Southern Messenger (San Antonio and Dallas, Tex.), Vol. 23, No. 36, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 22, 1914 Page: 1 of 8
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SOUTHERN
MESSENGER
Published With the Approbation of the Rt. Rev. Bishope of Galveston, San Antonio, Dallas and Corpus Christi.
VOL XXIII.—Me. 3S.
SAN ANTONIO AND DALLAS TEXAS, OCTOBER 22, 1914.
PRICE $L59 A TEAR, PAYABLE M ADVANCE
CABLE NEWS FROM ROME.
CATHOLIC LITERATURE
NATION HONORS COLUMBUS.
PICTURE FORGERIES.
of the Curia In this deportment. We
movement
3K Eut Coamerce Street
Sea Aatewo. Tana
gladdened
by
was
had
Ky., there was a
•T
LOUVAIN UNTVERSTTY
and
.1 3Iadoi»* Saved.
op
Fino
tor
A stat to break tbs wffl « Jaawa
eaptoltot.
artfltary
tam oc aaMMakaw at afejfcw
tai
«3
[OB-
X STO-
•q with
>•!*•*
LIO M. J- DUELMANN
ARCHITECT
I other
: Flav-
ler and
(Cial at-.
We
one
Roote
rDoer
the missionary
them.
The society determined to start
.Minn.
We ar* unable to say just what
SEETr*THIEBS THOU8ANB CXKB-
1CS WTTH VAKMCS AKMKL
Aeoordtng to reports from R«aw
via Part*, the Vatican to fafonaad
that at the present ttaa, then an am
tower than C3.M* etortca to tbs aar-
vlaa of the warring nations to vartona
dr. W. J. SCHLOSSER
Dentist
Old Telephone Crockett 13ML
]I8 E. Hhiutoa St, Car. St Muy's.
In Philadelphia.
In Philadelphia the speakers were
the Hon. Ben Johnson. Congressman
from Kentucky: the Hon. James L.
Monahan, Congressman from Minne-
sota. and the Rev. William J. Hig-
Paves the Way Far the Work of More fofmoas Work of the Rep-
the Miri—ary.
The Capuchin Fathers laboring In
caMttWTsaaa
-ual«nw»-
wottr.
Dr. WHKam D. McCarty,
DENTIST.
Office, 3I8-319-329 Moon BHg.
r.
<3
polntment the Pope ha* gained the j elsewhere In this issue,
help of the most experienced Cardinal t
of the Curia In this department. We j Bo
are informed on good authority that. ticn.
treat. i
The third act is the attempted ad- * that of the United States. but not
” an autocrat, an emperor
Teresa of the Infant Jesus Lltera-
. Any donation sent In to
the society for this fund will be used
**ut ;
The!
both j
JAMES McbONAIdD
LAWYER,
Prepare* Abrtracta
and flxamlnea Land TltlMt
tyCOXNOR BLDG.. VICTORIA, TKX.
/nnvrtW ta"G»rt*M P^k.^nd com«w
TIic monument was design-
r>s J Mulligan. wh J is the
It has been made plain at the oat-
jset that every effort will be made to
> suppress any move toward arousing
I sentiment toward or against any of
the warring nation*. The purpout*
of the movement are in fine but two:
The first is to attract attention to
day near Xtanrport which itiak at
th* oraautoc of th* rtrar aror the ana.
Both todea are brtagfag ntatwim
meats to the weeten treat, where one
of the supnaoe atnmtoa at Cba war
taM-
Gorwaa and Reartaa legurta agree
the ekearton tn th. amt baa aM
changed, atthoagh the araetoe are la
etaM toeeh along the Batt PraMtae_______
frnattor and aereoa Petand and Ge- a brother of the dataaaafi BL Ltata
Beto, la GaMeto, however, the Aan-
trtoaa amort ttar Mp*ad Ra»-
The latest reports at hand (Ort.],
, most
desperate kind is in program la West
Flanders ud Narthwtatarn France.
Tb* Belgian army, supported by the'
allies, to holding stubbornly to the
line at the River Yser and thus far I
has socBMafnlly halted determined «f- <
forts of the Gomao* to advance
alone the coast.
This is aanonneed to the French of-
ificial commuaiostioa Isaaed this sf-
: l ^~wonm os oast tm <mXhbaelB<msdl 4ta ♦Itom iniad£
of Gorman bandnuarMs which rays
Man attesta ata to hRihtmy- to bn* been dill jil by th. W
--- '“““ **“» Ros*.* gnsm. th* fcfto Into
*•*' BNtoTW*»•
SSESRrJS8f3iw*S«* ■■'
■
•The picture in question is the
series known as
PnRopal Offices of tie Com Naw
FBkA
iSpectil Cablegram To The Southern
Messenger.)
ROME, October 19.—-The appoint-
ment of Cardinal Gasparrt as Secre-
tary of Stale is greeted wdii universal
pleasure; it is felt that by thU tip
Chrtattan Brotham at Alx La ChapeBe
and Crwilrb. have been turned into
hospitals, sad tb* Brothers ara work-
ing as war nni nto Th*** Brbthara
hav* bean wounded in battle and one
kilted.
tert moacly ia tbe^catokal carps. la-
eittdad to tfm akmtor. there ar* mm
’Btabope and Ito Hi to other peetaMB
detog aatoo dnty.
ry on the Ilf* of Louvain even to the
Catholic atmoaphere which pmnsitm
that life. The university is unubte
to make any grants towards the an-
pease* of prntomnrs sad etudests,
but rh* masters and private tndirt-
: duals to Cambridge are prepared to
offer hcspttaltty to aJL Mossigaor
Stapleton Baraea, who to bead of the
Catholic botoea of studies no* eaab-
n-r—i some years la Cambrtdto. tos
raoatvud -many otoas of hc*p*tslity
from catholic and nen-CathoHc fixel-
Mm flor piled* end taymea. white th*
Jesuit* and others wfH auuumiamlatn
toeural. It M not yet kwewa wbaher
th* fncnitj cd Lan rets wS aowpt
this g*u*rone o*er: Indeed, it to may
dtffcnM to net *ay Udtogs from tiem.
Christian Brothers a* Nurses.
Brother Rudolph, writes from Bel-
gium to the Christian Brothers la Cin-
cinnati. stating that sixty Franciscan
Brothers hav* b**n added to the
army, and that the only ones re-
maining ar* reilglouB over 45 years.
;;
UiBRSBMMliaUOIto-
Oet. in. wn^ *. m
talL Ha was i—
THrtrr- iiimfilrt—
S»»»yegabjF?
• i IIFIK FWF*’ I tola 14^ x wai aa AngBcaa cfmgy-
k’todn.”
a that day of the Very Rev. > anfl o[tjer prominent officials.
Robert Hugh Benson.
I Hon. Chas. W. Miller, inrmer uuivnu - .
unexpected I State District Attorney, and Rev. At- i ’ p
Al! the signs indicate that a change . country. Toder the leadership of the
—.. ., J. Ku bee. of St Casimir's
I.’....:----c------ where tor'Church, th* organization of the forty
I weeks the hostile armi<ts have faced : thousand Poles in Brooklyn has been
’each other in such strongly entrench-! begun, and it is expected that it '.'ill
1 ed positions that neither has been able! not be long before the movement
to advance except at enormous cost, j takes on tangible form.
The principal effect of the mutual' The ultimate purrtoae of the mode-
banking operations has been to ex-1mem is to arouse an overwhelming
tend the battle lines without either 'L public opinion so that the Tsar ctJi-
xtde finding a weak spot , not fail to fulfil his promise of auton-
—** Am*> d_ .1 j.
MONUMENT TO
AN IRISH FATRIOT.
On .-Jr .lay. Oct. 11, th* mo lament j Monsignor
ere-d <b,l John F. Ftnarty--;
■ i , ■ H'WI I * yiCK llCvJ , * V” “ *’•**'•»
Cocvvie ia Galveston. Texas, and was < utter am axemen t here: detail*
*“■ are awaited with interest. <
NEWS OF THE VAR. MOVEMENT FOR AN
On Oct. 1T there was a naval battle | RMPEHNENT POLAND,
off the Dutch coast in which a British
| cruiser and tonr dmtroyers sank
t3e Picn Aolkmititilllj Ex- 'four German destroyers.
. | On the same day the German troop*
ptottL i reached the coast of Betglnm. less
I than seventy miles from Dover,
’ On October !S an offi -ial comment-
i cation from Parts reported two 1m-
t successes for l he allies in
attempt
raAroad pre**to«». was Mad in tte
ctocwit catot test wart by ikRTrn at
Mbu P. CsmptoR af Wt VteHMa.
[caption: "Execution of Protestants in
| the Netherlands*'. The picture, as re-
i printed, bore the signatures of “1.
’ Flameng" on the left < as the name
of the publisher), and "J. Quartley"
on the right (as the Artist I.
Th* picture was immediately recog-
— - i. >.>...... ..u... j of the
Catholic Church From | Central Vereln as a forgery, it having
\yithout, < cents each; The Inquired* I originally designed by Caiiot to
Guide, i cent* each. Polemic Chat. 1 9 Illustrate the horrors and sufferings
centt each These are. of course, post-| of wartare durinK the Thlrty
paid. It is a plan to give everyone i War Investigation proved the for-1
a chance to convcrt-maklug. for these , £ory sti]] more clearly and verified
special books have brought in many;t|]e fact tjjat the illustration was de-
souls to the Church. The office* of, gj.pjpyy,, tlle execution of mar-
the Catholic Church Extension s>o- < alKjprs by (-ourt-martial, and not of
?ef?l.aro !2^ted n McCormick (teilgions persecution. Tn order to re-
building, Chicago, and “y *?onS^ cure still more convincing proof from
sent into the Sister Teres* will;an authoritative and absolutely 1m-
be promptly used for doing this mto-; I)Mrti*i sourve. the Central Bureau of
alonary work, jthn Central Vereln submitted the ruse
Womens OthcHEc Onkr of Fowter*! Along with n copy of the drawing and
Lmy Tax of Ten Creta Per Capita . | «*• Jft*e <° **« M««um of
' , —. .. j Fine Art* nt Boston, Massachusetts,
bor Three lest*. . Wbich institution has a famous collec-
It was recently stated that the perjtion cf prints and etchings. In reply
capita so generously levied by the I to its request the Central Bureau re-
Women's Catholic Order of Foresters j ceived the following statement from
for Che purpose of building church**! Mr. Fitz Roy Carrington, Curator of
in out of the way distrtcu, through j Prints at the Boston Museum, which
the Catholic Church Extension So- | clearly proves the forgery. Mr. Car-
clety, was S cents per capita. This, rington writes:
tax is 10 cents per capita, and is the; 1. "The pirt„
second one the Foresiers have levied; eleventh of the
upon their members for the upbuild-J (Large) Miseries of War by Callot.
ing of the Church in missionary part-;. z. "The tide of the whole series
of our country. ' is: "Les Miserea et les Malheurs de la
I Guerre.reiiresentes par Jacques Callot.
— ---------- noble Lotrain, et mis en lumiere par
Israel, son umy. A Paris. i■ * mc ....
(Miseries and Misfortunes of War. been given out by three of the belli-,
pictured by Jacques Callot. a noble of ' gerent powers:
Ixjrralne. and executed by his friend I Part”Ort. 17 : ....
Israel. Paris. 1^33). [Official communication Issued by the
In Paragraph 3, Mr. Carrington war office tc-night says; In Belgium
copies the text found under the pic- attacks by the Germans between
cure, which Is in verse form and in 3! Nieuwpoort and Dlxmuude have been
rows of 2 lines each, and which de- 1 repulsed by the Belgian army, effect-
scribes the fate of the marauders, who ! uaily aided by the British fleet. Be-
il pon capture, are executed by hang- tween Arras and Roye Might progress
ing to a tree for their crimes. | has been made at several joints. Our
4. In this paragraph the tides of I troops have reached ns far as the
“■ wire network of the defense
"In the neighborhood of St,.Mihiel ‘
we have gained some ground on the;
right bank of the Meme.
"No news of Importance has been
received regarding th* remainder of
the front."
Berlin. Ort. 19 <vi* London, u:4"j
FREDDONECKER&SOliS
FRESCO PAINTING.
rhnreh A ork, Altar and Statuary
Decorating.
Phone, Crockett. XSSI.
rJ3 DRElSrt ST. SAS ANTONIO.
personally to complete the work of
codification of the canon law. but the
Pope promised so to arrange die work
of the Secretariate of State as to leave
time to the Cardinal still to superin-
tend that colossal undertaking.
Important Appointments.
Cardinal Rafael Merry de! Vnl ha*
been appointed Secretary of the Holy
Office, a Congregation of which tbe
Pope himself is Prefect. The office
was left vacant by the death of Car-
dinal Ferrata. This appointment wan
expected, as Cardinal Slerry del Vai
was the first available among the Car-
dinals composing the Congregation.
Similarly, the late Cardinal Rampolla
was Secretary of the Holy Office and
Arch-Priest of St. Peter's after his re-
tirement from the office of Secretary
of State.
Cardinal Glus tin! has been appoint-
ed Prefect of the Congregation of the
Sacraments, of which h« was Secre-
tary prior to hi* elevation to the Car-
<1 instate. Thus all th* principal of-
fice* of the Curia hive been filled.
Bishop Kcnaedy and the American
College.
Rt. Rev. Bishop Kennedy, rector of
the American College, has regained
strength after his recent prolonged ill-
ness. and win return to Rome from
Caatel Gandolto with 138 American
students. The American College is
still the largest of all the national col-
lege in Rome, although the regular
annua! increase is checked thl* year
on account of the wnr.
American* Received Is Audience.
Mrs John N'eiU and Miss Bowen
of Philadelphia hod the privilege of
being present and receiving Holy
Communion at the Pope’s private
I Mas* yesterday.
Rt. Rev. Magr. A. M. Colanerl, Prot.
Ap.. Vicar General of Omaha. Ne-
. braska. has been received in private
, i..- * iwo,* a Pro^stant;
trtful, ivh.>. at the age of aixten, de-; -- • —-------
;■ irwi :<> ix-eum* a nun. C.*, — ■
inc "rtiicr Sii|>ertor nf the F •suline ■
Flight.
ha op j’ ending to the revolt: Execution by Hanging < in the i p. m. i-^German army headquarter* i
om Rome. !original;."La pendalson.” the one in : have given out an official statement
• [question.) 12. 13, 14, and the r**t 1 under to-day’s date as follows; "Th*
7~,.' I show scenes taken from the Hospital, j attacks of the enemy to th* west and |
The exouisite statue of the Madon- 1 rrom Camp, the Devastation of VII- j northwest of Lille have been nepulaed |
l still XdsuntapalraV to s^ehr^ge*. Revenge of the Peasants, the by our troop, with tie infliction cf [
i still stands un^airaa in a nrnne tatrtboil(jn Qf SpoU> Mr.»heavy lo«m.
All around It are the ruins i Carrington then continue*; "In the eastern arena of th* war
4 - - • -- - * -j 5, ‘The wood engraving of which-the sliu&tion remiiu
v*t*u am • I r*;»• ■'"Rr* "■ ■ ■ <* * “s- — —- —w— — — —■■ w ■----
a amiller 1 y«ner>I staff to^tay made thia an- : they can iwcu.ni to their ancient iaa
. If*? ■.JC,- jl'1 .H I
At Boston.
Boston held a three-day cetebra-
.... , . On Oct. 9, patriotic exercises
Cardinal Gaspard was most anxious were held in all public and parochial
schools of the city.
Sunday there was a Pan-American
meeting in Faneull Hall at 3 o'clock,
at whicl> Mayor Curley presided. The
principal speaker was Hon. Romulus
S. Noan, ambassador to the Cnited
States from the Argentine Republic,
and a large delegation of the officers
and men of the Battleship Rlvadavls,
now at the navy yard, attended In
full uniform.
Monday, the holiday proper, was
ushered in by the ringing of bells and
the firing of a salute by the battery at
the navy yard. At 9 a. m. there were
exercises on Boston Common, which
Included the raising of national and
city flags by Mayor Curley. There
wa* also an athletic meet on Boston
Common, a band concert, and a mast-
ing in Symphony Hall in the evoutag.
"Landing of Columbus” st Chicago.
The landing of Columbus on the
shores of San Salvador was re-enact-
ed Monday at Jackson Park, Chicago.
The explorer and members of bls
little party, impersonated by Knight*
of Columbus, who had charge of the
Columbus day celebration, came
ashore from the caravels Pinta and
Nina and were greeted by thousands
of school children.
Several thousand persons signed a
BIGOTS REBUKED ST
A PROTESTANT LADT
Rich.bind. Wis„ is just now cursed
by a of anti-Cnthollcism.
jits* E!U Fort James, of a >romi-
nent i’ruh'sLant family there, sends
to the R;< bland "Democrat." a noble
irttcr. in ,vhl<h she pay* a hLth tri-
bute to tin* maligned Slaters. We
quote
The writer was educated in a con-
vent. am! for xix years Hred unong
I'm- Nor one* in all that time
taw "Fort made to induce her to
niter th- ‘•attiolic faith. No In luence
o' th.- kln.l was brought to bear up-
en ar.v ot the Protestant pupils The
li-auufni I've* of the nun* had. how-
ever. lasttrg influence tn othet chan-
n<>!s 0:i<- , f the sweetest memories
in that 'kstan: past are the hours
«(>■«; in tin- quiet halls of th;-.t con-
v>nf wlinol
•The writer
Tlie German army which besieged i om-r to tk* Polish people lc his do-
Antwerp is now free and the invading ' ™*in when peace is restored. G-sr-.
forces have been strengthened othe*- tnany ha* also let it be known that It
wise tor an assault against some '1’ »"*- - — -
point in the extended battle front, j
Rigid secrecy is preserved as to the'
point chosen for this offensive move-
ment. The bulletins given out by the
German headquarters throw no light.
on the nature of the stroke which ua- : promtoe* _h*je been formttto.
mUtakably is Impending:.
A,dispatch, dated London, Oct. I!1'
(10:15 p. m.) has the following:
The third act of the war in Che
western theater has reached a criti- ^ erring nation*,
cal point. The first act was the Ger- ]
man attempt to sweep through Bel-;
xa tbe neresrnty and advantages of free
with the capture of theJYench rapitai for ,he
as the climax of an irresistible nd-j^^ to dlBpel tlhe slavlc
vance. ; j, against culture.
The second act was the offensive as-1 The Poles are working for the es-
sumed by the allies after General van ta httuhment of an independent Poli nd
SwS,.
is inclined to take a similar step.
This question has many times :>e-
fore agitated Europe, ud In a crista
’ promise* of independence have bean
■ made to the Poles. But as soon a*
these difficulties have posned the
A Paris. 1033."
of :
Tribute To Priests.
An Anglican vicar. Rev. Mr. Forbes
Phillip*, who te at the front, sends
th* following touching letter to the
Jrault Fathers al Yarmouth, Eng-
land.
"Dear Father,—I am writing this
by the aid* of a French soldier who
la wounded through hto right lung
ud to spitting quantities of blood. 1,
with some of our men when he
beckoned me to him. ‘Come. I wut
to talk to a priest.’'
“I give hi* ovi words: ‘I am not
reilrions—I have hated the Church
and *11 belonging to it; why—I do not
know, but. O my God! I now see th*
brave prfceta: Always I thought
them mere things to black petticoats,
now I know they are men reel men
ud true aoldlcm of the good God.
They are so culm on the field of bat-
tle. urf u qulet-voleed a* before the
altar. Ah! I was born a Catholic: 1
Would be one again: but. enough! It
la now too,lata. Monrienr l’Abbe
Muy taw***’4 *• 1 says Goff to good; w*n. lam but
1*. when a. bom I should Kke to do Justice to brave
—*• —m j know nothing about God; *11
that I know fa thto----? Here b*
Mode the sign of the ctom. Tbo poor
Salto* had to do thto with his Mt
hand and tt eaueed tvtaga* of ptota.
I afiaU not targtt hto signed the era**.
n»
In the wiill* of *
S°?he convent, which was gutted byf. "V* *«« en^anng «•wmen -
fire in the general destruction of the ‘ml,rM}'^oos h>ve l**n enclosed is a
rown by theGermans. ! r^rly good rendering, ona smaller;
A piece of Che Iron root twlrted BC*lp- 1
cut of Shape, lie* within u inch of|’h,-h 1K3-1SS millimeters ta
the statue, but did not touch It Some
of the Inhabitant* of Termonde look
cn the Incident as * miraculous In-
stance of the intervention of Divine
Providence to *nve the statu* of the
Virgin.
UGHT AXI* waot*-
9OME JBMEUX, .
!1 ; that delight* the bonMvttr
I' baking to done, la p«4a
high trade, pore fnA **5^
i '!!?!"• ®tor that to ground to th*
s: MUto free* P* fctot
■ ^|**JM* *«< ftoepttogba*^
ja.llll.*^Mto IBtoh MtritolBt M. to*
Htfi?1 w ** I
Mto O»s 1
Miseow
,U l'!v- rt’.,;:;
of the Santa Maria, the third of the
Columbus caravels, which were cm ex-
hibition at the world’s fair and which
wo* abandoned after an unsuccessful
attempt to transport it to Sun Fran-
cisco for the fair there.
AC Columbus, Ohio.
Dlstlngnished speaker* made mem-
orable thia year's "Discovery Day"
banquet, held under K. of C. auspices,
at the Hotel Gibson. Columbus. Ohio.
Archbishop Moeller. Archbishop
Glennon, of St. Louis; Governor
James Cox. Attorney General T. S.
Hogan. Lieut. Gov. Edward McDer-
mott of Kentucky and Mayor Fredk.
S. Spiegel attended and responded to
* the various toasts.
In Covington,
torchlight parade.
, Children Celebrate.
More than two thousand children
of the parochial schools, academy and :
business college, Portland, Oregon,!
headed by a band, proceeded to St. |
Mary's Cathedral, where Solemn High
Ma™ was celebrated. Two hundred |
young voices rendered the pinin chant
Mass of the Angels. After Maw the
children’s parade was reviewed by
Archbishop Christie.
In New York.
Cardinal Farley and Bishop Hayes,
with the Cardinal’s write, attended
the celebration of Columbus Day at
Carnegie Hall, New York.
Rev. John H. O’Rourke, the elo-
quent Jesuit, delivered an address,
and was followed by Hon. W. Bourke
Cock ran. who spoke on "Peace."
There was a very enjoyable musical
program.
The Marquis San Giuliano, Italian
Minister of Foreign Affairs, died hero
last Thursday. He was a good Cath-
olic. Hl* coufeosor. who had adminis-
tered the last Sacraments, came to
the Vatican shortly before the Mar-
quis' death and saw the Pope, who
sent through him the Apostolic Bene-
diction to the dying man. This dr-
cumstan*e has occasioned consider-
able comment concerning the Pope's
political tendencies, suggesting to
Home a possible rapprochement be-
tween the Holy See and the Italian
Government: but the Pope’s action
was purely personal, containing no
political meaning whatever.
Yesterday a large concourse of prel-
ates and people was present at the In-
auguration of * commemorative tab-
let affixed to the house on the Piazza
qant Eustachlo where the present
Pone lived so many yearn while exer-
rising a vigoyowB and holy pastoral
activity in the parish,
*—......o- *..........—
DEATH OF MSGR. X H. BEKSON.
Among th* Gorman prm«r» nt
war at CnmboriW* Hogtaad. are 1.-
Sto Catholics who** spirttoal vtotbra
tototaedto to by tb* R*v. Anstte Mac-
rewptfca «C th*.R*er*toto»t* of ?•-
'MS and Stop MmM.
pareutly with the design of establish- ?
fne themwlv^H In rhtnh-l <wirr* '
from which points of vantage they
could menace England.
The situation I* still io much in the
dark that it is impossible to judge of
the exact trend of event*. The Eng-
lish and French papers n*t orally
gather encouragement from the re-
ports published from their side. From
the German point of view* it 1* possi-
ble the Germans have improved their
I>osition and with the forces which be-
sieged Antwerp and reinforcements
from Germany are attempting
the coast another sweeping
meat like that which ci.rried them so
far into France. •;L*JT7 unu
In this field of action it appears in-. tulttedly not so long, attention is be-
evltable there must soon be some de-ting called to such men a* Heuryk
cbdve result. The flatness’ of th* 1 Slenkfewic x, author of "Quo Vadi*."
country seem* to have made it impos- ; who was one time the recipient of :he
slble for the two armies to entrench Nobel prize for literature; Joseph
and face each other without important1 Korzeniowskl. whose plays are to-rlay
change in position for weeks as they Studied in American colleges; Adam
have done across Northern France. iMicklewicz. the poet; I go ace PsZer-
. ___k ewskL the pianist, and Josef h<ff-
‘ The .fO1sports have , rival; Matejko. the pa‘nt-
1~_F ~r ~~ er. and Stwosz, the sculptor.
in i-t-a- „ m i Tn.-! Ttle present movement is strictly
Paris. Oct. IP (.Lft* P. »•»—The.opp(Bled w nihnirtic or ausrriE*-
'tic revolution. It is believed that
nothing can be accomplished by s-ict
means, but It 1* hoped that the t ur-
[>ose will be accomplished by an et or-
mens upheaval cf public seutlmen*. In
favor cf freedom for the Poles, atich
will force Germany and Russia Into
carrying out their pledges.
' J—toy K— total RMMto
--■■■■ ri. . , ."I., , ■ ■ 4 .. ;■ ,, -F K,: *; #. ' •■■■■■■ r_. . 4,-1
- - ,, . ■■ ■” .4 ’V I- r H-; ■ : • -I -
t ----------------------
May HU Tetayta*ry Hot 1>
EathtaL
Catholics throughout Great Britain
are grateful to Cambridge Unicerd*y
for the splendH offer of hosi.ftaiitr it
has made to the faculty of unhappy
Louvain. Th* profensors have been
[invited to come to the university tad
e mtuauon remam* uncaangeu. ’ -t-dents and resume their
I Petrograd. Ort. !».—The Russian courses of study until each time a*
___« a JA-— ' — — aL.1— —-------. t-rtl WMZ'ttoM'f "ktotf
■w,,.-. u, unc s*ri**; nounCvment: "We galxed partial sue-1 ruined seat of learning. Buildings
i which average 1K3-1SS millimeter* ta ceaiies on October Ik in very fierce:libraries and other facilities T111.1*
' width. «»-83 millimeters in height." fighting tn the region of Warsaw and j placed al their dlsporaL and they
Thu* the scene to a war scene and south of PriemysL” vffl be able to Kraut degree* aad iwr-
not one of religious persecution, it
wa* designed by C*llot and not by j 20 > fighting of the
Quartley. *&d the scene to not in the; . -- .. . .
Netherlands at all. but in Lorraine or
Germany.
As already indicated, the use of pic-
tare* in this manner is by no
rare. Just whether or not Billy Park-
er to guilty of the same offense *e are
not prepared to *ay. Th* Central Bu-
reau of tbo Central Vereln will wri-
con* any information regarding the
H* also atate* that the two ho**** of | teraoon and to adrektod in the repert
4» n.r. COUininalratlonn ObOuM. „ , u£ MMI man UUHUMIMI vw» w»hk wre
Central Bureau of the Central Vereta. fl-bu>x bus been «otac «* *tocn 8s»-
217 Temple Bldg.. St- Lonta, Mo. ;di«u**
C B. of the C. V,
of aiXte’O, de-; short notices in Italian papers an-
Sh* apt;!led io I nolln<.fng the bomb outrage In St. Pat- ,
f the T-suline rtek-s cathedral. New York, have.
lo!.I th.i! her admission would not be >
mV Write,uthrho^rprem^r‘l^«h Of Italian Foreign Minirier.
"h her own part. Thts girl i ” " "
afterward# d.i idrd to remain Prot-
■hsuli ar. I i>t one word w - ver of-1
torct !»- th.- Mother Superior ugainet
(Ms il*M ls;iin,
In the uri-tit tidal wave of Ealve*-
ti>r. in !■>'■<> the Sisters of the I'rau-
Jbi> 1 '<>rr•■nt -aved hundreds of lives
Ri'carrt,-!. r>f color or religic U* be-
lief, th*-\ navu shelter to the home-
>s.t, niir*i4'.| the sick and comforted
th,* biiv.)i •-! in a manner that added
thdr r..o;i>-, to the annals of th* great.
"a til th.- history of the world, tn
tlm*-* <‘t 'tress, the nuns have moved
thmiuii if .. labyrinths of blooiy war
and darkc.*,*». angels of mercy. The
priests hat- Utter! the weary and aid-
ed them tn struggling alone stony
path- th..< have held tlie Win* of eu-
.uur.K’-nient to dying Up* and have
mad- th*- lying hours of niatr' hope-
lew nm- h.ippv. May the trouble be-
t»<m the M . ts be straightened out
and -ac!i made io see that the strong
arm nf t ie other is macle necessary
to th.' s i'!t are t.f all."
tween the Holy See and the French
government, at the very least a rap-
prochement of a cordial kind. Not, in-
deed. because the Po<m> has taken
tides in the most remote degree— -ar
common Father of all he can only ex-
liort all belligerents to jience. but be-
cause the distinct religious revival
observable all through France must
necessarily fore* the hands of
gins, S. T. L.. of the Seminary of St. i
Charles Borromeo. Patriotic songs]
were sung by the Knights of Colum-
bus choir of 20tl male voices.
In St. Paul, Minn., the Italian ,so-
i tfeties gave a banquet at the West
A pres* dispatch from London, dat- ‘ Hotel. Among the speakers were toe
ed October 19, 1:1° P- m < announce*, Governor i
* th0 cn ***** th** V^ry Rev, > ^rhov
Lt ! Unniimor F
; French Republic, which Is officially ■ Iery, 7,
I atheistic, Iles under to Belgium, the ■ village. 8,
I most Catholic of nations—ell ”
of Faris from Rome.
j
wr-j' 1 < <>| aonu r.
Oro lrt>h monument erected In Chi-1
raze w.w unveiled In Gartlel I
Chicag,,
ed by 1 1i-i
■dlirctur <>i the sculpture department
■ct the t liicago Art Institute.
"overno.- Dunne, his staff. M*ycr
Harrison :uid tb* city council, th*
Irish Fellowship Club, United Irtah
^Octetii-y the Seventh Regiment, nll-
tois Nit>o.;,d Guard, Ancten’
* Hibernians, th* Ctan-u*™™
Guards and the Gaelic Atbletie A**o-
dtotiuns took part tn the parade.
Discovery Day Officially Celebrat-
ed la Twenty-Nine States. ;
Discovery Day, October 12, was of-s
“■v’wsS’ussv. ic!
tlon* at Austin, Dallas, Houston. Gal- | toe missionary. In his mission district'>r<,adin* be more^isily’------ ■
is not to be wond.-red at. for their re-! plrtun._ which b^ th<J utIe -The A report from Berlin, of the same
K «? tv. Martyrdom ot Hypatta." These ttc-;
kh muSwed by others, tn-!
public school and having services tn - - —- - • - - - - -
their own churches perhaps but onc*|
or twice a month :md then oftentimes!
only on week-days, what wonder Is it
that such deplorable conditions
should prevail. 1 wonder how long it
will be before th*' results of such
conditions will open our eyes and
make us wonder at the spiritual hav-
oc wrought amongst the people of our
own religion. One need not be a pes-
simist to predict such results when
being confronted with such condi-
tions. it Is Indeed easy to seduce the
Ignorant, but those who possess intel-
ligent faith stand firm in the hour of
trial "
It is tha opinion or Father Marita kind of pictures this “lecturer'* i»
that Catholic literature supplements | makin< use of to convince hta au-
the instruction of the priests. i
"It 1* good for both Catholics and |
buu-CauiuucB." said the pfirai,
here in our mission district both are
indeed of practical solid instruction."!
The Catholic Church Extension So-
ciety sent him a box of well chosen '
hooks for distribution among his pw- l
pie, and needl.ws to say. the heart campaign, is furnished by the use to
WM by whlch they pnt M owning by the to.
mon# Catholic engraver. Callot. This
—'-'.-j -----.a was circulated by th* Melting Pot in
fund simply for the purchase of Cato-1 lts own and in a boolc entnie<l
oilc books, and it is called the StaterThe Roman Religion" under the
several tnouaana persons signeo ■ u* 1
petition for the return from Boston ture Fund.
■ ■ * ............
for the purchase of books to be sent
to missionaries for distribution.
society 1* enabled to furnish
The Faith of Our Father* and Th* ----------
Question Box for 1« rents postpaid nt2ed la CentraI Bureau
ntkgvh 1 Thu Pothml/' _
Klack had stretched his army on the f which will embrace all of its xncrimt
German west wing over a long line of ■ lands. They are working for the in-
communications that he could not {dependence of al] of the other Slavic
hold. The allied armies pressed the;BBtlons They look for the estate
German forces back toward toe Bel- i Hshment of a free Rutheiria, * f:*ee
gian border, compelling the entire j Sei-ria. a free Bulgaria, a free Cron-
line from the eastern pivot of Vgrdun ;tia and a free Czech-Moravian State,
to recede in order to maintain on rm- ■ with this accomplished it Is hoped
broken front and a possible line of re- (that they will be bound together un-
jder a form of government similar to
- — w—— — —— w — ———w-•*. —— —— 1,MUI| Ml L*J
vance of the Germans along toe coast; hreded by
of Belgium and Northern France, ap- j or a tasr
pareutly with the design of establish-1 it is contended tost a coalition of
ing themselves tn the channel porta. ;the Slavic and other isolated nation*,
from which nolnts of vantage thev hncb „ tba Hungarian*. LtthuanUm*
and Roumanians, would bo a mrisz
powerful factor tn Europe towzrrd
universal peace.
Pride In Stevie Unfocrutttan.
In arguing against tb* popular be-
lief that Slavic influence is agaiut
culture. It is urged that many of toe
most tamous universities trace thris
origin to the days of independent Ice-
land. They number among them Cra-
cow, Vilna, the John Casimir Culver-
along I rity of Lemberg and tb* recently R «»-
move- ; slanlzed University of Warsaw.
1 While the list of Poltsh notables in
.1 the field of literature and arts Is id-
r—flir- fartjMtd By PafaL-
Atatncaafi.
Th* ambitious of-the Polish peojile
who are seeking Independent govern-
ment for their native land will be
communicated to the American po*>-
[Thereupon it printed snd sold a eraie; w*’’11 Dn“’t,rk- th.? COMt-1 p)e by means of a nurfim which
■picture, which bore toe title "The = A r«~rt from B«rtla- tfce “me!teul bren bv pZZTtTLZ
; Martyrdom of Hypatia." Three tr(>; <1*to ssy*: > has been wng-d by Pri« ril orer the
- - All the signs indicate that a change, conn*— — — -L
eluding The Melting Pot of St. Loitis, [ “ Spending in toe protracted rtrng-lRev.
j which again borrowed Illuntrations; . 11 -'•orthern France, i
j from older anti-Cathollc sources. j
Now come* a certain "Billy Fark-.
er" with several picture lectures, en-
|t*.tied: "Rome, the Menace of I’rog-j
j res*"; "Ti e Trail of the Snake", or
"The Crimes of the Popes", Parker's
reading notices contain the announce-
ments: "Hear the History of the Cru-
sades”. “See the Instruments of Tor-
ture used on the Protestants during
the Inquisition. Illustrated with
nearly 100 pictures." These picture*
were recently shown at Bemidji,
| !Lf 1 «* ■*
[making use of to convince
diences of “th* Crimes of Rome.” But
'’•[lustrations used by The Menace. The
Melting Pot and other publications of
the same kind. An iaterestlng illus-
tration of how these agencies stoop
even to forgery*, in conducting their
toe
[government, atheistical though it be.
~”iTh* heroism of priests, levlte*.
Patriotic^songs monbM and nun* at toa trout, the 1 ___
crowding of churches all day long I the series are enumerated: They cov-
every week at home to pray for vic- er; j Title of the series. 2. Enroll-
tory and for the sonls of those French ’ ment of Troops, 3. The Battle. 4.
soldiers who have died in battle, the: The Attack of the Marauders. 3. Pil-
; deep obligations under which the lage. ti. Destruction of the Monaa-
of Minnesota. Mayor >ye. Preacb Republic, which Is officially ■ Iery. 7. Piling* and Burning of the
, ----- I atheistic, Iles under to Belgium, the: Village. 8. Flight. 9. Discovery Of
i In ,Ct,v*r2®r 1 most Catholic of nations—sll these i the Robbers. 10. Punishment. II.}
;Hon. Cha*, w. Miller, former^United ; w a baDpy ending to the revolt; The Execution by Hanging. 1 In 1
I original"La pendalson." the one (
jquestion. 1 12, 13. 14, and toe r—
uff attained great popularity n* a,
lecturer, in which capacity he visited.
tb» United State* about a year ago-
Hto <*1^ title
.nd which are dart*Md to retain *
tjLj. and pertMwmt ptoc* fa English
uSratnre- I“ on. of kto book, he
hearty foretold th. pt taint w
7pJ£_«ren to th* vary ytax of it* out-
bC7?;)iti<a1rtte « hta «roijt
toSa CtareK 1* Utao*««
te wn« thro, ytata mo »Pq^
TTc—*■- rtoMiitar^te to Popo
x. wftk thoWloaS rank of
Way Ma anal stat M M*ee.
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Campbell, William. Southern Messenger (San Antonio and Dallas, Tex.), Vol. 23, No. 36, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 22, 1914, newspaper, October 22, 1914; San Antonio, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1266193/m1/1/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .