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Main St. Columbus 9, Ohio on EX. 3411 Youngest member of the Indian hierarchy he is only 37 Arch bishop D’Souza described the rul ing as a “hard” one that would un doubtedly affect the work of the apostolate “to a certain extent.” “However,” he assured, “I per sonally feel that this is only a transitional phase. India has been noted for its toleration, and it is hard to conceive that a country with such high democratic tradi tions will permit restrictions of this kind to remain in force, espe cially since they are bound to im pair the good name that India en joys, particularly in the interna tional sphere.” The ruling in question bars foreign miasioneriet from India unless they are equipped to en gage in educational and social welfare work as well as to carry on a religious ministry. createst a new ob Church, the ruling concern over its fu Archbishop D’Souza Although it stacle for the need cause no ture in India, stressed. “Despite this and other difficul ties,” he explained, “the Church’s position remains very secure, and we are confident about the future. The Church’s position has never been so strong and vigorous as it is at present.” The youthful prelate listed among the Church’s difficulties, the opposition it has encountered from certain non Christian organi zations “which seem to be afraid of the growing strength of Chris tianity, and have been inspired by DURBIN, Winifred L., 72, 238 Newark Rd., Mt. Vernon, Aug. 31, St. Vincent de Paul church. Sur vivors: two daughters, a son, one sister and a brother. SWEENEY, Colleen Ruth, 4, 147 Erie Rd., Columbus, Sept. 6, Im maculate Conception church. Sur vivors: her parents one sister and two brothers. TORNABENE, Frank, 84, 337 W. Fifth St., Dover, Sept. 5, St. Jo seph church. Survivors: his wife, Frances five daughters and one son. ORBERTING, Frederick, 599 Larcomb Ave., Columbus, Sept. 2, St. Aloysius church. Survivors: his wife, Mary a son, daughter and brother. STRAKA, Mrs. Hilma, 47, 1506 Wilson Ave Columbus, Sept. 2, Corpus Christi church. Survivors: her husband, Anthony one son. ROUSH, Robert, 19, 1509 Georg esville Rd., Galloway, Sept. 3, St. Cecilia church. Survivors: his par ents, four brothers and two sisters. CANEGALL1, Antonio, 83, 1055 Camden Ave., Columbus, Sept. 2, St. Peter church. Survivors: his wife, Louisa three sons and two daughters. MILLSTEAD. James, 16. 1738 Fifth St., Portsmouth, Aug. 29, Ho ly Redeemer Church. TILOTI, Vittorio, 64, 857 Leon ard Ave., Columbus, Aug. 31, St. John the Baptist church. WE PAY YOU 6% INTEREST Let Your Money Work For You. Offer Limited to State of Ohio COLUMBUS DISCOUNT AND LOAN t«« K BKUAD ST. Columbae. Ohio CA D-IM1 They Know No Other Life There erg still about 150,000 displaced persons in Germany and Austria. At a D.P. camp in Ludwigsburg, visited by Catholic Relief Services—N.C.W.C. representative, are these children, born in the camps and still there. They have known no other life. By helping their daddies and mommies to come to the United States these children could go to regular schools and live in regular homes and not in barracks with leaky roofs, disgraceful plumbing and subnormal living conditions. Prelate Predicts India To Ease Mission Status (N.C.W.C. NE$S SERVICE) WASHINGTON, D. C- The Indian government’s new ruling restricting the entry of foreign missionaries is simply a transitional measure that is bound to be revoked sooner or later. This opinion was expressed by Archbishop Eugene L. D’Souza of Nagpur in an interview here. The Archbishop has been touring the United States to enlist the sympathy of Am erican Catholics in the crisis the Church is experiencing at the moment in his country. a misguided spirit of nationalism to brand it as a danger to the country.” "However," he said, "our rul ing statesmen, including Prime Minister Nehru, have decried this anti-Christian agitation and have more than once spoken ap preciatively of the work of the Christian missionaries and their contribution to the progress of the country." The Indian prelate said that ‘‘what gives us added courage in the face of our difficulties is the consoling fact that we are being blessed with many vocations to the priesthood and the Religious life.” He stated that virtually every di ocese has its own seminary, and predicted that if vocations con tinue to be as numerous as at pres ent, “the future of the Church in India will be a glorious one.” Ohio News In Brief CLEVELAND In his Labor Day statement, Archbishop Ed ward F. Hoban urged that the gov ernment institute a system of fam ily allowances “to promote the health and welfare of the family and of children in the nation.” Hailing the great social advances made in the U.S., the Archbishop added that much remains to be May They Rest In Peace SPIRES, Michael, 9, 1985 Brent nell Ave., Columbus, Sept. 1, St. Gabriel church. Survivors: his par ents, two brothers. SALVATORE, Mrs. Ernestine, 63. 1096 Northwest Blvd., Colum bus, Sept. 3, St. Christopher church. Survivors: her husband, Nick two sons, two daughters, a brother and a sister. HANKINSON, Lawrence E.. 36, 1275 E. Kossuth St. .Columbus, Sept. 3, Corpus Christi church. Sur vivors: his wife, Mary a stepson, his parents, two brothers and three sisters. RENTLER, Joseph, 73, 1475 Ells worth Ave., Columbus, Aug. 31, Corpus Christi church. Survivors: his wife, Florence a son and two daughters^ •KING, Mrs. Mary G., 60, 556 City Park Ave., Columbus, Aug. 30, St. Mary church. Survivors: her hus band, Charles a son, sister and brother. MOELLER, Karl, 51, 494 Han ford St., Columbus, Aug. 31, St. Leo church. Survivors: his wife, Erika a daughter, two sons and two sisters. HEGARTY, David J., 66, Laurel ville, Sept. 6, Our Lady of Sorrows chapel, St. Joseph cemetery. Sur vivors: his wife, Gertrude a bro ther and a sister. ROWAN, Miss Mary, 84. 609 Lin wood Ave.. Columbus, Sept. 6, St. John the E\angelist church. Sur vivors: one sister. -----------------o----------------- Want ads can make more noise for your prodt ct than a brass band with 1.000 members. CHECKLR CAS 1 iegistralion Act Enforcement in S. Africa Scored CAPE TOWN, South Africa (NC) South Africa’s national Catholic Weekly, The Southern Cross, has criticized the govern ment’s enforcement of the Popula tion Registration Act which gives a racial label— black, white or Col ored to the country's people. South Africa has a population of more than 12 million. Most seriously affected by the law are 1,000,000 Coloreds, the half-caste descendants of the early Boer settlers. An investigating committee from the government’s Census Bureau and Native Affairs Department is reclassifying thousands of them as Blacks. And, it reported, the re classifications by the “courts” are often based on such unscientific tests as passing a comb through a Colored’s hair to note its “kinki ness.” ’rhe 30.000 Coloreds who recent ly moved to Johannesburg were among the first to be rounded up for the examinations. It is said their migration did not fit in with the government’s apartheid (segre gation) plans. If reclassified a Black, the Col ored can no longer hold a semi skilled job, be a member of a trade union or move from city to city without a pass. In South Africa a man's color decides where he lives, how much he earns and where he may spend it, and what school his children may attend. done yet for the migratory, mar ginal and other unprotected work ers. CINCINNATI St. Gregory Seminary opened its doors this Tuesday to a record enrollment. Last minute requests from out side the diocese brought the opening day total up to 363. New students number 184. BLOOMINGDALE The larg est enrollment in the history of St. John Vianney Seminary report ed for the fall term. Of the 74 stu dents, 38 are in the high school de partment and 36 are on the college level. BUYERS* GUIDE Look not to that sacrifice with idle wonder. Bend to the Cross no eye of idle curiosity. His way is not the world’s way which is selfishness. Our human nature like Him must be stamped with sacrifice. We must look for sac rifice we must seek out crosses several times a day, deny our selves little things or pleasures to be more intimately united with the Cross. At your request we will send you a little paper bank in which you can drop in pen nies and dimes of sacrifices each day. At the end of the month, gather them up and send them to the Holy Father through His Society for the Propagation of the Faith. Those little crosses will be used to put crosses over altars in Africa, crosses over lep rosaria in India, crosses over schools in Burma, crosses over hospitals in Vietnam. Remember is was because Our Lord would not save Himself that He saved you. GOD LOVE YOU to K.P. “We decided to give a play for the benefit of the missions. We were very lucky as 44 people attended. Enclosed is a check for $5.10, the amount we made from the per formance” ... to G.V. “God helped me to find a new father land, and I was sworn in as an American citizen yesterday. En closed is a check for $10 to help thv poor of the world and in thanksgiving for my great bless ing Keep watching.your God Love MT. VERNON CLASSIFIED SECTION EXPERT installation of custom floors, linoleum, plastic wall tile, counter topa. Free enpmates. HAGENS FURNITURE, Danville. Ohio Phone 13-R Open Evenings FOR BOTTLED GAS AND APPLIANCES Call or See HARRY WILHELM Bottled Gas Service Bangs, O. Ph. 2317C Round Hill Farm There 1s A Difference In Milk Homogenized Vitamin Milk For Home Delivery Phone «1»J1 Mt. Varnon. Ohio YOUNGSTOWN KITCHENS FREE ESTIMATES Millwood Store Co. Millwood. Ohio Open Evenings Patronize these reputable merchants who make possible a Mt. Vernon Sec tion in the Diocesan Catholic Press. CARRY OUT MYERS SUPPLY BEER 4 WINE STORE 116 W High Ph. 23891 DELIVERY SERVICE SPEER’S MERCHANT DELIVERY Phone 52976 666 N. Sandusky Mt. Vernon, O. HARDWARES rHORP HD WE & ELEC. CO Danville 59-B Danville. Ohio WELL DRILLING Pumps and Service H. M. Hellwig & Sons Phono 2-9169 Utica, Ohio For Advertising Rates Writ*: AD DEPT. CATHOLIC TIMES P. O. BOX 636 COLUMBUS. OHIO Hadley’s Furniture and Appliances 23 East Gambier Street God Love You------------ Few Understand Meaning Of Life of Christ ■by Bishop Fulton J. Sheen How few understand the mean ing of the Life of Christ! Many think of Him as a man, often as a God like man whose noble teach ings were frus trated and end ed in failure through the Cruci i i o n. Our Lord is none of these things. Neither is he a martyr passively sub mitting to -su perior powers that crucify The Cross was His work it was the focal-point of it it was not the finish of His life, but the climax to which all else was subordinated. Did He not in the very beginning of His pu’jlic life say: “Destroy the Temple, and in three days, 1 will rebuild it. “The Temple is where God dwells But God dwelt in His Body. Therefore, “destroy my human life by crucifixion and in three days I will rise again.” The crucifixion was not a mis fortune in which Christ was trapped. It was a deliberate well ordered goal for Him. not the end of We honor our missionaries who rot in Chinese dungeons our Bishops and Cardinals who are brain-washed in satellite courts, for all these are but re flections of the Sacred Heart Who willed the sacrifice and death, though He could have es caped both. He was man and therefore He could die, but being God His death could make up for our sins. Because of love, He came to earth because of love He tabernacled among us be cause of love He refused to come down from the Cross, for if He came down, He never would have saved us. You column for an announce ment which is coming soonl If you are on a fall shopping trip in New York, make the “Be hold the World” exhibit at 366 Fifth Avenue, New York City, your first stop. Open Monday through Saturday, from 11 to-5, the admission is free and you will see some of the concrete aid given by the Society of the Prop agation of the Faith to the 65 million afflicted, aged, orphans and victims of leprosy through* out the world. 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 lx, N.Y., or your Diocesan Director, Father James Kulp, 246 East Town Street, Columbus 16, Ohio. WHERE THOUSANDS SAVE MILLIONS Curren* Return z’A/o Aceount’ A SAVE DIRECT FACTORY PRICES LOWEST IN HISTORY ON CHILDERS A U I FULL 36” width...34” drop for windows 45’ to 65* high. This is all you pay at our factory outlet for mi mdrvidnally packaged awning ready for installation. Nationally Advertised America’s first Do-It-Yourself packaged awning! Ready for you to pick up at our factory outlet. Install in 20 minutes! 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