CATHOLIC TELEGRAPH.

' " INN E C E S S A R I I SUN I'r AS, [N DUn I I S L. I B E R T AS, I NOM NIB U a CAR I T Ali! • , ' .. VOL. XU.-NO. 4? C[NCINNATI, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1843. WHOLE NUMBER 619.

From the Tablet. . Igatn. But she forbids marriage to no one unless 'he has even in contradiction of a heresy; so t~at when heresiell . " . if E Z p! . I if E"Z first made it unlawfrul to hitnself, He might as well sa.y died away, they expired altog~ther, with their effects, and Pi"Lncl.dw; I! Sfrws /) on t te .,·tnCl? es o . . H that the Church "forbids eu Ie to keep their hantls pure the Scriptures alone remained in their purity." . '~sa:lJs se mes I m07lijestin",.rr th.emsel-~e:~ Ul tU laRst ti3 tn Re~gwn, from blood;" because, wh~n I man has taken upon him tlie From all which we leatn, that Mr. Bosanquet thinks Ph1Ioso~h'/!' and Pni7.tzcs, y S. • osanquet, sq.- duty of-a soldier, she enjoins him to fulfil the duties of his very highly of the autMority of the Church, provided it ill Lond~n. B~lrns lR43. . . . . Istate. As to "forcing to abstain, by fasting acco.rdin~ to. a never exerted; and approves most strenuollsly of its co.n- Of thiS sprles of Essays w.e .1Ike the rehgwn least, the set rule"-the very thing is commanded by thiS wnter's demnation of heresies. provided it ney-er uses a negattve philosophy of tt0r; and tbe pnZtt!cs b.e~t (Jf all.. I~ the es- own body-ecclesiastical. which, in the Book of Common form of e;xpression. What can be the meaning of styling 'Says and parts of e~s~ys "bout re·!tglon there IS, Indeed, a Prayer, orden fasting and abstInence after a sham fa.shion the Athanasian creed an offspring of the logical and Aris. good deal th"! IS ~drnlr"h l e ; hilt, take them altogether, we of its own-and thereby (of course) teaches a "doctrine of totelian method of thought. we cannot tell. Its only con­ find a very grotesque nnd nnaecountable medley. In some devils." It would really be laughable, if it. were not mel- nection with logic is the sort of connection truth has with passages a vein of "x .Ited Pu.seyism, or w~~t sound like ancholy, to see a man who approves both celibacy and error-that of contradiction. The Athanasian creed is it. In othe·~s,. yn u might. tlunk a Catl.whc. spoke from fasting endeavoring to fasten a charge of devilclom against one of the orandest protests aoainst Arietotle that ever was within the vlslblA cnmtuunlon of everlasting life. In oth- \ a Church which he pretends to acknowledge as a part 01 enunciated;" and so far from b~ing "scientific," in the low ers, you are tre teu to thp low sh~fHe and cant of the. mod· C/wistenclom, on such a 1Joor arid nice distinction as that and ordInary sense of the word, it has a sublime simplicity €rn evangpliroal. And,. the.n ';:<~,aa~n you have a raving of between "encouraging" and "ordering" a mere variable about it that makes it rather a hymn than a Etatament of wh?lly ppcqilar wh l mslcal'~li lch se~rns to proceed fro~, pointof.discipline. The grotesque absurdity of the.a~cu- doctrine; and no man, we are SlIre, of common sense or no tsm upon eilrth ~Ithpr th"tioB,lsanq:let,sm . .A. part ofth~s sation is the ·greater-and its ~onesty the. more suspICIOUS feeling, can repeat it withont chanting it inwardly, and volume was jluhiIshfld I.n the B,.tllsh Cntlc;. and thiS -since this writer, if he l.(ows anythIng, knows that makinIS th ey m.ust feel) .710 authOrity, llnd lies in hypocrisy"-that is, pretending purity· of life and perjury." Of course no sound sun of the Refo!matlon pound them tn It by "II ~orts 01 human l1e~; they lac.k t.he abstinence from marriage, wile their lives were shocking- thinks it any sin to lie away the character of an ~ntlre body mo~al cour»l~ ... tfl brt'al. I() o~;e 1rom th.ese ties; and 'to'lus-tlfy lyand impiously impure; anI thus "having their cons~ience of Catholic priests; but stili, Protnstant or not, a mall theIr own splrJlIl"i> 1 c"wHdIC~, they teel cumpeJled to slan- seared with a hot iron." 'Jhe malice of the charae IS the must, in our humble judgment, have a ta~te of the ruffian der and blaspilPfllo the rea l dllthf)rity to wb-icb ~hey. da~e more aggravated when we eflect that on the 'only "'point on about him to brinrr forward such a hOrrIble statement as not bow their Rl obilorn npCl ks: O~serve th~ feelIng In thiS which the Catr.olic theor) differs from the Protestant- characteristic of Irish 'clerical life, without any .eltplana- 1let)tence, I"rolll the c"ll oca lion o( words,.1t would .seem marriage-the Catholic, sofar from forbidding marriage, ~i , on, reference, or means of testing the truth or aCf~uracy ,as ifaiJ the cl<1sses enumerate. d were described as "idola- highly'exalts it, and sanctiies, while this man's co-relif;- of it. As he has not ftornished us with the means 'he has ·ters." y/,t, as the \HlIer r,an hard~y mean to call t~e ionists ~ave done their beslto seeularise, and pag_OIse It, left ns no alternative but to treat it as a lie, and hi'llI as its 'lc.moclast Mussllirnall an td~llater, the ~ornan CatholIC by degrading it froIn .the ralk of a Sacrament to a sor~ ~f inventor. ,At page 372, we have a storyoftne Methodists, may talee sh~Jt(~r under hiS wing and vlnd . lC~t~ Mr. Bosa~- tertium quid, that approaciJ's much nearer \0 a ·mere CIVil to which (no authori ty being given) we attach equal cred­ '''Iuet's 1)P}"(! C ~t ?i at ' hp rxp" nsp of hIS Enghsn. Yet .thls contract than to the orditance, as founded and ·hallowed it-"'rhe Methodists set up the prettiest girls to prea?h i~ not o:ll1uch IllOn1 f:nL :-\t page 'l45, he fa~o .rs us With a by our Blessed Redeemer. Whatever other merits or de- religion to the young men~'b eca use,' say they, 'they wtl.! piece 01 Scnptnrp CrII ICISm, .WhICh, f~r erudition, candor, merits these Puseyites mil{ have, there are certaInly two not li sten to anybody else.' " , -consi~tency, and li'lsci'Hn, Is 'not eaSily to be ~lalched by in which ihey are unequaled-Pretence and Im7}uclen~e. We pass over sundry whimsical, private-judgltJent in. anythlpg p~oc retl ln g, even from the nOIsiest EKeter HaHl However, we need the les wonder at these odd d.oIngs, terpretations of prophecies, in order to express our regret ·demonstratlOlls. ...• when we find Ollr author cmdemning all creeds, ar..d In par- that tbe author shou!d have disfigured his boole, and spoiled "In the 4th char:ter of lhe 1st EpIstle to Tlmotny, St. ticular the Athanasian cretll, after the, folkwing fashion: our review of it, by such palpably unhandsome disingenu. ,Paul thus ,prophi'sIPs:- "A third taste which weimbibe from heathen literature ousness. He has left us no room til say in detail how 'Now the Sinril eppaketh expressly, that in the latter is for definition and classif-cation. Our beli.ef is not sat- heartily we approve, and how cordially we a~rnire, those · ti~es some shil!': Ofl!IMt fr om the. faith, giving heed to se- isfied unless all meaniogsare definite and distinct, and all parts of his book in which, leaving theological ~na~terSt ,ducinlT spirits. and dOCl.ri nes of devils; speaking lies in hy- senses and applications sqJare exactly; unless all the p~rts on which his learn~ng seems to be meagre, and hiS Judg­ pocrisy; haviu \1" Iheir consciencll se~red with a h.ot iron; ,of religious tf! th are caplble of being arranged acco~dlllg ment shallow, he grapples with tbe practical evils and 'forbidding to 1111r ry, 111101 cOlllmandlng to abstalO fr~m to a plan and scale, every Hophecy reterr~d to a.certaIn or- abuses of the present time; in. which he analyses the v~­ meats, which Cod hath crpaled to be received With der, time, and place; every word to.a SImple IOterpreta- rious sores and blotches by which the body of thiS age 18 thankscrivi 110" of I.hpm 1IIIieh beJipve and know the truth.' tion. Hence in part arosl the questIOns auout Homoou-. weakened and disfigured; in which he paints with a mas- I co;;'sider: with '11)IOY olht'r~, that this reflects upon the sion and Homoiousion, am \he definition of the Son as ot ter-hand the present symptoms ~ of ruin, al1f1 the w?rking Romish errors; whieh prer,pde in their rise and growth one Substance or Essencewith the Father; and as Begot- and tendency of the principles from which they sprmg.­ ·those of the V,'II" I,I'ltap0st,ry, as this prophecy precede? tenbefnre thewnrlds. Hawe thf'\. exa~t distinctIOns .and In tracing the evil up 'to its origin, even the E~says on re­ that in the 2nd ci" "i'irrlolhy, wilieh relates to the final Antl- definitions of Justificatio\, Sanctification, and Salvation. ligion are not without much value, though dIsfigured by christ. TiI,e ~f'iril ,, (" r-TrI'T nnd deceit, and the. sl1per~ti- Wh.en St. P?ul says: "lVho died. for OU! s.ins,. and rose "sores and bl?tches" ~f .their own . . W,e are sorry we c.an­ tions borrowed f,.o rn dHti", or Ihl1 heathen worship, wh.lch agam for o~r JUStificatIOn, ~e. make a dlstI?CIIOn ~nd.a not go more Into delall In an exanlIna1!on of .these top~cs, ·characterise the h",,,ish J "I( p, anel weave the ensnanng ' theory of It. TransllbstmtlatlOn IS a doctrIne havl~g m but-after 'rrivinrr one extract in which we deSign to be 1m­ meshes of their nl'\.. ~epm to 1)(' ~xp ressly pointed out, and part the same origin. Tie Athanasian Greed contams a partial-w: lUu;t conclude by recommending thi~ volume prophesied of, in 1\ is d""".r htinn. Th~ pio~ls fra~ds, and series of opposite proposit ions-as that the Father, Son" to all our educated rea ders as one of the very best pictnres "false miracles, !"!t f,~tth for tl;p, vllig ar,?on which thezr teach- and Holy .Ghost. are Ewnal, a.~? yet ~bey are ,not Tbree Iof the inner life of the present day that has lately fallen ers themselves do 711, 1"!;"rt -II,,,se are there expressly des.- E lernalE; (10 Latin and Greell, I hree Eternals, ) ':'I'hlch, into our hands:- lunated as hy,pocritirnl I' ps. !'l.Jlch ministers of the holy being couched in logical (o rm of expressIOn, and sUiled. to "INFLUENCIi: OF THE PRESS. things 'of God mllst, illolP0d, l. ~ve their minus and eon- logical taste and theory of thought, may at the same time sCiences cautpri~Pil. And \b , ~ ir Arror is not in recommend- be made logically and td hnically I.? disprove ~ne anot!ler; The press, so far from being a secUJilY .cor virfue in a 'log and encoll.ragin rr r.,·lihacy and .fleshly mor.tifications, a?d which.. though needful as d.pnl~ls of p.a.ftlCular here- people, is capable of becoming-nay, IS .lIkely t~ bec~~e but inforbidd17lg to mellry , and l"rclllg to abstaIn by fast- Sles, are signs of the lo~cal, SCHl~tIfic claSSIcal, and false the promoter of vice; and wl~en publiC prInC iples IS deClin­ ing according to a sri '/"1,' <" ; then,hy returnIng back to the taste of the age, of which the re-1JglOn of tl:3t a3 well as ing, is sure to be lhe grand Inslrllmenl (or corruptln~ and flesh from tile spirit-from """"hip to ceremonial-and this day partoo];, and oulof whieh the hereSies themselves disorganising the people. In the first place, the lTlol1V~ to temptin "fJ to every I,i"d "I' ail ,.", ;'lId Rvasion--throug h .put- h a d arlsen.· 'rlIe " bl Ig' a~o ry prol!llnence. gIVe??t th.e 'Pro- rectitude which it holds Ollt, is a low and bcorrupt motive. d ting a yoke upon til " "'l" It 01 . 11,' P' d'IS C.IP I es W I'IIC h nell h er cee d'mg 0 f t h e f'Iroy I GtlOst, attT! b U t e ddtas a IS InC t Ive pro- As public opinion, in newspapers, mnst e expressed . d at we nor "ur fathpr ~ hav!' hp"11 .<1 , Ip to bear. " perty to t h e 'l'h'Ir{ I P erson, oppose d to 'ma d'e an d 'b ego t - the first moment-as every. thin".h'''' must be Imownd' an JUt bg- We reallY am )l sh'I:OI d t~ irne to notice tillis very stale ten,' is of a similar character. I'd Cof on the very day II! w Ich It dOCtlrlP h"J! ~I:~ o~ and t:umpe;v acclI~'!li. n tl ", I, liive ["oily of which is much I would not Le understood as saying that there is one fo~med from pre.sent appearanc~s, an I r~m t : °t tS e ef- enhanced by " OUr>l"t ,,,. r,~ 'W'llInd of ~h lin!; it:. Not "en- word of error in the Athanasian Creed, Lut only that the thIngs. But Wisdom and goo ness 00 to t eT~ ur~ couraaingcelill"'('v" il f PP 'II"--\\ h;rl, Mr. Bosnnquetwonl(1 lanrruaae in which it was 'thus found nr cessary to nrga- , fect. at the saCrIfice ot presenl consfqupn~es. ~re orj do b~ut "forbi ri·di .. " In r'l imy" is lil p. "doctrine of devils," tiv; er;ors, its.elf perpetuatps a falsA and. philosophic habit I public opinion must discourage re~1 goo ness ~n tgood 'de;;;;-Ilnced b,' I Ill' Api"'!", T h,' f et Iw ino- th ' lt the Church of though I; and I. ha·t I feel ,convinced, that in aftM limp-s, sense, and encourag~ appealrafncelahn IPlet ~nche ahn .ou war forbids no onJ e tn n,"rrV, .to rhf' nr,,!, ' r use" 0 f t; 'h e wor d S.- 0 f a more vIta . I CI'1r ,.~ (janlly,. t1lSI' fOfm WI'11 no t b'e 10 UOlS-. .t show . and the fallaCies. all'p' . 00 IS . d-~ are IV . Ie !!Ive pres-t" t If any' one h~s VOI'Jll l1 ;ilv pn"ll~ " d nnL to marTY, and has on wilh the ,doctrinal habits .0J IhOllaht of the most atlvan- I ent eclat and populaTllY. rIlvate.J\l g-me~t IS m"re pa le~ takt'n upon• ..him" ei,ar"p,~ "ph. - -1\ hleh. the ca res of.. matn- ce d Ch"rlstlans. '['I Ie,J ews' are sa'dl to h ave f or b'Il Id en I'than public opinion., It i~ a .so a g rea ler IH lcenllve b to t VIT- mony are .deemed i tlcun~iskl1t, she holds lnm ' to his bar- that any 'exposition of doctd,os should, lie written 90Wn. tue~ }'V hen a persona ~ .l:\ .cl).lIa\l)ta,n~e w>'s l ept up e we,ell I . I .' ~ II :l62 r' 3 "'teW £ tradesmen and their customers, this was a stronger Induce· history of the foregoing. We, indeed, of this day, have OPINIONS OF THE ENGLISH PRESS. lDent to maintain their i,ntegrity, than the publicity which been reserved to witness a disorganization of the City of is now given to every man's affairs. The fear of the loss God, which it never entered the' minds of the early be- MORNING kIJVoERTISER.-Law prosecutions of character among their private connections, ?,as greater Jievers to imagine; but we are witnesses also of its tri- talked of on both' sides. The government is to arre t :/fl than the prilsent fear of l'ublic exposure a~d disgrace. In umphs and of its luminaries through those many ages O'Conneltanfr Mr, O'Connell's words are, that h! \ViIi fact the public' opinion is not so ruinous to a bad man as which have brought about the misfortunes which at pres- p;o;,eeute everr man who put his si~nnture ,:0 the Clon­ the loss of' character used to be among' a circle of prl'vate ent ovel'~hudow it. If thev' were blessed who lived iTT ta'!',' prodnmutlon. Thls may' be dOJng buslOess, but we­ customers. We see tradesmen, who have be~n publicly primitive times, and saw the fresh traces uf their :Lord", do ~ot thmk that on O'Connell'~ part it will be doin th exposed, set up in trade again, and carry it on with the and helud the echoes of Apos'tolic voices, blessed too are buslness of the Repeal of tIle Union. A far melre ga' C ' I d' d Hect most perfeat, success. Private judgment is more perma- we whose special portion' it is, to see, that same 1;ord re- an d cons:quentla procee iDa wonl be to memoria}ise the nent than public opinion. The daily puhlication of all vealed in HIS Saints. The wonders of His grace in the Queen, tv assu~e already ~s a fact--what the law can manner of occnrrences from all parts of the world, forces soul of man, its creative power, its inexhaustible re- only more defiOllely pass ltS voIce upon-tile unconst' the forgetting ofpa3t topics ofinte-rest., however great and sources, its manifold operation, all this we know as they ~utionalilty Ofwlhichbt~e present execrable government hal; important; and a man's character is only' lost to him for a knew it not. They never heard the names of St. Grego- ,e,en Il'Ul 1y; to ,ay efelre her Majesty a recital of the dee P short time, hy the greatest delinq.Heneies. The public soon ry, St. Bernard" St, Francis, and St. Louis. In fixing lOJ ustlce of ",lllCh Irelu nd lS the vlctlm; and in the nam become lenient, and indifferent to his offence. The mul- our thoughts then, as in an nndertaking like the present, of the common rights of humanity ('all upon the 50verei ~ tiplication of sneh villanies, and their daily repetition, on the History of the Saints, we are but availing OUI'- to nlly herself wlt.h a people stl'uggl,ing for their hbel~ maites tbe world regard them lightly and tolerantly.- selves of tha..t soiace and recompense of our peculiar and ~helr Ilves ago.mst a despotic uristocrat principII. Adulterers and adulteresses, and those guilty of disgrace- trials which has been pl'l}vided for our need by our Gra- which for s~vE'n hundredyears !?JIl talJJng unqualified mls­ ful acts, were never received back again so easily as now cious Master.''' ery and SUb.lll~atlOn'~ agaln reflews il~elf in a spiril the into society. There is no doubt ,oat that pe'rsonal acquaint. We.borrow the' above from the Churchman. The un- dlsgrace of the specJes to end ure, This would be a mod e ances, in private life, look with 'greater severily upon a d M to eusure thep,ratical pl'OlP'ess of the Repeal question, crime, than the public. But, as things are, the public erta!l\ng o~ ~. Newman is lillely in its manner and 01' Its eqUJl'aJent--,Jllstlce to Ireland, Ev-erYlhing in voice is the most important, and supersedes the private.- pnnclp eta e Catholic, if we may judge from his Church Ireland proves tlHLt, n lthollgh l\'Tr O'Connell was enabled f the The public canvassing of all topics, and accusing and 'de- °C t~e Fathers, anddlfromdtbe ghenerd°.l tone of J BI1'itish to . prevent bloodslH\d On, the occasion of the S~ppressed fending of every act, on bQth sides, and with gross exag- ITltllC , now a1vo"E'e y llnSer IS JrectlOn. n re atJJ1g Clontarf meetlOg, yet that It would be impossiblil for him f lll ~erations, and the frequent slander even of the wortlrlest tIe Ives 0 It lei nglish aints he wb have °dccasion t,) to lay the spirit ofagitatioll now rife in all parts of the and the best men, excI'tes and exhausts the ml'nd and [nor- state, not on y t lelr pnvate vlrtu('s, ut tbeir evout ce l- I d £' R 1 'TI 'ld ' b ' ' f h 'f I Al d !lng' om Jor epea,' Ie WI est JJ1sn OJty is, to suppose al sense, and renders I't unconcerned, and I'ndl'flierent to real e ratlOn' , or'I recephonI 0 t e mystenesh S 0f PI' t 18 tal', all, ' til,a tIt proc ama ]un, by government was sufficient to arrest transactions. The calumnies ag:ainst the good are a screen t hen 101'10 ate Ilttac lInent to t e ee 0 eter. t IS lD -h R I N '.' ' fi th Cb I ltd h bl t' ,e epea agI tatmn. , eV,er was a ,question carried by to bad men. The constant repetition of horrors and crl'mes vall1 'or e urc Iman to aya our 001', t e , arne , 0 the t f I I t f R J ' I' h f R Wh . vo es 0 a w 10 e, nn. IOn I e,pell 'lS not carried by the render us callous and rec'I{I~ss. And the detal'ls of murdo separatIOn, or to c large It on t e court 0 orne. at- 1 I f h I U f I h 'd " l' 1:lm~ersa ace ama~lOns 0 t e F1Sh people,-All it waits er, and suicide, and reg:icide, are lmown to lead and to I'n. evel' causes 0 comp aint may ave eX1ste ,It JS a pam £' t ji d ., £' f' I ' h ' b I'd lor IS com~no lon ~S , (rm; ,an ,fissllredly tha t people is stigate frequently to the commission of these offences.- lact 0 llstory, t at, not t'lese, Ilt t Ie want of a secon I' 'r I dtb 'hth H t t 'thtl m I S very near IOpogsesslOn a lIs l'lghts when what they have When the press promotes vic8, it makes aU men equally W1le e e' elg enry 0 a rup ure WI l(l .nO y ee, ~- I d £' tl I d '- ' f h h' h bl b ,,,rugg e ' lor le,y lave secUl'e ' save by 0. deolaratl'oll vicious, It drag:s virtue, which is independent, and de. A s to t"e contllluance a \ esc Ism t e ame cannot e I T' U ~ , I 'h b I I 111 aw. 'ne ,mo,n was never a reaJ thing. It was a sires solitude and retl'rement, before the.commonJ'ue!crment- ours, Slnce we ong to em,race t em as rot leI'S, on tIe f ran d 111 tIe I b egmnJl1g, an d has been a fiction ever seat. There is no sanctuary for virtue. There a;e very o[.1ly conditions consistcn1 with the tmth of the divine E r I 't t I I' d Smce. few erimes from which men are deterred by the fear of pub. promises to the church: namely, the admission of the ng IS 1 arts oera s lllVe ,(Ollltneere o.ver Ireland: but as !icity'. But pril'ate opinion and character is one of the first doctrines defined by an CEcumenical council-which defi~ to commo~ feellllg SUUSlSt111g between the countries, the , , d ' db h Ch I 'h' ' assertJOn 1S a brol1d and brazen lie- All the world mu t and strongest motives in all subjects of wrong alld dis- llltJOns are a mltte y t e nre lman, m IS own cau- ~ e th a t th "f I CI' f ' s grace. Even public men used to be more constrained by tious way, to be accurate-an

From the Londnn and Dublin Orthodo.r: Jourruu. Isome plac,es to the cu,}t~re of illiterate school-masters, I ,"In the first place, as a general rule, the ellst 'vindow ORIGIN AND PROGRESS OF MVSlO UNDER Ithey subst!tuted for the stmply graceful Roman chaunt, I wlll well deserve the trouble of drawing it, nnd the sllme THE CATHOLIC ' CHURCH. v.: hich retaIned somewhat, of rh~thm.' a slovenly, and in- : may ~e said of any dewrated windows whatever. ThesE!' . I I d I" 'fl h' h . slpld style of church mUSIC, which, mdeed, had lIttle more are, for the most part so exqui~ite ly beautiful nnd Th e sOCIa mora, an re IglOUS 1D uence w IC mUSIC , f " h tl I d' £Ii ' . 'so 10 Y om lier has constantty exercised in all civilized communitieli! is 1' I~I~g~~~~t ~~ti;et~ea~~~e of the eiO'hth century \hat or- vcrr I erent tfrb ead,ch olA , thnt.dtoo large a, c,ollectioll tt ib bl t t" f t th t 't I d' tl t M , 0 ttlem canno e ma e, ny WJn ows contalnll1g more Ii r, uta e 0 ne ~c a I appea s m?re !rec y 0 our gans began to he used in churches. The instrument was than fa I· ht '·11 b,' II . 1 bl T faeling and avmpathle. then any other of the sister arts,-- . , d d' , , ur, Ill: s VI J e gencJIl J va ua e, he sed- · "J h ' I bl T at th~t tIme little llndersloo ,an was chiefly confined to IlIa and ')lISClna 01' any otlt er recess in the wall ofth P,adtn~lOgl an stha:uary, 'h oWDe~er Inva ua' lle ~sldaulxl lary , the performance of the ,regal, which is now no longer chancel all sepl;lcbrul recesses and panelled or cano ' ~ al S,IO tIe wors Ip 0 f 1. e e lt~, mus,t st. Yle, p ~ce tt) , Imown. ' I b b k d '. " . " ' pIe musIC that hallowed and ennobling sCience whICh gives to I " . ' a tar tom s, rnc ets an COl bel s, If eleguntly fiOl~hed, h' , bl "I f " h h' G d It cannot be denied that mUSIC, consecrated as It was, benatu7'(JJ or stops for holy water at the entran all t O e r !D e Inestlma belPnlvl ege ° oOfmm Unl?g Wit d Ihs k , when first invented, to the noblest of all objects, declined interior ~f porches wI.Jl be verj', accelltable Acccu °t · 10 t he ever accepta e al1(1uage 0 a d oratIOn an t an s- . f t' t th b ' Tl 't f , .'. " ra e .. U d h ,0 h b ' f m process 0 Ime 0 a aSES , uses. Ie vam yocom- i!rawlDO's ot wood-work are extremely desirnble su h g!VlDgi- h n ~ r ,t ese clrcumstanfces, ~er ap: a hn~ · r~- , posers frequently led tbem into all manner of extravagan- ' (and w~ speak more. pnrticlll';rlv'to lJur f~iends In ' Su~ r: vII~w °h t he oniPln an d PbrogTf;ss o · ~USIC, \ln er t he at - ces, fatal alike for the- preservation of a pure style of mu- ' and Somersetshir.e) open ;ood.roofs ollen s-eats ~ h o Ie c urc ,WI l not e umnterestIng to t h ose w 0 may , d t th d h t f th d th t d' IT ,.'. ' Wll t h h fl' h ' h' SIC an 0 e saCFe c arac er 0 e wor s, us en In" theH nchly curved Sides l'Clod screens nnd parcloses no ave t e means 0 consu tmg t e very Jew aut entIc to produce confusion ann impiety in divine service Abu- -" , ' : . , or treatises which have from time, to time been published in f h' d " 'I ' d h 'h h screens to chnpels,carv.ed dours, funteovers-~nallcases this country. ses ° , t IS escnptl?n preval e to suc extent, t at ~ : b~forethe Refol'matlOl1j pnl'lsh chests, lf any of alltlquity; D' h fi 'f h Ch' . fi d counCil of Trent deliberated on the means of suppressmo above all should the church be so i'o1'flmate as to- po llrln& t erst r.,enlunes 0 t e nSlian era we n mnsic in churches; and the decree would certainly have ' 'i!' ' SseSB that musIc· was cultivated by the Greeks and the Romans d h d 'I d I I 'd ' ,11, the roo -loft, Hon, work, 3S m,'re valuable, Her,e we The emperors Caligula and Nero applied themselves t~ passe, da't no; so{;e partlc Ii an M oca lIcon~ eratto~s i mny mentiun hinges> ramifying into llet tl'acen·. all over the study of the art and even condescended to compete pr~vent~ 11 ' n1~5~ tl~e ,0 r ,ope f t~ce t~ t ~ s~con h' the door; handles, often wlIl'{led like serpents IH:;y-plates ner 0 c with their suhjects f~r the public pri71es; and it is well w 0, re:f , In ,t c ImpI~tih t h' e : y. e 0 ~ r 1 and the like.. The ar,rungement of the glass often dese~ve~ SIl a re known that Nero inhuman as he was in other respects; m~sICd t len In US~t ~as h ~real G I~ · 0 I~ess t a h •. ; copying, more especial1y in France. V dliagp. o~~ church­ e actually maintain~d five thousand musicians, at his own so ve 0 re uce I t'lOI tth slmhPde, kregonan c aun 'pwlen I yard crosses, pinnacle crosses, ornumel1trd stair-case , . a younlT composer, I en ar Jy nown, name d a es- 'I t t f h' I h . N Ii II e:,pense, all of wham at hiS death" were exp~I,led from t!le trina, °resented to tbe ontiff a mass, in a st Ie entirel, , UHe ,s, ~ ,w, IC? t ere fire .~O many 10 or a t a,nd cJt~. However, the fi,rst substantl.ve,rccogmt!.On of !DUSIC, new. p BeinO' found uPon trial wholl free fr;m the vice~ ~ome I setshae, mches, can?pled buttresses, and gro!n­ an:a ~he t~ue secret of ~ts subseq.. uen,! Influence, was It~ ~d- 01 the prevalent style,Pit was approv!d of hy the church, I109-for all these we 8hall feel mu~b obllge,d. The rich ~Isslon InLo the religIOUS cere,momes of the first Uh.ns- by whom it was held up as the model to future compos- towers?f the west" WIth theil' nJehes, bJeltry wlOdows tlans! who al?ne have transmitted' to us all ,the anCient ers. filled WJth cros,s stolle~work and pierced battlements: ,or, p,racttcal ~USIC that we, n,ow possess. Dunng the four The oratorio, which is generally regarded in the light of l agalO , t~eglorlOus spires of LlDc (l ln shlr.e,Rut~a~dshlre. firs~ ce~t~rtes, of the ChristIan chlj~ch the whole congre- sacred music, was never warmly patronised> by the fathers I~lld N 01 thamptonslme, are eX6:e lJ ent sabJects, so very gat~on JOI!led I~ chau~t\ ,ng ~he sp-rvlce; but the ryhthm ~f of the Catholic church, for this reason,-that the perform- frequently are porches and _duors, especIally N ~rman their musIC, being der,lved ~olely from the words-:-a se~'I- ance partook too much of the character of a d/ama more dours and bdl, gables, may 8. bu ue mentIOned as lIkely to barbarous ~rose,' or 6tll~ more barbarous poetry,-It retam- suitable to the theatre than the church. The oratorio 'is be'useful as lllnts ror m()d~ru churcbes. Front~ ue, or ed but a slight I,mpressl.oll of any sart of mea~ur~, and was commonly ascribed to St, Philip, of, Neri, born in 1515, course, more partJCllla~ly 10 request. ~n one thlllg o~ly generally d~aw , ed out, In slow and unequal Ume, to a lan- and who founded the c1)nO're00 .. De Grey computation, be the same more hIe that he has alr.eady entrenched himself bebind other­ deep and awful intprpst-has passed. We are now ~s or less! How silly to imagine that people WIll belIeve III ground, and that he prepa,'es to continue his course, not-· clearly· through it as if it never had oeeurred. There IS open sedition-sedition without plan-sedition without withstanding Lord De Grey's proclamations, and the re­ Dothi,ncr to' confuse our vision in', the p@litiaal pros>pect- concert-sedition WIthout object! How can they eredit giments kept under arms in Dublin. May the leader'of nothing to, ret~rd our plogres9 in t,he obS-lruc~ion offered~- it when the'course pursued by Ibose who make the accu- the agitation bring to a suceessful termination the cause Our path is as, free, our course as, clear, ,as if' nothing had srution proves tbat they themselves attach po credit to the for which he has not ceased a singfe day to fight! May I ever occurred' to shade or obscure tbem. But within a chal'ge they, malle1 he preserve sufficient authority over his countrymen to' short sp~ce it was not so. Tbe eveni.ng of Friday. was And what'an idea 'appea,rs to have taken possessien of guard them from' the evils of wav, and prevent fresh mis-· one spent in torture by. many a stout henrt. It was not the Irish executive. It would seem, if rumaur may be eries from aggra'Vating the sufferings of Ireland; already tbe lorture of selfish fear, or tl]e dread of, personal inflic-· believed, that they a~e about to prosecute every man who too real! Her cause is the cause of right. humanity, and' tion. Self was nevpr thought of unless to-think how each has openedihis lips'at the Repeal Association, and many justice; and there is no civilized nation that does not of­ micrht be rendered in h,is, d~gre~ most useful. Individual of them·who have not! They are' not only benton going fer up prayers forber, a'nd loudly express its sympathy i:o;rage was as high and, daring then as in,ils most exu~er- tp law with Q'Connell, but witii the millions of Irisbmen. for her sufferings. When the lawflllness of her ~om­ ant and forw'ard hour. And yet it was an hour of trIal, who ha've pronounced for the Liberator and for father-· plaints is so· universally recognized, their force is ure­ deep and th{)l!ghtful. The eXiaggeration of hate had mag- land! Undoubtedly tbis is something new! Fine times sistible; they penetrate into the rebellious convictions of nified the danlTer threatened. Tbe timorousness of Ilncer- for the lawyers! Between indictments and pleas, and· their oppressors and tbe day of redress is at hand. tainty h,ad m~de the public mind alive to first impressions, demur,JOers and replications, It will be profitable to that llnd bad heightened tIl e unquestionable alarm of the time. class of tbe commlln~ty, and sapremely ridiculous to the • And then the people! What were they to d01 How general body of the public. Imagine three millions of From the Tablet. were they to actl How were those to whom they 10uked men giving bail! Suppose {!em brougbt into the Queen's THE LEAGUE'S ACCOUNT OF for counsel to advise t.hem1 Tho~e who had hi~herto led ' Bench! Believe them tried' md convicted,--or even a ITSELF~ !he movement how ~h0uld they ,dtre,ct them ,now, It was,. large portion of them, whereshould they be imprisoned'! The new organ of the Anti·Corn·Law League, which Indeed , a fearf~1 penod. HapP!ly It ~as passed, ,and we It is clear they oan't go to glol, for the'gaols of Ireland' bears tbe name of The Leagu.e, commences with an address may dw?ll on It as o~ any Imaginary dIfficulty wbtcb fret~ ' would. not hold' them. Blf. stay! This condition of from the (»ouncil, of'which the following is an exlract:­ our wakl,ng thoughts. It has passed,. and we ~re unembar things, though bad, is not ertnely hopeless! There are The Council of the N ationaf An~i-Corn-Law League hav­ rassed-It bas passed,. and w~ ba'1e tTlumphe~. tbe workhouses. ExcellentJastiles they lue-close and ing rendered an account of its j'lroceedibgs and exp~n~i­ Yes, th~re never ye~was tTlu~ph , more deCIded than ?ur cheerless, dark and gloornv!-ill-drained, ill-sewered, ill­ ture, now appeals to you for cO'operalitm and support In I\S present tr,lUmph. W& have trIumphed over. the first dlffi- ventilated. No bUlliHncrs 'Call ' be better- adapted for pris­ future efforts. Some ground lias been laid for your confi­ culty, whlcl! was the gr~atest. We bave triumphed over ons-none more in'urioous fir human habitations. Why dence in its earnestness, its diligence, and, we cannot he~­ the o.b,tructlons of enemIes, and' t~e careles,s~ess or !lP.alby not ut those "co~s iratorl and other misdemeanants" itate 10 add, in its success. The present state of the agl­ (If fnends. We have trlumpbed In the deCISiveness of.lhe b' d,P . t th kPI I G d h tio th ml tation is success, From a provincial movement it has be­ ~ , ". f. h d ,. 0 JI Y In 0 e wor lOuses 00 enouO' r e.- hour, an" III Ihe antiCipatIOns o · t at greater eClSlveness Th h ld b Ii f dO. h d t come metropulitan and national. Tbe scienti·fic conclu­ of whicb we have SlIch deep need. Our progress fQl the . ere t ey wou e sa e, 1 c9urse! an pums e, 00, sions of able writers, on Free-Trade topics, bave grown last th'ree days has been a triumph as unmitigated and llon-· a~ severely as the most rIglrous antI-Repealer could de· tinued as it 'is.secure. . sIre! 'yes! the workhouse; seem to have beeln adapted into the principles cf entbusiastic multitudes, The con-· troversy of our towns has passed, into tbe eounties, almost' But what, during those days, has been the fortune of'our by deslgn aforethoug~t. forson:e such purpose. But the ceasing there, already, to be a cantroversy, ,by the f~i!lIre rulersl The most miserably ludicrous whIch has ever Repealers are, we reJolce,deslmed to nobler ends,. They or tbe flight, of the champ.illns of monopcrl'y. PolItICal been Ih" lot of men! They alarmed throucrh their party- are reser~ed for t' helllgh.p l rposes~f honor, glory, fame, men raised to office for the purpose of perpetuating com­ thev "thunder("d" through tbe press;, and ;ever, surll, was and happlOess. For thelr!Olmtry IS reserved ,the control mercial restrictrons, have practically confessed, though on­ suc·h a lamentable finale to such a triumpbant overture!- of.her own resources-~cve:nment tbrough her own ly in a succession of. (lomparatively inefficienl'.and usel~ss They promised great,things-tbey performed now, as al- chlldren-the rewards 0/ latlence, temperance, moralIty, measures, the justice of principles which theIr elevation ways-notbi{]g! What can be more absurd than tbe at- courage, Rnd devotIOn. PJr theIr coun:ry IS reserved !l; was intended to counteract and to crush; and, above all, tempt to put d'own a great national movement ,by going to lugh and honorable place IJnong the natIOns. the strllO'gle has now become an electoral conltict; the ex-· law-by a prosecution for a "misdemeanorl" What, we' __ tent of tne grievance'has been renda'red plain·, ~o a conaid" should be f;rlad to learn, can, be the meaning of such a pro- F7'Om tlLe ClUne,. Francais. erable proportion of those whom the franchIse endo!"s ceeding, unless it be an ungracious preparati,on to concede, with the ultimate power of redress. In one memorable tn­ ata future period, what we should now receIve, not alone The EnO'lish ministry hIS at length quitted its irreso­ stance, in tbe City of Durham, a competent knowledge of as a righI, but mayhap as a favor1 A persecution for mis- lution: a proclamation haf appeued forbidding the Clon­ the subject has been found too strong for sinister influence, demeanor against O'Connellt A charge of misdemeanor tarf meeting. This firstlCt of repression against the party spirit, or· even the boasted moltey' power, "the long" aO'ainst his son! An accusation against journalism, tbat agitation In Ireland is dOlbtless the signal for new steps, purse that carries elections;'" and there is every indication, j,;"urnalism has not been subservient! An accusation which will not long be \\aited for. SIr Robert P~el is that, were a dissolution-to lake place, the great and pnma­ ncrainst journalists, that they have thougbt less of prudence not a mun to draw hack, ruler havlOg passed the Rublcen, ry question, absorbing all party distinctions as obsolete or than of Ireland! An aocllsation against mE'n in thein pri- 'as an English print e~pre>ses it. Ministers of his char­ of mihor imp,ortance, would be, with all honest voters,. vate capacities, and they have remembered, their country aeter, when t.hey have fOla lengtb of time matured' a re­ whether there sbaH, or sball n'ot, be a Free-Trade Parlia-· and forgotten all fear of their country.'s enemies!' A war solution, know bow to plosecute the execution of it with ment. And tbis chanO'e has been effected at less pecunia. declared a~ainst opinion! A war of law against eight energy and perseverance. Regiments a're on tbeir march ry outlay than has often constituted the co~t of a. single millions! Yes-the Government appear to bave actually to, Dublin from Glasglw and Manchester, EI'ery­ electi0n for a (lounty. Tracts, lectures, and d!scusslOns at determined to go to law with Repeal, and to charge every thinO' announces, that ifgovernrnent still meets with re­ public meetings, have been tbe simple means; simple, but Repealer in Ireland wi th "misdemeanorl" Was ever any sist:nce, it is decided to tppea1 to arms, and to submit the mighty, because they were directed to the truth, and used thing so preposterolls1" They declare a "little war" differences between the tvo nations to tbe blind and brulal wilh sineerity. Our arguments have prevailed because against a nation! We had thought that "the Duke"' would justice of the red coats. 'Will, this act of vigor on the they were in accordance willI the experience of those t'o h~vetaught them ~he fU.tility .of sucb a contes~. TI,lat man part of the government sop the cI!urse of agitation1 It! whom, they were addressed; with the wretchedness whi.ch without compunctIOn stlg-matIsed tbe contest In Chma as a is difficult to believe it. Those Immense meetlllgs are so many have witnessed, and 50 many more endured; with "little war," What c?ul a lQve breatbings and wailings of contrition, do you bear the lics, or Roman Catholics, be a concession, the English .of novelty. This is a pecuhar feature of th1l present pe- language of a reckless 1T.0rtaJ! Soul trembling on the Parliament has already made it; and immemorial and uni­ riod of this age of inquiry, And were we called upon lips, and now bidding a long, and final farewell to the versal ltsage authorises it. The editor cannot com­ for a name, significant of the'present 'era of'i}3-, we would d d prehend the compatihility of the term Roman Catholic; but christen it from Acts xvii. 21, t)le·Ath'enian era. The his- bo y, an to earth, as you are receiving the sacred rites it is not above ordinary· capacity. We are not called Ro- tQrian says, 'Nor all the AtheOlans, and strlWlgers which of Extreme Unction, do you cast a pitying look on your man~, much less Romanists, by Pius IV.,.ner is the' uni­ were there, spent their time in nothing else, but 'either to defamer! Dllistrious and fervent converts from the con- versal church designated : by him, Romun. Learned ex­ tell or to heal' some new thing.' V..enly! what has been, venticles of men do C"tholic Pasto s t II 0 that pounders of Greek and Hebrew to young ladies, should is now. AmI a trner picture. of the present. conditIOn of . '. your "'. r ,~ y u take pains to understand a very plain Latin formulary, and the people of these Unite4 States need not be',sou!l'ht.- ,you ~'eqUire no deeplntel'llal"plety, no agoOlzrng sorrow, not confound a reference to a particular church, witb the Wehave lectures on about every sClCnce;' .or conceivable no diVIDe-love, no hatred of thapast, no grief for the pre- designation of the universal cburcb; or make ita pretext subject, from the ~st 'Irn-portant pOlllt.an tneology, down sent, no firm resolutions for the future, whilst you stand for the use of nick'names. Tbe Edi tor is as unfortunate in to animal magnetism" or Mesmer,lsm. The pUblIC appe-. . ,bis cbivalrous defence of tbe elegant manners of. Mr. titeis con s~ antly calling·for something new, and caterers at the baptIsmal waters! or whilst you kneel at thell' sa- OdenheiFller, as in his·.reckiming.-Catholic HeTald. are abundant, who, for. ready pay, labor to satisfy the de- cerdotal feet! Maya God of !o~e forgive pOOl' Bishop • mand. . .. McIlvaine' his many falsehoo:ls is the fond praycr of CHURCH BUILDING AND MITE SOCIETIES. This love of novelty has engendered ~ dlsorgullIzlOg yo.urs. P. McL. The monthly meetings of tbe above societies will be spirit. To pull down( and to destroy; IS th~ peculiar feature,of this age. All veneratIOn for established usa- • held in the Hall of the St. Xavier College, to-morrow_eve "'es 01' time-hon'iTed institutions, is lost in the supreme . EPISCOPAL ApPOINTMENTS.- From a highly creditable- ning, immp.diately after 'Vespers., rov~ of novelty and change. To theorise-to think, and source, though not official, WI learn that on "tbe 18th IIIlmIllIIr."lWpn'W'¥d!!t_iN!I!!@" 9lIIIM'N!9U"!ffl!¥ ,. to talk, abuut abstract truths'and propositions, Iconstitutes Septp.mter, tbe S. Congregatim of Proganda in· a solemn DIED.-On tbe 3d,inst., of Gonsnmn.tion, J ULI.i).. wife of a great part of the labor of tbis generation. t is rather .r;; an aO'e of invention than an' age of labor. And the old meeting, concurreli in recomrrending to his Holiness tbe Mr. Charles Lawler, aged 26 yen.rs. adag~, .that 'contrivance ~s half,' is more .than anti~ipa- approval of all tbe nominatio)s,made in thelate Provin­ teli in .this age of speculatIon.. Men are hVI·ng on Ideas. cial Council of Baltimore, elcepting that ~f the Vicar and visions of the future, whIch MAY, 'or may n&t be reo JOHN D. READY'S ESTATE. Apstolic.of. Oregon Territorjl who, heing oftbe Society alized.;'" NOTICE is ' hereby given that the suhscrib ..· h ... been appointed and • ~fJesus, w,as unwilling to aa:ept the Episcopal dignity. 'lll!llified. as administrator on the Estate of john D. Ready, late ofHam~ ilton County, deceased. ~ Dated at' Cincinnati, this lOth day of Novem- For the Catholic TelegTaph. The· appointments 6.ccordiIg to OUI' informant, stand ber,1843, JOciEP·H KEEFFE: MR. EDITon:-Your columns have been-' long enougr, thus: Nov, 18, 1843. ,. tt. occupied'l with. strictures on Bishop McIlvain's Oxford For the vacant See'ofCha'leston, Very Rev. IGNATIUS INFORMATION WANTED, Divinity, and this communication shall, therefore\ close REYNOLDS, Vicar General"o'lhe diocese of Louisville. OF"John Casey. a '1lstive of the Count y Westmeath, Ireland, by our remarks. Were we to follow the Bishop through For tbe new See of Hal' fird, Connecticut, Very Rev. trade a Bls"c'ksmith. He Jeft New York for .Cincinnati about six yea~s . . . WILLIAn! TYLER,Vicar Geq!rll.l of Beston. ago, and reSIded here for some time, he is sUPPfJsed to. be at pr~sent, In all the error$ of Ins ways, theFe IS scarcely a. SIngJe. A d' t t th B' h fB t R J FIT~- the neighborhood of Milford, Clermont County, .Oluo. Any l11form~ ~ . . . S coa J u .or 0 e 18 Ql 0 os on, ev. ORN ~ tian will be tbankfuUy received at the Office of the Tele~raph, by h18 line in the whole booll, wherem might not be found eIther EATRlCK. pastor ofSt. Man's church, Bostoll. sister MRS. MURPHY, a direct insult, or a falsehood\ er both. It is a shame, As coadjutor to the Bish'lp of New York, Rev. JOHN Om't!. Nov. 18, J843. If. for allY man pr~tending to wear the·livery.GI-:Obr.ist to be MCCLOSKEY, pastor of St. .bseph's churcb: N. Y: . For the new See of Milvaulue, In' WISCOnSIn. Very CLO!fH1NG., the author of a work pregnant Wlt}~ such outrageous ca- .Rev. J . M. HENNJ; Vic. G61. of Cincinnati. 'W ·HO'LE.s ·ALE AND RETAIL,. . It;mnies against that Church in which his ancestors were For the new See of Chlctgo, Illinois, ReV'. WILLIAnr WI'LLIAM;PYNE, successor- to k. & J. . Wolff, No. 30, e!st'Side of born, and in which they died. But wben did heresy·sparo QUARTER, pastor of St. .May's church, N. Y. Ma n, between Front anu ColumbIa, opposite Gilmore's' Exchange Of· fice , Cincinnati, respectfully invites the attentj~n of h j s ·.fr~en~s and deaJ· . t . t'm1 See how tbe spirit of error ' rap'es 00' page For the new See of LlttlE.Rock, Arkansas, Rev. AN- ers gelleraily to his stock of. reayti; wliere he was received'with the rever-ence whIch Together with a geuera l·asEor.tment 01 Fancy articles, '. -ALSO:- olic doctrines are! a man .who does not khow tbe name of 'his dignified manners, as well as his sacred character, A ·complete assortment of TaUor's Trimmings will he k~pt conStantly th t I retellQing to be a craft! One" who does not inspired: On his way to tbis island the second tIme, on hand, an of which he is disposed to .. ell at a maderM~ ad,'ance on e 00 s, p . . w.lth a VIew to ter)1ll11ate what had been begun .wlth very Eastern prices. know the p,l'fJfound A, B . .c" of Cathohc doctrllles, be- flattering prospects of 5uccess, "his infirmities compell- Sept.. 23, 1849 • . 4 a 4t Drawmg·Kmves; Hatchets, Chisels &c., all ofwhkh 8.1'f': warranted. --- Joles 1M l ' a It COLUiMBUS, Capt Cropper, 900 do 7th March. __'- Shoulder.. TIley also keep (!0!lt1tantly 011 iUlIHl ,and arc now receiving an extansive II> Ill ,· 3 SOUTH AMEnICA, Capt .Bailey, 900 do 19th do. assorlme!lt of Amen~an and Englieh llnilders' Hardware, together with a --- Sides Ib " ·s 4! OXFORD, Capt RathboDI;, 1000 do 7th April. large vanetyof ForeIgn and Domestic Tools suitahle for tht: use of Ca Ib 0{ 6 --- Hams • ENGLAND, Capt Waite,950 do 1!)lh do. penters, Cabinet· makers, Mill-wrinhts, noach and Warmon-makers &:. --- Canva.,ed Ham. III .a 6t which will sold prices oonform with the and NORTH AMERICA, Capt Lowber, 90(1 do 7th May. b~ a~ ~o t.jmes~O Mechanic~ --,- Sug. cIDed & extra do Ib 8 a iMercrhants WIll find!'lt ~IJ tbelr advantage to calLand examine prices anti LAJ,tp · Ib 4 6t EUROPE, Capt Marshall, 950 do 19th do. quallty before purcij,asmg elsewhere. bush 65 a WHEAT '" The subsuibers .beg I~ve to infor'!' th?;e perso,!s throughout tile Uni· LYON, McKINNELL & CQ. CORN,in ear bush 25 a 31 " (S~ccessors to John Croagh,' bush a ted States, who WIsh to send for tJJelr frtends, resJdent in Ireland, Eug­ --Meal land or Scotland, that they ha"e made arrangements wherehy they shall :Wo. 196, &,ast SIde of,Mam Street, between oth and 6th Streets Cincinnati OATS bush 20 25 May 28,,1841. ' . FLAXSEED b\ish 85 a• be bl'ought out. by the Old Line of Liverpool Packets, to sail from Liver­ Oil gal a pOOl. on tbe7th an~ 19th of each month ·in the year-and by first class A· 'SUGAR, New Orleans Ik 5l,. 6t mencan ShIPS, salling every week from ~hat port. The silbscribers are Ib 12t a 16 determined not to depend On any Ltverpool House, or anent, to see the THINK WELL ON'T. ---Loaf peoples interests taken care of-Mr. J.awt:s D. Roche. one '~f the firm. will TEA, Imperial Ib 70 a 90 An Editionofthe above work has just been published for the Cathon. Ib 75 a 90! remain t!;lere during the Spring of 1842, to see that every thin" connected --Gunpowder with their busi~ess will be executed with promptness and despatc.b. Should Society of thlS CIty, The t"oJiowina is the reGomUienc.lation of the Rt --Young Hyson ' 111 60 a 90 Rev. Bishop of Cincinnati. 1:1 t. • Iii 8 12 the persons wntten for not come out, they money will he "returned to tile COFFEE a parties who paid it 11crc, On the production of tbe certificate. SteJ\m uKnowing,of no little, or great work that 'teaches the great truths ofa TOBACCO, No.1 Ih 4 a 5 In r p.ckets ply reg"larly between the prlnei"ai sea ports in Ireland an~ Liv· futnre state a inore solemn Bnd ill1pres"rh c O'U\1lner than "TI-l(NK Cavendi.h Ih 25 a 30 WEL~.O.N'~" ~ r~co.mmenp this St~reo:~pe ijnd Chaap Edition of it, bush erpool, whereby the persons coming out can at all times have a safe arld SALT, Turk's Island Salt -- a quick conveyance to the latter piaGe. by the Cmcmnat1 Society for the DHrusio~ 9t Religious Kpuwledge I) to bUBh '20 a ~~1 --- Kanawha 'r'hose persons, therefore, throu~huut the United Atates, who wish to the Catholics-ofthis Diocese; Lo everyone of whom! would say "Taka aud read" with faith and piety" ' remit ~oney to their frjends in thE old c~:mntTY, are hereby informed that J. B. Bp. of Cincinnati 0tr::i~f~~~ i~ the amount here, dl8.ft wIll be forwarded to their fdends, . ' . t INFORMATION WANTED. a For S"le, pNnted on good paper an'd full bound, at the C.tholic Book . ~ngland-On Prescott, G~ote, Anes &; Co. Bankers, London, or s~ore, Sycamore Street, CIncinnati: Price 25 cents. 'l'he u.:ouaJ deduo. OF Thomas Curtis or hIs sons, ~· pbll, EdwIHd, Thomas, ~nd Michael ,tlOn allowed 011 wholesale purchases. qv.rlis' (the latter a pdnter,) orilrinaIly of the Parish of'Davistown, Ireland-On Royal Bank of Irelmll. . Scotland-The Commercial Banl.pfScotiand. D •.CONAHAN, Agent (Jountyof Wicklow. Ireland. TheY'have been in America ahout sixt.een June 10, 184Q. tf. yeare, when last heard of were on a farm Fiomewbere in Ohio. Any in· For whioh they will get the amomt, withQut delay, in any town in En· formation respecting them wW be thankfully received hy Luke Curtis, gland, Scotland or Ireland. 'Tbomas' brother, Fa.ctoryville, North sbore"StRten lalani'l, N. Y., or at Apply" or address by letter. posqaili. to DOCTOR F. RCELKER~ the Office of the Catholic Telegraph, Cincinnati, Ohio. BOCHE, nRO,l.'HERS & CQ,. 67 Southlid nnd extensive as in ~py other C,?IJ~gei hence the youthful Student., whilst preparing himself for ad· ATTORNE.Y ,urn COUNSELI~OR AT LiNj.fJffice on the East aide DC Ma'ln OF Three Disr.ourses atrainst the CAtbolii', Ohurch: 'l"~ ' ''·ercd by thf ll. e t' ~ mISSIOn into jUlY oft.he Theological Semjnaties, and whilst examining his St-teet, between Seventh and Eighth treats, Cincinnati, Ohio. R. C. Grundy; in the town of Springfield, Ky. By. Catholic Loyman. vocation, willuot lo se bis time should God show him thlft he is not called REFER TO ,!b~ a hove has been received and is for sale at tbe Catholi c Bookstore. to the Priesthood. but he w:illieave his holy retreat well instructed, al~d PrJce 10 Cents. prepared to.su~ceed in secul}lr pursuits. J.P. P. Lowe, Esq" Dayton, O. R.'C, Scpenck, .f.sCJ. Dayton O. Oct. ~. The JocalJty IS mo;;t healthy, tbe building capacious the boarding eqnal r. C9 l1 in, Esq. do, DrSmith, Clerk of the Montgomery to that ofnny College ill OUl'!eountry. Efforts baveb~en made to fix the H. H, HUlIter,Esq" Lancaster, O. Court,-ofCommon PJeas,IO. terms. as low as possiblej bence for Boarding, .Lodging, Washing and Henry Stansberry_ Esq ,do . ADOLPH LOTZE, Mendmg, Doct~r'~ feefj, nooks, Paper, Ink, Quills, &c., and for Clothing _J_ll_ly_8_IP_,_1_84_3_. ______t_l_ Tm, Copper, Iron Plate Worker and. ,Manufact.urer of Flnt Air Fur. naces, 'Stoves, &c., No.265 MainSt.;6 doors ahove otu Street, Cincinnatt only $120 per annum, payable half yearly in advance, will be required. JlIay 6, 1843. Em I 8!,!ould anyone wish to furnish his own Clothing, a suitable deduction D. PUTT. WIll be mad~. The d,epartment of €';olle.glate Stndies (or Secular pursuits will be reo Attorne} ot La·w. Office on Main Mween.6th an~ 7th Streets, direc~ly pREM~UM .l<'URNI:rUR)':.--MITCHEJ" MOOR & Co. moved, before ~be first ~ of May, to Cape Girardeau so that the Clerical pposite Gano Street, Cincinnati, Obi~ , Furmtur: and CbaIr manuractnrers, Citiztns' Cabinet Cct. 29, 1442. Students alone will remai" at St. M.,.y's. Addre~s Rev. H. Fig':ri, St. \Varerooms, ~I, Se,cond street, bAtween }Iain \lnd Syca.­ Mary's Seminary, Perry Oounty, Missouri. N? ..February .25, 1843. t·f '1'0 'l'HE IUBLIC. mo~e streets, Cmclllnah. ~ratcrl11 for tbe liberal patronage ~vhIch the~ hl~ve receIved SInce their associalion a~ a firm, The.undersigned proposes to com melee the publication in the city of LARD OIL FACTORY. Saint Louis, ofa Montbly P.-iodical, to be called tbe . I~(orm theIr rrtends ana the puhlic generally, I.hat lhey C(10- WATER STREET, BETWEEN nlAIN AND WALNUT. tmue to manuracture, :lT1d k~ep.constafltly on hand, a general 'THE subscribers wish to in for!!, tbeir friends and the public, tbat tbey CAT H 0 L ICC A BIN E T , ass~rtme?t Of artICles 10 theIr I~ne or busine5s. It being the lJave cons.tanlly On hand, a superior art~cle of I,81'd oil, whicll 'is eqnal" if deSIre of ilhtchel, Moor & Co., to s!lsta in their reputati-on, 1I0t sup~nor to any yet offered for sale III tbe Western Country; 'which and Chronicle of Religious Intelligence. they have therefAre determined to employ none but experi­ they w,lI sell on reasonable terms, and respeclfuliy ~olicit a share,9f pub· A lie patronage. n? which .is to be exclusively devoted to the exposition.• enced workmen, and use good materials ill their manuractory. CRONIN & CALLAHAN. IllustratIOn and VIndICation of Catholic Principles. They respectrully invite their fellow cilizens wh,) rna Cin'ti Sept. 16th,1843. want to purchase arbcles in their line or business to call an~ The proposed publication will contan: examine their stock. D. WEIL1j:R., ]st. S~lectio~lS from the leading CatlDlic Reviews and other periodic· MITCHEL, MOOR & als, pubhsbed In England, Franc.c, Ger~lany, and Italy' 85 well as from cn. OPTICAL, P~ILO.§lOPHICAL, ])IATHEnIATICAL, AND SURGICAL the periodical press of the United Stat61. ' Feb. 13, a841. 7-tf INSTRmlENT nIAKER. 2d. Impartial reviews of all Catholi< works puhlished in tbe United St~t~g, as also of Buch.otbel' works as UHy hllve reference to the Cutholic Also, all kind~ of Turning done in Brass, Ivory, WQod, Horn &c.­ rehglOn. HATS AND CAPS. \-Vood work Jlohshp.d of every color, a~d Musical instruments repaired. Store on the corner of 'l'bird and Walnut St8. 3d. Contr~butions to the Ecclesiastillll History of Ihe United States, ,..-,HE Subscriber would infurm bis friends and the public Cincinnati, September 16th. 1843. espeCldUy WIth reference to the Western Diocesses. 4th. A copious and carefully prepared SUJIlmary of Religious Intolli· .It.. that he has on hand a general assurtment of flats and gence, both foreiol1 and domestic. Caps~ at retail, w.hich he is disposed tD sell very low and JUST PUBLISHED, 'fhe editorial department of the Catholic Cabinet will be under the.su· solicits a call. ' De~~~ ~di~~~r~~ation .ofthe Ilt. Rev. Bishop Purcell a beauti\ul Duo penntendence of a Catholic clergymanlo be appointed by tbe Bishop Tbe Catbolic Cabinet will be published on the first of every mo';th, JAMES ERWIN. MILNER:S END OF CONTROVERSY. commencmg all Lhe first of ]\o~aYl In the present year., It ;Will contain 208 Main St. . The great want.oftills work felt among the Oath.olics of the \Yest, bas sixty-four pages of v]osely prmted matter-the size and style to be simi· mduc~d the .pubiishers to pnt It at a very low pnce. It is prjnted an i~rp~~ tbat 01 the JQontbly periodicals at Ibe East-on fine paper and new TO OUR COUNTRY SUB~-:-- beautIful whIte paper, full bound in Sb~ep.-Price 50 cents. 'l'he.Publiser believes that, in point oflypographical execution, as well r;rUE .attention of our ~ountry subscribers is re'Jul'sled to the folio win The us~~1 deduction allowed on wholesale purchases. For Sale at in~tructlOns from the Post 1\1 as,ter General. the Cathollc Bookstore, Sycamore St. Cincinnati, Ollio. . as of mtere~ting 8.lld useful informatil)n. the Cathohc Cabinet will be fo?ud eqnal to any of tbe leading periodicals of tbe United States. A Postmaster may enclose llloney in a Jetter to the pu'llisher f)f a News M 843 DANIEL CONAHAN. Agent. rll::{UIs-T,wenty.tive cents per month, to be paid on the receipt of each paper, to pay the subscription ofa third pe rso"u, alltl fr.mk the Jetter i _"_Y 6, 1 • . , tf written by himself." , nu~nher, or '1 bree Dollars per annum in advance. These terms will be str.ctly adbered to botl! in and out of the city. A"ents wlil be appointed Asthe Post Ottic~ thus affords every f~cili t y for remitting subscriptionlf HATS AND CAPS. through the country. 0 . to the Telegraph without expense, we Will he 111 uLure under the neccssit Tbe undersigned would Respeotfully inform hi. friends and tbe public CHARLES N. HOLCOlllB, Publisher. of deducting the postage from all reullttallces Cexcept from ufI'p.nts) an~ thB.t be has !lOW all hand a general assort~ent of the above mentioned giving credit for the balance only. 0 , arllcles,ofll1s own Manufacture and of the J8te,l)t fashions, which he is 01.1 mal\in.g payment~ to A ',: ents aUf ~ubscri b ers arc rcqucsted to obtaIn detewuned to '"?lIlow for cash. . NOTICE. receipts; as ~n case of the .negle~t of Agents to give credit for pnyment~ tbe productIOn of the receIpts w,li be delllanded. JAMES McMULLEN. IND~CEMENT8, TO CLERGYMEN, POSTMASTERS, &c. No. 152. Main Street, Between ~th an.d 5th, Two copies of the Catholic Cabinet will bc:maUed regularly for one year, or ol1.e copy for two ycars, for 5 60 TEl RGRAPII ~ATHOLIC BOOKS. Fonr cO~les for onc yeaJ, for ]0 00 THE CATHOLIC 'rell copIes for one year, for 20 00 Is published every Suturday, by h., CATlll>I,IC SOCIE1' FOR SALE IN ZANESVILLE, OHIO. ~Cllrrent mOlley, or its ~f]uivatent t pa.id in advance.] N. B. I ostrnasters a re authonr.ed by law to seud remittances free of FOR THE D1F~'USION OF RELIGIOUS KNOWLEDGE." 'rhe a fO l' to of Zanesville and vicino undersi~ned fer~ Sa~e theCitize~s postage, when t11 c letter is signed by themselves. This wjJJ aflord Rev. 'Ihe 'Lt,/'IllS or the Subscription ale itya selcljL assorl~H!n!. 01 CatholiC Books, Pictures, &c. Any Book which gentlemen, and others, nn opportunity of sending any moneys that may aeulay not have III hiS stock can be procured on the shortest notice. H paid in advance, - be collected to the PUblish~r, without expense, $250 Zanesville, Deeewber 16. 1642. JOHN}llcCARTNEY. CHARLES N. HOLCOMB, ~ltbli.ber , " " n!ter 6 months, --- 300 St. LOUIS, July 1st, 1843. Office on ::svc(unore street, OppOSIte the church