. Ontario Sessional Papers, 1918, Hurons. In a westerly direction there is the Coldwater trail to thewaters of the Georgian Bay and the villages situate in Medonte, Tay and TinytoAvnshi])s : in a nortlierly direction, the Algonquin trail to the hunting countryor rocky highlands and in a southerly direction, the trail to the villages situate inOro townshi]), and, eventually, to the Pilnu ((Uintry. Tlicsi three trails allcentred at Orillia or Cahiague. The Ojibwa are Algonquin and were allied to the Hurons, and occupied thecountry north of the Hurons. They came to the aid of the Hurons


. Ontario Sessional Papers, 1918, Hurons. In a westerly direction there is the Coldwater trail to thewaters of the Georgian Bay and the villages situate in Medonte, Tay and TinytoAvnshi])s : in a nortlierly direction, the Algonquin trail to the hunting countryor rocky highlands and in a southerly direction, the trail to the villages situate inOro townshi]), and, eventually, to the Pilnu ((Uintry. Tlicsi three trails allcentred at Orillia or Cahiague. The Ojibwa are Algonquin and were allied to the Hurons, and occupied thecountry north of the Hurons. They came to the aid of the Hurons, but too lateto be of any use, in resisting the Iroquois raid, but eventually defeated the Iroquoisand drove them out, and occupied the Huron territory. These people, Ojibwas,were afterwards, in 1830, removed to their present village of Eama by the Govern-ment and finally, in 1850, l)y the Rol)inson-ITuron Treaty, gave up their right ofownership of the land. l)ut retained their riglit to hunt, fisli. and trap over the landsceded bv ?? Mans primitive condition was that wliieh corresponds to the lowest typeextant, the Anstralian and Papuan: the further back enquiry is pushed such cultiireas exists is found to liave been preceded by barbarism. The savage races of to-dayrepresent a conditidii out of which all races al)ove the savage have emerged. —?? IioiHcis of Evolution, Edward Clod. If St. Paul warns us against perplexing ourselves with vain and endlessgenealogies, it may 1)C tliought that the study of prehistoric man is included amongthose of the Pauline vanities. It seems like a waste of time to trouble ourselveswith prehistoric man. We know nothing and—waiving the second chapter ofGenesis—can know notliiiig of primitive num. ^^itll iTdfcssor Branco we cansafely say: AVe know absolutely no ancestors of the human race, for all fossilremains of human Ijeings are the remains of genuine men, such as we are noAv.* It is impossible to discuss anthropology with a man wh


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