T M EE AMERICAN 5 and (amine, and ehe thall be utterly buret with fire; fur strong is the Lor Cod who judgeth her and judgeth lb' who bow down to her.' Home' pride is fanned by seeing the cu iee tl at give up the claim of Intel ect. of m.ttitinod and woainhood and fall wo and war ship a cheat and a sham.' llev. Fulton in his work ca'l-'d, "Why Priests Should Wed," describes a Cath olic church in these wods 'Enter a Catholic church at Waiters. Was there ever a more son lew procedure:' Some boys burning incense, Uie priest with his back to the ngreeation, tuumb ing over prayers in Latin, fie choir fringing a Litin chant, and run dreds of people on their kni e, wittiou' a thought for the hopper of reflection and without an inspiration fur the s-ul These ser iw s conducted in grand a-.d beautiful buildings brilliantly lighted, with splendid veetmt nts, touching music, costly decorations, and every outward token of reverence at d solcni nity, will impress the joutn and the poor as nothing else can. That is H -maoism in its deception, in its bypic risy, in its infamy; a painted ship on a painted ocean, unreal, havirg literally stolen the livery of heaven to serve the devil in.' The time is coming when the mists will clear away, and this absurd ity will appear, and then good bye to the power and thu deception of Human ism." Rome not only ministers to the pride of man and to his ambition, but to the lusts of the flesh. The substitute mar riage for the priests, which Father .CJuinn, late of Kalamazoo, Mich., de clares to be the invention of Fio Nono, for the purpose of holding the priest hood nominally tj celubacy, while ihe widest door was opened for the gratiii cation of lust, uncovers the depth? of infamy quite as much as dots the trans lation of Den's Theology, a book which every Itoman Catholic priest is sup posed to understand. It proves Rome to be joined to the harlot of the Tiber. Her wantonness is terrible In America at this hour. The natural man has full swing. There is a place for intellect, for love of pjwer, and for pleasures of the flesh. Hence the need of sounding out the peril of Romanists. They are on the broad road to hell. They must be warned to ll.e from the wrath to come, or they are lost forever. "For all that is in the world, the lu?ts of the fiesh and of the eyes, and the pride of life is not of God." So it will ever be. Sixty millions of people started in the road way of an intinitu purpose to build up a nation that shall be the light-house of the world, will never surrender to the pope of Rome and his adherents." In Revelation 13, beginning at the 11th verse, we read: "And I beheld another beast coming up out of the earth, and he had two horns like a lamb, and he spake as a dragon. "12. And be exercið all the power of the first beast, whose deadly wound was healed. "13. And he doth great wonders so that he makelh fire come down from heaven on the earth in the sight of men. "14. And deceiveth them that dwell on the earth by the means of those miracles which he had power to do in the sight of the beast; saying to them that dwell on the earth, that they should make an image to the beast which had a wound by the sword and did live. "15. And he had power to give life unto the image, that the image of the beast should both speak and cause that as many as would not worship the im age of the beast should be killed. "16. And he causeth all, both small and great, rich and poor, free and bound to receive a mark in their right hani or on their foreheads. "1". And that n j man might buy or sell, save he bad the mark, or the name of the beast, or the number of his name. "18. Here is wisdom: let him that has understanding count the number of the beast, for it is the number of a man, and his number is six hundred, three score and six." After careful study and long consider ation the only conclusion reached is that this two horned beast is the Jesuit society, for this society has fulfilled this prophecy in every detail. Luther and the martyrs of the re formations struck the blow which caused the wound, ind the Jesuits were the healers of the deadly wound. "Makelh fire come down from heaven on the earth," as in the case of St Anthony's fire, and in solemn ex-communications, which are called "the thunders of the church," and are par formed with the ceremony of casting down fire in the form of burning torches from on high as symbols and emblems of fire from heaven. Deceiveth by means of miracles, such as St. Fatrick driving all the snakes out of Ireland and other instances. Miracles, visions and revelations are the mighty boast of the church of Rome, the contrivances which she imposes upon ignorant and superstitious people. This two horned beast arose up out of the earth, like plants, silently and without noise. It did not come out of the sea or Ironi among the masses or by the will of the people, but arose by itself silently and not by the sanction or the election of the people. The greatest prelates have often been raised from monks and men of low birth. Did the Jesuit society originate in this way? L-tusme. Afier Luther had struck '.his death bl tw the re'orma'ion spr-ad raoidly throeghou; Germany and the northern nations, through England Scotland. Denmark. S.-ien and Sitz eriand. France. S;a r, Italy and Portu gal were moved bv It. AIrd Macau- lay says, 'within li'lv year f the day when L it her publicly rvniui;it d c in- munt.in wi'.h Home, Frot stantism attained its hi chest ax'endcn.'y. an H-ctidt-nty whii h it soon lost and which it has nev. r regain' d." Th n aro-e a e turner movement in the south, a re formation o' lift hod a d of discipline in the c-urch of Rome. This is the Jesuit S'lei ty, the heal' r of the beast. This great cornier movement in the Komm church, which gave lh iu such power that in two g iterations all the uncertain territory, ami F ai.ee. S,,ain. Italy, Folatid, Hungary und 1! ihemia Itocitme di jicudeuls of Romanism was due, more than to any other iaiis or agency to the Jtsuiis, and Ignatius Loyola who Was their founder. Ignatius Loyola, ii'-st general of the Jesuit-, whocrcateJ tho organ!, ition and formed its constitution, was born in ll'.M iu Spain Thirst for glory caused him at an early age to enter the army. II iving been wouudid May Jtl, 1.121. during the se'gi of i'amplona by the French, he read during his slow recovery, a few hooks oa the life of the saints. His heated imagination sug gested to him the glory of serving our lady and the church, as these saints about whom he was reading. Ilavin recovered, he first went to the BeneuieUne Abbey of Mount S.rritt, where, after a general confession, he took the vow of cha-itity, hung up his sword and digger on the altar before the image of our lady, and through the night devoted himself to the service of his mistress. Filled with a visionary purpose of converting oriental nations, ho goes to Palestine, begging his way, but the authorities force his return. He now sees bis much need for an eddeation, and goes to school in the University of Paris. When he had finished his schooling he selects Xavier, Laymex, Iiobadilla and others who resulve with niutial vo s, that they will obey the constitu tion which lie had formed. S in 1540, after conferring with the pope, the Jesuit society was organized. The design of the Jesuits were to watch closely all heretics and to punish them, to exterminate Protestant, and to build up the Roman church. The rule of obedience is enforced with utmost vigor. Loyola says: "I ought to obey the superior as God, in whose place ho stands." F.very Jesuit's oath includes these words: "To jou, the father general, and to your successors, whom I regard as holding the place of God, perpetual poverty, chastity and obed ience," etc. I. J. Lansing says that among the first duties of a Jesuit to which he de votes his life, is the teaching of the young. This made the Jesuits the school masters of Europe. They pos sessed the pulpit, press, confessional and the school. But never forget that the first and sole purpose of the society as a teacher, is to make submissive Roman Catholics. This determines the kind and quantity of their teach ings, and this must account for the fact that in those countries where the papacy and the Jesuits hare bad the most complete sway, there is found to day the most extraordinary percentage of illiteracy. As witness: Italy, where 73 per cent, Spain 80 per cent, and Mexico 93 per cent of the people are illiterate. This organization is secret, and they act as the detective force of the Catholic church. They spy out and report to the superiors all they can about their own church and also the Pro.estants. From the first institution of the Jesuits in 14S0, that is, in a little more than thirty years, history records nine hundred thousand orthodox christians were slain. He shall make war with the saints and overcome'them. During the space of scarce thirty vears the in quisition destroyed, by various kinds of torture, one hundred and fifty thousand christians. It was through these tor tures that Rome brought these nations again to the church. Read the Jesuit's oath, if you please, and you will know what position they hold in the Catholic church. Father Chiniquy says: "Have not the popes publicly and repeatedly anthematized the sacred principle of liberty of conscience? Have they not boldly said, in the teeth of the nations of Europe, that liberty of conscience must be destroyed killed at any cost? lias not the whole world heard the sent ence of death to liberty coming from the lips of the old man of the Vatican? But where is the scaffold on which the doom of liberty must perish? That scaffold is the confessional box. Yes, in the confessional the pope has his one hundred thousand high executioners. There they are day and night with sharp daggers in one hand stabbing liberty to the heart. Free America will see all her so dearly bought liber ties destroyed the day that the confes sional bux Is universally reared iu he" midst. Auricular confession and libert cannot stand upon the same groun,.: either one or the other must fall. Liberty must sweep away the confes sional as she has swept away the demon of slavery, or she is doomed to perish!" Allow me to quote a few thoughts from Dr. Foiton'. work. Ho says thai lU'tuam-m ignore that territio ptvph ivv of ti e tilth Revelation, when the cry sen mlcd in the dark age through the world. "Wto shall o n the hook? There was weeping b rati? there was no one found 'o op- u the (took." In spite of Romnism, the book was oened. For one of the elders said: "Wei p not; behold, the lion of the tribe o! JuiUtho root of David, hath pre vaihd ttoH'n the Uik, and to loose the seven seals there if." Home chained the Bible to the altar. There Luther found it. Christ Jesus gave the book to tie people and looi-e ed the. seals thereof; then ca lie the S in of G id into the view of mankind. 'And when ho had taken the hook the four beasts and four and twenty elders fell down before the lam having every one of them harps and golden vials full of odors, which are the piayers of saints. And they sang a new song, saying, Thou art worthy to take the book and to oiten tuc seals I hereof, for thou wast slain, and h.isl redeemed us to G id by y hood out of every kindred and tongue and Hoplo and nation, and hast made us into God priests, and we shall reign on the earth. And I beheld and I heard the voice of many angels around about, the throne and the beasts and the eUK rs: and the numlterof them was ten thousand times ten thousand and thousands of thousands, snying with a loud voice, Worthy is the lamb that was slain," (not the holy virgin whom Rome worships, Ind the lamb tli'il teas laii.) ": w irurlhi to renin power aud rit la s anil n'renqth and honor and ijhn y (Oil MlsSl'lK. " That is our victory in spite of Rome. Jesus ii worthy tj take the book. Say it, every creature in heaven; shout it ye reueemeu oi earin; ioi an say, ''JHutxi.tytoul honor ui.d qlory and power be uhto Jlim that fituth ition the throne, and unto the lemb former and crer." Rome hates the (took. God's children love it. "Bring out tho bock," said the duke of Guise. It is brought. The Bible is banded to the Duke. He takes it into his hands dripping with the bio )d of the slain witnesses for Christ. He opens it. Ho looks at t c title page. "This the Bible?" he asks. "It, is fif teen hundred years and more since the scriptures wore made, and these were printed within a year." The worship of t h s image of the beast what is the devotion and sacred nesj which the Catholic people regard the crucifix and image of tho Virgin Mary, but the worship of images? At times in their worship tin y will take the crucifix iu their hands, and at other times they will count their heals, which they always havi with tbetr, and repeat a commuted prayer. How much better is this than idolatry? For conspiracy machinations and evil designs the Jesuits have been banished from almost every state of Europe. The assassination of Henry III. by Clement was caused by a Jesuit. Chalel, a Jesuit, attempted the life of Henry IV., which led to the expulsion of that ord r from France. The assassination of William of Orange, attempts on the life of Qjeen Elizabeth of England, the Gun Powder plot, the massacre of St. Bartholomew, the revocation of the edict of Nates, or even Lincoln's or Garfield's death-are illustrations of the wicked deeds with which history closely connects them. The question may be asked, Where did the Jesuits go to when they were banishtd fro n Europe, or where are they now? Isaao J. Lansing says in answer to this question, in his work called "Ro manism and the Republic": "Our country is the paradise of Jesuits, un warned by tho experience of other lands, regardless ol the bonds ihev weave about the lambs of. liberty, we have permitted their presence in this country, until almost ready to throw off the disguise, they now threaten our in stitutions with ruin. It is the Jesuit who animates tho attack on our public schools, the Jesuit who thrusts his hand into our public treasuries for Rome. It is the Jesuit who is decrying free speech and liberty of conscience and a free press; who is endeavoring to divide the school funds; who is dictat ing the policy by which Romish schools shall take the place of national schools. It is the Jesuit who is doing his utmost in conformity with the constitution of the society of which he is a sworn ad herent and of the prophecy of which he is at once the dictator and the slave to reduce free America to the subjection of an absolute monarchy. Let Jesuit ism, which has fled to America to found an empire on the ruins of the republic, having been swept by edict from the old world here find the yruvc. I will close by repeating what Leroy M. Vernon says of Romanism: 'Leo XIII. sees Romanism con demned by history; more still it is by the gospel and civilization. The mo mentous, the perilous fact is, the public indifference to the insidious advances and encroachments of this despotic and mighty medievalism. While it is quietly interweaving itself with na tional light, strategically preparing the braces for its self assertion conten tious aetious and usurpations almost no one takes heed or offers a serious obstruction. Were any one, indeed, openly and vigorously to controvert its character, its progress, and grasping for power among the Catholic popula tion of our large cities, the result would RESCINDED . . . The offer of Rev. Cliiniquys hook, "FIFTY YEARS IN TIIF CHURCH OF ROME" AND THE AMERICAN one Year for S2.2S has been with drawn owing to our inability to make satisfactory arrange ments with the Publishers of the book. Another Great Offer Wo nio jin-jwrt'tl to make ur sulisoribers another henelicial. We will give Tlie American The Priest, The Woman, The Confessional one of Uev. ChiiiKjii v's This honk has lately heen taken from the Detroit Tithl'ie Library and burned, be cause tho tool of the Uoniiin Church who had been placed in charge, of the intitu tion claimed it was IMMORAL. Tho truth of tho matter is it exposed too minutely tho damnable character of the Lonian Confessional. When Koine says u thing is immoral it contains tho truth. Cut out tho following order till it ami send to us accompanied by $2.U0 in cash and you wiil receive the book and THE AMERICAN for out year. 0000000000000K0000 amuuicas rmiusmxa co., G KNTLKM UN Unclosed Please send TFIK AMKUICAN 6 y'u.x., If I do not order the paK r discontinued at the expiration of my timo, continuo to send it. charging mo your regular subscription price. KJTAre you now a Subscriber?. Y Please send the Hook to Y No Commission allowed to Agents on this Offer. You must" deal direct with us. NO SUBSCRIBER SHOULD MISS THIS GREAT OFFER, The Priceot' the Book, in The Price ol the I ' Dill UllUl 4IL11VI IIUIU O WJ WlH B1C MVMI IWI t I 1 1; j'l JV U VJ 1 U1C JNlJ'tTI U 1 f 1 1C if . VV. NOTICJS: This Offer npi1ics only to ilia Subscribers who jmy up io JANUARY 1st , l&iHi. Alonoy must jiccoii- j)nny tltu onor, xaarass Publishers of THE AMERICAN, Omaha. THE CHICAGO AMERICAN. THE KANSAS CITY AMERICAN. be mob violence. The public peril is neglected for personal aims. Pride, pleasure and luxury, like a lash of hounds, bay at the heels of gratitka tion. Vanity parades, ambition climbs, business hastens to be rich. The press panders, the politicians trim, the preacher doze, the priest sows tares. The country drifts, drifts, drifts. Mean while duty commands every voice to cry aloud and spare not the pen and the press to unite impetuous sustained &p Iteal, enforced by the priceless interests of our imperilled civil and religious liberties and institutions. When the jesuit assasin sUibttcd Fra Pao'a Sarpi, of Venice, to end his Uto liberal and evangelical writing, and Hed, leaving his weapon slicking into the wound, Sarpl himself plucked the bloody stiletto from his fl .sh, and holding it aloft, said, 'The pen of papacy!'" Contiari wise the pen is the sword of Protestantisn civil, religious for holy war against papacy. '"Awake, O, sword, against the deceiver and the destroyer! Put up thyself into thy scabbard only when the people are delivered by knowledge, recognizing that. ItomanHm and the republic are irreconcilable opposites, that the tiara and out starry banner are divorced es the poles, incongruous as the Roman wolf and the American eagle." LovtRS ok Liukrty. I in paired Digestion. The pat ent is j-i quired to diet. In building up and maintaining g(xd health, milk is recognized as a valuable factor, but it is important that it be ab solutely pure and sterilized. Horden's Peerless Brand Evaporated Cream meets all requirements. Entirely w hole- some. MERIT WINS. W. N. Whitney 103 South 15th St.. has added io his line of Qno Shoes the Waverly and Standmore School Shoes, which are honest gooiis and warranted for service, and are such gojd wearers that they will save you 50 to ier cent, ii; your shoe bills. It wl.l jiaj you to try them. ONE YEAR honks, hoth for find $ to pay forTIIK AM to ray address, triv sttiitoi Mr (Town) t per AMERICAN PUBLISHING CO., 2075 Howard St., TO IMPROVE THE COMPLEXION! n Use Howard's V Face ,fv Bleach V- .,--V.--- DARK and V ; SALLOW SKIN and SUNBURN. This Mi-ach ppihovps all dl-icnlor.'ittons and Impurities from tlie skin, siicli us freckles. Moth Tatrlips. Sunburn. Siillowness. l'le-h-wurms anil I'tmples. Fur Mile liy nil (IrM class Orudis!. Price $1.50 per Bottle. $500.00 WILL BE GIVEN For itn Incurnhlt ;ts of Blark Ile;tI4 or Pimples. HOWARD MEDICINE CO., f.lnctiln, .Vol). - nrui - C7ionjfO, 111. Menti.m pip'rin writtiu to advertiser SM'-iul .Master ( 'ointiiissioiici's Sale. I'nderand by virtue of an order of sale , in deeree of forerlosure of mort.yae issued out of the district court for I'owl'I.is county. .Ne braska, and to me directed. I will, on the Uthdayof February. A li s'i.Vat 1 o'clock p. in. of said day. at I he east front door of the county court house, iu the city of Omaha. Iloui-'las county. -Nebraska, sell at public auction to the hltrhest bidder for cash, the property described in said order of s .le as Tollows. to-wti : Lot t wclve ili' in b'.o 'k seventy-tive ,T.V of Dundee place, an addition to the city of OmahH. I lunulas count y. .Nebraska. faid pr.ipi r:y to be sold ,-, .;;.,ry I.v.l'.a J. I'roct jr. plainutl here.n. thesum of live hun dred, tifty-three and s."-lti dollars i.V..i.s.'o judgment, wi.h interest thereon a tne rate of seven 7r per Cftit per an mi n from S'ptem lxr 17th. M. To satisfy the American National Bank, of Omaha. Nebraska. Oefendaut herein, the sum of four thousand, four hundte 1. forty tive and '.; 1' dollars .N44.''.ii judirmeut. with Interest thereon at the rate of elKht s per cent per annum from September 171 ii. To satisfy the Pavton Vierline Iron Works, defendant herein, the sum of thirty three and iKi-im dollars fa.Hiii Judgment, with interest thereon at the rate of seven o i percent jer annum from November ;iti ls.t. To satisfy, the sum of thirty and .Vt-lui dol lars i.;o..".b eosi hereiu- toirether with accru ing costs according tit h judgment rendered by the district court of said I' .nu-las county, at 1 s Sept e m iH'r term. A. I . 1VU. in a certain action then and there iicndinc, wherein l.ydla.l. Pun-tot was plaiiitill and the Pat rick Land t'omp my. K ibert W. i'atr.ck. Vermont Investment t'ompanv. of Minneap olis. Minnesota, t'undee lirick Company, .lohn l. Montgomery. American National ' '5 7' '-JV oiler which will ho equally aa $2.00 HIIICAN and book entitled. Street, f.ii. , Street, (State. clctl-i, i S J OO 1 Yeor i S.OO OMAHA, NEIi. Hank, of Omaha. NVbruka. Ueorire A. Hohk land. I'axton A Varllnu Iron Works and Misan K. Wheat were defendants. Omaha, Nebraska. January lllh, ls'.i.',, ;F.oKl.K W. llol.HKOOK. Special Master Coimn'ssioner. Saunders. Marfurliwid A Hic.kcy, attorney. Hue. 44. No. bill. 1-11-5 Special Mn-der Commissioner's Sale. fuller and by virtue of an order of sale on decree of foreclosure of mortifuice Issued out of the ilisirlct court for Hoiik'liis county, slate of Nebraska, and t me directed. I will, on the l llh day of KHiruary. A. I) tst5, at 1 o'clock P M. of said dav. at the east front door of the county court house, in the city of Omaha. HoiiL'las county. Nebraska sell at public auction tothe highest hluder for cash, the prop -rty described iu said order of salt) as follows, to-wlt : l,oi nun her one il and the north s'xteen (lib feet of lot nun her twor'Jiln block num ber five i "j In Deere I'ark, an addition tothe city of Omaha. In Houidas county, Nebraska, as surveyed, platted nd n rdetf. Said property to be old to sat isfy The Mu tual liiM'stn cut Cm puny, plaintiff, the sum of eighty seven and l-Pi dollars cssMttl Judtfi. flit. Willi Interest thereon at th rate of ten iloi per cent nr aunjti from Septem ls. s'.i:i. and twenty-two and HI Ion dollars iS Mi cists, with interest from Septen her Is. Isn.l. toiret her with accruUm costs acoord Inj: to a judgment rendered by the dis rlct court of said 1 mclas county, t its Septem ber tern . A. 1 1. Is el. in a c rtain action then and there pending, wherein Ihe Mutual in vestment Company is pbtint'tf. anil Maren lii.ik'e and olt.ers are di fondants. lulled at O. aha, Net rasn .January 11th, A. lb lsu. SKVM K M. S.VIH.KIt. Spe lal Master Coaimissioner. W II. l(usi 11. attorney for plaint lit. I 11-5 M ltual luvt i n. vs. Iiras-o. IHx 4I. No. KIM. A MARVELOUS OFFER. To introduce our celcbi-icsl I'.o trie Tk a. we will vend 1 prt.'k.ikV fer i2c. an1 ui mail wKti it. free. 1 t-emitjttil ir"Hl-i"latsi ms-k eh:cn. neariv 1 yard Ion. 1 siiver-piatetl thinihle Hint 1 I elora.to K.iwi (smi To Kct nil s,mi,i rents t stamps 1 lo lo: oie l . Bo !4, I'hiimlcliihia, l'. I-4V95-13 A xku" fea.ure has Iveu injected into the A. 1'. A. movement in Iowa. Some very shrewd and practical me.-i have organized an A. P. A. insurance com pany. We have not examined the plan or style of business but they assure us that it is on the same plan as tbat con ducted under the direction of certain other fraternal societies, such as the Mas-jas, A. O. U. V. and kindred orders. We would advise our Iowa friends to look into it closely. It may be what you want. By addressing Dr. R. F. Dundas, ;!00-l-2 Sapp building, Council UiutTs, la., you can get all the information vou mav desire. t I