. The Catholic encyclopedia (Volume 4); an international work of reference on the constitution, doctrine, discipline and history of the Catholic Church . piness, or suffers them to interfere seriously withones bounden duty to God or man. Nourished anddeveloped into an unrestricted habit, it liecomes the fruitful mother of all manner of perfidy, heartlessnessand unrest. Seater, Manual of Moral Theology (New York, 1908), I;Lehmkuhl, Theologia Moralis (Freiburg, 1898), I. John H. Stapleton. Covington, Diocese op (Covingtonensis), com-prises that part of Kentucky, U. S. A., lying east ofthe Kentuc


. The Catholic encyclopedia (Volume 4); an international work of reference on the constitution, doctrine, discipline and history of the Catholic Church . piness, or suffers them to interfere seriously withones bounden duty to God or man. Nourished anddeveloped into an unrestricted habit, it liecomes the fruitful mother of all manner of perfidy, heartlessnessand unrest. Seater, Manual of Moral Theology (New York, 1908), I;Lehmkuhl, Theologia Moralis (Freiburg, 1898), I. John H. Stapleton. Covington, Diocese op (Covingtonensis), com-prises that part of Kentucky, U. S. A., lying east ofthe Kentucky River, and of the western limits ofCarroll, Owen, Franklin, Woodford, Jessamine, Gar-rard, Rockcastle, Laurel, and Whitley Counties, anarea of 17,286 square miles. It was established 29July, 1853, by the division of the Diocese of Louis-■\-ille, then embracing the whole State of portion of the State had been ministered to by abody of clergy conspicuous for ability, learning, anddevotion to duty. White Sulphur, the first organ-ized congregation in this jurisdiction, rejoiced in thezealous administration of a Kenrick, who in later. Cathedral, Covington, Kentucky years graced the metropolitan See of Baltimore, and ofa Reynolds, destined to become successor of the greatBishop England of Charleston. Lexington was grow-ing into an important parish under the watchful guid-ance of Rev. John McGill, afterwards Bishop of Rich-mond, Virginia. All of the clergy manifested in theirlives the glorious traditions of Flaget, Badin, David,and Nerinckx, whose successors they were. Catholicimmigration has been almost exclusively confined totwo nationalities: German and Irish. The formercompose a large majority of the Catholic populationof the cities and towns along the Ohio River, while thelatter have sought the interior of the diocese. InCovington and Newport German Catholics predomi-nate, while in Lexington, Frankfort, and Paris, theIrish are in the majority. Lying south of Ma


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