05.23.63

Page 1

.....

......~ .

.""

," :'.'...

~ ~ ,

.~

,,'

..

~~

.... .; ....

_

~~

,.

~........- .

"• • _.

III t:,;~

~

..

~

,

• • ""

....

..... -j' ,.• N

...""f

)~

Ii!

~;:

~;i;; .. :"';;·:'·~j;::;W*~~:~;;~~J}~:~:}f:/{:~W::~:f:~~/:::~~<;~~'

Contributions Reach $661,936

The 1963 Catholic Charities A ppeal has reached a new total of $661,936.89, the largest total in the 22-year history of the Appeal. Eighty parishes have already excee(led their final total of last year's Appeal. Holy Name par­ ish of Fall River; St. Lawrence of New Bedford and St. Mary's

~

.'

..

J>V

I

- .

of North Attleboro :lre the Iead~ ing parishes of the Diocese. "Returns continue in a strong and pleasing category," Chair­ man James F. Mooney Jr. re­ ported today. "When the books are closed on this year's Appeal, it is expected that the total will be considerably higher. "A final plea goes out to all

Solicitors to make their remain­ ing returns at once. The present total can be increased consider­ ably if all outstanding contribu­ tions are returned immediately. "Committee members of the 80 successful parishes merit a special commendation. It ha:~ been their efforts that achieved the present notable total. They

~;

W""t::~,:·\:."",

have surely been successful rep­ resentatives and salesmen for the Charities Appeal. The many thousands of hours spent by the parish and special gift commit­ teemen has had great results. We appreciate their efforts and thank them for their devotion to the Charities Appeal and dedication to their neighbor. HI

Vatican Audience WiU Make History '.

..

• '.

'

-,.

-

The

ANCHOR

.

..

.-

Kennedy to Meet Pope John

WASHINGTON An American pre ~ ide n t will meet with a Pope for the third time in hil'ltor~' when President Kennedy calls Pope John next month.

on

(C) 196~ The Anchor

PRICE lOe $4.00 per Year

.Bishop Connolly To Ordain "Winthrop Man Saturday .

Rev. Mr. Peter N. Graziano of Winthrop will be . ordained for service in thi" diocel'le bv the Most Rev. Jamel'l t,. Connolly, Bishop of Fall River, i~ St. Mary's Cathedral at 10 next Satul'da.\' morning. The ordinandu" is the son ef Mr. and Mrs. William P. The future diocesan priest has Gl'a:idano of 185 Woodside taught in the Boston school sys­ 'A venue, Winthrop. Sister tem and also at St. Anselm's Col­ J ufie 'Peter, his sil'ltel', who lege in Manchester, N. H. He is

".

now serves in the Worcestel' Dio­ also a member of the U. S. Army is a member of the Sisters Reserve. of ,';"lI'e Dame de Namur. The ordinandus will be spon­ I~,·v. Mr, Graziano was grad­ sored by Rev. Agostinho Pacheco. U""'O in 1956 with a Bachelor of He will celebrate his first Sol­ Arts ctcgree from Boston College. High Mass at St. John the Evan­ He !'<'('eived his Master of Arts gelist Church in Winthrop at fl'VIll the Hub Jesuit College in noon next Sunday. Msgr. Aloy. 1957 ,and. gained his Licentiate sius Finn, pastor. will be the ill' Sacred Theology at Catholic assistant priest; Rev. William . University in Washington thil1 Butler. deacon; Rev. Gerard )'ear. Donnolly, O.S.B.. sub-deacon and Rev. Charles Toomey, S.J., preacher. -eE''''.

.' ','

..

•~ ~

Guild for Blind To Mark Annual Bishop's Day

. , If

Bishop Connolly will be guest of honor at the annual meeting of the Diocesan Guild for the Blind· at 2 o'clock Saturday afternoon in Sacred Heart School, Fall R.iver. The Diocesan Guild is com. prised of regional units in Attie. boro, Taunton, New Bedford and Fall River which meet monthly from September to April in these cities and conclude the sea­ son's activities at the Diocesan meeting in the See city with the Most Reverend Ordinary as

" t,: ~_

.1

tf.··.··

tii-

..

BE\": MR.· GRAZIANO '\

"

<40..

JOHN MICHAEL HICKEY

Diocesan Youth To Meet June 2 In Fa II River On Sunday, June 2, the Fifth Annual Diocesan CYO Convention will be held at the Cat hoI i c Community Center on Franklin Street in Fall River. Mr. John Michael Hickey, Diocesan CYO Presi­ dent, will conduct the progl'am for the day. Activities will begin with registration from 1 to 1 :30. State and local civic officials will extend greetings from the Commonwealth and municipali­ ties of the area. Most Rev. James J. GenaI'd, D.D .. V.G .. Auxiliary Turn to Page Seven

Bishops Confirm 6571 Persons With the last two Confir­ mation ceremonies at Paul A. Dever State School on Monday, May 27, and at the Cathedral on Pentecost Sunday, June 2, Most Rev. James L.

Connolly, D.D., Bishop of the Diocese, and Most Rev. James J. Gerrard, D.D., V.G.• Auxiliary Bishop, will finish this year's guest of honor. "C>nfirmation schedule having Members'will be accompanied confirmed 6571 persons. bY drivers, .escorts <and ilieir Th,e two Bishops will have regiona:l' direch~rs. " .' "'.. confirmed, in 57 ceremonies, Rev. Georg"E·. ~~l1ivari"'pas... :.• 3123 beys, 3004 girls; and 444 tor of ~t. ,Joseph's' Church', Fa1t . aQul~s "'7;'.221 ·men·and 223 River, is.o.i~n director,' . women.:

., 4 .• ' ..

served or were to serve as Pres­ ident of the Un ited Stutes also were received by Popes. They are Ulysses S. Grant, William Howard Taft, Herbert Hoover and Harry S, Truman. Pope John received Mrs. Ja,"~~ Queline Kennedy in a privatt: audience March 11, 1962. Originally President Kennedy and the First Lady were sehe­ duled to go to Rome on a state visit in June and it was expected ....... :'"that Mr. Kennedy would have " " . an audience then with the Pope. However, the state \l'isit was MARYKNOLL, N. Y.· ....;. postponed when it became Rev. Peter P. Mullen. M.M., known that Mrs, Kennedy is ex­ of North Attleboro, hag been pecting her third child in August agsigneo to the Marvknoll and would not be able to ac­ missions of the Phil ippi;les. it company her husband, The presidential visit to Italy was announced at Maryknoll was then reduced in scope to a headquarters here. working visit which would in­ Father Mullen. son of Mr. & Mrs. Peter P. Mullen of 122 volve only a trip to Milan to Ellis Road, North Attleboro, is meet with Italian government presently stationed at SI. Jo. officials. Now, however, Mr. Kennedy seph's Church, Hilo, Hawaii. is to visit Rome and one or two In the Philippines. in 1958, other cities in Italy as well. Maryknoll assumed responsi­ It is not yet known whether bility for 3,200 square miles in the visit will take place at the Davao. on the island of Minda­ Vatican or at the Pope's Summer nao, with a population of 365,000 residence at Castelgandolfo. De­ people who speakil Visayan tails will be worked out by a dialect. The area is the "Wild White House party going to West' of the Philippines and Italy next week. homesteading is encouraged. During his European tour the There is a gl'eat need for mis. President will also visit West sionjl in the Islands, because Germany and Ireland. He will Turn to Page I'out' return to the U.S. June 29.

Local Missioner T o Serve Un d er . Bishop Regan

Fall River, Mass" Thursday, May 23, 1963

Vol. 7, No. 21

Two previous U.S. chid exe­ cutives whu have m~t with a Pope while in office are Wood­ ruw Wilson, who visited Pope Benedict XV in 1919 and Dwight D. Eisenhower, who visited Pupe John in 19;;9, Four other men who had

"..., .,.----..

First American To Direct Notre Dame de Namur Nuns The Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur, who staff Bii-lh()p Stang High School. North Dartmouth, have a new Mother General. Replacing Mother JOHepha de St. Francois is Mother Loretto Julia, S.N.D., who has been Provincial of the Connecticut Province for the paHt four years. The new Rever end Mother was elected at a General Chapter of the Congregation currently being held in Rome. The incoming Mother General was the former Provincial of the Massachusetts Province, and it was under her aegi:; that the Sisters of Notre Dame came to staff Bishop Stang High School. Last Fall. Mother Loretto ,Julia paid a visit to Bishop Stang High School, where she enjoyed a brief marching performance by the band. As Reverend Mothe:r, she will live in the Generalat~ in Rome, from which center it will be her task to govern the houses of the Congregation in the United States, Europe, Ja.pan, and Africa. Mother Loretto Julia has the distinetion of being the first American Mother General of the Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur.

8L LORE'l'TO IULIA.SoN",

,

.


..

~

"

\

r

2

Establish CCD At St. Theresa's New Bedford

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River, Thurs., May 23, 1963

Diocese of Fall River

Rev. Joseph Powers, dioc­ esan director of the Confra­ ternity of Christian Doctrine presented the Official Decree

OFFICIAL

to Rev. William Collard, pastor APPOINTMENTS

~he Most Reverend Bishop approved the nominations

submitted by Very Rev. Thomas M. Rondeau, O.P., Provin­ cial of the Dominican Fathers, assigning Rev. James M. Dono­ van, O.P. and Rev. Paul S. Doucet, O.P. to serve as assistants at St. Anne's Church, Fall River, replacing Rev. Ange M.

Begin, O.P. and Rev. Marc M. Richard, O.P. Effective Saturday, June 15.

~~/62-;;(f ­ Bishop of Fall River

Appeal Leaders The fifteen leading parishes of the Diocese are: Holy Name, $23,352.25 Fall River St. Lawrence, 20,148.75 New Bedford St. Mary, 15,339.50 No. Attleboro 15,149.00 St. John, Attleboro St. James, 13,907.00 New Bedford St. Francis Xavier, 13,060150 Hyannis Sacred Heart, 12,070.00 Fall River Mount Carmel, 11,014.50 New Bedford St. Joseph, 10,222.72 New Bedford 10,127.75 St. Mary, Taunton 9,339.00 St. Mary, Fall River St. Thomas More 9,206.00 Somerset 8,785.00 St. Mary, Mansfield St. Patrick 8,566.00 Fall River Holy Name, 8,260.00 New Bedford

Protest Revocation Of Tax Exemption WASHINGTON (NC) - Two senators have sharply protested the Internal Revenue Service's action in revoking the tax-ex­ empt status of the Fellowship of Reconciliation,. an interde­ nominational peace group. Sen. Gaylord Nelson of Wis­ consin said the reasons given by the IRS are "absolute nonsense" and "pose a serious threat to re­ ligious organizations in Amer­ ica." . Sen. George S. McGovern of Sou t h Dakota commented: "There have been many rebukes to the Prince of Peace over the centuries, but this must be the first time that the U. S. govern­ ment has officialy declared that His message of peace and recon­ ciliation is not religious."

fORTY HOURS DEVOTION

May 23-Mount St. Mary's Convent, Fall River. Convent of the Holy Union of the Sacred Hearts, Fall River. Convent of the Sacred Hearts, Fairhaven. May 26-8t. Mathieu, Fall River. St. Kilian, i'tew Bedford. June 2-St. Teres3'S Convent, Fall River. St. Joseph, Taunton. Holy Name, Fall River. June 9-55. Peter and Paul, Fall River. LaSalette Shrine, Attle­ boro. St. Mary, Mansfield.

Our Lady of Purgatory.

New Bedford. June 16--C 0 r pus Christi, Sandwich.

St. Elizabeth, Fall River. tHE AHeRO' second Class Postage Paid at Fall River, Mass. Publislled every Thursday at 410

~~~~r: ~~::~l t~~" o:::C~e r:~lIb~i~ Subscription price by mall, postpaid f4.00

per year.

of St. Theresa Church, New Bedford, establishing the Con­ fraternity of Christian Doctrine in 'the parish.

Rev. Clement Dufour, accept­ ing the directorship of the or­ ganization, announced the fol­ lowing Executive Board mem. bel'S:

Aim e Goyette, president; James Hickey, vice-president; Mrs. Stanley Zalenski, secretary; Mrs. Alain Lareau, treasurer; Miss. Marlene Roderick, chair­ man of Teachers; Mrs'. Vito Mor­ ra, chairman of Fishers; Mrs. Abel Jorge, chairman of Help­ ers; Mrs. Lau_-ier LaCoste, chair­ man of Discussion Clubs; Mr. and Mrs. Albert Caron, chair­ man of Parent-Educators; Mr. Norman Lacroix,. chairman of Apostleship of Good Will. Promotion Night Four teachers from the CCD SchOOl of Religion were enrolled as members: Mrs. John Texeira, Mmes. Roger Robitaille, Robert Cyr and Raymon~ Rousseau. In a joint ceremony in the church, the CCD School of Reli- , gion held its first Promotion and Graduation Night. Edward Bas­ tarache, Raymond Leger, George Lyonnais, Paul Mailhot and Ger­ ald Prevost completed success­

fully the four-year course. \Voin­

ning awards as most deservir1g

students for their respective classes were Judith Roy, Lor­ raine Cournoyer, Daniel Prevo~t ... and Paul Mailhot.

Parishes that have surpassed' last year's total are: WELCOMES EMISSARY: Leon - Joseph Cardinal Fall River-St. Mary, Blessed Suenens, Archbishop of Malines-Brussels and Primate of Sacrament, Holy Name, Holy Belgium, is greeted upon his arrival in New York by Francis Cross, Notre Dame. Our Lady of the Angels, Our Cardinal Spellman, Archbishop of New York. Cardinal Lady of Health, Holy Rosary, St. Suenens is the special emissary of Pope John to the United Anne, St. Anthony of Padua. Nations. NC Photo. 51. Anthony of the Desert, St. Elizabeth, St. John the Baptist, St. Joseph, St. Louis. St. Matthew, St. Michael, St. Patrick, St. Roch, St. Stanislaus. St. William, Santo Christo. New Bedford - Holy Rosary, Immaculate Conception, Mt. Carmel, O.L. of Purgatory, St.

summed up in the idea, "Christ

Anne. . BOSTON (NC) - A sociolo­ St. Anthony of Padua,' St. gist said here a basic change was born and died for me," led to "a kind of withdrawal and Boniface, St. Casimir, St. Francis from the "Jesus-and-me" in the attitudes of American Catholics moral indifference to the rest of Assisi, St: Hedwig. St. Hyacinth, St. John the has been effected during the of God's creation" and focused' "only on the goal of personal The Diocesan Retreat League Baptist, St. Joseph, 8t. Mary, St. 20th century. will hold its Second Annual Des­ John D. Donovan, chairman of salvation," Donqvan said. Theresa. Fuller Imvolvement sert and Card Party' at Cathe­ Taunton - Holy E'amily, Holy Boston College's sociology de­ "It helped to make a ghetto dral Camp Auditorium in East partment told the 27th annual Rosary, Sacred Heart, St. An­ thony, St. Jacques, St. Joseph, diocesan meeting of the League of American Catholicism and to Freetown on Monday evening, lessen the influence of the June 3, at 7:30. of Catholic Women the "Jesus­ St. Paul. Church on the evolution of A large group is expected te> Attleboro - St. Joseph, St. and-me" attitude which char­ attend this evening which will acterized Catholics here in the American society," he charged. Mary, St. Stephen, St. Theresa. In the 20th century; Donovan see many of those who have at­ Acushnet-St. Francis Xavier. 19th century was one that "hardened their courage in the said, conditions have changed tended week-end retreats at the Buzzards Bay-St. Margaret. Camp coming together to renew face of persecution but closed to make possible "the fuller in­ . Centerville-Our Lady of Vic­ their hearts and minds to the volvement of the Church in the old acquaintances and to make tory. . life of the society." Even more plans for attending another re­ fulness of the Divine Word." Central Village-St. John Bap­ This attitude, which can be important has been "the redis.,. treat in the near future. tist. covery of the social dimension Tickets for the get-together Chatham-Holy Redeemer. of religious life and practice, the may be obtained from Mrs. Tim_ East Brewster - Immaculate reemphasis . of not just the othy Neville, 23 Sheridan Street, Conception.

FRIDAY-Mass as on feast of the Fatherhood of God but the Taunton, General Chairman of East Falmouth-St. Anthony. Ascension. IV Class. White. brotherhood of' man, the rede­ the evening, or Miss Mary J. Fairhaven - St. Joseph, St. Mass Proper; Gloria; no finition of a new trinity of Shea, 16 Highland Street, Hyan­ Mary, Sacred Hearts. Creed; Preface of Ascension. Jesus-me-and-my-neighbor." nis. Falmouth-St. Patdck. SATURDAY-St. Gregory VII, Hyannis--St. Francis Xavier. Pope and Confessor. III Class. Mattapoisett-St. Anthony. White. Mass Proper; Gloria; Nantucket-Our Lady of the Second Collect St. Urban I, Isle. The following films are to be Pope and Martyr; no Creed; added to the lists in their re­ North Dighton-St. Joseph. Preface of Ascension. l'>'orth Westport-Our Lady of spective classifications: Prescriptions called for SUNDAY-Sunday After Ascen­ Grace. Unobjectionable. for General sion. II Class. White. Mass and delivered

Norton-St. Mary. Patronage-Gathering of Eagles. Proper; Gloria; Creed; Preface Ocean Grove-St. Michael. ·HEADQUARTERS FOR

Unobjectionable for Adult.

of Ascesnsion. Orleans--St. Joan of Arc. and Adolescents-The Good Sol­

I)IETETIC SUPPUES MONDAY-St. Bede, the Vener­ Osterville-Assumption dier, Schweik; The Slave. 600 Cottage St. WY ~·7 439 able, Confessor and Doctor of Raynham-St. Ann Unobjectionable for Adults-­ New Bedford the Church. III Class. White. The Passionate Thief. Sandwich-Corpus Christi Mass Proper; Gloria; Second Seekonk-Mt. Carmel Collect St. Jobn I, Pope and Somerset-St. John of God, st. Martyr; no Creed; Preface of Patrick. Ascension. South Dartmouth-St. Mary. TUESDAY-St. Augustine, Bish­ South Yarmouth-St. Pius X. op and Confessor. III Class. Swansea, Our Lady of Fatima, White. Mass Proper; Gloria; St. Louis of France. no Creed; Preface of Ascen­ Vineyard Haven-St. Augus­ sion. RESIDENT CAMP FOR GIRLS

tine. Wellfleet Our Lady of WEDNESDAY-St. Mary Mag­ delene De Pazzi, Virgin. III Lourdes. 6 • 15

Class. White. Mass Proper; Woods Hole-8t. Joseph. Gloria; no Creed; Preface of CAMP OPENS JUNE 23 - CLOSES AUG. 4

Ascension. THURSDAY-Mass as on feast of the Ascension. IV Class. MAY 2f White. Mass Proper; Gloria; Operated and supported by experienced Rev. James F. Clark, 1907, Second Collect St. Felix I, Sisters of Mercy and counselors. Superb Founder, St. James, New Bed­

Pope and Martyr; no Creed; living conditions. Excellent food. Swimming ford. Preface of Ascension. instruction given by qualified Red Cross MAY 25

Instructors. All sports and horse back riding. Rev. James V. Mendes, 1961,

• • Administrator, Our Lady of' ~ Beautiful, large swimming pool. Weekly fee BEFORE YOU Angels, Fall River. $40.00. Registration $5.00 ~. BUY - TRY MAY 30

Rev. Jordan Harpin, O.P., 1929, Dominican Priory, Fall River. Phone Valley 1-4239 or write to: Rev. Edmond J. Potvin, 1937, Pastor, St. John Ba.ptist, Fall

SISTER MARY RAYMUNDA, I.S.M. OLDSMOBILE River.

Rev. James M. Quinn, 195t, 1272 MAIN ST., WEST WARWICK, R. L OldsmobileJPeugot-Renault Pastor, St. John the Evangelist, IJ'7 Middle· Street. Fairbaven Attleboro.

Sees Basic Change

Sociologist Notes New Attitude of American Catholics During 20th Century

Retreat League Plans Evening

Mass Ordo

Legion of Decency

LARIVIERE'S Pharmacy

St. Mary's Camp

Necrology

•• •

• • • • • • • • ••

PARK MOTORS

J


.THE ANCHORThurs., May 23, 1963

Canadian Leader Cites La ity Need Of Theology

Silver Jubilee Mass Tomorrow

-

Tomorrow morning at the Holy Cross Fathers Mission House in North Dartmouth, Rev. Edward J. Hartnett, C.S.C., will . offer a solemn Mass of thanks­ giving in honor of the twenty­ fifth anniversary of his ordina­ tion. Assembled with him for this occasion will be scores of Holy Cross priests and Brothers from both Eastern and .Mid. West Provinces. Father Hartnett was born in Detroit, Michigan. He entered Holy Cross Seminary at Notre Dame, Indiana in 1925. In 1929 he completed his High School Course and p:ltered the Novi­ tiate where he pronounced his first vows in 1930. He graduated from the University of Notre Dame in 1934, and after com­ pleting his theological studies in Washington, D. C., he returned to Sacred Heart Church at Notre Dame where he waa or­ dained in 1938. Father Hartnet~ is well known for the many missions and closed retreats he has conducted for laymen, priests, sisters and members of the Armed Forces. For the past twenty-five years he has been a "travelling priest" as a member of the Eastern Mission Band.

, WASHINGTON (NC) A bill aimed at stamping out the interstate "gray market" in babies has been intro­ duced in the United States Sen­ ate. The bill provides fines up to $10,000 and jail terms up to five' years for persons who make a business of buying and selling children for adoption. Aimed at Brokers Sen. Estes Kefauver of Ten­ nessee told the Senate "the un. wholesome but profitable com. merce in human infants will con· tinue to grow * * * until effec­ tive Federal legislation is en­ acted." Kefauver stressed that the bill would not interfere with the operations of licensed, author. ized adoption agencies. Nor would it prevent lawyers and doctors from accepting reason· able fees for their professional services in / connection with adoptions. Rather, he said, the bill is aimed at "professional baby brokers" who seek to capitalize GOLDEN JUBILEE: The Most Reverend Bishops presides at outdoor Benediction on the plight of unwed mothers on the occasion of the Golden Jubilee of St. Francis Guild, Fall River, ladies' residence and the hopes of childless cou­ ples. conducted by Franciscan Missionaries of Mary. Traffic Flourishes Kefauver cited instances in which adopting parents had paid brokers as much as $7,000 to ob. tain a child. In such cases, he reo vealed, the broker pays a few hundred dollars to the child's natural mother and pockets the cation that the administration balance. ence and foreign language teach­ WASHINGTON (NC) ­ He said there are 'cases in * * '" We should explore * • • lias recommended to Congresss." Sen. Abraham Ribicoff has ing Ribicoff said that private which deaf or otherwise defec· classroom construction." presented the Senate with a School students number more' tive children have been placed Auxiliary Services six-point program to aid t.han'15 per cent of all students with couples who were unaware 4. Broadening present pro­ education . in church-related grams of teacher training for all in the elementary grades, 11 per of their defects, adding that this schools and. extinguish what he teachers, including those in pri­ cent in the secondary grades and "traffic" in babies "continues to called smoldering religious con· vate schools. "Why not provide 33 per cent in higher education.. flourish" and ''more than ever before we need the type of Fed­ troversy. scholarships which would enable erallaw being proposed today." The Connecticut legislator promising teachers to return to Vineyard Haven said his two-year stint as Presi. universities for a year of ad. dent Kennedy's first Secretary vance study?" ST. AUGUSTINE Computing Center of Health, Education and Wel­ 5. Furnishing Ruxiliary serv­ $20 fare taught him the "depths of icei? of direct benefit to the child, At Notre Dame Martha's Vineyard National the feelings and strength of the such as school lunches and bus NOTRE DAME (NC)-A new Bank convictions involved.' transportation. $15 $3 million computing center and "But I firmly believe," he ,6. Aiding all types of higher A. B .. C. Oil Co. mathematics building was said in the Senate, "that the education. "I am entirely satis­ Vineyard Slip Cover Shop blessed at the University of effort must be made to resolve fied that public funds may be Martha's Vineyard, Launde- Notre Dame. this controversy. used broadly without constitu­ rette. Fat her Theodore Hesburgh, "As long as it continues, op­ tional question.' '$11 C.S.C., university president, posing points of view become Ribicoff said the controversy Mr. & Mrs. William Carroll blessed the new facility which more resolute, reason gives away over financing the education of $10 is built around a UNIVAC 1107 to emotion and the possibility of students in private schools "has Dr. Joseph Frisch, Western Thin-Film Memory Computer. progress all but vanishes." blocked the passage of every Special Purposes pr,:0posal of Federal aid to edu. Auto Store, Bangs Market, David's Mens Store, Bert's Bar­ In his Senate speech Ribicoff ber Shop. made these proposals as a basis A T.SCO Oil Co., 'I'he Snack Where A South Dartmouth for action: Bar, J. A. MacInnis, Jeweler, 1. Income tax deductions of ST. MARY '.11HOn Lumber Co. H. N. Hinck­ up to $1,500 per college student GOOD NAME $100 ley Lumber Co.. and $100 per student for private Dr. & Mrs. Paul E. Corley Dukes County Gal'age, Island school expenses. $50 Electronics, Harold A. Dugan, Means A 2. Public financing of shared· Park Oil Company Goodale Construction Co., Yates time arrangements whereby pri­ $40 Drug Store. GREAT DEAL vate school pupils could use The Silveiras Mr. & Mrs. Gerard Coulombe, some public school facilities. For $25 Mrs. Edwin A. Whalen, Mr. & each private school pupil using Mary Sheerin Mrs. David Correll us, Mr. & public school space and equip­ Mr. & Mrs. Walter Martin Mrs. Joseph Bauser. ment, states would get half the Alice Sheerin S. B. S. Grain Store allotment proposed for full-time Dr. & Mrs. Victor Almeida public school students. Bishop & Hackett,Architects­ 3. Assistance for special pur. Engineers ' poses. "In elementary and sec­ Mr. & Mrs. Vincent Nayes ondary schools, there is a wide 3 Savings Plans $20 range of permissible aid in se· Mr. & Mrs. Frederick D. Cole Home Financing lective areas such as math, sciMary McGrath Mr. & Mrs Frederick Cole 565 MILL STREET $15 Chile Prelate Lauds Mr & Mrs. Harry T. O'Neil $10 Farm Cooperative NEW BEDFORD Mr. & Mrs. Frank Moniz; Mr. & Mrs. Leo Telesmanick. SANTIAGO (NC)-The Bish. Mr. & Mrs. Simon Viveiros, 261 Main St., Wareham, Mass. op of Talc'a praised a 17-family Open Evenings Telephone 295-2400 farming cooperative as he gave Mr. & Mrs. Walter Goulet, Mrs. Bank-By-Mail Service Available it full title to a 450-acre tract of George Kirk, Mrs. Will,iam A. Church land at Los Silos de Mandly, Mr. & Mrs. Donald Dwyer. Pirque near here. Mr. & Mrs. Lionel Fournier, The farming cooperative has Mr. & Mrs. Gerald Normandin, been running the estate- for the Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Cardoza, Mr. past 11 months. & Mrs. William Brady, Mr. & FOK PERSONAL INVENTORY AND RENEWAL Bishop -Manuel Larrain of Mrs. Antone Amaral. Talc: told the new owners: "In Hilda & Bernice Sylvia Mr. & MAKE A WEEK-END RETREAT a few months you have over­ Mrs. Sylvester Gracia, Mr. & at the HOLY CROSS FATHERS come the difficulties that any Mrs. Raymond Perry, Mr. & Mrs. new enterprise faces when it Manuel Dias, Mr. & Mrs. Louis RETREAT HOUSE Haskell..

starts out. You overcame opposi­ tion and attacks and, by form. Mr. & Mrs. Levi Christie, Mr.

Rte. 138, .'110. Easton, Mass. ing a strong association, you & Mrs. Michael Smith, Mr. & achieved a favorable economic Mrs. Manuel Silva, Mrs. George Men, Women, Couples

Each weekend of May and June balance of which you will be the Gifford, Mr. & Mrs. Thomas

Tel. 238-6863 Write: Fr. Kelly, esc, Dir. direct beneficiaries." Brooks

Ribicoff Asks Aid for Private' 'Schools

Legislator Offers Six-Point Program

GEO. O'HARA.

Offering You

CHEVROLET

WAREHAM CO-OPERATIVE BANK

TAKE TIME OUT

FATHER HARTNETT, C.S.C.

Federal Bill Aims To Halt Traffic In Baby Market

MONTREAL (NC)-It's about time somebody got around to considering the place and role of the laity." a Canadian lay leader said here. The Church has never really got around to it," he added. "We Jleed to work out a theology for the lay state." A bishop observed that too many Catholics are content merely to belong to the vast or­ ganiza'tion known as the Church. "They pay lip service to its rules, offer a certain formalized ful­ fillment of elementary condi. tions of membership, but the living force and truth passes them by," he stated. The statements were made be· fore some 600 delegates at the first of four Canadian meetings of the Regional Congress of the Lay Apostolate. Lay Apostles There was a wealth of straight­ from-the-shoulder talk. Two of the most outspoken were Murray G. Ballantyne, Montreal lay leader, historian and author, and Bishop Alexander Carter of Sault Ste. Marie, Onto "A layman is a man who has been baptized, who has 'put on Christ', and who is a living member .of the Mystical Body. Laymen are called on to lead a Spiritual life to the best of their abilities in very difficult cir­ cumstances. Laymen are not just passengers in the Bark of Peter. They are called to be apostles. We are not given Faith just for ourselves," Ballantyne declared. "The earth was plowed by the Apostles and marked all over with the Sign of the Cross, but the oil and chrism of its baptism must now penetrate to the center of its soul and its life," the Bish. op said.

3


4

Woods Hole

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River, Thurs., May 23, 1963

The Parish Parade

ST. JOSEPH, FALL RIVER New Women's Guild officers include Mrs. Theresa Read, pres­ ident; Mrs. Margaret Menard, vice-president; Mrs. Clare Gray, secretary; Miss Dorothy Jeff, treasurer; Mrs. Marjorie Griffin, corresponding secretary. Annual May procession and crowning ceremony are set for 2 Sunday afternoon, May 26. A parish softball team for girls in grades eight' to 12 is in process of formation. NOTRE DAME, FALL RIVER The Council of Catholic Women will meet Tuesday night, May 2a~ instead of the previously an. nounced date of Monday May 27. The evening's program will be. gin at 7:15 with recitation of the rosary at 'the Marian grotto in the Jesus-Mary convent yard and will continue at 7:45 in Jesus­ Mary Academy auditorium with a reception for new members and a musical program by girls of the academy glee club under the direction of Mother Mary of Carmel, R.J.M. A following coffee hour will be in charge of council officers. Members are reminded to bring grocery contributions for baskets for a whist party scheduled for Saturday, June a. SS. PETER AND PAUL, FALL RIVER The regular whist party spon­ sored by the Women's. Club will be held at 8 Monday night, May 27 under direction of Mrs. Al­ bert F. Doucette and Mrs. James Donnelly.

ST. PIUS X, SOUTH YARMOUTH Mrs. William O'Reilley, pro­ gram chairman of the Women's Guild, has apnounced the pre­ Summer schedule. Mrs. James Quirk will be in charge of the rummage sale planned for Sat­ urday, June 1, in the Church Hall on Station Street. The annual dinner honoring past presidents of the Guild will be held Tuesday -light, June 4, at 7 o'clock, in Mildred's Chow-. der House, Hyannis. Mrs. Hollis Batchelder, imme­ -diate past president, will be special guest of honor. Mrs. William O'Reilley of West Dennis is taking reserva· tions. IMMACULATE CONCEPTION, NORTH EASTON Dr. Barbara Gray will address the Women's Guild Monday eve­ ning in the Parish Hall after Novena Services. Her topic will be "Women and Fatigue." All women of the parish are invited. HOLY NAME, NEW BEDFORD The choral group from Sacred Hearts Academy, Fairhaven, will entertain members of the Wom­ en's Guild at their monthly meeting, Monday night at 8 o'clock in the Parish Hall. Tickets fur the installation banquet, scheduled for June 10 at White's, may be obtained at the meeting Monday night.

OUR LADY OF GRACE, NORTH WESTPORT Deadline for 'tickets for the installation banquet scheduled ST. MARY'S CATHEDRAL, for June 4 at 7 o'dock in the FALL RIVER Parish Hall will be May 30. Mrs. Mary Velozo will be in­ Members of the sewing group of the Women's Guild enter- .. stalling officer. The new slate of officers is as tained at the Catholic Memorial Home with a musical program, 'follows: Mrs. Cora Pereira, pres­ ident; Mrs. Mary Graham, vice. "Memory Lane." A solo honor­ president; Mrs. Marguerite Bri­ ing mothers among Home resi­ dents was offered by Mrs. Lee and, secretary; and Mrs. Louise Sayward. The production was Nanni, treasurer. A smorgasbord and entertain. directed by Mrs. Frank S. Mori­ arty. ment will follow the installation. ST. JOAN OF ARC, ST. MICHAEL, ORLEANS FALL RIVER The Women's Guild announces Parishioners will present "The a rummage sale from 7 to 9 Fri­ Whole Town's Talking," a three­ day night, May 31 at the parish act play Saturday 'and Sunday, house. A food sale is planned June 8 and 9, in the school hall to follow all Masses Sunday on Essex Street. Tickets will be morning, June 2 on the parish available at the door. house lawn. Also, members will receive corporate Communion at 8 o'clock Mass Sunday morning, June 9, after which a breakfast will be se..rved at the parish Continued from Page One house. Next regular meeting is set there is 'only one priest for every 6,300 Catholic. Through com•. for Wednesday, June 5. Members are reminded to bring stamp munity and social service proj­ books. ects, Maryknollers provided con­ tinuous aid to more than 15,000 SACRED HEART, people last year. NORTH ATTLEBORO On April 25, 1962, another SundaY, May 26 has been des­ native of the Fall River Diocese ignated Book Sunday in the and a veteran Maryknoll mis­ parish. Donations Of suitable sioner, Father Joseph W. Regan books will be used to augment of Fairhaven, was consecrated the school and parish collections. Bishop of the newly erected Preparations are under way Prelacy of Tagum in the Prov­ for the observance of Lay Apos. ince of Davao. The land is rich tolate Sunday the first Sunday in opportunities-both spiritual in October., Theme will be and material-for the Filipino "Education for Christ," and it and the missioner. will be developed by means of general and particular sessions planned to meet the needs of all parishioners and t.heir friends.

Local Missioner

Constitution Retains Church-State Clause

FATHER MULLEN

SALEM (NC) - The Oregon House has passed a: new version of the state constitution, retain­ ing the original provision on Church-State relations. The constitution stipulates that "no money shall be drawn from the treasury for the benefit of any religious or theological in­ stitution." An unsuccessful effort was made in the joint House-Senate Constitutional Revision Commit­ tee to amend this stipulation to ban only "direct" benefits. This would have permitted indirect state assistance to parochial schools in the form of bus rides and other auxiliary services for pupils.

$10

ST. JOSEPH $100 lVIeg>ansett Friends $50

Dr. & Mrs. George Chrtsbnlln $30

Fred E. Lux $25

Thomas H. O'Toole Mr. & Mrs. Ralph SImoneau Mr. & Mrs. Roy Stratton Dr. & Mrs. W. Robert Clements Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Goulding Mr. & Mrs. Robert Leonard Mrs. Claudia Pendergast Mr. & Mrs. George West

AWARD WINNER: Cor-, nelia Adams, sen i 0 r at Sacred Hearts Academy, Fall River, and daughter 01 Dr. and Mrs. William J. Adams, North Dighton, is the recipient of a $1000 scholarship to Newton Col­ lege of the Sacred Heart. A member of the National Honor Society and the Latin Honor Society, Miss Adams is active in debating and dramatics at SHA.

Westport ST. GEORGE

$25 Florence Bessette Faida Carr-ier Mr. & Mrs. Manuel'DosVais Alice Harrison Stevenson's Restaurant $11

Marcy Victoria

$10 Rosario Blancharo, Joseph Bono, Frank Costa, Dan i e 1 Cunha, Manuel Fagundes. Andre Fournier, War r e n Healy, Stephen D. Kovar, Mrs. Eveline Magnant & Claire, Oscar Martel. Walter McQuade, Antone G. Perry, George Paradise, Eugene Poitras, Eddie Raymond. ' Arthur Rezendes, Raymond Souza, Antone Victor Sylvia, Al­ phonse M. Therien, Holy Name Society. 'St. George Women Guild Ernest Vohnoutka.

South Yarmouth ST. PIUS TENTH

$100

St. Pius Tenth Guild

$40

J-ames McGonagle

$25 Doane, Beal & Ames Fruean Electric, Inc. Thomas Hague Mr. & Mrs. Maurice Ly,ncl1 Anenymous Mr. & Mrs. Edward, O'Leary $20

Mr. & Mrs. Bairy Kane

Martin Power '

Mr. & Mrs. Charles Eager

$15 Kay Lyons, Rita Swenoon. $10 Mr. & Mrs. Albert Andrews, Bass River Fish Market, Mrs. Roland Connors, Mr. & Mrs. John Davidson,' Mr. & Mrs. Frank Durant. Mr. & Mrs. Albert Gioiosa, Mrs. Alice Hartnett. Mr. & Mrs. Robert Kelly, 'Mr, & Mrs. A. O. Lagacy; Mr. & Mrs. John Mc­ Eachern., Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Norton, Anonymous, Agnes Rogers, Mr. & Mrs. Russell Tufts, Wayside Printing Studio. Mrs. Stephen Canty, Mrs. Ag_ nes Eckart, Erwin's Pharmacy, Mr. & Mrs. Donald Flibot.te, Jen. nings Oil Company. Tr. & Mrs. Thomas Jones, Mr. & MrS. Ronald P. Murphy, Riverway Lobster House, Mr. & Mrs. John Twohig, Mr. & Mrs. John Gray. Mr. & Mrs. Francis Gonsalves, Mr. & Mrs. David Hartnett, Don-, aid Johnson, Neil H. Smith, Mr. & Mrs. Charles Webster, Ber­ nard J. Boudreau.

$20 Lcdr. & Mrs. Joseph Hall, Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Lewis. Mr. & Mrs. Francis Keating, Helen McKenzie, Jane McLaugh­ lin $15

Mr. & Mrs. Bernard Cavan. augh, Francis Cavanaugh, Harry E. Handy, Mr. & Mrs. Robert Mason, Mr. & Mrs. Robert Mc­ Kenzie. Mrs. Gloria McLean, Cynthia Neal, Mr. & Mrs. John J. Mc­ Donald, Mr. & Mrs. William Stone.

Mrs. Mary Condon & John, Mr. & Mrs. James Corr, Mr. & Mrs. Francis Corrigan, Mr. & Mrs. Anthony Dangelo, Daugh­ ters of Isabella. Mr. & Mrs. Dana Freeman, Mr. & Mrs. Elmer Hallett, Mr. & Mrs. Edward Jaskun, Lee Side Cafe, Mr. & Mrs. Eugene Mysona. Mr. & Mrs. John Riley, HeleJl Scott, Mr. & Mrs. William Smith, Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Sylvia, Thursday Club. Mr. & Mrs. William White, Elizabeth Baker, Mrs. Helen Baker, Mr. & Mrs. Edward ChiCOine, Mr. &' Mrs. Earl Creemer. .. Cyrus Doiron, Mr. & Mrs. Ar­ thur Faria, Mr. & Mrs. William F. Fitzgerald, Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Garlanq, Mr. & Mrs. Joseph -Goudreau. , Mr. & Mrs. Do-nald Grady, Mrs.

Henry Hague, Mrs. Eleonar Han­

ley, Joan Medeiros, Mr. & Mrs.

Manuel Medeiros. William Murray, Mr. & Mrs. Paul Noonan Edward Roderick, Mr. & Mrs. Ralph Vaccaro, Mr. & Mrs. Paul White. Mr. & Mrs. Clifford Amaral, Richard E. McCormick, RobeN Richards.

THE TRAGEDY OF THE MISSIONS

In a recent magazine article, Father Nicholas Maestrini, for­ mer Director of the Catholic Truth Society of Hong Kong,

describes the dismaying difficulties

of the- missionaries. The average mis­

sion diocese -reeeives $12,000 yearly

help from Rome. With this altogether

inadequate sum of money, overworked

priests, Nnthers and Sisters are try­

ing bravely to bring the faith to mil­

lions, even billions of people who do

not know Christ. He writes: "Innumer­

able lives and sacrifices of mission­

aries ,have been almost wasted _ be­ 11Jt Hf/.u Father's Mission AiJ cause they bave been deprived of the ~J neeessary tools to do their job" ••• for tht Orimtal CImrrh An appeal from Mother ,Margaret. Superior General of the Daughters of Mary in Trivandrum, In­

dia,' vividly pictures some mission hardships. She writes: "At

present a small room, 20 by 30 feet, is used for services. It CaD

hold only 20 persons. There are 48 Sisters in the Novitiate.

Next year the number will be over 55. Since there is DO parish

church nearby the people are coming to our chapel for Holy

Mass and the other Sacraments. ,t is extremely neeessary .~

have a chapel built~' • • • A D19derateIY-sized one with a' wiD«

large enough to accommodate the neighboring futhful wiD'

cost $3,000 to build. Will you be gimerous In helping these

Sisters and faithful to have the essentials to carry on thm

work? Send your help now. Thank ,you.

A CHILD LOVES THE CHURCH

Jo Ann H. of Los'Angeles, writes: "1 have now been a CathO­

De for seven months. I had no religion until I became a Catholic

OIl May 3, 1962. I am eleven and love the Church. I think it, is

wonderful. I have started a little collection for the mission. This

is the first time I have sent money so the more I save the more

I will be able to send you. I w~lUld pke to write to a priest or

Sister or even more so you. Love" . . . Of course, we replied,

'thanking her and deeply moved by her wonderful enthusiasm for the faith ••• Would you like to help too with a prayer and ,a $1 a month to one of our clubs, such as; DAMIEN LEPER CLUB (cares for lepers) ORPHAN'S BREAD (feeds orphans); PALACE OF GOLD (provides for aged) BA­ SILLIANS (supports mission schools); MONICA GUILD (fur­ nishes chalices, altars, etc., for mission ehapelsl. ,_ , FATHER'S DAY IS COMING. On June 16, Sunda" Dad comea into hisOWD. In your exuber.ance over Mother, don't for·­

get F~,ther. He too would like 'to be remembered. What Ricer

way than to have a missionary say a Mass for his Intention? Or

enroll him as a MEMBER of our association ($1 a year; $20

for a lifetime). Tben be wllI participate in the graces of the

Masses of 15,000 missionaries. 'Other suggestions are a FOOD

PACKAGE for a Palestine Ref,Ugee' family, costing $10, a

STRINGLESS GIFT to be used where most needed. Or per­

haps a MEMORIAL GIFT to a mission chapel.

NEA-R EAST COUNTRIES RICH WITH VOCATIONS Yes, but money is needed for the education of seminarians

and Sisters. We have many names of ones needing help, such

As EMANUELE YOUSEF BOJI and SALIM ABBU ATTISA;

'Chaldean students in Baghdad, Iraq and SISTER MAJELLA and

SISTER GILBERT of the Sisters of the Destitute, Alwaye,

India: Will you adopt one of these?

Dear Monsignor:' '

I enclose $. . • • •• of the $300 needed to cducate a Sister or,

$. . .. '" of the $600 needed for the training of a seminarian.

rll send $ .•.•. montbly or $ .. "... once a year. I wUl pray for,

him or her.

Name

:•.••••• :••:. ~

.•• _:••••:• .•.••••••••••••:••.•••• :e:_: ••:

street •••••••. ftJ!J • • • • • • • • • • . • • • • • • • • • . •: • • • • • • • • • • • . • • • :• • • • • •:.~ City

Z~De

••

State ••••••••••

~'l2eartastOlissions~

FRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN, P,••ld.n'

MI9', Jos". T. IjaIl, 'Nat·. Sec'y

SeacI aU co......lcotf.. to:

CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION

480 lexington Ave. at 46th St.

New York 17/'N. Y.


Urges Catholics Lead in Ending Race Injus.tice

By Most Rev. Robert J. Dwyer, D. D.

Bishop of Reno

In the stifling heat of a Kentucky July afternoon the old man lay dying. In the gaunt, high-ceiled library of his mansion, where his death-bed had been improvised, a fly buzzing around the molding, driving him mad. At last the restless figure on the couch preachments on any pos­ could stand it no longer. He slavery itive Christian commandment. fingered his rifle, took aim. His personal morals, never and fired, shattering the above reproach, deteriorated sad­

cornice' and disposing of the fly. It was his last victory. A few days later,' July 22, 1903, Cassius Marcellus Clay was dead, just a few months short of his 93rd birthday. The n arne has re­ cently been re­ vived in the boxing r i n g , and, so we are told, in the more esoteric circles devoted to the Muse of Poetry. But for all its current popu­ larity it would have to go far to surpass the legend of the origi­ nal, the Lion of White Hall. Few men in our history have managed to crowd more mis­ takes into a busy life than this cousin of the Great Compro­ miser, Henry Clay himself. Still fewer have done it with greater braggadocio or more arrogant conceit. There were a few times, never­ theless, when Cassius Clay came close to the presidency of the United States, and it was his lasting conviction that the chief tragedy of the nation was that he should have missed his chance.

Ferocious Reputation The name echoes from the writer's own childhood, when an old friend of the family, a Kentuckian by birth, delighted in recalling that as a girl she had seen and heard' the great Cassius Marcellus Clay. She remembered his unruly WRite hair and beard, his fero­ cious reputation, and his fear­ less advocacy of emanicipation in a region where slaveholders were the masters of political destiny. It was not until long 'after, obviously, that the meaning and significance of his career came into focus, and only ,lately that Clay has found a critical biog­ :tla~her, David L. Smiley. At Catholic School As was the case with so many of- the Southern leaders reared in' the ante-bellum days, Cassiu's Clay had a· tincture of Catholic education. As a youngster in his 'teens he was enrolled by his father, Green Clay, a planter who ruled over a domain of %,000 acres, in St. Joseph's. Col­ lege, Bardstown, Kentucky. This was one of pioneer Bish­ op Benedict Flaget's more aston­ ishing projects, a boys' academy in the wilderness, an offshoot, actually, of the seminary he had established almost as soon as he had crossed the mountains to establish his see in the Dark and BJ:oodY Ground. The school was then under the tutelage of Father Ignatius Rey­ nold's, later to become John England's successor as Bishop of Charleston. Pitiable Eccentric Clay remained there only' a year or so, learning French prin­ eipally, until his schooling was cut short by his father's death. There is little evidence that his exposure to Catholic life and teaching did him much good.

Later he was to adopt a skeptical

attitude toward fll religion and even scorned to base his anti-

236th Serra Club FLINT (NC) - Serra Club of Flint has become the 236th char­ tered member__ of the interna­ tional organization dedicated to fostering vocations to the priest­ hood. The charter was presented at a dinner in this Michigan city by Fred J. Wagner, president of Serra International.

ly as he approached senility, un­ til he became the pitiable eccen­ tric of his last years. Inhuman Approach It was during the '40s and '50s that Cassius Clay carved out his reputation as a fierce and fear­ less advocate of gradual emanci. pation for the South, predicating his argument solely upon the economics of the situation. It was slavery, he contended, that made the South subservient to the North, prevented her in­ dustrial and mercantile develop­ ment, and stifled the exploita­ tion of her resources other than King Cotton. Never did he evince the slight­ est interest in or sympathy for the Negro as a human being. The Negro, in Clay's book, was a lia­ bility which w:\s merely com­ pounded by his condition as a serf. There was something in­ human in Clay's approach to the whole problem, a coldness which might well explain his failure even as a leader of men. Founder of Free Soiters Violent in debate, even vitri­ olic, C.I a y 's oratory, heard throughout the nation during the campaigns of the era, 1'Oars with windy bombast. It is hardly ,credible that in his day he was reckoned one of the nation's peerless speakers, little undervalued to Daniel Webster himself. Unhappy with the Whigs who could not make up their minds one way or the other on the slavery issue, Clay became a founding father of the Free Soil­ ers' and later of the Republicans, and anticipated great things from his sacrifices on behalf of the new combination. But first Fremont and then a tall lanky Illinoisan named Abraham Lincoln snatched the prize of presidential nomination from under the nose, and the latter made his gesture good. Recluse of White Hall All Clay ever got out of poli­ tics was his appointment from Lincoln as Minister to Russia, where, as his critics were not slow to point out, the patience of the Czar's court was sorely tried from 1861 until his recall eight years later. In his dotage he claimed that Seward had stolen the credit for the Alaska pur. chase from him, but the docu­ ments hardly bear him out. Back home he allowed his stubborness to wreck his mar­ riage and to alienate his family, and as the decades crawled along, and his political ambi-' tions went a-glimmering, he be­ came more and more the recluse of White Hall, the plantation mansion of his inheritance. "Cash Clay, the Lion of White Hall." Not a lovely or a loveable figure. There seems scarcely a trace of evidence that ever, dur­ ing his life, did he act from a disinterested motive of charity 01' even of human feeling. He , might be proposed as a caution­ ary example for all poetasters and prize-fighters of this our sad, degenerate age.

Free School Rides

Near in Wisconsin MADISON (l'....C)-The Senate Judiciary Committee has ap­ proved a proposed constitutional amendment to permit tax-paid school bus rides for private school pupils. The committee action came on a 4-2 vote. The proposal now goes before the Senate. The measure already has passed the Assembly by a 73 to 21 vote.

5

THE ANCHORThurs., May 23, 1963

Original Clay 'C·autionary' Example of Namesake

CAMBRIDGE (N C) Catholic laymen of the Har­ vard - Radcliffe C I u band their chaplains have ap­

Emotionally Disturbed

pealed to "fellow Catholics in Birmingham and throughout the nation to take the lead in bring­ ing an ena. to injustices long in­ flicted on the American Negro." The appeal urged that such action for social reform be taken "under the impetus of Pope John's recent encyclical Pacem in Terris." The appeal said the encycli­ cal's "ideals, particularly those regarding the dignity of the human person, urgently need to be put into immediate practice." All to Blame "Steps to grant Negroes the rights which are due to broth­ ers," the appeal continued, "must immediately be taken in America, in every city and every town in the land." Stating that "all Americans, not least among them Catholics * * *, have been to blame" for injuries brought upon the Negro, the appeal added that it is thus incumbent upon "all Catholics, and especially those invested with civil or financial power, and the young and idealistic in colleges and schools * * * to be the first to speak for justice and the first to act for it."

Poll Among Young Folks in Montreal Brings Startling Disclosures

Award Salve Seniors

Graduate Grants

BISHOP ATTENDS FEAST: Rev. Daniel L. Freitas, assistant at Santo Christo Church, Fall River, reviews pro­ gram with Bishop Manuel Carvalho, Bishop of Angra, Azores, as Fall River parish conducts traditional Santo Christo Feast.

MONTREAL (N C) - The Jeunesse 9uvriere Catholique(Catholic Young Workers)-has conducted a poll a m 0 n g 5,000 young people in the Montreal raea and has concluded the younger generation is made up of a lot of emotionally disturbed youngsters. Young folk between the ages of 14 to 25 were quizzed in their homes, restaurants, recreational centers and other places in the' area. Here are some of the more startling disclosures: Twenty-seven per cent of the girls and 41 per cent of the boys and their companions think nothing of keeping company with married men and women. Sixty-four per cent of the girls and 49 per cent of the boys reported that questionable books, magazines and other materials are circulated at their places of employment. Thirty-nine per cent of the girls and 64 per cent of the boys

Honors Educators

Miss Margaret Whalon, 89 Ash

said marriage is derided by their Street, Fall River and Miss Mar­

working companions. ilyn Kennedy, 511 Third Street,

Half of the girls and 60 per' also Fall River, both seniors at cent of the boys said they were Salve Regina College, have been initiated in "love problems", named recipients of graduate through friends and books-that , study awards. the sex education obtained from , Miss Whalon has received a Brown Scholarship for the Sum­ their parents was inadequate. Half of the boys and girls' be- mer and the following academic tween 14 and 17 admitted they year. She will study mathe­ were "going steady," had been matics Miss Kennedy's grant, for the ' keeping company with the same girl or boy at least three times same time period, is to the a week for a year. The boys Medill School of Journalism at said they started going steady at Northeastern University. 15, the girls at 14. One out of every five 'of the male workers said they did not believe they could be happily married-36 per cent said they wanted "to see life" before thinking of marriage. ~,.,,.,,.,,.,,.,.,

~\

,

DEBROSSE OIL' co.

~

~

~

Heating Oils ~ ~ and Burners ~

NEW ORLEANS (NC)-Three educators will receive honorary degrees at the 52nd commence­ ment exercises of Loyola Uni­ ~ 365 NORTH FRONT STREET ~ versity here Tuesday, May 28. They are Theodore A., Distler, ) NEW BEDFORD executive director, Association WYman 2-5534 , of American Colleges; Father , A. William Crandell, S.J., presi­ dent of Spring Hill College,

Mobile, Ala., and Henry King

Stanford, president of the Uni­

versity of Miami.

Over 35 Years Experience in managing portfolios

For Stability and Growth INSURANCE UTILITIES BANK STOCKS write for more information

Landry & Company Investments 31 MILK STREET BOSTON, MASS.

~

HU 2-4750, or New Bedford, Mass. WYman 3-5494

t,,,,,.I'.I,,,"

IF YOU NEED A

CORREIA & SONS

MORTGAGE

ONE STOP

SHOPPING CENTER

SEE US

• Television • Furniiure • Appliances • Grocery, 104 Allen St., New Bedford

WYman 1-9354

SCHOOL Maintenance Supplie. SWEEPERS - SOAPS

DISINFECTANTS

FIRE EXTINGUISHERS

D,4HILL CO. 1886 PURCHASE S~ NEW BEDFORD WY 3-3716

TAUNTON SAVINGS BANK 12 -14 COURT 5T,# TAUNTON, Tel. 824-8644

- ---

.- JEREMIAH, COHOL,AN

--------~

I

I

I

t

~

PLUMBING &- HEATING I

It

t' t'

--

I

Contr.etor• •inee 1913

I

WYman 3-0911

~

I

-- -- --- ---

...-..'..-.

703 S. Water Street New Bedford

----

..-..

:-..

--- --- --

--. .~..........-..-...-...-...-

•I

~


6

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River, Thurs., May 23, 1963

Wrong Image

Reasons for Foreign Aid Last Sunday afternoon' a television program featured two Harvard students from Africa. They discussed the American foreign aid program with the moderator and an­ other American. And they kept coming back, again and again, to the thesis that America has some ulterior and­ pr..esumably - sinister motive in ::.ending aid to the emerging countries of the world. A strange and sad aspect of the program was that the moderator could. OJ1ly keep repeating that Americans are idealists and that they help others because they. hoye these might adopt the same form of government that gave the Americans such a high standard of living. The conversation cried out for someone to step in and to stress the spiritual values that underlie the foreign aid progr<:lm in the minds of many - the belief that all men are brothers and that it is the act of a brother who has much to share with one in need; the belief that ownership of the world's goods is a stewardship and calls for sharing with the rest of the world; the belief that this is truly one world and the problems of some are the concerns of all; the belief that the Fatherhood of God demands the brother­ hood of man; the belief that Jesus Christ commanded His followers to be "lovers of the brethren." An these are valid motives that impel many in govern­ ment to push for foreign aid and move those outside of government to support such a program. It is sad that when the emerging peoples of the world ask why they are given bread, they are not given the IIe3S0ns but aIle asked to be content with a lecture on the glories of material things. No wonder they look at American aid with suspicion.

No Less a Responsibility The President of CBS, in discussing the responsibility of radio and .television to produce more worthwhile pro­ gramming, has asked that attention be paid to the ~e­ sponsibility of th~ audience to secure more worthwhIle programs. He puts his finger on a sensitive an_<:1 vita.l area­ produeery give the public what it wants or what the pro­ ducer thinks it wants. And if the reception is one of approval or at least not objection, then the producer.assumes he has hit upon th~ successful formula. So once agarn it is a question of audience action or reaction. Once again it is up' to parents ;and responsible individuals to make vocal their avproval or objection to what they and their families. hear and see. Once again it is evident that the reception of a single letter or postear-d in a ;radio or television studio has 'wide-ranging reper~us­ sions. Radio and television officials indeed have a respon­ sibility to the public. But the publk has no less a responsibility, too.

Telephones and Kindness A plan put into effect in Holy S(juls Parish in Little Rock, Arkansas, may bring smiles of sophisticated amuse­ ment to the faces of many but it is serving a truly Christian purpose. . Whenever there is a death in the 100 square-mile parish, a telephone committee of women (who else?) goes to work notif~rmg .other familes in the parish. The same is true whenever anY emergency arises. In a very short time the whole pari"lh knows what is happening and is ready to provide prayers, material help, reverent presence at wakes and funerals. The result is that the whole parish is brought closer together and the problems of one family become th~ con­ cern of aB. This builds up the Christian community spirit that is written about. so ·often in the history of the early Church. ,. A number of years ago, Clare Booth Luce spoke about the "Catholic Mind IDld ·the Protestant Heart." She de­ tected among Catholics a sad neglect of the little h~mey touches that she saw among Protestants - neighborly con­ cern, social contacts after Church, visiting back and forth among parishioners. Mrs. Luce may ~r m..ay not be oorrect in her estimate. But what she calls for - person to person charity and kindness and neighborliness - are indeed a vital part ·of day-by~day Catholicism. If on~y more Catholics would live like that!

@rheANCHOR OffiCIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE Of FAll RIVER Published .weekty by The Catholic Press 0# the Dioeese of faU River 4JO HighlanGl Avenue faft R,iv., Moss. OSborne 5-715' PUBLISHER Most Rev. James t. Connolly, D.D., PhD. GENERAL MANAGER ASST GENERAL MANAGER Itev. Danie! f. ShaHoo. M.A. Rev. John ,. Driscoll MANAGING EDITOR "VVh J. Golden

Ellellsion

PAVU REV. JAMES A. CLARK Assistant, St. Mary's Church New Bedford LATIN AMERICA­ A LABOR OF LOVE.

After the War the United States began a program of renewal for Europe. Through massive expenditures, mo­ mentous planning and merito­ rious sacrifices on the part of the American peo­ ple, Europe has been brought in only 18 years to position of economic prom­ inence fro m paralyzing de­ struction.Amer­ icans breathed a . sigh in the hope of possible relief from a shuddering tax burden upon seeing Europe reach the stage of a Common 'WE.d~ Market which meant economic independence for thp. Continent. By REV. ROBERT W. HOVDA, Catholic University However, for many reasons, Americans - North Americans, TODAY - Ascension of Our Church announces as the refrain that is-are now cognizant of the Lord Jesus Christ. Jesus is with of its Entrance Hymn: "In medio fact that there is another conti­ the Father. Our humanity, the Ecclesiae" ("In the Aseembly"). nent which needs our help. Com­ humanity He 'lssumed, is with Not only do we see here the munists in Cuba, persistent the Father. Th'~ pattern is clear. Church as the assembly of God's revolutions in other Latin coun­ tries, the unpleasant. receptioa Human eyes gaze upon the people covenanted community­ given American diplomats-these face of the Father, the human instead of the Church as a serv­ nature of the Word shares His ice station f9r individuals. But are some .of the reasons for the awakening North American m. life. And for one reason, accord­ also we see that this assembly is terest in this large mysterioUB ing to the Ascension preface, an assembly of seekers, learners, continent to the South of 1Il!I. "that he might make us sharers iPl1uirers, constantly ,growing

Effort to Help

in his Godhead." So the Scrip­ from their shared experience ture Readings turns us resolutely and in their understanding of While we stagger and sww, to the mission of the Church in God's Word, listening eagerly to under a tax burden, we can not the world His vehicle of opera­ the teachers God raises up in refuse to begin to help the La~ tion in H~ ascended and glorious their midst. Americans; we know that as long state. as there are impoverished peo­ TUESDAY - st. Au~ostine, pies we cannot ignore them. TOMORROW - Mass as on Bishop, Confessor. "Carry nei­ Thus we begin a program that Asee.nsion Day. We pray in the ther purse nor v·" l1n t nor sandals hopefully might rescue this COD­ Collect: "May we in heart live * * *" (Gospel). Both lessons to­ tinent in 18 years. The Gover. . there with him;" Not t3at we day emphasize the obligation of ment is striving to find the C~ would escape this world or our the preacher to speak a Word rect way-the Latin AmeriCall creative work all-l duti,'~: :t. which is as free as it can be of Marshall Plan-to help these But after the Word's passage purely human motives and pure­ people; the OAS, the Allianee through human life and death to ly human accretio{ls. for Progress, and several tech­ His rising agaiTJ and His Ascen­ Augustine was instructed by nical financial pr'lgrams, are aB sion, there is no blinding the the Holy See not to burden Brit­ ways being explored to he. human eye to creation's fulfill­ ain with a full-grown Roman or Latin America. ment and the destiny of us all. Mediten-anean Christianity. but Lack Edueati~n We know where we are going. to plant the seed of the Gi:>spel in whatever naturally-good Brit­ Though not devastated by war, SATURDAy-st. Gregory'VII, ish cultural soil he could find. Latin America faces problems Pope, Confessor. The Mass of a which make post-war Europe WEDNESDAY-S1; Mary Mag_ Pope turns our attention to the seem like a playground. The con­ Church by which Jesus hallows dalen of Pazzi, Virgin. In today's tinual flow of capital out 01. all time and space and to the Eucharistic assembly we cele­ Latin America (r.ather than be­ brate a saint whose vocation, ministry of the Word and of the ing plowed back into the lacal likes that of all Religious, is to altar by which He regularly re­ economies), the growing concea­ point beyond time to rna"',: ulti­ minds, redirects, reorients our tration of wealth (2 per cent eI. mate goal and to the ultimate the people control the wealtb), vision. No "gates of hell" (Gos­ pel) can close off this vision or basis of his value. And it is the centuries of stagnation, unstable deflect it from the glorious reign vocation of the Christian layman economies and governments, of the Christ and our ultimate t.o point t~ God's love for man lack ~r' land ownership, lack el in the here-and-now, to the fact education, sanitation, initiative; home. that now, in this world, is the these .al'e a few of the r-eaBODll SUNDAY AFTER ASCEN­ "time of salvation." Both voca­ f~r the plight of the Lau. SION. The Easter shouts ~f joy tions are equally necessary for Americans. the Church's life and for its mis­ and triumph yield today to a Pli~ht an. Problem more sober note. For the time sion. The people themselves are lIB­ .of the world (and of the aale to cope with the smotherinl Chureh) we will not see Him 1iifficulties that surround them. face to face (Entrance Hymn). The scientific advancements ef Our coofidenee for the time ~'I\--Jlflt'l'~.r CJuJ..s the rest of the world and the i. . being is part of our faith. And KANSAS CITY (NC)-Bisbop before our full participation in Charles Helmsing will not attend ereasing kncwledge of the r-* of the world through modera His glory, we will know the per­ any function held at a place communications have made the secution mentioned in the Gos­ which practices racial discrim­ Latin Americans anxious to shaM pel and the difficult ane. chal­ ination. . in the good life. lenging witness which is the The Bishop of Kansas City-St. H is going to take a cone. . subject of the First· Reading. tration _of America'll :10w-how ·But whatever we do and bear, Joseph in Missouri made the an­ and mo~y to rescue Latia we do and bear iri the Spirit and nouncement at the annual instal­ lation dinner of the lCa.lsas City America. with the Spirit, sharing a com­ Serra Club. This is the plight and the mon life 3 11d con r:" : t wj~h problem--ean we depend _ The dinner was' switched from all the other branches of the a private club after' Bishop your help? vine, never in isolation. That iso­ lation of man alienated from his Helmsing informed Serra offi­ Father and his brothers is the cers that an official of the pri­ vate club at which it was to be rear evil. So our Communion PITTSBURGH (NC) Da­ Hymn as we share the sacr.ament held had informed him that {)f our solidarity as Christians colored perse··s would not be quesne University has announeed hois us singing: "Not that you served. it will erect a $5." million Sci­ "I willingly concede," be said, ence Center that will house Mil should take them out of the world * * * but rather that you "that private cllJb~ have a right school of pharmacy and the de­ partments of biology, chemistly shield them 'from all that is to set down rules and qualifica­ tions fo~ membership. But they and physics. Construction ..... evil." do not have any right to estab­ begin in late Spring or Sum~ l\IONDAY-St. Bede the Ven­ lish .a restriction whieh places of 1964, and the center is ... erable, Confessor, Doctor. Thw; unjustified st~ma upon ~ whole pected to be read~' for occuPUMr Mass of a :reat teachez: in the people-" in September, 1966.

'fhnouq.h th£

'With th£ ChWtch

01'dinQry to Boycott

r

New Science Center


-- --

---- - - - -

Importation of Mexicans

Harms U. S. Farm Labor

THE ANCHOR­ Thurs., May 23, 1963

By Msgr. George G. Higgins

The Reporter magazine recently took notice of what ctertain church groups are doing to try to improve the lot .af migratory farm workers in the United States. "Being the constituents of no one in particular," The Reporter remarked in an editorial is inadequate to attract farm note, ''the migrant workers workers, he does not have to depend as much on the ser­ raise the pay. He simply tells the iousness of 'do-good' lobbies Federal Government that he can

ESSEX JUNCTION (NC} There's too much emphasis 0& causes of division of Christianity, not enl>ugh

as they do on the seriousness of not get farm labor, and asks for.

Catholk Agency Gets $40,000 U.S. Grant DETROIT (NC)-The Catholic Social Services of Wayne County has received an initial $40,000 grant from the National Insti­ tute of Mental Health' for a demonstration project for im­ proved handling of children in foster homes. Father Paul J. Hickey, agency director, estimated the total cost will be $600,000. The $40,000 grant will be used to complete the first phase of the project in two years, he sai<l.

braceros from Mexico. The pov­ erty of northern Mexico is so great that braceros are available at these wages: The result is that poverty competes against poverty to pro­ duce more poverty. A surplus of cheap labor is created. Wages have actually been forced down by P. L. 78. The Labor Depart­ ment, since 1961, has strength­ ened the enforcement of P. L. 78 and made some reforms in it, but the program still harms U. S. farm workers. Most braceros are used by large growers, sugar refining corporation and vegetable and fruit . processing companies to harvest their crops. Public Law 78's mass importation of Mexican farm workers helps the corpor­ ation farms drive out family farms. The importation depresses wages. Unfair Advantage The family farm uses little or no hired labor. Corporation farms depend on hired labor. Therefore, the lower wages are driven, the more corporation farms are able to lower co~ts. But the family farm is not able to do this. The corporation farm, therefore, gains an unfair advantage from P. L. 78. Also, because they have the cheap labor, the corporation farms are able to greatly expand their production. This lowers the price which the family farmer receives for his competing prod­ ucts. Such activity in tomatoes has driven thousands of small and medium-sized farmers out of tomato growing in non-bra­ cero-using states. . Growers do not need P. L. 78. It has been a crutch, which bra­ cero-using growers are afraid to throwaway. If growers will offer must to attract labor, they will higher wages, as other industries get sufficient workers. Arouse Suspicion

Further, the growers have steadily opposed the proposals of many Congressmen and Sena­ tors that a program, similar ta· P. L. 78, be initiated to recruit unemployed and underemployed American farm workers and bring them to the areas which need cultivating and harvesting labor. As long as the growers violent­ ly oppose such legislation, their cries that domestic farm workers are not available must be looked upon with suspicion.

eyo

7

Prelate Stresses 'Supreme Good' Of Christianity

Director, NCWC Social Action Department

'do-good' Congressmen. But ex­

cept for certain

church groups,

particularly the

National Catho­

lic Welfare Con­

ference and the

National Coun­

cil of Churches,

and for one or

two unions * * *,

naost of .the la­

bor and social

welfare lobbies

have done little

beyond testifying when called

upon."

The Reporter's favorable ref­ erence to the National Catholic Welfare Conference is appreci­ ated, but those of us at NCWC (and our counterparts in other national Ca~holic organizations) who are most directly involved in the problem of migratory labor know that we have hardly scratched the surface of the migratory labor problem. Major Step Perhaps the most important lingle step that should be taken right away to improve the lot Qf migratory farm workers would be for the Congress to repeal Public Law 78 under which tens of thousands of Mexican farm workers are brought into the United States every year in eompetition with our own do­ mestic agricultural workers. Representatives of all three major religious faiths have asked Congress to allow Public Law 78 to expire on Dec. 31, 1963. They are convinced that the program is extremely harm­ ful to American farm workers and small farm operators. Public Law 78 was first en­ acted in 1951 as a temporary naeasure to bring Mexican farm workers to American growers. Less than two per cent of Amer­ ican farms use the Mexicans, known as braceros. The~e are often large corporation type farms. In 1962, 227,000 braceros were contracted and recon­ tracted. Keep Down Wa&"es The mass importation of for­ eign workers is one of the major reasons why American farm workers, the poorest work group in the United States, were able to earn an average of only $881 in agriculture during all of 1961 and were able to obtain only 134 days of farm work in the entire year. Although P. L. 78 seeks to pro­ Yide against "adverse effect" to domestic farm workers, the im­ por~tion has kept down their farm wages and limited their employment opportunities. The esxistence of the program pre­ vents the law of supply and de­ mand from operating in setting !arm wages in the bracero-using areas. Poverty Produces Poverty A bracero-seeking grower offers work at perhaps 60 cents an hour in Arkansas. If the wage

..Q.,._..._"'!l

-------------~-_

GOVERNOR JOINS SERRA: Gov. Edmund G. Brown of California, center, became the first chief of state to be­ come an 'honorary member of Serra InternationaL He was recently inducted into the Sacramento Serra Club at a banquet with Archbis'hop Joseph T. McGucken, right, pre­ siding. Stan~ing is Father_ Richard C. Dwyer, founding . chaplain of the Serra club. NC Photo.

stress on the supreme good of the Christian faith, a Catholic bishop told a meeting of 300 CongregationaIists here in Ver­ mont. Bishop Robert F _ Joyce of Bur­ lington asserted: "How blessed are we in this country-nowhere else in the world is religion so respected. We have freedom of conscience, freedom from any human interference. But there is no freedom to set aside divine truth, once we know divine truth." Speaking at the 163th annual Vermont Congregational Confe~ enee, the Catholic prelate said the fOundation "of any lasting Christian work in the world has to be mutual love and respect." Depkwes Disbust

"What a sin it has been among Christians that there should be enmity and distrust, especially in the mission field," Bishop Joyce said. The two main purposes E)f the . Second Vatican Council, the Bishop said, are reform and re­ Novak of Harvard Says Too .Few Support newal. Cathc>lics concede that they, as much as. any others,. need Effort Now Being Made by Negroes in South reform t6 become truly Christ­ like, the prelate added. UNIVERSITY HEIGHTS (NC) interested in building and main­ All Christians need renewal -Not enough American Catho­ taining illfltitutions. than in because "even if we- don't fall lic voices have been raised in working for new causes. He intG bad habits, we lose the fer­ added: . the "primarily religious" revo­ Vor of original Christian dec:i. lution of the Negro in the South "A student at a Catholic uni­ sion a.nd need to brin:g the according to Michael Novak of versity cannot join a sit-in dem­ ChUJ'ch back to the spi.rit of Harvard University. onstration without fear' ofre­ apost()lie days;-" Bishop Joyce Novak, speaking at a convoca­ prisal but the same stucfent at said. tion at John Carroll University, the same university may join declared the Church often mak~s YAF (Young Americans for: Eight DicKeses Top persons feel they are "bucking Freedom, a right wing political authority" when they work to action group) without any fear.". 50 Per Cent Marte eliminate injustice. Novak asserted Ute teachings There are eight U. S. dioceses, Pointing to the Negroes. in the of Pope John should compel not five, as previously reported, South he said: Catholics to ask themselves. "Do in which more than 50' per cent "Here are a people moving I care about justice?" But he of the total population is Catho­ with dignity, with peace, as no added that it is up to the indi­ lic. other people have done in the vidual Catholic to put the teach­ Led by the Diocese of Pl"0'Vi­ history of the world. In the ings into practice. He told the dence, which is 61.1 per cent future people may look back on Ohio gathering: Catholic, the group includes these days as something great "It used to be the conservative Lafayette, La., 57.9' per cent; and beautiful in American his­ who appealed to the authority Corpus Christi, Texas, 57..5; tory." of the pope. Now it is the liberal Worcester, 55.99; Fall River,' Many young Catholics, he con­ who does and the conservative 52.3~ Boston, 51.9; Springfield, tinued, see the Church as ffiOl'e who argue against it.... 51.8, and Buffalo, 50.6".

Hits Catholic Inertne.55

THE MODERN ELECTRIC RANGE

Cooks Rings Around The Rest I .*.~.~~

eonv~ntion

Continued from Page One Bishop of the Diocese, will ad­ dress the CYOers. Keynote speech at the Con­ vention, with the emphasis on· "Youth Serves Today," will be given by an outstanding CYO leader from the Archdiocese of Boston. -. Eleeiion A business session of the Dio­ cesan Catholic Youth Council will take place with written and oral reports of the year's activi­ ties presented from all areas of the Diocese. New business will be presented and the busi­ ness session will conclude with the nominations for diocesan of­ ficers for the year 1963-1964. This will be followed by nomination t a I k s, seconding speeches, and acceptance by the nominees. The parliamentarian and the election chairman will then conduct the election. Suc­ cessful candidates will be in­ stalled at the Benediction service which will be followed by a buffet.

Only an ELECTRIC RANGE, defivers its heat by .direct cantod with the bottom of the utensil. No· flare-out into the air of the room means the coolest possibte cooking. FLAMELESS electric cooking ioy it in your home and •

IS

so ClEAN, SO MODERN ••. why not en­

"LIVE BETTER. ELECTRI.CALLY"

FALL' RIVER ELECTRIC UGHT COMPANY


THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River, Thurs., Ma'l23, 1963

Girl Scouts Plan

RecollecNon Day

Lists Suggestions for Gifts As Month of June Is Near By Mary Tinley Daly Mail these days includes fat white or cream-colored envelopes-happy mail, invitations to weddings! Receiving such invitations, one ponders what to get for the young couple, something for their new home. Goodness knows, bridal books . f h and bridal sec­ ciated as we started housekeep­ bons 0 t e daily and Sun- ing; the electrical devices, now day papers are rife with sug- outmoded, but which served gestions, everything from a well. Then there were the "un­ set of furniture to a set of usuals," most of them in periodic towels, and in price range from use, gratefully remembered hundreds down every time they were taken out: to a few dollars. the silver turkey platter, gift of So m e people, the Croarkins; wooden salad seemingly, are bowl, from Lu when she was endowed wit h ,;; Johnny's fiancee; antique brass the natural inbell from the Onderdonks; beau­ stinct to select, tiful statue of the Blessed Mother, exactly the right demitasse cups, book of family present,one that songs, spice cabinet. Probably will be useful, few of these we would have pur­ lasting, appro-, chased on our own, but what fun priate and, best to own. of all, undupli. Good Selection eated. This inTalking over the matter of stinct is not built-in equipment of wedding presents with other in the author of this column, friends who are homemakers of just one I envy in others. long standing-and good at seIf I send a bride a ,pair of sil- lecting gifts - here are some ver salt and pepper shakers, it's ideas of gifts that have' brought a safe bet she will receive a lasting pleasure to young mar­ dozen others, most of them ex- rieds: actly like the pair we ordered. For a sports-loving pair, field If I find the "perfect" and un- glasses are a delight to own and usual in all, Early American an- 'not likely to be duplicated. The tique shop, ten-to-one the bride same applies to a barometer for is furnishing her apartment in ' 'a nautically inclined family; op­ 'Swedish modern and 'loathes era glasses for those who love Early American. the theater and who, in the early 'As a guide to improving gift days of married life' when pen­ selection ability we consulted a nies are scarce must buy seats friend who has the instinct for far, far from the stage. it. Modestly disclaiming qualiFor a new bride, cookbooks ties that lie behind her innate are wonderful and there is a Savvy, she nevertheless displays lot of leeway here, for every' thoughtfulness, imagination, and ~bride likes to have a library of an uncanny knack for Qbserva.,' such references. Then there is tion. For instance, Jean'~i"o~l~ the "wedding cake knife,"per­ never buy Early American {or a ' "feet ,for cutting that first piece Swedish modeJ;n apartment nor, on the wedding day and for spe­ as we also did, a small table for',: ciaJ/occ,asions on and on and on. a couple whose hobby is making, If' you are sure this will not be their own furniture. 'duplicated, you migh't have the "I try to steer clear of pictures initials and date engraved on its or other art work," Jean told us, handle and a white bow tied on ,"unless I'm pretty sure of a it. friend's taste." Welcome religious gifts might "If you don't know her tastes," be missals, a beautifully bound we asked, "Then you get some- Bible, statue or crucifix. thing completely practical-like' • Standby for years has been a toaster?" "Our Family Book of Life," fam­ "Always welcome," J e a n ily record book for the impor­ smiled. "But do you know the tant events of religious signifi­ most practical people love to get cance, useful in recording the gifts they'd never buy for them- family's life in relation to the selves? The 'not striCtly neces- sacraments and, deepening their sary' items." , love for t,hem., It is available Being one of the "practical" from Conception Abbey Press, ones, we pondered gifts we had Conception, Mo. received through,' the years. North Dighton

It was almost a~ though .Tean's' thoughts and ours were on the'

ST. JOSEPH same wave length. "After a $25 quarter-century of housekeep­ St. Joseph's Women's Guild ing," she said, "when I consider Mr. & Mrs. Arthur Bourgault 'giving a gift I go over the ones Dr. & Mrs. William Adams we have loved. I translate them $20 into the environment of the re- ' Mr. & Mrs. Henry Conaty cipient. If they fit, I get them Mrs. Larry Spidle and they are almost aiw~y' 'ap­ $10 preciated." , . Mr. & Mrs. Alfred Perry, Mr. With this sound 'advice, we & Mrs. Manuel P. Vargas, Mr. & mentally reconnoitered:' there Mrs Thomas Kelly, Rose & John were the linens, so much appre- Katon, Walter Scanlon Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Jackson, Mr. & Mrs. Daniel McInnis, Mr. Buzzards Bay & Mrs. George Gray, Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Higgins, Mr. & Mrs. ST. MARGARET Donald Scott $15 Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Clifford, Wareham Lodge of Elks Mr. & Mrs. Levite Carrier, Mr. , $10 & Mrs. Nelson Meunier, Mr. & Roberti Electric Co., Mr. & Mrs. John Simas, Mr. & Mrs. Mrs. Lionel LaCasse. Robert Blackwell Louis & Mary Torpey, The Joseph B. Vargas, Francis O'Connell Family, Tucy Bros., Buckley Buzzards Bay Theatre" Mr. & Mrs. Charles Tucy, Sr. North Easton Red Wood Motel Inc., Red Top IMMACULATE CONCEPTION Bait & Sporting G<lods Co., J. & E. Realty, Mr. & Mrs. Crowley, $25 Mr. & Mrs. William Robicheau. Knights of Columbus C. Paul Tucy, Mr. & Mrs. Eu­ $20 gene Sweeney, Mr. & Mrs. Wil­ Benson's Construction liam Sweeney, Roberti Electric $10 Co. Inc., Mrs. Francis Alander. Margaret Ahern, Mr. & Mrs. Mr. & Mrs. Keith Sanger, Mr. Paul Bissett, Frank Desmond, & Mrs. Wilson Harding, Mr. & Easton Auto Body, Mr. & Mrs. Mrs. Cardoza, Mr. & Mrs. John William Kempf Hickey, Mr. & Mrs. Gildo Cub­ Mr. & Mrs. George Bagge, Mr. ellis. & Mrs. Anthony Silva, Mr. & Mrs Bay Hill Inn, Mezza Luna Res­ Dominic Stornante, Mr. & Mrs. taurant, Mr & Mrs William Doyle Wilson Bagdon Mr. & Mrs. Roland Tremblay, Mrs. Mae H. Bigelow, Mr. & Mr. & Mrs. John Landry. Mrs. Alfred A. McDonaJP

LEGION OF MARY: Principals in the May rally con­ ducted under the auspices of the Legion of Mary at Button­ wood Park, New Bedford, were, left to right: James Lamb Taunton, Comitium president; Rev. Albert F. Shovelton: New Bedford director of the Legion of Mary; Rev. John A. Cantwell, principal speaker; Arthur Macedo, president of New Bedford Curia.

Cause Advances Rites Congregation Discusses Beatification Of Mother Frances, German Nun VATICAN CITY (NC) -The mourners attended the funeral. beatification cause of a German Mother Frances accompanied nun who visited the wounded in a band of volunteer nurses to U. S. hospitals during the Civil America on her Civil War visit War is moving ahead. to this country. The group arThe ,Sacred Congregation of rived five days before the battle Rites has met to discuss whether of Gettysburg. Mother Frances , Mot her Frances Schervier, visited many of the large mili­ foundress of the Sisters of the tary hospitals during her stay. , Poor of St. Francis, practiced Her. Sisters cared for the sick virtue ,to a heroic degree. A and wounded soldiers in three 'declaration that she did would hospitals at Cincinnati. They be the Holy See's first publie also volunteered for duty on hos­ step toward declaring her pital boats bringing the wounded blessed. from t1?e battlegrounds. Mother Frances sent a group Sisters of the Poor of St. Fran­ of her Sisters to Cincinnati in cis today have institutions in the 1858 to establish. st. Mary's Archdioceses of Cincinnati, In­ Hospital, the community's first dianapolis and Kansas City ift , foundation in A.onerica. She vis- Kansas and in the Dioceses of itt:d the U. S. in 1863 and 1868. ' Covington, Columbus, Spring. Care for Soldiers field (Ill.), Lansing and SteuBorn in Aachen, Germany, in benville. 1819, the daughter of a factory owner, she had the Emperor of Mattapoisett Austria as her godfather. Mother ST. ANTHONY Frances founded her community in 1845, in a little house in $50 Aachen. She died in 1876, at the Mr. & Mrs. Francis Conway age of 57. A floral tribute from $30 Empress Augusta was placed at Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Perry the foot of her casket, and 20,000 $25 Mr. & Mrs. Frank Sylvia

Somerset. ST. JOHN OF GOD

$50 Somerset Funeral Home $11

Mr. & Mrs. James Costa $10 Mrs. Alice ArrUda, Mrs. Laura Furtado, Mr. & Mrs. Adriari Boissonealt, Mr. & Mrs. Manuel Noguiera, Mr. & Mrs. John V. Velozo, Mr. & Mrs. Henry Rego, Mr. & Mrs. Charles Campos, Mr. & Mrs. John G. Nobrega, Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Coray. , Mr. & Mrs. Thomas MacKane, Mr. & Mrs. George B. Colombe, Mr. & Mrs. Antonio Santos. Mr. & Mrs. John B. Souza ST. THOMAS ,MORE $500

Rev.Joseph K. Welsh , $75 Rev. Stephen J. Downey $50 Mr. & Mrs. Albert E. Mobouck $25

Mr. & Mrs. Charles Powers $15 Mrs. & Mrs. Robert Lopes

$20

Mr. & Mrs. Mark McIntYre $15 Mr. & Mrs. William Quinlan

Swansea ST. DOMINIC $~

ToWn Heating Co. $10 Mr. & Mrs. Manuel Borge!S ST. LOUIS DE FRANCE·

$25

Hyoo Beverage

Terminal Bilkery

$10 Mr, & Mrs. Eugene Penoy Mr. & Mrs. Francis Marcille Miss Camille AUdette, Mr. 1& Mrs. Edouard Madore

••••••••••••••••••

BaS

FISHERIES of FALL RIVER INC.

$10

Mr. & Mrs. Howard C. Chad­ wick Jr., Mr. & Mrs. William Walsh, Emily Perry, Josephine Perry, Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Rene­ han Mrs. Mary Pedro, Mr. & Mrs. Edward McCartin, George Smith Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Sylvia & Mrs. Pedro, Mr. & Mrs. Real Breton Mr. & Mrs. Joseph C~sta, Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Sylvia, Mr. & Mrs. Edward Cacilhas, Mr. & Mrs. An­ thony Caruso, Mr. & Mrs. John Costa The Silver Gull

CLAMS

WHOLESALE & RETAIL

SHUCKED CLAMS

STEAMERS & FRIERS

,~ ..DELIVERiES..wiiHiN....: "

, ' AREA . 4~ ~· , , -A- 75 MILE

For Restaurants • Institutions

Roadside Stands

Large or Small Clambakes

DRY CLEANING and FUR STORAGE

We can supply ~obsters, Oysters

Shrimps, Scallops in Season

Seaweed for Clambakes also

Available .

DERMODY CLEANERS

34-44 Cohannet Street Taunton VA 2-6161

$10

Mr. & Mrs. Richard Barrar, Mr. & Mrs. John Farrissey, Mrs. Benny Paskavitch, Joseph H. Ducharme, Mr. & Mrs. Frank D. Sylvia. Margaret A. Nash, Mr. & Mrs. Walter Curt, James McPartland; Sarah B. White, Mr. & Mrs. Al­ bert N. Duclos. Mr. & Mrs. Leo Guertin, Mr. & Mrs. Robert Connors, Mr. & Mrs. Henry Holtham. Mr. & Mrs. Frederick Badwey, Mr. & Mrs. Francis L. Buote, Mr. & Mrs. John W. Cahill, Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Martin.

'I1he Catholic Girl Scouts from various sections of the Diocese will meet at Cathedral Camp 011 Saturday, June 1, for a Day 01 Recollection. The day's program has beell designed to aid in the spiritual enrichment of. the participants-­ emphasiZing a spiritual interpre­ tatIon of the laws and promises of the Girl Scouts. Rev. William J. McMahon, Di­ ocesan Director of the Retreat League, will offer Mass at l'l o'clock at the conclusion of the opening exercises scheduled for 10 o'clock. Lectures will be delivered by Rev. Walter A. Sullivan, Dioe­ esan CYO Director during the afternoon session which will also include meditations and recrea.­ tion. The concluding section of the day's program will include a Living Rosary and Benedictio. of the Blessed Sacrament. Mrs. Theodore J. Aleixa. Taunton, is serving as chairman. Assisting her will be' adult vol­ unteers from different areas of the Diocese. They are: Mrs. Charles Lan­ dry, seekonk; Mrs. Ralph Patun­ off, No. Attleboro; Mrs. Josepll Murphy, Mansfield; Miss Joan Corrigan, Attleboro. Also Sister William Catherine and Sister Grace Angelica, Holy Ghost Parish, Attleboro; and Mrs. Lawrence Harbey, New Bedford. Rev. James F. Lyons of Taun. ton is spiritual director.

30 THIRD ST., FALL RIVER OSb~)rne

4-5693

••••••••••••••••••

Check These Banking Services

•• • • •

Savings Bank Life Insurance Real Estate Loans Christmas and Vacation Clubs Savings Accounts 5 Convenient Location,

NEW BEDFORD

INSTITUTION for SAVINGS


,THE ANCHOR­ Thurs., May 23, 1963

Says Family Loyalty Pretex

To Avoid Facing Real Iss~e

Hyannis ST. FRANCIS XAVIER $500 Ambassador and Mrs. Joseph P. Kennedy $100 A Friend . $50 Father McSwiney Council No. 2525 K of C, Hyannis Warren Buick Inc. $25 Robert Cotell Granite Chevrolet Co. Inc. Mitchell Motors Inc. Mrs. Bertha Fitzgerald $20 Cape Cod Bakery .$15 Edmund ,J. Daly Jr., Mrs. Vin­ cent O'Neil. , $13 John J.' Carroll '$12.50 Carreiro Flower Shop . $10 Mr. & Mrs; Robert Clement, Mrs. William Drew, Dr. Harry Sobel; Candlelight Motor Lodge, John Bright Shoe Store. Mr. & Mrs. T. Gelinas, Hyannis Hardware, Cape 'Oil Company, Mr. & Mrs. Edward Doudican. Anthony Bptello. Mr. & Mrs. William Fratus, Mr. & Mrs. Henry Houle, R. B. Corcoran, Cape Bowl, Hasckel's. Mr. & Mrs. Samuel W. Miller, Mrs. Emilie Cormier, Mrs. Jo­ sep Chicoine, Mr. & Mrs. war­ ren Tripp, Mrs. Robert E. Man­ ning. . Mary Hunt, Ray Sprinkle Co. Mrs. Caroline Crosby, Mr. & Mrs. Richard Sager, Mr. & Mrs. Henry L. Rivers, Margaret Car.;. ney.

By Father John L. Thomas, S. J.

Asst. Sociology Prof.-St. Louis University

"Should a boy think more of his parents than of the girl he has been dating for over a year? I'm a junior in college and Bill has three more years of graduate work so there's no thought of immediate marriage. We get along very well except on this they apply to other couples, and matter of family loyalties. yet to ignore their p~rsonal im­ He feels he should spend a plications in practice. That's why good deal of time with his I have warned you about self­ family and insists they have a right to expect this. I argue that if he really likes me as much as he claims, he would want to spend more time with me. Isn't it possible to re­ main too ~t­ tached to one's family? Am I wrong in think­ ing he's imma­ ture in this re­ gard?" You've asked several very different questions, Millie, but I think you have only one major probl~ni. You like Bill and' naturally want to associate with him as frequently as possible. He claims he likes you, too, and has shown it by not dating other girls for over a year. . Somewhat Unbalanced On the other hand, he dpesn't date you as often as you f~I. he should because he insists that he must spend a good deal of time at home with his parents and other members of his family. Considering his age, isn't his sense of loyalty and attachment to his family somewhat exagger­ ated or unbalanced? This is pos­ sible, for it is not unknown that some individuals are adequately weaned from their parents very late in life, if ever. Nevertheless, MillIe, I don't believe that this is Bill's prob­ lem, and I rather suspect that you know it isn't either, though both of you are using the pre­ text of family loyalties to avoid baving to face the real issue. Presents Dilemma What's the main source of your difficulties? You pointed it out almost in passing, though the fact that you m~ntioned it sug­ gests that you are not wholly aware of its far-reaching signi­ ficance. "Bill has three more' years of graduate work, so there's no thought of immediate marriage." This simple statement of fact tells us about all we have to know concerning your problem. Assuming that you are a normal couple and that you have already discovered that you like each other very much, the phra'se, "no thought of immediate marriage," presents a dilemma that you are trying not to face squarely. ' Self.Deception Why continue to deceive your­ selves? If you follow your nat­ ural inclinations and begin to see more of each other, there will be "thought of immediate marriage," for a normal young couple of your age cannot enjoy frequent and intimate associa­ tion for long with experiencing that insistent' emotional involve­ ment (love) which craves per­ manent union in marriage. If you wish to maintain a workable friendship, that is, a relationship that will not place you under excessive tension and stress, you must regulate your dating and other contacts accord­ ingly. Willing. to Take Chance It is relatively easy to accept these statements in theory, or as

deception. Don't argue that since you both accept the fact that there can be no thought of marriage for the next three years, there is no danger that you will become deeply involved through more frequent dating. You can't have it both ways, and I think that you know it. If you analyze your attitudes a little more objectively, Millie, you will probably find that you don't accept this "no thought of immediate marriage" as a guild­ ing principle in your relation­ ships. Although you may not wish to admit it even to yourself, per­ haps, for such an admission would imply rejection of the plans you and Bill have agreed upon, you are really quite will­ ing to take a chance on an earlier marriage. Good Escape Considered in this light, Bill's approach appears much more logical. I feel that knowingly ,or unknowingly he is, using his sense of family loyalty as a con­ venient means of avoiding deep­ er involvement. He is not in a position to think realistically of immediate mar­ riage, yet he likes you and prob­ ably senses that he cannot run the risk of seeing you too, often if he wishes to' complete his graduate studies before marriage. Under the circumstances he finds it difficult to provide a good excuse for not spending more time with you and pru. dently concludes. that his obli gations to his parents offer as as good an escape as any other. Reasonable Solution' What should you do? You have two possibilities. You, may de­ cide that a delay of three years is too difficult or too much of a gamble'. This wou,ld mean that you break up the relationship and start dating others. This is a reasonable solution and should involve no bitterness -you simply face the fact that as a couple you cannot think realistically about marriage for a long time to come, so that pro­ moting further mutual involve­ ment at present is meaningless. Complete Studies You may decide to continue dating. This means that you honestly accept all the implica­ tions of a three-year delay. Stop insisting on more frequent association, for Bill will either tire of arguing with you and break off the affair himself, or he will give in, and then you will have to come to terms with premature emotional in­ volvement. Don't deceive yourself; imme­ diate marriage will not be a solution. Bill will not later for­ give you for interfering with his adequate preparation for life. More important he is not ready for marriage until he has com­ pleted his studies, as all too many couples who married pre­ maturely are discovering too late.

Canadian Nuns Going To Brazil Missions

OTTAWA (NC) -Eight nuns from three sisterhoods will leave Canada in late July for mission BONN (NC).,.-All West Ger~ , stations in Brazi~. Four Sisters of the Petites man dioceses have issued a joint directive which says that for Soeurs de la Sainte Famille de Christians Monday, June 17 Sherbrooke will be assigned to "should not be a day for duties at the diocesan minor seminary in Marrilla. Two Grey ~eeches,btit rather a day for Sisters of the CrosS from here meditation and prayer." June 17 has been observed will join 10 other Grey nuns and since 1954 as a public holiday in assist at St. Paul's Hospital in West Germany to commemorate Tupi Paulista. Two Sisters of the Joan of Arc Institute will do an abortive revolt in East Ger­ social work in Tupi Paulista. many in 1953.

German Prelates Ask Prayer on Holiday

9

DIOCESAN OFFICERS OF CFM:' Elected to office at the first Diocesan-wide convention of' the Christian Family Movement were, left to right, top and bottom: Mr. and Mrs. Gene Moore, Attleboro, treasurer couple; Dr. and Mrs. Joseph Kerrins, Attleboro, president couple; Mr. and Mrs. Paul Dumais, Fall River, secretary couple.

'I Can Pay Them, Back' Women Collegians Volunteer for Lay Mission Work Among Negroes in Alabama and Louisiana CHICAGO (N C) - Twelve students of Rosary College in suburban River Forest have signed up for mission work among Negroes of Alabama and Louisiana,. Two others joined the Extension lay volunteers ser­ vice. Four members of the gradu­ ating class of the women's col­ lege conducted by the Domini­ can Sisters decided to postpOne their careers for a year to teach in Negro schools in Alabama. They will receive free room and board and $125 a month. They will leave on Friday, May 31. "It may sound kind of silly, but I feel deep down inside that

this is what I should do," Miss Ellen Creadon of Riverside, TIl., said. "There is a great need for teaChers for these children. After 16 years of Catholic education, I realize the sacrifices some of the college, and lay leaders have West Harw.·ch made for me. I feel this is one wliY I can pay them back;'!' ....

HOLY TRINITY The eight, undergraduates will $50

teach catechism classes for Ne. Mrs. Dorothy Hewitt

groes in Boyce and Monroe, ~,. "." '. ", "$25

from June 2 to August 16. . John·L. Burke

Two graduating seniors have. '. ' $10

signed up as Extension Service,. Mr. & Mrs. Lyndon Worden,

lay volunteers in the Southwest.. , .lKr. & Mrs. Raymond Speakman.

for a year. They will get their assignments in June. '

SAVE MONEY ON,

Missouri Parents Action Stresses Importance of P,arish Schools WASHINGTON (NC) - A congressman said here that the transfer' of a sizable number of pupils from parochial to public schools in Missouri points up the tremendous contributions the parochial school makes to edu­ cation in America. Rep. Cornelius Gallagher of Bayonne, N.J., said the enroll­ ment protest movement demon­ strates the problems and the im­ mense burdens other citizens would 'have to carry if the pri­ vate school system did not exist. Any Federal program to aid education, he said, should also include private schools. They are just as much a part of the national educational system as public schools, he declared. Existing Conditions Too, he added, they are just as hard pressed, just as over crowded and just as short of teachers as the public school system.

"If we fail to assist the pri­ vate schools," he said, "we are continuing to neglect an im-" portant segment of the national education system. I feel the Church-State iss u e, although sound in principle, must be ap­ plied with logic and common sense. And, as with any principle of long standing, must. be evaluated in the light of existing conditions." . ,

YOUR OIL HEA" •

CHARlES F.

=-

~RGAS

254 ROCKDALE AVINUI . .... 1EmOID, MASS.

• SEGUIN. Truck Body Builders Aluminum or Steel

944 County St.

NEW BEDFORD. MASS.

WY 2-6618

NF,.ick'~1Y"

..

~ ~

HEATING OIL

Norton ST. MARY'S $50 Rev. Bernard F. Sullivan $30 Mr. & Mrs. Charles Drane, Betty, and Charles $25 Williams Lumber Co., Mr. & Mrs. James Carney, John Drane, J. E. Fernandes, Norton Catholic Women's Club, Mrs. David A Rocha, Mr. & Mrs. Paul H. Sabourin. $10 Mr. & Mrs. Donald Butts, Mr. & Mrs. Clifford Brown, Mrs. Rose Cloutier, Mr. & Mrs. Donald Dion, Haskins Drug Store. Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Jolly Jr., Mr. & Mrs. Henry LeClaire, Aime G. Morin, Mr. & Mrs. Donald Nevius, Mr. & Mrs. Edgar Pelletier, Mrs. Doris Pendergast, Mr. & Mrs. John Simkins & Family, Anne O'Neill.

ClIff

THE SISTERS OF THE SACRED HEARTS

ANI.' OF PERPETUAL ADORATION

invite generous Joung ladles to join tile.. In leading I de~p.1J religious life of love, adoration, and reparation. In that spmt, the Sisters devote tIIeir time to tile education of Joutll, retreat wol1l, and domestic duties. FOI' further information, apply to-

Sisters of the Sacred Hearts, Fairhaven, Mass.

WM. T. MANNING (0. WHOLESALE AUTOMOTIVE AND

INDUSTRIAL SUPPLIES • GENERAL TIRES • DELCO BATTERIES • PERFECT CIRCLE RINGS FALL RIVER - NEW BEDFORD - HYANNIS - NEWPORT


"

\

V

10

Taunton

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River, Thurs., .May 23, 1963

need

Special Gifts National $800 Cherry & Webb Company, New Bedford and Fall River $300 J. L. Marshall & Sons,' Inc. $275 Rev. Thomas F. Daley $100

Joseph V. Tally

Rev. Edward J. Gorman

$50 \ . James J. Wilmot Co. John Terrence O'Duggari Stu­ dio, Inc.

Fall River

$1,000 Mr. & Mrs. Alvin J. Sullivall Fall River Electric Light Com. pany In memory of Mrs. Martha T. Kearns $500 Atty. & Mrs. Harold E. Clarkin Artcraft Fixtures Division Special Products Company 01. Tennessee, Inc. $456 . Residents of the Catholie Memorial Home $300 White's Family Dining Room &White Spa Caterers .

$250

.

Webb Oil Company First Federal Savings & Loall Association .St. Vin~ent de Paul Society . Particular Council . $200 Brady ElectriC CO.,Inc. Knights of Columbus - Fall . River Council No. 86­ $160 Mr. & Mrs. Herve Lagasse $150 Mr. Israel T. Alroy

$125 Dr. & Mrs. Roger E. Cadieux , $110' Mr. & Mrs. Noel Giard $100 St. Vincent de Paul Salvage :Bureau-Sacred Heart . In memory of deceased Priests of Sacred Heart Parish Confirmation Class-St. An.­ thony Padua Mrs. Arthur J. Shea J. O. Neill Supply Co. Stafford Furniture Co. Pacific Oil Company Oliver M. Cherry Gamache Trucking Co. Anonymous Radio Station WALE Callan Construction Company Dr; Morris Feresten R. B. Negus Lumber Co. . Sullivan's of FaIl River and Hyannis Lecomte's Dairy William T. Manning Co., Inc. Ashworth Brothers, Inc. Mrs. Rose Hurley Sherry & Medeiros Corp. $75 • Mr. & Mrs. Thomas J. Hudner Mr. & Mrs. Harold S. R. Buf­ tinton $62.50 Fall River People's Coopera­ tive Bank ' $50

:

Mr. & Mrs. FrancisE. Sullivatl Mt. St. Mary Academy Alum­ nae

Mrs. Katherine Crosson Poirier BuiCk, Inc. Letendre & Boule Wholesale Grocers . William Archard & Son .:Mr. Harry Gottlieb Chorlton Foundry In memory of Francis B. Fal'­ rell Daughters of Isabella Assump:" tion Circle No. 74 Newport Finishing Knights of Columbus, Bishop James E. Cassidy Council, 3669 John. F. Stafford. Insurance Agency William Stang Assembly Dr. Arthur K. Smith Samuel Leviten $35 Mr. James P. Hart Richard Morgan Thompson $25 Lavoie's Jewelers John W. Cain & Son Fall River Permanent Fire­ men's Benefit Association F. W .. Woolworth Co. Wilbur's Earnshaw's Sandwich Shop North Swansea Lumber Professional Pharmacy Grand Central Market

$500 & Barton Foundation,

Ine.

$100

Cliff Heights Nursing Home Joseph McCormick Cliff Lawn Nursing Home St. Vincent de Paul - st. Cliff Manor Nursing Home Mary's Conference Cliff Haven Nursing & Con­ Mulhern's Pharmacy valescent Home Babbitt & Simmons Kerr Mill Bargain Center, Inc. James E. Miles Insurance Co. Connors Travel & Insurance Frank J. Smith Agency

Charles R. Galligan Odias Dumont

George Sanford Hutchinson's Art Shop

Miss Mary C. O'Brien Fall River Glass Company

Knights of Columbus No. 82 Dr. Davis S. Greer

$75

Ralph Keyes

Dr. Theodore Thayer

Gale Ford Inc.

Goodnow's

Motel Somerset Inc.

$5C Joseph A. Bowen Company

Nu-Brite Chemical Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Abbott

Stone Charitable Fund Congdon & Carpenter Co.

Armor Bronze & Silver Co. Riveredge Printers Inc.

Inc. Strand Theater

McCabe Sand & Gravel Dr. Alfred J. Brodeur New Process Twist Drill Nira Warehouse Mart, Ins. Mrs. Edward O'Brien Tyrrells' Market Memorial to Edward & Isabell August Badwey & Sons Murby Riveredge Printers, Inc. $35 Burke's Inc. A Friend EXAMINES FOUNDER~S COFFIN: The coffin of the Burke Realty, Inc. $30 founder of St. Augustine, Fla., oldest city in the U.S.• is Elmer C. Slater Eureka ManUfacturing Co. attracting new interest as the Florida city prepares to Thomas J. Ashton & Son $25

Dr. Harry Cooperstein celebrate its 400th anniversary in 1965. Father Michael Carpenters Union

Dr./Ernest M. Fell . V. Gannon, director of the Mission of Nombre de Dios, is Edward Cooperstein

Dr. Fra,nk L. Cqllins Mt. Hope Machinery 00.

shown examining the headboard and coffin of Don Pedro Arrow Neon Sign Co., Inc. J. R. Tallman Insurance Menendez de Aviles, Spanish founder of the mission in Emma & Joseph A. Parks Sol K. Berk 1565. NC Photo. $20 Mr. William Hurley Jr. Venturini Brothers Bristol County Radio . Sullivan's Motor Sales Edward T. & Grace E. O'Keefe John P. Slade & Son Williams Lumber Co., Inc• Nelson R. Cherry . Paragon Gear Works, Inc. Dr. RichardH. Fitton Jr. Unda's Bus Service John's Shoe Store, Ray's Auto Eagan's Package Store Radiator Works, Dr. George J. Dr. Samuel L. Poplack Bounakes, Engine Service' & $20

WASHINGTON (NC) Five is affiliated with the NCWC de­ Supply, Inc., Francis B. Leary Dolan Funeral Home

million Catholic young people partment. The young people are $15 Wood Specialties Co.

James J .. Murphy Insurance throughout the nation a,re ex:" .expected to assist at Mass, re­ Staples Coal Co.

'pected to participate in the ceive Holy Communion and Agency Inc. $15

seventh annual National Youth spend some time privately be­ Pleasant Super Market Gus's Grille

Adoration Day observance June fore the Blessed' Sacrament Joseph A. Cohen, Mrs. Edward $10

2, Pentecost Sunday. during the observance. T. Murphy Dr. M. Cooperstein, Holliston Other intentions listed ask for T. Murphy R. G. Hovinard Msgr. Frederick J. Stevenson, Mills Inc., Frederick Reilly prayers to the Holy Spirit that Rose Motor Sales, Tanes & Funeral Home, Inc.

director of the Youth Depart­ $10

ment, National Catholic Welfare Catholic youth will receive Sons. A. A. Plante & Son, J. J. New­ Conference, said the youths are guidance to know the truth and Dr. Hamilton Wood Jr., Wool­ obtain courage to follow it, and worth's, Bristol Pharmacy Inc.• berry & Co., Bridgeman Lumber being asked to remember a that youth be infused with re­ Co., Daughters of Isabella St. special intention of the observ­ Russell Motors Inc., Joseph verential awe of Divinity, which Reilly. Patrick's Circle. ance and "to pray that the Di­ Hat Rack, Main Drug Inc., G. vine Spirit assist and guide the is the beginning of wisdom. ~illside ClUb, Comfi-Coil Inc., M. Haffards Co., Liberty Loan Fat her s of the Ecumenical "In this time of unusual stress MIler Gannon, Louis Cardin, & Realty .Co. Inc., Ormerod's Council in that the light and upon youth's moral resources," Gertrude C. Hartney. Dairy. strength of the Gospel may even Msgr. Stevenson said, "it is Dr. E. L. Latimer, Mandigo Baker Tractor Corp., AP Con. more widely influence human especially fitting that Youth Sand & Gravel Inc., Taunton struction Corp.' Dr. Bernard society." Adoration Day's intentions con­ Flower StUdio, Olson's Home of Weiser, Champion Paper Box The observance is sponsored cern so specifically the spiritual Flowers, Bonnie Brook Corp. Inc., Acme Refrigeration by the National Catholic Youth foundations of our YQung Catho­ East Taunton Social Club Co Co. • Organization Federation, which lics." A. Hack & Sons, Miller & Wil­ John F. Oator Insurance, Cen. liams Ice Corp., F. B. Rogers Sil­ tral Lunch, Jan Pietraszek In­ B. A. McDonald Express Co., ver Co., George E. Williams & $40 surance, Eatwell Provision Inc., Son, L. G. Beers Co., Hickery Saltzman's Men's Stores Attleboro Printing & Emboss­ Royal Store. Diner. ing Co., Inc. $12 Chauffeurs, Teamsters & Help­ $30 L. H. Cooper

ers Local No. 256, Atty Alfred W. R. Dunlap Co., Ine.

$10

S. Sherwin, Mulveny's Phar­ Demers Brothers

O. E. Cameron & Son, Ine: ~ Electrical macy, 'Somerset Package Store, $25 The Knopby Krafters Inc., Lafayette Shoe Store. Contractors St. John's Women's Guild Mack Miller Candle Co., Charles Gemco International Corp., Connelly Gold Stamping Co. E. Willis Insurance, Bowen Bros. Gell Motor Sales, Inc., Mell State Line General Scrap Co.. Electric Co., Ripley & Gowen Co. Jewelry Company, Joseph Na­ Inc. Larson Tool & Stamping Co. deau & Sons, Bedford Manufac­ Pelletier's Automotive Service Milady's, Branaghan's Beaut~ . turing Corp. M. J. Wall Co.

Shop, Gordon M. MacKinnon In­ Vets Safe-T-Cab Association Foster Metal Products

surance, Sweet Manufacturing Isadore Settlow Co., Mrs. E. Lat~ Attleboro Sun PUblishing Co., Co. . ham, Mrs. Alice Hennessey, Jo­ Inc. Morse Andrews Co., Hank's seph F. Sullivan ' 944 County St• Atherton Furniture Co. Cleaning Co., London's Inc., . Elizabe~h Ferreira, Delia Mc­ New Bedford. W. E. Richards Co.

Ashley's Drug Store, Alfred's Ginn, Mary Nelligan, Eliza'beth The Arteraft Co., Inc.

Beauty Salon Ryan, Mr. & Mrs. John Cavan­ Reynolds & Markman Inc.

augh. Anson Motors, Inc.

Rosella. V. Tuite, Abel Cyr, Charles Thomae & Son, Inc.

Elizabeth McCarthy, Martha T. Plastic Craft Novelty Co.

Kearns. $20

~

Attleboro Motor Sales .

$15 , $125 FREE/KIT Setld IS ...11 _pon fo, FREE saft- : 30hn G. Walsh Co.ntracting First National Bank \.E11ERS \ II,-mall . forllli ... Htaill • liartilll • B1"9Wns, R. F. Simmons Co.. Attleboto Trust Company

eo.

Adoration Day June 2

Expect Five Million Youth To Participate In National Observance

~~p

:(".

'#T..(;

~4t •

SAVE-BY-MAIL

..........................

Attleboro $100

St. Vincent de Paul Conference -St. John's Church Swank, Inc. Sadler Brothers, Ine. . Harry· J ..Boardman Insurance Agency, Ine. Shields, Inc. . W. H. Riley & Son, Ine. Massachusetts Electric Co. L. G. Balfour Company $75 Mr. & Mrs. Pab'ick J. Duffy Leach & Garner Co. $60

Conlon &. Donnelly

Saart Bros. Co.

$50 Bibeault Pharmacy, Inc. Carey Brothers Apco Mossberg Zip's Package Store Bellavance, Inc. Alcazaba Circle Daughters of Isabella

l

Williams funeral Home

g_.~ st. • 110.

EST. 1870

1 Washington Square NEW BEDFORD Reg. Funeral Director and Embalmer PRIVATE PARKING AREA TEL. WY 6-8098

DOLAN Funeral Home 123 Broadway

TAUNTON VA 4-5000

.$

.~

__

•• •

C~ •. ......................... :

regUI~r401­

Earn the highest rate on savings with each account insured safe by an agency of the U.S. Govt. Resources over

70

CURRENT RATE

$24,000,000

FIRST FEDERAL SAVINGS

OF FALL RIVER

HOME OFFICE 1 North Main St., cor. Bedford - Open Fri. Eve 'till 8 SOMERSET OFFICE 149 G.A.R. Highway, Route 6

••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••


Special Gifts

North· Attleboro

$1,000 Mr. & Mrs.. Raymond Lambert $750 leweled Cross Co., Inc. $500 The Bernard J. Doyle Family $125 Mr. & Mrs.· Joseph Wright $100 Joe Curtis Real Estate Agency Margaret Curtis Agency 'Oscar Hilman & Sons Westcott Construction C<t. Nelson Gulski Union St. Jean Baptiste d' Amerique - Conseil Duvernay No. 42 W. H. Riley & SOf/., Inc.. $75 Sperry-DeBlois, Inc. Catholic Women's Club $50 -Interboro Laundry, Ine. Thomas P. McDonough Coun­ cil No. 330 Reeve's Drug, Inc. ·x Wrigh,t Chevrolet Co., Inc. Donley Mfg. Co. North End Social Club Dl·. Domenic E. Leco The Mason Box Ca. Pete's Barber Shop $4t North Attleboro Foundry Co.. Inc. $3fl

Swanzey Tool C<t.

·$%5 Dr. Henry R. Bedard Dr. Robert G. Bedard Clover Super Market Cyo-Sacred Heart ChuFch lII~Grth Attleboro Coal Co. McNally's Package St6re The Rome Schofield Hardware C<t., Ine. $20

John R. Blackinton

H. F. Barrows Ce.

Frenchie's Service Stal:tOfl

Metal Spin-Craft, Inc.

Webster Co.

Robinson Electric

$1!i First Communion Cla8$ 1963 -Sacred Heart School . The W. T. Whalen Engineering Company A. Lacasse & Sons Als Radio & Television Service $12.5. North Attleboro Gas Co.

$10'. Dr. Isadore Altman, B & J iewelry Company Inc., Bright­ Top Inc., Alphonse J. Dian, Falls Athletic Club. Dr. Robert E. Fitzgerald, Fon. taine & Sons, Fran's Dairy Bar, Hindle's Auto Electric, 'Johnson Brush Co. LaFratta's Grocery Store, Mucker's Delivery Service, Ed­ ward G. Lambert Insurance Agency, Snow White Laundry ,Inc. Boston Coat & Dress Co., Mac­ Donald's Mobile Homes Inc., North Washington Street Ga­ rage, Riley Bros. Lumber Co. Inc., Madeleine G. Struck, Bur­ ger Chef. Bead Co., Bill's Cleaning Serv­ ice, Emblem Club No. 264, Greve's Grill, John L. Lifrate. George E. Landry, Raymond 1. Landry, Joseph F. Miconni Jr., Morel Construnction Co., Suvall & Sons Inc. Attys. Armstrong & Pollis; Succursale Ste. Jeanne d'Arc No. 174--Societe l'Assomption, Dr. Kenneth A. Atwill, Atty; Charles P. Mason. Walter H. Murphy, Norm's Gulf Service, John J. Oldham, Thibeault Mobile Homes, Watch. bands Inc., White Birch Motel. Joseph E. Dias, Dor-Will Co., Fred E. Shepard & Son, Edward E. Sujdak, Raymond P. Tousig­ nant

Six English Students Walk to Holy Land LONDON (NC)-A group of English students plan to spend the Summer walking to Jerusa­ lem and back, it was announced here. The party of about six Catho­ lics, all from the town of Black­ pool in Lancashire, set off last Friday. Apart from crossing the English Channel by boat, they hope to make the whole journey of about 3,000 miles each wa,. oa fool

New Bedford

THE ANCHORThurs., May 23, 1963

$1,00' First Safe Deposit National Bank $500 New Bedford Institution far Savings $250 Sequin & Caron, Inc. •

Prelate Asserts Fatima Message Taking Effect .

not

LISBON (NC) - Arcadio Cardinal Larraona, C.M.F.• Prefect of the Sacred Con. gregation of Rites, told

Seguin Truck Body Builders $150 New Bedford Five Cent Sav­ ings Bank $100 Daughters of Isabella- Hya­ cinth Circle No. 71 New Bedford & Actl,,"'~o~ Co­ operative Bank Dahill Co. $'7$

Acushnet Fish Corp:

$57 .. Sacred Heart Home Residents $51 Brockton Public Market Arlan's Department StOl'e Richard· Gonsalves Gulf Hill Dairy, Inc. Ernest J. Flood . $35 Building Materials, Inc.

$30 Browne Pharmacy, Inc. $25 Brewery Workers LOcal No. 197 Local No. 899, UAW, AFL-CIO Herman's Liquor Store Guy's Pharmacy Kay Jewelry Co. Brodeur Machine Co., Ine. Zeiterion Realty Corp. Local No. 168, UAW, AFL-CIO Bricklayers, Mason & Plas­ terers Union No.3!} Peoples Super Market Atty. Jack London Plumbers Supply Co. Atty. Foster R. 'Herman Paragon Travel Agency Damien Council- Knights of Columbus Fibre Leather Mfg. Co. Dr. & Mrs. Arthur Motta Star Fillet Co., Inc. . Jay & Bee Fillet C<t. $20 Dr. Milton T. MacDonald Elco Dress Co., Inc. Gollis Guilherme M. Luiz & Co., H.V. Sowle Florist. Enterpr"ise Stores Crystal Ice Co" Inc. $15 Smith Mills Pharmacy ·Local No. 377, ACWA, AFL­ CIO, M & K Coffee House, Travers· Package Store, Smith Mills Pharmacy. $10 Dr. Harold Burger, Davidson'. Pork Products, Sealtest Ice Cream Co., M. F. Avila, Perl')" Liquor Store, Inc. . Archie's Motor Trans. Co., Oliver Sportswear Co., Correia & Sons, John J. Ryan, In mem­ ory of Catherine Pinnington, Catherine Teeney. Dr. Franklyn BerrYtN. B. Lin_ gJ,lica Co., Daily News Publish. ing Co., John S. Dunn, Everett H. Corson, Dr. K. G. Yankoup­ olus. Dr. William W. Nelson, Dr. John . D. Barnes, Sam's Meat Market, Calvin Clothing Co., Adams & Adams. My Package Store, Loretta Hat Shop, Barnet & Barnet, Ancient Order of Hibernians Division No.9, Max Levovsky. . Nathaniel Lipton,' Waitt· & Scully, Inc. Tripp & Taber. E. C. Sherman & Co., Dr. Allen B. Stimson, Raymond McK Mit­ chell, Oxford Pharmacy, Law­ rence B. Maxfield. Gem Fillet Co., Inc. New Bed­ ford Tire Service, Denmike Corp. Mass. Catholic Order of Forest­ ers, St. Eulalia Court No. 164

WHITE HOUSE TOUR: Associated Alumnae of the Schools of the Religious of the Sacred Heart held a con­ vention in Washington and toured the White House as the President's guests. Mr. Kennedy's mother, three sisters and two sisters-in-law are Sacred Heart alumnae. Above, left to right, Mrs..Stephen Smith, sister of the President, Mrs. Robert J. Coffey, outgoing Alumnae President, and new Alumnae President Mrs. Julien J. Caestecker. NCPhoto.

It's An Old Story Nothing New for Kennedy to Have Graduates Of Religious of Sacred Heart Schools· ~round WASHI!Io~TON (NC)-Presl­ dent Kennedy surprised alumnae of schools of the Religious of the Sacred Heart by unexpectedfly appearing to greet them during a White House tour. Noting that his mother, three sisters and two sisters-in-law were Sacred Heart graduates, the President joked that he was used to having alumnae around but never as many at one time. Some 600 delegates to the 14th biennial conference of the Asso­ ciated Alumnae of the Sacred Heart were touring the White House when Mr. Kennedy sud. denly walked out of a side door as the women were filing out of the Executive Mansion's State Dining Room. Countrywide Gatherin~ The President said he hoped the White House would give the women a greater appreciation of their country's history as it had given him. Mrs. Stephen Smith, the Pres­ ident's sister Jean, was hostess to the delegates. She stood in for. Mrs. Edward Kennedy who suffered a miscarriage two days before the tour.. During their conference, the alumnae, joined by the mother

New York Too Fa~ For Holy Father VATICAN CITY (NC) - The president ()f the 1964 New York World's Fair invited Pope John to visit the fair, but '!be Pope ~e­ plied that it's too far for him to go, even QY air.. Fair president Robert Moses extended his invitation during an audience he and fair vice­ president Charles Poletti had with the Pope. Moses quoted Pope John as saying he had no objections 110 traveling by air, but ~he trip to the fair would be too long.

Recomends Summer Studies for Priests Asks Officials Face LA CROSSE (NC) - Urging Unemployment Fact priests of his diocese to keep abreast of the "new thinking" in the Church, Bishop John P. Treacy, of La Crosse announced diocese will pay half the cost up to $50 for priests who wish to attend Summer seminars and institutes. The Bishop noted courses are being held at a number of uni­ versities and seminaries through­ out the United States this Sum­ mer. He said priests may take from two to five days additional vacation to fit a study pIa&.

11

BATON ROUGE (NC) - The secretary of the National Con­ ference of Catholic Charities charged here in Louisiana that the U. S. has not faced the facta about unemployment. Msgr. Raymond J. Gallagher said the U.S. has not "engineered our research findings into oper­ ations that would deal with the fact that unemployment today will be of prolonged variety and that something more than a aup­ por~ check ia indicated.­

superiors· of aU 31 Sacred Heart establishments in the United States, also attended a special Mass at the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception where Msgr, Thomas J. Grady, shrine director, told ·them their first obligation of the 'emerging layman" in the Church is toward a deeper spiritual life.

nearly half a million pilgrims that the Blessed Virgin's mes­ sage here 46 years ago is taking effect. "Fatima· is known the world • over for its spirit of penance and prayer. It is now a leading cen. ter of spirituality as is witnessed by an increasing number of no­ vitiates and religious houses,". he said. Cardinal Larraona presided at ceremonies marking the 46th an_ niversary of the first of six ap­ pearances of the Blessed Virgin here to three children: Lucia dOil Santos, Francisco Marto and his sister Jacinta ..Francisco died in 1919 and .Jacinta died the follow­ ing year. Lucia is a Carmelite nun in Coimbra, Portugal. The Fatima shrine realizes the Gospel message, the Cardinal said. He added that he hopes the shrine will keep its primitive spirit· intal=t. Historic Year "1917 was a decisive and his­ toric year, ·both politically and religiously," he said. "As revet­ lutionary doctrines spread all over the world during the First World War and brought new di­ visions and wars, Our Lady ap­ peared here to remind us that God chose her maternal heart as a symbol of His everlasting mercy. "God is not only a Father. Through Mary, He shows Hi. infinite maternity." Mary's spiritual mot~erhoo<l stems from the mysteries of the Inc~rnation.and the Sacrifice of . Calvary, he said.

Example and Prayer "Some Catholics with special talents or training may be called upon to help in the external government of the Church or to help direct educational or mis­ sionary· activities; but many will not," Msgr. Grady said. "Every Catholic will be called upon to influence those around him by example and prayer. But especially every Catholic will be called upon for a deeper in. terior life," he added.

Agency Helps Flood Victims in Africa . NEW YORK (NC)-Catholic Relief Services-National Catho­ lic Welfare Conference, together with the Agency for Interna­ .tional DevelopI!lent, has made available foodstuffs to aid flood .victims in Burundi, Africa. Four thousand people of the Ruzizi Plain section of that country have been displaced·be. cause of the floods, according to a report received at CRS-NCWC headquarters here fr·()m R. A . Dumas, 'CBS program director in Usumbura, a capital of Burundi.

Clerics Protest Ban on Negroes OKLAHOMA CITY (NC)­ Barring of Negroes from the lo­ cal YMCA and other facilities has drawn sharp protests from Catholic and Protestant spokes­ men. Bishop Victor J. Reed of Okla­ homa City-Tulsa said "I con­ demn racism in all its forms." He expregsed the hope that the "many" segregated establish­ ments in the state will "open their doors to all those willing to patronize them." Protest' statements also oame from EpiscOpal Bishop Chilton Powell and Rev. EarI Kragness, executive secretary of the Okla· homa Council of Churches. Negroes briefly picketed the downtown YMCA after two vis­ iting Negro youths were refused admission. Coinciding with the . YMCA incident was the barring of Ne~o members of the Okla­ homa Ladies Bar Auxiliary-an association of lawyers' wives-­ from a local club and a cafeteria.

M-K Restaurant I i

featuring

''Th. Gaslight Room" Ideal for Communion Break­ fub. Organization Beque"

Southeastern Massachusetts'

Largest Independent ChAin

" ' Acushnet Ave. Ne. Bedford Can WYman 2-1703

We Give Gold Bond Stamps'

,

lOBSTER Bringing lARGE

BO~TS

10 BIG STORES

ARE'COMING

LIVE Maclean's Sea Foods UNION WHARF, FAIRHAVEN


12

Charity R'ebirth Eases Tensions

THE ANCHOR-

Thurs., May 23, 1963

Attleboro

ROCKVILLE CENTRE (1Io"'C) -A "rebirth of charity in the hearts of men" has given rise to an easing of tensicns both in this country and throughout the world, Bishop' Walter P. Kellen­ bergof Rockville Centre said here on Long Island. The Bishop addressed some 900 persons at the "Bishop's Din_ ner" opening the annual drive in behalf of Catholic Charities in the diocese. Bishop Kellenberg said this year's campaign siogan, "Chal'ity Unites All," is appropriate be­ cause "a new, fresh wind is blowing over this land and around the world" and "blowing away some of the harsh vapors and the voices of anger." The Bishop said Pope John. is the source of this new attitude. "Even the masters of the Krem. lin have grudgingly admitted that he has sounded a call to the world which has found re­ sponse in the hearts of all mer> .. he stated.

ST. JOHN'S

$250

Mr. & Mrs. James A. Carey

$100 Fred Bullock Dr. & Mrs. Vincent O'Donnelt $75 Rev. Edward A. Rausch $30 Mr. &: Mrs. J. Howard Lynch $25 Malvina A. Hilkern $24

Mr. & Mrs. Gerald S. Reilly

$20

Mr. & Mrs. Edward Connors,

Mrs. Walter Kendall, Mr. & Mrs.

Basil Mulligan, Mrs. James

O'Neil

Mr. & Mrs. John Aylward, Mr. &: Mrs. George Gibb, Mr. & Mrs. Bernard Lofgren $16

Mr. &: Mrs. Edward Scott

$15

Dr. & Mrs. Edward Fontneau, Mr. & Mrs.' Bernard Lofgren, Miss Celestine Whalen ' Mr. &: Mrs. Charles T. O'Nei1, Mrs. 'Ismay Sharkey, Charles Stobbs $10 . Mrs. Marie Adams, Mrs. Anne Adel, Kenneth Bennett, ¥.r. &; Mrs. Horace Benson, Thomas Boisclair ' Mr. & Mrs. John Boyle, Mr. &: Mrs. O. E. Cameron Jr., Mr. & Mrs. George Carey, Mr. &: Mrs. Herbert Clegg, Mr. & Mrs. Wil­ liam .clinton , ,. Mr. &: Mrs. Norman, Cloutier, ~r. &: Mrs. Joseph Colombo, Ar­ thur F. C()nnelly, Gladys .con­ , nelly, ?yIr. & Mrs,.Jo1)n CO,tter :Mr. & Mrs. Richard Cronan, ' Mr. &: Mrs; Edward Dowdall, Mr. &: Mrs. Peter Duffy, Claire Field Mrs. Elmer' Fition' "' . Mr. & Mrs. Lawrence Fitton, John Field, Mr. & Mrs. Emil Foucault, Mr. & Mrs. Christopher Gaboury, Mr. & Mrs., Anthony Garafano Mary Gilroy, Mr. & Mrs. Frank Gouveia, Mr. &: Mrs. Robert Goy­ ette, Clifford Grube, Mrs. Ray­ mond Haley Mrs. Ralph Hudson, Miss Lil­ lian Imhofaf, Mr. & Mrs. Ray­ mond Jacques, Mrs. Shirley Jaroz, Mr. & Mrs. Omer Jette Mr. & Mrs. Emil Joseph, Mr. Ii:. Mrs. Ernest Jost Sr., Mr. & Mrs John L. Kane, Mr. & Mrs. Ralph Keegan, ,Marilyn Larmay 'Mr. & Mrs. Walter Leach, Mr.

&: Mrs. Elmer Lee, Miss Loretta

'Maland, Mr. & Mrs. Edmund Mc­

Cracken, Mr. 8r- Mrs. Edward Mc­

Kay

'Mr. &: Mrs. Joseph McNally, :¥r. &: Mrs. Ernest Anderson, Mr.

&: Mrs. Donald Antaya, Mr. &

Mrs. John Antaya, Mrs. Winston

Berg, "

, Helen Bettenrourt, Mr. &: Mrs. Thomas Blake, Mr. & Mrs. Mau­ rice Cameron, Mr. & Mrs. Gilbert Carvalho, Beatrice Car'ney , Gertrude Carney, Mr. & Mrs. George Cloutier, Lawrence Cof-' fey, Nabby Coffey, Mr. & Mrs.' ,Richard Colette Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Cox, Mar­ jorie Crowley, Mrs. Wilton Dale, Mrs. Grace Davignon,' Ernest W.' Doyle Mr. & Mrs: Lorenzo DUPont, Mr. & Mrs. George Fredette, Mr. &: Mrs. Saul Gaudreau, Mrs. Catherine Gethro, Clement Jef­ fers Mr. &: Mrs. William Jenkins, Mr. & Mrs. Gerard Jodoin, Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Kelley, Mr. & Mrs. John KUdrnac, Mr. & Mrs. Edward Maher Mr. & Mrs. Ernest Marques, Mr. & Mrs. James Martins, Mr. & Mrs. ,John Mutch, Miss Carol Ann McGinn;.Miss ,Coleen McGinri Ellen Nitso, Mr. ·&,Mrs. Joseph F. Perry, Mr. & Mrs. John Pick­ 'ering, John Pickering Jr., Mr. & Mrs. William Reilly Mr. & Mrs. Paul Rixon, Mrs.' James Robertson, l\IIr.' & Mrl!. Joseph Ryan, Mr. &:' ivrr~. James A. Vahey, Mr. & ~Sl Walter Young , , Mr. & Mrs. Joseph'Motin, Har­ 'old Mulligan, Mr. &'~:James Murray, Mt:s. Roy Nels!>n Mrs. John Nihan &,' Family, ,Mrs. Earl Niquette, .Mr; & Mrs. Charles Nolan, Alyce'O'Keefe, Mr. & Mrs. Alvaro Oliveira ' Mr. & Mrs. john Pedro, Mr. &: Mrs. William Perry, Mrs. GeQr,e

ST. MARY

HONOR BLIND NUN-TEACHER: A Dominican nun who was born blind, 1?ut has devoted her life to the instruetion of blind children for 60 years, will receive an hon­ orary degree from Fordham University in New York,. Sister Mary Benigna, shown above with a group of her students at Lavelle Scho~l for the Blind in the Bro~x, .has specialized' in the teaching of :Braille to the very young and as a teacher of mUSIC smce 1904.

Problem Makirl9 Passive Catholics Active Church's Main Task, Says Belgium Cardinal NOTRE DAME (NC) - Bel­ gium's Leo Cardinal Suenens be­ lieves the main.. problem. facing the Church is "to make passive Catholics active." 'Catholics have no right, he said', "'simply to accept their faith, but must give it to others." Speaking at the University of Notre Dame convocation, the Archbishop of Malines-Brussels said Christians havEi a duty "to know God and to make Him known, to love God and to make Him loved, to serve God and to

make Him served." Pope of Universe Cardinal Suenens, who 're­ c4~ived an - honorary doctor of b;ws degree, once was a hostage slated for execution by the nazis. He 'was cited as "a valorous fighter and almost martyr for truth, freedom and justice. "1100 man alive," the citation declared, "better understands the meaning, force and charity" of Pope John's recent peace ency­ clical Pacem in Terris. The Belgian Cardinal, who

spoke on the encyclical earlier at the United Nations headquar­ ters in New York, des~ribed it. as "an open letter from the Pop~ to the universe." Council Impact The U.N. he said, is the "first step" toward peace and order in the world, "but we must go fur. ther." He pictured the Pope as serene despite the monumental prob­ lems facing the world and his own burdens. He quoted Pope John as saying: "Some people prefer to complicate simple things; I prefer to simplify com. piicated things." ,

$300 Mrs. Pierre Lonsbury $250 Agostini Construction Co. $100 Edgar pyson $75 St. Vincent de Paul Society $50 ' 'Holy Name Society $30 . Mr. &: MrS. William J. Crow:' ley Jr. $25

Mr. & Mrs. Edward Kiely ,Seekonk Council No. 5108 K of C , $20 Mr. &: Mrs., Donald Blake, Mr. & Mrs. ·C. F. Getsinger, Mr. & Mrs. Edward Murray. $10 Mr. & Mrs. Daniel Bevilaqua, Mi:. & Mrs. Alfred Caouette, Mr. &' Mrs. Martin Carr. Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Duffy, Mrs. Thomas Freeman. Mr. & Mrs. Walter Holcomb, Mr. & Mrs. Alcide HOUle, Marie Kirouac, Mr. & Mrs. Francis Laushway, Katherine R. Mc~ Cusker. Mr, & Mrs. James McKearney Jr., Mr. & Mrs. Henry Nesbitt, Mr. & Mrs. Chris. Poulos, Mr.. & Mrs. Melvin Young, ·Raymond Stebenne. Mr. & Mrs. William Tansey, Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Velardo, Mrs. Mary Wood, Mr. & Mrs. Francis Goggin, 'Mr. & Mrs. William'

ST. THERESA

Price, Mr. & Mrs. Glenn Rey­ nolds

$200 Alice Robinson, E:leanor Rob­ St. Vincent de Paul Society Cardinal Suenens termed the insofi, In memory of John E. $100 Second Vatican Council "one of Robinson, In memory of Harold Donald Boardman the most important councils in Robinson, Mrs. Russell Robinson , history:" It is not, he said, justa $50 Mr. & Mrs. George Robitaille, spectacular meeting of prelates Holy Name Society Mrs. Blanche Ronco, Salvatore from throughout the world, but , $35 Salvaggio, Zita Simms, Mr. &: rather a "meeting of bishop~ Mrs. Mary Grady Mrs. Raymond Simoneau with the Holy Spirit." , $25 Mr. & Mrs. Owen Smith'; Mrs. ~~nn., Ja,mes Burke, : Through the Council, he em. ,Madeline Stone, Edward Tatro, , '$20, . Mr. & Mrs. Charles Taylor, Mr. p~asized, the C,hurCh is conduct­ . HOLY GHOST NeJson, Roy, William Healy;: ing a three:fold dialogue-with & Mrs. Fred Taylor nilbert Whitaker, Philip Morris , Mr. & Mrs. Pa$rick Walsh, Mr.' her children, with her separated" $25 . $15 . &: Mrs. William G. Weber, Mr. brethren and with the whole In memory of Rev. James A. 'Francis Gillan,' Vincent'An­ &' Mrs. George Wefers, Mr. & \\;orld. Its great~st impact wil(' Downey drews, Roy Langlois, Louis Des­ Mrs: Peter Wielicz)(o come after it adjourns and, will $10 Joarais, Linus Gignac be felt for perhaps a century, he' Mr. & Mrs. D. Augat, Mr. & " $10" -ST. STEPHEN

declared. Mrs. William 'Demers, Mr. & Mrs William Sharples, Rob e r t $100

William Fontaine, Mr. &: Mrs. The Belgian prelate, urged Uobson, Wilbrod Gravel, ,Donald Dodgeville Finishing Co:­

liobert Geddes ,Notrepame students to love nIanchette, James Hanley. $50

'Mr. & Mrs.J. ~elly,Mr. & their fellow men everywhere, to Sydney Bibby, Richard Mur­ 'Rev. Robert' W. Dowling

Mrs.' Frank Kenton, John King, ray, Normand Vachon, Anthony "go wherever ,Providence will $25 '

Mr. & Mrs., Francis Langevine, P,ut you, to make a bridge be­ Quaglia, 'Carl Bradshaw. , Caron Granit.,. Co.

Donald Pelletier tween man and man." , Donald, Harkins, V inc e n t Ladies of St. Ann's Sodality

Girard, Roger Benoit, Theodore C.Y.O. of St. Stephen's Decelles, Frank ,Dowgiala. ' Mr.. & Mrs. Club . Joseph Savoie, William La­ Children of Mary Sodality ST. BERNARD poiIlte, Charles Rozak, Raymond' Monast, Raymond Tanguay. Holy Name Sodality , $200 Gerard 'Lefrancois, Ernest St. Vachon, William O'Brien. Mr. & Mrs. Romeo Vanasse ,Mr. &: Mrs. Anthony Terpak !,'ierre, S i g m 0 n d Kaczowka, Edward Scullin, John Rankin, $15 . $25 Ralph Williams, Michael Pierini. l!:dward Mis, William Demers, Anderson Motors Mr. & JV(rs. Thomas Lynch , Theodore Meunier, John '$10 , George O'Brien. Assonet Sand & Gravel Co. Howard Tessier, William La­ P~'cker; Rene Gingras, Harvey Mrs. NaIda Daigle, Mr. & Mr!. $20 fond, Hubert Appleton, Thomas Rousseau, T'~lOmas Higgins. Edwin Marcoux, ,Andre Lade­ }.fr. &: Mrs.' Joseph Corey Maroney, Joseph Bieniecki. Maurice Cleary, C hal' 1 e s bauche, )\fro & Mrs. Joseph Ther­ $10

James Ney, Aldie Grenier, O'Connor, Joseph Vierra,' Earl iault, Mr. & 'Mrs. William Carter, , Mr. &: Mrs. Henry Nadeau, Mr.

Mr. &. Mrs. Edmond TetrE:ault, Bylv:a Messier, Emerald Leves-: Henry, Stanley Gavlick. &: 'Mrs. .Frl;lncis .J5:enney, Mr.

Clue, 'Hector Benoit. Mr. & Mrs. Gerard Daneau, Mr., Noel camirand," ThomasMc­ Harold Blake, Mr. & Mrs. Wil­

William Ree, William Lynch,' &. Mrs. George Boyd, Mr. & Mrs. Loughlin, T~oodore Bergeron. liam Simons, Mr. Thomas Terp'ak

]:>Ominick, Berardi, George Sen­ Roger Froment; Mr. & Mrs. ~ich­ Irving'Blais, Joseph Robichaud Anonymous no, Raymond 'Bourque. ardBelmore . Thomas ,Leedham Jr." Roger Mr. &' Mrs. George Lacroix,' 13ussiere, John Bloomfield, John Mr. '& Mrs. Jean Bergeron, Tim­ CAPE COD othy Wright, Marjorie Wright" l:.oonard; , Phillippe Bonneau, Mr. & Mrs.E~gene Roy Mr. &, George, Oldham. , 'RolandCote, Louis Thibodeau,', Mrs., George Laliberte' 19qward Migneault, JohiJ. Mor,i­ ,ST. JOSEPH arty ·'Jr., Arthur Eaton. William Cauley, Will i am, $75 St. Vincent de Paul Conference l::;lennon, Mrs., Aloysius Bleas­ of St. JOseph's' Parish' ' dele" James Martill, Daniel Ma­ $10 ' liloney. ' ,Joseph Sears, James, Kelly, ConseH Jeanne D'Arc, No. 263­ Albert Langlois, Kenneth Steele, '

of 1'Union st. Jean-Baptiste Mr. & Mrs; Armand Doucette, Albano Silva.

Aft\~LE _,PA~KI.Nc; . Vincent Keane, Ray m 0 n d Paul Legere;' Mr. &: Mrs. Ed­ ward Legere " '.., ';Duc:los, Hor~ve, Lacroix; ·¥v~nne,

Assonet

ON

,JOHN HINCKlEY' & SON CO.

BUILDING MATERIALS SPring 5-0700

49 YA'RMOUTH' RD. HYAN~IS

<

-<'

. '


THE ANCHORThurs., May 23, 1963

Attleboro ST. MARY

$100

13

Wins Chemistry Medal Award

l Friend $75 I!:va Morawski

$50

Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Mlcotll ~r. Cecile Brais James E. Rhilinger

George J. Thomas Jr. a Bos­ ton College senior majoring in chemistry, ,has been awarded a gold medal granted by tr~ New England Chapter of the Ameri­ can Institute of Chemists for ex­ cellence in his field. Son of Mr, & Mrs. George J. Thomas, 416 Rivet Street, New , Bedford, he has been a Dean's List honors student at the Jesuit university for the past four years. When he graduates in June he ,plans graduate studies at M.LT., where he was awarded a teach. ing assistanceship. He will be a ' candidate for a Ph.D. degree in physical chemistry. He won honorable mention in the national Woodrow. Wilson and National Science Foundation Fellowship comJ,)etition. , Before he began his studies at Boston College, he was an honor student at Holy Family High School.

$35 A Friend

$25 Harold L. Sumner Mr. & Mrs~ John Gaffney Mr. & Mrs. Francis Martir_ Mr. & Mrs. Raymond Hillman Henry L. Gendron Mr. & Mrs. Howard Morse Mr. & Mrs. Robert Gilmore Mr. & Mrs. James Cullen Edward McCrory

$20 Mr. & Mrs. Edward,Brown, Mr. & Mrs. John P. Pollis, Mr. & Mrs. Fred Thorpe, Mr. & Mrs. James Kearney, James MacDonald Mrs. Geraldine Caldwell, Mrs. Doris McGee, Jane Carley

$15 Mr. & Mrs. Francis Fitzpatrick, The Jensen Family, John Bren­ nan, Arthur Levesque, Mrs. Ed­ ward McCue Mr. &' Mrs. Robert Kelley, Leo Stevens Jr., Mrs. Edward Collin.

$12 Mr. & Mrs: John MeCarthy, Mr. & Mrs. 'Edward Brown

$10

. POPE RECEIVES PEACE PRIZE: Pope John receives the $160,000 Balzan Peace Prize at St. Pe~er's Basilica in the. Vatican from Giovanni Gronchi, president of the Balzan FoundatIon and former Italian' president. In the center is Msgr. Mario Nasalli Rocca di Cornegliano, papal chamberlain. NC Photo.

Robert Mullaney, George I're­ eourt, Mrs. E. Joyce, Mr. & Mrs. Daniel Cavanaugh, Mrs. Marshall Hammond.' " Mr. & Mrs. Gerald Doyle, Mr. & Mrs. Antonio COlletto, Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Cabral, Mr. & Mrs. VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope HenrY McCarthy, Mrs.' Sarah John has hailed the Church's Willersin, Mr. & Mrs. Lewis missionaries as "the real men of Sanford. ' peace" at an audienee with, na­ Mrs. Laure Henshaw,' tional direetors of three mis­ Eliza,beth Smith, Mrs: Catherine sionary aid organizations. Bowman, Mr. & Mrs. James L. . Speaking to representatives of Dever, Mr. & Mrs. John Ryman. the Pontifical Society for the' Mr. .& Mrs. George Auty, Mr. Propagation of the Faith, the & Mrs. Hedley Dupelle,' Mr. & Mrs. James T. Lund, Mr. & Mrs. Pontical Society of St. Peter the Anthony Megna, Harold White. Apostle and the Pontifical Mis­ Mr. & Mrs. John A. Devlin, sionary Union of the Clergy,' in:" Mr. & Mrs. Henry Collins, Mrs. cluding. Gregorio Car din a I 'Agagi'anian, Prefect of the Roland Provost, Mrs. Norman Garrigus, . Mr. & Mrs. Cha'rIes Sacred Congregation for the Propagation of the Faith, and W. Shumila. Mr. & Mrs. Paul Hinski, Joan Auxiliary B!shop Fulton J. Wright, Gladys Dillingham, Mr. Sheen of New York national di­ & Mrs. Harold Boyle, Mr. & reetor of the U.S. Society for' the Propaga~ion of the Faith, Mrs. Roaul Trepanier. P.ope John sald: ' Mr. & Mrs. Robert McKitchen, "We greet above all the mis­ Mr. & Mrs. F'rederick Paine" Mr. sionaries and their ,co-workers, &; Mrs. Joseph Lennon, Mr. & the real men of peace to whom Mrs. Rudolph Thibault, Mr. & is promised the Gospel's up­ Mrs. Harold Roderick. lifting beatitude - 'Blessed are ~r. & Mrs. William Paulausky, the peacemakers, for they shall Mr. & Mrs. Louis Lambert, Mrs. Ernestine Gagnon & Family, Mr. Mary & Margaret Doran. . & Mrs. Paul Henault, Mr. & . Mr. & Mrs. Ludger Guimond, :Mrs. Joseph Melanson. Vincent R. Petti, Mr. & Mrs. Gertrude O'Donnell &; Florence. Joseph Stanton, Mrs. Lauretta Ellis, Mr. & Mrs: .Leo Nolan" ~r. ,& Mrs. ,William Miller;' Lawlor, Mr:& Mrs. John Hig­ Eleanor Courtney. gins, Helen Donley. 'Kathleen Courtney, Mr. '&' Matilda Dailey, Gerald Bes­ sette, Mr. & Mrs. Edward La-' Mrs. Marcel Messier, Lillian Devlin, Mrs. Harriet Shaw, Mr. very, Mr. & Mrs. CaSmir Kapa'n­ ski, Mildred & Leonard Gilroy., & Mrs. William Veno. Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Burda, William Golden, Mrs; Ed­ mund Welch, Mr. & Mrs. Robert Donald Guthrie, Mr.' & Mrs. Croteau, Mr. & Mrs. Eugene Thomas Johnson, Mr. &: Mrs. Dorily Sarazin; Mr. & Mrs. ¥artha, Mary Costigan~ Mr. '" Mrs. William Varney, Frank Skawinski. Mr. & Mrs. ROnald Mollins, Mr. '" Mrs. Douglas Gaudette, Mr. '" Mrs. Philip Rushlow, Mrs. Kenneth Hill man, Margaret Regan, Mr. & Mrs. John Krebs, Ceeile Moore, Mr. & Mrs. Al­ Mary Regan. ' fred Landry. Mr. & Mrs. Robert Habershaw, Mr. & Mrs. Maxie Sarazin, Mrs. Rose Healey, Irene Smith, Mr. '" Mrs. Mario Roque, Mr. & Mrs. Homer O. Perreault, Mr. Mr. & Mrs~ Henry Riordan" Mr. & Mrs. John Nunes, Mr. & Mrs. & Mrs. Arthur Coggio. Mr. & Mrs. James Madden, Matthew Healey. Mr. & Mrs. Norman Bonneau, Mrs. Marion DePriest, Mr. & Mr. & Mrs. George Bullock, M'rs. Mrs. ~harles Masterson, Richard F. Michael Bodinski, Mr. & Mrs. Gaboury, Mr. & Mrs. Nathan ' Raymond Cassells, Mr. & Mrs. Phipps Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Howard E. Rioux Charles Barrs. Mr. & Mrs. John Magnani, Jr., Mr. & Mrs. PauIFo~tin, Mr. Mrs. Bernard Reddil~g, Mr" '" & Mrs. Louis' McA<h,uns, Mrs. Mrs. Morino Turinese, Mrs. Kasmir Wojciechowski. . Anna Woodward, Mrs. Marcella Stanford & Sandra Stanford. Alice D. Milot, The' Gayton ST. PATRICK Family, Charles Wilbee, Marion $30 Johnson, Mr. & Mrs. John V. The Dorsey Family , . $20 Bielecki. ' Mr. & Mrs. Thomas F:. Char­ . 'Mr. & ·Mrs. Gerald McNally Jr. ron, The Zaino Family, Mr. & $10 Mrs. Joseph Grimes, ~r. & Mrs. , Mary & Margaret ,Bu.tler Henri John Grimes, Mr. & Mrs. Wil.. Destremps. liam Donly. Mr. & Mrs. Roland ~Poir.jer, r OUR. LADY .

Mr. & Mrs. JosePh Klng, Mr. & OF THE' ASSUMPTION

Mrs. Paul Levesque; Mr;' & Mrs. ' $10

Thomas O'Donnell, Mr.' & Mrs. Dr. & Mrs. W. L. Moriarty,

Austin Butler. Ernest Buckley, Marie ·Levis,. . Mr. & Mrs. Peter Fermino, Mrs. Mena Barrows, Mr. & Mrs. C. Mr, '" Mrs. Henry Heintz, Mr. & ¥n.E\rwett ,Ca$Sidoy II FMlilJ. . Crawford Hollidge,.

Dighton ST. PETER

$200 ,~~.

,

Pope Hails Builders of, Brotherhood and I.ove

Mrs.

Somerset.

Osterville

"They are the ministers of Christ, the builders of an edifice which bears the standard of brotherhood and of love." ' The army of, "mission~ri~s of Jesus Christ who set forth on ' the roads of the world not to s",bjugate but to enlighten, not to divide the world among themselves into zones of Influ- . ence and economic interests but to serve," is an "incomparable spectacle," the Holy F'ather as­ serted. The Pope said that mission­ aries also represent the ideal of Christian unity in "the one and only holy, apostolic and catholic Church. The Seeond Vatican Ecumenical Council proposing before the world a stronger and more heartfelt desire for unity has placed and will place the foundations for an ever greater propagation of that ardent prayer of the Divine Saviour,

Acushnet' ST. FRANCIS XAVIER

,

$100"

.White's Far:n Dairy Ine.

'

$Z5' .Norman & Mrs. Smith $20 Anonymous'

Missionaries Are Real Men of Peace be called children of Crild.'

$11

(that all may be one), which must become' the profound and convinced concern of all the faithful." Pope John emphasized the de­ sire for unity "calls for renewed and, more intense prayers and for honesty of purpose. The grace of. God will do the rest, oyercommg every obstacle." Technology Triumphs , The Supreme Pontiff declared that the "vast horizon of mis­ sionary activity, which opens the eyes to the harbinger of new development, exalts and stirs Our hearts, and it is all the more V'<lst and significant, when con­ templated in the light of this, mission of peace which is per-, formed by the heralds of the Gospel for the real and lasting benefits of the missionary in­ stitutions."

Henry J. & Mrs. Keenan George & Mrs. Borges 'George & Mrs. Dutra

$10 Joaquim & Mrs. Medeiros, Frohman & Mrs. Anderson Mar­ garet Ba'rry, Paul & Mrs. Lasse~ Charles & Mrs. McKenna. ' ' ,Theodore & Mrs. Bouch~ George Lavigne. Wilir,ed & Mrs. Rhines, George & Mrs. Miguel, Frank & Mrs. Cash, Mrs. John Auger, Raymond' A. & Mrs. Glynn ' Clinton & Mrs. Rose, Allen & Mrs. Fanjoy, John & Mrs. Otis, Harold & Mrs. Mendoza

Chatham HOLY REDEEMER

$35

Mary Shanahan

$20

Mr. & Mrs. John Roderick

$1{,

Mr. & Mrs. Alfred Durkee

Robert McNeece

Pope John added that "We (missionaries and priests) carry out our duties, whieh transcend all heights, aU speeds, a'nd the' triumphs of teChnology, in a ,deeisive and confident effort to bring man closer to God and to penetrate social life with the' 1~aven of the holy GospeL"

NO JOB TOO BIG NONE TOO SMALL

SULLIVAN BROS.

$25 , Acushnet Saw Mills Company'

$10 Mr. & Mrs. Oscar Martin, Mr. & Mrs. Charles White, Mr. &' Mrs William Taylor, Mr. & Mrs. Al­ bert L'Heureux, Mr." & Mrs. Leon'ard Meredith Mr. & Mrs. 'Ernest Marmara's Mrs. Kenneth Shaw, Mauric~ Sylvain, Mr. & Mrs. George Piv'a Mrs. Omerine Ross .' Mr.&·,lV):;s. Stephen Sayles, Mr. & Mrs. Ernest D. Boisvert, Mr. & Mrs. Leo Cormier, Mr: & Mrs. Clifton A. Denault Jr. Mr. & Mrs Roger Payant, Mr. & 'Mrs. Chas. E. Gendron

William O'Reilly

PRINTER~

Haye You Had An ,Accident Recently?

Main OHic. and Plant LOWELL, MASS.

Whether the damage involved an automobile or a truck the place to call for price and workmanship it

T.tephon. Lowel' 458-6333 and 457-7500

Deschenes Auto Body

Auxitiary Planla BOSTON OCEANPORT, N. J. PAWTUrCKO, I. I.

1693 Pleasant St., Fat! River

24-Hour Wrecker Service

PENNY SALE

THURSDAY - JUNE 6 - 8:00 P.M.'

Sturtevant &

HQok.

&t.' " " - , - ,

Builders ,Supplies

Benefit of

SISIERS OF ST. DOROTHY VIl.LA-FATIMA NOVITIATE !;poQsored by The Villa Fatima Helpers and

The Knights of Columbus, Council 82

CYO Hall, 130 High· Street, ,Taunton

2343 Purchas. Str..t New Bedford'

WY 6-5661

LEARN SERVICING On ' 'Saturdays, practical' 1 'year courses startln« June 15.' Efficient placement service.'

NEW ENGLAND, TECHNtCAL

INSTITUTE OF R. L

18t Early St.,' Provo t6'7-'7'7tt.,

"Save With Safety"

at,

BEDFORD~ACUSHNET CO~OPERATIVE BANK

'NEW,

115 ,W.ILLIAM .ST.

, NEW.. BEDFORD, MASS.


14

North Attleboro

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River, Thurs.• May 23, 1963

New Bedford OUR LADY OF PERPETUAL HELP $!ot

Franeiscan Fathers O.F.M.Conv.

flO .Tankowski Family $25 Boc Family Mr. & Mrs. Andrew Banas Miss Evelyn Jeglinski in Memory of Frank & Rosalie Jeglinsky Ignacy Kaszym,ki Family $20 Mr. & Mrs. Zyggie Stankiewicz $1'7 Mr. & Mrs. Constantine Lef­ kowiez $15 Mr. & Mrs. Edward K. Da­ browski $12 Mr. & Mrs. William Menard Mr. & Mrs. Edwin Marnik $10 Mr. & Mrs. Wilfred Hebert, Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Baron, Mr. & Mrs. ConstantineJ Nowak, Mary Galus, Mr. & Mrs. Peter, Pastie · Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Michalski,

Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Gonet, Mr. &

Mrs. Norman Bourque. Mr. & Mrs. James Blackledge, Mr. & Mrs. John Janasiewi~~. Mr. & Mrs. Leo Thomas Jr., Mr. & Mrs. Frank B. Sylvia, Stanley Smiechowski, Bill Mi­ durski Miss· Josephine Roszkiewiez, Mrs. Mary Kwolik, Mr: "& Mrs. Edward Bobrowiecki, Mr. & Mrs. Henry Cembalisty, Mr. & Mrs. Harold S. Cameron Mr. & Mrs. Frank Midurski. Mr. & Mrs. Stanley Supczak, Mr. & Mrs. Theodore J. Dabrowski, Mr: & Mrs. Bruno Repeta, Mr. & Mrs. Boleslaus Arabasz Mr. & Mrs. Edward Jablonski, Mr. & Mrs. Henry Bartkiewicz, Mr. & Mrs. Lionel Dubois, Mr. & Mrs. Chester Ponichtera, Mr. & IIIrs. Casimir Smeka · Mr. & Mrs. Andrew Stefanik, Mr. & Mrs. Anthony Zerbonne, Mr. & Mrs. John Izdebski, Mrs. S. Olszowy, Mr. & Mrs. John Hemingway Mr. & Mrs. Ulric A. Benoit, ·Mr. & Mrs. Edward Ponichteni. Mr. & Mrs. Roger Demanche, Mr. & Mrs. Michael Jamilkowski, Mr. &; Mrs. Frank J. Rezendes· Mr. & Mrs. Thaddeus A. Irzyk, Mr. & Mrs. David Amaral, Mr. & Mrs. John M. Canto, Mr. & Mrs. Homer Mandeville, Mr. & MrS: Gilbert Sylvia ST. LAWRENCE

$100 Dr. & Mrs. Joseph Baldwin Dr. & Mrs. Joseph Buckley Mrs. Nora E. Kenney Mr. & Mrs. John B. O'Rourke Dr. & Mrs. Robert Small $50 Dr. Orrin Hall · Theresa. Ruth & 'John Harney 'Lt. Col. &; Mrs. Antonio J. Lawrence $25 Elizabeth Cassidy Annie Cummings Mr. & ·Mrs. Nelson DumaIne Dr. & Mrs. Robert Moura William .T. O'Brien $20 'Anna M. Brady, Mr. & Mrs. ·Alfred Coutu. Mrs. Catherine Hayes, Mrs. Dennis S. Maguire, Mr. & Mrs. Charles Reckords Mr. & Mrs. James A. Ryan, Mrs. Lois Sullivan $15 Mr. & Mrs. J. Everton, Mr. & : Mrs. Frank Manno, Mrs. Delia Smith, Mr. & Mrs. Peter Ward, Mary Winsper $12 Amedee J. Blanchet, Mr. & Mrs. J. J. 'Carr Jr., Mr. &; Mrs. Paul Gelinas, Walter Lalor · $10 Charles Balboni, Mr. &; Mrs. · Norman Bergeron, Mr.. &; Mrs. William J. Berthhold, Mr·. & Mrs. R. Carreira, Edward Clark Mr. & Mrs. John J. Costa, Mr. &: Mrs. Adrian Cote, Mr; & Mrs. Emory Cusson, H. T. Dahoney, Mr. & Mrs. John Dixon Mr. & Mrs. James Doyle, Mrs. Mary Edwards, Margaret Foley, Mr. & Mrs. Fred L. Fredette, t4r. & Mrs. Willis Goodwin George Harrington, Mr. & .. Mrs. Harold Holmes, Mrs. Anne E. Hooper, Mary Lou Horne, Mr. & Mrs. Robert Horne Mr. & Mrs. James Hunt, Mrs. Margaret Johnson, Mr. & Mrs. William King, Irene Knudsen.

John Kraljic Mr. & Mrs. J. Tre[or Lewis, Mrs. J. Lynch, Mr. & Mrs. E. Manning, Dr. & Mrs. Anthony Martin A Friend, Mr. & Mrs. William McMahon, Mr. & Mrs. Raymond Michaud, Mr. & Mrs. D. Morris, Mr. & Mrs. Charles Morse Ann & Bridget Normoyle, Ed­ ward O'Brien, Mr. & Mrs. Fran­ cis O'Brien, Mr. & Mrs.'William O'Brien, Genevieve O'Connor Mr. & Mrs. William O'Don­ nell, Mr. & Mrs. John O'Malley, Mrs. John Orcutt Jr., Mr. & Mrs. James Pittman, Edward Putnam Mr. & Mrs. L. Racine, Mr. & Mrs. Gerard Rivet, Mr. & Mrs. Arthur Rose, Mr. & Mrs. Paul Rousseau, Thomas Sheerin Mr. & Mrs. Donald Sullivan, Mrs. Helen Sullivan, Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Sullivan, Daniel J. Tar­ pey, Mrs. Edmund Therrien Mr. & Mrs. E. V. Tynan, Mr. & Mrs. Baptiste Vercellone ST. JOHN THE BAPTIST $33 Dr. & Mrs. Thomas E. Zipoli $25 Holy Name Society of St. John the Baptist Church Mr. & Mrs. Josepll Dias, ·Mr. & Mrs. Gilbert Ferreira John F. Gracia Dr. & Mrs. Norbert V. Perry ·Mr.& Mrs. Paul Rezendes· Dr. & .Mrs. Manuel F. Sousa $20 John Augustinp. Jr. . Mr. & Mrs: Raymond Cabral Mr. & Mrs. Raymond Cockshutt Mr. & Mrs. Walter Oliver $15 _ Lawrenee, Ferreira, Flores Family, Mr. & Mrs. Charles L. Goulart, Mr. &; Mrs. Celestino Macedo, Mr. & Mrs. Albino San­ tos, Frank Santos, ·In Memory of Mary L. Sylvia $11 Mr. & Mrs. Christian Carreiro, Mrs. Mary Hodge $10 Mr. & Mrs. Walter Adams, Mr. & Mrs. Jose N. Alcobia Sr,. Miss Laurinda Andrade. Mrs. .Mary Andrews, Mr. & Mrs. Charles Arruda Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Arruda, In Memory of Mary C. Arruda, Joseph Avila, Mr. & Mrs. Man. uel Barao, Miss Helena Bartholo Mr. & Mrs. Virginio Botelho, Mrs. Mary Cable, Mr. & Mrs. Manuel Cabral, Mr. & Mrs. Man­ uel Calado, Mr. & Mrs. V. Man­ uel Camara Mr. & Mrs. Richard Carreiro, Dr. & Mrs. Mark Castro, Miss Marjorie Cockshutt, Mr. & Mrs. Donald L. Cordeiro, Mr. & Mrs. John Correia Mr. & Mrs. Edward Costa, Costa Family, Mr. & Mrs. Albert Davidian, Mr. & Mrs. Alfred DeCosta, Lucy E. Dias _Mr. & Mrs. Harry 1;)unham, Mr. & Mrs. Walter Espinola, Mr. & Mrs. Donald Fernandes, Mr•. & Mrs. John Fernandes, William Ferreira Mr. & Mrs; Frank Freitas, Miss Marion Freitas, Mr. & Mrs. Louis Goulart, Mr. & Mrs. Laurent GUillette, Mr. & Mrs. Edward Gracia Mr. & Mrs. John Gracia, Miss

Emily Gracia, Mr. & Mrs. Man­

uel Homen, Mr. & Mrs. Frank

Jason Jr., Mrs. Caroline Lavoie

Mr. & Mrs. Ildefonso Lemos,

Mr. & Mrs. Norman Lepire, Mr.

& Mrs. Joseph Machado, Mr. & Mrs. John Maduro, Mr. & Mrs. Donald Marshall Mr. & Mrs. Robert Marshall, Mr. & Mrs. Manuel C. Martello, Mr. & Mrs. Lewis McDonald, Mr. & Mrs. Calvin ·Medeiros, Mr. & Mrs. Charles Medeiros . Mr. & Mrs. Frank Mello, Mr. & Mrs. William Mello, Mr. & Mrs. William B. Mello, In Mem_ ory of Mary Mendonca, Mr. & Mrs. Charles Mesquita Mr. & Mrs. William Moniz, Mr. & Mrs. Manuel F. Oliveira, Mr. & Mrs. Edward Oliver, Mr. & Mrs. Edmund Perry, Mr. & Mrs. George V. Pimental Miss Mercedes Pitta, Mrs. Lucy A. Ponte, Mr. & Mrs. Herman Rapoza, Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Rego Mr. & Mrs. Albert Roderiques Mt. & Mrs. Edmund Rogers, Mr. & Mrs. John C. Souza, Miss Alice D. Silva, Mr & Mrs Joseph M. Silvia, Mr. & Mrs. Manuel A. Silva

Mr. & Mrs. Manuel S. Silva,

Mrs. Albert Simmons, Mr. & Mrs. Frank Souza, HenDaA Souza, Mrs. Frances SimmOQl.

SACRED HEART '$25 Mr. & Mrs. Peter Tatarian Mr. & Mrs. Robert Va~d-itl: $20 Lena & Roland Parenteau ': Mrs. Jeanette Gagne & Dor.is, Mr. & Mrs. Henry Guimond, Mr. & Mrs. Henry Larocque, Mr. & Mrs. Eugene Marchand $15 Mr. & Mrs. Ronald Achin, Mr. & Mrs. Joseph LaBree, Mr. & Mrs. Emile Seymour

BUILD JUNGLE AIRFIELD: Capt. Robert Rafferty, left, adviser to Vietnamese RangerS guarding the ne'wly­ constructed Rang Rang airfield, relaxes with Columban Father Patrick O'Connor, NCWC correspondent, and Lt. Col. R. B. Robinson, senior adviser to the Vietnamese en­ gineering battalion. The three men watched the first plane land on the jungle airstrip in an area where the Viet Cong (communist) guerillas have roamed almost at will for 16 ye,arB. NC Photo.

$10 Alphonse Barrett, Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Bonneau, Mr. & Mrs. Richard Brodeur, Mr. & Mrs. Gerard Champagne, Mrs. 'Lo­ rette Champagne. Mr. & Mrs. Roger Corriveau, Mr. & Mrs. Leo DeBlois, Mr. & Mrs.· Henry Desautel, Mr. & Mrs. Gerard Desilets, Mr. & Mrs. George Desormeaux. Mr. & Mrs. Philibert Dest­ rampe, Mrs. Melina Dion, Mr. & Mrs. Frederick Fortin, Jr., Mr: &. Mrs. Eugene Fournier, Mr. & Mrs. Conrad Girard. Mr. & Mrs. Maurice Gregoire, A Friend, Mr. & Mrs. Walter Harris, Mr. & Mrs. Frank Jor­ dan, Mr. & Mrs. Raym~nd La­ casse. Mr. & Mrs. Leo Laplante, Mr. & Mrs. Emile LeBlanc, Mr. & Mril. Normand L'Homme, Mr. &: Mrs. Roger Mercier, Mr. &; Mrs. Bernard Miramant. . Mr. & Mrs. Paul Neveux, Mr. & Mrs. Paul Neveux, Mr. &; Mrs. Ovila Ouellette, Mr. -& Mrs. RobertPombriant, Mr. &; Mrs. Raymond Ringuette, Mr. &; Mrs. Rene Robert. Mr. & Mrs. Leo Paul Tardif, Mr. & Mrs. Paul Veilleux, Mr. & Mrs. Alfred Weldon, Mr. & Mrs. Alfred R. Weldon, Mr. &: Mrs. Wilbur Weldon Bernadette Alix, Mrs. Cecile Bourgeois & Family, H9i'ace Dargis, Mr. & Mrs. Henry Desautel, Mr. & Mrs. William Dion. Mr. & Mrs. Roland Dubuc, Mr.

& Mrs. Raymond Lambert, Mr.

& Mrs. Arthur Lebeau, Mr. &

Mrs. Orner Martineau, Mr. &; Mrs. Gerald Parenteau. Mr. & Mrs. Norman Pin90­ neault, Mr. & Mrs. Rene Pinson­ ~ult, Mr. & Mrs. Roger Pinson­ nault, Mr: & Mrs. Leo Poirier.

Miss Mary Souza, Mr. &·Mrs.Pierre, Raoul Guy, Arthur Lari­ Anthony P. Sylvia Jr, Mr. & Mrs. viere, Orner Messier Jo£:eph . C. Sylvia, William G. Albert Paradis, Dona~d DUf~ur SyIvia, Mr. & Mrs. J. Paul Thi- Laurette LeBeau. Odehe Carrier be~iult· David Dumas Mr. & Mrs. Frank Travers, Marcel Spirlet, Ernest LaurenMiHon A. Travers, Mr. & ~s. deau, Mrs. William Chapdelaine, Antone Vasconcelles & Mary, Adrien Bourcier, Arthur Col­ Mbs Anna Vieira, Miss Flora lard, David Re~o Vil~ira, Mrs. Helen Walsh Mrs. Henry J. Magnant, Mrs. Eva Benoit, Dolores Masse. Ali~ ST. THERESA B. Rymut Alice Contant, Charles Schwank $300 Roland Duval, Mr. & Mrs. Oscar Uev. William E. Collard Leblanc, Laura Lemaire . $UO , ·Jeanne Brodeur, A Friend, 111:1'. & Mrs. Ronald R. Lei"anger Jeanne Cormier, Henri Nadeau, $100 Gerard Bergeron I>Onat Boisvert Ins. Agency Normand Joseph Hevey, Henri In(:. Du~al, Romeo Parent, Mrs. Eu. $75 clide Fisette, Joseph Arsenault ]r}orence Boisvert Aldea Duchesneau, Henri 110"0­ $25 lin, Orner Guilbert, Thomas 1l1:rs. Eliza Boisvert Michaud, Philibert Cormier Therese Boisvert Silvio Luminiello, Mrs. Jean­ Arthur Savoie, EqIile Bernard $20 Mr. &; Mrs. Joseph G. Chllr- Family, Miss Claire L. Cour­ noyer, Antoine Leblanc & FamboJilneau ily , $15 Fairhaven Mr. & Mrs: Edgar A. F. Langis Arthur Letourneau, Eva Mail­

hot, 'Jeannette Carrier, George

$10 ST. MARY Leonard Costa, Abel Jorge, Lafrance Family, George Charles $50 Fr,~d Allain, Henry Patenaude, Anita Charpentier, Emile Roy, St. Vincent de Paul Society Mrs. George Methee, Paul Cus­ Herve Patenaude $29 Bishop Stang Council, K. of C., son, Roland Benoit Mr. & Mrs. Herman Roy Wilfrid Belanger, Romeo Jodoin , Victor Belanger, Roger Raci.

$25

Eugene Duval, Mr. & Mrs. Al­ C'lt, Antoinette St Pierre, Gerald Mrs. Stella Pacheeo beJrt Morin Langlois, Honore Michaud $20 Mr. & Mrs.' Vito Morra, Mr. Napoleon Fortin,Lorraine Ar­ Mr. & Mrs. Randall A. Cardoza & Mrs. Mederic Vige~nt,. Mr. &; visais, Ira Perry, Theodore Bari­ $15

Mrs. Edward Benjamin, Mr.-& beau, Arthur Rousseau Mr. & Mrs. Robert Dorgan

Mrs. Bradie Metheny Donat Nault, Rose Boucher, $10 George J. Desrosiers, Mr. &: Ernest Letourneau, Wilfrid Jette Mrs. Roger Robitaille, Roger Mr. & Mrs. Edmond Patenaude Mr. & Mrs. Rene Brisette, Mr. Lamontagne, Henry Picard, Con­ & Mrs. Amedee Lestage, Florida Mr. & Mrs. George Beaulieu, Mr. & Mrs. Victor Saint, Mr. & Mrs. rad Gobeil, Marcel Masse. LeBlanc. Augustine Jussaume, Mr. & Mrs. in'. ANTHONY OF PADUA Edward Govoni St. Mary's C.Y.O., Mr. & Mrs. $500 Swansea Orient Benoit,' Mr & Mrs Donal.d lU. ~ev. Albert Berube OUR LADY OF FATIMA Brazil, Mr. & Mrs. Everett Gracie '. $50 Mr. & Mrs. E. Hiliman . l:tev. Gerard Boisvert $60 Mr; & Mrs. A. Mello & ]:tev. Bertrand Chabot Mr. & Mrs. Bernard Swales Mr. & Mrs. Frank A. Motta Jr., :Rev. John FoIster $35 Mr. & Mrs. R. .Richard ][,ouis Parent Smith Lumber Company .William Beauregard Famny $25 $35 A. PAMllY TREAT Claire Hargraves Omer Tardi Mr. & Mrs. James J. JohnSOll BAR-B-Q CHICKENS: $Z5 $20 Anna Poitras Mr. James J. McDermott Mr. & Mrs. Henri L. Galipeall Mr. & Mrs. Warren J. Ryan Jr:. Mr. & Mrs. John Green FARMS $10 $20 141 Waahln,too'St., Fairhaven Mr. & Mrs. Raymond W. Mrs. Germaine Chadwick .Tuft oft Route I . Boule, Mrs. Leonard F. Connors, Clarisse & Jeanne LafranCe

:Mr. & Mrs. Raymond W. Con­ WY '7-93S6 $15 nors,Mr. & Mrs. .Teck McCor,. 'Watch for SliM A Friend, Mrs. Anna Esa &; mick, Mr. &. Mrs. Manuel Family, Leo Hebert & Family While out for a Drive Miranda, Mr. & Mrs. Raymond . $13 Stop at thlll DeUghtfgl Spot L .. Parent. . 'Wilfrid Masse .Toseph Labounty $10 Arthur Correau, Mrs. Wilttalll Beatty, Roger Pelletier, Lilli/lll Delisle, Mrs. Alfred Deneault . lflenry DUbe, Donat Letendre, He'nri Guilbeault, Aimee & Alma Gagnon, Joseph Gagnon FOR FAMILY BANKING Armand Cote, Blanche Bel'­ nit~r, Robert James, Elvert Bin_ Laurent Roy l~rnest Richard, Rita .Todoin, ATTLEBORO· So. ATTLEBORO - SEEKONK Bertha D)lquette, Anna .JodoiD, Ernest Nolin Gerard Goguen, Roland Toune MEMBER FDIC Rita Parent, Normand Meny, Mr. • Mrs. William Fortin "formand DeBlois, Alice SIt..

SOn.

................

ROS,ELAWN

fiRST

NATIONAL BANK


Falmouth ST. PATRICK

$100 Wood Lumber Company Anonymous A Non-Catholic Friend to foster the Ecumenical Spirit A Summer visitor $35 Col. H. A. Barrows $25 Gilbert Arruda' Alice Creemer John Fish, Contractor Joseph Gonsalves Jr. Margaret Groves John S. Keohane Frederick V. Lawrence Inc. Mrs. H. J. Lefrevre Mr. & Mrs. John McDon'ald New Bedford Bargain Store· Jerry's Bar & Grille Mr. & Mrs. John Giabbai Jr. Elm Arch Inn $20 Harold L. Baker & Co. Inc., Mr. & Mrs. James T. Bento, George J. Chambers. Mrs. Thomas Dolan,Mr. Jayme Moniz. $15 Ralph Bold, Mrs. Carlton Brown, Mr. & Mrs. Leo J., Grif­ fin Sr., Falmouth Auto Body Inc., Joseph A. Sheehan. Mr. & Mrs. M~nuel J.' Amaral, Mr. & Mrs. Matthew R. Souza, Mr. & Mrs. John R. Hughes. $12 . Francis C~modY, Robert P1~ mental. Edward· Carroll $10 Mr. & Mrs. John Doyle, Mr. & Mrs. Francis L. Hankinson, Jo­ seph C. Miron, Mr. & Mrs. John P. Rose. Mrs. Emerson Ayers, Mr. & Mrs. John R. Augusta Jr., Mrs. Clarence Anderson, Grace Cros­ by, Mr. & Mrs. Arthur Corey. Mrs. Alf Carlson, Lt. & Mrs. Enda Coyne, Francis Dardis, Richard DeMello, Eastman's Hardware Store. Falmouth Circle Daughters of Isabella, Alvin Fisher, Falmouth Electric Co., Falmouth Firemen's Association, Falmouth Council Knights of Columbus. Mr. & Mrs. George Fonseca, Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Grace. Jr., Mrs. Wendell Hall, Mr. & Mrs. Charles Innis, John's Liquor Store. Lucien G. Jeglinski, Mary Kay Realty, Olin Kelley, Mr. & Mrs. Romeo LaFond, Romeo LaFond Jr. Mr. & Mrs. J. ·H. Lafond, Mac­ Gregors of Falmouth, Herbert McAdams Jr., Mr. & Mrs. Henry McCoy, E.dward McGahan Mr. & Mrs. Frank A. Marshall, Josephine Y. Martineau, Nob. ska Furniture, John O~r, Don­ ald Panaccione. Mr. & Mrs. Richard Pratt, Mr. & Mrs. James Razinha, Edward M. Rich, Mrs. Lewis Pratt, Mr. & Mrs. John Pimental Mr. & Mrs. Elmer Ross, Sgt. James E. Schultz, Edward J. Sheehan, Francis Smith, William Smith. Anthony Souza, Mr. & Mrs. Paul Souza, William Souza, Mr. &: Mrs. Lewis Stevens, Mrs. George Wilson, Mrs. Frances Zahn.

Provincetown ST. PETER THE APOSTLE

$100 Blessing of the Fleet $25 Mr. & Mrs. Elmer Silva Dr. & Mrs. Daniel Hiebert Higgins' Lumber Company' Mr. & ·Mrs. Robert Silva Provincetown Liquor Mart $20 Mr. & Mrs. Frank Taves Mr. & Mrs. Edward Salvador Mr. & Mrs. Bill White $15 Mr. & Mrs. Isadore Ferreira $10 Mr. & Mrs. Walter Harding, Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Silva, Mrs. Mary Roberts, Mrs. Selina Cross, Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Francis Mr. & Mrs. Francis Silva, Mr. & Mrs. Reginald Jas<>n, A Friend Mrs. Dorothy Linsky, Mr. & Mrs Sam Janopolis Mr. & Mrs. William Cabral, . Mr. & Mrs. Arnold Dwyer, Mr. & Mrs. Gabriel Fratus, Mr. & Mrs. Leo F. Gracie, Mr. & Mrs. Frank Motta Sr. Mr. & Mrs. Harold Soults, Mr. & Mrs. Manuel Coelo, Mr. & Mrs Gordon Ferreira

Ocean 'Grove

THE ANCHORThurs., May 23, 1963

ST. MICHAEL 500 Rev. Joseph A. Cournoyer

Mansfield

$75 Rev. Maurice E. Parent Rev. Richard P. Demers $25 Mrs. Lillian Valcourt $20 Mr. & Mrs. Rudolph T. Bisson, Mr. & Mrs. Arthur J. Madeiros. $15 Thomas 'Baldwin, Mr. & Mrs. Norman Thibault. . A Friend

ST. MARY

$100 The Darmedy Family A Friend $60 . A Friend $50 A Friend $40 Mr. & Mrs. Paul J. ~lynn $25 Jackson Funeral Home Dr. & Mrs. Raymond Ockerl $20 The Cuneo Family $15 Guido Frongillo Mary Ellen Gremore

$12

$10 Miss Teresa Arnold, Mr. & Mrs. Charles Arruda, Mr. & Mrs. Leonard Berube, Mr. & Mrs. Jo­ seph R. Bisson, Mr. & Mrs. Al. bert Bolduc. Earl Bolton, Mrs. John Burke . & Claire, Mr. & Mrs. Dominic Casilli, Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Clan_ cy, Mr. & Mrs. Manuel Corga. . The Dalton Family, Mr. & Mrs. Henry Dion, Mr. & Mrs. Philippe Durette, Mr. & Mrs. Ernest .Franke, Mr. & Mrs. William Furtado.' .. Mr. & Mrs: Frank Gallery, Mr. .& ~rs.. James Gaughan, Mrs. William Gilbert, Mr. & Mrs. John Goddu, In memory of Mrs. John Hibbert. . Misses Clara & Julia Howard, Misses Blanche & Yvonne Joli. vet, Mr. & Mrs. John LaFrance, Mrs. Hubert Laurendeau, Mr. & Mrs. John C. Lindo. Mr. & Mrs. Fernand Lizotte, Mr. & Mrs. James Luddy Jr., Mr. & Mrs. Henry Murphy, Mr. & Mrs. Caesar Paiva, Mr. & Mrs. Leo Paradise. Mr. & Mrs. Roland Patenaude, Mr. & Mrs. George Petit. Mr. & Mrs. Richard Petit, Mr. & Mrs. Adelard Pineau, Mr. & Mrs. Matthew Quinlan. Mr. & Mrs. James Reid, Mr. & Mrs. John B. Rochefort, Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Rodth, Mr. & Mrs. Normand St. Laurent, Mr. & Mrs. Gerald Sevigney. Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Smith, Mr. & Mrs. John Szuba, Miss Mary A. Trial, Mr. & Mrs. Dominic Troy, Mr. & Mrs. Edward Whelan. Mr. & Mrs. Horace White, Mr. & Mrs. Albert Zahralban, Mr. & Mrs. Robert Mailloux.

Seekonk OUR LADY OF MT. CARMEL

$100

,ru'stin E. Smith

$50

. Mr. & Mrs. William Cuddigan Robert W. McVay $25 Holy Ghost Brotherhood of Charity Seekonk Council lo."o. 5108 Knights of Columbus St. Vincent de Paul Society Mt. Carmel Parish Mr. & Mrs. George Taylor $15

Jennie Colaluca

$10

Mrs. .Manuel Axile, Herbert Bassett, Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Byrne, Mr. & Mrs. Mariano Cav. allaro, Mr. & Mrs. John J. Cor­ nell. Mr. & Mrs. Robert Doe, Jesse Hall, Mr. & Mrs. Anthony Khouri, Mr. & Mrs. August Mathias, Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth McCloskey. Mr. & Mrs. George McGinnes, Mrs. William Oakland, Manuel Ormonde Jr., Mr. & Mrs. Olavio Rizzardini, Mr. & Mrs. Edward Santos. Mr. & Mrs. Leroy Simmons, Mr. & Mrs. John Smith, Mr. & Mrs. Ernest Strzesak, Ralph Tur­ ner, Aldore Vincent. Mr. & Mrs. Peter Voccio, Peter Voccio, Mr. & Mrs. Richard W. Wolfe, Richard B. Wolfe.' Mr. & Mrs. Manuel Costa, Henry A. Danesi, Mr. & Mrs. Howard MacRae, Mr. & Mrs. John Petraitis, Mrs. Anthony Pimental, Mr. ~, Mrs. Frank Rose.

$12

Leo Markt . $10 Mr. & Mrs. Walter Alfieri, Mr. & Mrs. Ronald Baril, Mr. & MrS. William.' Barton, Mr. '& Mrs. James Beatty" Mr & Mrs. Wi1~ Ham Bellew. . Mr. & Mrs. Roy Boyden, Mr. & Mrs. Jobn Carine, Mr.' & Mrs. Americo Crescitelli, Mr. & Mrs. John Christopoulos, Mr. & Mrs. Americo ·Day. Mr. & Mrs. William R. De~ Baggis, The Dennehy Family, :.....Mr. & Mrs. Fred DeLuits, Mr. & JYIrs. Raymond' DeWall, Kathe­ rine Driscoll. . Mr. &.. Mrs. William Eastman, Mr. & Mrs. Leo Eldracher, Mr. & Mrs. Frank Farinella, Mr. & . Mrs. William Farquaharson, Mr. Wallace Cordon. 75TH ANNIVERSARY: Dressed in traditional Sioux Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth Guillette, Mr. & Mrs. Daryl Hatfield, A Indian costumes, two little boys huddle' with Father Law­ .rence E. Edwards, S.J., superior of Holy Rosary Mission, Friend, Mr. & Mrs. Nando Mel­ Mr. & Mrs. Albert Pine Ridge, S.D., during the mission's 75th anniversary chiori,. Murphy jubilee. Founded by Chief Red Cloud it has become the Miss !\iancy Ockert, Mr. & nation's largest private boarding school for Indian children. Mrs. William Palanza, Mrs. Theresa Palladino, Mrs. Victoria NC Photo. Pedro, Mr. & Mrs. Gino Repucci. Mr. & Mrs. Robert Shaw, Mr. Fratus, A Friend. Frank Signoriello, Mr. & Mrs. A Friend, Mr. & Mrs. Maurice William Sullivan, Mr. & Mrs. OUR LADY OF LOURDES Gauthier, Mr. & Mrs. Norman Anthony Tiatoria, Mr. & Mrs. $100 Gill, Miss Gladys Grey, Dr. Joseph Todesco Jr. A Friend Gerald Hoeffel. Mrs. Helen Sullivan, Mr. & A Friend Mr. & Mrs. Francis Howard, Mrs. Walter Wiese, Mrs. Agnes A Friend Mr. & Mrs. George Howard, Mrs. Willis. A Friend Sadie & Alice Joseph, Miss Cora Boy Scouts of America Troop Holbrook, Rae Beau Hareu. $50

14-St. Mary's Mr. & Mrs. George Jette, Mr. Mr. & Mrs. Paul Lussier

Mr. & Mrs. James Kelley, The & Mrs. Arthur Joseph, Miss $30

McGoldrick Family, Miss Rose Mary E. Joseph, Mr. & Mrs. Mrs. Isabel Tesson

Serva1s, Miss Louise Soldani, Mr. Stewart Joseph, Mr. & Mrs. $29

& Mrs. Joseph Sarro Thomas Kane. Miss Rita Rose

Miss Alberta LaPierre, Mr. & $25 Mrs. Antone .Lopes, Mr. & Mrs. Mrs. Isabel Jason ST. PATRICK Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Peters Jr. Francis Menard, Mrs. Esther Murchison, Mrs. Kenneth Paine. $10 Wellfleet Savings Bank Miss Flora Peters, Mr. & Mrs. Mr. & Mrs. Alber.t DeLoid, Our Lady of Lourdes Holy Harry Piersall, Miss Margaret Henry White, Mr. & Mrs. Ed~ Name Society Prada, Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Remy, ward McCawley, Mr. & Mrs. $20 Mr. & Mrs. WilHam Roche. Salvatore Sansone, Dr. & Mrs. Mr. & Mrs. William Dillon' Durate Agency Mr. & Mrs. Wilfred E. Rogers Charles Murray. Frances Hennessey, He leD $18

Jr., Mr. & Mrs. Albert M. Rose, Friends

Alfred Rose, Mr. & Mrs. Ernest Hoenig, Mr. & Mrs. Louis Gala­ $15

Rose, Mr. & Mrs. Austin L. votti, Mrs. Elizabeth Roche, Dr. Ralph Angus. . Mrs. Richard Bell, Mr. & Mrs. Rose Jr. Anthony Duart, Mr. & Mrs. Mr. & Mrs. Frank Cessarinl, " Mr. & Mrs. Norman Rose, Mr. '& George Dut~, Mr. & Mrs. Wil­ Mrs. William Scarry, Mr. & Mrs. Mr. & Mrs. Henry Fernandes, liam Gill, Mr. & Mrs. John Arthur Silva; Mr. & Mrs. John Mr. & Mrs. Paul Kiernan, Mr. & ·Kelley.. Mrs. Albert Hubert,' Mr. & Mrs. Sheehan, Col. John She~win. . Mr. & Mrs. Donald Ormsby, !\fl'. ~ Mrs.. Jqs~ph McWil~ John Cardoza. Mrs. Marie Sherman, Wellfleet liams, JOM Silv~, ,Miss Laura .' Mr. & Mr·s. William' Murr·ay, Package Store. Silva, Mr. & Mrs. .- Kenneth Mr. & Mrs. Ralph Reed, John $10 .Snow, . Mr: & - Mrs. Manuel Pires, Doris Rose, Mary Mendes. Mrs. Dominga Lopes, Robert Mr. & Mrs. Everett Adams, Soares. _ Robert Annese, Mr. & Mrs. John, - Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Sullivan, Brousseau. Berrio Jr., Mr. & Mrs. Clarence .Mr. '&. Mrs. Ronald Thureson, Berrio, Mr. & Mrs. Albert Bet­ Mr. & Mrs. George Williltms. White~s F~rm tencourt. . Mr. & .Mrs. Richard BraWn, HSPECIA~ ·MILK Mr. & Mrs. William Caldwell, From Our Own· Laurence Cardinal, Daniel Chis..­ holm, Mr. & Mrs. Chester Con­ - Tested Herd" .nors. Inc. Acushnet, Mass. WY 3-4457 Mr. & Mrs. Eugene Cormier, Wilfred Costa, Mr. & Mrs. Mur­ .•UNIRAL SIRVICE • Special Milk .ray Coughlin, Mr. & Mrs. John • Homogehized Vlt. D Milk· Cyzoski, Emanuel Davis. •. Buttermilk Mr. & Mrs..Leo Dayon, Mr. & 549 COUNTY ST. .• Tropicana Orange Juice .Mrs. Clifford F. DeLory, Mr. & '.Coffee and Choc. Milk BEDFORD, MASS. NEW Mrs. James Delory, Mr. & Mrs. • Eggs - Butter Robert Dutra, Mr. & Mrs. Arthur Daisy. Anthony Ferreira, Mr. & Mrs. Alvin Fetner _& Family, Eliza­ IT'S DAFFODIL TIME AGAIN ,AT GULF HILL I beth & Rachel Ficco, Mrs. Louise

Wellfleet

Wareham

Dairy.

.Miclitlfd C. Austin

CENTER

Orleans

Paint and Wallpaper

ST. JOAN OF ARC

Dupont Paint

$25 Frank Sellew $15 Mrs. Maximillian Friese $10 Anonymous

15

Bring the family to see these delightful blooms and treat them this Sunday to our delicious ice cream and dairy products and, oh yes ••• Watch the cows being milked at 4.

Order from Your Routeman or Call WYman 8-5691

Q"~Jr,,I

New Bedford cor. Middle St. 422 Acush. Ave.

GULF HILL DAIRY

-

PARKING Rear of Store

South Dartmouth, Mass. Dial WY 8·5691

IJ •


16

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River, Thurs., May 23,1963

Measure Your Gifts

God Love You

Lauds Humanity, Urbanity,

Language 'of Cooper Novel

By

A WORD TO THE RICH: "He Who was rich became poor for our sakes that we might become rich." st. Paul applies these words to Our Lord, Who emptied Himself of the glory of His Divinity to make us ,spiri~ tually impoverished..,.souls rich in His grace. And that same Lord made you rich in a material sense. Oh yes, you worked· hard, or you guarded your inheritances, or you invested well, but the Lord is still the first cause of your wealth. "What have you that you have not received?"

By Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S. Kennedy How can Louise Field· Cooper expect to get, away with it? In The Windfall Cliild (Simon and Schuster. $4.95), as in previous books, she gives us a novel without a single psychotic character, a single sensational situation, or a single obscenity. Evidently relationships within a ·family, she is totally unaware of the Thus although Ann and Scott norms of contemporary fic- Robi~son are a wonderfully de­ tion. All she knows. how to voted couple, and have bee~ so do, it seems, is write a believable over theyear~, there a~e bttle and enjoyable, as well as areas. or occaslO~s of: mI.sunder. a moving story about human standmg, .a~d fIerce dlsagree­ beings who m ments arIsmg from no clear you might reccause and subsiding as quickly ognize as your as they blow up. n eighb0r s, As for the Trewitts, their mar­ maybe eve n riage is stable, yet there is an your own self. aura of sadness because of The title applies Charles' dalliance, known to his to John Trewitt, wife but never mentioned. aged 12. John is Especially good is the sugges­ the son of an tion of the bond between Ann English couple, . Robinson and the windfall child. Charles and So much about his years from Valerie Trewitt. four to eight that is known to When he was a her, is not known, and never can very small child, his father. was be known, to his own mother. assigned to the Orient. Amusing Portrayals His wife went with him. It was . decided that the boy should live T~ere IS ~uch a~usement to with Valerie's sister, SYbil, in be g .eaned, In a qUlet_wa~, from the United States. th~ portrayal of the spmsters, Sybil, it proved was not too WIdows, and crotchet~ bachelors keen on.keeping him, ~nd, ,be- -:rho hav~ ~e~t commgs to the sides, her marriage broke up. f oor at~ : s eve~ I umTmer h ey So when the Trewitts s'tayed on rom Ime Immen;-0rIa. in the Far East much longer know one another s . faces all;d than they had expected to, John clothes almost bet~er than the~r was handed over to' an AmerIcan own. An? the ~;IVal of a trIO family living near Sybil. The of ~merlCans tIblates them as family, named Robinson~ .COlU- nothIng fo~ sev~ral seasons has rised husband and wife Scott succeeded m· domg. :nd Ann a boy Tim who was Modestly, the author slips in about ·John's age, and two gil-is. little observatiohs with a weight Want Him Back . and ring of truth to them. "Anger . But now after the Robinsons bends truth," s~e says, and have had John for eight years again, "In life, along with fear his own parents are finally set~ so often comes dislike;" tied in England and want' th'e She speaks of tarnished silver boy to come to them. His foster spoons as "gleaming orange-pur­ parents do not mean to yield him pIe with the gay iridescence of up easily; inqeed they 'are de- neglect," calls radishes "the veg. termined to keep him. It is etable foreordained by G<ld to agreed that they are, to visit be the stay and solace of garden­ England, bringing John and Tim, ing little boys," and has one and spend a holiday with the character say of the temperature Trewitts, during which the of bath water "How very inter­ question will be settled. esting, how the feet will give a The place chosen for the holi- different opinio~ from tile day is the Devon, in August, hands." .

specifically a country inn called No more than· did its prede­

the Moor and Bells. The author cessors will this book by Mrs.

obviously delights in depicting Cooper become a sensational

this establishment, its guests, the best seller or mark 'milestone

countrysi;de, and the changeable in the development of the· Amer­

weather, and she communicates ican novel. But it 'should· have

her delight to the reader: The not a few gratified arid· grateful

first meeting, as rair pelts the readers because of its humanity,

inn courtyard, is marked by urbanity and graceful employ­

shyness and sharp surmise. AI- ment of 'the langUage. .

though each couple sees a':l an· New Age

tagonist in the other, neither can . ' .

!help liking and respecting the Edward Wakl.ns The .Cathohc other. The beginnings. of a ' Campus (Macm111an. ~3.95).prefriendship sprout. sents some general comments on Element of Suspense ~ath?lic colle~es and 'universiAt first, it is tacitly agreed to tI:s m the Umted ~tates! al?ng avoid the difficult, heartbreak- ~Ith clo~ups of eIght msbtu­ tng subject of the rendez-vous. tlOns WhICh the author has There is elaborate pretense of studied in detail. preoccupation with thing~ of no One might wonder, at first, consequence, with run-of-th~. about the necessity or utility of mill conversation. But so deeply ,such a work. But one soon dis. are all concerned with what is ,covers that it is needed and use. to be done with John, that this ful, indeed. For Ii new age in will crop up ev~n "in:',the most American 'Catholic higher educa­ offhand talk. ,.:..: tion is upon u~. It has developed Mrs. Cooper's narrative has a in the last decade and a· half. casual air, but there is a strong ,The institutions of which he element of suspense. It is hard gives profiles ("uninhibited," he foOr ~he reader to discern in ad- avers, but this is not wholly so) vance what the issue is going to ,are Catholic University, Notre be, but when it does emerge, Dame University, St. Louis Uni. there is a sense of rightness, in~ versity, Rosary College, St. deed inevitability, about it. John's in Collegeville, MaryFamily RelationshiP$' mount's junior college (an espeIt is M~s. Cooper's gift';-to be cially interesting chapter), Mar. able to project and probe major illac College, and Rosary Hill. and minor characters of ~ndivi(I.'. uality and authenticity. If, ~n the, fwo sets of principals, the women are better realized than the' men, ntmetheless the two boys, are CHICAGO (NC)-Albert Car­ especially credible. dinal Meyer, Archbishop of Chi. Mrs. Cooper is perhaps at the cago, is scheduled to discuss the top of her form in dealing with Second Vatican Council before a Protestant group next Jan. 22.

The Chancery Office said he

BOSTON (NC)-Grants· total­ will speak before the annual ing nearly $400,000 have been Protestant Ministers' Week of awarded to the Boston College the Chicago Theological Semi. school of social work by the nary on "Aspects of the Ecumen­ National Institute of Mental ical Council," if the Council is Health. not in session at that time.

a

Prel.ate to Address Ministers Meeting

BeGets $400,000

Most Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, D. D.

LEADER: Sen. Eduardo Ftei, leader of the Christian Democratic Party in Chile, credits the increased em­ phasis on the Church's social teaching as the main reason for his party's resounding success in his nation's recent elections. NC Photo.

New Bedford ST. HEDWIG $150 lrranciscan Fathers $10 Stanley A. Mastey, Bernard Cook, Rudolf Kach, Arthur Syl­ via, Chester Gadomski Honorato Arruda, Leonard Ar­ rUlia, John Szydlowski, Stanley SzuIik, Nellie & Jennie Kuch­ arska ;rohn Kostrzewa, Stanley Los, Frank Kulesza & Son, Bronislaw, Gacek;, Michael Zajac Albert J. A. Daley & Louise Piatkiewicz, John Barylski, John Robak, Walter & Stanley Twar­ og, Manuel Franco· ST. KILIAN $400 Hev. Walter J. Buckley $200 m. Kilian's Conference, St. Vincent, de Paul Society $75 Hev" William J. McMahon $50 Dr. & Mrs. Vincent Sarlo $25 ]~va White Holy Name Society $20 Haymond Mahoney $18 J'oseph & Mary Masse $10 J'ohn Santos, Gerald Murphy, ,Albert Abrian, Claire Vaudry, Richard Desnoyers " Herbert Hunt, Leo Belanger, . An,ita: BeJanger,.' :RiChard Rose, Ro::>ert Benjamin Kenneth Pearson, Maurice Spirlet, Mrs. Edward Blouin, Edward Blouin, Donald Torres E:dward -Lang, Arthur Martin, ·Joan Murley, Evelyn Pothier, ,Josep,h Fernandes ,]~homas Grime, J. Arthur :Ross, Lmian Veit, Marguerite King­ sleJ', Laurent Audette ST. HYACINTH $150 ltev-. Herve Jalbert $50 St. Vincent de Paul Confer­ ence of St. Hyacinth Parish $20 Dr. & Mrs. J. B. Robert Mr. & Mrs. Leo Fournier . $15, The Charles Tarpey Family '_ ,$10 Mr. & Mrs. Roland Dumas, Mr. & Mrs. Zoel Bou'cher, Mi. & Mrs J. B. Letendre, The Misses Yvonlle & Jennie Damm, Mrs. Regina Connelly . . :j\'[ois,e Letendre, Eva Saulnier, .Ja~n~s Connelly,. Mr. & Mrs. Nor. .mand Sauve ·~..~. . .c ~ ~ ~ ~ o ..

F'la~'ToBUiI4?1 '

See Us

.

. Abo~t

Ilow Cost Financing

WAREHAM, !.AVINGS BANK Wareham

CY 5-3800

Falmouth

KI 8-3000

~1oO_O_D_O~-.u_D_~

It is much easier for you to save 'your soul than a famished, "fellah" in Egypt or a miserable cliff-dweller in a Latin Ameri~a "favella." You can give in Christ's Name. ' But the poor have to sink down into ,the depths of t~eir souls and make· an act of resignation and submission to G<ld's Will. You say you are generous? You boast that you' gave $100,000 to build a $3,000,000 church or $250,000 to construct a library? Fine! But are you really satisfied with what you have done, or were you "pressurize'd", by agents, public relations officials or drive "hatchetmen?" Did you give supernaturally or did you give naturally? Did it profit you for eternity or did it give you a bronze plaque in time?

Measure your gifts with the rules that

Our Lord lay down for giving:

1) Our Lord said we should give to the poor. When you

are ready to mak·e a distribution, "call in not the rich, but the

poor." He meant that you should treat the disinherited of the

world as thOUgh their need was not a stigma but a claim. The

needy catechists in Korea, tbe impoverished priests of Rhodesia-­

these are the men to benefit in the light of the life to come!

2) Our Lord said we should give anonymously: _"Do not

let thy left hand know what thy right hand is doing." Ever notice

how .much more you give when you "subscribe" than when

there is ,a collection? The ego wants satisfaction in the first

instance. Beggars always care tin cups because the giver ·gets a

ring of satisfaction as he hears his coin jingle in the cup. But

the Lord wants complete anonymity; He 'would have 'yOU gift

take wings so you could never' see where it went.

, 3) Our Lord said we should give to the poor becauSe "they

have nothitig to repay thee with; for thou shalt be repaid at the'

resurr.ection of the poor." The rich could. repay you, honor you,

put you on. a board, but the poor can'do .nothing. Therefore, ihe

Lord will have. to reward you. The' saddest, words in Sacred

Scriptul"e are: "Thou hast already received thy reward."

Those 'of you who are rich and 'who want to give 'to the poor of the world so that no one else but the Vicar of Christ makes the distrib,ution, write to me. I will reply personally to help you save Km~.

-

'

GOD LOVE YOU to S.B. for $70 "This is my first pay check my first place of employment." ••• to Mrs. A.B. fot $2 "To help the poor of the -world and beg prayers ,for ·a fallen-away lIOn." ••• to E.B. for $20 "After graduation, several girls are spending a weekend at the shore. I ·would rather you use the money I had saved to send missionaries abroad." ••• ·to a South Dakotan for $35 "For the Holy Father to use as he judges best."

from

Find out how an annuity with The Society for the Propaga­ tion of the Faith helps both you and the poor of the world. Send YOur requests for our pamphlet on annuities, including the date of your birth, to Most Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, 366 Fifth Avenue, New York 1, New York. Cut out this column, pin your sacrifice to It and mail It to the Most Rev. Fulton J. Sheen,. National Director of the Society· for the Propagation of the Faith, 366 FIfth Avenue, New York 1, N. Y., or your Diocesan Director, RT. REV. RAYMOND T. CONSIDINE, 368 North Main Street, Fall River, Mass.

PENNY lor PENNY YOUR BEST

fOOD BUYI

Jl Qualtty -AlliN

and DAIRY PRODUCTS


Coste, Joseph Costa, Mary L Costa, Charles Dennery.

Stanley Eldredge, Mariano M.

ST. ANTHONY

Farias, John F. Ferreira Jr..

$135 John C. Frias, Arinda Furtado, Falmouth Cement Works George Gonsalves.

John Leighton, Francis, Lewis, $60 John L. Marks, Antone B. Mar­

Alfred. M. Soares shall, Antone Martin.

$50 Joseph L. Medeiros, Joseph S. Carreiro & Bonito, Inc. Meedeiros, Manuel C. Medeiros, Herman Lopes & Son Manuel S. Mello, Sylvia Jean Village Cafe De Mello. Art's Supermarket Frank Moniz J·r., John Moniz, Antone B. Couto Jr. Joseph Moniz, Joseph Motta, Gilbert Paclieoo Louis Perry. John Reine Mary M. Perry, Man u el $45 Peters, George' Pinto, Alice De­ Edward T. Mello & Fam~ Souza, Ernest DeSouza. $40 George Soares, James G. Manuel R. Lopes Souza Jr., Theresa Souza, Mrs. Lawrence Peters Francisco L. Tavares, Helena L. James G. Souza Tavares. James P. Vidal Manuel L. Tavares, M'artha Manuel White Jr. Tav·ares, Virginia Tavares, Joyce $38 Teixeira, Joseph Valerio.. Joseph E. Souza Richard L. Welch, Harvey $35 Williamson, Alfred S. Yates.' John Cordeiro (Fresh Pondt Robert Alwardt, Manuel J. Paulino Rodriques Andrade, Millie Andrade, John $30 Araujo Jr:, Francis Barrett. P. & S. Fuel Oil Co. John Bartolomei, George P. William Bonito Cabral Jr., Mrs. Joseph P. Cabral Virgil Jansen Jr., Manuel P. Cabral, Alvira Frank M. Teixeira Cardoza. Jean's Bakery Antone Correia, Antone E. Richard L. Corey Correia, Joseph B. Couto, Pat­ A. H. Simons Jr. ricia Ann Couto, Joseph J. Costa $25 Sr. East Falmouth Fuel Oil Co. Laurence Costa, Lester G. Kenyon's General Store Dias, Manuel Fernandes, Mrs. In Memory of Carol Ann GoP- Thomas Ferreira, Frank Flora. man Joseph L. .Gardner, Frank David F. CorreIlus, Sr. Grace, John Henry, Ralph Kid­ Joseph Lewis well, John Meena. Joseph J. Medeiros Edmund De Mello, Flora De Frank Simmons Mello, Frederick De Mello, Manuel R. Soares Agnes Mendoza,' Antone F. Men­ John L. Tavares doza. Joseph Teixeira & Family Matilda Miranda, TheophilUfl Crystal Fuel. Oil Co., St. An- Moniz, Theophilus Moniz Jr.. thony's Men's Club, George P. Joseph Motta, Jasper Puckett. Cabral and Sons, Richard ~ Daniel L. Pacheco, Julio Fish, FI:&nk P. Lima. Perry, Marcelino Perry, Rosalie Edmund L. Lopes, Jack M~ Pimental, James Pires. shall a·nd Sons, John R. Mar,tiD, Theodore Pires, William De­ Robert B. Pacheco, John e. Ponte, Manuel Rapoza, Mrs. Roderick. Manuel Reine, Manuel P. Re­ .. Rose & Tobey Souza, Joseph zendes, Robert Roderick. L. Dias. Donald M. Rose, Alice Ser­ $20 rano, Cecelia M. Simons, Walter . Harold L. Baker Co., III Stone, John Sylvia. memory of Mrs. Mary Bonito Gerald L. Tavares, Sylvester by her son William, Germano Tavares, Maurice Teixeira, Mrs. Afonso, Joseph D'Aguiar. William Veiga. John J. Andrade, Carolyn J. Correllus, Raymond E. Correl­ Ius, Joseph G. Ferreira, Alfred Fairhaven Flora & Soft. ST. JOSEPH Arthur Lawrence, W a l"t e r Lucas, Antone Medeiros, George $'75 F. Demello, Theophilus & Mal')' Mr. & Mrs. James B. Buckley Oliveira. $25 Mrs. John Pena, Ronald Souza, Joseph A. Saladino Gilbert Tavares, Joseph R. Anonymous Tavares, Joseph L. Tavares, Fred Little Bay Market, Inc. Travers and Family Mr. & Mrs. J. Carrol CasteHo Joseph Bento, Pio Cardoza, Dr. & Mrs. Bernard F. Carter Manuel & Olive Correira, John $15 DeCosta Jr., Thomas DeCosta. Mr. & Mrs. John J. Powers Frank Figuerido, Manuel S. Mr. & Mrs. Edward Couto Gardner, Patrick Lewis, John Lopes, Abel Hello. $10 Charles J. DeMello, William Mr. & Mrs. Armand R. Marien, 'DeMello, Mary & Isabel Miller, Mr. & Mrs. Rene J. Fleurent Guy W. Nickerson, Jude e. Margaret A. Manghan,. Mrs. Royals. Roberta Braley, Gracia Family, Julio Santos, Frank Souza Jr.. Mr. & Mrs. Manuel Cabral, Mr. Manuel DeSouza, George Man­ & Mrs. Kenneth J. Noyer digo, Anthony Souza. Mr. & Mrs. Edward L. Kerin, $15 Mr. & Mrs. Arthur M. Frates, Mr.

Holy Ghost Society (Women's & Mrs. Wallace W. Alden, Mr. & Division), Lawrence G. Goulart, Mrs. Edward C. O'Gara, Mrs. John H. Macedo, Joseph A. Louis Almond Sr. Martin, Viv·ien Medeiros. Mr. & Mrs. Albert Moquin, Mrs

Arthur S. Mello, OUola De­

Antone Monteira, Mr. & Mrs. Mello, Frank Moniz, Myron Charles Joseph, Mr. & Mrs. Jose Moniz, Richard Moniz. J. Lobo, Noel B. Couture

Manuel Netto, Angelo Pa­

Mr. & Mrs. Roland E. Blouin, checo" John M. Pimental, An­ Mr. & Mrs. William J. Towers, tone G. Souza, Cecilia Souza. Mr. & Mrs. Edwin J. McQuillan,

Irene Souza, John F. Souza, Arthur Govoni, William H. Bar­ Maunel White. ron, Mr. & Mrs. Manuel A. Perry Joseph Andrews, Tony An­ drews, Manuel Baptiste, Adolph SACRED HEARTS Bishop, Angelo Burgess. Angelo Burgess. $20 Ernest P. Cabral, John P. Mr. & Mrs. David Sibor' Cabral, Camillo D'Egidio, Joa­ $10 quim Figuerido, Ralph HamilMr. & Mrs. Adrien Desrosiers, ton. ' Mr. & Mrs. Elphege Desroches John Jacome, John B. 'Pa­ checo, William Rapoza, Frank Rego, Scoba Rhodes. Central Village Michael Rodriguez, Frank ST. JOHN THE BAPTIST Simmons Jr.,Edward Santiago, Lucy & Irene Santiago, Stanley $50 Santos, John L. Silvia Jr. Dr. & Mrs. Peter F. Piccinini. $12 John Andrade, Richard G. $25 Hirtle, George D. Sylvia. St. John the Baptist Ladies $10 Guild

Falmouth Circle Daughters of $10

Isabella, St. Anthony's Women's Mr. & Mrs. Li~oln Dunlap, Club, Luciano Botelho, James Mr. & Mrs. Paul Cloutier, George Cordeiro, John Cordeiro. T. Leach. Douglas L. Correllus, Je9lle Mr. Arthur Maynard

East Falmouth

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River, Thurs., May 23, 1963

New Bed·ford

mENE A. MICHAUD

Plans Summer Study At St. Anselm's Irene A. Michaud of '158 Fourth Street, Fall River, has been admitted to the Foreign Language Institute scheduled to be conducted at St. Anselm's College, Manchester, N. H., from June 23 through Aug. 10. The Institute, which will be conducted in French, is one of 82 Summer and four academic­ year foreign language institutes to be held at colleges and uni. versities throughout the nation under the National Defense Ed. ucation Act. The program will provide spe­ cial training for teachers of mod. ern foreign languages so that they may improve their knowl­ edge of both the subject matter and country concerned, and be­ eome familiar with the newest methods and techniques of teach­ ing foreign languages. Miss' MichaUd studied art ill France for six years and re. ceived her bachelor of arts de­ gree from Rivier College, Nash­ ua. She has taught at Fall River and Tiverton, R. I., public schools. She is presently em. ployed by the Tiverton publie schools as a teacher of French in the elementary grades.

OUR LADY OF PURGATORY $50 Rev. George Saad Cape Cod Sportswear Co. Inc. $25 Fairhaven Lumber Company Mr. & Mrs. Hykel Simon Attorney Fred M. Thomas Atty & Mrs George M. Thomas $20 David's Trucking Company $15 Mr. & Mrs. Norman Joseph $10 American Lebanese Veterans Assoc., American Lebanese Vet­ erans Auxiliary, Mr. ~ Mrs. Jos­ eph Attalah, Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Barckett, Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Courry & Family Catholic Youth Organization,

Peter Daher, Thomas Daher,

Atty. Daniel P. David, Miss Jos­ ephine David Mr. & Mrs. Thomas David, Mr. & Mrs. Joseph E. Dupre, Mrs Amelia John & Family, Mr. & Mrs. Anthony John, Dr. & Mrs. George John Mrs. Selma Joseph & Family, Mr. & Mrs. Peter Kenham, Atty. & Mrs. George Morad, Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Moses, Joseph & Helen Nader Our Lady of Purgatory Ladies Guild, 'Mrs. Frosena Peters, Mr. & Mrs. George Peters;·Mr. & Mrs Anarew Riley, Mr. & Mrs. Dom­ inick Roda St. Joseph Sodality, Mr. & Mrs. Louis Sarkes, The Coury Zilah Family, The Yazbeck Family, .Mr. & Mrs. Peter S. Thomas . Mr. & Mrs. Sasen Thomas, Mr. & Mrs. Robert Watkins

1-7

OUR LADY OF THE ASSUMPTION

$20

Mr. & Mrs. Severo G. Alfam $10 Aguinalda Rose, George' l\t Baptiste, Mr. & Mrs. Robert Gal' rison, Mr. & Mrs. Antonio 9 Gomes, Mrs. Julia Gomes, Laun A. Duarte James P. Gonsalves, Mr. .\ Mrs. Henry Barros, Mr. & Mrs. Manuel Figueiredo, Edward J. Pina, Mr. & Mrs. Manuel J. Ramos, Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Pire. SACRED HEART

$12

Mr. & Mrs. Roland Teillere $11 Mr. & Mrs. Donald Desaute18 $10

Normand Trudel, A Friend, Romeo Gagne, Mr. & Mrs..Tohn Belotti, Mr. & Mrs. Lawtence Santos' Mr. & Mrs. Zephirin DUbe,' A Friend, Edouard Bourassa,' Mr. & Mrs. Donald Dufresne, Nap­ oleon Genereux' Mr. & Mrs. Leo J. Tracey & Daughters, Mr. & Mrs. Arthur Trahan, Mr. & Mrs. Oliver Ben­ oit, Mr. & Mrs. Raymond Fortin

ST. CASIMIR

$150 Rev. Casimir Kwiatkowski $25 Mr. & Mrs. ~lbert Poczatek & Family, $10 , Mr. & Mrs. Frank P. Adam­ ,owski"Mr & Mrs Stanley Adam­ ST. MARY owski, Mr. & Mrs. Lionel Char. bonneau,' Mr. & Mrs. Fryderyk $15 ' Beneficial Finance Co.-No1"th Gorczycza, Stanislaw Kaszynski & Family End Branch' Mr. & Mrs. Peter Lada, Mr. &; $10 Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Correia,· 'Mrs. Edward Nowak, Edward Mr. & Mrs. Alfred Defreitas, Mr. Olejarz, Theodore Pease" Mr. • & Mrs. John Flores, Mr. & Mrs. Mrs. Thaddeus Polchlopek Mr. & Mrs. Stanley Schick, Louis Kershaw, Mr. & Mrs. Sid­ Mr. & Mrs. Edward Viera, Mr. & ney McMullen Mr & Mrs Alexander NichoIas, Mrs. Felix Walski, Mr. & Mrs. Mr. & Mrs. Adelard St. Onge, Anthony S. Zielinski Jr., Mr. Be Mrs. Chester Zuber Mr. & Mrs. Daniel Silvia.

Perfect for School' Lunches

OVEN·FRESH DAILY your NEIGHBORHOOD STORE

...


18

THE'· "'C~0R-Dioceseof Fallliiver, Thurs., May 23, 1963

New Bedford OUR LADY OF MT. CARMEL

...

$135.50 Club Uniao Faialense $25 Mr. & Mrs. Joseph. Avila Mr. & Mrs. Raymond Medeiros Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Souza Jr. $15 Laura Oliveira $12 Francisco A. Baldo $10 Anonymous, Casa Cunha, Oli­ veira Travel Agency, Dale Ra­ poza, Mary Rapoza, Mr. & Mrs. Manuel Souza Jr. Stella Alexander, Carole Lou­ ise Almeida, Mr. & Mrs. James Almeida, Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Alves, Manuel Amaral Jr. Adeline Arruda, Mr. & Mrs. William Baroa Sr., Mr. & Mrs. Henrique Barros, Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Bettencourt, Joseph S. cardoza John Castro, Cynthia Costa, Mr. & Mrs. William Costa Jr., Mr. & Mrs. Franco DeMello, Mr. & Mrs. Francisco & Juanita Fer­ reira Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Fraga, Car­ oline Goulart, Isabel F. Goulart, Edward Joseph,. Mr. & Mrs. An­ tone Lemos . Antone Lewis, Mr. & Mrs. Francis Lopes, Mr. & Mrs. Rai­ rnundo Luiz, Mr. & Mrs. Jose Martins, Manuel Martins Hilda Mathews, Mr. & Mrs. Anibal Medeiros, Aristedes Me. deiros, Mr. & Mrs. Joao Mello, Maria Felecidade Melo Fernando Netto, Mr. & Mrs. Antone C. Page, Mr. & Mrs. Jos­ eph Paiva, Mr. & Mrs. Manuel Pavao, Mr. & Mrs. Antonio Per­ eira Manuel Pereira, Mr. & Mrs. Anthony C. Phillips, Mr. & Mrs. Joaquim Piedade, Dule Querim, Mr. & Mrs. Arthur St. Pierre Maria Santos, Mr. & Mrs. Raul Santos, Mr. & Mrs. Pasquale E. Sbardella, Mr. & Mrs. Charles G. Silvia, Mr. & Mrs. Joao Silva Mr. & Mrs.. Lauran Silva, Christopher & Mildred Sylvia, Mr. & Mrs. Manuel Sylvia, Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Theodore, Mr. & Mrs. Robert Vermette, Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Viegas Dorothy Bizarro, Mr. & Mrs. Manuel Almeida, Mr. & Mrs. Manuel Andre, Mr. & Mrs. r-.~or­ man Ferr-eira, Mr. & Mrs. James Machado Mr. & Mrs. Leo Pimental, Mr. • Mrs. Leonard Rose IMMACULATE CONCEPTION

$40 Dr. David Costa Jr. $25 Maria M. Nunes $20

Henry & Dolores Rodrigues

$15

Joseph Carvalho $10 Maria Almeida, Euclides Ca­ bral, Alsuino Cordeiro, Joaquim Gomes, Edward F. Joseph Jr. Joseph P. Lopes, Jose Martin, Arsenio Nunes, Anthony D. Rose Joao B. Alves, Angelina Bap­ tista, Bertha C. Batalha, Ernest­ ina Batalha, Lowell Dawson Manuel Frade,. .ronn C. Frias Jr., Octavio De "~mos Jorge, Rui Lopes, Antone Martin Victor F. Rebello, John Sar­ dinha, Correia Sisters, John S. Souza, Gordon Vieira, PoIivio Silva ST. ANNE

$100 St. Vincent de Paul St. Anne's Conference .: $50 . .

Rev. Arthur C. :'I!evesque Sodalities of.S~. Anne's Parish '$25

.

Maurice Lev~sque' St. Anne Credit. Union $i5 Mrs. William Lemlin $12 Mr. & Mrs. Armand Bolduc $10 . Mrs. Hubert J,i'ournier, Mr. & Mrs. Alexis Savaria, Mr. & Mrs. Alfred Farland, Mrs. Florina Fortin & Miss Lorraine Fortin, Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Lavoie Sr. Mrs. Beatrice Thibault, Mr. & Mrs. Edward F. Rose, Cercle Champlain, Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Sharples, Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Lavoie Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Normand Cayer

TWO FIRSTS: Sister Martin Mary, first Negro novice of the Sisters of C h a r i t y in Leavenworth, Kans., holds a syndicated photo of her brother, the first Negro trainee for the U.S. manned space program. She says the prayers of more than 900 nuns in her com­ munity will be riding with her brother, Capt. Edward J. Dwight, Jr., if he is selected for a space trip. NC Photo. ST. FRANCIS OF ASSISI

$20 Mr. & Mrs. Paul Vancini $10 Mr. & Mrs. John Castellina, Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Cataldo, Em­ ma Cipriani, Mr. & Mrs. Enrico ' DiBenedetto, Mr. & Mrs. Antonio DiMauro Mr. & Mrs. Antonio DiPiro, Mr. & Mrs. Rosario DiPiro, ·Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Johansen, Jennie Lincourt, Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Moniz Mr. & Mrs. Angelo Piscarino, Mr. & Mrs. Donald Rose, Mr. & Mrs. Charles Setteducati, Giulio Cesare Lodge-Sons of Italy Italian - American Women's Club.

Tender, Sweet arnLTasty, and So Thrifty, Too!" Tender, Plump-, White Meat - Breast and Wing

Breasl

QUARTERS

Tempting, Juicy Dark Meat - Drumstick and Thigh

Leg

QUARTERS

18

Tender, Young Pork for Roasting

Fresh Shoulders

$1,000

Rev. Louis E. PreVQSt

LB

Same low Self-Service Prices in All Stores in This Vicinity - (We Reserve the Right to limit Quantities)

-Asparagus

N EW JERSEY - Full Tips, Delicate Spears, Full of Garden Fresh Flavor

.~:~

Golden - Rich in Garden Fresh Flavor ST. JOSEPH

.35c 31c 35c

LB

12

5.,eel Corn

EARS

59c

69c

$1"

St. Vincent d-e Paul $75 Rev. Roland Bousquet $25 Mr. & .!VIrs. Edgar Trudeau Mr. & Mrs. Albana Collette $25 Mr. & Mrs. John Liarikos $20 Mrs. Anna Courtemanche Mr. & Mrs. Adrien Lemire $15 Mr. & Mrs. Arthur Barrette $12 / Mr. & Mrs. Roland Audette $10 . Joe Knox, Mr. & Mrs. Orner Payette, Mr. & Mrs. Herve Adam Mrs. Rose Paradis, Mr. & Mrs. Loreau Theodore Robert, Mr. & Mrs. Arthur Landreville, Mr. & Mrs. Clarence Perryman, Mr. & Mrs. Jean Louis Schwartz, Mr. & Mrs. Calixte Belliveau Mr. & Mrs. Clarence LeBlanc, Grenon Farr.ily, Mr. & Mrs. Wil­ fred LeBlanc, Elisabeth" Jaillet. Mr. & Mrs. Louis Pincince Mr. & Mrs. John Sirois, Edna Roy, Mr. & Mrs. Reginald Chan­ dler, Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Four­ nier, Mr. & Mrs. Leonard Olivier Mr. & Mrs. Philias Caron, Mr. & Mrs. Henri Valois, Mr. & Mrs. Gerard Guillet, Mrs. Lumina tiamontagne Mr. & Mrs. Roger Dupont, Mr. & Mrs. Wilfred Cote, Mr. & Mrs. Leo Hebert, Misses A. & M. Robillard, Mr. & Mrs. Leonce Methot. Mr. & Mrs. George Chamber­ lain, Mrs. Blanche & Miss Yolande Despres, l~ddie Lizotte, Mr. & Mrs. Hormisdas Trial, Mr. & Mrs. Donat Duhamel.

ZAREX

SIR·UPS

PT BOT

LINCOLN - Orange, Orange-Pineapple, Grape or Punch

'I1Bg~l

Juice Drinks DUTCH TREAT - Vanilla or Assorted

35c Sugar Wafers

ILB

CEllO

31c

.29.

Apricot, Pineapple, Peach, Blackberry, Plum or Cherry

ARMOUR'S Preserves FINAST 3 J~':S

6 TREET

Evaporated .MILK 6

EVANGELINE -

Pack

14'11 oz CANS

"4c 0"" Sale

12 0%

CAN

43c

BELLVIEW

Kosher, DiU Gherkins, Hamburger, Dill Slices

Pickles

DAILEY'S

2

ILB JARS

.. Delicious Varieties

PAPER Schraff"s . HARD 2 CANDY NAPKINS

2 39c Aluminum Foil

FINAST - Regular

PKGS of 160

91Aoz CEllOS

$1.00 ·79c 49c

49c


Today's Events Include Sodality Convention at Mt. St. Mary, 'Novitiate Day' in Da rtmouth

THE ANCHORThurs., May 23, 1963

Study Encyclical Christian Duty

There's no school today, Ascension Thursday, but sodalists from area high schools are attending the annual Sod;;llity Convention, being held this year at Mt. St. Mary Academy, Fall River. Also today,' girls from Dominican Academy, Fall River, are Also at Stang, four members participating in a "Novitiate of the student body received Day" at the Dominican "certificates of eminent merit" at the annual Diocesan Science Sisters' Novitiate in Dart­ mouth. A May crowning on the convent grounds will highlight the program. New school officers at Sacred Hearts Academy, Fall River, are Kathleen Raposa, captain of the school; Aileen Maloney, St. Agnes' team captain; Nancy Powers, St. Margaret's team cap t a i n; Margaret Donnelly, sodality prefect. At B ish 0 p I Cassidy High School, Taunton, elections fea­ tured the selection of new offi­ cers for the Debrabant Chapter of the National Honor Society. They include Charlene Phillipe, president; Jane McGovern, vice­ president; Alice McDermott, secretary; Nancy Fornal, trea­ surer. Fifteen juniors have been in­ ducted as new members of the chapter. Highlighting the mem­ bership ceremony was a talk by Sister Therese Anne, S.U.S.C. on college entrance requirements. A former principal of St. Mary's High School, Taunton, Sister Therese Anna is preparing to study at England's Oxford Uni­ versity this Summer. Relax with Greek At St. Anth'bny's High School, New Bedford, Richard Methia and Henry Pelletier are busy with preparations to attend the Sixth Annual National Catholic Forensic League Tournament, to be held next month in Pitts­ burgh. Richard will compete in the Original Oratory Speech divi­ sion and Henry is ent~red in the Model Congress division. After the pressure of Catho­ lic University exams and Auxi­ Hum Latinum tests, students of Sister Frances Sebastian at Fall River's Sacred Hearts Academy maintain it's really relaxing to study Edith Hamilton's "Greek Mythology." Well, the Greeks had a word for it. Holy Family High School, New Bedford, announces the birth of an official school em­ blem. It consists of the Marian shield,' on which appears the Star of David, a portion of the shield of the Fall River Diocese. Also part of the emblem are double malTiage' rings, symbo­ lizing the Holy Family. Within these rings are contained a crown, for Mary and the scales of justice, for Joseph. Above the rings are an orb and the Greek letters chi and rho, symbolizing Christ. New school rings, which pre­ sent Holy Family sophomores will receive in the Fall, will bear this emblem. Father Robitaille At Jesus-Mary Academy, Fall River, sodalists are planning M:ay ceremonies for Wednesday, the 29th. Guest speak-er will be Rev. Eugene Robitaille, SS. CC. and' the day's program will in-, clude an afternoon dialogue Mass, followed by a buffet lunch. A living rosary and May crowning by Sodality Prefect D-enise Crlliinal will be followed in the evening bya panel dis­ cussion and reception of new Sodalists. Parents will be in­ vited to the evening program. Paul Dumais and Ronald Cote are among Prevost High School seniors who are recipients of college scholarships. Paul was awarded the Firestone Scholar­ ship, in addition to a partial grant from Stonehill College. Ronald's grant is from Provi­ dence College,and is renewable upon con tin u e d academic achievem-ent. Eight seniors at Bishop Stang Hi(lh School, North Da~tmouth, have been inducted into the National Honor Society. They ~e Alfred Saulniers, Paul Bis­ bee, Michael Etu, John Hol­ land, Lorraine B-eaulieu, Leona Blais, Collette Lemire and Wil­ liam Rousseau.

Fair. Those honored were Wil­ liam Rousseau, John Whealan, Jean Ann Muldoon and James Ezemoli. Future Nurses Tomorrow is the date chosen for the annual May procession at Bishop Feehan High School, Attleboro. Students will as­ semble in the auditorium and march to the campus statue of Our Lady, where a wreath will be offered and act of consecra­ tion read. Returning to the audi­ torium students will assist at Benediction. Rev. Edmond L. Dickinson, .sacred Heart parish, North Attleboro, will preach and preside at the exercises. Future nurses at Dominican Academy include Jeanne L. St. Amand and Charlotte Pelland,. both winners of one year tuition scholarships to St. Anne's Hos­ pital School of Nursing. Jeanne's activities have included debate league, athletics, science club, student council and yearbook staff. She's consistently made the' principal's list and has alw held several class offices. Students at Bishop Cassidy are branching into community ser­ vice' by volunteering their as­ sistance to the Taunton Citizens Scholarship Fund. Proceeds of the fund will aid students from Cassidy, Coyle ,and Taunton High Schools toward college educations. Meanwhile, at Bishop Feehan" students are involved in election campaigns for student· council officers under direction of Sister Mary Kateri, council moderator~ Electioneering will continue un­ til Friday, May 31, when Feehanites ,will "go to the, polls." . Budding Scientists At Dominican Academy Sister Jeanne d'Arc reports that all her junior and senior commercial students have been awarded the Order of Gregg Artists Certifi­ cates for the Internati.onal Gregg Shorthand Exhibit. In addition, gold OGA pins were merited by Doris Brault, Margaret Viveiros, Lorraine Thibault and Paula Nobrega. On top of all this, DA received a gold seal honorable mention certificate. Also at Dominican, Jeanne Pinsonneault is receiving con­ gratulations for reveiving an honorable mention citation for her science exhibit at the Mas­ sachusetts State Science Fair, held at MIT. Also in the science news are Paul-e Moreau, Maurice Levesque, Gordon Bienvenue and Paul Garant of Prevost High School. All were winners at the Diocesan Science Fall'. At Bishop Feehan plans are in the making for the rededication of the schoel to the Sacred Heart. Last year saw the formal placing of the school under the patronage of the S3eTed Heart and on the First Friday of June this year the act of consecration will be renewed. Also in the spiritual depart­ ment, some HI Feehan boys are still commenting on the retreat they attended at Cathedra·l Camp under sponsorship of the Attleboro Serra Club. Intramural Volleyball Parents' Night held the spot­ light at Bishop Cassidy High last night as mothers and fathers heard Robert Hoye of Science Research Associates explain the meaning of recent achievement tests given students. Parents were given the opportunity to examine their daughters' test results and to confer with Mr. Hoye. Tomorrow Cassidy juniors and seniors will hear lectures on the opportuniti-es offered by careers in medical technology. Junior Hom-e Room 303 has been announced as winner in a ~nt hartl-fought IDrhl' intra-

19

NEWARK (NC) - The need for careful stUdy of Pope John's encyclical on peace was stressed by a priest active in social action work here. There might be a tendency OR the par·t of some to ·relegate re­ sponsibility for its'study to men in government, said Fat her Aloysius J. Welsh, director of the Pope Pius XII Institute of Social Studies. "It is the duty of every Christian to appreciate the Church's role and program in the field of international rela­ tions," he said in an ·interview. "The encyclical," he said, "continues the Holy Father's deep and abiding pastoral con­ cern for all mankind. It is posi­ tive - it has a program. The Holy Father is aware of all of the complex problems and yet manifests Christian optimism in providing a plan in which all of us can participate."

NUN NOW 'ADMIRAL': Sister M. Vincent, adminis­ trator of Santa Rosa Medical .Center, San Antonio, Texas, became the first nun-admiral of the Texas navy when Judge Solomon Casseb, Jr., representing' Gov. John Con­ nolly, presented her commission. In awarding the commis­ sion, Gov. Connolly noted that Sister Vincent "runs a right ship." The Texas navy consists of the former U.S.S. Texas, a battleship permanently moored in concrete near San Jacinto. NC Photo. mural volleyball tournament at Stang High School. All rooms participated in the contests. Graduation is uppermost in senior minds just now, but school activities must be carried on for next year, so elections of new people to old offices is going on apace; At Dominican Academy yearbook staff mem­ bers for 1964 have been an­ nounced, including Elizabeth Paiva and Judy Silvia, co-edi­ tors; Mary Louise Sousa, photo­ gn'lphy editor; Jeanne Pinson­ neault; copy 'editor. Sister John of the Cross is faculty advisor and· is breaking in her new staff today by taking them on a tour of the O'Toole Printing Com­ pany in South N<>rwalk, Conn. Another First At Fall River's Sacred Hearts Academy' students and fathers will attend Mass and receive corporate communion this Sun­ day morning, May 26. Meanwhile, at Jesus - Mary Academy, the National Honor Society has had as a special project this year the promoti<>n of the devotion of the Enthrone­ ment of the Sacred Heart in homes. Nine girls have been in­ ducted into the society as new members and 13 have been ac­ cepted as probationists. Another "first" was chalked up by graduating seniors at Bishop Stang, as they held their first Class Day. Ceremonies in­ cluded planting a tree on cam­ pus, .a senior assembly, presen­ tation of scholastic and atten­ dance awards, and reading of the class will, prophecy and history. The day closed with .a dinner served in the school

Nantucket OUR LADY OF THE ISLE

$10 Mr. & Mrs. Maurice Kiley Mr. & Mrs. George E. O'Neil

East Brewster OUR LADY OF TIlE CAPE

$15

J.Parke 0'(' '~'1ors Sr.

$10

Elizabeth H'At.=don

. Merle Thompson

cafeteria. At St. Anthony's the annual class day is scheduled for Fri­ day, June 7, with senior officers in charge of plan-making. Additionally, a freshman and a senior are in the news at the New Bedford school. Freshman Antony Andrade is an up and coming bowler, having to his credit five trophies won in in­ dividual and team contests; while senior Richard Beaulieu have been named recipient of the Acushnet PTA Scholarship, which he will use to further his education at Providence College. New debate club officers at Holy Family High are Edward Parr, president; Susan Sweeney, vice-president; Mar yEllen Crowley, secretary _ treasurer; Marilyn Mulcairns, librarian; Kathleen Kennedy, clerk of committees. .The first four named, and Richard Perras, Thomas Azar, Paul Thomas and Luke Sweeney will attend the National Catholic Forensic League Tournament in Pittsburgh. Accompanying them will be Atty. Maurice Downey, moderator; and Sister Mary Charles Francis, R.S.M., school principal.

M. MONTLE

,Plumbing - Heating Over 35 Years

NEW YORK (NC) - Brother Gregory, F.S.C., president of Manhattan College, has called for ,reatel' lay participation on the governing boards of Catholic colleges and universiti'es. He also asked for better un­ derstanding and '.:ommunication on the faculty level between "the man who w-ears the tie and the man who dons a collar." Brother Gregory spoke at the· Manhattan College Charter Cen­ tena.·y alumni dinner. More than 1,000 alumni and guests attended.

$25 ' St. Ann's Women's Guild St. Ann's Men's Club . Remington Elting $20 Mr. & Mrs. Edward G. MalOCllf Robert L. Smith $15 Dr. Richard C. Cooke $12 Michael S. Maclone $10 Jerry M. Downing, Matthew Tibi, George Tubman, Lou. Mantell, Mrs. James Powers A,dolph Rozenas, Mrs. Charle. L. Cook; Mrs. Ivlildred C. Shell­ ing, Mrs. Alfred· J. Larsen, Mrs. Bruce I. Wilcox Mrs. Robert C. Mattheson. Andrew J. Galligan, Fernando J.. Frates, Mrs. Florence O'Brien, Mrs. Carol Hill, Walter E. Nevitt Robert Doherty, Francis Yelle. John L. Spaulding, Francis .l. Casey, James S. Moura, Mrs. RobertW. Sherman

Saint Named Patron VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope John has· named St Vincent Pal­ lotti, who was canonized Jan. 20, patron of the Missionary Unioa of the Clergy.

, R. A. WilCOX CO. OFFICE FURNITURE

MOU4GHA·N

r.r

1• •n1iak DeIi_

• DESK'S

• CHAIIS

FILING CABINfTS

• FlRI filES • SAl'll FOlDINGTA81ES AND CHAIRS

, R. A. ·Yltl.COX CO. 22:' 8ED~ORD ST.

FAll RIVB 5-7831

W.H~·R.flEY

&.SON, Inc. '.

a'.SUVICE D'rt••·.UTORS ,

A((FPT~N<E

GaSolin_ Fuel· ~~,~~anp

CORP.

011. BURNER'S

Treasurer

O·I'I-S G I. IOILY8t1RNEIt UHI1I For pronijSJ

G~ivery

&. Dey" Nig.ht Se-rvlce

142 SECOND S'rREET OSborne- 5-7856

106 NO. MAIN STH&T

fALL RIVER

OS 5-7497

$30

McGrath Family

..

of Satisfiea Service

FaU l.iv.r

ST.ANN

.. SSKII

Stresses La.ity Rote On Cone~e Boards'

Thomas F. Mo"ag,han Jr

~FnRGE

Raynham

..ur...· lattletl

G_

S.","

.1 COHAN NO ST. TAUNTON AttleJlaora - No. Attl. . . . . Taunton


,

,

20

Taunton HOLY FAMILY

$100 Holy Family Women's Guild $75 Rev. James F. Kenney $50 St. Vincent de Paul Society $25 Ansonia Mills Mrs. Chester Cambell Raoul Ducharme , Dr. & Mrs. Richard Heywood

Mr. & Mrs. Alfred St. Yves Mr. & Mrs. Antonio Gomes & Family ~20

Adolph Bombardier, Thomas Coughlin, Mr. & Mrs. Camille Dietlin Charles Geer, Rose

Marie &: Sadie Motta Mr. & Mrs. Manuel Roupa,

Walter Starvish' . $15 ,,/Stanley Baran

,I.

New Bedford

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River, Thurs., May 23, 1963

$12

Gilbert Souza $10 Elsie Amaral, Wiiliam Araujo, Mr. & Mrs. Edward Booth, Louis Burgess, Michael Caron Mary Casey, Joseph Castro, ... Francis Conaty, Peter Conlon, Joaquin Correia Manuel Correia, John Crosby, Mr. & Mrs. Richard Crosby, Mr. & Mrs. James Curran, Mrs. Mar. garet David ' Joseph DeMoura, Arthur Den. iz Peter Deniz, Gerald Doiron, G~orge Dorsey , James Dorsey, John Dorsey, Mark Driscoll, Alfred Dutra, Francis Dutra . Charles Eugenio, Frank Faria, Antone Gomes, Mr. & Mrs. Lor­ enzo Grosso, Julia Grover Mr. & Mrs. John Horta, Chas. L. Kenyon, Lois A. King, Mr. & ,Mrs. Lee Krogh, Mr. & Mrs. Henry Lamothe Michael J. Larkin, Mr. &: Mrs. Robert Larkin, Mr. &: Mrs. Ted Lippold, Mr. & Mrs. James Lom. bardi, Antone Maderios John T. Martin, Mr. &: Mrs. John McCarthy &: Family, Wil­ liam F. McGrath, Lydia Medeiros Frank Mendes , Joseph Mendes, Helen, Mit­ chell, Bruno Mozzone, Cortleliu. Murphy, Mary Murphy Thomas Murphy, Mr. &: Mrs. Robert Nolan, Daniel O'Brien, Charles O'Leary . Antone Pacheco, James A. Pacheco, Fred Patrick, Raymond Prunier, Richard Prunier John J. Quinn, Louis Rezendes Mr. & Mrs. Nelson Robitaille, Dr, & Mrs. Gene Romano, Mr. &: Mrs. John Roupa Roger Roy, Ellen Ryan, Chas. F. Sheehan, Mr. & Mrs. John Silo va Frederick D. Silvia Charles Simas, Mabel Starvish Edmond St. Yves, Henry Sulli. van, Mr. & Mrs. Joseph A. Ta­ vares ' Mr. & Mrs. Frank Vieira, Mr. ,&: Mrs. Richard White, John .~ Zeiba , Ernest Andrews, Manuel Frates Ellen M. O'Connor, Hanora O'­ Brien, Harold Rogers Frances E. Rose, Manuel Silvia Francis E. White HOLY ROSARY

$20 Edward T. Julian $10 Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Arcikowski, Mr & Mrs. Frank &: Walter Bi~dak, Mr. & Mrs. Walenty Gorczyca, Mrs. Felicia Kable &: Sons, Mr. & Mrs. Michael Kuc­ zek Mr. & Mrs, James McMahon Mr'. & Mrs. Robert Nichols, Stanley Radwanski, Mr. &: Mrs. Frank Tabak, Anonymous OUR LADY OF LOURDES $50 St. Vincent de Paul Conference $25 Mr. & Mrs. Henry J. Silva $10 Mr. & Mrs. Joseph'Silva Jr., Wilhermina R. Martin, Mr. & Mrs. Alhert Aleixo, Mr. &: Mrs. John Baptista, Mr. &: Mrs. Joseph Faria . Mr. & Mrs. Arthur Pina, Mr. &: Mrs. Harold Woods, Mr. & Mrs - -: Gregory Neto, Mrs. Charles Hackney, Mr. &: Mrs. John E. Sylvia Mr. & Mrs. John Cambra, Mr. & Mrs: Antone Fel'1'is, Mr. & Mrs , Alfred E. Terra

ST. JAMES ST. MARY $50 $50 Mr. & Mrs. Louis Coholall Dr. John F. Mulhern Elizabeth M. Phaneuf $30 Mrs. John Duff Jr. Mrs. Mary E. Chaisty &. Family $30 $25 Mr. & Mrs. Arthur Macedo William & Catherine Brady $25 Esther & Ethel Buckley Mr. & Mrs. Fred Brotherson Daniel A. J. Doyle Mr. & Mrs. James Bolton Anthony Marino Helen L. Crowley Mr. & Mrs. Francis Norton Mrs. Lena Cordeiro Mr. & Mrs. Edward O'Gara MI'. & Mrs. Joseph Smith $20 $20

Mr. & Mrs. James Burns Mr. &: Mrs. Arnold Parsons Charles Tripp Margaret M. Burding $18 Mrs. Milton Viera

Mr. & Mrs. John B. Grant Joseph & William Cawley $15

John Quinn Ralph Buckley Mr. & Mrs. John T. Regan Catherine McCarthy $12

$12 A Friend Bernard Connolly $10

$10 Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Bender, Mr. & Mrs. Bruce Andrews, Mrs. James Bicker, Mary A. Anonymous, Mrs. Louis Bacigal­ Brimley, Mr. & Mrs. Daniel E. upo, Robert Cowan, William Francis, Mr. & Mrs. Stanley Corr Jadlowe William Cahill, Robert Calvey, Mrs. Margaret Jeffries, Mr. &: James Coyle, Joseph Coyle, Mrs. Mrs. Robert Jenkins, Mr. & Mrs. Edith Davis Edward Leary, Mr. & Mrs. Thos. Mrs. Helen Donahue, Howard Morock, Charles Normile Donahue, Gerald Dooley, Rich­ Mr. &: Mrs. Andrew O'Neil,_ ard Dooley, Elizabeth Doran Loretta E. Phaneuf, Mary E. Edmund 'Finnegan, Mildred Phaneuf, Mary Regan, Mr. & Fitzgerald, 'William Fitzgerald, Mrs. Joseph Ryan Mr & Mrs Francis Flynn, Donald Loretta Sillery, Mr. & Mrs. Gilbert Benjamin Wilson, Helen Winn, Monica Goggin, Daniel Grady, Mary Winn, Mrs. Elizabeth & Henry Grant, George Hall, Mat­ Anna May Ball thew Kelliher TOP RESEARCHER: Sister Alice Marie of the Biology Richard L. Ball, Mr. & Mrs. James Holmes, William Holmes Department of Clarke College, Dubuque, Iowa, has received John J Barry, Mrs Lillian Bowen Edward Kearns, Agnes Laughlin, a grant of $3,900 from the Iowa Heart Association to sup­ Mr. & Mrs. Roger Chouinard, Mrs. Agnes Lynch Louis LeClair, John Lyons, port a research project related to the causes and treatment Mr. & Mrs. Stephen Collins Mr. &: Mrs. George V. Dos­ Andrew McBreen, Mr~ &: Mrs. of heart disease. She holds a doctorate degree from St. Santos, John Downey, Mrs. Joba James McGowan, Charles Mc­ Louis University. NC Photo. Downey, Patricia Downey, Anne Mann Garside ,p Harriet Megan, James P. Mul­ ST. JACQUES ST. JOSEPH Esther Gelder, Mrs. George cahey, John Mulholland, Thomas Laliberte, Izabel Lima, John Murphy, Francis Mulholland $15 $30 Maguire, Mary McDonnell James Mulholland, Mary Mul­ Mr. &: Mrs. Thomas Cunniff Miss Claire Hamel Mr. &: Mrs. William Mitchell, holland, Mrs. William Murray, <'it Family $10 Mr. & Mrs. Richard Moniz, Mrs. Mrs. Catherine Orsi, Pauline $25 Dr. Charles Donat Cyr, Elzear Mary Newett, Mr. & Mrs. Henry Orsi Esther Johnson Cyr, Albert Dansereau, Armand Ouimet, Mr. & Mrs. Albert Pa­ Rosemary Grsi, William Orsi, James Maxwell Desautels, Miss Regina Hebert, checo Mrs. W. Jeanette Ouelette, Mar­ Mr. & Mrs. William Scully Lucien Rioux ' Mr. & Mrs. Daniel Perry, garet Ouelette, George Overton Hon. & Mrs. Frank Smith' George A. Power, Mrs. Harry Mrs. Anne Packer. Anna Reilly $20 Roberts, Mr. & Mrs. Lionel J. Katherine Reilly, John, Reilly, Mr. & Mrs. John Chaisty, Mr. Sears, Mr &: Mrs Anthony Theo­ HOLY NAME, Mrs. Miriam Reilly ,dore, Mrs. William Wood $100 Arnold Ruby, Wilfred Pierce, & Mrs. Timothy Neville. Arthur Avila, Mr. &: Mrs. $15 St. Vincent de Paul Society Thomas QUinn, Jose Santos, Mrs. Vincent S. CotnOir, Mr. &: Mrs. Mr. &: Mr$. James Kelleher of Holy' Name Church I Helen Sears ' Charles Edmundson, Mr. & Mrs. $12 $25 Cecelia F. Sheerin, Mary C. Daniel Hayes, Mr. &: Mrs. Mit­ Mr. & Mrs. John Cleary Mr. &: Mrs. Stephen Markey Sheerin, Arnold Silva, Mrs. Ellen chell Kijak $10 $20 Tatro, Louis Theroux Mr. &: Mrs. Milton Lawrence, Thomas Bannon, Doris Bar­ Mr. &: 'Mrs. Charles A. Gun. 4'\rthur Travers, John Wade, Mr. & Mrs. Eugene Lorenco, Mrc Mary Wall, Frederick Wellwood, tone Mrs. Gerald Boehner, Mr. ning Celina Lunny & Mary Louise '&: Mrs. Joseph J. Boiros, Ray­ $15 Mary G. Whittemore Lunny, Mr. & Mrs. Gerald O'­ mond Brocklehurst. Albert Hill Brien, Mr. &: Mrs. David Souza ' Mr. & Mrs. James H. Cleary, $10 ST. PAUL Mr. & Mrs. Walter Szwaja, Mr. & Mrs. William Hallahan, Einar Anderson, Mrs. Lillian Katherine Hern, Mr. &: Mrs. Ed. Baldwin, Francis Clynes, Pat~ John Wilkinson $10 Leon Bora, Mr. &; Mrs. Leo ward Lynch, Mrs. Alice McKen. rick Conlan, Mr. &: Mrs. Joseph HOLY ROSARY ~ Constant .Conroy, Mrs. Archie Dearborn, na. Mr. & Mrs. Robert Miller, Mr. Harold ~oughlin, Alice Dono­ $10 Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Dooley, Mr. &: 'Mrs. Robert Parent, Mr. & Mr. &: Mrs. John Milette van, Romeo Dupont, Joseph & Mrs. Leonard Goslin Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Reilly, Mrs. Mrs. Peter Reilly, Mr. &: Mrs. Dury, Edward Edwards

Gertrude Simpson, Mr. &: Mrs. Mario Riva, Mr. & Mrs Manuel Joseph Fitzpatrick; John Kel­

'Norman HUdson, Mr. &: Mrs. Bose. ley, Thomas Kelley, Louise Mac.

Mr. &: Mrs. William Sankey, kay, Joseph Mullarkey

James Lynch Mr. & Mrs. James A. Brady, Mr. & Mrs. William Trucchi, Henry L. Potvin, Mrs. Mar­

garet Potvin, Mrs. Joseph P.

Mr. & Mrs. Robert Cloutier, Mr. Mr. & Mrs. William Ross, Lo­ raine Batista, Mr. &: Mrs. Alfred Taffe & Joseph Jr.

& Mrs. Ensencio Coelho, Mr. & Mrs. William Cutner De Costa. Mr. & Mrs. Raymond Green, Mr. & Mrs. Maurice Lemieux, Mr. & Mrs. Wilfred Menard, Mr. Mrs. Malcolm Lewis, Manuel & Mrs. Maurice Simoneau Marshall, Mr. & Mrs. Richard for McMurrow, Margaret Mulcahy Ernest Prado, Thomas Sween­ ST. LOUIS (NC) - Some 200

ey, Mr. & Mrs. Frank Tosti. Mr. & Mrs. Homer Parent, Mr. delegates are expected at the

&: Mrs. Joseph Rezendes, Mr. & Catholic Theological Society of

Mrs. Antone Rose, Mr. & Mrs. America convention here start.

SACRED HEART 'William Santerre, Mrs. Loraine ing Monday, June 24, at which

Spearin. $50 Joseph Cardinal Ritter, Arch.

Benjamin Valdes Sr., Mr. & The McMahon Family bishop of St. Louis, will be host.

Mrs. Benjamin Valdes Jr., Mr. $36 The CTSA was founded in

Mr. & Mrs. William C. Emsley & Mrs. Charles Velozo. 1946 "to promote an exchange

TAUNTON, MASS.

$20 of views among Catholic theolo­

Mr. & Mrs. Robert Sault gians, and to further studies and

ST. ANTHONY THE lANK ON

$15 research in the, field of sacred

$20 Mynette Briody, lVIr. & Mrs. theology." Father Ferrer Smith,

TAUNTON GRIIN

Frederick Reams Atty. &: Mrs. Aristides Andrade O.P., of Washington, D. C., is

$10 John Camara president and Msgr. Richard T.

_ . .b... of Fed....l Deposit

Mr. & Mrs. Francis Bianchi, L $18

Doherty of St. Paul, Minn., vice­

bar.a•• Oorpor.tloa

Ruth Brady, Mr. & Mrs. Theo. Candida Abreau, Ernest Al­ president,

dore, Brassard, Mr. & Mrs. Jo­ meida, Anibal Antunes, Antonio

seph Burke, Mrs. Adelaide Car­ Borges, William Collins

ney. Mr. & Mrs. Manuel Costa, An­

Mrs. Patricia Combs, Mr. & tone da Costa, Beverly Ducharme

Mrs. John Devlin, Mr. &: Mrs. Herbert Ferreira,Frank Joaquim

Edmund T. Fitzgerald, Kathleen Mr. &: Mrs. Thomas Jordan,

Flannery, John Grace. Manuel Leanevs, Mr & Mrs Man­

Mrs. Rita Greenough, Jose­ ulli Lima, Agnes Martin, Rose

phine Haracz, Mrs. Francis Mendonca

Keithan, GertrUde McBreen, Mr. & Mrs. Antone Moniz,

Mrs. Luke McBreen. Manuel Pacheco, Edward Pate­

Charcoal Briquetl

Gladys & Mary McIsaac, Mrs. naude, Mr. & Mrs. John Rogers,

Anita Menard, Fred Miles, Helen Mr. & Mrs. Mario Silva, Mr. &

lag Coal - Charcoal

Murray, Mr. & Mrs. Theodore Mrs. Frederick Sylvia Peters. Antone Abreau, Antone Ar­ Mr. & Mrs. Frank Rose, Mrs. ruda, Maria Braga, Joseph De­ Jean St. Pierre, Mr. & Mrs. Vin. costa, John Silvia

cent Scully, Mr. & Mrs. Veto Joseph Thomas, Manuel Vic.

640 Plea_n' Street Tel. WY 6-1271 New "elferel

Stasunas, Mrs. Theresa Sullivan. toi~inO

New Bedford

Complete

Theologians Expect

200 at Meeting

BANKING

SERVICE

Bristol County

Bristol County

Trust Company

GLEN COAL & OIL CO., Inc.


Fall River , ST. MARY'S CATHEDRAL $400 Rev. Arthur W. Tansey $100 In Memory of Lucy J. Mc. Mahon ' St. Mary's Branch St. Vincent de Paul St. Mary's Cathedral Guild Dr. & Mrs. Frederick Sullivan $60 Rev. Daniel F. Moriarty $50 In Memory of Family of Charles W. Lynch Mr. & Mrs. Laurence A. Coyle $40 Rose Dowling $35 Gertrude O'Loughlin $25 Mrs. Elizabeth A. Deneh, Lucien Larrivee Mrs. Catherine Connell . $20 Mr. & Mrs. Alton Ferris, Mr. & Mrs. Michael Hayes & Family, Mrs. Ann C. Lingard & Ann Marie Lingard. $15 James O'ConnE'll& Catherine, Mr. & Mrs. Jeremiah Lowney, Robert Coggeshall, Mrs. Jere­ miah Holland, Corky Row Club Inc. $10 Julia Mulhern, John Sullivan, Richard Sullivan, Charles Crit­ chley, Helen. Goff. Michaeline Russell, Mr. & Mrs. Frank DePaola, Mr. & Mrs. James Comisky, Mr. & Mrs. Ed­ ward Grace, Mrs. James Whalen. Mr. & Mrs. Harold Sayward, Mr. & Mrs. Edward Laporte, Lillian L. O'Hearn, Mr. & Mrs. Paul McArdle, William P. O'Brien. Mrs. James O'Brien Sr., Mr. & Mrs. James O'Brien Jr., My­ rene McArdle, Helen Shea, In Memory of George T. Dacey by Margaret Dacey. Mary Campbell, Angela' Cyr, Mr. & Mrs. Arthur Haley, Wil­ liam Bradbury Jr., Mr. & Mrs. William Bowler. . Mrs. Francis Laliberte, Mr. & Mrs. Edward Doolan, Margaret Sullivan, John R. Correiro, Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Dennis. John Ryan, Mr. & Mrs. James Melvin, James J. Sullivan, Mr. & Mrs. George Nolan, Mr. & Mrs Edward F. Levell. Olive Quinn, Mr. & Mrs. Wil. liam Pereira, Mrs. Michael Mc­ Connon & Daughter, Mr. & Mrs. 'Joseph 'R. Levesque, Mrs. Lena Reilly. . Helen Burns, Mr & Mrs Frank Galvao, Mrs. Bernard E. Har­ rington. HOLY NAME

$500

Dr. & Mrs. Daniel F. Gallery $200 In Memory of Miss Anna Shay $150 Dr. & Mrs. Richard Donovan $50 • Helen Shay Mr. & Mrs. J. Burke Shay Mr. & Mrs. Joseph P. Phelan Mr. & Mrs. Michael H. Sullivan $25 Francis Devine Mrs. Eugene Sullivan & Family Mr. & Mrs. William Costa $20 Mr. & Mrs. Linus J. Mullaly Marion L. Torphy $15, Mr. & Mrs. Michael Hanley & Jane $12 In m'emory of Mr. & Mrs. John W. Roche' Mr. & Mrs. John J. Mitchell $10 Mr. & 'Mrs. James R. Medeiros, ,Ann Dunn, Mrs. Edgar Stanton, Mr. & MFs. Roderick ,Hart & Claire-Marie, Mr. & M!:s..' Fran­ cis Lea'ry. ' Mr. & Mrs. Andrew Duffy & Andrea, Anna L. Sullivan, Cath~ erine Shea, Anna Devine, Lena Doran. Mr. & Mrs. Thomas D. COIl­ lon, Mr, & Mrs. Thomas J. Logan Mrs, Julius Cohen, Mr. & Mrs. James J. Sullivan, Mr. &' Mrs. Raymond Talbot. M:r, & Mrs. Walter Neves"Mrs. 'Mary Taylor, Mr.·& Mrs. Donald Ryan, Rita Dennehy, Kathleen Dennehy. Mr. & Mrs. William Grace, Mr. & Mrs. Robert E. Lyons, Mrs. Anthony C. Leonard & Family, Mr. & Mrs. Edward Nasser Kathleen McIntyre, Mr. & Mrs. Joseph T. Canniff, Mary Hurley

Fall River

THE ANCHOR­ Thurs., May 23, 1963

SACRED HEART

$100 Atty. & Mrs. George T. Bolger Mr. & Mrs. John J. Coughlin Dr. Earle E. Hussey $50 Thomas A. Synnott $40 Mr. & Mrs. James P. Barnes' $25 Mr. & Mrs. John F. Coyle Madeline I. Riley Mr. & Mrs. John L. Morgan Lodivine LeMoyne $20 Mr. & Mrs. William F. Kenney, John M. Corrigan, William F. Fitzgerald, Mr. & Mrs. Willard R. Piper In memory of Mary A. Lyons & Staff Sgt. William F. Lyons by Andrew J. Lyons, Mr. & Mrs. James Roberts $15 Mr. & Mrs. Norman Myer, Mr. & Mrs. Edward Larrivee, Mr. & Mrs. Raymond F. Powers, Flor­ ence M. Sullivan, Mr. & Mrs. George McCoomb $12 Mr. & Mrs. Raymond Medeiros $10 Helen Vavrina, Mary Halligan, Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth E. Leger, Mr. & Mrs. Anibal Silva, Mrs. Raymond Norton Mr. & Mrs. Dominick Maxwell, Mr. & Mr.s. Walter H. White, Mr. & Mrs. Jose M. Silva Jr., Mr. & Mrs. John Manning & family, Charles S. Morris Miss M. Curtis, John Franey, Mr. & Mrs. Jerry L. CiUllo, Pat­ rick J. Flemming, John N. Sul­ livan Miss Mary V. O'Hearn, Mr. & Mrs. Melzar P. Sampson, Kath­ erine &: John P. Lenard, Anne M. Coyle, Laura M. Hollihan Margaret F, ,Lowney, Alphonse Legendre, Mr. & Mrs: John J. Mahoney, Mr. & Mrs. Matthew J. Sheahan, Mr. & Mrs. Leonard Harrington Miss Cecilia Clorite, Mr. & Mrs. Donald T. Corrigan, Mr. ,& Mrs. John Burke, Mr. & Mrs. Henry Champagne, Joseph Sul­ livan Mr. & Mrs. Leo F. 'McShane, Mr. & Mrs. John J. Furze, J. Ed­ ward .Croke, Mr. & Mrs. Manuel Crovello, Mr. & Mrs. George Schmoke 'Mr. & Mrs. RObert Sowden, Mr. & Mrs. Edward M. Dillon, Grace Learned, Mr. & Mrs. Ray­ mond Nestor ,Mr. & Mrs. John G. Harding . Mr. & Mrs. Everett J. Smith, Mrs. Margaret Ford & Mrs. Edna 'Hughes, William L. 'O'Brien Sr., Mary C. Finucane, Alice K. Bailey NOTRE DAME

$30 A. M. Masse Family

$10

Jos. A. Gagnon, Robert Mes­ sier, Romeo Trepanier,. Albert Thibault, Narcisse Goyette Albert Lecomte, George Gagne Julien Barnabe, Andrew Roy, Roland Couture. Camille Richard, Robert King, Hector Levesque. Mr. & Mrs. Alfred Berger OUR LADY OF HEALTH

$150 Rev. Luiz G. Mendonca $10 Mr. & Mrs. Antone Barboza, Mr. & Mrs. Manuel Cabral, Mr. & Mrs. Charles Gagne, Mr. & Mrs. Francisco Medeiros, Mr. & Mrs. Francisco J. Pacheco. Mr. & Mrs. Manuel Rocha, Mr. & Mrs. Augusto Santos Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Gilbert Vasconcelos JOhn Oliveira. ' HOLY ROSARY

$20

. Charles Finucane .

. $10

The Italian' Progressive Club, Frank J. Barresi, Frank T. Bar­ resi, Teresa Bertoncini, Ernest DiGiammo. Edith Manchester, Mr.' & Mrs. Eugene O'Brien, Mr. &: Mrs. Armando ·Toni.

21

13th Graduation At Salve Regina Bishop Russell J. McVinney will preside at the 13th annual commencement exercises for Salve Regina College, set for 3 Monday a-l'ternoon, June 3. Rev. Robert F. Drinan, dean of Boston College Law School, will be commencement speaker and honorary degrees will be awarded Sister Mary Louise O'Brien, Community School Su­ pervisor 'for the Sisters of Mercy; and C. Alexander Pelo­ oquin, director of the college glee club. Mr. Peloquin, music director of .'the Cathedral of SS. Peter and Paul in Providence, is being cited' for his outstanding contri­ bution to the field of music edu. cation. FIe is a noted orga~ composer, choral director, 3'Ii­ thor and promoter of the-' ad­ vancement of Christian culture. Sister Mary Louise, a graduate of P.C. and B.C., has been in­ strumental in introducing ad­ vanced educational concepts and a thorough program of teacher preparation. A community school .4­ supervisor for forty years, she will celebrate her Diamond Jub­ ilee of holy profession as a Sister of Mercy in July.

MEET AT ,UNITED NATIONS: During a sessions break at the UN building in New York, Leon-Joseph Car­ dinal Suenens, left, Archbishop of Maliness-Brussels and Study Cooperation Primate of Belgium, chats with Adlai E. Stevenson, U.S. MADRID (NC)-Spain's Cath­ Ambassador to the UN. Cardinal Suenens, acting as a special olic Action will hold four Days emissary of His Holiness Pope John XXIII to the UN, spoke of International Cooperation her~ starting Sunday, May 26 to the' U.S. Committee for the United Nations on the . to promote an ecumenical spirit pontiff's recent peace encyclical, "Pacem et Terris." NC among Spanish Catholics and to Photo. study past Catholic cooperation ST. PETER AND PAUL

ST. R04Jit

$100 $15

Women's Club, SS. Peter & Mr. & Mrs. Paul Girou:ll.

Paul Church $10 '$25 St. ,Vincent de Paul Society John E. O'Connor St. Roch's Council $20 Junior & Senior C.Y.O., SS.

ST. STANISLAUS Peter & Paul Church $30 $15 William' Daley & Family, lVir. & Mrs. Matthew Chrupcala $15 Mary Garity, Peter Garity, F:red- Knights of the Altar & Choir erick Hayes. . Boy Guild $12 A client of St. Anthony of Mr. &:: Mrs: William Lambert Padua Sr. . $10 $10 Edward, Mary & Josephine Mr. & Mrs. John T. Brook, Mr. & -Mrs. Daniel O'Connor, Mr. &; Niewela, Mrs. Rose Rudyk, Mr. Mrs. Anthony Pacheco, Mr. & & Mrs. Edward Piszcz, Daniel Mrs. Henry Holland, Mr. & Mrs. Gagnon Antonio Miranda. SANTOCHEISTO Mr. ,& Mrs. Robert Guerrettaz, Mr. & Mrs. Edward Quirk, Mr. & $500 , Mrs. Thomas Moran, Mr. & Mrs. Rev. ArthurC. Dos Reis Arthur Malloy, Mr. & Mrs. Ed­ $50 mond Audette. Dr. Raymond R. Costa Mr. & Mrs_ Roland Malenfant, $10 Mr. . & Mrs. Everett Cowell, Alfred L. Campos, Ermelinda Marion Mahoney, Agnes Tavis, Frizado, Mr. & Mrs. Daniel Cast­ Pauline Murphy. anho Jeremiah Hurley, Margaret Dunlea, Mr. & Mrs. A,:,-gust ST. ANTHONY OF PADUA Morriss, Mr. & Mrs. LIOnel $100. Moniz, Mr. & Mrs. Abdellah Mrs. Mary L. Silva Mizher. Atty. & Mrs. Milton R. Silva Knights of the Altar-SS. Peter $50 & Paul Church. Rev. Joao C. Martins

Dr. Francis J. Petrone

ST. MATmEU $15

Ventura's Pharmacy

$10 . $10 Mr. & Mrs. Leo Gendreau, Mrs Jordon Medeir,?s, John Martin, Anna Hamel, Mr. & Mrs. Wilfred Pelletier Mr. & Mrs. Albert Roy Sophie Ferry Mr. & Mrs. Edmour Thibault IMMACULATE CONCEPTION

$100 In Memory of Robert E. New­ bury $50 Immaculate Conception Wom­ en's Guild $15 Anna Long $10 Armand Guimar, John Ker­ shura, Edward O'Hara, Jean Le­ berge, Hugh Gillis Bertha Ashworth,' Homer J. Goddu, Mr. &' Mrs: Arthur Des­ rosiers, Antone Mattos, Arthur Bergeron Stephen Otis, James Cronan Mr. & Mrs. Jose De Medeiros

ST. LOUIS ST.ELIZABETB $12

$10 Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Garvey

John Vieira, Joseph F. Medei­ $10

Mr. & Mrs. Anthony Rebeno

ros, ,Antonio Viveiros, Manuel. Major & Mrs. Arthur Desmarais Enos

with 'international organizations and possibilities for more effec­ tive coolJi7ration in the future. ­ ESPIRITO SANTO

$10 "Mr; &. Mrs. Manuel C. Cos­ " tello ST. ANTHONY OF DESERT

$25

, Mr.. & l\frs. Elias Galib .. $10 Mr' & Mrs. John A. Monsour. Mr. &. Mrs. Alfred J. Nasser, Mr. & Mrs. Andrew You.sif, Mr.. & Mrs: Tole Joseph, Mr. & ~rs. Barb~rJ. Faris ST. JOSEPH ­

$50 St. Joseph's Men's Club $25 Mr ~ & Mrs. Edward Thompsoll , $20 MI'. ,& Mrs. David Matthew Sir. $10 Mr. & Mrs. Leverett Teague, Mr. & Mrs. Louis Cyr, Donald McGovern, Mr. & Mrs. James Saunders, David Matthews Jr. ,In Memory of Bruce· WimeJ; Mr. & Mrs. Norman De Coste, ...... Mary ·Cullen, Mr. & Mrs. Ernest Tessier, Mr. & Mrs. Leonard Phelan Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Levesque. Mr. & Mrs. John Duffy Jr. '

..

TOUHEY'S

• PHARMACY

ATWOOD

• He~ring Aid Co.

OIL COMPANY

• Surgiccil. Appliance Co~

SHELL

HEATING OILS

South Hyannis

Sea Sts• Tel. HY 81

trehe A. Shea, Prop. 202 - 206 ROCK STREET FALL' 'RIVER, MASS. ­

.0Sborne 5-7829 - 3-0037

YOURS TO LOVE AND TO GIVE! the lif. of a DAUGHTER OF ST. PAUL Love God mo.., and give to .oul. knowl.dg. and love of God by serving Him in a Million which use. the ....n, Radio. Motion Pictur.. and TV. to bring His Word to soul. ev.rywh.... Zealou. young • girls. 14-2J year. int.r••t.d in this unique Apostolate may write to: , IEVEREND MOTHER SUPERIOR DAUGHTERS OF ST. pAUL 50 ST. '~UL'SAYE. IOSTON 10, MASS.

--


22

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River, Thurs., May 23,1963

Fall River ST. PATRICK'S $60 'l'homas Ryan $50 , Mr. & Mrs. Charles Veltlza In memory of Mr. & Mrs. George V. Broderick Mr. & Mrs. Daniel Scully $40 : Joseph Morrison $25 .,William Bruneau, Dr. & Ml'S. J.oseph Norman, Mr. & Mrs. 'Yalter Burns Jr., Mary E. Kil­ r.oy, Mr. & Mrs. Anthony R. Rug­ giero, Patricia Leary 'Mrs. Mary Noonan & James Clegg, Mr. & Mrs. James E. Shea Frances Cash $20 · Mr. & Mrs. John Cote, Mr. &

Mrs. Edward Fitzgerald, Mildred S1i!Uvan, Mr. & Mrs. Patrick L'lary, James Ryan 'William M. Purdy, Mr. & Mrs. George BiltcUffe, Mr. & Mrs. J:oseph Biszko, Mr. & Mrs. Al­ bert Dufresne, Mr. & Mrs. Wil­ liam McHugh $15 · Helen Sullivan, Mr. & Mrs. ~. William Rys, Mr. & MrS". Martin Delahanty, Abbie I. Kilroy $13 Mrs. Jane Nodine $12 'Mr. & Mrs. James McCann, Edward Ryan, MI & Mrs. Ray­ 'mond Lavoie, Mr. & Mrs. Roman Rogala, Mrs. Mary Veronica King Mr. & Mrs. John Nazareth . $10 · "Agnes Tunney, Mrs. Frank Se­ well, Mr. & Mrs. Matthew Kuss, Mr. & Mrs. Louis Silvia, Helen Ferry Anastasia Mayes, Mr. & Mrs. Albert Mendes, Veronica King. Mrs. Harold Miller, Mr. & Mrs. Jeffrey Allie Eva McDonald, Mr. & Mrs. - Louis Viveiros Jr., Mr. & Mrs. Harold' Powers, Mr:- & Mrs. Nap­ eleon Jean, Mr. & Mrs. James Coyle Mr. &, Mrs. Francis Roarke, Mr. & Mrs. Paul Vanlanding­ ham, Mr. & Mrs. Normand Hey­ wood, Mr. & Mrs. Ralph Fletcher Mr.& Mrs. James McCloskey , Mr. &- Mrs. Joseph Bergeron, Mr. & Mrs. Donald Morrow, Mr. & Mrs. Charles Foy, Mr. & Mrs. Adrian Martini, Mr. & Mrs. John Leddy Caroline Wilcox, Annie Wil­ cox, Clara Miller, John Fletcher, Daniel J. McCarthy' Jr. Timothy Donovan, Mrs. Anna Hampl, Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Ta­ vares, Mr. & Mrs. Donald Hard­ i!lg, Mr. & Mrs. Milton N. Bed­ narz ,Mr. & Mrs. John Malloy, John Melvin, Mr. & Mrs. Ernest Mous­ seau, A.nthony B. McCormack, Mr.' & Mrs. Woodrow Tracy · Mrs. Jean Laliberte, Mr. & ~rs. Alex Todd, Mr. & Mrs. Ed\I' ""ard Gagnon, Mr. & Mrs. Albert ~wis, Mr. & Mrs.' James Fitz­ gerald · Mr. & Mrs. John Ciullo, Mr. & Mrs. ~dwar": Darcy, Mr. & Mrs. John McHugh Jr., Mr. & Mrs. Armand Berube, Mrs. Rita Del­ zenero Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Aguiar, Mr. & Mrs. George Boyer, Mrs. Lil­ liar. Lovenbury,' Mrs. William Atkinson, Mr. & Mrs. Albert Yelle Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Perry, Mrs. Margaret Miller, Mrs. William Swist, Mrs. Mary Grota, Mr. & Mrs. Frank Labecki Mrs. Mary Hickey, Sheila Mc­ Hugh, Mr. & Mrs. John Mooney, Mr. & Mrs. Thomas McHugh, Mr. & Mrs.' Joseph Holt Mr. & Mrs. Edward Forgette,' Mr. & Mrs. Jack Pacheco, Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Shea, Mr. & Mrs. Edward West, Mr. & Mrs. Roger Legault Mr. & Mrs. John powers, Mr. & Mrs. Michael Ryan, Mr. & Mrs William Holmes, Mr & Mrs John Conway, Mr. & Mrs. Ralph Cru­ dele Mr. & Mrs. Alvan White, Mr. & Mrs. Louis Rousseau, Mr. & Mrs. Raymond Barrette, Mr. & Mrs. Donald Canuel, Mr. & Mrs. ..... John Rodriques Mr. & Mrs. Theodore Blouin, Mr. & Mrs. Roland Peloquin, Mr. & Mrs. Philip Gorman, Mr. & Mrs. Leo Charrete, Mr. & Mrs. Arthur Emard.

Mr. & Mrs. John Morotti, Mr. & Mrs. Leo LePage, Mr. & Mrs.

Raymond Thibault, Mr. & Mrs.

Michael Mullaney, Mr. & Mrs.

Albert Duperre Antone Amaral, Mr. & Mrs. Anthony Rogers, Mrs. Jeanette O'Donnell, Mr. & Mrs. Harry Cipollini, Mr. & Mrs. John Viana Mr. & Mrs. Frank Bertoncini, Mr. & Mrs. John Whipp, Mr. & Mrs. Robert Whipp, Margaret Buckley, Mr. & Mrs. Norman Berard Mr. & Mrs. Oscar DeCecco, Mr. & Mrs, Louis }'inucci Sr., Mr. & Mrs., Charles Fennelly, Mr. & Mrs. Alban Couture, Mr. & Mrs. Roland Levesque Mr. & Mrs. Victor Auclair, Mary Welch, Mr. & Mrs. Eugene Connors, Robert W. Healey, Mr. & Mrs. Manuel Ribeiro

Mr. & Mrs. Forest Mills, Wil": Ham X. Murray, Mr. & Mrs. Al­ bert Mercier, Mr. & Mrs. William E. Miller, John McGuire, Jr. Mary E. Hickey, Mr. & Mrs. Robert Regan, Mr. & Mrs. Mat­ thew Gasior, Mr & Mrs Anthony Mello, Mrs. Beatrice Ferreira, Mr. & Mrs. Henry W. Buckley

Save Valuable Plaid, Stamps!

~'

FACt RUMP, TOP or

SCOUT CHAPLAIN: Fr. Maurice F. Meyers, S.J., will serve as Catholic chaplain at the International Boy Scout Jamboree at Mara­ thon, Greece, in August. He teaches Russian at St. Igna­ tius High School, Chicago.

ST. JEAN.BAPTISTE Mrs. Amanda Lagace, Henri $200 Demers, Rene & Robert Goyette, In Memory of Rt. Rev. M. P. Emile Rancourt, George Gagnon L. Lariviere Arthur Audette, A Friend, Leo $100 Turcotte, Mr. & Mrs. Ellery Rev. Donald E. Belanger Chace, Louis R. Bouchard In Memory of Rt. Rev. M. P. l~rnest Ouellette, Mrs. Muriel L. Lariviere Gamache, Albina Florence, AI. $75 cid.e Breault, Joseph Lavoie, Os­ Rev. Maurice R. Jeffrey cal' Martel $50 Michael Souza, Armand Ther­ Parish Catholic Womens Coun­ oux, A Friend, Roland Lamarre cil Alfred CarOB, Mrs. Wilfrid Le­ $29

Comte, Mrs. Armand Patenaude, (korge Casavant

Edward Sullivan, Edmond St. $25

Michel Oscar Parker

Lionel Desrosiers, Edmond A. Adelard Larue Bellefeuille, Diana Vidal, Oscar B. & S. Fisheries of Fall River Fontaine, Omer Blais , $20 Omer Martineau, Lionel Des. Alfred Berube, Armand Thi­ chenes, Russell Roy, Rene Mail­ boutot, Edward Quellette, Lucien loux, Leo Sullivan , Laroche & Family, Arthur Leo Thibault, Joseph Dionne, Gauthier Doris Patenaude, Anne-Marie Manuel Raposa, Albert Du­ 'St. Yves, Armc:nd Gagnon fresne 1N)lliam Letendre, Albert La­ ~ $18 berge, Stanley Bielusiak, Paul Raymond Francoeur Lauzon, Armand Desrosiers $15 Albert Talbot, Lionel Dupont,' Philias Ouellette & Family, Herve Proulx, Donald Desilets, Mrs. Alfred Desmarais & Fam­ ily, Joseph Laroche & Family, Jeanne Ouellette Jr. Arthur Desbiens, George Aurele Charest & Family, Louis Chabot, Lucien Lamothe Phil­ Goyette, Maurice Dore ippe LaFrance ' $14 Octave Fluet & Family ST. ANNE $12 $25 Eugene Gagnon, Omer Bris­ Mr. & Mrs. Leo Hamel son & Family $12 John Farrell Mr. & Mrs. Edmond Pelletier $11.60 $10 A Friend Mr. & Mrs. Russell Beaulieu, $10 Maurice Belanger, Clementine Rose Bernier, Mr. & Mrs. Ray­ Thibault,' Mrs. Henri Belanger, mond Brodeur, Ronald Caisse, Mrs. Arthur Audette, Ovila Mr. & Mrs. Donat Cardinal Mrs. Cecile Cummings, Mr. & Caron Mrs. Joseph Duquette, Mr.. & Cleophas Lauzon, Mrs. Adri­ enne Theriault, Donat Mailloux, Mrs. Arthur Gendreau, Mr. & Joseph Banville, Raymond St. Mrs. Andre Giroux; Mr. & Mrs. Maurice Grandmaison Germain ' Mr. & Mrs. Rene Lachapelle, Albert Quellette, Alphonse St. Pierre, Raymond Ouellette, Mrs. Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Lannon, Ad­ Anna Filiatrault, Oscar Phenix. eline Lavault, Mr. & Mrs. Albert Noella Yokell, Joseph Caron, Lavoie, Mr. & Mrs. Normand Michaud. Horace Gendreau, Charles La­ Michaud, Mr. & Mrs. Normand pointe, Mrs. F. X. Vaillancourt Ernest Haslam, John Haslam, Michaud. Mr. & Mrs. Andre Plante, Mrs. Ovide Pilotte, Wilfrid Des­ Yvonne Plante, St. I,aurent forges, Henry Lavoie Family, Marthe St. Laurent, Mr. Daniel Arsenault, Pauline Tal­ & Mrs. Fred White bot, Ovide Talbot, Jean-Bap­ tiste Ouellette, Arthur Vidal ST. MICHAEL'S Lucia Perron, Arthur Laroche, $25 The Gendron Family, Wilfrid Francis Lennon Bourassa, Yves Coulombe $15 Joseph R. Casavant, Matthew Manuel Carreiro Labecki, Raymond Melanson, $10 Raymond Gariepy & Family, Paul Archambault, Manuel Ernest Gagnon & Family Bettencourt 3rd, Antone Cabral, Albert Belanger,' Armand Des­ Marais, Daniel Marchand, Cora John H. Camara, AntOne Costa Ernest Costa, Cosmo Cupolo, Plourde, Manuel Correa Donat Blanchette, Thomas La wrence Farias, Tobias Furtado Tache, Armand Gauthier, Emery Robert Greenhalgh Peter M. Larchevesque, Henry Grandrnont, George 'falbot Mrs. Benoni Goyette, Albert Letendre, David Lindo, Joseph Ross, Paul Casavant, Mrs. Clovis LOurenco Jr., Miss Patricia C. Mello Mayrand, Paul Talbot ,1~homas Mahon, Manuel P. Roger Talbot, Mrs. Jeannette Milot, Odilon Ouellette, John Moniz, Manuel Motta 3rd, Henry J. Pleiss, Arthur J. Rebello Perry & Family, Roland Arsen­ Antone Rego, Richard Rego, ault Leo Legault, Denerie Bergeron Manuel N. Reis, Manuel Reis, Atty. Manuel Rezendes Napoleon Picard, Aphter Dau­ Delphis Rioux, Miss Lydia phinais & Family, Dona't La­ pointe Ro,~ha, Richard Rodrick, Manuel Leonidas Moreau, Edgar Che­ Sil vestre, Henry Silvia nard, Union St. Jean-Baptiste of Arthur Souza, Manuel Troia, America Council St. Rita, Albert Manuel Ventura, Camilo Vivei­ Blanchette, Aime Goyette ros

BOTTOM ROUND

ROASTS c LB72

SUPER.RICHT QUALITY

""'~"""''''.:mm%''''''l~*''''''''''"''Wl¢r''-''"'.t''WL«''''''''"",*,ULW.,,",''ill''',"W'W'',U''''' ~'~N>~m.. . '''''~~~(~?;o;«-:~~%i:;;;';V';;~..~~:~~,"",::x.~

,

SUPER-RIGHT

:'::::1::& •.•

.

Fully-Cooked· ;1

HAMS .'~. ~~~~ c ~~~ON c ·;,1 ..

L.a

'2'9 "

k8"

PULL SHANK HALF

3'9

ffi~ ...

FULL' BUTT HALF

39,., ,.W<~" " ~" "'4~"."~" ~«I49 D~,' ~-*"' ="'~"'" I# TURKEYS ~,I c

c

LB

LB

..."'-"e==.. .

.....

..

"w<&Wi«{"" •• ~~":-::--mWi'<~~w-\~~?c> ...-»~~ ~;;;~~~·l9N');oMK¥:II

Ready-to-Cook Grade A,

8to 141bs

41

C 16to Ib 121bs

(TURKEYS

4 TO 8 LBS

f:}~~

37 ,I C Ib

LB

.,,[ ~.

39C)

''''0

FOR A LIMITED TIME ONLY' ON THE 3·POUND ICONOMY SIZE

SAVE 201;

Mild Mellow Coffee

EIGHT

O'CLOCK

3 1 39 LB

BAG

, Rich Full-Bodied Coffee

Ii

SAVE 22c

RED

CIRCLE

V-igorou8 and Winey

SAVE 18c

BOKAR

COFFEE

P,lc.s shown In this ad ;uaranlted \MU Sat., May 25 & Ifftctlve at ALL A&P Super Marktts In tltls community .. v.lclnlty.

Tobacco produc.tS' & Items PToftlblted bJ'

la~

exempt frMt Plaid Stamp off.r.

.


Reach Agreement 1n Resettlement Of Cuban People

By Jack Kineavy Exhibition baseball holds the spotlight this week as the Venezuelan All-Stars from Maracaibo engage the Crim­ son of New Bedford High this afternoon in the first of three scheduled appearances in Southeastern Massachu­ setts. The visitors 15 strong play. '.l,'hey were scheduled 19 and· representing the best host Somerset on Tuesday and diamond talent in the State go against Prevost today. Raider of Zulia have a Saturday ex­ coach Jim Sullivan was expected

hibition at Otis Air Force Base to go with his ace Jim Goodwin follJwing which they'll move on on Tuesday in an all out effort to bring the Falcons back to the to Fall River rest of the league. and a Sunday Goodwin has been on the shelf afternoon en­ for a couple of weeks nursing a gagement with sprained thumb on his pitching Durfee High at hand. The injury was sustained Alumni Fie 1 d . in the sixth inning of his no-hit­ The· .La t in· ter against Westport and the big Americans lefthander, except for a stint arrived in the against Case, hasn't been on the United States firing line since. Taking up a early this week, good bit of slack in the Raiders' ::-,w their home­ offense has been catcher Bruce town idol Luis Cranshaw. Latest statistics show Aparicio in ac­ tion in Baltimore, toured the the husky catcher leading Narry nation's capitol, then headed in extra basehits including six north . to Rhode Island, thence doubles, four triples and two homeruns. His .500 average leads to New Bedford arriving yester­ the circuit. day morning. This 16-day good­ Coyle Wins will mission is being sponsored Big news in the track world by the People to People organ­ ization of Providence and is a was Coyle's successful defense of sequel to a similar tour made its Class B New England Catho­ last year by an All-Star school­ lic crown at St. Joh:n's Prep, boy contingent from Rhode Danvers, on Sunday. The War. riors had a team total of 351h Island. After the Durfee game, the I:oints easily outdistancing St. visitors will proceed to Newport, Mary's of Lynn which finished R. I. for a two day stopover second with 24. Mike McCarthy's which includes a night game at versatile performance - 1st in Cardines Field on Monday, May the mile, 2nd in the 440 and 3rd 27. The tour will· then move in the broad jump-highlighted back to the Greater Providence a fine team effort by the War­ area and another exhibition tilt riors who failed to score only in in Woonsocket. The Venezuelans the 180.yard high hurdles. The Blue and Gold cindermen will participate in Memorial Day put together two firsts, three exercises in Providence the fol­ lowing day' ~nd tentative plans. seconds, two thirds, three fourt"hs call for a holiday night game at and two fifths to amass their Cranston Stadium. The South winning total. Briar. Friary's Americans are scheduled to close 20-10 leap took honors in the out their visit with a night game broad jump, Dan Powell finish­ at North Attleboro on Saturday, ing second. Bob Yelk pulled 'up third in the 880. Veno, Asack and June 1. Dewey posted fourths in the Classy Club Coach Charley Luchetti's New high jump, shot put and 440, re­ Bedford club appears to' be a spectively and Powell and Far­ good bet to latch onto an at-large rell just made the scoring col­ Eastern Mass. tourney berth on umn in the 100 and 220. Coyle's the strength of a great season to relay combine finished second date. The Crimson took a 10·0 to round out the scoring. The meet attracted teams from record into Tuesday's game with Durfee over which it holds a as great a distance as Bangor, Maine. Host St. John's, in a f~rst game 4-1 victory.· Good pitching, speed, strong defense building year, was hard-pressed and timely hitting have enabled to retain its ~~ crown, edging the Whalers to fashion a terrific LaSalle. Academy of Providence, season on the difficult independ­ 341h-31¥4. Charley Zailkowski of LaSalle was chosen the best per­ ent circuit. Defending champion Durfee former in Class A and Ed Her­ all but wrapped up honors in man of Don Bosco was selected Bristol County on Monday by B's best. Coming up Saturday, defeating se~ond place Bishop the annual State Meet in Boston. Stang by a 7.1 margin. The loss dropped Stang three games off the pace with only four remain­ ing. Very much in the running ST. NAZIANZ (NC)-Father for Bristol County's second entry in the tourney place are the Eugene Brochtrup,- S.D.S., Latin Rocketeers of North Attleboro professor at the Salvation Sem­ who went into Monday's game a . inary here in Wisconsi~ has been named adviser in establishing a scant half game behind Stang. The Narry picture at this new program in 'Latin stUdies for point focuses on Dighton-Reho­ Latin American seminarians. Father Brochtrup will work both and Case with defending champion Somerset the only at the Center of Intercultural possible disrupting factor. The Formation, Cuernavaca, Mexico, surprising Falcons, coached by this Summer with two Chileans Ed Texeira, took a half-game -one a specialist in linguistics lead over Case into this week's and the other in Latin. They will seek to perfect a system of intensive instruction in Latin for seminarians who have not previously studied tile language. ATLANTA (NC)-In a battle against the country's No. 1 kill­ er, heart disease, abbots and monks from 25 :aenedictine and Trappist monasteries met here EDINBURGH .(NC) The for a progress report on a Church of Scotland in a special "heart-diet" study. report asserted that the Roman It was described as the first Catholic Church's laws concern· large scale meeting in this coun­ ing mixed marriage are both try of abbots and monks of the embittering inter-faith relations two communities. The meeting and resulting in broken homes.' was sponsored by the Georgia The report of the Calvinist Department of Public Health. State Church complained espe­ Twenty-three abbots were pres­ cially of Catholic. canon law ent. provisions which state that there The study, little publicized, is no marriage at all if a Cath­ has been in progress for five olic is not married before a years. The object is to determine Catholic priest, and which re­ the relationship between the quire assurance by the non­ diets of Benedictines and Trap­ Catholic spouse in a mixed mar­ pists and hardening of the ar­ riage that the children will be terie&-atherosclerosia. l"aised as Catholics.

Planning New Latin Studies Program

Religious Cooperate In Health Study

Church of Scotland, Hits Catholic Laws

23

THE ANCHORThurs., May 23, 1963

New Bedford-Durfee to Play Venezuelan All-Star Team

NEW YORK (N C) ­ Protestant and Catholic re­ lief agencies have worked out an agreement in resettle­ ment of Cuban refugees in this country.

NEW BEDFORD CHAMPS: Testimo~ial banquet to OLPH basketball team was spotlighted by leaders, left to right: David P. David, coach; Rev. Seraphim Stachowicz, O.F.M., pastor; and Ted Mogilnicki, team captain.

CCA Pa rish Tota1$ FALL , RIVER

TOWNS

Acushnet­ St. Francis Xavier 3,815.25 Assonet--St. Bernard 1,494.00 Buzzards Bayor. St. Margaret 4,857.00 Centerville--Our Lady of Victory 2,558.00 Central Village--- St. John Baptist 2,196.00 Chatham- .Holy Redeemer 3,585.00 Dighton-St. Peter 1,333.00 East Brewster­ Our Lady of the Cape 1,428.00 East Falmouth- St. Anthony 6,245.00 Fairhaven- . St. Joseph 6,176.75 St. Mary 1,759.25 Sacred Hearts 623.00 Falmouth-St. Patrick 7,759.50 HyannisSt. Francis Xavier 13,060.50 Mansfield-St. Mary 8,785.00 Mattapoisett-NEW BEDFORD St. Anthony 3,197.00 Holy Name 8,260.00 Nantucket Assumption 713.50 Our Lady of the Isle 3,031.00 Holy Rosary 584.75 North DightonImmaculate Concephon 4,438.25 St. Joseph 2,638.00 11,014.50 Mt. Carmel North Easton­ O. L. of Perpetual Help 1.943.75 Immaculate Conception 8,111.25 O. L. of Purgatory 921.00 Sacred Heart 3,855.05 North Westport-Our Lady of Grace 2,715.50 St. Anne 2,247.25 4,817.50 St. Anthony of Padua 4,974.50 Norton-St. Mary St. Boniface 312.00 Oak BluffsSt. Casimir 888.00 . Sacred Heart 2,423.00 St. Francis of Assisi 1',736.50 Ocean Grove--­ St. Hedwig 750.50 St. Michael 3,539.50 St. Hyacinth 1,478.50 Orleans­ St. James 13,907.00 St. Joan of Arc 2,085.00 St. John the Baptist 7,260.55 St. Joseph 10,222.72 Osterville-Assumption 3,156.00 St. Kilian 4,2'64.00 Pr.ovincetown-St. P~ter 2,388'.81 St. Lawrence 20,148.75 Raynham-St. Ann 3,210.00 St. Mary 5,324.00 St. Theresa 4,094.00 Sandwich­ Corpus Christi 4,607.50 Seekonk-Mt. Carmel 4,764.00 TAUNTON Somerset-­ Holy Family St. John of God 3,251.00 3,512.65 Holy Rosary 2,003.00 , St. Patrick 4,878.00 Immaculate Conception 4.,288.50 St. Thomas More 9,206.00 O. L. of Lourdes 3,062.65 South Dartmouth­ Sacred Heart 5,258.00 St. Mary 6,524.50 St. Anthony 3,770.50 South Yarmouth­ St. Jacques 3,960.00 St. Pius X 6,559.00 St. Joseph 6,245.00 Swansea­ St. Mary 10,127.75 Our Lady of Fatima 5,763.50 St. Paul 4,415.50 St. Dominic 3,235.00 St: Louis of France 3,863.50 Vineyard HavenATTLEBORO St. Augustine 1,963.50 Holy Ghost 4,022.00 Wareham-St. Patrick 7,950.00 St. John 15,149.00 WellfleetSt. Joseph 04,268.00 Our Lady of Lourdes 1,750.00 St. Mary 6,058.50 West Harwich­ St. Stephen 4,015.50 Holy Trinity 3,000.00 St. Theresa 6,287.00 Westport--St. George 6,384.50 Woods Hole---St. Joseph 2,547.00 NORTH ATTLEBORO

St. Mary $ 9,339.00 Blessed Sacrament 2,124.00 Espirito Santo 1,642.50 Holy Name 23,352.25 Holy Cross 981.25 Notre Dame 5,795.00 Our Lady of the Angels 4,918.00 Our 'Lady of Health 2,462.75 Holy Rosary 2,893.00 Immaculate Conception 5,890.50 Sacred Heart 12,070.00 St. Anne 4,810.50 St. Anthony of Padua 2,126.00 St. Anthony of Desert 1,557.00 ,St. Elizabeth 1,301.40 St. John the :aaptist 3,370.00 St. Joseph 5,774.00 St. Louis 3,262.25 St. Matthew 2;184.00 St. Michael 4,089.40 St. Patrick '8,566.00 SS. Peter and Paul 6,075.00 St. Roch 2,961.65 St. Stanislaus 1,902.00 St. William 4,770.00 Santo Christo 3,534.50

Sacred Heart St. Mary

4,807.50 15,339.50

The Protestant agency agreed to inform CRS-NCWC upon ar- \ rival of individual refugees or families at resettlement destina. tions and "enable Catholic au­ thorities to notify the local par. ish priest." Rev. Mr. Schauer said the co­ operation effort grew out of the Protestant agency's "large back­ log of home and job opportuni. ties in various parts of the coun­ try." He added since the Cubans are predominantly Catholics and there now are few resettleable Protestant Cubans "we would like to make these opportunities available to refugees who are registered in Miami with Cath. olic Relief Services-NCWC."

Pray for Council, Po~e John Urges VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope John has asked the Catholics of Rome and the world to pJ;ay for the· success of the ecumenical council during May, the month of Our Lady: The Pope's appeal was sent to Clemente Cardinal Micara, Vicar General of Rome. But the Pon­ tiff added: "Our voice is turned at the same time and with the same confidence toward the dio. ceses of the. whole world." Pope John said the Second Vatican Council "was convoked for the good of souls and is providentially destined to have beneficial effects on everyday life through a more just arrange­ ment of institutions and of inter_ national life in truth, justice and love and in the freedom of Christ. This most noble aim which human efforts alon~ cannot achieve, depends on the all-powerful gift of the Lord....

HATHAWAY

OIL CO. INC.

NEW IEDFOID-

INDUSTRIAL OILS

HEATING OILS

TlMKEN

Oil BURNERS

Sales & Service

501 COUNTY ST. NEW BEDFORD WY 3-1751

Serving the Saver and Home Owner.

$

The Specialized Job of a Cooperative Bank.

Norris H. T.ripp SHEET METAL

$

Rev. John W. Schauer of Church World Servi~e, Protes­ tant agency, said under an ar­ rangement made with Catholic Relief Services, the Protestants will assume responsibility for the initial welfare of refugees involved but "will not intrude in any· way with regard to the religious belief and practic.e~ of the Cubans. CRS-NCWC 0l1i\> cials confirmed the agreement:

.

J. fESER, Prop. RESIDENTIAL INDUSTRIAL COMMERCIAL

253 Cedar St. New ledford WY 3-3222

TAUNTON (O-OPERATIVE BANK VA 4-4084

WINTHROP ·STREET - TAUNTON ACROSS THE STREET FROM THE POST OFFICE

Where it PAYS to get together


.

24

.Cardinal Expects Council Schema On Peace, War

THE ANCHOR­ Thurs.," May 23, 1963

Maryknoll Head Expects. Rel·ease Of Bishop Walsh

NEW YORK (NC) - 'Phe Second Vatican Council will speak out on peace and war, according to Leo Cardinal

ROCKY RIVER (NC) ­ Bishop James E. Walsh, .M.M., is a growing source of embarassment to his Chinese

communist jailers and soon will be released. That is the opinion of Bishop Raymond A. Lane, M.M., former Maryknoll superior general. Positions Reverse Bishop Lane, veteran of 20 years in China, said Bishop Walsh, in refusing to leave China, had turned the tables by doing to' Bishop Lane what . lJ,ishop L.ane had previously d<)pe to Bishop Walsh. ::BIs-hop Lane explained that he had asked Bishop Walsh to return to America when the com­ D\unists took over China. He made the request as general of the order but since Bishop Walsh's appointment was papal, he was free to refuse-which he did. In 1953, shortly after the communist conquest, Bishop Walsh was arrested. . But a decade earlier Bishop Lane was in a similar position, and Bishop Walsh was general of the order. More Stringent Early in World War II Bishop Lane was in Manchuria. The Japanese wanted him out. They placed him in a concentration camp and told him he would stay there until he agreed to leave the country. Bishop Walsh urged him to take advantage of the offer and leave the country. But Bishop Lane refused and elected to stay. Bishop Lane said that his cap­ tors were less rigid with him than the communists are with Bishop Walsh. Nominally, he, like Bishop Walsh was no' per­ mitted to offer Mass while in pI'ison. Take Away Rosary, But the Japanese guards turned their backs while he had bread and wine smuggled in. He cele­ brated daily Mass, Bishop Lane , said, but Bishop Walsh was not even permitted to have a Rosary his brother brought to him on a visit three years ago. However, Bishop Lane added, he feels that keeping the 72­ year-old Bishop Walsh in prison no longer is of any value to the communists and he will be· re­ leased before too long.

Japanese Pilot To Be Ordained BALTIMORE (NC)-A :former member of the Japanese Imperial ,Air Force is one of ten candi­ dates to be' ordained to the priesthood here May 25. , Archbishop Lawrence J.' She­ han of Baltimore will be the ordaining prelate at the sel'vices in the Cathedral of Mary Our Queen. The Japanese native, Rev. Mr. Augustine S. Kasagi, of the Dio­ cese of Osaka, was born in 1929 of a Buddhist family. In World War II he served at a pilot train­ ing school of the Japanese Im­ perial Air Force. Mr. Kasagi re­ ceived degrees in education and law in Tokyo, and was employed in a bank there from 1953 to 1956. He was baptized in the Catholic Faith Aug. 14, 1955, and entered the seminary in Tokyo the following year, stUdying Latin and philosophy there. He completed his studies at St. Mary's Seminary, Roland Park, Md., and will say his first solemn Mass, May 30 at Immac­ ulate Conception Church Clar­ ion, Pa. During the Sum~er he will work in the Erie diocese and then go to Rome for studies in canon law. He expects to re­ turn to Japan after four years of study.

Center for Blind NEWTON (NC)-Dr, Thomas E. Caulfield, a Boston psychia­ trist, has been named rehabilita­ tion director and administrator of St. Paul's Rehabilitation Cen­ ter for the Blind here.

BLESS NEWMAN CENTER: Bishop James L. Connolly was celebrant of the ponti­ fical Mass which highlighted the dedication of the Newman Center at the University of Massachusetts. Richard Cardinal Cushing presided at the ceremony and announced a gift of $100,000 from the Archdiocese of Boston toward the construction cos't of the new milding. From l!~ft are Bishop Robert F. Joyce of Burlington, Vt.; Bishop Christopher J. Weldon of Springfield, who enthroned a crucifix at the building's entrance; Cardinal Cushing; Bishop Connolly; Bishop Bernard J. Flanagan of Worcester, who blessed the structure and the grounds.

Prelates Dedicate Newman Center Bishop ConnaUy Celebrates Pontifical Mass AMHERST - A center for Catholic students at secular universities was des­ cribed by Richard Cardinal Cushing of Boston as "vital to the Church's work on the secu­ lar campus as the parish church and school are to the life of the Church elsewhere." . The Carrli";"l'~ ~.l'lt,pment ('"me during a solemn Pontifical Mass at the dedication of the new Newman Center at the Univer­ sity of l\Ifl'l,~~l'l,..hll!,pH~. 'R;~ho1J James L. Connolly of Fall River was 'celebrant of the Mass in the Center's .chapel. Before it began. Bishop Bernard J. Flanagan :of Worcester blessed the grounds and exterior' of the structure and Bishop Christopher J. Weldon of Springfield.. enthroned a large crucifix at the building's en­ trance. In his sermon, Cardinal Cush­ ing stated that the "world of the secular university campus is one of the most critical areas for the apostolate of the Church in the United States." He cited a recent statement of the president of Harvard University w h i c h claimed that leadership without deep faith and concern is impos­ sible and then continued: "The

Association Chooses Catholic President MIAMI (NC)-Dr. Edward R. Annis, who will be installed as president of the American Med­ ical Association on Tuesday, June 18, has been chosen presi­ dent-elect of the World Medical Association. The father of eight children and an active member in Florida Catholic lay organizations for 23 years, he was elected to the world group office at the meet­ ing of the Council of Interna­ tional Medical Organizations held at Opatija, Yugoslavia.

university world is one of hun. fluence and training on campus, l~ering and thirsting after truth, the Cardinal concluded, it will personal development and ful­ "form the studen'~ to act in a fillment * * * whi,ch resists in­ world which he now sees as his !:ulation and is not satisfied until ' community" and awareness of it reaches out to encompass all need in that community will truth." , prompt him "to answer those Search for Truth .' needs wherever they exist in The Church on a'secular cam- . the human 'family." pus the Cardinal declared can 'The University, of Massachu­ alssi~t in the search for truth by" setts Newman Center is a three­ devising a program which makes . story' .building at the edge of the it possible for the student to school's campus. Directed by e'valuate and integrate his learn­ Father David J. Power and ing and to understand that all 'Fathe~ J. Joseph Quigley, the. men belong to a single family Center provides a program u.nder God." geared to the more than 3000 That program, Cardinal Cush- ' ~atholic students enrolled at the il!lg continued, has four parts:'. . of M. worship, education, development I of a sense of community and ac~ . ti.on. ' FQRT MYERS (l',"'C)-Bishop As the Church exercises its in- . Cole~an F. Carroll announced ' at the blessing here of the 23rd high school in the Miami diocese that it will be named in honor o~ Bishop Augustin Verot, first BIshop .of St. Augustine who WASHINGTON (NC)-The F~d­ . also served as Vicar Apostolic of Florida and Bishop of Savan­ eeal Communications Commis­ sion has granted the Boston nah, Ga. Catholic Television Center a permit to operate an educational television station on Channel 38 in Boston.

Named for Bishop

I:CC Grants Permit I:or .Educ·ational TV

Suenens, Archbishop of Malines­ Brussels, Belgium. Cardinal Suenens said the Council, will deal with peace and war.in a special schema on vital world problems. This schema will take up such issue~ as population, hunger, race, the developing nations, the Church and the individual, the Church and culture, and the Church and social and economic affairs. The Cardinal hea-ds the commission drafting this schema. Both l\'lust Disarm Cardinal Suenens, ask e d whether Pope John advocated unilateral disarmament in his peace encyclical, in the event that both sides could not be per­ suaded to disarm, replied: "No. In Pope John's view both sides must disarm." The Belgian Cardinal stressed the need for making the Church's message more intelligible to the modern world. He interpreted the division of the Council Fathers at the first session over the question of the sources of Revelations by saying: "It was largely a question of how to express ourselves. Some stressed the need of underlining principles in all things and of saying what has always been said. Expression Important "Some wanted to say things so that all can understand them propel'ly. These are differences over modes of expression and such things can be quite impor­ tant." He emphasized it is "always important" that the Church ex­ press itself effectively but "to­ day it is more important than ever." "There are so many misunder. standings," he said. "Words change so easily in meaning. And today so many' people do not, understand religious affairs. Matters of religion must be ex­ pressed to them very clearly and in some detail if they are to un­ derstand what we are talking about." Cardinal Suenens stressed that laymen must have a more active role in the Church. "We must emphasize that the lay person has not only the role of helping the priest materially, but of helping him in his spirit­ ual role, too," he said. "The laymen must share in spreading the kingdom of God: in' the world."

-

'

I

'f'fl\~~'B~

:

New England's Playground

OPEN ALL WINTER

BOWLING

BANQUETS

SKATING

".

.... ' CAMP SACRED HEART ~ SHARON, MASSACHUSETTS

Richard Cardinal Cushing, Archbishop of Boston, announced .... plans for the station last Janu­ ary. He said that it would offer ~ educational and religious pro­ .... grams and that a $400,000 trans­ ­ mitter for its use would be con. ~ .... structed in Woburn. ,. Msgr. Walter L. Flaherty, di­ rector of the television center, said in January it was hoped that all 340 schools in the arch­ .... diocese would have the neces­ sary equipment to receive tele­ ~ vision programs by next Fall. Eventually, it was noted, the station will also broadcast reli­ .... gious and educational programs fo:r the general public.

SPACIOUS FIREPROOF SLEEPING QUARTERS

For Boys 7 to 14 Years Old, Six week season: June 30 to August 10 Register for 2, or 4, or 6 weeks Free Tutoring if Desired THE BROTHERS OF THE SACRED HEART

~

~ 4111 ,

4

~ 411 ~

~ SACRED HEART SCHOOL ~

~

SHARON, MASSACHUSETTS

~

A RESIDENT SCHOOL FOR BOYS

~

Grammar Grades 4-5-6-7-8 THE BROTHERS OF THE SACRED HEART

~

~

.........................

.


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.