Our New Pope •.'
The: Anchor.' Today on Page Seven Begins.
Publi~ation.
SON OF THE SO,IL
of a 15-lnstallment Biography of Pope John XXIII ....!
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The ,ANCHOR An Anchor of the Soul, Sure'and Firm-ST. PAUL
fall River, Mass."
Vol. 3" No. 26
rhursday, June 25, 1959
~er.on·d t:lul Mail '-rivilesrea Authorized at .....all River. MDss.
PRICE 10. $4.00 pe, Year
No. Fairhaven Parish Plans Golden J'ubileeBy Avis Roberts The Golden Anniversary of Sacred Hearts Chur~h, North Fairhaven, will be observed Sunday, July 5, at' the church and later 'at a banquet at Gaudette'.s P~vilion, Acushnet. The Most Rev. James L. Connolly, D.D., Bishop of Fall River, will preside .' , only surviving member of a band at 10 o'clock Solemn High of three mission~ries who 'cam'e Mass, Sunday morning, £01- to Fairhaven in i905 from Livlowing a procession from erpool, El1g1and. Sacred Hearts School. Celebrant of the Mass will be Rev. Thaddeus 'Bouhuysen, SS.CC., pastor. It will be sung by the Senior Choir and children of the school, with Gerard PelletIer as organist.
A speaker at the banquet will the Rev. Stanislaus Bernard, 5S.CC., chaplain of 'Sacred ~earts ,Academy, Fair~aven, and
Another speaker scheduled is' Very Rev. William Condon, SS.CC., superior of S~cred Hearts Monastery, Fairhaven. There will also be entertainment ~nd music. Father "Thaddeus is honorary . chairman of the program. Louis Rogissart is general, chairman and toastmaster and Aldei ·Mont/ ,Turn to Page:
Eight~en'
Diocesan $-chool Picnic. Great Social Success Approximately 17,000 children attending the first Diocesan Schools Picnic, whooped it up Monday and Tuesday in giant parties at Lincoln Park, North Dartmouth, their spirits dampened only slightly -by small rain squalls. About 8,000 from 27 schools Bishop Gerrard' were present in the Greater Fall River both days, and the marvelous and Attleboro areas congre- spirit of cJ-.ildren were mani. gated at the park Monday, fested in the gleam of the eyes and 9,000 youngsters from 28 schools in Greater New Bedford and Taunton attended festivities Tuesday.' Bishop Connolly and Auxiliary
of both Bishops. Both days were minor miracles of organization. There were 1,000 laY chaperons each dayTurn to Page Two
Fall River Maryknoller Advises Youngsters to Serve Ma,nkind An unusual career, including seven years as assistant at St. Joseph's parish, Fall River, and nearly two score years as a missionary priest, is that of Rev. John E. Morris, M.M. Now visiting a long-time friend, Rt. -Rev. J. Joseph Sullivan,' pastor of Sacred Heart parish, Fall River, Father lV(orris will return next month to his assignment as superior of Maryknoll's promotion headquarters in Seattle, Wash. His territory includes Washington, Oregon, Idaho and Montana. He travels constantly through the four states, preaching, lecturing and showing films and slides on the work of Maryknoll. .
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Father Morris, a native of SS. Peter and Paul parfsh, Fall River, attended St. Mary's Seminary, Baltimore. St. Joseph's parish was his first and only assignment in the, Diocese. While there he was manager of the parish's ,baseball team, which won many outstanding victories. Today, 38' years later, he is still well remembered.by older members of St. Jos~ph's. The call of mission fields, Tul'o &0 l'age ~i&'hteeD
tEV. JOUN E:MORRIS, M.M.
EN ROUTE TO EUROPE: Three Superiors of the Holy Union of the Sacred Hearts have ,left for, Rome to participate in the election of a Superior General. Left to right are Rev. Mother Gabriel Clare, Rev. Mother Mary William; Provincial, and Rev. Mother Ann Joseph. '
Third Percentage The Diocese of Fall River, with 56 per cent Catholics, had the third highest percentage of Cat!:lolic population in the nation, based on proportion of Catholics to total population, . according to statistics in the 1959 National Catholic Directory. The Directory places the Catholic population of the Diocese at 250,356 in a total population of 445,060• By a slight percentage, the Diocese of Lafayette, La., leads the nation with 358,173 ,Catholics in a total population of 584,400; for a percentage, , of .6128, while the Diocese of .. Providence, R. r., has a percentage of .6126, with a Catholic population of 507,238 in a total population of. 828,000. , Total population for the Diocese 'of Lafayette is up 12,156 Turn to Page Eighteen
Holy Union Nuns' Sail for Europe
Diocese Looking' for' Home For Young Hungarian Girl
. A 16 year old Hungarian girl, proficient in German, Russian, Hungarian and English, is looking for a home in the United States. Rev. John E. Boyd, Diocesan Resettl~ , merit Director, is trying to help her find it. "She is separated from home and family as a teen-agel'. The National Catholic , result of "the Hungarhlnup- Welfare' Conference will sponsor rising," he said, "and needs her trip from Hungary to an a .. sponsor in the United American port of entry, said
States who will guarantee her Father Boyd, and the host family will arrange for her transportasupport while she finshes her With attendance'· at the Holy tion f,om thence. education and fits herself for Union General ChapterJn Rome Father Boyd was asked to take employment." . her ultimate goal, Reverend The girl is in the equivalent a personal interest in this case, Mother Mary W.illiam: provincial one of hundred:; similar, because of first year high school. She superior of the Immaculate needs the same family warmth or' the great success the Fall Heart Province of" ~e Holy, and protection as an American Turn to Page Eighteen Union of the Sacred Hearts, is en route to Europe. Her itinerary will include pilgrimages to Marian shrines and visits to Holy Union European convents. Accompanying her are the elected delegates, to the chapter, Mother Gabriel Clare Two young women from this Diocese have been reTurn to p~g,e Eighteen ceived as novices in the Maryknoll Sisters. A. third has
Two New Bedford' Girls Enter Maryknoll Sisters' Novitiate
Bishops to' Greet Students of New High Tomorrow 'First assembly of the boys and girls who will enter Bishop Stang High School in September will be held at 2:30 P.M. tomorrow in Kennedy Memorial Auditorium, County Street, New Bedford, Rev. Edward J. Gorman, Superintendent of Diocesan Schools, announces. Most Rev, James L. Connolly, D.D., Bishop 'of the Diocese; Most Rev. James J. Gerrard, D.O., V.G., Auxiliary Bishop, and Sister Agnes Marguerite of the Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur, teachers in the. new school, will be present to greet the students. . Purpose of the meeting is to discuss the program for the students in the Fall. Father Gorman suggests that, st1,.ldents bring their last report card, which will be collected during the meeting.
pronounced her first vows. The novices are Barbara Higgihs, to be known as Sister M. Leo Francis and LOll ise Mahoney, to be Sister Louise Virginia. Sister Christiana Maria, .the former Hon'ora Lucille Felix, pronounced her first vows at ceremoniel held, in the Maryknoll Motherhouse, Maryknoll, N. Y.
SISTER CHRISTINA, MARIK
Both novices are from St. Lawrence's parish, New Bedford, and attended Holy Family High School. Sister" M. Leo Francis, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Leo e. Higgins, 27 Evelyn Street, completed nurses' training and served in the United States Air Force for almost two years before entering religion. She has a sister a member at. the Sisters of Mercy, Sis"ter Marie de Prague, and one brother, Anthony Higgins. Sister Louise Virginia, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Francis C. Mahoney, 43 State Street, graduated from Amherst College and BOston College. She took adTurn to Page Fourteeo
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Christi; S~ndwich , ' . : . Our lady of Fatim~,Swansef.l Immaculate Co~eption, Foil River St. Anthony, East Falmouth NOTRE . DAME (NC(::", Continued from Page One. Our lejdy of th~ Isle, Nantucket, St. Anthony, of' Padua, New Bedford Alfredo Cardinal' OttaviaDt mainly parents; 450 nuns arid Our lady of Mount Carmel, Seek.onk St. Jacques, Taunton 'Says U.. S. Catholic instittldozens of priests and, sem1nar- Sa~;ed! Heart, Fall River' St. James, New Bedford ians. Nurses were in attendance Sacredl Heart, North Attleboro St. John the EvangeliSt, Attleboro tions of higher education, and there was an ambulance ,on S A ' h 'M tt . tt .St. Joseph, Fairhaven__ culturally speaking. are "worthv " ' . d d t . ntl,ony, ,a apoJse , . n'vals of the old .world, and .. the .' St..Iouis de France,' Swansea . premises, happily not nee e. Sf. B'f onl ace, New Be df ord ~ - e respec~. l'ts . su'per.lAo.... · Skinned knees and small bumps· . St. Fra1ncis Xavier, Acushnet St. Patrick, Fall River' . ...,....... •.,. Were the only wounds requiring St. 'George, , The Pro-Prefect of tile S. Westport St. . Patric k, Somerset preme Sacred Congregation 01. first aid. St. Jedn the Baptist, Fall River St. Peter, South' 'Dighton / the Holy Office, who is visiting Shrieks and Yowb St. Joh1n the8aptist, Westport St. Stephen, Attleboro' The p'ark resounded with St. Joseph, New Bedford . h 0 B df °d this country, feels U. S. Cat.,.. St. Teresa, New e or shrieks and yowls os the kids . . olic education "holds high the t.' Jose' ph, Taunton St. William, Fall River S took over. They crowded the ' prestige of-Catholic' culture and amusement areas and lined up St. Joseph, Woods Hole MORE THAN 20% Of QUOTA has its own hQnorable place in droves waiting for rides. They St..Mary, Seekonk Holy Trinity,' West Harwich among the' other centers of looped around the tunnel of love; St. Michael, Ocean Grove fie higher lear~ing in America." : scrambled up on the Whirlaway St. Patt-ick, Falmouth _ Our lady of the As'sumption, Ostervi Cardinal Ottaviani said be Whip; banged joyously around St. Pa~l, T9unton Our lady of Health, Fall River ,on the Dodgems; and, screamed, S P h ' A I P . Our lady of Mount Carmel, New Bedford thinks the Church in this' cO,unt. eter t. e post e, rovmcetown Our lady' of. Purgatory, New Bedford try is "strong and vigorous" on the giant roller coaster. St. Piu~ Tenth, South Yarmouth because of its "parishes ~nd The religious obviously had a St. Roch, Fall River - Our lady of Victory, Centerville parish life." great time, too. Watching out , 'Sacred Heart, New Bedford for their small charges, nuns rode : MORE THAN 80% OF QUOTA St. Anne, Fall River The' Cardinal called UPOll ihe merry-go-round,. some in 0," loay of lourdes, Wellfleet St.' Anne, New' Bedford American ·Catholics "to' strive .stately sleighs, but others stand.' I' MORE THA.N 70% OF QUOTA . St..Elizabeth, Fall River , cQ,nstantly to bring forth and de, :' . .St. Francis Assisi, New Bedford ing, clutching poles, veils and 'velop leaders in thought and ia .rosaries flying. ' Holy Redeemer,. Chat~am . St: Joseph, ',North' Dighton . action~ particularly in the ecoIHeart Taun"ton'-/'. The littlest children' had their 'Socred nomic, political and social fields," I '. .• St. 'Mary,' New -Bedford own amusements in Kiddies', .. Fairyland-a 'small roller coast. I MORE THAN 60% OF QUOTA' St. Mary, South Dartmou"" "It should not rest," he said, er, miniature railroad ride, a Holy NljIme, Fall River . St. Mathieu, Fall River "until'a specifically Catholic inpint-size golf course and, most Our lady of Grace,. North Westport St. Thomas More, Somerset , . , ' , fluence is, felt in the life 01. the popular, a gallop on green swans St. Do~inic, S w a n s e a ' MORE THAN 10% OF QUOTA nation." wearing cowboy boots. . St. Fro nCls I. XaVI'e r, HyaftfltS . ' 1.1 River.. Espirito Santo, Fa. Eat! No one stopped. The S J h I b ", ' ," ,. Holy Ghost, . . t. osep ;Att e oro . Attleboro' . children ,congregated ,. by" the dfo d " ~ A .Delicious· " . .j .' thousands at the' clambake pa- ~ St. lawrence, New Be r ,. '. .IrTlllililculate Conception, North EastOfl .'.' . . Treat. 'vjion at 10 o'clock for hot dogs;," ;" 1MORE TH~N 50'lb- OF QUOTA' . " Our 'lady of.: the 'Holy Rosary, New BedfOrd '10:05,french fries:',10:10,'fried St;...Johnthe .Baptist, New ,Bedford ,Our .lady of Perpetual Help, New Bedford : 'clams; 10:15'on,-box lunches.' In St. Mary,.Taunton ',', SacreClHeart,: Fairhaven', . ~etw~en th!:!y ,sampleq, a, ,weird 55. P,etE~r & Paul, Fall. River'" . . Sacred .H~rt" Oak Bluffs i ,. variety of soda pop and cotton ' St: Anthony o(ih.e, D.e.ser.t, Fall 'River . candy. Yo~J~1 digestions could " . • I MORE, T~A~ ;40% OF QUOTA, , . St. Anthony oi:Pa~ua', FaIlR.iv~ nandle ali-be Wlntien ·.lmmacul,ate CO,nc~tion, Tau.nton '. I · S t . Anthony of PadUCI;-Taunton N~ariy 'everyone' came,aw!lY 'Immacul,ate Conception; New Bedford· St.'Hedwig~ New BedforCl ' • with small prizes, V,;on a't v'ariou. lOur ·lady of. 'lourdes, T a u n ' t O f ' l ' Sf. Joan' of Arc;' OfIeaM' ' "concession's, . but· the big ~vent ,. St. Bernbrd,"Assonet ' • . ' , St; John of God, Somerset 'ofboth days' Were the drawing ., St;-:Hyatin~h..-..New' B8d~&:cf' ~', St~ -Kilian,' NeW"Be:'dfoicd 'for'the major awards~ .Th:e··sad- ·St. Joseph, 'Fcill. River- ' .'. / . . St; Margaret, Buzzards BOY died pony was won' o'n Monday St. l6uisl Fall River ' St. Mary, Fairhaven' by Juliette Durand ,of St. ~och's St._. ¥ar>j's Cathedral, Fait River St. Mary, North AtfteborO ~chool,Fall River: Bicyc~es . St. M~ry'( Mansfield . Sr. Theresa! Attleboro " " were awarded to Paul Souza, . Sf.. Mar~, Norton , ,.~ESS THAN 10% OF QUOTA .. Espirito Santo School, Fall'RIv- St. Patrick, Wareham ' , ·er and Dian" J}ernier, a Blessed I Holy Cross,· Fait River . Sacrament pupil, Fall River.' , . ' IMORE THAN 3t>% OF QUOTA Our lady of Angels, Fofi River The five circ\ls puppies were Holy 'Family, Taunton ,," Our lady of the Assumption, New Bedford' won by Paula Gauthier, St. Pat.. Holy Nalne, New Bedford . St. Michael, Fall River ' .;. rick's, Fall River.; Sheila"Nolan, Holy ROJ?ry, Fa!1 Ri~~ ", ' , '. St... St~nislaus,·Fdll· River ' . I.' , -~.' " ,:Santo',Christo, Fall 'Riv"er ' : St. ,Mary'J. ,North 'Attleboro; Holy Rosary, Taunt~ , , : Giles Desmarierais, St. Anne~s, '",_ L!' ,',,,', -- ,""". : : Fall Rive~;,.V4'giniaGomes, St. ", Legion of Def;ency , ,John's, Attleboro and Paula '..,". I '. " ' ... ' " -' '..\ .,' . ':;..t,. Francoeur".Domiai.ean,.Academy, ,The 'following films are, to •.be .FRIDAY-SS. John and :PaU'l., Fall 'River.' : ~9.-ded .to! t~ ,'lists in )tu~~' reMartyrs. Double, ,Red;· Mass Prior to the awarding Of . spective classifications: . Proper;:Gloria; Common P1:ef' I, ',,', " prizes on' '.ruesday, ·Rev. Ed-" ace.. "" ward J. Gorman, Diocesan 01tri!objebtionabM' fOr Adul~ rector of Schools;' under whose . and Adolescents:" Hole' Iri the SATURDA;Y ..:.. 'Mass Of' 'the . Blessed Virgin " for ·Saturday. supervision the two day picnic Head; Lelgendof Tom Do6ley; .Simple.,' White:' 'Mass Proper; .' was conducted; introduced Bish- Say One ~or Me. "" Gloria; Preface .of' Biessed ': op Connolly. The Bishop '." :., ' . ' '" r' , '. tpanked ',all, and spoke as' the : Objecti?nable i~Part for, All: Virgin. "spirit of the day' dictated":" ih ,.of :I:.,ove" lind Lust (certain ele'. . ments in this picture are judged SUNDAy/- VI Sunday Mter 'a light-hearted and fun-fille"a ,morally u~accePtable for general Penteco~t.· Double: Green. ·manner. .. 'entertainment). Mass Proper; Gloria; Creed; The children, ~ver 9,Ooo_strong; . I ·Preface of Trinity.' . then gave the Pledge of AllegiMONDAY~S. Peter and Pa~l. .~ ance to the \Flag and sang the 1. . Apostles. Double of I Class. Star Spangled Banner. ,. C f' to, Red. Mass !,roper; Gloria; ':, Eight prizes, 'similar to tho~ o~ Irma .IOftS Creed; Preface of Apostles, ' . ,.. given on Monday, were then .. i' ,Jun~ i!~'~,: : awarded ,to 'five :pupils of New 1:30 P.~. St.J.oan ?!- ~c, ':, TUESDA Y~~~~oration at. St. Paul,' "Apostle,'" Greater Bedford, two from TauntOR and Orleans. ", ,' ~ :one fr<~m Fairhaven. -;:, 4:00 p.Ml, "Our Lady of the' Double: . Red;,: Mass', Proper; Gloria;, Second {Collect St. .,' ., "'. '.. " . ,~~",,' , " John L'He1,lreux of· the Sacred Assumi>t~ori, O~terville. ; Q'!r:lLa!ly of Victory'~: '..Heart SchOol: Til'un'ton' was in~ t':winI!er ~f:;the, g~~~d prize, ::,'a .:. c:~nferrl~le at Osterville. ,. ,fully saddled .pony. Two New 7:~,·~.M,' St. Anthony, Eas ,';Be~ordites :won, ,the. bicycles: Fa~olilth." ," ., ", ,;'.,; . Blood 'Of Otir'L6rci Je'sus .~ . . :. . . ., .Damel Brule of' St. Anthony~s Christ. Double of I ClaSs. Red. . . , . . 'School and Linda Thomassett ~ I!~. Mass Proper; Gloria; Creed; ", .,' . Y I" of St. Theresa's School. . I Preface of the Holy Cross. _ The proud 'owners of tlie pup. FORTY HOURS ,I ' " THURSDAY-Visitation of' the ~ pies. are Diane ·Courtemanche, . DEVOTION . '. Blessed Virgin Mary. Double r Sacred, Heart School, New Bed\. . of II Class. White. Mass Prop, -... .,. fo~d;:'Angela'Car'ozza, St. JoJune 2~6tr Lady bf !,urgaseph'.s; Tauriton; Susan Richards,'" tory, New Bedford. :er; Gloria; Se~ond Collect Ss. .... . . . . . St. ,Theresa's, New, Bedfor~;:S[ Mary,' North AttleProcessus' and Martinian, MarA4nette ,Lauzon, St. Joseph's, ." · b o r p . · . . :._ tyrs; Creed; Preface of the Blessed VirgIn. N~,,:,,~ Bedfo~d and Linda Santos, July 5-l-St. Francis. Xavi~r, Sacred: Heart, Fairhaven.. '~ . Hyannis. .' . 'As the second 'day c~ncluded, "HolylTrini~, West Ha~Prelate, Cites: Value only one vehicle was not used, wiC,h. " Of Uo So Sisterhoods :I,'hank God-th~'am-bulanceJhat ' . J~:l¥ ~~~~,~ ... , J08R, o( ·i.~C, a1 ~ays stood·~, r~ady,', for, t;. anv ". Or leans.' ~;:.;;. '.; ;" ~ ~ MEQUON (NC) - Archbishop emergency. " . ' . ,.,. . Ou~nadY of:the A~Albert Mey.er of Chicago said, '. ,':. , ~ " , tiort, Osterville. ",: ' it 'is "literally impossibi~ to ,: '.·::::-···HeOCls·. Eudists:"; ';', ,"-. JuJyl9t-st.• Hyacinth, New over-estimate the value of tile .. sisterhoods in the United States." '•. '",<QUEBEC (NC}-Father Ed'Bedford: ~ ne'~:.:. . U, S,-"Sist~rh;ods, Arehb~~hop o.u,ard Boi1dreault,. .'" Meyer emphasized here in' Wisnative of Quebec province who,. ' ; ,I·' ...consin, represent "an argument is:.,Superior of the Charlesb3urg '-----~I-'.-.,-.. ~t '(obm.OOIMRieAt Regular, lag ami Family siR for the truth' of' the '''Catholic Scholasticate, . has, been named . lIIIB Aff()B()B , ."" .• .' . ' . ..~ Faith 90 convincing that "reliPfo~i¥iar~pe~.ih.rof the Eudist SeeOnd-e~ t'!DaiJ privilege. ~ ." - . • th" .' ,' . 'C'" :C'~', d' ·,.the .0& FaD Rtveri?" Maea. . P.ub1labed ., ev <!1'f :' gious pl'ejudices;· cannot stand 1oltW ........ ~ of.1h e:-~.ClIlI.~""'f>Cl"Y"" • '0 ,. F ~: .rr~,. ·:HL,"~~~~l .. '!-\~ ~,;" r~ureda.J ac;.;'-lJr~"Cl'-.Avenu~:;FaB .' :;-: .. ..;. --: .. ~OLA BOrnlNG- co. ·of the·, test ...Of contact with 0Ur::,U!U~g:~S,~~t~. :~(!~~ ~~. 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WOMEN AT WORK: Fift/members of Our Lady of Victo~y Woman's Guild in Centerville take turns staffing the Coffee Shop after last Mass Sundays-a Guild project to raise funds for the relatively new church on the Cape. At. extreme left Mrs. Francis Killeen serves Miss Elizabeth Giblin, with Miss Rosemary Goulding next in line. Mrs. Walter Baker, Jr., Guild president, second left photo, and Mrs. Raoul H. Beaudreau, center,
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"who suggested the idea of the ,Coffee Shop, provide quick service. Mrs. Bradley Parks, seated in second right photo with Mrs. James F. Colgan, serves as cashier. General view of shop shown at right. Enjoying conversation with coffee are James P. Bradley, center, Dr. and Mrs. Hugh McCarthy. The Guild served a roast beef dinner Saturday and is now making plans for' the Annual Bazaar.
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lndu~trious Cape Cod W oman's Gu~ld Runs.
Faculty at Coyle Continue Studies· During' Summer
Coffee Shop, to Reduce Parish Debt
Capetip K of c;: Sets Summer Meetings Walter Welsh Council, Prov-
oincetown Knights of Columbus, . By Russell Collinge Our Lady of Victory Parish, inCeriterville, is rehitiveIy new. It'started from scratch will hold one meeting mont.hly For most of the Brothers during July and August, on the of Holy, Cross at Coyle in ,1957, with no completed church and no rectory. No rectory! When the new pastor, second: Thursday of each month. H ig h $,chool, although Father Howard A. Waldron, arrived' he" tru Iy had no place to lay his head~ A parishioner WaIter R. Harding was re-' Summer cottage 'and; later, another parishioner let him have her "schoQl's. out" means' a va- offered the use of elected Grand Knight and Rev. cation from teaching, it also ~ouse ~hile she ~as in Fl~r~ fncl'easein.attendance during the ' 'But, again, the Guild is fortu- . Leo J. Duart will be chaplain of mea";s increased' application:. to . Ida. But. for qUIte a whIle, Summer' makes the parking nate in having 'that core of active the Council for the 10th year. their own books 'and 'studying. Others who, will serve for the Father Waldron used.4is car. problem· a·, cause of sleepless and' willing workers -:. and, the . During July and August, only as his office-parking at the.. 'nights, and. severe headaches. ,parish is fortunate. in having' a for;thcoming ,season include Leo Brother Eudes Hartnett, C.S.C, .
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prinl::ipal, will remain "from the, regular staff at Coyle. 'He and four Brothers from other schools '. will 'conduct Summer schoolclasses for Coyle students. Also directing classrooms will be Brother Albertus, Smith, who will teach Summer school .at Notre Dame !Iigh SChool, West. Haven,' Conn.; and Brother Francis Ellis, who will, teach. Sum~er schooCat Vincentiaa Institute, Albany N. Y.
Camp Coull!l!lors . Brothe.r _Eldred Reisenwebe.r· and Brother Thomas Keefe will ' prefect boys at Gilmour Summer· . 'Day Camp, Gilmour Academy; Gates' Mills, Ohio. arother Ferrer McHehry will serve as Sum'mer supervisor at the Brothers of Holy. Cross . Scholasticate Valatie, N. Y. Attendin'g seminars will be Brother Christian Stinne't who will participate in a seminar on curriculum revision' sponsored by the Diocese of Hartford at Hartford, Conn. Brother Albert Ciri and Bother John 'Kuchenbrod will attend a mathematics 'seminar at Holy Cross High School, Flushing, N. Y. ' Coyle Brothers·doing graduate work ~ include Brother R~chard MacDonald, education, at the University of Notre Dame; Brother Joseph Roos, music, at· Columbia University; Broth'er Thomas Gallagher, library science, at St., John's University, Brooklyn; and Brother Francis Ell,is, social sciences, at Siena College, Albany, N. Y. '
Organize Interracial Justice Conference ST. LOUIS (NC) - The National Catholic Conference OR Interracial Justice, with Councils in 35 cities, will hold its second national meeting in New York: in late August 1960. The organization plans to retain the . services of Matthew Ahman all executive director .and to establish a national office in Chicagi?, it was announced.
Church at specified hours. Ail that is in the past-Father. 'Waldron has a rectory a~dthe church ·has' been completed, all is magnificently evident to'anyone using the road from Centerville towards Hyannis. . . / .. . 'll th t' h has its share St.1 , . e pa IS . . . of fmancI~1 proble~s..So to Our Lady ,of VIctory GUIld 10 Center. ville~as it. must to all those ~n-. tere~ted' in parish work-eame the ,question:' How do :we raise som.e money. this Summer?
T~oone inember,'Mrs; RaouLH. Beaudreau, the answer was: simple-run Coffee Shop on Sun~ days, after Mass. Mrs. Beaudreau brought the idea to Mrs. Walter Baker Jr., president of the Guild and Mrs. Baker passed it along' to the ladies.
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. Experienced Le~der There were; as is quite usual, the cries of "No! No!" and "It'll never work!" -" but rince the standard objections were heard and :vigorously disposed of,' the good points of the pian were allowed to raise their bent, but unbowed, heads and 'fihally-as is .also 'q uite usual-'-even the most grudging diehar'ds became entliusiastic and willing to give the Coffee shop a good hard try,. Certainly Mrs. Beaudreau had no worries about 'it-'-having had six years of preparation while deal- ' ing with the problems of the Coffee Shop at St. Elizabeth's Hospital. And Mrs. :Baker'and the other Guild members rolled up their collective sleeves and said: "Let's go!" Our Lady of' Victory.Guild is blessed with an 'active, "attend - all'- meetings, core of some 50 members and they all take turns staffing the shop-with five members present every Sunda,y. Men Coo-perMe The Coffee Shop sells milk, orange juice, home made rolls, doughnuts and coffee and intended to open, for business after, every Mass on Sunday. But, as in all Cape parishes, the great
. At Center'ville, the Men's Club do' an" outshmoing' jop' of hand-' ling the parkirig with 'at least three men on; duty in the lot for each .Mass .. ',They had· to work out a-fiercely strict schedule of position and movement andl\riy-:, ' . . . thing'· that interferes with the ebb,. arid.flow of cars.between Masse. leads'straight fo chaos:' . .. 0.' _ '.' Doin.K .Very WeU , So the Coffee Shop revised its schedule 'and.·isopen only after tlte last, Mass·hut·.the Shop has been, and is, doing well, Eighty to 100 customers every ·SundaY .makes the ventur~ profitable. Of course tnisfirst month. has been helped' to a flying shirt by some , good fr:iends of the parish-with the Stop & Shop donating the coffee,'. White Brothers donating the milk; c'ream and orange juice and Mrs.· Baxter donating the doughnuts. With this start there is little doubt that 'the.C.offee Shop will keep. rolling along. _ and the' final credit must go to .the Guild . members who work hard and, what is"mote i,?portant, steadily.
.FUN£RAl HO.
469 LOCUST STREET FAll RIVER, MASS. OS - 2·3381
O~ROURKE'
Fune,al Home 571 Second St. F~II
River,Moss. OS 9~6072 .
MICHAEL J.McMAHON \ . . . Licensed Funeral Director Regisl'eredEmbalmer
Wilfred C.
. Jcimes E.
Driscoll
Sullivan, Jr.
Also Francis Carreiro, recorder; Bernard Days, treasurer; Lawrenc'e Meads, inside guard; Charles DeRiggs Jr., outside guard.
c.. P. HARRINGTON .. FUNERAL HOME 9" Plymouth An. Fan Rivei' OS 3-2272
SOUTH END ELEC'TRIC
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944 County. Sf. . New Bedford.
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Electrical Cont",ctolS . 464· Se~ st. FAll RIVER
OSborn. '2-2143 .
Inc. ' FUNERAL SERVICE
549 COUNTY ST. . NEW BEDFORD, MASS.
NICKERSON FUNERAL and MONUMENT .SERVICES
FtMet'_ BfHtW Fall River. MalIS: OS 2-2391 ' ROlle E. Sullivan JeffreyE, Sullivan
deputy grand knight; Leyden, chancellor; Judge Robert A. Welsh, advocate; .Ronalo; Roderick, wardeR. Gp.nr~e
Michael C. Austin
-JEFFREY E. SULLIVAN ~55& LoeustSt.
The reason for the dedicated work of the Guild, and of all the other Parish groups, lies in the deep affection and respect which everyone has ,for the pastor, Father Waidron-and in' the unselfish, priestly love whicn he ha~ f?l: ~is parish. . Our Lady of Victory is an outstanding and heart-warming example of true understanding and cooperation between parish and pastor. It must be a happy place to live. , . . - - - - - - - - - - - -..
Gracie,
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D.O. SULLIVAN &SON$·
Guild that constantly and successfuUy· stays with the irksome job 'of he'lping the finances. In addition to thE' Coffee. Shop, the Guild' displays and sells religious articles-Missals, Rosaries, .. and other small items--and will order anything else that anyone wants. This special activity is in charg~ of Mrs. P. N. Fitzpatrick. ' . Mrs. John Connolly supervised a roast beef dinner on June 20-' and the' Annual Bazaar and a. ~ke sale are in the works. Parish and.pastGr
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Diocesan Graduates·'Rec'eive Total of 52 Awar,ds...
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A total of 52 sCholarships have. bee'n won by gradua~es of the 10 Diocesan high schools. Leading· the list with 15'.:. ' . I 8cholarshipseach are Coyle ·High Sch<;>ol Qf TaunJon a~d Holy Family· in New Bedford. Gra~uat~s of Sacred Hearts. Academy, Fall River, earI,led Citizems' 1I Scholarship F04ndafive scholarships. Dominican tion' Sheila C),.D~rineIl;· Catholic Academy, also of Fall River, 'Worrten's Club.: followed' with four,· while, Y Also A~nes O'Neil,. Citizens'
Mt. St. Mary's, and Prevost, Fall EScl!t°lbartshh~pR FoundBat~odn; atnd e :. ego, n gewa er · d St Mary's Taunton R IVer, an. , ' c Iza 11 g CI b all merited three. 0 e ~. IU • . • Jesus Mary Academy, Fall . ~O~l1~lcbn .~~ad~myC s~~lOrr River\ merited two scholarships;' m~ u e " am.e e . .ar m~, rded to wmner of a scholarship from · an d one eac h was awa . I ., 'd H ear ts Aca d em y , F'al'r ~. Umon St.. ,Jean-Baptiste d AmeS acre h .. d St A th . , New nque; Joan A. Panek, Young aven an . n ony s, . Women's iComrriunity Club. of Bedford. ~Tiverton' rCitizens' Scholarship Highest Ranki!,g Foundati'oA and. Una Y. RayATTEND CONVENTION: Father FcrancisConnors, assistant at Sacred Heart Parish Graduates named most fremond, Frahco-American League. of Taunton and CYO director for the area, with CYO officers (left to right) Elaine Vall quently Three I S C'h 0 I ars h'IPS . for . honors were ' Thomas· Zandt, Richard Simmons, William Contreras. and Carol Duarte, formed one of the groups J. Mlkuhs, North Attleboro, a Mt. St. IMary's, Prevost, and Coyle graduate, and <?eorge J.. St. Mary's 'Students each merited representing the Diocese at- the New England Council of Catholic Youth Convention at Thomas . Jr., Holy. Family. th ree sc h 0 l' ars h'IpS. Manchester, N.H." . . f . Mikuhs won. scholarships M'l d N rom th an yn A nn K enne d y an d Brown" Pr?vId~n.ce an or Marguerite Williamson earned ea~tern Un!vedlties ~nd was ap- scholarshiJs It<; Salve Regina pomted to the Umted ~tates College an~ Margaret Rose SilNEW YORK (NC)-;-Fordham Navar Academy. Thomas mervan to th~ Catholic University seventh annual SYMCUSE (NC) - Smiling ever staged ~t the motherhouse University's ited the ~sgr. John. F. McKeon of Americal• All are from Mt. St. three-week Institute of. Missioa Sisters of the Third Order of St: of the Franciscan nuns in SyraSchol,arshlp for the highest rank- Mary's' Studies will open July 6. ing Holy Family student and .', Francis, nine of them. native cuse, was open to the public and ddT al awards from ProviAtPrev9st, Paul E. Lambert Hawaiians, strummed their ukeCourses will include the study was a -benefit for the new 8 I IOnCollege' and th~ school and Julien :R. Goulet Jr. merited leles. of the cultures of various mis'..' million dollar novitiate. d ence . . h 1 h" t h M' h alumni association. sc 0 ars Il?!'l 0 t e assac u.As the nu'ns sa~g ~ative ~eloTiUed "Sing and Rejoice," the . sionary areas, intercultural huOther Coyle graduates receivsetts. Institute of Technology. dI~S, the enthUSIastic audIen<;-e prograI1l included,' in addition 00_ man relations, advanced mising scholarships were Armand R. Maunce R.i Lamo~tagne won an qUIckly forgot the somber. reh- 'the. 'Hawaiian music sa c red sionary anthropology and linPoirier from Northeastern; John awa:-d frorry ~rovldence C?llege. giou~ habits, en~h.ra~led by the mUsic by the 58-member Sisters' guistics and' missions radio F. Sparks, Stonehill and the RIta Hut~hIllS, Jeanne Richard operation. '. mUSIC of thePapfic Isles. . .chorus; .Italiat:t songs ·wit.h acMassachusetts State' ;\ssociation and M ar~ ;Margfaret SwtelMch a~ . The unusual concert, first cordion and violin accompani~ of Emblem Clubs; John Cross a~ard wlm~er~ rom , '. ary s.. DE PERE (NC) - The new ment, a. "barber shop'~ q~artet III, Northeastern and the Fred MISS .Hutchtns scholars~lp c~me. and classical arias: $2,500,000 St. Norbert abbey, U. 'Ward Kiwanis Sch'olarship. frc.>~ Bryanit...College; MISS ~IchNEW ORLEANS (NC)-The. spiritual and administrative Also Thomas E. O'Keefe Jr., ard s,. ~ohn~on & Wa!e~ Bus!ne~ . Edward G, Sehlieder. Educa~ . The . Franciscan community, Providence College,i.- Peter G. School, MI~s Welchs, OmICr~)D ,tional Foundation: has 'given . founded in 'Syracu~ on Nov. 20; headquarters of.. the NOl1bertinea in, the United States, has beeII Gazzola,. Lt. James Mulcahy ChCalPt.er, DeD,lta .K appaJGammMa; $20,000 to Loyola University of 1860, 'now 'has houses in two dedicated here in Wisconsin. l I Scholarship; Charles P. Macaire I e IS .e,. e:m s - ary 'the South 'for its program in archdioceses and eight ·dioeeses. E hern Lt Joseph M. Levis Jr. Academy, won .an award from liturgical·music. The' check was It haS. Six missions in Hawaii, S:~olar;hiP; Russell P. Seneca, the. Citizen~" Scholars,hip Foun- presented by Frederick W. Sal- .including schools, a hospital and Alumni Associa'tion; John. E. dation and <j:,olette Dussau~t fr?m mon, presid.ent of the foundation, ~ lepr 9SU'ium. . Morrissey, New Bedford Iristithe ~ome'l s .Board of UmOil to Father Clement J. McNaspy, Mai~tenance Supplies tute of Technology artd Stonehill. HOASPtIt 81. S.J., dean. of the college of s acreul. H ear t s A cademy, . music. ' SWEEPERS - SOAPS , Holy Family Fairhaven Sandra C. Mandeviile , DISINFECTANTS Also honored at Holy Family" was named :winner of a scholar-, were Sandra L. Leclair, Cathship from the Polish Women's FlRf EXTINGUISHERS WHITE CASTLE (NC) - A Prescriptions called fer olic 'Women's Club and Alumni Business and Professional Club. legal holiday was proclaimed a~d delivered Association; John S. Bastoni,', Marc Cha'rron, St. Anthony's, here by the Mayor when Father New Bedforc~ Institute of Techwill attend !New Bedford Insti- Manford Schexnayder was orHEADQUARTERS FOR -1886 PUtl.CHASE'ST. nology; Robert A. Lawler, Amertuteof Techlnology as a schoIar- dained a priest in Hie _Order of DIETETIC SUPPLIES ican Legion' and Touchdown ship winnerl 600 Cottage ,St. V/Y 4-7439 - NEWBEDFORD -Friars M,inor 'by his uncle, Club.. , I . . .New Bedford , Bishop Maurice Schexnayder 01. WY 3-3786 . Robert Caron,' Touchdown Lafayette, La. Club; .Donald Benjamin, _S!andWASHlNqTON (NC)-A rec:' " ar~. TImes; ~thleen Morrissey, ord numberl of more than 700 Michael Fitzgerald, Martha educators from all parts of' the O'Leary, Lucy Francis and Janet country are I enroll~ in the· six Dufficy, all recipients of Alumni workshops ~ow in progress at Association awards. •. the Catholic :University of Amer. Saer~d. Hearts . ica, it has \>een announced by . The fIve wI~ners .from Sacr.ed Dr. Roy ,J. I?eferrari, university.: Hearts, Fall River, mcludeEhz-. secretary generaL" ". ilbeth Cetola; Seton Hall and i '" Stonehill; Lucretia Carreiro,
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Fordham to Conduct Study of Missions
Sistem:s Strum .Ukeleles and. Sing' 'To Aid Novitiate Building ·Fund
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Norbertine Abbey
.: Gran.t. for. M,usic -
.SCHOOL
LARIVIERE'S . Pharmacy'
'Ordination Holiday
DAHILL CO.
Recordl Enrollment
FRESH· BERRIES
I
.Refuse Zoning Permit To Atheistic School
IS SEL" I I PUNJ8HIUlNT
MIAMI (NC) - Dade County Zoning Board has recommended against 'the proposed erection in South Dade County of a Thomas Paine Children's Home and Education Institute. . ~Miami Beach atheist Joseph Lewis blamed "r.eligious fan'at': ics and super patriots" for the' recommendation ,against the ill! htution which' 'he and The Thomas Paine Foundations had propose~ for a,20-acre' tract near Redland. '
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WY man 9-6792 HEADQUARTERS FOR~ " COLONIAL AND TlADITIONAl 'URNIJUH
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LEARNING HOW: It's' a long process, becoming a good altar boy. In Sacred Heart parish, North Atth:~boro" it begins in second grade. In left picture, Sister Gabrielle Lucie shows Roger Achin, Knight Commander, the fine'points of bell ringing. Watching intently are, left to right, Raymond Collard, Grand Knight and Mark Fisher, Knight Commander. In left center picture, Sister adjusts the cassock of Apprentice Allen Lemieux. Behind them grouped altar boys await their instructions. At right center, boys rehearse the Asperges procession which precedes Sunday high Mass.
Employers Urge Just Conditions For .Workers
Candle bearers, left to right, are Gera,rd De Blois, Grand Knight and, Richard Le Compte, Knight. In rear, carrying, the holy water receptacle, is Robert Fregault, Kni~ht Commander. Leading is Alfred Bleau, Grand . Knight. In far picture, boys pr!1ctice moving the book at Mass. Robert Poirier, Grand Knight, -carries it, while Romeo Lallier, Grand Knight,kneels at left. Onlookel.'J are, left. to right; Richard P.insonnault and Edm~md Couturier, both Grand Knights. Boys are members or" the Knights of the Altar
Lots of 'Hard W~rk' Lies Behind, Angelic , Altar Boys, but They're 'Human Too
What transforms wiggling, 8Cuffting, tousled small boys into wen-groomed, sedate, LUCERNE (NC) - Some' angelic (looking) acolytes T'Sister Gabrielle Lucie, S.U.S.C. of Sacred Heart .Parish, 4 0 0 Catholic employers North Attleboro, knows the answer. She's the tiny controlling force of a dynamo of boys meeting here adopted a reso-59 of 'em, all proud members '9fKnights of the Altar, a national organization for altar lution urging employers throughout the world to p~ boys active in more than, the organization is indicated by Sponeorlll&' Groups mote just sociaI and economic 2.000 parishes throughout a different pin. Although Knights of the Altar conditions as a means of achiev- the United State~' and Cana:. Nine' boys at Sacred Heart are is af!. organization usually sponing social peace. " Grand Knights, and the other 50 sored by the Serra Club, a men's da. Hours of hard work on The employers, representing
S"mall Contributions Build Home for Aged
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CHICAGO (NC)-A home for the aged built by the small gift. of Americans of Lithuanian descent throughout the country was completed with formal dedication of an: addition by Archbishop Albert G., Meyer of Chicago. Holy Family Villa, residence for 135 men and women, was financed TT'ostly by little C'nntributions to the Lithuanian Roma. Catholic Cnarities here \ .... _<1 began its campaign in 1940 with nine dollars in the bank.
are eager to join them in their organization devoted to the fosaccomplishment. tering of voca~ions, in Sacred What lies behind_this perfec- Heart the group is a project of tion on the altar? The Knights St. Anne's Sodality, which prohave an official one hour meet- vides pins, certificates and The 'addition to the villa,' ing weekly, but in addition they 'awards for the boys. whose buildings are now valued must attend three practice sellThe imma'culate surplice worn at $2,500,000 cost about $600,000. sions and one Latin' class. Sister by every member? Those are Gabrielle Lucie and her assistkept in condition by the mothers ant, Sister Anne Raymond, also of the parish. take small groups for special work. The Knights are·.active in other parishes of the Diocese in addiThey're Human tion to Sacred, Heart: St. Although the boys are intensely serious about their serv- 'Joseph's, Attleboro; and Our ice on th~ altar, they're normal Lady of Angels, Santo Christo young Americans. Meeting:days and Holy Name, Fall- River, to name a 'few. Everywhere they are announced to all passing the church hall by a jumble of bikes are helping boys to realize the parked outside, and if 'you get grandeur of the religious life as they serve the priest in his most close to the scene of activity you're very apt to hear boyish . important action, that of cel' roughhousing-until Sister calls ebrating Mass. for order. Then amazing silence Gui~d , And the grown-ups helping"_ Albert G. Hamel, M.D., will sprea'ds through the ranks for at with the organization think, too, head ,the Catholic Physicians least 30 seconds. of words 'f Pius XII: "The group As the boys crowded together of Mass servers are the first Guild of Greater New Bedford for the coming, year. He was for group pictures temptation semina'ry." elected at the guild's annual. was too much, however. Such' a communion breakfast to succeed perfect opportunity for a few pokes, and shoves couldn't be Josepb Buckley, M.D. passed by. But ail was angelic Other new officers include ,again as the boys demonstrated WiUliam S. Downey, Jr., M.D., their knqwledge' on the altar vice president; .Ambrose F. Finitsell. One felt that Our Lord , nell, M.D., secretary; Archibald' AUTO BODY AND Was very glad to have his sky,E. Senesac. M.D:; treasurer., ' larking children close to Him.; VATIC.AN CITY (NC)-The GENERAL REPAIRS ' ~eruvian government has asked 75 Bellville Ave. WY 3-7661 for the canonization of Blessed New Bedford Martin de Porres. • . EAT : , Peru's Ambassador to the Ho.ly See, Luis Lanata Coudy, made the request in a petition he pre.ented to Pope John. That-R-Rich'N'YeHow-Rob.... Born in the Peruvian capital of Lima in 1578, the son of a fRESH COT-UP POULTRY' Spanis1t father and a colored mother from Panama, Blessed Martin became a Dominican FARMS Brother and ministered to the 145 Washington St. Fairhaven poor, especially to slaves' from Just 'off Route 6 Africa. He died in 1639 and was beatified in 1837. , 19 nation's, participated in the I 15th convention of the International . Union of Catholic Employers Associations. The theme was "Social Peace." In the opening address at the four-day meeting in Switzerland, Giuseppe Cardinal Siri, Archbishop of Genoa, called for • "peace based on order, an order which proceeds from God." "This order," be stated, "is based on moral laws', imposing respect of the rights and duties of all men . . . It remains the ' same for all men through all times." In other resolutions adopted ,at the convention, the Catholic employers stated: -Workers are entitled 'to share equitably in the profits of .the firm, and should be' given '. authority ,and respoIisibility according to' their' capacities. ' --Catholic employers consider it their duty to help underdeveloped countries, Jlnd to provide the means for adequate formation and training for those who are called upon to build up the economy of their country.
the part of boys and Sister go into tbe learning of Mass responses and ceremonies. At Sacred Heart even second graders begin the long process. These littlest ones are apprentices. AtJ they progress in knowledge they advance in rank. . Apprentices may wear cassock and surplice and a "K. of A." pin. As they begin the study of Latin they aavance tQ the grade of Page. Next step is that of. Knight, for which a boy must be able to serve low and high Masses. To be eligible for solemn services a boy must be a Knight Com..mander. Highest rank of all is Grand Knight. Each step in
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In a recent column,Bosiey Crow:ther,' film criti~ for
-, 6" :. " ~fHE ANCHOR .~
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, . Thurs., June 25, 1959
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The New York Times, 'decried the flooa of French'pictures '~,,:: which, he says, "are' becoming delibera,tely,erotic and laced . . with uncouth suggestiveness." No one will disagree'with·Mr. CFowther on that score. ' Of~east But in the same column" thecritke~pressed longiJigand TODAY-St. William of Monadmirationfor earlier French pictures,~hich "display~dthe \ tevergine" Abbot-Founder. 'He old Gallic capacit~ to be romantic and ~isque, ribald yet not 0 ' was' born it! Vercelli in 1085offensive t.o a person of intelligence ana taste." , Mter a' pilgrimage to ComposThe dictionary definition ,of ribaldIis: pertaining to or . teia,' he' settled between Nola . and Benevento. He was joined indulging in indecency or obscenity; coarsely jocular. It is . by. a group of hermit':'monks to difficult to. reconcile this with "a persor of intelligence and' whom he gave a rule based Oft' taste." ,i that 'of St. Benedict. The ru'le His sickeriing to hear and to ,read! such expressions as was adopted b~' the community "sophisticated" "adult" "fr~nk" "for the' ,discerning" under his successor. He died ill p42 near Nusco. . attached tQfiims that'~ more h~ri~st ~ppraisal would: c~n "suggestive" or "d<}ngerous to morals~i' H is disgusting to' TOMORROW-SS. John and hear and read a critic trying to justify such things asilot PaUl, Martyrs. According to trabeing "offerislve to a person' of intelligJnce and taste." The dition, they were brothers and implication .~hat' anyone who' approvest.,the picture, is ·officials in the households 01. Constantia, , daughter of Emsophisticated and mature; and, one whb disapproves is not peror Constantine. They were too· Might, 'is i~mature. intellectually 4nd er:not1,onally and put to death about 362 under esthetically. , :.", ' . • I Julian the Apostate when they'.. . Actually,·,it little rnattersl10w artistically'one makes refused to worship pa'gan' idols. It is also said th.at their martyr.,. 'an omeledi the: 'eggs used. ate 'rotten. And ·if certain types , .dom led to the'" conversion Of of films serve 'up sex in 'a' mariner that· bin be ·called ribald" •. ?' 'Terentianus, the' jtldge . w~ then tli~. skill, ofpresen~tio~does not Jh:mge the e~senti.a( .'. passed sentence on them. quality'of the pictures.. '1 Just'because'his manners may be gpod and his English' .' SATURDAY' ~ 'st. Cre~cens; . quite proper, the' '.'person of intelligerice ·and. 'taste" who Bishop-,Martyr,. He lived in the enjoys the ribald in 'pictures is riof atall'differEmt from the first'century, was a disciple'.of , . , ' St PaUl, and was mentioned by low-class uncouth ,Clout whg feersdisgustingly over the same St.. 'Paul 'hi his .writings. Tra'di:': .;' ' thing. If mlythi Il the former is hypclcrite, camouflaging .~oit relates' that 'he founded the. 'his-indulgence·under the.mask.of sophistication.' ,": ',". ','. By FatherJohn-L.Thomas~ S.J."'.'; ",';:: See. of Metz in Germany. The '''A person of intellig,ence and 'ta~te". has tOOmuc)l Roman Martyrology 'holds that , ,,' .. . . ..' ,A~t!ia~ti ~OI~~ ?f,Socioi~1 he. was. martyred under ·.Trajaa intell,igE)nce':and, mu~h' better :taste. ,th~n to . ~a~der .i n t o , SaiDt'Louls University' : : " ' - ' about ioo. .'" , :.,:;. ,~o~al.qu~~mi~~.F9,r'.h~11~t~ui~on~~ty.,to~now:w.Qere,he . . ,'How,:~~s.'.a mar.~ied·'~~il}~~:·:Wit~~'~:"'l!I~m"J~r'. ... ~:.:" : ; .. , " . ' ,'.'" l:;; ':IS~ gQmg. a~ the,,·courage ~. call thmgs b~ ,th~lr.,prOpel\~inother, assert herself without 'hu'ding, "mom's'" feeJin ,",' SUNDAY,~t: Ire~~~ll!·BI~". . .....Dames. ,.,' ".," ",", ", I .. ,., ",~:",;"" ," .. - . '. " .'. , ','" ,g~~ .. ~p'~Martyri';He . was'born.mA~I.·",; . . .',. ; '" ',' . : '., ,1.",,' ',',." >\-'. i ' .• ', P.f' coqrse som~r9aught~r~·bY:-AAsS .thelr,husbal)ds and rull' ,Minor, about 130, was educated ;" "':~A' ',!,~.' .' ' , " , " ."'1-.:"" ,........ ' . . " to. mC?ther. with, every pI:oble~;' but some ·,d(j,~try' 'to:.manage ":'by St.::Polyca~p.and"w<lS'Sent:~, .,,' ~ their ...own ,affairs and find' ,~dedkla'tion is ,not"c6n'tinUed cOn'; :a ',miss~()hary into Gaul, ~h~. ,, .. , ',' 1.,. A sur.v~Y'.' H~#aro>~rid' 'Ra~clif~~' u~d~tgradU3t~ this offends '''mom/~I, know. :irol ~v~r, tn~.ir ;c:tifl~rir:ii" t~:,'~: !'~ w;;i"s ,~r(i~i{l~d by' St. P~th~,,~~ "':" '. . . ' . ' .", ,.. " , . . . . . " ,f' '.'" . ' . . "'. 'th" .,-"., .. , ,.. 'I'; .,. sa~isf.acti6n.()f 'manip.ulllt~rJi.B~shop.. ',of;' Lyons:: ,Hebeca~~', '.' ,:revealstbat,',twenty-pn,e, ~I' ·cent.of :ClitholiC8 :at these ,one.mo ~r Wd19·.compalJ~s: 'th' '1' ' p.." 't""" "t'" "'''. Bishop·of'·Lyons , . ., . ., . .. . " " h " " h'l'd"" '" I '" l.._ .elf IV~S.. aren S m~s ... recog~. . ."'. In . '177 . " 'and"""'" ' ~. . . ,;'" .institutions~,6f,le~r'ning have "aposblsized. from. the. Faith. . . .er c. I .:: IS. not,. c ose :.~ 'nize;and respect: the,ifat:red'dig-'" "hIS preac~mg ,.converted much~ol)·· .' '.. """ Stiltistics':are; of',course, easy to rhisread. ·~t is. quite, :.,c~use.<daughte! dodges' prying :.. :nity .eacl':'child.'possessesas ,.;,·.F,r~nce,t6,'the"FaHI}.With,~'nu~;.;" '-.' ," , ' . ])Qssible that 'not 'al)"tmdergiadtiates ..were .questioned·'or. : 9.uestlons-: An,other: was "~l.'ush-:- ': persoQ;,'il,uDique"imag'e' or' G6d.·' ~~r .of:his fl~ck, :St:, IrenaeUj·.. , '. . . , ' . "". , .........• " . . ..•.. I . ' .' " .~!i,". :when-; '.<' ·:.'''I',~renta:L illl1:hoHt§;'th'efe'forcf 'w~nt:to,a'marty~:s d~ath,und8i ':: :'.' , ._ ,,:that'ilOtaILwho answered. did so.in 'a 'responsible way.':' .' daug~t~r .. e~:" . 'is'del~giJted';and t~rripofa'ry>'lt', Septimus·'Sevei'us·in 202; . : .' ' " , . Granti~~ this, t~e,s~~t!~tic,.is.~tfll~i,stur.bing: .. , ,ro.1le~ 1D ,a Ba..;; is given to parents not fo'r'their'" :.- ", i'''- , ' , . , . .So,me 'of- tbe,.Cathohes,attendmg,non:;-Cathohc, collegefl. ;P~. Care.co':lr~ 'own benefit~'buf; to' ;reeve the " .;MqNDA;Y '-; !5 S. P~~er .3 " ',' }~res~Jl..l'ply;.riQ~p'rep~re~'t~.liv~"£hei~,~all'th:insJ.lrr,oundings" ~!lstead;'of se,~k7 . child. To seek,toprol6ng 'it un,; ,P~~l" Apo'stle~':'M~r:tyr,s.;·irh:h . ; .which, if. not in 'opposition to Catholicism; are~and this. is mg heradvlCe. ' duly, .or to 'use it in a' manner' feast. commemorates the: martyr": ' . , , ' , . . How. should one' .thathinders' the ch'iid;;i groWth ,d6ri1 6f: the great' Apostles:~t:· . perhaps an-even greater challenge-:---indifferent to::itorhandle', ,'th is" ,toward Independencl(i5 ,~, seriooa Peter the first Pope, w3s' cruCi~ " derisive toward it. .' . . . . . :-'. .·problem? ':injustice: " " " ", .'.. fied with his head downward s~~~s ~rue' t~~t'tre-Catholic' attending' 3 ')JeCul~ . ,. Y?U .probably' .: . ;p~re~th~ ,is: a. ,service',~ear,the;':\.'riiiinphal ~~y at,~ eolleke' does,nothl;!.v~ the be'st Catholic rhentality..If.. he .di~.' . real,l~e t .~.a~ . .. t1~ll·~~g1?- wh;lC.h Jather~ a~d ~o~h-:, o!d~r o~. Eml,leror.. ~er,o.. H~' w~ '. , . "'",' . , '., '.' . ".'. youre '. puttmg .' ,ers are 'prlvIleged to cooperate burled m. the· Vahcan, O!ltb't. then . ~e wo~ld be,··gomg Jo, a.Ca!?oh~ ~ollege. Tli~: oJlly "me on thesp'ot, . with· God in the developrilent Of' same aay,"also .under or~er.Cll . ,e~cepbon mlg~t'be for one .wh?SlmpIYr ,could' not.get,;the ~~ldred, Eve.ry· . a'l1?-atliie chr!sti~n."., ' , _..... ' ~ero,St. '~,auI, who earlierwal ,'" . eour,se;, he . des!red 'at '3 Cathohc collegFand thiS would, ,tUlle .. I wnt~,..... . ':... The sec?n~sourceo! th~:.prob- one :.of.,~e greatl<st. persec',l~ . apply probably only to 'colleges of' technology. . ',.. ',' :;In?;,thu!g ?fi .thl.qUes~lOl'!,} re-lem is.~ ;ml5Co~c~ptl~~ of· the ... ~f ChnstIa\'l~ Pllly to ,be ~11.'~e- . ,1"8 . -hi" ' .. / h "t d' t ' I·' .. de f 'th ,.celve.mdlgnant'letters all the--meaning of ina'i-riage:':' When' .1!lously_ co,:!vertec,f,:.was put.,-, r!g... tW~YlU\,.~ s. ~hent . ~s·~~tl.~~y fma d"'?~ he. ·:w:a'Y:from~laska t~ 'the Pan8~·"So,ns~li'n!i d~iignt~rs,'rr;:a.rty,:th~,,·'dea~.by~ets~?rd of!.' ~he 08ti~, " , ,erence ?~ar -:r.e~glOn a IS:3. ill~e~. o~n .,OILt e D1aC,analZone,·~?d~ubt.I'l1get primary..,interest'ana·'~loYalt1: '~ay:- .,.,.,.':;:' ", ", ...;." ..,. . campuses 'of great. schools. But, surely'. thIS IS not the som~from·Hawauthlsume.To"mustnecessarilybeceriiered,on "':, "·'·.u , . : : , '. ..~, 'i",' " '< : desire'of many of th~ educators at these:lschools: Dr: Pusey,' . make .' my' positio"n clear,. from .their :·ownmarriage:The·n'ew···';r'UES~AY--:-"Feastof.the.~9m:-, .. " . Presi~ei1t- o,f iI~rvard,<h'as ealledullon hisst~dentsto have,·the outset,let me'say. thata·f,ainil~.,cirele·tn~y:;,l!st.ab.!~~·: :~~morat~o.n:of~t.. pa~l:' Apos~ "the ability 'to speak the' word Godwitl1outreserve or·em-. ,:~~~:;~e~li,::::e~~r~o~em~~, :u:ei~;~::ii:r;~Itmha;:~~f~:: '. ',:,wEIiN*SDAY~The'Mqst~ / .. barrassment~" . [ .. , ' . li~ns of good mothers, t~ere are ,right to privacy a~d. lildeplmd- 'eiou~ Blood. ThiS fea~t ~,as e~ . There ar~,. unf?rplllately, others· atl these· schools who millions of good mo!he~-m-laws. ence. he miJrtIag~'bond ,'existll . tab,1Jsh~d. by Pope' PIUS ~x III do not take that attItude and. these can do harm to the But there are exceptions, and between. husband and wife not hon?r of ~the Blood of O~r t . d C th r, t b tt k ' G d d" '1" as you suggi!st, a "mom" for an between' parent a'i1d' child.' ,/' , SavIOur which "Was shed for the uns ea y .a. 0 ~c,.no y ~Ir a acs~? 0 a? re Ig~on . in-taw can be devastating.' '. . ' redemption of mankind. but ~y their l~dIfferenc~ to <??d. They ~Ive.the ImpresslOn Of course the moth~r-daugh;" .' O~ Is ,Eftoug~' that If t~ey, wlth all their abilIty and maturity, do not need .ter combination is not the only . ~~~' re.dlrechon or ',rech,sn- standing emotional patterns are God, then why should the stud.ents. Suchl an oblique sniping relationship {n which "momism" . ,ne1J~g ormterest, affech?n, a~d involved.' Mothers who 'are on religion ,does greater harm than a frontal attack. 'occ~rs, though' it ~ ~roba~ly ~e: }o~~~tr from the old fam~ly clr- "moms" have generally fonned . . A, II . t d t I '. ' .' " presents what socI.al, SCIentists ,c~e::t,~ .., t!I~:. new ,ta~fS. hme, It a partnership with their :chil'. ~O ege s u en , a ,so ~nJ0y's a. ~erta,ll) am~unt ~~ call the ideal type. At 'thesame.iriV'~~y~~:~weaning,?roce~s,. a. t:e:-" 'dren rather than with their hus':free~?m from hom~ .and }aIl1~I~. tIe~,!I.~ver beforeexpentime, marriage is not the only ,d~f~rut1f),I1:,of :relatlO~sh,lp:~."be:- bands., 'Since' their childI'en enced. A~d some persons,l;Jave,llot.the str.ength of character Situation that reflects its barm- tween. parents and children,' . become,the major source of the." to do anything with thIS 'freedom but turn it into license-- ful effects., ·¥9the~s, whQ .have ref.used to . enjoyment and fulfillment, they 'b d f'd I . . .' I". ' allow their daughters to ,grow . feel "crushed" when marriag~ a an onment o. I ea s and st~ndard$ anp God. It IS unfor. t , I~ag~ of God . up, or who tend to regatdthem threatens to change the situation. ' '. tunate that these do not'kI1?lw that tru~ education means '. Ma~y vocatIons to the ,reltg- 'as'projections"of themse'l'ves are 'l't t 'd ." . .r' . .' 10US bfe are apparently effect.' " .' Hence their daughters win th e ~b I. I Y .0 . raw.. on .one s ,own\strettgth t~ ,follow the iveiy discouraged by the refus- ,~ot, b~ely to redefl~ethls rela- 'have' to make the break" patil~nt- . conVlCtlOns of the. mmd' an.d the correct cpojces of the will al of parents t-o allow their tlOnshlp ~hen the!r daughters ..ly. Qut firmly asserting 'their ,in'Knowledge' of the Faith and holiness of life must, be daughters to lead a life of tllliir. ~arl'Y. Ntheltthehr dbO sdome. daudg,h- 'depen.dence and the Qrimacy. of / . ' . I . . . ...rs, so a us an s soon IS-' th . ) t h e two-edged sword accompanymg every' CatholIc through own. , In such cases, other rea-, cove r 'they' ,ve' marne ' , d t"wo. wo-' to ·their spouses .. .elr d thloyalty. ' ., life. It is dis,astious as statistics show to see som t . " ~ns are usually given, but t~ese 'men thou h 'on . h id .... ~ ..an _eir own marriage. This, ill '. . .' ' . . ' I e en ermg tend to be merely convement ,. g e s ou ""'. :a matter' not Of choice' but 01. college WIthout It. . ·rationalizations.' enough for any man. " s ilI1 ple justice. .i. ,,, ... Some daughters,' howeyer, do' ----::----;---;----:-./1""-,..----:---+,-.. . .- : - - - - - - ThiS problem of momlSID m. wish toredefiJ'Je the situation but . I repeat; the marriage bond· . . . . I . , r e l a t i o n t o m a r r i e d daughters fih~. this .difficult because they exists between husband and : . ; ", . ' stems from several rather ob- don't wish to hurt "mom". What wife: not. between parent, and vious s~urces. In,the first place, can they do? -, '.child. A true mother is.'proud of I,. '. '. . 'j, .'. some mothers I:I\isconceive.their If th.ey· value 'their mariage, the independence of.het;~augh~ole as parents. Now the prImary their program' is ·'Clear. "Mom'" ter, for then she. reco'grri'z'es that , ' , , . I . pu~pose .of . pa~entho~d .is to.. is going tq have to .be. educated; she has rai'seci a woman.' , OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE·DIO'(:E~E.OF. FAU--R'VER assIst chIldren m theIr devel- She must learn the difference Publishechveekly'by Th'e Catholic'Pr~~s of thelDioc~seof"F~il River . ?pmen~ toward maturity" t.hat is, bet~een selfish possessiveness New' Provi 4.10 Highland 'Avenue I , m theIr gradualassumpuon 'of and true Christian:love"She may ARLINGTON HEIGHTS (NC')' Fall River, Mass. OSborne 5-7151 . responsibility, self-control, i~de- \fee!a'litti~" hurt· for a time, 3S -F a the r John W. Staftor~, PUBLISHE'R . . : (p,endence" and, .self-determma- the .ilewlY 'weaned infimt feels C.S.V.; a native Oklaho~an, ~ : tIon.~his requires,long. ~ears. of ,h~rt" but- her' marrj'ed' daughter been installed.' ,as Provincial Most Rev. James L. Connolly, D1D.,',PhD.unselfish n~rt~re! a~feetlOn, ~n-, h1is no choice if she,really'tirl- . Superiorofthe'Chic~go; iSrov- . GENER~L: MANAGER. , ASST. GE~I.E,RAL· ~ANAGER .. structlOn~ ,d~sclphne, ana' gUld- derstands the meaning of ~eince of the Clerics of St. Viator. Rev. Daniel F.Shalloo,'·M:A•. ', .......Rev. John P. Driscollanc~. In av~ry real sense, par-~arl'iage bond. ". . FatherStaffor9-,llucceeds,Father' . , .M.A.'NAG.'.ING\ ED. ITdp I ,., ".ents ~ust aim., to.,WQrk ,them~' Matter of Justice . '. John F. Brown C,S,V. who was . . .:~l'!'~s,outof.a J99· ' . ' ' "';'0£ course 'the problem Is"':s:e 'Provincial S~peri()r' 'fQlo 10 '. Hugh J. ~oii::le"'· I .' . .The.,r~ward fflr taeit' seWesa clifficult to· hal'ldle because' 1011&-" ; years. : ' ", ," ..' . .. - ._
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'Our New ,Pope:
From POPE JOHN xxm: An AuthoriUve BiographY'By Zsolt Aradi, Msgr. James.I. Tucek, and James C. O'Neill. Copyright, 1959, by Farrar, Straus and CU~hY, Inc., Publi~hers.
PART J.
A New, Pope The brief, bent finger of white smoke' announcing the election of Pope 'John XXllr curled from, the stovepipe .chimney of the Sistine Chapel at 5 :08 p.m.,' October 28, 1958. Fifty thousand people in St. Peter's Square watched with doubt and susp,icion as it disappew:ed in the wind. Millions of others around ' the world' watching television or listening to the' radio shared the doubt. The world waited until someone more authoritative, some t h i n g.. more definite than the changeable chimney' .smoke , confirmed' the hOM that j~ d~~ a pope had been 'elected.·,
SON OF THE SQ,IL,
I
When Angelo Roncalli set out for the seminary only five flliles from his home, he W:as in fact beginning a long journey to far p lac e s and"-great heights. Born into a large, bustling, happy peasant family, he h~ come to occupy the loneliest office on earth. who his ancestors were? Ye~ no one can be completely understood' unless there is a knowledge of. the "family' that bore and raised him. . Angelo 'Roncalli was born -in the village 'of. Sotto"il Monte on ,November '25, 1881., The house ::' where he was 'b~rn still stands.
ANGELO RONCALLI,'who·hM beCome Pope John XXrrr. was the third child and firstborn sOD· to Giovanni Battista and'Marie Anna (MazzOla)' ·RoncaIli, above. '"
,'." . Grea.t JOY' , . ~n hour passed. In that hour' .' ; the crowd swelled to more than ers before the hungry youngsters highest and in many ways lone:-' 300,000 in front of St.' Peter's. began eating. 'liest post in, the world - the It Was definite-there was new At' the age of six Angelo went papacy. pope. One question p~lled like to the' neighboring village of At'11 he was strong, healthy, it rip tide at the sea of people: Carvico to take lessons with the used to hard -work. As the son Who was he? ' parish priest. He walked the few of peasants wliose~ sense of pracCardinal Canali's long awaited miles 'daily,' 'carrying his shoes ticality is accompanied by a,deep appearance 'oil the balcony of St'whenever posslble., 'Another., .reSIHi!.ct, for, men of ,leiirning, ~ Peter's brought a hoarse cheer froni the waiting thousands. '" - Pope John .XXIII ' and in truth we did not. Ours PoP~., ~t,,:Pi1.!-s, 'did .the '!l8~e .... ~~Ol!gh~ wit~ hi~ innocence and , .."1, anno'unce to' ·you' a ' great' , ' ' ' ' ' ' ' . " was adignifled and happy pov- thing when he 'was a boy: curiosity. The hitter helped him .Arigelo;'rof"~ourse, did not'k~o'w '. in 'his "studies' and the'· former ' joy," the short Cardinaf"said in the crowd. The heavy set figure' . 'erty." , " this at ,the' ti~e;For him'~lt 'protected him. Latin. "We have a Pope." Wait- of tile 'former ,Patriarch of Ven- .', :'Nothing '~ExtraOrdinary The" ,rest "of. his, family' rei!ig il moment for the uproar to . ~~, ,lopll;ed sma!l on thE;. ,~e~t '",", .when'~someone" rece,!1tly ,ask~~ the; only sensible, thing. ,to do,"to mained in or near Satta' il ).\'Ionte. fAde~ he "continued: "The' mQst stone 'loggia.. :l'!~is 'w,as'a, diff~r- one of, ~is. n'ieces 'to. show him save shoe leather. P 8t d t The brilliant career of Angelo eminent' and'" reverend ...:...." .. his eilf milli in "ap'p'earaIiCe" from" 'tlle ~oom '\vh~~~''- the '''younit oor u en Roncalli in no way altered the vOice'" broke" for; a" m'oment: l\is prede~e'sSor., ' '. : ... \ ';',' ":'An~~io li:vE;d'as',~,hoy, shtr i!om~ In his early school days the liie of his brothers arid' sisterS. "An~elo "Giuseppe Cardinal :As he wtoned 'hiS first 'bless~' mented:':"Oh; we 'are rio thing' but ' Rbncalli/' ' .. ' . , ,,' :'. big to the'Cit)' of 'Home and'to' pellSant's... · tIt,was ,as, if to say; future" pope ',:was not, a part~cu- The ,brothers today are not well , "Tlle' smail figure on ':the bal:: the world/the crowd knelNn th'e '.','rher~'s not!J.i..ng extraordinlilry, litrIy"distmgliisned' student: In';, t6' do' nelt even 'in easY circumfact,': according to ,the ','vatican ," stan~lt; , .' ' , eony retired. Gentlemerdn wait:':' glare 'of 'floodlights. The solemn about, us." ,Her. frank statem~nt q~ty, ,(ia,iJy" I/Osserva.tore, ,llq~ "".;' WiSh F'ulfilled big came' out 'and' the crowd' moment over,peop'le,cheered was d~V:oidof'a;"y class co~~ his priest instructor had watched as a great banner was, "the new' "pope again '. as they sctousneSs' 'of' false humility.' It mano, r~asbn'''''to compiain' about "hi:s ., An example of the family'. unrolled and hung from'the edge struggled up off their knees. He was a statement of. fact. lack: of 'conscientiousness: and present status was given whem of 'llie' stone railing of' the hal':" did"not remain long· on th~ bal,The' 'fact,. however, 1s one of news of his election to the . papacy ·was. announced. His siscony. It'was il'iat of the'iate cony, the ;,fundamental' xealities , of poor study habits.' The priest, it iS,reported, gave ter, Assuntil, 68, said she natuPope Pius XII. The iamiliar Be~oW', a' group, of seminarians EUrope: • 'The: p~asantry which th~ young .Q~y a note,to a neigh~. rally wanted to 'go to the coroCoat (}f arms with its' dove' of watching "hiM leave' ,the .loggia 'outnUmbers'the rest of the in':' Peace and' the three' Symbolic began talking. One asked: "Ron- . hilbi~rits of 'the Old" World re- boring priest for whom Angelo's aunt kept' bouse, asking' him to nation: . mountains of Faith, Hope calli, ·the new' Pope - do you mains' ,the 'well . out of which scold the boy. But Angelo, sus.:. ,But she was_ worried how she Chari~,. fluttered ·in the night know anything about him?' What Euro~e renews itSelf. . , could maKe th~ trip. Her monthly ak"'," .: " .. 'kin'd.' of a'man is he?" • pension amounted to 13,000 lire :' "T9~~ ~:P,ea~nt" families' 'of peeting, ,the "contents, faHed, to deliver it. (about $20) and the cheapeSt " ' It' was as if ~ll Were' ",aiting ~OD of> Peasants' '. ·Europ~,.: ,withou,t . m~an!l of Wh,ile not a ,brfiliant ,student at for' Pius' to", step out' ~nce' more 'Pqpe John XXIII;" 'Angelo achie'v'ing"s6cial prominence and the 'time, he 'later acquired an roundtrip' .fare' from ·nearby oil'the balcony. 'Lean ,and ·Wl. Giuseppe " Roricaili, is the' sOn cOnceil,irati..~tfon jh¢' daily' proi}.:. " ," • . ' : Milan,to Rome cost 14,000 lire.,,' Her desire .and that of tbe he' 'had' stood there often during of, . a ·'typical European, ~easarit' leID',~-of; '.1ivi ng,· rerpain in. the appetite for ,books. ~e was a w~ 'P~st>.19,Ye~rs, while;:col\Wl,~,. family..' Some' would 'say that shadow~.:'lt;is).<mlYwhen a mem, norm.!!l'boy a~d he ?I~ a gre~t 'three' surviving brothers, Save~ deal of -work In addition to hiS" i-iO' 74'· Alfredo 69 'and Giuse pe'''' of a Pope whose broad, dramatic his father, was a' 'sharecroPJ?erj her ':emerges . i~'a', briIlian~e t d' N - E uropea~ pe,asaQ t '64,Iwere: ' , , P , ~,q .Ies..,,' 0 fulfilled before they ges'tures' , 'never faHed' til' sti.r' other-s ''th'a,t lie, w~~ a .f~rmha~.~:, ~~~ible, J?:, w.~ ,.w~i~d that.; the None' of" these - expressions' 'IS merit of' lluGh'- a family becomes :amlly wO~~d let, any ~vailabl~...,. really 'liad" time to worry. They ~D10~f~rs:~i~t Blessi :'. '. ,,>'~ quite· ' ed the"'£,ope D 's: f 'Irs t.'InVI'tacorrect:· Although ,'. 'ne 'itnowri.:. .....mllnpowel" "" ",'.. ';, ," be wasted. :' " .. ) <:'"re,"elV: , .'., DI',. " ", ''then ainan In'white' came bilt. ~orkea 'the lan~.Of;.~: n'o?1eIrian,'~:' '... ':, '" Fi!]t h(;i, r,': ' , ' ~t the age of 11 he le~t horne" tion and traveled to Rome in. a td enter the' Bergamo semInary:,' 's'peclal railroad coa~h. In St. Cheers 'went up as the short. ~e w~ ?b~e ~o bU!'hl~own~~~~ ,Al:\gelo, .Ron,ca14, came' from 'Entering the 'seminary' did ndt Peter's they Sat with native digh~ay:~ ,~ig,u~~,o~ Pope J.,?hI,l,XXIII ':~:.' h~~ ,~\m~.lr .~~~tot~"vy~s,~~~r sqch .a/fam.ily., Hjs, fat~er, Gi..~ neeessarily mean that the young: , nity: close to the ,Pope's ·throne. moved :;;lowly to the front of the "" '," . , : '... "aIgu' Battista Roncalll,. ow~~d balcony. ·A heavy' embroidered It IS .a d6cu~eht~ faft. ~hat nothing whe.n,Al}gelo, was. borp. Ron~a~~ ~ould, be a priest. A"" When' it was over they restole !tung aro\lIld ,his neck. Roncalhs H.ave·llved w'tIle bttle He, .worked the land of Count semmary ~n, those days was the ·turned home. Angelo Roncalli Those .o'n the side saw that it $Own" of So.tto .il 'Monte (under ' ,.ottavio Moriani. Later hjs only place a 'Catholic boy could 'remained in Rome. And with him remained the experience of rose like 'a half':'hood at the back t?e mou?-taw) In n?rthern Ital~ , father' was' able to buy a farm- receive higher education. 'of his ,shQrt neck. The white , smce Pletr~ Martmo Roncalh house on' the edge of town', savWhen h~ left' .for Bergamo-- 'his first years as a boy, the skullcap sat on' ~e I?road, ,head. came there w 1429. . only five miles away-he' unhappy memory of his family and . _ ing cent by cent to acquire it. Its rim disappeared 'under' the his deep devotion to soil and One ~ouI~ ask the. Importance Today, the Pope ,and his three knowingly pu, his foot on the crimson 'stole as the new' Pope of a historIcal famIly. tree for brothers jointly own 70 pertiche pat~ that led, him to the courts people from which he carne. lifted his hands to acknowledge lUlY: Il?pe· ~hat does It matter of land which the brothers farm of kings, to difficult diplomatic (Part II - A Seminariam triumphs and ultimately to' the Becomes a Soldier.) ~d/fW?T':i):;";"';"~';';""":"""":';,:::::'~2::;;;; for a,modes~ living. ' " Angelo WqS the third child of a family of 13 and the first boy. The very first day of his life provided an example of the religiousness of the atmosphere and home In- which he grew up. His parents did not want a single daY to pass before he was .baptized. His mother, Maria '. Aima Mazzola, left her bed a I few hours after giving birth and walke'd with her husband to the parish c·hurch. Despite the fact that a wind 'anq rain storm was raging they 'remained at the church unti~ , the' pastor, Don Francesco Rebuzzini returned. 'After the baptism; the infant was taken by his uncle godfather, Saverio Roncalli, to the altar' of the',Madonna and placed under her protection.' . Little Angelo lived the life 'of . the village children, often being left in the care of his older sisters. His mother, like the village tief the supervision of the TRApp ... women do today, worked along~e6 1\1\ • ,, ' ' ,'ST MONKS of the Abbey 01 the Gene side her husband in the fields. Trappists have been famous for and great care in baking give When the family moved into their home·made bread for cen· . this bread its rare; superb the new l:Io'use during Angelo's l: sixth year his mother gave 'up "tu.ries , '.• Monks' Bread brings flavor. Monks' Bread, tall and IT WAS IN ,THIS modest 'farm home',in Sotto Monte, working in the fields becauSe back,a long lost satisfaction - slender, firm in texture, brings the family had increased. Trathe simple joy of eating sub- ,an exciting new disc~JerY in "Und~r the Mountain" in Lomoarqy, Italy that the future warmth and Christianity stantiai, hearty bread. Rich in- honest good eating to your ~ope 1'ohn xxgi: Vf~ bOrn, No.v~l;ler· 25, '18$1. .T,he' Ron- ditional ruled the house., Each day at t~e iredients. skillful' kn~ading, family table. calli family has lived iJ:l. Sotto iI,).fon~"for ~re"than,,500 ·ringing of the no<>fi' 'Angelus his years. ' mother led the family in pray-
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'SPRINGFIELD (NC). - T h .: . Illinois Veterans, of Foreign' .. Wars honored as its "Citizen of "the Year" a nun who saved 23 children in last December's Chicago school fire' by having them crawl· across her body to safety. . Sister Mary Helaine, who W31l· a teacher in Our Lady of Angels school', suffered severe burns ill her heroic action and has under-. gone some 50 skin grafting operations.· She still is not fully' recovered. '. . . The Veterans' nomination re-o ported" that the \ ~ister first brought her own' class .doWJl. from the school's se~ond' fl~i:. 'to' safety; then ·made. three mQre tJ:ips up the ~laming st!lirwell . and led more than 50 'other chil~' dren out. '" .' . '.,,, "On her last trip," the nomination said, "the .stairwell . w.~l1 burned away from the flooring; leaving a large gap over an inferno. Yet this brave nun placed her frail body across this gap so that 23 other cnildren could crawl over her body and thus beat cer,tain deat!'t."
SENIORS' nAy: Attleboro District No. 4 of Fall River Diocesan Council, Natiori'al Council of Catholit' Wo'men, sponsored Seniors' Day at Qathedral CaJP,p: with ~, Dialogue Mass, .sporting events',' a cooko).lt and Benediction: First t~ enjoy t'hewater.are· ,jane Kelley, l~ft, and ,Jean. GUlan, both o.f Mansfield.· .. ,. " t, :-' . ' ".'
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,', Women's Council Storts' Excba'n ge .Progr~m . ,WASHINGTON (NC) - The Richmond Diocesan' Council 'of Catholic..' Womel,l '. ,ha!l.. donated $600 to the. National. Council' of Catholic-WomeL for initiation of • leader.ship.;exchiulgt!· program with the Catholic women of Latin Americ~; , . '. , In makirig ,the' donation Mrs. George Bain of Vienna,ya., Richmond council president, said the . · council p.1ans ,to. ,c'o'ntinue regular ~" . annual 'conttibuHonst6: the Latin American exchange program. She noted that'in January His Eminence'· J Richard Cardinal Cushin~;·.. A.rc,!ib1~hol??f;Bosto~; called 'on:th,,'Cathohc :women.of· · the U: S:;ii'd:~t{trn[tlh~ir:;;tf~n£iort to the'Cflufcn 'iri'Liitiri -Rm~ica'; as·a major concer'n of fh~ 'Holy See at the present time. ,
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Three Latin students" 'at :Mt., ;' Carmen' Moran y Velasquez, ·St. Mary's Academy, 'Fall RilTer, a' guest:.stude!lt 'from" Chiie 'ali'd' have been named. top scorers in' . a-' member· '.>f the senior class, . annual nationwide ;examinatioris'· " 'attained' a'''maxima cum-laude" 'of the Association for the' Pro- :iating, as did'Mary Brum, ftesh-' .motion of Latin: ..... " map. l\1'ary, daughter of Mr..a·nd . " . Mrs., Joseph Bruin, '674 South· . PhylliS., Pytel, fr~s?man: won. "Main .Street, '. is a graduate of' .a .gold pin for attaInIng ~lgl1est 'St. Louis' grammar school.' , academy score, together With the. , . .. .' . rating "summa:-cu~.laude" fo! ... Oth~r_ c;erFficate winnet~ ~n:" superla,tive merit." Daughter of ~cluded • trr~estudents .recelvIng·· Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Pytel, 100 . ','magna cum lau<w" mention apd. Cong~essStre~t, Phyllis gradu:" 10 ea.rning '-'cum laude" notice. , .ated from Holy Cross grammar Participati~n in the exami'na:"; school and'is a. scholarship 'stu- tions is an annual project of th~ dent at th~, academy. academy Latin department.
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while. "Everyone, young or old, is entitled to a let-down from tension to an n n k.Cn kin g of the spring of't e n tim e s w bun d too tightly. Aft e r weeks of utter rei a X a.·t ion; though, we've no'tited b 0 r e _ doin set.] in, par tic u _ larly .with. active you n g teeners. Toe young for summer iobs, too o!d for childish play; they becpme restless. This Year's Victim And so,' Simon' Legrees that we are, the' Head of the House
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,By Mary Tinley Daly .. . .' . . . This time of year, school is.anathema. With "school's . I . out" abandon, books are stashed' away; consigned to gather dust. After the aplomb of eighth gr,ade graduation, .the near-high-schoolers literally aildfigOratively take their shoes off. Swimming, ten- can be had I .' ' in a Catholic summer nis, picnics, and .long hours school ot in a business school for of do~nothingness stretch' a fee. It ,can be taken in a' sumahead. That's good for a mer public. school, included in your taxes. .Six we;eks of ba$ic typewriting doesn't make a typist, of course. But it does' instill a complete knowledge of the keyboard. After that the student can 'liter-' ally "thi6k at the machine" and piCk up ~peed as .he· goes..' It b~comes as a!1'tomatic as breathing. No longer As there'the laborious' "taking 'pen ill hand"" for writt~n communication. With a' . type~riter thoughts. '.flow, • fingers become an' automatic extensi01 of the mind. . . "Now is the Time ...There'~ the deadly dull' beginning, of cburse: the awkwardness of lifting finger after finger and making rows of asdfg hjkl; quer-t yuio p zxcvb nm.,! Then the strengthening of the 'outside two fingers on each hand with and I have long had a di~tum qw as zx' po';y l . at our' house:' after eighth grade . I everybody;:: .signed up for a The firist few ~eeks,are~' not six-week course in touch typing; interestin1g, we concede that. beginning in late June or early . Howev~r'l wh'en, those' fingers .July.' . . . '. begin to' respond, to "find" the Results, we have fpund, are' right keys witnout 'any c()nscious well worth' the small incon\;'en:': effort, th:ere is ,the' satisfa<;:tion ience of learning ,the .skill. Like. of real aF c 9 m pl!shment. , 'swimming.ordrivinga car, irs .Comes the day' when, over and amiost a necessity .for modern over, the' embrYOllic' "typist can' . living. And· like swimming .or· dash off j"NO\\ is t,!le time for' •driving,' once mastered,' typing all guod men to come to the aid becomes an automatic, ·lifetime 6f'th~'p'~r!Y""':"'tli~ oidstllpd~Y asset... . . < . that is s~iP a good exerciSe.:: . Our Ginny is .the .'.'victim". as After six 'weeks, Ginny 'prob:she: regaljds it,. thi!l, year. She .is, ably willI. not be able to rattle .:and '.is: not·, 100kil1g forward to. off, "The q,uick brown fox jumps ·the ~xperience; M~.ny a time' over the.1azy: dog'~ (~sing every :during . her eight .grades of lette'r of the alphabet). Certainly 'school, ·she has turned to' one or. she:w.ill·\not find that finge~1l anoth'er of Us fot' help in typing take oveI" completely. That re.lists, notes, prQgrams and the' quires much,'""much practice. like. She, has ,seen her 'sisters' I' • . and brot,her present, with a min": "fie believe, though, that Ginf ff 1 ny, like the. other children' at our· imum 0 e ort, neat y·<}one term house; Will be'glad-to have this papers,' get preferential treat- typewritirig skill instilled into ment for summer -jobs because I 'they could type. "I just don't. her subconscious ,mind, to be . know how you remember ~hich called upl at any time 'in . the . finger goes where," she says. future.: I "I'll never be able t<,> do it. I" h f Besides ..." a,nd the' real reason Fa mout Dol comes, I'll have to go to school, Summei- activities of ·Falin the ·summer." mouth Cii-cle, Daughters of IsaWe have a "this-is-where-we- bella, include making cakes for came-in" sensation as she mar- the USO in July and sponsoring shalls' all the excuses used by a food dale Friday, July 10. the older children before her- Circle melnbers wil~ be p/;esent everything from "I'm never go- Monday, June '29, at novena ing to do office work" to "I've services in St. ·Patrick's Church. got a sore thumb." I None works. Other lessons our children .' \ . ' have had at their own request. We've gone along with· music '(piano, violin, guitar, bass drum, , ukelele); ·"dancing (ballroom" .BOYS WANTEI?·"f~ the j ballet; ·square;. interp~etive); art. PriesthoOd and .Brotherhood. Ther~ also have been dramatic tack·· ot i· fundi' NO impedi" '" .lesson~;' .as w~ll as professional help. fIt' tetllli~j,.swimmit:lg, golf; mel)t; :'., i'w;,~~::', '~i ;: now and then an' OCcasional tutoring job. ;. ., BOx 574~ . We'd like to see t'h~ aggregate . ·hltim.,. '., Md. bill for these extr~~ctirrit:ula'rs; I . . .' , Come to t~ink, of it; i 'guess 'w.e. ~. ~1,: ', . .- t· :~~-'- .. -.. :... ;.,. "wouldn't.···...,·· r··.' , . .' .Butthis Js,.one'w~ insist upon'; . ~lL'RIGKr"To' . :.....typewritiilg. ltisn'tcOstly~ It
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WASHINGTON (NC)-Franeiscan Sister Mary Elvan Maschmann of- Cardinal Stritch College Milwaukee, has been awarded' the 1959 Guilday History Prize of the Catholic UniversHy of America.
By AIiee Bough Caltill !"or the seeond time this week, rve heard of families disposing of homes at the' seashore, with the explanation that the whole family could not enjoy the family's summer retreat, what with Dad workirig~iR the city and unable to CIOmmute and big sister in betweetl poles. The canvas can training with only a two- be laced to the poles. You'll get week vacation break. Each privacy for lounging or work family has found that with outdoors, and escape the feeling
She was honored for the be9t master's dissertation presented in the department of history at the university.
Siltter Elvan's topic was: of enclosure.. "Diplomatic Relations between It is wel'l to keep storage in the United States and Turkey, mind whenever you build a 1919-1933." This is the fourth place to sit outdoors. A box-seat year of the awarding of the with a hinged top permits quick Guilday Prize, which carries and easy protection for folding with it $100. lawa chairs, cushions, or garden tools when it rains. Make the top Cardinal to Preside and ~ weather-tight, and the base waterproof. Bore holes At ~adio-TV forum in the end and cover with screen MONTREAL (NC) - A onefor circulation. This storage box day forum on radio and telewill also hold sportl equipment, sumtner' and winter. Such handy vision will be held at the University of Montreal on July 7 storage is close to the heart' of under the patronage of His Emtake-it-eu.y summer living. It inence Paul Emile Cardinal Leneed not be an eyesore either. ger, Archbishop of Montreal. Make it like a long. high-b~ked YOUNG MODELS: Left to right, Andrea Velozo St. bench and decorate it with cushCardinal Leger said the forum ions to be used during the day, John of God parish, Somerset and Cynthia Franco: SS. had been arranged because radio and at night, when you lift the Pete~ and Paul, Fall River, model teen-age styles at a and television "have become seats, you'll have storage space normal means for the spread of for blankets and other items that fashIOn show sponsored by the Mercian, schoOl paper of ideas" on a mass level. The Mt. St. Mary's Academy, Fall River. must be protected. forum was not called to PUll Your aim is to be more comjudgment upon the present acfortable at home. so don't wring tivities of the radio and televistl,le last ounce from tired, beion...s,tations, but to discuss ways draggled ner"es. Get a lift by in which they might be used to spending a little time each mornSAN FRANCISCO (NC) Shir- sented to her in St. Mary'. the greatest advantage of ChriSt ing or evening observing the ley ~'~eill, heroine of Baker's Cathedral by Auxiliary Bishop and the nation, he Said. miracle of growth-your roses, Bea-ch, was presented with a Hugh A. Donohoe of San Franshrubs, lawn and trees. Place medal of Pope John XXIII here. cisco, during a ceremony in While Catholic leaders in the' your most comfortable chair or The medal was sent to Miss which outstanding members 01. fields of radio and television eslounge in the shade, anywhere pecially are invited to the O'Neill by Archbishop Egidio the Catholic Youth OrganizatiOil you can get away by yourself, forum, an invitation was exVagnozzi, Apostolit" Delegate to were given awards. and deliberately go limp. tended by the CaFdinal to all the United States. It was preA letter from Archbishop Cha.ncl'!S. are, as you ~elax in of the Catholic population. Rad;o Vagnozzi said: "I read in the this' easy chair, you'll see a spot and television are not the en.:. newspapers about -MiSs Shirley that needs attention: High on the dowment of a few, but th.e patriO'Neill who so courageously list' of worksavers is a storage mony of all, tbe Cardinal deattempted to rescue her schoolplace' for small tools, out where mate, Albert Kogler, and had clared. The luminous image y:ou can use them for the spurintroduced into the homes of all ROME (NC) --The Anglicaa the presence of mind to baptize of-the-moment job. In this way has become the property of each, you can eliminate countless trips Church serves to restrain the nim before he died. It was indeed and as such gives to each ~ an edifying and inspiring percollapse of doctrine within Protto the house for a trowel, a ball rieht of judgment, he said. of twine, a pair of gloves and estantism, according 1;0 a study formance. I thought it miglit be encouraging If I would send other equipment you are likely. in a Catholic review published a medal oiHis Holiness Pope CottOfll Attar Cloths to useoften Olltdoors this sum- here. JOhB XXIII with my warmest mel'. " VATICAN CITY (NC) - The The study, consisting of two congratulations on this sterling Sacred Congregation of Rites has articles, appeared in Civilta Catexample of Catholic faith and granted permission to the BraPontiff Encourages tolica (Catholic Culture), fortoourage." zilian Diocese of San Isidro to nightly Jesuit review. ThearConcern for Aged .Heedless eI. danger Millll WJe cotton altar cloths ia place tides were written by Father VATICAN CITY (NC)-ItalO'Neill swam 110 the re'scue of of the prescribed linen ones. Roberto Tucci, S.J., who stated the Kogler youth after he had lans have .been encouraged to The permission requires, howthat the Anglican Church "exerbeen attacked by a shark oU ever, that linen cloth must be concerD themselves with the cises a providential restraining Baker's Beach. S~e brought the used -for the IlOl'pot'al, purifieaproblems of old people by His function on doctrinal disintegrayouth to shore, baptized him Holiness Pope John XXIIi. tor and pall. . tion" within Protestantism. with sea water and had him On the occasion of Italy's first Father Tucci's opinion is that repeat the Act of Contrition after National Old People's Day the her. The youth died several Pope, through His Eminence an eventual rapprochement be.tween· Anglicanism and CatholihoUl'S later in a hospital. Domenico Car din a 1 Tardini Vatican Secretary of State, sent oism may depend on the success of "all those people who work a letter of congratulation to the TRAVELER'S organization s p 0 n s 0 r i n g the for the noble aim of giving back to the Church of England its old observance. Ott. BURNERS The letter said the Pope physiognomy." AWe complete BoUer-Burner "trusted that this day would or F1II'uce UJlig, Etlicient serve the purpose of reawakenTune-ups and Brake Work low cost beatlntr. Ba"BeI' . . . ing. public opinion and, partic80f As'lle) Blvd.. eor. TarkiJg fa.. oil . . . and 9M'Ykle• . ula~y among Catholics, the BiD Rd.. New Bedford greatest possible attention and Gilbert J. Costa. Prop. 8osifij),n) 180 Mt. Pi......' sweet . u~erstanding" for the problems , WY 6-'276 , New Bedfor'tl WY I-Hell Jh~tit~tibn5 of the old. .' TOR~~~:~{~''';;;''~''~", ~his is related to a high ilian Fathers here have anChristian and civil duty. And nouneed the establishment of . ~!".~~ve~" ~t is .l!lso. a .contribl.\,:,. ",3 ,. ,tHC,',! a new high . school, - and 'new' "tlon to social security and to' the facilities for the training of nov- realizing "of those ·high h~pes<for. New:Beclford.- Fall Rivet" -.MCltt8Poisett' J~es and scholastics in the United ordered progress which society States. w,ill n.eye.r be aple to achie.ve Andrean High School in Gal-y; ; until it can assure conditions of VfHOLESALE, RETAft Ind., to be conducted.·by·Basil.,. a" 'qUiet,' seren~'and .dignified PLANT CHAMPiON TER,' NO. DARTMOUTH ians, is the first building in life to this large category of Catholic cent.er RlanJl~d, by Bish- .citizens. '.' Every Garment moth-contf'olled Treated ot no eX'tt"a eos-t SHUCKED ClAMS op Andrew G. Grutka of Gary, STEAMERS & FRIERS Now nearing completion, the ANY PLAIN SUiT, COAT OR DRESS school will accommodate 1,500 boys and girls. CLEANED AND PReSHO-CASH and CARty A $750,000 novitiate has been : A 75 MILE AREA: oonstructed by the Basilians on ~"""""",.".,'-". COMMON.ION tile outskirts of Pontiac, Mich. For Restaurants • Institutions A new center for the education BREAKFASTS Roadsfde Stands . 01. scholastics will be ~pened Famous Reading HARD COAl ~...."" '''''f~ ~n at St. John FisJaer College, Large or Small CIQm~.. Boche8tler, N. Y. . NEW ENGlANO COKE
a minimum of effort the city !lome can be geared for the lazy, shimmering hot day. of peak summer. Here the,. find the practical way, to relax. . . If yoW: consider such a solution for sum.et living, start by asking yourself if your home and outd~or living sPace measure up to their p0s;sibilities for convenient, informal fiunily use. If the routine of . managing and maintain~ng your plaCe sap you of time and enermake you settle for less than your fall' share relaxed comtort, maybe' some of these tips will show you how to cut coraers, get unavoidable work done, and yet be more comfortable at JI,ome. Lots of Sleep YOti can greet' each morning with renewed energy and zest if' you've had your quota of sound, refreshing sleep. If one of those days of "scorcher" proportions 00ft1,6B along, you can weathet< it a lot better if you've had a goOd night's rest and a bedroom air""' conditioner will help. They are designed t-o remove moisture, to br~ng·: in, cool, filter, and eircu.ite fresh air. Most <cOndttiOners.: Will alSo exhauat"stlde air. The eomfot'fyou get will '1at .oUtweigh the expenditure. . ; Y'ou can also get quick relief Ml the hottest day by cooling the air with a lawn sprinkler. YOli should use an oscillating type, turn the hose nozzle to throw 11M finest possible spray. By spl,"aying at night outside your bedroom, you will get added 1'elief. If you. must do some remodeling to make your home a substitute for a far-away vacation spot, consider some of these things. You may save many stepS by having play and lounging space handy to the house. Suspend a piece of canvas to make a cool spot of a hot corner. YOIl can tack one side of the canvas to the house and support the other with poles. And while YOti are using canvas, if you want a quick, iriexpensive way to block a view you dislike, late afternoon sun, and hot winds, DlOunt a screen of canvas cloth
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10
New Weapons"of'Warfare Propose 'Moral ,Questions
-THE' ANCHOR Thurs~,
June 25, 1959
, DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER. MASS.
Prelate Cautions Aga i... st Extreme Art in Church
WASHINGTON (NC)-Some interesting moral considerations may be involved in:a new kind of warfare which has been disclosed to what was' described as an "intently quiet" committee of Congress. It is bio19gical or psychochemical warfare. We are been called 'war without guns already producing some of and nuclear weapons, and even the means to wage it and without dea:th, presumably J>eour experts warn that we cause it is possible to make
WASHINGTON' (NC) The Apostolic Delegate to the ~nited States emphasized here that it is impor-
must "assume ,the Russians people act against their own intant to make a distinction' beknow what we know." terests and even to welcome a tween religious art and Htur';' In this type of warfare it is conquering enemy. There are gical ~rt." possible to release gases which those who argpe it is more humane than war as we know l't Not, aU pieceS of religious an enemy could not see, smell art are "acceptable in church," or feel but which could render today. Archbishop Egidio Vagnozzi him defenseless for 24 to 48 May Involve Responsibility pointed out at the opening of hours while occupation forces But it would seem to open up the Washington Archdiocesan entered his territory and took a whole new lirie of questions Religioull Arts Festival. (lver. regarding morality and gUilt. In five to 10 years, it was These could involve the responBecause "people go to church said, we can have an array of sibility for depriving personsto get nearer to God/' the Archthese weapons with varying perhaps countless numbers of bishop said, church art must be phases of effectiveness. .They them-of their free will; the re- .. "inspiring." ~9i1ld sicken,. harass or kill eight sponsibility of these victims for "Art must fit into the liturgy," ,to .80 per cent of the people at- their acts while in .various stages he stated, adding that "the ~cked by them. They would, if of subjugation and the possibilChurch feels that extreme man-: desired, make the victims dance 'Ity of killing enormous numbers ifestations'in art must not be in for joy in the streets and shout ipfpeople alrr.ost instantly, silentchurch." propaganda speeches against ~lYand without warning. Since the people are not pretheir own interests. Maj. Gen. William M. Creasy, 'pared for them "instead, ofbeiJ)g ,Covel' Larger Area retired former ch,ief of the U. S. they would be ' POLIO CLINIC: Mrs. Thomas Kelly, R.N., is about to inspired, These gases and chemicals Army Ch~mical Corps, described shocked," and art in chureh, eould cover "fantastically larger this new type of warfare to the' administer first injection to Conan B., Sullivan at clinic woqld not serVe to bring- -man areas" than the present atomic Congressmen; He argued that the sponsored by' St. Joseph's Men's Club, Fall River, with nearer to God, he explained. ,.' weapons would affect. They can United States has put its~lf iIi Recalling his childhood as' . an· he put in the air or water supply. great danger with a "stated P()li•. assi~tan.ce frQni Con~n's ni?ther, Mrs. Edward J. Sulliva~. aJtaJ:boy at St. Peter's basHicainterested ,observer is R()ger Sullivan, past· president Underground shelters ag<\ipst cy" that we will not use chemin Rome where he was' ,atomic blasts would be "inad~- ieal warfare ~xcept- in r~talill . ,ofthe club ~",d chairman of the clinic. moun'ted "by Italian. Renaisquate" protection against these tion. He said it is possible today sance masterpieces," the Deleweapons delivered, by missiies. to strike initial blows with such gate said: "r am old-fashioned,' However, given ample warning, devastating effects that the vicbut appreciate the modern trend .people might take effectiv'e tim could not retaliate. to look for the new." .measures, if they had .proper The General pictured for the "I cannot say that I have apgas masks and were instru<;ted lawmakers the possibility of WASHINGTON (NC) - The House-a visit primarily aimed in their use. . .', Soviet Russian submarines lYing Cardinal Archbishop of Vienna at expressing the thanks of the ~reciah;d all that I have seen," There always have been moral off our coasts, equipped to spr~ad says the Catholic Church in A.us- :Austrian people for American .he admitted. "But after all,. art questions connected with the fog or to fire missiles contain_ 'tria is really coming to life. aid, especially that sent right is the manifestation of the artist's feelings and it is, there-' ,waging of wars. These have been Jng chemical or biological we~p Franz Cardinal Koenig .attrib- after World War II. fore, difficult to find an adeincreased and intensified as new ons. "I told the President that it utes this partially to the fact weapons becamc more and more Subsequently, Lt. Gen. Ar- that the Church-long under the is a great pleasure for me to be quate definition, of what is art." devastating, aQd as the line of thur G. Trudeau, the Army's re- protection of the emporers-is no in America," the vigorous Prince demarcation between combat- search. chief, told the Congress- longer a state church. And he of the Church told White House Attend Special Mass ants and non-combatants came men that this Government's insaid that during the Nazi occu- correspondents afterwards. "I For Help in Strike to be les:' and less observed. formation is that the SOViet pation, "for the first time in also told the President that 1 ST. LOUIS (NC)-More than Now an entirely new concept forces in East Germany and Po- centuries Catholics had to fight hoped he would soon 'be able has been introduced, and with it land have 15 per cent of th.eir for the Faitr." to visit Austria. However, I real_ 50 striking members of the St. Louis Globe-Democrat gathered probably new problems. It has armaments in chemical warfare. The 55-year-old prelate as- ize that this is unlikely while with management representahe is still the President of the serted the future of the Austritives for the first time in eight an Church is symbolized by the United States." weeks~in St. Joseph's church fact that the young people are here. taking an active part in the life Award Papal Medal The occasion was a special of the ~hurch there. He said the Mass asking divine guidance for proportion of young people To U. S. Serviceman PUSAN (NC)-A u.s. service- both management and newspaper among the practicing Catholics guild members in resolving the 'is greater than that of their man received a papal honor strike. But no one present ad·here in recognition of the help e1ders. mitted· knowing who had reIn general, Cardinal Koenig :,h.e has giver to missionaries in quested the Mass, which was ofsaid, about 90 per cent of the 'l{orea and Japan. fered by Father Mortimer Gav.Catholics in the Austrian coun- :. The Pro Ecclesia et Pontifice in, S.J., of the Institute of So,~edal was awarded to M. Sgt. tryside attend Mass faithfully. cial Order at St. Louis UniversBut he said that the situation Patrick Denier of Troy, N. Y., ity. iIi Vienna is "rather bad." Only "who duringl:is free time "helped In a short sermon, Father Gav15 to 20 per cent of the Catholics with the building of Catholic iniIi said that "men engaged in a :stitutions in Korea and Japan. ~how up at Mass on a normal controversy like that at the . The medal was obtained for Sunday, in the capital, he said. the serviceman from His Holi- Globe need the grace of God." The Cardinal, who received Declaring that the situation ness Pope John XXIII by CoSACRED HEART ANNIVERSARY: The 60th anni- his Red Hat from Pope John lumban Bishop Harold Henry, calls for humility and comproXXIII last December, said Ausversary of the consecration of the hum.an race to the Sacred trian priests are now learning Vicar Apostolic of Kwangju. mise, he added: "And so I join Heart of Jesus was observed with a solemn high Mass in to go to the people-rather than A veteran of 22 years in the all of you in offering this Mass Washington. The celebrant, Archbishop Egidio Vagnozzi, waiting for the people to come Army, Sgt. Denier is on his fifth for a just and 'quick solution to Apostolic Delegate to the United States, is shown with to them-and that the situation tour of duty. in Korea. During the trouble at the Globe," The S1. Louis Globe-Demol,lis present tour, he helped ,to improving. .Father Francis Larkin, SS.CC., (left) greeting distin- is Cardinal'Koenig spent 20'inin- .build S1. Mary's church in Pusan crat has been noted for several guished guests, the·· Portuguese Ambassador and the 'ufeswith' President Eisenhower and a new Sisters' convent in years for having many Catholic Chinese Ambassador. NC . Photo. when he called at the White the Northern suburbs of the'city. editorial workers on its staff.
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Cardinal' Koenig Asserts Outlook Bright, for Church in Austria
Mass Educatio.n,lnvites Complaint of Mediocrity
THE ANCH9R..,.. ~1 Thurs., June 25, 1959 '. DIOCESE OF FALL RI , _.
Creighton Jesuit Traces InHation To CQrporations
JAMAICA (NC)-Christopher Dawson, British historian, said here that Catholichigher .education is "of vital importance to the future of Americap culture." Dr. Dawson, professor of Roman Catholic studies at the Harvard University Divinitv School, "It is obvious that we cannot made the state~ent in a .~pect to get the same results .i. . t dd' 'from. any system of mass 'edu~ommenc;men. a . ress at . cation-whether. Catholic, .ProtSt. John s Umversity here. estant or secular-as can be obThe speaker pointed out 'that tained in i minority system historically "the Arne ric a n where higher education is conChurch was the Church of the fined to a picked few," he said. poor and the Church of the imHandicapped migrants, and throughout the Dr. Dawson described U. S. greater part of the 19th century Catholic colleges and universiCatholics lacked the economic ties as "handicapped" by "the opportunities and the social necessity of competing and keepadvantages of the dominant ing up with the secular' colleges Protestant society." in their very efficient scientific Modest Harvest and vocational teaching, while at . In these Circumstance&, he the same time they have to find -'COntinued, "we cannot be sur- additional time in intellectual prised if the intellectual harvest energy for tFle most important' ,w.~a modest one" in the early subjects of all-the sacred sci':' y~rs ot U. S. Catholic education. ences and a11 that is involved in ',l'he "surprising thing," he ~id, those spiritual aims which your ,:.'8,$. that the founders "succeed,program ,pescribes." ed in the essential work of .CI;eThe "worst" of this situation, atinga Catholic system of higher . Dr. Dawson said, "is that we.are education out of nothing." . judged by the worlq. nof bY.PlIJ;'· Dr. Dawson <;~mmentecl.·that success in this higher field;' but aities of "mediocrity" in Cath- exclusively by our performance olieeducation"do not rememher in the lower." _ that' the same complaint has been made very frequent(y and Nqtes Need l~y 'strongly br !be critic of AmerHospital Advisers .'iean .secular education and' by CLEVELAND (NC)~The new the ctHics ·o~ democratic educatlO~ in genera:." ,.. ' president of the Catholic Hospital Association says lay advisors "indispensable" to Catholic 110s.Find 400-Year Old pital programs. loriArt Treasure Father John, '-J, 'Humensky, . KYOTO (NC) - A 400-year- eRA. p,resident, emphasized that 'old Catholic Art treasure has Sisters-administrators rely heav'been discovered at M'ikara City Uy on their lay advisors. for help in the Apostolic Prefecture l>f iA administrative,. financial, legal Hiroshima. . arid maintenance pr,?blems <IS It is 'a stone .lantern, made 'in well as in expansion efforts. the shape of a- cross, with an Moreover, he added,. lay image of the Blessed Virgin boards are becoming more truly Mary. It is tht work of a rerepresentative of the community nowned craftsman. Oribe Iori. than they used to be.
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DAVENPORT (NC) The Federal Reserve"Board's "tight money" approach to curbing modern inflation is
DEDICATE MONUMENT: Rev. Felix S. Childs, pastor of Immaculate Coricep.tion Church, Fall River, reads inscription on monument erected by the parish Holy Name Society and dedicated Sunday at park mimed in memory of his predecessor, the late Rev: Charles R. Smith. .
Judge Notes Juveni'le Delinq'uency Ris4s When Spankings Decline NEW YORK (NC)"""Twentyfive years as presiding Justice 'of the Domestic Relations Court in this city has convinced John Warren Hill that the rise .in juvenile delinquency coincides with ·a. decline in spanking. In his ,annual report Justice Hill reviewed his experiences on the bench and noted that the rate of delinquency "continues to soar." "We believe," he said, "that the reason for this increase lies ~argely in the dangerous nonsense which a current school of .thought is teaching, telling par-
Prelate Gives Degree To Anglican Primate
MILKMAN AWARDED HERO'S MEDAL: Vice President Nixon presents the Louis Pasteur m.edal to a Chicago milkman, Casimir Janik, accompanied by his wife, 'Virginia. ;·;M;r.~anik rel;leued 10 chil4l'en during- the disastrous fire at Chicago's Our ,Lady of the, Angels, School. NC Photo. "
- QUEBEC (NC) - Laval University's honorary doctorate of ~etters was presented to the Anglican Primate of Canada by the Catholic Primate of Canada at a convocation here. Recipient of the degree was the Most Rev. Philip Carrington, who has been Anglican BIshop and Archbishop of Quebec for . the past 24 years. The degree was presented to Archbishop Carrington by Archbishop Maurice Roy of Quebec in his capacity as chancellor of the historic university. Archbishop Carrington delivered the commencement address after receiving the degree. He eited the relations of the French and British races in Canada as· being, "a friendship like that which unites members of . one .filmily.~'
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ents not to punish their children, declaring that discipline .curtails and hampers growth and ·that unhindered self-expression .isessential to character development." 'Justice Hill warned: "If a child is not disci~ined and taught self-control early in the home, the grown-up world will take care of him later on, pc,rhaps cruelly and when it is too late. A child curbed, taught obedience, spanked when he is young, rarely requires punishment when he hits his teens."
Pope John Honors Baltimore Priests BALTIMORE (NC) Five pastors of the Baltimore archdiocese have been elevated to the rank of protonotary 'aposfolic by Pope John XXIII, it has been announced by Archbishop Francis P. Keough of Baltimore. , They are Msgr. John F. Eckenrode, Edwin L. Leonard, Stanislaus A. Wachowiak, Louis C. Vaeth, all of Baltimore, and Joseph J. Leary 0:" Catonsville. It also was announced that six priests bad been named Domestic Prelates with the title of Right Reverend Monsignor and one made a Papal Chamberlain with the title of Very Reverend Monsignor. Two laymen, Thomas W. Pangborn, Hagerstown, Md., industrialist, and Dr. Leo J. Goldbach, Baltimore ophthalmologist, were' named Knights of St. Gregory.
an indirect method whose byproducts are unemployment and failures of sma!" businesses. In addition, Father Richard L. Porter, S. J., maintains President Eisenhbwer's appeals to unions and corporations to avoid steps that might increase inflation are ineffectual. The Jesuit head of the economics department of Creighton 'University, 'Omaha, expressed the belief that wage hikes won by giant unions are not the primary cause of increased prices, but rather that high prices can be traced to a faltering in a "necessary profit margin" established by corporations. '. Realize Windfall "The 1954-58 period, which seems to be repeating itself now, ill a case in point," Father Porter said. "At first,' there was a tremendous increase in profits, almost in the nature of a windfall, for large corporations. . "Labor uhions, when it came Wne to renegotiate their contracts, bargained not only on the basis of their increased productivity, but also on this increased ability of management to pay. But the resultant rise in wage rates was a relatively steady one', distributed throu:::hout the four years. ' Higher Prices "In the meantime, the corporations had come to depend on this unusually high margin of profit, committing themselves to expansion programs to capitalize on it. When their profits began to falter, as a result of wage boosts and other factors, they forced a higher price for their product in the market, to restore what was now a 'necessary' profit margin. "Thus, in the last nine or 10 months of the 1954-[;3 business cycle, we witnessed a definite downswing in business activity, coupled with a rise in consumer prices of some two-and-one-half per cent," he said.
New Berlin Bishop Serves Red Sector BERLIN (NC) - Germany's youngest bishop has been conseerated in the Red-ruled sector of the city to aid the Catholics of the country's Soviet zone. Auxiiiary Lis hop Alfred Bengsch, 38, was consecrated by Julius Cardinal Doepfner, Bishop of Berlin, who said: "The designation of a new Auxiliary Bishop for Berlin has become necessary because I am not allowed to visit the districts of my dioc~se located within the Soviet zone. The new Bishop,' however, will prove the unity of our diocese."
Wor:~(z;rs· Ri9ht~ to
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Ingr~dient of, De~ocracy
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. -Thyrs.,June 25. 1959
~OC~SE OF FALL
RIVER: MASS
By Msgr•. George G: HiggiltS
I G~d i::;;'Af~U
Direetor NCWC· Social AcUoD Depariment
A year ago, at its annual Conference in Geneva, Switzerland, the International Labor Organization authorized' a special investigatiorl on freedom of association for workers in various countries affiliated with the ILO. 'nle government of the United States, employers, as evidenced by case represented at the Geneva after case coming before us inConference by Secretary of volving union elections in the Labor James P. Mitchell, business and industrial plants coupled its enthusiastic SUPPQl"t of the country, take every legal step possible-and many em()f this resolution with a formal ployers overreach legality-to invitation to the ILD to start the thwart their employees' effort to proposed investigation inUle organize evel' when the union Vnited States. involved is • respectable, deThis invitacent one. tion was accept"And so.me employers harbor ed, and shortly the thought, 1 am sure, that thereafter the there is no such thing as a decent ILO sent a union unless it might be ODe ~our-man invesdominated by their own comtigating team pany... ~ this country Mr. Leedom, by the way, canf.olo a period of not by the wildest stretch of the several months. imagination be dismissed as a III recent weeks blind apologist for labor or a I was privil'prejudiced critic of managee«ed to confer ment. fol" a period of .veral .hours on two different ~ltia'W occasions with the members of Like Mr. Leedom, wilo is a this team. On both occasions the "true Conservative" in the befi question was raised as to wheth- seD8e of the word, I have no er American employers, by and ulterior motive in criticizing large, are in favor of unions or aoti-uniol1o employers, nor do I whether they would prefer to go wish to leave the impression back to the open shop and are that everything is hunky dOlT bopeiully looking forwa,rd to the in the labor movement. daY when they can do so with I merely wish to emphasize, impunity. as Mr. Leedom does so effectiveUse Illegal M--. ly, .that the right of workers to. . Itt reply to this question, 1. bargain colle'ctively is an essenexpressed the opinon that the tial ingredient of American democracy and that "no American majority of the employers asmould recklessly or surreptisociated with big business have long since decided-some more tiously attack any known ingredreluctantly than other_that,; ient of our· system, for the part for better or for worse, unions' attacked nftty be the key to ~ch success as we have attained." are here to stay. . This is not to say that organ. 1 added, however, that unfortunately many employers iii ized labor represents the "good guys" and management the "bad small or medium-sized comINInies or industries, particularlT- guys" in the American economy. in the South, are still adamantly Such invidious distindions are opposed to unions and are hoping utterly reprehensible. Da,. GeBe FOft'nlr acainst hope that they can permanently avoid dealing witb. The truth is, as Professor Benthem. jamin Selekman of the Harvard The record witt show also. I School of Business Administrapointed out, that some of the tion points out in a new book en!Oore backward employers in the titled A Moral Philosophy For letter category are not averse at Management, "Modem industry times to using illegal means to is a combined operation for man_ stave off the organization of their agement and labor. It is arroworkers. By way of anticipating gant for either group to assume objections to the latter allegait has a key to superior wisdom tion I should like to call attenand morality." tion to an extremely significant Union officials, Professor Seladdress delivered on May 23 by ekman adds, should and for the Mr. Boyd Leedom, Chairman of most part do realize that they the National Labor Relations have neither the right nor the Board, before the Florida Bar technical knowledge to tell emill Miami Beach, Florida. ployers how to run their busiDistressing Picture ness. OCY am truly distressed with the But by the same token, he says, picture I see," Mr. Leedom said. business executives "may as well "While it is the official position face the fact that they will never of management to support the again enjoy the opportunity for concept of collective bargaining unilateral decision making. That bt' employees, great segments of day is gone forever."
SOME FACTS ABOUT AFRICA , . , ,. Politieally, the world is divided. into two orbits: The United States and Soviet Russia. SpirituallY"there is no orbit but Christ ia· His Church. That is why the Church labors to make Africans free in the African way, through 30 native negro bishops, ~900 negro priests and 5000 ·negro Sisters.
The religious population of Africa is as follows: Moslems 38~, pagans 32 %, Protestants and Catholics 17%. Moslemism is gowing twice as fast as Catholicism. The South African government will not allow the native negro to vote. When Basutoland . adoptea its constitution~ it permitted 2000 whites to \fi)te, thus returning good for evil. Moscow broadcasts 43 hours a week Africa, while the Soviet satellites bI;oadcast 150 hours in English, French and Arabie..,. . , Communist Chin;, broadcasts 13 hours at¥ week to Central Africa.
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HOME BUILDER: Father The Soviets formerly attacked every #, Werenfried van Straaten, African leader who opposed them. Now, they"'; Dutch Premonstratensian • praise them aU, hoPing to catch them i,n their nets. priest, who is in the United civilization is SUperior to any other civilizatIDD, not States for discussions on the becauseWestern it is white, but because it is Christian. As the Western world persecuted Church behind loses its faith it loses its supremacy; a:f' other parts of the world the Iron Curtain, is founder gain the faith they will revitalize civilization. The Soviet power ill of the International Build- really "Western Christian civilization" with its science and mechanics, but withO\lt its Christ or rather with the spirtt of Antiing Order, dedicated to Christ. building homes for the homeless as well as churches and Last year the Catholics of the United States each gave 10 the !lChools for refugees. NC Holy Father 25c for the Missions of the entire world, or abo~t IOc each for Africa. This year we will do better, please God. Each Photo.
Honors to Grads Of Holy Family Twenty-three graduates OIl Holy Family High School, New Bedford, received recogniti'on ia the field 01. higher ed~tioa dtis lOon til. 'I11ey include WitHam Wheaton, graduating from the United States Naval Academy, Annapolis;Aubray j. Pothier, receiving a medical degree from Georgetown UniVet"sity; and two recip.ients of masters' degrees, Leonard Alfonso, Yale; and Richard. R. GaissoR, Clltholic University. 'others He Barbel'li Connol'll, Rosemary Moore, and Charles Reed, gradu'ating from Bridgewater State Teachers' College; Barry Marsseault, Thomas Rossi, and Joseph Vercellone, Providence College; William F. Pittman, and Norman P. Deshaisea, University of Rhode Island. Also Karl Burgess, Louis PocZIltek, and Vincent Silvia, Boston College; Mary Mellody, and JolUl LaFauci, Framingham Teachers' College; Elaine DeMello, BostoR Collelle School 01. Nursing.
week take up. collection in your office, shop or neighborhood. A nickle, ·dime or quarter a week from each and at the end Qf the month send it to the Holy Father's Society foe the· PropagatiOR of the Faith.
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itlsUl'ld . . by U. s. h¥!t ageMf.
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GOD LOVE YOU to Elizabeth for HEnel&tJed is $1 Ute atnOURt I ·have been spendfu&' for strawbent_because I love them." • • . to A Mother of Eiifht for $1. "Here is my one dollar aUowaaee. I bow what it is to' go without the· necessary thlncs;" •.. to A Bigh Sehool Graduate for $5. "Upon «t8du&tiDl' I reCleived . quite a Sum 01 mOlley. Beea:use I love GGd and Ifis peveri,. striek_ ehildren I am sendinl' a, little 80methiRc to help them." •.• to J.M. fer $%:50. "I pr~mlsed GGd the equiva~nt 01 $1.%5 for eenaill favors. The favon wen ~ bat I deIa,.. . tIM'th.ak.. Ie beN 1& is, doaltled."
The WerhJmIMIo - • ".:r ill .. tIetIicDM·.. to ...... ....,.en for tile Misr' . 01 the live eontmeD'" The ere4Ieeade ill to be fllfel '.Ie mi_OM 01 Africa. need sYmbolismI' the coler of i..s forest.s and tM !lael'ed color 01 the MOSIelllS for wh_ e_vusiOD we pra:r. II :r- send _ .. saeri'flee-offerin« of $I along with :rour re4l1eH for the WOltLDMISSION ROSARY we wiH send 0_ te y. . . . that y. . ..,. . . . praTer
to 1MI'iftoe.
Cut out this colum.n, pin your sacrifice to it and mail it tQ the Most Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, National Director of The Society for the Propagation of the Faith, 366 Fifth Avenue. New York 1. NY ..
or your DIOCESAN DIRECTOR· REV. RAYMOND T. CONSIDINE. 368 North Main Street, Fall River, Mass.
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WM. T. MANNING (0. WHOLESALE AUTOMOTIVE
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Graduating singly frOHl. the following colleges are Clara G0len, College Misericordia; Frank M. Poczatek, Fordham Univer'sity; Mary Manning, University of Massachusetts; Donald LeBlanc, I New Bedford InstitlM of Technology; Rosemary J. Burk-e,Mt. Ida J\lnior Collelle.
llightwday,at
ENJOY PICNIC AT CAMP: Mrs. Eileen Hickey, in obarge of games, calls time out at picnic conducted by Somerset Catholic Women's Club at Cathedral Camp. Youngsters are, left to right, Linda Marchand, Brenda ~ a...J. Pei;er Lown.
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By Most Rev. FultOif J. Sheen, D.D.: .
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INDUSTRIAL SUPPLI ES • GENERAL T.ES
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DELCO IAnERIES
• PERFECr . CIRClf; RINGS JIAtl. ...,. . ;.,
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Reds...•rainwash 80 More .Priests
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Altar "C(lridle, . Serve m .R~niinders . of Man's Duty' to Spend Life in God's S'ervice,
ROME (NC) - Eighty priest. of the Shanghai diocese were By Rev. Roland Bousquet - "shut up" for more than • year 1M. 'Jolleph's Church-New Bedford , . by the Red regime 80 they could receive their political . Our dally newspaPers vie with one another to report.the latest scientific discoveries. reeducation,'" it Wafl reported Every American, from the humblest to the greatest, finds himself affected by the new'here. est invention an4 the latest gadget. In the midst of all this bustling activity which changes '. Fides, mission news agency with headquarters here, said fuat our lives so radically at times, it is good to leave our daily activities to enjoy the serenity , 300 Sisters were "concentrated" - of our parish church.' The in anQther place for the same Chu.rch, which adapts herpurpose from June 2, 1958, until self so wonderfully to this April, 1959. It said the priests changing world of ours, were held in "quasi-internment" at Tong Ka Dou, once a. flourish- remains, nevertheless, the tradiing parish in· downtown Shang- , tional. . beacon shedding the -hal. The Sigters were held at peaceful light of the Gospel on Zi Ka Wei, "the old Jesuit center our modern anxieties. on t.he outskirts of the city. The Church holds fast to the traditional externals of her worTaken by Force sqip of God. They symbolize Fides, citing reports it had reher unbroken link with the ini': ceiveq. by way of Hong Kong,', mutable doctrine of the Apostles said:, .. ' . ' upon whom Christ placed the "Although' it has been insisted hope of the world. Among thes~ ag~n arid again thilt enrollment externals of worship we notice ill the ,patriotic !lssociation (the the altar candles.' . : . ' . government-'sponsored organiza.They serve no practiqal <p\lr.." tion promoting schism) is vol- pose since our modern churches' untary, priests, Sisters and Cath- are equipped with' the '. latest olic laity are in no way free .to electrical·devil1.es; Yet their. quiet! participate or not to ·participate simplicity, their poetic beauty what are pompously called remind us -that we are here on 'study session'. When necessary earth only to serve and give they are' taken for there by glory to God. The candles enSix Candles foi High Mass force." hance the beauty of the .cereSt. Joseph's Church-Taunton The agency said "that while monial of ·the 'Church by conits current information pertains suming themselves in the flame. curtailed. In this case the can,.' burn fol" the Benediction"of the only to Shanghai~ "it'is certain" . "W~ too must spend our li~es in. dIes were placed on the altar Blessed Sacrament; while at that 'similar situations exist in' God's service. ' itself before Mass, least 20 are lighted during Forty Hours devotions. . other dioceses in communist Reminders of Crucified· Torch -Bearers China. By the 'year 1000,. the candles The altar-candles take their, The use of 't:andles ,during had become permanent appointsignificance from the pasReport 1500 Requests divine ser'vicesgoes back to the ments of the altar, Th~' imperml ·full chal candle, solemnly blessed at time of the Roman' emperors. honors suggested by the candles ·the Easter Vigil. While the pas':' or C at h 0 •Ie I ms The emperor was, always ,accom- were' now transferred from the chal candle'is blessed the church NEW YORK ,(NC)-The Na- Paniedat solemn ,fun.ctions by celebrant to the 'altar and its is in 'complete darkness. It is tional Council of .Catholic --Men sev~n torch-bearers. This honor .' ·cross. The number of candles was 'hailed as the light of Christ as it has reported that its Catholic was ·also enjoyed by important< reduced . from seven to six so is 'borne to th~ sanctuary. . Film Library serviced more than officers C?f the' imperiai.:.:house- that· three ,candles' could be 1,500 requests for its films dur-' hold. Constantine. upon his con-. placed on either side of the cross . Then the sa.nctu~ry laJIlp and' ing. the past year. version, grante(. ·the clergy,; espe-. :in a symmetrical fashion. When- the' altar candles are lit from this The· library contains 97 half- cially the bishops and. above, fall ever .the' bishop cele.brates a great pillar Of wax. Thus, the hour motion picture films and the Bishop·.of Rome. fitting posi-: Pontifical' Mass _.' the seventh paschal caridle and the altar' kinescopes oJJ the best television tions in the order of 'precedence' cand.le appears above. the altar 'candle are symbols of Our Lord the Light of the world. Th~ productions of the NCCM pro- among the civil officers of Rome. cross.' These candles serve. to wax symbolizes His virginal gram Catholic Hour, produced These marks of. respect were' remind us of the royalty of Our body, the wick represents His in cooperation 'with the Nation- soon introduced'into' the cere": .. Crucified' Lord." . soul and the fire His divinity. al Broadcasting Company. monial of the Church as a special ,The 'ca~dlesticks which suP-. The NCCM ina!ntains the Ii-. honor to the'. Pope., After· t~e 'port, the· candl~s are usually brary-- to service the program f - ,PoPl\! had vested. for Mass m 'wrought out of bras~; silver or a and film needs ·of Catholic the sasristy, seven acolytes, eachgold-:finished metal. Wood is schools; par!sh organizations and carrying a lighted candle on a 'l!0metimes.used. "The style of the . "' other groups. torch-holder, led the solemn 'candlesticks matches that of the / Leading the list in popularity papal procession to the altar. .:altar cross, thereby re-emphawas the award-winning film . These ctll1dles were then placed sizing the'fact t11.at they serve to series "Rome Eternal" which on the pavement on either side honor the Crucified. had a total of 605 telev'ision and of the altar during the Mass. Paschal Candle non-television showings. The As the Ch~rCh ~lourished, the. The candles which burn durfour half-hour films of this sernumber of priests Increased. The ing Mas~ are made out of the ies were produced on location more solemn Masses were often purest beeswax. Unbleached in Rome. simplified to meet the needs of 'candles are used at Requiem Next in demand was the 13- the trmes. Thus the solemn en- Mass. The solemnity of the liturpart haIf'-hour film series "We trance of the celebrant was often. gical functions dictates the numBelieve," which had a total of ber of candles which must burn 446 television and non-television at the altar. showings. The "We Believe" At sung Masses, solemn and series features Father James J. high Masses, the six tall candles McQuade, S.J.. of John Carroll are lighted. An ordinary low University, explaining Catholic Mass demands two; while four Doctrine. candles are lighted for a bishop's , low Mass. At least 12 candles
Thurs., June 25; 1959
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Rabbi in O,regon Urges Political Equality for All PORTLAND (NC) - A rabbi has charged here in Oregon that there is "a ",idespread intrigue" to prevent the election of a Catholic as President of the United States. Rabbi Julius Nodel of Temple Beth Israel has condemned those who claim a Catholic president would be under the influence of . "pope, priest or foreign country." The Rabbi told his congregation that persons who believe this to be true arE unaware of "the sincere and intense gratification which Catholics have always expressed for the American principle of separation of Church and State." , No Priority "Any minister or layman whe presumes to say that only Protestants shall have priority in the White House is destroying the foundations upon which our .. country was founded," he added. "Either we have equality for al! ~nd privilege for none,· Rabbl Nodel declared, "or wt should scrap our Constitution we should destroy our Bill ~ Rights, we should dispense wit.. our Bibles a'nd forget our noble prayers."
FO.
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DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER. MASS.
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THE 4NC~OR- . ,
CUSHING'S LUGGAGE SINCE 1877
WILL OPEN. IN THEIR
NE'W' LOCATION About June 29th ,.
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New Be~dford Legion Offers Reading List "Worthwhile Books" is the title.;of a ·leaflet no~, being distributed a project of New Bedford m'embers of. the IJegion. of Mary. ./ .' . ,To .l?e issued, four times y'early, the 'leaflei lists 'titles a'nd ·comments briefly hn 20 ..current " ' Catholic books, It ;, 'notes :; .that . many of the bOQli:s a~eavailable at, the . New Bedford publIc'li- , " ' brary, which 'is also distri\;!uting . T\iVO 'candles' for' Low 'M~ thele.aflet;,". '.'~.' :,' ;:.... ', ,'., ;'il":':":::"'''', :.
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THI CA'MPBELL ,·,SCHOO~'. 96s Purchas-e, Street· New Bedford
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Biography ~f·.~e~e~li:~ti·ne:'
',' ·'~:.I'.'.; T-b~~~; June 25, 1959,:: o 19:<:: ESE OF FALL .RIVE~, ~ASS'_,
Reads lake ·-Mild Fi,ction /~7
S.
K~itnedy
By Rt. Rev.M:sgr. John. Peter Anson's book Abbot ,Extraordihary ··(Sheed and $4) reads like fiction, and pretty mild fiction at that.
W~rd. .
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you proceed from chapter t9' chapter, you Dan,ger tering, "But this can't be .trueJIt is sheerly fantasticaf in:' . BERLIN (NC)-':""The Ber-~ , vention!" However, there is t s no.ticed--,' that he ,m~de no ,a n lin danger is great and it i8~ . the' description on the jack- reference to Our Lord as Reurgent the Free West realize, et'''A memoir of .Aelred Cardeemer or• S~viour and made no , .. , ' . it for its own preserva~ion., lyle,' O.S.B.," and there are' allusion at all to either the New· the several photographs to keep . Testament o~ the Old. . This grave warning has beell reminding you that this is not Besides, was a 'believer'in give.n by ~sgr. Walter Adolph, fj,ction. the ,occult, ,a prac~sioner of ve~eran journalist in charge CJf 'th h l i ' t' 1 11 press matters for -the ch.ance"": fa I f)\elred Carea ng, par la to a man-· ." lyle. was an ner of weird notions, and con?f the'Catholic Diocese of Berlin.' actual person, vinced that' decisions should be . He said the leadership of East and most extramade in one's sleep. Germany is based (Dn nothing.~ ordinary. Born It was a'~'decision made in. but Russian bayonets and that iI~' England in sleep whicli(Ietermined him to the 'overwhelming majority of in'1874, he was lead his comrhunity into the Rothe people; in a free election, biptiied in the man Catholic' Church. He had would be anti-Red. ~A:n g Ii can sought to i~duce the Archbishop Catholics in the Eastern zone Church with the of 'CanterburY"to regularize' his' will stand firm, supporting the name "... Benja- . position, in the Anglican Church. '. SS~PETER AND P AUL:'The feast of SS Peter ··and· Church through, its grea't bulmirt." Fearnley This, led to: an investigation 'Paul, Apostles-Martyrs; willb,e observed Monday.-.St: Peter, .. w~rks. of il$ priests· and the., C 1 Ie His ·.,;vhich .resulted in demand that I ft th f"' P .' Catholic family, he' .said. fa%:r. .:.v~s" Ii civi~ eng'~eei 'in tii'e<' '~inmunity submit' to e " e lrst ope, was crucified, he~d, downward at the ..... J. u'l l'u s'Cardinal Doepfner. 'e" e"m"p'l"o'y' of 'the G·r·eat·We~.t:','::tainAnglicani.-doctrinal pos'itions."'-.. order of Emperor Nero.' On the,sarlwday; St.~ Paul,·· 'whO ... . . "Help Bishop ot.Berlin, has"saId: tIt etnRailway, and his' work took' • and' liturgic-.l pr8ctices'-a'sub.;.·earliet ;had been. one of. the greatest persecutors 'of Christ- us 'in' oUr struggle against com.. '- . bis family from place to place mission which Aelred .refus~: ians'only,tobe miraculously:.converted, was"put·to death' munism,'We need the help'CJf in England. . to make. There followed at once by the sword. NC Photos. the free world and the help CJf -,." When. Benjamin was 11, bis. his decision' ~ leave the Angli..; , .. its C~tholic journ~.lists.", father' obtained a position in Ar-. can communion. ", 1 .. .' gentina. It· was there that . the That decision waS mad~ on. no 'l""IiIIlu,ns ~1: read a book about medieya.! Feb. 18, ·1913.iOn·Feb. 25 a Cath.Continued froin P~ge One monasticism and at 13, made up , olic priest arrived variced'studies at the .," h~'milld ihathewould "re:Vive it'" on Caldey, to be/ followed on. AcadetUyRome and Tuf·ts Unibi' England:' A' youngster's' daY~"': March 4 by the Catholic bishop versity" , .... . dreams, soon .forgotten? Consider:' of'M:erie~ia: :(W~les)" 'and'th~f . ··She:tau'ght· for' thr~' years al'" . .'i ;aJ1d ,a: pleasant .time la had' by all' u"ehildien"ko: throug~:h:u ;, wbaLil>llowed.,,? ,. _ Catholic Abbots of Downside ,'1 ,Sacred ''"'Hearts . Academy, Fair- ~. L·..,nt~C8. singing ~lllsfavorUe ,n~rsel')' rhym~. But·.. Uiere· .. 'Cleep· .. ·· ,Young Carlyl~ returned .. to.. and Maredsous - the last nairled ' . haven, 'and l)eld membership ill',' '.' " '. •:' ; ·t":¥),.. ' ". S9~OW. and'·-lasUng"·'suffering. wbeD~.;. . i~g~Q.c.t. .,.)i~.,~~'J;lt)~. ~t~P\afa::::.:., bt!i,n~. Ute c~lebr..~ted porn 901:", ~_, ~llfiY; ?~sm~al, Qrgani:/iations. Sis:-" 'if' '. L~.~S '.'J" ..Uae'_$'rassboppers .begin , to jump· in:' . , . tory sc.hool, 'then b~ame, a ,nJ;~ '. umba MarmIOn., ter Louis Virginia has a brother c·· ..·'V·· "'.sO",{ IUbfopla.Tbey.·,jump· Bndieap over'·', "" di(;;ai'stud~i:it.· ~t. ,b~ame. clear.:~ ,Qp,.,M~ch. ~; ~~l!:~dc' an~ 22.,of,." Francis~.at .St. ,Mary's Seminary,:...,rt1t' :."~ ~":"eacihr~otber,ln.their~agernesa~· ~ ~. .~,. ~f.he ,wa~' il ~~rc.~ful}.~sj?·~,7:·, the 33 memb~rs Of ..his brother.,..·, Baltimor~., One sister ,is. ';, a" . ',~"'l:7G1 '0' '''Ow the uops,ot" &he' poor farmers .:.;-" i· ality ..wUb.a fet:v~d I{l1ag1OatI(,~~,." h~0,4 ...VI{e~, rec().np~~~.i.~ ,j'the teach·e~;mdanother,mmarried... " ; " i . t ; t P . ,wbo ,depend on tbe landfor their.~ ." . ' endl~sS ':enihusiasm' and' 'an'al:,,' < C~tp.o~ic Chur¢:h~ .'~F.eWconv~tS,~,Her ,fatberis ,3, staff :write~ .for. ", il' : ' .:' ~ . ~s~pport."1n , o.lle..:~ ..~a(~~at..: ~ m9~s.~.;.i;lY:Iln,ot·ic:swaY: Qve,r, ot~~r,~~~; tl;l(~ "~lltbPf re,ma.rks" ~.'h~VE!: ev~r.,: the', N,ew ~ Bedford'; "Standard · . : U : ~ the: crops "b~ve ,been ...d estr0yed .r~ -'., . Briefly he was an oblate of 1?E1~~ recelyed, WI. ~~, . so. bttle,p...(!.-:' .. ·Times." ,. '.",' ",' 'i "'_" ;. ': .'" , . .,;, . :' the ~st hl!~. :years..: Th~ ,.lleopl~.. bav.. ." ,: .. .' :", •.,. "":" ·,·,,·"''tieen' redu~e.d. ,to., • tbe. ,.d.e"t.hs., ·.of. ~" .. . an Anglican Benedictine. group.-· par~ t Ion,. and. such enorm,ous "Sister ,Christiana .Mari.. . ' . ., ..... •', h" h h k . " publici~y'" .... ..", ' '.' lerln&'. Yom m,.is.1I1.on. ~-. 'would, in._ .. m' w IC e-' was nownas. . ... " •. . ,. .' '" '"" da~ghter of "Mr. and Mrs. Henry ." u_. B,:.r.'other Aelred, then organized - ~y }he ~n.d,' of.. _,.¥~rcp.,. ~elred Felix, 319 .S. Main Stre,et, AtHr~' R-.L~' ~A;";'~" A:~ to provi~e, them wl!1i a pariSh .cen· th t t t M d '. ,,"J """"'.s ,OWUWlnM ier and .~~apel.,.•. ,.""w~U.. as' provide one of his own,' rented a small. ~3Il }n" e. nOV1 1a e .a .' are -. Ueboro, is. from St. John the for Iht 0rimf41 ,for. 'some' 01 their reaterfal needs. To' hou~, aQd set:himse~:~J>: a~, su- '. ~us in Belgi~lJl·Hi!l n.~yit,iate-.7 ~v~ngelist's'parish:Sheattended . ,J' ." . . ., ' . ' C8.1T7' on . UiiS ambitioUs . pro~ram'o; perior of a com¢un!ty of 10,: 1Oterrupt~, by a .lonl;t illness Trinity .College, Washington. ·.•erey ·h·,will need $4,008. Can YoU'helpT : . . '.' .'., young men: This was done en-·:· was combmed w1th some cram'. . ,,, ..' ..... .' ..' .' '. '1.' ..... .. , ' . ' . . ~ely 011 his initi~tive .and au-. !!ling in philosophy ,mdtheology. "", Serra,Conclave, ....YOUR MASS OFFERINGS, ARE THE ONLY ~SUPPORT,OI' thority. 'It had noapprova~ or :Efe~as ordai~ed a pr.iest-in July.; -,' •. Archbishop Egidio Vagnozti, '. YO~R MISSIONARY PRIESTS, .. CAN YOU HELP THEM 8a~ction: f~(m the. C~ll~rch ~f 19~4, and thefplloW10g,-october,. new Apostolic Delegate to the ": ~: .:AND.. AT.'l'H,E. SA¥ET~ HELP."YQURS~LFAND YOUR ~Qgland; 10 fact, off1C1ally It, was. bless~d ~s CatholIc· abbot United' State.siwill' attend t b e ' , . . '_ . ' ~VED, ONE! I .. , ' ,.. ' " " I' " w~s fro-wned on.' of Caldey. Ql\~ck wor~! 'e;·."" serra' Inte'rnatiOrial"coriverition. . SISTER ',SiMONE '~llDd'SISTER 'pAuLA' . : It,Il)1,111t,,therefqr<<:, soon .~Qun~~ .' : ," <;a~~u~~an 1tj'O.VI~c ." ":". i11"""Pittsburgh": On 'WednesdaT~ '. :.ave'prayeClman""lDOn&~"to<Oilr LidY'o;' . ~". er; one, supposes. Certaiilly It I .: ·In, ,1922,. .ql;lIte suddenly" the·,' June'" 24,;' .. ":';' ,. . .. · " . , P e r p e m a l'Help'lFeast June ,. 2'7) and' She" IHid plentyofviciSsifudes.. The' abbot, re~igned. and left for Can..;", ·"~',)il'" ",>," '" ./': '." : :~ :"haa,'aDllw.eredtbem. 'I{er'answer was' ." elll) r: 9O:"called monastery was always ada.·,There·he',.proposed to com""', . A umnae. eet" • nOW" Her, as . Sisters.. ' 01'" Our Lady 01· .A , . ,".to '''.0 fac~. with financial ,crisis, .made: bine, ra~chin~ a?d miss.ic;ma'rT:' '. ,crNCINNA~~" (NC) :~.ReprePerpehlal .Help' In' .Lebaaon. '·;Eachdrl 'Is' r'O" . p-'equent . forc~.<;l~, ~ moye$.<" . from. , worl~:, ... Hl~;. ~~ad" . ~as ... ~,s:,a,':>.~2lZ sentatives! of' about\one million'" ,willfna"· and, anxious to make tbe saerffiee," ·,IJu&, ,each . ~ust'lftrst oblain<a! spoll8Or l1hO' pillce, to place, was violently 'r; witi~,. ~he!De.s: as.:,,:ver, ~nd .!?-~~;' members 'ot.· ,the'. International' . assailed ... ·~·.by' ',' Protestants,',;:but . Co.r:flde~ce in"a br,iglJ,~,fUhir,~ .as, F~detat.jolt''Of' Catholic· Alumnae ·".·j··wj.Q,.lNIy"(·ber,, 'neeessarJ" expenses $150· :-:' ,:. r .. 8;Jinehow,.nianageddO', survive.:: u~sh~~~ll':; will gather .here·Aug0"23 to 21;'" I!,,:ye~r during"tbe ,twl):.year.. period,: of .no- ' ~: full ,list ,.of . ·.~heper.ils lind ' .. r~~: .ran~~i~g.,~~s ,~""fai;l)l*~. 1961; 'for ,the' next triennial con. ',,"«ale, kaJD~.ll&':;,.WOllld.y~ ,care to" ad(;,~: 0~~sa~v:eHt~.J:es o~ ~~he ~I;pup, is a,I;1d. ,h~. h~,14 I ~~~ss,ivel;r ,~W:~';' vention 'of!.the·.JFCA<'; "',". ,,~.,"c~ ~ MarJ?~-"., . ' ',": . . ;., ,,; 'i,ffipossible .I).,ere.,.. '.. ,': " ~~}l ,p~s.tora,1fs.,~n.~?33".he .~Pr" ~-'!""io....- -....';".........._ - -.....- - . We must come to the move ' .tered lhe. Carthus1an novitiate'. . ,. i . ' - ; : . ' . " , ., , . ,.• T~~, s~ns of, the! .Cilnd 'of :O'UI" 'LarlY,' 'NAll\1 and'MANOEL"" to the IsiEi' of'- Ca1d~y"6ff the' af'1V,I:l~~ilor~s,I S'pain, but stayed :'T~e .Family ,That . . · w h · to re~in llD!onl the~sce.nes a.~d the people 80 well lo~eci Welsh coast. This was'made by, only seven :werks.' "., ': " . . . . by Our Mother. They aL!o \V isb . to make Her Father .A:elred (as he was now Back in Canada, he was as:-' ,P, Tog.ether -: :lmown 'and lwed' byOaU' tbeir neighliorS and called although he had never si~ned a number of tasks in the countrymen. .To. do this they wish to enter the ' ~en ~rdained~ at the turn of ci ty,£1 f,: Vancduver:as c~aplain Stays Together'" ~eminary in. Jordan. Priests,-are . ba:lly . Qeeded ~the century. But lUs community. to :old folks, . sailors, ·p'rispners, ne,re, but ~fore, c.ach, boy may be, accepted be" did not settle ther~ pe~anently an."d~niy~rsf!>· .. s~u4.~!1ts;and '. THE ~ust have a ,sponsor who will pay "his necessary until.1906, when Aelred bought . edltor,,,of .tP~. Catholic· paper. exp~nsea' :of $1~ a' year during the 'sill year tM island.. ·. 'ThE!~::-y'~r~;~-:f,ro1D 1937 ·t9 1~51,FIRST NATIONAL selIllDary eoufSt). Would you care to "adopt a iest7 'Caldey had been for'alt,h9ugh~hectic; ,.·BANK . ' pt: :". Wh, not do' It iu bonOl' Our . , inhabite.d .. ., .." . ..were ' among . the II Perpetual Help?' , ' of , 8;000 years, and be.f,ore the Re- ~01't':or4e,rly:'~n,d~cp?stryIc,tiveCJf ,~ ,. formation had had a Benedictine hIS life~" ... ' ".,' . ' ' : _ Attleboro-SouUs AtUebore II' YOU.HAVE NEVER BEEN LONELY' •.. IF YOU HAVE monastery. Aelred now set about . He· became i:a,respeeted;'.and ., ,Seekonk, . NEVER ·F.ELT UNWANTED ... then you wiU .find It' difficult renewing' the Benedictine tra- .greatly 10V~d, figure. in Vanto appreclate tbe mental sUfferings' of tbose dition . there and made hiinself couver,. and. :when he left to _, who" have outlived tbeir families and frtends . the! first abbot.' He had, some spend' his last years in England, c and .find thfilmselves 'alone and unwanted. .'To time before come. to the United the whole cityl joined in saluting ,help tbeSlt good people and to make "the last 'States to. ~eceive Episcopalian - h i m . ' .: . . . . .' dayS. the, best", we try to, maintain Homes for. 'ordination; no Anglican . bishop , Amazin&" Story the A~ In. the" mission ~elds of the Near 'in England would ordain him. .The 'Benedictin~ co'mmunity of East. .,ou can belp the' 'dedicated . nlIns wbo On Caldey, Aelreid made reali- which he had 'been founder had '. .' • devote themselves to this work -by ioining ty of 'his dream ofa certain now left Ca1de~' and was success.:. our HOUSE OF. GOLD Mission Club. The type of abbot in the late middle . fully established' at. Pri'nknashCITIES SERVICE' dues are a prayer a. day and, a dollar a month. ages, He built himself a spacious Abbey, In his i77th year he was -DISTRIBUTORS W~.NOT CHECK YOUR WILL TODAY TO 'SEE WHETHER 'abbot's hol.!.s~. He)J.ad a. pro- ,rec~ived by them as, an oblate YOU HA!.~ ~ENTIONED CATHOLIC NEAR' EAST' MISfusion of splendidly jewelled 'and~ lived witr- them until his .' . SIONS ••• IT IS IMPORTANT TO US ••. 'AND IT IS 1M". :rings, croziers. mitres. death ·in 1955. . Gasoline 'PORTANT TO YOU! 'He went the, medieval abbot Even an outHne indicates how , :one' better in having a ·lirrious- amazing this I'story is;-But to F"eLandI,Range '" YOU' LEAVE ON YOUR VACATION BE 'ine and a yacht: He kept hunt- . know its full· power to astound, . 'L' you check. your reservations . . . stop the paper 'stop the ing dogs. He.. pontificated.. inthe-· ,the ,book .mustl be..read. Mr. 'An:.. . ~llk :." l?ck ·all,do.ors ... close all windows ... just be'most ceremonious manner, gor- son has writterl with both candor' fore yo~ leliv~ thmk of MONSIGNOR RYAN and bls thousandl g~ously clothed and ornamented, ,~nd affection•.-Sometimes he .,' ,OIL BURNERS of refugees", .. ~ .vaca.tlon for them Is simply a fuUmeal •• '. apd surrounded with the ,ut-', gives an excess 'of particulars' -'~-"'-' "!. .~EN DQLL,ARS will s1111 fe~d l! family for a week.. most in pomp. where sel~tion would much imG.,E. BOILER .BURNER UNITS . GIVE roWIN. THE WORLD FOR CHRIST! ." .' :: ,The . r~~igiQus position of the' :pro~~~e, pace of his work,·and. --_._- - - - - . ~.. . . utterly ari<;>mal:' sometimes he'1g rather. v a g u ? ' F o r prompt delivery '. . t:O)js' .'. QUs. It had 'Ilo' ~tanding in the just when' precision' would seem' & Day & Night Service . ~ .Apglican','cliurch;·. 'used:. the mis- most important. " .': t'Oo' saIs and o~eViaries' of the Roman Oil. the 'wh?le, however, he ~aI Bottled Gas S~ice ,FRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN, Pre.ident . rite, but wanted no part of the has done well with a dumfound-"" / _. .Ms9r. Pet... P, Tuohy, Nat'l Sec'y . . ET 5.T:'. , .... Roman Churc.h.' ., ,ing perSC?~ality!and 'an almost iIi'::' . : , ' : ' ,.~,.l<CTOAHUANT·N.ONN .' . Senclalr.mmunicatl_ to: . : "A~lred, of. course, had had' no'. credible career~ Seen· in 'some ".i-,''-\' '.' . ' ;~ '. ,'CATHOlIC NEAR EAST WELFARE .ASSOCIATION .t!leological. trail'!ing .whatso- perspectiv~, that career "is Attleboro -.No; Attleboro ,.,Lexington Ave. at 46th St.. New York 17, N. Y. '~.~er, but ~~s constantly preach_ clasSic example of' GOO's wri~ Taunto" ". '. " ; , . ,.. .... . o . '.", .~ng; and ,glv.mg ret.J:.eats. Retrcat~·.", .'straigh~ with' crooked .lii'J.e..<'·' ,".'. .'." ~ " .'.:'.o:'~~' ..:.••
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.WORK FOR BLIND: The blind of the .Diocese are the object of 8pecial solicituo.e o~. the part oi its Bishops and· priests.... In left picture, the camera .catches a musical ·moment at a banquet sponsored by the New Bedford G.uild for the Blind. Left to right, standing, are Rev. John J. Murphy, Nliw'Be,dford guild chaplain; and Most·Rev,·James Gerrard, D.D., V.G. auxiliary bishop. Seated are Adelindo B. Sylvia and .Miss Aure
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Desautels. Center picture, shows Rt. Rev, Msgr. J. Joseph Sullivan, Diocesan Director of the Catholic Guild for the' Blind. At right, D~V. George E. Sullivaii, Fall River ~~ea chaplain, chats' with two membei\ of the local guUd at the. Catholic Memorial Home. Left to ,right are 1\ ~ . Clara M. Harrington arid Miss. Catherine O'Neill. Highlight of the y' I' is the ann~al Dioces~n ~onvention in Fall River.
Work for Blind of Diocese Close '.to Hearts G::~Y (~~)~T~~=f~rts Of Bishop .Con.~~"y,~sgr. ,.Sullivan
Ca'nadians Assist Ch h· B ·1
Episc~p.alian Pastor Becomes Catholic
NEW YORK (NC)-A fonner Episcopalian pas.tor, his wife and of the Church in-Canada to,sup-:. By Patri,c.ia M,cGowan . th~ir . five children hav~ beea 'ply religious a,:,d·fin.ancial aid The· Gospels are· fun of instances of the tender, solicitude Christ showed for the baptized iii the Catho.lic Faith to the Church ofBrliz~i were de- blind. Imi~ating·. HIS special concern for, the sightl~ss, the Most Jl,everend· Bishop 'eightby,Auxiliary Bishop Fulton ~. scribe!l.~ere by J!.:at,h~r~.Ber:nardI years,.ago a·ppointed.a 'Diocesan Director to have chal"ae of proje.cts for the"spiritual .' . . . Menard; a CanadIan pnesLwho . ". '.'.' ,,~~ "',.,' .' . . . Sheen of ,New.York. Dr. HatoW teturned to Quebec frmll his mis- '.and SOCIal bet~erment of the ,blInd of the ~rea:, His .choi.ce was Rt. Rev. Msgr.. J. J~sep~. ,il-Bronk was the EpiSC()pali_ ilion post in oorther.n.' J;trazil' tcf Sullivan, 'pastor of Sacred River and New, Bedford grou.... .~.ided . _, the" blind. for, NCb, 'pastor 'of St. ,David's·' church, . d th'e, f unera . 1 o· f h'IS m0 ~' . •H eart .'Ch" h' F a II R'Iver;. ,cea~d to become . only' ." .. . . . . . Canibria. Heights;· Long·Island.. a.tt'en, '~rc;' a . de~rt":~,ther. .o q . , . "" " ., ' . . .. . ' . "''''', . .Jle, ·was also professor of Scrip.. . . . .er. , ' whO still serves in ·the.office'.. 'ment of the 'Catholic W-orrifm" , -.A biKhlight of .ihe gUiidyear ,u,lI'e ~d scholastic philosophy ... ··Fat!,er~enard.'sP9ke of the' His·actlv.iti~s·iJi :behalf.' of . Cl~bilandorga':1itM '~l'I., the :"'h 'the·'an'nualcomien'Jiori.· For-· . the~sdiool ',of" theology of the .~tivities ~n' progress 'in .the m.i~ . the blind began,saiq¥sgJ:. Sulli- .Catholic Guild for the Blind.' The ·m·erl)' ·~el.dil1 the Spring'; 'it ..wiii EpisCopMDioce~e~of Long Island. sIGns o~ northern BraZIl. whlc!t " , ' hen he '.was .appointed . ~~men's g.ro~p~,thoweye~, :,"a~ll-:' " be·hetd'-t)i.is. ;year ·in the Fall at'· '. " · h;lVe been. confided ~o 'the care ::Jer':tor of th~ r!lll Ri:vel:' ,tamed the~r mterest, an!l s,ght~d ~acred a.e~r.t School; Fall··River. ,.of th.re~ Quebe,c. d~eses, St; .'Catholic WOmel)'sClul>.. ,,~eriIb~rs· became special c.orri- . Members'.from the entire DioCese ," " ,. INA Hyacmthe, Sherb~ooke, a,nd·. Club· members" were ·askedto.mittee . members of the bl'iri~ 'aiten<i"1;he' event,' at :which the ~icolet.. One. examp~e.. th~t .he take a specialinte~est· in . the guild. , ..., . ",'. Bishop is alwaYs,present to greet CIted: was, th~ 'Canadll\n mIssI~n blind, but this project was con-: . Other organizations, too, be:' eaCh guest personally. .' , .; 'THE· MAIN FACTOR ]S in the CIty' ofCurul'Up~. 'Last fined'to the, Fall River:area and . came assoc~ated with the work·. ,: :,. . ~ :: year in,' Cururupu, 1.;650. wer,e limited to women.' In New B'edford the Knights of . ·AII Wekloli1e baptizedand'350m~rrlages were .:When' in'1951.B'i.shop ConnollyCQlumbus.have ." given. :much ' .. At .present SOme . 125 blind PROTECT YOUR blessed. ..,. gave Msgr.··· Sullivan special assistance,. and' iii. Taiinton the throughout the ,Diocese are guild . Among the Canadian ~ission- cha'rge of work for the, sig'htless" . Daughters of, Isabella have spon- members. About,200, sighted ,volaries are Sisters, lay people, and he began by. extending ' the field sored the Guild for the Blind'. . unteers ·assist with the. mOnthly priests; The missionllrjes are. 'of the Gatholic Women:s. Club. In ..the Attleboros the Knigl)ts of meetings.:..,All area blind are,jnWITH A, · deeply grateful fOl.: the pres- Going to'workshops for the:blind Columbus were first 'to help the . vited to :'join 'the' ,organization, HOf,\eywell Home Protector enc~ ~f .a' <;:anildian,PlIYsician.!ri. '-and other.such :organizations, 'he: 'group and now' various worn;' lIaid Msgi. Sullivan; mentionihg .-. 'Fire Detec,wlI &. . their mi(jst, Father 'Menard 'interested, men in joining: the en's g~ilds also 'active in .the that ,non-:Catholics 'are also wel. _, 'Alarm System said, " . group, which began to' meet· .at . p r o j e c t . . come and have atte.nd,ed group. '.' ' .. For. Sorcery, poligamy" and ex- .Sacred Heart· School.,... . : In 1953 the Catholic. Guild for in, t~e. ~st. . . Free Home Demonstration treme poverty are problems ·the . ' Ipo New .Bedford :. ,·the . Blind w~s incorporated on , I~t~re~~' 'Prospective mem-., , With No Obligation Call missiona'ries must Confront. ift With Fall River activities un.,. a .DIO~esan-wIde bllSIl!under. the .~r,s ~lly;c~,nta~t any ,of the.r~-: nortl}ern Brazil. ,Th~reis' .an ··der way, Msgr. SUlliv~':l tumed ,dlr~cb9n .of 8.1'few Bedfor.d.lllw- gi6'nall priest dfrectors' or lay Frank La'wrence acute sho~tage of priests.in-the his attention to New . Bedford yer,Jo!lephDuggal'l.. " , .'inemoers·6f the guild.·Ar;ange.. , Fire' Extinguisher . area. CanadianProtestlint mis- where again work for, th~ blind :' At ,~bou~. ~he saJJ.le time!·~, .mentEl Viiil be made to fransport , Sale's and Serv~ce slonaries are making much p'ro- began, as a proje<;t of the Ca~h- "the. wI~enmg .scope of the. or- ,,-them te:> the' meetings· nearest :. . Fire" Alarm System g~ess i~ the, ar.ea,_Father Men~ olic Women'~', Club.' .•., . ga~llzatI.on necess.~tated.. the \ap.. '~em., All guilds 'are at· present' Installation ard r~lated. ' . After apout a year the Fall pomtment of, ,prle~~ aIdes for. 'suspended for' the 'surrimer .and . 260 Ashley Blvd. each area' of the DIOcese; ,~ey: . will '. hisume aCtivities iii SejiWY 3-4136 include Rev. George E. SullIvan tember. . , Assumpta Guild Installs in Fall .River;. Rev. John J. .Murphy in New. Bedford; Rev. 'James F. Lyons, Taunton; Rev. DAUGHTERS OF ST. PAUL Gerard Chabot, Attleboro.' Ift"m. ,oung oirls (14-23) to labor .. Many Activities ST. AUGUSTINE'S Christ'. voat vine,ard a. an Apo.... of the ST. JOSEPH'S, EditiOtls: Pre... Radio, Movies and VINEYARD HAVEN Each local guild carries on its TAUNTON vi.ion. With these modern mean.. the.. The annual summer bazaar ,own program of activities. In Mrs. James Goldrick will seJ;Ve I\\issionary Sisters bring Christ'. Doctrin. as president of Assumpta Guild sponsored by St. Augustine Guild :?'few Bedford, the year's calento all. regardless of race. color or creed. for the coming year. Her assist- will be held. Wednesday' and :dar was closed this month with For information write to: ing officers include Mrs. Edward Thursday, Aug. 5 and 6: There .~ gala· banquet The Attleboro REV. MOTHER SUPERIOR ;guild has concentrated 'on' study' Lynch, vice ,president; Mrs. Ed- will be a food sale in July. 58 st. PAUL'S AVE. BOSTON 30. MASS. ward Gotham, recording secre- " Bazaar features will include a of the catechism in braille. Social tary; Mrs.. Paul Maynard, finan- ,swan pond, fish pond, fancy- events mark the monthly meetcial secretary; Miss Grace Mc- work and religious articles ings of all g~ilds. booths, snack bar, vegetables, With its twofold purpose of COME IN SEE and DRIVE Manus; treasurer. New directors will be Mrs. flowers, candy, and a kiddies' enriching' members spiritually. . and socially, the Guild someCharles Drumm, Mrs. Louis Bird corner. ST HYACINTH, times finds. occasion to cooperand Mrs. William Mulcahey. "The World's Most Beautifully Proportioned CanM NEW BEDFORD ate with state representatives in BLESSED SACRAMENT, . at giving material assistance· to the A clamboil will be held WedFALL RIVER The Women's Guild will hold nesday, July 29 by St. Anne So- sightless. "The state takes exa membership tea Tuesday, Sept. dality at Sconticut Neck, Fair- cellent care of its blind," noted, 15, with Mrs. Irene St. Arnand haven. Regular meetings will re- Msgr. Sullivan. The guilds use the services of and Mrs. Edna Morin as co- sume Monday, Sept. 14. many sighted volunteers as drivST. JOHN'S; chairmen.. ~ORD DEALERS FOR OVER 38 YEARS ers and guides for meetings. CENTRAL VILLAGE ST. JOSEPH'S, Catholic organizations in each FALL RIVER The Ladies' Guild will sponsor 1344-86 Purchase St. New Bedford, Mass. The Men's Club will hold its a food sale June 28 in the parish guild area take turns in serVing third annual family picnic at hall. Items will include cakes, as hostesses' and supplying reSt. Vincent de Paul Camp, West- pies, breads, squares and cup- freshments for meetings.. Sighted port, Sunday, June 28. Francis cakes. Chairman is Mrs. Fn:!d- committee members also arrange ~ntertainment, frequently proX. Montle is general chairman. erick Best, assisted by Mrs. Events will include softball, a J a!lles Hasoon.' band concert, 'pony rides and a ST. PIUS X, 1 county fair program. YARi'.iOUT:iI St. Pius X Guild will hold its The picnic will beheld SunAPPRAISER day, July 12, if there -is rain Oil filth annual summer baz~ar 'in REAL ESTAU the original date., . the church hall from. 3 to 9 ST. JOSEPH'S, Thursday, July 16. A savings ATTLEBORO bond will be offered as door .INSURANtE The'Ladies of Ste. ~nne So- prize. .Motif this year .wi~l pe WY 3-5762 dality:: win . receive' corporate, "Happy Birthday" in .commem:o136' C.ornell St. UNION WHARF FAIRHAVEN, MAS$.,' communion at 8 o'clock Mass this ration ·of the flf~h anniversarrof New Bedford' '.'" , Sunday morninc., the parish. ·
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French Pendulum Swi.nging Back to New Age ~f Faith By ,Most-Rev.' Robert J., Dwyer,' D.O.·
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R·od.·o, TV' '" As Great Aide's -'In Educo't.·o·n
~ window in Rouen, outl~ned against the Il)orning
the right the Cathedral, a Fo",est of Pinnacles; in the center
3t; Maclou, magnificiently flamboyant;' and .to •the left
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miracle that the churches survived at all. Years of patient :md painstaking I restoration are :teeded before they'are them:;elves a g a in. Bilt day bY day
-THE ANCHOR
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*y, ~he spIres of thr~ noble~cJturch~ r~.e up in glory. At 3t. Quen, with its crown sur- "':'" mounting' its b~-....-.t tower nae .bombardments of 1944 'Were hard on Rouen; it is a
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Thun.: June 25, 1959
DIOCESE Of" FALL RIVER, MAS6,
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Bishop ;;,. Reno
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DETROIT (NC) - Radio and television eo u I d h e I p solve some of the most pressing problems confronting
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~gulled the t~~nk~g the haute bourgeolslev, the ofupper middle classes which.r ul e d France and; set the tone of her intellectual land moral climate. Cer~inly,it affeCted the s~ntiment and the action of enormous massesrevolhtion displaced .by trial' of the the'indus19th
Christian edueation today, Bishop John King Mussio of Steubenville has said. . Keynoting the 11 ttl annual \ . meeting of the Catholic Broadcasters Association Ohio prelate declared: "Ifthewe cannot
century. It conquered the school' , system, anq. if there has ever, been a dreadful example of edu- . I
bring all the worthyto aspirants for higher education the uni-
the works; pro. erahsm cati~nal secpl,aris.m, Fc:ench Ilb~ re sse the . supphed It. It was coldly . versity or college; then, with the· finials are redetermined. to root out religion help of. God, let us bring the It 1 aced, the from the mind and heart of the university in all of' its best s tat u e s repeople. ._ . services to the student." turned to their: " But this: secularism, .given He pointed out that radio and lliches, the delsuch length of rope, ,could only television, "in their purpose and i cat e tracery hang itself. I It had neither the design, ,are born 'of God through reconstructed. When the.work Is _ intellectual I integrity nor the the genius of man, They are dedfinished they will not be quite moral to create a \ icated to our good. This' alone the Same churches they were spiritual. climate in which' men should bring to our lip's a magbefore, since we have lost the !;QuId live. With the rise of Comnificat of wonder and thanks,.. art of the original masters, but munism the l handwriting on the giving," lIley will be whole and side wall clearly traced the alternaBishop Mussio emphasized that once more, lives: the religion of Marxism . Christian' education today is And they will be used. It is 'and ·the end of everything that called on to counteract the ill !lOt as museump~es that the had made France individual and effects of Secularism. cathedrals of France are being great, or a return to Christ, as to But he added, "since we~ canrestored; not merely as elaborate. the source 6f all that .bas made not duplicate and reduplicate bait for "tourism"; but because her the miracle of Christendom. ()ur school facilities to keep up they answer the spiritual need " A reconsideration such as this with the ever increasing numeI the people. brought out ,a signal fact, that in bers of those seeking a higher . For the faithful are here in far , . s pite of the bombardment, in ~IR,~T AlDERS: Paul Pelletier· (left) is a willing education, ~sure~,: ,we can take areater number and with far spite of the "treason of the intel"patient for George Gobeil to practice sling t · g Both o.ur ~resent faCIlities for ~ucaP'eater spirit than we had ~n leduals':, the Faith still lived .,m M fT' "ym . bon and make them serviceable .Ied to believe. At' Mass, in the" Fiance. And not only lived, bUt mem rs o..roop St.-Joseph s Chqrch, New Bedford. to a far greeter nlimber of stu-' I'e8tored portions, with the hard ~ in this long, Jravail of persecu- and w.ere partIclp~nts In a week~nd camping trip to Myles.: "dents than before. 'relevision Ught streaming through the tion and cot'Itempt, had inaugu- .,' StaJ:ldlSh ReservatIon. .' and J78dio ~ the answer to OUI' windows - still void of their rated' its own Renaissance of. problem." . .brilliant glass, they assemble Christian apologetic, social eonTeen-Age Models !tefore improvised altars, and sciousness, ard liturgical revival. ....... VATICAN CITY (NC)-Archtbe huge areas of the naves are . The dreary decades of ·defeat Bishop JOlief Beran of Prague wired for exceptionally effee-had' not disc:ouraged the Church . has been praised by L'Osservative public address systems. in France; they had toughened tore Romano for his courageous The progress of restoration is her, brought: her to a yery clear .!'" • national interest, shared by understan~irig o( her mission. HOLY FAMILY HIGH SCHOOL. Mr. ST. MARY ACADEMY: opposition to cOmmunism on the those who believe and tnose not in terms of vanished glory NEW BEDFORD FALL. RIVER • 10th anniversary of his arrest who doubt alike. And by a and prestige; but of her spiritual . The installation of officers of . Ei~ht students, winners of • by Czechoslovak Reds. atrange irony, the State, which authority, her sacramentai mis. modelin~ cOJ·~test SP()Dsor;ed by 30 years ago confiscated the sion, her final and exclusive Our Lady's Sodality took place The Mercian, academy newsChurches, has assumed the bur- concern for: the "salvation at. on Monday" Bishop Gerrard prepaper, will be stand-by models tien of restoration wiUiout. souls:i . sided and the entire student ~dY for-the publication's style column SCRAP METALS Iluestion. The ,cathedrals had been sbatattended the ceremony which for the fort.hcoming school year. WASTE PAPER - RAGS Catholic ReadieD Vital t~r;ed, but they still stood a•.. closed with Benediction of the They are Katherine Walsh, TRUCKS AND TRAILERS fOR We have heard a great deal of s~mbols 'of t~e Faith tliat nevet: Most Blessed Sacrament. The Sharon.Fennessey, Theresa Lam...... PAPER DRIVES ~ t bo t F ,'. . dies. ,. Offl'cers a're·. Prefect, Edward bert, Paula Martin, Janet O'Don."",en years a u rance as a 'D " th t F - .' . CHURCHES, SCOUTS and ~land of mission", even as ~ th'IS,. ~n ~ ranee as Correia; Vice Prefect, Elizabeth nell, Gail Faris, Priscilla Moss CIVIC ORGANIZATIONS "France Pagan". Doutbless, there IS, returnmg to the -'Murphy; Treasurer, Michel Dow; and Ja,:,ice Lapointe. .' 1080 Sha'wmut' Avenue III much to justify this pessialth. th.e ~nswer must be th~ . Consultors, Agnes Costa, LeOnThe contest, featuring popular New Bedford WY 2-7828 mism, .and it would be foolish. charac!eqsh~.shrug . of the, ard Clarkson. - . .modest styles, included sports (JQ the basis of the happier im_shoulde~s: r'ho kn~ws? Tbe . casual, dressy and format e~ pressions we have received to present government IS strongly The newly, elected . Student sembl,ea. ' attempt to argue the p~int. Catho~ic, thf old' antagonisms • Council officers are:' President, There are areas of France.where and bltterJless are much less in Michael' Callagnan; Vice-Presi.' the Faith has practicallly ceased . evidence and there is a tremen- dent, Joseph Carignan; Secre-' .to exist, both in the great indus- ' dous up.surge of Catholic ac-, tary, John McDermott;. Trealttrial cities and in certain rurai tivity. I . ul'er, David Sheehan. regions.' {New chu~ches are building . But it is also plainly manifest e.ver~w~ere. 'Ca.tholic so~ial ac-: that France as a whole has by no bon IS In ful~ vlgor,. and the in:. NEW HDfORD . ... means lost the Faith, and is in tellectua~' leadershlp of' the . no real danger of d~ing so. The Church IS rym~r~able. But ~he INDUSTRiAl OilS Catholic reaction is' a very real problem of !rehglOus educabon and vital thing. If it is slow in has !,ot bee!.' solved, It remains an sizes in stock from HEAliNG OIlS effecting a full restoration, there _the. crux of: the question; and $3;99 to $100. . is no doubt about its determinauntil the nation faces it intellilion to keep at it until the work gently and g~nerously, it is hard 'is done. to see how i the industrial and .. .. OIL BURNERS . The bombardment of the rural ~asse~. can. be WOD back . '. oathedrals during the war was a, to th~lr hen~age, I '.regrettable thing, probably in- . . I.t IS tempting, n~verthelesa, to S~plng lags-6,89 h, $30, _itable but certainly tragic. Yet ~r~te. that :the ~ndulum ill in a very r'eal sense it was a. .~mgll1g baqk ~gam, back to a SOl'C~ ST. Rothingcompared to the bomnew age o~ ;Falth. SurelYr it iI hardment of these same cathe- ....w orth praym,g for, that th~ EldNEW BEDFORD WiHicim and Second 5tNets drals, as symbols of religion. est Daughter of the Church WY 3-1751 New Bedford carried ~m by the anti-clerical sh~ld kn~l ~gaill in .her 'liberals during the past hundred forgotten' shrines.. years. . .YOUR SA"'" EMltI..-i I The "block-buster" bombs of , AlSOI LIST Of ; 50 IlMlIlEST•RATE bite Alli~d air forces. destroyed , . RD.AGBlC'f IlSUIIED the physical fabric, precioUs beSAVINGS ASSNS. yond' price to those who love the t ••lIlIIforltetIH.-lntc.... Do You Work if. a Factory, I INVESTORSEAVICE supreme manifestations of medi.Garage, Machine Shop Of . , JI4~'~"? :h~~~:~' eval art and architecture. The IF," Ilftsl 'commerclll1, Gasoline Station? bombardment of the "liberal" p~paganda was deliberately We pick up and deliver, dean '. I aimed at destroying the faith- of ; ~> .,.~...,,..,.' .and re~w overalls. Also, wit hove R. A. WILCOX CO.' the people which created them a complete line at Cavera'" Pants OfFICEI FURNITURE and gave them their inner, and Shirts tor sale. ' meaning. For a cathedral deserted by its hi SCoeIl tori l..... eclia~. ~Jj~ . . We teclaim and wash ClAy oity, worshippers, reduced to the • DESKS i • CHAIRS .dirty or- greasy rags. empty status of a "national monFILING .CABINETS -, '. • -TAUNTON; ,MASS. Why Bvy wt.... We ~. ument", is an infinitely sadder • FIRE FILES • SAfES thing than the same building 'fOLDING TABUtS THE BANK ON llhatteredand wrecked by the AND CHAiRS .- .
con~iction
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SPotlighting
- Editorial Praise
Ou~. Schools
A. W. MARTIN
~.na;lOn
TENTS
HATHAWAY OIL CO., INC.
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Sales & SetYice
CARTER'S
Complete
:JAljKING. SERVICE
Attentio.n Mechanicsl
for BristOl County
JJr.i$.tol CQU~ty. ;., Trust. Company
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'Row effective was it?Cer.. -.mly, for over 50 years, It· en-'.
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TAUNTON GReEN ~
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NEW ENGLAND OVERAll & SUPPI.Y(0." '~.~;;~;.··~~~--.I ·i·l·ii·i·i·i·i·
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A Statement
of Policy
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From The Managem~nt of The
-STRAND THEATRE ,
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Fall R'iver's ONLY Locally Owned Theatre" The management of the Strand Theatre views
We herewith pledge that the Strand Theatre
with increasing alarm the type of motion Pic-
will present for public v,iewing only!hose pie-
tures curre-ntly ,being shown. i,n the, American
, tures 'with an A-lor A-2 rating as classified by
theatre~
. the Legion of Decency.
We are cognizant of the stand the Roman
. We pledge that no theatre Odvertising or theat-
Catholic Church and other religious organize-
rical literature published, in our behalf will
,tions have taken in 'this regard and we ~ecry, , , e'(er be su~tive either in fact or by inference. with ~qual candor the lowomorallevel to which a segment of the motion picture industry has
We like to think of the Strand Theatre' as a
deteriorated.
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.
IIFamily Theotre H • It is handsome in appointI
The management of the Strand Theatre pro-
ments • .'. complete~y air condition~ and provides the very latest essentials .for the com-
poses a policy of cooperation which we hope
fort and safety of our patrons.
will give the Legion of Decency Program add_ed \
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'impetus and greater 'meaning. In so doing we invite t~ support of religious and ed~cators parents, and guardians to 'join with us in our
M. N onnan Zalkind
attempt to elevate the quality of metion. pic-
President, Strand Theatre
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,.tures to an acceptable standard for family entertainment.
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In lceeping witlJ this pOlicy we are, pr';"dto announce the lollow~' , ing schedule 01 A-I and A-2 Movies to. be slto~1t at the Strand Theatre. 8egin~ing June 24 ---: Laurel and Hardy in Heroes of the Regiment A Night with Charlie Chaplin :- Wa It Disney/s Cartoon Carnival.
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Beginning July'.l - Hercules and Isle of Lost Women. .
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July
lS ..... The.Nun.'s Story with Audrey ,,;
No~., leY.,. ., lMpiri~' • ,• • TheoIogica"y
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,-:-~ ANCH()I Thurs'-, 'Jiirie 25, 1'959
>M(lryl<~oller'<Ad,visesY Yo~ng~t,ers,:,::,·
',DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER, MASS. ConUn'ued from Page" One there until 1956, when hisparo'however; came strongly ·.to the chial terr'itory was taken ov~r . young priest. : With permission ,for constructL<?iI of a jet ;airfield.. of Bishop Feehan,tli.en 9rdinary," At this time, Father ,Mo~ris' Continued from Page One applied for 'entrance to lVIary- return'ed to lj;all River for nearly knoll, the Catholic Foreign Mis- a year, assisting'in Sacred Heart' over the previous totlil. Last year , sion Society of America, founded' parish. His' Washington a'ssign~ the increase was 7,017. in 1911 by the hierarchy of the ment followed. Visits to Fall In other indications of growth, , United States. River. are especially pleasant for the Diocese was honored in the . Once a Maryknoller, Father the Maryknoller because' two ,past year by consecration of an , Morris taught in one of the com-'" brothers and a sister still live Auxiliary Bishop, Most, Rev•. munity's seminaries for a year, in .the city, the brothers. in his James J. Gerrard, D.D., to assist then did promotion work in parnative parish/of SS" Peter and Bishop Conn<;>lly in meeting the ishes until 1923 when he was Paul and the sister in his ever-increasing needs ' of the 'assigned to.' Ko~ea, 'where he "adopted" 'one of Sacred Heart. 0 area. remained for most of the followLooking back over' his 45 The number of, Diocesan ing 13 years. His work included years in the priesthood and a' . priests active in the Diocese operation of a central mission life more varied than'most, the rose by five, from 194 to 199. with 32 outlying s!fltions and veteran declared, "I've enjoyed Totals of students in" Diocesan, building of a language school for every minute,of it." ,parochial and private high missionaries ,newly arrived in " W~at advice does Father Morschools likewise reflected a gain. the country. ris give the many audiences of ,More than 300 additional chilPrisoner of War school-age' youngsters to whom dren were enrolled this year in In' 1936 Father Morris was he speaks; on the vocation of a \ parochial elementary schools, an , transferred to Japan, where he miss~onaiy'? "I tell them," he' increase from 16,334 to 16,686. contirmed work among Koreans. said, "that if they want to be Nearly' 1,000 more' public He remained there uritil1941 ~nd happy, they should plan to be of ;' ,grammar school children than in the outbreak of war. With many service tOI their fellow me!1:,1958 were enrolled in Christian , other religious, he was interned that's the real path to happiness doctrine classes, Figures rose ,/, for seven months until he was a'nd peace! from 22,576. last year to 23,527 returned to the United States "And I point out," he' added .,in 1959. aboard the prisoner exchange with a twinkle, "the wonderful', ship Gripsholm. dividends 'offered by Christ: a New Secretary \ In contrast to the experience . hundredfol,~ in this life and life CHICAGO (NC) Father of many Maryknollers, however, everlasting in the world, to come. John May, chaplain. at Mercy Father Morris was well-treated Where can 'you beat that?" Hospital here, has been ap~, while a prisoner. "The Japanese P ASTOR AND HIS CHURCH: Rev. Thaddeus Bou- pointed gel1eral' secretary of the were so sure they'd -won the war; huysen, SS.CC. has been pastor' of Sacred Hearts Church Catholic 'Church Extension Sothey could afford to be good' to ' ciety by Archbishop Albeit G. ConUnu~d from Page One for the past seven years. us," he said. . , Meyer of Chicago. Back in the United States, the and Mother Ann 'Joseph. missionary went to a Japanese The general chapter,' which relocation camp in Arizona asa will be held at Villa Santa White's Farm Dairy himself with servicemen and Contin~ed from Page One chaplain, after which he was' Teresa,'aHoly, Union' Convent. their families, with repairing near St. Pe'ter's, Rome, will con- plaisir 'is' co-chairman aided by "SPECIAL MILK assigned' to Hawaii; " working . 'the 32-year'-0Id chur'ch,and with sist of preparatory talks given a large commi.!j;ee. . \ From Our Own by a member of the, Sacred Con,. On the invitation of the first reducing ~he parish debt. Tested Herd" -gregation of Religious,' a two-day bishop of Fall River, Most Rev. Rev. Leopold Jeurisseri' was Continued from Page One . retreat,' election of tl:ie Superior ' William Stang, D.D., three Fathpastor from 19'14 to 1952 and he' . , Acushnet, Mas•. WY 3~57 River Diocese had ,in' finding 'General, meetings of. the General ers of the Sacred, Hearts came , also concerned 'himself greatly • . Special Milk homes for other teen-agel's im-' and Provincial Chapters, ,.and to Fairhaven in, May, 1905. Using with, the, church debt, cutting it mediately after, the Hungarian eJection, Qf' Assistant' penerals: temporary quarters, in the Mon- considerably before his death at· • Homogenized Vito D Milk ..uprising. Some' 15 , or, 16", were , ,The delegates from Imll}'acu':' alitery, Mass was said each Sun,. the age ,of 58." • Buttermilk I t H . P' '11 t k ' day.. To ,accommodate the famre~ttled m.ostly in, t~e Cape, Father' ,Thaddeus, came 'to , .• , Tropicana Orange i a e eart:' rovmce; WI, a e, Hies attending Mass each priest "area. "':. , " part in three Marian pilgrimages. . Sacred "Hearts ,,'in . June; ~1952,.' ' ...Coffee an.d Choc. Milk Just, rei~rne~from',8 !!pecial The' first will be to 'Lourdes, .and gave his lO-'minute sermon· in after serving as pastor of-- Holy , • Eggs' ..- Butte, ,legislative .' meeting of Di<X;esa'it' the second', to. Kno~k .. Irehind, , Portuguese, french and Eng:',' ,Trinity Chul'ch, West iIarwic;h,,' . Re~ettle'ment· Directqrs,' a'n,d where Our;, U<iy . ,appeareda~ lish.) Parishioners were from for, 12 ye;1rs'. II} 1956 he organized members of the National Cath-, the parish church on four occa'" " North Fairhaven and Acushnet. the' Conference, of SL Vincent olic Resettlement. Council; held ,sions in 189'; to console the Irish' Since that time Sacred'Hearts ' de Paul in· the parish. He has ,in New, York,. Father Boyd said in their sufferings. 'This' shrine 'has ' bec'ome 8 French church. purchased tables and chairs for 'that, marn'·attention of the gath- is of partictilar interest' to Rev- Two other Catholic 'churches," a small hinch room at the school. ering was focused on' the' Worid erend Mother Provinciai for St. Mary's in North Fairhaven and .encourages 'the Catholic , . ,and St. Xavier in. AcrtshRefugee Year, to begin JuJy 1, in 1897 her own mother,' as a Civic -Club, by ·driving, variolas 'Francis . . .... Your ProteCtio.. " with the object of' calling, notice' four~day-old infant', w'as, broughl ,net, have sillce been bUilt III the members to Boston for' patriotic' Buy From ,110 the aciJte 'refugee problem to tile scene o-f 1J!eapparition to - area, decreasing somewhat the programs. He himself worked atill facing, the world.. , be Jjaptized~ , " .- .:" number 'of communicants, at on the installation of new desks , Sacred'lIearts. It is not generally' realized, and seats in the school. , -- Mirc~luous Medal ' In 1907, Sacred Hearts Sisters he said, that nearly ,a million . , To commemorate ':' .Sacred 132 Roctedcdc Ave. . The third'Marilin' pilgrimage arrive'd from Europe and startrefuge~s are still displaced in' will bematIe to ,the, Shrine' 'of' , Hearts' 50th anniversarY"the exNew ~dtord E~rope, alone, ,of which 148,000 the Miraculbus MedalatRiJe de ing in November of that year the terior and interior of the church ' • . parish .M~sses were ,sung at the are in' immediate need, of aid have been restored and redeco,," .WY 5-7947 and 50;000 would best be served Ba'c' in ,'Paris. Here Mary ap-: convent on the corner of ,Main' rated. . " . peared to St. Catherine. Laboure Street and Howland Road. by migration' to other countries. requesting Ithat a : medal ' be In February, 1908, plans were Papal Talk Sunday struck and distributed through- ':approved for a new. mission Pope John XXIIJ;. will call out the world. . church. 'Two months later work attention of Catholics 'to the At each shrine the delegates on Sacred Hearts School started. 'World Refugee Year in a worldwide radio address to be "heard will pray that God wili give -to On completion 'of tJ:1e school on, Sunday, June 28.' President' each Holy Union Sister and to "uly 5, 1908, Masses, were tranii-, Eisenhower ha;- issued a procla- ' ~ach of her' ,students, relatives, ferred to it. 'A year later, ,on July'4, the mation inviting all ~itizens t'O and benefac'tol's, the ,graces He new church was blessed by Most support "programs developed in sees most necessary. The Am'ericim Sisters will visit Rev. Daniel F, 'Feeha'n, D,D., fur~erance of that year ,for ,the the Holy Union schools and col- then Bishop of Fali River, and assistance of refugees." , The uneral termscari ,be, leges in Ki'llashee, Athlone, and dedicated to the Sacred Hearts ' k'anslated ,'spe«ifically by, the' Banagher;lrel!1nd; in Soutpanw- of Jesus and Mary. " ton, London;! and Bath,Englandj, Fift-yyears ago' 40 families ' family or families of the Diocese Douai, comprised the parish. Today willing to" help a Hungariili, Lille, , Tournai, an'd .' there are 650 parishioners, and teen~ager or others of the young:... Erance.; ROryle; anq Madrid. ,-Religious, ,literary, and artistic 120 children attend Sacred sters listed in Father Boyd's PcJint 'and Wanpaper , files as needing assistance. He s~rines of: Venice, Florence, Hearts School. '. Father Bernard Pierson, , can '"be reached at Fall River, Milan, Luc~rne, Dublin; an~ Dupont Paint. Ed. 1897 Catholic" Welfare, Bureau, 344 Br:ussels are', also chartered on ' known, as Sacred. Hearts '~mis . PARKING r sionary" priest, led the small Highland Ave., OSborne 6-8481'. , the Sisters'. Itinerary. , Resr of Store Builders Supplies fl~ck from 1907 to 1911. He 422 AcuSb, Ave.' . , died 'in October, 1916. 2343 Purchase Street The Rev. Seraphin Ooghe was cor, Middle St, New Bedford pastor from 1912 until 1940. He WY 6-5661 New Bedford promoted piety by organizing the Association of the Sacred , Hearts and by forming the Sodality of the' Ladies of St. Anne. Increased Membership During Father Seraphin's pasSHEET METAL Plumbi"g- Heating torate the pariSh increased to 185 J. TESE~, Prop. families and' there . were 225 915 Acushnet Ave, RESIDENTIAL school pupils. The rectory was' IND'USTRIAl At Weld Square completed' under his supervision , COMMERCIAL in January 1928. Between the New Bedford 253 Cedar St. New Bedford rectory and, the 'church Father New Bedfor.d's Lead!ing WY 3-3222 Seraphin'directed the work .on Plumbe-r ,a chapel to Our Lady of Lourdes. From 1940 to '1944 parishioners' ;were ,under the tute,lageof the Rev',Oetave Igodt:- He concerned
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Holy tJi1ionNun's
Fairhaven Pa rish' Golden Jubi,lee
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\,PERFEtTION ,',:"·OIL
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Premier
GENERAL COMMIlvrEE: The large: committee of ltarishioners planning the Golden Anniversary of S,acred Hearts Church, No:r.th Fail'haven, is headed:by, left to right, Maurice Hevey; treasurer ; Louis Rogissarti, ,generaLchairman; Father Bouhuysen, SS.CC., pastor; J; A. Alder Mont. • . " plaisir, program chairman, 'and Joseph M. Hartrrian,secre•
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to See Pope
VATICAN CITY (NC)-Jap- ' anese Premier Nobusuke Kishi will be received in audience, by Pope John XXIII, on July 21, it was reported here. The date is the ,second' Of' the," Premier's " , . . 8ched.#~d two-day vi6it to Rome.- .
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Sturtevaftt &
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Norris H. Tripp
CORREIA/& SONS
ROBERTS HARDWARE
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ONE' 5TO'
SHOPPING C::NTEI·
1872 ACU5HNEl AVE. neO(' .8rQOklawn Park
• TelevisioB • Furnit_ '•. AppliaDOes ., Gl'ooel'J' 144 AUeD,M•• New Bed_d, WYmaft 7-935t' •
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NEW IEDfOn, MASS. SaM. J. LaGas... ·Manager '.
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'GfJz~ola,,C9,sta, Carey' Get AI'~Scholastic Recognition ~
; THE ANCHOlt....:' T~urs.,
. DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER.
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teams- in the area: it would come ail no SUrprIse to see Coyle, New Bedford and Durfee dommate the selections. Pete Gazzola Warriors' heavy hitting first ba~man was named to the Boston' Globe's select team, the only boy so 'honored south of Boston. Teammate Al Costa and Durfee's Charley Carey we r e bench selections at their respective positions, pitcher and sec 0 n d base. Bench status was awarded only those who were in finalist contention for a first team birth. Looking over the Honorable Mention list, which included pitchers Jack Torres of 'Dighton and' Bob Parker, New Bedford,. we came across the names of a couple of well-known baseball personalities. Both' are s~rt stoPs. One is the younger brother of. the,late Harry Agganis; th~, other the son of Len Merollo,' former Chicago Cups' shortstop ana ~w'~ scout with the, same or~l;lm~bon. Merullo ~e younger IS at Malden Catholic, Agganis.at ,Lynn, Classic:aL I :t:1e&$D&' ~e~ure , ; .ScoUt Me~ull,o was. credited Wt~ an,other, outsta~~mg sel~lnll J()b recenUr-he, slgn~d Moe Drabowsky 'for: an estimated $56,000 in 1956--whenhe inked Connecticut's Moe Morhardt to a bonus contract. Thoughtfulness was a definite factor. Merullo "invited the young outfielder's mother to the College World , Series at Omaha to watch her 'son play. Mrs. Morhardt was so pleased ,by"the gesture that she 'advl'sed her son to cn~t his 1.... U10 , with the Cubs. , Back: to 'the' All-sCholaStic " .....uad. Also mentioned were ;;;cond' baseman - Jim' I Antosca, ,Mansfield,' catcher' Bob Hargraves, Durfee, and outfi'elders ,Frank Driscoll, Attleboro, and Jim Enos, New' Bedford' Voca<.ional. Named to the bench Wall catcher Pete Marchegiano, Arch,.. bishop Williams. H;is broth~r;s professional surname was Marciano. ~ou 'guessed it! Pe~ is Rocky's younger brother. The' selection of Matignon's Art Grilhamto,a ffrst. string outfield berth rounded out an,amazing ye~r for the Somerville 'lad. He previously, had ,been a unanimous ,~All Scholastic choice iii football' (end) and basketball (guard). Graham hif:4i3-for;the season, scored three times from secoJld o.~, infi~l~ .,outs, s,tole 13 ,bases in14'''games 'and "never stopped _ hustling," Matignon posted a - 4'.:ro, reCord foe tile ,year., . Significant' ove'rsight in tI;le All-Scholastic listihgs'-':"'in ttlis ageot,'1 humble opinion - m-
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'Fall River llho'her 'Camp Counselor .
Jaek Kiaeavy
l!kJmerset ltick Sehool Coach It·s.An~Schoiastic time 'again pursuant to the closeout of the 1959 season. We shan't atte~pt to select such a team, what with our horizon being pretty much limited to the Narry League. H~w~er, from what little we did see of i',
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June 25, 1'959
, Brother Francis, Leo Le~ry, C.S.C., son of Mrs. W. Arthur Leary, 126 Summerfield Street. and the late Dr. Leary, is serv,ing as a counselor. at Nob'e ,Dame Camp in Michigan, conducted, by Brothers of the Congregation of Holy, Cross. ".Recipient of a bachelor of arts degree .conferred by Notre Dame University earlier this month, Brother Francis will receive his first teach~ng assignment at the' conclusion of the vacation period to a school conducted by the Eastern Province of the Congregation. A graduate of Sacred Heart Parochial School, Fall River, and Monsignor Coyle High School. Brother Francis attended St. Micha'el's College, Winooski Park, Vt. for two years prior to beginning his novitiate at St. Joseph's NOVitiate, Rolling Prairie, Ind. '
eluded :f.ail\ll'e to mention such boys as Pete Bartek, Coyle, Jack Ward and Joe Sylvia, New Bedford, and Dick Fagan, also of Coyle, who had such' a tremendous tourney series, All of these youths we~e recognized by Sports Editor John Needs OIl his Taunton Gazette team. Bartek caught the last two innings of the title game against Belmont with a broken finger. Post game x-rays revealed a ,double break on the ring digit of Pete's right hand which was nicked by a foul tip in Belmont's big stanza. The youngster displayed tremendous grit' by hang,ing in there. In fact, he ihrew out the first Belmont runner wno attempted to test him immedi-', - ately after the injury occurred. Pope Bestows Honor Schedule Camps in Area SEATTLE (NC) -' Archbishop The New York Yankees atThomas A. Connolly of Seattle tempted to launch, the tryout has been named to one of ,the w camp season at Mansfield last highest honorary positions in the 'week but the, weatherman, Church by Pope John XXIII. The proved uncooperative and tpe 59-year-old prelate has been aplast two days were washed out. . ,pointed an " Assistant at iae Area ~opefuls haY,e qlu(;,h, ~ look, ,TROPHY: WINNER: Rev.' John F. Godelaer, SS.CC., " Pontifical ,Throne. forWard to however. 'The "Dodg- pastor of Ou,r:Lady. of the Assumption Church, New Bedfohl, , 'ers' entou~age is sceduled, to ' , 'open 'a three-day camp at Sar- ",presents, ,~ather HU~I~t Memorial Trophy to RiChard "'gent',Field,:New Bedford, 'next Monteiro, jts first winner. The award,. pr~8ented to'the Monday. ' church and in miniature' to the recipient, honors the memory '~ Heating' ,_'; Detr~it 'wiH "againsponsor of ~v. Hubert' J. Vasselaer, who initiated GYO ba:seb~n'in workouts in Fall River, July,'1-9 ,t,,'he par,'ish.I~ is, given:,tO't,he 00,y t exemplifying ,Uiolie Over 35 Years . . f.· c' 'at South Park, and ,'the Kansas ~ Satisfied Servi~' City Athletics will bold similarlif~, scholas~ic endeaVQn~nd CYP sports tradition.". ' , ,806 NO. MAIN ,SlUR drills' at, Hopewell Par~, !l'aun- ....:. ' ., ' ",; , " " , ton, July 9-11. The Red, Sox :I~, 'Fall River OS 5-749P .opened a.'school yesterday at Cranston,' R. I., ail d the camp , Sunday morning, ,~~ne' 28, ' . , , will extend through, Friday. members,'of the CatholIc Young ',' .'.', Adult Organization of Kennedy Word 18 that~het NlCh?ls.re- "Center, New Bedford, will att~ to t~ majors '- th18 time tend 8:30 Mass at St. ,James" WIth the ~ Sox, - may not Church followed by first annual ,be too far 1ft ,the !uture. The Communion breakfast. The p'~an former Braves,' flI~ger . from ning committee is headed by nearby Paw~ucket. IS domg ,a Martha Daprato. tremendo,us Job WIth ~ the So~ s , Members will co-ntimle bowl' N?, 1 farm club, Mmneapoh~. H,ts 2.28 earned ru.n av~ra.ge .IS 'ing and' tennis' teams duringtbe th e second 1o~est '.In,th e ~lrcUl t . Summer. Committees have also, ,,-Teammate ~arl Wllsoncould 'be- .I pllinned attE~nda'nce' at a 'ba~ball ~Ill~ DOlLAI· 1'homos F. Monogh'oi'I Jr. , ' come the fi rs. t ,neg ~o" t o"we ~' a game in Boston, .picnics, island ;c I, \ Treasurer '.'BAllRooM t· Red ~o~ unifo~~' i l l Amerl.canexcursions;' arid Ii fishing trip. \ Lea~ue ~ompet1t1on.,,:'The ,fIre",Susan Deschenes'and JaCque.' , Availabte tor ball ng righthander ~ now 6 1 line Mongeau will"'be co-chairn','" , 'men of Ii dance to "beheld' at tIh ' SECOND ~8ts, Testimo~ials, EtC. ,on e, seaso . " " 'Stevenson's iIi July. Other"activ- , Pumpsie Bats.:n6 " ities include'attendance at the ", fOiFuU Information' Co~ R1~.: With Delock and Sullivan on, Newport Jazz Festival, concerts, ROLAND GAMACHE ,the shelf temporarily and no "'trips' to:'suinrrier playhoUses imd , 'WYman 9-6984 " OSborne 5-78~ ,'place"togo but up, ti:IeSox could 'musicaltents, visit,S to muSeums use help {on:' th~ mound. Mean- and' pilgrimages to shrines; " --'-'---';"'-,I while, Elijah i'Pumpsi~;', Green .(' , is having a,:good year 'with the ,Also on Sunday, .Tune, 28,., I , Millers. 'He :is hitting .325, play- Norman "St. Pierre will "$how ing second"base' and batting No. . c,olored slides of the club's ac2 in the order for'tile league tiviti,es, w,hich will be, follow,ed le.aders. , , - ' ' b y basketball and volleyball Mike Roarke, former Boston ,games. Taunton, MaIL, Taunton Greetl College catcher, is the iirst string / 'catcher 'for, LohisvilIe;\ now a VA 2~2282 ,\ Braves' 'affiliate. "Roarke caught Juan Pizarro's no-'hitter' 'last week, the first such game of tpe " ELECTRICAL '''Otw season in the' American Associa- v. 11'..... Frietuls~ CONtRAtTPRS, ': tion. Pizzaro stal:ted the ,'year with Mil~_aukee.but was sent . ResideBfial'~ 'Comme.eW down" ,for'" further seasoning. " ." 'lndustrial , " , " Roarke" had" two doubies' arid batted in"'the 'only fp'ri"i; '01.' the '. , 6U ~dway" ~' ~, g.ame~ ". " " ~' ' ;OS 3-1691 ,
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GET SAFETY iNSTRUCTIONS: Jam.es Murphy, right, of New Bedfottd, DiOOesu seminari~ and Ca,th~ral.Camp COUJl8elor, 'gWes li1'Ilalt er-a.et and water ~f-ety instructions to Rich8l"d DeMen, lef,t, of TauRtOft; also a semiriiJiaR'aAd ,~. ~.'~ ~..centet,'.of'~Rivers.
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