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Fish and Oyster Market

167 E. 87th ST., Bet. Lexington and Third Aves. Tel. 725-79

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Original EAST SIDE MARKET

JOSEPH B. SELG, Proprietor.

Choice Meats, Poultry and Game

1646 Second Ave., bet. 85th and 86th Sts.

UP-TOWN AGENCY

Patrick McKenna

Authorized Agent for the following Steamship Lines:

Telephone, 2196 79

TEL, 3680-79th

American Line, Anchor Line, Allen State, Cunard and White Star Lines

Fire and Plate Glass Insurance Broker,

Drafts payable in all parts of Europe at the lowest exchange rates Office, 250 East 90th Street Orders by mail promptly attended to

A Full Line of Religious Articles

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A. GOLDSTONE'S

Dry and Fancy Goods House A FULL LINE OF LADIES

AND GENTS' FURNISHINGS

1602 THIRD AVENUE, NEAR 95th STREET

We are open evenings until 10 p. m.

We give S & H Green Trading Stamps

JOHN W. O'REILLY,

TELEPHONE, 3614-79th STRKET

Undertaker and Embalmer

1597 THIRD AVENUE, Between 89th and 90th Streets.

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GIRLS

Grade 7 B. Madeleine Delaney, 92%

Rhoda Burton, 91

Marie McCrohan, 89
Della McGowan, 88
Mary Murray, 88
Ellen Boyle, 86

Mary Kane, 86
Agnes McLoughlin,
85
Genevieve Wools, 84
Barbara Vaughan, 83
Marie Donegan, 83
Mary Malone, 82
Mary Clarkin, 82
Veronica Russell, 80
Ellen Carey, 80
Margaret Haugh, 80

Mary Neeson, 80

ROLL OF HONOR FOR APRIL

Rose Mitchell, 85

Anna Duffy, 85 Marie Sullivan, 80 Mary McGowan, 81

Grade 6 A.

Mary Fitzgerald, 82%
Florence Tiernan, 81
Grade 5 B.
Anastasia Phelan, 99
Madeline Bielemeier,
93
Helen Walsh, 92
Mary Barry, 92
May Sullivan, 90
Mary Duffy, 90
Anna McMahon, 90
Margt. McCusker, 89
Nellie Brosnan, 86
Florence Clark, 85
Ellen Porteus, 85
Mary Breen, 84

Mary McCormack, 82 Josephine Dennehy,

Grade 6 B.

84

Ethel Hollenstein, 86 Margt. Simmons, 84

Grace Roeding, 83 Isabel Connelly, 82 Catherine Callagy, 82 Loretta McGrann, 80

Grade 5 A. Teresa Hannon, 83% Cecilia Stanford, 82 Mary Callanan, 80

Grade 4 B. Catherine Cowie, 88% Mary Hyland, 83 Rose Donohue, 81 Mary McGowan, 81 Anna Theoricht, 80

Grade 4 A. Emma Schaub, 93% Helen Heaphy, 90 Cath. Malone, 89 Margaret Moore, 89 Anna McKeon, 88 Agnes Haugh, 87 Mary Callahan, 87 Margaret Dalton, 87

Lillian Carson, 86
Frances Kelly, 83
Anna Shea, 81
Rose McHugh, 81
Ellen Coppinger, 81
Ida Hopkins, 80
Madeline Ludeke, 80
Sarah Johnson, 80
Anna Murray, 80

Grade 3 B.
Julia Cusack, 98%
Loretta Fitzpatrick,
95
Ethel Delaney, 95
Lillian Moore, 92
Margaret Bauer, 92
Mary Duffy, 90
Albertina Kronen-
berger, 90
Mary Moffitt, 89
Belinda McKeon, 87
Marie Warrington, 83
Anna Derrig, 81

(Cont. on page 22)

DENTIST TO.

Sisters of Notre Dame, New York Foundling Hospital,

St. Joseph's Asylum and Christian Brothers

DR. JOSEPH KUHN

Member of Father Nicot Council, 253, C. B. L.

1108 Second Ave.,

Member Salve Regina, K. of C.

DENTIST...

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Butcher *

1540-1542 FIRST AVENUE

Telephone Connection

1454 SECOND AVENUE
S, E. cor. 76th St.
1730 SECOND AVENUE, Cor. goth St.

COR. JACKSON AVE. AND HOME ST.

MRS. JOHN J. MCNAMARA

Will Continue as Undertaker of Our Lady of Good Counsel

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The Beatification of Joan of Arc

[The beatification of Joan of Arc took place in St. Peter's, on Sunday, May 2, before an enormous
congregation. In the centre of the Gloria above the altar was a picture of the new Beata. At the
beginning of the ceremony a veil covered this.
declared worthy of the honor of beatification.
the lights on and about the Gloria were lit,

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This fell away immediately Joan of Arc had been
At the same time, the bells of St. Peter's rang out,
and the choir began the "Te Deum."-EDITOR]

Canonization of Saints. Every heart
in the world that can throb with emo-
tions of love of purity, heroism and
patriotism; and every intelligence that
can appreciate the indignities offered
to the noble maiden, by both church-
men and laymen, and can rejoice at

the vindication of innocence and virtue is grateful to Pius X for this latest act of courage and of justice.

The story of her life and persecutions fills all with admiration; and although it is a plain, simple story, it is a noble and most interesting one.

She was born in the East of France, near what is now the German frontier, in the year of Our Lord, 1412. It was the beginning of the stormy fifLeenth century, characterized by great disorders, wars and schisms, both in the Church and in the State. Her birth-place was called Domrémy, a small village. Her parents, James Her parents, James d'Arc and Isabel Rowée, were plain, pious and uneducated people. Indeed, in those days very few peasants knew how to read or write; and yet they were intelligent, for the Catholic religion infused into the minds and hearts of the least educated, often gives to them a keenness of perception and a sentiment of appreciation for culture and beauty, which the best education without religion will never confer. Faith and the constant practice of the Christian virtues are always mental tonics, elevating the intelligence, purifying the imagination and softening the manners of a people. Witness the Catholic peasantry of the world; and Joan's family belonged to this class. She had a younger sister-Catherine-and three brothers. "No one in the village," testified the priest of the place, "equalled Joan in piety." Every Saturday she had the custom of visiting, in the neighboring wood, a little chapel dedicated to our Blessed Lady. This chapel was locally famous as a place of pilgrimage; and near it stood a large beech tree, round which the villagers (Joan among them) often gathered for May feasts and for other festivities. Like all her townspeople, Joan felt deeply. for the woes of her native land, France, then disturbed and disrupted by internal factions, and harassed by constant wars begun by Henry V of England in union with Philip the Good, Duke of Burgundy, against

Charles VI and continued against his son, Charles VII, Kings of France. It is well to remember, in studying the history of these wars, that neither the England nor the France of those days was the England or the France of the seventeenth century, when Feudalism had been almost destroyed, and when the idea of nationality and the sentiment of patriotism,-which is chiefly a consequence of that idea,-developed into its modern form. More than half of the generals and soldiers who aided and abetted Henry V in his attempt to conquer the French King's title, were the French King's feudal lords, but helping the English King for the furtherance of their own interests. The play of Shakespeare, "Henry V"-written when Elizabeth was on the English throne, and national sentiment strong-is, to a great extent, responsible for the myth that Henry represented England alone in the conflict. Many of his men who fought at Agincourt were Norman knights, or soldiers of Norman descent; for the Saxon was still in England very much in the condition of "Gurth," the swineherd, as described by Walter Scott in "Ivanhoe." The bodyguards, some of the best soldiers of kings, even later than the fifteenth century, were foreigners; Louis XI's body-guard were Scotchmen. This lack of national spirit explains the condition of France in the time of Joan of Arc. The Duke of Burgundy (who ought to have been the ally of France) became the ally of Henry V after Agincourt. Charles the Sixth of France died a prisoner of the Burgundians, leaving to his son, Charles VII, a France so dismembered and weakened by the revolt of feudal lords and the combined aggression of England and Burgundy that his kingdom comprised only the territory south of the Loire. But the sympathies of the peasants, and their power in the conquered territory, so far as they had the exercise of it,--were with the Dauphin, who was not yet crowned as Charles VII, King of

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