RELIGION IN' THE MA-RKET PLACE?
The ANCHOR
© 1959 The Anchor The Most Reverend Bishop has called mon the faithful of the Diocese and others of similar traditions "to stand for what we reverence and keep the'Lord's Day holy," in statement published below. The Bishop said that "it is high time to say a word about Sunday observance and the growing tendency to slight it by making Sunday 'Just another day.''' The Bishop states that this, is no matter of dictating to others .what they . should dQ, but rather, a "problem of safe-guarding what has been and ought to be a sacred There has been strong presThe Bishop's statement calls institution.",
a
And he points out 'that it would sure in recent weeks to over- ',for religion to be articulate and be a shame, to' allow those who ·throw the Sunday laws regardto find public assertion as it does seek' a hasty and -surreptitious ing sales and to weaken them to when Sunday is kept with .due profit by selling on Sunday to a point where there will be "bus- r~verence. Unless this is done, An Anchor of the Soul, Surs and fi"irm-ST. PAUL get away with it. To those people iness as usual." Men and women he, says, religion is lost and God the Bishop' says, 'ilt would' be '.' of all faiths have seen this as is lost and all, is; lost. weakness in faith arid in con-' another sign of the infiltration for any of us to fail of ,materialism into society and' The Bishop asks ·that God be River, Mass. Thursday, July 2, 195~ victions given His due and that the marto act in the knowledge that have insisted that the Lord's ket-place be not allowed to in-3 .... '27 ,lIeeoa" .Ct... M.i1 Prjyil~.. PRICE 10e we too are free; and that we Day be kep . holy according to terfere ~ith th,e service of God. thorluol .t '.11' Ri9ft. $4.00 '"' ,_ have. a right to trade where we their. convictions and the tradi. please.'" tions of th~ 'country and state. ' The Bishop's Statement: J
Fall I V o.
,
.-..0.'
....
M....
I think it is high time t~ say. a' war,d, about Sunday observa~ce and th,egrowing tende_ncy to-slight it liy making Sunday .~'j~.t ano~her , day'""'.. . Weare Christian people. We ho've .grown up in the: belief that religion leads up: to: knowledge,lov.e and service of God. We 'em);. ~sed to thinki~g of Sunday as the lord's'Ody ";'h~n' there .should l:ie none but necessarylaboi to which we are bound by the demands of charity and consideration for a neighbor's unexpected want. Traditionally, and through conviction. we have joined with one another i~ acts of · public worship. But,' more than that, we have' tried to keep holy the entire day, keeping it. in the consciousness that it is good for man to take time off, not merely for. rest and relax· Qtion, but to' adjust his ideals 'and habi'ts so as 'to keep right with God and his fellow-men~ The late John Foster Dulles, a man of deep and' active faith, regretted that' in' his. latter d~ys he'h~d not the time to throw off the bu~ 'l'HERE IS NONE BETTER: Bishop Connolly (second den of responsibility and anxiety and to confrom left) and, Auxiliary Bishop Gerrard (extreme right) sider':-"contemplate," was the word he usedgreet t~e incoming Fr~shman Class' of the new Bishop Stang 'the problems and the opportunities that he met High School , .in Dartmouth at the Kennedy Youth Center, · with, and, put them in p'roper relationship,' not New Bedford. Father Edward J. G6rman, diocesan school ~ione W:ith edch other, but with a view to their superintendent, (left) and .Sister Anne Depise,' principal, also addressed the prospective first year student body. The 'i~port. Du'lles was a, church:goer. He reCogfacilities at Bishop Stang are the best in modern secondary nized his obligations to God. To him as to.oll true Christians, Sunday was a day to be set educa,tion in the East., apart for paying heed and giving thankful recognition to the lord and Master of the univers~. But he cherishished also the chance to keep his spiritual house in order and think of the higher and' nobler things' of life. ,
...
New High· School
:Is Ultra Modern ..
.
""
,
,
.
, Members 'of the pioneer freshman Class .of' Bishop Stang High~chool, North Dartm~uth, were greeted· by !\fost Reverend James L. Connolly, Bishop of 'Fall River; Mo~t Rev. James J. Gerrard, Auxiliary Bishop ;and Rev. Edward J. Gorman, Dioces" He,..explained that tne' campus an Sup e,r i n ten den t of comprises five buildings. A conSchools, at an assembly at·, vent, four stories high;' will Kennedy Center, New Bed- accommodate 36 Sisters; a chapel ford.
The future students also met their principal, Sister Anne Denise of the Sisters· of Notre Dame . de Nam.ur; an~ Sister A~nes MarguerIte, . regIonal supervisor of schoo~s for the Notre Dame commumty. Father Gorman described the plant of the high school to the students. "Wait until you see your new school," he said. "You'll be proud that you are entering." ,
will . serve' both Sisters and students. . The academic building is three stories, including 24 classrooms. Four science laboratories for general sciences, biology, physics <:> and chemistry, are', completely equipped. There are three commercial rooms, and art and ,homemaking studios. Offices include a principal's office, counselor's room and chaplain's office. . A sep\lrate ,administration Turn to Page Five
Far . '!Iany now6days~ the observance of Sunday is limited to a respeCtful nod and an air of. re·spectability. Others, and I'wish they :.ver. a majori,ty, carryon in the best traditic:m, seeing Sunday.-as it was meant to be and as it he;:'s been until recently-a day to ~ kept holy. without servile work,· and not marred by "business as usual" signs.
But; there are those•. and their number i. growing,' wl1b se~m set on Qffront,ing our convictions -and our Christian traditions, in the name of individual liberty ci~d the. chance to 'make a hasty•. surreptitio~~ profit ;by ·reason of neglect or seeming ,indif,ference on our part. . It would be a shame to let. them get away with it. It would' be . weak'ness _in faith and weariness. in conviction for any of us to fail to act in the knowledge that we too are free. and that we have a right to trade where we please. Religion has a right to be in the market-' place, guiding the morality, and upholding the standards of those that honor the Day of the.. lord. It should be articulate in the Church. a~d in the community. Unless it finds publiC assertion a'nd steady expression it can readily be lost. And when religion 'is .lost, God is lost. And when God is lost, all is lost. . Our problem then is with the difficulty. and certainly the impossibility; of serving Mam-. mon and, God at one arid the sam'e time, when every human weakness draws us in the diree. tion of material values, and little is done to safegua~d 'the service' 'and reverence due the lord, not' e~en on Sundays. We must then stir up our own convictions, give full expression to our religious life, in the first place. W. should rec.ogn'ize .that the tumult of the market-place should, not find expression at G'" time when in good conscience and with honest ,. hearts we ought to give the Good God His due. This is no matter of dictation to another. It is rather a problem of safeguarding what has. been' and ought to be a sacred institution. It should not be summed up in the phrase "don~t let them do this to. you"-but, rather "don't do such a serious harm to yourselves." 'let us aH stand for what we reverence and kee~ the lord's Day holy.
Cardinal Hits Court Sunday Ruling ._ BOSTON· (NC)-A Federal court decision which holds the Massachusetts Sunday closing law is unconstitutional has been criticized by .His Eminence Richard Cardinal Cushing, Archbishop of Boston. The 2-to-1 court decision deals with the Crown Kosher Market of Springfield. The market which closed on Saturdays, the Jewish Sabbath, had been convict.ed of ·vioHowever, the Federal court lating .the ,state law regulating has reversed the decision, chargSunday closing,. Both the convic- I ing that compulsory Sunday tilin and constitutfonality of the closing laws violate the Federal Sunday law were upheld by the Constitution. Supreme Judicial Court of 'MasCardinal Cushing, taking note sachusetts last November. ' o f the ,court's decision, said:
"I th'ink we all, have been shocked to learn that, in the minds of' many modern statesmen and jurists, Sunday has lost its religious significance and has thus lost the right to proTurn to Page Eighteen
Our New Pope •• _Seminarian Becomes Soldier "'155'S'S:"
The' Second Instt:dll!'ent o~ th~ bIography of Pope' Joh~' XXIII Is on Page Seven Sigtssss:::.:,:,:::::::: is SSSSgSi'SS':: is):::: %%.%%P
.
I
Pope .U,rg~~"F~ithf~J ,,~verywh~~e, To' ,Assist. ,Re,fugees ".~f. .W Qrld
c.·
,2" Thurs;,~J~~ ~~~~~:
DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER. MASS.
NEW YORK (!'fC)~Catholics _.' 'I. Ordo e'verywhere have' been urged by of discoutagement and despair h k - "WPat' kindhearted man could :'FRIDAY-St;. Leo n; Pope'and Pope John XXI!I to eh~, rna e remain indi.fferent to that sight? Confessor. Shnple. - 'White. a succes~ of" the World,,~efugee Year. . . -~o, WallY men, w9qten.~np.,exell "·Mass Proper; Gloria; Commc;lIs In a radio broadcast· to 'the children,' are 'deprived, without Preface. Votive MaSs in honor, ,world the Holy 'Father said- .he "any fatilt of their owri;'ofsome . of the Sacred .Heart of 'JeS\18 gives 'his wholehear,ted, support : of the most, fundamental rights '.' permitted. Tomorrow ,is the .and encouragement to the under_-'"of.:the,·human person.' . First Saturday of the Month.' taking' and recalled 'earlierpap"Families are divided in.spite .' SATURDAY- Mass 0(: the ,of their 'own wiShes. Husbands Blessed Virgin for Saturday. al efforts to relIeve the plight of ~re separated from their wi-ves Simple. White. Mass Proper; refugees. He declared in, part.: 'and children are" kept' a'way Gloria; Preface of Blessed - "With deep' satisfaction. YVe from their parents. What a sorVirgin. have learned of the institution, rowful anomal~- in rroctern soSUNDAY - VII Sunday After under the auspices 01 the Unitedciety,,'so_ prou•. of its technical Pentecost. Double. Green. Nations Organization, of the World-Refugee Year from JUIle, and social' progress!' Everybody ,Mass Proper; Gloria; Second has the duty to, take this matter Collect St. Anthony Mary · 1959, to June, 1960, and We to he~rt 'and to do whatever is Zaccaria, Confessor; Creed.; wholeheartedly give the' m()raJ,' in. his p¢wer in' .order to' bring Preface of Trinity. support of Our encouragement; this sad' situation to an end. MONDAY-Mass of the previous to. this noblp undertaking: Sunday. Simple Green. Mass "The lot of those who live in . Proper; No Gloria; CommOD exile far away from their home..: ,B'est. ~ar.t of Pic~ics' Preface. lands has always evoked in ,a All That Good Food! TUESDAY-SS. Cyril and Me-' , very sp.ecial manner the mother. Weary' personnel of Lin'coIn . thodius, Bishop!.' and ·Conly solicitude of the, Catholic Park, North Dartmouth, .picked fessors. Double, 'W·hite. Mass Church, vrhich could not forget themselves up after last week's' Proper; Gloria; CommOD the words of Christ, its Divine ,onslaughi of 17,000 yomlgsters Preface. Founder; 'I was a stranger and at' ·the howlingly successful, Di-: ' WEDNESD1Y - St. Elizabeth, you took me in; naked and you oc~san School Picnic and shakQueen and Widow. Simple. ,~overed me . . , in prison and ing unbe~ievin~ heads, produced White. Mass Proper; Gloria; you came to me' (Matt. xxv, 35). the 'following statistics: Thousands of Viciims ' . ? , Common Preface. Enough' hot dogs were eaten THURSDAY--'-Mass of the pre. "Today; as everybody· .must to make a double row extending , viou~ Sunday. Simple. Green.' know, there are hundr.eds of from St. Mary's School, Fall RivA G A h 'b It h"~ HOSPITAL . WARD: Dr• . eorge rc a~ au ,c I,eJ.' tllousands of refugees" victims er, to St. Mal'Y's Home, New BedMaSs ,Proper; No Gloria; Comin divers ways ot" the' upheavals ford;, 'via Route 6 . · ' " mon Preface. of ph!lrmacy serVIce, U. S. PublIc Health SerVIce, presents ;of fe~ent:yel}rs, who' are, stil( - .,Two toils of french 'fries disap:, ," award for outstanding contrib.ut!~~ ,to hospital. p.!'Iarrmicy , held in camps or lodged in huts, : 'Pea~e~ •. ~own youthful' :g,ullets, , i to Sister Mary Bernice,oS.S.M., director. of. hospitalphar. Qumlliated in their dignity _as .'. an~'. S.lX ~md a hal:f::co~s '~et:e .' .macY'service ,St. Mary's. Group of •Hospitals St.' Louis. ,',human· beings, ana, /ioDletiwell \S~C~I~lcedi to pro.YI~e Pl1rp.,?~rg":'NC· Ph t' -" , ,exposed to ,the ,,¥or!jttemptatipns erd)eef for the ,pICnIckers. ," , " , 0 o~ ," " '.'" , ,'" I,.,' <.When'it came to sqdaj'Lin~~ln ','0'.::, "'Say Medi~ 'Co'ntribute ,})~~k)av~ up6ria!l·7eXac f'fig:,· e , "En~ugh to .flp·at:a::lj~ttle_,i!.r i" 'To Morals Dedin~ ',' Commercial. Industrial", stt'ip;", was as cl6se:as.~Q~,staff I~ew , NEW ,YORK(NC)~Religi()\-1s ~~ould ket; Institutional' " ',' f' ','-' ',,;',' ALEXISHAFEN (NC)....:.. Two '., Father: Wiltgen is peFliaps",.the leaders of the major; faiths here : :::J'l'o ' st~tistics,:'~Y~Ual?le" 'ori 'lfulerica'n priests have'reiul'ried : first·: person ever to sefout'On ';" .,," Painting and 'Decorating have ,issued ,a report. citing news- \pJ:.ie~~s, ~isters '. andf;..'~~tl1ers-")" liere, after" cele'B'rating Ma!ls'on "foot from the coast' to Climb'Mt. · papers, magaziJ;1.e,s.."radio,aJ;ld tel- ,Aor: ,qn how"lJla~y·,ioungs.ters: 'the top, .of '15;400::£00t Mt. W:il- . Wilhelm., He left on'; his esti- ,. 135 Franklin Street' . ' , ,. evision 'with, contributing to a ,'are counting days~till'next year's , '" 9Sb'o~.:.e2'~1911 '~'ffail":- , .. . '" he.Lm, highest, tt;lou!ltain in the " mated 220-mile walk from Alex- 'Fall Riv~r' deciine in the city's ntorals, • , I . " Territory of Papua an~ New isha:fen, near Madang,' on May 22. ,The report, which reflected ~iturgy pg'rticipation', Guinea. ,-:', At Wararuk Mission he was:\ the views of a committee, of .' The ,M~sses (on June 5) were joined by F::ther Johnson, who 'J 104 priests, ministers and rabbis, , Re.qui~es P:repcuatlon the first ever to be celebrated on organized the rest of the expedioffered recommendations to the , MILWAUKEE (NO);-;'-, Full top of Mt. Wilhelm. tion, ·and by his' brother, James , city, and to the media for im'participation in. the .lit~rgy ~e.,. The priests are Divine Word Johnson, 22, a lay missionary in .proving the moral climate. missionaries of the Alexishafen' charge of the vicariate' ware-' · It urged that ni!wspapers ban ,quil'es a change of mentality in , lurid advertisements for motion '. both prieSts arid, people, accord- Vicariate, Father Bernard John- house at Alexishafen. James acing to the president of the' son, 'head of Wararuk Miss~on, companied the expedition part"" pictures, . that maga~ines bag "salacicms articles and pictures" , American I Liturgical Conference. /who is from Milwa.ukee, a~d way. Father I Shawn Slieehan of. ,.Father Raphael M, WIltgen, hIS. ,.... " and' that' television' reduce emphasis on:' crime and '·violertce. ,l~rightol),,!spoke ;at,¥l;lr,.uet¥ ." t?rian o~ ,the vi~arhite, who is .;"',', L~gion of De~el'i¢.y, . ,. ." ", ' , ,l'he,followillg films ;ire to, be " ~'The.-' mass 'media _ industry, . University, duri!1ga five.-d~y in,,: ,from C,hlCago. on religious' education The expedition was Star::ted' by' once conscious of this parasiti- ,stitute . , ,. , . . a'd'd"e.d to'",th'e. l'Ist~ '..In "h" J.ell·, ' · · . · S E I THESE:'; . ' . cal presepce in i,ts' mid.s~, ' must : 'sp'onsored, by the university's ,Father Wiltgen, who~anted to "spe~bv~, c~as~lficahons:. '. . itself assume a responsibility 1. theology departmeti..i arid Mary,. 'se~ fir::sthaQcl' the rQut~ iii"tc? the UilobjecHonable" for. ,general~' C' M~' densely pop ulate4 highlands dis- ,patronage: ~orse Soldiers; M,ira-, " , . ., . for eliminatin:: th,ese debaslpg grove College, Detroit. , He reminded the group of' 50 covered by pioneer Divine Word '. cle of the. HIlls., ' : '.. ' , .. _ . ' , " , and degrading practices," the report added. ' " . Catholic Muca'tors and pUbHs~;; missionaries in 193~ and 1933. " ' Unobjectionable for adults and .." eN., .,.ers that: i?telligen,t. participation F ' G ' " S ' II·' d 1 ts S t in the,liturgy presumes a unity r. eorge u Ivan . a 0 e~en: capegoa. "of-:-'friendly wo04 Students . to Attend ,of mind ~~d spirit in the cOIIgre-ls VFW Chaplain Unobjectionable for adults:, ' , , . , D a y of the Outlaw. .' WanD and companionable" wid! ' Apostolate 'Meeting . gatl'on and'. cannot be .fo,rced. ' Rev:. George E..Sullivan, pastor Twelve students will attend Catholics must .learn to see the of St. Dominic's Church, Swan. many work-saving' ronveoiencea the Boston College Lay Aposto- liturgy ks participation in 'sea,' and Fall River area director ... in DeW NATURAL FINISH.· late convention from Aug. 31 to Christ's 'wbrship of the Heavenly of the CathollcGuild for ~ cboice ofloYdy eolon. Sept. 5. They include Kevin ~ather, the integral worship of Blind~ has added the chaplainSend coupon £os- colorl'ul ~ Tripp" Dioce~n Sodality Union the Mystical Body which is not cy of the. Massachusetts DepartPlumbing'.- Heat, ing' let Ibowing DeW model ki~ .. president; Edward Corr\eira, limited t;c). rubrics an prayers, ment of the Veterans of ]foreign Holy Family Sodality prefect; he explairted. Wars to his duties. Over 35 Year. Elizabeth Murphy, vice prefect; . Catholicl.schools can prepare, Father Sullivan was .elected of Satisfied Service Michael Dow, treasurer; Kath- students for life':'long 'participa- by popular acclaim. OrganizaI ' erine Kelleher, secretary; Leon- tion' in the liturgy by -teaching tion members said that th4:!Y did 806 NO. MAIN STREET ard Clarkson and Agnes Costa, the basic i doctrines of worship. not ,recall a simila~ honoJ;comFall River , qs 5~74CP eonsultors. ::!,ive others are still a~d relati!l~ them. to the rites, ? big to a state-level ~ffi~ial pre, , to be Selected. . Father Sh~han stUd. viously. ' , ,The S~ansea priest's World , 'JJi'iddieboro RoOd. Rovte Ie War II record includes service WAUEY SIZE PICTURES in the - European' . 'Pacific EAST FREETOWN Laminated (S~ ~' - Plastic) theaters.· He was the first priest to be sent from Europe to the 15c eo. 2 for 25c p.p. Far East. -He left., the service with the rank of major. . 24 HOUR SERVICE 'j•••
:
Mass
DONNELLY.. PAINTING'
i.
'SE,I,tVIGE" ': ':.:
Americari:·PriestsFirst to Offer
".
J,'
~:.
~',;
'.
'
. ", '. '.
'.
M-·'" ", .' .... asses on'
'G ulnea'. '. M ountaln, •.
.'
re-
I',' ~
HEN' 'TeH
f:
GEDR.OE M. MONTLE ..
.E.W.GOODHUE
1St: " SPECIAl- 1St:
, Lumber Co. In~
arid
,
SEALAST,
FORTY HOURS DEVOTION
AID NAZARETH' HALL:. Grand IKnight Albert L. . Champoux', right, preSentsia check fiomFall River Council 86, Knights of Columbus, .tC?.Bishop. Coimolly. The contribution will be used for the work .of. Nazareth Hall for Exceptional Chi.ldl-en. At left is Joseph F. Grondin.;
f
Box' 574
NEW ,BEDFORD,
July 5-St. Francis Xavier, Hyannis. . ,Holy Trinity, West Har-~ wjch. . -July·12-St. Joan of .Arc, , Orleans. Our Lady of the 1\ssumption, Osterville. July 19-:-'-St. HyaCinth, New Bedford. "·St. ¥ary, South Dart. mouth. . July 26-5t. Stephen, Dodgeville., 'St.' Francis of ,Assisi, ' New. Bedford. St. Pius X, South YatmOl,lth. , ',' :rHE ANCHOR SeCond-Class maiJ privileges authorized "t Fall River,' Mass. Published'every rhursda~ at 410 Highland Avenue. Fall
River. Mass,. oy the Catholic Press of the
.
~ASS.
F. L. COLLINS & 'SONS o
INCORPORATED 1937
'.
'GENERAL (ONTRAaORS, and' ENGINEERS ~AMES H. C.()LLlNS, ·C.E., Pres.
Registered civil and" StruCtural Engi~eer Member ~ational Society Professional Engineers
FRANCIS L COLLINS, JR., Treas. THOMAS K. COLLINS, Sec'y.
ACADEMY BUILDING
FALL RIVER; MASS.
OioecsfI ,of Fall River. 'Subs(!riPtioD priee.. -
)y mail, postpaid
U.oo
per year.
.
/
Altar", Canopy Supported by F'out' t'olumns Dedication Rite Ceremony Brings Suggests R9yalty ,!f Christ, High· Priest ,Catholic,Protest
Pope 'John' Says
.g~a~i~';::;cc
:. VATICA~ CITY '(NC)-In .. ' By Rev. ,Roland Bousquet :reference to'the inconclusive forSt..Joseph's Church, New Bedford ASHINGTQN (NC) Inclusion of .,Masonic rites eign ministers" meeting at, Gen-. . " The llJessage of the, Gospel is pr~ached' t'o .the ~~rld not only in terms of sermons, e~a, Pope Jo~hn XXIII said at a, ,lectures and books. It is also crystalized insto,ne and masonry ,and'glasl:\., Thus our in the cetemonies for laying ,general audience that the source 'ch'urche~.are real catechisms, oh, not printe'd in ink, but chisled and hewn and painted the cornerstone of the exof tlarmohy and peace~is charuntil they ' express the Faith' of the generat ion that built them. We caIi but think ,of tended east fro fit of the U. s. Capitol here on July 4 has been i,tYspeaking to more than 20,oooc, Cathedral of Chartres, . protested by The Catholic Standpeople in St. Peter's basilica, the St. Peter's Basilica iIi Rome.~ ard. Pope said the law of Chri~t Our own ,national shrine The newspaper' of the Archis charity, thL sour'ce of har,dedicated to the Immaculate diocese of'Washington said such ,mony and peace, that peace Conception will be the monuceremonies "are certain to be which eve'n the highest repreoffensive not only to Catholic ment of our' special devotion to sentatives of the world have ,Our Blessed Mother. In the same citizens,out to citizens of other difficulty in achieving with simfaiths as' Well.,f 'fashion, every' 'parish' church ply human means, f f . I "Questions arise in our minds Unfortunately, he continued, expresses the aitho Its peop e; imm( iiately, If, as Americans emphasizing on'e aspect or anthis is part of the nature of, other of. the living Catholic ,generally believe, the Masons fallen humanity, but Christ with Faith. , are'solely a fraterna) organizahis law of charity and by virtue Today, 'we will attempt to ex, tion, why' has one such society of his immola':ion on the cross plain the ciborium, orcivory as been accordea ,the exclusive always triumphs ultim,ately. privilege of conducting the dediit is also called, which suggests "Peoples of the world were' the royalty of Christ, the High cation of a building which becreated to love one another, but, Priest, A civory' is an enframing longs to each and every Amer.unfortunately, the story of Cain structure of wood. or stone 01 ican? and Abel is the story of the metal supported .by foui: ~r mon "If, on the other hand, Masonry world whel. Christian love is columns. The altar stands be, , is a form of religion (and this is wanting," the Pope s~id. nearer the truth), why should neath the canopy arid ,between As an example of this lack the columns 0 this one religious groJlP be of, love, the Pope referred to the The roof of the ciborium may 1 granted the right to dedicate a hundreds of priests killed' in take various shapes; it may. b< public building? the Spanish Civil War "in a mo- square, rectangular' or oblong "Masonic rites were used when ment of collective folly." (An It is large enough, however, t.. George Washington laid the • orestimated 6,000 priests were cover the entire altar and th', nerstone of thl.; Capitol's original killed in the Spanish Civil War, platform on which it stands. section, and when Millard Fillwhich began in 1936 and ended The main altar and the altar a more dedicated the House and in 1939.) . which the Blessed Sacrament is' Senate wingl>, 'The same pre8.1 First Encyclical reserved is always covered with account stales that 'since Mr. The Pope als~ spoke of, the a canopy of some sort. The Ci,Eisenhower Is riot a Mason, his general l!,ck of respect for God's borium which we are' describing participation will be apart from laws. saying that it is, enough is but' one type of canopy ,found a c~remOIlY' to be COnducted bT to open the daily paper to real,. in churches. 'the • • .' Masons.' ize that serious trangressi~ns 'of , The baldachin is another kin, , "We suggest that this is the the Ten', Corr.mandments are which consists in' a roof strucoppoi-iune timp to omit cerec:ommitted everywhere., ture "\ade, of wood {>r, richly ,monies which should never have' In" his discouse. the Pontiff ,brocaded, draperies' suspended been used in the first place, and referred'to the imminentpubliabove the altar or bracketed to' whichal'e certain to be offensive cation of his first, e'ncyCIical, the wa,ll.A silk hanging usually not ,only to Catholic citizens, but l!'ta'ting that the w~rld, soon , forins the'"backdrop foi-the 81to citizens of other faiths' aa ,- .. ~9uld kn.ow the teachIng Q.f the tar wh'en .the" ~anopy' is' attached -",-; , well." ~ope l,ls .th" , successor ot ,St. '__ to the wall, ~et,~r:., " ,,' Protective COVeriDI' He also ~entioned the forth,. The m'ore ancient, of these' two "COTTAGE. ,c:o~ing Rom~ syno4 an~ e~u~;-: types" of :iltar-canopies is thf' encl~1 .CO'lOClt He .sa~d It 18' c'iborium'.' The earliest examplef ' ,By':TheSea hoped· the synod w.lll be h~ld of the :.ch';ory' may 'be' !oundip.' R~ms : for : Rent-Ove;I~Ii: before the. end of,th~s year, ~~~ Rome and, Ravenna. By. ,the ing Buz~ards, Ba'y-WaterSt. ,.~ha.t the ecum~nclal councIl 'fouith century, mosf:altars were Off Route 6, .. ,Mattapoisett "~11l s~~ak to. our, g~od brot~ers " covere'd by' a canopysupportec, Center~ Across from Bathing who bellev,e' m Christ" parbcuby columns.. The use ol'the cJ", Beach. P.O.BOx 565, Mattalarly, to those Brothers of. the ,barium was suggested': by thE poi~tt, 'M~ss. SK 8-2479 East." _protective arches 'pla:ced 'over the graves' of the most renowned, ~ martyrs. e ,e These early churches,as,we have seen, were often construct~ Inc. NEW' YORK (NC)-His Emi-' ed on -the site of the saint'~ BALDACHIN nence Francis' Cardinal Spelltomb so that the altar stood di. Immaculate C~nceptio~"":",Fail River Fabricators of man has called on Spimish- . rectly above the martyr's body, artistic necessity. The altar was speaki,ng Catholics here to "seal Later it became customary 'to often simplicity itself in these' , bolic splendor, the focal point of the church, the throne of Christ and reaffirm your faith, in order ,place the saint's relics' in the early days of the Church. It that no one· be able to destroy or, hollow of the altar itself. Thus' often took the form of a simple the High Priest. Raised above the' pavement of the sanctuary pluck ,it out from your soul and the idea of a protective cover- .' table. Or agair a single block from your fpmily," ing for the relics and the altar 0'£ wood or marble constituted , the altar stands below the inner dome of the Baldachin, the archi"To be Catholic is to be suggested itself. the altar. 753 Davol St., Fan River tectural symbol of heaven tocemented to a granite rock of Symbolic Splendor Insignificant in size and in orOS 5-7471 wards .which the Mass is diabsolute truth, and is to oppose Moreover, the Church was per- namentation compared to thf ,'ected. , . with courage and strength, the fedin!; her cerem~mial at this vast, edifice of a richly decorcurrent of immorality," the period. The Church was enjoy- 'ated church, the altar could not Archbi~hop of New York deing freedom for' the first time' 'd'raw the attention of he faithclared. after many years of persecution. ful to itself. 'As many churches Cardinal Spellman spoke at During the Roman persecutions were modelled on the plan of Famous Reading HARD COAL a Mass offered at the start, of, her' ceremonial was rather re- the emporer-throne's room, it' :' NE;N 'ENGlAND COKE the seventh' annual San Juan strained. The pope ~hd'th~ bishbecame natura! to adopt the 'DADSOt-i .OIL' BURNERS Fiesta,' for Spanish-speaking" 'ops set about the task oJ perfect- .eanopy' in which stood the irn, Catholics. sponsored by the"New: ing her Liturgy.' , ' .. perial throne. , ~24-Hour Oil Burner Serv~ce Yor~, ..a~chdiocese·' T~e .£i~~ta, . Constantine, the, first Chris'The altar, enframed by the,ci": honoring St. John the Baptist, tian empore r , lavished manyim- 'Jioriitih, appeared in all its symCharcoal ,Briquets patron sC!int oJ Puerto Rico, was ~rjaJ honors' on the pope and '.' ... . /;Bag Coal - Charcoal~ held on Randalls Island here. tile' clerg~'. Many of these were In. preparation for, the . <;el.,. i\ltroduced in cerempnies of the ebnitioil a' nine-'week' nmtena church,. It then became quite naand a three-day triduum were tural to adapt certain items from LuqGAGE SINCE 1877 conducted at all Catholic the emporer's court in the conchurches in the archdiocese at struction of these early churches. WE SAID BY JUNE 29 640 Pleasant Street New Bedford Tel. WY 6-8271 which services for the Spanish- , Beside,S, the ciborium, was an speaking are held. SORRY - IT CAN'T BE DONE! Cardinal Spellman urged , . Will try to make it by July 1 Spanish-speaking Catholics of. HARRISBURG (N)C - The the archdiocese to be "legitimate Catholic Total Abstinence Union Location' channels of the Christianity of, of America' will hold its 87th Pleasant and Union Streets your forefathers," annual conven~ion here Aug. 10 New Bedford He called on mothers to "eduto 12. The convention will in(Mac Gregor Brand) cate religiously your children," clude both religious services and and asked fathers to "give the business meetings, The Catholic example of 'a manly -religious Totai Abstinence Union, foundspirit" to their families. ed in 1872, has a membership ~ Electrical of about 70,000 persons.
'w
'th~
I
. 'I 'U. rges ' Catho ics -, ff rm Fa Ith Recil
JOHN' E.' COX CO.
I
Structural Steel'
a'nd
Miscellaneous Iron
,
'
.
Union to Meet
New
DAVIDSON'S' . "
SCOTCH ,DAM
~
Vocation Center
BOGOTA (NC)-The Bishops and religious superiors of CO"lombia have established a cen~ ter to coordinate efforts to foster religious vocations. Organizers of the center noted that in Co-, lombia there are only about 3,700 priests, while there ou'ght to be 14,000 to attain the proportion of one, priest to eacB_ 1,000 CatholicS.
CORREIA &' SONS ONE-STOP SHOPPING C:NTER • Television • Furniture • Applianc~8' • Grocer,. 104 A.IIen St•• New Bedf.ord
WYman 7-9354
'CoJ:ltractors
~~
WINNING FAVOR WITH "S FLAVOR
SQ ,LEAN - SO TASTY - SO DOWNI<.GHT GOOD'
.~
94:4 County St. New Bedford
?/t~
~
JUST ASK FOR IT
at Food Stores itt South Eastern , Massachusetts
4'Thurs.,....July THE ANCHOR 2, 1959
Bretons' Cathoiic Realism' -Gives Ru'mengol Meaning
OIOCESE OF FALL RIVER, M6,S$, '
Charity of Public To Support New Cancer f:lospitai
By Most Rev. Robert J. Dwy:er,' D.R "
Bishop of Reno
Gradlon,'King of Ys, as the old Br~ton legend tells us, had built his city on the Bay of Quibero~, and had walled it round, with a mighty sea-gate to keep out the rising tides. Here he thought to ru1E~ ,with ben-evolen't sway, faithfui'to his old Dr~idgods. But his chllfches where, each year, the daughter, bewitched by the faithful' ga'ther in pilgrimage to spirit of evil, conspired to spend the :night in vigil, fasting, open the sea-=-gate at the dark and doing ,penance, cont.essing of the moon. Warned -only just their sins i and receiving Holy
' • in time, Gradlon made his es- ,Communion. There i~ rich tradition here; cape, as the sea roared over essentially I unmarred by superthe city. stition., The "Pardon" is taken, Even today, wit h, absolute seriousness. the fishermen Through aIr" the various fortunes avow, one can of Breton Catholicity, the rise see -the buried and decline of the monastic city of Ys, its ~ movement,' the weakehing, of towers glinting fervor during the phases of Rebeneath the naissance ': and Ji:nlightenment; waves of the - the bitter; trial. of the French bay, and one Revoluti~n~ and the mockery of can hear the 19th century liberalism, Britany tolling of 'its remained faithful to its "Parbells, five fath"" don~~ i _ oms deep. It is a legend that has haunted the Today ~ith the upsurge of a memory of France, and poets and renewed spiritual life, they atcomposers have echoed its tragtract still larger numbers intent edy.• 1t takes its place with that upon the work of prayer and Camelot of the Arthurian legend, penance. TIle presence of curious for it was the same dreamy'Celon-lookers,1 tourists who have tic imagination which conceived heard that Breton "Pardons" are them both.' , fascinating things to observe, has no interest ,for those who regard Weary and dispirited, King them as' a normal and integral Gradlon wandered through the expression lof their faith. ' w~t woods of' Landevennec, meditating upon the treason - 20,~OO Pilgrims that had befallen his ·house, ·and So it that on Trinity how his' gods had abandoped Sunday. this year,' the date of' him in his most need. the annual Pard,on of RumengoJ., , Here' he chanced to meet a saintly hermit, who 'instructed your' scribe and his' companion made their pilgrimage of grace him in the faith 'of Jesus Christ, l to the little hamlet in the hills baptized hi~, an:d ga~e him beyon_d Quim~r. courage to found a new Christian Arriving I for Mass 'we were city and Kingdom, and to begreeted witP magnificent courtcome that "good King Gradlon" whom the Bretons recall with .esy by the, Bishop of Quimper, Msgr. Andr,e Fauvel, and given pious reverence. places of honor in the open sancPromise::; l\lonastery tuary built I fer the great "Mass One night, as the King parof the Pardbn". ' leyed with the hermit, they saw, By conservative estimate far off in the forest, the gleam there were close to 20,009 people of a Druid bonfire. It was the present, many of whom had Eve of St, John's when the fury come on fdot long distances to of, the ancient incantations rose assist at the exercises of the to full height. Fearlessly, Gradvigil the preceeding night and Ion strode into the center of the to take patt in the torch-light,' Druid camp, extinguished the proCession :and' the Midnight· sacred flames and overturned Mass. I' ' the altar of human sacrifice.... That afteinoon, nothi~g would And there, in that place called do but that the American Bishop Rumengol, he vowed to set up a, from "the Fh West; should preChristian altar and found a mon- side at the tlosinlt'ceremi:)nies of astery for the monks who would," Vespers, Procession,' and Solemn gather around the hermit, St.: .. Benedictioni of the Blessed Sac::' Aubert. ' rament. I ,\. '. ,,' , So 'it fell out, and Rumengol 'Eloquent ,Voice ,1_ ' became one of the first ChrisIt was an experience, of ,the tiancenters in all the wild Breton' peninsula. Endowed by the glorious unity of th~ Faith' and King and his sucCessors,' peopled - of the fraternity of' the priest~ by the Irish monks who came to hood. It gave eloquen,t\voice to complete the work of conversion, the miracle hf divine pardon unit was s0011 a place of pilgrim- der- whate.v~r local manifestation. I age where the Mass supplanted King Gradlon is a memory and the pagan sacrifice and the pardon of Christ at~med for the maybe only a legend, but the blood of the human victims of- ' meaniqgof; Rw:neniol, with its fered in hatJ.:ed/to' the van- thousands of praying pilgrims, is a reality riloted' in the stong quished spirits of the forest:, Catholic re~lism of the Br'eton Certainly it is no legenq that peopie.' i there are traces of 'a' monastic For those lof us who have our fou!1dation here dating baekto the ~7th 'century, and the ,tradition ,traditions y4;lt to bu,ild" it was of the Beeton "Pardon": of' Ru- a ,lesson in the strength.and quaI-, mEmgol is one of the very oldest ity of- the faith needed 'to outlast the centL.cles. We came away in all the land. from Rumert,;ol edified, yes, but Faithful te 'PardoDB' deeply humbled. We'had touched .There are ~nY' "Pardons" 1ft something of the bedrock of the I, Brittany. These are ancient faith.
CLEVELAND (NC) - A hospital for incurable can-, eer patients which will be dependent on "the· hourly' mercy of the public" to meet costs has been dedicated by Auxiliary Bishop Floyd L. Begin of. Cleveland. The Dominican Sisters of St. Rose' of Lima, establish~d in, New York in 1896. will conduct the institution completely de-' pendent on the charity of the general public, as they were instrocted to be by the community's iounder, Rose Hawthorne Lathrop, convert daughter of author ,Nathaniel Hawthorne: ,
.
'
The hospital is the first institution in Ohio, though the Sisters' are represented in the New York, Philadelphia and St. Paul archdioceses and th~ Atlanta and Fall River dioceses. It was built by the CIevelanti 'Diocesan Catholic Charities. But the nuns take it from there.
Jas'
I
GRADUATION DAY: Gerald A. Arata, confined to his home with a fractured leg, .receives his Sacr~d Heart School, No. Attleboro,,,diploma from Rev. Joseph S, Larue, pastor. Sister Superior ·Marie Gemma looks on. ~
. Attleboro' Serrans Elect "'Brenna~' Russell E Bre'nnan will serve as president of Attleboro District Serra Club for the co~ing year. He succeeds Eugene Farrell of Mansfield. Serving with him will be Ed-
MILLl9N DOLLAR BALLROOM
ward J. Coogan, first vice president; Cornelius T. Lyons, second vice' president;' john A. Graham; treasurer; J, Harry Condon, secretary; 'Oscar A. De~osiers, director for a three year term.
Available for
Banquets, Testimonials, Etc. For Full Information Contact
ROLAND GAMACHE WYman 9-6984
Finance Yqur New Car
with a Fall' River Trust /-
'\
L-OW' COST AUTO LOAN \
-A-Fall . River Tr~t Auto Loan' hi the practical and econorni~l way to -finance the pUrchase Of your new car. I
You,
pay
Charges"
Low
BankF"mance
You may also plaee yOur Insurance with your favorite broker and ha~e-the premium included in your
loaD.
'
Stop in for oomplete details at our
any
con-
and" have- the payments Main ,Bank or at of our' tailored to -fit your income. ~ '- , venient Neighborhood Branches.
.. OPEN FRIDAY 9 A.M.
to
8 P.M. '
Total, Asse~ Over
REAl>POIN'I'S PRELATE: Governor Abraham Ribicoff swears in Rt. Rev. 'Msgr, Joseph F.I Donnelly, whom' he rerrppointed chairman of the Connecticut State Board of Mediation and Arbitration. NC Photo. '
I
'FLINT BRANCH 1219P1easant Street
SOMERSET BRANCH 1045 Coun,ty- Street'
$28,OOO,OOO~OO
SOUTH END BRANCH 1649 South Main Street
-.
'-
IT WON'T BE LONG: Advance preparations for the oPening of Bishop Stang ~igh School, ,North Dartmouth, are engaging both the Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur, who will ~taff it, and pr.ospective students. In left picture, left to right, Sister Alice Gertrude, president of Emmanuel College, Boston,; Sister Anne Denise, who will be principal of Bishop Stang; and Sister Magdalen Joseph, music supervisor for this province of the community; study blueprints for the school's chemistry laboratory. Sister Anne
Denise and Sister Magdalen Joseph are sisters as well as Sisters. In center, Sister Anne Denise checks report cards of, left to right, Sharon Gendron and Leona Blais, who will enter Bishop Stang from St. Kilian's School, Ne.w Bedford. At right, Sister Agnes Marguerite, supervisor of schools for the Sisters, examines a prospectus for the high school with, left to right, Aim Swain, New Bedford; Nancy Sylvia, Mattapoisett; Billy Rhodes, Wareham; and David Chomard, Fan River.
Bishop Stang Pupils Meet Principal of New School Future students of Bishop Stang High School, North Dartmouth, became acquainted with their principal, Sister' Anne Denise of the SisterS of Notre Dame de Namur, at the assembly held at Kennedy Memorial Center. She brings 'a varied background to her faculty of at least five Sisters new assignmen~. For the of Notre Dame fo{ the first year ' past three years she has of the new schooi" during which taught Latin at Notre Dame only freshman students will be High School, Bridgeport, a regional high school similar to Bishop Stang, Previously she served for nine years as principal at St. Theresa's High School,' Providence. A graduate of F.mmanuel College, Boston, 'she received a Master's degree in Reiigious Guidance from Providence College in 1958. ' The principal's assignment at Bishop Stang' will be solely administrative. She will head' a
admitted.
Franciscan Wins Theology Award
BUFFALO (NC);""- Father Juniper Carol, O.F.M:, foUnder arid fi~st president of the Mariological Society of America, has been named recipient of the 1959 Cardinal Spellman Award for achie,vement in theology. The award is given yearly by Pope John Cautions the Catholic Theological Society of Arn.,erica. Father Carol's seBergamo Missioners lection was announced'·at. the s0VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope ciety's 14th annual convention John XXIII has cautioned a here. group of missionaries from his The 48-year-old Franciscan native diocese. of Bergamo against the temptation to over- priest 'founded the Mariol~gical value newly found material aids Society in 1949 to pr.omote theo. logical studies relating to- the to their alJostolate. The Pope asserted that real Blessed Virgin. Author of numerous books and articles on good is never found in fleeting flashes of audaeity but in me- Marian theology, Father Carol is ,thodical, constant and humble no'w stationed at 51. Bonaven, ture's "Seminary, Paterson, N. J. work. Elected president of t]:1e theoHe congratulated the missionlogicai society at the close of its aries on the -many good reports he had heard of them and their meeting was Msgr Lawrence J. Riley, secretary to His Eminence work, from various bishops. The missionaries were led in Richard Cardinal Cushing, Archaudience by B,ishop Giuseppe bishop of Boston. Piazzi of Bergamo.
Ultra Modern
NOW PLAYING ot the
• • •
GALA' HOLIDAY EXTRAVAGANZA Children Always 25~
Regular Admission for Adults
THE MIGHTY, SAGA MIGHTlESf MAN! OF THE WORLl1S
Amer,icans to -Staff Library in London
LONDON (NC) - His Emin"""ntinued from Page One ence Williarr. Cardinal Godfrey, bL ~g includes the business office, a reception room, health Archbis!lOp of Westminster, has room, audio-visual laboratory, invited Franciscan Friars of the and library. The latter will acAtonement ' from Graymoor, commodate 50 students in its reading are~ and also has stocK .N. Y., to take over the:' Catholic .. Central Library in London, at and work rOdms. ' one time threatened with closGiant Auditorium ure. Auditorium, gymnasium and cafeteria are housed in the fifth First members ()f the combuilding, said Father Gorman. munity, two priests and. two The auditorium, capable of Brothers, will a,z:riveat the end , lIeating 1100, has a stage three of June to take up residence in Itor.ies high and deep enough to the library building in the cenproduce a Broadway 'type show. • ter of London. , The gymnasium is a standard This library, which has the high school basketball - court,. biggest collection 9f, Catholic with· a large automatic curtain books and documents in this which makes it possible to divide country, is open to anybody, but it into separate practice courts is primarily intended for stufor boys and girls. Bleachers are dents and others seeking specialrecessed. When drawn, they will ized knowledge. on Cathoiic subseat 720. Additional stage bleachers will accommodate an addi-' jects. An appeal was made last year to prevent its .closing tional 200. " through lack of support. The lower gymnasium floor The Graymoor Friars, originIncludes lockers, showers and ally an Anglican community, visiting team facilities for boys. were received corporately into Similar girls' equipment is prothe Church 50 years ago. They vided on the upper floor. started the Church Unity OcThe cafeteria, also on the lower tave now observed by both gymnasium floor" has a seating Calholics and Anglicans. During capacity of 500 and is equipped World War II some members of to serve all kinds of meals. the community worked at a wayOff the auditorium is a large band room for use of lChool side chapel at Timberbottom, KaDt. l.a t:he Southwark diocese. IAWlic units.
STA•• '/OG
STEVE
REEVES
SYLVA
GIANNA"MARIA Fabri~o Mioni .lvoG'~I;rani ·ArturoDominici
KOSCI NA CANALE
Mimmo Palmara·Lidia Alfonsi· GinaRovere , DIRECTED By PIETRO FRANCISCI· 0 SC A.R FILM-GALATEA' OlSTRIBUTEDBV Warner Bros. ~
CO·FEATURE Island o,f Lost Women
I
COMPlETELY AIR CONDITIONlD LIVING ROOM 'COMFORT - PUSH BACK SEAl1 PLiNTY Of FREE PARKING
No·: Business" .
on:SUndaY.·:~;·, I
. '.:'.>~"
6'
.
~THE ~NCHQI .. '
Thurs., July 2; 19.59
'. " .' ': DIQCESE J~.ff .FALL RIVi!:", MAflS.. . The"Ailchor'iepeats 'jt objections to 'c'urrentattempts ,to make Sunday "business as usual" day. ., ',' . . <The .civ.illaw·of MassachusettS recognizes -that Sunday , . . .• " i~ ..aday . of .,worsh·ipa;J.1p)·~~~."lJl~8: ia~'.Va.sfir.~t. ~nacted , . '. ,. \ "'~ . . three ·centuries ago: 'bY;Pr.ot~stant' for¢~fathers,>¢oncern~d· • .'. . . p;., ... ":;.~, 1 . ~ ..•• .;:to:'.,.. with reverence due' to .God ·and· anxi'ous . that the LOrd~s .Rem'ember that ,thou keep holy the sab- . . .eommand .to :keep. l:toly :ais daY'be observed. . TOnAY - Visitation'· of the bathdQY. Six, days shalt'thou Icibor1"and · ,There are reasoJ:lable exemptions :.fJ;om ; the .·Sumlay Blessed Virgin.. This feast. was· shalt do ' 0 11 thy works';,:But on the seventh. , established by Pope "Urban . ,VI . law to the extent that works of charityianrlneces'sity may arid extended to the' Univ.erSal dqyisthesabbath ot.;the lord thy"God: be performed. on' that day. But·there 'is la continuing moveChurch in the 14th century by · men't to widen #l.e·:exemptions. and-now"':-to opendhe' way thou shalt do no· work .on it, thou nor thy Pope Bo~iface IX in memory ot ·to full-scale busiJ1ess as' usual., .•. . .:.:.. the 'visit ,ot' the Blessed'Virgin thy. daught~rl.northy nlans~t: son, nor, • -- The law stands as 'abarrier..to open commercjiilism. I: ··to her cOusin, St. Elizabeth. -va nt, nor thy maids~rycmt, nor: thy beast, The law shqull;l: not be. changed.. ~ i . .', .... , . TOMORROW - St. Leo ~ the . stra nger' that.J~ wjthi thy. gate·s. .··.e: The fac(·remains that this nation -is based on: God. As : Pope-.Confessor;' ~e was a', Sicil~ . 'a natibn· and.asindividuals, AriIericanfl"l;>elieve in God.·This: ian.. Eminent"for' poetry .and· F"r in six'days the lord·madeheaven· and .. .". skmed .in languages: who suc~.· · belief mustno.t.'b¢ 'Iip'serv'ic'e'but 'l31'lould-show itselfilt !art,~i. .and :t~~, sea, «(rj~~al' 'MngS.Jhafeii~J". .• 'ceeded PopeSi. Agathein ·681:,'",._, . "act;' 'The ' Sundair :"ia~."sho~s )~ihe r~~e;~hc~ of;iiidl~'idual~'" • -' . . . . , or' .. . " .. , • , ' I -. . ;". . . .•.. . . t' . He reformed the Gregorian chant, . mothem,l anarested'!3~ the .seventh day. and .the.Stat~!,fW:j.tb.e.Gr.~at.or. . " ..;, '','..... ~ .. i " ' ,', ,.. ,·~nd. composed. several .1V-I,H:gj,cal. .. f. , Therefore:':th~{'lord' "BIl!ssed, ' the' ·s~verith~ . " The,objectors to the Sunday law. c.it~the loss: of money . · bymns: He ·was·.k:nowniJas. "T~e day, 'and sa'ncttfied ih<;]: . . .. " . ,. , th"at'they.suffet: That- proves 'onething~that worship of,,·' · ,Father of, the.,P.oor.", He dIed " .... · 68:1. ' . ., " God. exacts a I>ri'ce; How 'much wouid' it;'be worth if'if:cost . , nothing in effort· or sacrifice? " .'. ....', . SATURDAY-SS. Osee anc! -: ' . .'The 'income in ev~ry busine8~.is iimited and ~on(litioned,' ,; "Aggeus,' ·P,rophets. St. 'Osee,' ~iso' · called Hosea, lived in the eighth ,by many ~actors",Those doing bulYness,:.in:resort area~ century' B. C" and prophesied especially know..that their income' is dependent: in' large: ·the' destruction of the Kingdom··' -measure on the weather. When the weather .isJ)OOr, their of Samaria. St. Aggeus, 'also inco~e falls and ·th.eY take this philosophically. as' the hand' called. Haggi, lived in the sixth century B. C.:His prophesy cali~ of Goa. Let' theriirealize' that their income is .also de~ on King Darius of Persia to f~r ·pendent on the 'hand of God as expressed in His co~mand- . ward the rebuilding of the Tern- ' ·QIJESTIONS ment to keep holy His day. They kno~ when they set up pie of Jerusalem; _d a bUsiness. that they must take the we4ther'into considerSUNDAY-St. Anthony MarY ation. They mus~ kno\y, too, that they should take the ANSWERS Zaccaria, Confessor. A native of Sunday la~s and what. they sta~d for i1to cl?nsideratj~n.. Cremona, It~ly, he sb.ldied medi" Certamly some merchants could' make more 'monElY If ... cine but· abandoned this profes- . Sunday were turned into a commercial day.· And they Rev. James A. McCarthy sion for the priesthood. In 1530 . " ", ' . . .he .found~d the Congregation 01. could make' more money If they .werea:Ilowed to·.'rob Qr to. . Holy Name Church-Fall River Clerks Regular of St:· Paul, get together, and fix piices' or to .'capt~re the"market 0!1~ What is a flabella!' . The APSE is the sanctJiary called the Barnabites, and • milk or 'other staples.' That is' where the law steps in to . th·'·· 1 of the church .building.' This. women's Congregation called the. Fla b e 11a IS e p ura l' 0 f the 'end ; 1..'· regulate for the common good and for! the sake' of right.' Latin word FLABELLUM. The term,l,s more sp.eclfkally app IC- Arigelic Virgins. He died in 1l?3t. , Doesn't if c'ome' down' tothis-":'the desire to make . . ". able to those of Romanesque or and was canonized in 1897' bt flabellum IS a fan of ostnch. or G thO "h·t t . . II . money at the expense of honor to God 1; BO't there are still peacock feathers, with a. long th·o . IC .. ar~ lei' C utre; ..orgt~na Yf" Pop~ .~o XIII. . , "d ,'th 'd o'f' e seml-CIrCU ar ermma IOn 0 , . . h an dle, carne · " -enough' people left who ·insist that God must come first. 'th'.e ch"urc, h "b u t I'a ter th'h .MONDAY-"-St., Thomas More, t'h 51 Pe e s ape · on h"el er.. 1 h the papa c air w en e ope .b . . d . d' t· th Martyr; Born i,. London in 1478, And thesewiJ] oppOse any attempt to'ridicule' as' "blue" and ;. borne I'n' proces'sl·on. .ecll;me van.e accor mg .0. e he studied at Oxford and became to' change the Sunday laws into alloWing "business as ' 1 Use of ~e flabellum is appar- . general ~~I)\g~ ~.f the b,!.ll.1<hng. one .of 'Eng1and's outstanding usual:'. on the Lord~s day. .. ently a carryover frqm the'days .. I!1 a baSilica, It. IS ~hat r~unded, lawyers. He was, married an.d . 'when insect-control had not or. vaulted sectlOl) m which are deeply devoted to his family. H.e reached' the advanced stage ~f placed the, biShop's thr~ne and became the first layman to hold .. . development of our, age. Those seats ~or the clergy., and m front the office of Chancellor of England. Faithful to his conscience, . . The Strand . Theater in Fall River is 'to be, congratu- who have visited Rome in .the of whlc~ the altar stands.. Th~ TRANSEPT is the croSll he declined .. t6 . support King .. ,'lated for its pUl>licly announced policy to show only those summer months .will be con· picture's that aregrade~ in t1i.e A-I and" A-II category by vinced that it still has the very arm of a' cruciform (or cross- Henry VIII's divorce and refused praciical pu'rpose of cooling the shaped) church, extending to to sign the oath of supremacy of the'Legion. of. Decency. In this \\'ay parents and children' Holy Father: both sides of the nav~. ;Another the King~ He was imprisoned, .' will have no fear 'of seeing what might:OO morally danger. * * * less frequently used, termdesig- . arid after 15 months was .benating this same area is ...:.... the ous or offensive' and insulting to their taste. How 'far may a Catholic cQIifes.sional. ., headed_ on ,Tower Hill on July., 1535.. He was canonized by P~pe Many times ·the Church is accused of taking a· com- .. businessm~n' go in contributing to Protestant organizations and .' The NAVE in cruciform. Pius XI in 1935. . pletely negativeattittide toward. the :field' ofentedain.: ehurches!' churches is that portion of the .. '·ment-..:.q'uick to point . out. and . condEmln .. what' is wrong,. · TUESDAY - SS. Cyril arid . . . . building in which the laity sit, A Catholic businessman could kneel and stand and assist at Methodi,us, 'Bishops ~ Confessors. . not so quick toc()mmend . attempts. to !lift the tone. Part of'· the Church's . 'Work is; of course; ,negative"';";"towarn contri~ute for business' rea~ons.. Mass, from the transept to the :Venerated as' "the Apostles of a.lone to .a. Protestant organJza- 'narthex~ ',1'0 ge~ a~.clearer picture Slavs," they were brother• . againsteviI.And the Church is not supposed to be a ;I>ub- bon. Gertamly tl{e:e. are none so of 'this, if we were to have a the who were born ir. Greece and licity agel)t for any interest. B'utwhen r there are. s~ J!l.anr narr?w as to cons~der wor.~s of bird's-eYe. view of the building educated . in Constantfnople. recent challenges '.to morality. in the. m~ving ;picture indus.,. chanty the exclUSIve. domam of from above the long portion of They began their work as mie- . trY,then churchi:rien are ,more willing no.t only to point' out Catholics alone. For ~xample, a the cross w~uld be the nave and sionaries to the Bulgarians and, . Catholic ·,~ould. contnbute even the cross-arm would be the on coming to Rome, were eonse-. what is evil but to commend and encourage what is good.. to a non-Catholic orphanage pro- transept crated Bishops by Pope . 5t. ". This local step to keep the moral;IJvel of movies high vided: that scandal is removed' . . '. ". Hadrian II.' St. Cyril, who died . and there is no danger of draw-' In a~clent baSIlicas, t~e NARis certainly worthy, of praise and Emcotiragement•• in Rome ir. 869, labored ia 'ing Catholic children into error. _THEX IS that space leadmg .from Moravia, Dalmatia and· southetll And if there are those 'who coinpla;in that they are not In response to a question re- the outer doors to th~ .mner Russia. St. Methodius, who died the recipients of equal praise, then the answer is easygarding contributions to prot- doo~s. In other words~ It IS the: in 885 in M~ravia, labored in Go thou and flo likewise--an'd the praise shall be yours too. estant church building projects, ~esbbule.of the church. A chur~h Moravia, Bohemia, Poland and the Sacred Penitentiary in 1822 1~ o~e of thos~ v.ery few ~Iassl- neighboring countries. Their relanswered: Yes it is permitted, but flcabons of bUlldmgs where ~ou ics are venerated in the Church only if such assistance will free enter.. th~ front door to fmd of San Clemente, Rome. i .' Catholics from the·iriconvenience·yourself 10 the re~r of the struc, Very little has been made'of the World Refugee Year . WEDNESDAX - St. Elizabeth that began Sunday. The purpose of the y'ear is to focus the ahd scandal of conducting Cath- ture; the .nar.thex must be !he ,olic services along with Prot- sp~ce provIded for contemplatmg of Portugal, Queen-Widow. She attention of all men and nations on the terrible plight ·of estant rites. It would seem that thIS proble.m before one .enters was born in 1271, the daughter the millions of homeless throughout the world. 'Vhe situation the speCific instance in this case contemplat1Og God. of King Peter III of Aragon and . is especially trying in Hong Kong, amoni the Arab refugees had to do with a project to. build, 0 . was married at the age of 12 to .* * * \ _ King Denis .of Portugal. She dis'from .Palestine, and with the behind the Iron. a Protestant church in an a r e a . . I . group from where formerly both Protestant What does IHS sta.nd for on tinguished herself as a peaceCurtam. '. " (J i' . and Catholic worship had been the back of the vestments used 'maker betweer~ the rulers' of The most difficult thing in the world is to get people conducted in a common buildat Mass? I Aragon, . Castile and Portugal. • to be interested in their neighbor's business.:-not their 'ing. Some theologians have inI . After her husband's death sne terpreted this to ~indicate that, IHS is. the monogram for the took the habi. of the Third Order nextdoorneighbor-quite the contrarY+but their neighbor such aid is not essentially Holy Name of Jesus; the first of St. Francis, She died in 1336 whoTTI they. do not see, whom they dOl' not know. It is a wrong, but is permitted) for a . three letters of the Holy Name and was canonized by Pope matter of becoming catholic':minded-with a small "c"from' a latinized form of the Ur ban VIII' very serious reason. . 10 16 25. and that ,means taking the-sorrows o~ all as a personal In general-a Catholic is not Greek letters. Another pious in, . concern. allowed 10 contribute'directly to' terpretation is that these repreDuque'sne Un.OYers.°ty' sent the iniialletters in the Latin the spread of' a false religion. The story is told of the com- phrase "Iesus Hominum' Salva- President Resigns - f' tor" - "Jesus Savior of Marimittee 0 Protestants approach- 'kind". PITTSBURGH (NC )-Father ing a prominen. Catholic in the Vernon .F. Gallagher, C.S.SP... community seeking aid in razing' H has announced his resignation as their old church and construct;'. onor Patron Saints president of Duquesne Univering a new. church on the same . ROME "(NC ).2.S even- Cardin- sity here. . OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIO.CESE OF FALL RIVER site. When the.man. gave his als and the Italiar; Minister of Father Gallagher, who is alSo donation he told them that' he Foreign: Affairs joined' in . the Superior of - the Holy' Ghost. Published weekly by The Catholic Press ~f th~ Diocese of Fall Rive~ . wished to make it cle'ar that this 20th anniversary of the .procla- Fathers in America, will coD410 Highland Avenue' money was not to be used to mation of St. Francis of Assisi '. tinue' as cha'irman of the univer-' Fall River, Mass. OSbo~n~ 5-71'51 build a, new church, bu't to tear and. St:Catherine .ofSiena as. sity's board of directors. ., down the old church. Is there a " PUBLlSH,ER ; copatrons of Italy. -In a solemn At ·the same time Father Galmoral theologian in the house? Most Rev. James L. Connolly, D.O., PhD: convocation at the Pontifical· lagher announced the appointI '. •. * * {\ngelictim College in. Rome, ment of Father Henry J. MeG~NERAL MANAGER A,SST. G~NERAL MANAGER . Would you. pleaSe explain Foreign Minister Giuseppe Pella Ahulty; C.S.Sp., as acting, pr'eSlRev. Daniel f.Shalioo, M.A. . Rev. ~ohn P.DrisColl .. , the"location" of theSe' partS· of· . delivered the commemorative . dent until .the board meeu' ia 'MANAGING EDITOR I..., . . .< the. church-the apse, the nave; ... speech honoring the F.ranciscan ; October. to. name a 'pej;maneui .Ho.ghJ; Golden' , : ' I , " Ule,.I1llr.,t.hex aDd.. t~e tr~~ep~ c and·Dominican, saints. : . . . , ' . aUCCe.wlOr•
..•. ,
'.j'
a'
.
The" "Law 'of- ···God ",':'
,"
I"
"
·'~,6f':Feast
• ·......
..
l-'
•
•
i
:.~:
1.
.~
0'
.. '
~. ~
By
g
A" Worthy..·· Step'
Refugee' Year ,.
_ .
.Days .'
n
'not
:
-to"
., . '
Weekly Calendar
'
'f
..
@rhe'A~fjHOR >
....
':., :, -:OU~.' rNew'~Pope: ",'
-:. ;; ..~~ ;:' ~
~i
~
,'.",.
. ,.,PAR'J1' Dr · ,The '. day 'he"set" ~ff on a':f"we-tn,ife journey. f)rom' JUS home of Sotto il Monte to the'seminary in 'Bergamo,Angefo '~Roriealli had in his pocket a gift o:n'ova The year' was, ]892'" "and' he' was Uyears~'Q1d<.' ' .., , The morning before ,hIs action. But it waif: not un1li1i after his ordination that Ron... . departure, h. is mother, Marla ealli was to come· into' close con,.' Anna Roncalli, left the 'tact with the man who. was one 'houSe early. When she'.re- of tlie' gJ:eat bridges. that led turned .she put two lire' on the young. man to oocup¥ the .throne of P'eter.. the table and b roke" into . Though far from a ol'itliant tears. studeJ:lt in his early. studi~s~ An,. l
, "Two lire was' not an insiltnigelo, in the seminary, encount,.. ficant sum in the 90's .'1'0 'col- ,ered subjects which interested, lectit she, had ~adethe,!Oli 4s :him. History ingen~~al.,an4l.that of the relatives' in the vilTage "of the: Church accountedl. w·. "imd nearby areas. Norie·' of' them \IDuch'of'bis'readiIig: . ; . 'were any bettet off ..tlrart An;tJnlike A~hille' Ratti~ lateii" '·geiG's"father. . ',. ""'.,..... I Pope Pius XI,. who, ,was 3' gen-' But they gave what they :ius at absorbing: georog,. math:-, ,\could, ,not from' surplus"£ilnds ,ematics,. poetry and.~' ~Y'. ,.but .from ,money whieb .,was Roneallii's'chancter' was not: ,needed at home. S\le knewtllis "disposed to study 'for its own .. and she was grateful andl proud. sake~ Yet. from-. the' beginning" .,Although the seminary would he was a, good rese31'cher. ' pay for .her boy's educati9n, his Predominant Intelfest. food and, board, she did not He did not have a definite, in,want her son, Angelo, to arrive clin.ation to be a p~oressioriar at the 'seminary. Pel?l1 iTess; Her scholar. His-scholastic life in the .tearswere those of joy. sem~.naiy is without SUrprising, Sees Dream' Fulfilled acbievementls. .But as a semi,., .. AngelG, all. through his .life narian ·he··showed qualities; that ,shared his parents' view on later made' him known, aSI 3' 'money. It was to be used to'pro-warmhearted, amiabre and wise vide' for the necessitieS of life peIl'son.. He co·fub'ined!a-. p'rofotind ,and some legitimate diversions. knowledge of history with,theJ;Jut ,regardless of how, little'one ology and with. it, ptedominant' liad, generosity' was the only interest in his fellow man.. 'way of life.' . He was witty in conver~tion ACcordingly, when he 'could, 'and haa many 'good~ ~iends. His 'iinaUY;do'it, RoncaHi built little' contacts 'wit!) his native village, 'by li.ttle a' 'place for" tile care thou~ .'on a ',new baSiS; never of small children 'in fiis"'horrie- "cha'riged ,. and he spent' iill' fiis town. He sent the money 'to 'a vacations there, 'even when his ehit~hood friend, Pierino Donitravels 'took hiin -to Bulgaria, zetti" then, mayor of the town, Tui"key~ Greece and France. 'He ~sking ,that. the source be kept 'Vvas 'always 'Qaturar with e-9-ery~~cr,et.. . . .. ,'.. . body in his daily con,tacts.:' " . The first s\lbstantial .sum ar. "Ampng the 'strong, influences ri~ed from Istanbul. in 1943 hini 'as a young man in Bet'while' he was Apostolic Delegamo were the writirigs of Alesgate in ·Turkey. With it came 'san'~r'o Manzoni, the gteat Itala'letter in whicb.he wrote:: '''You ian atithor"whose 'works probed 'know' that the greatest. desire of . the meaning' and practice of 'my, life would be to· build" in Christian rove. ·Sotto iI Monte 'this infants' home LOves Music. ., but' as . yo,u know,' r 'am no~ a . Bergamo's. musical life' was 'capiialist." It 'was not untit he co'mpletely diiferent. frGm thl1t became' Patriarch of Venice that of glamorous Milan. Here Gae}1~~~'~s dream)ulfiped~:,. tano Donize1lte. rathertliilh. Ver. Social ProiPam '", ", ·di;"'commanded attention..,'J'ohn The city Gf Bergamo, where ·;'XXIII ,remains a'lover 'of.·the ..'the diocesan'seminary waS:loL ,musio';of ,00nizettiJ•. Ponclrlelli. cated;' .was one of" the most im- ,Mozart l , Bach and the,pre-Bach · ·portant centers of Italian Cath- ·Italians.. "'" ... . . ", ',oHcism in . the ~O's;· Much'.. ,of" ,!Jjhe ·milestones in 'the· life."of · ~ltaly"was, in"a turmoil ,of bitter ,ca' "seminarian:are.. those.. which an:ti_cleJ:'icalism and anti"papal 'mark" ,his, approach to·, priestfeeling ran: hi~ But. '.Bergamo, ·;hood. In. 1~95,·AJlgelo;..;Roncalli · was pr.ofoundly ,Catholic, and, its "at. the,· age of 14: recei,ved his Bishop. a'nd Catholic lay.J'eaders ·first·tonsure,... ~'the. outward lmd had developed and put into' prac- visible sign of the clerical. .state, "tice ,a..·constructive social pro- sYJIlbo.Iizing Christ's crown of gram. tho'rr)S:" Two 'years later, at 16, .. ~t the seminary young Ron- 'he 'became prefect of'the dorm· calli. ,became acquainted with itOry of his class, a: distinction the. thought of the leadell's of given to' students of s.chol'astic Catholic social action. The thenmerit. Bishop of Bergamo Antonio . 'In 1898, he received minor Guiandani dedicated his entire orders and. by 1900 hig; pre-unilife to the diocese and' the cit¥; versity training was completed. The Bishop's successor, Bishop The curricuhim had included Radini Tedeschi, was a natiOn,.· Latin, Greek, Italian and world all)' known leader in. Catholic historYr J!lathematics, geometry,
n
on
-,~.', '.' : j.
C.··_ ..'.• ' ,'"." e,' :'."
~JP.marlan
..
, ".;; .<,,'
'B""~omes·,,· " ".,' S.· ·0···I'..]'!"'··' U1.ler ." ~
,., '.-i
"::"',"
Ji'llotheltRoncaIlHnet Potle Pius X ,'. in' the' haiIs' of. the Vatican.· The "': Pope,. wno', later was' canonized, " . k\-idJ his' h'an'ds: ()n\ his' head; and " admonishedlliimJ to, live' up to, the , g,;~at.'v.ocatwa that; he' had, under.taken. . First. Solemn. Mass He returned to Satto' il' Monte to> celebrate his, first SOI~D M-ass' in the church: in which' h. baptized. AU the' family wer.e there' on Aug; ,15" 1904-, the .·feast of the ,Assumption. Hi. sermpn. was' on' the theological significance of. the' Assumption. , It was: no' easy 'task. for thougb 'aLwa~s held. and. accepted with,. ; out question·,;thulo. belief beCame ,,;an/ a1'1iic1e' of'- 'faith, only in, 1958 when: it. was dogmatically pt:Oo~ed; bY? Phis X1I., .. '.Nf~r· tIre sum:mer' Fatb.eJ: Ronc!aiiv 'return' i to. ROtne to take .hiS: doctorate in~ theologYj and' to .~egin\ w.onk. alb 3' doct.orate-. ia ~1l0~ laW'. , , While' R'oncalli was: studFfng . in, Rome;, Pope· Pius X appointed Msgr. RadinL Tedeschi . to> be Bishop; of .Bergamo,. This; ev;ent changed' Ronca:llifs, life' entirely• 'l?he~ new' Bishop) was, soom too be iii need~ on a secreta~. Pltrt in' Consecratioll 'l?he' new' Bishop was o~' an aristocratic family', He' was; well ,knQw!J! in,.Italy fur' his 15 yean 't of. -\lerving'.the' Holy See' ~s 3' sort SEMINARIAN:. Angelo ROIl£alli,,' (;centen) ~ and, wo "of "A:mbassadQ1"" t'o Italy; confellow students: at the: SemimliFY in B e r g a m o l ' . standT in conta(:t wiUr opposinc " l. . ~ .," ". '. '·parties, with' organizations and geogJ:aphy: pny's{cs,,' chemistry, ,19~? tJ:1trfir:a: of mallJ' qist01l!:'7algrOUps' of' all' kinds; ,Italian.. and, world lite~atw;e.· stll?ies;~ttDlbutab~etcl'.t~ pen,:;-:. ~l11ong'those'whowere tb-take , .Wins' . Seminary . Scholal1ship . at AngjllOl ROncalll. .. .part in' the, consecration of' the . When Pope XI 3;PPOlDt~d': n;;~:' Bhin~pj Radini" Tedeschi By thiS' tune yoUng, Roricalii Father': .Roncalli a.. BlS~ep. In·.. piCked'out t'wo"Bergamo prfes~ had. found hiS wa~ and, was a 1925\. he. ~~oki as; .lliS . eplsc~paJ: . Angelo R'oncalli and GugJjelmo brilliant student. He won' a mott~l,th~tof,?alldInalBa~o~o---: . Carozzi, now Archpriest. paStol.'ScllOlallShip. 'to. Rome's,' great of Seriate near Bergamo. ObedleIrl:i:a: eiJ Pax: (Obellience Seminario, Romail(), His: pellSOnalit)" was: wellbalariced, ahd his ··and! ·Peace}... Bef?re:' he entel1~d .. ·· .:The' con~ecra:tion was Pius X'. the' concla~ whi.eh: ele~tedl ~m first'sihce his etection as, Pope. interests . proportionatetJli well Fope;, G:ar.dmal Ron~alLi: wenli.~. 'The importance of' Bishop Radivided with a deCisive inclinthe tomb, . of Cardinal Baromo d"' . . In/ T e d esc h'" I In t Ulie lif'eand · deation' for history. Ffe was a vela ment of the future Pope and,.kinelt, In pray;er,for an hour. healthy" yo!Ung' man liked equalJ;)urmg; the' saIne' tlllJ,e he· also. . P rr ly by professol7S' and fellow stu- .i 't ted' hi' b' t b g 'g; to John can hardly be exagoerated. ml.a s. su Jee. 'fi om. I d d fr' d dents.. · · 0 'S" 'Ot ".) ....'·1·· a. h: . head '.The c oseness,an eep le'1N. '"' eeL'S anu: eanln,,> IS, U;,' f' th 'w ' b t li 'Normally priests' contmue on the ,foot. 'oil the' statue of St. 1>~TIIL~" .e t 0 IS, es, ~xe~p ..tnei'r education in diocesan semP.eter, . repeating .the' mot~;. fl~e~ 10 b~~e lo~g•. d~:-a~le~, ~nd Obedience and, Peace. ovmg, , lOgrap Y .w l~. a. er inarIes. Only' those 'With'excep" .'~' .. ,.. ': '''" . Ronca-lll wrote after hIS frIend tional qualities' are sent to study Voluni'eers' rorlnflmtr:J, and mentor died in fiis-arms.,·· at the gl1eat Raman· tinfv:ei'sities. Mgelo,.·Rol!leaIU· was·. one· ,of ",,\rn,l'foy:eW:b~, I~Ol, at th~ ag~, ,lnit, .~~ recalla two things. of of 20ROncalli yolunteej:ed' f9r . the morning of the conse.cration. these. HfS;. futmre, educa.tliOIl! was Iriiiifary'dervice. ':trnrverkii;y's'tli-' "Orie'was 'that'it was he who neld paid' for out of the Cerasola dent's c.; incl'uding Seininatilms,'·4. the' Book:' of the Gospels, agafnst fQundation estab~i'shed' for B'er: gamosemiii~rians .• by a. 17th 'were 'permitted' to', sliorten. their"· ' ;the' neck ·of the new. Bishop, sig.cOmPuij;ocy-, military ser.vice, ,to', .. ni~¥ing., that-.. the . Bishap .mUBI c;eni~ry,.can9.?o~ St. Petet::;~: . ()ne, y~ar, if: 'U1e:l v.orunt~~.r~~. f;' ~eii! .th~ yo!':e 'Of <;hr.ist. Obedience and Peace Ang.e.lo.,R!1ncall~ 'p'~CK:ed the i~,,: . , ~isf!.oDrS\,Secretary. ... , While at' the 'RomariSerrtinaifY, f"a'nt"ry'" '.. The- second, waSl tn'at. the- Pope . RoncalIi encountered· one of·1lhe ., ASsigned totli'e 73rd' Infantry :'embracecL the 'new:' B'ishop. "a£ter ,great: influen~es "of his life. This :'RegiineJ:l,t or'the·Lombardy, bri,.· .the: 'ci:msenramoh and whispered was the' . wri'tings and life' of galie" he. "served one· y,ear;, an,d . 'jOt'hisl ear' that after he· died"he the' 16th; century' Cardinal ·<I:!e- .received· ,his_hoI).orab~e·cl;ischarg~. , would l!ome immediately to take '. sare Baronie, a' disciple of' St. . with the rank. of sergeant. He . the Bishop, with, him and that Philip Nett : .,,: w:as in, no way, different. :£rom 'fiis .' "they' would be togetlier for' eterHis'influence on: the yourig 'fellow: reclluits: On, the con.tJ7ary nit}?;· It was. not. until, much later man was: m~r.lted and constant. lie 100kedl like a t.~pical ·Italian .. that, the: Bishop: understood' the In '1907 .F'ather RoncalIi, then SGldie.r.. ,.M.ilitaJ:y training. was'. meaning; ot these words. But it a Bergarrio' seminary professor not, difficult. for him. He had is; a" fact that Rius ~ die<L on and secretary to Bishop RadIni great. ph.y;sical' strength and com-· Aug;. 20~ 1914" and: Radini. T&Tedeschi, delivered the common,. sense' plus, an,. aptitude for <leschi died! two) dayS; later.. memorative iecture on Ba.t:onio's comradeship. Later he' was:. to Shortly after the new;- bishop works and life during the third seItve. ilh the; axmy; itg;Jn. ., took~ possession: of his; episcopal centennial celebrations at B'er. M'eetn; PillS: :lIl: f)f Bergamo, he' \)egan: lookgamo, This 'Wal> published in • • . • .. :. _,:,1~""_ ing: fur al secret'aIry:. He' remeJnE'inished1 W'lt;h1 L"l$. L.IOLL:ll ......."', IieredJ E'athers: €anoZ'lli, ami' RontlTai~g: lJe.re~n~d to, Rome- to calUi w.no. hanl assisted!, at', hra conlliIrue his: studies. ~11>, .TulY.!' consecrat'fum €aro~~. whom) the 1903" Pbpe- Leo: ~ di~d, His, Bishop' tallted to, firSt<,. repHed ~CesS011'wa:r.Cardmal G~useppe- Uiat. Roncalli was, the: proper S8r.1:oj who: like. the fufuIre: PlJ,pe . man: for the> post; The: BiidiOf rohn. was, .Patrlarch 0.£ Vemce took: .the' advice, before. commg: to: the, tlirone: (Next: week. A. y,ear' after the electioru of A Pastorate Is: Long'. Delayed') Pius X" Angelo, Roncalli was, __ ' .. ordained" The' date wag; August 10,. 1904, and the' ceremon.y, took place in the church of Santa Maria' in; Monte SantO; The following day he celebr.ated Mass in one' of the grottos. of'. St. Reter's. at!, the' altar which, acco.rding to tradition is next, to tire' tomb, 'of: St. Peter; Bclore, he returned to: his' village: .tli~ day! after hiS' OJIdination,
was,
Pi.us:
I,
,.
'
"
',;:-:
see'
P:EA,IlL lAUN:DRY' COMPLETE' .. LAUNDRY SER.VICE 64. HICKs., SIREO'.
.
,HOME VILLAGE OF ANGELO RONCALW:: lfn 1892, th'e lil-year: old Angelo 1'eft '.'
Gotto il Monte to enter the Seminary at: Bergamo.:'fivemilea a.wa.y.
NEW' BEDfORD
W1'ma...
~
.
I,D'EAt, LA,U'ND,R:Y: Fall) River 05: 8~56nr ,
.3~3~,
,
New 805. ., Road
Curtains' ~ide' Window/Fault,s" Create Beautiful Effect~' '.' \
Thurs'.,
"DIOCESE OF 'FALL RIVER. 'MASS,
Nurses Council' 0:. ,ISsues Book Ie.f'
'By Alice Bough Cahill , What" would a ]lome be like wi~hout windowl\? Just drive along a new' development and, ,most houses· are practically ·all-windows '<>n 'all sid,es-veritable fish bowls. But suppose you don't'livein a new ~odelhome; perh~ps you evehhave .~ .hom~ with old,. . wall, leaving the windows clear' fashioned windows.. They for light. At night time you can aren't hoPeless, .so . take' close t~em a~d .the unbro~.en· heart, and resort to some of sweep .of fabriC gIves' the effect,
." WASHINGTON (NC) "-. A ";" booklet containing special meditations for nurses on t1:le Statipris ..' of the' Cross has been pu blished ·here by .the National Council. of. · Catholic Nurses. "A Nurse's Stations of the :Cross'" 'was' 'written by Msgr.· · DavidJ.. Boyle, . pastor of st. 'Mary's Church in E'argo, N., D. For each station there is' a 'meditation relating the station to a nurse's career. Tne introduction to the book.let points out: . "Like Our Lady, 'Simon of CYr~ne, Veronica and the weepingwomen of .Jerusalem, .thf! nurse wouIe' ease the sufferings of our" Saviour, 'But Christ's sufferings are over. She. must turn, then, to minister '""ith loving care to thE ~hrist she find. five-year-old -in her patient.," . .
. k th t have turned such of a wm,dow ",,~ll.. ',. : ' th'~ trlC S • a, . . Then there's the.other type of wmdows .mto eye-catchers of ld f h:' ed . d . th b beauty: 0 't-h as ~bontwlnh~wh~t e kay On fthe niceties of the Gay w~ a, ase. 00. Ig 0 ~a e a natural wmdow. seat. With a e 0 ~ Ninetiell wil~ to . valance 'across the windows and have, a stain~d-' pan·els. c)~ each side, you can ass toppmg create a! charming grouping by on' a large. win'placing' :a' sofa. or love seat in d ow . Y.o u r front of. the bay with plants on problem if you the window base making a pleas-have such a ing background for your furnihouse, is ho~ ture.' . to treat thiS , Curved 'Windows outmoded eleI ,ancy. Instead Now.ar d again' one comes UP':' CONVAI"ESCING: Prayers of friends of of replacing on a .curved window' and the Cheryl ])arra!, of Aubur? N.Y., ~ere 'answere? follo,,:ing the color e d question: of how to treat it may panes with one be solv~d' by using a va'lance open-heart surgery. She IS shown In St., JOi'1eph s HospItal, large glass window -: which to "square off" its top. Place Syracuse, after the operat~on. The child:s heart had st?pped would be costly~try a drapery the valahce high enough to be for 10 minutes. NG Photo. eoverup. Always bear in mind .invisible: from the. outside, but that to make any wIndow appear ~allow the'lower edge to follow less conspicuous, 'choose materthe curve' of the window. ial to match your walls. Then, Just .like all details of house'le) further the illusion of today's keeping, [you must, be certain big-window l()Ok, hang draperto have ¥ood grooming for your arid' political levels, Father, ies to cover the wall at the draperies, for they must hang . MILWAUKEE (NC)~ More aides' of the window. well to look their best. Of course than 200 Religious and lay· Weber' suggested the crux of If you top such a window with one muSt start with' rods and these problems could be found teachers of home economics in • wood cornice it will give it . hooks in the right place. Be seon the family level. Catholic high schools and colthe new "width".' You'll need. 'lective about hooks, for differ-. leges were tole. of the vital role Sound Living·. to use two pairs of draperies. ent types do different jobs. Be their subject plays in the fornfaThe task of home economics You should hang a stationary' s~re tpe; cu~tain rod is fastened tion of ~~ristianhomes. is to radiate the Christian home Pair to the floor at each side of· firmly, so It won't sag unde.r into the changiIig world, Father Father Donald Weber, assis~ the' window. If you have ,a radrapery [weight. . Weber pointed out. ant ,director of the Family Life diator 'directly under' the' winIf your window has a wood "The family, home living; car'!. program ()f the Milwaukee archdow, however,' there's. another frame, hide it by attaching diocese, said: "On'e of the chief restore What a sick human race' problem, which can be solved brackets' to' top corners. If it's agencies in, the world. of stabiliz- . has called for. . Sound, fundaby having the' draperies that . plaster; 'it's advisable to use mental basic living of the family ing a quivering present, and draw across the window on tratoggle bOlts for anchoring rods. within the hom", is pr.obably the Yerse rods cut off short, to clear' 'Now' 'measure from: top . of . lmticipating a' secure future, iI· answer to the peace table, the It; 'Y~u might add a finishing bracket to the hole where you the Christian' home.': delinquency progr'am, 'sound 80-' touch by boxing 'in the radiator . plan to put your fir'st hook, after He told the 12th annual concialliving and statistical tellies," with plywood, and gold grillwhich measure the drape to ,vention of the National Catholic he. said. , '. work. ." ·make.su~ethat, the heading will Home Economics Council: Father Weber characterized, , Disguising Draperies 'hide r?d land window frame: It's . "Yours is a vita. subject, a living home 'economics as day by. day The, Ilicest'thing about dr~per,., very, Important to be. accurate' challenge . . '. your dedicated ' duties arid responsibilities. When ,Ie! is that they can disguise the if you want draperies to hang charge is and will 'be to restore 'these ar'e combined. with pamost impossible architectural straight. I all things in Christ through tience and kindness, as well 'as lines. If you have"a, room with Next; you should check draptheho~e." . the virtues to be used in hectic an odd and unattractive window ery length after hanging. -If it is Noting that.peacemakers have daily ;living,' Father We.ber said, ' arrangemel).t, hang your cQr-' wrong, measure and mark botsought a solution for modern the' family will have a greater tains from the ceiling on a tra"' tom herhs and alter' as' you problems at summit, scientific effect upon the changing world. :verse track and continue into an would an uneven dress hem..We awkward jog section. ',l'his will l\dvise that you keep, any" extra make' the room' look much cozlength itt the material ·at .the ier. .. . bottom df the drape,because if For a room with two narrow' drape~ie~, do ~hrink,,: youi"Will windows separated by a wall find it. easier to, adjust the, bot,. space, considyr ¥eati,n~ them as tom. hem' than .the top ,heading. one bylising three panels to You C!~m ,keep, the o~tside cover. the entire ·wall. Have your edges of drapes straight by ho~k eenterpanel stay put, then hang ing them; to the .window fra·me. your side panels far out on the Sew a ring to the top of hem' and slip it over a 'cup 'hook' · . Honors Foundress screwed into the baseboard beMONTREAL (NC)~The. City; low the window.'You'·can make . of Montreal is erecting a comthe hem hang evenly by weight-, o memorative plaque .at the main ing. it:St;itch"weights to the top' Q • entrance of the .mot1:lerhouse of (not the :'botto~) of'the' hem at the 'Grey Nuns :here in' honor of' . each cOrner. If' lightweight .Blessea Mother d'Youville, their draperies' tend' to hike up, sew, ., :" foundress, 'who, was beatified j~' a weighted taPe all iaCrosa the'! ""a'y' : . ,. :' .....; . . . ':,. top 'of' the' hem. ;./ . ," :.,".
,1'
Says Capacity to Love Asset to Leadership ST. LOUIS (NC)~The capacity to love is' an asset to the
Priest Asserts Home Economics Vital· to· Christian Family life
"
-THE ANCHOrt July 2, 1959
8
ability t.o lead, Father Cyril F. Meyer, C.M., national moderator, told the 14tb national convention of Kappa Gamma' Pi, honor and activity society for women of Catholic Colleges. Speaking to representatives at the 9000-member organiiation, Father Meyer cited the qualities' of love stresserl. by theJate Pope Pius XII. He ~aid that this love ·of other's sh"uk be supernatural, disinterested and indicate a willingnes~ tot:ickledifficult taskL·
A. D•. McMULLEN ' lIK.
~
.
r
MQVER'S' SERVING
, FaR: River r . New ~dfOfcl.· ~ Cod:Aree ' Agent:
..
AEROMAYFlOWEI TRANSIT CO. INC. .Ncition-with MoYen,' .WYman 3-0904 , 194 K.empton S,- New Bedford
"
".,','
'Goocl,-''.
•
:
0
'
•
o '
• D'd':» .I $n' tIt,
-
','.'
,
',,;'
I '
,
.~.
",
!'
. <:J~.:''''. '.' ,.' . ,The." entire' 'family enjoys 'Guimond· ::Fa~nis . N'.A .Qu~lity" Milk~ala 'matter o;f,fad it's t~ family's;fQvorite Sum.met"~er~ge. . . . , '. . .,' " '-. . , .
. I'
:';
"
Try, a glass "Of 'Cool;.' farm.:f~~$h Guimond·: Farms 'Milk the next ·time .you're'thirsty. Enjoy it,with rriea!~ ot..~i.!h betwtMtn::rneol ,snacks. . Nothi ng "li~e~Guimond Farms~.· rich, , wholesOme : flavor~ . ;1
• -
~
•
~RMS
05_8-5286" MASKS AND MISSIONS: At the I recent vocations ex~ .liibit in Manchester,' ~ngland, a Holy I Ghost Father tries• ceremonial native mask on a yourigvisitor, wnile his friend stands by armed to deal with e~entualities. The mi.,,,, sionS:!-ries have' a,large co\l~ti~n 'of.~~k8, and this ,par'ticu:' . 1aI' one. • is a' caricature of- ·a. magillwate. l\lC Photo. . .•• - .• ... r_
I.,
-A.Q~J1Ufk! .
.'
.'
~I
.
.
..... _
,PENNY FOR. PENNY, YOUR. BEST .
....
i ' , .
. .., . .
_.
,
~...
.
.
.•
.
>
..'
f,OO~·BlJ.Y •
~
~.
.
~
·Not Firew:o'r'ks, but: Highways Are Fourth of July Danger
Mute .Mer'V"'ri zes Entire Catechism Mrs: Sam Pak, 76, just wasn't going to be left out of this year's Confirmation Class in Seoul, Korea, that's alf, there was to it! What if she was deaf; she could still read. couldn't she? What, if she was dump. and couldn't speak'; she c~uld still write, couldn't she? . So the old lady· presented her.self to Father Francis Mannion, Colllmban pastor,of St. Patrick's parish, armed ..with pencils, pencil .sharpener .ana a supply of paper, .ready for the pre-Confirmation examination .. She was told that in her case it wouldn't be. necessary. 'However, she insisted on her rights and was told to go ahead. After a. day and a half of ah:nost steady writing, Mrs. Pak had correctly written from memory the complet€< Korean Catechism -more than 200 questions and answers in numerical order!
.By Mary Tinley Daly A "Safe and Sane Fourth" was the slogan years ago-probably before many ·rea<;lers: of this column were born. At that' time, .it had a, definite significance. The ·idea was to outlaw dangerous ·fireworks which took their toll every Fourth of July. Fingers, to border, take off in hightoes, ears, eyes;· evert lives powered cars .~o "celebrate." . of children were sacrificed Beaches will be packed, mounto the cause Of so~called pa- taio' resorts will have. stallding triotism. , There were 'yard-long, double rows of firecrackers t hat, o n c e ignited, Jumped around
room only. Highways will be filled with cars bumper-tobumper. That's fine. People want to -lebrate and reiax. '-''' The same thing happened just five weeks ago. Th~ up-coming weekend is a replica of Memorial Day weekend. Macabre statistics came in the 40 following Monday - nearly 0 Americans killed in highway accidents. That terrific toll was taken in commemoration of the nation's dead. -
A, ,..
ainb 1 uncontrolle manner; rr k giant crackers that· zoo 111 e d
·into bIas" with
·spine - chilling.· ·detonations and
disastrous con·s e que n c e s. The r e were What Price Freedom? "bomb torpeOn the Fourth of July, the does" which under a tin can- .price to be paid, as inevitable as caused many a youthful face. to the rising and setting of the sun be scarred for life. Other VIC- on that glorious day, will be in tims were maimed. or blinded by tribute to the Inc;lependence of the gunpowder that could be our country, won at great sacribought for a child's w~ekly. 111,- fice. iowance. .. Independence and freedom we Such menaces nowadays hav~ haVe today. Bu; i.s it ~he sort our been outlawed almost every- Founding Fathers 'envisioned for where, thanks to the "Safe and us?, We . are independent of Sane' Fourth" crusade. . . tyrariny· from without, thank During the early days of ·that God. We're free to think, .speak, erusade I remember, as. a child, act,according to our own con-_ my father's custom of· goihg,.t0 science. . . . . . Mass each Fourth of July, urgmg ,When so many of us take lithis family to join him in praying erally 'the words of the popular "for all those who wiU ~ b~ song and apply it·to ourselves, tempted this day by a sen~ ..of .'.'Highas the flag on the Fourth false· patriotism to endanger life of July"-ana then venture forth and limb." onto· crowded highways· . ; Dad then ga¥e each of us 50 that's carrying the spirit of freecents--and a half dollar was!l dom too far. lot of inoney in those. gays-to '. Though the· '~Safe ,and Sane buy our fireworks. We were Fourth" crusade, as such, is a tempted, no doubt about that, to thing of the past; perhaps it has invest in the zoom-zooms bought even more significance today. by our fellow customers. ' ., That prayer "for all those who Back into mind came that will be tempted this day by a prayer of Dad's and we pur- sense of false patriotism· to enchased Roman candles,.,.skyrock-. danger life and limb," uttered ets-which only Dad was allowed long ·ago in a small' church in· a to handle-pin wheels, in~QcuouS small midwestern town, is even "snakes, in the 'grass," sparklers more meaningful on this July 4, and the like. 1959. . , Today's Weapons . '.' ,. Today, in the space and jet _Six Volunteers Off age, the Fourth has a connota- To Home Missions tion never dreamed of by Dad INDANAPOLIS (NC) _ Six .. his contemporaries.Marian College students have Results· of firecrackers, even vol'imteered to give religious inliant ones, and ;'bomb. torpe; struction in Arizona and Aladoes" pale into insigmficanc~ bama 'missions, their travel costs compared with .the wh.olesale paid by the school's unit of ·the slaughter of today's Americans Catholic Students Mission Cruthat takes place as they celebrate sade (CSMC). the ~ndependence of 'their counFour will serve six weeks at try. ' S t . Michael's Indian Mission, Those jumbo crackers of long' Chinle, Arizona, instructing Nav_ ago took finger~ and toes-even ajo children and two others will eyes and ears. Hor~ible. , aid Trinitarians in Gadsen, Ala. ~oday's Fourth takes the Marian College, a woman's instiwhole man - body, and' sometution, was founded in 1937 by iilries, perhaps;· soul... : . , .; . the:$isters of St. Francis: In g~la mood; Amer~cans·~om " . ''!. . •
Air Force 8as~ Women, Elect Club Officers
Catholic ,Women Say. Equal Rights Amendment Is False: Solution . . ,
WASHINGTON' (NC) ~ It would seem t6 be time, once more· ·to ·get _. fixed straight in one's'minQ· wha't is meant by the s6-called E'qual Rights alTIendment proposed for the U. S. Constitution.·· . . The· Judiciary Committee of the· ·Senate has reported favorably. aproi>ose~ amendment to the Constitution saying; "Equality .of rights under the law shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any state on account of sex.... , On the face of it, this would seem to be wholly acceptable legislation: It is certainly calculated to win a lot of popular, seniimentalsupport. , 'B~tit h~s been ·opposed, vigorously. and cons~stently,.by ,the National· Council of .Catholic . W~meri _':md ilnumQ~r of .other organizations for more than 30 years because the proposed legisl~tion is not what it seems to be. Only in recent days, ,the NCCW told the Senate Judiciary Committee that "under the guise of equality the proposed amendment would wipe out legal safeguards protecting woman's position in the home and in society." At other times, the NCCW has called such "blanket;' legislation "a false solution of the problems of discriminat~on because of its false assumption
that men and women are identical and hence. sho\lld receive identical ,treatment." The NCCW gives.. "frank recognition" to the fact that "although '. men and women are equal in their personaldfgnity they are nevertheless different," and the council says respect should be had for "the characteristic which nature has given each." . Organizations opposing the amendment 'saY,it would wipe out a~arge number of legislative gains· tediously won by women over a long period of time, and would substitute not.hing of value in their stead.
":'··:·i:;AUBERTINE
Maryknoll Non·''.:... ,,,of Visits Family '. :.. . ". ,F"neral
Il. M.rc~ Roy - C. Lorraine Roy ROlI'er LaFraneeo
FUNERAL· DIRECTORS 16 IRVINGTON CT.
NEW BEDFORD WY 5-7830
T rini.tarian Fathers BOYS . WANTED for the. Priesthood and Brotherhood:
Lack ot funds NO impediment.
"'i:~:"~~~~~~~"~~:'~~I .~OOM
i
i
, ROS~LAW,t-' ~A~M o•••••
.I
~·.~o.~~~~,~·~
'
,.
Write to:
. POBox 5742 Baltimore ·8.. Md.
THE '59 FORDS -rite World's Most Beautifully Proportioned Carsat
,FORD ,." '·';MOTO~'SAlES' COMPANY' DEALE~~
FOR 9VER'3a YEARS
·'3.t:4~~6P"rchase St.
Home
• t~ •• +~~ ••••• ~ ••
FUNERAL HOME, INC.,
COME IN - SEE - and DRIVE
. " ,. ".' ,. ;·,fORD
BURLINGTON (NC) - Maryknoll Sister Mary Pa'ula· is 'en- \ .' :,ftfl'e.. Aubertine'Braugh .". Owner and Director Joying all the comforts of ho~e during a visit, with her family Spacious Parking Area · here after thi·ee. years, of ,regor- : WY 2-2957' ' .. OWl mission . life in. Bolivia's .. , .teaming jungle. ., .. ~!9AlleD St: . New Bedford, ' Sister Paula·, who with anoth~ · ., Maryknoll nun has been operating a small clinic in the· jungle, said rats used "to "play. tag" around the edges of her bed until she put a stop to it by securing the servicelJ of a cat and dog. . .' Plentifully prevale~t at her TO BETTER SERVE YOU mission station Sister Paula: said, 'are batS, lizards and large' black WE'VE DONE SOME FACE LIFTING - MADE MO.RE - • lPiders. :'INSTALLED NEW EQUIPMENT WE INV•.T . EYOUR ,~ . Sister Paula said medicines at ,Co.' ,msPEqIQN. . . , .• .·tbe clinic are kept irt orange··crate shelves. The medical sup• ROAST STUFF~D C~ICKENS""~ plies used to be flown in by air freight, she said, but that proved • ROAST, STUFFED. TURKEYS; too expensive. The supplies now • POTATO SALA~: are received by river boat ·and are months in reaching the clin•' COlD S~A..W .tJ ic, she added. Sister Paula is an aunt 01. Sister John Bosco, also a o. M.a~y.. knoll nun, stationed 'bi Kandy, . Washington Street off Rte. 6, Fairhaven - WYman 2·6473 ...~
Ceyloa."
.BROOKLAWN
The NCCW,is fully in favor of legislation calli~g for women to . receive equal pay for equal work, that is, receive the same salary .:as men if they do the same· work men do.' The council. .has adoptee.:. resolutions on this specific matter a number of times ·in the last decade or so. But . the "Equ·al Rights" amendment, the' NCCW says, would not even insure equal pay for equal work. ...
Y
Atllintic to Pacific.. frombord~
Mrs. Manford B. McClanahan will . head . the Otis' Air Force Base Catholic Women's Club· for the next six months. Serving with her will be Mrs. Edward Corcoran, vice president; and WAF Staff Sergeant Martha Koury, secretary-treasurer. Elected head of committees Were Miss Martha Hurley, social; Mrs. Donald Lacombe, Spiritual; Mrs. Francis Levangie, altaI:; Mrs. Joseph Trochta and Mrs. Paul Harden, catechetics, Mrs. Jack Sewall,publicitY;··Mrs. Leo Marcus, refreshment!!.. :
FIRST BLESSING: Rev. Owen E. Finnegan, S.J., gives his priestly blessing to his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Owen F. Finnegan,' 124 Cottage Street, Fall River, ·following celebration of his First Solemn Mass at St. Mary's Cathedral.
New I)e~ford, Mass. ...
~
GERALD E.
<McNALLY ,,:~. ~
~
.'.
. '. .
c
.GE·NERAL CONTRACTOR 2666· NORTH. MAIN ST.'
-
FALL RIVER
TELEPHONE OS 5-7992
.-WEBB' OIL (.0•.·, TEXACO FUEL OILS DOME.STIC & HEAVY
DUTY·~IL ~URNERS.
Sales - Service - Installclfion· ..::. MAIN OFFICE'::·10
~URFEE ST:"FALL, RI~E!l'J'
....................... ... .. ..
..
" .:::.,. '"'.' 'P'horte: OS S,~74'84 ~~,.:,
~,
~
~~
~",...
t,
.:' . '" "" '.,
10 '
Dio·ceso·n·. Serrans Attend
-THE ANCHOR 19~9
. 'Thurs., July 2,
Internati~nal\C~nvention
DIOCESE OF 'FALL RIVER, MASS.
Protesta'nts Join \C;~u$ade Against Smut Literature·
Nine from the Fall River Diocese attended the 17th annual 'Serra Internatiorlal convention in Pittsburgh. They included Rev. James F. McCarthy, St. John the Evangelist, Church, Attleboro ; Rev. John F. Hogan, New Bedford area director of Catholic Chari- tion's' grow numerous," Bishop ties; and, as official gele- Wright said. gates, Russeli· Brennan, At,.. :In a pre-convention address, to tleboro ; Dr. Arthur K Buck- the govel1nors of Set.:ra Interna-
ley, New Bedford; and H~nry ticinal,-Bishop Nicholas T. Elko Desmond, Fall River.: . of Pittsbl.p;gh Byzantine Diocese Also present were JohriGra-. asked Seiran~ to be alert to their ham and Cornelius Lyons, At"~o!y respor,.,ibility." Ueboro; and Dr: Raymond Costa "The Church needs, persons and Quinlan Leary; Fall River. who will' stand firmly on two With more than 3;500 other . feet and profess· their faith imd convention attendants, including will . defend it, not with mere .1,700 registered delegates, they words, but with generous· sacri-· heard a call to ·Se.rrans to "spyak fice and personal sanctification," · up" for' the diocesan priesthood he' declar~d. by Bishop John J. Wright of . Bishop Elko advised Serrans Pittsburgh in his keynote ad- that "when conferring with pod·ress. tential vocations, never minimiZe "Spiritual Snobbery" the sacrifice required." The Bishop spoofed any i'spii"_ . "Never· let them believe that itual snobbery" which represents the' priesthood is ail' ordinary iiie "poor parish priests"as assignment,"· he·continued. "In..,.·, somehow infei:ior 'to th.e"great stead, tell: them howdemariding; . rt!ii,giousorders.':Bishop ~i"ight how exacting and how challengdeclared that this' notion 'was not big it is to wear a priest's gar-. 'OFF TO CAMP! With, happy grins,. these Fall River shared by priests, "but often was . mentS or nun's garb." , . boys' are off for Catholic Boys'. Day. Camp, .W estpor~.· To by their aunts." . ,,' l'iarent's ,Rep.ori . . . 8th 'ff He reminded' - his .audience I . ' run daily from 8 :30 to 4 :30 until August 2, e camp 0 . ers that the founder of the diocesan .In his report.as president J. . swimming, sports, handcrafts artd the oPI>orttinity to ·attend .. ' .. p'rie'sth·ood. ~as Jesus Chris.tRay. J0.rd;'m, Houston, isaid thaC d'l M L ft t . ht R nd St Law' ence Henry ,~ Ser:ra I. nterriat~<?llal ha~. e.X;pan.d:-.". . aI, y. ass. ~ : 0 :Is:! are, 3;y~o... r , ...., ,.. Hit!iself,. an,d·! thaLthe di?t-: esan . ed'~to'anorgariization" of;l1Jriost' Mercer, Paul M:-edelros al1d. MIchael ..Bates. .e,.., . .' '''PJ;lestsexisttQ.:doin.e,,~ry,ilaQd. 9,000 metrlbersin 133'Hiibs 1in'the;:-i!' """':,,' : .....:;:' :',':"'''. ,., '.," . ' ;.' i ' .. r",',.", •• ' " , . "
• MIAMI (NC)-Protestant" lead.ers hi. Greater'· Miami' have pledged complete support of Postmaster General
Arthur Summerfield's campaign' to rid the U. S. mails of indecent I . literature. . Rev. Mr. B: F'. Schumacher, Lutheran minister who two years' ago waged a successful campaign to rid newsstands in North Dade County of objectionable material, is chairman of··the Great Miami Mimsterial Association . committee on indecent literature. . He serves on the Advisory Committee on Indecent Literature for Dade County which surveys reports of v'iolatrons of Florida laW concerning literature. . 'All Must Help "The churches' will surely, offer'their support, to the Post Office'sc'amp'aign to clean uP. the' mail," pr.. R, B. Culbreth, a Baptist minister·who is chairman of 'the' civic tighteousnesscom-: ·mittee for the Ministerial Association; declared. "It ties r.ightin with the moraland"spiritual-WO'rkdfmY:.committee. and' "is a' maUer' 'affecting, the morals .·Of· ~~. work, ,,,,"ieh J~sus.,;ca'me: 19. U~~ted, S.t.ates,. c.a.~a.da., .Ptier~. ' y . ":·u·n····.·g,: . tO~"E'n' the' young people ofthe country.'. ' >,. R~~Q,',:~~~lCO, P~ru, ·~,ngl~J;1~r~lJ~d;<·· .. . . . .: .' .' "..", : .. -. . '.. ',' . "As Serrans 'we must develop. If 1 . I " . · .Last' . year, ·Dr,Culbreth,· re-. ceived::an .advertisement froni . ... Los' Angeles concerning a series love' for,.'.f.am,iliarity· with.' a.n.d' he noted: ,There a're new clubs in , St . V mcen' t de Pa .. . uI Camp '. In. 'South Westport . ',' has . ,'. of' nude films. He reported it · insight cinto' 'thL- work arid the 40 states. . ' . . '.' .... \ "·,.. opel1,ed for the .sea.<;on...Th.e,. Camp,ma,intained by the Cat.h..· promptly .to postal' authoritiell problems of our priests.'?' 'i:he I' ~nd the se"nder ·was put out of Bjshop continl,led. "Then, will The Serra"n who traveled' farth:" . olic Charities Appeal and the Bishop's Charity Ball, will business. 'come a full appreciation 'of the est fori the conventi6n",8S' provid~ free . vacations for .over 500 youngsters from aI· Eugene. Dunlap. acting pos~ rb' . t Father LOigi' Ferrari of Genoa, ..' .. ' ' . .. , ...... ' . . .,' .: extraordinary'dignity and. eau y Italy.': .Thl·rty-five .bishop"s· were most, eve.ry CIty, and ...to.w,n ,Camp' has .been exparided with master at 'Miami, said all comof the diocesan priesthood." D I Id t ' iil '·attendance,· including several of the' IOcese:· n ac I lOn, the Department's Order of the. munities across the nation must In our own:homes and putilich d ost to ay Cross and Arrow continuing on c~operate in reporting the rely in our communities, we must . from South , and Central Amer- the Camp is . . of indecent literature to be on guard against those moral,. 'ica. .' campers from the Fall River a larger scale as the theme of ceipt their local postmasters. political, sociai and educational /., ,I and :tiJew Bedford areas. These the entire C,am~. . forces which have undermined will add from ioo to '150 more" The s'port~ ,progra,m III even Christian values and vocati.9ns i campers a week. The age is from more diversified .wlth weekl.y to the priesthood. elsewhere. 6 to 12 years old. baseball games With Ca~hedral . "We must seek to encourage . :. " Director of the. Camp is Rev. Camp, plus regular penods of (NC)-The need John E. Boyd and Chaplain is baseba~l and ?a.s~etball. and promote those constructi've forHANWELLA private· schools is identical Rev. Donald E:.Belanger.. Mass t I .S p e.ciaI A c t iVlies a t ..th e. C a m p. f'orc'es whi'ch pro'duc'e the moral . with the need for religion; says . II I d tit h b and intellectual climate in which is celebrated every day in the ~I ~nc 1;1. e .a en s o~s, ., oxBishop /E~mund Peiris, '.. O.M,I." eamp Chapel, and is attended by i~g, field days, mpt~ry ndes; ~a .:. . ~ami1ies.· grp.~; s.tro'ng al'!d~\ voca.-. 'of Chilaw, condemning the cur-:, both the boarders ll'rid day camp- riety shows, .camp-~ires,·mOVies. 'h 'P'" "'D . ii ~ent campaign, for iJationaliza-( ers:' 'Twelve :semfnariahs ·of the Every camper. willpadicipate 'in:o • · :;·,.·.·.:NEW.BEDr:O~D. •. ater ., .eyton .:ra1VS.: t,~on of'.!llllpr!xat~schqol~liD :Cey-:' DioceSe serve -'on:the'staff ~of ,these events. '.. , ' " :. ','. ';' \. INDUSTRIAL OILS ~ity's,Larges,t Crowd: Ion whic~ has the backing of;' counsellors of: the, Call1;p. .: '. . Area' Canipers" . ',~ ,~. ~ ! ROULERS:(NC) '.- Ail esti-:: some gov~rnmenbleaders... , In," addition,. tm,administering :'AboutlOO youngsters"'froni tht' " .. HEATING OILS mated 800ao persons .crowded· . Cath.olic~ctivity to meet the~ the: camp program;. thc.',semipa.., Fall. River 'area'are" 'at· Camp : i. into this' to~n~~35~OOO;:ih the:: situation iincItlded the'.<:observ-i· rians,,,giv~ ,a short.>instruCtion tht;se two weeks, Their'visitin:g TlMKEN. FlemishY 'se2tio'n: 'of'Belgium to,l· anee".of il' day.,,' of' prayer· for;- each-day.inthe ..Chapel' on some, .day wiIl~'next SiJn'daY"~Th'e heai."'the iFamily,IRosaryCrusade'; church scl;lOols. . . point 'of,. religion,ge~red·, to···th~ campers' from the. :J'aunt/?n-'. ';.1,:', •.-' ·".,. ,.' OIL BU'RNERS' preached ·by Father Patrick' Pey_'J '. Bishop": Peiris said' that 'tlM{ age of' the campers.. Twice a Attleboro .district:· wUl' 'enter •. -.'lb. , _ton, C.S,C. fam~ religious fervour . of AsWeek the campers attend infor- .Carrit;> on July 12 and'theirvisif-:Police said the crowd was the i~!l~. ,~p~l.c:L be lit: . l!. ,~isc;ou.p::L mal 'catechism'''aiscllSSioilS; :'. ,,; ing 'day ~ill be' July" 19, . the largest inthis:~ity'S history. . the!, we~E1. to:.gO .i.n. f.or an edu,.. ., .;. ::":' :"~;;?',::.;,: .• ';,-;. ','; Fea'st 'of St. Vincent PlniI:· · .. Earli·er. s··i:m''i"I'a' I' record:'break- cahon.,wlt1hout.religlon..." """.;, "., E"pand Ac~~vlheli'" ' . New Bedford and' the' surroi:itia.:. There has been' much expan. . 501 .COUNTY ST. ing crowds had gathered in other The Bishop laid the blame ·for . 'f '. t· 't' th" mg towns will send Its campers I slon 0 camp ac iVi ies. is year. on JU IY 26 ·th.·'· 't'" g d cities of the Bruges diocese to progress qf materialism and re- The Nature Shop 'has beet\ reno- Aug 2 'Thw~C' ViSiCln NEW BEDFORD ayt·.pn hear the Irish-born priest. Fath- ligi6lis' inc;lifference in.' the ·W.est. . d 'th .. 1 " e ape 0d con In. f vatewi many more amma s gent '11' t C . A" '9 . 'NY 3-1751 er Peyton told his Ilstenershete: ,at the dopr of a conceptIon fl . 1 . C onserva t'iO~ an d with v· WI en er amp on ug: . "d' f l' on disp ay. T' d A 16 "The Pro Ecclesia et Pontifice ~uca~lOn l iV~,rced rom re ig- fire prevention are.being stressed ',. lSI ~ng ayon ug. . giants bow before it, giants of 10US mflu,ence. Men, and ~o-:- with 'Smokey the Bear serving . intelligence, giants of sanctity - Dlen. hav~, grown u~ ~here ~It~- as the theme of this .activity. that couldn't be fooled by the out1!ny ide.a of religlOus prillcI- .' I The. already well:-established' Rosary for one' second if they pies;' he siHd., and mor.alit~'hall ,Art<Shop. has introduc~d. new . . . d its . povLr '" and . become them nothmg' . -paster,. 1 ha d not recogmze h"'" 'for 011" t' " .' more' '.", 1d eas ill w6r k .' f or th e. greatness and worthiness . " t ..~.l1c,pu I c prop~ry;. . \'" 'younger boys and rosary making The Rosary is most worthy of 'Bishop' ·Peiris contrasted· this for the older. .' ",":;~ew. Be~lo~d's husband, .wife' and child~en to. situ·ati9n.. ·~ith the 'position' .in . At th~. camp's private be~ch at trust, ·to love,· and' to grasp \,Vith--- or~ental," c,ounti'ies, saying tll~i Westport Harbor{;:trained Red their hearts, as. well ali 'with religion is: the core of the Easfs Cross Lifeguardil.' are on' duty. their hands:" culture. . Two 1 seminarians "have received 545 MILL ST. NEW BEDFORD, MASS. 'their certificat~s~ in this from · the': course sponsored by the WY 7-9486 · National Catholic Camp'iug Association at Cathedral Camp. The Indiar' Department of the
a
0··O... 'O·. ··s·te'·5'" )·O·y·..·.,: :ii~~:·~~'r:~··'7t~e~:.V:nd~~~:~~: e:E~~~~nc~h:.:~~r.~h:~:S:~~~~ S<t•. V.i~c~rit d, e' P.q.ul· C~tri.P--. ··'··:5.·.·
Asserts -Private Schools Needed'
HATHAWAY OIL (O.rJ.N(~: .
·F
',' •
~
*,
de
','
:"
:J
I '.
J
":'$"le5 &. Service'.',.
,LOUGHLIN, .'... CHEVROLET 9nly Authorized . CHEVROLET- DEALER
Confirms Children MONTREAL (NC) - Forty · handicapped- children were'con. firmed at the. Basilica of Queen of the·World here by' Paul Emile Cardinal Leger, Archbishop of · Montreal. This is 'an annual Cer~IPOny over which Cardinal Leger· presides. .
\
.
NEW ENGLAND
CLA M B,A' K,E
Every 'Sunday-' $2.95 including .- A Live Lobster
Attention' Mechanics! Do You Work in a Factory, ~arage, .Machine Shop or Gasoline Station? ' We pick up and deliver.. clean and repair overalls. ,Also: we h'ave a complete line of Coverulls. Pants and Shirts for sale. We reclaim and wash any oily, dirty or. greasy rags.
.Why Buy We Supply . When .
NEW ENGLAN'D' ~ . . OVERALL & SUPPLY (0. ' . " z," e.• New
FAMILY DAY held by Serra Clu~ of New Bedford THE at Cathedral Camp shows J. Clinton', Rimrner, chairman, CASA BLANCA . .eft;, dispensing hot d()gs and .hampurgers:·£o Mrs.. Joseph' . " '. .,.' ' Howard Av. .·edford ,toggsha"Bridge~ Fairh~ver:! ~.,.,' ,~~lleverand her twos()!1~..Jol:m,14. aQd', ~seph Jr.•.l~•...,. /:I~'''~'~'~,~~~~.~.~.,~.~ .. ~.~~ .. f.._.iIiIllIII"Pbo1NI' WE '.6~2'·_WY·9~~5i.IIi'IIIi·_lIIII!lIII!iiJ .
.
.
J'
.
Pope Says Catholic Press'Important on4' Necesso'ry
THE ANCHOR-, , Thurs., July 2, 1959'
I
DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER .. MASS.
VATICAN CITY (NC)-His Holiness Pope John XXII( , called the Catholic press not only important but necessary to the Church as he bestowed "bountiful blessings" on the Catholic press in the United States. The blessings were giv:en to all members ,of tpe tiut necessary. Its activities in &4lff' of the NCWCNews theU.S~ are vast and vital.· It Service, its Rome bureau works very hard, but I must· say, and aU me~bers of the Cath~ 'lavora, lavora, hlvora' (work, oliC; ,Press Association of the U.S. The Holy, Father was eager to be told about the various activities of the JIl'ational Catholic Welfare Conference and as~ed questions' about it through his interpreter, -Msgr. Odone Tacoli. In the course of the aud'ience the Pope said he cordially bll:!ssed the N.C.W.C. itself and ail of its cpllaborators. "Ah; the Catholic press, and what it does for the Church!" th,e Pontiff exclaimed.' "It is 'York that is not only important
a
11
Legislators Act On Two Sunday .Closing Bills COLUMBUS (NC) ·-Two bills; both attempting to settle Ohio's Sunday closing law controversy, were voted
work, work), for the Church needs all the devoted things you do." ' During the audience the Pope followed closely a brief outline of the N.C.W.C.'s organization and development and closed by extending his "bountiful blessings" to the Arrierican Catholic press.
out of legislative here. .
committee.
The Senate commerce and \abor <;ommittee by a 4-to-2 vote. recommended for passage a bill which would repeal the controversial law outright. Meanwhile the House judiciary committee recommended by a 15-to-3 vote a substitute bill for four others, which were before the committee, to eliminate some of the archaic prohibitions of the law, Many of the bans date back to territorial law, before Ohio became a state. The proposed law would keep the" ban against common labor and transaction' of business OD Stinday. '
Anti-Smut Drives Bring .' Results '
,'DENVER (NC) - Postmaster' General Arthur -E. Summerfield ·said here the Post-Office DepartIrtent's campaign to rid the mails' of obscene literature is producing' r.esults. " . The' number of cases of alleged DUNFERMLINE' (NC) - A violations of anti-obscenity laws" ' party of 80" Scots-born emi;-, turned' over to district'attorneys' grants returned here from, the, has' more than' doubled· in ,the U. S. to join 16,000 pilgrims for; Under the House measure, e~ FIRST ~NNUAL COMMUNION BREAKFAST of the ceptions the annual Scottish. national·pil-: past' 60 days, Mr.' Summerfield are allowed fo~ works' red ... ,,\, . ,', ,~: , •. ,', ,C,atholic Young Adult Organization '-o,f Kennedy Center; grjmageinhonor of St..¥arg~f~,i, ' decl.a. of necessity and charity. It also, q,ueen al1d,.p!ltron·E!~S.., .... ~.... uJ:et~~st::~~e~i~~~id:lc~;:;~.~.;1N~~ B~qfor4",h~l~atM_~;K ~~~~~~r~pt:s GasVg'ht cRQQ~,;, exempts "per-sons who"conScien-' .' The "pilg.r.ims \Vere me.m}:>~};~ to a law enacted ,last year bJ followed, Mass at St. James Chur~h.Martha'Daprato,centeJ;,: ,'tiously observe the seventh 'day ~f' -the l Guil,d Qf, St.·, 'M~J;g,~J;" Congress wllict, pJrmits distrib-, . ,jlanning. committee chai'rnian,confers,· with' 'ReviLeo '. rf: ' of the' week as theSab~ath'; and abstain thereon from doing et ,of Scotland which has" its ilk, utors bbjectional rriatetial to "Sullivan, 'moderator and main speaker;'and EU'gene R'. Mon~ thingsprohibited·on Sunday," ternational headquarters in, ~ew be. pr~se.c':lte~ in. the place to lou', l?resi<ient, right. ' , York. They ,were, led by Fa,the,r, which ,It IS mailed. .,,' , ' " .. ,.':"',,.' ',,, ' " Austin lCittredge. of the .Franc,i~-: Pre~iously, ,'they could be can Friars of the AtOilem,ent, prosecuted only in .. theplacc " '.,' 0 eg~"."s,als '.' Graymoor, N. Y. , " ..,.", from which it had 'b~en mailed. ,,Carrying :their own banner they. ,Mr. Summerfield sald'southern ,.' , ," ' ' . ..1, ' " : joined the procession, which es~ California and southern New. . VV EST .HARTF,ORD. (NC) o.f. isotopes. ,corted .: a re,lic of. the saint Yo~k' State are the -principal fhe firs't radiation l<lbor:itory at ..Tbe p~ogram operates under through the town's streets, 'alter- centers 'for, distribution of ,por- a 'Coh'necticut college for women the" "direction 'Of Sister Maria and· , I nately reciting the Rosary' ifor- nography. He' blamed this situ- is nearing completion here at ~E:!nJgna" p~ofessor o~ biolQgy, the conversion of Scotland and, ation on "extremely liberal" St. Joseph's College, conducted and" bio-chemistry, who' has singing hymns to the music of court interpretations of obscen- by the Sisters of 'Mer~y. worke? with radio-active isobagpipes.' ity in those areas. 'Equipment now being installed ,topes m a progra~ o.f adv?nced At an altar set up in ,a public in. two existing science labora:.. ~e~earch at the Marme BlOlogpark, the pilgrims attended a Red Press Hammers tories was financed by a $3500 lcal Laboratory, Woods Hole. Mass offered by Archbishop grant from the Atomic En~rgy Gordon Joseph Gray .of St. An- At German Faithful drews and Edinburgh. This was BERLIN (NC) - Communist Commissron.Completed- facili t'ies followed by the tra.ditiol1al pro- publications are constantly try- will include an air-conditioned· cession of priests and prelates.. ing to undermine the faith of "hot, lab"· where' radioactive ma-. teria~s are. handled, and a spe",: The' .pilgrimage ended with C.atholic publishers here. cially" lightec.. . "counting", 'or JOSEPH M. F~'DONAGHY veneration of, St. Margaret's,- ,Father Erich Klausener, edi-. rpeasbring, lab for 4etermining ,,, .... ,,, ,3 PRIESTS. :' , owner/mgr. relic in the' n'eatby'St': MargaI', tor of. ,the ,Petrusblatt, Berlin di..i the amount ,of, radiation. 'given, et's Church. Most of the Scottis~' ocesan newspaper, said ,the .Red off by', substance!l." "142 Ccimpbeli St. " FALL-RIVER RECTORY ,;,:-,: .' Bishops,!' hundreds ·of ,.p,riests; publication!l",sla.nde,~. tI:1e Church ,,. New Bedford, ,Mass. . Starting with:the'fall se!Jlestel'i References required .. monks and nuns took part. 'Q)[; s.~a~ipg ,it ,has ,'po;wer •!>!'lly ten St.' Joseph" senior science WYman 9-6792 St, Marga'ret 'was an nth-cen': Q~a.use~ ,.:of "p'eollll;l~.s igJ1l)ranc~. majors' will' use ,'the new.'instal~ :R~p'ly: The ANCHqR " 'HEADQUARTERS FOR. tury Queen of Scotland. She is I~l;l, ,alidress.ed pl,lbFsh~J;s ~~om lation: 'to' 'condlictexperiments buried in a 'church 'in Dunferm~ 10.·,EurQP~an' co:untries anp t~~ in' radiatior. biology', and', gain ",COLONIAL AND . "~P;o 0;: Box·7;,Fall·River,'Moss;- , line which she and her husband U,.,~... '. ;,:_, "" , ' " , .. ,;, TRAD"'nONAL, FURNITURE practice ,in the use anq. handling, King Malcolrii;: built. 'She was ,Tp.e publ.ishers were ",;elcomed " : . ,':, 't: canonized' in 1250 and named, to. the 'J.l\eeti\1g,by lIis.·',Eminence : ... " .,;' .. .,' ".""""",."",,~patro'ness ·Of. Scotland in·1673. Jqlius, Cardinal)oepf,ner, ,Bisb,-; 'd.r;';'Sir w~rd~f.aioud. "'v~rtisirig; .'1DOlltni : op, of aerlin. lie tol9 th~m,t~at balterj .... buiit and. italfed' by' the mOnI<~ 'hemselves so meet ,t~ growiog demand.. ' :Confirms, Prisoners !' reqloyal .. of. Berl.in from. the Western world would mean the LONDON (NC) - Archbishop What Started as a small-scal. You' j>r.nduq baked by hand' io the kitchen of • Gerald p'. O'Hara, .Bishop of siart, of economic and' political. T rap!>ist monastery bas blossomed inco' a hig),' collaps'e for the city. He stated Savannah,- and Apostolic Delequaliry 'loof produced with ,he accu,IlCJ" of gate to Great Britain, adminis- ,that there must be' no compromOdern scientific methods. tered the sacrament of Confirm-, mise on, this point, although The .Trappist Order requires ~ its some agreement must be reaclfed ation ,to, 14 prisoners during a : Insuran.ce Agency: . me~bers vows of obedience and poverty. This visit to Wormwood Scrubs, big with the Soviets. l<ads to a life of simpliciry, hard work. and London jail. The Archbishop was "Help us wherever you can tranquiliry. Perpctual silence is observed. n.. : 54. PLEASANT STREET : also celebrant of a Dialogue with insight anddecisiori, for nlAnks never (OQverse .with each other. When', NORTH 'ATTLEBORO : : i.t ,i~ a\>solurely oe.:,essary to discuss some ~ Mass in which'the men partici-' we' need .the· help of ,the free of their work, they use a sign langua8e invented pated, and he preached and gave world." the Cardina'l urged the : . TEL. MYrtle 9-823.1 : by Cisrercians a thousaoq years ago. AI'hOui!h Benediction. publishers. Trappisrsspend mucb o( their' day in ,prayer
Americans Join' Scotch Pilgrims',
oj
'5't' J'osep - " hi's, C 11 .",' 'E'" t "hi·' h.es . New Radiation 'Laboratory
LEARY ·P·RESS PRINTING MAILING
234 Sec~md St. Fall River
,'COOK
BOWEN'S
·WANTED
Furnitu.re Store.
~
' ' .;:,
;
~
"".
I
"
~":'Protect'
:- What
:
Have -:
~McGOWAN~
-
.I.,
-
-
~d c~n~~mpl.l:ti~n, ~ch monk ",earns his d~j)): br~
Real Nut[l'itlon In a LoaU A foo( o( Monks' Bread is _ onough in nutritive value to be a meal.in iuelf.... 1t ruts to· be, for the Trappist monks who developed this delicious loaf rat no' meat, fi~h, or eW. Bread i. rhe backbone o( ,heir simple diet. Only the finest ingredients are used: u,nbleached flour for the white bread. vegetable shonening; vitamin enrichment. rich' milk aolids. sugar, and. salt. Trappists have hem' famous lor their ,home-made bread (or rhre< bundred years.
STROLL IN VATICAN GARDENS: Pope John XXIII and four Italian cardinals stroll through the Vatican Gardens. From left to right are: Giovanni Cardinal· Montinj, Giuseppe Cardinal Siri, Pope John, Giaco~o.·Cardinal Lercaro; Alfonso Carqinal CaStaido.. NC Photo. I
_.-;
,
by wor)<inS for the whole community, An" individual JP.onk owns nothin8; even the habir'he wears belongs '0 rhe community..Hard worle. is one of his chief Penances. The Trappist program, is neatly summed up in their motto: ';To work IS to pray."
The Monks'
mC'3ls consist 'of Monks' B.c.d (aJways in plen,tiful supply C:ICrpt during lhr ~$OO ,of srcc ial fasts), soup, ...cgMa.blcs, milk. and cherx, 1hc, sJrep (or seven hours each night on a bed o( planh wilh only. straw pallet (or mattreu. At 2:00 A: M, ,~ ~gin lhe ncw da, by singing,psalms and ()(Mt di...ioc pfaiscs in thrir c:oir slalls. .-
When You (JI)
placc rbis lolli o( lall, slffldtr s!kes you. table, you arc sharing the mODlcs' bread with dac:m.
In 1961 a small pioneer band o( Trappi" Cistercian monks of the Strict Observance from the ,Morher Abbey o( Gethsemane in KenlUcky ,f"'lnded ~ new monasrery in rhe' Genesee, , Vallef. Tilling rhe fields and raising new build· . Jags with their own hands, these hald-workin"g monks, are rurning theit' land into a model farm. When the monastery was raised to an abbey - which meant that i' would be completely seH.supporting - bread was chosen to be rhe chief source o( income. The small kitchen stoVe, originally used to ....ke Monks· Bread bad to be replaced wirh a reslllurant Stays tlalIII"ally fresh' longer oven. But vi~itors spread reports of tbis deENRICHED BREADS: licious loaf so rapidly ,bat wirbin twO J.... while' whO! W.... .. 1ft '. Monks' Bread ..... being sold by mail .. fill , _', .". • , , • R e W .... Rawa.it As the loa(;s_r~puia,iOn Spr~ '. .AT YouR GROCER'.' ",
"Your Daily Bread .....
--i..
--""""",---,,----_.
SAVE MONEY ON
YOUR OIL HEAT! B -CfJll
~_~~9a2n
CHARLES F. VARGAS 254 ROCKDALE AVENUE NEW BEDFORD MASS.
YJrquick del/very II
€s-s2> HEATING OIL
•.
I
I'
St~aiy °Dat,ing . ,U'n!justified "Among .Yt;)u"ger ,~roups ...
,By 'Father 'John L. 'Thomas,
:
,2
-THE ANCHOR .
Thurs., July 2, 11959
DIOCESE 'OF FAUL .RIVER. MASS
sJ.
i
Cause for, Reioidng'
God, !LoveYo'u ... " :By 'Most
Assistant J>rOfess~rof Sociology Saint', Louis UniverSit~
'Rey~ fgltonJCSiheen'. D.lD.' "',",:' ,:.~' I
. Being man as well ~ God, oUr Blessed 'LOrd '~hC)we1l all hnman 'emotions when face to face with a Sinful world.·ReI;"ing' on Scripture, we learn that '()ur .Lord wept three times: '" • •. once in the Garden;" . .. d , " ~ •. once' o\f~r' th~"ttlnib of LazaruS, , .. , " . ~ •. 'once over Jerusalem,. . .. . ,Four times He is .sald to have loved in a partlcnl~r ~aTi • : . the rich youngman, •.. Martha and :Mary. .... \ .••. His Disciples, ,:: •.. Jomi ' ;.. , ,
VVould you kindly rest~te your po~iti0nGnsteadY'dat-r
'~g? My wife and '1 read y'cffit:colUIn:n but don't Alway.s ,:,.'iraw t.he ~a:me pracUca,l,~onclusi(ms from. it. A.!e.. . parents
daing right to let their 14+-,-(going·on. lQ) year-old daug-biter fro steady with ahtd ,of 1,6'? theIDselv~. ,Hence there must These' .kids go 'exclusiv~ly be ,oIJPortucities foryoungpeowith each 'other and are t@- pIe to meet each other 'and to gether bvo 'or three times establish ifriendships leadillgtO
a week. They're good kids _ courtship' land marria,ge. ·'Tw.iee Be marv~led: '. ' . " ." . I ' daily corn:municants _ what ,cioo The custom' of. dating stemS • •• once for the .faith of the RomanCenturiaD.· / 1 thinl,'! irem this~eed. OriginaEy it in- ••• once at the unbelief of ~is ..Countrymen 0U .' As you' have. v<llved onay ·youngpeople· mOl'e 'Gil' One cK:ea~ion, BisSoul is .said 1ohave'bee~ 1l'oublec1: '-d' J .. ~ ,or less rekdy for· marriage; but . u. lcated; oe,' . · .. in the Garden 'of Gethse..rnane j've' written" on" recently it has been adopted las ·Once He was .movedby compassion .eady dating a normal form of entei-t3inment as--He :Saw' the· hungry· rnultitude;onceHe Several times. also .by·young adolescents wbo was angry iii the .synagogue at ·Capharnaum. Sin c e'steady . have'no s~ous thought of mar. I ria.ge .in rrtind. ' Only once did He sing, ,and ,that was ,tbe dating mea n s FEAST DAY JULY 6: St. ·,oight'.He went out w His' Death. " different things Since tllesesocially inimature rn' different but sexually developed younger Thomas More, Chancellor ·of '!But with aU tbeSadness as iki~d of '. . ciontexts, I've adolescents' are quite capable ,m !England, ,refused to support a :setting for a rich jewel,He rejoiced ·only . tried to' pteemotional inv.olvemerits'and 'sex- King H~nry VIII's divorce. once-4nd ,that was in the . shadow of 'the sent the basic ual activities, 'it .should ,be 'obunprisonedand beheaded' he - Cr6ss as the', Disciples c8lmebackand repor.t.,0 d . essential vious that :this, practice not 'only was canonized in 1935 by 'edon their ,ministry. .. ,. fa'c t s t'h a t directsthbir energies and InPope. Pius XI.' NC Photo: shauld be kept in ~mihd when terests away from formal prepa. A:llthese -emotions touch tbe Directors"~;i \ reaching a decision about 'speciration iorl Hie but also ,entails of the 'Father's' Society . forthePr~-ff fic cases. It should 'be. ,'noted serious moral problems. "MoYem~nt ,pagationHoly of the Faith, as Jlews ·eomesin IF that a rational decision in :the Mall:es Distfuetion from missionaries throughout the world. We""'? practical order .always repre-The practice ·of steady dating are :saddened at the ,sight of priests, Brothers and :Sisters iii labor sents the 199ical .application of· .mllstQe. vfewed in the context UTRECHT(l~C~L.The theo~mps in ,China; w(dovethey~uitg'men' and women ·of the Legion moral princ}ples-'or ,premiSes 'of" of these pertinent..-facts. Hence logical studies of 1,348 Dutch stu- of Mary in China wboendureaperS.ecution rather than deny",their val~es to a~et of pertinJilt it is permi~sible for socially madents in 1958 were either wholly faith;w,e marvel at the .zealof priests in making converts in socIal facts. ·Hence we -must ture YOUllg:people seriously c::onor pa.rtiallY financed by the Kenya and. Vietnam; we are troubled af our tDabiliiy tostiI" up understand both the 'pruiCiples temp~aUng I marriage. There is Netherlands Catholic Labor great :~ffectionfor the poor of the world; but we rejoice too, and and the facts in reaching a prac- -no justification for the praCtice It was d'isclosed :here that the most of all, when you resolve to 'do penance for your sins, namely tical decision.· ' .among younger age groups'. netherlands. Catholic Labor by sending a sacrifice to the Holy Father ,for .the 135,000 mission- ,. :Whatare thepertinent,facts? However; a distinction conMovement contributed about aries .thr~ugli!out ·the world. .', '. , • Let's start with what we know cerning the mea~ing of steady .. " : ' . $480,000 'toward financing these about· the human agents mvolv- .dating is pertinent here. To the studies. . GOD LOVE YOU to Mrs..W,G,'C. for ~$74. ,IOn ..June18th'"Y 00.' The miljority of boys 'and'" extent. that: modem parents 'apThe movement, which has some .was seventy-four .years old. Last year I sent you .seventy-three giils in' in\r . culture ·reacl). , pU-" pear either, unwilling to supply 40,000 members, does not dollars ·for. the missions. This y.e'ar ['am making it $74." . . . to berty roughly .betw~en ,the .ages. sufficient : entertainment . fo]" give priority ,to "its economic., M ..L.B. .for :$10. "This is the first Dioney ·that [have saved from . of .Hand -14 or '15. ' . '.... ,.,) teen agers jwithin the extended program, but to the complete not .smoking for th~ 'past :few 'nionths.~' : . . to N.M. for $("[ .. Puberty' represents :the initial' family circle' of r~latives ,and !\.piritual, moral and cultural de- . promised ,this dollar in the hope that !l 'would pass my ·exairig::..l. .. step in the final stage ,of sexual' friends, vat,ious. forms m ,group velopment of ..the. working class. and I .did!" .•.. to Mrs. J.D.L. for $5. ".This was given to nieu development. During this period, activity sponsored either by the -' In 1935 the' organization esa birthday' present. I'm sending it for the poor who need 'fo04 Mrmal adolescents 'become cap- schO<lI, chu~ch,'-or other organitablished the Canon van Scha'ik . and shelter." . . . to M.D.H. for :$1. "Hel'e is that dollar' with able of sexual arousal and the zations hav~ been developed. Fund for the education of priests. which iI ,can ,buy so little and' with whiCh Our Floly Father can reproductive act, together with There need belittle objection In 1958 the number' of student buy sO much;" .' - - - _.- that special form of emotional ,to such fo~.msof group ,enterpriests supported '.by the Neth--'Involvement char.acteristic of 18inment provided. reasonable erlands Labor Movement,and lIilor ,~he 'love 0.1 Our Lady' and tlte missions, order a··~ Iov.,e between men and women. attention is; paid to' supervision, coming from its ranks; exceeded 'Love ¥ou ,medal il~w in anyone' of,foursty1es Frequently in thep~st, 'and in time, place land frequency. 1957 to18fby ~OO . • me countries even today, :mar'$ '2 small sterling silver riage followed immediately. In Some Ignore Facts $ 3 small 10 k. gold fined Lutherans' to Await v aU': times and places,moreover, .' 'Now if t~e term "steady I!at.; .$ '5lar~ sterling silv~r th~ period is characterized by' mg" means i,no more than that Specific ,I nvitation $10 larg~,~Ok g~la filled , the beginning of considerable a boy and girl can. safely' 'rely SAN 'FRANCISCO (NC) lICxual activity either alone or on each ·other for dates on 'such The Lutheran Church-Missouri 'Cut ~ut this column, pin your saCrifice to it· and mail 'if ~ the with others. 0 occasions; there can be' no' 'ob- '. '- jec~ion to the practice. Indeed, it ..synod "will await an invit'a.tion" Most Re~. 'Fulton J. Sheen, National. Director of The SOciety' before it .decides. whetner it will the 'Propagation of the 'Faith, '366. Fifth Avenue, New York 'L iN Y., Preparation tor Life represents" merely ,a normal have representatives in Rome or your!(J)IOCESANDIRECTOR,REV.RAYMOND T. 'CONSIDINE, c.onsequentiy, . if for vario~s co·nvenient,· ['often unexpressed during tpe Ecumenical congress 368 Nortih'Main str~e,t" F;allR,iv~r. Mass. reaso~s the gapbet'Ween the agr~t:nt t~at they will'attend completion of 'ptiberty and 'margroup affairs together. ' . 'ann<~unce(l by Pope 'John XXIII. Dr. Oswald Hoffmann of New lIiage is lengthened, 'some ',PN)- ' - Tli:is' fortIl of steady dating i" DAUGHTERS OF ST, ,PAUL York, said his, churcQ has eni ¥is~on milst he made for .il'egudiffers markedly from the cur,IRvi.. "oung '.gi'" ,('14-23110 ,labor 'lit' fating sexual activity. Among a rent fad in ~hich immature teen ,gaged in DO ."off~cial discussion~' ,Christ's vast vineyard cii 00 Apostle of the . few relatively prinuitive ,groups, aget:sape ~e exclusive, int1- ,regarding the Holy Father's acEditions: ,press, ,Radio, Movies ,ciAdrelethis. period is regarded as a time mate,affectionate association ,Of ition. He added that he does not ,viaiOft. Witttth_ ,mode.. _aas,. th... fqr youthful sexual experiment engaged coO-pIes. This latter' e:Iqlect "any reaction whatso-' llIIissionary 'Sisters 'bring Clori....Ooctrl., ever" until and unless'Luther. _ Uldfreedom. form can ha~e no justification. Ie crtl. 'reganlless of ,race. cOlor .• ·CIMO. I ans are invited to the congre88; Among civilized .natiolUl 'at Well, .Joe,!I think youkoow 'for inf.rtn1di_ 'write .to: He said his chur'ch is "riot' least until the· present ~ial ,lTlY answer to the case you pre"REV MOTMEI ,SUPERIOR ~'", custom and family (sup~iv1SiOn. sented. Parents who tolerate averse" to receiving' an invita.. st. ,PAUL'S ·Aft. 'IOSTON :.,MASS:. tion :to the Rome meeting but earefully regulated ,the relatiensuch an affait simply ignore the ~ouldparticipate only if its renbips 'between the unmartieairl 'fa~ ,of mb. I presume" ,of - . . , presentatives could "discuss docorder .to'p~event ,untimely ,emo-. course., that Ithe young couPle trine on the basis of Scripture." ~t:l:al involveme.nt and to keep are normal. If tb;ey're'))Dt, their He 'did not rule out ·the possibHllexual activity at :a minimum',.,. parents .have Iother problema .to i't,yof sending,u[u)fficia16bilerlSince OUT tecliiialogica#y 'ad':' wcJr+y- a o o u t . I ' IINC. vanced socic.ty·,ean'eIidure ,only ..', .,' ," " . ers. ·,:1 Doctrinal' discussions, Dr:' if an increasing .proportion·of ,~ri~sts... ~akePJea J'oung people_\1JIlflergO,. -long ,., . Hoffmann said, would '''h'ave to ··,~··,·, . '':'(1'' .!" f t l .... \ 1 '. Jrears of iormaltraining .and edFor'fight; on S'mut sfar;t with Martin Luther because tllCation, the gap between' pu- ''''''NEW YORy"(NC)':-A letter that's where our differences :", . .c. berty and .'marriage nmstremain, r~!1esting. p~re,nts'eoopera:tion with Rome begHi:'" ',' considerable" Whi1J.e···:'.;morality (" with postal d.ff.iciais .iiI ridding and .common sense dictate that . the mails of lobscene literature 6800 Take Marriage -.·r' ~e ,energies .'and interestsbf' waS read fr6rir the pulpits ,of ,all youth, nltist, m~anw!iile be. dichur.ches in .t~ ;\rchdioeese~f Prepa ra tionCou rses MONTREAL, (NC) - 'Some r'ected toward' formaI-.· preparNew York.' .'. , < alion. for li:!'e rather than towar..~... .', The letter. was sent :to aU par- . 6,800 persons took' ',pat-t in:' the .... ~ . .,·.·,ART-HUR , J.'..:DOUm .... ...:. .•.' ( 1;600 pnipaiation' for marriage emotio~a~.:ln:volvement and ,sexishes by MsgrioThbtnas A. Donu.al.actIvIty. : nellan;', Chancellor of "the arch1' courses given .·in . 60 parishes of . 'IFA!LiL iRIViE:R .MASS. ., .. . " . .. 1 . ,'. , . the Archdiocese of Montreal las.t Entai:sMoral Problemsdiocese:~Iturged parents to .save . ..... : .. A further fact ,to Iconsider -is any _objectibmible material . y~~r:,. it \y~s rep~f.te(f by Paul Emile Cardinal -Leger. Archttiat our. society ,pJ.a~ 'major mailed to th.eU;. children bypOc. responsibility for the' selection .nography dIstnbutorsand .turn· bishop of .MontreaL.- ' Assisting the 6,800 i~th~ir of Ii' mate' upon'· :young 'peoplE!" "'it, over; totheit localpos'tmaster, courses were 125 marrIed " :. \, !. , . "" . .• "either in .person or b~ mai'!. . ,It. 6 at The~rrowsi.. ,.iNol'thW:~port " '.' "i. " couple's, .60 doctors' and nurses Catholics Distribute.' "This vicious morement loun- 50 ndtaries, 264' other leaders and " fl' • "R' .' -.'., dfilrmine the morality of oW: na- 150 ,priests. : Leo etslD, uSS1a.n tion, partic1,llatIy our youth,has" Where .\Ibe LONDON. '(NC}7-The, Sword· so increased these past few years tEntire. IF~,,' ~ , ' '. of the 'Sr>irit, British' :Catholic' as to present a problem of 'im~ 'iCan;l)in~ ." ..: i?tern~F9.~~al,ll:f,.f!l,jf,~" orga.l1jzJl;.:ro.Mi.!lt~ ,and. 19rave...concern;" 'BONNER FLOWERS . ",~al:1r .... '. tion, revealed here that itsmemthe letter said. SpBC'laltsu tift ..' i bel'S ?istribute.,. 20,000 leaflets' in", Pr.eviously cpnfined itO stores S,peci.a.lFl'Or.at Arrangem6ft~ I . ! :', RUSSIan at. the 'Br.lisse~s· World' .and: newsstands 'a vast. amount ~a.ir last :yeai> "':, :, .' :'.' " ':o( thi8,'le'\Ycitriaterial;'as well • _Funerals .... Corsages,; .,·,to . • " .•-:-'. It was .~tated 'at the lorgar\iza-', .as .. samples.;.~olicitiilg ·s.ales of • Weddings • Hospital· i tion's anntla!,: me~tin.~ h¢:e:that .,even. 1l10re ,"iibt~.ctional:ilepic 12082 ,Robeson St. '. 120,~g:;;'CQ~I~S: .. of,.~p:ublicati()ns: : ...:t\.ir.(!S;. s'lidesiln'~"fibris are being IFein River 'O$5~7804 For,ReservatioM ,. dealmg WIth' world -problems sent to -children urider 'cover ·of. .. _ .,._.:.,' _ ;; ; _ . . ,_.,_. " _""'_' . _. ' _'_. <_' --.,;~. I , .. _.i",_.f'ttD_:_n...;·· ..~·;O~'S_·'..;",if~;:i.1;,,;,;18S;;.;.'.:.:.;,".~';.Ii;,';'.ii;;;''~;.;,;'~~ ~lCe issu.,d la.;t year. first class maiL" _ .\~; 1.. ; ' · ,"Ii, ~""". It ..•• , •.. ~._ " .•: : \:~ ' .•"'l. :!.L-l:.' ...
iLabor·
Finances Stud ies
..
,'.
.toe
,.
•
~
I
'for
I
;D ,&. D"';Sales~ ';and,~rvicet" . .·"j·FRI··11 .'G···IDi·:,;'···'·m·!·'E"" -
'.'
iR:E!F!R!IGERAT!IO'N AiPiPiLIAiHCES. AiIIRCO:ND!ITIONil,NG
,~-
"
.;.~.
,Fami'y, ,ResiftJurtJ:nt ",', ~.
i
Schedule for Summer. "Sea'Sf)" Assonet ST. BERNARD'S
Masses: Sunday-7, 8:30,10 A.M. . First Friday-Evening Mass 5:30 P.M. Boly.day9-8:30 A.M., 7:30.P.M. ."
Buzzards Bay ST. MARGARET Sunday-6:30, 8, 9; 10, n A.M.,
Masses: Daily-7:30 A.M. . Confessions: Saturday-4-5 :30, 7-8:30.
12 NooJi.
West Barnstabl~
Onset Masses: Sunday-7:30, 8:30, 9:30, 10:3«1, 11:30 A.M. Daily-8 A.M. Confessions: Saturday-4-5:15, 7-8 P.l\l.
'.
Confessions,-Before Sunday Masse.;
provincetown ST. PE'fER TIlE APOSTLE
Centerville
Masses: Sunday-'-6, 8,.9,10, 11 A.Nt:.· Daily-7 A.M. Devotions: Sund~y-7:30 P.M. aConfessions: Saturday, eve of Holy Dais and eon . of First Friday"""':'4:30-6, 7:30-8:30 P.lII.
OUR LADY OF VICTORY
Masses: Sunday-7, 8, 9; 10, 11 AM. Daily-7:00 A.M. . Confessions: Saturdays, eve of Holy Days, eve of . First'Fridays-4-5:30, 7:30-8:30 P.M.
,
ST. MARY'S
Masses: Sunday-7, 8, 9; 10. 11 AM.
ST. JOHN THE BAPTIST
CORPUS CHRISTI
Masses: Sunday-8, 9, 10. Daily-8 A.M. P.M.
Masses:. Sunday-8:30, 9:30, 10:30 A.M.
Chatham
Sagamore
HOLY REDEEMER
Masses: Sunday-6:30, 8, 9, 10,11, NoOJl Daily-7:30 A.M. Devotions: Sunday-7:30 P.M. Confessions: Saturdays, eve of Holy Days and Thursday before First Fridayr4:30-6, 'J:30 -9 P.M. Exposition on First Friday
SUPER-RIGHT, Tender, lean and mellow' flavored for delicious holiday feastingl
ST. THERESA'S
c
Masses: Sunday-6:aO, 9, 10, 11 AM. Confessions:-;-4-5, 7:30 P.M. .
Shank Port·ion
·Pocasset ST. JOliN'S
lB39
Masses: Sunday-6:15, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11 A.~ Confessions:-4-5, 7:30 P.M,
East Falmouth
Popponesset
ST. ANTHONY
COMMUNITY CENTRE
Masses: Sunday-7, 8, 9, 10, 11 A.M. Daily-8 A.M. (Others unscheduled) Rosary and Benediction: Sunday-7 P.M.
Masses:. Sunday-8, 9, 10 AM. Confessions:-Saturday-4-5 P.M., on17
\
'South Yarmouth
Shank Half Include. Choice Center Slice•
.ST. PIUS TENTH
East Freetown 0
Masses: Sunday-7, 8, 9, 10 A.M. Benediction: Sunday~5 P.M. Confessions: Saturdays-7:00 o'clock.
.
Bun Portion . i&'49 c
OUR LADY OF 'l'HE HIGHWAY
Masses: Sunday--':'7:30, 8:30, 9:30, 10:30; 11:38 A.M. Daily-:-8 A.M. .
Falmouth
EQst Den'nis'
I
ST. PATRICK
Masses: Suriday-8:30, 10:30 AM.
'
ST. AUGUSTINE'S
ST. TIIOMAS
Wareham
Hyannis
ST. PATRICK Masses: Sunday-7, 8, 9, 10, 11 A.M.
Masses: Sunday-G, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11 A.M., 12 Noma Dail'y-7, 8 A.M. Confessions: Saturday-4:00-5:30, 'J:30-8:30 P.II.
"
SACRED HEART "
Masses: Sunday-8:00, 10:00 A.M. .
ST. ANTHONY
.'White' Bread', . $.;~ED
LOUllDBI
.
,Tru'ro
. Assorted Fruit Flavors·
'/
-la-Rex Syrups :,
lIasses: Sunda,y"--8, 10 A.M. First FridaY,-8 A.M,
Mau: Sunday..;..,-tJ A.M. '
. Oak Bluffs Daily-,-7:30 :A,M. Benediction: Sunday-'J:30·P.M.
- 'Edgartown ST. ELIZABETH
Masses: Sunday-6:45, 9:00 A.M. Daily-7:30 A.M. Benediction:'Sunday-7:30 Poll
Orleans ST. JOAN OF ARC
Masses: Sunday-7, 8, 9,.10, 11 A.l\l. . Daily-7:30 A.M. .' Boaary and Benediction: Sun<laY-'J:IOP.II.
East Brewster
90NCE.n'IOJI
1Ianett: Sunday-'J, 8, 9,10,11 A.I\(.
North Eastham CHURCH. OF· THE VISITATIOW
Ma. . .: Sunda)"-8, 1,·lo.n A.II&. .
,"-:.; ~arge ~ggs " Silverb~ook' Fre6h~.amery' Butter,. '
OUR LADY OF PERPETUAL . . . . .
'-
lIasBes: Sunday:......7, 9, 11 A.M. . , First Friday: Devotions-7:3O P . •
West
-
Harw:i~h
..
HOLY TRINITY
lIasses: Sunday---'6:30, 8, 9,.10, n ·A D __ " Da~ly~7 A.M. .... ~nfessions: Saturday-4-5:3(), T:30-IP,M.
Dennisport
,
.
'1
PINT JUG
DOZEN 1 LB PRINT
6SC
1'r.... _ " ' _ . _ - . . ...... ".. .. Joolra ........M .. IIlIo~ ..........
Woods Hole ST. JOSEPH
Kassel: Sunday-7, 8:30;9:30, 11 AX Daily-7 A.M. Boeary:and Benediction: Sunday-T:IO P.II.·
'..
IMMACULATE CONCEPTION' 1Iuies: 'Sunday-'i', :8, 9;:10~·11 .. A.K.. '12.... '~ ",.,
~~S3C
OPEN WED.,-THURS. &FRIDAY JULY 1,2 &3·'TIL,9-'P.M.
Sum'!ay-7, 8,9,10, 11 'A.M. Daily-8 A.M. . Confessions: Saturday-4-5:30, 7:30-1 P.l\l.
Meg a l1 sett
c
I A&P Super M.rlc.... ·CIosedAII Day, Sat., July 4
Ma~s:
Daily~,'A.M. ' . ,.
I
.i
.. '
"
UPPER COUNTY ROAD OUR LADY OF ANNUNCIATlOIf
.
I
Sunn~, Strictly Freah' Grade A
. North 'Truro '.'
OUR LADY STAR OF THE u:A Masses: Sunday-6:30, 8, 9, 10:30A.IlL
I
l6'~~ 17
'Eight O'Clock CoHee
- SACRED HEART
Sconset
.1 ,
3tb· bag 1.53
'Mild and Mellow
Masses: Sunday-7, 8, 9,10; 11A.l\l. ,Daily-7:30 A.M. 'Devotions: Sunday-7:30 P;M~, '
Masses: Sunday- 6; 7" 8; 9,-10,1:1 A.M; Daily-7, 7:30 A.M. Services: Sunday-7:30 P.M.
53c
41~
JaheParker':StOck'up for the holiday
Wellfleet
OUR LADY OF THEISLII
LII
CANS
Masses: Sunday-8:30, 9:30,.10:30 A.K. Confessions: Saturday-~:30P.. M.. OlJR. LADY OF
Whole Hams
Cranberry .Sauce. 2 1 LB 4SC :Juicy and Flaky-cru'sted - Regularly 49c .' Apple. Pie Jape P~r~~L~;ge 8" EA 39C
Masses: SU~day-7, 8:30, 10 A.M. Confessions: Saturday-6:30 P.M.
"
HANDY FOR ANY OCCASION
* * * * * *. ,* * * *
West Wareham
Nant'ucket"" ,
89C
LB
OCEAN SPRAY Delicious with Ham or Turkey
ST. RITA
ST. ANTHONY'S
Masses: Sunday-6, 7, 8, 9,10,11 A.M. Daily-7:30 AM. . First Friday-6:30, 9:00 A.M. Tuesday-St.. Anthony Novena Ilftd Novena . '. to Queen of Peac_7:30 P.JL Conf~aiOlll: Saturday-4-5, 7:30-8:30;,
Center. Slices
Grade A
. Marion .'. -
'"
Inspected.
Daily-7 A.M. ' Devotions: SUI}day-7:30 P.M. 'Miraculous Medal Novena: Monday-T:30 P:lL Confessions-4 and 7 o'clock P.M.
Yarmouthport
10 MKE, BROIL OR ~y
6 to 18 Lbs U, S.· Gov'.
..
ST. FRANCIS XAVIER
.Butt Half
Turkeys
Masses: Sunday-6:30, 8, 10, 11 A.M; Daily-7:30'A.M. Benediction: Sundays & First Friday_T:3«I P . • Confessions: Satul:day-Children-fO:3G A.M. Adults: 4-5, 7:30-8::30 ·P.M. Eve of First Fridays-4-5, 7:30-8:30 P. II.
Masses: Sunday-6:15, 8, 9, 10,11 A.M. Daily-7:30 A.M. Benediction: Sund'ay-8:00 P.M.
",eluding Choice Center Slieet
READY-TO-CQOK, PLUMP, TENDER
Vin~yard -Haven
Falmouth Heights
c
.* * * *. * *. * * * *
WORDEN ({ALL STATION'
Masses: Sunday-7, 8,9, 10, 11 A.M. Daily-7 A.M. Novena: Monday-Miraculous Medal, Benediction: Sunqay-7:30 P;M.
,
011
Bass River
..<
Ma tta poisett
Shank Half
Masses: Sunday~7, 8,9,10,11 AM. Daily-7 AM.
CATHEDRAL CAMP OUR LADY OF THE ASSUMPTION CHAPEL
IMMAClJ~ATE
HAMS.
Sandwich
•
. ST. JOHN THE BAPTIST HALL
.
Fully Cooked
,South Dartmouth
Central Village
c
by Vice Presiaent ~ichard l\I. Nixon in Washington. Mr. Crim, who was cited for more than a million and a half miles of driving without aD accident, said "St. Christopher is my' constan~ companion. I attribute my safety record and the winning of this award t. him . and to the power 01 prayer." ,
ROUTE 6A . OUR LADY OF HOPE MassesSunday-9:30, 10:30 A~M .. ",
ST. MARY'S
Masses: Sunday-7:30 AM. Daily-7:30 A.M.
Power of Prayer Aids Trucker
OKMULGEE (NC) - TwentyOsterville six years of accident-free truckOUR LADY OF THE ASsuMPTION driving were attributed by the Masses: Sunday-7, 8, 9, 10,11 A.M. "1959 Driver of the Year" to the Daily-7:00 AM. "power of prayer." ConfessioQs: Saturday-4-.5:30,· 7:30~8:30 P.M.. Ca,rl C. Crim, a recent convert to Catholicism, now a member Santuit .'. of St. Anthony's parish in this ST. JUDE , Oklahoma town, recently·, was Masses: Sunday-8, 10 A.M: :. presented the American TruckConfessions: Saturday-7:30-8:15 P.M. ing Association's national award
",'
. ..' "... !','.'
.. ~.:
. ':
., .;
",~B;y BRIAN' CRONJlI(! . .-.' " '"
.•r.:. ••.• •
. '
"
•
.,:
:'.'
-'0
:~:'!;Irt;·,High,.Malls" th:e: ;G~spel is:-(a) :Omitted! ,(b) Said ,Aloud?
',;~'>'(i:)ISaid SilentlY?".(d) Su'ng?r
zt '~:~th-e'Church
."
,
, ' .
'c~l~b~~tes 'O~Y three" birthd~ys'iIi its lltu.ri{ic3I
6;";.cafen'dar- Our Lord~s;' Our LadY~s, and:;"(a), St., Joseph's? r",,'(b) SLPeter's? (c) St. John t~e Baptist's?, St. Patrick's ,3:. ThelIoly places in the Holy Land have ,traditionally ,beeo ;',r';Under :the care Of'. th~:,--~a) Franciscans?' .(b) .,Dominicans?, 'X;;,<,,(c}Tr,appists? Cd) Cannelites? '. " , ' .:: , ' .' ' . " ;j('J;:Wha(does the ,word '.'cr~ed" niean?:-(a) Ri'ayei'? (b) Belief? ';i:C:' '(~)':.fIyiiiQ? (d)'Prophecy? ' '., " , ;5~",~~ThoSe-, bOdks ' f~l~ely. claimed to be" divinely ·'inspired . partS ··of \ ,;:}':::tfitr. Bibl~!' 'are',;:;' termea:;"'(a) Didactic?"(b) 'ApOCryphal? •.~ .. t .. , . '.. '. " . '. ::.;.:':;Cc): Pr:OPlletical?' (d·) Canonical?.:' '"". r··· . , '.. .. : . ,; .7:, .," '" ';'" ",."" ,,' . ';' " ... :", .,' . ' , , ' , ' . . " C ' , ,-, •• , , 0 , ' ' ' - , ' . . ' :&\:~';ID> ec~r~$i'listica.r- ~'r~mk~;~oVi;hiclr"'Of .the ,,;,following: , orderg,;·,is .l::: HONOR;OUTSTANDING' LAY~AN:Arc~bish~j)EgfHJ? v.aiH9zz:1':'~ie:,so.~d:,;1~~t,;, Ap-' ~:;'i1':~io:l'n':~,~\~):';:'.~.ic.~oi~'i~1/ ~b)': '1\col;Yte? .. ec) 'Deacon? ~tolic Delegate to the United States, pr.esen ts . Notre' :Dame: Uili\:et~itY'}L1959.;Laetare c~~''''(d) ~ubde~co~U '. ':.' ,c"" ; !:' .,: ",,' ,-: C' ~~dal to'Depil'ty Under Secretary.:,of:State; RobertD: Murphy.- At left i8'F~th~r ,.Theodore 'T.,; To 'whom did Oti{L~dy; ~ppear with a miraculous medalahd aSk ~" Hesburgh,:, C.~.C., ..Notre Dame, ,president, and at right is pro Charles Malik, presi- "', that it:be'made·and'·,w,6rn::bythe'faHhtfii?::.:....'(a)"'Bernadette-Soudent""Of the lJriitedNaHons KssernbtY:';N(rPhoto~' ...' ' 0 " ' . " "~"', , w • . ':::; :bif9~ (b) ,Cilther'ine 'Latioure? '(c) 'Mariette Bileo '(~) 'St. Maria , ' . '. i· ..· , ' :, ~oretti? ' , ' .. ,. ,',". '" .,'.,. " "
«0
;
>
.>c>., ,." ..,."
General
LdUdS'< I'nte~r'n:ationa 0 I [dbo r., ::1
•
I'
.
.,s·",:"" ,b'r J-ee·t.-YeS 0,'.," '·9"o'.n"·.-·Zot·.~o·n' By G.
:Tr~d~ :\~:~io~.i~ts C J I '4
.., ~~o~i1~e, ~~~~O~l::!:~ :o~;~:fi>l~i:~;~~:r,(~f\~~:~~~: . . Aquinas? (d). St. Aloysius Gonzaga? '. \ . ' ,
"NoE~WnYy.e.onRKe ('NCU)_Y.T, &J\~e' 'A_ Give yourself 10 marks for each correct answer page 18; ~ j,j.- ~"Ratiiig':'.a~Excelien.t;:7~Vely Good; 6~d; 50-Fair . sociation of Catholic Trade un', ..... ' . -:',,' t·· , . . . ~ '. '• . ~' ~.' . - .-' " , ionists."<~CTU) will hold its 13th . .' . . """1 ,,' national conference at ihe .Tudor ," Defegates particjpating iO,-the·, 19,59 Conference of' the. ArII¥ 'Hotel, Cleveland, July. 4 I!t,ternational. Labor Organization in i-Gen~va," Switzerland and 5,. national 'direc'tor Frank ~k time out in the early 'stage 'of, th,is important meeting Andolina·'announced here.' ., • ~I ,~H~pq a.. M.:~~~ ,co~'P.~,n,:tpra ..- tin,g: ~~e1' }Q.t!t:,a~niy~,~s~.g"~!, ., .traTchte~dassn'aOCtl"oian.tw~ol~d'"e'WahttieChn'tl~o,an:s faOt~d~~adv~_the dril~ing ~ ~hs." Sis lise~~rlalble adlssvicleand ~e Zwe~ r th ILO Th h f ',' ' . '"l"~'" .Mlpass " "on,. MI ;'.,. e a vaMl n m onary· a. ar•• :. ~ e preac, er ~r within' .*b.e --International Labor .its fight,. against exploitation of .. (Trapsjorclan). This devoted mlssioath~ ,Occa~lOn was the Most', 'Organ'tz'ktiori"ih' its recent his~ ~Negroes anfl,Pu~rto Ricans;lwill ·al'J' wrote that his mission chapel on ,. Rev. Francois', Charriere, torY' ViAs'the"adoption in 1957 meet· under' the theme: "Prob- .:', ..'. the outskh1s 01 the tO~n wall almost $h~hop ,of Fribo.u~g, the di(h,= Of. a c~nv'l entio.n. to outlaw f.orced. lems of Industrial Harmony': . ",,,,,, 'as .large as the 'main Ch~ch.. As •. ocese in which Ge'neva is located.'" labor":m the'world. . . , 'Strikes Today~ndTom·~rtow."· . "," . fe~~lt he, was,force,cit,o 'dlvl~eDlUc~ , !:iA: summary of::Bishop Char':"" ,Work: on, such a convention '.' The' 'ASSoCiation;which; was 9f.,hIs tiJile.,between'tbe ,cbapel and ri~re's sermon began i~. 1947 when the Amer-. founded in 1937 .here, has as its uie main pa-rish' Church: The dIS~~ alre'ady. apC: ';;ican,Fe~edtion .of L~bo~. as~~d'purpose 'to progagate Imd: imf' knce is about five"mii~I' and 'ili bad ~ared in. t h e · , ;;;,~~e."V.m~~d;.NatIon.s, to mves~l-plemt;nt U;te:~o'cial·'teachings .of ~weather Uie:'~~i~c Is, rat,~erontlie diocesan press. gate forfed labor 10 the SOVIet the Church in the field of'llibor- ; '.'" "rougb side. Taxi fare would eat up ~nder"';the NC, Union al\d communist-dominated management r:elations, Mr. Andomost of the' revenue .... 'til :walk :ihe' Ify-iine; It will ' counb:ie~; ...", , !ina ·said.' . distance would require 10 'Igueh fun. , 't;herefore sUf~ Serious, Mistake . ACTU spokesmen hav~ apTbt'HdyFaIhtr'sMiIsioR Aid 'Uiat he;' 'wouid' requIre aIi . aSsIStant . flee to: recall Discruh.ination in employment peared numerous times, before .". " "1~ tht OrimtalChuirh ".prieSi ~'; ~ So' he' wrote and' asked wi · , . " . th" h' h h b ,." .'., " to appeal for $500 .- buy a "jeep." titat the Bishop ~,a~o. 1r"Is,~~e 'Y; IC as een Congressional". committees in MI enthusiastically stIrr10g wIth10 the ILO for the Washington,testifying on various We were about tf; suggest the b1lS-"'but ,there:is no'· bus serv·', 1 A d ft . Ice here between the refugee settlement and the town; Can , ' t 'p'. '1' a i sed the pas .seve,r.a,.. years, . .ra.. co.n- rna tters such. as labor " .racket"oil' help' this ·goOd ,p'ril~st 'to 'buy a "jeep" 50 he can "multiply" , 1'1'0 l' k:'-of the' . ventIOn,alllled at eradlcatIn.g, dls- 'eering ahd, mostreceritly, rais:.. . , y1te"rn'a' t YO n a I. criminati9A,', aga,iI)s.t . emp10yees ing of the, minimum w.ag'e: fro'" .bll presence and' be Intbetown 'and with 'the. 'refugees 'at . . . Ul , moSt'the Saine 'time?" . . ~bor: Organib~cause ~f. race, c.ol?r, sex, .reli$1·to$1.25. . "" • ,:,~,tiQ nan d ,,,' gIOn, ~olrt!<:~l; OP,~}:llon, national I . , • . SUMI!4.J!;R CAMr,~:.ARE Q:NKNOWl')I,~, ,PU~ ·R~.fUGEE, urged--Catholicsto help achieve or f CIal" ?rl~~~ w~s adopted at ~qrdinal'Cicogn~niQ . ". ,CHILD~EN ... ,.J\,L.MOST.AS Ul'fl(NQWN 4~-AFULL,~~AL itS: a i m s . ' the Int~rnatIonal' Labor Con11I..1 WE. CA!'l~O'g~s~~~ ,.THEM TO CAMP BUT WE M.UST ')Bishop Charriere.~s words 01. ference I~ June, 1958.. n l""IIleJ! t!mE!Qst'j" ,.,I'~ED..,'f.HEM·,'.. :: $~O. WII,.L ~,E,l'lJ) A, 1'.09,D PACU~1!;1 p,~aise~cho whaitp.~ Church has .In recE1~t'Ye.ars·thin~O, not- , V:ATIC~N ~IJ'Y (NC~~---';f. His bk;en sayingo'f ILO·these many w~thstan4mg'lts ·many. accom- Em~nenceiAml~to Cardmldi CiJOSEPH arid HiKMAT"Wi,1 enter .·'seliiinari'iD JerUsalem" ..i~ars ,of rjts·existence;:.::~he-..Jate",.. ,p.h~h..l}'\~.l}~ll,!'l, t}}~,:f,iel,<l"9f.~.oc~al",,, ~Qg9l;lj1j,_,fqpp.. ~I;.A,!lc;>stolic ·.Dele- .:, ,'Jon;iJub', 1-, 'the 'Feast'of '·the Most 'Precious 'BlOod;· 'Both boya I. ..1 f h b d d dl " were "SO' anxious'to'startoil', the road to the·.... ',. ,Pdne PiusXII,.for.' e~3:ml?l~;a.':"-;',i~.:,feg,~II;t,,·.,!.~~ ,een. a e.cI e y gate, to t.h,e l~,nited St.atel1,", has ri'" tr I b t th b' ' ':",,·.nar "that we: could not' refuse ·them·..pel"" een, named" a ,"!ember of, the 1" 'mission --'even 'though :1&, was .·'C". gamble. clressi,ng .J ,the ; I~P',s;,HQ{[~~!P}~~, ,.c~,~.o~e,r:~ll~:" <:.. ~u Jec ".ID:.. ~" ~" . , ..' B6dY. at CastelgandqJ~g,m 1957, u:~uted Stiltes..,Some of Its crltI~s l?acred Congreg~tIon of the Holy .,' '.birit~d'·our that "T.:tt~.,.,Chr~stia.":,,.haye., goi;1~. . ,~o: ,.f.ar .as. to suggest '.0,ffi,c¢,.. ;,....,.' ... '" ,. " . '.,' Usually":we make,' these'" boys 'waU,' until . th t th U S tho f . ''''''':, we have a spOll8or.. 'for·eacli who Is willing -novements., : . have'· given th~lr., 3 " ,.e .~.' . "•.. WI raw· rom. ' "HIS appomtment bY-His.:Holi-,;.,,,,,~,pQ .. the necessary;expenses of,~:$100" a f!,l'ii supporqo:'the'lnt~t~~.tion'al"··theorg~nlza.tlO~. . "." . ' ness fp~~,,J;~/:ln.,;x.:?,IIrbrin~sto .,,:,,<-ci7ear ior thl'slx year.'eourse. However;;we Labor'- :Orgailizat~on, ..l;l~9 ;,con-:.',;~,I~;;~~.~~.~'Tlt~I,'!! opl,Dlon-:-;-whlch 10 the nU.,.m.,~~. r:.ofca.. rdm.alswho '''.der I·t "an . ,h..onor. to" ta'ke ·.,part h.as. bee.nl,st.ate.d.,\ more than once are' 'rlu~ti'ibers"'ol" tHe' congre,ga- .'." '.. are, confident tbaLsince they ,will ,begln.on·, Sl .. • FeaSi which recalls Ou~,Lord's' sacrifiee. . ~:itS work." ° , i,:C:'~:'" .J.' ,"m:The,:t~rdstIc~ and,t!?-r:0l:lg~ tig,?,,,,,tl).e. y':~tica.n,.,~~partment' lor us .•• it will not be too difficult to find someone wbo wlIl' ;:. '.' 40"Succ;ssfl1r"Year!l"'~"" ",'. ,oth:r.me~ha-thls would be a concerne.d with faith and mprals. make. sacrifice for' Himl . l.'Organized, at·' the' dose of . s~nou.s m,Is~k,e. The,~qpe :~imself is..the Prefect, World War I and since '1946 a :1£ the United ~ates were to of the agency, whi~~ i~. the . "'SISTER DANIEL and SISTER GEORGINIA' liavelong dedred to become Sisters of the Vlsitation in Indfa. We gave them ., · eciltiized ,.ag'ency as.sociated~lt~d~a~l!r0n:' any of the ~pe-smallest'of the'12'congregatIOns. . permission to enter the .novitla&e on iub' 2.' &p. h th U't d N tions the clahzed agenCIes of the -Umted or perma!1ent commissions of the Feast of the Visitation 01 Ute Blessed ~b 'in : w~:l~ ';"he~e in~rna-' Nati~~s .~ry whic.h it ho!ds mem- cardinais, handling the business . Mother. We' have DO sponsors for them .. · 'I' th del' of the bershlp, ItS foreign polIcy would of the Church. tiona CrIsest'nuing are ethe or job it· has be. h"a~per I ed b .. se . If·s'"Hi~e his. recall from Washingyet, but we know that Our Blessed Mother y I"ts own. " '. d ay, IS con I . exclusIOn' to 1 t D be to . th .will find • sponsor for: each girl, wbo will 'bEien .doing for 40 years-,-the im. " n as ecem r .recelve. e .be willlnr to pay her, necessal'J' expenses of Red Hcat :and sedr~e IlnC~e" Roprovement of man's working 'and Particularly is this true of m $150 • year for. the two years of novUlsie c ma Icogna.ni Ii~ing conditions. . the Internlttional Labor Organi- ' an urla,ar tralnill&'. It may be you who will step' for· Wh'le the measure of accom- zation. 'Y ith )ts 79 member has been named a.member of SIX owardl plish~ent of the United Nati.ons states entipedto, represe~tations of the 12 sa"cred. congrega.tions. artd its '~pecialized . agencies' in, . not ..only py representatives of .. Pope J~h.n alsq m~d.e hll~ a 'BEFORE YOU PICK ,UP THAT MEMBERSHIP AT THE the political sphere re~~iins de-' ,gov~rnme~t but also byspoke~- m~~ber of the Pontifical. ComBEACH CLUB ... THE GOLF, CLUB ... WOULD YOU HAVE batable', 'international organiza- ment for lfb~r and for the bus~- miSSion ~or the' Authentic In-_ A FEW EXTRA DOLLARS TO JOIN THE CATHOLIC NEAR lions like .the ILO have unqu~s- ness.comm,umty, the·ILOmay.be ·terpretatIon of the C;:~d.e of Can, EAST MISSIONS. THE DUES ARE $1 A YEAR EOR. INDItiOnably. had a real measure of 'consld,eredl ~he' most effective o~ L.aw and the P()nhflcal C~m VIDUALS OR $20 FOR LIFE. THE ADVANTAGES OF'JOINsuccess in economic and social sou,ndmg ~oard of any of the .m.lssIOn for the State of VatlcaB ING CANNOT BE MEASURED SINCE YOU SHARE IN ',hm n\atters. And' succ:Ss' iIi these ~mted: Nations specialized agen- City. MASSES AND WORKS OF MISSIONARIES ALL OVER THB . . . '.' N,EAR EAST. .... matters .. cannot fail to 'remove. cles., . I r-..;..---.....~.....--..;,;,--_ s6me '6f'the threats to 'peac.e· for In' a,'major foreign policy adwhich we all so earnestly pray. dress on ~anuary 18, 1958, the ; It may be that' in these spe.: late Secret~ry of State John Fos, . eialized agencies, dealing with tel' Dulles 1""arned: &bcial an(l economic matters on . "Unless we wl!.-ge successfully Joseph ,A. Charpentier Reg. Pharm an international' scale, com-, ,.·the politidl-economic war that mitted to the view that improve- is now beitJg fought; communist ,J:EL. WY. 6-0772 ment in.th~ "have not" countries impeI'iallsrri cab. win' _without PRESCRIPTIONS ~ .beneficilil also, to the~ "have!' 'ever' a gun Ifired. It is vital that 1902 ACtiSHNETAVE., eoiIntiies, and placing. the the, newt~ jndependent and NEW BEDFORD "h:aves" and "have nots" in part:" newly developing COl1ntries n'~rship to accomplish .these' should' fiild! in freedom the way C01Jlmon objectives, we have, to .1~f~ ,up ,t~eir own people." .GIVE TO WlN.THl!: WORL,DFOB C!ilUST•. found the ke" to creating closer There seems little doubt that a~d friendlie~ contacts between. onel;>f the tealavemies through nations.".. ',' ".:': .o/hicb 'the' -qnited ~tates' can help , 'ELECTRICAL 'In this 'way ·the International to :wage such a struggle is in the Labor Organization can be ex-" world "forulIi" readily'available CONTRACTORS FRANClS CARDINAL SPELLMAN, PrMldent. tremely .beneficial in the devel~ within the! International Labor Tuohy, Nat' Sec'y ~ ~ Residential Commerillal opment . of American) foreign Organizatiota. Surely it is an ,. . ,:.!' Send an _unlcatlofta '!M. ,. industrial policy. . effective mean.; at our disposal ." ;~TH()LICIN~lt~ST•.vt~lF~Ri, AS~O(IAno.M Probably one of the most sig- to persuade: the world's ~eople 6U Broadway. Fall River. ,,"'.' .480 .Le~~ngton ~V••. ~46f~ ~"''''~,Y~! '7~ N.Y. lI.ificant and certainly an im- of the honeSt merit of OW' form .OS 3-1691 ., ',',.: .. ,.....,.,:. ,: . ,.,'t, mensely impot:~ant d~ve!(>pmellt. of organiz~ socie~7. .
;1'
au'
.
Msgr. George I:Ijggins 'Director NCWC Social Actlo~iDepartmen&
';'·T·'A'K E: T'rH' E 'B' U' S I
. . '.
"
.....
•
,
•
•
•
.
I
R
P'
" '..: •....;.
'
P
"
.:~
------
BROOKLAWN PHARMACY
AIME PEllETIER
,'. fii.~rfast(UissionsJitJ Ii
.-.
Msgt.,'e""'.
. -""""!',.
'"
A'ssig'ns "Brother' Chr,isticin', To,' School in East' Africa' '. ':'
....
"'.., ' .
'.
.
'., )
.,: ..
'. Brother Christian Stinnett,C.S.C~, assistant principal , of Msgr. Jame8Coyle High. School, has been assigned to a new'missionary ·secondaryschool.to"opeii ,soon'in Uganda, East Africa.' The appointment was made by the Provincial of the Easterh'Province of ' the arothers,' Brother Ephrem O'Dwyer, G.S.C. Brother Christian wi!l lE~ave for Africa with two' other -Holy CroSll Brother:s, s,ome tIme in September. This is the"second 's~hool opening in Africa :under the' Congregation of.Holy:Cross, The Mid-West Provirice of Brotneri operates a second~ry,schooi in , SekondLGhana,. W~,st 'Africa;' ' Brother' Christian received, bis " academic,degrees a,t ;Notre Dame Universfty, his ba:chelor's' arid master's degree 'b6t~, being in. lICience. ' . ' His graduate work at Fordham ,.nd Catholit' ,Univ~rsity: "have 'kept Brother Christian in contact witt the latest information in his fieF, of teaching- and, .dministration, He was thc first principal at Catholic Central High School in' Monroe, Michigan, and also served as principal at Vincentian Institute in Albany, New York.
STORES CLOSED ALL DAY SATURDAY, JULY 4th ••• , "Shop _,Iy.for the ,holiday. week·end! .,
'
Plump; tender young turkeys'seleded from the '!nest norther,,. Rodts. ~n U. S.(;rade A '
'URI(EYS1~;E~OR~:YVL841 c Tender. lean meat for your, deliCIOUS main dish. First Nahonafs mildly smoked. sugar-cured.
BROTHER CHRISTIAN, C.S.C.
Brother was transferred to Coyle High School' in 1955, where he has served as viCe-principal and director, of studies,
Famous Painter Says Only Great Art Is Good, Enough for God CINCINNATI (NC)-Mediocre And it is not tru'e t.hat congregaart is "an, abomination," and tions are Slfandalized by ,art that bad art is "immoral" Jean Char- 'is good." 1 lot, professor of art 'at the Uni' The 61-year-91d artist added versity of Hawaii and interna- "that "all my . life I, have tried tionally know'n' painter,' said in to make liturgical art a syno-:an informal talk at Our Lady of nym for ',great art" Cincinnati College here. , "Bad art," he said,"is imDecorator of ma,:\y churches moral, as all bad ,things are iman~ painter of the' mural bemoral. And 'perhaps- the worst hind the main altar.in St. Leonthing of 'all is mediocre art, ud's ' Semina1'y Chailel, Center- which is like the 'lukewarm' ville, Ohio, Mr. Cha.r!ot declared: , ,person mentioned in the Gospel. "Only great art is good enough Mediocre art is an abomination, lor God.'" and should not exist in the temAddressing a small group of pIe of God." .rtists, art teachers and students in a lively, outdoor questionand-answer session, the FrenchPray~r born artist, who is ari American NEWARK (NC).,..- The Office citizen, brought ,up the "oftenheard accusation that congrega- of Communication' and Entertainment of the Archdioc;ese, of tions worl't stand for' good art Newark has issued a prayer, for in churches.;' "There is no ground for such ,dec~ncy in the communication., ' • statement," Mr. Charlot de';' Inedia. elared. "People like, good' art." , The prayer asks God ,to, grant Ch1irc~ Home of 'God " that all will'reject what is op:" But the'''heart of the matter," posed to His divin'e· will, "iil ino-' when it comes to liturgicaL art, :tion pictures, on' the 'stage, on the is that "the church is the home air waTes, and in print." , of God." ,. Some 25,000 copies 'of the '''God is satisfied:" said Mr. , prayer have been distributed to' Charlot, "only with the best 'studentS in all of the' Catholic you can .give Him. It -is not prop- ,high schools of the 'Newark er to ~ive Him less than the best. archdiocese.
Archdiocese Issues' for Decency'
HAMS~$i; ~-~~ Canned
Haill.'
d H
C
,anne
'
=L839c
SW:-~:.:aE~~~~. ~l": FERRIS
53.15
55 • 19.
.'.4L8
I ~l~ 99c Ground Beef,', ' 2 CAN
amSHickory, Smoked
"OUR BIG VALUE" - lender, Aavorful '
Frankfurts '"
FRESHLY GROUND LEAN BEEF
89c
lBS
rwe ReHr"e the Righ••o llm,it Quantities)
'"L,EM'0NADE'' Yor'' ,STRAWBERRIES ,'SWISS CHEESE .IA-REX PEACHES PEAS NA.PKINS: ,rUNA ,
.
.
Garden
~ Pink39c or Regular
5
,1120% CANS
60z CANS
"Yor Garden - St.ced H
1
,10, 0% ceNTS
160z
39c '
CONT
Brookside
Y21B PKG
Natural Sliced
PINT JUG
Fruit F1avored Syrups
1 LB 130%
Ri~hmond.- Sliced
Ric~m9nd --.@ncy 'Medium Size
'
Homespun Giant Size
21 '2
CAN LB 10z CANS
PKGoi 160
TImber Lake Solid White
Fresh FrUits of the SeaSOn!
GRAPES y·2.9c Refreshing
, SEEDLESS VARtETY, " Delicious' and
Red Ripe - FUn of sweet juice ;... Serve chitled
JVatermelons \pples Wine~p Jlueberries
', 6c 3B~G 29c 29c tAl
Deep red and glossy - aisp. fir. and juicy
Tru-Blu berries. cultivaled. big: plump and juicy
BASKET,
70% CAN
49c 29c 3Sc. 29c 2Sc 29c 3Sc 29c
Here's a Helping Hand for your Budget! Ched tllese ... pric... Cult savings at First Natioul
Lucky Whip :::','- ~~A~I 44c " h It_,I .... 39 C './ M us roo._ ,_ 2 CAN~ ftANCO· LB • 16c CAN • 5 paghettl AMUICAH, Jell-O FnIit _latines4 pJKG~ 33c ................................................ C'
~.
- Bakery Specials'Hearth Rye Bread 2 ~~At~~ 39( Cra(ked Wheat Bread 2 l61'~ES 39( Fren(h 'ea Cake ~~~;I EACH 29( Butterflakt Rolls ~~~;I :~~, 21 (
BROOKSIDE
I
FINAST
ICE,CREAM' GINGER ALE -=;;~is
I,
I
always High Quality and Creamy Smooth HALF GALLON
69c
I
,
Also All Popular Flavors
,4,,~~:t49c
SAVE 2.0e Contents Only FROZEN FOOD SPECIALS FOR THE 4th OF JULY SUNKISl PUNCH '
DARLING
~:~S
$1. 00
6 tA~S $"00 6 C6A~S $1. 00
Strawberry-Lemon
Grape Ju!ce
SUNKISl PUNCH
DELICIOUS'
Raspberry-Lemon
Hawaiian Punm
,. \
SUNKISl PUNCH
·YOR" GARDEN
FIRST OF 57: First member of his ordination clasS to kneel before Bishop John W. Comber, M.M., Superior General of Maryknoll, is 'senior'deacon Leo; A. Decman of Joliet, m.,A combat infantryman in 'world War II" Father' Decman will leave for the missiona of Korea. NC Photo.
6
Pineapple-Lemon
Hamburger Steak
-
,.• 1 .
..
-'\..
,
."
16 .
Thur:'er' W'rites Informall'y Of,Assocmation With Ross' I
.-THE ANCHOR
9 __ JU_I_:Y_,_2_, OF' FALL. ~IVER. _1_'9_5_ MASS,..J . 'I ','_DIOCESETh_u:..,r_s_.
THE CATHOLIC.
.
i
1
C~OSSWORD
Announce PI.ans For ReligiQus TV Series
By Rt. Rev. Msgr.. John'S. Kennedy James ThlJlll'ber was associated· wi'th Harold" W~ Ross' GD ']["he New Yorker for '24 years irom 1927 until Ross's death in 1951.. Ross, of course, Wa.<;, the fOWlder and first editor O:E that.·vell'y worI'dily magazin~. Thurber~ informailly but inds,ively reviews the . t' I th t· \' ~. tu·' al . t " t':. . 'Dh' Y SIS .mg1a ev..ery Lac . pom .a.ssOCla l(l)n .HII :L eears be checked for accuracy. With Ross (Atlantic-Little. This'is the hardest feature of B'rown. $5). This is not a ed.ttorild work" the easiest to
NEW YORK (NC) ...,..-Comprehensive plans for "genuinely - creative" religious programming on the NBC
television network for 1959-60 and' beyond were announced here full d'ress.,biograpny, but a· series evade as beneath the dignity of at meeting for key TV execuof essays, without chronological the editor-in-chief. It demands tives of tb<: nation's three major seq1!1ence,' and a huge IexpenditUre. of time, can religious faiths. , wit h s 0 me be 'crueHy boring, but is, indis~ Edward Stanley, NBC director ovedaJllP.ing, in . 'petllSabte to sec1JIi1"e and preserve' of public affairs" who presided at ,t 11 e subd'e<!:t quality',. the a~mbly, said the network's matter. Jlru eaG:h Ross :may have been ~avalier partnership with the three major chapter the auin~ his treatment"'of some of his faith groups-Prote~tant, Caththor r i :Ii fIe s . assi'stants and contributors and olic and Jewish-has resulted in through a set could be picayune' about book"more 'experimental and pioof: g1impses or keeping detaHs (although a],waysneering programs of a high order impressiOlJs of at war willi" the business office). thari any other' place in teleROss and' by ' . ' k' Gt But Thurber makes it clear vision." the oo s, e~ld' that he! was general'Y generous' TV chiefs of the National one h as a VIVI , t" at t l'k if' ketcIa,y p'ic'0 ~rIters. and mos 1 e. a Council of Churches (Protestant . S ...e'. mother Ihen in his personal conand Ea~tert:l Orthodox), the Nature "':. alii excern for their' weHare. tional Council of Catholic Men, traord'mary character. . . , \ . .' I 2 Defen se officiol., 19 G~, Adonal' RegulaiJr readers oil The New The bpok abounds m anecdo~es ACROSS and the Jewish Theological Sem3 Stolemat~d (Chessl 20 Prophet who inary of America-principal 01'Y'orl~er will naturally be. interabout :Ross (s?mesalted W1th SUpre..... head of <4 Belonging' 10 Emil' appeared of the ested in seeing its maker at close profane l and . eve~ blasphemous the Catholic' Church, ~nizations cooperating with Tronsfiguration _. 7 Teaser ," .... Bu't wi]'] the book appeal speech) Jand In vlg.nettes of pe.r5, First man af Creation NBC in production of its regular 22 Catholic higl\' school: 8 Weak in blood' ran ..... t d th th 6 Official, language of Sunda~ TV religious programing to' oth'ers;? JikCl:i:dedly ye!t. WhatSl?ns cOl1nec ~ WI. e ma.ga-: the- Catholic OIurch. 9 New krseycity 23 Rope vestment, -attended th~ assembly. ever Thurber writes commands Zlne (e,~,,(acld, as m the case of 8 "The Cho";n Twelve" '10 Go,between symbol of priestly U Tar-oil .hrub purity The groups join with NBC in •. wide audience" and' most of Ale.xan~er Woollcott; favCl~ble, followe... of Cliri'st li2 Iilnauthorized lito..... 26 Festival hymn wtiat he writes; is cr:€ a high order as In t~e case of E. B. White). 11 Belonging 10 Cana production of '.'Frontiers of 14 Biblical, general:' 27 The Holy See Faith," "Th~ Catholic Hour," M1: excelTence. . It touches· on "Ross's private 13 U. S. Chari..., Si....,.' 15 Demons . R eccentric Fife sorrie aspects of which were, ffounders: Mather ••• 28 Sometime lavabo and "The Eternal Light," reA gaJou r os.~ was an. '. . . ' 21 Trap vessel 1,t. Command$ r............spectively, as well as of occaoolorIul,,' and oddly fascmabng scarcel~, edlfymg,. Ross; who. was... 17 Famed structural DOWHI 2?GOVernof" sional' specials. . human fueiaag, more i~probable th"ee' .umes marrIed, appears to> ' feature of St. 24R<tv_ Ii. Part whence' Productions on the agenda of Columbus sailed 25 Volume and emteriiaJiimingthan most char- have hald I10 religion, although , "eter's Itome 10, Ne-,'" Worldl "'llhe Catholic Hour" for 1959~60 aerters in fiction. Still again, we ''G'od bl~ss you" was on his lips 1'8 Title given Il'enedictine, 'and beyond, as announced at the taaiVe heJre something of. the in- as often as other expressions Carthu.;an, ·Cisterci_ assembly by MaI'tin H. Work, ~ side story of the production of. which ~ill not, be quoted. here. man~s (P1'l executive director of the NaThe New Yorker. The~ a~ollint of the baptIsm of ..... . H Di't· " 8t I ,his daughter seems to imply that r-------------~-------------tional Council of Catholic Men, indude' three programs' dealing lIS s me Ive ye Catholic I Baptism can be proSummet" Plans The 1ast is of moment to ev- eured fot an infant at wbiIn and with the recent Vatican decree elTYone who has any concern without 'assurance that the rebr'iJaging about changes in the ~h WJiilti'mg and pUbli~hin~. cipient ~ill be brought· up a litorgy' of the Mass for October, smce The New Yorker, llke 1t Catholic. . ,,' . . 1959', and a series of four or five .IMIMIAClJI,ATE €:ON€EP'Ji'ION. 011' not, rong ago evolved its own ...... b: h t 11s us prac t'·1- '.OUR: LADY OF HEAJiJJi'R, pl.'ogL'ams de'signed as an "intro... . . . . d xuur er, woe· FALL." RIVER dlSbnctllVe style FALL RIVER duction" to the Bible, for Janu. . '.. has mamtame .' ca II y as 'Imuc h a b ou t h'Imse If as Henry S. GIllet, Jr., has been it wnh astol1lshmg C'Onslstency. bot R " . ' til ' I h ary, 1960. The 'Women's GuHd· will serve named winner of the Holy Name and. has: 1'1'eM to an exceptional a u o~s, gIves e person ~ 0 a potluck supper at 6::3Q Monday 't d recI'sl'on never saw Ross a sense of havmg Society 'Scholarship for the sec, . I. leve 1 0 f l 1 erary an p ond consecatiive yeli'lT.. He will oombim:ed with: 'Ul1Cl:OmmOn sup':-- known ,lim:!.. and ~ person ~ho evening, JtliLy 2~ in the cl!:lUrch It.. d . g' offhand knows the magazme some 1dea hall, A theater party to BClston continue to atitend Coyle High pu::nesS' a.n: seemm f h 't t th 't is also tentativelly planned for School', Tauntol.; Gillet is active edness. 0 ow II go . a way. the summer ,months. in the' paris;- Bo-y SCOtlt troop 'The soplhistiG:aation and sheen Gruesome It III 'and serves a& ar: aItacr boy. James of' the magazine would, one ..: ' HOLY ROSARY, W. Pell'etier is secretary of the m'ight suppose, indicate that the Munel: S,?ar~ s ~ovel MemenFALL R,VER scholarship' committee' which: .... . geniuS' belnllind it was a me~roto Mon (LI,Ppmcott. $3,95) warded the honor to the C()1'le Miss Rose M. FargiilIele, mempolitan, OC!lTn and' bni'd il) New come~. to! us high,ly"not to say Y'ork, Ross: was in fact a native eftuslVel:lj, recommended by ber of the Women's Guild, was student. 0~1' ColGl.'ado" had been a reporter Graham! Greene. .and Evelyn honored by receiving the Dr. N. sizes in stock from in places, fali' from New York in Waugh, both. of wh0n:'.are usyKenneth Shand Award' for Dis-' i ' both dIstance'arid atmosphere, any carefUl. m handlmg wo~ds. tinguished' Teaclling a,t gradua$3.99 to $100. and prooabl'y reached the peaTe Mr. Creep IS quoted, as saymg tion ceremonies at Henry Lord oil hiS' plle-New Yorker career as' that it 'i has . delighted me as Junior Htg~' 8chool, Fall River. Home made editor of Stars and Stripes in much as-.;any novel that I have She' has taught in Fall River World War :E. read ~ince the war." . CANDIES . public schools for 37 years and is/active in the pa'rish guild and CIf/OCOLA US He was awkward of frame. and He dO~s' not indicate which the Catlw~ic:Women;sClub.. manner and nad a face which war or how I)'lany novels he. has Sleeping Bags 6.89 to $30. .1'50 Varieties might. have b-eem that of a, coun- 'read in t~e interval. Mr;. Waugh SACUD HEART,. try storekee-pe1" or' an' Oxford' rings a bit of a change with "a ROUTE 6 Near don. He was. disorderly and 'exbrilliant ,and singul?rly grueNORTH ATTLEBORO t Fairhaven' Auto Theafre pl'osive, excruciatingly shy, in wme achievement." As the auTwenty-eight grammar school William and Second Streets sOme ITespects naive, in many rethor of. Tpe Loved One, he can graduates attended exerdses, fAIRHAVEN, MASS.' New Bedford spects. ignorant, and by no means' be expectF' to know something followed by a party sponsored a great reade,l.'. All in all" the about gr~esomenes,s, and also by ,their mothers. Francine very reverse of what, from a something- about brilliance. Girard, with an average of 93%, scrutiny oj! the magazine. one The gruiesomeness is found in is recipient of'a four year. high would expect. . the unsparing 'exploration of the school sch.olarship.. Other awards . A; Thtlrber tells Us .lifern The ills, weakhesses, abenan'cies of 'were made in academic subjects, New Yoriter offfee' w;s success'- extreme oid age, of the physical cond'uct,' politeness and applicaOPEN MON.} .TUES. r WED., THURS., FRI., SAT. 8:30 ' ion of c1'ises, if not. a' single condisord~rs land. psych,ological; of tion. tinuous cllisis like a thunderstorm the gnsly IP,e~slstence o.f greedy,. " . 'Ct~SEDMbN., TUES., WED' r 6 P.M. • 1 ... , \ ' which refmses to gp, away; Ross . lecherous" spiteful habIts. , was' forever flingh1,g aociut and In on)y Jne or two 'of the char": SAT., P.M. . yelling;. People· were hired' and acters is there an'y degree of the· fired p:redJllttately and without wisdom, serenity; :anef mellow: discClmihle rea1?on. dignityofl advanced years; the , But either because or In spite rest are stewing in the inordinof the ta:n1frl1ms and! the tension" 'ate appeti'tes, the rancors and' '"For Your Protect_ '" fAIRHAVEN, MASS. UNION' WHARF Buy From, the sudden cBiscoverieSll and the follies of Jarlier days. eq~al:Dy su:lll'C!fen departur.es, there Miss Sp1arks is undoubtedly PERF.·ECTION·~ contitlued to be turned out a original.' She is also astutely obmagazime peculiarly glassy, servant anld can I>e witty. 'But 132 RodCd(l" .A~•. blrisk, articulate,. and' as smooth her book i~ a tour de force rath..l New 8edhwd1 - i f no1l as' olallId-as' cream. er than a novel, and one which Ross Meticulous fr~uelltly [limps, falls into rep':' WY 5-7947 One I1easom'. fOO!' this was Ross', ebtlOp, and collapses :rather ~an Ondoubted critfeal' wizardry. rounds off.! .., . Tburberdescribes, hilariously I ·but s!h.'l'e.wdDy, Ross: inspecting ~XX:)oClod,~-=ec>~~=-c:::>c~
a
b.
',1....,
.
The Parish Parade
TENTS
an
Dorothy Cox
VACAT'ION:ERS 'WELCOME!
a
' . . ~• • - l .
•
PERFECTION . . OIL
:
,;po
"
. " b.OSED:.1KtJRs., FlU., •
'..
J
6:30
I
•
tNOW ~
del ivered .to your door
-
the submissitms of artists, for covers or cantoons. ·He would, brood crver these. fuss over them; make apparently irrelevant remarks" trren' reel! off a. de:f'mitive critique amI' suggestions starUngl¥ to tile point. . Another' was Ross's meticu~sness. :Ere edited, strenuously and' relentlessly, himself endurlng the tedium of going inching1r 'and suspiciously 'through .manuscripts, testing them lirie b,. line. word for word, and in-
J1.J
B'
ATWOOD
'LU'M'BER. • CO. ~ I : So. : Dartmouth ~
\
an~,
Hyannis
'j
SiD
0·1
Qil COiMPANY
SHE'LL HEATIN.G OILS
......
ar'tmouTn 7;'93.84 tivannis 2921
"fi
I
South • .Sea Sts" Hyannis. - Tel. HY 81
Be'~tf!r' ~airy
Products
"-AND--
6, Derrciour
Flavon, STAT! , lOAD
la, -(REAM
In. Quarts and ~ gals.
Says Publishers Turn Attention To P~rversion
I
THE ANCHOR-
. Thurs., July 2, 1959
Pope CongratuJo.tes Cardinal Stepinac . VATICAN 'CITY (NC)~His Holiness Pope John XXIII has sent a letter. to His Eminence Alojzije Cardinal Stepinac,.A,rchbishop of Zagreb, congratulating him on the 25th anniversary of his consecration as a bishop. L'Osservatore Romano, Vatcan C;ity Dally,repor·ted here that the letter had been sent, but did not reveal Itl!I conten~. Cardinal Stepinac, wbo WlUl consecrated a bishop OIl .Jrune 24, 1934, ha;, been living·in' hill native village of Krasic, Yugoslavia, ,sinee. his release ikom prison bT. tl\e communists ill 1951. VOsservatofe said be -devotes his days "in his 'enfureed residenceto prayer, medi·tatl0ll on Holy SCI'i;pture and translating. a8Cetical WOl'ks, leading the au.tere life be has always loved."
13 TV Stations Lose Code Seals WASHINGTON (NC) - The National Association of Broadcasters said here that televisioJ~ code "seals of good practice" have \ been taken away from 1:'; stations because of advertisio b policies. This brin~s to 21 the number cf seals revuked because of tll:' televising of hemorrhoidal remedy advertising. In addition, saie: the NAB, 17 stations resigned a; . subscribers to the voluntar:' code. The association did nc: identify the stations.
MISSIONS .MEETJNG:: Discussing plans for the 10th annual meeting of American mission societies to be held in ,Washington are, left to right, Sister M. Angelica, S.C.M.M.; Brother Paschal Breau, S.A.; Rev. Frederick A. McGuire, C.M., executive secretary; Rev. Gilbert Hay, M.S.SS.T., and Miss Irene J. Simone, representing Lay Apostolate~ NC Photo
Donald H McGannon, president of the Westinghouse' Broadcasting Company and chairman .of the Television Code Review Boa,rd, said' that at onc' time 84 code subscribers were , carryIng the, advertising of personal products.
Cape Parishes Prepare for Gre~ Increase In Catholic Population D~rin~ Summer
Of this number, 45 cancele(: the ads, 17 resigned from the code, 21 seals were revoked am: ·one .station has' been cited fo:' continuing to carry the ads, he he said. Code .subscribers nov.total 270.
As the Summer season begins, parishes in ,the Cape Cod area are prepared for their annual influx of visitors. Up and down the peninsula, churches will increase their Masses and ,other ·devo.tion:s.in order to accommodat e Summer residents. The parishioners, too, shaI'e in heightened activity. Churches tha t may have three Masses during the Winter plan a Summer schedule of -In addition to Holy Trinity, Fathers, Stigmatinesarid Fran15 per Sunday. Throughout other parishesex;per'iencing a ciscans. the area 168 Masses are said . large gain !in Summer populaCorpus Christi, Sandwich and eaC'h Summer Sunday incoiJ.- tion include ·Corpus' Christi, Holy Trinity. West Harwich, lead, trast. with· 84 during the Winter. Ushers, ·organists, cl10ir members, custodians and other laypeople concerned with ,the work of ,the parish musta~so .step up their programs. Holy' Trinity Church, West Harwich, is a parish jumping. from a ,thl'ee Mass Winter sched:ule to 15 in the S'ummer. A mission at Dennisport is also activated. Where the normal Winter population of Cape Cod is approximately 18,000. in the Sum·mer it jumps to about 40,000, an ever-changing 40,000, of course, as vacationers come and go. For the traveler's convenience, a schedule of Summertime Masses on the Cape Is published in this issue of The Anchor, and will be repeated later illtbe season.
il/mprison' P-:iest VIENNA (NG)-A Czech court ·hassentenced. Father Jaroslav 'ryrner' to five years in prison for' antistate adivities. accordIng to a report received
here.
....
Sandwich, from .six Masses to 1,6; St. JQseph's, Woods Hole, four to 10; St. Pius X, South Yarmouth, itlwee to 12; Our Lady of Lourdes, Wellfleet, four to 10. Also St. Margaret's, Buzzards Ba,y, .six to 11; Holy Redeemer,' Chatham,. three to nine or 10; St. Patrick's and St. Thomas Chapel, 1m Fabn0u:lihand Falmouth Heights, from :four to" 10; St. Joan of Are, Orleans, four to 14; Our Lady of the Assumption, Osterville, five to 10. Many QrdersCooperate
To care for. the needs of the 'Summer population 42 extra priests are r.eeded the Cape each ,,'Sunday.;they 'inc1ude Jesuits, Sacred Hearts Fathers./ Holy Cross Fathers, La Salette
in the number of additional .priestsrequired. Each has seven on Sundays in addition to the priests of the parish. Corpus Christi invites two priests from La Salette, three Jesuits, one Stigmatine and one HQly Cross Father. Holy Trinity, a Sacred Hearts Fathers parish, enl.ists the aid of seven additional priests from the. same congregation. In all, Jesuits service six Cape ' Cod parishes, Sacred· Hearts Fathers nine. Holy Cross Fathers attend three, and La Salettes five. Stigmatines and Franciscans are at one parish each.
A Delicious
r..eat I
I I
on
Name Cftanc~lIor
BROOKLYN' ('NC) - Bishop 'Brian iI. McEntergart 'has named Msgr. John 3. Heneghan as Chancellor of the diocese of Brooklyn. 'Msgr. Heneghan had served 'as a vice-chancellor, and succeeds to ·the post lIast Ihe'ld by Bishop <John Z. Carberry ,of Lafayette, Ind. 0
I
BLUE RIBBON
:l
LAUNDRY .
. 273 CENTRAL AVE.
·1I
NEW BEDFORD WY2-6216
Meyner. Signs Sunday-Closing Law,
Made ',Rite Chips I ~ *or " ..... today
YOUR FURNITURE ANY TYPE -""~""'--,-, ,, , " " ,: CUSTOM : 8UIlT ;., ,:, , ,
"
:
FURNITURE ':
,
~
:
,...
,
.SECTIONALS· ~ PARLOR SETS ODD CHA·IRS··CHROMECHAIRS
BY 'STAR '
'
-
:
'--'.. "
, .........._.._.._.......... ; , 'YOUR :: ~
Get A Free Estimate,•• -CaIISTAR: A Decorator Salesma n WiiU 'Call onYOU= NO O B l i G A t I O N :
~
ICONVBm81.E:, TOP and SEAT
:
COVER
:
: . HEADOUARTERS:
Free P:ickup and 'Defiveryas.For as
Hyannis~..-....__......_-_.... ~
Phone WY9..632S· STAR SEAT COVERGUARANTEE (0. FAST SERVICE IO·YEAR W:RITTEN
,1.270 PURCHASE ST., NEW BEDfORD .,
A'nytl,ing . You Con Sit On·· We Coil Cover! ~..,;::o._.="-
!) i
:SAVE ,MO'NEY RE·:UP.HOLSTER
GOY.
TBENro. (NC}-Gov. Robert B. Meyner h1l3 signed into law a Sunday-clO£ing measure which stipulates that it will be 'effective only in those counties where voters accept ;it in a referendum. The law prohibits the sale ,of furnishings, furniture, building materials, clothing and ,household or office appliances on Sunday. Before residents in any of state's 21 counties can cast their ballots on the law, a petition containing the signatures of at least 2,500 v-oters requesting a referendum must be submitted to local officials. When he signed the measure Gov. Meyner said it had no re-' ligious aspects. He pointed to a state supreme court ruling which beld that the o'bject of Sundayclosing legislation is ·to provide • day of rest and not necessarily time for worship'.
i
.. DIOCESE OF. F~ RIVER, MASS.
PEORIA (NC)-Ptiblishers of objectional paperhack books have switched f!rom "textbooks onerime" to works promoting sexual pecversion, the direetor of the National Office for .Decent Literature said here. Msgr. Thomas F'itzgerald of Chicago declared that "gang type books where the hero is brutalized" are published less frequently today as a result of protests. Hpwever, the change is not .• cause' for unQualified rejoicing, he said, sincE: certain paperbac.k publishers "are getting more and more into the field of perversion." He said about five pocketbook publishers dominate the monthly NODL list of publications dIsproved for youth. On the other hand, he said, some of the best in literature is being published in paperbacl editions, and the publishers of these works should be encouraged. Men's Magazines Msgr. Fitzgerald also discusse I the rapid growth in the numb« r of so-called "men's magazines." which exploit sex "It~s allowed because we are a liberally thinRing people," he said. "We are influenced by newspapers, and newspapers are opposed to any form of censorship." Today. he declarel!, more newspapers are coming to "admit the problem of' obscene literature. "But they have no soluti<m," he added. Msgr. Fitzgerald pointed out that publisher Bennet Cerf conceded in a recent television interview that some paperback books are not fit for general consumption. "He agreed that it was wrong, but he defended their right to be published" the speaker said. The American 'Civil Libedies Union has a similar attitude, he declared, adding: "They say if they must choose between complete freedom and censorship, they will take .freedom."
17 \
.--
"THE ,FIGH!tING'CHAPLAIN
liT A!l' t:flAPLAIN TIM- ~tANe.c~ OUT TilE CABIN WINDOW~...... . .'.
.. ~TEg THE TKA/NINc. DEArHOFA F/lIEND, ;ICE: '"
"
PI/..OT BIt./.. EL.U~ 'CAN'T OR: WCW'T 7i'V<E" A PlANE· .. UP. ASaWD THE.t:/ANT C4R~/ER, CflAPVVN TIM 1{1 A~ED
TO TRY 7D
~E'ACH
THE
YOUTH.~"DDliNLY,
IN mE DECP OF N!Q1TCIfAPtAIN TIM' . WAl<E~' I~. H/~048IN ...... : ..
Ai/EARN'
~
,. YEg ! AND AT 7H1~ 'HOUR 1
poN'T. .
LIKE IT.·
.
.I
'I
CardinQI Criticizes Ruling
Cross Word Solution
teetion from profanation which Russia,1 the' Cardinal said "we · bas up to no\\ .been accorded to are headed in that direction once POPE It by law.", . .' 'Sund~~ is dissociated. 'fromthe ADAK '. Ignore Thinking' I remmi'lt of religious . signifi:' .·LA.TIN· . The Cardina" spoke out earlier' .:cance."j APOSTLES OIl the Sunday obseryance,. b u t . . , Sacred to GOd .. , .' CAN.(S··SETOIl · said· the court's decision "brings . "For' '.Catholics,". .Cardinal this matter once 'more to our at- .Cushing said,"Sunday is neither ·AWES·,··DOME i· lention and indicates its serious-. a, day Ifor 'business as usual'" DOMS~···LORD I DeSS in relation to the functioning nor a c,ivic holiday, to be. given ELUS··REGIS· of the Church in the .direction of over. in its entirety· to recrea. CnTCTlJRE ....r daily livE;s toward ·God." tion and amusement. *CAROL·· , He' called the ver.dict"com"Only by keeping the da, ,:pletely, at variance with ·t~e tra-. sacred Ito GOd/': h'e' concluded;' ·ROME. .:,>.•. '! ditions of the past al1d lI)col;'-. ,"can ,we assure for future 'gen-,' .,wistent··,with ·he purposes-o( he eration~ the beneffts which· have . Sunday observance as they have been gained in the past through. ~THE ANCHOi · been' implied ill .. o~r . previous the' assoeiation ~fprayer ancl Thurs., .July 2, 1959·. liegislation.'~. ':'.1'" .. '. : ' . : : , rest/" DIOCESE OF 'FALL RIVER: ",A,SS. · Cardinal Cushing urged ."that We..bring· our actual' obserya~ce~' ,..: , of.. Sunday back into conformity' . Fac;:.ts,~f 1 with the' thinking froin which . " . h'''''' <. . , . ANSW·ERS:1(d·)·,2(c)·,3(a)··," ear existing legislation .. as .pro:: .' NEWj "ORK , (NC)' -'-High. eeeded." . ". praise and deep regret were ex-. 4(b); 5 (b); !I, (c); 7 '(b); 8(c). . ". ' . Like Soviet Russia 'pressediinmessages sent by of- . . '. The lawswtiic~ prohibit man,. ficials .of Protestant, and' non:' ~rins of a~tivity which are' 1n- sectariatI voluntary· relief agen:" .' .. ·consistent with. the' religious ob- cies on 'the retirement of Msgr. llervance of Sunday should not Aloysius J. Wycislo as assistant· I~ ." bespoken of wi.th contempt" theexecutiJ,e director' of c;atholie MANILA (NC) - Douglas · Cardinal said. '. '. .. Relief Services~NationaJ'Cath- Hyde, former communist editor, · "Do 'we .want: Sunday to beolic Welfare Conference,:tO ac-' warned here that the Reds are come the kine. 'of day it 'is in ". cept 'a' p~storaL. in Chicago. ' . capitalizing ort .the, wave of. naSoviet Russia?'~. the Cardinal .The agencies .included,' Church tionaIism in this 'country to inasked ... Pointing out ·that days of World" Service, ,the American filtrate various organizations.. rest are appointed. by governJewish Joint Distributiol1' Com,. Mr, H'y.de, who n~~ writes for ment.al decree, and religious a~-· mittee, t'he Lutheran WorId Rethe Catholic 'Herald, British tivities o,fficially excluded in lief, United HiasServi'ce, the weekly, told Army officers at Americah Council for Nationali- Camp Murp"ly that the Reds ties Ser~ice and the Technical have always considered nationalNEW YORK (NC)-Auxiliary. Assistal~<;e Information Clearing ist movements as ideal grol!-nd Bishop Walter W. Curtis of House. for their purposes., Newark will lead a pilgrimage Msgr. Wycislo was' associated "As 'of now, the communists' this autumn to shrines of the with CRS--:NCWC since its inhave already' abandoned their Holy Land, western .Europe and ception 16 years ago in various military designs 'in AsHl and are · Ireland..While in Rome from . capacitie~ bot~ here and abroad. now' engaged in an infiltration Oct. 9-1{ Bishop Curtis 'expects He has been appointed pastor of ' drive in' this area,'~ 'he said.. Iio be. received. in an .audience the Iml11~culate Heart of Mary . I . He ad.ded that when the com· J»y His' Holiness Pope John:. parish in! Chicago,. where he was born and! educated. ' . munists find it inexpedient to XXIIi. !' use force' openly, they go underground .and "emp~oy parliamen-' tary. struggle or .subversion." Jesus Varga,former secretary of defense, said. .that' written instruetionsseized' from members of the loc~l communist party advocated the use of nationalism to promote a "hate' America" campaign. ..,
..E\'lEll.
18, .'
Non-C ath.olicsP.·r.a.ise Welfare Executive
n
.Faith.
Red.s' Capitalize" On ...·at.ion.alism
Leads Pilgrimage
Smu~
. WASHINGTON. (NC) -"That
translation was given the Delegate by the Lincoln Sesquicentennial Commission in a cereall Americans,. but scholars in mony at the Apostolic DelegaRome soon can .read the Gettystion.. burg addI;ess with .this openi~g:. . S"en. 'Joh~ S. Cooper of Ken"Octoginta et septem' abhinc·· t,ucky, . chairman of the. com-" jam annos . : . ,. . mission, presented the' translaA translation. into classical tion illuminated and written ill 'Latin .of ·Abraharr...Lincoln's im-.' . l~rg~'letters .. before an audience morhll two-minute address'was of, diplomatic. corps .in~inbers presented to Archbishop Egidio' from 12 nations and' officiala 01. Vagnozzi, Apostolic. D~legatelio' '. the· Lincoln' commission.· the U.. S.,. to be sent to the -Vat. . ..'....... . ican Libritry.· . . ·.···L I·E .. X " Inspired by 'the 150th anniverSary of the birth of Lincoln, the . PLUMB.lNG "HEATING, INC. for' Domestk " . . . .' ~pening phrase, "Fourscore. 'and seven years ago," is familiar to'
E·:M
P~blic HClS Influe"ce To·StopS....ut.Trade . .
'GHICAGO(NC) '~Chicago ,p'ostmaster Carl .A.; Sc.hr6eder said. herE;. th~t" ,the American public can put 'an end to mail distribution of' obscene litera-' ture if it wahts .to. ~We can ciean up the mails in , Chieagoand thenatioil if enough citizens', become aware. ;of the seriousness 'of this problem and their influence to do so. W.e must do. so to protect our homes; curb juvenile delinquency and prevent the poisoning of the minds of our children,". he said. Mr. Schroeder stated that 'the appropriate action for a citizen who has been sent obscene material is to turn it oVer to. his local postmaster so that postal officials may take act~on against its distributor. . ,
use
'. NO JOB TOO lUG '. NONE' TOO SMALL'
.SULLIVAN BROS. PRINTERS Main Office' and Pta~
INDIANAPOLIS (NC)-Nineperson's werearrestrd here 111 a crackdown ordered by Sheriff Robert O'Neal against theo sale of what he alleged was obscene litera ture.. The. arrests ""ere criticized by Retail Druggists Association and the local branch of the American Civil - Liberties Union.
cj~
. . " ICE CREAM
LEO H. BERUBE, Mg~. 951 Slade St. Tel, Of, 5-'1836
"
U
'. • 'IndUstrial " .. . S~le. aJWl Oil' Burriears Serviee
.. . I
W'f·'2.9447··· '2283' ACUSHNE'tAYI. .'. ,NEW' BEDFORD
,I;
SAVE'··'·fo',. a bright future! ':
Our deposit limit ha's been increased ... now you can ·sav.e. up to $10,000 inan Individual Accou'ht.. c!.nd accumuk: ate· ug.to $20,000 by·· added'interest. You can ' 'save up ·to $20,000 in 0"" Joint Account and accumulat~ ·up. to $40,000 by added interest.. .. ,
LOWELL, MASS; Teleph;'n~' Lowen
.
GL' 8-6333 and GL 7-'JiM
Crackdown
,~een
BISHOP - CHRISTIAN BROTHER': At a ceremony in Rome's North American College, of ~hi~h he is rector, Bishop Martin J. O'Connor is received a!s an affiliate member" of the Christian Brothers. Brothet E. Victor, F.S.C. (left) Assistant. for A,merica and Brother NicetJoseph, F.S.C., Superior General, offiCiated. . . . . NC Photo.
Apostolic . Delegat~ Receives La.tin Translation o~ Get.tysburg Address
Au~mary PI~D" BOSTON OCEANPORT, N. J. PAWTUCKET, I. L
Latest. dividend at the rate of
per annum
Save by mail at
TIte
'OLD,' FAJRHAVEN
LUMBER COMPANY.
Complete Line Building Materials 8 SPRING ST., FAIRHAVEN WYman 3-2611
RED
BANK / Fall River Savings Bank Open Friday e.venings till •
141 NO. MAIN ST• FALL
RIV~R
Tel. OS 5-7868
ACTION AT PINE VALLEY: The Country Club in South Rehoboth was the setting "for the first annual Diocesan CYO.golf tournament, when contestants in four age groups vied for low gross and blind bogey awards. Left to right, the all-Fall River group in left photo includes Edward Phillips, St. Louis Parish;. Richard ~oy, St.' Mathieu, ana Bob Placido, St. Patrick. Tauntonians in second left' photo are Dennis McGrath and
Fall, River CYO' to Sponsor Basebal'l, .School for 'Giants, By' Jack Kineavy . Somerset High School Coach-
Tuesday, July 2f, is': a date all you, young baseb'all aspirants' throughout "t,h(Diocese of Fall RiveJ;' wi)l'w~~t . to reserve. For on tluitday the San Francisco .Giants will conduct abaseball school'in Fall River under the ausJlices of the' FalI:~iver . C'YO~ . -'!he PhiladelphiliAthletfcs.'This recamp' wIll under·the· dlre- iteration should provide' sOlace 'ction QfGiant scou~ Frank. and' comfort f~~' Red'Sllx adherSeyboth', - who' was'.', instru- eqts. ~ho~e,'lie~oes' are"~~w ,mental.in ~ignIng j,;>urfee's 10 m. ".f.F~ti?g." with ~he, cellar, ,by, a
Arruda a coliple 'of ,years ago. ~~ttEJrof .percent,age POlHtS, This i~ defin.... :But t~en c·ons,id~i:. the. pl,ight itely a red letof the guy. whose teaJP IS .curter date in the rently lead,.ing. ,the' lea~ue.. Perannals of CYO haps you read earlier: this week athletics. To what'Clevel~d's vitrioIicG, M. this a 'g en t' s Frank Lane called his field . knowledge, it manager, . Joe Gordon. Upis an unpreceon r~flechon, Lane was closer dented move. to the truth.,than his derogatory Most schools appellation would iJldicate. . of ... this type' 'Gordon is ~ se~i-pro manager. are sponsored . Look' 'at hiS middle' strength either directly, 'which is' the' barometer :cif" a by a professionat..elup or. _by a balh:lub., At shOl"tsh'op is' Woody large daily 'newspaper in coopHeld who failed 'to'make 'it '":ith eration with the major 'league ,.New .Yor.k, and Kansas·,Clty. , organization. It is'a large unGranny Hamner; cut, adrift· by dertaking but Father Walter Sul- . the .last place Phils ·and waived , livan director Fall River CYO . out .of the National· League, ,is and Father P~ul McCarrick, hi~ the pivotman.,/ -. assistant, are already making Out of' Reiirement plans to. expand the school to Tito Fran~~ria" 'e~'-Baltimori• three-day aHair next ~ear an is doing th~' bulk' .of the . should the response wan:ant It. ce~ter-fieldingwith 'occasionThe tryout will mark the only al assist 'from Jirri PiersaU.. Franfonnal appearance of the Giants' coria, iilcidentally.. ·is the only scouting organization in.. the Di.300 hitter on the club. Behind ocese this year. There will be no the plate is Russ ,Nixon (,154) conflict with similar schools unbacked up b~' Ed Fitzgerald. der different auspices since the (.213). George Strickland came last of these will be. Ule Kansas out of retirement to play third City camp, July 9,;,1:1, at HOpebase. well Park, Ta~too. U it doesn't constitute a semiGreat oPportun~ pro alignment, I don't know what E1i«ibility FeqioUEeinents are does. Perhaps. L.ane w~s, ~king the' same as those uSUally set just for' publication. Perhaps he.. down. 'for a tryout' camp.· Candi- . has advised bis hirelings ,to take dates must be Uftiformed, have no umbrage at his public uttertheir own glQves and spikes and i'ngs, they ~ being sorel~ fer box American Legion-" players. must effice. This could. be. But in the have the written permi'ssicm of event Trader Frank is' serious, their team' manager to particiwe wond~r what he'd have to say pate. It's a great opportunity were he general, manage!' of the for youths of the Diocese ~ the Bosox. school is non-sectarian - to reThe name Williams, a famileeive professional instruction in iar f'txture in the Big Ten. batthe game. ting statistics for nearly a genAnother of the popular innova- eration, is stiL there. But it's: tions of the Fall River CYO, the Dick of Kansas City, not Ted of Alumni League is about to conBoston. The big fellow has exclude 'first . h~lf play. Latest perienced such trouble getting word on the standings has the ""over the' .200 niark that observstrong St. Thomas More team 8£' ers are prone to agree that this. Somerset in first place, with may be his last year. Ditto Stan Sacred Hearts,. St, Anthony of Musial, his National League Padua and Immaculate Concounterpart, who is hovering eeption in clos'e pursujt. The cir-, around .260. Age inexorably cuit has attracted top flight taltakes its toll. ent from the Greater' Fall River Patronage Increases area and interest continues, -to The closeness of the American irow. . League race-the emergence of Comfort tor Sox Fans Cleveland as pennant· contender With the holiday weekend an the bac~sliding of New York coming up welre sure to read -reflects an increased patronage again of the fabulous exploits of over half a million to date. of the 1914 Braves who came Only Detroit and Boston have from last place on July 4 to thus far failed to come up to thecapture the ,National League 1958 mark. More serious .is the pennant and then the' World SerBoston situation where a drop lea in itraight iets ov~ the of 94,000 is in evidence.
an'
Barry Bird, St.' Joseph, and Bob Martin, Sac,red Heart. SeGon9: :right includes JarQes Connor, St.. Joseph's, FaIL River,and Gene 'Mazzone, Sacred Heart, Taunton. At far right are James Cunniff, St: Joseph's, Taunton; :Ray Gagnon, Notre Dame, Fall River, and Bob' Yelle, Immaculate Con~ ception, Taunton. T~phies, will be presented August 3 at ,the: Fall River Country Club. . ..
THE ANCHORThurs., .July 2, 1959
l' 9
DIOCESE OF FAL.L RIVER, .MASS. '
Doherty ,~oach,. At Xavier U /:
C)NCINNATI (NC)-~d~ard A. Doherty rated' ,as a highly ima'grnative " .coach' . of offense footpall, haS: sigr~d -a' .three-Year contract as head'coach'at Xavier ·University' here. . Head 'coach at the University' of Ar,izona f0r'th~ ~ast two sea-. son~, . the 41-year-old Doh¢rty suc~eeds Harry.(J.yi:ick) Connj:Jlly, who resigned' suddenly ov~r' a difference with' university' officials on athle'tic -policy, after four years as Xavier's head 'coach. Doherty and' Connolly were teammates on Boston College teams in the 1940s Doherty was backfield coach at Xavier under ConnoHyin 1955. Doherty was the personal choice of Father Paul L. O'Connor, S.J., university president and when the news of his appointment was: "announced, said: "It's like coming home." '!", ,,' ;','"
': ., Resul1)es
,Dutiies,
· .. DENvER (NC) ""-' Msgr. Matthew 'J. Smith, ··'editor..in-ehief of the Register System·of.. Newspapers, who was" injured: in an .automobile ,accident, .has re· sumed some. of· his editorial duties; including. his weekly column, "Listening In," .ii· wu announced' here.
'DONAT BOI'SVERT INSURANCE AGENCY
McGrath Victory H'iQt.liqhts, first Dioces~n CYO Golf ,Tournament , Dennis McGrath of St.. Joseph's , The match was' the highlight of Parish, Taunton, gained first l~g. the first annual Diocesan CYO' (til. the~arty Hig~~ Mell\,Qrial tournament,..sponsored! ih~s yea.' Trop.hy by,.defea~ing Bot> I:'lacido by Monsignor Coyle Clluneil' of St. Patrick's, Fall Rive~,n~ a .r<' ()£ C; of Tauntol1. ,; ,playoff after both had tied 'for . MCGrath also· won the Ie. .10\111 grosS with'~c'otes of 8P at · "gItOS!, trophy ,for 'the 18-19 age' , 'Pirie Valley Country Club; South ueup. Thomas Unsw0rth· o£,.St. 'Reh,obOth: . . .. . . , Paul's, Taunton, won ,the ·blind · bogey trophy.> Placido won. ·the :.Jow"gross trophy and Leo Leary 0f 51. Mary~'s;: Fail River., woo -the'·. blind' bogey' . trophy in, tile .,. VATICAN' CI-1'Y(NC) ,.:..:.... 'HIS' 16-t17 ·'age. grou~. ." , Holiness 'Pope 'Johrt 'XXIII :is . Winners ill 'the 14-15 age' group ·taking a' dose' personal ''inte'r~st "were Jam'es Cunnift; St. Joseph's, in prep;p-ations for Rome!s di- · Taunton, low gross, and" Eugene . ocesan synod. Mazz.one, Sacred Heart, Taunton,blind bogey. He recently presided at a plenIn the 12-13 age gro'up Richard ary session of the synod's preparatory commission ~md sub- Brodeur, Notre Dame, Fall River, had low gros~ arid' Ja!'nes C6n~' commissions. At this session he indicated in detail what must be Ilor, St. Joseph's, Fall River, woa the blind bogey. accomplished before. the synod can meet. . Trophies will be presentedai ,,' The Pope~x~c,ts tne .Ro,~an ,?K. ~f. C Golf Nig'ht to 1?e. held sYnod to .be .amoQ.el for .diocesan :l,\'io~4ai, Ayg. 3, at F~ll )li!el' C;oul?'try Club. . . .,s~~ods. througho,u,t th,e w~;id ..
'Pontiff.,· Pre$ides: . .Over,. Meetin,g '.:"
R~' A. WILCOX CO~
.
I,
BISAILLON, ,5 :
.
QFFICEFURNaTURi '., : .. SbleJr for: I....ediat. D...... ~·
.• DESKS • CHAiU FILING' CABINETS' I ,. FIRE FI LES • SAFES I FOLDING TABLES AND CHAIRS
.
GARAGE 24-HOUR WRECKER SERVICE
iRe A. WI:LCOX CO.
653· Washington Street
22 BEDFORD ST, 'AU RIVER 5~f83'
,Fai,hcwen WYman 4-5051
,.
All Kinds Of Insurance 96 WILLIAM STREET NEWREDFORD:MASII;
DIAL WY a~5153 . P.rlona' Service
~ss~
"Save
of
at
' "
.New Bedford Ii Acushnet Co-operative Banks NEW BEDFORD. MASS.
1i15 WIUIAM Sf.
OIL BURNERS Also complete Boiler-BurDer 'or Furnace Units. Efficient ,ow cost· beating Burner and foe I oil sale~ and se~vice.
,Stanley Oil Co., Inc. ,
480 Mt. Pleasant Streeti New, Bedford WY 3-266?
COMPARE ••• then ioin the ,
. ,FAIRHAVEN LAUNDERETTE ON ROUTE 6 ''You leave it and we will wash it" • Shirt Service. . • Dry Cleaning & DY,eing • S & H Green Stamps 160 Huttleston Avenue Route 6 Fai~haven WYman 5-7990
..
\
SWITcH TO, NEW BATTEI'WHIPPED
Sunbeam ,BREAD
, THEY MAKE MARRIAGE WO~K:Scores of devoted priests and. Paul,F. McCarri~k,. S.t.' Mary's Catpedral, addresses a typical gatheriI!g•. laymen of the Diocese are active in pre-Cana and Cana Conference ;work .In the course of year'tliis scene is' enacted from Provincetown to Attle- ' under the direction of the Family Life Bureau, headed' by ,Fathef 'Ray~ ,boro. At right Father McCafthy, Fimlily 'Life d.ireetor, plans conference ~ mond McCarthy.. In the piCture .a1yleft, Rev. John P:Ui'isl:;oll, 'SS. Pe~er:.' schedule for the 1959-1960 ·season. Couples .who have' attended the sea- r and' Pa~l, Fall RIver, who has. gIven many talks tQ engaged and ,marrIed sions· say unapimou'sly, "When the conferences" ate held in your: parish; ,cOliples througlwut the Diocese, advises a young pair.. iff ce~ter, Rev: or city, 'd9n't"niiss .thepl!'" ,., '
a
~.,. AC~c.hl)ishRoP '-Asks> Ma~lr.iag-~s· Itlze~~,. esp~c:t
'.. $.u. ~day··. .Law,s.·;,
,re M,'tide in Heaven',:Sa:ys·,Prwst,. 'TBaptizdes 'vY~U~g, ;:; . '. ..()~na 0 Ichm' .~~·~;<But/·, Need ..Hard Work'· ,Oil.' Earth,.' .....' .. 'MIAM~(NC)~The,m~st: · t :'. ' M' A,_
crit-. injured 'casualty .of·a·.tor-· cowan",'" B y P a rlCta , ' . (NC) -'- , . , ' " '. i·;' J- " .... ." " ' , ' .:: · , " . . · · r · · ' . ,.. . " \ nado whIch, roared " througlac. CLEVELAND " ' . :Archbi~hop ~dward. F. HO- ,,';, ,'. ·~arrjages ,-ma~ 1>e .,made in ;heaven,,'~l;l't~.it t~~el'!' a :g~d,~~e,al ,<?f:, earthly hard' wl?r~" Miami's "~ortheast 'secti6n"'wu, '~an" Bishop: of Cleyel~nd,,· to ~~,eP'lthem,<x:~nI)i'Qg,. ;A-"prie~t. wh9"1l ~g{~ .e ,~:~,~ol,~liear~ed}y._'Y.itli ~:,t.h~t· sta.tement. ,i~ '. baptized a. Catholic '~h.ile und~r;} has;called on 'all.citizens.to, ,Rev..:Ray,It!ondW., McCarthy,plrect9f of,t~~.. DI?~e:s~u~F:a~·Uly L,I.fe,Eu~e~l,I. By means of :.' going surgery .in, -North. Sh()~;' , , ,_respect ,~ild oi?ey the O~io, Sun- '.3~ p~~-qa'QaC<?nf.erenc,~s_~nd ,Ca,na Confe.ren~~~ ~"ye~t! :.ne has nelp~<Jh.undreds of area ,Hospita!. ,,"': .. :~" day closlOg,law. , couples to get off to'a good f ,.,. h . 2 2 " " hope,they.,'l'l . go'·o··ut and be mar-' ,: Msgr. JafIles F.·Enright; ~ ... : , h' t I . ' , c o n erenc~s,' ,t ere· ·are . .m.ar' .' .. '" _ ,,'I;hc:A~chbls, op, m a pas ora <matrimonial' start· 6tinject ' riedcouples and 16. doctors w~o.' ried saints!" , tor of§t. Rose of LifI1~ Ch~~~~:: lett,er· read 111,all churches,- de. ':" .. ··..t··l·t·' ; "t' .,.", '''''t'''b':'· " I 'Th 'll'f I " · r... · " . ' , ' , Miami.· Shores and Dlocese·:of: nounced 'lmnecessary ·Sul)day .. ~ew,. VI ,~ .1 y, In 0., an e~ .,a, -. appear on pane s. eya 0 " ,.1\0 . !te.r. Cana. What!" . '.. , . Miami' .. V1car' for Religio.u";;,' , IIS h e d unIOn. ' l o w a general lecture plan· as ... bU,siness'. ane. called on'C.hristians . ,Post~Can. a 'activities,. about,· g'arbed 'in hospital cap andgown,',~ outlined by' the Chicago head. to use "eveI:Y lawful means ·to N~arli a Decade quarters of Cana Conference 'which 'many couples 'inquire '., administereclthe sac·rament. 01.,';oppose. the desecration of the wor~, b'ut presentatl'on .var.ies might include membership i~ Baptism to young Frank Vassa~·" D y" ., He has Iheld his position . I 10 tt'I, age' d 11 ,w h'l ' L or d ' sa.... , since. with each individual. All sti'ive pa~ish "Mr,' and Mrs:' , cubs, of I e f'OUl:. p h ySI-" . He pointe d ou t t!l h t th e con- 1951, wHen Bishop COlmolly for ~ positive rather than nega- w h'IC h t'h ere are severa ' 1 ac t'Ive . d h" on,an oper-,;. clans a tt en d elm. atittitionalityof Ohio's Sunday 'first orgapized the Family ,Life tive approach to marriage and. in the .Diocese; activity in the ating table. . closing la'w has been repeatedly Bureau. IBeginning. with pre- its complexities. Christian Family Movement; or, The 'bOY'- who was baptized' at upheld by higher. courts and he Cana work in Taunton and Cana ' for wives, membership in ,.th~ 'the ,request 'of' his' parents, Mr•. said it "promotes the best inter- Conferenc1es in New Bedford and How They Operate Family and Parent Education and Mrs; F. J. Vass'aiotti ,wno'; est of society." Fall Rivet, he has steadily. exPre-Cana and 'Cana Confer- Committee of their, Dio.cesa'n are visiting here -from. 'Hunts":" Archbishop Hoban noted 'that tended buteau activities until itsences, operate, ,on a different. 'CouilCiI of Catholic Women a~- ville, A.la.;rema"ined·in critical, the law makes exceptions for _ facilities are available to every schedule, said Father McCarthy. filiat~.. condition 'from injudes';reccivEid-: those who observe. the' Sabbath parish in the Diocese and a staff Whereas pre-Cana is given Also recommended by Father, .when he wa.- hvrled i!lti> the air l on'the seventh day, and pointed of 21 prie sts is' required to fill, within one week,' Canas are McCarthy 'is a magazine spe-, during th,e tornad~. out that both Christian and all requests 'for 'speakers. spread over an 18 month' to two. 'cially for Catholic families. Jewish teachings oppose the sev-' '. In add'iti~n t6 lectures for en- year period.' In both series the Called "Marriage," it offe~s 'a en, day work-week. gaged andlmarried 'couples, the requirement is made that three-month free trial sUbscripIT,~5 ALL RIGHT :TO Some individuals the Arch- Family Life 'Bureau has. for the, couples must' attend every ses- tion. to couples, obtainable by SHOP AROUND FOR. bishop 'said, ~'f.lagr~ntly ignore past two J..enten ~easons SPOl.l- sioil. There's no· shopping. around wiiting",MarI:iage Magazine, St. 'and violate the total law,", on sored PreI/arationfor Pfe lec- for one particula~. meeting' that· . Meinrad, ,Ind. SOME 'tHINGS, BUT the pretext that "some of the ture series l for teen-agrrs. .Held mig~tbe of ,special inter~st. . , lias Father~McCarthya.watch,,; language of the law is. archaic, at· the Catholic Community;rre-Canas begin with a lec- word for his .Cana "graduates"! , and some of·its pr'ovisions obso,- Center' in :Fali River and" Ken-ture, on social 'and: c~nonical. "Marhage is.a life that must be, , lete." .This situation" the Arc~- nedy Center: New ~edford, ;they . preparati~n' for ,m~rriage. "We '\led--<-you cim't '" reduce it to a ' , . 202;.206 Rock Street billhop felt; was "most regret... have drawn capacity 'etowds "at try to ed.ucate couples as to the . slogan,',' 'he declares. "But St. 'Fall River table," '. everysessi:on. ' . '. , solemnity of the sacrament they: Benedict's' words, 'Work and IS'TI:!E PlACE 1'0 He .called the day'-'of rest a Another ~impo~ant activity is will receivc:' !laid Father 'Mc- Pray', 'express its requirements." GET A PRESCRIPTION "human necessity" which pro- close coope'ration with-the Fam- CJlrthy:... " . . motes :family harmony and com- 'ily and Parent Education ComThe 1mhal sessIOn .IS followed CatholicChild"en . FILLED! ~ilnity social well-being. mittee of the Diocesan Council by. talks fr~~ marrIed ~oup~es "'" ,__ At-the present time, two Sun- of Catholic Women. 'Program on th~ rea~lhes of famIly !Ife Co.ntribute Much' day observance bills are pending suggestions I are provided to par- and dIscussIons. on the phYSlC~l PARIS (NC) - Catholic chilthe Ohio legislature.. One ish' guilds' and other Council a.spects o~. ~atrlmony by quall- dren from 26 countries .contribwould' repeal all laws and open affiliates; aitd it has been largely fled phYSICIans, uted more than lour million dolthe, way . to full commercializa- through the cooperation of these The Cana series for m~rried lars in,1958 to assist children in " tion of Sunda·y. The other would two agenci~s that there has'been couples includes four lectures: missio~arr',are~s. change the present law, repeal- increased Jmphasis thrbJgh<llit . husband-wife ielations~ip;',parThis was announced here at· ing sections which prohibit the Dioces~:' on family' cti~toms' ent-young child' re~aFonship; the ann'uai meeting of the Pon-' ",ports and entertainments. such as use 0.. the Adven(Wreath' parent-:-adolescent; ~nd' a' ,.'final ; tifical A,sliOciation of the Holy ,~ ;, . " and celebdtion of sa~lii,!\' days discussion' of' spirituality i.n tti~ Childhood' )' by Msgr.· Adriane ,Rhod~ IslandNa,tive, and baptisrr,al anni~.ersa·~les in married state, . . '.. ' Bressoie~,: president . of the or'Heads Ne.... 'School addition to birthdays. : ' . "The first Can'a' is. :aneye- ' 'garii~atio,ri: : ,.' , 'f"t' ; , " ' • opener to many,", ,said 'the Farn/ . WARWicK. (NC) '_BrotherQuestionS They Ask ily Life Bureau head. "They are /. Fra'1coi s Guilbault, C.S.C., a Thei-~ are no· standard' ques-' delighted to .realize that the . ,Rhode Island native, has been tions that ,pdp up at all.marriage'clergyunderstands and apprenamed principa: of the new Bish- for,ums, .said Father McCarthy, ciates the' problems ,of the"marop Thomas F. Hendricken High but' there a~e certain topics ,freE. ried."· School here which will open in quently dis~ussed from one. or There's a psychological reason September, 1959, with the ninth another angle. Pre-Cana couples for the' time lag between the _ _R_E_A_L_E_ST_A_T_E_ D•.al OINSSU6R_ASN2C4E6?' and tenth grades. often' have i queries about the ""Cana Conferences. "We invigoThe announcement was made advisability;of the wife's work- rate them at 'the first meeting, 21 Bedford S!. by Brother ·Ephrem O'Dwyer, ing, relationships with in::-l.ilws, and by, the secorid they're ready e.s,c., provincial of the Eastern handling of I.money and .choice for a re-fueling. By the' time Citizen's Savings Bank BuildinG' Fall River, Mass. Province of the Brothers of the, of living quarters. they":ve completed the series, we ·Holy Cross. Cana Conference . problems For the past two years, Broth- vary· with 16cality.Cape audi- • er Francois has been adminis- ence's,' for e~ample, have' many ,trator and' assistant principal a't .and anxiou~ questions about Vincentian Institute, Albany,' Catholic edutation for their chil·N. Y., wl)ere he has been teach- dren, In . areas . where' ,.there is' ing since 1952.: Previously. h~. ,male. u~e,mPfqyment, 'the~~ ar'e held teaching ,as,signments: at . proble~s a~ 'I :to working' ,wi~e.s I Cathedral High School Indianap- : ;and the 'share of housework hus~' . 'olis, Ind.,. and at 'Monsignor • band,s should', assume'; . . Ii' "James Coyle High School, TaunRecreation; finances, common tory. . c prayer and dther religl>us cusTo· date, 369 students have toms:' 'all arJ' of importance to been accepted· for admittance at. establishE!d,f~mily,groups. NORTON .... c. PLAINVILL! " the new :Providence' diocesan '. In ',addition to the 21 <priests ~oute ·1-23 Jet. 106'& 152· '~~~~~b~~,~.;~ . w~ :~e,~~~~~.~re~~~,~_ _~_~_~~~~_~_~_~~~.~._~~ _ _~ ~ ~_ _,~,~.~_~ . ically
G'
j
•
..
"
.'
••
,
?5
TOUHEY'S' PHARMACY
in
I
•
FRANK S~ FEITELBERG
,1:
.•