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The Intermountain Catholic from Salt Lake City, Utah • Page 2

Location:
Salt Lake City, Utah
Issue Date:
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2
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I 3 I Itlfci ilNTERMOUNTAIN ND COLORDAO CATHOLIC JUNE 14 1902 I Sl CbUltb z0 I the yjctorj which over u1 Cometh the I 1 1 tiniversal faitk world our CHURCH CALENDAR fourth Sunday after PenticosL Gospel St Luke 111 The Miracu Jous draught of fishes i Sunday June 15SS Vitus and Mo destus 4 Monday June 16St John Franc1 Regis 1 Tuesday June 17SS Martian and Nioandr Wednesday June 8St Mark and I CompMM I Thursday June 195t Juliana Fal I conieri Friday June 20St Silverius Saturday June 2lSt Aloysius Gon zaga JUNE The same fair Tune with its roses red I The same wise words to the young hearts said The same deep sea and the same blue sky The sao fair hopes and tho promise high The same pure eyes the same soft hands The sunlit hair with its golden strands The same glad sons with its echoes clear The same low whispers of friendships dear The same farewells and the passing shades Like sun half hidden in woodland glades The same soft tears for divided ways Tho same fond vows for the coming flays The same frail barque on the shoreless AOO The same mute fear of the Istot God keep you fair as the flowers you hold White as the lilies with hearts of gold God eep you pure as the prayer of a nun I God guide you and bless you every one Teresa Beatrice OHare in the Rosary i Magazine THE SCARCITY OP PRIEsTS Many Catholic Settlers Did Not Have Opportunity to Hear Mass A mission for nonCatholics was held recently in the township hall of Independence Cuyahoga county Ohio I Though the roads were very rough the farmers came in great numbers I from the surrounding country Over I 300 persons filled the hall every even I Ing and many showed an earnestness that indicated something more than a mere vulgar curiosity One good result of the mission will be that quite a number of children of all ages will receive the grace of baptism That the faith was kept alive at all in the community is owing in large measure to the present pastor FatherAust who ften travels I almost impassable roads across the valley and over the hill of central Cuyahoga county The same story I may be told of many other towns throughout the country where on account I of the scarcity of priests the I Catholic settlers did not have the opportunity I of practicing their faith and their children grew up in total ignorance of the true religion the glorious II heritage of their ancestors to them and the result has been a great loss to I the church But it is now expected that in the near future through the apostate of nonCatholic missions multitudes of people whose ancestors were Catholics and who are still possessed I of good will will be brought back to the faith This should be the earnest I hope and prayer of every Catholic who desires the kingdom of God extended among men Catholic Home Companion PBOPOGATION OF THE FAITH i The Great Society a Few Earnest Women Inaugurated Go ye into the whole world and preach the gospel to every creature That splendid organization the Society I for the Propagation of the Faith rand the AscIstancc of Catholic Missions has issued from its American center at Baltimore Md a brief outline of its work since its birth in 1822 in Lyons France Lyons and Paris are still the sister hc centers of the association with an auxiliary council in Baltimore To these centeres flow in 4luietly the yearly contributions small but steady of the faithful and zealous fand charitable in all parts of Christendom and at he end of each year oil the money so gathered is distributed again to every corner of the globe wherever the gospel is being preached to the poor and the missionaries need schools and churches in which to gather their converts Started in 1S22 in the city of Lions by a few women who at the instance 1 of Bishop Dubourg of New Orleans were moved to help the pioneer i churc bin the United States It has quietly worked and steadily grown until today its members are to be found in every Catholic community in Eu Topo Asia Africa America and I Occanlca To be a member one must say every dayon Our Father and one 1 Hail Mary and the ejaculation St Francis Xavlor pray for us for the success of the society and contribute 5 cents a month toward its funds I One may give six dollars and be i counted a special member or forty dollars and be called a life member But the main financial support of the grand work is the regular membership paying five cents a month which is collected and sent by one in every band of ten The society deserves to be better sustained than It is by American I Catholics For the help of the struggling Catholics of New Orleans and Kentucky in 1822 it was organized In 1S33 the Catholic missions so helped began to show gratitude and in that year six dollars went to Lyons I from the United States to the funds of the society In 1843 one thousand I dollars for that purpose were freely contributed from American Catholics And then it began to spread more 11 1 rapidly The Catholic world has given 1 to the society since 1822 almost 1 Seventy millions of dollars 165690 017 Of this 12076905 came from I I France alone The two great feast days of the society are the 3rd of May the feast of the Finding of the Holy Cross which I Is also the anniversary of the founding of the society and the 3rd of December the feast of St Francis I Xavier that great missionary to Cia and Japan And plher sheep I have which are not of this fold them also must I bring and they shall hear my voice and there shall be one fold and one shep herd The sacred congregation to Propaganda Fide Is the modern monument to their solIcitude for the propagation of the faith and the preservation the peoples from heresy I Pope Gregory XIII in 1572 deputed Cardinals Caraffa Medici and Santorio to give special attention to the propagation and maintenance of the faith among the MaroniteSt Slavs Greeks and Egyptians The college was at first called Collegium de Progaganda Fide per TJnivcrsum Orbem The edifice occupied by the congregation and the college Is quite Imposing occupying an irregujar quadrilateral in the shape of a trapese It fronts on the Piazza I to the church of St Andrea delle ratte A SOLDIER QF LIBERTY Monument of an Irish Brigadier Armagh men are about to pay a tribute to the memory of a brave coin patriot who fell nobly lighting against i Englands war of greed and in defense qf the freedom of the Boer republics On the Sth of next month Mr Michael Davitt who resigned his membership of the British parliament as a protest against the cowardly attack on the independence of those two brave and chivalrous peoples will very appropriately perform the unveiling cere mon Th mnrmmpnt wilt nnrnntttntn the memory of Hugh Carberry a member of the Irish Brigade who was killed at the battle of lI dder Spruit In the noble cause of Boer freedom During the last few days large numbers have visited the monument which is at present on exhibition at Messrs Denmarys monumental works Glas nevin The memorial takes the form ofa Celtic cross at the base of which Is a figure of Erin clasping a sword At her right hand is an Irish wolfdog while her left clasps a shield emblazoned with a harp At the back are representations of the traditional round tower and ruined shrines surmounted by a sculptured bust of the dead soldier of liberty The following is the inscription on the stone ERECTED BY A FEW IRISH PATRIOTS TO THE MEMORY iOF HUGH CARBERRY OF ARMAGH A VOLUNTEER OF THE TRANSVAAL IRISH BRIGADE WHO FELL AT MODDER SPRUIT BRAVELY FIGHTING FOR TnE BOERS AND THEIR INDEPENDENCE AND AGAINST THE UNJUST AGGRESSION OF ENGLAND RIP Dublin Freeman A Novel and Needed Newspaper Why should the devil have all the newspapers Accounts of wars disputes murders suicides divorces frauds and scandals together with the latest betting and the pride of specu lative stocks nearly fill the columns of most journals Yet every competent observed from time immemorial has decided that there is more good in the i world than evil Is there not room therefore for such a daily newspaper as Good News which should deal with the better side of the human character and should direct attention to the generosity selfsacrifice and heroism of lifeZ Such a newspaper should be devoted to the cheerful sides of life Its reporters ould hunt outall that is pleasant and the editor would do his best to encourage the public to look at things at their brightest There are very few mutderqrs the minority are thieves not the majority the amount of premeditated villainy is comparatively small there is more kindness than unkindness In the world and in most lives there are more agreeable than disagreeable ncidents only we are inclined to brood over the latter and forget the former A newspaper edited on such lines would start Its readers in a cheerful mood each morning and nothing is more contagious than cheerfulness nor more necessary to success London Truth A Mrs Grundy Most of us are well acquainted with an ancient personage called Mrs Grundy It is not difficult to meet her since she is ubiquitous but it is sometimes very difficult to recognize her as she has the gift of chameleonizing at will This privilege enables her to take any form or sex and to frequent allsclasses of society One would imagine there were thousands of Mrs Grundys in existence and yet strange to say there Is only one A powerful old dame is Mrs Grundy Most of the inhabitants of the earth savage or civilized bow down to Mrs Grundy and pay her tribute Men fear the old lady kings tremble before her but few dare resist her will Yet the stern old dame strange to say has real respect for those who defy her authority and i will even court their friendship but very few have the courage to make the experiment If she deigns to smile on an enterprlse i is a brilliant success whereas her frown br sneer withers away a promising scheme or good work Her influence is always baneful and she has ruined millions Perhaps you are curious to know how she acquired the bathe of Grundy which does not sound very ancient This is how it came about About 100 years ago the English damatist Thomas Morton had a certain reputation as a writer of comedies He brought out one which was a great success It was entitled Speed the Plough and in that play one of the characters a certain Dame Ashfield continually repeats these ids What will Irs Grundysay Hence we get the proverbial interrogation and What will Mrs Grundy say is equivalent to What will the world say Mrs Grundy embodies the worlds opinion which has exacted far more I victims than Juggernaut on his triumphal car Human respect is an immense power Inthe world Civilization has trampled out slavery but it has not freed the slaves of human respect As long as the world continues to exist it will have its willing bondsmen It needs courage to break the massive chains which human respect winds around its victims not that physical courage which faces danger and braves death for fame but that moral courage whic henables a man to live up to his convictions to hold up the flag of duty and to be true to his colors in face of the worlds fccorn or enmity There Is a quaint adage Women fear mice mice fear men and men fear women I and sb the cycle closes Something I like this so often happens In our daily I lives People stand in awe of one another and in their terror sacrifice duty and sacred interests because they have not the courage to free themselves from this bondage Why do even good People fear to go against the current of the worlds opinion or in other words why do so many Catholics tremble before the despotic Mrs Grundy Generally because either Interest pride or cowardite prompts them to ourt the favor of the old dame I Do not let yourself be laughed out of performing a duty Never run into danger because you are dared to do it this is a very cowardly aft Do not be ashawed to own that you are afraid to commit sin Say your prayers openly even when ypu fehare a room with those vho dq TiotTvpraV Abstain on Fridays ancl tast days in spite of a I mocking laugh Never apologlze for your religloj or conceal It I through shame Never exceed our means in order to emuiate your wealthier companions Honestly admit your social position If you aiestaylng with Plft estants nbfv oA tljat account glect to go jnassDn Sfihday Never attend npnCatholic servides The common plea is i did nof like to refuse this is a cowardly excuse Never show your approval at any sarcasm or Jest against holy scripture or Christian morality Do not be ashamed of being pious and beware of posing as a Jolly girl just to conceal your deeper feel I FEAST OF THE SACRE DHEART The lights burn low on the altar Where stately lilies sway Alone I came with burdened heart One sad and weary day I knelt mid beautiful fancies Dimmed wero my tearful eyes When lo a voice in the distance Raised my heart to the skies Jt came like a ray of comfort Through which my eyes ould see Mid visions sweet and tel crOne long loved memory I grasped for the smile that cheered me Tho sweetest earth could crave Born of a musing and pathos Which only heaven gave The beautiful flowers were blooming Seeming his love apart And the wealth of his loc was beaming From out his sacred heart As the last faint rays of twilight Folded their crimson wings From the depths of the mighty organ A beautiful melody rings It rang with its sounds of grandeur Consuming memries sweet It swept through the brilliant chapel To tile Masters loving feet It lifted my weight of sorrow And the tears from off my check Fell ocr the perfumed Incense Rituals of love to keep That sweet feast day has gone to rest And Client Is the night And far beyond the glowing west I see a gleam of light And sweetest memries call me back From worldly joys to part To rest within his loving arms Ills own sweet Sacred Heart St Louis Mo June 0 1 liP If RELIGIOUS INTELLIGENCE Rt Rev Bishop Gradin first Catholic bishop of St Albert died June 3 at St Albert Manitoba His see Included tho entire territory of Alberta and he was the senior bishop of Canada having been sonsecratcd in 1859 With his letter congratulation to the pope President Roosevelt has sent to his holiness a full set of his own works each volume containing his autograph and an appropriate sentiment of presentation A rumor has reached the states via London that Mgr Falconio the papal delegate In Canada has been definitely selected to succeed Cardinal Martinelll as papal delegate in the United States 0 Miss Mary Burns of Nashua Is IT has presented the pastor of the Immaculate Conception church at that place with a check for 10000 Plans for the new edifice will be begun at once 0 It is only about thirtysix years since the first mass was said in Salt Lake City I The celebrant was Rev Kelly and the place an old adobe building The Mormon capital was then under the spir itual jurisdiction of Rt Rev Eugene OConnell bishop of Grass Valley CaL 0 The Popular Bank of Leo XIII has been founded at Madrid in honor of the papal jubilee to aid the working classes Its patrons are amongst the highest of the nobility and have been long interested in circles of the toilers Amongst them are the Marciuts de Uroulio the Marquis do Mlna and the Duke Sotomayor I 0 Two thousand and thirtytwo men went to communion together on Palm Sunday in the church of St Nicholas Madrid The bishops have been received with filial veneration during the vlsi atlon of their diocesesa further contradiction of the calumnies of men like Ir Sydney Brooks who writes in the North American Review May 1902 about the corruption of Spanish priests and the hatred of the peoplo for them 0 A recent correspondent of the Spectator Quotes the late Cecil Rhodes as haying stated some time ago I have great admiration for the Catholic church It in my opinion the one logical religion of the world and if I had time I should like to become a Jesuit myself I know many Jesuits in Rhodesia and have so great a respect for them as a body that I take off my hat to them each and all Mr Rhodes estimate differed considerably ably from the one last year expressed by WaldeckJftousseau The Catholics of the United States last year contributed 77000 to the Catholic foreign missions while Italy was patls fled in contributing J62S070S Turkey contributed J64726J Russia and Poland S72 Africa 731513 and India about 1000 donated 40 X2w ilexico ot S13 Canada ex co and Central Amerjca and West Indies J2 5259 Poxertystricken Ireland pave 22 093 England 1207804 Austria 1586560 France 731236G2 Germany 7539896 and little Belcium S6S290 30 Rev Father Limbrek of the German I Holland foreign missionary society writes attractively of conditions In WH liamslnnd German New Guinea The mission has heen In existence only six years yet considerable progress has been made Mission stations now exist at St Joseph In the Island of Tamlec on the mainland at Kokan in tho island of Aly at Mo numbo and at tho Bay of Bogia For the most part the inhabitants are cannibals and Father Limbrek cheerfully writes that one of these days some of us may be roasted and eaten Schools are conducted at every station 0 i New South Wales statistics show that 123605 Catholics habitually attend Sunday services in that country a third more than the Church of England can show half as many again as can be shown by the Methodists and nearly eighteen times the number exhibited by the Baptists 0 Much improvement in the condition of DC Austin OMalley head of the faculty of CCotre Dame University was reported today by the physicians of St Agnes hospital where Dr OMalley was taken on Friday Dr OMalley Is suffering from an acute case of stomach trouble and It was thought at first that an opesation would be necessary The patient however has shown so much Improvement that his speedy recovery is looked for 0 0 Abraham Slimmer the well known TrTc brew philanthropist of Waverly la has arranged to surrender his home and surrounding park in this city to the Sisters of Mercy of Dubuqe for the establishment of a hospital which they have agreed to have in operation by Oct 1 In the meantime an extensive addition will be made to the already commodious building The property as It stands to which the Sisters of Mercy have been given a uuit claim deed is valued at 4 0 President Morrlssey has announced that the formal presentation of the Luetarc medal to Dr Murahy would be made nt Notre Dame the I 1 on evening of June 18 The same evening the exercises of the I graduating class will be held and the commencement address delivered by William I Breen of Fort Wayne a former Laetare medalist Several ecclesiastical dignitaries have been Invited and an effort will also be made to have the living Laetare medalists present President Morrissey will make the presentation The June ordinations at the cathedral 1 in Baltimore will take place June 21 They have an added Interest from the fact that I the second colored man ever ordained to the priesthood In this country will receive I holy orders on that day at the hands of Cardinal Gibbons The colored candidate I is the RQV Harry Dorscy a htu ilAnt at SL Tftsonhs mnnrv a wrno I raised to the dlaconate Jitht fal by Bishop I Alfred A Curtis The flrst colored man I ordained In this country was the Rev Uncles in the cathedral Dec 13 1891 Father Uncles who hi a memberof the Joscphite Order Is now stationed In Delaware Another colored priest Father Totton who illefl iifcw years ago in Chicago from the effects of the heaat Was oranlhed abroad Father Dorsey was born tKlscily twentyeight years ago andiwas1 educated atU Paul He will labor itmopa hisown people 1 At Ahecrtd of the fifteenth century tiicrc were less than 4000000 of people bpek I lis English at the end of the sixteenth there were COOOOOQ at the end of the sexeuteenth there were SX000 au the 85OO aJJhc I end of th eighteenth there vorc 21000000 and nqw there are 116tXlO000 21JO corresponding centuries the progress of French was as follows 10000000 11000000 10O0o Hoo Itt000000 3UOOOOOO and 52000 Thus for 40 vearH French nnl easily and at the cndhf the last century al Ild 10000000 ahead Now it ROOOJKW behlnd 1qOW VLlkc moft people tho Pope has his Jit tie wealincsses love for sWeat meals This Is well known In Italy and at his jubilee motherly peasant woman gave expression foe him bya present of an enormous pile of sweets wrapped in a Huge colored cotton pocket handkerchief It is said at the time that none of the Pipes many presents pleased him more than this I i A Surprise What I made yai seem KO upset the day became engaged You knew I was 11 going tojirpiysedjdntwyouj Oh dcftc me yes But ThtrtFnblaca I was going to accept your Cbe Catest Irish Hews With compliments directory United Irish League 39 Upper OConnell street Dublin John EJ Redmond pres idcnt May 30 1902 Cork May 8The recorder sat today dispose of the criminal business and addressing the grand jury said On the llth of last month I had the honor of addressing the grand Jury for the borough 6f Cork and then congratulated them on the very small calendar that was before them Now again on the 28th of May I have the honor of presiding here at borough sessions and I am happy to tell you that I have to repeat my congratulations You have a very small calendar to go before yoif Having regard to the population of the district Which you now present and the time that has elapsed I thing it is a wonderful thing to be able to tell you that there on the calendar but six cases Two of these gentlemen are for attempts to commit suicide That reduces the number of what I call actual crime to four Gentlemen I most heartily and sincerely congratulate you upon such a state of things and I do so more cordially because I am not now adopting anything exceptional in my address I am merely repeating that which session after session have the honor of saying in this court DUBLINS REPLY TO THE CASTLE The local government elections in Dublin on the 29th inst were extremely satisfactory all round from the Nationalist point of view Perhaps the most notable result was that in the two wards In Clontarf which was the stronghold of Unionism A few weeks ago Alderman Qibson declared at a coronation meeting in the Rotunda that thank goodness CIon tar would for many a day be a thorn in the side of the city and the corporation Alderman Gibson was yesterday relegated to a back seat by the electors of the East ward who had the audacity to supplant himself and his Unionist colleague league by two Nationalists Something similar took place in the West ward where two Nationalists were also returned and me Uninonist There is very great consternation in Lord Ar dilauns township In Arran Quay the United Irish league candidates have simply swept the field while in Inns Quay and other wards the candidates put forward by the United Irish league were also well to the fore In Balllnafad courthouse about four miles from Boyle the prosecution against eleven members of the United Irish league opened on Tuesday May 26 The coercion court was constituted on Tuesday May 26 The coercion court was constituted a follows Mr Henn 11 and Mr William onesc R1 The defendants who live in the neighborhood of Ballinafad County Sligo were charger with hayIng on the 7th of May at Ballaghboy In the petty sessions district of Balll pty Bal nafad County Sligo taken part in an unlawful assembly and with having unlawful and tumultuously assembled together for the purpose of wrong fully and unlawfully using intimida ion towards one John Smyth one James Smyth and one Martia Smyth The little courthouse was practically filled with crown officials while out side were placed a number of policemen Removables in givingtheir decision ision mill the meeting was a perfectly legal one up fto the time of the shouting at Smiyths After that i vas an illegal assembly They dismissed the cases against John Bren nan John Coei Thomas OGara and John OGara of Ballinafad But John Sherjdan Michael Condon Dominick Buoye and John OQara of Cacrickna horn and Henry MacDejmotttroe should be Imprisoned till the rising of the court and find bal in two sureties of 5 each and pne of 10 The defendants fendants intimated in reply to Removable Henn that they would not give bal and were sent toprison Great indignation felt in the dis rict at the decision The defendants arc respectable young men and the prosecution is regarded as a punish merit for theim membership of the league OFF TO AMERICA At a meeting of the Srtokestown board of guardians recently an appli I ation was received from an evicted tenant and her son for assistance from the board to enable them to go to I America They had got passage tickets from a sister in America but they had not the traJn fare toQueenstown Mr I IConnell said they were entirely des Itude and God only knew how they hived since they were evicted There were no prospects for the young mann thic country The chairman Mr James Neary entirely disagreed with this view He would be very happy to assist an evicted tenant but he didnt wish to assist in driving them out of the country There was work and to spare for all the young men left in Ireland and he asserted i was wrong and unbecoming on the part of any board of guardians to assist any oung man to leave the country The I majority of the board supported the hairmans was refused views and the application I Emigration from the I western counties I of Clare Galsyay and Sligo to the United States is attracting much atten lon hundreds of emigrants from those counties passing through Limerick on hejf way to America During Febru any Marchand the beginning of April the departures were at intervals but within the past fortnIght they have become of dally occurence and extra traIn accommodation has had I to be rovided andin some cases trains ran to meet emergencies The United Irish leaguers of Derry have dealt promptly and properly with the Nationalist corporators who without a protest permitted the corporation to propose an expenditure of 400 in connection with the dec raton of the city on the occasion of the coronation Only four of the sixteen Nationalists in the corporation put in an ap pearanceat the special meeting called for the purpose and of the four whoa only one made a spirited pro tse against the proposal to use the city rates for the glorification of the king The Tustiri McCarthy and the South 1 TT UA I varu ural cll 8 ui LIt uiuivu leuyuu I have cajleluiOtt the cautious councilors to resign the posts to which they were elected in Nationalist prjnciples lI there are tome craven Nationalists I In Derry tber are also overwhelming numbers wh are straight andjuncom I wl ufcom promsingvJ 0 1 7 lAt the MJanprliamiiton quarter sessions held vitistweele nd Mr Wilson Vaughn atuli sheriff ot tile county Leitrim preited Juge Waters with white gloves4Hjs honr1 congratulated the subshetfrf and the people of that divisiph of thcountry on Its peaceable tate It spoke very well for the char ver acter of thtjHnhabltants This is singularly onelbfthe divisions of the county of Leltrim that Is proclaimed DISGRACEFUL TREATMENT Teiriplem6re4After the savage sentences beingimposed on the five brave nationalists tJ JRoscrea quite i recently by a brace 6t rehi n1E the treatment jth0y4 Were subjected toby tie po Hca fU1 rff wai both cowardly and inhuman The prisoners were detained in the court1 house fOr about two hours after their sentences varying fronl six to three months being passed They were driven Ballybrophy railroad station a distance of twelve miles on outside carsunder a regular downpour ot rain WJien the prisoners were about to be removed from Roscro they asked to hayiy their overcoats which Were in house close by brought to thpmjf but thgSofflcer in chttrgo sternly refused their request The five brare young men looked tipon their imprisonment as a token of pride and honor for as the cars left Roscrea they all Joined In the singing of God Save Ire land They informed some friends who followed them to Ballybrophy that they were wet to the skin They were delayed at the Limerick Junction for several hours in this terrible condition i and it was not till the small hours I I of the morning they arrived in Clon mel I was a cold rainy night and it told pretty heavily on some of them for several days after Clarcmorris May 24At the Clare morris quarter session today before his honor County Court Judge Dane 8 wholesale batch of processes at she suit of NolanFarrell against his tenants for nonpayment of rent was heard Decrees were granted against thirtyfour tenants Mr Kelly crown solicitor 11 Kely solcltOI appeared for the landlord tle and Mr Kirwan solicitor Ballinrobe for the tenants I Boyle May 24 Today County Court Judge OConnor Morris in opening the Boyle quarter sessions said there was only one small bill to go before I them AR fnr na Vid Ifnnnf thn ft nf the county was quite satisfactory with the exception of the unfortunate com Latlon or quarrel on the Do Freyne and Murphy estates Last January he went at some length into what he thought was the cause of that combination and it was no use in repeating what he had already said I MORE COERCION IN THE WEST Claremorris On the 23rd of May six members of the Bekan Iranch of the United Irish league were served with summonses under the Coercion Act at I the suit of District Inspector Carbery Claremorris for conspiracy and intimidation toward people in that locality who had put their cattle to graze on the Greenwood farm the property of Colonel Knox Brittas castle TIp perary 4 Mr James Dodd who had taken a farm Iii the County Sligo under circumstances objected to the Rivers town branch of the United Irish league and afterwards surrendered i and in whose interest the police under Superintendent Laracy assaulted a number of the people including Mr Nan netti in Blessington street on Whit Sunday has sent a letter to the I Inn Quay ward enclosing 3 3s and I repudiating and condemning the action of the castle and the police I On Sunday 23th May many success fut nationalist meetings were held I throughout the country Coercion has not plainly broken the spirit of the people and it has brought the patriotic priests the men who really love their people and sympathize with their sufferings into the van of the movement i At the United Irish league meeting held in Cork to hear Captain Donelan and Mr Flynn than whom the party has no two more earnest members the chair was occupied by the Rev Father Barry At the great national gathering in Galbally Tipperary the veteran nationalist the Rev Canon Ryan presided and delivered a speech in which the duty of the Irish priest to stand by his people was most eloquently enforced He said he believed the proper place for an Irish pastor to be was at the head of his people directing them encouraging them and pointing out not alone the way which would fcad them to the goal of happiness they were all aspiring to but also the surest and safest road to the attainment of that freedom pros perity and independence which were I the Godgiven right of every freeborn man I is such words and acts that I renew and strengthen the old traditional bonds between the priests and the people in Ireland which are equally I conducive to the interests of religion and patriotism patriotsm I Caatleiea 27th May I In connection with the norent cam I paign on the above estates on Friday i evening the subsheriff Rosconunon accompanied by a bailiff on the Murphy I estate and an escort of about forty of the I visited that district for the purpose of making seizures for rent They visited the house of a man named 1 James Moran of Creery on the Murphy estate where they seized under a writ from the superior courts for rent four I cows and one horse On 29th inst the Creery cattle were sold by the sheriff at Roscommon having been driven from Frenchpark The cattle were bought in by the I league They visited several other places on the estate I afterward for the purpose of malting seizures but were unsuccessful in their efforts as the people had the stock removed previously On the previous day a bailiff on the De Freyne estate visited several tenants on a townland named Clooncheev Fairy mount warning the tenants of the impending evictions and the results that would follow 4 The government is determined to have Mr McHugh in jail as he has been served with a summons to appear in conjunction with Mr Mc ternan secretary tf the North SHgo executive of the I before the removables on Friday 3d June on a charge of intimidation I ON CREDIT I 1 a Frce ee I Gatalogaell 4ThR1tITEaCa stLtuts Century Steel Range No 80AI8 Han als 8inch lids oven 17x21x12 splendid reservoir and warming closet lined throughout with asbestos burs anything beat bakaro and roasters on Earth Guaranteed 10 Eat Guaateed years Weight 475 Ibo Only 2290 Terms 800 cash faalonco payable 300 a month no inter est Shinned fmmUnn1 iter X1 tW AJf W1A fCCOlpt 01 800 cash payment Wo tru nClnpl honest people located i all parts of the World Cash discount 150 on Rage Prelgh averages 5125 for each 60O milea Send mleB for free catalogue but thin is the great est bargain ever offered We refer to Southern Illinois National an CENTURY MANUFACTURING CO Dept 605 East St Louis II Airis Presn yr Nicol Se Salt Lake Electric Supply Company I Contracting Electricians Wholesale and Retail Electric Supplies Best Assorted Line of Electric Flxtur West of Chicago Telephone No Sis 18 1st South St Salt Lake City Utah 4 011 Will Do Better at I 0 I a 10 I Next Week I I 0 Than at any other mercantile institution in the state This is no new deperture but the standard rule We are making some 4 I 4 4 splendid offerings to our patrons Here an some samples 1 I I Ladies Tailormade Suits entire Silk Raglans entire stock for one 3 1 stock for one week week ONETHIRD OFF ONETHIRD OFF 4 HOSIERY SHIRT WAISTS Boys 21 rib seamless Bicycle Hose Splendid Offerings of latest wear at 4 4 black all sizes regular price 35c Prices to Please 4 for oneweek 4 200 4 I Muslin I and Knit Underwear Boys and Girls rib Black Cotton Choicest stock in the city at the Very Hose highsplfced heel double knee Best Prices for our patrons Come rand foot regular price 35c for one the week commencing Monday June 9 4 4 week 200 a CORSETS Ladies Fine Black Lace Hose ce regular New and elaborate assortment of the price35c for week one very best styles and make 250 4 New Summer Wash Goods I 4 INfANTS WEAR I Most Beautiful Line of Fabrics ever 4 Bonnets Bootetes Flannel Wear etc at brought to the west and at the Very Lowest Prices I Lowest Prices 5 a a i i Everything Else You Need I i In the Latest Styl st5est Qualities sand Lowest Prices ah 0 I CM I Webber pt 1 0 i.

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About The Intermountain Catholic Archive

Pages Available:
4,845
Years Available:
1899-1926