Sessional Papers, Volume 8"Report of the Dominion fishery commission on the fisheries of the province of Ontario, 1893", issued as vol. 26, no. 7, supplement. |
Wat mensen zeggen - Een review schrijven
We hebben geen reviews gevonden op de gebruikelijke plaatsen.
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
Accidents acres Address Affections Agent Agriculture America arrived Autres Boston British Canada Canadian Carleton cattle CAUSE CITY CLASSE Coll Colonial Company Copies correspondence Council crops Deaths December Department Disease DISTRICTS Dominion Dorchester emigration Enclosed ending England English exhibit farm farmers Folio forward France French Germaine give given Government Governor granted Grenville Hald Haldimand honour horses immigrants important increase Indian interest Island John July June land letter London Maladie Manitoba March months Montreal Morts names nées North North-West Nova Scotia OFFENCES officers Ontario Order ORGANS Ottawa Paris parties past persons Port possession present printed Province Quebec Railway received reference relating respecting Return River season sent ships showing sions statement Sydney TABLE taken tions Toronto Totaux trade United volume Whitehall Winnipeg York
Populaire passages
Pagina 205 - MÉMOIRES des commissaires du roi et de ceux de Sa Majesté britannique sur les possessions et les droits respectifs des deux couronnes en Amérique; avec les actes publics et pièces justificatives. Paris, Imprimerie royale, 1755-57. 4 vols. Map. 25 cm. Contents: i, Mémoires sur l'Acadie et sur l'isle de Sainte-Lucie...
Pagina 150 - It is composed of almost all the merchants, with an admixture of considerable landholders, and of some of the younger and more intelligent civil officers. It possesses much wealth and still more credit, and in addition to these it has all that mutual confidence and that precision and unity of purpose, which, to do our countrymen justice, they know better than any other people how to confer on political associations. This imposing body, moreover, has great advantage at the present moment in the moderation...
Pagina 40 - Congress for the government of the Territory North West of the Ohio, provided nothing herein contained shall extend to affect. the claim or claims of individuals. to any part of the soil which is recognized to them by the aforesaid Cession Act.
Pagina liii - Railway in so far as they are applicable to the undertaking, and are not varied by or inconsistent with the Act of the Parliament of Canada last above cited ; And whereas by an Act passed in the thirty-seventh year of Her Majesty's reign, intituled "An Act to amend the Act respect37V., c. 15. ing the construction of the Intercolonial Railway...
Pagina 47 - Bishop of Nova Scotia, the Clergy of the Province of Quebec ; the Minister, Church Wardens and Vestry of the Church of England in the City of Quebec; Church Wardens and Vestrymen of the English Protestant Congregation in Montreal. Dorchester to Grenville (No. 6), with petition from proprietors in Montreal for the extension of their lots towards the St. Lawrence beyond the town wall. Petition enclosed. Dorchester to Grenville (No. 7). Sending naval officer's return of vessels entered and cleared,...
Pagina 19 - ... restrained neither by pity nor scruple from using threats of damnation and the Micmac tomahawk to Majesty's government as merited a much severer Punishment." Shirley a Galissoniere, 9 Mai, 1749. Shirley writes to Newcastle that the Acadians " are greatly under the influence of their priests, who continually receive their directions from the Bishop of Quebec, and are the instruments by which the governor of Canada makes all his attempts for the reduction of the province to the French Crown.
Pagina 124 - Discussion Sommaire sur les Anciennes Limites de L'ACADIE, et sur les Stipulations du Traite d'Utrecht qui y sont relatives.
Pagina 152 - Still the good points of his character are not to be denied. He seems to be irreproachable in his private life ; in social intercourse he is mild and gentlemanlike ; and if, in politics, he is too hot and unmeasured in his proceedings, I do not find that reasonable men accuse him of being dishonest. His principal faults are violence, a want of the plainer sort of sense, and, I fear, an inveterate prejudice against the English. Whatever else he be, it is impossible to set eyes on him, and not perceive...