The Southern Messenger Under the Cross (San Antonio, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 35, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 2, 1893 Page: 3 of 8
eight pages : ill. ; page 22 x 15 in.View a full description of this newspaper.
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J7
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J;
be Assassin.
RS,
Margaret Lamb^nn’a
i
r.
DRAFTS ON IRELAND.
r
N ANTONIO, TEXAS.
■ . .<
ax'
■ *'
erce Street,
t
■3,
enemy
A
At the World’* Fair.
i ;
- Organization
I .
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t *
GOGGAN & BROS-
Ince of Ontario.
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r
11
■ Paulin,recently died at Oran, in Algeria,
M.
1
TEXAS
4]
a
t!i
"i, ■
GRAND AVE.
o
San Antonio, - -
U
of
Geo. Mandry’s
• «!
5.'
■ -x
guaranteed.
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.7 .".;■
■
AT '
Di
r
. Sullivan & Co.,
.NKERS
q
fl
•1
‘Ji ■
/
■■ i\‘.
t
ject
bappy
The <
its
was r
unjust.
The strength of a-nation is in the in*
7 ’"t 1
r‘ ‘ • I
; -
■ i - ?
THOS. M. GARLIN,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
MS Chestnut St..
■j.;?
r hfL
t !’
-
ust be toM it once. Anentire estate offered tapurtssudtrscta
suit buyers. '
A. A. Busch,
President.
.• . -
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’! ■
•: < 1 ■
IDS,
AT. LAW
fH5G.)
< STREET
ALTAR WINES
—0—
F. I. JIEYEB.
Wine Merchant, ■
Dealer and Im-
^tjP or «tr<
brands of
' . J ’■•
7 ■
;;
t, • ' «
ITH DEVINE & CO.,
' ■ «
SANr ANTONIO. TEXAA-
REAL ESTATE.
fstaurant
nt in the city.
f ALL HOURS
ibonx for TamUipt
loledad St.
I BERGERON.
jSt. FRQP8
i&SONS
u Dealers in
CUE—Mpc<.*»vi-ry :
Hui ar the Public •
1 - Z iv:dUi Vice- :
r**‘0u4 VitT-Pre-.
Cora Bojle
. a first*
terms than
I
Oi
: >;
. 7- _ ' =»
, > iJ
Met
USS?
. .7- 4
fe’
,/K
/ rp. ’ ;
A brave Scotchwoman, Margaret telligent and wellKMrdered homes of its
Envy not the appearance of "happi-
ness in any man for thou knoweat not
PROPRIETOR OF
City Meat Market,
AND SAN ANTONIO
Sausage Factory,
1JJ.-5 AlyVIIN AVE -
(Old No. 25 Acequia ^t.)
3
m
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rob J- '
SUCCESSORS TO JOR^
TWOHIG.
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Oi iers by mail solicited. Send for new .
illustrated Catalogue. • J
17..?..? & CO.. Piiai. Siltiwe.Ml,
eties OF JAMES :-: CLAVIN
1,10 druggist
l;:i W. Commerce Street.
San Antonio, - - , Texa,
7 ,;
1^33
rls=S§|p
var >N
H£**eV
. cd
THE - .
Hl ’ C
Is notjii^this capable of selling you
dass Instjruirrent ^^tlose price and on easy ter
“'C
THOMAS
E. Cnr:4Ton ston and Navarro street*.
777,1 Id?.!?
ALEX. BRULE’S
Restaiwant017iX
Opposite Passenger Depot,
*.k- BES I jjct Meal in the City ;
/■J/.A.s77A7i, TEXAS. " ■
Affliction is s winged chsriot that
mounts up the wul towards heaven;
nor do we ever ao rightly understand
God’s majesty as when we are not able
to stand under our own misery.
(nzSItc
| F" fflSS
I m mg
Philip C»A
Vice-Pies & Gen’l.
7 <>7. V.
^87.;7
V*
S'
1 7 *1
Gi L
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Ok. iMtePWUi'* -i
SMITH.
j hy. love, but most of all by the clear
I discernment and impartial justice
which pays no respect to persona
Christ with bread and water is worth
more than 10,000 worlda Christ with
pain is better than the highest pleas-
ures of Bin. Those who have a real
PHILADELPHIA'
■■ . ... ■'
r7
C-7 :-7'7.,Y
«»flu <i5 nt
* I
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< ed an important role in the political history amiably.
No man can find fault with his neigh-
bor while he is closely watching Christ
He who doubts, and yet seeks not to
he star BrewinC ®
7.
;■ vmcu *'
h?’ gnmicsnU
p In additi
it no'
a. !7.
TH* fre«t»M<>M In Borne-
The Freemasons are putting the fin-
ishing touches to their new lodge in t e
fraud old Papal Palace Borghese.
Signore Lemmi willed that the seat at
Rome should be a princely one, and he
has hired part of the first floor, in par-
licular the grand hall of the soldiers
which is as large and high aa - church.
Considerable restorations hare been
made, and at the moment we uri
workmen are busy fitting^ np th® Bp*
paratus for electric where we a«
auguration of the new G<
shortly take place and it is> said that a ! «^“n«e~an,
new life, especially political ~£<*eri- I “af wLm
£mT Th^ ^“bullTt’he pilace ' -nUg^jn .
did not indeed foresee that it wm one . - of
day destined to shelter an_,enB”y’ 2?^ i r -
such an enemy of the Church’ T j "7 makes the
Borghese Palace was commenced ta . who m^e .
1690, by the Spanish Cardinal Deza, I»
who died before
1700. The work
Paul V., who bought the {
foundations and the st^®n 1 j•
Paiil V. made
Ordinal Scipio Borghese ** j haTiDg -
named deluxe ue --—.. made to »
handsome appearance, courtly and . tion oonfe^onal was not a matter 1
generosity. Tus that i
----Freemason • { of dWnlge ««• fatewst
might hb said: ■‘CMlhialfoi. has
~w*'' MMiftdences of ^he oonfe^^
^T^Xaed,trhM. scoortof law
it myd T tew
mi mi** MF aed the
• . <' ■ : ■< -’iLsijSi
';-A' ■ !a
' THE SOUTHERN MESSENGER.
ihlogles, Etc.
Depot and 9un«M
neree Street
TOXAS.
8*n'i?.ldEr^“>‘
Ail zKaxnp* Cheap.
P<SOM,
gBBR STAMPS,
' i‘ •:
tsr To the World’s Fair, ■. 7 ■
- INTERNATIONAL ROUTE
a *
International & Great Northern R. R. Co.
with its superior facilities and direct connections, offers
its patrons the - - ~ * * *
SHORTEST, QHTCKEKT and- BEST ROUTE TO j
ist. Louis, CMw aii Points Mi aai W ’
...... ........
1
in
*‘As queen.”
from the
Mary.
n
“But what security >
I can you give me,” asked the Queen, “that ■
you will not take advantage of an act of
mercy and again attempt my life!" “Mad- |
:-7'4WI
'■7/-- NIB
. 7
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W7a
■■■■'. ■ :tsl
■" -■1;. . u
4 ' . . * - ‘ , r *i a
’ ’■■ 7 ' - 7 g
Cooperage
Tanks, ^atenw, ::
Troughs, Vats asd Kegs, ■
guaranteed. .7..'71/7.- 'fflM
Cor. Austiifia<fl»y* ' • .7/7^1
Sam ''Antonio! l; i>7...; ■nr5™H
■ 7'7; t / 77 7',77
?/7'M/777$;
iANCtLST ORUkR!
E ill B 1 k \ I .\ \ > I
f Ain^rii- ,
;o. I frf rhe A. 0.1
of Bex ir <
[retfi ir? > japfer a. - 35 West Sidk Alamo Plaza.
hidin’* Hall (»n I Telephone 280. Sun Antonio, Texts
t uni 3rd Thiirs- 1
kysof ra.H'1 month I
I’p-ident. E*r. J. T. |
-nr. J. T. >[,-1
r. /i’ll (r •.; Fii,.{
ea*.. P J. Scullev: |
br.nT ir O. P. (‘ody. !
Me-t at their i
[ the AHMthatn!
taust A. Zizik;!
re Seere-’
: Ah* tot ejit;
kvietz: Tn n®nri*r.!
L Wtn. lObrH-!*
phiil, Alexander I
td. K*»nda an<l i
I Rpbef < 'om- i "
|k- Sre^ani, PROF. BUKOWITZ
i Bearer. Jul.an . TEACHER OF MUSIC
p.E—Mf'o*<evHry ' Vocal and Instrumental
(Jniy a limited number nf pupil*tak('n- .
<'ail at re>i11ence 116 Rleiiujond Ave.r
; or Address. P. O. Box. 625. ■
THE NEW PRAYER BOOK. a
THE MANUAL Of' PRUB,
:,t 1 ftir 7e ot iiie Catholic Laity.
cnly n rrect and complete compendium of-
;ue x rayers and Ceremonies 51 the
Cuurch e^er published.
■nf.zj-l -.\ inr Third Plenary
i .mor ami imlmM-d itli th®
O Hi- Eu.i'.enr.- < ‘ard:Ha] Gib-
By twn -Vrhhrhopand Bish-
* Ann rariu Un rai*h>.
of Binding, Prices-
Over $lW»oworft ofSai AitBiM Prajarty
iust be Sok at once. An entire «ta& offered in parts.tracts
I suit havers. Uttge, well equipped brewery with good line ef
fade st a Great Sacrifice. Extensive printing and lithographing
establishment, controlling the best trade in the South-west- sttcii
bargains never before equalled. '
REAGAN HOUSTON, Assignee.
I < ■
- -'
'1 i Champagne, Rhlna and CalKornia Wines.
Hl orders for one gallon or wore r<ronrpl]F'
; delivered—ciij or country, by railur express:
fia.
"• | FuB information . ■
fnrrj-bed regarding
Philadelphia, Pa., and vicdott
Rentf, interest amf claims^
all kinds collected. E**tat
fettle*! ano attended te* .
Copies of Wills, Deeds, Deaths, etc.,
THOS. Ma GARLIN,
ER,
■«W\
’\S'
5 IS
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• 5
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T . ;7’
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I’--' 7'
i- 7 ; .■
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■■■/'■'• ii'l
6-,
• • ;; .!h*:r ! ■
‘ . iini <‘i»
lv’i<>': »:
: Itii.'H - ::it *
: -*j i.- . r< r.
Hl LUlilw. H.
I Ci-.rk:
‘ m:
Fri-ebt?
l17 rne-.
timqa a*
Catholic schools,
only two and a 1----
detail the display
These so-called public
their displays numbered
logue from 275 to 716
-—435—represents the
the separate portions
hibit Take from this 60 photo- . ship,
graphs of buildings, etc.. each |
appearing in the catalogue with aspe- ,
cial number,
resents the total quantity
hibits that hav$ come L. -
public schools in Ontario.
lie separate schools of the same prov
i -_ 11.^ <-nn%a nfl.t5k
loguewith the exhibits from 709 to 950.
The difference less 13 ;
buildings, etc., will leave them 234 aa I
the total quantity of class work mate-
rial sent to the Exposition. Now if i to
we compare! Three thousand e g mMT1V years
hundred and seventy-six public school* many y^
send 375 aggregate exhibits. x
hundred and eighty-eight Catholic Sep-
arate schools send 214 aggregate ex-
hibita. All which is vastly gratify-,
tag.
: 'i*
- 1'^ 77'7
# k 777.7-
177.
.7 i . /
h e ’• “7 .- ?■-/
■ 7:1 ■ 77 '■
[P: ' ' 77'-7 ' :<:; '7"/S-7: , > ,
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77
77
770
Pullman Sleepers between Laredo and St. Louis; Galveston
and St. Louis; and San Antonio and Dallas, daily in eack
direction. - - - • ~ ~ “
For Rates, Time of Trains and other Information, call oa
nearest Ticket Agent. D. J. PRICE,
Asst Gen-Pass. Aft,. J ;
_____________ mmbwH •-
7AI. '■ ” ! I!
Joj II-7\ < irr;.- 1
. 11 .>71 !:-t ’’I ’ i'l
[l- ;. . ■ >!: • 7 !
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i-r.biT; —
tt iii'hU .1 :i’ j 1
i., / \\ i•. of t..(
■. > ?.
. . Il
< -i. 1 :i 1’ 7 ■:
7
I!- ,
olic colleges,
p- >nd 220 £—
jni-
14 archbishops.
That “
puritans
.a
the <
y
have
doubt
. bcity in
I-
■t
comment
Cardinal
termination in
lands and i of mistaken
s*cr*d.
_____ __________ .
at Washington, I-inexhSuatible intere&txn
the ways of menkind. pest eaA'|^ymrt
jr.SciMir.mr" ‘ ’
_?A „__
nervous precipitation and one of the pis-
tols fell with considerable uoise. Needless
to say she was immediately arrested and
completely disarmed. Elizabeth desired
to interrogate the intrepid prisoner her-
self, and struck with her noble replies
‘ ~; “You considered it to be your duty 1
happy, and they ’ toward your husband and your mistress, or beauty for poetry.
He who has never watched in sorrow,
and watered his bed with tears, knows
you not, ye heavenly powers.
I The greatest men, the greatest heroes,
I are those who know their duty and are
j brave enough to do iU
I That man’s fame is most lasting and
’ is most enviable whose song outlive*
! him on the lipa of his fellow country-
• men!
I There is an underlying principle of
■ good, I think, in every one. It may
: not always be evident^ but it is there
_r act as judge.” Elizabeth
granted an uuressrved pardon in spite of >
her Prime Minister, saying to her flatterers. . may be done by severity, more
3T.1!S» I SSlS -s -4&’taJS£:
story told in her youth by a descendant of
Lally Tolendal himself some fifty years
He was a member of the Stuarts
— She very ’
the Province of On- : cautiously added, however: Ta it *u«en- Chriat happy people,
tic, for I have never found a o_ —
’ fact in the writings upon Elizabeth to be
There are
SEt ± ~‘J>” 7o^-.s- ■ n i to-,. <«-.
ueational exhibit, twenty and one-half
pages are devoted to a detailed apeci-
fication of the display made by its .
5,876 public (Protestnut) schoola. The ,
$87 Catholic separate schools in that ;
same catalogue require eight and one- i
quarter pages for the detailed specifl-
cations of the exhibit they make. That- to her memoryby a
k tn sav the Protesant schools are ■-—
more '.han-sa timw ~ numerou, a. the aeeted m hospital work for twenty-fiva
Yet they require | years
half times the space to > time in
of school work. ing. -
! of the terrible typhus epidemic of 1863, | inner workings of what is
The difference '
detailed total of
! Of
this
’NUNS AS PRINTERS.
S Visit t> tli« PremlM* of the M Crolx^
! Newspaper.
u A visit to these premises shows,
He says:' “Isawher for the first j writes the Paris correspondent of the
u 1867, when the cholera was rag- J Liverpool Times, among other things,
I noticed her sweetness and calm grave, bearded, religious, side by wde
schools have 1 courage- I saw her tending the victims ; with lay journalists. It reveals the
h ~ta. of the terrible typhus epidemic of 1868, inner workings of what» probably by
on the cata- , of the terrimey p^ i hadpre-'^r the most active and extensive
‘ printing establishment m
d lifelong friend- | France. Moreover, it shows the actual
, fi,-- rd nnoio* i siup. administration knew her to j accomplishment of Pere d’Alzon’s pro-
from this 60 pnouo- *“l£r among tke strong and brave phecy. when, after having founded
buildings, etc-, each | brave. She passed with a * the Order of the Assumption, he fore-
------™ ‘ j KmiHnc- face through the most terrible 1 shadowed the work of the good press
The remainder, 31 u, rep- , J f d alwfys with words of 7in connection with his religions, and
.tel Quantity of the ex- . d £rt on heP lips tor : prOphesied its ultimate success. All
from the 5.8 A . strength Jsn^ 'despairing.” No ; this being realized in our day. Many
public schools in Ontario. The Cat o- j ' . . a woman received ( thousand copies of the Croix speed
lie separate schools of the same prov- ( wond^tha . such
ince are accredited in the same cats. | the £ oa hej. by the K<> | .
photographs of ; public in She had expressed a j -L
She fell a victim premises
a Vi, aa + O 1 I M a AV-t +
had worked for so I
was with her at the Ias^
••Courage, sister,1* he said;
get better, and you will live to wear for
years to come your Cross of ^. Legion
of Honor.” "No.” she replied, I shall
not wear that cross any more. l am
going to where I shall have a better
and a brighter one. 1 ,
is done.” Of such stuff are those sis-
ters who are continually reviled and
calumniated by bigots and religious
impostors in this country.
Do ToaV Best.
It is not by regretting what is irrep-
arable that true work is to be done,
but by making the best of what we
are, ft is not by complaining that we
have not the right tools, but by^usxng
well the tools we have. What we are
is God’s providential
ements-God’e doing, though it
-•s misdoing; and the manly
new lire, especially / \+ i tha wise way is tx> look your disad-
cal life, will be given toi the society »t “ "in the face, and see what can
Rome. Those who built the i£ J^xteout of them. Life, like war,
.. .._J—X that it was one , be made mistakes, and he is not
the best Christian nor the best general
iaxee fewest false steps He
j best who wins the moat splendid
?L7wies bv the retrieval of mistakes.
ienuiu<»««“ — victo py orzaniz® victory out
estimed by Pope Fprget mistakes, organize
auguration of th®
shortly take place :
I
the recipient of it J'^’eef to ”
Igpitta the interest i
having exhausted a thousafidf^
fat thMfa *■* <
0^1 7 7 7-----7: ‘
I tween M. de Lally Tolendal, a
peer, and one of her cousins. T™
is now the New England of ; wna th<t of XVIIL and Louis Phil-
etit is one for which its promulgators
good foundation. T^ere is no
that the development of Catho- 1
lu New England has been won- i
derfuL and here is one explanation of
it, an explanation well established by j peternajUed. to avenge the deata of both,
tatistics, Tne descendants of the Pur- & - *
itans Iiavc arrested their own develop- J
jnent by a limitation of family. The • and the second for .
id NewEugtend ' . Bu3 the ^uM-be assassin and ?ideas u UUe makinff £ne coach horSea
in irreat num»?ers ^ave, c ; 7nK near the queen’s person with too much
est Catholics, an innate as well as a re- , < • 1
lirrloiis horror of any interference with
the course of nature, and, in
consequence, they are rapidly possess-
ing the land. It is quite in accordance
” the old Bible promise on the sub-
of children that the man shall be
-- whose quiver ]
Catholics are
ghall not be afraid to stand with their
in the gate.
(To be continued) ...
CANADIAN CATHOLICS,
Superiority ot Their Educational Exhibit ,
the
answer
, vicsuLuj’QL ui vmw beautiful
I “In that quality she should pardon me,
exhibit has been much struck by the
vast superiority v* vou
_11 L7X M WL* V ’*** j — —---1 .
He observes that if one takes [
from the exhibit of the Province of I
Ontario the work from the Catholic
schools, the paucity of what remains
will not redound to the honor of any
country’s educational facilities. Fig-
ures bear him out There are 5,876
£btic (Protestant) schools ta the Prov
Ince of Ontario. This number excludes - ■ -
kindergartens, high schools, collegiate |
insiitutions, special schools, eta. In |
plain language it;«*,* o had .migrated to Franc,
of the people* inere are zo» vbvhuhu . ., , ,_______ ter.
In the cataloiTue of Ontario sEfi-
trace of the
found in Romet”
Tribute te » Brave Tian.
A valiant nun, known as Sister Saint
and a remarkable tribute has been paid
‘ , medical man, Dr. j
Sondras, with’whom she had been eon- .
HOME in amebica<
(Continued from Second Page.)
^7771^381,616, *nd 6,250,045- Communi-
•* ’ This is more than half of all the
test ant denominations combined,
?!^iCh in 1880 numbered 10,065,953 com-
ddition to this it is interesting to
that there are upwards of70Cath-'i
--,40 theological seminaries I
jj 220 academies. l-~ __________„___________________
tents are supervised by *5 bishopsand , esting conversation which took place be-
. ■ I tween M. de Lally Tolendal, a French
the old New England of the pe€r> one of her musing. The epoch be resolved, is equally unhappy and
is now the New England of ; wna that of Louis XVHL and pail.
Catholic^’’ is a serious statement; lippe. thg principal snbject Que^n Eliza-
a<ma "Fzvt* xvhinri its uromnl^iLtGrs ' * * « - *
Lambmn, who was in the personal service people.
; of Mary Stuart, had witnessed the death
! of her husband from grief upon learning
[ the cruel fate of that unfortunate princess, his secret "griefs. j
> If you want your pathway through
i Margaret went to court disguised in male iife b3 smooth and firm, pave it with
i attire and provided with two deadly pis- Q(xfs promises.
I tols, one for Elizabeth and the second for /To use grand words to exuresa poor
herself. But the would-be assassin and fa like making fine coach horses
! suicide joined the crowd of courtiers stand- draw donkey carts.
To delay to do right is the desire to
do wrong. We dO decide when we de-
lay deciding.
We are responsible for what we per-
mit others to do in?our names as we are
for what we do ourselves.
--------- _ Manyt brain, like buried ores, might
is full of them. ’ said: ^cou considered it to be your du y bave y iei^ej a mipe of truth for science,
therefore, to kill me? But what do you
suppose my duty is toward you?” “I will (
answer your majesty frankly,” replied
Margaret, “but is it as a queen or a judga
that she asks the question?”
came the proud
1 destroyer of the
A visitor to the Chicago Educational • wag th# j
■ r of the Catholic Cana- ■
dian exhibit over every other specimen
there. He observes that if one takes , MargRret> I* mercj ^^4
with bo much precaution b no grace. Your and leap forth w^,n the time and
majesty may act as judge.” Elizabeth ar8 yor it.
. , __________JI In rt# * r ___ x
In the government of men & great
Cardinal Scipio
_ de Roma, tl
Alas that tbe noble pile ; through
should be occupied bv. A J ' I ~ " ‘
lodge’ ■' • , • ' ' — i IS "^i-n
Kto to <hto
mate, the aonl, n»«r
j when called upon to
fi’i ntadi tatee N to poihj*
taooa-ttptib**
7 PM,»thwotnwnjf
the cata-
_2 : viously entertained for her ripened into ! Catholic
their ex- ! those of a respectful anr
60 photo- i ship. The ,
etc, each | ^he parsed with a j (he Order of the Assumptions fore-
through the most terrible ’ shadowed the work of the^ good Pr^J
always '----- —-----
'— ‘ ’ its ultimate success.
No ‘ this being realized in
nightly over Paris and into the prov-
inces. The Pelerin and weekly num-
bers of Lives of the Saints, and other
crumma . . . , j ppegi i WM taken over it the
, ..... 1— | other day by the director, the Rev. |
•>you will PereBailly. so that your readers might
have some details of Catholic journal-
ism as understood and practiced by the
Fathers of the Assumption.
The most interesting sight in con-
nection with the visit was that of a
My work on earth nUmber of gentle-faced nuns ta charge
of nearly a hundred girla and women
all engaged in setting up type. The
num are skilful printers, but they pray
as well as work, which is what the Croix
is constantly telling its readers to da
At given momenta ciandlea are Lighted
before aatatne of Notre-Dame-du-Saint.
and a nun recites the Rosary *1°^°>
present joining in the responses. These
praying interruptions do not prevent a
more then ordinary amount of work
being got through under the rule of
these typographical religion* They
all appear to have sweet, gentle faces,
but to be withal quietly energetic and
vigilant Thqse are the Little Sisters
of the Assumption- While some are
printers, others are missionaries, and
others nurses like those who ™re »t
Lourdes the other day tending the sick
of the national pilgrimage.
Tat«Uretv»l PleMurw.
A cultivated mind—any mind to
which the fountains of knowledge
have been opened, and whieh has been
. taughtin any toleraWe degree to exer- .
cise ite faculties—will find sources of
. 0,11 that
STORY - OF ELIZABETH, j domestic reading
. _ { Jealousy in the sentiment of property;
An Unreserved Pardon fbr a Would- but envy is the instinct of theft.
-—* I Therdis no such thing aa being happy
| without asking God to tell us bow.
Determiaaticm to Doubts are not overcome with vio-
Murdtr the gum for Revenge—Hov lence, but with reason and understand- ’
Her Argument* Overmastered, the Pan*
Sion of the Sovereign* ; Speak little and gently, little and
A Homan princess whose ancestors pl&y« well, little and frankly, little and
establish- ; <jf a former day, told the following inter-
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The Southern Messenger Under the Cross (San Antonio, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 35, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 2, 1893, newspaper, November 2, 1893; San Antonio, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1247359/m1/3/: accessed July 1, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .