The American. (Omaha, Nebraska) 1891-1899, January 20, 1893, Page 2, Image 2

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    THE AMERICAN,
THE AMERICAN
OUK COKKISroNDKNTS.
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i-vrtata falbs I itw It tjr no t-H-
tat IVit la How " Afala
qtHM frw th. ! tilth! "W Ht'l
amtt IVWt lrtipih at ! i.viintiii
trt FMhlu. froM lhi yrr S an la rtrrUwl
ffH th twrrtlt-al. Mwrt. alraH
rliXupMllttr aad twnlthi awlhti!f
rail 1 1 uniritnN. it: Bt. II W
atlwvtMhttlhi Hicr Irtlhi" K.himm anil
Acta XXVIII. irm that IVlr smM not
litvr Utxtnxl la ltmi Ix-f.iw A. KM li'N
lul iiHm4 tbr m i i-liiiir"
Now, Mr. fwvl. I think m liavw faMonmt
your ittli loon fclwng ami It U floating tli
toward lite wialr, mul hin tltn lien I of a
tropical pun ahtnwi Mm It tbirt a III Ih
nothln Irft Iml IIik w Ym n mi
Old tn. lld I MItMIMI If I WIT t COIItK l
lloinf mid H,intt to jiinvn t jruu tho t
ponlilon In whli ti you. ltli your t hun h.
nuntllmt. I would not Ik nn.H-oiwful lniMn
ln your iyi lliHt you might yourtruf
urroumlliii!. Vou nr nn old iuhii. with mi
oldchttivli. mid ynu him to op pUylnt bllnd-mm'-lMiir,
mid 1 do not niidntnml why
more who urn plnyliiK you do not yi'tl
"Hot."
No, Ptir yin not blxhou Hi Honi for
twcnty-flvo your. Howimnn Hpontlo lo the
Jew. If you wlxli to HnIi for nioiinUlii trout
you muni not go t th Imy, hihI IVtvr kmw
what kind of Bli 1m wn trying to cwtch. An
my quotation Ima uggHtid. If IV(r had
boen hUhop of Homo, at leant John, who
lived totlimindof the Hratohrlatlan cuntury,
or aome of the wrltmof the Now ToMiummt
would have wild aoim-thlng alumt It. The
United HtatOMhaM lein nottd for Invonfeira
of a (wrtalnolaxa, but I think the divoUw of
the Vatican library are alwinotod for a per
tain t'liiiwof InventloiiH. and tholr liivi'iilloiin
have btHn many Iicchuho tlicro him been a
great clKiuand forthi-m In order to place the
ltoman ralhollo church In mich a faNo por
tion aNMhe Ih at the prtMnl I line.
Now, Mr. il'eccl, you ahutild atlnilre the
truth wherever you ace It. If you Mie that
I'elf-r wan not a IiIhIiop of Home, or tlt-Ht pope,
If you plcBNO make Mrraiigemeiita to have the
church you repiimnt change that tenet. H
mlghtcHUNU ihetroulile and e.vpeime of con
veiling an ecumenical council. It might
cmiNO nomc IiciiUhI i1Iw'uhnIoiii. It inlglit
caumt ihmiMiiiHlN of the hooka of your Hunch
lo be .wcii'lhh'HH! hut If It In the ti ntli why
would It not he piactlciililcl1 t)f coiirae It la
Infenvd a church Im acckluH trulh, When
t'lirlHt wa before I'llale mid prior to lilacon
dwiiiiiltiK('lirlNt,l'llnteoNked,"WlmtlNtriithr" and now I wIhIi you lo atop a moment, hi' fore
you tlnldli your life upon earth. Domicilii!
my atttlnmenta In reference ( Ihe upoalle
I'emr and atk, "What la truth t"
m)if Jia"'l, let me aay, '
An "Inventor" showed one duy,
To a lady down your way.
I'oter'a akull, when young and gay,
How could 1'eter, tell I pray,
Have been bluhopy Would he atray
Hack to earth and for you at ay?
If hn did, why then portray
To thin lady, old and gray,
All the power that there lay
In thin akullT Another, aye.
Yea, Mr. Peed, a lady In Italy waa ahown
two akullaot the aKMtl Peter, one when he
waa a boy and one when be waa old, If he
died when he waa a boy bow could ha have
been pope for twenty-five yearn? And If thin
two akull bunlneaa la a fame and your follow
ers toll It to deceive, why would they not
tell the 1'eter schema and let all who were
foollah enough believe It and yearly send In
their "Peter's pence."
We will meet again In a few days and nee If
we cannot prove more fully tho devotion of
your followers lo your "Inventors." Yours
respectfully, . Ai.rph.
KomTiik Amkhicani
Pro Arls tt Loci.
Oh bigot ry, bigotry, who ran eiplaln
Thy noiu uiHiti
jMiti man, thgugh a thousand
Though reason Iwlahors and pummels thy
bead
Thou 1 1 vent, exhaling the stench of the dead!
Where Home can dictate
The laws for a state,
Its bigoted creed to extend.
It gains the control
Of man, body and soul,
And loaves bltn a serf In the end.
Hoe blntory's "Dark Ages,"
Macaulay's late pagen,
Kox, Draper, and martyrdoms, read,
And note with what gall
This church controls all.
Where atatutos are based on Its creed,
Hlnce Constantino's creed
Was adopted the greed
Of this Catholic organisation
Has been to acquire
By statute and lire
Control of the way of salvation.
' The honest and pure,
Though simple and poor,
Who fall to respond to the bell.
Are sent by the pope
Without mercy or hope,
To writhe In the torments of hell.
Our fathers who fought
Kor freedom of thought
And honor our soil with their graves,
Developed the birth
Of a nation on earth
That will not bo fotter'd like alaves.
Thla country, thank heaven
To mankind Is given
Where Itome forms no part of the plan,
Where youth may attend
It's free schools, and defend
Their brains from this bigoted clan.
Unfurl then the glorious ,
Banner victorious,
That represents free men abroad,
And Mweur that no pope
Mhall shadow our hope
Hy crowding Itet wccn us and God.
On An a, January 10, 1B Dox Box.
nine maun
After the Press.
Fhamkkoht, N. Y.. Januarys. lftQa.P.niTnu
Th AMEaiCAM-Dear Sir: As I was looking
over a tow of the several papers at the Y. M.
0. A. rooms here In Frankfort. I dltu-nvereci
an article In the Church Union of New York,
Jcenil)erl5th, 1SS2. It is composed by Rev.
-. .it t I
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Site. 1 lt it S -
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.mK mtt-m U t1twl wtWiii lt
r wt li a.Hwal ni4
h 4ii' to ir xnt tt I."
kl in In4 si -l.l!. HV Ike l'l.
Msnt ! m-i tf tti1 twoinlnf ! I f
er iiiii-l h any hm if ac
suntv tnit IHi-y ssrin.t f.t a ff
(min I'aiholl.- . Ihe tlr Ihwisht
tllil liiiwiinmr thrlr IrnlM t If Ihey hl
pMi.tii-4 iM l imi villi a aannwtln
KrrMins mm miliig In all aim wi-rr
IIm-iv lh hillrnat-ns of the aliole Honian
t alhiillc Hischlne piirssloty and timf,--I,miI
Hile that ttM llm-n will Slid
ia.i' In yum column. In main tvivt fully
your f i lend. I. A J i nan.
Signi it Own Death Warrant.
Only monre dotaila uf tins nsH iil
ItiSi i( Hn' ounvcntUm tf Human I 'nth
olio tvhlilhi!s havti lsin nllowi'il to
tsHHittio pulilio, nml tlicro In a suspicion,
evnn, that such mat tor wa jilvon ti
the- pro was rather fur I'fToct than
ruthful ivi'iuil.
One rathor suipriHlnif piowi uf In-
format Ion thus conveyed, is that tho
public school nro honevforth to bo
"toloniUul." We aro not vouching fur
the truth of this ut all; in fact, wo lire,
not prepared tflacoejit it aatliu imihUIoii
of tho Uotuun Catliollo ehurch, for it
does not agree with the policy of that
church in any particular. If, howovor,
tho reMirt Is correct, wo are of tho
opinion that this alleged "toleration"
will conalst merely in a change of
methoda. The tight againHt the public
schools will bo conducted in a leas ub
llo manner, but no leas bitter a subtle
and silent warfare, vaat.y more danger
ous than the holder and open attacks
indulged in hy ex-Judge Dunne and his
faction.
It wiih when tho Greeks bore gifts
that they were most to lie feared, for
then under guise of friendship, they
struck their most deadly blow, and it is
thus we must guard against such over
tures ns the Catliollo church proposes
to make towards our schools, There is
need now for oven greater vigilance and
preparation.
Another noteworthy feature of this
convention Is the proposition to estab
lish a papal nuncio at Washington. A
nuncio, or legato, Is simply an embass
ador, representing tho pope, and
through him tho Catholic church. The
reception by our government of such a
personage, would be a formal recogni
tion of the temporal sovereignty of the
pope, and would place him in diplomatic
affairs upon a level with all other for
eign powers.
Need we say that this must never
oomo to pass? Is there any reason why
tho United States government should
thus exalt and prefer any religious
body, especially when there is a sus
picion, and -in many quarters a well
founded belief, that this institution is
by no means friendly to our government?
Why should tho Catholics be given this
recognition above the Methodists,
Presbyterians, or other equally numer
ous sects? If tho Catholic church is, as
it sometimes claims, only a religious
organization, why does it crave for a
civil position?
These questions aro very easily ans
wered. Wo need not answer them here,
for the response will naturally arise in
tho minds of all who read them.
This much we will say. The politi
cal party, or its representatives, that
allows such an innovation, or admits to
any degree of special favor, the Catho
lics or any church, practically signs its
own death warrant. However careless
and indifferent tho jieople of America
may appear to bo, such a step would lw
the signal for a political revolt that
would bo more than a landslide it
would bo an avalanche.
Until tho opportunity to turn out
such party would bo offered, however,
much damage might bo done, and it
would lw a wiser and much safer policy
to prevent tha consumation of the plan
now, than to encounter tho difficulties
of destroying it later.
The warning has gone forth. All
may know what is threatened and each
will have a duty to perform. Agitation
is the best way to meet the crisis.
Turn on the light, strongly and con'
tinuously, that all may see, and thus
create so powerful a public sentiment
in advance, that thoso In power will not
dare to disregard it. Thus America
can be saved. Pittsburgh American.
Linen Stationery.
Every attorney should call on The
American Publishing Company,
412-13-14 Sheely block, and order a
supply of fine Bond Glazed Linen Sta
tionery. It is the finest thing in the
market, and does not cost more than
ordinary linen paper. Telephone 911,
and we will call and show you a sample
Attention Jr. O. U. A. M.
Columbia No. 3. will meet Tuesday
night January 3d, and thereafter, at
Patterson Hall, 17th and Farnatn.
John Uudd, 305 North 6th Si., has
a full line ot Ladies' and bent s Gold
Watches.
WIIYTIir.SK MSSALT
IT i I'M t M MH Mil t0i
. l-hamrll p t-M IS)
Smi It ft, tt !
t tkv k wlliiM
t Mm kmtit,
li l tf fc!i ( )tHti.t
lhal has Nsm fpfc-aKM aa m My
aw4 !n gim .iii titi'mi
Utt'Wia, Imt a litt) o.i.n.t.ati. Ih
!.) t HiHst, t tlo'V. fcsli.fr a aU thai
It wwthl t tftjr tn. i.l ful, qmt In
t WiiWT4ttit4ev, If the Water vt the
rB wrrs v.tbtWKn tltaa alt asthrj
arw
The ft41nwtn.it H.lsnaH.m was first
mnreetntl to tnvm lf manr )rr agM
hen ree4vln tny first In) In i4.
IWal rhemlcal analvsi. lit fnitilem
then lo t 4vh was the aaration of
the taar diaa4vr4 In water hy nwi
tlatlng them cm hy one in a a4i! con
dition, fill rating away Ihe water from
the first, then from this filtrate jm lp
Itating Ihe fteentnl, and ao on until all
were wejiarateil r acomntnl for.
Ont in doina this there was on base
that was always left to the laat on ao
nuiintof the diftleultyof eoiubining it
with any arid that would form a aolid
comjHmnii a diflletilty ao great that iU
preaeni waa determined hy a dilT,rent
method. This tae is aixla, the predomi
nating base of sea suit, where tt is eom
bineii with hydrm-lilorlc ai'td. Not only
ir, soda the most soluble of all the mineral
bases, but the mineral aeid with which
it is combined forms a remarkably solu
ble aeries of aalta the chlorides. Thus
the primary fact concerning the salinity
of sea water is that it has selected from
among the stable chemical elements the
two which form tho most soluble com
pounds. Among the earthy bases is one
which is exceptionally soluble that is,
magnesia and this stands next to soda
in ita abundance in sea water.
Modern research has shown that the
ocean contains in solution nearly every
element that exists upon the earth, and
that these elements exist in the water in
proportions nearly corresponding to the
mean solubility of their various com
pounds. Thus gold and silver and most
of the other heavy metals exist there.
Sonnenstadt found about fourteen
grains of gold to the ton of seawater, or
a dollar's worth in less than two tons.
As tho oeetin covers all the lower valleys
of the earth, it receives all the drainage
from the whole of the exposed land.
This drainage is the rainwater that has
fallen upon this exposed surface, has
flowed down its superficial h I opes or has
sunk into porous land and descended
underground. In either case the water
must dissolve and curry with it any sol
uble matter that it meets, tho quantity
of solid matter which is thus appropri
ated being proportionate to its solubility
and the extent of its exposure to the
solvent. Itain when it falls upon the
earth is distilled water, nearly pure (its
small impurities being what it obtains
from tho uir). but river water when it
reaches the ocean contains measurable
qnantities of dissolved mineral and veg
etable tnntter. Thoso small contribu
tions are ever pouring in and ever accu
mulating. This continual addition of
dissolved mineral salts without any cor
responding abstraction by evaporation
has been going on ever since the surface
of the earth consisted of land and water.
An examination of the compositloil of
other bodies of water which, like the
ocean, receive rivers and rivulets and
have no other outlet than that afforded
by evaporatk n, confirms this view. All
of these are more or less saline, many of
them more so than the ocean itself. On
the great tableland of Asia, "the roof of
the world, there is a multitude of small
lakes which receive the waters of rivers
and rivulets of that region and have no
outlet to the ocean. On a map they ap
pear like bags, with a string attachod,
the bag being the lake and the string the
river. All these lakes are saline, many
of them excessively so, simply because
they are ever receiving river water of
light salinity and ever giving off vapor
which has no salinity at all. There is no
wash through these lakes, as in the great
American lakes or those of Constance,
Geneva, etc.
Tha sea of Aral and the Caspian are
lakes without any other outlet than
evaporation, and they are saline accord
ingly. The Dead sea, which receives the
Jordan at one end and a multitude of
minor rivers and rivulets at the other
end and sides, is a noted example of ex
treme salinity. It is, as everybody
knows, a sea or lake of brine. The to
tal area of land training into the great
ocean does not exceed one-fourth of its.
own area, while the Dead sea receives
the drainage and soluble matter of an
area above twenty times greater than its
own, and thus it fulfills the demand of
tha above stated theory by having far
greater aalii ty than has the great ocean.
According to this viow the salinity of
the ocean must be steadily though very
lowly increasing, and there must be
lowly proceeding a corresponding adap
tation of evolution among the inhabit
ants, both animal and vogetable. The
tudy of this subject and the effect
which the increasing nlinity of the past
must have had upon the progressive
modifications of organic life displayed
by fossils is, I think, worthy of more at
tention than it has hitherto received
from paleontologists. W. Mattien Wil
liams in Science.
Her Point of View.
A charming lady of the old school, who
is a member of one of tho historical fam
ilies of Massachusetts, says that she never
goes by a statue of her most distinguished
kinsman without wishing it did not stand
there in the sun and in the storms.
"Other people like statues." she says,
"but I do not. 1 don't like to see my
cousin rained on, and I always feel it
when the snow falls." Boston Tran
script. We may render the words of one lan
guage literally into those of another and
yet lose the very spirit of the whole, but
there are cases of what may be called
"sympathetic translation."
tvae4 Vi
W . i tniv lw tH tV4it?ra
blli IS lit) nr t.t t -l.g
at ti h 4 (Ml lt, fnt
,4.!i bi mm a tiTl t.t W Ihe
ijiiM tr m1 a t wtiatt r4a f
ll w a f tnl uf . f smtH, w h
l.ts t sitle ,rtt th a
tt-it lr.rtt tVt4,4 ttlull .n t.-
KI i -.U. iht tmi-llr W tw tin
rili rwnt"l al w aw ti,.t, l !
4!itMtMi hati!.! Ihe ..mnl it la
..Ui an. mi l lhal lie h I mfctim
U.i-rw wit), w'nM BHt!ethutt'r
His il- M. wan an In ttan h lived
n4 far awav in lb rru?, ewl wi
Had )ruttitnp. t, make f r lam or
li g . -t hit. V In paytnwit f r
mull wan hhh he had mvhad
I w o j r l'f II ewnel wrf 1 1)
willing l.i fulfill hi contract, ami wrntt
trf lie vii reminded of II wiU im-
to Ixmmi hand Ihe Itrtt da."; toil he
tM-ver aprd,
T1h twrvham waa reairirig' htshounw,
and avrding lo Ihe runtoiit of Ihe coun
try had laken Ihe law Into his own
hands. An hour after lie left ns h re
lumed, calling out triumphantly, "Well,
I have tny man, you aee."
Hi Uaao was unrolled. One end was
tied to hi saddle; the other was fastened
about the wriata of an Indian. I shall
never forget the captive's impassive fm-e.
His strong ftatnrea, framed in long locks
of hair, expnsol neither anger nor as
tonlshmenl only philosophical submis
sion to fate. The next day at daw n I saw
him cheerfully at work with the air of a
man who was glad to py his debts.
Curiously onough, when some time
later another man wished to engage his
services he declined the offer. He liked
his employer and his work and had no
desire to better his condition. Marcel
Monnier.
Daath to the Horses.
It is a white and dreary plain. There
is a line of straggling gum trees beside a
feeble water course.
Six wild horses broinbies, as they are
called have been driven down, corralled
and caught. They have fed on the leaves
of the myall and stray bits of salt bush.
After a time they are got within the
traces.
They are all young and they look not
o bad. We start. They can scarcely be
held in for the first few miles. Then
they begin to soak in perspiration. An
othor five miles and they look drawn
about the flanks, and what we thought
was flesh Is dripping from them.
Another five, and the flesh has gone.
The ribs show, the shoulders protrude.
Look I A poler's heels are knocking
against the whifhetree. It is twenty
miles now. There is a gulp in your
throat as you see a wreck stagger out of
tho traces and stumble over the plain,
head near the ground and death upon its
back. There is no water in that direc
tion, worn out creature.
It comes upon you like a sudden blow.
These horses are being driven to death.
And why? Because it is cheaper to kill
them on this Btage of thirty miles than
to feed them with chaff at $250 a ton.
And now another sways. Look at the
throbbing sides, the quivering limbs.
He falls.
"Driver, for heaven's sake, can't yon
see?"
"I do: so holp me God, 1 do. But
we've got to ,?ot there. I'll lot them out
at another mile."
And you are an Anglo-Saxon, and this
is a Christian land. "Round the Com
pass in Australia."
Kft'ected a Compromise.
In a certain Maine town lives a man
who for many years has been engaged in
the grocery business, but receiving a
good offer he sold out to a younger man
and retired to private life. But the rul
ing passion was too strong to let him
long be idle, so he commenced building
a store on his land, which adjoined that
of the Methodist church. For, a time
everything went harmoniously and the
new store neared a state of completion.
But just at this point up came one of
the trustees of the church and said.
"Your store sets over on our land one
foot and it will have to be moved." This
rather staggered the prospective grocer,
and he retired to ponder over the ques
tion and study the deeds of his land and
test the measurements.
In doing this he discovered that the
back of the church rested over on his
ide of the line three feet. Armed with
this new argument he said to the church
owners, "If you will move your church
three foot I will move my store ono."
This view of the case was a new one to
the church authorities, but recognizing
its force they made all haste to effect a
compromise. Lewiston Journal,
Not the Weaker Sea.
To refor to women as the weaker sex,
a German scientist says, is surely a mis
take, for they have always known how
to preserve their dominion over the so
called stronger sex. Men are indeed wo
mon'a most obedient slaves. Solomon
said his wives were bitterer than death,
and surely there never was a greater slave
to woman. Statistics show that seven
wives survive every ten famous men.
Ileloise survived the loss of her beloved
Abelard twenty-two years, and similarly
the wife of Washington, though she de
clared she could never get over the death
of her husband, outlived him thirty
years. San Francisco Argonaut.
nurled Wealth In France.
In Normandy the English conquest in
the Fifteenth century, followed by their
ultimate expulsion, has given rise to
many traditions of buried treasure,
which the least sujierstitious attribute
to tho English. Throughout France the
Revolution, without doubt, gave occasion
to many secret hoards, the owners of
which may well have jieriHhed in the
massacres and proscriptions of the Reign
of Terror. All tho Year Hound.
Ancient and Modern Fanhlons.
Dr. Julien Chishohn says that there are
engraved stones and monuments in the
British museum which prove that the
present fiishion, both in dress and head
gear, is almost identical with that of the
women of Bahylon at about the time of
the flood. St. Louis Republic.
RELIABILITY
H t llHt'At l lin lf
ru n Otitis at
V pnimanlii' i i tl!iin In
ni tly a h Jin nttil, r !nn i h futnliil. Wlial 1 me m t
Wit), rrrUliili,-lit pnl ImmoYiv Mln! twoar,
iiW'tV iuiiiiliiti, Inmt til w!iim, mMmx, i!nip tnt
iiMHlictnt, rfiiHD's ji'fcrlry, ceM'K notion, comfort, Miuik
its limn, tloniffitiojs cloak's millinery, toy. WYpunn Unr
HrMgeort Orptws ertu Kcry, h.inlwniv, lioiiM'uminliinirs nan
n-s lioi Man Vet, fur rui mul jrmvrie.
AY luvo tin targtht, HiH'st Mock of HKI.IA1U.K Men
clintulisc in Omaha. Our pri' well; we want Tfm1l T
to eom;irv them with thoe of other denloin, I L
mul if you tin.l that we are the CIIKAPKST, we wwit
T to give tin your tnioV. U that asking too
1 WUi
'much!
Come in i
The Bell Department Store Co.,
(Moody, Ackerman & Williams)
"UNIVERSAL PROVIDERS:'
Dodge and Fifteenth Streets, - OMAHA.
G.N.JONES.
The Best Grades of Soft
COAL.
All Kinds of Hard Coal.)
OFFICE: 109 SOUTH 15TH ST.
YARD: COR. 1BTH AND IZARD ST.
TELEPHONE 1490.
W. W. LOWE.
TTTT
AHSOLUTELY PURK DRUGS,
PRESCRIPTIONS a Spkcialty, S. E. cor. 16th & Farnam
TOILET ARTICLES, PERFUMES,
CHOICE CIGARS. :': OMAHA.
"THE POPULAR"
CLOTHING
HOUSE
JULIUS FURTH, Propr.
109 South 16th Street,, OMAHA. NEB.
BETWEEN DOUGLAS AND DODGE 8T8.
Mull Onlem aolioited and Sailafnctlon Guaranteed.
Superior Work,
Books For Americans!
Rev. Slattery and Wife's Works:
"Convent Life Exposed" (Mrs. Slattery) 75c. ,
"Secrets of Romish Priests Exposed" 40c.
"Why Priests Don't Wed; or, Substitution for Mar
riage" 75c.
"Woman and Rome," (for ladies only, by Mrs. Slat
tery) 25c.
"Devil's Prayer Rook," men only, Rev. Slattery 25c.
DR. J. D. FULTON'S:
"Why Priests Should Wed" Paner 50c.
SruncEON Our Ally."
Rev. J. Gk WHITE'S:
"Deeds of Darkness" Price, $1.25.
s "Homo" men only Price, 50c.
T. M. HARRIS:
- "Assassination of Arraham Lincoln" Price, $2.50.
Many otber valuable works comprise our list. In our Book
Department we will make a specialty in all works of (his kind.
AMERICAN PUBLISHING CO.,
BOOK DE&RTMENT.
LOGAI C. THCMAS, MANAGER.
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TIIKODOKE I' l.EWIH, M ANAGRtt
Reasonable Prices.