Southern Messenger (San Antonio and Dallas, Tex.), Vol. 29, No. 50, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 20, 1921 Page: 3 of 8
eight pages : ill. ; page 22 x 16 in.View a full description of this newspaper.
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Travis at St. Many’s—Tr. 2498
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408 East Travis Street.
TO COLORED SESSIONS.
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B. F. & FLORA M. GURDEN
OHIEOPRACTOBS
Gist the Gurden Service
of Palmer Method
Chiropractic
Six Doctors to analyze
your case FREE.
X-Ray and Klinoscope
English-
’ -thfti •:
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SAVE YOUR CLOTHES
Let ns save, the csst of a sew suit.
Cleaning, Pressing, Repairing and Dyeing.
Garden Cleaning & Dye Works
M. A. BEEDE, Prop. FRED H. AHIR. Mgr.
Trsvss 6601 122 Garden St.
Work Called For and E»elivered.
EsEfifi
stepping-stone to spiritual
TO,.v»«..«nt pad fa the
the eternal recontponse promised to
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W®artatas--aiifl Kuibafesora. 3 -. :- .
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Cloonan & Osborn
“The Home of Art”
| . .....
| £“SUS”irS s£“ Si-SS
I “iHSiW.5 SSSrSB BSSS«
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FAVL
4S« MUT4K PXrflKX
Dealer in Stsple sad Fsticr
GB0^%8duH^V?^u’?^liS
■kei’at tor Etie Will & Baumis Co easdtos
aar! all tdafie of Clrarch 3bppE*s.
Ask us tor the ccior card of Automobile Varnish Colors,
which give thorough instructions for the refinishing of jour car.
and her finer spiritual instincts at
length leading mankind to higher
planes of religion, of humanism and
of ennobling spirituality.”
We have great confidence in the
future action of our Catholic women
for the social betterment of our
country as we know the basis of.
morality upon which their founda-
tion rests.—Catholic Transcript.
im .mu....... HllJTBnuareMWMiiMisiywt^rml*rtggmaMim^«irnniTn-nuiui in mu izin
I The Mikno |
I National Bank |
8 Laredo, Texas t
Transacts a General Banking X
and Exchange BusJnesf!. g
lx Collections Promptly Made X
and Remitted. X
| X Kmdcan Mosey Bought and. SW
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■
wrecked regions. Already the ex-
penditure of 8,500,000 francs—2,-
000,000 francs of which was due to
American generosity—has succeeded
in alleviating the condition of
priests and in providing for the re-
ligious needs of the inhabitants of
that territory.
The statement of the committee
showed that 2,102 parishes have
benefited by the funds thus far ap-
plied. Eight hundred temporary
churches have been erected and 23,-
000 vestments, 6,000 sacred vessels
—chalices, ciboriums, etc.—8,000
pieces of altar cloth and altar linen,
and 1,410 priests' outfits have been
distributed.
SGO children now attending, and
he must turn away other hundreds,
hungry, for Catholic teaching. Way-
nesboro; Ga./sent a delegation of
it on-Cat holies, more than a year ago,
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of Your Car
-g-w ON’T TRADE your e.sr off tit a sacrifice just -beci.;.
U ish has dulled anti Hia car doesn't look .as J
tive as when you bought it.
to reason, and even to accept di-
rection from sources they formerly
condemned.
Worker Not it Cog in Machinery.
In the many protests that have
been voiced by fending sociologists
and students of industry since the
memorable declaration of the British
Labor Party, there is ‘constant em-
phasis on the fact that from now
on the "personality” of the laboring
man must be respected, and that he
will no longer be regarded either as
a slave of the machine, or a cog in
the industrial wheel.
Thus in an article in “The Amer-
ican Journal of Sociology” (Septem-
ber, 19201 on “Why Men Strike,”
we read: “The work of modem
tradesmen, craftsmen, and laborers
is so specialized, so devoid of in-
trinsic interest that the workman
finds no incentive to work except the
pay he receives The present in-
dustrial unrest will not eease until
the workman is studied as a human
organism with the purpose in mind
of giving him some interest in his
work besides the pay he receives."
Among the declarations ..adopted
at a conference of national and in-
ternational trades-unions at Wash-
ington; D. C., Dec. 13, 1919, was
GUNTER HOTEL |
Sb® Asrtoiilo, Tsssas. . • '5
Modern, European. Absoluti
RATES: $L50 TO $5.00.
Houston and St. Mary’s Stu., One Block North ?
St, Mary’s Church. ?
PEIlUy TfliRULL. Mamaueb y
J
the laboring man does, not lose hia
( oinplaias that
BLANK BOOKS “8
Loose Leaf Books, Devlcsm and
Supplies; Files, Calendar Pads,
Office Supplies, El©„ tor
Counting Room.
(JOMMEBCIAL PBIMIMG,
bwmncj, wiasa
@3$ W. CfemsstswB “* a'“"fl “*
trrsaawwtrt ^^ssit . .r.um jf.nonsuvvy- . . v-t* 7..-—i-j— w*v,b
Tell your painter to use Lowe Brothers Automobile , Varnish
Colors. They are especially made for the repainting of automo-
biles—truck or pleasure crar.
They are easy to apply and dry hard with a rich gloss.
A S&rieg Appeal Freni the Di-
rected GeaersL
W>* have received the following
appeal from The Catholic Board of
Mission Work Among the Colored
People, No. I Madison Avenue, New
York:
My Dear Fellow Catholic The
230 priests and 600 Sisters who are
fighting in the front line trenches,
tc gain the American negio to
Christ, were easily supported during
the war, but now there has natur-
ally come a period of "Letting
down," and the task is morn dif-
ficult than ever. Yet, there has
never been a time in the history
of our Holy Church, so filled ■with
opportunity for extending her lines,
imr a people so ripe for conversion
cs wo have right now in the colored
uillsoiis nt our door.
Father Kelley of New .Orleans, tn
parish established -f<sgr years ago, ---------------- ....
' .his school wlil hold in the desolation of Northern France
of~ Christian file without which so-
W 1
Suffer? 1
Foor eye* 3
sight is a |
drsiattjitia |
fee nerv4cs g
, , -and yemr
4 ^enifeasd .
4 year diffoos® on. Pro y
I er glasses will help yon. ■,
| Ot?r glasses oroFsfy. > :
| DOYLt’-BHiDHER :
I OPTICAL CO., J i
| IMS W. Commerce fit. ■8SS S. ALAMO SZEMEST.
Lb. a M«B, BBSBBBBI
g ‘ < 1
g StssfJisrtnLcns and Hrntjateora. ’
a.- .■ g
••...';B- ■ .‘NAMED-■MAGISTRATE,.
5e5^i^^5^'HKSSa5aS25aS2ai2SESc5'a (By N. C. W. C. Newa Service.) 1
fc ":"±__ i Ed.Ste«3&ss«8 t
| _ss .1^“ “a ■““■ I lumber |
I. ’«®s
Good Bread, Rolls i
and Cakes.
REJWCa fKPMHS/tf trtESPSMi w g
SV A SUlfiHKArtS g g
Ct®opiadk st I
(SBa-ivU |
Adiujfesii& I
Wil? K*|
. Rmffse fteI
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EI
----' _x _ 4»nwir «srrwir..4 oltd «kiATHJ t A fl €«r TSfA-
in which Catholic women
ONE BLOCK OM ALL CAR JUNES gm $
ALKOWIT/J
: BROS. CO. " t
: THE STORE OUT OF THE HIGH PRICE DISTRICT.
; Where prices the whole year round are wliut you can afford to pity. £
heroic dead. v.<"
Detans of the vorit
with the monument, the-conger atone
of which fins already ; been- laid, - ------------ -
fine been revemed here bjtlthe And in other made the cry wi
Oliver Dabestiat, A. A., honorary
chaplain of the Basilica of Our Lady
o£ Lourdes and Chevalier:pf..the Le-
gion of Honor, who has come to
the Unitefl States to further the
work.
The project lias already received
the sanction of Cardtaar Gibbons
and Archbishop He.yeb: of - New
York. Personal souvenirs of the
fallen men, including erne lilies, ros-
aries, pictures, letters and other re-
membrances are now being asked of
I heir families by Father Dabescat
and are to be .placed In the niches
of the memorial chapel, which will
Michelet, the ' sculptor
. , ---“as entire
I charge of the decorative.‘ work in
[connection with the monunient.Th
ise will
i date the faithful at Mass, except
during the pilgrimage season; when
| Mess will be celebrated .outdoors on
|an altar built as part cif the exterior
of the monument.
At each of the four- corners of the
iinae will be statues oi .kOIdiers of
allied nations, each fifteen feet in
height. An American soldier will
stand at the right corner of the
main facade. Above the base will
be a series of has reliefs,‘in which
meric a will be represented by a
symbolic subject of ;.which General
Pershing will be a central figure.
Surmounting these reliefs will be
imposing statues of ;Our Lady- of.
Lourdes, St. Joan of . Arc and St,
Michael and above these figures will
be represented four angels forever
sounding the call to the sacred
duty of prayer for the dead. Their
wings touch and from the central
point rises a cross.
France has already contributed
more than 150,000 francs to the
shrine, and Belgium-,, England and
Italy ha/e given substantial sums.
The committee that is assisting
'Father Dabescat in the work here
includes the Counters de Laugis.’
11liars, president; Mrs.; John G.
Agar, Mis. Gerald M. Borden, MUs
. * ™..« n-.iw n>,;nn> jf vs. Henry E.
Gourd. Mrs. J. Pierre Hugnet,
Countess Georgine Iselin; Mrs. de
Laneey A. Kane, //Miss' .--Marie ,La
Montague, Mrs. Augfistef-Noel, Mrs.
Henry Daniel Ilobblno.- Mre. Francis
G. Stuart, Mrs. i-IcnryWatera Taft,
Mrs. Reginald T. ToWseud. and
Mrs, Emile Utard. -
io the cry was tak-
.en up. -In. the declaration of the;
churches, there ,wds th a same, ■■
strong, deter milled opposition to
what had become a system of in-
dustrial slavery for a vast portion
of the.wage earning class.
Strange teachings of history!
What had been tio often and so earn-
estly advocated by Ketteler in Ger-
many, Vogelsang in .Austria, de Mun
in.France, Vermeersch in Belgium,
and by Pope Leo- XIII, and always
so scornfully rejected, was now
eagerly accepted by a world tired
and disgusted with the evils of an
industrial regime based upon the
might or the strong and upon the
power of wealth.
These great Catholic social re-
formers taught a social doctrine
which wait not acceptable to a mon-
ey-mud generation and to an age
hardened by materialist teaching.
They insisted on Christian justice,
supplemented by Christian charity
as the foundation stone in every
righteous social order. But they
were laughed to scorn. Now that
the terrible world war has dealt
the death blow to the un-righteous
system of a purely “Industrial civil-
ization,” people are glad to listen
| INDUSTRIAL PLANTS |
I Walsh & Burney | J
I' GENERAL OONITtACTORS, t Ti
$ ;t»‘2-8-4 Cniwica Building *
...... / . |.
FIREPROOF' B*.‘ILJMNG?1. - ± . . \, ; :j
. -.- ' -. Li
2. ‘SESBS^^.’aSSHgaM
Catnmdy-Hamlyn cu to- the.’ to«<iy
catholic; poet
AN AMBASSADOR.
(By N..C.-W, C. News Service.)
Paris, Jan. 13.—Paul Claudel,
one of the moat noted .of French
Catholic poets, has been appointed
ambassador to Japan, Thin is one
of the four most important posts in
the French diplomatic service. He
formerly was French Minister -to
Brazil. Announcement of M. Claud-
el's latest appointment is made in
the Paris papers to-day.
great impetus will be given to
legislation .'.------
of this country will be greatly inter-
ested. There is a “baby bill'' and
a “motherhood bill,” and several
other bills which will directly and
indirectly affect our Catholic social
action.
Present indications seem to point
to the promotion of a social legisla-
tion committee which shall have
several women members. It is ex-
pected that representatives of our
largest Catholic social organizations
shall he called upon to assist in the
promotion of these social laws. That
women shall play a prominent part
in this phase of government'activity
It was made plain that notwith- Jn plain from Senator Harding's
standing the great, .vork that has 1Vords, "I think we shall see woman
tho tool’ V4>L ._ .1 __. i T-1 1M *■» 'll
•H
iciase the fin- .j
bright-and attrac- |tf ■■
What it needs is a cciiit )f good paint'. ■ sj
K
Perhaps you feel thtit you cannot afford to go to the expense K
of having the car repaintod. But this peed not be uu expensive g
job- S
been accomplished the task is yet
hardly begun. There are still 1,-
398 churches to be restored, and
2,355 are in need of assistance.
Through the efforts of German
Bishops many sacred vessels, vest-
ments and other articles of liturgic-
el equipment which were taken away
by German troops are being return-
ed, but. very often these arrive in a
condition which makes them use-
less or incapable of identification.
What seems most to be needed, the
committee learned, is a supply of
amices, corporals, a!bs, surplice
and vesture for altar boys.
It is the hope of the Bishops .if
the twelve dioceses in the devastated
regions that Catholics In France
and other countries will respond to
the appeal which the Pope made in
a letter to Monsignor Orelin, vicar
general of Paris and president of the
committee. The Holy Father said:
“It is absolutely necessary chat
the Church in Northern F'rance
return, as soon as possible, for tin,
sake of souls, to the rhythm of its
existence. The Common Father of
all the faithful has no doubt that
French generosity and Catholic so-
lidarity will, once again, jn such
event, receive a solemn confirma-
tion."
Priests who are sacrificing their
lives amidst the ruin wrought by the
war are doing a wbrk ct reconstruc-
tion not often reported by theiress,
they have kindled again the light
of Christian life without which so-
ciety would soon' lapse back to pri-
mitive barbarism, - Many of thes./
noble /priests are - in rags. They
: (igklns;/ for .the. establishment ' of, a were the first to return to their vil-
inission'for: them. (in. tbe -whbld lages and more than 0119 has died
center feare are-but five.Catholics) from privations or from, excessive
itnd they are yet wafting, for.;an'an- labor,
S:wur. ' Greenville, Miss., ta= this year -—°*7'TT ’ ’, ■
. oseslttg a college and- seminary for ‘ Ken. -Feter -Paul Cnhensly, ac-
? cording to European exchanges, ts
form the base of the monument.
Monsieur
Mass. The coronation took, L.]losell gy Marshal Foch, ha:
----- immediately before Mass, r.bal.K(, <]t- decorative.:v
Archbishop Ortneo officiating as a | „„„
delegate from the Holy See. After j(i,,poi whuh will form its':bm
the Gospel, the Rt. Rev. IMiguel M.sui‘ticientfy large to acci
de la Mora, D. D.. Bishop of Zacs- dat(} th() rftithful at -Maas,
tceas, delivered the sermon nn that
historical occasion.
The Pontifical Mass was followed
by the solemn chanting of the Am-
brosian Hymn, the “Te Deura.” 'The
beautiful ceremony of the placing of
their pastoral srlifts by the attend-
ing prelates at the feet ot the Sac-
red Image, in token of filial vas-
sal age, brought yie coronation pro-
gram to a fitting close.
Historical Data.
The image of Our Lady of Zapo-
pan was brought from Spain in col-
onial days by the pioneer Franciscan
Padre Antonio de Segovia. The
Image has been veenrated in the
church adjoining the Franciscan
convent at the village of Zapopan,
near Guadalajara. It measures fif-
teen inches in height. The wonderful
sculpture seems to be'a representa-
tion of our Blessed Mother in the
mystery of her Immaculate Con-
ception. However, others see rep-
resented in the image the mystery
of her Expectation.
fiocu^ Catholic Agrarian Week,
An Interesting program of import- '
ant papers and lectures was discus-
sed and studied during the Social
Cafholic Agrarian Week which was .. .
held at Guadalajara, January 13-16. fAimee Delmonieo,
RESTORING DEVASTATED
CHURCHES OF FRANCE,
(By N. C, W. C. News Service).
Paris.—-Reports submitted to" ths
last general meeting of the commit-
inery, owned and operated for pro-
fit ..alone. The workers Insist on
being masters of themselves."
Catholic Teaching Safeguards
Persona! tty.
Now the Ciltholie teaching on the
value of the individual before God,
safeguards the personality of the
wage-earner. He is not merely a
slave of the machine, nor a cog in
the vast industrial system. He is
endowed with Immortality and is
called to an eternal inheritance in
the kingdom of God.
We are constantly reminded that
all labor is excellent, and that it
may become a means for securing
this eternal recompense. St. Jo-
seph was a wage-earner, and merit-
ed the praise of being "a just man,"
no less by his loyal devotion to his
daily work than by his life of ad-
mirable virtu er In the Foster-fath-
er of Jesus the workingman of
every nation possesses a model of
surpassing excellence. We do not
associate the name of St. Joseph
with anything striking or imposing
from a worldly point of view. He
led the ordinary, quiet, laborious
life of a man devoted to duty and
to the care of a family. And r*’
he was a free man, he rejoiced in
the liberty of a child of God, his
was a rich and fully developed per-
sonality. He served his God and
served the interests of the Child
Jesus and the Blessed Mother by
his steady application in that sphere
of labor to which Providence had
called him.
Tile Dignity of Imbor.
Catholic workingmen, tan you
sire a more t '
■ just man, St. Joseph? Where will
* you find such devotion to
duty, such whole-souled and faith-
ful cooperation with grace, as In
the life of this faithful guardian of
Jesus and Mary? He is your patron,
your advocate. It would be folly to
turn to other ideals when you have
: this glorious Saint proposed to you
As .your ipodei.
Moreover, Christ Himself sancti-
fied manual toil, and taught us all
the dignity of common labor. What
an incentive to the -Catholic work-
ingman to a,.,.1^ -----" ”...
. task in the spirit of the Divine Maa-
’* ter and St. Joseph ? imitating them.
Plume Crockett 1372 * ? ’ I
.RENNER’Q
309£.NnevaSt. J
...... ' ............ ■■■ ~ ,
personality, but makes of his occu- edee,
pation a e-_«i sine te noi ritual —
enrichment
every faithful servant of G.tid. -;
---o—-- .
CATHOMO WOMAN . known,
. .smisD;1o*nfe4
-^r , "Y'
««i^c.S”hX.X ».^-i±K?ssW£SS
CZECHS CONFISCATE
CATHOLIC CHAPELS. • I
(By S. C, W. <;, News Service.)
Prague, December 21.—The con-
fiscation of eight chapels in which
Mass was said for school children
has f.Teatly aroused the parents of
Catholic children who attend the
schools in Prague, The confiscation
yet is aot only illegal, but was actom-
pushed through violence. Furnish-
ings and vestments were ordered
sold by the Prague school officials.
The children are now attending Mass
in parish churches:
The hostile officials have found
another means of harassing the Ca-
tholics through their attitude to-
wards the' popular gymnastic asso-
ciations which hmve been formed by
them under the name of “Eagles."
This organization has spread to the
worthy ideal than the Slovenians In the United States and
.----,„,n thousands of members there are
included In its roster. In opposition
to this distinctively Catholic organ-
ization is the “Falcons,” composed ■
chiefly of those who have become so ;
“liberal" in their religious temlen- <
cies that they have renounced airp
pretence of religion. The county So- J
rialistic officials offer the use of <
the public school halls free of x
charge to the "Falcons,” but the
“Eagles” are excluded from their
use. As /the prevailing high
lu rents aiid.the general; poverty of
apply himself to his daily the organization : make it impossible
- - - —• • for them to secure other accommo-
dations the Catholic organizations & /
are hard put to maintain" their exist- S
■■■ ■■ '■■■}
akMJiiw W n*»aa _ 'O .T" :
and to the conquest of frkNCK CITY ■ AIDS;
(By N. C. AV. C. News Service.)
: Paris, -'Decemltwr''24l-«-Afl is well
■■ known. tte’/ijlKmeUr-:
' Put of jate-Catholic
f Catholic magistrate ■ in. Devonshire, at
(at XUra7a“S7oUHm ™
S.”S«'^5. »(«<
t '■ '■ ''/''"//'//to/"' /?<///:"'<: y
SE-Sf® tssx:I / Undermuslins"' W1
=™SSSXs~s5= J1’ Now2SJeS°‘ ’’I :i
I .Tm-dlvingthwa^^
looks elsewhere for encape from :s siik and cotton weaves, .this is the one yearly evens ;
>ed“ra‘c -M “-rsi 1
“ej f the lo^st pri^ : / /"L'
H This sale without question .embraces-thq'la^ees^. vj
y stock"we have ever offered. It involves the largest -
jj special purchase we have ever made and also in- if
| eludes our entire regular stock, ..' ■■iLu
H Thrifty women will hasten to replenish their ward-. ]!
g robe at phenomental savings. ■/
JI (Third Floor)" ‘ ' ? W
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Brik- J
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Restore the Beauty 1
fi Vribwuo 3. January, 1921, asa month of in- n.w r. v'- < f n /
bbh h ilBNlli 1 ,rsF In tense religious activity in. the future ,
history of the archillciceaa of Guada-
a I Jara, Mexico. - These-are the cor- I
omition of the ancient and tmirueu- 1
tons image of Our Lady of Zapopan <
and the Social Catholic Agrarian
Week, I
In order,: to prepare the faithful '
for these unique, celebrations, mfa- ’
sloua are being conducted in ths: <
archdiocese. Members of various re- tries may gather to pi^trfbute to ««k to ^oWruct The Eng
asss^ssrajs:
MissioBary Sons of the Immaculate
Heart of Mary, Franciscans, Joseph-
ites, Pro fess era of the Seminary and
some members of the secular clergy.
These general revivals were launch-
ed on December 27 last.
Canon leal Coronation of Our Lady
of Zapopan.
. The solemn Decemdiale, a ten-
day-prayer in honor of Our Lady of
Zapopan, began on January 8 at
the Cathedral of Guadalajara, There
were daily Masses and general Com-
munion at 6:30 a, nt.; Pontifical
Mass with sermon at J a. in. and
the exercises proper and pilgrimage
at 6:30 p. in.
On January 18, Coronation Day.
the Most Rev. Francisco Orozco y
Jimenez, D. D.. Archbishop ot
* Guadalajara. celebrated Pontifical 1
High Mass. The coronation took I
place immediately before I
D
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■:
SAW5ANTON 16 ■ TEXAS
TERENCE MacSWINEY
nifeetze, highgloss photographs of both. Smail size 25 cents;
medium size, mounted, 9x11, 75 cents; large size, mounted,
13x16, $1.50 Prepaid. Send money order or stamps. Agents
wanted. T. E. Sweeney, Pg. Marmger Photo Co., 106 Sixth
Avenue, New York.
Muriel & Baby Maura MacSwiney
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Campbell, William. Southern Messenger (San Antonio and Dallas, Tex.), Vol. 29, No. 50, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 20, 1921, newspaper, January 20, 1921; San Antonio, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1266680/m1/3/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .