Illumine the Hearts
Of Men, Pope Pius XII
Implores Blessed Virgin
(Continued from Page 1)
their city. He recalled that the
cathedral of Messina, which was
. twice destroyed in this century—
first during the "disastrous earth
quake of 1908 and again during
the last war — has been reopened
for worship. Now being re-il
luminated, Messina’s monumental
votive column to the Heavenly
Mother stands as a perennial tes
timonial to Messina’s faith, the
Pope sa^d. After having been
damaged and extinguished by the
war, this column now serves again
as a lighthouse to the living, indi
cating the port to the navigators
of ships, and Heaven to weary
hearts, he explained.
The relighting of the beacon
symbolizes a renewal of the prom
ise and the return of Messina to
its traditional devotion for Blessed
Virgin Mary, the Holy Father
said. He then spoke of the mourn
ing and sorrows throughout the
world in the aftermath of war and
implored the Blessed Virgin to be
mindful of hearts, fearing every
where the threat of new evils and
filled with uncertainty of an un
known and dark future, so that
they may find, under God, the
lost way to peace and light of her
Divine Son.
Peoples do not attain true, real
and enduring peace unless through
the arduous but secure way of
evangelical ‘justice and strong,
generous love, which is the high
est crown of that justice, the Pope
continued. He asked the Blessed
Virgin to recall to all men that
‘‘not by fraternal strife and selfish
victories, not by violence and
striving for powe^not by obsti
nate rivalry can. be obtained by us
and by the human family the'su
preme good of that peace to which
we are called, but by putting in
to practice the teachings of Him
Who alone was able to call Him
self ‘Prince of Peace’ and pro
claimed no other war than that of
man against his own passions.”
Create Bond of Union
Budenz Urges Nation
(Continued from Page 1)
we can at least set out upon the
journey. It is His Holiness, Pope
Pius XII, I believe, who, when
Papal Secretary if State, well put
it when he said: we must ‘grow
up’ with the developing cooperat
ive society which this ‘bond of
union’ envisages.”
Both labor(' and industry desire
mainly two things, the speaker
continued: security and freedom.
For the workingman, he said, se
curity means “a wage . that will
protect the family, not merely in
its sustenance and education but
in times of fhmily emergencies,”
, while freedom means “his right to
speak out economically and politi
cally, as a part of the democratic
state.”
“Any intimidation of him as a
worker, any threat real or implied
to his livelihood because he did
not conform to the dictates of the
ruling group in the state, is not to
be condoned.” However, the em
ployers too, can be threatened
with insecurity, Mr. Budenz con
tinued, because he is “hampered
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and seriously handicapped too of
ten by the monopolistic develop
ments which have come out of
originally unrestrained comoeli
tion.” The freedom of the employ
er, he said, is hampered at times
because^ of “restrictions by labor,
unwisely continued.for years, that
interfere with production and that
could best be met in some other'
way.”
In striving after freedom and
security both sides must not seek
merely selfish gains but the com
mon good, Mr. Budenz declared:
“for the good of mankind, the two
camps, drawn up in battle array,
will have to yield eventually, to
that ‘bond of union’ which the
Popes proclaim as the earmark of
a healthy (because united) so
ciety.”
Announce Appointments
For Diocesan Positions
(Continued from Page 1)
received “his training at Fordham
Preparatory School, Fordham Uni
versity and St. John’s Seminary,
Little Rock, Ark. He was ordained
at Sacred Heart Cathedral, Ral
eigh, in December, 1943. After
serv’ing as assistant at St. John’s
Church, Waynesville, Father Mur
phy undertook three years study
in Canon Law at Catholic Univer
sity for a degree in that science.
He was assistant pastor at St.
Paul’s Church, New Bern, during
the summer of 1945, and at St.
Lawrence’s Church, AsheVille, in
the summer of 1946. During the
past summer, Father Murphy re
ceived specialized courses on the
Confraternity of Christian Doc
trine at Catholic University.
Father Koch, new editor of the
North Carolina Catholic, has just
completed an intensive journalism
course at the University of North
Carolina in Chapel Hill. He re
places Dale Francis, first editor of
the paper. Father Koch studied at
in St. Mary’s Kentucky, and re
ceived his theological training at
St. Mary’s College and Seminary
Catholic University. He was or
dained at the National Shrine of
the Immaculate Conception in
May, 1943. He has served as as
sistant pastor at St. Patrick’s
Charlotte, and St. Paul’s, New
Bern. He has been director of the
Catholic Students’ Mission Cru
sade in the diocese and wrote a
column, “Dear Teen-Agers,” for
the North Carolina Catholic.
Philip S. Ogilvie, new executive
secretary of the North Carolina
Catholic Laymen’s Association, re
places Dale Francis, who was first
executive secretary of the asso
ciation. He is a native of Savan
nah, Georgia. Born in 1919, he was
received into the Church in Febru
ary, 1938, by Father Philip Tier
ney, O. S. B., now assistant pastor
at St. Peter’s Church, Charlotte.
He is a graduate of Catholic Uni
versity and has been a member of
Boxwood Lunch
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Vernon E. Hall & Earl Hoke,
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TARBORO, NORTH CAROLINA
Main Street Main Street
FARMVILLE SCOTLAND NECK
the staff of Mullen Library, Cath
olic University, for two years.
He is a member of the Catholic
Inter-racial Council of Washington
and was co-founder and organizer
of the Catholic University Inter
racial Council. He participated un
der the guidance of Rev. Wilfred
Parsons, S. J., in the program of
the district committee for Racial
Democracy and was an advisor
for the Newman Club at Howard
University.-. All of his family fol
lowed him into the Church and a
sister is a Sister of St. Joseph, Sis
ter Victoria Marie, now in Bruns
wick, Georgia.
Third new member of the edi
torial staff is Miss Marie Agnes
Smith, a graduate of Marywood
College, Scranton, Pa., and promi
nent in Catholic Daughters activi
ties in the city of Scranton. For
the past four years she has been
secretary to the editor of the
Scranton Light, diocesan paper of
the Scranton diocese.
Miss Virginia Sobotka, art edi
tor for the paper, will remain on
the staff and will have additional
editorial duties.
Barbara Francis, associate edi
tor of the paper, will leave with
her husband. Mr. and Mrs. Francis
arrived in North Carolina in April,
1946, from Dayton, O., where Mr.
Francis was a newspaperman.
They began the organization of
the North Carolina Catholic Lay
men’s Association, started the NC
CLA’s book campaign which has
placed more than a thousand
Catholic books in public libraries,
and a year ago this month pub
lished the first issue of the North
Carolina Catholic.
Chapel Hill Publishes
Book By Markham
(Continued from Page 1)
old ‘political churches,’ (Catholic
and Orthodox) and they can
easily find reasons for Tito’s dis
pleasure,” he asserted- “But
the Yugoslav Communists, in
their aims and acts, are working
against the Christian religion in
all its forms.”
“A true Protestant Christian
will find,” Mr/* Markham con
cluded, “that an alliance, even
in his heart, with Tito against
non-Protestant churches is as a
‘pact with death and a conspira
cy with hell.’ ”
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521-523 N. Trade St.
WINSTON-SALEM, N. C.
I
In a commentary on Mr.
Markham’s book, The Washing
ton Post states that he explicitly
contradicts almost every detail
of the claim of religious freedom
in Yugoslavia made by the dele
gation of American Protestant
ministers. The Post finds this
claim “rather difficult to swal
low” in view of the' recent .mob
murder of a priest of Lanischie
and “firm grip exercised over
the whole country by the noto
rious OZNA, or secret police.”
Organization Gets
Approval of Holy See
Rome. — (NC) — The Holy See
has given tacit approval to the
establishment of an international
relief organization designed to co
ordinate activities of Catholic
welfare groups in all countries, it
has been disclosed here.
The international organization
will not impose itself over al
ready existing charities, but will
function as a means of informa
tion and coordination. Nations
which up to this time do not have
their own relief organizations
will be encouraged by the inter
national outfit to create them and
to participate in the functions of
the world-wide organization.
A bulletin released in Vatican
City, discussing formation of the
world-wide organization, stated:
“The result is that the Holy See
has approved in rough lines, the
idea of a provisional committee
constituted by representatives of
national organizations which
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117 Gillespie Street
“Where the Promise Is Performed”
FAYETTEVILLE, N. C.
should be recognized by the Hier
archies with the idea of following
this line, but at the same time the
Holy See has reserved for itself
the task of preparing a charter of
an international organization of
coordination of Catholic Chari
ties.”
The bulletin emphasized that
the provisional committee shoul4
take the initiative in coordinating
the efforts of organizations with
out interfering in their direction
and organization on a national
scale.
In reviewing the efforts of na
tional organizations, the bulletin
paid high tribute to the accom
plishments of War Relief Ser
vices — National Catholic Wel
fare Conference, which it stated
headed the relief organizations
which have outgrown national
borders.
MOODY
FUNERAL HOME
MT. AIRY, N. C.
Modern Beauty Supply
Phone 2-1241
219 E. Sycamour St.
GREENSBORO, N. C.
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DEALERS IN FINE GROCERIES
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MERCY HOSPITAL SCHOOL OF NURSING
* — Accredited School —
Approved by AMERICAN COLLEGE of SURGEONS and
AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION
FALL CLASSES BEGIN SEPT. 6, 1947
For Full Particulars Write: Director of Nursing,
Mercy Hospital, Charlotte, N. C.
A NOTE FOR PASTORS
Do you get more, papers than you need? Return them to North
Carolina Catholic, Nazareth, N. C., and you will be credited for
all your returns. Send us a card giving the new number you need
each week. If you have already sent in a change card and the
change hasn’t been made there has been a slip-up in the circu
lation department so send in the change once again, along with
the approximate date the change was first requested and we’ll
charge you only for the number your originally ordered.