Southern Messenger. (San Antonio, Tex.), Vol. [3], No. [29], Ed. 1 Thursday, September 20, 1894 Page: 3 of 7
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V-CT
JUT!
■-W
S Pt SCO PAL ENDORSEMENT
fitagtoCopyfe. OoeYwfLM.
'd
SAS’ A.VTONIO.TEX., Sept. 20. :sm.
fjfj
one, acting within the limits of his
m.
11
H
I'l
The Pwz, a protestant prohi-
i :
en-
: J1
|V
li
i; ■
“A Catholic newspaper is a per-
petual mission in every parish,"
—H r s Holiness Pope Leo XIII
did through the intercession of
Mary. Moreover, Our Lord, fore-
seeing all the evils of liquor, did
very wrong, according to the same
theology of the Review, to choose
and ordain wine as a part of the
Holy Sacrifice, because. Priests be-
ing thus obliged to buy wine, some
tisements, we want
theologians to erase
moral theology the following
M Prosequtnti Jus suum
1
[t
[;■
Entered a: the Pocteofflc* at San An-
tonio, Texi*. J^Swonii-clxiisKaU Matter.
THE
SOOTHERS' MISSENG ER.
.... 6:00 b. tn.
. .7:00 n. ta.
■ . .9^10 ».m.
... .3KW p. m.
duub end be
smszoocTsm.
come to the cooduskM that, after fidds ad gatdms.
■CITY CHURCH. DIRECTORY.
HAN >TCR.:A.YDO (IxTKBTtpn
Eight Her. J. C. Nem.
Ekv. J, A. Dumoulin,
Ecv. F. R Plur-chet
Bev. Jva Moulin.
±>u a days—First iubm......
Second mass. .
High uuumi.....
VeiperB
Sermon at the second
high
Wrek O*ys—.First Mbs/ ,
Second •• , ,
Third - .
“A CRANK is an expert on a
subject, about which others do not
care."
are to be congratulated for theft
„ I sense in not inviting that
sect, for a sect it is, to dedicate a
building that has been erected not
for Masons only, but for all citi-
zens. We hope that our San An-
> til acx, not
ai. Supreme
fbrSMy .
<aia3t ►
and
An religion i» the only science, which
contains a pledge of happiness in this
world and in the world to come, it is
incumbent upon all to learn it. And
what better means to obtain this end
than the reading of * good and sound
religions journal, as the Southern Mre-
renger, published in San Antonio?
For, this is a Catholic paper to which
we not only jrive our approbation, but
which we recommend every family of
our Vicariate to have. , .
Peter Vkrdaouek.
Vicar Apostolic of Brownsville.
Laredo, Texas; March 6th. 1894.
< i < . |
Such com mo nt cations must in all
rssea be accompanied by correct names
and a-IdrenAe* of writers, not for publi-
cation, tme as evidence o< good faith.
&
M'1
about ‘quality* or cheapness" to
He indirectly encouraged the
guests to drink: there would be
no excuse for the Blessed Virgin
Mary for having told our Lord
about the giving out of the wine,
as she could have forescenthat He tionsm secutusj which translated
would provide wine, and that the into plain English means: “Any-
-nce on hand, would be one, acting within the limits of his icar m ucl, u is to oe supposea.
Had the fellow-citizens of rights, cannot be held responsible that the self-murderer either docs I
ied Virgin or of St. Peter f°r an effect not intended," not believe in it, or hopes for mcr'.y;
tit to take liquor, than we As long as the sale of liquor is'from the Supreme Judge c.- o.-|
Ab the pro*, when properly dweet
ed, is a powerful aid to promote Re-
ligion and diffiiee the knowledge of
Truth, we approve" of the p*per, Tkk
SorTHEBX Mxbkzngkk — which is
published under oar control, and we
hope it will reach every Catholic
family in Stitt that understands
: the English language.
tJOHX C- Nkraz,
Bp. of San Antonio.
cot
to be overlooked. Is it not ra-
tional to think that people, no-
ticing the use of wioe in owr most
a yell: “In Boston
PnblUbed weekly by the Sochiem
JUMexgir PnblUaliig Company,
Office of Publication—No. 30BW W
Commerce rtreet.
Common IcadoQB for pub' ition not
rrectalng tain office by T^xtay will
nor appear till Lmub of following week.
tlader the Btwpteea of RT. REV. J. C.
JUalZAZy Bitbop of S*xx Antonio.
L. WILLIAM MENGER, General
Manager. To whom all motwya snould
ba paid and communicaUoiia addraaaed. ’
Office Of PubllcBilnn__Va vslt/ w j
appeal to Mgr. Satolli, and Mgr.
Satolli were to sustain Father
Kammer, would this be an-
other decision binding all Priests
to act as that Rev. Father has
done? If not, why rot? If the
decision in favor of Eisbop Wat-
terson be binding all over the
United States, this new decision' „ith lhose of Quf .
shou d be so, m hke manner. wouU
Would protestant prohibitionists - •
then also shout: “Hurrah for Sa-
tolli;" as they did after the Col-
umbus judgment ?
“’ncpUBiry nr convkrsa-
hoe.
“Th* evils worfcsd by drink uro
known to everybody. Whatever help*
or encourages people todrink,or urges---*------- -----------1 ,, .
them to hwy Uquor. or makes it tatty for Catholic cranks and some protest- to prove that seil-mtiroer is not
them, or tempts them or rnrgitos To * " ” -----1---- — —’
them, hr taut about ‘ quality” or
chsapneM, or by simply bringing It to
their stteatfon, ts helping to contimw
and to spiuad intemperance. It works
damage and ruin; it gives eeandal: If
in Catholic papers, it brings reproach
upon our Church, and as this is an?*,
nerved and unjust, the sin of those who
cause it is all the greater. To talk
about the * ‘proper use’ * of liquor mt
being theologically wrong, and to say
that tho man. who displays the tempting
announcements of the liquor,is.not res-
ponsible for its misuse by his readsn is
to try to creep out of * very small
hole. ”
This extract taken from the
Sacred Heart Review, which is one
of our most esteemed exchanges
and at the same time one of the
meekest temperance papers, gives
us an idea of total abstinence
theology. If the Review’s theol-
ogy were orthodox, there is no
student of statistics skillful enough 1—'‘gun-shops," as many kill them-;
to c^me to even a distant estimate) selves with revolvers. et=_—
sas! Beer has been taken from
them, and Jupiter Pluvius does
not even send them water to com-
pensate them for the loss of beer.
jGentlemen, comedown to Texas,
tution of tbe Blessed Sacrament? here you find both In abundance
" to still your thirst. We have fcverx.
had lots of rain recently, aM we
seed more of year dass to develop would have it
the resources of our r___~
august sacrifice of the Mass, will prairies and turn them cto fruitful
■■ ■% r
account of liquor; there is no con- j
fessional-box, where, week after j to the reading of bad novels,!
week, uni
not be granted
liquor; there is
rail, where hundreds, year after! indecent pictures ■—“church
year, would not receive unworthily vices" keld at night,
the Bread of Life, on account of
liquor; there is not a Priest in the
world.who would not sin all the year
round by using wine at the Holy
Sacrifice there would be no excuse
for Christ for having changed
High
la St.
Gse r.f jj-e most impartant and
>s of God to man is
Among all
■ crea; arcs . f the Div nity, man
i al .ne is endowed with this great
[prerogative. The tc»Egue is the
organ of communication bj- which
our thoughts are manifested to
other*. Like many ocaer gifts of
God to man, the tongue may be
osed fora guod and leg innate pur-
pose, or be abused for an unworthy
.... 105W *. tn
4.00 p. m.
er. rwm ct_i v ei;"s (coloxd.)
Rev. R. M. Barrett.
Sa idavs—Low axtaa, with congrv-
gBticnaJ Hinging.. MX) *.
Ro«ary. Sermon and Ben<-
diction...........7:30 p. tn.
Meek day*— Mm............7rf»B. m
ar.RA-nuex’s cnracu^itoverctnvnt Hili.)
Rev. M. A. Rhati^m.
Sunday*—Tx>w Ma s. with InstractRjD. in
toe t 'S.apei of tbe Incar: ate
W ord fchool, corner or IV J-
low mid Crotoy Streets.
8.00 a. nt
Jlasa. with ae rm on.
Patrick’! Church
IO.OU a. m.
▼aekdayc—Mbm............7 JO a. m.
movunocMnwT.
Very Rev. E. M. Bculani, V. cnapSain
luurra nona ntroocaXY,
Etc. J, B. E- Audet. * ’haplajn.
ST. L.>Cls‘ CilU.ECE.
Bro. John Wo;r. Director.
J&jv. F. Spenner. Chaplain.
R«v. E. Beyrer. A<«'t Chaplain.
Bro. i.'Iim. Frar.ci*. Trea/nrer.
rr. Mutr’a coixbge.
Bro. John Bunaeder. Director.
At Bucharest, a lunatic, who
brandished a long knife, rushed to
the altar during Mass and tried to
murder the Priest, He was dis-
armed before he could do any
harm. What puzzles us is how
this Apaist came over there.
The Constitutional Convention
of the’State of N. Y. has refused
to submit the question of female
suffrage to a vote of the citi-
zens of that State, on the ground
that the vast majority of the
women were opposed to it, or
were indifferent in the matter. If
the judgment of the women in
New York be as sound on every-
thing else as it is on this question,
the men, there, are to be congrat-
ulated on possessing such jewels.
Costoas
WencesUas. King ’ Hc wstitution’s helped or supported
----„, in part by the State treasury.
S*rirrd*y. 29. — Dedication of the Arch •
|; ' hearers; but when he proclaimed
H with a ydl: “In Boston sweet-
H. J faced Sisters teach in our public
dost bear you mu.
the former, if they were to believe
that by self-destruction they would
The Rev. Father A. M, Kam- precipitate themselves from a state
mer, of St. Anne's Church. New- of tolerable suffering into a state}
ark, N. J., is reported as having °^’n‘"o,‘crab*e and everlasting tor-|
publicly announced, that he never
again would perform.the marriage j that many crif-murderers amongst! S°ME ?riests of
ceremony between a Catholie and a I Catholics act in a moment of ft-1 diocese 5011 a committee to ,-Veb-
non-Cathohc, because no good! forgetful of theirduties and b«hop Satolli. to secure h-.s fttiz-
comes from such marriages. Ap- of ctcn;ityt and that th(„ fi d | ferer.ee in theft troubles rith Bish-
pheants for marriages of that kind mefCy bcfore thc Supreme Judge. °P Sonacum: but the AuostcBc
he would, in future send to the if there arc no other sins for wfaidi "c ^terfere, de-
Bishop or the View General thcy descxvc punishaicnt. B I eying that be is not here to to-
Supposing some Cat.iohcs would insanity ii not always an excuse, s.tltutc nt,“ b-r interpret
as often it is a result of a dtssipat- ( nC s a’ 110 :
cd or ill-regulated life, a result of a ’ read,crs , :hs "-’E'S? Ni «*i2
want of the Christian spirit of self-1 reco^cCt ”’s:- nc- while
sacrifice. Were we better Chris- j thc hquor c we
ttans, we would bear our troublesi tilc apir-n® Thet Mgr.
with more Submission to the wu| SatoIH _•> mission was
of God, with greater patience: we t~,---““
would unite our sorrowsand pains w“Oi,c duty
dying uard, we , . —~ —
1 a means of E'cIc£itc P1?’
satisfying our sins and of sanctify-
ing ourselves. A Christian of rhat
spirit will remain strong under all
circumstances, as Job on the dung-
hill: he may even come to that
perfection of the Saints, which ‘
made their suffering desirable
them. Pati ntnr?\ tn suffer ....
to die. was rhe mot:.i r.f r-a; v -,f‘
them. V\ ."'.tie tu.e se.f-murderers of1 • - .
Ingersoll ;.>.=« for death, because ■ 1
they hate to suffer, our Carbolic:
heroes only I-xiked for dcvli. be-
cause they hited not to suffer.
.. "Ths Roman Catholic
World Alm*u*c for I9H ■£ S.ni.417
Th* protntoat bodies sum ct ahont
14.000.000 • • Cindmtett dhr
Standard
The number of Catholics
^iee'tlrinltBts
pissed resoluSors,
Qevdand toi
crown” and to disai
f poEticalstageiberai
KnUnltcd States peop
We al wai^j hui
®!Lbut we al«i
credit for at frto
*r°
of an tile oi
*t-,der that : < &eai
?catn»t toVklittfa.
*Bof*S^B^rei3
£ 7 '■■■■ StesLft;
fcLiL'*' dSffl l-
all of which is sinful, as the Re-
view says. What is still worse,
wine being brought to the Priests’
residences, people may think that
all this wine will hardly be used
for altar purposes; hence comes
scandal that “brings reproach up-
on our Church.” Moreover, the
. ~ must
necessarily induce some of our
fellow-citizens to plant vineyards
and make wine, and naturally to
taste it after it is made, and . „ —rr., „
little by little, perhaps, make liquor will receive our hearty en-
drunkards of them. And what .dorsement." „„„
will they do with the surplus? Germans fed in that blessed Kan-
----- —----j ? Is it not to be
follow thc example set by the dti- feared that they will either drink
* : it themselves, or sell it to others?
. „ ------. .. ---- —[ can
stones of public it not be traced back to the insri-
ttte Methodist persuasion, knows i
I, hew to fire
I penally when it is composed of
I 1 Orangemen. Apaists, and Da ugh-
F!‘ ters of Liberty. In one of his
S' : latest sermons he called Leo XIII,
El a. “bag of bones,” which was
I sce»e*Stt*y.
d 3BBbfaC« of »■ <
I of strict pritecplesj
I even *
; ^rive thc sramentl
[ there noc some j
I their eta* vuiaticK wia
jnore suited to the a
I -be bar room, tlian d
I sons professing to bd
Old age should all
arable and inspire raj
I .often not tlie gd
I shocked, when 'be cJ
I presence of a
I jj,d hears him uta
paries' It is a J
that he, whose steps!
| to thcgrave and whofl
-hat his years on eJ
;. ixrcd, should so far ■
L s to give earpressio J
nguage. Nothing J
as "this, to break |
Tnincs ol toe yoiml
Xhat they should J
Xh-ir ciders. |
Not only is vulgar!
^sit-on prev.iient arJ
cd-cated and illiterai
sails equally ainonj
and :.-rc”:gent ciassci
-difference consists rr. |
the language in one J
and ft. the ether is el
pur:y :s conveyed i J
\Ve are told in Hoi
b'c shall has’c to greJ]
.of every idle word. B
bic responsibility, ts. M
■currec by those who |
d-lge I" unchaste lane
The hearts of tho?!]
it a practice to use
must be foil of unc.J
we have the btstftl
'Wore of God, that -fl
abundance of thc head
speakrth." When uql
Aon; who is ferven: urt
aL good things, we k-jj
i mind dwells in the I
God. and that h s hd
and. when we listen J
tine ard the man cf
mark the delight wit s
descan: on scan da. a
tnpics.we know that thJ
■ing out of the abundaJ
hearts, and that otirid
lovely of the virtues, fl
inent there.
When will men rm!
purity is not a neciessa
to wit: but that, on th:
detract s fro rr tr; e t»
prives it of all claim J
and causes disgust?
should produce pleasufl
worldling, who irtag:rg
■garity is the spice of lJ
visit a convert or mon]
4 number of rdigi3u5 J
ation. and he wi” be J
the beauty ard tie sa
<»nversat:on of those eJ
pure-minded pernem-'. |
■overhear com^rsatiansl
purest wit is cmoloyd
*aft. but he will listen!
the least suggestion of |
wet every Chinstiaij
be his position in
| *^cther occupying an d
I tian, or lining the life c
pieson of toil, recognJ
I®espossibility for the *1
U* w “ use in the Sesh.
|ter his conversation, fl
Ittider any pretext, wii;
|«to tongue, upon whid
[“* rcsfoc the Sacred ll
utter amr wot!
|« impurity.
I At Appalovatz, t|
a mob threw sfl
PLwl}'-salocn mxriagj
l~®&. as -.t was pasrirl
P? p;*ce, and the kinj
had a narrow c»ca
- These Servians J
El CDrr‘Paiiicrs to sod
'tow-bayx who
111 to running rone |
F?®^ wild chaps evny]
F^uzRtioE is for ftcxn 'J
... *. m.
. . .6 t3i). b. m.;
.... 7 .-IX) i. 02.
•r. h*>t*8 unt'acr*
Rev. C. J. Smith, O. M. u
Kev. £. J. VC.iiagtiBa. O. M. I.
S xMdayH—Mbbbcb.......7.30 and 10 a. m.
Sermon at second tnaas.
w w t V«P«*- ..........7:43p.m.
woet Mmmh......,.tiBa7a. m.
“It IS a criminal offense in Illi-
nois to accuse a person of belong-
ing to the A. P.A. ’Exch.—Thus,
in Illinois, it is considered a dis-
grace to be a member of that or-
ganization I Is it possible? How
pervert must mankind have be-
come to regard the A. P. A. as a
body of stigmatized individuals,—
that association which is the de-
fense of the country, thc bulwark
of liberty, the protection agaftst
Popery, and the pattern of patriot-
ism * Oh, how have thc times be-
come degenerate 1
ar. JOMzra’n cnurtcH.
Rev. Henry Peflerkora.
Sinday*—FItb: mm.........7:30 a.m.
High mu«.........JOrfK) a. m.
„ J Vipers............4to0p. n.
Week deva— Maaa u*ually at 7 a. m,
*r. michaxz's roxacH crrrrwTw,
Rev. Bernard Ztnifewafcl.
S -n ay—Mbm. ... ’ ' '
Veapers,
—, , : a law
He chose the easier way of dying:! everywhere by which false accus-
wine, once on hand, would be
drank. I
the Blessed Virgin or of St. Peter
more right to take liquor, than we
have? Were there no drunkards
at that time as in our days? If
not, how can you explain the re-
mark of the chief steward at Cann?
“Every man at first setteth forth
good wine^and" when men have
well diank, then that which is
worse. But thou hast kept the
good wine until now." When
“men have well drank,” so that
they do not notice any more the
difference between good and bad
wine, they' are not far from that
state, which even the most lenient
theologians call “intoxication.” If
people at that time never indulged
too much in hcuor, how again can
you explain the following texts:
“But others mocking, said: ‘These
men arc full of new wine.' But
Peter standing up with the eleven,
lifted up his voice, and spoke to
them: *Ye men of Judea, and al!
you that dwell in Jerusalem, be
this known to you and with yotr
cars receive my words. For these
arc not drunk, as you suppose, see-
ing it is but thc tbird hour of the
day.’ " Is it not reasonable to in-
fer from this, that some people, at
a later hour of the day, used to get
drunk? Consequently, in those
> no more than in our days, if
thc Review’s theology be right,was
it permitted to help or to encour-
The faculty a' speech is rightly
- ' when ft is xserf to sing
the pcaises of our Creator: to do
good to our fellow-men: to serve
for our ordinary neecs,bct it b
^feth<?.a2 directioo> whenever it is used to
----- *P»ead dander and falsehoods aad
\ow especially whcskcwr it is made to
serve as the vehicle of impurity.
CouverwtioG n tod^Igcd m by ;
yutujg-and old; by seen and w»- 4j
atea: by beys and giria. 1* dr ; H
couraiaiiaa of those asowud «» c-fM
own Gguxv* free from the ufcc of anpuricy? w
JDaaaeCtite -nitajE^tfa: <*“-‘j|
everywhere else, pupils hardly of our new court-house. Officials
who favor that secret organization
in such a manner, ought to be
noticed and remembered when
election timeroUs around.
afl, wine cannot be snch a dUbofi-l W0 AJttXTHK CTVAltMT
cad drink as it is represented to I ’
be? And this, in fact, is the gen-1 Ingersoll, in has recent artide to
eral opinion of mankind, some] the N. Y. Worid on wiodc, tnes
ant bigots, of course, excepted. ! act* of cowardice, but an act of
The Review holds that the pub-1 manliness. He says: “If men had
lication of liquor advertisements I the courage, they would not linger
cannot be excused by saying that! in prisons, in alms-houses, in hos-
tile “proper use” of liquor is not Ipitals, they would not bear the
theologically wrong, because such i pangs of incurable disease, the
advertisements may lead to the! stains of dishonor, they would not!
misuse of liquor by some readers. ; Eve in filth and want, in povoty i - r
But the Review advertises ”phar-! and hunger, neither would they!^1”" m
mades,” where poisons of aHjwear the chain of slavery. AH j duly heralded through the ---
kinds are sold, when it is well'this can be accounted for only by cmbeI.L»hed by the wondroLs tafe
known that many deliberately j the fear of death or'
poison themselves. On the same! after.' f
principle, it would be wrong to ad-! intended to take his life, had
p'le I j B « Sb ww ■» —'MB ■■ ■ ■ -
>■—r ! f«t the emperor. He knew that ■ prisoned” nun to the effect :hat
“millinery," as some Tarifes might - at the bottom of every river, in the; she had joined the Sisterhood of '
- - - - - - ’ - - * ' " 1—• own free choice, that chc
and j to the convent now because she
Of oueht to 7c^2r
According the “World Almanac"! rvrrriwf,
the number of Christians in this *
Republic would be but one-third
of the whole population. Pray
Mormons? Impossible. UW
are they then, tfwei --
aanot say, nnieM they are unbe^
——— And, stiff you call this a
"Christian country,- or, as some
sehooh—teach Latin—and the _____________
; pupils sit there like the gorillas of tonio officials, be they Catholics or
I South America," the audience non-Catholics, will in the future
i greeted him with cheers, and
: showed a great generosity in the
subsequent collection that was
taken up to pay the arrears of the
. preacher. No doubt, there are in
the Boston school-rooms, as well
h|“ better educated than gorillas; hut
o - this occasion, the Rev. speaker
1- ' his obtuse hearers were regu-
B!1 Ur dioceroses.
Il s ■ ,
cle, and the citizens of St. Louis buying of wine for the altar
enough to excite the rage of his good
non-Catholics, will in the future throw it away?
sX_ -_______* r w
zens of St. Louis, and not give the i * " .
Masons the exclusive privilege of And the cause of all this evil
laying the comer
buildings, etc, as was the' case f ' * *" 2
with the laying of the corner-stone There is another consideration
better Chris- j ST=afin“ ?f thc liquor c
J ♦ Lb—
| SatoHi s mission
as law-maker, but
is to settle dif-
ferences. This last utterance of
'" ~ ives our
assertion to be correct ixd knocks
into smithereens all arguments, in-
tended to show that thc decision
in the Columbus liquor cuestion is
binding in all dioceses.
different Catholic Bishops of this
country, to hear their opinions
about Mgr. Satolli’s decision in
Bishop Watterson’s case. Here
is what Rt. Rev. John J. Hen-
nessy, Bishop of Wichita, Kansas,
answered; “As Kansas is a pro-
hibitionist State; we arc supposed
to have no persons engaged in tL
liquor trade; and no reason, there-
fore, for any special legislation in
our diocese for that dass of mer-
chants. Our people are sadly in
need of water, and any movement
tending to supply this kind
Wonder bow the
i
a long and a momentary -,affcring,!
he chose the latter. As to the;
fear of beK. it ii to be supposed!
not bad in itself papers hast a I count of the circumstances ?’•
right to publish it. and if somej drive him to lay murderous hr..
buyers misuse it, it Is "Jraster in-1 upon himself. Because bdr .. . -
trntwnsm:' not in the intention of in the stof^ness of ^.-idr !Athr<
the papers,—Everything well con-j suffer, than to comm?, ifou. tr<me: uon. Th«-j- h*vt now w-thdrawn tte
sidered, we believe that the L- .—- —ft — ■„ I____________...... I- ’
view itself is trying “to creep out them, it does not follow that they j from
of a very small hole." That sub-[have less courage than those who-would tuduev rot to hope th*t aw* <rs.
terranean hiding place out of which j kill themselves, as the latter, far i ??err lu»
it tries to creep to fight non-bigoted j from being terrified by future pun-!
Catholic papers, will not withstand i ishment, hope to And in death the his return! to either ret.** > ord»-
:--r j —i—:„i : 1 _r _r. . —j > I avow his toti.'rvirwv.w pn’.S^C iu tta
newBpBpem. compel mt tr are
■ he rejoices that the fahte scurillius
■ yam purporting to be bis stetemmt ha*
gone out into the world taster and
further than the tnith can fc/low it.
: The desired imprwitkx. has am
! created-, the stupid prejndic3 confirmed
—what matters it then that » eonmnm-
I ity of nuns has been maiftred and in-
1 suitedr ■
Cl course, it is to be inferred!
ceremony between a Catholic and a I Catholics
non-Catholic, because no i ‘1
Calendar.
Wselc Emfiiur Sept. 29th.. 1894,
Sunday 23.--Nineteenth Sunday after
Pentecost. —St. Linus. Pop** and
Martyr.
Monday. 24. —Our Ladv of Merer.
Ttawiay. S3.-Sts. Etutachius and
Companion. Martyrs.
Wednesday. 2rl. —St. Etwbius. Pope
azrt Martyr.
Thursday. >7. -Sts. Costnas and; and financially, than to see Catho-
Damian. Martyrs. 1 - - - -
Friday. 2S.—St. T~
Martyr.
«iel. St. Michael.
Iff CMPtKTK JCTTIC& 1
A few weeks a^o, some Apaist,'.
ii. Buffalo stated that a Ccrfofe '
Sister Mary Benedict was
detained in the convc::
her will, and that she craved
panted for her freedom. .A
of Anieas ctrr^ns was served Lpa®
thc Mother Superior, who pn>
duced the alleged ■ mprisoned"
The afuft
was
press, '
j the for of death or ‘of something' of one Comwril of East A_-^
Seneca, knowing that Ncro ^ hen the case was called, the
ul to take his life, had no'lawyer for the Sister simply read
vertise u€3tables,” some people j fear* He knew that he could de* sworn stoleniitiit of the ■\nt,
might cat too much of them,—; feat the emperor.
become proud in showing off thrir 1 coil of every rope, on the point of ner own rree cnotce, that chc uas
new dresses, or as some stylesr every dagger, Liberty sat and; m the convert now because she so
might not be altogether modest: i smiled." I desired, and she hcartuy wished to
’ “ ' ' We admit with Ingersoll that} continue to remain there wfthout
co crone co even a aisnanc estimate1w tewivera, ct—• u ’i-, tbc suicide is not afraid of death,! molestation. The case wa, at
of the number of those, who sin on I leges, academies, and schools," as as otherwise he would not kill him- ■onoe dismissed, and >:> ended ihzt
self; but it is fear or want of Cour- ’ great sensation.
age, anyhow, that rendets death j But should it have ended that
sweet to him. Seneca knew that' way ? Should these calumniators
he had to die and perhaps in the I have been permitted to go with-
“ * ' E ~ ------- * * Very
merchants necessarily would "talk bitionist paper, has w; ;tten to thc
The great Union Railway bring their wine to their attention.
Rev. Jame? A. Roberts, od Station of St. Louis was recently
I dedicated. Prayers were not said,
” at which we are not astonished;
-□ a congregation, as- but wlut is that thc
Masons were not there to perform
their mummery of consecration.
Thc absence of this last feature
will not hurt the building a parti-
the point -of; her
styles * every dagger* Liberty sat
I
selves with revolvers, eta,—“ol-
j as-Aucuiica, suuouis, *y.
i the learning of how to read might
i zsC rt/vipreFc |
iworthy absolutions would and irreligious books and papers,!
granted on account of* as thc learning how to draw —----- — —- —— t---1~ — - -- r>-
there is no communion (might tempt some one to delineate ’most atrocious pains*, but he also [ oat punishment whatever5
lurch ser-j knew that be himself can take his’ likely there is no law to reach
they give life ’n a more expeditious manner. ’ them; but there should be
and this Ingersoll calls “manly 1 cr* eould be punished in az exem-
and noble” A man, who does plary manner, or, at least, should
.....We ap-
manly remarks made
Before we admit thc Review's! house, or to suffering the pains of) after thc trial to the reporters of
our Catholic ‘ soff a coward who is afraid to die j had appeared for the Sisters
from their!or to go to heli. C_: ft----ur----j
sen- j us that anyonc.who were to follow
tenca "ProsequentiJus suum non" " ' -J ■- • - *
imputatur effecius praeter inten-
as
boys and girls a chance to flirt on
the way home;—“marriages.” as
out of some marriages spring , .
children, who will be everlastingly; not murder himself in preference to: be ofoiged to, apologize,
damned. j going to prison or to an alms-’ pend *ome manly rem:
livre 'D.MBtrear-'cr ! Iwit'TCr' rtf* ♦‘rt 4t1T ff*J-r4’FI4T rrtfTie rtf 1 lifter TlCir tl'll *to tile H
water into wine at Cana, whereby theology in regard to these adver-’disease, etc, is, according to Inger-’ the press by Judge I*cwi$, who
■” (t-J --- > e-- -T- e-._ 5
But it seems to] tPcir attorney. He said;
"Threw people have published m
! Ingersoll's advice, would be a' ‘b”,
a , , chBTxe « the vauTHnX ol the Qtwd
much greater coward, as between | Shepherd hsve enticed be isnwret
’ child from the lore of its parents are
the protection of its homo, under falsa
and fraudulent preteDiire, and are nev
holding th* poor treatue priaoner. no-
der revere pains imd j*enn’ties for any
* attempt t£ recare.
■ "The ettaree. tnlre in every detail,
.-ib-rs been recUeialy made witboa: a
,. - r.tatiH* aS nrUStBKK to mur ft,
■Three worthy old friends of the
1* E r.rppctem family pick or. •. seemingly
-.' ‘--‘L Object to bnEy a h3nrehold rf
-■ -.ns are secure pledgee of rem-retalta-
CVU-j--.-— . - — -V* . I ■ LiOtt. iiBT have now withdrawn tte
Re-jand take it along into eternity wii.nl pr?SS?ia|> withmt a word.
view itself is trying “to creep out them, it does not follow that they j from “SaS
That sub- [ have less courage than those who • would induce uh to hope that the gra-
the latter far ’ tW*n h**,bt*a aMT c-
- own credulity, but his evifiea: disap-
Dy tuture pun-jpeiatmeut at the outxnne o -sere
d in death the *»i his refusal to either mt.-a.-i ordw-
ns rw*rc u/tT? i’
the batteries of old theological for- ’ end of all evil; and they
tresses, which have stood thc at-: shrink from suicide, no less than
tacks of 1800 years.
The Committee on Charities, in
the N. Y. State Constitutional
Convention, in its report on ap-
propriations for “sectarian” chant- .
able institutions, demonstrates days
1 that thc work of thc religious asy-
Hums, hospitals, etc., is better and
cheaper than the work of the pub- age people to drink, as Our Lord
’ lie institutions. Such reports
fully prove how bigoted must be
the members r of the League for
Protection of American Institu-
tions, who would rather permit
thc State to suffer loss morally
1
in part by thc State treasury.
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Southern Messenger. (San Antonio, Tex.), Vol. [3], No. [29], Ed. 1 Thursday, September 20, 1894, newspaper, September 20, 1894; San Antonio, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1247411/m1/3/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .