Southern Messenger (San Antonio and Dallas, Tex.), Vol. 30, No. 7, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 24, 1921 Page: 4 of 12
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! A Mergsnthaler Idnotyp® l^sehtoe. One of the latest
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BUSINESS CARDS
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Crockett 3338 Crockett
Crockett 3338 Crockett
STREET
330
330
ELM
ELM
STREET
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£
GARLAND HOUSE-HEATING SYSTEM
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Crockett 8010
and
£
We have paid, and
THE CELTIC CROSS.
136-138 West
Commerce Street
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$
Easter Gandies
different
THAT W WILL ENJOY IMMENSELY
■i
jlJt ■ ■ Candy Eggss Rabbits and Novel-
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great-
unto
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CARBON PAPER
This is tlie kind we sell—it is very tooth-
some-and delicious. After eating
it there remains a. craving for more.
M
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ALLELUIA!
That word convoy a
; Columba.
Generous and Critical.
If ths people are naturally geuer-
State
Bifocals
The Lesson of Patrick.
The partly of Ireland's woman-
The Irish maid
Loyal and brave to yon.
Soggarth Aroon,
Yet be no slavo to yon,
Soggarth Aroon,—
Nor, out of fear to you—
Stand np bo near to you—
Ocit! out of fear to you!
Soggarth Aroon!
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£
1
§
DULLNIG
PRINTING CO.
Legal or Letter Size.
$1.50 and $2.25 per box of
_100 Sheets
DULLNIG
PRINTING CO. ‘
PRINTED
ENVELOPES
Vl|
I
I
2
Business Size.
1,000'DaQdy 2x
1,000 Bond, 20-lb ..
1.000 Linen, 20-lb.
or
We Will Print for You
5,908
of the Dandy 2X kind for
$17.90
JES F. WOLFE,
$gr.
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BOYLE-BRIDGER
OPTICAL OO»
SOS W. commerce S6.
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re-
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we are sending
HEATS EVERY ROOM
CHEAPLY INSTALLED
ECONOMICALLY MAINTAINED
EASY TO OPERATE
GIVES QUICK HEAT
Address: Dept. 4
SOUTHWESTERN SEATING CO
Crockett 8010 SAM AKT0MI0 Hume for iStimate
RSa5a5E525H5E5ESa5a5E5H535a5Era5H5a5a525H5aS25a5252Sa5HSES25ZE2S?S25BSaSZ5E52K525KiKa5H5KaSB5a535E£ESHt3
Dreams I
May Gome True I
1,000 Linen Finish... .$6.50 |
or
We Will Print for You
5,000
Hammermill 8^x11. for
$17.90
... NIC TENGG
Prayer Books
Easter Cards
Catholic Bibles and
Catholic Testaments.
220 W. Commerce St.,Sian Antonio.
KNIGHTS TO WAGE WAR
ON THE WHITE PIAGUE,
Dr. Edward W. Buckley of St.
Paul, Minn., Las been appointed
chairman of a commission of in-
quiry created by the Knights of Co-
lumbus to make a thorough investi-
gation of methods of euro of tuber-
culosis In the United States.
At their last international conven-
tion, held in New York August,
J\^;psV . - • -
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l8««rK«t88i!e««wtrr»tctM'”#c»Hf‘£CMiN’,BM'!,!11,1,’,,f’,»<i* -iff--1??
i 11
were sent—$1,000 to
Most Bev.. Dr. Harty,
» of Cashel. Thurles,
Rev. Dr.
Killar-
Rev.
of Hos-
tile warmth of hope. Yet, whatever
of good or Hl the coming days may
hold, the new-old cry of Faith will
be the final utterance of the well-
&HKLO WfBTMING
w awm.
Undertakes and .Embalmer
StS EL PASO STREET,
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And
forms of Irish superstition
exceedingly beautiful. The
_■ of the national character is
expressed even here. Thus, when a
babe smiles in its sleep, the Irish
mother, recking her child, bends
down and kisses it, believing that in
that moment an angel has come to
whisper heavenly messages to the
pure infant soul.
Bartering all far Faith,
Following e'er;
That others deem a wraltt^
Meeting and fair.
ip-
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It is so easy to make such a dream true, and
we’ll show you how it’s done with a
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cus, they are also exceptionally criti-
cal. Many a tribute has been paid
to the quickness of their judgments
and the justice of their decisions
by the princes of intellectual Eng-
land—the great ones, for instance,
ef the drama and the opera. Of
■ themselves, they are the keenest of
all critics. They ere ever ready to
laugh at the foibles of their compa-
triots. Ou the other hand, they are
supersensitive to external criticism.
Bitter lessons have made them ex-
cessively proud. The gibe of the
foreigner—even the English-speak-
ing foreigner—Is an impertinence.
There are those who can see no
goad in the Irish. We have known
these who considered all poets mad.
There are those who would- crown
Dark Rosaleen with u halo, and
place the palm branch in her hand.
Few things earthly are faultless.
The future Is dark. What glories
Jit may .bring to her tried sonl we
cannot guess. A cloud of sorrow
ehrouds it now. At times a ray of
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g If you have put off buy-
H tog an Easter Hat, you
S need not fear that you
g will be disappointed. We
g have arranged a special
I showing of Easter hats
j for to-day, Friday, and
|j Saturday, that is? truly
| distinctive—hats thaf will
instantly appeal to you.
Many of the latest modes
have just been produced
and will be shown for the
g first time.
iJSSww
I
eide’o cannon,
crated by :
■...: -proud
“‘Where ivied arcli or ptllair Innes,
Plead hbughtily £or :glortea gone.*’':
itis
Wsel, for
FAUL BWGG!
420 MILITARY PD/tEA
Dealer In Staple and Fancy
Mn,4^inS^4^Bt“g!^p^n<IiEi
French Government for his work as
chief medical ofdeer o? the K. of C.
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glasses for XI
the two pair
need—-Both far tas4 sear
csrrectian ever prerent, ta
never noticed!. We gfisdl
hoth vicious into CiBE.
Tbs people are deeply religious,
and many are the uncanonized saints
tn the simple household of the coun-
try parts. The priest Is beloved.
The people are. in the truest sense,
his children. To him do they look
guidance. He is their father,
their champion, their consoler.
"They are a priest-ridden people!"
So says the enemy. To the Irish,
this is the Englishman’s nearest ap-
proach to humor.
The Bills of Vivian.
God 1b ever present to them. To
Him and to His Holy Mother they
speak as to those present, and their
1,GOO. 2x3 V, for......$3.85
1,000 214x4 ......$4.35
FRENCH BOY SCOCTS.
(By N. C. W. C. News Service.)
Paris, Feb. 25.—Boy scouting un-
der Catholic leadership in France,
far from supplanting the Associa-
tion of the French Catholic Youth,
is working alongside and cooperat-
ing with it, according to M. Georges
Goyau, one of the leaders of the
movement.
The Catholic boy scouts of Franco
have a distinctive organisation of
their own. This Catholic federation
binds together associations that have
been formed In Paris and through-
out the country, enables lads to
work ont tho ideal ■ of Christian
charity wHh tie energies of youth,
makes its rule of conduct the ob-
servance of the Ten Command-
ments, recognises God in nature,
and thereby cultivates a love of
plants and animals, urges the prac-
tice of thrift and prompts ilts mem-
bers to be pure in thought and
word and action.
The summer expeditions which
were a part of the program of the
Catholic scouts last year will be re-
vived this year. The spirit which
------ --------- ... — ----- animates these expeditions, which
?_ but rwigned, Heart of are based on the modes furnished
tuas, Domino, by American boy scouts, is well il-
lustra ted in the following prayer
' offered up by the scoutmaster in
planting the camp. „
"Christ, my Lord and my Chief,
i Who hast chosen me in spite of my
weakness to be chief and guardftu
I of my brother scouts, grant that my
word may be a light to their path,
that I may show them Thy Divine
imprint In the world Thou has cre-
ated. Tesch them Thy holy law,
and lead them on to Thee, my God,
into the camp of rest and joy,
where Thou hast set Thy tabernacle
and ours forever." .
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Our Presentation of EASTER |
HATS Is Truly Superb I i;
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lUhlua eMa OlMoses. Priced,
rS2iS£S5t?s’OTdlp“*ft™»
The altar is set; we uplift again the
chalice.
The priest is in purple; the >ell
booms to the sacridce.
The trumpets snmmon to death,
Ireland rallies—
Tool or free? _ ______________
overpaid tho price.
—Rev. P. R. McCaffery, O. C. C., In
The Advocate of Australia.
W®. Basse Co.
121-123 Milila-i'y Plaza
Heavy Hardware, AatomoWe Ac-
cemries anti Bhrksiaith SHppfe. f
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_ eyes the radiance a£ victory.
Alleluia! Praise ye the Lord, far
now our Faith is not vain, Christ
the Master, has vanquished death.
We, too, shall rise and be clothed
again in our ffeah and with our own
■eyes see Him in His glory. If ws„
follow the Master in lite, even —
■■■: Golgotha,; and like Him suffer "and
. do the will Of the Father, a never-
ending Alleluia will he on our . lips
and ..eternal Easter joy tWBl dwell la,
our hearts. ■■ ■■.:■■
■ He who known that he is of use
to those aromid him, that his life is
t cutmdihgdh:.helpfulne^,.:.hha.a faun-
I■■■ tain of ..tapplness in'Wowa aaul.-,
- . . ’ . - - - ■
ry ■ ---—ATHORe xor fsanmate jg
1020, the Knights of Columbus un-
dertook to wage war on the white
plague. For several years there had
been a movement ame--
looking for the establishment" of
sanitariums in various parts of tho
country by the K. of C. This the
knights had found impracticable, al-
though they have for long given
support to numerous institutions for
the core and cure of tuberculosis.
Now, under the leadership of Dr.
Buckley, who Is Supreme Physician
of the Knights of Columbus and a
recognized medical authority, the K.
of C. will conduct a nation-wide sur-
vey of the methods employed to cure
tuberculosis. Dr. Buckley will have
some renowned doctors and exper-
ienced laymen ou hiB committee. Archbishop
and the next international conven-
tion of the Knights of Columbus,
the “American First” convention to
be held in San Francisco next Aug-
ust, will act on the most comprehen-
sivo surveys ever made, as numerous
tuberculosis experts have volunteer-
ed to aid the K. C. committee in its
work.
Dr. Buckley was recently knighted
by Pope Benedict and awarded the
North, South, East and
gaunt gables are met at every turn,
their broken reef-trees and plough,
ed-up hearths laid bare, each a
heart-rending hook whose opening
chapter tells of s'mh» happy fam-
ily, but whose final words are a
tearful adieu to tile homeless wan-
derers. The landscape' Js lire fuse Jy
punctuated by tho empty ^bius
whence there went forth, in wild dis-
. may into a dreary radio the best
young blood of the crautry.
Sa-
The largest platen-press printing plant L
JjN THE CITY OF JSAN ANTONIO ■
Within ti^toweeks wT® be operating nine platen presses and with all our other
modern S jabor-saving machinery can quickly take care of our growing trade.
D«e»« KBfincvDCi^CEcaeeaMlotPMiaouaekM COBS If *OD6nse«t*fi*—-■
a«fiWMM8sr«ri>«'»uEc.Esan.cssS^e.uSvvbuev.ee.s.xsr>*wssagfliprirfM ________ «-.*><» A diA
UP-TO-DATE TYPg FAC^WONTJEBFUL WOUK-^EXPEBIEKCED EMPLOYEES-BEASOKABLE
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...........p,bb«b.™b-««™™«||c Queen of the Plant/* does weiything but talK * |
I Output equal to the production of ten men. |
PRINTED
LETTERHEADS -|r
Standard Size 8^x11 i|
1,000 Hammermill... - .$4.40 | \
1,000 Next Best Grade $5.85 | /
Tolerant People. 1
They are tolerant os>d bigoted. CSr-j
dinar Uy, both Catholics and Protest-1
ants live together in harmony, each
respecting the other. Indeed, their
native courtesy is seen in tho Cath-
olics’ more than ordinary regard for
their Protestant neighErar, who Is
the stranger In their midst, their
guest as it were. In conversation
between tho two, there is seldom
any reference to religion, for the
Irish are naturally reserved mid fifty
of enaniring into the private iiffafrs
of each other. There are but sam-
ples of that fnstinetho poiheneim*;*'"*'"''2,22i,“.X^i«Z“== 72
that is so remarkable a feature of; fsl1 » 111 the dayB of
the country. Even the poorest and j
the most illiterate know the correct
thing to do in exceptional cirenm-1
, I, , ,L'J in- .......... IL r II 11 lil ■! I. i.iiJJTK rrvavwvrriTW-rww-rWT<|7W^^
ffiaQcaB( where It it & quastlsn ofl
... Canrt^y, J Iff
Ou the other liasd, the Catholic
Intolerant of any irreverent refer-
-■.r.i.™,■. ..-■----. —.pm, . H,«i once to the .religion he holds sacred.
- teu ton the heart of: every worthy He has had to fight a bitter fight
J Irishman, as It is written on the to preserve it.
' fair face of his Kmereld isle. Go
.where you will, you and ths ruiai
OildR B’lopfdiiSfs jthhfvsift.
Her beads while she number'd, the
baby still slumber’d.
And smiled in her face as she
bended her knee;
Oh! blest be the warning, my child,
thy sleep adorning.
For I know that the angels are
whispering to thee.
Alleluia! That word convoys to
the entire world a message of joy
and victory. The priest at the altar
intones it, the choir repeats it, the
whole congregation takes it up.
The bells Bend it forth from their
lofty homes in tho spires, the
breezes of spring waft it across vale
and hill, the birds sing it In the
trees, and even the flowers of the
meadow seem to whisper it into the
ears of their neighbors.
The sound of that message awak-
ens a joyous echo in the hearts of
men, and even penetrates to the
ears of the prince of darkness on
bis fiery throne end makes him
tremble.
Alleluia! Christ is risen from the
dead, the Lamb of God that had
been elain has regained life and
will taste death no more. Only for
a few short hours the dark grave
could hold. Him, then He fulfilled
His prophesy and broke the shackles
of death.
Alleluia! The angels In white re-
splendent garments rolled away the
large stone from the tomb, and lin-
gered at its side to announce to the
mother of the Holy One, to the
other pious women and through
them to Peter and John and the rest
of the Apostles, that Christ was
risen, indeed. .And soon He showed
Himself to the twelve in His trans-
figured body, the tsacred wounds
gleaming like rubles, and in His
MESSAGE OF THE
EMPTY TOMB.
The Easter message is the mes-
sage of the empty tomb. It is the;
message of tho new lite, higher and
purposeful. Do we need ftT Never
in all history such tin outreaebing
for it. In the vision of this higher
life, in. the assurance of this un-
broken immortal life where the
great father-God Is ever true to the
ideals of righteousness, and love,
men can stand with * sure trend,
though, the red tides surge around
them, and contend for human lib-
erty.
We couple the Easter
with the empty tomb and the an-
gel’s message, “He la not «-
t. la risen, as he Bald.”
■ fob
.Ob, the cabins long deserted. Old-
en memorien av?aKc—
Ob, the pleasant, pknisunt places!
Hush! the blackbird la the brake!
Oh, the dear, and kin&y voices! Now
their hearts ore fslsi to ache. ...— ... .. . ... .
i speech is very Intimate. Their be-
Unfav^ef.^de. i loved dead are round about them,
„ A Vfitill united with them In. the Com-
rtn 01 Ssfcts. They doubt not
the things we are t0fthat “the devil goeth about Ilka a
Ini raarfnE tion> 6es5clnS whom he may
land is stilled in dea-!i can it ee “■•devour," but they place Implicit
If h“ ”TQrie8t <rt ’K0 I681 ,|E| trust in the angel spirits whose God-
things of the past ere the brent h of gj^an an tv is to smard them Deal-
er nostrils. When* ' pale> Tredltlonj wffh^e nn-
^iseen, is it any wonder if some few
BeTbA^fch11!™ V»| thevlo£ the Ieas educated sometimes sin
The Irish are emctiennl, yei they th h f creduiIty?
are also calculating. Fieir ocsiness - - -
instinct is keen. Met., and women|®°®e (£orlns o{
too, are plentiful who might hold i
their own with any in the world. p 17
Yet their progress Is not whist one
might expect, for they are hamper-
ed in many ways, civij ly and -otial-
ly. But perhaps the!, which debars
the majority of the people from at-
taining wealth is the iniotione! side
of their character. They are too 1
generous, too hospitable, too con- .
scientious, to be succsj-afu! competi-
tors. If any proof were warded of
their natural business acumen, onoi
need only point to Ireland’s emi-!.
ne. c men in any walk of life in al-/
^nost any country of the world, i
The difference is tlmi outside their-
own country -they are no longer:
dealing with kindred (spirits. Theyk
have a battle to fight fit which thes
fittest only will survive, and the' - -
Irishman loves a brills—o.t any- bind is proverbial.
£md. ; preserves the primal bbauty of an
] innocent soul far beyond the years
I that bespeak the "knowledge of
I good and evil” in other nations.
Tbs beloved Apostle of the race
camo to them bearing aloft the
image of Mary. He told the maiden
the tale of her purity. He told the
mother the wonder of her maternity.
Through sixteen hundred years they
have handed on the lesson, bo that,
even in this our day, the Irish maid-
en Is to the world the type of purity,
and the Irish mother the type of
tenderness and of highest love—of
consecrated love. The instinct of
respect and chivalry for womankind
Then why not dream of the time when your
home wifi be like a big sun-parlor, every room
breathing comfort to your face as you enter the
door?
Ireland. In menus t— _
commendo tpiritum maum—Into
Thy hands, O Lord, I commend my
spirit.
Rev,. Dr.
mi Cashel, 1
County Tipperary; Most K
Charles O’Sullivan, D. D..
County Kerry; aid
Michael Flanagan, C. C. cf
common, County Roscommon.
The letters that are being
ceived from all over Ireland
most heart-rending„ and it
this In mind that
™»£67 .1° th® different points
« ---- ------------ rather than to concentrate on any
Cross of tho Legion of Honor by tho on0 Place.
i . .. . Our endeavor is to establish
ten or fifteen points of contact m
the various parts of Ireland with
r=|(1m?.vS ti3ftae In Charge to
fllntls are carefully
bundled. Then send an amount
' “ay° t0 «<* “r
.. j . 1,0 triJe that ttaL
ent Sstm ®«ttes are urg-'
SLinnl J" ea.9ler for thcm «>
get funds from the various relief
committees because of their
er appeal and influence
it Crosa tows
it beet to reach the smaller inm.
wh°se needs, although not
m large, are just os urgent®
ferldnml8tar^ auW6S ef-
rered their servlceu to the Celtic
? meesage f*0” for duty in Ireland Tho i
d the an- association win gladly avail
here. He *«ded
Italy, foi ------
f the late Th0 eldest daughter of
------------
fcl^........“
■te
iShSmentgho? Rew Afiwciatiott Ws $3,0 Tc
Ireltiod,
The Celtic Cross Association has
broken its best record. Last week
saw checks aggregating 23,000 sent
to Ireland for the immediate ro-
oI tho suffering women and
children.
This makes $7,GOO Beut over to
Ireland in the comparatively abort
loei9’lC0 itB orgflDl~atlon’ Jun-
The funds
each—to
rw
It: f
flit '■' ties of Ewr^f DescnotionD
Hr ' — • -
| Give us an ulea of wlat you want and we
|||fe 1 will cheerfifiiy fix up a basket or box
HI ' ■ ■■ f®T°E' ' ' ■ ■
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J ■ ■ ■■■■ • .-..ywn : fcAtfl « thfiil?
i o£ once glorious abbess, of Aistcrfe
77M. ■ ■ rntles, and laity ■ mini!-towers,
thfneu of bsauty, rifted by the regi-
-'7 Is . aide's : cannon, sacred things tae-
- crated : by the- nitW’S fcmder;,
Pfo«d wen in decay. i
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San Antonio, Texai
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Ss^hm Wfag & fcfa Ca, up1 s sasgesUoiT of^e ure
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Campbell, William. Southern Messenger (San Antonio and Dallas, Tex.), Vol. 30, No. 7, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 24, 1921, newspaper, March 24, 1921; San Antonio, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1266331/m1/4/: accessed July 2, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .