Southern Messenger. (San Antonio, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 33, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 11, 1900 Page: 4 of 8
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nacor ax umukixiti
nKSHJTOBIESfflHB.
rl
i r, rJT;, £ an «rhi« our »* *
been looked for in an age kke our ltl ”Jg:
I own. It has been, as regards mor- mT rirft I round nbatr twenty
I al and social ideas, a revolutionary ed »t p1m*os *U bumuieriag M
! - ___ _# Pur^rx their excerci«es at the mm (Im m
age. Over many parts of Europe, oa difiere£l. k(.y uot^*<
9AM ANTONIO, TEX.. Oct. 11. ?W.
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h'
ofaooey ■ j
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tun. 'n.
those principles.
The number of
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CALENDAR.
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I liSflFKIk< J-jilitfatU .
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«T - rtf Publication—No. 309^ W.
Ommim Str «t.
“A Catholic newspaper is a per-
petual mission in every parish."
—His Holiness Popb Leo XIII
I J
' J
fctetrcl *t the Poet- Office *t Su it •
toeto,T'x**. ukcoimI-cIam ait: ai'tar.
WHAT a farce we
upon the Filipinos!
what we called anarchistic prlnci
pies might well have been predict-
ed for the criminal manifestations
political* purposes,
the United States J
the bcnciit of fee
oar educational system
obvious.
lawlessness and
regicide.
MARRIAGE A GREAT SAC-
RAMENT.
7:4Si>. m.
7 :0C 1. 33.
-y * **
JITY CHURCH DIRECTORY. |
A BRAND NEV.
The Baptist B:a>- da
them," we said them nay, and
■ent American soldiers, tinder the
Star-Spangied-Banncr, to shoot
them down. A nice example of
“truth" and consistency that!
“O wad khh power ths gfo **,
IbMoaantihMilbKams'aot™
Magi* Copy 5c. Qnoyeartl.M
VwMUMd wwkly uudar th* auBpicM
■w WW BSV.J. A. FOREST, Btahcp of
O* Antonio.
Accordinc to the ever busy
English correspondents who labor
for the enlightenment of Amer-
icans especially, and for the rest
of the world incidentally, the great
French Exposition has been a some-
what gloomy failure. It certainly
has been so, for England; but for
America, Germany, and other
countries.it has been at least fairly
successful. We believe England
did not get a single award, or dis
tinctionofanykind. United States
exhibitors secured t prizes,
220 of which were grand prizes, or
of the first order; 486 gold medals,
583 silver m idals, 422 bron ze
medals, 270 honorable mentions,
and a long list of gold, silver, and
bronze medals for collaborators.
Every line of industry, art, and
skill has been given recognition.
American farm products, American
mines and forestry received grand
prizes and gold medals, and Amer-
ican cottons, woolens, and silks
were given the same consideration
as were American hj.»
machines, sewing machine
ing presses, liberal arts, and r;<,as-
portation. American education
and art, silver ware, and jcwti.ry
, were placed in the front. Amer-
icans have no reason tc complain
of the great Paris Exposition, or
to complain of any want of suc-
cess.
—having remarried during the Iife-|h£wfl.wwwtr-
time of all three, and at last ac ' *
counts was living with the third
Mater. And this with the con-
i who is
must ac-
The Manila cotB(!S[‘-n li*i u
ready quoted says: **“
It emma friitny to Usk -t.
print*. In their row*,
tMcbers of th-* public
ed State* pMwadcu. TMt *
here, not it ia »uroemity
at The only fcirt
idaoda ie the Ateuec. or
It hs* about 90) papib-b—
fourteen to eighteen. ill
■nd bright-looking.
A ffoad Chvrc
it?— It j the bread
Our divine Teacher tt
is the way, and wi
that lead to perditii
walk thereon: but ■
way and ni^row t!
<eac to life everiastizi
b-t one way to bi
honest, to be just tJ
dreds of ways to b
honest, urjurt. The
true Church : ’here
others, that are r
broad Church include
and error: it is a br
With the cry of starvation
from the Pennsylvania coal region,
—and this, too, at a time when
the demand for American coal in
foreign countries is greater than
ever before—the politicians plea
of ‘ the full dinner pail" looks like
mockery.
In s previous article, io which
the Messenger had occasion to
refer to the damnable meddling
of Government officials with
the trarriage laws in Cuba, we
asserted that as marriage is a
sacrament, of divine institution,
civil officials have no right what-
ever to tie the nuptial bond, ar.d
just as little right to sever it.
Sacraments and sacramentals are
religious matters, pertainig of right
to the Church and to its duly ac-
credited ministers. The propriety
of this was recognized throughout
aU Christian nations for
than fifteen hundred years,
er during that period had
' ' J
pM| ; ■
■
THE SOUTHERN MESSENGER, OCTOBER ri, tyn.
' ' Vflty few mraifl sr? ‘
h»'.*F pMied tv'f'aty
is*-!-* of kfe aad tin
•w'ttiwl before th*-.
‘mportant :hen i; is tor
tustract our children r
playing at (mr knew
Yes, instruct then
innocent y pixyi
public school, to wh
gate them, will und
have taugnt then,
may generally come
your salvation. Bu:
parents competent t
■bus instruction ’•
say no;foe, you tell us
Baptists do not Imc
are Baptists.’
Const unlcatlotw for pabUextioo not I
asoatatnx tbis ofllco by Tuesday wli 1 not j
appear till Isms of following week.
Luckily for the coal-operators
now on a strike for living wages
in Pennsylvania, we are approach-
ing a national election, and the
coal-barons and swindling railway
companies will be forced to yield,
so we learn from an Associated
Press dispatch. Mr. Hanna; Mr.
Cornelius N. Bliss, Secretary of
the Interior; James Stillman, Pres-
ident of the Standard Oil Trust
Bank; and Senator Scott, of West
Virginia, lately called upon J.
Pierpont Morgan, at Wall Street,
New York, and Mr. Hanna is re-
ported to have said in substance,
to Mr. Morgan:
* ‘This strifes will rofn ut, and ahsuld
not be allowed to exist another day.
Yon, with the great power st your
command, can atop it, and all the Re-'
publican managers unite with me in
asking yon to do ao. This strike la the
only cloud in an otherwise clear hori-
zon. The party has all the money It
wants: in fact, it wsa never better oil
in tbe matter of funds. Cash has been
pouring in ftotn the most unexpected
quarters, and is still pouring in.
' 'Nov. Mr. Morgan, I have not come
here to ask for money, for we have all
the money we want, but to implore
you to put an end to a strike which is
winning thousands of votes for Bryan
every day it lasts.
“We who are managing this cam-
paign bolieve that tbe well-being of the
psrty xhould stand paramount at this
rime with every patriotic citizen, and
that for the sake of the party, financial
or other con ■(derations should be put
aside, at leant temporarily. We ssk
you. Mr. Morgan, to use your influence
to put an end to this strike.”
Any thinking peraoa
familiar with history r
r< WILLIAM MENGER, Gmwral
Mtesacer co whom ail moneys thtsiid
£4 **d coaunanicatloc* addmwed.
dreii 'ln the idea, of a new dom-
««tic right; He ouae to bring help
to oppMflMd pcopits tn the ide*
I
age. —
tbe old restraints that religion
had imposed have completely
vanished from the minds of a large
SCHOOLS Ac.
YTraallns Convent-- MM Augusta St.
Onr Lady of tbs Lak*—Lake Tlaw
94. Loads* Coilag* Wert End.
at. Mary's Coilsgs—Collage St.
at. Joseph's School—IM Bonham St.
St. Henry's School—L70S 8. FJnrss St
iMnrnate Word School—Cor. Crosby
«M1 WUlow Sts.
St. MlchaaTs Ursuline Day
Cire. Indianola and South Su.
Utvolina Academy at the Sacnd
Atari—Prospect Hill, W. Commerce St.
Ito FVroaado School for Boys— ill:; N.
&arado St.
Saa Fernando School for Glrta— 215
&Mtb San Soba St.
tont^enridge Villa—River Are.
SL Peter Claret's School—510 Live
Oak st-
at. Joseph's Orphan Asylmn—MH1 taiy
8L John's Orphan Asylum—Milam
11 ^talite Boa* Inflnnary—MHam Square.
Be. Ftaneta’ Home for the Agnd—JC17
RFJtawSt.
Hana of th* Good Sbepbssd Bast
IM.
K -,i- ,r
An esteemed
temporary in W ashing^
that he would like the
eration better if It ***
th«
seems W
tbe year ending June 30, I9jx>, 8,-
457 suits for divorce, as against
7445 in the previous year—an in-
crease of 1 ,oi 2, Of these applica-
tions, 3,878 were granted for di-
vorce as against 3,217 during the
previous year—an increase of 661;
1,060 applications were still pend-
ing Reports from Chi-
cago show that during the first
six months of the current year
there were issued 9 340 marriage
licenses, while during the same
married by magistrates, or by period there were filed 1,912 suits
for divorce—about oitt divorce to
five marriages'* These are ter-
rible conditions."
1 he rapidly increasing number
of divorces should convince sensi-
ble people of the necessity for a
la speedy one,
in our divorce laws. The root of
efficacy and has been blessed by the evil, however, is in ill-assorted
~ ~ marriages; and these, again, come
because of a lack of moral stamina
With too many young people it is
"Marry in haste, and repent at leis-
ure/ ..... .<
Christ oar divorce laws was shown recent-
ly in the case of a man who suc-
cessively married three sisters, was
tion of things is little better, if bet-;
ter at all, than that of the middle
ages, when Europe was in a state:
of semi-barbarism. This is. we
believe, a logical result of the re-
bellion against the Church in the
16th century, and the relaxAtion. faced haired
of s>-
CIS, James Boyce, M- r., com . men- 3^^ C(,ueKB
menting upon the regicide epidemic: s5w ^nreb cf Unudc,
that has for some time prevailed finest ctmrshHt fo *5°^*-
tnar u*s w » r verr cotnpnriE< qu.
in so-called civilized countries, with mahoirMj'. *ad a
virtu aHy concedes this. “Novel which !_• b* fi itefiM -o iwfowki
„d dunlv U are the ptera'.
na," he says, “a httic reflection 1 a- we a eqataT
shows us that they might have:
O:
il'sr
>1 ■ ■
T-
L(('J
Jit
r _ 1; j: ;
if
ill
Hanna in the appeal to Morgan
to end the strike at once, and the
great Money 1 rust man will prob
ably accede to the demand. The
dispatch continues:
Mr. Morgan tuu large interest* in
many of tbe coal roads, notably the
Belding sud L»:kawannx, and It was
evidently believed by Mr. Hanns ard ,
tiow with him that a word from Mr. I ™ parliamentar;. n, the now al- - The improper use ofiBOBef ■
Morgan woild put ail the half starved most universal habit fa-jong che and <-ate electota
miners at work again with wmcrbfog M,K„ -c ' lin„ ao - ’ anc
in their dinner pails until after elet tion | urban populations; v. rc-cmg, an become a serious evu in tfa C*
at any rate. Mr. Morgan was pxTt.cu ■! the excitement maintained by tbe
larly impreeeed with the words of Mr.
3i HI man, the preaident of the Standard
OH Trust Bank, for whoee cool jndg
ment he hu great respect.
Hanna and hit colleagues are urging
all the coal operators to arbitrate, and
have aaked them to accept Archbishop
Ryan as arbitrator.
ofcs hmre
aa other ettixen. U
the minister of God.
The doctrine of Christianity
binds the husband and wife in the
holy bonds of matrimony; it es-
tablishes the family, and it
strengthens the state
came, as Lacordaire tdls us, to
elevate the. lowly in tbe idea of a
commo* origin and a holy broth-
erhood; He came to give strength
are playing
A corres-
pondent in Manila writes to his
paper as follows: “The teachers
are doing all they can to inculcate
Americanism. Last Fourth of
July, there was a school celebra-
tion at which pyrotechnic speeches
on liberty were made, and the
Declaration of Independence was
read by one of the pupils. On
Washington's birth-day, American
flags wcr? put over all the school
building-- :cr the first time, and
there were appropriate exercises in
commemoration of little George
and his remarkable hatchet. I
: doubt whether the hatchet story
has as much force here as in Amer
ica, for tbe Filipino child has thus
far not been taught to reverence
the truth." Indeed! The FAipi
no* who beard the Declaration of
Independence read will hardly
credit us with a monopoly of “the
truth." When this people, whom
we pretend to have bought from
Spain, wished, according to the
inmortal words of our “Declara-
tion ot Independence,” to amume
“the separate and equal station
TO WHICH THE LAWS OF NATURE
“The fearful seriousness of the
divorce cancer,” says the Catkolie
Telegraph,1^ again emphasized
by the publication of thejeport of associated, rightly or wrongly, with
the state of Ohio. According to those principles. TL_ ' .'
this report there vere filed, during persons with more or less disorder-
men professing to be followers of
Jesus Christ and ministers of His
gospel. Seldom, or never, though
—even with the bad example by
which they are surrounded—do
we find Catholics applying for di-
voice,—chiefly, we believe, because radical change, and
their marriage has a sacramental
more
Nev-
a dis- j
sentient voice been raised within*
the pale of Christianity. But ,
even if there h*d been such dissent, ,
the integrity of marriage as a ;
sacrament would not have been
affected. A sacrament it was by
the divine command, and a sacra-
ment it must remain, any human
opinion to the contrary notwith-
standing.
la the first chapter of Genesis,
the twenty-seventh verse, Moses
gives us the status of the marital
bond: “And God created man*to
His own image: to the image of
God He created him: male and fe-
male He created them;" and in the
twenty fourth verse: “Wherefore
a man shall leave father and
mother, and shall cleave to his wife
AND THEY SHAL BE TWO IN ONE
FLESH."
This was under the Mosaic
dispensation, or the Old Law, and
we see that under the New
Dispensation, alter the coming of
Christ, there was no relaxation of
the sacramental bond of matrimony
on the contrary, our Lord Himself
reiterated it and strengthened it.
St. Luke tells us (XVI, 18:) “The
law and the prophets were until
John; from that time the kingdom
of God is preached, and every one
useth violence towards it." Here
is the dividing point in time be
tween the old dispensation and
the new, and we learn that the
scribes and pharisees—learned in
the law—recognized the integrity
of the marriage bond as a dis
tinctive mark of orthodoxy, for
they tried our Divine Savior with
this as a test:
“And there came to Him the
Pharisees, tempting him, and say-
ing: Is it lawful for a man to put
away his wife fur every C3x.se ?
Who, answering, said to them:
Have ye not read that He who
made man from the beginning,
made them male and female ?
And He said For this cause shall
a man leerve father and mother,
and shall cleave to his wife, and
they two shall be in one flesh.
Therefore, new they are not two,
;' but one flesh. What, THERE-
FORE, God hath joined to-
gether, LET NO MAN PUT ASUN-
DER. They say to Him: Why,
then, did Moses command to give
a bill of divorce, and to put away ?
He »ith to them: Because Moses
by reason of the hardness of your
heart permitted you to put away
your wives: but from the begin
ning it was not so. And I SAY
TO YOU, that whosoever shall put
away kis wife, except it be far
fornication, and shall marry an ■
other, committeth adultery; and
he that marries her that is put
away, committeth adultery."
Here we find nothing about the
incompatiH'ity of temper, bicker-
ing, or neg-ect,—the natural result
of hastily formed and ill-consider-
ed unions—brought before the
courts as a plea for divorce.
Nevertheless, we see divorces
granted for pleas of this kind, and
the parties to such divorces re-
of a universal republic founded by
God Himself and governed by
Him. The bond of the members
with which is a crime against both knowledg .. .
God and man. The atheist may
' sneer, but his sneer or his raillery
' cannot alter the fact. God gi ant
■ that the millions whose happiness
■ depends upon the observance of
1 the divine law may sec the truth
■ before the time of grace has pass-
: ed, and that they may be spared
the necessity of adversity and
misfortune that open the soul to
illuminations that in prosperity
were unseen.
What unity and
j^CECAN DO.—The
« tihe Dirt ill the G
« B*den has fin*
*7* bffi, readzmttfiq
***“ J*der« to the
T* Grand Ducky.
wqc pnm^ared b
then tie btm
1 27?? ■ete» ctREnd to
Thty woeae
As the prtas. when properly directed
is a powerful aid to promote HeUgion
and dilfaae the knowledge of Truth, w»
approve of the paper, the SourKffiW
Mas^Draet—which is published tinder
our control, and we hope it will reach
every Catholic family tn the State that
understands the English language.
♦ Jons C. Nmtaz,
Bp. of Ban Antonio.
As religion is the only science, which
| contain* a pledge of happiness in thin
• world and in the world to come, it is
" * ' And
tkm. pitata give u- the former piace i wha. better moans to obtain thia end
■■■iiirtt Hi.nW*II MaaW
than the reading of a good and sound
religious journal, aa the SOtmxfUt Mss-
SKNgeb published in San Antonio?
i r'or, this Is a Catholic paper to which
—- | we not only give our approbation, but
which we recommend every family of
our Vicariate to have 7
Peteb Vzrdaoper,
Vicar Apoetollc of Brownsville.
Laredo, Teran. March fith, IS'H.
jirrrrityfrw “semt-p
it it sot of cur Choi
must mert it trr:
duty men and
Republic. Every
-nvd must be a po
acnae of tbe w
he would be unfit fc
American citizen*
things political are
ought to be, it is :
of every dtiten—Ca
Protestant, Jew a
tile—to endeavor :
evil, and. remedied. :
recurrence. The A
organized in Wash:
beggarly baiter's dot:
and they carried the
fiance of decency ;
•he city of Wash;
time ago. Congress
ooo to help tbe st
Ricans, but with A:
the Catholic ?ucrt'
forced to sw.illo« F":
{reJization t.’tr * Sa
Rev H P- Kc'.'tit
a collaborate r, >it K
pointed by t C<: A r-.
menc to d;s>tribL*e
starving islander;,
protest agamst s
work would be
presumably, and c
Washington canteen 1
approve of that.
AS an evidence th.
evil is not ccinnced :
the North, but is pc
as malignar.:: in Tc:
the following dispatc
Daily Express frene
on Oct. 3:
Forty-two divorce? ’i
th» district court U> day
th*: this !• the record !>:
of th* suite wm ccritew
oufr about ten mtuucw
r*oh. There **ere 1 s
marriagm m q-riefe *: tt
severed, the pirtief nu!
entering of the derrer *1
th- justice of tie peirc
thore grunted five were
Do What Duty 1
Young man, its a jjoc
otic citizen you have
to perform toward:
your corpoiation. ar
As a good <
t*-ave other duties
which are inseparable
~n so far as badpol tic
s -"ained! from interferi:
*y of conscience or fr
*ry dass of citizens
a:ds cr privileges 01
toeir religion. Da n<
professional politician,
essiooa] politicians a
rumed, at
-ue. Do your duty as
Ous voter, and remcmt
owe to God, to your 1
to society at large.
e*ch on * different key lx atitantai
tbe boys were enregwi in>ta*chtar^
in others tsey were carving,
coniiderehle artistic *a£E^. —
------- , tbe prieets **.-. very goad «t Ml
part of the laboring class in the along the lines of the beanx am
towns, and ha« b«> replaced tto|
a great extent) by a positive h* !
tred of religion and those who are! <<A11 wc,..
specially associated with :ti Thisl^^- - - Brighter and
has been particularly the case m j thiC Cubans," the wx »
France, in Italy, and in Spain. In j ^ys dsewhere. B<
those countries, the ruling Church ■ withstanding all tins Aqhww
v?as most completely identified with
the state, and the most powerful
for repression. It is, therefore, tn
them that the recoil has been most
violent, to which we may perhaps
add that in Spain and in Italy
there is a greater tendencyto violent
methods than in northern Europe.
Along with the removal or loosen-
ing of religious restraints, the re has
w
»w
ill
il
rM
L. j, >/<■■
K • ’i ■!& '
R
r ‘1'1'
I 'Mi'1
w
I#’
I Ip:
I w -
I -W
14j.
IS#
'I®:)
.■ N' '*
and brightness in the nitagytvrv
tion, reared amid the tonal d
war, we refuse their paiotti the
right of »df -governmeet. Aad *
to the Jesuits “acting u tottex
of the pubic schools of a Uoted
States possession,' the afltgtd
Manila belongs to the JcmtRit
has been their* for mote that I
- - hundred wars,—was then Imp 1
been all over Europe a diminution bcfon_ tbc f w I
of the old respect for rank, the old . on pj^31th Rock Tharfor, I
habit of looking up to the so call-, absence of other Kha* I
ed ‘upper classes.’ the old acquiesj other m I
cence in the established order of. tobrafk 1
society as being natural, rightful,, presen: at Jeast.’ CF«^,* ]
acts |
characteristic of the vulg^ W- I
educated snob. Yean bdaek I
was born, President Waringta 3
numbered American JenitB, ** |
their gowns,’ among his moat » I
timate friends, and many a fiat ]
tied his horse at thrir pte M I
Georgetown College. It vm a 1
Jesuit, Father CarroL, vh* w |
chiefly instrumental in I
friendship of France, and aotai 1
freedom, for the struggliag Aarr- I
ican colonist*, and it vu tfa J
same Jesuit whom FrunHbtaaa- I
ed with his >ciendship a*ce^®< |
aod whom he sought to nutetM I
first Amer can Rishep. “Fnwy, I
quotha.' I
We cordially indorse the approtatlou
of out oeteamed predecewor In ~egard to
the Soersuur Mkwksoer of S*n An-
tonio, Tex,, We are happy to recog-
nise in that publication all the elements
which, according to the expiBewlon of
onr Holy Father Leo XIII , make a
Catholic paper * ‘a continual mission* *.
and we earnestly recommend the
Soutssrs MRMEsasR to all the faithful
of onr diocese tJ. A Forbott ,
Bp of San Antonin.
Dec. 31, IffilJ.
mxasno CATHXDta L
Xk.R'iv.J. A. Forest. D D
Very ‘lev. J. B E. Audet. Aliut+tr.
Bov. ?. BandriLlard.
HanJiy*—Marten......7 :30 and If u in.
Vtapcre ..........5 tX) tn.
tierin'»n at each Mass.
Vtakl-ayi—Mam..... ■ ■ ■ ■ 7:3l i rn.
ST. XAST'8 CHVRCH.
Bev. C. J. Smith. O. M I.
Bev. A. Fletcher, O. M. I.
fotaday-— Low Mart..... 7JO*, tn.
Hlyh Mau and Sermon. 10:00 a tn
Y«*te’n> ........ ”
Week I lays—Mass. ■ ■ -
«r joexya’5 csvrcb 'azaxjix. i
Bev. W. A. Fuhrwerk.
.fotadayt-—First Maas. > . -
High Mass
V*sp-tr*.......
Week Daya-Msss
ed brains is *o large, and increases
so fast, tnat wherever there is a
widely diffused excitement one
must expect it to break out, in
fierce or vicious natures, into rav-
age crime. Such natures do not
ask themselves, ‘of what use is the
crime, and how will it bring any
nearer the overturn of established
institutions which wedesire?* Argu-
ment is lost on them, as the fear
of punishment has proved to be. ..
It is one of the most painful proofs
that the hopes of rapid human
progress which were so rife in the
world forty years ago were toojSe.’
sanguine."
It has been the same in this;
country as in Europe. Our prisons
are fijled, not with the illiterate or
the ignorant, but with educated
criminals,—men and women whose
godless education has enabled them
to become the more adept scoun-
drels. It is not the illiterate or the
ignorant who endeavor to sap the
. ... - v«y foundations of our govera-
The shockmg indecency ofijnent by debauching citizens and
purcbastng their votes, by stuffing primarily for other
ballot-boxes, by bribing Govern- ~
- , ___ t ment officials and officers of justice,
divorerf from two otthem, twice, by debauching the press^rith
/ -■ Our »bscoocfing than Washingtoa, wkerej
bauk-ca*h«er* and book-keepezs uni rightii of
aresiHcducatedmcn.gndtheseaod outraged withocta!«*<
. , , , . thtir Hire are so many rh*» - - - *->-**“
niraneeofthe law! It i* brutish, cesaityfor amoul h*rV bone in
far tte Wtate Mm Ort. M. IMO.
: . ^"MWtand^qfMwmtatad AMD OF NATURE'S GOD ENTITLE
[ i ■ctafoy. 15—3k. Tu—. Vtrgt*.
P ; WtetafBy. IS—Btatad Vtotac HL Fap*
[ wi Ca*fatata.
W«tou<w. H—Btilfodwig. wiAw.
: WfctawfoylS—aULata. EvAUguhrt.
k «H*rn>-at. PtaarB rt Hi ■■tail.
Ctaftarer.
Bk. JTrt* C**tfc*A Ctu-|
t-'
.. . 7*. m.
.... l0l» *- m.
. . . p. HL
.... 7 ;L> *. m.
ITT. KICBAZL'a CHCRCl (POIUSEs )
Bev. L. Dsbrowikl.
Sunday*— High Mam ...... fliiO u m.
▼tap^rz........._■ • ■ ■ ■ 4 flP p. m
W«ak D*y<»—Mam 7tf)*.m.
ST. TBTSB CLAVTta’Z (COLORS.)
Bev. J. A, Dumoulin.
Bundays—High Mam - 9 W *. m.
Ever Ing—Service......... 7 .0) r>. m.
Weekrfav*—Maas........... 7CT*, tn.
Ki ary Friday^>ne hour of public w.or*-
Kta at tbe Bleeaed Sacrament trtm 7.00
to S^K p. m., followed on the lint *nd
Skird Friday* by Benediction.
n. pATXICX’a CHURCH.
Bev. John Sbeehao.
Rea. 614 Willow Street.
Sundays—Low Mau........ 7£0*.id.
High Mam.......... io«*s- m.
Catedilam ■ -............. 4 iK) p m..
Rosary and Benediction... 5 p tn.
Wtak Oaya—M*m..........7.t>0 » m.
cttjhch or m axeaxu asARr.
Cor. W. Commerce and Trinity Sfri.
Be* H. A. Milmo.
fl*nda.7»—Maaa . . 10:10 a. tn.
CKSULCTE COWVEST.
Bev. J. Forget• Deapati*, 0. M I.
JlaadxyHAudWeeuday»— MaM.li vu* m.
Attar-exT or oca lady or ths iaju .
Bev. ? F. Parlact. O. M. I., Ctapl*Bi.
fatrd*'**—M*m ..........6:15 * m.
Vur-era 3JK) p m.
Weak iOaya— Mam.......... f»:>5 * m.
3A.VT A ROAA IXURMAKT.
Rev J. S. Bednarck, Chaplain.
Aery Day—Mam......... 6:CO a. tn.
Munday^—Beads, Veapan and
Benediction . p. tn.
■T. kxasci«' aom ro« thi ausd.
Bev J. Robert, Chaplain.
Beery day—Mam. ....
3T. LOUla’ COLLBOK.
Bro. Jobn Wulf, Director.
B*v Jos. Weckemnr, Chaplain.
Bro. Joaeph Miller, Treasurer.
M*nda5*—Mam............. 61-65 a. m.
Bemry, Veepert, and Bene-
dletion ................. 1:45 p.m.
Weak Day*—Mars 5:15 a. m,
rr. mabt’b cotxaoa.
fteo. Qeorge Deck, Director.
itov. Aug. Friache, Chaplain.
mu03WRiD<iK vaiXr—wsrna ofckab-
rrr or m twc*ax*TS wosn.
Barv F. Schneider, C. PF* 8.
tarttfhy—Mats usually at.. 6rJO a. in.
remmr or ocu L*nr or ch*k.-ty
(oooo amzK),)
"Bor. C. Daveiuy, O. M. I.
-Beadaya and Week Days—
■am................... 6 AO A m
try, and it shou.d be i
Judge Jackson, of the
States District Court at WM- j
ing, W. Va.. in addrtswC *
grand jury recently, ga« the *r
Slowing admonition.
» - , ' I with to make tome J—
it wul be seen that the spread of you about the nghta
out of onr elective francNw ** *
right* also of the federal 1
Have yon ever weighed hsuY^i
tbe welfare uni prosperity J
try ia a pure election* •*" 1
government in the world 1
Nation* hare watched onr
growth. There never w*e ****;
try witiriu tbe knowledge <r j
Tbe government ie fa on dad 1
eent of the people- Th** J
preened through tbe ballot.
“Yon mnet reflect that all I
thia oountrv emanate from ]
untrammeiel will o! |
ever tbe people of this coiwy^JjZ
corrupt, when the vote of uw
can be determined one way —
by the nee of mrmey. we
toward decay and the J
“Yon eee daily U> toe .
boms to you on almort rtaj j
that it U necewary mllli*" i
lar* to be raleed in nroer J
man or that man *- I* tixJ J
halt and put a stop K , mi |
must be commenced soo™^^^.|| J
and it may ** well be co*U**^^ 1
i thia little mountain ^tats m w— j
I *”•" J
It should not be forgo«® J
! bribery wis the cause j
dine and fall of the great I
Empire, and that if
continue in this country,
surely cause the downf-
Republic.
When notifying m of change o: ad- incumbent upon *11 to learn it.
mt E*M<k-nce m well ** the new adcreee.
necessary. In many places, thcf dever Xmerioi
ideas of the French Revolution {of ( in thc fiippailt
1789) have worked upon the mtnds
of thc more ignorant part of the
industrial urban population as al-
cohol works upon a feeble brain.
Thc indent respect for authority
has been turned into a blind ha-
tred of authority.".
The smattering of education—
so called education—included in
the “Three R s," with the absence
The other gentlemen joined Mr. of religious instruction, is also
mentioned as a potent factor of
discontent. The dip into the Pie-
rian Spring that was supposed to
be the great panacea for al! the
ills of humanity, thc needed tum-
ulus to nobler ai'*?-: '.nd amo-
tions, had a contrary effect “Add.'
to these farts,"- n ; thed; tin-guish-;
tiow with him th*t * word from Mr. jea parliamentar;. the now al- ■
UTban P<>P“ktions) cf reeling,
constant diffusion of news, and
the rerr ^val by the press of tbe
veil of stately obscurity which used
to conceal the personality of
rulers from the eyes of subjects,—
add all these things together, and
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Southern Messenger. (San Antonio, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 33, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 11, 1900, newspaper, October 11, 1900; San Antonio, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1266497/m1/4/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .