Southern Messenger (San Antonio and Dallas, Tex.), Vol. 16, No. 13, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 16, 1907 Page: 1 of 8
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■ !'j:1
MESSENGER
i
SOUTHERN
PRO!
H
[PIKE $1-5® A TEAK
SAN ANTONIO AND DALLAS, TEXAS, MAT 16, 1907.
*
THE NEGRO MISSIONS.
F
8*y:
1
V tti-jsjt
‘T!^
being
NUNS EVICTED BY GENDARMES.
o. - -
idowaol
cree
beautiful orange
hie friend and confessor, the
[•i
Bod*
'ears
U>J, ril^UM *• Jriri*r|b«. Ot “>•
bUii", ■
fl
Famous
tonio Becy
tai. New York, was one
nurses L-- ~ --
between the States.
1 ■H*rar
•••'
■fl
& LOCK n
ruaewM,
■■ fl
' ' -I
j '<iffimiiu ’N|i|ijiiri jii
* ■ "jFiSF1
Is
tg Better?
******
W.c—**
III
i»T.
>AUL NV
JUTLlrt
L JJiTHE 3***
M
| 'i
«JRADEN-O’NEILL
. i ►
I ■!:.(
BEt|
MF ANY. I';i]
'about yaur i
Wo will help
re money. .
yOL XVI—NO. 13.]
n --r-“—
OF SAFES
LSMITH I
3PLATIN(
ad tn
of ctiitr^vh
■ Jl;: '
1
'Ws
r;;H :?i i
Irom S. P.:
far to our
h:
1'1
I-*
|‘‘among the saintly saga, on hie I ton.with the sea. tun «ua
shelves, among the wordsmiths of to be the nomens ,<* -
hl. store-house of wisdom, a rest-
J
c
CARR. mJ
I Dr. Wiffiam D. McCarty,
i D1NTIST.
I Hour*'. » to Ul : l« S am.
[ Ole E*cl" U. Pbonail.
I 0FY>"E, MOOHK BUILD TNG.
; THE M. H. WIUZIUS co.
>■ or.ir.i->.’ 1 sure* .nd Good.
< It.-, ■_»- in tfi. United 9t*t«a.
5 nar of-E-.'JMlowtaM e.«;08»*» »uLb"
) oc .pf lieailon -
I Vriidir.'n, Albs. Banners, R*-
< li^ious Goods. Picture*, Btat-
< nary. Stations of the Cross,
j Ssii'bii and Liturgical Books.
J THE M. H. W1LTZIUS CO.,
i 413-41 ~ Broadway,
i Milwaukee. - - Wte.
Tk Wrbm Wkt
*ra*s**Mte> era—mm la etaster
mb*W**<tabM «mm M tao
L Mat US—IIS ill, «• WMUtosar *
PtTTLltMB ■ ItyA*. Om —fc w»
7 —W'Oe MbM—:*SOMM star Sraei
iM ss«m> Ih a seta M M
p astitaetai M*« W**
t ’ ■ Mk(l
h ■; HtMrnJNOKKe ..
L ' lMwfesHMMtaa -w TffiH*
I *K__L’.i____■; '-; '----—
Bk rl]
fl
noun! HU
nd Cleu, ;
De Cuame |
kg San Aatt
[a an excellent
r.g place.
REILLY. MU
days Later all Franes was sur-
prised to hear that the young
Bishop of Baysux, Monseigneur
Arnette, had been chosen coadju-
tor Archbishop of Paris, with
succession assured.
The choice of this young pre-
League,and various other bodies.
Everything indicates that it wm
be an important event in Belgian
Catholic life.
Dr. Frederick E. J. Lloyd,
formerly prominent in the Epis-
copal ministry, and whose con-
version some months ago attract-
ed wide attention. lectured in
Kansas City recently, his subject
At present, however, it is an
affine L_”21._
wnthing more a different place
from the dismantled house near
by where th* workmen are busy
treneformin g the airai**t STCh-
bfehoprfc into tfie Ministry of
Labor.
The grape vims whfoh Cardi-
nal HSnhard piaotod fifty years
ago, and tended daily with bis
own hands until last New Ysar^s,
L"---w~ ~ * .. — . r. <
who iGJIlllli taM
ttot Ito ato---— - ---«
braft fwiHVCe.
He to — J
tototowsofWto. _ __
«toi KfatotTe VlM» «H Ml »
liies for . „ J
irst 1
minion
oks, Rosario^ I
folders, Etc. j
lie Bibles^ I
Picture*.
inage
FENCfl
'■ SiJ'.
tip! kUri-.ri
1 ■■ ' ,'■ ■ ; ,
T 'U ■
Doon of Unaliae Convent Batter-
ed b.
Nantes, Franee, May 4.—At
daylight to-day fifty mounted
gendarmes surrounded the Con-
vent of the Ursulines here and,
when toe Sisters refused to open
the doors, battered the latter in.
The Sisters were found assem-
bled at prayer in the chapel, but;
after the mother superior B uuu^u ..
read a protest against the action ; .f ^.1^. Cardinal
of the authorities the offioiaUng , Rinh . th<t splendid old son of
priest removed the Bleseed Sac- rittan b# ^n henceforth
ram ent and the Sisters withdrew. . . •>
In toe meantime an excited
crowd gathered outside the con-
vent shouting maledictions on
toe soldiers. Several persons
were arrested, including a lieu-
tenant of the Twenty-fifth Dra-
goons.
times as much will be required
in the end.
Extewma ef PreMat Damato.
The Vatican gardens are In the
»ans-Tiber district of Rome, and
at the rear about 1,200 feet
bread. It is purposed to buy a
itrip in the comparatively oon-
■ gested district of exactly that
j width, but to broaden it, aa
Rome, May 1.—The Pope today I soon as the open country to
2 _i audience to Bishop | reached, to a width varying from
Lillis of Leavenworth. He ex-; a quarter to three-fiftha of a
‘ ‘ ‘K“ mile. The strip is to be axtend-
ed to Civita Veochia. Ito Isngft
will be sixty-five mftos.
It is believed It will not be dif-
ficult to win from the Italian gov-
ernment recognition of the Pope’’*
temporal power in the limited
domain to be bought, as that
would not affect the King’s rule
over Rome, and would mat*
mere rib-
s
and{cburch ir. '’pi'metio «*• built by
' paitc-r and peop.3, while the
leadin. '".obrew merchant, who
happet.. to bo the artist * I the
town, gilded the cross whion
adorns the building. The mem-
bers of the congregation support
their pastor as liberally as any
similar rural community.
Rev. Chas. E. Reilly has a
nice congregation in Houston,
with a flourishing school of near-
ly 100 children in charge of the
colored Sisters of the Holy
Family.
In Dallas the work is in charge
of Rev. J. J. Ferdinand, who in
little more than two years has
succeeded in building a hand-
some church. H« is now making
preparations for a suitable school
to be opened next fall under the
charge of the colored Sistars.
St. Peter Claver’s on Nolan
Street, San Antonio, under Rev.
J. F. Warning, reported a large
class of children and adult con-
verts who made their first Com-
munion and were confirmed re-- d^tpjyed B
cently. Mother Margaret Mary Ta
and her Sisters of the Holy The threa
Ghost are devoted to the work |
amongst the children.
Rev. U J- Welbers, of the Di-
vine Redeemer Mission, East
End, gave an account of the new
school which has a regular at-
tendance of thirty children. Spe-
> ciat efforts are made in both
school* to teach the children a
1 love for work. * While the girls
----------! are instructed in Mwing. the
the diooese, of the building of boys receive lessons in carpentry
- — - - ■ • from one of the best known oar-
pentere in the city. Father Wel-
ben has made several visile to
Pleasanton, Ataeoeka Co,, to
the colored people of that town.
w The interest and enthusiasts
Jesuite at St. Mary’s College,end shown by them give a fair prom-
- ise for anew mission. Twooon-
GoMen jubfr verts were received
recently at St. Vincent's Hoapi-
" ’ °f the
for soldiers during the
iw<w Z-. . She
not merely ' toe spoHation^and i attended the small-pox pa-
w&a 71 ye&r« of age, and had
apen; ferty-cight years in the
convent.
Invitations are <a*j to the cor- ! oemg \ jw ■> “ >-■ j
ner^tone laying vi the new St.; frs-oc-j ’ Thu Wil;;» Wood
Paul Cathedra on ths 2d 0! Junv. j Thrster wns . ro\<*e to the drwrs1
The new structure will be, if not; occasion, itd toouaauds
the grandest in the West, cer-
tainly the grandest in the North-
west, and will cost over one mil-
lion dollars. Archbishop Ireland
will himself deliver the oration.
______________________ ________- __ ______ ’
are passed. Yet the truth is as | West will be present. It will be
■ i -x J I A,H - — — *3-. aLweMwii* t«*k flva
“Stubborn aa a Breton,” is an j
turmoil and passion."
Aaerica a*d The Poles.
Rome, May 5.—The Pope gave
today an audience to the Right
Rev. Joseph J. Fox, Bishop of
Green Bay, Wis. -or Iull reccgniuou □» ujo
pressed gratitude for and admire- i It* Lan government, it
lion of the filial <Jevotton of | oonfcem Utag for fhe papal Court
Amenoan Catholics to the Holy, AmbM^do„ and Ministers from
See. He e&id that America at |ev important country. It is
forced him many 0®*‘ nc/ said that t*e project haa
Referring to toe ^thol*e Poles !b0en fonninj? for yeBrs,
living in th® Vmted 9tstM( d® __e,A zv\a aaa
..id tb.t in due mum of time I ' Two or three
they will have some Bwhcps of (m.,„h ha reauirod
their own nationality, not eape- j
daily appointed.but appointed in |
the usual way. He sent his
blessing to the JVbmXv. a Mil-
waukee Polish newspaper.
Bishop Fox gave the Pope $5,-
000 Peter’s Pence.
Americsa Bisbop Received ia Aa£- j
eace- [
Rome, May 1.—The Pope today
granted an i——.———.—- _ -
Lillis of Leavenworth.. He <
pressed gratification with the
growth of the Church in America,
and he hoped it would prove a
power for the welfare of a great
and promising country. Conso-
lation was afforded him by the
manifeMtations of sympathy of
the American people in his posi-
tion respecting the French crisis.
The Bishop presented to the . .
Pope the Rev. Fathers McInerney ; foreign territory of a
and Burke of Kansas, Augustin, ben of Italian soil. Thus toe
of Missouri, Clark and Menan oi whole Vatican-Quirinal queetiou
Rhode Island and Jenkins of; will be solved with honor to both
Kentucky. He also presented; rides, and with little in the nature
Peter’s Pence to the amount of > of a material ocnceerion on the
512,000 to ibe Pope. then part of the Italian government.
w.HWM, C— i 1 P would have his own
who uopod ir/the future seaport/ at which visiting mon-
" isit Lu« Western and middle archs could land to pay their re-
, epests to him and then re-embaric
{in a small yacht at toe earn*
1' Railway lines from Turin and
Ro’h^’ fMt^f -hTw'ST of I G«no* oro“ the prop0*4
Iff a^f.u I "nt." d“ i»port“‘ hiRh—y-,
It would not be possible
! to allow those to remain without
> toe risk of raising oontroverriee
11 fYi«an! with the Italian government, eo
collapse, wiuc h would mean , proTides for the sinking
destruction to toe bee. type of a. .treeta, roads and rail-
Th. Ponbtt ho- mu^ J <O(J l»
money would be ni*oe*s*ry w . . , . * ---j---1—.
restore the wall and was inform-
ed that it would cost about S25,-
000. The Pope said that in view I
1 Il d-11 4lAVt S
Church he thought ft would not;
be right to spend no much for a ,
restoration, no matter how val-
uable the garden.
The wall in the Vatican gardens
which are especially threatened
is the one which overhangs the
Zitella, or Maiden's, alley. The
part of it which has a ready fallen
‘destroyed a beautiful orange
The threatened Renaissance
garden is surrounded by walle
about 650 to 1,000 feet tong.
ixas'
ide l^=
■ PIUMBIBC AMD HEATUtC CO.
IK 223 Loecya Bteeet,
H SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS.
■ Hr 1-5- of LafcynM. *4.
I—*"-* **<1 *• “**
(up* *•»*>< pl—a a ■
J. C. LAMK1I, Attorney-at-Law
I &»<■■ ft* * JiC Moore Bld<.
I :»■< Ftcm* 47Z Phon* UtK.
I BAN ANTONIO. • ... TEXAS.
I M E BbCKLST W P FOiLXT
BUCKLEY Jt FIS LEY,
I LAWYERS
I I tad "■ Fr-nca K4c SAN ANTONIO, I'll
LEO. M. J. DttLMANN?
ARCHITECT.
I IM a Craaam Sa SAN ANTONIO, TSXAS.
I. Dr. G, W. Philips.
I DKMTUIT.
I Mi W. Ctfwirnr m.. Bae AsMio.
|w. M. WOLF, M. D.
i 41» Moore Bldg.
PtUUMA 112*
HaatdMU* til Berth St. r*ol»«»TMO.
CAk n*r alfc t» l»ft At IfarC A WiJdlM**
Dni< 9rer»
wtabUsbed to ~te ,
OnSMdaV.^yC^J^te^ti^^
__ Mtom. Ptorn wss^i'; I
be boat iar stoMMHp hniBWM
hsnwTT D*
££>»»■>, and hotetoMg
pUgriSMaisd other risttetoi
Jar"tram that town wesM
mMMr bcMsa of the
wgj
suffer. But their former garden-
er lies bedridden in the new home
that is no home to him, calmly
awaiting the end.
Hew He Ctoae His Seccemor.
It was characteristic of Cardi-
nal Richard that when age began
to weigh upon him and a coadju-
tor was needed to share the bur-
dens of his office, he held no con-
ference with his fellow prelates
and, as toe story goes, did not
even ponder in his own mind the
merits and defects of those eligi-! gia^t, pastor of St Patrick’s
ble to succeed him. Church, Osage City, has been
He went simply as a child to ’invited to deliver the memorial
—r—*K“ address for toe post May 26.
The old soldiers became ac-
quainted with the priests during
the war, and the invitation states
that they have groat love and
reverence for the Cshtolic cler-
gymen.
Next year will be a jubilee
year in the diocese of Louisville.
Then will occur the hundredth
anniversary of the erection of
St. ciaro’s church at Coleoburg,
and to* astabliohment of the
Dominican novitiate,nanr8pring-
fiald. Of diamond jubDo** there
will be thro*, the establishment
of Brthtohem. Academy, of the
th* fonndieg df' St. Vincent's
Orphan Aayimn. I
lew wffl bn jslnbnted by the
difficulties that hamper their ef-
forts—difficulties which can onlj’
be overcome by the patient char- seaport
wore turned away. Dr. Lloyd
appea.-*i under the auspices of
the Knights of Columbus.
According to reports from <
Rome, the Pope has just appoint-
ed a number of apostolic dele-
gates to visit every diocese in
Italy and to report on the condi-
tions of the seminaries. In the
interest of better education for
: the students. Pope Pius X. has
decided to reduce the number, of
seminaries from one in each dio-
cese to one in each ecclesiastical
province. The delegates have
been sent to study local condi-
tions.
Although there were no Catho-
lic soldiers in th* Grand Army
Post at Harveyville, Kan., and
few in the town, the Rev. Father
Fr_e5L Donecker.
Jraci W’°^S^?
T10 MonUik Bl. Box BSB.
SAW ANTONIO, TEXAS.
To Their Brethren In America.
“We Need Toor Comfort and I I
Sympathy In This Hnr
of Trad.”
Paris, April 24.—Monseigneur
Arnette, Coadjutor Bishop ol
Parle, successor to Cardin a
Richard, and the active head cl >
the Church in France to-day.
sends this message to America:
‘‘What do we ask of our broth-
ers in the United States? We
entreat them to arouse and exert
the force of the public opinion oi
a great nation. That is ail we
have toe right or the will to ask.
“I cannot speak officially, nor
issue nor utter an official mes-
sage. You must understand
clearly that my position gives me
no such authority. But I can
speak as a Catholic to Catholics,
I and to unbiased Americans as an
observer who knows the ques-
tion in Issue.
Ada Only Fail Undenteadtsg.
“To all your countrymen,
1 therefore, I would make this
i plea; Give us your full iinder-
} standing of the conditions which
j exist in France, and which en-
compass Christianity in this
country. Study the questions
for yourselves.
“If you distrust our words be-
cause you believe they are
founded on self-interest, ignore
them. But do not accept the
false phrases of our implacable
enemies for the fact*. Onc'e you
have gained comprehension of
the truth, and th* whole truth,
we are assured of your sym-
pathy.
‘‘As a Catholic epeaking to DMtTOVW
the Catholics of America I would thanksgiving,
say: *Wa na«d your comfort
----j and sympathy in this hour of j
=! il LS“ | „ .C.tbouo
, en your compatriots to full un- |
i deratanding of the tyranny, the
despotiam and the oppression
which masquerade in France to-
day, under toe names of freedom
ity sud oo-openttoa the Catho*
li0’a«>'moet pleasing feature of buildings, and abouta mile fam*
th* conferee©* was a visit to the
RL Rev. Bishop Forest, on
Thursday afternoon. The pater-
nal manner in which th* Rt- Rev.
Bishop t-
Fathers, a»u mw
words he addreeeed to them, will
spur them co to renewed efforts.
wm celebrated at St, Peter
Claver’s Choreh with the Rev. J.
F. Warning as oslsbrant Rev.
p. O. L*b*au proMhed aa able
and instoMttvu sennon. After
,, -7__Mess an informal reoe^ttoa wm
ton at given the Fatoscs by the mcm-
MESSAGE FROM THE ,
CATHOUCS OF FRANCE
IWJ3KBD Wm. THE APPKOB.TXON OF THB RT. REV. BraH0r3 OF DA1XAS AND SAN AFTONIO AND THk'VCAK APOSTOLIC OF B..OWN<VU-^-
4000
-umes which now adorn the
naess of th* individual ledgers
WOODS NATIONAL
3ANK are sure evidence of
tie ih us factory service rsnder-
by that progressive and
popular institution to its
depositors.
. '9 • .
iiiin.iiiH11*■ w'
•*»- . .. •
au.ii. UM..WSS*. i i ■■■"• j PROPOSED PAPAL STATE.
| NEWS FROM ROME |
acossscseMSseseesMSscseMsMSCsetoS
A New Order ef CWwJry.
A new order of ehivalry.known
8£f tbMV —-- — — —' W
pulchre, has been Instituted by;
Ise for a new mission. Two oon-
At their meeting the Fathers
and it will be the crowning work
apostolate in th* great North-
west.
Pope Pius X. hM Issued a call
to the Catholic women of New
York to aid in preventing the
spread of the divorce evil. The
I . ’.7—"*■—i to Mias
Lummis, founder of toe Daugh-
ter a of the Faith, and was read
by her at a meeting of the organ-
ization on April 17, presided over
by Monsignore Lavelle and ad-
dressed by Archbishop Farley.
There has been organized for
this year a great Belgian Catho-
lic. Congress, similar to the Con-
gresses annually held in Ger-
many. It will be composed of the
Federation des Cercles VatJtoli-
depression of 1
France, but the extermination of
toe Christian faith and of all re-
ligion.”
Carfiaal Richard Psri*x Away.
The nominal head of the
Church in France is a very old
man, who is slowly dying. The
truth about Cardinal Richard has
not been told eince the doors of
his new homo closed after his
first entrance. It can be glean-
ed only by inference, even after -----------
th* doors of 50 Rua de Bourgogne [ and most of toe Bishops of the
epoch-marking event in the
and liberty.’
laflaeece Mast Be Fait
“The impact of the thought of
a great people truly Cree ii bound
to be fell throughout the civilized
world.
“That is our plea to America—
comprehension of a criminal re-
gime which crushes liberty in the [
name of liberty, and whose aim is | war
the Church in tjOixs ai Blackwell’s Island. She
in the
BISHOP FOREST AND JO3EPHITE FATHERS.
Top row, left to right: Rev. P. O. Lebeau, Palmetto, La.,
Rieht Rev. J. A. Forest D. D., Bishop of San Antonio; Very Rev.
Thomas B. Donovan, Superior of St. Joseph’s Society for Nepro
Missions, Baltimore, Md. Second row, left to right: Rev. Joseph , 51Z,VW IO : up». Ai'- cools pw ui *u
F. Wareing, San Antonio; Rev. John J. Ferdinand, Dalias; BeT*| visited Cardinal Merry del Vai, The Pope
C. E. Reilly, Houston; Rev. L. J. Welbers, San Antonio. {
Western and middle arch* could land to pay their re«
towns of America. epecti to him and then, re-embark
jin a small yacht at toe earn*
The Vaficu Gardea ThreateaeiL ) port for a short run to Rome.
o >. t — ■ -~i.~ I Railway line* from Turin and
Rome, May 6.—A few weekli 3
| ■£££•* ^’35
to toe Vatican museum, fell and .. .. - -
this morning the Pope wee in- 1
formed that the wh:>le of the |
{surrounding wall threatened to :
VI___A. nrt-ktslfd mMfllft
; the plan provides for th* ainkiDg
r earned under toe Vatican domain
by tunnala, and the atreeta eithar
of toe financial condition of the [ pawng over then om
the bridges. Railway atetioM
would be bunt in toe tannali at
toe Vatican territory, so vitetan
arriving by train could stop
directly to Papa] soil and not M
compelled to eet foot on Homa
grounds.
Reotifil MjELmmL
Substantially all strnctiffM
■tandinff on th* land to be LiragM
for th* Pop* would be demolish*
•d and toe whole territory oo»-
verted largely into a park, with
handsome drives and pacha, and
an electric railway operating frost
a point near toe Vatican to tos
__3 on the Pope’s grounds,
A suitable area would be Mt
aside for emb*Mi*e and togatfou
thTvMican asmall vfllag* wosH
be built to provide boot** far
workmen employed oa th* r*B-
^Z>eive<rth^JoMphito pirate, water worts and
rad th* encouraging ratal pi Ism c_.—^r~,~
th* Vatican independent of rtm
Ou th* sesenser, the idea * j
■die* of abacs ehall ba
in the
I Ab lateresfinR Project
Weahky Atoericam.
k new oraeroi cuiv*iry,«.uv->-A ? Statements widely circulated.to
the Knighta of the Holy Be- t effect that the project o£
* * ; rcrniing a Papal State is behind
the Vatican. [ the announcement of toe recent
---- J purchase of a strip of land to ba
Copy ef “Frtaried France” Prwertci j added to the Vatican domain,
te The Peee. ! *=« herewith given for what they
Rome MSV 5.—Thomas W. worth. The plan seems to
T Roatou is here to- : be a feasible one, and hae many
oit^bly to
portrait'tota.ani.'t M,n»ni. H.;xt to C.tbolxc.
Intelv had audience of toe Pope! A dispatch from Home
S’crdioA. M.r? d.J V^toj-^ “TM
Ftaooe.” aolirerrti b.^oR .nd MJon.y o! PM.-
I a special dication to the Pope. I dslphia had purchased a ertnp of
The Pope, who was addressed tend adjoining the Vatican m
“The Great Priest" in the; order to extend the Popes do-
Jklato g*.1S*>“4
- - -* am ttxg i uOD Wltn tn0 BOXI-1B *■ totodsx
■»* pi™ .?K-pnne °‘
tie entire Vatican problem and
five to th* head of the Catholic
Church again a seat among the
ruling monarchs of the world,
with a little kingdom of his own.
As the idea necessarily provides
' for full recognition on the part
; V4 mi “ ?■'•' ■ - - ------ -J
! contemplates for the Papal Court
. " * VW*’ ____* . . wee^
| every important country. It *■
---said that tke project has
_______. >
and the first S10.000.000 needed
simple m it is ssd.*_ |
old French proverb. “Sturdy as
a Breton," is another phrase as
2. But toe oak that with-
stand* a thousand tempests is
-- - i------- " _ . . kliisd ii Kransi»»*ited. L™*d*Sil
of toe autoorities the officiating , R-nharH| gpi.ndid old son of
> ■» ■ A . . ■ 1 * 1_ _ — lb. M. M A. JT
only by bis household.
He was evicted like a default-
ing east rids tenant last January.
He was toe gneet of 3d- Denya
Goch in for a time. Then he
moved to a new residence so near
his old one that there is really no
great difference in. the rize and
exterior of the propertie*.
H» Fiemat fade Laipaff
In toe Rue d* Grenelle, how- —
ever Cardinal Richard had lived head of the Sulplciane, and a few
longer than th* lifetime of the ’-----" -----------
average men- It may be that
the new arohiapiacopal palace
may grow to b* lees brave and
crude aad cold during the com-
ing deewiee.
buying rad lodging— late—barely in the fifties, with
‘ th* .look and physique of a man
of thirty-five—no longer cause*
surprise exteapt at the wisdom of
selection.
That th* world will hear much
of him in the years to come is the
opinion of all observers who have
watched the calm, untroubled,
patient diplomacy with which he
_ is conducting the affairs of the
etin growtatf. They wiU be Church in th* most trying period
T“,-~wTF;: Utafromhl.llp.tlMtth.aM- tarn wm b. «**»*<> by U"!,,*1
_ had asra to Amaris*, which hade tbfo Useuifa* HMecerad. th*ooegre- ^*CU**T? <*?*t ^^n^**^?*^*
tribal UMnaltarUt **H*w **• «wMriyH;y* KT* vST^w
| CATHOLIC NEWS AND N0TE5J
eMSMoosMesaeseeseeafeieraaomocai
The Japanese Government has
ordered a copy of Goldie’s psint-
ng of the death of St. Francis
Xavier for the public library in
Tokio. „r
Sfr n.w C«puohtaml..ion.ri» “
have left Belgium for the mission r
>t Lahore, India. Four Oblates
of Mary have sailed for the Bolo- [
mon Islands. 1
Seattle College, conducted by (
the Jesuit Fathers at Seattle,
Washington, was badly damaged
by fire on May 3. The loss is
estimated at 510,000, fully cover-
ed £>y insurance.
The triennial convention of the
Ladies’ Catholic Benevolent As-
sociation of the United States
will be held in Springfield, Mass.,
in July. About one thousand
delegates will attend.
Leo Taxil, the French writer,
exploiter of the mythical Diana
Vaughan, and writer of i.n al-
leged expose of the Masons, is
dead. Taxil was a hoax, who
for a long time gulled French
Catholics.
The present month will witness
the laying of th? corner-stone of
the new St. Francis’ Orphanage
for Bovs in Detroit, Mich., the
gift of* the priests and laity of
that diocese to Bishop John 8.
Foley, in honor of th* golden
jubilee of hie ordination to the
priesthood.
On the anniversary of the great
eruption of Mount Vesuvius, 50,-
000 people of Naples formed in
procession, and with statues of
aatote, banners and lighted
candles marched through the
' streets chanting prayers of
------- t w.- They recalled
We their narrow escape of a year
I ago-
I
Dele mon t and Franohe- Montag-
ues, Switzerland, which were
suppressed to consequence of the ,
schism of the Old dsthoHes end
of the Kulturkampf.have been re-
established on the old lines. The
Catholics of Switzerland now
number 1,379,664, out of a total
population of leas than three mil-
lions.
Sister Ann Scholastica, vener-
able Sister it Charity, who died
But our request of you
history of Western Catholicity,
Via rf F.t»iWrtmSm<v
Of The Jetephite*.
The annual visit, week before
last, of the Very Rev. Thoe. B.
Donovan,Superior of SL Joseph’s
Society for Negro Missions, to
San Antonio wm of more than
ordinary interest.
A number of priests of the So-
ciety assembled at the pastor’s
residence on Nolan Street to
make their reports to the super-
ior, and to discuss ways and
means for advancing the work
amongst the colored people. Be-
sides Rev. J. F. Wareing and
Rev. L. J. Welbera of this
city, there were present Rev.
A CIAC. - Chas. E. Reilly of Houston and .
quee, presided over by M.Woeste, j j. j. Ferdinand of Dallas, |
of the Christian Democratio the Louisiana mission was i
represented by Rev. P. O. Le-
beau, of Palmetto, La.
Father Lebeau’s report was
most encouraging. It goes to
show that with time and patience
the colored people will make
Catholics who are a credit to the
Church. Besides a good congre-
gation at Palmetto, Father Le-
beau has several missions. The
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Campbell, William. Southern Messenger (San Antonio and Dallas, Tex.), Vol. 16, No. 13, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 16, 1907, newspaper, May 16, 1907; San Antonio, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1247237/m1/1/?q=mission+rosario: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .