Southern Messenger. (San Antonio, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 28, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 6, 1900 Page: 4 of 8
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THE SOUTHERN MESSENGER, SEPTEMBER 6,
1900.
4
'•rerponc
I/.*
-1
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R
Thej
□1..
tn.
■ J.
Roche.
II
dais come, but woe be to him by
were those of tibeutfr. If trouble 1899, waned the rege*cy, gxd
■ .!•
[i;;
r1'
I'
• /
- -:>
& „ ;
5
the Catholic religion,"—the specific
word “Catholic”, as if to distin-
guish it from "Protestant” or the
shoot his neck, and were cast into
the ata-
So.e-
th: ?■>
I ’ '
ax.
t the
4
q
Dl ]
■' 3
.4,1
4
a*
■;ib.
•phe Ko®'
Cat
5ta*f-
ec z..
one.
"nervous prostration"
time authorized the propagation of posite side of the Gulf of Pcchdi, “will power!”
• “ - * - * “ ^^uvaiuav AA1VW4J 4.44AL ^**<7 r WVLUU MC #•** ■
Hon. Carl. Schurz is a political! turn Pretoria after the carers
Great Britain, jealous of Russia's certain
concession, forced from China a
lease of Wei-hai-Wei, on the op-
7 30 sad 10s. m.
.... 5;00 p. m.
7.3) a. m.
;* :;i} s. a
4 -00 p. tn
75)0 *. m.
■“LAVER'S (COLOaXD )
S«v. J. A. imouila.
fiondays— 31*;: Mum.. •
7 0'1 a. id. -
\> 3‘J a. :a.
Q Ou p. m.
. ’JX)p. m. 'ides
... 7.00
I
cares to know the true causes of
f J. A FOREFT ,
Bp of San Antonin.
D e. 31. ’“95.
jtty church directory.
*am »u.'iuroo catbkdkai..
Rt.Rev.J.A Forest, D D
Very Rev. J 3. E. Audit Admnatr.
Be»- ?■ Baud-’Hird.
Sundays—Ms**-* • .
Vespers
Sermon at ewa Mass.
Week Days- M v*«
87. Jl.iRT'B CHURCH
tmir. i, j. .-.—.. ■
Bev. A. Flett ■»« O. M. 1.
Bundays— Low 4*e*
Hlata Mass ar ■! Sermon
Veepens
Week Days— Mm*
or of China sent to Pope Leo:
XIII a congratulatory letter c."
the most cordial kind, couched in
affectionate and most f
terms. If the erudite but very
W* cordially Indorse the approbation
! (■! orr
! the Southern Mebbexoer of San An-
t =l . T-:r.. We are happy to recog-
nize In that publication all the elements
7 .'“j *. tn- i-------—
i of c it diocese■
■ i '7;
. - /A
K’ ■:
I .
I. B ■'■'
| V
I jf
| a
- the j
PROTESTANT PREACHEBS
AST) PAPERS AND THE
CHINESE EMBKOG-
LIO.
inevitable. ,
Ar.d the San Antonio Express
pretends to be “well informed’'—
even better informed than people
| in England "outside of missionary
sects'. Note also the succeeding
words, “sod Catholic churches hav-
ing in consequence been establish- Kwang Chau Wan, This
A. \-
U '
!«•.
ng sowm kssm
fita^s Copy 5c One year 51-SO -
I BpCrore of the paper, the Southern
M v wr*nmt—which Is published under
’ ‘ > hope it will reach
| eviry Catholic family In the St**«
| Qxierrtanls the English language.
o«. o. Ml. •"-'=» -! * JOOS C- XE“2',
3n.f. | Bp. of San Antonio.
Cammrmlcadotti for publication not1
—-hh—■ this Office by Tuesday will not;
appear dll iseue <*' following week- (
Wfrsn notifying ns of change of ad- I
dMa, please giv- us the !““? p'—.
eff «* ,r; '-—------
Entered « the Post-Office at San An
circles"—of matters tn China, and
especially of “the chief cause, or,
more properly, the chief tangible
cause, of the present outbreak,”—
and that “chief cause or, more
properly, the chief tangible cause,
was a concession made to the Ro-
man Catholics tost rear'. . — ■
wonderfully erudite genius of the!
/f I ^rest forgets—if he ever knew
it—that Catholic missions flsur-
I ished in China 2 35 years before
1 Protestant missionary had set
: on Chinese soil, and that
these missions number hundreds
?m>coy AL XIDOUKKXXT*
As the press, when properly directed
is . p.rwerful aid to promote Religion
| sa' dfffnre the knowledge of Truth, we
__"^™?roBEST7Bi>^pof!.p:rore of the paper,
te Antonio. j
~ T- WH4JAM MENGKR, General [cur centre I, and we
ra whom all moneys *bcnkl.---r,...u„'n*
frgpM sad eocnn'-unlcstlons addressed.!
of Publb ation—No. 30SJ<
; our Holy Father Leo Kill , make a
„ ... „ ; (Ta-7 die paper 1 'a continual mission’ ’,
i a. tn.
. 10:00 a. m. ■ aad we earnestly recommend the
i Sou 'eeiw MEBanrowR to all the faithful
• J "J w- " - 1
m:cha' > CHURCH (rtUML)
CALENDAR.
fW tte Week ffadlag Sept. 15,1900.
9—Holy Meme of Mary. ...
^<rfay 10—*- Hilary. Pope and Con-1 pnrtn* to do the devil's dirty
tanr. i . . - ..
TteMdsy. I". —8t Nicholas of Totentinu,
CuhJMBiir. _
WeAeseday 11—St Louis. Khur.
T^nr-Mw IS—Oct Lady, Help of
CtaMiaM-
MklljKt*—BntfMto* ct the Holy
13—OetoW’ of the NMMty at
fftoM MiTVfrtfA
a,, religion 1b the only science, which
ccmta Lus a pledge of happinees in this
- --------\ “ j w^rk and in the world to come, it is
former place | it cm it ent upon sU to learn it. And
well m the new addrees.1 waa. mean* to obtain thia end
—: 7T ! ntjan the reading of a good and sound
- r-j-fl *T rpi* T'DBL* VILLC a**1 f
as w»nd-iilass mail matter.; Journal, m the SoUTHzrx Mes-
------------------------------- £=5f<j£B,, published in San AntonloT
r or, thia la a Catholic paper to which
pe nit only give our approbation, but
vrhicu w* recommend every family of
' cur Vicariate to have.
Peter Verdaocer.
vicar Apostolic of Brownsville.
Laredo, Tesas, March flth, l^rt.
not obtain any further cooco-’editor ‘by « 1
S^“^“pta°p*i'p°ro'w“i*£“f'^:P’ oi£b':=?'rX?*-1
the eatrxnce to Tientsin and.cy of the Kitser t w ,
“ckmguwdedbyRussUtodEng-l!®-, he , ‘«nd l
land, itshould not surprise any one j to many ,o had Mr. 3-^ *
’ >ple of China hated> unfortunate a predicament, it*
the “foreign devil*" and land rob-! impossible to believe that he U
bers. Religion had nothing to co -conmauiy entered m.o y. ejj^
with causing the outbreak, prim-. ling a-nance wfr.cn s .und*^
X or secondarily: but when the ■ tally so far rtmovec :rom his t^
mob became infuriated it wreaked | and ha prxaapte* b^t there he h,
its vengeance on the nearest fcr-i wiUy-nary... Jf ±ro^. the $.
dgn objects, the religious estafr ' roct or indirect «ppo-t of Jfc
. Sunents. Therefore, when ne« s- tichurz and frs _fo_o wen the
, papers, editors and preachers prate whose avowed naan..a oo-uy a.
about Catholic missionaries or volves a vital b.ow at tae cqq.
Catholic concessions being “t se mereial integrity o: the Um^
: chief cause" or the “chief tangible' States is electee ,o admmuta^
cause' of the “Boxer” outbreak,1 .i a*-'s of the nation tor yran
thev do so through sheer malto: to toxc. no .rag be-ng i
or ignorance of the facts. i Europe nor dead oies e:the
—=re= sumainy could view th? situiti*
FEW EXTRACTS FROM a with mere complacency that fe
“JOVKNAL OF CIV1LIZA- ” ’
TION-"
r
V”
3AN ANTONI" TEX.. Sept-’-9M-
’f-ii;
■;'£jl1
T '
■ '"*"5 .
:'wr’
as he f
circumiocutionally expresses it.
Among the causes of discontent
was, first, the foisting and forcing
of the opium trade upon the
Chinese by the British Govern-
ment, and the infamous “Opium
War" waged upon China by that
Government, ending with the ces-
sion of Hong- Kong to Great
Britain. Thus China at once lost
command of the mouth of her
greatest river, the Yang-tse-Kiang,
and had her subjects drugged into
a state of poverty and imbecility
in order to give England a mart
for the opium trade of India.
Next, was the Tai-ping rebellion,
iS;i-1864, fomented by English
Protestant missionaries. Follow-
ing this was the seizure of the
: port of Kiao-Chou and adjoining Sir Boyle
district, in 1897, by Germany, on with a <->■
, account of the murder of two
; Jesuit missionaries by a mob,—a
, mere pretext, for Germany did not
l tolerate Jesuits within her home
territory. Io March, 1S9S, Rus-
sia obtained a lease of the Talicn-
wan znd Port Arthur, and ad-
W'- A *
Si?
■I r'
II
• i
U »i
B'toi
frZill
.>■ -i ,'fii
1 '*1
f ! » A Hl
w
I lltll
i a bit of its humor 1
‘W-th the of I
, at the sonnets of ..-j”’with I
many more splitting rbeir sides 1
over the :re>r;em:\ iaportnae
it is many thous- qI .’A’inslow/ ar.d with the seen-
‘ “A Catholic newspaper is a per-
> ..•> » *i> ■ mission in every parish."
7 -mj p. m.1 _Hls Holiness Pope Leo XIII
7 :<)0 a. us.
hour of public adore- “*
_______■ T-.'Hl - ....
? 'oliowed <■>!! the arrt »i:'i ’
Ti-i E conviction anc snooting of 1
cal-s the Boer lieutenant. a* I
„. rhere :he dismissal of h-.s 'German at
to hold down the islandsand keep: .^mplice. show that brtsd j
them from taking :vght. What ~nment officials are cn“ I
the editor of the wrtes j,nd cowardly. Cord ..a
may appear to him “illuminating, demned and shot fr? a;
if not always grammatical" or log:- the German Boer n-.a; or
cal,—to use his own words m .pricvcd, probably
another case; but to us they do: i^st indignation —
not make “perfectly dear certain. government and pron e. 3*
matters which have hitherto been . popular opinion the wor.d
somewhat Ofajue.' . will condemn the nencish
in the detective semcc
Boer cfficcrs. pretends syrr-p^W
■v at HC
not desert hi* flock, and these
^Ollhe^
articles of agreement, and do,dy 1
examine them for any evidence of the
constraint: ■
•‘Firet In the ®ccWi*«tic*l hltr- 1^— ,
*rc£ Bi»hS« bo entitled to tbo the people
^me reak >nd dignity «y^ror»*nd . - - • -
Governors, and shall be privileged to
interview Viceroye and
• <Tn r-Bfi* a Bishop Is called away or
diet, the priret In charge shall he priri-
leged to interview Viceroy* and Gov-
eruore. Vicar-generals and archprireta
■hall be privileged to
urers and judges as we.l aa intendant#-
Other prieau shall be privileged to Izt-
; terview prefects of the first and second
class, prefect) Independent, snb pre^
, fects and other functionaries, all o-
whom shall return courtesies, accord-
“"Swondiy. Bishops shall make a list
of the priests appointed to tske
Of affairs, and interview the
ties giving names and locations Of
Site, T». IM
viceroy or governor, who will direct
under-officials to receive them accord-
ing to this regulation.
• ■ Priests requesting an interview, o-
thore e»peri ally appo^t** to
Charge ofkffalra. should be European^
If however, a European priest be not
convenient with the Kngusge
he may be accompanied by a Chinese
priest acting as an interpreter.
-Thirdly. It would be nsel^s for
Bishops living away from cities to visit
the provincial capital for the purpose
of being received by the viceroy or the
governor, if they have no business in
hand. At the installation ot a new
viceroy or governor, upon
of * new Bishop, or upon ‘
Vie have not charged Protcs-
tants with exciting the “Boxers’
in Chin*, because we know that
religion of any kind or shade bad
: very Uttie, if anything, to do with
it. But we do charge with igno-
rance or bad faith the prattling
preachers who are now going
about the country alleging that
the Catholics had not a little to
do with it: were, in fact, the cause
of it. And we do charge with ig-
norance or duplicity the daily
newspapers—prominent among
which is the San Antonio Ex-
\ press—that publish the libellous
charge. The Express of August
15 jiays, editorially, under a double
head-probably to call closer at-
tention to its zealous partisanship:
< ? jurtderiug the ureut amount of mat-
ter relating to Chiues? uffrirs which
bu found its w*y into print during the
lut few week*. Lt is very ■urprising that
■0 little Bllusion h*e been anywhere
msde to the Boman Catholic concession
obtained lut year. In England, indeed,
outside Of mbsionary circlet, barfly
any one seems even aware of the exist-
ence of that agreement, which was the
chief cause, or more properly, the chief
esteemed predeoeesor In regard to tangible cause, of the present outbreak
Even those persons well informed on
Cnlnese matters, and resident in the
-------have realized
guc on both sides of 1 qutstior at Mr. Scliurz must be a very dewr
once, and to draw both a positive t0 do a- tieSie ;hmp *ia-
and a negative conclusion from , conteiously’'■ We should prefefr
the same premise. For instated j -jjat the editor of "Har-
“It has been evident to all ir.tcil;- ■ s Weekly' -.s *-constibujijf
gent observers for so>m titne^ that j pi^y^g into the hands of tie
as an actual war the rebellion in y;:rscr i-to the hands of the
the islands is over": ar dthen a line or Government. huh sw
two further down,“/f//;-t’-^ ind<*d. has Ur.de Sam and the Mikaiki
of one kind or another may be; p,.iHng its chestnuts out of the we
will be, but the issue is closed.
— -<ter con^fcr’Bl> 1
TbTvT«^ ^v"
^tothe^®4’®16^’
,, then *®Et to G
C0^ That hr woulc hi
the tirw kee
^‘-L- urged him to gc
Could a more <
^devjed.0^,100'
£ existed in? It 1
^U'tnda whxh has •
L.-xd. Cordna swore -
I Corcua was condc
I of ^2
I " his sanction. 1
I r?:, Gud <1° •«“!°1
I me Unite* Su,M
xtUroF“TKi: <
. „ of TH K
■ IT; i
: HU
I
ET g a
I? -4 :
| :G i
r. ;!■** '
.5 C» I
.Ctomptor I
. ri IS *■ 1
to avoid 1
of the Ger** 1
tists openly and vigorously ob
iecting to the tra.torouf periods
of .-L’-TKJpe all * ho co net im-
prove of Imperi riism and Milita-
r.sn'. arc now 7-: tors anc tiiext
id. honest strength of the ctraa-
try repudiating the heresies of
It is a sort?; Sight to «
the Hon. Cxri >.'■■■ ailytoc
himself with these peop.c.
wit’rc;: realizing it a-u.r.g the
_________ ; uh; isthe
very incarnation of po.icies tiuf
,n his own soul he ceterts. A
• of toe ox whose dimension!; he , £:.0_ mar. shoul 1 n<vr- oecM*
envied. If the war there is over. a"a,'’-paw_-
we presume General McArthur —---
60,000 men and our neet of war |
ships—General McArthur
for 40.000 more men- —are
that tzt ba
anang«»«“’ io: a
’ c Melcinte
a ~
Churches m general.
T« Greco-Melchite
ishes :a A®*- ■:he
^ior. / the Greek :
^alied the other s
■ rcco-Koumani.
Rutnrt.an and
I-s Bishoprics and Ar;
the i'atria.-chabt 1
Archbrihopncii
Enxsa and Tyre and t
tics oi rieyroi.t, 3uc
BaibcK Dami-Hcus, bi
3.^.5 and Fargul.
The Patriarch C.
ntc is Mgr. Ger
0^-5 ■“ title of Pct^
succession of his ciign.
; ic Rome, rectnw
i pope the rmportan.
j wh'iri. 1 speik, and sr
i cxec-’-.^"
-r-, u.; 7t-.n anotb
;s,. vidcd .nto the
p;' . .ailed, the S;
I th: >■ .-s-Marynite ar
I Ma-aoa- - There is
I tore?*. al'C'U* tw0 cf t
I six.* The Archb
j Sa.-.ods of the Syro-I
I huve inc: .r. synod *1
I unanimously elected
I Mgr ' oseoh Eman
I the rrcscr.: Archfr-s
| “Tnc >vro-Varon-.ti
| rite ha- :<en represe
■ not txact'.y by a pi
| by something of the
| 0: trie \rcr.3iihops <
.-1 t the ; ul
- i omage at
ar.t, ar.d tr
r . x. special
together
Sy" ■ ’< <.ror.i tes res:
A n,:;. -nr the adr
an » ang const ar.
Mare- •'-:i in Rem;
aga.r-z tnc common
cwitra-y was pres
seco- Congress
Arc; .nr- logy Prob
veur :: .a Perpetuc
des Maror.'/ics, etc.
Josey : Z>ebs, Arcl
Cite :: BejTouth.
prune: e CathoLqu
same view, whida 11
teres: luc m port a.
ie a .arger work
»frch has appea
- Perpetuelh: Orth
frtes etc.. Arrau,
rieme : Suf. ,
kept up inEefnitelr, and pro^i r/J jn Cfr.EA.and incidental’y inSonfl:
will be, but the issue is closed.”!
Ruskin and others have been cited par;|y for principle partly w
in proof of the theory that one s pve thc readers of the MES5EF-
surroundings have much to do GI;R R rew samples of t.ie vagares
with hifi mental indiosyncra-cei Rranklm Square l.lcrature a
perhaps Franklin-Square—Grieb. extta?,jnSd in what was errtwBe,
like the square resorted to by Peter .R Know-Nothing days a “low.
Stirling, is not a square at all. but of Civilization' m league «itt
a triangle—may have something ti,e ^ark lantern parts we haw
to do with the seculiar constitu-' frntr, the “V. eekiy's” «■
tion of the Weeklf. rhetoric and ri0L.s ygi^ 1?,d shall now ticacwitk
logic. i
The editor of the Vr\x-no-
where specifies the islands referred’
to, but we presume he means rhe
Philippines. The war there is
over—the sea; 1
and of miles from the shores of t he
United States, a fact that seems
] not to have been taken into ac-
' j us who, :r.
, Franklin Square language, cal.
M ore
seme-
-, tear that f
“he • .rtirican \epublic tries to
m
■■
- ti;:.
-i' -:ii ' ■ T-
■ \ ?! :
T'4 '■ b "
_ A : -.-patch to
^qjjj £
-I states that Lx
cent r>roclamati:>u
vaai nurghers has.
praval T'he eftec
OTEmander-in-cfrk
will be that all be.
®ot taken the c at
Queer. Victoria m
pr-aoner* of wa
to ahie-bcdx
women and ch
•doubtcdly unpeec
* civilian populat
territory, when m
j *e« the enemy
l :o juitif;
Bnt!Sh assert th
I *U actluxi or
L tants, and that h
| «ake distinction
I “> the field and t
-^ytokethe;
I n Giving ajd c
I a°«s in ttnx*
I
I *ake the oath,
i-' .ti
t '- “"■-f •
r - ■
r <y '‘;
& T -h: t ..
i ilr* '
thus virtually -commanding, be-
tween them, the sea-entrance to
Timtrin and Pekin- la April, exile from Germany, and therefore ] been seized aw
gcwwl w^rd “Christian," a<«timed i SoSr France had her share <rf ter- nr>)“™r«w. re* rt- r^.. i
by the multitude of disharmonious ritory by securing from the young
* - * Emperor’s Government a ninety-
nine years' lease of the Bay of years,
_____________1Z “'i was -
cd » all the provinces ot China," apparently the straw that broke
for him that he had a mkistooe in cuy flight in case of trouble, as Empress set the Emperor aside io
LaJ? toe Lake—Lake View.
SC. LonU' ''toilette— West Ecd.
31. Wary’i- CoUagn—Coltefte SL
---a *I I ■— V
School—170® S* Flore* St-
Mnat. 1
Willow fita.
OU Ursuline Day Schcol-
<5or. Indlanoia and South Sts.
rexBoHoa Academy of the
—Proepact HUL W. Commerce tit
Fernaudo School for Boye—11U N
zteeada St-
gati Faroando School for Girl*—Ilf
<aKiaSan Baba fit.
Bu^ar dee Villa—Biver Ave.
Peter Clavsr's School—610 Llw
StL
SL Jfatep*>’s Orphan Asyluw—Military
Mt- Jobe s Orphan Asylum—MUsx
Kuab Roea Infirmary—Milam Square.
MJFniZ’ HoSatortheA«rf-30l7
<■ yjarea St.
Ami et tbs Good Sbepbert—East,
JM. i Christian unity, but their object
■ is not to strengthen this unity by
(drawing doser the bonds of friend-
| ship and Christian charity: on the
i coctrary, they seize the flimsiest
| pretext to do the devil's dirty
; jrnrk by sowing the seeds of dis-
' tord. It must need be that scan-
wmI** I MUI WUC MAMA "J “Lnr «• <•** u ’e" ue > *r* 1 — w------ • —-
whom, the scandal cocoeth, better —not simply along the coast with-the camrfs back, the Dowager tatio^bothe ajww a strong an- his Wtow-prisoocs
The Cath, erse
•Several of the. fraternal organiza-i
te> | gotten—j
L. ?. Adamwn Is the duly author-
scent of the SovrUERX Mu*
hHMJUR to solicit Hubscriptiow' and ad-! a _
ver'lwmente and to collect for the same. I foot
of thousands of Christian followers
and many native Chinese Catho-
lic priests, without causing any
if he ever knew it—that the Tai-
The Supreme^ pings, the first ‘Boxer secret so-
ou Sioo as ajciety in China, which caused the
.I + A.'+kwA'ilr in t sAo nnrcss*
ea :h as a regular premium. Why j erf by “Chinese Gordon,’
fict start c —.,... — —--- —— — j
yeur parish to join-—C. K. of A. j Jpr the purpose of counteracting
m. |15urnal. : the weA of the Catholic missiona
Next Saturday. September ri; prfgs, or
consecration of Right Rev.] ancj persecuted them. He forgets
n n.hc ever knew it—that the
in Catholic missionaries
— Occamc
unites| habits, and mode of life, and,
i says
, were
says;
aniza- ,
tions of Cleveland have taken I/tr
prompt and active measures
6:00 a. mJ cu-opcrate with the suggestion of
cuAnrrr j the i ni: erse for a general meeting
I at Cathedral Hall, on August 26,
; -3 discuss the q jestion of federa-
tion." Shields commandery, K.
of St. J., the Father Matthew To-
tal Abstinence Society, and three
divisions ot the A. O. H. have ap-
| pointed delegates and pledged
their support. The movement
towards federation has assumed
The Irish must look to their , ers. Gano.au American
credit for bulls. The editor of
Harper's Weekly has lately been Britain, seeks the company
"expanding" in this line, and some ~
of his efforts would not discredit 1 for them and displeasure
Sir Boyle Roche. In connection j methods of the Britisz <
with a cartoon—one of those old-1 and this renegade American w I
time cartoons of the Nasty order' American sentiment for a-j I
for which the Weekly was famous,! worth. Having xngrat^rid I
—or infamous, as you please,—' self with them, and gamed I
the editor of the “Weekly' asks,I contidcncc, he feigns 1
“Is Bryanixm a political faith. or I with the British officer1* I
is it a disorder like nervous pros-! the fedings of his victims hy I
tration, for which time and a prop- i Hammatory appeals, anc indnow 1
er exercise of the will are the only i them to break their parole g _ j
' 1 cure?" That is a good; der to have them m his j
Think of a man in a fit of This villain, Gann, pretende^^ 1
exercising be ‘sick and tired' of the
service, and told Cordua
It is generally known that the would be an easy mattes to j
— — - .....n 1
1 ^^id the arsena
not "persona grata" to the Ger- i Furthermore, as Ccrdua ®
man Emperor. Mr. Schurz was Gano said that such an
a stalwart Republican for many i would stagger the whole
, an officer in the United army." Thus worked upoo-^
States army, and Secretary of the; under the influence < ‘
mated by Gano, Cordua cod
strenuous statesma: wh^ rules 1;
, Berlin. And if these th.rjgs *reic.
' complished through the .nstnuno.
For bifurcated logic and infinite tal,ty o( y. Schur:
varieties of “English as She is jy/-of courSe. and h;5 fncads-
Wrote," the editor of Harpers nQt a 1.^. cve-tu^ty but rtl
Weekly, may challenge ccmpir-son • pOssinie.^a failure u 7 0 a tfe
with any other man on this s.de i^x.s£rs part to be ;to* the dec*,
of the Atlantic. In twisting ".he ratjOn of *he Iron Trost up® o«
' ths *rriv*l Queen’s English, the editor of 7he distinguished and atademsuy a-
u ,, . ot * nww D1BUUb,. .. l*ay occwrion | Weekly may find a compeer in the tccm(.u frilow-either. w-U be *
country, do soiiwa to hw retetorf ceremony, as New Year’* Day »nd Critic, but his logic is unapproacna- -h(. ^55^: instances of the it.
bk.b~us.lt enable, k P«.;e, n. Lr^.-
’U“M“ viceroys and governors, at the same |
time Inclosing their card*, viceroys (
and governor* shall return the cour-
tesy. Before leaving, or upon their'ar- ■
rival, other priest* shall, provided they -
have a letter from the’r Bi*hop, he ,
privileged to interview, etc , according
to their rank. :
14 If fctty grave °* import mt x&Btxer
concerning any miaeion in any prov-
ince should arise, the Bishop and mil-
ei^narie* in office shall appeal to the
minister or member* of the council
which the Pope ha* appointed m a re-
1 litrious protectorate. The latter ehall
1 have the right of deciding, together
[with the Taung-11 ■ Yamen or the local
I authorities, If a mandarin is consulted
on an official question by either a Bish-
op or a missionary, he must give the
matte? immediate and polite attention,
and institute an investigation.
■ A.b occasions arise the local author-
itif* shall couasel the people, exhorting
them to unite wi h the Christian*. They
shall never encourage hatred or coun-
tenance disrension. Bishop* and priests
shall likewise exhort all Christiana to
strive earnestly toward maintaining the
good repute of the Catholic religion, *o
that the people may be content and ap-
' preefativr. In any suit between the
people aal the Curistlans, the local au-
, thoritie? shall judge, and rule with
equity; taat the people and the Chri*-
' tiaas mav live in peace, missionaries
• shall neither interfere nor give their
protection with partiality ■''
, The editor of the S<zz; Antonio
' Express seems to forget—if he
ever knew it—that shortly before
the “ Boxer' outbreak the Emper-, ^>uni■ bY ^osc aaao 8
> y Franklin Square fa*
of tfr-rriritelvcs "expans-c-urtB
; , sensible p who ;
friendly r- “S <•[ '£eog:3;-hy
"expa. I’’ sufficiently to to
the Philippine Iriami-., and a^sim- 1
s~of Bishop Fa-i the recent outbreak in China, we date the J-i..p.no*, it „u. sha.- $iemes of a a?ch
L° nUrded « can »sure him that ndri.0 «< «“ >“ n°<-
Thia «uld never neither "the chief cavse" aw “the i »bo tried to expand to ,n .
o- of toe ox whose dimension!; nt.
rics whom the Chinese classed <
among the other “foreign devils" ,
when they were out of humor or 1
could get nothing from them. <
The erudite genius of the Sr?’/ An- 1
press seems to have for-
-if he ever knew it—the
tenor and text of the agreement
between the Chinese Govemmer t
at Pekin and the Papal Secretary
of State, Cardinal Rampolla, act-
ing through the mediation of the
Vicar-Apostolic at Pekin, Rishop
Favier, whose praises Minister Wu
extols, and whom he calls a real
Chinaman. We republish it for
the benefit of cur erudite contem-
porary : mark the opening words
of the agreement, and see whether
it is forced or voluntary:
■Th* Imperial govarninent, having
for a longtima authorised thepropaga-
, tion of the Catholic religion, and Cath-
olic charchM having in eousequenca
* b«an MtabHahod la all th* provinces of
China, we are dreircus tore* our peo-
ple and Christiana live in harmony. To
1 ioaure a readier protection It ha* been
■greed that the local authorltiea shall
i exchange visits with mlsslonariM ac-
1 cording to the conditions specified in
the following article*: ...—
The editor of the Express must joining territory;, and in^ April
and the peddling ot bogus acknowledge that there is no sign
1 ot coercion or constraint here.
Note the words, “having tor s long
Interior during Gtaafs adgrinit-
a strong an- his fciknr-prisoners on toe
ti-iSBperia£st and an opponent of bolt only two of them.
thatoineofGcnnanyandEogoad, and Mcmas, the
Bar. C J. S-.-iitn.'C.JI. I.
750a. m. Itml-'. Tex.,
I0:0u a m
7:45 p. tn- I
7 O'-1 a. tn : .rjjl h, according to the cxpie**rion of
JOSEPH , CHCRCR GERMAN 'j
Rev. W A h’ ffirwerk.
floaday*—Fir*’ Xm*
High Mas*
Venper*
Week Day*—K
rr.
Rev. L. Dahrowski.
Sonday*—HUP Maae
Yeaper*
Week Day—Mm*
ST. PETEX
Bev, J.
"Evening—S< -vice...
Week duv*— > vm
Every Frid*’ one-------
fcten. of the Bl*~*ed Sacnuneni from <
to 3XJ0 p. m., *
OU rd Friday* 1 v Benediction,
rr. xick's chubCs
Rev. John r eelian.
Re*. A’l.low Street.
Sunday*—Low Mjm
High Mw
Cateuhiim
Boeary and Jenedlctlon
Week Days-Viu-a... ■
CHURCH C':‘ TEE 5ACREU HEART, 1
Cor. W, C'w .mtr<v and Trinity Sts
RtfV. H. A Mt Imo.
Smuteys—M-*--* 19i>»a. tn.
tK? UXE CCSVENT.
Etev. J. For et-Despati". 0 M L
-3snday**udv eek'.i^y*—M*** oiiUs.tn,
*rxnWY O' OCR LADT or THX LAKE.
Rev. P F. • ' iritot. O. M. I..1 bapisdn.
jiindavs— M” r* ■ ■ .... *. c
Vespers 3.00 p. m.
Week Days- ..... 6:13
3A5T RCHA INFUU1AST.
Rev. J. S :jcduarrk Chaplain
<very Day — M*** ■ t> 00
Boodays—Vipers and
Benedict: -a ....
IT. rSASf-s' I10HS F-OHTUti A'tEb.
Rev J Ru--rt. Chaplain.
Every ‘tey ■ '** *■ C1-
st eels* coi J. «••!£.
Bro. John u '.dr. Director.
BaV.Joa. V ocltnseer. ' hapJal-
Bro. Jo*«P MiLcr. Tres-i :rcr
3 an da J*— t a.
RAgVV, and
«edCD * j3P- “•
Week Day*- M**" ti.lSa. m.
n-r mart’s college.
Bro. Georre Dr-k. Director
Rev. Aug -'rischo, Chaplain.
V* RI t e X VUXA Ets'l £R® OF "HaR*
lTY o> rnx imcarmatb word.
Rev. F. Scuneider. C. PP S.
Bandays—Msas usually at ~ “
wwtrmr jcr last of
, 8HEFHXRD.)
Rev. C. D!>veluy- 0. M. I.
Sundays an-: Week Day*—
WMf .. . ' . . . 6J0 * S
SCHOOLS Jtc.
Vitalin* i -invent—104 Augusta 3L
Our I a .!-» nt the Lake—Lake View,
SC- Coal*' r to liege—West Ecd.
St. Mary> Collage—College SL
Iff Joseph ■ ScbooL-116 Bonham St.
Word School—Cor. Crosby i definite shape in Cleveland, as it
L ' rad previously in Philadelphia
„eid other cities. Our Texas so-
Sacre .. exties should lose no time in tak-
ing action on the federation move-
ment.
It SEEMS to us that certain
correspondents and editors of so-
called Catholic newspapers could
be engaged in very much better
business than scanEalxm tnagrta
turn „
church news. Some of these cor-
respondents arc in Rome, the capi-
; tai of Christendom and center of
□•'■MF of our energetic Catholic
might easily make $163
; X little work on your part will do popular outbreak. He forgets—
• t Get twenty full rate members if he ever knew it—that the Tai-
foi the C. K. of A. The Supreme! pings, the first 4Boxte" secret so-
Ci-uncil will give you S100 as a!ciety in China, which caused the
premium. Besides you get >3 for | great outbreak in iS5o, suppress-
* . « v 1. _ HUT*
out and get the ladies of‘tu;ed by Protestant missionaries,
yeur parish to join-—C. K. of A.; Jpr the purpose .
j ties, and that these same Tai-
---- - . - Great Flags,” eventually
! >< ”, be .he ninth anniversary of, turned againrt their dry-nurses
tn<; <
°l,! T.acophile Mcerschaert. D. D,; ,r hc
2:45 p, tn. I g shop of Syd:ma. Vicar-ApostoL ; £jropca... —---------------- .. .
|:c of’the Indian Territory. The! becamc Chinese in dress, language, forgetful editor , of toe /: rpress*
i S< ■cthern Messenger unites} habits 4nd mode of life, and, as
, w th the clergy and t*«thiul of h s Minister \\’u r
j V.cariatc. and - t.s friends^ vier or p<-kin,
1 everywhere, in < . ig ieiicita-1 rcai Chinamen. ------- - ,
i tions to the dis*«„..died prelate, j,c said of the Protestant missiona- chief tangible cause,
[ w th the hope that ne may be spar-'
ed tocnj >y many '.'.ore > ear-, of ■-«-
fulness and honor.
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Southern Messenger. (San Antonio, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 28, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 6, 1900, newspaper, September 6, 1900; San Antonio, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1266268/m1/4/: accessed May 14, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .