THE AMERICAN. J WttKLY KiWSPtmt. ' - - " v- "IHttSICM FOR AMI KICeMS. " If aeld teat all men ore Americana wne Swear Allegiance to tAa United Statct without a menial reeeivation la favor of the Pope. Volume IV. OMAHA, NEBRASKA, FRIDAY, SEITEMIIER 21, 1894. PRICE FIVE ItHJ NUMBKB 38. ROME IN WASHINGTON. Always Alert and Aggressive In Securing Legislation and Pat ronage For Her Benefit Our Sation's Capital the Headquarters of the Best Organize, Wealthiest And Mont Dangerous Jesuit Mission ary Force in the VI hole World. Washington, D. C. Sept 15, When Dr. Sunderland declared from his pulpit in the First Presbyterian church of this city that we, aa Ameri cans, could not afford to have the func tion of our government paralyzed by j the decree of a foreign and usurping I potentate, and that the Roman papacy, whatever might be the professions of its more liberal adherents, was an or ganization palpably irreconcilable with the spirit of our institutions when he denounced the Jesuits as an order of men harbored among us, who had been at one time or another expelled from every country under heaven but our own he planted good seed in good ground, and the Protestant people of the capital began to reflect and to in vestigate. The result has been the or ganization of a bureau of correspond ence here for the purpose of furnishing to all Protestant newspapers in the country reliable and timely information concerning the status and movements of the Papists at this center of political activities. If the battle with the papacy is yet to come, and if it may be even now at our doors, as Dr. Sundorland and thous ands of other well-informed and con servative men believe, it is time to pause and consider the strength and strategic position of that institution bb compared with our own, and In doing so we shall find that It has gained pos session of nearly, if not quite, all the strongholds which command the public mind except the Protestant pulpit and the free school. In and around this capital, we find numerous popish seats of learning, with hordes of Instructors, mainly skilled Jesuits, and thousands of students, all being trained for the higher walks of life arid lor ffieprlesthood. 7 Georgetown college, established in . 1778, had last year 100 instructors ana 650 students, Gonzaga college, estab lished in 1821, had 11 instructors and 141 students; St. Johns col'ege, estab lished in 18G5, bad 13 instructors and 160 students; the Catholic university of America, established in 1889, had 13 instructors and 30 students. The last named is the national university of the papal church, and is confined strictly to post-graduate work. All these are within the District of Columbia. The total number of instructor they employ is 142; the total number of students last year was 981. At Baltimore are St. Mary's Semin ary, established in 1791, and having last year 11 Instructors and 245 students; and Loyola college, established in 1852, which had last year 11 instructors and 219 student. At Emmettsburg, Maryland, is Mount St. Mary's college established in 1808, and having last year 30 instructors and 198 students. Besides these collegiate establish ments, there- are numbers of others, such as Carroll Institute, St. Rose's In dustrial school, the Academy of the Visitation, the Convent of Notre Dame, St. Dominick's convent, and St. Vin cent's school, all within the District of Columbia. The rnumerous parochial schools, moreover, lend increased strength to these higher institutions, while to meet all this mighty educat ional force, the Protestants have prac tically nothing but the common schools of the district. As to churches, the papist are equally fortunate, having sixteen magnificent church edifices, tne finest structures in the city, except the government build ings. They are the church of the Im maculate Conception; Holy Name of Jesus; Holy Trinity; St Aloysius; St. Cyprian; St. Ann's; St. Dominik's; St. Joseph's; St. Mary's; St. Matthew's; St. Patrick's; St. Paul's; St. Peter's; St. Stephen's; St. Teresa and St. Agustine negro Catholic church. Among other' institutions owned by them and conducted, of course, in their interest, arerProvldence hospital, the establishment of Jthe Little Sisters of the Poor, the nouse of the Good Shep herd, St. Ann's Infant Asylum, St. , Joseph's Asylum and the Industrial ' Home school. Taking thejwhole arch diocese of Baltimore which includes the District of Columbia and those counties of Mary land lying west of Chespeake Bay, we find a Romish population of 235,000, with 150 churches, 47 chapels, 60 sta tions, 22 orphan asylums, 90 parochial schools, 6 hospitals, 4 ecclesiastical seminaries, 8 colleges, 10 acadamks for V M THOl,HlHi:a w 7wiV - Mix . young ladies, 2 foundling asylums, 2 asylums for colored children (see Sad ler's Catholic Directory for 1894, page 73.) Here is perhaps the best organized, the wealthiest and the most dangerous missionary force in the whole world. This diocese of Baltimore is the head center of the Jesuitical power on this continent, and not only the Jesuits, but theMaristsand Redemptorists, scarcely less fanactical monastic orders are also represented here in great force. Now, if a little leaven leaveneth the whole lump, is it any wonder that all this mass of Romanism has made the papacy stronger here than in Rome it self? Is it any wonder that the Ro manists have been able to accumulate $13,600,000 worth of proterty in the District of Columbia, mainly through the channel of congressional appropria tions? Is it any wonder that the Indian appropriation bill, the sundry civil bill and the ilistrict appropriation bill, have all become scandalous vehicles for con veying public money to sectarian uses? In this matter, the only remedy sug gested by coogress, a remedy which the papists will hardly allow to be ap plied, is a national university. The select committee of the senate having that project in charge spoke of it in a a recent report as follows: "Among its members there would al ways be moral heroes as superior to the menaces of power as to the insidious arts of the most skillful and corrupt devotee of false gods men able to un mask error and bold to stand for the right at all hazards. The sacredness of truth, freedom of thought, and freedom of speech, will be the Inscription upon its portals. It will be not a light-house only, but a bulwark of liberty and a watchtower for the nations of the world. "The proposed university is also a patriotic necessity." It is painful to realize that such a scheme as this, so pregnant with great and good results, is a mere mirage. But the Jesuitical cabal, which holds the balance of power at the capitol, will as surely throttle it in all the future as it has done in the past. The only hope of successful opposition to the Jesuits lies in their expulsion from the country, and this can be effected only by sending men to congress who do not place alleg iance to party above conscience and religious principles. It needs no uni versity to effect this. It needs only an honest, manly performance of the duties UNCLE SAM: "This must have been a very silent hog !" IRISH, in Chorus: "Why, sor?" UNCLE SAM: "Because the still sow gets the swill." imposed by citizenship in a Protestant republic. The workingmen of Washington cele brated Labor Day for the first time on Monday, the 3d Instant. There was an imposing parade in which all the trades of the city were represented, the num ber of men in line being estimated at 7,000. Among the most conspicuous leaders were Milford Spohn, president of the lotal federation of labor, a Ro manist; M. P. Canty, president of the local conference, a Romanist; James J. Deery, master workmen carpenters' as sembly, a Romanist; George A. Traccy, president Columbia Typographical union, over whose company merrily floated the green flag of Erin; and C. G. Conn, owner of the Washington Twits, a Roman sympathizer. In fact, it was painfully noticeable that the posts of honor and influence in all the local labor organizations were monopol ized by the subjects of Leo XIII. The following, for instance, are the names of the officers of Bricklayer's UDion, No. 1: Wm. McGann, president; Thomas Sullivan, vice president; C. G. Hessler, recording secretary: M. P. Canty, treasurer; John P. Healy, mar shal; Wm. E. Branahan, assistant mar shal. These names are very Buggestive. They sound strangely like the list of city officials of New York, Boston, Chi cago or San Francisco, and indicate that in the trade unions, as in the munici palities of this country, the Protestant element has been reduced to the ranks by the more aggressive Irish papists, who never forget Pope Loo's injunction to make themselves felt as active ele ments in the daily political life of the communities in which they live. It emphasizes t'ue fact, that the city of Washington in tae arch diocese of Bal timore, Is, from the foundation up, dominated by Romish influence. It helps to explain the singular circum stance, that such influence is sufficiently potent to secure, on an average, 80 per cent, of the lower positions in the various government institutions, rang ing from chore women to appointment clerks. It helps to show why this arch diocese of Baltimore, with the opera tive forcesot the federal government, and of the municipal governments of the district of Columbia, and the city of Baltimore as unfailing sources of emolument to its individual subjects, and of subsidies to its corporate institu tions, is the most prosperous ecclesias tical corporation that has existed since the days of Martin Luther. It helps to account for the anomalous fact, that a cardinal and "prince of the '.church," from his throne in the cathedral at Baltimore, the capitol of this rch diocese, directs the political, activities of the capitol of the United States in the interestof the sovereign from whom he derives his title and his power; plac ing the sovereign authority of this na tion, as legally constituted, in practical subordination to that of his foreign and usurping master. It is humiliating to regard the capitol of the United States as a mere appendage to the arch dio cese of Baltimore, but that is its true relation. In effect, the sceptre has al ready departed from America. This is no exaggeration. The papal legation here and the cathedral of Baltimore are co-operating in the work of under mining our republican institutions. "With smooth dissimulation, skilled to)?ra;e, "A devil's purpose with an aniiel's face." Satolli Is Indefatigable in the work of seducing our horde of purchaseable Protestants in congress, in the execu tive departments, in the press clubs, in the labor unions, in every organization which may Influence legislation, tha public administration, or public opinion. In the presence of this spectre, Protes tants are timorous and slothful, while papists are bold in denouncing "Know Nothings." Americans dare not raise their voices In defense of their own re ligious or political principles. Even such men as those who compose the Maine delegation in congress, the read iest debaters in that body, are silent when these matters are broached, as they were Indirectly in the discussion of the Indian appropriation bill, which Mr. Linton's speech of the 7th of June, precipitated in the house of representa tives; while men like O'Neil, of Massa chusetts, an Irish papist; Timothy J. Campbell, of New York, and T. A. E. Weadock, ot Michigan, also Irish pa pists; and Tracey, of New York, for merly a member of the Papal Zouaves, in Rome, are always ale,rt and aggres sive, not only in securing legislation, but also official patronage for the bene fit of papists. To be a Romanist here is to enjoy every opportunity for worldly prosperity. There are more Romanists in office in this town, with a population of only about. 2-5,000, than iu New York whore all the officers are Romanists, with a population five times as great; and the relative force of Ro manism upon legislation and official methods Is proportionately more in tense. As bearing strongly upon the subject of politics in New York City, I believe that some facts relative to the arch diocese of New York are pertinent In this place. For upon the relation of the papist church to the local govern ment depends the character of the ad ministration. The arch diocese em braces the city and county of New York and the counties of Westchester, Put man, Dutchess, Ulster, Sullivan, Orange Rockland, and Richmond, in New York state, besides the Bahama Islands. Its papist population at this time is about 800,000. Its working capital consists of one cathedral, 211 churches, 61'ehapels, 49 stations, 1 theological seminary, 4 colleges, 51 academies, for boys and girls, 8 orphanage schools. 9 industrial aDd reform schools, 103 parochial schools, 8 orphan asylums, 15 homes for destitute and wayward children, 9 hos pitals, 3 homes for the aged, 4 day nurseries, and 2 fondling hospitals. It has an operative forco of 543 priests, 427 lay brothers, and 2.3OT religious women, (nuns, etc.) The diocese of Brooklyn, comprising Long Island, lifts h working capital of 120 churches, 17 chapels, 9 stations, 1 theological seminary, 2 industrial schools, 2 colleges, 23 select schools for boys and gir.s, and 131 parochial schools. It has 217 priests to a papist population of 2S0.0O0. These two corporations, embracing a membership of more than a million pa pists, control probably 200,1X10 faithful voters, who constitute the balance of power In the United States, and who have for years terrorized and plundered the grt at metropolis. Last week a con ference was hold there, consisting of delegates from the republican county organization, the anti-Tammany de mocracy, the state democracy, the Ger man American reform unioa, the in dependent co'.'.cty orgRTitti"t and the good government clubs, to discuss plans for combined opposition to the Tammany Irish papist power. Resolu tions were adopted expressing the belief that all the various forces opposed to Tammany could be unified in a manner and upon terms entirely satisfactory to all the organizations represented in the conference. It is to be hoped that sim ilar movements against papist domina tion will be set on foot at once in all our great cities, especially in Chicago, Bos ton, and San Francisco. Let us have a new deal all round, for It Is evident that the papists havo stocked the cards on us, not ( nly In Washington, but in every grrat city In the union. Above all, let the Ameri can Protection Association see to It, that no.io are put on guard, but those who acknowledge paramont and entire allegiance to the stars and stripes. Without envy, hatred, malice, or un charttablenehs, let every American stand by the flag of his country, and the free schools of the people; holding fast to the doctrine, that to compyT V man to make contributions of n' A J tor the propagation of opinions wticb ho disbelivcs, is both sinful and tyran nical. Let it be remembered that a great deal of Information concerning the questions at issue between our order and the papacy Is contained In the do cument now being sent out by Rev. Green Clay Smith, (P. O Box 133, Washington, D. C.) which contains speeches by Mr. Linton and Senators Piatt, Daniel, Call, Quay and Galllngor, besides other imortant matter. ,, A MOVE IS 'THE KHUIT DIRECTION. Supreme Council of the A. 1. A. Will lie u Transferred to Washington, D. C,Hu Washington, D. C, Sept. 15. The presence in Washington for the past ten days of VV. J. II, Traynor, supreme president of the American Protective Association, has wonderfully stimulated the growth of the order In this city. Traynor has mado final arrangements for transferring the supremo council to this city. This will Iks accomplished within a few weeks. Traynor believed that as Washington is the national political center It is the most appro priate and available place from which to direct work now being performed by the order. A large printing plant will be located here and ncwspaiers and documents printed by the million. Mr. Traynor says his own state of Michigan has virtually been "Americanized." He expresses the bollof that none but , those In sympathy with the A. P. A, will be returned to congress at the com ing election; Representative Weadock of the Tenth district has declined to accept a renomlnatlon because he con siders his election Impossible. In this city the organization Is In creasing Its numerical strength. V-'--p ' in three weeks five now councils Java been established In the DistrliV j Columbia, making an even dozen In v flourishing condition. From twenty to thirty new members are being Initiated into each of these councils every regular meeting night. Colored men are act ively engaged in organizing, and sev eral councils composed entirely of that raco will soon be ready for Institution. Steps are now being taken to establish a branch of the Woman's American Protective Association hero. The headquarters of the A. P. A. in this city present a scene of great actlv- v ity. Under the direction of the local ' advisory board hundreds of thousands of copies of sjieeches delivered in con gress on the Indian appropriation bill by Representative Linton and Senators Galhnger, Call. Quay, Daniel and Piatt, are being sent broadcast throughout the land. More than half a million copies of Mr. Linton's remarks have already been difctributed. An appeal to 118,000 Protestant ministers of the United States has be?n prepared and is being mailed to each pustor. They are urged to preach sermons from their respective pill pits upon the question of raising public money for sectarian purposes. Statistical tables havo been arranged showing the extent of Mich legislation in the past. General Green Clay Smith of the Metropolitan Baptist church is at the head of the bureau having thia work in charge. Local councils are now preparing to make a bitter fight against Congress- . man Meredith of the Eighth Virginia district on the ground that he intro duced in the house a bill appropriating several thousand dollars of public funds to Gonzaga college, a Catholic institu tion here. President Traynor has just gone to Wheeling, W. Va , to institute a state council, and especially to look after the Second district, where W. L. Wilson is a candidate for re election. The A. P. A. expect to take a conspicuous part in the campaign in that district. Prepar ations to that end were made some time ago, when Cardinal Gibbons, Bishop Ryan, Richard Kerens and oilier prominent Catholics met at the home of ex-Secretary Stephen B. Elk ins. It was then thought Elkins would receive the republican nomination, in which event Wilson would have been given the solid supiort of the A. P. A. Officers of the order believe that the programme involving the solection .of Elkins was abandoned because of the sudden activity manifested by hat body in the Second district. Subscribe for The American; 12 a year in advance. )