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2—THE CATHOLIC TIMES Friday, February 18,1955 Russia's Boss (Continued from Page 1) that it does not mean a basic change of Soviet attitude toward religion, just a change in tac tics. The paper reminded that the basic Red policy on religion continues to strive for its elim ination. One section of opinion at the time considered the Khrushchev decree a gesture aimed at popular, izing himself personally with the masses and winning additional sup port for his ambition to achieve top power in the Kremlin. Khrushchev’s biography gives no indication that he has ever had any Church connections. We Supply White Dress Shirts Work Clothes And Wiping Cloths The Inc. INDUSTRIAL LAUNDERERS AND DRY CLEANERS UN. 1166 999 N. 4th Columbus, Ohio SAP FOODTOWN MARKET 2976 W. BROAD ST. "Glasses that Satisfy" ROBERT E. HAGMAN, SR. OHIO STATE OPTICAL CO PUMPS MM5 'ompt Repair Service Artificial Eyes Fitted 146 East State St. CA. 1-3697 Columbus, Ohio Availably in tha following Rad Calf, Blu* Calf. Brown Sutde Blue Sued* and Whit* Linan. Silts abo*» 10 slightly 200 E. State St. Other Upright and Tank Models, HOOVER SPECIALS as Low as have that certain something FOR STREET FOR BUSINESS FOR SMARTNESS You'll Love the Dressy LO1V HEEL! Stocked in black tuade and black calf W* carry this pump in 3*/j to 12 AAAA to width. MASS ORDO Liturgy OfjThe Week SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 20 QUINQUAGESIMA SUNDAY Violet vestments, No Gloria, Sec ond prayer "Defend us”. Third at the choice of the celebrant, Credo, Preface of the Trinity. MONDAY, FEBRUARY 21 FERIAL SUNDAY MASS AS ON SUNDAY Violet vestments, No Gloria. Sec ond prayer “Defend us,” Third for the Eaitiiful Departed. Fourth at the choice of the celebrant, No Tract, No Credo, Common Preface. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 22 FEAST OF ST. PETER'S CHAIR AT ANTIOCH White vestments, Gloria, Second prayer of St. Paul, Credo. Preface of the Apostles. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 23 ASH WEDNESDAY Violet vestments, No Gloria, Sec ond prayer of St. Peter Damian, Third of the Vigil of St. Matthias, Preface of Lent, Prayer over the People, Last Gospel of the Vigil. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 24 FEAST OF ST. MATTHIAS APOSTLE Red vestments, Gloria, Second prayer of the feria, Credo, Preface of the Apostles, Last Gospel of the ferial day. MADE SAVE MONEY FACTORY TO YOU If you are interested in on* or more radiator shields or cabinets, please advise. 20% discount if order placed immediately. Budget Plen If Desired. Con tact us today for additional information. RESIDENTIAL COMMERCIAL INDUSTRIAL R. A. MASON CO. 227 Letchworth Ave. Columbus, O. RAndolph 4137 SHOE SIZES AVAILABLE FROM RITCHEY BROS. AAAAAA AAAAA AAAA .. AAA .... AA ......... ♦o ♦o S s 12 12 12 12 12 12 12 12 10 10 10 10 ..3 ..3 I'/j ..2 to to to to to to to 8 0 E EE EEE nt »HOS. 1374 Grandview Avr Save$139-5now ON THE NEW LIGHTWEIGHT HOOVER Lark complete with cleaning tool* .wwjmi it cle*n*. All-around cleaning tool* for dra porie*. fnrniahing*. floor*. $8495 «.mpi.,. Small down payment Kmguie Irarie-in $29« TERMS $5.00 and $2.00 PER WEEK HOERMLE'S APPLIANCES Hl. 4-2195 1894 Parsons HI. 4-2196 FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25 FERIAL DAY Violet \estments, No Gloria, Sec ond prayer "Defend us,” Third for the Living and Dead, Preface of Lent, Prayer over the People. SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 26 FERIAL DAY Violet vestments, No Gloria, Sec ond prayer "Defend us”, third for the Living and Dead, Preface of Lent, Prayer over the People. o----------------- Proposed Aid (Continued from Page 1) other facets of the problem that must be given conside ration. Among these he included the vari ations in money-raising procedures in various States, scrutiny of the “ultimate destination” of Federal aid, the ratio of pupils per teach er, obsolescence of buildings, and interest cost on bonds floated for construction costs. Meanwhile in Washington, Ove ta Culp Hobby. Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare, gave her interpretation of Eisenhower’s pro posal. In explaining that the program would apply only to public schools, she said that there is an acute need for 300,000 additional classrooms at the moment, and that the program would provide the "quickest way" to get the needed schools. In all, the Administration esti mates, she added, that the proposal would put $7-billion in federal, state, local and private funds to work in behalf of public school construction during the next three years—more than doubling the rate of construction. The federal loans and grants, she said, would be made on the basis of per capita income of the indi vidual state, and on total school age population of the state. Thus, public schools in a state like Rhode Island, where about 25 per cent of the children attend Catholic schools, would benefit far more than a state where there is a com paratively small percentage of chil dren in non-public schools. -----------------o—--------------- Purchase Site for Central Catholic High in Chillicothe vide for the growth of Central Catholic High School here were re vealed this week with the purchase of property across the street from the present St. Mary’s parish plant. Announcement of the purchase was made by Father Raphael Rodgers, pastor. The new parcel is 198 by 193 feet and includes a large residence for merly the home of the late William McKell and the late Miss Mary A. Kilvert, first cousins, who willed the property to their housekeeper, Miss Mary Sweeney, member of St. Mary’s parish, from whom it was purchased for $30,(MM). Four rooms of the former dence will be remodelled at paratively little cost to serve porarily as classrooms for fifth, sixth, seventh and eighth grades. Later, it is hoped, the lo cation will become the site of a new building for the students of Chillicothe Central Catholic High School. The present school building on Fourth St. is crowded with 123 stu dents of Central Catholic High School and 237 pupils of St. Mary’s elementary school. The purchase of the new property will provide for immediate expansion. Chillicothe Central Catholic High School serves two parishes of the city, St. Peter’s and St. Mary’s. The Sisters of Charity of Cincin nati are in charge. o— .......... Curfew for Teen«Agen Launched in Philadelphia PHILADELPHIA—(NC)—A cur few law for teen agers has gone in to effect here in Philadelphia in an effort to combat juvenile delin quency. LidCHtCKtR CAS Columbus owweo AWO Q*B*Tio| THE LORD ... V Sister Marks Golden Jubilee Sister Alexandra, O.S.F., of Holy Rosary Convent, marked her gold en jubilee of final profession in a quiet celebration at the convent last week, highlighted by a High Mass celebrated by Msgr. Herman E. Mattingly, pastor. Sister Alexandra entered the convent of the Franciscan Sisters of Penance and Christian Charity at Sacred Heart Academy, Buffalo, N.Y., in April of 1901. A native of Buffalo, Sister was first assigned to the staff of Sa cred Heart Academy for a number of years. She later was stationed in St. Anthony’s school, Uniontown, Wash. St. Ann’s High School. Buf falo St. Mary’s Academy, O’Neill, Nebr. St. Aloysius Academy, New Ix'xington St. Peter’s Convent, Co lumbus Shrine of the Little Flow er, Reynoldsburg and St. Vincent’s Orphanage, Columbus. -----------------o----------------- Peron’s Aim resi com- tcm the (Continued from Page 1) have already lost their autonomy. The government has also decreed that students of Catholic colleges must pass examinations before a state board before their degrees will be recognized. Tha 1947 law astablishing re ligious instruction in tha public schools has not yat baan abro gated, but tha education ministry has suppressed its office for ad ministering this law. At the same time it has announced that "spir itual advisers" would replace priests ousted as religion teach ers. It is generally believed that these “advisers" will be political tutors teaching "peronismo.” Not only priests but also leading Catholic laymen and students have ended up in jail as a result of Peron’s campaign to “correct abus es'’ in the Church. Most of them ran afoul of the rigidly interpreted law demanding “respect” for the president. Two Catholic-oriented papers have been suppressed for support ing the Church during the current Church-state controversy. They are El Pueblo of Buenos Aires and Los Principals of Cordoba. A resolution adopted by lhe Chilean chamber of deputies de ploring the religious and political persecution in Argentina got a quick rejection from the peronists here. The president of the Argen tinian chamber of deputies, An tonio J. Benitez, asserted: “There is no one in jail in Argentina for his religious ideas, nor are there any political prisoners.” -----------------o---------------- St. Louis University Recipient of $142,5(M) ST LOUIS—(NO—St. Louis Uni versity School of Medicine was the recipient of a $142,500 donation from William McBride Love in memory of his mother, the late Mrs. Kathleen McBride Love Kelley. Father Paul C. Reinert, S.J., president, has announced. Catholic Book Week February 20-26 The first few days of the Lenten Season coincide with Catholic Book Week. February 20-26. Spiritual reading can help us all find what we seek peace of mind peace of soul. May we suggest you try one or more of the books listed below. Romano Gardini THE MEANING OF HOLINESS Louis Lavelle STOP, LOOK AND LIVE James Keller THE WATER AND THE FIRE Gerald Vann RELIGIOUS ART BOOKS 2 0 5 EAST BROAD $6.50 2.75 2.00 2.75 ROSARIES PRAYER BOOKS GREETING CARDS i 70 Sisters Attend Principals Meeting Principals of diocasan schools held their first meeting of 1955 last week at Christ the King School. Five of the Sisters posed for our photographer as they were looking over the Christ the King Catholic Press month display. Pictured, left to right, are Sister Mary Norma, O.S.F., principal at St. Mary Magdalene School Sister Mariella, O.P., principal at Christ the King Sister Mary Pauline, O.S.F., principal at St. Mary School Sister Anna Marie, O.P., principal at St. Francis School and Sis ter Ursalina, O.P., principal at Holy Name School. Approximately 70 principals and assistants at tended the meeting. The main item of business was a discussion of testing methods employed in parochial schools. Dr. John C. Mariott of World Book Co., Chicago, was on hand fo lead the discussion. Health education also came under discussion highlighted by talks by Professor Wesley Cushman and Mrs. Florence Fogle of the physical and health oducaticn department of Ohio State University. Pope Asks Charitable Attitude Obligation of Society To Ex-Convicts Noted VATICAN CITY (NC) The community at large, as well as the individual person, is obliged to contribute willing ly to the rehabilitation of former convicts, His Holiness Pope Pius XII declared in a lengthy written message entitled, “Liber ation from the State of Guilt and Punishment.” The proper attitude for both the community and the individual to ward the criminal, Pope Pius said, should be that indicated by Our Lord’s words: “I was in prison and you visited Me ... As long as you did it for one of these, my least brethren, you did it for Me.” In tha massage to the Italian Association of Catholic Justices he declared that in helping a man who has been condemned to prison, "one can and should as sist him to attain an interior vic tory, and consequently an interi or liberation from the evil of punishment. The com u n i y should see to it that it is dis posed to welcome lovingly the man who comes forth from pris on into liberty." These considerations are not prompted by an utopian blindness to reality, the Pontiff stated. It was to be admitted, he said, that not all, nor even most, criminals are ready and disposed “to bear with the required process of purifica tion.” But many others, he stressed, can be helped. Declaring that a criminal’s re turn to the juridical and ethical order consists essentially in libera tion from guilt and not from pun ishment, the Pontiff said that the task of liberation is to “reintegrate relations disturbed by a culpable act.” This raintagration may ba a simpla tiling if tha objact of tha crima was a puraly matarial thing, and tha dabt may ba fully axtinguishad by rastoring tha ob ject, Pope Pius daclarad. How ever, if there is a question of a crime against another person, then the culprit has "an obliga tion, in a strict sense, to tha per son of the creditor." There is a kind of enslavement, His Holiness said, that binds the culprit to an object which moved him to perform a culpable act. Thus it is necessary that there should be “a psychological, juridi cal, moral and religious liberation.” Psychologically, this liberation is “an abandonment and retraction of a perverse will freely and con sciously culpable tion to good.” placed by the ego in a act, and a renewed inten will what is right and the Pope said, “the justice and hence Juridically, exigencies of juridical liberation from guilt, re quire that as much service, sub ordination, devotion, homage and honor be restored to authority as were taken away from that authori ty by the culpable act.” Moral liberation, the Holy Fa ther added, coincide* “substan tially, for the most part, with what we have said concerning the psychological and juridical liberation ... it is a reprobation and withdrawal of the positive contempt for, and violation of, BLUE VALLEY BUTTER IS GOOD BUTTER That's Why Millions Use It th* moral order, involved in the culpable act." The Pope said that unless re ligious liberation is offered to a condemned man, or at least point ed out to him, he is cheated. He de fined religious liberation as mean ing “liberation from that interior guilt which burdens and binds the culprit in the sight of God.” “If this final religious deliver ance is not manifested to the cul prit, or at least if the way to such is not pointed out or made smooth,” the Holy Father declared, “then very little, not to say nothing, is offered to the guilty man in his punishment, however much one may talk of psychic cure or re-edu cation, of the social formation of the person, or emancipation from his aberrations and from his en slavement to himself.” ........ —..... o---------- Josephinum Grad, Former Public Printer, Dies at 72 Funeral services were held in the Shrine of the Blessed Sacra ment in Washington this nast week for John J. Deviny an alumnus of Pontifical College Josephinum, and the former director of the U.S. Gov ernment Printing Office. He died at the age of 72. Mr. Deviny was also a former as sistant director of the Bureau of Engraving and Printing, which pro duces the county's paper money. He received a law degree at the Washington College of Law. Of Interest to Catholics RADIO PROGRAMS Sunday. Fab. 20 WPKO, Waverly, 9:45 a.m—Sa cred Heart Program WTVN, Columbus, 11:45 a m.— Catholic News WHIZ, Zanesville, Christophers WBNS, Columbus, 11:45 a.m.— 12:45 p.m.— Hour of Holiness—Series of programs featuring excerpts from addresses, encyclicals and letters of Pope Pius XII —“The Voice From the Vati can” WHIZ, Zanesville, 2:00 p.m.— The Catholic Hour WLW, Cincinnati, 3:00 The Catholic Hour WPKO, Waverly, 4:45 p.m.— p.m. Hour of St. Francis WCOL, Columbus, 5:30 Greatest Story Ever Told WNXT, Portsmouth, 5:30 p.m.— p.m.— Greatest Story Ever Told WNXT, Portsmouth, 6:00 p.m. —Hour of St. Francis WTVN, Columbus, 7:00 p.m.— Ave Maria Hour Friday. Fab. 18 WRNS-TV, Columbus, 9:00 a.m. louring the Town—A discus sion and demonstration of per sonal and social guidance in the parochial high schools. Father Omer Schroeder will be assisted by some of his stu. dents from St. Charles High School. Monday Through Friday W’LW, Cincinnati, 6:10 a.m.— St. Mary Seminary—Morning Prayers TELEVISION PROGRAMS Sunday. Fab. 20 WBNS-TV, Columbus, 11:00 a.m. —Christophers Tuesday, Feb. 22 WTVN, Columbus, 8:00 p.m— Life Is Worth Living—Bishop Fulton J. Sheen THE PINE ROOM Formerly BIG 3 TAVERN Under Naw Management FINE STEAKS CHOPS CHICKEN SEA FOOD Specializing in Italian Spaghetti Many Varieties of Fine Sandwiches Legal Beverages Open Weekdays 9 AM Till 1 AM Closed on Sundays Until April 3 JOSEPH P. LOUDNER, Prop. 1360 HARRISBURG PIKE JO. 2067 Bishop Urges (Continued from Page 1) getting divorced and “remarry ing.” But actually, they do not re marry no matter what euphemism it applied to the act of setting up a home with someone else while a former spouse is living. There is only one right name for It and that is adultery. The State cannot unmake a contract which God has ratified. When you mar ry, you marry forever. “These are among the truths which the Church gives us for seri ous consideration as we begin the season of Lent. They should deter mine our resolutions and our ac tions during this penitential peri od. Wherever there is evidence of a defection of our will from the service of God in discharging our duties, it is exactly in those areas that we must work to strengthen ourselves in God’s love.” If they wish, priests will ba frat to usa the vernacular in stead of Latin in the distribu tion of the ashes this year. This follows the approval by the Holy See for the United Stetes of an appendix to the Roman Ritual. The words which the priest in tones as he makes the sign of the cross with ashes on the foreheads of the faithful are these: “Remember Man that thou art dust and unto dust thou shalt re turn." The observance of Ash Wednes day as the first day of Lent dates back to at least the eighth century and follows the example of the Old Testament Ninivites penance in sackcloth and who did ashes. parishes Benedic- Lenten devotions in all will include sermon and tion on Sunday and one other eve ning of the week and Stations of the Cross and Benediction on Fri day evenings. Lay Retreats 1955 Fob. 25-27 ... March March March March March Men 4-6 ........................Women 11-13 .......................... Men 18-20 .................... Women 25-27 ................_... Women 31-April 3 ......... Men LAY RETREAT HOUSE St. Therese Shrine 5277 E. Broad Street OPEN 9 A M. 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