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The Catholic times. [volume] (Columbus, Ohio) 1951-current, May 06, 1955, Image 8

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Persistent link: https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn83007243/1955-05-06/ed-1/seq-8/

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All
Legal
Bev
erages
Walter
and Catherine
Lynch, Props.
8—THE CATHOLIC TIMES Friday. May 6, 1955
HI. 4-0215
819-821 Mohawk
PREMIUM GASOLINE
Finneran & Fischer
Oak And 6th Sts. CA. 4-0208
GOD’S CHILDREN
Now that the month of May U here, we are truly busy trying to
prepare tor FIRST COMMUNION DAY for the thousands of little
youngsters under our eare in the mission areas of the Near East.
Their love ol God and Our Lady is tremendous—but they are among
the poorest of the poor! Could you help us elothe them in a spot
less white dress or a new suit for that happy day? A NEW OUTFIT
rosta only ten dollars ($10). God will reward you a hundred-fold
lor your charity.
REMEMBER GOD AND HIS MISSIONS IN YOUR WILL
We Are
helping to build Columbus
by manufacturing
f/exicore
Precast—Prestressed—Monolithically Poured
Concrete Roof and Floor Slabs
L'aed In Many Church.. And School.
ARROWCRETE CORP.
816 McKinley Ave. CA. 1-5506
Frog Legs, Fried Turtle and Fish on FRIDAYS
tyofaivlf Gnlr
FINE FOOD [v
LIQUOR
CHAPEL NEEDS!
We did appeal some time ago for help to build
two chapels—one to he built in Thuruthicad,
India, and the second for a village called Vaka
yar. India. At the present time we need fl,500
for each to make them a reality. The poor In
these villages cannot help much. Could you
help—in memory of a loved one?
YO1 STRING1.ESS GIFTS HELP OCR HOLY FATHER IN
CRITICAL NEEDS. YOUR GIFT IS HIS STRENGTH.
ANTHONY OK FRANCIS—YOI PRIEST?
These two young men are studying at St. Francis
seminary in Beirut, Lebanon. Apostles of God—
they need $100 for each of their six years’ train
ing before they become mission priests. They
have nothing but their zeal to work for aoula.
Can you adopt one? God leva you.
WHO GIVf/i TO THE POOR MAKES A LOAN TO GOD
MAY CLUBS. Your dollar a month to a Mission Club will be used
this way during the month of May. CHRYSOSTOMS, for the edu
cation of our students for the priesthood in the Holy Land.*****
MARY’S BANK, for our Sisters in the Holy Land. BASIL.I ANS for
Father Henry Ayrout 8 J. in Egypt*****PALACE OF GOLD for
•ur Old Folks Home in Jerusalem****tORPHAN‘S BREAD for
lather Victors foundlings an Egypt* *MONICA GUILD AND
CHAPEL OF THE MONTH funds for the chapel st Manjackala.
Jndia*****LEPER FUNDS for the Damien leper institute at Tri
ehur, lndia***SACRED ARTICLES for Our Lady's chapel
Tauriat, Egypt****FlRST COMMUNION OUTFITS for Father Ken
nedy's Palestine refugee children.
SISTER MEIJNE AND SISTER PR IONE
These two novices are beginning their training as novices with the
Armenian Slaters of the Immaculate Conception in Rome. They
are needing $150 for each of their two years’ training before they
become missionaries for God. Could you adopt one of these nov
ices? You can pay the amount tn any installments. Our Lady and
Ow Lord will bless you.
BE GOOD TO GOD AND GO© WILL BE GOOD TO YOU
12ear East Olissionsj^)
S*«ncti Cardinal Spaliwaa, Pmid.nt Majr Pater P. Taaky. Norf tec'y
Sand «N iimmawiMiiliRi tet
CATHOLIC MfAR BAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION
490 LexhtgNwi Ave. ot St. Mew
York 17,
N. Y.
W
Twenty-three Italian orphans,
most of them only toddlers, have
begun a new life in the United
States. Brought over by the Cath
olic Committee for Refugees—
NFCCS Chairman Picked
Miss Irene Welinitz, a junior at
St. Mary of the Springs College,
has been elected regional Mariol
ogy chairman of the National Fed
eration of Catholic College Stu
dents.
-----------------o .....
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COLUMBUS, OHIO
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Florentine Restaurant
COLUMBUS' MOST COMPLETE ITALIAN
sey and Connecticut (ten in the
metropolitan New York area)
Pennsylvania, Ohio Michigan,
I lino is, Iowa Louisiana and
Texas.
Reds Fail to Stamp Out
Religion Behind Iron
Curtain, Reports Reveal
NEW YORK (NC) Despite Soviet persecution of the
Church behind the Iron Curtain, there are “signs of a wonder
fully deep and great religious renaissance” in the countries
of central Europe.
That statement was made here by Monsignor Joseph
Kozi-Horvath in an address to the second international con
gress of the Christian Democratic
Union of Central Europe held here.
The Monsignor is president of the
C.D.U.C.E. council.
“Oppression and suffering,”
Monsignor Kozi-Horvath said, “have
served to deepen the faith of the
masses in the captive nations, not
to crush it as their oppressors had
hoped.”
But, he noted, the “handicaps
suffered by Christianity are al
most insuperable. The spiritual
leaders are in prison, the whole
ecclesiastical organization is un
der communist control, religious
orders are disbanded or sup
pressed, schools confiscated
Those who profess themselves to
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be faithful to their religion run
the risk of losing even their jobs
and livelihood."
Reports presented to the con
gress on individual nations gave
details of the persecution the
Church has undergone.
Church services in Czecho
slovakia are well attended and the
people are “increasingly attached
to their religion,’’ Dr. Felix Mikula
stated in his report on that coun
try. He continued.
“The actual situation is this:
none of the 19 Catholic Bishops
in Czechoslovakia enjoy full free
dom of action. Fourteen of the
Bishops are either in prison or
have been otherwise deprived of
their Church activities by govern
ment appointees.”
Reporting on Hungary. Peter
Horvath said that after a period of
relative softness, religious perse
cution was being stepped up again.
He cited the increased activity of
the so-called “patriotic priests.”
“In spite of the increasing
danger, however," he stated,
"the population faithfully ad
heres to the Church."
In a paper on Poland, Zbigniew
Ossowski pointed out that His Em
inence Stefan Cardinal Wyszynski,
Primate of Poland, and nine other
Polish Bishops are in prison or
confined to monasteries outside
their diocese. He also noted that
an estimated 5,000 Polish priests
have been imprisoned and deport
ed to Russia.
Public worship tn Yugoslavia, it
was reported hy Dr. Peter Remec,
“is not only at the mercy of the
police, but to a greater degree of
the collectors of taxes.” Nearly ev
ery church in that country, he
stated, is taxed at more than two
or three times its actual value.
Pre-war Lithuania had 1,650
priests, Kazys Pakstas noted in his
report on that nation. Now it has
only 870, he added. Out of 13 pre
war Bishops, he said, only one is
still in office. Four Bishops died
in Soviet prisons, he stated three
are living in exile and the others
died natural deaths so far as is
known. Of 98 Lutheran ministers
in prewar Lithuania, he said, there
are now only four.
o---------------lx,
Eucharistic Congress Held
At Oldest U.S. Mission
ST. AUGUSTINE, Fla. (NC)—
The oldest United States mission
—Nombre de Dios—was the scene
of the first diocesan Eucharistic
congress of the St. Augustine dio
cese.
Some 5,000 pilgrims, many of
them coming from as far as 500
miles away, took part in the two
day congress, walking in the sev
eral processions through the mis
sion grounds, attending the con
tinuous Holy Hours, and joining in
the adoration of the Blessed Sacra
ment, exposed all day at an out
door altar on the first day of the
congress.
o---------------
Be Loyal To
Our
Advertisers--------
CApital 8-2262
Call NOW and
Reserve YOUR
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e
Your Hosts:
TONY PENZONE
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JOE SCURO
RESTAURANT
But, it is not enough to act
this love after sin we must
“make up” for the wrong we did,
just as Peter did after his denial,
and Paul did after his persecu
tion. It is not enough just to
pray we must “bring forth
fruits worthy of penance.” And
what worthier penance can you
do for your sins than a) to
give the Faith to someone else
who may use it better than our
selves b) to make this possible
by denying ourselves some pleas
ure or luxury as a symbol of the
rending of our hearts c) to deny
ourselves even the pleasure of
deciding how that money saved
from the luxury will be spent
d) make an act of Faith in the
Vicar of Christ by sending it to
the Holy Father through his own
Society for the Propagation of
the Faith. Cut out this little
meditation on penance attach
your sacrifice to it, and send it
to us in the name of the Risen
Christ Who waits for your love.
GOD LOVE YOU to W.B.H.
“Enclosed please find a check
for $94. It is ten per cent of an
inheritance I received. I am sure
our Holy Father Can use it.”
Show a will to give to the mis
sions by taking out a Propagation
of the Faith annuity. You will be
a double beneficiary: first, by re
ceiving a fixed income as long
as you live and secondly, in the
grateful prayers of those whom
your money goes to help after
your death. If you would like
further information about an
nuities, write to us.
Cut out this column, pin your
sacrifice to it and send it to the
Most Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, Na
tional Director of the Society
for the Propagation of the Faith,
366 Fifth Avenue. New York,
N.Y., or your diocesan direc-
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God Love You----------------1
The Past Is Not Irrevocable
To Those Who Have Faith
—by Bishop Fulton J. Sheen-------------------
The past is not past to those tor Father James Kulp, 246 East
of us who have the faith. Re- Town Street, Columbus 16, Ohio,
gardless of what one may have
done to crucify the Saviour,
there is always
hope. How
much Peter
must have be
moaned his de
nial of the Sav
iour before the
sharp tongue
and the mock
ing eye of a
woman. It
must have been
like the paqgs
one feels as he
fault to the loved dead—a hasty
s some
petulance, or a sullen refusal to
tenderness.
And yet, the so-called ir
revocable is not irrevocable.
We do not believe that ev
ery deed is like the spent ar
row that can never be redeemed
for the quiver nor is it like
Pilate's inscription, once writ
ten always written. New days of
love are granted through the
Resurrection fresh starts begin
as one steps from the confes
sional box reconciliations, sweet
er than unbroken friendships,
are made at the Communion
rail. SI- is mighty, but there is
one thing sin cannot do, and
that is to make Christ cease
to love us. His lovt is not the
echo of our love: we do not first
say “I love you,” and hear Him
answer “I love you, too.” Rather
our love is the echo to His love
our love is a response to His
Love. He loved us first. True,
the more we sin the less
we can believe in God’s
love but the more we sin, the
more convincing does He make
His love to us—even in making
our soul unhappy until we thrust
ourselves back again into His
embrace.
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