"Increase in Special Gifts Signals New Record High For· Charities Appeal
The ANCHOR An Anchor of the Soul, Sure and Firm-ST.
Fall River, Mass.
Vol. 3, No. 17
The Catholic Charities Appeal started on an increased tempo and enthusiasm this week. Special Gift solicitors have been making their contacts for the past several days. Their reports have been very encoQraging. 'l;'hey have received a gracious reception fro m of the Appeal gave a unified industry, business and pro- understanding at the 1959 ap;. fessional men. In many in- proach to the Charities AppeaL stances, attributable to the A~ty. Daniel. F. Sullivan, Lay, pledge option, there have been Chairman, am". Mr. Harold substantial- increases in giving. Me~han were I,n charge of thIS senes of meetmgs. They were While the Special Gift part aided by Rev. R. T. Considine of the Appeal is under way, ,and Rev. R. W. McCarthy, Mr. the final planning for the Par- Russell Brennan and Mr. Willhlm ish Appeal section, is now beiiIg Fagan. Great emphasis was done. Parish Committees are pre- placed on the manner of makJ)aring their contacts,· assign-' ing contacts and the' reasons ing contacts, and planning their for contributing. kic,Koff ' committee ' '!leetings. ,In his presentation of per-tinEach of, the' Areas "of the Dio-' 'ent Appeal information, M .. has heid Han:: 'Are~ 'lr:leeting '·Meehan plit .primary empha'sia for" Special 'Gift :SoliCitors. ·To on increased giving in 1959~ ,these meetings, a priest: from ' "The gift of last year," he said, each area parish was invited. "can in most' instances be subThis bringing together of the stantially increased by the uae Special Gift and Parish phases Turn to Page Sixtee'n
PAUL
Thursday, April'23, 1959 Seeond CI.... Mail Privileges Authorized at Fall River. Ma..,
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PRICE 10. $.4.00 per Vear
Ads an,d Films Cause ·Mounting Protests' .
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ALBANY
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(NC)--:'Ntimerousino~ie"p~ucers
adv~rtising mate~ial which appears
industry's own eodes, a New has charged. Pressures of television accompanied by declining attendance at movies apparently causes the trend toward code violations, the Joint Legislative Committee on Of'fensive and Obscene Material said in its annual report., The report asserted there is "need for immediate and sub-
to 'vlohite 'the'
York Leirislativecornrnittee stantial improvements" in the industry which can be accomplished by a "return' to the responsibility, principle and letter of the production and advertising codes." The committee warned that if the improvement· it sees as necessary does not come about, "additional state or Federal conTurn to Page Eighteen
,Bishop 'Connolly to Preside At Masses for Vocations
Says Increased Comic Qook Sales DLie to Decency Code ,NEW YORK (NC)-The president of the Comics MagazimfAssociation of America has reported comics sales have. increased as a result of an indu'stry code ,banning sex and'
horror.
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John L. Goldwater told the annual association meeting
wa.nt ,filth and .gore." , He added: '.'The economic success of our industry 'cannot be that sales of comic books permi,tted to be dependent in the' now total 6?O. million per " slightest d~gree'" upon' the ,pur-· year - 150 millIon more than". veyance of the indecent or hor-' ~hen the code went into effect rendo:us..It must' '~e bas'ed upon' m.l954. quality,. good taste, originality Mr. Goldwater contested' re- arid creat~vity." , . '.. " " ports thatth<.. code had hurt . Mr. Goldwater told the comic , comics sales, saying: "It' is' a bo'ok: publishers "it.is up to' tis' slander upon the,youth of Amer~ toikeepmaking our publications ,'." ica to Say; as somenewspaperbetter-'-and' the better"Uiey. are; articleS .. indicated,' that kids th(mor!!they., WillS~,li."· ',.:":
DANIEL" F. SULLIVAN" .Listen'~o WJ~R-TY At, 12:15 Sun,day
T'aunto Tl First Friday, C~ub.'·Members 'Pl~ln~ing
, His excellency, the Most Reverend James L. Connolly will preside at three Solemn Masses for vocations, to b; held at 10 o'clock Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday mornings, May 4, 5 and 6, for high school and academy students of the diocese. ' Rev. Jphn H. Hackett, episThe Monday Mass, sched- copal secretary will preach and uled to be held at· Notre the Mass proper will be sung by Dame Church, Fall River, the Holy ,Famil.y .c~oir ,,:ith the will be attended by all area c~~gregat~on Jommg In the priests, the stugent bodies of 0 er pa~ s', Prevost High School, Dominican, ,St. Mary s, Church, Taunton, Sacred Hearts,Jesus Mary and' WIll be the scene of the WednesMount St. Mary Academies'. day Mass,. to be attended by, R P tr' k O'N'll St ,Taunton and Attleboro priests, ev. a IC e l , . students from Coyle and St" · T~omas M~re Church, Somerset, Mary's' High Schools. Will preach, The proper of the " Mass w.ill be sung by students ,0£ Rev, Edward J. Mitchen, Sacred Hearts Academy, and Sacred Heart Church, Taunton, the entire congregation will join . will preach at the ceremony and, 'in thecomrrion. ' Coyle students will sing the At ,St. Lawr,ence's 'Mass, prop.er. '. .{ H.' . Tuesday's Mass will beheld at " ,Also in connection with'stim- ; St. ,Lawrence's" Church;. "New ·,ulation of interest in vocations,·; Bedford,; and, will, be· attended ,. the CYO" of Blessed Sacrament· by. New· Bedford'· priests, and . parish; .Fall.. ,River, will'sPlWllOr, stude'nts from Holy Family, and, an:' elaborate· vocation displ~.· · St. Anthony's. Hi~h Schools,·' Saturday' ~nd' Sunday,. May.S ~. . New Bedford, aQd Sacred Hearts and,·3. All area" youth' are 1ftAcademy, Fairhaven. ' vited to the exhibition.
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. To ·Commemo-,;ate F:o~nd~ng' 'Nexf Mon~h .
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..W'arns Country ··D~"elo~ing Ha ~f;I"C:ore"ofUnemployed'Worke'~s.
, .'By Marion Unsworth' , . • . " _ . .. ,. ' . . . , ;.1 "" •. ' . ' Ii . ", • A ,group ·of Cathol,icmen in ,Tauntonrepte!?enting·~v~i'iety. of' profession~ and ~cu, 'WASHINGTON (NC)"'"-A warning that·"we are deve1- . ))ations ha~ been meeting'once a month for'~lin()st a year in an organization unique in .the 'oping large hard 'c'ore of unemployed ~ork~rs,", arid· that Taunton area of the Diocese;; , . ." '''we cannot· permit this: to cpntinue witpou't a' s.erious· effort Established in May'of 1958 as 'aFirst F~:id;:ty Club•. the" group, . ranging' in :number tQ do something ,abput it" haS been sounded by Msgr. Joh. , " . from 10 ~o 39;, have met'. O'Grady. ' ' "I do not want to be an alarm,eac.h First Friday. The meetAppearing before the House ist;" the prelate told the com. ing- includes a talk on a.' mittee, "but a'. the same time Com'm'l'ttee' 0'n "'w' ays "and I' . spiritual subject,· usually by believe that we ought to be one of the ,priests of the city, Means, the secretary of the - conscious of the mentality that National' Conference of Catho- ,long-lasting mass unemployment followE:d by lunch. The club was formed as a lic' Charities' said anyone who ,can develop among the qlasse. project Of the, Catholic Action has had direct personal contact· of the unemployed. I hope that Committe ~f the Knights· of Co- with the· ·country's unemploy- the leaders of our country will lumbus, Monsignor James Coyle ment, situation during the past become more conscious of and Council, Taunton. Anthony two years ,"cail'not fail to be .im- more sensitive to this situatioa Costa, 66 Plair. Street, an active pressed by its seriousness." before it is too late." participant in other committee programs, was ,asked to contact Spifr~':·'ual possible members. . The first meeting was held in En~rgy May with Rev. Edward Oliveira of Our Lady' of Lourdes parish as guest speaker. At the first , anniversary luncheon next Four . members of the, BROOKLYN (N C) month, Father, Oliveira will Congregation of the Sacred Thanks to the inspiring again address the men. Hearts, formerly of this Dio- leadership of its bishops, the , Several: members of the clergy cese, attended Honolulu cere- Church in the ,U.S. has beattend each meeting, including CQme ','a veritable dynamo 01. Rev. Francis', McKeon, pastor of monies celebrating the centenspiritual energy. ; unpredictable nial of the arrival of the, Sisters Sacred Hear,' d~urch, and chapof the c'ongregation in Hawaii. in the extent of its future polain of the Knights of Columbus tentialities." They were: . . and the First Friday Club. This is the "priceless heritage Mother Mary Gertrude,SS.CC., The men atteric; First Friday "St , Mass· in their own, parishes.' until 1952,a faculty' member o:f we, give to our young bishops FIRST FRIDAY CLUB: Shown are priests and laymen ' Although most of them are Sacred Hearts Academy, Fair- ,today," said Auxiliary Bishop active in the First Friday Club of Taunton. Standing (left Knights; this is n·ot a require- haven, now Mother,' Provincial John J. Boardman of Brooklyn in l:Jis sermon here at the double ,of the Province of Hawaii. to right) are Rev. Francis McKeon, pastor, Sacred: Heart ment for joining' the First Friday Father Octave Igodt, pastor consecration Of the Most Revs. ' group. Costa se~ds out cards Church, ,Taunton; Gerald Dooley; Rev. J<,>hn Galvin, St. each month to remind members until 1945 of Sacred Hearts, CharlesR. Mulrooney and Jo.Peter's, South ,Dighton. Seated, (left .to'right), Francis and 'reports. . that'. each meeting Church, North Fairhaven. seph P. Denning whn will ··be Frazier :and. Anthony F.. CQsta,.. dub ,chairman Turn to PaJre -Sixteen Turn to Page Sixteen TatD" Pace 'Eia-b&eo .. . . ' · .... . .' ~
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Former Diocesan Asserts Heritcage Religious Attend Honolulu Rite Of 'Epi,scopacy
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DIOCESE OF
DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER
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-THE ANCHOR Thurs'.,. Apr. 23, 1959
fAu' RIVER, MASSACHUSE11'S
IISHOP'S OFRCE
Kennedy and Methodist Bishops Report Very Pleasant, Session,
said
WASHINGTON (NC)-Sen. John F. Kennedy has ,he and 51 Methodist Bishops who invited him 'to an off-the;~:~~to:e;ting enga~e~ ~ a,~'~~era.I discussion of ~ub~~'
'April 14, 1959,
Hi ~ ~,!,pass;o~ 'on t~e; mJJltitude.", ' ,~"
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The' legislator, a Catholic "llnd' Defense' secretary :Neil'R. widely regarded as a leading',: ,Mc~lroy. , ' ", ':,' ' ,,': '!" 1960' D em--, L: 'Only, ' • Appeals to Group , , cand'd I. a t e' f o~ th ~" on~ bishop made, a ,reocratIc nommatlOn for the" 'port after the closed-door ses:presidency, characterized' the' sion with Senat9r 'Kennedy in.. ' session as "very pleasant." ,the'Senate Offi2e Building: ' Re- ' ,A Kennedy aide said later"that' tired Bishop James H: Straugh ,"one or two questions had reli- "of Baltimore told newsmen Sengious overtones," but most of the ,ator Kennedy has a "good per40-minute session was, devoted sonality" and "appealed very 'to qu~stio~ ori~foreign policy. ,much to the group."~ The. Council of Bishops of the' Fred Holborn, a Kennedy as- .., promptly and sufficiently~ . ' Methodist Church, leaders of the ,. sistaitt. reported "it was all in ' Wherever we find true followent, of 6 Christ, we are.. nation's larg~st single Protestant; a friendly spirit," ,adding there INre to 'see such compassion~TheCharityof Christ moves' body, with, about 9.5, million was no effort to secure from the men. ,The ~ere8peCtacle ,of -want, physical or spiritual, in' members, met with Ii number 'of, Senatorfurthet opinions' OlD old :01' young, stirs them to~action·. They are not satisfied top government officials during church-state matters. h T its semi-annual meeting here. ' "On'ce"Belor~' .' " with"expressions of ,sympathy ,or gQ04 c eer. ,hey are n~t 'The~~1 membership of, the Tb~ MaSsachusetts, legislator helc:l" back, by cautiouaeconomy. W,e ~c,annot put a quota councI~ IS 76. . . 'h.as'~e~ quoJed' 'as /.~~ing be Pre~Ident EIsenhower recelv;d opposed Federal financial supon kindness. The very evid~:nt'faCt that' there is sOme one , sickor"in need ~,enough tO~p'rom:pt Us~to p~ovideeven to councIl'members at _Q1~ .White 'port of privat;',scbooISand WlI,I', the point of sacrifice. ' ' , ' S I S T E R ' M. VERONA, R.S.M.' Hou.se.La~er, they met In closed 'agail1$t sending a U; 5. Am~', ~ , ,Our Blessed Lord p.ut us under obh,'gation to love one seSSIOns WIth a number of o!ger, sador to the Vatican' " CJ Officia~; 'includ~g Vice: PresiHe. has' also' been' q~~ted as' an~ther. He gave us a-test of-His true Ch':lrch in the l~w"of ~ent'Rlchard ,NlXon,Chief' Jus- 'expressing the belief that ,nothCharity. "By this shall aU men know that you .are my tlce Earl Warren, U. 5: .Senator ing takes precedenCe over the'" disciples, if you have love for another." Hubert Humphr,ey of Mmnesota presidel1tial oath to uphoid the The Charity of Christ never fails in Jibe,rality or foreThe appointment of a faculty : , Mass Ordo u. S. Constitution. -... . 'ht It member of Mt. St. Mary Acad' I t t0 I Bishop G. Bromley,Oxnam of Slg. see k s t Q prevent ,recurrellce 0'f\' rnat~rIa wan, emY,;Fall River, to the position FRIDAY-St. 'Fidelis of Si~ar- Washington, outgoing president adjust men and women to the demands of society, to make of Procurator ,1>rovincial of the, ingen, Martyr., Double. Red. ' , l' f d d s·ste f M f th U· M'" -'Pt' , .' GI ona; . 'Pref' of the Bishop's Council, told'ie-' ' them self-reliant 'and secure. It brings re Ie in ee where ' I ,rso, ercy 0 , e ,mon", , ass" ,;per, a~~portersthat at, the .last meeting , needed. But it appeals to 'the conscience of the strong Province of Providence, is an- " of Easte . ,', ','" of the group here m 1943 they "'''; " , " " , 11 I'd' 'b' If t 'bl f " " " " ,nounced by,Mother.,Mary Gath-" ~ATl!RDAY-S.t. Mark, ~.van-·"interViewed'Sevetal topgoverii':' ,', t~U.lilti.l)g; :that ~~h one; 0 ,~,> Im~e ,~0u,n,~. e o:con:-, erine, Mother J;'rQvincial. ,', gehst: pouble of n'~lass: Red.' rnerit"offiCiaISjust' as' they did" dltIons III t~e commumty.And the, str0I?-g..ar~the sympa-, She is Sister !,\fary, Verona" Mass Proper; GlorIa; Seeond ' thi "tirlJe " ", "" .. ' thetic. They are those who love to "the..,p()int .of se,ryice and,.;direcro.,r pf .the ac~demr orches~, Collect Rogations;Creeli;Pre.:<'.,' sc, ,,' ,', , , , ' : "', sacrifice.. , , ' ' , ,tra ,and-previously "on the, st~ff face, of Apostles.' , . ' ",Jnte~~«?'w ,Othe~s, ' . ' , ' ' ...... '", bI" d' d d .', th d d' t d . f of 5t Mary's Cathedral School SUNDAY-IV, Sunday After, _,' . Sf?a~~r >HJ1~p~r~,y, ~1!W con-",,: ,~"yve'are .esse mee IDe e Icae :'s~vlces,O, Wor;toflierassignmentcam~ , Easter. Double, White. Mass :sIdere,d,agto~g~pcandldj\tes,!or prl~stS and ~Isters th~t stat{ our ,homes~ 'hospItals and ", fro~ Moth~r Mary Bernar<line Proper; Gloria;, ~~cond ,Col-, the: D~mo~rll;bc: pre~Idenbal social agencies. Wh~t 'they do 'is beyoJId 'any' power of ou'rsVic~r <;e?erai of the c~ngrega~ lect Ss. Cletus and Mai'cel- noml~atIO~, saId after hIS~~t:- , toI;ep'ay, them. But the G~d God knows and rewards, and, tion. ' , linus Popes and Martyrs:' ing with the'Bi~hop~ it, ~as , the:beneficiarieshold'grateful,prayerful memory. We have' Creed' Preface of 'Easter" "very ,cordial and ,informative" I,de,al,P,arish Church, . MONDAY-St. Peter Ca~isius and :tha~ he,found the cl~rgymen taken com'fort in the' many words 1 of.~ppreciation that ' , ' Confessor and Doctor'of thJ ,,' in ~reem~nt for a, "more, affirm,:" reach us fQr wotk done'through our social agencies, youth Aim of Competition chUrch. Double. White~ Mass ,ati'~e line",in foreign policy. , , centers, hOmes for the aged:'and 'chronically 'ill; and for NOTRE· DAME (NC) - :A. Proper; Gloria;Creecl; Preface -!'- spoke~an fo~ Mr-_1I!iJ!:~~ what is done, by no means enough, on behalf of the phy- church architecture competitio~ of Easter. , ' " said the V,lce Presld~nt Wl~ed, will be ,held in connection w.ith ' to emphaSIze that hIS mee·;n.. aicall" 'and mentally affl,icted; We eould never have 'atTUESDAY-St Paul of the ' 0&&&6 oJ , the 1959 North American: LiturCross, Conf~~or. Do ubI e. with th~,BishOPs: "was not. in ~e tempted these precious.acts, of Charity if material means gical -Week from Aug. 23 to 26 White. Mass Proper; Gloria; conte~t of possI~le nommation Second Collect St. Vitalis, by .the RepublIcans for the , were not forthcoming from our friends and supporters of at the University of Notre Dame. the Catholic Charities Appeal. ,Sponsorea by Mr. and Mrs. Martyr;' Preface, of Easter. preSIdency., There is no likelihood that anyone of these and other Otto 5paetb of New York and -WEDNESDAY-St. Peter 0 f , , . known as the Spaeth Liturgical M services to the community and the faithful be curtailed. ' Award, the competition requires Verona" Double. M P artyr. GI; - P Red. f AUBERTINE Rath,er they are bound to'gro,w._Our maintenance costs do ass roper; orla; re ace architects t1> submit plans for of Easter. THURSDAY-St. Catherine of cOntinue 'to rise, and,n~w' building requires a small fortune. an "ideal, parish church." But we face an, insistent demand for extending the reach Siena, virg',~ Double. White.' "~e'enAU.b~rtine8rau'g,, of Charity within the Diocese. Our New Nursing Home is Confirmations Mass Proper; Gloria;Prefaee " Owner and Director ". . ,already taxedtQ'capacity. We must provide for more classes ,'April %7 of Easter. ' Spacious Parking Area: at Nazareth'H,all,, School for Exceptional Children. We need ' 730 : PM , . St . Lawrence, New 'WY 2-2957, more accomlno&tions, for' the, Aged and infirm of the Bedford. 129, t\llen St. , NewBedl~rd Diocese. We';want to assure the benefits'of our Youth, MayS,_ Guidance p~ogr8:In:to every area whe~e'::thet.e;i~ need of it. 2:00 P.M. Sacred Heart, New ,.,'; So we tlim t9'YOU an{all frilm9,s;':~jf'Catholic,Charity Bedford. C . h t h e rem'm .' der, t,h a t 'our"nee ',' d s .' . 1'11 great. W e'are 2:00 Bedford.' P.M. S,t. Hyacinth, New .JOSEPH M, F, DONAGHY WIt ate:'s I BROOKLAWN" owner,1ingr.. heU:s to th(h~ompassionofGhrist:Webe-~ome,tr\le followers '4:00 P.M. St: Theresa,N e w FUNERAL HOME, IN'C. ' 142 Campbell St. wh~n, noting':a, neighbor's want, ,we' respOnd ,generously , Bedford. R.Ma"'el ~o;' -' C: LoM'al"e Ro, Hew ledford.· Man.', , " ': Rocer L"Fran""" , and promptly relIeve it.', The ideal chanty is to give not 4:00 P.M. Our' Lady of Mt. merely of our abundance.: True'Charity is not measured in 'Carmel, New Bedford. WYman 9-6792 , Fu'NERAL DiRECTORS ' teruis of what -\veWiI1,never miss:,.It is found in our sym7:30 :~~·h~~·t.Francis Xavier, HEAQQUARTERS FOR 15 mVINGTONCT. _.. we h'ave: to do 7 30 PM 'g N e w "," pathies, the interest w~ take',' and' tlie.~wil,l , . . St. He dWI, , , COLONIAL AND" . ' NEW BEDFORD ,wy 5-7830, fOr a neighbor what'we,:wouldwish himtodo for us. Charity , Bedford. ~DITIONAL FURNnuRE May 10 is measured in terms of needand,inyol'(1~s'sacrifice in every case. It should cost us:SoDl¢ii:fing!.';tlw~/~ff-ortand n.loney. 2:00 P.M, 'Immaculate Con: Thisr;ye;:tr on the a,dYi:ce., of' ol,1i'-"special lay ,Steeril'\g . ception; North Easton. Co~mitt~~;,\ye, have del.erm'ined"j;Q' introduce the',Pledge ~~~ ~::: ~;rM~~yo~a~~n~ SY8,tem.lt, is, done with, ~ view'&Q ~aise the:level, of giving, Holy Rosary, Taunton. and encourage interest in Charity over a longer period. Wei should not, think to absolve ourselves from concern for the,needy by. 'rn'eans' of a' t~ke~ gift:'What ~e offe~ sh~uld' ' FORTY' HOURS be' realistically done, having in mind the wide, extent of ' , DEVOTiON activities we support, the many thousands in need, and the ' April 2&--St. Michael, Ocean new services that can be set up only -wh~n sufficient means' Grove.are provided. So we hope that the. 9% of contributors who Our LaAy of the Immac''give $10.00 or more will be substantially increased, and the ' 'tilate Conception,' Fall great percentage that gives $5.00~o'r less be lifted up, ,River. even if it means nomore"than adding-'a dollar or two to May 3-0ur Lady of the Imthe traditional' offering. ' -maculate, ConceptIon, , 'North 'Easton'. " So let us !Inite once m()r~ to provide, for our less for-' , 5t. Vincent's Home, Fall tunate neighbors. Let 118 share the compassion of Christ. ' River., ,'Ma;y we rejoice to be instruments of God's"solicitude for'the St, Mary, Hebronville. n~y. Let us provide adeq,uatel)dor the present and build May 7,--Gonvent 'of the Holy up, resources againstari' uncert::\in future. And may, the ' U n i o n of the Sacred Provident Hand of God bless us;'our cominunity, our homes Hearts, Fall River. ~..6 ~, tile ,aupml.l~ Of tile JRApp;" "_ua, , ..... ~ . H' N Conv'ent of the Sa~ed , ....., ' . ' ~ ~,JIle AbbeJ of u~, ' au,d those th ' at we h e Ipill· IS' ,arne. . Hearts, Fa i r h a -oj e D. •Trappists, have been famous for ' aJl!i great C3!'e.t in ,baking ,give ," FaithfuUyyours in Christl'. , ,Mount 8t. Mary's Con" " ,..- - , . ' "',,' --, " , --' " . f ' ; ' , ' :,,' 'vent; Fall River. . :' their hQme-made bread for cen- .,:thl~ ,bre~d Its rare, sup.llrb "turies ' •. Monks' Bread brings :;.~f1av~r. ,Monks' ~read~ 'tall, a~d ~;, back a long 'lost satisfaction -~;slen~erf finn, in texture, brings -, m mBo, •. . .' Second-claSi maUprivilegea authorized '.;«1e simple joy of eating sub- "an .exciting, new ,di$c~'J.el'Y, in , ' , - " t Fan River, Mass, Published everI' ~'::stantiaj;' hearty bread,'Rich in- :'hones~ good, eating., to -your -.. ..... .', 'Bish~" ,of:FaIl Rivu':.-t,,: ",' >, ' " ,;,..'.{,j'''i:,r~ut'8daYa~~~O Highta",d, ~v~ue_,F"n " , """ , . , ,', " " ,River. Mass:,-'by th~ Cathohe.Pniss'of the ! ... )jgredients. skiHful kneading, >lamily" .table.. "i;.'", ~'\" :', ,': '!' Diocese of Full Riv<"t ~ubscrjTltinn price " Dearly Beloved, " " ',' ',A piCture is ,said to'be",'worth tholisa~d \words'; the -. f ehr'IS t'S compassIon . f or'"th',e. SIC . k-' PICture 0 ;, ',and: th"e;p?"or is worth far more than 'that. 'It is a:thing to think' uPon and imitate. ' 'f. ,'" " , "i have comp'asSion ,on' the multitude!' He said.- He , would not send them away empty. So He fed five thousand' mthe desert, just as He healed the sick and gave si,ght to the blind'. He felt for everyone in need. He had, compaSsion., And because He lov:ed 'His,n~ighbor, He ,provided for, him '
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DIOCESE
New Vatican Ruling Recalls Religious Duty in Voting .
FIRE
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LOVED, ONES
FALL
RIVER,
THE ANCHOR -
ELECTRIC CO.
Statile for'Rally
MANHATTAN BEACH (NC)-A campaign against smutty magazines is gaining momentum and generating
FORMER PARISHIONERS HONOR BISHOP GERRARD: Members of St. Mary1s Parish, Fall River, gathered with Bishop Connolly in a testimonial to their former pastor, Bi~hop Gerrard. Left to right, Manuel Benevides, Bishop Gerrard, Thomas Carroll .and Bishop Connolly.
Pontiff Make's- Customary Visit .To Tombs B~neath Basilica VATICAN CITY (NC) - His to the grottoes accompanied only Holiness Pope John . XXIII by his secretary; Msgr. Loris .bridged the centuries of the, Capovilla. He knelt in prayer papacy to pray in St. Peter's before the tomb of Pius XII and before the tomb of the first pope ,then .before those of Pius XI and to pay homage to'hisprede- and Benedict.xV.· . cessor as Pontiff and 'Patriarch. of "After completing his visit to ·Venice,St. Piut X. the 'grottoes, the Pope went The Holy Father chose the date ,down the' stairs 'leading to the of the sixth month of the· death. excavations. of Pope Pius XII to visit the . For more than an hour. the . tombs of four popes,' including Pontiff walked. on a guided tour the tomb which once held the of the ancient Roman cemetery remains of St. Peter far beneath uncovered during the reign of ,the present basilica. Pius XII. ' . The Pope's visit to the excavaHe showed great interest in the tions beneath St. Peter's was a, historic finds which h'ave been part of his customary visit on' made in the excavations and ex·the ninth of each month to the amined the ancient Roman mau·tomb of Pius XU in the grottoes soleums and' str~et of tombs immediately below the floor of which once,in the early years of St. Peter's. Christianity, stood on the then As usual the Pontiff walked uncovered slope of Vatican HilL
public indignation ,in South Bay communities, southwest of Los Angeles. Manhattan Beach City Council has asked City Manager· Gayle Martin to investigate undesirable literature at newsstands. . Nearby Gardena's City Council heard a complaint from Mrs. Sol Farkash about "art" magazines. She asked their sale be banned.. Neighboring Redondo Beach's . 'City Council unanimously ap.., proved formation of a committee to rid, city newsstands of smut. . Chamber of Com'merce men will join co~ncil delegates ' in studying the problem.' In Torrance, the City Council. endorsed a voluntary program among merchants to clean up smut.
Bingo Bill Fails . MADISON (NC)~An attempt. to put the question of legalized "bingo" for church and charitable organizations before the voters has failed in the Wisconsin Legislature. . '
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LOS ANGELES (NC) - An l1-£oot statue of Our Lady of Guadalupe is being 'sculptured here for the annual "Mary's Hour," to be held this year on May 3 in the Los Aniele. Coli-
FALL RIVER
OSborne 2-2143 Fm
STeeS
a Sffl'tTl
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Aroused Public .,.O,pens, Crusade Against Smut.,.
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Thurs., Apr. 2.3, 1959~
'VATICAN CITY (NC)-The Vatican ruling that it is a sin' to vote for a candidate .who· indirectly supports the eommunist cause has,universal application but admits mitigating circumstances. . '. That is the substance of Offi~ decree the Church has by an authoritative comment on no means invaded the exclusive the decree made by a com- field of politics. All the decree petent Vatican source. does is to fulfill a strict duty The nature of th~ decree is imposed on the Church by its eminently religious and doctrin- .founder, Jesus Christ, to .teach al. In these days politics often all the faithful, to enlighten contouch and sometimes invade the sciences and lead them on the fields of morals and religion. It road of justice. 'is therefore 'unavoidable thl!t The use of one's vote, besides 'the acts by which religious au- being a right, is also a political thority defends its subjects have duty. More than a duty, it is a repercussions pn the political moral and religious right. level. Anti Red Purpose The dishonest cominent of the Where it is a matter of formeommunist press thl!t this ruling . ing a government in' which there of the 'Sacred Congregation of are communist ministerS,the..... the Holy Office was issued in the decree of the Holy Office applies specific ,.interest of a particular if the collaboration of Cathopolitical party 'is absoiutely'de- ·lics. would be advantageous to nied; Communism, which viO- . the communists. This is the con:' Iates the autonomy of places and dition in the majority of cases. the independence' of peoples, In very special circumstances, . making them slaves, has no" however, it would be necessary right to assume the role of to apply the pertinent moral, ehampion .of Sici)y. . . principles and choose the lesser The effect of the decree' is - of two evils, in which case the universal and is not limited to decree would not apply. the events in Sicily. The' decree refers to all couptries, regions Legion of. Decency and movements where the interition of collab.oration betwee,n The foilowing films are to be communists and Cat~olics de- addedto the' lists ih thei'r respecvelops.Such circumstances are tiye classifi·cations:'· . found in nations 'where certain' UnoQjectionable' for' general' trends and movemenis .h~:Ve" patronage:'. Battle. Flame, Her": arisen which would attribute to cules, It Happened to. J:ane. themselves the name of ~ChrisUnobjectionable for adults and tian although they' hilve fallen . adolescents: Gigantus, the Fire into the insidious net of c~llab-'" Monster.. orationism promoted. by every. Unobjectionable for l!dults: means and ir. every dicum- Jonas. stance by the communists.', Regarding Iron Curtain coun-' . Objectionable in part for all: tries, there is good reason to Eighth Day of the Week (this. ask whether free elections really film, in dealing wIth frustration, exist and whether the eleCtorate· contains grossly suggestive elehas a real freedom of choice. ments and tends. to condone In the publication of the Holy illicit actions. Change of classification: House· on the Waterfront has been New Bedford Sister changed from the .condemned Serves on Okinawa classification to that of morally Making her first home visit objectionable in part for all. The in 13 years, Sister Mary Con- objection was made because of stance of the Daughters of Mary, suggestive costuming ,and seHealth of the Sick, showed New quences; the change of classificaBedford friends and relatives tion is warranted because substantial. revisions have been. slides depicting her work as a medical missionary in Okinawa. madE:... in the picture. However, A graduate of New Bedford the change applies only to prints High School, the former Beatrice shown in the continental United Pestana joined the community' States. shortly after her graduation and was sent to Okinawa in 1953 IN.A after completing nurses' training. On the Pacific island she assists in the operation of 12 THE MAIN F ACrOR I~ room dispensary which cares for the needy regardless of religion. About 80 patients a day are PROTECT YOUR treated,- with cases of eczema and tuberculosis being especially prevalent. . WIT~ A Sister -Mary Constance will return to Okinawa this summer Honeywell .Home Protector' after . taking advanced courses Fire Detection & . Alarm .SYstem in Japanese at a FrancisCan For' l school- in Tokyo. Her relatives in New Bedford include two sisFree Home ·Demonstration ters, Mrs. Albert Charpentier, With No' Obligation Call 428 Church Street and Mrs. Louis Frank Lawrence C. Charpentier, 79 Arlington Fire Extinguisher Street. Sales and Service Spons'ors Legislation Fire Alarm: System To Curb Obscenity Installation WASHINGTON (NC)-A bill 260 Ashley Blvd. )' has been introduced in the U. S. WY 3-4136 House of Representatives to per, mit District of 'Columbia police to petition the Municipal Court to or<l.er sellers of indecent literature to surrender equipment used in the 'production or distribution of printed obscenity. Rep. John Dowdy of Texas sponsored the 'proposed legislation which describes indecent publications as those devotedly. mainly to the' publication of Electrical scandals and immoral sexual conduct. Congress makes the Contl'octol5 laws for the District of Columbia..
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HONG KONG (NC)-Strong opposition to the Vaticancondemned Patriotic Associ~tion of Chinese Catholics, and the consecration of three more. "patriotic" bishops, highlighted a regional conference of Catholics' in communist China,which has' now come tt? light. The opposifion,. led by in violation of the orders )f the Archbishop Joseph Chou -Holy See, .and thus automatlc,Chi-Shih, C.M., of Nan- ally bringing' excomm~nication h g led to his ouster by to themsel,ves and their conse-
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"'ALL
RIVER.
MAn.
- THE ANCHOR
Thurs., Apr. 23; 1959
Archbishop Asks Catholic School Aid in-Canada WINNIPEG (NC)-Arehbishop Philip F. Pocock of Winnipeg has criticized the failure of the Province of
C ~,' , , . , , ' crators. FIve of the 23 were the patriotic Cathol~cs, Anconsecrated' last October also in o~her priest was co~secrated ,a· the course. of a meeting in Manitoba to provide state aid bishop .to replace him. At the Changsha ,which was similar to to Catholic schools. . sam~ time, the. four ~fra~an the Nanchang one. The Archbishop called for "the bish~ps of the eccleS1a~tical It was following the consespirit of justice" to correct the province headed by Archbishop 'cration ceremony according to situation, pointing out that ManiChou-two. o.f the~ Ameri~ns, the Red paper, Umt the Jeletoba and British Columbia are and all IDlssl,onanes long s~~ce gates passed their resolution to the only two of the 10 Canadian eX~ell~d-wer~ ~ ~ re"relieve" the four missionary provinces which do not provide lieved of theIr bIShopriCS. bishops of their posts. aid to' education to Catholic 'rhe moves toward further . Attack Vatica.n schools. Idlism in China are repo:rtedby . . .. the' communist newspaper KiaThe meetmg also .nscussed - "In the whole British Empire, · .' Jih Pao to have taken place what were called ~ h.td~enthe state helps to some extent , DgSllast' r...t b A r d i n g to '''e dence and sel1-adm~Dlsb'atlCmof. . prj~ate and parochial scbools," · . " " 0 er. cco w, th Ch h '. Chi .. ~~~ PaPer, they took place at·& joint e ur~ In I?a! exVU"""... ' the ArChbishop noted. He said in : ClOOference of Catholic and Pro-, the trehaCVtiont.ary, .r.olandlbcaJ ~atUJ'tede Manitoba aDd British Columbia WINNERS OVER 25 NEGATIVE TEAMS: Naney Laf -t t . tativesin Nan- o. e a ICan. . .l'eJee. "parental rights are not' recOgtes anrepreseD tit. "r t' . 'do 'ts d fleur (left) and ~ary Lou Simcoe (cente!")of ~red Hearts ' niUd' tOrula Of proper dem0.. ' cbang, "capital of ,Kiangs!prov-' e .ea~ lon~~y .' cumen .an , . .1-";'" .' th st entral China. publications distrIbuted toy the Academy, Fall River, PQSe WIth the moderator of the Debra- cratic spirit." · '""':~ m so~ ea c . . Vatican." This last obviousl,., rer. 6:;.,year-old .vincential ferred principally the' i95lt 'bant Debaters, following their victory in the" Southeastern ''This ' si.tuationhas . existed .. ¥chbishop,· who . wasrel~asell encyclical "AdApostolorum New England High School Deba~ Tournament at Providence . ~ now for 68 years, during tro.m prison earber last year,· Principis," 'in ,which .Pope Pius College. whicbthe 'Catholics in Manitoba . denou.n ced theatt~.pts. by XII condemned the PatriotiC! ~ve been taken for granted. I 'members of the Patrlotic Asso- .Association ofChi~se Catholics hope' that the spirit of justice dation~und~r the guidance of urged the persecuted Catholi~ will prevail and that Manii.oba the communIst Bureau of Reto be steadfast in the Fciith and will no longer take a second ligious Affairs-to. adopt meadenounced th'e iilicit conseeraplace to any province in Canada .ures which would.make ~ne tion of bishops. Rev. Edward L. O'Brien, pastor Rev.: James A. Dury, pastor of nor to any country in the ComCatholic Church . m China . . . Corpus' Christi Ch.urch, Sandof S1. Mary's Church, Mailsfield; ·monwealth." " . "In t h the big leap forward in At the same conference, It 18 wich, was the celebrant of a' celebrat~ a Solemn High Fun"In a' democracy," he: ,·said, ~ c." . . reported, the Protestant :leleSOCialism. gates "iebuked ,."rightist . ele--", Solemn Mass of Requiem for his , eraz'MaSs yesterday morning for "we expect·to'have a right to our BishopS Dismissed . ments'." 'and 'pr'OI'{ibited anum- '. father, 'Thomas ·Dury. The Mass the repose of the soul of his Catholic .schools. The .children sister, Miss Hannah E. O'Brien. belon~primarily to the' parents, The Red report goes on to . her' of' ministers from carrying' was offered Tuesday morning in Holy Nome Church; New Bed- The Mass was' offered in St, . not the·state. 'It is the responsisay that because of his opposit- 'out' further reIig'ious activities ford, at 10· o~clock. Father Dury Joseph's Church, Fall River, and bility of the Church to give and Ion to the Patriotic Association, among Protestants. was assisted by Rev. Leo T._ Father O'Brien was assisted by supervise religious· education, Archbishop Chou, ~as fOrl'1.aHy Rev. Daniel F. Shalloo, deacon . and that of the state to assist the Sullivan, deacon· and Rev. "relieved of his bishopric." For Henry T. Munroe,· subdeacon.. and Rev. William J. Shovelton, 'parents in supplying material the same reason, five priC!:ts subdeacon. . Most Rev. James' J. Gerrard, were "relieved of ~e dutips of ne'eds of· educ~tion." I Most Rev. James J. Gerrard, vicar ·capitular." '~'His Excellency, the .Most'· D.D., V.G., Auxiliary Bishop, D.D., V.G., Auxiliary Bishop, presided. His chaplains were Later the "patriotic"; CathoReverend James J. Gerrard, Rev. Walter J. Buckley, pastor presided. Chaplains to Bishop lics passed a resolution to "re-:Auxiliary ·Bishop, of' Fall River, of Our Lady of the Assumption Gerrard were Rev. Christopher lieve from their bishoprics" the presided . this morning ~t. St. Parish, Osterville,' and Rev. L. 'Broderick, pastor or Pius X four Ordinaries of the metroMary's Church, Taunton, at a Raymond T. Considine; pastor of Church, So. 'Yarmouth and Rev. politan province of Nanchang. Solemn High Mass of Requiem' St. William's Church, Fall River Thomas F. Walsh, p'astor of St. Three are Vincentians and one for the repose of the soul of a and Diocesan Director of' the' Louis Church, Fall River~ is an Irish ·Columban, '1.nd all Sister· believed to haye taught Propagation of the Faith.. were ousted from 'China by the ,every child who has ever passed Reds around seven y.ears ago, through St. Mary's SchooL during the heyday' of the dn~i She was Sister Mary Alice. missionary drive. They are BISS.U.S.C.; for 46 years fourth hop. Patrick Cleary, ·S.S.C., of grade teacher at St. Mary's. VATICAN CITY (NC)-WithNanchong who is now at Navan, Thomas F. Monaghan Jr. Born in Ireland, she was one of in a few months the works of Ireland' Bishop William C. _ seven sisters 'who entered, relisuch 20th-century artists as Quinn, 'C.M., of Yukiang, C~li Treasurer gion. six of them the Ite1igious Rodin, Rouault and Utrillo will fornia-born prelate now' domg of the Holy Union. join'Raphael, Michaelangelo and mission work in Formosa; BisOne sister, Sister' Michael other:. great artists of early peri142 SECOND STREET hop John O'Shea, CM., of KanJoseph. is also at. St. Mary's. ods represented in the Vatican chow who now resides fu. RidgeOthers are stationed in England Galleries. ' FALL RIVER field in his native Connecticut, and Capetown, Sou.th Afri~a. "This is only a continuation and 'Bishop Gaetano Mignani, MILLION DOllAR Since Sister' Mary Alice taught of the close relations the Church C.M, of Kian, n~w in Rome. OSborne 5-7856 has always had with the finest· The five' vicars capitular- four-th grade· and carrie to St. BAllROOM Mary's .orily four years after its . artists of every age," explained acting heads .o{ !iioceses--ousted opening, every pupil at the Prgf. Filippo Magi. . by the Reds are 1i~ed as Fathet'S Available for Yang Kuo-liang, Tang To-mo, school since 1913 passed through ~anquets, Testimonials, .Etc. her classroom. • Tsou Ying-lu, Hu Ying-tang and Chang Ming. .For Full Information Contact and Elect Own Bishops - • ROLAND GAMACHE According to the Kiangsi daily Nu~ WYman 9-6984 the particip:;Ints in the meetlIlg 'MONTREAL (NC) The in. then 'elected three bishopsFathers Hu Ching-ming, Huang. formative process in the beatifiSpend A Beautiful cation ~ause .of Mother Marie Shu and Chen Tu-ching. Father and Sons. Inc. Anne, foundress of the Sisters of WEEKEND IN NEW YORK Hu was chosen for' Archbishop OSTERVILLE St. Ante, has been 'completed Chou's archdiocese, Nanchang. Complete·. Tours Arranged· When building a savings acGArden 8-6509 and the documents have been and Fathers Huang' and Chen count it's most important to Including forwarded to'"the Sacred Congrefor the American Bishops' Sees add to your account on :at TRANSPORTAlION·- HOTEL gation of Rites in Rome. of Yukiang and Kanchow re':' regular schedule. So don't let Mother Marie Anne, a native THEATERS spectively. . any "ifs" keep you qom your John Wang Ki-kwei, schi!l-. of Quebec. was born in. 1809 and habit of thrift. You can start died in 1890; In 1850 she'founded matic Bishop of Paoting who an OLD 1U:D BANK account ,. at Vaudreuil, Quebec, the,sisterwas himself· consecrated illi.::itly with as little as $1. TRAVEL SERVICE hood which today ha's more than' , last July is reported to . have proceeded with the con~ecration 2.000 members in North America. All accounts insured in full. "For Your Protection 364 Hersom St.~ WY 2-9321 Boston, ,Portland and ·WorceSter. of the three priests. The three Buv-FrOm , , New' Bedford Latest dividend at the rate of consecrations t· bring to 23 the 31f~ per annum. known total of "patriotic bish-· ops" consecrated in Red China 132 Rockdale Ave: NO JOB TOO BIG Save by mail at \ New Bedtord NONE T()() SMALL
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Jlishop Presides At Requiem
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LORETTO (l'rC)-Father John H. Boccella, T.O.R., Minister Generai of the Third Order Reguhir .0fSt. Francis. will officate at the dedication of the Pius xn Memorial Library at St. Francis College here on May 2. Fathe'r Boccella, a native of Audbon, N. J., and an alumnus of the college will deliver the principal' address. and bless the mod ern fireproof building. Father Boccella was ordained in 1941 and chosen Minister Gener.il in 1947. His headquarters are in Rome. '
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DIOCESE OF FALL
I
THE ANCHOR Thurs., Apr. 23, 1959
Marquette to Offer Traini~9 Fellowships
MIL W A U K-E E (NC) - A $225,000 graflt to the Marquette University school of medicine will be used for research training in physiology over a five-year period. The grant, from the National Heart Institute of the U. S. Public Health Service, will permit Marquette to offer additional fellowships for advanced study and research, particularly in physiology of 'the heart and circulat~n. . The awards will include grad~ uate sc.hool tuition, plus annual stipends from $1,600 to $2,400" depending on the category, There will be research opportunities for medical students, graduate, doctoral and postdoctoral students, and practicin,« physicians and dentists.
5
Blackfriars' Guild of Fan Rjver will present "The Night of Ja;nuary 16th" at 8 o'clock next Monday and
FIRST CLOISTER IN PAKISTAN: Fir~t 'city in the tslam~c nation to: have ,a contemplative order,. Karachi, P.akistan, welcomed two enclosed Dominican nuns from Lady ,of the Angels Monastery, Los. Angeles,who flew 12,000 miles to survey the possibilities of establishing their order there. Pictured are (left to right) Miss Henrietta Collins, Archbishop Joseph Cordeiro of Karachi, $ister Mary Imelda, O.P., Mother Mary Gabriel, O.P., and Bishop Francis B. Cialeo of Multan. Miss Collins, who accompanied the nuns is the sister of Mother Mary Gabriel. NC Photo. ' 0'
Tuesday nights in Sacred Heart School audito17ium for the benefit of Nazareth Hall. Diocesan School for Exceptional Children. "The Night bf' January 16th" is a famous court-room drama which enjO¥ed a long run 0 on Broadway. A jury chosen from the audience will decide the guilt of Miss Natalie Silvia, who heads the larg.:! cast. Also aPpearing in this production will be Joseph McManus as the .illdge, Robert NMle as orose,cuting attorney, and Stephea Miller as defense attorney. Assisting Joseph D'Adamo, director, and Bessie Shay, assista~t director, be james' Wil~ox, production manager; John Trainor., program . chairman; Sally Wilcox, ticket chairman; Honor Toohey, costume chair_man, and Alice Harrington, pub-' licity chairman. Rev. James MeCarthy is the mod~rator.
will
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Pontiff to Officiate At Royal Marriage VATICAN CITY (NC) - A royal rorriance~ which began -at the coronation of His Holiness Pope John XXIII will be climaxed in the Vatican on July 1 when the Pope will officiate at the marriage of Belgian Prince Albert and Italian Princess Paola Ruffo Di Calabria.. The Belgian Prince, 24, is a brother of King Baudoin and, first in line for the throne. The Princess is 21. While the Vatican - made no official statement it was un-derstood that the marriage would take place in the Pauline Chapel, inside the Vatican Palace. No details of the forthcoming ceremonies. were immediately available.
MA".-
Guild to Present Play for Benefit Of Nazareth Hall
BOSTON (NC)-American youth should "forget about rock and roll" and wake up to the threat of communism, His Eminence Richard Cardinal Cushing said h·ere. . The Archbishop of Boston contrasted the dedication of Soviet youth with' what he called' the lIOftness and complacency of many American young people in an address to Catholic Youth Organization members during an archdiocesan youth congress. He warned that commurnsts have penetrated, not only "to our very doorstep, in - Latin America," but have also infiltrated Am~rican youth organizations. . In return, the Cardinal said, it might be a good idea for some specially qualified American young people to attempt to "infiltrate" a Red-run youth co~ gress scheduled this summer in vienna. Cardinal Cushing added' that every cultural exchange group and athletic team coming from the Soviet Union to this country bas at least one official spy. Addressing an audience· of 2,000 young people, he declared: "Your lile is not what I get the Impression you think it is-a bowl of cherries. It is going to be difficult 'for you. "We are living in a materialistic age. If we think we are going to overcome communism by adbering to this philoSophy, we are loing to find ourselves pretty' ~ulnerable when, the time eames." 'ChOCl61e Goed EdueatioD In another address to the youth congress, Sister Mary Augustine, editor of MaristMissions D\agazine, told the young people that they should be "rebels in the right direction" and emulate the dynamism of communist youth. "America sold itself out a long time ago, by way of education," she complained. "Other nations laugh at our education system which gives credits for learning to make an omelette, an apron; and how to drive a car." She said young people could help to remedy this situation by resolving "to choose a really good education, rather than the easy courses."
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DIOCESE
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The First Baptist Church in Alice, Texas, embarked attendance campaign. In letters mailed out to \.. members of the congregation, the school superintendent of the Church attached a green trading stamp. Each person, cQming to Church on Sunday would receive two' trading stamps for each stamp received by mail. At last repurtg, Church attendance on Sunday had increased~ubstantiaJly. . The motive ,behind the' campaign is laudable. The idea lleems to be to get people to come to Church by hook or by erook and onc~ there,. then their mirids and hearts may be , turned sin'ce~ely toward G~d: - '
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What Price' Salvation
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- THE ANCHOR
I
TOMORROW-St. Fidelis of Sigmaringen, Martyr. He was Mark Rey. a native of 8igmaringen, Germany, who practiced . law and became known as "the Advocate of the Poor." In 1612 he joined the Capuchins and was ,noted for his preachings against the Calvinists in Switzerland. On April 24, 1622, after one of his sermons, he was fatally stabbed by: fanatics ,who attacked him 'nE~ar Gruch. .
Three GreenStaflBpS
But the salesman' approach to religion leaves much to . .. Try to "sell religion" as one would try to sell vacuum cleaners or automobiles, and the true meaning of religion deteriorates ana takes its place on the supermarket shelf lIS just another product. . '. .Religion is not' a . product that theunimowing public must be "conned" into trying' for its own salvation. Religion is a fact-it is the fact that God cI:eated man. and there is • connection between the two.' !tis" the fact that' God wills to be the Father of men~that me'it must unite themselves by' grace to their Creator and love and serve and wors.lip Him 'as their Father and Friend ana Helper. The fact, then,is too sacred a thing to be equated ~ith the latest in breakfast foods or a' "hard sell" ca'mpaigJ!.: Puta price of three'green trading stamps upon religion -and that is just about what it will appear to men to be worth.
MABS.
TODAY-St. George, Mllrtyr. The patron 6.:' England is revered highly in the East and West. He was an officer under, the Christian ...tormentor, Emperor Diocletian. He is said to have rebuked the emperor for his persecution of Christians, refused to sacrifi;:e to pagan gods, a~d was beheaded in 303.
The families of those children on the pilgrimage and the parents of all eJfCeptionalchildren will be brought closer to God through the prayers of these-certainly the most beloved of the ~hildren of God.·. . .
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RIVER.
Weekly Calendar Of Feast Day~
In' a day when there is so much self-seeking-, when even religion is so often equated with a series of request~ 6f God, it is a sign of great Faith that there are those who approach God with the child's desire to .give: And ~rom what more innocent lips' can the praisE\s of God be sung than from' the lips of those who will never know what it is to offend'
en
FALL
L.:.-.Thurs.,_~pr. 23, 1959 I
Cardinai Cushing's pilgrimage to Lourdes with a group @f exceptional children.is surely a trip to touch the hearts and Faith of all. . ,' The Cardinal has said that the group would go to Lo~rdes not seeking ,cures but to give these little ones th~ opportunity to sing the praises .of Mary with'innocent voiCes and pure hearts. .
GOO.
OF
By Father John L. Thomas, S:J. A~istant P~ofeS80r ,of. Sociology Saint, Louis University , Just how much help 'can one expect from a 14-year-old daughter? My' husband says I don't give her enough to do. I've tried, but when she's mad you're better off doing. it k"~ If k h · .yourself. S he doesn't Iike to, sew or coo. you as . er to go' to the store,' she has mark' is highly revealing. Somehomework to do although. a where along the line in her little later she wants to ,development your daughter has ",watch T.V. or she goes:dowiI ,learned that i::she gets "mad," town to a ·show. Now I don~t .finds some excuse, or simply like ar.gumeilts but' she's really refuses to cooperate, you will, do 'getting out· of the ".work yourself because you han d .' Do I find it easier in the long run. " have to use' a But what about her training! :elub!., What's happening to her char'"No, not club; acter ·in the' meantime? If, , though it '-inight minimum effort or efficiency
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The director' ~ of the movie "The Nun's Sto.1'.v.,"; F'T-ed , J ' Zinneman, has 'explained lYhy it tOok him two years to film' 4.h·e p·l·cture. . . . . , .' .' .. ", With all the technical skill of Holly.wood ,at hi.s c6m~
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SATURDAy - St. Mark, the Evangelis.t. He is said to have been converted by St. Peter, whom he afterward accompanied to Rome as secretary and interpreter. Believed to have founded the Church in Alexandria, he was arrested there be-
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tury, his remains were moved to Venice, of which city he is th.e patron saint. SUNDAY _ SS. Cletus and Marcellinus, Popes-Martyrs. A Roman patrician and also known as AnaCletus, St. Cletus was the third Pope and ruled from 76 to 88. ·St. Mat,eellinus also was a Roman. He became Pope in 296 ,aI)d was martyred for the Faith in 304. MONDAY-St. Peter Ca'nisius, Confessor-Doctor.' He was a German and one' of the first companions of St. Ignatius in 'the Society 'of Jesus. He was' renowned for. his work in ,Germany and played a prominent part at the' Council of Trent. Hedied in Switzerland in 1597. I
TU,ESDAY-St. Paul of the
you h.ad /"',,.... children to' cooperate, around Cross, Confessor An Italiah paddled. her a the home, most parents .would nobleman, he founded the Paslitti.ewit.h be better off' doing the work Sloms . . t Congrega t'IOn un d er the .your . . " band - .. about themselves-at least in the' guidance of Pope Benedict·XIII. '10 or 12 years .' .. beginning; ' . He died in 1775.' . mand, Mr. Zinneman still took all that time 'betausehe is a. : ago: 'You're be:'" .' ... Apparently, many mod~rn perfectionist. Since the picture is a~uJ a'Ca:tholic. ,Sister,eopling.' awate ·.mothers take this approach; with WEDNESDAY-St. Peter of Mr. Zinileman spent eight months studying theCatholie' of your prO})"'; " the result.that theird~ughters·Verona, Martyr. The son of religion and learning abo'ut con've'nt life. He wantec(tobe lema bit,late--:-perhaps not tOO ,'either,must learn..housekeeping· heretical parents, he received sure that. he' understood the motiv'esand convictions 'thatla~butYOUrlittie"daughter ~. .in' ·~pecia.l classes' at . sc'hool or ~:m h~~..it ~'~~i~~:':::~i~~~~:d!l . ......... '. beaded f~r tr,oiible;, a~d' it's not· enter 'marriage completely igInfluence, Cath.olics in, general an.d direct, ·young· Catho'Il'e .' ,en't'lre.y 1 her'f au It." Gro . . 'HI'ng gl'rls . ' .narant of'their routine domestic .' his, life to the co.nversion of the _ ladies in ,particular into convent life. . . ,... ..don't '.. usual~y:, react ,as, ,Sh~" ia "duties.. ,' . . CS:thari, the~ swarming .into the . .' Su<::h i~ the price that· Mr. Zinneman'would.paY'forhis ... doin~. ;Wh~n ,t.hi~ h~ppel1s, ~~, ·It ,takes time,patience;and' north 'of Italy.. He was. instruart. " '," ". '. " '. .. .' _' .' .'. had best- mqulre ,how iLh!i~. ' the willingness to put. up with niEm~al in converting thousands, A d h . t ChI' . h' . pened. ", ,. '. . . . . " some· initia( inefficiency if you .and was' slain while traveling '. Ii. ow It pU s at OICS to s ,arne ~ There 'are several' indic~tionawish to help your daughter de": from Como to Milan in 1358 at Here is a man who is ,so sincere in his work, so dedicated. in Tour letter. Fi.rst,· you,r h?lt- velop into a mature woman, but the' age of 46. to producing·a worthy' picture-and with the· hope of an. band,. says .that you.. don t - glV~ . who else has this responsibility? . . Oscar inthe,backgrourid.,......: .thathe could take several months her enough to do. Are you one ' T r a c e ' s Delinquency to 'be sure 'of 'his' gro'uiId. He,stu<lied Cat'holic{snl a re.." .8f those highly~ef~icient. hou~ Praise ano Correction To.' 9bsC:ene. Books :, d any use . Finally, you say you'do,n't like, aearch program, as an I'nte'liectual a'sSI'gn'me·nt•. " . ' ,wives' w~o never :foun tot Kmother's ·little helPer?" '. arguments. No normal. person QUEBEC (NC)-Judge Achille if.
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,And so ·manyOf .those who believe, Catholicism, to be.. '. '. 'Patien~"nd"PI-ai~,'.' does. ~hy niustth.ere.pe argu":- I;»ettigrew of t~e Quebec Court' , .. , : : ' '.. • me.nts w~enthe ~ltuabo.n calia. of, Sessions ha~ cited 'obscene / .. f 'th' "t d . to th 't t'h" f th " I'·· .; MOlJt httle,.gl~ls hke to, lffiltate. ,for a defmite. plan of acbon and 'pub'lications as~ a major cause of · rea d I~g ~r,. ur ,er s u y, m , e ~u., s .0, elrre IglOn.· 'their' mothers.. !heT typica;l17 . firmnelis? ' Too - many 'parenui the delinquency .here, which has They smIle .at study ,clubs, as Cathohc mtellectuaJsnobbery' start out, by.. playmg ·at."keepmg· forget their position· engaging tripled in the past four years.' or unnecessary searching into what they know they.possess. . house',' ~nd thtm gradually. start in endless -arguments 'with their ,; .Judge Pettigrew said· there .They "e·anl1o~.eyen. pick;. upa :five-:C~tl~. I>ami~hle~''rh~y.~,le~r~in~,,~~o :~i.~g~ "to ~elp, . ,c~il<!renas ~they~e.re dealing· ~as an increas~ "not. only, in the eomplacent 1ft theIr F~uth. . . '., ' . ' ',' m o t h e r . , WIth adults. There IS" room for ,number of c:rlmes but. also, of ..... Catholics with a. large"C" should be cathoiie with: '" "~ .cou~se they're ,usually a '. under~tanding,,, counseling,. i~~ th~ gr~vityof theac~ co~ . '1 " " ' , ' . . . . . . , . . , ,.~ . nUisance ',rather' than ·a .help 'strucbon, encouragement,pralse mltted. He .observed Juvemle .•mal. c -an~ that means umversal,ready,to·leam from. from' the start,but how else can' . and correction but no place' for· " delinquency cases increased from 264 in 1955.to 806 in 1958. . anyone 'whowould 'teach them truth. Mr. Zillfteman ean 'they:learn their 'feminine' roles!: .argument.. ' , . eertainly teach a valu·ed·,lesson to all. 'If a: man would 0080 A. litUepatien:ce-, praise; and im-, '. 'What should you do? It seems Discussing obscene. ,publica. mu~h for art, how much more should be do~e for. salvation! " C9Uragemen~ ~e~,erally launch~ tC? . ~ettiatyou "and yoiar hus- tion~, the ju.rist ~mphasized ~eY . . . ,.,' . them:ona-hfe-hmeofdomestlc- band should.have,a·little talk inshlled pOlson m)the souls. of serviCe. The process has been 'with your daughter explaining the readers by glorifying de.going on for centuries! . to her that she is oniy one membauchery. He said prostitutes are However, you maintain yo~'re ber of the family team and praised, soliciting is presented " , better off doing the work your- consequently has resp.onsibilities as a necessary evil or even .self when she's mad. Now let's as well' as rights. desirable, and young people are look at this statement. There Further, . you' should have invited to think of women and are two points worth noting. clearly in mind just what you girls as objects of pleasure to be You say "she gets. mad.". expect ,of her, So that there can later discarded. "It is criminal," OFFICIAl. NEWSPAPER O(THE ·DIOCE.SE OF. FALl.: RIVE~' . All growing children . get be some planning .. of work, be stressed "to allow young Published weekly by The Catholic Press of :~he Diocese ~f F~II Riv'er "mad" on one' occasion or an- studies, recreation, and so forth. people to browse though these other, but if they soon discover Finally, since 'you a'i-e s~artillg books." . , .,. 410 Highland Avenu~ ' J ' . \ ' c: ;. . that it doesn~t get them any at- late, you should proceed pa.tientFall River, Mass. qSborne5-71 ~1 t~ntion or out of any work, they ly but firmly. Your daugh~er has ' Educators to' Meet soon come to realize this is an much to learn arid unfortunateCHICAGO'(NC)"::"'Archblshop . PUBLISHER . ullpro,fitable,. tactic, to employ., '17 she does ~ot appear to be Albert G. Meyer of Chicago, will .. Most Rev.. James L. C~n~olly, ~.D., P~I;)., 'Doesn't your: remark imply that verr close to you now. ' .. open. the' annual convention of .'-'GE~."ERAL MANAGER,· . ' ASST.. (:7ENERALMANAGER' " ,your' daughter has been 'getting:' Bring' her. intO the, fimiily . the National' ·Music' Educators' ,away ~ith'it quite,su.ccessfully,! . eireJe,.of s~ared,.plans, 'r~spon- .' Association,chere Saturd~y, April. '. ".. Rev•..PQoieLF;SilaIl60, M,I\.·'·' Re-...;:John,'P. Drlsc~U . . ' . ' E,asier ApiJroach . " .ibilities, a~d' hopes Jest .. she .-: 25. . The, 'convention' annually' ;~-: «:.::"';~NAGiNGED;TbiL<':',' " .You; alSo.'s~te ,!'you're ~t.... start .. ,build ber'life wtaide ~ 'attrac'ta more ,·than3,.ooo deie-·
~sw:aY of salvation forthem:have:no tjrnefor,spiritqaE"
@rheANCHOR
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DIOCESE OF
Essay Collection Is Replete With .Sane Chr·istian 'Vision
FALL
RIVER.
THE ANCHORThurs.,. Apr. ,23, 1959
MASS."
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Seek to Abolish Death Pena Ity In Illinois
By Rt. Rev. Magr. Jo~n S. Kenne'dy Immense learning at the disposition of a luminous Christian intelligence is the source of the wisdom which, for many years now, has been dispensed by the eminent English scholar Christopher Dawson. It is evident in' his newest work, The Movement intermilly transformed by the of World Revolution (Sheed spread of Western education, and Ward. $3), a collection which led both to adoption of of essays bearing on the much of Western culture and of
CHICAGO (NC)-Support for legislation which would impose a six-year moratorium on the death penalty in
Illinois is being mobilized by crisis which presently confronts western political ideology and the Illinois Committee to Ab'olish the world. Mr. Dawson's concern to the rise of hitherto unknown Capital Punishment. is not the solu. nationalism which . revolted Auxiliary Bishop Bernard J. against Western control. ' Sheil of Chicago, committee tion of immediate problems Thus, the revolution which chairman, said members believe of .a political, began within Western. society the death penalty is morally insocial or econot only extended to ·the East defensible' and that it brutalizes nomic sort, but and changed the East 'completesociety by cheapening life. the understandly, but also now results' in setCommittee leaders stated that ing.of the presting the East against the ·West the neighboring states of' Wisent as it has because of the long history of consin. Michigan and Minnesota , colonialism. ' which have abolished the death evolved f r.o m the pas t a s The present situ~tion looks ·to penalty; now have lower homi'sCOUTING AWARD: Raymond Pare, committee chair- cide rates thar, Illinois. be perfect for the purposes of w e.I I a s the Communism. The' Communist man (left) accepts plaque presented to St. Anne's Troop 50, Prof. Wilber G. Katz of the charting of a path into the , appeal lies in this - that It .Fall River, by Henri Lessieur (right) southern district University of Chicago Law future. The greater part of this "offers-the poor and underprivi- executive, as Rev. Francois Vaillancourt, a.p., spiritual dirSchool, who serves as committee book is given to the contempor- leged the hope of a kingdom on treasurer, said' the commitiee ector, and Paul Thiooutot, senior patrol leader, look on. has a membership Of 225 civic ary confrontation and conflict earth, while· at the same ti.'ine . between the Western world and satisfying" their res en t men t leaders from 105 cities and towns the Eastern world. Mr. Dawson against the" rich alld powerful in Illinois. seeks to indicate how this came classes and nations that have The Illinois Academy of CrimCLEVELAND (NC)-Bolivia's criticized the rude and superior about. But as an essential pre- exploited them." anti-American riots are largely attitude displayed by "too many inology has unanimously adopted liminary, he first takes up what This book, demanding reading the result of resentment built 'up Americans" which is keenly felt a, resolution favoring passage' of he calls the revolution in West- as it is, is wonderfully stimula- over the years against bad man- and resented by Bolivians. the moratorium bills. ern culture,. beginning with the tin~ to the person'who will take nered Americans. Renaissance and continuing to it ·slowly and ponder what it So says Maryknoll Father our day: has to say. For it comes to grips with generally ignored, :essen- Joseph V. Flynn, an American The chief issue of this revolu- tiaIs; it puts current. ev~nts in. priest who has spent 15 years in tion is the secularization of c\li- perspective; it indicates .dimeIl- the South American country and ture. Where once Western cUl- sions in the affairs of men to 'is now home on a six months ture was thoroughly Christian, which' little iHi'ed is paid;' and leave. Bolivia disturbances were trigit has' by degrees. come to :be in it is replete with sane'Christian gered by an article in a na.tional all .aspects secular., In several vision.' -magazine quoting an anonymous centuries" it has been radically , : ,Brother Andre . American' official as . saying changed, . so that the religious tr I d Among the most' famous element is no longer cen a an shrines on the North American Bolivia would be better off split all-pervasive. up among its neighJ;>0rs,·, .' " c·ontinent· is that of St: Joseph Anyone who knows Bolivians, Ultimate R t a g e i n Mon'freal.Situated on 'historic 'the priest said, would know that Mr. Dawson holds that we 'Mount Royal, it annually draws' it's' a pretty. poor joke to talk have now reache.d the ultimate teens of' thousands of,' pilgrims about splitting up the country 'stage in this process. Our culture from all parts of Canada and the because of its economic problems. has, SO' to speak. beep thorough- United States. Besides being a The people have a "fierce love ly denaturalized. center of unusual devotion, it is of .liberty,"he said', because it We are faced with these on the way to becoming one of has cost them. so much. alternatives: first, "we' can're- the" biggest churches in the "Bolivians admit they have main in the half-way house of Christian wrold.· ,problems,') .the priest observed, . It came about, because of the but '. far from giving' up; they liberal democracy, strivi~g desperately to maintain the higher faith arid persistence of Brother 'feel have a .'''glorious future" for standards of economic life which Andre. who' died in, 1937 and their coun~ry: The Maryknoller WHOLE- for roasting - .SPLIT. ~~ broiling are the main justification of our "whose cause for· beatification secularized culture"; or second- has 'already 'been ' introduced. Renew Persecution CUT·UP for frying •• AU Aj ONE' LOW PRICEI Iy,"we 'can return to the tradi,.His story is. engagingly, told ,by Soviet Lith,'u,an.ia.·..: tion on which Europe (and the Alden Hatch in The Miracle of, d ,the. Mountain (Hawthorn. $4,95). ROME (NC.) - ' Atheistic opentire West) was founded an ','. Brother.,·",A .. I1'dr,e,',w~,s"bo'rn i.n ..' .j,' . set about ,the i~mense task ,of pression of religion' in' ,Soviet ,the . rest~ration : of. chiisti~J.l 1845, the. son of a· poor C~nadian Lithuania has been "stepped, up. :.cQuple,;.: Alfred!. ,and" Clotbilde A report carried in the current c u l t J , l r e · " · B e l ! s e t t e.. ,At ,bapttsm, qe, wall :edition bfthe Jesuit magazine. The Christian cultural tradi- given his father's Christi~n name Civilta' Cattolica, revelilspubliFRESH-U ',5:. GqVl '. 'tion {sby no means dead. lthlis So.;!rajI was.,-theinfant that,it 'cation"of liturgical and religious persistedunde'r"increasinglyad- was assumed he would not Jong 'books has been forbidden,:'as INSPECTED GRADE. A' verse' conditlons.' But, 'says Mr·:su.r;vive,·, the.:cerern.ony:. But.,the has 'anY religious instruction of 3% POUNDS Dawsoil,"~'our positron.is .. ~'like ,newest Bessette ,w:a~, <iestined,to children. Evidence indicates that 'that' of the Christians' in . the ,reach the ageo! 92., ""':_ another wave of persecution is We reserve the, right to ·limit quantities. Roman Empir'e, 'when the ,Although' his. parents left,hiIJ.l also in force. C' Church had on th'e' oile 'hand' 'to no material heri\age, theyl;lad '. A letter received from Lithu:.. convert the pagan masses in the set him an excellent example of ania. according to the magazine. SUPER-RIGHT CORNED BEEF great Mediterranean cities .- .• piety. And from his early years arUcle, confirms the report that and at the same time to,defend the boy spent niuch 'time daily Bishop Teofilius Matulionis of its bare' right to exist against'the' iri" pniyer. ..' Kaisiadorys has been deported crushing weight of an aI1:..pow:. After a short stay in New"Eng:.. for the' third ·time.. It. was also erful world' state which recog- land., in search' of permanent reported, that, the.~ithuanian nized no limits to its authority." 'employment,- he' en'coUhtered "8 ;f:~~U,J,~ lfathe,r G~orn?t~ P,allk~tys . 'ins preCisely this secularized prie'st who'uhd'etsto'dd'him,' ap- ~s)n I:!nso~,lI\ SiberIa., ,. ;:: .Western culture which has' peri- prElcilited' his sterling' quaUties, " . C ;:.~ CLOSE'JRllv\ ettated the East; produced'tre- ande'ncouraged' himtcl'try ·the . Mundelein 'to'Ho'n~;.' .. ' meridolis 'changes both there and "fe1igi6u~1ife.'Hesought to enter ' , '.,' . f' ,'. EXCESS'FAT 'REMCPV~D, 'in Africa and set' in 'motionthe'Broth~rs6f'lheHolyCtoss,. 'English,··P:ro eS$Or' 'Co.' "lets shown In ibis ..,.g....1ltftd tIlrU Sat., April 25 & tll.etl" In this tommunlty & vltlnl". '", ",. forces wn'ichn6wa're directed Was "i3t' firsH'ejected, later'Was CHICAGO (NC)-Riiih "Mary ag·alnsiihe·West'.· /proviSiOrially' ....·accepted.~ alm:ost':Fo:k:;' ':author ,'and professor of . . " '. , .... \, . was"nohidmitted to vows; English at the University-'of' WisWestern Co.lo.nization., :-.. To begin with ther.e was WestPorter's 'TaSk . , 'consiil':Milwaukee,- will receive I ,-I. ' d h .. 'a' ... the' 1959 'Magnificat Medal preO nce. a d mltte, e w s 88ern colonization which opened ' . CELESTE DINNERWARE Sugar Bowl & Cover 1..2', > ' •.. si.gned to the - tiu.mble, task of sented 'by' Mundelein' , College up ,the ancient, sealed ,world of ' " here.' ."': . " " ,,'. ' , Cream Pitcher :99~ and'itwaljl 'c'onsidered , COMPLETER PIE~E,S NOW ' . Vegetable BO-wl. '9ge the East a nd drew the globe porter> , t" h t' h " 'ld' I' " d Miss Fox has been chosen for ever more tightly tog~ther by, cer am t a L wou IVe an ON SALEI 11 '12'" Serving Platter 99c die in his quiet ~orner, unknown. her "remarkable accomplishcommunications and trade, ments i~ teaching, her 'eminent 13""" Serving Platter. 1.29 Then came the shattering of Such was not to be the' case, 9ge Gravy Boat however, . work in the field'of human relathe immemorial Asiatic empires tions and for her research on the Casserole ~.99 use 'of economic pressure, First. Brothe::o Andre made' a beca , t a t'IOn . as a won d er,..wc;>r.k life and writings. of the Italian Tea 'Pot 2.29 technology. and' new ideas-all repu Relish Tray 7ge from the West. 'er; Many:' gievously afflicted poet, Dante." FinaHy, oriental society was pople were restored to health Sparkling beauty for your after they had visited hini and ay artlclpatlon family table or fanciest enHeads International been touched by him. This imA liturgical wor,kshop oncon-' tertaining. , . 'portant and astonishing aSpect gregational participation in ·the JEFFERSON CITY (NC)-Dr. of his career is lengthily treated Mass will be' cond~ted at Stonec SOUP PLATE T"i:A~~:tS 39 Bernard A. DQnnelly, of Alton, by the' author. hill College. May 7•. starting at IlL, has been electeq. president . Secondly; Brother. Andre was 1:30 P.M.. with! a M~ss, at 4:15 of Te Deum International. He determined that' some day a P:M., it was allPounceq today.: by has "been vice ptesident of the vast church .honoring 'St. Joseph the Rev. Jam,es J~ Doyle,.CSC, Catbolkmen's 'organization, would stana. on. '-Mount Royal. dean 'of the college. Several hunwhich has 2'7 chapters 'in iiilie 'Tfii~! dream was .disctissed' by ;·~~ed;""lrii~§~s,:,~~ci?di~~:.-·cl#~, 'state~ and'a'rnembetship;O(5;OQO. 'olhers'a~'-\an . -a-hsUrdltY.'·l!oVv,' Sisters,,' s.·,em.i!1"ri~Il,1l '. ~nd laity , ... '.. , . '. " , ,-,,', "ove"'iile yerr~' i{\;V';is r, , . ' at Omaha. . t;""i::C" scribed' ill these liages. ' """saci-M 'M~'~wIirbe~s~·"
Rude Americans Cause Resentment
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-THE ANCHOR Thurs., Apr. 2;J, 1959
8
Meals, Chat·
Fall River Women
.By Alice. Boug!! Cahill If you are building or remodeling a house in .this Ipace age, perhaps 'you are weighing the preblem to \lave or not to have a' (lining room.. Naturally this' must be a persona} deCision. Few Pieces Silver · The dining rooin, of all rooms in the house, should. Sihce we mentioned that pea:' have a spirit of friendliness. 'ple 'are not all buying' eritire' It may .be dignified or it may' suites of furniture' for their din-
"Nqm~ 'Officers
, Mrs.. Jazpes A.' O'Brie~ Jr., St. Mary's Catheciral. parish; will serve as president of the Fall .Rive'r District· Diocesan Council of Catholic Women for.the coming year.' She will be assisted by Miss Helen C. Chace, Notre Dame' parish, vice president. Other newly appointed officers include ~~rs. George P. Hurley, St. William's, .recording secretary; Mrs. Bradley· McDermott, St. Joseph's, corresponding secretary; and Mrs. John J. Silva, St. Anthony's, treasurer. At the district's annual business meetil).g Miss Rose C. Saulino, retiring president, called for annual reports from her officers and from chairmen of spiritual develop~ent, family and parent education, discussion' :~lubs ~nd youth committees..·
be gay, but it should be a room ing rooms, perhaps we should eonducive to the happy, spark- give some tho'ught to what ling' side of life. Isn't breakfast' would be acceptable pieces. Ina p) e a san t . stead of the conventional sideer meal if you board, a low.-boy (with .nice eat 'it in a sundrawer space to hold flat silver) ny room? Isn't might be substituted. On this dinner mO're"deyou might arrange a tea-service lectable 'if you or a bowl of ffower's and a pair eat it in a room of candlesticks. G09d taste. to?3Y with a colorful demands great restraint and background, a simplicity in what is 'shown in well - lighted the .way of silver and glass :in. room" a room 'the dining room. Overburdening.': eI. cheer? How .the sideboard with' silver' is' no e t. te n' Mother longer done. Some few ·..pieces C· I b "ili say "Don't may be shown but in ·a·simple···· '. ehtenana.n .' e e rates .iscuss ~our problems with Dad 'room maybe you'd rather. have .At New Bedford Home .. until' after we've eaten." The just a bo.wl and cal).dle sticks. . . A guest of Sacred Heart Home, happiest families are thos_e who If a lowboy doesn't give you New Bedford, has celebrated his I reserve I}leal times for the light-. sufficient drawer space, ·invest· 100th birthday. He is Michel er gayer sott of conversation. in a four-drawer chest. To reLamothe, a native of Canada, . .' Because your dining ro.om is .place ·the china closet, you'll find who has spent the past 80 years ',. eften considered a. utilitarian a Corner cupboard interesting. in New' Bedford. room, because the, arrangement .However; a tip from those A mill worker, Lamothe reef the furniture' can be varied· who've tried it-lie sure to tired at 80 and made. his h.ome but little; one often sees a house measure your corner space! It ,with family members until three where the dining room is actu- is always surprising to find t h a t . ,. '.' '. I years ago when he entered ally the stepchild' of the house, one has a room with corners BREAKFAST COMMITI'EE: St. Patrick's CirCle,·.· Sacred Heart Home. · where color and design' have that are blocked by. doors and.'. Wareham, committee planning..commumon breakfast to be "Everyone loves him," said been forgotten~ . windo~s. 1£ yours is such a held. Sunday. Rev. Justin ·McCarthy,. creator of "Brother Sister St. Ida; one of the Grey Once-upon-a-time p e 0 pI e .room, it would be wiser to settie . Nuns o( Quebec who staff the bought dining room furnit'!te in for a flat cupboard that will go. ·':Juniper'.'·will be the main speaker. Left to right, Mrs. Gerard Home. 'She described 'the cenituites~the conventional' table, against a side wall. The corner ..F. Cusick, co-chairman, Mrs. Harold C. Cleveland, committee tenarian as still' very active, a~ 'chairs" buffet and serving ,table . cupboard and a flat wall. cup.,. '$ember, and Mrs. Frank A. W ~lsh, Jr... in charge of flowers.,' tending Mass daily and' being .' -placed them in one position board' are wonderful. for disquick to· offer . assistance ·to . and there they stayed. But today . playing your prized c;,hina "and C?.' ~Rel L. youngsters of BOor 90 who have . the interest in antique furniture, glass. Oftentimes what one. difficulty with stairs or long cor· which has made' collectors cotn'. h b d .' t' 'd bine pieces whichharm.~m.ize i~~~~:hel;t~::'h:i/~oi~~he:~ ••..' upp~r... uge~"'" _ r l ;::'birthday was marked "with but' do not' exactly match; h.a.s .of a room.. . WASHINGTON (NC) . - The· ; l>rought no~peace, but ,'!an~ther" a 'party for 75 of Lamothe's famcaused a reaction'which, it seems . · . " . W o r l d . Refugee' Y-ear"· ·pro-.·· ..kin.d._of·war:'to the·newgenerll-.··."ily. Five generat.ions·were rep.....;. me, has prompted manu .. fa. c;,,' . ,If you want a cottage dining' clal'med .by··.t·he' nl·ted. N·a·tl··ons....:.- '. ti.o.. n.'. 'an .. ld.. :a,m .. o.n.g.. ".t...h.e .h. ~artaches r~m i~ Conlonial feeling;you'l~" ,.r·es~i.itedat the occasion; iaid' turers to offer the buyer'Blore . . . 'f' h" tz' which. begins nextJuly'·3i-has· and . trage~les" "are ~e refugees,·Si.ster. S t . l d a . · . ". Yariety' ·in· design. . '. probably .wantdrapes· o c III beerl'. 'sup':p'orted by two tOp 'of-". "who.. i>ear :witiIeSlito· the' bitter. . . .. 'to the window sill instead of' the ~",. f . .. . Gray-Green Walls . .floor, organdy or net :glass cur'.:. . ficialS in Catholic 'relief .work:· .' uUlt·O ,coD1pr?JIlIse: . i ... '. ..:Nevi ~edford Party·· Let's start with the walls of a .... . . ' .' '.' '. " .,., ''Throughout -"Europe' 'in the '. "- card party will be held by ·l·n'g·· 1"0'o·m'.' You' 'm'' I'ght' 'p'a"'I'nt', . tains. It's ni.ce to make curtain.' .;, A .Jomt statement of endorse,. . N' d F' " E ·'t· 'f ~ . I ," . ' . "t ". ·.f . •. .. " . ear all " ar .as , re~gees' an,,: .tn ,·the Infant of Prague Guild Th'IS night the fabric m~n1 J came· rom . 'h' ,--"," · them a pale gray-green. .. , .as . . ' whether. . K Alt f C' Archbishop.. . t" gUIS u=ause of· a ·restr··lctl·V".· ~ · would be especially pleasing if so that tl1 e y can be drawn at , a r . " .' .er·. 0 . IDClI~na I,. In ·prOcesibased on dlsci'irilin'iltory Wedneslfay,May 27, at St.'Mary'. · 70U are using .dark oak or w.alplain or' figured, gi\.es a' decor;" ~ his c;apacity.s chairm.an of the laws aruLpracticei' of lOme' na- 'Horne, New Bedford. MaybasketS ,. and a merchandise certificate .ut furniture. If you. wish .. to at:iVe spot to the' windows which' U. S.Bishops' Welfare and . tions. . h' d would other~ise be .dark. .' . Emergency .Relief .Committee,; ''Ten•. of thousa'nds' .:who . fled . will be a~arded. . . . th have color III e C aIrs,a .. eep . . and Msgr. Edward' Swanstrom, . -. red upholstery would be ,.pleas. executive' director of the com-, the lands of theistic .COIIUDU-: tng. Then.use a dull red for yqur Falmouth Circle .0 of I mitteestablished in 1940' to 'eO-: nism ftndthat some nations do drapes. ' 'r.o Hear Jesuit Su.nday· ordinate the raisirig and distri- not' 'recognize oppression' and This color scheme furnishes a ""bution' of funds to meet relief Persecution in the religious field most attractive background fo'r Mrs. Ar;nand Ortins is chair'. . . . as they do. in. t~ 'economical ailver displayed on buffet or'. man of the annual communion' .·needs. and political",fields as sufficient .erver. We'd suggest ·an oriental breakfast ofFalino~th'Circle', . Bearlaehes ..:.. Tragedies ~eason to warrant a policy of rug, for this will·not· only' give Daughters of ISabella,'scheduled The two said the years. ~ince government~ aid," the .tatement you years of wear but because for Sunday at Coonamessett Inn. the end of World Wa~ II h~ve' • read.;' . the all-over design will not show' Rev. Philip Keliy"S:J. will speak...,..._ _....~ ~...;. ~ -::'_ _....._ _':. .pots as a plain rug does. May activities of Circle·memFor a room' furnishe"'d .in ma- bel'S will include .participation of hogany, your v.:alls· might be the glee club in a New Bedford . . . · light blue. (with green, in it). Neighbor-s Night program TuesIRELAND ~ ENGLAND · Select a Chinese rug, accenting day, May 26; and attendance'at a . rRANCE • GERMANY shades of tan, and with this as district meeting of the Diocesan a floor covering, se1E;ct uphol- Council of Catholic Women ~uqTn'NEW YORK ''- .tery in blue-green. For drapes . day, May ~. ' 0 MAY1S . 7 umight use ·agreen-blue '. Mrs. Mathew Souza, regent; "'Clotfi "U':-Y',81~:' AUG. m~ material. with 'some gold in it: ind Mrs: Joseph Gardner will .. . .,.: eIlPT.1 • • OCT.1. · in'· addition' to 'pairited willIs, attend the annualconverition of 'there's always!' paneling"'YOu"the Diocesa'n Coun~il~sCirCle.· . -.;" . ..:.,.: .-' ~- ':..(~ '. . might' pa~ei .'onewall in pine' .. deleg~tes. ;The . group's next and if the ceiling is high:enough··. Illeeting: set for Friday; May 8; .W..ho " .. you might like to use a dado on. . in St. Patrick's Church hilll, the three. walls .with' scenic~,' Falrrtouth.A May basket 'party lbifti . papet. ab'ov'l the dado.. ' Scenic will be held: .. . paper on 'a wall gives' color and .. pattern to the room. If you' can AZORE'S' ; PORTUGAL afford, the luxury of a fireplace . Hyacinth Circle 0 of I in your dining' room, by all ,Plans Invit'ation ITALY. SICILY mea!lS have one. ChrOme Dyed Ver, Llaht WeI.ht GREECE ·.,ISRAEL Members of Hyacinth Circle Verqnjca's Veil Subject No. 71, New Bedford. Daughters Fine .~TISTES,. SERGES, Ts.OLYMPIA. . of Isabella, will participate in a fa,"'st fro"" 80,_ Of New Bedford Play.' state-wide retreat, to begin toPANAMAS and GABARDINES now . ~ . . . MAYT ·oIULY25 A play dealing with Veronica's J!lorrow at. the Cenacle Convent,. AUClI.26 • SEPT.2S Veil will be presented at 6:30 B'righton. Rev.. Thomas ManOCT. 20 •. DEC. 1 II Sunday evening over 'New Bedning, O,M.I., will 'be. retreat ford radio by the Catholic master. \ ' Theater' Guild. In other activities scheduled' You may now buy, DlREcr FROM THE MILL, .the yery By .Manuel Almada, the script for the next two months, the same fine cloth you have bought for years through brokers . we'.. have previo~ly lupplied. and A.T TID!: SAMB LOW is dedicated to a-fiew 01'<"'",s circle will hold 'initia'tion cere-' . PRICES. . monastery of Discalced Carmel- monies Tuesday, April.-28. Banites who make copies of the veil . quets will be held by the bowl:\ ' . ·Write or phon.- till if you wish_ lNl1eiman te call to see you at the oonvent, ... mar come on linen touched to the original ing. league and the Secret Pal. ~ /roM Newy",A; . " MHd . to the MilL ... . likeness, preserved in St. Peter's group, the latter bein'g slated for, ., Basilica. Rome.' /' . Tuesday, May 5. ' .. 'FOR INFORMATION .~. 'CALL COLLECT The' script' is a speculative' The junior circle' will' sponsor story. concerning the identity of a display at the Diocesan CounVeronica aue' the love for Christ cil of Catholic' Women convenwhich brouE(ht her to Calvary.' tion, be held at Kennedy Ceo,... ' · ..M iss Florence Mello will be at ·ter 'Saturday, ·MaY'Hi. . " . .' \ '50:·AUI,Q':aD.·'.,;~,;;... :.~:tj. . , ~,~; ",."'-. ~_ ,., the' '·organ· and"Christopher'. A. . The'circle eleet~'d Mrs. Lillian :"'!'-":':":'-:(,'.~.~~'.~;~""'<":";".;,~,:.~,:,' : '. 'Best' will' direct" the:' halfdlO\Jr" ;.Guthr,ie ·..•. trust-ee o-:fOt uir:~· '.~ ,Production' . veal'l ,.. f '.. :_, •..::.L'·~; .
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DfE ANCHOR . lh~., Apr. 23, 1959
Budget Balancing Problems Today
9
'., For r River Nurses" Elect Offi cers .
By Mary Tinley Daly Budget: time is here. .r Business firms, 'civic, educational and philanthropie institutions are puzzling over the 1959-60 budgets to go ill force at the beginning of the fiscal year. Even families 'are readjusting finances at'- favorite movie stars-and be out ter the debacle of income only four cents on each'deal. A taxes. Where to cut; How roll of film for our camera cost to reallocate? a quarter Plarlning goes all the way At Present, However down the line to Ginny's allowBack to present-day economance at our ics: a dollar a week for a 13 year house. At 13, old living in a metropolitan she has what center in 1959? According to a we consider recent survey in Life magazine, or had considthe weekly allowance' of the ered - an adeaverage girl of 13 is $3.63--more quate sum for than three times what our aver,her '. state of, age girl has been' getting ... .life,: a 40llar a Let's see: admission is 60 "w~k.: YBut it cents to a movie even in our just.· d o,es,n' t, .s u bur ban emporium (threecover," she tells fifths' of Ginny's allowance, as us. Ours doesn't compared with two-fifths of e ~ t he r, . w e ours); infrequent trips downfind. ' town or for basketball games SanctiJrioniousiy and talking and the like mean 20 cents bus 'off the top .of 'my head, . I fare eal;h day., The "doubleprompUy told Ginny that at her _ tithe" for. church would' be. 20 · age I had only one-quarter of cents. Postag<.' has doubled, as 'that weekly amount. Moreover,' have ice cream sodas and camI, too, had to pay for movies out era film--"-and everything else. of it, buy presents,make church When Ginny's sisters were 13, donations and even .try to save \ there were more chanceS of a bit. . making money to augment the '''How much ,did movies and . buck-a-week: safe baby' sitting sodas cost then, Mop1?" Ginny and the like. · asked~ "And "what was really There will Ijav'e to be some right to 'put' in the basket· at readju·stment ...... probably some 'Mass on 'Sundays?'" '. ,. .paid jobs at home to make that . ..... 'Lett to Ponder . ~ine ~ ,the b~dget more relis", ' .' tic . ' .Wise to the,ways of her elde~s, .' i>robilbly 25: cents per week' .GlIU~y wa~edout on the dlS- had the same proportionate im· Cthusslon. at?d left us to pond.er pact on our'parents in the longe ,ques lOn. . 'd t to G" Sh h d I th ll'd ago, ml -w~s wn as mnya e· a us. n e sma; .mt "fair" allowance does on us in .', western. town,. w.here I lIved at 1959 M'." "b' have' ,'. the,.' ',sam,e .the age ..of ,13, a nickel.. (double ... ~ proudy lgIVen ' ': . ay t" s e, , , tith) e .could ,U<; a t ''tisf " ;c~urcb, on, .. Sunday mornings- '0'5,8_, aClOn,.; no sQuinching it into the palm - - - - - -....- - - - - -.. of the hand and dropping it in ~FAll RIVER quickly. . . A movie w.as the,n tert cents, "'~ NEW BEDFORD as' were ice· cream sodas. More.over, all, my; friendS. had. just . aho\lt. the' sa~e" allowance., ,S;lturday: 'afternoons when we, did not sit thro~gl" the ..two showings of "The Perils of Pauline" and the like, we had 20 cents left for spending or saving. The ( : allowal1c~ was all ours ---' no :questions asked. We could squander the whole thing On a '; banana split or eke it out on :penny candy all during 'the week;· Memoh of that penny candy comes back:, ti'n 'frying pans with t~o "eggs" (sUgar, cornstarch fondant whites with nauseous ,yellows that you dug out with : tiny 'spoon); 'paraffin pipes' and \' bottles filled with sugar syrup ,in red or green, licorice strings two yards long; ,"ja\1lT breakers" · that lived up to the name. How '. could they' give' so much for a , penny?' Ailc" thi- .pleasure wasn't ;; spoiled by' 'the 'thougijt that. we . ,. should "brush after eating.'; . I We liv'ed within easy dist~nce \ .of friends and a triP. "uptoWn" , ·meant.8 five-miqute.. wa~, . : viewing .of Beilo~s store windows , to see what they :·were· we~ng in the sophisticated "East'" (Chicago)", i Money seldom entered the :pic- ' ture,for' ~e had that' backlog of 25 cents every single week. ~mmonlon We could save for presents, send away stamped, self-addressed : envelopes for pictures of our
IHVEII. . . . . .
.New' 'officers of' the Fall Ri~
C'aniolie Nurses" Guild include
Mrs. George E. Sullivan Jr., n!:eleete.d . as president; Mrs. Mkhael P. Fitzgerald, vice presi.,. dent; .Mrs; Dennis F. Sulliv~ recording secretary; Mrs. William F. Davis, correspondini secretary. Also Mrs. Thomas J. Fleming, treasurer; Mrs. John J. Wilding, historian. Named as directors were Miss Yvette Paquet and Miss Anne Lewis, each for two yearS; and Mrs. Joseph Lawlor, Mrs. ,Edward Haponik and Mrs. Oscar J~ Dube, for one year terms.. . The. next meeting will be held .Wednesday, May 20. Mrs. John :SiDlpson will b,' chairman. Pre'vi~sly, members will attelld the Di6cesan-wjd!il meeting of, Cath.,~ij'~··ilurses: scheduled for Satur,diy, .May9~'·a St.Anne!s Has-' 'pital.. ' ,',
BEST AFFIRMATIVE DEBATING TEAM: Kathleen Morrissey (left) and Mary-Jane Walker, members of the senior and junior class, respectively, at Holy Family High, New Bedford; were selected as the best affirmative debating team of the 25 teams that participated in the Tournament at Providence College.
Propose Job Discrimination Ban SACRAMENTO (NC) ...... Fair to race, religion or ·color. Gov. employment practices legislation Brown' Commented' that'-- "in is virtually,), on ~ts way to the guaranteeinl! equal job oppordesk of Gov. Edmund G. (Pat) tunities for all our' citizens; weBrown of California follo~inggarolessof race, creed or 'color" an overwhelIning victory' in the the State Legislature has taken State Senate. an historic step forward in the The legislation outlaws -job long battle against prejudtc:~' and discrimination in California due discr,imina.tion." , ' ',
Sagamore Circle D of I" Plans Guest Supper . Members of Mother cabrini Circle, Sagamore DaughteJ-. of ..... Isabella, will sponsor' a I!Oin.muqi,on supper at which busbands and friends of the clrcJe and members of the Falmouth and . Hyacinth circles wilJ be gUeSts. Mrs. Dante CremoniDi, past regent, is in charge of ..rn~gem.enb.. ' '.' The Sagamore group will attend initiation ceremonies sCheduled Tuesctay, April 28, by .Nf!,w Bedford Hyacinth Circle. They win. also parti~ipate in ,8 day. 9lprnYe!: at ~cred Heart ~ inarywith Corpus, Christi Gu~, Sandwich•
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Sucordium Club Elects .Officers for Year New officers of the SucordiUDi Club of the Academy of the Sacred Hearts, Fall River, will be installed at a banquet Thursday, May 7. They include Mrs. Alfred J. Roy,"president; Mrs. Elmer R. ; ,.~tatf900t· 'J?:;.'" 'Vic~? .,~,~~esiden' : ·Mrs"J...Jpseph,Welcb, ~1ary; . '~:'Mrs. ,:Francis '. P. McG\ligan,' . treasurer. . ~rs", .. ~dnWrt~t.J'i )'4~tras: will; 'be·"a cllrector for a .three year:' term and'Mrs,' 'DavId W. Boland~ :. immediate past president, .-wW;'::
:'~:,a" ~ector ~"'~ i~.'.
days forever in
fine .professional photograPhs token in
our studio now. SPECIAl.
O'FFEB
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"9.95
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, photographs one 8x10, two 5x7's plus· . three purse picture. .
Dr.;Uing ROOrris"~' Yo;;, 'Convenience Noappdlhlrilllnl needed;pro'of••lioWft· .. ," .... ." Photograph'Studlo .. 4th. f'tOo',"·· " ::-::"1":'-
• Gids' 7 to 14 at 5.98-13.98 • Girls' Half Sizes 1O~ to 141h at 8.9810.98 • Sub-Teeners' 10 to 14 at 8.98-13.98 • Sub~Teeners' Half. Sizes 101f.l to 1414 at 10.98-12.98 • Veils' 2.98-5.98 • Petticoats and Slips 1~9~7.98 " • Panties 59c-:-l.25 ...... White "Gloves $1-l~98 '. ,., . .. ~'
For tJile8I;
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ea.sioJlS iD &be life of a YClWIC lady. See aur elegant. eol1eeUcut of new abIes, some tailored anti
simple, eUJ.ers frilly and fanq., Nylons, 'OJrpndies ,and Swisll embroideries.. :.1.'
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.. Eu',opean •Social.ists Are··Adopting,\·
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D'OCES.~
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Friendly Attitude Toward Church .
OF FALL RIVER.
MASS.
THE·ANCHOR.· .. ' .
. Thurs., Apr. 23, .1959
'WASHINGTON (NC)-:Vice Chancellor Bruno Pitter-. > man- of Austria says Socialist parties in several European cOuntries are a'dopting a more conciliatory attitude toward the Church. The Austrian official, a leading member of the Socialist party, was inter" . Mr.. Pitterman expiained that viewecl in the office of Msgr. Catholic religious instructors in George G. Higgins, director the schools are selected by the . of the Social Action Depart- Church but appointed and paid
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Favors .Marriage fo" ,H. I·.g.h. S(:hool Se·nl·o·rs , ".', J
COU' rse
CHICA-GO (NC)-A Cath~" olic educator has· suggested. \ all Catholic high' schools
ment, National Catholic Welfare by the state. He added that eight' _ Conference. Mr. Pitterman, who of 15 teacher training schools in make marriage preparation is visiting and lecturing in this the country are Catholic. courses a regular part of the llOuntry, also brought Msgr. Hig. On the thorny qtiestion of senior year curriculum. . gins a greeting from' Franciskus Church and sta te .laws on mar-'. The courses' are necessary "to Cardinal Koenig, Archbishop of riage, .the Vice Chancellor inI give to all our students a better Vienna, whom he called on be-' dicated the Socialist party sees understanding of the vocation' fore departing for the United a 'possibility of compromise on of marriage," ·declared Father' States. the differences that exist teEdward V. Stanford,' O.S.A., The Vice Chancellor asserted tween the Socialist and the 'Cathprincipal of 'Archbishop Carroll the Socialist party in Austria is olic .position. . High School, in the' 'nation's DOW interested in promoting In Austria, Catholics have to capi.tal. better relations with the Church: be married in a civil ceremony The Washington priest, who is He added it is his impression" before they can be married bea former president of Villanova that socialis.t parties in Belgium, fore a priest. This is in conformUniversity cited four principal Germany and Switzerland are . ity wilth"a law established by the. '. reasons for his proposal': ' . also' . adopting 1)' "The trend' to earlier ' a more concilia- Nazis in 1938. The Bishops 'of . mar... " lJocyattitude toward the C;hurch.. Austria have frequeritlyurged' riages, which got its· start dur··· Parental Demand that the law be rescinded. ing arid after World War II, will" . " d th 't' th: " continue' for some time 'and' bids"'" M· r. p·tt 1 erman SRI .. a IS Solemnize Marriages i1ttltudeis 'most a'pparent 'in Ausfair, to. increase.'~ (About 20peY' tria; particularly in tl).e educaMr. Pitterman said that despite cent of the Cathciiic high schools .tional sphere. He. noted .thai in the, obligatory civil. marriage· in the country:, are' .now offer;;;;. Belgium also the Socialist party. ceremony, 90 per cent of AusDIOCESAN CENTE. IAN:' M.ichael L'amothe' ce'le- ingmarriage preparation ·cours-:.';" .... just become more flexible tria's Catholics have their mares ) . .' . . .. its outlook toward Church' riage solemnized before a priest.' brated his'100th birthday at Sacred Heart..JJipme, New 2) For the ma~y studentsw~o" 1;"'" IIChools. Ac'cording 10 a> pact Hea'dded that the Socialists "do Bedford. Sister Sophina (left) and"Sister IgEe of Jesus· dO'not attend' a: Catholic college sighed'last November' by Bel- not ,oppose a Church marriage."" hold some 'gifts presented him. Five' generations of his' senior year high school. is the'. aium~s three major political parIn resp{lnseto a question by family, 75-ill all, were present for. the, ~c~sion. 'Hehas 35 . 'last opportunity 'to r.eceiv~'mar .. · . ties, Catholic schools are receiv- Msgr; Higgins, t~e Vice·.·Chan:.... . riage preparation: training- in .. :. -tng th'e same subsidies from the cellorstated" that in his' opinion gr!'l-ndchildr~n, 57 great grandchiloren and one great, great' .Cl!tholic school. . ., ·~Yernm~nt as are being paid the relationship between the' grandchild., , , . . 3 ) ."A marriage preparation ."public· schools;· The.pact also' Chutch:·and·',ior·ganized':l~borin< \ cour in h'gh 'school' g d .cognizes the "right of parents Allstria',isvery satisfactory lilt a . to ~hoose the. type of education thepresent·iir.ne.· : .. ':.' , j view," smce high school semorli" iIley want:their 'chil(fr'~h.to re- .' He added' that t~ecooperation~ .' have gen:rally achie~ed suffici:"';" . .eive.""":::·' .... . of. Christian Democrats. (the.CLEVELAND (NC) ~ B o t h ' " . . ' :nt mat':'-flty to 'beneflt ~~om sucll . Mr. Pitterhtari"elllphas1'zed in, pE!opie'i(parLy) "aild 'S'ociaiists in school administrators and guid": 1) In commumcabon,. as .1\ re- mstructlOn and yet most (If, Austria at" 'thei,present·:time re'CeD.tyearshas· conti'ibufed ·w'· ance counselo~s must make sor.ne sult of their "technical jargon.'" them are far et:10ugh removed" . iothere is no difficulty'on the akttering of kc'Onomiccondi,;;' basic .changesin theirthi'nking 2) ~~ adaptation, as '8 result from marriage to permit them to . 8CbooI.. question.'" He stated' that tioris',' wifhthe' resJlt that "the: if guidance pr~grams in ·C~tholi~ . : of expecting ."too much too so'on~' . be objective about the,lll.atter/',,' tolio*ing World War II the ma- . gap between.the r'i<;h"and the' schools are to become more ef- ~om s c h o o l s . . " 4) Young. people to?-ay are . r'l:.~".Y. ·."o".·f·...··'·p ..··a'·r'··e··.·n'·.t·s';.·I·'n·' ·A·'u's·tr".I"a, 1"n';'-' poor~' is. 'not 'v~ry' "'p"'r"'o'"no'u···.. n·c"'e"d": f' 't"" I f' "bombarded" by,;'the communi' jo .eclve:. . ':", .' . '.". ,...... 3). :.I n,.un d.ers.ta n d'Ing. the. .',1-.,,· . , .' . . • . . • ', .,,,: . ' • -:"; ~Ud!.rig 'fuoh'Qf; tii~ ~SO:cia:nst~, todllr;:': .,i ';', ',. . ; "",. '. This advice has been given ~ .. nanclal.aDd :personnel.problems. cahons medIa wI~h mls1eadmg 1I'Oted 'in' favor "of 'havihi(r-E!lig':; - Ed uc at~'~~"to "';a ' r , ' F~th~r O'Neil C~ '0'Am'our, '~~" .of·admin'isb::ators. , .' . .. ' , : i ' lln~ f~lse ~de~~:'.~. b out 'lllarriage"'~ ,bIS"'lllstfllctions " iiI:' pubii'c ." sociatesecretary of the School 4) lit providing'a ;basic mini;.' . -:ha . hSltuhabolnd·of tmboralt··ldangtedr.·; IIChools:'He attributed this re..:. Fall Rivei' Nuns' "'Sui>erintendElnts" DePllrtffient, mum guidance' program. 'for W lC. S .~u '. n~., .e' 0 era e Iiponse to the crippling effects . Sister John Elizabeth, S.U.S.C., National Catholic Educational schoolswhicli are unable' to do' . by Cathohc educators. en the moral training of youth principal of Sacred Hearts Acad. AssoCiation, Washington;' more at present. . Air Base Breakfast afWt'the nazi occupation of Aus- emy, Fall River, ·w~Il. moderate Father D'Amour cited a "failAmong' forthcoming 'projects tria ill March 1938. .. a .panel discussion at the first ure to· recognize" 'four ..,things Works of Thomas of the newly organized Otis Air .. '11 'R-' .. . .. spring :meeting of the Second- about 'guidance on the part of Force Base Catholic Women's Fa . iverStudent .ary SchooL Department of the ..many Catholic School adminis- Gift to University PASADENA (NC)-One of the Guild is a breakfast for chil. Wi..n.s Ess.ay' Award' . National Catholic Educational ·trators. He listed :·these·four , Association~New England unit. things as: world's leading scientific.. insti- dren receiving First Holy ComWalt~r Nichi'por,'14 year old To take.plac: Saturday at Our 1) The "scope" of guidance; tutions ·~as.received· a compen- munion Mothers~ Day, May 10. eiilth grader and member of St. Lady of 'theE:Ims College, the 'roo many administrators equate diumof the work of one of ,the JOseph's . parish, .J!'all . ~iyer," h'as llleeting will have as theme gllidancewith mora)',values, he world's leading' philosophers.. ~n n'am~d '·thir.d prize \9inn~r "Meeting the .. Challenges in said. " . . '. California Institute Tech.. ~ state.,.wide essay contest Catholic Secondary' Schools."' "'~)' The .'. ,technical ~ture ~ nology here'. has. rec~ived ... .ponsore'd :~hy"a' Bosfon lriews"; The panel.moderated by'Sister . gUidance. three-volume .set of.·St" Tbom~s' OIL COM,AN.Y: paper. John . Elizabeth will consider .3) The' fact that· guidance SUInm~. T,he~iogica, presE!nte~.to 'Uisprlze, $100; .cam~· for ·an high <school ";evaluation ,·tech.' SQme sort or other is needed the . school's humaniti~s 'ibrary essay. on the benefits ·of 'good nique,s. ,.Brother ' . for every not just .the ~. by the Cal Tech Newman' Club. ,-!\lb~n, .. ,f,I.C.,: ' ,child, .' . Canadian -'American relations. prinCipal: of . Pre v"os t 'High: c~lledproblem child. . . Dr. Lee A. DuBridge, C~l Tech SC~?~~sti~()l,o.P.,9!:'s ,.,a.r~. no.thing School, Fan River; 'is among the 4). The·fact thllt steps must be president; accepted the:voi:'" . ' . -. .. DeW to young Walter, however. panelists... · . • taken to rerriedYbasic p.rol>Ie~ urnes;' : He was consistently top-ranking . Othe sUbjects to be discussed in the guidance field. . . "The gift was ,made' possible South Sea Sis. atudent at' St; Jost!ph's parochial' at' uleail dliy 'nieehng'include, 'He also charged that guidanee by the . generosity; of ,a~ 'Cal school and· has attained high .... . '" . personnel'had:faiIed in four areu . 'T~I, HY8l" ' Hyannis '. . . teaching: problems poseed'by' }'n" th·e;. r'ela"t"l"O' os: W'1"'" adml'n'-" Tech alumnus and former :Newhonors at Morton 'Junior High .gifte'c:l students '. and techniquell' ~ . . . - man Club member. ," '. " ...;,,' School, which he now attends. istrators:' cof youth guidance. ·He was recently. first prize winner in a Jewish War VetPrelate. to,' Preside J 'J .... erans' essay· contest on educati.9n in America, and he' is sched.:.At Family Blessing . . WALLET' SIZE PICTURES aled for inclusion in a forthAlumnae of, Sacred Hearts • Real Estat~ Loans Laminated, ,(Seal, .Pla~t;ic) eoming high schobl poetry an-. Acadel1).y;F~1I·River,.:will meei; ••. Savings Bank Life Insuranee thology. ~. with ~usb~lnds a':ld children, at· J ~a:. for' p.p. .• Christmas and Vacation Clubs . His plans include atte'ndance 3 Sunday afternoon at the acad'" 24 HOUR SERVICE at DUrfee: High School' next year '. emy· for the annual blessing oi . ' . $cIvings Accounts and· continuation 'of his ed'uca- ..,families. Rt. Rev~ Msgr. Hum"" .SEALASTj Box • . 5 Convenient Locations tion at college. berto S. Mede'iros, school chap-. NEW . BEDFORD, MASS. ., '. :' · lain, wilJ;i,presideat~h~,chapel ceremony.. . NEW BEDFORD Mrs. Mary Giblin Heroux. IS hi charge of entertainment and refreshments for the affair. When it's time
Need, U.'nderst~"\ding "for Succ·esso.::: . ". f~OI!'"se PSY~h.olo~iCal ;~i~t~:f:~ Of' G . p' . ,. :.
.uIUance· rograms :In Schools.;
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INSTITUTION. for SAVIN,GS
,~MR. FORMlJLA.~7~· ., .
: Fuel.Oit Treatme-:,.ts:
..: Are Ideal' For' Churches;: · , Sch~ols, Con'vents, Orphan-: ·:,ages, and Rectories:" .... , .:.:... REDUCES ..
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S~rvice' C~lIs
to retire • • • Buy '.
(Mac' Gregor Brand)
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WfNNtNGFAVOI wmi .m FlAVOR
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DAVID·SON'S·
FISK
RUSSELLT. STONE!~ .Brokston .Chem. ~o., ,.,.'. ,
37 Silver Road" , .. . . . . .. Brockt.9,!l'.19> ¥as~: ..:.'.. '
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:. 276 Central St.,FaI.1iwr OSborM 6-8279"'';: •...
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.Masiachusetts
DIOCESE OF
Five Miami Parish Priests Serve 2,500 Families in 10 Languages
FALL
RIVER.
I
THE ANCHOR-
Three other languages, kept on tis. Lithuanian and German are • standby basis, are used when spoken also by Father Vincent tourists call at the rectory and Valis.' , ask for a priest in Portuguese, Portuguese is heard at the recRussian or Slovak. tory when tourists arrive from Pastor of the polyglot church Brazil. They converse with II Father R. E. Fhilbin, an ex- Father Valis. Ji'avy chaplain whose four priestFrench - speaking Canadians assi~ants have a combined linwho vacation in the area are guisnc talent comparable to that also directed to St,Michael's, of. a language university faculty. where Father Razutis hears conThe parish confessionals, fessions and counsels newcomtagged to indicate the different :ers in French. languages spoken by the priest Polish Choir inside, are a match for the con." . ,lessional placards posted 'in ,St. For~eople wh,o speak PolIsh, Peter's basilica when an, ·inter:-.. a spec1al Mass 1S o.~ered. each national, pilgrimage reaci'les Sunday. A sermon IS dehvered Rome.' " in their n~tive t?rigue and h~mns , St., Michael's, despite, its, cos- are SU~g m PolIsh by a ChOl~ of mopplitan atmosphere, is Ii ,m.qd- 15 v~lCes., Some 200 Pohs~ ,est parish located in an average speakmg people. are regularly, m Miami neighborhood. Its church, the, pews. Nab,ve customs and .. a converted military ch~pel.· c?stumes preva1l at yearly Spanish is spoken by more c1als as w~ll as at ~onthlY d~n than 550 families. The pa'rish, , ners h:ld m the pansh by PolIsh ,issues a weekly bulletin in Sp'an- Cathohcs,. , -ish, : conducts a Sunday Ma~s Lending an assist in the n:lUltiwith ,sermon and singing in lingual community is a cOnva -, Spanish, has two choirs of Spa'n- lescing priest whc lives near the '!8h singers and three lay teach:: rectory, FathE' Francis Garmus. us ,who speak the .. language: He speaks Russian and Slovak. Two of the' five priests who i~< Engli~h, ,the tenth ianguage ,side at the rectory are,from,.', employed at St. Michael's, is Spain. ' ' '. ',.,,', number'-one in popularity;'
Miss Kathleen C. Roche will head the New Bedford District Council of the Diocesan Council of Catholic Women for the coming year. Supporting her will be Mrs. Homer J. Mandeville, vice president; Miss Leonora Luiz, treasurer; Miss Lucille Benjamin, recordin!, secretary. , At the annual meeting of the district council reports of the year's activities were made by Miss Mary E. Foley, heading'the youth committee; Mrs. Michael J. O'Leary, family and parent education; Miss Lillian Ross, s p i r it u a 1 development; Mrs. James T. Mosher, discussion" clubs; Miss Mary McGrath, 'organization and development; Miss Luiz, hospitality; Mrs. Ed-" ward R. Ponichtera; publicity; Mrs. George COllette, ways and' means.
COYLE ALUMNI COMMUNION BREAKFAST: Gathered at the Coyle High School cafeteria are seated, left to right, Rev. Bernard F. Sullivan, assis'tant at St. Mary's Church, N,orton, main speaker, and Brother Elma, C.S.C., :vice-provincial. Standing left to right: Joseph. Bettencourt ,. , Taunton, chairman; Thomas Whalen, Taunton, president of the Alumni; Brother Eudes, Coyle principal ; and J Qhn Condon, Brockton" toastmaster.
'Second.Ha~d StoreYolunteers ,"
CLEVELAND (NC).-In a tiny ,second-hand clothing'store in a Negro 'neighborhood here, three women volunteers have been ·conducting a quiet information campaign which has succeeded' in winning converts and "fallenaways" to the Church'. , 'As a r~suii of the campaign, ,which·: uses pictures of Negro 'priests; nuns, bishops and saints, as'well as information pamphlets ancfl>ooklEits, more than 100 persoris,' have' either come into the Churchor'i'eturried to the sacram'ents. . SAN FRANCISCO, (NC) Double sessions, with no 'end in fr9,m 'three nearby With little pirbli~itf' and '~9ne sight before ,1963, when another parishes, are, Mrs~ lola Ellis,' Mrs. ' lOught, t,wo pa~ishes.in t~i~" arch:- new' school 'w: " be ready. 'Mary' 'Baker 'and' Mrs~ George diocese are playing tbe" "good' The late Father Henry 'E. 'Day~: "" ,", ,", " Ileighbor" role th~se days." Plunkett" then pastor, of St. C~stome~s "are USillilly at':' " The S~'ri1ai-itans are Our LadY' Isidore's, in 1957 offered the disOIl Loretto in Novato and St.- lsi": trict the use of his new.· four- . tracted by the religious pictures dore's in Danville. room school and hall. It was pasted in the windows, Mrs. Ellis Both are providing. space in vacant, lacking the Sisters to said. This prompts theQ} to ask . their parish schools for public 'staff it. The district' gratefully questions and few leave without sehool classes. And both l1ave accepted the offer, made with some discussion of the Faith. One man' returned three times , earned watOm thanks from hard- Archbishop Mitty's permission. with friends. One convert, an . pressed local public school dis~ Parents Happy tricts. '''Everybody's happy, especially After 55 Years In Novato, it happened this ,the' parents," said Father Julius OMAHA (NC)~St.Cecilia's way: . M. Bensen, who succeeded Father Last November, a fire totally' PlunKett as pastor. cttthedral, 'an 'impressive Spanish destroyed Burdell school, some . "Use 6f .the school; 'wh'ich is style structure whose twin towthree mil,:,o Vlest of town. ,The' some 'di'stance 'from the church; ers ate' 'V'HiibHf 'triiles 'awaY-from little white schoolhouse - just, cio'esinOf interfere with parish ac-' Omaha, has been consecrated by one room, with 12 pupils-was a tivities' at all. We have it for our A:rchbishOp GeraldT. Bergan Marin County landmark, among' Saturday CCD classes: The rest officIating. Th~ ca'thedral was the last of its kind. The young-, of' 'the time it's nice to know itls cJristhided' over a' period of 55 sters and their teacher, Mrs. riot just standing idle. years. The' :: ''Archdiocese' of. Adams had no place to turn. All '''The school district pays fot oiDiilia'ii'observing its centenpublic schools within a reasonthe utilities and maintenance~' riiai':year ihi~ye~r. '.' , able distance were already jam- And I'd like to say they do an Packed. excellent job of'· seeing Coo that Father Charles J. Farrell, everything's kept in, good, order: ........ , ..... i-, ... '-, '. Novato pastor, sized up the situ- They even fake care of the garONE STOP ation-then picked up the phone. dening." -' SHOPPING CtlNTER Would Archbishop John J. Mitty Criticism from anybody 'on the ' permit the Burdell children to "church-state separation" score? • Television • F~rnitun use one of the unused rooms in None whatsoever, Fath,er Ben• Appliances • Grocer7 newly opened Our Lady of Loret.:. sen said. Both in Novato 'and to school? He would.' DanVille, the "good neignbot" 104, Allen St•• New Bedford "It' worked out just fine'," ,.' parishes', have received praise "", "WYm~n'7-9354 , ••• ..-.o~_n_-.n_d _o·_o-.-....J Father Farrell said. "The Sisters~, from the loca,l press. " tell me they hardly know there's' another class going on. The' ehildren mingle at recess and noon. The rest of the time Mrs. Adams and her pupils go about' their own work, and bother no-· body at alU' Simple Arrangements Financial arrangements are ample. The public school district pays its share of the utilities bill. In Danville the public elementary school district was faced with an emergency, too. Not a NEW BEDFORD, MASS. 115 WILLIAM ST. fire. Just more children than it bad classrooms' for. Result: '
No One TalksChui',ch~State Split When Parish Helps 'Public Schools
thewome&:
Mission,S Dependent
'elderly woma!) who came, to buy and stayed to ,talk ,knew nothing about ,,·the Church. Later she took instructions and ,was baptized-and was followed "by her daughter, on-in-,law and 'their .. four children into ,the ,Church.
Mrs~ Ellis said the '. cehtei"S greatest success is 'wiih' '''fall:en,;, aways.'" "'They come in' here," ,she' 'said,'" "look at the bulletin boards and ask if we're Catholic.' On~e ,they know we ar, t'hey unload. From tl;1e:ri '~"it's an: easy step to get ' them to confession.'" ' , r
CORRE'IA. & SONS
VATICAN CITY (NC) - The Church looks to rural lands above all others for those ener. gies it needs, io fulfill its mission, Pope John has told a group of pilgrims from Piacenza, Italy. •
W Ity Settle. ,For' Less?' \
Bj.,%,::' 'JI. '
per annum'" An anticipated dividend ~. ',::'
'The -litti~"'comb\inaticin :~ rum-
3lJ4 % will be paid by FIRST" .
mage store-information centers operates on it shoestring. All items: are donated', and sold at low prices. Profits go to the missions or to help one of the parishes. Last year $2,100 of the store's $2,181 profit went to the missions.
FAIRHAVEN LUMBER r
• ,j :
FEDERAL of FALL RIVER"" on all savings accounts for .the" ',' 5'-montbs period ending June 30. 1959. ' This higher rate is due to our ' record growth in 1958 . • • and to further, encourage thrift. START an account with lIS NOW, ••. share in a higher dividend next .July! WHERE you save DOES make . a difference.
First Federal
COMPANY ,.
~
Complete'-line: " Buildin.g Nlciterials ',' (,
.'$PRING ST." FAI~HAVEN ; ,; ,WYman,.3-261,l" '.'
Sewings and Loan,' Associa~~ ,
II' Fall ,Rivet'
1 North Main St., Cor. Bedford' Opeftfridayi EVenings 'tit • ::,
; ; ; ;&; ; ;D; ;Sales ;,,; ;.,::..::=======; and Service,'
New Bedford & Acushnet . Co-operative Banks
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INC.
, ,FRIGIDAIRE j;.
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REFRIG,ERATION APPLIANCES AI'RCONDITIONING
'FRANCIS J. DEVINE "
,363 SECOND, st.
ARTHUR J. DOUCET
FALL RIVER, MASS.
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•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • • :,:ANDERSON: & OLSEN 5 ..: ~~,,'" -INDUSTRIAL and DOMESTIC
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HEA'TING - PIPING'(~ncl AIR, CONDITIONING
,:CONTRACIORS
5
.................•................... : 312 "iftman St. •
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Miss K. C. Roach Council Leader In New Bedford
:ro-, ,Lead Many to Catholic Faith
" Sister Mary Esther of the Sisters of St. Joseph; ailative"O! :rall Rjver, died last, monUl" in Dublin, Ireland; according" 'to word received by Connecticut I16latives. Daughter of the late Dr. and Mrs. Thomas T. Tobin of Fall River, she served in various hospital capacities throughout he.r '" J1eligious life. She was in Ireland for the purpoSe of founding a hospi~l.
'11
Thurs., Apr. 23, 1959
MIAMI (NC)-St. Michael's church is definitely on lll)eaking terms with its parishioners. Six foreign languages are used in administering the sacraments and directing various activities within the international community of 2,500 families. Lithuanian, German and Ital:' Spoken regularly are Span- ian, used less frequently than iBh, Polis~, Lithuanian, Ger- ;~~e °N:::u;~nr~:gl~~g~fs~ica:~~: man, Itahan and 'French. satility of Father George Razu-
Religious Dies
MASS.
WY 7..9162. I
New Bedford :
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·COMPARE ioin the SWITCH TO •• ~ then
NEW BATTER WHIPPED
Sun6eam BREAD
Stl'y's' "S.mokin'g- ':'lsi:'C'he(irf'l'I'
'DIOCI;:SE:;',9F"
J
A,meni.ty ,of Clerical': life,
F~l¥":R'VE~.~·M!,se.
- THE ANCHOR Thurs., Apr. 23, 1959 :
12
By Most Rev. FultonJ. Sheen, D.D.
" ,
out
EnPt;
When Moses broutbt bis. people' of the' Illavel7 Af lie went Into the mountain for forty dayS to eommune with ~: ... While Moses prayed, the. people decided to set up a new lead....· a false god, made,in the ima«e of a golden caU, the like of wblela' they had seen while in bon~e. The ;oIden calf was made oat ." tbe peophi's golden earrings! .
Far be it from your Sage to take sides in the controversy whkh still furiously rages ,over the effects, harmful or harmless, of tobacco. He'is, alas, a kindred spirit of that honest man who, having read all the dreadful statistiCs compiled by I the avowed snuff to sustain' them in their enemies' of the weed, pru- heavenly harmony j the result .dently determined to give up was not conductve to the prayreading. er of cquiet.
Moses was so angry when he came down from the mountain that he pounded and ground the golden. calf into the finest of powder. He put the powder in water, where it seemed to have the appearance of blood, and then made the people drink the dust of their own idol. .
It is of some antiquarian inOne-Pinch Limit . terest, however, to recall that' In 1682, therefore, _a: decree one of the more vigorous Roman was issued by His Most Chris- ' Pontiffs of the tian Majesty, Louis XIV, limit1 7 t h century ing canons to ,one..pinch of snuff Gold that had been prostituted later U r ban VIII, per choral sessiori; and directed came into its glory when the Son of God t1b pub lis h e d that it be handed around by an became man in Bethlehem. Wise men from PN a Bull in' 1642 usher· in a large snuff-box. . ' which threat;· The exisitin,: evidence would ened with exseem to show. that the Fathers commuriication of .the. SoCiet., of Jesus' were tho 'g e' :of ;the \' early addicts of the weed, and Gold therefore has a . double value, it can, take us away, from c Ie r g y' 'a n d "were ,inclined "to, question· the God or it can bring ,us to God. We 'do not want 'You .to give' up yoUI' JaitbfuI who ;validity of. the P~pal prohibigold that has sacred associations, bilt rather your old 'gold: watches -w'(i"r e: s 0 en:" '. tion of its use. by the clergy, that no longer run,i:ings that have lost sentirriental value;· silver "slaved' 'by"' 'the e~~~ywher~ anq alw"ays, though service that' no .longer, serves, eyeglass frames •of"' gold, WOIn: out tobacco habit , we assume 'they' saw eYEr'to eye diamonds, jaded jad~s,precioUs pearls, golden earrings~· Hoarding as to smoke; chew, and snuff it with Urban 'VIII on ;smoking in' NEWMAN PORTRA, IT : ~ , them they become like gold~n' calves;' giving them to: the' MissioM' -in · ' c h u r c h . · . ' church. 'is like giving them to Christ;, in' fact· you do give them to 'His Vicar. "Our temples," he thundered, Time, the universal liealer, Recently discovered .in an Every cent that is given to the" Society for the ProPMation of the "by'reason of the divine Sacri- has fairly' well regulated tpe ,antique shop, this oil paint- Faith is given to the Holy Father. As he said: he is to be "first and principally aided." , fice celebrated in them, are matf~~, even in. ~~, abse~ce of ing of ~~gland's John .Henry called houses of prayer ...Now pont~fIcal prohIbIbon~. 1£ the ) Cardinal Newman by an unit has recently been brought to Contmental clergy still annoy' . . '.' Exchange your old gold for heaven's gold, as Scripture advi..Our attention that the ugly habit their more puritanical brethren known artist, hangs In ~~e "My counseL to thee is, to.come and buy from me, what thou ,needof taking by the nose or mouth .from Outre Mer by taking an London_hom~ of Opus Del In , est; gold proved.'in fire, to make thee rich." (ApOc 3/18)· . that herb vulgarly known ,as occasional pinch of snuff during Hempstead. The Superior, GOD LOVE YOU· to .Anon for '$100. "Enclosed is a bill :he ioba~co has 'so widely spread lengt?y: ceremonies,' ~ .more .Father' 9a1arraga, found it been saving, what for? ,-oday) knew:,wh~nI re~d :MI~SION.,".,. ..,." ~r~>ugh',ce'rtain . dioceses that ,promment abuses InveIghed in an antique shop 'and was C.M. & Co-Workers for $20. "We are sending tbis.$20we c~ll~ ,persons of both sexes, prie,sts ,against by Pope Urban have long bI t ' . h · t 'f ' .. 'ill:ld Clerics, regular no less than d i s a p p e a r e d . . , a e .. ,0' pure, ase ,I ,or. a . The Easter Season bro~ght ,~ut ~e ex~ g~ilero~ sai:dfices','\~. to J .L. for $3 "I borr9wed a Best Seller from a lending libr817 secular, forgetting the propr'iSmoking, remains, as it was small ,sum. :rfC Photo·, .. ' instead of buying a copy for myself.". " to T.C.for $5"1 waniec'I"to ~ties of their 'station; make use .intended;, by'· a benign Provi-fuvest this. in some little pleasure lor"rriYSeIf but I'didn;t,", :', .....: ,~ ~f 'It ey'erywhere, particularly in .dence, one of, the more cheei-ful 'Catholic Boy Scouts . . ...' .. : :.; . ' . the city' and Diocese of Seville; amenities of, the' clerical· life. Segregation .. ~ ." .Jf you have sent~ 7~Qr old gold ~d precious' Jew~ls there'" what 'makes us bhi'sh the Indeed; it is somehow consoling Resent HAVELOCK (NC)-A .CathOyet one piece' that .You can. wear and ptove that you are a 'friend 'mor~! eVEm during the celebra- ,to reflectthaUt was a Cardinal, lic boy scout troop .has withto the Missions.·.• the GOD LOVE YOU' MEDAL At: ~OUl' 'fidD. of ttieMass:- . " P r o s p e r o n o Santa Cruce, "wbo drawn from .activities '6fa, re,,",' "They soil the sacrea linens 'introduced tobacco .into Italy- gional 'Boy' 'Scouts .' of' Afuerica , ,reQueS& we will send &be, D,leclal of'7ourcboke':' ' . I. $ 2 Small~ sl,v~ medal"·' ." w"ith those . disgusting humors and in; .the form' of cigarettes. - coundl ,because' it oPeratE!s :~ri o'a $ 3Sinall silver medal and Cll&in " ~ " ,which tob'acco exudes;' and they",,· "'Books and'Tobaooo ", ; ;'; segregated basis: " ," ; " $ 3 Small 10k goi.' filled med&J ,", ,iDfect ,our churches with a re-'N-ay,. more, use "of 'My . Father Fr;ink J.Howard ~id $ t: Small . 10k gold, fill~d .medal ua"ebaiD ,puisive stench.", Lady Nicotine has :the sanction . the parish's Bo~ Scout Troop 304 $ 5 Large silver medal ". " .. . .' " ',' Forbids. Use , Of Pontifical and even of sain~ly is "withdrawing from 'a~ Boy $10 Large .10k gold' filled ~edal . ':', ,'Such being the woeful state indulgence. 'Pope Pius 'VII was Scouts of America activities."" , ...... of ,affairs, the -Pontitt strictly devoted' to his snuff-box, as was Relin'quishio!; the parish, ~out ~~t tltiscolumn, pin your:'~erifi¥ to it.~~4.',~llil :it'tO"~ forbade . its ·use, .oral (Jr nasal 'or the revered reviver 'of Thomis- charter" Father Howard' wrote Most Rev, Fulton J ...Sheen, National Director of The' Society fell' fumigative, 'within the sacred- tic study, Pope Leo XIII" Pio the regional scout 'council: ~'If the Propagation of the 'Faith. 366 ~ Av~riue~'N~w 'York 1, ~. Y., precincts,. anc. pronounced it "Nono; in the'm'idst 'of 'his tribu- . we ,had' known that you were set .. unlawful for clerics to -indulge . , . or your DIOCESAN DIRECTOR ~,,~YMpNDr.'c;ONS~~ t in the filthy habit." . lattons, 'found comiort from tirfie up '. on a segregated basis, 'we 368 N.orth Main .Street, Fall River, l'4ass.·.. , .' . '. to, 'time in his piPe. ~ would never havl:l .sponsored a It is" ,not on record that t h e · . .troop in the1irstplace." He noted ! Pontifi~ai' .ukase was part'icu- " .The white soutane, of St., Pius DAUGHTERS OF Sf P~Ul · larly, effective, especially in the X. was o~~asioJ:lallY, discolored, 'if that the .Easteril :Carolina~ Boy y.;~ng. gi"" .i4-Ui to labor III . " Christ's' '_it vine,ard' u' an: AltOs"" Of' .... : a ban d on e d," city of Seville. ever .,' So slightly, by, tell-tale Scouts of Amel-ica C~uncilin formed him that 'it is a seire/' Editioits~ . P~~SSI' Ri.MJio.:· Mtiv'ks . and" "'e. · Queen' Elizabeth 'Of Spain, de- _.snuff 'stains".evidentlyn'o, barvision. With th_ modem means, ..... voui, daughter of ,the' Church, •sinister to lejs holiness, and mor- g~ted, organization and sai~. that llIlisiiona" Sisters bring Christ's Doctri8e , sought to enforce the decree in tifica~ion"and:r~ther a remind- . anyone ~hQ accepte4 iis ch,a.r~r 10 all, regardless 01· race, 'colo, or CNelI. her .dominionS 'by ordering the ,er that he was rooted in the,soil had to accept andabi~~ ,by its ,·For information write to: . . . ,,',: ... '. 'f: church beaa~~s; to. confircate all o£.the sturdy· peas~ritry he loved. .. bylaws.,. REV, MOTHER SUPERIOR snuff boxes opened during di-. Pope,Pius'XI, forthright as he SO 51. PAUL'S AVL. BOSTON 30. ~ Pre,ldte to Dedicat¢· vine 'i.V!.:.orship;buLthese func-was leatned, 'enjoyed an after" tionaties, she:~discovered, were ',·breakfast Cigarj'as' was no'nore .Seminary'on May'13 :' not above the:'·irifluel1ce'of mod- than proper for a 'former librarNOTRE DAME (NC)-"-Arch; est briBes.. ',,: , ,.' 0' ,.,,~ ian, for·'the''ilfomas of bo'oks 'and 'bishop Egidio 'Vagnozzi; 'Apos; Earl~,hi> the :'.lolloYling cen- tobacco: blend well together. tolic' Delegate to the . Uriited , tury, Pope Clement. XI, actu1£ Pope Piu,s XII disl!k'ed ·to.: : States,"is scheduled to dedicate " ated either by discouragment or bacco,' Pope Jol,ln, XXIII !S the new, three-million-dollar , by a more libEiral'view of tobac~ known to savor a' cigarette, at Moreau Seminary here on 'Wed; co, revoked' his pr~decessor's odd hours.' But· whom are we nesday, May 13. The'semimiry,i1itu~ted on Ple · ~ull~n,d conien~~; ti1mself convincing? Not ourselv.es, sure.: with exc.ommtinicating anyone ly... " . " . Notre Dame University campus, , will, provide'. acc6mmodations i for about 200 Holy Cross sem, inaria'ns'~~fd30 fa~l.l~tY'iDembers, : . Due Lack Love _ stud~nt 'priests, arid ~rot~ers~ ; "spI:ead s.o\r~pidly th~o~ghout tOS:ANGELE8, (NC)--':"Mis.' the 17th century, and in no sion service is one" of' the major !. country; riH;>re widely than,in tongues in the language of love," France,;wheJ;'e it occasioned fur- '., Msgr,Anthony 13ro~w:ets has told ; ther ecCiesiasticaiheartburnings.' membersl'of the"Mission Circles ., ..... ·.··t·· .;: Imported in leaf form, it was ,of this archdioce~e. ' ) ,.... . .necessary to grind, it into powThe archdiocesan director of -' · der by ,miniature mortars and the Society for Propagation of 24-HOUR WRECKER pestles. the Faith said "lack of love This manifestly, was a some- among Christians and pagans is With SERVICE what noisy process, and when the one of the leading' causes -of good Canons of the Chapter, world wretchedness,. of hate, Dependable 653 W~shington ,Street halfway through the chanting discord, fear' and of irreverence of the DiviIl Office, decided toward women." 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BATON ROUGE (NC)-Msgr. bishop Paolo Bertoli, Apostolic . Robert 'Emmet Tracy," will be 'Nuncio to Colombia, has been "consecrated Titular Bishop of 'transferred to Lebanon. He suc: 'Sergentza. and Auxiliary Bishop ceeds Archbishop Giuseppe' Belof,'Ulifayette,t...a.,' on' Tuesday, trarni,' wh(fhas . b~(!n ',na~ed May 19, by Archbishop Egidio Nuncio-Internuncio to the Neth,; Vagnozzi.· . erlands. ' :' Bis40p-elect Tracy wiil be the . '~chbishop Bertoli was born :;first bishop to be consecrated by in Poggio Garfagnana, Italy, p Archbishop ;.Vagfiozzi:."afrer his·, 'F-eb., ,1;:1"1908.. -He ;was ordained 'ii arrival in the U~ited' States cli' .i~: i930",~~l}d ~onsecra,ted in May :;May to take up 'his;'dit'Uet"u 1952;,,}\\year later he was ,ap~ :~;Apos~<.>_~~" Ee~~~~~~•.•• ",;c_ pointed Nuncio to Colombi.".;:;'
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RIVER.
MASS.
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THE ANCHOR.... Thurs., Apr. 23, 1959
Asserts National Race Laws Hurt Social Advance:
MIAMI (NC) - Lawyers from North an<;l South Amer-' ica. have been; told they can play a role in providing'the
basis' for achievement of' the' PHILADELPHIA (NC)""tranquility of order" sought by Racial discrimination is a 1I10st of the world. terrible evil 'no matter where Auxiliary Bishop James H: it occurs, but when it is Griffiths of New York, chair": man of the U. S. Bishops' Com- . furthered by national law 'it bemittee for the Pope's Peace Plan, comes even more obnoxious. This opinion has been ex• peaking at a Red Mass, declared "today the life of the Christian pressed by Archbishop John C. Is a constant challenge to aiertGarner of Pretoria in the Transaess and dedication." . vaal District of the Union of Rights and Duties South Africa. The prelate is on He said it is a' day of colleca six-month visit to the United tivism "in which you, under the States. guidance of a Church which has The Archbishop spoke of the . demonstrated its qualifications, situation in 'South Africa where Ol" at least, its right to be' heard, discrimination is furthered by must firmly insist on and ex-. national law. But since it is a pertly conciliate the dignity. of , . crime against human nature, it cannot last forever, he said. Inthe' individual human person . TEACHER~ ,OF SACRED DOCTRINE: Some 230 Catholic colleges, ·of. the United terracial justice ,must· come to and the legitimate .demands ,of,. 'States aug Oanada:; met in New York for the' 'fifth' annual national' convention of the South 'Africaeventuaily, even tile commOn good." . . Society ~f Catholic College· Teachers of Sacred Doctrine. Pictured .(left. to right) are: Bishop Griffiths said that "to ' . if it takes a long time to·achieve IIOme it may seem an oversim~ Brother Celestine ·Luke,F.S.C.; and Broth'er Alban' Mary, F.S.C.; both of Manhattan Col.:. it. plification, but 'it is fundamenlege; Auxiliary Bishop John M. Fearns of New York; Father Thomas Doplon, O.P., St. Impedes Progress tally' true that in vain, shali we Rose's ··Priory, and SisterRoseEile~n, C.S.C., St. Mary's College,. Notre Dame. NC Photo. The high racial barriers that labor and strive for the trandivide the people of South Ai:" quility of order which is peace. rica and impede social progress, in any area of human relations, hold back also the advance ()f 1Ulless we blend our efforts to SAN FRANCISCO (NC) - The it's easy to forget that a patient 'Freeway nerves' in commuting the' Church' in that area, the restore to the human person the trend is back to family physi- is a spiritual and physical en- fathers, for instance. prelate noted. lIIignity and the destiny conferred cians. And high time, for the tHy, not just a medical probl~. "What happens is that the "Sooner.. or later-and unforen it by God' from the beginintense pace of modern living "Too many sick people are mother or dad translates an emo- • tunately it will be later than aing." has created a bigger than ever wandering from' specialist to tional disturbance into a mental sooner-the walls of. racial disHuman Dignity need for "the man with the little specialist. What they really need ailment and heads for a psychicriminatior must collapse. PresOnJy in' terms of human dig-' black bag." .is,the insigl1t a ff\mily physician atrist. 'A family doctor, knowing sures within the nation are lIity can there be true freedom, .. This was the' word from Dr. can give. He considers the whole :the' .whole- picture, could have significant,' bt;i ·the Iltrong lie emphasized. "Freedom is a John G. Walsh, Sacrame"rito 'person, .and ~ore than that, spotted the cause and save them pressure of world opinion will 'temple. ~f the moral order. 'It is physician who was named presi- knows the rest of the family as 'a trip. What seems to be a physiplay ari important part in the the aggregate of the rights and Qent':'elect'ofthe American Acad- well, and, the home. in which . calor mental ailment may n'Ot change," 'the prelate declared. .be 'that at all. Psychiatrists will duties of individuals and' famemy' of General Practice. Five they live." adding: Ilies," he. added. thousand of the nation's' family This insight has become especback me up in this." "I. am fearful, however, that Overcome Narrowness doctors were here for their' an- ially' important in recent years, General practitioners' prob"; the situation i!l' South Africa . Some ,rights' and duties cannot nualn'leeting. Dr. Walsh said. . . lem is to achieve status and preswill get worse, before .it let. 1M taken away, even when 'an Dr. Walsh is a i;amily doctor .. "In my own practice I've ·noted. tige commensUrate with that of better." , . the" medical specialties, Dr. apparent common good might and a family man, too. 'He and. an increase in the number· of Walsh deClared. Although genehallenge them" he' de~lared. . his wife, Sabra, .are parents of "f~ilY emotional problems. Hus"Consequently, 'in the valuati?n'.., eight ~hildn;n: 1.:h~Y· hail from··bands and wives at odds. Teen- -eral practitioners form 60 per' u. S. mediCal proef true freedom, these rights an~ Our Lady of the . Assumption agers feel their .parepts !i6n't uri" .cent of LOURDES (NC) - The 'old duties' must be balanced' and parIsh'in' Carmichael, ·just out- ,derstarid.th~m," J;>r. Walsh' said. f,esf!ion, "w~ know the public. private railroad .car: of nazi appraised both by the d~m.nds .9iCleSacramento. Th.e.alumnlls of, ".vpdo1ibted~y.the pace;of'life~ . wants and needs more because Field· Marshall Hermann Goer;. our. headquarters in Kansas City ef the dignit'· of .the human Per- . Marquette medica~. scho~l is. a ~a;y h,~!' ?"lot. to do. witH it. ing, transformed into a hospital gets:thous~nds.of .letters asking and the family.· on one hand . board member ,o~ Mercy Hos'car, has arrived here from for·thenames of recommended and the exigencies of the'· cOlrl- pita!; Sacramef).t!J, anc\pasLpz:es- :Je,rSf!y ~f!rr~I'l$'PI~n Vienna with:24 Austrian pil-' doctors."· . . 'lI1on good on the other," he said: ident of the Cathofic. Physicians grims. Dr. Walsh, and othermemberlt Bishop Griffiths said '. thai ,<Guild there.; .'. . . <. NEWARK" (NC) - The" Serra .of the AAGP, would solve the ·common good" should meiln 'to' "Just afte~ Worid War II the Clubs Of New Jersey' are orglin:-. 'problem by upping the standCatholics m:ore than their' own trend was all to medical specialA Deli~ious nation, region or province. He" -ists,''' he said; "'rhat's. been re'- '. iziIig a prog'rllm to provide voca-: .ards, and. hence the. prestige, of' ,Treat tion information'-for 'more than . general physicians. He urged reminded that Pius XII said that' ' veJ;sed in the past two years, but 40,000 students· in 'c'atechetical lon'ger education for GP'statholics particu'lariy should' not completely. -America is still e~erc~me rationalistic narrow- specialist-minded. And: that's" classes. 'of ''the New~rk 'arch- specifically,' more time in hos' not good., . diocese. . . pital' residency. And .he would lie ss. _" . The: Serrans will· show voca- like to· see the day when GP's Fragmentation '. tioil motion pictures on Sunday are certified by m~dical examin':'Dependence on specialists mornings and early evenings. ing boards, as are specialists. means fragrnentation of medical The program will be for seventh This, he said, would mean inemcare. And under th.ose conditions 'and eighth' graders arid high bel'li of his profession would MANAGUA (NC) ~ ~ncara school students. hew to a single standard· of rua's BishOps have offered to, Under the archdiocesan apos-, quality-something that. does mediate the conflict between the tolate ·lor vocations, talks on not exist now. 10 v ern m e n·t and opposition ~harge . religious . . vocations by priests and , . . . - - - - - - - - - - - - - " groups iJecause of the restless-' DAYTON (NC,;' ~ A charge . religious are ·given in all' schools TREES SHRUBS lIess and political tensions\Vhich that: mass anti-Catholic' senti-· ·of the' archdiocese both during are on the 'verge .of provoking a mlmt, e~i$ts !n Dayton has been the Fallaod Spring terms. revolu'tion. . challenged by a. Catholic priest. The 'military regime of Cen'tral The charge .has been made by America's largest country,-head':; PLANTING Gov. Ernest F. Hollings of South ed by .President' LuiSSOiJ{:-' Carolina, when he testified beDESIGN eza pebayle, has.~qnditiof).allY, for.e a' Senate J~4icil\ry subcotii.accepted negotiations' for" mediHigh Street, Assonet, Mass.· mittee in' Washington. He told ,i{ite . ation..... ..,' ,, ' ,J~Ph,A, Charpen~ier the legislators :t6at· he wa~' in , 'Ask For .The'" .Today Tei.: MI4-2821 At the same time the Catholic-. ' Reg, Pharm. Dayton last October attending . .ient~d Social Christian part,. Ito! .ACUSHNET A V~ . a Lutheran convention when , ' h'as joined the' growing forces NEW BEDFORD ' news Qt"the 'death of Pope P'ius epposing the Somoza :regime.· TEl.. W't(»o:0772 . It h.as j'oined not oply to defend .XII was re<:eived.. TJ:1e Governor PRESCRIPTIONS human rights and dignity,p'arty char.ged an outdoor shrine statue leaders have stated, but also tti of the Pope was tarred and set afire': :'.... ' . ,. neutralize the activities of pro- . F'athe~i~herinan s~id'th~t Gov. communist elements in the' NaHollings is wrong ,in implying tional Union of Opposition.. there is, ~nti-Catholic feeling in . and the city. He emphasized it never has been ascertained whether the incident was the result of • GENERAL TIRES, •. DELCO BA"ERIES a prank,the work 'of an insane ADELAIDE (NC)-The conperson or wa~ done by a group . • PERFECT CIRCLE RINGS' tribution of Catholic schools in ,of people. Father Sherman disFALL RIVER - NEW BEDFORD - HYANNIS' -- NEWPORT Australia was praised highly closed that after the incident' here by Baden Pattison, South he recclved a number of letters Australia's Minister of Educafrom non-Catholics, including tion. ministers, which clearly showed Speaking at the opening of :'theabsence of mass anti-Cath81. Paul's Christian Brothers' olic ,se~timen1. . Regional School in Strathmont, he said: "It would be impossible lor us to a'ccommodate and teach .46 Tau.lton Green . . \y.t,\SIiINGTON (NC) ~ An the 30,O()0 in Church schools if. TAUNTON, MASS. they went to our state schools." . exhibi~"indicativeof the fundaMr. Pattison, a non-Catholic, mental :place of religion in Amer.THE lANK ON' _id' he believes no youths can ican society" should. be a part TAUNTON· GREEN MY they have had. a .. complete . f)f the U:.S..display at ,the Mos- .. . .. cow Fair:' next, Year, U.S.' Sen."' ~uca Hon uJ:lless ~'they are .rea~l:r ,~r .' taught the ·fundamental :basis ()f, T~\>m,s .J;Dodd,· of Connecticut, . " _ember ~'''e,der.l Deposit '., ..~: lif~: -that .:men~d: women' ~, ~.adVi8ecl 'the tJ;S;'Stafe J;)e-' ..... r.~e COr1t~••_~.'. '"'. . - .. ~......- - - ..... --' ,,' -L.;._-.;-:.. ......_ _ ~_....;.;:,,;,;;,; ..... ~nL·· . ,.livmg llOuls:o
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Dayton Priest Denies Anti-Catholi4;:
ASSONET NURSERY
BROOKLAWN PHARMACy
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Australian Praises Catholic Education
Complete
WHOLESALE AUTOMOTIVE
BANKING S'ERVICE
INDUSTRIAL SUPPLI ES
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Spotlighting Our Schools
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FALL - RIVER.
MAS&. ..
14" - THE ANCHOR
"
Thurs., Apr. 23, 1959
Changes :, Rati.ng . Of French Film ":
JESUS-MARY ACADEMY,';. MT. ST. MARY 'ACADEMY, FALL RIVER FALL RIVER M. Mary Mediatrice, head: of. The academy was .honored by NEW YORK (NC)-The National Legion of Decency has. the science department, was a visit from the Most Reverend ,udge for the preliminaries at. James J. Gerrard, new auXiliary removed the French film. . the science fair at Durfee High. bishop and' former spiritual "House on the' Waterfront," from:· OIl April 13. 1 _ director of the s·odality. He its condemned Classification 'and A science fair will be held' at .' celebrated Benediction for the . listed it in its "B" rating, morally' JMA' auditorium on April 29 'student body and visited each objectionable in part for all. i and April 30. ~wepty-two ex- classroom, .imparting his bless·.A statement by'. the .agenCy, , hibits in general science; chem- irig.'. ' · which rates films ona moral \ Jstry, and biology' will be on The annual concert was prebasis said "substantial revisions. display for the public Wed.nes- .sented last night in the auditorin tlii.s picture are d~emed suffi·.day evening from 7:30 to 9:30 ium. Previously a performance' cient to warrant a change in:<and on Thursday' afterno()n, was given for Sisters orily. classification which is applicable: 'April 30, from 2, to' .4. ,Mr. Ar- Sister Mary Verona, just ap· only to prints shown in the conmand Dallaire, head .of the poiri~ed Provincial Procurator, tinental U.S.A." science dep~rtment· at .Durfee;· is the orchestra' director, assisted CATHOLIC SCHOOLS CU'F TAXES: Typical of CathThe legion, which had con-" the Reverend Brother August by Arthur Paquette, B. Mus. olic schools througheut the Uni~d States, the schools of demned the film, said it is now: and Brother Roland,F.E..C. of Commercial students will the Saginaw' Diocese are saviiJ.g- taxpayers more than in its "B" classification, rather: than a higher" one, because of, Prevost Hig:lare'on the board attend a demonstration and il. $6,000,000 this year according to figures compiled by stu- "suggestive costuming and . . of judges for the local exhibit. lustrated lecture on office proThe. four prize-winners will cedure, business etiquette and dents of Bay City (Mich.) St. Joseph High school. Checking. quences," In its condemnatiQn', the legion enter, the diocesan wide com-public relations tomorrow,'a; depictiiJ.g'-annual savings.tO taxpayers are students had said: "The. treatment of this petition to be held on May 14 Junior Red Cross meinbers Cynthia Mader and Charles Bateke. NC Photo~ . _.. film' because of multiplication and 15" d~ring the Teachers' were 'capped at·a special a.ssem· of ~ggestiveness in costuming Convention. At the academy, bly by Miss Ruth E. McHugh, trophies. and medals will be inOderator of the organization. and ·situations, seriously offends Christian and traditional stand· awarded for 'outstanding proj- The. 25 receiving the' cap give ards of morality and decency. ects. 'Certificates. will also be voluntary service in area hosII presented to all studeI:lts. who pitaIs and have completed the "WOODST'OCK (NC).L.A "vosponse, from the 50,000 boys in ,In addition, a low moral tone is characteristic of the principals participated in the local. science required' number of hours to ·cation ;choo: by mail" is enroll-' the participating schools, has fair at the end of May.' merit the recognition. . ing its first students at the been gratifying, Father Gal- and of the atmosphere in which the story is dev~loped." The, Se~iors Retreat is schedSACRED. HEARTS ACADEMY, Jesuits' Woodstock College here lagher said. 1I1ed for April 19 at Our Lady FAIRHAVEN in ...... _
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Voca . t-.Ion S'. c h00IbM y, al-I Att rae t S In' t'ere'st o· f H''. =gh Sch' 00'<1 80·y·s.
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The Sacred Hearts Academy Potential students oare . the 'of Fatima, Manville, R.,I. The retreat house is conducted .by Glee Club will present its 116,000' Catholic high school the. Oblate :Wathers:' twelfth' annual concert. on Sun- boys in' the Middle Atlantic Jeannette Gamache, .Annette day at 2:30 in the af,ternoon' and. ·states: Father Charles Gallagher, .~ &beliDi;..u poveriy stricken' ,I.e Comte, and Doiores Larrivee.: 'again' at· 8:15 in the evening. S.J., who initiated the program, " .village of' AddOUssieb tDioce~ oJ . . Tyre). .Mentioned in the Bible; rich' were the recipients of certifi- '. Tick~ts may. be "obtained from' sees it as a spur to vocations"in in . history. wealthi "in the under-';'··· cates for outstanding results in any glee club member. . general even though most of the 'ground" where tbe oil gushes througb . typewriting.' Lise Toupin and A wide variety' of songs .will'" literature connected' witli it on· i&.!i wll7' &0' &be sea-'-POOR in &hfi Claire' Harrison were awarded be offered, ranging from cla.s- .. deals with the 'Society of Je·sus. necessities' of daily 'life.·is the story' .', pins:'for high :'ac~ievement in a 'sicaithrough popular to folk At present approximately 180 &his localUy, .·.Tbe political impor'; Shorthand Contest. tunes... . '.,"high schoois in the eastern &anee of .t.his area is second onb· ~ ... The theme for the 'eoncert, United States 'are official' pro-,&he spirituaJ needs of &hese struggliDc :;.' ST, MARY'S mGH, entitled "A Musicale," is' the • ticip~mts. Of this'.' number,' 135, Christians. The· entire village-. :', . TAUNTON, 'inspiring "0 Sing Your Songs." receive monthly "vocation post.c.tbo1ic" bui &here is no Church,.Do& Students .of the 11th and 12th Sorile 'of.. 'the ~selections are'" ers," design~d and~ade at Holy Fathen MissiotJ ~ ev~n a chapel.'" U will coSt $2,500 &0 ·;Medley. from the.' Sunny South," Woodstock College. The other fur iht 0ritnkJ CJnmh . build • Church "on &he pipe line.-ades are' preparing' ·for .•the . I' h' t~ f ... "Cra'dIe Song,'" "ProceSSl'on of .45 se h 00 s receIve a s Ip~en ·0 . . . . Will ,.on belp?-wi&h &he'one CheCk Junior-Senior .Retreat,- to begin . the Toreadors," ".viv' 18 Bonne posters once a year. ' 7011 Call skilLe a blow for &he economic, political, and above all, tomorrow, April 24; '1 at Cath. Th t t l " Chanson," and "Old MacDonald e pos ers presen a· re IgIOUS . in the religiousweUare ... or. ,.our: felJo~ . Catholics. edral Camp., Betsy Robbins' and ..Had_ a. Fa:rm." . . . vocation as a 'dramatic, exciting. Lea -Cyr, who won first a n i i ' · ·MASSOFFERINGS ARE THE SOLE SUJ:'J:'O.KT OF YOUR The "Singing Bees," a spe'cial ::all to God's work in: the modern second prizes respectively, in the , Id A h b tt 'f .h MISSIONARIES .•. R~MBER THEM TODAY. . . .choral group, will sin.g" "Sev.enty.-. .'. wor. t t e. 0 om 0 eac . School Science Fair .will pre\ . Six Trombones,'~ "The 'Wells· . poster: is a note, for interested ~SEE . THROUGH '. THE EYES.' OF· A ,sent 'their exhibits at M.LT. to:- F W .. ...... n I ' 0 boys: Wtiteto Vocation Contacts, morrow'in competition with stu.' ... ~r:go" ,agon, ... : ~I: y .,. ne '. ,..... . ,.,'.. .. ' ,CHILD is· the wistful thought of. many of Morning.... and "Gory Indiana;", WoOdstock College,' WoodstOck, . . 'us we' move' along through life. ~iiu Can dents. throughout the state. There .will also be three surprise'~d~ ' : . . . .' iry~ right now~lm!l ilpagiDe the iDlpor. ·Juniors wili take the National numbers. / The. young men who. write bnce of a -new FIRST COMMUNION. OUT· . Mer~'t SCholarship .. Qualifying The',entire performanCe' will: . ,..,r:e.ceive· ap answer pomone.: of FiT in' the eyes of tb~ &ho.Osands Of refugee Exam, ,Tuesday, April 28. ,Soph:,- be,y.nMz: ·the directio.n of Sister. Woodstock's theologians who ; diiidien who wilJ SOOD '~pproach' '&he 'altar: 'j, ,,-: omores and fre~men -have regyit<lli~.ni1e,'.;SS.CC.• who. is the have Served 'as high sch~ol for '&he first, time. We 'are. doing our best ,., isteikd fo-: theN-atfonal Educasirigiiiginstructor. sandra Man- "teii~he;s: As long-'as . the boy to . help them. A' FIRsT" COMMUNION' . ,;. tional :Qevelopment .Tests which deville, a;~nio_', :willaccompariy ""';;;isii~s,ihi~ personal corresp~m-' . OUTFIT _is- $10. ,Look 'at "'through :the EYES .OF A CHILD:·,' serve a15.o' as . prE;liminaries to at the. pi~no. ... .. " '".dence.:: is con.tinuea. ~,::r:p~' fewe will have no 'fearS of not:receiVing enough to clotbe.,:. ", the National Merit tests. Special ',. ,,' ~ ':' each child" ".' , .... .'" ".: ..:' ",; . ""':'" ',' ," .~ ',1. \. • ' •.•. eertiflcates:ofacliievement w'ill 'SACRED' HEARTS ACADEMY,' t· 0ty. be 'a~ardea:'to;~t;"dents o f " F A L L ' R I V E R . . · , , ; , a I~,an, I , :,,~.I~er::, ;·"·A KNIGHT WITHOUT"ARMOR Is·A MISSIONARY. PRIEST: ;',~.WITHOUT A CASSOCK. '::CAN yQ'U.·CLOTHE ,AN: APOSTLE?, , Grades IX an~' X 'who rank in "Debrabanf Debators receive<I ~. .'. . A CASSOCK. IS .$25:';.;CA1I1·Y():USPARE QNE~ ..:·, ~·"i·. the :hpper' 'quarter··of"pupils "in "." first·.,honor.able·,,:mention,,· at,,:·& :" """V:A"l'IC'A1i1~'CITY-(NC)":::"':'The the state, ,tournament he~d; at Sto.nel).~1!.: warning,: ofPoland'sCommu~st MARY;~MONTH 'IS-rIIE":MONTBOF MA1i' imci' 'shehlls' :', Th:~ Glee Club is preparing C~ll~ge. KatherIne Dannemann. leader to the" Polish Hierart'iiy .,~\ spoken in Ute depths ~f ,.'the: soui to 'SiSTER' BARBARA imd' "< mus~~ for Confirmation exer- WI,mfr~~ \'felch, M.arY(}l!llagher", to:' confine' itself' to. matters: of . SISTER CELINE wbo wisb to become Do- ,i' cisesi the-. May Procession and. and' Nancy Lafleur J,'ePresented, "'faith alone has been criticized ininic~D SisterS iD kaq. ; BUT. :the' beauties" the Vocation Mass, all scheduled the a~adem'y.. ';.' , .... he~e byVOSservatore Romano. ',ofMay'and the voice ':of '·Our Motberare' 'for ne,xt .month.. ' .' '. .Semor~. ·.honored . ·Abraham.. The Vatican City daily\' cr;,~i-' noi' liDiited to a 'single COUDtJ')" . '. . She lias' also'spokeD to MATHEW ·and THOMAS in . Lmcoln at a G?od Go~ernment. c!s.,!\..~s ~(mtain~d,in a .,sharply Juniors will attend' Open Dar' program WIth, LoUise Banks worded editorial signeu oy India". 'Tliese boys wish to. become priests. House at local hospitals during ,as chairman "and, Rita .. Faria assistant .editor Federico AlesTo serve at &he albr for:ever, PerhapS Our the coming week: to _,\Vitnes~< .' taking thepatt of I:.incoln. .. sandrini, "who 'writes 'regularly Mother will also speak to .you· this month , . and' ask .yoo. to .. lIdopc. one of. these : four,. student Iiurses iIi' 'action and beOver 50 stud,ents. attended on affairs of the Church behind .' .generous··souls. ".Ea~bgirl ~~st. ~ave .asPo.J:l~·' " com~' acquainted with hospital ~e anny.al,j!-'niot-s~niOl:.Lretreat·:}the"IronC urtain. '. . aor .to pay her expenSes ·of·'·$150 a yea~.for:, the two Yl?lIr PI1r:i~. ,. "', wor~.. C"". .' '. at Cathedral Camp.. . '. ('.. The editorial; afte~revie~i:ng :. ef. novitiate training;. each boy must. have, a spOri~or. to supply.: :'. w~nings by Wladlslaw.·Gom'ul- SIOO .- year the six y;';iu- sembtarY cOUTse. Ljsi~ii! . Perha~.. : , '{ ' ..: 0, -' ..... ~, I',@ . ":"ka; first secretary oi the Polish . ;yoo are:tbe one to."adopt a';ebild'ol Man-i"this inoi1tb.~""·· .... J; ..'~ r' "",~ ~ .. ',"_,._ _<.2.:.-_ : ' ':,'. Conm1uriist'plu'ty; addressed! to .;"... ,the;: Polish.,:.ishpps, .<saidthe ... REMEMBER THE.HOLY FATHER'INYOUR LAST' WILL, " .: .. "" < waplings ~'cannot leave us indif- ' 'YOtJCAN DO.IT,BYMENTIONING THE .CATHOLIC NEAR .. ferent, to :their patent:injusti~." \ . EAST, MISSIONS: .<'WE ARE THE HOLY, FATHER'S MI~ ,.. :~:.:': .\':' -. . ""~~>.t . .;. ,- -:-'. ;~~ .' • 51.0N Am'·'FOR THE OlUENTAL' CHURGH. .... . ... ,
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IN TBE .. MERB1i MONTH OP'MA1i' why DOt let your. hean be tlad aDd. your 'soul secure in &he imowledge 'that YOO share ill"
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.By.BRIAN CRON:IN . '.,c Father Bernard Hubbaid, the well-known Jesuit, is noted for ·ew - ampu~· his missionary work' in:-':"(a) . ~ric.? (b) Korea? :(c) India? ,,'; STEUBENVILLE (NC)~on (d) Alaska? .' . . . ' '.' , . . . ' , . littuction willbeg+n this St.iril;nier The stone in a .cardin~!'s ring is:-:-(a) Sapphire? (b) Ruby?" ... seven liuildlngsuiat will'fonn (c) Amethyst? (d) Em~ald?·. .' . the' ~ew campu;; of the v FranMembel-S of' the O~er' of' Friars Minor are more eommonly 'cisean-':operated College of 'Steuknown as::-(a) TrappistS?" (b) Carmelites? . (c) Cistercians? benville here in Ohio. (d) Franciscans? . The newc'ampus, .consisting St. V:ituB is 'the patron saint of:-(a) Invalids! (b) Doctors! of 40 acres, is located in College (c) Comedians? (d) Actors? Heigh.ts, just inside the Steu.benThe first Biblewasprlnted in 1452 by:-:(a) William Gaxton? ville limits. The College which (b) Martin Luther? (c) King Jam.es ? (d) Johann Gutensberg? now has an enroliment of 551 To whom. was 'Rachelmarried?:7'(a) Jacob? (b) (:ain? "students,lias, been situated for (c) Moses? (d) Isaac?' . . d "Bl d . th cl . f \. 13 years, in d~wntown SteubenC ompIe te th. e . sixth.: B ea t't 1 u e '.. esse are e ean . o. ville . heart "?:-:-:-(a) . . . . . for they· shall possess the earth."? . . '(b) for they shall be calle<!., the cnUdren of-. dod.:'L. (c) " for they shall see God."? (d), ..... -.for they shall be " e : . If.S. ,. . satisfied."? . " ' T h e first president· of St. Who was the last of the prophets before the coming of Christ?:-' John's College - ' today Ford(a) St. James the qreater? (b) St. John the Baptist? (c) Dimiel? ham University - ·wa.s the Rev. (d) Jeremias? ~ '.., ; John; l\-1:<:Closkey;who was later, C' . 't 10 marks for each correct answer on Page 18. to ''become America's fi r Bt ':R1:iting:'1l0;"Excel1entj' '-'ro-"Very "Goodj":-'60';Goodj 5().;.F8ir....' .. "'""'·cll'tdittJ;··"~~i.,' ,,'. ' ....
&be d8llyMBss of'the. Hob' Father. of Cardinal Spellmai1,and , . ,et·.'&honsailds of misSionary priests';" Yoowili 8JSo. share in &he' . sacrifices and sufferings 01 all your missionaries throughout'· &be lands' of' die Near E~ Bi beeomhir; a member' of &he' Near East Missions you, oot onI7. bring joy to yourself but YOU _, bring essential aid &0 &he work of the Holy Pather ill &hese landS which Our Lord kDew aDd loved. Join today as a sip ·of your Jove for Our 'Lady who· Uved ,aD the Near East and tlharcel the sufferings 01 our fellow Catholics. ANNUAL MEMBERSmP . PERPETUAL MEMBERSHIP IDdividoaJ .... n Indfvid~aJ ..... < • . . . . . S 21 Family'· . ' .. ~. .'...... 'Family" ..•.• < • • • •• • • 101
GIVE TO' WIN,THE WORLJ) . FOR CHRIST
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SPIRITUAL BO_UQUET FOR POPE: A spiritual bouquet from sailors and marines aboard the USS Intrepid is presented to His Holiness Pope John XXIII by Father (Commander) Paul A. Lloyd of Providence, R.I., chaplain. In the " center to the rear is Msgr: Nasali Rocca, Maestro di C~mera of His Holiness. l'fC Photo.
Pope Receives Spiritual Bouquet' of the Intrepid's personnel have attended the Pope's general audiences. In another military pilgrimage to St, Peter's basilica, more than 100 officers and men and a spiritual bouquet, during a their dependents came to Rome Jeneral 'audience here. with Father (Capt.) Edgar A. The artistically bound gift Pelletier of Worcester, chaplain was presented to the Pope by at the Southern l!:uropean Task Father (Comdr.) Paul A. Lloyd Force headquarters at :Verona, of Providence, chaplain aboard' Italy, the Intrepid, which is attached All the audiences with the to the U, S. Sixth Fleet. Pope. were arranged for the Accompanying Father Lloyd military personnel by the staff to the audience were about 70 . of the USO Club 6f Rome, which officers and'men from the ship; is operated by the N,ational ]a recent weeks more"than .200 Catholic Community Service..
VATICAN CITY (NC)Sailors and marines aboard the USS Intrepid presented H~s Holiness Po~e John with
Vocation' Vacation Plan Stimulates. More Interest' in, Priesthood LONDON (NC) -.,- Another 60 iling two 'similar free vacation bOys have entered or are waiting'· weeks next August tilking' abo'ut to enter English seminaries,' '80 boys in all, ages between, 11 . thanks to a "vocations vacation" ; ,and' 18;:· All they' have to do' is plan started· here last yearby' to write 1'0 . him stating their' the Claretian Fathers. ·case and" agreeing to ·pay their The Claretians offered a own' railway ..fare· ~to'dmd from week's free holiday last summer Highcliffe.. Preference will' be to 50 boys at their scholasticate given to' regular' altar, servers: of Highcliffe Castle in Hamp-. " ~ .' mire close to the English south eoast. There was seabathing, boating, horse-riding for the ,'" , ".' bOys, plus plenty ,.of, good' food' ,BALTIMORE (NC.).'- Parish and indoor recreation. disc~ssi!ln ~lubs'.'.as.an ,answer ~o . 'There, was also daily Mass, , neglect by ~hrIstIans. of their, arid Iltost of the mornirigs were 'duty.. 'to resist teachmgs and " devoted to retreat conferences~' pra~hces contrary .to, those.: of ' , So great 'was the response that Ch.r1st ha~e been .urged,'by Cothe Fathers had to increase the . ad?ut~r, Bishop Michael, Hyle ,of 50 boys to 63. W~~mgto~, t' . . 'd' t' I" ' 'Father Joseph Gamm, who -" e, ·p,re ~ e sal s Im~ at~on planned thl holiday, has stated fo~(, dlSCussI,on., and meditatIon that 60 of those boys are now' ~lghtbe foun~ from ..the local, either in ~eminaries or have been . dlo<;esa'l ne~spaI?er, not. onl! accepted for entrance. Of these, b~causeof' .th~ mformatIon It , 36 are studying or have been gJ1,~es, bu~ bec~use the t,cnowledge . · aCcepted for the secular priest-' of what IS be~ng. do~e elsewhere . hood. The other 24 are' spread: and.' b~, t>.the~s may serve' to' • a(nong 15 religious congrega- '" ~r,0't~\ ~roll f~9m letha~gy,and tions, including the Claretians. "neg.ec . ':' Father Gainm is so pleased', •__"'"';'!'-~-"':" I with the result that ,h~. is. plan, ";' , .
Prelate Cites Valu,e ' Of ·Discussion CI'ubs'
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'Ohio to S,tudy L:abor. Problem of Migrant~ .0'
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COLUMBUS (NC)':-An Ohio House committee' unanimously' . · passed a ll'!easure which would provide a two-year study of the, migrant labor problem 'in the .tiIte,· , The resolution was backed by the Ohio Catholic Welfare Conference. Among those speaking in favor of the bill at a hearing was Father Albert Ottenweller of Delphos' and Father. Francis Schweitzer of Ada, both of whom work among the migrants. Both priests emphasized that more than 10,000 workers' who come to Ohic each year, "are citizens of the United StiItes who are entitled to the "same privi~ .... leges as any other citizens." ,PUl'POse of the proposed ,stud.,.... .. to get "an' objective view of ' the problem so that cor-rectiye'· lIcialation can be ~dt&en." " ..
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Nabisco
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For Thrifty Spring HouseCleaning ! Johnson's KLEAR 21c -, 37c Johnson's 47c CLOROX- Household Bleach 53 c 27c· ,23c LIQUID DETERGENT 4 51.00 19c BELLVIEW BROOMS 51. 19 51.09 35c'
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Underwood's
Deviled ··Ham
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':AL~ , . $l4~: D~le Juices
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NAiuRAL SCIENCES ILLUSTRATED 16 VOLUMESA BOOK A WEEK
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VOLUME NO. '2 NOW ON 'SALE Volume H •• 1 onl., 2ft still avalloW.
Sa';'e Low Sell-Service Prices in All Stores in This Vicinity - (We Reserve the RighI 10
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Tender, plump,'meaty, delicately flavored -chickens Available Whole or Cut-up-May be used many ways Freed, ·Brolled,' Baked, Barbecued or ~oasted.
limit quantities!
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Italian Woman .HintJ Re'ds Behind .Suit Against Bishop of Prato MILAN (NC)-Loriana Nun%iati .Bellandi, one of the .'pair . who sued the Bishop of Prato for pUblicly' charging them with "pub~ic . concubinage," was quoted here as saying she. was · driven to take part in the law . 't b "" t t d -. t f ..,,,. SU! y In e~es e In er ~rence.. The l?WSUlt, brought by Mrs. Belland! and. her ~usb~nd, ~a~o, whom s?e married In a CIVl1 ceremony In August, 1956, · resulted in the conviction of Bishop Pietro Fiordelli of Prato for "defamation" by a Florenoe court a year ago, The Florence Court of Appeals reversed the conviction last October however, ruling that what the' Bishop said of the. Bellandis did not e6nstitute a crime. " Separated ' Bellandi couple has. been .eparated since this past" Easter. · .11 C9rriere della Sera, Milan Daily" reporting an interview .with Mrs. Bellandi, quotes her as saying: . '. .. · '''Had it .depended.on me, the
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Bishop would not have been involved in a law suit. A~d my husband would probably not have taken such a step either had' there not been certain interested interference." . ~..' Mrs. Bellandl did not explaIn the nature of 'the '.'interested interference." But Bishop Fiordelli himself has declared tliat the Communist party prodded the . I t t k th' tt .' t coup e 0 t a e e rna er In 0 open cour . .. Mrs. Bel!andl IS reported n~w to be seekIng a lega~ separatIon from Mauro' Bella?d~. The husband became a victIm of paral~sis sh.ortl y , aft:r ~he op.ening of the Bishop s trI~1 In January, 1958, ~nd was off~red fr.ee treat-. ment In the Sov~et Umon. Mrs. Bellandi stated ear.lier in Apri~; shortly after leaVIng Bel.landI, t~at passports hadb~en . Issued for both to g~ to RUSSia, but t~at . she had dec.lded to leave him and. take .thelr'18-month-old.son . ' , to lIve WIth her parents; ~.
Mari·st· to Address Attleboro Mothers
. AU RO:;:; 47 WrilIDC-. .86 Mild. Sll,Olren.e acal1l" ' 1 HIl: IS·CAI.LED IDstrumen' 86. Grass Ood "OOLDJo,N ......... 411 Attempl 87 Apprehend ~~ .SU·-E ""«1. 8 Alioto 49 Alfedion 88.. Rub 01l~ _ _ I~n' .. D 11 Units 01 enerlf7 60 Departed' DOWN TWO YEARS 16 Japanese 61' CleanlDlt' - . J IN A ........ danclp.K Kirl 62 Marsh . 1 VDIr_e tl Periods In limo 11 UE WAS SENT liS Illslan"... I Labi'lea" 6lI HE BECAJU:' , INTO :: =:~ I Consumed TO'. 17 Oenlle . 117 E,,~eecI :-~::~e:l:I~~n' BISHOP 18 Malden, IriMb . 18 ConJone&l.. • IDWVea.1.... :: ~:-:e$e - . . . . II Shorl fM'lod 18 Small ...&lD. .. law " .ake . " . 10 Appea. . ar... , radII.... " 8_11 ..... :u Cap • B .. 1I'Domeodel . aHE DIBD •. ~. ' . . ;r":lD" aDimal . • ...... . Ml41U:: "·MaD·. . . . lIakll.I. . . . . It-Ab bMt J&epuro Di~1<n._ II Pereonal ' . .. atWood. pwu.oan U THEWA8 iii Iledlel......... 26 Prepo.ICloa 16 UDUSUal RI8 ZDxT ell Shipe , ., Raved lIeree17 :; 'GDlded II JleJUf7 67 ,. Heredltar7 Flow ODI 11 'I'owl ' SirickeD . . . .: 'ador. . . . lIea$ew 1.''I'~lland 80 Slaalflller . SO Marke. .71 Nickel . carcl_o (pi) 61 CU Iii I'.'" lit Italianc.l. . 71 Halt. . l' IUII4 o' IMlud' lit Wlman·;-;:.... . 53 (,onJDndloD 7. Amer,,,,,. KodI- II l'eIlo... 8S Delaal•• lIll ",olie " eal Ae.oela"•• ·M lUnd of 6lI SaD,-04 1I8 ,Wise ~ ..maD. (abbr.) _...0hUnc \p1.) 67 Surer . SlI HE It' KNOWN 71 OIdT..._ , • V. 8. 8tate . 68 A deadl7 ... FOR HIS IIlfure ( . b b w . ) · 70 E""'.... . .St;RMON8 ON 77 Beeline . ' II V........nn 7S Object at ..... ~ THE...... 78 Edld II Penlten.... 7. S. be II '0 Calcium 711 Realdene... • ....on 711 VoleaD. 12 SIDnied penoa 81 HIS BIRTB. . More ob..... 77 Only 13 Foud re.trle"r. PLACE III Coan 80 S'na.e M FatiJ{ue 113 Rim eommiUM III Pos.....Id... &6 ConfideD"" ·84 Llfel.,.e ., Corro.lon pronoUD
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-THE ANCHOR . Thurs., Apr. 23, 1959
Continue~ from Page ODf!' finds a few ne\": faces and Haltogether we must have had almost . 100 men at one time or another." Luncheons are planned to last approximately one 'hour wallow members to return "to their businesses. At present, members are lettiQg the club grow and become known 10 Catholic men in TauD,ton who might be interested. Later, they may' have eve~ing meetings' for the convenience .of many unable to attend at noon. They also hope to promote 'a First Friday family dinner to be attended by men, wives and children. . The' Catholic Action Committee of the Council, which became activateC:: last year, also has on its-agenda a retreat, in the near. future. A Living ,Rosary held for the· past ' tWo years at Our Lady of, Lourdes Church was sponsored ·by· ibe committee.
.:Appear R'eports'-E'ncollrciging " .
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,- '. Continued'fr~m Page Four Hall, Catholic Memorial Home, . . the Bi'shop·CassidY Wing for of t?e pledge m:thod of glVIl)g. Chronic Invalids, and the CathA five .dollar gIft of last year olic Community' Centers of 'Fall can b.e lI~creased to ? ~en dollar River and Taunton. Their visits contnbution,' the minImum for~ were pr od uc t'Ive ,0f a new . con1 'bl a p led g~, In seve~a poSS!. e c:ept of .Catholic Charities. They manners. by pledgmg to give th b 'ld' g . t th ta.ff five dollars more in Nov.; pledg- saw e. UI m s, mel . e .s Sf' . . were gIven· an exp ana t Ion· 0 / ~l one quarter d~llars and the work objective of. each inty cents) tc.. paid every . stitution and saw. many phases ..uarter; by' paymg a. d.ollar a of the institutions, in action: "I :month; or «:v~. by gn-:Ing, ~e never r~alized how much was ten' dollars 1ft .cash whIch will be; g d " d '''1' taO 1 be most acceptable." _. .m . one, an . ' . ~r m y HE k' ". h will raise my contrtbutIon to the . e Ch T . A ' 1 thO r" er . ' very wor Ing perSC?n, eontinued "should try to be' in art les ppea IS ye!i' 1'1 e '..... . tbe most commonly heard re. thiS ten dollar ca.tegoty· It remarks as peop'c completed theit presents .the' contrIbutIon of less persona . " 1 'mspec t'IOn. . . than the cost of a package of. 0 ' .. . n S·un d ay,. A prt'I 26 , th ese IncI~arettes or of a gallon. of gllsstitutions will be .open for visitobne each week.· Certamly ev. be' t 2 d 4 PM' . "1' '11 t to be . mg ween an " ery f amI 100 ur L'd' h wan '" a y s H aven, 71 C e nter' · ytWI 1 d d cue.In IS group. St F' h .. t th . . , air aven. A ppeanng a e' same sertes St M 'H 593 K of t''' Ch' S 11' . ary's orne, empt meed I~~S, ~~rma~h ~ lva~ ton St., New Bedford" sberestse h be ~o flve~. a ,;mG~s Sacre9 Heart Home, 359 Suma t e aS1S 0 glvmg. Ive St N B dt d unto, sacrifice". was his theme. mer " ew e or. · "We have to participate in tpe sacrifices of the entire. Church and locally too. Giving out 'of our abundance is not Charity. The annual Com m u n ion Charity means ·sacrificing. A gift br~akfast of the Confraternity innocent of the taste of sacrifice of Christian Mothers, South is very little Charity. The solici- Attleboro; will be ·held at· 8 tor must set the example of S'unday morning, May 3. Rev. charitable .sacrifice before he Guy Cyr, S.M., of the Marist can hone-;tly. approach others' College and Seminary, Framingand ask them io make sacrifices; ham, will speak. By example of' Charity we can 'Reception of 30. new members' · induce those who gave nothing and installatiOi of officers are to become contributors and scheduled for Monday evening, those who gave to' contribute May 4, at 7:45. Mrs. Helen Mymore in line with- the existing ette heads incoming officers, needs. assisted by. Mr... Catherirl'e MorAgencies Visited ris, vice president; Mrs. Joane As an immediate preparation Keane, secretary; Mrs. Laura for the Appeal hundreds of Delude, treasurer; Mrs.. Jeanpeople visited St. Vincent's' and nette McLa.ughlin, mistress of St. Joseph's Homes, Nazareth ceremonies, •
DlocatE 01" ,.ALL .IYEA. MA"
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Solution on- Pa«e 'Elghteen I
Silverstein and Masso to Receive Hartford. Labor Institute Awards NEW HAYEN (NC) - T'h e president of a manufacturing . concern and the business representative of a iabor' union have been chosen to receive the 1959' McAuliffe Medals of 'the Hartford Archdiocesan Labor' Insti. tute, it was announced here. The recipiellts are Saul M. Silverstein, president of the Rogers . Co., Rogers. Conn., and Anthony L. Masso, business representative of District Lodge 127, International Association of Machinists, 'Stamford, Conn.' The' .institute pre~ents. the awards each year to a represen,. tative of -labor and a representative of management for promoting good labor-management, relations in Connecticut. The medals are named for the .late . Bishop l'yfaurice F. McAuliffe of Hartford, founde.r of the·institute. Announcement elf the awards was made by_ Msgr. Joseph F. Donnelly of this city, director of the institute, who ~id that Mr.
Silverstein \las chosen in recognition of "the constructive steps which he has taken to establisb the sound structure of industrial relation which today prevails between his company and its employees." He said that Mr. Masso was selected because of his "farsighted labor leadershjP" ·wniCh has not only promoted the interests of lcibor but, has established' employer-employee relationships on a basis of justice. Both men .will receive thek awards on May 11 at a dinner in their honor.
LEARY PRESSI PRINTING and .
Bishops H'eritage Continued from Page One . auxiliary . bi~ops of the Clio-
eese. Bishop Bryan J. McEntegart of. Brooklyn was the consecret.ing prelate. . '. . Bishop Boardman national secretary of the Society for the Propagation of the 'Faith, ealle.,t attention in his sermon to .... monumental charity of our 'eOuDoI tr'7 and our people, which· b•• brought GOd's blessing in liueb manifest' abundance UpoD ... land." . . Be cited the bill'ions experid:'
ed by 'the government to f~ the world's hungry and "the tens of millions by our Catholic:. . Laity. given in willing sacrifice to' feed their souls with the bread of eternal life in the lancia of the missions." . , "Truly hath the hand of God'i anger been turned aside by the charity and prayers of the people of our· country," the Bishop added.
Trinitaria,n Fathers BOYS WANTED for 'the Priesthood, and Brotherhood. Lack of funds NO impediment. Write to:
P O. 80)1 5742 Baltimore 8. Md.
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First Communion •• a proud event. in a' 'young man's life.
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MAILI~G,
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SUPPORTING CHARITIES' APPEAL: Members of the Nor~h Attleboro Steering Committee for the Catholic Charities drive include, standing(1eft to right) Edmund W. Dery, .Jr., Robert.J. Deschenes. Seated- (lef.t to right) are Joseph .T. Snllivan and Rev. Edmund Dickinson, Sacred Heart Chuil:h.
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OUR LADY OF ASSUMPTION. OSTERVILLE The Women's Guild will hold its annual communion breakfast Sunday, May 17, with Mrs. Ralph Shea as chairman. The group has presented foam rubber kneteler!? to the local Cenacle' ccnven · . ff' 'll be' tall' d ' N ew'o Icers WI Ins e ....... d M 7 Th . 1 d .. nurs ay, ay . , ey InC u e M~s. Jerome Bowes, ~resident; MISS MIH'Y Cross, vice presdent. Mrs Phili White! , . p eJ'. tr'easu~er; Mrs. Ro~ Lebel. \ recording secretary; MlSlI IIQda Almeida, corresponding lIeCl'e-
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ST. MARGARET'S, BUZZARDS BAY Members of the 55. Margaret and Mary Guild will participate in the apostolic work of the A pos tl es h'Ip 0 f p ' The prorayer. . t . I' d b S' ]ec was exp alOe y lster Grace Angelico.. In other business the group' . . . voted to partiCipate In a custume ball sponsored by Bourne P.T.A. and to make a contribution to the parish CYO. SAeltED .HEART,
ROME PRl1a~ATE VISITS NAGOYA: Father Martin Gusinde, S.N.D., internationally known anthropologist and profeS80r of Ethnology at Nanzan University:in Nagoya, Japan greets His Eminence Cardinal Agagianian, on hiB recent visit there. NC Photo. ' .
Chinese Study Circles Discuss Question of Pope for China
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Our Lady of Loreto' Medal for Airmen
L EM I EU X
Encyclopedia Issues , Are Now Available
, BEATIFIED: Blessed Elena Guerra (above) foundress of the Institute of the Oblates of the Holy Ghost, will be beatified Sunday. The Institute is popularly known as the Sisters of St. zHa. NC
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NEW YORK (NC)-The 15th and 16th volumes in the projected 150-volume "Twentieth Century Encyclopedia' of CathoHcism" are now available, They deal with apologetics and the religion of ancient Israel. . "Why We Believe," by Msgr. Leon Cristiani, is the 15th vol;ume. The 16th work is "The Religion. of Israel,' by Father Albert Gelin of the theology faculty of the Major Seminary at Lyons, France.
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Taunton KofC Li'sts Degrees
ST.' ELIZABETH'S, FALL RIVER Antone Nobrega and Frederick J. Reis head a parish committee making arrangements for celebration of the feast of ;;t. Elizabteh Saturday 'and Sunday, July 11 and 1~. The observance will includ~ a procession on the church grounds,' and various fund raising activities designed to benefit the parish.
,.TA1JNTON 8'1'. )lOCH'S, New officers of the Holy Name FALL ILIVER The Council of Catholic:; Society include Hugh Fly~n, Women will meet at 7:30 Mon- president; George White, vice president; Charles Mansfield, . day evening, May 4, in the HONG KONG (NC) - The Stanley ROberts, parilJh hail. Members are re- secretary; "study circles" required for Cathtreasurer. quested to bring prizes for a olics in China by the communist whist scheduled 'Wednesday, regime are regularly discussing May 20. In charge of the whist ST. JOHN THE BA~ST;' the question of having a "Pope will be Mrs. Hector Barrette, CENT.RAL VILLAGE ParIsh ~.vents postponed due for China" it was learned, here. with .Mrs. Russell Wilkey and to the Ciltjlolic Charities 'di'i've ,.. , Accordi~g to tra'v'eiers return:' 'Mrs. 'Loretta' Vailliulcout.t 'assis(~ncludea. rummage sa~e" orig- " 'i~g',from 'the main~qlld~ th~' gen'lilg her. ' . ' , ',,' .. ': ': Ina.~~y .)!ic1:Je9v~ed, for Saturday, eral.'i<;l~il i~ that havingfa ,pope '" 'Plans for June dinner party be 'made at the May meet- AprIl ~5. It WIll be held SatuF- in China (Chung-kuo Kiao-day::,MaY,23, from 10 to 4,inA~~ tsong) would do' aw~y com'lng and members are urged to "~ " , pletely with the thought of 'make"reservations ea'rlY.Trans- parI~h' hall.' .The ,r~gular: monthly 'whish:.:qllegianc~ to the,R<;>m'anPontiff, 'Portatiori to the dinner 'be provided. ·Mrs. Charles Fortin planned for.. Saturday, .May ,9, " who"by communist definition is has been cancelled. '" an. "imperialist." .. heads the' dinner committee. While .' the 'extent of the , • NO:rI.tE DAME, ,SACRED HEART, "Chinese :pope""rnovemen't is unFALL RIVER ,NO. ATTL~BORO known here. it is seen as a furThe monthly meeting of the : 'April activities for St. Ann's ther I>rogn?ssion, of the,. Red Notre Dai:rle Women's Guild will Sodality include the annual maneuver to try to divide' and be held at 7:45 Monday evening, spring whist, a spring dan,l:e, and a fashion show of "Wedding April 27, in Jesu!? Mary Academy auditorium. Guests of honor ~wns of Yesteryear." will be Rev. Robert W. Dowling. Mrs. Pauline Lallier is now and Rev. Roger L. Levesque, to HEMPSTEAD (NC)-The first formulating plans to 'present the be ordained Saturday. A musical . approved medal for aviators and second annual fashion show to program will follow the busiair travelers in honor of Our be held on May 26. ness meeting. Mrs. Robert F. Lady of Loreto has been dediWork has been resumed Wedcated at Mitchel Air Force Base nesday evenings by the sewing Messier is chairman and' Mrs. Andrea Roy co-chairman. in New York State. group for articles for cancer ·The new 'l1edal commemorates patients. Parishioners are asked ST. HYACINTH, Our Lady of Loreto who in 1920 to donate white shirts and sheets NEW BEDFORD in order that the project may' Mrs. John B. Letendre heads was named patroness of air' flight by Pop~ Benedict XV. Ac': continue. , t~e reservations committee for a First Communion will be made communion breakfast planned cording to tradition, the "tIoly House of Nazareth, now in by 50 first graders on Mothers' for Sunday June 14 by St. Anne's Loreto, Italy, 'was transported by Day, May 10. - School, children. Sodality. enjoyed a movje as a reward The group's next meeting is angels from Palestine to Italy. for assisting the parish to attain scheduled for 7:30 Monday eve- . Since the 15th century it has .been venerated as the house 10 its Anchor quota of subscrip-_ ning, May 11. which 'the Holy Family lived. tions. The Mariettes, teen-age .The medal carries an image of girls' club" will have a picnic IMMACULATE CONCEPTION. FALL RIVER Our Lady of. Loreto and. the at the novitiate of the Holy Mrs. George Charbonneau, prayer "Our Lady of Loret.). proUnion Sisters, Groton, Mass. parish chairman of the Youth tect my flight" on one side and Four girls from the 'parish are Group, has announced a junior a jet airplane is shown on the novices in the ,.community. and senior ice skating party for other side. ST. PIUS X, Wednesday evening at the IceSOUTH YARMOUTH bowl in Providence. Buses will DONAT BOISVERT The Pius X Guild will hold a leave at 6:30 in the evening and fashion 'show Monday, May 18' return at 10:30. All parishioners INSURANCE AGENCY at Dennis - Yarmouth Regional are invited. High School. Members will at": .The Women's Guild will hold All Kinds Of Insurance tend the annual district meeting its annual Corporate Communat Falmouth Sunday, May 3. 96 WILLIAM STREET ion on Sunday morning, May 3, The Tuesday, May 12 meeting' at the 8 o'clock Mass. Breakfast ,: - NEW REDFORD. MASS. will feature a program-present- will be served in the hall immeDIAL WY 8-5153 in-g ways of handling synthetic diately following the Mass. . Personal Service dress materials. ST. JOHN BAPTIST, NEW BEDFORD The Ladies' Guild wiP sponsor a ham and bean supper Saturday evening,May 23, in ~LUMBING & HEATING, INC. the church hall. Mr,s. August for Domestic Avila is chairman. Mrs. Fred ~ . &! Industrial Cunha is in charge, of arrange__ •.._. . Sales and ments for a communion supper Oil Burllears Service scheduled for Sunday, June 21 WY 2-9441 at New Bedford Hotel. . 2283 ACUSHNET AVE.'
will
FALL
THE ANCHOR Thurs., Apr. 23, 1959
The Parish Parade ST. GEORGE'S, WESTPORT .. The Women's Guild will pre.ent a style show at 8 Monday' evening, April 27,~with Senator Mary L. Fonseca of Fall River as commentator. Mrs. Ralph P. Souza heads the arrangementS committee.
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confuse China's Catholics prIor to 'obliterating religion completely. Meanwhile, the communist radio staticon in Peking has re'ported that· two leaders of the Patriotic Association of ChInese :Catholics have 'denounced as "'slander" ihe'U.,S. State Department's charge that Red China's .Tibetan operation was intended t6 "destroy 'religious and ·political "autonomy" in Tibet. Statement Radio Peking aSserted that Aichbi~hop Ignatius P'i Shu-shih of Mukder., chairman of the Patriotic Association, and Tsao Tao-sheng, vic" chairman, issued a statement saying, "We want to remind the U. S. State Department that the days are gone when'the imperialists could provoke national disunity on reli'gious 'pretexts." "It quoted the statement as say-' ing that the Tibetan rebellion "has nothing to do with religion," and also declaring: "We Catholics feel from the bottom of ou'r heart that we have enjoyed genuine freedom of belief since liberation (by' the communists) because we are no longer deceived by the imperial-' ists and reactionaries. We hold Mass . in our churches every morning as well as Sunday evenings.
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,Msgr. James Coyle Council, Taunton Knights of Columbus, will work first, second and third degrees dl~ring May. First degree will be worked Monday, May 11, and Wednesday, May 20, at Knight.s of Columbus Home, 54 Broadway. The second degree is scheduled for Thursday, May 21, at Legion Hall and the third degree for Sunday, May 24, at CYO Hall. . The class receiving degrees is designated as Msgr James Dolan Class, following a K of C custom which honors members of the clergy in this manner. Born in Taunton, Msgr. Dolan attended St. Mary's Seminary and was ordained' in' 1912. He served in France in World War I and was then named. pastor of Hol7 Family€hurch, East Taunton, a pastorate' now held by hi. brother, Rev. William H. Dolan. 'In'1935 Msgr. Dolan was assigned as pastor- of S1; Mary'. 'Church, Taunton, Vfhere he now serves. He was raised to the monsignorate in 1955. Other forthcoming Council acti~ities include Ladies' Night, scheduled for 8 Saturday evening, April 25, at Mou/lt Hope Club, South ,Street, Taunton, and .a Spring"Revue, listed for Monday and. Tuesday, May 18 and 19, at Taunton High School Audito.rium.
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FALL' RIVER.' MASS. '
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",-,T,HE ANCHOI' " : ' Thurs., Apr: n, 1-959
To Aid Priv,ate School, Teachers: ,. '
"Cardi'neil, Spenm~n Now Affiliate, ,'.~e~b'e~, o'f Fr~~'ciscan O~~er
teach, 'for 1i~e yeais:in/p'ublie;" . , " schoolS; ':The' 'same 'c9nces~ion, W I' t'·' . NEW ,'YORK (NC)~~is Emi,;. 'was signed by Father Augustine , , """'." ", 'is not~gr:mted to"private s'chool ,ross, ,or 0 .,. Ion nence' Francis Cardinal Spell... · 'Sepinski, ,·O.F.M.; FrancisCan d Men has call17 for.ame.nd~e~t ;"teachers~'" ,:, .. , , ,',' ,,' """","'.,.' '" ·inan, Ar~p.bfsh'op" of New' Y~tk,. Ministet, General in Rome.: It, of the National DefenscrE,d\Jca-, ~ "',Tne",NCCl\f has iurg~d: broad':' became' an adl,)pted' son of the was dated, April 15 to commem~ tion Act to extend its,loart"for- ,ening :':;~~' tht:' :loari::forgiv~il~~ "'" r.icrHHt1I11r.;t1H*1 '750":year':0Id 'Order of Friars ra,te ·the 20th anniversary" ~ A «iveness provisions to teachers, '. provision; 'p'ointing but' that :·.':the: ,,, "Minor' in' a ceremony 'here, .' :,' ;"',Cardinal Spellmal). being named in non-public schools. ' " 'non-public 'school' .has be~n' a'n" " , Som~ 1,200 persons, inCliJding .. A.r:~hbishQP 0:1; New York. : ' '. Public school teachers whore- ,impori~nt faCto:, in ;the growth friars" of Immaculate CO!lception ',As·a ,Franciscan affil~ate, Car..-. eejve government loanS" to,'fin"-'" of ed'uc~ti~ri·in·.t~is'coiii-l~ry" 'and,' " ,Province 'who had assembled for dinal Spellinan will share 'in~aJl . ance theircolJege training, may ,"the' hriportant,piace:,pf,~he'~(m-: " the ' annualirenewal of ..'~heir' the'spiritual works, prayers arid ' ,~ave' UP, to, half the loan forI>ublic"'~choo'l'in:the'structl1r~of, vo'ws,~a!Jd .hundreds''!f Fran~i~~ M:ass~sof the' order. He will 'liven by the goy,E;rmJ?erit if they American education.":'.,', ' .. I can terbane,s wat~hedas,C:ar dl -" be entitled to wear the Francis,nal Spel1In~n received the ~Imple. ',can habit to use the' initials brown habIt of St. FranCIS and "". ' , th b . ' f th f" Th,O.F.M. after ltls. name, and to Continued from Page One 'The same"issueof Variety,:ree revlary o. e ~Iars", ,e , enter and reside' in Franciscan troIs would appear inevitable,", ' por,fed' that, United Artists, a' ceremony took place 10 St. An- 'fr' ., - h e ' th rId. ' 0f P.ad ua Ch'urc." h ' lanes anyw re 10 e wo Among the cljief offenders in major·.u. S. studio, ,has acql.1ired ' th ony questionable subject matter for Lopert Films, a 'disfributor of ANSWERS: 1 (d); 2 (a); ~ (9); Father' Charles J. Tallarico, plots, said the report, are for- 'foreign movies; as a" wholly':' • (c); 5 (d);,6 (a); 7 (c); 8, (b).' Minister Provincial, read 'the eign films, "many of, which are owned but independently oper-' document· of affiliation which never submitted to' the, Motion ated subsidiary, "to' handle pic- Cites Ne.ed ,to, Train 'made Cardinal Spellman a full-, Picture Production Code.", tures which, either it' (United', fledged ,member of the order, It safd numerous proposals for Artists)cannl,)t release under Teachers of Religion and presented hirr. with the habit, tighter' censorship 'indicate the' its obligation, to ·the code, or ATCHISON (NC)::"":'Too Jriany and breviary. The ceremony extent to which the public now ' el~e,which might prove a'sourc,e ' ' , took' place on the 750th anniveris reacting to offensive ,themes of poteRtial, embarrassment " to Catholic' women are. ~'tongue sary of- tlie.. order's founding. , tied" when it comes and advertising. the company." " ' . " , to' matters NEW BEDFORD The document of affiliation religion, a Kansas pastor said Remove Standards . The article also' said· that Co, ~ here.' . The committee also said that lumbia 'Pictures" another major· while protests have mounted on ,U. S: studio,' has, an ':arrange-, ,,',,:"1 have kn~wri many former IND,USTRIAL OILS CENTER such matters, "the industry has ment "very ,similar. in 'intent.,at college women who get tonguefor HEATING OILS, continued to produce other pic., least" 'with: Kingsley~Interna- tied when it' bedomes a-question • BASEBALL EQUIPMENT. ' tures of-great so~ial, educational tional Films. Kingsley:'serves as: of,giv'ing Qur Lorc;l a,litpecredit TIMKEN and entertainment value." . the .U. S.· distribu'torOf most, for, the wondedu.lw-ork He did , . ' UNIFORMS'. ' In the meantime, Variety, a" French fillns ,teaturirig Brigitte: qn, earth," Father ,Egbert Hall, ., CATCHERS, EQUIPMENT OIL BURNERS , ' 'weekly show business pliblica- Bl:trdot, Variety. said.:, ," ",' O.S.:13., declared.',: .BA,TS;-GLOVES ' . '~., tion, reported a' quota tion f r o m " '... " , ~'On the other hand," he told 'SpecialTeam, ,:' & an' article in thc Screen Pro'delegates attending a Confrater'Prices '. 1/ ducers Guild Journal "by GeofNEW HAVEN, (NC)-Copies nity, of Christian Doctrine conTrophies' ,~ ,frey Shurlock," administrator of of the 'Ca'tliolic 'Transcript .wili ,ference at St.,Benedict's College .501 COUNTY ST. OPEN 7THURS., &F~1. NIlES Hollywood's coi:le: office which: be', provided, to;: patient' reading , p.ere in kansas "they*et ~p and 'reviews films produced by. the rooms 'at five area hospitals "by, " ,~talk without any ~ouble if it's NEW 'BEDFORD, : HOBBY., TOWN, major U. S. studios: > I ' " :. the Jo~n, Barry G'ene.r:aF'Assimi- ' . a,home qemonstratioriprogram.'" 1501 Acushnet Ave, WY 6.:8725, : WY 3-1'751 Mr. Shurlock is reported -to bly;' 'Fourth Degree Knights: of" '.. Father,· Hall, pointed. out' that , New, Bedford have said: Columbus' 'here; 'The' 'assembly ·the current sh'ortage of ,Religious "More and more of our films has, ordered 14-supscrip tions \0, 'to ,teach' catechism ,emphasizes : are being based on s.~bj~ct mat- "the, 'Transcrip~; which ",is' '·the "the' need to ,train 'morelay:' ~r ·that is further 'and further newspaper "of the HartfOrd 'arch':people as' religion ,teachers. He removed, from the standards of diacese' and,· the, Diocese 'of", praised the work of theCCD ,in . 'mass entertainment 'on which Bridge~ort lind' Norwich.. ; " 'this field. ,', . . the code was based. Some of the, ~~.j • novels and plays r'ece~tly pur: chased have' drawn whistles even .N,ewBedfi,rd's'from sophisticates, ,"As your agents, we report ~HEVROLET ,to you that it is becoming steadily more difficult ,to bring this ,545 MILL ST. NEW BEDFORD, MASS. new material within, Code requireJ'!lents." WASHINGTON (NC) '- The'
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Continued from Page One Father Adrian Var" Tilburg, until 1947 assistant, at St. .Joseph's,' Fairhaven. Father Philemon Lefevre, until 1948 administrator of St; Boniface, New Bedford. , Father Lefevre is now chaplain of St.' Francis Hospital, , Honolulu. 'The Sister and priests were 'in attendance at a Solemn Pontifical Mase offered in the ,Cathedral of Our Lady of Peace, Honolulu, Others' present included Father. Henry Systermans,' SS.CC.,. Superior General of the Sacred Hear'ts'Fathers, and ¥other Zenaide. LOrier, Su- ' perior General of the' Sisters of "the Sacred, Hear~' ' -
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Pius X Holy Name Soci'ety Conducts Golf Tournament
THE ANCHOIThurs., Apr. 23, 1959
19
.Overflow Classes Continue to Tax School for L~i:ty
By Jaek KineaYJ ......net Bleh School CeMIl
'The 'recently eoncluded' fu.st annual tOurnament ,spon-
.-ed ~ the Holy: Name Society of St. Pius X Chu~h drew _ en~~jIsiastic titHd·of 135 contestapt,J to the Bass River CoIf Club·inSouth Yarmouth. Holy Nanie Societies from :many; ~sections' of . Eastern ,po~~t Hilltopper' bats ov~ the )[ass. : 1'were represented· iii final, balf of the game. '. '. ., , tile tourney; ,. . Wareham;' defending Old Col-
'NEW YORK (NC) - The School of Theology for the Laity, which ,started out as a ~mall project, is making plans to i accommodate aboilt 450 students in its classes next semester. ' The success of the school has been a welcome surprise to the 'Dominican Fathers who started it, said Father Francis N. Wendell, O.P., provincial director of the Third Order of St. Dominic for the eastern' U. S. The idea of establishing a sehool of theology' for lay people in New York wa~formulated late last year.. ' 9riginal plans 'called for the, registratio~ of about 80 st'udents'in moral :and dogmatic theology classes:· I When 'the school was flooded with regi~tr~tions, plans were . changed to accommodate a stu. dent bqdy qf ,215.;·J?espite. this, a'number of prospective students had to be turned away. To meet the demand. the school is doubling its faciljties. The school is staffed at the administrative level by lay people. Father Wendell said· the. School has received reqUests for help and advice in establishing"" .simihir' 'projects iri other' parts \ ,I,:: , of the U~ S. > , ,. ':i
Individual honors went to ony champion's, again is off and BiB Jackson of Mansfield and . running fast. Despite the gradDarrell 'Shepard of the host.club uation of top-flight hurlers, Tom who posted 77 Eccleston and Ken Borsar'i, and 80 respecCo~ch Clem, Spjllime's char~es tively , to gar-' are looked upon as the team to aer ioWgrOSB beat and their current .·undelaonorS in the feated record indicates there's' JIoIy N~e and mon: ~th than rumor to the guest competipredIction. tton. RunnersA veteran Dighton nine be. CyOHOOP TEAM AWARDS: Members-of the St. An:. lIP ill each flight hind ~e '~ffective 6-hit pi\ching thonY'.,of, Pa.dua ·parish, ba,sketball. q',uintet of New Bedford,' we r e 'J 0 h n . . of leftba~der Jack Torres took McNiff i Salem an opening . day 5-4 decision h.0.no~ed at a dt nner cel~bration are (1e~t to right) Alfred eountr;;~ C l u b , ' f r o m SOmeJ,'~t. i~ Narry ,~laY. L. 'Raulet, most valuable' player; Lionel Brassard, most imall d Gie 0 r g e . PrevQst ~nd, Dl~~~ Vo~aho~al proved player; Roger R. Blanchard, high ~corer and Coach IIeed ol{Otis Air ,"orce ~. -a~ racked up' mlbal vlctorll;ls,A.lbert R,'ForCier, w~t,h plaque of appreciation. ~ All'" of' W I'laston ...whlle C,~ was not scheduled. Geo rl!e en 0 'Male' 'th·· d 'b t ' th" ' . . took Hclly NameJow nel hon~~~ " .. I~.. ~1E -. ~ u ~n" e clr-. 'Jes'~,i.~ Maga·~.·n·e·,,,, 0' 'th '71 " d L s' 'bo who CUlt were coaches Tom Karam ... WI a . an ou zar,, " , .' also had a 71, headed the gu;st ~~e:~s~::~os~~d Norm Vab:USt for low net.The host,parlsh Th So t C 1 tr k ' won ~he team prize b~ .the slim meetlast :ee;:s~a/~:ntri~~t BALTIMORE' (NC) The exploitation, for members of the IDllrgm of one stroke. down to the relay, the last event Church favors some restriction Church, first oiall, who may not The favorable x:esponse to th~ on the program, before the issue or censorship in matters of read- realize just what it is, and for tourney may result in its be- 'was decided. The fleet Warrior ing for its own members, Father those not Catholics, who frecoming a semi-anI!ual affair.. quintet paced by Mike O'Hearne Harold C. Gardiner, S.J., has quently labor from all sorts of Unde~ co~sideration ~t yre pres:, : and. P~~ Ba!t~k" raced to' .vic,-... told the. Bar Association here. misconceptions. ent l,ime.,~s l,he ,posslb~l~tr, of, a ... '-1ory ancHhe meet. O'Hearne and. The literary editor' of Ameri"The "Church recognizes;...and' Fallseq~~l ..... h~cp., if it material,-:- : Soiner~et'!l . ,Bill Taber .. h a ,d.. ' 'ca, nati()nal Catholic weekly re.,.·, 'even applauds-the activities of izes, :will ,be held "!-nder :the ,double. w~nsto lead the individ- ..view, ~aJd "that "the ~riature and, any legal steps' to' co~trol the aamea,lJ~pices next. Sep~emb~r. " ual perforpl~rs o~· each squad. 'extent of ,t~e restriction, h,~w..: ,evils: of"potriographic, suggest:' Members: of the St.. Pius. X, .. ,\ Don't look now, but the Sox' ever, ·is·a matter .that needs much' ive, 'lewd and vulgar publicaBoly~ame Tourney, ~owmittee '. split ~with tne Yarjkees, coupled . tions---e-either .'in the printed incl\.lded, Tom l\iartip., ch,airm~n" with ,Chicago'~ belting D~troit,' Says:Tibetan Revolt '.: 'word 'in '''the visual media. Phil ,Demp·se:·. Cha'des' Still,' 'has ~~ft.Cleveland all alone atop ", C' . ',' '" ,', This springs from the Catholic Johri' F. MiI'rtin,' Ray Mello, John' the American League. The In- ' ou·ld Be Success.ful· philosophy' of the duty of gov. Doherty, Andy' Doher,ty, Pete ' diani ~howing' has been ama. z,: " TAIPEI (NC)-,.,Given certain, ernnient' to act for the common ..... 1 lKcNamarra, Frank Chase, Joe ing,though, not many concede ' conditions, the present resistance' good. :Norton, Chest Savery, Dessis that it will' last. Leading off to the Chinese communists in "Apart from the machinery O'Connor, Walter Wright; Bud for Cleveland is young _Carrol Tibet ultimately· could be suc- of purely legal process, what is Terrio, Payl Sullivan and Frank 'Hardy .:who has supplanted J~ cessful, according to a Swiss the stand of the Church?' This Orman;-Richard .and Tom Mar- Piersall in centerfield. Canon Regular of St. Bernard is an area wherein there is room ."II'!;.."'; tID Jr. also assisted. Al Rosen, former Cleveland who formerly served as a mis- for a diversity of opinion," he SEE THESI The annual Spring vacation great, now a TV commentator, sioner on the Tibetan bo~der. commented. ' brings to th'e scholastic sP9rts was in town over the week-end "ll the will to resist holds ICCne a week full of varied ac- and he r:eports that the Cleve- firm - and in that the Dalai tivity which in addition to base- land organization rates Hardy Lama can have a decisive inpo '-tcITCH. NS.../ ball and track also finds golf a top-flight prospect. Where this fIuence - and a certain amount and tennis prominent on the leaves Piersall remains to, be of arms and assistance reach the of friendly wood Home made agenda. Among the busiest will seen. Jim is not, the' type of 'insurgents,' victory is assured," Warm ,and companionable, with be the athletes of Coyle High player who ts temperamentally Father Alphonse Savioz said. CANDIES many work-saving co'nveniencea who are down to compete on all suited to sitting it out. FatherSavioz is one of a group CHOCOlAT~S •.. in new NATURAL FINISH, fronts. Severai of the 'Warriors \I' , of Swiss Canons of St. Bernard 150 Varieties, or choice of lovely colors. double in track and baseball; ·To H~nor Senator working among the mountain " Send coupon for colorful bOok~ DO mean f e a t . ' t BUFFALO (NC)-U.S. Senaborigines of the Formosa east. ROUTE 6 Near. let showirig ne~ m~e1' kitch~na. Coyle Courageous ator I Eugene . J. McCarthy of coast. Fairhaven Coach Jim 'Burns' charges Minnesota will receive the Peter , .. . Auto Theatre Mail Coupon Today' 'lbowed a lot 0 ... heart. in coming Cariisi~ 'Medal' at Canisius ColFAIRHAVEN, MASS. back: from an 8 run deficit to lege' on Sunday, May 3. It is --------:-----~--deadlock Durfee in an ,extra- awarded,for "personal integrity, inning fray at Alumni Field, unquesti9Ded patriotism and Fall River, last Thursday. The unique contribution toward the Warriorsunleaslied a' potent 17 enlighteiunent of our American hit attack to salvage a 13-13 tie, p'eople"~' after most of the large openiflg 3 day crowd had' vacated the , ,Middleboro Road, Route '8 premises thinking Durfee had CHARLES':. VAR an easy victory in .the oUing. EAST FREETOWN 254 ROCKDALE AV_ The d e fen din g champions '. ELECTRICAL NEW BED~. MA..' won't be manhandled again. this si plan to build 0 r.mod.1 O. Pl.a......d free CONTRACTORS boo~let ~ith pidllr.. of ne! mod.1 kItchens. I. year, we'll wager. Coach Urban Residential - Commercial has a fine array of talent at his Nom. I • ' Industrial disposal. Only John Cippolini 11 ..'. at third base is new in the. vet·1 ________ J-: 63~ Broa~way., Fall River eran infield which in 'its time OS,3-1691 bas seen Durfee win the' State '0' ehampionship in '57 and go to "WWQQWW,=tj'':::,:::I:i'l:W=s:::l::l'ls:::l=W~\;J the' Eastern·Mass.final's last . ;.,. year. 'Michael Austin Th~ right side has 'AI Lavoie at first and Charley Carey at the pivot.. Bo'th hit from the left, Inc. c; I, side, for average and distance. Stan Kupiec, classy-shortstop, FUNERAL SERVICE rounds :out the inner cordon which, as far as this ag_e~t is 549 COUNTY ST. ooncerned, compares with the best in scholastic circles any: NEW BEDFORD, MASS. where. THE . The Hilltoppers s tar tin g MORRIS battery 'comprises Richie Bona- ~ ~ ~ lewicz, a strong-armed rightPLAN laander, and rangy Bob Hargreaves, worthy successor of Russ Gibson. Both boys' and the entire infield were starters on Brad McDermott's Zone 9 American ,Legion champions last IIUJIlmer.' Sophomore Henry Wodjunski, • product of the Taunton Pony 'League, tur~ed. ,in; It terrific ;~New: .elief' perforplance against Durlee... The chunky righthander .. ' . ' ....;.. displayed poise that belied years' >; end ..Jx,perience ~ .. meetin~. ~ ~ ~ 4!'~..- ~".c.~~=-c:x:loC)CI<COQo=-c=-c:x:loC)C~O~=-c:::K:loC)CI<COQol:l<l=-c:xxi~
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. of, 'ac~i';ities :~lling, the Welfare Bureau, Fall River; center, he takes a,earful of children: for .anit:e ,of Rev. John E. Boyd; .pastor,C.athohc ClIarltl~s super,: ~ieam' treat; right, he discusses his·· weekly .Be~s .broadcast with Harold Yisor, director of St. Vincent;s Home;':iJid, radio, 'voice of' the DiOcese; At . ,sChofield; imgineer at 'WSAR, Fall River.. His 'prograril'has been ,.fe~tQI'. left he is ea:ught ina rare l'elaxed'moDt~nt' at. . 'his desk in the Catholic .on the station for,. the past seven years.'. ' . . . . , . , HQW
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Truth Available . HandU?ritten' Note From Late Bishop' Catapults. Fi~eJ Castro Ha's: TQ Christians y P · hle' Cordial Meeting: In Politics oung rlest Into 10 Breat' ss Years -- With" Bishops ..' . c
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.'NEW'·YORK (NC)-Fa:~rt . By Patricia' McGowan HAVANA (NC)-On the is no automatic; substitute.· Jt an started in 1949 with ~ harldwritten note f~om the late Bishop Cassidy requesting eve of his departure fortne for intelligence, but the' pol- the .curate 'at St. Patrick's Church,. Fa]I River, to drop everything and'assume. charge of United States, Cuban Premo; itician who is a Christian St. Bernard's Mission; Assonet, St. Vincent"s' Home, Fall River, and the Catholic Welfare ier Fidel Castro met with bas available to him truths and ,Bureau fOr the :raIl River area. " members of the nation's bi~ teaching~ that bear u~on the un-. Ten breathless years later, a' ref~rrai. "serVice to Diocesan, may not !tnow the answers," he archy. derstandmg.and solutIons. to con-- .Rev.John. E. Boyd, is, not parochial and community agen- says, "but I certainly know the In his interviews, one 'af temporary pro,blems, a ·u. S. I f Ifill' th' . 't- cies is maintained. Frequentlyprol;>lems!"" . which lasted, for an hour, the Senator has WrItten. (on y ~ mg ose comml people in trouble do not know Spechil Mem'ories leader .of Cuba's revolutionalj Sen, Eugene J. McCarthy of ments,. but has added a few. where ·to go for help or even . . forces discussed matters eon-
two
Mi~nesota. d~ew this concJusion For seven rears he has presented that help' is available' to them. . Do any events stand out par- cerning Church-state cooper;";' . in an article appea.ring ,in. thea weekl,Y .p.rogram, ·"A Catho.lic Fa'ther B"oyd and hl's offl'ce' pro- ticularly in the . past 10 years? I d t h' tion in;'rebuilding the coun''':;: 50th jubilee. issue of America, a Prie,st Looks: at 'the News,"over vI'de a liaison' between welfare F a th er B oy d smg e ou IS WI . broadca'st of the late' BI'sh' p as-' C · ins' m.eetl'ng wI'th AuxI'II'a"';' national Catholic weekly rev.iew WSAR,' Fall 'River, and ,bas also resources and the ·needy. 0 -, . b d ' .. sidy's funerai from Sacred Heart ·.Bishop. Evelio Dias of' Havana . 'edited and published here by a .;mi.~ast.discrIPbOns?r d~ze!1SJ;lut Father Boyd is far from Church, Fall River. "Every was described as cordial and bOth groupDof Jesuit Fathers: 0 I urglCa . ceremomes· rOlD being preoccupied' with' paper radio station in the Diocese was 'the Bi'shop and Premie"l- CastfO Iii his article, sen. McCarthy, .. St. Mary's Cathedral and other work only. He lives' at St, Vinh k d t th "h 11 d em.erged from the I'ntervl'e~ a former Catholic college profes- churches'of the Diocese.. . Cent's Hom.e- and is' continually 00 . e oge er, e reea e , . , H h d th F 11 R' P . "and 'it was conservatively estiwith' optimism, Earlier··the sor,' re-emphasizes his prevIous'· . .e. ea. s ._ e·.~. ·'l'o,:e.r,. ar,"-: surrounded with over.1oo lively statements that there is no con- ticular 'Conf~rence:,~f. the. St. youngsters. A big event of their mated that there were 1,000,000 Premier had met with Bishop . V' 'd P I S . . d t 'listeners t9 the·progI:am." Alberto Martin Villaverde 01. flictbetween Catholi~lsm, or any . lI~certt e all.. ,oc~ety.,a~ . ,a.::-" (and, his) week "is a Sunday trip Station WSAR estimates' that Mahinzas.· 'of the major religions, and the ' tends weekly ~eetmgs .of St~ fOr ice cream. ' . 35,000 to 40,000 1iste~' to Father: Bishop' Dia~ is now report~ U,~.. COI?sitution. .' . . ~e~ri.ar~:s un!t .~ t~e :orgariiza';;. Active ill Civic' Life B d' ' 1 ' kl '. . ',' .' . ly dr·aft,in.·g· a' p'astoral o'n matte...· ~e writes tQo, that CatholIcs, tion: 'HIs latest JobstE1ms from .. '.. oy . s regu ar wee. yo, progra~, "a~pt and support ful~y • • '. the F~ll 'River bus strike: For . "I can\tak~ only 10 chlld~n, but topping 'all was the estimated - of interest to the 'Church regard;.' '. · ~e pr?vision,of the Constitution~: five monUis:'h'e ·,hl,\s.b~~m ,oper., because· !hat s, a~ the, stat~on audience when childr~nfroin St. ing 'the nation's situation under which ,forbid's the establishment . ating' .twice..·. ,daily.'schoOl· .bus·· wagon .~Ill .hold,_ l:Ie exp,lams, Vincen.t's ~.ome participated' in ·the· riew Castro. regime. It is e.. M;pr¢fermertt of any churcb.".~ .ilervice·from,St. Vincent's' Home : "but I long' .ago· gave uP. trying the. "Name that Tune'" television Rectedt.o 'deal 'with l~md'refor~ . Th;~ .H~gislator','contendsthat'to,.D.ur~e : and Mt..' St. Mary,:s. ~ch~o,sethe 10. I leave ~h,~t to show,., . . soCial reforms, racial disciim~ ,·"to .the extent; that religious be- .. high. schools;. ':As'a result he~s'in. Jhe.· S~~ters,. and,whe~her. It.S. o.~. • ·~We.: had. about . 4O,000,00()' . ation: 'and' the' tasks to; be· . . liefs':may influence 'political ac- .' 'a .'position' to state that it~s'ex-," the. basis of. good· 'behavior or viewers," Said :Father Boyd.:' '.;~~;teed.,,·to the nation's lay lion;" ap. inqu!l"y.into the stand of actly 'four miles .from; ~ Home .w~a~,. I don't· know!". At .any , Although 'the numbers ~~:. a. ~andidate,.onj.iss':les has some' to 'the; girls':'aca<\emy.: . ' ra,t,e, the, lucky ,youngs.t~rs... volved in: the radio and televi- .. In Washington, Castro' 'denied justification,~'.. bQt. he adds .. tha~ . ' 'Silver £ihing . . c)i~se!'l. e~ch. week never mISS. sion' programs are ·tremendous,·. twice in the same 'day that _. '''u;nfortunatel~: the .wrong ques-, . The school' bus· chore. has' in- .. the 6ccaslOn~ . 'Father Boyd reaps a different and his 'supporters aJ:e commun. ~~'1s a~e t~~ .,"~t~n as~ed,..or~e, 'r.dire.ctly,- pr.es,E! nte ~iJ!l, ~ith'., a. .' The d,uties ' ,~:. past.or to . St. and .. greater""' satisfaction 'froDi ists. He rejected' the' Red label right questIons 8s~ed Improperly 'bonus hour at, his ,desk 'in.:·the ;-:.~ernard s ,.Mlsslon, ,Assonet, statistics., .niImerically much' in ·a.' me!lting' with "the 'Senaw or directed, ~~e . wrong, per", .c~tlioiic Welfare' Bure.au office: '.' neatly fill . up any chinks of·time . smaller.. They tell the story 6f Foreign' Relations Committee ." . d mIg. . ht h ave.. 'H e· ,vocatIons. .' . to the priesthood and ' and in a"speech/to' the.Am'.e'r .... · , sons.' . " . ,. '. "I ':get 'here'· ~t .So!dock'· Jike it· F .' at,h ez; 'Dh ~y e .:·, 1 . , . . . "St;:, ·.Society.of Newspa' p'er; .Edl·tor · Tu.rni l1g ~; .the reat~o~sh~p. or not;" he;'grins, "ahd it's'airiaz;;' says: three Masses.eveI:'Y ·sund ay, ' ,'sisterhood, among alumni·of u' . ' '. ',. ~_ between reJlglOnandi>0litics III ,fn'ghow:'much rcan do fil that . one at the HomE! and·.two at St. . Vincent!s 'Home;' '. ,r know, you are worried' •.. ' ge:?er~l, ~e' com~ents: ' '. . qqiet h<;mr before. the ·t~lephone·· Bernard's.. He. is t?ere at least. He mentioned especially Sis- we are cOmmunists," the bearded FaIth. IS, of c~urse, no·full and and door bens start ringing."'t:wo oth~r ~Imes durmg the w~k, , ter Mary Rita, RS.M.; a child at. Premier told· newsmen ·attend" 'automatic substItute', for knowl. Father' Boyd's: Cath6licWel- . for catechIsm Monday evenmg, the' home.' who entered the, Sis- ing the editors' convention.: "I edg.: ?nd intellig~nce, ,but~e fare Bureau 'assi'gmnent include'S and ~onfessions Saturday. ters of Mercy and returned to have said 'very clearly-we ... ChrIstIan has avaIlable· t.o hIm an' almost. uhlinlited variety' of '.Civic, commitments are fre- teach the 'girls at St. Vincent's not communists." revealed tru~h toget~er WIth the activities, having, the common quent, too. He is on th¢ board for many years until her death -great b~dy Of teachm~s on, hu"- denomInator of giving. assistance of 'direc.tors of many or~aniza:- some five years ago: At . least m,an problems and affairs drawn to those in need:. ,He handles tions including the United two boys are Maryknoll Misfro~ exper~ence an~ from cen- cases involving un~ed' mothers, Fund,'. the Red, Cross, the ~risful sloners and there's one brother;. · tunes. of s.!udy. ThIS truth and' their hospital care, 'and arrange- County M!lntal Health. q~nic, sister team. Peggy Hickey is a these teachmgs sho~ld, when ap- merits for' theh' babies' 'welfare, and the. Cerebral· Palsy Cliriic. Carmelite Sister now stationed PI.u·mbing -Heatin9~~ plied to contem~orary pro~lems, His office places children for He is frequently asked to speak at Mary Manning Walsh Home, - , 'Ov~r 35 Years' " , have so~e bearmg upon thIS un- adoption: and examines the qual- at panels and confeJ;'ences on New ·York City; Her brother, . "of Satisfied Service , d.erstandmg and upon "the. splu- . ifications of ap.optive parents. subjects allied to juvenile delin- John; is approaching ordination tlOn of those problems. Older children who are vic'" quency and child guidance. "I as a Dominican: . 806 NO. MAIN STREET· '; F" d II"' tims of' neglect or inadequate . A lot·toresult from a 'hand'Fali River 055:7497 1 • B"IS h I S . care come under his jurisdiction. writte~ note..
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GEOR&E .M.'MONTLr
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op lor e Accusers Separate
Man of Year
They may be placed in St. 'VinPHILADELPHIA (NC) -His PRATO (NC)":"":'A couple whose cent's Home, individual foster Eminence John Cardinal O'Hara, 'marriage was the occasion of a homes' or specialized:..state insti- C.S.C" Archbishop of' Philadelwidely publicized lawsuit against tutioI!s. .' , " phia, has been honored as "Mall Bishop Pietro Fiordelli of Prato 'A weekly, task is attendance ,of the Year" by the Notre Dame have separated after little more at juvenile court. ,There' Father Club of ,Philadelphia. Cardinal than a year of married llfe. Boyd'.often finds:pari~h st. Vin-, O'Hara is a former president of . They are Mauro and, Loriana cent de. Pa~l Societies allies in ,Notre Dame, Bellan'di; whose charge of' slan- helping youngsters\. straighten der again!!tBishop 'Fiordelli re- out.after·a.bad.start. Working .. ~~• • • • • ~ . suIted in' his' trial and condemna- on the parish :level, Vincen'iians You, II . ., ,tion. The trial was later appealed 'dm inquire into,home c_onditions RAVE b I and the,'sentence was feversed. and~~ frequently: assist children. . CJ out em It is claimed that the trouble spiritually :as. well as materially, " : EVERYBODY' DOES I between the Bellandis began . : Young and: Old . • B' B Ch" k ' when a child born to them was The. aged as well as gle: young • ar- Ie ens baptized without the 'father's, are often in need of sympathetic ..... FRESH knowledge.. Differences are said .and expert ·assistance.·.·Through ....:•., EGGS ,to have flared again between.thethe: Catholic Welfare ·office-ap.", • couple when a hospit.al in Russia. ,plications :,'for,'. the ,Catholic • offere~ .~o tr~atMauro .free. for , M~mC)~i~1 ~0Jl'!'e and itS h~sp'ital. ' . '. ; FARMS' ·paralyslshe suffered shortly", wmg .are:pr9cessed. ,"', :',: '.' .:.i4i5W'h'· . St, r 'I' . - . : ,afte~;tM, qp~ring.of ,Bisho'p :Fior.;. -:' •~n:.,t~~ .~rea:?~'~a.~~ly·r~latio~,,: ,. " . ~U~na:-Dito~te~.. ". . clelli s trIal In January, 1958. .hlps counsellmg' IS 'offered .and ~ . t-~._
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