Southern Messenger (San Antonio and Dallas, Tex.), Vol. 30, No. 33, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 22, 1921 Page: 1 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Southern Messenger and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the UNT Libraries.
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TO RESTORE DANTE’S TOMB.
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OBLATE SCHOLASTICS
MAKE TEMPORARY VOWS
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AMERICAN HISTORY
MOVEMENT.
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upholder at the claims of Ire- i
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j appointment f_-
with the truce and peace. nu
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ItHcial Organ K of C, aad C- Il. of A. in Texas. ; •[£«..
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PRICE $2.50 A YEAR, PAYABLE IN ADVANCE ■■-Ji HH
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(By N, C. W. (3. News Service.) |
New York. Sept. 19.—New 1
parochial schools have enrolled
wore than 109,000 pupils for the
fall term, which opened last week,!
(lie hliawlnnt Ina. i
Ses-CenieEtary Celebration Held al UIli£orin
Ravenna.
(By K. C. W. C, News Service.)
Washington, D, C., September 19.
—The- Rt. Rev. Monsignor John T.
Slattery of Albany, the author of a
notable work on Dante, represented
the Catholic University of America
at the Dante sex-centenary celebra-
tion held lost Thursday at Ravenna,
Italy.
Monsignor Slattery is president of
the Dante Memorial Association and
in its name presented to the Na-
tional Committee for the Restora-
tion of Dante’s Tomb, the sum of
$1,009 collected through the ef-
forts of the Catholic University and shlp certificates. J
’ “ lowers would feel more satisfied If
the "doctor” would inform them
else how could the Orange mob have
continued its work of slaughter up
to the hour of curfew, and that
within a stone’s throw of a military
barracks? If a single individual
were done to death in a Southern
County as scores have been done to
death in Belfast, thousands of arm-
ed forces would be rushed into the
district and martial law proclaimed
within twenty-tout1 hours."
In pursuance of the policy cf vin-
dictiveness towards Catholics the
Northern Parliament intends to pro-
the "reform’.’ or s
. ’1lcat(oa
Catholics who have built
sgs “ ■ ifigsaB gois
Ossi
»-MESSENGER «
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ST, MARY’S RECTORY, SAN ANTONIO.
Home of the Oblate Fathers as it f-—
left11, 10’ *<’21. GHnipsq Qt
Characteristics of the Colonial Char- j> p.;|||
Fnelmrlst Mt- Commercial Monopolies in the . ffi.’.fl
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world -■■■>■■
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j.gpriBgiiekt- t "■'
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ary iWain.- .H»ided.
Parliament, (ind men like him,
urging to be more aggressive.
Incited the Recent Pogrom.
In addressing a meeting
gilgSSlil
■ssbo
members cf the association. [
This sum would have been larger i
had It not been judged prudent to
merge the work of the association
in that of the National Dante Asso-
ciation in order to avoid overlap-
ping.
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i’utics of citizenship in the United
States. They would feel safer un-
der his leadership if this point
could be cleared up.
Disowned By Masons.
----aker is evidently peeved
and
Before the
a friendly
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me entire vriituuiiv vwuui
the day his appointment was
nounced Mr. de Valera and
Lord Mayor of Dublin waited
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him and personally offered
congratulations.
tion. Benediction of the
Blessed Sacrament followed.
Third annual vows were made by
Donut Morrissette. James J. Connors,
end Albert G. Sheehan of Lowell,
?lass.; Charles J. Costello, Wake-
ii eld, Mass,; James J. Donnelly,
Cambridge, Mass., and Thomas D.
Hurley, East Boston, Mass. Second
annual vows were made by Leonard
P. Falvey, South Boston, Mass.;
James S. Kerrigan, Roxbury, Mass.;
Albert A. Chevalier, Campbell, Neb.;
William H, Kelleher, Lowell, Mass.; :
Thomas J. Hanna, Roxbury, Mass., ■
A. Bruce MeLean, George E.
(By N. C. W. c. NefWB Service.)
New York, Sept 17.—The date-
for the consecration of the Rt. Rev. the District
Jr
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11
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IN ESSAY CONTEST.
(By N. C. W. C. News Service.)
Washington, D. C-, Sept. 16.—
Three of the State winners, in the
national essay contest on the sub-
ject, "Good Roads and Highway
Transport," are pupils In Catholic
schools. They are Miss Aileen Hol-
land, St. Mary’s Academy, Provi-
dence, R. I., Miss Victorlne Peach,
Mt. de Sales Academy, Catonsville,
Md., and James Walter Hammond.
St. Joseph’s high school, Manches-
ter, N. H. Their papers have been:
forwarded to Washington to be con-1
sidered by a national committee
which will select the national win-
ner.
The contest was open to pupils of
high school grade In either public
or private institutions. Many hun-
in ark fug the heaviest registration ini
their history and an increase of 5.-M
t'00 over last year's figures. There
has been a notable Increase in the
number of students registered
the Catholic high schools.
Meanwhile the public school sit-
uation confronting the city ts said
to be the most serious in its his-
tory, necessitating the part-time at-
tendance of 100,090 pupils.
The amount of money saved to
the city as a result of the main-
tenance of the parochial school sys-
, ...„ tern is emphasized by the fact that
Crown forces to end this carnage,; *n U>« ease of the Christian Broth-
' ers teaching in the elementary
grades it Ib estimated co amount *’
J 1,071,160 in one year.
11
si.:4i Si
I
Wil
Till
fa Washington, D. C.
(By N. C. W. C. News Service.)
1 Washington, D. C., Sept. 19.—
Oblation Day at the Oblate Scbolas-
ticate of the Catholic University
was observed on the feast of the
Nativity of the Blessed Virgin, with
fourteen members of the commu-
ni ty making temporary vows aud;
one member making his perpetual ■
profession.
The oblation Mass was celebrat-
ed by the Rev. C. J. McCarthy, U.
M. I., superior of the sc hoi a Stic ate.
The Rev. Henry Rt Burns, O. M. I.,
ct Tewkesbury, Mass., who had con-
ducted the eight-day retreat in prep-
aration for the ceremony, preached
the sermon.
At the communion of the Mass,
the aspirants advanced to the al-
tar, where they knelt on the top
step, each holding a lighted candle,
rhe symbol of faith and love, in his
right hand and the formula of obla-
tion in bls left hand. After the
words "Ecce Agnus Dei,” the vows
— ON “AMERICANISM”
®Y ALIEN-BORN PREACHER.
Bigotry aaJ fgE>onmCe
Utterances of a Kn-Klox Sponter
At Houston.
By P. L. McGrcal.
Sept. 16.—(Spe-
" 'e were given
what is con-
13 el fast on
when
>ugal,
be a
“Grand
In Cash Prizes.
The Knights of Columbus have
formally launched their $1,000,060
American history movement with
the offer of $7,500 in cash prises
to contestants in a national his-
tory competition.
The first prize in the contest Is
$2,500 for professors of history in
colleges in the United States. Five
other prizes of $1,000 each are of-
fered to: school superintendents
and school teachers in the
I'lifted States; the general public,
including specialists tn historical,
sociological, economic, legal, politi-
cal, diplomatic and biographical stu-
dies: students who have access to
material in the universities and
libraries aud archives of Canada,
Mexico, Central and South America
which deals with International rela-
tions of the Americas; students
specialising in American history,
who have access to material in uni-
versities, libraries and archives
overseas relating to the United
States and students in colleges In
the United States.
The final awards will be made at
the 1922 meeting of the supreme
assembly, Fourth Degree, Knights
of Columbus, under whose auspices
the contest is being conducted. Su-
preme Master John H. Reddin of
Denver, Colo., is la charge of the
K. of C. history movement which,
at a cost of $1,600,000 will result
in the production of a cycle of pam-
phlets on American history, written
from original sources, which the
knights will distribute In pamphlet
form by millions of copies, to news-
papers, magazines, legislatures, civ-
ic assemblies, forums, and all
schools, public and private, as well
ns universities and colleges.
Specimen periods end subjects to
be subjects of contestants’ papers
ate: 1592-1763, European rivalries
and colonial Institutions, from the
discovery of America to the Treaty
of Paris, 1763; Colonial Union,
fiem the Confederation of the Col-
onies of New England for mutual
.defense to the Articles of Confed-
and
7 times during the
‘lectures” but thus
his “educn-
tour of the United States”
i never told his audiences
he became naturalized and
court granted him citizen- „
Many of his fol- j [JIj0 ja a
F i r. f E I P ,
■ quent preacher.
! one of the me
bishops of Dublin since the days
St. Lawrence O'Toole. A re I:!::::!:
Walsh assumed office in a time of
2 He; Crangeman gave the following ad-
. d'led "in a'period of strife and war-,vi(-‘e to a Catholic resident in
: tare. At nil times he was a etreu-1
I nous
land
Orangemen in County Down, Coots
asserted that Rome was behind Sinn
Fein. He further asserted that the
Catholic Church was at the begin-
ning of the end in Ireland. And to
this latter statement the wish was,
c£ course, father to the thought.
What has been the effect <d Mr.
Coote's words advocating oppres-
sion? There has been another fierce
Orange outbreak in Belfast. Houses
in the Catholic quarters have been
bombed. Areas where Catholics re-
side have been surrounded by hands
of Orangemen armed with rifles and
revolvers. Catholics were forced to
defend themselves with the lesult
that there were pitched battles (n
the streets.
This latest attack upon the Catho-
lic community was arranged
plotted in cold blood,
outbreak took place
:: riv ■ t: 11 gs -..nd bkss-
■<! from thci Ger-
lml tin? greatest
iop.-d when the
nio I'ollowing tfiie-
appcarri) on the morning after the
: ’ on tim
■ -
" - “ ■.- ... * .... “«
of poverty, chastity ai__
and the vow of perseverance in the
community were pronounced
reception of the Holy Eucharist fol-
lowed.
After the Mass Brother John J.
Connolly, 0. M. I., of Lowell, Mass.,
who made his perpetual profession,
Missionary Oblate upon his breast
and was presented with ths white ’
^lPul“^_tb_e _lmmacuIate Concep-’ I i„® .
03 will be received by Supreme Secre-
tary William J. McGinley at Knights
of Columbus headquarters, New
Haven, Conn. They should be type-
written in English, fuliy annotated
and include a complete bibliography
so that sources may be Investigat-
ed. They should not contain more
than 4,006 words. Each wanu-
script must be signed with an as-
sumed name and a sealed envelope,
containing the author's name and
; address with identification ef the
assumed name, must be included.
and A. Bruce McLean, George E^ Edward F. McSweem
McGahan, and George L. Carter of'i:J chairman of the K.
Buffalo, N. Y. ------------------ '
Houston, Tex., Sept
ctai)—Houston people
a demonstration of
stautly occurring m
Thursday night (Sept. 15) y
the “Rev. Dr.” William McDm
a Scotchman, who claims to 1
1 resbytedan minister and
Lecturer of the Louisiana
tion of the Scottish rite” of
a tirade on
J not Amer-
Ihifi) Important Meeiiings of Cafe-
E lie Young People?.
B- {By N. C. w, c. Newa Service,)
B Berlin Sept ?—Among the re-
||;eel manifestations of Catholic life
Eft Ger any m- the Missionary Con-
Bfereaw ot Orman High Schools
IprWi are hel l at the Missionts.ry
of I he I ’athera of the H ly
g;$hst io KnechtstPdim and attended
Elf students ifuLU all parts of Gar-
Euffly and Swiizcrlatid and th,s groat
|;«igres3 of the Neudtmtschland"
fejW Germany > Union at Frwi-
K tsrf in Badri:
iJ.Tbs JliKtiomn y Congress was In-
l&Eikd tn awalo-n among the young
||pwple of ih'-rmany an interest in
I'.tae and f:ir<-:gn missions. It ln-
fecded leetnr'1?, talks and moving
rjiefwes describing the romance and
Immense ral'ir nf missionary work
|ha!i parts h [lie world. Cardinal
|Sih-lite, who is president of the so-
I'ddf, sent his iin-otinga and bless-
Many win> wrote for resorva-
l&as had t<, ta- 1 ri nsed, us all places
Htre taken nmir than fourteen dz.ys
|.More the oin-mTig cf the congress,
|» interest ami e 11 thus teem ma-ai-
humirmls c? students
attended the congress justify
'hat the congress will
than fnldii iis object.
Ficilmt” t oiu’crence.
Ths Fn-itain:
8h FRIHSTS ATTEND
[I CHAPLAIN’S BURIAL.
B De¥itl Lait Amencan ^ceir
B KiBed In tne World War.
H (By N- c- '''■ ■'<ew3 Servtce'-)
■ Holyoke-. h-i--- St’PL l9-—--(ore
Kftm'tvo bin ■ ■" timi ii»y clnrgy-
igfn, incltHli-’'-’ -■ army < hnp-
Biiits, al1 'll! serric£3
Rifta hist M ? ' ■ ■ I'1 -acred Heart
Bpurcli when t h-mors were Sabi
Barite ib-1'’- ■ 1:1 r Lnvifl, cha>
ikin oi 1 he : 't nfatitry of the
B-jnjj DBLr-t- to have becjtt
|2) last Alh- - ■■■ Ulcer,- killed in
Ltavorhl ! io- I’oritiflc.'il High
I’i'jss of He , i: ■ was sting by tae
Bflt. Ik1'- !l; ■ 1S ^'Leary of
IsriiiKdckt. t" Rev. Monsignor
|(iwrp! A -' ;llf ;i;ew Vc-rlc, ■
|:fttholie lire-;. Lif army ntid .
rhapHui.- .itt'-nded. The rt.ili- :
|:isry funeral w.ts rite largest ever 1
gteld 1“ ttlis Sl ' u"n 1,1 th‘! stlte- 1
f CATHOUC LIFE IN GERMANY. i
“Take your holidays during the
| week-end, your street will aeon be-
i ccine unhealthy,”
i in the first days of the outbreak
[fifteen persons were killed and 109
I wounded. Within the past thirteen
months 120 persons have been kill-
led and 879 wounded in Belfast.
i ‘‘tmath To Catholics!"
Commenting on the latest Orangs
orgy of violence the Irish Inde-
pendent says:
“The story of Belfast’s Orange po-
groms will go down in history as
eno of the blackest pages in the an-
nals of organized massacres of re-
ligious minorities . . The painful
happenings of the present week
force upon one’s mind the conviction
that the watchword of the braves
who shoulder their rifles with im- '
f.unity In the Capital of Str James 1
Craig's principality is henceforth 1
10 be ‘Death to the Catholics.’ For ’
the present appalling outbreak not
a tittle of excuse or provocation can 1
ba urged.- We are not satlsfisd that '
a sufficient effort was made by the 1
______
IT ----Bov; mop, .FealvMtX San
1.^--------------- .. JAH ANTONIO AUD a;im.
ness and prcfeOmal men in the
city, who evidently have no desire
to listen to "brW^eDbtigal and his
Eelfast logic,
The "Rev. DreEfB.-iiai.ittilii, under-
sized man, weighaWb.X36' pbunda, and
is apparently Shears'old. He :s
an incessant cigarette smoker and
one would never pick him out in a
crowd as a duIiG ordained minister
of the Gospel. ®Ie has a decided
Scotch b-u-r-r-r-igaml is difficult to
understand. In||ttCt It is humorous
to hear him wit^his harsh, foreign!
accent talking about "Americanism,"
if it were not do menacing to real
Americanism aRd provocative of
jurisdic- civic strife,
the Ma-
MORIAL MASS AT LOURDES. TIRADE 'S
Forty Tboosand People Attend Sol-
emn Requiem For Those Whi
Died During the War.
(By N. C, W. C. News Service.)
Paris, September 11.—on the last
day of the National Pilgrimage to
Lourdes, an imposing ceremony was
the 3ita oE wilat 16 t0 ba
tads iv’T1 Of Intel'a!lled Grati-
x 1 ,the pres™ce of the Arch-
bishop of Algiers, the Bishops of
Lourdes, Verdun, Chalons, and Fre-
hundred Prosts and 46,-
000 faithful, a- Solemn High Mass
ivas sung for the repose of the souls
tL rv6 dled dtiriB5 th0 ^r.
r? .L1 turg cai ehaot3 of the Office
or the Dead were executed with
perfect ensemble by the assistants.
j,1 ®Kr-- Schepfer, Bishop of Lourdes
delivered an eloquent sermon and
prayers were recited for the allied
nations, especially the United Stat-
es, whose flag floated near the tem-
porary altar with the flags of ths
Allies.
The monument of Interallied
Gratitude is to be erected near the
famous sanctuary and will ba sacred
to the memory of all the allies who
fell in the great war. The corner-
clona was laid November 11, 1920,
the anniversary of the armistice, in
the presence of several Cardinals,
delegations from the allied coun-
tries and more than 20,000 veter-
ans of the war.
The crypt was built in the winter
and spring of 1921. it is now com-
pleted. It is a subterranean tem-
ple, and the galleries are forty me-
ters long. The walls of this cata-
comb have a total surface of four
hundred square meters. They will
be covered with the names, written
in mosaics, of those who seek a
tomb and find it near the Divine
Mather.
Panels will also be provided to
receive small personal remembrances
of the deceased soldiers: crosses,
portraits, letters, decorations, which
will make their presence in Lour-
des seem more real aud place them,
more directly under the blessing of
the Virgin.
ic bodies in Texas judging from his
remarks last night, v
viously appeared here
announcing his "lecture” contained
the Information that lie represented
the Masonic order us “grand lectur-
Following this so-called lec-
at the auditorium, a number
of members of the Masonic order
took exception to the speaker using
the name of the order as a shield
to hide behind and also as a nait to
attract hearers. A letter of protest
was sent to the Grand Sovereign of
the Scottish Rite at Dallas. It fs
assumed that that official forbade
the "Rev.” McDougal from using
his Masonic titles. At any rate they
no longer appear on bis placards
and other advertising matter. The
"Rev.” hinted at this during the
course of his tirade lust niglit and
placed the blame on a "pn miaent
Knight of Columbus.” He also
declared there could be no "frater-
nity’’ between a Knight of Columbus
and a Mason—not even a citizen-
ship fraternity.
The meeting last night was open-
ed by the Rev. J. E. Green, pastor
of a Methodist church here, whose
son was formerly district United
States attorney tor tbo Southern i ...----------- -----. —-
Federal district of Texas and is d reds of young
connected with the legal de-[men competed. The State winners
now conn production i were selected by committees ap-
F. «,mr rind its allied concerns, pointed by the State superintendents
Another son is a merchant here, of public instruction... The winner
Heretofore Houston Catholics con-1 will receive a four-year scholarship,
* t Vhe Rev Mr. Green us a I including tuition and living ex-
infotor who was above 'encourag- peases, in any college or unlvmity ----------------------.
s“fe .*» SE
W™ Wttolmrt »I U>» «M W H»r»« s-.. CaltoUe. -»o
"and they-regret bls Information concerning mstnt-1"-4 ----
ley of Boston
of C. Amer-
■ ; ii.’uti History commission, and Mau-
I rice Francis Egun, former Minister
NEW YORK’S PAROCHIAL ” Dn'e"iT c£r,.^d”J.i'‘‘k™S
SCHOOLS BREAK RECORD.'
----- iand former professor of History at
York’s j I’ennsylvanla University with Geo.
nrolled I'erry professor Political, Economy
nt Union College complete the per-
sonnel.
PRESENTATION TO
ADMIRAL W. S. BENSON.
(By N. C. W. C. News Service.)
Waycross, Ga., Sept. 16.—Daugh-
ters of the Confederacy of Georgia
are to present to Admiral William
S. Benson a jeweled sword on the
occasion of their twenty-sixth en-
r.ual convention here on October 18-
20. Admiral Benson and Mrs. Ben-
son have been invited to the con-
vention and it is announced that
they will attend.
The State Chapter of the Daugh-
ters of the Confederacy were epon-
BL.rs of a movement last yeaj to
erect a statue to Admiral Benson, ‘
who Is a native of Georgia, bat this - : S
—- — was defeated by autl-CatboIlc prop- . . ffeO
MONSIGNOR DUNN. waged by political iisso-
elates of Senator Thomas E.
Watson. • •
Admiral Benson is president of . : i
------—- .... Council of the National I
John J. Dunn, recently named by < Council cf Catholic Men In the arch- J
His Holiness, Pope Benedict NV as t diocese of Baltimore,
. . the Auxiliary Bishop of New York,;!
1 l“L?ro" has been definitely announced as ■ ..
0.1. ,28. » <M « SM. aoim:‘DEA1H OF ARCHBlSHOr
• vF’aSS; ■;-“Wctn.i*c*HA
J. Hayes,;-is a touching;evidence c!
remised Houston
. to be printed in
the interests of [the Klan, and sug-
gested that the -^Southern Messenger
absorb the two: Houston afternoon
dallies. This wSa bis final shot and
was fired becauio the three papers ;
named refused -.to give him free •
space for advertising purposes.
— i
NEW ARCHBI&OP OF DUBLIN. ;
(By N. C. W, & News Service.)
Dublin, Sept." 11.—Catholics in
Dublin have beej^ elated at the an-
nouncement that they are to have •
the Most Rev. Dr. Byrne as suc-
cessor to the late)?Archbishop Walsh
The new Archbishop la only 4S
years of age. He has been raised
from the curacy Xo the prelacy.
Within living memory only two
other curates hive been elected di-
rectly to the episcopate, namely, tho
late Most Rev. Dfr. O'Dwyer and the
late Most Rev. Dr. McCormack.
Archbishop Byrne is a native of
Dublin. He recSyad his early edu-
cation at Belvedere College, Dublin,
conducted by thsfeJasuits. There he
carried off one ol the few first class
exhibitions awarded in those days
by the intermediate Board of Edu-
cation. From Belvedere he passed
to Holy Cross j,.College. Clonliffe.
There, also; he ysun many prizes and
distinctions, In|1891 he graduated
with honors to®he former Royal
University. fo-<®92 he went to the
Irish College, ;R^e, where he com-
pleted his theological studies, win-
ning many priori in Dogmatic and
Moral Theology]® After his ordina-
tion in 1895 Ito returned to Ire-
land and stoivffil successively as
------... _
diocese of Dublin! Th 1901 he was
appointed vice-rector of the Irish
College, Rome.
When the term of his appoint-
ment came to an end he was. at his
own request, brought back to Dub-
lin. Archbishop Walsh then gave
him a curacy in the pro-Catbedral
where he ministered for sixteen
years until his appointment lust
year as auxiliary to Bishop Walsh.
Dr. Byrne is a man of many gifts.
He has had first-hand experience of
clerical lite tn all its phases. He is
thoroughly acquainted with the
practical details of the existing edu-
cational systems. His courage is
wonderful, his personality is chartn-
..... He is a brilliant and elo-l
’ . Dr. Byrne succeeds
me u.,u.u. ....- —— ; one of the most illustrious Arch-
just when lie forsook allegiance to : i3lshops of Dublin since the days of
tho British crown and assumed tho | st Lawrence O’Toole. Archbishop
WutHJt iiEMii until uxijCq Ju a iij;
I stress and trial and tension.
|X m BELFAST
DUE TO IGNORANCE.
Faulty Edacatiira In the StrongWd At the ScMa&ticate of the Order Details of the R. of C. Plan.
of Orasgeism—Asil Its Results. * ~ *
(By N. C. W. C. -glews Service.)
Dublin, September 11.—Returns
recently published cast a curious
sidelight upon education in Belfast,
the Stronghold of Orange ism. Of the
11,009' young people who leave
school in Belfast annually and seek
employment, only 15 per cent re-
ceives a decent education; and of
titoao boys and girls 0,009 were to-
tally unfitted educationally for skill-:
ed employment.
It is staled that nearly all tho
$">,900,000 damage caused in the
city during last year’s riots (when
the houses of hundreds of Catholics
were burned) was the work
young people ‘between 13 and
years of age.
It is these Ignorant youths and
young ignorant .adults whom Wil-
liam Coote, the Orange member of
T5„_>; . , ....., nre
the sessions of the Sis-
ters’ Slimmer School at the Catholic
University, the Right Rev. Thomas
J. Shahan delivered a lecture to
four hundred students on "The Re-
ligious Influence of Dante and His
;mo in tho Development of Catho-
1 Philosophy, Poetry and Art.”
Dr. Joseph Dunn, professor of
the Gaelic language and literature
at the Catholic University, will soon
imblish an exhaustive study of Irish
antecedents of Dante, showing to
whrit extent medieval Irish religious
thought and life affected the struc-
ture and temper of “The Divine
Comedy." Many who totve read.
Dr Dunn’s scholarly study on St.
Brendan in tho middle ages anti-
cipate a treat for students of pa"t0
and medieval Ireland in this forth-
coming work.
Bishop Shahan is a member of a
committee of distinguished ^kens
of Washington who are planning,
for an early date to , ,
national celebration ,®«
Bishop William Turner■ of
Buffalo, Bishop Sbahan and* Mo^
Y^Thlve^en generous contribu-
tors to this collection. At?°ngfolio
Insures is a “VXS
edition tfJobi
latin translation of The
Comedy,” 0xc.cu£?d.. * early in the
Cf two English Biahops cany 'U
StTSa
V'"; ffiSJSS* SSriSf!
*rii“s STo'.".™ ™
?.cl^*c or^er, delivered t
"When Americanism is
icanism" under the auspices of the
local Ku Klux Klan. The Catholic
t-burcb, the Pope, the Bishop O£
. Mobile, Very Reverend J. M. Kir-
. win, vicar general of the Galveston
. diocese and president of St. Mary’s
1 Seminary at La Porte; the Southern
Messenger and two Houston daily =
afternoon newspapers came in for
abuse by the lecturer.
The affair was as carefully staged
ns an old time political meeting,
with members of the K. K. K. sta-
tioned in various parts of the City
Auditorium to act as applaudere at
tho proper time when given the
signal. The rent for tbo hall was
paid by a local “Kleagle," Approx-
imately 4,500 persons were present
lc> hear the alien minister make his
fanatical attacks on Americans.
Ninety per cent of these came
through curiosity, many of them
being members of the Catholic faith.
The remaining 10 per cent of the
audience was made up of members
of the local Klan and those in sym-
pathy with the intolerance of the
organization.
A Mixture of Bigotry and Ignorance.
The "lecture” was a mixture of
bigotry and ignorance full of incon-
sistencies. For instance the speak-
er lauded the American Legion and
the Simmons organization almost in
the same breath, ignoring the fact
that the membership of the first
named organization is composed
entirely of men who have performed
military service, while the bulk of
membership of tbe Atlanta man’s
association carefully refrained, from
t whe)1 tUa coua-
try called.
He paid a glowing tribute to the
"196 per cent Americanism” of
the Klan native born members, and
in the next breath criticised “Col-
on el” Simmons for putting the ban
on foreign-born citizens, thus bar-
ring him.
"Rev.” McDougal professes a
burning love for the flag of the
United States and dramatically
points to it many
course of his “le
far in what he calls
tional 1
he has
when
what
(.‘ongre.is
Society
pruof i.f thtj energy
nf Germany
cooperate In the in-
s._ - ...a of Germany,
f-its congrcs- was presided over by
I’.Archbishop 1 >r. Karl Frit::, and was
I flletdctl by tiii iiibcrs of the society
vbcra all part,; .,f iiernniny amt drle-
1'roiii i iiii’izig, Upper tlilesia,
|,?rraan ’-..kcria, 1 Icihemi;.,, and Hol-
t;.,. 17,.. ,.ril ijir-nt was riipt’O-
| wnteti by <;, • v.- r 31 iia ■ rnt fjtiu ncillor
r ;;! ■■ -be Burgernieister,
Mt Ric-di'l. 1 w;1;; present.
L Tslegrai:;,. j;i’,-<.tsiigs .-.nd
.Ter,? L
E Hinra.i; •.
L'"Lilis in STI: .I...,-
. |
ft'sfia {ruin ;
h
kJ!,T r‘"!“ Benedict KV
E in 'I'm: with the brave
11 'he Catholic Young
!ll'|''ini-iit “'leudentch-
’ wM|'h in! met at Fraihurg
:n:<l sends fraU to
“irfiett>r:2 and the Individual
th- .i-MLrd apostolic bene-
as a plcilce Of "till further
pL , Mti I’co.peris.v and fruitful
,,f ,htt Catholic Young
L.? ,8 .a,ln”,nt’nt for “he honor
te'-U,f'Otiilralir>n of the Mngdorn of
|'Stu Christ.
cardinal gaspaehl
ISrWMP>ro,?r:im nf th" contierance in-
llh j i,ecturl?:; iln<l diseiisBtonn on
IXw’O'vli'g mbjacts: ’The H.eli-
IhssiiLwt of the New Ger-
I o 'Thf! Fight for Purity";
v motion to Mary”; "AnSJwr-
|wiaBT"’<"il": "Y,,Qth''
t,£ the great intflr-
th? tC3te(l 1,y tIlc HcIY Father
bitten»TD'lns I,f‘°i,le’s movement*, in
CMlfi tilo following com-
| Jiielit- " frwi ,iu‘ Nuticl°r M^r-
I Gift Irani Dope.
thf' P,eas;«i’e to inform
F^httawt .‘J” [i"ly Father recoived
Sh-itia J’,, e rFrluest of the Aasocift-
|| jiilitj. Catholic Stu den In to the
r’f Germany and
lil nnr to locate the slum
E'WyVt'1 'ri? for ,h<( spirtttml and
biti^n,. oi the members dttr-
| t mRr
feStiri,] ?f J'*-099 mark'; vraa also
Klcfeh r0Itl th': 'hirmnij. (iliavities
Ssfratary Backing,
mSa W:srin s,,r
-
MS® (WMRHMi BEili. ■ :
^ “i‘ il IILyJA'H—' ircinwm.Taisia ? ecionei gE „e riral .
tfe."—" =~e.=="Si £=■
Ji p
r — ■■Ji
miHOF.ARCHBlSHOP .
’SiSZiSiS' - -Sa jo|
I
tors; Commercial Monopolies in the
Colonial Period; the American Col-
I oiiies. Assets or Liabilities; "Morn-
■ Ings Guns" of the American Revo-
lution: tho election day sermons of
w^^Jra^te^^ahVhe^ct^1^;^ 0CEie^:
Our diplomatic relations with Rus-
- ln, etc.
the competition
1, ucu
Man user I pts
one
1 of the districts subsequently attack-
• cd:
The speaker is evidently peeved hind Tor treeoom. .Archbishop
□ t the higher officials of tho Mason- Byrne’s appointment synchronizes 1
L;s with the truce add peace. >lo en-!
When* he pre- joys the goodwill and affection of
■ the placards tho entire Catholic community. On
- - ’sssa
■ ;i W
<11
IB
/ill!
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Campbell, William. Southern Messenger (San Antonio and Dallas, Tex.), Vol. 30, No. 33, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 22, 1921, newspaper, September 22, 1921; San Antonio, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1266416/m1/1/?q=food+rule+for+unt+students: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .