St. Viator College Newspaper, 1910-10

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'- 1.; · I · :t..'' -·;,· •• J ·. . \ PAULISSEN MANUFACTURING CO. MANUFACTURERS OF Sash, 'Doors and Mouldin{/s Interior Finish a Specialty Plate and Window Glass Always on Hand 143 Washington Avenue, Cor. Bourbonnais Street, Kankakee, Illin6is Central Union Telephone, Main 276w : : Independent Telephone, No. 160 Kankakee Book Store ' 176 Cqurt Street Fine Stationery, Popul a? Copyright Alger and .l-£e1dy Books, Post Cards and A !bums, Pennants and Pillow CoverJ, Sporting Goods . . The Gift Store F. MAISONNEUVE High Class S- ho·e Repairing Satisfaction Guaranteed Basement, City National Bank ALCIDE L'ECUYER & COMPANY Mercantile Jobbers Confectionery attd Cigars a specialty East. Ill. Trust & Sav. Bank Bldg. Both Phones 601 Kankakee, Ill. TEL. FRANKLIN 480 w-.J.GtLBERT, MGR CHICAGO FIRE BRICK COMPANY MANUFA C TURERS OF ' Fire Brick, Fire Proofing, Fire Clay, Hol- low Blocks, Hollow Brick, Flue Lining, Sewer Pipe, Wall Coping Chimney Tops. 508 CHAMBER OF COMMERCE CHICAGO E.BETOURNE and 1 Optician Kodaks & Supplies Students' Elect1 ic Reading Lamps Kankakee Electric light Co. NORRIS & FRITH Hard-ware and Sporting Goods PATRICK· BETOURNE PHARMACY North_ Side of Court Street - Wf1r §qnp The Largest Stock of Photographic Supplies, Pl ates, Fi lm s, Lamps, Enlarging Cameras & Developing Papers in the City. LUMBER H. H. TROUP & co. LUMBER KANKAKEE, ILLINOIS i

description

The Viatorian, Vol. 28, No. 1

Transcript of St. Viator College Newspaper, 1910-10

Page 1: St. Viator College Newspaper, 1910-10

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PAULISSEN MANUFACTURING CO. MANUFACTURERS OF

Sash, 'Doors and Mouldin{/s Interior Finish a Specialty

Plate and Window Glass Always on Hand

143 Washington Avenue, Cor. Bourbonnais Street, Kankakee, Illin6is Central Union Telephone, Main 276w : : Independent Telephone, No. 160

Kankakee Book Store '

176 Cqurt Street

Fine Stationery, Popula? Copyright Alger and .l-£e1dy Books, Post Cards and A !bums, Pennants and Pillow CoverJ, Sporting Goods . .

The Gift Store

F. MAISONNEUVE High Class

S-ho·e Repairing Satisfaction Guaranteed

Basement, City National Bank Bld~.

ALCIDE L'ECUYER & COMPANY Mercantile Jobbers

Confectionery attd Cigars a specialty

East. Ill. Trust & Sav. Bank Bldg. Both Phones 601 Kankakee, Ill.

TEL. FRANKLIN 480 w-.J.GtLBERT, MGR

CHICAGO FIRE BRICK COMPANY MANUFA C TURERS OF

' Fire Brick, Fire Proofing, Fire Clay, Hol­low Blocks, Hollow Brick, Flue Lining, Sewer Pipe, Wall Coping Chimney Tops.

508 CHAMBER OF COMMERCE CHICAGO

E.BETOURNE D~uggist and

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Optician

Kodaks & Supplies

Students' Elect1 ic

Reading Lamps

Kankakee Electric light Co. NORRIS & FRITH

Hard-ware and

Sporting Goods

PATRICK· BETOURNE PHARMACY North_ Side of Court Street

-Wf1r il(n~ak §qnp The Largest Stock of Photographic Supplies, P lates, Fi lms, Lamps, Enlarging Cameras & Developing Papers in the City.

LUMBER H. H. TROUP & co. LUMBER KANKAKEE, ILLINOIS

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John J. Wheeler, Pres_ident William M. Byrne, S~cretary

The Standard Roofing ·. Co. Established 1866

ROOFERS

692 N. HALSTED STREET CHICAGO, ILLINOIS

. Phone Monroe 430

Medal and Diplomas at World's Columbian Exposition, Chicago, I893 ,· American Institute of Architects' Exhibit, Chicago, I894

ESTABLISHED 1884

JOHN CARETTI & CO. JOHN D'AMBROSIO, Proprietor

OONTRAOTORS OF

TERRAZZO-CERAMIC JlAi r

M,arble and Enamel 1':l9Sa lCS •• ••

Uile an~ marble 'UUlork

172 Michigan Street, Chicago, Illinois Telephone: Randolph 1499

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HANLEY ~ CASEY CO~ ~,,,. ·- . ,.

Manufactmrers and General Contractors

Heating Ventilating Apparatus

Complete Power Plants

Sanitary Plumbing Municipal Water Works

and Sewerage Systems

37 to 45 OHIO STREET, CHICAGO, ILLINOIS

Long Distance Telephone, North 1833

TilE NEW WORLD CHURCH GOODS STORE

We have a large selectt"onof Prayer Books, Scapulars, Candlesticks, Rosaries,

Medals , Crucifixes, Sanctuary Lamps, Holy 1/Vater Fonts, Cards, Statues Pictures,

Gold and Silver Crosses, Sick Call Outfits, etc., at very moderate prices. Mail

orders given prompt attention. ,

S43 Wabash Avenue (Near 12th Street) Chicago, Illinois.

D~ J. O.,LOUGHLIN, M.D. Practice Limited to

EYE, EAR, NOSE AND THROAT

lnd. ;phone 704 191 Court Street, Kankakee, Illinois

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' 'NONOISE"

School Boards Buying Andrews' Schoo >

Desks are sure of satis­faction, prompt ship­

. mert, fair dealing. · We also lead the world

in Opera Chairs, Set ­tees~ etc. , for halls and auditoriums .

The A. H. An.dre-w-s Co. -

t74-6 Wabash Avenue :-: Chicago, IlHnois

MONEY TO LOAN ON CATHOLIC CHURCH PROPERTY AT LOWEST RATE

Inquiries Solicited

NAPOLEON PICARD 159 LaSalle St. Chicago, Illinois

Our Dentistry . is Painless :a~r~~~ r:~~r !r~uo~~ ~~~~s~~~ vert isers. We are rapidly

building u p our trade by re put ation alone-we feel sure t ho ugh you will find our prices an addert conaiderat.ion.

Whalebone Teeth $5.00 Gold Crowns $5.00 White Crowns $4.00 Gold Fzilings $ I oo Teeth fitted with the Alveolar System wit!zout p lates

Platinum.Fillings$z.oo . Bridge .Work p er tooth $4.oo,' jull set $7.50

CHICAGO DENTISTS Office H ou rs, 8 a. m. t o 8 p. m . Sundays, 10 a. m. t o 2 p. m.

Pho n e lnd.893 65 EAST AVE. Opp. I. C . D e pot

Dotnestic Palace Steatn Laundry Telephone No. 178

311 Schuyler Avenue Kankakee, Illinois

OUR ICE CREAM & SPECIAL DESSERTS win praise wherever used. Made in =============== a modern jJlant by competent work­men, using only absolutely jure cream and flavors. SpeCial jJat ty Prices.

ANDERSON DAIRY COMPANY "Every Mouthful Delicious"

Ei t her Phone 9 1 391 Schuyler Avenue, Kankakee, Ill.

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Ind. Tel. 472 We Do Repairing

·F. A. LOTTINV'ILLE SH.OE D,EALER

All New Ideas in Fashionable Footwear

188 Court Street Kankakee, Ill.

Distilled Water I ) The Family Ice

Ce ( Absolutely Pure

F.D.RADEKE BRG.CO.

Both Phones 132 Kankakee, Ill.

Legris Brothers

113ankers · .Kankakee, . I IIi no is

The "La p·etUe" The-atre Kankake:e's Most Popular Picture Show

Best Singing Best Pictures Best Music Matinee 2 to 5 p. m. Evenings 7 to 10:30

New Show Every Day Admission 5c

Roy's Pharmacy 19 3 Court Street

Drugs, Stationery, Cig~rs, Paints, Oils and Varnishe-s

Prescriptions a Specialtg

STITH BROS.

Restaurant and Lunch Room

182 Merchant Street, l{ankakee

Knox Hats Lion Shirts H & P Gloves Everwear Hosiery All a:e striking examples of the perfection of A:nerican Manu­facture. Necessities whose comfort and goodness will apreal to you long after you have forgotten the price. Sold exclusively in Kankakee by

B. B. FERRIS---Distributor of Men's Wear

F AROUHAR . & ALBRECHT CO. ====WHOLESALE====

SCHOOL BOOKS 378-388 Wabash Ave., Chicago

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The McLaug.hlin""Mateer Co. Crushed ·stone; ·Cement Walks and Curbs,

Portland Cement and all Kinds of ' Mason's Supplies.

North Schuyler Avenue and City Limits, J(ankakee, Illin1:>is Both Phones No. 277

Dr. z. J. P~ya.r1 I '

DENTIST Crown and Bridg~ Work. Gold Fillings a Specialty .

. Popular Prices. Excellent Work. Prompt Execution.

175 COURT STREET KANKAKEE, ILLINOIS

. The Finest Assortment of Room Fur­nishings in the city will · be found at

J. LECOUR & SONS ..

The Store of Quality and Lo-w Prices

· Largest Insurance Agency in Kankakee County

Shirley Moisant & Co. Fire Insurartce·'

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Office in Legris Brothers' Bank 'f ~,

Kankakee, IJlinois

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TABLE OF CONTENTS

- Cut of St. ·via:tor. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2

Influenee of St. V'ia:tor .. ....... ' . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3

Pa.ss6on -Play .. · .................................... ~ . . . 7 I,

vV e~lc.o1ne to Fa~ther Hicke!y ........................ , ..... L!

· ·vannntelli Receives Viatorians ................ · ......... 16

Cut of Va.nnut.eni ........................ : . ........... 17

R.ece:ption of Fathe!r R:obert: ... · .. · ....................... 19

Cut of Fathe1r Robert, G. ·s. V .......... . .... ............. _20

Ohild ·Fa:ncies>--Poeti:n1 ............... · ...... ... ... : ...... 25

D·eath of F:ather, LHnlhert ... ... .. · ....... . .............. 26

J£,ditorial .... ............ . ............................. 27

JlJu~onmwatru .......................................... 29

Obitua1ry ... · ... ·' ........ : : . ........................... 30

~L\..lu1nni .......................................... · ..... 31

Pers:ons; and Places ............................. . · ...... 33 ' I

Societiesi .................... : ....... ................... 35

Excba.nges ...................... · ...................... 37 . . .· \

Athletic~ . · ........................... ~ .... ~ .. .... ...... 39

L.oc~a·ls. . .... · ..... . : ............................... ..... 42·

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SAINT VIATOR

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THE VIA1~0RIAN ''FAC ET SPERA"

VOLUME 28 OCT OBER , 1910 NUMBER 1

INFLUENCE OF ST. VIATOR

HI LDHOOD is pre-·eminentlv the a2'e of dreams' the ., ~ '

a1~e when! btnrldin:g ca:srtles in the RJir is legitinwte ~~ and! s"'reet:, vvhen plans for life a,re lruid with little

e=:~~w=======- know ledge burt unlimited eonfiden ce. The child bHssfully ignorant of evil, except as personified in the books he, has 1~ead a.s had men and terrible dragons \vho,In gallalllt knights kill, always imagines him.self as the champ,ion; of right ·and the brave defender of the weak and innocent. Ambition, the constant com pan ion of his imagination, ever takes the1 side of virtue, and has not ye.t learned to borrow the weaponS> of vice to aittain its end. Beautiful drea:m.s of childhood, who would have been without you? You remain with us yearg afterrward.s as the precious· leg:acy of a: time when each one of us carried his o1wn fairy god-n1other with hhn in his in11agina­tion, when a field w:a:s large a.s1 a1 world, a:nd a day seemed a glorious eternity. Alas:, that in 1nany c:als:es! you ha:ve proved untrue, that a clos·e:r acquaintance has been made with evil, and that ambition ha1s often pro:v,ed a tra:itor to virtue.

In the world today ambition is chiefl.Y directed t.owards the .~ttainment of fame, wealth or' power or of the three com­bined. Men im~gi.n~ethat no per1nanent gnoCL can be worked ·except by those who corn1mand at lea:S1U one of this trinity, arid'' " .. flartter themselves that in desiring them they desire them only as m·eans and not as an endi. T'he child of yesterday ·who dreamed of heroie deeds: for virtue's sa:ke, as the man of to·­day, ma~ he engaged in relentles~s pur.suit of fame, wea1lth or power under the fond delusion that he can thereby; periTII3Jn­ently benefit the world. No more cogent refutation of such an error exist1s1 than the calenda~ of the Church's saints. The greater majority orf them were not fa.m·orus during life, nearly

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aU of them, were poor, amd con1pa1ratively few of ,them exer­cised· any po,ver in the s.ense the "World understands the word, yet. no ca,talog!U·e of the world's Great Ones· repres:ents1 a s much .. p:ermtanent good a:s: dioes' the R:oma!ll Martyrology. The w·orld pointsi t:o fa,me, weailth and powm•, the Saints to ob­s·curity, pO!Verty ainldt obtedience as the1 roryaJ· m·ea1ns t:o tlie grea:test1 benecfit of mankind, .and: in this matter, as in others·, the saints o;vm~come the worl<l.

vV e need not r~fer to the suns a:nd m1oons: of the :firma­I11ent of sa.intdoml to prov·e this~ ; An instanc{j of one of the ob­scurest, poorest and humblest Q1f tb.e saints will suffice, whose nam.e was Vialtor, a1nd who live'dJ. toward·st the end of the fourth century in the ea:thedraf city of Lyons ais a mere Lectotr and ca1techetieal instructor, yet the result of his g~ood deeds lives to this day, as1 the following pa:ges1 will show.

History does not retca'll the names of St. Viator's parents, but their worth has been immorta;lized' by the virtuous: life ,of their S'O[l who, .Adon, · ru reliable hagiolog1is.t, relates, sanctified himself while still quite young. S.t. Just, who wa1s then Bishop· of Lyons; attracted by Via,tor's: remarkable virtue, ele­vated him to the rank of Lector, the second of the :Minor Or­ders, and appointed him· to tea1ch: . Ohris:tian1 doctrine to the children of Lyonst, and a beautiful legend relates that he was in the ha:bit of going1 throu'gh the s.treets of Lyons, ringing a bell: to ' call the children to crutechism. Humility and obedi­ence, two virtues that go hand~ in hand', were ever pra:ctis,ed by this1 young s1a:int, who1 a11Ways recognized the will of God in the slighi;et;;;,t wish. of. Bishop Just. When the latter decided to retire, to ... the, desert of T!b.eba,id in orclier to give himself to pena:o.,~;e a,.n,d prayer, St. Viator determined! that God was crull­ing hiir.L to · ·do liket\:ise, a1nd surrendered everything the world holds· de~r to emhrace obseurit.y, poverty a:nd! the . bond of o;b:edi~ee . .. T··o:gether the venerable Biis,hop, ·grown old in the ,service of God, and' th~ bo~ jUist sta:nding o1n the threshold of Inanhood purs:ued the toilsrnneJ journey to Scete, one of the nu'merou:s monasteries of the Thebaid destert, the hom.e of S:o many remarka,ble saints:. On their wa!Jl they pass.edi thl'()!Ugh ~umerous towns1 andJ cou:llitrh:~s~, famoru:s in the annalS\ of hiSl­OOTy, literature and art, but God being their bourne, they tu;rned not aside fo[" a? moment to examine even the greatest monum:ents of hlliiilan g€11ius1. Arrived' .att Seete Jus1b and Via1tor concea1led their a:ntecedents S'O that no man mig:ht know

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the sacrifices they had n1ade in o1~der to answer . the Divine· call, "Go sen all th.art thou hrust, take up thy: Oross, and fbllow :Me." Continual pena1nce:, pr.a!Jer a.ndi n1or'tifieation occupied . the two saints fo;:r the fevv renw.Jining1 yeairs of this; life, during which they had been united by the bond of love of God, a~nd "in their dea;th they w~ere not divided," God calling thmn to their re­ward within a 'ferw months of one another.

Such is a brief · skert;ch of the life of St. Viator which no one can deny wa~ obs:cure, poor and! hunl!ble, and yet the good deeds of this holy youth are bearing fruit to this d.ay. vVhen !!"ather Querbes founded a religious' COlllillluni.ty for the pur­pose of teaching Ohristia,n d'octrine and the service of the Holy Altar he chose St. Viator as its prutron, and this cormmu- ' nity has foi~ three quarte1~s of a century been spreading the kingd.Jom of Jesus Clhrist throug1hout many la:nds. Here is casting bread on the ·waters and finding it after many da·ys., here is forceful refutation of the error that posterity can only profit through fame, wealth and power. Le:t the Great Ones of · the earth 'vhot florurished at the SiaJme time co1ne forth amd show where their farme, wealth amd porwer are benefiting ma,n­kind to the same extent as St. Viator's obscurity, p·overty ar.nd humility. ·

The youth of 1nany land's today are reaping the fruits of St. , Viator's exalted virtue. ·They a:re sitting at the feet of his spiritua1 children learning les:sans of duty) nobility of chair­aeter, and of ru Wisdom· that . tr.ainscends and surpasses a.ll earthly wisdom .. They are leaJrning thart man was not made for earth, that earth can: not sa:tisfy the aspirations of his sou:l, that the rewa:rds of -ea.Jrth mre a,s; va1in and: tr.alnsitoa:oy as the very m.en who seek . them·. Upon their tender and receptjve minds· is impressed the truth ' that the good m.ust always: be s:aught and intrinsic evil ever shunned·.

The secret of St. Viator's influence which ha:s come dlown to us through centuries lieH in his co:nfonnity with the will of God. H.ere is tO' be found the key-not,e to true succe.ss, the "open S.esame" to the door of Influence thait can never die. Fame ma~ be a;cquired, burt will die; wealth ma.y be amaiss:ed., but will be squ:a.Jndier·ed in· time; powev may be gained but will dwindle, but even ()Ill€ good action done in order to be in eon­fomnity with the Divine Will will inf.aUibly bring forth a hundred ~old of everlasting good. M:an's knowledge is limited, but God's is infinite, and the fame of the least good deed

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6 THEi VIAT10R;IAN

reaches His ears, in His sight it is immensely rich in Inerits,_ and carries with it a1 po.w-e:c drawn from the Infinite. · A good deed' is a flower tha.t never "wastes its' sweetness on the des:ert air." Thus aJre the obs-curity, poverty and. humility of the Saints superior to the fanre, wea[th and power of the w:orld1, fov they begert:. the only fame, wealth and power worth pos­seiS!Sing,.

T'he ambition of all should therefore be directed to atttadn­ing conformity with the will of God, for this is: the only thing worth attaining, and this! ambition should! be strong' and. ar­dent enough to overco1ne alll difficulties that lie in the way. Few s:twdent!s: in these daiJs a·re. called to make the hell~oic sac- , rifices, to perform the bitter pe:nances amd sU'bmit to the austere mo,rtific:a:tions of St. Viator, but all ha;ve their own paii.ns, troubles and difficulties:, and no one who ha.s come under the infi.UJenee of St. Viator s1hould: wish that th-e1se might .be less:, so long

1 .a:s. ·they are the will of God. To quote the

noble wordts of B:rowning: .

"Then welcome each rebuff, That turns ·ea·rth's: smoothne1s-s rough, Etwch sting. that bids nor .sit nor srtand, but go! B·e our joys three parts pain! Strive:, and ho1ld cheap the str:alin: Learn, nor wccount the pang; aare, never grudge the

thr~oe.''

Praetis;e this aa:td care not: whethe1~ s1ucces:s con1es: to you or not, for yoru a.re gaining a1 higihm-- srucces.s~ tha:t the world knows not of, and ne:Yel~ \Vill be a:ble to understand.

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THE P'ASSION PLAY FRED F . CONNOR '13

. JIE!R1E: exis;ts in the· hun1an hearrt an unquenchable · · · desh,.e, ,not only to put \Vhart n1oves the innermost

soul into words., but a lso to express: it dran1:at.ically in son1e form or other." This. has been 1nanifeste:d

in ail ag'es, even an1ong the 1nost prhnitive people, for the J ·erws amd Gentiles of old were a:cqua:inted with relig.ious pla.ys. The Roman Church waged .a successful vva:r aga~ins:t the gl ori­fication of the flesh pra!cticed by the · R.o1na.n En1perors1; and introduced to her mrembers: a new and purged: dramatic poet.ry to· replace the fo:rmer licentious a;ct of the Ron1ans.. · \IV e can can this Inear&ure: taken by the Church tor prot•e:ct the faithful frorm the arbuses of the Ro;man st~ag.e, the real founc1a,t.ion of that historic dramatic production enacted at Oberammer•ga,u every ten years.

The whole liturgy of the Oa;tholic Church is composed! of higher poetry and sa~cred drama, from. which our 1nodern dram.a has1 sprung, for , in the sacrifice of the lVIas.s., we ha~e "a blending 6rf symbolic action, Scrjptural nar'l~a.t.ive, and out­bursts of s:ong; producing~ arn arrtis,tie conception, ai drar1natic progression . with pantomimie, epieal a.ncl lyricml elements.~' This pra1ctice of pres:e:nting the l ives of the saints or the events nar1~ated in tihe. Go·srpels to the illiterate became s~o univerrsa,l , that, in the twelfth century, there: was; hard,ly a, place in all ~entra:l and we:steTn Eturope which d'idJ nort ha;ve a1 special re!­ligious stage. Man.y of the plays presented took the formr of Pas.s,ion Pla\fs, which portrayed' the Agony, Scourging, Or:own­ing with Thorns, unjUist condeann!art;io~., Cru1cifixion a.ncl Resur­rection .of our Lord,. Fraternities sprang up, whose pa.rticu.la:r alim wa.s1 the preseut:artion olf P;arsrsion Plarysr. Foremost a1n.ong these wa1s the B'avarian court in 1\funich, where saered ch~atma srtoodl in speeia,l fatvor. A period orf arlmos1t univet~sa.l wa.r: led t ra the neglect of the PassrioDJ P lary throughout Eu.r0rpe, a!nd. it was1 only when a terrible plague was1 rwging in 1633 thalt the

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8 THE1 VIAT'ORIAN

people of a certain district in U pper• Bavaria\ turned· the:ir thoughts wgJa1in to the Pa;ssion Pla~.

ThiS! was a.t OberaJ.nmergau, a: small villag~e )lidden away < in the Tyrolese Alps in the mountain vrulley_ of the Am.Jil!e:r,

tw1o thousand. seven hundred and sixty feet above sea level, and forty-five miles southwest of Munich. The pla:g~ue had s.:vv·ept over rull Bavaria, leaving s1orrorw a;nd d'es.olation in its train, for the people were dying by thousa~nds. Afte~ about one hund1red -of the inhrubitants of Obera1nmerg:a:u had fallen

. a p~ey to the pestilence, the villarge madre aj vow to God.! to re:stior~e the forgotten Pa:s1sion Play, if H:e would free · thmn from· the death-dealing · infection. From that hour the plrug1ue was checked· perm:a:nently, a~s~ not another pers.on died a1 though severa:l were suffering from the dJiseas;e. Since thait time the villagers haiVe fulfilled their vorw by pe:r:5orming a: d1~atma of Cihris:t',s life andl srurffering1s eve1ry ten yea,rs,; a duty which they have handed down froiDJ generation to generation as a sa1c1~ed l.e:ga:cy~ Thus we see that the Ob~rammerg1an Passion Pla~ is not exa:ctly a s:urvivrul of a; mediaeval myst,ery or m1iraele plaif, but owe:s1 its: ori·gin to the vo~w made by the inhabitants of the Bavarian village. .

It is ass1ertted. that the Play wa:s. firsrt held in the a:n·cient Benedictine; ~1,onastery of E:ttrul as ea1rly a,si the twelfth cen­tu~and that the orig1ina.l text andJ a1rDange:rnents w:e:re n.o do-Uibt made by the monks: of this m:Onastery. ·_ The text has . been revised several times, chief among which revisions; was that of Father Ottm.a;r Weiss!, ai Benedictine monk of J ese·-'\Va,ng, who rea:noved unsuitaihle aJnd inharmonious pa~ss:age,s., and' snbstituted pros·e for dogger'el vers'e. The improved text, how·ever, as: now uS'ed, was: compiled! with great care: by Father Daise:nberger, the Vicar of Oberammergatu.. The text of the pla~y has thus gone tln .. orugh succe!s:sive alterations~ a!lld r e­yisions, until it · h.a:s gr,orwn froirr the ha:r:d, even: coarse, pla~ of early days~, to the excellent version used; today, free fr'om triviality, well-developed and fuU of life; making the Pais:sion Play- the grealt1est tragedy the world ha,s: ever known.

The performance takes place on the Sunda:ys. of sun}[}ler. This yea:r the first oecu1·red on ~1aly; 16th am.d the last on Sep­tember 25th. The fad~ thart two h'urild~l~OO' arnd fifty thousalnd guests were expected to vi.s11t the qu:alint little village to witnes,s the perforn1ance of the play this: yea~r sthows tha~t, wHh each succeeding. decade, it is acquiring a wider reputation orver the

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T'H!Ei VIAT'O·RIAN 9

' wod-d. T'he pe:rformance comr:rne~nces aJt eig;h t · o' elock in the morning a.nd continues until five in the1 evening -with a short . . . - - ' Intermts~:Hon .at noon. The pla~, which is d1vtdeid into three parts,, with seventeen acts mnd t~wo tableaux before each a1et, possess:es: two peeu:~liatritieis:; namely, the tableaux vi·vants: or prophetic Old _ T1es1bainlent type:s', and a, chorus; of S.ch utzgieister or Gua!I'td'ian Angels:. E!a!ch scene from the his1tory o1f Ohrjst is prefa.ced by a t.a:bleau of t~ypical import fron1 the Old T1esta­ment, and is intended to foreshadow· the follo1wing tableaurx

, ·, which are ·taken from the New T1estam,ent·. The first a1ct, is Ohrist's entry into J erus:rulem1; the fallowing atctsl follow the text of the S.cripuureSo closely until the pla1y ends with the .A~~cension of our Lord a,nJd the Hrullelujah Ohorrus:. The , .Ohorus consists of nineteen per1sons, ten male:s1 alll!d nine: fem:ales, the leader being called the Prologue or. Chorag1-m. Tlhese spirit-singers, presiding as1 Guarl(lJian Sp:irits orver the entire perf:ormanee, prepa,re the a1udience for the con1:ing scenes,, and they explain andl interpret in delig1htfully · harr­monious strains the eonnectioDJ bet;wee:n the type a:nd · the ful­fillment. T'heir beautiful melod:y, floati,ng up: to heavelll pro­duces' an indes·criba:ble sublimity orf feeling in the arudienee a;s if c:elesUaJl choirs of rung1els were adoring God.

The great amditorium in which the pla,y is presented Slea,ts four thousandr people at present, but if the eonemlrs.e of people which pours into, OberaLJll'mtergarur eontinues to inerea,s:e, the pr:eparations recently made vvill be inadequate. 'Tihe stage, S!arve for the d~ntr!ail portio:n, the pl"~OSiceniuin, is without a cover. At one . end, on a blue backg:routnd, are pa;inted\ the figu~--es of F 'aith, Hope, and Charity, an·di a1 pelican feeding her yorung fr:om; her hea['t's1 blood!; while for a1 ba!ekgrrorund there: is the sky and the snow-covered! Alps. There a:re five distinct plateeiSI of action ; the prosceniUJm, for the chorus:; the centrral stage, for the tahlooutx vivantS', and the usual d'ramat:i,e scenesr; the pala:ee of Pilaite; the paJla:ce of! Annasr; the streets of J eru­salem. The whole pres:entation, even in regard tlo the s;mall­est details: is a; faithful interprert.ation of the 8criptnre.s.

Words eannot express: the sentin1ient.s whieh aire aroused in thos.e who witness this play. ·They are lifted above and beyond the pre:sent time:, and li~e in the emotions of the

'actors, who ha~e a: positive genius in the way they conceive a.nd impersonate their roles1. The scene of the Crucifixion is the most thrilling in the drama:, for we see!In to see Christ

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Himself suffering arnd dyin~ fo'r us, · in the person of Anton Lang, who hangs' on the Oros1S' twenty-t1wo Ininutesr, while all the details na!rra,ted in the Gospe1s are faithfully· ena.eted. L1ang is a m:a1n of noble chara,cter a,nd• m.aj-e:srtic figure; and has a very refined conception of his, role. T1o he able to see the various incid'ernts .solemnly aind religiously represented under' the open sky l"~epUJysl ahnost any ,s;a.erifices: or incou~ veniences which the thousands of t,ourisitsr undergo, for the sight ling~e1~~~ in the me:morry like a1 benediction.

The villag~e:rrs rega1rd tile Pa:s1S1ion Play as ai solemn a1ct of religious \vorshjp, and the pe,rfonnances a:re cha,r:a,cterized,. by the greatest reverence throU!ghout. The principal characteTB ha,ve usually been heredita1ry in certain faaTitilies, a:nd harve been handed d'orwn from father to son; but all the cha.racters a!re selected for their' relig'ious: devotion amdJ purity of- .life a.s vv·ell as: for' their dran1artic ability. Life holds no higher honor for these peaga;nts. than to be chosen to enact the role of the Ohristus or the Virgin lV[.ary. The proudest gir'l in all the world today is Ottilie Zwink of Oberam,m.erga;u, fot~ she has been chosen fron1 am.ong the Obera.Inine:rgau g~irls as pure in mind, soul, and' bod~, and thus, quaU:fi.eid to enact the part of :M:ary, the ~1othe'r of God. In the yea1rs between the pi~esenta­tions: the villagers wre: carefully drilled in. dralna,tic perfornl­alllces by their pratstor, a~nd, by con1bining their relig,ious fervor and their artistic instincts', they are able to produce a play, the drama tic fbrce of which is eq ua:l to tha,t seen on any stag':e occupie:d by the greatest actors of which the 'vorld can bo'a1st. In both the village church and s.chool the children a,re drilled in dran1atic impe:r:sonation, and they a·re thus adarprted and tra1ined to ena:ct cert;ain parts with such ma1rvelous enthushl.iS1ll · and relig1ious fervor that they aire inin1.it.ahle'. The preceptor of the village school is a 1n.usicia1n ·as, well as. a eorm:poser, and he teaches the children to sing passa:ges fro1n the PasHi,on Play, which forn1s t1;te Alpha1 and' Omega of their lives; and they grow up to 1natnhood a.nd1 \VOilllarnhood' with the highest id1eals of beauty a~ncl m1oraility ever1 befo1re them. T'he Pws.sion Play is not meant a!s1 ar lit:era:ry or drama,tic masterpiece, yet there is a:rt, and high dramatic as \Vell a:s: deep religious! feel- · ings; ailld the world bows before the rea1Ustic faith of the, peo- , ple of Obe:ran11nerga u:, allld honors. then1 for the grea.t tr1.1ths they teach to s.tranger.SI, " rho a:re lifted' up to a:n acknow ledg-

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ment . of their God through the humhle pii.ety of those· lowly mountaineers. ·

Besides the ' instruction. allld pra;ctiee which the people reeeive a:s they grow up, :many . other influenee~s ha·ve been a.t work to produce the pea1S!ant players. The very nature of' the epuntry and their oecurpat4ions~ conspire to give them an innate' fa:culty :which adapts them· to the presentation of the Passion· Play. All the m·ore intelli~ent membe1rs of the cofJ.n­tnunity a:re wood-carver:s: and the religious. su:bj.e:cts which they choose in their carving fit them: for impersona,tion: on the stage. T1hey strive to put a1 suul into the pieee of wood hefoTe them rus: a sculptor' s1trive:sJ to ca.rve out into real life his eon­ception ; · and, in doing this, they uncon:s,ciou.sly develop the art of realizing and p:ort.ra~ing tha,t which the n1ind eunceives. Thus t.he~y live: in the .atmnsphere of and their daily occupa­tions atre in line with religious1 life. vVhen on the stage they ~ trive to approach the cha,racters: · they are portraying full of holy awe. a1nd paiS1siona1te :fervorr'; allld w'e , thus: have al nlas:ter­pieee of religious feeling, which has been preserved . intact for In ore than t ·wo h u.ndlred and fifty yeair8.

The country surroundijng, the pla,ee of performing the play lends illlspiration aJiid.' be1aurty. to the whole picture. T'he pictuT'e:squeness: of wood and river a'nd! mountain blends: with the ha.Uovved' s:cenes:. The plaleidi blue wa:ters1 of the1 Amm,er, the ca:s1tled era,gs of the lofty Alps; with thejr wooded heights:; the lord.ly pleaJS:Uire horuise:s1, in cont.raJsrt. w;ith the coquettish villas. of the tiny villages; dignified' b~ the time-t-inted: ruins of fl:; mona1stery, make a1 natural background for the presenta­tion of the play which delfies the taste or sikill oif the; n1os.t ac­complished a;rtist to supplant. - High u1p on the peaks of the snow-capped mountiwins a1re Ininiatu.re Calvaries! with the three cros:s.es standing1 ourt d!istinctly, while leading up to each Oa.lvary are twelve stones., the Stations: of The Oros:s. The sides of the road le:ad'ing up to this unique spot are lined with images of the ~1adonnas1 for "T'he way to the pres'e1ntation of the Pa1ssion Pla,y should he ru wa~ of Pena1nee .. " Orverlooking an on the highest peak of the taH Kofl sta:nds1 a grea1t . 'vhite Cross· which the pe1as:arut:s erected more than two hund1red years a:go, s~hedding a! B·enediction o;ver aill. T:he faith of the peasants ]jke- the n1ounta,in aiir · penetra,tin.g· every nook and

' corner of their hnn1ble mountail1J ho1n1,es, wafts into theh ..

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hearts and souls,· the halm of peace a:nd ha ppiiless. They are throug~l their realh;tic faith :rnade "'IYOrthy to offer up to God a sa.crifice V\' hich is seeond anly to tha,t, offered up on the aHa.r during the Sacrifice of the n1:ws:s; atnd su rely it ·must be a pleasing sight to God 'to see sueh an exa·mple on earth of. real \ piety and worship unsta ined! by any thoug,hts of worldly gain or better:rneut.

It. is to be regretted thart the senthnerut in fa1vor otf keep~ ~ . . { '

ing the Passion :Pla,y i'n Obera~n1n1e:rgau is dying out. 'The in11pressrion that "like a: n10Utnt.arirr :f:lol\ver it, w:ould not bea.1· transplanting" sree:rns a.pp:r·op·riat.e whh the original ide:at of the Play. All adYainces t ~.i: outs lUl'LS· to :rnake: of it a. inoderrr d raana ha.ve been religiously arnd sternly refus.ed. In the ea;rly history of the: play, the presenta~tioni wa;s often beset with :rnauy obsta,cle:s, and, at one time the pla:y was: forbidden by the Ba:va.rian go-vern:rnent, on the groun:d:s. that it was not co·nduci-ve to the enlightenment of1 the people, and · not in keeping· ·with the existing non-bdief. . The pa.ris:hioners~, how­ever, showed ·what a strong' spirit for the Cartholic faith df\velt a.1n0.ngst t.he::rn by presenting pettition after petition to the government, until permiss ion was: gra1nted: allow'ing the per­for:ruanee of the P'a:Ssion Play. N 01w "'IV€1 fear not tha~t the p~resenta.tion of ther Pla(Y will he f'orbidtden, but thart t he con­course of fa;s.hionahle visitors1 who throng to the perforn1ance~r: ,

will gradually have the effect of in1;pa1iring its1-ge:nuinenes1s, and si:rnplicity. Then too, the faet thati a; short time ag.o the P'a.s­sion Play in t"'lventy-one acts wa1s: presented in the Oolis,eun1 at San J1"'~randsco, by at east of one· hundred characters, a1ided by three hundred supernumeraries~, a1 chorus of tw'OI hundred voices., and an orchestra of fortry pieees., to an audien ce: which filled the vast stru:ct~ure to it:Si dloors, increa1ses. our fears that the Play w.ill be conunercializedl. The P:arstsrion Play of the Wes;t, was w'ritten by F 'ather Joseph Krou:s of the: Franciscan Or de:r. The effect on the audience was one of the :rnost reverent attention; and att. ti:rnes. it m·ovedi tl).em to t ea:rs arnd e-ven s:ohs, which cotiJd not. be rest~a~ined. It is: a good thing t hat SO many thousands can. rec·eive t,h e benefits of' \Vitnessing this Play, com:ri1en1orart:in·gi the Pas~s.ion of Ghrist, but it is to be · feared that thist mos;t, sacred of an dramas will be made con1n1ompia;ce and commercial, a,s1 a, result of mercenary m·eth­ods. vVhen the Passion Pla:y origina·te:d the people1 decided to give the' Play only once in ten yea:r'"S;, in order that it n1ight not

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be cheapened by frequency, but · if the Passion . P'lay hecon1eB universal in .AJnerica, it wHl frust.ra,t e: the hopes -of the pe.ople of Ober'a:riHnet·g-a:u. · ·The profits1 o·f the Pla.y ' ar·e divided into

: four parts, the first, part going to the poor, the s-econd to de·­frayi_ng the erx:pense:s1 of the plary, the third for the hospita~l, the· school, and other ins1titurt.ions of' the villa,g-e; the fourth is an hono~Jt~rium for the · actors. So far little· a~tt~ention has been paid to the n110neiJ mecruing: front the Play, but, the great

. profits which undoubrt.edly will be received this year ·and e•nsuing year:s: nla.y Ina[' the genuineness of it. - Thus we per­ceive many things. ·conspiring ag~a1ins•t those s.iinple · de·vout peasants of Obera1Inn1erg,au to rob the1n. of their unique and so1einn act of worship which s till pnsses:sesr a:ll the stre:ng~th and purity of its· first presentation. · -

Therefore le·t us all e~a,rnesitly hope · that the Pas:s~ion Play of Oberanunergau: n1ay continue .stHl unblen1isl1ed and untaint­ed by worldly 1notives, as1 a1 Inounta~n flo•wer inclig·enous! to tha.t country; that thiSi Play which has fo;r its1 subje·ct none ort.her than the Passion of Ohris1t n1a.y serve to keep the. people of Obe·r:an1n1etgau, as1 well a:s all thoHe! who a1re fortunate enough to Yvituess it., ev·er fa1ithful to the trust God' has pla:ced upon them in this life.. L1ert usi trust tha1t any desire on the part of s;peculat1ng n1en to eorrtipt or con11n1ercialize the Pla,y a1Si 3J

Inoney-Inaking schelllliel, "\vill be firmly and religiously frowned at; that the villag·ers· "\vill eontinue to hand down fr'mn. g,en­era,tion to generation the Passion Pla1y as. an inviolable trust.; and that all who "\Yitnes.s the Play 1111a~ he able: to respond to Anton Lwng's call, "Betet, betet 1nit uns," ~ pra.y, pray "\Vith us!

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WELCOME TO FATHER HICKEY W. J. STEPHENSON, A.·B. '10

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Delivered on Class Day, June 19, 1910

s vVE Ineasure the greatness of a.n individual by the infiuelllee he has) exer·cised for the betterment of hu­manity according to the S>tandard of Chris,tian ethics, .so likewis:e do we m~easure the greatness: oif a naition

by the p.rurt it has played in the advancement of civilization through the deeds of its~ Christian men and women. A<ecord- · ing to this criterion we unhesitaltingly as.se1rt that, no other nation in proporrtion to area andl population has contributed more ·to the betterment. of humanit.y\ tha.n has ''the little lsi­land beyond the sea."

(F'rom that s~a:cred .soil, oft bedewed· with the blood of con­seerarted virgins and other holy ma1rtyrs, millions of most gen­erous, God-fea~ring, L~ibert;y-loving .souls1 ha.ve gone forth into mlmost every part of the known world, souls: thait harve been nurtur'ed and strengthened by thart swblime Faith, which een­turies, of relentless pers,ecution in their nart;ive land h.a:ve failed to pervert or des,troy.

w ,e need only eornfine our visrion to the limits of this glorious republic in orr1der to rearlize the vvond:erful influence of Ireland's. Sons and D~aughters1. Whether you gaze tovvarrd the frozen north, or the baln1y south, the cultured· east, or the bustling w·est, you will find that in every sphere of honest toil and noble endeavor, lrelarnd's children harve left the undeni­able im1;)ress of their Ohrisrtian manhood and womanhood.

In every depair'tment of co·mmerce, . la:bor a.nd seience, their influence and power ha,ye been felt. Their willing hand:s haYe constructed ra.ilro-aJds, built out industries, and now their brilliant minds1 direrc:t .them. _Their ·. appreciation of An1erica.n freedom is evidenced by ·their valor in w.a,r, their virtue in pea,ce and by their s:entiments of lofty patrioti-sm, which frequently resound thrl()·ugh the haHs of Obngress. It is not necessa.ry to particularize in amy special department of human endeavor, in order to den1onstrate the ability a.nd the

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energy of Catholic ireland in promoting the welfa,re of h urnan society.

But tonight our thoug)lts are turned towal~ds, a bra,ve a:nd gentle soul "\Vho enters the intellectua,l a:renar, clad in t4e hu1nble g.a:rb of a Cistercian Monk, to battle far truth, against the destructi,ve forces of fa1se philosophy. From his peaceful hom~e, in old Mt. M:ellery, where the a,tD:lrOsphere is e:ver laden w~th holy thoug1hts and devorut aspirations, which constantly ascend to the . throne of Mercy in behalf O'f a world deluded by vanity a1nd sham.e--yeaJ, a world an unmindful of n1.arn's

· reaJ purpose and his ultimate end-from out those consecrat­ed haJl,s wherein none but the holy m:a,y d.well Rev. Father Hickey through the pa:ges of his' work, emits brilliant raysi of philosophic thought, which show fo['th the beauty of that Truth ever ancient and everr new.

vVhen we ~onsid:er the eminent pos:ition ·which this hum­ble Ois:te:rcian has already a tta,inedJ am'ongs~t modern phiioso- \ phers, our m~inds are carried! back to the da(Ysl when arnother Gistereia:n was obliged to lewve his monastic pearce in defense of truth to enc'Ounter and' cru:sh the most fallnous dialectidan the world had ever known. :M:osrt of yorm aa:-e fallnilia,r with that famous meeting at which the leade:cs of thoug)lt were ass:em­bled to witness what they expected would be the greatest intellectua,l combart of all timesr. The rationalisn1 of the m.ighty Abelard! hald swept arcross the entire continent, his fan1e wa1s the topie orf the day ; he hadr destroyed . sc hools1 of lung established repurtartion and his, doctrjnes had p!ervaded almost every sanctum~ of thoug1ht, . until even some -of God's elect were deeei veld by hiSi skilful sophistries.

Quietly and unostentatiously comes that holy Cistercian, the humble St. B-ernard; invoking the aid of Divinr• Assist­ance; his eounte:nance shj~ning with the refulgent rays of enlightened faith, eonsrcious: of his orwn nartive weakness: com­pared to the tra1ined intellect of his opponent, yet strengthened by the aJ>morur of tha,t F'arith~ which overcO!Illes the world, a!lld totailly demolishes the theorie1s:, a!lld1 challenges1 the champion of rationalisn1 to de:fend his pernicious doctrines. But the haughty Abelard could only reply "I wHl not answer the 0 •.,,4--"""' o " I

:].~LC.l c1an. This is the ,sam,e a:ns;wer which the ra;tionarlis:t and mater­

ialist: of toda·y make to the humble dis:eiple of St. Berna.rd,

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whos1e voice co1nes. to :t;ts, across the Atlantic.. They will ·not, ior they cannot ans.wm··, be·cause truth ever remains a.s unas­sailable to forces, of e:rror', a:s does· the rockbound sho.re, to the splwshing· of the waves. '~

And a,s1 the lovers of truth in the twelfth century, wel­cmne!Cl St. Bernard, so t,oo d'o we of the twentieth extend affectionate greetj,ngs t.o -Ireland?·s, latest . cha~mpiou in · the cause of truth. vVould that the veil of prejudice a:ncl bigotry '\voulcl drop frO>m before the vision ·O·f 1na.ny noble1 s-ouls; who are deluded by va1in. and pretentious sophis1t.s, '\vho-s-e blatant n1outhings djs:s1en1inate fa,ls.eho,od' instead of truth; produce d~isturhance in pla,ce of pea:ee · and: · disp·ens,e, m:ental pois.ou where they should p~oduee intellectual vig1or.

But the cause of truth will never Ia.ck defende1:.s so long a!S we have a Ziglia,ra: and· a, ·Hickey to ·1nouid the weapons. for its. defense and a R.ivardJ and a. B.ergill' to tea:eh us how to use the1n. To an the classie:SI thart ,are t-o follo-vv us· up to the coflir­eted heights1 of College . Gr'adua:tion we cheerfully connnencl F:a.ther Hickey. . vVith hiln for . their guide through . 1n.azes of philos;ophy, they need) not, fear' the quagmir'es o.f doubt, the an1bus:cades of error nor the devious pa:ths of sophis,try.

In eonclnsion, we expr'e:s;s. the hope that every earnest s:tudent, seeking fbr the truth, 1nay take for -his · con1 panion aucl g'uide, M1is clojster'ed' sage, '\\71hose soul, i1lun1ined with the light of Fari.t.h, finds1 eonsrtatnt jo~ys in meditating on tlfe s:uprmne ·T'ruth atnd' in· the conten1pla!tiO>n of supm'·nal Love.

Tile' COllln1unity of St. \Tjat.(n-- is- on'e o.f seve:ra,l religiorus con:grega:tions over which' Cardina1l . Vh1ce:nzo \Tannutelli pre~­s.ides; as lH~Ot·eetor. ' T1o these the per~6nality of the g,rea,t E·ucharigtie Ca:r!dinal is es1pecia:ili dea,r, for it js upon then1 thwt the graiciotis: chur'ehn1a:n lai\rishes his: 1nost constant, ea1·e, and in their behalf he spen.cLst a laLrge porrtion of his busy tin1.e. The \ T]atoria,nsi esteemed it no slig·ht privilege then to have an hour ~('t a.pa1rt. for them by his Gra:ee, our thoughtful a.reb­bishop, d II rLng whieh they l11ight ha.ve thelir be·loved ca,r'Clinal

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HIS EMINENCE V I NCENZO VANNU'l 'ELLI Cardi12al Protector of the Clerics of St. Viator

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Protector aJl to themselves while oDJ his brief visit to Chicago. A peculia~" cir~cums.tlaill.ee which .srtil1 enhances the · · s;ingular fa~or was the fact thart the s:ons of St .. Viaft,oir were invited by the a1rchhishop to be the first to greet the eai~dinal a1fter his arrival in the city. With eag~el'l joy a1nCU filial reverence Fath~ ers: and BrotherSJ from far ailld! nea1r aiS-semhled in the patrlor of the archbishop'.SJ residienee at 9 o'elock a.. m. Sept. 26.

They had; not walited! lo,ng when the good archbishop ca'ime a1ccompanying the veneralbl.e cardinal; it 'vas an impressive rnom·ent, not .so much by the m:a1jesrty .. of authority .as by the charming go1odness and' the s;i.mJple kindne:ss1 of thes·e two grea,t churchmen. The archbishop present~ed th~ vis1it1ors to the cardinal aiSi m~emhers of aJ brarve baitrtalion of his eceiesiaBtical

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militia! and: withdrew·. The c:atrd'inrul found among his .caUers severa1l O'ld, and very dear friends:. The V. Rev. )Father Rob­ert, 0. 8. V., of Bruss1els, ~ecently elected! vicM" of the co:rrqnu­nity; the V. R.ev. Fa1th~r Drucharme, 0. S. V., provinciail of Montreal; the V. Rev. F 1aJther O:Q.airlebois, G. S. V., provinciaJl of Chieago; the R.ev. F:atthers1 Dug~a.s:, Rivatrd and Laplrunt.e who all had the privilege of calling upon his Ellninenee in R:ome.

The cardinal in his aHocU!tion to the little group of Via­toria:nSJ urged; them~ to continue by their energietie effo,rts to des<erve t,he approbartion and encoruralg1ffillJmtt of the g:rea,t arch­bishop· in whose diocese they~ are working. He had but con­gra~tulwtions for the resru>lts aecm.p.plished by this little band of Christian edruc:a.tor.s in this part oif the immense field tha,t America unfolds to apostolic activity. "How encoura:gingi is the pasrt, how ip..srpirin.g the' future! Oontinue to s'en:d forth from. your .s~ehQolsl ailldl colleges gol()ld m:em. for the church, the sta:te aind the home. R:ediou1ble yoru.r efforts am.d your nulllJber:s. T'he Christian school is an indispensable means for the renewa1l of .all things in Christ. ·T[he a1ge need'S' you, your greart coun­try needs you, the Church needs youi and. thrice bles's,edJ will he the home where the father and the son:s have lea:rned the lessons: that yoruJ teach to· childhood: and youth."

The ea:rdinaJ, upon the reques:t of V. R.ev.' F ·arther Oha1rle­bois:, G. S. V., imparted his special blessing to all the mem­bers of the con11lllunity of the province of Chicago, to their pupils· and parishioners·.

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R.ECEPTION TO V. REV. FATHER ROBERT, C. S. V. Vicar General of th~ Clerics of St. Viator

Very Rev. Father Robert, Vicar General of the Clerics of St. Viator, arrived at St. Viator college Septe·mber 29, ac­companied by Very R,ev. P :aJther Ducharme, G. S. V., Pro·vin­dal of the Oanadia:n ProiVince and V. Rev. Fa.ther J. ..A ... Charlebois, 0. S. V., local Provincal. Fa;ther R.obe!rt is visit­ing the jnstitutions in charge of the Olerics of St. Viator as represrenta;tive of. the Superior General, whom old a:ge pre­venU~ from. makin~ such a1lli ext,ended! trip. T'he students v\Te1re as:s:embled on the steps of Mrursd.le Hall to greet the distin~ guished, visitor on his1 a1rriva1l, the Oolumbia.n. Gu~~d's• a,eting . · as aJ guard o:£ honor.

On the following day a; formal reception was, tendered to Father Robert by the srt.ud1e1nts in the giylllJnrusiium. Fra:ncis A. Oleacy, president of the srenior ela;ss, read a1n address of wel­come which was replied to in feeling terms~ by Farther R.o:bert, who gra1nt.ed the .students a1 "grand conge~" a1nd then shook hands with every one of them.

The address of welcome a.nd F 'a1ther Roihert's' reply were as follow:s :

Verry Reverem·d Fa.thetr Rob·ert: 1'o me the signal honor ha:s been assig,ned of extending

to you the greetings of the students a.rid fa1cul ty · of St. Via1tor college. The ,student body knows a;nd feels thart ru Cle1ric of St. Viator is1 at home whenever he corme1s1 within the influence of whart in the pwrlanee of this insrt.itution is known as the: Via­toria:n spirit; hence to ·sa~ thart you are we-leom·e . by the faculty were .superfluous. We rejoiee with our teachers' a!lld superiors in knowing1 thart yorn_.r advent will Ughten their cares and increase their joy. Your coming iSI that of a, farther to his expectant children, for in your person js: repres~ented that grand old man whO.m: Provid·ence has1 blessed with a: length of da,ys: even beyond the s1eripturaJ y·eail"s: in order that his young and vigororus eommunity 1nay prosper, under the djreJC­tjon of his wisdom! which grows1 1nore fruitful every da.y by rea·son of his eonstantly incfleasing experience and sanctity.

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VERY REV. FA,THER ROBERT, C. S. V. Vicar General of the Clerics of St. Viator

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T·HEi VIAT'OR.IAN 21

' As: t:Q.e repres.entat.ive of the Superior Gene~ral of the Cleric·;_, O'f St.~ Via~or, the ·venm~arble and the1 beloved Fa:ther L~joic, we greet yo{!.. and bid you welcomie. Since '\Ve ca,nnot greet in per~on tl;la:t fa:therly father, that exen1pla:ry religious:, ·. that wis~ and· prudent rulm·, that just n1an who for nigh a. quarter of a. . century ha1s stood a.t the hehn, g;u,jding the bark which wa.s launched by the S1adntly F ·a.ther Querbes, we earnes.Uy beg of you V·ery Reverend Father, to bera,r our 1nessage of love to hilu a.nd tetll him that. t.he .srturde:nts at. Bourbonna.is of the p·r esent generation have but one de·sire, namely, to be . \vo:rthy expone,~ltsr of the t,e-achi:ng of the SiCYllS1 of St. Via.to,r: T'ell hin1 that w )fat the collerg:e has ev.et~ gloried in is' our glory and our pride. It is. our a1in1: to nlainta,in and pe:rpetuarte, with tha1t ·increcu:,e whkh evinces! vjgorou S; lifer and hea.lthy growth; the noble· tradition:~\ the fair -nm.n e and the grand spirit which has e'\r.er cha.ra~cteJ~'jzed this' institution since it '\V~1S. b·egotten b·y . a BeaiUdoin, . baptizeu]; by a R.oy, arnd: confir1n.ed by a lVIa,r ­s;ile. Jusrt ws ad'vers:ity jn the f'ormJ of persecution in Fr'a,nee ha1s expo,s:ed the valor and virtue .of your confrere-s in tha.t c·ountry a,nd a.s, .a,, consequence has:. 1n.ade your cmn1nnnity mor~e extensive a;ncl prosperous in E1u·ope, SiO too t he: trials which. Provirlence s.ent to this ip.s.titution , has only t est ed the met;tle of the \ Tiatoria1ns: in this·· field of la:hor a.nd by proving it una.llo~ed has n1a1cle it n1ore effeetive. .\'Vhile '\Ve s-ympa.thize w'ith your eonnnunity in Fram,ce andi deplore the statte to which the enmnie'S . of our holy reUgion ·have' llirought the · eldest daughter of the Ohurch, we ·ferel confide:nt that right vvill pre­vail over 1night, thart the rege111eration of the land of Joan of Are is, in the S''\YOrd· of truth '\vield·edl by .the exiled religious a1nd fadthful clergJ! o:f that , histtoric• nation. JYiay ·the God of 1night, the God of right n1:aike you and your e<:><Ininunity srtout of · he1aLrt, strong of arm, and ke!en of intellect in the strug1gle which the exiled re.Ug1iou·s1 .arre waging in defense otf p1~in:ciple. vVe know, Very ·R.everr~end Farthe:r, tha,t yo.ur zca,l, your ta1etnt and your virtue pla:ced you in the: forefront of the battle when, a,s: Provincial! of Vourles, the cradle of the · \ Tiatoria:n Order, you djrected your suhjeets1 when the ha111d of th e despoiler was ra1ised aga1i ns1t thmn. You prorved yourself then a. good fighte!r, fighting the g,oodl fight for Christian educa.tion, for truth, for God. This: give!S yoruJ one m.ore title to our hea:rt.y welcmne, and a. strong one, for our ad1niration goe:s1 forth t.o a1 bra ve1 sroldier, esrpeciatlly a1 soldietr of J esus Ohris;t. W er are

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22 rr_HE, VIATORIAN

glad that your visit to Am1erica was· s:o happily timed that you wer~e a.b!E;~ to witness that splendid! world ,profes1s:ion. of faith in the Etuehalristic. God, which only sueh a Cartholic country as1 Olainmial eorwld' call forth. T1o participate in sueh an ~ event mrt11s:t make yorru feel tha,t yoru have contributed: in a speeia1l manner to that voice which has ·caught up the echoes of th~ pasrt, 1nade them resound in the pres1ent, allld reverber~ arte through the centuries tOi corme, proclaiming tha1t God reigns in the hea~ens' by His: might and upon our all ta.r.s by His love. The dialnlond ju:bilee of your Order in Canada which ga~thered atround the devoted Superior of that prorvince, our estee·med guest Very R;erverend· jF:a1ther Ducha.rn1-e and his zealous c.o-lalborers1 Sio many. loyal aJlumni, friend·& and bene­falctor'Si, has shown to yoru horw fruitful the mother of our province has be1en. W,e take this OCCaiSion while eongratu.lai'c-ing and welcoming: you V,ery Reverend Father H:obert also to . felicit~arte and greet your dJistinguished companion Very R.erv- · erend Fruther Du:chaJrrne. We want to tell ' F~:the~r w hart; he already know.s thalt the students a1s well a1s the fa:culty o.f St. Viator coUege rejoice in the prosperity of his province a;s~ n1a.nifes.ted in the recent jurbHee a1ndt that they hope and pra.y tha.t the Lord mtruy extend his: wis;e and paterri.ail administra)-bion into the d'istarnt futurre. Y ou!r kind fa~ce has mirrored itself in our souls befiore, dear F1aither, and w-e have felt, when-ever, in . eonjuri.Dig: up the memories of the pa1srt tha,t image ha!S come ba;ck to us:, ain in:s~piraJtiOJn tOi think kindly and to aiet charitalbly . . We harve other reaiSons to be grateful t:o yoru· d,eatr Father . Drucha:rme, and the ·srtrongesrt is the interest which you manifested in our welfare when despite the sacrifice which it enta1iled' you willingly acceded to the desires of your Superior · Genera1l in giving your a:ble associate Very R,everendi Fa,ther Ch.a1rleboisr t:01 this province a~s it.s~ head. We appreciate the sa1crifice which you made nort only because through it the influence o:f the Viatorrh11ns' has been . extended in our country, and other students in new colleges have been: mad:e the fortu-nate recipients of its bles;si.ngs, but principally becaus'e in the two yea:rs1 thart Farther O!harleboiSI ha.SI been with us he ha1s ma!de usr feel tharb he is not only a true ·father to the religious who are the immediart,e olbjec.iJ of his· care but that he is~ like-wis-e a g01od father to ervery Via,todan student. We would eons1ider our filia,l dU:ty far from fulfilled Very R.everned Farther Oharrlebois, did we not profit by this occasion to con-

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THE1 VIATORIAN 23

grartulate you upon the hea1lthy gro\\:th which has: . taken plwce in your province, ma,inly by reason o.f yqur prudent zeal. '" e appreciate your kindly visits and we horp·e that durino· the

' 0 year they ma.y be frequently repeated.

· 1 vVe hope Very Rev;erendi F:ruther Rolbert, that your' sojourn , in the United StalteSI illlaly be very pleasant rund that when you return you will cherisih as one of your most plea1siant Jneinori e:3 · your visit to St. Via1tor college.

Revevrend Fa,thers a.nd 1Brother8'. De:ar Friends: I a[l]]J ve,ry confu~s1ed, a:t. the heaa:-ty and be:aurtiful welco1ne

which yort.l1 ga;ve m:e yesterday, amd' at, the lovely \vord'Sl which you just addres1S1etd: to me by, the lips of this young but allready

' eloquent .speaker . . In turn for yo1ur kind eomplin1enrts, I should be delighted, if I eoUJld ea1Siily express you the feelling.s of my hea;rt. Unfortunately; a1s' you obs1erve, I cannot spe1ak E·nglish well. Excuse m1e, plea:se, and; be . indulgent for rny strange a1nd bar'ba!rous1 pronunciartion, wh:Lch will annoy your ears·.

About: four months a:go I w:as1 saHing from Oherborurg (France) to New York, on the great German liner, Kais;e1rin Augusta~ Victoria with' over three thous~arnd passengers, emi­grants: for the m:ost part, coming from aill the countries of Erurope, to settle here in the Unit.ed; Stat,es:. There were Ger­mans, Po1les~ R.us:sia,ns, Bohernialns:, Italians, Greeks, Syrians:, Jews alnd many orthe·rs. TihO!s,e pe!Ople 1na.nifested no mark of sorrow, or sad'ne1ss~, not even an appa.rent regret. Old m~en

aind you:ri·~ men, poor and' rich, all appeared' to be glad and hopeful. Why this1? thought I to . myself. Djd they not leave their nart.ive land, their sweet home, their de:a.r pairAnts?

How could it be, tha1t they a!ppea;red without any ca1re? vVhy? B:eeause, if they left~ aH . behind . then1, they saw _ beforG them· a. la1nd of irreSii:srt,ible attraction, the well nam•ed land of intense . life, ; la1rge horizons, wiide hope:s, and true• freedom, your own lmnd. That a1ttra,ction I now feel in n1y turn, atnd I s,incere•ly decla1re thait I am, j f nO.t perhaps tota.Ily Aanerica.n, a,t least ha1lf American.

Land of freedon1:! How strongly thrills a French hea.rt. a.t this word. It is France that helped your forefathers to win politic freedom. It is a Freneh artist--you . a,re arwar8 of it-who cast tha,t allegorical and gjgantic statue whjch towerS! ahove the innnense harbor of New York, I)bert:v en light-

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'l'llE1 VIAT'OR.IAN

ening the1 world. But now a1las1! it is France whose gove:rn.­llH:'lH strang'l~'S' liberty, drives a,wa\Y the r eligious orders; eloses. the C:a1tholic Sichools, and deprives the Church of her property. Oh, n1y friends1, after ha,vin.g: seen, a1s1 I did, so rnany Slchooh~, coUe:ges, .smninaries1 dosed, .so many monks and nuns: rohbt:d and :fO'I"ced to exile, so rnany flourishing estahlishntents tail­ing into ruins:, whrut plea,sure, \Yhat joy to experience at rnee:t­ing you here, fre1e tea1chers~ free s~t.udents1 in a sp:lenclid a1nd really free coUe1ge, ha1ppy and f're:e citizens of a great and really free1 republie. Learn how to a1ppre~ciate your~' good for­tune! for what it is worth.

And now, let m~e tell you tha1t I was loving you before ~.eeing you. The newspa.pe,rsl, the Via1torian and the New ,;v odd~ often brought to rn:e beyond. the ocean1 your nan1e1s., your succesis1es, the g1aornes \\r-hich you \Vin every year a,t ba,selb:aill, and, wha1t is: better, your , good spirit, your' piety, your a ttachme~n t and devot~erdne·s:s-. to y ou1-- Aln1a1 }\f,a;ter. I . love:d yolll ag1a1in, because long1 a1go · I personally knew· s~everaJ

of your: . z·eailous1 andJ distinguished profes;sors:. Fr. R~iva.rd, Fa1ther Laplante, Fa1ther 0'1VDahoney, your pres,Emt a:nd so kind pre~s.id.ent, your for1ne!r and' ne'V'er"-to-be-forgotten President, F 'ather 1\l(a,rsrile, your' aietive, good! a:nd virtuous' Superior Provincial, V e:ry Rerv. F 'arther" CharleboiS'. T1he~ he­carne my friends atst SiOIOn as I knev\r, then1. You, pupils1 of n1y best friendst .and of n1y confreres, you a:re ahnost rny owri pupils. ·

For a:ll thes,et reasons I greet you with joy, pupilS! of St. Viator; I greet you in rny ·oyvn naJ.ne, and in the name of the Right ~ev. Superio1'" General, FUJther Lajoie, the great a:nd veneralble old. man, \Vho sent rne here frorn Belg'iUl11. I will rerna1in a: \Vhole \veetk in the rnidst. of you, living your life, sharing in your joyful a,rnuse!lnents, trying to g·o back to. your careless atge, arid: r1e!eollecting the happy tirne:s during which I presided oveT' a1 eoUe:~e like thjs:, in Paris. I greet you and tha:nk yoUI not only · for your reception a'nd your addr~sts., but yet n1ore for the pleasure which you will procure me during rny VJS'It.

Perrnit n1e, in finishing, to aiCTd one w:ord of advice. You are he,re, at the college, a;eeording to whart, I re:ad in the annua~l eata.logue of the eolle1g1t\ principrully to buHd up your cha1r­acter, to rearlize that a,t aill t,imes rig·ht eonduct is es;s:entia~l to 1nanhoocl. Hen1ernber this faithfullv. It is' cha,ra.cter that . v

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THEi VIAT'OH.IAN 2.5

m~tters. in life. A n1an is: not what he has, but ·'" hat he is, not wha.t he sa,ys, but 1vhwt: he .(loes' . . · :Jlake it your principal business: to build up partiently, courageous:ly, w·ith the help of the Divine grace, your eha.ra,cter. You will be useful to your fe:llowmen in' the measure in which you are · true: to yours-e,lf, to the principles of rea,son and fa.ith whirh n1ust ins:pirei ana a:ctuat~ your life. Ye•s1, wo·rk this:, build up your character, a character, \vhich can defy an a1ction of tirne, a cha.racte·r that can stand the tests' of this lo\v world, a. cha.ra.cter · tha,t will des.e:rve- the r'ewa1rd of God, and s~ecure you, after tilne, a gloriOUS• ert;ernity in the land beyoncl the stars.

·I forg-ot something. There is. indeed a thing, which the pupils in E1urope wre. very fond: of, and, I suppose, in America too. I willingly grant yon w "Grand. Conge." You will take it according to the judgrnent of the R.ev. Fa,ther President.

------~~·----~-

' CHILD· FA.NCIEiS.

When yet I dwelt in childhood' s: reahn, By, fa.ncy's! power swayed,

I thought the moon a ~ilver ball, vVith which the ang.els played.

I thought the rnyriad starrs a1bove, \iV ere dia,rnond:s' spa,r'kling bright,

The jewels .s·et in crowns: orf' sa.int.s, R.efle.cting heaven's ljght.

And when the• gentle tee1ning rain, · Besprinkled glade a.nd glen,

I dee1ned· perhaps the a1ngels wept, For s·ins1 of ·wieked men.

T'he: fl eecy snorw I long~ believed, vVasr down fron1 cherub's wing,

~Phe· whispering win~h~ blof\Yn o'er the lea The psaln11S1 that angels: s•in g-.

But childhood's, dreaJns· now long ha1ve! fl ed Disrobing- n1e of Inirth,

~ly happiness was grea1te:r then vVhen Heaiven seerned on e:a1rth.

J. A. "\V.

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26 THEI VIATORIAN -

DEATH OF FATHER LAMBERT

Father Lambert i.s dead, Christianity ha.s lost 'a chain­pion, and the New York Fre~eman1'Si JournaJ mourns an editor whose pla,ce can . never be filled. · C:hris,tiatns of all deno,mina,­tion,s. feel they halVe susta,inedJ alll irr'epra~ralble! loss, ·as: they go ba1ck in men1ory to the days Bhort.Iy after the close of the Oivil war, when Colonel Ingers:oll, like an impudent, Goliarth, was challenging the Ghris~ian hosts to war, and Father LHrrn­bert, like a1nother David, issrtted from tp.e obs:curity of a1 s~m1aH

country parish where .he -w1a1S tending his flock to1 do battle . I

with . this blatant Philistine, rund s1lerw him by 1nea~:ts1 of the sling of simple, forcible Elnglis:h a:nd the pebble of logic made smooth in the brook of Faith. We of the · Church M·~lita,nt,

mourn, but the Church Tlriumpha1nt is rejoicing, for a con­queror has gone to his triumph. F'rom habit the pra;yer, "Requiescat in pa:ee," rose to our lips when we hea;rd of his death, but almost eharnged to "Ora: pro nobiiS'" when we thought this galla:nt soldie1r .srtood before the Wounded · Judge whose cause he had alwa(Ys bravely defended.

The sad news of Farther Lanrbert's dearth only reached us a1s we were going to press1, s:o .spa,ce forbids~ an extended a ppre­eiation of his life allld work, but this deficiency will be sup­plied. in our next n urn ber.

....

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THE .VIATORIAN Published ~zonthly by the students of St. Viator College, Bourbonnais, Illinois.

EDITORIAL STAFF

Editor in Chief-FRA~CIS A. CLEARY, '11.

Exchanges-J. P. O'MAHONEY, '11. Societies-FRED CONNOR, '13.

Athletics-· GERALD BERGAN, '12. Personals-· RALPH LEGRIS, '11.

Alumni- TIMOTHY A. ROWAN, '13. Locals- PETER J. CURLEY, '14.

Ente?·ed at the Bourbonnais Post Office as second-class matter

All ctJrrespondenc-e must be addressed" The Viatorian," Bourbonnais, Illinois. Subscription p'rire One Dollar per year, payable in advance. All business C071ZJnunications should be addressed to r r Business ld anager,''

The Viatorian, St. Viator Collej[e, Bourbonnais, Illinois.

EDITORIAL.

Once n1ore do 1ve co1ne forth fresh from the press to gre~et

ihe old, and to 1neet the1 new, at this, the opening of another schola~s~Ne year. As editors1 of an up to date journal, we shrull en~ea:vor to cover

Sa,zuta·tory. every pha1se of student a:etivity, a1nd with a renewed energy put forth eve,ry effort to en­eourage rull branches; of litera,ry endeavor.

Our voice, · then, will s10und the note of student effort and with the support orf r eal liv.e :students1, our monthly issue should conta,in nothing sa1ve real live interest,.

Montreal, the most Catholic city on the American con­tinent i~ to be eongratu1a;ted upon the s;ueees;s of the first

E'ucharistie Oongres1s held on the western

Euoharistic Congress.

shores' of the Atlantic. In this old Oa:na-dian eity vva,s witne1ss:ed a gathering, S'lN?h as the' Ca,thoUc Church alone could assemble, of world· fig:mres:, · bishops~, S'chola;rs, prea;ch­

ers, monks, prie1srts and laymen, all giving testimo1ny to thei r ,belief in the E,ucha1ristic God. Under thei banner of faHh, the

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THEI ·vrATORIAN . ' .

Gros!s, assembled :men aiild women of an · callings. amdJ .s·ta~tio~us

in life in the sacred' streets1 of :Nlontrea~l ·whence haiVe ·g,oiile forth noble mis:s.iona.rie,s to cope with the damgers. of the un~ trodden vvilcls, to ruttest thaJt the trut.hs1 of Christianity are still a Living :f.oroe in the '.Yorld, and that the belief of the A posrtles is. the belief of the grearber prurt of the Ohrist.iau w"Orld today. S.uch a; gaJthe,ring can not falil to g·ive a: new impetus to Catholicity on tihe Arnerican continent, and we trust that God in His mercy may make the CongTess fruitful jn a. great harvest of souls1• J\1ay W'e soon ha1ve ano·ther Euch­aristic: Congres:S in Am·erica:.

·It ·will be well UJt the beginning of this1 scholastic ye.a~r t,u spe:a·k briefly of the spirit w1hich shoruld anhn.ate the student

body. T'his· spirit malY be called.~ the coUege

CoU.e:ge SzYirit.

spirit amd consists' in an esprit de corps which cause1s1 the individua1l to overcome his privrute inclinations fo-r the sake of the public good. E'very student should feel

proud of his college, and .sho-uild do eve['ything to advalllce its interests both on .the a:thletic field .and in the class :room. Let aJl unite for the success' of the college, and if ther'e be s.ome vir ho do not like some memhers' of t:he teallllS!, for insta:nce, let the'ln "\vork by their m:oral s!Upport: for the succe1ss of the tea.Ins., for these latter do not re:present individuals but the coHege, and the success of the college rerflects; back on eve:ry student. Unite then, ·in everythin~ for the general g-ood of the co-lleg·e.

..

T'be editors of . the Viato['ian feel deeply obliged tot the 8tudents. who harve subscribed in such num·bers for the co1lege 1nagazine this yea['. Eivery s1hident shou:ld siUpport the Via­torian, for withoutJ financial a1id in the form of subscriptions it can not exist. All students~ at leasrtJ the older ones, should endeavor to contribute all"ticles for publication. · Bring in your stories, poem1s1, ·es~s~s, etc. Perhatps the fires of genius,

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29

are burning in your breast wi.thorurt any one knowing, it. Do not be a,shamed 01f the: productions. of your pen. We re1ceive mu~h wors.e contributions than your·s:.

I

The Viatoriatn desires to thank t;he Rosary l\1ag.aiZine for the use of the cuts of the Blles1s:ed Joam of Arc which appe1a1red in the l\1[idsum,mer NThilliber. Such coU!rtes~ on ·the pa.rt of such a prominent publication is a grea.t a1ssistance to college journalisJn.

Patronize the firms who advertise in the Viatoria:n. In doing this you are losing nothing., a;ndJ helping your college and worthy advertis:ers', as the Virutorian only takes advertise­Inents· of reliable goods.

----.::._ __ _

PHR;ONEil\1AjT'A. "This is. the noblest thing yet discovered under God-'s

sky," wrote Oar lyle of haii~d work, a1nd this is one of the noblest and trUJesrt sentences that ever flowed from. the pen of perhaips the grandesit of all E:nglish writ·ers. 'iV ork of all kindsi is exa,l ted, but as bl"la1in and m•ind are .SIU peri or to bra:wn and matter, m,ental work is superior' to Illianua'l wo-rk. The student is called to thh~ noblest of vvork, andl with the key of good will and honest effort ca1n unlock the goldea:L door to the court of the Inl'nlrortals. He . is cailled to inthna.te converse with minds that CaJill nat di.e, andi to live in the re131hns of intellect ra,ised a1ln11ost to infinity. This is1 the voc:a1tion of -the stude•nt, a,nd has he right therefore t;o con1plain otf hard work, when nu1nberless men are daily pwyjng fa,r heavier toll to enter the C'OU'rts of wealth a1nd birth? Ha1·d \vork is1 worship, and when it is af the Ind.nd, it Jnrukes Ina:n 1nore like God, for in his intellect main is: a1lmost' D'ivine.

Is it: not s.trang1e tha;t s·mTIJe 1nen .should find difficulty in believing jn the D·iviriity of Christ becausJe 0 1f the· v,ery aba;s.e­ment of His humanity? If H·e had com,e on ea1rth as a pr'ince o.r potentate, they would instantly a1StS!ent tha.t He was God, but does not the lowliness of His station a is man prove tha,t He wa1s. divine? If nut,n wished to invent ai God-n1an, \vould

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30 THE\ VIATORIAN

he ever ha:ve dreamed of . having hhn bo,rn in a: s·table and lea1ding a life of porvert~ and ob~curity, and dying the jgnom­inious' death of al criminail? The J ewislh ideru of the :M::~esisiah is the express:jon of how man'·s una~dJedi reas·on would depict God a,s: man. · Gold! aJo1ne could think a:nd endure the utter­Inost abasement, andJ surely in this v-ery fact we have an addi­tional proof of the D1ivinity of Ohrisrt.

Another school yea1r ha1s begun, a[ld in the course of a fe,w m1o;nths will harve rwnged i.tsel'f beside many others1 in the history of the past;. H!ow mlallly vaiin l"egrets, how 1na.ny lost moments, bow m:ainy '\Va,srted1 oppo1~tunities will this: yea:r leave behind to reproa1ch us in years to come? The pasis1a.ge of time, especially in youth, is a1 solen1n thought, wh,ich s:horuld harve its' sHllutary effe1ct OlD. aJI. Other thjngs s:top, but the stream of Time rushes on, bea1ring; us: to · the Oeea:n of Eiternity.· At the end of this; yea;r we ~shaill be one y.ear nea:rer the solution of all the questions thaJt vex our curiou's' hearts, but shall we be one year better :fittledl to receive the true solution~ This rests With each individru:all. Tim'e is1 short and rapid, but

. E\ternity is long wjth no beginning and no end, and therefore God being eternal isr the only B'eing1 who can a::fford to be s.Io.w in doing " rhat . Slhoruld1 be doone. Man not being eternal ha1S1 to hasten, lest he he1 lost 1n E ,ternity's 8ea1 hefo~e his duty has been accon1:plished. S. 1T. N.

OBIT1UACRiY.

The prayerful 'sympathy of the fa:culty and entire student borl.y goes out to Fra1nk Lcvnch of the: S.enior clepartn1ent who in the dea,th of his: heloved fa1ther sU'stained a severe loss·. Very Rev. J. P. 0'~11~honey, 0. ·s. V., attended the funeral services ailld aeted a1s deacon at the mass.

Mr. ~L Donahue of the S.emina:ry elicits, the heartfelt eo.ndolence of the faculty an·d s~t.udents, in the untimely dearth of a, devot·ed brother who wa:s. sudd,enly killed.

· In the dearth of Rev. J. H;en.nessy S.t. Via,tor's loses a friend a:nd benefa:ctor. Rev. J. P. O~Mahoney, . 0. S. V., Rev. ,V. J. Clifford, 0. S. V., and Mr. O'Brjen -of the s .e1ninary at­

. tended the funeral eeremonies . . Requ.eseant in Pace.

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ALUMNI

31

In re-opening this deprurtment, we wish to inform our ever loyal Alumni) that it will afford UIS m,uch pleasure to publish whatever items eoncernJing their a,etivities they 1nay wish to appear in these columns. "The Viatorian" offers an exceptiQnal opportunity of ,SJpeaking~, not only to the legion of fellow merr111ber:s, but. aLLso ·to the countless adn1irers hot.h in a:nfl out of c.ollege. We hope that this mlild appeal will be sufficient to e~er our table with responses.

Walter N ourie, '10, of Beaverville, Ill., last yea,r's s:tar full back is having1 the h.ficrdest game of his career a,t :Michig~an

University, this yewr. vVrulter's' opponents a~re not frail flesh and blood, but huge volUimes of Blackstone's Oomn1enta.ries. Howeve~r, vValter will not have to fig1ht the battle alone as Harry Kaa·rpern "\vill be on hand' to~ help him go through the line.

The R;ev. W. Joyce spent hisi vaca;tion at Portland, Ore­gon, with Bishop Oarrroll. Fr. Joyce was, ordained frortn our · S em:inary inr '08.

Mr. Eillimett Conway, '08, i's eng1a;ged in newspaper ·work in Sioux Oity, Ia. Old. Deadiers will remem,ber Mr. Conway

- as a contributor and. a:s:soeiate editor ofi The Via.torian. '

R,ev. J . . M:ulnd;a,y,, '05, took his degree in theology and a fellowship at W1a,Sihington, D•. Cl. Fr. ~Iunfia,y completed his corurse with hig1hest honor~' ·

Mr. Jan1es Dougherty, '08, of Piper Oity, Ill., will soon . begin the pra1ctiee of la.w. F·or the la,stt,, two year:s Jim Dough­erty has been studying larw at ths Clartholie University orf Alnffi"i C'3J.

Melchior Ooreora1n spent Thursd:a~, S,ept. 15th, among old friends .art the coUege. This; yea.r will find Melch's naane on t'he register alt Illinois' University.

Rev. John Fla,na1g:an, recently ordained is1 no"\v seeretary of Bishop MUJld1oon: and a1ssristant Cha,ncellor in the Rockford· D1ioeese.

M:r. Joseph Leg~ris,, '.08, orne of the greates:t football and baseball star.s ever prod'ueed by St. Viator's, made per~petuaJ

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32 THEi ·VIATO·RIAN

vows· i.n the order of the M:ost Holy Red:emer on August 15th. A Ia~rg:e delega1tion of friends a.nd rela:tives froin Bourbonnais attended the cere1nornies

·"Red" Kelly, '07, " rho since leaving; St. ViU~tor's hrus been ' a1tt,endin:g the law depa.r.tment of Notre D~a.me Univer:sity, has .been dra~fted by the Ofhicago "White Sox." R.ed su:cce:S:s.fully c a pta~ined the N ortre DHJID'e Va1rsi ty la,s.t s,eason.

Rev. · J. B. Shiel enterta,ined the alta.r boys fron1 St. Mels, Clhic.a:go, a1t the 'corllege .(luring the s-ummer. Since his or<fina.­tion last Ju:ne Fr. Shiel ha~s- been a1ssiisrt.ing Fr. McDonnell at S.t. Me:ls.

The Rt. ·· Rev. M1gr. · Legris, te1ac:her of Moral theology i.n the · Seminary is sojourning at OaJrlslbad, Germany, w_here he is undergoin~ a eours:e of. treartn1ent for his health. L,a.tes~t reports a~re most faiVora.ble.

Mr. S.: J. lVIiorg]an, '0'9, whQ hars been employed in the traffic derpa1rtm-ent of the Illinois1 Oentr~a~l Railroad Co., for some time will enter No:tre Datme this faJl.

Mr. Al lVIcOia1rthy, the lightning third sacker who played on the 'V.ars:ity for s:everal .s:easons has signed up with the Pittsburg Pir~art:es~. We beg~n to see pennant hopes · for the

· Pira:teg in 1911~

Our old friend T'r•oy l\1umson is at last coming in for his rights:. Lratest report.s-1 a1re ·thart he will m·a.ke the Michiga.n 'Var:sity t~his1 frull: This however is no great surpriS!e to those who sa,w him in action on ouir 'Va1rsity in '08. ·

M,r. Leo. Koenezer has' entered t:be mercantile world. Viewing the hus1inesis like m1~nner in which Leo conducted the bowling alleys· last ye~Lr. we ca.n see: nothing but su,ece.ss~ for hint in his1 ne"r ventUire.

Mir. Elugene Corcoran, la1st year"s vice presiident of St. Pa1trick's Literary and Debating Society will this yoo:r display his oratorieail powers .art the Univer.s!ity of Notre Dame.

We a1re pleasted tiO .note th.att Mr. Francis Donovan, who was so,me time ago com1pelled to g,ive up his~ studies on1 a,e­COUint of ill health, is much stronger.

Mr. Louis Bachalnt, fonner Gaitcher on the 'V a.rs,ity, ha~s hatd .a: sea1son of ill luck with D:es Moines. In breaking

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I.

33

two fingers he ha!S, . been out of the gam,e for il1Jos,t of the summer.

Rev. J os.eph PHon, who finished his Seminary eourse in '09, is: d'oing1 g;ood w'ork building up foru:r miss,ions a:round Winter., Wisieon.sin.

Im:ais R:iee wa:s v;rith us for a few hours1 on Sunday, Sep­temiber 25th. "I" will attend the Physicians; and· Surg·e:ons CbUege at Ohiea:go this yea:r.

Mr . . Arthur , Bergeron is1 pursuing1 his cour'se of studie~s · at Loyo'la University this yea~r. Our bes1t wishes attend "Doc." ·

R,ev. Jas1. W. Frierle·rich, '01, has been appointed starte Oa:tholic chaplruin for St. Char'les1 schools for boys, arnd the Geneva s1chool for g1irls.

PERSONS AND PLACES

. R:ev. J. F '. R.yaln:, G. S. V., who foe n1any years directed the fina.nees1 of the colleg:e ha1s: been: pr•omorted to the office of Prorvincia!l Proeurato1... B~efore1 becoming tre:a,s:urer of the college Father R,yan hadJ a:lso held t:he responsible po,sitions of Prefect of Discipline and Director' of Studies1, both of v;rhich offices, he :srutcces1slfully mana:g:ed. Uneomtmton bU!siness: ahility, addres:s and execUJtion: w:ere the ehara,cter'i.srtie mark,s' of F'alther Ryan as1 tre1asurer of the colle·ge, a;s ·was! plainly shmvn hy the manner in which he Ill'astered' the difficult po,sition of the col­lege im•m·ediately a,fter th:e fire. . Oong~ratula~tions alnd 'v.ishes' for sueees1s attend Fa·rther R~a,n frorm_ hi,s, host of friends.

The d:edieait:i.on of R:ev. 0. E !. MeOa:bel's1 splendid new ehurch took plaee Su:ndJaiJ, Oct,. 2. R,t. Rev. Jos:eph AlerdJi1ng Bishop of F1o~dJ Waiyn:e officiarted. M1arny distinglll~i~sthed c1,ergy­men an'd laym~en asstemhleld to ,eelehrat'e th~ event and' c:on:­gratu1ate the pa;srt:or on the .su:eces:stfUil issue of his: efforts.

The fiftieth anniver.stacy of St. Oolu1nbkille's: Ohurch, Chi-. c:a:go, w.a1s1 obs1erved with' due S!olemnity a[)Jd impres1sive ceve­morties. The eelelbrat.ion covered three da(Ys:. .Allmos:t an the clergy who orffitcia:ted! were prietsrt;s: oTda1ined from1 the pa,rish. St. Oolumbld1lers bomsts of givirig 1nore pries1ts, tio the church than any other parish in Chieag·o. The pa:stor, Hev. P. ~J.

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34 THE1 VIATO.R,IAN

T'inaru IS to be congra1tulatted! not only on occa,srion of the Golden JuhHee but bec'afn'se of the mwny improvemetnts he ere:cted in the short time he hrus been pastor. The magnificent ma1rble vestibule amdJ struirca1se, new m1aJrble altars, and th~ general improvemrent ·Of the premirs:es put S.t. Corh1mhkille's among the first class churc:hesr of the city.

The enrorllment of studemts at pres:ent exceed·s tha:t of any former year. The number is still increasing and bids fruir to taoc the caprucity of the college to the utmost.

The found>artions of a building1 to be used as a.n infirmary which will be in cha~rge of sdsters have· just been completed. Next year sristers will be · here to ca1re for the students in sickness.

R,ev. J. El. Bielair, 0. S.. V., has1 .succeeded Rev. J. F. R~an, 0. S. V., as trea;surer. )Father Belruir's ability rende:rs him thoroughly fit to direct the finarnces of the: institution.

ReV. P. F '. Brown, C. S. V., left re:eently for the C'ruthorlic University a;tr Washington, D··. C. · F 'ather BrDwn will take up a speciaJ cou:rs1e in · Theology, and likewise pursue a, couT·se in missionary work. The many friends of :F'ather B~rown at the crolleg~ wish him success in: hi~ studr1es a:nd will be anxi­ous to we:lc'Oirne him barck at the end of his c'Ourse.

I .

Rev. C. J. St. Amalllrt has been appointed assistarnt at Maternity church, BouTbonnrul.sr_, to fill the vacancy left by the removal of Rev. J. E. Belruir, C. S. V,, to the eollege.

F'rom arcrOSiS the plruins' we received glowing reports of Corlurnbus College, Ohamherlain, So . . Dakota. The student register of last yea1r ha1s1 been doubled. The new building: is well under construction amd will soon be ready to m.eet grow-ing demands'. , · . - .

Rev. J. D·. Kirley; 0. 8 . . V., amd W. J. Olifford, C. S. V., returned from their Etruropean trip just before the opening of school. We ma,y expect illustrated' lectures o,ccasionally from the H.everend }F:a;ifuel~SI during the Ion~ winter mont hs.

Rev. J·. V. Rheams1, 01. S. . . V., has been promoted to the position of Director of StudieSr. The well kno·wn abilities of Father Rheams· 1ea,ve no room for doubt that the high stand·-

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THE' VIAT'OHIAN 3u .

a1rd, 3Jnd. efficiency of the courses, offered by the college will be maintained and even improrved.

Charle~ S.hea, student orf '09, after having undergorne an operation . forr arppend:icitis art St. Marg1a1ret's. hospital, Ham­mond!, Ind., is still lying dam:~er'ously ill. That he ma~ safely is~soo from danger and have a, spe~edy rec:orvery wa:s the prayeT orffered by the entire colleg~e bod:y.

A.mongl the .recent visitors ·were: Rev. J. Sammon of Peoria; Rev. P. H. Drurrkin, Rantoruf; Rev. J. E!. Meyers, Good­rich; Rev. J. T1. Bennett, Ka:nkake:e'; R.ev. W. Granger, Kam­kakee; Rev. Fr. MicGuire of Bart:avia1, Ill.; Rev. J. Larbrie, :Nlo­menee; R~ev. F 'r. Ortrow:stki, Kalllkaike:e; Rev. Fr. Ha!JeS of Chi­Cagio·; Rev. J. Arms:trong:, F 'a;rmer City; R;ev. J. B. Shiel, Chi­cago; Mr. D·. }F. Our ley, M:r. A~ l\1Ja['!stbon, Mrs'. J. O'Leary,

. Mr. }F·. F'isher, 1\fr.s'. W. Walter:s1, Mr. and! M'rs1. Fraill:k Mur­phy, ~ir. Charles B~rown, M:r. John Winsor, ~fr. and M'rs. Cashen.

...

SOCIETIES.

T'he Class '11 is starting: forth upon the last lap with enthus,iasm and confidence. They have kept their ranks' in­tact for three long yea1rS1 and they hid fair to contdnue a guid­ing star' to the lower c:ltaiSiS'In'eln. Tfll'ey h~ve already beg;un class activities1, aS' they are IMl.iking: prepatra,tions to appe'a:l to the social s1ide of the collegiate .s,tudents in the way of a1 ban­quet. N o'v that the Seniors! have "sta:rted the baill rolling," the ·Juniors and "Sophs'' will not be long in falling into stride. The F 'reshmen, true . to their name, will soon be or­g,anized and be S'Oiliciting attent,iolll from, their dignified uppe~r dass~men. The following prog1ram1 will be rendered at the Senior's banquet in the Oollege Auditorium:

Salve, Francis' A. C!leacy, '11; Olasg Spirit, Ja:mes :NL Ji"'itzgerald, '11; Piano Solo, Ra:lph Legris,, '11; S.ocial Union, Jeremiah P. OlM:ahoney., '11; Violin Solo, Fred F. Connor, '13; Sidelights on Philosophy, Eilder Boulig.ne, '11; Vocal Solo Ha1rry Keeley, '13; Promising Lights, Gerald Bergan, '12; 'vocal Solo, Cla :renee Jaeobs:, '13; Views: of Hickey, R.ev.

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36 THE! VIAT'ORIAN ·

E; L. RJv.ard, D. 'D'.; The Student, Rev. W. J. B:ergin., 0. S. V.; T:ravels in Elurope, ,IV. J. Cllifforrd, 0. S. V.; Olo~'ing R.emarks:, ·v. R,ev. J. P. O'MaJhoney, Cl. S. V. ·

The old m·emlhe·rs. of the· Scientific Society hav~e held a n1eeting at which they formulated t:heir plans for· the corrning year. ~n importa;nt ques:tion discussed w:as the a4-Inittance of the IUtany new m:e:rnbers, who are 3./nxious to in­dulge in the frequent eoccruT'sio~ns to the ravine and otherr places of inte,restt in q uesrt of bottaJnieaJ a:nd zoologica.l speci­m,en'S.. La;s't yea!r thes'e visits resu:lt;ed in the acquis,ition of' nlJa,ny rare specin1'ens·, atnd the' Society hopes this' yea:r to be a.ble to add to its large collection. Under the able direction of Fa,ther B.rown the society should peog·ress1 in scientific work, and should be an important fatetor in increasing the interes~t of the .studoots; in the steiencesr.

We cannot overlook St. P3Jtrick'S! Literary and Deba;ting Society, which, a :lthough confined to the se,cond ye:a,r high school, has an: enviable r~ecord borth in numbers and in literary merit. The importance aind the good 'vork of this society in the high school is inesrbim:alble, arid we look forward to the tim·e when it shall include the whole high school depa,rtm,ent. The Moderator of the society, Brother Sheridan, expects: n1any new m·embe.rs this ye:aJr, a:nd he i:s n11aking plans for a 1nosrb su~ccessful year. ·

Those who admire the g1enius and power of a Demos1thooPJ~ will enjoy the deba1tes1 of the Riivard Literary and Debating S:ociet.y, which is c'Oimposed of merrnber's o.f the Senior and Junior classes. They wHl soon be winning orur a,pplause by the force of their logic.

The zea,lous: support,er.s~ of the Th-espian Club are looking over the new mJent. Those who a:re aibJe "to render an old thing new" will be m~o~:t welcorrne in this soeiety, ,;vhieh will st.ag~e a number' of college plays during the eoming yea.r for the entertainment of the Sltudent body.

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Once ag1a1in harve the d'oor~ of the Viatorian sanctu1n 9pened and sent forth the trusty scribes who 'vill g"uide~ the destinies, of the now unlettered pagBs otf 19·10-11. It is1 with a sense of res1pons:ibility the e!xcha1nge editor adjusts his pen to (

recor:d the n1·erits1 or defec~s o·1 the exchanges: tha~t a1re: daily a1rriving in the sanetu!ln. Ptdly, indeed, does he rea,lize the impo~rtant rol·e he is: called upon to play in the are•na: of' liter­a,ry criticism, and he " rill endeavor to have hj,s; pen ever in ha.r1nony with t1he la,ws of t.ruth a:n:d jus.tice. To thos:e whose

, excha~nges ha1ve ,already graced our s1a:nctu1n the s:rune hea;rty welcorn1e is: extended, a~s. also to those whose a.cqua,jntance it will be ourr1 privilege to' forn1 du1ring , the cmil'ing· ye~ar. That our relations ma1y be mos:t pleasant a:nd profita:ble the exchange editor will d:evote his1 best effort.s1. But should orur policy not m1ee:t ·with universal favor t:he Eix. Ed. will not grow di~:cou1r.a1ged a:s long as his pen i,s~ confor1nable with strict impa,rt.ial,ity. This is ·what is expected in return when criticising the productions tha!t vvill ~race our colleg~e parper.

VVhile we do not clas's the "Oatholic School J ourna1l" a;mong our college list of exchange:s, yet there · is sufficient ma;tte~J> of a high grakie in it1 to make i,t, a1 useful an1d valuaible pap·er. The September · issue is replete w'ith useful info1rma­tiolt1: for pupil's a1nd: teaiche~s. A b~ief a1ccount of the Edruca,. tional Oonven:tion at Dletro.it is one of tJhe m1any articles of this is:sue. Brother Philip F. S. , C. c:antribute1s: an able paper on the duties andl rela~tions1 of a princi~pal with his S!chool. . "\tVhile the adrvice given seems conmnonplace yet many inci­dents mentioned: a,re oft:en pra~cticailly overlooked arnd hence the necessity of the paiper. Tlhe study of ru great picture is a history of the "La1srt Supper" by Leona1:rdo Da Vinci. T'he writer toru·ehes upon the history otf the artist a:nd offers a few rema1r~s on the excellence of his work. A s1tudy of Gra,y's Ellegy ·isi a comprehensive all'ticle and possesses high litera·ry merit, doing fu'll justice to that excellent poem.

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38 THE; VIATOR;IAN

Th0 8ociety of the Divine "\Vord, T'echny, Ill., . is1 to be congr:a:tulated on the exceHent produetiori of . St. ~:tichael's A:lmana.e for 19·11. This horutsteholdi faiVot~ite contains- instruc­tive and interesting reading, matter embracing, religr

· ions a:nd secular su"Q,j'ercts. l\1any of the contributions: are by well kn'Oiwn ·writers. A copy of this. vatl uable Almanac may be had, in either German or E/nglish, friom' Techny, Ill., Soci­ety of the D~ivine w :ord.

lVI:a.ny o:fl the S.eptemtber exchanges; · eontain echoes of : commeneem.ent day. The "Youn~ Ela.gle'' has its quota.. The eoonmencement addres;s of the Right R,ev. Thort1as OJGornlan, D'. D., Sioux F 'aills, So. Dakota~ js, indeed, a masterpieee atnd invites Sterious .stud1y. 'The BaccalaureUJte Sermon, too, de­serves the publicity which was extended it on the occas,ion of its delivery aJt Sinsinaw'a. In poetry the Young Eagle excels jt,s:elf this month. · Who earn read that perfect gen1 "T'o the Lord of Hosts:'' without pronouncing it the product o,f aJn un­usually gifted' pen?

T'he Notre Dame S.chola:stie is one of our regula:r and most weleon1e vistitorsi. Its .srpicy art,icles interspersed' witb rare bits of verse give it a1 flatVOT~ thart is not found in many college journa[si. A recent issue contains an: excellent article on "St. )F'rarrcis orf Ass:isiSii-Poet." The madority of peop-le are ignorant o:f the fa,et tha1t St. Francisi possessed wonderful -poetic genius. ;'He: ·was a1 s1a1int," the write'r S'ays~ "and' because he was a1 swint, he was a1 grea1ter poet fm:• he more truly under­s,tood na1tU!re, a:nd eould speak from this knowledge." vVe shall read with pleasrure the continu:atiorn of this article' in sucees:sive is1sues. "AJ Ha1r!d F'all" is a cleverly written story.

, It has a local tone .. 1"The B.ruces in Irelallld" is an. h:Ustorically correct artiele . . T'he editoriatls, though brief, deal with topics of interesrt to students.. It is ea_,sy to und'erstand the sorrow ·which the S,chola!s.tic -- experiences jn announcing1 the death of the mother of the V. ·R,ev. J. Oavaillau.gth. T'he ViatOOrialni ex­tends a not.e of s'ymlparthy to the beloved president of Notre Dame.

The Ola,tholie Hon:t€! Annual is in its 2-8th year of publica­tion. T'he 1911 number is1 veritahly a, little encyclopaedia, and, Ill'Oreover, is bea'rutifully ill usrtrated. .· It is published by Benziger Brothers, New York.

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O!UR CIOACIH; Both Manager Olea1ry and St.. Viator college are to he

. congratulated upon securing the s1ervices of ~Ir. L. J. lY!aii'ks to coa1ch the footbaU squad. T'o. a ll lovers of the college g~a,me the nan1e of Mr~ Marlts1 is by no means:· a strange one. For the- past three years, he has: been the st1rur of the strong Dart­nlouth oollege eleven a1nd by his stella1r work of last s:ea1son was selected as fullba;ck on Walter O:amp'·SI second All An1eri-

. can T1eam. RiB thorough knowl€d~e of the new style of play, coupled with his aggressiveness: and. popularity with his play­e~"s, stamp him a.1s a. coa1ch of whom St. Viator or any other col- , lege might well be pr'Oud. In the short space of tiln.e he has been at St. Viat.or).s he hals worked wonders with the team:, a,nd p·roanises~ a mosrt. succeslsfu:l sea:son. Ooruch ~1a;rka " ra1s the one man need1ed, and: the alreadiy rosy prospects only become brighter eve,ry tim'e he drills the defenders of the Old Gold and Purpole. The Viat.o:rian in the name of the student body extencls :Nir. ~1a1rks1 a wa:rm welcome.

FOOT'BALL. Hacrdly had St. Via.tor beg1un the new year, ''rhen Oapt.

Fitzgera;ld issued a, call for all footba.ll candidates to 1~eport. His summons was ansrwered by· the largest and best array of · footbaH talent hitherto seen at the college. In all the prelinl­inary pra,ctiees: thus far, both the vetera,ns and recruits: are showing: then1selves to be nToleskin artists of first rate calibre. Th~ rivaJry for positions on the team is: s:o inte:t;J.se, a1nd the pla,ces so closely c-ontested:, that no predictions. of a probable lineup can be made 'until the first graa.ne. Of the veterans1 of last yea1r, we have the indOimitatble a1nd, ever per:seve.ring Oapt. Fitzgera:ld who by bis1 stellar virork lastt season was again elected . to lead this1 y~ea,r's' agg.reg1ation. Sherman, the pow­erful eeuter, D'arche a.nd' Sullivan the sta,r guards, and Q.uHle at quarter· are 'still with uiS: and seem~ to have their pos.itions secure. Amongst: the recruits Storr, Mlo~n.ihalll, Sa,mlll'On, Ber­gan, R .. Lregds, V\1elch, and Brenza1 are: showing surprisingly good form. Oa1shin, T1radnor, Ganarvan., Hail"rison, _I(iss:ane,

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40 'fHEr ·viAT'OHIAN

f)ougherty, Gord:on, v'Va:ll, O'L~ea,ry, Ledwell, Warner, Duffy, 'Vaters and NleDonaJd are imrprovingJ daily -and are sure to be heard from.. Tihe team appears to be the best that ha~s ever defended the OJd Gold! ailld Purple, · and the student body is: overflowing with enthusiasm aboru.t itSi chances..

l\1anager Clea1ry ha1s been very busy compiling a schedule and thus fa1r announ.eesr g~a~m,es with Hyde Pa1rk Athlet.ic Olub, Wesleyan, :Millikin Ullliver~sity, DleParuJ, Lo~ola,, and prrob­ably vvith Dixon or B:radlley "Poly," giving one of the · best schedule:s our pla,ye:rs1 have had.

AT~HLiE\T1I 0 ASISrOlOII.A;TT ON.

During' the first we1ek of school, the St. Via1tor's:. Athletic AsJSO'cia1tion held a.1 rous,ing me,eting:, laying plans for the en­suing year and electing~ the following officers :

President-J. M. F1itzgeraJd. Viee-Presrident--EL J. Quille. Secretary-R. Legris. T'reasurer-F. A .. Ole1ary. The association is! in a, flourishing condition and gives

prcnnise of a s:uecessful yeatr". ·

BIASrKEiT: · BACLrL.

Althoug;h it, may be a little erurly to issue a forecas,£ about basket ball, yet the prro~spects loo1m up so rosy tha,t this: little: notice could not be suppressed. From la1srt year, Oa.pt. Fim­gerald, 1\tloynihan, Oleary and Kis:s:rune remain, and with the new luminaxies a,ppreaJ·ing on the horizon, a; fast, S})eedy quin­tet is a!s.sured'.

While football natu:raHy is the main attra1ction a.t pres-­ent, nevertheless: the other sports are receiving the:ir due sup .. port. Both the 'ha.ndball a:nd: bowling alleys have been pu·t in first class condition, - mnd these coupled with the pool and billia1rd tableS are being USied to their full limit.

TIHE1 JUNIORrS.

The Juniors under the directiorn of Coach Q.uille a:re adap-ting themselves' to the ne"r .style of pla1y w.ith great raprid·­ity. The tea1m: while not a;s heavy as' last year promises to be the fastest aind! best in years:. T'he mostt promising ea1ndidates are, Conklin, l\.feGe·e, Zorilla., O'Gonnotr", She1a:, Kelly, Prime:aJu,

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41

l\lagruder, U del, F'org~ie., Holt, Whysocki, R.iehe!rt.s', L,. lVlort.ell, l\[foynihan, Kennedy, lVlcAndrrewsr U~nd Boi.srvert.. Gan1e.s1 are beingi .arranged w'ith the hesrtJ hig)l school t,e1ams in the vicinity and the season is: sure to produce som'e :fine football.

TIIEID MINIMS. I

Coach McDonald's team. isr prog1res'sing nicely. Thorugh servera.l of his old stars haJVe left a1nd can be found in the Juniors: he promises a sqUiad that will uphold its reputation as' the 9·5 lb. eharmpions of Krunk:a:kee to aill, comers'. The team will be picked from: the fo:llowing: Pepin, Oa1nphell, Senesac, G. Kane, Oamp, Kis:sane, Fitzpart:ir'ick, Dandurand, Dillon, P. Boyle, D. B:oyle, J. Karne, Baker, E i. F 1lynn, Kekich and Cyrier. The Minim1s. a1lso silo,ved their' usual! bwselball a:bility and in a double header overwheln1ed the village team 23-3 a.nd the Bradley ''Hus<ks" by a, score of 24-4.

Page 48: St. Viator College Newspaper, 1910-10

!' ,,.,r

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42 THEI VIATO·RTAN '

I

LOCALS

--"T'halt down."

-H·einz! Heinz! vVha.t's the matter with Pickles?

-Bill (rut taible)-"vVhy do they erull thjs: water1nelon"? :E'ramk- "P'ut me wis1e." · Bill-"Becaus·e it is plarnted in the spring!"

,-"Fish" Samrmon had better take to the; deep wat.e:r. Four l~., ishers, afte~r one fish. ·

' I I

--Keeley has broken into local politics- Oh, Ha~rry! "'iVhy?

-"T'hoy" Rainbow is· here!

-Large pa~r~y arrived from R.ivers.ide. HaH! Rail! The gang's. arll here.

-Willie-"! denie1s the ri.o~nination."

-A. L..- "He's .s:o. thin 3;;01.1 caill see the ribs in the baek of his n e:ck."

-Art-T'ie your little pony outside.

- His broken hea,rt ·no more is; pining, He hum:s~ no m.ore those love-lorn a:irs,

Dick vow's' thalt all bids~ he's' dJeclining Thart take him nea:r convent affairs.

-~i tz (on · grjdiron) -"What can you play"? 1\tfikef--"VVell, l'n1· purty good on the a,ccor.din and fine on

the n1outh-nrgan.';-Eix.it l\fike!

-Piper Oity returns· to the fold. Leo, J.awn a;nd Louis. and the Kelly twins this yea1r.

-Upon inves:tig1ation it ha:s been found that "Glli';;" · and "Red" 1nake· a good-sized shado'I\T when pla:ced ba:ck to hack.

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- \ ,

T·H :EI VI~T01R1IAN

-lzzy-Well, hoi,v' do you fetel R.ed.? Hed.-· Like seven days:. Iz-How's that?' · Ried-· Kind o1f ·weak !

43

-Well, no~v thatt the "Oowch" is! here· we will begin to "trajn" and try t:o "e1ngine1er'' a few prlwys. Rrels'olved to miaike no bad "br.akes."

-Iz-"Gos:h durn you Mruiggins1! Quit snorin'."

-A young mran fr'orn the torwn of Miomenee, In attempting; fo hurdle a; fencre,

His eoa£ caru.lghti oiil! a nan And he turrned: very p~le,

·As .he said, "I .can't stwnd! thist sus:pens~e !"

- · No more :visritsr in the gloralmiing., In yoruT room you: m~l'sttJ rem~Jin,

In the haills there's! no moire roatrning, Ourferw haiSJ rung onc:e ag:ain!

-For Sale-Onre per~ed;1y good, slightly used banjo. ply · E i. Q. ·Third co~ridor.

. . -Personal! Notiee!--Nott: resrporn.sible f.orr g;dnding and gn~ash-

jng noises, proreeedingr from · RooiJ:nJ 219· afte~ da1rk. J. F ·.- ·

-P. ~ Lootking art: his 1 ow sib. oetst on, a ·cold day in Oct:Orber, Gee. I look like a su1mmer resorrt.

' - · R.a:ven is· aJ "bird" of a pH.cher arnd · harsr a peacch otf a "wing."

-WhO us:ed tiol 'ring th:e morni'n g bell t:o w.a:ke U'S1 from our sleep·? ·

Pickleisl! , · ' .·r

" Tho us~ed to "Jerk' the tint for e1arts" .aiSl hird'S1 beg;an to ..

peep? P,. kl . ' -1c es. .. . , Who urs:ed' to c:a:U us an to elas1s1? Who us,ed to wake us

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44 TH'E\ VIATORIAN

all for ' l\1ass.'? vVho calleCL us1 to orur noon repas.t? Pickles! Com·e back! Oh, om:ne ba1ck ! a:nd: jerk the old co\v-bell once

more, ~!fake j uniorg how 1 and seni01rs· s:corw l a's. you hwve of times

done before.

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IF You. are interested in Athletic Sports you ' should have a copy of the Spalding Cata­

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