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Crowing Total Again Shows Sincere·Charity of Area Public approval of the diocesan projects is manifested by returns to Catholic Chari ties Appeal headquarters. More than two-thirds of last year's total has already been realized an'a present indiCations are that this year's Appeal is stronger than had been . :,iIJiJ d .. . anticipated.. '::r,;,iLU Finartabulation of ~he re ·.·tf .,.'·,' sult of the Appeal Will not : ., be known, however, for an "'.' other two weeks. While the
The:
ANCHOR
An Allchor of the Soul, Sure alld Firm -
Fall River, Mass.
Vol. 1, No.8
ST. PAUL
Thursday, May 30,' 1957
Secolld Class Mail Priveleoes Authorized at Fall River, Mass.
PRICE, 10c: $4.00 per Yr.
Franciscan Convert Takes Part in Jubilee Service Rev. Alixes Morris, a Jewish convert, of the Franciscan Order, recently assigned to Our Lady's Chapel, New Bed ford, was Master of Ceremonies at the Silver Jubilee Mass of Rev. Arthur B. Klyber, a Jewish convert, of the Redemp torist Fathers. The Mass was offered at. Holy Redeemer C h u r c h, . New York City, yesterday morning, with a large number of Jrwish converts, Pl'iests, religious and laity in attendance.
Father Morris entered the
Church on July 17, 1948 and soon
eiltered the Franciscan Semi
nary. He was ordained to the }loly Priesthood last June by the ,Apostolic Delegate, Most Rev.
Amleto G. Clcog'nani at the'
Franciscan Monastery, Washington. . In addition to Father MorrIs, four other converts from Judaism assisted Fathel' Klyber. Deacon and subdeacon, respectively, were Rev. Elias Mayer and Rev. Am brose Schaeffer. Beniedlctlne Fathers ordained Saturday. Rev. Meyer Toby. S. J., was assistant priest and Rev. Peter Jacobs served with Father Mor ris as master of cei·emonies. Father Klyber. assigned for the past foUl' yeal'S to the Re-
STUDENTS AID APPEAL: Thomas Salvo of the Im maculate Conception parish, Fall River, presents check to Bishop Connolly for the 1957 Catholic Charities Appeal. The check repr~sented the proceeds of a dance conducted by the Students' Council of F.all River.
. Three Priests Are Given New Parish Assig(lments Three changes of assignment of' priests have been announced by Most Rev. James L. Connolly, D.O., Bishop of Fall River. Rev. Edward B. Booth, dean of Dukes and Nantucket Counties and pastor of the Sacred Heart Church at Oak Baptist Church in <;:entral Vil lage, Westport. - Bluffs,has been named pas Father Booth. who was born tor of St.. Mary's Church, in Fall River•.was educated at
North Attleboro. Rev. James E. McMahon, ad ministrator at St. John the Bap demptorist mlSSlOn at" Omaha, tist Church. Central Village, Is a native New Yorker. He was' Westport. has been appointed to ordained in Holy Redeemer succeed Father Booth at Oak Church, his home parish, on Ma~' Bluffs. Rcv. William R. Jordan, a 30, 1932. cumte at St. Mary's Church in Mansfield. has been designated administrator of St. John the
United States Catholic Population Increases
St. Mary's Cathedral School and Durfee High School, Fall River. He attended St. Charles College and St. Mary's Seminary In Baltimore.. The new North Attleboro pas tor was ordained to the priest hood in St. Mary's Cathedr!lJ, Fall River, on May 25, 1922 by the late Most Rev. Daniel F. ( Turn to Page Seven
Appeal officially closed Wednes day night, Diocesan headquarters will continue to accept contribu tions for another fortnight at least. This 15 the same plan which has been followed In the cam paign of previous years. Project Approval It is quite evident from present returns that there is an over whelming approval of the pro jects underway in New Bedford and Fall River. These include the addition to the Sacred Heart Home, New Bedfor9 and the Youth Center, also In New Bed ford. Widespread approval has also been acknowledged by the dioce san faithful in the erection of a home for the aged chronically ill . and the new school for Excep tional Children. These foul' units are sustained and financed by the Cathollo Charities Appeal and represent a total expenditure of $2,000,000 during the fiscal year. North Easton Every day parishes of the dio cese are reaching last year's quota but the outstanding exam ple is had in the returns from the Immaculate Conception par Ish of North Easton. The exem plary charity of the people who Turn to rage Seven
Prayer for Vocations The following prayer will be recited daily during Vocations Wee~ which begins today and continues to June 9:
o God, we earnestly beseech Thee to bless this diocese 'With many priests, brothers and sisters who will love Thee with their whole strength and gladly spend their entire lives to serve Thy Church and to make Thee known and loved. Bless our homes, bless our families. Choose from them all those who are needed for Thy holy work. Mary, . Queen of the clery'll! .PTa'll for us. Pray for our priests and religious; Obtain for vs many more. Amen.
NEW YORK (NC)-Catholics in the United states, ,Alaska and the Hawaiian Islands now number 34,563,851,
according to the 1957 Official Catholic Directory just
issued by P. J. Kenedy and Sons, publisher.
The new total shows an
increase of 989,834 over the mcmbers of the hierarchy. the
number in the country's
statistics reported by the di largest history. They included foul' card rectory last year. There now inals, 33 archbishops and 180 are 34.386.351 Catholics in the 48 states and the District of Co
lumbia and 177,500 in Alaska and Hawaii, it was reported. The 10-year incre.'\se in the number of U. S~ Catholics was placed at 9.295,678 or 36.8 per cent more than the 25,268,173 reported in 1947. Increas.e in Convel·ts· For the eleventh successive year, the' number of converts entering the Church in each year exceeded 100,000. It was re ported that during 1956 adult b..lptisms 'numbered 141,525, an increase of '2,192"over the pre ceding year. This figure brings the total conversions duriI)g the last decade to 1.252.854 the di rectory reported. The directory, surveying 26 archdioceses and 111 dioceses in tbe United. States, llstcd 217
bishops.
Gain in Religious An increa~e of 1,376 in the numbe.r of clergy brought the to t:H of pjriests to 49,725, largest ever recorded. They in~luded 30,481 diocesan priests,-;-an in crcase of 747-and 19,244 in re ligious communities-an increase of 629. Listed for the first time were 2,087 newly ordained priests. FOUl' Archbishops,' six bishops and 711 priests died dur ing 1956: Professed Religious recorded 9,300 Brothers, an increase of 432, and 162,657 Sisters. an in crease of 3,112. First issue of a Catholic Di rectory in the United States was published in 1817. Subsequent editions h3 ve reflected the steadY Tw:o to ra~e SeveD
NATIONAL PRESIDENT ADDRESSES DIOCESAN WOMEN: Mrs. Robert H. Ma honey of Hartford (second from left) was the guest speaker at annual meeting of the Diocesan Council of Catholic Women held in Fall River. Miss Margaret Lahey (left) is the retiring president. and Mrs. Emmett P. Almond of New Bedford (second from right) is the new Diocesan Council preSident. Rev. Thomas F. Walsh is the Coun cil moderator. Mrs. Mahoney, a sister of Most Rev. Philip M. Hannan, Auxiliary Bishop of \yashington, is president of the National Women's Council. . . .
THE· ANCHOR n.un.. May 30. 1957
F«JlI'hell' Condon Again Provincial.
For-Sacred Hearts Fathers
.
J
ORDO
Very Rev. William Condon, as. CC., has been reappointed for· 11. second term as Provincial of the United States Province of the Congregation of the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary.. Announcement of his reap pointment was received from tile Very Rev. John d'Elbee, Superior. General of the Congreg'ation, re siding in Rome. Priests from the Fall River Diocese who are members cif the . Congregation's Un i ted States Province are Very Rev. Paul Price; S'uperior of Sacred Hearts Seminary, Wareham; Rev. Henry Creighton, Novice Master, Ware-' ham; Rev. Alexander Perry, and Rev. Dominic AnnunZiato, mis sionaries in Japan; Rev. Jude Morgan, Navy chaplain in Guam, and Rev. Maurice Pepin, profes sor at the major seminary in Jeffrey, N. H. Father Condon was the first American to hold the position of Provincial In the Congregation. The United States Province was established 10 years ago and in cludes, besides foundations In this
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OFFICIAL Diocese of Fall River
FRIDAY-Blessed Virgin Mary, Queen. Double' of II Class. White.' Mass Proper; Gloria; Second Col : BISHOP'S APPOINTMENTS lect St. Petronilla, Virgin, Creed, i. v Preface of Blessed Virgin. ., SATURDAY-St. Angela Mer May 30, Thursday-7:30 P.M.-St. Mary's, Seekonk, Blessing of Icl, Virgin. Double. White. Mass Proper; Gloria, Second Collect . Church and Presiding at Mass. for Peace; Preface of Ascension. June I, Saturday-9:00 A.M.-St. Patrick's, Fall River, Junior SUNDAY-Sunday after the Foresters. Ascension. Double. White. Mass Proper; Gloria, Second Collect June 2, Sunday - 2:00 'P.M.-Corpus Christi, Sandwich, Con 88. Marcellinus, Peter and Eras firmation, mus, Martyrs, Creed, Preface of 4:00 P.M.-St. Margaret's, Buzzard's .Bay, Confirmation. Ascension. 7:30 P.M.-St. PatriCk, Wareham, Confirmation. MONDAY - Simple. White. Mass' as on Ascension. Gloria, June 4, TuesdaY~lO;OO A.M.-Providence College, Commence Second collect for Peace; Preface ment. of Ascension. ' TUESDAY-St. Francis Camc ciola. Confessor. Double. Wihte. Mass Proper; Gloria, Second Col FORTY HOURS lect for Peace; Preface of Ascen Bion. DEVOTION WEDNESDAY - st. Boniface. STEUBENVILLE (NC)-Mem Bishop and Martyr. Double. Red. June 2-St. Joseph, Taunton. Mass Proper; Gloria; Second bel'S of the new.Catholic Physi Holy Name, Fall River. Collect for Peac'e; Preface of Asthis Ohio diocese cians' Guild of country. a ~ovitiate in Ireleand . cension. June 9-St. Mary, New Bed , ford. THURSDAY - St. Norbert, were told their work is a means and a foreign missjon in Japan. st. Mary, Norton. There are now 81 priests, 159 Bishop and Confessor. Double. . of 8aving their own SOUls, as well June 16--'St. Mary, North At scholastics, eight lay brothers White. Mass Proper; Glgria, Sec ond Collect for Peace; Preface as preserving the bodies and tleboro. souls of others., and 24 novices. ·of Ascension.' Blessed SacI:ament, Fall Bishop John. K. Mussio of RiveI'. Steubenvillealso told the doctors Trial Called Turning the guild can be used as an effi June 23-St. Elizabeth, Fall Point in History cient means of restoi'ing in the River. Corpus Christi, Sand EXETER (NC)-The 1949-50 minds of the public the dignity which in too many cases has wich. The new st. Mary's Church, in the Cherry HH.l Acres trial of 11 top communists con- been lost by physicians because JUl~e 30-0ur Lady of Purga 'victed of' attempting to over section of Seekonk, just over the Hebronville line, will throw the U. S. government was of misunderstandings and the tory. New Bedford. be blessed tonight by Bishop Connolly in the presence of termed a "turning point in Imprudence of abuses by "a tiny Sacred Heart, North At handful" in the profession. tleboro. a large congregation ~ ,American history," by the judge The Bishop asserted that "vi Rev. Cornelius J .. Keliher, fessionals follow the 'same co- whc presided. . cious and often extremely harm;' administrator, will be cele- lonial patte~n prevailing through Speaking at PhillIPS Exeter tul rumors are wont to be 'cir th h h Alademy, Justice Harold R. Me ·brant at the Solemn Hig'h e c urc . dma, former U. S. District Court culated concerning lndividual Mass, at which Bishop ConHas Allen Organ judge, who has since been eie- doctors, . springing up entirelY The choir loft is located at the \'ated to the U. S. Circuit Court. Without basis, but promulgated nolly presides. Rev. Ambrose E. Bowen Is deacon and Rev. Jo- rear of the church over the main of Appeals, recalled. the strong with all the righteousness and and seph F. O'Donnell, subdeacon. entrance, with a new Allen elec- pressures brought against him by pomp that bespeaks authority.' Deacons of honor to the Bish-' tric organ. . commun;st' sympathizers in Il,~l The result is that the entire op are Very Rev. John J. Shay The stained glass windows on unsuccessful effort to break tIP medical pro f e s s Ion is dis~ honored." and Rev. John J. Kelly. Masters one side of the church depiCt the t.he trial. ~ Bishop Mussio noted \he long of ceremonies are Very Rev. Glorious Mysteries and on the Judge Medina said'the case was Bumberto S. Medeiros and Rev. other side portray the Joyful of' great significance to the and tedious hours maintained by John P. Drisocll. MYsteries. American people because it threw the conscientious physician. "Just because a .doctor keeps Music will oe by the LaSalette The church was ~founded ill the spotlight as never before on a minimum of office hours," the « Seminary choir. Members of St. 1904 bY the late and beloved Rev, the Red conspiracy in this coun try and because it aSserted the Bishop .pointed -out, "is no reason Vincent de Paul Society will be Patrick S. McGee. ushers. Rev. George A. Lewin, former validity of cases tried under the to suspect that he does not put in at least that number of addi The new church, built at a pastor, launched the original Smith ACt. . cost of approxImately $200,000 building fund campaign which He said he realized from the tional hours in surgery or hospi displays a departure from "the responsibility was assumed by start that the great majority of tal calls. Like that of a priest. usual church type of edifice in Father Keliher who came to the spectators in the courtrc)om were his day can never be called his that it stresses a· new contem- church approximately 18 months communist sympathizers who own." porary church style cif architec- ago and has expended untiring had no interest in the actual guilt ture known as Georgian Colonial.' personal interest-in bringing the or innocence of the parties in While this type is unknown to new· church pl'oject to its most. volved," but "simply wanted to this section of the state It is successful conclusion. tm;11 thing's into a tJ~ree-ring , . circus for propaganda effect." quite familiar to the Cape Cod Rt. 6 at The Narrows in North 'Westport liector of the Fall River diocese. 'Priest Is Mayor "With God's aid," Judge MeCARDIFF, Wale~' (NC) dina declared, "I found the stamSeats 550 The walls of the interior of the ina to carry it to the end, and church are of a delicate shade of Father Stanley Vince; pastor of American fairness and jurispru blue, making an extremely beau- a little town of Llandovery, has dence were upheld in the Te t'f 1 t h been elected to be that town's Rnalysis. I also found pleasure In JU se ting for t e pews, with mayor by the entirely Protestant sending most of the lawy'ers in a seating Ca pa CI·ty 0 f a PPIOX' . 1- board of aldermen. . volved off to jail afterwards." mately. 550 persons, which are painted' a . brilliant white. The ---'--N"-A-T-IO-N-A";;'\L:-"-"L-E-G-I....:O-N-..... O-:..F. . :.:. . .D.:. :.E-=C:..::.E:.. N-=.. C:..:.y::.:. .:.:. =.::.:= sanctuary furniture is . a]so .
pained white and white marbleUNOBJECTIONABI.E FOR GENERAL PATRONAGE
lite checkerboard rubber tile.cov- Badge of Marshall Brennan Men of Sherwood Forest
ers the -entire floor of the main Coldtiz Story . Monster from Green Hell
ehurch. .... Half Human Time is My Enemy . Georgian lines continue to pre- .Man in the Road
vail in the design of the sanctuUNOB..JECTIONABLE FOR ADULTS
Outlaw's Son
ary and a paneled reredos for the . Desk Set main altar is also painted white. 'Dino ' Saint Joan
A large crucifix is suspended in Hatful of Rain Seventh Sin
front and e,bove the altar, giving Midnight Story
in. preparation for the Feast, June J3th the impression that It rests in OBJECTIONABLE IN PAR,T FOR ALL
mid-air. ' Green Man Winner's Circle·
OUR LADY'S CHAPEL-FRANCISCAN FATHERS "Jesus in the Blessed SacraCONDEMNED 572 PLEASANT ST., NEW BEDFORD, MASS. =;;;8;;;n;;;a;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;" ment," is the only ornamentatiOJ;lN inscribed on the all-white main r BEGINS TUESDAY JUNE 4th to JUNE 13th
altar. A white lectern Is placed
near the communion rail.
Novena devotions: after the 10 a.m. and noon-day
To one side of the Sanctuary
Masses, also 'at 3, p.m., 5:10 p.m, and 8 p.m.
Is the sacristy and at the oppo
Sermons by FATHER LUCIAN GALLAGHER, O.F.M.,
r;ite end an altar boys' room. The
of the Franciscan novena and mission band, New York
11001' of the sanctuary is of cork. The communion rail is all
BROADCAST of the perpetual novena every Tuesday
white with colonial pattern'
for the sick and shut-ins, at:
turned uprights supporting a
16 a.m. WNBH New Bedford' - 1340 Kes.
Iltained birch top.
. The side altars have been set
n a.m. WSAR Fall River -;- 1480 Kes.
·almost along the outer walls,
7,:30 p.m. WALE Fan River-1400 Kes.
with the inscription' "Our Life,
Our Hope, Our Sweetness" on the
llf Y0111 live on Ca,pe Cod or Southern New England and wisb Virgin's altar and upon St. Jo
to follow the novena every Tuesda.y over the Radio,. please write to us for 1Il novena. booklet: tJeph's altar, the inscription "St.
-!Qstl?~.! Pray For Us." Two con Write t.o:
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Ohio Ordinary .Lauds Doctors
large Crowd at Blessing Of New Seeko~k Church.
BUILDERS
'WHIT E':·S Fam'ily Restaurant
;
SOLEMN NOVENA TO SAINT ANTHONY
NElV BEDFOHD!!S L.EADING PHARJ:IAc;y
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REGISTERED • .PHARMACISTS
-5
!:«lIther Redor CIIJIII" !Lady's (hClipel
'l'Iilll ANCHOn.
'Su,:-on,J.-claas mall prlvlleges au
th'\l,;<>.ed at Pan lUver, Mas's. Pub
I1sh~(l <Jve"y Thursday at 21 Boo
,.)'tho-.:t 'C"thglJe 'Sl"«ll, FaB River, 'Mass., by Pr<1SS of \h<1 DhJeese ~f
by
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Rlv!))'. S,,'bacrilltion )wic'e'
po·sIJJaJdU.OO ~Cl' year.
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THE ANCHOR
Thurs., May 30. J957
Prizes and Proms
Sp(Otl~ghting JESUS-M.\RY ACADEMY,
ItlVEllt
I~,\LL
A $25 bond donated by the ~an River JuniOl' Music Federation was presented to Monika Smith, a sophomore, by Reverend Moth er St. Therese of the Infant Jesus. Superior, for a~ove-ave~' a O"e music ability and mterest m p~omoting good music. Doris Marchand, a senior, ~'ead Mayor Kane's proclamation for Lafayette Day at the observan~e conducted by the Franco-Amen can Federation. The following college inten tions of seniors have been an- 110unccd: Stonehill - Gerva Balthazal', Carol Ann Dugan, Pauline Dupre and Janine Patry. Bradford Durfee - Pauline Coulombe. University of Massachusetts o Martha Grillo. St. Annc's School of Nursing Cecile Coulombe and Simanne Caron. Salve Regina - Greta Assail. ST. MARY'S HIGH, TAUNTON
Our Schools Carolyn Soares, photography editor; Jean Ng, business man agcr; Catherine Costa, circula tion manager. The reunion committee of the classes 1907-1953 is making' plahs for future activities. HOLY FAMILY HIGH, NEW BEDFORD
First honors at the end of the fifth term were awarded to Dan iel ParadiS. a senior; Carole Kelly and Mal'thamarie Rogers, jun iors; Janet Furtado, a sopho more' and Eloise Burgo. JoAnn FigU~l'idO, Diane JUdd, Kathe rine Kellehe't', Susan Koch, Ray mond Lagasse, Catherine Smith and Mary Jane Walker, fresh men, Students who participated in the Science Fall' In New Bedford were iuvited to visit the Museum of Science in Boston. Approximately 40 members of the junior and senior classes were guests of the Postulants and Novices of Mother of Mercy No vitiate in Cumberland. R. I. In connection with Vocation Week activities.
"Roman Holiday" will be the DOMINICAN ACADEMY,' theme of the Seniol' Prom, to be I··ALL RIVER held Friday, June 7, in the ~chool Sodality officers elected for the auditorium. Committee chau'men coming school year. are prefect, ar~ as follows: Sinotte; vice-prefect, Claire Decorating-Jeanne Linhares, Claire Reilly;' secretary, Hannah Sondra George, Blanche Bo~r Eullivan; treasurer, Elizabetn que, Susan Torres. Entertal~l Menard. ment - Ann Sullivan and LOlllse Senior candidates were re Brezinski. Refreshments - Ann ceived into the sodality at a cere McDermott. Tickets Nora mony in the Academy chapel. So VaillancoUl't and Mary Marsh. dality Director Rev. Donald E. Seniors were gucsts of juniors Belanger received the sodalists' a t a reception in the school h~ll. act of consecration and officiated Committee heads wcre E.h~e at the Benediction of the Blessed Cayer. entertainment: Patncla Sacrament which fjllowed the Morrison, dinner; Kathleen Cor reception. l'igan and Carolyn Baker, decoI' Sodality prefect Louise Chou II tions. Seniors were presen~ed inard was chosen by the seniors Our Lady medals on silver chamS .for the honor of Crowning the as mementos. Blessed Virgin. All pupils of ele rr.entary and high school classes 1\11'. ST. MARY ACADEiUY,
took part in this annual cere I"ALL IUVIm
mony, which closed with Bene TIle school orchcstra ha~ be~n diction of the Blessed Sacrament a warded the Highest Ratmg m in the auditorium. the Southeastern Massachusetts Daniel F. Grace, Jr., chairman Music Festival at Whitman. of the Knights of Columbus Judge of the 40-girl group was Speakers' Club, held a meeting in David Alviani of University of the auditorium for freshmen, Massachusetts, whose comment sophomores and juniors inter read in part. ested In the public speaking and "A truly inspiring group and debating club he is organizing in ,'ery effective total sound. All the academy. 'A committee of stu persons concerned are to be con dents will make the preliminary gratulated-the element of time arrangements for an intramural for practice, the methods, con debating league, to be directed ducting. etc. are very eVident. to b,· Mr. Grace. the good here. The tone quahty . The following students were is a product of practice and time, appointed for the Catholic Stu-, but the beauty was in the sus dents Council of Fall River to re tained quality of the tone-unu place the' graduating senior liUally good for novices." members: Muriel Boutin, Louise Levasseur, Elaine Maltais, Janet JESUS-MARY ACADEMY,
Thibault, Claire Audet, Jacque I"ALL RIVF~R
line Oliveira. This year's junior Members of the Alumnae As members, Claire Reilly and Claire sociation have been invited by Sinotte, were reappointed. Rev. Roger P. Poirier to attend; Pre-commencement week fea the special mass for the gradu tures the junior-senior banquet ating class at Not I' e Dame next Monday night and Class Church Sunday, June 16. Day Exercises at 3 ;30 next Wed Father Poirier, speaking at the nesday afternoon. Seniors of the Alumnae annualrcunion, stressed yearbook staff will be guests of the Importance of Catholic edu honor at the annual Journalism cation. Mrs. Vivian Mulrooney Club party June 6. Juniors of the presided and Introduced the club form the decoration com members of the Class pf 1957. mittee, sophomores prepare th~ Among the guests were Rev. Mother Superior and several Jcsus-Marie nuns, former teach ers and pupils at the convent. SACUED HEARTS ACADEMY, RIVER '
I~ALI,
Scnior staff members of the school's publications for next year have been announced as follows: Janua-Lcslic Salvo, editor-in chicf; Joan Morris, business manag'cr; Joan Bouley, art and layout editor. Assistants are Pa tricia DeNardo. Mary Dunn, Helen Gagnon. Patricia Gibson, Katherine Howard, Barbara Le vesque, Anne Petrillo. Shacady-Fernanda Carreiro, editor-in-chief; Mary Louise O'Neill and Rita Louise Souza, literary co-editors; Elizabeth De Fusco, exchangc editor; Lynne Marie Collins, fashion editor;
3
400,,000 Catholics In' Secular C'DUeges
Mark Cannonization Ann;ver$a~v Of St. Benedict, the Moor
One hundred and fifty years ago, Pope Pius VII gave to the world a .new saint - Benedict SAN FRANCISCO mC) the Moor. "There are almost 400,000 Catho Born of slave parents, the lic students att2nding n?n-Cath humble Franciscan Brother was olic colleges." said Father James the first Negro to be named a J. O'Bl'i~n, national chaplain', saint by full canonical process. BellE)dict Manasseri's' parents National Newman Club Fedcra.; tlon. wl10 also runs the Catholic were devout Catholics, Negroes of a lowly station. Their ancestors student center at the University had ~en brought to Sicily from of Connecticut. "The number will Etheopia as slaves. be considerably larger in a few Benedict could neither read years. Our jO'l is to keep them nor write, but neither this nor close to the Faith. in surround his color was a barrier to his ings that tend to' pull them being chosen in 1578 as superior away." . of the Friary of St. Mary in Pa "Our job" belongs to the 700 lermo, Italy. priests working as Newman Club Piety Ridiculed chaplains at state and private ( secular colleges and universities Born in the village of San throughout the country. Fratello in the Diocese of Messi na, Sicily in 1524, St. Benectict was the son of Diana Larcan, a Bar Catholics From freed woman. His father, Chris Graduation Program topher Manasseri, was a slave and overseer on the farm of MOUNDSVILLE (NC) - Re fusal by public school officials in Vincent Manasseri ......: the family this West Virginia community to took its name from the owner. One day, whUe working in the allow 22 Catholic members of the high school graduating class to fields with other laborers, a take part in graduation exercises companion ridiculed his piety was characterized as "a violation and made inSUlting remarks of the right of free, exercise of about his color and parentage. l·eligion." , Benedict suffered the insults Father Benjamin F. Farrell. patiently and remained silent pastor of St. Francis Xavier under the scorn. A passerby, who had overheard Church which the 22 youths at tend. made the charge after the the remarks, stopped and said to Catholic graduates had been the group: "You joj{e now with prohibited fron} taking part in this big slave fellow but in a few the graduation exercises because years you will hear of his fame." they had not attended bacca Performed Miracles laureate services which were held The man who spoke these pro at .. Simpson Methodist Church phetic words was Jerome Lanza, here. a rich Sicilian nobleman who had given up wealth and honors entertainme;lt, while freshmeri to live a hermit's life in the serve refreShments. JOUl'milism neighboring hills. awards will be given for out Upon Lanza's invitation. which
standing work in this important was followed by prayers for guid ance, Benedict gave to the poor
school activity. what little he had and joined the hermitage of St. Dominica at Caronia. Fellow hermits were not long in recognizing his many virtues and extraordinary holi ness. News of his piety and of some of the miracles he worked brought crowds to the hermitage. It had to be moved four times in
an attempt to avoid the throngs' seeking to approach the holy Negro. In 1562, when Benedict was 38 years old and had been 17 years a hermit. Pope Pius IV declared that the hermits should disband and join one of the approved orders of the ChUl'ch. Benedict chose to enter the Order of Friars Minor as a 'Brother. Clothed in the brown habit and white cord of a Fran~ clscan he silent the next threEt years in the Convent of St. Anna of Giuliana and the rest of h13 life at the Friary of St. Mary of Jesus, near Palermo. Except for a brief period when he served as Guardian of thlt Friary 0578-81) and as Vicat 0581-84), Benedict worked at cook in the friary. That God had given him thtt power to work miracles durinlr his itfe was authenticated in tM processes which brought about his beatification by Pope Bene~ dict XIV, In 1742 and his canoni~ zation by Pope Pius VII on May 25. 1807. Most of the miracles were cures of the sick, especially those suffering from cancer. The sign of the Cross, a touch of the hand, or a prayer was all that Benedict needed to execute God's will. St. Benedict Manasseri's de~th occurred when he was 65, on April 4, 1589, after amonth's ill ness at the friary. He had spent 21 years in the world, 17 years as a hermit, and 27 years as a Franciscan near Palermo. In the United States St. Bene~ dic't the Moor, has 13 churches,' Seven schools, nurseries and ol'phanges are named for him and committed to his protection.
Wins Scholarship
Miss Helen Souza, a member of Santo Christo Parish, Fall River, has been awarded a $300 New England regional scholar~ ship by Bryant Colleg'e, Provi~ dence, following a competittvEt examination. Daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Charles Souza, 381 Division Street, Miss Souza Is a senior at B. M. C. Durfee Hig'h School.
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Breakfast and Banquets
ST. ANNE'S, NEW BEDFORD
Reservations are beiIlg taken for the ladies' society banquet at Copicut Restaurant, Tuesday. June 11, the final meeting of the organization for the season. ST. JOSEPH'S,' WOOD'S HOLE
. Members of the newly' organ
IZed Women's Guild, with' the
assistance of the men 'of the'
parish, have completed redecor-' sting the 'ps,rish hall. . ' A 'collec'tioD of old and valuable Catholic .books now a'rranged in cases in the hall, will be trans- . ferred to·the bell tower in Mary's Garden for the use of summer; Visitors. Plans for a' bridge and whist with Ml:S. Roland Beliveau and'. Miss Jan -McLaughlin as co chairmen, were made at a m~et ing of the Guild. Rev. Bernard Unsworth, pastor, presented a description of the Mass through the medium of colored slides and s special rec.ording. . . Guild officers are Mrs. Nor man Benoit, president, Mrs. George F.' West, vice-president; Mrs. Stephen H. McJnnic, treas urer, and Mrs. Frederick R. Me tell, secretary. 0
man, served breakfast to the First Communion class following the 8 o'clock Mass Sunday. Coyle High School glee club. directed by Brother Albertus, el~ tertained the guild at Its May social. Other Taunton guilds and that of St. Peter~s, Dighton, were guests. The guild will also spon sor im outing for graduates in june. Mrs. JOl?eph Benoit headl the committee. ST. PIUS TENTH, SOUT.H YARMOUTH.
Guild members served bl'eak• fast to a class '0f-19 children who received' First Holy Communion. A procession and crowning of the Blessed Virgin statue were held at the evening service. Rev. Christopher Broderick, pastor, explained the meaning of the day to the children and enrolled them in the Scapular of Our Lady. Ve'neration of the relic of St. Pius Tenth was followed by Benedic tion of the Most Blessed Sacra ment.
Labor Leade,r Urges Racial Equality
ACADEMY GIRLS WIN TROPHY: Triumphing over keen. tournament compet tition from adult bowling teams,_the quintet representing Mt.·St. Mary Academy, Fall River was awarded the handsome Matt Wisz Memorial Trophy: The 'bowlers, left. to right,' are Pat Vasconcellos, Ann Mis, Margaret ~robleski, Carol Guay .and Mary Lo max. Another team from the Mount captured thIrd honors. Awards WIll be made at the Athletic Association banquet Monday, June 10. .
NEW YORK (NC) - It is a basic tenet of ·the labor move ment to support "all forms of human justice and political jus tice, as well as economic JUlitice." OUR LADY OF GRACE, This statement was made by NORTH WESTPORT . ,WARSAW. (NC)-Support for George MeanY,AFL-CIO presi Rev. Maurice Lamontagne, ad ministrator·, speaking at the dent, when ,he i.-eceived the 1957 the agreement concluded last Communion breakfast of the. Philip Murray Award of the Na December between the Polish Women's Guild, urged members tional Association for the Ad to- discourage "going steadY"_ vancement of the Colored Peo ,government and the Catholic Bishops is· a' cO!'nerstone of "the among the young people of the pIe's Legal Defense and Educa tional Fund, Inc. _ Polish road to so::ialism," party parish. The award' was bestowed on chieftain Wladyslaw Gom,ulka Asst. Dist. Atty. John J. Har , rington, guest speaker, discussed Mr. Meany, a Catholic,. for his .declared. Mr. Gomulka made the point Juvenile delinquency, divorce and leadership in the tight for equa obscene literature. Mrs. Adrien lity for all Americans, and for in'a five-hour Epeech opening his contribution toward better the first meeting of the Central Picard, guild president, intro race relations. 'The award Is Committee of the Polish com duced the speakers. named for the late Philip Mur munity party since the one last ST. MARYS CATHEDRAL, ray, former president of the CIO.· October which brought him to FALL RIVER who was a Catholic. power. He also' warned party Newly elected officers of the Mr. Meany said that in the members seeking further moves Women's Guild are Mrs. Frank court of world opinion the' great toward democracy that they Duffy Jr., president; Mrs. Law weakness in America's fight must accept the party's policy'of rence A._ Coyle, vice-president; against totalitarianism is its "centralism" or resign, Miss Maureen O'Rourke, recoi'd failure to eliminate racial dis • Concerning Church-State re ing secretary; Miss Helen Mur crimination. 0 lations, Mr. Gomulka said: phy, cOl'l'esponding secretary and "There is no need to stress Miss Mary Malvey, trearsurer. that our party is based on the Uncover Frescoes Directors are Mrs. Frederick scientific outlook of dialectical SALZBURG, Austria (NC)': Sullivan, Mrs. Joseph Springer materialism, (\nd that t~e and Mrs. James A.' O'Brien Jr., Recent excavations around the <Church's) idealistiC view of the foundations of the Salzburg Ca retiring president. world is something alien to it." Installation ceremonie.s will be thedral have uncovered several -"Even so, we have concluded held following. tlie annual ban an understanding with the Cath frescoes on the walls 9f an earl quet next Monday night in Cath Ier church, which are calculated olic Church and have even olic Community Center. to be about 700 years old. ' ST. DOMINIC'S, SalZburg's present baroque ca SWANSEA . thedral was built on the founda ; Mrs. Walter Urban, Mrs. Ber tions of a Rom:mesque structure CURTAINS trand Boulay al1(1 Mrs. Robert which was destroyed 'by fire In DRAPES Berard ,comprise' the committee the 16th century. The excava RUGS making arrangements for the tions' have also uncovered sever'al Women's Guild annual banquet coffins of Salzburg prelates of LINOLEUM and installation of officers Wed the Middle Ages. Their bodies 1636. Acushnet Avenue nesday night, 'June 5, at Tiver were clothed in heavily orna ,New Bedford, Mass. ton. mented vestments and on, the WY 4-3861 To be 'installed are Miss Jane hands were signet rings. Borden, president; Mrs. Hanlbal Motta, vice-president; Mrs. Miss Alice Pacheco, treasurer. Mrs. Thomas Porter presided In These Two Hearts at the ele.ction meeting.
Jese,Jits to Cooduct Retreat Radio
Top.Polish Red Admits Religion Caused Millions to Bolt Party
0
0
Itl.....·ay..,s
0
on
agreed to non-compulsory reli gious 'teaching in the schools." -Mr. Gomulka noted that "this state of affairs does not accord with the world concept, of our partY,"and sai<;l that such an ar rangement does not exist even in such capitalistic;: countries as the United States or France. "But the party could not dis regard the fact," he said,' "that the dispute with the Church had turned millions of believers against 'the government and pushed them away from social ism. We had to change this. sit ·uation." In his warning to communists to follow the party line, Mr. Go mulka was especially critical of sections of the Polish communist press which have been pressing for increased freedoms for the Polish people.
ST. LOUIS (NC) - A radio retreat will be featured in a 12 broadcast series of. the Sacr~d Heart Program in June. The retreat will be based on meditations from the spiritual exercises of St. Ignatius, founder of the Society of Jesus.
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THAN EVER BEFORE See us for the 8f.S1 DfAL In a
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IMMACULATE CONCEPTION, ,'l'AUNTON
MORE FORD in 1957
THE RELIGIOUS OF THE HOLY UNION of the • SACRED HEARTS
ST. MICHAEL'S, FALL RIVER
New officers of the Women's Guild are Mrs. Joamia MyrelJes. president; Mrs.' Mary Cupolo, Vice-president; Miss Cecilia Oli veira, recording secretary; Mrs, Dorothy Tavares, corresponding seb'etary; Mi·s.·Genevieve Gi'een haIgh, treasurer. . Chairmen Committee are Mrs. DOrothy Cordeiro, llunShine; Mrs. Diamentina Machado, p'ub licity; Mrs. Alice Cabeceiras. spiritual; Mrs. Carol Francisco. hospitality; Mrs. Irene Pereira, )·outh. Mrs. Pereira is in charge of ar rangements for the prom for the gaduating class of the parish school, with seventh grade pupils also as guests.
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To SANCTIFY SELF and ONE'S NEIGHBOR.
WHY? By imparting KNOWLEDGE imbued' with CHRIS
HOW? TIAN IDEALS. THAT ANSWER IS. UP'TO YOU. ' WHEN? For Further Information Address
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THE ANCHOR Thurs., May 30, 1951
At Our'Housl!
'Sodalities ·Have Excellent Opportuni~ty for Profect By Mary Tinley Daly
It's 8:30 of a Sunday evening as I write this, after a day filled with joy and pathos. The joy came with having our beloved Mother Evans -no relation, not of our faith, but a dear friend-spend the day with us. We picked her up at the old ladies' in action, in World War I. She home where she Ii ves, tak had no othel' children, and her died many years ago. ing her to a patriotic func husband There is nobody but the friends tion where Mother Evans' qua veringly sweet voice could still make its e If heard as The Star Spangled Ban n e r was sung'. Mother Ev ans, net weight 98 pounds,age In the 80's, wouldn't use the cane she needs during the playing of the national anthem. Taking a firm stance-sans cane -her left hand was straight at her side, her right over the heart, and her eyes straight ahead. Very Thankful After the ceremony. a little ride while Mother Evans,recalled phrase after ph'rase of the speech we had just heard, thrilling to its patriotic message. "The Lord has blessed us," she smiled, "giving us men with such Ideals at this time. The Lord 1s good.to this country. And He's good to me, giving friends like you." The Head of the House glanced out of the cornel' of his eye and I know we both felt ashamed that we have done so little for Mother Evans. In the busy days, v;eeks and months, we have merely telephoned hel' now and then, sent infrequent cards, paid all too few visits. Mothel' Evans, though, had no sense of being neg'lected, simply JOY in the mo
ment.
she meets, like ourselves, who love her for herself. This woman of brilliant intellect, charming personality, and a real "feel" fOl' human relations is living out her last days in a completely foreign atmosphere. Love, understand ing, and affection-the very life line of her existence-she must make on her own. Think It Over The home in which Mothel' Evans lives has no organized guild-no group of friends to visit now and then, to take the ladies far a ride, to get to know them and fulfill the innate hu man need for friendship. Now and then, she tells us, people evidence interest, take them rid ing' and to see the Sig'l1tS. It is not a Catholic home. It makes us wonder. Is there an old people's home in your parish or diocese? And couldn't it be a part of your sodality's efforts? Many sodalities are looking for "projects". CYO, Boy and Girl Scouts-fine! Orphan asylums, fine again. All of these are caring for young'sters "with a future" as the world sees it. And yet, the services to those In old peopies' homes may seem depressing and profitless. But the old folk have a future too, a radiant future, very neal' re alization.
Papal Blessing Given Authors WEBSTER GROVES, (NC) Pope Pius XII has sent his Apos tolic Blessing to the directOL' of Gallery of Living Catholic Au thors. The Gallery is celebrating its sliver jubilee this month. It Is housed at Webster College, neal' St. Louis. A jubilee observ ance is planne,d at the college later in the yeal·. Membership of the Gallery has growi1 from 100 in 1932 to more than 800 from all over the world. Since 1945. those writing in foreign languages have been ad mitted 'to membership and 58 countries are now represented.
Emn1anuel Degree For Taunton Girl Miss Ann Marie McMorrow, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James F. McMorrow, 28 Cedar Street. Taunton. will be awarded a
0
New Bedford Girl Is Going Abroad
Papers Expensive
Miss Cynthia Beaudoin, 2296, "Oh, look!" she exclaimed as we came back into the city, Acushnet Avenue, New Bedford, "Why this time last year that an active member of the Chil hospital was just starting-and here It Is nearly finished.' "Haven't you seen the pictures
In the paper, Mother Evans?" we
asked. "They've been running all'
views on the . pl'Ogress of that
hospital."
"Some people at the home get
papers,'" she said Quietly, "but
they don't pass them around.
And newspapers are expensive."
Fun In the Kitchen
This broug'ht to mind a poign
lint remark made by a friend'
whose mother-in-law was in an
other such home, a Catholic
home for the aged. "When we go
to visit Bob's mother," om' friend
had said, "we try to pring some
reading material for the other
ladies. You've no idea, Mary,"
she went on, "Ilow gnteful the
old ladles are for a newspaper
yesterday's, or even last week's"
After the ride we brought b" her to our house and tried to dren of Ma'ry Sodality of St, persuade her to take a short rest Mary's Church, has been selected as ,an exchange student of the during' dinner pr~i>arations. "Just let me sit and watc?;" American Field Service and will she pleaded, "I know !'In no good 'spend the summer in Germany any more at actual helping, but with a "foster family" to observe It's fun to be in a kitchen-even the customs of the people whill. somebody else·s. Oh, what's spreading American good ,will. that?" she g'asped as the pres-. , A student·, at 'New Bedford sme cooker beg'an Its sizzling' High School, she will leave from Montreal on June 22 with othel' chattel'. American students and return Things Have Changed Sept. 9. Her school activities in We explained the mysteries of a pressure cooker. showed her the clude basketball, Allied Youth Intricacies of a modern stove and and Student Council. Cynthia is also chairman of the School freezer. Savings organization and co "How h '0 use k e e ping has changed," she mused. "I'd have' chairman of the Youth for an been a whole day preparing this Honest America committee. dinner you're fixing in jig-time.
Catholic Pupil Wins But homemaking' 'remains the same," she chuckled, "how lucky ST. ALBANS (NC)-Joan Pa you are to have children to eat Quette, eighth-grade student at what you prepare, and to have St. Mary's parochial school here, won the 1957 Vermont State grandchildren to visit you." This was the only hint of the spelling bee and will compete on loneliness that Mother Evans June 7 in the Nationa'} spelldown must feel every waking' ll)Oment. sponsored by the Scripps-How Her son, unmarried, was kUled ard newspapers in Washine-tou.
Missionary Nun Now Vacationing With Her New Bedford Father
bachelor of arts degree at EllJ. manuel College commencement exercises Monday, June 3. President of her class in both freshman and senior :rears, Miss McMolTOW is listed in Who's Who Among Students in Ameri can Colleges and Universities." Her campus activities include membership in the Sodality, Confraternity of Christian Doc trine, Biology Club, Glee Club~ International Relations, Literary Society and Modern Dance Club. Following graduation, Miss McMolTOW will be enrolled in an executive ,training program in Boston'.
Sister Mary Dolorosa of the roundings. the task of coping Order. of Holy Cross, (Bertha with minor operations and pull Richard), originally of St. An , ing out an aching tooth or two thonY parish, New Bedford and falls on Sister's willing shoulders. now a missionary in LeBourgne, The natives have great conti Haiti, is Visiting with her father, . dence in her ability but sh(t Eucllde Richarst of 352 Ashley knows how inadequate are her Boulevard, New Bedford. facilities. She would like to build LeBorgne is a Small city north a small hospital to provide spacs of Port au Prince in the :Qiocese and accommodations for her of Cap Haitian. Bishop Albert patients and hopes to make thiII Francois, Cousineau, C.S.C., Is dream a realtiy through the Titular of this See. Sister Dolo genel'osity of friends and rel&~ rosa has been a missionary in tives. that section for foul' years. She Because of the intense heals is a Registered Nurse and has and climatic conditions, the mls made special studies In the fields slon,ary Sisters in Haiti do not of Hospital Administration and wear the traditional habit of Holy Cross - hence the moditt psychology, Sister operates a free clinio cations seen in the picture. and treats some 1,500 patients You'JI )1"'nll .1n l,o,'e "TUb monthiy. Since no physicians Ol' NOR/lt'lAND'S DONUTS dentists are available in the sur-
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®rheANCHOR
THE ANCHOR Thurs., May.30, 1957
Weekly Calendar Of Feast Days '
OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FAll RIVER
TODAY - Mary, Queen of the Universe. This feast was insti tuted by His Holiness Pope Pius XII in his encyclical letter "Ad Caeli Reginam" issued OCtober 11, 1954. He directed the feast to be commemorated throughout the world each year on May 31 and on the same day the conse cration of the human Tace to the Imm'aculate Heart of Mary be renewed so "that there may arise an era of happiness that will rejoice in the triumph of The Vocation Novena in the Diocese will run fro~ rellgion and in Christian peace." June 1 until Pentecost Sunday, June 9. The Apostles gave TOMORROW' - St. Juventius. us the example of this first novena. They,spent the time Martyr, He was a Roman martyr whose relics were transfel'l'ed in from the Ascension of Christ until the descent of the Holy the 16th century to the Benedic Ghost upon them in prayer, waiting for God to strengthen tine abbey of Chaise-Dieu, Ev them in their vocation.' , l'eux, France. These novena days will be spent in the same way by SUNDAY - SS. Marcellinus the faithful of the Diocese. We are united in prayer asking and Peter, Martyrs. St. Marcelll nus was a priest' and St. Peter God to send laborers into this porUon of His harvest field. an exorcist, who were prominent The Diocese has need of priests and Brothers and Sisters. among the Roman Christians at ~ince God does not abandon His people, we feel sure 'that the beginning of the fourth cen the beginning's of vocations are in many of our young tury. St. Peter was first im people. How is it, then, that there are not niore asking-to prisoned and through his pa. tience brought about the con. be admitted into seminaries and religious houses. version of his jailer and family. Father Thomas of st. Louis University stressed sev Royalist of Royalists St. Marcelllnus baptized them. eral points in his May 16 column for THE ANCHOR that Which led to his own arrest. They would bear repeating'. Parents can encourage vocations were condemned to death and were executed in a forest in 304 not by forcing the idea on their children but, first of ,all, at a place unknown to other 'by showing reverence toward priests and religious. This Christians. Their bodies later shows the children, what a holy thing a vocation is. were found and interred in the Second, parents sho\lld g'ive their children the p~sitive catacombs. Many centuries lat:er. By Joseph A. 'Breig challenge of holiness, urging them in their:present-day _ their remains were transfelTed to 'Clevelartd Unlver~e Bulletin Frankfurt. Germany. lives to be heroes for Christ. It is from these that God MONDAY - St. Pergentinus ',.. ' chooses His helpers. Doubtless it will seem odd of me to begin an exposi and Laurentinus, Martyrs. They , Third, parents should have their children realize that tion of .my philosophy of government by r'emarking that were brothers and mere 'boys the Church is the continuation of Christ in the world and , the-last day of May, on my Church calendar, is the feast when they were dragged from even now' they should, do something to help Christ carry ,of Our Lady, Queen of the Universe. But there is purpose their classroom, but proclaimed on His work. in my peculiarity" as you ' - their Christianity and were put Agairi, parents must realize that vocations Jlre built :will discover. has taught me that the plays to death dUl'ing the persecution under Decius in 250 at Arezzo in I am as romantic about which people say r simply must Tuscany. on solid virtues, not' emotionalism or "playing at religion." royalty as apybody else. In see are invariably disappointing. Finally, there is no substitute for prayer. ,TUESDAY - St. Francis Ca· childhood I pored endlessly over Trusts People racciolo, Confessor. Scion of a Nevertheless, I do want the .noble famlly of Naples, he was
all the stories about benevolent ~ kings, knightly 'great political decisions to be born in 1563 at Abruzz1. During
made by majorities-providing In his re'cent talk to the Daughters of Isabella in princes and his early years he was afflicted
beautiful printhat the majorities are properly With a skin disease akin' to lepro
New Bedford, ,Bishop C~mnolly made some pungent re cesses. The informed, and are protected from marks,on the place of women in society. The Bishop point phI' a s e "and foolish excess by the restraints, sy and was cured when he de
of constitutions that guard the cided to become a priest. After
ed out that a ,woman's chief role is "to bring out the best they lived hapeternal' verities and the rights of ordination with John Augustine
in a man and her family." pily' ever after"
Adorno, he founded the Minor
hal; a great deal individuals:
This'she can accomplish only by asserting the finer of magic for me. I am a democrat (shall we Clerks Regular. one of whose
qualities of her own nature, by providing the inspiration My romantisay?) in the sense that by and main duties is perpetuaJ adora~
that ~s needed in a home and family. ' cism, however, cannot alter the large I trust the people. I am a tion of the Holy Eucharist. He
was the first General of the
Unfortunately, too many women are surrendering fact that politically I am an un- rebpulican in -the sense that I community and was renowned
compromi~ing democrat and redo not trust the people -too far, their true role 'and are trying to compete with men to their for his administration and his
With a small "d" and And in no earthly sense am I publican, own detriment with resultant harm .to the whole family. a small "1'." Perhaps Imight.most a royalist; although in an un preaching. He died in 1608 and
was canonized in 1817.
Some women think that it is sophisticated to speak vul quickly suggest my position by an eai'thly. sense I am. WEDNESDAY - St. Boniface. garly, clever if !hey act as a "pal" with men, stylish if they admitted oversimplification: - I ' True King Bishop-Martyr. He was born in run around in dungarees or undersized shorts. As one believe in the inalienable right 'of Tome it is a plain and over Devonshire, in 680 and lived for magazine put it: "They think they are sights, to behold; We the People to make our OW11 whelming' fact that a man named some years as a Benedictine mistakes. Jesus Christ proved himself to monk before embarking on a. actually they are just sights.' Kindly Disapproved be my king, and that a woman missionary career. Pop I.' St. With the ~ummer coming on we will meet up with named Mary, his mother, proved Gregory II consecrated him a. a great deal of this. We will see mothers and wives acting , This is not to say that I have herself to be my queen. ! would and sent him to Ger in a most unladylike way, and setting the example for their anything - against ,monarchs. consider myself a fool and a lout Bishop, many, where he is .venerated as who' prefer them are ennot to recognize these truths. Those children to do the same. And then, they will wonder what ,titled to their preference among the Apostle of the nation: He I am a ,democrat and a repub has happened when children throw off the wise restraint~ forms of government. lican, and not a royalist, because chose Mainz as his See and of discipline and goodness and imitate the pattern- of It 'is t.rue that I held myself (foi' one reason) I trust the brought about the conversions thousands. With 52 compan. their elders. As the Bishop said, "There are many women sternly aloof, in a sort of kindly judgment and the virtue of men. of ions, he was martyred in Fries. who are learning the hard way that this is the wrong way:" disapproval, from the oh'ing and , plural, more than the virtue and land in 755, His remains are in ah'ing that went on in the Am- judgment of a man, singular, in And they are learning at the expense of their own charac erican press over the coronation ,the broad affairs of government. the Abbey of Fulda, Germany. ,tel' and the honor and, happiness of their families. of Queen Elizabeth and the nup- But the opposite is true when the New Catholic Books Children are gTeat imitators. That is how they learn. tials of Grace Kelly and the one Man is infinitely more tthari gnNEST BHOTHER. A Story Of
Young people are the same. That is how they learn what , Prince of Monaco, But that was man.
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against either' ruling' house, It ten thousand proofs, and above gTades g.'o Jay brother.
But how' will -they learn unless' they are taught. And who was rather due to my reluctance all by rising from the dead, that gRNEST, BROTHER. A Sto,'y Of Lady Ot Guadalupe. (Duj,,,,ie. Is there to teach them but their elders and especially to join up' with excited multl~ HE told the literal truth when Ou,' $1.25). An account tor grade scho')1 their mothers ang fathers. If the mother is an example tudes. HE said that although HE, was children of Juan Diego and the apparition In 1531. _ Almost automatically, I stand man, HE was God also. And on of goodness and dIscipline and holiness in' a home, she ERNEST, BHOTHI<JR. A Sto,'y Ot
Saint Dominic Savio. (/)uj3,·le.
is giving the best possible lessons, to her husband and chil aside when I see everybody, the cross HE earned, even in HIS ' $1.25). A pictorial biography' for
_marching in the same, direction. humanity, kingship eternal by ea"ly grades of the boy saillt ca
dren. And she is living out h~r. true role as a woman.' . In 1954.
Before falling in line; I want to donning the royal purple of His nonize,l EHNl<~S·.r. BROTHI<JR. A Story Ot
know where the throng is going. Own blood for our redemption. Saint John Berchmans. (Dujll rie.
$1..26). BlogTaphy tor grade 8cl)(,ol
I am a democrat, but not to the He laid down His life for us. children 'of the Jesuit .salnt who
8ir Winston Churchill once.wrote: "I look at youtli in extent of trusting crowd .judg-' Mary Is My Queen died at the age of 22.
ERNEST, BROTHER.' A Story Of
all its activities, and I wonder what would lie Ilefore them ments: I am republican enough His mother Mary. earned ever Saint Lucy. (Dujarle, $1,25). Pic.
if God wearied of mankind." A critic, reading this, replied to be suspicious of popular en-, lasting queenship by uniting her torial biography for early graues
Only with gr,eat dif,. , will totally with His. At the cost of the virgin martyr who died dur.
with sharp perception: "To what 'inferno might we be thusiasms. the Roman persccutlons,
flculty can 1 be persuaded to' of such agony as no human mind IngF~RNEST, BROTHER. A Story Of
consigned, if God should ever weary of mankind? Could read a book that everybody is can conceive, she gave Him Saint Therese. (Dujarle. $1.25). Pic
torial hiography for early gT:Hl"s
even God devise a word so grim, than men have made from reading, or to see a movie that Whom she loved more than self of the Little Flower of the Child
Jesus.
in sacrifice for us. Because she ,everybody is seeing. weariness of Him?" LODER, DOHOTHY. The LaUd
My trouble is that I know that ,'loved us, her soul hung' on the And People Of Belgium, (Lippin
cott. $2.75) . .In a series of boolls on
nothing on earin can be worthy cross with her son's body. land, history, gcog"aphy and life or
In this sense, and in this sense nations, pre!:>..'u-ed for chllurcn of
St. John of the Cross has written that God will never of unanimous adulation. No proag'es 12 and lip.
duction is as good as that. ,The ' alone, I am a royalist of royalists. do for man what man can do for himself. Trust in God is thing O'FAOl_A1N, SEAN, The [?illest
that everybody exclaims Mary is my queen as Christ is Stories Of Sean O'~'aolain, (Little,
always necessary, but it cannot be used as an excuse for' over cannot possibly live up to my King, and on the feast of her Brown. $4,7[;), Selections from
three ea.,'lier \'oll1l11es tog-etller with
laziness. ' '. 1ts advance billing. Experience queenship I salute her. eight new ·stories.
'.11
Published Weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of River ,21 Bedford Street Fall River, Mass. OSborne 5-7151 PUBLlS'HER Most Rev. James L. Connolly, D,D.. Ph.D. CENERAL MANACER ' ASST. CENERAL MANACER Rev. John P., Driscoll Rev. Daniel f. Shalloo, M.A. MANACINC EDITOR Attorney Hugh ,J. Colden
Where Are the Vocations
.
'
-
In 'Salute to Our Lady, Queen of. the UniY~rse
Woman's Role _
,
'
THE ANCHOR Thurs•• Mav 30, 1957
7
Pope Notes Demands American Catholic Journalists Must Meet
Catholics Continued From Page One growth of the Church. The 1957 directory is the 124th to be is sued. The past year's growth of the Church required 28 more, closely-pac.ked, three - column pages. The U. S. edition of the director required 1,208 pages and • weighs seven pounds. The directory reported a rec ord total of 16,345 Catholic par ishes in the U. S., Alaska and Hawaii. There were 15,823 par ishes with resident pastors listed, an increase of 170, and 522 par ishes without a resident pastor. Listed also were 9,556 chapels, 4.930 missions and 1.700 stations -an increase of 456 places where Mass is offered regularly. Educational Institutions A new high of 12.916 separate educational institutions includes 83 diocesan seminaries; 417 re "MOST WONDERFUL": Pretty Sharon Garrett, 17 ligious community seminaries, novitiates or scholastics; 259 uni year-Old Catholic girl from Salt Lake City, receives a $1000 versities and colleges, an increase check from President Eisenhower in Washington, as first of five; 1.539 diocesan and par ish high schools; 846 private place winner of the 1957 National Essay Contest sponsored by the President's Committee on Employment ot the Physi high schools; 9.274 parish ele mentary schools, an increase of cally Handicapped. A Catholic high school senior Sharon 223, and 498 private elementary said her winning the contest, "was the most wonderful schools. Also listed were 133 thing that has ever happened to me." Three other Catho protective institutions with 17, lic students were among the five top contest winners. NC 331 youths under instruction. There were four new diocesan Photo. and 16 new religious community , dained to the priesthood by the seminaries established during the late Bishop Cassidy on June 10·, last yoor. The 83 diocesan semi 1933. . naries reported enrollments of ,Continued From Page One Father Jordan has served 18,392, an increase of 1,757, Feehan, D.D., Bishop. of Fall Sac l' e d Heart Church, Oak
while the 417 novitiates and River. Bluffs; Assumption Church, Os
scholastics of religious communi Since his ordination, Father terville; Immaculate Conception,
ties reported 18,076 stUdents, an Booth has served at St. Mary's Fall River and has been at his
increase of 668, indicating a to tal of 36,468. an increase of 2.425 Church, Nantucket; St. Kilian's. present Mansfield parish since 1937.
caildidates for the priesthood. New Bedford; St. Peter's, Pro
More StudeJlts The upward trend in Catholic vincetown; St. Mary's, North At tleboro, and Holy Name. Fall university and college enroll Continued fro~ Page One River. ments for the third year is re He was assigned as adminis reside on the periphery of the flected by an increase of 17,568 students during 1956. The record trator at' St. John the Baptist diocesan line is demonstrated in Church, Westport, on Jan. 2, their more than 60 per cent in post-war decrease of 31,699 oc 1941 and was transferred to Oak crease over 1956. curred in 1951-52. Current en Lay Chairman Robert V. Mc l'ollments now total 259,277, or Bluffs on Feb. 25, 1949. Father McMahon was born in Gowan of North .Attleboro todaY 105 pel' cent more students than 10 years ago-an increase of Fall River and educated in the indicated the deepest gratitude at 184,157 over the 175,120 in 1947. public schools. He was graduated the response from so many The number of full time pupils from Durfee High and then at hearts to the Appeal with " In Catholic elementary and high tended St. Charles College and Heart. schools during 1956 reflects " St. Mary's Seminary in Balti l'ecord increase of 214,896. The more. Aids Beatification He was' ordained to the priest 1.539 parish and diocesan high PATERSON (NC) - Bishop schools reported 448.408 pupils, hood on May 31, 1931 by the late James A. McNulty of Paterson, an increase of 34,628; the 846 Most Rev. James E. Cassidy. N. J., has recommended support private high schools reported D.D., Bishop of Fall River. Father McMahon has served of a movement urging the beat! 274.355. an increase of 15,836. In at Our Lady of Assumption .f1cation cause of the parents of 9,274 parish elementary schools Louis and Azelie-Marie Martin the enrollment was reported at Church, Osterville; St. Francis and three sisters of St. Therese 3.616.465. an increase of 164.680; Xavier, Hyannis; St. Mary's, of the Child Jesus, revered the 498 private elementary North Attleboro; St. Patrick's, around the world as the Little schools reported 92.565 students. Fall River; I Holy Ghost. Attle Flower. The 133 protective institutions boro, and St. Mary's Cathedral.
He was assinged to St. John
reported an increase of 1,056 to a present total of 17,331 children. , the Baptist in Westport on June
15, 1954.' Aid for Sick Father Jordan was born in
The 1957 directory rePorted 2.452.595 public school children New Bedford. He attended Holy
attending 45,860 special religious Name School and Holy Family
Joseph A. Charpentier
classes or schools, such as the High School before he entered Reg. Pharm.
St. Charles College. He studied
released-time program and reli 1902 ACUSHNET AVE.
gious vacation schools, which at St. Bernard's Seminary in NEW BEDFORD
represent's a year's increase of Rochester and St. Mary's Semi
nary in Baltimore and was 01'TEL. WY 6·0772
156.693. The more accurate statistics now available, the di PRESCRIPTIONS rectory reported. show that there decrease of 274 during the year,
1s an aggregate, inclUding 01' it was reported. ,Homes for in
phans, of 7,192,147 youngsters valids and aged were recorded
In all grades under Catholic ,in at 303. an increase of one, car struction in the nation, an in ~ ing for 26,655 residents. crease of 387,018 or 5.7 per cent Infant baptisms during 1956 were recorded at 1.246,173, ,an in a year. Six new institutions. it was increase of 41,191. There were
reported, brought the total of 333,138 marriages. an increase
Catholic general hospitals to of 8,231, and 29~,118 deaths, an
801. which treated 10,865,662 pa increase of 9,263, reported during tlents during 1956. Bed capaci 1956. ties In these hospitals were re ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;, corded at 129,603, an increase of Salespeople Wanted 1.922. The· number of special hos pitals was 1'ecorded at 133. ac The To' Buy The Book commodating 10,799 patients and set'ving 159.114 patients annu ally. The directory noted that 2.75 COIPY in relation to the catholic pop And SeU ulation of 34,563,851, it is evi of New Bedfoll'd MaliS. dent that the total of 11,024. The faith of Main 776 patients treated in Catholic Union and IPBeasilIlI1lit Sts. hospitals during 1956 included a The Catholic large number of non-Catholics. North End B".alllJ~1irJ Baptisms Gained 1200 Acushnet Ave. Current enrollments of 34. EMILY C. PERRY, Prop. Member FederaU Deposit 993 students in Catholic train OPP. St. Lawrence Church Insurance Corpgration ing schools for nurses showed a New Bedford, Mass.
T ra n sIe rs
Appeal
'ST. LOUIS (NCl-pope Pius XII has given American Catho lic journalists three basic rules for success in their "lofty apos tolate" of guidance and leader ship. The Pontiff's recommendations were made in a radio message transmitted to the 47th annual convention here of the Catholic Press Association of the U. S. The Pope said Catholic jour nalists must meet the following demands: 1) "They must show their eoinpetence, acquired through serious study and a sure grasp of the fundamental principles of Christian philosophy and theol ogy, and made evident by the clear and cultivated expression of sound jUdgments concerning the impoitant problems of the day. 2) Their writing must reflect
Soil Stewardship Day Program Plann'ed GRAFTON (NC) - The Dio cese of Worcester will hold its annual observance of Soil Stew ardship Sunday at St. Philip's Church and the Magill ",Farm here on May 26. Highlight, of the ceremony will be the blessing by Bishop John J. Wright of Worcester of 50 wayside shrines for erection along roads and highways, and simple' wooden crosses for place ment in farm pastures. Prayers will be recited· for the temporal and spiritual welfare of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts during tha approaching crop season.
"the unity, the oneness of the Church in her faith and moral teaching." 3) They must be "ever con scious • • • of the one sublime goal" that sets them "Qpart from ordinary writers: the spread of Christ's kingdom of truth and salvation among men." Stating that "the influence of the Catholic press will be in pro portion to the influence and number of its readers." the Pope urged that students of and gmd uates of Catholic colleg'es and universities "should be a chief support of the Catholic press and literature." In matters pertaining to faith and morals, the Pope said the Catholic press is required to "give loyal obedience" to the bishops. But In regard to questions out side these spheres, he stated.
"free discussion will be altogeth
er legitimate, and each one may
hold and defend his own opin
Ion." But "such an opinion should
be presented with due restraint,"
he added.
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DIAL 8-5211 Anne Mitchell, Personal Shopper will be glad to shop for you in alJ1lY department and send your pUll'clhaseli on the next delivery to youll' neogltn.. borhood. '
Our 80th Birthday Sale
Ends Saturday
THE ANCHOR
T1lun::- May 30, 1957
Son of Living God
God Love You By Most Rev. Fulton J. Sheen,
D.D.
Mohammed had twenty-two years in which to labor, Buddha forb-five, Our Lord a little less than three. Yei the short life word of Our Lord hit history with such an impact that He split time In two, so that all history since then has been dated A.D. or B.C. Mohammed belonfls to the Arabs, Buddha to the people of "lndlil, Confucius to the Chinese, but Our Lord cannot be identified with a nation. He belongs to the world. . After much licentiousness, Buddha
turned from women In disgust. It was not
so much that he left his passions, as that
his passions left him. His virtue was born
of satiety rather than discipline. Moham
med was a sensualist, who promised a
sensualist heaven, and like all sensualists
despised women. Our Lord, living a life'
of purity, elevated women: In an age
which would not accept a woman as a
witness, He defied the times by making
a woman the first witness of His Resur
rection. ...
American Aid Given'
Chinese Refugees
J.!ACAO (NC) - COJ1Ullander Pedro Correia de Barros, Gover not of Macao. and Bishop Poly carpe da Costa Vaz of Macao presided at the official opening of the St. Joseph social center and the Infant Jesus day nurs ery. Both buildings were erected under the auspices of Catholic 'Relief Services-National Cath-' olic Welfare' Conference for pov erty-stricken Chinese refugees on this Portuguese-controlled is land of the South' China coast.
Girl Scout Award
WORCESTER (NC) - Bishop John J. Wright of Worcester has amiounced the establishment of a special award for qualified Catholic Girl Scouts of the dio cese. . To be known as the St. Joan Mohammed op~nly confessed three months before his death: "I am a man as ye are". But Our Lord, on dying, of Arc Award, it will be similar to said He would rise again. This is the difference between all reli the Ad Altare Dei award for gious leaders' and Christ. They were men, and, He, the Son 01 the' Catholic Boy Scouts. The new Living God. award will be presented annually beginning on May. 30, 1958, the . Buddha despising slaves and the -Iowl,y born once wrote: "The. Feast of St. Joan of Arc. teaching is for men of understanding, not for fools." Our Lord went Into the highways and byw,-'lYS for His followers, and de clared that His teachings were hidden from the wise and pru dent and revealed to little ones. Your daily sacrifice of a little luxury will heip the' Holy Father's own Society for the Propaga- . APPRAISER ti.on of the Faith declare Christ's teachings in the highways and REAL ESTATE byways of the Mission world.
James F. O/Neill
GOD LOVE YOU to Miss A. F. H. "Flowers are dear to me. It took a great deal of will power to pass by some violets. Please use the enclosed dollar for Missions." . . -. to' Mrs. J.C.F. "I've been thinking about what $1 <can do for the Missions. My grandparents were born in Scotland and I know a bargGin when I hear one." ... to Mr. and Mrs. J.W. for $5. "This is the amount I had left after pay ing all my bills." ... to R.C.B. for $2 "I was saving this money for a long playing record but decided that It would be better to add one pagan child's name to the heavenly record instead." Everyone loves a treasure hunt and so we propose to send . our readers on one! Will you look in your cellars and your attics, in your bureau and your J~wel box and find a treasure that you are willing to send to us that you might "lay up treasure for yourself in the kingdom of heaven." The old gold, the sterling silver service, that you send to us, can be resold and the money realized from the sale sent to the Holy Father, who in turn sends it to the Missionaries, to help them maintain their own lives and tile lives of the poor of the world whom they help. SEND TO: THE SOCIETY FOR THE PROPAGATION OF THE FAITH, 366 FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YORK I, NE\V YORK. Cut out this column, pin your sacrifice to It and maii It to the Most Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, National Director of The Society for the Propagation of the Faith, 366 Fifth Avenue, New York I, N. Y., or your DIOCESAN. DIRECTOR REV. RAYMOND T. CONSIDINE, 368 North Main Street, Fall River, Mass..
Cites Work of St!' Thomas More
In Plea for Legal Reforms
WASHINGTON (NC)-Ameri can jurists should follow the ex ample of a 16th century lawyer-· saint and reform the nation's' court system .. An associate justice of the U. S. Supreme Court .told· members of the St. Thomas More Society of America that there are "many valuable lessons (which) law yen, may learn" from the soci ety's patron. Sp ~Qking before the group's annu:tl lunche6n, held in con
junction with the American Law
Institute's annual convention,
Assoc.late Justice William J.
Brenr.an Jr., recalled the legal
reforms instituted by St. Thom
as MO.:e in England during Henry
VIII's reign.
The youthfUl justice pointed out hetw St. Thomas More con clusively demonstrated in his day
that the essential of democratic
society is integrity and effi ciency of jUdicial progress. He called for a "modern, stream lined systGm for disflenslng prompt, efficient justice." He
said' our society "not only need
n.ot, ,but cannot tolerate systems of autonomous courts, free from any sort of control from within
or without."
Techniques used by St. Thom-
. as More, said the associate jus tice, "do not differ from those which are featured in today's
programs for administrative re
forms.. "For me, an enthusiast for the
cause of administrative reforms," said Justice Brennan, "it is_ a happy privilege to be able to bring so great an authority to the support of the cause." . The member. of the nation's highest tribunal conclUded, "It is but natural then that the ju dicial process should come under examination, for, even as in St. Thomas More's day, so also is it . true today that 'Jtistice,sirs, is the chiefest interest .of man on earth.' "
LaSalette Shrine ATTLEBORO, MASS. Daily Masses: 6:30, 7, 8 A.M. . Confessions Daily: . -6:30 A.M. to 9:00 P.M. Devotions on SUNDAYS begin year round at· 3:00 P.M. Perpetual Novena to Our' lady of laSaleHe every evening at 7:30 P.M.
Organizers of
Pilgrimages P'ease Contact:
Rev. Father Director TEL; Attleboro 1-0008
•
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The good man - will be a generous giver. Ps. 3~:21
Jeweled' Cross NORTH ATTLEBORq
ACADEMY COMMENCEMENT SP~AKERS: Mother st.. Vincent de Paul, principal of Jesus-Mary Academy, Fall River, announces the selection of Claudette Chouinard (left) and Pauline Lapre (Rght) as valedictorian and salu tatorian, respectively, at graduation ex&cises June 9.
SACRED HEART YOURS
Indeed it wlII be, If you help rescue It now. We mean, Sacnd Heart Chapel in Mallacomp, IndIa. God has 1i0 blessed the mis treats 50 sick. They had sionary labors of the to have a larger chapel Sacred Heart Sisters and started' on their that the room of the own, but lack of funds convent they used for set in. With $2000 they a chapel wlll no longer ean complete the work. do. Now they have The 1IIl0ly Father rec 2156 boy and girl pu ommends their plea pils, 25 orphans and a . warmly. Can you help? hospital that d a I I y
SILVER THREADS
Tell a lifelong 'story of joys and sorrows,' Finally, perhaps, the last years of loneliness-unwanted, poor, abandoned. Our Mission Club to support Near East homes for the abandoned aged Is called . PALACE OF GOLD. They are just that for these unfortunates. Members send a DOLLAR-A-MONTH. Won't you join?
DADS AND GRADS Wondering about Father's Day or Graduations or Weddings. Let liS recommend a GIFT that'll be deeply treasured. What better will. serve for years in than a' Mass said for a mission chapel. Our them. OR. membership lovely artistic GIFT enrollment, for 15,000 CARD will say any Masses saId yearly for one of these meaning our members and they ful messages for you.' enjoy rich Indulgences. We'll fiend It anywhere OR a sacred article, for you. given in' their name, MANY NEGLECT TO MAKE A WILL AND HA VE NOTHING TO' SAY ABOUT HOW THEIR LIFE SA VlNGS ARE USED: YOU'LL WANT TO GIVE GOD A SHARE, PUT HIM IN YOUR WILL. OUR MISSIONARIES ARE GRATEFUL FOR THE CHARITY OF YOUR MASS OFFERINGS FOR SUPPORT. MASSES SAID SOON.
,POOR SISTERS
ing two In training. For example, SISTER CLOTILDE In Egypt, SISTER JOHN BAP TIST in Lebanon, and in India SISTERS ORTHOLONAand MAR Y BENEEZI. Please?
Our friends are
quick to help needy seminarians. But we still have many young girisaspiring for the missionary I I f e for whom we have not found a sponsor to sen d her the $150 needed each year dur-
YOUTH SPEAKS This Summer - have your
son or daughter
learn to type.
Mornings only, 8.30 to 10.30 Monday, July 8 to Aug. 16
Typewriting helps cbildren to:
• Cet Higher Crades • Cet on School Publication
Staff
• Earn Money in Spare Time • Get Started in a Career Enrollment Is Limited Write, phone or visit the school for free Teen-age Typing Bulletin
And begs for a helping hand. FRANCIS, III Lebanese lad, anel MATTHEW In' India have just begun theIr six years trainlnlJ for the priesthood. Their families cannot help with the expenses. In the Near East a little goes a long way. We ask a sponsor for $100 a year for his keep and education. Send It In any payments.
HEAVENLY DAYS Few are more heavenly than when they .receive Our Lord for the first time. Our wonderful missionaries have prepared thousands of tots this year and so want to give
each a NEW FIRS'f COM . MUNION OUTFIT ($10), Can you give one In thanks for the grace of your own First Holy Communion?
The Campbell ~'l1ear Fast O1iS$ions~
FRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN, President
SCHOOL'
NEW BEDFORD, MASS.
H. I. ROBITAILLE, Director
25 Morgan St.
Phone WY 5-7024
Msgr. Peter P. Tuohy, Neil'. Sec'y
Send all communications to; .
CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION
480 lexingto,,! Ave. at 46th St; New York 17, N. Y.
Sage and Sand
M,t. St. Mary Academy Summer
Session to Start June 24
Treaties Binding Nations Called Waste of Paper .By lllost Rev. cRobert J. Dwyer, D.D.
. Somewhere in the State Department, that grim re nunder of the architectural vagaries of our· ancestors, there must be a closet where they keep Useless Treaties. It,should be rather full by this time, with the yellowing parchments overflowing the crowded shelves. Not to vest it as to make it morally inviolate. speak of the 19th century, . Cause of War which mayor may not have "When there is good faith, and ftllfilled their original purposes, what a conspicuous waste of en gTossing documents date from our own times. There are those drawn up at the end of the 1st World War, most of them-with nations which for all practical purposes have ceased to exist. There would be the Kellogg-Briand pact, that hopeful gestUl'e of the '20s which was to outlaw'wiu' forever as an instrument of polley. And there would be a swollen pile of them to l'emind us of certain arrangements made at Tehran and Yalta and Potsdam which we would sooner forget than fumble over. But the trouble is that they are there; they have been printed and publl/?hed; and they belong to the permancnt record. Scrap of Papel' Back in 1914 the world was still innocent enough to be shocked when the Imp e ria I Chancellor of Germany' dis missed the treaty guaranteeing the. integrity of Belgium as a "scrap of paper," But by this time we have reached a stage of sophistication where any and all treaties are regarded in pretty much the same light. If tney work. well and good, but it is generally understood that trea ties are merely a part of an In tricate diplomatic game played by experts in that sort of thing, and nobody is expected to put any real stock in them. Perhaps never in the history of civilization have international faith and credit been at so low an ebb. Emperors and kings have practiced deceit on one another in times gone by. undoubtedly. and republics have been known to disregard their pledges quite as readily as dictatorships. But they did so with the clear reali zation that they were committing the international equivalent of mortal sin and deserved the cen sure they were sure to get. Their come-uppance, as in the case of a celebrated Corsicall adventurer, was regarded as justice finding its own level. Today. for the most part. all sense of sin or immoral ity has vanished from diplomacy. Treaties are excessively fragile, hothouse flowers; gathel' them today. for tomorrow tilCY will be wllted. 0
Sterile Exercise It means the end. of course, of international law. Those philoso phers who so cavalierly dismissed the Idea of a Christian polity and then went on to call the 11atural law a figment ought not to be surprised at the result. The mere proliferation of treaties, without l'egal'd for their necessity or for the good faith of the contracting parties, is a completely sterile exercise. And where there. is no l'eal consciousness of law as l'ooted in nature and ultimately in the divine plan. it becomes 1l0thing more than an elaborate and expensive farce. More than foul' centuries ago that somewhat crabbed genius, Erasmus of Rotterdam, who de scrves to be known as one of the founders of international law. spoke his mind on the sub Ject of treaties. Emph~tically. he was not in favor of a treaty to answer every imaginar~' con,.
tillgenCy; the word itself of Christian princes should suffic~
(or all normal purposes. But it and when a treaty was needed. it and when It lI/llS in the tru\'t int~rests of the poople (for. otherwise It were a mere conspi tv,CV) such. solemnity should. in 0
the parties to a transaction are honest men. thete is no need of hard-and-fast bonds; on the other hand·, when the matter is one between rascals, their very bonds provide the materials for litigation. So between good and wise Princes, even where there is no treaty. there is steadfast friendship; but where Sovereigns are foolish and evil-inclined, the treaties which were designed' to make war impossible are the cause of. war, for' 'someone is always complaining that one 01'_ another of their innumerable articles has been violated. The usual purpose of a treaty is to end war, but nowadays the name is applied to an agreement to carry it on. Such leagues are but measures; whatever expediency beckons, there an alliance is formed." . It is as though Eramus were reporting, in somewhat formal language, a session of the securi ty Council of the United Nations: But he is actually doing more than that. He is putting his finger on the very nerve center of our malady, that we are ex posing the concept of interna tional honor to ridicule by trying to deal iVith rascals. We persist in making tre'aties when we know full well that one of the "high contracting parties" has not the slightest intention of living up to its end of the bargain. It is worse than a waste of time. it is a traversty of international mo rallty. One may have all the sympathy in the world for the idealists who' hope to build a better world' by u§ing bricks without mortar. but cold realism discourages the process. If he were ever known to smile. Erasmus might be in4ulging a sad little laugh at our expense.
OUTDOOR CONFES S ION: Priest heal;;; one
of the thousands of confes sions made during Spain's. fourth National EucharistiC Congress at Granada, at tended. by more than 150,-. 000 persons.
New Building WAS H IN G TON (NC) Ground will be broken on June 5 for a new half-million dollar classroom b u i 1 din g on the grounds of 158-year-old George town Visitation Convent, which the Sisters of Visitation conduct here. The new building will be known as St. Joseph's Hall. Total cost of the project has been esti mated at $659,000.
•
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944 Co",nty St. .
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. Mount St. Mary Academy. Fall River, Summer School for ele mentary, junior high and high school students will be opened Monday, June 24, with cl~sses conducted by certified reUgious teachers in all diVisions. Attendance offers students the opportunity to improve their basic knowledge of subjects which pave previously seemed difficult . to them. Summer school also pre sents the opportunity to acquire a. knowledge of subjects which stu dents could not !it into their reg ular high school program. . Arithmetic, English and read Ing are among the major subjects taught in the elemental~y and . junior high sections. All the usual high schol subjects in which
there is adequate enrollment are
offered.
Offers New Course . An additional course to be Introduced this year is a special
pre-high school course. includ
Praises Catholic Men
On Integration Stand
NEW YORK (NC) - The
"consistently uncompromising"
stand of the National Council of
Catholic Men for complete inte gration "is one of the most hope ful aspects of the interracial
movement," George K. Hunton
told the weekly forum of the
Catholic Interracial Council.
lIe quoted the text of a reso- lution adopted by the recent
NCCM Cincinnati convention
which call~d for "just and Chris
tian integration of Negroes. In dians, Mexicans, Orientals and all other racial groups, not only
in the schools, but in all phases of American life."
~l" A II ~IOtOI·S J:n:~.
iog foundation mathematics for secondary schools. an Intensiv6 course in the essentials of Eng lish, and remedial reading, A special Ngh school cour({() In reading comprehension will also be given.' Classes for the elementary school division will be held for five weeks, June 24 to July 26. Each class .in the elementary school section has a. one-hour period.
The junior' high and high school sections will be conductW. from June 24 through AUgust 2 witn a double .period of 90 mtn~ utes daily in each subject. Early registration is urged. Ad ditional Information may be ob tained by contacting Mount St. Mary Academy. . R. A. WILCOX CO. OFFICE FURNITURE In Stock For Immediate Delivery
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LOUVAIN. Belgium (NC) Two Amelican Bishops will be honored by the Catholic Univer sity of Louvain's American Col lege when the college celebrates its· 100th anniversary in June. Bishop Russell J. McVinney of Providence and Auxiliary Bishop Fulton J. Sheen of New York, both alumni of the American College, will be awarded the honorary Doctor of Sacred Theo logy Degree. Bishop McVinney is episcopal chairman 'of the Bishops' com mittee for the American College.
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10
The Yardstick,
Christian Union Leader Nb,tes Unit,y Problems
THE ANCHOR Thun., May 30, 1957
StonehiU College 'To Grant 73 Degrees
By Msgr. George G. H!ggins Director-Social Actio~ Dept."':-NCWC
Feast of Assumption Made Paid Holiday .for Factory Workers RAVENNA (NC) - The feast are of Italian extraction, were of the Assumption, which occurs on strike over disputed points in on August '15, was written into a new contract. The seventh
an AFL-CIO labor contract as holidax... was not disputed. L. S.
the seventh paid holiday for Romit'a;' president, of the com
pany. readily agreed to the pro factory workers here in Ohio. The new holiday' will go into posed' feast da,y shut-down. He 'effect this year for employees of 'is a member of IIp.maculate Can the Romito - Donnelly Corp., cep,tion parish here. manufacturers of leather furni ture for beauty parlors. The em ployees are members of Loc'al 654, United Automobile Workers. The employees, many of whom WASHINGTON (NC) - Two Catholic organizations have sent Christian Democrats telegrams' to Presiden.t Eisen hower commenting on his appeal Stronger in Europe to the nation for support of his NOTRE DAME (NC) - The foreign aid program. Christian Democratic Party is The catholic Association for rapidly gaining ground in Eu Interne.tional Peace, in a message rope, according to a new volume, signed by its president. Harry W. "Christian Democracy In West , F.lannery, said this country has B eni Europe." moral 'obligation to assist under The book is one of a series iri developed nations. international studies published " : The .Natlonal Catholic Rural by the Committee on Interna Life .Conference, in a statement tional Relat'ions at the University signed by. Father James L. Viz of Notre ·Dame. The Ruthor, zard; 'S.J., vice president of the Michael P. Fogarty, an English donference, said it "heartily en economist, Js head of the De dorses" adequate- funds' for mu partment of Industrial Relations tual security. at the University College, Car diff, Wales. Honor Hub Prelate What. the many Christian BOSTON (NC) - Auxiliary Democratic movements stand for, how they began. how they Bishop Eric F. MacKenzie of Bos have changed, and how they are ton has been el~cted l!J fellow in developing today ai'e discussed the American Academy of Arts and Scienc~, the s.econd oldest at length, Trade union~, move ments for the farmers. small learned society in the United States. Bishop MacKenzie Is of. business men and larger .em ployers. the various family and ficie.iis of the Boston archdioces an Tribunal and chairman of the youth movements and the influ Archdioce'san Music Com~i.ssion. ence of the laity in Christian democracy are' explained with numerous charts and tables.
Stonehill College will grant degrees to 73 students a.t Com mencement exercises Sunday on .In the last release of The Yardstick the International Con federation of Free Trade Unions, which has its headquarters in the college campus. Rev. James Brussels," Belgium, was criticized by Msgr. Higgins for its refusal J. Sheehan, esc, president of to cooperate on a basis.of mutual respect with the Christian Unions the college, will confer the de of WesteT1i Europe. This week, belOause of the ,importance and gl'ees in ceremonies on the lawn ·timeliness of this subject, Msgr. Higgins has invited Mr. August in the rear of the administration Vanistendael, secretary general of the International Federation of. building. . Chief speaker for the 'day 'will Christian Trade Unions"'!>also of Brussels, to discuss it in greater de tail as a guest columnist. Mr. Vanistendael is in Washington at be Atty. Joseph A. Duggan of the .present 'time for' a series of conferences with representatives 'New Bedford, former United oj the AFL-Cro. ' " , States Assistant Attorney Gen .. " ' eral, who will discuss the separa : The question has been asked Um~ and; again whether tion of church and state. Four all free trade unions could not unite in one single, world honorary degrees will also / be wide international federation so .that the Christian and conferred. ' Socialist -unions, .along with others' and with eac,h other, The exercises will culminate the senior week progl'am, which would join in one interna-. will also include Bacculaureate . I tf f ' . I eral Se.cretary, of t"h!J. Interna services on Saturday at which tional p a orm ,O~, socIa 'tionaf Federation of Christian the Rt. Rev. Lawrence Joseph pr.o I' e S s, freedom and Trade Unio~s, 'is serving on that Riley, STD, secretary to Arch peace~, . same committee as his'assist!mt. bishop Richard J. Cushing of For practical purposes the It is well known, that a certain Boston, wi11 giVe the sermon. The , whole question boils dqwn 'to the degree of coo per a t ion was Satlirday program will also in achieved also in the Consultative dude a luncheon and flag raising rei a tionship between the
Committee of the Europeal) Coal ceremonies. In terriational
and Steel Community. . The Sunday program will also Confederation
The Christian unions, on their include awards of prizes to of Free Trade part, have constantly suggested seniors' and undergraduates for extending this cooperation to all scholastic excellence. Unions UCFIncluded in the graduates l11'e TN) and· thE' European organizations: to the Internation a 1 Council of Europe, North Atlan 11 seminarians preparing for Federation of tic Treaty' Organization, the the- :Priesthood a~ Holy Cross ChI' i s t ian Brussels-Group for 'the Common .Fathers who are students at Our Trade Unions Market and Euratom, etc., but 'Lady' of Holy Cross Se~inary their suggestions, :were turned and 'St. Pius V Seminary, affi (IFCTUl, so down every time by the European liated with .the college and 10 lIimilar in capItals.. yet so different in being. Regional Organization of the In cated on ,the ,college campus. When in 1949 the International tern'ational Confederation of Free . / ,Confederation of . Free' Trade' Trade Unions.. Father Dulles Begins At the general level relations S d Unions was established, an iilYi • G tation was sent to the different were eased a bit In the interna tu y In ermany Christian unions. on the Euro- . tional Labor Oi'ganization where MUENSTER, Germany (NC)First Negro Priest pean continent and in Canada, Mar,tin Ruppert, President of the Father Avery Dulles is due here ELECTRICAL
NEW ORLEANS '(NC) - Au to join the new international and Dutch Protestant Trade Union next month to complete his ter gust Louis Thompson will become CONTRACTORS
disband the International Fed Center, was elected asa member' 'tianship in the Society of Jesus the first Negro priest for the eration of Christian T l' a d e of the workers group 'of the Oov- at the Jesuit college ,here: . Residential Commercial Diocese' of Alexandria, La., when , Industrial . The convert son of U. S. Sec Unions within two years. . Boa L.· Abel Cail Auxiliary Bishop retary' of State John Foster This demand has been recentlY ermng . y. 633 Broadway, Fall River Orl~ans, ordains' louet of New qualified by: Msgr. George .G., Seek Cooperation Dulles "'iii spelid several weeks him June' 8 in St. Louis Cathe OS 3-1691 It is clear-that cooperation can at the Goethe Institute in M'u Higgins of the N.C,W.C. as being d'ra}' here. ' ' unreasonable. and it has proved :Only start when both trends of 'nich brushing up on his Gh'man . in fact to be no workable propo free trade unionism accept each , before beginning his final year of other's existence, in an unbiased formal training in September. sition for bringing about the de QON'T DELAY ~ 'SAVE' TODAYI It was 'learned that Fnther , Illred unity. way. This even implies that new unions of either trend can be 01' . Dulles' mother took. the oppor Suggestions Ignored _ ganized if workers so decide. Co tunity to visit the college where Would thiI1gs have been dif operation therefore means com her 39-year-old son is to finish ~~ '. ferent, if the American trade promising on the monopoly posi his training when she accompan unions .had had a fuller knowl-, tion of either movement. As far ied Secretary Dunes to the recent NATO conference in Bonn. edge of the phenomenon' of as the Christian 'unions are con Christian trade unionism? Let cerned there is no difficulty at • SAVE - BY - MAIL • us refrain from doing any guess all, since they reject monopolies Alumnae Breakfast work along these lines and stick, for trade unio'ns as being hardly We Pay Postage Both Ways Mrs: Horace L. 'Borden '07' w1l1 to the facts. ' consistent with real trade union be guest speaker at the annual The Christian trade union in freedom. If they know, however, temational suggested a form of before starting any cooperation, Communion breakfast for.. mem permanent and organized co that it is only accepted as long bers of Sacred Heart Academy operation, excluding none of the as there is no opportunity to Alurimae Association Sun day morning. possible further developments. liquidate them, one can not won Breakfast will be served in the This suggestion took the form of del' that they should have some school hall, Prospect Street, Fall ., '0 AN..' A.S S O· C I A , ION a document, but this document reservations. follOWing Mass in the was never seriously put before And yet the facts show that River, Open Friday
No.1 North -' tafl,'~~' Academy chapel. any of. the policy-making bodies it was precisely the Christian Eveninll till 8 \
Main Street Miss Hazel M. Conaty is chair ot the International Confedera trade unions, which every time man of 'the committee arranging A Modern Institution For Savings & Home Loans tioD of Free Trade Unions. took the initiative of suggesting the reunion. ' It was argued mainly that na cooperation between both free trade union internationals. tional differences made 'it 'lm They al'e not a bunch of, nar possible to consider'any proposal for. international' cooperation. row-mi.nded sectarians, and are The fact, in particular, that open to loyal cooperation, but Christian trade unions were re who would blame them,' after So established In. Germany was of' many futile efforts, If they have paramount importance for the perhaps lost 'a little of their negative attitude on the part of· Oliginal candor? the. International Confederation of Free Trade Unions. Differences . " . . , existing in Switzerland, Belgium, Holland and France were also taken into consideration, but 'not with the same strong feelings ,as ': . was the German cause. Cooperation Established, Eventually a strong, organized, and fruitful 'cooperation was es tablished at the European level in' the Joint Trade Unioil Advis ory Committee with the Organi zation for European Cooperation, comprising twelve members from Hot Asphalt Mix - CoDd Asphalt Mix - Sheet Asphcdt
the International Confederation Bleaches of Free Trade Unions and five DIsInfects For Roads - Driveways - Patching
from the Christian trade unions. Moreover Schevenels,' General Purifies ,/ Secretary of the European· Re , gional Organization of the Inter national Comederation of Free PLANT: G.A.R. Hlghwoy, SWANSEA OFFICE: 823 Davo' Sf'., FAll ROVER Trade Unions, is functioning as At Your Neighborhood
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Cherwell Bla'sts Pope's
Appeals to Halt Tests
\
By
Donal~
THE ANCHOR Thurs.• May 30, 1957
Lois M. Eveleth 'Veronica Mattos Wins Scholarship Latin Winner Lois Marie Eveleth, a senior at Mt. St. Mary Academy, Fall River, has been awarded a cerU
Veronica Mattos, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Manuel Mattos, 140 Snell Street. Fall River, has been
ficate of Superlative Merit in La tin as the result of a nationwide examination conducted by the Association for the Promotion of the Study of Latin. Daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wal ter J. Eveleth, 127 Cory Street, Lois attained a score of 115 out, of a possible 120. She has won honors in the contest in previous years, attaining the Superlative Merit rating in her sophomore year also. In 1955, Mount St. Mary was awarded the special school A. P. S.· I. ,gold Latin Trophy for having won a total of three medals or medal-pins. The total is now foUl'. Miss Eveleth is co-editor of the yearbook, class secretary and a member of the Latin Club: She has been a hig'hest honor student for four years' . Eminent Merit certificates in
awarded a scholarship by As sumption Circle. Daughters of Isabella. Miss Mattos will be graduated from B.M. C.l)urfee High School June, 12 and begin her studies for the nursing profession at Union Hospital School of Nursing, Fall River, in september.
McDonald
There is something tragi-comic about the criticism presently being leveled at Pope Pius XII by Lord Cherwell, the British physicist, who is upset because the Holy Father has recently reiterated his plea for a halting of hydrogen bomb tests. I mean, aside from the gogues who have proved them question of either scientific selves so adept at smearing their _ opponents by claiming they have fact or moral principles" I been duped by or are allied with
find it extremely audacious that Communists simply because the a scientist and politician,whose latter. for their own reasons, oc c:olleagues have notoriously failed casionally applaud the state to prevent all ments or actions of a non-Com the past wars munist. , which have af The question is really whether flicted the hu or not hydrogen bomb tests man r ace. should be halted. If, on moral, Ilhould now un psychological, medical, economic dertake to criti and political grounds, such tests cize the Holy should be halted, then the Holy , Fat her and' Father has no other alternativt raise questions but to affirm that position. And c:oncerning his the fact that the Soviet propa knowledgeabili gandists happen to be occupying ty and under that same position does not mean Iltanding of the present Inter . that Pius XII must abandon it, national scene. nor does It mean that his refusal It has' not been the Pius XII's to abandon it proves he has been and til(; Albert Schweitzers who lJave led humanity into the hell , "taken in" by the Communists. As a matter of both scientific of modern wars. It has been the and . psychological~political fact, 1I0-called "realist" politicians, like Lord Cherwell, men who pride there are very good reasons why themselves on their diplomatic hydrogen bomb tests should be halted. ,There is an increasing ac finesse, their hard-headed saga city, tl\llse are the men who cumulation of evidence' of the lJave blundered their way into' lethal genetic effects of stronti war by alternately appeasing and um 90, the radioact.!ve particles &oading aggressors; by blindly from the fall-out followll1l~ nuc lear explosions. American and relying on a' supposed "superiori ty" of armaments and by always British scientists, the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists at the Uni acknowledging too late the anti versity of Chicago, a recent aggression advantages and uni fYing value of collective security' lengthy article in The Reporter programs based on something concerning effects on residents more organic and permanent of Nevada and Utah (test-site than the momentarily pragmatic Btates)-all raise seriou's ques-· tion 88 to the capacity of the and historicallY discredited pact human body to absorb. without and-treaty arrangements: danger, the radioactive particles. 'Forlorn. Experiment' ,
What Po~ Said I shall corne; In a moment. to
Now what did Pius XII say a Lord Cherwell's specific accusa tion' against Pius XII. I warit few weeks ago to Masatoshi Mat there to note that he has already Bushita, Japan's' specild envoy indicated his level of competence seeking from world leaders an by a speech last Dec. 11 in the agreement to end hydrogen bomb Bouse of Lords On the United tests, Did he urge a unilateral Nations In which he noted, cor halting of these tests? Did he rectly, that the U.N. Is funda assert categoril;ally that the mentally incapable of acting de amount of strontium 90 settling c:lslvely In a situation such as to the earth. is already of suffi arose In Hungary last October cient quantity to kill a particular because It Is not based on world number of people and perman. Ir.w. His conclusion was not, how imtly alter the reproductive fa ever, that the U.N. should be culties of a certain number of transformed into an organic. po other people? Did he ask the litical federation with defined West to supinely and foolishly end limited legislative, judicial lay down their arms and invite and executive pollee powers. His Soviety aggression? conclusion was, rather, that the He did none of these things. U.N. Is a "forlorn experiment in He said that, so far as radioactive idealism" and, should therefore fall-out is concerned, "no one can be abandoned. with Britain (and foretell with certainty what the I suppose all other nations) re ultimate biological effects, espe-, tumlng to that form of national cially the hereditary ones, can power politics which bestowed on be on living beings." Us the handsome gifts of World He said that the hydrogen War I, World War II, the Korean arms race is a "useless waste of War and, most recently, the scientific actiVity, of labor and of massacre of Hungary. material means," and that it is Lord. Cherwell does not, then, "an exhausting and costly race come very highly recommended' to death." by his own past, as an authorita He said that the "destructive tive, wise critic of the statements power of nuclear weapons has be and actions of Pope Plus XII. come unlimited, being no longer Lord Cherwell, speficalIy, checked by the critical mass ()harges that the Holy Father has which once set a natural limit'to been. "taken in" by pro-Soviet the already terrible power of the "peace" propagandists because he first atomic weapons." has issued humanitarian appeals He said that this "unlimited for a halt in the present nuclear power is now used as a challenge which, tossed from one camp to arms race. He claims to be sur prised that "men in hi~h position the other, becomes- more and without scientific knowledge or more catastrophic, while each exact information" should "issue side tries to out-do the other in appeals on quantitative scientific the increasing and unfortunately questions on which they are real real terrors which the power in ly incompetent to judge. spires." , "How they (Pius XII, Dr. Path To War Bchweitzer, etc.) can aUow them In short. the Holy Father sim 8elves to be taken in by the in ply reminded the world, as he accurate propaganda of the has done repeatedly, that it 1s f)'iends of Russia is hard to un rushing down the old, timeworn derstand," said Lord Cherwell. path to war, that an armaments . Adept at Smearing race ·has never historically led to peace, and that this time the war The question of whether a par ticular statement by Pope Pius will be truly "catastrophic." To all of this, Lord Cherwell XlI happens to parallel the So yjet .propaganda line is quite has but a contemptuous snort. As I say. the irony of the situa1rr~levant. except to those dema-
tion 'lies in the '!;;upei'iorit,y and arrogance of a man who has nothing to offer but the shabby bankruptcy of a politics and a science that gave the world three successive blood baths in one generation and now promises, on its own credentials, to turn the world into a howling, uninhabit able, poisonous wilderness.
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tl::Je ,examination were won by Patricia McGee and Catherine Gesner; Superior by Ann Marie Doolan, Carolyn Anne Lenaghan and Mary Turcotte; Honorable by Patricfa Boardman, Barbara Peckham, Carole Mattimore and Mary Lorna». Sister Mary Rose, R.S.M., A.M., is ~acher and head of the Latin department.
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IListof Contributorsto 1957 Ca'tholic Charities Appeall
Co., Sol K. Berk Co., Inc.~ A Friend. Mr: and Mrs. Howal'd B. Car . roll, Chandlei: Mfg. Co., Inc., An Attleboro
thony N. Elias, M.D., Flynn Mo . ·$100
tors Inc., James E .. Miles. Swank Inc.
Staples Coal Co., Taunton .$50
News Agency-Jamel; Gallaghel:, R. F.Simmons Co. J. M. Wells, Donovan Amusement $35 Co., Poole Silvel: Company. Attleboro Printing and Em Society of St. Vincent de"Paul, bossing· Co. st. Jacques' Parish, Sylvester $25 .Sowiecki, Williams Lumber Co., Car~y Bros., W. E. Richards, Inc., St. Anne's Society,' st. Co. . Jacqlles, Dorothy Drummond. Joseph McCormick, Devin~'8 $20 Milk Laboratories, Inc.,' Boyden M. J. Wall Co. Plastics Co., Bristol County Ra $10 dio Co., Bristol Jewelry, Inc. Charles E. Willis Ins. C9., AI John J. Gregg, D.D.S., Ed fred's Beauty Salon, Artcraf.t Co., Machnik, Mason Box Co., Mc Inc. Cabe Sand and 9ravel .Co., Mul hern's Pharmacy. North Attleboro Pober's, Walter G. Powers, Eu $500 gene J. Sullivan. ' Mr. and Mrs. BemaI'd J. Doyle. $20 $125 A Friend, Emco Electrical Sup Dr. Roland Smith. ply Co.. Dr. Richard Heywood, $100 Joseph E. Warner, Taunton Ma Joe Curtis Real Estate. 'son Supply Co. $75 • Manuel J. Correia-Bmnco. Catholic Women's Club. M.D., New Jersey Rubber Co. .'. $50 $15 Interboro Laundry. C. Ray Bill Hewitt's Cafe, Richmond Randall Co., Mason Box Co., Granite and Marble. Works, Knights of Columbus-Thomas Southern Mass. Oil Corp., J. R. P. McDonough Council No~ 330. Tallman Insurance Co., A Friend. , $35 . Bruce P. Velon, M.D., James Daughters of Isabella, Benedict· 9'Brien, M.D. '. Circle No. 61. $10 $25 L. G. Beers Co:, DeSilvia Elec Michael J. Croke Real Estate, tric Co., W.' L. DonIe, Ea,gan's Nolan's Flower Shop, No. Wash P!.Ickage Store, Foster and Com ington St. Garage, Diamond's pany. Funeral Home, Ladies of St. C. A. Hack and Son, Hanson Anne Sodality, Sacred Heart and. Company, Leonard's, Inc., Church. D. ~.. MUl'phy and Co., Inc" Rus Oscar Hillman and Sons,' St; sell B. Myers. Vincent de Paul Society, Sacred Paragon Gear Co., W. H. Riley Heart Church: llnd Son', Inc., Wilfred Saint, st. $20 Germaine and Son, Dr. John Dr. Eugene Leco, J. J. Beau Smith. chaine and Sons, Schofield Hard B. E. Stanton - Kiddie Shop . ware, Webster Co., Fred E. Viens Sweeney's ,Dress Shop, Talbot and Co. Tweedy, White Front Market, $15 F. W. Woolworth·s. William H. Bennet, M.D.• Plante and Fontaine Co., Inc., Ringuette:s Market, Drs. Herbert Church Coal Co., Menahem and Elsie Loeb. Clover Super Cooperstein, M.D., Daughters or Market, A. R. Brais Co. Isabella, Eddie's Meat Market. $12.50 Mr. Hope Machinery Co., J. Whiting and Davis Co. Howard O'Keefe, Riendeau Fu $10. neral Service, George F. Riley, Newell-Blais Post No.- 443, Silva Funeral Home. V.F.W., Hindle's Auto Electric ' Young's Motor Tmck Service, Co" Sayles Dairy Bar, Gaudette Inc., Greyhound Package !Store, Leather Goods, Inc., B.P.O. Elks George E. Mador, Armond V. Bo No. i011. lino, M.D., Greyhound Coffee No. Attleboro Emblem ClUb, Shop. . Capadanno Fmit Store, Aglae's Octagon Service Station, Oli ver's Market, Ward's Garage, Hat Shoppe, Swanzey Tool Co" Tri-Boro Finance Co. Frank E. Pero Insurance Agency, Drs. James A. Bryer. Sr. and Tremont Super Market. Jr.. Morin's Lakeside Inn, Mr: Jack Miller, adams Cleaners, and MI:S. George Cleary, Mr. and Voice of Portugal, Souza Electric . Mrs. Emil Fetzer, North Attleboro Co., Farrell;s Cafe. Coal Co. Mechanics CODPeratiye Bank, Louis' Grimaldi and Sons, Fred Costello Buick, Inc., Edmund J. E. Shepard and Son, Joseph Mar Fitzgerald D.D.S., Homer's, 'In sten, Davis Electric, H. F. Bar terstate Transportation Co. ' ~ rows Co. " Leddy's Variety Store, Manny'S L.,S. Peterson Co., Jarvis Corp., News, Mozzone Bros. Lumber Atty. Charles Mason, Fl:anklin Yard, Parker House, Plank and Hardware Co., Wamsutta .Drug Hansen.' . .. Co. Presbrey Bros., Presbrey Re Oldtown Lace Works, Auto fractories Corp., American Le Body ·Co. Holy Name Society- gion, Benny's Auto Stores, Car Sacred Heart ChUl'ch" :Michael mine A. CarucGi D.D.s. Vigorito, Dr. E. T. Welch, Dr.' Robel·t Welcrl.
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$200 Taunton Daily Gazette. $100 The Queen's Dallghters, Dolan Funeral Home, $50 Dr. Henry A. Alves Jr., Bristol County Trust Co .. O. Arthur Ne reo, ·M.D., Alfreq S. O'Keefe, Ar mor Bronze and Silver Co., Iilc.' Nason Oil Co.. Andrew J, ':Led dy, M.D., Drummond Printing Co., Charles R. Galltgan, Frank J. Smith. Robert F. Mealy, MD., Eureka Mfg. Co., Laughlin's Market, Ed ward O'Brien. ' $30 William E. Davfflon, M.D, . $~5 Taunton Lodge No. {50, B.P.O. Elks, A Friend., HodgmEl.u Mfg',
Assonet
ST. BERNARD'S $50 Ml" and Ml's, Marianno Re zendes. $35 Mr. and Mrs. ~obert Blake. . $15 A. Gertrude Gould; Misses Rose E. and Amle McHale. .. $10 Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Callag han, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Car roll, Mr. and Mrs. Benoit Chat' land, Helena V. GOUld, Margue rite. Gould. . . Mr. and Mrs. Norman Lafleur, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Nacaula. Mr. 8,nd Mrs. L. NevflIe and Family, Mrs. John W. Porter. Parlshioner, 1!Itr.. and Mm, Jos eph Slm.on.'J,
Attlebolrt;» HOI,Y GHOST , . $150 Matilda Vaughan.' $100 "Libitinarius" $50 A Friend. $25 Catherine LeClair, James ·K. Nerney. " $15
Gerard J. Kenton,
$10
Senora Boucher, Francls Fla herty, Doris LeClair, Gertrudo. Maguire, TaylQr Reese. ST: JOHN'S $150 Mr. and'Mrs. James A. Carey. $100 Benjamin Nolin and Family. $75 John Mahon and Family, Mr. and Mrs. HaI:ry Condon. $60 Dr. Anthony Terranov. and Family. $50 Mr. and Mrs. Edward Coogan, Mr. and Mrs. Russell Brennan: Mr. and Mrs. Robert Romero. , $40 Myles Daly. .$30 Mrs. William Walton. $25 Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Brenn an, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Cain, Mr. and Mrs. Wlllter Cunning ham, Mr. and Mrs. Luca 'Fantac cione, George Janson. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Lohse, Mc-, , Brien Family, Mr. and Mrs. Jo seph Mahon, Mr. and Mrs. Ar thur L.. Mulligan, Mrs. Elizabeth Nolan. Mr. and Mrs. Francis Sughrue, Mrs. Leland B. Smith. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Rioux, Mr. and Mrs. John' McCal:te. . $20 John B. Antaya, Mrs. Gem'go Berg; Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Ciolfi, Mrs. James Doyle, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Foley. Rose ,McBrien, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Mondor. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Summer. $la Mr. and Mrs. Paul Bellavan~e, Mr. and Mrs.-John Mullaney, Mr. and Mrs.' Robert Nolan, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Stanton, Mr. and Mrs. John A. Cummings. William Duffy; Mr. and Mrs. James Fitton, Mr. and Mrs. Ray mond Gaz·zola. . $13 Miss Mary Giles. $10 Harvey Gariepy, The Misses Biggio, Mrs. Roy Nelson, James Maher, Oscar Maher. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Perry. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Niquette, Arthur Noliil, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph. Perry, Maria McBrien. Clement Jeffers, Mr. and Mrs. . J ... Frank Kekley, ML' and Mrs. Charles T. O'Neil, Mrs. Thomas O'Keefe, Margaret O'Keefe. , Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Rounds and BradfOi'd, Mr. and Mrs. Dan iel Gilroy, Louis Galligan, Leo .Galligan, Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Sullivan. Mrs. Edmuna Stone and Fami ly', Mrs. Blanche Rondo, Mr. and Mrs. James Robinson, Mr. and Mrs. Alfred McNally, Jennie Mc Donald.. Lena Lee,·Mr. and Mrs. John' Lee, Arthur F. Connelly, Mr. and Mrs. john Maher, Mr. and' Mrs. Ernest Doyle. ' Mrs'. Caroline Doyle, MI'. and Mrs. William Madden, Helen Madden, Mr. and· Mrs. Donald Antaya, ~ir. and'" Mrs. Kevin Myles. ..: Mrs. ·,Sarah Johanson, Elsie McDonald. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Bellavance, Mr.. and Mrs. Rich ard Cleary,Fred Franz. , Sarah Bagley, Mrs. Lillian Harrington, James Clark, Mr.· and 'Mis. John Carroll, Mr. and Mrs.' Cllales Bowen. Mr: ilnd. lVlrs.:James Cl'oke Sr., Mr. and Mrs', Frank'Cronan, ,Mr. and Mrs, 'Joseph ~Lanc, :Mr.'
and Mr~. Francis' Stelter, Peter and Mrs. Joseph Ol'1ando. Agnail and Joe, Thompson on Co.. Silvia. Ml'. and Mrs. Fred Endler Jr., Frank Quinlan. , John F. Gilrein, Margaret Kil Mr. and Mrs. Orner Jette, Wilfred Pallle, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Lee, Ian, Phyllis Spooner. BemaI'd Beatty. Dighton Mr. and Mrs. George Kohler. Anita King, Mr. and Mrs. Clayton ST. PETER'S
McDonald, Mr. and Mrs. Peter $10
Marron, Mr, and Mrs. John Dr. Charles M. Souza'.
Wilson. Mr. and Mrs. J. Kenneth Mur Hebronville phy, .Mr. and Mrs. William Au ST. :MARY'S gat, Mr. and·, Mrs. Almon Mc $100 . Manus,~ Mr. and Mrs. John O. Walsh. . . Mrs. Pierre Lonsbw·y. Mr. and Mrs. Louis Blaine. $25 Harry Dowdall, Mr. and Mrs. Jo Ml\ and ·Mrs. David Blake, Mr. seph Fredette, Mr. and Mrs. John and Mrs. Geo. McCarthy,. Mrs•. Keane, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Leland Smith, St. VIncent De Kelley. Paul Society. .. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Blake. Mr. and Mrs. George Levis, Mr. and Mrs. J. Howard Lyncp, Miss $20 Mary Higgins, Mrs. Alice McGre Mr. and Mrs. John S. Francis•. gor, Dr. and Mrs. Raymond Mil The Lynch Family. llano $15 Edward Murphy, Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. John Connelly Joseph O'Donnell, Mr. and Mrs. and Family, - Mr. and Mrs. Robert Rohman, Mrs. Ismay Charles Dauray. Sharkey, Mrs. Jeremiah P. MaYOr: an? Mrs. ,Cyril Brennan. O'Brien. . $12 ST. JOSEPH' Mrs. Mary E. Coyle, Mr..and $35 Mrs. Rudolph LaPalme. Joseph Desvergnes Family. Mr. and Mrs. Avila Grenier. $10 $10 Mary Boudreau, Harold De St. Mary's Guild, Mrs. Clinton mers. "" Joseph R. Fredette, Mr. Roland Ainsworth. Mr. and Mrs. Jos. F. Brochu, Cyril Cote, Alice Pion, . Bienvenue, Mr. and Mrs. Jos. p • Bienvenue, Miss Agnes Blake. Pion Family. Mr. and Mrs. William BJake.· Joseph Pelletier, Rene Dubuc, Mr. and Mrs. John Buben, Mr.~ COlll'ad Maigret. James J. Coogan, Mr. and Mrs. Wm. E, Coyle Jr., Mr. and Mrs. . Chatham Wm. E. Coyle Sr. HOLY REDEEMER Miss Catherine Fisk, Mrs. Ed $50 ward Fisk, Miss Marilyn Fisk, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Corkery. Mr. and Mrs, Francis Goggin. $25 Mr. and Mrs. John Harrington. Association of the Sacred 'Mr.\.and Mrs. Wm. O'Brien. Hearts. HOly Name Society, Ano Mr. and Mrs. Jos. Trojan, Pat nymous, Mary Byrne, Cecile rick Walsh. Doelger, Marie Doelger, Chatham Mrs. Walter Amos, Mr. and Trust Co. I Mrs'- Wm. Curtis, Mr. and Mrs. $15 Charles F ..Doherty, Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. R. R. Lally. Mr. James H. Duffy. Mr. and Mrs. and Mrs. George Killen. Thomas Duffy. ..... $12 . Mr. and Mrs. Jos. Hearn, Mr. Daniel Shanahan. and Mrs. Jos. Lambelt. Mr. ancl . $10 -Mrs. Harold McCormick, Mrs. A Friend, Yvonna Danz,' Mr. Robel't Pritchai·!i..
The Con.gregation' of the
Sacred.Hearts of Jesus and Mary
LEAD· A LIFE OF REPARATION
A PRIEST OF THE SACRED HEARTS IN ADORATION The Fathers of the Sacred Hearts engage' in Parochial work foreign and home missions and education.
Aspirants to the
religious
p~iesthood or. brothe,:hood may obtain infor
.mation by writing to . VOCATIONAL DURIECrOlt 3· 'ADAMS ST!l1E1rIr . lfAOllllHlAVIEINI, .MAS5AtClHltUlSlCm
Ihe Family Clinic
THE ANCHOR Thurs., May 30, 1957
Lists Reasons for Church Stand on Mixed Marriages By Rev. John L. Thomas, S. J. Sf. Louis University
Why is the Church always harping on the evils ot mixed marriage? I know of several right In our neighbor hood which are very successful. Besides, some of the nicest, boys I know are non-Catholics. How is our faith going to be known if Catholic young people can't date with those coming e~otionallY involved or falllng in love? Once you have of a different religion? ... ... reached this stage, experience
.
know, Maisie, there are a : people who share your view.,. Accord jng to inter views and pub-, lic opinion polls, a good percent nge of Ameri cans - Catholic and non-Cath olic - feel that there are few hazards con nected wit h mixed marriage. This is all the more startling because religious leaders, Cath olic, Protestant and Jewish, have constantly warned their flocks about the dangers of such unions. This raises the interesting ques tion. Is anybody listening? Harmful to Faith Let's look at the known facts about mixed marriage. Extensive studies conducted by sociologists show conclusively. that mixed marriages are harmful to the. faith of the Catholic party. Stated in broad figures, approxi mately 45 pel' cent of the Cath olics involved in' valid mixed marriages have either severed all connection with the Church or attend Church, services very spo radically. Likewise, the religious training of children suffers in such marriages. A conservative estimate would be that roughly 40 per cent of the children born to such unions are either un baptized, or are baptized in the Protestant church, or are bap tized only, that Ill, they receive no formal Instruction in the faith. Finally, although a con Biderable number of partners join the Church before marriage, J'elatively few are converted dur ing the marriage. I
shows that It is not easy to break up. Heed Warning This suggests one further point against dating non-Catholics. It always involves the danger of invalid marriage, that is, of at tempting marriage outside the Church. Our studies show that somewhere between one-third and one-hal! of all mixed unions are invalid. No doubt, many of the Catholics jnvolved in these unions started out by "only" dating non-Catholics, but the casual date became a "steady" and love followed. Are you listening, Maisie? Or will you be one of the many thousands who complain, "Why ,didn't you warn us!"
Serrans to Meet LOS ANGELES (NC)-Drama tization of historic moments in the life of Father Junipero Serra will be a special event at Serra International's 15th annual con vention here Jun'e 24. Delegates from 160 Serra Clubs in the western hemisphere will attend,
13 Congress Told Communist
Youth to Mark Adoration, Day WAS H I N G TON (NC) Youngsters throughout the na tion will observe "National Youth Adoration Day" ~or the first time on Pentecost Sunday, June 9. Msgr. Joseph E. Schieder, di rector of the Youth Department. National Catholic Welfare Con ference, said this is :'a program requested ,by, developed, by and , scheduled by" the Diocesan Sec tion of the National Council of Catholic Youth. "It is not a progtam that will get wide publicity coverage like that afforded juvenile crime, but it is one that much more honestly reveals the nature of the vast majority of the-young people of the country," The present purpose of the ob servance is to have all Catholic youngsters pray to the Holy Spirit for guidance to know the truth and courage to follow it. The three-fold purpose is for in creases in 1) the number of re ligious vocations in every dio cese of the county; 2) purity. honesty and a sense of responsi bility among the nation's young people, and 3) spiritual and temporal relief of the suffering young people of Hungary and their fellow citizens. Msgr. Scheider announced a prayer and picture card dedicat ed to the Holy Spirit suitable for all young people is available at the National Council of Catholic Youth, 1312 Massachusetts/Ave., N. W., Washington 5, D. C.
WASHINGTON (NC)-The danger of communism is increasing, not receding. The United States remains the major target of Soviet aggression. This is a disquietIng official report which seems to have received relatiyely lit once observed that If the Ameri tle attention. And yet, it comes from an can people saw this horde wear official source which warns ing the uniform of a foreign thQt "indifference to the Krem lin's avowed program of global conquest can lead only to the inevitable destruction of our free institutions, and ourselves as a free nation." This has a particular signifi cance at this time, because in writin'g of the recent death of Senator Joseph R. McCarthy of Wisconsin, some newspapermen and others created the impres sion that he greatly overrated the communist danger in this country. The danger is not minimized In the annual report of the U. S. House of Representatives Com mittee on Un-American Activi ties. It is from the foreword of that report, written by Rep. Francis E. Walter of Pennsyl-' vania, chairman, that the warn ing at the beginning of this let ter is quoted. "Anyone who thinks that com munism in the United States no longer constitutes a serious men ace," Rep. Walter also says, "should consider that at this moment on American soil are the equivalent of 20 combat di visions of enemy troops engag ing in propaganda. espionage, SUbversion, and loyal only to the Soviet Union. A prominent American jurist
power and moving freely in theil' midst. they would immediately voice great alarm. The alarm should not be less If the uniform clothes the minds instead of the ' body." The chairman says his como: mittee "would prefer to report to Congress and to the Ameri can people that the tide has turned against international communism and that the day of its dissolution Is in sight. The committee cannot do so. There are many, nevertheless, who feel that communism has become en feebled and exultantly hail each new sound from the Soviet sphere as the death knell of the vast communist totalitarian em pire. It is a grave delusion which, they embrace." The report foreword says the membership of the Communist Party in the United States has declined numerically, but it at tributes this to the fact that "many dilettantes left the fring es from which they had long' gazed with soorry-eyed credulity." "But those remaining in the communist apparatus comprise a hard core of revolutionaries who have consecrated themselves to accomplish the annihilation of our form of government," the foreword warns.
GILBERT C. OLIVEIRA INSURANCE
8
APPRAISER
REALTOR
1320 No. Main St., Fall River - OS 2-2000
Sources of Trouble
What are some of the sources oi trouble in mixed marriages? First, it hinders the spiritual unity of the couple. The Catholic partner must pray alone, attend Church services alone, approach the communion rail alone, and retain, unshared, a whole world of spiritua.l· experiences' and val ues. Second, there is lack of agree ment concerning the religious training of children. Third, church loyalties in re gard to time, Interest. and money are divided and can lead to quar rels. Fourth, there may be rejection or positive interference from in laws. ,Fifth, and most important, differences in religion produce basic differences in value sys tems which love cannot resolve. Catholics have distinct beliefs
concerning the indissolubility of
marriage, marital fidelity, the use
of contraceptives, and so on. Al
though many Protestants hold
these same values as ideals, the
great majority feel that they can
be ignored in exceptional cir
cumstan~es. The Catholic par
tner can never agree to such an
interpretation of divine teaching.
n",Ung Non-Catholics
What about dating non-Cath
olics? The answer is simple. In
the normal course of events, dat
Ing leads to courtship and mar
riage. If you wish to avoid get
ting Involved in a mixed mar
riage, you must logically avoid
dating non-Catholics. I realize
that it is common to use the facile excuse that you are "only"
dating, but where does one draw
the line between datini and be- '
Danger Is Increasing
,DORSEY LANDSCA'P'E & TRE'E CO. Designing-Planning-Construction Specializing in Chur.ch Property ELBOW·GREASE RAISES 22: A family of 22 chil dren on a laborer's salary is the story of Ignacio Reyes and his wife Susa'nna Martinez Reyes of Omaha. Parents of five, the Reyes adopted 17 other children, who were mem bers of different parts of the family where parents had died. Trust in God, nose to the grindstone, and elbow grease in the family garden raised the family, Mr. Reyes says. Recipient of the Benemeren~i Medal, Mr.. Reyes is active in his parish Holy Name SOCIety and St. Vmcent de Paul Society. A daughter, Cecilia, commenting on the family said, "The milkman often said that he had Father Flanagan's home on his route." NC Photo.
FRANCIS W. DORSEY 316 FIFTH ST. FALL RIVER OSborne 4-5698
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.:.r,r-...
Fan River ST. MARY'S CATHEDRAL $500
In Memory of Daniel J. Har rington. , In 'Memory, of Lucy J. Mc Mahon, by George McMahon. $~5
Mr. and Mrs. George P. Hurley. $50 .. Dr. and Mr. Frederick J. Sul livan. $30 Ernest Kilroy. _
Mr. and Mrs. ·James Diskin, The Lavagnino Family. $20 Maureen O'Rourke, Mr. and Mrs. Edward F. Slattery, Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Perry. . Mr. and Mrs. John Boynton, Barbara ..Dunn, Helen Kenney. $15
Edward F. Fitzgerald. Rose Dowling, Margaret Dunn, Mr. and Mrs. Jeremiah Holland, Helen Joy, Margaret and Thomas Kennedy. . . In Memory of John S. and Alice V. Moran, Mr. and Mrs. John Vogel. $12 The Loughman Family, Mrs. Angela Wingate. $11 Mary and Anna Johnson. $10
Mr. and Mrs. William Aylward. Mr. and ·Mrs. George Boitano, Mr. and Mrs. FJ.:ank Duffy Jr., Mr. and Mrs. Warren Dwelly. Mr. and Mrs. Raoul Gagnon Sr. . Genevieve Harrington, Julia Harrington: Katherine Harring ton, Mrs. Margaret Kelliher, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Kerrigan. Mr. and Mrs. Eugene LeClaire, Mrs. Effie Lowney, Mr. and Mrs. Michael McMahon, Mrs. Jere miah and Miss Mary Malvey, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Myles. Cecilia 'Sheehan, Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Sullivan,' Mr., and Mrs. Edward Sullivan, Eileen A. Sul livan, Gertrude A. Sullivan, ·Mrs. Catherine .Barlow. Mrs. Margaret Barrett, in Memory of her sister Sarah E., In Memory of George and Thomas Biltclif fee, Mr. and Mrs. William J: Blythe and Sons. Sarah Booth, Helen and Rose Burnl:!, Mr. and Mrs. Wilfred Cal laghan, Margaret Clarke. In Memory of Charles E. Connoi·s. Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Coyle, Mrs. Daniel Driscoll. Mrs. Alice and Miss Alice Duggan, Mr. and Mrs. John Duggan, Mrs. Cath erine Fawcett. Mr. and Mrs. Jerome D. Foley Jr., Mrs. ,Frank Hanley, Mr. and . Mrs. Bernard Harrington. Jan ice Hurley, Margaret Hurely. Mary Hurley, Mary T.Hurley, Ruth Hurley. John Kenney, Mat thew Kilroy. Raymond Kilroy, Mary Little, Anna E. Lynch, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Magriby. Mr. and Mrs. Rosario Marchesi. Ruth and John Martin, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Marum. Mr. arid Mrs. John Mercer. Mary Mitchell, The Murphy Family. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Rey nolds, John Rogan, Helen Shea. Mona Shea, James J. Sullivan. Nellie Sullivan, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Thomas, John Wa'rd, Mr. and Mrs. William White. . BLESSED SACRAMENT $10 -
Octave Jusseaume, Dr.. Rosa rio Peladeau. Lionel Beaudoin. ESPIRITO SANTO $25
Anthony Alves. $10
Antonio Oliveira. Domingos Barros. HOLY NAME $300
Mrs. Charles E. Bonner. $200
.
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Tansey. $100
"'
In Memory of Mary E. and Louise F. Shay, Dr. Jeremiah Sullivan. Katherine C. V. Sul livan. $75
Dr. and Moo. John C. Corrlg'an, Mr. and Mrs, Hector Mongeau. $50
...t .'
14
THE ANCHOR-
Thurs., May 30. 1957
HOLY ROSARY . $100 John W. Varanese. $50
$100
$25
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph F. Phelan, Dr. and Mrs. John Carvalho. $35 Mrs. Charles Hurley, Dr. Mar garet Sullivan Doherty. $30
Holy' Name Women's Gutld, Mr. and Mrs. John E. Connolly,
Catherine and. Emma Connors, Helen and Anna Shay, Mr. and Mrs. Hugh J. Golden. $25
Ttre Neilan Family, May Leary, Mi'. and Mrs. Michael Hanley and family, Mr. and Mrs. Anton Kaiser. Mrs. W. Arthur Leary, Mr. and Mrs. Noel Giard, Mr. and Mrs. John W. Roche, Mr.- and Mrs. Joseph W. Cummings. Lillian and Rose Dowd. "
Holy Rosary Women's Guild. $25
Mr. arid Mrs. Louis A. Sisca and family.
$10
Hillhouse Convalescent Home. Amy Halligan and Sarah, Dennis Hurley. Annie E. and Mary E. Quirk, Edward J. Doran. The Misses Doran, Mr.. and Mrs~' Joseph Borges, Grace Dunn, Margaret Coleman, Julietta Delehanty,-
$10
Alphonse BellefeUille. Edilbet·' Brault. Joseph Coulombe. Lil lianne Courtemanche: Dr. and Mrs. Paul DeVillers. Mr. and Mrs. George Foul'l1ier. Adelard Gauthier, Benoit Gauthier, Mr. and Mrs. Hector La ' chance, Mr. and Mrs. Albert
Michaud.
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph O. St.
Denis, J. A. Silvia.
ST. ANTHONY OF PADUA
Mr. and Mrs. James J.' McMahon, Mr. and Mrs. C. Joseph $10
Driscoll, William L. O'Brien, Mr. and Mrs. James R. Mitchell, Manuel Silvia.
Thomas H. Collins. ST. JOSEPH'S
$50 ' Laura Hollehan, Mr. and Mrs. $50
Immaculate Conception Wom Thomas J. Burke, Thomas ,ConIn Memory of Mrs. Katherlna
en's Guild. ", nors. John Corrigan,' Mr. and F. Marcille.
I $25 . Mrs. Daniel Duffy. $25
$20' Mr. and Mrs. John J. Burke, Elizabeth' Flaherty, Dr. and
. Thomas J. Fleming, Margaret Charles Duffy, Mrs./Michael sur- Mrs. Louis Kroger, Mrs. Mary
O . Lyn ch . Mr. and Charles,G:Daby, Mar lIvan,- Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Walker, Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Hurll,
$ 20 garet E. Shea, Mr. 'and Mrs. 'Vallee, Mrs. Letitia Lynch. Margaret Connors.
Mrs. Henry J. Duffy. James H. MartiJ:}, Pat l'Ick P h ·e-' 15 ,Mr. and Mrs. John J. Turner,' Mabel L. Morey. $ lan, Gertrude Q~irk. The McDonald' Family. The Raymond O'Toole ,Family, Mr.. and Mrs. John J. Sullivan, $20 Lenaghan Family, Dr. and 'Mrs, Margaret Connell. Loretta Gavin, Mr. and Mrs.... Catherine T. and Mary L. Har , $12 ,'James 'Reilly. William McNa- l·lngton. The Misses O'Brien. Mr.' George Sola.s. J O'C onne, 11 S 1'., The Hindle Family. mara. an d M rs. J os.. '$15 . $10 'John M. Sullivan Family, Miss Mr. and Mrs. Jos. J. O'Connell Dr. and Mrs. John Dunn. Mr. J M r. an d M rs. Leroy B or d en. Godfrey Bessette. Mr. and Mrs. Helen G. Law. Edward Healey; '1'., and Mrs. John Hogan and Kath $1~ Daniel Henry and Family, Gl'ace Angela Harrington, Mrs. Annie .. erine, Mr. and Mrs. John T. CU,ttle, Mr.' and Mrs. John J. Eagan. Douglas Law, Mr. and Mrs• Crowley, Mr. and ,Mrs. Daniel Conaty, and' Hazel, Julia Cole Mrs. Mary L. O'Sullivan, Cath- J 0 h n Connors, Mrs. Ell en M £1Mahoney. Mr. and Mrs. Martin man. erine'Lomax, Helen Lomax, Jos~ honey and Julia. Mildred and J. McDonald., . Mr. and Mrs. Henry Desmohd. ,.. eph Sullivan, Dorothy C;' Sul- Gerald Harrington, Bernadette In Memory of Joseph F.Kelly, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas j. Logan, livan. Foley: Mr. and Mrs. Michael Breen, Mrs. Frank McDermott, Mr. and Va I erI e F 0 I ey. Odella Carpenter, Mr. and Mrs. Mr: and Mrs. Eugene J. Ivers, <!l10 Ernest Floyd, George, Driscoll. Mrs. John Keating, Dominick ,John Fagan. William Norton, OJ' Sperduti Family. ' Joseph DaRocha, Mrs.' Edward Mr. and Mrs. Vincent Johnson, Francis Shaughnessy, Elinore Joseph Victorine, F. R. Catho TI, Murphy, Ella T. Dempsey. Mary and Margaret Dwyer, In Kennedy,' Mr. and Mrs. Thomas, lIc Nurses, Guild, Teresa Hetu. ,George E. Sullivan Jr., James Memory of Alvin 'E. CunningDunn. Henry J. Kitchen, Florence R., P. Boland, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth. ham, A Friend, Michael McNally. Sutcliffe, Francis Burke and " $12.50 Lynch, Jane Sullivan. Mrs. J. P. McMullen and Ml;. and Mrs. George Duffy. Family. Family. \ Mr. and Mrs. James OUR LADY OF HEALTH $10 $10 Catherine Barnes, Frank Ken- ,Downey, John J. McGettigan and The Misses Dunn. The Misses Manuel Freitas. ny. Rita' Kenny, ,Dorothy and Family, Alma Foley, Mildred ' SACRED HEART Regina Higgins, Miss Mary Ryan. Powers. Powers. Mr. and Mrs. Linwood Wordell. Margaret G. Dillon, Mr. $100 Hugh F. Reilly Jr., Mrs. Helen Eunice Dion, Mrs. Tttos. F. and Mrs. Robert Matthews. ' Dr. Earle E. Hussey. Sweeney, -Louise Ryan, Mrs. Monaghan Sr., Mrs. Wallac. Mr. and Mrs. Walker Warrener $60 Catherine Flynn; Madeline Con- Fairbanks, Mr. and Mrs. Ray and'Family. William P. Cody Jr., Dr. Roger Cadieux. nors. mond Fletcher. Mr. and Mrs. Mildred V. Carroll, Mr. and Mrs. '$50 John Springer, Mrs. Bernard Wm: Doran.
Mario Antonelli. Mr. and Mrs. John B. Cummings. Mr. and E, McCabe, Mr. and Mrs. MatSt. Joseph's Men's Club. Mrs.
Chester Nuthall. Mrs. James E. Sullivan. Mr. and thew Shea Sr., Helen Sullivan, Frank D. V. and Eleanor Brady.
Mr. and Mrs. John Mitchell" Mrs. James, W. Steele Jr.' Mrs. Margaret Hammill. Mrs: Eva Simeson. Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. John J. Donnelly Mr. and Mrs. John S. Burns, Mr., and Mrs. John E Kiley. Philip S<;hnell, Frank Austin. Jr:. Mr. and Mrs. Romeo McCal Dr. and Mrs. John Manning, Dr. Mr. Timothy C. Sull\va!1, James Mr. and Mrs. John J. MOloney. lum, William F. Murphy. Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Mooney, Rose Roberts, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Edward Moran~ Mrs. John J. E. Sullivan. and Mrs. Robert Nagle. Banks, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Fitzgerald Sr., Margaret" Mc- • Dr. and Mrs. Carroll 'Gettings, $25 Canniff. . Closkey, Jane Haran Mary Judge, Catherine V. and Mr. and Mrs. William P. HusMr. ~nd Mrs. James F. Wilcox.
Mrs. Mary' and Marie Murphy, Mrs. Daniel J. Crotty and 'Fami Margaret Whalen, Cathei'im; sey. Mr. and Mrs. Edward F. Margaret Hession. Mrs. James A.
ly, The Byrne ,Family. Mr. and Furze, Mr.i and Mrs. William Hughes and Margaret, Mary Bradshaw. Mary D. Sullivan.
Mrs. John Reder. Hargraves;'James Heywood. Heywood, Sara Anderson, 'Mr. Anne & Catherine Coughlin.
The'Misses Donovan, Bessie Mr. and Mrs. Edw. Monarch.
. Mr. and Mrs. John Tuit, Mr. and Mrs. Edward' B. Downs. Shay, Mr., and Mrs. Fred Brls and Mrs'. Darnel Murphy. Mary Mrs. Ursula Riley, Mr. and' Mr. and Mrs. John O'Day.
sette, Hannah C. Higgins, Mary V. and Anna G. McCarty.' Wil- Mrs. Daniel Desmond, William Thomas McAndrew, Anne Car-
Ham Barrett,.Annie McCarthy. 'J. Higgins. Kirkman and Family. John Fra- riel', Margaret McAndrew.
Mr. and Mrs. John Schroeder, Herman and Margaret Spring-· ney, francis Regan.' Francis Meagher Esq.
Francis J. Devine, Mrs. Charles er, Jeffrey Sullivan, Miss Cath SS. PETER AND PAUL
Genevieve Skammels, Fred J. $25
E. Brady, Mr. and Mrs. Charles erine Roberts, The Trainor Harrington, Josephine Greeley, Leonard, Mrs. Walter Fallon.
Family, Francis Holland. Mr. and Mrs. Edward' F. HarMarion and Anile O'Hearn.
Mabel and Sally Moran, Ger Hannah Connors, Mr. and Mrs. rlngton, Willard Piper. $15
trude M. Hurley. Mr. and Mrs. Charles E.' Sevigny, Louis Des Elizabeth McCat;thy and EliPeter Garity.
Thomas Collins, Mr. and Mrs. marais, Iii Memory of Margaret, zabeth Crowley. Dr. and Mrs. . $10
George Nugent, Mr.' and Mrs. Smith, Daniel Cooney. Robert S. Hackett, Timothy Mrs. Isabel Bailey, Joseph
William Connelly. Mrs. Margaret Carabil'\ieri, Mr. Shea, Margaret Tolan, Leonard Conaty. Margaret Constantine.
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Crowell.
. Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Beaulieu, and Mrs. Howard Melker: Mary Sullivan. Milton Sullivan, The Sullivan Mr. and Mrs. John Donovan and
Mr. and Mrs. James R. Clarkin, J:, Catherine F.' and Ella L. Anna L. Sullivan, Bernard F. Coughlin, Mary, Catherine and Family, In Memory of Mr. and Family.
Sweeney and Family. Lillian Madden. Mr. and Mrs.· Mrs. Patrick Halligan, Elizabeth Mr. and Mrs. John W. Dris-
Genevieve C. Duffy, John W. Henry E. Boulds. L. Leonard, Oliva Pelletier. colI, William J. Farren. Charlea 'Cummings, Mr. and Mrs. George .' Mary King,Dr. Henry Bolen.
. Grace Martin. Mr. and Mrs. Hanington, Frank Harrington, $21
. William Slater, Lena Alley and Katherine Harrington. Perry, Mr. and Mrs. John Johnston, Mr. and Mrs. James HlgA Friend.
Rose Seaman,' Mr. and Mrs. Rose Hart, Mr. and Mrs. Ern gins. ~ $20,
, Peter Gibney, Mr. and Mrs. Josest Hasprey, Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Franc~ Urban, Mr. and Mrs. Charles F ..Blif- eph A. Dennis. George A. Morgan. ST. ROCH'S
Mr. and Mrs. George Glanagan, fins, Mr. and Mrs. William MerMr. and Mrs. Alvin Hoar, Vin$50
Mrs. Catherine McNaboe and, cier, In Memory, of John _and cent Fitzgerald, Mr. and Mrs. Katherine, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Margaret McDermott. Mrs. MaT- Thomas P. Sullivan, Helen F. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Cote.
Leary, Mrs. Mary McCarthy. J. Lemerise, The Barrett Family. garet' Flynn and Mary, The A FJ.·iend.
$15
Mary Mooney, Mrs. Charles Misses Cummings. Jack Anderson, Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and ,Mrs. Gerard Lafond.
V. Carroll, Nancy Carron, Mrs. Sumner MacDonald. Quinlan Stanley bwsney, Joseph Griffin, $10
Eugene Sullivan and Family, Leary, Margaret Desmond, Alice Sarah Griffin,' Josephine' LouMr. George, Berube, Mr. and
C. and Mary V. Hal·i'ington. ' ette. Lillian Hart. Mary Hart, Ruth Leary, Mr. $15 . Walter McVey, William Fitz- Mrs. Donat Ferron, Misses Gau and Mrs. Francis L. Collins Jr. Mrs. Alice Sullivan and Fami 'gerald, Ella McMahon, Catherine thier,' Mr. and Mrs. Isidore and Mrs. Francis L. Collins Sr., ly,' Mary C. Daley. Grace A. Kaufman, ,ElIza.beth and Agnes Lapre. Mr. and Mrs. Wilfrid', Lapre. The Mahoney Family. Dah~y, Raymond Holmes, Mr. Coyle. Rita Patenaude, Mr. and Mrs.
Kathryn F. Power, Mr. and and Mrs. John O'Neil Sr. The Brown Family, Arthur Mrs. Eugene Pontiff, Mr. and Lodivine LeMoyne Mr. and 4ndresen·. Anna Kien~ke, Mr. Adelard Salvas.
ST. WILLIAM'S
Mrs. Lyman I,.ynch, Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. John Morgan. and Mrs. ,Leo Murphy, Mr; 'and $100
John P, Dwyer, Anne and Mali' $15 Mrs. 'Prank Sanders. The Donovan Family.
Kelly. Mr. and Mrs. John J. Moy' Joseph Cote, Leonard Hughes. Gertrude Kelly, Mr. and Mrs. nagh, Mr: and Mrs. Dick H. John Connors, Jane Broderick, $30
Frank M. Coffey. Mary Lysaght, Cutting, Margaret Dunn, Mr. M-ichael Geary, Mary V. O'Hearn. The Boodry Family.
:Helen King, Mrs. Mary MorCatherine 'Lysaght, Mrs, James arid Mrs. Robert Carr, Mr. and $25
Nolan, Mrs. James Sullivan. riss and Margaret. Patricia Reed, Mr. and Mrs. James ,Butler•.
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas McThomas A. McCa~ Family,· Margaret O·Grady. Joseph and Mae Riley.' John J. Honan, Mr. Gull·e. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Margaret Coyle. Thomas Lynch, Helen Kennedy. and Mrs. Francis Gauthier, st. Kingsley, Thomas F. Welch, Mr. ,- Irene Cummings' and Family, Sarah Porter, Mr. and Mrs. William's Woman's Guild. and Mrs. Alfred Dube. Mr. and Mrs. J. Joseph Welch. William' Davis. Mr.-· and Mrs. $1l1i Godfrey Bessette, Mr. and Mrs; Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Powers John J. Harrington, Mr. and Mr., and Mrs. John Hodnett, Daniel Henry and Family, Grace and Family, Mr. and Mrs. Fred' Mrs. Frank LaBossiere and Wil Mr. and Mrs. James Nichols, Mrs. Cuttle. Mr. and Mrs. John J. ,R. Dolan; Michael Grace. Mr. liam, A Friend. . Mary Raposa Bnd Henry. Conaty and Hazel, Julia Cole- and Mrs. William Healey. Elladore O'Neil. Catherine $16 . man. $13 Murphy. ,Mary Walsh. The Haggerty Family, Wil _ Mr. and Mrs. P. Henry DesMary Irene Price. ST. ANNE'S liam E. Tansey, Mr. and Mrs. mond, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas J . ' $U $15 Charles Malf:lne, Mr. and Mrs. Logan, Mrs. Frank McDermott, Thaddeus, Tokarz, WilHam Mr. and Mrs. Reul Martel. Mr. Leo Robert, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Mr. and Mrs. John Keating. Whitehead. and, Mrs. Alphonse Poirier. Sullivan. I $10
The Furgiuc:e Family. Loggia. Oiovinezza ·No. 1296, Holy .Ros ary Teenagers. IMMACULATE CONCEPTION'
THE ANCHOR Thurs.• May 30. 1957
Books of the Hour
Insight into Russian Mind
15
. Church Must Stress Farming in Africa
Given in Two New Novels
CAPE TOWN, South Africa mC) - The Church must place more emphasis on agriculture If she wishes to become self-suffi cient In Africa. This memorandum was pre pared at the request of Arch bishop Celestine J. Damiano, U. S.-born Apostolic Delegate to South Africa. It was drafted by Dr. Karl H. Shuette, lecturer In botany at the University of Cape Town. "The Church and agriculture are Intimately linked In Africa," the memorandum states. "With out a real improvement In agri cultural production the Indi genous Church cannot. hope to flourish because of poverty and unsuitable social' conditions."
By Rev. D. Bernard Theall, O.S.B.
Two new novels having in common a Russian back ground and a deeply religious content are Zoe -Olden bourg's The Awakened (Pantheon, $4.95) and Heinz von Homayer's The Radiant Mountain, .(Regnery, $4.00). The Russian author of the first of this pair writes minds one of the old Bolshevik
her first novel of modern in Koestler's Darkness at Noon,
who has come to terms with life
times, after the great suc and death by the time he is shot
cess of two historical novels, The in the back of the head b~ one
World Is Not Enough and The · of the new communists. And like Cornerstone. ~'.:~}Y:'r the Koestler book, The Radiant The central t-f":'·'··· Mountain will give the Western theme of The reader much insight into the A wakened Is, Russian mind, past and present. SHRINE }?OR OUR LADY OF AFRICA: A statuette one of the Worthless and Frightening oldest in liter- I I should certainly have come' of Our Lady of Africa backed by a painting of the 22 mar across the new Penguin Books tyrs of Uganda, brought to the Faith by the White Fathers ature: the 1~""i'.'W. L·~-_··_---_·· growth of love ~/.~\k Dictionary of Politics, edited by and martyred by pagans on June 3, 1886, are the center Children's between a boy \~ .~. First Quality Florence Elliott and Michael of attention as Very Rev. J. Alfred Richard, Provincial of and a girl ,/i. Summerskill (Penguin, 95c) In the White Fathers discusses with two seminarians,-plans at Reduced Prices whose nation ~"iiY the course of checking up on' new ality and reference books. I am indebted, for the national 8hrine to Our Lady of Africa being estab MEN'S SAMPLES family back however, to a most interesting lishedat Franklin, Pa. The statuette, is a reproduction CANCELLATlONS g l' 0 U n dare widely divergent. S't e p han I e analysis of the book in the May 4 of the famous, dark-complexioned statue of Our Lady at $10.00 to $20,00 Value of the conservative Nation Algiers, Algeria,'ltl French North Africa. NC Photo. Lindberg is the daughter of the · issue al Review by William Schlamm, . , widowed Leopold Lindberg, a Jew From to pl'. reading the book sooner than lturned Russian Orthodox. Al · for I might otherwise have done. . most agafnst her will, she falls By way of gratitude. I should in love with Ilya Lanskol, a like to refer readers to Mr." NEW BEDFORD
young member of the Paris Rus 1494 ACUSHNET AVE.
ScWamm's . article, called "A' sian colony. The French capital Book'to Burn," which will, I am "The Home of Happy Feet" HARRISBURG (NC) - Pope and not to allow himself to be __ 18 the scene of most of the. book. sure, make enjoyable, if frighten Pius XII is "the Apostle of peace come a part of the machine. and consolation" who tells man';'
Family Quarrel ing, reading. Enjoyable, because Because as man he is the son of. In Leopold Lindberg, the Jew Mr. Schlamm exposes the Pic . kind that "the power and energy God, and -the power and energy Ish heritage is always at war tionary for a piece of not very of Christ Is far greater and su
of Christ is far greater and perior to atomic. energy." with the Orthodox Christian cul subtle propaganda of the far-to This tribute was paid by Arch superior to atomic energy; and ture into which his conversion the-lett sort, where everything bishop Amlete Giovanni Cicog has taken him. The old - fash Russian is glorified and Ameri Christ is the same, yesterday, ioned, conservative Ideas of hu cans come off very badly indeed. nani, Apostolic Delegate to the . today and forever." United States, at the consecra man behavior Ingrained In him The Pope "exhorts men to ad III the book capitalism is de make it Impossible that he fined as that· system under which tion of st. Patrick's Cathedral just themselves without fear to should accept the atheistic Ilya "The means of production and here.. all forms of progress," tbe Arch The Apostolic Delegate refer as his daughter's suitor. bishop concluded. "and to em the apparatus of distribution are There is a quarrel, Stephanie controlled by private owners who red to the Pope as the "Good ploy the advantages of such pro leaves home and runs away with run them at their own discretion, Samaritan" whose "works of gress for the betterment of Dya, ,but Is miserablY unhappy. driven by an urge for profit." mercy from a golden chapter of humanity in its' movement on charity in the history of the the path of virtue." . Then comes World War II to Communism is featured by a so . turn Paris upside down and to cial life "guided by the principle world." PRESCRIPrlONS "Pius XII has clearly recog make more chaotic the relations 'From each according 'to his the dangers which threat nized between Lopold, his daughter. ability, to,.gach according to his· en 'human dignity and' human Reliable and Ilya. As the book ends, IlylJ. needs', and class, labor and pro existence if the new scientific 164 RIVET STREET Prescription Service has gone off to war, leaving perty distinction disappear. Stephanie about to bear a child, Fathers Tennien and Greene discoveries are not limited to a WY 6-8867 New Bedford Leopold Lindberg is dead, and of Maryknoll would enjoy the good use," Archbishop Cicognanl Dum~nt's said. "By repeated appeals to his Russian priest fdend, Father definition of "Bamboo Curtain," . We Specialize In nations and to the world • •.• he Alfred A. Dum9nt ReR. Ph. !!lop. Kahn, Is setting about the task which goes: "Those who believe of reclaiming Stephanie. that such a barrier exists allege has proclaimed that the dignity WEDDING s· Your Friendly Druggist In the background are a mul that there is no freedom of of man is supreme and should I • be valued and respected above PHOTOGRAPHS I Depot Sq. HyanniS, Mass. titude of minor characters, most movement in and out of China." all in labor. in the service of I ~" __ notable among them Dya's highly That naivete of this sort should his country, and In his relations unconventional parents and his get itself published is the 'fright ening aspect of a worthless book. to national and international brothel', Andre, and sister Mari life. anne-and their Parisian bohe Greatest Power English Conversion
mian friends. There is also Fath "The most magnificent object er Kahn, with whom Leopold Asked by' Pilgrims
in all creation Is man," the RESIDENT CAMP For GIRLS AGES 5-15 Lindberg has countless theologi LONDON lNC)· - Thousands -A I' c h b ish 0 p continued. "He cal conversations-a priest in the JUNE 23 - AUG. 4 direct line of descent from the of men, women and children alone. among all earthly crea Russian religious men of Dos .walked across London along the tures, is destined to live intelli Operated and Supervised by route taken by the Reformation gently and eternally with God. tolevskl's novels. Experienced Sisters and Counsellors the 422n~ annivers XII turns Martyrs on "Accordingly, Pius This Is not an easilY read book. to man and directs him not to WEEKLY RATE $30.~ REGISTRATION $5 because of the interweaving of ary of the first executions at Ty feel small 01' insignificant i11 the the stol'ies of its characters, nor burn gallows. Phone GENEVA 4-2079 or GENEVA 4-0143 is it entirely a happy one-but It . The pilgrims walked from the presence of any machine, re site of the old Newgate Jail, now gardless of Its size and power, or Write to Sister MaQ' Thomas, R.S.M. holds the reader's attention (ex 3070 Pawtucket Ave.• Riverside, R. I. cept for occasional idiomatic the Old Bailey, Central Criminal Court, to the site of Tyburn. now lapses caused by translation dif the Marble Arch cornel' of Hyde ficulties),. It will be popular. Park. On the way they stopped More Impressive to offer prayers for the conver The Radiant Mountain is a sion of England at three Catholic much shorter and simpler. but. churches.' . I think more impressive book. It ,II WYman In Soho Square Msgl'. George is in the form of a journal kept Smith held up for veneration a ~ 3~6592 by a White Russian general, relic of Blessed Oliver Plunket, Andrei Alexelevich Beregin. while ·Archbishop of Armagh, and the CHARLES F. VARGAS he and an old, deeply spiritual last martyr to be dragged the 254 ROCKDALE AVENUE schoolteacher, Sergei Ivanovich. two miles to his terrible death at NEW BEDFORD, MASS. are fleeing across Russia to es TYQul'l1 on July 11, 1681., cape from communist secret The first five martyrs to die police. They are led by the Gen at Tyburn were hanged, drawn eral's SOll, a convert to the new and quartered in 1535 in the regime. . reign of King Henry VIll. As the !light and the joul'l1al Offer to young Men and Boys-special continue. It becomes apparent opportunities to study for the Priesthood. that Beregln is much worried Confradors about the crimes and brutalities' Lock of funds no obstacle. Candidates E'edrical of which he himself has been for the religious Lay Brotherhood also guilty in the past - that much floul-searching is going on as he accepted. For further information, write compares modern communism with his own former lack or- love to and charity. The book ends with the two comrades resolving to end the flight by giving them tielves up, in order to find God nnd peace in the death they 944 County know will come. ' P. O. BOX 289 HOLLIDAYSBURG 12,. PA. In the self-examination of the New Bedford.' • general there is much that re
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FATHER STEPHEN, T. O. R.
Walter Carter. Thomas Cawley. $25 Mrs. Wm. Bellow, Mr. and Mrs. THE ANCHOR Mr. and Mrs. Leo LaBrode. ' Thurs., May 3D,. 1957, and Mrs. James Clark, Pa.t Mr. The Bi'uno Family. Roy Boyden, ST. PATRICK'S $20 rick Conlon, Francis Considine, Mr. and Mrs. Phijlip Connor. $35 Mr. and Mrs. John T. Barrows. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Couza. Mr. and Mrs. Malcom Fales, Mr. Salvas, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas John P. Sylvia Jl·. Mrs. Sylvio LeComte. Mrs. Russel' Crawford, in Memand Mrs~' Robert Lovely. Mr. and Towhill. • $25 $15 Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Holmes, ory of John F. and Catherine 'Carl Dole; New Bedford Bar Mrs. Alfred Sarro, Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Rodolphe Para gain Store, Mrs. Synne Lefevre, James Shea.
Eliza Lawrence, Bertha Angers, Daley. Alice Dorgan. Anna 001'- dis, Mr. and Mrs. Roland Pothier. Michael Ames, Lawren'ce Burdo. . Sr., The Antone PelTY Famlly. ':Q,1e Misses Welch, Mr.. and Jack Perry, Mr. and Mrs. Ed- gan. Captain William Cregan, Mrs. Mrs' Lawrence Bryan, D1'. and Anonymous. ' ward Tarvis. Kathleen Downey, Mary Dow EileeI1 Finnell, Major Roland .Mrs: charles Colella, -Jaines R. $14 Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Cabral, ney, Maurice 'Downey, Stephen Deneault. Nellie Sylvia. Mr. and Mrs. Fernandez: Friends. . The Joseph A. Bedard Family. $15 Gino Ginesi, C. L. 'Lord. Mr. Manuel Reis, Mr. and Mrs. Clin- .p. Downey, Fred Doyle. $10 Dl·. William O'Rourke. Dl·. and Ml,s. Harold Qualtero. Mr. ton Murray, Mr. and Mrs. Clif~ Hugh Early, Eric Erickson, Ml·. Mr. and Mrs.' Alpha Ricard. Arthur J. Wagnel', Dr. George and Mrs. Ralph Sarro. ford Ryder. and Mrs. James J. Foiey. Patrick Mr. and Mrs. Armand Layoie. DeMello, Major Eugene Larocca. Mr. and Mrs. John McDonald, Foley, Stephen Francis. . Dora Breault" Mr. and Mrs. Wi.lIiam H. Keating, Winthrop Bertha Cassidy, John McGlinn, Wllliam Furness, Mr. and Mrs. Phillippe Leblanc, Gerard and Mattapoiset't Lumbert. Mrs. William Henderson, Mr. and Anthony Gianetto, James Gleas Ruth Boudreau. ST. ANTHONY Mrs. Thomas McAuley. on, Joseph Gorman, Frederick $13 $50 Mr. and Mrs. Edouard Hevey Dr. Andrew Colucci. Mrs. Mary and Ethel Dunham, Greer. and Family. Mr. and Mrs. Gus Mr. and Mrs. 'Peter Duff, Mr. and Mrs. ,Charles Barr, Mr. Lawrence Harney, Anna Har $10 tave Gaudreau, Mr. and Mrs., Frank Sylvia. and Mrs. William Medeiros, Mr. rington, 'Leo Harrington, Mau Edward Perry, Frederick Eng Adrien Rock. Mr. Omer U. Gre $30 and Mrs. Maurice Kiley, Mr. and rice Harrington'7'"Winifred Har- non, Mrs. Wilfrid Rousseau. lish, Falmouth Pharmacy, Fal Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Ve1·dl. Mrs. Manuel Thomas. rington. mouth Auto Sales, Falmouth Mr. and Mrs. Francois O. . $25 Mr. and Mrs. John Santos Sr.. William· F. Houlihan. Julia Grenon, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Car... Fire Depal'tment. Dr. and Mrs. John Gibbons, and Mrs. Tobias Flemming,,' Kane, Lillian Kane. Louise La Mr. George Blake, Leonard F. Mar riel', Mrs. Ella Merchant. Rosary Altar Society of St. An Mr. and Mrs. Albert Si}va, Mr. Roche, Mr. and Mrs. James tinI Dr. Norman Starosta, Nor ST. HYACINTH'S thony, Anonymous. Elmcrest and Mrs. Arthur Howes, Mr. and Leith. man Williams, Frank's Diner. $10 , Corivalescent Home. Emily 'and James Worth. Mrs. Edwin Livingstone, Dennis Ly Vera Brabrook; Antone Bur Dr. and Mrs. W. J. B. Robert. Josephin... e Perry. and Mi·s. Antone F. Sylvia ons, John Manning, Edith Mc Mr. gess, Frank Tavares, Joseph Mrs. Rose Ledoux, Mr. and Mrs. Jr., Jane Sylvia, Mr. and Mrs. Intyre. $15 Miskell Jr., George Creighton.' Charles Tarpey and Family, Mr. Helen McIntyre, Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and' Mrs. John McCue, Anthony R. Silvia, The Foster Lt. Joseph HaIl, Marian Tukey, and Mrs. Emile Berthiaume and Family. Harold B. Ryder Jr. Thomas P. Moore, 'Damase Mo Mr. and Mrs. David Haley, Mar Robert Marak, Arthur Reposa. ·Family. lVIr. and Mrs. Peter I. Sylvia, reau, Mary Moriarty, Gerald garet Morse, Anna DeCosta. Mr. and Mrs. Gaspard Lafleur. Jane Wallach, Joseph Dixon, Morrissey. $12 Hyannis Mrs. Alice' Pel'l'Y, Miss Wilhel Mary Galligan, The Moo I' Constantine Murin, Joseph A. Ml'. and Mrs. Arthur Smith. ST. 'FRANCIS XAVIER mine Roy. .Family. I Norris Sr.• Mr. and Mrs. J. L. , $10 ST. ANNE'S '$500 . Mr. and Mrs. Antone, S. Sylvia. O'Brien, John Pendergast, Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. James H. Gif~ Mr. and Mrs. Joseph'\p. Klm $20 'Mr. and Mrs. Michael Sivik, Mrs. Mary Phelan. ford: Mr. and Mrs. Walter D. nedy. Theodore Lariviere. Helen and Margery Toner. ,James 'Powers, Richard Regan, Smith, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Mul ST. MARY'S $15 Mrs. Kenneth Holdgate, 'Mr. Caroline Roche, TommIe Saun laney. Mr. and Mrs. Anthony De Dr. and Mrs. Walter' J Ken $25 and Mrs. John S, Conway. Mr. del'S, Hugh .shanahan. Costa, Mr. and Mrs. Manuel nedY.' Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Penler. -and Mrs. Joseph Nicholas. ' Mrs. Dominic Sparrow," James Linhares.
$10 Sullivan, Mary Sullivan, Robert Mrs. Mary Senecal. Mr. 'and Mrs. Frank Pimental, .'
Meredith Drew, Mr. and Mrs. New Bedford Swain, George Swansey Jr. $20 Daniel Barfoot. Mrs. Celine Mar- '. Romeo's Package Store, Anony J. Gerin Sylvia" Herbert Mr. and' Mrs. Henry Gurl. th<l HOLY NAME
mous, William Keane, Mr. and tin, Lillian, Shea, Irene Shea. Thornton, Leo Tipping, George Shea Family. $400
Mary G. Shea, John P. Shea. Mrs. William Corey. Walker, William Walsh. Anonymous.
$15 Mr. 'and Mrs. Charles Mona Rose O. Mitchell, Dorothy Faw Dr. Edward Welch, Harold F. $25
Mr. and Mrs. Petel' Wojtus· , cett, Margaret Fawcett,' Mr. and han, 'Anonymous. Mr. imd Mrs. Gertrude and Loreta Daley. Williams Jr., Mrs. Mary Wilson. zewskl. Oscar St. Jacques, Mr. and, Mrs. Mrs. John J. McConnell.' Wilbert Davis, Dr. Walter IIUMACULATE CONCEPTION John Flynn, Mr. and Mrs. Leo $10 O'Nelll. $25 ' Libby. Mr. and Mrs. Oaston De Mansfield $15
Furtado's Dairy. Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Lacer Brosse. Mrs. Anna Devlin' and ST. MARY'S Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. Gun
$11 da, Mr. and Mrs. Antl10ny Betty, Mr. and Mrs. Elphege Ga,· $100 ning: James McCrohan.
Mr. Joo.quim Mota. Snyder, Anonymous, M. C. Lin mache, Ellen e-nd Catherine Gor Mr. and Mrs. Eugene R. Far $12
$10 , hares. Dr. Stanley Mysliwy. man, MI'. and Mrs. Gerard Guil rell Jr., A Friend. . The Dury J!'amily. Harold D.
Mr. Joaquim Salgado, Mr.' Ar J. A. Hagen & Company, The
lotte. $50 P. Ryan.
thur Fredette. Nest.
Mrs. Richard Hawes, Mr. and Catholic Womans Club, Rob $10
OUR LADY OF ASSUl\IPTION Mrs. Lawrence Hughes. Mr. and ert ,C. Currivan, A Friend,' In Raymond Bourbeau,' Mr. and $10 Mrs. Thomas Leaver. Mr. and Nantucket Memory of Father Harrold. M'rs. Leo Cole, Gerald Harring Amaro Duarte, Stephen Fran Mrs. Sylvester Maloney, Dr. Au Mr. and Mrs. John Dunn. Dr. OUR LADY OF THE ISLE ton, Raymond Lima, Mrs. Mary, cis. gustus McKenna. and Mrs. Anthony Gasson, Flor $50 Harrington. ,OUR LADY OF MT. CARMEL Corella N. McKenna Milo MosS;, ence Miler, Friend. A Friend, Mr. and Mrs. Robert 'Mason Family. John McDon $25 the O'Gre.dy Family. Anna Pittle. $30 E. Deeley, Albert Lavoie, Alice al,d, Mrs. John ~. O'Leary and Lisbon Sausage Co.. Elsie M. . Mr. and Mrs. Wllliam Toolin. Darmody Family. and Mary Roberts, Mr. and Mrs. Family, Mr.and Mrs. William Sylvia. $32 $25 Charles P. Flanagan, Mrs. Ethel Powers,Mr., and Mrs. Emile $21 Mr. and Mrs. Normand Leach. A Friend, Mr. and Mrs. Andrew H. Prindiville. Island Service Reale. Mrs. Maria C. Ferro and Fam Company. . Pazsit. $20 Mr. and Mrs. William Rous Uy. The Donoghue Family, A $25 • Mr. and Mrs. David Costa. seau, ,Mr. and Mrs. John Suill $10 Friend, Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Jack Mrs. Paul Klingelfuss. M1·. and van and Dorothy, Mr. and Mrs. Hel1l'ique and Dorothea Rog $10 son, A Friend, A Friend, Dr. and' Mrs. Edward Quigley, Mr. and George A.' Thomas, Mrs. Doris ers, Mary Rego, Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. \Freeman Barlow, Edward Mrs. John A. Kenney, Mansfield' Mrs. Albert Glowacki, Mr. and , Vigeant, The Misses Yates., Manu'el C. Mello, Mr. e-nd Mi·s. McLean, Mr. and Mrs. Leon He,· Council-K. of C. Mrs. Walter Glowacki, Ml'. and $150 bert, Mr. and Mrs. Norman He Francisco A. Baldo. Mrs. Charles E.' Flanagan. $20 Anonymous, Giusti Baking 'Co.
bert, Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Sulli " SACRED HEART Gonya Family, 1'he Misses Joseph Visco, St. Mary's Guild, $100 .
$250 . van. O·Malley. Pacific National' Bank, Marine Dr. Fr·ank R. Leary, William
Mr. and Mrs. Joaquim Texe Tallman. LaBrode and Roun The Breen Family. 'Lumber Co., T. J. McGee Council, H. Loughlin. in Memory of Heri' seville. Architects. Ira. $15 K.o·f C., A Friend. man R. Saunders. ST. HEDWIG $30 . , ',$20 Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Kuzdzoz, $75 $10 , Mr. and Mrs. Normand Seguin. The Nees F'amily, Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Gordon MacDonald, Mrs; Harriet I. MacDonald. Adolf Golda. Anonymous. , William Watterson. Rolf Sjolund, Mr. and Mrs. $50. A Friend, A Friend. Charles Fleming, Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Ricard A. Cole, Frank ,Mu'rray. Mr. and Mrs. $10 Mary McNulty. MI'. and Mrs. Walter' Alfieri, Maxwell Deacon, Noreen Shea. $30 Mr. and Mrs: Ailtonio Antosca, $15 In Memory of Thomas F. and Mr. and Mrs. Richard Ball, Mr. The Terry Family, Ml'. and Agnes M. Eccleston.' and Mrs. Vincent Brown, Mr. Mrs, Joseph Lennon, M1·. and $25 Mrs. Daniel Murphy,' Gladys and Mrs. Vincenzo Capone. Mrs. George Demakis. Mr. and SERVE CHRIST AS Worth, Mr. and Mrs. Francis Mrs. 'John J. Flanagan, Richard Mr. and Mrs. Antonio Caponi McGarve'y;' Mr:' and Mrs. Paul and Wllliam Gero, Mr, and Mrs. gTO. Mr. and Mrs. Willianl Cori • Parish Priest Frank' McLoughlin. nor, Mr. and Mrs. William Kirby. $10 Cullen, Mr. 'and Mrs. Bart Cuneo, $20 • Priest-Teacher Mr. and Mrs. John CUl:rivarL ,'< Mr'; and Mrs. Edgar Bowen, . Anonymous. Mary Cole,'Tl\e Mr. and Mrs. Victor Cutillo. Mrs. Norman McCleave; Mr. and odoreFredette, Mr. 'and Mrs. • Foreign Missionary Ml'. and 'Mrs. John Daniel, Mr. Mrs. Ernest Lema S1·.. John John J.: Gibbons, Mrs: "James _ _ and M1:S. Bradley Danphinee, Mr. Hamvlin. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hickey, . • Home Missioner Mr. and Mrs.' Timothy Man-. and Mrs. James Devers, Mr.'and Lloyd. Mr. and Mrs. Allen E. Norcross, ning. Alan Moriarty, Mr:S. Jen Mrs. Raymond DeWell. nie' Rogers a'pdson', Nathaniel . Mr. and Mrs. George Farnam, Rose 'Stanshigh, Patrick RObin '., ,Mr. and .Mrs. Edward Finn, The son,Mr. and Mrs. Thomas ",:qe Stewalt.· $15 Garofano Family, Mr. and Mrs.. vine, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hardy. Mr.' and Mrs. Joseph Senee'al, Mr. and Mrs. William Atchin- . Howard Keith, Mr. and Mrs. J. Austin F. Tyrer, Lillian Thufs son, Arthur Bancroft Jr., Arthur Spencer Kelley Sl'. Bancroft Si·.• Martin P. Bari·y. The Lane Family, Mrs. Agnes ton, Mrs.' Edwin Shepardson, For Information: Lillian Cole. '. C. Leonard, Leo Market, Mr. and Donald Terry. Mr. and Mrs. Byron Sn'Qw, Marcel Dupre, Mr. and' Mi·s. Mrs.' William Markt, Mr. !l,nd about the Holy Julia A. Ayers, Mrs. Charles G. Timothy J. Manning. Mrs. Mrs. Chester Moore. CrOll Fathers or Mr. and M1~S. Paul Morini. Snow, Mr. and Mrs. Casm~re Thomas Moriarty, John V. tho Lay Brother3 Caton, Helen Jull. ' . O'Neil Jr. Harold Morse, Mi'. and' Mrs. who assist them, Mr. and Mrs. Adam Mastai, $13 William Morton, The McGoldrick Benac Family. Family, Mr. and ~rs. Edward Mrs. Ralph Harvey, Mr. and Mrs. $12 Albert Fee, Mrs. Robert Mack.. McNamara. Write to: Edward Bruce. Josephine Deacon. Mrs. James O'Brien, The Pasc $10 Ml'. and Mrs. Charles Stack nill Family, Mr. and Mrs. G~orge Anonymous, Clarence Adshead, ' pole. Mrs. Bridget Harris, Mrs. Pierce, The Servais Family. . Carrie and Edna Shields, Mr. Sidney Thurston, Mr. and Mrs. Arthu'r Alcarez, Anthony Bal and Mrs. John Sloan. Mrs. Mae Kenneth Pease, Mrs. Ernest thazar. Mr. and Mrs. John Bar low. King. Woods. MI'. and Mrs. Albert Stanley' Baron, Mrs. Herbert Mrs. Frank Conway, Sophia' Zaffini. The Beatty Family, Mr. and Thompson.- Ml'. and Mrs. William ·Barron. Mr. and Mrs. Prior Bas Mrs. Cyi'ii Bellevance. M1'. and ,BUI·dick. Jr., Ml·. and Mrs. Jolm sett. Orner Bellerioit. Eric, Besso.
Falmouth
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16
HOLY CROSS FATHERS
THE ANCHOR Thurs., May 30, 1957
THEOLOGY FOR LAYMEN
Attributes of· God: All In God Is His Essence
Chaplains' Retreat HARMON Am BASV-, New foundland (NC)-A retreat for "chaplains of the frozen waste lands" was conducted here by Oblate Father James A. Shee han of Tewksbury, Mass. Seven Catholic air force che.plalns who are on duty with' the Stragetic All' Command and the Air De fense Command were the retreat ants. Father Sheehan, a fOlmer chaplain, is now national promo ter of the devotion to Om Lady of Hope.
By F. J. Sheed
God, we have seen, is utterly changeless. This might strike us as involving Him in infinite stagnation. For us, with our matter-bound habits, activity seems unthinkable without change; but this, as we see looking closer, is be . cause we are finite. Th f t t t··t f He is mercy. We have to think ell'S grea ac IVI y 0 of. them as distinct, in order to the infinite Spirit is know think of them at all; but in Him' ing; with us this activity they are not distinct from His
I
involves an immensity of chailge, learning what we had not known, forgetting what we had; In both f a s est h e change comes from our finite ness, in the one case from igno rance, in the other from a defect in memDry; but God Ii: now s a I I things, merely . being God, and there is no for getfulness for Him; so that His activity of knowing is at once limitless and changeless; He is omniscient. His other great activity is lov ing; and that again for men involves change, waxing and waning, finding new objects, losing hold upon things already loved; here again the change fomes from our lim1tations; God loves with infinite loving-power, no loss possible, no increase con ceivable. He knows ana loves with infinite intensity, and this is not stagnation but measureless vitality. God is all-powerful, too. There are no limits to what He can do, no limits to what He can m,ake. The most powerful man cannot make anything of nothing at all, he needs some material to work upon and in the absence of ma terial, his power must lie all locked up within him and unus able. That is a solid limitation and God lacks It. He needs no material: He creates. "Can God make a weight so heavy that He cannot lift it?" asks the unbeliever. He feels he has us cornered. If we say "yes," then God cannot lift it; if we 5ay "no" then God cannot make it. (The reader might do well to pause here and think out how he would answer it.) Our reply is that God can indeed do all 'things, but a ·self-confradictlon 1s not a thing. God cannot make a four-sidedt"riangle, because the terms contradict each other and cancel out: a four-sided ttiangle 1s meaningless, It Is not a thing at all, It Is nothing. A weight that an almighty Being cannot lift Is as much contradiction In terms as a four-sided triangle. It too is nothing. And (to give an old text a new emphasis) nothing is impOssible to God. Because God is infinite, there ill no distinction between His attributes and Himself. Take knowledge, and begin with our own. My knowing Is something that I do, but 1t Is not myself. This may not strike us as a limitation 'but It Is, and a con Illderable one. If only my know ledge were myself, I should be knowing all the time, simply by being; I should not have to make B distinct effort to know; I Illiould never forget. But, as it is. my knowledge Is less than my Ile)f; I am finite enough. heaven knows, but my knowledge is more finite stiB. Now God'S knowing Is not sub ject to this llmltation. It is not distinct from Himself. It is Him self. If it were not, if there were really a distinction between His knowledge and Himself, then He" would have something that His knowledge lacked. In that event it would not be infinite, and we Ilhould have to face the monstro sity of an infinite God with limited knowledge. , ; This applies to all His attrl-· 'b4tes - just as GodJs. knowMdge, so He is lov~, He is jU$t1ce.
very self, and therefore not from one anothei·. Whatever God has, He is. And these attributes are not less themselves for being infinite. God's love would not be greater by being distinct from His very self - as ours is! It is a difficult idea for our minds. But then God must be mysterious to the beings He made of nothing. Live with it; keep it in the mind; and our feeling that the attributes must be distinct will grow less, we shall begin to "see" their oneness' in God. We are now clearer, I hope, as to what God is. We are ready for the question - what is God's life, what does He do with Him self? We are ready, in other words, for the great adventure of the Blessed Trinity.
Baptizes Father MEDAL FOR JOB WELL DONE: Brigadier General C. Wooten, center, Commanding General of the New Jersey Military District, and Commandant of the Kilmer Reception Center for Hungarian refugees, is re ceiving the Benemerente Medal from Kilmer Chaplain (Capt.) John Kosky, New York City. The Medal was pre sented for. "humanitarian service." Also taking part at left, is Father Alipius Forro, Chaplain for Hungarian re fugees coming to our country. NC Photo. Si~ney
Hard Work of Capuchin Fathers Shows in Okinawan Conversions
NAHA,. Okinawa (NC) - In the 10 years" since organized missionary work began on Oki Teachin'gs of Aquinas nawa, the largest of the Ryukyu Islands, the Catholic population Termed 'Bourgeois' has risen from 200 to 1,500 out BERLIN (NC)-Teachings of . of a total population of 800,000 st. Thomas Aquinas are "bour people. geois capitalism" and social ac tion programs based on them by Through the history of Oki an American priest. are out na\va, there was no missionary moded, a Moscow journal has activity on the island until the charged. Capuchin Fathers arrived in It cited Sulpician Father John 1947. F. Cronin, assistant director of In 1953, the Daughters of the Social Action Department of Mary, Health of the Sick, of the National Catholic Welfare Cragsmoor, N. Y., came to the Conference, as a leading repre island to aid the Capuchin sentative of the American school Fathers. of Neo-Thomist thought. The Sisters conduct a dispen Father Cronin is attacked for sary· and do catechetical work. making harmony between capital . In their rounds through the 'vil and labor the goal of his work. lages they bring food and cloth "Such an ideal is old-fashioned ing to the people while caring and fruitless," the article said.' for the sick. They lea~e Catholic The,victory of the working class literature written in Japanese, es in the inevitable struggle be the language of the islands. tween capital and labor is merely The work of the Sisters is put off to a later time by such chiefly with non-Catholics, but tactics, it stated. most of the Catholics on the island have come into the Church through the work of the . Plan Boys' Schools LOUISVILLE (NC) - A. total Sisters and the Cap u chi n of $3,654,604 in cash and pledges Fathers. Last year, when the new Vista has been raised through the edu cational development program of Maria - in - Okinawa dispensary
the Louisville archdiocese, Arch . was opened, a large statue of
Our Lady, Health of the Sick,
bishop John A. Floersh of Louis was put up alongside the path
ville has announced. The cam paign was un,del:taken to expand leading to the dispensary door.
Immediately the little shrine the see's high schools for boys became a center of attraction. to .start a long-range devel Qnd opment program for Bellarmine Young mothers carrying sick babies and old men limping College here. . painfully, stopped to bow. Spontaneously it became vir Church Theft tually a custom that no one ever MERIDEN (NC) Sacred passed the statue of Our Lady Vessels were stolen and the and the Holy Child without stoP BlesSed Sacrament desecrated by pIng to bow. . Statues are not familial' to the thieves who broke into st. Rose's people of Okinawa, so the shrine Church in this Conne~tI~ut com munity. They jimmied open the tabernacle on the main altar, re moved three cibOl'ia and a lun ette and left Sacred Hosts strewn on the altar. The tabernacle on a side altar was overturned and left on the floor.... . . "It's a whale 01 a drink"
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WINTHROP lNC)-A seml nal'ian at the Oblate College In Washington, D. C.. baptized his father at n ceremony at St. John the Evangelist Church. Rev. Mr. Gerard Flater, O.M.I., adminis tered First Communion to his father, Albert Flater, after Bap tism. The seminarian is a dea con and will be ordained a priest by Auxiliary Bishop John M. Mc Namara of the Washington Arch diocese on June 8.
THE
SQUARE PHARMACY, 1
presented a problem to one lit PRESCRIPTIONS tle boy. Tbos. P. Selleck, Reg. Ph.
One day one of the Sisters MEDICAL SUPPLIES
noticed him walking round the 1 ST. MARY'S SQUARE
statue, viewing it from every TAUNTON VA 3-3300 angle. But he still wasn't sure if the ------- '\-- -- - - - - - - - woman holding the baby was alive or not, and there was only one 'Yay to make sure. Picking up a little stone, he threw it. at the statue and then ran away as quickly as he could. Several times he turned to look back over his shoulder-just to be sure that he wasn't being chased. This year there will be a May procession. During it the Okina South • Sea Sis.
wans wili be introduced to the venerable Catholic practice of Hyannis Tel. HY 81
crowning Our Lady's statue. _.- --- -
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THE BROTHERS OF THE SACRED HEART
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NEW BEDFORD
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North AttBeboro , ST. MAlRY'S $50 Mr, and Mrs, Henry Beach. Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Kivlin. $35 Mrs, Alice Barnhill. $25 Mr, and Mrs, George Mondor. Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Young, Mrs, Elizabeth Croke. ' _. , $20 Mr. and Mrs, Nelson Gulski, Mr. and Mrs. William, Brennan and Family, Mr. and Mrs. Regi nald J. Curran. Mr. and Mrs. John Hamm. $15/ Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Mc Carthy. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Gendron. $10 Kathleen· Courtney, Charles Collins. John Collins. Eleanor Courtney. Mr. and Mrs. John Brennan. Mr. and Mrs.' Norman' Bris sette, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Barrs. Mr., and' Mrs. Ernest Glode, Lillian 'Devlin. Rita Dev~ lin. Dr. Joseph Ca1·ey. Walter Mc Cann. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Magnan, Mr.· and Mrs. Thomas Galvin. Mr. and Mrs. James McGuire. Mrs. Rita Dunham. MI'. and Mrs. Frank Walsh. Mr. and Mrs. Will i a m O·Neil., ·Mrs.. Rose Healey. Mr. and Mrs. Leon Regan. Winifred Kelley. Mrs. Marion Johnson. Mr. and Mrs. William Kiehn. Mrs. Joseph Mc·Enroe. Mr. and Mrs.' Theodore Ban kowski. Mr. and Mrs. Williams. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Habershaw, Mr. and Mrs. George Bryant. Mr. and Mrs. ·Edward Smith. In Mell)orlum.
North Dighton ST JOSEPU'S $25 James Williams. Dr. John Doyle. $20 Manuel Motta. . $10 Joseph Mason. Milot Family:
,North Easton
••
.,p
IMMACULATE CONCEPTION $25 Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Gentile. Cornelius Harvey Ill. Mr. and .. Mrs. Michael J. Hegarty. Mr. and Mrs. Charles McCarthy Sr., Mr. and Mrs..James Mullen. North Easton Council K of C . No. 238. $20 Mr. and. Mr~. William Furlong Sr,. Mr. and Mrs. Domenlc Inge mi, Dr. and Mrs. Gerald F. Gray. $15 Mr. and Mrs. GUY Ando. Mr. and Mrs. Leo M. Harlow. Mai·· garet E. Harvey. Mr. and Mrs. Charles, King, Wm. Knapp and sons. Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Lyons, McCarthy Ooal Co., Mi'. and Mrs. John B. Parkes Jr.• Mr. and Mrs. Vincent Wright. $12 Mrs. George Craig, Mrs, Ed ward Tracy and Peter Tracy. $10 Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bearce. John Brady, Optician, Christo pher Brophy. Abbie Buckley. Jo sephine Buckl,ey. Margaret Buckley Mary H. Buckley. Mary M..Buckley, Dan-. lel·F. Buckley, Miriam Burke. Mr. and Mrs. Robert F. Clif ford, Mr. and Mrs. William Con don, Mr. and Mrs. James S. Con ner. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Con nolly, Manuel Correia. 'Mrs. Mary Correia. Virginia Correia. Clement Coughlin. Ed warci Coughlin, Elizabeth' Cough lin. J Mrs. William Cummings, John L. Dailey, Mr. and Mrs.. Daniel Desmond. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Dorgan, Mr. and Mrs. Robeit J. pray. I.Mrs. Alice Eastman, Easton Construction Co., Mr: and Mrs. James Fitzgibbons, Mr. and Mrs. T. Russell Fox, Vincent L. Gal yin. . . Mr. and Mrs. Salvatore Gazla no, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Gorman,
Mrs. Renee Harlow. Alice Harvey, Anne Harvey. Catherine Harvey. Mrs. Corne Eus Harvey, Grace Harvey, Mary Harvey. Harvey·s'Market. Joseph Hayden. Mr. 'and Mrs. ArthUl' Heath., Mr. and Mrs. ;James Healey. Mr.' and Mrs. Roy Howard, Immaculate Conception Women's Guild. Mr. and Mrs. James Johnson. Mr. and Mrs. Walter J. Kates. Mr. and Mrs. John A. Kelly, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Kelly. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Kent Jl·. Klein's Greenhouses. W. E. Langley. Joseph W. Lineham. Mary Lineham. Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Lombardi. Edward Lamer Jr. Mary V. Long. Thomas P. Long.' Mrs. Anna C. Loud, John 1. Lowndes Insurance. Mr. and Mrs. William McEntee. Mr'.' and Ml:S. Charles McMen amy, Mr. and Mrs. ,James Mc,. Menamy. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Maliff. Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Manning. . Mr. and Mrs. Vincent Mathers. Frank Milan. Mr. and Mrs. Fred erick MUl'phy Sr.•. Frederick Murphy Jr. Katherine Murray. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Nolan, Mary Nolan. Mr. and Mrs. Ste phen Nolan. Mrs. John·F. O'Con. nor Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Readdy. Isabelle Regan. Mr. and. Mrs.. Frank J. Reynolds. L-eRoy Rob ert. Mr. and Mrs. Leo Savard. Mr. and Mrs. Leo Schleicher. Mr. and Mrs. Benedict Scully, Aima M. Sheehan. Mr. and Mrs. Dominic Stermante, Mr. and Mrs. John Sullivan Mr. and Mrs. John D. Sullivan. ' Mr. and Mrs. Francis Sweet, Agnes Sweeney; Mary H. Swee ney. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Trav ers Sr.• Rosella Tra'vers. Vase and Son Supply, Mary E. Watt, Mrs. Mary Wesley. A Friend. A Friend. Brockton Tool Co.. Alphon Carlson. Club 400. J. Frank Con ley. Copeland Funeral Home .• Highway Package Store. Wil liam M: Howard Insurance Co.
Orleans ST. 'JOAN OF ARC $15 Thomas Gilligan. $10, . Mrs. Richard Bessom. Leo Gal lagher.
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Provinceto.""n ST. PETER THE APOSTLE $25 Catholic D;aughters of America Court. Provincetown. $15 William F. Silva, Dr. Daniel H. Hiebert. ·The Lobster Pot. $10
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F. A. Days & Sons, Cyril Pat ·rlck. Augustus Keane. John Fer reira. Arnold's. Inc. Marcey Oil Co.• Annie L. Sil via.liose E. Pedro, Mary Murch ison. Domingo Godinho.' . Joseph Ferreira, Mii'iam and Bessie Corea. Bo'at Sea Fox. Boat Yankee. Boat Shirley and Ro land. In Memory of Joaquim Cross, Boat Charlotte G. Boat Jimmy Boy. Boat'Lind~ and Warren.
. Seekonk -
OUR LADY OF MT. CARMEL $10 John Vincent. Mr: and Mrs. Joaquim Hendricks. Helen Mur ray. George Allen. Mrs. William Bishop. Peter Voccio.
. Somerset ST. THOMAS MORE '$25 Mr. and MrS. John J. Clorite. Dr. and Mrs. Arthur LaSalle. $15 Mr.. and Mrs. Francis Char rette. Mr. and Mrs. George J. Shott. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas F. O'Connell. $10 Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Ma honey. Mr. and !\irs. Walter Mar dula,. Mr. and Mrs. Francis J. Maher. Mr. and Mrs. John Bab cock, Mr. and Mrs. Roger W. Fortier. Mr. and Mrs. Richard M. Bloodgood,- Mr. and Mrs. Joseph P. Murooney, Mr. imd Mrs. Jos eph W. Duffy~ :Mr. and Mrs.
18
THE ANCHOR ThurS., May 30. 1957
Charles W. Latham. Mrs. Eliza beth Haggerty. , . Mr. and Mrs. William McKen na, Mr. and Mrs. John A. Kearns, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Daley, lVIr. and Mrs. Alfred Morrow Sr .. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Gerraughty, Margaret Morgan.
SCl9th
Yarmc)(lJ~h
ST. PIUS TENTH S5l)
Mona and Catherine Kennedy. Mr..!:Lnd Mrs. John Lindo. Mr. and Mrs. Aime Lizotte, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur McLear, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Martin. MI'. and Mrs. Robert K Mooney. Mrs. John Roberts and Mat thew. Mr. and Mrs; Albert Zahralban.
Vineyard Haven ST. AUGUSTINE'S $50 St. Augustine's Guild. $25 Mr. and Mrs. George Anthony, Michael Fontes Jr. $20 Martha's Vineyard National Bank. • $18 Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Whalen. .$10 , Bert's Barber Shop, Mr. and Mrs. Fmncis . Duart, Hinckley Lumber Co., Mr. and Mrs. Walter Kszytniak. Mrr. and Mrs. Mar shall McDonough. Mr. and Mrs.. Harold Morris, Mrs. Frank Oliveira. Mrs. George L. Sears. Manuel Sequel'ia, Smith Brothers. Cont~actors..
West Hall"wiiclJ-n HOLY TRINITY $25 General and Mrs. Vincent Jacobs: Mr. and Mrs. A. A. Mil ler. James Connor. $20 Mr. and Mrs. Frank Conroy. Mrs. Adelaide Messenger. $17.50 Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Va chon. $15 Mrs. Chal'les E. Finley. $10 Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Craffey. Mr. and Mrs. John Mei'na, Mrs. Frank Pardee. Mr. and Mrs. Rus sell Collinge. Mr. and Mrs. Wil liam Downey. Frank Downey. Sarah Mc Glinchey. Dr. and Mrs. Arthur . D·Elia. Mrs. Laura Vachon. A. G. Osborne. Marie Stone. Agnes Halbritter. Marion Halbritter, Katherin6 Lane.
Mr. and Mrs. Peter LeSag·~. $35 Holy Name Society; St. Pius X. St. Pius Tenth Guild. $20 Mrs. Clara Fitzgerald. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph J. Panek, Mr. and Mrs. Louis R. Parks. Mr. and Mrs. Philip E: Dempsey $25 . Mr. and Mrs. Harold L. Hayes. $15 Mr. and Mrs. Frederick P. Bogal'. Mrs. Fred Hatch. Woods Hole $10 _ Mr. and Mrs. William F. Casey. ST. JOSEPH'S Mr. Robert E. Cunniff. Mrs. Her $75 man G. Curtis, Elward Finn. Mr. Mrs. John Austin. and Mrs. James A. Hannan. Wareham $20 Mrs. W. Harry Heptonstall, Miss Frances Goffin. Mary and ST. PATRICK'S Mr. and Mrs. Gel-ard Jodoin. Mr.. Katherine Broderick. Mr. and and Mrs. William T. Marnell, $100 Mrs. Eldredge F. Shaw. Bough Misses Ellen and Frances Hen Mrs. Thomas Turner. Mr. and Motors. Inc. nessy. Fr. Callahan Council K. Mrs. Roy Stratton. $15 Mrs. Coleman J. Coyne. In of C. Miss Jane McLauglin. Memory of Norman P. and Ma $25 belle Dempsey. In Memory of J. W. Hurley & Co. $10 Daniel 'and Ellen O·Connell. Bass Mrs. Elizabeh Collins. Mr. and. $30 :River Bharmacy, Quaker Village Mrs. Bernard Cavanaugh. Thurs Amy Brewer. Do-Nuts. . day Club of N. Falmouth. $20 Mrs.' Thomas Grew, Mr. and Mr. and Mrs. Walter Collins, Raymond. Mello. Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Baptiste. Taunton Richard Terrio. $25 HOLY ROSARY Dr. and Mrs. Joseph Moore. $25 SW\U ll'1l sea $15 .Jeff Hayes Mrs. Joseph Stott. ST. DOMiNIC'S $10 $10 Walenty Gorczyca. Ted Julian. $100 Mr. and Mrs. Charles Brown, John F. Giblin. IM:1HACULATE CONCEPTION Mr. and Mrs. Robert Cahoon. Mr. $25 $18 Mr. and Mrs. M.· Francis and Mrs. James Conroy. Mr. and' William Fagan Family. Donovan. John Hicks, St. Domi-' Mrs. Charles McGovern, Mrs. $15 Theresa Rogers. nic's Women's Guild. The Boylen Family. Donald , Mrs. James Doherty, Mr. and $20 Mr. and Mrs. Paul Hardiman. .Mrs. Francis Kingston, Romain McLean, Thomas Theriault. $10 Ml\ and Mrs. Harvey Lennon. St. Poyant. Mr. and Mrs. William A Friend. Mrs. Patrick Brown . $10 Henry. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Mr. and Mr3. Louis Travers. Reidy Jr.'. Mr. and Mrs. Carlton and Family. Dominic Cirino, Charles Colton. Dr. Richard . Ernest Gendreau, Mr. and Mrs. Eldredge. .Mr. and Mrs. Houle. John T. Cooke . Robert Berard. John Santos Sr., James Cunningham. Allan and Daughters, Mr.' and Mrs. Galligan. Dr..and Mrs. Charles Murray. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Curley and Family. Effie De Sumner Stacy. veney. William Dinneen. John Mr. and Mrs. John R. Cooney, Moffet. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Sullivan Doherty. Mr. and Mrs. Myron Furtado. John Goggin.. John Goodwin Mr. and ·Mrs. Francisco Tavares, Sr.• Mr. and Mrs. William Le Mrs. Thomas Hazel, Albert Be~ Favor, Mr. and Mrs. Leon Jones. and Family. Nora and Martha MI'. and Mrs. Charles Kiernan, Hayes. Cornelius Kelly. Th6 dard: Sr. Anna· and Mary Gaffney. . Limieux Family. ST. LOUIS DE FRANCE Mi'. and Mrs. Medio Pederzani, James Mahoney, Thomas Mar $50 tin, Thomas A. Martin. Dr. Cle. Ideal Laundry. Omer Trudeau. ~ ~r. a'nd Mrs. Rrobert Kiernan. Margaret Walsh, Mr. and Mrs.' ment Maxwell, The Joseph Me· $25 Clinton Vose; St. Patrick's Girl Nulty Family. Henri Fortie:', Scouts. Mr. and Mrs. Fred May Cecelia Reilly. William Russell. $20 Edmond ,and Arthur Cote. Mr. nard. Mr~ and Mrs. Albert Hagan, Manuel Santos. Henry WOtjUll Mr. and Mrs. Edward Collins. ski. Gilbert Correia. and Mrs.' Joseph Dufour. Sarah McLaughlin. The Keliher Family. A Friend. $10 Mr. and Mrs. F. X. Auclair. Mr. and .Mrs. Emile Boilard, Mr. and ·Mrs. Moise Caron. ·Mr. and. Mrs. Lionel Paquette. Mr. and . Mrs. Francis Tremblay. Mr. and Mrs. -George Parent, Mr. and Mrs. Rocco Giacobbe. Mr. and Mrs. Pierre Picard. Mr. Invite young ladies to sanctify their own souls and Mrs. Fernand Auclair. Mr. through serving God in the Apostolate ·of and Mrs. George R.' Levesque. ST. MICHAEL'S $150 Mr. and 1\1:rs. Joseph A. FarK $40 Mr. and Mrs. Louis Fayan. , $35 Dr. ,and Mrs. Raymond Dionne. . $25 Mr. Joseph Cox and Family. Mr,. and Mrs. Raymond Pettine. $20 Mr. and Mrs. Patrick H. Cal lahan. $15 Mr. ari.d Mrs. Leonard Board:' man and Family. Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Moran, " $12 Mr. and Mrs. Charles Toye. $10 Mis~ions Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Dallaire, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Dumais. Mr. and Mrs. Howard Eaton and Write to Family, Mr. 'and Mrs. John Fa rias. Mr. and Mrs. Frederick MOTHER PROVINCIAL, R. S. M. Fazzina and Family. PROVINCIAL HOUSE Mr. and Mrs. Leo Grenier. Mr. ' and Mrs. John T.Horan. Mr. MANVILLE POST OFFICE and'Mrs. James Johnson, Misses RHODE ISLAND Blanche and Yvonue Jolivet. ?
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Sports Chaffer
Williams' at 38 Ha~ Sights On Triple Batti~g Crown By lack Kineavy
Hope kindled anew in the hearts of Red Sox fans when their favorites successfully invaded the West. Then fol lowed a dismal home stand and disillusionment. Some measure of consolation attended the continued effective hitting of one Ted Williams. The controversial star out minds me of a favorite theory of I'm not so presumptuous to fielder currently leads the mine. think it original, though I've American League with a never come across it elsewhere.
I
.417 mark, is first in home-runs It concerns the RBI computation with 10, and has 20 runs batted which at present represents the In, seven in arrears of Roy Siev total number of runs knocked in t:rs. All of which poses the ques by a player during -a season. The tion. "Can Williams win the magic number in this department coveted Triple Batting Crown:' Is 100. The attainment of this There are several obstacles which total represents a highly-credit are immediately evident. Ted's able performance. advanced age, 38-he'1l be 39 on And yet, I can't help but feel August 30-ls a primary con that a finer measure of achieve Ilideration. Should the big fellow ment would result if actual ,runs lSucceed, he'd be the oldest player batted In were measured' against to annex the title. Lou Gehrig, the number that might have been Yankee Immortal. was 31 and the registered. Such an arrangement oldest player of record to' take would equate 'all hitters and re the triple crown. flect in a truer sense their rela Yogi Aid's Mantle tive value to the team. Facial Protectors Big Ted Is shooting for the title Herb Score's recent facial in with a vengeance. He has won It twice in the past, as has the' Jury has prompted thought In legendary Rogers Hornsby. No some quarters on the feasability man .has ever achieved a third of a protective device for pitch triple sweep. As a matter of fact, ers. Many different experimental the records credit only four other masks ,have been devised for hockey goalies down through the players besides Williams, Horns by and Gehrig. They are Jimmy , years and all have met with ul Foxx, Chuck Klein, Joe Medwick timate failure. There's good rea son to believe that a similar de and Mickey Mantle. The last mentioned must be vice for pitchers would be uni versally rejected. The thing conceded Williams' second ob Iltacle to the throne. Mickey came would be a hinderance, Impede vision, and be a general nuisance. through handsomely in all de Most likely to be hit are fast partments In '56. He has age on his side, plus Yogi Berra, and the ball pitchers. Some statisticians 1'est of the Yankee supporting have estimated the speed of a cast. Yogi has had a rough fast ball at approximately 100 Spring. though. with the result m.p.h. The line drive ricochets at that Mantle has been walked an estimated 150 m.p.h. At 60 feet that doesn't give a pitcher , more often. No one seriOUsly ex pects this situation to continue more than a blink. At that, con nlUch longer however. Berra Is sidering the number of pitches thrown, the incidence of serious not an extended slumper. Injury has been very low. Prin!lipal Problem The third ·factor, which. I sup Ten,Million Dollar pose, ties In with Ted's age, is his physical condition. Reports em Program launched .mating from Sarasota this WORCESTER (NC) - Plans Spring emphasized Williams' ri for a 10-year development pro gid self-Imposed training sched gram for AssumptiOb College \lIe. For Williams this was some have been announced by F<:tth thing new. Heretofore he's made er Armand H. D,esautels, presi no bones about his dislike for dent of the school. pre-season routine. Being a can The program is the second did indivIdual, Ted knew what he phase of the building plan an had to do to get ready. The re- nounced in June 1955, which 'Ilult: a sharper, fitter. more re called for the eventual construc laxed Williams. He means to get tion of 11 buildings.
that third triple crown that elud A tornado in 1953 virtually
t!d him so narrowly in 1949 when destroyed all buildings and oth
George Kell edged him in per- er facilities used by the college.
centage by .0002. , Five buildings have been erected
slnce"then. F<:tther Desautels an Actually, the percentage de partment is Ted's forte. He'll be nounced a goal of $10,000,000 for up there. Irs the RBI side of the the 10-year development pro gram. picture that's apt to cause Wil liams the greatest trouble. In the Somerset Mother late '40s and early '50s, Dom DI
Mr. Mary Murphy, 2347 River Maggio and Johnny Pesky were
great table setters. In '55, there side Avenue, Somerset, was were the Billy boys, Goodman named Mother of the Year by and Klaus. At present, the top Somerset Circle, Daughters 'of end of the Sox order is in a state Isabella. Rev. Joseph K. Welsh, Moderator, gave Mrs. Murphy a of flux.
Miraculous Medal and chain Big Names Missing
Missing from the 'list of triple which were presented to her by one of the four daughters, Doro c.rown winners are many of base ball's most heralded players. thy Lou Murphy. Babe Ruth led' in homers and
runs batted In on five different
Clccasions but lost on average
NO JOB TOO BIG each time. His average over those NONE TOO SMAll five years. A mere .368. Ty Cobb
and Heinie Zimmerman aren't
recognized because their feats
preceded the official recognition
of the RBI computation in 1920.
Stan Musial missed by the nar
row margin of one 'homer in
Mllin Office and Plllnt 194.8. The "Man" had a .376
average, 131 runs batted In, but
lOWELL, MASS. onlY 39 round-trippers to 40 for Telephone lowell John Mize and Ralph Kiner. The GL 8-6333 lind GL 7-7500 Il,bsence of a qualifying rule for the hitting, title cost Jimmy Foxx Auxiliary Plants tJ1e crown In '32. Foxx led with lil:! homers and 169 RBIs, but BOSTON Dale Alexander with 392 at-bats OCEANPORT, N• .D.
tlclged him by three percenta~e lPoJnts for the batting crown.
PAWTUCKET, R. I. New M,lethCJI]
TaJldng about percentagE re-
SULLIVAN ' BROS. PRINTERS
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THE ANCHOR nur•.• Mav 30, 1957
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Social Work Aim Differs Today 'NEW YORK mc) - The aim of social work is to help people and communities to help them selves, James Fogarty, dean of Fordham University's School of Social Service, said here. "We have passed the stage where we planned for communi ties or for people in communities. Today we attempt to develop the capacity and resources of the in dividual person and of the com munity to handle their own af fall'S," the, educator told the Catholic Interracial Forum. In his daily work, the profes sional social worker deals with "people who have been hurt by social and economical discriml nation1' the dean said. , Among the "hurts" he enu merated were bad housing, in dustrial accidents, broken homes and exposure to depraved or im moral influences. - "Some of these they bring upon themselves and some are visited upon them by society be cause of their race, religion or economic condition," he stated.
ReCOins Life of Cardinal Newman
In Talk to New Bedford Mothers Dr. J. E. Cameron DUl'ant of New Bedford addi'essed a Moth er's Day Communion Breakfast held by the NewmaI1 Club of New Bedford Institute of Technology. Dr. Durant discussed the life of Cardinal Newman and the travail which he underwent prior and subsequent to his conver sion to the Catholic Church in 1845. He outlined the reasons for some of the major decisions in Cardinal Newman's life with spe cial emphasis on the attack made by Dr. Charles Kingsley which gave rise to the Apologia Pro Vita Sua. This defense of Newman's life appeared originally In London newspapers as a series of articles which had a wide and enthusias tic reading audience who rallied to Newman's support. To this day, it remains one of the most brilliant apologies ever written. Dr. DUl'ant outlined Newman's
President Praises Catholic Press
ST. LOUIS mC) - President Eisenhower has congratulated the Catholic Press of the United Boy Scout Jamboree States on its contribution to the strength 'of the nation. Scheduled in July In a message sent to the NEW BRUNSWICK mC) Archbishop John F. O'Hara, ' Catholic Press Association con vention, the Pres'ident said: C.S.C" of Philadelphia will pre "As your organization has dili side at a Pontifical Mass on July gently '''Worked to inform and 14 in Valley Forge, Pa.. at the na tional jamboree of the Boy alert the citizens of our land on the great issues of the day, you Scouts of America. Bishop Richard O. Gerow of have contributed to the strength Natchez, Miss., will offer the of our natiorial community. The Mass and Archbishop Leo Binz security and j)rogress of our Re of Dubuque, Iowa, will preach. public depend upon the will of the people, educated, concerned Msgr. George M. Dowd, national and responsib-Ie. director of the Catholic Commit "Congratulations to the Cath tee on Scouting, will be chaplain general at the jamboree. Over olic Press Association for per forming this mission in the 150,000 Boy Scouts will partici splendid t!'aditlon of American pate. journalism:'
life, imprcssing upon them that the same crises and 'difficultielf which the~ will encounte~ in life may be confronted in the same manner as Newman met them, namely, by application of the principles of the Catholic faith to each Individual life. Dr. Durant attended Holy Family Grammar' School and High School, and was .graduated from Boston College in 1934, and earned his Doctorate at Tufts Medical School.
Franciscans to Choose Tr,eir New Superior ASSISI. Italy (NC)-The first general chapter of' the Francis can Fathers in six years will start here tomorrow. The meeting pUl'pose is the election of a new superior general of the Franciscans. According to recent statistics there are 26,317 members of the Franciscan order'divided among: 15,362 priests, 6,388 Brothers, 3,551' clerics and 1,016 novices. There are 93 provinces of the Franciscan Fathers throughout the world, with representation in 32 countries. Netherlands Is .. the. home of the largest province which has 1.329 members while the New York wovince is the sec ond largest, numbering 924. The Franciscan Fathers (O.F.M') are ,one of the foul' ma Jor branches of the order found ed by St. Francis of Assisi In 1209. The center groups are the' Capuchin Fathers (O.F.M. Cap,). the Friars Minor Conventual (O.F.M. Conv,) and the Third Order Regulars of St. Francis (T.O.R'>. The combined member bership of these three other branches is 19,391.
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, THE ANCHOR- " ' ThUI'l., Ma Y,30, 1957
School B~s Bill Defeat Likely
Only Few Oppose Religious Query
HARTFORD (NC>-A bill to give communities the rtght to provide school bus transporta tion for non-public school pupils has been virtually k\lled by the State House of Representatives'. The measure giving Connecti cut cities "and towns the' clearly' defined right to grant transpor tation to parochial and other private schools was adopted by the State Senate. Following t-he House action, Thll. Catholic Tran$crip, news paper of the State's three Cp" :, olic dioceses charged "a certain segment of the Republican Party with bigotry that is ready to fly in the face of' fact. of decisions . of the U. S: Supreme Court, ,of legislative responsibility. bigotry that Is determined to rule or
WASHINGTON (NC)-The U. S. Census Bureau said here "very few persons" refused to answer a question on religious affiliation included for testing purposes in a recent nation-wide survey. 'The bureau is 'now_ weighing the "pros Qnd' cons of including stich a question in the 1960 pop ulation and housing census, The l'ecent test was designed to, gauge reaction to' the query which opponents have claimed would- be widely reserited. ' Several church-related groups, including the Catholic Press As sociation and the National Coun- 'eil of Catnolic Men, have urged the question be asked stating that it will aid churches in their future planning and assist schol ars in their stUdy of contempor ary American society.
PAPAL HONOR FOR NCWC JUBILARIAN: Silver 'jubilarian Father John 'F.:' ruin.~' Cronin, 'a Sulpician,arid assistant director. of tne NCWC Social Action Department, The paper said that "bus trans receives the good'wishesof A.'rchbishop Pa,trick A. O'Boyle of Washington, Episcopal' portation is not and should not be Q political issue" ,but that "a Chairman of. th~ NCWp Social Action Department, op the occasion of his 25th priestly faction of the Republican Party jubilee. Looking oli at left is Msgr. Howard J. Carroll, NCWC General Secretary, and. has made It one." Gruenther'Stresses at right, Msgr. George G. Higgins, Director of the Socia~ Action Department. Father
Concept of Ch'CJrity " . Cronin taught philosophy aha. economics _to many Fall, River priests who studied at St. Potential Servicemen WASHINGTON (NC) - The in Baltimo.re. Mary's Seminary To Hear'Ch~plain head of the American Red Cross 0
.
said when a civilization substi tutes the material for the spiri tual it becomes "soft·, and loses its concept of charity, Gen, Alfred M. Gruenther told some 3,000 delegates at the 32nd llational Red 'Cross convention 'that a "neighbor helping neigh bor" policy "is essentially a job' for charitable 01'ganizations" and -a basis for a lasting civilization. On the opening day of the convention, Gell. Grenther at tended a Solemn Mass offered in St. Thomas the Apostle church. here. ' "One hears from time to time the question: 'Why 'not let the government do ~t?'" the Red Cross President observed,· "I think that would be a major error because I consider that this concept ,of 'neighbor helping lleighbor' is essentially a job for· charitable organizations." "If we should ever abdicate to 'government the responsibility for home relief and rehabilitation of the fainilY," Gen, Gnienther said, "I think we would be start;, ing a path that would endanger our concepts .and our way of ' life."
Pope, as Apostolic .N~~ico, Taken Fo~ Begga~ at German Conv'ent
MUNICH, Germany (Ne) The Poor School Sisters here' treasure unforgetable memories of His Holiness Pope Pius ,XII. from the days whe'fl he was Apostolic Nuncio here. The Holy Father loved to visit the children: In the several Munich nurseries run by the Sisters. . The Pope came here in 1917 as' Nuncio shortlY after his conse cration as Archbishop, the 40th anniversary of which will, be celebrated next Monday, One bright summer day in 1918. he rang the bell of the Sisters' kindergarten in the suburb of Ampfing. A young fellow opened the door and without looking too carefully, yelled at the visitor: "Just wait here, you can't come in!" Then, thinking' a: beggar was at the door, he began to look for Sister Guardian to' get a few, pennies to give the poOl' man. Before turning around, 'however, he noticed how the stranger was moving on. 'Nehru Shifts Stand "Sister,'!' said the youngster, On Birth Control / "He isn't even waiting!" NEW DELHI (NC) - Prime . Sister looked out of the ·win Minister Jawaharlal Nehru has dow, and 10 and behold, the urged that the birth control Archbishop was about to turn movement. in, this country be back. She rushed out terrified, to apologize, but the Nuncio was made "widespread and success not a bit disturbed. ful." "You've got a good doorkeeper' Observers regard Mr. Nehru's here; Sister," he said smiling. present stand as a complete re versal of his position up to 1950, "Keep him on the job!" Once on entering the playroom.. when he advocated increased economic production to care for the Nuncio noticed a group of the population rather than birth children playing· volley ball. He control. They cite portions of a caught hold of the ball imme 1949 Nehru speech, to a United diately, to show them he was Nations commission meeting in familiar with the game. Whereupon one of the boys India, in support of this view, which was that of his mentor, stepped in, "That's no good. Mister," he the late Mohandas K. Gandhi. said condescendingly. "See? This Mr. Nehru then said that a ,belief that overpopulation existed , is how it's done...· And the Nuncio without hesi in India was a "serious error." Parts of India were actually tation, obligingly followed the instruction of the youngsters who underpopulated, he said, Under production 'not overpopulation apparently did not rec!ognize him. "Now," the boy remarked with was the crux of the problem, the Prime Minister stated at that' a sigh of i'elief, "Now, you're time. The- solution lay .not in okay!" Other mempries of the Pope's' checking' population growth but in increasing production, he then stay in Munich h~\Ve also been recalled here. . emphasized. ,. On one occasion when' the nunciat"ure was short a man, Urges Year of SoCial Nuncio"Pacelli asked' the Abbot Work for Engaged .of the nearby Benedictine Abbey BOCHUM, Germany (NC) , of Scheyern whether he could Every young person should en perhaps spare one of the Broth': gage in at least.a year of social ers to help out. It so happened work before marriage, the Ger . that 75-year-old Brother Andrew man archbishop of Paderborn . had just been relieved of kitchen sj\id here. duty. So he was sent here, to be "Young I*ople should know the Nuncio's butler and door the' effects' of poverty first keeper. . Soon the' Nuncio took a great hand," the Archbishop declared. "There is no better way than by liking to the old man. Anxious to working with others to alleviate improve' his German, he often the sufferings of the poor. Then engaged, in conversation with many musions about life' would : him. To kid him, one day ht'!
vanish and mUlTiage become all asked:
the mote meaningful:' '. ' "Suppose I were Join ~10U1'
monastery, I'd have to stand last· ,in line, wou'e". "Sure," said -Brother Andrew,·.· "If you a1'e' a- nuvice, ~ ou 'v(:: got' to take your turn, Later Oll, 'per- . haps, since. you are a Bishop., Father Abbot might let yoti step. up. But really, if I were you, I wouldn't join," . "You wouldn't? Why?" "Well," . g' l' inn e d the g'ood Brothel:, "after all as a Bishop you are supposed to be perfect, so yOU needn't be 'a monk any morel" "F'urthermore," he added hur riedly. and he was 5criollS ahout it, "they couldn't use you in Scheyel'n.. Your Gennai1 isn't good enough. so you couldn't even preach or hear confessions." The Nuncio beamed. ' "Suppose I sang a Hig'h Mass, once in a while." "No, no!" replied the Brother, "That's the Abbot's joh - we" don't need an extra man!" '.' . Some years later the Nuncio
NEW ALBANY <NC)-A spe cial day of instruction fOI' young men in this area who expect to be called into the armed forces within the next year will be held at neighboriilg Mount st. Fran cis Seminary on June 2. The in structions will be given by Father Fred McTernan, Army chaplain from Fort Knox, Ky. The program, especially St. Louis Convention planned for young men between ST. LOUIS (NC)-Archbishop th'e ages qf 19 and 2i, is being Joseph' E, Ritter of St. Louis' co-sponsored by the Deanel~ will offer a Pontifical Mass here Councils of Catholic ·Men and on June 23 to open the 10th an;" Women. nual meeting of the National,' Catholic Council on Home Eco- ~ FRANCIS J. nomics. Some 225 delegates from' the U. S. and Canada will attend. had becQme a Cardinal. In 1930 Brother Andrew of Scheyenl. passed away peacefully, aged 84. His Eminence rememberd the man who once had refused him admission t() his monastery. Af fectionately, he sent his sincere expression of, sympathy' to the Scheyern Abbey,
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