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cocnm Reds Ominously Attack Vatican And Hierarchy BERLIN Poland’s communist rulers have made a new ind ominous propaganda attack on the Vatican and the Polish Hierarchy. The sharply worded attack was made through Tryhuna Ludu, the top organ of the communist party in Poland, and was broadcast in full over the Warsaw Radio. The Red propaganda blow came shortly after His Eminence Stefan Cardinal Wyszynski made his strongest indictment of the Red regime since assuming the office of Primate of Poland four and a half years ago. In a Corpus Christi sermon the Cardinal scored the use of “physical violence” by the regime to hammer the citizenry into a Marxist mold. The Cardinal urged his faithful to resist “state pressure even to the point of blood shed.” The Trybuna Ludu article lash ed at the Vatican as “an enemy of our frontiers” and an “ally of the most reactionary forces.” At the same time it assailed the Polish Hierarchy for “trying to white- oe eoooMi a won BUILDERS* HARDWARE xptciAusrs” iuhttr tvin. aixom Fl OOF CHfCKS-MMMtF WFtHC HlHCtS SAKENT ‘t "wFSWmJSeW MH BOXES MfDfJi? *E«'VE« BABB CAXAGE BOOB TBACX *AHtt«, OU AW CUOOf A FAINTS S WWFAl HA»DW»« TOOLS CLASS SAHDEBB tOGEBS AND FOUSMEBS FOB BENT Whm* AD amt 6019 A---LI_ U____ i IF CT CBS It !4I III CH MT IT U Ummeltti IJa^waiea Ml NORTH HIGH 1| wash the Vatican.” “It is difficult to suppose that the people who declare that the Vatican shows no aggression to ward Poland can themselves be lieve it. For in the last few years the Vatican has given only too much evidence of such glaring hos tility to the national interests of Poland and our regime.” (As “proof” the communist paper cited the Pope s statements to Ger man Catholics, which it interprets as calling for a revision of the Po land's western boundaries.) “The Vatican does everything to increase international tension, to suppress the anti-war resistance of the peoples, to assist the aggres sors and condemn those who op pose aggression,” the article went on. “Hypocritical and perfidious is the statement of the episcopate that it is ready to render unto Cae sar what is Caesar’s and unto God what is God’s The- episcopate, for political and not religious rea sons, does not want to reconcile itsell to the fact that the’povver in Poland is forever in the hands of the people (communist party). This is the crux of the matter and the cause of the systematic infringe ment of the agreement of 1950. (The broadcast cited no case of “infringement” by the Bishops.) -------------------o------------------- IT PAYS TO USE THE TIMES CLASSIFIED ADS. ROOFING and SHIFT METAL for EVERY TYPE CONSTRUCTION coMBcnctAL oommnmr wnomuL bombs BBxrr metal Slaee 1«n THE GEORGE SNYDER A SONS CO. AD. S!41 ■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■—■■■■ft Winkels Quality Foods Jf e Deliver 3369 Indianola Ave. JE 5465 aHHHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiin RISES FOR CHARTER Keep Your Crowd Toge44»er Modem Equipment i For AM OeeookwM Chorter Lobe Shore System Buses Send Your Laundry and Dry Cleaning To Coll Adams 7231 For Troy Boy Service Wear A Troy Finished Shirt V.....'i..... ZLl.l.lUl,g.LJLlLl.!_..,"i:il... !, ’53 FORD Buy The Economy Run Winner CHOICE OF 6 CYL. OR. 8 CYL. MOTOR Three Transmissions, Seven Body Styles and Twelve Colors WATSON-FORD Open Evenings 1288 N. High St. Columbia, O. UN. 2118 lour Friendly Ford Dealer Courteous Drivers Reasonable Rates “The Finest in Bus Transportation'* LAKE SHORE SYSTEM 714 Boat Brood Street Call AJBam» 6310 or MAin 5112 Aeic C.( Red or Bishop Bryan J. McEntegart of Ogdensburg, N.Y., who has been named Rector of the Catholic University of America. He suc ceeds Bishop Patrick J. McCor mick, who died in May A gradu ate of the University, Bishop Mc Entegart has distinguished him self as an educator and adminis trator. He is nationally known for his achievements in the fields of charitable and social work. He has been Bishop of Ogdensburg ten years. 6 Chaplains Give Rites At World’s orsl Air Crash TOKYO, June 20 Six Catholic chaplain- were on hand to give conditional last rites to the 129 U.S. servicemen killed near here in history’s worst air disaster. The first priest reached the scene as flames covering the giant two-decked transport plane still surged high into the sky. fed by some 3,000 gallons of gasoline from its shattered fuel tanks.- The chaplain was Father (Lieut.) Alfred H. Tegels. a Benedictine from Osakis. Minn. “It was terrible, terrible ... It beggars description.” Father Tegels said mournfully. The priest is chap lain at the Tachikawa Air Base, where the plane took oft before it developed engine trouble, stag gered in the misty sky and plum meted nose first into a rain-soaked rice field. Within 30 minutes after the crash Father Tegels was giving conditional absolution beside the twisted, burning plane Then as the charred bodies were brought out. he anointed conditionally more than 40 of the burned bodies. The crisp hands of one body were still clenched tightly about a Rosary. Father Tegels was joined shortly by five other chaplains from near by air bases. One of them was Fa ther Frank Ebner of St. Cloud, former chaplain at Lockbourne A.F.B., Lockbourne, Ohio. ELEVATORS Oil Hydraulics Electric Dumbwaiters Hoists Capital Elevator A Mfg. Co. W. Town and Lura Stu. AD. 2487 AD. 3«3« Novena lievetions to Infant Joons of Prague rr IF i ST. LADISLAUS' CHURCH COLUMBUS EVERY WEDNESDAY 7:30 SI. I.adislao* lacatad at 277 R«*h Avanua and is within waildnr d«s tanra of the Persons Avanaa baa and the So. Hirh Street baa. THE CATHOLIC TIMES, FRIDAY, JULY », 19S» (Capital Sees Sales Boom In Good Reading WASHINGTON D. C. (NC)L There’s a sales boom in pocket size books in the nation's capital. But this time it’s the right kind of books. For the past three months, Cath olic titles of paper reprints have been hold outside various Wash ington churches following Sunday Mass. The committee handling the project is offering a positive an swer to the problem of paper-cov ered reprints, now under fire throughout the country. “We want to persuade pocket size book publishers that there is a considerable untapped Catholic market for reprints,” Eugene P. Willging, Catholic University li brary director, told the Catholic Standard, organ for the Archdio cese of Washington. In sales tests held at six church es so far, almost 1,200 books have been sold. Among the popular ti tles: “The Song of Bernadette.” “The Greatest Story Ever Told,” “The Seven Storey Mountain” and “The Foundling.” “Up to now,” Mr. Willging ex plained, “chiefly the wrong books have been accessible to readers. We’re trying to make the right ones accessible.” Members of the committee who hope that the move will spread to parishes throughout the country have prepared a manual explaining just how it's done. These are available from Mr. Willging at the Catholic University of America Library. Washington 17, D. C. Hiccups 5 Years Prayer Gives Him Strength GLENDALE. Calif. (NC) A young man who planned to become a priest began his sixth year of constant hiccuping with the belief that prayer will bring about his recovery. Doctors have warned Jack O'Leary not to build his hopes for recovery from what is the long est seige of hiccups in recorded medical history. More than 200 doc tors have attempted to cure him without success. Now down to 78 pounds from the hiccups that wrack his nervous system every second. O’Leary has gained a pound for the first time since he was stricken 5 years ago. He is unable to sleep more than one hour at a time and can only keep food down tor short periods. But at 6 a each Sunday Jack O'Leary is at Mass “1 keep pray ing,” he says. “And that gives the strength to carry on.” -------------o------------------- Prague Reds Renew Battle With Church VIENNA (Radio. NC) Re cent anticommunist uprisings in Czechoslovakia, which followed a confiscatory currency ‘reform” may serve the Prague red regime as pretext for new violent actions against the Catholic Church. Fears to that effect are support ed by the report of a Catholic workingman who escaped from southern Bohemia and has just arrived here. He stated that a number of priests, most of them young members of the clergy, dis appeared after communist agita tors had violently attacked the clergy as being among the “sub versive elements’ responsible for the anti red demonstrations. .Most ot these priests are feared to have been arrested and sent to the concentration camps which the regime maintains for the recalci trant clergy, the escapee said But some of them, he speculated, may have avoided arrest and joined the “underground.” I’he arrested priests share the fate of their superior. Bishop Jo sel Hlouch ot Budejovice. who last year was “banished” from his See and has since been Kept in confine ment at an unknown place. The regime engineered the “election” of a pro-communist priest the Rev Joset Buehta. as vicar capitular of Budejov ice diocese. Other reports reaching here speak of about 150 diocesan and 100 Religious priests working at forced labor in the uranium mines ol northwestern Bohemia. They had been taken there from the priests’ concentration camps in Ha jek. near Prague. Gross-Meser itsch in Moravia, and a third one near Brno. These priests, working in the mines near Jachimov (Joachim stahl) say Mass in primitive chap els they built deep underground, thus following the example of the early Christian martyrs who pre served and practiced their Faith in the Catacombs. Printing & Lithograph Co. 214 Oak Street Columbus, Ohio AD. 1261 AD. 1262 Commercial and Designed Printing and Lithography Full Direct Mail Facilities LEE HENNE Christ The King Parish JIM HENNE Holy Rosary Pansh hirst American Jerry Kaafa (above), manager of radio station WFJL, Chicago, and vice-president of the Catho lic Broadcasters’ Association, it the first American elected to the executive board of UNDA (Cath olic International Association of Radio and Television). He was elected at the five-continent or ganization's general assembly in Cologne, Germany. Labor, Adult Educators To Be Honored ANTIGON1SH. N. S (NC) St. Francis Xavier University here announced it is conferring honor ary degrees on a number of promi nent Canadian and American citi zens who have made major contri but ions to labor education, coopei ative and credit union develop ment. The degrees will be awarded July 6 at a special convocation cel ebrating the university’s 25th year in the field of adult education. Included among those being made honorary Doctors of Law are Murray D. Lincoln. Gahanna, O., president of the Cooperative league of the U.S A. and of A RE., and a member of the I S. National Security Resources Board: CIO President Matter Reu ther. Percy R. Bengough. Ottawa, president of the Trades and Labor Council of Canada: Benson Y. Lan dis. New York, noted authority on adult education and associate exec utive director of the Research and Survey Department of the National Council of Churches: the Rev. J. D. Nelson MacDonald. Dartmouth. N. S., pastor of lhe Woodlawn United Church and former presi dent of the Nova Scotia Education al Council A. R. Mosher. Ottawa, president of the Canadian Congress of Labor Jerry Voorhis. Chicago, executive director of the Coopera tive League of the United States and the Cooperative Health league of America, and Msgr J. 1. hias son. Vicar General of the Diocese of Bathurst and former New Brunswick director of extension for St. F. X. o------------------- Superior General isits Tornado Wrecked College WORCESTER, Mass (NC) Father Wilfred Dufaull. A.A., su perior general of the Assumption ist Fathers, has arrived from Rome to inspect tornado damage at the order s Assumption s College here. With him he brought a gift of 30,000 francs (about $100) repre senting the 30-year savings of a contemplative order of nuns in France. Father Dufault, once president of the college, formulated plans for a fund drive for its reconstruc tion with Archbishop Richard J. Cushing of Boston and Bishop John J. Wright of Worcester. Archbishop Cushing is honorary chairman of the fund with Father Dufault. Bishop Wright is chair man of the general committee Tornado damages, estimated at over $4,000,000, will require re construction of the entire Assump tion College establishment, includ ing high school, college and con vent buildings. o---------- —. New Church Built Over War-lorn Site Of Village PARIS (NC) Bishop Louis Rastouil of Limoges has dedicated a new church in Oradour-sur Glane, the little village that was deliberately set afire and destroy ed in a wartime reprisal action in June. 1944. More than 600 in habitants and refugees were kill ed. The old church was burned com pletely and all the women and children who were locked inside perished in the building. One per son alone escaped by leaping from a window and evading the ma chine-gunning of the troops sta tioned outside. Will Sellers Of Filth Find A New Wav? CONCORD N *NC How tough is it to gat a convit tion on peddlers of pornography? Ask New Hampshire legislator Louis I Martel who has been fight ing for twenty years to tighten Slate laws designed to block com merce in dirty books and pictures. For 20 years the filth salesmen have been finding loopholes in the law. slipping through the courts. Police cracked down Arrests were made. But how many convictions were made? Not too many,” said Mr. Martel With a new bill, recently passed by the New Hampshire I^gisla ture, Mr. Martel hopes that the courts will have something to work with through a definition of the word “obscene “As defined in this chapter, the term ‘obscene’ shall mean whose main theme or a notable part of which tends to impair, or to cor rupt. or to deprave the moral be havior of anyone viewing or read ing it.” To protect the scholar the edu cator and the artist, the legislature made it plain that the lav does not restrict the selling of books that are truly designed “for the advancement of art. medicine, sci ence. education and literature That’s how things stand today, l^gal and political argument, dis cussion and compromise was re quired along with hard, unrelent ing work by those who backed the legislation. It s been a rough climb. With its present laws can the State of New Hampshire get convictions against people who spread pornog raphy among its youth? Men like Ixiuis 1. Martel who has four youngsters of his own—keep hop ing. Only time will tell. o------------------ Former Solon Hits Einstein’s Advice To ILS. Teachers (N.C.W.C. NEWS SERVICE) PHILADELPHIA Former U. S. Senator Herbert O’Conor of Maryland declared that Dr Albert Einsteins advice to American teachers to refuse to testify before a Senate committee was “an in sult." and “unwarranted interfer ence by an alien in our midst.” Mr. O’Conor spoke at a Com munion-breakfast of the Pennsyl vania Railroad Holy Name Society in the Broadwood Hotel. “This gratuitous counsel comes with bad grace from Dr. Einstein* one who should not be permitted to impede the efforts of officials of our nation to uproot any sub versive activities, if they exist, in the universities and colleges of the United States,” the former head of the Senate Crime Investigating Committee stated. iWiiriM iMtwa YOU* baby oeshives THf BEST Phoot (or Demxwtrition Obligation BAMt-TtNOA SAIB AMNCY F. uhmm Cbarta tamurn* law, Imb. Jn«MncbX i.MM tab Onw Baoklw », Mail CSriaiwM CHk -TITF SAFEST FLACt FOB VOVt BABY Tosrr 240 N. ARDMORE RO. EV crtrtM UM (JCT AVIxa C0-MJTW.W6 etf ■nt 6t5T Fonyov flowed STEMBER Vi Stember Flowers 2SSS N. H1GB ST. KLONDIKE 1«2» Stembers State 172S N. HIGH ST OPPOSITE NEW OHIO UNION Largest Retail ard in City Quality Coal and Coke We Specialize in All Sizes ef Stoker Coal for Domestic and Steam Purposes The Big Mountain Coal Company GA. 1112 Farmer Denied Square Economic Deal-Pontiff VATICAN CITY, (Radio. NC— Society has not given the farmei a square deal because it has re duced him to a simple appendage to the industrial and commerical branches of life. His Holiness Pope Pius XII ex pressed this viev in an audience given to members of the Inter national Federation of Agricultural Producers who held their sixth an nual meeting in Rome. The treatment given farmer! .« not. for the good of society, the Pope declared and it is not in con formity with the social doctrine of the Church. The Church has repeatedly de plored the fact that farming is de clining because it is profitless while at the same time whole po pulations are suffering from an acute lack of food "The remedy is to be sought in an increase in farm production and in the rational stabilization of economic relations between peo ples," the Pontiff stated. "And this is valid not only in the field of agriculture. A certain number of national economies have not suc ceeded in harmoniously develop ing the notentialities of production with which nature has endowed them. The federation is composed of farm organizations from more than two dozen countries, including the United States. It has its headquar ters in Washington. D. C. Pointing out how difficult it aioKTwejurr roixn calvabt EVENINGS PLUMBERS Electric Roto-Rooter Sewer and Drain Service. Phone Circleville 455 DEFENBALGH FLAERAL HOME Circleville 151 E Mam St Phene 411 Circleville Fast Freeze Food Locker P. J. GR1FP1N Own* and Operator HI Edison Ave. Circleville O. Hudson Cleaners 2Hour Service 2301 Cleveland LA 3112 LA 12111 W HILLTOP io achieve the aims set forth by him. lhe Pope stated “Can your organization boast of having reached ■.!«■ important oh jectives? Undoubtedly, very few, given the complexity of the proh iem and the extern of the ieforms desired. “The few years ot me life of vour federation would he suffi cient to show- if there were such a need with what slowness prog ress is made. MODERN, i FULLY AUTOMATIC 1 The Pope told the international agricultural group that it could contribute much to the promotion of markets, the intensification of commerce and raising the living standard of the vast number of farm families. Founded in 1946 in London, the international federation is a non governmental body devoted to pro moting the welfare of those mak ing their living off the land. 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