2—THE CATHOLIC TIMES
MASS
——............ ... Liturgy CH
SUNDAY, AUGUST 7,
THE TENTH SUNDAY ACTER
PENTECOST.
Green vestments. Gloria. Second
prayer of St. Ojwan. Third of
St. ©wmos. Credo. Pref art of the
Trinity.
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Friday, August 5,1955
ORDO
The Week------------------------
MONDAY, AUGUST 8,
FEAST OF STS. CYRIACUS,
LARGUS, AND SMARAGDUS.
Red vestments, Gloria. Second
prayer "Defend us.” Third at the
choice of the celebrant.
TUESDAY, AUGUST 9,
FEAST OF ST. JOHN VIANNEY:
Vigil of St. Lawrence White vest
mewls, Gloria. Second prayer of the
Vigil. Third of St. Roman, Last
Gospel of the Vigil.
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 10,
FEAST OF ST. LAWRENCE.
Red vestments, Gloria.
THURSDAY, AUGUST 11,
FEAST OF STS. TIBURTIUS AND
SUSANNA.
Red vestments. Gloria, Second
prayer "Defend us”. Third at the
choice of the celebrant, Proper
Epistle.
FRIDAY, AUGUT 12. o
FEAST OF ST. CLARK.
White vestments, Gloria.
SATURDAY, AUGUST 13,
ANTICIPATED VIGIL OF THE
ASSUMPTION.
Violet vestments, No Gloria. Sec
ond prayti of Sts Hippolytus and
Cassian. Third of the Holy Spirit.
Common Preface
Annual
Summer Festival
of the
Immaculate
Conception Parish
DENNISON, OHIO
Friday, Saturday and Sunday
Aug. 12,13,14th
Corner of Sherman and 2nd St.
Fish Fry On Friday
Beginning 4 P.M., E.S.T
Cafeteria Style
Varied Menu Saturday
Beginning 4 P.M., E.S.T
Italian Spaghetti Dinner
i Sunday, From 12 Noon, E.S.T.
Fancy Work, Home Baked Goods,
Home Made Candy, Fish Pond,
Games, Booths, Rides
On
Games
e
Display
1955 Chevrolet
1955 Admiral 21 in. T.V.
Casual Fireside Chair
PUBLIC INVITED
But, according to Fathar Wil
liam
F.
Jenks, associate secre
tary of th* NCEA's department
of special education, the direc
tory Is proud testimony to a
growing aworonoM by Catholics
of the problem of the exception
al child and show* the Church
doing about the tame amount of
work for th* handicapped a* pub
lic institution* and much more
than any other religious denomi
nation.
Father Jenks estimates there are
about 1.000.000 exceptional chil
dren of Catholic parents in this
country. It is virtually impossible
to say how the various kinds of
handicaps are distributed among
this number, he said, but the di
rectory shows the largest number
of those being cared for are the
mentally retarded Yet of the esti
mated total of 1,000.000. only about
10 per coni of these are receiving
the proper training, he added.
One of the more important con
tributions of the new directory, the
priest stated, is confirmption of the
theory that day schools are being
relied upon more and more for
training of the handicapped child.
Gradually this type of training
where the child lives at home, but
attends classes in a school in his
area has been moving tn the
hr explained, taking the load off
the crowded residential school.
For mentally retarded children,
for example, lhe day schools out
number the residential institutions
28 to 20. and new ones are being
set up to the tune nf several a
year.
A breakdown of th* Catholic
facilities in th* directory show*:
two residential schebl* end four
day school* for the blind 13
braill* libraries and transcribers
for th* blind 80 centers for th*
d*af 10 Catholic Guilds for the
blind flv* homos for th* blind
12 clinic* for cerebral pal*y: 38
hoy Retreat*
1955
August 5-7 ..Mon
August 12-14 Men
August 19-21 Women
August 26-28 Women
September 2-4 .... Mon
September 9-11 Women
LAY RETREAT HOUSE
St. Theresa Shrine
5277 E Bread Street
ST. DOMINIC’S
(N. 20th And Devoise Sts.)
HOMECOMING
Friday & Saturday, Aug. 12,13
HOMECOMING STARTS AT 7 P.M.
Refreshments
Two-Tone 1955 Chevrolet
Station Wagon
ON DISPLAY
Agencies Are More Aware
Of Exceptional Child’s Needs
Directory Shows More
Work Is Yet to Be Done
WASHINGTON (NCf— A national picture of the work
Catholic agencies are doing for exceptional children has been
provided for the first time in a directory published here.
Prepared by the National Catholic Educational Associa
tion the directory reflects a picture of many shades. It shows
the preponderance of work for ex
ceptional children—mentally, phys
ically or socially retarded young
sters—is being done in the area of
mental retardation. It also indicates
much more work could be carried
on in other areas, such as the blind
and the hard nf hearing
child guidance clinics 37 has*
pital schools and 54 hospitals
without schools for the crippled
nine residential schools and eight
day schools for the deaf three
residential schools for emotion
ally disturbed four sight-Mving
classes 12 speech clinics.
Another trend showing the in
creasing interest of educators in
the exceptional child is the appoint
ment of many assistant superin
tendents of education as directors
of special education, Father Jenks
said.
But he added that many more
teachers are needed. "More relig
ious orders should expand their
work tn include the handicapped
child.” he stated.
missionary to China and member of
the faculty nf a Chinese seminary,
now in exile in the Philippine Is
lands.
Addressing an "open house” aud
ience at Grailville Community Col
lege. Ixiveland, Father Hofinger
cited the rapid spread of Christian
ity in the first six centuries after
Christ. “Those centuries,” he said,
“are the golden age nf the Church's
missionary work At the same time,
they are the golden age of the
Church’s liturgy. And this ia no
mere coincidence.”
To form “real Christiana" under
the catechetical program of today’s
missions may take "generations,”
Father Hofinger said. But in the
early days of the Church "as a rule
it was possible to give catechumens
a deep Christian formation in tun
or three years,” he added.
"And w* didn't hav* any cate
chism, then,” h» (aid. "Th*r*
w*r* no Catholic school* for fha
groat majority of catechumen*,"
Instead, their Christian forma
tion stemmed from "Intlmat* as
sociation with the liturgy.”
“First of all,” he said, “the litur
gy in those days was completely
understandable tn the people It
was the accepted rule then to cele
brate Mass In the language of the
people.”
"Rut it is not merely a question
Coney Islands
4
Calmoutier Fete
Set for Tomorrow
FREDERICKSBURG (Calmoutier)
—The annual homecoming event
sponsored by St. Genevieve parish
will take place this year Saturday,
Aug. 8. beginning at 5:00 p.m.
A new dust-free road is expected
to attract additional crowds to the
annual festival. The new hard-top
road, stretching all the way to the
site of the homecoming, begins
two miles east of Apple Creek at
the junction of State Route 250
and County Road 187 in Wayne
County.
Calmoutier is situated nn the
northern edge of Holmes County,
five miles southeast of Route 250.
between Apple Creek and Mount
Eaton and five miles east of Fred
ericksburg. It is three miles north
of Route 82 to Mount Hope, then
three miles north of Mount Hope.
Directional signs will be posted and
adequate parking space will be pro
vided near the grounds.
Citizens of the little French com
munity are planning for the biggest
homecoming to date in the more
than 80 year history of the event.
Entertainment, games and food
will feature the affair.
Mass Is Best Teacher
Of Christian Doctrine,
China Missioner Avers
LOVELAND. O. (NO) Christian doctrine is learned
more deeply and more lastingly through the liturgy the
Mess, the Sacraments, the Divine Office than through class
room instruction, a veteran teacher and missionary declared
here.
He is Father Johannes Hofinger, S. J., Austrian-born
of using the common vernacular,"
he added “The whole structure of
the liturgy then was much simpler
than it ia today. If a catechumen
attended the liturgical celebrations
a few times he could not help un
derstanding what was taking
place.”
Another feature nf the people’s
worship then was that it was more
popular,” Father Hofinger said
"The whole community of Chris
tians had an intense, active part to
play. They considered the liturgy
‘our worship,’ ‘our work.’
As a result, the liturgy helped
build up the spirit of community
"so necessary in a time of perse
cution."
Rut by the time of Charlemagne
labout 80(1 A.D.). the liturgy had
become not in theory but in prac
five the work of the clergy," Fa
ther Hofinger said
“Of course we need formal in
struction.” he admitted, "but our
classical school of religious forma
tion is in the liturgy.”
Father Hofinger made it clear
that the liturgical movement was
“not just an attempt to have the
Mass in vernacular languages."
“The purpose of the movement,”
he said, “is not to have a fine cele
brat ion of the liturgy from our
point nf view, but to achieve a
general deep renewal nf Christian
prayer in the spirit nf the Church
and with the Church
"W»
muit th* calibration
th* Mass not only a* a duty,”
h* **ld, "but a* semothlng wo
cannot do without. Otherwise,
when a time of p*r»ecution
com**, th* people ar* apt to hold
th*m*elv*s excused.”
“The early Christians." he said,
“stood up before their judges and
said, ’We cannot live without the
Mass.’
—....................... O 11
Ml. Carmel
(C ontinued from
Page
Ruaanne Grape*. Cnlumbu* Allee
Earlynn Gra, Columbu* Mar«ar»f Ann
Gray. Milliards Martha Ro*e Hasse'
Columbus Nanry Jane Klmmey. Waah
inrton. C. H. Carol Jean Knierim. Co
lumbus Chrlatine Marcelain, New ark
Rose A*ne« Meaaerlv. Lancaster Carol
Sue Mills Alexandria Ruth Elnue Mor
ris. Eanaarille Sara rance* Mtilh*an
Coahocion Jn»erhine Alma Mulvey. Co
lumbu* Janice Ellen Mumper Panville
Barbara Ann Noonen. Mt. Vernon Emtlv
Lane Schlue. Wa»hin*ton. Naney
Mae Schrim, Columhu* Nadi* Man*
Shitran Marysville. Charlene Ann (mu
Un. Coumbua Shirley Ann Thoma*.
lumbua Harriett F.li»»beth Warner Oel
awarF
-------------------0-------------------
May They Rest
In Peace
SemVARTZ. Ctrl A. 77, Kenton.
July 28. Immaculate Conception
church. Survivors: his wife three
daughters, three brothers and one
sister
STEPHENS, Mrs Ejtelle Cltve
land, July 27. St Joseph cathedral
Survivor! a daughter, brother and
two suters.
THOMAS. Noah 84. Junction
City. July 29. St. Patrick church
Sun hors hia wife, Katherine two
son*, three daughters, four broth
era and three aiaten.
Mourned
Bre'her Anthony Bruye, O. F.
M., (above) who died suddenly in
Jerusalem, we* a well-known au
thority an th* Moly Land and had
served at N.C.W.C. New* Service
cer-espendent in Palestine since
1939.
He joined the Franciscan
Order In 1912 In Washington,
whore ho served as editor of the
Crusaders' Almanac.
o------
Relief Crisis
(Continued from Page 1)
tn rtn wha! they could. but be
cause resources are very limited
and the amount of financial aid
they can give is quite small, as
sistance will fall far short of the
needs of the poor." He asserted:
"The funds are going to hove
to come from tax sources.”
The problem will again be dis
cussed when the board of Direc
tors of the Council of Social Agen.
cies meets Tuesday, and the Ad
visor,v Board nf the Franklin
County Welfare Department meets
Wednesday. As a member of both
boards. Monsignor Kappea will at
tend the sessions.
The public assistance cuts were
necessitated, when the city coun
cil and county commissioners di
rected the Franklin County Wel
fare Department to operate with
in its budget the rest of the year,
even at the expense of cutting
relief grants.
Under th* now scale, people on
general relief will receive enly
80 per cent ef food grant*, or an
average of 64 cent* a day per
person. People who hove been
receiving grant* under the Aid
for th* Blind, Aid fer Dependent
Children and Aid for the Perma
nently Disabled and Aid fer the
Aged programs, will receive no
supplementation from the gener
al relief fund*. Their full sup
port muit com* from federal and
state money.
Aid for th* Aged grants will
not nxcevd $85 a month, and Aid
for th* Blind grants will stop at
$55 a month.
Affected hy the relief cuts are
.1.900 families—or approximately
10.000 people in Franklin County.
Because of lack of funds, the
Franklin County Welfare Depart
ment also owes $145,804 tn med
ical hills tn Cnlumhus hospitals
for 1954. and by the end nf the
year, the deficit is expected to
rise tn approximately $375,000
Among the hospitals affected hy
this fund loss are Mt. Carmel, St.
Anthony, and St. Ann’s In addi
tion, St. Francis Hospital ceased
operation June 30 with a large
county deht unpaid.
OLUMBUS
SAVINGS
AND
LOAN
48 W
1)
Iwan on Aug. 4, in th* hospital
chapel. A brtakfaat was held
following th* Mass at which tim*
pin* war* presented each of the
graduate*..
Thirty six of the graduates are
from the diocese of Columbus
They are:
Feggr J*«n Lnndnn
GAY ST
Joanna I
Jan* Albritht Columbu* Jn-Anne Rauwi
rardnnr. (•n(,ho»-ton Janet Em«H* Rlr-k
ham. (’nlumbii* Mnry Ann Rladtburn.
Columbae Kathryn Rachel Callahan. Co
lumbua Emily Atvn carmean ChUhenfhe
Joan Marilynn Cbutellar. Newark
Mary Ellen Oevtne. Columbus M»rv
Joe Oiirhin. Oanvllle Mar\ Relle E'»n*.
I.oaan Ruh' France* Factor. Columbus
Moll, Carolyn F*r*u«on. Columhua Man
lyn T*re*a Fisher, helaw-are Joan Lil
Ilan Gallagher. Chillcntha Mary Ellen
Golden. Columbua
Of Interest to Catholics
RADIO PROGRAMS
Sunday, Aug. 7
WPKO, Waverly, 8:45 a. m.—
Sacred Heart Program.
WHIZ. Zanesville. 11:45 a. m.—
Christophers.
WLW, Cincinnati, 2 30 m.—
Catholic Hour.
WPKO, Waverly, 4:45 p. m.—
Hour of St. Francis.
WNXT, Portsmouth, 6:00 m.
—Hour of St. Francis.
WTVN, Columbus, 10:45 p. m.—
Catholic News.
WTVN. Columbus, 11.00 p. m.—
\ve Maria Hour.
Daily
WLW, Cincinnati, 6:10 a m.—
St. Mary Seminary—Morning
Prayers.
TELEVISION PROGRAMS
Sunday, Aug. 7
WBNS-TV, Columbus, 10:00 a.
m.—Christophers.
WLW-C. 2:00 p.m. Christo
phers.
BNS TV—2.00 p.m. Coium
hus churches Father James
Hanley assistant pastor of St.
Christopher parish, Columbus,
begins a four-week discussion
series on the history and na
ture of sacrifice.
I________ _____________________
Ex'Times Editor
Takes OSU Job
Frederick J. McCool, former news
editor for the Cnthohc Times. is
the new editor of the Ohio State
University Research Foundation.
In his new position, Mr. McCool
will edit reports on the more than
135 active projects underway at
the foundation
A Pennsylvania native, Mr. Mc
Cool studied at St. Vincent’s Col
lege. Latrobe, Pa., and the Uni
versity of Pittsburgh. He served
on the Catholic Times staff from
January, 1948. to September. 1951.
Since then, he has been chief of
the International News Service
bureau in Columbus.
o-------------------
African Quint is Baptized
BULAWAYO, Southern Rhodesia
—(NC) Quintuplets born to a
member of the Mashona tribe were
baptized at the All Souls Mission of
the Mt. Oko Reserve, following
their birth in a simple house in the
bush.
1
Local Priests
Receive Letters
From hWitnesses’
Northwest Congregation of Je
hovah's Witnesses, located at 1190
East Hudson Street, Columbus, this
week was circularizing priests of
the city with a pamphlet, "Chris
tendom or Christianity Which
One Is ‘the Light of the World’?”
As sent through the mail, each par
cel was addressed to the priests as
"Mr.”
When the office of the Catholic
Times was contacted in the mat
ter. priests were advised not to
open the mail, but to mark it “Re
fused Return to Sender,”
and
drop in the nearest mail box. It
was pointed out that in this way
the sender would have to pay re
turn postage, in addition to the for
warding postage already paid, and
the propaganda would in no wise
be effective.
Activities nf Jehovah’s Witnesses
were also noted this past week by
the Catholic Nows of New York
City. In an editorial comment the
News stated “Jehovah's Witnesses
and their gathering at the Yankee
Stadium got more publicity in the
New York newspapers than any
religious gathering here in
a
long,
long time—many times as much
Pontiff ('rentes New
Dioeeae in Brazil
aa
the annual Holy Name Rally at the
Polo Grounds which has at least
twice the attendance. Jehovah’s
Witnesses reject all ‘organized
re
ligion.’ including Christianity. They
deny the existence of Heil and Pur
gatory, maintain that only 144.000
persons will go to Heaven, all oth
ers remaining on earth refuse to
salute the flag and refuse to serve
in the Armed Forces. They number
less than 500,000 in the world.”
--------o- ...
VATICAN CITY—(NC)—Hi! Hol
iness Pope Pius XII has created a
new diocese in Brazil and’ has ap
pointed two new members to the
country’s hierarchy.
The new diocese is Sete Lagoas,
with territory taken from the Arch
dioceses of Belo Horizonte and Dia
mantine. It is the eastern part of
the country, about 200 miles north
of the capital, Rio de Janeiro.
■AM MM W
Fifth Annual
Corn Festival
CHURCH OF
THE HOLY SPIRIT
4311 I. Breed St. Whitehall
Today 5A^®’ Tomorrow
5 to 11:30
21 "iu On Display
Pony Ridot Fun R«fr«»hments
PUBLIC INVITED
Bring Th* Entire Family
By August 10th Will Earn Income
From August 1st
HUB Federal Savings & LoanHSh4j“
All Savings Accounts Insured Up To *10,000
Current Dividend Rate 2V2%
Saved
Invested
AT THE
HUB FEDERAL