The American. (Omaha, Nebraska) 1891-1899, July 19, 1895, Page 2, Image 2

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    THE AMERICAN1.
i Bin em;.
A Rnmta rather. It Aha a Han
kind, Claim ta Uat IU4 J" Klrln.
1U-T. T. Jaklmowlca, the prlct la
charge of Su Ji h" Itoraaa Catholic
Church, oo South Hickory tweet, Mt.
Carmel, IV, wa Icfjra "Squlrw I. J.
Lewis rrceotlj, charged by O4U
Citjor, wlf of Anthony Cajr, with
awault and battary and alWmpl to
ro. The ra grew out of the per
secution by the prlet of the OaJ r,
who wera rnUsl (our wkt affo (or
threatening the life of the prlol and
libeling him. Cupr and big wife
took step to prove what they hid
ald, and tho suit atme montlonod wa
the initiative. W. H. M Oram, of
Shamokln, was attorney for tho priest,
while Lwyr L. S. Walter, of Mt.
Carmel.atdtd Mr. Ciajor. She went
upon the stand and gave the following
tenllmony under oath:
"Came to this country with Rot. T.
Jaklmowlci from my homo In Italy, In
187. Wa went to a hotel la N
i ork 1 aoni remember the name-
where he registered aa I being bla wife,
We later lived at Hi. 433 Sixteenth
street, New York, a man and wife,
Ha had forsaken the priesthood on
oouiiug mj this country and assumed
tho name of Pronlslaw Maloeskl, I tak
ing the same name, as his wife. lie
bocame poor, and made an effort to re
turn to the priesthood. He was sent as
a priest to Nantlooke, and later taught
a parochial school at Baltlmqpe, MJ.
He sent me to a school In Chicago,
where I remained until he returned to
the priesthood and located In Omaha,
Neb , when he sent for me, and I went
to Omaha, whore I was to assume the
role of his sister, but actually resumed
my former relations as his wife."
He oompolled her to take a drug
that he gave her, but eventually her
health gave way and she became, very
poorly. Representing hor aa his sister,
he performed thesaured marriage core
niony on Sept. 1U, JS'.r' when she was
wedded to Anthony Czajor. Later the
couple went to Chicago, and Priest
Jaklmolca went to Mt. Carmel, where
he took charge of St. Joseph's Roman
Catholic Church. Ha wrote to Czijor
and his wife, entreating them to come
there, and offered to asnisl them. They
eventually came and engagtd lu bust
ness, receiving pecuniary asUtance
from the prieot. Ills assistance still
made her feel indebted to him, and be
called at her home, whilo she some
times went to the parlbh-houw, the
priest treating her to wine.
One day lact June, either the 21 or
3d, she called at the parUh house, ar.d
he Insisted upon hor "doing his will,"
as she stated, but she lef uel. He at
tempted to drag her to the stairway
loading to an upper room, and In so
doing allosral her to fall, causing such
injury to her, whilo In a delicate condi
tion, that fatal results followed. Dr.
Motitjllus was summoned and attended
her during her illness. The priest be
came enraged because he could not
exercise his power over hor after her
marriage, and he began a series of
.port outlons. He wrote her a letter,
couched in In uliing language, and
vtatlng that he had had 777 girls before
he ever saw her, and other remarks.
Then letters began to follow one an
other, Ho botran further to persecute
her and her husband, and he finally
sued them.
Here she ended a most sickening ta!e
of her life. When crobS questioned as
to why she did not tell her husband of
the attempted assault by the priest last
Juno, she replied: ' 1
"We are taught never to gj agalnt
the priest or tell of his actions."
"Well, but when you lived with him
as his wife In New York, you knew you
were doing wrong; you did it of your
own free will?"
"He said it was all right; be was a
priest and was holy, fcnd that if I did
his will I was dulng what was holy."
Priest Jaklmowlcz was then asked if
he had anything to say, to whlo 1 he
replied:
"I don't know anything about it."
Bond In the sum of $1,000 was re
quired, and the priest furnished the
amount. The case will be heard at the
September term of the criminal court.
Patriotic American.
"Will Calvin Answer!"
In The American of June 20th a
subscriber asks "Calvin" a question,
vis: "If the Church of Rome is the
mother of harlots, where are her
daughters?" I will answer. I like to
hav honest inquirers ask questions,
and I mean to give true and honest an
swers. Truth is what we want A
wall built with untempered mortar
will not stand.
Yes, Rome is ,"the mother of har
lots," and has daughters. Every city
and every nation which she has pol
luted with "the wine ot her fornica
tion" is her daughter. Every institu
tion and every church that endorses
her Idolatrous worship is a daughter.
Revelation, xvii, gives a full and an
accurate description of this notorious
harlot. The description is prophetic
and figurative; yet it reads almost like
history it is such a perfect delineation
cf the character and deeds of idolatrous
Rome. Rev. xvii, 6: "And upon her
forehead was a name written, Mystery,
Babylon the Great, the mother of har
lots and abominations of the earth."
Rome may be called the mother of har
lots btauM sh claimed the supremacy
and to he the bead of all churches, and
led off ia the great apostasy (II Toes
aloolana, 11, 3 9) and Introduced Idola
trous worth Ip, and Is the mother and
principal example of Idolatries and
abominations and all kinds of Iniquity
and corruptions of Christianity. Hence
he Is said to have "bt come the habita
tion of devils, and the bold of evry foul
plrlt, and a cace of every unclean anil
hateful bird." lkv. xvlll, She Is
call.d the "great whore that slttelh
upon many waters, with whom the
kings of the earth have committed for
nication." How have king committed
fornication with her? By making Ro
manism the religion of the land, or by
any alliance deigned to promote the
Interests of thi'iloman papacy.
Cleveland committed fornication with
the harlot when he wrota that letter of
congratulation to Leo XIII. What
shame for the President of the United
States to write such a letter! It was
virtually betraying bis country into
the hands of that tyrant and great
enemy of human liberty, for political
Influence and papal votes!
Itif It is not necessary for a church
or a party to commit all of the abomi
nations of this Babylonian mother In
order to be a daughter. There are
degrees In Iniquity, the adoption of a
single principle may place a party on
papal ground. To set traditions and
the commandments of men above the
Word of God is characteristic of the
papal church. There are two Fays to
destroy Chrlstlanlty-(l) to deny It al
together, or (2) displace it, make void
the law of God by human inventions.
This is the character of popery through
all its history. The "man of sin" is so
described in II Thessalonlans, 11, 3, 4
The teaching of the Bible Is that all
matters of doctrine and worship must
have divine appointment. In other
words, "whatsoever is not commanded
is forbidden." Deny this principle, and
the Bible ceases to be the rule of faith.
When a church denies this principle in
her practice she Is on popish ground
Some nominal Protestants are at least
half-bloods, and are therefore daugh
ters.
Pufeoylles, or high churchmen, are
virtually papists, and the pope so re
gards them. Many antichrists have
gone out Into the world. Satan fur
nishes dresseb of different styles but
tbey are made by the same firm in
Pandemonium. But tho weather is too
hot to write an elaborate article, in
lieu of which I will quota Dr. Scott's
eomtnt ntary on Revelation, xvii, 3-fl:
"The angel carried John in the spirit
into the wilderness, for the an tl-Christian
tyranny and teductlons had re
duced the church to a most desolate
state and made It like a desert. There
he saw a 'woman seated on a scarlet-
colored beast.1 This woman was the
emblem of the Church of Rome, and
'the beast was the emblem of the tem
poral power, by which It has been sup
ported, and the latter was 'full of names
of blasphemy.' II Thess , 2, 3; Rev.
xlll, 1-7. 'The woman was arrayed in
purple and scarlet color,' for these have
always been the distinguishing colors
of pope and cardinals as well as of the
Roman emperors and senators; nay, by
a Kind of infatuation the mules and
horses on which they rode have been
covered with fcarlot cloth, and even
literally to ride on a scarlet-coloved
beast! 'The woman' alco was most su
perbly decorated with gold and jewols;
and who can, in adeqmtj language,
describe the pride, splendor and mug-
nificei C9 of the Church of Rome, In her
vei-tments and ornaments of evory kind?
Even papist 4 have gloried in the supe
riority of their church in this speoies
of magnificence above ancient Rome
when at the height of her prosperity.
This appears in all things relating to
their publlo worship, and In the papal
court, even beyond what can be con
ceived; and external pomp attaches
carnal men to a religion which exces
sively interests and gratifies them, and
may even be said to Intoxicate them,
whilst they despise the simplicity of
spiritual worship.
" 'This is beyond description, and as
much surpassed my expectation as
other sights have generally fallen short
of It. Silver can scarce find admit
tance; and gold itself looks but poorly
among such an Incredible number of
precious stones.' Addison. In the
woman's hand likewise there 'was a
golden cup full of abominations.' This
alludes to the practice of harlots in in
flaming their paramours with love po
tions; and represents the various fasci
nating allurements, impostures, delu
sions, promises of impunity, Indulgence-,
absolutions, with hopes of
worldly Interest and preferment, by
which that church has always obtained
and preserved her Influence; and se
duced men to join in her spiritual for
nication, the other abominations of her
corrupt worship, and the unhollness
connected with it. To distinguish this
notorious harlot from all others her
name was inscribed on her forehead; as
prostitutes of old sometimes made them
selves known by labels on their fore
head, with their names on them. This
name was 'Mystery, Babylon the Great.'
Her religion was a 'mystery of iniquity'
(II Thess., ii, 5-7), and she herself was
mystically 'Babylon the Great.'
"Now, there was nothing In Rome
pagan to which this title was more
proper than any other city; nor would
It have bes anrthlnv very mysterious
to have subttltuted one pagan city for
another; but It was Indeed a 'great
mystery' that the professed metropolis
of the Cnrlulaa Church should be an
other Babylon in Idolatry, Iniquity and
cruelty to the poople of Gl; and her
very title of 'Roman Catholic.' or uni
versal church, entitles her to the name
of 'Mystery, Babylon tho GreaV She
affects, indeed, the character of our
holy mother church, bit she Is In fact
the 'mother of harlots and abomina
tion of the earth,' the inventor, source,
promoter and principal example of
Idolatries, and all kind of abominable
abuses and perversion! of Christianity,
with which the nations of the -earth
have been corrupted.
" Vtrm C. The woman wa a notori
ous for crjelty and persecution a for
idolatry and profligacy, and the apostle
aw her 'drunken with the-blood of the
saints, and with the blood of the mar
tyr of Josui.' Rev. xvii, 6. In this
re-ipest, Rome pagan and Rome papal
were both criminal; but the latter has
probably slain more thousand than the
former did individuals. Hence the
apostle would not have been greatly
astonished to sua a heathen city perse'
cuting Christians, having witnessed
and experienced such persecutions
many years before he had the vision
But that a city professedly Christian
and the metropolis of the Christian
Church should thus wanton and riot In
the blood of the saints might well ex
cite his highest amazement All this
Is very plain, but papists wonder by
what figure of speech heretics are
called 'saints' and rebels against the
pope 'martyrs of Jesus.' "Scott's Com'
ment. on Rev. xvii, 3-0.
Rome does not murdoror kill men as
saints but as heretics. She calls truth
heresy and saints heretics. Rome's
missionary work Is to kill and perse
cute those she cannot seduce, now
long will It take tho world to learn the
true character of popery? Calvin.
The Immigration Issue.
I am uncompromisingly in favor of
tho suspension of immigration for
twenty years. Why? Because the
disastrous consequences of wholesale
immigration have blighted our pros
perity, blasted our national reputation,
undermined our elucattonal institu
tions and thre itened our fedu-al gov
ernment. For tho last fifty years there has
be sn rolling across the Atlan ic from
V e Old World a continuous and power
ful wave of Immigration. Whilo our
mighty republic was yet in its ibfancy
only the hardy and industrious came to
make their home in the new land. But
as Time, with his devatu ing Mck'o,
came and went, tie wutjrs of tho wave
ga'hered up the debris and refute of
worthy nations aid lappol the shores
of pauper lands; it became a scavenger
tc the slums of Euroje Austro- Hun
gary, Russia, Po'aid, Bohemia, I'aly,
Ireland, Spain and Portugal. And
from those countries, the abode of
crime, vice, ignorance and superstition,
the influx of immigration gained new
impetus and volume, until, fur tho latt
thirty years, it las swept like the
mountain ava'ancte over tt is fair land,
leaving in its face ruin, starvation,
degradation, woe, misery and shame.
Tho torrent bat not yet abated, and
tho America! people, ever intent on
tie present the exciting pursuit of
the almighty dollar and with ptaoti-
cully no thoughtof the future, are head
less of i'.s thunCerous muttering, as
with giant power it batters away the
bulwarks of American lifcorty; as it
launches its insidious influence againBt
tte free public-school system; as it
heaves its scum of dissolute, i? nora t,
unscrupulous foreigoism into every
public office; as it directs its stubborn
energy against the freedom of the press,
the growth of patriotism, the Ameri
can birthrights of free thought and
free speech.
Aye, this country was, and still is, a
haven ot refuge for the honorable aad
industrious persecuted of other oa'ions.
But it must cease to be a refuge for
murderers and outlaws, a land of plenty
to the pauper and ignorant, ai asylum
for the degraded and dissolute outcasts
of the slums of the Old World.
Hordes of cheap immigrants have
taken tho place of honest American
workingmen in tho fields, factories,
stores aad workshops, and in the build
ing trades; accepting reduced wages,
they hare fattened on filth, eiucated
their children in the schools of super
stition and ignorance, reared their
families in the malodorous squalor of
poverty and disease.
Foreign influences and foreign labor
in the midst of us are and ever have
been the prime causes of our labor
troubles, hard times and monetary
panics; un-American ideas, doctrines,
practices and influences have been at
work fomenting discontent and breed
ing evil. Cheap pauper labor has taken
the place of honest American labor,
and driven the intelligent and worthy
workingman to the verge of starvation
and despair, ruined his every encour
aging business prospect, and dispelled
his every hope of elevating his social
standard. It has been disastrous to all
save selfish capitalists, ruinous to all
interests except those of monopoly.
These results, only a few of the scores
directly attributable to foreign immi
gration, demand of us, as we value our
homes and love our country, as we rev-
erenoe the memory aid trairions ot
our ancestor, as we respect j itioe and
the honor of humanity, tnat we fulfill
the oblifaUm the -e by ivpoed, and
clc the gates ot Castle Ga-den for
twenty years.
Still the waters abautju lath them
selves into a racing fury, their seeth
ing turbulent-1 augmented by the driv
ing gale of foreign prejudices; still the
wave surmount the defenses of our free
institution, and the rumbling of the
coming deluge la borne "from .afar.
Shall we a -rest it in ita progress, or
hall we, secure In the vUijn of pre
ent happineaa, neglect the .ominous
threatening, blind our eyes "to the
dareiiog heaven and the impene
trable mist that gather about us, and
slumber In the deceitful quietude of
conscious securi.y, until the clang of
the nation' dca'.h-knell cresound in
ourta- the natim then tj start in
alright at the impending peril, hut al
too lute! With a terrible crash the
bulwark are broken, the defenses de
stroyed, our free institutions crushed
and swept away as a boat upon the
whirlpool of Niagara. And then, the
water of ignorance, crime, vice, and
ecclesiastical superstition, Jdespotlsm
and diabolism, the massive debris of
pauperism aid filth, close upon our
liberties, overwhelm our heaven-born
right and privileges, stifle our moans
of suffering protest, and America
proud America falls to a dishonored
death.
I ask you, Which shall it be?
A. M. Erican.
MINISTERS PROTEST,
Klot in Boston Afford a Text for Many
a Sermon.
Boston, Mass., July 7. Many min
Uters In this city spoke to-day 00 the
riot that occurred in East Boston on
the Fourth of July, in which a man
was killed and several menwounded,
as the result of an attack on an A. P. A.
parade in that district. The largest
gathering was at the People's Temple
this afternoon. The spacious edifice
was found inadequate to accommodate
the throng of people, and an overflow
meeting was held in the Presbyterian
Church opposite. The speakers at the
People's Temple were the Rev. E. S.
Wheeler and ex Priest Joseph Slattery,
both of whom in the most severe terms
denounced the spirit of religious intol
erance which they claim was at the
bottom of the whole mbtter.
A committee of citizens has appointed
Councilman E. S. Crockett andu Mr.
E. V. Eigerly as a committee to peti
tion the board tf aldermen for the use
of Faneuil Hill on the evening of July
10, for the purpose of holding an indig
nation meeting of the Patriotic Order
Sons of America to protest against the
action of the mob at East Boston on
the afternoon of the Fourth of July.
Hatched by the Hierarchy.
We have stated in the columns of
this paper several times that the rebel
lions in Manitoba were hatched by the
hierarchy of the Church of Rome in
Quohec; that Colonel Ouimet and his
command were held in Winnipeg and
the Protestant volunteers of Ontario
who left weeks after went forward and
foueht the battles of our country. Now
we have the proof: Bishop Gravel
states these men under Riel were fight
ing for the Catholic religion and Cath
olic schools and to keep the officials of
Canada out of the country; and in the
last rebellion a Catholic priest hoisUd
a white 11 ig on a church, and said it
contained only women and children,
but when our troops came within shoot
ing range of the church they receive!
a volley of bullets out of its basement
They never were loyal subjects, are not
to day, as is plainly seen, and never
will be; and the ecclesiastics of the
Church of Rome are at the bottom of
all these damnable schemes. Orange
Truth.
Sat oil! Is Given a Reception.
Plattsburo, N. Y., July 8. The
fourth session of the Roman Catholic
Summer School of America opened at
the Plattsburg Theatre to-day. The
first lecture was by Rev. W. H. O'Con-
nell, of Boston, on "External Relations
of the Early Church," followed by
Conde B. Pallen, of St. Louis, on "Phi
losophy of Literature." The afternoon
session was held in the Casino, on the
school grounds, thus formally opening
them. Rev. J. Herman Wibbe, of
Schenectady, one of the three priests
in America who make a special study
of botany, gave the first of his dis
courses on that subject. In the even
ing a public reception was tendered to
Mgr. Satolli at the theatre. The dis
tinguished visitor congratulated the
projectors and members of the school
on the success of their untiring zeal
and bestowed the papal blessing on all
present.
5EXT TIME YOU GO WEST
take the Burlington Route's "Black
Hills, Montana and Puget Sound Ex
press." Leaves Omaha daily at 4:35 p. m.
Fastest and best train to Hot Springs,
Deadwood, the Yellowstone National
Park, Helena, Butte, Spokane, Seattle
and Tacoma.
For rates, time-tables, folders, etc.,
apply to the local ticket agent, or write
to J. Francis, G. P. and T. A. Burling'
ton Route, Omaha, Neb.
A.L.DEANE&CO.
J. II. TAYLOR, Manager.
1116 Farnam Street.
WHOLESALE
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Care American Publishing Co
THE BLACK POPE."
OR
Jesuit's Conspiracy vs. A.meiicanism9
ia IN THE THIRD EDITION.
This was the book that the Romanists burned while in the bindery. Nearly
300 pages. .Over 100 pictures. Speeches from worthy representatives
from most of the patriotic orders.
IT WAS THE FIRST A. P. A. BOOK EVER PRINTED!
pbice rtr cxjOtti. $1.00.
A cheap paper cover edition-is being prepared at50cents.
FOR BALE BY
AJSIERICAN PUBLISHING CO.
OMAHA. NEB
AND RETAII
THE