"The Psychology of Parent
hood, and Practical Problems of
Rearing a Family” will be the dis
cussion topic Nov. 1, Mr. Donald
Smith, staff announcer at WBNS
radio and father of five chil
dren, will be the moderator. Pan
el members will include Michael
WHEELERSBURG Bishop
Ready will bless the new Parish
Hall at St. Peter’s parish, Wheel
ersburg, next Wednesday at 4 p.
m. Father Edwin McCormick is
pastor of St. Peter’s.
October
October
October
November
November
November
December
23rd
25th
30th
4th
4th
6th
16th
4:00
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
7:30
21st
21st
23rd
25th
30th
October
October
October
October
October
November 8th
i
I
It Won’t Break Dad
Mr. Don Smith, center, St. Catharine parish, father
•f five children, poses as the nervous new father for the
Catholic Times photographer as Dr. S. D. Edelman gives
him some tips on how to care for the new heir. Both Mr.
Smith and Doctor Edelman will take part in the series of
pre-natal discussions for married couples which will be
gin at 8 p.m. next Thursday at St. Ann's hospital, 1555
Bryden Road.
Pre-Natal Classes Begin
Thursday at St. Ann’s
Next Thursday at 8 p.m. St. Ann’s Family Clinic, 1555
Bryden Road, will begin another series of pre-natal classes
for married couples.
The classes are designed to inform and ease the pos
sible anxieties of young married couples who are looking
forward to having a family.
The series will not only deal
with medical problems but will
also concern itself with other
aspects of pregnancy which
may be of social, economic,
emotional er religious nature.
Many outstanding leaders of
the community, priests, doctors,
psychiatrists, social workers and
parents have offered their serv
ices and experience for this series
of discussions.
Next Thursday the subject
will be "The Prenatal Physical
Examination and the Hygiene
of Pregnancy." Moderator will
be Dr. John Gallen with Doc
tors Harry Keys and Clarence
Gallagher as panel members.
Classes are open to the public
and will be held in the Guild
Room, St. Ann’s Hospital, 1555
Bryden Road.
Seaway Perils Investigation
Into 17th Century Church
MONTREAL (NC) Foundations of a Catholic
church, rectory and 11 Indian dwellings have been unearth
ed in an area that soon may be flooded because of construc
tion on the St. Lawrence seaway.
Archeologists are working against time to sift through
the remains of what they believe
to be an Iroquois village of about
1696. It is near Caughnawaga in
the midst of seaway develop
epment projects.
There is a slight chance that
some of the articles unearthed
may hold some secret of the
young Indian maiden, Kateri Tek
akwitha, the Lily of the Mo
hawks, whose cause for Saint
hood is being processed. She grew
tip at Ossernenon, a Mohawk vil
lige near the present Auriesville,
Bishop To Bless St. Peter
Wheelersburg Parish Hall
N.Y. She was declared venerable
by a 1943 Vatican decree.
-----------------o-----------------
Apostolic Delegate Opens
Vistarama Mission Show
PHILADELPHIA—(NC)— Vis
tarama, a week-long exhibit of
the work of Catholic Missions
around the world, was formally
opened with a Pontifical Mass
celebrated by His Excellency,
Archbishop Amleto Giovanni Ci
cognani, Apostolic Delegate to
the United States.
The sermon was given by the
Bishop Cuthbert M. O’Hara, C.P.,
exiled Bishop of Yuanling, Hu
nan, China, who was imprisoned
by the Chinese Reds for two years
before his release three years
ago.
Fall Confirmation
Schedule
Bishop Ready
7:30
7:30
7:30
4:00
7:30
7:30
3:00
P.M. Christ the King, Columbus
P.M. Saint Vincent de Paul, Mount Vernon
P.M. Saint Mary Magdalene, Columbus
P.M. Saint Michael, Worthington
P.M. Saint James the Less, Columbus
P.M. Our Lady of Lourdes, Maryiville
P.M. Saint Joseph Cathedral, Columbus
Bishop Hettinger
Saint Thomas Aquinas, Zanesville
Saint Nicholas, Zanesville
Saint John, Logan
Lockbourne Air Base, Columbus
Saint Mary, Marion
Saint Agatha, Columbus
P.M.
P.M.
P.M.
P.M.
P.M.
PM
Vol. VI, No. 3
Reception
To Honor
Chaplains
The faculty Council of New
man Hall, a newly formed organ
ization of Catholic professors and
administrative personnel of Ohio
State University are introducing
their new chaplains to the Uni
versity community at a tea to be
held at Newman Hall on Sunday,
Oct. 21, from three to five p.m
Bishop Ready will bo present
as will many of the pastors of
the Diocese of Columbus. In
charge of the refreshments are
a group of Catholic faculty
wives of whom Mrs. Vincent
Elterbroak and Mrs. Thomas
Rockwell are co-chairladies.
On Sunday at all the Masses
Father Richard Walsh, director
of Newman Hall, will speak on
the second of his series on
"Christ, Our Way and Our
Life." The subject will be
Christ, the Wonder Worker."
There will be a class on Mon
day evenings at 7 p. m. for those
contemplating marriage. This
will be conducted by Father
Walsh.
Father Keating will continue
his course on Thomistic Philos
ophy on Tuesday at 4:10, and
“Theology for the Layman” will
be held on Thursday at 4:10 by
Father Walsh. The Inquiry Class
continues as usual on Tuesday
and Thursday, at 7 p.m.
o-----------------
Michigan Catholic1
Gets New Editor
DETROIT (NC) Father
Richard T. Parrish has been nam
ed editor of the Michigan Catho
lic, newspaper of the Detroit
archdiocese, it has been announc
ed by His Eminence Edward
Cardinal Mooney, Archbishop of
Detroit.
Father Parrish succeeds Msgr.
Hubert A. Maino, who is now pas
tor of St. Lucy’s church, St. Clair
Shores, and dean of the eastern
deanery of the archdiocese.
and
Houlihan, Lawrence Hoye
James Connor.
Dr. R. Frank Donley will
cuss “The process of labor
Delivery,” on Thursday, Novem
ber 8.
dis
and
Topic of the fourth discussion
will he "The Care of the Mother
and the Child after Birth.” Dr.
Joseph Forrester will moderate
the discussion of panelist Doc
tors Thomas Hughes and S. D.
Edelman.
The last in this discussion ser
ies will center around the topics
“Marriage as a Vocation and
Medical-Moral Questions Affect
ing Married Life.” Monsignor Rol
and T. Winel, pastor of St. Mary
parish, Lancaster, will be discus
sion leader with Father George
Fulcher, assistant pastor St. Jos
eph Cathedral and Dr. Joseph
Gallen as panelists.
The Holy Father made the appeal in an address to the
Congress of Catholic Associations of Small Business here.
Ownership and responsibili
ty, the Pope said, provide a
powerful stimulus for good in
the community and make a man
more "fully a man." He urged
that these benefits be distrib
uted among employees as much
as possible.
“The private u s i n essman,”
continued the Pope, “the mer
chant, the farmer, are all con
cerned with making the goods of
their own labor bear fruit. They
are witnesses to the results
brought about by their labor as
well as the effects of their neg
ligence or mistakes. This fact
provides a kind of tension be
tween material goods and their
owners which takes the form of a
productive activity submitted to
powerful stimuli for the good of
the community.
“But if the owner of a busi
ness,” he went on, “thus finds a
way to maintain and consolidate
his social position, is it not proper
that he should try to share the
same benefits with those who de
pend upon him and give him the
support of their labor? Do they
not also have the right to a stable
position in society, to possess the
goods necessary for themselves
and their families, to make them
productive by their own initiative
and draw legitimate profit from
them?”
Th* Pop* stated that it is
commonly recognized a* a fact
that employees contribute mor*
to an enterprise when they feel
that they have a personal in
terest in its proper function
ing. On the other hand, he stat
ed, a man cannot submit his
economic and social aspirations
totally to another man's will.
He cannot be a mere "silent
functionary."
“A human concept of enter
prise,” continued the Pontiff,
“must undoubtedly safeguard the
authority of the owner in the in
terest of the common good, but
it cannot submit to such a pain
ful misunderstanding of the pro
found value of the worker. As a
matter of fact, when technical
progress or concerted efforts to
raise productivity are forced up
on small business it will become
necessary to ask for the indis
pensable collaboration of the per
sonnel.”
The Pope observed that the ev
olution nf modern economy, new
discoveries, and their application,
will increase the advantages of
big business. It will become in
creasingly necessary that the
small business owner work more
intimately with his employee,
that he listen to his desires and i
Serves God Regardless of Race, Color or Creed
Sick Poor Nuns Begin
45th Year of Service
Forty-four years ago four young women arrived in Co
lumbus to care for the sick and poor of the city.
The women were the first nuns in the city of the order
of the Dominican Sisters of the Sick Poor. Their work is
the visiting and caring for the sick and poor of the city,
free of charge, regardless of race, color or creed.
and three other sisters establish
ed a convent at 168 E. Lincoln St.,
the same location that it has to-
day.
In ihose 44 years the Domin
ican sisters have taken care of
more than eight thousand cases,
requiring about 112 thousand vis
its totalling around 500 thousand
hours of service.
Next Thursday the annual do
nation day tea will he held at the
convent. This tea is one of the
chief means of support of the lit
tle band of nuns which have serv-
Businessmen Asked
To Share Ownership
With Employees
VATICAN CITY (NC) Businessmen have been
urged to give a greater share of ownership and control of
their companies to employees by His Holiness Pope Pius
XII.
suggestions and share the solu
tion of business problems with
him.
"We will add," the Pope said
in conclusion, "that the Chris
tian ideal must never cease to
inspire your enterprises. The
business which asks for the co
operation of several individuals
for production of goods must
then become a means, a mile
stone on the road which must
lead always higher. Man has
done nothing if, by bettering
economic conditions, he has not
also given deeper worth to cul
tural, moral and religious val
ues.
“Each one of you, each one of
those dependent upon you, is en
titled to the fullness of divine and
human life as a son of the Church
and a member of the Body of
Christ Become more and
more aware of the presence and
call of Christ in every human be
ing, even the poorest. Make your
professional work contribute to
the betterment of their lot! Your
sense of justice and the spiritual
fraternity which unites you to
them must bring you to give them
the sincere esteem and affection
which they expect from you.”
■'’sB
'5
Iw
Mayor Sensenbrenner of Columbus
points out the slogan "Trust in Youth" to
representatives of the Catholic Youth Or
ganization who met with the Mayor to re
ceive the official proclamation of National
Catholic Youth Week in Columbus. From
left to right are Jerry Gantzer, Our Lady
The Catholic Times
ed the Diocese for the past 44
years, according to Sister Clare
Marie, OP.. superior of the Co
lumbus convent.
Sponsored by the Friends of
the Sick Poor, a lay woman or
ganization formed to give aid to
the Columbus foundation, the tea
will begin a 2 p.m.
Mrs. Joseph Hagerty, president
of the group, has appointed Mrs.
Lewis Higgins and Mrs. Paul
O’Dea, co-chairmen.
■—---------—o-----------------
St. Agatha
Addition to Be
Blessed Oct. 21
Bishop Ready will Solemnly
Bless the new addition to St. Aga
tha’s school at 4 p.m. this Sun
day, according to Father George
Kennedy, pastor.
Fr. Arnold Favert. pastor of
Our Lady of Victory parish, and
Fr. Albert Culliton, pastor of St.
Christopher parish, will be dea
con and sub-deacon for the form
al dedication and blessing.
The addition to the school, the
third since it was constructed in
1940, contains six classrooms, a
gymnasium auditorium, lavator
ies, locker rooms, music room,
teachers lounge, principal’s of
fice, storage and furnace rooms.
When the original school struc
ture was built in 1940, St. Aga
tha’s had an enrollment of only
46 students. At that time, four
classrooms and social hall pro
vided adequate space.
With the fast growth of the
parish in the years following, it
became necessary to add more
facilities.
In 1950 a library and two class
rooms were added and in 1952
two more classrooms were built
and the old social hall was con
verted into classrooms. A kitchen
and cafeteria were also built at
that time.
o-------------
Solemn Profession Rites
At St. Joseph Monastery
PORTSMOUTH Bishop
Ready will officiate at solemn
profession ceremonies at St.
Joseph Monastery here today.
The monastery is operated by the
Franciscan Nuns of the Most
Blessed Sacrament, an order ded
icated .o the perpetual adoration
of the Holy Eucharist.
Mayor Proclaims Youth Week
We Must Aid
Missionaries
To Win Souls
A heavy burden will be
lifted from the thin should
ers of our Holy Father this
Sunday, Mission Sunday
throughout the a olfc
world.
The first and heaviest respon
cibility to reach the people of
every place with the truth* of
Christ belongs to the Vicar
of Christ.
The Holy Father’s Mission aux
iliary, the Society for the Propa
gation of the Faith, seeks pray
ers. sacrifices in concentrated ef
fort on that day, which will he
distributed under the Pope's su
pervision among all missions and
the missionary groups both home
and foreign.
Bishop Ready in a letter read
at all Masses offered in the Di©
cese, last Sunday, said "All of
us must share Christ's concern
for souls. Those who do so,
even when it means complete
lifetime sacrifice, deserve the
title of 'missionary.' Now it is
our turn to prove ourselves
worthy of the name and of a
share in the glory of their he
roic deeds."
New missions will he establish
pd, old ones expanded and the
works of mercy and education
will be expanded.
Catholics in the United States
have been called upon by the
Pope to remember the colonial
days up to the early nineteen
hundreds with 7‘-2 million dol
lars from the Propagation of the
Faith in Europe.
Last year in our Diocese more
than 34 thousand dollars was
Th* nine, all from the Neth
erlands, were brought to the
United States under the Dutch
Refugee Act. This Act, a part
of the overall Immigration Act
Pope Says...
Be Alert
To Movie
Morality
ROME (NC) His Holiness
Pope Pius XII wants priests and
lay leaders to develop a sense of
responsibility in protecting the
morality of the faithful with re
spect to movies.
Msgr. Angelo Dell’Acqua, Sub
stitute Vatican Secretary of State,
said this was the Pope's wish in
a letter to the National Congress
of the Catholic Cinema held here.
Msgr. Dell’Acqua said “caution
and watchfulness” are required
for the diffusion nf moral and
religious principles through a
medium “that can be either an
instrument of education nr a tool
of destruction and ruin.
of Victory parish, Judy Kabealo, Immacu
late Conception parish, the Mayor, Judy
Chase, Our Lady of Victory parish, and
Joseph Murphy, St. Augustine. Youth
Week will be held October 28 to Novem
ber 4.
Columbus 16, Ohio, Friday, October 19,1956 Price Ton Cents $3.00 A Yoar
Mission Sunday Gifts
Lighten Pope’s Work
&
ft
SI.
Nine More Refugees
Arrive in Diocese
For Placement
Nine more refugees will arrive in the Diocese for
placement within the next two weeks, according to Fr.
Lawrence Corcoran, assistant director of charities.
of 1953, which expires in De
cember of this year, provides
that the Netherlands govern
ment provide transportation to
their destination in the U.S.
expense money to pay initial
expenses in the United States
comprehensive health and ac
cident insurance policy for
three months end permission
for emigrants to transfer per
sonal funds to the U.S. The
Dutch government is the only
state that pays the expenses of
the emigrating citizens.
“More than 150 refugees have
been placed in the Diocese by the
Catholic Welfare Bureau since
1953.” Fr. Corcoran said. “The
bureau finds them jobs and plac
es to live on arrival, trying to
make the initial impression of
their new home a good one.”
Those arriving in the next two
weeks are: Mr. Joseph Wallner,
who is sponsored by Charles H.
Thompson. 622 Wrexham Ave.
Mr. Piet Vincken, mechanic and
machinist Mr. Bartelink Wouter,
mechanic, and wife, Catherina
Mr. Nauta Didederik, mechanical
ability Mr. Eduard Van Em
merick. auto mechanic and
Gerardus Vaessen. wife, Ger
arda, and son, Peter. Mr. Vaessen
has worked as locomotive en
gineer, maintenance mechanic
and a coal miner.
Anyone interested in helping
these people either with a job or
home can receive more informa
tion by contacting the Catholic
Welfare Bureau, 246 E. Town St.,
Columbus, CA. 1-5891.
-----------------o----------------
Vermont Court Nixes
Aid to Private Students
MONTPELIER. Vt.—The Ver
mont Supreme Court has ruled
that present state laws do not
permit use of state funds as tui
tion payments for students at
tending non-public schools.
The state’s high court held
that any change in the system of
state aid would have to come
from new laws passed by the
General Assembly.
o----------------
Student at Georgetown
WASHINGTON, D.C. Miss
Georgie Ann Allnutt of Columbus
has been enrolled as one of the
56 members of the freshman class
of Georgetown Visitation Convent
Preparatory School here as this
oldest of all U.S. Catholic girls’
schools begins its 158th academic
year.
Miss Allnutt is the daughter of
William R. Allnutt, 2268 Abing
ton Rd.
i
The Pope, pictured here at the beatification of In
nocent XI, must shoulder the responsibility for the op
pressed and needy of the world. You can help see that
the Faith is brought to many areas of the world by your
prayers and material sacrifices.
given to the Mission Sunday ap
peal. The Holy See allocated
51% of this to foreign missions,
dividing it among 643 districts.
Forty p«r cent we* given to
the home mission* of th* Unit
ed Stete*, chiefly in the South
end Southwest, and Alaska.
Nino per cent was distributed
i
in the Neer East, th* area in
and around th* Holy Land
which is now of miuion charac
ter.
“Each prayer and sacrifice,
Bishop Ready reminds us, “is act
ually thrice a gift. The Divine
Master said that it is first a gift
to Himself because it is given
to the helpless, it is a gift to the
Holy Father, for he arranges its
distribution among the Missions
and his is the heaviest respons-i
bility toward the Missions. Fin
ally, the people in the Missions
receive both the blessing of Faith
and aid in their poverty.”
-------------o----------------
Schedule Set
For Diocesan
Mission Meet
Father Charles Erb. S.V.D. re
cently returned from Africa will
offer a Dialogue Mass to open
the Diocesan Student Mission
Workshop at 9:30 Saturday at
Bishop Rosecrans High School,
Zanesville.
Following Mas* th* Catholic
Students Mission Crusade pre
sident of Rosecrans High School
will welcome th* mission-mind
ed young delegates from all
over the Diocese.
After a brief explanation of
the schedule by Ann Matesich,
Rosecrans student who was elect
ed to the National Board of the
CSMC at the national convention
in August. Father Erb will give
the keynote address.
Sectional meetings will follow
the opening address with the
freshman, sophomore delegates
from Junior and senior meetings
respectively led by New Lexing
ton St. Aloysius Academy, SL
Mary High School, Columbus, St
Mary, Lancaster and Rosecrans,
Zanesville.
Each of these sections will dis
cuss the study, sacrifice and pray
er programs of the Mission or
ganization.
After lunch the students will
participate in a short recreation
period.
Following this delegates from
Newark St. Francis de Sales will
present a round table discussion
on the topic “Personal Service
to the Missions.”
Holy Rosary High School, Co
lumbus, will stage an oratorical
contest with the topic ‘‘What I
Learned from the Crusade Con
vention”
The latest mission movies will
be shown later in the afternoon
with the general session opening
at 3 p.m.
The one-day workshop will end
with the recitation of the Cru
sade Pledge and the Apostolic
Blessing being bestowed upon
the delegates.
WANTED
.’. Catholic books and per
iodicals for free distribution
among interested non-Catho
lies. Magazines as Jubilee,
Worship, Th* Liguorian, Sign,
Catholic Mind, Catholic Digest,
Family Digest, Th* Grail, Al
tar and Home, Voice of St.
Jude, Informetion, America,
Commonweal, Th* Torch,
Work, Today. Can you bring
them to the Confraternity of
Christian Doctrine Office, 246
E. Town Street, Columbus
Our phon* is Capital 1-5891.