The Southern Messenger Under the Cross (San Antonio, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 36, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 9, 1893 Page: 2 of 8
eight pages : ill. ; page 22 x 15 in.View a full description of this newspaper.
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SMITH DEVINE & CO.,
o
LOME IN AMERICA.
1
Bg MATMOND BLATHWATT,
the State school, by ignoring the
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'd
<Xa Pall Mall Magazine.!
DRAFTS ON IRELAND.
!
SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS.
r
The New York Sun, in a recent
push.
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ion of the Church ’
CATHOLIC KNIGHT’S OF AMERICA (St
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and CaliWia Wte$,
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San Aitonio,
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the whole city. Pure/ chaste, virginal,
SUCCESSORS TO JOHh
TWOHIG.
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It is an obligation on our men to know
thoroughly the other aide. Therefore
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ru<eb oi Toniuct must be !»>*•. .-J. on
reason and icienoe, in order that it may
Third Order of St. Francis—Meets 1st
Sunday of very month.
SI. MARY'S CHCRCH SOCIETIES.
Archconfraternity of the Holy Family.
The St. Vincent de Paul.Society.
The Altar Spciety.
Apostleship of Prayqr of the Sacred
Heart.
Xad1
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granted by
to ba: allowed
tohlua tbatewwh raligfehaaduaatfoa.
pace with the times, must strive to dis-
cern the future, must be able to give a
reason for the faith that is in them.
, will find it
now
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r
let thorn take head that they be worthy
•f their inheritance.
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P'
8AU.ANT0NI0 FOMTCl
,—Manufactures all Classes of—
-A.rchitectTU’al Iron
and Brass Work.
Philip C*rl. IJ
Vice-Pros & Grn'Ldfif. : |
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■ - - TEXAS
- Restaurant
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guaranteed. .
Cor. Auatln and Hays St. -
San Antonio.
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^hretrd-Roman fac^a of Bishop Keafie.
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THE SOUTHERN MESSENGER.
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eated, untrained, and unintelligent
persons upon the wide-spreading lands
F- I, 31 F YER. >
Wine Merchant 1
Dea!er und Zm- ,1
porter of tU J
brard* of i
So must
it be with the Church in the Republic.
Her humblest members are called upon
A. A. Busch.
President.
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Catholic Public UM
308 1-2 W. Commerce Sf.
HOURS 10 to 12 and 5 to?
DAILY, EXCEPT Sl'NDAYS.
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GRAND AVE.
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Catholic University of America. His
statements go far to disprove the very
nnwarrantatiie assertions made by cer-
Full information
furnished regarding
Philadelphia? Pa.,
: Champagne, Rhiae
orders for one pallon or wore SroEFtly
I delivered—city or Country, by rail or expreiK
I 35 Went Side Alamo Plaza.
Telephone280. suxi Antonin. Text*
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p s-pj
k-^d
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by the State rather than the Church— j
though 1 admit the CJhuroh permitted '
such action? But in those days all
churches persecuted. There is no -
place for- the Inquisition
free country today,
bid that there
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Bi
1 the truth, and the truth shall make ?
---, We strive as earnestly as .. , . ,
any of our Prote.Unt fellow-country- i become » important, if not the
men for the cauae of uniTertai educa- moet important political factor in the
I Republic* She will become a factor '
1 that will not permit itself to be left
f_____,____j i— _____:
; politician, or body of politicians, desir* j
' ous of exercising an influence either for 1
t good or evil in the State—a factor that [
; will go toward the construction and j
“ ' ’ 1
Geo. Mandry's
Cooperage Works, j
Tanka, Cistema, Casks, BArrefr . j
Troughs, Vati and Kegs, best ww jj
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omy it is in close touch with the people^
Winy, even non-Catholics, are turning
to Rome as the one great social force
necessary to maintain the people in the
PROF. BUKOWITZ,
teacher of mu*ic
Vocal and Instrumental
Only a limited number of pupils taken*
<fall at residence 11G Richmond Ave.r ’
or Address P. O. Box. G25.
by forgiveness,
Truth alone ca
and mould the mini
borrow ia not tl^e p<
discipline of humkuit
In prayer it is
vp it bout words, titan I
heart.
God is
a sphere?whos
where — circumf^rend
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JAMES :-: CLAVIN
DRUGGIST j
134 W. Commerce Street. ' J
San Antonio, - Texas.
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— -» Hi
w c- Salih* I
•the few territories. A family can be
geareely less than father, mother, and
•Be child. Yet only one-half the Con*
gregationalist families are church
'member*. Each household is re pre*
gented by one member and* a half.
fig* fpowiag up to suppby ths
An
trhea.
Joftiest
her
Bom
gpt the I
>hole L .
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ALEX. BRULE’S
Restaurant oMeraX
Opposite Passenger Depot,
B^”BEST 2$ct Meal in the Gty
PALESTINE. TEXAS.- '
D. Sullivan & Co.,
BANKERS
Nof^Bl W. Commerce Street. * SAN ANTONIO, Texas
CATHOLIC SOCIETIES OF
SAN ANTONIO.
SAN FERNANDO CATHEDRAL SOCIETIES.
Conf .aternity of the Mpet Holy Sacra-
nent—Meets 1st Sunday pf each month
ifter Vespers. Daily adoration of the
Blessed Sacrament from 6 a. m. to 6 p.
m. Sundays for men.
Association of the Christian 31 others—
MeeJs 1st Friday of each month at 2:30
r>. m. Practice of the Holy Way of the
--Cross every Friday at 2:30 p. m.
ST. JOSEPH'S CHVRCII SOCIETIES.
St. Joseph's Society—Meets on the 3rd
Sunday of each month in St. Joseph's
Hall. J. Dielmann, Pres. :Wm. He ring.
Vice Pres.: A. J. Kissling, <'orresp. Secy.:
J. F. Ripps. Financial Secy.’ L.
Wm. Mengpr. Treas.
St. Anne's Society—Meets 4th Sunday
and vicnnn , i
Rents, interest and cJalmsof :
all kinds coHcrtec. Ertatet j
Settled and attended tn. jl
Copies of WillB, Dtedi. Deaths, etc., furrii^ 7
THOS. M, GARUN,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
608 Chestnut SL, L
>«, that BoBiikm wm fused with
guritanUm, Medhavallam Was lost 1
the vast sea efKoderaity.- (
. It U quite a moot poisi ae to whi«h
prelate.of the Society of Jews, and Pro-
Mneial of the Jeeuita of Maryland and
Mew York—facet in which, however,
were esaily discerned the ’cuteneM and
enterprise of the energetic Yankee— I
■ took heart of grace and hoped for the
best Tor those faces told me, in a far '
more litoral sense than It might be su^
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•nd Engli-thJ
iflBvnl and It]
in another MQM J
Wendell Holmes
j_? will never <td
I, but it is equal-
may |ow -
THE NEW PRAYER BOOK '
THE MANUAL OF PRAM
For Be Bst si tie CatimcLsj
“■ ^awaagrase*
Church ever published.
Authorized by the Third Plenary Conn-
ell of Baltimore and indorsed with the
approval o Tlis Hmineiu-e ( ardinal Gib-
bons and by every Archbishop and Bish,
op of the American Hierachy.
Trenty-four Styles of Binding, Prices
from 81.2n to $8.
Orders by mail solicited. Send for new
____ ____ Illustrated Catalogue.
vHU net fail to accomplish the work
*>aee that W set before Jier. I glanced
a«t at the wiadow. bad soot away down
iyr the sUw walers of the historic Fa*
fieatacj l oasurht a glimpeo of the boa**
. MfnlWashi»rlceMomoriaL Tharo*
Mke Clooyatra's Moaile, H stands, and '
;j,-yoadaa»oig»t<away fromifc . It is '
U - eeea dram cve^ dominates
i;L-,j'•■Jr* "J. 1
.■> f ' ■' *'s * ■; Ji“r, ‘ . ■■■*'.. ' ■■ '■ ' '
investigations conducted here. And
within these walls has been contrived
a new application of photography to
star transit, which will have an im- :
the very temple of Puritanism, nte ; portant effect on astronomy generally.
sortMCO of the statement* here I “But,” he went on, smilingly, “our;
. ,-----1.. i-------- ■! advance with the times is not carried*
on in the skies only; we 'are progress-
ing wonderfully *with the ordinary , « .
education, first of our clerics, and then : * fleet "Khout ships and officers, or an
i of our laity. Take for instance the {
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army without generals and captains.
But his main argument contains a
He would have a Church
where all are servants of the Most
High, all banded ’together to do His
priests' who'shalTbJoniy pritatAmen ; J5lrk-J *-11 “fiving to bring to pass th.
who know theology and nothing else. Kingdom ofHeaTenonearth.^ S° must
nothing of the world or of matters
secular? Here, in America, before all
things our American Catholics must be
prepared to contend against atheism,
households
has dwindled te this! Scattered all Inquisition; how do you get away*from
over the country, the body once so or how do you explain those dark biota
active, so dominant and energetic, has , in your Church’s past history?” (
ihrunkfrom what tt once was in an- The prelate replied. “Can you not ^*T“ *
>stral New England to one-third of a see that those mistakes were rather tho?ou?faly A““"an a*d
with- American ideas.
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i“'"T w.'r:Sn^eS* |M» Itww * a. M. WtatiB.
rual director, Rev. C J. Smith. O. MJ 1' ■■
ALTAR WINES
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\ in tnelr own hours—tuts religious edu- t
its beauty, its pathos,. its sublimity, > cation to go hand in hand with these-
| onlar teaching provided by the State ;
As Dr. Ireland has well pointed out,' T 4
the State school, by ignoring the re-
Hgious instruction of its children, is
doing harm to the State. Therefore ; aA ■ wl F\ -
Catholics, while ns earnest as their > w ■ wB wmMBB
1 Protestant brethren for the retention !v
There is
in * ,
and God for- er3t’on*” In America the Church is free
should be. We from all trammels. It can act as it thinks
We would even ProPer* & enjoys the com pie test auton«
j Cwifc- -,*-£14 in £^otte4^i£}cal I
born, or, at all events, was brought holy See, in dealing with the Church
lobe baptized. The Sun remarks: in America, is to let condemnations j .. „
*‘If this Puritan Church isnotraising alona The world is not governed by : _
«p sons and daughters to take the places these, but by persuasive presentation*
the fathers who are passing away, of the truth. We regard the Protest-
’ ~ * * . ant sects as our brethren. Our Cardi-
nal follows in the footsteps of Dr. Car-
rol, the first Archbishop of Baltimore,
who declared: Tt never was our doc-
trine that salvation can be obtained !
* commun- I
ion of the Church ’ As to your objec- 0 ome a -
tions: the Church that once condemned •P<’-nt4n«ous, harmonious, and united
“Sam "said he. -Wre • Galileo now provides some of tho a^on on the part of her lay members.
•cam, _ Th 1<aye ftll to th#ir prieit^ their i w ~
' -0 4, au r’l i r j .K -u_ Marys Branch ?»o. 304?—Meet* on the
______________ ________ _____.... I officers. But the Colonel and the sub- (jH, ?nll1 Jrb TllA411n,.u tnAnfh m.„r i
ting this moment, the first and oldest] *}*"“ cannot poasibly fight thebat. •
Jesir.t College in America, there is
? -- 'P.
grow on one day by day, and all day
tlong
”Tb«t illm Ejyptiaa shaft uplifts '
Its pf>i t to eaUh the dawn's and sunset's
drifts
Of various jfold.”
And ih it adt so with the Church in the i *----------------------
irreat Republic? Is it not thus, inefee'd; | o« «»• MhninsMe •ocular educ|
tn;-.i Roinein America is actually show-
in- iuT-plfi Tower ins* aloft, pure,
1. nitifid. in the rgid^t 7>f a great
• r; \-;izin'/ t ac*: <»n thM.»* inn?-. 1’
G ttrern ntiM.; step. ifuM‘V
'••••-.I into the golden xni-.V c ' ’
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iv
II
Ladjes Entrance > Soledad 8t. PROPS
ED- STEVES & SONS
Wholesale and Retail Dealers in
LUmbek,
ft te«, SatBHs, Stefojte.
■XMfceand Yaz&s: £ & g. K. Depot sad Sunset
Crossing on East Commerce Street
SAN ANTONIO, TMXA8. <
KKl&Vifil-JS’SSS:
ftlWVW. ^OX<sSmJ^
iHmfRNG AND RUBBER STASP&.
> ■MilfaWartBhJr^
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In no smaJest respect do such men
Gibbons and Ireland lag behind in —
the onward' march of civilisation, f Sullivan,
, the Church shall be well J
abreast of the times, and even in ad-
‘The Church,”
says one of them, **must prove equal
to the hour and occasion. * It must en-
ter into the spirit of the twentieth cen-
Skw-1
ip
WfL
W'
. “But, sir,” said I, “can
-- NO . * r 1U MS W**O »UIA&* V. VUta „ *, w.v
growing upto fill th* Cnurch ■ nation*! church *o much u , tu,n Bnd into tha 8pirit oi th. time*
no children to to make it keep pace with the time* | >nd of the conditions of it, environ-
eeme rushing out of school with merry ; and with the aspirations of the nation. J ^neu t, and it must have both pluck and
The New York Sun, in a recent But, sir, said I, “can you rise in addition to these qualities,
makes the smallness of Congre- above your old traditions, many of j howeTeT.t it must give evidence nf an
X—A L. * * TOhinVi ‘Aw* nwal nut KowrhAnv ‘ .... .. I
aoaahly blame them? Mr. Jamw Eu^ j weU “ ecclesiastical organization that
mU Lowell auurad me, only a few ! wtth, authority,
weeks before bls death, that he eonsid-’ beard. .
ered the demand* ef th. Catholic* fair |, ■“»«*.> ™n«®t»red that the Qwch
aad reasonable, and in accordance ft®;^* Bepublie I am eo fondly depict- i
with juatioo aM ooaimoa-aoBW 'Both ; ^“K ’^ll be, not the Church of Mdd|tkr|
Ordinal fHhhntia nd Archbishop John i wum, or of the Imperial City, or er*tt‘)
aa at preeent constituted. On 1 •*!**•* Sodie. It will not be Bom* *»:|
the aontrwy, thdy gloried in them- -1 we hitherto known it, hampered.
_ - ■ ■ - ■ -
stroythem,*\aaidthe'Avehbisho|K Noj
thoM two sptendid |w*lates» Americans
and loyal B^xbiteano to the very epra
would Mttarte mtefwy attempt to
hfador ffoombteatfoi
State AH ti^sy wk
a man a rijjfhtd
©wu happiness any mJ
another? I
The earthquakes gi
out tuodG beautifo.'l h
tains in the heart!
Lhshonest menfeonij
froi^ themselves as
benest men know and
Let your charitable
®ious gifts. Theie hsJ
of supprossinj
tUde and abuse, j 1
do rot hear khat I
€^ve forth its mcladv
rushing of IhemifchtiJ
spouse to any other'in
ftanman, than certain
ft ^ams of coming;
accommodate Jours!
that «om4
. fashioned instruinent!
have cmly *iverj
and will n|rt id
5*der a touch tjhat 1
raptm* or
:^«rgeBLwt f ft
(Of the fathers who are pawing away,
how can it hope to grow and flourish as
It did when families of eight, ten, And
twelve were common among the godly
people of New England?’’
How prophetic, then, are the words
OftheoldNew England Congregational only by those actually in the
jniaiaLer, the Rev. Joshua Hopewell,
to the immortal Sam Slick, well nigh
SO years ago:
ago in’ to have an established churcn:
St may be a very good church, and u
B groat deal better than many -we have;
'bntetill it ain’t the cnurch of the Pil- Jesir.t College in America, there is a
grim Fathers.” “What churoh, minis- magnificent observatory; and within
ter?*’ said L “Whyft said he, “trie the next few weeks the fatherin charge
Roman Catholic Church; before long it 1 is about to publish a work of original
will be the established church of the
United States”
Now, when it is remembered that
New Kngland has been for two cen^. *'*
ies.1
Importance of
‘fearlessly made, that it is fast becom-
ing the very stronghold of Catholicism,
aanaet possibly be under-estimated.
For to win the fight in New England
Is to win it all over America. - of our laity. Take for instance the
But if th* Church in the Republic 1* ] Catholic University of America, over
. . 1 t _„rji * grand trutn.
you think for one moment that we de-
vote all our energies to turning out |
to strive to the uttermost. Lay energy,
lay action, lay thought and promptitude
will avail what the teaching or even
the most devoted self-sacrifice of the
clergy cannot hope to accomplish. It
is no good that priests and prelates
spend and be spent, whilst the lay
members of their flocic are given over
to a political scoundrelism which would
put to shame the vilest outcasts of hu-
manity. It is of little avail that the
priests of the Church preach glorious
{truths, or raise aloft* pure ideals,
r timid and reactionary press
f - 'ftftft
H
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rl
til
•red the demands of the Catholics fair
Bote ' ?>*» not the Church of M^dfik
1 Ireland informed me in the- meetearn- j -
desire to interfere at all with the State [' Puritan Rome, It will ^e entaM*
teew^ j we have hitherto known it^ hampered ^
1 turiee old, and altogether and hbpeftftft;
' !***!«■ ■ rt **> A* A . aw4. ■ ^9. - frr*■'/?/
with the sphdt of to-day. It
Borne Americanised—ia other
teenklw demoei^ite And A__
- (Cootlaeed on Third Page.)
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in America is to let condemnations
alone.
And the Church, animated >f each month.
, with new youthfulness, feeling itself
really and truly American, divested of
all care for the past^ and full of hope
for the future, is ready for the battle;”
Yes, the Church, as represented by
her officers, is ready, iut are the soldiers
i in her ranks equally prepared? The
; weak point undoubtedly in the Church
" the lack of energy and
i[tr
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ths State system, would add to it ths
religious education, not only of Its own
Church, but of all the other Churches
df'-u! i In the Republic.
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< as
They'V."^ P- Wtat, illumined by th. light ojj
______ __i___ n evm* hzivkmfml nf tha irrlTlimrir thT* _ ..... 5-
ghlldren because they are not
Connecticut come startling facta on
tho decline of Congregationalism—the
dying out of the once dcAninant re-
ligion, formerly so tyrannical,
young people are i
Old meeting-houses;
______________ ______ I tain ill-formed Protewtant* that Catho- ! th*n_oth’r A”_ A“e?”“!
that th* old **■ mergad in th* I }^®*, *r* i<UOr*n^ ,n^ hop*. ' nfnnltr in th. R.miH-
- ■ -n i lessly in arrear of the times; out of th* m&lntenance ofunity in the Repub-
I? tone*, in short, with th* .piritef th*: }ic- Bome- By whllt ™ ma* t MEALS TO ORDER AT ALL HOURS
1 bm, ; however much we may dislike or tefik
i ^Xnd aa regards the desire of too eiPla5n away or absolutely deny the [ft1Ul Dining Room for Families,
ft* Catholics to control the religions odn- ' *acti Rome» nevertheless, is the ons Main Plaza and Soledad St.
oation of their children, who ean rea- 1 <reat Church—the one vast political as..j J, L0USTAUNAU & P. BERGERON*
, with a voice
And especially
promptitude of action which are not to
In his : Braden, .Jr.: sergeant at
Tries at Truth,” ! Rice; - - -
thich there shall ] bearers, J. McMahon, IL Froebel; trustee. I
be neither pries'?? nor ministers, 1
churches nor ordinances Thin, taken
by itself, is an ideal impossible of re-
alization. He might as well plead for ;
John
wolski;
Notzon.
Thomas
mH tee,
Stephen
Mathew Nosek; Color Bearer. Julian
’ Czernteski.
gibbons’ reading circlk—Meets every
other Thursday afternoon at the Public
Library. Pres .Misj F.DeZavalla; Vice-
tns , Pres., Miss L. Miller; Second Vice-Pres.,
Treas., Mi*s Lucy Ly le
I. F. SHiELOS,
ATTORNEY AT.LAW
(Buady Building.)
210 E* HOUSTON STREET
BAN ANTQXrrQ,
“Elite”
Only French Restaurant in the city.
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Letorteai#
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ty them.
them*
?Jt,mBdi«val -nd ...
• in anoth.r Maw
*£r WendaJl
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■ gjssipeft — v
Miisi^ipP1 may J
3 I believe that tne
if she will j but!
ideals and in J
noblest trail itid
Paritan BpmeJ
ft United ^tete
> EngHsk-spdakiiJ
(To be ksont
1S]
Let no possible ; loss
patronage or gold, tern
of that whiclj yoj
your conscience disapj
thousand times td be si
Bin; nobler to spend w
the bitterness of un
thsu become a Uo|low
hohow friend. ; Wo
main poor foreveft thl
respecting heir of thei
gpring. than, in janol
ghakespeare’a “coin j
for the “vile drachmod
fcire of wrong ‘ loi droJ
blood. ’’ , i 1
li>aty.l
The sense of duty 1
It comes to us from
folded in the unfqldin
h one of God’s grjeateJ
brings us into th^ mq
Sod and makes US acd
It opens up to pl
changeable and hicb
nniverse ean abrogate
as a eourse of clond'd
pursue, we shall bJ
neglect we shall .briiJ
inevitable misery.!
A cheerful *out whl
wisdom of the Creau
everv turn thinking 1
Me might have made!
now and then churns I
lew the diaphragm wi
•r tends a cheerfhl mfl
plexus, denoting that
with God and nktun
sad goodwill witk thi
whoia in fact afc opd
tical. pb II ku thrfipic
atver become adyspej
On* C'au^e 1
Expectancy of tfepul
■Lny secular afid rd
Fear of bankruptcy i
a fine business and seq
lag amouL7 the teonej
of slander and abuse
all the J one-- beaked v
biting-. Many or ths
life, like hyenas,! flee]
cus meet theni. H
pa: - : :‘.»r d
wr - .lown uhuer
n4’ '
.---_ft_,--J
Tile A.meftc*u
They are possessed d
virtues They hrive a
of fair-play, of tr^rth,
have an innate lo5re d
If on this natural! tree
sapling of supemhtura
grow into a mighjty d
lifting its branches td
lug fruits of sandtifica
form a Christiay. na
which has seldoii bei
never surpassed. -pCarl
Trite kente
We win by teniderd
1J
111
Sorrow is not t4<
ihmtj
bette
now provides some of the
greatest astronomers of the day. In
this very college in “which we are sit- I x _IVi_ *t t__*.
tie single-handed; the private soldiers [. uai uljr<.lurj t >. ji. ,
must follow where their officers lead. L; president. William Campbell; vi e-i
Archbishop Ireland frankly concedes L president, Joseph A. O'Krillv; recording
to Protestantism a lay energy andftecretary, P J. Senlley; financial secro-
promptitude of action which are not to | tarv, A. F. Pollok ; treasurer, Ed.
be found in his own Church. In his J Braden, Jr.: sergeant at arms, H. B. ■
recently published ’’Tries at Truth/’ ! Rice; sentinel, Junes Clark: color 1
Mr. Arnold White fondly dreams of a | bearer. Con*t Weiss; aRsi tant color i
Christian Church in ivhich there shall } bearers, J. McMahon, H. Froebel; trustee. I
neither 'priesft nor ministers, | three years, James H Tierrre . j
Ancient order-
OF III B E K N 1 A N > :
of Americj. Div. j
No. 1 ef the A. <>. t
IL of Bexnr < o. I
Mnet? in Suaefer A
Braden’s Ball on
1st and 3rd Thurs-
days of each month
President, Dr-J. T.
FitzSlmon. Vice-President. J. T. Me-
Queeney;Rec. Sec., P. E. O’Hara; Fin.
Sec., C.T> Hogan; Treas., P. J. Scnlley;
Sgt. at Arms, M. Joyce;Sentinel, P/Cody.
8T. Albert's SOCIETY—Meet at their
hall every 1st Sunday in tne month at,5
i p. uu President. August A. Zizik:
Vice-president, Theodore Weiss: Secre-
tary, Constantine Weifti; Assistant
Sebretary, Joseph Morawietz; Treasurer.
John Kush; Marshak Wm. Dobro-
Assistant Marshal. Alexander
Trustees, Ed. Kotula and
Watzlavzick. Relief Com-
Joseph Czernicski and
Malgorzewick. Steward,
really te k..p pac* witk the onward j which 1 have the honor to pre*ide.
yuah of ovonta In that marvelous coun- <
try, the most keep the pace in every '
uartieular, otherwise her increase will ,
be a eurae te herself and to the coun-
try atlarga Quality, not quantity, is
what must first be considered. The
greoipltatten of vast hordes of ill-cdu- j
; and free-thought, and scepticism, and
Jf AM.rita woul* bfttti* le'*s"than a i the “f®1. “U“! k??P
•alamity. It ia net sufficient for Rome ;
tn the West te be fruitful and multiply
aad replenish the earth. She must
pr*vid. that h*r off.prinfb. burr*»»e»
•f par* lif* and wholtaom. moral* , 7_hl_c^
Zhar h**om* eiiiaen. ol no m.an cityj | T* ” --•
tet them taka h**d that th*y b* worthy 1 . . .. . x, .
„ --H*r*, arain. j i m th* fow year* they ara at the Uni-
«oma te th* eonaluiw that th* Cath*- | w»i^. th*y learn to trace the connec-
u Aninr Ktat tA I tion between science and dogma. They I •
£tain± ta iminr it 2 *^.umiTation ! mak« • P«>*>un<i of the prinei- | **”**£? °?~ar* aad. n®£ard i
tadftutlv to b*d*air*d. » ' P1^,®< “ »PPU«d to society, I aMeafwork for Vh? Ro^ta Sh^
! with a psvchological study of normal 1 w B Freat work lor the Roman Catho-
. lie laity in the American Republic.
And if they but realize this.
Church, like a mighty army,
ipl
thoroughly well-versed ia sociology, ■ manned Jt°d equipped,
And so, if all these her ideals are car- !
risdoutin their entirety, itgoes with-*1
out saying that the Church will speed-
[CONTJMUTD. J
The decline of population In New
Xngland is a remarkable fact which at*
tracts general attention In the United
Staten, and forces itself on pu blia
notiee in a hundred different waya 1
■ For instance, once thriving and teen>
iag farms are becoming desolate wll-
demeesaa The want of farmers ia
nans and daughter* L__, -------
l*rup n.ae; Rachel mourns for h.r ayes, hopeful of the brilliant future. . ^oal„
* From These were my thought* ia that mo , fc . _/
ment of silenc* . • , ~
I broke it reluctantly. Bishop
Keane had just been declaring that
his people did not seek to make theii
u I as UOVLVUBIi UUMS VM VV **w .
to make it keep pace with th* times Bnd of the conditions of its environ-
<l*e. Th. New York Sun, in a recent Rut, sir, .aid I, “can you ri*o nuah. In addition to these qualities,
issue, i
Nationalist^ families^ topic of a wti^ch^are hopelessly of • unquestionable intellecUiaw-upcftority;
Shurch has 492,000 membersan£&S5,000 i Bishop Keane, of the massacre of St I ‘^nau*t dom-'“lte ‘tserauu.m. &nd
* The New England race; Bartholomew’s Day and of the Holy;
Scattered all Inquisition; how do youget awawfrom ; ,
prove the most powerful educational
j organization. To effect this we must
se^thr/those^mistakes were'Vlther1 ft1* *’' the ««“• tim*
*miilionfamilieslnforty-four States and political than ecclesiastical, committed “ft™"’hly . Amarican’ ft *J” • .
i?? . .—\ ----bv the State rather than the Church— i "’.‘ft American ideas. Our foreigm
-v* , priestshave not divested themselves,
U ■ and do not divest themselves, of the
no ; old spirit. They are bound down by
, the past. What we want is a new gen-
for-
We
ab devoutly to bedssirod.
Her teak, however, la indeed no light
•ns. I realised this to its fullest.ex* I
tent so I sat in the great Jesuit College ;
fit Georgetown, talking to some of the , , ,
Roman Hierarchy <on the question of
Catholic Instruction sad education, and
my heart sank at the thought *of ha
literature, and history.
tatb meet influences the other in thia
. .Strange followahip; whether Rome
geminates America, or America tri*
mnphsoyer the Italian element But
fn the faooc of x&x friends I took eom-
forM the good qualities of the Ota
World and the New were equally proe-
ent And Ireflectod, aawe cat a no
. : Jbent in deep atUlneas, that if the*
! ft . Chureh ean bnt rige o*t of her lower
aelf, with sueh men to guide her aha
!; OHII hot fail to aooomplish tea work i ft *
the Maa undertaken, orto win in the ft”?01* •*
‘Withered be the hand raised to de< : aad fo^fored by catfon* and rule* een-
a ’ to w to to . - ’ I . A nr?as . i*r d^.A'Xi ■ m '
lemly incompatible and out of tqn^S-ft
will bo ft
? words, j
L abnormal mental conditions, j
Their cosmological course involves no ■ ,------------ —
■m*U knowledge of ebemirtry, physic*, ' Chur^.like “ mighty army, brilliantly' Mjfi. M, Phelan.; Sec.. Miss Cora Bovle;
q-jjg- are officered, splendidly disciplined, per- I Tm™ t t« •
*—s.i_ -----j __j ----x---will j
i fiv^r^Luxv, «nu nuiurj. in learning . BaOT® on to victory.
migW*. B.rtoT^d"tato th^;
• reeteref the Catholic University of *l«em free. We *trive a* earnestly a*
America, and Monsignor Campbell, a j our *rofo*tent ft
; tion. God fs Light, anefin Him is
darkness at all.*’
Thustheelo^ueatBeotorof the great: unreekoned with in calculation* of any ;
ous of exercising an influence either for j
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The Southern Messenger Under the Cross (San Antonio, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 36, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 9, 1893, newspaper, November 9, 1893; San Antonio, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1247505/m1/2/: accessed June 19, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .