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Everything is all right.” But right after that another steward came around and com manded: “Go to your cabins Get ready to man the lifeboats.” We went down three decks to our cabin, but we couldn’t get anything from it except our life preservers because smoke began filling the corridors. Just then the loudspeaker told us to go to our number stations the ones we had been assigned in lifeboat drill right after we left Genoa. Our station was the large cab in on the promenade deck. There were several hundred passengers including women and children in the first class passen gers’ promenade cabin. Suddenly the lights went out and all we could see were shad ow shapes around us. Another priest, a Father I-am ber! from Philadelphia (later identified as Father A. Paul lam bert, pastor of St. Philomena’s Church, l^andsdoune, Pa, near Philadelphia) began reciting the Rosary out loud, and Falher V oj cik and I responded: “Holy Mary, mother of God. pray for us sinners now and at the hour of our death Many in the group joined. 1 be gan hearing confessions. I gave general absolution to the group. I could hear Father lam bert doing the same, and anoth er priest named Father Markham (later identified as Father Daniel Markham of Troy, N.Y., who was injured) and Father Wojcik. The people appeared to have been strengthened by the Rosary and the confessions. There seem ed to he less crying. Wf looked outside through the windows and portholes and saw that the dense fog appeared to be lifting a little. After what seemed to be hours we suddenly saw lights—many light*--and someone shouted: “A ship? A ship!” People began talking, just to keep in touch with each other. Some even tried to joke a little. Lay Retreats 1956 July 31 August 2 ----------..Men August 3 5 Men August 10-12 Men August 17-19 Women August 24-26 Women LAY RETREAT HOUSE St. Thereto Shrine 5277 E. Broad Street MIESSE Prescription Pharmacy We Consistently Stock The Latest Drugs 1686 E. Main CL. 3-4484 WE PAY YOU 6% INTEREST Let Your Money Work Fer Yeu. Offer Luattod to Stota of Okie. COLUMBUS DISCOUNT AND LOAN l«a X. HBUAD ST. C.l* mb*i, Obi. CA R-8BS1 WALL PAPERS OF DISTINCTION PITTSBURGH PAINTS ART WALLPAPER CO. 325 S. High St., Columbus, Ohio CA. 4-6421 MONUMENTS OF DISTINCTION COLUMBUS ART MEMORIAL CO. •Oft-MM W. MOUND ST. pomwr cobmxb calvaxy cnnrruBt) OPEN SUNDAYS KVENtNGS BY APPOINTMENT MmhuhmiIb Markers MamoImiim FAMILY RATES No Charge for Children 12 and Under GARAGE M« PARANG LOT The order finally came over the loud speaker: “Abandon ship, tighten your life belts, women and children first.” By now the deck was tilted steeply, so we all slid down in a sitting position down to the evacuation doors and windows that had been opened by crew members. We waited for some time at our stations beside some lifeboats. Then crew members first helped women and children down Jacob's ladders over the side to a lifeboat And, thank God, the water was calm. We looked around and saw that we were almost surrounded by the lights of a number of ships. We were only in the lifeboats 15 or 20 minutes then we pulled alongside a huge liner. It was the He de France. Again we used Jacob’s ladders, but this time only for a few feet. For the holds of the lie de France had been opened to take us aboard, and people were giv ing us warm soup and sandwich es and hot coffee and blankets and deck chairs to sit in. When the sun came up, we could see the Andrea Doria slip ping further on her side. Novena Set For Bellevue Shrine The Sorrowful Mother Shrine, Bellevue, Ohio, announces the opening of the Novena for the Feast of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary. August 11th to August 19th. During the Novena, Masses in the morning will be offered at 8:00 and 9:00 Evening services and Proces sion tn the Lourdes Grotto will start from the Shrine Chapel at 8.00 p. m. Sunday Masses on August 12th and 19th will be offered at 8, 8, 10, and 11:30 The 10 o’clock Mass will be a Field Mass in front of the Chapel. August 15th Masses will be offered at 6. 8, 10, and 11.30 a. m. and in the evening a Field Mass in front of the Chapel at 8:00. There will be opportunities for going to Confession before, dur ing and after all services. -Wars Ordo~ LITURGY Of The WEEK SATURDAY, AUGUST 4, I FEAST OF ST. DOMINIC. I White vestments, Gloria, Sec-1I ond prayer (in Ixw Masses) fori the Pope, Common Preface. I Green vestments, Gloria, See ond prayer (in Ixiw Masses) ofl Our Lady of the Snow, Creda.l Preface of the Trinity. I MONDAY, AUGUST 6, FEAST OF THE TRANSFIGURA TION OF OUR LORD JESUS CHRIST White vestments, Gloria, sec-1 ond prayer (in l/iw Masses) ofl Sts. Xystus and companions,! Credo, Common Preface. I TUESDAY. AUGUST 7, FEAST OF ST. CAJETAN White vestments, Gloria, Sec-1 ond and Third prayers (in l^owl Masses) of St. Donatus and for the Pope, Common Preface. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 8, FEAST OF STS. CYRIACUS, LARGUS AND SMARAGDUS. Red vestments, Gloria, Second prayer (in Low Masses) for the Pope, Common Preface. THURSDAY, AUGUST 9, FEAST OF ST. JOHN VIANNIY: VIGIL OF ST. LAWRENCE White vestments. Gloria, Sec ond and Third Prayers (m Low Masses) of the Vigil and St. Ro man, Common Preface. FRIDAY, AUGUST 10 FEAST OF ST. LAWRENCE. Red vestments, Gloria, Com mon Preface. SATURDAY, AUGUST 11, SATURDAY OF OUR LADY. I SUNDAY, AUGUST 5, I THE ELEVENTH SUNDAY AFTER PENTECOST vestments, Gloria Sec Third prayers (in Low of Sts. Tiburtius and and for the Pope, Pre­ White ond and Masses) Susanna too ROOMS WITH MTN face of the Blessed Virgin. Here sandwich Is lust as important a whole dinner. DOERSAM'S M-U-M W. BWAD ST. COLUMBUS. OHIO Went Down With Ship I I A loss in the sinking of the Italian liner Andrea Doria, off the coast of Nantucket Island, Mass., is the artistically done chapel, which was adorned with murals by artist Lino Schenal. A triptych over the altar shows the Madonna of the Rosary, with St. John the Baptist at left, and St. Goorge at right, the latter two both patrons of Genoa, Italy, where the 29,000 ton liner was built. Andrea Doria Survivors (Continued from Page 1) 33, also of Chicago and returning from postgraduate studies in Rome, were in the lounge play ing scrabble. They said that if they had been in their cabin they would have been killed. Occu pants of adjoining cabins, includ ing New York Times correspond ent Camille M. Cianfarra, were killed. Crew Exemplary Father* Wojcik and Goedert wore among the last to leave the Andrea Doria. In contrast to statements by some other passengers, both priest* said that the action of the ship’s crew was exemplary. They not ed that some crew members did got into lifeboot* before the passenger* but only to man the boat* for rescue work. Fathers Goedert and Kelly said that they and other male passen gers joined in rowing their life boat for more than an hour go ing to the waiting Stockholm. Nun* Recall Crash Two Dominican nuns, Sister Marie Raymond of Grand Rapids, Mich and Sister Callistus, from Ixmdon. Ont., who had been studying music at Pope Pius Academy in Florence, were among the survivors. They had I gone to bed at 10 p.m., planning Ito get up for the 5:30 am. Mass Pope Sends (Continued from Page 1) Andrea Doria and pride in the ship’s officers and crewmen. His Eminence Francis Cardinal Spellman, Archbishop of New York, cabled President Gronchi of Italy. Word was also received here that U. S. Ambassador to Rome, Clare Boothe Luce, now on a Mediterranean cruise, radioed her condolences eign Minister and to the Italian Lines, Andrea Doria. Happy Landing For Refugees NEW YORK—(NC)- Among the 1,709 passengers aboard the ill-fated luxury liner, Andrea Doria, were a group of 20 Italian refugees enroute to America to begin life anew under auspices of Catholic Relief Services National Catholic Welfare Con ference. With the exception of one refugee immigrant who was in jured, the remaining 19 arrived safe and sound although bare foot and minus personal belong ings which for many represented all they possessed. They went their various ways, thankful that their lives had been spared to embark on the new life they have looked for ward to for so long. ‘Pray for Peace’ Appears on Mail WASHINGTON (NC) Fif ty of the nation’s largest post of fices will start using the first group of “Pray for Peace” can cellation dies on Aug. 1. This was announced here in a prepared statement by Postmas ter General Arthur A. Summer field who said that similar dies for other post offices will be manufactured and supplied as quickly as possible. ROOFING GUTTERS SIDING AND CARPENTRY WORK FREE ESTIMATES City Inspection DUPLER BR. 9-4866 Y I in the ship's chapel When the crash came “I half fell out of my upper berth,” said Sister Callis tus. “I dressed and put on a life preserver. Sister Marie Raymond and I walked the stairs up four decks to our lifeboat position, where we waited for a long time. It seemed ages.” A Baltimore priest, Father Jo seph Oppitz. C.SS.R., who board ed the ship in Genoa, was met at the pier by his mother and four relatives, bert, Pa., survivors. Father A. Paul I,am was also among the Daniel Markham of and his sister, Mar suffered Father Troy, N.Y. garet, of Defihar, N.Y., minor injuries in the crash and were hospitalized briefly in New York City. Father Antonio Con tent!, of Cilento, Italy, was hos pitalized with a fractured leg. Fa ther Joseph Batroli, also of Italy, was another survivor. Returning to Washington from Cyprus, where he had been teach ing for years, Brother Benedict Simon of the Franciscan Monas tery. Washington, D.C., was taken to St. Vincent’s hospital. New York, for minor hurts. He will soon celebrate his golden jubilee as a Brother. News In Brief had to For Martino Gaetano president operators STEUBENVILLE—St. John Vi anney Seminary Bloomingdale is expecting its largest enroll ment in its 10 year history when classes resume in September. More than 90 students are ex pected for the nine year courses now being offered. CLEVELAND Marianist ther William T. Anderson, a five of fer his United church, of the East Cleveland, will oL first Solemn Mass in the States at St. Philomena Sunday, Aug. 5. Falher Anderson was ordained in Fribourg, Switzerland, last Ju ly 17 after completing studies at the Marianist International Semi nary. TOLEDO The more than 800 Catholic students who will be en rolled at the University of To ledo in September will receive letters of invitation to join the school's Newman Club. letters, signed by Mary Lee Grosjean, membership chairman, were to be mailed this week. The letter speaks of the Newman Club as "a necessary and import ant bridge between a secular edu cation and your Catholic Faith.” CINCINNATI Plans to step up the anti-smut campaign of the Dayton Deanery Council of Catholic Men were outlined at a meeting of the Deanery Council’s decent literature committee re cently. According to Edward Shultz, chairman of the committee, most retailers in the Dayton area are “generally quite willing and even eager” to let decent literature committees remove from the newsstands and book racks pub lications disapproved by the Na tional Organization for Decent Literature. ESTABLISHED 1800 ROGERS* Church Could Remain Aloof In his address to 4.000 mayors and heads of provincial admin istrations of the Democratic Christian party meeting in Rome, the Pope obviously referred to the several political battles of (he past years in Italy and other European countries where the elections have been in great Tart contests between Christian and non-Chnstian forces. Although the Church has not taken any of ficial stand, it has exerted indi rect influence where the inter ests of Christianity were threat ened. "If all exerted themselves," th* Pontiff said, "so that the Gospel* were th* highest fer ment in theory and in practices If in their dissension* and re sulting baffle* men would leave out of their discussion* th* rights which God ha* over men and the world end would limit themselves rather to th* different way* of building with in the human structure a soci ety which would be essentially Christian, then th* Church could remain outside ef strife and avoid siding one or th* other party. The Holy Father seemed to re fer to the problem of coopera tion between Christian political forces with communists and their socialist allies—a problem exist ing in many parts of the world where the absence of a clear ma jority seems to demand compro mise for exercising successful government. “There are not lacking,” the Pontiff continued, “those who seek impossible approaches, de luding themselves about the va riety of changeable, expedient tactics, and forgetting at the same time the inacceptability of the unchangeable final aims.” The Pontiff then developed the requirements of a politician who openly declares himself to be fl Inspired by Morality By Father Jerne* I. Tucek VATICAN CITY If all were inspired in their civic and po litical activities by faith and Christian morality, the Church could remain apart from political contests and avoid siding with one party or another, His Holi ness Pope Pius XII declared. •nr with Finally the Holy Father stated that men and things, structures and institutions, continents and nations, all belong to God. “There fore there belong to God also the provinces and the towns and they, too, as such, ought to man ifest His glory and render Him due honor. men “But today there ar* who want to construct the on the negation of God, others who pretend that Christ should be left out of the school, the fac tories and the parliament. And in this struggle more or less open, more or less declared, more or less sharp the ene mies of the Church are some times supported by and helped by the vote and propaganda of those who continue to declare themselves Christians.” world a Christian. “To be a Christian,” the Pope said, “means to know the truths of th* Faith deeply and organ ically. It means believing them firmly because they have been revealed by Christ and taught by the Church. It means also to fol low the examples set by Christ and to bear testimony to Him with deeds without which faith would be as though dead. In or der that Christ be known and glorified in you, We exort you to Christian consistency.” So that those in political of fice be a credit to the Faith they profess, the Holy Father urged them to combine technical com- SAVE ON GLASSES at LAMBERT OPTICAL Complete GIamm $8.50 TO $n.5O 1000 Frame* In Stock $3.95 to $5.95 at LAMBERT OPTICAL 101 N. 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