The evening world. Newspaper, July 20, 1903, Page 2

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“3 the Commendator Manucii, the Pope's director of temporal affairs. They FB) Chapel, where 1: will lie in state, PRET ST es Sapna OMPETARN HR 7 sang PITS OEE THE WORLD: MONDAY EVENING. JOLY 20 nounced the absolution and the Chicf Usher approached and, taking the Fisherman's Ring from the dead band, gave it to the Camerlegno,, who Each new Pope has a new lisher- broke it in accordance with custom. , 190% |OREGLIA, WHO WILL GOVERN IN ‘PAPAL INTERREGNUM, AND GUTTI, THE PROBABLE POPE LEO’S DEBT SUCCESSOR OF LEO ant TO MOTHER LOVE. | CRIPPLED THRONG man's Ring. o All retired then except a group of monks, who remained keeling IN| Among the many benutiful traits ot} IC, rr 140 XIIf, his devotion’ to the memory ‘The Cardinal Camerlengo, now the ruler of the Vatican, gave Orders) of pis saintly mother, whom he lost that the great bell of St. Peter's be tolled to announce the Pontiff's death to the populace and the bronze doors of the Vatican were closed. The ancient custom of announcing the death from the loggin of St. Peter's to Confusion reigned throughout the Vatican unti! Cardinal Oregiia sum- moned the Marquis Zachetti, the Grand Marshal of the Papal Court, and turned over (o him the keys of the Vatisan. He Issued orders through them to the chamberlains and members of the Swiss Guard. Measures of military severity were at once enforced. Access to all outsiders was de- ) wied, The apartments of the dead Pontiff were locked and the doors sealed. Preparations were at once begun to remove the body of Leo to the Sistine Meanwhile in the section of the Vatican palace where the cardinals will be confined during the conclave the clangor » of six hundred workmen grated sharply on the general air of mourning. Pope Leo entered upon the last agony of the death struggle at 3 o'clock “this afternoon. Dr. Mazzoni announced a few minutes later that life would goon be extinct. At 4 o'clock the Pope had lost all consciousness, but he ) Was not pronounced dead until later. a » , During the morning there had been great alarm In the Vatican. Just before noon Dr. Lappon! really thought the end had arrived, and Cardinal ino Vannutelli, the Grand Penitentiary, began the prayers for the “dying and gave the Pontiff absolution in articulo mortis. CARDINALS AT BEDSIDE. ‘Hie death was considered so imminent that all the Cardinals were pres- ent’and the members of the Diplomatic Corps were admitted to the sick- room. Pope Leo rallied from this attack only to suffer a relapse. Just at that moment a large party of American tourists, unaware of critical situation of the Pontiff, ascended the grand staircase, talking and laughing. They were approached by a gendarme, who sald: “Please 40 not make any nolse, as the Holy Father is dying.” This produced great ie Pope's condition was somewhat ameliorated, in reality the doctors did shortly before his ordination, is marked. ‘Phe strongest, mwectest and purest Influence in a man's Ife ta that of his ax he often did, he sald “She was the woul of every good work flcence set afoot in our! Indeed, my sacred mother | A them herself, But all} of piety and native town, started most this notive outside work never made Her | neglect her home duties. She lavisho@ devoted upon us all a mother's most tenderness, Blessed and incomparable wus she among women!” Like many other great men in history Joachim Pecc! owed his great qualities of mind and heart to the early influence of a pure-souled and high-minded mother. ‘The mother of the Pontife wan Anna Prosperi-Buzi, a direct descendant of Colm di Rienzi, the last of the Tri- Dunes. The Prosperi-Buzi was one ef the twelve great familiea of the Vols- clan city of Cora, From her martiage with the patriclan Count Ludovico Pecel resuited four sons and two daughters. ‘Yo the education of her children she brought gentility, learning and the pro- found piety of an Italian noblewoman. Of her won, destined to become the ruler of the Roman Church, whe once sald to. @ noted churohman: ‘He will certainly | turn out well, for he is the child of hiv) mother’s prayers." Crowds at Bovathd Devotees Visit the Church of St. Jean Bantiste DAHME BOY ABLE TO WALK. Piles of Crutches and Braces Stacked on East Side of Shrine, Which: i the Cured Cripples Have Thrown, Away There. “My child Is able to walk. For the firet time In his I'fe he has taken a few steps.” Mrs. William Dahme, of West Point. passed out from the little church of Bt. Jean Baptiste with Joy in her eyes. Willie Dahme, a child of seven, who had been bedridden neary all his life. had taken a few steps after the sacred relle of St, Anne had been applied Around the church religious devotees who had travelled miles and came from all parts of the country tobe cured by the sacred relic toid their stories of faith and recovery. Crowds of devotees visited the church in Enat Seventy-sixtr street to-day, and the tame, the halt and the blind, both young and cld, who were led to the altar SUMMER TREATMENT f the people of the world was not carried out. mother,” he wrote to ala brother, Count aM Mi ! > CONFUSION IN THE VATICAN. Joseph Pecel, many years after her and Many Miraculous Cures ; ° death. Ane eenin tn apreking of bt, Are Reported ae the Resut, | OF the Hair and Scaip ‘Always Best With’ Shampoos of Coir ‘ ‘Tho early education of her children turned away with the firm i emotion among the tourists, and they immediately retired. was in her hands, and when Joachim before the end of theNDVOUC LEAD, ‘wil | .°. Although this morning's bulletin may have given the impression that |at the age of ten years confided to her be cured. his wish to become a priest her delight ‘The case of Willlie Dahme was only think so. They considered that the lowering of the pulse and the di- tion of the respiration were due to great prostration of the whole or- Here Hes Anna Prosper! Mother of the poor; moat affectionate to her childrtn; born at Cora; A saintly woman, gently and generous, was boundless, Count Pecc! was told of the lad's aspirations and he replied: “I wanted ++ make a soldier of forces with the skill of an expert tact!- clan, him.) it to enjoy the happiness of aeeing her son} celebrate mass, In her in August, 184, she ordained and was his mother who made provi-| fifty-seventh year, one of many where anxious mothers had brought sick and helpless children to the | sacred relic. | And light dressings of Cuticuna, pure “ ginism, which was augmenting, notwithstanding the fact that the patient| You wili make # Pope of him." sion for the education of Joachim and] was carried off by a malady. Her ohil-| After an exemplary fulfillment of her| The first step in the visit to the saint|eat of emollient skin cures. This That the boy inherlied the martial| his brother Vincent, afterward a car-] dren were around her bedatde. Bhe died eee A aged ot years n Js to the churoh proper, where the sacra-| treatment at once gobs falling hair, S, at times took a !ittie nourishment. The Pope continued, now and then, to mutter phrases, although uncon- scious. His mind, evidently, returned to the events which impressed him | most before his {)Iness. ardor of lils father he showed afthr- ward as a member of the church mill- tant as well as in a more forcible man- ner as G. nor of one of the provinces of tho Papal States, which he cleared dinal, by instituting the cultivation of silicworms upon her husband'n estate. The lads were sent to Rome, and thither | thelr parents journeyed often to enjoy In a churen in Rome Leo XIIf. and onths and 1 his brothers caused to be erected In the | mech nena an dase ‘with those year follow death a around her. aimple_moniment marble | Lodovico Pecct and her affiicted children which surmounted and bore! reared this monument to thia unique thi and incomparable woman. their mother's of Parlan her tomb men: {s administered and the devotee ges to the basement, where the sacred rellicl Is kept. ° Mothers of all kinds and des:riptions crowded up to the altar, carrying chil- removes crusts, sChles and dandruff, soothes irritated, itching surfaces, stimulates the hair follicles, supplies the roots with energy and nourish- ment and makes the hair grow upon > their compantonship. beautiful pase on, sald to have! “MURMURED IN DELIRIUM. of bandits by manipulating his slender! The Countess Anna Pecci did not live been written oy Leo XIII Peace be unto thee, pure soul! dren in all stages of deformity. Babies eet, wholesome, healthy scalp, * At one moment he was feeling xbout with his hands and moving his = | Ul strapped to boards, little fellows with Pies all else fails, so spiritualize his Church as to make it worthy to control the destiny of the} braces on their legs, tiny girls on “What © head from side to side, trying to lift himself, while he murmured: inertly. ywds! What devotion! My dear people.” Then, falling back establishment of universal and perpetual peace; the perfection cf the educa- | tion of the clergy and the people; the amelioration of th condition of labor, Above all else, to use the express{on of the prophets, being of goodness, all compact. |euilitons who followed hi ‘He was a man who feared God," crutenes, girls whose eyes are not pen- Complete Treatment e " tr y thi 7 ‘nt, ) he sighed sand sald: “Ol, the weight of these robes. Can I hold out until| Without Injustice, violence, or bloodshed; and the union of all Christian Audi HOW CHEE Nislcarese Gay endaels thal ward (oehotde ei or standing forth aa G ai panda dee ai ‘the end?” This was followed by scraps of Latin verses and prayers and|churches in one fold under one Shepard. He lived to see all these, his | the form of a man without admixture of meanness or vice or crime, but clothed A L dAtt) For Torturing, DisSiguring Humours, eonais He entertained the highest | with Justice and virtue and goodness as with garments. We can say of Leo as| Down in the basement, where tapers crusts and sosle, ite )yue creoeee ue eialeL then came an interval of silence which was broken by another access of ) ®nergy, in which the Pope cried: “Ihe Consistory is over! They can re- "proach me no longer! How many faces of all kinds! How many forelgn- ers! The Church is triumphing!" and so on over and over again. A wonderful thing about Pope Leo was that every time his mind be- heart's Jesires, well on the road to realization. respect for the United States, and hoped great tnings from the growth of the Church under the protection of our starry banner. May God grant us fa successor to this great Pope who will prove equally noble, pious, large- hearted and generous as this great oPpe,” was sald of Bernard, “We thank Thee, Lord, that Thou hast counted the world worthy to have had him so long. Leo's Place in History. Because of his achievements for the Church all scholars have already given Leo a place among the greatest of the Popes. Strictly speaking, the giant Popes burn around the altar, the devotees passed, buying fromthealtar boys for 10 cents the tapers which are lighted in their name. Little Willie Aldrich, so grippled that is mother carried him, was taken to | the altar, where Father Roy applied the " came clear he seemed to grasp the fact that it might be the last, and he The Rev. Dr. Henry A. Brann, rector of St. Agnes's Roman Catholic! \.. xi in number. It was the glory of Lec the Great that he founded the sacred rele. Wha) (relic oF Anne, When, during the alarming crisis about noon, | Church, said: Papacy and organized that vast system whose lines from Rome, webclike,| {yUGh Is Mald to (be a smail portion of made the highest use of it. he was, lying on his bed perfectly motionless, while around him knelt the. 'Gardinals and other members of the Papal Court, praying and not knowing whether the Pope was already dead, without any preliminary restless- > ness the Pontiff opened his cyes, which fell on Cardinal Oreglia, who was ) at his side, and he sald solemnly: YOUR EMINENCE, WHO WILL SOON SEIZE OF SUPREME POWER, I CONFIDE THE DIFFICULT TIMES."" ‘TO YOU PHE, REINS “CHURCH IN THESE stretched out over the earth. Then came Gregory—the Missionary Pope—who, in 690, sent hie teachers to the inhospitable shores of England, where they won over the savage ancestors of Shakespeare and conquered King Ethelbert by thelr plea for !mmortallty, Later came Hildebrand, that Gresory who was not content that the Pope should be the equal of kings and princes. It was his ambition to exalt the spiritual power © all temporal power. Emperors, kings and queeng must be subject to the rid's spiritual ruler, He denied to Henry the Fourth of Germany the right of hvestiture of bishops, and when Henry insisted Gregory promptly excommunt- tuled “him, forbade any of tls subjects to servé him. In that hour Hildebrand oved that the Pope was the king: over all emperors, ruler of all temporal “The dominant note In the oratorio of Leo's life was intellect. He was fa man of great intellectual powers and will rank in history with Gregory the Great, Leo I, Plus IL, Innocent ILI. and Benedict XIV. “Being a ma nof great intellect and ‘having leisure and Inclination In his early days, he acquired a thorough knowledge of theology, philosophs and political economy. He had also a good imagination and great literary taste He showed this in the polished style of his encyclicals and In his Latin poems, which are not great, but are elegant a silver case which the priest, passed over the afflicted auppileant. Kneeling before the shrine, with her boy in her arms, the boy's mother repeated earn- estly the prayers, in which all, other aftlloted and supplicating ones foined. Passing the relic over the littic Aldricn bo Father Roy appiled it with the tition of prayers to all of the sup- Plants who Were lined before the Tall. Pon each. side of the shrine are plies of crutches and braces which the cured cripples have in years past thrown be- fore the saints’ shrine in recognition of a cle; Curicuma ‘Otaant, (900.), to inatantly allay {tehtog, and soothe and heal; and Curiouma ReaoLventT Pitts (%c.), to ‘cool and cleanse the blood, may now be see of all droggiste for ane doliar. Oures made in summer ore apeedy, permanent ond economica!, CANDY SPECIAL FOR MONDAY. Vanilla Cocoanut Creams.,..1b, 106 Chocolate Cream Pecan: “Being a man of Intellect, he saw that ignorance, in the clergy and In p ‘ *} oD Dl ay ij 3 Ir SPECIAL FOR TUESDAY. -POPE GIVES LAST GREETING. the people made many of them a prey to infidelity and socialism. He knew] nonarchs; and from that day Gregory was master and Henry wus sesty Al iio | Ce CUES ge are’ te oritchies/of Mra) Cocoanut Cream Kissen ss 106 Then Mgr. Bisleti, the Master of the Chamber, asked for t * ; nakevs | ervants in Henry's palace fled, The monarch had coal, but no one to kindle a| Mary A, Carroll, of ‘Troy, whose case| cece! a Seale Nourts while! “ont rs ee Me ypes thalsa cultured: and Vosted! intellect) willimayver zu! erent danagl un lesa ithy ire; flour. but no one to make a loaf; horses, but no man to tend them, When | has attracted much attention at the Chocolate Raspberry Jelly...1b. 150 Bediction for (he Court, which th ontif granted, saying, “Blesa you,”| baser passions contrcl. He knew that the greatest infitels were men whose | jo ‘cing appeared on the streets all men fled, and every ehop door was locked in perane aoe CORA eatin ce Adding: “Be this my last grecting Intelligence had been dominated by animal passions. He knew that where] ais face. At Inst Henry took a staff and made’ his way to Italy, but the Pope | by . 54 BARCLAY St ' Then the Pontiff gave his hand to be kiased by Cardinals Oregiia, Ram-|the masses were ignorant, as they were in the sixteenth century, it was used to see him, For three days and three nights, barefooted and bareheadad,| "I was cured by faith," sald Mrs. Car- OR. WEST BWAY, ensy for any political lender to carry them off Into all sorts of heresies, mld the Uasis of winter, Henry stood knocking at the doop before he recelved | [1119 2M athe moment 1 pressed tHe Aa: 29 Y CORTLANDT SE a So ee eNO EALO NCaE Tinie bled elt _ vudience and pardon, Then, for centuries, the Pope was a sdvereign, OTD Rees in cratointesed wrth COR CHURCH Polla, Serafino Vannutelll, Dele Volpe and Vives y Tuto, who were present. *) Dr. Lapponi profite! by the Pope's animation to administer restora: > Alves, whefeupon the patient sank back as suddenly as he had revived, : The words which the Pope addressed to Cardinal Oreglia, and which “proved to be the last supreme effori of that Intelligence which has aston- . ished the world, are much commented upon, and it is wondered whether the intention of Leo XIII. was to indicate Cardinal Oreglia as his successor. The words will certainly have considerahle weight in the decision of the Er dinals who will take part in the Conclave, * Cardinal Serafino Vannutelli, the Grand Penitentiary, remained at the Vatican! All night fo be within call to give the absolution “inarticulo mortis.” Cardinal Oreglia, who actually agumed charge of the Vatican yesterday, despite Cardinal © Rampolla’s protests, remained until midnight and ther went to his palace but ‘hen came the great Popes of the De Medic! period, who built the cathedrals, who were the patrons of men lke Bramante, Michael Angelo, Raphael, Titian nd Da Vinel, and that great company of {mmortal artists. In that era when the ntiff was a secula e came the Reformation also, that rent the Church In ain; and Jong after came Plus with his decree of infallibility; and last of all same Leo the Good, who accomplished the impossible even in Luther's own country. What His Efforts Wave Accomplished. If any man doubts, let him ask this question: Which churches cr: the more crowded —the Lutheran churches in Berlin. or th? Catholic churches? And in New York itse(f, what shall we more say than that undgr Leo's direction the churches w'vere the faith he holds is taught are ful! tothe doors ? ization, with its fifteen centuries of history! Hence ie determined to lift up the clergy to the highget plane of scholarship, He ratsed the pitch of college, semin: nd university stud: fes. He put Thomas Aquinas or his throne, and restored the study of orig!- nal documents of the original sources of canon law and history, “Education with reilgion; education in the highest sense of the word was his aim, for he knew that an educated people which is at the same time religious will preserve public order and «ill not try to take others’ prop- erty. All his encyclicals prove this, To make men look orf this life as a mere vale of tears, a preparation for a glorious immortality in the lite hereafter, was the aim of Lec the 'uminator, Let us hope that all his successors will follw ont his programme.” a new life. When J arose I found that IT could walk, ‘Three days ago I was tolpless; now by the grace of God 1 ameured. * Hurt in Trolley Accident. “Three years ago I was injured in a re trolley accident and had been paralyzed aver sine.”” Two young men who have travelled all the way from Nashville, Tenn,, in order to receive the aid®of the relic, are filied with joy at their recovery. Their names are Matthew Sherlock and Thomag Car- roll. Both say they were afflicted with heart disease for years and until they eat the reile of St. Anne they found Dac-T-Ra Eyeglass Clip, SOc, Does, not slip, pinch or leave mark ave As) avin Pony 2890 34 “DAOHTERA'TH ROS optiofhan” sole tatenters PILE OIL sess 400 W. 57th Bt., N. Be _ Laundry Wants—Female. PAMILY IRONERS wanted, 449, Went 53d. at. “Knapton’s Laundry. ¢ The Rev. mathe: Wonderful indeed this great org: A li the way from Peekskill he returned this morning and entered the Vatican with Dr. Mazzoni. ne i a ‘a Doren the Paul Fath r entitled his panegyric on Wondertthedrata it has built! What Madonnas and ‘Transfgurations it has| Mrs, John See eae peenalelit oom Cap RTAROHERE on, shirts, eollare | GREATUST OF CROWL fi : Ac isantonsnwe tO the p hwentieth Ceathy sainted? What solomn ‘Te Deuins it hax written! What saints named Fenelon 0li witl. who suffers from hip diseare. it Laundry. ee 4 (6 IS. ‘One of the most dramatic events in the life of Leo XIUL," he said. | ja Thomas a-Kempls! What philanthropists like Francis of Assisi! What! day, but, lit Tap cullagwasiaGle In all the | heroes Hike Bernard! Little wonder that it has ruled princes and peasants alike! | to si she sald. cy In the great square of St. Peter's the crowd of watchers who had remained throughout the night was augmented after daybreak, and grew despite the ter- rise heat to greater proportions than at any time since the Pontiti's death was nounced imminent. The Italian Government has a regiment mo barracks adjacent to the Vatican to preserve order. —_——__+. /»PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT “Shows the Feeling of the Entire Country; He a 7 ° y ‘The English Cardinal who wrote for the world his “Lead, Kindly Light,” was] man so overcome b; aralysia ‘that it ; Says, Irrespective of Religion. morn may gather about the pathway of progress, still there is one figure). vore venerated for the purity and slmplicity of his character. Fan eal eCareneltin essai: Nincnnie ‘ that looms up compelling our attention away from whom we shall stray i and children, mothers with i) ack) COlwh i ; i The Pope Whose Interests Were Universal. Saar e ne there Mieit | chloe, Chelees. only to our hurt, and back to whom we must always turn for wisom, solace | “ “1, ine noblest sense of the term Leo was a man whose interests were world- fhe greater part of the | WANTED—Two gi There-are also many men, | erpocker Laundry, 489 Oh ‘ OYSTER BAY, July 20.—When President Roosevell was Informed of Ps death of Pope J.20 he dictated the following for the Associated Press: “The President expresses his profound regret at the death of the ven- We Pontiff, waose long career no less than his exalted character has © gommanded the respect of al) Christendom.’ The President said that in Mttering these sentiments he was giving expression to the feeling of all the people in the United States wholly withont regard to thelr religious faiths, « . Justice Leonard A. Giegerich, cf the Supreme Cofirt, President of the P Catholic Club, on learning of the Pope's death said: “was his sending forih his message to the twentieth centur history of the Pope sthere were no more thrilling words than those ut- tered by the Great White Shepherd of Christendom et the dawning of this new century. They were uttered from the pulpit of the Vaican; they were addressed to all mankind; they were spoken by a feeble old man, in whom were gathered the expriences of a century and behind whose office were twenty centuries of history. “The burden of the message was that Jesus hrist is the master of all hearts, as well as the healer of all nations, and that the common welfare of humanity demands a return to Him from whom we should never have Phat,it has controlled political institutions and shaped the destiny of states! Take it all in all, the Catholle yt the last fifteen hundred years—has survived ompires, states and civilizations. And the new position and influence that the Catholic Church now holds ts largely due to the wisdom and noble character of Leo the Pontiff. He was not a great theologian, Ike Augustine, giving us a vast body of di- vinity. He was not @ great orator, like Chrysostom, swaying the thousands weeping in the Cathedral of 8t. Sophia, He did not have the military Instinct ind fron will of Hildebrand. But he was 0 great Bishop, like Ambrose, who ruled by love. He was a great ist, like Gregory, sending his missionaries into the uttermost parts of oropagand Whatever of diffl- | ne met. eve the years that are to come in the dawning century. But, great as he was, we forget his greatness when we remember his goodness, culties there may be retarding tho triumph of truth; whatever mists of the vide. In reading his letters and addresses we are impressed with the universality of his themes. He writes and speaks not from the viewpoint of an Italian, but rrom the viewpoint of the citizen of all countries. ‘Always he strikes the universal note that appeals to all people. The most im- portant of his eneyelicals deal with the condition of the working clagses, chief utes of Christians as citizens, on marriage and divorce, on socialism and anarchy, on workingmen’s clubs and trades unions. In these noble papers he speaks not from the viewpoint of the prelate, but from the viewpoint of the Christian. He always pleads tne cause of the poor; his heart was knitted in with the In- terests of his kind. He had tried to make his name a shield for the weak and his influence a bul- wank for thelr defense, and quidance. He Is Jesus Christ, the Day Star from on High, “Tuis is Leo's message to the twentieth century, and his tall, gaunt, un- earthly figure stops for a moment on the brink of the tomb as he draws aside the veils of eternity, to impress great truths on the heart of humanity. He has no class of men particularly In mind; he speaks to al) the world.” —e+. DR. HILLIS ON LEO THE MAN AND HIS PLACE IN HISTORY. has been the most marvellous political force | 3 ‘0 sleep, Little “Johnny Rose, twKo a hatt yeore old, was carcied upto the shri up to the shrine rap} A year ago he fell and Injured his spine, ‘As the mother de her way thropgh the maimed and Relpieas who surrounded the ehrine her face was tranafixed with Joy. “tHe will be cured,” she said to an Bvening World reporter. “THe has slevt evér since I have brought him here, and lust now he begs me to take from the ard. August Snyder, of Flatbush, who has been paralyzed ‘for years, says he |s Many Men in Line. A pitiful figure at the shrine was a he poor, wkith shawls pulled over thelr heads; tne rich, in silks and laces, rub shoulders together during the days | y of the novena, when the little brick Church of St. Jean Baptiste 1s crowded swith the faithful who come from all ris of the country seeking health, On the outside of the ohurch and Hning the street are booths on which are displayed relics and statues of St, Anne, SHIPPING NEWS. ALMANAC FOR TO-DAY. IRONBR—A fino collar and cuff ironer, by hand; work, ¥ employoment and lots of itt t employed. Ad= rt, (collar and ou and stead; 4 <i EXPRESSES HIS REGRET ee ua . : he earth, He was a great statesman, who proved himself a match for the most |"? xi) art camel FOLDERS Mutual Steam Lawn RORSESSITAY, seca diplomats. He held bimarlt to be a sovercten and spoke of himself as a|mortings wand Ii feel improved atter | Company's, 825-501 Went 24th at, “The greai master mind of the Vatican sees with more than prophetle]\-isoner in the Vatican, and he was tthe equal of princes and ambassadors whom | each visit.” SHER WANTED. een ‘Steam wheal Bireian | 6icam ington at ted, at once, rae Ro IRONER: good ladies’ clothee “That the Catholics in America, as well as their co-religionists over In condemning the oppressor he spoke no soft words; he descended upon the v4 eee the entire world, have suffered a great loss in the death of Pope Leo XIILL, e+. strong man's sins and crimes with the might of an avalanche. His words burn | 5!" riven, 4.46) RG tc TSU rises.. 1.00] ironers who ha 4 ane experience. Pilgriue = is a fact of which al) the communicants of the Church are keenly con- like a flame of fire against every form of iniquity, He came forth, and lo! the High Water, Low Water. TONER First clase faliy tropes wha a ie 7 Cy scourge was i) his hand, . MP. iton waists. Prospect Laundry, E. lath ry pa. sj , BY NEWELL DWIGHT HILLIS, What a mine of wirdom Is found In these addresses to the working ciassea! | Sandy, Hook . UAUNDRY— Young. 1ady, pipers marker ane His attitude toward the Catholic American was that of an affection lie poluts out for the people the paths that lead to prosperity and peace. Hell Gate Fer 12 Columbus aye. 2 te and proud fathe, and the influence which he exerted over “arrhy, the clergy and the people of the church canot be over-estima the hier- 1 Successor of Henry Ward Beecher and Lyman Abbott as Pastor of Plymouth Church, Brooklyn. It has often been sald that the strength and wisdom of these letters were traceable to the College of Cardinals and to the representatives of fore!gn coun- trles Who stood around about the Pope for counsel and direction, PORT OF NEW YORK, WASHER WOMAN er “aaa 2nd fine piece, coralzal Laundry, 110 &. sa raarceeel tino WANTE! a for aren ands, Anply Piierisn steam Laundry, 96-98 a at., Brooklyn, } is best attested by the ra. strides le by the chure! MONG those men who are the glory of their time the worid has already ‘ oo ie erthalonts Luce a Aedes ay as Hh ohne h tn thy A Tadd’ a late place.for Lea the Rok tHe: But If Lincoln read his state papers to his Cabinet, does that mean that his In- ARRIVED. fountry, e is n doubled since he assumed! Tho firat Leo is known to tne world as Leo the Great because he founded | ®usurals represent any genius save the genius of Abraham Lincoln? Proteus tauna Wants—M is he duties of the Holy Office. As a statesmen he was without a peer, his|ine Papacy, but the lust Leo, who conserved, purt@ed and strengthened what tho| And whoever reads the Pope's aduresies fo the people will finish his reading | gina, AUN DY re Wery act, however, being actuated and governed by the highes: sptritual] first had founded, will ultimaiely be known 2s Leo the Good with the full conviction that Leo's intellect was clear and powerful, !!ke the sun-| Minnetonka about 15 or 16, tor laundry car 1e.. By reason of the majesty and beauty of his character he was revered ,by tence Poe te ray trousn staal Pans of error and tgnorance; and that his voice | Kone, Haskon “1d Kant ith = easter , Sari Fe nile ay ECAC aha TI atiato soy. [is his own voice, always ringing teu erranae Ia laundry. “The spiritual and mental pre-eminence of this great and holy mau Ppoleslanviand Cashaveielne.cvese Bis is. and now sat Neils dying the’ Ee But it Is not enough to mention his intellect—he was 2 man of great genius, of one Fate ror Tei 0 vaderlan h Apply 0.00, extant world mourns for him as it has lamented no preia! nee the death of ithe inspiration of even the humblest of the Catholle faith, and From every viewpoint Leo appeats to the sense of universai | &Teat woodnens, of great simplicity; and above all of great plety and trust in God. Sere das Tver steam Ruaadey 16 Concord Cardinal Newman. more to place the Church of Rome before the world in its true) dmiration. EMT RE RR INCOMING STEAMSHIPS. dL _ Bava ene of tik predecers He 1s the spiritual ruler of more (han one huudred millions of men, and yet ‘The flags on all the city butjdings wily DUB TO-DAY. - ecperhne D lors in the Sacred Office from the! over never made him proud or arrogant. CITY FLAGS AT HALF ee half-master tn compijance JPIM the | potterdam, Rottertom, Vaderland, Antwer>, PENMAN The man : He je a great scholar, wise toward cll books and Wbraries, but he is neither MAST FOR THE POPE, ; Mayor's r tw -— ‘who writes M, J, Lavelle, pastor of StS. aPtrick’s Cathedral, sald: impractical nor a dreamer, for ho ts known as one of the mest practical of men, Body of Drowned Man Found. /OUTGOING STEAMSHIPS. “SUNDAY HOPDY Leo XIII. was one of the grandest in the long line of successors| | !¥e '8 aanuully in receipt of treasures of gold #0 vast as to make the income} he flags on the Cl } were placed | ‘The body of an unidentifed man was La ewascebvitised WORLD PaPies. Hie name will live in history, not merely because of the ex. {2 Prices contemptibie, ve" to the end he ved in three rooms furnished to the) at halt Mast yeni Myer t found tn the East River at the foot o¢ | Jemestown, Newonrt News Marenhense, Barbados, ns 4 ¥ i of d enness i pover so0n at « tye! 1 ti t CERNE Nan cee REITING } ‘his oPntificate, but principally because of the virtue of P's eH enase nn Peet nounced. Several Akon when. the oe tan, aaa crea fy re writes ic achiev ts, H ak He Is held In universe! reverence because he stands for the great simpticities,) was reported ay dying, fhe Mayor ote Inches in “BUCCESS8." World ‘Wanta of ements, He had a heart which em-| those universa's of Christianity. called Love, Pence xnd Good-Wil, Ipatructed his secretary Wi thtam A pounds. It was reese fl reach the most people ang cf, The great objgt at which he aimed was the| © His ambition "Was one of the nobiest possible to the mind of man—vis., to arene er ara eaiace lek hmast Bray. eaten bring the most resulta. 5 x idles ada! J ates iad jes pallette 9 ri se le aa

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