MORE MEMBERS IN ARCHBISHOP J. B. PITAVAL OF SANTA FE Pray for the Patronize f Success of the Our CATHOUC CHURCH AND REV, ROBERT SERVANT OF GOLDEN Catholic Press Advertisers IN COLORADO THAN ARE THIRTY-FIVE YEARS IN PRIESTHOOD; SECTS COMBINED THEY WERE ORDAINED IN CHAPEL OF OLD

Statistics Gathered by Priest ST. MARY’S ACADEMY, IN THIS CITY Show Gro'wth of Faith Here. Came as Young' Men From Bishop Machebeuf Induced France to Work in Them to Become FIGURES PROVE PROGRESS Colorado. Missionaries. History of True Christianity Traced fron\ Beginning THEN FRONTIER DIOCESE MADE DEACONS IN EAST VOL.XII. NO. 21. DENVER, COLO., THURSDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1916. $2 PER YEAR. in Colorado. An ecclesiastical anniversary of unus­ possessor of a splendid voice. ual importance occurred last Sunday, Father Robert Servant and Archbishop (By L.) Christmas eve. The Most Rev. John Pitaval met in France in 1881, and have Our beautiful Centennial state, it Baptist Pitaval, -D.D., archbishop of been warm friend's ever since. Bishop seems, was from the very beginning of Santa Fe, N. M., and the Rev. Robert Machebeuf, the Colorado pioneer, was on LOCAL, CATHOUC HISTORY OF 1916 REVEALS THAT DEATH creation dedicated to Christianity: wit­ Servant, pastor at Golden, Colo., who a visit to Europe and induced the tw o ness, the wonderful phenomenon, the were ordained together in'old St. Mary’s young Frenchmen to come to America to ANGEL HAS TAKEN HEAVY TOLL IN PRIESTS AND SISTERS Mountain of the Holy Cross, tvhich, near academy chapel, Denver, attained their labor in the hard Colorado missionary 'A its geographical center, stamps Colorado thirty-fifth anniversary as priests. field. • • ■ with the sign of the Cross. As one of Archbishop Pitaval was ordained for Father Servant ■R’as bom at Lamothe, our western poets sang; the dioceSe of Denver, and was pastor Haute- Ixiire, France; arid received his Denver to collect funds for .beautifying Building Activities in Church at Aspen, Colo., when J^e was rais^ to education in that country. -He ’set > sail Laity Also Hit Hard in Removal the church. He' was here for several “The Lord Himself has set the sign! ihe episcopal dignity. He was conse­ on June 4, 1881, and,-- lauding in ’ New of Some of Its months. A little incident, of his trip not Circles Show Progress of For, lo! beyond the wild ravine,' * crated titular bishop of Sora and auxil­ York on June 15y was-sent to Mary’s hitlverto related was that he ime.vpected- Leaders. Faith Continues. Where lofty pines their gray arms toss, iary bishop of Sante Fe on July 25, 1892, seminary, Baltimore, At-here,- on ’Sefltcm- ly met here a priest who had become A hoary mountain head is seen: and was made administrator of the arch­ ber 8, he and Archbishop Pitavah were acquainted with him in Italy and who A review of the happenings in local. ley, one of the most powerful personali­ Whose fissured crest forever shows. diocese on May 22, 1908. Archbishop ordained dekeons, in the cha)>ei' of St. had no idea he was in Denver—the Rev. Catholic circles in 1916 reveals that the ties among the Colorado clergy, died. Emblazoned in eternal snows. Peter BougSrde died May 17, 1908, and Charles’ college, by Archbishop (now Dr.; John P. M. Doyle, T.O.R., a prom­ death angel has been rather busy. Cath­ Peter W. Collins, noted K. of C. lec­ The sacred emblem of the Cross.” Bishop Pitaval was named to the see on Cardinal) Gih^ns.- ■ The 'two yoring dea- inent educator who spent the summer in olic circles saw not a little building, and turer, gave addresses in Denver and other January .3, 1909. He was preconized on cOns were ordained to the priesthood- in Denver. there were many triumphs for the church Colorado points. A. D. 1542—-As to the introduction of April 24, 1909. Denver, at their request. | ■ ■ ’ March. in a spiritual way. The diocese enjoyed June. Christianity into Colorado, it is remark­ As metropolitan, he is over Bishop Father Servant has worked in many Miss Alice Monaghan, of a prominent a Steady flow of converts, while numer- The Rev. Fiewman, educated in able that, exactly 50 years after the N. C. Matz of Denver, Bishop A. J. Schui parts of Colorado since that time., He Denver family, who several months be­ , ous missions brought back many fallen- St. Thomas’ seminary, Denver, and discovery of Columbus, there was, very ler, SJ., of El Paso, and Bishop Henry has often been confronted by seemingly fore had given up a comfortable home away Catholics. Following is a brief re­ known, to many Coloradoans, was or­ probably for the first time. Catholic Granjon of Tucson. Sarite Fe ■was made impossible tasks, for he saw this state for the severe life of a cloistered nun in view of the year, gathered hurriedly from dained in Louisville, Ky., for that dio­ worship within the present limits of the the see of a diocese in 1850 by Pius when it was far more of a frontier tile Discalced Carmelite order, receive

States is not asked to engage in de­ TRINIDAD SCHOOL HAS MORMON CHARGE fensive war. She is asked to make war AMERICAN JESUIT NOW BEING CANONIZED for monopolists in another country. Un­ BUILDING FUND BENEFIT fortunately there are too many people PROVE^ABSURD wanting war at any price—at any cost. (By W. G.' (^de.) VOWED NOT TO TRY TO ESCAPE MARTYRDOM The following entcrtainnient was given Utte,j'ly Impossible for General “ It isn’t the thing you do, dear. December 19 at 2:30 and 7:30 p. m., by (The Sacred Congregation of Rites has helper, if out of gratitude only, the Hu­ ful persecution of their almost helpless It’s the thing you leave undone. the si.xth and seventh grades of St. JoJ Apostasy from Christ’s True seph’s academy, Trinidad: “Christmas taken up the cause of of ilie rons at once foes, determined on a complete annihi­ Church That makes a bit of a heartache martyrs Jean de Breboeuf, Regarded Breboeuf as a Sorcerer lation of the Hurons as a nation. At the setting of the sun.” Comes But Once a Year,” .chorus; “ Dr. and he was ever after considered a pow­ Attacks became constant and appall­ in Spite of Himself”— Mr. Gregory, Frank Lallemanlt, Antoine Daniel, Cliarles Gar- (By Maximilian) erful but dangerous resident of any vil­ ing, and Breboeuf, faithful to his post, Most of our sins are sins of omission. Putaturo; Mrs. Gregory, .Lucille Puta- nier, Noel Chabancl, Joques,‘ Rene Dr. James E. Talmage of Salt Lake lage. Many times his death was decreed, saw the destruction of his children be­ We neglect the performance of a kind turo; Squire, Janies Timpone; Sir Jasper, (loupil and Jean do la lande, Jesuit mis­ City, an apostle of the “Church of Jesus many times the tomahawk hovered over coming daily more imminent. act. We forget to be courteous. W*e are Ralph Tafoya; footmen, Felix Silva anil sionaries killed by the Indians in Canada Christ of the Latter-Day ” (Mor­ his head, but almost miraculously the On the sixteenth of March, 1649, he unmindful- of anotjier’s feelings. We Charles Diemer; Grandma, Joseph Math­ in 1816, out of hatrfed of the Faith,) mons), in a lecture before the Denver final hour was postponed. happened to be teaching in a little’ lyl- don't speak out when others are assailed. ews. “Santa Claus Land,” chorus; One of the best known of the early Philosophical society recently made the In view of this constant menace to his lage he had named St. Louis, when a few We don’t read books to improve the “ Warren’s Address,” Charles Fox. “ Imps Jesuit priests who sought the conversion following assertion: lii(s it seems marvelous to learn that frightened runners brought the news mind. We don’t protest against injus­ of the Trunk Room”—Kittie, Berneice of the North American Indians is Father “The Mormon church baa developed be­ Breboeuf’s apostolate in the Huron mis­ that the enemy was at hand, and al­ tice. We don’t value our good influence Loughery; Sadie, Devona 'Von Buddenbk; Jean dq Breboeuf. Often styled the giant cause of the power inherent in the divine sion lasted more than twenty years. most before the ■words were uttered. over others. We are ashamed to resent Aunt Jane, Lucy Pellegrino; maids, Jane among missionaries, Jiis large stature, source of its claims and authority. Mor- True, this period was broken by a jour­ The Iroquois Leaped Over the Palisade vile language. We never think of how we Gibble and Lena Gagliardi. “The Autumn herculean strength and dauntless courage monism holds that a great and general ney to France, and by a stay of some and the slaughter began. Breboeuf, who might enable other lives to reach fuller, Gipsy,” Mgt. Green; “Home, Sweet made him a conspicuous figure among apostasy from the primitive church fol­ length at Quebec, yet it was never of his at first remained unnoticed by the fren- nobler development. We do not seek to Home” (Mazurette), Anna Swaney. “The his contemporaries, while his terrible lowed the apostolic administration of old, own will that he left his forest exile, and , zied .horde, hurriod hither and thither, improve social conditions nor help to Water Million”—Mrs. Vitters, Florence martyrdom has . p^^eserved his memory and the authority of the holy priest­ when departing he would say: “I go, but;baptizing the neophytes and giving ab- make this world a better place. These Farley; Joseph William Vitters, Edwin with especial distinctness. hood, without which the required ordi­ I leave my heart behind me.” solution to the dying. are only a few of our sins of omission. Ryan. “The Yellow Bird”—II Trovatore The vast, mysterious region border­ nances of- the gospel ca'nnot be adminis­ For almost twenty years, then, Bre- Presently, however, a shout arose that (“Dorn”), M. Gysin; “The Prophecy,” ing Lake Huron was the scene of his tered, has bben restored in the current bocuf led a wilderness existence, living the Great Sorcerer was in the village. A The famous Frenchman who remarked, sixth grade girls. “Bethlehem”—Angel,’ apostolate, and the tribe of Indians bear­ qge thm "a direct dispensation from in filthy tepees, subsisting on disgust pause in the deadly work ensued, as the “Little minds are too much hurt by little Anna Swaney; Old Shepherd, James Tim ­ ing the same name the object of his la­ heaven to Joseph Smith.” ing fare, and braving the rigors of the.jroquois gazed with surprise on this im- things; great minds are quite conscious pone; Young Shepherd, Charlie Fox; Lad, bors. While the writer knows from many Canadian winters. portant and unexpected prize. of them but. despise them,” must almost Mgt. Rider; King Casper, Alice Mengel; A descendant of the Crusaders, and personal friends who have lived and educated at the Jesuit Novitiate of He wrote in his diary: “ It is a mis Then with yells of triumph they fell have anticipated the effect of standpat King'Melchvir, Rose Tafoya; King Bal- traveled in Utah that the members o f the Rouen, that cradle of so many Canadian take to protect' yourself from the cold, upon their prey, binding him fast, and criticism on those great giants of^pro thaser,,Hope Aguilar; Choir of A^els, Mormon" church are a splendid people,, for the cold is an enemy you can make tearing off his nails in order that he gressive Republicanism,^lAfolIete, J^nr sixth apd seventh grade pupils; l^gin martyrs, Breboeuf, on deciding to with considerably better morals than your friend, if you only open your arms might not attempt to untie the fasten­ son and Poindexter. 'iTic first has been Mother;, Anna Aiello; St. Joseph, Joseph Give His Life to the Forest Children numerous other Americans, an assertion a t the' New World, had every oppor­ wide enough.” ings. re-elected to the senate from Wisconsin Mathews. Piano, M. Green, A. Aiello, like that msule by Dr. Talmage should tunity to repeat in the wilderness the And in another place he exclaimed: The details of what followed are not by the most overwhelming majority ever M. Rider, M. E. Linskey, Mgt. Linskey, not.be let go unchallenged in the. Cath­ “ Climbing rocks and skirting cataracts pleasant reading, but as Breboeuf may given a candidate in that state. John­ E. Snodgrass, and K. and M. Kerr; violin, heroic deeds of his ancestors. olic press, particularly when one remem­ '' He landed'dt Quebec in 1625, one of a will be pleasant if you think of Calvary.” be considered to epitomize the heroism son’s majority was unprecedented and A. Swaney, J. Elivain. bers that the Catholic Church' is included cotdpany of four Jesuits, the first to set It was this spirit that sustained Bre­ and suffering of the , a Poindexter won despite the strong Demo­ The third grade gave $12 to the school in his claims of an apostasy. Unless fbdt 'lit that part of Canada. boeuf, for though his physical strength knowledge of the tortures commonly in­ cratic vote in W'ashington. These three fund, proceeds of its Christmas play De­ Jesus Christ were an impostor, a “gen­ Encamped around the trading post, for was great, it would not have been suffi­ flicted by the Indians on their enemies men will occupy positions of command­ cember 15. Helen Nolan give the school eral apostasy” is an absolute impossibil stfch''Qucd>ec then called itself, he found cient of itself to account for his powers cannot be-out of place. ing influence: at the national capitol. No fund $3.75, Mrs. Bicket $2 and Mrs. ity. Jesus Christ is God. It is impos irtrtcrous bands of Huron Indians who of endurance. other Republican and no Democrat, with Brown $L When the hour came for despatching sible to doubt this from the exclamation had journeyed thither from their remote Aside from the hostility of the Hil- the captives, Breboeuf, as the great the possible exception of the president of the Apostle Thomas when he discov country* 'for the combined purposes of rons, there was always the danger of at­ chief, was first to be led forth. A fire himself, will have greater weight in the A man does his best when he is cheer­ ered that his doubts about the risen barter and diversion. tack from the Iroquois to guard against, was kindled, and while the flames new political alignment that is about to ful. A light heart makes nimble h&nds Lord had been in vain: “ My Lord and The condition of these savages at once and from whatever quarter climbed about his lower limbs, the exe­ take place. The name Republican may my (ipd,” he said. Dgubts of Christ's and keeps fhe mind free and alert. hjppealed td tiie young apostle, and he Misfortune Came to Visit His Fickle cutioners amused themselves by -laying be retained but a new party is about to divinity are equivalent to doubts that felt'8'‘btirning desire to rescue them from Children firebrands and hot iron? on the tipper be born. the l^riptures are inspired. Christ, God A shoemaker was fitting a customer their degenerate (ysndition. the Black Robe, that mysterious sorcerer, part of his body. They then- cut off who refused to be frightened, was cou.- himself, Who could not err, made thqsc with a pair o f, boots, when the buyer ^ " To/'do this, it would be necessary, of strips of his flesh which they roasted and statements to the apostles’and thereby Plato’s Republic has, for twenty-three course, to live aihong his charges, and to demned by the chiefs and menaced anew ate before his eyes. hundred years, profoundly affected po­ observed that he had but one objection to the Christian Church: “ Behold, I am become as much one o f tliera as his with torture and death. litical ideals, even those of our own day. It is related that during this horrible with you all days, even to the consum­ to them, which was that the soles were priestly vocation would allow. Yet his dauntless courage, his tireless agony, the wonderful man iitterM not It denounces democracy as a govern­ mation of the - ■w'orld” (Matt... 28:20), a little too thick. Now Huronia, as the- almost inacces­ patience, his constant cheerfulness pre­ a groan. Occasionally he lifted up hie ment of\license and disorder, the rule “ Thoji art.-.Peter, and upon tips rock I ‘Tf that is, all,” replied the shoemaker, sible Huron domain was then called, served the lonely missionary year after voice of a mob.^it bitterly assails liberty and year, while around him in the wilder­ will buil^ ,My .churqbj and.the gates of Lay Hutdreds of Leagues Distant from To Exhort and Sustain the Christian equality.' It creates classes and ap “put on the boots, and the objection will ness his brotlier priests were succumb­ hell shall, not prevail against it” (Matt. ■ Quebec Indians plaiids aristocracy. It makes the com­ gradually wear away.” ing to the torch and the knifes 16:18). ' and was to be reached only by such a around him who were about to suffer a mon people servants or slaves, and Nor was he entirely without consola­ No other interpretation can be given journey as might have made the stout­ similar fate, but this only excited his treats them with the greatest benevo­ tions. Occasionally his long months of . . ^ ^ r rwi . fo these promises of Christ except that, lent contempt. It establishes a small est heart quail. Dense forests, wild cat­ tornjentors to greater fur^ To prevent: i„ impossible for the aracts, trackless plains, vile and scanty unremitting effort suddenly bore fruit in beneficent ruling class called “guard­ further speech the.v shattered his teeth j church to err. An apostasv is out of the Murphy's Root Beer food, the companionship of faithless some rarely spiritual convert whose per- ians,” the chiefs being philosophic and 1.11«1 his mouth with hot ashes. [question. The gates of hell certainly fetlion amazed even the teacher himself. aristocrats. It upholds war and a stand­ guided who might take his life at any Recalling the former words of the ■ prevail against a church that changes its 1634 and 1726 CURTIS STREET rnomeht—such were the difficulties to be To Breboeuf also was given the joy of ing army. It destroys the marriage re baptizing the first Iriquois to become a missionary, one Indian e.xclaimed: ou I jo^trines. Tlie Catholic Church Is the lation, takes from parents their off­ Phone Main 6390. Denver, Colo. encountered, but the prospect did not dis­ always told your people it was good to ; o„,j. church that has not changed its (hr-stian. A captive of the Hurons and spring and makes them children of the may this intrepid pioneer of the Cross. suffer. ^ oil should be very grateful to , since apostolic times, JAMES SWEENEY He requested and received permission senti-necd to torture and death, the un­ state. It was the Socialism of twenty us now. Another, mocking him al>out a Denver priest, a Jesuit Fat: to undertake tlie conversion of the Hu- fortunate creature’s last agony 'was miti­ Father, who centuries ago. It regulates by law all gated by the waters of regeneration. the value of baptism, pouml a caldtoun , has the conversion of a number of Mor- domestic, business and social relations Directory of rons, and in preparation for Ifis life work of scalding water over his head. began the study of the difficult language Most frequent of all, however, were the . ,, , , . ! moiis to his credit, has generallv cf- in the most unnatural manner; and it Thoiigll Brebwuf s body was by this j j,jj, ^.Q^k by showing the Litter- of that nation. manifestations of Divine* favor ■which abolishes private property. In nearly Attorneys-at- Law time a fnghtful spectacle of burns and | [)ay Saints this warning, found in the In due time an opportunity favorable were showered upon him. The *'\^oice all respects it is the very antithesis of OF COLORADO. that s))er.ks in the solitudes often made 22:18: “For 1 testify to Christianity. Considering, however, the to the undertaking of his stupendous pil­ barbarities were continued. His scalp Itself heard to his ravished ear. Heav­ every one that heareth the words of the date when written, it exhibits, in some grimage presented itself, and attended was torn off. burning pitch was poiirinl enly visions were vouchsafed him also, prophecy of this book: If any man shall respects, a remarkably wise and just JAMES J. McFEELY by his ref the tortunxl man as­ tle more than a hundred years ago. As Attorneys-at-Law into the frowning solitudes of a strange tounded even the Indians themselves, As an authority on their language and this American “ pro]diet” died without 305-07 Symes Building land, in search of a people wrapped in used as tliov were to e.xhibitions of silent GOLDEN JUBILEE OF GREAT Phone Main 4310 Denver, Colo. Buperstititions as dark and dangerous as cu.stoms he was unequaksl. recanting, we have the assurance of He Compiled a Dictionary and a i r : . '. '; i». .,u«i -„„io hi,„ AMERICAN MIRACLE KEPT their surroundings, have been described They Tore the Heart from the Mangled WILLIAM H. ANDREW in ancient chronicles. It is now suffi­ Grammar the plagues written in this book.” Body Denver boys who are members of the Attorney-at-Law cient to say that Breboeuf finally reached in the Huron tongue of great value to hie Catholicity is the only religion on the and devoured it. that they might share seyeral sanctuary societies here placed 515 Charles Building what seemed to him the Promised Land, successors, and was also the translato." face of the earth that wil stand a in its wonderful qualities. under the patronage of St. John Berch- Tel. Main 1369 Denver, Colo. and began his ministrations to the sav­ cf several religious books. searchlight investigation. . And for whom had Breboeuf inimo- mans, S..I., will he interested in a cele- ages with all the energy of his forceful He endeavored to teacli, his adopted JOHN H. REDDIN, latwl himself? 'oration that took place Deoember 14 at nature. children how to build forts and palisades Attorney and Counselor at Law for protection against the Iroquois, and The Hurons, as a body, hail never be­ Grand Coteau, La., commemorating the But his life, henceforth, was destined come converted to the Faith, and from 612-614 Ernest and Cranmer Block had they listened to his advice, and em­ golden jubilee of a miracle he performed to be an almost unbroken chain of trials, the time of his death ceased to exist Seventeenth and Curtis Streets braced Christianity, they would undoubt­ there after death, the miracle that gave difficulties and dangers. as a nation. Even the proud Iroquois Phone Main 557 Denver, Colo. edly have been preserved from exter­ convincing proof of his sainthood. Mary Discouragements Became His Daily themselves were destined to pass into (Written especially for The Register.) mination. Wilson, a victim of cancer, had become JOHN T. MALEY, Portion, oblivion.. In a hundred ways, then, Brehoeufs a convert to the church and, being east Lawyer for the Hurons, though admiring the But those things, even while he fore­ When somebody talks “culchah” at knowledge and judgment were offered in off by her family as a result, entered the 601 Ernest & Cranmer *Bldg. courage and strength -of their new teach­ saw them, meant nothing to Breboeuf. you, don’t pay any attention to him. the service of the, unhappy savages, but Religious of the Sacred Heart. She could Phone Champa 1778 Denver, Colo er, refused to accept a re*:g7on that The savages were God's children, the call Strive to acquire common sense. they rejeeted all, and desired only the not get the fiabit because of lier awful nF^nt the sacrifice of all they held dear to help them had been his, and for the death of their counsellor and friend. disease. A novena was made by the and sacred. privilege of saving one soul, as he had Militarism means Socialism. Some of Yet it was onlj^ined that Breboeuf was nuns to the Sacred Heart, thru the inter­ In spite of his patience and zeal, he said, he was willing to go to the ends our short-sighted friends don’t see the The F rk k RE. HaU not to die at the hands o f the Hurons. cession of Blessed John Berchmans. The was able after a long residence in va­ of the earth and endure a martyrdom.— connection, but they will wake up to a Martyrdom was to be his—the long morning it ended, December 14, 1860, the rious villages to do no more than bap­ . realization of the fact when it is too novice, who was dying, saw a Jesuit Drug C o . tize-a few dying infants. Yet he said years of suffering were to end in a hide­ late— providing they succeed in destroy­ standing beside her. He told her to open that to accomplish this much in the cause ous death, but it was not the Hurons, ing the ideals of Washington and revo­ COX. LARIMER A 27TH ST8. her moutli and placed something on her o f salvation was worth traveling to the after all, who were to immolate their lutionary sires. WALSH GIR]^_GET VEILS tongue. A cure resulted. Then she asked Deavar, Oolo. end of tine world. apostle. That he anticipated his fate if he were Blessed Berchmans. He re­ A prCuliar, and. as it happened, a moat was inevitable, but like the true mission­ In the natural order one man’s pros­ Daughters of Industrial Com­ plied that he was and disappeared. The unfortunate incident that marked the ary he was eager to die. perity need not be, nor is it, another’s cure was entire, altho the morning it “ Oh, my God,” he once cried, “ why is missioner Now Lorettines. poison, unless the prosperity is stolen first months of his stay in Huronia, happened, the nuns had seen Mary W il­ The A. W. Clark Drug Co. helperl to make hia position among the this barbarous country not converted, from those ■who have produced it. Pros­ TWO STORES; son with lier tongue thick and raw, her Indian/O'onc of great difficulty and un­ and sin abolished! If all the tornients The Rev. W. J. Hewlett, the Colorado perity should be equitably—not equally lips discolored, her hands cold and con­ Comer 8th Ave. and Jason S t certainty. which the captives endure here, should pioneer priest, was cliief officiating cler­ distributed. Equity should come before tracted, her finger nails blue, and her Ir i Ato. and Elati S t In the year 1028 a terrible drought af­ fall on me, I accept them with my whole gyman recently at the Loretto mother- equality. The words equity and equal­ mouth in a revolting condition, with fected the entire lake region. Great fires heart, I alone am willing to suffer all house, Nerinx, Ky., where be is ity distinguish the Georgeite from the blooil clotted around tbe teeth. EVERYTHING IN DRUGS broke outi devastating the forests and the pains that the martyrs have suf­ ehapluin, when Misses Mnrie and Louise Socialist. . wiping out the lodges of the .savages. fered.” Walsh, daughters of Frank P. Walsh, of The frightened tribe set all its sorceries At the outset of his missionary career, industrial commission fame, received Senator Clapp sees the socialistic dan­ EXCLUSIVE MILLINERY to work, but with no effect. he inscribed this solemn vow: their black veils and took vows as Sis­ ger lurking in the action of Congress at Particular Attention Given to Order Work A t last it was decided that the red “ Jesus, my God, what can I give 'fhee ters of Loretto. Miss Marie Walsh is the last session when it placed a burden cross over the .missionary’s wigwam was in return for all Thou hast given me? now known as Sister Franees Marie and of $400,000,000 additional upon the Mrs.K.Cullen T «k e Lawrence St. Car to Colfax A re. 1462 LipanS t the cause of the disaster, and Breboeuf I will accept the chalice of suffering, -Miss Louise as Sister Catherine Ixmise. backs of the American people ostensibly was ordered to take it down. This he and will invoke Thy name. I, therefore, On her return to Kansas City, after for the army and navy in a time of Defused to do, and furthermore made.use vow in the presence of the eternal seeing her daughters’ reception, Mrs. profound peace. It ■will serve as an in­ of the occasion to explain the'true mean­ Father, Son and Holy Ghost Walsli declared that they had been centive to others to think that pos­ fw a z s ^ -§oc

d’Arc, St. Vincent de Paul and so many The Denver Catholic Register other noble men, .saints of God who de­ voted their whole life to the building up HISTORY OF 1916 MAN NOT FREE TO The Sham-Hater Entered as second-class matter at the postoffice at Denver, Colo. of the kingdom of Christ. But I will speak of the France of today, of this (Continued from Page 2) (Continued from Page 1) modern Babylon which you have found REJECT CHRIST Commencement exercises were the or­ Published Weekly by so wicked that the “Lord hath opened Written for Xlile newspaper by Ber. It is no crime to be poor. The crime I der of the day in the many Colorado his armory, and hath brought . forth William Demony, SJD., of St. consists in not knowing "b.y you Catholic educational institutions. Bishop The Catholic Publishing Society (Inc.) the weapons' of his wrath,” for he has Bosa’s Home, Oenver, poor. AIcGovern of Cheyenne spoke at the Sa­ let loose upon her the country which 1828 Curtis Street cred Heart college entertainment. “And blessed them and said to gave to the world Martin Luther, Bis­ People only think they want money. Denver, Colo. Herbert Fairall of Denver was elected Alary, His Motlier, ‘Behqld He is set for Telephone Main 5413 marck, the Elector of Saxe and the What ftoy really want are the things state deputy by the Knights of Columbus the fall and rising of many in Israel, and Landgrave of Hesse, the Dukes of Meck­ that money will buy. at their Colorado convention. for a sign which will he opposed.”—St. lenburg and of Pomerany, who are still Luke ii:34. THURSDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1916. proud of their, title of “Princes of Van­ July. Neither wealth nor poverty is crim­ As war with Mexico secmetl imminent, dals” and that sinister monster who There is often a burden attached to a inal. Both are good if deserved and every Denver Catholic hospital volun­ established at the expense of the Cath­ favor, but this burden from the virtue in neither is good, if undeserved. teered to do all within its power to care olic Church the first Dukedom of Prus­ the favor is sweetened. Its fulfillmenf, OFFICIAL NOTICE sia. for wounded soldiers should this prove however, brings the favor and its conse­ In the education of the young em­ necessary. The. Denver K. of C. began quences; its non-fulfillment destroys the The Denver Catholic Register is published by the Catholic Publishing In the la.st century, dear Father Man- phasis should be placed upon the ideals the formation of a volunteer company, to favor and brings consequences that are Society, an incorporated organization controlled by the Diocese of Denver. nix, France has been leading the whole of brotherhood and service rather than Catholic world in pilgrimages. Lyon go to the front if the trouble proved lamentable, No one should complain be­ commercial success, yet real.commer­ This publication is, therefore, declared to be the official newspaper for the severe. cause there is something requir^ of. one' Catholic Church in Colorado. The clergy and laity are urged to use these and Marseilles bow under the blessing cial success is dependent upon, the law Plans were announced for a new $20,- to whom a favor is or will be granted, columns for the promulgation of information and news of interest to the of the of La Fourvieres and Notre; of service. The two Ideas are not an-, 000 church, to be erected at I.aniar, Colo. especially 'wlien- this blessing is Oie per­ Catholics of Colorado, and we earnestly recommend that every Catholic Dame de la Garde; throngs of faithful tagonistic except m the minds of those Fatlker Eugene Montell, Si J., pastor fection of man. Such is the favor that home subscribe for at least one copy. This paper belongs to the Catholics spend the whole night in adoration at that have false .standards of commer­ at Alamosa, died. He was succeed^ aft­ the Almighty bestows upon us in grant­ of the Diocese of Denverj and we hope they will take pride in making it a Montmartre before the Blessed Sacra­ cial success. ment; Pnray-le-Monial is stiU the cen-. er a time by Father Edward Behiels, S.J. ing us salvation and the means to ac­ credit to themselves and the Church. The Rev. H. R. McCabe, pastor at Ida­ quire it. N. C. MATZ, ter where millions of people are In his thought-cpinpelling bdok “ Chris­ ho Springs, celebrated his silver jubilee Bishop of Denver. strengthened in the love of the Sacred In the words of Holy Simeon, Christ tianity and Modern Civilization,” Wil­ Heart; and then we have Ars and Nofre in the priesthood. was set up for the fall and rising of liam S. Lilly, the greatest of modern Dame de Lourdes. And truly all thesp Ground was broken for a magnificent many in Israel. He came upon earth, as Catholic writers, brings out in bold re­ shrines, where the Virgin of Bethlehem new chapel at St. Francis’ hospital, Colo­ He so often professed, to save all men. lief the fact that the elements- of civ­ CHRISTMAS, WITHOUT CHRIST! spoke and where the Sacred Heart of rado Springs. Tlie Glockrier sanatorium, That was the favor it was His Father’s ilization are chiefly moral. Intellect i.s Chicago, Dec. 23, 1916.—“ Christmajs carols, sung in practically Her Divine Son begged for more love of that city, built an addition to the and His on'n desire to confer upon Im- but its instrument. I know well that *1 nurses’ home during the year. all of Chicago’s public schools today, avoided mention of the Christ thru the French nation, render the soil mans. To it there was the burden of this truth has been for a season ob­ of. France sacred and revered by the John F. Campion, prominent and weal­ keeping God’s commandments. This favor scured by the school, or rather schools, Child. The changes in the carols resulted from a recent order from the whole Catholic world. thy Catholic, giver of a $10,000 set of may be said to be obligatory of accept­ o£ writers who set aside virtue, benev­ Superintendent of Schools, calling attention to a State law prohibiting But what about foreign missions? chimes . to the Denver Catliedral, died. ance, so, tho it is called gratuitous, it olence, love of -God, of country, and hold anything of a religious nature in class exercise!” Surely, there is Where was born the Propagation of the His widow is to erect a $30,000 mausole­ is nevertheless a necessary blessing. Not out physical science as the sole factor Faith? In France. And what country um to his memory in Mt. Olivet, as an­ that one is able not to be saved, but that of human progress. But it is true all something “ rotten” in the laws of Illinois, which ignore the decision nounced in The Register in December. the same—the first of truths: and I »> I snpjmrts our devoted misisonaries. in God gives everyone the means that he of the U. S. Supreme Court declaring “ This is a Christian nation foreign lands? France. She has oon- A new Catholic church was dedicated must use to be saved. So those who re­ have no fear but that it will be so rec­ L. itributed in the la.st century more than at Rislvale, Colo. fuse to accept this favor that God show‘ ognized when the brief hour of mate­ The first genuine military field mass ers upon the raoe will be the fallen ones, rialistic tyranny is overpast, for the t t t t t 255 .millions,; while all the' plhe.r na- ! tions of tlie Catholic wbrld 'have pain­ in the West was celebrated under K. o-f or those for whom Christ is set up for world cannbt live without it. \ HUMAN LAWS. fully contributed altogether 165 mil- C. auspices near Golden, where the Colo­ the fall. Everyone -will understand that The average man does not find it dif­ Liquor imports in “ prohibition” Colorado, in the year 1916, num- j lion«- who are those men of God rado National Guard,was mobilized. His coming for the redemption of the The .Stonemen, a society with anti- human race is not'^the cause why one will ficult to keep from committing murder. h er 23X,3231 But then, there wa» collected a State tax of *28,9(3.87 Catholic proclivities, made an unsuccess­ be lost, but the evasion. When we are He should concern himself about keep­ during the first eleven months. 4,700 all told out of 6,106 foreign mis­ ful attempt to organize a branch in commanded to perform some *deed, and ing his government from doing so. This Denver. , freely given what is necessary to do it means not only opposition to the com­ ( This shows the wonderful working of human laws! The old sionaries, and you find them wherever mercialism that finds'profit in manufac­ Roman was right when exclaiming: “ What can Jaws avail, without there are hardship, moral and physical The Glockner announced a continuation and refuse—then that deed, or the com­ sulferings. These are the very ones who of its work of training women in the mand, may be said to be the occasion turing -death-dealing instruments of morality in the people ? ” L- “bear the burden and the heat of the rudiments of nursing, giving a several of the fall, but not the cause. In other war, but it also means determined effort ***** day” in the vineyard of the Ijord. And weeks’ course. words, the fall is to be attributed to man to annihilate all forms of legalized spe­ . . 1 1 i. a.; _ £ ___ T ! '’ ho are those who die away from their 'August. It appears a terrible catastrophe to cial privilege that deprives babies of Three times recently have tve cjme across quotations from Latin-, winning the crown of martyrdom? The Rev. Raymond Hickey, of Denver, think that because of the occasion of fresh air and robs the producers of'the American papers .speaking in horrmed terms of the morals of non- j Fons of France they are, and in 1913, was transferred to Greeley, as successor Christ's coming, there will be many lost; products that their labor has made. There are no human rights more sacred Catholic missipnaries, men and women, sent there. And these are the | < «t of 154 priests of G ^ murdered in of the late Rev. A. B. Casey. but on the other hand, there will no The first mass celebrated in the Buena doubt be more saved, and had He not than these two: The right to the means people whose slanders about the morals of the Latins are accepted j irench Vista reform school in the present war com'-, the opportunities and the means of sustaining life and the right to re­ 8 0 r e a d ily I S. .And where was established the “Oeu­ den’s term was permitted. of being saved would have been much tain the product of labor. As Shakes­ vres de la Sainte Enfance, les Ecoles St. Elizabeth’s parisli began work on a more limited, and many more than now peare has it, “You take my life when d’Orient and La Societe Antiesclava- new $12,000 convent and it was an would have fallen. We must never lose you do take the means by which I live.” We invite priests, laymen and sisters to send us news when gistei” In France, the mother of civ­ nounceil that the Franciscan Sisters of sight of the fact thart man falls thru Liberty is impossible where one man they come across items that would interest the Catholie public. Pub­ ilization and generc^ity. Stella Niagara would take cliarge. of the his own fault, and if he is dainnetl, he controls another’s- means of li-ving. It was this . {bought that made Cardinal licity given to such activities may make others active and thus work And then, 1 a ^ you, dear Father Man- school next term, since the present order cannot blame God for •he sentence. His iiix, is she a Babylon, that country wishes to devote itself entirely to insti­ deeds will justify his condemnation or Manning refer to the British system of untold good. S. which has given and is still giving her tutional work. his salvation, and man i? always proud land tenure as murderous. money nml herlblood tq the Master for A new chapel at Berwind, Colo., paid and grateful for his existence. He would Belgium's abominations? You never tlie Imilding up)of His kingdom, and do for in part by John D. Rockefeller, Jr., rather be than not to be, even tho ]M>r- HOLY GHOST CHRISTMAS could, for you know her too well. Bel­ you want the /people of Denver to be- was dedicateil. A magnificent new haps in some moment of despondency, he PROGRAM AGAIN SUNDAY AN OPEN LEHER. gium, the “gem” of Europe, the Cath- iieve tliat Gp(l sent the “Hnns” from church was dedicated at Rawlins, AVyo., may be often inclined toward the latter, On account of the success of the pro­ olice nation at heart and in deed, does the North to/destroy her from the face by Bishop McGovern. and if this blessing of existence he is gram rendered by the choir of the Holy (An Open Letter to Rev. E. .J. Mannix not deserve such a punishment. of the enrth^ A new parish at Colorado Springs, so willing to accept with its accompany­ Ghost church on Christmas morning, un­ by Rev. .J. L. Juily) •‘Poor Belgium, peaceful Belgium,” as Indeed, I was right in stating that dedicated to tlie Uorinis Christi, was ing reverses, how much more should he der the direction of J. Frederick Lampe, so pitifully ptated Elihu Root at a your sermon was a breach to justice, started, witli Faflier Abel as pastor. A be willing to become a sharer in this Rev. and Dear Father: the entire progiaurwill be repeated ne.xt nia.ss meetingi in New York, “God fear­ to history and to charity, yes, even to Protestant church was bought, moved favor from God which entails strenuous My attention has been called by a Sunday morning at the 9:30 o’clock high French pioneer priest to a sermon ,vou ing, law abiding Belgium. She had no charity, as France, in ispite o f all her and remodeled for Catholic services. labor on the part of mind and body. It quarrel with anyone. .She .sought no faults, was entitled to-your generosity. ' Father Garde, SJ.. vice president of is only for a sliort time that he will be mass. preached in tlie Annunciation churcli a In most of the city churches, tho nation’s territory. .She coveted no That was the spirit of Christ. He was the .Sacreil Heart college, left to become forced to bear the burden in payment of few weeks ago, I perused it and found it Christmas music will be repeated iu neighbor’s goods. .She threatened no kind to those who had fallen in the editor of Revista Catolica, the Spanish tlie favor to be given him, and then the to be., like all your-sermons, eloquent and whole or part next Sunday and Monday. in most particulars to the point. one’s security, but she stood in tlie way wayside , and dropped out of the sight Catholic paper at Las Vegas, N. Af. favor itself will be etenial. of a mighty nation’s jijirpose. Her stern o^ men. Ami you. you have abrnsed the Sister Alary Cluve, formerly of St, You have Lie gift, because of your A great parF of the world has come QUEEN’S DAUGHTERS WILL earnestness in your work, of deeply and noble resolve to kee]> her faith was greatest nation of the world. True, she Vincent's orphanage, Denver, prominent either to forget Christ, or to mmimize touching the heart of your hearers; of her only crime, and she has been pun- bad, for if while, forsaken at least ofn- as a charity worker, died in Kansas. His person and (Timinish His works. To ENTERTAIN ORPHANS eially,‘ her God., but she is'redeem ing September. bringing home some of the very best ished as if her people are the vilest on these— oven tho they may be said to An entertainment will be given by herself nobly today and jiroving that . Father Francis Koch, O.F.AI., builder thoughts that rarely seem to enter into earth. Her towns have been burned, some extent to be ignorant of the real the Queen’s Daughters for the children she was. not the decadent nation that of .St. Elizabeth’s church, Denver, came the mind of our devoted people, and it is her women and children and old men Christ—nevertheless, His coming will be at the State Home, Sunday afternoon at have been murdered, her country even flie .American pisjple believed her from New Jersey to celebrate his golden a pleasure for me, your brother priest, to for their falling. It may appear a hafrd 3 o’clock. Refreshnients will be served. brought under the sway of a foreign iin- to be. Her sons, her “ Poilus,” have jubilee in the priesthood. register the many victories you are win­ sentence to impose, but still it is a just Following is the program: vader, and today because she has suf­ surprised the entire, world as they have St. .Joseph's new parochial school was ning in the spiritual field wliich has been one— namely, that man is bound to in­ Remarks—Air. F. Fincher. fered thus, her men are carried away demonstrated that their France of to­ opeiieil at Grand Junction. assigned to you. i vestigate sincerely, if he has not faith, Song—Alisa Anna Ross. to forced labor as slaves.” day is still the Very same France of St. J. K. Alullcn anm^uncetl that a site had However, after the perusal of your ser­ all about the Christ, and then willingly Reading—Aliss -Nancy Capp: bade for what he believed was to be a vary, we shall see that it is nothing new MANY NON-CATHOLICS AT In your sermon you stated: “That at heart Ftance is still a Catholic na­ grandest priests of Goil. W e all have minor operation. It proved very serious for man to reject Him. There are Herods MISSION IN PLATTEVILLE that land shall be prosperous only where tion. She stands on her knees today, heard of you;' w'j'i I“r?ul work ard 've and resulted in bis death. today as in those days of old. There The mission given by the .Rev. E. J. the laws of morality are observed, is only her hands folded in prayer, but ever are very proud of yon; |iroud indeed lie- Father Pantanella, S.J., pioneer priest, are Judases. There are people with evident from the pages of history. From Manhix, of the Denver Cathedra!, at worthy of her traditions and giving to cause you are so ■iiiconoerned with the rcacherl his eighty-fifth birthday anni­ hearts as hard as the perfidious Jews of the pathetic days of Sodom and Gomor­ Platteville a few days ago, won this the world a lesson never to be forgotten tilings of the world. But, in the future, versary. those times; and there are soldiers as rah, down thru the decay of the Imperial compliment in The Platteville Herald: Of pure and noble patriotism. kindly leave France alone and even the The Catliolic papers of tlic country brutal. In fact, in every walk of life “In spite of the bad weather which pre­ Roman Empire, ancient mistress of the nations of Europe. Whenever we want What is true of individuals, dear (lublislied news that the canoniz.ation of now as then, there arc found those in vailed, the meetings were well attended. world, gnd even to the present day of the to preach about race suicide, immorality, Father Manni.x, is true of nations. We Father Ixco Heinrichs, O.F.AI., shot and whom pride dwells supreme. There are Father Mannix is a very eloquent and French republic, have we striking exam­ apatliy and sellishneas, let us stay right fail, and often, too, not because we are murdered by an anarchist •while giving self-centered individuals in every class, forceful speaker and his sermons 'were ples of what I mean—flaming syllables here, as we will find plenty of material wicked, but because we are human. .St. out communion in Denver several years who cannot distance themselves from the appreciated not only by Catholics, but on Belshazzar’s wall for those who care for our sermons at home. And if apatliy Paul explained it well: “ I find then a ago, is expected in time. ego and approach the other, but rather by the many non-Catholics who attend­ to read as they run.” law, that when I have a will to do and selfishness are among the signs of A new church was dedicated at Wig­ desert the other and- advance toward the ed.” . While the entire world admires France good, evil is present with me. For I the times, then this great country is gins, Colo. ego. A mission i^t Fort Lupton was even today, and while the heroes of Verdun am delighted with the law of God, ac­ doomed anil one could easily see writing November. But can it in any sense be said that more gratifying in results attained. Fort and those of the Somme are building a cording to the inw'ard man, but I see on the wall. That apathy of the Ameri­ The cornerstone of the ne-w El Paso Christ’s work is- a failurq, because His Lupton and Platteville are cared for reg­ pinnacle of glory for their couptry, a pin­ another law in my member! fighting can people, the greatest orator of the cathedral was laid. The money for this life is an occasion for thC fall of many? ularly by Father B. J. Froegel, of Brigli- nacle which not even the assertions of against the law of my mind, and capti­ West, the Rev. T. H. Malone, bitterly Imilding was collected by Father Edward Far indeed from the truth would be ope ton. learned American Catholic priests will vating me in the law of sin, that is denounceil in the C atliedrat^ week ago Barry, SJ., long a Denver pastor, who who would assert such. The failure that ever tear down, you, dear Father Mannix, my members.” Rom., 7-21-23. last Sunday and lield it as the very cause returned to Denver in 1916, having fin­ is is not on the part o f Christ, for His in your prophetic vision have seen the Oftentimes,'indeed, tired of the things of the downfall of many nations. ished this special task for which ho was work was perfect and remained so, but he will be rewarded with imperishable writing on the wall: “ Mane, Thecel, of Gcfd, we forget the beautiful and lofty Is the love of money another sign of sent to El Paso. it is on -the part of man w'ho' wills to happiness. . Phares” (Daniel, v, 351. In your estima­ aspirations which raptured our soul. the times? Oh, then let us pity America. The -Dominican order attained its seven lead aa, impAfeet life and hence must The work of salvation is not, as some tion, France is the Babylon of the twen­ We lower ourselves even to the level of "Our total profits,” writes the editor of hundre last as long as there is a world in which humiliated and helpless, she is agonizing, her the title of Daughter of the Church. another an ear, anotlier a leg or an arm. 1916, and which had been extensively Fathers C. J. Carr and Edward Barry, it exists. So to all creatures would be indeed, and the very picture of the true I will not speak to them of the I have seen men of whom everything remodeled, .was dedicated as a Catholic S.J., of Denver, attained their silver jubi­ the rising, if all would so will. To Babylon. And yet what wrong has she France of Clovis, St. Denis, Pierre I’Er- was lacking except that of one thing church at Superior, Colo. lees as priests. many Christ’s coming is an occasion of done, Father Mannix? Could you kindly mite, Godefrey de Bouillon, St. Bernard, they had too much—men who were all Trinidad celebrated the golden jubilee The silver jubilee of St. Clara’s orphan­ their falling, but because they themselves tell the readers of this paper about F’oulques, St. Louis, Genevieve, Jeanne ear or eye or belly.’ ” J. L. JUILY. of Sister Sebastian, Charity order. age, Denver, was celebrated. ' so will it. y THURSDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1916. DENVER CATHOLIC BEfilSTEB P u r * n * * .

♦ CALENDAR OF THE WEEK. ♦ GIVES 6 SERMONS IW VESTMENT IS * ------„ . * + December 31, Sunday—Within ♦ ♦ Octave of -Christmas. Gospel, St. ♦ GIVEN TO PRIEST ♦ Luke H, 33-40: The Prophecy of ♦ ON SAME MORNING ♦ Simeon. St. Sylvester I, Pope, 335. ♦ Clearance Sale on Religioiis Pidiires Father Gibbons Thanks Donors ♦ 1917. * The Rev. M. F. Callanan, rector of ^ & January 1, Monday—New Year’s ♦ Annunciation church, probably holds the i in Christmas Talk 4" Day, Circumcision of Our Lord. ♦ record in the Denver diocese for the' I at Barnum. Gospel, St. Luke ii, 21-22. (Holy ♦ number of sermons preached on Christ- ‘ ♦ day of obligation.) + mas day. He delivered no less than six, i + January 2, Tuesday—Feast of the ♦ all from the Annunciation pulpit. Altho i FINE MUSICAL PROGRAM + Holy Name of Jesus. Comraem. of ♦ FOR THE NEXT FEW WEEKS WE WILL SELL . N all dealt with the lessons of the Christ-! + Octave of St. Stephen. ♦ mas season, no two were altogether alike.; (Presentation Parish.) ♦ January 3, Wednesda|^Octave of ♦ Father Callanan prepared different talks The Christmas celebration was in every ♦ St. John, Apj^tle. *SC Genevieve, ♦ because many persons went to several; ALL FRAMED REUGIOUS SUBJECTS way a great success. The church was 4» Virgin, Paris, 312. ♦ masses. beautifully decorate

QUESTION BOX

What sort of pains shall the souls of Denver Preferred Parish Trading List the damned suffer? These Merchants, Eager to Secure Catholic Trade and to Help the Canse of the Catholic Press, Solicit Tour Patronage. Trade Given to Onr Advertisers Means a Better 1. Internal torture and despair at thought, of all the evil tliey have done, Paper for Ton. Tell These Men Ton Saw Their Cards in The Begister. Boost for the Catholic Press! It Is as Necessary to the Church as Parish Schools. and of the many graces • they have abused. (Wis. v, 1-15; Matt, vii, 12.) 2. Unspeakable sadness and misery, be­ cause they have, by their fault, forfeited eternal happiness in hjaveri (Luke xiii, Holy Ghost Parish Sacied Beait Parish Holy Fasiily Paiish Cathedral Parish 25-28). 3. Perpetual horror or the dismal St. Parish company of the devils and. of all the COAL COKE WOOD damned (Matt, xxv, 41); and 4. The most iTHE CHAMPA PHAEMACY WALTER EAST Take your next prescription to Phone South 4300. intolerable torments and pangs, without S. E. MARTIN Jaa. E. Thrall, Prop. any hope of relief or end (Mark ix, 45; Wholesale and Retail Dealer In VAN ZANDT’S ALAMEDA PHARMACY Apoc. X X , 9-10). Fuel and Feed Poultry Supplies Prescriptions Carefully Filled CATHEDRAL PHARMACY Our "Special Mixed Hen Feed" Is a PRESCRIPTION DRUGGISTS Please give a short account of St. MEATS AND GROCERIES good feed. Conkey’s and Pratt’s Colfax and Logan Peter’s efamefa in Rome. PHONE MAIN 2426 Poultry Remedies. Max H. Thust, Prop. St.‘4*eter’s church in Rome is the sec­ Corner 20th and Champa Sts. 2390-2306 Larimer St. telephone 1461 Phone Gallup 1702 8979 Vraln St Phones Champa 808 and 809. 300 S. BROADWAY. , ond basilica erected over the tomb of the . The first one was begun under BUNDY FOE COAL ELGIN CREAMERY Phon* South 153 Bea. Bonth 16*5 Constantine, the first Christian emperor. We Want and Will Appreciate Tour Trade E. F. Schindler. The present one was begun in 1450 and A. J. GUMLICK & CO. Bandy Lamp, Centennial and Tampa St. Patrick's Paiisk WHOLESALE AND RETAIL was not completed until 162fi, taking 176 Valley Bontt Connty Coale, Coke years to build. It is the largest church and Wood Onr Specialties Milk, Cream, Butter and Eggs, PLUMBING in the world. Church and vestibule have Day and Night Phone, Phone Gallup 4 7 3 Phone Gallup 740 Office and Yard, 2600 Blake St ICECREAM a Icligth of 694 feet. In the transepts it Englewood 143. CAMPBELL BROS. COAL CO. 248 S. BROADWAY is 461 feet wide. The nave is 151% feet Phones: Main 669 and Main 1896 620 E 17th Ave. Phone York 676 Turd 1400 W . 32nd At*. high. The summit of the cross on the J. J. MACKIN, Estimates H. A. HAMES Offlo* 1401 W. 38tk At*. The Ninth Avenue Pharmacy. ft dome is 435 feet from the floor. Diame­ Funeral Director and Embalmer Hay, Grain, Coal, Coke, Wood Decorating in all its branchea ter of the dome is 1.S8 feet. The church I QUALITY Estimates cheerfully furnished. and Poultry Supplies Ninth and Corona. covmrs an area of 163,182 square feet. 3535 Bontb Broadway. Grocery and Market ICnglewood. Service and Quality our Motto Earnestly Solicits Tonr Vslnahl* H. A. HOLMBERG Prices Guaranteed. Please Call and Pstronag*. Prompt DeUyery Ssrrio*. Give us a Trial WALL PAPER AND PAINTS i—News and Views—i J. C. WILSON U. S. P. O. Stetlon 17. 3703-4 CHAMPA STBEET St. Jobs’ s Parisb Baur’s Ice Cream Whitman’s Chocolates 252 SOUTH BROADWAY in German [ DRY GOODS, SHOES, NOTIONS Phone XSa-lT. 3281 Phones; York 361, 362 Phone South 432. Denvar. LADIES’ FURNISHING GOODS The Three Greatest Cleaners of Denver— GENTS’ FURNISHING GOODS VERNON J. ROBINSON, ' Leitzte Friedenshoffnung, FINCH STORE HOFFMAN’S PHARMACY Noch ist nicht alles verloren. Die Phone Englewood 243J THIRD AND DETROIT Soap and Water and FANCY & STAPLE GROCERIES Presse der Alliierten wUtet zwar, wie 3500 So. Broadway Englewood, Oolo wilde, gepeitschte Hunde. Aber die Re- Everything in Household Goods We guarantee purity of drugs used and Fruits, Vegetables, Fish, Corn-fed Heats absolute accuracy in compounding phy­ THE GIGANTIC CLEANERS ^ giemngen haben ihre Antworten auf das THE ENGLEWOOD Sole Agent Queen Washer sician’s prescriptions or youj;^ family WANTS TOUR BUSINESS, Friedensangebot noch nicht gegeben. Der receipts at reasonable prices. We would 700 EAST COLFAX AVE. THE FINCH STOBE 1 Tonr Store Ilka to be your Dmck der Neutralen is augenblicklich HARDWARE COMPANY PHONE YORK 499 80 gross, dass sich noch keine Stimme 1725-27 E. 31st Ave. ) York 3054W FAMILY DRUGGIST gegen den Frieden hat verlauten lassen. HOT-AIR HEATING, GLASS TROUT BROTHERS Und entscheidet sieh Prilsident Wilson PAINTS. VARNISHES ERIIART’S HOME BAKERY GALVANIZED-IRON CORNICES PHONE YOBX 6882 W Dealers in einmal dazu, sich cmstlich im Interesse We Do the Best G. F. Erhart, Proprietor des Friedens in’s Zeug zu legen, dann 3464 So. Broadway Phone Bnglew*d ISl GILMAN THE TAILOR Fancy and Staple Groceries, werden alle Neutralen folgen; sie alle CLEANEBS AND DYEB8 Meats and Fish. WEDDING AND BIRTHDAY CAKES ohne Aosnahme ersehnen den Frieden, A SPECIALTY ischen Zensor vollstiindig vor den neu­ 1731 E. 31st Ave., nr. Williams St, GAME. FRUITS AND VEGETABLES jene m it eingeschlossen, die wahrend des Freiydi Dry Cleaning, Fancy Dyeing, GRANDE 728-730 E. OOLPAX ATE. Order* Taken for All Bakery Good* tralen Lilndem verheimlicht. PressihA Remodeling, Refitting, Relin­ Krieges m it den Alliierten sympathi- FEUD CO. Phones: York 1622, 8071. Afternoon Delivery sierten. ing, Repairing Ladies’ and Gentlemen’s 280 So. Pennsylvania Phon* South 33S3 Uhser Staatsdepartment ist im Be- Garments We call for and deliver to Sehr wahrseheinlich ist es also, dass any partjof the city. ELMER H. PETERSON, Prop. THE DENVER CREAMERY CO. sitze von Berichten amerikanischer die Alliierten in ihrer Antwort das 901 Santa Ps Drly* Phone Sonth 56 De TURCK BROTHERS Agenten in Sihirien, die einfach un- deutsebe Friedensangebot nicht ganz von Everything pertaining to the Creamery gaubliche Zus'tUnde in russichen Lagem COAL, WOOD, HAT, GBAIN, FLOUB der Hand weisen, sondem die Forderung . CEMENT, FLASTEB line. enthilllen, aber wiihrend jedes seiner ANCY GROCERIES & MEATS stellen werden, klar und deutlich die SIXTY-EIGHT IN Tardt First Ayenne and Santa Fe Driy* Bedingnngen zu nennen unter denen die diversen Bureaus nur zu bereit ist, anti- 2145 COURT PLACE deutsche Schauermiirchen in die W elt zu Zentralmacbte zum Frieden bereit wh- 701 South Logan St. setzen, verschanzt man sich, kommen die SACRED COLLEGE Lieaders in Quality and Low Price*. ren. Wahrseheinlich noch ist es, dass Tel. Main 1412. sie selbst die Bedingungen nennen, unter Alliierten in Frage, hinter die sogenann- Phone South 764, Denver, Colo. te Neutralitht. Cardinals Now Numher Just Two THE SCHAEFER GROCERY CO. COYLE BROS. denen sie zum Frieden bereit whren. LUSK PHARMACY Solche Bedingungen wUrden sicherlich so Less Than Authorized Best Cornfed Meats. Plumbing, Steam & Hot Water Heating hoch gestellt, dass vor der Hand an Von 1,663,194 Kriegseefaneenen in Seventy 929 E. ELEVENTH AVE. einen Frieden noch nicht zu denken deutschen lagern sind In zwei Jahren Orders called for and promptly delivered Office. York 2724. Cor. South Logan Ave. and Bayaud SC ware. Sie wUrden aber doch die Frie- nur 29,297 gestorben. Die Todesrate in 812-816 Santa Ps Drlvs. 2844 GLENARM PLACE FACTS ABOUT NEW MEMBERS Phons South 115. Res. Main 6436. densverhandlungen einleiten und die den Ver. Staaten ist 14.1 aufs Tausend; Wo give Service, Quality, Accurac:r.and in den deutschen Gefangenenlagem ist Our work our best recommendation Reasonable Price* ( Volker dazu filhren, ihren Geist mehr The recent consistory raised the num­ BESSIE MOREY-PERCIVAL Estimates cheerfully furnished on new dem Frieden als dem Kriege zuzuwen-. sie 8.7,— damit sollen die LUgenberichte or repair work. der alliierten Hetzpresse und der Tuber- ber of cardinals in the Sacred College to Phone 221 South Denver, Colo. den; Hatten die Zentralmhchte mit sixty-eight, two less than the full num­ ihrem Friedensangebot auch nicht mehr kelschwindel unverantwortlicher Ver- O. A. ALENIUS leumder ein ftir uMe Mai erledigt sein. ber. Some interesting facYs about the UP-TO-DATE MILLINERY MRS. C. M. GOINS _ erreicht, so wUre das doch eine gerade cardinals are given by the Roman corre­ um die heilige Weihnachtszeit begrUss- spondent of The Western Watchman, as OPEN EVENINGS. GROCER enswerte Emingenschaft. follows: EXCLUSIVE MILLINERY HUSBAND AT SEA AS 771 Santa Fe Drive With the new increment the Sacred Phone South 1831 683 Sonth Pearl Street, Der Oberammergauer Christusdarstel- JUNCTION WOMAN DIES College consists of 32 foreign cardinals ler Anton Lang, von dem wiederholt ge- Orders Called for. Prompt Deliverr and 36 Italian. 'The former are divided Fish and Game in Season. 303 East 7th Avenue Denver, Colo. meldet wurde, dass er im Kriege gefal- Grand Junction, Dec. 27.—Mrs. F. E. as follows: France, 9; Austria, 5; Spain, len.sei, ist, wie alle ilbrigen Darsteller THE A. PETERSON Open Evenings. Marcussin, wife of Capt. F. E. Marciis- 5; America, 3; Germany, 2; Holland, 2; ARGOOD CANDY SHOP des Passionsspieles iiberhaupt nicht ein- sin, who is now on the ship Radford, Portugal, 2; Ireland, 1; Canada, 1; GROCERY n o . BUY YOUR gezogen worden und alle erfreuen sich passwl to the Great Beyond at St. Brazil, 1; Holland, 1. GROCERIES, MEATS, FRUITS 924 Dart Eleventh Ave. hestcr Gesundheit, wie der hochw. I’far- Mary's liospital Saturday. Mrs. Mar­ So much foV national representation; VEGETABLES, ETC. Coal, Coke, Hay, Grain and Flour rer von Oberaramergau, Joseph Schriider, cussin had lived In the city for a number now for the representation of religious Phones: South 1792-1793. “ Argood Home Made Candies” dem Sekretar der katholischen Fiidera- f r o m ' of years. She passed away after a long orders in the senate of the church. The 601-611 SANTA PE DBITN. Onr Specialty tion, Heim Matre, mitteilt. D er einzige siege of illness. Her husband is the only Friars Minor have"3, the .Jesuits 1, the “MADE PBESa DAILV” A. D. SNTVELY des IQlOer Ensembles, der gestorben ist, known relative at this time, but her be­ Dominicans 2, the Redemptionists 1, the If service, quality and price appeal to ewar Herr Thomas Rendl, der 1890 den you, we solicit a share of your patronage 482 SOUTH BROADWAY longings will be gone over in the hope of Benedictines *2, the Salesians 1, the Scal- POPE LAUDS_FEDERATION Pilatus, 1900 den hi. Petrus, und 1910 finding some living relative who can be oppians 1. Phone South 65 Simon von Hethanien dar.stellte. Er war notified of the death, so that funeral ar­ Ijet us now run over briefly the salient Catholic Protest Against Mex­ 78 Jabre alt. rangements can be made. She had con­ dates in the life of e a ch 'o f the new ican Persecution Upheld. St. Leo’s and St. Elizabeth’s siderable property in the city and a few cardinals. Die Erfahrung der Soldaten in den friends whom she had met during her 1. Msgr. La Fontaine, of Schutzengriiben Europas wiihrend der Segretcria di Stato di Rua Saiitita. stay here, hut they were not intimate. Venice, age 56, father Swiss, mother W. H. Hensler John Henalet jiingsten zwei .lahre hat die Meinung From the \ atican, Oct. 30, 1916. She is about 65 years old and had been Italian. Priest at 24; bishop 1900; pa­ manchcr Aerzte und I.*ien, dass Tabak Sir -\nthony Matre, K. 8 . G., HENSLER BROS. THODE’S PHAEMACY a devout Catholic thruout her life. triarch 1015. To the bishops and clergy iSecrctaiy of the American Federation immer gefUhrlich und sehr oft ein tot- We make a Specialty of lichcs Gift sei, umgestossen. Sie hat of the world he is of special interest of Catholic Societies. MODERN PLUMBERS because of his intimate connection with Moat Distinguished Sir: bewiesen, dass der Gebraueh von Tabak, Mrs. Bloom—“ Do you find it more BomodeUng' and Jobbing * Bpooialty PRESCRIPTIONS the reform of the Breviary and with the Your esteemed communication of Sep­ wenigstens im Kriege, nicht bloss ein economical to do your own cooking?” Phone York 6030. Genuss, sondem einc Notwendigkeit ist. new Code of Canon I.aw. tember 30th last, came to me in due 1449 MABIPOSA BT. COR. COLFAX AND ST. .PAUL Sir Fr^eriek Treves hat diese Erfahr­ Mrs. Syme-^'Oh, yes; my husband 2 . Msgr. Sharretti, age 00, auditor of time, containing two very important res­ Phon* Koln 2267 ung im sildafrikanischen Kriege ge- doesn’t oat half as much as he did!” the apostolic delegation at Washington olutions: “ Our Holy Father qnd Peace” Free Delivery to any part of city. in 1892. Bishop of Havana 1900; dele­ i nrt “Mexico,” passed by the American • West Denver’s Most Successful macht: ,Jlunger, KHlte, Ermttdung und Drug Store Member Master Builders' Association Wunden kann ein Soldat ertragen, wenn gate apostolic to Canada 1902; recalled Federation of Catholic Societies in its ‘ How masculine Sadie has become in PBESOBEPTIONS AND DBDCK9D3XS Phon* York 593 W. Z. Bancroft, Mgr. er rauchen kann,” sagte er. to Rome 1910 by Pius X as secretary of latest national convention held in New BUNDBIEB OUB BPECIALTY the last few years!” Sacred Congregation of Religious under York under the patronage of His Emi­ Onr Boda Booth* Make Your BANCROFT DECORA'nNG CO. Kartoffelbrot in Deutschland abge- “ Ves. You know site has turned Cardinal Vi ves y Tuto; assessor of holy nence Cardinal Farley; resolutions which Soda Ta*t« B«tt«r We Do All Kinds of office (a cardinalitial post like that of schafft. feminist.” ^ you requested me to bring to the atten­ PAINTING, DECO&ATINO, KABD- majordomo of the Vatican) 1914. HANEY’S PHARMACY Der Berliner Ijokal-Anzeiger veriif- tion of the Holy Father. Goods Delivered Free and Freely WOOD PnrXSSING, G BU N IN a fentlicht eine Erkliirung Stegerwalds, 3. Msgr. Ranuzzi sprang from the no­ It is a genuine pleasure for me, very Phon** Main 2352 and 2353 AND OXAlONa Wife—John,[1, you’Vliaveyoii’lLhave to take that eines der Direktoren des Eniuhrungsam- bility of Bologna, age 59. Spiritual di­ distinguished sir, to express to you, and 1100 BANTA PE DBTTB 2408 E. COLFAX DENVER, COLO. tes, welchc er in einer Rede in Reek- ball away from baby; he hit sister on rector of diocesan seminary. Sent by by the courtesy of your kindness to the lingshauscn angab, wongch vorii 1. Jan- the luad with it. I.eo XIII as councillor of the Papal esteemed officers'of the federation, the THOMPSON THEATER Nunciature at Paris, 1899; recalled and very g;eat joy given to His Holiness by CODPAX AND anaiiwi uar an die Verwenduiig von Kartoffeln John—Yes, dear—but you should have filr Brot nicht liStig sein wird; made Bishop of Ix)retto 1903. As major- tin; sentinients of filial devotednoss and Loyola (S. H.) Parish OPEN EVERY NIGHT seen the curve the little ouss had on it. Ein verbessertes Mahlverfahrcn er- domo of the Vatican he leaves golden attachment to the apostolic see so nobly Regular Matinees Saturday and Sunday moglicht eine ausgiehigere Getreideaus- opinions after him. Voiced in those resolutions; as also by . FRANK A. WOLF Special Matinees Announce In Program niitzung, nhmlich von 93 statt 81 Pro- E. W. Woodside of Rocky Ford pro­ 4. Msgr. Boggiani, age 63, horn at the spirit of Catholic zeal and fraternal Boscomarengo, birthplace of Pius X, charity which animates your delibera­ Only High-Class Photo Plays zent. l^r Direktor sagte, dass die Lage duced one of the record beet crops for Fancy Groceries and Corn Fed Meats das Nahrungsmittelmarktes derartig in 1863. Enterew*U Blvd., D«av«r, Oolo. lassen sich vide Jlrote backen, welclie “ Quite *right, missus, quite right,’’ said Congregation 1914. and hearty man, looking more like 60 CRESCENT DRUG COMPANY den deutschen Barbaren doppelt gut 5. Msgr. Marini, “ Auditor Papae,” age CHAS. A. BERQUIST Tammas, “ but he didn’t keep his job than 74. The-Down-Town-Store-Next-Door-to-You 73. A Roman of the real old type; in­ munden werden, da sie mit hritiscliem lang after he got his wife.” 9. Msgr. Dubois, Archbishop of Rouen, WALL PAPER, PAINTS, VARNISHES, Gelde bezahlt sind.— (Buffalo Volksfrd.) timate friend of Don Bosco; made do­ primate of Normandy, age 60. Bishop Complete Line of OILS, WINDOW SHADES, GLASS, mestic prelate by Piux IX, secretary of of Verdun 1901. Notable ever for activ­ BUBBEB GOODS, CAMEBA PILMB BRUSHES, ETC. Wie die helgischen Fliichttlinge in Eng­ “James, my lad,” said the grocer to briefs by Leo XIII, secretary of Su­ ity on behalf of CTiristian education of GUABANTEED FBEBH OANDIEB preme 'Tribunal the Apostolic Segnatura PAINTING. PAPER HANGING land bchandelt werden, berichtet das in his new assistant, “who bought that youth. Since the war began he published Peter yA. D’Amico, Prop, and Mgr. Zurich erscheinende „Volksrecht:” by Pius X, and auditor Benedict XV. In Phone Gallup 2199 mouldy cheese today?” several pastorals explaining Pontifieial 2905 W . 25TK AVENUE Ein seit vielen Jahren in England an- 1896, under auspices of Ix:o XIII, he 280f HIGH STREET, DENVER '’Mrs. Brown, sir,” was the youth’s attitude towards the struggle. Rules siiRsiger SchWoize'r erklilrt ,in einem Ar- founded the periodical “H^essarione” to 877,000 Catholics. Let Ub Deliver It to You. tikel, dass seit zwei Jahren tausende reply. influence the reunion witn Rome of the 10. Msgr. Maurin, Bishop of Grenoble, Oriental churches and “ H Crisbstimo,” a von belgischen Flflchtlingen gezwungen “And the stale loaf we could not sell age 57. Ordained in French college, St. James Parish Aurora, CoL wurden, in britischen Munitionsfabriken last night?” periodical of sacred eloquence for the Rome, in 1882, after making his course in unter Verhaitnissen zu arbeiten, die ganz clergy. St. Haiy’ s Parish, Littletoi “Mrs. Brown, sir.” ^ the Gr^orian university. In 1885, pastor ahnlieh sind, unter welchen die Einge- 6. Msgr. Asoelisi, Archbishop of Benc- of Detrousse, a parish of 500 souls. Bish­ “Where’s that lump of rancid butter vento, age 44. To him Cardinal Merry THE CHAPIN LUMBER CO. borenen auf den Plantagen Ceylons und op in 1911. A man of great pastoral zeal. H. F. McAr t h u r Indiens ihr Brot iverdienen mtlssen. that the baker refused?” del Val (who is 51) gives place as the AURoA a. COLO. 7 Wenn die Belgier sich weigern, zu arbei­ ‘•Mrs. Brown bought it cheap, sir,” was youngest member of the Sacred College. Tout at the seaside—“ Yes, miss, we’ve Dealer in ten, werden sie zu schwerer Zwangsar- Bishop of Muro Lucano 1909; Archbishop Littleton, Colo. the answer. isome fine boats around here; they can ■ beit verurteilt. In lakonischer Weise in 1915. Notable chiefly for his labors Building Materials, Paints^ Coal werden die hiergegen erhobenen Be- “And the six eggs we could not sell a for Qiristian formation of youth . . steam twenty knots.” ^ Dry Goods, Men’s and ladles’ schwerden verOffentlicht, welche trotz week since?” 7. Msgr. Oreste .worgi, age 60. Or­ Young lady visitor—^“1 suppose they and Farm Implements des Protestes des belgischen Gesandten dained 1878 on s a i^ day as Giacomo Phone Aurora 14 “Mrs. Brown. Are you ill, sir?” asked steam the knots so that the sailors can Furnishings and Shoes erfolglos bleiben. In alien belgischen Della Chiesa, the reigning Pontiff, was James, as the grocer turned green and untie them more easily?” W. H. RINN, Kolonien, welche fiber das ganze Land raised to the priesthood. Has filled many PIEPER MARKET V zerstreut sind, macht sich das GefUhl groaned. sacred offices in the sacred Roman con­ allgcmeiner Entrilstung und Enttilusch- “No, no; only I’m going to tea at gregations this quarter of a century. Harnack’s advocacy of Lutheranism Dealer In THE NEARl^T PLUMBER ung gegen die belgische Regierung gel- 8 . Msgr. Duhourg, Archbishop of Ren­ Brown’s tonight,” replied the unhappy led Prof. Dr. Von Ruville, professor of tend, welche ihre Untertanen in hoff- nes. age 74, moat elderly of the new Fresh, Salted and Smoked Meats Repairing' a Specialty. man as he wiped the perspiration from nungsloser Weise im Stieh gelassen hat. cardinals. Ordained 1866. Professor in history in the University of Hall, into PHONE SO XdCTTUBTON, 0 0 X 0 . Shop 9293 East Colfax Avsum . Alle diese Tatsachen wurden vom brit- his face and sank into a chair. the Seminary of Treguie, bishop’s secre- the Catholic Church. A. C. PIEPER, Prop. PhoB* Aurora 19.

\ THURSDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1916. D8NY8B CATHOLIC B801STEB t'age tie Tea.

a little herself, now that her fears were relieved. “Poor Carol,” she said, “she’ll never live down the humilia­ P l l U D E T S l tion. I must go and console her.” In a little while Carol felt much bet-, O F T PAP j J'ON ter. But she talked it over with Pru­ dence very seriously. “I hope you understand. Prudence, that I shall never have anything more to do with Blinkie! She can die of m E L HUESION 'starvation for all I care. I’ll never take her to and from the pasture again. I couldn’t do it! Such rank ingrati­ lil-VSTRATED BY tude as that cow displayed was never -W.C .TANM E equaled, I am certain.” “I suppose you’ll quit using milk and cream, too,” suggested Prudence. (Copyright, th9 Botbs-Merrlll Company.) “Oh, well,” said Carol more toler­ antly, “I don’t want to be too hard SYNOPSIS. she gasped out an explanation. on Blinkie, for after all It was partly “You were just—right, Mr. Morgan— ray own fault. So I won’t go that far. CHAPTER I—Prudence Starr, eldest of five motherless girls, comes to the Meth­ to give thanks—for the table! There’s But I must draw the line somewhere! iierrp Cfitisitmasi! odist parsonage at Mount Mark, as house nothing—on It—to be thankful for!” Hereafter Blinkie and I meet t mother (or her father, the Methodist min­ And the whole family went off once ister. strangers!” more into peals of laughter. The Spirit of Christm as is m aking Itself felt In CHAPTER II—The girls entertain a vis­ iting minister at luncheon, to his discom­ Mr. Morgan had very little appetite CHAPTER III. this Christian land of oiirs. fiture. Carol, one of the twins, rides the that day. He did not seem to be so % family cow with disastrous results. fond of sweet corn as he had assured The ta d lM ' Aid. Men, wom en and children are giving prudence. He talked very little, too. Now, this really was a crisis Iq the thought to plans for m aking others happy on (Continued from last week.) And as soon as possible he took his life of the parsonage family. The girls Christmas Day. j hat and walked hurriedly away. He “Hurry, papa,” she whispered; "you bad met. separately, every member of can't hold in much longer! Neither did never called at the parsonage again. the Ladles’ Aid. But this was thelt Som e will make costly felfts; som e will ^Ive A few weeks after this Carol distin­ can I ! " first combined movement upon the par- little rem em brances, lnexF>enslve,-but rich In And together, choking with laugh­ guished herself again, and to her last­ • sonage, and Prudence and Fairy real genuine G ood Will; som e will send written ter, they hurried into the’ barn and ing mortification. A man living only Ized that much depended on the suc­ six blocks from the parsonage had gen­ gave full vent to their feelings. cess o^ h e day. As girls, tlie whole m essa^s of loving thoughts; and m any, very erously offered Mr. Starr free pastur­ So it was that the twins and Connie Methodist church pronounced the many will send the spoken word over the age for his pretty little Jersey in his were alone for a while. young Starrs charming. But as par­ Telephone lines. “You did a pretty good job, Connie,” broad meadow, and the offer w;as grate­ sonage people—well, they were obliged fully accepted. This meant that every said Carol approvingly. to reserve judgment. And as for Pru­ W hile hom es resound with Christmas merri­ evening the twins must walk after the “Yes, I think I did myself,” was the dence having entire charge of the cow, and every morning must take her ment and the very atmosphere Is charged complacent answer. “But I Intended household, it must be acknowledged back for the day’s grazing. with G ood Will to M en, the Telephone O perator to put in, ‘Keep us as the apple of thy that every individual Lady looked . eye, hold us in the hollow of thy hand,' One evening, as they were starting ■forward to this meeting with eager will be at her lonely post, connectlri'lfe the lines out from the meadow homeward with and I forgot It until I had said 'Amen.' ness—they wanted to “size up” the sit­ that will carry $lad voices to distant friends. I had a notion to put in a postscript, the docile animal, Carol stopped and uation. They were coming to see for gazed at Blinkie reflectively. but I believe that isn't done.” tii'emselves! Yes, it was undoubtedly Her duty Is to serve, and ri^ht gladly does “Never mind,” said Carol, “I’ll use “Lark,” she said, “I just believe to a .crisis. my soiil that I could ride this cow. she perform her tasks, even while others are that in mine, tomorrow.” , “There’ll be a crowd, of course,” said She’s so gentle, and I’m such a good m aking festive holiday. It cannot be said that this form of ■Fairy. “ W e’U just leave the doors family worship was a great success. hand at sticking on.” between the front rooms open.” “Carol!” ejaculated Lark. “Think And you w ho use the Telephone on Christ­ The twins were invariably stereotyped, ■“Yes, but we’ll close the dining-room cut and dried. They thanked the Lord how it would look for a parsonage girl doors. Then we’ll have the refresh­ mas Day will detect In the operator’s cheery to go down the street riding a cow.” for the beautiful morning, for kind ments all out on the table, and when “Number please,” the notes of the “Merry “But there’s no one to see,” protest­ friends, for health, and family, and par­ we are ready we’ll just fling back the Christm as” w hich w e w ish for all our patrons. ed Carol. And this was true. For the sonage. Connie always prayed in sen­ dqors carelessly and—there you are!’’ parsonage was near the edge of town, tences extracted from the prayers of So the table was prettily decorated others she had often heard, and every and the girls passed only five houses with flowWs, and great plated of sand­ time with nearly disastrous effect. wiches *lmd cake were placed upon it. But later on the inbrning worship In the center was an enormous punch­ M ountain States Telephone went better. The prayers of the chil­ bowl, borrowed from the Averys, full dren changed—became more personal, ot lemonade. Glasses were properly and Telegraph Com pany less flowery. They remembered that arranged on the trays, and piles of when they knelt they were at the nicely home-laundered napkins were feet of God, and speaking direct to scattered here and there. The girls him. felt that the dining room was a credit The family had been in the new par­ to them, and to the Methodist church sonage only three weeks, when a vis­ entire. iting minister called on them. It was From every nook and corner of the about ten minutes before the lunch­ house they hunted out chairs and eon hour at the time of his arrival. stcKds, anticipating a real run upon the Mr. Starr was in. the country, visiting, parsonage. Nor were they disappoint­ so the girls received him alone. It ed. The twins and Connie were not was an unfortunate day for the Starrs. even arrayed in their plain little ging­ Fairy had been at college .ill morning, hams, clean, before the first arrivals and Prudence had been rummaging in were ushered up into the front bed­ the attic, getting it ready for a rainy room, ordinarily occupied by Prudence day and winter playroom for the and Fairy. younger girts. She was dusty and “ There’s Mi-s. Adams and Mrs. tired. Prentiss, and Mis.—” began Connie, Carol’s description of parsonage life. It’s a perfectly adorable scut,” bright­ Many a good reputation haa been The luncheon hour arrived, and the listening Intently to the voices in the But Prudence was concerned to ob­ ening, but sobering again us she real­ stabbed by a pointed tongue. girls came In from school, eager to be next room. serve that a big easy chair placed well ized the gravity of the occasion. “

ACCURACY— The Key Note BURGLARS AT CATHEDRAL RECTORY GET TRIBUTE IS PAID TO DANIEL MAHONY It Is all Important that-ellfciency and accuracy predominate in optical work—simple or complicated. AWAY WriH GOLDEN, BEJEWELLED PH BY FATHER CALLANAN. LONG A FRIEND If you visit us we shall be glad to show you the safeguards we have pro- vidcd. We hold your eyes and our reputation above all financial interest. Returning to the rector.t. Father Mc­ The courtesies o | our office are cheerfully extended to yoU, ALWAYS. Menamin placed it on a mantel in hi.-; This, Thursday, morning Daniel J. Ma- siinshine, frost or snow, never was he Vessels Used That Day for Car­ office. hony, a Denver pioneer, was buried witli known to miss the holy sacrifice on Sun­ rying Blessed The burglarizing was done by profes­ a .solemn rciiuieni high mass from ,St. day morning, never was he an abs^itee Sacrament. sionals who knew how the rectory wa.s Joseph's church. ThS celebrant of the from his religious duties during his long TbeSwigeit Bros. Optical Co arranged. They probably visited the mass was Very Rev. T. J. Condon, career in our midst. He was a man who building a short time before, pretending C.SSJt., tile deacon Rev. M. F. Callanaii, took great pride in his t'hiircli, who had a WkoM BspmtatloB u d Bftiiipmrat OlT* j Burglars who entered the Denver to be there for alms or business. After P.R., the sulKleacon Mr. William Higgins, deep respi'ot for the priesthood, who T e« the Klgkest Ontds of BorTloo. I Cathedral rectory, 1854 Grant, on Christ­ Dovotod BxelulToljr «e a reconnoitre of the exterior of the awell- St. Thomas’ seminary. The remains were (‘vinced a tender reverence for everything tho n ttlsg and Mumf ao- inas night, looking for the 83,000 ob- titfbic of OlMwoo. iiig, they broke the glass in the front tiqfceii to Mount Olivet cemetery, accom­ that pertained to the supernatural, and 1 5 ^0 California St. Denver : tained in the .Christmas collection, es- door and let themselves in. Then they panied by the clergy, the mail carriers, this faith and love and reverence were <7 ; eaped with about ,$300 w’orth of loot, proceeded to ransack the entire down­ who acted as pallbearers, and members mirrored in his life and gave coloring to : including a $250 pyx. A pyx is the little stairs. The first thing they did was to Uf the Knights of Columbus, an order of all his acts. His purity of conscience container used for taking the Blessed \ STATEMEN^ OF THE CONDITION OF «ut the telephone wires. They knew that whicli Mr. Mahoney was a Fourth Degree bordered on-tlie scrupulous, his veracity I Sacrament to the sick. This particular Denver, ^ sick call .night awaken the clergymen member. The sermon was preached by was un(iuestioned, and his loyal devotion i one had au- interesting story. Hibernia Bank & Trust Co. Colorado at any time. Most of the loot ^’as taken Father Callanaii, pastor of, the Annun­ to his wife during a period of thirty years About five years ago, the Rev. Hugh from Father McMenamin’s office. Al­ ciation, a life-long friend of the deceasetl. —a devotion that was equally recipro­ - At tlid OloM of Bnsln.Bt Kovsiuber 17, 1916. ' L. McMenamin, rector of the Cathedral, ' RESOURCES LIABILITIES most every drawer in the desks was After a few appropriate remarks on the cated by her—was exemplary and edify­ Loans and Discounts;__f 304,998.85 Capital Stock ...... 3 100,000.00 ■ frequently took the Blessed Sacrament opened and the knob on the safe had lessons to he derived from the presence ing to all his acquaintances. Death to Bonds, Stocks and Securi­ Undivided Profits...... 8,019.87 ; to a sick woman, Mrs. William Le Pere. been takcjj off before the yeggnien were of deiitli in the closing hours of the dj'iiig such a man, whether it comes early or ties ...... 567,210.13 Deposits ...... 1,110,313.08 j She was grateful for the privilege, and, Real Estate ...... 23,527.07 seemingly scared away. The .neatnes.s year, the speaker paid the following late in life, can hardly be called an un­ Cash and Sight Exchange 322,596.90 31,218,332.95 i before undergoing a serious operation, with which the safe was handled con­ touching tribute to Mr. Mahony as a welcome visitor. It found him in liis old j told her husband to take all her rings vinces the priests that the robbery was gentleman and a Catholic: 31,218.332.95 age as it would have found him in the ■ and other jewelry and have a pyx made the work of professionals. It took aii- ‘AS'liile yet a student for the priest­ prime of-liis manliood, with his lamp for Father McMenamin if she should not expert a half hour to open the safe on hood. some twenty-five years ago, I met trimmed and ready to render an account GROWTH OF THE HIBERNIA BANK . recover. She died, so the husband From July 17, 1913, to Nov. 17, 1916 Tuesday morning, using the same meth­ the deceased for tiie first time, and he of his stewardship. During a long life he I brought the jewels to the rectory, and a ods that the thieves would undoubtedly then impressed me as a lovable character, had used well the talents given him. DEPOSITS: i Denver concern made the py.x, which have employed if they had not been frank, courteous, sincere, and above all. a \\ hen that life was ebbing to its close he j was a work of art. It was solid.gold, scared off. devout Catholic, who took pride in his received again and again, witli even more July 17, ..- ...... $494,088.34...... 1913 I there were at least eleven diamonds in it, July ...... $602,179.15 .; If they had succeeded in opening the religion. During a dose and intimate ae- than his accustomed reverence, the Sacra­ 17, _ ...... 1914 ; and it may have been worth considerably safe, they would have been jCtOO richer. quaiiitaiice.ship and friendship from that ments of the Church. A trying, painful July 17,______$674,875.48 ...... 1915 ' more than the $250 valuation placed on If they had opened a drawer which some­ day to this, these same lovable traits of illness, borne with Christian fortitude, i it by Father McMenamin. One of the how they missed, they would have been character seemed to me to ripen and ex­ purified from his soul the dross that re­ July 17,______$1,003,407.12 __ 1916 i most beautiful features was a cross $70 better off. But their search for the pand with his aih’ancing years. For mained and merited for him the enco­ 1 worked in diamonds. $.3,000 collection money was in vain; the thirty years he has been a familiar figure mium of that Divine Master he had servied Sept. 11,____ $1,028|353.76__ i9i6 Since the affair had fiueh a happy end- coin had been taken from the house some on the streets of Denver, whose growth so faithfully, ‘Well done, thou good and I ing, it will not be a breach of charity to hours before. from a frontier town to the queenly city faithful servantj enter thou into the joy i tell what happened to Mr. La Pere, hus- Father McMenamin lost all his Christ­ of today he so proudly witnessed. ‘Dan of thy Ixird.’ ” Nov. 17, $ 1 , 1 1 0 , 3 1 3 . 0 8 .9.6 j band of the dead woman. He had not mas cigars. The thieves seemed to pick Mahony,’ as he was affectionately called, Father Callanan officiated at the : been tu confession for a long period, but was a universal favorite not only with O ar gain-in deposits since July 17,1915, is 64 2-3 per cent. particularly on him. Several boxes of gi-ave. ' when he brought the finished pyx to the candy had been sent to the rectory, and his fellow workers of the post office, but Daniel .Mahony, a resident of Denver ! Cathedral rectory to present it to Father were all together. But the thieves took with the business and professional men of for forty years and a letter carrier for HIBERNIA BANK & TRUST CO. ' McMenamin, he got on his knees and only Father McMenaniin’s. Some old Denver, to whom his unfailing kindness twenty-seven, a Fourth Degree Knight FZFTBBHTB ABl) CBAMPA STS. ! made his confession before leaving. He purses, containing no money, and some and courtesy endeared him. Ixmg and of Columbus, died at his home, 1082 Ban­ I remained faithful to the Church after- leather cigar holders were tnken. But continuous dealing with the public is apt nock, on Christmas morning. He had V'ards and died a Catholic. the meanest theft, next to the taking of to beget in most men a fynicism aiuFin- been retired seven j’ears and was age

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