T1IK AMI.KH'.W - i. i l ,.t!... i i n h n Tm I'll I I ' -- .... I ' V4 f( 41 (t'4t, "- ! ti t n'( 4t X,i n - f f, t.,r.f f,i?. i (, I ,--ft,if , t, .., f,at f OMAHA, MlltUASKA, I );ilY, Jl'I.Y '. lv.!. VU MK II, I I loun.1 THi; AMI I (HAN H.i K l A!m iH!n, M,.ti ni I liin.- .t III .1 A M liltlSuN, tle, 1 V. - K s ,., THE Aw. MCAN MOMIS ATTITUDE, Mn OppoMt nil tl,PM'i"rii ol Hip Srtrtlly, IV..,', Co, I', Itu.lotph, Ph. D.. In hi IhMiU, ''Tim Ureal Roman AntM'on.la," ny; "It'MiiimUiii l afrnl.) of n i ti t T t.-uti f i trm if governiiiciii, mill yet Roman Ism I prospering under the constitu tion lf the republic "(ml what Archbishop livlnml, f HI, I 'mil, Minnesota, mtiil nt the Catholic cotigrusn nt Baltimore In November, l!i; 'of inestimable ad vantage lo tlx in the Utterly tlin church enjoy under IIiii constitution of the republic. No tyrant hero casts chains around hor; no concordat limit her lift Ion, or cramps her energies. Sho In free a thu eagle upon tin? alpine heights, free to spread out to unob structed flight her pinions, to hoiii to highest altitudes, to nut Into not ion ull bur native energies. Thu lnw of the hind protect hor In hor rights, ami ask In w turn no sacrifice of thews rights, for hor rights uro those of Amoriciin citizenship.' Any clear minded American can see from thin eulogy on religion freedom that Romanism taken thu advantage over the constitution of tho United States and boldly encroaches upon this constitution which protects religious liberty. Romanism in not satisfied with freedom in tho exercise of its religious worship; not satisfied with tho protec tion of Its rights, which is guaranteed by tho conntitution; but it ban been sedulously at work not only to main tain full freedom of religious worship, but actually to subdue this country to Romish rule, Tho samo archbishop said: 'Our work is to make America Catholic, If wo love America, If wo lovo the church, to mention tho work suffices. Our cry shall hi, 'God wills it, and our hearts glial 1 leap with crusader enthusiasm. Tho conversion of America should over bo present to tho mind of Catholics in America as a supremo duty from which God will not hold them exempt,' When Koinlsh bishop publicly preach tho 'Reforma tion' of tho United States, is it policy for Americans to fgnor: tho encroach wonts? Ourcouritry y flooded with liter ature pointing out the schemes ofHoman Ism; danger signals have b on hoisted In every State of tho Union, and yet our people arc blind tr tho fact that tho en emy is not only marching in upon us, but has already gained a solid footing in our midst, is controlling many of our cities and schools, and to a groat extent, tho press and tho pulpit. Hundreds of thousands of dollar aro yearly drawn form the public treasury for tho Ro inanlzation of American youth, white, colored and Indian; public office are entirely In tho hand of Romanism In tho cities of New York, Boston, San Francisco, Buffalo, Cincinnati, and of hundred of smaller cities, town and village from tho Atlantic to tho Pa cific, and from British America to tho Gulf of Mexico, Our politician go hand In hand with Romanism, and our population of sixty-throo millions of "free American citizens" 1 ho com pletely vitiated by Rome rulo that free peech and a free pros aro nothing moro than a mockery, and men who daro to express their thought by word of mouth or In print aro systematically boycotted by tho priesthood and by tho priest-ridden horde of Romanism, American liberty Is at stake; and tho twentieth century will only know it as a thing of tho past unless a general revolution will eventually snatch it from tho omlssarle of Romo and ro Uro it to tho American people. The grandest fundamental principle of the republican form of government, ex pressed in our immortal declaration of Independence, "that the just power of government were derived from tho con nent of tho governed" will forever bo burled where tho one-man-power of the papacy obtains control of tho destinies of a nation, Romanism and tho repub lic can never harmonize; there can bo no peace and harmony where tho white and yellow flag of the papacy 1 floating In the breeze alongwlde of tho red, white and blue of American Independ ence. Romanism does not want to bo tolerated; Romanism 1 not satisfied with equal rights; Romanism I not content with rellgiou freedom; Rome want to rule an control, to subjugate and to domineer. Since the loss of tho temporal power In Romo (1870) tho papacy ha made constant effort to attain civil authority In tho United State. Thi I not done In secret, nor under cover, but openly and boldly. Tract number 40 of tho Catholic Publication Society, on the "Temporal Power of the Pope," tell It plainly in these unmistakable words: "How can thl Independence of civil authority be secured? Only In one way. The pope must bo a sovereign himself. No temporal prince, whether emperor, or king, or president, or any legislative Jxxly, can have any lawful jurisdiction mil- lb '. Wliitt ilfcM lis tin- 'h III I'vl, It.t, Hi o( 4'41-I V thi! i' It h it lit t li'titK nthl dih'- nil.V n tit.' tiefii i.ft liiit. riiiUt Mm wit U klntf of k Ihk: but tin' !i' guv iru th clntivli in tin iuiiiiii nl ('In it in H III in ptviM'iiInt lt. Hit hi, ollliv Hti-tvfntv, iiiiiki-o him ii'i'inr to i-ii) nlitli-Hl, tttiiNii ill mul liiiman g.ivi-i-nm.'iit," With thl "illt hio I'litlin" In ultfhl, can miy Aiih'I'Ii'iui I'lti "ii Ix'llevo miy loiigi-r that the Uointtn Cat 1ml U chiitvli U KittUlifil with cijuul right ami thu protect inn ot our cuii-il-tutiim? I'a pa I l!oui. litis i-uineil the republic of pagan Rome; the piipucy htt warii'il iigaliixt kliigiliiui and em pires from the days of Boniface III and Kmperor PliiH-as (iio7): from thiMlavw of Gregory VII and Kiiijioror Henry IV of Germany (lo?3) down to the day of Pius IX and King Victor Kinmanuel (IH70), and the sunie pii)iicy that ruined the Roman republic is now employing the same tactics and t he mime means for the establishment of Its sacerdotal and pontifical supremacy over tho re public of Hie United States of America. While tho American people Imagine that they live in perfect safety and aro not afraid of any danger to American liberty, from without, they are blind to tho busy st ir of their greatest enemy in their very midst. The political divi sions among the ruling parties keep tho people busy fighting for some unim portant issues; it is either free tariff or protective tariff, and the constituents of the different political parties fight for these imaginary planks in their so called party platforms as though tho future weal or woo of the whole nation depended on their campaign. The close observer can readily perceive that the political issue of our free country are vastly dictated and fluctuated by foreign magnates and liy, American cap italists. The average American voter, especially tho foreign-born citizen, who was reared under autocratic rule, prides himself of the republican privilege of the "ballot box," and ho casts his "free vote" with a dignity and pride that gives him the satisfaction that hi vote is just as necessary for tho destiny of American liliorty and free government as the whim of an emperor or king for tho maintenance of a throne. Our people at large iiuagino that they are part and parcel of tho government while- they have the right to vote; and now that the Australian ballot i lie coining so popular, the "saorednos" of the secret ballot box 1 considered un impeachable. After every campaign and election, however, the constituent of the winning party discover that they have voted a et of politicians Into office, and that these politician and tool of monopolies are simply laughing over the credulity of tho people; and they go on changing old law and mak ing new one for the benefit of the rich, for boodle and bribery, and the con stituent of their own party are given a few smaller ollce of civil reform ser vice and now and then a little ap propriation of some kind or other to keep them quiet, whije tlie constituents of the opposing party seem to bo re signed to their fate, and take it for granted that the "spoil belong to tho victors," Thus the nation Is kept In a constant uproar for political promi nence, and ha to suffer under tho ener vating system of political demagoguery which favors the few in power and opens tho way for foreign enemies to enter into our land of freedom and to crush our Ixiastod liberty, because they find us unable to restst, Romanism l taking advantage of thl condition of affairs, and tho papal authority Is Insidiously advancing In America, When tho "Infallible" head of the Romish church sees fit to con demn certain political opinion, or cer tain form of government, tho faithful must sustain the decision of tho "holy" father under penalty of excommunica tion. In answer to the question, "Are priests bound to obey tho civil laws?" Romish theology gives tho following decision; "They aro certainly not bound to obey those laws which aro re pugnant to ecclelastlcal immunity, to their state and to the canons, They are bound to oley those law which con cern especially tho common welfare," (Gury, part I, number 03, page 38.) Priest and people are only enjoined to obey those civil laws which benefit their church, and are approved by the papal authority; for the pope claims to bo a)ive all civil authority. This doc trine can be found in all books of Ro mish theology and all catechisms. Such discrimination of tho law of a civil government, taught and practised by a religious liody, is tho source of disaster, of rebellion iind of anarchy; and such a doctrine necessarily dis franchise all subjects of the papacy under the government of the United States. Tho masses of our American people do not know that the "holy" Roman Catholic church in America is anything else than a "peculiar" system of re- t it: ;. ! li, f, nil l.tiu 1 1 iv s'i'1 l.ll.jl UHWIIllI pliil, "t tt til" n i,-ii'Hii of tln lr bWti" u. tin- MI. ,if ,tll),, tl.lf t.Kpl llt ll"t iili.ti'l-fitiiuil the Cmln'He wltiiv, sin', pat- no r.tieiit imi to It; but tiny ntv lilti'ttlw Ignorant of the fit' i, wltmwil by a b!iHly bintory of one tbiiurtliil ji'it and tiiniv, that RuiiittiiMii I a tte',1 nipltlll'il polhlritl wiwi-l', which I ilirtiiictrlotilly ii-il to all other mii in olieui'th. The hint ilei'iiile of the nineteenth iviilurv will furnish abundant proof toall who have hitherto considered the chiii'i-h of Rome tn lie nothing but a church, that thi-y have Is-en grossly deceit id. History repeal" itself, and the United States of Amer ica will erelong witness the outbreak of religion faiiatielNin and of religions war; and Humanism will most assuredly conquer our nation and make America Catholic, not only In faith, but also In polities. Those who take the Catholic church to be simply a religion Issly, like other christian churche in Amer ica, will do well to consider the work ings of this huge papal anaconda. The Pope's Latest Order. Tho pope thinks that the time has come for Catholic to take a hand In politics, at least In the diocese of New York, and force denominat ional schools. In his latest letter to the bishops of this province ho commands thorn, at their next meeting, to seriously de liberate as to the best means of pro venting Die children of Catholic parents from attending schools where instruction In the Catholic creed is not given. Moreover, he says to the bishops, "we desire that you should endeavor to induce those who govern in your various states, and honestly acknowledge that all things the most salutary to the republic Is re ligion, to secure by wise legislation such a mode of teaching as shall not offend the religion and conscience of Catholics, who, equally with their non Catholic fellow-citizen, furnish tho means of education. Wo have the conviction, based on tho fair-mindedness and practical prudence of your countrymen, that they can be easily brought to lay aside suspicions and prejudices offensive to the church, and to recognize freely the services of that pc" which dissipated pagan barbar ism with the light of tho gospel and created a new Hoclety with all its glory of christian virtue and human culture. Such considerations will, we hope, lead every man In your country to tho con clusion that Catholic parent should not bo forced to build and support schools and institutions they cannot use for the education of their children." What this means Is, In plain word, that tho Catholics shall force, by mean of their Ignorantly compact mass of voting tool, our state government to set iij) and maintain denominational schools, giving the selection of teachers and course of study to tho official of the various ect. That tho pope ha given till command at tho present time, and for thl dloocHO, shows that ho know tho power of Tammany Hall and Is not only willing to uu. It, but intend to use It. And there I too much reason to fear that ho will uo It successfully. Ho may not bo able to establish the system of denominational schools at once, but hi tool may find omo way of turning state fund over to Catholic schools, a they now obtain money to maintain their asylum and convent on tho pretext of supporting children which would otherwise boconn state charges. Tho Frmnm' Journal says; "With union, fearlessness, and perseverance In our ranks, wo can win In this battle for religion and education one of the grandest of victories, not only for ourselves, but for the mass of our countrymen who fail to appreciate the de-christianlzing influence of an in struction which sharpens tho wits at tlio expense of tho heart. If, in the deliberations recommended by tho holy father, our bishops map out a plan of action which, in their judgment, will bo feasible and satisfactory, they will find a ready co-oHration in carrying it out from laymen, who have for years been hoping and praying for some such word from those whoso duty it ha been to take the initiative in such an im portant matter. Pope Leo has spoken wisely and well. Close up tho ranks, friends of faith and fatherland, and stand together in a grand determined effort for that which i ours in tho nature of things and ought to bo ours without question, at thi day of our civilization." Tho plan of action will undoubtedly bo a demand for appropriations for Catholic schools, whether the other sect get any or not, and the co-operation of the laymen will bo to vote as they are ordered. TVufi tinier, Advertisements inserted In The American are sure to bring a profitable return to the advertiser. Americans, wateh the columns of thl iipcr 1 i i HOMl AND I DUCAT ION - i ! Wll HttmAnum Wont, Ntilnl.lutp tor Our f mf Putitic Si lieol Sjtr-fit j i-'ine UK H t . In I1 In Hit It' t ttiliu' I Mi,- ln nci'i.l What I tht hconl ; ,n u UiU tUt h iiihiiiii- mo Am, 1 1- I call politic Hfliitnl MI, to le ! ati, ttiliil. !, IllitSt li- the cilnenli.tn ot ) I In r i hihhvn, nml claim to hate 1 m in r win r tt nni inm m in r my i e hmc wen, Now lmt ii lit fri-Jt'' Wlnil fiiiH't ltir cnll(.'ht-iiiiii-iil him he Imparted to the null. him that hate Jong Itcvii under her dominion? What piiv giv In morality, piety and the arts and science? 1'Vr answer let us turn to those countries where she has long I eld iiy, tt In-re fur centuries she has had everything pretty much her own way, ami tve will take a survey of these lands at a time when she ruled over them without let or hindrance. In Austria, the papal states, Rome, Spain, Portugal, Roinaii Catholic Ireland, Mexico, Cuba, Central America, and tho South American states, crime, pauperism, and Illiteracy prevail to a far greater extent than In ru n-papal countries, These facts are as clearly seen as the rivers, lakes, mountain and cities of those lands. Facts are stubborn things. Take the following from a report published in IS. 4, from judicial returns, of person prosecuted for murder: In Protestant Kngland there were prosecuted for murder in each million of the population, four. In Ireland, Is if ore the great emigra tion, there were forty-five. In France, where murder was classi fied rather scientifically, thirty-one. In Austria, thirty-six. Jn Sardinia, whero one part of tho kingdom was under Protestant Influ ence, twenty. In Tuscany, eighty-four, In the Holy States, where the holy church had most manifestly everything its own way, one hundred. In Sicily, not qultj so intensely de moralized by Romanism, It conies down to ninety. But in Protestant England, let it lie borne In mind, tho proportion is four. Take Mexico, with an endless list of p'tVsts, rich adornment for tho clergy, every facility for tho church to carry out her own plan, and with no Prot estants to impede the progress of the priesthood in any direction, and here 1 a fair intellectual specimen of tho ed neat inn and culture which Romanism aim to give. That land ha dense clouds of ignorance brooding over her IMsople, like tho volumes of darkness enveloping tho earth lieforo tho ma jestic word of tho Everlasting were heard, "Let there bo light." For more than .TOO year the Romish church ha had control of Mexico, and what aro tho results? Rev. Dr. Green, visit ing at Paohtica, say: "Potatoes sell for a penny apiece, and you buy them one at a time, for tho seller cannot count." Think of it! In .TOO years, tho parochial schools In Mexico have not taught tho people to count potatoo, and not much else than the catechism. In tho same letter Dr. Green says: "Yesterday was Sunday, and tho lord archbishop attended tho bull fight after mass, in his clerical robes, and ap plauded tho fun, and graciously re marked that It was one of the most skillful ho had ever seen." As with Mexico, so with the South American stales, whore the Roman hierarchy has controlled education for ages, and the result is pauperism, Ignorance, dis order, crlmo, lawlessness. Go to the continent of Kurope and begin wll,h France. In 188!) one-hal,f the Inhab itants of that country could neither read nor write, yet Rome had U-.vn t he teacher. From tho illiterate half come lt.r per cent, of tho )eron arrested for crime, From the other half came only f cr cent. Listen to tho testimony of Victor Hugo a to Rome's teaching In Franco: Ah! Wo know you. Wo know tho clerical party is an old party, Thi it is which ha found for truth those two marvelous support ignorance and error. Thl it Is which forbids to science and genius tho going Ix-yoml tho missal, and which wishes to cloister thought In dogma. Every step which the intelligence of Europe ha taken has been in spite of It. Its history is written in tho history of human pro gress, but It Is written on the back of tho leaf, etc. What of Spain! That country of illustrious memories, with successions of mighty kings, proud armies, vast fleet, invincible heroes; with her fertile land and tho wealth of the Indie added to the vast resources of her own people. Spain, where tho church wa mightier than tho kings; whero tho Inquisition seized the loftiest and low liest, and measured out stint without timidity; where for centuries tho church sat an Imperious queen, mistress of everv Spaniard and all that he had. 'ought to show the exact marks and lU.Ml'llli. M (i,j , i lint '! 'l" ') , ,) :nin W si I ho I " 'I" clmtn It ji;ill,-,l, !( , "". .-- t4 tj,'iiii-sii'f t on,-, tho list t.i tv Ni.tnt' i',,il turn jsiple. I.', i" i' em illn i- rs n. hot ttiite. Mij,lt !"' '', Am. iti-sn )-.plc, using Victor II'h;.' IttltCtiiU'e. MY to R"llie: "V t Ml n tottte you the youth to Instruct; ti l t m il U l now jmir ioipi!. I.j I us e those ton liste pnsliie.il. Whst linte yon dime for Spain? Swlt, mag' liitl.viiily endowed Spain, ttlileh ti Celted fl-oiil the Homali In r first, and from the Ai slw her wvond, clt tll.at ion; from providence, in spile of , word --America. Spain, thanks to you. n ut under a joke of stiiMir, degrada tion and decay. Spain lias lost the secret of the potter it obtained from the Roman, the genius of ni t it ob tained from the Arab, the new world It had from God, Audit has received from you, In exchange for all yon have made l!. lose, the inquisition, which you would like to establish here, which has burned on the funeral pyre millions of men, which disinterred Hie dead to burn them ns heretic. This Is what you have done for Spain and this Is what you want to do for America. Take care; America Is a lion, and Is alive. On getting nearer to Rome, what of Italy? Despite the beauty of its climate, the fertility of its soli, the fine genius of It people, and tho heritage of re nown which, the past lias bequeathed to It, what was Italy when Imtnaiiiml entered Rome? A land of ruins and In that land where, for long centuries, legions of priests and nuns had labored, and hundreds of popes had reigned, many of them with a temporal as well as spiritual scepter, out of 21,000,1)1111 of people, 17,000,000 could neither read nor write, and an American official stationed there .said that the humblest district school In the backwoods of America was Infinitely superior to the parochial' school of Rome. On tho authority of Metamler, In Romo In 18,j, out of 1,54.1 births, .'1,100 were found lings, three-fourth oj whom die in the Romish asylums, where misery, rags, beggary, Indolence, and every species of vice and immorality abound. And till Is the consecrated city of tho popo with Its 10.000 nanal nrlesls, monks, nuns, and In a population of only1 i';s,to(J.v But why continue? Look at Ireland The parliament commission of 1870 reported as a result of Homo's ystem under clerical management that there wore in Ireland "untrained teachers, untaught scholars, and an ignorant population." The British census of the following year, 1871, showed that the meager Instruction which liUomlnoneo, Cardinal Cullon, thought sufficient for the Irish youth wa given only to a part, and that in Connauglit where the Roman Catholic population was tho largest, fil per cent, wero returned as illiterate, while of the Protestants only II per cent, were so returned, and tho roMrt of the Inspector general of prisons showed that whllo tho Roman Catholic population of Ireland was about to 1, the criminals were at the rate of six Romanists to one Protestant. Crossing tho Cannel wo find the same state of thing in England. The Roman Catholic TimiM of April 17, 188,1, notes l.T,(i7"i Romanist committed at Liver pool against 2,1.10 Protestant In a population nearly five Protestant to one Romanist, Thl state of things, the paper say, Roman Catholic public "cannot contemplate without feeling of sadness and humiliation," Again, Father Nugent, who played an Import ant part at the Roman Catholic con gress recently held In Baltimore, and who Is tho chaplain of tho prison at Liverpool, alluding to the Immorality prevailing In that city, said, as reported In tho Catholic Thmn, November 12, 188(1: "Nino out of ten of tho girls to 1m soon at night along the London road and Lime street wWo Catholics; there was no use hiding It. Tho sisters of Notre Dame had 1,500 girls, "Under their charge what Is'canie of them after they left Mchool? They went Into place where they got work, and lnsteod of going home at night went out with their companions," Tho Tablet, a Roman Catholic paper of high authority, o recently a No vemlHT, 1888, published an article In loaded type, in which tho writer says: "I was astonished to find, when en gaged In another matter, that the jior centage of jiivenllo criminals of Catho lic parentage was out of all proportion In England to tho relative Catholic population. Upcn looking into the matter I found that we Catholic con tribute mure young criminal than any other religious denomination." Crossing the Atlantic and coming nearer home we find the same state of things in Canada. Take the province of Quebec, when 10 jr cent, of th population aro Roman Catholics, 20.1 ler cent, of tho criminals are Roman Catholics. No wonder that the Balti more plenary council of lS8rt, should i. it ! .1 1 i. ; idi.v ! ' ttit.l hiii-.tti.g ! f-t i. ikt,- u.i a tut U-re .-.imion .1 is. . J.,),- t 1 1. ..- I- y .th t i- .1 piii,. j 1 c!H. mv tin vlithh' H of t ! ho! n )!- Hi " llr tl l Jli- Uivtin !e"ihl ti "The .vt gntclti.it liti'S ill the union niii )ir.iilj t?ns; in which t ftlSinilcs fuc tin ttnvt ttitlui tilinl ill elect ton nii hut. the lu.ft to U Hh tiitiiticipnl slntis. We funilh more limn our Mittl-,' tif the rowdies, the ilnuiUsi'ds, mul the xleham imputation In our Urge t'iti. s. The majority of the grog -seller- In the city of New York are Cntholies, mid the portion of the city where gi-ng-wllltig, drunken new mul tilth most alsaitul are those chiefly Inhabited by Catholics; and we scarcely see the slightest effort made for a reformat Ion,' In a word, no one cnti examine the carefully-prepared statist les of prisons, reformatories mid Industrial sclusils abroad, where Rome has tint ram moled sway, without coming to I he conclusion that Roman Catholic sclusils, as com pared with American public sclusils, are propaganda of Ignorance, supersti tion, vagrancy, pauperism and crime, and yet this Is the system which Romo propose to substitute for our public school. The advice which Dr. Me Glynn gave to his congregation at Cooper Union, New York, may well be repeated here as we close this series of paper. Dr. McGlynn said: "Cherish your public schools; listen not to their enemies, no matter whence they coino, Make these as complete and perfect as you can. Show no favor to any rival system. If you will not exercise the right, if you will not assume the tight to forbid rival systems together, at least do not be guilty of tho incredible folly of nursing and fostering and actually, by appropriations and tax exemption, encouraging rival system. Never bo guilty of the folly of dividing your school fund among the various churche and sects. You, in such a case, would he guilty of destroying ono of the greatest and most potent Instru ment for building up and maintaining one great, free, common nationality.' Jtimton TraMkr. A Priest's "les!nft'f ; Extract from a speech of the R"v, John Nash GrlfUn, minister of Herolil's Cross church, Dublin, at tho uuriual meeting of tho Irish church mission,' held in London, on the 30th of April, 18,12: "I pray to God to pour down all ven geance on those who sent their children to tin Kllrelly school on last week (particularly). May the devil bo their guide on the right and on the left, ly ing and rising, in bed and out of bed, siting and (.landing, within and with out. May all misfortunes attend their families and labor. "And any person or persons sending their children to this school hence forth, may bo struck blind and deaf, so as never to see any of their children again, and may the children sent to the school go wild. May they never leave the world until they become such examples a that the marrow may come through their shin bone. May they be pained Ixit.h standing and sitting, and may they never leave this world until they are In such a state that the dogs would not bear coming near their carcasses when dead. "I pray to God that every child who goes to this school, that for every day he spends In it, his life may lie cur tailed a twelve month, and that they may enjoy a year of maturity, and that those people who sent their children to the school, that their crop and their goods may bo taken away by the devil, and may all these misfortunes attend any person taking their posterity In marriage thirty years hence, I pray tho Almighty to hear this prayer (!!) a tho inhibitor of Cod, and I now strictly command this congrega tion to kneel down and pray to God to grant mo my prayer." (!!) This curse was pronounced by a Maynooth man, tho Rev, Michael Mediae, Roman Catholic priest of Carrogalxilt, near Kllrush, . i A convention of jesiiitsof the Missouri province wa held In St. Louis last week, for the purpose of selecting three delegates to the international conven tion of the society, which meets In Italy in September. Tho latter convention choose the general of the society, who holds the poitlon for life. The last general of the society wa Father Anderledy, who died last winter. , i i. I, A new republican club wa organized recently, electing Geo. Wilson presi dent and D. S. Lowery secretary. It meets every Saturday evening at tho corner of Ames avo. and Thirty-second street. AGENTS WANTED : At The Amekioan. Call and see ns or write f ir paticulars.