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Show WHAT THEY SAY OF US. Some years ago-and not so very many years ago, either to be a Catholic was to be an object of suspicion; our words and utterances were accepted ac-cepted with care and our claims were tabled without with-out ceremony. This was because our old time and Old World enemies had grossly slandered and prejudiced preju-diced public sentiment against us. But the average aver-age American is too liberal minded and too original to be long "buncoed" by hearsay and the prating of interested scandal-mongers. He would see for himself, him-self, and sight brought knowledge, and with the knowledge came an appreciation of our worth and the recognition of our rights and the justice of our claims. The following digest from the Xew World proves that prejudice is fast disappearing: "Some, at least, of the great dailies can sec things in iheir proper light. A few days ago the Cincinnati Times-Star, owned by a brother of Secretary Sec-retary Taft, boldly declared editorially that it is wrong to force Catholics to pay taxes for public schools which they cannot use. The Republic of St. Louis recently admitted that denominational public schools would be just. Last Tuesday the ... Tribune of this city, commenting on Father Sherman's Sher-man's declaration that divorce is consecutiw polygamy, poly-gamy, said editorially: " 'Father Sherman stands against a background which might well 'lend him an aspect of authority. Fifteen hundred years ago, when turbulent barbarians bar-barians settled within the confines of the Roman empire, it was the Catholic church that coerced the vagrant lust of the barbarian heart and bound one woman to one man till death did them part. Today, when the sacrament of marriage is threatened, threat-ened, not so much by savage boisterousness of passion pas-sion as by the frivolity and insincerity of men and women to whom unshaken belief has become impossible, im-possible, it is the Catholic church that still refuses to make a single concession to legalized promiscuity, promis-cuity, and that still keeps unblemished the ideal of an indissoluble spiritual union between man and wife.' Thus, plainly, there are those who see some admirable ad-mirable qualities in Catholic Christianity. In conclusion, con-clusion, the Tribune says: " 'The voice of the whole Christian community ought to be as clear and emphatic as the voice of ! the Catholic church.' ''It ought, really, but why is it not? Why does it not speak out against Socialism as clearly as the Catholic church has done? Why does it not point out the peril of godless industrialism as clearly as the Catholic church is doing? Why is it timorous about arraigning world-wide evils of every kind? Simply because it, too, is of the world and hesitates to assail the masters that feed it. The Catholic church is the only great force on earth that is: absoluely fearless." i- 1 |