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<note>Raising Evidence</note>
<note>Raising Evidence</note>


<p>In France, where a crime appears to have<lb/> been committed, but the criminal is unknown,<lb/>the officer whose business it is to prosecute applies<lb/>to the temporal <add>civil</add> magistrate and <del>wh</del> gets permission<lb/><add>is granted him</add> to obtain a <hi rend="underline">monitoire</hi>.  This <hi rend="underline">monitoire</hi> is<lb/>an exhortation addressed by the bishop or parson<lb/>of the parish to <del>the</del> <add>all good</add> Catholics who may chance<lb/>to knowing any thing of the matter to repair<lb/>to the civil magistrate, and give in their evidence.<lb/>It is wonderful what a deference is paid<lb/>to these salutary exhortation. <note><del>The people are persuaded</del><lb/>All who believe are<lb/>persuaded their salvation<lb/>depends upon the<lb/>punctuality with which<lb/>they comply with this<lb/>injunction<lb/></note> This applied religion<lb/>is of clear and real use. <foreign>O si sic omnia!</foreign><lb/><del>The Catholic religion which is capable of doing</del><lb/>I never heard <del>in</del> or read any such  thing as a<lb/>sermon preached in England to [endeavour to]<lb/>persuade the people <add>faithful</add> <del>to carry what they have to<lb/>the ears of justice do</del> perform this service to<lb/>society.  This is a  recourse which Catholic<lb/>governments enjoy and which Protestants are <sic>debarrd</sic><lb/> of. <note>A Briton may find proof of this in abundance in <lb/>the Douglas cause.<lb/></note>The Catholic religion is capable<lb/>of doing a great deal more good as well as<lb/>a great deal more harm than any of those<lb/> <note>which</note></p>  
<p>In France, when a crime appears to have<lb/> been committed, but the criminal is unknown,<lb/>the officer whose business it is to prosecute applies<lb/>to the temporal <add>civil</add> magistrate and <del>wh</del> gets permission<lb/><add>is granted him</add> to obtain a <hi rend="underline">monitoire</hi>.  This <hi rend="underline">monitoire</hi> is<lb/>an exhortation addressed by the bishop or parson<lb/>of the parish to <del>the</del> <add>all good</add> Catholics who may chance<lb/>to knowing any thing of the matter to repair<lb/>to the civil magistrate, and give in their evidence.<lb/>It is wonderful what a deference is paid<lb/>to these salutary exhortations. <note><del>The people are persuaded</del><lb/>All who believe are<lb/>persuaded their salvation<lb/>depends upon the<lb/>punctuality with which<lb/>they comply with this<lb/>injunction<lb/></note> This applied religion<lb/>is of clear and real use. <foreign>O si sic omnia!</foreign><lb/><del>The Catholic religion which is capable of doing</del><lb/>I never heard <del>in</del> or read any such  thing as a<lb/>sermon preached in England to [endeavour to]<lb/>persuade the people <add>faithful</add> <del>to carry what they know to<lb/>the ears of justice do</del> perform this service to<lb/>society.  This is a  recourse which Catholic<lb/>governments enjoy and which Protestants are debarred<lb/> of. <note>A Briton may find proof of this in abundance in <lb/>the Douglas cause.<lb/></note>The Catholic religion is capable<lb/>of doing a great deal more good as well as<lb/>a great deal more harm than any of those<lb/> <note>which</note></p>  





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3

Indirect

Raising Evidence

In France, when a crime appears to have
been committed, but the criminal is unknown,
the officer whose business it is to prosecute applies
to the temporal civil magistrate and wh gets permission
is granted him to obtain a monitoire. This monitoire is
an exhortation addressed by the bishop or parson
of the parish to the all good Catholics who may chance
to knowing any thing of the matter to repair
to the civil magistrate, and give in their evidence.
It is wonderful what a deference is paid
to these salutary exhortations. The people are persuaded
All who believe are
persuaded their salvation
depends upon the
punctuality with which
they comply with this
injunction
This applied religion
is of clear and real use. O si sic omnia!
The Catholic religion which is capable of doing
I never heard in or read any such thing as a
sermon preached in England to [endeavour to]
persuade the people faithful to carry what they know to
the ears of justice do
perform this service to
society. This is a recourse which Catholic
governments enjoy and which Protestants are debarred
of. A Briton may find proof of this in abundance in
the Douglas cause.
The Catholic religion is capable
of doing a great deal more good as well as
a great deal more harm than any of those
which



















Identifier: | JB/087/181/002"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 87.

Date_1

Marginal Summary Numbering

Box

087

Main Headings

indirect legislation

Folio number

181

Info in main headings field

indirect

Image

002

Titles

Category

text sheet

Number of Pages

4

Recto/Verso

recto

Page Numbering

f1 / f2 / f3 / f4

Penner

jeremy bentham

Watermarks

[[watermarks::gr [crown motif] [britannia with shield motif]]]

Marginals

Paper Producer

Corrections

Paper Produced in Year

Notes public

ID Number

27706

Box Contents

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