Southern Messenger. (San Antonio, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 31, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 29, 1898 Page: 4 of 8
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Mil
ih
T. . ■
SOKE QUE8TI0M8
Mt
SAX ANTONIO. TEX.. S*p'~», MM.
CITY CHURCH DIRECTORY.
I-'’
r
>
Marr cm
L-l-
4 '.n'i.
CATHOLICS PKUEOUTXD
IH ITALY.
Entered at the Po*t-Ofa* st San An-
tonia, Taxa*. asraoiMd-clMS null mater.
“A Catholic newspaper is a per-
petual mission in every parish."
—Hrs Holiness Pope Leo XIII
Wa cordially Indorse the approbation
of oar aateeawd predeoraaor in regard to
Mr. L. P. Adamson la the duly au-
thorised agent of the Soctherm Mxs-
BBifOBa to solicit robscriptioni and ad*
vertiramaute and to collect for the same.
nrntBOB XV MOKTH DA-
KOTA.
The Messenger of the Saad
Heart gives the following adfat
to our teicbers, which, if tollota,
A WAR CHAPTER IW
SCHOOLS.
12*
fe-ni
Btr ;
The Italian Government, on nc
count of the so-called bread note
in Italy and especially at Mita,
THE Wisconsin Patriot, an A.
P. A. organ, published in Mil-
waukee, has “given up the ghost."
It seems that the defeat of Spain
has not increased the power of the
A. P. A.
ki.
E-
Ei
Aatteprara.wtea prepacty dfcwtrt
to apuwutfal aU to giomoto Xrtigfom
■tedlffaratto knowledge to Truth, wo
apptoia of too peper, toe flooranra
Msawawn—wkfch is y-FMfa-f ante
•my Catholic family fa the State that
uadarataada the KagHafc iMgaag*-
t JousC. NXKAX,
Bp. of San Antoafo.
ptiaa gf tlMt teotat Wta 1
the rWn afRrt Worth ta
cwjAHMr Jta wMwjj
I *»***«' I 1 ’“*’3
■ h ■ - ... .•■ : 4^
public welfare, it is a c
Unreabamed liberty <rf
As xaUgfo* to the only science, which
contains a pledge of happiiwaa fa thia
world and in the world to com*. It is
iacumbmt upon all to learn It. And
what better new* to obtain this end
than the reading of a good and sound
. religious journal, as theSovTHnwMn-
aasoKB, published in San Antonio?
For, Chto to a Catholic paper to which
ws not only give our approbation, but
which we recommend every family of
our Vicariate to have.
Prrn Veujaocer,
Vicar Apostolic of Brownsville.
Lando. Texas, March Oth. 18M.
It seems that England can intro-
duce civilization by methods
which, if used by other nations.:
especially Catholic ones, would in-'
cur the condemnation of the uni-
verse, even of our jingo journals.
A LYIMG DISPATCH.
Spread Eagl
it beautifully <
Gri. J. P. Ncwo
omc address to
tiatiem, which rec
cty. He said;
Ikaowlam spue
•tor laugh az old c
•dadowracrtd
touch t to vStasi
Vtodand ft blossM
atahvtaa.
tomia teams Bret
[Si
liiS:
CcamMstosttoM tor pabBnfloa not
mashhv tota otoo* hy Tuesday will not
appear tfll fs-ao of foifowing week.
■ faeh sMUU'teaUsaa. uxuac to all
xaera b* aocorapmied by cornet nemra
ta iiMiewraof writers, not for pubU-
carton, tat aaovMeooe of good tilth.
SCHOOLS Ac.
XTreoMo* Convent—IM Augusta St.
Our Lady at the Lata Luk* View,
a*. Louis' Crltof Ww End
■fa Mary’s Cnilew ranagsSc.
fa Jtata’b School ng Boaham Sc
SU Ilentj’a School—170P 8. Florasfa
taaami* Wart School—Cor. Crosby
^dWMo’Su-
SU MfobaeFi Ursuline Day SfrooL-
.Cor. ladtaneia sed Saetto 8'a.
Urvulia* D*y Setanl, Pnupact Hill—
44M Wrat Co seine 8c
ten FmaateSehoal for Boys—216 N.
LototeSu
tea Fernanda School ter Girts—US
Stetatafk
te. PVtor Oarers gQtael 610 Ure
OWSt.
EL Jmepb’s Orphan Arytem—Military
PGuu ,
~fa John’s Orphan Asytam—Milam
&mta Meaa EsEremrv—Wgam Equal*.
ri~ - - - - “ ’ —
j&FtomsSA
Amu af th* Good ghiphiid Tut
l»to-
the New York Journal referring ity of knowing what was going m
in Cuba orforc the war, ttoy nor-
ly had equal opportunities oi Ion*
ing what was the matter with aw
troops. And indeed tbeydmii
have been able to learn it; to, ■
the Messenger of the SacrHHari
remarks, “wme of them had dto
patch boats in the obscure* pad
of Cuba and Porto Rico: ril d
them knew well how to ddagethe
camps w th their morning and Se-
quent ‘Extra’ editions. At Itet
ZOO correspondents sailed witklte
army to Santiago, and as ntey
more were left behind." Wta
were they all the time win «■
soldiers were being killed by
ncss and starvation ?
ilHi
- !: , < , ■, .s.
; ■■■ ■ ■';
i
At A meeting of the American
Association for the advancement
of science in Boston, Dr. Wolfred
Nelson says:
•' Wtan tta lawful landowning inter-:
sate fa Cuba rets, no doubt it win to
for m tedcpaodsut Cute under a*
Awwricsn protectorate. Th* Cub* Ubtu
of th* black* would b* a rerttabte h*n
apo* o wth. a Hot upon Ctafotlaa dvfl-
iaattm*. Cota, tta fair and fertil*. to
taka tar plate to tha famfly of ustfcou
asarth*** law. order and nisei ruaraa-
te*d by tta United States. Cubutote
aeredftabi* part of the earth, mu* be
rated by • flrm hand. A rekaUtam,
tarrartr mtoarity. tarpsly th* aimfaal
itimmto to tta felamL meet to tamA*
that tha greH law-aUdtag matertty
team rirtto that mo* to rrepaotaA
Ttat AN* or NLN* reggsd oamm
state* dtatata term* to arer a mtta
aadstatf of pseptois th* aom* of m- and began abo* war of extmata-
totagr. tat Mr tota gtoBtetae are - - - ~
tatfeta* m'lfe t'taTtta ^Ttato
"5
The following dispatch is a om-
plc erf the sort of “news" that
come * from Rome: “It is eatimatrri
that during his pontifieato Leo
XIII has amassed $20,000,000, in-
dudiog presents of precious stones,
gold and silver, to the value <rf
*10,000,000.
“President Kruger of the Trans-
vaal Repubhc is said to have pre-
sented the Pope with the largest
7Ar Boston Tmscrift relates
an interview with a man from
Fa^o, North Dakota, who, among
other profitable industries of that
anrcnutooL sad w* bop* ft wiU reach city, cited the great number of di-
vorces. He said: “I believe that
our easy divorce laws bring into
this little city alone $100,000 a
year. Several fashionable board-
ing-houses are kept running by
the divorce colony, and more or
less of the hotel business is of that
conferences and moral reform as-
sociations go up to the Legisla-
ture and ask to have the laws
changed, but so far they have
made no great headway. There
are too many parties in interest
who put up a stiffer fight on the
other side. The lawyers of the
State profit from the present sys-
tem, and so do the hotels and re-
tail shopkeepers. I do not look
for any change In the requirement
of three months* residence in the
State, which is the basis of our
flourishing divorce business. This
is one of Fargo’s very consid
erable sources of revenue." What
I .,t;a
l-’i
to the war of England in the
Soudan says: “There were no
wounded Mahdists left after the
battle of Omdurman. Crvcl and
[/ ■!■ J" ;■ ,
' “j/?’ /
wounded, almost without excep-
tion, were massacred by the Brit-
ish and Egyptian soldiers. .Mas
sacred is a hard word to use, but
it is the only one fitting. Om
dorman was not the first battle
where this has been done. Since
Gordon's depth it has been the
custom, because a wounded fa-
natic is more dangerous almost
than a well one." In that battle
England lost 200 men and the
Dervishes 15,000. The Anglo-
Saxon race is said to be “a great,
missionary race", and in its Chris-
tian charity it cannot afford to
take prisoners, but has to kill
everyone. No wonder the savages
submit to the Gospel; with such
charity any rebel must become
convinced of the efficacy of Chris- will bear good fruit in the frtte
tianity. In the face of such mas-
sacres what becomes of the asser-
tion of Queen Victoria that the
KtestatotagfMto tortoarMte. T*m.
ste tote teta. will tta bteak ptagw ef
Cewtrsl ata fasten Cutate*** to ta »
topM-n*n.’*
The “Cub* Libre" of the Caban
"patriots is a thing yet to come,
notwithstanding the war.
at $4,000.000."
We had no idea that the Presi-
dent of the little Republic was ao
wealthy as to make such psesents,
and that he has become so friend-
ly all at once to the Cathofci; tor
not ao long ago Catho&cs cookl
several parts of Italy.. - -Niu&er- ’
ous inoffensive and useful sooetie*;
were dissolved, to the destruction,
in a few stormy days, of Pa-
tient and modest charitable work
which had been accomplished dur-
ing long years by noble minds and •
generous hearts."
This ' _
Catholics will not £ave the Italian
Government: it is, to use the ex-'
pression of the present Prune Min-
ister of England, a “dying coun-
try." The New York Herald pub-
lished not long ago the views of an
Italian statesman on the situation.
“At the present moment," he says,
**a harmonious arrangement be-
tween the government and the
Vatican is a matter of Life and
death for the nation. The Papacy
cannot be crushed. AH the anti-
Catholic persecution of the last
twenty years has been useless. I
consider the Vatican as the real
arbiter of the situation. Either
we Italians must come to terms
with it, even at great sacrifice to
our pride, or our nation is predes-
tined in the near future to some
terrible cataclysm, of which the
recent riots have been the symp-
tomatic pi-dude?________
A DISPATCH from'London to
L. W1DUAM MENQXB, Gtasnl
Jtauter. ru wtate sfl teterys itatefl
Jta *tot ate mwteNtetans adflrssM*.
Otote «e FUMItetan K*. w-
MuMteScrtt
It IS said that our soldiers in
Cuba were supplied with a lot of
corn beef packed by a Chicago
firm, and bearing the label, “Can-
ned in 1885." Charles Cary, of
the Ninth Massachusetts, tdl^ the
Boston Post that the food was “un-
fit tor dogs, let alone men." As
the Catholic Universe aptly re-
marks: “Canned meat is not like
wine; it does not improve with
age." With the treatment our
soldiers received during the war, it
is doubtful if in the event of an-
tote-oritay, ynmol
tawteunnteta 1
toe flma. that tefa
to* When <ta smi
Anvattelafttaafl
tar wMfata: jo*
«ta ta ta
totec* -
atMscsf taster •
taka* th* nsM*.i*i
’■tates.’*-^*-
^ Whoever can «
faes anmot mil
tacmai ao pta*
ta n**al mam
STS****- ** £*•
Sa w
toto
Sff.inK OP
j in mMsurtug v
to**
goatawyto
Lose only vw
Hssndtai
—Th* 9»a«
« I
A MODEL YOU
j can temporary
Admiral Dewey 1
working m a rati
tion m Mew Y
great victory of tl
the young man
bj- the pubfiste
Eistcrn “ytflow
offs Of a place
staff at a salary
doH^-rs a week,
to do nothing 1
» rtter. by some <
b--om the paper
the great name ol
honesty of the :
above such a fira
tuously r<fused.
th* Ac Church was the pm»-
rwnint cause of the riot*. The
data tttat he----
Holy Father to a* encydkai tetter with the Kfout ef aputaSS
to the ckrgy and people to Italy het* grtoinmtefc*** wggg
’ "■ ‘ for stxfes,hai aether taJ
nor the indfautiou to cmwS
men, as a rtoe, care
about wealth than the rot* "
ktod.
Far from befreving the ft
be too rich, let
ish the comrictiou that
tatal
which each contributes fafitate l
ly for hts support is wefl J
LlBgKTV of speech is > PM
- OtariC**yfe- Ou*i*srgl-M.
MIM wteJy tare ta ampins
aCMT. XXV. J. A FOKXBT, Otata* to
A short time ago we ventured
the question, why is it that col-
lections are being taken up and
contributions made for the purpose
_ of helping the Red Cross Society
y7ar thc ’yno<is and noblc WQfk fw thc M0Djr
our sick and wounded soldiers,
when we consider that the war
costs the country about a billion
of dollars. Since then we have
noticed similar remarks in the
Messenger of the Sacred Heart.
After referring to the work of thc
Army and Navy Christian Com-
mission of the International Com-
mittee of the Young Men’s Chris-
tian Association and the Relief
Committee of the American Na-
tional Red Cross Society, (what
long titles!), of which the former
have spent over $50,000 and the
latter over $130,000, in their va-
rious ways, in behalf of the soldiers,
the Messenger of the Sacred Heart
says: “Considering thc ill-treat-
ment our army men have received,
we can only applaud any body of
citizens that has come to their re-
lief; but the question arises, why
cannot the government supply its
troops with necessary food, tents,
writing materials and other essen-
tials ? Why cannot officers pro-
vide, at least for the sick, such
comforts and luxuries as they
themselves usually enjoy? Why
must the men look outside the
camps for medical attendance, and
die without spiritual ministrations,
when. hundreds of priests were
eager to serve as chaplains? And
why were the only women who
have as yet properly attended the
sick and wounded soldiers not
called upon until the eleventh
hour, when thousands of them
were ready from the first to serve
the army, even vnto death ? If
the government can successfully
meet the needs of its sailors, why bloodthirsty as it may seem, the
should it need for the army the ex-
traordinary exertions and expendi-
tures of the committees mentioned
above; or, since even their efforts
have proved so inadequate to the
needs of the army, why not avail
itself of the offers of devoted men
and women, who offer their ser-
vices without stipulating for sal-
aries r
There are now several hundred
Catholic Sisters nursing our sick
soldiers, but, as the Messenger of
the Sacred Heart remarks, they
were called upon only at the
eleventh hour and, no doubt, for
the reason that they could no
longer be dispensed with. It
would almost seem as if the gov-
ernment had a desire to shelve the
Sisters as it shelved General Cop-
pinger. _________________
The return of our soldiers gives
occasion to editorials like the fol
we found in the
Illustrated American'.
Where is tbe r«t otthe Seventy-first?
Tda wu the cry that welled forth from
thousands or throats ae the remnants of
New York’s eplemfld regiment »asrch
ed up Broadway and Fifth avenue on
their return to civil Izttfcm. Not a man
or wom-u wbo saw thia handful of
sunken-chseked. limping and almost
helpless band of aolJim could repress
a sob of resentment aud wrath. And
tbe question: ■ ‘Where is tbe rest of
the seventy-first?” was involuntarily
prompted by tbe mown ranks of a regi-
ment which had loat only fouiieeu men
la actual battle. Yet. out of a thousand
strong returned only a pitiful four hun-
dred. Where are the other six bun
dred? Dead from fev-r. starved almo*t
ou th* threshold of their Lame*, the
victims af the grossest inoompeteoos
ever recorded in the history of thia
country.
The flower of our voinuteer soldiery
treated like cattle; th* men who won
fam* for America unprovided with even __j .y~_ _._5. ... r~~~
the common necerettire to life: ourna d,«^’or“ in ta world. It a valued
tioual heroes allowed to die Ilka vermin.
aa th* loving arms of relatives aud
Mauds were stretched out to teip them.
We believe in upboldtag th* fateto-
tious of our country; tn giving Oto
Pttedeut lorsl support and the warmth
at our blond; in not laying bar* th*
skeletons of our national ekmtassgo*
sips dforioe* tta seemteof their friends;
sod. Asally.f* America and »~ni *rin~-
But wudo antteHse* fa MgHgeocs
that is murder.
Why not 1r
Mr, Timothy H<
very pointedly: ‘
insist that Iwla
entitled to seif-|
Cuba.ar.d should
slrp or .i?ia''Cc v
til that was gra
Messings would
CafhoOc Colnmb
that, though tber
went in the aboi
far from dtrin
It indignantly ej
with Cuba ? W
cnilizcd. It hxs
half-castcs. It '
titled to freedom,
tn Idly expressed
no sensible cam
with Ireland,
teeming with cut
facendfaries, oatl
beasts. Englanc
Ireland the court
almost nothing
laad is Catholic,
k ■■'
JAPANESE newspapers are shout-
ing that it is the duty of the Unit-
ed States to hold the Philippines.
The explanation is that there is
an alliance between Great Britain
and Japan, and the retention of
thc Philippines would force this
country into an alliance with thc
former power
At THE Crefeld Catholic Con-
vention in Rhenish Prussia, Bish-
op Schmitz of Cologne eloquently
dwelt on loyalty to the govern-
ment, and, as a result, thc Em-
: pcror was assured by wire of the
loyalty of 7,000 assembled dele-
gates of German Catholics. The
Emperor appreciated the message,
although we think he would be
more satisfied if thc Centre party
would not oppose hts plans so
often. Well, loyalty to one's
country does not precisely mean
that the citizens should be dumb
tools in the hand of the ruler.
The Red Cross Society is not
__ such a saintly organization that
m.fata*’ Hais»fortaJ«ri^in7 jealousy has no room in it. It is
said that a movement is on foot
to depose Miss Clara Barton, in
order to place the wife of the
Pretedcnt's private Secretary in
her place. Says the Midlsotd He-
virar. "This seem* unjust to Mrs*
Barto*, but might have been ex-
pected. The multitude of news-
paper pvffs inevitably mast have
aenund femtniae cavy. Wide the
method of persecuting
; troops, took so long to £*g^| I
■ rhe actual state of things is fa. I
camps and on our transport s*. I
scls." It is strange, indeed, fa |
fore the war they knew all ta* 1
Cuba’s sufferings, Spanish orvlte^ 1
Spanish devastations, etc, tak* 1
the war they published all hta I
of news about the doings gffa I
Archirishop of Manila, ta* I
treacheries of priests and mw» I
which not a single word wash*; I
they knew so much that wai&fa |
but, when our soldiers vac ft x I
worse condition than ever the (*» |
bans were, when foul water ate to I
adequate drainage were sknriy b* I
surely poisoning our men ta '
marking them for victims *
phoid and other fevers, the* pa-
pers knew nothing. Thevoyp.
pers that brought about the u*
with tbex lying news, wtredta 1
when real news should have btn j
published. If they had oppatta
the SouTHBBir MBasefoER of San An- kind ef Christians are these people
tonio, Tex.. We are happy to recog-
nise in that publication all thc elements
which, according to the expisenfon of
our Holy Father Leo XIII . make a
Catholic paper ' ‘a continual mitaon”,
and we earnestly recommend the
Soumax MstaKsasa to all the faithful
ofourdfocMe. tJ. A. Forkst,
Bp. of San Antonio.
Dec. 31. I8M.
HSrs?'
jSbetato fikta
sad dt»s
—ably
2>a««
^oefroa ha-«
£ so that there
.__ .« an on*
ZU
ajury “ "dI f
some people
Si S.
mock “ 11
ux nmito uruDtu.
fa R«v. J- A. Forwt. D. D.
far. Juan de Dim Mutu*.
Very tar. J. B. K. Auiitt. V. G.
Maaia*.........7 and 10a. m.
Veipari ...... 3SM p. m.
SertB'm at aaeh Maas.
WrtkDuyi—Mbm,..........7.-00 a. m.
Tatter Arrtet wtll bear coufeatkxia in
fagthb *t tta Cathedral averv Si.nxdsy
ftm 5 to ®’-30 p. tn.
BT. XAJtT'SCSUUCH.
Bev. C. J. Smith, O M. I.
Bev. P. F. Ptfii*c.O M. I.
Rev. E.J. O’Callagban. O M. I.
-SatHicya—Low Mms...... 7 30 a. m.
Hl*b Man and Sermon... KhO > a. m
Vtapen.................. P- =-
Week i>t«. -**»-.......... m.
ST. JOeXTlTs CKVRCX (GEMIAX. }
B*r W. A. Fuhtwerk.
Sundays—-FineMom. .
far* Mam.......
Vmpera...........
Wete Day»-Mbm. .
of North Dakota? It is stated
that the churches are opposed to
this divorce business; they may
be now, but they have not always
been opposed to it, and many
sects still sec no wrong in it now-
adays. It is only of recent years
that some denominations, espe-
cially the Episcopalians, are think-
ing of checking the evil, but, as
far as we know, they have not
taken any rigid measure towards
attaining that end. The Catholic
Church is the only church on this
side of the ocean that has always
and uncompromisingly adhered to
the teaching that a divorced per-
son cannot marry again as long
as the other partner is alive. We
do not say that some unscrupu-
lous Catholics do not occasionally
act against the laws of the Church,
but they know that by this very
fact they deprive themselves of
the future reception of the holy
Sacraments and will be looked
upon as non-practical or, in other
words, as bad Catholics. If thc
sects had always condemned and
fought against this sort of mar-
riage, the Legislature of North
Dakota would never have enacted
laws so favorable to divorce.
Moreover, the stand taken by
some sects against divorce is
neither firm nor universal enough
to make a marked impression and
to let the legislators understand
that thc thing must be stopped.
The Protestant denominations,
when they are united on some
point, and ask unanimously for
some favor, seldom fail to obtain
what they desire, unless their wish
is evidently unjust or dearly
against the constitution of the
United States. Thus, when they
were thinking of ruining the Cath-
olic Indian Mission Schools, they
knew so well how to clamor that
thc government thought it best to
yield. After Alger had granted lowing, which
permission to erect a Catholic ~
military chapel at West Point at
the expense ot the Catholic Church,
the favor was too much for the
sects and car-loads of petitions
were sent to him, until he found a
means to rescind his permission in
the official opinion of Attorney-
General McKenna. It that same
permission has since been granted
by Congress, it is granted only
indirectly by the passing of a bill
which authorizes any denomina-
tion to build a chapel at West
Point if they so choose.
If, therefore, a Legislature re-
fuses to listen to the protests of
some sects against the divorce
oth^ »ar in ta near future there laws, it is evident that these pro-
tests are rather weak, poorly sup-
ported, and unimpressive.
lie me**«es of ta government _
mdrirficules thc ide* to thc Church 11—t to Fr-kmg ha fair w
disturbing pabbe peace. **e»*y%
was our surprise and sorrow when
we teamed rhat, under a nAculons
and iU-coaceated pretext, in order
to lead public opinion astray and
more easily to accomplish a long P01^ that the fear
If our young people will kara th* I
Chapter well and will try newt >• ]
forget it, the war fever in ta I
power of England lies in the Bible? country will not soon return. I
Now that tta war n over, let ate*- |
ter to prepartd tor our school MSWte I
jnrf*c*d ay a few worda talik* ME I
Sixd ft ia fo tbe truth in it* **1 I
affair, before, during and after btaft- I
ties. Let all proper pr*iae begim> I
tbe men wbo deeerre it, from tta Mw I
a*t leader* fa army and any dm*• I
tta Mmpleat private ar mutes, te I
due notice be <!▼*■ to tbeir frete* 1
eaK - awrtficw. endurance, h^dte I
death; tart add ata* a page or tm * j
tbe dark uda o< tbe arury. and. ta** ]
■a it is, let it be written bold ate dfa j
all about th* hot-bed camps otk**- 1
■tareatta Into to derated sunata* 1
fltal and traa^ort acccaamodtam. 1
Pitiable aa tt«taa.lcta I
▼otod to ta stotata of dtam ta I
deaths in eunpaaad In ae rellte tan 1
•bite- than won up tta amount etete I
•d by tb* war tax aud tteaiaoata* 1
fcdtated tojitoto diiiiiaifaitaj^j^ I
aXtkia;ton»with araaefew ]
tte jatosmfae, wrmgitan ata ti*
ttamaraa bttem ilutatow W
ata mate manr etaol boy ta ,
hw* ft by liMt. a*1tan» Ota"*.fl
«C ta taw* ata w wafaW ta-J
raw apo* ditadi ttara fate tatafjl
fate war fe a pertag er isopw wta*|*
eftarttag curtaputeawith ottwW,Y
*““■-- --
WE ACKXOWIXX>G*,vritil tfetaHi 1
_ _ --------receipt of on iavtatio* from ta j
take no part in the government of Sisters of Chatty of the luimtaM I
•a..*» MS- Word at Fart Warth to toEtaj^
the ceremony of ta opetag rfta^
sew SCjnirph s Infarnwy to **i■ ‘
city on Scptetaerngta Rt»*ta|:.i
irr or tn* taCABaATX word,
BuOdays—MaMumwlly at.. tt:00 a. m.
xteuarwr or oca lrdt or chakty
Coood anriom.)
Bar. P F. Prtisoc. O. ML I.
Sunday* and Week Days—
Xa*.........-........ 6 30*. m.
',u
•Ji
XTstato*
totattafe*
.... 7 JO a m.
.... 10:00 *. m.
... 4 to p. m.
.... 7:00*. m.
ST, riOAIL'l CHUXCH (POUHH )
Bar. L. DtbrewskL
Bunday*-High Maas...... dtoam
Vespers.................. 4 £0 p. m
Week Dayw-Mms.......... 7:00am.
ST. PB1U <XjLVZ*’H (COLOOXD )
Bar. J A. Dumoulin.
-Sunday*— Huth Mam........ 8 30 *. m.
X suing—Barrie*......... 7 -JO p. m.
'Week daya— Mau........... «. m.
Baary Friday^oue boor o t pubiloadon-
tiuu of th* maarad Sacrament front 7. OU
co 8to p. tn., followed ou the first and
third Fridays by Benediction.
ST. r*.TBlCK’l CHUnCH.
R«r John sbeebao.
Baa. 616 Willow Scrrat.
’Bmdnya—Low Mara........730*.ia.
High Mat*........... . .10 to *.ai.
Catetklim . . ............ 4top-m.
faauy and Benediction... 5 to p. m.
Weak Days Mara........... 7.00 *. m.
CKBCtm C0WKXT
VrayBiv.J. B.K. Aodat, V. G
SundaysaodWeekdays- ■Mem.6:JUa.ni.
ACaDKXT or ODB LAST or TUX UII.
iter. Henry Pertsrkora, Cmptein.
Bundays Maia..............&45 a. n.
Veapan................... 3.00 p. hi.
Week Days—**M.......... 6:IB a. m.
&UTTA BORA KTDUAKT.
Rar. J. B. MeLoy. Chaplain.
Braay Day—Mass.......... 6:00*. m.
Buodays—Bead*. Vraper* and
Bentalctloz ............ 1:45 p. tn.
<r. maxcia’ non roe thc aosd.
A'tanded from Seat* Bora 1 a Urinary.
ar. LxHrta’ cuuiot.
B-v. Jobe Wulf.IMreetor.
far. Jas. Wamceraar. Chaplain,
fan. Joeapb Millar, Treasurer
Bataa's—Mass............. 6:45a.m.
Bowery. Vespers, aud Bane-
diatiou.................. 2:45 p.m.
Week Day*—Ma-s .......... 6:15 a. m.
ST. MAKt'k COLLBUB
fko. John Kiuaoder, Director.
R-w. Aac. Friaobe, Chaplain.
i. Mowry-
' Malta, g-Xfayg—tata lagsli
™ ■ Tbtasy, Vtata of Aa-led.
tafa*mta,*~*»Geta Widow.
Tterifa*. d-ta. fauta Crate iiw.
IMta. T—Evtatitfate ***C*ta*s-
would be so many .young men
ready to volunteer.
yr ,»sr«gg£xzxgfcx
pj- tog Illi 1 I' I |«M. :
:
‘ :'Li ■
■teiti'
MMaOdHij'
premeditated plan, people dared to
lay at the door ot Catholics tbe
stupid charge of disturbing the
peace, in order to saddle them , . -
with tbe blame and tbe disastrous lMC_ylw'n. rt. fa.
results of the rioting enacted m
inoffensive and useful socsetie*; pttoaotes anarchism.
AM IYCOKFBTUT P>W
“It is strange," says the
ger of the Sacred Heart, ^fa
our newspapers, which an ■*
filled with heart rending
the neglect and starvation of
troops, took
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Southern Messenger. (San Antonio, Tex.), Vol. 7, No. 31, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 29, 1898, newspaper, September 29, 1898; San Antonio, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1266705/m1/4/: accessed June 25, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .