Oranges Directory—1934 599

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Oranges Directory—1934 599 ORANGES DIRECTORY—1934 599 Steuben (EO )—continued A(4)Counihan G E 129 Fenessey Richard A(106)Kirchartz P E A (308) Clark Marie P 100 Trott Josiah 0 @ A(21)Ericson Carl E Riordan John J © A(107)Treacy E W A (309)Krueger Mildred 102 Baker William A(22)Tindale S M Mrs Vacant A (108(Turner E A (310)Herbine R H ABooker Richard A (23) Hoffman J A 130 Churcher Charles H A (201) Bowman J A 3d (311 (Hilliard Armon 103 £ Brown James (24) Furniss C W Hart I Mary Mrs © (202)Vacant A (312)Bennett M A 104 Cuttino Lawson (25) Dowling C M Mrs Vacant A (203) Beard Cornelius (313) Davies G C Foster J H (31) Nixon R G 133 Vacant (204)Cippler Frank J (314) Rooney Mary A 105 Thomas A Mrs (32) Miles Fred 135 Tweedale Charles W A (205(Hughes W E A(315)Hennessey J F 106 Lewis Mae W Mrs © (33) Graumann Lewis 137AWehrfritzM Harry L (206) Eastman A F (316) Weigman Edward 107 Groves LeRoy A (34) King Maine D 138ASavage James R © (207) Biegler P L (317) Winckler L E Mrs 108 Lester Harold J (35)Kalkhof B Mrs 143 A Simpson Lewis K © (208) Richards T C (318) Malone D B nurse Petty R A (41)Vandenburgh E Mrs 144ABenson Olaf * (301) Carlsen Viggo A(319)FitzSimmons J R Vacant A (42(Pollard John A Main Eliza Mrs © (302) Bender M Ellen A(401)Cowan Vera M 113 9th av crosses (43) Bally George O 147 Condilg^lberforce M (303) Matthews C A (402) Richards Edith 116 ^Gregory James M A (44) Kolb Herbert A ACroi^Ht Frank L © (304) Blind J George A (403) Catherine Ida E Shockley H A (45) Mullen Samuel 148AKynor A Mabel (305) Williams Ernest (404(Walker Mabel C 118 Allen Ellwood S 7 Mills Edgar I 151 McGovern T J © A(306)Pietsch W L (405) Machette J E Owens James 9 AKuhl Richard H © 153 A Taylor Chester E © A<307)Pflster William Jr (406) Bruster H G 120AGoode Elijah 14 A Simpson Benjamin J 154AMcCloskey C A © A (308(Gates B G Mrs (407) Voss Charles W Womack M J 15 AMaccabe Walter P 0 157ADrummond J Mrs ® A(401)Munson G W (408) Pursack O W 122 Robinson L Mrs 16 Roberts G H Mrs © 158 Merrill ct ends A (402) Mitchell M G Mrs (409) Goozay C Arthur 123 Deacon Eva W Mrs ® 17ABosenbaum F W © Werner Albert G © A (403) Perry M A Mrs A (410)Bergner C 124&Fuller John ARieker Howard W Burns Victor M © A(404)Doehler Herbert (411) Eskew Roderick Stewart Samuel 20AMuchmore G Burton McCann John J A(405)Seldler Jacob (412) Emrie Katherine Jones Jack A 21 Fischer Marie S Cummings John E (406) Smith William J (413) Daniel M M 125 King M C 22AWestervelt James D 3 ALesher Henry M A (407(Ramsey S D (414) Earle Edna M 126 £ Johnson Edward D 24AReid John S © 170 Reynolds F M builder® A(408)Woodward H P A (415)Teeter Lulu T Parker Alexander 25ABauhan "Charles W A Wahl Oswald E 17 Marlboro Manor apts (416) Callaway W C 127 AWynder Edward 26 A Wilson Arthur H © SUMMIT (EO) fr 193 N Munn Meyers William R (417) Kudolla O nurse 128 Bowen Wright 29 A Townsend Nalbro F © av NE to 106 Ashland av (Bl)Jennings B H Mrs (417) Kudolla R M Mayo Thomas 30 Kimber Walter E © (Right even) (101) Campbell J D (418) Bazinet D L Mrs Vacant 34AHolton H A meat 4 A Cook Thomas N (102) Savage M B Mrs A (419) VanRiper H L 130 Adam Scott 35ATrimpi Dorothy M © AHall Margaret M Mrs (103) Nungesser W V 24 Vacant Dickerson R Mrs 38AWohlhieter Joseph W ALawson S C (104) Gaskins J B Jr 26AKuinby Ripley ® 131.Q.Elliott Edward Rev 39AReimold M B Mrs © Nelson Myrtle E Mrs A (105) Patterson C F 29 N Walnut st crosses Porter Alfred 42AHimes Harper A © A Olsen J J (106) Felton Ernest R 32ABenedict Gilbert S © 132ALyons William G ® AHimes A H ins AVanNest E G Mrs A (107) Brady H Neill 36 A Summit Garage of E Or­ 134^Heeley Charles H © 43 Vacant AWilliams J A A(108)MacGrath J A ange 135&Francisco J R tchr danc 44ABurnet Frederick M 3 Vacant (109)Mostella E P nurse 39AFinnernan Bernard A ing © 45AKinne Henry G 8AMeyer P C painter A(H0)Anstead T W 49 N Clinton st crosses 136^Robinson Arthur W 48AFisher Jennie E Mrs AQuinby Edgar H A (201) Stern S Arthur 97 Julich F N 137.& Clark Constance 49ABertrand Elmore A ARiker Anna F Mrs A (202)Rossell C B Mrs 97 J First Luth Church A Peterson C F ice ® SOAWauters Harry S © A Singleton A Mrs © A (203) Mattson K E Rev (Swedish) 138AVanNorden Frank L <§ 51A<3eiser Harry © Carroll W A (204)Koehler Harry G 99 Cunningham P J © 139AEgan M Mrs 54ADey George E T A Condon Itala D Mrs A(205)Marr Grace Mrs Purcell A A Roulund Victor 55AHanko Emma © ADarrah G Blaine (206) Vacant lOlAEgan Edward J 140 Benton Sallie Mrs 56AGonzalez Clarence M ARichardson Horace A(207)Peckham B A Vacant 141 Sypher Florence M © 59 A Walker John 9ACollier James R (208) Luqueer W A 102AOlark L M Mrs nurse Vacant 60 Vacant A Davidson Edward M (209) Davenport Granger Clark Lois H 142 Banks Samuel 63ACollins William B © Lauer Arnold A(210)Keeler Gilbert B A Howard S W Mrs © 143 A Goodman Henrietta 64 Stewart Ethan A ALippincott E Mrs A (301)Watson George L 104 MacGrath J M © Pritchard Harris © 66ACampbell Joseph B © ASavitz Harold W (302) Brodie Louis Hylas J Edwin 144AConrad Percy L 67AHorton Frederic E © 10 Weed Walter C A (303) Greeley K C 105 Cunningham I A Ashe O W 68ASturdivant Clifford R A(l)Wilder Philip V A (304)Brown A J Janssea Caesar L M 146.Q.Majors John 70 A Williamson Coral D A(2)Ferris James L Jr A(305)Schmiedel A G 106ASnowden C F Mrs Reid L T 7lABaldwin Arthur M 3 (3)Gleichmann T F A (306)Schenck M A Seibel Louis © 147AVanderhoof C A Mrs © 72APinkerton L B A (4)Kolb Andrew C A(307)Rodgers T R 107ASchroeder Fred G AVanGilder F M Mrs 74ARaymond Frank J © (5) Vacant A (308)Shepard L M ASchroeder E G Mrs © 148ABrown L S Mrs drsmkr 75 A Irwin Robert H © A(6)Zoerner F T (309)Morris Roy E 108 Ball Walter © A Brown Lloyd E 76 A Trott Warren V © (7)Bower M Maxwell A(310)Nixon Thomas H AZilberman Henry Thomas L E 77AThomson W H J © A (8)Sanford Truman M A (401 (Peabody R T 109AAnderson Herbert S 150AMiddlesworth J M © STUART TER (W 0) fr 34 (9)Mendell Wayne (402)Saidenberg John E A Brennan K K © A Sheffield Albert McKinley av N (Right ev­ A(10)Farrar H K A (403(Wells E A Mrs 110 A Johnson F W © 151 Argyle Charles en) A(ll)deNourie L H (404) Vacant AKeigher Philip J 153 Zahner James E l McKinley av ends A (12)Jackson Cecil D A (405) Sanderson J H 112AKelly Carl K 154 A Carter H E 1 AMillar James W A (12A) Stevens George H A (406(Griffith S D Mrs Vacant AGrice Ansel M 2AFleming A E Mrs © A (14)Peters F P A(407)Sheperd Pearce 114AMcGeehan Frank C ARoberts Earl A 5ACook Charles N A (15)Quick John G A (408) Stephens M M Mrs Gannon Ellen Mrs 155 Cohrs Frank W 6ACleeland William J © A(16)Ruyter M D Mrs A (409)Varney Blanche G 116ACorey Matthew 156 Henry H A 7ANewkirk Gordon A © 12 Monterey Apts A (410) Hinckley David A Smith LeRoy M Hargrett Rosa Mrs 8 A Collins Willard L Gallery Isaac F 18 Fritz Oscar H 118 Ehrmann E J 157 Brady John A © 9AFmmons A C nurse Payton John J (101) Haveron J Mrs AMcGrath James A 158AHolle J A undertaker lOASchmidt Henry F © A (101) Smith Winton L (102) Vacant 120 Kelley Everett F AHorster Otto G © 11 Musler George A © A(102)Koopman John J (103) Foster Sarah Mrs ARosenberg R C © 159 O’Neill John J 12AWinters George W © (103)Jones Stuart P (104) Cambios Cynthia 121A Wang Frederick O Vacant 13 Blackstock A W © A (104)Runyon R J (105) Vacant 122 Reiff E M Mrs 160 Brown Thomas J 14AAlford Robert W © A (105)DeMonte R W (106) Haynie Helen Mrs ARiker Francis A © 161 AWilson S A SUFFOLK AV (M) fr 110 A (106(Silvester W H (107(Sharp Loretta C 123 Ashland av ends 162ACoates E Mrs Parker av S to 410 Elm­ A (107) Hunter Thomas M A (108(Furman Theodore SUMMIT AV (S 0) fr 200 Nelson Philip wood av (Right odd) (201) Vacant (109) Arthur Mary Garfield pi S to Maplewood Harris D H 7ABatchelder Charles E A (202) Black W M (110) Lime Alfred F line (Right odd) 164ALilly J A 9ASchill Hilmar © (203) Hankins M M Mrs (111) Huchthausen Marie408AManser E H Mrs © STEWART PL (S 0) fr 380 HAWurffel John © A (204) Pratt William B (112) Vacant 410APerry John W © Vose av SE to 389 Scotland 12 A Anderson Bjorn A (205)Fondiller Joseph (113) Glorieux Waite C413AWilliamson TJ Mrs © rd 13 A Short John W © A (206) Van Gils H D (114) Lee Harry 415AStoiber Edwin L © STOCKMAN (W 0) fr 8| 14AEngelberger W H © (207(McCracken M K A (115)Blair Janet S 416AMcGinity Joseph F © Mitchell SW to 5 Freeman 15AGilpin Harold P A(208)Hanze D A Mrs A (116)Montzourane D E 417AJIeldrum James K © (Right odd) 16ABrunner Joseph © A(301)Harvey W G Mrs 499 VfiPffTit 3 Strout John T 17 AFetherston E M Jr © A (302(Cooper W H A (H7)Geraghty John J 423AFaulks Wilfred W © 5AYasko Stanislaw 18ABruce David M © (303)Gebauer E G ins (201) Reusch Agnes J 425ACasserly Thomas F 12 Kent John F 27 Midland blvd crosses A(304)Lederman M G (202) Morris Ruth A 428AWolcott Augustus T 14 Payton Harry M 31 Vacant (305)Erickson G C (203) Weiss Helen B 433 A Chilton Edmund F © 16 Hatton W ice 32 Wiese Gustave A © A (306) Faulkner Freder­ (204) Brockman Mollie 440AEaBaume Irving I ® 18 Campani Antonio © 33ASargeant Walter W © ick (205(Richards Florence 441ALyons George © Parziale Pasquale 34ARissland Louis W Jr © A(307)Benson George A (206) Townsley F W 445AAdams Platt © 20APostiglione Pellegrino® 35 Brittle Will H © A (308)Severin F C (207) Wood D T Mrs 449Ahawrence Ralph W © 22 Lovenguth G A 37 A Jacobi K J radio ser­ A (401)Lofquist Spencer A(211)Hopping W K SUMMIT AV (M) fr S Orange Wheeler C H vice © A (402) Nordstrom Elof (208) Cleveland W J line S to 83 Tuscan rd 24 Multner Otto A © 38APridman William F © (403)Bean J D (209) English Harry A (Right odd) 26 Vacant 40APrinton Thomas A (404)Johnson C L Jr (210) Bryne Joseph F 479 Baldwin rd crosses 28 Borner Francis H © SUMMER (0) fr
Recommended publications
  • 1976-12-December-NWO.Pdf
    11111~111 New Series Vol . XXXVll No. 4 • Whole Series Vol. LXVI No. 11 • December 1976 3 Mission Memo 7 Ed itorials Reconciling Ministries 8 A Chilean's Passion for Peace Joyce Hill 10 A Patriarch's Prayer for " Love, Fraternity and Understanding" J. Richard But le r 12 Christmas Poems from Latin America 16 The Crisis in Ethnic Church Leadership Cha rley Lerrigo 20 New Life on a Haitian Island Photo Feature by John Goodwin Services to the Elderly 26 The Shepherds' Center Meets Human Needs Betty J. Beal I 29 Smiles in Paradise Auril Wood 31 Training Nurses at Canta, Liberia George M . Daniels 34 " Japan Doesn't Wear a Halo in Asia" Teruko Mi z utani interviews Dr. Noboru lwamura 36 Tallon Tindit, lban Christian Educator Ellen Clark 38 Experiment in Seminary Education 40 Books 42 Letters 43 The Moving Finger Writes COVER The Lee Family, Vietnamese refugees, celebrate their first Christmas at home in the U.S. Lawrence A. Larson Photograph (See page 42) Editor, Arthur J. Moore; Managing Editor, Charles E. Brewster Associate Editor, Ellen Clark; Art Director, Roger C. Sadler Designer, Karen T ureck; Administrative Assistant, Florence J. Mitchell 475 Riverside Drive, New York, New York 10027 Published Monthly (bimonthly, Ju ly-August) by the Board of Clobal Ministries of the United Methodist Church, Education and Cultivation Division, in association with the United Presby­ terian Church, USA . Second-class Mail Privileges Authorized at New York, N.Y. Additional Entry at Nashville, Tennessee. Copyright 1976 by Board of Clobal Ministries of the United Methodist Church.
    [Show full text]
  • Cover Beginnings: the First Quarter Century of Mount Saint Mary
    Cover Beginnings: The First Quarter Century of Mount Saint Mary College Page 1 Beginnings: The First Quarter Century of Mount Saint Mary College By James F. Cotter Page 2 TO THE ALUMNI Youth, what man's age is like to be doth show: We may our ends by our beginnings know. Sir John Denham Page 3 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS This history of the first quarter century of Mount Saint Mary College owes its existence to the writers of the college newspapers and the local reporters and editors who have told its story day by day, week by week, and month by month. The chronicle here is year by year. Sincere thanks are due to Dr. Estelle McKeever and Mr. James McEnery who supplied me with the material needed. Sr. Marie Genevieve Love, Roberta Singer, and Irene Walsh Nunnari were most helpful in answering my many inquiries. Mary Mills, Kathryn Stevens, and Florence Price also looked up information when necessary. Anne Wilkins kindy typed the final copy of publication. Barbara Currier and Brendan Coyne have been involved in every stage of the composition of this history, from first planning to final printing. the errors and omissions are, of course, the author's responsibility. May readers find as few as possible. Writing Beginnings was fun from start to finish. This history is dedicated to the alumni because it was their story then as students, and it is still their story now as alumni. They made it possible to happen, and they make it possible to tell. They are the Beginnings of Mount Saint Mary College.
    [Show full text]
  • Catalog 191 PDF Download
    Preserving Christian Publications, Inc. TRADITIONAL CATHOLIC BOOKS ____________________________________________ Offering More than 5,500 Used and Out-of-Print Catholic Titles Availiable in our Printed Catalogs and on Our Web Site www.pcpbooks.net And 46 Books in Print Selected from Catholic Classics & Important Books for Our Time Catalog 191 September 2021 Preserving Christian Publications, Inc. is a tax-exempt not-for-profit corporation devoted to the preservation of our Catholic heritage. All charitable contributions toward its used-book and publishing activities (not including payments for book purchases) are tax-deductible. The Liturgical Year by Abbot Prosper Guéranger The most famous classic commentary on the Masses throughout the Year. The Liturgical Year The Liturgical Year The Liturgical Year Advent Christmas Book 1 Christmas Book 2 The first three volumes of Dom Guéranger’s fifteen- Complete Advent/Christmas set $46 #5962 volume The Liturgical Year comprise Advent (vol. 1) and Advent: $16 #7026 Christmas (vols. 2 & 3). We are offering these three Christmas Bk. 1: $16 #7027 / Christmas Bk. 2: $16 #7028 volumes as a partial set, or as individual volumes that can Available: September 15, 2021 be purchased separately. All volumes are a sewn hardback edition. Volumes 4-6 (Septuagesima-Holy Week) available in November Used and Out-of-Print Titles OUR LORD / OUR LADY Problem of Jesus, The: A Free-Thinker's J., O.Cist 1950 200p dj (G) $17 #96220 Diary [using the literary device of a journal or Infant of Prague, The: The Story of the
    [Show full text]
  • Silvano M. Tomasi Papers CMS.126 Finding Aid Prepared by Mary Elizabeth Brown, Sonia Lau, Mary T
    Silvano M. Tomasi Papers CMS.126 Finding aid prepared by Mary Elizabeth Brown, Sonia Lau, Mary T. Sanders, and Cecilia Wang This finding aid was produced using the Archivists' Toolkit February 21, 2020 Describing Archives: A Content Standard Center for Migration Studies 29 February 2020 307 E. 60th Street New York, New York 10022 Silvano M. Tomasi Papers CMS.126 Table of Contents Summary Information ................................................................................................................................. 3 Biographical/Historical note.......................................................................................................................... 5 Scope and Contents note............................................................................................................................... 6 Arrangement note...........................................................................................................................................7 Administrative Information .........................................................................................................................8 Related Materials ........................................................................................................................................ 8 Controlled Access Headings..........................................................................................................................9 Collection Inventory...................................................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • E-Troubadour News
    THE - - MARCH 2015 C ONNECTING THE SECULAR FRANCISCAN C OMMUNITY THROUGHOUT OUR REGION. Published by Our Lady of the Angels Region of the Secular Franciscan Order in the USA. - 2 - Letter from our Region Minister March, 2015 Dear Brothers and Sisters in St. Francis, Your Region Executive Council has been stepping up and working very hard in the New Year. We meet once a month which is, in itself, a sacrifice in time and travel. Add to that Cluster gatherings, elections and visitations, committees, phone calls and emails, and you will see that our schedules are quite full. However, we serve you with great joy because this Council is a real fraternity—we enjoy being together, praying together and collaborating on the business that will make our region strong. In thinking about what makes a council or an entire fraternity healthy and strong, I began to think about communications and communication—(No, that’s not a typo). What type of communications does your fraternity use? In my experience (and from what some of you have told me), fraternities communicate through: Phone calls Cards, notes and visits to sick and homebound members Newsletters and e-mails Facebook pages, websites and picture sharing Opinion and planning surveys Face-to-face conversation at our fraternity gatherings Most of us have gotten pretty good at communications, although at times the news still doesn’t get to everyone. I encourage Ministers and Councils to be sure that any news you receive from the Region, either by e-mail or surface mail, gets to all of your members.
    [Show full text]
  • The Advocate - Oct
    Seton Hall University eRepository @ Seton Hall The aC tholic Advocate Archives and Special Collections 10-15-1964 The Advocate - Oct. 15, 1964 Catholic Church Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarship.shu.edu/catholic-advocate Part of the Catholic Studies Commons, and the Missions and World Christianity Commons Schema TheAdvocate Laity Attacked; Official Publication of tlio Archdiocese of Newark, N. J., and Diocese of Paterson Vol. 13, No. 43 THURSDAY, OCTOBER 15. 1064 PRICE 15 CENTS Joint Worship Okayed An Advocate Ncus Summary An Advocate Neivs Summary VATICAN CITY - Intercom- munion with Orthodox VATICAN and CITY - The schema common prayer with Prot- on the Lay Apostolate estants under certain cir- was introduced for discussion cumstances were endorsed in the Vatican Council on Oct. by the Second Vatican Council 6 —and promptly drew with- in last week’s work. ering commentary from al- most The council also stressed the every quarter of conci- liar common bond of. Baptism and opinion. Before the Holy Eucharist which, “al- debate opened, more than though Catholics have differ- 90 speakers had signed ent beliefs from Protestants up to discuss the schema. Be- fore the on these sacraments." provide talk was a day old, the a common ground for discus- draft had been criticized for too sion and prayer. being timid, too strong, ungrammatical, awkward and OP APPROVAL both meas- to unorganized, name only a ures came as the council few of the complaints. wound up voting on individual WHEN THE chapters of the schema on Ecu- Fathers, with a roar menism Still awaiting revis- of applause, closed de- CRUSADE bate six later KICKOFF - Allen C.
    [Show full text]
  • The Cloister Chronicle
    THE CLOISTER CHRONICLE ST. JOSEPH'S PROVINCE Condolences: The Fathers and Brothers of the Province extend their sympathy and prayers to the families of Rev. H. D . Schneider who died on Dec. 28, Rev. J. G. Crombie who died on February 27th, Rev. T. A. English who died on Feb. 29th, Bro. Bernard Kelly, Laybrother, who died on March 5th; to Very Rev. C. I. Litzinger on the death of his father and mother; to Rev. T. N. McPaul, Rev. J. T . Murphy and Student Brothers Kieran Fergus and Richard Curran on the death of their fathers; to Rev. J. R. Vandergrift, Rev. W . R. Ryan, Rev. W. R. Gannon, Rev. T . J. Smith, and Rev. T . N . McPaul on the death of their mothers; to Rev. P. V. Manning and Very Rev. W. F. Cassidy on the death of their sisters; to Rev. W. A Fincel on the death of his brother and to Student Brother Thaddeus Arrigo on the death of his grandmother. Professions: On June 1st Student Brothers Nicholas Coughlin, Julius Adam- chak, and William Ronayne made their solemn profession into the hands of Very Rev. C. H . McKenna, Prior of the House of Studies in Washington. The ceremony took place in the main chapel of the house. On March 25th Very Rev. T. T. Shea, Prior of St. Joseph's, Somerset, Ohio, received the first profession of Bro. D avid Antrobius, Laybrother. Bro. Gerard Thayer, Laybrother, made his second profession into the hands of Rev . T. G. Mullaney, SubPrior of St. Dominic's, Washington, D . C., on Feb.
    [Show full text]
  • The Advocate - Jan
    Seton Hall University eRepository @ Seton Hall The aC tholic Advocate Archives and Special Collections 1-2-1959 The Advocate - Jan. 2, 1959 Catholic Church Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarship.shu.edu/catholic-advocate Part of the Catholic Studies Commons, and the Missions and World Christianity Commons Recommended Citation Catholic Church, "The Advocate - Jan. 2, 1959" (1959). The Catholic Advocate. 74. https://scholarship.shu.edu/catholic-advocate/74 Father Dion Given Visa By Russians r WORCESTER. Mus _ Russia has grafted an entry Ti*a to Rev. Louis A. Dion, The Advocate A.A., and the Assumptinnist priest has said he will leave Official lor Moscow Publication of the Archdiocese of Newark. N. and of on Jan. 2ft and ar- J-, the Diocese orSatenon, N. J. rive five days later. *, NO. Father VOL. 1 Dion will serve as FRIDAY, JANUARY 2, 1959 chap- PRICE: TEN CENTS lain to American Catholici in Moscow He tg, succeeding Rev. Ceorges Bissonnrtte, A.A., ex- American pelled in March, 1955 He will Cardinals have the title of Express Apostolic Admin latrator of the U.S. S R and will On the be responsible Their on directly to the Joy Return Home Molv See. Father Dion had visa "It's great to be home.” filed a recognized and with a tbe smile ramp of the plane, ex- Inside... application in T9M. That sentiment It wras reject- was ex- said. “Do you in recognize me pressed hix pleasure at being ed after the U.S. State Depart- pressed by both Cardinal Cush- this outfit?” home and then left for ET TU, NOTRE ment the DAME? refused to grant a perma ing and Cardinal O'Hara last He said he w jr by Cathedral of SS.
    [Show full text]
  • Parish History
    A Brief History of Our Parish Introduction Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction On the 100th anniversary of Saint Gregory Colonial America the Great Roman Catholic Church, this Vicar-Apostolic of the London commemorative book offers witness to District from 1607 to 1783 how belief can be integrated with our Mission Church of North America surroundings, how worship proclaims the Superior of the Mission John Carroll divine when past and present, tradition (1784–1789) and creativity are combined. This book Diocese of Baltimore celebrates the centennial of our parish and (1789–1808) describes our place within the history of the Diocese of New York Town of Harrison, the Church of New York, (1808 – 1850) and the Universal Church. This is the story Archdiocese of New York of the roots and beginnings; the history of (established 1850) our parish community. It contains a brief biography of our patron, Saint Gregory Revolutionary War of Independence, the Great, historical images and Catholics in North America were served by photographs providing a beautiful record the Vicar-Apostolic of the London District in of stained glass, murals, statues, and England. During the time of the American church architecture. Revolution, the Catholic role in the English colonies was minimal, for they numbered The parishioners of St. Gregory’s are no more than one percent of the entire members of the Catholic Church, deeply population. The minority Catholics generally rooted in Sacred Scripture and Tradition. supported the cause of independence and The history of St. Gregory’s Church exemplifies fought in the revolutionary army. During the the idea that working toward fulfillment of Revolutionary War, anti-Catholic bigotry, which that mission is the responsibility of all had been pervasive throughout the colonial members of the Church.
    [Show full text]
  • Irish Collections at the Newberry
    1 IRISH COLLECTIONS AT THE NEWBERRY Introduction The Newberry holds several thousand items relating to Irish and Irish-American history and literature. There is an abundance of material on all key events, movements and individuals associated with Irish history from the seventeenth to the twentieth century, though the library’s particular strength is in the nineteenth century. Researchers with an interest in military and political history are particularly well catered for, as are those concerned with the Irish literary tradition. There is also a strong collection relating to Irish-America, particularly focused on the Chicago area, and the library has numerous resources which are invaluable to all those with an interest in genealogy. Scholars interested in Irish poetry, literature and drama will find a wealth of primary and secondary material. There are a substantial number of books by and about individuals including Dion Boucicault (1820-1890), author of The Shaughraun and The Colleen Bawn ; Richard Brinsley Sheridan (1854-1900), best known for his plays The Rivals and School for Scandal , and Oscar Wilde (1854-1900), poet, playwright and wit. The writers associated with the Celtic Revival of the late-nineteenth and early-twentieth centuries are also well represented with publications by the poet and playwright W.B. Yeats (1865-1939); J.M. Synge (1871-1909), author of The Playboy of the Western World and Riders to the Sea ; George Russell (AE) (1867- 1935), editor, poet and artist; Seán O’Casey, (1880-1964) author of The Shadow of a Gunman, Juno and the Paycock and The Plough and Stars ; and Lady Gregory (1852-1932), best known for her re-workings of Irish folklore and mythological tales, and founder, with Yeats, Synge, AE and Edward Martyn, of the Abbey Theatre.
    [Show full text]
  • Traditional Catholic Books
    Preserving Christian Publications, Inc. TRADITIONAL CATHOLIC BOOKS Specializing in Used and Out-of-Print Titles Catalog 178 August-September 2016 PCP, Inc. is a tax-exempt not-for-profit corporation devoted to the preservation of our Catholic heritage. All charitable contributions toward the used-book and publishing activities of PCP (not including payments for book purchases) are tax-deductible. would adjust them falls from his hand and is broken, as if there Essay on Catholicism, Liberalism, existed an irremediable disproportion between the weight of this balance and the weakness of man. It would seem as if God, when and Socialism He gave to man dominion over the sciences, had withheld one alone which He destined to remain under His own sway and jurisdiction— by Juan Donoso Cortés [1809-1853] the science of equilibrium [pp. 160-162]. Excerpt from Part III, Chapter 3, “The Dogma of Solidarity — Contradictions of the Liberal School”: 2014 xx + 236p [reprint of 1862 ed] $16 #63282 From which we see that the dogma of solidarity not only confers nobility upon man, but also dignity upon human nature. This is not the Communion in the Hand: case with regard to the communist theory of solidarity, of which we shall presently speak. Documents & History According to this theory, the solidarity of humanity does not mean the vast association of men who are by Bishop Juan Rodolfo Laise united because they have but one and the same nature, but it means that humanity is a living and organic unity Excerpt from Part IV, Conclusions: which absorbs all men, who in place of constituting it are only its .
    [Show full text]
  • SALESIAN BEGINNINGS in NEW YORK. the Extraordinary Visitation of Father Paolo Albera in March 1903
    SALESIAN BEGINNINGS IN NEW YORK. The extraordinary visitation of Father Paolo Albera in March 1903 Michael Mendl I. Introduction On November 14, 1900, the Salesians of Argentina celebrated the silver ju- bilee of the arrival of Father Giovanni Cagliero (1838-1926) and the first Sale- sian missionaries in that country. To enhance the festivity of the occasion, Bish- op Cagliero — he had become vicar apostolic of northern Patagonia in 1884 — and his fellow Salesians in Argentina invited Father Michele Rua (1837-1910), successor of Father John Bosco as rector major of the Salesians, to come to Buenos Aires. Father Rua sent his regrets, but he used the opportunity also to send an extraordinary visitor to the two American continents, to spend two and a half years visiting every Salesian work and every Salesian confrere and sister between Tierra del Fuego and the United States of America.1 Father Rua designated as his representative for this important responsi- bility Father Paolo Albera (1845-1921), a very highly esteemed member of the Salesian superior chapter (general council). Father Albera had joined the Salesians in 1860, a few months after their founding, and following his priestly ordination in 1868 exercised various offices of local responsibility. Don Bosco in 1881 appointed him the first superior of the French province of the Salesian Society. Despite the anticlericalism of the French government, Father Albera successfully fostered the Salesians’ development in France from three houses to thirteen in eleven years. Father Albera himself was called “little Don Bosco” because of his zeal and kindly personality. The Salesians’ Sixth General Chapter (1892) elected Father Albera spiri- tual director general (also called catechist general) of the Society.
    [Show full text]