05.25.61

Page 1

Charities· Appeal Gifts Set New Record, Total Reaching Toward $600,000·

The ANCHOR

The continuous growth of the Catholic dharities Appeal has been maintained this year. A new high of $587,010.20 has been reached, This is the highest amount ever contributed in a Catholic Charities Appeal. Chairman Joseph E. Fernandes issued this statement at .Headquarters this morning. "It is wonderful to see the Charities Appeal of 1961 growing to a new high. It is wonderful because it shows the affection of the people of the Diocese for Bishop

Connolly. The generosity that ; has been evidenced in this Appeal is a true sign of. approval of all accomplished for charity in the ten years Bishop Connolly has headed the Diocese. And the most consoling point is that the money is still arriving at Headquarters in sizeable sums." The leading fifteea parishes An Ancw of 'h, !otIl, Itw. tmd rirm-ST. PAUL • are: Holy Name, Fall River PRICE lOe $21,916.37 © 1961 The Anchor V~1. $4.00 per Year St. Lawrence,. New·Bedford 19,941.26 196.1 St. John, Attleboro ;13,979.00 Socond Class Mail Privileges AUlhorized at Fall River. Masa. St. Mary, North Attleboro 13,563.00 Sacred Heart, Fall River . . 13,228.50 St. James, New Bedford. . 12,594.30 Tum to Page Two

5, No. 22 ----__1_---Fall River, Mass., Thursday, May 25,

president Declares May 30 Day of .Prayer for Peace

WHEREAS the high courage and the supreme sacrifice of Americans who gave their lives in battle have made it pOssible for oU>r land to flourish under freedom and justice; and WHEREAS the ideals and patriotism of those who answered the call to service stand· as all inspiration to every new gen·el'ation of Americans; and

Father Canuel Is Jubil,ar;an Rev. Henri R. Canuel, administrator .of St. Hyacinth Church in New Bedford, is observing the .25th anniver-

WHEREAS the same prineiples and revolutionary beliefs for which our fo:rbeaN fought and died are still at isstre in the world and the ehallenge against them can be met only through the same qualities of courage, strength, and unflinching determination shown by our Doole dead; and WHEREAS Memorial Day year provides a fitting occasion upon which OUT people may not only commemorate the Nation's heroic dead bu t may also unite in prayer for the preservation of liberty and peace free :£".1'om the threat of war; and ~ch

t>RlESIDENT K.ENNEDY

sary of his ordination to the priesthood. Fr. Canuel was ordained June I) 1936 in St. Mary's Cathedral, Fall River, By the late Most Rev. James E. Cassidy, Bishop of Fall River. The New Bedford administrator is well known in the diocese. He has served at St. George's in Westport, St. Mathieu's and Notre Dame parishes in Fall River, Sacred Hear~ in New Bedford, St. Joseph's in Attleboro and on Sept. 20, 1960 he was appointed to his present position by Most Rev. James L. Connolly, Bishop of Fall River. On Nov. 21, 1941, Fr. Canuel Turn to Page Twenty-seven

Federal School Aleasure Is Confusing Alinisters Kennedy Position President's Bill 'Like Ba ptistsl" Helps Catholics, Says Graham ·Says Methodist NEW YORK (NC) - ExDES MOINES (NC)pressing admiration f.o r . A Methodist bishop's con-. President Kennedy's stand rention that President Kenagainst Federal aid to pa- nedy's Federal aid to publie rochial schools, Evangelist Billy schools only program "actually Graham said "in some ways he's is a bill helping church educaturned out to be a Baptist Presi-. tion" brought repercussion.s frOOD dent." . Washington., Pressed by newsmen to explain The interpretation of the bin this characterization, he said: by Rt. Rev. R. Gerald Ensley, "Why, he's taken the Baptist Methodist Bishop of Iowa, was stand on aid against that of his . disseminated among Methodist own Church." ministers and church members Mr. Graham was iJiterviewed throughout Iowa. This resulted here before he departed aboard in a flurry of letters which the liner Queen Mary for Eng- expressed opposition to the Fedland. He said the question of. eral aid bill; to members of. Federal aid to church-supported Congress. Turn to Page Twenty-seven Rep. Cleveland M. Bailey of. West Virginia, member of the House education subcommittee, said that the Federal aid issue had been distorted deliberately and misinformation had been spread about it. He emphasized .that statements by President Kennedy and the bjl1, itself, limited the $2.5 billion aid program to public schols. The legislator said he had received hundreds of letters, most of them from Iowa, that identified the bill as "giving aid to parochial schools." Without making any specific. accusations. Rep. Bailey said "spreaders o;f misinformation are liars."

Diocesan CYO Meets Ma.y 28 REV.HENRIR.CANUE~

Says Refusal to Patronize Trash Films' Is Ba!~t Way to Control Movie lndu~~ry

By. Msgr. Thomas F. Little There are good films and there are bad films. Yet the s'ad truth is that not an of the WHEREAS ta this· end good films have received the public support at the box office which their Own excellence <fhe Congress,,, in a joint· warranted. While the public was decrying Hollywood's so-called preoccupation with "sex l'eoolution approved May 11, and violence," a "Sundowners" was weak at the box office, a "Sunrise at Campobello" wae 1-950 (64 Stat. 158), re- dying an<J. a glQrious "Anne largely contributed to this box Are we suggesting that every film must be suitable for the il1Je8ted the President to issue Frank" was long since bur- office success. youngest theater-goer? Hardly a proclamation calling upon ied by the Americ~n theaterthat, for every reasonable person d h b d t1le people of the United goer. An t ere are a will encourage the motion picture industry to provide us with States to observe each Me- films. Some are bad in the sense mature, worthwhile adulJt entermorial Day as a day of of being trash· as entertainment tainment. prayer for pennanent peace·: What we are suggesting, howHow serious· is the need for NOW, THEREFORE. ][, oontrol over movies and what IOHN F. KENNEDY, Preldtype of controls should there be? Here are some answers dent of the United States, to these widely debated ques~ do hereby urge the people of (lions about films from the the United States to observe executive secretary of the Tuesday, May 30, 1961, National Legion of Decency. Memorial Day by invoking the blessing of God on those as the rash of "spear and who have died in defense of ,-such sandal" epics with which we our country and by praying have been recently deluged. for a new world of law where Others are bad in a much more peace and justice shall pre- serious vein-they are bad so-, V3il and a life of opportunity cially. They are the so--called films, the so-called adult shall be assured for all; and "sick" dramas which have been conI designate the hour begin- ceived by juveniles and heavily Ding in each locality ~ sold to adolescents. Or they are the cycle of films eleven o'clock in the morning have glamorized and all of that day as the time to . which but canonized the lady of easy\ wnite in such prayer. virtue with the heart of gold. The sad truth is that too many .:[ also urge the press, radio, of these films have been unbetelevision, .and aU other med- lievably successful at the box ia of information to coop- office. ..ate in this observance. More depressing perhaps Is 'llurn to Page Twcntl'-sevell

the

tho~hl;

that childrell! have

HONORED: Bishop Honore van Waeyenbergh, rector of the Catholic University of Louvain, Belgium, will receive an honorary LL.D. degree at the annual Commencement of Assumption Colleg~ Worcester~ in June,

ever, is that there are more and more films today which only an irresponsible parent will permit minors to view. There are also some films which even a mature adult should recognize as being socially disruptive and morally corrosive. The undeniable fact of good and bad films calls for some control of the motion picture medium. But what kind of control? The legion favors, and has suggested, a system of classification of films imposed by the industry upon itself. The legion believes classification would be an information service for parents, could be a guarantee that morally wholesome adult films would be produced and would forestall undesirable action by the states. For some people, motion picture control means but one thing -pplitical censorship on the municipal, state or Federal leveL Such censorship, they feel, is the only practical and sure deTll!lll'1l! to Page Twelvo

Representatives from sixty~ five per cent of the parishes in the Fall, River Diocese will be on hand Sunday, May 28 to coordinate CYO activities for the coming year. His Excellency, the Most Rev. James L. •Connolly will head a large group of clergy together with State and local representatives of the civil government at the convention. Preparations for the Fall River meeting have been in the works for this convention for some few weeks. Nominees \for office will be presented by the area directors of the CYO from Attleboro, Taunton, New Bedford and Fall River. Outstanding personalities from these areas will conduct their office-seeking campaigns. with the hope of being selected by the voting delegates to reoresen:t the program and youth of the CYO m the coming year. The caliber of candidates from each area will make the job of electing the new officers a very difficult one. The CYO has taken a prominent role in the lives of the youth of our Diocese and many young men and young women have been able to show their abilities and talents in the area CYO convention. The keynote address for the affair, which will mark the slogan to be used by the CYOs in the coming year. will be given by Mr. Donald Montle, the head coach of football and baseball at B.' M. C. Durfee High School in Fall Rive.r.

The Fall River Counen of Catholic Women under the direction of Miss Mary Cabral and Mrs. James H. Sullivan will prepare a buffet lunch to be served to the conventionaires. The Fall River Area CYO Glee Club Tusl'l to P~0 Twentl'-seveD


THE ANCHOR.-Di~ce.se·of F~II River-Thurs.. May 25, 1961

2

Socagl·

DiSCU$$

Impact

,...,

.ra,.r C·riticiz• Film Festival A~ Cannes

EnlCYC~Q~@~$'

o

0111' U.S.' ~co~@my

VATICAN CITY· (N~ .UOsservatore ·Romano, tile Vatican City daily has crNi- . ciSed. the 'Cannes' lnte~

WASHINGTON (NC) - The outstanding American economic system has stemmed from partiCipating in the spirit of the papal s6cial encyclicals, "especjally in regard to property," James P. Mitchell, former U.S. Secretary of Labor, said at a symposium Father John F. Cronin, S.S., at the Catholic University of assistant director of the Social America here. The occasion Actiol,l Department, National marked the 70th annivers- Catholic Welfare Conference, ary of the Rerum Novarum encyclical issued by Pope Leo' XIII and the 30th anniversary of Quadr:agesimo Ann"O issued by Pope Pius XI. Archbishop Egidio Vagnozzie, Apostolic Delegate to the United States, presided at the symposium. Other participants in-' cluded Msgr. Joseph N. Moody, New Yoark archdiocese historian who discussed the "Hisiorical Aspects of the Great Social Encyclicals," and Father Patrick W. Gearty, Catholic University ecoriomics professor, whose topic was' "How Can the Doctrine of the Encyclicals Be Made More Effective?"

Mass OrdG

FRIDAY-Ember ~riday After Pentecost. I Class: Red. Mass Proper; Gloria; Sequence; Creed; Preface, etc;, of Pente, cost. SATURDAY -Ember Saturday After Pentecost· I Class. Red. J,\[ass Proper; Gloria; Sequence; Creed; Preface, etc., of Pentecost. The Celebrant may omit the. 2nd, 3rd, 4th, and 5th lessons with their versicles and prayers appointed for this day. 'J,'he first lesson and the epistle, how.ever, must be said. SUNDAY-The most Holy Trinity. I Class. Whit,~.· Mass Proper; Gloria; Creed; Preface of Trinity. . MONDAY-St. Mary Magdalene de Pazzi, Virgin. III Class.. White. 'Mass Proper; Gloria; no Creed; Common Preface. TUESDAY-Mas~ of I Sunday after Pentecost. IV Class. Green. Mass Proper; Gloria; Second Collect St. Felix I, Pope and Martyr; no Creed; Common Preface. W¢DNESDAY -Blessed Virgin ~ary, Queen. II Class. White. IYIass Proper; Gloria; Second Goll,ect St. Petronilla, Virgin; Creed; Preface of Blessed Vir'; , gin. TH;URSDAY-Corpus Christ~.. I. plass. White. Mass Proper; Gloria; Sequence; Creed; Com- . wori' Preface. 4~In the Mass which. is followed by the Procession, the celebrant sings, Benedicamus Domino, and the Last Blessing and Last Gospel . are omi~te.d.

No

NUB1

Ch«uilges Name

GLASGOW (NC) - In the wake of the Holy See's decision eliminating "St. Philomena" as . unhistoric,.; Archbishop Donald Campbell of Glasgow announced during a· visit to St. Dominic's . Monastery of. the Perpetual Ros-' ary that Sister Mary PhUomena of· the Blessed' Eucharist: would henceforth be known all .Sister Mary Eucharia.

FORTY ~OURS DEVOTION May 28-St. Matthew, Fall River. St. Kilian, New Bedford. June 4-St. Teresa's Convent, . Fall River. St. Joseph, Taunton. .Holy. Name, Fall River. Corpus Christi, Sandwich. June 11-SS. Peter & Paul; Fall River. LaSalette Shrine, Attleboro. St: ,Mary, MaW!field~ . Sacred Heart, North Attleboro. . June 18-St. Mary, New Bed. ford. ' Blessed Sacrament, Fall River. THE ANCHOR Second Class Postage Paid at F"l1 River. Mass. Published every Thursday at 410 Highland Avenue, Fall River. M ...... by the Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River. Subscripiton price IlY postpaid $4.00 per year.

man.

tiona! Film Festival for joiniDg "a ininiature impious festival ~ blasphemy to the usual disp!fir of sex.'" IIi an editorial,' the newspapE.'S' also presented the example oi was the moderator. the late Gary Cooper as proof of Conditions for Justice the Church's teaching thai Mr. +VIitchell said the political movies do not have to appeal 10 societies of the world have de'-' .' the base instincts in order to be rived "lasting descriptions of the entertaining. I proper conditions for economic Polish Film justice" from the 'teachings of By "miniature impious fesa.Popes Leo and Pius XI. val" the editorial referred paJi'"' "Our own system has been ticularly to the prize-winning formed by rejecting Marx, by Polish' film "Mother Joan of tho advocating the principles of the Angels." Editor Raimondo ManHomestead Ac!, and, to a large zini recalled that it was this film extent, by participating in the which Stefan Cardinal Wyszyn,. spirit of the encyclicals-espeski, 'Archbishop of Warsaw; had cially in regard to property," the d~scribed as -a "dirty gloV'e former Cab~et officer said. thrown' into the face of the This has come . about largely Church." He recalled too that through the pressure. of free inthe film had been a lioxof:ficrll stitutions, "arising almost spon- . OUTSTANDING AWARD: Joyce W. Strong, left, failure in Poland. taneously out of need,".. said Mr. Real Danger Mitchell. receives Outstanding Junior Daughter of Isabella of the, Editor said: "WhQI , 'Governmimt Power Year award from Rev. John J. Hayes at Mother-Daughterl . Catholics Manzini beyond the Iron CUll"I certainly agree that in a mass society, with its pressures tea at' Ivy Circle home in New Bedford. Proud Mrs. Albert .. tam struggle and sutler to 00e to conformity in things material, , W. Strong stands next to-her daughter and .Mrs. Ernest main faithful to the values ~ the soul, one feels discomfort • an examination 6f the' national R. Letendr.e, Director of the Junior Circle, is at right. conscience is constantly in Joyce will now compete for National Junior Daughter 'seeing the palm awarded to ~ tural manifestations which . . order," Mr. Mitchell said. "Much not . artistically . important and of what we make is wasteful. award. are ideally nihilistic. On maR Much 'of what we'do is trivial. than one occasion we have bad Much of our response .to individual freedom. is a/ demand ~ Contin'ued from Page One . St. Boniface 324.00 reason' to wori'der whether tile license. . . · St. Francis' Xavier, Hyannis St. Casimir' 1,013.75 real' danger is in the strength cii" "It is also true that govern1,506.00 cominunism or in the corrupUOll . 11,783.50 St. Francis of Assist mental power seems to be the St. Thomas More, Somerset St. Hedwig 825.00 of certain sectors of society," most immediate' and most euecMr. M-anzini concluded 1M 1,360.00 11,371.50 St. Hyacinth tive .remedy for. these ills. It has · St. Mary's, Fall River 9,109.75 St. James 12,594.30 editorial by asking "honeStlJil. been said that there is no' other Holy Name, New Bedford St. John the Baptist 6,619.25 . must brains be terrorized by tile . resort f<lr the people," he conminorities GIl 8,877.55 di~integrating , 8,946.00 St. Joseph tinued. . st..Joseph, New Bedf<lrd St. Kilian 4,148.00 . eccentrics of the unbalanced, GIl Mr. Mitchell said he could find 19,941.26 the mad? Why must these 8,877.55 St. Lawrence nothing in the encyclicals to jus- ·Mt.. Carmel, New Bedford St. Mary 4,513.95 people have control over' tOe tify that "the exercise of govern3,318.00 movies?" 8,575.75 St. ThereSa ment power is the only OIl' the St. Mary, Mansfield 8,128.00 TAUNTON most proper or the most effective ~:. ~litriCkT'Wa[eham.~,~:~.~: Holy Family 2,698.50 Le~ic", of Decencj means to develop a society that. .. ary" aun on ,. Holy Rosary 1,812.00 observes the commands of charParish contributions are: Immaculate .Co·nception' 4418 50' ,. The following films are to . . FALL RIVER ity and,iustice." . 834' 75 . $9 109 75 O. L. of LOur:>es u ,2 . added to the lists in their :mSince" Rerum . Novarum the St. M ary .00 Sacred Heart 4, 736 Bl d St· 1, 811 .25 spective classification~: American society has exhibited esse acramen ,. St.' Anthony 2,775.30' . 2,038.00 St: Jacques 3 UnobjectlOnable for geneuil' the truth of its lessons about free Espirito Santo 21,916.37 St.' Joseph 5,525.50 patronage: The Parent Trap. institutions, Mr. Mitchell de- Holy Name Holy Cross . 889.50 St."Mary ,175.00 Unobjectiomible for adults aDd clared. Notre Dame.. 6,044.00 St.. Paul 6,720.75 adolescerits: Battle at Blood7" "We have been an exemplar to ' 2,089.25 . ATTLEBORO 4,063.00 Beach; Gidget Goes HawaiiaDll! the world that 'the just society is' bur Lady of Angels 1,236.65' HIGh 'Shadow of the Cat. the one with an ethical base," he' Our Lady of Health oy os t 3 , 1 8 5The .00 ' . . 2,225.50 St • J 0 h n 1,979.00 3" Unobjectionable for adulbl . asserted. rWe have built here the Holy Rosary . Gage most productive and open econ- Immaculate Conception 6,059.45 St. J osep h 3,362.25' ' Green S . Summer. 13,228.50 St. Mary . ,'. .4,604:50 top Me Bef-ore I Kill (classi&-' S a~red Heart omy in history.' and done St . Amie 4 546 65 . St St ep h en 3 ' cation applicable only to prmtB.. within 'the principles ot'the " ' . ,064.00 h . 4,646.00 s own in U.S.A.). cyclicals for a public po1icy that S t. Anthony of .Padua 1,661.25 St; Theresa . NO. ATTLEBORO Objectionable in part for aD! responds -to need arid a private St. Anthony of Desert 1,384..50, St. ,Elizabeth, 1,448.20. Sacred Heart' . 4,250.75 The .War-rior Empress (this jeeconomy that responds to indiSt.John the Baptist, 3,151.00 St. Mary 13,563.00. venile-oriented·film has indecent· vidual decision.'~ . . St. Joseph 4,228.65 costuming; this classificaticm: ·St. Louis 3,057.00 Acushnet TOWNS \;>ased on revised version of film. FCD'mo51~ U~ivers;ty 8t,. Matthew 1,961.50 Assonet . 2,209.00' applicable only to U.s,A. prin~ St. Michael, . , 3;569.35 Biiizards J3a¥1,562.00 The Big Show (low moral t~ To Ccst $10 Million 6,120.50 Centerville 3,382.50 sympathy ·towards· perjury. TAIPEI (NC)' - ' Archbishop St... PiJ,trick. 6;305.00· Ce'ntral Villa~ 1,651.25. Mad Dog Coil (exploits· vi~ Paul Yu Pin, rector of Formosa's SS.Peter & Paul St. Roch, 2,705.50 Chatham 2,023.00' lence, brutality, sadism and .... pr6jected Fujen University, 'esti823.00 Dighton. . 2,r49.00 d~ncY). mates that the institution will St.. Stanislaus 4,373.50" E t B 1,145.00 , . Separate Classification cost $10 million when iill its de- St. ,.w.i~iiam as rewster 867 75 Th . 4,423.51 East Falmouth '. e. N~tional Legion of .~ partments are c::omplet~d. He ex- Santo Christo , ". NEW. BEDFORD Fairhaven 3,192.00:. cencyhas plac,ed the Itali. . pects it to have an enrollment of Holy Name $8,946.00 St. Josep'h made mQVie "La DoI~ Vita" ' . 8,Qoo to 10,000 students. Assumption 738.55 4,884.00 . its "separate clallSifieation." . It was revealed here that the 427.00 St. Mary, 1,150.60,' ',l"he film has been charac~ liberal· arts and .law schools are · Holy Rosary Sacred Heart 547. 00. a izeds immoral by a number" . Immac,u1ate Con~e~."'" 3,686.25 expected .to 'open ~ext year. A 1"'-'..... Falmouth. . 6 550 00 i 8,575.75 ' . '. move critics. . new tract of land fora campus Mt. Carmel Hyannis ,11,783.50 The I egi on' s " separate c1--......... ..in. Taipei is still' being sought, O . L . of Perpetual Help 2,295.60 Mansfield' 782.00 8,128.00' fication" is given to "~rtata the original parcel donated· by O. L. of Pilrgatory 4,435.85 ::Z:~~~::ett 2,326.00 films, which, while not moral. the local government in the sub- Sacred 'Heart .2,237.25 No: Dighton. 2,730.00. offensive in themselves, requiN urbs having proved unsatisfac-. St. Anne St. Anthony of Padua .. 5,498.80 No: Easton 1,985.50. some' analysis and explanatloD tory. ., 6,704.00 as. a . protection to the unln-·· The university's medical " No;'Westppl't 2,476.25 formed against wrong inte~. ' school, to . be· conducted by Norton 5,660.50 tations and fal8e conclusions.·· Dominican friars; is to be built Ocean Grove' 3,105.00 in TaiIl:an. Koahiurig; Formosa's Orieans' 1,580.50. 2,810.00 . Two 'Pr8~st-BlI'othen .. .' LIMBURG (NC) -;- Auxiliary Osterville Necrology Parish 2,148.10 Serve Bishop Walther Kampe of Lim- Provincetown THE ANCHOR lists the death 1,571.00 CINCINNATI (NC) - St. ~ burg, Germany, has called for Raynham anniversary dates of priests 3,695.75 X parish, served by two prie~ awakening . of drivers' con- Sandwich whQ served the Fall River 3,473.00 brothers.for a combined total GIl sciences to' avoid the complete Seekonk Somerset· Diocese since its formation' in . 94 years, observed its 50th ancolla~of the: auto traffic SY5:St. John 01. God '., 1904 with the intention that 2,813.00 niversary with a Solemn ~ tem. . St. Patrick ,the faithful: will give them a 4,090.00 offered ·by Archbishop Karl ~ :Writing in ~e' Limburg diocSt..Thomas MOle prayerful remembrance. 11,371:50: Alter, of 'Cincinnati. . esannewspaper,. he said that MAY 27 '.' So. Dartmouth . , 5,616.00' "our religious instruction and Father John H. Berning, . . Rev. 'John H. McCann, 1957, sermons must deQl in increasing So.. Yarmouth .'" 5.,172.00 who was assigned to estaollsla Fall River. , . · frequeru::y with moral problems, Swansea the. parish on Oct. 13, 1910, is still MAY 30 pur Lady of. Fatl. . 5,128.50 the pastor. He has been a priele ·resulting, frimi modern. technolSt. Dominic Rev. Jordan Harpin, O.P., 1929, ogy," Mere knowledge of tiaf-' 2,978.50 for nearly 57 years. Dominican Priory, Fall River. St. Louis of. France 3,35'1.00 . fic regulations,!:ie said, is not His brother, Father Louis . . Vineyard Haven Rev. Edmond J: Potvin, 1937, enough. 1,829.00 Berning, has been assistant pa. Wareham Pastor, St. .Joha Baptist, Fall 7,347.36 tOl' at St. Pius since his ordinaHowever, he said, "when there River. is a total ,absence of good will". Wellfleet 1,465.00 tion tell the priesthood in 19tt. Rev. James M. Quinn, 1950, On the part of drivers, thEm ''the West Harwich '3,251.50 And the church organist, Lee Westport Pastor, St. John Evangelist, . threat of punishment must as6,598.00 Moelder, has served the pariIIl sist" . Attleboro. WoOds Bole 2,175.00 . f<>r 50 years.

eCA Nears $600,000 ·Mark

so en-

.

Bishop Seeks Auto Remedy

Sgme


Urges Press to Emphasize Divine Dimension of Church

'PH£ ANCHORTtturs., May 25, '9.=6..:..'

Bishop of Cork Warns he~and

VANCOUVER (NC)-:-The Catholic press can contribute to the protection of the true image of the Church by stressing its divine dimension and correcting the false image created by men hostile to CathoHcism. This advice was given by Bishop John J. Wright of ing, he said the press "must see Pittsburgh at the civic ban- to it that the place of the laity quet of the 51st annual Cath- in the sanctified life .of the olic Press Association con- Church is highlighted and made vention meeting under ·the Cheme: "The Image of the Church - As Fashioned in the Catholic Press." The prelate urged journalists not to emphasize the popular North American image of the C!:hurch as a well organized institution, but to show it to be an organic institution by adding its divine dimension, which he called "the heart 0'£ the witness ~ must bear." Archbishop William Mar k !)uke of Vancouver welcomed Clbe delegates at the banquet which was atten<led by seven bishops and an abbot from British Columbia and neighboring provinces and territories, along with representatives of civic government and several b.undred Vancouver Catholics. ./ Counterfen Image Bishop Wright warned that the !'counterfeit image" of the eh.urch is being created by persons who have made the effort "" full-time profession, such as Protestants and other Americans United for Separation of Church and State (POAU). "This counterfeit image to Pa i s e hostility pictures the ehurch as medieval, therefore . dated, alien, totalitarian, politieal and clerical," he said. The Catholic Press has a "very elJvious responsibility" ~or correcting this, he stated. To offset the image that the Church is dated, the press must show its l'elevance to today's world, he declared. '1'0 counteract charges that it lit alien, the press must show ftte Church to be relevant locIlly, Bishop Wright asserted. Totalitarian Church When it is said the Church is tbtalitarian, "the' press must be prepared to indicate the proper .ense in which she is totalitarian, iID. that she is totally subject to Jesus Christ," the Bishop conClnued. As for the image that the Chut'ch is clerical ()t. domineer-

Teach Religion Wit~Appeal

MINNEAPOLIS (NC)-A semInary professor advocated that parents adopt the fairy tale tech-

Ilique in teaching Peligion to pro-=bool children. Father Juniper . Cummings, O.F.M. Conv., 01. Assumption. Seminary, Chaska, Minn., adlIised 600 members of the Fedel8tion of Catholie Home and llehool Associations here: "Inttnuate, don',t pontificate, iii. winging religion to your childIoen. Religion is more like II -'iry tale than a mathematical ~uation. And it's better thaa a fairy tale because it's true. . hch it in a way that will appeal to children." .

AFL-CIO Gtves 3,000

To Cuban Refugees

MIAMI (NC)-The Americaft Pederation of Labor-Congress of Industrial Organizations haa pen $3,000 to Miami's diocesan. center which aids Cuban refugees. In a letter WlhiQh accompanied 1be donation, AFL-CIO secretary - treasuresr William I!'. Schnitzler said that "the work that your organization has been doing in offering relief for the Cuban refugees in Florida has gone a long way ill furthering ~istance to these unfortunate people." Robert E. Ftaheriy, a native of lel'sey City, N. J., who now resides in New Haven, Conn., directs the AFL-CIO Community Services . program at Miami's etJban Refugee Emergency Center. A member of the Knights of eolumbus, he previously served in the Hungarian refugee settleJ!1ent program at Camp Kilmen,

11..1..

clear." Of "accusations that it is a political and temporal organization, "the press must do everything it can to heighten the features of the Kingdom of God," he said.. Bishop Wright said Pope John has given ali example of theimage of Catholicism for individual Catholics to project. He pointed to the Pope's humilit). and charity. New Soviet Symbol The Bishop noted the increas.,. ing importance of "image-malting and image-correcting" in the modern world, citing the Soviet Union's abandonment of the bear as its symbol and adoption of an image of a kindly nation represented by "Gentle Uncle" Khrushchev. The bear, he said, was used by the Soyiets before and during World War II because it created fear, which suited their purposes. But more than a decade ago, they changed the image, he said, because they were no longer seeking conquest, but coexistence. He attributed the "B and K" act of Bulganin and Khrushchev in England and the later visit to the U.S. of Khrushchev with his wife - to' the Soviet effort to change the USSR away from the "savage" image of 'the beat.

Lower Grades

To Go First CINCINNATI (NC)-The Cincinnati archdiocesan school board has recommended that whenever pastors find it impossible to operate a complete eightgrade parish school, the lower rather than the upper grades should be dropped. The regulation, approved by Archbishop Karl J. Alter of Cincinnati, is described as a "general diocesan policy." Approvalof the Archbishop is necessary fo~ dropping any grades, the board stressed. . . The board also announced that a regulation setting a maximum of 50 children to a classroom in parochial elementary schools will go into effect in September.

Seniors Set Program At Stonehill College Students from the Fall River Diocese are ill charge of several Senior Week. events at Stonehill College. The annual week begins tomot'Tow and ends Thursday, June l. Phillip Perra, Taunt<>n and' James E. Tamagini, Wareham are among 'seniOl's planning ~ jazz concert tomorrow night; and New Bedfordites Frederick J. McLoughlin, Jr., class president, and John R. Wilson are in charge of a Memorial Day trip to Nantucket. . - . Class officer..s will also make arrangements for the senior prom Wednesday, May 31, at Sidney Hills Country Club, Chestnut Hill. Other activities for the week include attendance at a pops concert in Boston, a Communion breakfast Sunday, May 28, and a closing party June 1.

Chinese President Kin Baptized Cathotic

TAIPEI (NC) _ The fi I' s t great-grandchild of Nationalist Ohinese President Chiang Kaishek was baptized in St. Christopher's church here b¥ Arch~ bishop Paul Yu Pin, refug~ Ordinary of Nanking in Red China and rector of the Catholic Fu Jen University here. The baby girl, christened Faina Maria Margarita, is the daughter oi Alan Chiang, the President's grandson, and the former Nanq Cecilia Zi, a con-

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Of Red DOli1iger DUBLIN (NC)-Ireland's communist parties are ready to seize power if Ireland is plunged into economic or

NEW OFFICERS: New officers of Diocesan Our Lady of Good Counsel Retreat League are, left to right, Treasurer Mrs. Joaquim Bernardino, Recording Secretary Miss Cecile Brais, Past President Mrs. Raymond Hamel, Corresponding Secretary Mrs. James W. Leith and President Mrs. Emmett P. Almond. \

Priests, P.robation 'Officers Team Up For Battle Against Delinquency NEW YORK (NC)...,.-The Archdiocese of N~w York has. formed a working agreement with Man.,. hattan courts to cooperate on the reform of youthful offenders. Nine parish priests from neighborhoods with a high incidence of delinquency met in a Special Sessions courtroom with pl'obation . officers with whom they will work. Simon Shute, acting chief probation officer, said this is the first formal arrangement his department has had with a religious body. If the experiment is successful, he said, it will be extended to other boroughs and to other faiths. . . Notify PastaI' Under the agreement, whenevel' a Catholic youth is arrested in Manhattan, his parish priest's name will appear in the official record. The priest will then be notified and will receive information in the court files. Discussing the project with the priests, Chief Justice John M. Murtagh said: . "Delinquen.cy .is an enigma in all disciplines. Miracles are not to be expected, yet this is sOmething I regard as of great importance. In a large measure the delinquent is, ~e suspect, .one who has not had the affection and guidance normal. to all human bei.ngs: The clergy is i8. a position to supply these needs. "Yo.u will have a real opPortunity when a yputh is spiritually motiyate~; though all too many have ne'!'er been so. May faith in God sustain you against -almost impossible odds. My fervent hope is t.hat thIS is just the beginning." . The nine prie~ts ad~ressed by' Justice Murtagh averaged 30 years of age and all are fluent ita Spanish. . Cal'dinal Inte~ested -Case notices being Sent to members of the clergy by Father Robert E. Gallagher of New York Catholic Charities saT in part:

Sturtevant &. Hodk

"Every Catholic youth appearing in Manhattan Adolescents Court (also in Special and General Sessions. youth parts) is being brought to the attention of his parish priest. Will you kindly follow up on the situation mentioned here as promptly as possible? If you wish further information, please call the Youth Coun~el Bureau (of District Attorney Frank S. Hogan's office). ."Please let me know what follow-up.has been maue. h18 ,",,,,,1nence, Cardinal SpellmaJi, has requested a periodoic report on the success of this project."

Spanish Bishop Shows Concern BILBAO (NC)-Bishop Pablo Gurpide Beope of Bilbao in a pastoral letter has expressed concern over the economic plight of Spanish workingmen. Bishop Gurpide war ned against efforts to solve the country's current economic difficulties at t.he expense of its workers. In view of the hardships they already bear, he stated, they must not· be required to make further sacrifices. The Bishop also called bn Catholic employers to do all in their power to assure workers a minLmum standard of living. This is a matter of conscience for all Catholics, he said.

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political chaos, the Bishop of Cork h'as declared. B'ishop Cornelius Lucey also asserted in. his speech on the menace of communism that the Connolly Association for Irish immigrants in England is n communist front. Use Stratagem He said the Republic's communist party, which calls itself the Irish Workers' League, should not be underestimated because of its tiny size since Irish communists do not expect to achieve power through pop.ular vote but through stratagem. Bishop Lucey said Irish immigrants in England who join the Connolly Association in England are not told it is a communist organization. He said they must first be conditioned and indoctrinated before the association's real purpose is revealed to them. The Connolly Association, he said, purports to work for the same cause of Irish nationalism, the reform of conditions in Ireland, and the welfare of the immigrants themselves. But he asserted that these objectives are sham, and mere bait to catch unsuspecting Irish immigrants. . "The very reticence of the associatio"n about the kind of social and political system it proposes to substitute for our present system is .itself a matter for suspicion," Bishop Lucey said. "But more tangible evidence has been adduced. For instance, several of the leading members of the association have appeared on 'communist platforms and lectured at communist centers. The association has faithfully followed the communist line in all major issues dividing East and West." The Bishop had a word of ca}ltion. "We should of course be slow to label people communists-though not prudently to ~uspect them," he said. "That a person is a militant trade unionist, or an agitator, or has givea up the practice of his religion, is not. syfficient reason for 'labeling him a communist. To be a real communist, a person must support the party line through thick and thin."

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Teaclroefi'~ DUBLIN (NC) The Protestant Chureh of' Ireland reports that a large number of teachers in the .Irish Protestant secondary schools are Catholics. . At its General Synod here the delegates were asked to 'give serious consideration to this situation.. It noted that in one of the Protestant schools more than half of the teachers were Catholics.. Better Teachers Dr. R. W. Reynolds of Dublin' presented this inforrriation in the report of the Board of Education. He said that in many cases the Catholic teachers we re better teachers than the Protestants. '" . The number of Catholic teachers was brought out bya survey, said Dr. Reynolds, which showed' that in some of the Protestant. schools the percentage of Catholic teachers was at least 25 per . ~ent, and r!Inning up to 50 per cent or higher. -"Let me say at once," said Dr. Reynolds, "that these Cat~olic teachers were, in many cases, better teachers than the Protestant ones. They are as good and as well qualified as the Protestant teachers." Shortage A subcommittee reported that shortage in the number of Protestant teachers was due to the low salaries offered. The Synod adopted the subcommittee's recommendation that salaries be' augmented by the Church'where government subsidieH were not provided to the teachers. 'Raising such a fund, it said, would require a contribution from each Irish Protestant diocese, and possibly a grant from the Representative Church Body. .

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CHESHIRE (NC) - Labor a.nd,· Father Masse said that "in a management must choose be- fumbling, tentative sort 'of way tween voluntary cooperation and the American people are being increasingly strict government forced to reaijze that the cold control-and the choice "cannot war is a real war; that it is unbe much longer delayed," an like any war in which they have authority on industrial relations ever been engaged; and that· if warned here. they are not to lose it-and, losFather Benjamin L. Masse" ~ng i!, become th~· richest pro:vS.J. an associate editor of Amer- mce m a world-WIde commumst ica 'magazine and president of empire--they will have to ma.ke the Catholic Economic Associa- some changes in their traditional tion,. said labor and management ":,a y of d~ing things." "must wake up to the life-andCold War Is Real death facts of the cold war, or The Jesuit priest-editor said the cold war will overwhelm that· the "unprecedented" charthem." acter of today's 'crisis "sends He wa'rned that the public is shivers down the spines of our becoming impatient with' work military men." .. stoppages and the government"is They don't like to be told that '. '\ . "starting to crack ,down ." the Qld ~amiliar ways of preparFather Masse spoke at the an- ing for war and assuring the nanual McAuliffe Medal Awards 'tion's defense have to be reexdinne'r, sponsored by the Hart": amined," he s~id'. . . GLEN· RIDGE (NC)-A min- ford Archdiocesan Labor InstiIt deeply disturbs pubhshers ister who was an advisor' on tute. and editors, who shrink from religious matters to President· censorship of any kind, even when it is wholly voluntary. 'Eisenhower said here that Eed- . ~~~$$""'$ Ulkll'~Oll'ilo(QJl1il. eral aid to parochial schools is IS Arid it sends a::l uneasy feeling seeping through the ranks of inevitable. . (6(QJll'Ilil@~otC lXlo@1m ~~~~@~ ..The Rev. Frederic e., Fox DETROIT (NC)-.The. second labor leaders and management spoke at Glen Ridge Congrega- Ukrainian' Catholic high school officials, who' have still not fortional Church on the opening in this country was blessed here gotten, the no-s·trike-no-Iockout day of the 31stannual.II).eeting . by Bishop Joseph M. Schmon-:- pledges and the. wage and price of the Middle Atlantic Confer. controls of World War II and the ence of Congregational Christian diuk, Administrator of the Phil- Korean War." .'. . Churches.' adelphia Byzantine Rite arch. I ' diocese. M'OJDOli'§ WDIn Federal aid eventuallr- will be The school is operated by the given to parochial schools, he pun . h of the Immacula..... Con ~ . ~ .] 31 GIi'~idll1.!J(QJU'@$ AW~Jll'(dlS "said, because "we Protestants ception of the Blessed Virgin NEW YORK (NC)-:"'The six ignored the needs of our public Mary, and staffed by Sisters of schools." St. Basil: Foun-ded in 1959, the seniors graduating with classics majors at Fordtliam College have Encourage Catholics high.school has 65 students in the won a total of 13.graduate school "If we Protestants care deeply nihth' grade and 30 in the 10th. -' awards. These include Rhodes 'enough (about education)', we: 'Bishop Schmondiuk is a former ~oholarsh.ip·, .Danforth. Fellowcan do two things," he declared. pastor of the 2,000.-family parish. s}:lip, t:wo Woodrow Wilson Feli'We can redouble our efforts to improve pubiic schools and we The other Ukrainian 'Catholic lowships anci twO National Dehigh school in this country is in .c an encourage the Catholics to Stamford, Conn.· It' is a prep fense Fellowships. . The' students will :do theil' give their children the finest ed- school for boys' who .intend :to graduate Work at OXford Harucaticin possible," he said. study for the priesthoo.d. ,:ard, Princeton, Georgetown His views, ho)/Vever, were not . shared by. the Episcopal Diocese '1l'~~(QJfr® S(i'@U'®$"~®(cils - and Fordham. Father' James H. R~id, S.J., of Newar~, N. J., which h~ld i~s, ' ,. ,.C" " .. '. • '.' department head, said, "This is 87th annual convention in Trin- . TIhili'~tI:!lU'elJ'l'A~~ Afll'DIt:Q ity Cathedral, Newark, the Sa~:·' .KABGAYI (NC)-Communism ~he largest group graduating in ·day. : . . . Js.threatening to' take over in <;lassics at Fordham in over 10 The convention, with a: few Mrica a missionary prelate has years. And,. as far as we know scattered 'voice votes' in opposi- 'w:<i~il~~r:.h~rk._ . . ' it is one of the lal'gest in tlh~ : . ~ion, adop~ed. a resolution 0IlPos~ Arcp.bishop Andre Per~augin,' .Coun~ry." mg F~deral aid to church-related -W.F., of Kabgayi also said'in a schools and stating that such letter: to the priests and Reli;' schools should be "supported in gious 'of his See on his return full" from private or church from· a trip to Europe that sources. Catholics there are not aware of the scope of the struggle for Africa. Loyola' to Award . , In spite of their readiness to Honorary Degrees help, he said, EurQpean CathoNEW BEDfORD 'NEW ORLEANS (NC) - An lics do not understand .that the attorney, an engineer. and an Chl,lr'ch- On . this contin~ntis' in accountant :will be 'awarded mortal. danger. They are inadeINDUSTRIAL OflS -honorary degrees for- outstand- quately and inaccurately' ining contri:butions to jlheir pro- formed, he went on. HEATiNG OILS fessions and society at Loyola University's commeneement 'cerTlMKEN . lPlcni High Sc'hool emonies May 31: NASHUA (NC) - The first Receiving the degree of doctor OIL BURNERS of laws will. be Leon Sarpy, major' parochial Catholic High school, a million dollu project, Capt. Neville Levy, USNR (Ret.') S~fl"uce and· Louis H. Pilie, all of New will be constructed here within two years, Mayor Mario J. Vagge Orleans. Degrees will be conferred by Father W. ·Patrick has announced. After a meeting 501 COlllMl'V $1'. with Bishop Ernest J. Primeau Donnelly, S.J., president. .. Approximately 330 graduates of Manchester, and priests of this NIEW talEIOIFO)~f!) of the university's six schools' area, the Mayor said the fourQnd colleges ·will receive 'their year school is expected to have WV 31-17$1 diplomas. accommodations for 600 boys.

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..... ANCHOR-Dioce...1 ~re'_ThU'" May 25,

1961

5

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CATHRYN BROWER

EDMUND A. HARRINGTON

JEANNE

HARB~CK

M;ARY A. MARCOTTE

PAUL PONICHTERA

Seven Holy Family S'eniors Win Awards Seven seniors at Holy Family High School, New Bedford, are scholarship recipients. Heading the list is Paul Ponichtera, son of Mr. and Mrs. Chester Ponichtera, 272 Nash Road, winner of a $600 scholarship from Providence College, renewable yearly. A four year student, Paul also plays shortstop Oil the school baseball team. Providence College has als~ awarded another of Mrs. Florence Brower, winner daughter of Mr and Mrs. Omer ~op-rankmg .student, ~d- of a $200 scholarship from New Marcotte, 34 Yale Street, the mund A. Harrington, son of Bedford Catholic Woman's Club, Catholic Woman's Club has Mr. and Mrs. Edmund Rar- and the Bridgewater State Col- awarded a $100 scholarship, and rington, 84 Mill Street, a $250 yearly scholarship. Others receiving awards are Miss Cathryn Brower daughter ,

lege Alumni Scholarship for $100. She will attend Bridgewater in the- Fall. To Miss Mary Ann Marcotte,

New 'LeguolJ1 of Onl<e ThcM$@nd Men' Ucr1it~s PrayelT§ With C@ll'nteMp~at~Ve$' LADUE (NC) - A laymen's group devoted to Eucharistic devotion has earned the gratitude of contemplative nuns in this area of Missouri during its two years in existence. Known as the "Legion' of One Thousand Men" its sole requirement is that members pledge· to devote some time each week to adoration of the Blessed Sacrament. When and how long are left up to each ihdividual. Despite the group's name, more than 2,000 men have pledged to make the weekly devotion. They are organized in two groups-one meeting in North St. Louis at the chapel of the cloistered Sister-Servants of the Holy Ghost of Peretual Adoration, the other here at the chapel of the cloistered Discalced Carmelite nuns. In each case the men use the so-called "public chapels" of the convents-chapels which were all but unused, and, in the case of the Carmelites, kept locked to the public, until the adoration started. The nuns' own chapels are cloistered and within' the convent. 'Eternally. Grateful' Mother Mary Anne of Jesu.s, prioress of the Discalced Carmelite convent here, said in a message to the adoration group members: . "You have given us the priviitege of having the Blessed Sacrament exposed daily in our chapel, and for this privilege we will be eternally grateful. In addition, the thousands of visits the good men of the Legion have made have added impetus and zeal to our vocatiO!l. "To know that you are coming in regularly to visit Our Lord and to pray with tis has helped us immensely in intensifying our prayers for you and all the people of the Archdiocese of St. Louis," she said. Joseph Cardinal Ritter, Arck-

Young Marriages D~sturbing TOLEDO (NC) Bishop George J. Rehring of Toledo said he is "terribly disturbed" by the growing number of teenage ma.rriages that go on the rocks. The Bishop, who addressed men of the Toledo deanery parishes, said the home is not doing what it should to prepare children for marriage. Romance can wait, he added, until those who plan to marry can go about it in an intelligent way. The Bishop also criticized parties for pupils of grade school age,. "Let them grow up fiJrst," lI8id the Bishop.

bishop of St. Louis, lauded members of the organization for their success in furthering Eucharistic devotion in the archdiocese. Nuns' Contribution "Too often the laity and Religious are inclined to take for granted the work of the contemplative Sisters in our very midst," the Cardinal added. "The Legion of One ,Thousand Men has drawn the attention of our laymen to the daily' contribution in prfllYer and sacrifice which these nuns provide in our archdiocese." Three men are credited with creating the idea and. organization which has brought 2,000 men. week after week to the two chapels. . They are Auxiliary Bishop Glennon P. Flavin of St. Louis, Leo J. Wieck, chief financial and accounting officer for the national May Company Department Stores chain, and Father Joseph W. ~McNicholas, secretary of Catholic Charities of St. Louis. /),

to Miss ~izabeth Quinn, daug~­ .ter. of Mr. and Mrs. Francls Qumn, 103 Rockland Street, an award of $75. Mary Ann plans to attend Massachusetts State University, and Elizabeth is enrolled in Mt. St. Vincent.College, Nova Scotia. From the Greater. New Bedford Scholarship Fund, Miss Jeanne Harbeck, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Raymohd Harbeck of 968 Victoria Street, and· David Sheehan, son of Mr. and Mrs. Francis Sheehan of 289 Maple Street have received scholarship awards of $100 each. Jeanne will attend Rivier College, New Hampshire and David will matriculate at Boston College.·

ELIZABETH QUINN

DAVID SHEEHAN

Bishop Connolly Guest of Blind

The Diocesan Catholic Guild f9r the Blind, comprised of regional units' in AttleboI'o, Taunton, New Bedford and Fall River, held its annual meeting in Scholarship Winner Sacred Heart School in the See John D. Golenski, eighth city Saturday afternoon with grader at St.. K.i1ian's School,. Bishop Connolly· as guest of New Bedford, has been named honor, one of five winners of eight-year His Excellency. addressed the scholarships by l'Union St. Jean gathering"'and then greeted each Baptiste d'Amerique. The award member personally. They were will cover high school and col- accompanied to the meeting by lege fees. John is the son of Mr. . drivers, escorts and'their re-gional and Mrs. John Golenski, 495 directors - Father Gerard J. North Front Street Chabot of Attleboro; Father

John J. M!1rphy, New Bedford; Father James F. Lyons, Taunton; and Father James F. McDermott of Swansea, Fall River director. Father George E. Sullivan of St. Dominic's, Swansea, presented Bishop Connolly following the opening prayer and address of :welcome by Father McDermott. Mount St. Mary Academy glee club provided the entertainment and luncheon was served by the Women's Guild of the host parish.

Urges Dedication To Common Good NEW YORK (NC) - A priest here called for a dedicated effort by scholars, government representatives and labor and management in working for the common good. Father Edward J. Hogan, S .•T., assistant pastor of St. Ignatius Loyola church, said _that in spite of the economic - progress the U.S. has made its goals are far from realized. The Jesuit priest preached at a Mass commemorating the 70th aimiversary of the encyclical "Rerum Novarum" .and the. 30th' anniversary of. "Quadragesimo Anno." Father Hogan stated that there are still many problems in the U.S. economy that are unsolved. Asks Intelligent Efforts "Some six million. American families and not on' farms either are living on the slenderest incomes because thE' breadwinner is aged, or infirm, or a mother unable to command a proper salary," he said. "A lot of your vegetables are still picked by migrant workers, . uneducated, wretchedly housed in shanties . . . Only about a third of American workers have unionized; the rest must protect themselves without the benefit of a union." Father Hogan said the solll-' tions to these and other problems can only come from "the most intelligent and dedicated effort of scholars, government representatives and company and union officials closest to tne situation."

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Tijmffid About Easter Duty

OilllHy Th-fien A wise analyst has said th~~t the greatest failure of the United States is its failure as a democracy to reach a ., significant element of the world's people.' This country has spent billions of dollars to 'aid other. countries. and has seen a signifioant portion of that money gone to waste in that it has not furthered the ~ause of , democracy at all. ' The answer is in this: the aid was on a government to government basis, instead of on a' people to peoJ?le basis. Governments can change, people's attitudes toward them can vary, corruption can tear at them from within' - and then the United States is tarred with,the same stick that blackened the government it wasc§lending aid to help. When people are aided by people, there is a difference. Here there is no impersonal dealing but heart speaking to heart. Here there is love - , somethi~g only a person can, give and receive.' Communism is an appeal from an individual to an individual to help himself, to help others, to change society. The individual must be convinced, willing, ready to do all and to give all. He has a significance and a place in the movement of the whole.' . '; Democracy must use the same teChnique - indeed, by definition this is the heart of democracy, the value of the individual in the whole. Communism is a philosophy that can never be defeated by bullets or bombs. It is an idea - and an idea can be , defeated only by another idea. When people of the United Sfates help people' of' another country; when aid is on a people to people basis;: when love enters into. the c~mme~e ~ then, and only _then, will democracy be effectIve as Its own salesman. ' • Then, and only then, will people of other cquntries know that democracy is concerned not alone with 'technology, not alone with economics, not alone with pol!tics, but and above all - with people.., . This is the language they will understand. This is. the power that will persuade them. This is the assistaIl;ce-that eannot go to waste. 0

§@me Caft'h@~ics

DODGE CITY (Me)Some Catholic shut-ins fait to make ,their Easter duty because they fear it will be

'"

"too mtich bother" for a priest to bring them Communion at home, Bishop Marion F. Forst ,of Dodge City said here. In, a pa·storal letter to the pee/ pIe 'of his diocese, he urged relatives or friends of shut-ins to help them ~n making their Easter duty. He reminded that May 28, Trinity Sunday, is the Easter ~uty deadline in the U.S. Trouble ''The big trouble is that a priest just may not be aware, that some one or another of his parishionel's is not able to get to church," Bishop Forst explained. "How can he know about them, if someone does not tell him? Even in some of the smallest parishes it is quite easy for a priest not to know that one of his parishioners is sick, unless someone so tells him." ,' As for the sick or crippled, many of them dislike calling the re'ctory themeselves, for feM' , that they will "bother" the :~'~':""''''''''''~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~_~~ priest, the Bishop said. Hopeful . - \I ";J" "Others of them feel that they'li be able' to get to church ' in a week or two, so'there is no By 'REV. ROBERT W. HOADA, Catholic University need to call a priest. A scattered ,,;';';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;';;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;';;;;;;;;_;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; few wj].] delay on the grounds th~t if a priest isn't interested TODAY-Pentec~tThursday. MONDAY-St. Mary Magda- enough in them 'to call, wh;y . -Saturday 'of this weelt is an len. of Plj.zzi, Virgin-Betrothal shoulQ they bother! "Some are too timid, some may ordination day. Today's Mass re- to Christ is the theme of both minds us that -the Spirit works Epistle and Gospel. Though there be ashamed of the place in differently in each of us, accord- are various special kinds of vo- which they live; a few insist on ing to our vocation. The Apostles cational espousal to Him within waiting until they leave the hosthe Christian com~unity, the pital ,01' nursing home .and are went out to preach with an authority that compels obedience. ,basic reality and relationship back in their own homes," the _ In, but not of, but quite definitely in. This is the special grace of the here is one already achieved in prelate w'rote. ' The Bishop said most parish ~.'. That is the position of the Catholic regarding the world. hierarchy; the apostolic college, "Baptism. The Church is' the 'bride of pri'ests make weekly calls t8 f'" . ' our bishops in union with the The Catholic is not a precious hot-house flower, able pope. As the structure of the Christ, whom He loves as He bring Communion to the sick to grow and develop and live only in the rarified atmosphere Church, the Spirit grants to them lo'ves' Himself. Such love elicits and shut-ins. In large par.ishes, a Driest of a cloister, kept vigilantly from even suspecting the a protection and an irf;lllibility atteritiveness, surrender, 1oya:l~y eontamination of the world. which is not a gift of our Con- of the Christian who, as member usually'makes sick calls daily. No Imposition . firmation nor of ~is eucharistic of the Church, is wedded and Christ's prayer for His own was this: "I do not pray coming. But that, too, is for all pledged to Him. E\rery Sunday's J "So asking a priest· to bring that thou take them out of the world, but that, thou keep of us. So that our prpphetic Eucharistic Meal is a mar~iage Holy Communion to one's house, them from evil. They are not of the world; e'ven -as 1 am voices will have a sure test and feast; sign and foretaste of the or to a nursing or convalescent' home, is no imposition on the marriage feast of heaven. ' DOt 'of the world." a solid base.. " priest," the Bishop said. "He is TUESDAY-Mass' as, on Sun- going out anyway." And that is the position of the Catholic. " TOMORROW - Ember Friday Indeed, no one advocates allowing a young'ster in the of Pentecost - The first lesson day - The Mass is that of; the Bishop Forst urged relatives, Sunday after Pentecost, friends and nurses, ca!'ing for Faith. to stand up 1:0 the sophisticated problems of the gives us a picture of heaven, for First the spirit present in us now is an rarely celebrated since it co,in- the sick: "Call the priest, explain twentieth cel1tury. But once a person is equipped with the anticipation of heaven. The Old cides with Trinity Sunday. But the condition, and ask the priest riches of his Faith, and once he has developed strength of Testament sees justice and boun- its lessons of love set the tone to call on the person and prepare character: then he can and must be -very much aware of .tifulness as'twins, not in a mate- for the whole Season after Pen- him receive the Sacraments. More than the intellectual, The priest will welcome the call, what is going on in the world and make 'his influence felt . rialistic way but because all tecost. "Yes, I believe" is demanded by 'and he will also welcome the in the very midst of it. ..' f:::= God's saving ac.:t,s in history. God' opportunity to bring the SacraThis requires study.- both ·of the Faith and of the taste. Jesu~ healed, but only be- is Love, and faith without works ments to these fine people who world's problems. It requires awareness - of oneself and of cause men must somehow be is dead. cannot go to church." To day's national holiday one's influence, actual and potential, upon one's environm~nt. _ made to'see that they are not echoes the Christian command to , enmeshed in the web of It requires sacrifice - the willingness to overcome apathy ' forever their sins, that hope is possible. love the dead in the communion and indifference and to catch fire with the desire to serve The. pentecostal Church, the" of saints. Today's Mass teaches 'BELTSVILLE (NC) - Bro. God. "1 have'come to cast fire on the earth, and what would Church of the Spirit, -is here and: us to love the living. Indeed, I but that it be kindled:' " " now in a "space-between." Im- every Mass, by its nature as Erminus'Joseph, F-.S.C., has been "communion," tells us that we named Provincial General of Catholics then, are expected to be in the middle of every portant as the space of the world love God in loving our fellows Christian Brothers in the United problem' _ social and' political and economic. Whatever is, it is not the end. and that there is neY way excluStates and the Philippine IsEMBER SATURDAY OF sive of t1;lis way. ' lands. effects man in his welfare here on earth which is the road PENTECOST-Apart from ordiAs Provincial General, Brother be walks to God'is the province of the Catholic; , WEDNESDAY -Blessed Virnation ·Masses and other' solemn Joseph will supervise six ChrIsgin Mary,' Queen-Human lanThe sound moral principles of the Catholic, and the occasions, today's Bible readings tian Brothers' teacher -training guage always falls short in, atvalues he possesses are not meant for the textbook - they in the liturgy may be simplified ,tempting centers in the United States and to describe the superare meant to be measured against situations as these exist to the first and the last two les- natural order. But still we have one in the Philippines, and' will sons. The first lesson and the be an adviser to the communin the world 'and to be translated into action. to try, since, "I've gotta use Epistle call for gratitude at the· ity's Superior General in Rome. The Catholic must not remain the armchair philosopher, coming and operation of the words when I talk to you." There a're 2,508 Chr·istian BroWords taken, from man's politthe ivory tower theologian, the speculative moralist. He Spirit. The Gospel illustration' ical vocabulary somehow seem thers in the U.S. must get into the world's arena and wrestle with the, of Jesus' healing and saving mis- particularly weak. Formerly novice master at . sion assures us that He acts now world's problems and come up with valid solutions. But this feast of Mary, Queen, the novitiate'here in -Maryland in the sacraments, that we truly celebrates the sovereignty which of the community's middle AtCatholicism is not a museum - it is a living organism. meet Him in the sacred signs. is God's gift to His handmaid. .I an tie states province, he sucIt must involve itself in the lives of men. Although she is a member of ceeds Brother CQrnelius Luke, TRINITY SUNDAY - Today Yes, the Catholic, while not of 'the world, must be in Christ, she is the second-born of F.S.C. we begin a new emphasis in the Brother Luke has been named the world. And interested in the world's problems, too. the new and eternal covenant ~hurch's 'year..We have celedirector of a new national reand, like the Church, is,a mother brated in our Sunday worship treat house now under con-ever since.last Advent the great to all His oth~r members. Her struction in Santa Fe, N.M. , saving events of salvation-his- unique motherhood is the source Director in Rome . tory. We continue to' celebrate of her sovereignty as of her other At the same time it was angifts. them in- the season after Pentenounced here tpat Brother Denis cost, but from a slightly differof Mary, F.S.C., president of Jubi'~ee' ent point of view, more subjecDe La Salle College in Manila, tive, more' concerned with the NEW YORK (NC) - Father the Philippines, has been named OFfiCIAL NEWSg:tAPIER Of THE DIOCESE Of FALL RIVER human response of faith, more James J. Glynn, C.M., director director of Christian Brothers at inclined' to emphasize the moral of the Vincentian Fathers' Misthe Institute Jesus Magister in Published weekly by The 'Catholic Press of the 'Di~ese of Fall River application. sion Band in Brooklyn, will ob- Rome. 410 Highland Avenue , The Mass of, Trinity Sunday; serve his 25th anniversary in the The institute, founded in 1957, Fall River, Mass. 'OSborne 5-7151 celebrating as it does that mys- priesthood by offering a Solemn is a school of advanced philosoterious fellowship in the one Mass of Thanksgiving in the phical and theological studies PUBLISHER God, that overflowing richness Church of St. Paul here next open to Brothers of all teaching Most Rev. James L CO(lnolly, D.O., PhD. 'of divine life when we will Tuesday. A native of this city, communities throughout the. please' God, one,day know, is ~ Father Glynn served as a misGENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MANAGER world. brief interr~ption in this transisioner in Panama, the Canal ~ev. Daniel F. Shalloo, M.A. Rev. John P. Driscoll The appointments were made tion. A sort of total .look at the Zone and in Opelika, Ala., before in Rome by Brother Nicet MANAGING EDITOR' awesomeness and wonder of God he was assigned to his present Joseph, F.S.C., Superior GenHugh J. Golden, as faith perceives Him dimly. post in 1958.. eral of the Christian Brothel'8.

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THE ANCHORThurs., May 25, 1961 Continued bom Page Two

Cliff Lawn Nursing Home. Cliff Manor Nursing Home, Cliff Haven Nursing Home, Smith Electrical Supply Co., Atty James Seligman, S. A. Ross. National Contracting Co., Paul Woltman, Chace Electric Co., Nira Furniture Co" Mr & Mrs Charles G. Daby. Mr & Mrs John P. Dwyer, St. Joseph's Women's Guild, S1. Patrick's Women's Guild, Slater Paper Box. Corp., Burke's Inc. Burke Realty Co., Canada Dry Bottling Co., Max Myer, Wilbur's, John Braz. Colonial Wholesale Beverage Corp., North End Laundry, B& S Fisheries of Fall River, Fall River Steam & Gas Pipe Co.. Modern Shoe Store. , Riveredge Printers Inc., Gertrude Manor Nursing Home Inc.. Mass. Catholic Order of Foresters-Our Lady of Fatima Court, F. R. & N. B. Bottling Works.

Special 'Gifts National $1,000 In Memory of Most Reverend Daniel F. Feehan, D.D., In Mem_ ory of Most Reverend James E. Cassidy, D.D. $800 Cp,erry & Webb Company. $400 P. A. Tracey Company. $300 0 J. L. Marshall & Sons Inc., Our Lady's Chapel. $250 In Memory of Mother M. Rose Huber. $200 Joseph M. Mosher Associates,

Inc. $150 In Memory of' Reverend' John ~. Sullivan. Chester F. Wright, A.I.A. Agostini Construction. Camac Company, A "Pilgrim." $75 William A. Riley. E. Turgeon Construction Co. $50 John Terrence O'Duggan Stu• dio Inc. E. Brodeur & Son Inc. .6$25 Thomas W. Reed Co., Joseph P.lflynn, Harris Lumber Co. Inc. Richard G. Dick, M. H. Gerritt & Co. $20 H. Carr & Sons, Inc. $15 Farley Harvey Co. $10 . D. Dixon Donoyan Inc.

BISHOPS' NIGHT: Attending Bishops' Night at the New -Bedford Serra Club are left to right, Mrs., Daniel F. Dwyer, Bishop Connolly, New Bedford Serra President Daniel F. Dwyer, Auxiliary, Bishop Gerrard.

St. Vincent de Paul, L. G. Bal$100 . four Co., Antaya Bros. Inc. Princeton Clothing Co. Inc.. $60 . Cornell Dubilier Electric Company, New Bedford Defense Saart Brothers. $50 Products, United Motors Inc., Apco Mossbe'rg Company. Sullivan & Foster. St. John's Council No. 404McMahon Council ,No. llJl Knights of Columbus, Harry J. Knights of Columbus. Boardman Insurance. $50 $35 !Caplan Brothers Furniture, Plastic Craft Novelty Company New Bedford Joint BoardAttleboro Printing & Embossing TWUA, Blue Ribbon LilUndry, Fawcett Mills' Inc. . $25 ( Reynolds & Markman. $75 Catholic Women's Club, The Acushnet Fish Corp., Ernest J. Flood. ' Marathon Co. $50 , $15 $250 Saltzman's Men's Stores. Arlans bept. Store. ,Taunton Daily Gazette $10 , $35 • $100 Building Materials Inc. London's Inc., Bernard Connell. A Friend, St. Vincent de Paul $25 B. A. MacDonald Express Co.. -St. Mary'sf Mr & Mrs Charles ,Desmarais, Charles R. Galligan, St. Mary's Sweet Manufacturing Co. Milady's Shop Inc., Watson's Mr & Mrs William H. Casey, Women's Guild, Knights of Columbus-Msgr. J. Coyle Council, Diner, Guyot Brothers, Publie Knights of Columbus - Bishop Stang Council, Manhat~n BotFrank J. Smith, Mr & Mrs Joseph Finance Company, tling Company Inc., Babbitt'. Martin, George Sanford. , $75 Steam & Specialty Company. , Bricklayers, Masons & PlasGoodnow8 Morse Brooks $500 $50 . The Bernard J. Doyle Family. terers I. N. Union #39; Herman's Liquor Store, Union Liquor. New Process Twist Drill ClI $200 , Company, Glennon Roofing Co., First National Machinists Bank, McGowan Insurance Agency. Trudel's Pharmacy. Joseph A. Eagan, Edw. O'Brien, $150 . Central Pharmacy, Bettencourt St. Vincent de Paul Society- \ Fireside Restaurant. Pharmacy, Atty Foster Herman, St. Paul's -Church. $100 Frank Sylvia,Real Estate; ZeiteJoseph Reilly, Dr T. R. Thayer. F. & M. Curtis, Inc. rion Realty Corp., United Auto$40 $SO Philip Moreland. Brook' Manor Inc., The Mill- mobile Workers, Local 899. Lyman & Baker, MacLean's, $35 stone, C. Ray Randall Co., DQnFibre Leather Mfg. Co. Weir Co-operative Bank. ley Mfg. Co. Inc. . $20 $30 $30 Federal Motor Transport Co. Eureka Manufacturing CG.. Deschenes Bros. $15 Cornelius J. Murphy Insurance. $25 Park Motors Inc., C. F. Cush$25 Achin's Garage, Dr. D. Eugene Paragon Gear Co.: Staples Coal Leco, No. Attleboro Plumbing & ing & Son, Travers Package Co., McKenna's Gift Shop, Dan- Heating Co. A. Lacasse & Sons, Store, Hiram Wheaton & Sons. $10 iel' F. McNearney Insurance. Jarvis Taps, Inc. Martin Sullivan-Clothier, Dr .Octagon Service Station, TaunMi' & Mrs Edward Smith, Holy Nathan Mitnik, New Bedford ton Ncws Company, Bacon Felt Name Society. Linguica Co., E. C. Sherman & Co., Dermody Cleaners. Clover Market. Co., F. S. Brightm&n Co. Dr. Samuel L. Poplack, Eagan's $20 A Friend, The Output Co., Dr Package Store, Pober's, Allan Dr. Maurice Gra,nt, H. F. BurRobert Rosenberg, Colonial Res,M. Walker & Co. Inc., Bristol rows. taurant & Equipment, Knowles County Radio Company. $15 . $25 Rep. Carlton H. Blixx, Bergh Loom Reed Works. Elco Dress Co. Inc., Harpoon L. J. Sullivan Inc., Holy Name Brothers Co. Inc., C. K. Grouse Harmonizers, Everett H. Corson, Society of St. Paul's, Mason Box. ,Co. . Local #644 Steamfitters Union, $20 $12.50 United Textile Workers #25. Wood Specialties, D. F. Linea No. Attleboro Gas Co. Local #87 Pocketbook Workers Supply. ' $12 $15 Hall Sanitary Pumping Service Union, Perry Liquor Store Inc.. M. F. Avila Inc.-Liquors, Pat Dolan Funeral Home. $10 Aleixo Insurance Agency, OlDiamond's Cafe, Clara Sulli- McKenna - Women's Clothing, son's Home of Flowers. van, Holy Name Society-Sacred Tuck Jewelers. Woodacre Monument, Sylvia & $10 Heart Church, Davis Electric Co.. Brown, Max Levovsky - Real Plank & Hansen, Sullivan's Norman Lacasse. Office Supply, Holliston Mills,Marvin C. Gay, Thorpe Auto- E;state, Peter J. Haste, J. A. Inc., Interstate Transportation J;I1Qtive Co., Hindle's Auto Elec. Hagen & Co. Inc. St. Eulalia Court U64, Gold Co., Joe's Taxi Service. & Power Mower Service, Ralph Market Basket, Benny's Auto Hall Realty, Standard Atomizer. Bond Sterilizing ,Powder Co., Stores, New England Brass Co., Franklin Hardware Co., Riley Oxford Pharmacy, Roy's PharSelf-Service Laundry, Foster & Bros. Lumber Co., V. H. Black- macy. Company. Senecal Pharmdcy, Lariviere inton, Mucker's Delivery Service Powers Pontiac Inc., Mechanics Pharmacy, Family Pharmacy, Co-operative Bank, W. H. Riley Lincoln Pharmacy, Olivier Phar& Son, H. & H. Machine Co., 1.. macy, A Friend. $1,500 G. Beers Co. . Edward Whitehead ·lne.. Al~ Hemingway Bros. - InterNte pert's Furniture Co.. Lawrence Hooper Feeds Eng. Co.; FredTrucking. ' erick L. Reilly, Mayor & WIN B. M,axfield, Gem Fillet Co. IDe.. $600 B, F. Cleary. . Mr & Mrs Clinton Hansoa., &hln 'Coal & Oil Co., Inc. Arthur J. Murphy n., Italian " 'Loretta Hat 'Shop. . $300 Naturalization Club, Norman Amerioan Press, hM. Mason, Taunton Professional $358 $1,500 Pharmacy, Goldstein &; Assiran. Lincoln Park AmusemeDt Se8WD &: Caron IDe. Taunton Supply Corp., DaVQl $200 Company, A. Friend. Printing Ho':lse. , BisatloDltI'Garage. $1,250 $150 B. M. Co Durfee '1!AI8t eo. Guisti Baking Co. $1,000 ',' $100 $121 :Mr &: Mrs Gerald E. MeNaD3r. Mr & Mrs J. Gerald Heagne,r.. JlyQcinth Circle . . '11 Deueb- Firestone Rubber & Latex ProdPartklular CouROIl aoeiet, GIl ... ol l&a:bMI8. . . :ow, Glf j:~ THe 1&

Taunton

No. Attleboro

Rubber Co., Fall River Electric Light Co. $500 R. A. McWhirr-Co. Mr,& Mrs Thomas Tansey, Anonymous. $300 Slades Ferry Trust Co. G. W. Carpenter Inc. $280 Mr & Mrs J. E. Bullock. $250 First Federal Savings & Loan Assn. Donnelly'Painting Service, Mr & Mrs John F. Doyle. $200 Mr & Mrs M. Norman Zalkind. Brady E~ectrical Co. Inc.. Delta ElectrIcal Co. $160 Mr & Mrs Herve Lagasse:

Fall River

$20 John's Shoe Store, J. M. Darling Co., Thomas Ashton & Soo, Hathaway Funeral Service. $15 Joseph Dudek, Cropper Florist, Lapre's Turkey Farm, Cozy Cab & Bus Co., Sanford Hardware Co. Staples. Coal Co., Earnshaw'. Sandwich Shop, Mr & Mrs Thomas Abbott, Lavoie & Hillman, George W. Graham. Dr Albert Resnick, Somerset Lodge.

$10 Open Air Market, Highland Delicatessen, Luso -' American Macaroni Mfg. Co., Empire Chevrolet, Charlmor Furniture Co. Rex Laundry Inc., Grand Central Market, Economy Radiator Works, Capitol Fruit Stores, George B. Lockhart Ins. Sam Dubitsky, Overhead Door. Fazio Chair Shop, Charles Campos, Yellow Taxi of Fall River. Liberty Loan & Realty Co $lSO Monaghan Acceptance Corp., Dominican Academy Alumnae" Lincoln P. Holme~, Atty Alfred Atty & Mrs J. '1. Harrington. S. Sherwin, Anne's Beauty Salon. $125 Mr & Mrs Fernand Cote, PeerDr & Mrs Roger Cadieux. less Laundry, Mike's Restaurant, Fall River News Co., Inc. Harold C. Nagle Ins Agency Inc.. $100 Thomas Marvell. Mt. St. Mary Alumnae Assn Bolduc's Lumber Co., Everclt William Stang Assembly K of Mot her Catherine McAuley Sportswear, Loring Laboratories, Guild, Frank S. Feitelberg. , Mr James Kane, Peter's Package Store. Gamache Trucking Co. , Wolf Lamp Corp., Mr George $75 A Friend, Fall River Package H. Hodapp, Independent Laundry, Atty & Mrs Isador Levio, stores Assn., O'Neil 'Fisk Til'e"Sacred Hearts Academy AlumService, Sears Roebuck Co. nae Assn. $62.SO· Dr. Harry M. Lechan. F. R. People's Co-Operatiw Turn to Page Ten Bank.

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$SO

Mr & Mrs Lewis Morley Mr &: Mrs Antonio Lagasse, Knights of Columbus .#3669 Bishop James E. Cassidy Council. Robert L. Germane Dunlap Associates Inc., John Stafford & Co., Newport ;Finishing Corp. _ $35 ~arl N. Beetle Plastics Corp., John E. Cox Co. $30 Durfee Buffinton Ins. $25 , W. Harry Monks, Terminal Ba.kery, ~. Fred Beckett & Son, Cliff Helgh~ Nursing Home,

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8

THE,ANCHOR--Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. May 25, 1961

Women Protest Movie Violence

Mi~or Remode!a'U1g Often Pays' B~g D~vidend~ to Homemaker

SACRAMENTO (NC) - Protests against the trend toward immorality and violence in current movies were voiced at the 58th annual California Federation of Women's Clubs convention here. The meeting also urged federation members to begin a letterwriting campaign to television stations and sponsors to make known ,their dislikes and likes in programming. . Sfate Censorship The corlVention adopted a resolution which called on the film industry to return to decency by adoption of a stricter code of self censorship. The delegates deplored cur;. rent movies which over-emphasize' sex, crime and violence. The resolution said the federation would, "regret to see state censorship which seems to be definitely in the offing since a large section of the industry has repudiated self censorship." The conventton opposed foreign export of films which over:" emphasize brutality, sex and indecency since this gives a false image of America.

By Alice Bough Cahill The difference between moving to anothe.r location, or the building of a new house, or the frustration of living ·in a house that is too old or characterless' can often be solved· by simple minor remodeling. Take,Jor instance, mass produced, purely impersonal So successful were this womdevelopments. Often you can an's efforts, the neighbors make changes to 'suit your thought she'd splurged on new tastes and needs that are dining room, furniture. If you more effective than extensive. I'm thinking of changes that can ~e wrought' , with wallpaper, 'paint, and possibly a few well-chosen accessories. Maybe all you ,might need in a given room is a not-too-complicated built-in which a handy·man husband could construct if he wanted to save labor costs, iiere's a suggestion for the family with a living room that needs to look larger,. even if it can't be enlarged. Take out. small front windows, substitute a bay window, then replace side wall windows with another large window. Thus opened up, you'll now have a generous living room of good proportions. Maybe it will be enlarged but little in size, but a great deal ir. use and ap· pearance. A front bay will actually add footage; while a large side window" will open up the room visually, Enclosed Stairway If you have a narrow enclosed ,etairway to the second floor, ugly in itself and adding nothing to 'your room,You might open it up. If you need part of the wall · for support, build bookshelves along it to face thE' living room. You may have 'a narrow arch, between a living room and hall. You can add spaciousness to your '4'00m'by enlargin'g this arch. An eyesore often found in aii old house is a dark hallway, which is wasted space. You might "brighten the corner" by install- ' 'ing decorative glass brick. By adding a convenient tabletop counter with drawers, you may be able to turn this into an , area that is light, functional and attractive. Glass. blocks are al-' 'most maintenance free; they can be cleaned with a damp cloth. Then, 'there are houses where walls are paneled with molding. If you'd like to brighten up such ,a dining room, instead of ripping out the panels, use an interesting wallpaper. Now the panel acts .as a frame for the new paper. · To complete your remodeling 'ob, you might paint the fu'rniture. One of my friends has just completed such a job. She used an antique white and then accented some of the design on the chairs with gold. The seats of the chairs were reupholstered in a leatherlike white plastic.

don't care for white; you'll find that black lacquer dresses up furnitUJ;e. Storage Shelves

Another"point one should bear in mind is that a few shelves anywhere can end storage headaches. Almost no space is too small for shelves. You might frame windows 'Yith bookshelves,' or install shelves under a row of windows. Even in your kitchen, low shelves for cookbooks take'advantage' of waste space. A top shelf makes a good kitchen desk. . A' three-inch 'shelf around a jog makes a wonderful place to display a hobby, likll a little girl's collection of foreign dolls, or a boy's miniature cars. Anyone who has remodeled an old house will say "have a plan first."- When one buys an old house, the temptation may be great to improve it. Sometimes it is bought with that idea in mind. The theory is that,if you've gotten a good deal, you can afford to invest a little· money in renovations and repairs. But such renovations can run away with funds, if you don't give careful thought ·to plans and costs. . .

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CONFERENCE DELEGATES: To represent Sacred Ifearts Academy, 'Fall' River, at a Youth Citizenship Conference to be ~eld next month at.Tufts University; are, seated, Margaret Silvestre and Mrs. George E. Snyder; 'standing, Ann Turner.

Lisbon to Mark Students to Represent Fall River Return of Rei ics :'At Tufts Un"iversityConference LISBON (NC)-The relics of the Holy.Constable of Portugal, Blessed Nuno Alvares Pereira, will be greeted on their return to Lisbon with a· civic ceremony on June 18. 'The relics have ,been exhibited 'throughout Portugal during the past year to mark the, sixth centenary of Blessed 'Nuno's birth. They will arrive here in a procession of boats on the TaguB River which will land at a large riverside plaza, the Praca' do Comercio, where theywHl be received by Church, civic and military authorities~ .., The following day a congreSs devoted to Blessed Nuno's work will open, and on June 24 all Portuguese Bishops will be present at a Mass in his honor. ,

~ray

for Canonization

Blessed. Nuno defeated, the armies of Spain in 1385 when be was only 25 years old and restored Portuguese sover.eignty.· In 1422, after the death of his wife, he entered a Carmelite friary that he had founded in Lisbon. • He died as a Carmelite Brother in 1431. Public devotion to him

Buffaio Diocese to Have Council of Women BUFFALO (NC) -A council of Catholic women will be formed for the Buffalo diocese, Bishop Joseph A. Burke has announced. The Bishop said the council will be organized on district and . deanery levels and will be affiliated with the National Council of Catholic Women, Washington, D.C. A representative of the NCCW, Mary 'Donohoe, will corne from Washington to assist in 'formation of- the council.

WINS GRANT: Sister Albina Marie, S.U.S.C., Sacred Hearts Academy, Fall River, has earned a grant for ad-' vanc,ed study at New York University French Institute for Secondary School Teachers. She will attend an intensive seven-week course in ,teaching methods cthis Summer,

Many Refugee Religious o Trickling Into U. ~

Award Winner . Miss Claire Paquette, daughter of Mrs. Catherine Paquette, New Bedford, and a student at St. Joseph Preparatory School, Fall River, has been named third place winner in a state' wide French Background contest sponsored by the Am'erican Association of Teachers of French. She received a:bronze plaque and her teacher, Sister Sainte Veronique, was given an honor certificatfil.

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For the second year, Sacred ploring "how successfully some . Hea~t~ ~ca~emy, Fall River, will schools are fulfilling the task of part~cIpate.m a three day Youth ' . '., , ,Citizenship ConferenCe at Tufts developll~g responsIble cIhzenUniversity, Medford. ' s h i p and providing an atmosTo attend sessions Monday ·'phere in which intellects will through Wednesday, June 5 to 7, - be sharpened." are Mrs. ~eorge E. Snyder, Students, from 16 Massachuacademy hIstory teacher, and setts schools will be' joined by. eleventh grader~ Ann Turner teams from the other New Engand Margaret Sll~estre,. mem- .land states! New Jersey and New bers of the school s .varsIty de- York. Sessions will feature bate team. '. . ~eaders from government agenThe co~ferenc~.WIll conSIder cies, schools, colleges and civic human . ~Ights at horne and organizations. They will deliver a,broad WIth the purpose of ex.:. general session addresses and there will also be sectional meetCotiege Women to Serve ings' for students and faculty advisers. 'As Summer Missioners'

. BALTIMORE (NC)-Six students from the College of Notre , Dame here will be among nearly 70 Catholic college students doing Summer mission ~ork in the Raleigh, N. C. diocese. The students will work in Raleigh under the direction of the diocesan Confraternity of Christian Doctrine. Among ,their assignments will be teach,ing in religious vacation schools •and conducting parish censuses. ~he students from the College of Notre Dame who will take part in -the program are Mary,ann Hutchison, Ann Miller Gerry Riljca, Susan Priest, Dor~ othy Genevich a~ Ellen Moore.

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MIAMI (NC)-Reports of the abuse heaped on' nuns still in Cuba reached here as the communist government of Fidel Castro continued its campaign against the Catholic Church. Reliable sources cited several occasions when Sisters stationed in Cuba were forced by women members of the Castro militia to disrobe and remain undressed while their convents and schools were searched. At one school ira Camaguey, they said, students visiting the nuns after the seizure of the buildings 'were alse stripped of their' garments as militia women sear~hed for arrDII .and valuables. As the number of priests aIKl Sisters seeking refuge in the U. S. through Miami's port conti~ued to increase, official!:: of the Miami diocese reported that more thall 85 nuns and 15 priests had beell received at Miami's International Airport and at West Palm Beach, a debarkation 'point.

Alumnae Officers New officers of Jesus Mary Academy' Alumnae Association, Fall River include Mrs. Lucienne Dumais, president; Mrs. Jeannine Giroux, vice president; Miss' CeCile Gendreau, treasurer; Miss Therese Cadrin, corresponding secretary; Mrs. Bernadette Morrissette, recording secretary. All will serve for two years.

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Elect Provincia; For Third Term

By Mary Tinley Daly, A somberly serious atmosphere pervades our house these days. Lights burn into the past-midnight ho~rs, are turned on again in the early dawning - in one room, that is, Mary's. The television murmurs instead of blares. Ginny ronfines her long-play rec. " Thts was crossed out and we OFds to hours when Mary is could imagine our redhead apnot at home. Dinner is 'over plying "positive thinking" to her quickly, telephone and house problem. "And when these ex-

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noises kept to a minimum. ams are Qver-pray that I'll pass Saturdays and Sundays, usual- 'em-then I face State Boards! Jy carefree, are You-all pray for Mary and me, quiet. No more we'll study, and offer up the week-end get': study. O.K.?" tI~ get hers of O.K. say we. ., 0 u n g people At this stage, all we can do is sitting around keep the house quiet as possible the piano. Now for Mary, write frequent letters and then Judy to Markie, pray for them both Fit' e d e ric k s and for all. our other ~hildren, eomes, but only and grandchildren, and our, for study with children-in-law. . Mary, not a Th~se urgent requests, coming !'JOUnd but the . at the end of a 'speci~ied course occasional shuf. of studies for Markie and Mary fie of papers or the closing of a when both are hopeful of gradubook. From Friday afternoon ation, reminds us of a question 1IIltil Monday, Mary 'scarcely asked by a member of our lifts her eyes from books. liturgical study club. Discussion Reason? . had been on prayer for the whole "Comps." Mystical Body. Seniors' Dread One of the club members said, . The abbreviations doeS not "Father, I'm glad to pray for the have its theatrical or sporting whole world, more specifically ~nnotation of "complimentary." for the whole United 'States Quite the opposite. It is the Army. But surely I could say lIIhortened version of "Compre- just one more prayer for a parbensive examination," that dread ticular private in Uncle Sam's o:f college seniors when they are Army-our Bill? Couldn't H" to be examined on any and every "Of course you can!" Father phase of their major subjects. agreed. ' Some scarcely remembered part So it is at our house. 0:f a long-ago past course may iioom high in such a thorough Catho.lie School Pupils work-over. 'Th~ mystery and surprise of Get Patrol Awards "'What they will ask" is'not at WASHINGTON (NC)~Pupils intl'iguing at this stage of the of four CatholJc grade schools £tame. It is terrifying, fOr on it were among six saluted as school m.ay hinge the acquiring or the safety patrol heroes by Attorney relinquishment of an A.B. degree. General Robert F. Kennedy With an English major such here. a;; Mary's, requiring a great deal The six were presented with 00:' reading, and in 'a college . awards from the American Autowhose academic ~ta-!1dards are " mobile Association by lV):r.. KenlMgh - Trinity -preparing for nedy at ceremonies i~ his Decomps is no ,laughing matter. partment of Justice office: The Recognizing that' one ca'm\ot presentation ceremonies were' a "~am" for comprehensives-stay prelude to the 25th National tip all night and memorize one School Safety Patrol .. parade. bOOk, or several-means that the Some 30,000 boys" and. gir-ls final two monthsmustencom- marched Saturday as a . tribute pass not only doing of, daily to the country's 770,000 school ~ignments in the liberal arts, safety patrol nteinJ:iers. ' but a complete review of the A specialli~esaV'ing 'medal and major. . c~rtificate was .presented - to 'There must be more than "reThomas O. Pretti; 14, of St. IDembering answers" or facing Agnes' Cathedral school, Springset of "true or false" questions field, Mo. He was credited with When luck may well playa part: - pu,shing a6-year-old boy £rom • is a broad inquiry as to real the path ,of an on-coming truck, eomprehension of the one field saving the boy from possible Gi knowledge you' have freely death at the risk of personal ebosen as a major. injury. 1ft addition to the hushed atmosphere within our houseHealth Services'Draw ~ken only now and then by an exuberant younger sister whose Fire from Atheists enthusiasms occasionally run out BERLIN (NC) - Health servof bounds-we receive short but • ices' developed by a growing frequent letters from Markie number of parishes in Poland who is going through a like ex- have achieved such status as to perience of intensive study. . earn a blast' from the' country's Now in her final,year of.cqF ~rgani2:ed atheists. lege, with a major in nursing " The' parochial health centers Markie begs us. to" "Tray, anl! :·em..p loy either professional pray hard" at 11 of a Monday :nur~es··~ mostly Sisters banned eight of a 'Tuesday, etc.' ' .', ··i!rom hospitals by the communA-Oka.y . ist regime - or specially trained "'Never stlidied so 'hard in my . auxiliary personnel. The .Cathome," she writes.'''Think l'nCdo-' ,lie health services seek to 01'ing A-Okay, as the astronaut ,glanize' medical assiStance to the Shepard says-but you never can sick in their homes, rather than be sure. Oh,. thOSe ex~ms. .vying to duplicate the activity of Wouldn't it be awful to get this' the state-operated health serv... and then flunk 'out?" lee. ' Relatives are trained in how 80.,000· At Ma.-ul.,s Hour. : to care for the bed-ridden. ParI T' ish workers try to aid, in the "'oy for World Peace personal problems of the sick, LOS ANGELl!:S (NC)--80me both spiritual and material. 10,000 persons a ~ in tlJ,e Th~y supply them with 'books _ Angeles Coliseum h.ere and and magazines and do various ~yed the Rosary for the end errands for them. One ,of the fill communist aggression, the _ main tasks of the health centers eonversion of Russia and world is ~ assure religious ministrain the 14th ~ual Mary's ,!IlOn' to the sick.

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THE ANCHOR-:Thurs., May 25, 1,961

MAY CROWNING: Sylvia Porter, a senior at St. Anne's School of Nursing, Fall River, completes the crowning of the outdoor May statue in hospital's garden.

Nun Acquires One-Person Art Show Hard Way-by Painting Herself YOUNGSTOWN (NC) - Not everyone can go to Italy and come back with 60 oil paintings fit to hang in an art gallery. But Sister Margaret Ann did exactly that. , Her luggage is loaded with unusual paintings of the Sacred Heart, the, Blessed Mother, Biblical scenes, landscapes 'and 'figure 'studies,' many of which are featured in Sister's ','oneman" show, at Butler Art Insti-' tute here. Master's Degree The Ursuline nun acquired the art collection the hard way -by painting the pictures herself: They're the product of 20 'moi1ths at the Pius XII Institute of' Fine Arts in Florence, Italy, where Sister Margaret Ami painted her way to a master's degree. Following a picture-a-cI'a'y schedule, Sister Margaret Ann says that· any trained artist who adopts such a routine will' paint "five or six works" in that time in which he expresses himself well. . Butler Art Institute' officials, however, believe Sister's estimate is too conservative. They want 27 of her paintings. Expressionism Sister expects that her expressionIstic style will meet with a cool reception. She explained: ,"There are many who believe that good art must be a picture of something they have' seen before, or. have. color which appeals to their senses. They also. believe that. art must be practical as. well as merely beautiful. "But art ,must, be creative, and it must have' intellectual appeal. The Christian. artist, by superimposing his intellect on nature, can bring a new image' of God to humanity.". Key word in her explanation is creativity. The. mere copying of an object in photographic detail, she emphasizes, is not art. Explaining her own expressionistic. style, ~he pointed to Ii vase of pink' flowers in the lounge of her convent. "The idea is to penetrate into· the atmosphere-to interpret nature. T\J,e flowers are light and soft. The area around them is velvety, and the arrangement seems to be 'floating in the air. The aim is to interpret the relationship of these things and paint the flowers as they affect me at this time." Other Schools . The . two other schools of painting, she explained, are the , "realistic" Or, photographic,

James Francie Cardma1 Mc~ Women Elect ~e, ArchbiShop of Los An:' New Bedford Catholic Wom1Je1es, presided and gave the con- en's Club officers 'for the year iluding Benediction of the Bles- include ~Mrs. William N. Whelan' Mild Sacrament. Jr., president; Miss Kathleen 'I1he sermon was given by Fr. Downey, vice president; Miss Plan Banque~ ~ V. Sheridan of the CathJean McGinnis, Second vice presNew Bedford Catholic Guild ~ Information Center here. i:rl.ent; Mrs. Joseph C. Motta, ~e 3,500 :men, women and l'eCording secretary; Mrs. Roland £-01' the Blind will close its club lIib.iJ;dren furmed the el'O:!IS and F. , M:athieu, corresponding sec- year Tuesday, June 6 with a bnquet at the Gaslight Room ~ of a gigantic)lWog.rosary retary; Mrs. James M. Kearney, CIa *be field. tlJeasul'er. of M and K resta!ir~'

which was lost about 50 years ago, and the "basic abstract pattern," whiCh she calls the "pin'nade of true expression."

Women Sponsor Training Sessions WASHINGTON (NC) - Oneday sessions as part of the 11 Summer 'Leadersnip Training Institutes sponsored by the Na~ tional Council of Catholic Women are to be held, Margaret Mealey, NCCW executive director, stated. "We are. pl~ased to announce that due to the success of the organizationlaboratol'Y 'at the recent instittite of. Georgetown Uniyersity,. we will' now' offer this labprat'ory to' one-day registr::,-nts at other institutes." ,The one-day session, as well as the three-day institute; is open to all NCCW officers and chairmen on diocesan, "deanery and parish levels. All affiliated organizations have been invited. .An Institute in this area is to be held at Cardinal Cushing Col, lege, Brookline, on June 26-28.

Reverend Mother Marie Elisabeth, General' of the Sisters of Saint Joseph, has announced the re-election for 'a third term of . M6ther Jeanne Therese as Provincial of the Fall River Province. The Reverend Mother General has been in the diocese for the la'st four weeks making her canonical visitation to the parish convents where the Sisters of , Saint Joseph devote themselves to the Catholic education of youth . The Sisters of Saint Joseph du Puy are members of one of the oldest ord,ers of teaching nuns in Europe. Founde'd in 1650 by Reverend Jean Pierre Medaille 8.J., under the solicitous and fat her 1 y 'encouragement of Bishop Henri de Maupas of Ie Puy-en-Velay, France, the small congregation expanded rapidly becoming one of the most numerous and most scattered in the world. In the. Fall River Diocese, Mother Jeanne Therese has given the American Province a new impliltus and has paved the way to greater expansion. It is with genuine pleasure. that the Sisters acclaim ,this re-election.

Honor Franciscan Nun On 50th Anniversary LOS ANGELES (NC) S-omeone added up the statistics and came up with the answer Sister M. Geraldine walked 112,840, miles in 31 years, never got anywhere but accomplished a t l' e men d 0 u s amount of good. The German-born nun ~as futed h~re at a reception in Queen of Angels Hospital on her 50th anniversary as a member of the Franciscan Sisters of the Sacred ·Heart. Honored also was Sister Mary Clement, who celebrated' her 25th' anniversary. ,In her 31 years as night . s~­ pervisor at the hospital, Sister Geraldine has pac~d the corridors 10 miles night .in making her rounds, seven nights a 'week, . She came to this country from . Germany in 1908 and five ye;lrs later became a nursing nlllIl. She has been . at the hospital here since 1926 and has been the night supervisor since 1930. '

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Sf. Eulalia Court

St. Eulalia Court, New Bedford Foresters, will hold a mem. Welsh Protestants Help orial Mass at 5:30 Saturday afternoon, June 2' at St. Mary's Sisters to Clear' Debt 'Church, South Dartmouth; A 'HOLYWELL (NC) .....: Two Communion supper will follow. prominent Holywell Protestants presented the final installment' of a $14,000-fund they launched Happiness is ~ mental attitude and to help local Little Sisters of the one may be aD happy in a cottage 88 Assumption clear the debt on in a mansion. their convent here in Wales; Im'pressed py the ,nuns' work REYNOLDS-DEWAll for the sick poor they decided . that Noncomformists in the town William & Second Sts. were not going to be outdone in Christian charity. New Bedford WV 6-~234 The drive was begun eight years ago by T. N. Griffiths, then chairman 0# the Holywell Urban District Council, and Albert S. Jones, director of a transportation firm.' They presented the final installment of $4,200 to TV star Eamonn Andrews, who is a cousin of the Sister superior at Holywell, Mother St. John. ,OIL BURNERS

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Fund Raisers - On the agenda for St. Catherine's Fund Raising' Group, auxiliary of the Park Street Dominican. Sisters. Fall River, are the annual ban!luet, Tuesday, June 13, at Copicut Lodge; a Fan fashion show; and a Dominirola.

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' . " Ib8 Prank Mello. Maiy McGrath, Mr &: . . . Gerald Normandin, Mr & MIll Philip Ttacy, Mr & Mrs ~ mond Boyce, Chester Smith. ' Mr & Mrs Gerald MorenCJl, Alice Perry, Mr & Mrs George Gifford, Henry Gamble, Mml'garet Gamble. Helen Gamble, Mr & Ms Joseph Medeiros, Mr & Ma Louis Haskell, Capt. & Mrs Daniel Mullins, Mr & Mrs RaymoWi H. Chase. Mr & Mrs Harry Q'Neil, Mr • Mrs Zigmund Peret, Mr & 1IIIe Manuel Costa Jr.. Mrs Nelson Cleveland, Mr • .Mrs Henry Valenti.

THE ANCHOR-

Thurs., May 25, 1"'-1

(Jontinued from Page SeVeD/

No. D,ighil'on ST. JOSE Pili $50 Mr & Mrs Richard K. Martin. $30 Mr & Mrs Henry Wareing. $25 John Silva, Mr & Mrs Albert Gramm, Mr & Mrs Arthur Bourgault, Mr & Mrs James E. Williams, Dr & &Mrs William Adams, Mr & Mrs Robert Hoye. $20 Dr John Doyle. , $15 Mr & Mrs William Virdinlia.

'tc)'lrilham ST. ANN $25 St. Ann's Men's Guild. $20 lIIr & Mrs Paul J. Fountain. $10 Mrs Dorothy Champagne, :m.. wood Clark, Joseph J. Ferreira, Bernice A. Fountain, ManUEil Perry, Adolph Rozenas, Franll Rozenas. . Turn to Pa8-e Eleven

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Mrs Madeleine Carter. $10 Mrs Eva Caron, Mr & Mrs Joseph Jackson, Mr & Mrs Roy Menard, Mr & Mrs William O'Connell; Mr & Mrs John Synan. Mr & Mrs Oliver Collard, Mrs Joseph O'Connell, Mr & Mrs Samuel Pine, Robert Blackwell. Mr & Mrs A. J. Hoyt. ' BY%Ol!nlU'Dn~ Mr & Mrs Charles Perry, Mr ,Brr~~~~@U1 & Mrs Daniel Fernandes, Mr & Mrs Wilfrid Hebert, Mr & Mrs A solemn pontifical Mass bl Anthony Procopio, Mr & Mrs the Byzantine Ukrainian rite Harold Roberts. ' be celebrated at 10:30 Tue&. Mr & Mrs Manuel Varga's, Mr day morning, May 30 at St. Gab& l\[rs Milton Sherman, Mr & riel's Passionist M 0 n a s t e,r. Mrs Richard Sim'l11ons, Mrs RELIEF SUPPLIES DISTRIBUTED IN KOREA: The distribution of relief corn meal Church, Brighton. ' Osmond Crotty, Mr & Mrs Rich- was made at the Sacred Heart parish, Wangsipri, Segul, Korea, by Father Brian Geraghty, The ceremony will be part .. ard Donahue. the observance of the goldeJl Miss Dorothea Silva, Mrs' S.S.C. to'more-than one thousand persons, of whom only abOut 100 were Catholics. Th.e julbilee of"retreats for men at ~ Hubert Beckwith, Mr & Mrs Columban Fathers' pastor is one of many missionaries called upon to' distribute relief retreat house connected with tile < Joseph Mason, Mr & Mrs Johnn food supplies prov;ided by Oatholic Relief Services-NC~C, the American Bishops' world- mOnastery. Celebrant will lie Egan, Mrs Milton Mann. ', Most . Rev. Ambrose Senysll'" wide rel~ef agency. NC Photo. Mr & Mrs Edward McGilvray, O.S.B.M., D.D., Auxiliary Bj9h~ Miss Leona GramJ:l1, Mr & Mrs $50 Henri Proulx, H. MacIntosh,' Bernard O'Connor, Mr & Mrs of the Byzantine Diocese CllfI Joseph Amaral, 'Mr & Mrs In memory of Rt. Rev. John' Joseph Salvas', George Juaire, Leo Parent, Mrs Laura A. Rear- Philadelphia and Apostolic ~ GeQl'ge Gray, Mr & Mrs John J. Shay, Mrs Alice Stobbs. Everett Lavin, I Lawrence Go- don, Mr & Mrs Raymond Roarke. arch of Stamford. His jurisdiOLane. Mr & Mrs Joseph Sylvia, Mrs non includes all New England $35 . verno, Donat Desrosiers. Mr & Mrs Vincent Scully, Mrs Dr ,& Mrs Harold Thompson. .1: O. Paulhus, George Proulx, Eldon Tilton, Mrs Helen Baker, and New, York state. ~ Francis Wheeler, Mr & Mrs Nel. '" $31 Rene Melanson, Roland Brochu, Mr & Mrs John Cole, ,Mr & Mrs Retreatants at the Passion. son Meunier, Mr & Mrs Harold George Ferris. Mr &. Mrs Bernard Lofgren., Mrs Paul Lepage. house, their families and frien. Sherrington. , $25 • Romeo Proulx, Adelard PelleMr & Mrs Manuel Medeiros, are invited to attend the Masa. .Mrs Frank Zwilkowski. Mrs James Doyle, Mr & Mrs ,tier, Herbert Lavigueur,fJoseph Mr & Mrs Frank Rose, Mr & Mrs Father Jude, C.P., of the retreat Basil Mulligan. Rosario Fredette, Raymond ,La- Paul White, 'A Friend, Mr & Mrs staff, notes, "Since almost 300 Benjamin Amaral. Somerset $20 ferriere. men from five Eastern CatholJe Elisabeth Baker, Mr & Mrs rites attend retreats with the ST. PATRICK'S Mr & Mrs Joseph A. King. Adelard Turgeon, Conrad $50 . $15 ' I' Maigret, Mrs' Agnes Desmarais, Joseph Brown, Mr & Mrs Earl Passionists, it is to honor thII Dr & Mrs Roland Chabot. McBrien Family, Mr ,.it Mrs Joseph Bellonzi, Francis Paul. Creemer, Mrs Henry Hague, ]argegroup that ,the Mass II being sung. . $12 John Picchi. Herbert Fisher, Roger Sam- Judith Leonard. "Also, since the urgent Mr & Mrs Joseph B. Lewis Sr., Mr & Mrs Edward J. Leonard. $10 son, Rodolphe Boucher, Paul $10 Mr & Mrs Lawrence Auger, SimpSon,Harold Demers, Mrs Mary C. Morris, Edward Roders and requests of Pope Jobla erick. ' , XXIII are for Christian un_ Mr & Mrs Thomas Daiey, Mr & Mrs Raymond Boucher, Edward Gaudreau: SAINT THERESA'S and since the only door througO Helen Morgan, Francis R. Jones, . M rs W I'll'lam B owep., M r & Mr s \ SO". Dartmouth which Orthodox Christians will Mr & Mrs Frank Souza & Son Clifford "Bodge, Miss Beatrice $10 return to Rome is through these DIll' & Mrs Manuel RegO. ',' . ' Carne~. Joseph Herbert, Christopher ST. ~RY Mrs Wilton Dale, Mrs Bertha Bryon, Alie Grenier, Anthony noble Eastern r,ites, the celebr" ST. THOMAS 'MORE' Doyle,' Mr & Mrs Wesley -Dudo- Quaglia, Roger Benoit. $60 lion takes on a wonderful time$35 " vicz, Mr & Mrs 'Edward HaberMrs Julia Bradshaw,Eugene Dr & Mrs Paul E., Corley. linees." St. Thomas More Holy Name shaw, Mr & Mrs William Jen- Joubert. $50 Bociety. ", kins. Mrs Isaac DawsoD. Howling Success ~, $30 . Mr & Mrs Gerard Jodoin, Mrs Woods Hole $30 -. ST. PAUL (NC)-More u.. Mr & Mrs Edward J.McCann. Warren Johnson, Mrs Clayton A. ST. JOSEPH The Silveira Family. 2,000 men, women and childrea. $20. MacDonald, Mrs 'Bernard Mac,$90 $25 mostly in family groups, turnea Mr & Mrs Joseph A. Caron, Donald, Mr & 'Mrs F. Eugene Megansett Friends. Dr & Mrs Archibald Senesac, out for the first open house .. Mr & Mrs James F. Nicoletti.' Moore. '$50 Dr & Mrs Victor 'Almeida, Mr St. Paul's Seminary here. ~ $15 Mrs Eva, Morin, Mr & Mrs St. Vincent de Paul Society. & Mrs John J. Dugan, Mr & Mrs mented Msgr. Louis McCartb:ll, Mr & Mrs Richard Dyer. Raymond Nolan, John S. Picker$35 Francis S. Winsper,' Dr & Mrs rector: "It was a howling suO. $10 ing, Mr & Mrs John Pickering, Mr & Mrs Bernard Cavanaugh. John Machado. cess. We'll have' another De1IIfI Mrs Mae Bridge, Mr &:Mrs Mr & Mrs John Redding: '$30 , $15 year." .John R. Fennessey, Mr & Mrs Mr & Mrs Joseph' Soares, Mr' & Mrs William' McCul- ,/ Mr & Mrs MailUel H. Sylvia, Thomas Martin, Mr & Mrs Ar- Charles Stebbs, Mr & Mrs lough, Fred E. Lux. Mrs Dorothy Horan. th?r M. SUllivan, Mr & Mrs Franklin Stranz. $25 $12 WIlfred Michaud. ' Mr & M.rs Francis Birch, Mr & Mr & Mrs Robert Leonard, Mr Mr & Mrs L. Roger Labelle. M & M 'r ,rs Rudolph Gardullo Mrs Thomas Birch, Thomas Bois- & Mrs George West, St. Joseph's $10 E~lis ~tE. B Chorlton, Mr. & .Mr~ clair, Mr & Mrs Adrian Bosh, GUild" Mr & Mrs Roy S,tratton, of Mr & Mrs Frederick D. Cole, E vere,t ridge.' Mr & Mrs John Correia. Anonymous. S Mr & Mrs Alltone Demello, Mrs VA 2-0431 T. JOHN OF GOD Mr & Mrs Daniel J. Cronin Jr., Mr & Mrs Joseph Goulding, Veronica Schmidt. Florence & $50 Mr & Mrs Richard Denzer, Mr & ,Mr & Mrs Eugene Mysona. Flora Andre, Mrs' John Roberts. '26 Broadway St. Vincept de PaUl Society Mrs Henry Flynn, Joan Flynn $20' , Ellen Andre, Mr & Mrs Thomas "$25 ' M J : & Mrs "Hubert l'tennessey.' Mr & Mrs H. O. McComiskey, B H I R ' rooks, Louise R. Bettencourt, '~ o yS ·osary ' Sodality', Holy Mrs Hel,en Holt, Mr,s Victoria Helen McKe'nzie, Jane McLaugh- M r & M N arne ,rs Joseph' G. Sylvia, oClety. Leaman, Mr & Mrs Robert Mac-· lin, Mr & Mrs William Simmons, $10 . Donald, Loretta Maland, Mr & Mr & Mrs Emil Tietje. Cha~les Campos, Raymond Mrs Robert Moran. . $15 E. A. WARING CO. o MonteIro, Ronald Capeto Dr. Mr & Mrs James Murray, Mrs Roland Beliveau, Mr & Mrs Americo Almeida. ' . _ John Nihan & Family, ,Mrs Mary Stephen McInnis. Mr & Mrs Rob41-9 SECOND ST., FALL RIVER , Oliv'er, Mr & Mrs 'Gilbert Rea ert McKenzie, 'William Stone, . ,Distributors for PluMbing, - Heating , , At_tle'boro Mr & Mrs Norman Tetreault. ' Francis Cavanaugh, HOLY GHOST KENT FLOOR and Mr & Mrs Louis Blaine, Mrs ' $l! Over 35 Years $50 ' . Ralph ,Adams, Robert Adams" ' Mr & Mrs Fred Metell, Mr & VACUUM MACHINES I Of Satisfied Ser.vice Holy Ghost Parish St. Vincent Mrs Elena Bonin, Mr & Mrs Don- Mrs, Eugene Young, Patrick FIRE EXTINGUISHERS, ' : iN NO. MAIN STREII' , de PaUl, Anonymous. ' 'a'ld McCauley; Mr & Mrs William 'Reilly. $25 . Phone OSborne 7-9100 Sheehan, Aima Smith. ' ' $10 Pall a;". OS' 5·7'" In memory Monsignor BettenST. JQSEI'H'S Mrs Dorothy Berg; Mrs Mary eourt, In ~~mory Rev. James $25 Condon & John, Mr & Mrs RobA ..Downey. . " Doris Levasseur. ert Effenberger, Mrs. Evelyn Se,ying , $10 $20 Elliott, Rosemary Gallagher. Kat~erine Kenton, Orner J. Joseph Pelletier, Misses Eva, Mr' & Mrs E1Ip.er Hallett, RenquIn, Jose V. de Farias Pa- Agnella & Lelia Boudreau. 'Harry E. Handy, MI & Mrs Louis eheco, Roland Sears, .John Vive$15 Hurrul, Capt Joe Joseph, Mrs The' Specialized of a Cooperative Banlc IlOS. Adrian Antaya, Lucien Paul. Arthur Kay. .Da.n~el Raposa, Charles Sousa, $12 Francis W. Keating, Lee Side VIrgInIa Ahearn. Lewis Nye. Cafe, Mrs Mary Lowey, Bernard ST. JOHN $10 , J: McCabe, Mr & Mrs L. A, Mc$200 George Blade, Wilfred St. Caffrey. Fred Bullock.' Onge, Armand Doucette Lionel , Mrs Gloria McLean, Mr & Mrs WINTHROP STREET - TAUNTON Demers, William Perry.' $90 Edmund McClung, Mr & Mrs ACROSS THE STREB FROM lHE POST OffICE Dr & Mrs Vincent O'Do~nell: Simone ,M. Provost, - Elodia James McInnis, Mr & Mrs Rob$85 Dupuis, Fred Vadnais, Rita ert Mason, Mrs Elizabeth Mayo. Where it PAYS to get tog~fheT Rev. Edward A. Rausch. Irving, Joseph Doucette Mrs Mary Jane Metell, Mrs

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'THe ANCHOR·Thurs., May 25, 1961

Nam@ Franciscan Fre~d~m Fighter Krtlo~~to~ Malta

11

Rome to Rec~iv® Remains of SailfilU'

ROEBLING (NC) - A young Franciscan priea~ who was a leader of the Freedom Fighters in Buda-

ROME (NC)-The remains ~ Pope St. Gregory VII-the fiery monk Hildebrand who brought an emperor into submissionwill be brought to Rome to mark the inauguration of a parisa ehurch dedicated to him. The remains of the pope, who reigned from 1073 to 1085, will eome from Salerno, 150 miles southeast of Rome, on May 25. They will rest in his new church" the Church of st. Gregory the Great, for four days and then will ~. returned to Salerno.

pest during the 1956 Hungarian revolution, was recentl7 named • Knight of Malta. Father Basil Vegvari, O.F.M., DOW assistant at Holy AssumPtion church in this New Jersey tOwn, was invested in the robes of the Sovereign Military Orde'l' of St. John of Jerusalem in an. informal ceremony at. the headquarters of the order in New York recently. Invested with him was Msg!:. Bela Varga, leader of Hungarianll in exile in the United' States.' Chairman of the Hungarian Committee, New York, and president of the last freely elected Hungarian Parliament. Msgr. Varga left Hungary in 194'7 when the communists came to power.

Near BesilfieD,

The new parish church hail been entrusted to the Francis. cans. It is situated near st. Peter's basilica and serves a growing residential district which has been built up outside the walls of Vatican City since Pope St. Gregory VII was born SYMPOSIUM MARKS ENCYCLICAL ANNIVERSARIES: A symposium Oil labor, marking the 70th anniversary of the Rerum Novarum EncycJical issued by Pope Leo some time between 1020 and 1025 in Tuscany, a region of northHelps Organize Defense XIII and the 30th anniversary of Quadrages imo Anno issued by Pope Pius XI, was held ern Italy. He became a BeneFather Vegvari, 31" was enat the Catholic University of America, Washington, D.C. Shown a.bove with some of the dictinemonk and was SOOIi rolled in the Hungarian Army cadet school during World War participants is Labor Secretary James P. Mitchell; Archbishop Egidio Vagnozzi, Apostolic brought into the administratioa n. He entered the Franciscans Delegate to the U.S., Msgr. Joseph McAllister, vice rector of Catholic University; and of the Church. AS pope he came into conflict in 1947, and was ordained a Father Patrick W. Gearty, Catholic University economiCs professor. NC Photo.. with Henry IV, German king and priest in 1953. Until the outbreak emperor of the Holy Roman Emof the Hungarian revolution, he 'Manuel Furtado, Mr & Mrs Jas. pire, who eventually submitted $25 .served as a prefect for high St. Mary's Guild, Mr & Mrn 'Drapeau, Mrs Frederick L.Ston- and sought forgiveness during a school students at Esz~rgom.·. Because He Cared • • • Richard Blake, Mr & Mrs Omer ley, Mr & Mrs Howard MacRae. three-day barefoot vigil outside Leaving his monastery at the Ferl~nd, Mr & Mrs C. Edward ,the pope's residence in bitter outbreak of the revolution, Continued)from Page TeD Kiely, Mr & Mrs Arthur Patewinter weather. Pope Gregory Father Vegvari walked to Budanaude, MisS· Helen Reilly. ST. GEORGE died at Salerno in 1085. pest. to vo~unteer as a. chaplain , $20 ! . for the Freedom Fighters.. On $25 ST. MARY Mr & Mrs Eugene Ferland. arrival, he found there were Alice Harrison, Edmund Kel$30 Mr &. Mrs Leo Tracey. enough priests ministering to ley, Leonard A. Langlois. Catholic Youth Organization, $15 .them and worked instead on the . DeCosta family l . $15 Mr &; Mrs Charles Dauray" MONTREAL (NC) - A mitt'. . . $Z5 Richard P~ Munroe. organization' of the defenses of Mr & Mrs Lester Kennedy, Mr sionary who has traveled over the city. . $10 Mr & Mri;"Patrick Devlin, Rosa Eliodor.e Allard, stanley Be- 65,000 miles in 10 years as a With the return of Russian Fernandes, Antonia Gonsalves, & Mrs C. F. Getsinger, Mr & Mrs tanks to the city, Father Vegvar.i Norton Catholic Women's Club, Nicholas Lombardi, Mr & Mrs biec, Norman R. Cameron, Gil- "salesman for Christianity" said Albert J. Richard" Mr & ·Mrs bert Carmel & daughter, Mns here that the world is thirstrnc concentrated on the defense: of M:r & Mrs Paul Sabourin.' , William Laferriere & Edw. for Christian teaching. . Oliver Cholette. . the Royal Palace in Buda. When Mr & Mrs Charles H. Blomer. . $10 Father Henri-Marie Guindem. Mrs Albe rt Doyle, Ernest the ·area was left without a lead- Mi & Mrs David A. Rocha. . Mr &;. Mrs Manuel Amaral, Flood, Jr., Alan: Grim!!haw, Holy 8.M.M., 'has delivered some 8,000 er, he assumed command of the $20 George Arrighi,' Mi, & Mrs J, E. Name Society, Raymond Laureti- sermons throughout the world in defenders. Mr & Mrs George Bauza, Mr & the past 10 years. He speakt' Mrs Harry Borden.' ' Blair, Mr & 'Mrs Donald L. deau. Escapes RussianS Blake, Mr &. MrS John W. Blake. . Lionel Marmen, Bento Mel1@, English, French, Spanish, ltalliw . $15 Mr &. Mrs Ber.jamin Braga. Joseph V. Mello, Armand Me!n- and German. . . As the Russian. tanks moved Mr & Mr!> 'Frank J. Teixeira Mr & Mrs Arthur Clark, Mr & ' ... : . ard, 'Henri Menard. . . in to. disperse th'~ defenders, he Jr. The Company of Mary mismoved among the men,. encourJohn A. Niznik. Rob~ E. 'sionary said: "Everywhere I Mr & Mrs Gerald Bernier, Mr .Mrs John Duffy, Mr & Mrs Richard' Gallacher,' Leo V. Garrity. Parent, Antone G. Perry, Ho:w- have preached, and that irtcludefl aging them, hearing confessions & Mrs Thomas Kelly. . Mr & Mrs Thomas J. Gildea, for the Catholic youths. When ard S. Platt, Emily Porter• North' and South America anc! ." $10 .Elphege . Re'naud, Lionel J. Europe, I have found peop~ 'the attack came,the defenses 'Mr &. Mrs Samuel Arena,' Mr & Mrs F. Goggin, Mr &; Mra crumbled under the tank assault, Eleanor Bauza, Mr & Mrs Jacob Gerald Grave'l, Mr & Mrs Charles Sears, Ja'cob Strunk, Mrs. Chris':' eagerly awaiting some clergy~ topher Townsend,' Alfred J. ilnd the. area was evacuated. '" man to come' along and' help Belt, Norman Boivin, Mrs Avery Harrington, Mr & Mrs Gilbert Lima, Armand Lortie, Mr. & Mra Tremblay. .Then he donned his religious Clapp. them take up their religioUS t»> . Tl1lrn to Page TwelVE) habit and moved among, the . liefs." Mrs Mary Colpas, Robert Dev- Henry Messier. . Mrs Alicia' Ainsworth, Mrn wounded to bring food and reli- lin, Mr &"Mrs Erp.est Donald. gious help to them. son, Mrs Mary ferreira, Mary Walter Amos; Ralph Bellavance, Mr & Mrs John Bielagus, Mr '& . Twice he was arrested by the Ferreira. Russians and imprisoned, but Mr & Mr:f Philip J.' Gilbert. Mrs Francis. Bliss. Mr & Mrs Kenneth Bliss, ·Ml." each time managed to gain his Mary Harrington, Mrs Thomas' release. Arrested a third time, Henderson, 'Mr & Mrs John' 1.. & Mrs Ernest Boisvert, Mr &; be escaped with sQme feilow Kane, Mr & Mrs Kenneth La- Mrs J. Gerard Burris, Mr & Mea Raymond Cosgrove, Neil Copes. .,rison·ers and managed to' get Croix. Mr &; Mrs Rbland cote, Mr & across the border into Austria. ,,: 'Mr & Mrs William J. Lynch, Mrs Wm. Cotter, ·Mr & Mrs Leo Federation Chaplain' MES Jerome -McCaffrey, Mrs Ray McKinlay, Mr'.& Mrs Charles Delaney, Mr & Mrs Raymond On free soil, he organized Ii Malouin, Mr & Mrs Robert Mar- F.eighery, Misses Fisk. camp for refugees near Vienna, shall. Mr & Mq Thoil. Flanagan, Mr and began screening refugees to . Mr & Mrs Raymond Millette, &; Wm. Fletcher, Mr & MrsArweed out Red agents. ' Phylis Morin; Mr. & Mrs Wil"- mand GaUdette, Mr & Mrs Joseph On July 27, 1.957, he arrived in Ham 'Peach, Mrs Mary Pierre, Goyette, Mr & Mrs Frank J. Governo. the United States among the Mr & Mrs Ch1!rles Post. J.efugees. In that same year he Mr & Mrs Roland Roberge, . Mr & Mrs .J, Aime Lambert. Was instrumental in. the organ':'; Mr & ··Mrs . Alfred Robitaille, Mr &; Mrs Francis Laushway, ization of the Hungarian Free~' Guild S. Signorielli, Mr & Mra Gilbert Lee, Mrs Helen. Lind'dom Fighters' Fe'deration of ¥ilbert Simas,Mr & Mrs John berg, Mr & Mrs Joseph Marcink America, serving as its president Simpkins. . wicz. Mr & Mrs Nerney, Mr &; Mrs ·for two years. He is now it:.!l Mr & Mrs Alfredo Teixeira., Donald Pelletier, Mr & Mrs ~haplain and .is also chaplain of M~. & Mrs Frank J. Teixeira, the World Federation of Freedom Mr & Mrs' Frank .Texeira,. Mrs Chris. Poulos, Mr & Mrs 'Il'. Fighters. Fred Thornton, Mr & Mrs Albert Przyblaz, Miss Ann Schiller. Mrs Eunice Schiller, Mrs Rose J. Valente. D Mr & Mrs ,Charles P. Wich- Tracey (Edward & Earl), Mr &; Mrs Lewis Trucchi,' Mr & Mrs land, Mr & Mrs Benedict Yelle, \ CHICAGO (NC) _ John. V;. MI' & Mrs Felix "Yarusitl~s, Mr lIs Howard Vaslet, Mr & Mrs John R . h U··t . . Joseph Baldwi~ Mrs Ida Bell'- Walsb, Mr .& lliklI· La~ Welch. Dlvefll1 y of Notre niel.", Mrs Arthur. Brown, Mr & ) els man, :Dame sophomore, h~ Mr & Mrs Hector ~ MJi' \named the winner of a $1,006 Mra Robert 'Cllarron,' Mrs Roe:! & Mlro Hugh}"; McDado., 'chort storY'contest st>6n80red bY, Cloutier. '. .: ." '. 'jlthe T.h9rn as i lW.9!-"e Asspciatioli . Mr & :Mrfl Adplphe Colle~ ([DlD'D. JLAll)y OF l\ft, ~ ~ $40 " .ond the McGeary Foundation. Ml."s Margaret Cr~y, oMr & 1VIrlJ ( ~ Dan Hel-r, associatiolii. presi. Vincent DAiJgelo~ Mr' &. Mro Mount. C~ei . ~ N&Cl1l " , $21f . 'dent, said the Reishman story Manuel Faria, Mr & Mro' Josepm Society.' ."Man of God," WO.1!!l ovel." 3U) , .E. Fitzgerald... . The Woodctegt' H:~ . . $20 . ;;other entries in the competition' Carl Gaili,van, Mr & Mro H~, for t,he best short stoi-y by a'n .. old' Gentle,. Joh~ Maigret, Mr C:J Micha~ L.KfnDall1Cl. ';\Undergraduate in a Catholic' col~ ... M;:,s", RosarIO Pmo, 1Vh" & Mro . $15 , Mr &. Mrs' Willim G ~ 'ooge or university in thin coun- WIlliam E. Rogers. :try:' . . Mr & Mrs Philip Stepanek. Robert E. Borah. ~ The 19-year-old winner W 11 Mr & Mrs Alec 1'eixeirlll, Mr CJ $10 'native of Charleston, W. Va..;... ~Cl .Manuel Teixeira Jg., Herbert F. Besset, Manuel Moltozo, Mr & Mrs Will~ F. Sulliwho was graduated from Holy van, Mr & Mrs T. :Royal DemePs. Cross Preparatory Seminary at Belen Murray. ST. MARY'S Notre Dame and now is In t.hQ $100 university's English department. , Peter McGovern, Mr " Mn His only previous short story.. .Mr & Mrs Pierre B. Lons~ John Drohan, Mary G. DeSilva, appeared last Fall ill the uni$50 PAC.L. Rehoboth - Seekonk, versity's student publ.lcetion, the William Elliott, JaDe Barker. SL Vincent de Paul Societ;Jt. Juggler. The presenta~ will $IS Edward F. Bowen, Mr &; Mn be made May 7 here. Mr • Mrs B. A. Dzija. John &. McCarth7, Mr Be Ma

Norton

Westport

Missioner Salesman For Christianity .' .

N obe ame Student' ;Wins Story Contest·

been

Seekonk


W. Forte, Michael J., O'Leary. Normand Gaudreau, Antone 'Overcome Evil Good' Poirier, Joseph R.' Anderson, Armand Marien, Charles Joseph. John Alves Jr., John Bartlett, Arthur Bartlett, Tobias S. La. . ronda, John Rogers. t Continued from Page Eleven B:Y Most ~. Fulton J~ SheeR, D.D. ·f Walter Ohnesarge, Richard Fanrha·ven Stevenson, Antone DeTerra, The Oongo! "I aIIJl a man off God. Do not toach me." IF'Ol'' III ST. JOSEPH'S . Martha Bisaillion, Zephire R. moment these wOli'ds from the lips of the White Father silenced! Bisaillion. . the men of the Bakusu tribe who, fired by Communist propaganda, $100 Marie E. Bisaillion, Cornelius had attacked the mission. But only for a moment. For they hacll Joseph G. McGann, Garrett S. Sullivan, George A. Emin, come armed with spears and a truck carrying fifty gallons ci Schuler. , Margaret. T. O'Leary, Alice M. gasoline to burn the church, rectory and school. Then shouts Domeriek Nicolaci. O'Leary." were' heard by the priest. One of his companions had had his eyes $75 Roland Tripp,' Alan: Dtilong, gouged out,' his body mutilated. As he was being martyred the James B. Buckley. Arthur H. McCormack, Kenneth Communist-inspired soldiers called out: "Bring the body hero $60 J. Noyer, Edward L. Kerwin, •.. Say the Mass now ... Alleluia, Alleluia! Kwa jina Ill. babaMrs E,thel M. Ehrhardt. Wallace W. Alden, N. F. Tangney. 'In the name of the IF'ather.''' The mission was set afire. $50 Samuel Jackson, Lionel DuNichol88 Mahoney. lude, James Maleey, John W. What is happening in the Congo reminds of what DostoievsM $30 Saunders, Manuel Arruda. August J. Gonsalvoo. Joseph Carey, Raymond Barwrote ninety' years' ago when he foretold the Communism d Russia: "Cicero will have his tongue cut out, $25 ,ton, William E. Coogan, Everett Joseph J. Kovie, J. Carroll Tichon, Florence E. Mello. ' Shakespeare will be stoned ... We will proCastello, Robert E. Hinsley, John Vieira, Ralph -4'\ntonsen, claim destruction, we will set fires going, EVACUATED: Only priest every scurvy group Joseph P. Collins, Manual' ,A.. Ernest Borges, Noel B. Couture, be of use. There is Oliveira. . Jean Charles DuCharme. to leave his mission post in going to be such an upset as the world has Earle M. Larkin, Bernard l!'. .Rose Benton, Raymond Mi- 'Laos under his superior's ornever seen before. Russia will be overCarter, James T. Dunn, Da,vid chaud, Julia M. Sylvia, Robert whelmed with darkness and the 'earth will Father OdiHon Maladers is W. Fitzgerald, Joseph F. Fran- Gallant, John Rogers Jr. we'eI> £or its gods." . val who served in the Lao· cis, Dr Edward L, Soares. Joseph E. WiIliams, Violet John C. DeMello, James E. Williams, Raymond C. Harding, WJta,& is' the answer? To be anti-Comtian missions since 1899•.NC· Muldoon, Mary Gage, Henry 'Joseph A. Kobak, William Moniz. Photo. munistic? No: There is too much of that. It Fleur~nt, Vic~;2:leur.ent. Adelard A. Durocher,_ Sera- . is . not enough to be against someihing. What are we for? Only by an increase of Donald LeBlanc. John J. NOi'- phin Moniz, Abbie Minezzi Oscar goodness, holiness and sanctity can we save F. Morency, Henry T. Olden. wood, Virginia Vincent, Louise Alfred Costa, Joseph DeMello, 'Continued from Page One ,the Congo and the 'world. "Overcome evH by good," says st. Paul: Educate a boy fur LaRoche, Edward Fitzsimmons, Paul A. Gosselin, Joseph Govow, fense against the evils of the film the priesthood in Africa to take 'the place of the slain White Charles A: Stii~~' • Louis B. Gold. industry. There is no other way. Father. Build a mission chapel to the Sacred Heart in reparation Mat'garet A. Ma·ngbcm. ' John P. Howarth, Frank TomAt the other extreme are those 15' ' kiewicz, Raymond L. Rodriques, who 'reject, ,not only, political " for your sins: For who will save the world if it be Dot we who, $ nourish ourselves wUhtheBre&d of Life? . l• J:Edw_ censorship'· but every form of Albert F. Be,nac, Lester F. ,J0h n F . n-ndergast ~ "'J . Fonseca. ,film control, even that of the Edwards, ,Joseph :M~Donald, Edward Rose, William Bartlett, industry's own .Production Code ~ not pay $25 to become a' member of an anti-CommunISt Enos F. Days Jr., Edward ConGeo Authority. ' DOr. . J' ohn t,C · BrdresGnahBan,.t. rge What is our position at, the society-give that money to the Holy Father and become pro-Christ. Do Dot turn the pages of,this paper to see what movies are Joseph A. Saladino, Earl J. D uran Gera,~' enOl 'IUr-, Rational Legion of Decency? An 1'b a1 J esso" Th 0 ma s F .•--.eondemned - use your eyes tQ see the misery of the world and Dias, John L. Harrison,' David Simply stated, the. leg,.ion'\! the priest without eyes. Strike your own breast. Offer your prayers 'N ama.r a,"Roger Archambau1+ &., GoUg'" Thomas A, Reillev. ... " II' d A.. J 'Alexander Phil- . policy holds for a ~inimum of ·to the Heavenly . Father, send your sacrifices to the Holy Father , . '..- '$iZ; " ones, ~ . legal restraint and a maximum ',through his Society for the Propagation of ~he Faith. What better GeOl;ife ~rboza, Louis M; Bettencourt, Jean p~ .,of individual, r,esponsibi~ity.. way. to do something positive for Chri6t' and His ChUl"eh! $H . . "To curb less rather than more, . . Bourbeau,Frank Joseph Tyson, lAloDe .... Geraldine ViVelrOtl, .E ve1ya 'Jerrson, Foster.' .., hold"for li"'berty'ratherthan GOD LOVE YOU to M.H. for $20 "For the sPftacl Of tile' Faith.Viator, 'Joseph G.-Marques, Ruth' ,. " ',for restraint" is the prinCiple ~ to L ..J.S; for $5.28'."This small offering represents the loose' Evans, Elsie M, Silva. ' ' - , Lows D. COSt8~ , . which th'e U'-S.' juridical system ehange 1 had at the Imd, of each. day tor a week May it also be a Josep)1 Juchs, James M. BUrR.' .... , .Ift'. ~I1Y has be~n rightly dedicated from petition for' a 'change' for the better In my spiritual' life." '... 'M' Donald TUcket', Curtis L. Lopee. l!30 the b'egirining. ' " S.D.P. for $1 "The 'poor me' blues, so prevalent 'among those 01' 'B. V. Meekin. ,. james F. Bv;ris. ,ThoSe who would like to 'see 118 who have plenty, has downed me once again. But the 'help, James W. Greenway, Thomas ' , $25 more .restrictive .laws curtailing others' cure is effective, espeeially when repeated frequently. My F.' Mulkearns, Odelia A; MedeiAlbert Lajeuenesse, 'Ernel" c.' the freedom of the motion picJ'oS, John I L. Reed, M;muel ~ Horrocks, Mrs Alf~ed Pache.,.;". ture tndustry should' bear ill. , recovery started with' the enclosure of the above donation." • ',' to C.O. for $25 "I received this for my birthday with instructions $0 Furtado. " " $20, ,/ mind that this principle of minget something'l wanted. What 1 want is the donOr's return to the. George' E. 'Feeriet' Jr.; Chris:. l\httbew ·R. H31"t.. knal restraint'serves to safeguard Fl'lth. May this gift help nM oDI&' the donor bat all. those wbe tOpher R.' Keough, John E. Bel$10 . the heritage· of all our vital freeare yet to hear God's·Word." · lotti, Raymond Richard, BeaLucien DlugosinSki, Jolm' doms. '. ' I vice L. Quinn. Caton, John Gouveia, Edward . PatrlNl 'Control The ten letters of GOD LOVE YOU spell out a decade of. ttle George Loren, Lizandre A. Ogara, Antone Costa Jr. ' . Yet, there must be some' ou~ Lopes, Anson W. Paine, Eryk William R'obinson, William side control of the motion picture. Rosary' lIB they encircle the medal originated by Bishop Sheen to Szotek, John F. Goggin. Greene,Frank Reid, Webeir:a. 'industry-the control by' the honor the Madonna of the World. With your request and correa.:. pondin,g off~ring you may order a GOD LOVE YOU medal in an,' Bernard Pires, Albert P. Silw; Torres, James Joaquin. patron. • . Jerome Brault, Anthony.M. Jose Urquiola, Manuel:OO:85'o In a free society the mature of the following styles: ~ylvia Jr., Louis Almond. . tin, Charles Ehmann, Ozelle I.e- eitizen will recognize that his $ 2 small sterling silver James V. Mulroy, Paul C. blane, Joseph Alves.. freedom carries with it the per$ 3 small 10k gold filled Hudon, lIenry E, Fortin, Rober.t Alfred Raphael. George Beall- ,sonal responsibility of his own $ 5 large sterling silver L. 'Edwards, Manuel Almeida. lieu, Michael Hanczaryk, Eil~en individual control o'ver the film $10 large 10k gold filled Edward B. Loughlin, Harry x.. l\Il. Lauzon, Robert Dorgan, Ed- industry. Only the half-hearted Young, Edwin J. McQuillan, AI- ward Bouley, Frank Morris. will'ask ,the state to accomplish bert T. Resendes, Joseph T. SACRED HEARTS the task which they as parents Cut out this column, pin your sacrifice to it and mail it to the , Blowers. $10 . ond citizens should be doing. Most Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, National Director of the Society for Blanche Martin.. Pupils of st. Percival Garant, Frank KaseIn .other words, in our freo the Propagation of the Faith, 366 Fifth Avenue, New York I, N, Y.. Joseph School, Manuel L. Gon-, vich, George Trahan, William rociety a ticket at the box office or your Diocesan Director, RT. REV. RAYMOND T. CONSIDINE, salves, Francis L. Bums Jff.. Taylor, Ernest Gautreau. is a vote for good or bad fiIlns. 368 North Main Street, Fall River, Mass. Augustus H. Xavier. ' ' Francis Bernard, Antonio Mature and intelligent selec-, Antone C. Tavares, Arlindo Pepin, Louis Rogissart, ,An'toinc tton of films to attend, however, Dias Jr., ROger Gladue, Walta'· Daigle, Alfred Lussier. r-equires some information. The · Silveira, Doris I. Dawel3. Rene Y. Harbeck, .Arm8Dd principal function of the National Alice Perry, Frederick Schon-' Becotte,Amold Cejka,Leon8lPcl- Legion of Decency is to provide NmoUi Reading HARD COAl , ~~n (f~ heinz, Norman Robinson; Manuel Cejka, Raymond Pepin. auch information. NEW ENGlAND COKE ,'~4~ tj~~ A. Sylvia, James B. Lanagan; JOB. 'A. Aldei Montplalsill., The legion offers amoral eVllll., IDADSOH Olt. BURNERS' Edmund J. Folger, Edmund Adrian 'Desrosiers, Elphege Des-' aation of films just as the paM. Tavares, ,An~hony R. Fernan- roches, Joseph DufreSne, JOsepR tron's favorite' motion picture 2...·Hour Ott aurner s.nrice ~ ~~LL dez, Thomas R. Thomas, John Martel. .' eritic gives him ,an artistie Iilftd Charcoaf Brlq' lIet8 . e 'Jarvis. J. Donat Fajard, Antone Rod- ' entertainment evaluation. ~~§ , Joseph Corediero, Hilda (}1'4l-' 'eriques, Patrick KeegaJl, Jcl& The central and national office Bag C~ -' Charcoal ~..." ',, .:.. . . . . .~ . da, Armand ;F'enha,. Dennis E\1Dei' ward, David SiboE. of the legion is located· is New Hogan, Marguerite L. Carroll. York City. Since ,the legion is II . Arthur S. Richards, MaJ;1Ue! non-profit organiza'tion, it relies L. Brun, Frederick F.· Wolanski, OW LADY OF THE . . . . uPQn, tbe gratis services of II Successors to DAVID DUFF &- SON Arthur Dion, Flora X. Fisher. .. $85' large staff of reviewers. Some . , Edwin W. Ailard, Ruth. M . . of these reviewers are members New Bedford 640 Plealant Street Tel. WY 6-8271 Day, Manuel J. Pacheco, Joseph lWrtl Paul Klingelfua. cr;f the clergy, but most 01. them L. McCarthy, Edwin J. Oliveira. ' . ' $20 lllre laymen and laywomen. ,Frederick Gifford, John E. MFe Joim G. :M:aeDOuW. The legion reviews films eitber ~eary, Joseph E. DeWolfe, Hil' " $15, ' m the theaters, which is the case , degard F. 'Grindrod, Manuel . Patrick RobinllOD, 1\111'1I ADa- with'most foreign films, OIl' in the .~ Cabral. " belle F. and ~enrietta' Leigb¢oB. lIC1'eening rooms of the American Grovel' Co Johnson, Robert eo " .. $10, film cOplpanies at the mvitatiOll Gaudreau; Francis J. Buckley~ . Mr &:' Mrs Michael DriseoD., 01. these companies. Ellen Downey, Mary B, Sullivan. Mrs Bertha Conway, Mrs Peter • Finished Film Patrick Newp' 0';'" · John Lowney, James Hanahan, Svlvia", " • ., Mrs, In all cases, the legiom -views 'Why. ~~ ,-- We Supply Roland Surprenant, Joseph FW'- . ~~r~ Me~. Edwill.... I'. only the finished film product. .'. r. ,~.do, Augustine A, Longo. 'I , , ' , , '. , '. In no case, wilJ the·legion agree :, COM¥t.El'f ' . , Thomas P. Farley; JuliaH. .~~, r,,:R,~. JO,:ar,,~Doo,'~'.. to read sCripts, with a view to RENTAl WORK l:INiFOR~' Chadwick, John, Sweeney, F1lYil...",...... censoring 01' otherw-ise ernieizDePiro, Evelyn DePiro. O' G iilg. them. ' TOWELS FrancisB, Hostens; Luciea ,ceciR rove Films are rated eitRer &:l mOl'A-t.o hclaiM Iftdvstria4 GIo~ Briere, Maurice Burke, Louis ' ST. MICHAEL 'allY.ae~eptable 01' aIll morally Govoni, GertrUde A. Stiles. . '$i.o ' , ' 'objectionable. Acceptable films Edwin R. Stiles, Alexander :a. l\k &: MrS LeonBrd' BerUbe, are further distinguished. into Perry, Joseph B. Andrade, Paul Mr &: Mrs Joseph Boutin, Miss three categories" pamely, those Sicard, Edward C. Vogt. Claire Burke &: Mrs John A. which are acceptable either for , Leo '~" Vielleux, Albert M. . Burke, Mr &:' M1'II Dennis 'Methe family. or' for adults and Gonsalves, Jules' A. Blouin, AI- deiros, Mr & Mrs Patrick l\/Iul- adoiescents or only for adults. • . Successor to bert W. Blouin, William ~ laney. The legion also gives a special 00ew hgIcmd Overall & SuppfyClo. Harding. Mr It Mrs Thomas Re<Ha1la, l'eCommendation to films out29 Illowarcl, Ave., New Dedio... Laurian T. Clement, Ernest Mr &: Mrs John Rochefort. " standing ·for their moral, lU"~j8tie PholltfJ WV 1-0'78' or WY '7-0'788 N.Dion, Mary M. Goggin. JOB' 'Eona." ..... lileveDteea" and enteriainmeBt values.

12

THE ANCHOR....,. '" Thurs., May 25, 1961

by'

God Love You

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Trash Films

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SHELL IIPremium" H~ating Oils, ~i:!~ ~ r. li1:: ~~ 'Y~

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'; COYNE IDUSTRIAL LAUNDRY


THE ANCHORThurs., May 25, 1961

Jamg Michener Repo..ts· ~~~~lriences in Politics

Educ~ticn Makes Pa~~nts Aware Of Ro~e

By Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S. Kennedy James A. Michener, author of many beat selling books about the Pacific, is writing of something much 'closer to borne in his latest, 'Report of. the County Chairman' (Random House. $3.95). During the 1960 presidential campaig~ he was chairman of the by the action of the bishops io Bucks County, Pennsylvania, Puerto Rico. ~ ~itizens for Kennedy.' He Secondly, there were the pam- , now provides a sprawling phlets "consisting mostly of rant-

ing, rodomontade, and bigotry.It Although he recognized its irrationality, it evidenUy had conposition. ' siderable momentary effect on It is Mr. MichMr. Michener, for he confesses ener's ultimate that after reading a sample of eoDclusion that it "I felt obliflted to rush' out what happened and shoot the first Catholic I was not so much encountered." Well! Ul a t Kennedy Strong Reaction won as that Thirdly, there were the sensaNixon lost. tional "revelations" of self-styled Rockefeller, he ex-priests and .ex-nuns. Mr. believes, could Michener recognizes that the apIh a v e handily peal of these was largely salataken the eleccious. tion. He also be. But he holds the Church in neves that the result would have been far different had President some measure responsible, since, Eisenhower played a more ac: tive because "the Church always part in the campaign, and espe- stressed a secret kind of ritualcially' had he spoken out earlier. ism, there seeins to be .an insatiable desire on the part of Prot. But the determining factorS, in his view, were Nixon's show- estants to know what goes on within the hierarchy." ing in the televised debates, es. He found that the religious pecially the first, and the Vice President's failure to be clear- issue permeated the entire campaign, but judges that there was eut and concrete in his campaign strong and telling reaction to the oratory. Of particular interest to our . anti Catholic extremism. The Dea'ders will be what Mr. Mich- ·Norman Vincent Peale fiasco i6 . ener has to say about the reli- represented as counting, heavily, gious issue. He discusses this in but in a way not intenoed by its general and as he found it at perpetrators. Mr. Michener's book is inforwork in his own bailiwick. mative and colorful as·a picture Church 'Reactionary' . of ,a local segment of the camBefore Kennedy's nomin.lltion paign and of farther ranging exthe author attended a New York cursions for Mr. Kennedy in dinner party at which the guests which the author participated. IIlcluded "three gentlemen faDeUs Books mous in American letters." One The Paulist Press has issued' ot. them, opposing the nominathree . paperback Deus Books tion of a Catholic, said of the (':hurch, "It's ..against everything which deserve. attention. The I stand foi'. It's dictatorial, sav.. price, of each is 75 cents. One is. What About Your age in its enmities, all-consulJ)Drinking? by John C. Ford, S.J. ing in its desires, and reaction. This originally appeared in hard ary in its intentions." Interestingly, there was a l:overs under Man Takes.a Drink. C'atholic woman present at this It is a thorough discussiop of alaffair. "A reasonably faithful cohol, its uses and abuses, and practicing Catholic," she called is both knowledgeable and impressive in· 'its' examination of' herself. W hat "reasonably" meant to her is disclosed by her alcoholism. Another is Father Joseph Mcwitness, which was in this vein: "'The whole tenet of my Church's SOl'ley's A Primer of Prayer, belief is against democracy, and which is just what the title sugthe exercise of' intelligent will, gests. Here is an easily compre:' l1Ild the freedom of the individ- hensive and enlightening exploration of something essential in ual." ' The story of this dinner party every life. The third, Personal Problems, is worth reading for its indica~ t10n of typical American intel- is by many hands and takes up lectuals' 'vision and appreciation many questions - marriage and divorce, adoption, mental health, of the Church. They see the ' Church as monstR'ous and men- etc.

TOLEDO (NC) - Bishop George 'J. Rehring of Toledo said here that discussions over Federal aid to education

should awaken parents to their proper role in education. . If the parental role in educaflon were better understood the Bishop said, there would' be greater effort to provide for educational needs from the resources "of th~ local community and of the state. "Then control would stay where it belongs," he added. The Bishop, who addressed II Knight of Columbus dinner, also spoke of the "probability of con_ trol of education passing over to the Federal government" under an aid program. Bishop Rehring said, however that if Federal aid to educatio~ becomes a reality, then simple justice would require that all parents should benefit if all are compelled to pay taxes for primary and secondary education. This is true. particularly, he added, because "education is the primary function not of the state bilt of the parents."

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NAZI LEADER'S SON ORDAINED: Newly-ordained' Father Adolf Martin Borman, M.S.C., son of one of Hitler's top, henchmen, receiyes his missionary cross from Father Christian Moser, provincial of the Missionaries. of the Sacred Heart in Eichstaett, Germany. Father Bormann, a' convert to Catholicism ill 1947, will serve in the Congolese . Archdiocese of COquilhatville. NC Photo.

Stresses Obligation of Uni'ted States ,To Share Abundance With Hungry WASHINGTON (Nt) - An Father Vizzard said the relong as masses of people in this I sponsibility for sharing Americountry and abro"ad are llungry, can agriculturat" abundance with "there can be no such thing" as the needy should not be borne farm surplus, a Catholic farm' by' the farmer alone. spokesman told the Senate AgriNlIotional Responsibility culture Committee. . Father James L. Vizzard, 8.J., "This is a matte~ of national declared that if the United i'esponsibility, and if the farmer States fails in the "opportunity, fulfills his part of the j<Yb by and obligation" to share its abun- producing abundantly, he should dance of fo'Dd, "the hungry and . not thereby be penalized by deneedy people of our own' councreased prices and income," he try and of the 'world would said. . , have just cause for anger." Father Vizzard also warned of Father Vizzard is director of t'he "disproportionate" power of the Washington office of the those who purchase farmers' National Catholic Rural Life 'produce. Conference. He testified in favHe said farmers "will never be or of the general objectives of able to achieve justice by and the 1961 Agricultural Act, which was being considered by the for themselves until they are so joined together in cooperatives Senate committee. Earlier he had and oth~r voluntary organizasupported the bill in im appeartions that they can bargain efance before the House Agriculfectively with the giant chain ture Committee. stores, canneries, packers, millers and other large-scale purR~ases chasers.".

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Ide~$ Are ~Ro~ketsq , AnU-Catholie Mail Once the campaign was under War way, Mr. Michener found that Tl!li~ion AMHERST (NC)-A senator Bucks County was deluged with characterized ideas as "rockets" " ATCHISON (NC)-,-St. BeneGrand Knig81t at 19 anti-Catholic mail. Of the many which will win the cold war did's College will raise 'its tui- . WINOOSKI PARK (NC) pieces of it which he saw, none · "nd warned any nation which tion fee and room rates for the was anonYJJlous: the source was · abandoned its ability to produce' 1961-'62 school year; Father Patrick H. Curtin; who won't be 20 until Aug. 17, has been elected always plainly indicated. Much ideas lessens its chances for sur- Brendan Downey, 6.S.B., ~presi­ a Grand Knight of the Knights 01. it was direct from Protestant vival. dent, announced. ..' of Columbus. He is a sophomore ehurches. The tuition will be increased Sen. Phillip A. Hart of MichThis literature was of three igan addressed' 300 members of from $300 ,to $325 per semester. at St. Michael's College here and was elected Grand Knight of kinds. First, there was what Mr. the Newman Club, their parents ·Room rates will be raised from Fatner John Verret Council at Michener calls· ~'the relatively $90 to' $125 per semester in some and guests, at the Univesity of the college. He is the sori of Mr. bonest" sort· citing "civil intruMassachusetts here, at a 'Com- residence:halls,and from $75 to and Mrs. Frank L. Curtin of sions made by the Church in munion breakfast. $90 in others. Sale~; Mass. ' 8uch countries as Spain, Ireland, . Father Downey said the inHe called fur" an intensified and Colombia." The truth of such creases were made necessary by build-up "in all the disciplines'" ebargelj was, he ho)ds, proved and said the educational "crash, the rising costs ·of operating the For your Building Materials program" in the' sciences is in- Kansas-college. Needs and Choice Building Professor Direct adequate to meet the demands Lots /in the Greater Taunton .. Bunche . to' Speak Sodnnists Federation of the cold war. Free nations Area maintain freedom of thought ,BALTIMORE (NC)-Ralph J. CLEVELAND (NC) - Msgr. and expression that produces Bunche, Undersecretary of the loseph A. Spltzlg, professor of new ideas in philosophy, the United "Nations and winner of INCORPORATED phtnUOSOPhY at St. Mary's Semarts and science, he said the Nobel Peace Prize in 1950, ary, hRs been appointed di- ':,' . will speak'at commencement exrector of the Nattoftal Federa- ' ercises 'of Loyola College on Honora.ryDegrees VA 4..7847 - VA 2-4051 ttOD of Sodalities. June 4; . WINOOSKI PARK, (NC) 'A' Bis appointment was announ"': ced. in a joint statement issued bishop, two members of Con=====cc=cccc' gress and business' .executive ' ONE 'TO A CUSTOMER .j . WH!lE THEY LAST by Joseph-Cardinal Ritter, Archbishop of St. Louis; and Arc~- ' will receive· honorary doctorates 'LIVE' LARQE,KIN8 SIZE bi9hop Edward F. Boban, Bishop June 5 at commencement exer01. Oleveland. ArdIbi.shop Ritter cises of St. MiChael's Coliege. is episcopal moderator of sodal- Those to be honored are: Bishop fties in the 11.S: ,. .. ' James J. Navagh of Ogdensburg, Msgr. Spitzig » the first per- N. Y.; Sen. George D. Aiken of tJOn' to be app()inted. by episcopal Vermontj Rep. Edward P. Boland' authori ty to the post. Previously of Massachusetts; and Michael W. the national director was elect.., McCarthy 'Of Manhasset, N. Y., eel from among episcopally ap- chief executive officer for the pointed diooesan ctirecto.... Msgr. investment ·firm of Merrill, Spitzig bad served aa Cleve- · Lynch, Pierce, Fenner and Smith, lJfae'4efln~. land diocesan dl1'eetlor' of sodal- Inc. Mr. McCarthy will deliver Uaton Wharf-Fairhaven, MllSll. tile commencement address. " . . . since 1iCi8.

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Warns Insurance Not Warrant NANCY (NC) -'- The Bishop of Nancy has warned that an

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14

Mass to Mark' , 15th Centeno ry Of St.Patrrack

THE ANCHO.R-

Thurs., May 25, 1961

Says ZonB!f&9 law Barritng Ca\?~@IDc School Is VgC;@~S

DOWNPATRICK (NC)Mass will be celebrated 00 June 11 to mark the week?long observance in the Down ,

HOHOKUS (NC) ::- The Borough . Council has approved an amended zoning regulation which would block eonstruction of any school, public. or private,. in·8 residential area. It was voted after it became known that the Newark archdiocese had, purchased a 34acre tract from the Chestnut Riding Club, after club buildings were destroyed by fire, as a site for the' regional high school. The council action, adopted by a 5-to-l vote, was characterized as "spot zoning" and was denounced as "arbitrary, capricious and viciously directed" by Fr(;)derick J. Gassert, Newark attorney representing the archdiocese. He indicated the amended ordinance will be· tested in court.' Refuse Challenge . The high school planned here . by the archdiocese is one 0.£ eight to be built with funds raised in a $25 million campaign nojr in progress. The Borough Council's action, which was expected, came at the conclusion of a public hearing. Opponents of the amendment had challenged members of the council and of the Planning Board to state their reasons fO!' 'objecting to the proposed school. The challenge was not accepted but after the meeting a city offi- ' :cial said it was deemed inadvisable to state the reasons at the time because of the possibility of litigation. The offichil added: "But we do, have good and valid reasons and they will be made known at the proper time." . Bill Pending In the last two years the archdiocese successfully, fought two restrictive zoning cases in the courts. Both cases eventuallywere decided by the New 'Jers~ Supreme Court. One case involved an ordinance in Saddle Ridge, a ·reHidential community in Bergen County, where efforts were .made to block a branch of Seton Hall University. Saddle Ridge· :and university officials now are negotiating their differences. . . Meanwhile, the New J·ersey. Assembly in Trenton has pending a bill which would bar dis~· criminatory zoning regulations in the state.

Fordham Establishes Honor Society Unit Q

NEW YORK (NC)---:A chapter of Pi Sigma Alpha,' national honor society in political science, has been established at Fordham .College. Eight third and fourth,-year students were installed'as charter members in Delta Zeta, the local chapter. Membership is granted to junior and senior students having high academic , standing and substantial achievement as political science majors. Pi Sigma Alpha was founded at .the University of- Texas in 1920 to stimulate serious study of government and politics, and to bring together those interested in the field.. It now has some 75 chapters and 15,000 members.

UUlivel1'$sty Ce~~bll'af1'es 350th Annivelf'sary' MANILA (NC)-The University of Santo Tomas in downtown Manila marked its 350th anniversary with a four-day celebration culminating on the feast of its patron, St. Thomas Aquinas. Prior to Philippine independence, Santo Tomas was the oldest university under the American flag, antedating Harvard College by 25 years.. Santo Tomas was confirmed as a pontifical Catholicuniversity under Pope Innocent X in 1645. It has graduated an estimated '10,000 students since its foundation, and now has an enrollment of nearly '28,000. Santo' Tomas has special memories for many AmericanS. It was on its 50-acre campus that the Japan'ese i~ terned U. S. citizens when they occupied the Phillippines ill World War IL '

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ARIZONA APACHES SEE THE POPE: A group of teenage American Apache Indians from the St. John Indian Mission a t Laveen, Arizona, pay a call on His Holiness Pope John XXIII while in italy for an international folklore da~ce festival. NC Photo.

'Democro·tization of'World Aid to Freedom The medal is awarded annualLOUISVILLE (NC) The incre'asing democratization' of ly by BellarmineCollege ·to a world society will, in the long .person "who, on t'qe.national or run be more helpful to the cause international scene, has exempof freedom than to communism, lified in a notable manner the a United Nations official said virtues of. justice, charity and temperateness in .dealing with here. Frederiek H. Bollmd 01. Ire;' difficult and controversial probland, president of the 15th ~n­ lems." era} Asembly. of the U.N., made' \ Mr.jl\oland declared in his ad. this· prediction 'aft~r receiving dress that the emergence into the Bellarinine Medal .from independent statehood of new Archbishop John A. Fl~rsh 01. . and mostly undeveloped states "is undoubtedly the mOst fateLouisville,

Am'erican Catholics 'Help Resettle, More Than 12,000 Refugees GEN~VA (NC) American. Catholics, working through their worldwide relief organization, helped 12,122 refugees find new homes . and new 'homelands ill 1960.' This ;"'as' announced ,by, Cath-. olic . Relief Services-National Catholic Welfare Conference through its deputy director for Europe Jean J. Chenard. . More' than 1,200 "physically and socially handicapped" refu:' gees were received in .Australia, Belgium, Canada, Norway,

SPOKANE (NC)-Skid row derelicts will get a chance to begin a new life on a 500-acr~ farm to be directed by a Franciscan lay tertiary, Brother Martin, scin of a Methodist minister and director of' the House of Charity in Spo1«lne 1 He said a major reason for the farm project is the increasing number of men seeking temporary .board and b~ at the House qf Charifty "They're confused, undernourished and have lost most of their ambition as individuals," he stated "Our farm will allow them to work in ideal liurroundings, away from skid row temp'tations."

Sweden and ·Great Britairt, Mr. 'Chenard said. Before the end of . 1960 Denmark and Switzerland launched projects to resettle 'handicapped' refugees, and the United .States alSo opened its gates to the tu~ercular,.the aged and the otherWIse handlCapped. . Ca~holic agenc~es in Australia, BelgIUm and SWItzerland accepted refugees.fOT placement in homes for the aged. They took care of these people ,,:,ho are old, u.Hable to work and WIthout relahves. AusirMia Heads List The largest numbers of refugees 'were moved from Italy (3,289) and Austria (2,603). They were mainly Croats, Slovenes, Hungarians and Poles who had taken temporary refuge in Italy and Austria. Australia headed the list of resettlement countries, as usual. It took' 4,393, more than a third of the total number. -, The· United States took the second largest group of refugees, 3,542. Of these, 1,834 were Dutch· who ·were expelled from Indonesia. '. There was a decrease 'in the number of stateless refugees resettled in the U.S. because quotas had been oversubscribed and departures under America's new refugee law, (P.L. 648) began only in the last few weekc

John C. Hayes Heo.ds Loyola LCllw School

27 Catho~Dc CoUeges Share in AlEC GrC!lrtlts

Farm Project Offers Derelicts New Life

CHICAGO (NC) - John e. Hayes, president of the National Council of Catholic Men and. acting dean of the Loyola University law school since October, 1959, has been named dean of the law school. Father James F. Maguire, S.J., Loyola president, said Mr. Hayes will succeed John C. Fitzgerald, former dean,who has been on Ii leave of absence for two years .while he served as deputy administrator fOl' Cook County, Ill., courts. ' Mr. Fitzgerald will return as a professor in the law school in September, but at his own request has been relieved of 'his duties as dean, Father Maguil'e said.

WASHINGT.ON (NC)-':"'Twenty-seven Catholic colleges~ are among 165 educational institutions ,sharing in Atomic Energy Commission g ran t s totaling $1,950,797. Glenn Tl Seaborg, AEC chairman, said the grants are for the purchase of laboratory equipment to initiate or expand courses in the life and physical sciences and in engineering that are related to nuclear energy. The Catholic institutions receivings grants include: Notre Dame (Ind.) University, $22,528; Holy Cross College, Worcester,' $10,000; St. Anselm's College,. Manchester, $5,500; College ()(f Our Lady of the. Elms, Chicopee, ~ooo.

ful and most far-reaching political developm'ent of our times." , He' said .that colonialism is 'becoming a thing of. the past and is giving way to a new, ,horizontal and· egalitarian organization of world society.'" ' "Th,e world community ... is becoming a world democracy," he continued, '''and the United Nations Assembly .•. is coming to be more and more a. body ,broadly representative of the peoples of the world as a whole. This radical change in the character of world society, and in the composit1on of the U.N. Assembly, must inevitably bring with it fax:-reaching consequen-

ces."

and Connor diocese of the 15th centenary' of the death ~f st. Patrick Auxiliary Bishop William. Conway of Armagh will offer the Mass near the burial place of St. Patrick. During the week there will be exhibitiqns and lectures about St. Patrick. ' The celebratioI;l will be, closed on June 18 -with a Pontifical High Mass, sung by Bishop Eugene O'Doherty pf Dromore at Saul, the traditional site d, St. Patrick's first church. During the Dublin Patrician Congress, Gregorio Pietro ~V Cardinal Agagianian, Papal Legate to t~e Congr~ss, will pay an official visit to Cork. He will travel there on June 20 in the State railway car which is being especially refurbished for tho occasion. As' part of the Congress a 6'bell Flemish Carillon has been brought from the United States. .and will be installed in Croke Park for the June 25th Pontifical High Mass. The Carillon is similar to one used at the Eucharistic Congress in Brazil. Weighing only 500 ,pounds, it can reproduce the ,sounds of 86 bells.

.Says Prayer Needed In Choosing Career NIAGARA FALLS (NC)Young men should, pray few guidance in' choosing a career, a priest said at Vincentian Dat' observances at Niagara UniveNo:' Jty. . Father Cornelius J. Ryan, C.M., treasurer of the Easter'li province of the Congregation 'of the Mission, told collegianS attending a Mass in the student center that they should not decide on any career without ·first 'discovering what career the LoM wants them to follow. "And," he advised'them, "whelli through prayer and receiving advi,ce, you have a vocation oi". career indicated for you, with the blessirig of God, have the courage to follow it as Our Lad~ did:' 'Behold the servant of ~ Lord!'" ,

Control 46 Votes Mr. Boiand pointed out that a few years ago "the Westerb powers could always' count with reasonable assur'ance on being able to obtain the' necessary two-thirds majority in the U.N. Assembly for any provosal which they considered vital to their interests." Maryknoll~!s Going , But "that is no longer the Four Continents case today," he stated. "The relMARYKNOLL (NC) - Fortyative voting strength of the two M~ryknoll Missioners wiD West has been diminished 'by take part in the society's 44th the increase in the membership annual departure ceremony Juno of the U.N., particularly the 11. They have been assigned to membership of the Afro-Asian remote stations on four contibloc, which now controls no nents. Archbishop John J. Kro! less than 46 .'. . of the 99 votes • of Philadelphia will deliver the in the' Assembly." departure address. Because of this development, On the previous day 35 sem,;. Mr. Boland said, "we must not inarians will be ordained priests be sutprised to find the Assem.' of the Catholic Foreign Missiol1 bly speaking more often with an Society of America by Bishop Afro-Asian ·rather -than with a . John W. Comber, Superior GenWestern accent in the future." eral of Maryknoll But he said that in his opinion/ it is a mistake "to talk and Are You Wearing A think of the Afro-Asian countries in the U.N. as being prePretty Hat? d~minantly anti-Western." He It's explained that some of these nations "tend on the whole to vote .~'~ more often with the West than Southern Mew England's with the communist bloc on vital issues." Largest Millinery Fashion Stara

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Archbishop Asks Ownert;hip of Own Homes

Jesui·t Autrhor Wins .Ca~tmo~~~

CAPE TOWN (NC)-Arch.bishop Owen McCann of Cape Town has urged that the millions of Africans who work in the nation's cities be allowed to own homes there. The family, said the Archbishop, is the primary social unit and a man should be able to live with his family and care for its spiritual and material wants. Unfortunately, this is not always the pattern in South Africa, ne said. Own Lmnd Since Africans have become a permanent part of the urban industrial structure in the country, it is vital for peace and harmony that they be allowed to own land in the urban areas, Archbishop McCann said. The urban Afriean population is between three and four million, continued Archbishop McCann. Rural areas set aside for Africans when fully developed agriculturally, will support only about 3,500,000 he stated. The Archbishop concluded: "No matter what policy hl applied, the existence of a great urbanized section of African people is inevitable . . . It is 11 problem that has had to be faced in Europe and the U.S.A. It has been" solved there largely by tIM: extension of ownership or sharing ownership and by an increase in wage rates. "Social policy, too, has been directed to the protection of the family. Our labor problem must. be solved along those same lines."

Remembers Kindness Of Hospital Sisters. , PASSAIC (NC) - It took 61 years for David Gregory, 75, of Allentown, Pa., to achieve peace of mind. He did it with a check for $1,000 sent to St. Mary's Hospital here, asking the institution to dedicate' a room in memory of his wife. On January 6, 1898, Mr. Gi-egory, son of poor Italian immigrant parents, underwent an appendectomy at tht' hospital.' At the time the operation was considered major surgery and Mr. Gregory was given a SO-SO chance for recovery. He spent three months in the hospital recuperating. There was no bill when he was discharged -the Sisters of Charity who conducted the institution reQuired payment only from those wb.c> could afford it.

Catholic Theologians To Me~t in Ottawa .

OTTAWA (NC) Catholi~ theologians of the United States and Canada will meet here June 19 and 20 for the convention a-f the Catholic Theological Society of America. The meeting will deal with such subjects as cIvil law and religious freedom, moral problems in business, and the concept of death in Christian theology. A highlight of the conventioll will be the discussion of morality and business. Participants will be Arthur H. Hayes, president of the Columbia Broadcasting Sys.tem radio network, and Father Daniel Lowery, C.SS.R:, €f Washington, D. C.

Town of 9,000 Has Own Pastor at Last KENNETT (NC) This southern Missouri town, for years one of the lsrgest in the country without a resident Catholic pastor, has one at last. As 78 charter parishioners watched, Father James A. Seyer was formally installed 'as pastor of St. Cecilia parish, the first parish in southern .Missouri's Dunklin County. Kennett, a town 01. more than 9,000, long has been the only incorporated. community over 5,000 in the state without a parish of its own. Since preCi.vil War days, its Catholie population has been minute, and as recently as 1G years ago Catholics numbered onlJr .. Today thei'e are 200.

15

THE ANCHORThurs., May 25, 1961

Press'Aw@~d

VANCOUVER (NCr-h. John Courtney Murray, S.J., writer and speaker en Church-State affairs, was

SERRA CONVENTION: More than 2,000 persons are expected to attend 19th annual convention of Serra International which will be held in Minneapolis June 29 to July l. Shown making plans are, left to right, Mo st Rev. William O. Brady, D.D., of St. Paul; . Raymond Schneider, president of the St. Paul Serra Club; Eugene McCahill, convention chairman; and Joseph L. Bolduc, president of Minneapolis Serra Club. NC Photo.

Serra To Hold Convention in Minneapolis' .CHICAGO (NC) - Some 40 members of the Hierarchy and 150 priests are expected to meet with members of the laity at the 19th annual Serra International convention June 29 to July 1 at

the Radisson Hotel ~n Minneapolis, Minn., it was disclosed here. A cardinal, two archbishops and six bishops will' be among the principal speakers at the ses-

sions. The organization is comvosed of Catholic business and professional men devoted to increasing vocations to the priesthood mnd religious life. The organization's headquarters here said observers from the Sacred Congregation of Seminaries and Universities in Rome as well as representatives fro~ 10 foreign countries are expected BROOKLYN (NC) - A Labor "Unless we solve the problems to attend the convention. Department offiCial urged here. such as those, of imemployment, Archbishop Brady Host that Americans work to solve racial discrimination, depressed Speakers will inclUde Albert social problems in the spirit of areas, slums in our cities and low . Cardinal Meyer, Archbishop of the papal social encyelicals. wages of migratory and other Cliicago, who is episcopal adviser Louis F. Buckley, Middle At- workers, we are endangering our to the organization; Archbishops lantic regional director of the relations with other nations and William O. Brady of' St. Paul, Bureau of Labor Statistics, said suffering economic losses within host to the convention, and Wil"we have yet a long way to go" our country at a time when good llam E. Cousins of Milwaukee before the hopes of Popes Leo will among nations and econ- and Bishops William G. Con~ XIII 'and Pius XI are fulfilled. omic growth are so essential," he nare of Greensburg, Pa., Andrew Mark Anniversary oaid. G. Grutka of Gary, Ind., John P. Mr. Buckley spoke at the . "To the great masses of pea- Cody of. Kansas City-St. Joseph, Queens and Brooklyn Adult Ed" pie in Asia Africa and South Mo., Loras T. Lans of Rockford ucation Center at a ceremony America w~ must demonstrate Ill., and Auxiliary Bishop Leon~ marking the 70th anniversary of that our'sense of social morality ard P. Cowley of Minneapolis. Pope Leo's encyclical Rerum identifies us actively with those Bishop Alonso M. Escalante Novarum and the 30th anniinterested in improving the con- M.M., Vicar Apostolic of Pand~ versary of Pope Pius' Quadrag- ditions of the workers and in and rector of the Seminario de esimo Anno. ,Both documents achieving a better distribution ()f Misiones in Mexico City, and pioneered 'in the field of social the world's wealth amonp the F~ther John J. Considine, M.M., theory. nations of the world." dIrector of the Latin American Mr. Buckley said 5te "sound . Bureau, National Catholic WeI", principles and procedures" set Conference Work~H" fare Conference, will be the forth in the encyclicals are pri~cipal speakers at sessions "being applied to a greater ex- Win Papal Honors WhICh will be devoted to content at present than ever before." EL PASO (NC)-Two vetsideration of the shortage of But much remains to be done eran National Catholk Welfare priests in Latin American counIn solving social problems and Conference workers who have tries. much hinges on their solution, contributed 64 years of service' he added. in the immigration field have been presented with papal Catholic Agency Aids honors. Paint and Wallpaper Cle'ofas Calleros, director of Port\lll~l!u;,se Refugees Dupont Paim the EI Paso office of the NCWC LISBON (NC) - Food and ' cor. Middle St. Immigration Department, was medicine supplied by Catholic • 422 Acush. Ave. Relief Servic;es-National Catho- invested as a Knight of St. Greglic Welfare Conference were My the Great, wliile Adela Wala.., t:J, ~ New Bedford part of II shipment flown to lace, office case worker, W'a5 , .... ~' PARKING presented with the Benemerenti thousands of Portuguese refliRear ~ Store Medal. . gees in the Congo. The presentation ceremony The supplies were flown to Leopoldville in a plane lent by WaB conducted, by Bishop Sido the Portuguese government to ney M. Metzger of EI Paso in St. Patrick's Cathedral here. aid refugees forced to flee from neighboring Angola, Portuguese Bishop Joseph M. Gilfore of West Africa, where hundreds of Helena, Mont., episcopal chairwhites have been killed by Af.- man of the NCWC Immigration Department, and Msgr. Paul F. l'kan nationalists. Other relief supplies, which T'anner, NCWC gene-al seorellary, were present. are being distributed by Portugal's Catholic charities organization, are being flown to Luanda, .Plan Scholarship Angola's capita\, to assist refuThomas F. Monaghan Jr. BROOKLYN (Ne) - A fourgees who have gone there from year tuition scholarship tol be Treasurer the strife-tol'n nQrthern part ol awarded annually to a student iDe territory~ of Puerto Rican birth or parentage who demonstrates potential 142 SECOND STREET Editor to Speak leadership in his community will BUFFALO (NC)-Father Ru- be established next Fall at St. OSborne 5-7856 dolf Harvey, O.F.M., editor ol Francis College here. Franciscan the Fri8l', Franciscan monthly 'Brother Henry, O.S.F., college magazine, will be the speaker dean, said the student may be FALL RIVER June 2 at Rosary Hill College's either from Puerto Rico or the .wtb. eom~ eatercises. :New York City area.

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Asks Americans to Meet Social Problems in Spirit of Encyclicals

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awarded the Catholic Press Association award for the "outstanding contribution to Catholic journalism in 1960." ~ather Albert J. Nevins, M.M., edItor of Maryknoll magazine and CPA president, presented the award at the civic banquet of the CPA's 51st annual meeting here. In Father Murray's absence the award was accepted by William ~oIUb, gene.ral manager of AmerIca magazine, which Father Murray formerly served as aosociate editor. ' The Jesuit priest, who is 11 professor at Wodstock (Md.) College, was cited partiCUlarly for his new book "We Hold These Truths." Father Murray was given tho "outstanding contribution to Catholic journalism" award after a. vote which canvassed the entIre CPA membership. Four other candidates ware considered in voting: Floyd Anderson, managing editor of the Advocate of Newark, N.J., and CPA vice president; Father Thurston S. Davis, editor-in_ chi~f of America magazine of New York; Robert G. Hoyt, editor of the Catholic Reporter of Kansas City, Mo., and Father Nevins. . This year marked the thin! time that the CPA has presented the journalism award. Previous winners are Dale Francis, editor of the Lone Star Catholic of Austin, Tex., and Frank A. Hall, director of the Press Department, Nat'ional Catholic Welfare Conference. The award consists of a specially inscribed statue of st. Francis de Sales, patron of the Catholic Press.

Pope John Praises Bishops of Germany COLOGNE (NC)-In a letter the Bishops of Germany, Pope John has singled out for special praise their aid in preparing for the coming ecumea.ical council. Pope John praised them for the wisdom of their counsel, the help of their practical experience and the well-pondered judgment they have exercised in the pas.toral demands of the times. These, he said, are three charae= teristics evident in their recen:l reports to the Holy See. tell

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"ft1E A<NCHORllhurs., May 25, 1961

IThe Parish Parade Boy Scout Auxitiaty

17

Mr & Mrs Gustave Moreno, S. & A. J{)seph, Mrs Kenneth Paine, Mr & Mrs Joseph Reffi5!o Mr & Mrs William Caldwell. Wilfred Costa, Mr & Mh.'"'5 Ernest Rose, Mr & Mrs William Dillon, Mr & Mrs Eugene Cormier, Mr & Mrs Maurice GaU\thier. Mr & Mrs Emanuel Davis, Lawrence E. Cardinal, Mr &: Mrs Charles Laughlin, Joseph J. Gimpl, Mr & Mra Charles ni. Frazier Jr. Mr &, Mrs Arthur F. Joseph, Louise Fratus, Dr Gerald W. Hoeffel, Mr & Mrs Norman Rose, Mr & Mrs John Sheehan. Francis Mooney, Mr & Mrs Arthur S. Joseph, Antone Duarte Jr. Ins. Agency, Mary E. Joseph, Mr & Mrs Charles N. Grindle. Mr & Mrs Francis Howard, Mr & Mrs Donald Ormsby, Mll' & Mrs A. S. Bettencourt, Mrs Robert Sherman, Mr. &; Mn Anthony Duart. John Silva, Mr & Mrs George S. Dutra, Mrs John Thomas, Mu Antone Silva, Flora Peters. Mr & Mrs Albert Cusson, Mr & Mrs Joseph Peters, Mr & M~ Norman Gill, Mr & Mrs Everett Adams, Mr & Mrs George Williams. ' Wilfred 8; Katherine Rogei'Sp Mr &; Mrs Albert Rose, Mr & Mrs John J. Berrio, Daniell Chisholm, Mr 8; Mrs George 'Berrio. Mr & Mrs George C. Williams, Alfred Rose, Grace Deschampa, Mr & Mrs Austin Rose J.1r.

BLESSED SAORAMEN'I', sT. MATWEU, FALL RIVER FALL RIVER A cake sale will follow allll To benefit the church debt Masses June 4, with Mrs. Therese fund, parishioners will sponsor Goulet and Mrs Florence Lussier a bazaar the second, third and in charge of arrangements. Pro- fourth Saturdays of June. A ceeds will benefit a graduation large committee ,is headed by, fund for eighth grade students Rev. Henri Charest, honorary of the parochial school. Guild chairman and Rev, Thomas Mormembers and mothers of grad- rissey, general chairman. uates are asked to donate cakes, Reservations for the annual inleaving them at the hall between stallation banquet to be held 6 and 8 Saturday night, June 3. Sunday, June 4 at White's resNext regular meeting is set for taurant by the Women's ,Guild Wednesday night, June 21 with will close Wednesday, May 31. Mrs. Alice Corbin in charge .of The meal, to start at 6:30 will be hospitality. smorgasbord style. ST. ANNE'S. OUR LADY OF ANGELS, FALL RIVER I FALL RIVER Annual banquet and instaUaThe annual banquet and intion of officers for the Women's stallation of the Women's Guild Reserve of Boy Scout Troop 50 is slated for Sunday, June 18 in is slated for Tuesday, June 6 at the parish halL . White's restaurant, To be seated ST. ANNE'S. are Mrs. Noella' Melancon, re- NEW BEDFORD elected president; Mrs. MarguerLadies of St. Anne will sponite Banville, re-elected secretary; sor a rummage sale from 10 to 4 Mrs. Dolores Tremblay, treasurer. today and tomorrow at 1078 SANTO CHRISTO. South Water Street. Mrs. Adrien FALL RIVER Desrosiers is chairman. Mrs. Ophelia C. Monids chairThe unit plans a chicken pie man of a dance to be sponsored supper at 6:30 Tuesday night, ~_ RECEIVES BLIND AWARD: President Kennedy conSaturday night, June 24 at June 13 in the school recreation gratulates Daniel R. Webber of Saginaw, Mich., after Stevenson's restaurant by the room. The event will close mcpresenting the· blind law student from Notre Dame· Council of Catholic Women. The tivities for the year., council's study group will meet) , University . .with all award of $500 for "outstanding . ht J 6 . ST. PIUS X, at 7:30 Tuesday mg "une 1ft SO. YARMOUTH scholastic achievement." Mr. Webber ranks in the top third the church hall and the next regActivities of ti»e Women's of his class at Notre Dame. NC. Pho~o. ular meeting of the unit· is set Guild for this'Saturday will inI for Tuesday, J'une 13, also at the elude the cleaning of the chapel Mn C. Rodenbush, Mr & Mrs hall. of Our Lady of the Highway by Because He Cared • • • Charles Ellis, Mr '& Mrs John OUR LADY.OF VICTORY. 's volunteer group and the conC~Uahan, Mrs Constance J. fimNTERVILLE ducting of a food sale at Erwin's ST. THERESA'S Perry. A chicken dinner is ,planned. Pharmacy, Yarmouth Shopping Continued ftlom Page'l'welve Mr & Mrs Martin Ober, Mr &; $200 for Saturday night, June 24, illl Plaza. Mrs Harold Lynch. Mr & Mrs St. Vincent de Paul Soci~ the church hall by the Women's 'The Guild will hold a rumWareh~ , Frank Alves, Mr & Mrs Manuel Guild. Mrs. John Connolly is mage sale in the, church hall be8'1'; PATRICK $50 Alves, Mr &; Mrs Domingo Bapchairman. Also in the hall will ginning at 9, saturday morning, $85, Donald Boardmaa. tiste. . be a bazaar from 3 io 9 Satur- June 3. Mrs. James Quirk, chairRe¥. Kenneth Delano. $Z5 Mr &; Mrs John Lynch, Mi- & daY'h JUlY 29 , Mrs·HStanley · T:- man, asks' that 'donations .0£ ,• '$:t5 . J8ek,H&fIOpian. Mrs Winthrop Baylies, Mr &; . $24 th M d mas an rs. eywor .... I' d' th ·t be U_"': Mrs Kenneth 5emedo, e othmg an 0 er 1 em,S, .mu ... :Mrs John Nolan, Tony Bacchieri. Backus will be co-chairmen. .Jo8eph Iwuc. brought to the ball b\v that date. Mr & Mrs John Sienkiewicz, Mr Mrs Eva Cardoza, James BarST. KILIAN, . ' & : Mrs Theodore Baptiste, A. I. , $80 NEW BEDFORD ST. DOMINIC, ber; Mr & Mrs Kenneth Heekin, 'Louii McBride. Guerzoni. SWANSEA Edward Menes,Mr & Mrs Robe»t Mrs. Diane Spirlet will h e a d , $20' , $1S the Women's Guild for the new The Women's Guild will spon,. Dr &; Mrs Robert Johnl9Olll, Sweeney. George Tedino, Mich~ ~ ' ason', supported by Mrs. Stellm sor its annual Carnation Sunday . . Mr & Mrs Edmund Conley & se Collins. Family, Mr & Mrs Henry Gon- V'ineent Andrews. Balut, vice president; Mrs. Edith before ,alI Masses ~ M ,ay 28" :Mr &; Mrs . Edward $15 $10 Gonsalves, recording secretary; Miss Dorothy Pires is chairman. , , salves,.Mr & Mrs Charles Barroo, JobIl Drew,· Edward Mess:ieI\, . h CYO James T. Moran. th M f b Mr &; Mrs Donat Cloutiell', R\llMrs. Jeannette Francis, financial em ers 0 e parIS ' M r &: Mrs Gerard C1llslek. Roger Bussiere, Ernest YeghilllG" secretary. Installation ceremonies will receive Holy Communion m dolph &; Jeanne Charest. Levi Monast. next month at a body 01) Sunday morning at $1Z , Mr & Mrs Charles Westgate are planned for William Cauley, George . th &; Mrs Robert Klockel', :Mr & family, Mr & Mrs Henry Fel1'Stevenson's restaurant, North ,the 9 o'clock M ass. F 0 11owmg e &M'i' Mrs William Paling. . O'Brien, James Henry, Paul rtmouth. Reservations must be 1I{Iass, a Communion Breakfast nandes, Louis Andrade, Mr &; Da Bonneau, Norman St. Germain. . b e serve d a t D unrov i n R esMr &: Mrs JohnSantoo. Mrs John DePina & family, Rose made by Friday, June % with WIll $10 Albert Poholek, Oscar Paquin, taurant. Rev. Edward J. Burns, Federici. M rs. VI'oia Dabrowski. RaYlJlond Tomlinson, William . P . h F aU. •• Melvina Gracia, Mr &; ,Mrs aSSIstant at St. L ouisarIS, OUR LADY OF LO URDES, Demers, James Dwyer. John Texeir<>, Mr & MrsK Miguel River, will' b e' guest spea k er. r W ELLFLEET Everett Larocque, Vincem Gomes, Mr & MJ<Il Paul iernan" . ht a t th e K...LJ O 'y is in charge n Monday mg ..... Mrs. Ida Tenne OUR LADY OF LOURDES Girard, Irene Campbell, Holy Milfor d Rd ., the CYO 0l1'- Mr & Mrs Charles Tamagini. of co llecting items for a rum- C hall, $100 l'fame Society, Adrien Piette. . t' 'II d t d Laura Veechi, Mr &: Mrs JohlU mage sa le scheduled from 10 to gamza IOn WI con uc a ance. Andrade, Mr & Mrs John Alves. A. Friend, A Friend, A FrieR4. Gaspard Dupont, John Piette. 4 tomorrow in the church hall OUR LAJIHl I()F FATIMA, Ethel Gallus, Mr &: Mrs Frank William Goff, Thomas Coleman, _ $25, by the Women's Guild. SWANSEA Galvin. Robert Crook. IIll memory' of Wm. F. Rose HOLY REDEEMER. Fatima Hall, Gardners Neck Mr & Mrs Julius Llllchini, MI'8 lind Mary E. Rose, Holy Name Normand Brillon, Rene ThElf'CHAT.HAM Road, will be the scene of m Armanda Dupont, Mary Mendes, Society, Wellfleet Savings Bank, rien, Anthony Varrone, Nicholaa The parish will sponSOl' a pub- penny sale at,8 Saturday night, Armand Pires, Doris Rose. Todaro. The First National Bank. lie ham and bean supper thitl June 3, to be co-sponsored by , Mr &: Mrs John Goggin, Mr && $20 'l'Mn to Page Eighteen Saturday night. Mrs. James Car- the Women's Guild and Holy Mra Edgar Beauregard, Mr &; Donald Chapman, Rita Rose, doza is in charge of arrange- Name SocIety. Refreshmentl:! Mrs Marshall Jackson, Mr &; Mr & Mrs Wm. J. Gill, Mr &; ments. - ' will be served and admission Mrs Thomllfl Reidy, Mrs Albert Mrs Harry Pearsall. A Delicious OUR LADY OF LOURDES, and parking ,wi~ be free. Co- DeLoid.' $15 TAUNTON " chairmen are James Griffin and, Mrs Marguerite Riley, Mr '" Mrs' Richmond Bell, Ernest Treat The school fund drive commM- Mr~. Arthur ~cLear. Mrs' Robert Parese, Mr & Mrs and Paul Lesson, Our Lady C!l!f tee plans a ham and bean supper ST. JOSEPH, Daniel McGrath, M:r & MI'II Lourdes Guild .. and pennny sale for .Saturday" NORTH DIGII'l'OM Robert St. Jacques,' Mr & ·MN $10 June 3. Servings will ~ from New officers for the Women'lII Chartes Crocker. ' ' Major John F. ~herwiR, M:r II: 5:30 to 7 : 3 0 . . Guild include Mrs, Anne ProcoHelen Hoenig,Mr &: Mrs Vie- Mrs Kenneth Snow, Clarence J. OUR LADY OF GRAOB. 'pio, president; Mildred Hmi- torio Gallerani, Mr & Mrs Regi- Berrio, John A. Rose, Mr &; M!'S NORTH WESTPORT gan, vice president; Mrs. Jeanne nal Loxley" Mr &: Mil'S Richard Paul Lussier. ' Tuesday, June 6 is the date set .Roy, ·recordingllecr~tary.; ·Mrs; Kiernan, Mr & Mr):l'~ Pelle-. . Mr & Mrs James Delor)t, by members. of the Women's Louise Johnson, corresponding tier. . AnonymouS, Joseph M. Rodsu':' Guild for their annual banquet secretary; MN. HeIeR Roberts, Mr & Mrs WilHam Connell, ,ski, Cora .Holbrook, Margaret and installation, to take place ill treasurer. Mrs Emma Houle. Caroline Bar- Prada. the church hall. Miss Helen ST. JOSEPH, haza, Mr & Mrs Antone ·Barboza. ' Chace, district council president, FALL RIVER Katherine Barbo2a. Michael DRY CLEANING will be installing officer. Tickets New officers for the Women.. Melloni, Mr & Mrs Francis A. and for the banquet, to start at 7, are Guild include Mrs, Henry Ber- Kingston, Mr & Mn W'il1-terBapobtainable from Mrs. EdBa ~ nardo, president; Mrs. Franklin tiste. FUR STORAGE ent, chairman. 'Fairhurst, president; Mrs. Mr & Mrs Peter Murray, Mr 8; ST. LAWRENCE, Alban Vezina, corresponding seeNEW BEDFORD retary; Mrs. Edwin Rosario, Ye- ST. JAMES, The Couples Club announcee cording secretary; Mrs. Raymond NEW BEDFORD that its second annual dinner Heyworth, treasurer. Mrs. Leo J. Telesmanick is l!'e34-44 Cohonnet Street dance will take place WednesThe unit will hold a whist elected president of Msgr. Noon day, June 7 at White's restau- party tonight at the parish hall .' Circle for the coming season.' Taunton VA 2-6161 Ask ,for Them Today rant. Dancing wiH contin,", till and a memorial MasS for de- She will be aided by Mrs. Henry midnight aRdthe election of ceased memben is scheduled for Luckraft, vieepresident; Mrs. officers will alsO be·. feature '1:30 Tuesday morning, May 30. Antone Estrella, recoriJing ~cre­ ON ,CAPE COD of 'the evening. Mr and M1'IIl. The Women" Guild will spontary; Mrs. John Barry, financial Leo M. Sullivan are chairmee. 'sore a whist party at 8 tonight m aecretary; Mrs. HaroAd L MOO!'e, aided by a large committee. tile parish halt OR BrightmaA Uoeasurer. ST. .JOHN BAPTIST. Street:· MH. '.JOtI& 1:. Smith 'irs' Annual banquet is set :for NEW BEDFORD chairman. Wednesday, June 7 in the church The Holy Name Society Bowi. HOLY ROS~ .alland entertainment will feaIng team has scheduled its an- FALL RIVER. ture a meeting Wednesd~ nual banquet for (; this Sunda,MI'8 Ernest D'Ambrosio Is June :U. night at White's restaurant. Team president· of the Women's Guild SACRED HEARli'. officials include George Alexa~ iqr' the coming season. With her FALL RIVER del', president; Joseph Darmofalo wilt serve Mrs. Raymond. 'Parise. Annual installation ceremonies vice 'president; A. Monagua, mee president; Mie<l ElI.'Wl ~ _ the Women's Guild win be AMPLE PARKING secretary; Ai WHU~ tre~ d:cd, ~'~ ~ ~ . held Sun~ JuDe , at Stone Joseph ~ ~.,..~ .... B1>idge IDa,

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Romeo·'LaFond, . Vinceat Lucl&- :'Dugan, ~ CanoII, . . . THE ANCHOR- , raft, William McCann. : man's Hardware, Tbomas Dola&. Thurs., May 25, Robert Metell, Joseph ,Ano.. Mrs Mary McNamara, Leo $00 Murphy, John Mondeau Sr~ Moo nault, Loukl Botelho" wareham &vingo Bank.. lT~ National Bank. Mary Miller; Walter Malley.' Mrs Clareoct:l ~ Mr. J,., $15 , ,Mr & Mrs John L. Medeiros, Betro Auto ;Body, Inc., Mr &: Mrs Alice Murphy, Margaret ElL~ 'Continued from Page Sevelllteen !E@lSSd' f«:!J~IMl©l1ll{('1rn MrnJames Carreiro, Carl Dole, Mullen,' Kenneth Rogers, Wu.1'NI BUZ2U1Ird$ Bay M. E.. Ta'hres ,Jr. • liam Souza. I Ili'ig . toft ST. ANTlfIIONY ST. MARGARET $600' ., $10 Sears & Roebucl'!c, Mrs RobS'lr. PETEB' $60 Rev. Jose M. Bettencourt;.o Ama~ Station, Mrs Alvin erta Schauberger, Anthony So11$50 . Sts. Margaret &: Mary Guild. Avila. 'Fisher, Frost· Boat Company, mine, Mr & Ml'lI Edward SUlliSt. Vinceat de Paul ~ . $50 $100 Mr &; 1lIInl Michael CroniIi, Fred-van. Edward, Sheehan. $28 Mr & Mrs Thomas Masterson, wiclt Cameron. . Mr & Mrn Edward L. Cbazie" Falmouth Cement Works. Mr & Mrs William Brady. Joha Donahue,Mrs Agnes 'James Shannon, Mr& Mrn ton. A Friend. . $50' ,,' $25 ' Lewis Stev~s, Smith's Variety $10 · In memory of Manuel D. Fell'- Dardis, Katherine Dugan, Mr & Ernest Dechene. Me &; Mrn Alfred Morey, Mfi reira, Mr & Mrs James SoUUl" Mrs Frank Emmel,.Mr &: ~a Store, Frederick Toran, Tony'a $15 George Fonseca.' Diner. Orise Lachance, Mr & Mrs JohD Myron Tavares Family. Mr &: Mrs Raymond Fitzger'liar & Mm''-'oseph Graoo··Jr.. Mrs Leonard TyIer, Wash- J., Cassidy, J. Gerald FlemiDir" $4~ . ald. Gros1smaB1'o, Mr & Mrs Leo Grif- burn's' Grain & L\UDbel' Co~ Mro . Lawrenee Dutra. Manuel G..Souza h. , $19 ~Mi'a , GateIy,Mro George Wilson, Raymond J. Wil-' Albert '. DeMell~ Mr &; Jl4;r:!J $3@ ,', Mr &: Mrs 'Carl Harrington, Sb.eUo Hendrickson. llama, Mrs William Veary, Mr & Joseph Nascimento, M:r & Mal · Joseph B. Souza. Mr & Mrs Emiliano Gavazzo, Mr ~ Keadn, ,Mr &, M1'll Mis Clifton VeaeY'. Henry Keenan. $!S' & Mrs Mauri~e Savage, Mr III ~ La-erEence,' Mr & .l\4ro AlphonSo . B!a~ Ro~ Tun.m W Pa{fe N4m.etcoo llhIi' lJ% 1Illnl Fredericlt Ward. Mrs Joseph Curley, Mrs Mar· $25 garet Crosby. Children's Paradise Shop, Mr . Larry Ellis, Mr &: Mrs Caeser & Mrs William Bonito, Mr' & Monteiro, Cranberry Supermar- Mrs Daniel Botelho, Pe~ Ca,r;. ket, Ann McComiskey, Mr& vaIbo, Virgil W. Jansen. . ""'" ..- ... Mrs Fred McComiskey. ,Loufo H. Marshall, Mr &: llIIriJ J & E Realty' Company, Mr &; ~yr.oD Medeiros, Mary & Isabel Mrs James P. Walsh, Mr &: Mro, Mil,ler, Mr & Mrs George Pinto, .John McElroy, The McDermott- Mr &: Mrs Arthur Rabesa. Bernabei Family, Mr &: Mn 'George F. Rapoza, Manuel p~ John F. Burns. Rose, Mr &: Mrs Frank G. Souza. Friend; Friend, Marcel Poy- Mr & Mrs Manuel O. Souza, Mr ant, Friend, John Dellea. BE Mrs Tobey Souza, Mr & MnI . Mr &: Mrs James V. O'Connor" Francisco. Tavares. , . $20 _~. Capt. Francis Schellenberger., Mr & Mrs Manuel Bro~"lst Lt · Harold L. Baker CD.. 1\fr • James. R. Duval, 1lIInJ Hazel Mrs Lois Abrams, John Andradta Cashen. (Sandwich Rd), David Co.rre1lwI. Miguel Chantre, Mr & Mrs Michael P. Dutra. Peter Fernandes, Mr &: Mrs CorManuel P. Dutra, lIIIanuel Ie. Delius Sullivan. ' Ferreira, Walter Lucas, Char1tlll J. De Mello;;Manuel R.Reqello.;,., Elmer J!'. Ro~bins,' JQbn Co Roderick, Manuel R.' Soares, AaOUR LADY OF VICTOJilY ,: o ~. " $10 ' ~ony F. Souza. Joseph L. Tao-' .. , ' MarY ?,Beaudry, William, R. , vares. ,.' · Joseph 'R. Ta\tares,· David . Kelly. Teixeira, Arthur Veiga" ~ I Vieira. \ . '.' $ III i . j ,. . .•.. ST. JOHN THE BAPDm~ . ",$1'75 . E~wardAndersoD, JosepIIl Bento,' Antone Costa, .101m De Mr & Mrs john DeNadaL . CoSta Jr.,. John K Macedo. $50 ' . Abel Mello, George .,. De' Dr & Mrs Peter PWclnlni , Mello, Manuel F. D Meu.o, Frank . ,$15 , Moniz, Guy ·W. Nickerson. . Mr' & Mrs F!ederick W. Best: TheophiluSOlivei!-a. Clara 'R.,' $10 Mrs Gertrude C. Almeida, Pacheco, William De PODte, JulkI , Santos, Albert Soui:o, Ronald .J., 'Willia~ H;. Regan. . Souza. ' . '

"961

'.MJ.omas ,.Joy, ··Mrs ··:Marga'ret.E. O'Neill; ,Agnes Rogers,' Richard DeM.ello..' ," .

•"Mr &: .Mrs Vincent LeBlanch, Ellen Jackson, Mr &: Mrs John Roy, Twip Gates Hotel, Mr'&: Mrs Frank Dres,ser, Mr' &" Mrs Alfred Sankus, Mr & Mrs Malcolm MacDonald.

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Centerville

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Centr'a.l Village ';.'

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There's Not a·,. ,Hole a Carload"

Chatham

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G 'Af$Ul "ermano Oll.OOo', $5O " $Ill 'l Mr &:.'M~~' Arthur Cork~.AntoneG~:~u.za. , $40 " $10. Mr& Mrs John Cavanaugh.' >,.' Daughters of Isabella, Be1JnflNI , ': '$25: ", ';',' ...• Alwardt,Manuel S. Boni~, MaGMr &, ~rs Patri~" SuJ.l..ivan, .. ,.~:~~. Bote~~~ George .W. BUlb Mr & Mrs frank FlahertY, . Mr &' ' , " '., " . Mrs Rober:t Morley, Nickersoa·. ~an;uel Burg~~.JamesFranCQ, Lumber Co: . '.. . , ' : , Arlnda, .Furtado, Edward. Gr&:-, . ..... ~$20.> ,?am, l'Iarol~ G. ~aggendorff.' , Mr &: Mrs\ Leonard Fougere.' ,Rlliph KIdw,ejl; Antone .Ms!"Mr &: ~rs Kenneth :E:ldredge.,- shaI.!-.. Joseph Marshall, ~nto~ PrisGilla:' Gleason, .loSePh Nick~ Medeiros, Joseph.T..MedeIros. ersoQ, Mr' &,Mrs .lobo Speight, Salvador Me~eIros, Charles De Dorothy Harned. ',. ¥ello Jr., WIlliam De MeUq. '. . F.. . '$15 Agnea Mendoza, Matilda 'J!IB,.' Mr' &: Mrs::Godfrey Forgeron, randa., ,, .' ,. Mr &: Mrs Paul Courtnell,Mr & John B. ¥omz, Joseph. Motfila Mrs G. Mal'chessault Mr & Mre (Acapesket)" J~seph Motta.· ~: Georgi'! .Kille'!n, ~" &: ~ hank Nun~es, An~elo Pacheco. -~ Charles Bladen. Arthur PImental, John M.PS, $12 ~ental, Manl!el Rapoza Jr., WilAlice Dobbyn. liam Rapoza, Manuel P. Rezen-. $10 des; .~, " . ' .' " .' Robert McNeece Eleanor Mul'Manuel P. Romlza, FredP., phy, A Fr\end, A 'Friend, Fran- Rose, Jude C. Royals, Bel.mlre. ees LeBlanc. De, Souza, Irene Souza. Mr & Mrs Gilbert Surette'A : .loseph F So~ .Lucille Anne . II'riend, Dr & Mrs May, No;ma De. Souza, .ManUel'. De ~. Tuttle, Mr & Mrs Joseph Riley. Olive De So~ Helena Ta~ Mr & Mrs Edward Zibrat, Mr.' ,,' _~uel L:.Tavares,· Virginia &; Mrs P.' Confalone, ' Michael Tavares, Manuel Valadaca, ~ LeBar, Thomas Haley,Mr &: Mrs - ValerJo, Oscar ~~ .Joseph Stapleton. ' .. , '.... " . . '-", . Mr &: Mrs Thomas Sparks, Margaret Killen, Mr & Mrs Johm S'if. PATIUCJj[ BreaUlt, Mr L&!"MrsF: Stetiliii;i ',., "- ''1' $2M " '" 'Mr ~ Mrs Jopp)'fo1?Y.:d,e.,..! ,It,~. ~~.!J:,j~,.. .. .', . Mr & Mrs M. Klauser Mr & . ' $300. , ' Mrs Arthur Ndlan'.:Mr & Eli' ">'"k Fri~;,i," :.,,' Rogers, Mr &r·:[.VI.!S ~thur,KeIl\llY .... """ ,'. '.~ .""~ _~~~ "., . ,' ':" ",., Mr & Mrs William Keefe.' " . MIr & Mr.s Dani~ ~ Mr & Mrs 'F:' 'Fitz'gerald,' Mt&·, ;"", .....:",' '1' $50 '::""; ,.: _ Mrs George ,~Hlliyan, ,~& Jl4rn ,;: s'JpJl,e'(l .. Ba,t;ber.~. Be!l~"Shcl;;;o i', ,'.. George Stilliv:an, Mr & Mrn l.awren~e A!:itonellis. .' Joseph Orlantlo;' Mr & 'MrS' Ed'.. ,,'>"Edmund Sherinail.,· ,.. . :,,;, win Ferreria, Captain & .MnJ $M!1 .. Casey: ' . AEr-iend.·'· . Mr & Mrs Rob'ert,Ols()n;~&:':," ';':.....: $25, Mrs Burton Storey, Aime Cun';; :,; Elm 4l'ch Inn,. Mrs, Eileen. " ningham, Mr & Mrs A. CapricCio, 'Finnell,,~~argar~t' Groves, Boli' Jll[r & Mrs A. Kolodzik. ' 'i. ,.: Name Society, ': Keohane' Wino James Griffin, l.}i_r &' Mrs 'W:~'."'COinp~rih" '., ... : ,... .... ,.. ; Dallak, Mr & Mrs Theodore' .' . IYI('''&rMrs Edwin Medeiro~ Hyora, Mr & Mrs WilliamWh'ue" . Romiza~sj' Texaco Station, St. ~ Jll£r & Mrs M. Wright. Patrick's Women's Guild, Thomao Mr & Mrs Thomas, 'Corrigan, .. F. Maguire, McDonald's. Mr & Mrs Leo Farrenkopf, Mr .lerry's Bar. $20 &: Mrs Earl Nickerson, Mr & Mrs William Gaffney, Mr &: Mal Edward Kilkenny, Mr & Mrs John' Hughes, lliIk & 'MIs Donat Barabe. ' I

~5f'BOlLY REDEEMER

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!EvsrybC?dY' is farkiw:'gabout the, wonderful smooth texture .of Gold Medal Perl~d-Whipped Bre<KL" -It's so smooth l1 ~ llJIaliform - ' not a hoie in' a carloacL" Perled fob" sandwDch.s .dencious toasted -Gold Medal Oven-Fresh Bread is Perfed Beyond Compare.. ,

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...OVEN-fRESH DAILY at

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.NEIGHBORHOOD GROCER


Mil Parrahar, Tony eonso-

$!I

Because He Cared • • • Continued from Page EighteeJII

West Harwich HOLY TRINITY $100 Mr & Mrs Arthur Brady.

, $65

Ernest Links. $30 Richard & Wallace Wales.

$25 1141' & Mrs Edwin D. Vegliante, Mr & Mrs Walter Trainer, Holy Name Society, Ladies Assoc. of the Sacred Hearts, Mrs Dorothy Hewitt. J. M. Cloud, 1141' & Mrs LeRoy Long, Mrs. Charles Finley, Catherine Lane, 1141' & Mrs A. A. Miller, 1141' & Mrs Frank Carleton. 1141' & Mrs Charles Walsh, Mrs G. Wilson Smith; Doane, Beal & Ames, Inc.; Chatham Trust Co.

,

$20

1141' & Mrs Ralph Stevens, Mn Donald Steele, Mary H. Kelly.

$15 1141' & Mrs Robert Hennessy, 1141' & Mrs Richard Shea, Mrs Edith & Beverly Rice, 1141' & Mrs Clement Desaulniers, 1141' & Mrs John Merna, 1141' & Mrs Courtney Chase. o

$12 1141' & Mrs William Lally, 1141' & Mrs George Gardner, Mr & Mrs Arthur Carroll. $10 Mr & Mrs Robert Snow, Mr & Mrs Thomas McGuire, Mr &: Mrs Robert Bouvier, Mr & Mrs Herbert Carbonneau. Mrs E. Legros, Mrs AIda Lapham, Robert Henderson, CarltoD 'Maloney. Mrs Anna Gomes,. Mr & Mrs George Gomes Sr., Mr & .Mrs James Blute, Mr & Mrs William Stinson, Mr & Mrs Manley Boyce. 1141' & Mrs William Brady, !vIr & Mrs James .White, Mr & Mrs Arthur Keefe, Mr & Mrs Paul Bacon, 1141' & Mrs Moses Roderick. Mrs Clara Larkin, Mr &: Mrs Joseph Stacy, Mrs Joseph Connell, Mrs Alice Hughes, 1141' &: . Mrs Frank Sanborn. Ann Larkin, Mr & Mrs Joseph Galizio, Mr & Mrs Edwin Roderick, 1141' & Mrs John Raneo, Mr & Mrs Joachim Pena. 1141' & Mrs Domingo Rose Jr., Mr & Mrs Edwin Souza, 1141' & Mrs Julio Barrows, 1141' & Mrs Emil Bourgeois, Mr & Mrs Elliott Bryant. 1141' & Mrs William L. Snow, 1141' & Mrs John Powers, Mrs Robert Gott, Mr &: Mrs John Rose h., Mro & Mrs Robel't Chase. Mr &: Mrs Donald Strout, Mr &: Mrs C. Parker Whittle III, 1141' &: Mrs William Derwin, Charlet! R. Taylor. 1141' &: Mrs Joseph Barber, Mr &: Mrs Archie Bullock, Mr &: Mrs William Mahoney, 1141' &: Mrs Albert Davenport, Mr &: Mrs Richard Murphy. 1141' & Mrs Bemis Boies, Mr &: . Mrs Manuel Thatcher, 1141' &: Mrs' Frank Gomes, Mrs Beatrice Fonseca, Mrs Ruth D. Gomes. Mr &: Mrs Stanley Gonsalves, Mi- & Mrs James Mendez Jr., 1141' &: Mrs Joseph Gilmette, Mr. &: Mrs Charles Duffy, 1141' & Mrs Gerald Duffy. 1141' &: Mrs Clifford Wood, Mr & Mrs Roger Nunes Jr., 1141' & Mrs Antonio', Centeio, Marilyn R. Souza, Dr' &: 1141'6 Bernard Riley. Ml'S ..LtGertrude Murray, MN Ann Cronin,' Capt. William House, Mrs Peter Roderick, Mr &: Mrs Robert MacLean. 1141' & Mrs Wallace Raneo, Mr &: Mrs Thomas Cummings, 'l\/Ir & :Mrs Edward Cluett; Dr &: Mn E. Eagle, :Mr &: Mrs Law.renee Duffy. James Egan, Robert Healy, • .. Mrs Gerard Hawkins, • .-11 Mrs HeJ1ry Raneo, :Mr' &' lila William Robichaud. lII:r & M1"S Raymond ~ . . & Mn .John ADdersoD, Charles Bevans, )(r & Mrs Atvab :hila, Mr &: :Mftl CIiftOIl .AdamlI.

:Mr & Mn Jamea ~ ~ $20

Mr & Mrs Arthur Baronousky, Mr G Carlton Clark, 1141' & Mre Aa-thur Norris. ... . $15 :Mr & Mrs Edward Kinder. $12 Mrs Raymond Ertel, Mr &: Mrs Manuel Packett. ' $10 1141' & Mu :Roger Bassett, h., Mr & Mrs William E. Bohlin, l\Ifr & Mrs Edward Boyle, Mr & Mrs Lincoln Brogi, Miss Madeline C. Brown. Mrs Kimball Clark, Mr & MI'8 JO'seph E. Craffey, Mr & Mrs Robert J. Crowell, Mr & Mrs Arthur G. Dickey, Mr & Mm Warren Doe. Mr & Mrs Lawrence Doyle, M!r & Mrs Theo. B. Ellis, Mr & Mn Thomas Fox, Mr & Mrs FrankGaHant, Mr & Mu David Dod&don. Mr & }\;ks Geo. B. Holland, Mrs William 'Jones, Mrs Alma B. Kerr.igan, Mr & Mrs Thomas King, 1141' & Mrs Paul LaBrecque. Mr & Mrs Walter J. LaFreniere, M'1' & Mrs Richard G. La,Porte, Mr & Mrs George '1'. Linehan, Mr & Mon Walter .t. Linowski, 1141' &: Mrs .Frank E. Lodge. Mr & Mrs John Lombardi, Mr Joseph McAleney, Mr &: MIls Frank McCarthy, MiS6 Helen, Mullen, Miss Mary Nolan.' Mr & Mrs Ernest Nonnandin, Mr & Mrs Domenic Saccocia, Mr. Ernest Saccocia, Mrs Anna M. Unsworth, Mr & Mrs E. .t. Waldron. Mr. & Mrs Monte Zopatti, Mr Paul Zopatti.

iini, .Mr &: Mrs William MargaDella, Anonymous ~Sandwich), Sandwich Hardware (additional)

Provincetown ST. PETER $250 Rev. Leo J. Duan.

$60 Rev. Thomas C. Mayhew. $50 Dr Thomas Perry. Anonymous. $25 l\bs Lucinda Rose, Boat Shirley &: R9land. The Altar Boys, Catholic Daughters of America Court Provincetown 11851, Holy Name Society, K:nights of Columbus Walter Welsh CouncH, John e. Snow. Mr .&' Mrs John Ferreira, Anonymous, Judge & Mrs Rob_ A. Welsh, First National Bank of Provincetown, William B. 'Young Insurance Agency. $29 Chauncey Hackett. Mr &: Mrs Robert Silva.

$15 ' :Mr & Mrs Isador FerreiFa, Jho Daniel H. Heibetlt. ~10

:Bik &; Mrs Leo F. Gracie, Boat Jlaney' &: Debbie, Mr &; 1141'S" Joseph Dirsa, lVIal'ion Perl"Jl, Bessie Corea.

So. Yarmouth ST. PIUS TENTH

$220 Holy Name Society. $100 St. Pius Tenth Guild. St. Vincent de Paul Societ)l, Mr & Mrs John G. Doherty, Mr &; Mrs John F. Martin. $50 Mr & Mrs Harold Hayes.

$25 Mr & Mrs H. Ba,tcheldor" Doane Beal & Ames, Mr & Mrs . E. J. O'Leary, Mr & Mrs Paw E. Sullivan. Bass River Liquor Store Inc., Mr & Mrs Louis J. Catania, Mr & Mrs James H. Quirk. $20 RObinson Five-DQUar 9to1.'e.

$15 Mr & Mrs Charles Eae-. Erwin;s Pharmacy, Rita Cobb. $10 Daggett's Market, Mrs Jo}m Davidsort, Mr & Mrs Edmund Jr. Donlan, Mr &: Mrs Charles B. Ellis, Mrs Walter C. Hewins. Mrs Mary McCarthy, Sou. Yarmouth Hardware, :MI!e Charles Sullivan, Anna Tighe, Mr & Mrs Charles Webster. J3ass River Fish Market, BasfI River Gulf Station, Bass River Pharmacy, Mr &: Mrs ChesteJl' Deluga, Mr &: Mrs Thomatl Hague Sr.. Jepnings Oil Company, 1141' & Mrs Paul Johnson, Riverway Lobster House, Mr &: Mrs Edward Robinson, Wayside Studio.

Sandwich CORPUS CHRISTI $300 Rev. Ambrose Bowen.

$100 St. Vincent de Paul Society. $50

Sgt &: Mrs Robert Daugbters of Isabella.

Kenn~

Miriam Corea, Mr &: Mrs THE AN(I'f)~George Zuck, Mr &; Mrs Cyril Thurs., May 25, 1961 Pat:r-ick, Mrs Annie L. Silvia, & Mrs William H, Cabral. Mrs Rose Pedro. 1141." & Mrs Irving S. Rogere" 1141' & Mrs Frank Taves, RobMr & Mrs Ralph Medeiros, 114m ert Kelley, Mary J. Jacobs, Mr & John Edwards, In memory oil Mrs Francis E. Rogers, Mr & John & Mary C. Ferreira, B~ Mrs Howard Days, George Leyden, Mr & Mrs Little Infant. John F. Cook Jr., 1141' & Mrs Oll'~ean!i George Gaspa, 1141' & Mrs DenST. JOAN OlF ARC nis Aresta, Mrs Mary Browne. $52. Mr & Mrs Willis Carlos, Mr '& Maxirnillian Friese, Fran!l: Mrs Manuel Coelho, Mr & Mrs Sellew. Harold Soults, Mrs Alice Wil$35 liams. Joseph Gerald Gallant. Miss Mary M. Crane, Mr &: $20 Mrs George Silva Anonymous, Mrs William Quinn. 1141' & Mr;s William White, Louis Nicholas R. Marto. Cabral. $10 1141' & Mrs Edward Dahill, ' Edward O'Brien, John DelaMary E. Francis, Beatrice Welsh, ney, John Harrington, Henl7 Mr & Mrs Richard Veara, 1141." & Fitzgerald, John Connors. Mrs Manuel Avila. ' Charles Corbett, George Duffy J. Arthur Lopes, Anonymous, Sr., Joseph Courant, Stanley Mrs Lillian Dalpe, 1141' & Mrs, Smith, David Bessom. Clarence Kacergis, 1141' & Mrs Marcel Norgeot. Frank Pu~ Joseph Ferreira. pura, Leo Gallagher, Yvonne 1141' &: Mrs Warren C. Silva, Dane Backus. Agnes Bennett, Anonymous, Nickerson Funeral Home, Paul Anonymous, Anonymous. E. Nichols. Monument Fish Co. Inc., 1141." & Turn to Page Twent)< Mrs Edward Salvador Sr., Har,bour Lights: Mrs Mae O'Donnell" Admif~! Blue Sea Motel: Mr & Mrs ChesST. LOUIS (NC)-Rear tel' Kissiel, :8. H. Dyer Co. Edward C. Kenney, surgeon genMr & Mrs Thomas Francis, eral of the Navy, will speak June Mrs SIena Cross, Nickerson 3 at St.-Louis University's 143M Funeral Home, Anonymous, Mrcommencement exercises.

Speaker 4dm.

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NEW WAYS WITH' FOOD from Susan Shaw ..". an extra touch that makes shopping

more interesting at Stop & Shop!

$25

Mr & Mrs J. R. Greenhalgh" Francis Mackedon, St. John'si Catholie Women's Guild, Sorenti Bl'otheril.

'"

in Memory of Etlen It William

:Mel..aulblin.

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Stanley PerguSOll, 1WN, HeleIIl Perkins, :Mr . & Mn Charletl Goodwin, Williani Drummey, Mr . It Mrs Arthur Hallam. Mrs F1ted Comings,Mr &: MI'Il 'l'ldward Shay R., Mr &: MN Melvin Burns, Mr & Mrs Angelo Brwster ' . Dmlooica, :Mr & Mrs Lawrenee , IIIlIIAC1JLN.l' C()N()BPTJ0Jl :FitzGerald. $lOG Mrs Ralph MacKenzie, Michael ........,:Ralph W. Guida.. BalatyD, :NIl." &: Mrs Frank Tilion, Mr &: Mrs Cbarle.s WilliamG, $SCI 'ilhomas M(mtague. Bev ~ A. -..m, ȣ ' Mr &: Mrs John Creeron, Paw $25 . . AI :Ih'S Henry A.. CIt1J&b&n, Pelletier, Mrs Lillian Tully, ArIll' Ed88 B. Copel1, IIr Ji'TaDeiil thur F1abert,y, Mr &: Mrs ThoffisD ~:;:/;~ 01baDQ, [4

When you check .your Stop & Shop ad every week, doe't forget' to read the little assist we've included for you - to put DeW ideM ,'in ,yoW' me.als- to make your food planning easier. It's the "Kitcheft Talk" .column, pacJced with recipes and eooking tips by OW" 0WIl SueaD Shaw, a gal well qualified to p896 OIl the hints and ideas me's found through her experiences m her own home. 'this colUlllll is Often based on ,the weekly Stop & Shop "beet buys" - 10 why ftOt clip and save it to use now and nn the future? It's another eKtra touch. to make your meals more enjoyable - to, make your' \ food shopping more interesting at . Stop & Shop! We give Top Value Ad

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~20

THE ANCHOR-

William P. MacLean, Mr & Mrs John Goldrick, Catherine Mc-

Anthony S. Silva Jr., Antonio Fraga, qeo.rge Perry. William R. Martin, Gil A. Bettencourt, Armando Medeiros, Francisco A. Deniz, Alfred Rogers. _' John F. Parker, Joseph Mattos, Joseph E. Terra" Carlos Mello, ·John H: de Silvia. ' . George Ferreira, Joseph Car- ': dozo, Arthur, P .. Costa,. Jos.eph · Viejra Jr.j Mhu(G.o~~:l;" :,:'., . \ .Donald J: Enos; Johi'i. S:: Af,meida, ,Augus~ Varella,' Cai-lota Silva, Frank Cabral Jr. Arthur J. Mathieu Jr., Anto.nio .F. Costa .Jr., Ge.orge Martin, ·Augustus Avylla,', Clara . F. Duarte. Raymond Senechal, -Joseph P. Silva· Antonio Gonsalves, John "Card~za Jr., Joseph L. Mello.' , Joseph IGracia, Louis F. de Sousa, Henry Arouca, Josepn J. Vieira, Albert Andrade. • Malluel Faria St.;";' Josep~ Eno~. roll,

Thurs., May 25, 1961

Cabe.

".~JII'

~minued from Jl>3!ie Nineteen

T

a U111il {j'(j)fil HOLY FAM!LY • $25 .

.

. Dr & 'Mrs Richard Heywood,. St. Vincent De Paul. $20 Mr & Mrs Antonio J. Gomes " Family. $10 Stanley. Markowski, Larry Spidel, Henry B. Hall,Joseph.C. T'avares, Cornelius Murphy. I Lois A. King, Mr & Mrs Arnold Silvan, Edmund St.' Yves, John Gonsalves,. Richard Mal~ lette. Charles Simas, Frank M()n~es, Charles L. Kenyon, Helen Mitch-

ell HOLY ROSARY . $200 Franciscan Fathers, OFlVI Cony.

$50 Sowiecki Funeral Home. $25 -Mr & Mrs Jeff Hayes. $20

Franciszek Bielenda, Mr & . Mrs John Dubena, Edward T. ..... Julian , Mr.& .Mrs Russell Wood\ ward. $12 Mrs Felecia Kable, Mr & Mrs John Kokoszka. "

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, ST. MARY'S $100 .. Alan Cusick, Mr & Mrs William '1. Fenton, DrO. Arthur Nereo.:" , .$50 . • Dr ·John F. Mulhern, Kenneth ,Baker Family,. Dr. Charles &. Hoye.. '. . $30 . '. Mrs Mary E. Chaisty & Fam"; iIy. $25 . Margaret Neena'n, Mr &. Mrs Edward O'Gara, Dr John J. Gregg, Dorothy & Marguerite McManus, Emerson Moran. $20 Helen Laffan.

VISIT MEXICO SHRINE: The Star Spangled Banner rang out in th'e Basilica of Our Lady of Guadalupe in Mexico' City upon the recent visit of American Legio~ National Commander Willi~m R. Burke and Mrs. Burke of Los Angeles. Msgr.· Gregorio Aguilar presented them with the formal. greeting and blessings of the staff ,of the Basilica. NC Photo.

Mr & Mrs Hugh W. Flynn Sr., Mr & Mrs 'Casmir Zyskowski, John F. Vargus, Mrs Samuel McClellan, .Mrs Edna Lincoln. Mr & Mrs Francis Linnane, Mr & Mrs Robert Dewey, Margaret Slattery, Richard Smith, Mrs Jean St. Pierre. Joseph Grace, Robert Simmons, Richqrd. Flannery, Mr ~ Mrs Claude Simmons, ;Helena Raggett. Anne Reilly, Mary Reilly, Mr & Mrs Edward Callahan, Judith ,Makin, Patricia F Combs, Mr & Mrs Anthony ,White, The Fitzgerald Family, Mrs Ann' Sweeney, Mr & Mrs Frank 'Longo, Mr & Mrs Veto Stasunas. Mr & Mrs John. Haggerty, Mrs Margaret Rose, Mr & Mrs John Callahan, Marguerite Cronan, Marie Cronan, Elizabeth Doyle, Mr & Mrs James Wyatt. Mr & Mrs William Andrade, Mr & Mrs William Gorman, Mr &. Mrs James Leonard, Mr & Mrs Gerard Pigeon, Allan Colleran. Mr & Mrs Raymond Gauthier, Mrs Dorothy Short, Mr & Mrs FrederiCK Reams. Mary Murphy, Catherine Crowninshield, Catherine McMahon, Mr & Mrs John Brady, Eileen McMahon, Mary McMahon, Mr {It Mrs William Clemmey, Mrs 'Caroline Clemmey, Virginia Waldron, Mr & 'Mrs Charles Lynds, · Mr & Mrs Oscar Maynard, Mrs R. Harold Allen, Mr & Mrs Edward Cunniff, Mr& Mrs John T. Mahoney, The Gormley Family, Mr & Mrs John Devlin, Mr, & Mrs Joseph S, Rose. Mr & Mrs Benjamin Seekell Jr.; Mr & Mrs Theodore Belanger, Mrs Luke McBreen, Gertrude .McBreen Cornelius Field.. , Mr & Mrs William Campbell, Mr &' Mrs.' William F. Murphy Jr., Walter Waltman, Mr & Mrs Leo Fortin, Eugene Sullivan. . , Mr & Mrs'George E. Dion J1;., Mr'& Mrs Edwar:d Langille, Mr & Mrs Claude Cornaglia, Mr & Mrs Roland Renaud, Mr & Mrs JaJDes·H. Lynch. .' Mrs Harriet Mansfield, Claire Leddy, Mr & Mrs Louis Romani.

'Harry J. Gurney. Mrs Helen M. $10 $10 Mr & Mrs Leo Benoit, Mr & Harrigan, Katherine Hern. DIIr: & Mrs John Arcikowski, Mrs William ~Berry, Mr & Mrs Mr & Mrs Donald HigginbotDIll'. & Mrs Frank Arcikowski, . $15 Franklin _Brown. '1\41' - & Mrs tom, Mr & Mrs John F. Laffan, ,Mr & Mrs JoSeph Arcikowski, Joseph .& Eileen Gorman, Mr James Cassidy, ,Mr' & Mrs Leo Mr & Mrs Edward J. La Pre, Mr Mrs. Sophie Bednarska, l\!Ir & & Mrs James F. McMorrow, Mr Conroy. ' . & Mrs John Latham, Janice DIll'S Victor Bednarz. & Mrs Patrick H. Lyons, Wm. Raymond Corriveau, Mr & Lawlor: " Mr & Mrs Frank Biedalt, Mr Clifford, Mr & Mrs Daniel Joseph Demers,,' Raymond Di'Lawrence Lawlor, Mr &. Mrs & lYIrs Albert Biedrzynski, John Moran, Charles. O'Connell. . Resto,. Mrs Raymond. DiResto, Leo A. Lenii~ux, Mr & Mrs EdBobola, Mrs Bertha M. Bolster, . $12 Theodore Dupuis. ward J: Lynch, Mrs Frank Mr. & Mrs Herbert Cardoza. Jean R. & Ann C.·Levasseur. Mrs Theodore Dupuis, Yvonne Mafion, Mr & Mrs l"aul Maynard. "Mr & Mrs Edgar McAlooJ:!., Mr & Mrs Manuel Da Costa, $10. . Dupuis, John, F~tzgeJ;ald, Mr & DIll' & Mrs Robert Devlin,"Mr & John Alden, Catherine B'rady, Mrs Joseph L. Fontaine, Lt & Cha'rles . McCaffrey, Mr & Mrs Mrf Joseph Drewni~my, Mrs Margaret & Elizabeth Brady, Mrs William C. Hickey Jr. . Vincent McDenhott, Louise'Mc. Mada Dykas, Frank Dziub:ek. ," .Win. Brady, Thom~s Danahey. Raymond:!ette, Mr & Mrs Kenna, Francis McManus. . Grace' McManus, Mary Mc-' Mr & Mrs Lewis Fal.tlkner, Mr Dr Wm. Donahue, Lelia Duffy, William Kron, Mr & Mrs Rich& Mrs John Fornal, Mr & Mrs Paul Duffy; Mary,. Fitzgerald, ,'ard Kullas;,Mr & Mrs Raymond N.earney, . Mrs Mary McNUlty, Walenty GorcZyca, Mr & Mrs Winifred Flaherty.. ' " , LaBrie Edward Lamoureaux. ! Mi' & Mrs Russell Menard, Har- . old J. Morris:. ,~'." Walter Kosinski, Mr, & Mrs Mr~ 'Lewfs Gilbert; John Hal'.';' "'Jose~h S. Letourneau, Robert Stanislaw Koss. ' ' rica, Donald HOI)l1es,' Roberl' Moniga, Alice Olson, Harold J. May<,iell Murphy, Mrs Johq. E. : .. ~' ' . . '. ~. O'Cohnor,·.Mf & Mrs' Walter E. Mrs Magdalena Kudzia, Mr & - Doherty, Leo Gauthier. Olson;. Hugh Patenaude. 'ST:ANTIHlON'IY Mrs' Frarik Kusekowski. Mr & . ' .' "Daniel:Graciy, Robert Hanni-·,· Edmond· A. .. Poirer, David OiHern, Mfg' Louise'Parke'r, Mrs . Mrs Paul- Ladebauche; Johll 'ga'n, Matthew.: Johnson, EQward ... Rogers; Sa~uel Rondeau, Mr & Rayford Peterilpri. · $600 "Mrs Charles' Ponsler, . Mr & " ':at. Re~. Ma~uel J. Teixeira. Markowski, Mr' & Mrs Robert L. Kiernan, Mrs Edward Kier- ' Mrs Adjutoe St. Pierre, Mr & Mrs Edward Quegan,Mr & Mrs Wichols. nan. ..' ·Mrs Stanley Urban.- . $85 Mr & Mrs Walter Pelcz;arski, Raymon~ LamowoeaJ,lx, Loretta Mr & Mrs Edward JohI}son Sr., Peter Reilly, 'Mr &; ,Mrs klbert , , 'Rev_ Joseph Oliveira. lltIr . & Mrs Ernest Pellegrini, M, McHugh, Catherine McNa- Mol' & Mrs EdWllrd Johnson Jr., Ribeiro;, Mr & Mrs Francis Rit$50 chie. - .'. ' . , , Stanley Radwanski, Mr & Mrs ,;mara, Dall;iel & :a~rr~.l\4aghery,. Mr & Mrs Louis Bartel, Major & Rev. Rudolph Frick, A Friend Matthew Rozkuszka,' Me & Mrs Ernest Medeirc;>s. . Mr'sChaput, Mrs Helen <;,:ostello. Mr ~"Mrs William 'Sankey, Mr · of the Charities, Manuel FonMichael Rozowicz, '. Colin Menzies, 'William MulRobert Couto, Vivian Couto, &. Mrs John A. ::;hea, Mr & Mrs tinha: " Bronislaw Sienko, Mr i!t. Mrs' hem, David Murray, Christine Mrs William N. Crowley, Mr .& AlfredC. . Shearing, Ruth B. , $%5 .Joseph Si~nko, Mr & Mrs. Car- Nagle, Helen O'Brien.. ' Mrs John DeI,.ang, Chester Jack,;, . Smith, Christine Sullivan. .. · Joseph Abreau, Robert Menl'Q1l Slavick,' Severin' Sowie<;ki, Mrs. Ria O'Brien,' Walter man., 1IIfrs EdWard Sweeney; Nora · des. Mr' & Mrs M~~tp~~ Srocz~'ns~i. O'<;;O'nnell, lVIr&: Mrs ..l\l,Issell Mr & Mrs Eugene Lavigne, Mr Sweeney;' Me & Mrs Cornelius $20 Jan Stanek, 'Mr' & Mrs 'Walter' PeterSon, Gilbert j: Picard, Dan.. &;Mrs john' A. McRae, Mr &: W. "Tierney, Mr & Mrs Peter John Camara', ;John Evanoff. strojny, Mr & Mrs, Franci.sz~1l( "i~l' Ry.an ~r;~, ' -< . '. ~ . Mrs .Manuel. Mell~, Mr & Mrs Tino', Mrs" Leila M. ',I'raverse. · Charles Ferreira. Tabak; Me '& 'Mrs'Albert Ta-' Mrs ioseph 'Sheeban>Mi- &: Manuel· Oliveii-Ii, Mr ~. Mrs E!izabeth White, Paula White, . $15 Yal:es, Mrs 'Magdalena Tokarz, Mrs Francis' Silver;· Joseph P. Lewis H. Oliver. Mr & Mrs Harold' A. Yelle, Mr & Aristides Andrade, ESq. Mr & Mr~ Walter Zagol. 'Silvia,' WalterP. Smith, Rl.(t~l ~ Mr & Mrs John Schondek, Mrs Mrs Walter. J: DerJ?odY. Peter Nolan, ' Synan, Harvey Wilson Jr. . Arthur Sonnenberg, Francis $13 IMMACULATE CONCEPUON SACRED HEART - ~argaret. Behan, William Sullivan, Joan Sullivan, Mrs JQhn Coelho, $100 $25 . $10 Behan, Leo'·, I}erube, Lawrence' William Wanamaker, Joseph St. 'Vincent ·de }3aul Society Mr & Mrs john Doyle, Mrs Callahan,' Wi~iam Cameron. Witschey. . Mary Amaral, Antonio Abrwn, Sacred Heart 'Conference. Remington Elting, Dr.& Mrs Anibal Antunes, Raymond BeauMarion ~. C,ampbell, William, . Kathleen Field, Robert Labrie, $25 . A. J. Leddy. Chamberlam, John : Connors, Thomas Noonan. Mr & Mrs Louis V. Cook, Mr lieu, Manuel Camara. $20 Henrietta' Carvalho,. Raymond S'1' JOSEPH . at Mrs' Vincent Makin. Mr & Mrs H~nry Wotjunski. Joseph Coyle, Ruth D!as.. Robert ,Dias, Helen, D.9n~hue, . $200 I . Coute, Antone Da Costa, josep.h Mr & Mrs Victor Silva, Mr & $15 De Costa, Joseph Enos. Donovan, FmneV· ' k H • Hurley. Mrs Robert McClellan. Cornelius Kelly, 9eorge AnnaAlb · dEdmund tt ' ery R ev. Pa trIC John Clement Faria, .. John gan,. ,ert Gau e e.. ' ..' , $100' $20 i.ovely, Mrs Donald MacLean. WIlliam Grant, Robert Hill, R C l' J O'N 'Il H 11 Fernandes, Charles Fostin, Mr & Mrs Lidiono Severino, $10. .•.. Margaret 'L: King, '. Charles ev. o~ne lUS. el, 0 George Furtado, Eleanor Gay. Mr & Mrs J. Frank Doyle. Mr & Mrs Raymond Andersen, Kingsbury Ann Laughlin' Name Society. John George, Antone Gomes, ,. ' $50 . Mrs John Avery, Mrs A. 'Beau$15 ,Dorothea ,Laughlin, Gertrude A t · Guild W It G George Gomes, Esq,t> Antone Mr. J., ·Francis Cronan. lieu, Mr &. Mrs Edmund Bren.,. ·,Lawlor" Alice McKenna; Mr &.. . ssump a , a . er . Gasper, Louis Lima. • . Mrs JOseph. Hayes. nan. James Carr. -Mrs John McKenna Ruth Mc-' Powers. Jesse Linhares, Caesar Cor$35 ~:a2 Nil' & Mrs Leo Carter, Mrs K·enna. ' , "reia, Bella Medeiros; Mary .. Mr 8£ Mrs George Manning. John .Reilly.- .. Edwin Devine: Mrs 'Eileen Susan McKenna, John McMorey, The. Nunes Family. .. '$25 Mr & Mrs- .Francis Andrews. Gorey, Eugene Dufour, ·Eugene Namara,' Elizai>eth Malo, Emery Albert Patenaude, Edward $10 '. Gorey. Mr & Mrs Edward F. Kennedy. . ..' Malo, Sarah Maloney, Mildred Maurice Lagaee.. Mrs Anna ,S!Jllivan" William Perry, Leonard Rocha, Alfred Mr & Mrs FranCIS Harrigan,. Maxwell, Mary Moriarty; Fran- .Dr' &' Mrs Rose, Vasco Teixeira. . .'$20' SuJJiva~, Mr & Mrs Edmund Mr & Mrs Frank 'Hoffman, 'Mr & ces Morrison, Irene'Monison. · JlUDi!S T. Thomas, Prank Vu, Waldron, Helen ~hea, Mr & Mrs Mr & Mrs Joseph Caiozzo, Mrs George Horan, :Mr ~ Mrs " William Murphy, ~ Barbara' Gabriel Vieira. Edward Ladebauche ~r,.~ ~r~ . O'Brien, Edmund O'Brien,. Janet Helen Dahill,Mlll'ibeth Dahill, Raymond Knott. Antone Abreau, Angelo M . . Mr. & Mrs: Edward Pietnik, Mr & Mrs Arthur G. Souza. \Henry Legere... . O'Brien, Anna M. Phillips. ' Barboza, Anthony DeStefano, $15 . Mrs Mary Bullock, Me &; Mrs' Su~an. McGwre, Mr. & Mirs 'J. Joseph Quigley, James Reid. Arthur Duarte, &; Mrs Rob-- John Ferreira, Serafin Ferreira. Charles Lawlor. ~cKlttr!ck, ~rs Damel Moor~, -.. Joseph Scarano, Richard Smer-' Vincent FurtadO, Antone 1. , $10 ert Frates, Mrs Mary McDerRI~hard Mulcahy, Mrs, Cecelia don. Mrs Ric'hard Smerdon. Marshall, Antone Muniz, James mott. . Mr & Mrs Amalio Annunziato, Redly. . . . ,Joseph ·Tavares, A,rthur TraMr ~ -Mrs Duane Allison, Mr RuscOni. MI' &. Mrs. Hugo Riva, Mr & vet's, Michael Welch,. Grace Mr & Mrs John Annunziato, Mr '!'arM to Page Twent,-oae &. Mrs 'Anthony Arena, Mrs Har- • Mrs Albert'Berard, Mr &; Mrs, Mrs Edgar Vogt, Mr & Mrs Wal- Wilbur,:Helen Seaver. old Be~son, Mr. & Mrs J.esse Bet- John' Br~ga Jr., Mr &; Mioa Fran,;. ~r Wade,. Mr & Mrs ,Salvatore Cis ~erry,.Mary Kiley; Matta, Mr & Mrs' Raymond tencourt. • ST. PAUL . Yelle. 0 BEFORE YOU Mr .& ,Mrs· Andrew Boylen, .Mr Mr & Mrs James F. Carmody,' '$fjO Mr & Mrs Joseph Chamberlain, &: Mrs· Bruno Alegi, Cbarles BUY Mr & Mrs Arthur Benoit. OUR LADY OF LOUR.DES Mr '& Mrs Arthur Chassey, Dutr~, Mr &: .MJOS Man'uel Re$35 "$25 Misses Cosgrove; Mr & Mrs Ed- bello Jr,; Mr & Mrs William Mr & l'ars Hector Demers. Virgil KirkIand. Vaillancourt. ~ ward Dahill.. " $25 $20 Anna Fenton, Helen Fenton, Mrs Lydia Moore. Mr &: Mh Albert Dickinson FamHy. George Macomber. CZlo)' Folcik, 'Mr & Mr~ John Me Mr & Mrs·Omer Frappier, Mr & $12 $15 . . Mrs. Henry. S. Furtado Sr., Mrs Morrow, Mr & llIh'a Ernest J.. OLDSMOBILE Frank Phillipe. Me & Mrs Salvatore. Spinelli. Ethel Gallagher. Mador, Mrs- Adelaide Carney. Ofdsmobile..Peugot-RenauJt $10 $12 Mr & Mrs Robert Gilmore, Mr Mrs Howard Chadwick, JOO1:I f1J M!4Icfie .SUOOt. S'Ql!'havCn Frank R. Pero, Joseph Med«;iEileen & Mrs Edward Hench¥. & Mrs William Gregg, Mr & Mr-B 11. McCarthy FamiJ,J, ME & NlfJ:s . . 'r

Mr.:

m PARK

MOTORS

.


Because He Cared • • • •

l

Continued from

'

,

P~

Twenty

Fall River ST. ANNE

$75 Dr & Mrs Paul DeVillers. $50 Mr & Mrs Aime Giroux. $25 Loretta G. Fillion, Marguerite & Blanche Gendreau, Francis J. Martineau. '$24 Mrs Leona O'Neil. $20 Mr & Mrs Reginald Bellerive, Dr & Mrs Alphonse Poirier, Mr & Mrs William St, George. $15 Adelard Gauthier, Mr & Mrs Paquette. $12

Mr & Mrs Benoit Canuel. $10 Mr & Mrs Russell Beaulieu, Mr & Mrs Alfred Bolduc, Mr & Mrs Louis Bouchard, Arthur Bourgeois, Edilbert Brault. Mr & Mrs Armand Chenel, Miss Leonie Couillard & family, Dr Adelard O. Demers, Mr & Mrs David Driscoll, Mr & Mrs Joseph A. Dube. Bertha Duclos, Mr & Mrs Albenie E. Dupont, Beatrice FoIster, Mr & Mrs Georges Fournier, Agnes Guy. Mr & Mrs Paul Hamel, Mr & Mrs ,Hector Lachance, Mr & Mrs Romeo Lachapelle, Mr & Mrs Henri J. Lambert, Mr & Mrs Henri Lapierre. Mr & Mrs Raoul Lemieux, Mr & Mrs Thomas J. Levesque, Bertha Martel, Mr & Mrs Reul Martel, Ruth E. McHugh. Mr & Mrs Andre Messier, Octave J. Morneau,' Mr & Mrs Albert Ouellette Mr & Mrs Joseph Paquet, NIl' & Mrs Edgard Ross'. A. Silvia, Cecile Sutton, Mr &: Mrs Ernest Talbot, Bernadette Thibault, Lucette Cardinal. Mr & Mrs Andre Giroux, Romeo Paquette, A Parishioner (3). Elisa Arpin, Mr & Mrs Louis Beaulieu. Alfred Bernard, Mr & Mrs Edw,ard Berube, Mr & Mrs Georges Bouchard, Mrs Helen Boucher & family, Mr & Mrs . Joseph Bourassa. Rosilda BrOdeur, Mr & Mn Joseph Cabral, Mrs Theodore CarvalhO, Marie D. Dailey, Mr & Mrs Ernest Dupre. Mr & Mrs Robert Fay, Eva A. Girard, Mr & Mrs Honoriu8 Goddu, Mr & Mrs James Harrington, Mr & Mrs Rene Lachapelle. Mr & Mrs R~ger Landry Adeline Lavault, Mr & Mrs Albert Lavoie, Mr & Mrs Norbert Martineau, Mr & Mrs Aurel Michaud, Mrs R. Pelletier, Muriel Roy, Joseph Yokell. Mr & Mrs Elie Dolbec, Mr &: Mrs Edouard Melanson, Adele Ouellette. Mr & Mrs Thomas Clegg, Joseph COUlombe, Mr - Mrs Maurice Grandmaison, Mrs Joseph Lannon, Mr & Mrs Henri Lescault, Anne-Marie St. Denis. ST. JEAN BApTISTE

'

$200 Rt. Rev. M. P. L. Lariviere. $100 Rev. Donald E. Belanger. $75 Henri Demers. $60 Rev. Maurice R. Jeffrey. $52 Jean Demers & Family. $50 Marie-Ange & Alma Rouleau.. $25 Antoinette Michaud, Aurele Charest & Family, Aurore ,. Edna Clement. $20 . Armand J. Thiboutot, Alfred Berube, Andre Carrier, Arthur. Gauthier, Louise Lavoie. $15 Ernest Haslam & Family, Odi:: Ion Ouellette & Normand, Philias Ouellette' & Family, Albert Dufresne & Family. $14 Octave Fluet & FamilY'~ $13 George Chabot. $12 Vincent Campbell. $11

Albert Deschenes &: PQmi~ $10 , Yves Coulombe, MI'll Adrienne Theriault. Alfred Laroche, M-

tbur Vidal, Mrs Alfred Desmarajs & Family. , Francois X. Deschenes, Omer Brisson, Ernest Ouellette, Armand Desmarais Sr., Maplewood Window Cleaning Co. Matthew ~abecki, Ovide Talbot, Pauline Talbot, Ronald Duval, Mrs Charles Michaud. Thomas Tache, Alfred Bernier, Ann Guilmette, George St. Amand, Mrs Benoni Goyette. Aime Goyette, Leo St. Amour, Friends, Oscar Phenix, Mrs Anna Filiatrault. George Casavant, Louis R. Bouchard, Donat Lapointe, Manuel Correa, Cora Ploude, Donat Blanchette. Arthur Audette & Family. Mrs Muriel Gamache, George Boisvert, Albert Ross, Mrs Ellery Chace, Armand Gauthier. Oscar Parker, Edward Sullivan, Roland Pilotte, Mrs Clovis Mayrand, Mrs Ovide ,Pilotte. Lucien Laroche. Louis Chouinard, Albert Ouellette, Alphonse St. Pier-re, Joseph Laroche. . Mrs Yvonne Gagnon, Joseph' R. Casavant, Alfred Gagnon, , D;nerie Bergeron, Napoleon PIcard. Dr Alfred Brodeur, Albert Blanc.hette, Mrs Henri Belanger, MaUrIce Belanger, A Friend. Diana Vidal, Aphter Dauphinais & Family,' Dr J. Donat Milot, Edward Ouellette, Mrs Francois X. Vaillancourt. . PaUl Casavant, Eugene Gagnon, Wilfrid Desforges Honore Carrier, Arthur Bizier.' Gilbert Fiola, Wilfrid Bourassa, Roland Lamarre, Alfred Caron, Abel Morin. ' Joseph Lavoie, Raymond' Francoeur, Ovila Caron, Louis Goyette, Philippe LaFrance. ,Armand Theroux, Albina & Alena Florence, Bertrand Parent, Edmond AUdette, George Legault. Lionel Desrosiers, George Talbot, Oscar Mar~el, Cleophas Lauzon, William Letendre. Henry Raymond, A Friend, 'Leo Sullivan, Omer Blais, Lorraine Lavoie. Joseph Dionne, Leonidas St. Laurent & Family, A Friend, Maurice Dore, Albert Laberge. Leo. Thibault, Adrien Baraby, Jean-Baptiste Ouellette, Edmond St. Michel, Joseph LaFrance. Armand Gagnon', Lionel De&- chenes, Charles Lapointe, Ruesell Roy, Rene LarOcque. David Duval, Emile Duval, Raymond Melanson, Bertrand Lepage & 'Family. Armand Desrosiers. Philippe Clement, Donald Desilets, Albert Talbot, Rene Mail- ' loux, Daniel Marchand. ,Royal Ledoux, Susanne Lan_ dry, Wayne Copass, Charles E. Lavoie & Family; Joseph Landry. Lionel Dupont, Hubert Giblin, Mrs Wilfrid' Lecomte.

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fait River-Thurs. May 25, 1961

"

CLOSED TUESDAY, MAY 30th Super Markets Open until, 9:00 P. M. Monday ~ May 2.9 0

Freshly-cut f~om ,the finest "Choice" grain fed beef

ROA T

BONELESS

CHUCK

.c.

LI

53c

LB

79c

Choice Steer Be'ef - Boneless - Tender, Tasty

SHOIILDER ROAST 100% Choice Beef - Ground Several Times Daily

GROUND CHUCK Tender Pieces of Delicious Choice Beef STEW BEEF

59c 65c

La

La

--PRODUCI ·SPECIALS THIS WEEK-END!-A Lip-smacking Treat - Red Ripe, Ful of Juice

WATERMELON

L87c

and Tender - TIght Green Heads B:roccoli Fresh BUNCH 23c Serve with Your· Sunday Roast - Delicious Washed and Cleaned ~LLO 19c Spinach Cook Ready Red Ripe - Vine Matured, C:~O' 19c Tomatoes , A Salad Favorite Variety Texas Onions' Bermuda 3 B~G, 25c Mild to

Same Low Self-ServfcePricel in Allsi_ In This V'tcinity - (We Reserve tIie Right to Limit Quantities)

Swansea

,

ST. DOMINIC

nOO

Mr & Mr-s Robert DUBfl. $10 Mr & Mrs Carlton Greenhalgh, Miss Claire Lapointe. ST. LOUIS DE FRANCE . $10 Franco - American Womada ClUb Inc., Joseph Belanger. ' Mr & Mrs Roland Goddu. OUR LADY OF FATIMA , $400 Rev. James F. McDermott,$25 Our Lady of Fatima Women-'w GUild, Holy Name Society 01. Our Lady of Fatima Church.' $15 Kathleen Kennedy, Mona Keqnedy, Mr & Mrs Raymond .L. Wilson. $12 Mr & M1"s ArthurF. Tui'cotte. $10 Mr & Mrs Arthur A. :Beaupre, Mr & Mrs Nicholas A. DeMarco, Mrs M. Francis Donovan, Patricia Donovan, Mr & Mrs Peter Geiewski. ' , Mr & Mrs Daniel F. Henry.. Mr & Mrs Frederick J. Lord, Mr & Mrs\Leon J. Menard, Mf' & Mrs Andre G. Michaud, MT & Mrs: Manuel Miranda, Mr & Mrs Jack R. McCormick.

No COUpon OIl Items Below!

25 25

EXTRA

50 50

EXTRA

,

,

251"50 ! ',-'

\25 -

--

'J."JI. GMen Stamps!

When

You Buy A 1 L8 PKG

FRANKfORTS - Finast - 'SkinleSlS

--;~,.,

Jo1tJL .

With Purchase of One - 15 02 CAN

EXTRA J.~ Green Stalnps! GINGER ALE

10D

EXTRA

GREEN STAMPS

'When You Buy A 6-Pack ANAST

,

Vineyard Hav~n

ST. AUGUSTINE $10 Mr & Mrs Francis MeteD. Group Commander & Mrs Isadore Sousa, Mr & MI'S George Beauchemin, Miss Carolyn CoDrellus. Tum to ~ 'l'wenty-t_

21

Johnson' 5 HOLIDAY CAR WASH WITH THI5 COUPON

Good through Monday, May 29

end A~l Popular FtaVON,

J.'1I. Green Stamps!

When You Buy A FtNAST.

'

,PINEAPPlE PIE

EXTRA

J.4'JI.

Green Stamps!

When You Buy A 10

0%

STUffED OliVES Anast -

EXTRA

JAR

Lge. or SmafI

J..". Green Stamps!

When You Buy A 1 Lil CELLO PKG

CHUCKLES Candy Jellies

6 Varieties

EXTRA' J.1tJl. Green Stamps!, ,When You Buy A lV. LB JAR

FINAST PEANUT BUTTER

EXJRA

J.o4'Jl. Green,Stamps!

When You Buy A 1 Lil CELLO PKG

SALlED PEANUTS =: Finast =: Jumbo

-- ~--- ~ . ;-_.

---

-' -~ •. ------~--:.

-- -------_. -' - .... -'

5

EXTRA J.~. ~ GREEN STAMPS

With Purchase of One - ! LB TUB - FROlEN

"VQ)r" Garden

STiAWlnR~irE$

WITH THIS COUPON

Good through Saturday, June 3


22

Mrs Daniel E, Francis, Mr & Mrs Norman Langlois, Francis A. McNulty. Charles Normile, Mrs Corinne Petit, Mr &, Mrs' Charles Reed, ;,~'" o~, ,,~~ .. ~:~7rtl:"_~'~:~7· ;':$:~ :1~ William Reed, Mr & Mrs John Cotinued from Page T~eJlty-one T. Regan. Mr & Mrs Karl Schenk, Mr & ~@~f«llfi'd Mrs 'John Tomlinsbn,M.r & Mrs John'F. Walsh, Mr & Mrs BenST. HlEDWiG jainin Wil1lon, Mary Winn. , $10 Mr & Mrs Kenneth Andrews, Esther Waskievyicz. Mrs Elizabeth Barrett ~ Mrs Rose Hutton, Carole Boudreau, ST; llnYACllN'll'lHl Mr & Mrs Louis Boudreau, Mr .& $60 Mrs Thomas Callahan. ' Rev. Herve Jalbert. - John Downey, Mr & Mrs John $10 William Furtado, Albini. Hotte, Downey,' Patricia Downey, Mr & Delia Trahan, Andrew Bdba, Mrs Roy Edwards, Ha~riet H. Hart.' 1 Raymond Rainville. Hughes A.Desautels, Roland ...., Mr & Mrs John Hartley, Mr & Toyfair. ~' Mrs 'Edward Hayes & Family", Mrs Evelyn Levesque, Mr & Mrs ST. JAMES Ambrose McCoy, lVIr & Mrs Har$100 old Mills.' ' Henry McAvoy., Mr & Mrs Edward Pacheco, $i5 Mrs Helen A, S. Ross, Mr & Mrs Monsignor Noon Circle. Herman Saunders, Mr &. Mrs $55 John Wilkinson, Gene Vermette. Rev. Thomas E, O'Dea. Mr & Mrs Eug~ne Lorenco, $50 Lillian Killorarl, Mr .&', Mrs Mrs John Duff,·l.V!r &: Mrs George Pimentel,' Mrs Theresa' Louis Coholan. Weedall. .' , ' $40 The Cawley Family. ,' ST. JOHN THE BAPTIST $30 '$50 Anna Meehan. Mr'& Mrs ~illiainMcGraw,M. $25 • C. Swift & Co. ' Mr & Mrs John C. Martin, Mr $25 ' It Mrs James Bolton, Mr &, Mrs Mr &' Mrs Joseph Dias, Dr &: Fred Brotherson, Claire Ji'ortier. Mrs Norbert Fraga, Dr & Mrs Helen Crowley. Mr George Norbert V. Perry, Dr & Mrs ManSwansey & Catherine Swansey. uel Souza. " ' : $20 Dr. & Mrs Manuel F.DeMello, Mr & Mrs Francis Baptiste, Mr & Mrs Joseph Sylvia & JoMrs Wright Bolton III, Mr & seph Jr. Mrs Arthur Macedo, Mr & Mrs $20 Matthew McAvoy, Mrs Wiliam ,Mr & Mrs Norman Lepire. Norse. In Memory of Augustine &:' Mr & Mrs George Sheehan,' Olympia Gonzales, Mr & Mrs AIMr & Mrs Liriden 'Worden, Mar-, fred Perreira. ' garet M. Burding, M. Agnes $15 Ellison. Mary & Alic'e Fagan, Mr & Mrs A Frieind, Mr &: Mrs ,Luke ,Gilbert Ferreixa, Mr & Mrs Jos. Smith. . .Flores, Mary ~ewis, Mr &r. Mrs _ $15 Joseph M. Souza, Fl'1l11k C. SanMr & Mrs Christopher J. t08 Jr. Baines & Elizabeth A. Baines, $" Mary E. Foley, Genevieve MurMr & Mrs Julio Alfonso, Mr &: ray, John Quinn. Mrs Manuel Alves, Joseph Avila, Mr & Mrs Everett L. Emery. Mr & Mrs Manuel Botelho, Mr &:~ $12 Mrs J. M. Boyle. Mr & Mrs Gerald O'Brie,n. Mrs Edwin Brock, Mary Cable, $10 Mrs Bemvida Caldas, Mrs EvanMr & Mrs Patrick' Baker, Mr gelina Cabral, Mr &: Mrs Joseph &: Mrs William E. G. Batty Jr:, Cabral. . Mr &: Mrs Richard Carreiro, Mrs' Mary Bauer & John Jr., Mr &: Mrs Joseph A. Bettencourt, Dr & Mrs Antonio deCastro, Mr Mr & Mrs Damase Bouchard. & Mrs Arnold F. Conde,Mr &: Mary Boyle, The Brennan Mrs Herman Condez,Joseph Family, Mr &: Mrs James E. Correia Jf. Brocklehurt, Mr& Mrs John Mr & Mrs Edward Costa, Mr &: Buckley, Mr & Mrs Archie Mrs Albert David Davidian, Mr Cadieux. ' & Mrs Edward DayS Sr., Mer &: Mr & Mrs Antone Camacho, Mrs Alfred deCosta, Mr &: Mra Mr & Mrs Leo Caron, Palll Antone DeMello. Caron" Mrs Dorothy Chapman, Antonio M. deMello, Mr & MrS Mr lit Mrs Stephen Collins., Joseph Deschenes, Miss Lucy E. Mr & Mrs Antone Costa, Mr &: Dias, Mr & Mrs Charles W. DuMrs Charies K. Edmundson, Mr ponte, Mr ,& Mrs Bernard Dutra. & Mrs Mile L. Fa>;, Mr_ & Mrs Miss Theresa Ferreira, Mr &: Michael Feeley, Mr & Mrs Pat- Mrs Manuel Ferreira, Mr & Mrs rick E. Foley. George Ferro, Mr & Mrs Stanley Mrs Thomas Galligan, Mr & Franczyk" Mr & Mrs Arthur Mrs Alexander Gonsalves, Mr & Freitas. Mrs James Hampson, Eugene Mr & Mrs John R. Furtado Jr. Hayes, Mr & Mrs Arsene Houle. '&; Family, Vincent & Uzurinda Agne~ Kearney, John J. Kear-' S. Furtado, Mr & Mrs Angelo ney, Mrs Maria' Kearney; Mrs Fraga, The Garcia Family, Mr Mortimer Kennedy, Stella Lam- &- Mrs John Gonsalves. balot. . David Goulart, Mr & Mrs Mr & Mrs Manuel F. Louro, ,Lewis Goulart, Mr & Mrs Frank Mr & Mrs Paul Marshall, Mr & Gracie, Mr & Mrs Manuel HoMrs Delor Martin, WiliamT. men, Mr & Mrs Frank Jason Jr. McAvoy, Mr & Mrs Kenneth Mrs Flausina Lemos, M,r & Mrs McAuliffe. " ndefonso Lemos, Claudia Lewis, Mr & Mrs Timothy F,. McCro- Mr & Mrs Charles R. Macedo, han,Mr & Mrs Frederkk Mul- Mr & Mrs Edward Machado. cairns, Alice Murphy, Mr & Mrs Mr & Mrs Frank Machado, Charles Nichols" Mrs Joseph Mrs Francisco Maduro, Mr & Perry. Mrs Manuel C. Martelw, Mr &: Mr & Mrs James E. Pettey, Mr Mrs Joseph O. Martin, M4' ok -& Mrs ArthUr Ponsart, Mrs John Mrs 'Ernest Meades. . Ponte, Mr & Mrs Manuel Rapoza,' Mr & Mrs Calvin Medeiros, Mrs Patrick Rockett. MT' & Mrs Charles Medeiros, Mr Mr & Mrs Richa~d Rostron, & Mrs John Medeiros, Mrs MaI',Patricia Russek, Mr & Mrs Medeiros, Ralph Medeiros. Joseph Ryan, Mr & Mrs Timothy Mr & Mrs Frank Mello, Mr &: Shea, Mr & Mrs GustavusSlater. Mrs Guilherme Mello, Mr & Mril Mrs Ann Splaine, Mrs Virginia Lewis McDonald" Mr & MT's A.nStarbuck, Mrs Elsie Starre, Mr thony Neves, Mi- &: Mrs Jose & Mrs Albert Stephenson, Mr & Oliveira.. Mrs Stephen Stupalski. Mr John J. Oliver, Mr &-MN , Julia Sullivan. Patricia sum.. Walter Oliver,' MI'S Alice Pavan, William Sulliv'an, Mrs Don- checo, Mr ,& Mrs John Pateak~ aId Swan, Mr & Mrs George Mr & Mrs Gilbert Pedro. ", Sylvia. ' M r s Caroline Perry, Mr & MN Mr & Mrs Vincent Sylvia, Ml' Edmund V.' Perry, Mr &; Mn It Mrs Walter Szwaja, Mr & Mrs Emanuel Perry, Mr & Mrs ErnWilliam Tavares, Mrs Anna, Tayest Perry, Mr &; ~ GElQlI8e lor, Mr. & Mrs Leo Telesmanick. Pimental Celia White, Mr & Mrs DunMr Joseph Rebello, Mr &; MIla stan J. Whitlock, Mr &, IyIrs Joseph Reheiro, Mra Aliee SaLeonard Almeida, Elizabeth & manica, MT' &; Mr-s Albino SanAna May Ball. Mr. & Mrs Joseph tos, Mr &; Ml'fI Wil1iam R. Serpa. Bender. MI' Ernest SUva, Leopoldina Mr & Mrs William DesRuisSilva, Mr &; Mrs AMero Soares, 8e81.1, Joseph L. Fournier, Mr & l\1k &; M1lS ~,~ _ THE ANCHO~, Thurs., May 25, l~~!

'\; ·,,~~:'''·'f·~~Mi~),iJ~ N@w

&: Mrs Herve Berube, Mr & Mrs

Lindsey Collins, H. T. Dahoney, Mr & Mrs Arnold Ma,ngham. Mr & Mrs Michael Martin, Mr . & Mrs Roland Rivet, Mr & Mrs Timothy Quill, Mr & Mrs Stanley Barboza, Mr &' Mrs Henry Bishop. . Mr & Mrs Francis Cairns, William Clarke, Mrs T. William Clynes, Mr & Mrs Alfred Coutu,. John W. DempSey. ' Beverly Hogan, Mrs Laura Hogan, Mr & Mrs J. Kling, Mr '& Mrs L. Lamarre,' Timothy Lawlor. M. Louise & Eleanor Ledvina, Mr & Mrs E. Ledvina, Mr & Mrs S. Marry Sr., Mrs E. D. Murphy, Helen Murphy. . Mr & Mrs George Oliver, Mr &: Mrs Gerald Roche, Peter Roche, Mr & Mrs A. Santos, Mrs Katherine Sherman., , Mary Smith, lsabe.lle Sullivan, Joseph Sullivan, Mary Sullivan, Lillian Tablas. Mr & Mrs Primo Tarini, Mr & Mrs Albert Taylor, Mr & Mrs MASS FROM WHEELCH,AIJ,l: Father Simon Forester, F. Toletti, Mr & Mrs E~ward Varsel, Mr & Mrs W. Whalen hospitalized 'for 42 years with polio, reads in' his room at" Jr., Mr& Mrs Ray Weber. Santa Rosa Hospital, -San Antonio! Texas. The 87~year-~ld . Mrs Leonard Whitehead, Mr priest rolls himself in a, wheelchair to say Mass tWIce &: Mrs Glenwood Wilbur. Charles Balponi, Mr & Mrs weekly in the hospital chapel. NG Photo. Charles Bramwell, Mrs W. Chapman , Mrs Elsie R. Doyle, Mrs , Albert Henriques,Mr & Mrs Glewnies & Mrs John C. Souza., Emerson. Manuel Souza, 'Miss Marie Benjamin Hesford, Mrs Margaret Edward J. Foster, Mr & Mrs Souza, Miss Mary Souza, Ervin Holstrom, Mr & Mrs Raymond Fred Fredette, Mr & 'Mrs Wm.-J. R. Spach, Mr & Mrs, Arthur M. Hubert.. Fury, Charles H. Greeder, Mrs Mrs Annie' Kenney, Mr & ¥rs Fred Morang. Sylvia. . Miss Elsie Sylvia, Mr & Mrs Edward ,Knowles. Mr & Mrs Mr & Mrs Francis Smith. Joseph Sylvia, Mr & Mrs Joseph Joseph Knowles, Mr & Mrs KenC. Sylvia, Mr & Mrs Ernest neth Knowles, Mr & Mrs Donald ST. MARY'S LaFond & Son. Tavares, Mr John ,M. Tavares, $100 Mr '& Mrs Edward Lang, Mr Sr. ' , Mr & Mrs Francis J. Lawler. , Mr & Mrs' Francisco Travers, ' & Mrs Joseph Landry, Mr & Mrs $50 Mrs Neal Vancour, Mr & Mrs Henry Lyonnais, Mary McCann. 'Mr & Mrs. Richard Valladoa. 'Mr & Mrs Joseph McGrath, Adolph F. Walecka, Mrs Helen $25 Wa'lsh, Michael Timothy Walsh.. Mr &' Mrs Richard Manning, Mr &. Mrs Joseph Boldiga. Mr & Mrs Robert Wiley, Jr., Mr & Mrs Alfred Martin, Mr & Mr & Mrs Albion Wright. ' - Mrs Elio Martin, Mr & Mrs Ar$20 Mr & Mrs George Alexander, ,thur ,Mello, Mr & Mrs Adrien Edward Goodhue Lumber Co. Miss'Laurinda Andrade, Mr & Messier. $10 Miss Margaret Paull, Virginia Mrs Thomas P. Barry, Mr & Mrs Mr & Mrs Francis Callahan, Virginio Botelho. Mr & Mrs Paull Mr & Mrs Conrad Pel- Mr & Mrs Leroy Greenwalt, Mr letier' Mr & Mrs Joseph Pel- &: Mrs Austin Manning, Mr &: Jayme Cardoza. Mr & Mrs Manuel 'Cardoza, Mr letier: Mr & Mrs Andre' Poirier. Mrs George O'Neill, Mr & Mrs &: Mrs Marlow Carlson, Mary, William Raynor, Mr ok Mrs Henry Porter. . Caton, Mr ~ Mrs Gerard, Cor- Lionel Rioux, Mrs Agnes SilMr & Mrs Arnold Brown, Mr veira, Mr & Mrs Alfred, Silvia, &; Mrs Arthur Desroches, Freekum Miss Carrie Costa. & Mrs John Cunha, Mr &: Norman Singleton. town Screw Mfg. Co., Mr & Mrs Maurice Spirlet, Mr '&: Mrs Arthur Hood, Mrs Ernest Leucht. Mrs John C. DeMello, Mr & Mrs Harry Dunham" Mr ~ ~rs Jo- James Sullivan Sr., Mr & Mrs Mr & Mrs Albert Luckraft, Mr seph Ferreira, Mrs Marla Fer- Kenneth Taber, Thomas Town- &: Mrs James McDermott, Mr & ley, ,Mrs Gladys Walda. reira & Family. ' , Mrs Joseph Mullins, Mr &: Mrs' Mr & Mrs Manuel Funcia • Joseph Nunes. ST. ~WRENC~ Deolinda, Mr & Mrs Joseph'FurWilliam McAndrews. $50 tado, Mr & Mrs Manuel Furtado, I>r Orin Hall, Mr & Mrs JereST. THERESA Mr & Mrs William Gonzales, Mr miah Ke,lleher, Mi & Mrs AntonBe Mrs Edmund Grace. $150 , Mr & Mrs Antone F. Gracia, io Lawrence, A Friend. Lemieux Plumbing & Heating John D. Curran. Mr & Mrs Eugene Haun, Mr &: Co. Mrs Joseph Jacintilo, Mr & Mrs $30 $25 Celestino Macedo, Emilinda MaFlorence Boisvert. Mr '" Mrs Thomas' Wood. $26 duro. $20 Joseph Martin, Mr & Mrs ManMr & Mrs L. Finni, Paul .. Mr&; Mrs Donat Boisvert. uel Mathew, Miss Lydia Pacheco, 'Marion Keane" Dorothy Curry, Therese Boisvert. Mr & Mrs Americo Penha, Mr &: Vincent Brimley.• $15 'Mrs Frank Perr'y.. '$20 Mr & Mrs Georges Dufault. Mr & Mrs Manuel Pinto, Mr. - Mr Be Mrs Daniel Dwyer, Mr Mr & Mrs Armand Dudevoir, &; Mrs' Joseph,Rego, Mr & Mrs, ok Mrs Francis Mahoney, Mr & Mr & Mrs Ronald Fortin. Alvaro Rodrigues, Mr ,& Mrs Mrs Charles Reckords, Mr & $10 Norman Souza, Mr &: Mrs Frank Ml'8 James A. Ryan. Mr & Mrs Joseph Salvail, Mr $15 , Sylvia. Milton Travers, Mr & Mrs WilMr &: Mrs J. T. Curry, Mr & &: Mrs Joseph Morency, Mr & liam Wanat, St. John's CYO Mrs Albert L. Fisher, Mr &: Mrs Mrs Roger A. Guay, Mr & Mrs John Harney, Thomas Jennings, Conrad Lemay, Mr & Mrs ConLaura T. Sylvia. 118d Gobeil. Mr &: Mrs W. K. Burke. ST. KILIAN Mr lit Mrs John Laronda, Mr $10 &; Mrs Eugene Duval, Florence $400 ' Mr & Mrs H. Barney, Mr & Rev. Walter J. Buckle¥. , Mrs H. Butts, Stephen Carney, Paquin, Ser'veul Deneault &: Mr &: Mrs W. Cleary, Margaret Family, Mr & ~rs Ovila Rock. $100 Mme Montcalm Pepin, Mr ok St. Kilian St. Vincent de paul ok Laura Culhane. Mrs Valmore Lauzon, Mr & Mrs Mr & Mrs Edward Duffy, ,Mr Conference. .. MJ'S Edmund Dupre, Kath- Adrien Gagnon, Mr & Mrs ,Jos$15 Dr &; Mrs Vincent 881'10, Arnold erine Fay, Mr &: Mrs Edward eph H.' Fredette, Mr & Mrs Bernard Sasseville. GQlligan, John Kr~ljic. Weaver. Mr &: Mrs William Desjardin, Mr &; Mrs Frank Manno, Mr $15 Mr &: Mrs John Golensld, Mr &: Mrs E. Mullarkey, Mr & Mrs Mr & Mrs Conrad Robitaille, Mr . &: Mrs Eugene Millette, Mr & D. Monroe, Mr & Mrs J. Mur.. Mrs Ol'val Langlie~. Mrs Albert Lamontagne, Mr &: l:8Y, Mrs Clement O'Bernier. , $IS Mr &; Mrs William O'Brien, Mrs Donald Gaudette. Mn Margaret Bouches, Mr & Mrs William Millette, Mt- &: Ml'S William Quinlan, Mr $12 ,Mr & Mrs Joseph Berneche. &: "Mrs L. Racipe, Mrs Mary Walter Font. • Mr & Mrs Joseph Jeffrey, MiSll Ribeiro, Elizabeth Smith. $10 Jeanette Blain, Mr & Mrs ArMr &: Mrs Leo Soucy, Mr . , Rev. Hugh J. Keenan, :Mr .. mand Marlow, Mr & Mrs Emile Mrs Ernest Amaral, Mr ok, Mrs Mn J08. Sullivan, Memory 01. Preterre, :Mrs Emma LeBlanc. John Anuszczyk, Mr &:' Mrs Wm. P. Sullivan, Mr &: ,Mrs J. Albert J. Charette. Laurent,Audette, Mr &: Mrs Rene Edward Williams. , , TurD 60 Page TweD~-.thr" Mr &: llhIs D. Abal'antes,., Mr' Bachand, M1' &: MEw Edw8l'd Barseleu. ' , Mr & Mrs Charles Barton, Mr, COME IN - SEE - and pRlvr' .. Mrs Joseph Belliveau, Mr &: Mrs Robert Benjamin, Mr &: Mrs Joseph Bernier, :Mr Ie :Mn NoIrman Berube. ............ ,... Beautifully Proportioned ~ Mr & Mrs KenDeth Brigh$at man, Mr & Mrs .Norman Cloutier Mrs Helen Corrigan, Mr & Mn James DewhW'st, Mr &: Ml'8 Barmood Doyon. CoMpa.,. Mr &: Mrs Adam Dubeene, Mn Beatrice Faunee, Mr &: Mn PORI) DEAlERS 110I 'OWI 38 YEARS Peter Galary, Mr &: Mrs Boben Gauvin, Mr &: Mrs Thos. Grime. I tJ.4J4' 86 PunhaM .. New BecIforcI, Man. ~ ~ Jlik " MEa

'M.;

THE '61 FORDS

ASHLEY FORD SALES

r-n....,. ...... s-..


,

,

.

-~ecause 'He Care~. '; '.. ... '.

'Mary Tinkham, lVII's Kenneth Tuttle, Mr & Mrs Edward Walsh, Mr & Mrs William Walsh, Charles Whalen, Mr & Mrs Joseph Nunes, Anthony Sylvia. Mr & Mrs C: W. Costello & Family, Mr & Mrs Charles Crowley, Mr & Mrs FranA!: Wacaser, Mrs Roscoe Barstow, Joseph Ponti. Anonymous, Mrs Virginia Mahoney, Dr & Mrs StanleY Mysliwy, Mr ,~ Mrs Thomas, Renehan, Mr & Mrs Manuel Roderick. Mr & Mrs William Suzan, M1' & Mrs William Suzan Jr.

>

\

Hyanni$ ~VIER

$400 51. Vincent DePaw. Societ¥.

. $100 Rev. James P. Dalzell; Doane, Beal &: Ames. $75 Rev. John Pegnam. $60 Dr &: Mrs Austin F. O'Mallev. $50 Walter M. Gaffney Associates, Rene L. Poyant, Mr & Mrs John Kilcoyne, Barnstable County National Bank of Hyannis, Mr &: Mrs James Pendergast. $25 Great Island Pharmacy, John . Hinckley & Sons. Mr & Mrs John P. Curley Jr., Father MeSwiney Circle Daughters of Isabella, Mr & Mrs Richard E. Norman, J. William Bowser. $20 Charles McGrath, Dr &: Mrs Walter J. Kennedy. $15 Richard F. Murphy, Mrs Vincent D. O'Neil, Mr & Mrs Robert O'Neil, Emil Guertin, Peter Nelson. Mr & Mrs Frank Garvey, In Memory of James F. McCarthy, Mr & Mrs Lawrence J. McCormick, Dr & Mrs James F. Dunne•. $12 Mr. & Mrs William Harrig8l1. $11 Theodore W. LeBlanc. $10 Alice Godin, Mrs William Drew, Georgette Barrier,.Charles Bearse, Anne McKeon. John Bright Shoe Store, Mr &: Mrs Antonio Dias, Peter Choquette, Mildred's Chowder House, Mrs Marie Howes. Mrs Agnes Peltonen, 'Mrs William Wilson, Mr & Mrs Stanley M. Crosby, Mr & Mrs M. E. Sweeney, Mrs Arthur Lorrett. Neptune Room B. L. Tallman Co., Mr & Mrs Daniel J. Donovan, Granite Chevrolet, Mrs Mary Roderick, Mr & Mrs Oliver Verrill. Mr & Mrs Oliva Denoncourt, Ruth Schuman, Mr & Mrs Henry L. Rivers, Mr & Mrs William J. Flinn, Mr & Mrs Michael Proc. Mrs William Fitzgerald, John F. Dempsey, Dr A. W. Mandelstarn, The Coady Family, Mr & Mrs James P. Shattuck. Mrs Bertha Amirault, Thomas Ayers Jr., Everett Williamson, Mrs Sylvester Francis, John Levine. Mary A. McGarry, Mr & Mrs Manuel Medeiros. Mrs Ora McElhaney, _Mrs Alice McGinn, Mrs Agnes E. Cryan. Alcibiade Soucy, Mr & Mrs Kenneth Drew, Bernard Aikens, MrO& Mrs Homer A. Phinney, Mr & Mrs Arthur Snow. Ernest Barabe, The Barnstable County Mutual Fire Insurance Co., Carreiro's Flower Shop, Mrs Warren Jennings, M~ &: Mrs RosS Dixon. Ray Sprinkle Co., Mrs Richard Haydon, Mr & Mrs William Mullaly, Mr & Mrs ·Theodore Holmes, Lillian Senteio. Mr & Mrs Edward Gosselin, Mrs Herbert Jackson, Edward Barry.

196~

23

Mr & Mrs ~enry Suedkamp, Mr & Mrs John Sullivan, Vose &: Son Supply Co., Mr & Mrs Francis Sweet, Tanner Ford Sales. Mr & Mrs George Becka', Katherine Brophy, Mr & Mrs John Delgado, Mary Delgado, Mrs Margaret Dinneen, Mr & Mrs Arthur Gorman, James Gorman. . Mr & Mrs Christopher Brady, Mrs James Brophy, Mr & Mrs Charles Campbell, Mr & Mrs Francis Cannistraro, Helena Donaghue. Mr & Mrs Francis Foley, Mr &: Mrs Albert Getchell, Mr & Mrs IMMACULATE CONCEPTION Edward Grant, Mr & Mrs Wil$85 liam Higgins, Mrs Katherine Rev. John J. Steakem. Keena. Mr & Mrs Walter Lesh, Mr & $25 Mr & Mrs James D. Mullen Sr., Mrs Bernard Manning, Mr & Mra George Marsh, Katherine MurRelen Derby. ray, Mr & Mrs Patrick McDonBruno's Restaurant. ough. $20 Mr & Mrs Alexander Pires, Mr Mr & Mrs Dominic Ingemi. & Mrs Anthony Pires & Joseph, Mr &: Mrs John Yosgandes: Mr & Mrs Michael Pugliesi, Mr $15 & Mrs William Russell, Mr & Greyhound Package Store. Mrs Loreto Salvucci. $10 Mr & Mrs John Stafford, Mr Anthony Alho, Mr & Mrs Frank Carliri, Mrs Franklin & Mrs Richard Tino, Abbott Craig, David Gomes, Mr' & Mrs D.rugs Inc., Mr & Mrs John Bellino, Mr & Mrs Timothy Chas. Hallahan. Mr & Mrs Walter Kates, Ladies , Bryant. Mr & Mrs Ernest J. Evans, Auxiliary-:-Ancient Order of Hibernians, Mrs Mary Kron, Mr & Mr & Mrs Arthur Ferron, Mr & Mrs John Linehan, Mr & Mrs' MI'S William Hansen. Thomas & Marietta Canan. Chas. McCarthy Jr. Turn to Page Twenty-four Mr & Mrs William Stoddard,

Gont. from Page :rwenty-~

ST. FRANCIS

nlE ANCHORThurs., May 25,

No. Easton

MEMORIAL TROPHY: Debate teams from Prevost . High· School a~d Dominican Academy, both Fall River, tie for possession of the Sister Ignatius Memorial Trophy, to, be awarded aimually by the 12-school Narragansett Debate League~ Representing their schools are Paul Charland and Elizabeth Donnelly.

Florence Collette, Mr & Mrs· William Connor, Mr & Mrs Leonard Cooper, Mr & Mrs John Coyle. . Mr & Mrs Fred J. Creeden, Mrs 'Pauline Cruser, Mr & Mrs $12 ' William Cullen, Mr & Mrs Victor Mr & Mrs John Menezes. Cutillo, Mr & Mrs Charles 'Damato. $10 Mrs Margaret Dell'Orfano, Mr Doris I. Allen, Mr & Mrs & Mrs Arthur Faria, Miss Mary Thpmas V. BreJ;lnan, Mr & Mrs Faria, Mr & Mrs William FarMiguel Brito, Mrs James Callaquharson; Mr & Mrs Albert han, John Callahan. Flammia. Doris Carney, Mr & Mrs J.ohn Josepl\ Gibbons.' Mr & Mrs Carlos, Joseph Costa, Mr & Mrs Ralph Hilton, Percy Houghton, Murray DeCoffe, Mr & Mrs 'Mr & Mrs Albert Inglese, Mr & Anthony DeCosta. Mrs Edward Jameson. Mr & Mrs· William Duggan, Mr & Mrs Fred Kelleher, Mr & Mr & Mrs Antone Faria, Mr &, Mrs John King, Mr & Mrs Ste- Mrs Joseph Farley, Mr & Mrs phen Kovich, Mr & Mrs Alphy Charles Finn, Mr & Mrs James Lemieux, Mr & Mrs Clarence Gifford. Leonard Jr. . Mr & Mrs Noah Gomes,' Mr & Lillys Drug Store, Mr & Mrs Mrs Warren L. Gulley, Mr & Nando Melchiorri, Mr & Mrs Mrs George Harold, Mrs Irene Chester Moore, Mr & Mrs Celes- ,Huggins, Dr & Mrs' Charles tino Morini, Mr & Mrs Paul Hutchings.' . Morini. Keith's Ice Cream, Mr & Mrs Mr & .Mrs Victor Narciso, Paul . Keane, Mr & Mrs Leo Mr & Mrs Orpheo Pagnini, Mr & Libby, Mr & Mrs George Lib-. Mrs Henry Rouille, Mr & Mrs erty, Mr & Mrs Leo Lariviere. George Sawyer, D,aniel Sullivan., Frank's Market. ,Mrs Elizabeth Mr & Mrs William Sullivan, Markey, Mr & Mrs Paul McMr & Mrs John Todesco, Miss Devitt, Mr & Mrs M. H. McRose Vasa nelli, Mr & Mrs WilIntyre, Mr & Mrs Melvin Miller. liam Verzola, Mrs Katherine Mr & Mrs Albert Morgado, Whalley, Mrs Mae Wood. Mrs Margaret Morse, Mr & Mrs Mrs Marie Barnes, Mr & Mrs Paul Mullaney, William Miller, Louise Davison, Mr & Mrs David Mrs William Perkins. Falotico, Roland LaPlante, Mr & ;Emily Perry, Josephine Perry, Mrs Wallace Martin. Mr & Mrs Albert Rebello, Mr Mr & Mrs Jos(!ph'Todesco Jr., & Mrs Richard Regan, Mr & Mrs Mr & Mrs Paul Westlund. Eugene Sheets. , ST. MARY Mr & Mrs Arthur Smith, Mr $100 & Mrs Walter Smith, Mr & Mrs A Friend, A Friend. ST. ANTHONY Anthony Snyder, Mr & Mrs $50 Oscar St. Jacques, Mrs Joseph A Friend, A Friend. $250 Sylvia. $40 Mr & Mrs Charles J. McMr & Mrs Paul J. Flynn. Gowan. •• • •• •• $25 $100 Mr & Mrs John Dunn, A Ernest Denault, Eugene Phe• Friend, In Memory of Harold lan, Mr & Mrs Clarence Verdi. SCRAP METALS Morse, Mr & Mrs William Jack$50 . WASTE,PAPER - RAGS son, Mr & Mrs David Jackson, Louis -Dupre, Mr & Mrs David TRUCKS AND TRAILERS FOR Peter Provost Jr. Haley. PAPER DRIVES $20 $35 CHURCHES, SCOUTS and Mr & Mrs Orlando D. Souza, Mr & Mrs Warren Ryan., CIVIC ORGANIZATIONS A Friend. $25 1080 Shawmui Avenue $16 Anonymous, Mr & Mrs Manuel New Bedford WY 2-7828 A Friend. • • • • • • • + • • • • • • Linhares, Mr & Mrs Frank $12 Pimental, Mr & Mrs Joseph ColFrancis Antosca. lins, Mrs Amelia Whalen. Mr & Mrs George Lincoln, Mrs Edea G. Duchaine. Celia Leretti. $24 featuring $10 Mr & Mrs Kevin Cadieux, A Friend, Mr & Mrs Ralph 'I'fhe Gaslight Room" Chambers, Mr &: Mrs Arthur William Keane. Ideal for Communion Break$20 Marcheselli, Mr & Mrs Albert fast!' O""anization, Banquets Mr & Mrs Romeo Bedard, Mr Murphy, Miss Eileen Myett. Mr & Mrs Arthur Richards, & Mrs William Corey, Francis 386 Acushnet Ave. Miss Rose Servais, Louis 501- M. Curtis, James Downey, Mr & I'liew ,Bedford Rene Gabzrie!, Dorothee lBloic=o, Mrs Johlll Murphy. «:011 WYman 2-1703 Polly Murphy~ Ml' &;. Mra Mr &: Mi'D Leo Annese. M:Jo~

Mansfield

Mattapois,ett

• •••

w. MARTIN

M-K Restaurant

a-

MASS UNDER'A THATCHED ROOF A Bishop In southern INDIA writes us: "Twenty-two famlDes (150 people all tog'ether) have joined the Church In PULPALLY (DlOClese of TIRUVALLA). Mass Is being offered III a temporary

hut, under

III

thatched roof. Catechism

Is being taught III the same. hut--and at night this is where the priest getl his sleep. Prospective converts III PULPALLY are numerous - but we must have III permanent church. The Coat' hr land and church Is

$3,000. Can you get people to send gitt.

Tht Holy Fathtr's MissioR Aid 118 something?" Mark your ftrthtOrimtalChurrh large or small, "PULPALLY."

THE MAN WHO HAS EVERYTHING OR THE WOMAN, FOR THAT MATTER, IS A PROBLEM AT GIFT TIME. You want to say Thank You, Happy Birthday, or Congratulations. But what do you give the man or woman who has everything? Our suggestion saves you time, and worry. Let !Is send him a Catholic Near East Gift Card ... an attractive, artistic message, 'signed by us, indicating you hl!ve - in his name-sent to a needy missionary a sacred article needed for the Mass. Wh.at gift could be more unusual, more beneficial to your friend and to the Church, more permanent than a lifetiJ~e? Here are some gilt suggestions: " Mass Kit $100 0 Tabernacle $25 Altar .,.............. 75 0 Mass Book .•••••••.. 25 Medical Kit .. :....... 75 0 St~tions , ... ,....... 25 Mass Vestments...... 50 0 Censer, Boat 20 Confessional . • • • • • •• 50 0 Candles (Yr.'s Sup'y) , 20 Monstrance .••••••••• 40 DSanctuary Lamp ..... 15 Crucifix ., •• , • • • • •• • • 25 0 Pictures ...••••••••. 15 Statue ...•••••••••••• 30 0 Pyx ' . . . . • •• • • • • •. 15 Chalice ........ ::.... 40 0 Altar Linens 16 Ciborium .•.......... 40 0 Sanctuary Bell 5 TO SAVE YOU TIME, simply cut out this column, indicate the gift you are selecting, and send it with your check or money , order to us. Be' sure to include your friend's name and addresa. We'll send (him or her) a, Gift Card immediately.

o o o o o o o o o o

_

SPEAKING OF GIFTS IS THERE ANY BETTER WAY to say Thank You, Happy Anniversary, or I Apologize, than by giving people a membership in the' CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION? The Spiritual Benefits are incalculable (a remembrance in 15,000 Masses e<lch year, for instance, a Plenary Indulgence at the instant of death), and yoU have the assurance thllot what you 'give will directly benefit the work of the Church In the pagan Near East. Membership dues are: ANNUAL 0 IndividuB>1 $1.90 Family 0 $ 5.00 PERPETUAL 0 Individual $20.00 ..••.. Family 0 $100.00

ONE MORE SUGGESTION - THE FATHERS, MOTHERS, YOUNGSTERS you find among the PALESTINIAN REFUGEES are'the "lost generation" in 1961. They crowd together in hovels in the host countries, deprived for political reasons of what they once' owned. We're trying to help them by sending food, clothing, medicine. We can feed a Refugee family for 35c a day, $10 a month. If you'd like to have us feed a family. for iii month in the name of • friend, send us $10. We'll send your friend a Gift Card-and we'll send you, as a token of our deep gratitude, an Olive Wood Rosary from the Holy Land.

~'l2eartDstO)jSSQO~~ fRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN, President MItS'. Jol. T. R;-' 'Nat' Sec', ~ 011 cOlll!illlltlcatlelll hI

CATHOLIC NI!AR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION

480 Lexington Ave. at 46th St.

~

Yon 17i'N. Y.

~


24

THE ANCHORThurs., May 25, 1961

Cont. from Page Twenty-three.

New

~@4il*lti)li'cdl

HOLY NAMlE

$100 Dr. Frank Leary. $60 Dr & Mrs John B. O'Toole Jr. $20 ' Joseph A. No~ris Sr. $15 Joseph F. Gorm,an, Dennis Lyons. $12 Mrs Lillian Baldwin. $10 In Memory of Edith S.' Alcarez Antoine Balthazar, Mr & Mr~ Raymond J. Bourbeau, David Bruce, Walter Bru<:e. Mrs Catherine Carney, William J. Carter,' J. M. Clynes, Kathleen Downey, George Dumas. George Dumas Jr., Henry Fanning, William Gero, Manuel Gonsalves, Mr & Mrs Charles A. Gunning. William Kenney, John J. Manning, Martin McNally, Armand Messier, John Mills. , Archer Newton, Elmer P~ul, John Ramos Jr., Howard Ricketson, Clinton Rimmer. Mrs Frances Rose, John' Ruel, , Albert Ryder, Mrs Mollie Smith, Joseph E. Ste. Marie. Henry Stewart, Alex St. 0nge, Albert W. Strong, Alfred Sylvia, Angelo Telesmanick. Mrs John Thomas, Norman To,-:res, Mr & Mrs John W'. TouIan Jr., Roland Blanchard.

Franciscan Conv.

,$200 Fathers

O.F.M.·

$30 Michael, John & Anthony Jankowski. $25 Mr & Mel;! A. Banas. $20 Aleksander Boc. Mrs Kwolik, Mr & Mrs C. Smeka, Stanley Smiechowski, Mr & Mrs' 1. Kaszynski. $15 Rosalie. & Evelyn Jeglinski, Mr & Mrs J. Siwik. $12 , Mr & Mrs Edwin .J. Marnik. $10 .' Mr & Mrs David Amaral, Mr & Mrs B. Arabasz,' Mr. & Mrs U. Benoit, Mr & Mrs 'J. Blackledge, Mr & Mrs H. Cameron. . Mr & Mrs H. Cembalisty, Atty & Mrs Edward K. Dabrowski, Mr & Mrs T. Dabrowski, Mr & , Mrs J. Dancewicz, Mr & Mrs L. OUR LADY OF ASSUMPTJION Dubois. . $50 Mr & Mrs D. Duguay, Stanley Abramson, Titus & Levenson. Dziuba, Mr & Mrs S'. Dziura, $30 Joseph Filipek, Mr & Mrs .J. OLOA Holy Name Society, Mr . ·Furtado. & Mrs Alfama Severo. Mr & Mrs F. Golen, Mr & Mrs $25 F. Gorczyca, Mr & Mrs Jan OLOAssumption Club, B. Ker- .. Izdebski, Mr & Mrs J. Janasiestenbaum. wicz, Mr & Mrs C. Koczwara. $20 Mr & Mrs G. Laflamme, Mr & Mr & Mrs Antonio Gomes, Mr Mrs Constanty Lefkowici, Boles&: Mrs Arthur N. Duarte. laus Midurski, Mr ,& Mrs J: , $10 Midurski, Stanley Murach. Mary Faria, Mr & Mrs John Stella Olszowy, Mr & Mrs Fortes, Mr & Mrs Joseph Senna, John Pabis; Mr &-Mrs S. PelMr & Mrs Andre Ramos, Mr & czarski, Mr & Mrs M. Pielech, Mrs Henry Barros. Mr & Mrs C. Ponichtera. Edith T. Barrister" Antonio Mr & Mrs B. Repeta, K. Rocha, Mary G. Ramos. John M. Charles Rokita, Mr & Mrs S. Lomba, Mr & Mrs Domingo Smith, Mr & Mrs Z. Stankiewicz, Gomes, Clara & Jaime Gomes.' Mr & Mrs A. Stefanik. Mr & Mrs John G. Livramento, Mr & Mrs S. Supczak, Helena Mr '& Mrs John J. Gomes, Mr & Szczech & Jennie Szczech, Mr& , Mrs Benjamin Montez, Mr & Mr'S Mrs W. Szeliga, Mr & Mrs L,. Edward Joseph, Ruth Gomes. Thomas, Mr & Mrs Stanley UleMr & Mrs Joseph S. Pires, wicz. OMary t'Rbeiro, ,Mrs Joseph BapMr &; Mrs W: Ulewicz, Walter tista, Edward J. Pina, Mr & Mrs Arabasz, Mr & Mrs H. BartkieManuel 'Figueiredo. , wicz, Mr. & Mrs E. Bpbrowiecki, Miguel Teque. Mr & Mrs John Hemingway. Mr & Mrs Adrian Jette, AlexDUKACULATE CONCEPTION ander Marusa, Mr & ,Mrs W. $40 :'IIenard, Mr & Mrs F. Midurski, Dr David Costa Jr. Arnold &. Helen AvellaI'. $20 ' . .M:r &, Mrs A. Buzniak, Mr. & Dr Manuel G. Camacho. Mrs R. Demanche, Mr & Mrs ., $11 E: Duile, Marja Galus, Mr ,& Mrs 'J. de Ponte Cordeiro. '.1.- Gonet: .' . . , , $10 Mr & Mrs M. Jamilkowski, Richard Parsons, Abel Fidalgo. Veronica LeBlanc, Mr & Mrs AI~rtino Barros, M;tria Ma- : 'Homer Mandeville, Mr & MI'l 'ohado, Victor Rebello Jr. ' Antonio Sousa, M;aria Almeida, ' K. Nowak, Mr &; Mrs F. TomClarence Nunes,' Joseph Saraiva', czewski. Mr & ·Mrs A. Zerbonne; Mr lk Manuel Bettencourt. E. Ponichtera, Mr & Mrs J. Jorge MarcelinQ. Antone Oli- Mrs Szarek. ' veira, Au'rora Ferreira, AntOAe Gonsalves, Virginio AJriaral. SACRED HEART 'James Correia, Daniel Cor-, $25 . , deiro, Silva'na Morrell, Armand Grenon Funeral Home~ Brie, c::;eorge ,Paiva. . $20 Frank Perry, Eduardo MenMr & Mrs.FrancoisO. Grenon, do Il;ca, Joseph Freitas, Donald' Dr & Mrs Jean Paul Grenon. Menezes,Jose Coutinho. . $10. Alexandrina Ferreira, Grover > The Albert Brunette Family, Williams, John Sousa". John Mr & Mrs Adrien Rock, AnonyPimentel, Joseph Pimentel. mous, Mrs Corinne Caouette, Mr Gilbert R. Coelho, Henry Rod- & Mrs Charles LaFleur. rigues, Ernestina Batalha, BerMr & Mrs J. A: Richard, Na.tha Batalha, Gabriel Tavares. poleon Genereux, Mr & MN .Seraphim Almeida, Hilde.:. Roger LaFrance. berto Borges, Joao Gouveia. OUR LADY OF MOUNT CARMlEL

$25 Holy Name Society. $15 Marhi C. Ferro. $10. Mr & Mrs Josepti Andrews, Mr & Mrs Americo Araujo, Louis J. Cabral, Mr & Mrs Jose Carvalho, Francisco Duarte. . Mr & Mrs Jacintho S. Ferro, Mr & Mrs Manuel Florio, Mr & Mrs Anto;;'io Garcia, Mr & Mrs Edward Gracia, Mr & Mrs Raymond LeComte. •

Mr

OUR LADY OF PERPlETUAlL ,HELP

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...

$25 Mrs Pasquale Nicolacl. ' $20 Mr & Mrs Paul Vancini. $15 \\ Manly Mfg. Co. Inc. Emilio Peitavino. $10 Mr & Mrs Joseph Cataldo, Mr &' Mrs Anthony DiPiro, Mr & Mrs Rosario DePiro, Dr. & Mrs Joseph N..Finni, Emma Fornaciari. Mr & Mrs Robert J. M;orelli, Charles & Catherine P.allatroni, Joan S. Perry, Mr & Mrs Nunzio Raffa, Mr & Mrs Salvato Salvati. Daniel J. Tarpey, Giulio Cesare Lodge-Sons of Italy. Mr & Mrs Louis Bono, Mr & Mrs Antonio DiMauro, Mr & Mrs Dominic Santangelo, ItalianAmerican Women's Club.

Mr & Mrs Joseph Lewis, Mr & Mrs Stephen S. Macedo, Mr & Mrs Frank Motta, Mr & Mrs Antone Pacheco, Me & Mrs Manuel Pacheco. Manuel Rapoza, ,Mr & Mrs Manuel Rapoza, Mary Rapoza, Mt & Mrs' John J. Rose, Mr & Mrs Leonard J. Rose. Mr & Mrs Edward Souza, Raymond Sylvia; Mr & Mrs Raymond Sylvia, 'Antone Varoa. Mr & Mrs Americo Arruda, Natalie Ferreira, Mr & Mrs Joseph Fe.rro, Joseph Lopes Oliveira, Laura Oliveira'. Raul'Pereira, Mr & Mrs Ernest Santos, Mr & Mrs Manuel Silvia, Mrs Philomena Sylvia, Mr & Mrs George Viegas.

ST. ANNE

$60 Rev. Arthur C. Levesque. $10 Mr, & Mrs William Brabjn, Cercle Champlain Club, Mr & Mrs Normand Dion, Mr & Mrs Louis Plourde, Mrs Laura· Viens. ST. ANTHONY OF PADUA $ltO'

Raymond Laliberte. $21 Helll'i Lafrance &: family. $25 . Mr & Mrs Edward G. Lorangee. Louis' Parent_

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OUR LADY OlF 'PURGATORY $70 The Rev. George Saad. $25 Rykel Simon, Fred M. &: Geo. M. Thomas. CREDIT UNION MISSIONARY: Father'Daniel Mc$20 David's Trucking Co., Ace Lellan, M.M.; of Denver, Colo., who he~ds a chain of cre.dit unions in Peru, is back in the Umted States seekmg Cabinet Corporation. $10 financial aid to holster the work credit unions are doing Scott Manufacturing Company, Fairhaven Lumber Co., American among the poor of Peru. The ~irst credit union formed 1955 with 23 members and a cash reserve of $21 now has Lebanese Veterans Auxiliary, P. Coury, George Abragrown to' better than 112 units and is expected to sponsor Edward ham, Thomas David, Everett . more than $1,000,000 in loans this 'year. NC Photo. Pittsley, Joseph Brackett,- Geo. Peters, Josephine David, Geo. EIEmma Dagesse, Roland .pes- Hillow.. $20 Norman Joseph, Peter S. Armand Bussiere, Rita Parent, rochers, Ernest Deslauriers, Rose, Thomas Joseph Dupre, DomiAlice Contant & ,Pvt Laurier C. Boucher, George Florent. Joseph Caron, Albert Mande- nick R~da, Joseph Family, RoH. Contant. ville, Alfreda Poirier, Dr. Joseph land Bessette, Geo. J. Thomas. $15 Joseph Coury, Peter J. Thomas Bourque, Mr, & Mrs Honore Paul Anthony. Josep!l John, Anthony John, Michaud.. $12 Thomas Moses, George Saba, Oscar Leblanc. Joseph Guilbeault. Nicholas Kenyon. $10 ST. BONIFACE Daher Family, Attallah Fa~ily Joseph Correia, Julien MenSahadi Family, Coury Family, $25 ard, Damase ·Dupuis, Mrs Donat Mr . &, Mrs Frank Corre, St. Baroody Family, Mary Pont e. Ledoux, Orner Breton. Vincent de Paul' Conference, Odelie Carrier, Arthur Car- Anonymous. reau, Ernest Thiry, Joseph Bed$10 ST. STEPHEN'S ard, Leo Belang~r. . Mr & Mrs Francis J. Barrett, • $200 Alfred Marvel, George Lem- Mr & Mrs James Butler, Mr & Rev. J. Orner Lussier. ieux, James Bartoli, Normand Mrs Charles Desjardins, Mr & $100 Despres, Florida Woolley.. Mrs Arthur Folco, John Freitas. , . Dodgeville Finishing Co.. Hormidas Boucher, Edouard Mrs Albert Kramer, Mr & Mrs St. Germain,'Ernest Payette, Mr Emil Seaberg, Mr & Mrs Herman Morse Sand and Gravel Co. $60 & Mrs Leo Hebert, Ernest RichSimon, Mrs Albertine Wobecky. Rev. Robert W. Dowling. ard. $25 '. Robert Bertrand, Florence ST•.CASIMIR Sodality of the Children of Johnston, Roland Cloutier, Nor$100 Mary, Catholic Youth Orga~iza­ mand Parent, Ernest Bernier. . Rev. Casimir Kwiathowski. tion, Mr & Mrs Edward BrItton, . Godelive Soucy, Blanche Ber$25 , • Mr & Mrs Romeo Vanasse, Allell nier, Joseph Frates, Armand Mr & Mrs Aibert Poczatek Blanchard Lawn Mower Sales. Bel~nger, Gilbert Melanson. .. .. $10 ' Caron Granite Co., Sodality of Gerard Goguen, Henri Dube, Mr & Mrs Frank Adamowski, the Ladies of St. Ann's, Mr & Jeannette MandeVille, Mr & Mrs Mr & Mrs Stanley Adamowski, Armand Bonneau, Donald Bou- Mr &. Mrs Napoleon Const;int, Mrs Club., $20 cher.· , Mr & Mrs Bronislaw Copach, Gobin Motors. Leo Robida, Norbert Latimer, Mr & Mrs Jacob Gajeyski. ,$15 Rene Lacoste, Beatrice Sylvia, Mr & Mrs Teddy Kalisz, StanAnderson Motors. Beatrice Gelinas. . . ley Kaszynski, Mr & Mrs Jan $10 Mrs Edouard Langlois, Arthur Lech, Mr & Mrs Joseph Lech, Mr Albert LevesquE', Mr & Mrs Desro~hes, Mrs Moise L'Heureux, & MI's Joseph Linkiewicz. William T. Carter, Mr & Mrs Joseph Jusseaume, Alice &: Mr & Mrs Walter Mierzejew- Rene Gabriel, Dorothee Boisse, Yvonne Caron. ski, Mr & Mrs Walter Miller, Charles Gelinas, Ernest Seney, . Edward Olejasz, Mr & Mrs John Arthur Boisse. . Mr & Mrs 'Robert Cloutier, Arthur Lariviere, Michel Le- J. Pelczarski, Mr &; Mrs Louis Annette Smith, Yvette Smith, 'febvre, Delina Cloutier. . Peltz. '. Mr & Mrs Henry Fontain, Mr & Charles Gaudette, Mr .& Mrs Mr & Mrs John Polar, Mr "'. Henri Duval, Charles Vigneault, Mrs Thaddeus Polchlopek', Mrs Mrs Alexandre' Goudreau Jr.. Leon Kolusian. Oliva Martin, David Rego. Anna Rytelewski, Mr _ & Mrs TarD to Page TweD&,.-ftve Mrs William Chapdelaine, Mrs Stanley Schick, Mr & Mrs Leo Henry J. Magnant, Alcide Ron- Turgeon. • deau, Arthur Letourneau, Gus. Wolanski Family, Mr & M... tave. Lamarche. Anthony ~. ·Zielinski Jr. Dorile Graveline, Irene .FrisT. FRANCIS OF ASSISI gault; Emile Roy, Antoine, Marcotte, Mrs Arthur Benoit. . . $30 SaM.. J. LaG'Gsse, Manager , Mr & Mrs Eugene .Laplante, st: Virwent de Paul Confet'Walter Panek, Damase Janvier, ence. 1872 ACUSHNET AVE.· Antoinette 'Gelinas, Mrs' Romeo Lemire. . near Brooklawn Park ' Wh.itels Farm Dairy Henri Roy, .Marcel.Sl?irlet, AlNEW BEDfORD, MASS. bert Vitkievicz, zOe 'Spirlet, ,Mr '''SPECIAl MILK &; Mrs Frank Cormier: From Our Ow.n . Arthur Collard, Anita Charpentier, Joseph Pisarczyk, EITested Hercf' zeal' Cormier, Rosario Pineau. Acushnet, Ma... WY 3-4457 Eugene Boisvert, Mr & Mrs SHEET METAL Arthur Buteau, Duval Family, J. TESER, Prop. • Special Milk Claire L. Cournoyer; Antoine RESIDENTIAL . • Homogenized .Vit. D Mif.k Leblanc & family. INDUSTRIAL • l!utter-milk Maurice Cote, Lillian B. Ross, COMMERCIAL • Tropicaha Orange Juice Arthur Meunier, Adrien Pelle253 Cedar St. New Bedford tier, Philippe Prevost. , • Coffee and Choc. Milk Lorraine Arvisais, Mrs Eudore WY 3-3222 • Eggs - Butter Gaudette, Gerard Bergeron, Mr Theodore Baribeau, Edouard Langlois. Mr & Mrs Henri Brule, Antoinette Roy, Armand Bourque, Rit,;l Jodoin, Merilda &" Maria Lapointe. Andre .Aucoin, Roger Rioux; at Normand DeBlois, Thaddeus Gumienny, Delph'is Rondeau. Simon Comeau, Amedee Lestage, Mrs Alfred Deneault, Napoleon Rousselle, Alina Beaulieu. Philibert Cormier, Mr & Mrs Wilfrid Masse, Romeo Parent, Domin'ique & Marie BelUveau, NEW BEDfORD, MASS. 115 WILLIAM ST. Azarie Bolduc.

in

Dodgeville

ROBERTS HARDWARE .

Norris H. Tripp

"Save With Safety" NEW 'BEDFORD-ACUSHNET CO-OPERATIVE BANK


Cellllt. from Page Twenty-four

No. Ai'tleooi'@ SAClltED HEART

Catherine Frazier, Sarah Monahan, Mr & Mrs James Whalen, Mr & Mrs Edward Schriever & Family. Mr & Mrs Ralph Purcell, Mr & Mrs Edwin Hinchliffe, Mr' & Mrs Philip Rushlow, Louise Colletta, Mrs Eva Kivlin. Mr & Mrs Thomas Br~nnan Jr., Mrs Stanley Sheldon, Mr & Mrs James Dowdall, Mr & Mrs Arthur Dusablom, Mr & Mrs Robert Gilmore. Mr & Mrs James Kearney, Mr & Mrs Robert Pini, Mr & Mrs G. H. Morse Jr., Mrs Helen Jensen & Ruth Jensen, Mrs Rita Dunham. Mr & Mrs Clement J. Sharon, Mrs Isabelle Hawkins, Mr & Mrs Richard Martin, Gladys Connelly, Irene F. Smith. Mr &; Mrs Walter Turcotte, Joseph E. Dias, Lillian Devlin, Mrs Mary Beaulieu, Catherine Regan. Mrs Edward Messier, Mr. & ,Mrs' Dorily Sarazin, Mr & Mrs Roland Cloutier, Mr & Mrs Frank Irvine, Mr & Mrs John Murray._ Benjamin Rizzardini, Mr & Mrs Thomas Kearney, Mr & Mrs John Bielieki, Mr & Mrs Francis J. Doran, Mrs' Albert Gaudette. Mrs Ernestine Gagnon & FamBy, Agnes Marien, Mr & Mrs

THE ANCHUr{-

25 Boord

Thurs., May 25, 1961

M®c&o~@~ RIi~®~ @lfi] CMD"eS

At l@llilfrdes

$25 Mr & Mrs Ralph Patunoff. PARIS (NC)-The Inte!.b Joseph M. Bressette. $20 national Medical' Committee Jean Desilets, Mr & Mrs Leo of Lourdes has declared Froment, Peter Tatarian, Rita & unexplainable"medically Alma Achin, Raoul Precourt. three sudden recoveries linked ArthW" Gagne. with the shrine of the Blessecll $12 Virgin at Lourdes. Oscar Brunelle. They are the cure of a Frenca.. $15 woman who was suffering from Mrs Aldea Brais, Anonymous, a rare and deadly liver disease. Mrs Imelda Achin, Donald Fiola, the cure of an Italian woman Parenteau Family, Amedee Rinwho had tuberculosis of the guette & ElaineJ • bone, and the cure of a German $10 victim· of mnltiple sclerosis. Bernadette Alix, Anonymous, Cw-e Pierre Chabot, Patrick Chaput, The Frenchwoman, Mrs. Gin-Wilfrid Chaput & Family. ette Nouvel of Carmaux near Aime Collard, Dona Desilets; Toulouse, was cured during a Dr Armand Dyon, Roland DubUC, AID ARAB REFUGEES: This Arab refugee, a blind pilgrimage to Lourdes in 195&. Aime Dufault. Roland Fontaine, Laurence deaf-mute, is being cared for by Sisters in a Catholic home Medical treatment had made 00 headway against her liver inGaudette, Gendron & Zilch for the aged in Jerusalem.' The Pontifical Mission for fection, which has proved fatal Family, Families, LaPlante \ Palestine, the Holy Father's reli"ef agency, helps provide in 110 of the 112 known cases. Orner Martineau. The Italian woman, Mra homes, schooling, medical and religious care for them. NC Norman Ouellette, Ovila OueLElise Aloi, was cured in 1958. Photo. lette, Albert Pinsonnault, Alphie . The German woman, Angere Precourt, Bertrand Prefontaine. 1\ ;\ ~ If' & om • ~ Ii:. Thua, was cured in 1950. She Mrs Julie Roy & Euclid; Jean lJ'V'n~gl!". ~W@tl1 ~~W$ ~KuD~rJ1 ~e)[ugees had been taken to Lourdes in a B. St. Pierre, Emile Seymour, dying condition. Now she is ~. Edward Surprenant, Romuald. nun as Lourdes. Thibault. Lund. NEW YORK (NC) - More same mercy and compassion Committee Mr & Mrs Daniei Bessette & Anna E., Wilfrid Bourgault, Mr & Mrs Albert Soulnier, than a million Arab refugees . Christ brought to the poor and The comml'ttee met here at ~..._ ' Ol"" Albert Desilets, Mrs Albina Fon- Mrs Rita Billingkoff. still are in exile in the Middle oppresse d cen t unes ago, .. M sgr. h h f th V· Mr & Mrs James McCarthy, . Ryan said. mot er ouse 0 e mcen t'1811 taine, Ernest Fournier. Elizabeth Boudreau, Mr & Mrs East, Msgr. Joseph T. Ry'an, Fathers in the presence ci Albias Guay, Albert Jarvis, William ·O'Neil, Mr & Mrs Rob- president of the Pontifical MisAmericans Contribute Bishop Pierre Theas of Tarbes Bruno Lalancette, Georges Lan- ert Hill, D~ John P. Cooper. The Pontifical Mission for and Lourdes and of Archbishop dry, Georges LaRochelle, Roland Agnes Curley, Chester Chase, sion for Palestine, said here. Palestine, he explained, was es- Paolo Bertoli; Apostolic Nuncio Letourneau, Eugene Marchand. Mary Regan, Mr & Mrs James These refugees depend for tablished' in 1949 and has proto France. Mrs. Nouvel:s ease Adrien & Lydia Courtmanche Cassidy, Kenneth Hillman. their existence on the relief vided food, clothing, housing, was presented by Dr. Pie~ Leo Lacasse, Leo Poirier. Mr ,& Mrs Edward McNamara, work of the United Nations and schooling, medical aid, employ- "- Mauriac of Bordeaux Medicm Mrs Bernadette Allard, Edou- Frank McKeon, Mrs John Doran of voluntary agencies such as ment and religious care ~.:>r School, a brother of Cathol. ard Aubin, Alphonse· Barrette, n.ovelist Francois Mauriac. Margaret, .McGrath Family, the Pontifical Mission which is' thousands of refugees, the Mo~u Joseph N Bonneau, Henry Cham- & Florence Ellis. the relief agency of Pope John signor said. The three cases termed "unpagne, Roger Corriveau. Mildred Leary, Mr & Mrs for Palestine refugees. The refu"Most of this has been done explainable" now go to a Church Henri Desauteles, Georges Des- Gerald Bessette, Janice Bessette, gees lost their homes and their through contributions of Americom,mission for further study' to ormeaux Jr., Mrs Amy Girard, Edwin Wilmarth,Mr & Mrs livelihood's during the Arabcan Catholics," Msgr. Ryan said. determine whether they can be Fernand Goulet, Harvey GuiIsraeli war in 1948. He announced that an appeal called miraculous. Joseph LeFevre. mond, Henry Guimond. Mr & Mrs Edward McCrory, "In a land disastrously divid- for' funds now is being directed John Hetherington, Leo La;. Mr & Mrs Henry Heintz, Mr & Kenn~dy Has Private ed, the Church brings to all from the office of the Catholic plante, Florian Lapre, Henri . Mrs Roland Maloney, Mr & Mrs people in the H.olY Land the Near East Welfare Association, Audience With Pope Larocque, Emile LeBlanc. . M & M 480 Lexington Avenue, New B d M K VATICAN CITY (NC)-Ed= ernar c enna, r rs fC" ... ",,1- P.r"""'...."'........ a.:.... n . Norman L'Homme, Mrs Arzelia Benedict Germaine. . td)""""E\. """'''''UV""UUI>!1 York 17, N.Y., to continue the ward (Ted) Kennedy, President Lizotte, James McDonald, GeorMr & Mrs Joseph Zaino, . ©>~ HS§!r@ll'tl<!: ~\1'@G'M®~ work. 'Kennedy's youngest brother, ha:; ges Mercure Sr., Mrs Bernadette Judith Rice, Mr & Mrs Edmund b.een received in private audiPapillon. Rice,-Florence L-eary, Mr & Mrs DETROIT (NC) - The DeOC©IJ'@@1l'Tl Ofj'rJ»lm~fi1l(t!lgj~ ence by Pope John. Mr. Kennedy Roger Parent, Rene Robert, John Coyle. ' troit Historical Commission has and his wife have been visiting Joseph Ruel, Pa~l Tardif, Alfred Zaino Family, Hugh' Hill, Mr asked the City Council for per- ~®G'S fP@H@ V @cdn~ Weldon. SEOUL (NC)-Salk polio vac- Italy with·a group of Bostonia1Y.l. & Mrs 'John Grimes, 'Mr '& Mrs mission· to preserve several hisHe. has been on a 'personal goodcine has been flown here from John McCormick, Joseph Grimes. toric statues when Detroit's old ST. MAlllY Detroit by the, U. S. Air Force will tour of the nation' occasionedl Mr &. Mrs Nathan Phipps; John city hall is demolished. $100 , k by the centenary of Italiso to avert the threat of a polio J. Brennan, John Collins, Mr & Among them are statues ()f Anonymous. unification. epidemic among the 150 children Mrs Marcel Messier, Mr & Mrs pioneer priest-statesman, Father $50 The Ken~edys also called' em of St, Paul's orphanage here., Gabriel Richard (1767-1832), Mr & Mrs R. Gilbert Bergh. Arthur Kane. Italian President Giovanni Gr<ilrJ;W:hen an orphiln girl showed Mrs George Jacobs, George and explorers Robert de La Mr & Mrs Henry Gendron. chi and Foreign Minister Antonm Jacobs Jr., Grace Feid, Walter Salle (1643-1687), Antoine Cad- symptoms of polio, Sister Pauline Segn,i.They were entertained by $30, Johnson of Quebec wrote Mrs. Feid, Mr& Mrs Louis Donly. illac (1658-1730) and Father Mr & Mrs Robert Kinkead. . America's newly arrived am'Mr' & Mrs Henry CollIns, Mrs Jacques Marquette (1637-1675). L. G. AUberlhi, a Detroit Cath- . bassador to ,Rome•. G. FredericlI , $25 olic, for' vaccine. The orphanage Edward Lambert' Jr., Mr & The city began readying plans Coppola, Mr & Mrs Joseph Reinhardt. ,Mrs George McGee, Leona· Kerr, Kelley, MJ' &. Mrs Richard. for demolition of the building is staffed by' Sisters of St. Paul Mr & Mrs Joseph J. Sullivan, Beaupre, Mr & Mrs Raymopd '. after the Miohigan Supreme of Chartre!!. Mrs. Auberlin" foundress and ,Antonio Correia. Vandette; Court denied a petition for 'an WilEN SICKNESS STRIKES director of the World Medical Mr & Mrs Albert Robinson, Mr & Mrs James Bailey" Mr &. injunction to restrain city acIT'S I MPORTANT TO SEE Relief Organization, got the vacMr & Mrs John Gaffney, Mr & Mrs Domenic LaFratta, Mr & . tion. A citizens' group seeking YOUR DOCTOR. AND WHEN cine f.rom a manufacturer in Mrs Thomas Galvin. Mrs Joseph Calc~gni,. Willi~m to retain the building is circulat~E'5 'GIVEN YOU A Margaret & Mary Kinton, Veno, Mr & Mrs Dudley O'Leary. .ing petitions that coul~ put the Detroit. The' wganization is a . non-sectar-ian group that has I"RE~'RIP.T.~. 1'1'$ 'Mr & Mrs Paul Hagarman, . question on the ballot. George A. Greve, Catholic Girls' . shipped 700 tons of medical supClub. . Mr & Mrs George Desmarais, IMPORTANT TO 6ET plies tQ ,underdeveloped coun$20 Mildred Gilroy, A Friend.. t~@$~ I!\ ~@I1ftilOl!'ll<dJ~r·' .. IT FilLED AT tries. .. 'Mrs Helen Harris, Sheila SpadMr & Mrs William Spadoni. ©~ ,!F@rm@U' VO~~(Ql@@ Gertrude & Alice Littlefield, oni, William A. Miilez.,' Walter U@@~~~H'S [E~@~(( Na1HJ'Il Mr & Mrs Brown, Mr & Mrs Simms, Mr & Mrs Fred Connelly. . SAVINES (NC) -.A cast-iron P~~~MAcr LAWRENCE (NC) Sister Fred Thorpe Sr., Mr & Mrs RobMrs Bernard Redding, Francis cross is all that remains' of ert Kelle-y, Mr.& Mrs August R. Clavette, James McGl'athJ Mr & i'avil1es, an· Alpine village that .Evangeline of Marymount ColFunke, Dr & Mrs Robert Welch. Mrs Joseph Burda, Mr & Mrs has fallen victim to modern . lege; Salina" Kan., .was elected progress. The rest is rubble, president of the Kansas AssociaMr'& Mrs Raymond Hillman. Richard Riccio. dynamited and destined to rest tion of ,Teachers "of History and R. Vandal, Mr &. Mrs Steven ., $16 Mr & Mrs Kasmir Wojeichow- Cinq·Mars, Mrs R. Bishop, John peneath the waters of a man- Social Science at its 35th annual made lake., .' meeting here.', . 0 ski, Mr& Mrs Thomas Mulligan, Fitzgibbons. Harold Sumner, Jennie Angus, The parish priest of Savines Ostervalle Marie Bolster. carried the cross to a' new vil'Mr & Mrs Francis Martin, OUR LADY OF ASSlUMIP"l'IlON lage built above the level of the $100 Gertrude M. Cassidy, Mr & Mrs reservoir,' which is part of John B. Lebel & Sons Inc., Mr France's expanding program of Arthur Gillooly, The Cortney Family, Arthur Levesque. & Mrs Robert Sims, Thomas J. rural electrification and irrigaSERVICE STATION Powers. "' tion. $10 Mrs Cora Setchell, Mr &. Mrs $50 The new village, also n~med 149 North Street llobert Maloney, Mr & Mrs Mr & Mrs James Lebel. Savines, houses the old village's HYANNIS .$25· ' . Roaul Trepanier, Roland Bella1,200 inhabitants. 202 ROCK STREET Mr & Mrs James C. Brophy. vance, Mrs Aurore Richard: ONE STOP SERVICE SP 5-9846 $20 Elizabeth &turdY, Mr & Mrs Uphold City Contract fALL RIVER, MASS.' Herbert Arns, Mrs Robert FenMr & Mrs Robert Shields. WithCathGfticColiege $15 ton, John .stanford, Mrs Anna .. • • • + • • Woodward. TRENTON (NC) - The apMr & Mrs Terrance Rogers" •• ••• • • • • • ••• + •• , peals division of Superior Court Marcelia McLean, Mrs Mary Mrs' Francis Williams. IN NEW BEDFORD - IT'S here d-ismissed a suit by a Jer$10 Perry, Mr & Mrs Henry Connors, Mr & Mrs Leo Valois, Mr & Mra Mr & Mrs Roger Scudder, Mr sey City taxpayer challenging an appropriation made by the Gerald Dorey. &; Mrs Benjamin Perry, Mr & Mrs John Perry, M & Mrs Ralph city as part of its contract with Mrs Raymond Dillion, ~ & GEO. _CHEVROLET Mrs Paul Fortin, Mr & Mrs' Shea, Mr & Mrs Jeremiah Mur- the Seton -Hall University medical-dental college. Leonard Driscoll, Mr' & Mrs phy. Mr & Mrs Thomas O'Donnell, Francis Reilly, Mrs Eleanor The college ·is housed in the FOR THe: ~eNlEST TRADlE EVER Westberg. Mr & Mrs John Pina, Mr & Mrs Jersey City Medical Center on Q William Copley, l\fr & M1!'S Alvin R. Souza, Mrs Evelyn Syl- lease arrangement with the city. SUCCESSOR TO I.OUGHUN CHEVROlET Basil Chatterton, Raymond Lara- via, Mrs Charlotte Burnham. Eight suits have challenged the mee, Mr & Mrs Edward Poirier, Amelia Fernandes, John arrangement or various aspects 5.65 MILL ST. Open Every .Evening WY7-9486 Rogers, Edward Daniel. lIr & Mrs Albert Vegiard. of the contract. Seven suits have :;s.~;: . . . . 'il'en'llIl ~ ll"ecre 'll'wellllCy-SDE failed, one still is pending. Mr & Mrs James McKea;n, ~,J

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$15 Henry & Anthony DeMeo & Mrs John Partridge, Mr: & Mrs William P. Lynch. r $10 - The Apps Family, Mr & Mrs Charles- Bevilacqua, Mr & Mrs ~. from Page Twenty-five Raymond, Black, The Misses Elizabeth & Margaret Bushell, FoB Riv!Bf June Camara. ft. ANTHONY OF PADUA Mr & Mrs Antone Cordeiro Jr., Mr & Mrs Manuel Cordeir9 ':, Re\<. Joao Jr., Mr & Mrs Joseph Correa, Mr & Mrs Raymond Cote, Ida HarDr. Francis Petrone. rington. $10 M1' & Mrs William A. Johnson; Ernest Ladeira, Edward MaMargaret . Kehoe, Mr & Mrs _ado, John Cabral. Orient Laplante, Mr & Mrs WilANTHONY OW THIE liam Lecour & Family, The DESIERT Logan Family. Mr & Mrs Stephen Magill, Mr $10 & Mrs Timothy 'McCarthy, Mr & Mt' & Mrs Fouad Corey, Mr & Mrs William Morris, 1\11' & Mrs ~s Louis Latif,. Mi" & Mrs »Jlhmy Milan. . Edwar:d F. Murphy, Mr & Mrs Normand G. Oliv,er. Mr &: Mrs Edmond Massad. Mr &'Mrs Frank Rapoza, Mr &; ST. ELIZABETH Mrs John Rowe, Mr & Mrs Wil$250 fred St. Michel, Mr & Mrs RobRev. Joao Medeiros. ert Sheehan, Mrs Joseph Sulli$100 , van. '. A Friend. William & Isabelle. Tierney, $75 Mr & Mrs Robert Cavaco, Mr & Rev. Manuel P. Ferreira. Mrs Joseph Domingos and $25 Mr & Mrs Manuel'S, Borges, , daughter, Mr. & Mrs Frank Dussault, Mr & Mrs Manuel 'FerJoseph Rodrigues. . reira. . $20 David Grace and Famiiy , St. Elizabeth's St. Vincent de Richard Horan, Mr & Mrs' GilPaul Conference. bert Willette, Robert E. F. Boyle. ~. , . $15 -St. Elt'zabeth's Guild, Daniel ST. MATHIEU Jr. Araujo. $100 ./ $10 Dr & Mrs Omer Boivin. Antonio Viveiros, Manuel Pe:.. $25 llIeira, Vincent Tetuan, Joseph. In Memory of ,Rev. Aurelian .. Mello Jr., Daniel Raposa. L: Moreau, Dr & Mrs Roland Antonio .P. Gonsalves, A Chouinard. I'-I'iend, Joseph Ferreira, Maria $10 ~nsalves, Agostinho Oliveira, In Memory of Rev. Auelian L. &lVangeline Furtado. Moreau. ST. JOSEPH. ST. MICHAEL $100 $50 Allen J.' McDermott, Capt "& Manuel Rogers & Sons. DIn Joseph O'Connell. $25 : . $50 . Gilbert Oliveira. · Dr & Mrs Louis Kroget"'. · $25 . $10 Arthur Amarello, Isabel CaMrs James Bradshaw, St. peto, Henry Cardoza;' Roy _seph's Men's Club. Kinard, Cosmo Cupolo. ' $20 Manuel L. CarreIro & Fami~y, Mr & Mrs Lawrence CabeceiEdward. Costa, Manuel Pereira, 1la8, Mr & Mrs James Downey, !oseph J. O'Connell Jr;, Mrs Kntone Mello, Manuel Lima. William King, Antonio ,Lindo, .Harold Smith. Weber Lopes, Noel Medeiros, $H Manuel Oliveira. Edith Sears. Joseph Rego, Manuel Reis, '\' " $15 · Peter Hodnett, Mar:y,D. Sulli-' . Delphis Rioux, Theresa Santos, Paul Therrien. . ' -.0, Margaret ·Turner. Atty Manuel M. Rezendes, $12 ~ Mr & Mrs Thomas J. Lynch Jr. , August Botelho. , $10 ST. PATRICK : Mrs Charles Austin, Mrs $1000 f!harles Boyd, Mr & Mrs Joseph. Itt. Rev. Edmund J. Ward ~. Boyd, Mr & Mrs Joseph D. $75 . . *urrows, Mr & Mrs Vincent Rev. Robert S. Kaszynski. ~io ,& Mrs Emelia Calio. $60 : Mr & Mr~ Edwl1rd Carey. . Thomas Ryan. Anne M. Cleary, Mrs Mary Con$55 , bo,., Patrick Connelly, Mr &: Rev. John J. Delaney. D&s John Connor. ' $50 Mr & Mrs Richard Curran Mr Mr & Mrs Joseph Keefe, In '.t Mrs Wallace Fairbanks, & J!tlrs Peter Fazio, Mr & Mrs Peter memory of Mr & Mrs George V. .-no, Mr & Mrs H. A. Gibson. Broderick. $40 William Guillmete, Mr & Mrs Mrs John A. Coady & famil,.. • ~nneth Hambley; Vincent Hun$25 eock, Mrs Donald Head, Mr &: In memory of Mr & Mrs Mrs Philip Jeff & Dorothy. " · Mr & Mrs Henry Lavoie, Mary Michael J. Foran, In memory of Mrs Margaret Coleman Connol's, ~, Lennon, Mrs Mary Lennon, Joseph Pinsorinsault. • & Mrs Fran,k N. Lombat:di, Ann McAvoy. . . . Mr & Mrs John Bevilacqua. $20 Mr & Mrs Daniel J. McCarthy M & Mrs James Nicoletti &: • & Mrs David Matthews, M; family, Mr & Mrs Patrick Leary, . & Mrs James Mendonca, Mr &: Cusack faJ!1ily, Mr' & Mrs Henry Mrs James Murphy & Michel Guilfoy & Eileen. . ·1llIr & Mrs Walter Nichipor. ' Mr & Mrs. Joseph Biszko. Mary C. O'Brien, Mr & Mrs $15 ~seph Payton, Mr & Mrs James Mr & Mrs Woodrow Tracy; Perkins, Mr & Mrs Roger Petit, MI' &: Mrs Lagace, Mr &: Mrs Mr & Mrs Thomas R. Place. . Mr & Mrs R. L. Sperduti, Mr Louis A. Shea Jr., Mr & Mru Martin Delahanty. &: Mrs Walter Stetkiewicz, Mr & Mr &: Mrs Theodore Blouin Mrs Edward F. SUllivan, Mr & Mrs Edward J. Sullivan, Thomas Mr & Mrs Edward Hoponik Th~ Wilcox Family. ' . &: Gertrude Sullivan. Mrs Eva Suneson, Mr & Mrs $10 Paul Gendreau.. Mr & Mrs Michael McCarthy, James Mullins. Mr & Mrs Ralph Audet, Annie Z. Costello, George & Lillian MeST. LOUIS deiros, Mr & 'Mrs Henry Urban. $50 Mr & Mrs Mark Leary, Mr &: St. Louis Conference, St. Vin- Mrs John McKeon, Mr '& Mrs eent de Paul Society. Daniel Massey, Mr & Mrs Refino· A; Furtado, Joseph Flynn. _ $35 Margaret R. Sullivan. Sarah C. Spellman, A Friend, .. $25 Mr & Mrs Ralph CrUdele, ~ayor & Mrs 'John M. Arruda, Thomas Melvin, John Melvin. In'Memory of M1' & Mrs Thomas .. $ing Philip Settlement WomConroy, In Memory of Mr & Mrs en's Club" Louis A. Shea Sr., Sohn E. MCMahon, Mr & Mrs Mr & Mrs Peter Czapiga, Mr & . ~:William O'Neil. Mrs Brian McCann, Mr & Mr~ $20 Joseph Griffin. Mrs, Mary - Cassidy, Patrick & Ann Griffin, Mr & Mrs. John Arthur Garrity, Gertrude O'Neil, Fanning, Mrs Margaret WimWilliam & Irene Reynolds, Frank sett, Mr & Mrs Matthew Gasior, Mr & Mrs Georg.e Leach. • Betty Sh.a,){. A~,r"

English Cat1tcMlC'

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Thurs., May 25, 1961

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SChools Facing Teacher Lack,

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LONDON· (NC)-:-Despite the, current $12.5 million program for expanding Catholic teachers' colleges, the

c.$~artins.

shortage of Catholic teachers for Catholic school posts is critical, the Bishops· of .England and Wales have indicated. The Bishops issued a statement following their. annual 'meeting appealing to Catholic teachers to leave their posts in other schools in order to join Catholic school faculties.

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Colleg; Grads In. the statement, iss u e d through the Catholic Education Council,~the Hierarchy added: - D "We urge Catholic university ENCYCLICAL ANNIVERSARIES: The social encycli- graduates wherever possible to, cals of-Popes Leo XIII, left, and Pius XI, right, which this seek to obtain posts in. Catho. month are marking their 70th' and 40th anniversaries lic schools." The education council, headed respectively, have exerted a consid~rable influence on the by Bishop Andrew Beck, A.A., progress and direction the American labor movement. of Salford,' announced it is NC Photo. opening a new Catholic teachers' appointments bureau in order to help cope with the Mr & Mrs Arthur Noiseaux, Mr & Mrs Pat.rick Leahy, Mr shortage, It said that it is of Mr & Mrs Robert Gastonguay, &: Mrs William Lomax, William critical importance that quali- ' Mr & Mrs George Martin, Patri- Lowney, Mr & 'Mrs James Mcfied Catholic teachers be given cia Leary, Edward Brosseau. Crosson, Isabel McMillan. all possible assistance in finding Anastasia K. Mayes, Clara 'The· Mahoney Family, Mrs Miller, 'Mr & Mrs Peter Abdal..;. Angela Maitland & Bernard posts in Catholic schools, and that there be no loss of teachers 'lah, Mr & Mrs Manuel Ribeiro, Kelley, Mr & Mrs Leonard Matto the Catholic schools through Mr & Mrs Thoma!; McHugh. timore, Mr & Mrs Daniel MenMr & Mrs Ralph Correia, Mrs donca, Mr & Mrs Abdellah lack of information. Man'y Millions William Atkinson, Mr & Mrs 'Mizher. Vincent Fay. Mr & Mrs August Morris, Under the, overhaul of the Mr & Mrs George Jasmin, Mr Anne Marie Murray, James & national education program be. & Mrs John Viana, Mr & Mrs Helen Parker, Mr & Mrs Lionel ,gun in 1944, the Catholic ,school Leo Charette, Mr & Mrs James . Perry, Ronald Raymond. systems have embarked on a Mooney, Mr & Mrs Wililam. Mr & Mrs Jamel; Riley, Mr & plan which, includes the buildPurdy. Mrs George Rocha, Vincent 'ing of 700 major schools by Mr & Mrs John Walsh, VIolette Ruttle, Mrs Mary Souza, Charles 1963. Britain's "3.5 million Cath,olics .are providing $84 million Kay, Louise Kay, Mr & Mrs Sullivan. Thomas Delzenero, Mr, & Mrs Mr & Mrs John SUllivan,' "for the program; national or Raymond McCann. Rosella Sullivan, .Mr' & Mrs -local government authorities are supplying $112 million in grants. . Mr & Mrs Milton P. Rogers, James Sunderland, Mary TanMr & Mrs James Holleran, Mrs sey, Mr & Mrs John Tunney. The teacher shortage has not only been affected by the inGermain LePage, Mr & Mrs Mr & Mrs Edward Tyrrell, creasing numbers of schools and' Donald Charest, Mr & Mrs Rob- Louise Tyrrell, Mary L. Tyrrell, ert M a r i e r . ' Mr & Mrs George Vibberts,' Mr 'pupils; it is compounded by the extension of training-college H~nry W. Buckley, Mr & 1V!rs & Mrs John ,filding. courses to three years, earlier Raymond Onorate, Mr & Mrs SS. Peter & Paul-Men's ClUb, Edward Arruda,' The Holmes Mr & Mrs George Caya, Mr Be: marriages among women teachers and the increasing tendency Family. Mrs Stanley Chrupcala, hu dl; among .secondary school pupils Mrs James M. Cox, Mr & Mrs SS. PETER & PAUL to undertake five-year courses. Americo DeMarco. -' $100 Mrs .t\lice Desjardins, Mr & Margaret Lahey, SS. Peter &, Mrs Pasquale DiMartino, Mr & Maria Cardoso, Louis Oliveira Paul's Women's Club. Mrs Manuel Felix, Paul Hag$'75 gerty, Mr & Mrs Herbert Hay- Family, Daniel Castanho, Lawrence Martins; Jose Antunes, den. ' . John Tyrrell. $50 - Mrs Mae Higgins, Mr & Mrs Laureano Silva. Joseph Conaty. William Marum Sr., Mr & Mrs ST. WILLIAM'S $35 Carl Mithers, Mr & Mrs Edward $600 Mr & Mrs Gilbert Nadeau. QUirk, Mr ~ Mrs John Quinn. Rt. Rev. Raymond T. Con.$30 Lillian Roberts, Charles R. sidine. Mr & Mrs Nicholas Tyrreil. Sullivan, Mrs Agnes Tavis. $25 . $25 . "Tyrrell's Market. ST. STANISLAUS Mrs Hehm Burke, Matthew $20· Burke, Matthew Burke, Mr & $150 Margaret O'Grady. Rev. Hugo DyUa. Mrs Jerome FoR!y, Miss Kath$12 erin~ Harrington, Mr .& Mrs . ". $'75 Carolyn Merola, Aliee Merola. Francis L. Lowney. ., Rev.' John Czerwonka. '. $10 < $10 . Mr & Mrs Edmund Bagley. Mary Q'Neil, Mr & Mrs Rus~r & Mrs George Morgan. . Walter & Liilian Deda, Her.., sen Stanton, Mr & Mrs Victor bert King, Edward Kocon, Wal- Aubrey, Mr & Mrs Armand For$20 ter Kocon, Joseph Kosin,'-', John & Ursula Lynch, Mr &: and, Mr .\ Mrs Andrew MachMl'S James E. Rogers. Angela Kruczek, JosephKulpa. ado.. $15 Honorata Meczywor, Leo lViorFrank Monahan, Frank COl'Mr & Mrs Thomas Booth & rissette, Pete!" Pietraszek. 'gino. Family, _Mr & Mrs Edmund Joseph Sroczynski, John Crowell, Mrs Rose FinneranMr Wnenta, Joseph Witkowicz, WaITurll to Page TwcDt,.-ei&'M & Mrs William Garvey. ' ter Wojcik, Stanislaus ,Zak. Mr & Mrs James Glynn, Eileen Mr & Mrs Walter Romanowiez. Keavey; Mr. & Mrs Edward I.A. WILCOX CO. SANTO CHRISTO Kelly. $50'. OF~ICE FURNITURE . $10 In Memory of Rt. Rev. Fran,ID Stoe" fH I__edlate Dell... , MI" & Mrs Manuel Alves, Mr cisco C. Bettencourt, Council at • DESKS • CHAIRS' &; .Mrs Wilfred Autote" Mrs Catholic Women~ FILiNG CA8INm Isabel Bailey, Clarence Lee &; $25 Bar:bara, Mr & Mrs George Ber• FIRE FILES •. SAFES In Memory of Rt., Rev. Frannard. FOLDING TABLES eisco C. Bettencourt, St. Vin.Mr & Mrs Roland Boivin, Mr &: cent de Paul Society. AND CHAIRS Mrs Thomas 'Boule,Mr & Mrs $15 Eugene Boyer, Everett Bray. R. A. LCOX' CO. Atomic Fence Corp., Columbia Charlotte Britland. Pharmacy, Manuel Martins Jr. 22 BEDFORD ST. Julia Cahill, Mr & Mrs Thomas $10 FALL RIVER 5-)'B38 Connelly, Mr & Mrs James Manuel Mello, Dionisio Lutz. Cooney, Henry Creighton, Mr & Mrs Louis Cyr. . John N. Daly. Mr' & Mrs Donald Desjardins, MI' & Mrs Henri Destremps, Mr & Mrs Raymond A. Dooley, Mr & Mrs Charles Dumais. -. Mrs Mary Dunlea & Family , Howard Duffy, Mr & Mrs Sha:u~ , Fitzpatrick, Mr & Mrs James Garvey, Mr & Ml'S Leopold Giroux. . ~r & Mrs Joseph G;osselin, Elizabeth Grace, Mr & Mrs Raymond Greeley, Mrs Dorothy Guilmette, Charles Harrington. Mr & Mrs David Hart, Fred- ! erick Hayes, Mr & Mrs William Heffernan Sr., Mr & Mrs Edmund Humphreys, Mary Kelly.

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Class Track' Championships At White ,Stadium Saturday· By Jack KiBeavy'

llI1E ANCHORThurs., May 25, 1961

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27

FCC Head A!ks Parents Protest ,TV Violence

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The Class Traek Championship Meet, heret-ofore known as ' the State Meet, win be staged Saturday at White Sta<Uum, Boston at 10 A.M. The mammoth affair which as usual will be under the competent direction of Joe McKenney has drawn 1821 when the late Frank "Cheese" entries from 116 schools. McCrehan beat the Crusaders' This represents but a neg- legendary Ownie Carroll before ligible drop from last year's some 32,000-40,000 (they never

RADNOR (NC)-Parents who think there is too much violence on TV should complain to networks, the chairman of the Federal Communiea.- tions Commission has stated. This viewpoint of the chalp. , ~ Newton N. Minow, is ex-. Pi'esse9- in a letter appearing In the current ,issue of TV Guioo, published in this Pennsylvanm oommunity. "'If you parents feel the station is emphasizing too much violence, Y0!1 should say so," the F'CC commissioner states, "Pel1~ sonally, as the father of throo Uttle girls, I think too many, programs teach our youngstenJ that the solution to most pro!> 1ems is a punch in the jaw or fA hWlet in the belly. "If information shows ~ rarely carried by your station and you want more information and less entertainment, say' 80 .' • . Most broadcasters want 00 be responsive to the public aOO responsible about their use ~ your airwaves."

did get the official attendance) record high of 121 schook and 1891 entrk!s, despite the posting howling partisans at Braves Field. The three game series of minimum rethat year drew some 80,000 fans. quirements for Doe Gautreau, a Braves minor each of the league official and Hop Riopel, track and field now Varsity coach at H.C. were events. members of the Crusader nine. The field While on the subject of colevents portion . lege baseball we note that Somof ,the compeerset's Jim Bridgeman and Fall tition is schedRiver's Charley Carey and Dick uled to 'be held Bonalewicz played vital roles in at the Stadium Colby's 5th Maine baseball title tomorrow for under the aegis of John Winkin, Classes A and former Duke University luminB. These, for ary. Bridgeman was the Mules the most part, include schools No. 1 hurler, whiie the exin the metropolitan Boston area. Another innovation, aside from Durfee tandem were the big stickers in the Colby offense. the name, finds the first five And of the same vintage is schools in each class eligible to West Point's Don Eccleston who__ compete in the new one class State Meet which will be held had a fabulous schoolboy career at Wareham under coach Clem on Saturday, June 3. The first six in each event of the state Spillane. He, too, is the' Army's Meet will then automatically leading moundman. '!'he other , half of Wareham's famed onequalify for the New England. Continued from Page One BASKETBALL LEAGUE: NinaPoyant of St. Theresa's New Bedford High is ex,pected two pitching staff, Ken Borsari IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I Parish and Joseph Gallagher of St. John the Baptist Parish have' hereunto set my hand and to be a strong contender in is with the University of ConClass A along with Newton and necticut. say, these young men, hold outstanding player 'award for Boys and Girls CYO eaU8ed( ~e Seal of the United the, Boston schools, English and banded together would make a States of America to be aHixecL Grammar School Basketball League in New Bedford. tremendous ,loeal iD,1pact is a Trade. Attleboro hi the only DONE at the City of Washinearea school which will compete Cape League revival.' ton this twenty-fourth day OIl Final Streteh . ill Class B. st. John's Prep of April in the year of our LoN High School bas e b a 11 III Danvers iil ranked the team 110 nineteen hundred and sixty-one, beat in C and thios may be the "rounding third and heading , and of the Independence of tbll 'home." The Old Colony League NEW MONMOUTH (NC) . made possible, by the weather United States of America the oDe year that perennial D titUst winds up its atffilirs this week Weather forec,asting at best is 8 station, is an invaluable aid in hundred and eighty-fifth. Concord gets its come-uppance. Fairhaven and Dartmouth eotHd . while Bristol County and 'Narry , risky business, but to seventh' teaching the pupils, she added. JOHN F. KENNEIW , don't) conclude until a week" grade pupils of St. Mary's School "We like to think that we be the squads to do it. have our own 'New Frontier' Coach Al Boucher's Cl'imsoe from today. '1'he picture in nei- it is a matter of calculation. Under· the tutelage of Fran- St. Mary's," Sister Donna obNORTH EASTON (NC):-Goolf. flyer6 prepped :for the Class ther of the latter is clear. Old served, "and that some of our John A. Volpe of Massachusette Meet by copping the Greater Colony will presumably send cisc8n Sister Mary Donna, the children observe at first hand will give the commencement adscientists of tomorrow will have Boston Interscholastics' cham- Silver Lake and Hingham into dress at Stonehill College _ post season play: Fairhaven, 1~ the' workings of an official U.S. been introduced to the wonders pionship last Saturday. The New June 4. games upon Durfee ~ which weather station' right on the of the unive~ right here." Bedford squad finished fou;rth still has a game with North I in the senior division, eked out Attleboro hanging fire.' ~ can't schoo grounds. "Of course, we do not do any . r~ a 2 point margin over Rindge Sewing Machines-All Makes afford to let up after lIuffering official forecasting," Sister Donfor the junior title and ran away AT WHOLESALE PRICES Continued fl'om Page Out. its first league loss of the season . na commented, "but the pupils with the freshman-sophomore was named diocesan director of last Thursday. ~njoy making their own predicphase enroute to its winning the Holy Name Society, a posiIn Narry, the situation is' lKi tions." ' point total of 72. Rindge Tech FALL RIVER-OS. 4-5719 tion which he still holds. complex that it defies analysis. The station helps make up the' was second, Newton third. TAUNTON-VA. 4-8651 The league leadership, 'currently official Weather Bureau foreFr. Canuel will celebrate a. Defendi.ng Champi.ons Attleboro-CA. 2-6300 shared by no less than three casts for this Jersey Shore area. Solemn High Mass of thanksgiv-' Fairhaven',s Jeff Purvis turned ing on Sunday, June 4, at 11 at teams, was partially resolved on Readings must be taken every New Bedford-'#'(. 7-0682 in a tremendous performance in Tuesday when Holy Family met day and sent to the iJ.S."Weather St. Hyacinth's Church, New the senior 440. Rindge's Brooks, Dighton-Rehoboth. Case, thll!' Bureau in Chattanooga, Tenn;, Bedford. The ,deacon and sub-' the premeet favorite could do third l~ader, had a date with each month. . , deacon will be Rev. Gerard STO~~S 00 'better than third. Durfee's winless Diman. One, game back Ai;lout the size of, a television Chabo,t and Rev. Omer Lussier' '1823 Acushnet Avenue Paul Mooney ran fourth. Pur- of the leaders is Somerset High : set, the "{eather. station UJ who also' served as officers at vis ia the defending, champion which' threw everything into 0 New Bedford, Mass. equipped with mercury and al- his First Mass 25 years ago. Rev. in the Class D 220. After beating spin by virtue of its consecutive cohol 'thermometers and a preLucien Jusseaume, aSsistant at the best Greater Boston had to victories over Case and D-R. cipitation gauge. ," Sacred Heart in New Bedford, offer, the Fairhaven Fly e t Called the '''Beehive,'' the sta- , will preach the jubilee sermon. sho~,ld repeat with ease. "'The, Family That New·9Mg~ding tion "iit believed to' be the only Following the Mass, a banquet Also returning to defend bbI official U.S. weather station will be served in the parish hall , , ~ravs Toge~hei' championship , laurels will be under the sponsorship of the ' SYDNEY (NC)~A new wing located in an elemEmtiiry schoo1. , parishioners. ' l'lI Somerset's Dick Burbank whose" The idea for the 'projecl W1ilG Stays TogethCr" specialty is the broad jump. at St. John's Catholic College of conceived last Summer by a Fr. Canuel was born Aug. 26, Dick has been, wiQning consist- the University of, Sydney has, group' of parents who volun1911 in, Fall River. He is the soil THE ently all Spring and coach Bob 'been J:}amed for", Australian teered to heLp with the school's' of the late Georges and Ellen Simpson gives him anexcellem Prime Minister Robe}.'t Gordon , science pI:0gram. (·Salesses) Canuel. Attending Menzies, a, Presbyterian. FI~ST chance to defend. In ali the!'e, the jubilee MaSs will be two "We' applied' to ,the" governThe , Prime Minister attended are 15 first-place winners in brothers and six sisters; one nisment l~t October," said Sister the opening of the $170,000 Men1960 returning to competitiOD. Donna, "and the approval was ' ter, Sister Rose of St. Francis, ~boro-Soutb AtoeboN assistant superior of the Little The only double defender will zies Wing by Norman Cardinal , granted in December. The sta':' 8ee1l0Dll Gilroy, , Archbishop, of/Sydney. be' Kevin O'Brien, of Belmqnt Sisters of the Poor in Chicago, tion was installed March 28." The decision to name it after wiU be unable to attend.. who WOfl both the' ClasS B Sister Donna said the main the Prime Minister' was taken hUl'dle an~ h~gh jump.., purpose of the project is to stimbecause of his contributions to ulate an interest in science On fJhe collegiate baseball 'the cause of university' education. among, the pupils. Practical' ap, " scene, Boston College dedicated plication of, classroom study, its new baseball field in honor TrucIc Body Builders of Commander John J. Shea , ," AlomlDum or Steel "'aintenance Supplie. Continued from Page One who went down in the carrier SWEEPERS - SOAPS 944 County St. P. DUFFY Wasp off Guadalcanal in 1942. under the direction of Rev. Paul ,NEW BEDFORD. MAss. DISINFECTANTS His son Jack to whom he wrote Connolly, will entertain during, WY 2-6618 a stirring letter just before the the assembly. . FIRE EXTINGUISHERS Comfortably Air-Conditioned Registration ill-fated cruise was in attendRegistration for the cQl1vention ance, as was a host of former , ATIUBORO B.C. diamond greats. Cardinal begins at 12:30. The general 20 ,Peck St. CA 2-0193 meeting and key-note address Cushing tossed out the first ball 1896 PURCHASE ST. and the dedicatory game B.C. va. will begin at two o'clock sharp, .'PATRICK J: DUFFY NEW BEDFORD followed by a business session Fordham was underway. Funeral Dir. - E:mbalmer WV' ~-3786 , and the presentation of nomi, Memory Lane, ' They still talk of the fabled nees for election. A general B.C.-H.C. game' of June 1923 assembly and entertainment will follow imme<Uately ,Next will be a :short buffet and, the election. The program will conclude Continued frOlll Page One .. with the installation of the new schools "is immensely comples, CYO officers ,and benediction of: and there's no clear-cut yes-or- . the l\fost Blessed Sacrament. no answer to it. RORlsr 'amI "But' generally speaking I and ST. BONAVENTURE (NC) ~ against using Federal funds for GARDEN CENTER these schools," MT. Graham .James A. Farley, chairman of the said. "In other WOI'ds, I tend ., Coca Cola Export Company, wm • GENERAL TIRES • DElCO BAmRIES agree with Mr. Kennedy, whose be the commencement speaker at the 101st graduation exercises • PERFECT C1RCLE RINGS· views are in conflict with those 215 MaiR St. PLaza 9-31-1 1 of the RomaA Catholic llier- of St. Bonaventure University on FALL RlYH - NEW BEDfORD - 1ft'ANNIS - NEWPOtt'f ~ .June 4.

Peace Prayers

Pupils Make Weather Predictions' At Station on School Grounds

at

Governor Speaker

Fe lli anuel1

$30

NORTH EAST SEWING

Name For Plrime Minis'ter

NATIONAL' BANK

SCHOOL

D,·ocesa n CYO

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.SEGUIN.

J.

Funeral, Home

DAHILL CO.

WM~

Kennedy Plan

1."MANNING (0.

WHOLESALE AUTOMOTIVE

am

Farley to Speak

INDUSTRIAL SUPPLIES

Buzzards Bay

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fit

THE ANCHORThurs., May 25, 1961

28

Ml'tl 'lletoesli Hetu. $15 Marg~l'et Connell. $10 'Bertha Ashworth, Thomas Clemmey, Adelia Connell, Mra 'Jose DeMedeiros, Mr & Mra Raymond Botelho. Joseph Cabino, Joseph Rapoza, Mr & Mrs Robert St. Pierre, Mr & Mrs Lionel Cadieux, Mr & Mrs, John J. Barrett ' " .' 'Mr' & Mrs RogE:r H: St. Pierre, Anna Long" Thomas Whiting, 'Rog'er Lafrance" Rose Doherty, Mary' Power. .. . ' James Britland Jr.

Con!. from Page Twenty-six

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F«1l~~ ~nY~r

ST. MARY'S CATIIIEDRAL

'$100 'St. Mary's Cathedral Women's ,'Guild, In memory of Lucy, .J. . McMahon. ' '" ' $85 Rev. Paul F.' McCarJ~ick. $50 'In ,memory of 'Charles W. Lynch Family. " $25, In memory of Je~emiah E. Holland Mr & Mrs Wilfred Cal- . , laghan, 'Mr & Mrs Robert Shea. $15 Corky Row Clu.b, Ine. $10 . ' Claire J. Nagle, Hillard M. 'Nagle, John Russell, MJ~ & Mrs ,Arthur Russell, Mr & Mrs Ed,ward 'Levell. :' 'Mrs Aaron G. Cummings, Mr &; Mrs Leo, Leary, Mrs Nellie Thibault, Margaret Dacey, Mr ,& Mrs William Pereira Jr. 'Margaret Riley, Mrs. Michael , McConnon, Florence' Cook, Mad'eline Lally, James Sullivan. ' Mr & Mrs James Melvin, Mrs ~Hannah Melvin', Lucien Larrivee, Emma Wright, Mr & Mrs Anthony Machado. Mr & Mrs Gilles Gollins, Mrs Gertrude Rimmer, Mr & Mrs_ .William Considine, Mr & Mrs .Thomas Pingley, Daniel Ping'ley. " Manuel Almeida, Mrs Agnes Tanguay, Mr & Mrs Jolin J. l(:il''by, The ,Sullivan Family', Mr & Mrs Philip Rocha, : Mr & Mrs George Nolan, Charles Critchley, BLESSED

S,~CRAMI~NT

$10 _ Stanislaus Karnasiewicz, ~ Paul Beaudoin. ESPIRITO SANTO

$325 Rev. Joao V. Resendes. $50 Rev. Ernesto L. R. Borges. $25 C.Y.O. Espirito Santo Unit, ll4r & Mrs Antonio Oliveira. I $15 The'Vincent Family. $10 Mr & Mrs Manuel Abrantes, D"eodata Albernaz, Mr & Mrs Joseph Antunes, Mr & Mrs Domingos Barros, MI' & Mrs Diamantino Bernardo. Mr & Mrs Alfred Cabral, Mr & Mrs Ernest J. Carreiro & Family, Mr & Mrs John V. Carvalho, Mr & Mrs Luiz Carvalho, Mr & ,Mrs Manuel Carvalho. Mr & Mrs Manuel Carvalho, Mr & Mrs Joseph P. Costa, Mr & Mrs ViCente Costa, Mr & Mrs Manuel Costello, Mr & Mrs George Freitas. Benjamin Garcia, Mrs Christina Garcia, Mr & Mrs Philip Ledo, Mrs Alice Medeiros, Mr & Mrs Joseph L. Medeiros. Mr & Mrs Joseph N. Medeiros, Mr & Mrs Manuel Medeiros, Antonio V. Miranda, Mr & Ml'!J Antone Morais, Mr & Mrs Harold Mosher. Mr ,& Mrs John Nunes, Mrs Isabel Oliveira, Mr & Mrs Man:' uel Pacheco, Mr & Mrs Edmond Pavao, Mr &' Mrs Louis Perry. Mr & Mrs Manuel Silva, Mr & Mrs Manuel M. Silva, Mr & Mrs Joseph R. Soares, Mr & Mrs Antone Souza, Mr & Mrs Joseph "'Souza. Mr & Mrs 'Manuel Souza Jr., Mr & Mrs Joseph C. Travis Sr., Mr & Mrs Antonio Valentim, Mr & Mrs David Vasconcellos, Mr & ll4rs Paul F. Young. HOLY NAME

$500 Dr & Mrs Daniel Gallery. $100 In memory of Atty James H. Kenyon; Dr & Mrs Jeremiah Sullivan. $50 John T. Farrell Jr., Mr & Mro Wiliam E. Crowther, Mr & Mrs Gustave Mattos & Nancy Mattos, Dr & Mrs John Dunn. $40 , Dr & Ml's Alfred J. Roy. $25 Mr &' Mrs Cornelius Lynch, Mrs G. Richard Duffy, Mr & Mra William F. Long .Jr. $25 Mabel Moran, Mr & Mrs lWnWl Mullaly. '

SACRED HEART

$100 Rev. Daniel F. Moriarty, Dr Earle Russey, Rose Sullivan, Sacred Heart Parish Women's Guild, Sacred Heart, Conference Society of St. Vincent de Paul. "$'75 Rev. John J. Regan. $35 Katherine Furze. $25 Patrick Flemming., Mr & l'trG Michael J. Grace, Margaret McCarthy and In. Memory of Mary McCarthy Brownell, Mr & Mrs 'Nestor G. Silva. , $20 Mr & Mrs Raymond Gallagher, Mr & Mrs J. Joseph Welch. . $15 John Flemming, Madeline. Y. Riley; Andrew J. Lyons, Angela Harrington. ' Mrs Helen Sweeney, Dr Ed;' ward Steinhof., " , $12 The John Furze Family, Letitia A. Lync,h. ' , John Farrell. , $10 John Sulliv!1n, Patrick 'Miller, ,Mildred & Gerald' Harrington, Catherine & Thomas Roberts, Dorothy C. Sullivan. Leo F. McShane, Mrs Margaret ,Degnan, "Mae S<;hancks, Anna Rowley, Mary V. O'Hearn. " . . Ch,arles' V. Porta, Mr & Mrs Thomas P. Stapleton, Leonard 'J. Hughes, Mr & Mrs Joseph T. 'Canniff, Rose Farrell. A. Irene Noble, EdmUnd L. Pilling, Irene Porter, Mr & Mrs William Watson, Florence HarCONFIRMATION AT OTIS BASE: In his first visit to Otis Air, Force Base for this rington. Mi' & Mrs Patrick Sullivan, purpose, Bishop Connolly confirms 70 boys, irIs 'and adult converts.. A reception and' Frances Dailey, Margaret Riley, dinner at the Officers' Club honoring the 'Bishop 'followed the confirmation ceremony. Mr & Mrs Thomas Lynch. Rev.' John Hack,ett, assistant .chancellor, arid Chaplain, Colonel Jol:tn D. St. John, S.J. and Thomas Dolan. Marie Dubuque, George ShatChaplain, Captain John A. Collins, C.SS.R. of the base, assisted the Bishop. tuck, Mrs Louise Murray, Anibal Silva, Mr & Mrs John Trainor. Antonio Pimentel, Joseph dale, Emilie Tremblay, Leo Van$15 Margaret Lowney, Helen Lit:-:»renda, John Rocha, Caetano· tle, John Franey, Jerry CiUllo, Mrs Eugene Sullivan & family, asse Family. RodrigueS,_ Mr~ Manuel Sa. Mary Dolan. Mr & Mrs Ervin J. Carroll. OUR LADY OF TEE ANGELS Maximino Saraiva, Frank Sil$10 Mrs Mary O'Sullivan, John \ $25 via, Leopoldina Sousa, FranSarah Moran, Mr & Mrs Romeo Connors, Mary Price, William. Holy Rosary Society. celina Vincent, Manuel VitaL Alenburg, Mr & Mrs Francis Worsley" Charles Gibney. $10 Leary, Misses Louise & Ruth Mr & Mrs Louis Boitano, Mary Manuel Silva, Frank 'RodrIHOLY ROSARY Walch, Mr & Mrs William- Henry. Stapleton. gues Sr." Manuel Alves, Atty $35 Ann Dunn, Mr & Mrs James R. Mr & Mrs Dennis Patota , Sullivan, Mi: & Mrs Vincent Bag- & Mrs Frank Rodrigues, Edward W~AR nall, Mr & Mrs Thomas Sheehan, Souza, Antone Michaels, Al$25 meida Funeral Home. .; Katherine Battersby. Mr & Mrs Frank Mazzoni, Sh~s That 'Fot Roland Soares, Mary Silva, Italian Amer. ,World War Vets.o Mr & Mrs Thomas W. Ham- ' "THE FAMILY SHO~ STORE" mond,. Mary Hurley, Mr' & Mrs Joseph Kise, Manuel Cabral, InC., Post 10. David A. J., Burns, Mr & Mrs Gouveia. $20 John~s Louis GleaSon, MI's Walter OUR LADY OF HEALTIll John De Nadal. Palmer. ' $225 $10 Rev. Maurice Souza. The Italian Progressive Club. HOLY CROSS 95 PLEASANT STR~ET Mr & Mrs Frank J. Barresi, Mr $200 $60 Fall River OS 8-5811 & Mrs Albert D' Am brosi~, Mr & Franciscan Father.s of Holy Rev. George J. Sousa. Mrs Ernest J. D'Ambrosio, Mr & Cross Church. $30 '¥rs"Joseph Gragnani. . $25 Angelo Pereira. , Mr & Mrs Louis Oli¥eiN, Mr & Mrs Charles Szulewski, Announcing Opening of $20 Pasquale Zarlenga. Holy Rosary Society of Holy ,Delia Pacheco. Reliable Fence Co. Frank Barresi, Mr & Mrs Emo 'Cross Parish. $1-6 ,OF CAPE COO Bertoncini' & Family, Teresa $10 Manuel Freitas. Bertoncini, Mr & Mrs William Militia of Mary Immaculate Hyannis $10 . Leary, Edith Manchester, Mr & of Holy Cross Parish, Mr & Mrs Mrs John ,Salvo. . Rose Aguiar, Joseph Almeida, R. Canuel, Mr & Mrs H. Collura, Route 132 SP. 5·4124 Mr & Mrs J. Midura, Mr & Mrs Silvana Almeida, John Britto, \ 'A Complete Line of IMMACULATE CONCEPTION Manuel Cabral. Stanley Nowak. $25 Cedar & Chain Link Fences Mr & Mrs J-os. Pypnowski, Maria & Victoria Correia, Florence ,Lyn~h. Joseph Sabat, Antonina Szpak. James Costa, Sandy's Diner, Adelaide Couto, Manuel Faria. NOTRE DAME Albert Fournier, A Frienel. $25 Joseph GonsalveS, Clarence ~ Eugene Hubert. Harney, Alfred'Marques. '. $20 Manuel Medeiros, Jose Mello, ,.. SHARON, MASSACHUSETTS', Ernest Brisson. Manuel Miranda" Nicolau No$15 ~ Spacious, Fireproof Sleeping Quarters ~ Normand J. A. Belanger, Louis brega, Louis Pereira. ;V For Boys 7 to 14 years old "'IIIIIIIIIIII E. Bellenoit, Georges Migneauit, ~ Six We~k-season: July 2 to August 1'3 Poirier & Patry Families. Register for 2, or 4, or 6 weeks "'IIIIIIIIIIII ,' $12 ~ Free Tutoring if desired Armand Brodeur, FranCHI DEBROSS~ Mulrooney, Edgar St-Martin. THE BROTHERS OF THE SACRED HEART "'IIIIIIIIIIII $10 Jean-Baptiste Aubin, Rem 1 Couture, Esther De~osiers, AlHeatin~ bert Dussault, Eugene Heon

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