CA_TIIOLIC TELEGRAPH, AND ADVOCATE.
" INN EO E S SA R II SUN I T AS, IN D lJ B I IS LIB E R T A S, IN 011£ NIB usa A R I T AS."
VOL. XXVIII. CINCINNATI, OHIO, SATURDAY, DECEMBER .M, 1859. . NO. 5~.
Mobile that a priest was to be immediately sent RT. REV. JOHN XUAREZ, OF THE ORDER OF ST., are corrected. rrhey are relllarkable as show- them .* - FRANCIS, BISHOP ELECT OF RIO DE LAS ing the imperfect knowledge of the subject dis- PRINTED AND PUBLISHED E VERY SATURpAY MORNING BY When placed under Bishop Portier, the tel'- P ALMAS, IN 1527, THE PIONEER BISHOP OF played by so ripe a scholar as Mr .. ~?am~. In rit.ory contained two priests of the diocese of THE UNITED STATES. reply t~ the charge that the. InqUIsItIOn ll1teI:- JOHN P. WALSH, New Orleans, and one of that of Oharleston, The ,name of this zealous missionary is 'un- fered WIth the advance of SCIence, the "Amen- At tiLe Cat/wlie Teleg raph Printing and P"bl'ishing Establishment who all left the new Vicar Apostolic to perform known to most of us, yet he was Bishop elect can Oatholic, '.' re~' iewing ~1r . Adams' Address, 170 Syca)nore Street, Cincinnati, Ohi? all duties with no coadjutor, except one sub· of the first diocese formed in any part of our refers to a pomt III the hIstory of, K~pl e r, tbe deacon. Havine- examined the state of the present territory, extendinoO' from R, io de las grea.t Protestant astronomer, whIch IS always A t $2 OOp e. r annU1n . .~ Wlt en delive1'ed by our Ca1"Tier s, $ 2 5n '-'. I f 1 h d field of labor, and induced a missionary pnest Palmas to the Eastern shore of FlOrIda. e tIll t le s a e: to remain during his absence, he set out for Of his birth and early life I find nothing "The astronomer," says Mr, Adams, "at the , Postag-e on Catholic Telegrap h an d A d vocaLe E I" 'd d t 'th I d h F' d d b d ~ m'ope to so ICit al ,an me WI suc 1 suc- He entere t e ranCIscan or er an em race peril of his liberty, or his life, must disco\'er Within lla mi1t.oD Co unty ...... Free cess that on his return he gathered Bround him the reform then introduced. When the Ven. nothing which would require so much as an ex With in Ohio, per year ...... 13 cts To a n y pa rt of tl~e United States, per year ...... , ...... 26ct!; five priests and five sub-deacons. The late Father" Martin of Valencia was ' sent by the planat.ion of the meaning of a passage of Scrip Bishop Loras was one of tho s~ who joined ~lim, General . Quinones, Father Xuarez was the ture." The bistorical confirmation of this as and now by his zeal, learnmg, and ablllty, fourtl{ of his twelve companions. They all sertion, we humbly submit, is not to be found (~·r o m Duniga n's Catholic Almanac' for 1860.) form ed the young L evites for the awful dignily sail ed from San Lucar in hnuary, and reached in the interest felt at Rome for the astronomer Biographica't Sketches. to which they aspired. Bishop Portier then Vera Oruz on Whitsuneve, May 14th, 1515, on the distant shores Qf the Baltic-not in the visited his whole vicariate, was prostrated Oortez received , them warmly, relying, and liberality of the Cardinal-not in the intelligent RT. REV. MICHAEL PORTIER, D. D" FJRST with a violent fever at St. Augustine, but was justly, on their zeal for the conversion of the aid of Gisio-not in the fri endly sympathy of BISHOP OF MOBILE. nu sooner recovered, than he preached a re- nativ.es. Four convents were immediatelyes- the populace, not in the protection of th e Pon- Dr. Portier, was for some years the oldest treat to endeavor to reform abuses that had tablished, and of one of these, tha.t of Hexot-, tiff, We beg permission to point out wh ere it of our Bishop ~ , in age and in priority of conse· grown np to the great scandal of the pious, zinco 01' Gaxalcingo, Father Xuarez was made really is; and at the same time, to fill up a void cration, and, as will appear from the, annexed His estimate of the population of the vicariate Guardian. Zealous for the freedoin of the In,· left by him in the history of Kepler, notice of Bishop Juarez, administrator of the was, 2,000 at Mobile, wh ere the chmch had dim~s of the province, who had always lived" On page forty-nine, we read, "In the twenty- • oldest diocese ever erected within our limits. recently been destroyed by fire; 1,500 at Pen- peaceably and never risen against the Spaniards, second year of his age, he (Kepler) was Pro- Mi chael Porher was 'born at Montbrison, in sacola, wh ere th ere was an old wood en church; he obtained of the I}:ing that they should be fessor of Mathematics at Gratz." Now it may the department of Le Loire, in 1795, aud early and 2,000 at at. Augustine, where there was a taken by the Ol'own, 'and a royal order forbid interest many persons to know why the Luther manifested a vocat,ipn to the eccl ~ siastical state, tine stone church. These three places were th eir enslavement, and directed them to be well an Astronomer left home 'to accept a professor which a truly Ohristian mother gratefully en- reglllarly erected parishes. lreated. ship in a distant Oatholic University. Wolf c.ouraged. He wasstill in the Seminary when ' ~By aid from Rome and 'from the Association In the interest of his Indians he visited Spain gang Menzel informs us. "The theologians of Bishop Dubourg, in 1817, visit~ d France to of the Propagation of the Fai,th, he was ena- with six, three of high rank, and three of the Tubingen condemned his uiscovery because the appeal to tile zeal of the' clergy for co,htborers bled to enlargc his new church at Mobile, build lower order: these the king ordered to be Bible teaches that the Sun revolves about the in the vast diocese assign ~ d to him, a dipcese a seminary, and begin a new church at P ensa- dressed suitably ,to their rank, and taken back Earth, and not the E arth about the Sun, so replete-witll reminisce,nces of the zeal of ~he cola, and to send missionaries to visit the scat- as the climate of Spain seemed injurious to (Joshua commanded the Sun to stand still). French missionary and th~ intrepidity of th e tered Oatholics in the north'1- them. , Tbe King al so gave him a donation of He was about to, suppress his book, when an French !Baltimore, in 1829. at RIO de las Palmas, and as first bIShop, noml- Another German historian, also a Protestant, li~ confirmed, after due i~truction, no less than He soon afler obtained a filiation of the Visi- nat~d Father Xua,rez, enjoining O? him the pru- ,states tbat "the Lutheran theologians' pro forty of the sailors. Mr. Portier remained at tation Oonvent of Georgetown, which still sub- tectlOn of the IndIans, and espeCIally the sum- nounced his astronomical truths damnable, and Baltimore to learn English an,d prepare for 01'- sists. In 1838 he established an Orphan Asy- mons to be . made before r~sorting to force. condemned the theory because it did not appear dination. H e received Deacon's orders there, lum, which he confided, jn the year 184 t, to The zealous son of St. F'l'f,nCIS longed to enter to accord with the command of Joshua." Nay and then proceeded to St. LOllis, 'where he re- the Sisters of Oharity. To give permanence on -this fi .eld of labo;. Without awai,ting.'the ~or e , the same author intimates that the 'Ooper ceived the dignity of the Priesthood in,181 S, to the Oollege and Seminary, he sought a reli- Bull for hiS consec:'atIOn, or ~ e rhaps flymg from nican system was at that time refused only by I;ris zeal in the ministry soon exposed him, and giuus order, but the Eudists did' not long direct the honor by s:ekmg: the tOll, he pr?ceeded at the Protestants of Germany, in"tbe following year he was prostrated with them, and, in 1846, the Bishop confided the once ~o A,menca WIth the fl,eet ot ~arvaez, The Inquisilion 'at Rome began to move in, yellow fever. t After this he was sent to New establishments so dear to his heart, to the So· the Kll1g, ll1 c~n s equence of hIS nO,t bCIllg .con- this matter full half a , century too late to be Orleans as vicar, and appointed to establish a c.iety of Jesus, under whose fostering care they ~ecra, ted, allowll1g Imf! th~ first fruItS and tIthes 'now obnoxious to the charge of setting the ,ex school, on the then poptllar Lancastrian sys- have pro ~ p e red highly. At St. Augustine, a for IllS support, the erectIOn of a church and ample of arbitrary interference with the pursuits tem,! His labors here were eminently Sllccess- female Academy was opened, but the Institute house. , , . of science. This charge w~ have laid a.t the ful, and evinced rare qualities; The death of to which they belonged did not take root and After ,the wreck of, Pamtilo s fte.et, he aSSIsted 'door of the' Protestant consIstory of Tublgen, one of his companions, struck down in the out- the Academy S0011 closed. The care of orphan the Adelant~do by hIS soun~ adVICe. In May, and adduced in proof the testimony of two of set of his career, drew forth from his pen a boys and the direction of poor schools 'next 1527, Pamfil,o set out WIth three hundred, the most distinguished Historians of modern touchinO' tribute but could not deter him from claimed the attention of the Bishop, and in among others Father Xuarez an? a lay brother, Germany. If the Inquisition 'persecuted' Gali exposin~ himseif still more in his laborious January, 1847, he was relieved by the nrrival Brother John de Palos, thre~ pnests, and forty leo, which we emphatically deny-if it caused mission~§ " of some Brothers of OL~ristian Instrl,lction, w~lO se horsemen; but when, Ilew dIsasters came they his banishment-which bas never been pre- Meanwhile Flo.rida, so long a province of labors have ?een contmued to. the present tIme. began to c?ast ~Iong m w,retche.d, boats, Father tended, it but followed in the footsteps of the Spain, was ceded to the United States, and the o,n t,he erectIOn of the See ot Savannah, Ea st Xuarez, WIth hIS companIOns, Jomed the party self-constituted infallibles of Tubincren. Holy See resolved to erect that territory, till l' lond,a was,detached ~rom the See of M.oblle, ll~lder the Cont~dor Alfonso Enriquez, ,and If Tl:lbingen had been Rome, ~nd the. Con then subject to the Bishop ' of Havana or the and atter beln,g for .a time: pa,rt of the D~oce se atter great suffenng on the w~ter, were dnven sistory -the Inquisition, far-very far different Bishop of New Orleans, with the State of Ala- of S~vann a h. IS, agam a Vlcanate f\pos\ohc t ashore, and gradually all, pen shed except one would have been in popular history the relative barna, into a Vicariate Apostolic. To this new ,BIshop Portlel: was thus 'enabled to dev,ote person, No. rec.ord r emams of the las,t mo- reputations of Galilco and of Kepler, 'l'he divisioll R ev. Mr. Portier \,\'as named, and the hI~self more ,entIrely to the S~at~ of Alabam,a. ments pf thiS pioneer biShop', and conjecture gentlemen who compiled books for English and bulls actually reached him in the latter part of HIS last e r e ~tIonw,.s the ~rovld e nce Infirmary can scarcely POInt to the ,spot where 'be closed American youth knew well their trade, and 1825. He at once 'declined the burthen as one under tb e SIsters of Ohanty, wlllther on belllg his career: . . the merited correction of Galileo's perversity too great for hi5 shoulders, but on a peremp- s,eized, wit~l the drop~y, lie retired, and afte r a. Aut/wnl2eS, Torquemada,. MonarqUla In- has, by some literary legerdemain, secured for tory order he submitted to th ~ will of heaven, lin ge l'l~lg Illness expIred on th~ 14th of ~ay, di a~a I~,x. c. 23, I:Iwrer\ Hlst. Gen, d,e las him a species ,o.f i~mortality, whil~ toe incon and after makino' a retreat was consecrated at J 859, 111 the 33d year of IllS epIscopate, rhe Indlas Ill, 287 , 1 ; IV. 26, n-' 64, 1, 2. Oabeza sistent and unJushfiable persec.utlon of p o ~r St. LOllis ori th~ 5th of November 1826 Bi- local papers remarked that. "by his suavity 01 de, Va?a, Naufragos,T 10, .)8, 39,67. Al'l'ate, Kepler appears not to have deserved at theIr shop of Oleno in JJ Q1·tibus and Vic;r Apo~toli c manners, liberalitY ,of sentime?t, deed,S of be- Hlstona de la Islade Ouba, p. L79 . . , hands the poor trLlmte of a passing remark l of the Floridas. The field , before him was nevolence and chanty, he obtamed an l11f1uence -- ~ -.---- To what other cause can be reasonably attri- enouo·h to di scouraO' e a stout heart. In a and a general esteem, whi ch are among- the [From the N. Y . Metropolitan Record,] buted the undue exaltation of Galileo at his ex- strange country, app~inted Bishop of an extell- best human testimonies of a ~ e ll'OI' d e red I!fe," GaJil l' o and the R,)man Inquisition; a Defence of the pense? As Oatholics, we are proud of the sive district, in which there were only two or "H~ was lea:'ned.' of sO?l1d Jtldgment, str~ctly Catholic Church, frolll the charge of having persecuted Italian philosopher-proud of the country-. of h tl ltd l (J"tileo fol' his philosophical opinions. Gincinnati: three priests, who woul d . most probably be upngI 1, t ap d JUs t ll1 a II IS 101l~· 1. S a~, ac IOns, John p, Watsh. the ao-e in which he lived-an age of gn~ at ill- withdrawn before he reaclled the spot! No and ,gUIleless a,s became a Ohnstran, tellectual, superiority-an aQ:e illustrated by a, wondel' that h e wrote to a fflen' dId: " nee two \'~I ~' llOp Po r t1 e r was n ot all autllol'. . Se,\,,O r al This refutation of the oft-repeated slander Tasse;'a Macchiavelli, a Oampanella,~ a Bembo, or thr. ,e e priests, an d d are not' as k lorC t Ilem, as of' Ill' -~ I~ tters. were• publI'sll, ed _in tile Alln ' tIes de ,w ° ainst the Ohurch, that she persecuted science a Toricelli, a Guicciardini, an Ariosto! . But I am afraid I cannot now support them. I have Ia P ropag~ t IOn d e Ia F 01. ,TI ley are as C10.- I in th e person of Galileo, is reprinted from the we are not therefore bound -to close our eyes neithel pectoral, cross, nor c Ilape I, nor crOS.Ier , 10 ws·. NotIce sur M'. Andre F errary, vol . I . D'ltbli!l Review, and it is sufficient to convince to.the transcend ant genius of his Lutheran con- nor mItre., " A n d h' e mIg. IIt a dd , no means 0 t' No ' 2 ..P 57 . Two letters ll1, ' vol , 1. No., 5 anyone who is open to conviction of the false- temporary, the Legi. slator 0 f t h e PI anets. any kind as in communicatino- his wants to dated New O~'leans, 15th ~'pI'lI, 1818. L e tt ~ r boo~ ,of the charge. The whole s~bject is in- "Honor to whom honor"-and if Kepler be,re another fri end he wrote: "If yOou can buy the to his mother 111 1817, vol. 11 p, 413 n, Letter vestlgated th?ro:lgh,ly" ar:d treated III a manner membered-let not the "Theologians of Tubin. articles without' any money, it is an cxcellent to the Abbe Oolleton, New Orlean s, 23d June, t ha~ adds to ItS ll1tnnsiC 1I1tere~t. The 1l;mount gen" be forgotten l wa that I relish exceedinO'I '." Undeterred, 1826, p, 41,5, Letter to the Abbe Oantal, of 19norance betr~ly e d b~ wr~tcrs . on thIS sub- . . . . . b. Y b th' t h) ltd t h'I S New Orleans 31 st AU D'ust 1826 P 416 Let- ject and the hardIhood ot theIr mlsrepresenta- The effect of sectanal1lsm and rel1g-IOus pIe- ,,?we:etr, Yd' IS prospecd'l.e 11as ene °M. tel' to his mother p 419 to Abbi, should be sufficient to excite doubts in the J'udice in blunting the moral feelings is evident .lcana e an commence llS a bors, as IS- " " 'L e tt~r tb~ tion~ , . " .'hI' h h' d " SI' d B' I b I' t ' Oantal P ensacola 22nd January 1827 p 422 candId mInd as to other assertIOns aO'amst the from the perSIstence WIt w llC t IS an SImI- onary an IS lOp, Y preac llnO' a re reat at < , , "" '1 kl '" d ' , . t th Oh h 't t d Pensacola. II .' 0 Letter to same place, 10th May, 1827, p, 424, Church, made WIth equa r~e essne s ~ an ~IS- lar ?harges ag;allls , e urc are reI era e , , " .' . Journal of his journey from P ensacola to 1St. regard of trut~. The perslstance WIth wluch ag~lll and agam, and. that by men wbo would s ~he ~I s tll C t confided ~o, hIS care was de- AU O' llstine, il' . p, 73, Letter to the Editor of Protestant wnters have endeavored to fasten shrmk from propagatmg falsehood on any other' ocnbed, III 18' 21~ ~ s c0n.tam.mg two c!1Urc!les, the °Annales. Spring Hill, 16th January, 1831, this charge upon the Ohurc,h, is ren.larkabl~ ; matter .. ~o such it would be useless to com l:~ at St. Au g ~stme, WIth ItS:> OatholIc popu: iv. p, 693; LeLter to same, Mobile, 19th Au- and we mu s ~ sa): does but lIttle CrC?It to then- mend tbI~ lIttle w.orlt, but ~o th~s~ whose l.o y~lty tht!on of 3000 , the other at I ,where gust, 1831, p, 6 t 7 ; 23d December, 1831, regard for hlstoncal truth, or'trufh III the abo to truth lS superIOr to theIr e ~nsacola, r e h~IOus pr eJ~ldlce, co R ~ v. Dr, Ool~ma~ was statIoned, whI!e ,the p, 628. Letter to Very Rev, M. Bissaredon. stract. The article is prefaced by an able in- to those 'who would ~ave as nICe, ~ fee h~g ~f nsolmg news IS ,gIven to the OatholIcs. of May 16, 1838, xx. p. 4'17; to same, 1852, troduction from the pen of "An American Oa-' honor about slandermg com~u.Dl t i e s as mdl-' --- xxiv, p. 150. tbolic," in which some mi s s~atemen(.s made by viduals; we'would say .r~ad th~s httle book, and. • See the letter, An nales de 1" l'ropagation, ii, 413 note. the Hon. John Q. Adams, lll- an address de- see what endless -repetItIons wIiI effect,)H?W one, t lb. i. No. 5. * I.J a it,y's Oi.re'~ t o ry, U :;, l ~v. h .. ' - .1 +j La;t.v', Directory, 1822, p,llS. t Ann, de I" Prop. ;v ,71 , 69 /. livered in Oincinnati before the Astronomical assertion le,ads to anot er, more posItIve anw Ib ii 57 t See Catholic Alm.n acs, 1833, 1839, 1 8 4~ , 1846, 1847 , 1849, ' '1 tIt tl hI ' t A~D!;l es 'de ]" Propagation de la Foi, ii. 413-425, 1857. Society of that city som ~ tIme before bis death, more untrue, unt! a as 1e woe s ory as- 2 CATHOLIC TELEGRAPH AND ADVOCATE. sumes tbe co nsistence of an undeniable and assisted by tbe Rev. Thomas Ciano A most proceeded with th e election, The following is actual sEate, we find from a list now before u:- well-attested fact, Indeed, impressive and feeling sermon was preacbed on the result :-Rev, Dr, Russell , Maynooth, dig- that the collection contains 57 folio yolumes' •. The starry Galileo, with his woes," the occasion by tbe Rev. Thomas 'Kerrigan, nis~imus, Rev. Mr, Dorian, Loughenisland, distributed in the following order :-Ja nnary' wbo, in the most fervid language, impressed clignoi1·. Rev, Mr. Fitsimous, Cushend all. 2 yolumes; February, 3; March, 3; April, 3; has been the text for many a tirade against the upon the novice the solemn nature of the life dignus. The votes, I understand, were-16 May, 8; June, 7; and so on; and to give an Church, and we have no doubt it will ans' l'er she had espo u sed. ~ San Francisco Monitor, for Doctor Russell, 9 for Mr, Dorian, and 4 for idea of tbe number of Lives that fi ll tbese 57 for many a one to come, it having the advan The Rev. J ohn Pendergast, from All-Hallows Mr. F itzsimons. After the election all the pa- volumes, we will select the month of April and tage of provin g, not only l~ er love o,f pe~'secu College, arrived in San Francisco by the Golden ri~h priests were ent~rtai n e d at dinner by the go through part of it day by day: April 1st tion, but her hatred of SCIence, whICh IS the Gate, for the California Mission.-San F ran- BIsh?p. I need. not l}lform you that Dr. Rus- 40 Saints; 2nd , 41 ; 3rd, 26; 4th, 26; 5th: most popular and effective charge against her, cisco Monit01'. sell IS th e President of St. Patrick's Coll ege, . 20, &c. Total for the month of April, 1472 and, therefore, not likely 'to be given up. . ... ' Maynooth, and tlie able and ~cco mpli s h ed Hves! According to this account of one month, On Sunday, the 4th ~n s t., t:le dedlcatlOn?t biographier of Mezzofanti," [The Times says, and judgiog by approximation, th e whole 57 MARRIAGE AND FAM[LY DUTIES IN GEN ERAL, A PasLO ral Letter of th e Most Rev, J, B. the church of St. FranCIS X,avler t~ ok pl ace. m that Dr. Russell is r,eall y the accomplished volumes must contain more than 26,000 Lives Purcell, D, D., Archbishop of Cinc inn at i, Second Weymouth Center, N otw lthstandmg the m- scholar described by the F1·eem,ln. Our con- of Saints, The original conception of the Acta to:dilioll, Revised and Currected by the Aulhor, c l~m e n cy of the day, the chu,rch was crow~ed temporary, howevel:, is in errpr in stating that belongs to the 16th century. At the time of Cincinn ali: J, p, Wa lsh, Bookse ller and Publisher, With a v,ery numerous and pIOUS congregatIOn Dr, Russell the President of Mavnooth was the Council of Trent, Lipomani, Bishop of The Catholic community should feel indebted fro,m the n eig hbor~ng Yill~ges. . . ~ne of t~l e ieadin g opeaker!1 at th e"recent'Dub- Verona, and at one time President of the Coun- to the publisher for prese nting in a convenient Th e Rt. Rev. BIshop Fltzpatnck, aSSIsted by 1m meetmg, '£he Dr. Russell who took a part ci l, published six folio volumes, but in about a form the Pastoral of the Mo~t Rev, Archbishop the Rev, James Healy of Boston, the Rev. Fa- in that demonstration was a Dominican of score of years afterwards they underwent a ~f Cincinn,ati on the solem n ~acrament of Chr.is- ther ~apst (late of Bangor), Rev. P. Cuddi hy Dublin.] . searching critical examination at the hands of tJan ,Marriage, and the duties connec ted With of Milford, and reverend clergy of the parish, Law, Surius, who bad them brouoo'h t out in a 'e f Wi'tness, we dd e d II, e, Tl'liS va1 ua bl e l'ttlI ·· e , b 00 k s IIOU ld per orme dIdt Ie e d!CatIOn" 0 f t 1 Ie b til'Id' m cr m' t1 le ScoTLAND ,-The Scotch dissentin oO' far neater and more classical style_ 'd I· . 1 t d d tl t tl 't t ' I 'b d b I ,0 I paper, has the foll ow in g: :-ROMISII SEM"INARY b e WI e y clrcu a e ,an Ie ru IS I eon ams usua m'anner prescn e y tie ntua 1 ; t Ie ~ In 1559, Father Rosweyde commenced in 1 d f 11 b d t I . d' I ' I 1 l' IN DUNDEE ,-Mr. Thiebault, merchant, has set b rong IIt to th e I(DOWie ge 0, a. w ~ 0 no c 10lr urmg t Ie time a ternatc y c lantmg the earnest at the College of Douay, the task of , tl t f tl bl t dId Af I d d' , aside upwa rd s of £ I ,000 for erec tin g an In- ~ reaI Ize Je na -nre a Ie olga IOns mcurre psa ms an responses. ter tIe e !CatIOn, I hunting- up unlmown documents and bring'l'ng I I ~titution for the residence of 'a nu mb~ r of teach- ~ by, and the duties incumbent on, t lose w 10 en- High Mass was sung by the B,ev, p, Cuddihy, to lioo' ht fOl'lrotten Saints. H is preliminary ' 1 t' .L~ T Y. HCt d hId b 1 R F I ers designated the 110rris Brothers, who w.ill ~ ter upon t IIe marriage re a IOnS,-lY, • .lUe ro- an t e sermon preac 1e y tIe ev. at l~r work, the Fasti Sanctm'um, was published in l' R d B h' . . d under take the education of a larg-e number of po Itcm ec()]- . apst, w 0, III very Impressive an appropriate Roman Catholic boys, Several''other Roman 1607, and he ' announced 17 volumes folio- o. language explained th e object and intentions of two on th e Life and Festivals of Christ and His Catholics have also met and subscribed a suffi- · the Church in dedicating certain places to (he Blessed Mother; one ' on the solemn festivals CATHOLIC INTELLIGENOE. . f Hi Al . I d' b 'ld' cient sum to co mm ence the bllilding of a school se rvICes 0 e mIg lty, an III Ul lllg up in connection with the Institution, of the Saints; twelve on the Acta Since1'a of On Saturday, Nov. 12th, R,ight Rev. Bishop the temple of God' in the,souls of the faithful. the S,aints; one on the ,Martyr9log'ies, and the ~ TI M fBI r [The "Morris'" Brothers are no other than ~ Gmce set out for St, Anthony's Fa, IIil, and aI'- Je ass rom reet loven was penormed remaining- tw o for eight categ'ories of notes and the " Marist" Brothers who are well known ~ rived there, throuoO'h a heavy snow-storm, at by the, choir of the Cathedral, who under the as most ,skilful and efficient instructors of thirteen tables. "I suppose," sa}is Cardinal six o'clock in the eyeninoO" The Falls no lon g-e r directioQ of Mr. Werner, afforded a rich treat to Bellarmine, '''the man intends to live for two ~ 1 . I' . ' , youth.] answer the description given of them by Hen- t Ie congregation III Istenlllg to the sublime hundred years.", But besides this enormot\s uepin in 1683. From the point where they music of the Catholic Church. The Rev, Dr. Marshall has been promoted task, Rosweyde wrote pamphlets against Casau- once plunged from an elevation of forty or sixty 'We congratul,ate the people ,of Weymouth in by the Right Rev. Bishop Gillis, V,A" from St, bon, Scali ger, Cappel" and many eminent PrQ fee t into a rocky canon below, they have re- having so tine a church, being , upwards of one Mary's, Edinburgh, to the charge of St, Pat- testant ministers; published in Flemish the ceded over a mile, widening the bed and re- hundred feet ' by forty- ~ ve, together with a pas- rick's, Canongate. "Henbits of the Thehaid," ~h e "Lives of the ducing the perpendicular descent to sixteen or tor's house, erected in their midst; and we like- An interesting, fa ct is, that in the greater Holy Virgins,'" Ribadaneira's "Flowers of the twenty feet The view is still grand and im- wise congratulate the Rev, A. L, Roach, by n.umber of th e addresses of the Spanish Epis- Saints," and an 'ed ition of the Vital Patl'um. posing, though it loses much of. its wild -and whose exertions the church has been erected, copal bOlly to the Queen, on the occasion of the, In 1629, he at last entered on his great work" picturesque effect from the numerous mills and on the completion of such a 'truly good work.- war against the infidels, the situation "of the and asked only twelve ' years to finish it, He dams which modern enterprise has constructed Boston, Pilot. ;Holy See, and the grief.which is inflicted on the was t9 go to press in the month of October, upon and around the Falls. The Catholics in, On the 24th ult., seven Franciscans arrived H oly F ~t h er, are mentioned in a sense in every but news came th at Bois-Ie-Duc was taken by St. Anthony have a large stone Church in pro- in Alton to join the Order already establi~hed way similar tb that of the pastoral letters of the tbe Dutch, that the Jesuits had been expelled cess of erectiofl; the style is mixed Gothic, in that city. French bishops,-HallGs Correspondence. by the Calvinists, and that their books were chaste' and elegant. It is much needed, as the The central commi ttee of the Swiss Pius flung confusedly into narrow boats, He fell present Church, a neat"frame building, can ac- The corner-stone of the new church of the sick ; and while in that state was called' to at- commodate but a portion of the congreg.l\tion_ >Annunciation, was laid at St. Louis on the ~ 27th Verein (Society of Pius I X, ), has sent an ad- tend a person lying dangerously ill of a conta There is also here a very pretty German ult., by the Most Ret'. Archbishop Kenrick. dress to the Holy Father to express, in the name gious malady. On' the 6th of October, 1629, Church, besides an establishment of the Sis- 'The sermon was delivered by the Rev. p, of the Swiss Catholics, the grief and devotion poor F , Rosweyde was carried off, in his 60th tel'S of St. Joseph, with pay and free schools Feehan. 'fhe erection of the church is to be /lxcited in them by the situation of th e States of yearby a violent fever. attached. On Sunday 13th Nov., the Bishop carried'forward by the Rev. P. J , Ryan. the Church,- Ch1'oniqueur of Fribourg. The death of Rosweyde forms the epoch preached to a very large audience, and con- 'The Rev. Eugene O'Hea, for several years The Grand Duke of Baden, in presenting to whence dates the real commencement of the firmed forty-three persons_ on the Mission in the State of Mi ssouri, and for the States the n'ew concordat with Rome, ex- Acta, though twenty years were still requi.red '1'he recent fall of snow had caused the sud- the past year assistant pastor at the church of presses a hope that the same spirit of liberal before tile l;lying of the foundation stone of den disappearance of all wheeled I'ehicles, and the Immaculate Cenception in St. Louis, has and religious feeling which has brought about this imperishable work. The Society 'O f Jesus, in the afternoon the Bishop found a beautiful left on a visit to his native land, Ireland. this concordat will be felt in its examination by who bad to guard the inheritance of their de- sledge, with two spirited horses, in waiting, to . , . . _ the Chambers and its execution.- Ami de la parted brother, entrusted the prosecution of his take him to Bottineau Prairie, sixteen miles dis- THE plO ceed~ of the late Fall fO! the benefit Religion. work to John Bollandus, born in Tillemont, HI b'd I d f of the orphans of St. Mary's Asylum Frank- , D 1 f L' bAD 1596 At h tanto \IV len a out ml way, a cava ca eo · r t t t d t $3 92376 ' The funeral of the RIght Rev. Dr. Brady. uc ly 0 1m u rg, .., . t e some twenty horsemen, Canadians and half- $1~ ",sl r~eO' a'l~houSn.et ,0 f C'I :' . - el~p : n ses ,Bishop of Savanah, U,S" took place in th~ school of Utrecht, where he completed his pre- · d . 1 ' tl I d "'''' ,'" . e IS els 0 lauty III CHI O'e of CI I f' IF ' M" P , - paratol'y studl'es lie' was faml' ll'ally I blee s, was seen applOac ling; ley la ,come tl' I t't' d tl ' r tl h 0 ' lUrc lOt Je orelO"n ISS Ions at arls Ill , . , , . ,' mown to meet and escort the Bishop ,to the Church. ' Ill~ , ns ItUfLIOIl1tbank lelr ItI ed,o rp [anhs, rd~ffiturn presence of a laro'e cO~loTe o-a lion ~mono. wbich amongst his fellow-students as 'the Cornucopia. ' f h I ft' , d t lelr OTa e u an s to t1Je , ales 0 t e l er-· "'. 0 0 .' '" S' t' '1'1 h kId A f ter a b rle a t to pro er servICes an ex- to . hIt d tl I aSSIsted the pupils of the IrIsh Colleo-e the cun wnl1n. ' lOug no' 'now e ge came pres3 thanks, the cortege moved on at a rapid en t ansd es w JO exel~ ell ? emsett~es so ge ~~r- Vicar-General of Paris, the President °of the am iss to him, in historical learning especially, pace.~us ~ a~ . so s~f~es~eu ll~1 ge t~ng ~IP \a ~s ,Association of th e Propagation of the Faith, he had no equal. " Names, dates, topooTaphy, S Bottineau Prairie is one of the most fertile in t~r Se ,aJ;-M It 1 7- ~I e.r lelr an d as? 0 'Mr. Deso'lajeux, several American .Cath.olics, &c" once treasured up in his memOl)" were • the State. It is all settled and under fine cul~ ~ ~ns to "tla a 0\1 Jell' genJ7uJ, on~tlon, and the °Brothers Hospitallers of St. John of never forgotten. One' of the Professors under tivation. 'fhe settlers are chiefly Canadians and, . ~~ a l~o 0 to l ~r ~etr · e;:n a~ l ~ les ';:.,JO" so God , MOT. Amanthon, a Dominican missionary whom he afterw ards studied Theology at Lou- half-breeds. , The ChurGh 'Of the 'Conception is :ll, eMra , y pa l'Ol1lSe 18 F dther Ra. voux preached in F.ninch. ,We read in the (Jim'nali di Roma :-"On unng , ensc JelliUS unng ' ,an ape- 'h th ft ture and , the . prodig- ious activity of mind it broch [.01' 55 years -On the tomb of the last R, e tu . rmng t 0 St, ','A n, ony. Ill. e a ernoo.n, the ,afternoon of the "'1st ult., the Pope "'ent . ~ , . _. '" n (w inces in the sphere , of which it is the obj'ec t, nalned J's tIle t'o Ilowin O' sl'mple I'nscription . f f I the oldm ebr escort I ddo. ,t.w:entyf l.olsemI de n wasf 11 m-f un'expectedly to the Cemetry'of Calil'sto. on t'lle it'will appear surprising that such a work should '0'- erca ~ e. y t l~ a ,ILIO n 0 SIX S e ges u 0 right of Villa Appia, and descended into the be a sealed fountain to many! The popula r Quod Rosweydus prpararat, these ,Joyous and lIght-hearted people. .T ,h e, crypt of the \'ir_,crin 'and martyr Sal'nt Ce' ci ly, and I k d' I Quod Bollandus inchoarat, 1 1 f I dId th d ' J knowledge of t Je wor an ItS aut IO rs must o_ng In e. 0 IO rsemen an s e ges, ~ rapl Ity 'prayed .before her image w.hich has withstood necessarily be to a large ,extent, second hand, - Quod H ll nschenius formarat. WI h. . whLC, hI they h b .sp,'ht ed over the tl w.., Ide open the. vicissitudes of ele'ven centurl'p,s, H'ls Ho- and even a know Ie( Ige 0 f ,t Il at d escnptlOn.. is ,Perficit Pap,eb,rochius_ pr~lt'le, WIt 1 t ~ rl,g' snow m~n mg every-, liness prayed on the very spot where the yen- ft t '1 tt' bl U d tl I In the year 1635, Henschenius commenced thmg, and the Jlllgl111 g of the 'slelgh-hells, pre- erated remains were buried so loncr bero' tl 0 en no easl y a ailla e, n er Je worc t d It tl rId " 'f 0 l'l e ley "Bollandists," Appleton's N ew Ame1'ica.n Cy - hi s cont~'i bution s~y ith the "Acta of St. Amand" ~e n e a, oge ler a scene Ive y -a n mspl.fl mg W,ete placed in the tomb prepared for th em by clopedia treats the subject in less than a single for the 6th of February. That work form&Jtn III the hl,ghest degree. TI~e greater portlOn.of order of 'Pope Ul·ban. The Pope, who was column, and, though iLs statements are correct, event in the history of the Bollandists. !Ien the cortege attended the' Bls.hop tl~e whole diS- accompanied by some - members of the com- they must be evidently insufficient to conyey to schenius devoted twenty-two paragraphs to bis tance to St. Anthon!-dashmg With un a~at~ d :missipn of Sacred Arcbreology, examined the ,the reader any notice like ly to make an im- Prolrgomena on the life of the Saint-h ~ dis- :8pee.d across the blldge that sp~ns the M)SSIS-crypt with great abtention." . h" d cussed tIle year of his birth"his native country, SIppI, through the 'streets of the city-and up to pressIon on IS mm , ,- the uoor of the church_ The returned in the IRE-LAND.-:-The Belfast correspondent of the The composition of the A cta Su.nctorum waS the Order to which he belonged, and his Apos- same order after receivin O' th!Bishop's ih k -Freeman writes, under date of 'fuesday night: commenced nearly 260 years ago, and strange tolic labors_ ,Many perplexing eras in Frencb .. and blessinrr,-N. ,y. F1.i'eman. ' -an s. ----:-"In conseqence of t?e. declining health of the to say, it has not yet advanced in tl!e Calen,dar History were finely cleared up. ; and through . '~. Right Rev. Dr: ;Denvlr It became necessary to 'beyond the 1st of Nevember. DUring the tIme the Whole mass of this varied information, ColD- On Thur~d ay morm~g, NOY.l I7,at' the Can- elect a coadjutor bishop to assist his Lordship the Society of Jesus had been suppressed, and prising eighty-eight clo s~ly printed folio pag~S ':vent of the PresentatIOn, Powell-stre'et, ' Miss iIi the administration of the affairs of the dio- of the French Revolution, the materials for the in columns, the reader IS enabled to find bls FI:ances Phelan-!n reJigiOI~ , Sist e r ' Mar~ Teresa 'cese of 'D c;>w n and Connor,. Accordingly, up- months of November and December were lost, way without any difficulty, by a running C,o.m t ,Joseph CalasanctLUs--'recelved the .whlte veil, lwards of forty parish priests 'assembled to-day but have been since found, and it is said that mentary of marginal notes. To every subj,eo , ,.at the hands of the Most Rev.' the Ar.chbishop" in St. Patrick's Chapel, Donegal-street, ' and no time will be lost in publishing them_ In its on which a difference of opinion migjIt 'pOSSIbly CATHOLIC TELEGRAPH AND ADVOGATE~ SAN ..... Wi! !2i!b"W?&E' ,ffiPiSiiWBfW'!Hd94NWOW M&P¥9@t8R' SdHMiACf· exist, the canons of model'n historical criticism .The love of mischief is generally strong in for tlle convel'sion of the "Papists," and uf the any other woolen fabric, which she should are most rigorously applied. When the work boys; but this mischief only degenerates into heathen, who, somehow or another', are never wrap closely about her-still, however, without of the pupil was presented to Bollandus, he crime when the latter goes unpunished, or is converted, in spite of the mints of money which changing her position. was so pleased with the production, that he re- rewarded. Boys get into mischief often simply are spent for this benevolent purpose, by a gen- There may be nothing new in these rules, solved on remudelling the whole month of for want of employment; they don't know what erotts but misguided public. Here is a brace but there is something useful, w bicb is beLIeI'; January prepared by himself on the model uf to be at, and the want of inventive faculties sets of instances in point; they are taken from a and we commend them to the notice of the nu his young friend. . them to imitating. The necessity for good secular paper: merous fair ladies WllO are constant readers of In the space of 25 years, the 1170 Acta of models to copy then, becomes of first importance. THE FOREIGN MISSION DEFALCATION.-The the MIRRoR. - Baltimol·e Catholic Mil'1'Or. the Saints of January and the 13100f February Children should be entert.ained at homc as fflr removal of Rev. Dr. Pomroy from the Secre- • -among which the Life of St. Bridget alone is as possible, particulady at nigbt; reading, taryship of the American Board of Commis- TEE 'I'REASURE- HQUSE OF AN AFRICAN EM- a volume-were welcomed with enthusiasm by music and innocent games, should have due en- sioners for Foreign Missions, a position which PERoR.- The Monituer de l'A1'1nee gives the the religious and literary world. Even Pro- couragement. The following paragraph con- he has held so long and so ably, was briefly following description of the Emperor of Mo- iestants J'oined in the general admiration. Vos- tains some wholesome advice: annollnced by tele0'1'aph 'rIle con~"ssl'on ulade' I ,,' 1" , . rocco s treasure- louse at Mequinez : sius, who had written with great bitterness "DU'l'IES OF P ARE:;'TS TO THEIR CHILDREN.- to the Prudential Committee of ·the Board by against the Acta of St. Antonii, maintaining Dr. Bellows, of New York, preached a very Dr. Pomroy appears to justify the action taken In the middle of the garden stands a fortress, . f tl C t b with a triple wall, perfectly armed and defended. th a t t. h e use 0 f t Ile SlO'n 0 le ross was no so able and I'ntel'estl'ng- sel'mon laot SUllday, tIpOll )' I't I'n deposl'no. Ill'm fl'om office He a~know o ~ ~ ",' , - In the central inclusure rises a stone buildinO' ancient as there represented, promised to re- tIle dllll'es of parents to tllel'l' Clll·ldl·ell. It w"s leches llavl' nO' assocl'ated " 'I'lll publl'c wonlen on "" tract when he saw the Preface of the Bollan- ar_.O'ued, among- other thing's, that the separation~" three different'" occasions nand each one of the lighted only from the roof. It is entered through .~ v " three iron doors, one after the other. The dists wherein they pro d uce num b er Iess texts qf the youni!: from the old in social life was a depraved chamcters with whom he had corres- I ·· t tl' . • ~ pavement of t le interior is black marble, and f rom t h e F< at h ers re ternng 0 liS pIOUS prac· grave error- that children \vere often brough I. pondence had extorted from him $500. The d' I · T l ' 1 b't 'd '{T • t' "h . I' f d' at one en IS a arge opening-, throug-h which tIce. 0 lIS lOnor e I sal , v OSSlLlS ai, - up with less acquaintance with their parents c ue to tnese acts was reveale by opel1lng h ld d'l ~ ~ fully kept his promise, for in his very next than with the servants in the kitchen-that private letters, supposed to be on the business t e go an S1 vel' coin, bullion and jewels are conveyed to the treasure below. This last wor k h e not on Iy re t rac t e,d b u t even sal t e d novell'eadl'ng:, wI'tIl a careftll select'Ion of bool,s, of the Board while Dr Pomro}' was tempora ~ , . - mentioned place is an extensive vault, divided that men could now distinguish between truth ought·to be encouraged, and card-playing, with- rily absent from Boston. It will be l'emem- . an d fi c II'on . "TT.tU! cel·ta a dub;/'s, " 1"1'obab;l;a, , a out g'am bl'lUg:, coun t enance;d tl la t d omes t'IC bel'ed that tIle extens_ l've defalcatl'ons of Mr. IUtO compartments of equal size, in each of . man1:l;1 este J+: U l 81S. seCel'nan te/'. " All d ue al'1 o.w- dramas should~ be played, and heroic biogra- Porter, of , PI1I'ladelpI11'a, "or'luel'lyl' Secretary of which is the value of a million piastres. The ances n:~de! the Acta Sanctorurl!' well deserves phies read-that no child should be required to the Sunday School Union, were revealed in net produce of the taxes is lodged in the trea- the admiration of• ther wOI'ld.' SIIIce Alexander• s t u d y more tl'lan SIX Ilours a d'ay, IllC I u d'Ing: th e tIle .same mannel·. HI's confessl'on I'S to thl's sury ever-v" three m,mths. The Emperor, him- u uIIv ., an d B ene d IC t Xl v., SlUce B e IIal'mllle an d time taken for recitation and that the school~ eCl.'ect'" '. self,. wIlen at Mequinez, is present on the occa- . M b'll' M . d DC' slOn ; but in his absence he names three of the Bona .. wl.th .a I lO.n, u.rat.ol'l.an u. anQ:e ,teachel's 'vho would first adopt tlll'S system, "That .ome months aO'o lle was walkl'nO' out . ~ , ' '0 '", chIef officers of his household to attend for him, ha~e .untted III -theIr pral.s~ WIth yOSSlU.S and would secure the' greatest reward for themselves. in the evening, and was accosted by a well- knowing well that mutual distrust will.scarcely Lelbnttz! Bayle and ~abrIc\us, theIr claIm .to The idea promulgatcd was, that while there dressed female, and, at her request, accom- II h the ~ratltude .of mankmd can. scar.cely be dlS- Sl1011ld be pal'ental alltllOJ'ity, and childlike obe- . d h t I h WI 'I' tl I a ow t em to concert a robbery, and if they B pante er 0 leI' ome. 11 e III le par 01' should do so, they would soon betray each puted. Napoleon spoke as highly of them as dience the domestic household should find in conversation with 'her a man came in, and, of Ture~ne, and no~ lo~g since De Hal~mer and within'itself the source and means of the purest under the threat of exposure, forced him to. other, or be denounced by tile black guardians · GOlTes III ~erm.anr, and Monge, ~U1Z0t and and greatest happiness." sign a note of $500, which he did, and subse- ~~stfl:sf~~fi~be;~i:en ~~n~;\~~~lk~;:~~r~a7.:: St: ¥arc Glrardm III France, subscnbed to the According to the Catholic theory, religious quently paid it. Since that he was enticed by earthen jars; but on one occasion the conte~ts oplUlOn of one of the most. learned amongst th,e, I'nstl'uctl'on should underlie all other, and this is another female into another house, and there f t f JIB II d Wh 0 ten were abstracted, and the robbery con- co un ryme~ 0 o.m ,.0 an us ..." atever, undoubtedly the greatest safeguard; although, two men assailed him and forced him to sign cealed by filling the jars with earth and cover. says De Rlffe~belg, be the 0pllllOns you pro- oftentimes, the fruits of it are not observed for another note for $500, which he subsequently i,ng t,he top with a few gold pieces. The theft f~ss, ~r t1:e phil?sophy y?u ad~p.t, ~e you. be- many years after. Still it rarely fails to tell in paid. Another woman, by the representation was not discovered immediately; but a black bevelS. or unb~!I~vers, zealots or Jlldlfferen~lst~, time, and to save the young mind and soul, that she was suffering with a dissipated hus- who had seen the rob1?ers in the act, and had Catholtcs or dl.sclples of Luther an.d Ca.lvlU,. lf eventuall fl'om d~struction. band and destitute children, enlisted his feel- y, v been nearly murdered by them and left for you Iove 1earntng and h ave any h IS t onc b e 1Ie f •• , ings, and he opened a correspondence with her, d d fi - d in the past, you must respect the Acta Sanc- d bIb 1 d' f M 01 t . ea ,a terwar recovere,d and gave information [From the Cincinn,ti D,ily Commerci,l.] an su sequent y, y t le a vlc.e 0 , 1" . loa e; against them. The Emperor ordered the ten tOl'um as one of the gteatest monuments of Marriage of First Cousins. paid $500 to get his letters back, which h~ thieves to be decapitated and directed that their learning, and as the archives of the grandest did and de~troyed them" epochs in-the histpry of man." M. The evil consequences of the marria,Q,'e~ of' , ' . heads should be placed in the ten J' aI's which blood relations, have. become so formidable A f1 F they had emptied, as a warning to others. •.•• that they have finally commanded tbe attention . ccid~nts rom . irJl. These vases are still in the treasur.y, placed on (From the Baltimore Mirror) of Chief EA'ecutive Officers and Legislatures of 0 ur dally papE'" rs recOl. ' dadCCI en ts from fi re mar bl e pedIM estra s. uley-Ismail's ~uccessor .Save the ·,Ohildren. several States-usuaily th~ v'ery last parities to so .often, that .people. have almost learned to determined to adopt a different arrangement, In walking along the streets, we often ob- whose consideration such important facts are read them ~vJ[h mdlfference. We speak of and built the vaults now existing. The Em serve little boys belongiug to various conditions presented. In the State of Virginia, . the con- personal ac.cldents, such as ,frequently . c~use peror Muley Soleiman, well known for his , in life imitating, (we w.ere gciing to say their sequences of family intermarriages have become death, and alway~ the most mtense suftermg. cruelty, was accustomed, after the quarterly superiors), their elders. Just as we were appalinO', and an effort is about to be made to Females, for obvIOUS r;,ason~: are. most ~o~; deposits; to have all th.e blacks pu.t to de~th coming into the sanctum, we saw two groups interpo;e legal ubstructions against it. In Ke.n - monly the sufferers. l~e burmng flUids who had been engaged m the operatIOn. Abld typical of their class. A parcel of little .fel- tucky, simiJar disastrous effects have been re- are generally under theIr management; so del' Rhaman, his successor, abolished that atrc lows, a school of minnows we may call them, alized, and Governor Magoffin in his late mes- that here is one great source of exposure: ~ cious usaO'e but he decided that the blacks em" were pummelling one of their companions who saO'e, dwells upon the subject in language which Anot11er is their style of dr,ess, w.hi~h has so ,ployed i~ ~lTanging the money in the vaults was keeping up a running fight, wbile his as- fai~ly portrays the extent and magnitude of the often attracted the flames from foot lIghts and should never leave the building. .It would, sai·lants were uttering, in sharp trebles, yells evils growing out of legalized incest, and ear- open fires of all sorts. A few years ago, a fe- therefore, be useless for them to steal the trea and imprecations. There was no fight appa. nestly recommends the passage of a law utterly male attendant in a stor~ in this city was burnt sure, as they are separated from the rest of the rently; it was a mere stage scene on the street; prohibiting the marriage of first cousins. He to death f~'om the exploslOn of a, c~mph.ene or world, and ,could neither spend or conceal it. a copy from real life; a drama exhibiting but says there are over 800 idiots and feeble- et.hereal OIl lamp, under the followmg .clrcum· , ••• mock passions and mock tragedy. These boys minded children in Kentucky, and the number stances: the lamp. wa~ half full of flUid when It has been decided in EnO'land thartrades- 'had the appearance of belonging to' thriving is steadily increasing. He attribntes the evil sl~e attempted ,to .hght It, and h.ad .two tubes for men ticketing .their goods for "'sale in tbei·r win people. . chiefly to the cause ftbove assigned, and while Wicks, ~ne of whICh on ly was In use, the ?ther dows at a specific sum, can n0t be compelled. to We passed another group. Half a dozen recommendino' the establishment of a School of tube belllg open and uncapped. In applymg a sell them at the price marked. little ragamuffins, with a vile segar between Imbeciles, he"'exhorts the Legislature to pass an flame to the wick, it caught th~ ga.s passing It is intended to apply to Parliament for every two of them, were puffing the nauseous act for the "prevention of marriage between through t~le ?pen tube, and cam.ed It . at once power to construct a railroad through the smoke in their own and other peoples' faces. first cousins," and proceeds to remark: to the flUl~ In the laI?P, explodlllg the latter 'I'hames tunnel, to connect'two roads on either These chaps were ill-clad and thin-visaged, and "By a sino'le act of the Leo'islatIlre you save and thrOWing the bUl'l1lng flUid over the clothes side of the .river, by whom the tunnel is to be looked as if they wanted bread more than to· in the future" an immense am"'ount of sufl:'erinO'. and person of the attendant. This is a form purchased for .the purpose. bacco. We knew a dissolute old fellow, some You can diminish, according to the opinion ~f of accident ~hat, of c.ollrse, can be .easily , ••• thirty years ago, who would, perhaps, be to tho,e who have fully investigated this subject, guarded against, e~pecI~]]Y when . care IS en- Post-Office Register. these chaps a rep1'esentative father. He brought twenty per cent. of the number of imbeciles,' in- forced by so fatal a warnm&" . Kew Yo~k, Plliladelphia, Buffalo, Oleveland, Colum'buB elevenpence home one evening to his huno'!'y sane deaf mutes, and blind children. Render The hoop~ worn by ladles have, upon nn- ·anel PIttsburgh, open at ten a.m ., and nine pm.; 'l dId' d '" f I I. b ht f ' I and close a.' eIght a.m. a. n.t! half-Past eight p.rn an d expec t an t -fami y, an Ie Irecte "Tom" the marriage of cousins illegal, and a great evil Il!erous occaSlOns, 0 a e, roug on a,a ac-' Boston, Baltlmore, WashlllO'ton, D.C .. Wheeling and to go out and· buy eight cents worth of bread is at once eradicated. At least from fifteen to cldents. When the dress ~'lkes fire from .be-, Spri.ngfield, open at ten a.om., and len p.m.; apd close 'and four cents worth of whiskey. Whiskey twenty per cent. of all these sufferers, are t'he low, what shoul~ be done .. The first thmg, at eIght p.m. . ., t h d I' k' b bl th t 11 b d th t tl I d Chicagu; &c., open at eight a.m., and two p.m.; and was actIVe In our own t en, an t 11ll mg how offspring of cousins. A gentle~an of. science, pl:O a y, a WI. e o.ne, IS, a .' Ie a Y .c1ose at twelve 'p m. . little four cents 'would get, patel·:familias im- of learning, and enlarged expenence, who has ~Vlll run t? the slleet dO?I, or . elsewhere, look- Toledo, Detroit, &c, open a't eight a.m., and ten p.m.; mediately changed his order to a "fip's worth for a long time paid a ,Q,'J'eat deal of attention to lUg for aid, a.1~ost terr!fied to death.' as well close at twelve p.m. ' ' h f . ~ ~ I b I I bId fl St.'Louis, oPen at eight a.m.; and close at five p.m. o f b read an d a fi p s wort 0 whiskey." This this suhject, recently informed me he never yet s Ie ~ay e, w 11 e .ecom1ng.enve ope '\I1 ames; Indianapolis, open at. eight a.m., and ten p.m.; close ::It -was a hard change for the fami ly, but they had seen all the children so related sound in In thl~ man~er she almost.lllsures her own de- one a.m. and five p.m. were willing to bear it as a compromis~. Not body and mind'. There is al ways among- some sLruct.lOn .. The flames nse up around her,. Nashville,. N. Orleans, Cairo, Memphis nnd Natchez, ~ I d tl I b d h 1 h d open at elght a.m. "and foul' p.m.; close at eight a.m. so teoh I d man, IlOwe vel'. H e suO'O'ested an- of them some defect, mentidly or bodily. 'A reac Itng Irec; Y.ler· ? y, er arms, Ie: ea Lo~isvi l le, open al eight a.m., and five p.m.; close at other change, still more whiskey'" and less laro'e number of the pupils (so say the teachers) a~d face, leavlllg nothIng for her but Imme- eIght a.m. . . . hread; and before Tom left the house, he had I'll t"'lle Deaf and Dumb AS)7lums are the child- dlate death! or d. eath, after a few da.ys, more· Ham!lto,n and Dayton, open at twelve a.m., and ten p.m. ; 'close a[ one a m., and three p.m. orders that he dared not disobey- to lay the ren of cousins. At Danville tlLere are fOUl" sis- or I ess, 0 f I:ngen~g torture. . . . Portsmouth, Chilicothe, Marietta, Wllmington, Circle- money all out in whiskey, as bread was too tel'S, deaf and dumb, tILe childl'en of cousins " Now, suppose. lUstead of runmng ab~ut III ville and Zanesville, open at eight a.m ., an,d nllle ..,--d'ear! t"ey "ave two s'Yleaking bl'others, both in delicate fear and dls.. trac.tlO .n., .shO'e throws herself slm,p.ly I p.m.; close at one a.m. to to r h fl I d r I I Th lexington, &c" open. at twelve n.m., and nine p.m.; These boys ought to h ave laid out their pen, liealth. Tlm'e is also, from anothe1' family, upon t e . 001, CI Yin",. a ou lor le p. . e close at one a.m., and twelve p.m. nies in bread, or ginger cakes, or apples, or the1'e, a sister ' and brothel', children of _cousins. flames ~~turall'y pass directly upwards, and m- Newport and Covington, open at eight ·a.m. and four something nourishing:; but like old C __, ml'el'e;s a.not"el' in,.tance o.f sister and brother, s. tead of mvesttng h. er who,le person, they. only p.m.; close Ilt three p.m. ~ .L I., " ":J 'I h I I b TI 1 Hillsborough and Springfield, 0.; open at twelve m.; t h ey had a mind to be luxurious. tl, . also deaf and dumb the childl'en of second mvo v.e er ower 1m s. le.n t Ie portIOn of cl,?se at balf-pa.st one p.m. Children, unfortunately,' a·re ready ,to follow c~~s~~s, slwwing that the' defect extends beyond the dre~s under her will burn but sl?wly, if at Riclimond,'Ind., and Eaton, 0., open a[ eight ::I.m., and bad example. It's needles's to speak of pa· ' t"e 'second' denree In the institution at all, wlnle th&t above, held away m a good wtel'l~ p rn ·; c10sBe at o~e a,m' I '11 I d '. . even" i:!' b I I ' _. '11 b " I I Jams burg, ata vIa an d Broo t VI e, n .. open at rents, teac IleI'S,. fl;n d a 11 supenors.In , ~omestlC, Danville as in other States, I am info1'1nedJrorn I~easur.e y t Ie O'lOOPS, Wl urn WIt 1 compara-. t~ e lv~ m.; close at twelve a.m.. . moral and reltglOus matters, settlllg good ex- . t t twenty per cent. Of the pupils m'e now ttvely lIttle dan",er. .Cahforma-Through bags close a.t one a.m. the 3d nnd ' . b' SIX een 0 :J , TI' ' . 1 d' t' k t . 17th of each mOl1th. ampI e, tIeI 0bl IgatlOn emg@neofthefirstofdll'avebee'nt"echildreno'.f COUSillS 11S simp e expe len IS Hown 0 everyone, F . -M'I I 'd'l . . " . . . an a wa.ys ,. " :J .' 011 • • b . I d ' fl. h" orelgn al S C ose !II yat seven p.m. ,a I 1 tl~e duties of.ltfe; but. III clv~l an~ 'pohtlCal ______- - ,,!pon. 1·0 ,ectwn., ut peop ,e on t re ect W en O~ce hours-Open daily from half-past seve,Jl a m. 1<' relatIOns, there IS a necessity for It whICh sliould III desperate fnght, though they may remember SIX p.m. r d If" (From the Louisville Guardian.) h I b l' d t tl .' .... b. e en,orce mere y or ItS own weIght, if for no H th M G w at las e,en exp aIne 0 lem, Ari'iv.al .and Departure of Trains. other end. The i[lterests of society require the ow e oney oes. , Our own attention has been called to the OHIO AND MrSSIsSIPPI- Trains Traimi repression and severe punishment of rowdyism We ha\'e often had occasion to wal'l1 our matter by certain rules upon the subject which Arrive. Depnrt.. 8.15 A 111 and crime, not only to vindicate the supremacy fellow-citizens of the danger which they incur We found in a recent French paper. This says, f:~k~·iii~·A~~~;;'·';;~;i~t'i~~:" ·::.~·.~·:::::. ~'~J~ ~ ~~ 1.25 P 111 of .the .Iaws, but to save the rising generation in giving their money to the Protestant preach- by a w.ay of illust.ration, that ;t. .mll of paper, a Express, ...... ,.30"'1 1015 p " h I h h I ~ . . d I b I I ht ~ t b t d INDlA.NAPOLIB AND CINCINNATI- W IC 1 IS soon to carryon t e w ole mac linery ers lor certam specIOus an apparent y enevo- amp ' Ig er or illS ance, urm~g a one en, Express, ...... , ...... , .... 6.50 A 'L 1.-10 A M , of this great Republic. lent objects which they propose for t.beir favor- may be held in the hand until consumed al!!lost Accommodation, ...... 12.45 P >1 11'.20 A" Half the boys in town now look upon the able consideralion. Our people are, in general, to the other end, if the burning part is held ~p- LIT:;;:~~~~~I.::: .... ·...... · ...... ·.. · ': 00 P" 5.40 PM . ruffians who figure so larg:ely upon all public very benevolent and charitable, and, we may I ward; but reverse it, turn the flame down- Express, .... :...... 1,0.00 A" .8.00 A '" . d I ~ d I I I d h d '11 b h b AccommodatIOn, ...... 4.40 P M 2 •.15 P 1\1 OCCaSIOnS, nn W lOse names and deeds are so add, very cre u ous. 'f ley give generously . ,ward, an your an . WI soon e.caug t y Express, ...... 11.30 P >1 1.35 P M .. 6.00 AM constantly recorded in the papers, as genuine and even bounteously for almost e,very scheme it, Wher upon, it is discreetly enjoined that, CINC~-::;,~:~~,~~.~~~.~~.~.. ~.~.~.. ~~::~~~= .. .. ' 7.15 A II · ·heroe.s. The bullies, themselves, look upon whic1~ is ~tarted by tbe. Protestant mini~ters, whenever a lady's garments take fire, she must Mail, ...... 7.30 A" 11.0S AM 6.52 P &f' notonety as fame;. and there are young aspi- espeCially If t,he conversIOn of the "Papists," THROW HERSELF IMMEDIATELY ON THE GROUND I 1~~~:~od~ti~~·,:·::::::::::. :~~~·:::.~~·:::::::. k~~ ~ ~ 8.50 PM ' · rants ·w ho agree WIth them, and who take them or of the foreign heathens, of whom few know 0R FLOOR, AND REMAIN DOWN WHILE SHE 'CALLS .'j AccOml!lOdation, ...... " ..... 5.30 PM 9·9P P>I ' as models for imitation . . ·If the models were anything, be in question. The Parsons .qank FOR ASSISTANCE. r.lAR~;;~ ~:rc~~ci;;;;~;;:::::· ...... ·.. :·.... lL30 P '" · properly dealt with, and punished accordioO' to on an abundant capital, when they appeal If she finds it necessary to move to briI1g ~~~~:~m~d~t·i~~; .. ·:;:::::::::::::::::::::: ~::g!: It~~:: , their deserts, this spirit of imitation would be to the credulous generusity of their flocks .. help, she may do so by DRAWING HERSELF ALONG COVINGTON AND LEXlNGTO!(- "'uelled, or rather turned into some better' Tllese slIould, however, know how the money UPON THE ''FLOOR, BUT ST~LL MAINTAINI.NG ·-THE . Exp~ess, ·: .. ·,' .... , ...... · .. 'i .. · .._ ·<.. ,· .." .. • 6.50 A '" 6.35 P M '1 . - Accommod.thon, ...... 2.10 l' M 11 .1..00 A M channel. Th.e penitentiary and the gallows 'goes; and as those more immediately concern"- HORIZONTAL POSITION.. . CINCINN"'~l, ~1~~"OSD AIID Il!DlANAPOLIf- 6.00 A JI[ 12.50 ,'" fi d ' t h d ' 1 . . 3.40 P If 6.55 P H ' ~re no t att. rac t Ive; a It IlOug 11 unpunished feats, ed will not per1 Japs ~e II t Il~m, we WI'11 . .A 'P er llaps' s Ile may n a . ap ,sOIpet llpg D»,YTON",ND Mlq!!I9~N-(Fpr Dayto.D, Cliicngo, Toledo .and De- . "that merIt such correction, to some minas great amount of it goes Into the pockets of those calculated to protect her, as a .RuG, .or DRVf>- , tr~~~nlng Express, ...... <...... 7.30."">1 may be. very reverend men, who are so very solicitous GET, a BLANKET, a LOOSE PIECE OF CARPET, or EveniDg Express, ...... 6.30 r M 4: CATHOLIC T E LEGRAPH ADVOCATE.
as *4 'M ! I e + Edd 94£,,# t ! 8M, ;:;:: ,,****,,,,. S ....Y dM sa 'ib§- t e If, fE ,@·tA .. If&>''-'!9tM *' am a,.. & & iQ * i4dt!B ([, tfhrrlic ffi;d£fYrnn h anh ' ,!bbrrtaft. \In t,h e splendid hall, of, th e Academy the young The Welsh People. THE diocese of Fort Wayne has adopte d the t . ~ , , . Z.l 1 ~o c:; IpupIls of the, boardmg-school perform ed some A communication, si gned San:JUel Roberts, ORDO for the city' of Rome- the same as used elegant pieces, conveying, in t,heir selections, a ,attacks the Teleg)'aph for an opinion expressed in the diocese of Cincinnati. R EV. S, H, ltOSECRANS, D, D" } anll .. : ...... EDITORS. delicate compliment to the new bishop, on two regarding the moral condition of the people of ... VERY REV. E . PUnCBJJTJ, . THERE will be a Sacred Concert given in St. harps and a piano ; after whi ch, Miss Fannie Wales. We made an allusion to them in con Patrick's Church, on Sunday evening, J anuary O;FH.:t:- No . 17 0 SYCAMORE STR EET , ADOVE F IFTH, Parker, who with all her family, natives of nection wi th revivals, to show that tb ey were the 1st, to help to pay the first instalment on a Connecticut, resicling , in Mobil e, is a cOlwer t, in a condition of mind more likely to yield to Cincinnati, 0" Saturday, Dec, 24, 1859, Schoollot,th at has bee n lately purchased. The delivered the very beautiflll Address, her OWn th e impulse of Error than of Truth .. We said 10l'ers of good music and the fri ends of Catho The Calholic Telegr aph and Adv o ~ate being pubJi sbedwith lily compos ition, which we are happy to present, in nothing of th e character of the Welsh in this ap)lro\,ation, and be rng {,he o!limal Or~"n of the DlOce,. ,of tl · It · ·, d· 'fl U' d d U T b l' lic Schools will of course g o. We earnestly Lou i,v ille, I 'tro n ~l)' reco mmen d it to the patron age of t,be ano leI co umn, 0 OUI l ea el s. le a", e 'country except what was goo. ry e e leve · 0atholic cl ergy and lait.y of Kcntu cky. . . Mrs. Austin Barber widow of Rev. Virg'i l th em to be, so far as we can learn ,. a sober and recommend the whole affair to the Catholic t :nI ARl'lN .JOllN, B Ish op of L ouis1'llie. ' community. Lou is,ille, Augmt 6,1853. Barber, is on her death-bed, in the Convent, law-abiding people in the States. We did not
PUCr,"" ER or " CATUO LIC TEUOltAl'lI .AND ;A DVOCATE , " ~Yo u ever grateful to God for having call ed' herself, take Puseyi te , nor Catholic testimony against THE Governor of Kentucky in his late mes · t1.re auth od sed to publi sh m y :l pprobatJ on of your pn per, a nd hId d I . I' f to state Ihn U adopt it as tbe Urga n of my di oce,e , ilIay the er lUsban ,an t lelr many re atIves 1'0111 th e Principality, but sound Protestant evidenc e. sage to the Legislature of that State recom· ' Dh' in c Provjloencecrow u your labors wi th,success! You r- most d k I' b . d I I ' t- f I I devoteLI frie rd, ' t A., Brs bop of Cleveland, ar ness to Ig t, an ca m y walIng 01' IeI' To show MI'. Roberts, and others w 10 may mends the passa.ge of a law fo rbidding the t rrh c Cathnlic TeZeg1"aplt and Advocate is recoID men"derl t o the dissolution- and reward. think asehe does, that the opinion we expressed marriage of cousins. W e hope that this wise Catholics of t hp. Cov i l1~to n l)iocese as :In int e r es~ in g a.nd in s tructive paper, an d as the medium by which offi chtLc OlllUlun i· On Sunday, the Bishops and Clergy walked was not lightly or uncharitably formed, we will connsel of the Goyernor will m'eet with a favor cations will be made to them. , able response. t G rOnGE ALOYSI US CARRE LL, lH sb op of Co vington. in procession to the splendid, though · unfinish- leave at the office of th e Catholic Telegmph the ed, Cathedral. The Solemn Ponti6 cal Mass tirst volume of " The Social Condition and Edu I cardin-lI y recommend t,h c Calholic J'e1,f'..Qr aph t o the co nfi ~ Fair for the Sisters of Mercy, e nen a nd SUpp Ol't of the CAlabama and Florida, and Rev. Mr, We ha\'e now dope enough to justify us in visiting' and counselling those who had gClne pel of Mt. St. Mary'S t:l eminary, on Augustine Martin, of Philadelphia. 'fhe sermon was reply to the acrimonious article of Mr. Roberts astray, by collecting poor children into their Oeclltering, of the Diocese of Fort Wayne, and preached by the Archbishop of Cincinnati, and and his mere assertions. Should he wish to school rooms, and recalling many from the Garrett M, Sheehan, of the Diocese of Albany; in the atternoon and evening mos t able and in: continue th e discussion, we will publish the tes ways of vice. Aid them now at their Fair to and Sub·Deaconship on JosEiph Patrick Fitz- teresting discourses we re delivered by the Rt, timony of the Government Commissioners, and provide a suitable home and enable them to gerald, Anthony M. Mazeaud and Michae\ Rev, Bishops of Chal'les tO)l and Natchez. then people will understand why Mormonism extend the sphere of their Holy Mission. O'Donoghne, of the Archdiocese of Cincinnati. Monday, the Bishop of Mobile was left took such hold in Wales. all Ii. On Tuesday, 20th inst, Mr. Sheehan was 01'- alone by his eolleagues- alun e from them- - - .- . ~ --- Oollections for the American Oollege in dained Subdeacon, and Rev. Messrs. William but with a devoted 'clergy amI fl oc,k wI 10 vI. e d Eloquence, Rome. "Eloquence is the child of knowledge. and St. Joseph Halley and Anthony Mazeaud were with one another in rendering the visit of th eir St. Vincent's, M~unt ,Yei-tlOn, , ' bl h d When a mind is full, .like a wholesome river, L 1 ' D '11 M" f R 'd Promoted to the Deaconship. On Wednesday, clerical fri ends most agreea e to t em, an " . . ,u{ e s, anVl e, ISSlOns 0 ev . It IS al so ,clear. ConiuslOn and obSCUrity are J l' B . t d' N b the F east of St. Thoni as, Apostle, Rev. Da- entitling themselves to grateful and affectIOnate _ u lUS rent, omit e III ovem er re- much oftener the resul ts of 'Ignorance than of ' $ ~ '3 ' mian Kilibe-r was oi'dained Deacon, and Rev. remembrance froJIl henceforth and forever. port,;) 12~ ineffici ency. Few are the men who cannot ex- S M ' DId R 'd 11' 'Timothy J. Tierney 'and Anthony Mazeaud re- Ii) T 1 -t-Oh 'I" f St r . f A press their meanino', when the occasion de- t. l ' ary s, e aware, an ev . r . . . ~ . h d ' , HEeegan urClO k . 'ranclso s- o Wiese, Pastor, also omitted in Novem- cell'ed I nest 00. ." sissum, in this city, was solemnly consecrated mands the energy: as' the 'lowest will defend bel' report, 20 00 The ~Io s t Rev. Archbishop will sing Ponti- last Sunday, and Pontifical Mass sung by Rt, th eir lives with acuteness and sometimes even St. Dominic'S, McCluuy, Perry Co., 9 00 fic ~ 1 Mass on Christmas morning" six o'clock, Rev. Dr. J ame.s Frederick Wood, Coadjutor with eloquence. They are masters of , their St. Pius, South Fork, ' 4 40 in Holy Trinity Church, arid in tire Cathedral Bishop of Philadelphia, assisted by the usual subject. ' '1'0 make others feel, we must feel Cathedral Cl ergy, . 40 00 16 29 at half-past ten. He will' preside at Vespers in at t en d an t s. T'lIe Rt . R ev.. B'I S1 lOp 0 f F or t olll·seives. Knowledoo'e I-S IIOt a mere colle.ction SSt. JMary'S, l' Noble~1 Co.,C ' t. osep 1 s, 1l ouroe 0. ; , 3 54 St. Joseph's Church at three P.M., fl:nd at half- Wayne was in ,the Sanctuary during the Mass. of words; and it is a delusion to suppose that St. John's, 6 58 _past'four bless the chapel, convent, and hospiTal The Dedication Sermon was preached by Rev. thoughts can be obtained by the aid of any St. Mary's, (Beaver) 16 25 of the Franciscan Sisters, Betts street. At this ,Father Wenninger. Bishop Wood addressed other intellect than o,ur qwn . Wllat is, repeti- 'St. John's, Bellair, 900 the conoerreoo'ation in his earnest, impressive tion, by a curious mystery ceases to be truth, St. Patrick's, Guernsey Co., 2 25 interesting ceremony Rev. Father Weninger . , I::lt. John's, H a ~Ti s on, manner at the close of Mass, and the Bishop even if it were truth when it was first heard. 4 00 will preach. St. Henry'S, near Minster, 16 00 --~-••- ~-- of Fort Wayne preached at Vespers. The The shadow in a mirror, though it move and St. Mary'S, Chillicothe, 91 50 WE take from the New Orleans Standa1'd Chnrch is 139 feet loner 65 wide ' 48 hi erh mimic all the actions of vitality, is not life. ___~,_ .... "_,~, ___ 0' , 0 1 of the 11th Dec_, a very interesting account of from floor to ceiling, 75 from foundation to When a man is not speaking or writing from Financial and Commercia . the 'ceremon'ies, sermon, &c., at the Consecra- comb of roof, and has two steeples, each 134 hi s own mind, he is as insipid company as a TUESDAY, P .M.-Since the date of our last , D Q - 1 :g' h f weekly review, the Money market has not un- tion or the Right Rev. r_ um an, ' is op 0 feet high. It was painted by Tandrop. looking-glass." dergone any material change for tb e better. Mobile. - -- --.~. - ,- The above extract is from a living English Throughout it has been characterized by ex- When the R ailro'ad is finishe~, the distance ~ OUR,,!orthyneighbor, tbe Commercial, did not author. It is a paraphrase of the text-':out treme closeness, lmd the discount.houses have b etween New Orl ~ ans and Cincinnati, and be- finei in the learned ~ nd judicious" Lives of the of the abundance of the heart the mouth been compell ed to refuse a large proportion of tween Cincinnati and Mobile can be travelled Saints," by Alban Butler, the ludicrous sketc!l speaketh." Other intell ects cannot do our the paper offered, and in many cas'es it has over 1'1148 houl·s . .There "is, to misapplvan of the life of St. Francis of Paula, to which he been fomid impossible to dispose of. first class '1 thinking for us, but they can give us food for paper at 10@ 12 per cent. The income has in- old ~ol'd, a portag-e ' o'f t""enty illl'Jes, not of a treate. d his re.aders last Monday .. The Church " ~ H thought. If we digest i.t" it becomes our own" creased, and is still increasing, but the outward ' t b t f· Oal'I'o III to was not dediCated ,to St. FranCIS of Panla_ . cl' 1 . d'ff f I I b l' t' h k canoe, b u t III a seam oa 10m , '" . .' . . ' and in our mill Its' me IS I erent rom w Jat current las eeu arge III prop or lOn, t us' eep- Columbus, Ky., and there are twenty-live The ~rchbl s hop_ of Clllcllluatl was not present; it is in theirs. , " ing the b;lances dow~ to the lowest worki,ng '1 ft' b t C" d d D k the BIshop of Vlllcennes was not present. The r1 • • • level. We do not tlnnk money has been ' as rul es 0 s agm er e ween :rrana a an uc - , Ihe mtellect cannot create ItS thought; It . TI ' d t t 'tl' tl I tt ' 'JI M' 'I'h? I t I' k f th R'I d '11 Bishop of Alton was not present. The Arch- . . 1 .. scarce III 11r s ree WI nn 1e as en years 111, ISS. IS as III 0 e aJ roa WI . ' . must manufacture It out of prevIOus y eXlstmg as dnl'ino' th e past fortni o'ht . but the strin U'ency ' cOITlpleted, and the tl'me, ,=hl'ch I'S now blsh9P consecrated t.h e HIgh Altar of ,the Wh 1 '1 1 l' b I '" 0 ' . I . '" soon be " materials. et IeI' tIe wor (mans IIp e roug I has had a healthy tone about It-t lat IS to say 62 hours, reduced as above ~tated . 9n the Church of St. FranCIS of Sales, Walnut HI~ls, and disjointed, or elaborately finished, it is truly the ~emand wa~ largely for the purpose of Mobile road there are 60.miles to be travelled last Sunday. Very Rev. Father Ferr-edll1g its, a child of its own brain. rfhe great orator creatmg new busllless, and nbt to pay old debts, " blessed the addition to the Church; Father . " _ . . " 0" Consequently people have for the most part, in stages. ; takes IllS matertiils flom the Inm", ,plesent, been in a condition to do without that which All tile bl',110PS atten41'n,,'" the Consecrat'lon Hahne, of Dayton, preached. The Church is f th '11' h t - f ti d 'd' h 1 ~ rom e ml IOn p an asmagona 0 Ie ever- was not obtainable, an conSI enng t e c ose- were lodged in the truly hospitaBle old mansion' very beautiful.:....:______spifting pao'eant of individ ual and national life. ness of the mal,ket, tbe pressure for loans was e of the Most Rev: Archbishop of New Orleans, The Catholics of Mobile presente d t h e B1-' He puts th~m 1n the caldron of I,lis heart, be- quite mo.derate, and first class pap1 er, whenf noth than whom no one kno;s better how to make . d b I neath the fire of natural g'enius; soon they' cnrrent 10 the regular ehann? .s, was _or t e shop, on his' arrival, a horse an nggy wort 1 " " most part r,etlred, so that secun(les of tlllS class 'his guests at home and happy. The Rev. Mr. $7 ~ sedhe and bOll over 10 e l ~ql.l en()e. . ' . were not offered to any extent in the street. Perchc, Editor of the p)'op, Cath., and chaplain ' . • B' . In the m:Itter of Chnstlan preaclnng tIns The extraordinary demand experienced fol' cur- of the excellent U rsulin'e Sisters, and the just ~he J:Ion . Petel H. , UI nett., ex:Governor ~f process will not suffice by itself. The end of rency is attributable to the crowding 'of the pork popular and devoted cure of the Cathed aI, Caltforma, a convert to the C"tholtc Church, IS the preacher is the salvation of his hearer. business, that usually covers three months mto M. Maenhaut, also hospitably ent@rtainedthenowinNewYork,superintencling the publi~a- The' t1'uths that he is to deliver must b~ living thedsame nt1lmber dOt' Iweeks'h' Ovebr'lwo I:un?red tion of a work on the True Church on whIch . . an fi f ty t lOusan lOgS ave ee,n lecelve d bishops and clergy. " , and present, as 111 the case of the secular ora- within the last three weeks, to 'handle which '1 d 1 1 f h . . he has been enoeraoo'ed since his conversion. I t d bIT d f h' Th e P re 1ates aval e t lemse ves Q t elr a.lspl- tor, but living an present, not ecause t ley required about $3,500,000. . wo-thir sot IS, cious reunion to address to 'Pius IX., a joint , et- is published by the A ppletons. We look for happen to be the present mo~ e ntary figure 9f ~ccord in g to reasona?le estima.tes, was taken tel' of respect(ul sympathy, earnest proe st, its appearance with no 1 . ' .for young women, the AI'phan Asylums, for SF' "Ch 0 W I H'll 1 taken the coal that purified the prophet's lips, funds disbursed for thIS staple cannot ong re- way to t. ranClS ' urCl,1 anut IS, ast .. - . h ' . C', ' t·p.· C' t ,boys and. girls, the Infants' Asylum, the uu- . ' , b t from the altar of th e ltvlltcr God. mam 10 t e mterlOr.- mcmna ~ n ee urren. Sunday mornmg, and escorted them to the u " '". o · . • •• ~ _ _ merous and well attended free schools of the Tl Ii 11' ffi. - I ' . Church, where they were received by the The Seminary. P ASSPORTS .- Ie 0 oWIng 0 cia notice ,various churches, the Bishops, with the ex- f om tIle Department of State appears in the ' zealous Pastor, Rev Mr Schmidt and Rev I 'f '1\ bl- hi ' G 1 R I' . I ceptlOn. 0 f th'ell' Rt . R_ ev. b re th ren 0 t' G a 1veston Mr. Hahne. ' .., . TIe reasurerI S WIb 't ..pu IS liSd D enera. e- C'onstl'tution :-"Information has been received _ and Alton,' whom urgent:duties recalled on Fri- • ... port of Annua u SCl'lptl.ons an onat~ons to at this department, from an official source, that day, to their,respective Sees, left on the magnili- WE reg'ret to have again to warn the Catho- the Seminary for 1859, the week after Christ- certificates. from. notariesd in ther dUnited d ' States cent steamer, Cub,a, cor Mobl'le, wllere they ar- lics of this city against the imposition sought to mas. of Amenca,. ~ssue dto natura Izce ahn u~nhatu~ II _~._~___ ralized inhabItants, 0 not conler t e ng t 01; ,rived on Satu~day noon, of the lOtlL The after- be practised on them-by a degraded clergy- THE WESTERN BANNER-R D , Killian, Edi- entrance into Prussia, nor through Prussia, into noon an del'enmg · were d evo te d t0 tIe 1 VISltlllg.. . rua~-tickets for a stole,, " , &c. tor and Proprietor. rI'h'IS IS. an exce11 ent J-our- Germany, nor even wilh" the visa of ministers ·of the Spring Hill College, directed with signal J. MURPHY & Co. have published a magni- nal, its matter always carefully and judiciously or consuls, would they have any validity ~s passports. Furtherm~re ; the only p a sspo~-t~ In r ability" by..the Fathers of-the Society of Jesus, ficent editi9n of St. Vincent's Manual. In its selected, and its editorial department as attrae- the United States whIch are of any valtdlty It ,and tlae Academy and Convent ofthe Daughters present form it is one of the finest Prayer- tive as good sense arid good taste in style can are those issued by the General Goyernment ,jl ,of St. Francis of Sales; two miles from Mobile. Books w~ have ever seen. make it. It is published at St. Louis. at Washington. , . '"\ CA.THOLIC TELEGRAPH AND ADVOeA TE. \ & .., . Bi §+ H '·S ·'; 6 : ,%*, g 441£54'2 g 'Jill", ", 4 P vSffl i . h?§iS ; tm . rnn:;r;.; ! 2 J 9S& - ijQ h ,t A1B <29 ,* .an ? ti ·W ' . t& e 5 • 8< &hM ; 11 -a '· ii · . ; '4 W5# • From the New Orlealis Catholic Standal'd. tbe age of the fuln'ess uf Christ, that we maY I an ~ffiict e d f~r?l of Illiman kind galled by tb e ! are both, iri t h ei~ ' respective spheres, the iou- Co nsecration of the Bishop of mobile. nol now be' children , tossed to and fro and car- chaInS of spm tual slavery and bondage. It· aves of the Almlgll'ty., Tbe solemn and imposing Ceremony of the ried about by every wind of doctrine, in the was. worthy of the goodness and tbeprovid ence. While in .those .co untries where bi shops ~ r e . wickedness of men, in the craftiness by whi ch of the Delt" to IJres€rve a successIOn of men In commun IOn wIlh the Holy See, r eli gIOn Consecration of tbe Right Heveren d D r. QUln- J • lan, Bishop of Mobil e, too k- p I ace as appomte. d , they lie in wait to deceive, but performing'· the characterize.d by. this charitable self·devotionI flourishe.s an.d btru Ith is hhe ld s.acred, I . whereb this at tbe Cathed ral on Sunday las.t. truth in charity, we .may in all things grow up and {o furnIsh IU tbe sacred resources of t le coml,?unloll IS ro (en t ~ re IS ~Ot ll11 g ut un- . in him 'w ho is the Head, Christ. Church a sacrament wh ere all th e graces neces- certalllty. In R.ussla, religion IS the slave of a The Episcopal and Ecclesiastical ProceSSIOn, 1 dIE I d f 1 1 followed by several Catholi c societi es an d t b e He elsewhere tell s the Corinthians to look sary for the faith ful, enlig.lte ne and zea ous tyrant; in . ng an 10 a woma.n. I ' W 10, lOweverI Mili tary, who had respectfully 're'quested the upon the members of {he Hierarchy as the m~n- di sch'.lrge of ~o many arduoll s and b ighly. re- r es p e ctab l. ~ 11l her ( om estlc r ~ atlOns, can ? lOW rivileo'e of assistino' "as tbe escort, m oved from isUirs of.' Christ and dispensers of tb e mysterIes ~po. ilslble .dutles .may be reg ul arly sllppl.l ed. no. ~uthol'lty from Jesus ChrIst fo~ assumIng a P o 0 of God; that while Christ was on earth, GCld rbIS, de111 ed as It has been, to Oll r astonl sh- spll'1 tual supremacy over the consciences of her the resid ence of the Most Rev. Archbishop at CI ' b' ' I' D f d f F . I about tbe hour conte~plated, and, in the pre· was in Cbrist reconciling the world to hi mseJf; I~ e nt, by numerous sects professing the HIS· su jec.ts. 'I 1e . title of e en er 0 tbe .< ml l and that Christ, at hi s ascension, placed in us tl<1n name, He h as not neglected . "Every was g iven to one of her ancestors when h e was sence of thousands of interested spectators, en- S C r WId' d d tered the spacious Cathedral, in their appointed the ministry of reconcili ation; and he add~d, high-.Priest, . S h'l . d commISSIOn If less IDlraclllous yet equally as prectc 1 un ess t leV e sent. eg ec not tIe co u gIve, III IS O,Hl g owmg WOI s, llS glace- alS e~. an t t:c g: ery? '\ I Je"rr s~~ an h clear and a~ thenti c as that' of' the eleven who 8-race which is in "thee, w'hich was gi ve n thee ful eulogy of · the Bi, hop elect. Broug ht up stan mg p L 0 y t Ie used the divine p/eroo'atil'e of fillin o' up the by prophecy, with the imposition of th e hands under hi s own. eye, he witnessed his pro'gress ~c~ I~ ~ et~tlrehf 1 ~ Il~C. .. were .~cc upl e "fiY t ,e alt fl. ~r once It I~S orio'inal number of tbe °apostles by ' th~. clection of tbe Priestbood, (says St. Paul to 'rimot),y in science and pi ety. After 'studying hi s th.e- mao' l11 ficent eUl ce o t h e most spacIOus ecc eSI' 0 • . ' . ' d" d ' 'r' I "I d . I I , . I tt . f l " . I . I h P I b 'Id" . 'I" . ffi' t and consecratIOn of MathIas or who fastlD O' l. 4., an aO'am, 2 10 Imot IV; a m011l s I 0 ogy 111 tla sanc ualY 0 ealJ11ng , w llC 1 as astlCfL 1I1 mo' 111 t liS Ci ty, was 1l1SU Clent 0 . " 0' '1'1 h °h . I' f' G d . - b' I t tl A ' . . CI I Oli 1 I' d f' d .. d Imposed hands and prayed over Saul and' B[\l'- lee t at t ou stir , up t Ie grace 0 . 0 giv en so m. anv IS lOpS 0 Ie men can llIrc 1, accommo date a IV 10 app Ie or a mISS IOn, an ) . . . I ' I . . th b I' . . f !Vi t Bt ' M' .. ' I . t· t ' d 'tl l ' . d'f 1 " d w l' mild t nabas, whom they selected for a specHtl mllllS- w lI C 1 IS III , ee y t le ImpOSitIOn 0 my. o.un. . al y s- le ~vas III IUS e .WI 1 a , 1U~dl e· s, I I nod·t t 1Oud'~n s, . e Cd co pe e 0 try hands.") pansh 111 {he State of OhIO, where by 11ls zeal, retIre from t le oors Isappomte .' ' . fIE' " I' I d h' J . I ' . Ii " .. . . Cold, then, must be the heart and unen- And III the 1st chapter 0 t 1e < plstle to Titus lIS e oquence an IS c 1anty, Ie gall1e every rhe forms of the unposmg cer~lllonJ: whl~h li g'htened the mind of hini who can trace in the he says, "For thi5 cause I left thee in Crete heart. Americans, Germans,'French and Irish then took plac~ , wer~ ?o tully eXF:~1l1. e~ 111 sce ne which this day's solemnity exhibits, no that tho~ shouldst set in orde; t h ~ thi~gs that \~er e. equally ~e a r .to him: He kn'ew no dis . our last numbel, that It I~ unn ~ cess a lY fOI us evidence of a divine superintending providence a: e want1l1 g and sh?ulqst ordall: PrIests 111 every t1l1ctlOn. of natIOnality. LIke a tru~ Apostl.e,lh e to lepeat the~. Su~ce I,t {o say, that' all was and care, keeping faithful vigil for th e Churcb; cIty as I also appOInted thee': Could the sa- mad e h.lmself all to all, that he mlgbt gam all done m ~rd:l: aC?~ldJng to the Rom~n Rlt.e , who looks upon the consecration of a well-pre. c~'ed yollllpe ~peak mo~ · e . plamlJ: of the n ~ c e s - to. Chnst. Subsequently h~ was ?alled to.·a tha.t notlnng l equll ed by. the soleml1lt~ W'ANCY TABLES, &c. you shrank on that occasion, n. ot. from the. to. iI, tu~, power, autbonty or l'Ight to teach and triumphs achieved b.y the Sovereign Pontiffs in l\IissM;lI'y 'Denny, (wheel o[fortune) ...... 71. 00 b t f tl I d 1 d f d tl I 1 '-' 1\irs. U'Co nnor anti l\1iss~~llen O'Brien ! ...... lOS 00 ~ . rom. Ie lOnor, an tl€ e I }'1ll15 submiSSIOn gu~ elan Ie las. . every age. He alluded in noble terms to the ~lI- s . Nicholas and Miss McGann, ..... ::...... 1:15 UO With .,vh. wh, . on the clearest malllfestallOn of ' rhus far we have approached nearly to th e mart"r a!!es, the heroic firmness of St. Gre!!ory l\[rs. D . •J. O' Heilly, Mrs. M'Cabe and Mr •. J. C. Terfioth, 400 25 ...... R d S I J ~ ~ Mrs. ll. J . Webb and illrs Ri chard Slevin, ...... 452 10 -t h e, d IVllle WI II , you .fi nally b owed to the man- I anguage 0 f .t 1Ie ~uost everen ~ ea reI'. In V 11., the meek constancy of Pius VI., the trials. The Sjsters' table, (JIl l'S. F. Gainer, Urs. Ballard, M!'s. , date of Heaven, whICh cal1 e ~ on y~u .to de- the rest of hiS. able a~d eloquent d~ sco urse, we the persecntion and exile of Pius IX. The DO O rn;{~~l't:,~ ~.'~~ .~.:iSS.. ':.~y. ~.,.~.:.::::: : .. :::::::::::::::::::.:·::? '~1~ ~~ vote yonrself as another Chnst, a VICtim for must crave ai hberal llldulgence from our read· hands which tbe Sovereio-n Pontiff had freed the welfare of yo.ur fl?ck. ers. ~urs uing. tbe subject of the Episcopal from their fetters were rai~od to strike him, the Expenses, includiug hall rent, printing, &c...... $3 ;~~~ ~~
, If th e ,ProphetiC "p IC e that then sounded be- auth~nty, he saId: men whom be had release'd from imprisonment " I Nett receipts, $2)81 5 65 neath tIllS vault forewarned you to behold Pnde was the first cause of our l uin, Can for tre ~so n, and who swore to be faithful (o ... some hing more in the cross that was placed on God sanction a principle which would make their deliverer, violated thei r oaths ; his Prime mary and · marth~ Society. your breast.than the gold tb.at gli.ttered, if it told this pride .inco ~ rigible! No! He distinctly tells Minister, Rossi, his Private Secr etary, Palma, 'fhe regulal' monthly meeting of the Ma r yand .:nfartha· So. yo~ of tbe light tbat was to !llti~1l1 e th e page on us that faith comes from hearing; that seeing were basely assassinated, and th e revolution cioty wi ll take place in the basement of the Cathqdral on next ~hl ch you were calmly re a dl~g of the suffer- the world by Wisdom knew. not God, it pl!,ased was successful in Rome. The P ope beca(l1 € an Sund;ty, tp-morrow, afternoon, immediately after ;Vespers. mgs of the Seventh Gregory, It cou.ld scarcely God by the (supposed) foohshn~ss of preaching exile to save the people he loved from the fur h ave revealed to , you the cons~latlOns of. the to save them that believe, ChrIst the wisdom ~h e r crime of parricide. He owes his restora- Association for the Propagation of the e _ ero~s as we beho.ld {hem to day III tbe gl~nous all;d the power of God, thus choosing tbe weak tion, under God, to the valor of France. His Faith. . e frUIt s of your iEplscClpate. tlungs of the world,. that ~1e might confound tbe gratitude is recorded in a marble tablet set in The regular monthly meeting of the Association for tOt! no· cl · Beloved brethren, the Apostle tells us that strong, and the foolIsh tlungs of the world, that the wall of the oft-ruined and ever r enewed paga.tion aitue :Faith will be held in the basement oi the C~tb e· Lt • e,ver~ high P~·ies t. taken fl:om a.mong men .is he might confound the '~is~, that as it is written , ramparts of Rome, in the words, Pqrduellibus d\'al, on next S:u nday, to-,mol'row, afte~ Do on, immediately afeel' :s appoll1ted for men III the th1l1gs that appertalll no flesh should glory 111 Itself, and that "He ab u,/'be virtute Fmncol'um pl'ofligatis." What- Vespers. ... 1- ' tu ~o~. He. ~elivers to us the true i~ ea l of the that g:lorietb ma~ glory in the Lord." Cor. i. 1. ever may bave been at regrettable epochs, the Business Summary for the Week. Jr ChnstJan mInistry .when he teaches I~ the 4th To Him are w.e lU?ebted for the ~nowledge of .errors of a ' portion of that gallant nation, she Throughout the entire week the weather has ;0 chapter of the EpIstle to the EpheSians that the truth. It IS HIS savIng doctrllles we have still maintains her proud distinction of eldest been cool, thoLigh the temperature, at no time, rs God gave some to be a~
ipi!i\!."¥!¥a- . -as· ' gg;i%! i f £ 41 eMa i§\¥"M€iiW 4!i2iIi1i&tiMlLSt-;U¥b1*Q'YI.1d%JMA A b .. 0 a eAT! Particulars of Cook and Coppic's Es- sJssion of the jail, which was accordingly done. in the religious ceremonies conducted by tbe a l:esidence in that place of nine years. The cape. EXECUTION OF COOK AND COPPIC. Rev. Messrs. North. Lel:r. and Waugh. When chlldren w_ere all bor~ in Skipton, They were The sentinel stationed near the jail reported W I h d " . . d' h called upon by the Shenff they stood calm and sent one llIaht to Jo.dg-mas, and then, by l'al'l, to e lave a an excltmg time urlllg t e '1 I '1 I' ~ ~ ~ that a quarter past eight o'clock, on the morn- r I h' I . I d qUIet y w 11 e tlelr arms were beina pinioned, Monaghan, on theIr way home to Ca,I'I'I'ckma- I past twenty-IouI' IOUl'S, w Ich las Just c ose d f b'dd' ~ ~ ing of Friday, 16th December, he observed a 'th th t' f tl ~ , an , a tel' I mg larewell to the guards of the cross. No". 9- Rose Hamilton, a native of "1 II 1 1 I II d , WI , e execu IOn 0 Ie lour prisoners. . '1 hId ' t tb d t k h ' D 1 man on th e Jal wa ,w 10m Ie c la enge ,an 'TI h t tl d t d tl JaJ ,were e pe In 0 e wagon an 00 t elr onega, and her two childl en, were sent here receiving no answer, fired at him. The head HOU.g ou Ie ay yes er a;: . Iere was a seats on their coffins. Their appearance was by the authorities of DU1'ham, J'nstead of Lon- great mflux of strangers and cItIzens of the l' th f hId . tl th f ' of anoth er man was also seen above th" wall, t, 1 fl k" I 1 a er 0 ope ess espmr ra ler an 0 reslg- dO\lderry. They were sent one nio'ht to lodo-- but he retreated as soon as the first one had coun IY, w 10 were oc mg In to see tIe ast at' d th ) d t t k b t !'ttl r' d ° 0 act of the Harper's FelTY tragedy, and the lat- n IOn'l~n ey seen e o. a e u I e no Ice mgs, an were then forwarded, by rail, to Lon- been fired at. 'rhe man on the wall, seemed at t th lId' th . ItO f anyt ling as the processIOn moved slowly on dondeny, on their way home to DoneO'a!. In fil'st d' etel'ml'!Ied to pel-Ol' "t, and wao about e r cam~ us earyappre len Ing ey mlgl to the field of de at11, dd't' t 1 ~. to v ~ ~ b d t d a ttl t th a I IOn 0 t Ie 10regOlng, Captain M'Bride gave making an attem pt to jump down, when the the de ame B ou as was e case,on The wagon reached the scaffold at thirteen temporary relief to upwards of 200 poor per f 1~ postt~ ' sentm. e I dIdec are IliS" mtentlOn. 0 f 'Impa I' m g l'11m eTl ay "10 rown s execu. d IOn.t 1I '1 ddt mmu. t es b e I'ore one 0 'Ic o ck ,an d tIe 1 pnsoners . sons, and sent 150 persons to lodo'in o's for one - 1e 0 on his bayonet; he then retreated into the jail th vlg~ anlcefext'herctlse, a ' Ie rtal roa . epo ascended with a determined firmness, scarcely two, and three nights accordin o- aso th eir dis' t t yar d WI)'tl COpplC . an d b 0 th gave th emse I ves up on etl arnva 0. , ef thram was nt'o so fs Bnng en sUlpa. sse d b y tl la t 0f Ct'ap am B'lown. A b n-e f tl.ess reqUIr. e d and forwarded',"'. SIXtv fOUl' poor- . b f I ' as on Ie occasIOn 0 e execu Ion 0 rown, ff d f 1 I ~. ' J - WIt out urt leI' resistance. d b t ntl d'ffi It ' d' t prayer was 0 ere by one 0 tie c ergymen_ persons to then' respectIve homes viz fifteen Cook afterward remarked that if he could at.n . u I e I cu y was expenence In ge - The ropes were adjusted, the caps drawn over persons to G1 asO'ow twelve to Ardl'o"~'an two ,m(Y III t own. I . I . .'. 0' , v, , have got over and throttled the guard, he would SI tI ft th . I f th t' . tl t leIl' leads, and both were launched mto eter- to LIverpool two to London three to Dublin have made his escape. ft lor ya el' de 0 U e m nity seven minutes after th ey had ascended the fifteim to to Monao-han' a~~~;'a r a lI~, f ~~ L~ndonderry elev~n The Shenandoah Mountains are within ten ~ ernoon, a. gra.n ~I Idary I~es~ -palra e 0 T~ scaffold. They both exhibite-d the most unflinch- four to Armao-b Nov' 26- J obn Walsh hi~ minutes' run of the jail wall, and had he reach- t Ie compm~I~ls m ~ ~n ,ance I O~l\ P aC'~i l~ ing firmness, saying nothing. with the excep- wife and thr'ei ~hildr e ~ were land ed on'the ed them, with his thorough knowledge of the ~~~ps wJn lroug. 1~1~ ev~ u IOn~ ;\1 rea tion. of bidding farewell to the ministers and quays of Belfast this rr:OJ'nin o' from the Le~ mountains, his arrest would have been diffi cult, s II ,an were t;'evlewe /. enr;f d a la erro Sherifi'. After the rope was adjusted about pard steamer fl:iendless and °penniless One s g esp.ecially as but few uf the military could have w 10 'tvad on l.e. roull m u' ress, an d Cook's neck he exclaimed: "Be quick, be of the childre~ died on board the ni o'ht 'before ~ 1\ d 1 . d . tl . bt moun e on a Sp1l'l te d cl larger. ' k 'bl " h' 1 l td b C 1\1 B 'd ' .. 0 . 10 owe 11m urlng Ie DIg . 'TI ' . 't d t d ft qUlC as POSSI e, w IC I was a so repea e y apt. 1.\ , 1'1 e o-ot a coffin and shroud and llad Ie prisoners were VISI eyes ,er ay a er- C . :;>, T h ey h a d succee d e d ,af tel' two wee k s' 1a b or, noon by R ev. Messrs. Nassau, Dutton, and OppIC.. . _ the cor~se bUried this morning. The rest of when alone and at night when their bed-cloth- N -th f tl p . b t: CI . I dRAfter hangmg about tlmty mlDutes both the famIly received their breakfast ana are ing muffled the sounds of the saw which they B 01 i 0 W Ie lIes /t~llm~ t{Uld~ It ~n . eV bodies ' were taken down and placed in black now in search of their friends -Belfast N ews liad made out of an old barlow knife, in cutting ever y aug 1, 0, ' I.e e 10 IS plscopa i walnut coffins, prepared for them. That of ' .. - through their iron shackles so that ihey could ,Church: Tfe sel;vlces I: the cells ~' ~re ofd. ~n Cook was then pl aced in a 'poplar box, labelled t ~A:LROA~ ,REdAD~R.-Tll1S is the name of put them off at any moment they should have ~lt e r~st~n g c l~rac el ar wr~ 'partlclp a ~ed ' m and direc ted as follows: "Ashabel P. Willard a Ittl~ Ill~entlo~ eSlgned to enable persons their work completed. They had also made 'a y ate con emne J,t loug I It IS now eVI ent, and Robel t Cole 104 W'lf t e t N trave mg m rmlroad cars, or stao'es to read from subsequent events, that Cook and Coppic v ,1 .' frAwd y, E ' I lam-s I' e , ew their newspapers in comfort, in spit~ of the J'olt- sort of chisel out of an old bed-screw, with L 01 { cal e 0 ams Xpl ess were playing 'posnlm, as their minds must 'TI' ffi f C ,- I' d' . 'I ing's of the vehicle. It eonsists of a narrow strip which they succeeded, as opportunity offered, in Ie co n 0 OpPIC was pace In a sImI ar ~ have been fixed on hopes of life and liberty b t b ~ ddt l ' tl ' · I ' of magnifying g'lass, set in a black frame J'ust removing the plaster from the wall, and then lId I d' . ox, 0 e IOJ'war e 0 liS mo ler III owa. . d .' brick after brick until a space was opened for rat leI' t Ian on .eat 1 an eternIty at tl!e lime _ __~_. • WI e enough t~ ·coyer one hne of a newspaper them to pass tlnough, all except the removal they were maklllg outward protes tatIOns of General Summary. column at a time, by the aid of which the of the outer brick. " resignation. smallest print is, magnified to the size of pica or They all gave an unqualified assent to the The number of deaths from cholera in the areat primel,·. 'The part of the wall on which they operated F 1 d ' 1 d ~ . h h b d I' h h 1 - conviction of religio. us t.ruth, and each expressed renc 1 army unng t Ie twenty ays' cam- I NG ENIOUS MODE OF REG"LATING RAILROAD' was m t e rear 01 tee s on W lIC t ey sept, . '1 f . f M v . I d . I 1 a hope of salv.atlOn m th e world. to .come. palgn agamst tIe ron tier 0 . orocco, was two TRAINS,- 'Tlle conductol'S nn the SWI·." S, French. and t h e be d b emg pus Ie agamst t Ie wa I com - h dId d d v 0 pletely hid their work from vi ew. The bricks Co~k an I! COppIC ~~ere th e lo.udest ~n theIr pro- L ousan on~ lUn r~ an SIXt!. .. , and Itali~n railro~ds calTya watch of ingenious they took out were concealed in the drum of a fess l~n~ of a cl~an",e of heal,t and m the ~ o p e Acts of plllaO'e dn'ected ao- amst the mISSIOn constructIOn, deSIgned to ]iessen the dano'er of. sto"e, and the dirt and plaster which they re- of ,dll'1~e forgweness; they frel'}y admItted of the Lazarist F athers, on thOe 14th of Septem, accidents. The aperture by which the ~atch moved were placed between the bed clothing. ~hell' gUIlt and ac~nowled ge ~ then' doom as a bel', at Ning Po, have been one of the conse- is wound up is acces~ible to the conductor, but They acknowledged that they had been at work J~ s t one, ~nd that III the. ma:n they have been quences of the P eiho events, The appearance that by which the, hands are regul ated can be a whole week in making the aperture in the tl eated wlt.h the utmost kmdness by all, though of a British man-of. war, sent by Admiral Hope, opened only by- an official whose business it is wall. Their cell being on the first floor the they thought. that ,some. of the WItnesses were caused t.h ese excesses to CE:ase. The Cruiser. to set all the watches by a common standard. aperture was not more than five feet above th e ratl;er ha;s.h m tl:ell' t~stlmony. . . with the French Consul, M. Eclan. o~ board, Thus the time of running of the trains is, FeD. pavement ,of the yal:d, and when freed of their Th.e mmlsters Ill1agmed the;: had dlscove~'e d arrived at Ninrr Po on the 19t11, and five of the dered uniform, and no accident is excused on shackles the access to the yard was quite easy; a. decld.ed}y fav.orabl ~ ch:m~~ In Cook's mmd ringleaders ha~e been arrested. 'l'hree of them the ground of mistake. 'l"I~e aperture hy which here, howe vcr, was a smooth brick wall about s!nce h.w Ill tcrvlew With hIS sisters. Up to that were literary graduates,-Moniteul'. the dial is regulated is closed by an application fifteen feet high to scale. This difficulty was time hiS ci1;lmness and bravery wel:e regarded S M '''1 of a system of permutation, such as is employed 'd . as pr.o cee.dma flom a lack of feelmg, but on PAIN AND OROOCO.- ... Ie departure of the I'n some pel'mutatl'no' J.'cks. ' soori. overcome with the al of the tnnber on ~ S . I f M' v leavlllg him yesterday afternoon they reported pams.) army or orocco contmues, amidst, 0 , which Captain Brown was hung, and which th r\. t he had be'en led to seek forgiveness in his great deruonstations of the people; the Queen , ~RAVELLIN~ ONE .H UNDRED ,~ILES ,\N HOUR, was intended f.;r their execution on the suc- pro testa.tions of reli o'iollS conviction and hopes going in state to offer up prayers for the suc- - Th~ Counel' des .1i!tats Uins pubhshes tl~e ceeding day. of forgiveness, all of which was undoubtedly to .cess of her arms. The Times' special con'es follOWIng :-"~r. MtlhaJ'd Flll?Jore, Ex-Presl- They placed these against th e wall, and SOOl1 hood wink their project of escape. pondent is already on his way; and dating dent of the Umt~d States, .has Ju~t ad?ressed a reached the top of it, from which they could Cook has been visited, throughout his im- from Malaga, gives a glowing account of the lett.er to M. Rolh.n G e r~am, aslung. hl~ to ex have easily dropped to the other side had not prisonment, by the Rev. N , Green North, at enthusiasm of th e people. The following is a pla~n at .a .pubh.c 'me.etlng the J?nnClples on the vigilance of the sentinel on duty so quickly the request of the pri soner, as also of Governors specimen- an order of the day is issued by the w~lch tIllS I11 ge ~lOus !IH'e n~ or beheves he can checked their movements. They were arrested Wise and Willard. Rev. Mr. North was pre- ?eneral of the 31:d. <;:i01'pS :-"Our ~0 1 3.' cause b~J!d a ~teamsll1p ~hlCh WIll make. one l1U? in the jail-yard by General Taliafe1'l'o and an sent at an interview between Coppic and a ~s the cause. of cIVIlizatIOn; you uillte III your dl ~d mdes ~n hOUl, and whose stl eng th WIll officer of the day, who rushed to the jail the Quaker gentleman from Ohio, who raised the ra~'or the wdl .of one country and the sympa- resIst the. f~1I y o~ the ocean and even tlle sho~k moment the alarm was given. prisoner, He describes the interview as an thles of the natIOns of Europe; you possess all of a col~lslOn wltl~ other vessels. y'vhen thiS Sheriff Campbell and Captain Avis are of affecting one, fUld speaks highly of Mr. Blit- the necessary means for carrying through the s ~e~m e r IS laden With pass€'Bgers, freIght, pro course much Chagrined at this narrow escape of ler's Christian deportment and advice to the enterprise in a short time; we march under vl s lOn~ and coal for a voyage r ~ und the world, their prisoners, especially as they had resisted : the orders of a Gener:tl-in-ehief 'of the army she will only draw at most tw enty-two feet of ' ~ r h 'I ' t . h th' , pllsoner. d . If:' d d I a II mterlerence 0 t e ml 1 ary Wit e mtenor MI'. Butler says that Coppic was Ii trusty but whose military qualities are the best guaran- water, an -a Sl?gu ar act m ee -t Ie ?xpense discipline of the jail. very artful boy. An uncle of Coppie's, his tee of a good result, and your divisions and ?f the voy a~e WIll only be about one-fifth what The prisoners were shrewd and cunning fel- father's brother, from Ohio, also visited him brigades. are commanded by generals and offi- It ~vould be m the stea~ers now , afloat. For lows. They were doubtless without any accom- yesterday, the interview lasting over an hour, cers ' habitu~ted to. war, and who have long tll1l'te,en y~ars M. Rolhn Germam .h~s been plices in their undertaking. The fri ends who He seemed in much distress at the sad fate been acqualDted With the path of glory. God stu.dY.lDg IllS ne,,:, system ?f mec!lalllcism ~nd were still here were also fearful they might be which awaited his relative. This was the con- is for us, and wi th His protection we are about buddlDg, and emlDent ~nglDeers .m t?e U mte.d: suspected of having knowledge of the attempt. dition of the town, the prisoners and the mili- to commence this struggle and speedily to con- Stftt~s have assured 111m tha.t hIS dls~overy IS The gen,eral impression is" had tbe prisoners t.ary. Up to sev'en o'clock last evenino- all ap- clu~e it in order, on your return from Africa, destmed t? m,ake an epoGh m , the history of , waited until midnight, or later, they might have 'prehensions of an intended resc ue I;';.. d 101;g y?U, may embrace y?ur families amid the bene- steam navIgatIOn." reached the mountains, but it is presumed they since vanished and nothino- was thouo-ht of but dictIOns of your natlve-country- of that. coun- How SEA BIRDS OBTAIN FRESH W ATER.- were fearful of beinoo- watched durinoO' the night, ' 0 0 , t I . h t d fi t tl t' f the approaching execution. :y w IIC , 0- ay con n~s 0 y.ou Ie sa IS. ac' The question is often asked, where sea birds or desired to have as much darkness as possible, t f ,IX' b d 'h t1 r So firmly had this conviction settled on the 1O? 0 an Ollence, com me Who Ie mamles- obtain fresh water to slake their th irst, but we in order to gain a good distance before dayliaht bl' d h '1' t t f tl f t k d A ~ pu IC min t at ml Itary duty was voted a a I.on 0 Ie power 0 a grea mg om. n- have never seen it satisfactory answered till a would allow of a g'eneral pursuit. t R d 01 H d t M I bore, and the finale of the tragedy regarded as onlO os e ano. ea -qual' e lS, a aga, few days ago, An old skipper, with whom we • ••• I Telegraphic News, at last approached. Nov. 19." were conversing on tbe subject, says that he At a quarter past eight o'clock last evening DEPORTATION OF IRISH PAUPERs.- Since the had frequently seen tllese birds at sea farfroro Cook and Coppic, two of the Harper Ferry the whole town was thrown into a commotion last report, Captain M'Bride has relieyed a con- any land that could furnish water, hovering prisoners, came near effecting their escape 'on by the report ofa rifle under the jail wall, fol- siderable number of poor persons, who came. Hrounq, and under a storm cloud. clattering like , the night 'preceding their execution, They cut lowed by several shots from the vi cinity of the as usual, from various parts of England and ducks on a hot day at a pond and drinking in guard-house, in close proximity to the jail. Scotland, and from the United States of Ame- the drops of rain as they fel!. They will smell through the j ai l and had mounted the wall be The military was called to arms, and the ex- rica. ' Sept. 27-Sent a poor woman and her a rain squall a hnndred ,miles, or even further, fore they were discovered, They were exe citement was intense beyond anything that has three cllildren to Glasgow, whose husband died off, and scud for it with almost inconceivable cuted on Friday, 16th, at Charleston, Va., as yet occurred during our ever memorable era of in the Geneml 'Hospital here, a few days be- swi,fthess .. Ho'w long sea birds ca~ exist with were also Green and Copeland, the two negroes military occupation, In a few minutes the fore ; the poor woman is a native of Scotland. out water IS .only a matter of c?nJect~re, but concerned in the insurrection. streets and avenues of -the town W( re in pos' Oct. 2-Bridget Casey and her child, sent her(:' probably thell' P?wcrs of entl.unng thIrst are session of armed men, and it was with some bY'the authorities of Edinburgh; they 'were increased by habIt, alld po~s ,bly they can go EXECUTION OF GREEN AND COPELAND. difficulty that the cause of all this turmoil could sent to lodgings for three nights, and th en for- without it for many days, If not for several The negroes, Shields Green and John Cope be ascertained, Rumors were afloat of every warded, by rail. to Londonderry, on their way weeks. land, have just paid the forfeit of their lives. description, and it was at one time thought that to Sligo, to which place the woman belongs. SYMPATHY OF THE NERVEs.-The New-York The crowd in the town is very great, and the the prisoners had overpowered their guards Oct. 5-Sent Mary 8mith, her son and daugh, execution was witnessed by one thousand six am I ma d e then'' escape, an d th en tl la t an a tt ac k ter, all of whom were in great distress, home Medical P'tess says : ,hundred persons. At nine o'clock this morn had bee n made by parties attempting to rescue to D'romore, county Down. , Oct. 30-Authur When th e nerves, from long Ilabit, llave be ing the 'fi ,eld was occupied by the troops, and the prisoners, M· Williams, fifty -four years of age, a native of come accustomed to transmit their messages at seven minutes of eleven o'clock the proces To-day at the execution the hodies of the Omagh, 'and Patrick Loughran, a native of from distinct pal'ts, and are suddenly.cut ofr sion made its appearance. It arrived at eleven negroes, after being cut down, were placed in Donegal, were sent, by th e authorities of the from them, they will retain along their trunks o'clock at the scaffold. poplar coffins and carried back to the jail. They city of Providence, State of Rhode I sland, th e sympathetic or sensational actions. Thus. The prisoners were in a wagon, accompanied will be interred to-morrow on the spot where United States of America, to New York, and a man who lIas a leg amputated will feel dis by the Sheriff and Jailor. They mounted the the gallows now stands, though there is a party were there shipped, with sixteen other persons, tinctly along the course of ~he trunk of the scaffold with a firm step. The prisoners had of medical students here from Winchester who two of whom were insane, on board the ship ner.ve sensation from toes w lllch no longer ex -the cap placed over their heads by the Sheriff, will doubtless not allow them to remain there Neptune, for Liverpool, and were sent from ist. The mind is also influenced hy this, 'and and, after appropriate prayer by Rev. Mr, long. Liverpool to Belfast. Loughran is almost blind~ frequently this peculiar direct neJ'\'OlJS action Nort,h, of the Presbyterian Churcl~ , they were At about a quarter to twelve o'clock notice and his story is a sad one. He states that he can only be allayed by that which is negative launched into eternity. Before the rope was was given to Cook and Coppic that their time has been twenty-four years in America. 'rhere and reflex. A curious instance occurred with cut, Green was heard to offer up a fervent was appro~ching, only one hour more being al- he,llas a son and daughter, in Providence city, in my own experience. ~n old. sai~ o r suffered prayer, Copeland was not heard to pray. lowed_ The military movements, similar to who would have supported him, but that he much from this. He retamed IllS dIseased foot Green's neck was broken, 'and he died with those at t.he first execution, were repeated, and would not be allowed to stop with them. too long, but at !ast ~onsented to an amputa.. out a struggle. Copeland writhed in "iolent a wagon with two coffins was standing at the' ¥'Williams states that he has been eight years tion. I knew hIm with , only a wooden leg. contortions for several minutes. door onhe jail. . At half past twehoe the same in, Proyigence city, and that he w.as sent to When he had 'his nervous pains he al~vays The prisoners 'bade farewell while on the military escort was ia readiness, in the mean Liyerpool against his will. Capt. M'Bride sent called 'for hot lYater, into which lI e p,ut ,his , :scaffold, to the ministers, Messrs. Waugh, time the closing religious ceremonies were pro- them three nights to lodgings, and then to the wooden stump, If told. of h~s folly in suppo . N0rth, and Lock, expressing a hope to meet gressing in the cell. Since_ the failure of the unio?, where Lough.ran. still remains,,receivil)g sing that such a proceedmg c~uld ~? any ,good, them in heaven. 'I.'he drop fell at' ·eleven attempt of 'Cook and COppIC to escape last suro-lCal treatmenl'for hiS eyes, and will be sent he would become enraged, and. h 'l ~ p~:oxysm minutes ' past eleven o'clock_ The 'bodies will night, their assumed composure and appax:ent ho~ e to Donegal' any time he wishes., M' Wil- of pain would increase; but If gratIfied, he be 'placed in jail for intellment ,t,o"morrow. resignation ,llad given a\vay and they now liams was sent to :Derry, on his way home to took things easy, and ,the 'process actually ap' Un . Buohanan, do , Newport, Ky. and all oflbe Publicahons pubhshed bJ Ihe 1I0me of .J ohn 1'. I.otton. Calf ...... " ...... 0 0 " 'a lsh, Cmcmnatl, 0 aug6 Bra n c h, No. 171 Vi n est r e e t, Infdrior, ~ ib ...... 0 0 H oney. REFERENCES. The ~o~t Rever ~n d ArchbIshOp PURCELL. and n E'I'~el'end Clergy. CINCINNATI. Ordinary...... 0 0 In Comb. 'tl lb ...... 0 25 B.S. McGIN~IS. CliAS. ". DLE'IRICR. The progress of thIS COl pora.tion has been stabla aud unintet MIddling ...... 0 0 StrulDed, ~ g.tllon ...... 0 I' o] ,wd & I:l<>OIY. (llncinn.ltl , S S Boyle & Co , .J O'Donnell. rupted t hl ough seasons of financial sunshllle and sturm, or pe Good Mldrlhng ... .. 0 0 Iron. Cm' lUgton; ]~ O'Bl lcn , Dayton, .1. H. Cle.ny, LexlDgton. Ky McGinnis & Dietrich, I lOds eventful In or exerupt flom sweepIng co nftagl atlOn s and Cotton Yarns. Pig, O. R c. b 'tl ton ... 0 0 Assorted Nos...... " . 0 20 Do. do. h b...... 26 0 ATT ORNE1S AT LAW AND NOTA:RlES PUEL1C, No. 2fiS Alain <:irt>E-'t marItlme dlsaster G. H. BUSSING . GEO. c. GLASS bl'tween 6th and 7th, Cincinnati, O. JJy30 ' ~ Agenoy estab h s c. ~d iT\ Clllcmnatl in 1825, ante datmg Dozen Yal ns, 500 . . 0 10 Do. Tenn. c b ...... 30 0 all plesent locall11smance Ccmpamcs ~nu AgenCIes In the In· " "600 ...... 0 9 Blcoms do...... 65 0 P. CRYAN. R. C. Buranc" uusiness In thiS CIty. 33 y~ars constant duty hel e, 700 .. , .... 0 S Boiler, 1i! Ib ...... 0 0 G. H. BUSSING & CO.) FARTnING. combIncd wlth we \.ltll, expellence, entt'l'prIse and hber.Lhty, Carpet Warp ...... 0 0 Amel Jca n Sheet " ...... 0 5% YAN & FA.RTHI!\TG, Manufacturers and Wholesale De.tler.ti especmlly cC' mmend the A!.:tnH. Inslllr ...... 0 80 VenetIan Red, cwt .. 3 25 CODY, 'Y'HOLESALE GROCER -P. CODY, dealer In choice T CHANTS, Nb b Dan"s Building, Public LandinO', Cin- Tuition, including tbe same branches already specified, ~ 1 Ithubarb, E. I...... 0 90 ~halk ...... 0 1)1 P• family Flour, 'l'eas,Sugars, 1.'obn.cco, Llquors,&c. &c .. No. lDnati. Ohio. . 0 n020 pay.tble se ml·annually in advance, per Se::iSlOn of ten 17 and 19 Water street. between MalO lind Walnut feb·25 and a half months...... • ...... $25 00 Senna, Alexandlla ..... 0 28 Yellow Ochre ...... 0 231 Junior Clas!S ...... 20 00 Do. Eastlnd", ..... 0 12 Lamp Bl.ck papels .. .. 0 6 Snake Root, Seneca ...... 0 60 VeldlgIis ...... 0 7.() ONES & ' CONAHAN, (Surcessors to Gross and Dietrich), In~~i~:'~I~t:.er paltIculals apply to the Slstms Jesldiug in the Do. Do, Va ...... 0 00 W Rags J· ManufactUlers of CANDLES, SOAP and OIL~ Oll1le, No SR. JOSEPIIINIl HARVEY, Mother Superior. Sponges, B.lhama ...... 0 37 estern, 1i! lb, cash ...... i28 ' Vestern !tow, CIncinnatI. 'l'a.pels and Paschal Candles fOl , IlE annual seFSlon of Studles at ~ount St. ]1:irY's Col1egi Do. 'J'url\rchb!shop PURCELL; ,Veri. He" . .ED E. P J Sca.mmon. AM, Professor nfJ'tfatbem:ttics. much cla.im their compassion andassIst<1llCe Do Do ,?>%,doz .. 2 75 Do., Brown ...... 0 0 WARD PUltCELL, V. G.; Rt.Rev. JAMF.S .F. WOOD, . sepU, Xavier Donald l't(cLeod, Professor of LatIn and Belles Lettres Tomato Cat., 1i! 7:1: doz ... 1 25 Loaf, Nos.lto 9 ...... 0 0 . :1 ELI,SI B}]LLSI IlELLS' BELLS' Henry J ,Yjesel, Professor of Music. Do. Do., 'tl doz. I 00 Crushed and POWdered .. 0 9% It Ys The subscriber is extensively engaged In manufacturIng 'l'be 'l'utor s .Lre fUlui shed f, om the Students of Mount St Pepper Sauce, do ...... 0 90 llrazll ...... ~ ...... 0 0 B G E 0 R GET 0 W NCO L LEa: E, Mary's Seminary, WIth which the College is connected. SardInes. '1l\ box ...... 0 48 Tallow. Bells or ev~rysize used by Churches, Colleges, PuhhcBuildings, GEORGETOWN, DC. ' - rER)13-l'AYABLE HALl<' YEARLY IN ADVANCE Do. ~.~ box ...... 0 24 Rendered, 1i! lb ...... 0 10 Steltmhoats, PlantatioDfI, etc. IlE academic year at tbls InstitutIOn commences on the tin His Bells are construct ed upo;n true and correct I?rinciples it: Mouday of September and ends ahout the1D1ddlo of -iJu!y ;. g!:~I~~:!~~~I~,e per s~,ssion, f~om Sep,t.1 to June 30, $175 Do. ~ box ...... 0 17 Rough. '" ...... 0 6 T theirform and thicltness,andJn the proportion and combInation EXPENSES. S Sahd Oil, 1i! doz. qual ts 4 50 Treg.tabl.. . -Mnsicftnd Drawing, each $40 150 Do. Do,1i! doz. PInts .. 2 25 Potatoes,1i! bushel ...... 0 0 of metals thus attaining the greatest degree of sono rou 8n ~s~ , Tbe penslOn for the scholastic year for Tuition, Boar...d, Lodging S Doe~r 's 'Fees and MedlCIue $5 00. according to attendance at Macaroni,1i!lb , ...... 0 13 Turnips ...... 0 0 the r.'ost melodious t one, and the requisite strength and durn Washing and Mending hnen IS, ...... $200 00 the ophon of the Parents 01 GuardIans .. billty. $100 00 inva,'iably in advance. )- Vermicelli ...... 0 12 Onions ...... " ...... 0 0 "FOI the whole Vucation spent In the Colle"'e an- extra. cha Tapioca ...... 0 12 Vinegar. An a~fJortment of medium sizes are kept on hand, enabling Medical aid and MedIcines, ...... 5 80 I, of$.!5 00 Will be made; a.nd for any part of ltmore than n wer~e Pic and Sp. Oys. 'ii\ doz. 6 50 Cider, 1i! gallon ...... 0 60 pnrchaliCr< to hear and judge of their qualitl for themselves For half boarders, ...... 125 O~ a proportIOnate cbarg,c e , Fresh cooked, ...... 6 50 Mauuf.ctured ...... 0 0 Largp.r size<:, and. if desired, of a particular tone and key, and For day schoiars, ...... :...... 50 00 n Dr,lfts at t~irty days will he i.sued for all expen,es. Lobsters, ...... 3 00 Woo! Fleece. ehimesof any number ,·r SIze of BeIls, cast at a sbrrt '{1otice. Use of Philosophical and Astronomical Instruments ... I 5 00 Bell. c~st at this foundery are furnished w:tb springs (to pre· Graduation Fees, ...... ' ..•. , 5 00 B?oks and "tationery can beoiltamed in the Co lIege at th Ind.Fire crack., ~ box. 2 25 Extra Fine ...... 0 e ordmary prIces. e vent the unpleasant sound produced by the clapper jarring on For those students who m.y .pend the Vacation at the ' . .Feathers. Full Blood ...... 0 (l )- th e BeU) and the most approved plan of iron yokes, wheels, anll Colle~e an extra charge Will 1)e made of ...... [~OO Toe Pocleive prompt Sbou.ld a s.tudent leave befnr? the expiration ' of a quarter, no deductIon wlll be mad~ except In cases of sickness or dismi~sioD • daetlon will be made. except In case of sic knells or dismissa.l. Do. Mo ...... 120 0 Unwashed ...... _ .••••• ~ Ysoff • ttontion hyaddressing GEORGE L. HANKS, ap22 Nos. 120 alia 122 East Second d ..e et. C,,,c1nnati. aug2.3m • JOHN 'EARLY, S.J., President. 8 CATHOLIC fELEGRAPH AND ADVOCATE M;;1{ Ii #@ · t eNg g '4 &¥¥ §i!§ig? 'aM 9-+ @i .iii -
Addres~ to Right Rev. J. Quinlan, Splendid Velvet and Morocco-Bound YOUNG l\TAN from the EAst, who has had several years New Tailoring Establishment. A expedcncc l wi!:,b es tl ~itu il ti o n as bookkeper or sale!=man. Bishop of Mobile. Prayer Books, Can be seen a.t I,inn street, No. 137. . dec17 3t EDWA.RD . M c A.RDLE , 8U ITA TIl.E po--n EG S l e:l~e mo!'-t respectfully t o inform his n~merous friendk, . t he gentlemen of Cillcinnali and its "icinity, tb:lt h e has Welcome. thrice welcome, Bev'rend Prelates all ! FE'V more 6mall Boys cn.n bp. received at the Private B Scb ool on £101 : bet ween }:igbth nnd Ninth str e et~, ~ o . tnken the St o n~ 178 VIN E b'l' R.KET, b~tw een 4th attd 5th sts., ,Joyous tho bour t.h t ~ t brillgs you to our hall, CHRISTMAS A 298. ~' o r terms apply to Dr . .1. Uudd . decli wh~re h~ intends carrying on the MEHCllAN1' 'l'AJL Ul{.lNG ~ And blest-the p urpose which this fC5 b~ 1 bright AXD bUSiness III all its branches. I n soliCiting a s bar ~ of public patronage wh en there is so Doth to OUI' b;t llow'd !'\il orJ3s your s tep "i invite. much c O Ulp ~ titi o n, he ial,es 1 ~ 8,'e to ~tcoming foi'Dl and lat est sty If's, e J)lpl o ~ iug the be~t workmen. H ~ f~c ls confident that a ~ i ngl e trial will convince A u 5picious day! an era it portends and b il].d illg, altogeth er crcdituule to lllecbauics and illanufac Baltimore. any g~ntJ ellla n , tbnt ill point of excell ence of fit, uentn e~ s, :md That e'en Ueav'n's former mcrcie:. fin transcends. turt:l I'S in t he 'Vest. ST. VI:\'CF.NT'S J.IANUAL, r €: yi!=cd hy a. Vcry Reverend C l e rgy~ durabilit.y of worl\Dlanship, pu tlctulllity to ord( ~ r s, aDd MOD ERATE But, oh! while thus now benediction pours man, Examiner of Ho () I \~ , is approved by me, and I' €C(lmmended CUARG ES, he cannot be surpuli!'-ed. to t he faltllful of my charge. In tides prolific on our arid shores; Pious Guide>" a guide to Catholic D eration, A c h o ic~ selection of uents fUt'Di shing articles always on Gircn under my band at Baltimore. this 9th da.y of Novem· hand. d~ c 17 6w While fl'om th e vault descends in gol den streams l Smo. Beautifully illus trated. B ou nd ill be,', 18;9. t Fl\ANCI' PATRICK, bl u e, bhtCk, sca.rl et and and lllarOon silk vclyets 'l'!Jc light that from thl~ 'fhrone of ;\Te rey beams Arch bishop of lJaltimore. Just Published. at pric e~, from $ ..1-.00 to \).00 Can still our h eal'ts their bur::;; t.ing d epths r estr ain, Antique Morocco bindings. from 2.50 to 4.00 Mary L~e, or the Yankee in Ireland; NOI' turn to Her Imll1acul:l.tc from stain, l!'rench and Turkey llIorocco, and Ru~sia bind .Iud pub1i!= hed, in an e)pg:mt and attractive volume of n early i ug: from 2.50 to 3.50 llrOO pap:es, frc·m entirely new sterentype plat ~ R , in two dif llY Til E AUTliOIt OF S lJA~' DY MCG UI RE. ']'0 whom indeed for priceless boon this day, fe r~nt sizes. ia 180 and 2'to, and embelii f' h ed with New :lnd The Publishers ,have spared no expem,e in geUiug up this OUi' grat eful souls' bt.lst homn:~~s we p'\.y ? Key of Heaven: a Manual of P7'oye,'s Bellutiful l ~ngra.vin gf' , in the finest st.v le of .t h e arL; in work,-it is printed from New 'l'ype, on Fine .Pavt'r, WiLh lllus To ITer who d"igm: upon hCl' festal dear selected from t it t.o the convenience of the reader. ' Th~ De- Invoke their Patroness th' Immaculllte, And. Laity' 8 Direct07'y, f01' the United States, Ur suline !llanual, in velvet, 9.rO Yotio n ~ iu constant u sc, such as Morning nnd EYening Pra.yers, And all, my Lord, with rcv't'ence and with love, Catholic Devotions, ,: $40') to 9 OU DevClti onF ior Ma,!';s, &c., a.rc prinlpd from be.autiflll largo r,y-pe, WITH AN J't'fore ihan can words portJ'ay, as from Ilbove, ;:5t .•l ohu's Manual, 6.00 to 9.00 and throughou t t.he entire J ~ook. tile ~t'en,tl'st care has b ~e u ob- 4.CO to 9.00 served. in tbe selectiuu ofa clear, bold nnd distinct type, easily Appendix, .containing tlle Canadian Directory, R eceive (thee as) OUI' Father, Pastor, Head aud IIo l'd, St. Yi m'cut's i\lanun}, " '~ isitatiou 1HauuaJ, 4.0U to 9.00 I'ead , aud not. i~ltiguing t o the eye. &:c., jor 1860. 'Vhom IIeavJn thro' l\[ary's hands doth deign accord. 'l'he l'ubli ,hnrs believe that they can snfely r ecommend this. A LSO , " To thfl3 lilt.ewise un utte r'd th:l.uks we owe, ns t.he handsom est and m ost complete Prayer Book ever issued Riblc~:lt prices from $1.00, 1.50, 4.50, 5.00, 7.50, ]0.00 to 25. 00 iu this country. Craving that LIeav'u ·th' indemuity best ow, 1 Recommendation of th e Most Rev. The Arch Life of Chrii.;t, from 7.50 to 10. 0 '1'h ~y r~fe r with pl efumt· c to the :lpprobntion of the MOf't Hev Fur h OIll '3 ftlJll friends a nd hallo w'll joys resign'd, LiI~ of the Ul cf'sed V il 'gin~ from 4.QO to 15.00 the Ar cbb i ~ h o p of Baltimore, aud to the following recommellda bishop of .Baltimore. Butler 's Lives of the Saints: from 5.00 to IS.00 On Southern shores a. life of toil to find. tions to thc former ~d i tiou . :l\Iessrs. Uurphy & Co . h:Lvi ug undertakell the publication of The Sncl"lImentnls of the Holy Catholic Church , or gady orders f rom t. l.l e 'l'rade, n~1i g i o u s Communities, a~d Our 'grateful od son~ alone sh :1.l1 ri~e the 31t:tropolita n Cut !rolic Almanac, at. the i1Jstauce of tlJe latO' .F lowers from the GArden of th e Liturgy . lly others, respectfully soli<: ited. . Provincial Council :l.t llaltjlIlor~ : 1 recOmmeud Ibe ll udcr(aldug To TI(H', our Arbitress beyond the ~ldes, tbe liev. " ·nt . J.llarry, from . 'j5c. to 1.50 to tbe f~ ~\'or 01 Lh~ Prelates or the United ~tatcs ",uu of th ~ That her mn.tcrnal heart may ever he MURPHY &: Co, Publishers, Legends of Holy Mary, with stoe.} engraYing for. 182 llaltilllOle 8treet, naltimore. Clergy and f,tith ful , tlmt the n ecessary iuformtl.'l ion may be fur A place of r est in life anu death to thee ! Tille p:tgo; beautifully bound in fine cloth, wllh ni!>ihell t hem in (iUI;! t i1lle) aud thHt th~ worl\. Illay meet with richly gilt side. Au elegaut Gilt Book. ~8 For Sale by all Cathnlic llooksellers. dec173s patr onage. t }""l{A 1'H.a:s l'Al'J{ICK, a! m ay,her heav' nly aegis guard t h ee still Ar chbisb(lp Df llalt.imore. FI'om ever y danger and impending ill, Baltimore, Jnly 1f, 1859. 'fill crowns celestial gird thy brow Ott 'high, JUST PUBLISHED, "The Best Oatholic Paper in America." The i\letropc.l itllll Catholic Almanac and T~Hity's Directory, is And tho" Le tbron'd with ner etern.ll),. The sequel to Cardinal Wisema.n's Italy and the Papal States, an anthorized CI\Lh olic Anuuul, uod as S U I b is recom mt::n d l.:l d to entitled : t be Faithful of tho United ::lt a~e s . It contaills reliable iuful'Dla' FAN Nm PARKJlH. . " THE Mo.ST POPULAR AND THE lion cOllCe rning the s tate of l:{!ligion und it ~ prugl'etis in our CHILD OP ' MAUY. GOVERNMENTof1li.ePAPAL STATES MOST WIDELY READ." c.n llntry. together with the Illost ample details of Ule .t:cdesi:ts Academy of the Visitation, AND TEllPOltAL POW I!:lt M' THE ['OPE. tical afrairs of the s~vcI'a l Dioceses of the Uuited ~Iate :; , Cauada, Mobile, Dec. 8th,1359. Uy ODe of the J~d itors of the a Dublin Itl;:v hnv." aut! the Britisb. PrOYinCf~S1 prepared an-! furlllshed fvr lhis work Neatly boulHl tll clotb, SO.38 by tbe respective Pt·e l at~s . . 'l'.be Geueral Ju1ut"lllation is «s full as is conststent with it!) charaj:; ior: I'enderi ug it a vtlluaLlt:: book This work is a. complete hif'tol'Y of" n ow MOD ERN I S THAl' NE'V YORK TABLET. · of r eference fut' every Catholic lamily'. 'l'lle Urdu ha!) been pre LOOKING over a I ate number of the London flOST'LITY TO "HE T""POR,'. DO,n NION OF TIH: HOLY SEE," pro· pJred wit,h the greatest c~\.re, a nd will be foull.Cl so completu as Illusi1'ated News, we find that its Italian corres. du cing tbe te,tim ony of Hanke: Wilites id e; Gosselin; }'arini: The TABLET is adm itted by:l ll to h. t,he Bes t and most In to presen t to tht: Ch:rgy not only t,he variOUS Oflil:cs, but also the j i M<.Iguire GladFtone; Bowyer ; nlackstone 'Yestlake; . lSey dependent Catho1i1J Papc-r in Amel'ica.. 'l'be co ntents of its co principal dates of lh~ Mar t.yrology. pondent admits tha.t it is very possible that if moUl" ; Cre",y; Funblanque; Bril;bt; Allison; Miley; .Abdy; lumns are of tbe most varied and une l ceptionable cbllract er. .BarIy o 1"d ~r s frolll llooksellers and others, respect fully soli of the people of Tuscany W€I'e to be. BroughaUl; \I'isemau; Leap ill .gwell; Sir Hen ,'Y Win ston lJar· The most cal'efut supervi:o; ion i ~ extended ' even to its Ad\!ertis cited. tile vote ron: P. Cumin j London Quar terly ]{eview, .'pril, 1859 ; The iog columns, which arO l\:ept clear of Quack l\Iedicine and Sen JOHN )I:fURPHY &: CO., Publi~hers. taken, the majority might recall the exiled dy- Edinburgh Heyiew , April, 1859; 1o" 'a"er's ~Jull,,"ine , May, 1859; ~ atiou Paper AdV"erti bements, the P I'o:;cuce of wbich, unfi t . d' The Lnw Times, iUuy 21, 1859' 'I'his is a complete HAND-BOOK journals, otber wise higbly ref- pcct a.b le for introduction into 18'2 Baltimore st .. Baltimore. nasty. TI lIS correspon ent IS an ardent lover OF ITALY. thd lfam ily Circle. ' ]i'or Sale at 'Publish ers' Prices, t y :r. P. Walsh-Kreuzbur g of Italian liberty, as understood by Victor Em- Galileo and the Roman Inquisition, THE N. Y. TABLET, for 1860. and NutTe,Cincil1u, . And by all CH Philosopbical opinions. J!'rom the ,,' : Dttblin mence the publication of tholic Booksellers in the Unitt: d Slut",S alld Cauada. declO 3t, not been in Italy, an d h ad personal lmowledge Rev;,,"." witb an in troduci ion by a"f Ameri · A NEW S TOR Y, of the way revolutions are got up in that con'll. can Catholic, Hmo. l'ape,', fl ex., 0.13 Land for Sale. \vrit.teu expressly for this paper by the well· known and popuhtr FAR:\] of 52!4" acres of lund, situated one mile from the try, can understand tllC real meaning of the A new :wd beautiful edition of writer, A TTr.o;;ll line n. .... nvont. • n" o wn (~n .. Ohio. 'l'hirty S. to JOH!f P. \VAIJSH, 17 0 :::iyc;tmore street, Cinciunati. octS And the same can 'be said of the late elections The popular HISTORY OF IRELA.ND, URE WINE A.ND OLIVE OIL-GEORGE HELD, CAN'fON, in favor of Victor Emauel and "Itali'an Lib JUST REOEIVED. P 0 ., has ('C'o stantly on haud and for salc pure OLIYE OIL By '1\ D. McGE E, "Esq., M.P.P., will be continued to completion. and pure W1~ ~S at the following rates. erty" in the central part of the peninsula. A large and varied stock of lace pi c tUl'e~, statu ets. rosnries in As t.he :tlltb.J}, will hll.ve renched tb9 pel'iod of ., the Reforma Ulive Oil, at ...... : ...... $4 00 per gallon tion" by th ~ beginning of the year, bis concludiug cllapter s Roussillon, red. at ...... /; 00 H PittsbU1"!!lt Catlwlic. cocoa, iYory, bone, silver, garnet, pead, cornenliau, co ralj and must be looked forwlIrd to with iucreu5:cd interest. Do white at ...... ,...... l 40 -- ~--~--- pure silver and gold r osaric~; gol d and silver medals frpm $1.(,,0 MRS. J . SADLIER, l\follt.pellier, white at ...... 1 25 to $10.00 each j elegant Vases of Flowars a~ high priced ns llourgoyne, r od at ...... •...... 1 50 . Latest by Telegraph to Queenstown. Cbatea.u eauf, red at...... 1 5U $25.(;0 per pair, with stands and glass sb adt's; Candlesticks, 'ViII also Contribute Interesting Sketches of Irish Lifo and LONDON, Dec. 8.- The Times' city article, Of Character. - Alsalse Wille, wbit-~ at ...... 1 40 Wax Candles and Tnp.er s; elegant.Iy framed IHhograpbs and D o. do., do., a:; ...... 1 00 Wednesday evening, says the English fnnds engr avings: a fin ~ likeness of St. F rancis of Sales, said to be a THE EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT oct.l56m. are again very buoyant to·day, and .nearly all true 1i1leness, wit.h or without frames; Crucifixes and Holy 'Vill continue to be marked by the same boldness and inde· E. J. R UG UES. G. T. DORJ.d.ND. descriptions of securities have likewise shown Water Fon ts at eyery price frrm 15c to $5.00. A large stock of pendence which h'!'ve hitl~ erto ciJa.ractcrized its cffo.rts in the I.L UG [[I!:S & D::JRL .>l.ND , Importers of Wa tches, Clocks. {Tood cause, lwd w111 con tInue to denounce the 4?nemws of that r ,J ewelry, &c., No. 150 " ralnut str l.:let, below .h·ourth, mn P ;·i.l.ctical Re1igiou s Dooks, em bracing aU the standard worl{~. an upward tendency. There has been a de ~au ~e under wbafever dif'g uise they seek to bide themselves. cinnl ti, O. mand in the Discount market, and the tone was Al so, Cbess and Back Gammon Boards, and l>ortfolios in 'Faithful to its programme it will eschew all uler oly political mOl'occoand par,ier ma.chie, at prices from $1.50 to $12.CO. questions, but wben t.he cause it W ;lS ostablish ed to dllfend is REGAN, Dealer in St:\ple and Fancy DI'y Goods, Cloaks, good to the la·st. , attacked, 0'pfl111y 01' covertly, it will be n O r especter of p a r~on:; • Shawls, and l!lmbroideries, at No. 150 Fifth street, between 'fourist's COlltp!l.n iOll, 4to, imitntion morocco, fUl'nLc;bcd with or of partie8 . It will "ver be the dctermiued opponent of Know TtlHce and EIlll, Cillcinnati, Ohio. . oct!;) 12m - The Direc tors of the Great Eastern Com paper, peu, knife , wax. pen clettner; &c., ...... $5 50 No thingisln, whether It assumes tbe garb o~ Republicanism or Diamond PortfoliO, d ch gilt Rides, with rack for H letters pany, finding themselves unable to present th~l t of Democracy. to all~we r ,"" letters , 1.75, 1.44, 1.15. fr-at uT e in·the T'l.blet . . vo lume will con lain a complete h st of P o~ t' O Ili CClS In tbe TTmted PARIS, Wednesday.- The rates for bills dis \Yith such featurt!s. we think ihe 'l'ablet cannot f:til, during Stat es and 'l't:l'ritori.l;!s. oct8 the coming yea!', t o still further j ustify thIJ pre-eminencc al· counted by tlie- Bank of France, have advanced ready cheerfully accorded it by ils cOt:tempol"llries, of being Just Published and now "eadg, to A. G. DENNIS. considerably. Funds are less activ~, but steady. the best, tbe most independen t. and the most widely circulated G. P O'nON::-i"ELL. Catholiqmpt' I' in AlO erica. While thMlkiog the Catholic public O'Donnell 8r. Dennis, Rents a9f. 85c. Met?"Opolitan Catholic Almanac fo,' 1860, for the fLtvol' alrehdy accorded to ou r p.ntcrprize, we are confi· ATTORNEYS ...\T-LAW , AND .NOTARIES, Arm CO;\fMISSIONJmS, No. 15 p ublished by Murphy & Co., containing StlLt.istics of the dent of its co ntinuance and further extension. Hierarchy of the United Stat es and au AppendIX compo~ed Public La nding, ~ ho e ober gd ' s Building, between i\ltl in and Receipts from Dec. 15, to Dec. 22, 1859. ;i of the Canadia.n Prov incial Dir ~cto r y. Also an AJpbabeti TEltllS: Sycamor e, Cincinnati. O. Special attention g iven to Steam cal list of Bishops and Clergy of the United States, the bO:lt Busiuetis, n e~s. -N ew Hrk (N . •T.) Evenipg J ournal. lon experience to merit a share of public. patronage. 1.\:0 pal.ns Careful and prompt attention to'all orders. The Tablet is ably conduct,ed, and is bold, f~n rl ess , and ind~ u after 'an illness' of about four weeks, Mr. JAMES pendent in tone.- Louisvil1e Guardinn. Willbe spared to ~ive satisfaction to those who may fa~'o r Ium with A, caiL His store is two doors weil of Plum, north SIde, No. ( HATTA.N, aged 59 years, a native of Tyrone, J 0 H N P. W A L S H, It ha~ tttken the first r:lnk among he C_atholic journals in tbis country.-Portland (Me.) Al"gus. is succ.,sor to J. Eshelby for the manufac· Bookseller, 'Printer, d::ut Publisher;' 'rhe Great Hepublh: produces n othing in .the way of journal .. 2~~.·~~~~t'~~~·eil Ireland, and a resident of Ohio for the last ism superior to the New York Tablet.-D.uhlin Nation. tur.ing of the celebl'l\ted H ~ ir.liDe~ B90tS. • . twenty years. May he !est in peace. 170 Sycamore st., Cincinnati. Dedi 3t Orders fro1ll. it distance. wll1 receIVe pro.mpt attentIon.