07.09.59

Page 1

The ANCHOR -

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An Anchor of the Soul, Sure ana Firm-ST. PAUL

F~II

River, Mass.

V.0.I 3, N O. 28

Thursday, July 9" 1959 l:Ieeond Cia•• Mail l'riyilrltetl

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U:,'.rges Fam.-I.-e·'5 Adopt V: ocat.-ons Progra'm' ~

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Pope· Stresses Unity In First Encyclical Pope John'~ first encyclical-which was issued on the 'Feast of SS. Peter and Paul and will be known for its opening words, "Ad Petri Cathedram"(Near the Chair of Peter)-is centered· around the three themes ·of truth, unity and peace. Although di,rectly 'addressing,the Catholic hierarchy,' clergy and faithful, the Pope in the section on unity spoke directly to Prot\ estants and ,to dissident churches of tli'e East. The Pope pointed out in the section on truth ,that ignorance of truth, contempt for truth and, turning away. from truth are the sources of all evils. Tne Pope S,tressed the obligation that the press, radio, telp.vision and mov-

Attleb'oro M.-ss.-onary: In" ,AI·as k a 4'3 yea rs

. . . Dog teams for taxis; ice-clogged rivers for transportation, noon darkness and midnight light; ll'\elted snow for washing; ~ish eye~ for candy; this has' been the milieu of

ing that pictures have and to thehabits truthso opinions of . Sister Mary Edward of Jesus for 'the 43"years she has spent men are molded along the tight· in small villages in the lines, The Pontiff exhorted these . , northern part of one of our mass media to confront evil and states, Alaska. Now , , . , . '. vice and to strive to preserve . home among' friends and , , ..wholesome morality. • relatives in Attleboro and North CLEVELAND (NC) -A fivE:-point family . , program to .On ,the suhJ'ect of p'eace, Pope . t' l' h " ' t .Attleboro ,for a short visit, the encourage voca IOns was out medere by the new president John .stressed~th'at "God c r e a t e d . 'veteran missionary of the Sisters of-Serra International, Dr: Frank J. Hanrahan, Jr., director' men ,not as enemies'but as broth-' .. : of·St.Anne expects to return to ~f internal medicine at St. Vincent Charity Hospital. The ·ers." He, asked. statesmen in the north ~ountry in August. organization of laymen . particular to aiqi., at peace with , Of her years in Alaska, Sister genuine good will, and pointed seeks to promote vocations ' Turn to Page Eighteen has spent 24 years in Juneau, 16 to' the priesthood by a i d i n g ' in Holy ,Cross,_ one in' Copper seminarians' education.~ardinafCushing V~lley and the last two years io Dr. Hanrahan said that he beVictoria, ~ritish C6lumbia. , Sister Mary Edward is a nurse lieves the growing need for vo" . nnounces cati.ons will be better met if 'd . and, when in Holy Cross the Catholic families adopt a pro. rivers o . Je . only nurse for miles in a terri• • gram to encourage them~ He .:, .BOS'l.'ON '. (NC) _ A tory which has no resident 'docsaid families should: "Young Drivers' Code'" has tor. A sled pulled by eleven to 1) Pray for vocations. This is . thirteen dogs brings her fi-om ' a habit with every Serra mem- . been:formulated by the Boshouse to house in her village and bel' and should be habitual with 'ton Archdiocesan CYO to re' to, other villages as much as'7li ,Catholic families. .mind young~ ,people and t h e i r m j J e s away. During the summer, ,2) Learn· what the religious parents of' the proper use of' S~STER MARY,E'DWARD -. Turn' to· Pace Ei&,hteea' '" .. life is really like. Certain fam,automObiles. . . "" " . '. '.' ". · il.ies tend -to produce more than . 'the code, was .released by.the their share of vocations. ,One . ?ffice o~ Richard .Cardi~al Cush-. · reason; Dr. Hanrahan suggested,' mg, With the warn 109 that· . . is·that members of these families "youth and the automobile 'are ~~arn early wh.at religious''life is pOJentialkillers - ' physically., 0' 0 0 like and know it for a happy life. . :wheri moving,. morally .. when- . . . • '. ", . '. . " . . , '3) Realize that a vocation is ,stopped." . The announcement' .NEW-YORK (NC)'::'-'A official of 'the U~,S. Bishops' · from God. It's not a criticism, . explained that the code was,an overseasreIiefagency said here .that international efforts to explicit or implicit, of the lay aux~liary"iice,nseu that should ,aid refugees in the next year "will provide an index to the 'lire. It doesn't mean that it·· child Turn to Page Eleven . '. moral cIimat El 'oj the·worJd·." Msgr., E. E. Swanstrom, execu,. .who enters' religion: does not F'o' rme"'r I·cers·' "tiye._ d.i.r,e.ctO.rof. th,t>' C.atholl·c ' ,,' '. ' ',' . .' ap·preciate"his·parents'·life. ,- . , .. ' . ., .". t th h lth d t t f '. N t' 'I ' o. e ~a an , .10 egrl y 0 .our ' R '1' f S' . . Tarn to, page,. T.welve, '. DR; FRA.N. K J. HANRA.HAN ·'.·.. rge' R,el.atio·ns'· ,~I~ .. erVlces -,a lO~a ·free'SOl;lety.u . , . CatholIc :Welfare Oonferencesuccess ,in the refugee pro-

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Sta't'e.s·",:.,.W.,:ith' Holy See . -made the., statement 'lit 'a Amendme'.nt·Up·ho'Ids' luncheon marking the start of Ie oneeeney' D " ,. WASHINGTON (NC) the World Refugee Year.· Rig·ht .to' 'Ru .. "The 'United State~ cannot' The refugee problem is "enor,'. , afford to be absent any longpointed out and it " . '. mous'~ he.

. gram;hesaid,would narrow "the 'great chasm between our professions of democracy and brotherhood, and our practice of those greatconcepts. u Msgr. Swanstrom declared that '''the'history of our time has been written-and is still being written- as the refugees, mountin, into millions and tens of millions, Turn to' Page Nineteen

. W AS~INGTON ~NC) - A. cons~ltutlOnal amendment· "er:. from such an important would be futile to ex~ect the has been mtroduced In the U.S. Senate to counteract the listening 'post as the Vatican, a problem to be solved in one or effeCt of the U.S. Supreme' Court's ruling th~tstates may group' describe'd as "some,' of ,two years. However, he added, not interfere with the advocatlng of anti.social ideas. The' J America's most· distinguished "the progress that we are able to . former diplomatic officers" has achieve in the 12 months to come amendment was l'ntro'duced ley's Lover." The court ruled stated. , ... will provide' a ,telling guide by Se~. ~a~e~ O. EastIan d that the film had been barmed Appointment of a permanent of MISSISSIppI. It reads: because it advocated the idea U. S. Charge d'Affaires to the ·"the right of each state to that adultery is SQmetimes per- Holy See was. strong.ly recom. . . mend~ b~ the group I? a rep?rt e decide on the basis of its own missible.' public policy questions of decenBanning a film for this rea- of th~lr VI~WS on foreign polIcy cy and morality, and to enact son "struck at the very heart of qUeS~lOns Issue~ by the Se~ate .leg' I tion with respect thereto constitutionally protected lib- Foreign Relations Committe. . In the past few days the DiOcese has been host to ~wo sha;~ ~ot be abridged." ' erty," declared' the ~ajority The officers were no.t identifi~d. . . .. opinion written for the court by The Senate committee; whu;h . missionary Bishops: Most Rev, Joseph O. Bowers, S.V.D.. On June. 29. the SupFem~ Court Associate Justice Potter Stewart. drew nO"conclusions of its own Ordinary of Accra, Ghana, West Africa; and Most-Rev. Gonstruck down a New York State ..... rad Dubbelmim, O. Praem., Ordinary.of Jabalbur, India. One ba'n on th~ film "Lady ChatterTurn to Page Eighteen ' . Turn t9 Page Sixteen . is' a 'slight and wiry Negro, the other, a hearty; bearded C'hinese Peo'pl'e giant, reminding one immedDesire Failure . iately of St. Nicholas. Both prelat~s stayed only. briefly in Red R'ute Fall River. Bishop Bowers was en route 'to Boston, Bishop :'l.'ORONTO (NC)-RecogDubbelman to New York. .·iiition in the United Nations Like Columbus, Bishop Bowshould be withheld from Red ers approach,ed the New World China because "those people by boat, and like the explorer, who have become slaves'to the he wasn't sure where he would communist system want their land. He traveled on the S5 government to fail so that they African Glen, a freighter from will be freed." Liberia, which"~eceived docking This'was emphasized by exiled orders only two days before Bishop Kenneth R. Turner of making port, The docking orders Lishui, China, on his arriv:al in made him the only Bishop ever Toronto from his present misto arrive in the city by water. sion in.Nassau, Bahamas. He is Unique Position ii member of the Canada ScarNo stranger to the United boro Foreign Mi,ssion Society. . States, Bishop Bowers, a Divine Bishop Turner, who was under Word missionary, is a native of house arrest in China for three the British West Indies. He years under the cOplmunist re:' l' studied for the priesthood at gime, said of the Chinese peop,le: , seminaries of ~he order in Mis"If they see that in the rest of ~. sissippi and Wisconsin, completthe world there is strong opposi·ing his training in Rome. tion to communism-that the EPISCOPAL VISITORS: Two bishops whose Sees are thousands of miles from here He is the only Negro bishop government which has taken paid brief visits 'to Fall River. At left is Most Rev. Conrad Dubbellnan,O. Praem., whose ever to be consecrated in this over is not recognized-they are , country. He was elevated to the eiven hope that one day there diocese is in India. Most Rev. Joseph O.Sowers, S.V.D., Bishop' of',Accra, Ghana, looks episc;.opacY,.in 1953" followi~g will be a' change." ' over copy of The Anchor in right photo with 'Rev. ;Raymond' T.·, Co~sidine, Di9cesan Di;-, which ,he took possession of h~ - reCtor of the Propaga~~n of the FaitlL' ' ... ,,' , , .' . " .' , , " Turn to1"ace'SixteeD .......... ,TurD to' 8btteea

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Two ,New:Bedford Religious Mark'· Golden Anniversary of Prof~ssion

-TttE,ANCHOR Thurs'., July, 9, 1959

DIOCE;:St=: OF FALL RIVER, M'A,SS,

Two Sisters of Mercy stationed also joiried' in the celebration. in New Bedford are observing The latter included Mother the golden anniversary of their' Mary Cath¢rine,' Mother .ProprofessioJ;}.They are Sister Mary vincial; Mother' Mary' Antoine, , J,Ursula, RS.M. at St. John's Par- Assistant Provincial, and several ish and Sister Mary Peter, RS.M. ~mbers Of the ProvinciaL NEW 0 R L E.A N S. (NC) -at St. Kilian's. CounciL I Brother Cajetan,. O,F.M., was .. . ' , made ,a fellow of the American A letter of gratitude for Iier ,.,The jUbilarian~~ught for 41 _. Institute 'of Architects at,a meet"" work among youth. iIi the Dio- years, !It,' S~. , Mary. s' Cathedral ing ,of, the. society here. This cese from Most Rev. Bishop· School,.. FaU\ Ri~~r. followed by honor has been giyen to only James. L. Connolly D.D" Bishop two ;anda':. half 'years . at S~. about ~wo per cent 01. AI-!\, of. Fall RiveI', was .the highlight J!J~n s, '~ttleboro., .Sh~ IS now· mel)lbers. of many congratulatory messages. ass~gned to :St. J$:lhan s. :"Brother Cajetan, a practicing received by Sister' Mary Ursula. - E' n", g'I·.'.~sh',I"~: a" architect'since 1945, and a sculp.The Holy Sacrifi~e of th~ tor'l is head of the Office at Mass,offered by Rt. Rev:'Msgr. Franciscan Art and.Architectllr~; John A. Silvia, pastor of St. John' in New York. He 'has design~d . Baptist Church, began the ob-' _. LONDON ~ (NC)-The 'bill in and directed construction of servance. Mother MaryCa:ther-· Parliament to increase governimportant religious buildings in ine, ~Mother .Provincial of the ment subsidies for the constructhe United St!ltes, Canada, .Brazil Sisters of Mercy, together with tion arid repair of number of' and British Honduras, and is a members of the ProvinCial' Catholic imdi other religious secspecial consultant on the interCouncil, ,attended, the' . mid-. ondary schoqls is expected to benational commission for restol'a. afternoor luncheon. come law b~; the end o'f July.. tion of the 'ttasilica of the Holy Born in Ireland, Sister Mar.y Th~ bill-increases subsidies for Sepulchre in Jerusalem. Ursula entered 'the Mercy Com"" co'nstruction land repair of CathBro.ther Cajeta:n calls the style munity at Mount St: Mary, Fall olic secondary sohools within the ·of ecclesiastical design he has River, on Nov. 21, ~ 1906- and. state system: from '50 to 75 per dev.eloped "common sense conpronounced the vows of religion cent: Maintenance costs other .temporary." It is. traditional in on' July 16, 1909:' Sister's reli- than extermil bu11ding repairs, the true sense; he points out, gious life has bee'n. spent in sl)ch as fea~lIers'. salaries, are !lince "traditional" styles' of pre-. service at Bethlehem Home, .a,lready paid t for by the govern- ; vious centuries were contemTaunton; Our'Lady of, Mercy ment. .! ,. ." , porary in their ages. ArchftecConvent, New Bedford; and St. "Excluded 'from the' bill. are ture for many years, he' said, was electric,' drawing mainly Louis' and St. Joseph Schoi'il,,- Cathoiic'pri.mal'Y schools aitd the Fall River. . secondary sChools" outside ,the frolJ1 styles of the past, and fre:Sister Mary Peter,1 state system Classed as indepenquently became mediocre, but de,itt ririvatei;!!choqls." '. . " MASS, ,IN BRAILLE: The Propers' of t,he'Mass in Braille, architects now-are wOl'kirg to Beginning, her second, half ' century ill'the :service o{God is W" ~'I'I'F' ',! . , . ' '.:, ",,:' an~w,project of the Catholic GuilQfor th'e BHnd,Chicago~ elevate 'the' standard 'ofecclesiSist,er Mary Peter; RS,M,; si. .' ,I av~rlng Dlvorc~, has been;wirlely acClaimed: The Ordinary ,of the. Mass,'has astical design. Kiiian's Convent, New Bedford,' Held'h'V;alid"' . , to the blind. Prepl!rii1g the packets"are,' Among gue'~ts' her, golden ' ,MILWAU~E CNC)""':"The will:' William. F? . LYl1ch, ,dire'dor, and .Alice Rorrest with' her jubilee MQst of dog", JoviJa. ,Ne 'Photo:' ".' IJ,ey, James· J. Gerrard, D.D" son out. of. a j$40.000 e~tate w.lth. :' _'," ,'. . '.', '..; ," Auxiliary Bishop of the Diocese, a$l inheritance because he re.: '"SPRINGFIELD. (NC) -,- The an<l.manyarea,priests., fused to dhrorc!:! his ~Qatho1ic ~ 0 "J. , Bishop of 'Sp,riIigfield has an. Members of Sister MarY,,' 'f h . b ' ' ' ' nounced the new..$4,900,000, CathPeter's' family lpany rep,re,:' . 0 .. " edral High School here will have s~l'.l.tqtiv~s 9f,tl1e !;)ist~rs'of)YJ;ercy, R Stauff rul~d that the w, ill of ~ BUFFALO ,,(,~C) -;- The mod- interna'tiim:al dllig.ration, .. trade' -3 ~3-member: advisory, group, in.,. ' Ed'th D' . ' ern Id h lIttle more reason / . 'cluding ,the!:head,.of, the local Mr enf~~~e'a~le' ., ! ~::~~:. ''r::s,~::, to' ~~~Y:":b~~t overpoJ;itilll~io.~ :~~~~~~~t~~n"~~~~~~~":~~'n~o~:~~ ,public school committee. against the ptlblic 'policy of Wis- "than Adam, a,~d Eve had," a dit,ions more similar to'.ours.'~· Bisp,op Christopher J. Weldconsin"in that it is' ','calculated Catholic,theologiap said, ,here. ,. "s e If,"h . 1 t·· . ' onsaici the advisory committee . . . ' I . " • h 11 t IS ISO a IODIsm IS, unwill' offer recominendation~''on y . CINCINNATI (NC):"'- Science to',Induce divprce" ' .. ' . It IS ;' 0 y unne.cessar 1 0 Christian, imd a cause of over-. policy and 'procedtire at . the has come 'to the aid of the liberal ',.Asa result !Of the ruling, Mrs. s~op, the o~erhPoPulablonbexp0- population,'" he ,added. ,: sch.'001', 'schedu,led'to op'en I'n' ,Se'p.-' . . DIamond's two' sons .will '·share. SIOn by blr~ contro" e c a u s e ' . . ci arts at, Our Lady .6£ Ci'1 q.nati equally in the' '$40,000 inheri- it is already de,stin~d to end from p';' t te~ber. and interpret the instiCollege, where a "language l~brleS, . emer .. ' tu.H,nn'.S program to thoe:.com-,'v, " oratory".. has just been ·installed. tance. . I' 'natural.causes," ,d,eclared Ji'at.heJ:. <;l I ", " , ' ',' AnthonyF. 'Zimmerman, S.V.D. ,HELENA (NC)-The Montana munity.. . . ' " . ',., · equI'pped' I The laboratory ,s , Blesses Boats. , F a t h e r 'Zimmerman stated that Bai'Association now inclUde's a '. The committee includes three . with, soundproof. 'booths' where " the ,current ,: expan'sion of the priest' among its membership for'· pr:ie(lts" 'four laymen, tWO!1U~'. students may listen to their own· Riyer';,'SJ;rin,.'e Ri,t,ff;',:' ,world's popuilltion is due pd,n,-., the first -time. 'He 'is' . 'Father . and· four other women. ', .....:. tape-recorded'" voices "and com-'·.PORTAGE.<DESSIOUX, (NC):,. cipa,lly to, "th,e,"f,a,ct, ,tha,t pe,ople Eil'unEitt "r , P.·O'Neill" ofthe Carroll r....~~--~----~·;...-!'l" ' pa,re" theiJ.:·· pro,nunciations ,\w.ith, , . Hundreds of I . , . ,. 'small' ed' , no'w''ll"ve 'lon'"g"'e,r 'tha"n' they' use',d College 'faculty here' who' \\la's' ':," ". " " '.'. t!hO!l~"o.f,an,.instr,~ctor, al,so.:re-' --" ", saluteda,'40-foot. ",·"m lum.. to,' BuiU~e' i,ncreasiu'giife-spa~" .admitted to' the' 'Montana . and lar.ge 'boats 'bar' in ,'.'.,' . ,-, • 'lorded.' ' .. high statue 'of' ,Our. Lady 'of ·the.' will rea'ch 'a' limit' e'ventually, he' cEireinoriiescondu~ted'in "the The teacher may monitor the' " , , _, .... ' ' v, '.' -, • •, ' ,, , . work of' each student from a . !l~vers In th~ :a,n~u~l'?~e~sIn~ of said, and t!len ,the population Sta~eCapitol here,~Plu, mbin'g'.- Hea,ting master control board. boa,tsat thl~ I MISSISSIPPI River level will b·~ stabiliz"d. Languageinstru~ta~s':'at tl1e:<·"sh.nne,:~~lpcr ~"sti"n~s,' on a Growth ,Moderate,. ", ' Over, 3'5' Years college said the "lear.n-bY-dOi~g" causewa~ tha~ exte?d~s?m~ 300 - Beyond that 'point,' he pre,Family ·That .. of Sa-tisfied .Ser";ice techniqi.lt~; ,<would. i supplemen,fi ~eet .0~~~nt9 .t,h:~, MI!,~~SS~,?PI.. , dicted, "populationgr()wth will lecture;':period~{,'and" give "ther:R' :,,~. ,:,.•An est,lmatfr?.l?O.OO:boa.ts ~hug.. be moderate." He- called it' Prays .Togethe~, 806 NO. MAIN STREET addit"ional' t'ime-icirpersOlial in::'" ,?ep. ;~loWly p~s~: th~ ,statue,: and, '!utterly ridiculous" for people Fall River: OS 5-7497 struc'tion.;\ ., :,.' , . ~ .• ~: ;'.;,.\;:. re~ely,~d;t'1e ple~sing ,ot· Fath~r I "to become excited now about a Stays'Togeth,er:.,>.;.'. :..:::,".., 'I. :w,..' ." ... Ed_war<:JlJ:. SC,?latfm an., pastor Of. 'future' world 'overpopulation Wisconsiri ,to ,Hah·.,. ,~' St, ~ral1e~s . ~arish here.. The which will most likely never THE '-. "~" , " . , . ' ).' , .. : ble.ssmg 'was a- part of:, NatIonal Su .,'day'Ca r~,Sa les.' .4. l,:):~/S~!~;·I!9atirig:'IW,~e.k,:,t~rem9nies. ~;~~een~~ ~~: ~~~~h !~:llli:~~~, fIRST MAQIS01" (.~C}~,A.:.'biii.pro- '.. :.B.?,ats~:fa~w~tjn ,~izef~,o~'sm~ll become scarce "is ,a creation of hibiting','automobile.dealersifrom ,sJ:1ep;l, 'Yl~ll.. ().!;lt~,~ar.d. motors? to ,the imagination, rather, than of 'AttleborO-South AttlebOro' conducti'ng' bU~ih¢'ss-"on:'Suhday .l~r!e ~~bl~::qr~iser~,.and, tugs., . reasoned thinking," he said. : , ' 'Seekonk ' , " ha~'~bee1)..gas~ed'by, 'the Wisc<>p:;" ' . ~- ..'::': .;:::;,~j_ ',',. . . ' . Father Zimmerman declared sirl'.legjslature aiid .. sent .to 'the:-",:·;Mass ,Ordo" that the ,Catholic Church'ssolug?~.~·r~9r'" ~or- 'sIgrt'a·t~r~,!\~;:r6~~~:ii(16~~~{.~\S'\f~e;~~~Jn.:HGi~ tiontQ the economic problem of , blll.exeJU,pts dealers who obser:ve, '''·h''''B "thk' ':M I r . "d'SS"R""" population.: expansion "is- not ,a. '. ~II .$iz~s: in.. stol;k. ~rom· I R. A.. WILCOX S,;.wr,a~v"~."s::'the..:~:Sabbath '':,'':r~II''{iP'',ii,f:'?" .rs" ~r ~,~s, a~,·~,·:'i,l}7 strangul,atl'on'·of ll'fe, but"such an. r"'..'· .' "'I . , , ' h ;' ""'. ;. . .' . P v"""'·.",'·"i!us',·and Secunda. Vlrgu'lS"and ' increase"of, economic production .: ,OFFICE FURNITURE'· .. " . , ' $3.CJ? l'~ $100. vld~~.th~y.close theIr' busInl,!sses ':':-1vIattYl1" /;5flYip~··l.~,~ ';'1\1:'" ":.111 -StOelf'for ~11II.edia'.···Deli'"~;''' "...; ., ~"DESKS" , . ' : .CHAI'S ..."Soda"''''' to,Meet"" 'c.';;',· .. ,' ~. ,,'),'I,.,-I:c '''', " "," ~ith room, to spare.'" ' , , ':FILING CABINETS;",,' ,.~ • ~~: ~'~",~~•.•: '~"':' : ., ..,".,<.r:.... •;," .sATl:IRDAY'l;';"';';:~, Mass of .ttle~ , ::!"1,eml;>ers:o~ ~e ,BoYS,~ SodaUiY'~.:: :';Bles5'"ild:Vir~\n"fSt"'S~tllrday:;' As a solution to the problem ".FIRE FILES" . :. 'SAFES; .. o,r.cHoly· ~"'Fa'm'l I H'g'h:"S'c'h' ·~l';'· ., ','. , '.. h"e·.urg~d""fre,er,circul.atiOn','"Of o "'-:~.' .,: ": ,,~},~!,:, I ,,:' . . "p,~:,."":,,, ;·Simple.: ,white. Ma"ss'Proper; ~leepi"g .. BOg~ 6.89' to $30. FOLDING TABLES .' N~:;~elifOr~t~!~J~ll1eeta~7: PcM,;, .'" ~:~' 'G:l~ri~'; ~ Se~Q~d COllect.Sf'Pius AND CHAIRS ne.?!i~.,:rll.e,scl,~r,. . ~n. t~~ K,eT,pl.op,. d ' Pope'and'Martyr' ,Pref;tee of

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Pentecost. I Double. Green, Mass Prop,et; Gloria;. Second Collect St. Jphn Gualbert, AQ" ,~c;>t;. Creed; Ilref~c,~ of TrinitY. lVJOl'r DA Y-~t;, ':,-nacletys,-'Pope . and 'Martyr; ~.Imple, Red,:~ass Proper; Glo~la; Common.:Pre,fa_ce.. :.'::: "',! •

J I 12 St J ' of , u y Orle~ns. oan" . !,-rc, , Our Lady of fhe Assump-tfdn~ Osterville. . /uly 19-5t, Hyacinth; New , Bedford. ", . "".." ~t .. Mary, South riatt":~ :!.. TU~SR~%~:';,~}§t~,;;~o~~v_enture, " rpouth. " . • '" l\isP:'lP2' ~:~J.:l~t: ",qG.~!~.s~o!'·:~.l!J;ld Jt,iiy"26-',S(" St~pli~ri,:'Dodge:>'· '. Dc;i~~or' o~Jpf ~qhii'rc~!~f1i~~lei ":" '11" >'St,,' ":"F"', ' "" 0 f", ',' w;m£e. Mass,·1P.roper-;'iCS'ori.3· ";,,,, .V~. e.. ,ranC1S. 'f ". " " r·"'" .' f, ", ' '.': . ;"ssisi,' )iew";.~~4fol:~i,, '. 9.r~~;. :cqmr~~ PIi.et~ce,j~'t ,,',' , St. Pius :X" South.yar,.·. Wl!lPN'Ji~SD{i.Yt'-St. He1lry.,,;Em'",.. ':. ,m6iJth.. \ . '.7 - ' , ,'b. ;:". P9f~f-T~llidfu;GO~fessoi:~:Siiitpie. Aiig.: 22 s1,· George; We'stpo'rt;' " '~r:h(fl'!:'·,l\fa~sf~·Bropef; lGlhtia; "~ :~ap~~4H~a:rtsjairfiaven:'::' ;~:?~&#&iF~~~~' \T'?<,n};:

~~V!V;;;>~Y::~~:;,9~.mm~~pr~tion

THE ANCHOR ~, .. !:l~,,~.,t~~i ,,}3~~~~td V~r~P! of s.,cohd-ci....; 'mall' ~rlVlicge8 authoriaed" ;. 'Miount:.GarmeI.·.Greater,,~Dou.t Fall River, Mass, . Publisbed evel'Jl •.. - -" . . . . " -'" , fhursd..,., atUO 'Highland Avlmue.,Frill _,' ble; 'Wh.j:.t~,:;*,a'§.s;,~r~p'er; GlorRiver, Mass.. oy the Gatholie Press of the ia; Creed; Preface; of,:;:Blessed Oioeese of Fall River SuhscriptioD price VI'rgl'n. - ,... ' ,y mail. postp~ld ".00 per ,ear.

R••~.WIL_COX "CO. . 22 BEDFORD 5T:'

WASTE"PAPER~'RAGS ;TRUCKS AND TRAILERS' FOR PAPER 'DRIVES ' CHtJRCHES, SCOUTS and CIVIC ORGANIZATIONS 1080 Shawmut Avenue New Bedford ' 'WY 2-7828

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JlUDIIE!!',·

HEPBURII •FRED ZINNEMANN'S~fF. THE NUrlS'.

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'STaRY'Tlc~~ ~, PETERNGFINCH

DAME EDITH EVANS DAME PEGGYASHCRO" DEAN JAGGElI

, WI!" MIlDRED DUHIIOCll SCREENPLAY.8\' ROSERT .HOERSOII PRODUCED 8\' HENRY BLANKE

I

- Starts WED. JULY 151t1

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IliillJ

-""' .. ,REO 2IH"EMAHII' NU........ WARNeR BRoa. y,

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'STAT E . NEW -.', '

BEDORD


Supreme COIIrt' Upholds ~arish' In Zone Issue TRENTON (NC) -

Presentation Sisters Visit North Attleboro Home After Mission Service in Japan By

'The

New Jersey Supreme Court has upheld the right of St. Mary's parish, Ocean Township, to establish a ,school in a restricted' residential zone. ' By a 5 to 1 vote,. the court struck down an attempt to block the parish fro'm using a 59-yea 1'old, 17-'roon: house as a school. The: Ocean Township Board of Adjustment and the Township Committee had gral'\ted' St. Mary's a zoning variance to establish the school. A group of' property owners had brought the suit in an effort to reverse the granting of a variance, ' Chief Justice Joseph Weintraub ruled' that a parochial school is not "dramaticailY'dif: ferent" from the uses n'ow permitted in the area and said he agreed with the township that the school would not be detrimental to neighboring properties. He also wrote that educating children "furthers the public welfare," and declared that the need for the school is obvious.

Father Rocha Returns Home , Rev. Anthony P. Rocha, a native of the Immaculate Conception Parish, New Bedford, 'has returned home from Portugaf for assignment in the Diocese. Father Rocha spent his last year of study at the Patriarchal .Seminary of Christ the King in ,Lisbon. He was orda'ined' 'last' Februa,ry21 for' the Fall River Diocese by'Cardinal Cerejeiro. , After ,his ordination 'Father

Marion Unsworth

,With a combined total of 16 years serving as missionaries in Japan, Sister St. Francis of Assisiand Sister Louis, are ilOw home vacationing ,with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Pinsonnault of, 157 East St., North Attleboro. Both &isters, members ~f the Presentation of Mary Order, have been' teaching in Himeji, in central Japan; Sister St. Francis for nirie years, and Sister Louis for seven. The former was' one of the original group of nuns who opened the school, called Kemme Joshi Gakuin., . , "At first we lived in one of the classrooPIS," Sister St: Fran..: cis said. "There were six of us in. a location formerly -used. ,by the Japanese army,' The Japan.. ese people w~r'e very impressed that Americans would live that way. '1Most Americans in Japan live on a very high scale," she explained.

THE ANCHOR-

Thurs., July 9, 1959

3

DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER, MASS,

Catholic Hour Is To: Explore Four .Areas NEW YORK (NCr-The corporal and spiritual works ,of· mercy and their practical application in four "problem areas" of society will be the theme of the July Catholic Hour series. '

The Catholic Hour is produced by the National Council of Cath. olic Men in' cooperation with' the National Broadcasting Company and is broadcast' coast to coast every Sunday from 2:30' tQ 3 p.m., KD.T. . The areas to be discussed are the apostolates to the blind. the lonely, the sick and the retarded child. Four experts will examine School Beginnings the problems and possibilities I in each of these fields, offering The school started' with, 150 practical prescriptions for the pupils in junior high school. layman who wishes to serve on a Now, a senior high school and volunteer basis. juniorcoilege have been.-added, The individual subjects and and there are 1,000 students, of speakers will be: whom a'pproximately 100 are -"The Exceptional Child" . Catholi,c, the rema'inder pagan. ' (the care and teaching of the reStaffing. the school where the tarded childl, Mrs.. Joan Dunlop , two North Attleboro nuns teach of Albany, N. Y., and guests on English, music and 'French, are July 5. 16 Sisters, of ~hom nine are -"Apostolate to the Blind": Canadian-American and, seven ,Father Paul M. Lackner, director' 'are Japanese, and 38 lay teach...; of the Catholic Guild for the ers. Blind, Pittsburgh, July 12. Although the city of Himeji _"S u i c j des Anonymous" ,has a pop'uiaHon of 200,000, to Father Kenneth .Murphy, direc- ' the rest of Japan it is "the, tor of Rescue, Inc., Boston, July country.". The Sisters· estimate' 19., that perhaps 1,000 residents are ADMIRATION: Sister Louis Bertrand (standing) ad-"The Hospital, Apostolate". Catholic. ," '. mires the painted bo'wl that Sister Francis of Assisibrought Msgr., James G. Wilders direc, Both, Sisters stressed .that the, back fl'om the Japanese M i s s i o n . , . · · , '. , tor of the Rospital Apostqlate of Japanese,are very receptive t o . ' . the New York Archdiocese, Jul, . ,the Church. "Japan' is ready;" parents are finding sUitable~r' St, Fr~ncis accompilO'ied a 26. , Sister Lou,is said r '.'if only there mates for them! . ,group to Nagasaki.; ., "were more missionaries. Our "This- creates a problem i f . ' :/\,t present the Sisters are very school is ,run' like Catholic· child wishes to become.,aconhappy' t<- be home, wfth, their Religious Pictures and ,schools e~erywhere;:a crucifix vert," Sister St. Francj~ mEm~' f;lmfly.They will ie~ain in in everyroorri, prayers. before' 'tioned. "It is harder, to find '3 North Attleboro and then go to Crucifixes classes" and religion ,claSses for man who wants to marry a Cath:" ,81. Hya~inth inCarladafor' July everyone." " " o l i c girl. And a gir.l who wishes, and .August. TIley look 'forward Make Wonderful "It is a miracle that $0 in~ny to enter the' convent has even to r~tti.rningto Japan about the Wedding Gifts parents sent their children to the _ more difficulty, 'since h~r par- end of September. .; .. school when we first started,'~ ents, ·if theY-are pagan, think it ' A~ ,br~ther, Bertrand, who is 'her sister added.. is selfishness-a desire for a nice' employed in Venezuela, also is The missionaries also empha- quiet life." at home visiting, which makes Erpily C. Perry sized the ,eagerness ofl the Japan~ The hardest thing for a Japa, cQmplete family reunion for 562 County St. New Bedford elle ,to ,learn; "They have a won~,' al1E;se cqnvert to' accept' is facing the Pirisonnault's. There are two ,Opp. Sf. lawrence Church deriul tatent for learning Engothers 'and living as a ,Catholic ,othe'r brQthel's, Rene and Roger, \ lish and French, and imitate at" home, the missionaries' reboth of North Attleboro. perfectly what they see and port. They do not have enough hear," they said. "strength to be made fun of. The Japanese are a 'very proud Impressions Important people, and will not take clothImpressions are very impor-' ing or any other item from an tant to the Japanese people. The American. The Sisters, however, children are very capable to give like other. missionaries, always : . . a good impression, and' it is' need cancelled stamps, and good partly because of this that they books, particularly in the field of English literature,' so that are such good students. they may build up their library. , The school schedule is, much ' An enthtdiasm of Japanese more extewive than it is here. students is travel. and schools Classes are held from 7:30 in plan organized trips "yearly. the morning to 5 in the evening, Pupils in, middle and elemen'al'ld s9me pupils travel as much tary schools' take three-day edu-. as two hours by train to attend. cational trips; and in 'high school The' school year starts .in April, " a five-day tour is planned. While with'the ·first term ending July at school, they visit almost 'the 26, After, a week's vacation, whole country. They see histori- , there are morning sessions durcal sites; museums'and other " ing August in 'cultural·. subjects places of interest. .. Last,y~ar .. Sis- ' which pupil. attend' on a vohin,tary basis. The second' term' runs from September 'to' mid-, March with a week of ,vacation at Christmas. LlJOGAGE SINCE 1877 '''About one-third of the girls .', go 'O!1.to college, generally. to NOW OPEN prepare for teaching or phar;" macy work," Sister St. FranCis IN THEIR explained. "The, rest usually take a two-year course in sewing . to prepare for m'arriage." PLEASANT .& UNION STS. American girls will be interNEW BEDFORD ested to lear ~ that Japanese girls do not worry about boys while COME AND SEE US! attending school, because their • • • • + • + • • • • • • • •

KEAT,ING'S

GET IN'THE SWIMI

Rocha flew to Rome and said Mass at the tomb of St. Peter; he then flew to the Holy Land for Mass at the site of the Holy Sepulchre. FOl' the' last three months Father Rocha has been doing parish work in the Azores, per-. fecting himself in the Portu~ guese language.

S~razin Grand Knigh~

In North Attleboro.'

, Roger M. Sarazin will serve as ., grand knight of Thomas P. Mc,. Donough Council, Knights of Columbus,' North Attleboro,' for the coming,year. . He, will attend the annual state convention as a delegate, to gether' with JohnJ. Lang Jr., past grand knight: Serving with him will also be Leonard J. Quinn, deputy grand knight; Robert Paquin, chancellor; Earl ,Lavin, warden. Also Edward G. Lambert Jr., recorder; Atty. Robert G. Funke, ,advocate; John A: Graham, treasurer; Bernard Miramant, inside, guard; John J. BevilaqueJr., outside guard.

Original Manuscript MEMPHIS (NCl-A sheaf of pencil-scribbled,' papers in second-hand store might not be worth more than a glance. But the manager 01 the St. Vincent de PauiSalvage Store here took another look, and his organization was $1,100 richer because of it. The' papers turned out to be an original manuscript of one of O. Henry's short, stories,. "The yenturers."

a

CUSHI'NG1S New Location

First Federal"Savings AND

,LOAN

ASSOCIATION

OF

ATTLEBORO

. 3%% on all· Savings Accounts' 1% Extra on System(ltic Bonu~ Savings

, f3'!~'t~l~

doing things together. And dieeover, too, the d_p-down enjoylnent of a "frllllh up" with 7-Up. it's America's home d&k that matches the mood of happy livin«. As you' work and play let crystaldear 7-Up add i~ wholesome lJoodDeas..


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Check Titles of Fil:ms Here' Before Going to ,Mo~i~s

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Sunday Shopping Stirs Trouble

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five Pennies For the .First Ti.... Girl Mas' likely , Green' Mansions

~aradise

Hercules Hey Boy! Hey Girl! Invisible Invaders It Happened to Jane· James Dean Story .Johnny Rocco Joh Pou; Jones King of the Wild Stallions

lagoon P,ork Chop Hill ~ursuit'of Graf Spee Rising of pthe Moon S,od Hors~ ·Seventh. Voyage of : Sinbad" . Silent Enemy Son-of Robin Hood

lost Missile Marcelino Modern !imes Mysterians Nine live. (Nor.)

Three Brave Men T~wn like Alice. A ..vatu'; West.boUftd "

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ALEXANDRIA (NC)-A Sunday closing law's constitutionality was seriously challenged here. for the first, time in recent years. Virginia has for. the past 180 ye~s had a law prohibiting the transaction of business on Sunday, except for' that which i8 "necessary." Local custom determines what is necessary. The Sunday-closin'g law was chailehged in' Fairfax, Circuit Court in a civil case filed by attorneys representing some 27 firms in th'e .Alexandria area. Judge Arthur W. Sinclair heard arguments on the constitutionality of the lay' and took them . under advisement. The civil suit followed action on the part of Commonwealth Attorney Robert C. Fitzgerald, who issued· criminal warrants against the firms charging them with illegal Sunday sales.

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A-2 - Morally Unobjectionable"for Adults and Adolescents Born To Be loved Brain Eaters City Afte- Midnight For' Dobbs 'Giant Behemoth Gigantu! the Fire Monster '. Gun Fight. at Dodge City

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Gunfire at Indian Gap. Here Com, the Jets Hole in the Head . Hound of ihe Baskerville. last Train from Gun Hin low Is th., law

S~ider

legend of Tom DOoley Nun's StorY Pier S, Havana Place in the Sun Porgy and . Bess Restless Years' Revolt in the Big Hause Radon Roof ~y One for Me Screaming Sk,ull . Senio"r Prom Shake Hands With' the ·Devil She Demons Sheriff of Fractured' Jaw

St,!lag l7 (love... of . Paris) Step Down To Terror Tbrzan's Greate.t . .: Ad,~enture T~o.Headed Boy Verboten V;rtuous Bigom'" Warlock ~i1d ana the In·noe....t Woman Eater ~oman Ob.essed World, Fle.h and the IDevil

J

A-3 -l\-forally (jnobjection~ble for Adl.~lts , ,

Age of Infidelity (S".) Angry Hills Anno Lucasta Ask Any Girl Certain S':"ile, A Count' Your Blessings Crime and Punishment. (Fr.) Crime, ';nd Punishment U. S. A. Crucible (Witche. of . . Solem) Fr. Decks Ran Red Doctor's Dilemma

Don't Give Up the Ship Four Skulls of Jonathan Droke Gidget. G;;i;man's Walk Horse's Mouth (Br.) Inspector Maigret·(Fr.) Jonas • Man Who Could Cheot Death ",'.: Man Who Understood Women Mating Game Mirror Has Two Faces

I

Honor Composer

Monster On the COtftpue M~gger The Nbked Mojo N.!.-Name 0" the Bullet N~rth by Northwest Ol] Life and love Operatior Domes Ra'w Wind in Ed_ . Tohk Commandos The.e Thou.and Hilla This Eart~ 'Is Mine Viblerit Rood (Hell'. 'Highway) Young ;PhiladelphioM

SHRINE TO CHILD-SAINT: At Nettuno, Italy,near Anzio, where thousands of Amencan casualties of the World War II beachhead are buried, it is planned to erect this shrine in honor of St. Maria Goretti, whose feast day is, observed today. The body of the Virgin~Martyr is interred in the adjoining Church ·of Our Lady of Grace. NC Photo.

B - Morally Objectionable in Patt for All Attack of the SO ,Foot Woman Blo~de in Bondage . (Sw~dish) Cat Girl Cop Hater Daddy-O Eight" Day of the W..... Female Animai 7 Forbidden Desi,. (lover's Net) Headless Ghost Hell Divers ,(Br.)

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H Man Naked Africa '. H';rrors . of ihe Blaek Lov-; and -Lust Museum Parisienne, lo (Fr.) Hot Roc' Gong" Pelfe.!t Furlough . Hause on The Waterfront Pri~e and the Passi_ I. Mobster Riel. in Juvenile Pri.- . I Was a' Teenage Rob.! Racers. ' . Frankenstein 'Robin at the Top / Jet Allack Scr,eamil}g Mimi lost Paradise ~me Come Runni,.. left Handed Gun TaJk Batallion Man on the Prowl Te.i..oge Wolf Pad< IGrJ Middle _of the Night', '

Of;'

CAdorabie Creature . And God Created Wo_ Baby Doll Bed of .Grass -Desperate Wom_. ~ Elysia Flesh Is Weak French line Fruits of Summer " Game of love Garden of Eden Houn on the Waterfront Husband for Anna . liane, jungle Goddess I Am a Camera Illicit Interlude Karamoja, la Ronde la" Plaisir lellers from My WindmiR light Across the .street lover's Return Mademoiselle Gobette

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AMSTERDAM (NC)- Hendrik Andriessen, Dutch Catholic composer, has been honored fop his work, itA Symphonic Study." He received the Professor vaft der Leeuw, Award, the Dutcb government's award for composers.

MONAGHAN,' ACCEPTANCE CORP.

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,Schedule. Liturgy Week Speakers

~ondemned

Madamoiselle Striptease Maid in Paris Marie du Port Miller's Beautiful .Wm, Mitsou Miss Juli<!' Mom and Dad Moan Is Blue, The Naked Night, The Nona Night Heaven Fell No Orchids for Mi.. Blandish One Summer of Happiness Passionate Summer Paris Nights Please! Mr. Balzac p.ot Bouille Queltion of .Adultery Rav.en, The Rosanna Savage Triangle Seven Deadly Sins, The

ScJrred Serisuolita (Barefoot ~avage, The) ShJ Shoulda 'Said No Sin~ of the Borgios Smil... of 0 Sum...... HIgIIt Snow Was Blad< .,' Sari of Sinbod Smiles of A S _ i Night.' Stella Str~lIe,., The The: Bed Three Forbidd.... Storiee Thrill That Kill., The Violated Wa~'" of Love WelWant a_Child Woman of Rome Woinen Without Names \ YoJ.;g and the Damned. 'The

NQTRE' DAME (NC) , A "Lay Participation in the Mass~" church musician, the editor of as its general, theme.. a liturgical monthly, a canonist, The speaker's will inClude the vice provincial Of a religious . Father Gregory Murray, O.S.B., order and a Chicago parish' priest of Downside Abbey,. England; are slated' to give major, adFather Godfrey Diekmann, dresses at the North American O.S.B., of St. John's Abbey, Liturgical Week here, Aug.' editor,' . of Worship magazine; .23-26. . Father Frederick R. McManus They will share the platform of the canon law faculty 61 the with Giaco~o Cardinal Lercaro, Catholic JJniversity of America·; Archbishop of Bologna, eccleFather Bernard I. Mullahy, siastical patron of -the Italian C.5".C., assistant provin~ial of Liturgical Conference. ,Cardinal the Holy Cross Fathers, and . Lercaro will give the' main adFather Andrew Greeley of dress of the .week, whic~, has Christ .the King parish, Chicago.

Thomas F. Monaghan Jr. Treasurer

142 SECOND STREET

FALL RIVER OSborne 5-7856

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HOOD

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i Separate Classification I .

ANATOMY OF MURDER - Observatian: The clinical analysis, with which the subject moiler of this film' (r~pe) i~ so explicitly and franki y detailed, is judged to exceed the bounds of moral acceptability and propriety I in a moss medium of entertainme~t. . I 1 . . (A ~eparate' classification is gi:-en to certain films which, while not morally offensive, require some analysis and explanation as ~ prot~ction' to the uninformed ogains' wrong interpretations and false conclusions.)

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Clip This List and Savt It!., I

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How Do You Rate on Facts of Fait~,~

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"flAPPER;' -ON HALF GAllONS' OF HOODICE .CREAM•..WORTH

.;

By BRIAN CRONIN -

,I

In the Nuptial Mass, the priest pl'ays that ~he bride' be .. dear to her husband like ••• ": (a~ Rebecca? (b) Rachel"! (c) Sara? (d) Delilah? ,! %. On what day did the Holy Ghost descend upon the Apostles?: (a) Thursday? (b) Friday? (c) Saturday? led) Sunday;? 3. What order was founded by. :Saints John,i Matha and Felix of Valois for the purpose of freeing slaves?:-(a) The' Vincentians? (b) The Redemptorists? (c) The' Trin!tarians?' (d) The Cistercains? . ~ I .. ,.,. 4. A Holy Year' is inaugurated by the opening of the Holy Door in St.' Peter's. When does this cerJmony occur? (a) 1 . Christmas Eve? (b) Christmas Day? (c) jNew Year's Eve? New Year-'s Day? . . ., f~" , 5.' Of what crime was Ananias accused by Peter'!:-(a) MUlder? (b) Lust? (c) Lying? (d) Disobedience? 6. The, "Holy Rood" is another~ name for }r~:-(a) Vatican?: ~'!. (b) Holy Lands'! (c) Cenacle? (d) True (Jross? . , The symbol' of the eagle' i-~presents which ohe of the Evange-' lists?:--i.(a) Matthew? (b). Mark? (c) Luke? (d) John? '8. What is the' first fvariable part of the 'Proper of the ·Mass?: . (a) The introit? (b) The Gradual? (c) The IColleds? '(d) The", Epistle? ' . . " .... ' Give yourself 10 mark~ for each correct ansJler. on ~ge ;l.:t. :Ratin~: 8~Etcellent; ·70-......Very GOOd; 60-1Good; sO-Fair~ -::

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20~ TOWARD HOOD

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"SHIMMY" . 'SHERBET

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OFFER L1MITED~ACT TODAYJ:

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DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER. M4SS"

A-l- Morally Unobjectionable for General Patronage" Aparajito (Unvanquished) Battle Flame _Big Circu,' Big Fisherman Darby O'GiII and the lillie People Diary of Anne ~ronk Escapade in Japan Escourt We.t

-THE ANCHOR Thurs .• July 9. J959

IeEeREAM WATCH "'36

TkeQualiJ4I!ceCrtGm

~IN'".IVIIY

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5

THE AHCHORThurs., July 9, 1959

German Nation Has First Catholic Chief of State

DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER. MASS.

Australian Priest' 'Returns Swords To Japanese SIDNEY (NC)-An Australian Mar i s t missioner whose furlough' has turned into a "good will tour" will return 24 samurai swords to , Japanese army officers when he goes back to his parish south of Tokyo. . ··The sw~rds were given to Father Anthony Glynn, S.M., by former Australian servicemen who took thcm from the Japanese at the end of World War II. They askcd Father Glynn to restore the weapons to their first owners as a gestl.!re of good will between the peoples of Australia and Japal~. Father Glynn, who is on leave

:~:n;nh~u';ti::~~an~~~~:se::a::~~; -

of arts and crafts given him by Jap;nese as a demonstration of good will. Since arriving home after six years in Japan he has toured New South Wales; Victoria,

BERLIN (NC)-For the ,first time in the history of Germany a Catholic became chief of state when Dr. J-Ieinrich Luebke of the Christian Democratic party was elected President of the Federal Republic of Germany by members <of the West German ParliaHighly respected, but not so ment and representatives of widely known as a number .of 11 states. For the first time, other Ge;man political figures, President Luebke has said of too, the two highest German himself: "I am ~ot man of posts are filled by Catholics publicity .. who likes footlights. since Chancellor Konrad Adenauer, the nation's political leader I am a man of work." continues in office. Despite the tradition that the two posts should not both 'be held by members of the same religion, Dr. Luebke has the full NEW YORK (NC)-James M. confidence of the nation's ProConnolly, a ' former Brooklyn testants. This was stated in June by Lutheran Bishop Otto Dibelnewsman, has been elected to • ius. second one-year term as presi'. A former Minister of Food dent of the Catholic Institute of and Agriculture, Dr. ."Luebke the Press here. succeeds President Theodor The institute is a local organHeuss; a Protestant and former ization for Catholics engaged in member of the Free Democrats. newspaper, magazine, radio or The new President, 64, is the TV work, as well as in the allied second chief of state of Western fields of communications. Gennany since the end of World Moderator of the institute is Wal' II. He was a staunch antiMsgr. Timothy J. Flynn, director Nazi during the Hitler dictatorship-during which he spent ~ of radio and TV for the New 20 months in jail. ' YorK archdiocese.

a

Press Institute ::Re-elects Head

NEWLY ORDAINED: A reception was held at St. Hyacinth Parish Hall, New Bedford for Rev, Donald L. Paradis, M.S., left, 'La Salette Missionary. With him are his mother, Mrs. Roland Paradis,. an~ his

bro~her,~ev. Mr. Paul Paradis ••

M. S. Father ParadIs was ordamed

In Rome recently, and celebrated, his first Mass in this country at St. Hyacinth Church.. ' '

Many ..... Yorkers' L' earn Spanl,S •h I~ew

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Help ,P'uerto R".·cans' AdJ·ust

, Queensland and the'FederalCap- ,T~ ' ital Territory with his display. . He will shortly visit Australia's NEW YORK (NC)-A joint Increasing visits to Puerto island st:lJe of Tasmania to show city and Puerto Rican ·govern- Rico by city officials to meet 'his "treasur chest" of dolls, ,mental C9mmittee has reported island counterparts. miniature houses, Oriental ma- . "heartening" progl'ess in New The distribution of "hundreds donna~ and other exhibits. York's program for the adjust- of thousands" of leaflets in SpanPreviously, Father Glynn, one ment of Puerto Rican residents. ish. of three Glynn brothers who beExpansion of Spanish-speakIn its report to Mayor Robert came Marist priests, toured New F; Wagner, the committee cited ing personnel, so that "Where , Zealand on his "good will" misan expansiOli of Spanish-speak- just a few years ago the lan.ion. In New Zealand he reing personnel and an incre~sing guage barrier was an obstacle to ceived the first of the samurai development of Puerto Rican effective communication, we awords he will return to Japaft. leadership here. The Police De- 'find -this is significantly less of a' problem today." partment alone reported more The report was the first from' than 1,500 of its 23,000 members , now have some command of a continuatioris, committee set up in January, 1958,- by the third Spanish. ,Approximately one out of 12 migration conference held in San, , WASHINGTON (NC)-PostNew Yorkers-or some 670,000 Juan, P. R., under auspices of master General Arthur E., Sumthe Puerto Rican Commonwealth persons--=-are of Puerto, Rican merfield said here he does not understand hoy! many passages birth or parentage. This compares and New York City governin the novel "Lady Chatterley's with 245,800 such residents in ments. \ Lover" can be regarded as "any- \ the 1950 census. . The report cited increased efthing else but filth." He made the statement in com- forts by Puerto Rico to guide persons migrating, here. These menting on the controversy . which has arisen since his June ' have" set up local Mayor's ori-, TRIVANDRUM (NC)- Seven entation programs in 25 munici11 ruling that the D. H. Lawbishops representing the Chrispalities, distributed two million I rence novel is obscene and may tian churches of Kerala told Inpieces of lit.erature on the island not be sent through the mails. dia's Prime Minister Jawaharland intensifieL English instrucThe book's publishers and a , al Nehru here that every section tion, now given daily on all 29 book club which 'wants to disof the population and all demoradio and six television stations tribute the book to its members cratic parties have been taking there. ' are seeking to have the Postpart in the preseJ1t agitation Among New York's contribumaster General's ruling reversed against the communist ,governtions, the report noted: by the courts. ment of the state of Kerala. In judging the book obscene, The churchmen - three of Mr. Summerfield said: "I made them Catholics and four of them no claim of being a literary critic bishops of other Christian comin the professional sense. But I Rev. Henri Laporte, O.P., pas- munities-presented Mr. Nehru feel I have some sense as to tOI' of St. Anne's Church, Fall a memorandum on the Kerala what is decent and what is filcrisis during a 45-minute interRiver, serve on the executhy, as most normal people do view here. The meeting, which tive committee of the province have, and filth is filth." took place during the Premier's of St. 'Dominic for the next four three-day visit to this state capyears. ital to study the situation, wa. . The province includes 12 termed "very cordial." Canadian monasteries and two General meeting' of Particular in the United States. Father Laporte is at present attending Council of Fall River, Society of St. Vincent de Paul, will be held he, 10 day execuive committee meeting which followed the proat 2 P.M. Sunday, July 19, at St. vincial chapter meeting where Vincent de Paul Health Camp, he 'was elected_Both are held in • AUTO BODY AHD Westport, President Jerome D. St. Hyacinthe, Quebec. Foley announces. , GENERAL REPAIRS Benediction of the M os t 75 Bellville Ave. WY 3-7661 Blessed Sacrament will be held in the chapel at 4 P.M. Members New Bedford have been it:vited to bring their wives and families with them to enjoy the camp's facilities while A Delicious JOSEPH M. F, DOHAGHY members attend the meeting. owner/mgr. Treat President Foley reminds the 142 Campbell .St. members, active and honorary of theil' obligation to assist at Mass Hew 8edf~, Mass. and receive Holy Communion in' WYman 9-6192 \ theil' own church on this day, HEADQUARTERS FOI , during the Ocfave, 01' on any COLONIAL AND day within the eig~t days preftAOITIONAl FURNITURE eeding the Feast, July 19.

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Postmaster Says Novel is Filthy

Kera 10 ,Bishops Oppose Reds

Fall River Dominican Provincial Official .

"THE FLAMING FRONTIER

• e • between CbrisUanit, aDd Communism burna nowhere more brlrhtl, than in EZHJKKARA (Ernakulam,. , So. India)," writes the brave Blsbop of the diocese of Ernakulam. This Is not a' new situation, the skurrle haa rone on without eeasinr. And It Is onl, now that Catholics of the Important village of EZHIKKARA hav" asked for help. A parish Church aDd parish hall would help them In their struggle against the evel' pressing foe Tilt HJy Fallxr'r M;mo" Ak.' of Communism. The)' Deed $2,500youI' check will bring you effectively tht Orimlal ChNrrh into the thick of the baUle, and yCHI will not have to leav.e )'our TV!'

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EAT LESS DURING THE WARM WEATHER 18 COMMON ADVICE OFTEN GIVEN US DURING THE SUMMER. YOUR REFUGEE CHILDREN DO NOT NEED SUCH WARNINGS ...THEY NEVER HAVE ENOUGH TO EAT, .. TEN DOLLARS WILL STILL FEED AN ENTIRE FAMILY FOR A WEEK .•• SEND A FOOD PACKAGE TODAY. SISTER EMILIA and SISTER GlSELE have always had great devotion to Our Lady of Mount Carmel (Feast July 16). T.hey have asked Her to help us lind a benefactor who will make it possible for them to devote their lives to Her service I of the poor in Lebanon., Each girl must have a sponsol' who will be willing to pay hel' necessary expenses of $150 a year .. during the two year period, of novitiate training. Would you like to have a "nun Ia the family?" Here is your chance. IT IS UNNECESSARY TO TEI,L YOU of the need for a strong native clergy In India. The Holy Father, himself, has told us many times. It is for us to tell you that ALEXANDER and JACOB wish to enter the semiuary in iIIi:i!IJ!iI!!!!!reilllI Mangalore. Each bo)' needs a sponsor who will paY.. his necessary expenses of ~~!!i!I!i!!i1iJ $100 a year during the six year semlo~!IlIi'iiii-J ary period. Would you like to have a L: "priest in the family?"

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'Fall River Particular Council Meets July 1

LECH GARAGE

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MASS OF.Ii'ERINGS ARE THE SUPPORT OF YOUR MISSION· ARY PRIESTS . . . WOULD YOU CARE TO SEND SOME BEFORE YOU' LEAVE ON YOUR VACATION? HELP YOUR PRIESTS AND HELP YOURSELF! HEALTH ••• STRENGTH ... RELAXATION .• '. REST are the main topics of thought and talk durin« the Summer month. and days of vacation. While we are in this constructive frame of mind perhaps we can spare a minute to think of the health and strength of our soul as well as our body. A membership iD the CATHOUC NEAR Missions will bring untold spiritual atrength to your soul sinctt you share in the Masses and sacrlflees of OUI' Hoi, Father, Cardinal Spellman, missionary priesta and nuns. Wh, Dot 611 iD the blliDk below before 'OU leave OD YacaUon? . "Dear Cardinal Spellman: In gratitude to Almighty God for all His gifts. as well as for the welfare of my own soul I would like to share in the spiritual benefits of a membership in the Catholic Near East Welfare . Assoeiation ($1 for an annual membership; $20 for perpetual membership).

Pope .Contributes

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GENEVA (NC) - Pope John XXIII has donated $1,000 for combating malaria to the World Health Organization it was announced here by Dr. M. C. Cand!ui, director general of WHO, who said the Pontiff's donation is a powerful encouragement to governmenfs and private organizations which have been asked ,to take part in a worldwide, campaign to raise the$100,000,OO(t needed yearly to cOqibat malaria .effectively.

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CiTy •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• : •••••••••••

~'l1ear rast01issions~ , FRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN, President Mlgr. Peter P. Tuohy, Nat'l Sec'., Send all communication,',o: .

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. Pope John's firstencyclic.ll points out the specIal d u t y . of the press, radio, mo~ing,pictures·anq.t~lev:isionIlolonly I to refrain from the 'dissemination of error; lies'an.d obscenity but to publicize what leads to 'good and virtuous practices. , :' . This does not mean that the Pope aridtne':Chiirch:'ex- '. .. 'pect these agencies to·become 'the right aI-,'m of the C . • ,burCh,. .... \ '. in its' battle for virtue and against eviJ., Thesemedi'a' have:,., .

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"which' sh'e repeatedly.re·pulsed,' entertamment cannot say and slww wh~t~..-v~r:t.heywlsh~ .".. . ." ; . .. . :..' .' IIi. ..JulY, .. i~92 a ·lew m: 6'iJth" . .. . • 1..' 'f" . th" '. .. th . . ' .', .' after 'she 'had .madehe'r F,irSt . In' the 'case<of; the rlglits 0 . mene: ,w IssilelS ra er:· " .. Comniu~ion, the youth .~ttacked clear~cut:Let' wpapedibel a'mail and'he sl,le.L.efa.~oy-, . her arid' when.' she. resisted··.hi. ';. · il1gp~dure attempt to pOr.tray 'tlie ·life 'of ~ in9iv~di.Ial and· . " advance he stabbed her 14 times. ., · he; wilJ step.·iii· t9' profe~t. . " .... She died sh'9rtly 'aft~rward, for~,~ · .' The jssue becomes clouded when· thel1aws ·of God are ." giving. her' murderer. The 'youth . · · w a s sentenced' to 30: ye'ars .i1l · at stake. The· recent Supreme Courtdecisio'n upsetting -3, .., . . .. prison; was.t:e~eased after 27 . 'New"Y~rkbanonan 'ad,ultery~approyi~g~ovIeOis'acase ill" years because o~ good behavior, " pOInt. The'Court was apparentlyuriwil1in~to, accept'; the '" arid continued to lead a life Of . law God as sacrad and areawliichrriu~tbe protected.; . 'penluiceand devotion to'th~ girl' .And~·siIice G6d' will not raise a. pe"rsonal objection the' Court he killed..St: Maria .Goretti was , beatified' in 1945 and c3rlonized 'can very weU have its w a y . ' 1 : i nthe Holy Year' of 1950. Her· ~. If 'the rightS: men must be ·safegluarde~" so' much moth~r, 'Assunta G'oretti,o wu more the laws of God." If the' press and m,ovies infringe· on present· at her canonization: the law of GOd, there' must be restriction, e i t l 1 e r s e l f ' : i m - T O M o R R O W - T h e Seven · posed or by law. All would w.ish that .~he restriction be.$elf"'7Vo~ . Brothers and SS. Rufina'and Secunda, . Martyrs. The Seven enforced. But, unfortuNately,. there are .those .who cannot. ".' • _ . . ' . '. Brothers 'were~he sons of St. see or:w'ill not seethe truth. Andoso men of good will~men K e e p ·'.Felicitas, Martyr; They were' who love God-have the right to insist, Ui~t the press an'd . . ',.... . ' . -'.' JamiaI-ius, Feliz and Philip, who radio 'and,;-movie industry' and television 1?e held.W ~.rever~ werescourg'ed to death;' Slyence the"laws .of .God. ' .. .xc~en VICevanus,th~ownfr~m ~ precipice, .. and Alexander. VltalIs and Mar. . •.. ' '.... . . .'

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· those· who look. upon adultery as pro~i:'. ~nd: its'· ~rtray.~l . St,Dominjc's Church, S,wl'nsea . died 'abo~t 150. ::?S. Rufina and as ~uchis only ipk~eping with their:vieWk~i.i,c.!t:a*,:~riu.,. .... Some lJIonthsago iny esteemed classmate penned the f01:-: Secunda were Roman women.' m-e.iIt can be'advanc~din favor of every type. ofevir.:.;Th...~~~··lowing"froni::his:re(:tQrY.ol).Nantucket Isle' --,-: ':1 hope. the, . who were 'put to death by Val..: .. are. tho.se·who th.ink dope-addiction and theft are·va!idJormg' . : 'hew highwaY':aoesJiof·go·through my kitehe.n.o' Dear. Dean '.'~rial1 abo~t 257: ' .; " , . .' • 'SArURDAY-,-St.Pius I, Po~.., . " . ., '. of'seif~exi>ression: 'The Courtwould.neverldreamQf'gi,vin'.,fear:not:,.My.galleyis as safe from an intrusion as' a .Martyr. He succeeded PopE;' St. t.he~epr?~ection by.,law:_ . .... .: . ; ' : . ." :.' ~ " Lawrenc,e Welk~ecital at '~a~ of the La'rd, make ~traig~t' Hyginusin 140. He may have " . God Is·longsuffermg; Tread ,on ,the rIghts ofan_mdI'" " the '.,recent .Newport Jazz His paths.. Eyery valley shall.be 'been brotlier of'Hermas, au... vidual and 'tha.t p,erson, will objeCt quicklyl. ·Do vi.olence to Festival. ..' .•. filled, and every mountain and.. thor °of'~The Shepherd'.' and, if I S O ~ was, like his ·brother, born a .th~laws ofGo~and God willleavethedefellce inlhehal1ds · I n fact,' my shavin'g sal~n hill shall be brought lo~ ana .~lave. During 'his' . pontificate; of His thildren, That is why all men who are concerned with .. escapes the new construction by" the .crooked. way stIall be made . he dealt energetically .. ~~th' . God must speaklip.·and object when;H'is Ia:ws violated.', twe.nty-two: h~,ndr:ed and riiri~ty. straIgh~, ~and the rou~h.,~aysquestions of Church discipline .' .' . . I h ., k I..·· ". seven' yards, exactly matchmg smooth, and a.ll mankmd shall 'and' actively opposed the Gnostic . That ~s ~hy th.e mdlVH:lu~ s w 0 rna ~ upa cO~JOum~y, in yardage the number of, dollars' see the salvation of Gqd' "., heretics. It is.not certain. whether must mSlst agaIn andagam that they h~i"~ sta~dards .m.my good people !'Iere. at .Saint ' . Pat~In!o Hearts heW-as put to deil th , but he.!1ler"keeping with the. laws of God. And the pre~s, radlO;~ovles . Dominic's contributed' ~o our I It should be immediately' ob.,. ited the ·title 'of Martyr through and television must not be allowed to fall .beneath those recent Catholic Charities Ap- vious to all that good Saint John the. hardships he endured durstandards' . ; _ peal. . was not laying out a super-high-. ing his·reign.He died. in 155.. '. • I '• While sparing our, parochial way' for transcontinental dra'g- .. I possessions, this contemplated .racing. H.is. sights, being celestial, . SUNDAY-St. John Gualbert, A nobleman of · . master route through our usually coni:entrllted themselves on mak_ 'Abbot-Confessor, . ., . .peaceful area has failed to deal . 'ingstraight th~ path of the Mak~ Florence, he was born in 999. . It is heartening to see 'that there are many. 'individuals in such a 'kindly' manner w.ith oui' er,' into. the hearts a~dsouls of Seeking to' avenge the murder of all faiths who· still put the homage of God fir~t: These parish in genera1.4ctually, w~ mankind.·His aims, being heav_' of his brother, he apprehended men. and women of the mind 'that the ~eaceof. Sunday . are rent asunder. Truly,: we are enly, directed' themselves'. to ' 'the slayer on Good Friday, but . ..' ". .' '" I " . •. ,. ' . . , a sermon he heard on the exmust be kept inviolable and should .not bow to the dollar.' ·.";i1l1 shook up.". ' ... leading creatUJ;es safely along .. ' ample o'f Christ on the Cross '. The reaction to the ·"business as usual 'on Sunday" cry' Steam' ·.sh~vels· b'iting' away, . the heavenly highway to. the changed the -course of his life is' that this is. an 'attempt, at sheer 'comm~rCialislJf'and bUll-doze~s"PJlshin~ ., ,around, et~rnal ~b.odeof the Omn!p,ot~nt, '. and' he freed the wrongdoer. He . • • I ' ." • _ cause :the resultant pIcture, were Creator.. '. . . ' . , entered the religious lifeahd sacrIfIce of the hon.o~ due to Go~ on the. altarl of. materIalIsm.: it . viewed froina 'heHcbpte~ "Eyer~ valley ~hall be filled; . founded the monas'tic Order Of Some worth~whlle suggestIons have been put forward . cruising .overhead; to take. 'on sounds bke a clanon call for th~ Vallurnbrosa; He died' at Paii- ' that the so-called'Sund~lY blue laws n~~d:revision':'Certain" thelikene~s of a pil~d-up cutti~gco~plete annih.i~a~ion of .all ~eg- signano; one' of' his ·fou~datioils~. lobbies. have succeeded in'. securing. ,exemJtions :for. their' room floor ,ir a, belabo!-"ed Holly-' . atIve trans~~ess~ons .aga.mst the, in. 1073 and was' cano'nizec:i: 'by . ; . ' .•• ." I. • . wood StudlO. . law of God. FaIlure to observe . , . products whIle other SImIlar products are stIllrestrlcted~' . Trees are felled wa'lls ~emol-' Friday abstiiience can never be Pope Celestine III., in 1193. All are agreed that there are andshotil~ ·be reasonable : ished home.s taken" down of . j~stified' . by· .the loud lament ~ONDAY - St Anacletull,. . . ' . I' ,. , . th Ch Pope-Martyr. Also know~as st. exemptions· demanded by charity and' necessity., . . . . .- carted. away' to ,new ·l~cations. at, rist s~lecte~ 12 fishermen ,ClI:itus, he 'Nas the third Pope "But let th'erebe a uriited front agaiJlstlany ~uld' aJI at-~ With·the advent 'of new aven- wh~n, He m!ght Just as easily and reigned from 76 to .88. He .,' 'd rna k e S un day, "" . lues travel we have garnered have ~hosen a ~ozen~Holy butchers. said to.have been ordained to · t emp . t s t'0 rl'd"ICU I'e·the I"aws.an . more '. of passes 'th . Sacri - is '. . a commerCIa, " , an a. G'I ; . crap, .. Absence from'the . the pries.thood by St. Peter: . . . . day. . game-over passes underpa!jses flce on Sunday mornings is inTUESDAY S . - t. Bonaventure, I ' . ito passe.s at all, J'~st dead ends'. e.xcusable in most cases, Top .bil- ' . 1 Bishop - ConfesSQr - Doctor. : He To make .matters' worse , a dust dmg for · _ h" the Mass . .on your Sun- was 'born at Bagnorea. in 1'221. O b.owl recently raised its earthly . ay sc: 7dule will mean mOrf~. on One of the man\L.-national polls has tried to clarify t h e' baptismal nafl1e' was Jo~n r powder in ,our midst. Randy, J u d gmen t D .ay t h"an will the pre.,. His but he was called Bonaventure mo~t pressing problems that the country' hds to, face.. ' . Louis and Joe; local protectors sence of tlie same word oil your (good- fortune) by St. F1'3ncis of Ther.e are. the usual categories ofpeac~, housing and .. of the-"pea'ce, put in a full and 1959 li<:,ense plate. .Assisi j who cured' him miracu-· .' . B ut som~ . . I· \ . Sinful.' Fa. iIings CrIme. people feel that over':populafion will be one b. u~y' " da.. y g~iding. 'sem. i-l1lind.e.d lously as a child. ··He became"8 of t.he g.reat.. probJem!,. o. t. th,e' fu, ture, and that t.!l,~.~oy~rn~ . drivez:s tWqugh the ,hazard~Us Neglecting fulfillment of' the Franciscan at the age of 20 and san,dy clo~ds! along WIth leadmg Easter Duty precept will never at 26 was 'Mit'tister General·.Of ment sh~uld prepare for this n,ow.. . ' ':'. . .' Joe P. Pestrian safely across the enlist you ih the rank of the the Order. Once when asked by , , Xt IS to b~ hoped that .,the .governmeJ?-t WIll prepare street, .lest prematurely he col_ holy ones when the saints come' St. Thomas Aquinas' where tie for this by planning on af expanded economYlin which many lect a r:serv~tion as a,n overnight marching in. Splitting the fam- re'ceived his 'great learning, he more millions of people in the, country' can enjoy a high guest m hIS favonte funeral ily and levelling the home makes replied by pointing to a crucifix. standard of living and. the freedoms of adembcracy.· home. presumptious 'the hope that He was the advisor of St. Louis It is· to be further hoped that nothing 'so 'unscientific 'Clear the Way' Catholic Charities will c'onsign ' and of St. Isabella, the King's In the inteJ;est.of speed and se~ to your neglected children a sister. He. was nominated Arch.:. and unnatural as birth control be put forwarl:I as an answer c:urity 'all··this knifing o'er the perpetual lease on i deluxe bishop of York but declined the to the problem.. For birth control is not ah ans~;er to a . meadows and through the woods split-level mansion. honor. In 1273 he was created problem-it IS a capitulation. ' has been deemed essential. ,Hard-hearted abandonment of .Cardinal Bishop of Albano. ~_'-~ Wherever we are going, it is aging, dependent par~nts lays no Known as the "seraphic'Doctor," I considered imperative that we just claim to the shouldering of he died in 1274'during the Counarrive there 'faster and more your responsibilities by an al- cil of Lyon. . I safely. Distance must shrink. Ac- ready overtaxed parochial St. WEDNESDAY....,.St. Henry n, cidents .must diminisll, Casual-' , Vincent' de 'Paul' Conference. Emperor. A· desceridant of ties must. ,:be lessened;·' Against' So it goes. These and all other 'Charlemagne, he "was "born in the hour of crisis; a'dequate av- sinful failings r:1f. omission c'ry Vavaria in 972 and was known as , . . .... , . . . .. .,.,.. . .. , .. ' . ' . , I· . . . enues of, efficient .evac'uation for' burial. ,Don't summon a Henry the. Good. He' was 'eduOFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER ,qiust be provided. No· o,bstacle . priest. Open your do-it':yourseIf- cated by St. Wolfgimg of Ratis-: Published weekly by Th~ Catholic.Press of th~ Dio~ese of Fall Ri~er ~ay remain sta'nding, The order kit, and get to work. Pitfalls bon. He becameempe'ror in' IO/)2 410 Highland Avenue I . of the' da~"Clear tpe W,ay.". must go. Valleys must be filled. and with his em'press, St. CuneFall 5 : 7 1 5 1 ' Long' centuries ago John the The highway to heaven must be' gundis, did much 'for relIgion R.iver, Mas~. . O~borne I Baptist (neither Southern nor on the level: during troublou's :times. He" had PUBLISHER' i"'· Northern~just Baptist)' spoke "Every mountain·and hill shall a special love' for the Benedic-' Most. Rev. James L: Connolly,' D.O., [PhD. . the same language, presented the . be brought low." Roadblocks to tines and tried to become a GENERAL M,6;NAGe'R ASST. GENERAL MANAGER same.bl!le-print. The!jaintly Pre- man's attaining to the salvation m~mbei of that Order. For this '. ,. I ". '.- cursor of the Loid, the.'Herald of of God, more .formidab·le in co.n-. reason .he wa. ii Ilamed .·by' p.ope'.. Rev. Daniel F: ...-Shalloo. M.A. Rev. John P. Driscoll .quoting . Isaias, .de- struction; more lasting' in'endu~ Piul;'X as the'patron'of the Ben,the Me~siah, MANAGING EDITOR I clared ....The ..voice Qf one 'crying ance than the Iron ana' Bamboo edictine Oblates. He died in. 1026 ....~~.g.h,J •. <:~Iden ", w.. ' .th~"d~·ser~ ,'1'1a~~, ready' tho' :. Turato Page,.~ixte~~.' arid was canonized in li46.:

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.!,Thvf'S..". July" 9,1:959

y~ars 1904'tO 1914'are among the most important in the life, ~f A,.ngelo· R~Q~~"now P~ John~~IU. FQr,t)lose lQ years.:were.lived ..in,e}Ose re1a~on and.development WIth ·the, ·intelligent, sensitive and arlstocraticBi'shop of Ber-' " gamo~ Count .Giacomo "Maria Radini Tedeschi. Often af~r}' hia electiol1~ Pope Joh~~PQ~e in:.detail the~ishoP'lI.,V:iewsarXt!';" thQse years .and. ' Of .hia adionson ·soci~I· problems., . long departed " friend .. and One of the Bi~hop~. decisions guide. In almost:every speech indicates how advanced he 'was'

l?t~E.~E OF· FALn, IUIlER'•. "

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P.re'o~e's,-Report :

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for' <.~. 'fir~,:y'ears of the 20th .. cQming. ~un:renjcal council touching on Bergamo;' th~ centtVY:' Tfu{'factory; wo~keJ'$,.~t c ..h~ already bE,!en ~t in. m<r 'Pope' 'pa'id. tribute to,th~'man' ' , ';: . " " .' Ra~ca.' nm Bergamo, .in., 1909' tio~. j;ly the major adPlinistrative whom he served as secretarY wentoristrlke to gain the iight offices of t1ie Church,. Po~ JohD forlO,years. ' '. to:or~,n~~.uriions.', '.~ ,._ XXIDhair'beert told, . . ' , Despife:::cl"nicism' and comI"'" This report waS. given tiy .. 'Secre'bry to Leader' pliiint3;\tbe' .13il\hop:sympathized ..; ,l}omenicoC'ardinalTardini, Vat.. PrC;v~den'ce ~r,da~rted .ij.l.at th~' with' \t~, ~riit~r.S.and ,actively i<;:an Secr.etary of State, to· the ~oble Ral;iini Tedeschi. sho~ld supported: 'them..cAfter the. 50first full Sf!ssion, of the prepar~­ choose as his most intimate as':' day si~~~ endec( ,I'9pe'Pius,?C tOry commission. for the councii sistant tbe 23~year-c;id 'peasarit . sent Ilim' a letter saying, "We which the Holy Father has athoy from Sotto il Monte. In docannot di~p'prov~ •.wh,at you tended. ' irlg sO' Pro.vidence· struck' hard ha'lre thought, pnident: to do , Car.dinal Tardini told the Pope at Father Roncalli's ambiiion to sinice yo,U' were. fully' acqU1Hrit:-~ that: thecommissi,on has begun be"a parish priest. He w~s t9, ed:: with the place, the personS its work and soon will begin wait' almost 50 years before he involved and the circumcould exercise the ministry as stances." : asking for the opinions and ad.. vice 'of the' bishops. 'and othel!ll a pastor of souls. ' A n d it' was Radini TedesChi who win. attend the council' .' 'Don Angelo moved into' the who pointed out to Roncalli that The' Pope expressed his grati,. mainstream of national' and in:' "prudence .does not consist in tude for the commission's work temational life the day he doing nothing. It means to act moved into the Bishop's house and act well: and: said" the proposed coundl :hil& already attracted: great in';: in Bergamo. The Bishop had The youn'g secretary was not t:el'est, although tber~ have been been an oJificial of' the Vatican confined to the chancery office. Secretariat· of State· for 15 years. At the 'age of 23,' he. was alsO . suggestions ana eonjectul'es reo. He 'had been a'quasi'''Ainbassa- professor of Patristics,,~Church gardil\lg its:.scope that have lit~ relation to fact, , dar!' in Italy, active in all forms History ,and Apolegetics at the of social progress and aware of Bergamo 'seminary, .' '. .. He added iliat it. strould' be- ~ . , membered, above .il11:;,. that.' the political changes. ' ' ;:Former' sttidents of his' say be' Father Roncalli· learned' the was,.well liked, particularly be- , .. .council is being called to Show· practi~al application of Chris-' cause. his lectures were' given.', ·that the Chur~h, witl'li. ils ·v~~. tian principles·.to nation81 and with"(mthusiaSm, conviction and" riety Qf' rite~ di~ne' activi·tie. world affairs at· the Bishop'. spi~ed""with.,coiorfuI 8needo~es: EPISCOP At SECRETARY: Don RoncalJi as. he -ap-; and unbreakable unity, intend. lIide. His alert mind,'followedhis' Ms~. Giuseppe, Angiolini,' a t'o :Icl'rfeVe new' Vigor' in 'CaiTyinc pearedml906 when he,' . secretary io Bishop · '" :,. ~ ' ~ superior''S: activities. aDd ·deci... former student and.today Spir." .ouHts: di..ine missimr. ' ions. 'l'hUlf the last touches to the itual ,Directot .of the Bergamo .·The work. took. Angelo RoDtf1atoa. .tfte ~ tile Pope bad formation of the fanner',··SOIl . Seminary' recalls, that . '~Don caIli 5(f' years.' to" cOmplete, and eon~ra~ hiin.aBisl'rop ten to were applied. Ro~calli!s class ani'his CODVe!'then, ~yw~tb ~eassistance ~ year~ previoUs, 'Pius X told"IHrn ., Before· entering Bergamo; saiion were. alway. .attr8ctive another. But he,k;eptat it stea~- that lle wouI:d. come to take him or. en, ,ro ems;, Bishop Radini Tedeschi visited and exciting and (students) , iIy.' During the years in Bul:Witb him for etemitJ'. THE HAG1!JE (NC):- SpectiaI the tomb ot St. Charles Borrom- waited' for his appearance with ilaria, . :rurke,.~ Greece. France J ....... th • f 11_~ plans have- been maxie for' eatII, , . Dl'..-)'eaI' a.. O~>UW1:<I, ' o'l~. seml1ll" ...,.; _ ~-. 1 and even Venice be worked Oft ... .4.&. __ .... _ 11.: _, h' ~, eo, the great figure of the count- pleasur;lble' expectation." . .a ......... .-.l1ca ~. lInsell "nrobIems. 011 worke-' in ttn. er-reformation, at. Milan. A few The seCretary and hi. Bishop the volumes', wi~ .his ~uties u a seminary .,... days· later he and his secretarystia'red a devotion to St. Charles 'Over the years five volumes Professor ane with his work on oountry>s indl$try, traveled to Lourdes to visit the BorromeO.The saint unexpect:were published, The fifth arid the papers of St. Charles. He Tile Catholic Employers' 0.s,hrine of Our Lady of the Im- edly'provided the young priest final one' was issUed after he bealso begaDl the biography of the ganizatiou.. in the Netherlands illovites groups from maj:or Dutch maculate Conception. Then they with 'a task that would take him came' Pope. At'·tbe time of its . 0 nl' .",..;, Bhiish.I<JP,._.Who loomed so large ill sem1·narl·eg' to ~'l'Sl··t .4a·.. and it 'carried 'Y"':n:: _...... • .t, "· t~l··es U~ travel~ on to Ars, France, to sO years to complete. It also in- publication,' . ., , diScuss workers" problems.. The pray at the shrine of the thentroduced him. to' another· priest name'Of the Patriarch of Venice' . Without lUsi knowing. it;. a seminarians ha,ve'srrowo' peat Blessed, now St: John Mary Viwho like" Angelo Roncalli waS· and not'that of the Pope. His instrumons were to sSy only that 'chaptez' of his Hfe' was cfusing interest in labor. Many o~ t~ anney, .th-e Cure of Ars,. patron alSdfu be 'a pope. .,.. ., it was '<wrltterl" by the same for Angelo ·Roncalli. World War . ask permission to work in· faco~ pa~~h priests.... ,. .. It ail began' when ~n Angelo Roncalli who wrote the· oth«' I had begun and another stint"tories· and' o~ices during their , The first months in Bergamo. liappened tofirid a series of do'c. ..the a~ was: near· at ~d. ~ holid'ays. The seminary auth<mw:~re .spent i~ a generalsur:vey UtnfmtB relating to St.' Charlei' four,'? · A1J . Roncalli' came tO~· know (~ext, ~k:'.See HorrOR )ties also' encourage' studenta' te ~f.,th~. di~cese, On. Dec.. 8,.1905,. pastdrarvisitii,toBergarrio'in the the Bishop' began his pastora! 16th century. The documents Msgr. Ratti through"his'scholaJr',." o.~War Firstband) , ta)l:e,.~art inwo~k camps;.. visits. On Pentecost, 1909, lie' ;locatea 'in the 'archives of ly intel'ests.lIO too he came into ~ompl~ted ·Utem,. visiting 'all 352 the Archbistldp of Milan:' , /', contact with atbe!' leaders of, the ..... "ij) THE ~,EMB~ ~ND, FRIENDS OF THE p'ai'ishes in his. dioce~e, accom:';. .,,', ,', ,- , Church,. of Italy· and Of· Europe pimied ·bY ~ his secretary. ' . :"Wli~t a pl~a'sant surpr-,ise for throulih .the Bishop. .'. . ' . , ., . tP:e,~ 'th;e' ~ut,ure pope ..wrote" '1;. Prior to goiDg to Bergamo; Parallels ~ound.llere.detailed d~ume,tts,. Of these years, most of' the in- most. interesting .documepfs>' Radin! Tedes¢hi had resigned as formation available comes from about the life of the Church in a' <lireclot' _of'a Catholic social, the, biography which Don ·Anthe 'Bergamo diocese' in its moSt economic and' political organizagelo wrote of his superior after characteristic period. when ev- tion called Opera dei Congressi Bishop Radini Tedeschi died. It eryone was working for the re- because certain' hoFhead proStreet~ gressives wished to push CathO"not only tells. about the Bishop newal of religious life." lic political participatiOn in tile but'it points the way of the fu• It 'was 1906 and Father Ron.,. ture pope. calli was only 26' but, despitehia national life 'of Italy too fast. MARSHFIELD, MASS. Love ad Lo:raltJ' Among Radini Tedeschi's first youth, he decided he would edit In Bergamo the Bishop was projects. was ·the restoration of llnd publish the forgotten papBEHERr - NURSING SCHOlARSHIP FUND the crypts of the bishops of Berers,"He overlooked the fact that engrossed with his diocesan afCome after breakfast-bring along your lunch-enjoy • gamo. Roncal!:. was to do the there were 39 volumes of pareh-· fairs and withdrew born u.e . Bor-b-q,ue at. 4:30 P.M. - Swimming. Crochet. etc. same thing in Venice when he ment arid that the projectcoold nationai area Of Catholic social action. There were· those .who became Patriarch of the City of take a full'-time scholar a lifeAll FOR $11,00' iaw in' his withdrawal signs of the Lagoons, time.. Get prfnted directions from any member of the Catf\ofic' mOre, significant. One finds parallel after paralIt was natural that he should sometbing i Nurses Guild or Mary L Mccabe, R,N., 1'10 Broad'way, There were ~those who said be leI in. the actions of the Bishop consult the prefect of the Arnof Bergamo and in the actions brosiana Library in Milan, a was out of sympathy with 'Pope taunton, ·Mass. Please make reservatioM by July 1:4th. of the Venetian Pa~riarch, Carscholarly priest named Achille Pius X and the Pope's condemnadinal Roncalli. Reading of the Ratti, later Pope Pius XI. The tion of the doctrine of modem. ~ . . . Bishop's concern for modernlz- meeting between the ,two was 1Stn. ing seminary life, for instructing typical of them both, These insinuations troubled his clergy for the introduction ~ncalli, with .the boldnea of Radlni TedeKhi greatly, And of pure liturgy, and for devoyouth,. yet with .natural reSpect Angelo Roncalli shared his sadtion to the saints, it is as though for the great Kholar. who WlUI ness. Although he granted that. one were reading about the 'conalso older than he, presented his perhaps the Bishop worded cerns and activities of Cardinal idea .of making a critical editioQ more· than necessary about the Roncalli more than 40 years of the material. remarks of critics, Father Ronlater. Ratti, the wide and ~peri- cani~s biography stresses heavily Don Angelo traveled a great enced man, did nothing to kill his. superior's love of the Pope deal more than most Italian di- Roncalli's enthusiasm but called and his loyalty, expressed both ocesan priests of his ti~e. Fiye his attention to the vastness 01. public' and privately. ·,to the times he accompanied the Bish- the project. Chair of Peter, op to LOJ,lrdes. With 'the BishOp , Roncalli himself tells bow . BEGINS TUESDAY, JUlY 1'4th Chapter Eads who was President of the Italian Msgr,' Ratti went' througb the In bad' health from 1910 on, Pilgr'images Asso~iation, young parchment volumes and recomBishop ~dii1i' TedeSchi died in Father Roncalli journeyed to ~~nae~ that the' busy secretary the arms of the man who had Franc~. Switzerland, 'Spain, the eoncentrate on volume six lind NOVENA PREACHER: 'FR~ STE~HEN ,.McMAHON~ O.f.M. Holy Land, Germany an4Aus- seven which ~eemed to have the served hini' as friend and secretary for ten yea'n. Dying, he're'tria. . . " . greatest material relating. to peated the prayers whispered by ., .Bishop's Influence· Bergamo. . Our I:.cidYs· . C~apelFranCi~c:an ~'hers B'i~hop Radini Tedeschi, once a '" He suggested that two '11'01- Don' Angelo: "Oh Jesus crucified, . ',. , " , ., 'forgive my "sins;'I love YOU', p'rofessor of Christian . sociology Urnes should be the baSiS fO~ 5'72 , ~ASAN.l S1i~, I\IEW :BEDFORD I' love You; I love You, !,.:" .' in" Rome and' very. active' ill gener'81 outiine ·of. the work. · He died on Au.g" 2:2, 1914, tw~ Catholic social' activities, "cer- Photostats of the dOe1mientS ·Tel. .WYmaA 6-$214 'tairily in,fIueneed his young - . were'made"un(ier R!l~'s:Per8oit~ days after £he, deat~ of' P~ PIUS' X. 'ThlS was' significant ia o:etary. whose biographi repOrla al suPe'rvisioa.

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fALl., II·VER ·DIOCESAN COUNCIL OF 'CATHOLI'C NURSE.S

2nd' Annual' Open.·H:ouse

McC'abes, Field Rexhcnne -Beach SATURDAY, JULY l8, 195·9

Noven,o, of Ni,h,e: T u:esdays' to

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SAINT ANTHiONY "The Mi.racle Worker"

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·Development HomesCan Show Individ'ualTa'stes of Owners By Alice Bough Cahill

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-'tHE ANCHOR

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Thurs., July

1959

DIOCESE OF FALL R·IVER. MA55,

Professes· Vows At Vi"a Fatima

In most' areas, a home in a new dhelopment' can be ..boughtfor less:'money than you wouid expend if· you started 1;obui,ld from' scratch.. This comes abo~t because. of ',the 'builder's large-scale' buying power and reduction' of archi-: t' t I t . . t f' I' .ec.lir~. 'COSS',IHrice mos..o cover' the drapery hardware,al \' · the homes:tollow.a master. they' used.; both. glass curtains '., plan with slight..~hanges in and,drapesl~ Now they had a ' .' eonstruction.Btit no matter . lovely backgroundfor·their rna-.

Sister Nancy &r'nols, a Tau'nton native, made temporary Pl:o. fession ·and .Caridad Portu of New York received thc Holy Habit·ip. the Novitiate Chapel of the Sisters 'of .51. I;>orothy at .. Vill.acfatima, Tauntofj Saturday. . Rev.. Fe ter M~ Telese, S.J·., Jell.. ' "where you buy, a hou~e is rare- 'jor fiJrnitu~e·grouping.:.· ';"'~ . uit·~lssionary· from. New York, ;-.. -:1y if: ever, exactly what yoo" '. ';fhese owre~!l ..al~ ~Ullt~· p~r:- .. was cel~brant of the High Mass.' . ' .:" would like it .. tItion tosep,a,rate dlmng!1ndl~v.;::.,.,. '·.,!,hc, ':ceremony followed' the ·tObe.· . lng. areas. solid , pa~eled' : anQul'lf"eight-day r.etreat given ., ,"Mo!lt gener~ ba~.becam,e a .. plante~,;wltha " ,b~ R~vr~eriry Callahan, S.J., of ':.11y there's not' trel~Is a?~v~_to ,the. cell~Il~' .We .. ' B.~~t~m . College. Three Taunton '.' enough. !it 0 r _ . . ,,:ere h~vm.g a· debg~tful bme priests. seated. in the sanctuary' age, space, or dISCOv.ermg.· . the .novel:ways· . were Riv. 'Patrick Hurley,'pastor ·the '.. relation... these young couples 'had s o l v e d o l ' St.-J·oseph's·. Church; Rev. ': _. hi 'p'between their a:chitepturall?rC?ble~s.·and' ' Josepn.:pbweJ:S, his assi~tant: and' ; , ',liviiig and. din-: soon .w~f,?un~ ~urse~v~s. o.na . . '. . ',Rev. "Norimin .Ferris, assist'ant at j.

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~~~~~nSP:t~on'.~ .the nelg~.,.., j.iJSTA DROP~SISTER: .Cia~sin~~~~d.~· t~cent·Ye~t:~.'~t· :s:i.· M'ar~'s Chu,rch:·.. . .' Createt S~rage S~.c,e ': .. St. I~uis College of Pharmacy, these. ~rs~e~s' hav.e. g??~ ~a~f:. :~R~I ief'·Grou p to' Aid

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.i: th;th,e ~::~:b~hefrxp~~;:;~ way around ~he world from each.?ther<~l~.t.et:.~.. ~u~lel 'Yo~ ~ It~'lia'n .: Childre;; builder with limited imagina- . roo':'l'blg ef).oug~ for. t~ble and . Hoe~e, left; IS b~und for the ~edlc~~'~lsslO.n:~ls~ers . HO~~)l- . VATICAN," c'ITY . (NC)~TI1e ..•ion constructs' kit<;hen that is chaIrs, but I!ac~lhg .mstorage tal In Berekum, Ghana, AfrIca, S.1s~.erl .M. P~ulett :EIJ{In~, Pontifical; Relief" .organization '. ~slinical lookirig, the same in ~pace. A b~I1t-ln UnIt,: ~nly 16 right, is ,bound for West Pakistan. NC Ph9to; . . expects ·to help 750,000 Italian every. horrie in the development. mches deep,t not. only gav~ them _..., '. .: ... ' .. . .' children enjoy a ,vacation in the Witheach.family's house'sim- ,,~torage spac~ WIthout takmg up .country this summer. Dar to those of three or :tour too much fl~r space, but macie ' ..' In addition the' organizatioll Dearby neighbors, it requir~s a decorativ~. fe~ture, out of .. ~ will help provide recreation cenpatient planning to individualglass.-block 'C?!?enm~ centered on U 0 OU· ters for 500,000 children in the ,he your own home. None o.f us \ the walt ThIS umt created ~he LISBON (NC)"- Nearly. 800 movemerits, children's literature, cities of Italy. wants to visit a neighbor and· ~ffect of ~ ?flllway .between, hvdeleg,ates from' 47 . countries and other matters relating to the Most of the help is in the form ,feel we are sitting 'in our own· mg a~d·dmlI~g rooms. .. 'gathered here for the. Seventh education of youth. ' . of American surplus food sup:living room. Ilyou find yourself ThiS coupl~ was also pro~c:l to Congress' of" the International .' ·The - theme of the congress -plied by th~ American governeonsidering a home in a develshow us .h?'r they .had. c~anged ,.. Catholic' Child Bureau to' study ,proposed' that children' be given .rrieqt through Catholic Relief .opment·,. maybe some of these ,the w~lt,e-lm~m~led ~~ltch~n. " the, preparation /)f youth' for its . the '!greatest chances of suc- : Services ' - Natiohal' Catholic IlUggestions w.ill help your probThe oflgm~lly austere. room professional futu·re.: . cess in the· Christian and human Welfare Conference. ... lem .. . . had been clianged into. one of . . . ' . a'spects" .and:state.·d.· ·tha.'tproper ' y<!u hav'c. a sll'ght recess i,n :e.ye.-catcbjng.I,. bea..uty, This..is The delegates-including four fr'om' the Unitect· States and. 50' education is needed to prepare If. · your.. ' living . rocimwhere. it is what. theyd~~.. They selected a from ·Canada....:.~ere greeted by thilril.. for professions. . '" . difficult to place your furniture, . .1arge-patterT1~.' wallpaper. to Manuel Cardinal . Goncalves Fou1'!ded in 1947 with the ,ap;i>er~aps: a simple; yeti,?pre~s- , .destroy the. c.hnu;al ,look: .~ scal-. Cerejeira, Patriarch' of LisbOll. . :proval. of. the Holy :'See;: ·the·.'Ip.ive built'-in bookcase WIll glve lop was.b.UlI~,<..Ibove the s,~pkto . . \ t 1" I C til j'" Ch'ld B' .it 't'he nee'ded' decoratl've treat"-, provl.·de a shi,eld for the.fluorestopics erna .is·,a: IOna techllI.'c. . a 0aL'orgaiIizatio~ lC:·. 1 . . . u. Among· . . . .'under ' .,. ·discus'" " . .'rElau· . '. . ; . . '.' ce.nt light w,hich thoey had iri~., .. 'SIOn were religious' formation and - "'t'h'" "t 'h" f' ,,, i1 . ' to ,study ,the 'problems .ofchildment Make 'the lower part a desit . stalle9- to br\ghte~. di'shwashing. e ca ~c Ism; a!D. y education, and build;the shelvesfrom desk ' .. :Then . th~YI :r:~-e?ameled the pre-llCho~~ educa,tiori, children's' ,hO~~~' €ongress ·.clo~ with .• .'tOp to ceiling, with a crown ..kItchen .~nbrfe!y.dIfferentfrom. For Beatification. pilgrimage to Fatima. 'molding at the top. You. can .that of .any neIg.hbor. . . . ' . ' . . -keep the cost of this ·construc..: ' . When we. fam~ ~ome,:jt w~s l,dEXIC'O.,CITi··(NC) ....:.The . MI~LlO~ DOLLAR " " tion down py using plywood. Of h?~d,to reah~e. that w.e had been foiindre-ss. 'of several', Mexican · eour se , for your. supports .and ,VISItIng a, J!lefiI,!m-~>flced d~ve~- . religio~s. congregations is ,being . :BALLROOM • I. ,shelves, you'll need . heayier o~ment, S? dtstmCtIve and mdI-pJ:.oposed' for beatification. She is stock to give the 'unit a'. so.lid .' ~Idu. al. did. Ithe. ·"Owners make . ~ada:. :Copcepcion. Cabrera de p . . . , res~riptions·.,ca"ed fo"..:A'" 'bl f' · K I . "appearance: You might ~over th~lr h ~mes:;J L1 k. ~ F ~ ..ther ,e,Armida' who. fOUli'ded the RelivOla e' or ou c~~ change the .giou~.~f. the gr~ss,o~the Sacred · 'the dElsk JoP with.li.noleum.. . ler s b~hef, , . and .c!el.i~ered . '; . Banqu,.., T~stimonlal~, ,~. In"a home 'We VISited the dm'" world, you, can change your 'Heart 'and the Missionaries of HE~DQUARTERSFOR""~ , . . Ingalcove v.;as so shall~w, when home, wit~ t~e. pel? of God~nd . ~the'~oly: Spirit. These and other DIETETIC SUPPLIES' . For ·Fullinformotion Contact'· viev.;ed from: the living room,' your own Im~gmatIon:anden.~~ '.' ~on~r.eg?t,io':ls she~o,unded are 600 Cottage St." WY .4..7439. ROl.AND· GAMACHE' · It seemed that only expensively gy. . 1· '. '. ,known: now' as . Works· of the .. "'ew Bedford' " ; . ,.. ', WYman 9 ..6984 . p~~edd~orntiq~~dm~e ' ~ . . . . . ' . . C~ro:~:.~ ~ ~~============~~~~~~~ ~~~~ · it r,ight. On our 'next visit, ~e' Social SCIences Have: ~ · were delighte? v.: it.h t.he. way t~e Value in IParish Work-' o~~ers had mdlvldu.ahzed thiS . BOSTON (NC)-If the social' · dmmg area. They .Installed a " '..' . 'i.e' ·.hallow floor-to-ceiling built-in scthlences arbe ~~ed.:? paflfsfh' wt?rk" . which deepened the alcove' and ey can ru~g new· e ec lV~; reduced the broadness of. the . ness· to the ~eneral apos~olate~ vista from living room to dining Msgr. FranCIS J. Lally ..;.~old M.' reo . . institute on ~'Tpe. Sociology. Ql a ; . very modern look was Americau Catpol~ei~m."" :. achieved by fitting the plywood .Msgr. Lally, edItorO'f. The doors with, invisible catches· PIlot, newspaper for the Boston 'th~rt;bY eliminating the need .fo~. archdiocese, Sa!d ,these. scienct;1l .; pulls ~r knobs. The family vyas could;.be.~sedl t? .supply, ~ata.. on · thus enabled to arrange its furchangmg populatIon, faml»' hf~, Diture to better advantage. . 'cultural pattern's,.. and other . To reward .'us. for our enthu- forces ~:£fectiri~ therelaUoiJ.~, . ; lIam over' the improvements ,the Church apd the individulll. . ~; :' A'. ".;: they'd made, our. hosts'insisted. . ThliMollsignor : agl'~th~t ~ .. ' -"_ .. · that we visit a neighbor three . the Church'. prese;n~. ~~PMJsi~." .. .:.;.' .. ,.]: ..... : .~ ..... .' ~ .• ; .:.J..: 'boose! :'down ." the street. ;.We :progra~ b:aF made,~ial ~tidie. ;, ':' .~: .~. "'-;. , , :.:;. ·weren't:consci6us·· ihatwe were' ,difficult uP:to!~ow: Howexer;';M', >.,~. '.";~f.f' /::..•. ,1\: \ : ,,~., < :. :,_",~:"", "" ':, ..:." r. "::,,-, ..... ,. <',.: .. ' . . ...... '.' .. "\ . :... in a holise ..with: the same floor :, stres,eed"'that sUch..' analYselare' .c· ,·.·h~~S$artt:l't()f,'gue~Wd99fng·'-'~bov(·~j~f:o<Iu~~:(Joesn't :Frit,lke ::."':, :';'.,('" :. ,-: pla~Here;Ii ~hat"t.hey:~id. 'Y~th' ~coming .mo*e'., ~~~r~~~,:,~.::.f~'·i:: ... :",. ,;pI~hy:e:.wInd~w;:.~hl~h . ..hact, the.C~~rc~. ~~~t,?eB:, )~.:,_o.WIl" ~. ''-:':''': ·ti)e ~r~~d.ony:.~better.:QuQlity,:~:.,wo~ds·ia.;·tije:'~nly,', :"'," .' presented .• furnittite-arrange:; . effectiveneiill in· carrying .00ti&.1i·' ..•.. 'iDentproblem; ..... ' . . apostolate· and~etermi_B. it!! '. .' ~...;'. t~in9·th9t.~~~ '.' . ' . . ...... ':. ".' . .: . , 'By building' one~foot' deep plaCe' in Amerlean soci~."· ,. :th~t'~ ':~hy,'we: ~Y··(;uim~nd Farms "A 'eabineti!'and bookshelves on each' '. I. , ' · ~de" Of .the window they. were ...Pornography·;' ,1Sick~ning"" _; l·~;7.:·,::>,;;'Quolity,N;~'mifk·and pro~.)o y~~rse.fthClt· Guimon~ :~orrri5"'· .. abie to shorten tht{)ohg wall. . . I· . . . The. 'husband, built-·.· wooden . ,Jhrea~' to::Children, :, .. ~ ..; ,. . ,".:·t9P~.'t.~m., all: ~h.~leso~, .f(lr~:-fres~ fl~~or on~ good~ ~alanCe' 'acrosl' .the , window."'. 'Mt>QPUS:.·(NO) '::':"'-.p~rnoiir.: }:··<..e~fdoy,.cift4N- day .. '.···~"w'ek,~fter· . week.;. : .....:... ..' ~.' . . . ".' phy'~nt through the ma'ils·con-,,· 'p i.4)ce~ S,tarts.·' Driv!.. stitutes. a "sickeniri. thr';at" .. .. ,": .the~ tiby's 'cIHldrel\; postJ!iaste'ts' J .' ..:.>.:..: / · for "Traffic Safety from throughout Connecticut ' 'EL PASO (NC).-The di~ese were told here' by Mrs. Cecil M. · .f El Paso has -launched a month- . Hard.en, special assiJtant' io~.the ". long campaign for traffic safety,' Postmaster 'General . '. with the assistance of. the El Ref~rring tolthou~ndsof'let· Paso Diocesan Coun~i~ of Cathters. received. tiy.the PosfOfl'ice . , . 'olic Women. . Department 'frbm parents;'. Mrs.. 'J . Bishop Sidney M. Metzger ;of Harden said: "~ou have only: to EI· Paso openeo the campaign by , ,".hear. the. ·words of thousan'dii to I .' . . . · 'proclaiming . July as Vehicle . know' 'how,b~dthe' situation , Safety M o n t h . · r e a l l y is.;}' h~ve seensami)i~s" <. , .The Diocesan." Council ". ~ '. of this viciouS, vile" stuff/ ~nd Catholic Women will enCOt•.·age 'they ~re so si~kening that· they e .' the program' throughout the' are beyond bellef.". ' .. month with the .distribution' of .• . The Post Office Departmetit is \o{~ printed matei:ial. on highway . ~aging an'intehsive wa'r~iigain8t ..../ ;." .. ' ~ .: \.'::.' _ .' . ,.; . . . . ·1:,~,:.. .t,· _: " Il8fety..:and:,~it~religiQl!s.ar~icles peddl~rs , C!f ·pbrno~ra-phij,,·Mrs.,: ".'.; for'! ,c~rs•.<,!h.e.: . ~al1}paig!i':W:ill .. Har~e!.!:miia,'bJtiriullJ~~r..e;;:~~lp , YOUR .... ' '-"'.• ...,,-",,-.·.t'1 >.,", •...•......:,•••••..•• " ..... , .. close July 26 with a diocesewidili"'lr6mthe .public if iiik effort i.I ' blessing .of cars. . to have maiim'um effect. .

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METUCHEN (NC) - Mother Mechtildis, former provincial superior in G~rmany, ha~ been , elected fifth superior general of ·the congregation of the .Missionary Sister of' Our Lady, of Africa."''''

By Mary Tinley Daly The days of adventure, combined with real family "togetherness" are not over, Witness the Arnett family: father, ~ot~er, eight <;hiIdren-eldest not yet 16, youngest _bout to celebratehi~ fjrst b}r~ltday; Today they put car , and .,truck, into gear ·for .a ';1) D A tt' . t'f' t 'di ' t th n r. rne s ,:!Clen I IC sues· 4 , 000 ml'1e:'round .trip 0', e 'and what further information he. Sonora ~ese.rt in' southwest- . expects' to find. I was-and I'm" · ~rn Uriited 'States and dowg" . sure, my reaaers are too-con':"

i~to Mexico in' sea~ch of a,.rare .. cer1,1ed· about Mrs. Arnett's sum.species of keetles-and a l~ of .: mer:ancj.,{that of the eight liv.el,. family fl,ln.. . yo,ung1!ters./ Catholic Uni.. '''How.' d9 you know what to',,' versUy 'sClen: take for 'three months .in the tist Dr., Ross H. 'desert-for 11 people?" I aSKed,' · Arnett, Jr., ige . appalled at :the yery th~ufht. 4(), with a red The' Simple Life . . .Blondey'oung . Mrs. Arnett · beard that gives him a profes-, boosted sobbin'g little Joe, three, ,sional. look. a n d : .onto her lap,'applied an ice cube' . ". will save :him ': 40 .a bumped fo'r~he.a,'d:,."Wel~, shaving time .. · . she smiied, "we figuratively has taken the dr~~ circ'le around .alI the trip tW.ice. b~- ~:;\ ' things we heed ?ere at homefore I n , hIS .Wth 'need -- as essentIals. Then we basic resea~cr'''·''·'' pacl,ted them intotbe truck and iOOto ttt-e study 'of oeetles.· Dr., ~ar, .What didn't fit, we're leavArnett's findings have added im- ing 'home.. There will be toys · measur~bly' to mankind's know- and games and' dolls, of course," ledge 'of beetles which, he says, she nodded reassuringly at Fran"constitute 25 per cent of '·the ces, five,. and Barbara, seven. "species ' of ~ll living organis~s, "B';lt, c~Ok;,~g?'/ I asked. "And .plant an.d anima!!' ,'. ~~shmg , . . . ' " ·' t d'es h'ave made hl'm one We have tw,o portable stoves, H IS SUI , ,, , d' ' 1 1 "Th ' of the. CQuntry's outstanding she· answere . ca m Y'. ere s a~thoriti~s on 'the subject., Only ~always' wat.er, soap and a ,,:ash . . t ' f oxacis were board. Durmg 9ur metropohtan seven ypes. 0, . . . t l' . l' d t known .before his researches. lfe ' Win er Ives, we are mc me 0 has brou hi' 'the total io44,forg~t- that-·a length of rope · . ,. ' g ..' strung' between two trees. makes nammg some . 'd d oubles ;, '_ MATER ADMIRABILIS: Visitors ,from throughout the ' .of hIS fmds ' .... for, " ·'a· won d erf u 1. ·d rler-an his wi!e a.nd chIldren. !Ie IS still , as ' a jump rope, world are flocking to see this painting of -the Virgin, which InvestIgatmg the sp,ecles of. ox"Our life"will be 'simple," she Pope Pius IX called '~M,ater' Adrilirabilis" (" Admirable acis which ,abounds on ,t~e Soll- continued, untying a knot in Mother"). It was' painted in 1814 by Pauline Perdrau, a ora desert-+ncnce ~he trIp. , Barbara's shoelaces' "but if we ,On last year's' exc,~rsion, Dr.' w'aited for the children to grow . young French woman with no training in difficult technique · Ar~ett was accompanIed only by up, we'd never go-and we all of the ~resco. NC Photo.. . a,graduate assistant in .biology, , want to·.be there together/' "while the rest of uS st~yed When they get to the desert, home to welcome. Matthew." life will be all outdoors for the MrS, Arnett explains. Arnetts-sleeping, cooking livTw.o years ago, . tbe ..fl',mn,..:.- ing with nature. In the mean. ' with on~y seven children. then- time, there is"~the trip.. : ROME (NC)-Early this sum- because of an extraordinary cure made a similar trip in !l small If truck. and car should bemer a' nun, passing through a that had taken place. before it. bus. ""We could take exactly on.e come separated, they have an l'tiny chapel in the 'cOnvent Event~ally he authorized at speton," Dr.' Arnett recalls, "so we arrangement for both to call Trinita dei Monti, caught the cial feast, Mater Admjrabilis, ill all weighed in, and filled up the their next-door neighbor in the sparkle of a sapphire 'and diarecognition of the painting's Jle1n8inder .of the ton .with gear." 'ea~t.· The first ·lo~t Arnett will mond ring on the altar. beauty, its power to attract souls Two-Vehi~!e Comfort, 'give, his or her locaton-then the The ring's donor had vanished, to a deeper interior. life, and the . This" sunimer, . 11 month "old second Arnett will' receive the but' the nUn wasn't surprised. cures.. of body. and soul that ~a~thew, h,ill. brothers and si~-,'Jllessage ,from the neighbor. 'Offerings SUch as this are com- . stirr~urid it... ters, ...fa~her and. mother, will, They'll make out. . monplace before the fresco of the Pius IX .was only. ol)e ,of many travel in comfort-a two":vehic1e This' summer, we venture to 'Virgin known as the Mater Ad- distinguished visitors. Others caravan:' an' old Dodge "car . say, will yield not only valuable 'mirabilis (Admirable Mother). who knelt at the foot, of the driven by mother and a Chev- scientific' data but, just as, imVisitors from throughout the painting were St. Pjus X, St. ,rolet truck driven by father. portant a never-to-be-forgot- world, ignoring works,of PeruTherese of Lisieux, and St. MaThat truck is, the epitome of ten ex'perience' of living ·for gino and Volterra that are deleine Sophie Barat, foundress ingenuity. Let me tell you about members of a courageous fam~' housed under' the same roof, of the- Religious of the Sacred : it: It'!J ordinary pick-up size, ily-the Arnetts, God' bless 'em! flock·to see the, Mater AdmiraHeart easily managed on·the hgihways. bilis. It was pairited, in 1844 by But'the'painter herself, PaulOn the inside, along both sides Set/ Summer Program'. a' young Frenchwoman with no ine Perdrau, never returned to : and across the front, Dr. Arnett For H'ls,tor'lc 'Church ' . i~ai?ing or e,xperience, in the ""see her l1lasterpiece. Shortly has built bunk beds for six. The , dIffIcult techmque of the fresco. '., ft . I t' 't~'h . t' d · L' lIir G N (" C)' '" ,.Th" W lower three are storage chests,: I ",IN TO N - His- . e power 0 f th" e paIn t·mg l'les , ath erS .comp . t e 'fmg th I S seen d Here(t . .. S X . C • 't" d ' ' b l ' It e OCle y 0 e acre top covered with foam rubber tonc 1. Francis aVler hurch, In I S .un ~ma e reverence. ,.. d b- 1 t hear I . mattresses. The upper three are familiarly known as "Old BOhe-" commands prayer. When Pope an eca~e an e emen ary sc. 00 aanvass and wood, also with rub. mia," will be open again this' Pius IX Saw it in 1846 he spontea~her In France. She d~cl~ned ... ' . ' an offer from her superIOrs to ber mattresses. In the "free" Summer on three Sunday aftertaneously gave It the name by "t th M t Ad" bT' ·th center space, there are portable noons.. ,', which it has. since been known. VISI , e. a"er mira I IS WI eribs for the two babies, MatAfternoon Mass will be offered "Really," the Pope . exclaimed, ~he wo~ds,,; I prefer to see her thew and Teresa, two years old. on July 19, Aug. 16 and Sept. 20. , ~Ilhe is Mater Admirabilis." Hl Heaven. This accounts for only ~ight! Antique church a~ticles will be; .V: Pius~ IX,visited thepaintinc r--.....- - -.............--_~ .. ': Right. The other two Ar!,1etts, displayed in the rectory by :the" .~ " ." ','1" . , . ,JEFF·REY ·E.· · Ross H. III, 15, and Michael, 14, Old Bohemia Historical Society... · ~. St. Vinc:ent's ·Alumni ' .....'... , as well as Dr. Arnett's student- '. The old churc? was founded,'~,~:~;~j'A~g,.If",st,;p"hl'nll:~f ;A,~wn,·'·"ni an,d., ",.~SUL,L1VAt-4: "assistant, "will sleep in jungle 1'104 at the lute of Boheml.::·~~teiil,is.. 9(::~~i-,.V,.in.<:~tts Home, _. ,,, ...,.,, ,c " ' .. " . ., " hammocks strung between trees, A cad e my, predecessor.to Fall River, include a clambake _ " ; . ;;.,~ .•~,:-: ' '. :' 'Along the. ;~id.~s, of the;. tJ:,l,lck", :G~9.q~et~wJ;l) :U1)~v,erS,ity., ,the I}a-:, , Sun!laY,-.AuguBt ,9..jlt St. Vincent "''''''''550 "Loeias&' S t ; ' ! .. ,: between upper and lower bunks, tion's oldest Catholic college, de Paul Carr.p, Westport; and an '.'" .:," Fall . River. '\'Iass: ~ .",,,' " are cupboarCl~-l{br 'i1i'~hes/ cook,;'" "cWaShitlgto'J,):"D;'C.· The 'eWurch is', :liuction" SatUrday:;' Aug. ' 22 6n ,. ......, '." OS,' 2;,2391., '. . '., " ing utensils, foodstu~fs, toys, lab in f~irly good condition but,. :.the· grounds of ,~J(>seph Carroll, .. ' , > , " , fto'se' 'E. S'ulh\}ali' " '- . " ~ .equipment· and the Professor's adjacent,buildings are in need 'Water,Street. Assonet. The group "J-effrey-E: SliHivan" · reference books.. ,., . ,. " , of repair. , ·will 1p.eet again,:Fhursday, Aug~ We saw the Arnett~ two' days t. 6, at St:, Vincent's Home. .... ' , before take:'off; "at an iinj)romp- . , ,. ' ... ,' ," .. , " ' .. 't " .•, ..,'.;,." - :., ,., ..",' , tu press conf~r~I1C~ a~ th,eir hp!11~'-:' . ; in Blandensburg,·Md. The male ; ,", Fa;;;'e~a(:H~:n;" · reporteFs were most interested ' ,,;, ::: ~~'c;"~d St. ,> '

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The election ~as held 'in .the . Sisters' inotherholise 'in 'Algie'rs, according to a statement isslied by· the U. S. Mother Supel'ior's '. of~ice here. The nuns a·re, comm.only known .as the White ~is­ ters because of their distincfi~e wliite ,gl,ll'b, . .. The congregation now has 162 Il?-issions in Africa staffed .by ·more. than 2,000 Sisters,' the' American headquarters· her e said.

Name Ora"ma ·", . ,.'

Teacher . 'For' Theatre Award' ':sT, .LOUIS (NC)~Th~.!Din~:" :I~'

r)e~n Award for distinguished 'service in' Cath~lic theater actiVities be presented to 'Therese Marie Cuny of Chicago , at the national convention 'of the Nationai-- Catholic Th~ater Conference on Aug. 20 at the University of Notre Dame, it was announced here.

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Miss Cuny has been an active member of of the NCTC since its beginning~in 1937. She is a former president of the organization and now is co-chairman , of the convention. She teaches drama at 'the Academy of Our Lady of Providence High School Chicago.' ' . ' . , . --' ' , The, Dinneen Award is .named for Father F, G. Dim~een,,·&.J., a co-founder of the NCTC, who served as its president in 1939~40.

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.Concessions Operator To Screen Magazines ST. LOUIS (NC) - Tpe Fr~d '. Harvey Company, operafot -:6f restaurants and newsstands concessions in large U. S. railroad terminals, is inaugurating a new method of screening magazines to be sold on its stands; According to Thomas L. Croft, . attorney for the company,· tM; action was taken by "the highest ' officials of the company" wheil they came to believe "that reliance could not })e well placed in the magazine distributors' to . provide only matter within tb. law for Sale throul Fred Haner C~)lnplW"" ' , " " ' . , , .....

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Fall River, Mass.

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DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER. MASS.

Supreme Court ·Ruling· Threat' To 'State Law . BALTIMORE (NC)'~ The ., chairman of the .Maryland State Board of Motion' Picture Censors expressed concern here that a 'recent U. S.. Supreme Court' ruling may· hav~ invalidated part of the state SET DEDICATION DA'I.'E: The great upper church of the National Shrine of film licensing law. C. Morton Goldstein said he _ the Immaculate Conception, Washing.hadasked the office ot' the 'State ton, D. C., will be 'dedicated on Friday, Attorney. General for a .rUling·· Nov. 20. The' Shrine; largest Catholic' on the constitutionality of' the state licensing law. . church)n the United States, is the n'aMr, . Goldstein said he had tion's tribute to tne 'Blesseu:'Virgln acted because of a ruling by the. Mati, who i~· the 'c~untrY'spktrone~s: u.· S. high court in w.hich if re- . .' under the title of ~minacuhite yoii;..:o versed·a New York State ban :on . ception. NC Ph~to;:';~:' " showlngs of the film "Lady Chat,..; . terley's Lov~r." . He said that sections of the Maryland· film licensing law are '. similar to parts of the New York law which·the majority of the . Supreme Court_held to be uncon- . stitutional. The Maryland 'law states in: part that an exhibition license' may not be granted a film if it . "expressly.' or impliedl'y presents" acts of "sexual imm'orality or. lewdness" as 'beiJlg "desirable; .::acceptable or proper patterns 'of' behavior." . The majo.rity of the Supreme Court .struck down a similar· section of the New York film licenSiIlg·law on the grounds that' it violated cOQstitutionaLguaran- , tees of free speech .by forbidding . th~ a4vq~acy of ideas..

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'Protes't 'Contract With. Sisters

:, NEW IBE~IA (NC)~A group of citizens, led by three Baptist'· ~inisters, protested action of· the' Iberia Parish Police Jury i!l' signing a contract for adminis,:. . tration of the new courity hos:': pital by Benedictine Sisters; :'; , The hospital, a.multi~milli'on" dollar' projeCt ,now. under con-·. struction;' wili' be completed sometime in 1960. The Sisters .with· 'whom .the ,contract has· been signed are ..the Olivetan. Benedic,tilles of Jonesboro, Ark. The 'protesting group, desig-. nated as the "Iberia Parish; Public Affairs Committee," has urged the jury to canceUhe con- . , tract:with .the nuns,becaulie t~e.', . bOSPlt~I,.construc~e. d oq.., pU.!:>hC la~ .'wlth·~.a~·

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,"-THE ANCHOR

'. Thurs., .JulY:'9; 1959

, WASHINGTON (NC)'~ Luke ' E.' Hart, Supreme Knight of the Knights. of Columbus, has pre sen ted Archbishop Patrick A. ·O'Boyle . ,of'Washington with.a check for, \ $500,000 which completes pa'yment of a K of C pledge of one million dollars for· construction of the campanile" or bell tower, of the' National Shrine, of the Immaculate Conception. .·Mr. Hart· came' from the Kn'ights headquarters' in New' HliVen to make the presentation. Archbishop O'Boyle accepted tile check in his' capacity· as Ii mem-· ber of the board of' trustees .of . the national shrine, ". The .campanile: be kqown as the "Knights' Tow-e,r," iii honor of the donors. The .pledge· of' funds, for. iihe .dmipanile. was '~m:nounceci by -Supreme 'Knight Hart on March ·31,-1957, on' the. 'occasion of the· ~unveiling:in' . Waterbury of bronze statlie·.of Father' Michael J;. 'McGivney, .who founded,the K of C in New . Haven 75 years earlier. .The pledge' represents pay-, . ments by all. the K.'of C councils . intheU. S.

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"6i~ The .shrmehas·beenbullt as. a~orned', has'been thc <scene 'ol' mined ·~uota1ioris fr6m\',v~i'i()ut>}.~'" ml?epCt,. ~r~,~~ls~, ~~:- . an act 'of'homage tC?'t~eoMotherr i1hpo~ihg "r~Iigiou's 'ce~emoriie~': articles' i>f ;;t~,e~ederaland~. §tate' . d}l~~t §t:>~IJ'!TI~p:,. :th.r~:>ug~\.P:i,El.; ·?fqod:.' ~t· i~ alSo:r plea;~orher'f~~'7;;~~' thte~' dec~'des. -'.'>J'~" '." ,cop.stitutions ahd 'statutes, ;lnd "offIce, h~re>pt"the;:Nllt.lOn~L:·mtercesslOn~nd..~rotechon,'as'. .. . ...., ,,,...,": was accompanied by. ."inferp·reta..,· S.hrine. The Car(linal-~rchbishop theBleSS~d VIrgin IS the pa~ron-" ~io;,s·:uiat are !TI'erely the'ic'o~~' .o.(ZNeW:.ygrk;.it<;h;aiOnah 'of Hie: ess'ofthis'c~llntry unde!-'fhetitle;' .' · side'red' opinions" of ;th'e 'self"; ',' shriJ;\e's:board:br: trustees., '.; .. :>;0£' her' ,ImmaculateConceptionl' ;ap~oirited c6mmittee.'!,; "-" ."1. . ;. . . :" ; . '.- :,: {':.,,',.;.::_~',;.;< SM was so chosen bY'the Bishops . " .' .... . , .: .... . ' The.shrine will be incomplete of the Uilited States"in 1846.. 0 ic' ni rsity : , ' i n : ,~.m.( of: :iti;y exte'ri'or' details. '.In .' ,the firs', stage' of the' '· .,'. '$'100' '00'0·..· G"" '. andOwiUlack'most'of itsinterior.. 'Shrine's' construction' '(1921- . G . ' e.ts '. . "'. ".' .ra~t. ·ornaine'nts"pl;i.~·ried:f.or~ th~' fu":; "1931) a crypt chutchand a lirypt ,~EW YqRK (NC)-",-An unreture; it was niade''clear.,incon- .. area·· were' built;· . This :.i:rypt .. stricted grant of .$100,0~0 h~s' *ctio~: with .ib!ea·ill~ouricem~nt:' churc,h, -large and colorfully' been'made to the Cathohc Unl.' L' . ' . TI·R·E · versity of America in' Washing- . Lat:gest!in' U:·~S." r.-.-~---"';"---_""'_-" ton, D. ·C., by-'the United States ,The edifice, is ,the. largest. ~ 276 Central St;; Fall River· 8.teel -roundatiOn 'c' as "part .of :a: ,Catholic· ,church. in the ..United, .. .' ". '. ' . " . i' · $2,350,000 aictl'io'education pro:' . ~'State's, and on~"of .the"seven.~';' . "';'. " OSborne 6·8279 .gran1 a!.l.tJ'ounced by the found-'~ l~rgest. religiou~ structures in' ~: '.'M~irite·na·rice"Sup·piieS··;. '. ~ i :~ ation. Cathol!c University ·was· the world. ,~ .. .' i"·.~~WEEPERS·,... SOAPS" ohe.of four'" schools rc'cei'ving: .'. . i' "'. " •. DI.S·I~FECrA~TS.·· ."_:_. I . . . . _.~;_ . . . _ ' the $100000 grants'-'In' addition '.' "~Archlteeturally, ,the shnne-has Holy Cr~ss C'oIlegej' W~rcest"er, Ii.,' 1:>,een.d!07~~ribedfsJ:!e!,.~g;,~~.p.t,~~,.. FIRE.. EXTIN,GUISHERS and Our Lady; of the Lake Col-:' , porarY,m style Ibutmthespint-'.. :~. ·c.""." " . lege, San Ant()l\io, were named ".of' the '~omane,&que 'and Byzan-' , J:: .. 'AHI~~CO~ among 24 iiberal,. arts a;1(I' tine. Its ~c!assical. lines harinon- '1886':PURCHASEST: sciences '''colleges which .will ! '~ze with theni~mirnenta,l·.bu~ld-;. share in $450,000'for. major:.pur-'·. mgs.'o~,the~ab?nl!lC~Plta,l, and, , NEW BEDFORD pose or capitalL grants. th~ edIfice glve~ Washl.ngt?n a!1y!Y 3.-3786 · .For::dham .University,- .New ,other. gr~at plll~.e of pilgrImage, ~ York, and Notre Dame Umver" The·dedication will mark.com'. . .",,' · . sit~were eacq., n~med re~i,pieD.;~' A~ll!.~on·'Of:t!:lelsecond of three' ,. NO JOa.TOo·IIG';" ..' ~... r , '. . · of'$7,200.graduate stUdy fellQw,:,," stages in'the construCtiohOf the. .' ships. ('o-total< of 45 ;f.eUo:wship",:····shririe: '·Tlle gre~t: church,: mass... ~ . NoNE TOo :SMA~" :.'. ;, were .gn.:en. '. '. .~". ...., '';-' ive' in .size':imd 'beautiful>ill the ~I ". 'B' d' f . 'd" 'K" ··f.-C····... ·harmony 0{its1prop~rtions,.has.· I .... e.~ e, or . , .0 -'.. ',; been built thrcHigh.the·collel::tive . ,.; Plans' An.n~al·O.uting . effort ~f Catho~~cs~n all par~s. of. . , McMahon Gouncil No. 151 K of 'the Umted·States.·Non-Cathohcs, PRINTERS-~ . ./ . 'C of New Beclford will hold its': ,too, have' con~ri!iuted . to the ann'ual outing: and. darribakeat . ': "grea!. undertak!~g.: . '"Main' ()ffiee and ~laDt' l' P.~: cSJlri~ay,- .July· .26 'at .. j I:·::·'"·c;,~ "'':OWELl;:MASS:' ; . 'BrownSScon'ticut Neck', .rair... ' ... '.' TelephO~ i;t~ell haven.' ·Henfy ·Latnbert. arid L~onard Ro~~rts are. co-chair.., I men. ' ~ .' './,".' . An entertainment. and sports . , ' . ~.u:l[iI!ary P~anta: program' will .be. conducted 24-HOS~~~W .. I,'cR.EEC~ER <? .. ·in convenient and Family size under th~ leadership of Gral)d '.1 ' . . BOSTON Knight Clarence. Yates, Jr., with 3S .HILLMAN, STRE'ET OCEANPORT" til. J. prizes to 'be ·a~arded.:The com.:, .-', ~':"'NeW BEDFORD":; <.' .: ". rAWTUCKET" R. L··. mittee suggests ea'ilY-: 'r~serva:~:: ."." :, "W'i 61.834'3. . '.,::: , COCA-COLA .BOmING-CO. of tions. . . . '. . , .c? ",fALL RIVER~ MASS~

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Spanish Prelate Lauds Banning Of Goya Nude

11

THE ANCHORThurs., July 9, 1959

DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER. MASS.

Ca·rdinal Cushing On TV Series

MALAGA (NC) - rhe banning of it reproduction of a nude portrait by.a Spanish artist from the U.S. mails

WASHINCTON (NC) - His Eminence Richard Cardinal Cushing< Archbishop of Boston, appears on six of the latest series of 13 "Zero-1960" telecasts sponsored by the Blue Army of Our Lady of Fatima here. The cardinal discusses the atheistic character of communism on the filmed series which is released by the Blue Army for national distribution. He recently received wide notice by advocating that· courses on communism be given in the upper grades of high schools and c<>Ueges. The Blue Army, founded in 1946, has membership in 57 ~ountries. Its purpose is "to pray for the conversion of Russia and world peace, in response to the urgings of, Our ~ady of Fatima.

was cited hereby Bishop Angel Herrera y Oria of Malaga in a pastoral letter on public moral· ity.· . The Bishop referred to the decision of U. S. postal authori:' · ties to ban the reproduction of the ,painting known as "The Naked Maja," which was being used to publicize a motion picture on the Iffe 'of the Spanisb artist Francisco Goya. In his pastoral, dealing especially with' the principl.es of morality to .be observed at Spanish beach' resorts, the" Bishop said: . "Repeated efforts to, improve· morality' abroad ··lend greater' strength to Spanis!I' attell).pts ... The U. S, government; to protect the people against' moral. weakness and lewdness, has recently" . pmhibited the circulation.' by ( mail of a postcard depicting a painting by ,Goya."

Native Drums ARUA, (NC)-Natlve dancjng' and the sound of African drums gave a touch of local color to celebrations here marking the enthronement of Bishop ,Angelo Tarantino of the new._ Diocese of Arua, Uganda. ..

Association Honors 92-Year-Old-,-Priest .'

CIUDAD REAL (NC)-A 92year-old priest, founder of the Nationa1Cath6lic .Association .of' Pro'pag'andists . (ACNP), was" REREDOS lauded 'here at ceremonies .comELECTRICAL ' : St.· Mary's Cathedral - Fall River memorating the organization's CONTRACTORS 50th anpive'rsary. The tributes were 'accorded. to Residential - Commercial . . IndustriaL Jesuit Father Angei Ayala, who founded the ACNP in this city 633 Broadway, Fall River Of in 1909, 'The association is dedOS 3-1691 icatedto fostering' apostolic' . ;-. B R R' I dB t activities in various spheres of . . y ev. 0 an . ousque . life. .,.' , St.· Joseph's Church, New Bedford·.. Bishop Juan. Hervas y Benet, . Have you everIloticed a group of childre.i1 at play? Their ganlesare .invariably pat- ' Prelate Nulliu'sof Ciudad Real, terned'.6~the work of aduIts:They are at'their best when': they :imitate their' heroes. It llaid, "May (}od reward Father seems that they are .impatient .with'their youth and want tore~cli the success whi<;h' Ayala for all. the. good he has·. champions enjoy. We find this amusing~ Yet on the golf course', we attempt to adopt the done in behalf ;of the Church techniques of the heroes of . , and' Spain," Until this time it was strictly .. called the rig~t of asylum the fairway. Our: choice' of forbidden to place, an~thirig'on granted by the king and to Bus Transportat;on 'clothes may be influenced by the altar .table except what was__ apprehend someone who had .so· INC. CLEVELAND (NC) - Sister what·-the 10· best dressed' :directly needed for the sacrifice placedhims'elf under the protecMary.Ann Joachim, lawyer and. wear, etc.· .. ' .As a matter of .' of ,the Mass, In the tenth and tion pf the. Sablt, was a· serious head of the social studies depart- fact~·the advertising industry is eleventh centuries the relics of crime. ment at Siena Heights· College,. based on' this'desire·to imitate .tpe saints were· removedfro~, ··These relic~ were". found in ~ho has been admitted 'to prac- ' successful men and women. . the.ii-'. tQmbs anr ph~ced above or Rome and in the Orient. Only the ; : .' tice before ;the U. ·S. ;Supreme', . The . Church hefself'Iiasqcihg<. ,behin.dtbellltar·~I):l~rge,Or9a';"~~big 'cities and larger chu'rches, .WH()Lr:$A~f; &':". RETAil:·,. Court, poHits ci'u't' th~f the high,,:,reeognize<L;,ethe,.. ,jmportarit'role'.-·;~epted .cq.ff~rs' .. :r~e. r:;e!iq_~~r~.'c~Uld <ol?~in.: t~etelics",''}::pe, .... coiJrth~(u. ph. eld .~.h~ ,£t:>~s.tit.v,tit:>n-: :' . th~.,. :.'«:~W. m. p~,qns, P.J..,th ... e.'JaI.:..· th .p.J~y,... >,,:.., . .r~.. st~d.•. ,0..~.... :tl1.e al.t~r. ' Its~l..f })1-", ~a.~.;. .' .,smaller chuJ;ches. ·often.' place!l , , " .: .', '.~' ..• ; "". · ality of'public bI.istransportation in ouJ:' l~ye~. A.:t .Bap.~Ism;'Ve ~.r:e· . p!ac~dp!1~.. str,~ctut~ ~u~lt, be.- .. tJtatues and, paintingsabo"eth~ . SHUCKED' clAMS for Catholic school pupils. ,She:, giv'en 'a"sa'iiit'<; name .iii 'order',hmd the altar.'. , '. ',' '., .... ", main alt~r to evoke the 'm~mor.y' STEAMERS'& 'FRiERS . i?dicatesttl.~ ~§~, e.xpe9-ts a~di- t~~t;weInay,'i~ita!el!~tJ vjJ;t.lleli", :,These. coffers;; cO,vered . with : ot'theh; '~atr6n 'saints. '. .' ~" ".1" ; ... '~ ~ i':,~ ~ '~'.~: ~ :::~.:. :,,~ ~: ~on~l st~e :.;'Po,,~rts j~.a.nd;leg.I.sIa-:- '~ ;EY-,l:l~y,,\ Sa; t 1't a 1t:: .,h~me. '. ~~,~",,~,> gold ,or 'sHyer." l!lt,u!l..ded :with pr.e...,,;,. . . •' .• ~~ .,. ·.: ..DELIV.ERIES .WIT u.. IN :",. · th OrIze .. sue'h' t tue "or h t ure 0 f ." some .ciotlsstones" . ,l. ac.~d'~.·n. ,: (::I t ures to. au aUXII Iary!\" sa 9 YI piC .often. took'monu" . '·,T.'.h. " 'us' ; .th. "e reliqu.. a.r.ie~p· > . . .' · 'serviCes. ' . I' favorite saint: .."'" ',',' ':!,: '" '" ,':. mental'propol1tions The. altar' . t~e' ~li:ar'gaVf)?Ia,ce' t() the r~re~~' ,;.' ',A MILE AREA c.' " :. , .~Our parish' c.hllrchesare placed; l iatIiet small un:m,n~w, was elo~~: doses 'which 'reached 'i'Uie' zenith' :~ ............... '~ ... ;'~ ...'... .;; ~':" '.: ............ !; u~d~r tb¢': patronage of ~;'s~i.nt. . gated tosuppor~thelle large rell; o('th~ir'a~ti;:;tic' splendo~ ~n the' . Restaurants Ir1Stitutio'nl :: . . : , . ' ~,,": 'J'.' . ' . !, Si)ln~ ch.'ur.ches. ·exP.·resst.h.edev'o- ;:quari¢s•.. The 'altarcanoP.·.y.w 8 S:, Got~IC ~h\l,rc.. hes.. In'" the, c~u.,~se, "'Roads'ideSi~nds:' .... :.: .. :.·.Continued-k.I.. r~m.:.:,.,~I,\-.. :g.e One. i,; ..... , . , of tim t""'e ~t .. tue ·of·the· sa nt· .... . , ,,'.' " < ,~. • .-t.i.on 'of•.. '.a. i.thf.uL.• iil.:., a ...,most·.,· removed. ··:and,.·,·.placed: (lVe.r·,'the·.,· .. e .u i:>... . I. . L'a' rge· .. or·.'..·• Sm. al·I·.C"I~...'m' ba' It.... L~ • . 'b"esigIled bf.··Y.'ouRg.·~::drJvers, andij', .."the. ~~ ,',. P ... ' . " ,'. . . ft I d 'th their .parents.·.· .... ' 'sttikinl( ·inan·n~r.. A shltue or relics.:,' .... .' . , . . , : ~as 0 .' en rep ace WI. a reprepainting\>fthe.patron saint 'is s~nt~honof,th,e,Passl(~n. Toda.y.. I • . The ~~ur-poinfpledgecontllin~ ,:inshrinedin . a ~'large . structure .. .- The entire city took:. pride' in ~~~y rer~doses haye,large crUCI-.. We can:supply Lobsters, Oyst.,. promises that thej·.oung driver ·w.hich"rises' from b''ehiild ·the,,·the.relics of.their~saiilt. The city fIX Ion scenes. '11 be f . '. h '. . I 'd~' "d' h" . t' t' .' .. Shr.imps,' Scallops in Season WI . care ul In t e operation' a·ltar.· ThI'S fram' ewor'k' I'S called' was.:p a~e un er Ispro ec IOn. . of a ,car, thai he will exercise' a r·eredos. . .' . Ih time ·of. war iuid'famine 'the The reredos serves, to lift' up' Seclweed "for'Clambakes aiM ..' . . . Ol,1l' hea.rts to God and to remind . the HChristianvirtue" of cour- ,. . If we examine the. reredos·" reliquary' Available .., . 'was ofte'n carried' in' us to pray to our patron saints so tesy to. other drivers, that hewiIl closely we can distinguish three.' solemn' procession. through the that they may intercede for us not drive ,while 'tInder tl1~ influ-· secti&h,s. ,The :base .is usually as. streets. Of.,. th~ city.', ..' . ' before Ule throne of God,Placed . ' ence' Qi.in·toxi~ating dri{;k orb~:: wide;iijas ti1-e,; ..altar 'ste-ps~ndl! :' Whoever ~ought refuge in the . over thealtar·they seem'tore-, THIRD ST., FALL.RIVER .:. :~~e~~~r'·::;i~e-c:,·ra~der~~:~.~~i rtCa,ebacI·eh.'~~Trhthe'·~:c:'·eh~n'etirgahlt'.'pOofr'·ttI,ho..,e· raertsat~,I,: c.hurci). . pqSJ1~SsiQg:,ther~lic, . ~f a. m ' iansds'. I~sSt'htheasto'tuhrece·sao.cfrhifo·iclel'neOsfs,.t.h. e 4-5693 n , " . . ienow9fi!q... I"~in~ was·.Q~t oLreach: M will "neverabuse·the gQod.pur-; iiig:ori·thisbaSe' 'is"a large -deco;; of the 'civil authoI'itles.':-Thfs was (Next we.~k-The Altai: Rai.I.)''' .•.•.•.•' ••.•••••.••'.•.•••. ,poses for which· a- car is intended" 'rat-ed"p'anel enfI'aming'tne 'statue' . '.: ,

AIME PEllETIER

Reredos ,·Is Reminder to Seek .:lntercessiion Of .Patron Saints' B(~fore .T1{r(Jn~ 'of God

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ing the' mora.l law~hile in an- nice usually crowns this tableau. other's company." . The reredos is often' decorated It was suggested that use of with freizes, buttresses,. panels' the family ca~·.· should depenr;!. and. traceries ~havingthe aspect upon the faithful observatlce of of fine lace. However, the style the pledges, ','" ' and height 'of .the reredos ·cOn,. Cardinal Cushing;s office urged. forms to that of the church.· that 1: ~ code· should be explained The rei:-ed6s is the' outgrowth .. at Sunday sei:\ri~es, CYO meet-, of the veneration-of relics which· . '; ings aJ'ld to. p.Q.eqts. "This coder'-'reacq.ed· a climax j~,:ih~_~enth .: provides.an I;lkp~,r't~nit:y.forpar- . century., The esteem·itt·which·, " tlntal ground'.'rules and clerical .the' relics ,were held' was so great: , ..;. discussion'to::l!'v()id the dangerS" ast'o influence;' the:' CQl1~i~uetion' ' . associilted.w,ith:;:·anavtomobile/' '. of the altar for ov~r a tliousan«i . the annoui~~:~f1~~?~~said. . ':~;;!~~}~ars.·.·. i ;: .. ' . . : '

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Think fCatholic .... . "

God Love You

By Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S. Kennedy ; Toward the end of her autobiography, Day Before Yes, terday (Doubleday. $5,95) "Mrs. rheodore Roo~evlt, Jr., fells _ 118 that, some time in the late 1930's her ,doctor found , : ,that she was badly rim down; he prescribed a complete rest.-

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NatIonalism means that the only missionaries who should be a,ided ~re those who come from the United States. Catholicism means that all missionaries from all countries, should: be the object of ou'r prayers, sufferings and sacrificeS. , .

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: She took the co~plete rest into his work in Puerto Rico an~ 'by setting ou.t for China, the Philippine..,· demonstrating where she was caught in the that he was an ~dministr'ator of midst of, hostilities between uncommon indu~triousness, efChina and Japan and narrowly ~ectiveness, ,and sane prog~e~,,.~~--:,,: escaped death in a bombing raid. Ive ~utlo.~~. , , . ; ~:':." _:" "She moved, on . HIS m: :tary serv.lce, 'lD ,pothc '., to the Philip '~orld Wars.. outstan~ing)n'!,,:' aines where Its leadershIp an~ gallantrr·A}-, , .~ ~ame clost' thou~h in his fi~ti~s, he, w~ i~:'-;';;~; to perishing in ~he first wave. to Ih~t the be~ches~~ / ':" a severe earth_ In the D-Day Invfslon pf ,F~an:.e"', : ' and shortly there,after ,he died ~ ';. .( quake. She says, " "As Ii rest curp. a heart attack. i , ' " , ' ' ('for me the trip Just as jler huspa~li;w~~~quic~. ,,:.,!Iad been an to volunteer in the'two,:~ars;she"'OPEN'CADSE" F

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Take AfrleA. for example, which is one of Ute most imp-okant· misSionary continents in the wo'rld. Here is ihe offioial record of ~ .Battonality of moili of the' priests ill Afri~a. Percentace of Total Number AfritlaD 16 % 1:811 French 19.6% 2;197 ... ~lgi~, . 19.5% 2i159 &ish 10.3% 1,149 Du~ IDJ.% 1;136 Italian 5.9% ,660 German ' 4'% ,,451 Canadian' 3,3% 3'4 E~g'J.isb~~' I. ,.3:1% ~"

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Amei-ican(U.S.A.) ,! % 224 . "'~~~l~nd; .,with ,.~ '~;~'y s~~l" Cath~lie popo~!!<~i~D, ,ac,tuallJ' bas .,I~.Omore:" prie~ts missionarieS ill Africa ihan' the Untted States. "

· •..•. ,. <x · , Well, I sup-' second, ser~lliginyFrance on~t4~';.Qn,!l::l41an:i'" borl!".._CaI>ucp:m·,~"l.· Po8ethat'there . former, occa~ii>;n.>:apd in Engl?nd;; ·.'pf;ie81;/)Cnown .as;·~he' ·"cpa#),~;~~:.: are various ways o~ restIng, and on the. la~~~r;:';~he·.cansw*h>'pion:~Qftbe..colored. peQpie"\.' ,:"J':~' .7 :( ,-,_\_, the Roosevelt way .I,S apparentl!' s~oothIYj~qgt s!lc~ ~~gg~d>~s::h"·.'·' ";1.<0:'.' >th .'..... t';' ·f· ,">:.>.., .,' I bound to be of a strenuous, If slgJlme.n~st~·her'hoJjbles ofpho- .' .Jl:'!l ,,:~en .. ',e s~ J~.. Q ,•.~,:.",} . . ".". :··,i,: .....·.. not spectacular; sort...A~,~.?yl~t~ ,~?~ra.phy~nd e~broidery.She . . 8~ve~;y~a~· beatific~tl()n' l~:':;"; ":} • <~~,e~you ~h~nk of, ~qe. missions: think Catholic! The, wo.rld Mrs. Roosevelt'sTemlmsc~nc~s Il;I:,an· .. ~xtremely,.adaptable per-. yestIgatIon; NC Photo:" 18 bIgg~r: t~an ~~ur parIsh, your, dIOcese, your country. ThInk '. are largely of activities'i>~led'o":" son. '''~' :'.,:' ' ; . ' .' of .the missions In. terms of the Holy Father, the'Vicar 'of Christ / ...·I:!activities, with nevera'd!lll nio-.·',;She,represent$; I should .say,. , ... ~a. He, more than anyone, in the world. knows all mission needs:,he ment and few that wer~" quie.t. . something special and pre'ciou,s' .. Con~inued fromr'age One', loves all the missionary soci~ties equally; therefore as he said, She was born' Eleanor :A~ex,". in the American gellius. ObviouS'-:-·. 4) Never criticize prie.sts' or. he.. must be "first and principally aided." Send Y9ur, sacrifices to ·:ander. Of her forebears, sl).~ has' .,IY; ,a··g.reat.'lady" .she has;.:·the·. "Reiigious ill jront.cif children. 'A} .11ip\ ..w!to fias the umversal interests of' souls at heart. colorful stories to tell;th~y: w~re '.. common touc~>~.he is, at ,hOII147<~:·child.will· have no interest ip a- .'-' ingenious and energetic. p~ople. "with ;"si~ple,:fo.lk. here·' an~" life that his parents don'.t:respect;· . You send aid to him· through his 'officially appointed .Her ,parents were d~yor~ed whe~..abro~d. .sh~ i~ "E!quall~, adept" at .: /5,> Enc~urage'thoughts 'of V~;. fesentatives, "the Directors of the Society for' the Pro a ~~:~ she was three, and ,her, mother . runnuw' a.party!for· tbousands, catIons..Llsten courteously ~hen,·. . . <,' ', ' , p g i i took her to l~ve in ~rimce;'".... :in.the"g(lV.eI:.li.Q~'*¢n~r~pspalil,c¢',:.thech'iid s.ar~he:s~H~inkhlg,ab9ut, : ::t~'?i·Faith·'~:r=e Ema: ~OUCh your alms. They go dirently to Upon theIr return;' several and at; preparmg fISh'" chowder· the religious . life: ·.Don't be --too ,'. ~ ...c.~ .. of i . ac aydeny .y.ourself a. ;ii.ttle ,luxury fO,r, "rears.later, they settled ~n New in a.:~asi9.e~ cottrge;.' anxi()us to:'tell hirQ !'k», .w~it:.a·'. ; < .:.~~~o,f ChI' st our Lord. York. She was 20 when, In 1906, ·~':·Arid,. she".Yirites·a flowing,:· ·fewyeai's.~·. ':.' ' . '. :';,': >",' <' . ,', . . , ;' . . ; 4te first met Theodore)loos:e~":'clir-Onicle'withal~glit:i~uch:'Y,ou . . Test~Jl~ro~~Iace .' ,>;' GOD' LOVE, YOU to Mrs. E:A;R. 'for $5. '''1 needed'to have' a · ~t, Jr.l' son of the Preslden~;; , . will' en?~y~er, Ibook. , and..' th,~ .Studl(~~,· have show:n,.!?r.. H.a~-" little, carp~ntry ,~o~e, a.nd ocould fmd no~y, so I promised this , Young Roosevelt wa,s handl- opportllmty. It affordl!"to meet, "'l'~~~~-,~ald; that.·th~,~alOf1ty of money',to>.the mISSIons if 1 could do the, lob ,myself" . " .. ,to Anon. ; capped by'his father'~.pr,estigeo::. her. ; ...,'.'. i_ '.>"~',',,' ", prie,stB:';'andReligious·.made up.:.. for $2. '''My.roommate and 1 at college literally saved our pennies. :His wife writes, "The diSa(lv'an-:-',', .. S~r Sleuth. .' ,. . t~eil:·~irid to enter, religious: life·'... ' , Hereds the.·result." . : . to J.J.F; for $100. "This is just a "thahk · 'tagesof being a gre;lt '~an's s01,\: Recently we hlve had. a .niun.:'})e~~~e ..t!te 'eigh~h ':.grad~.:: :'1'00 .•. you' .for a"llpir.itual favor received."' ... to' a group of' "BrowniE\s" f.. outweigh the advantages. bel' of, miirderstories.in which" '9ften,:he.beli.evel;,.p.are.~tstry' to·, for·$JO. "We. have' lust completed our firSt year of ' Girl Scouting. Ted's tru~y rema~ka~le career priests the sleuths.'N6W···~est"! ...chi]d!~ rocl;lti~>n::.~t~e,;' We saved this mO,ney for the .~issions by not buying construction was to,be cloaked IneVitably and comes oile featuring· a.. nun u,' ~ron,g::})la~I~. thebfe' ofJbe. paper, Cra7~)I}Il;'.~otch tape, pIpe cleaners,' paper doilies e~." perpetua}lyby the,sha~<?w of his hawkshaw:,- Siste~Simon'sMur-:- 'lit'0r\!:'i.;. . " , ., ..-;. . > ::':: .... to D. L. and'Frien~ for $3;50. "We had a little fa~ and we-want rather'sfame,.~t 25 ht!!'all. der Case;by·.Mal'garet:AnnHub-. '., ' '1'~~f ri~~tpla~ to test a.voca- . to send you' half. at the proceeds. oornpared with. his fa tiler ,at 50' ~ar",,(~~~ce.>$:U5)':,It'.is~quiie,~4)~~.:~said,. is in ,a' .minor . .." aad·.found· wa'nti~g. ,!, " , " ,.,good~.· :',:','~;.:., .[, . '.• '<,-:\ ". ~m~~?" ~nda bo~ .w~o lea;ves ---, I KHe was' ',always' 'accused . of·. .• The scene' is a ,Cityo.iifthe Mid,...: ,on~ IS ,In n~ sense a faIlure. On. aaVi! y_ • WOKLDMISSIOM ROSARY iG take away oD imitating. his.. father in 'sp~ch,,: dte.'W~s't'("thepi'ctu~esquewild$: !~e,contrJu'y, he's wise to find yo... vaeaUon with :Jou! If DOt;' f~r ~~ur req~est and .' $2 offer, welkarld-smile:lf he had:taken"()(a,M:idwester~'re~rt~'towrti!{' ~'ut:early.in lifeif he really ~oes inc, we will be happriG send. Y08 ~ blessed by Bishop · this serioi!slyand triec;t.·'to ilit;~' , saY:~Jh~, Ja~ket)·:rThe.';;t\!o· foc~f',~a~~ avocatioR.. Ful'oa J. Sheell. ,;,' ','." . · llimself he would have been,jul· p(jintSi.are'a:scrubbe(landso~r· 'In this connection,. 1>1'. Han; bearably self-conscio,us." ;." hpspitaVilrid a,rliffisil!riverside', :rahiin said, it is important to reCut out this column, ,phi yo~ ,sacrifiCe to it 'and' mail' it to the She sho.ws thi;lt he ~as,~n fad.p carhiyat.:-:>:;. '.~J::,':::'. :"'i\':;' ," mem~r the two-fold nature of -' aD exceptional person m hIS own Aft~.r. a VISIt to'Jhe ~coild, a· vocatIOn-the grace of the call- Most Rev. Fulton' 'J: Sheen, National Director of The Society for · right. He went into business to worried little old lady is dis- ing itself, and the grace to per- the Propagation of the Faith, 366 Fifth Aventie,'N'ew York 1. NY., · make eno~gh money for the patched on the grounds of the severe. or your DIOCESAN DIRECTOR REV. RAYMOND T. CONSIDINE, 368 North Main Street, Fall River, l'4ass. , ., . , family to live on, with a view first. Her murder touches off a to a career of public service hectic search, further homicide,.. Activity . . : (}Dce financial security had been perilous situations for a number HAVANA (NC)-Major Pedro pAUGHTER~, Of ST.. PAUL ~.;. achieved. But he never attained of peopie, the b~ring of ancient Luis Diaz Lanz, commanding ofInvite young gi,1s (14-23)' te lobo, iii iIigh elected office. secrets, 'and thete is a rousing flcer of the Cuban Air Force, ,Christ's ,vast'vineyard cis an .Apostl. of the He was a distinguished me~7 . con~lusion::. . charged there is ,communist acEditions: P,ess, Radio. Movies and Ie Ieher of the New York State leglsr SIster SlIllpn m,lght have saved' tivity in Cuba's armed forces vision, With' these modem mean., the"; lature, but his bid for the gov- the old la~y's li~e, had, as they ....and submitted his resignation. . ."il5i"na".· Sisters b,ing Christ~.· Doctrine emorship (from which his father say she but known. It is this- into all. rega,dless of 'a••• ,color Of . , _ . Bad stepped onto the national culpable failure Which leads h~r For informatiott write to: ticket) was defeated by Al to assume the r~le of detective. . REV. MOTHER SUPERIOR ;,' Smith. He was, for awhile And iCis she who solves ,the case 50 ST. PAUloS AVE. BOSTON . . • . ......SS~ :~ sistant. st!cretary of the' ~avy- in and, at the t end,'holds, a gu'n ~.95 the Harding administrat~on, and on the killer. . . !. . .' ~ater was governor of Puerto The author doesn't indicate WHOLESALE AND IlETAIL COME IN SEE '~. and DRIVE' [Uco and governor general of the whether she is cehsured for these Philippines. " unusual extracutricular activiBETIENCOURT & SON ' ·It was alleged 'that he was inties, but the reader at least will • ' ' , ·",'·.·'fOlve,d. i,n t,he T.eapot Do.me,. scan- '. ob.solve... .h,er. bee.aWe. of,,her part ,.,. ~I J~HUIl~H ST" N~ hcUoId ,;\+:., I!1'he;·,W-W-. , , I ' ",,..., 'I.,' W1'4~2S.S '" ',~ " ~.' ",-. 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TECHNICOLO~ . w~·li~?;·,oef~r~'·'mBrria~;·"YO~~.' ~".. . ..' , J~ :~.: merl,ohviouslyareo~ their'goqd . 'beh·avior.. It. doesn't require the. tale'nt 'of' a g-enius to' di~over' .) .I. , . that· a .little attention; and flattery pays big dividimds and: I ,'f"; .. ' i" ClO-8rNIIIIMJ paves way:.....to conquest:'., . . the .. '.-.. - . . ..,.' .. J , '.-' But. this, .discovery ·may' 'be quit¢ superficial, involving little as the cynlcai etlngo ... 18f49On.fk. ~ insight in'to the cOnstant need of i. the partner, . for' consideration, , recognition, . ,and ..appreciation. . Hence ortce the victory has been' won, attention and flattery have .served :their ,purpqs~Ilow;·:the· .. , 'partner."can be simply taken for" . '. ." ., ,. ,I. granted." ". '~" , '.: '. .- ',:. : " '1 When delinquent husbands are (" '. 'FILMED IN B£t.:GIUM>ITAL~. Ai:RtcA confronted with this complaint,... :j".,... . -AM> MOsT1.Y IN niE CONSCIENCE OP the~ pr6test that of course' they" ,~ I . . .: '~YOWlIi ANo.B£AUllFUI.,' _~ .. _ appreciate .all that. theit. wives :. ',' . '''~ ' . are doing for them but .that· they.. :,,', .';:. '..... L.:..-.,. . -'. also are' working hard. to 'suppoft' '" -rEEunn EVANS DAME PEGGY AS'HCROFT DEAN JAGGER' wmiI _DREO OUtlJltOell SCREENf'lM 8I'~R~'~~' . ,. the ·family. What they: fOrget' 'is'· ,.:;,,~,,::' ~~~._Hfl\Cftc..~ . PRODUCED BY HENRY BLANKE INnCfEo.,F.R£DZUtHEMAMf .USCOOMfOl6O"'~lIY'Mlflzwu", that they are receiving a great ' I,: : ;7' :~a\~~i~ttj~~~(ma~~~fr~~e:~Y.' ... -EA~' ~.-Y... ~·----------.-/;...;-, ~

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,qrow~in~"'ll People lnto, Pew Bui~t for Eig·ht

,: ." ls,.'~,"ld.,V~ngeance for Irritated Ushers ' ,.

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'By Rnssell Collinge

. 'This sta~te~out with the idea of giving the Congregation a chance to air 'its ~iews and critiCisms. of Ushers in gener~l"":'-andaIlo,ving the Ushers equal time at later date.' But it~eems probable thabl lot'of, peo.ple·.niight read only one.siqe and never get: arOlind ~ ~ear1~g~rOmth~o~per. Then,' in. a .flash ofbri11;iant cl~rity~) saw'th~ path ofjus-, bce. Why not c:ombme em? · ' h d" lth t h ,. :..' .'. , ' Ct:..' 'h' .". h . b" . . '.' ...., ooc ,over an .slgn~.: a· ere i made. for eight ordinary people? ,~ .er~w~t , c;> tame? from . a s~at:· .' '. ..... . , . " . . .Well, 'YOU just ,watch next time, conflde!J,bal. sour~es In b o t h , And ,what h~p!>ens. .The In- ~ USHER: You' still here' So~e, ea~ps,· the fraQkly., bias~d .' separab)esget, mto. a bIg,. argu- times.J wonder', \v.hy i usher. . ~ent who,s gOll1g . '. d" . P lamts of both t"'e ,. . congregation. ' over. '. . .. " ....to Sit,. and. ' Whoy anyone oes. I'. 'sure' h' ate' . , . .they leave. 'you .. ,a, n'd. .the' 'ushers. '.. •' . . . , .,. , standmg· ·there c r ...'. o w'd'mg. ,everypne m:' .p'eop'1"e CONGREGATION', . t· h ere ear Iy,oug h'"v t0 h ave ", . . , ' I'm ·g·lad . ,WIth " the 1 . whole. " . , pew you,ooched .' . 'f'·· th a't' ge ....ou asked me • .Can I' . tell you' overg at. " you, and sm - ·some·. , rIg . hts. ' B or . ' anl1g . . .. ". u t la t ecomers a thing or two 'about fmg...C: ~hat 't.' .t 0 Sl't ... so y.ou t ry t 0 get . th am..I tsuppose~, d th to wan , . . ushers! 'd' Hav~:' you ,.ever, ,run: into· the ?'. asell .. e .Jom. an. en. 0lie more into a full pew.. It's . usher a~'the do()r who never has give t~e~ a written note to t)1e .' 'tough on the early ones but i any change? Ask 'him to do a. people In the .fourth- pew left I' be'th' '11' h'd 'b~'''' , . . . . .' . . saying' Admit one . I~ure. may ey a . a. . Ig AWARD: ·The~.. Simple ~hl~g like c~angInga bill . CO NG REG A ION' Th bills to change a[}d I feel' better. NEW PRESIDENT: Rose.., and the dirty look you get-the . h ' M~ry 'Cuny, of Chicago '. ' . en 'Well,' time to give out the fumbling ar.JUnd. '.' ·Look. Th~y , ~:r.e:- th~ 1;lghtY sU~fe t' of ,envelopes,."" mary Rocca, member, of the .has been named to receive know that people aI:e coming tb 't. rI~ I;n .0 Iters a t .~o. ec Ion .' CONGREGATION: And all ,the annual Dineen 'Award.of staff of the news' 'bureau at Mass on Sunday. so why the '. Im~. ramp, /ramp, ramp up,. '.' " . '. ' . 'b··t 'k'" the aisles like the Roman Le- that talkmg that· goes on .In ·the National Catholic Thea· 'Marque~te University, Milb Ig surprise' a ou . ma mg . b' k' I '11 t"h' k' th st gions on para~~ ......:.. and just as .. , ac.,. ·,rea Y i n : e pa or. tre Conferimce for her distinwaukee, has "beert elected, change? USHERS: . It's like. this. We soon as they. finIsh that collecc- ought to know. about It. ..•• guished' service in Catholic president of G~mina Pi' EpR start out with a supply of small tion..: tramp, tramp, tramp . HERE LE:r US END silon, national Jesuit honor~ tiills and silver and just before back agam. A.nd why dges the NOW . . . WIth the observation theatre activities. NC Photo. ary society for women. NC Mass,it looks like plenty. But ,~econd collection. have to .run ~at the past~r does know about Photo.' guess 'what? The first five or,six Into t~e consecratIOn? Or rIg~t ~t-:-fr~m all Sides. !Ie knows how White's Farm Dairy people that show up want after. It - when everyone, HI . Irrltatmg som~ thmgs can be to change for a ten! . Why? Tbey kneelmg and. . . . . the congreg.atIon and he kn?ws "SPECIAL MILK must know theY.,'re coming to USHKRS: Ushers g~t prob- how bad thmgs would be wlth-, From Our Own Mass on Sunday so couldn't they lems. And one of them IS collec- out the ushers. He knows that Tested Herd" have the seat money and what- !ions. T;wo. collecti,ons and the congregation seldom thiJoiks ever they put in the collection Jammed churches. It s all .an ,about th~ problems of handlmg Acushnet,' Mass. WY 3-4457 ready? . .' ". . usher can do to work his way 10 Masses each Sunday - and LOUISVILLE (NC)-The Th. to h h ' h' along an' aisle, let alone collect that the ushers must. • Special Milk h ey rant~ge abve t edrlgtht ... but it gets' done. Then comes But by way of consolation Catholic fa,mily has an im• Homogenized Vito D Milk e c .alknge o.r· b.. •pape';" oy San d e the' second I collection! Start it he al~ knows that the usher~ portant role to play in bring- ' ml • Buttermilk . man- u., not on un ay. . h ft h f" ' " . .. You know what I think? I think rig t a ~r, t ;. Irst and run mto .wIll contmue to give theIr bme . ing Christ to' the' modern • Tropicana Orange J~i~ . 1 .' f b' b'll' the consecration .. , after that, and efforts and that the.congreworld, a prfest-exped in family 'they k' • Coffee and Chc:ic. Milk. '. deethP ahsupp y dO Ig I.S riot 'only is everyone imeeling,' ,gation,will f6rgetits irritilti.on- . life work said here. aroun e ouse ,an no one IS h' '.. .' . . •. Eggs .". Butter ~ Ich makes thmgs awkward, unbl next Sunday: . Father Paul M. Valente, chap- a 11ow ed I kt O .t °Tuhc h , 'th. em· d" urdm g but big ; churcli; . big crowd, fast . lain 'of the Christian Family. th e wee. Sb" un ay ' t' a rid' ·you may run mto , . ..........--";,,....... . k en,,;.. 'on l·· 10 .celeb ran. Movement in Buffalo, N. Y., everyone.piC s u~ ~ :nIce Ig 'Goinmunion. $0 why' not after. 'warned against regarding ·mar- or 20 and c0n;Ie!l:,.a ro,Ul\(1· for . ~ . ' ...- ' 'l'k' '. d ' 'h'l t A d tlf.·· " d . 't • 't ",ommumo,·, I e urmg teas riag!! exclusively' as husband~ ch a.n g e. . n ey' .on,·' wan' 'or t· ? '.'-,Vi '11-" I t' f .t'. ' .any fives th nk ,J'ilt, ' . a IOns. e, e s ace I. wife and parent-child relation. ' a .you. u .,~>nes By then a lot, of the congregaand silver and may·be two dimes . ',. . ships. t r't" . . ,bon' Will be on the way out. .. By this line of thought, he .'-and a nickle fOth or . a as, . q~ar.. Excuse .me 'someone wants a , '" : ' said, "we forget that parents are tel'. People~ . ,.,... . Iwmdow open. . .' . • also)ay people an~ that the great . Impati~~tUshe;S'" . . . "'Earl~:Birds ~ren't Lucky field of the laity is to work in CONGREGATiON: And then CONGREGATION: ... another the temporal order-to restore the whole temporal order to take the usher wlio,march~s up'·· 'thing~why is it that when you to the head of tbe aisl~,turns, .take the troUble to get to church com •• a Christ." holds up one ,finger, sta'res' back .early, as you should, and get Christian Struc~ure at you and, waits. 'Wouldn't you settled in a' pew with seven The greatest task of the ChriS- 0. think, Iie:.·could see you have other early c()mmers-why, justtian family today,' the speaker someone -';with ·YOli?~. And, my, "about at the Gospel there's a tap said, is to help give the world how'iinpa~lent'he. gets 'If 'you ·on yo'u~ s}loulder and the usher "a Christian form and structure." don't practically. run up. the aisle. ushers a fine, .family of three "The day has past-'-if ever it . USHERS:: Now, you .take th'e . into your ·p'ew. 'I think all ushwas in' existence-when a family insepai'~ble companions;::'Two of ~rs. are frustrated subway guards. or a group of families can with-' . 'em. So you .searCh:,the. cr.owdM Ever notice. the .smirk they have , draw from the world, either lit-· ch4rch·. ,ind. '. find" tw'o . pOssible when they've'" squeezed eleven erally or figuratively, to develop spaces:1jot together, maybe, but people and a child into a pew Christian family. living. Beats.. SO you as~' the people' io, "We have had enough of frag'Coll~;ge' Choi~e.· mented specialization in mOdern ..... VIler., til•• uP."".", If".. .. life. What we need now is in. TREN'rpN (NC)':"-Ti'ie ,second ' ." tegration, in more 'ways than the highest c,o\Jit in:' New Jersey, hali ftAPPl1T. .MONKa tl Ill. ...., " .• . ..... " usual connotation applied to this held as v~lid a st~te scholarship till lentl.. word." , law providing for the, first time .'. , • Msgr. Earl L., Wnalen, . secr~ that .state-financed .scholarships. tary of the Cincinnati Arch- 'can be used' in 'priVate'as well .'; diocesan Council of Catholic. as p'ub}ic colleges. Women, tole:. a session on th,e ,Electrical.. liturgy that the lay apostolate BEFORE: ~YOU is becoming ihcreasingly identiContractolS fied with the current liturgical .BUY -TRY movement. . ' There can be no apostolate' SecOnd St.·.· without the liturgy, nor a Catholic 'way of life without the Mass, " ....A~~, .RIVER he said. . , PLDSMOBILE . Although "we know and have OS~rne'2-2143 'enault • Peuge~t '~ Simco been told" that the Mass is the .l '67 Middle Street, Fairhaven greatest act of worship; "~e still do not understand it," Msgr. ". WHalen said. He told his listeners that an understanding of the Mass is not intuitive, but the result of study and Christian living.

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Catholic Family Has Vital Role In Apostolate

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MOTORS

OPEN DAILY ~TILL"2 A.M.

500 Workers Make Pilgrimage to Shrine CAP DE LA MADELEINE (NC)- Five hundred employes of the Association of Railway Employes took part in their 13th . annual pilgrimage to the shrine of Our Lady of the Holy Rosary.. here. A donation of $4,000 towards the new basili~a was presented. ' During the pallt IO J years th4! workers have donated some $1'4;-' 000 for the purchase df'a 5·tatlon. of the Cross for the basilica. . Tiley also 'are undertaking to raise $14;000' for the purchase of a Stations of the Cross foe the' basilica.. .': They also are undertaking to raise $40,000 fOi' an organ ill the basilica.

P.RI:NCETON •'

ROUTE 6 -

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fEATURI~G

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I

16

Is Keep Right Shortest Sermon , -Continued from Page Six third. There are rules which deeurtains combined. rise strongly mand this. 'and steadily against us' through Almighty God also has His 'our 'own building. rules-laws long since promulThey may be discovered stand- gated.' Thousands-of years before ing forth ir. the known, and Geneva He ,introduced ,His recognized, wilful and deliberpeople to summit talks. Atop' ate enactments of positive 'sin Mount Sinai, a/nid the flash of contrary to the pronounced manlightning and tre ,road of thu~­ dates of 'Divine Legislation. der, He causea to be engraved They may be immediately : indelibly on tablets of stone His identified as utterly heinous to, Commandment~-rules for, the the all-embracing vision' of, an Game of Life. I all-seeing God. In themselves Rules, too., for the heavenly they constitute the legion of of- 'highway, sin'ce; their observance, fenses. perpetrated by mortal, eliminates all possibility of spir-man against his Eternal God~' itua,l traffic jlams. wholesome Now sinre.,it is not intended eterilal wreck~, costly lasting to pro~laim litany of these casualties. They need only to transgressions, and since it is be heard, he4r.kened to; and not designed to list humanheeded. i kind's failings categoriCally, s u f - , Two, Loves fice it to stat~ tnat every positive No doubt you have already serious/sin must be brought low, noted the fact that, all Ten Combe it- to our dishonor by thought, mandments m~y be reduced in word or 'deed. number to twoJ-.,.love of God and , In their wanton display of in- love of man. Such love makes , gratitude and, their evident lack the human heart pulsate in holy of appreciation, they tend to beunion with the Sacred Heart of . little, if poss'ible, the infinite Je~us. Such love defines the merits of 'Our Savior's all-gener": Creator's world as large enough GUS sacrificc upon the gibbet of for all His cteatures to exist Calvary. They declare man blind in 'peace, harm10ny and concord. to the vision of his glorious oinSuch love_ condemns the wordl <'<2, 'heritance; th"l', of a son of God. and actions of Icrushing Khrush'They demonstrate an indiffer-chevs and gr{li]>bing Gromykos. ence to Christ's holy wish 'to be Such love establishes earth as, with him daily in Holy, C()IIl- a stepping-"t~>ne to heaven. .munion. . Such love eliminates the need of They displa;, forgetfulness that a seeing-eye dog, to guide your the Holy Spirit of God came course:':"'-a cou'rse readily and 8fIce to remain forever'in Holy' brilliantly mJminated by the Cenfir~ation. Obstacles to 'the holy ,grace of IGod. - <enhancing and augmenting of The Master 'Planner - bas ,cod's 'eternal ,glory without; -mapped the 'way. ,He pointS 'Reeds must go. straight ahead! His route, lying Put the spiritual steam shovels directly forward, needs be Mid bull~dozers to work. Tear" ,sm~oth and leyel, never bumpy, down repulsive sin and its curved and crooked like a prettem,pting, alluring ·'occasions. zel with your; beer. It .dictates • 'Bring them low. Nothing mus~' its own rules.! Obey, them and stand in the way of God's coming you'll get there. .to us and our going to God. Keep Right! Road buildine helps.us recall ' Speed and comfort will :avan that back in school days we were but little, shoJld you happen to ,taught a straight line describes 'be, trav~lIing in the wrong dithe shortest distance between rection."You~ citizenship is 'in any two points. True, but not heaven" declares the inspired always safest. page of. HolYI Writ. Keep the God Has Rules rules of the road and you'll be- ' When aging 'Ted Williams come a perm:u'1ent resident. poles a long ball within the park. 'We have Chbst's promise-"If 'he could easily jog leisurely' you would ent~· into life eternal, ' down, the base line to third but, keep the Corrlmandme,nts.'" Our ·the umpire's waving arm would traffic signs along the highways eall him out. First he must h!1stle' put it another kay in whatprobalong the prescribed paths, ably ,bespeaks' the shortest re, touching first and second before corded sermoh of our times..,.he can d'ig his sPik<=:s safely into KEEP :RIGHT:

Cross-Examination

DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER. MASS.

'THE CATHOLIC CROSSWORD

Dislike Reds· Continued from Page One The Bishop also commented on individuals who go to China for a few week~; and then' act as authorities on the ,situation there. Under Coercion "Th~re is no freedom of thought or freedom of speech over tliere, so 'how can these visitors expect to get the truth from people who are under coercion'?" the Bishop asked. "They go, for' the most part not knowing a single word of Chinese, to a 'country where no , one will dare say a word on how 'he feels because he "would certainly be caught and imprisoned," Bishop Turner continued. For future travelers to Red China, the Bishop had this to say: "Before God they have an 'awful responsibility.'" ,He advised travelers to go to British , - Hong Kong and speak to the Chinese refugees there, if they would know the truth. "They will find there matter, for tears, ~ and they will learn the truth 'from people who have become free,'.' Bishop Turner, concluded.

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Two Bishops Visit, ~n. Diocese

~Continued .fron:tPage

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One' There he visit his 93-year. "des h'IS years Qld father. Afncan see. He dlVI ' as Bishop into' ';five year plans." Bisho~ I?u~bel~an of Jabal'During his first five years he bur, India, IS .a, natIve~f Holl~nd. built a seminary, cathedral an<! ~e has b~e.n the l.!mted St~t~s B. F.GOODRICH, Dist. technical school in Accra and Slllce Apnl l\nd WIll leave In RECAPPING DONE energetically fostered the devel- Aug~st. H: iSi touring the counIN OUR OWN PLANT . opment of native vocations try ~n t~e u,!trrests of the needs 365 MAIN STREET among his people. , of hiS DlOcese r "' FAIRHAVEN ~, There are at present five naThey incl~~,e schools,a ~os~iWYrtJan 7-4501 tive priests, three major sem- ta,l, ~nd addltl,ons ~o the ex!stm g inarians and 22·minor semina- semmary.. Th,e BIshop saId he rians in his Dioc'ese, as weIr as has two. priest-'doc.tors a~~ilable four 'pro.fessed Sisters, four for medl~~l \\fork m addItIon ~ , novices and four postulants. In .lay phYSICIanS,' They are hand 1- , -addition, many' priests and reli_caPJ.le(l, however,_ by lack 01.' gious from other areas are at eqUIpment. 299 ASHLEY BLW.' work in Accra. ,The Diocese of Jabalbur has The Bishop's second "five year about ~,OOO Catholics amoT)g a opp. St. Kilian Church plan" includes concentration on populatIOn of~,ooO,ooO. It covers Free Parl(in~ Free Delivery "religious education in the Di- an area r~u~hly equal to the ocese with emphasis on the litur- state. of Mal~E1' It was erect~d as New Bedford WY 7-8281 gical movement. He will develop a Diocese I?I ~932. and BIshop an organizationl similar to the Dub.belman I~ I~S fustand only C,onfraternity of Christian Doc- _ Ordllla~y, ser vmg as. p.refe?t trine to train -lay catechists and a(}Ostohc. fro~ -1933 until hIS coordinate teaching. consecratIon ~n 1954. 'APPRAISER • "Life in Africa is moving ver,. The . ~issifll~ary, who ,has lEAl ESTATE fast" he declared "We built worked In IndIa 36 years, has qUi~kly, but now ';'e must COD.- b.iinself becotne an I~di~m, ~a- ' solidate our position." Part a4. ti()nal. ~e spea.~s ~mdl,. chIef INSURANCE 'his purpose in visiting the United tongue In 1lIl!C m hIS DIocese, WY 3-5762 States is the rec~iting of 'Jay and aIs(}so?,~ ,!,ele~u. Most of U6 Cornell Sl. missionaries willing to assist in the populahor In hIS .a~ea proNew Bedford his catecheticaI, projects. fesses the H~ndu rehglO~,. bU,t "People ~ho come to Africa th~re. are al~? many aborlgme.s., , ." '.. Thirty pnestil serve the DI,.., should be professIOnals, he saId. '., d I I '300 S·IS t ers, In .' " 11 " , " oces~ an . ne.ar y Trinit~rian ~e have n~ s ortage of .SeI'Ql- additiom to feligious Brothers:' skilled workers,- but tea.che~s" Eri route to Iri'dia, the Bishop will : doctors and nurses who WIll aui . H 0,II' an d t 0 or ' daln ' • " , st op Ill' a·",- . ~n t~e s~re,~d OL theChurchart~. young Indianl as a Praemonstra": Illva ua e. tensian. Several other native' . . BO¥S ,WANTED ,for, the Priesthood anl!! Brotherhood. ;Bishop Bowers will make ar- vocations are: in the making, he l~ck of funds NO impedi,~~, rangements for consecration 'of· said. I -' " his new cathedral while he is Bishop Dubbelman will speak ment. ' here, and will-address the, nain churches knd visit PropagaWri~,te: , tional convention of the Knights tion of the I Faith directors in' -of St: 'Peter Claver in Mobi'le -.- the' Midwest rbefore leaving' this. P: 0.80.574' in August. A trip to his West country. He lhas' already toured 8oltimo~ 8, Md. Indies home is a.Iso on'his agewiL llbe P&ciiic cOast.

ROLAND'S TIRE SERVICE

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9 Cud 10 Arab chiefs 11\ Ten ,(Comb. ·for.... 12 Alcoholics aid 14 State (Abbr.) 15 ~void. 16 System 17 Upright, ilon. 18 Bible BooIt (Abbt- J 19 $oak 21 Jurist 22 'Mr.:' (Sp.) 26 Cloy P;pe 27 Mr. 'Franc. 28 Hair oils' 29. News, oer,vice 35 R.-seet. office 36 Science degr.. 37 Laelaving ......

Edit~r

SALINA (NC)-Father Gilbert : Landoll has been named prochancellor ()f the Diocese of Salina, Bishop Federick W. Freking announced. Prior to the appnintment Father LandoU was assistant' editor of the Northwestern Kansas Register, di'Ocesan weekly newspaper.

,

'The former diplomats also op": posed revival of. the ."personal representative arrangement," whereby 'the President sends an official,representing him personally, but holding the rank of ambassador. This was done ,from 1939 to 1950. -, The arrangement "would find little enthusiasm today in Vati..t:> can circles. hecause o,f its equiv- , local and temporary nature," the group maintaipe~.

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ProposeH-oly See Rela,tions Continued from Pan Ooe ,in the report, ,said the group urged diplomatic relations with ,the :fIoIy See because it is an ilIlp'ortant source of world information; representation would enhance the, U. S. position with Latin American nations, and, it would ally this country with "the :!l1placable foe- of athletic . . "' ,communIsm. , The· group said that appointment of a U. S. ambassador or' minister "would appear for the moment to be out of the question" because of "political ,ana other opposition" this would encoimter in the U. S.

-THE ANCHOR Thurs., July 9, 1959

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Agric'ultural Workers .Need Protective Legislation By Msgr. George G. Higgins Director NCWC Social Action Department

A few weeks ago in the vicinity of Phoenix, Arizona 16 Mexican farm workers were burned to death in a traffic . accident and 32 others were serious!y injured. It would be an idle waste of time and small comfort to the survivors of the accident and to the farmers for the employment of families of the deceased to the group. The unscrupulous try to pin the blame for this conduct of some of these crew terrible tragedy on anyone leaders, such ·as the withllolding

Pope Praises Cardinal Stepinac For Pi'ety and Intense Activi.ty VATICAN CITY (NC)_uIt cularly for his zeal and intePl~-' is better to suffer than to aid activity in behalf of his paston,: injustice," Pope John XXIII has .government of the Zagreb See. stated in a letter sent to Alojzije Cardinal Stepinac . has bee'~' Cardinal Stepinac. confined to his native villa!!' The contents of the letter were of Krasic, Yugoslavia, since hi, not disclosed until now although rele~se f~om prison by the COft',. ' . mUl1lsts m 1951. Jt had been sent to the Cardmal The Pope wrote the Cal'din;: several days ago on the occasion . th t u k t" of the 25th anniversary of his a .yoU now a~~ ere ley I ~ episcopate. the m:dst of.sadness.. He recalJ(. that hiS merIts, "acqUired throuf.: In the letter the Pope praised action and sufferings, won ft,:: the Cardinal, who is Archbishop attention of' aU. Our pre~;i(­ of. Zagreb, for his moral gifts, cessor, Pius XII, honored yo·: piety and firmness, and parti- with the sacred Roman purple·...

in particular. Let us charitably .of earned wages, has seriously hurt' many farm workers. To assume, then, that, humailly -Correct this situation; companion. speaking, :t was bills have been introduced in unavoidable. the Senate and House calling for The fact rethe Federal licensing of crew mains, however leaders.' . -as I pointed out in a stateAs a matter of policy, this ment released column' has be~n hesitant over ST. MARY'S CATHEDRAL, grounds at Highland Avenu'. t h " 0 ugh the the years to recommend public FALL RIVER Westport Factory. Evening se~, NCWC News support for specific' CongresThe Women's Guild will bold sions will begin at 7 and Satu,-Service shortly sional . bills. There is ample a public whIst at 2 this afternoon day afternoon seSsions for chi:after the Arijustification, however, for makat St. Mary's School. dren will start at 1. zona tragedying ap exception to this policy VISlTATIOl' GUILD,' Rev. E. P. Levesque is honor', that the numin the case of the above-meJ:lNORTH EASTHAM ary chairman, assisted by;. ber of such actioned proposals, for farm workGuild members will sponsor a . large committee of. parishioner· cidents in the ers in general and migratory record hop at 8:30 Friday eveBooths will include foods, whi: . transportation of migratory agriworkers in particular, being ning, July 10 in Eastham Town elephant,' green thumb, dol)' cultural workers, both domestic completely unorganized and Hall. A social is scheduled for fancy work, balloons and nove:and foreign, has consistently liaving no lobby of their own, Wednesday evening, July 15 and ties, games and chances. been so. high in recent years as must of necessity look to sympafair will be held from LATERAN STAMPS: A a10Summer to call for some kind of remedial thetic friends in other walks of till 3 Wednesday, July 22, also MT. CARMEL, legislation. It is recommended life to fight their legislative likeness of Pope Pius XI feaNEW BEDFORD at the Town Hall. that the several states seriously battl~s for them: tures a set of two new Vati- ST. GEORGE'S, Parishioners will hOld tl'.". consider the adoption of regu-. Accordingly I would strongly can postage stamps issued in second annuai c1amb~ ke ~ WESTPORT lations for intra-state travel urge the readers of this column the 30 and 100 lire values, Horseneck Fair Grounds ~;unda". The annual lawn part.y to benwhich are in ·line with the standto do what they can to support Aug. 9. Ch'arles and Edwar: efit the school fund will be held _comhtemorating the 30th ards of the Interstate Commerce the above-mentioned bills or Friday and Saturday, July 17 Souza head a large committl: Commission regulations. similar proposals', regardless' of anniversary, of the Lateran representing societies of U, . and 18, and again the weekend Protect Others act. NC Photo. partisan considerations. of July 24 and 25, on the church . parish. Legislation directly aimed at saving the lives of migratory '~. workers has, or at least ought to have, a sufficiently strong e~o­ tional appeal to insure its enactment sooner or later. It is well to bear in mind, however, that this : . . . I is not the only kind of legislation.needed for the protection of migrants. On the contrary, the shocking truth of the matter is that there is practically no social legislation of .any· kind either Federal or State, for the protection of agricultural workers in general. _'..;,5..;,9_F..;.O_R..;;D_S_JX_E_S_-_1_2_5_.2_M_IL_E_S ~--~ and migratory workers in particular. MAKE "6" - 114.1 MILES Legislation, such as the Fair Labor Standard.; Act, UnemployAD tests ment Compensation, Workmen's conducted ~ad results Compensation, the Labor-Man. agement Relations Act and Child Labor Laws protect millions of Ity America's fo... _sf American workers, but none ~M~A~K~E=--:: .. I~"~;..:....:9~5~.:::5~M~I~L~E~S~-.;........:_ __!'4~p~41! Average of indepondent automotive who labor on farms. In addition, ., other trucks ..._rch OIgani%ation· _ migratory farm workers, because ~M~A~K~E=-':"~D~':':-.!8~7~.~8~·~M~·~IL~E~S~. ~~~~ ..I£: 100.0 miles . . . . . AVAIlAIIlI ON REQUIST of their itinerant 'existence, are _ inquify Ib: P. O. BoJI21517 often excluded from' local health ford oMsion. Fur. MltDr CotnpaJ Detroit 31, Midtilin and educational facilities. Depressed Group Substandard wages, excessively long hours, poor housing, inadequate health facilities, and· a number o' other depressing conditions are the direct result of the exclusion of farm workers, 'and migratory workers in particular, are' the most depressed and poverty stricken in our , . society. Fortunately this year,to a greater extent than ever before, efforts are being made to correct this miserable situation. Several bills which, if enacted, would substantially i~prove the. lot of . than average of all other ,leading '69 Y2-ton pickup trucks I agricultural workers are currently in the Congressional milL Here is a brief summary of their main provisions: Want every fifth tank. of gas "on the house"! (1) Minimum Wage and Child That's the certified bonus you can get in a '59 Fordl Labor Legislation Tests of '59 pickups, by America's leading indeS. 1085, introduced by Senapendent .automotive testing firm, showed that Ford tors McNamara and Clark, and Sixes delivered higher gas mileage at 30 mph, at 45, a similar bill in the House would at 60, in traffic, in door-to-door delivery. This is an establish a minimum wage for farm workers on large corporate over-all advantage of 25.2% more than the average farms. Beginning with a wage of all others! Come in and examine the certified rate of 75 cents an hour, the records . . . see what a '59 Ford can save for you! minimum for farm workers would be increased each year until it reached the level established for employees in' other industries. The Senate also has before it a related bill, S. 2141, 'which would prohibit child labor in agriculture outside of school hours. Under the terms of. this bill children employed' in agriculture -woul, ~ be given the same protection as child'ren employed \ in industry. Ford's 25.2% better ~milea~ means that fo!' every (2) Crew Leader Relt'istrati_· 100 miln the average !59 pickup goes, a modem ~Of'd Migrant farm workers usually ~_r--/ fJl.AJ. SU loell 2~.2 e.J:tra milee on the sameamouat of cae! travel in groups under a' crew leader who eontracta with

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THE O(Y I~ HI:A.~D BY: THI: . NE'ARE~T WArCH-;~';~

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ANCHOR 18 Thurs.,~THE July 9, 1959

Nun in Alaska Four. D¢cades .,

Court Upsets

New.

Yor~,,~aw

Continued fr.om Page One ag() one of the '~ndian!l bought ... . '::ontinued ·from Page One' came also from Sen. Frank 'J., DIOCESE OF'FALL RIVER. M~SS, when the ice breaks, the nuns dynamo which furnishes' power Sen: Eastland said the Senate, " Lausche of OhiJ. Ina speech on travel by ~anoe .among floating for the .whole '[illage.. Judiciary· Committee' of which>" th'e Senate floor he declared: "I ice and rapids. . . . ' . Froz~n .North ~ CrossWordSolution' 'he, is chairman, will "speedily" cannot accept'as sound the decla\,' .When someone is sick in a reAnother modern. convenience hold hearings on ,the proposed ration that under the right ·of moteviUage, 'Someone must go which· the· Sisters have is amendment to, the Constitution. free'spee<;h tl:le showing of movto···the convent for Sis~.er and automatic ·washer. and- ·dryer. ,He' was 'joined in introducing ing pictures in public encouragAL;B bring her and a traveling como. The missi6narYIsaid that when the amendment by Seris. Estes ing and implicitly approving an STOLE pan ion back to the sick persoll. clothes are firstJhung oult during' Kefauver of Tennessee, Herman adulterous life is lawful,' and MI,TER' " Mentioning that this is rather:. the winter they become very E. Taimadgeof' Georgia,· Strom . that the, government 'is helpless SOTER . frightening, because ·they seldom; stiff, but in, a ~e':'v.days.turn -w0nThurmo'1d. of South Carolina and .·to do anything' 'about iU' know the Iridian' who is paddling . derfully soft '. and.' fres~.. ' Holy Olin',D.Johnston of South CaroBelieve' in Commandments . 'NOD the 'canoe,' Sister recalled' otle 'Cross h~s .winter.: temperatures' li~a. ' ' . :. Sen. LaOsche'said the Supreme " REpIlAAIEMIISSS : particularly 'harrow.ing ride down to 60 beloW, zer&,. Anything . Support for the amendment Court decision "stated that the ffUMERA!.IROCHETS whe'n the :ice' .was breaking. in waler must, De kept on top of morality of, adultery is a matter ' , • ..: Th'·" . k T · P ',rlest . an s .WO, - upon which'·' people might have :When' the craft arriVed at. a . the ever-present wood stove 'or it· ' \MIC4• •buTER -large ice block which, 'it could wilt freeze. I '. . , Anglican >Ministers;, different opinions." , , 3ERETTAIPAENULA oot 'cir'cumnavigate, its' skipper .More and more traces 01 Civili-MELBdUR~E (~C) -Fathe~ Howeve~., h~ said, ,~he .peop~e "had the two nuns· get out onto ' z~tion- are' finding their way into , NSMIlJNlIOPlSPA. ' W, A:~ooley; founder .oC.St. . of the Untted, States belIeve lD , "ARM . the 'ice~ He was out" of sight for Uie ,remote' parts qf. Alaska, SisMacy;sCath61ic Settlement has' the Ten Commandments. We be20 ininutes' while the· stranded t~r said. 'More people are travel-, publicly thilnked two Arigiican lieve' in· . the comtpandment. STEAL missioners wondered whether ing 'and 9uying fis dop.e via-mail millisters f9C. their' help and ·'Th,?~...shalt': notcommft adul,'CORDS .be wotlld 'eve>: return! ',' order catalogues.' advice in the construction' ,of tw'o te.ry,. .. ; , The. nearest' doctor is 300 'miles"Two p~iests ~re in' residence, · homes for elderly' people:' _' _ .BLUES away. He is radioed only in' one for' the village Of ,approxiFather .Pooley 'paid tribute to ENSemergencies and for ·operations.. . rna tely 300' 'Indians· 'and. one' .for, the' Rev:. Mr. ·.Tl1 cker t~e An-' Sister Mary Edward. :deJj.vers· . the 'missiori' stations. Most of the glican settlement at Camper.. \ ' babies, pulls. teeth, ,treats cuts, obstacles confr6nfing ·the spread, down and the Rev. Canon Smith f:acts ofF'aith 'and takes care of the usual of Catholicism I are dying out. of a simHar settlement at Bairns-' diseases. Sister said. , . I · " : . ." . . ANS.WERS:,i (b);2 (d);3 (c); 'dale, Victoria. '''I think ·the Sh'e has a clinic in the convent <I (a); 5 (c); 6 (d); 7 (d); 8 (a). · great accomplishment here' is Catholics or Nothin&, for those who:~re able to come thaJ '!Ve. ',have ,been' able to Almost all the Indians in her for ,treatment" ~nd she trains the ' break dowr. sectariarism and village are converts: "They are school youngsters in the basic bigotry..We are all friends helpfor Bristol County either Catholics or have no reli- principles of firkaid.One of'her, ing one another," he said. gion," Sister said, since we have most unpleasant experiences was Continued from Page 'One been the only missioners there. 'conneCted with Isled dogs. '''lam out his own role a's head of the But usually only the older people scare'd stiff of I them," she said Church. puts him in an e.Xcepcling to the old superstitions and wryly. One day ~he was asked, tional position to give co.unsel 011 rites. There has been so much ,to help a dog whose eye had peen peace to the world's statesmen. progress in Alaska in past years." badly torn in a Ifight. Praises Labor ~ . There are 11 Sisters at the She aslfed i:t8 ,master, "Can , P .. . . ,. h . h' British Columbia convertt.° They you hold him?" '. ',:' ,The. o~e cntlclzed t. ose W 0 . TAUNTON, MAss. ~un a boarding,· school foi: about He replied, "I don't know.", try. tlos:,r up W~~lst bet,:,,:en , OIL.: BURNERS 130 boys and girls, most of whom "W'll'You'd better!" Sister SOCIa c asses. ,1 e . pralsmg. "'Iso complete Boiler-Burner THE BAN~ ON or Furnace Uniis, Efficient are' abandoned and neglected .. I ~ 'd h'e looked 'at the '. ,the progress in. the labor fiel.d , exc alme as s l' tt t' t' th "t .IOW cost heatin~. Burner and J.foo. children, "The 'principal reason menacing eye bf..the dog. With he .cal,e~ a en IOn ; o e ?O" TAUNTON' GREEN " for· their neglect is 'divorce," the animaL held. down by its. many ~dlff~rel}~es,m m~tenal. fuel oil sales and, service. '~Sister p'ointed 'out. There is also . owner and three boys, Sister took" ,posseSSIOns "and deplored the "Member of Federal D~POllIt Sfan.ley Oil Co., Inc. a day,' school for the children, o~. stitches and pU,t ointment "on. its specter, of unemployment.. , . 480 Mt. ~leasant"Stree"" , ;. litS':'rance CorporaUoll New Bedford· . WY 3-266'7'. .' th~ ·village., ' '. eye. Immedia'tely it· quieted Stressillg: .the unity " of the The Indi'a'ns eat mostly,fish,down and'latef, refused to,leave family.as the ':basic.>'.l1nity of and occasionally'moose, caribou' her! .' >' I ' , " , .' society, (he. Pope' urged ,the and bear meat. There are·vegeSister' is. now. in Montreal, father to',take the place'of'God , table gardens'wh'ich":have:to' be where she . Iremain until hf;!r., among his children.' '. started 'in hothouses b~cause ,of trip' back to Victoria at the be-. ''i f tli f thO': .. ', the .short summers; "However," ginning of August.. ' . n sp~a. Ipg o . . or ~ommg the missioner noted, "during' the·. , Highlights oiSta,. ecume,mcal" counCIl, the:. Pope ._ • ~.;. '; : 0. . . . . .. .",t h' ' h" me ..' '24'" HI'g'h[l:g"hts '0)~ her sta·y'.l·n, the said t.,ha,' t its . sum'mer ere ..... IS suns , ch.ief .'bu,sl.·n,e'ss will hours a, day, ··and. things. grow Attleboros hav~ been :a visit. to be th: Increase ,of }'~lth and the much' fast~r.'! ' Sacred 'Heart! Convent North' adapting of.. dISCIplIne to th.e ,Mission conditions are· much • Attle'boro ,wh~re Moth~r Marie 'needs of the. time. c ' . irTt"proved sinc" Sister' first went,' Gemma, ~uperibr, was lier hostYour Brother Joseph to Alaska .in 1916. Now, her con- ess; a tour thtough a religious, In 'speaking, to non-Catholics, vent has, running', water. The articles 'manufacturing company; , .the Pope gave' himself a name villagers, ho!Vever,' melt snow and attendance'iat the graduation by, which all may know him: ,UNION WHARF FAIRHAVEN, MASS. during the WiI)ter and save some of her niece, Lfnda C. Ouellett~, "Your brother,. Joseph." These to be 'used during 'the Summer from Sacred Heart School, North words, cried out by Joseph, son . months'• Attleboro." , .... . of the patriarch, Jacob; to his The convent also has its own Her .. traveling compa!1ion has long-separated 'brethren who liPremium~' dynamo for electricity, particubeen' Sister Marie Leonard, a knew him only as governor of .larly useful during the darkness cousin from Montreal, who has Farnau's Reading. HARD COAL alien Egypt, refer to the Pope's of November, December, Janu:" accompanied her on three' 'pre- Christian name, He celebrates NEW ENGlAND COKE ary and February. 'A few years vious trips horrie. . '. I his name day on 'the feast of DADSON Oil BURNERS '. Sist~r Mary iEdward· has 'vis- St. Joseph.. , . UrgesVoc,ations ited her four sisters, Mrs. Marie 24-Hour _Oil Burner Service The Pope said that he sought EVORA (NC)-"It' is not Cloutier, Nordi Attleboro; Mrs. the return of non-Cathoiics not Chaf'co~ Briquets enough to pay for the education Henry Monf,et,!.Mrs. ,Louis Tharl into a. stranger's house', but into of'a seminarian-you must send and Mrs. Marcel Forgit, ,aU of . Bag. Coal .- Charcoal their Father's house" . Attleboro;_ a ; brother, Albert your own sons tei the seminary," ,"'9' Archbishop' Manuel~ ,Trindade Coutu of Pawtucket; Mrs. Ovila . In the encyclical,· Pope John Salgueiro of, Evora, Portugal, Ouellette, a riiece, and Ahhur combines an iRflexibleattftude declared here. The prelate was Cloutier, a 'r)ephew',' both of toward tr,uth" With the greatest Suc>ceJso~s to DAVID DUfF. (;, SON. speaking at a meeting of the North Attleboro; also Lionel' humility and kiridness in speakArchdiocesan Association for yo- Forgit, a ne~hew,> and Doris ing to those who are striving for 640 Pleasant Street' , Tel. WY 6-8271 New Bedford ' , cations to the Priesthoo,d. 5'!vlln. a. niece, ot Attleboro. . . tr'uth. ,

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Fall River CYO Sc'hedule Includes· AII-S.tar Games By Jack Kineavy .'.

THE ANCHOR-, Th,urs., July 9, 1"59

DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER. 'MASS.

Offers PO'og~am To Help Combat ',Juvenile Unrest

Somerset High Schoo{Coa~h

In the immediate offing on the Fall River CYO sports to the Giants' trYout.camp (July 21) mentioned last week-are a couple of All-Star g~Il,1es·to be played under the arc lights. One of these willfeatiJ,re .the best· talent in the· CYO Newcomer BillY' Jurges "has Alumni League against a one thing working for him,.how:strong amateur team' yet ever. He has nc, place to gQ' b,ut to be selected. The second up. Most baseball people concede

ealendar~in addition

NEW YORK (NC)~Dis, trict Attorney FrankD. O'Connor of Queens County presented t hat· county's

tilt, which ill tentatively that it .takes a month or so before for the first week in August, a manager bec0111es sufficiently will pit Northwell .acquainte<r with his perern' Division's sonnel to know what to expect of finest agamst them~ Let's hop~ Jurges is intu-' their Southern itive because. tpe Sox play ~he c 0 u n t e r _ Yanks six straight games after parts. Ruggles the All Star break: and Sou t h Interim Manager? Parks are the Speculation is rife ev'eri now playing Sit e s regarding. Jurges' future status under considerwith the Sox. Is' he merely an ation. interim manager? Is Ted WilThe relativeliams adually Yawkey's '60 canly quiet sports 'didate? We dont' presume to world came to life with a bang. . know, ot course, but we think it over the holiday weekend. Har-, . interesting that Jurges' was ad" vard;s crews turning in an unvised not to alter the present prec'edented double win at Hencoaching staff of Baker, Burns ley proved the Colonials still and Ferris. Billy reportedly troublesome, while at nearby wanted to bring on his o'ld Cub Wimbledon international titles teammate, Augie Galan. in the men's and women;s singles were annexed by South. Amer. We trust thaL Bill Ve.eck. has carded d

STORE WINDOW APOSTOLATE: Store window. displays, arranged in cooperation with store proprietors and :6~eossa~cc~:,~i~~~:a:;~O~t~~~ local and na.tional religious organization.s,. are now a,:~iJ~' . play .. between National. and able through Our Lady's, Store Window Apostolate. A book • American L,eague, teams than..did. store in that city has'featured the above exhibit of"Father the originator of the plan, Hank Greenberg. Frqm' a. purely,.bus- Damien, the '!Leper Apostle" and the works of his order, 'lness standpoint, the arra,nge- the Sacred Heahs Fathers of FairJ1aven. NC Photo.

icans. And at' Baltimore, Higgins was out and Jurges was in as manager of the floundering ,Red Sox. Basebail's PanaCea Higgins' ~e~ignation came as no surpris~. ("wner Tom Ya'wk~y , had ordered general manager' Bucky Harris .to ,WaShil1~ion,,1;<.>; pversee th.e bal~ club an4 such a mQve. ,could pn~sag~" only "Qne thing: the;. 4ecisio,f1 to. change managers hacl,been reacheiI. This. fr~rr:t . time '.i~memprrai ha:~. 'been:' baseball's panacea for' rightjng' a team that is down. ,. 'It ali started in Spring trainfng where, as usual,' the' Sox looked acq'uisiII'ke' world' beater's. The , tion of power hitting Vic, ,Wertz seemed' just' whai the' ·d9C~!:. ordered and Boston's brass had' the Sox in strong contention for the first time ir: Higgins' tenure. ·,Then even before' the bell rang" Williams came up with a pinched n'~rve in l~i!1. nec.k, ~m~ t\1e .big" fellow has' yet.to' hit stride. ~ Wertz, old as players go at 35,:. likewise suffered a' series of de-, bilitating setbacks, with the re-, result that tile starch went out of the Sox' off~nsive. '

mEmt couldn't jniss.-Tl1e Yankees early seallon junket to tpec:qast for the Campanella charity game is~,aqiris,tal}'~e in J?.oint,.:the·:tea~!l drew over 90,000 for a nig\1~ g~p.~.,.,,;,... "., .. ;'. ;,.,,; Jimmy Fund Game The' jimmy' Fund gam~' between, the Braves an~ the Sox. scheduied later th·is mon.tl;i· will no doubt: be pla)'ed before a .

Episcopalian Bishop Sees Son Ordained as Th3 ppist Priest '

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SPENCER (NC)""An Episc~­ and Father Edwin B. O'Bden, Catholic chaplain at Yall~ Unl-' palian bish~p was' pre'sent, in $t. v'ersity,' 'who received 'Father Jpseph~s Abbey h~;e wh~.n his Augustine: 'iht'o 'the Catholic son wa~ ordained· pries't i';1 one Church, ~ of the Catholic Church's strict. Father Augustine is a 1954 est religious orders., .' graduate of Yille. He was concapacity .throng. PeQgle, want to Rt. Rev. Wilfiam P. Roberts verted to Catholicism while an' get a look at Hank Aaron, Lew .. came here from' Philadelphia to undergraduate' there. ,. , . Biirdette, Wa~ren Spahn and Co. Bishop Roberts, who now lives. in, ac;tion. Interleague,play seems see his son, Bruce· A. Roberts, in PhiladelphIa, was forn:terly a good deilJ"more feasible ,tha,n receive the' sacrament of Hoiy the establishment of·a. third Orders as a Trappist Monk. He stationed in China as a missionmajor .league.' The Ameri~an has taken the religious name of . aryof 'the Episcopal Church.' League~Jight 'now:. lists only. Father Augustine. The ordaining His wi~!'!'be~ame a ,Catholic seven,,' .3M. 01' better' hittel'S.. prelate was His Eminence .Rich- while she was living there, her:. Where.. do the, proponents ,of, a. ard Cardinal Cushing, 'Archbish- de£ision being influenced .largely .' by the work done by' the Mary". th.il'd major' circuit propose, t(). op of Boston.' Attending' the '~eremony were knoll Sisters., get the players? .. another sori of Bishop' Roberts, Father Augustine is the fourth . ~'You,' don't make a major William, who is also a member Yale University graduate" to beleaguer simply! by putting' on" of the Trappist' community here, come a member of the Trappist him 'a major leagu'e' uniform",' community here~ commented A..L. President' Joe Influence 'of Church Mike Takes the Rap Cronin,. recently. Leo Durocher's Pitchers Sullivan, .Delock, and attitude on the subject is humor- Annoys Communists Brewer the mainstays of the ously 'veiled but substantially VIENN:. (NC)-A Czechoslostaff, ait found the eal'1y going the same. Leo plans to "buy a vak communist organ has comrough. Rotation was out of the toupee and' play" in the event a plained that the Catholic 'Church' question since on~or several of third circuit is formed. still has "too much influence" the flingers were on the shelf : Hope you enjoyed the All over the· lives of the Czech now and again. Yet, with· these Star game. people. . reverses common knowledge, the "Rude Pravo" said the cammanager had to "take the rap". .'Seeks Ban on' Birth' paign against the Church must This is nothing, more than he stepped up.. It was the first bo'wing to expediency. It's nbt Con hoi BroadcaSt attack 00 the Church made, by the .manager that makes or . LONDON. (NC)-The British the publication in· several . breaks a ball club;' it's the play-. BroadciJ,sting . <;:pr,poration .... has months ers themselves! Stengel'" at' the '. taken ·no.' action on· a :. Catholic " <Examples o~ the .Chur<;h:s i.nhelm .of the podgers and then legislator's announced intention fh"ence, the 'publication said,ar!,! the Braves didn't know what the to ~ek, a ,ban. ona'1 :AngFcan. th~ gre;lt nuiri~er of chri;'-tenii:J,gs, P~int:an~ '. ~allpaper fir~t division lOOKed 'like: Haney 'Bishop's radio broadcast 0i:! birth' Gliurch weddings ~l}dChristian Dupont Paint ." didn't set tqe. 'i\'orld afire with, control..' :' ',' .....' : . ,. burials in the.cpuntiY:, . It,~d~,. , ' . the Browns or 'later the Pirates. monished local communists to '~ . " PAR~INq " . b Anglican Bishop Mervyn' BlJt both men have done the JO ,. Stockw60d -..of Southwa'rk has~ find' a way ·to "replace' ,these_ of Store.. with the Yankees. and' the agreed' to .appeal for funds for·; Church ceremonies with "worthy " Q.~a,.422Acusb; ~ve. : Braves. . the Family Planning Association'· cOmmunist celebrations... ···.. cor Middle St, . radio' addresssclieduled on' Booklet Distribution ·in :. ,New ~ed(o~d August 23 over the BBC network.':' A)tains.N~w Reco~d: '. William '1;eeling,' a ..Catholic '. 'LONDON (NC)-For the first member of Parliament, said re-', , time in its history. the Catholic·. cently that he will make a deTr~th Society distributed more' mand to' have the . proposed bri)adcast barred by the gov-' than three million publications Plumbing - Heating la'st year, its annual rep,ort stated. ernment, which . ~ontrols' tqe BBC.. Most of the 3,084,568 publica-' 915 Acushnet Ave. NEW ·BEDFORD ' tions were booklets costing a few At Weld Square . cents, sold mainly in the rear, of INDUSTR.IAL 'OILS New' 8edfo;d Catholic churches. They deal . ,Co~tinued. from Pa~e. Q~e with devotion doctrine, social ,New Bedtord's L~ading , HEAliNG O'llS trace and retrace tl~eir. paths and other toPi~S.\ . . . . '.. . Plumber over the surface of the globe in' A number were 'translated inTIMkEN a' calligraphy 'of agony';; . to five language!! including the Arabic and an' African 'dialect. " He" continued( "The' refugee, . Oil ,BURNERS Four pamphlets for the blind 'as one who has been forced to &, flee or who'has fled 'by his o~n were reprodu.ced in.l~rail.le. ONE 510" The soc'iety"'is';now distributchoice" from his.ow.n,':society, SHOPPI~G C6N1ER ing one million more pamphlets, from. his home, his hQm~l,and and a year to parts of the English-: close human tie's, is'in"a ~ay like • Telev~ion • Furniture 501 COUNTY' helpless, speaking world' than it did b.e- a newborn,ch'iid • Appliances • Grocery fore World' War' It. It has' a naked,' strtpped" ,of .theprotec-' 'NEW 8ED~D· membership of .36,185 who re- : tions that socie.ty, 'affQrds, its '1M Allen St•• New Bedford eeive pamphlets free in retura members, deprived of any power WY 3-1751 WYman' '-9354' for the«' annual .subl;cQptioQo . over hii environmeDt. ..... 4

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,Grand Jurors Association here with the draft of a longterm program to combat juvenile delinquency. .'His recommendations, which could not be put into operation for several years, include greater use of "released-time religious education" by the three major religions, and a new ex~mination of the possibilities of a course of "moral, philosophic, humanistic study, tailored to the age and development of the youngster. Mr. O'Connor said his program was "designed to stimulate discussion which leads to actionand not mere discussion." Among the other proposals listed were: The encouragement of first offenders "to enter military life wherever feasible." He said 81 per cent of the boys I"eferred to the Youth Counsel Bureau, a "'" private organization in the District Attorney's office, "have served satisfactorily in military life." , Delinquents Anonymous' 'The establishment of minimum se<;urity camps along the old Civilian Conservation· Corps pattern.; ;, '" The establishment of a "De... linquents. Anonymous" set~up similar: to Alcoholics AnoI)Y-' Inous. ',The development of. recrea.;. tional space £hroughout the; \ country~.. .. , ' " '.' , The. enlistment of lay ,volunteers "on a local community and. religious leveL" ,The raising of "standards and incentives to encourage people to become professionals in the fight .against delinquency."

Fig,ht'Smut ,MIAMI (NC)-The: Florida Synod of· ·the Presbyteri8l1 Church in. the USA has joined' other church groups in' the. fight' against ~decent '··literature. ·At· the 39th annual meeting ..of. the synod held ,at the University of Miami, 'clergy and lay delegatel voted to cooperate 111 ridding'the mails and newsstands of obScene l.it~rature.

• .' Sturtevant'& ,Hook '.

HATHAWAY'· OIL· (0.,' INC.

OLIVI'ER

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, RESPONSIBLE, F:OR .THOUSANDS: IIi charge of the activities of Moderator of the organization; Mr:s. John J. Mullaney, Dioc~~an President;'. thOusands of women througnoutthe DiocesJwho are members of affiliates . Mrs: George Bauza, President of the Attlebqro District; and· Mrs. Timothy of the Diocesan Council, of 'catholic Wom~n;"are' thes(deaders~ Left'· to Neville, heading'Taul)toll,District affiliates.'N:ot showriisMrs.Gilbert right are Mrs. James ()'.Brien,-Fall River District President;;Miss 1{athleenJ. Noonan, President of, Cape and island groups. The Diocesan' Council C. Roche, heading' N'ew"Bedford women; R~v" Thomas F. Walsh; Diocesan is'in turn.·an affilia"teoftheNatfonal Coun~il.' : . .' . ' .

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<,.'.M,<HelenaRqbberi'wasreelt:ted . M th G 1 f th C :2e,s~e~~:c~~~ C%~u~erOi~t~~: ' . U~itY4the keynote' of the federation;' the reasonfor·'its. exi~tence;::and 'the means - ~a~io~~ of ~~:'~~is~eis ~~ ;t,~::: marked 13 years of growth and hy'-which it ftlDction's./If one w:ord'is to·be·usedto'describe theDioc~s~n¢ouncilofWo~' seph.of:Concordia at a 'general 8u'ccess with' the opening· .of, a. '; men,. this' must -be it. The'CoUllCii. is. not' actually ,an "6rganiz~tiori,:'as'its:D'iocesan moderchapter meeting closing 'the: dia-:new modern fout,.story head- . tor, Rev. Thdmas 'F. Walsh of S't. 'LouIs' Church"FailRiver"expl~ins,.butafederat'i()n of'" mond ,jubilee y~ar,;of the c~n7 Clu~rter~he~e, " .' "'atriliat,e'!-l,w~ththe majority, ," • , j ,'. . ,~. ,"':;, . '. ' : . ' gre~abon here I~ Kansas, _ The concrete and glass· struc- . f .' ffT t . , ' . t" f The orgamzat.on and develop,... actIve.m the DIOc~se and IS. Bishop Fred.erIck, W, Fre-ture" houses 'handicraft 'work- .0, ',.a . tta e~. consl~ mg. 0 ment cl;)mmitt,ee i~ in cJtarge of ' '<dire~ted·.by R~v, Leo Sullivan•. king.. of Salina presided at the ~hops, .recreationroci~s, 'il. li-' . parlslt""'gr04~s! .gU1l~s. and cont~ctin~ new. ~ffiliates, aqd:,' .Miss~~!lrY A. Cole, Youth. Chair- election .and gave the co~gre';' bi'a'rY, a rtlco~d~ng. stlJdii> ,fo( : ,clubs. Coor~matmg th,e 'en- . keepm~ ,p~esent members. mte~-, 'man for the D,S,C,W", has no~ gation $7!!J00, as an' appreciation radio' trariscri'pti'ons' as' well'- as "tire' Dioces~' is ,a slate of Dioce.:. ,ested, At .present, 21,000: vv oQlen .' been,. m,acl e :a l1abonal vI<;.e-presl-; .gift from" parishes and missions, .. , 'the" administration offices of, the' san officers, ~ith repl'esentatives of the Diocese, belong. to tpe dent. " o f the' Salina diocese in 'which . associlition. .. 'of' each of fii.re districts 'on the Council through 124 affiliates," 'Rev, Francis 'A, McCarthy is' .the Sisters o£,St.:Joseph have'.' ..... 'F'" 'th' J . h H. 't . S· J. :' ' board of dirf'btors, 'Districts are I ; ' The SP.iritual Development .in charge:oHhe Discussion Clubs taught." . a er osep owa son, '" ,' T.; C . 'tt' d th d' , t' ; ", ' , omml ee" ~n er e Irec Ion Comnpttee , whICh' has held PZ:0':' . The congregation was ·started . · of Wah Yan College, and director Fall ~lver,N~w Bedford,. Tal,ln- . .' 'of the Boys andr'Girls. Club, is '. ,ton, Mtleboro ;ind.Cape Cod and Qf Rev, 'Y'lll~am McMahon, has grams demonj;trating.' and. eJ!:-, 75. yearS' ago "withsix Sisters., ·'';''eii' known in Hong· Kong' fiJr' . .the Islands" '1 . . been responSible for such events plaining m~thods by w,hi<;h..such ." -It. has increased .one·' hundred' e hay,e it~ bril1g, abou,t. aa!l the Holy ~our held,at Holy; ~r?ups are s~arted' .alld carriedfold-7now. flum,bering ·6oon~ns. · his~ork among ~ the " nearly • : ,'10,009 streefurchin,!!.o{thiscitY.. ,umtya~O,ng~he,;,?athollcwomen Nal11e ,Ghurch, New ~Be~ford, o;n on.. , " I ... .. 'Th' h'ld" 'f 'd. 'thth .0f.the.DIOcese,; Father·Walsh .the,mght of Pope P}us,XIIs ,To' ass}St ,the women of the . . ~se;c I ren !l:<;e, w~ e. "d ,,' 'd'b I k d'" t'" 1. death which 800 women at-, .. "" ,'. .' ' , ' , . necessity .. ' of 'earning enough. §al,' .an ,rf a ,. ,own. n~ 10~,a , ".'" . ' '., . C.o.un.cIl ~n. " devel?plOg, th~lr Th.. m"""u.... of • man is .. ot the mOI:'iY ~o' f,i!1 d ,food and shelt~r, .,raclal a~dllI~gU1StIc barrler~, _, ,te~ded" It. also wor~s''',closely., programs,," the natIonalgI;0up . .. u~ber .·of· hi.'''.~rvant4 'but in th~' '-' ,'. . 'f . . .f f' . 'I l'f' ,To thIS. end the CouncIl a With, retr~!lt leagu~ provid.es '. them I'.act\,. ·any orm 0 ami y Ie,. " 1'·'."'" , the· DIOcesan t' "1 . d ·t t f . , with monthly 1 ,;'o,ni~ of.~:~ple· who';" ~,'.~rv ...;. affec'tiori. of :ethical' s~arida~d~; member~f. t~e Nationa! 'CO\lnci~ 10 ,::omo Il)g ',C osere. rea s, or messages 'aM pamphlets' cover~ " excep't the will to survive:' " 'ofCatholIc 'Y'omen"~lth head,-. ,'flo. en. . ' . . ' ., . ing every·pha.se of. activity. -In. 'u' .' 'F a th er H'' tson.•s. _'. quarters ·in. -Washington' doctors who a'ddl'tl'on Father Walsh has at' . "d n 'er' owa . I . . , ' DC'" .' ., " The panel .of three i ", . ; ...., ~ , . - , REYNOLDS-DEWALT' I' d' h' . in 1946 th 'Bo ssponsors, YarjQus eyents in .dif-. vI~lted '. severa} sectIOns of., ~he tended' national conventions in' ea. ers Ip s ce ,e y. f t t ' · f th d' , . DIOcese speakmg' on Parents as .. , ' '. Willia~ ;':Acush~et arid Girls Clubs have increased eren sec Ions 0 ' e IOcese. . . ' , ' . , ' '. . ". '. 'Boston Chicago and St. Louis, ..' . , , . . , F' Ie" ·tt . Educators thiS year was the ,re-:-,. ' . '. . . , . 11\ number and Improved their . . ' Ive I" omml ees. . ult of . g 'e't b ' th'e" "1\t the. conventions you real..' New Bedford . WY "6·8234' . 'd e f' h' s a and pro ram, s ,EducaW:>n. up y . 't h ~ zeal of the laywoman in· - , f aCI'IT lies .t ~ provi nen d SIP, " ,T h e...D'~oce~~n' group ?a,n, dr~w .Family Parent ,Ize' ,understand~ng and goo~ example' on 18· dIfferen~ co~mlttees set Committee under ~he direction'" '~e works of the Church," he for: t~ese forgotten youths,. the. up by the: N~tionaICouncil; O~of Rev,Ra~mond,McCarthy.,said.,"The Cou?cil really is maJonty of whom· are refugees the~e,' BIsh\,p . C;onnolly has, The most e~tensive proj'ect of teachmg leadership. ,Even at the. IT'S f-LL RIGHT TO from Red China, . designated fWe in. which women the Council' thus' far w'as' also ~istrict.!Ueetings the clergy tries SHOP AR9UND FOR. . ' of this Diocese part~cipa'~e.-They 'thework of ,that' committee: It ,to. . st~y.,out'of the business being SOME THINGS, BUT P o l i s h ' Reds ~r'e Spiritual:Develop~e~t;FalI}~ 'wasa ~orkshop' on ,the Family'~arriedon a?d just saY,~he openIiy~an~ Pa,rent Education, Youth, and the Liturgy held asa fea- 109 and cl~smg prayer, . 0_ u s t Bis h Op Organ~zatIo~1 and Development; ture of the Council's- annual "We are developing Ieade)'ship BERLIN (NC) _ Polish com- and DlscusslP~ Clubs. . ,: convention, Approximately 750 all the time," he added. "There " The Coul}cll was . offiCially women were at the event' which are nine million members in the 202-206 Rock Street munists are pressing demands t bl' h d J 3 19 3 ' . . Fall' River for the' removal .. of Bishop es a IS e rune " 5, with a discussed, in addition, The Fam~ country, and you see what a force ,.. Czeslaw Ka'czmarek as head. of Mass celebrated by the Most ily and Diocesan Institutions,'- for good that can be," IS TI:!§ PLACE 1'0 the Kielce diocese, it was'learned Reverend B~shop ,in St. Mary's and' The Psychology of Children. , . Cathedra~, :Its first president ;S I lEt GET A PRESCRIPTION here, . was Mrs, Carolyn Manning, who u,eeess u. yen FILL.ED !' ·..TAe Bishop wasplacc~d: u,pqer accomplished .the' groundwork of In commenting. on' the Workhous~ arrest by ,the R e4.s·m 195~, contaCting. ~ffiliates and' inter~ shop, 'held at .t.he sixth annual. . after being charged with "anti.., ',estin,g',them!,in the !1e\y gro.up. . ~onvention, .~ather ;~alsh, who '. ·'jjtiH~".·activities> 'But' he.;.~as. ,Due to:her efforts, 105'affiliates has been Diocesan ,mOderator .. . I' · allowed to resum-e administra':' 'were organizing members of' the Since 195~, said,' "I 'was ,most~·· :7or l Your Protection " lion, of his diocese in '1~7'council:';"I'. , ,. " , ' ' . amazed ,that,we'had 'arrived, so' ;, " ... . Buy From ... Reports I;'ecelved' here state.d, Her succ~,ssor,. Miss. IYIargar~t' soqn .a~ astag~ \yher,ewe, could. ihat~, the communist press. 'has Lahey, .pUt the Council program put on sU<;h an undertakmg. so leveled sharp attacks against the into motion hy havIng presIde'nts sllcce.ssfully,",.' ". ..' . .. . 13'2'Rockdala Ave•.. Bishop, It-was learned that local an'dco~mihee''lea'der~' attend . The 'Youth Committee helps ~~d authorities have' refused to' .meetings an~ othere~ents spon-... .p~art dances,' trips, movies' and ,.. .New Bedtord ., approve parish priests 'appointed sored by :atriliates' and by keep- .parties in. supplement· to . the 5-7947 by him: or. to settle any. matter ing the smaller units in touch work. of the' Catholic Youth. in. which Church authorities are, with the Diocesan group: Organization, Which is verY - obliged to'. appeal to the state. . j " . The third president, ·Mrs.. Mary C \ . A, Almon.d,: who has just com.,. oach Resigns Priest Singer Presents pIeted her term of office, brought' DUBUQUE- (NC) - Vince Six Radio Broadcasts about a tighter organization 'and Dowd, veteran Loras College Do You V/ork in a FaCtory, 'SYDNEiY (NC)-Father Kevin strengthened some of. U~'e wea~ head basketball coach, has. reGarage, Machine Shop or O'Connor's natural and untrained points which the Board' had signed after 18 years in the post. tenor voice is booming him as found in the operation of the ' ..He will enter pri~ate business. Gasoline Station? one of Australia's most popular Council. B~cause . of. tl1is,the~e We pick up and deliver, 'c1ean are quarterlly ~eetings. in,. each ballad singers.' . and repair overalls'. Also. we have ,The' 32':'year-old priest, 'who is, D,C,C'\Y'~f~tl'lct, one for cO -',! a cO,mplete-, Iineot CO'vertljJs. Pants mittE)e ~halr~en', melllbers, 9f. attached to Sac.red Heart Cathe-. .' and.Shi"rts for s a l e . . \ drill' in Broken Hill, Ne,w Solith' the Board'apd distric~ president~,~; , ~e :reclaimand 'wash any oily, Wales - one of the Common- and an 0Ilen meeting for :all. , ' . members of all affiliates, Mrs.', . dirty or greasy ra.9s. wealth:s least populated areas will. present a series 'of six net- ,Rose Muil~ney of Attleboro"'is: Wh~ . Buy When We Supply -----..---':..;" . incoming p~esident. . ., 'L--_.....-'-. work radio broadcasts" in reDistributed by ~ .Many Attend 'spo~se to .public .demand, ' His lilting treatment of Irish Father ~alsh remarked that Rodman songs'was first broadcast earlier he has beeri most impressed with . ~everage Co. this year and the response was the work the women haV:e' been. ,so 'great ,that the. Australia·it do.ing, aridl with ~he largenum331 Nash Rd., New Bedford· . ,-,Broadcasting' , Commission're~ hers.. of members .who: ,attend Z'~ .Boward Ave.• New Bedford . WY~a~ '7:99~t ,. . ;' ... :. :.~~u;ested'hilI1 f~~ ;i~~rie~:}~rieS;., D',C,C.W'. f~ticti6n~,>~:::"~:'~." /". ·~• .,,'._.II,. . . ._~.b. . . WY '9-GC2C or: WY 9-6C25_111!11 "

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