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:^ . < k^'iU&hzvh'&'Uf* : W» ••'?<*:•*••'.$».,.* yi^'^f$^^m^^s^t*' :p ''' .ikjCif^iilvWB - , ..*..>• X*ifM**M* .CATHOLIC COURIER AND JOURNAL, \FRIDAY JANUARY G, 1933 ITS\g*od NOW BETTER BUSINESS liter . _'. . . NOWwki y* apeMl— 7M SAVE . , . if yoa «w ***** * VALUE »d SERVICE IT A* C»t*»6c €o«ri«* &^«w»»I BUSINESS REVIEW COLUMNS Speak ers For Lecture Course 3^ Aiuibuhced (Continued from Page One) rector of Catholic Education who will have,for his subjeot \Christian Edu- cliftsh.\ TF&ther Duffy's tatk witt appeal particularly to parent*. ^^ D ^ hl n^ for Ti w tTntTir C ir.- 1 mtlt^ry- all others interested in education of ono _, H f nvltfl(ii ho 8aId . Tnese , ec . Seminary and known widfly for IIIH radio talkB. lAither Klimann will up ply tho principles in the encyclical to the problems of the day. Chairman of the Executive Com- nittrceTThmir H: Bon-hpTiyrnnrwwi? in commenting on tho proposed course stated that each of these W- UtrPH will ho vitally Int'-restlng to all who attend. Baaed of course on the principles laid down In tho Holy Fathers.* Encyclicals they will how- ever h a fllled with Information and thought of the day. There will bo Catholic youth The Rev. Theodore Wlnterroth. as- sistant pastor of St, Michael's Church will apeak February 24 on \Freder- ick dxanatn.\ tho founder of tho St. Vlne*nt do Paul society and whose activity as a Catholic lay workor is still being .held up as an example to Cathollo laymen throughout tho - world, • — The Mexican Question will be dis cussed by tho Rev. Dr. Frederick J •Zwlerlein of St. Bernard's Semlnary- on March 10. . Dr. Zwlorlstn who Is profeuor of Church History at tho Sarolnary, ha* made an exhaustive atiidy of the troubles or fh« Church In Mexico and will have Interesting information for his audience, \flfta great Borum Novarum, \On tftecdttdltloxi ot Labor\* laaued by tope t* o XUl will bo dlaeuwed at lentth pn March 24 by tho Rev. How- 'StifQ. Gick of the faculty of St. An- ^r%w'f~SemJnary. The great En- cyclical liaTlng as It r doe» groat hearlnf tin the questions ot the day. Jitheir Cock's'talk will bo particu- larly timely and Informative. Tho tfoinmitteb aolected Eathdr Geek ..for thU talk becauie of his many yoara aftfdy of the question. —enarh»-^^mckoJU-jQhRliceIl.or _ of Bocheiter Council, Knights of Co- lumbui. and a graduate or Boston College will on April 7 relate tho Jit'ory it \The North American Mar- Hfri.\*Mr. Tuokor la widely known — for„hls ability aa a platform speaker aM haa been selected by th e Fedora- t&tt'e^mmtttee because of his ox- tenalye knowledge otthtr early Jesuit jftlaaioiMulet. t For tho closing talk, on Quadra- jealmo Anno, \0n4he Reconstruction ofttheSoSlat pf^ttt.\ recently Issued bx^ope Hu»>3a, the Federation, has \p&earW tho Ber. Benedict A. Eh- riann, professor \at\ St. Andrew's VJth'lij • / * -it— r-T-Ti-inai. J. J. Kalb & Son* :JfflfflES^at WHOLESALE •HOB REPAIRERS' SUPPLIES ,tr7-§f Andrews St. Main S07S ,KOM M0-B87 Ante Delivery JOSEPH J. BROWN MARKET Choice Meats and Fancy Dressed Poultry - IT Bkfcmond St. Bocheater, N. Y. •erTlee - QwOlty Town Talk Bakery, 501*507 Pullman Avenue nco. •jAlways Boosting Rochester\ Baked Goods of Every Description - Ow«rBck«Pa*a Tc«rl)ox)rJi!ieri Day ate. 446 FOB HIGH QUAX<rar COAL and COKE at Lowest Prices JR0S.S SOI DRIVING PARK AVE. It**\~' mem AUTOMATIC .-OIL BURNERS --= -for —-— COMFORT and COITONIENCE fy% ajrtajpOO^ LAUBEILECTRIC OoMaUpKr Ko Oo*t—Ko ObUg»Oon is president, J president, and J. F. Schmidt is secretary-treasurer .of the corpofa- jtton. , • Persons Who want baked goods of quality\ will And that they can btr purchased from* the Town Talk Bak- ery and the?-have, leamed-from ex- tureB will bo a presentation of Catho lie Evidence along tho same llnett as that of the outdoor speakers in Lon- don and now In the t'nlted States. Chairman Donnelly said o s — Pope Manifests Interest in Irish, Prelates Relate (Continued from Page One) splto of persecution!! and ofher means adopted to undermine their Faith.\ Hlo Hollneaa wan deoply im- preaaed by tlto devotion displayed at tho EUchnrlBtlc Cbnuresa. Many of the Blahopa roforrod to tho dangorB or Communism in Ire- land. The Most Rov. James J. Mc- Nameo. Bishop of Ardagh and- Clon- mnenolse. snld .he had boon pained to ne\srnr~tmri)foHff aurtmr\W« visit to Rome that a branch of an organiza- tion stated to ho. Communistic had boon formed in his diocese. The press report, howovor, ho added, he had found to bo exaggerated, for some of tlmpooplo -whose nnigjjs.woro given had ropudlatod all connection with the organlza,tlon while others said they were in Ignorance of the implications of tho organisation. This was not said Bishop McNamoe. a po- litical question, for the movement with Us hoadquarters In Russia wa s entirely different from either politics or social action. It was tho very op- oslte of both\ ho added, noting that t aimed at setting up a religion of irrellgion. Tho aim of tho move- ment was not, as-of old. t o attempt to impose another roliglon on the people but to put an end to religion altogether, the prelate said. Tho H6Bt Rev. aratthew Cullen. Bishop of Kildare and Lelghltn. in a public address, declared, that In Ire- land Communism did not make a rtlHvrnftnHr \n >-\»r'\\ tmciuiwe its promoters know well that the Irish people woro deepty attached to their religion. Tho Communists, he said, claim nil they wont is t o holp tho un- employed. Hut this Is only a pretence. It Is tholr hope, tho Bishop Bald, to get peoplo Into tholr ranWil know tntr-^*«t=tf a -th<^=eafe make a faho step the second and the third false stop will be easy. Thrti> real object, lie declared, was to erad- icate all roliglon from the world. Re- ferrlng-to-hl\ recent vlslLto Rome, the Bishop said that when. His Holi- ness was told how regularly the Irish people =Ftsit the Sacraments he was overjoyed. His Holiness inquired specially about the schools and the children and wa8 pleased to know that the educational system in th e Free State was working very satis- factorily. Have Town Talk Men Call on You The Town Tatk Bakery is located at 501^507 Pullman Avenue, and Its building is fitted with the latest In model baking equipment, is manned by a group of bakers who know the kind of baked goods that the aver- age housewife requires as a suitable siibatittfte.foT home baking. The Town Talk Bakery is BTKOcIt- ester business, composed of Roches- ter men, who buy raw^ materials from local producers. C. w. Schmidt ~—^T^th»4dtT--^iee- perlence that bread, pastry and other articles of food are always fresh tend tasty. -- A - .• Quality and service have been WStchwotds ehTtt_ih J e_Town Talk Bakery has lived up to carefully since the-lnceptlon of. the establish- ment. Motor trucks pass your door every day with freshly baked prod- ucts from the ovens in Pullman Ave- nue aad a corps o* delivery men dis- tribute TthB\*products.-throughout \the city and vicinity.- :.... ~TW Town Talk Bakery has the distinction of being a 100 percent 16- ,c*l cdncfera and are \Always Boost- ing fcbehester.\ ELECTRIC CQ,, Inc.! m^r^a ir^ _7-r- Mm Ave, Stone \7210 :*& si \ Birth Control 'Use of Correct Pamphlet? Sale ; Church Music h Curbedjy Judge! ^(Continued from Page O.n i i- rworp be-au-'.ifui t'.ai. •i.a'. oi t ;.a:n6d cbotr unaf-con.panipd hi m'*rum«nt. v;><- human voit-c it, iii.!:if-diati- haiidrwur'k of Qn- »3t. -IliCUlS IPlan-t'-'\\ ni0 ' il -'f Mjr - f< * f ' t -mniiral initrun 10.111 ,. <f) TIlP ohrhlt i.rcmf r 0 urt Ix-tuj:* it ' s f \\' : >. ' fidf^l. T Th«- aVfpndiii.t. I'aganeili. -.%..- •>• rnhtt-d on Sfjjtf-niiw.r 23 to Ii t,, c'\> Wll!iaai Halloran in cowpan-. *iU Siip«-rirU**inl>-r • i.'nivlfs of '••' I' a '' If rfppnrii,,'i'i of tti* CI^^' 'V ;\' hr ftjrri- Tin- two officers .u-ii; • \ ! A complaint that tho Mail !'•\- <'<' hvas adv<rfisins anrl dlMrtV«''''C -'•>•'• \' jf'in'njl lltfidMiTi-. vL«,l'f<i ' : -' \'\'• !• y <i..\ h'-rort-, notirp a *ii ••\» 'li« I I..I-, of cotjtraof pti\ f .ilcr.1' .t. .n.' foatraf'-i'tiyt-s ajid..,iiunc.!ia'' i ,| l-t'- i 1 .' fl' I''.,- pa tiip>.ii-i . on salf. R<> ; in '' ''• ! i i,- »ii,fr m i :it-|,lfif.ljfr i'i '••'• \l ' • • j iiitcrM-wni tl.i- manager. • r \ ,! •\ •' tmir s«aro!i warrant anA'p'-i''\ 1 \''* (injiloyff J'awani'llj who 'ail \\\'' ' .fil l tl.t • |,c I.i u '> i,-1 jfjjf* ;r -t \ - * ±'Jx'ilSJ.'i!i hi.u with violation ot -••*• T'lfu- i::0(i of tlip Otiw 'i'-i.'-t.' 'foil-- 'i':,!•, wHrii,,,, ,,f tae \»j>. tor Ibids Ow advcr!i«l:.t. »alr an<l '!'•'' ,','ition of Mrt!i control litera'!'• I \dinitK sidF Tli£_-ni<- of tin- iijirpjMf rts -•!<! i.ltti-4 *»v I'a^aiwlii but hi- •' M \ ! iv ui.iiiitaJiicd H.at tbe aih' 'i-'i..-. and t.nlf of :urli literature h. .1 net wai not a violation of t l hut part nf Ins fi-yitlmst* tin .IIU-«» The di'ffiixi- rlalm wu.s bastJ m> ^'•' lion 13037 of IIIH CH.'i'eral (''><!•' -\• fvri.ptin^ i,iTtioii ri-tBtrint '\ ' •' antl contran-[itIvr htatiites pri-ci-••Un- it Swtioti j::i)'!7 Is as follow- K\cf|itionH . Thf cext tlir.\ preci-dlti« ii-rilon'i iTFiatt Tirr^ n* fi-rt tPachihir In rejrulirly char ter»*d ntoUical rollegi-s. the publi- cation of standard mi Un-.il books, or rpfiular |iraeliilo.i>-i> of medicine or druRaiBtiln n»-ir \ Ipfrttfmnto business. A<<Histant I'oUri- Prosecutor I>«-T, -rrt-- - a '''H.lprojliUH : ,., k il ••:<!>• «i<-ction* nr~T 1 \ -imp!'- di'Vk-f'.t p i- n ; ar .., j! ••in in,-, w,,ui,i ,,. .,, '* t \ \'\• '.ti'l. T.l- p.i.in-hVJl ft-n failed th.- choi • atpil for t i(- propf ;n:r ','!•• .IM-. I . \*. j. ... . ..Ml t A I.I I.' MII^TC ' T'i- r'luir will Vin^ ,„ • 'if . Mu r .i-, wit.,oi,i_ i* u , ., : \K '-\t. and with 'disti; r ••i.m to tlisrt^iif words tbp„,.,v •J\ '•» diKtliisui-tif- d T L Cl'l.il l,». nidtln to SHI' t •' ii\' \,-r-Nd ^olos or f .NI p.i\. ar>- iiot ii, ordt r T i>- <•' o,r- w.ii ^u... w» • 1 Mm'. • of ai-CGfi.pa.ln ;... af'OTi!,anyii.(- ln^f: i-i;» liri-'c'or may • pn*-»t or laymar: \ TTfp orsan - « a.lioard may b«- outB.dt- *,:ie^anct TnTTrmoTrgn \wher^ tr 4 »- i-tjou ' 1.- >\ t>aii<'luar>. s-uiii „i, arran-'fj world s-U|.iiOM-. a> a\ 1.. ' .1 I nt-rwci's of an oruanist aiul cl.-. '' 'in- din tor. nndinon of ,..,„, An ,j u , t . ,, J t hy r- „ m ,. aR !*:»• .*-a-' 4 I:.,- ,-oij-:*-udi io::. voua- v ^f*— atjit--\^+i. *'*'hni'i si-^s, •i'lti-oltl jolt- 'a,- >io;i 111-hifis-liif. •/••':•• part ot th' mu - • as ••juph.d^izt'd >,\ . _ t':«- Ho|\' ii .- and in ri,nfo'riii!'\ with tradi-f 1 no: .1'. falhoh,- dMi'iplit •- I t 1 1 1 -i i 1 litll V 'I., ori-an. No -~-i 111 n- In the Year of Our Lord 1933 Radio Talk Given by Rev. Benedict A. Ehmann, Professor at St. Andrew's Seminary, over Station WHAM During Rochester Catholic Hour—Sunday, January, 1. Our Divine Saviour has compared tho \scribe instructed In the kingdom of Heaven\' with n \householder who bringeth forth out of his treasure now things and old.\ \\\ these younc hours of the now year, I would take your thout'litH back to Bomethini; that happened over thirteen hundred years ago. It Is in the island which wo now call England. I'ope Oreporv tltn Orent hns alrnndv sent Aiiffiistlnn nnd his band of missionaries to con vert tho southern kingdom of Krnt and its king. Ethelbert to the fnlth of Jesus Christ. This was in tho yoar 697. And ' now thirty yoars later the weisht of English power-has shifted to tbo northern kingdom of Iffofthhumbciaiond. its younK heathen klnu. Edwiin. A king of such sin- core mind nnd fair promise must he captured for Christ • and sn we find Hie mlgglnnnry, Pfinllniis pnlnlng en- trance to the court of Edwin and preaching- tho cross of Christ to thnt Old English king. Rut Edwin must needs wait: he must eather bis thnnes and his counsellors: he niuit discuss thisimomentous thins with them. In council, then, the new one of the thnnes arises to give his hlTna* on'*tTfS^SrlJlwtr his name b not recorded, but his words are given to .perpetual -memory in St. Bede's Ec- clesiastical History of the English Nation. They ought to be written hi letters of gold. As a te\t for this New Year's meditation. I-will (iuote them for you -word for word-u The present life of men unon earth. O King, appears to me. in com* parison with that time which .is un- known to us, like to the swift flight of a sparrow through your hall, where you. with your enldormPn Bird thanes, sit by the (Ire. at supper, in winter. The hall is warmed: with- out are storms of wind and rain and winter's snow. The sparrow passes swiftly in at one door and out at an- other, gaining awhile a short safety from the wintry blast: but soon af- ter a little calm he flips once more into the unlcnTSwin-passing from win- ter to winter again.. So.this life of ours appears for a moment, hut whence or whither we are wending \ye know not. If, therefore, this new faith can teach us aught more sure. it seems truly to deserve to be fol- lowed.\ Ag a result, Paultnus was Ipxited to set forth the great- mysteries of Christian faith to the king and his thanes: and on Easter Day. G27, Ed- win and his- court were solemnly baptized_in the capital city of York amid scerieT\bf~T3wthetlc grandeur. Is Greatest of Philosophers to-kk«se-beautiful and wise words. tlrerages before-CJirist foundr-themF selves groping in the dark when they attempted to analyze the mystery^ of the origin and outcome ot-liUmffiff fife. Socrates, \Plato and* Aristotle, Seneca, and Marcus Aurelins —, mightier men than any of the Christ- less junker philosophers idolized to modern drawing-rooms—all-df tljese felt the insecurity of their answersr to such, questions as the Whence? and the Why? and the Whither? of our mortal life. That is one reason why Jesus Christ loom's so mighty In history. For thousands of years MrSfe-Him the best of human en- IbaYorB ^Titto^bttett. directed toward. M- 0 ~- f- i the solution of life's mysteries and problems. Nor should we let -enr- /Selves b e fooled by the mistake of supposing that the meh of those times were inferior in quality of mind to ourselves. Their literature, their arts, their craftsmanship, their taws, *ere of a technique and perfec- tion trait sho# them* to Kar<s been at least as high, in the merely human scale of civilization, as ourselves. But over it ail titer© Mag A jwight-of failure—failure to ponetrato beyond the horizons of life and Bring back the confident Jinawer that would ease the Insistent pain at the heart of humanity. Then was born Jesus Christ In Uethlehetn- and the three Wise Men came to His enve. bringini; L-ifts. They knelt at His feot. as sign nf-tlte noth-intyuess of their own wis- dom: and with them knelt Socrates. knelt. Plfltn knelt Arlatnfl» IrnnTf ^H the philosophers of tho older time. becniiBO from the lips of this Stnlnr would come tn« tietit and the truth trmt^jjuld free the world of Its darkita*. \lam the Way antl the Truth and the Life.\ He will Ray of Himself He will teach the world that life be- gins with r,od; that we human crea- turfs tire created by God. to live for God. tn come.at last to God for ever- InntiiiL- Ufi •—that nf nre nhifnl anil canr.nl Jestio'i be saved except TTirnngh\ redemption ot us; that throiiKh Jesus, everv luininn creature iflfty IflVe hope ami the^comfldeiit e\- pectuilon of 'eternal life throm$h falt'i nnd good vjorks. \Come .to \Te. nil von\ tTiarinlmrlwrWHWrf-- wninirTtiinr-T\w you sliull find rest for your souls Nor will all this be done in the dark fear nnd trembling of n mighty and dire judgment, but rather in the gen- tle mercy of a \coplouB redemption \ \Merry and truth have met each other- Justice and peace have kissed.\ (Psalm 84, 11.> \Learn of Xte.\ this divine Teacher will say, \be- cause I am meek and humble of heart.\ My dear friends, unless we know even a little part of this history — the pitiful and awful history—of the nations before the coming of Jesus, wo cannot begin to appreciate what His coming did for tho world. ' As the incarnate Son-of God, He stands of course, supreme among the per- sonalities of history, never equalled and never to be equalled. But be- cause Be- Is the Son of God. His teaching could bear that authority and thai: assurance which even the best teachers before Him has so pathetically lacked. It is by the fact of His Divinity and by -ttt^^nnp mentous authority o£ His doctrine, which remade and reshaped the thought and the hope of the world, that Jesus Christ, stands as the dividing point Of world history. And Capable Speakers To Address Men In 10 Churches (C<m.tirii«M from l'age;Oi,e> - i . it. . .inil J tiiiii-fian conhiilsi. * 4 ,-' HuUfJAV.'- Hi lie. , t [j, e Uiv. jjllt-i.. i',(>lilin«, chaplain nf the Moiinii- Cn'ii.u li!\itiit|i Hiily Itonar. • Churcn v tne Ili'v Daniel Connell: st • Mii'iu»-l'» f'.iu.ri-h the lt,-i 'Gr<-i:fir> f-itiiz. H'i> I'uh:., v ihii-rpti. thi: )l>- ''Iiori-H V I'rt'diiion . pasTii;- of (Jolin the KvatiK- i-t ('hurc ,, i, spem-f-r i,...rt. | Arrangements fur the ten ra^llie^ ! a Mrh will be mii.jui- In th,. hist'iry i,' tin- Huehmter IIIUCH*,,; lt re beuu- Itijiidh-d by the Kxeciniw Cnmtnitiei- :nf th' Itocheiiter Inoensan Hull Name J'DIIHI cot^lstin;- of the R»-v r.ln Lvons. in htn arfeutnPtit aeaifisrt J*' William Ktauder. ilfccesan dlrt-cior till? defense, contended thnt wliii.,*' 1 0 '' f-\«T»l chairman; the Hev T druRPlbt en't'ttKed trt the adv.-r- j \rthur K Klorack: It E >'htestifier. Using, dlstrtl.utron und sslo or hint, •»' J- t'onnolh. William i; Wytin. contrul Uttrature, l.t- cea$«d to -ti : f,,,IH, \ , i J Knunp. It W Ctissy. An- \-ngaced in the l.-s.itln.atebobir..-H nf ,lr, - w Wuest.. Joseph Antolitia at.d a druggist. Briefs were then Mih-U 0 ' 1 \ w Dirluger. Each of the ten tnltted to the court ly both fMen nn jehurches had committees completing this point. j.itrangements ut those ralh churches. Practice General, CUlm ( The rit> cnurchta have-bten divided. Buonpane further asserted durinc into ten sections and the Catholic I he. course of the case that the HJJJL*- men frnm these churches will go to of contraceptive Ht<rKtut9 i : aiii1 r ~ci>fi-|\the rally church In the section in t'rnceptives was general throughout ; .which,their church Is located. A e.i the city. He questioned Paganelll pacity furnout Tn\ .«ach of the ten as to what other drug storahandled churches is expected by tho pastors such literature and drugs ornrtlrles ,of the churches in the city. I'aganelll mentioned several of the, larger wholesale houses in Cleveland • and some of the chain drug stores, j all of which, he said, have no hest-' fancy in passing out birth control DISCOVERY OF - SWISS -P-RIESX-BBINUS Iir-LIEFl TO THOUSANDS TMrty years ago a .Swt.ss priest, Kan ' r Kent zU-.-ti^rOV-r^'EAPr- D\!t-a nin-ve'i.. ' ••-I, r,- n -flv •omposod ot harmless leaves, flowers and roots from the high Alps. Remedy su '.,ipfi.i. i'uU<«r Keunzle was tel-us,i v .y 'he -J Pft,tjiplic Chur^u t o give a'l his time to the r>-'ief rf suffering through L A IM H A If. A Mazing \Tenredy—pTTTUt a \Tl•'•\•!. corrvcts Circulation. itirr,l.,r. i,> ii>n Sn-ai- ach and Kiliuev > •-..•;b>»• - rell^V^e Nervous Headaches. H w o 11 e n Llmha, (»'<Jt. Hdi-uisuii^t ><l At- '.eritM. ^ixm l>i-» ,v--'-s. A'.sc^snea. 'iallstunes. L'ae,l aril endorsed by ihouHaT.ds tho world over. Send $2.60 tOIUY f.-xi ciarant^ed in troduct>.\-y trea'u-.i Or write us your trout,;.- tt. l ue will mall complete fdiln Kit i 1. rKSTIMOMAt.S l-'l;OM I.KTTKItS - *S Wf ItKt F!\Kli TIIKM f 10U\. i I t.a.' :; ••(! o:,l; two hot tie- of l.a|ii-iji ,.'il. t ,atiK Hit -Lon|^.J-»aii-»«li -aita-i-n i'i>r iwi. years I :ia\e t».n tn, i.,iin] with the Kiiiinyv .iii'l i.o Uoftur rould bring ui.v i,,i|i iint ii,iw, afur the us<- if I.apnl.ii. I uiii in uciod health aealn. 1 am s\tlll taking Lapldar n?ety day nnd expect to do so for quite a.wrHlo Lapldar should be in every household. — •» Mrs. AmaMe lollnuer. \rrj5Teton . Wise. Order at once. iJfe1JIfTaT^nrBert=\ tle of LAPIDAR at 12.50 nor hot- tlo from: LAPtDAR CO., Chino, Calif. literature, and contraeeptlrs when they are asked for. PAYNE & DUNHAM COAL and COKE AT REDUCED PRICKS 84 BRONSQN AVENUE Phono GENESEE 5S« sweet and comfortable: thciparrnw -flylTrK for a brtef-ntermsni-oM-of tht- stormy darkness found at least a warm and pleasant hall. Uutto thou- sands today, the present lib which seems to bcthe only .solid- thttrC'lRey have, is cold nnd cheerless^ like an lev field hetween two dark .oceans. The world has been guilty at a xlle treason: It has gone back to the old pagan despair. It has divorced it- self from the faith and the bnpe oft Jesus, and faces a grave of bitterness nnd- defeat.—• •— : — _ -.«,«.,. ^^^^ ^, ^^„^ Oak* T. S. Rubber, Tile, B, FLOORS—FLOORS—FLOORS «. Asi,lmlt—Laid. Finished, Ueflnlshcd. Write or Call, Main C400 FLOYD L. CHRIST ts5 Snrh^rst. for \«\>«« Information mo spring at. n „ Rc ,i m - fwi or Estimates history has paid HJBn. tts Enprenre tribute by reckoning the count of Its years from the Ume-of His birth. His- tory has known that, when the ma- jestic figure of Christ walked tills world, a destiny had struck, toward which all th e pa'st had been tending and from which all the future must Havlng_ pyes,. shaft tv ? be as thnw» 'hat see not\? Hnvlns ears, shall we he as those thnt hear noTT 'Jenns f'tfist has not abandoned tho world His Oospel is still being prenrhed M •t: Hts Vicar on earth Is still pend- ftTtrTFTrr^cTPd and urgent appeals nrrrTWffrTOa^ror a\\re'tufn'tn prayer and ChrrstTrin principles. With unfailing enc-sy. document after document have mme from His Holiness, Pope Plus XI- calling upon tho world to bend itself humbly on Its knees \before Christ Nor has he considered his crusade nf prayer and Catholic action complete even with that Knowing that the world's deep-seated diseases clamor for drastic remedies, and remember tng that this year of 1933 marks the nineteenth hundredth anniversary of the death of Christ, he has done the unusual thing of proclaiming a Holy- Year to begin on Passion Sundny April 2. A ^irpreHre—challenge hasT been given to the world. It is being offered a way out of its hell-hoie — the only way out—^a way so sur- rounded with penance and self-denial that the world may refuse to take it. It is the way of prayer and sacrifice. False starts and broken promises of past years may make us hesitant of hasty resolutions for thistjMew Year. But orte thing we cannot do w& Cannot Teirrain indifferent to the Holy Father's, ohallenge^for—prayprr On one thing wejnttst be unque*5=\ tionihgly resolved—that this year shall be, not alone in name but in tbe practical working-out of our Uvea, a. Edwin's unknown counsellor bit)take its vitality and strength .if it home to the very heart of a profound truth. - Away from .the teaching of Ghrist. life is a baffling mystery. It has always—been so. ihe wisest will so much as survive LIfe«, Cold and Cheerless And here today we are entering the year of Our Lord 1$f£3c—Is the heads of ancient Gre£m^aad=£H|n£Jri- -world-on-its knees in ©hristian faith, i s it-raising prayerful eyes to heaven in Christian hope, is it busying itself with the- works .of Christian charity snnl ireace? It is d sad and terrible truth that there are thousands upon thousands fox iKhom Jesus Christ Ttteans practically nothing. You-miss the mark completely if yr>u say that that can't make so Very much differ- ence to anyone wlio doesn't realize whit he i s missing. Jesus Christ Is always necessary for the things that count toward tire • kingdom of Heaven: \without Me you can do ( ; nothing.\- But seldom in jrecent times has there been such desperate npftri 1 fpr Qhrlst as'there is now! The last \four years are bitter^proof of the utter emptiness of living: away from JesusTHirist. Darkness again presses around-the daets of life and death,.andtheold questions are again being asked as if they had never been answered by a divine authority. But worse tfi«n that— mmy have, lost thejaBte for living, tfcs seat of life, Totlie old heatKen, afleast th e space at life between the darkness of the womb attd the grave wag warm and 1831—Rochester's Oldest Financial »'»!UH|T»»»»«I>» ipt'liition— 10:t5 Start a Bank-Account for Rahy - - NO W Xn matter how small the initial-deposit, or how little tJif amounts you add from time to- tme—money in the bank grows surprisingly fast .. . Let your, child enjoy- early—that feeling of security and inde- pendence that only a bank account cas give. -' Rochester Savings Bask 47 Main St W. —-Two Offices^_lJJStankKn-Sk__. Open Saturday Evening—5 to 9—For New Accqu4s and Deposits Only Resources Over $68,00oj)i0.00 1831 A CENTURY OF SAFETY, RELIABILITY,ND SERVICE 1&3S I Holy Tew. Christ is still Christ, ana His promises of mercy and grace have not yet been taken back. He must loon\ larger and larger In our daily thoughts. We must unite \our prayers with His daily in the early watches of the mofnlng, in the noon- day heats, and in th e declining hours nf night. -yVe must seek Him out in Hts~~HiTjf7rTeirTffd--^MtpIrr i Rea-I- Presepce In the altar^tabernaplb. We must abide more closely by His com- mandments, and-fere-^aere dfiigently according to His holy Will. This way and^-this arone—Heg the hope of the world's rescue. If Christian men throughout this\ city alone were as'\ brriiript and generous in* their re- sponse as were the ,si&. hundred men who watched and prayed for one hour last night before Jesus Christ in the Cathedral, what' wonders could he done? It wnuld mean the finding of lost faith, the rebuilding of shat-' tered hopes, and the mending of broken hearts. In God's name; let us pledge ourselves to that in this year of^Our Lord 1933. \Deliver us, .we^esieahjEhee Lord, from all evils, past, present, and t o come, . , . and mnrPlflUlg £rant\ peace in o'ur days: that through the hounteous help 6f Thy mercy we may he always free front sin and se- cure from all disturbance. Through Jesus Christ Thy Sori our Lord, Who •liwjth and reigtfeth with Thee in the unity of the Holy Ghost, one God, for e*er and ever. Amen.'! •fdkyo—The Catholio University of Tokyo ,has a student body of 700, this year. \Ammft^fk^jmm^m KIT luUhth^nnmrffmthbnc^rf ~~ . liturgical A OJDAXTW.Y P»VQTSP|> THB JJLTS OF THX GATHOXJO dkT&GH SrjsffiY|Ott-awtlio# joaoe priot o , . . , _ ^_ IjtxrpaJ Arts mold be an in^Htatkm! And *Iabout as mexiwiM^ •Pd ytt appropriate, t token <rf year esteem ai«*can find tetbese bard Jkoxijo27^5oflai»*^ESiJp«^ Jatdiptbeoogponindaendit in^ Ihefat « ^^&«^!?£%j2l&£ a :St: fir mi |g Ux Onouc CAan •MfJr tweaW emtmn txtauxAt AIM SOCHTY. 4*.lMl4uriStmk MwTMkOK n»_Kiin»4T. Owla D. — • ,*jylM Vital ¥ » .#^«S&»Si.^S* , tia UTOKKU. Atn Soam #tnt 4i<xl SmM INrY«dtqt, HMt «t«| tkt mdikm •<•»»»• 55L \ * *h Art tf *« ttarimf: bfjf- fttir.-- l-ty k*~ J r J£T