 
                  
                  
                  
                  
                     I see no legal objection to this Ordinance, but before it is
                     sanctioned it should be sent to 
the Treasury with a reference to
                     subsect 9 of sect 6.
                     
                     You will be better able to judge than I am whether the Ordinance
                     is likely to work satisfactorily, and
                     I will only observe that I do not agree with the AG in thinking that
                     the Gov can give grants of public money to denominational schools.
                     
                  
                  
                   
                  
                  
                     I think it is plain that no grant could be made under this
                     Ordinance to any denominational School. It proposes to
                     establish a "uniform system of public Education" by means of
                     "Common Schools" and it appears to me that these "Common Schools"
                     alone can claim any grant under the provisions of this Ordinance.
                     
                  
                  
                     There is, however, no definition of

 a "Common School," and on
                     turning for one to the Act of 
1865, which is repealed, I find
                     SS xiii that these schools are to be "conducted strictly upon
                     
Non-Sectarian principles." No books being used which teach
                     
"Denominational Dogmas."
                     
                     This might admit of Grants being made either to (1)
                     Secular Schools properly so called, in which there is no
                     Religious Instruction at all—or (2) to Schools conducted on the system
                     of the
                     British & Foreign School
                     Society—in which the Bible is read, but no dogmas taught.
                     
                  
                  
                     From SS xii, however, in which Religious Instruction seems to
                     be left entirely to the Clergy, I infer that the Common School is
                     to be a Secular School "in [actcating] the Highest Morality"
                     
                     (SS xiii Act of 1865).
                     
                  
                  
                     As the consent of a large proportion (2/3) of the Resident
                     Householders is required before a new School District can be
                     formed—and as there are some denominational Schools, with tolerably

                     large incomes the [prass]
                     
                     of which may prevent the necessity of
                     setting up new Common Schools—I presume that this Ordinance
                     may be sanctioned. From the Attorney Generals report, I gather
                     that, it is a compromise—but the Blue Book for 
1867 gives no
                     means of assuming anything as to the relative numbers of the
                     different denominations, who 
w be
                     likely to decline to take part in a "Common School" system.
                     
                     The outlay on education in 1867 was $5,064.
                     
                  
                  
                     The population is (?) about 10,000 exclusive of Indians.
                     
                  
                  
                     I presume that the Governor must have had some estimates of the
                     probable Cost of the system submitted to him, which he ought to
                     have forwarded.