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Show FOREIGN. Fearful Storm, in Canada. Montreal, 15. One of the most fearful fear-ful stoi rns that ever visited this country coun-try swept over Montreal Inst evening, and actually levelled everything in iib way. A lare number o buildings were utterly destroyed and hundreds severely damaged No loss of hie, however, is yet reported. The huge freight sheds of the Grand Trunk Ji. II. were prostrated. The loss in them alone is immense All the telegraph lines are down, and much greater damage dam-age at other points is reported. By Cahle. Ems, 14. Prince Frederick William leaves Ems to morrow morning for Berlin. Beneditti, the French ambassador, ambas-sador, left at 5 p.m. The Germans unite in support of the king. Wild enthusiasm prevails in the minor states. General Moltke is summoned to Berlin London, 3 a.m., 15. It is reported that the European poweis will unite in a protest against the implacability of Prussia. It is rumored that the Hrus sian government has demanded that (,'ount Beneditti shall be recalled by France. Austria continues to profess neutrality in the qua rel between Prussia, Prus-sia, but it is said w ll abandon it if a third power should intervene. Dublin, 15 There was a desperate riot between the Orangemen and Catholics Cath-olics to-day, a' Augheucillery. A deputy master of the Orangemen's organization or-ganization was killed and many were wounded. Berlin, 15. Count Benedetti's demand, de-mand, coupled with the peremptory declination of a further' conlerence with the ambassador, will be apt to arouse new apprehensions of hostility, but not necessarily lead to war. It is simply the act of the chief of t!"e llo-henzoilern llo-henzoilern family in the person of the kins, not an act of government, which would r-quire the countersignatures of the ministers. Prussia refuse- ro abandon aban-don the policy of a "masterly inactivity" inactivi-ty" wi-h regard to the Spanish throne. At tt. Petersburg there is a strorttr fcelinc on the part of the llusian ov-crniiKiit ov-crniiKiit azain-t France. It is U'li'-veu now the Emperor Napoleon is bent on an aggressive war to destroy the balance Lf prwer in Europe, seize mi ar: over-mastering posi-ioa and farce the rosiomifm of the Bourbons od Spain by fms. |