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,Tlle ANCJIIOR
Family Life Meeting
Hits Secular- Ideals
BUFFALO, (NC)-The American secular 'image of marriage and the family was referred to by a priest here as immature and "schizoid in its romantic inability to face reality." Father Lucius F. Cervantes, 8.J., of Regis College, Denver, Colo., told
delegates to the National Catholic Family Life conven An Anchor of the Soul, .!jure and Firm-ST. PAUL tion that the secular ideal of marriage and the family in this country has three chief characteristics: romanticism, in
dividualism and role-confusion.
PRICE lOe 8eeond C I... M.i1 Privileg.. He said that romantic love is $4.00 per Yea' Authorize. .t F.II River. M..... not new, but he deplored' the tendel}cy to regard it as an abso lute, "In no civilization but our own," he said, "has it been'made , '- the unique basis of the, total social edifice insofar as it has been accepted as 'the quicksand Turn to Page Eleven
Fall River, Mass. Ttlursday, July 17, 1958 ------------,------"'01. 2, No. 29
.Diocesa n Sisters Of Mercy' Mark .Golden Jubilee
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Six Sisters of Mercy of the 'Fall River Diocese who were among the 15 that made pro fession of perpetual vows at St. 'Mary's Pro-Cathedral on July .CARDINALOF THE SACRAMENTS: His Holiness 16, 1908, marked, their Golden Pope Pius XII greets Cardinal Aloisi, Masella, Prefect of Jubilee yesterday.: the Sacred Congregation of Sacramental Discipline, during Sister Mary Leo, RS,M" a na th-e of Ireland, bas, taught the a ceremony at the Vatican. Between the Pope and Cardinal pupils of the first grade during Masella is' Cardinal Alfredo Ottaviani (rear), Pro-Secretary her entire period ,of teaching, first at St. Joseph School, Fall of the Holy Office. River, later at St. Kilian School,
TO TEACH IN BELIZE: Sister Mary JaCinta, R.S.M., points to town in British Honduras where she will continue New Bedford, and since then at Holy Name School, New Bed hler career as teacher. Interested onlookers are (left to right) ford. Norma Phippen, Linda Sil!l0n ms and Dorothy F'eid. Sister Mary Elizabeth, R.S,M., a native of Pawtucket, R. I., has VATICAN CITY (NCh-There are seven sacraments taught music and in the elemen tary grades at St. Vincent 'Home but the Sacred Congregationof Sa('ram~ntal Discipline must and St, Patrick' School, Fall devote most o{ its working t~me to the problems of only one River. She was a former superior -Matrimony ~ ' '. Turn to Page ,Fifteen This congregation is one Codex of Canon Law which It's the teacher who'll be htte for school when Sister of the 12 top administrative sta~es t?at "to it is e~t~.us~ed all Mary Jac.inta arrives in BelizEl, British Honduras.,Although 'ff' f 'th C th I" legIslatIon on the dlsclphne of , 0 . Ices 0 e a 0 IC the seven sacraments"
the. Mercy Sister will r~ach h ~r mission assignment in mid Church. Specifically its task By far the greatest 'part of thi/
A,ugust, school will.have been in session nearly two months. is to help the popes regulate and discipline concerns marriage. A teacher at St. Mary's She looks forward to missio~ _ safeguard, the daily use of the Two out of three of the congre 8C~hool, North Attleboro, for work with special e!lgerri~ss be Our Lady of Victory Church seven sacraments, gation's commissions are devoted the past nine years, Sister cause :she ~ill be reunited .w.ith in Centerville on Cape Cod The congregation takes its exClusively to its problems. Mary Jacinta volunteered for t~o SIsters ~ho entered relIgIon from its duties as deOne section deals solely with ttl f ' .. t· ' wIth her, SIster M. Magdalena wI'II hold' its First Annual name scribed in canon 249 of the Turn to Page' Seventeen ,e orelgn mISSIOns some Ime d S· t M J B th Summer Ball on Tuespay . a~:o and recently received notifian f IS er t a~y, ,amNes. BOd e2ltion of the Belize assignment. fared ormerh:alc ehrs lIn ew e- evening at the Sherwood Forest ; or paroc la sc 00 s.
She will probably remain in 'Schools' in British Honduras, Ballroom fr~m' 9, p,m, until 1,' ' 'w'e .~ee. 0 British Honduras five years~ Turn io Page Seven The Ballroom-the newest and S finest on the Cape-wasrlonated AN FRA,NCISCO (NC)-"What the theatre needs for the occasion by the owner, most today is laughter." Anthony C. AlosL' Completed' . The man sits in front of a huge mirror, daubing on. " less than a month ago· the Ball- • pasty. orange makeup~ His Australian voice rolls like the room has a dance floor large rf h'IS d'IC t'IOn and ' man' ,"The theater to'day needs more Word has just been received from the General Mother enough for 1,500 persons to dance su , f l'S ' h,008e in Rome, that the Very Rev.erend Philippe LeBlanc, hakespearean comedy-high comedy, not prat comfortably. The parking lot caD ner re ect schooling. His name is Cyril' falls and slapstick. The gutter M.S.,. has 'been named Provir: cial Superior of the Immacu- . service over 1,000 cars~' . stuff has been overdone. It was late Heart of. Mary Provincl i of the Missionaries of Our . The Ballroom is located on Ritchard. Higgins Crowell Road, in West ~'It ,is hard to laugh when popular fo!:' a while· and that's Lady of La Salette. . pointed for a period of six years. Yarmouth, within five miles of things are grim, but .Jtell you all they 'were writing-but it', . Father LeBlanc will be Reverend Father LeBlanc, who downtown Hyannis. Higgins that is ,what we must do-laugh time to reject it no~,time for all'lsisted, in his duties, by the is well-known in many .com , Crowell Road is the' main access at .. ourselves; laugh with others a laugh," Mr. Ritchar'd -urged. R,everend Elmeric A. munitiesof New England, has. road from the Mid' Cape High- -if we are not to let this time Laughter Best been Treasurer" of La, Salette way to West Yarmouth, bois, M.S. as 1st Councillor; Rev of trouble get us down," .he deMr. Ritchard was here starring Turn io Pa&"e Eleven' erend Ho:ri.orat Gauthier, M.S., , Turn·io Page Four elared. / in the touring production of the ~Ild Councillor' and Treasurer; hit comedy "Visit to a Small Reverend Maurice Viens, M.S., Planet;'" in the same role he Councillor; and Reverend Lionel created on Broadway. He said LeMay, M.S. as Councillor and he believes the times call for a Secretary. The new Provincial more hopeful; less morose out administration has been apTurn to Page Seventeen , . , By Patricia McGowan They have half the parish working for them. They have' after-school catechism elasses and transportation organized right down to a special lady who sees that tots don't 'get their fingers caught in car doors. They have' nearly 500 children in two parishes at tendin,g instructions one or two days a week. How many Sisters are accomplishing all this? The answer is four t Transportation was, th,e main motels, offered the use of near;' Only four members of Our problem in organiziQ.gcatechet- by installations to the Sisters., . . .. . ical classes, since almost no chil- Since catechism classes are l1eld L~dy Qf. VIctory MI~slOnary dren livM within walking dis-' in the winter and the motels SIsters are responSIble for tance of the. churches., "You'll are' used only in the summer, all .the catechetical activity in have about 70, children," pre- the double arrangement has the Cape Cod parishes of West dicted the, pastor. worked beautifully. Harwich and Chatham, both in But with a motorcade·of transMothers Are Drivers . charge of the Fathers ol the portation arranged by the Sisters, "Every 'time I run short of ",Sacred Hearts. ' not 70,' but more than 200 chil- classroom' space, I borrow anTo understand how they do, it, dren showed up for instructions, other motel unit," laughs Sis you would have to meet S~ster which immediateiy created an- ter Mary Regina, And the Tay Mary Regina, their energetic other problem. ,The parish halls 'lors are truly generous benefac Superior, and her three equally weren't large enough to accom- tors in that they underwrite the active co-workers. ' modate the classes crammed into cost of light, and heat in the When the Sisters arriv~d in them. motels. ' CHARITY PATRON: St. ,West Harwtch five yearli ago, What to do? For a ,time Sister In fact, three years ago, ~hen the Sacred Hearts Fathers were Mary Regina' was stumped, but they built a new motel near Vincent de Paul, whose feast attempting to handle catechet- .. then'" a novel solution was of- the church, they put in heat day is Saturday, is patron' ical activities in addition to al~ . teredher. " solely for the benefit, of its win of all societies :devoted to the other duties of two fat-flung Parishioners Mr. and Mrs. John tertime users. . , , works of charity. NC Photo. .A'I'HE& LeBLANO "rishes. ' , , .. Taylol', operators· of. chain ol. Turn to Pace l'iy~
Congregation Regulates Discipline of Sac~aments
No. ,Attleboro Nun to Teach In Belize, Britiish Honduras
A.nnu'al Ca' pe Ball . iII Be Held W ' On Tuesday
Cyril Ritchard Asserts Laughter G ...... d f
reQt Toda'y's Theater
F:,ather 'LeBlanc ~Iained Provincial ~: ()f M~issionaries c.f ~ La Salette
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,1Uissit)ndrg Nuns Instruct 500
Cope •.Chlldren in Catechism
Consecrate 'Eigh~,: Chinese Bi.~hops .~~
Despit~ Excon~imunicati~nWatlling , ' .
HONG KONG (NC)- - Both "
Catholic and communist sources If the reported new.consecra here report that eight "elected" tions.are' true, and' if~hey were"
Catholic bishops have been con carried out ~ithout Vatican ap secrated rec~ntly in communist 'proval, it would. bring the num China. bel' of schismatic bishops in Red China to 10. . . , Four priests are reported to have been consecrated bishops Oil .the heels o~ t.he reported
by Bishop Francis XavierChoa', new conse~rationscome reports
'S.J., of Sienhsien in his cathe that the c~ndidat.es for episcopal
dral, and the other four by consecration have been chosen
· Archbishop Ignacius P'i of Muk for' five' other. Sees, They are'
den in the Tsinan cathedral. The Nanking, whose Archbishop Paul
Siimhsien consecrations are Yu Pin is in exile in the United
said to have taken place on States; Suchow, where Massa
April 20 and, the Tsinan ones chusetts-born Bishop 'Philip
on June 1. Cote; S ..r" was jailed and then
Reports of the new ~onsecra expelled; the vcant Hangchow
tions came three months after archdiocese; Shanghai, deprived
it was announced t.hat two Chin of its pastor since the imprison ment of Bishop Ignat.ius Kung iii eSt! 'bishops had been' conse ' crated in Hankow despite the September, 1955, and Canton,
explicit warning of the Holy where the Apostolic' Adminis':;'
See that both the consecrating . trator, Bishop -Dominie Tang,
bishop and, those consecrated S.J., '~as j!lih~d last Febr~~ry.
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wo~ld
suffer .excommunication. Decrees issued by the Sacred ~ongregation of t.he Holy Of fice~back in 1951 provide auto' matic excommunication for the conSecrator and'the priests con secrated ,when men are raised to the episcopate wit.hout·the ap:' . proyal of. the Holy See. ' ~ Sees VacaQt
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Off'l-cl-als ·P..a·'I-Se P PI an ,reiate I s ','
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-THE ANCHOR Thurs., July 17, 1958
Ordi,naryCites
Duty to l:'Ion,or
Traffi'c. Rules
, CROOKSTON . (NC) Bishop Francis J. Schenk of' Crookston has stressed the, obligation of Catholics in the:
CHURCH LEADERS IN ALASKA·:.I~ 1948, the 'Most Rev. Francis D. ,Gleeson,S.J., (left) was appointed titular
Bishop of Cotenl1a and Vicar Apostolic of Alaska. His resi
dence is in Fairbanks. He is a native, of Ca~rollton Mo.
Most Rev. Dermott O'Flana.gan, (right) Irish-born American citizen was consecrated Bishop of the newly erected Diocese of Juneau; in '1951. His. See city is Juneau, the capital 01 Alaska. NC Photos. -, . •
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matter of traffic safety. "The obligation in conscienctl to observe the traffic safet.y J:eg·· lations is inescapable," the Min·· nesota Bishop said in a pastorall letter. Attention was called to posted speed limit signs on the highways which bind Catholicsl in conscience. The Bishop issued the pastorall in cooperation with a' reques1t from Gov. Orville L, Freeman of Minnesota, who appealed tel church leaders of all,denomina·· tions to impress upon their mem.. be~s the importance of traffi41 safety."
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Prelate Offers MaSSI Knight of Maltal'
For
ST. LOins (N(:):-City ,?f ficials lauded Msgr. John J. Butler for providing th'e first NEW YORK (NC)-His Emi·· recreational program of its type nence Francfs Cardinal Spell•. man, Archbishop of New York, in citY,history forunderpriv',ileged -children in public hous. . . offered a Requiem Mass here fol' James F. McDonnell Sr.,' '18, ' ACCQfding,. to the communist ing. founder of- McDonnell & Com·· . JlewspaperHopeh. Jih Pao,' the' The Msgr.'ButlerNeighborhood, ~ea pany, one of, the oldest invest-· "ele,<~ed"'-' bishops, consecrated', Center will stari·to,prov,ide,or DARMSTAPT, (NC)~A Prot-to the· Catholic Church and one ment firms in .Wall Street. . by Bishop Chao in Sienhsien are ga'nized recreation foiloo Negro estant retreat' house, believed to to th~ 'Orthodox, Church. A , Fathers Wang ,Shouchien,- Pan children living in the'· William be the only one of its kind iil the statue.. of St. Francis stands in Mr. McDonnell,' a 'Knight ..! , Shao:;-ching~ Chang Sho,u,:,yi ,and L. Igoe Housing project" here: world, was inaugurated in Ger- .the cloister .of the motherhouse. Malta and a financiai contribu-, '.Lan Pai' 'lu. 'It gave their Sees John J: McGuire, manager ,of many by the Ecumenical Sister~ rhe retreats .includ·c Bible tor to numerous ..Catholic i.:isti., as'Yu'ngnien, ~uanhw,a, Siwaittze the proje,ct, saili it .~as the first hood of MarY,a Lutheran comreading, prayer and ~ediU;tion. tutions, died here ~ffera lonl!: and Yungpi'1g. ,program of ifs'-kil,ldtO:,J>esp'on munity often likened to CathThe retreatants alsoar~ invited' illness. The Mass was' offered iIIl Yungnienand Yungping,both sored b~ a.religio!-,s group in a olic reiigious orders 6f women. tO,take part in the s~rvices held St.~atrick's Ca~hedraL i H h " r d 'public' housing project ',any "The new building adJ,' oins the by .,the ..S isters, in their~' ch,apel, Mr..McDonn~li married MiSlI n the 'opeVatican,yearbook provmce, are as . Iste in the United liy' pe- where ." .' ,. States., mother hous~ of the slsterho~d WhICh· mclude Matins,Lauds, Anna Murray, daughter of th41 ingvacari'f, Sees. But' Suanhwa, . St'-Louis City' Parks Director and wasr, named :The Joy of, Vespers and Compline" after a late, Thoma.s E.Murray, notecll and Siwailtze have legitimate . J.:'almer, Baumes,c~n~ng,th~ pro Jesus." Retr~iitants are invited Benedictine pattern, Opportuni inventor; on May 24, 1916. The: >bishops, with the latter's Bishop .' grarnari "important. and, ·vital. to spend one· or two weeks in an ties are offered for "confessions" . couple had six sons and eigh1; · .Melchior Chang.-listed as being' unp.erta}{ing," saic:ittle', prpgr;;m ~tmosphereeIosely akin to the and Holy Communion. daughters, among them. Mn., ,.in 'jail ,for the Faith., " was a "real service 'both 'lOttie on~ p~evailing in si~ilar i~sti:" The Ecumenical Sisterhood of Henry Ford II. Meanwhile, 'several Catholic children and the community:" tutlOns under Cathohc aus~lces;Mary (Marienschwestern) is led .-sources here have received· what Msgr..Butler; who is'dfrector, There. ar~ 50 rooms~, ea,ch by its two foundresses, Mother seem to be reliable reports 'from of' Catholic Chatit'ies' here will named for either ~ Ca~h?hc samt Basilea (Dr. Klata Schlink) and Red China' of, theconsccra-tion, of .' cond':l~f .a day camp. for the' ,chil~ or so~e Protestant rehgl~us pe~~ Mother Martyria (Erika' Ma Members of Particular Coun-, four,.others "elected" bishops by dreil at the city's .1200-acre For- J sonahty. Awhol.e floor IS d~dldauss) , who started, the move ,Archbishop P'i of Mukden for est;,Park lIis~eighbor~ood'Ceit c.atep. to the varlO.usdeno~JI1a- ment during .the war in connec , cil of Fall River, SoCiety of St" Vincent de Paul, have been r~.. 'the schis~atic patriotic AssoCi ter., ":.ill provide, tra'1sp9rtation.. "6ns of Protestantism, one'rO(lm ti()n with Bible classes .foryouog ation bfChincse Catholic~. The Igoe ,,~partments .were. girls. At that time they were in . minded by President Jerome D" Foley that the g~ner~l mee'ti~ll: 'bUI'lt t· 'I . spired to begin a common ll'fe I'n '.'. The 'information ~ messages ,. . ~o years ago, .J:ep acmg 'of the Council will be held at -"'and.·reports, .br{)ught hl~reby·,iil . all area of slums,nwthwesL of FRIDAY-':"-Sf. Camillus 'De Lelpoverty and self",denial. dividuais, and stili incomplete the Sf.' Louis' centraL business'" lis; Confessor; Double.··White. In 1947" and against heavy . 2:30 P.M. Sundayat'the 'St. Vin-, eent- de . Paul .Health , 'Camll' --indicate -- that the . Mukden district, There..are no. large- play Mass' Proper; Glori1l;· Second odds, they formally established ,Adamsville .. Road, .;Westport ... Archbishop consecrated Fathe.rsc . ar~!as or _parks within miles' of --Collect ,SS. Sumphorosa ~ndthe sisterhood, which today con . The Saint's feast-:will be, CJIb-' Charles Li and Teng ven-iung 'the 'apartmentS:, \". ,'" " .her ' .Seven ,Sons,. " ·Martyrs; sists ,of:, '60 ,members and' i8 served "Satu.r,day. All members" .for the Diocese of Tsaochow and Third Collect for Peace; Com_lIPreading "fast. active' and honorary, ,are ,ex·, mon Prefac,e. . The members' lives, wbj}e . ,the Tsinan'archdiocese:: BOth " 'Sees have been vacant,~~i~h.er" By ",SATURDAY- St., . Vincent De ·protestaI'.' in tenor, actually re-' pected, to . assist . at Mass and. receive' Holy Communion ill "the names of "the, other two" ' ,,'" , Paul,. Confessor. .DoNble. fleet Catholic ideals"of the reli their own, churches' c)li 0.91 bishops nor their Sees have b~n TAIPEI (Nc).,-A-correspond:' ·W·h'te M' GI' gious·lffe. In' the beginning, the ~~ 1 • . ass, P roper;·..' ona; ... 'available here. . ' e n c e , course in Catholic 'doctrine' Second' ColleCt for: Peace; Sisters m~t with criticism, and' or 'during ·the· oetliv'e 6r;- acoord ing to a new' ~~ision by the organized and directed here by' Common ,Preface. even opposition' on the part of ~ather Albert Cremer, C,I.C.M., Protestant leaders who felt their Holy See, oil any &f the' eiiba IS proving a success on Formosa. 'SUNDAY~Eighth Sunday After. 'ideals could not be reconciled days precediilg. the Fe'ast.' . : " . The follo~ing. films are to The courSe was initiated' and ~entecost. Double. ,Green. with Protestant traditions. Soon ._,~a_" ,be added. to· the lists 'in their: , adver.tfse·d· 18 ',mo·nths"ago. There Mass Proper;, Gloria; Second' h owever,elrwork ' th . . . found' wide, respective classifications:' ' are more than 4,000 persons re Collect Sf. Jerome Aemilian, recognition. . . The Sisters consider, prayer Confessor; Third Collect for Unobjectionab~ for' General ceiving . the weekly lessons' of Peace; Creed; Preface of .' "th' . ' the el'ght-m'onth cour'se·.', Patronage-Desert Hell, Dun elr way:. 0 f life·.... They feel The idea for teaching doc ,Trinity. that prayer is the only means to' .kirk; Spy in the Sky. trine through the mail was bor:' MONDAY - .Mass . of Previous overcome the division of Chris Unobjectionable for' Adult rowed from the successful ef Sunday. Simple. Green. Mass tianity and they have choSen the and Adolescents-Man or Gun, So. Dartmouth forts of the Knights ofColum Proper; No Gioria or Creed; Blessed Mother as' their patron ,Once UP,OfF> a, Horse, Revenge bus in America-. . ~econd Collect St. Praxedis, ess beC~u~,,_ l ike'Mary,they want :of Frankenstein. and Hyannis, .Virgin; Third: ·Collect for" to'rgo ,all ',tbe way in. their co'm" Unobjectionable for ,Adults- . Peace; Common'Preface. plete:surrender.,'tQ"the Lord. 'by' ')~lever Love a, Stranger,'··,Paga,ns. , So~ 'Dartmouth' ," ' TUESDAY~St.. Mary Magda ad9pting poverty;,humility and :- .... ' Objectionable in Part 'for All " WY 7-9384,·' · .. lene"t',enitent:·"Double.' WlJite. obedience as their lot, even ,' ,t-Hot Car Girl. ' "MC"Oalssl'-e';e'·--tPrfooPrerp.i.'e::asrc}e~riNa;. SCecondd :ho'OwUsgh'they" .tak.e Do formal., Hy'anniS:2~1 Com~~~ Preface.~" . o r e e ; .;~~.;,:;.:':::"-:-';,';;.'~"_':-":'~""';""';_---"';':::~::'-=':'=======:;::===!
Ge'rman' 'Lu"t'heran 'SI'-sters Found' Protesta , nt R.e t· ' t H. ouse
Particular Council To Observe Feast
'Mass Ordo'
'C'" o. . atechlsm Is Taught Correspondence'
this
Legion. of ' Dece~cy
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LUMBER CO..
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FORry HOURS DEVOTION
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July 20-81.. HYllcinth, New Bedford st. Mary,South i>~'rt mouth " Sf. Pius, X, South Yar mouth· ,. , ;' Jul~ 27-St. Stephen; Dodge , ville Sf. Francis of Assisi: New ,Bedford,' . Holy Redeemer, Chat ham' 'Aug. 3-Sf. George, Westport. , Sacred Hearts, Fairhaven Aug.
\i~St; Tnere~,. So~th
Attleboro St. ,Theresa, New Bed f?rd,." . " .'." Our Lady ~f Vi~toryCenterville ' ,> THE·ANt:HOR . Secoild~cla8s mail privileges authorized ·at Fall River. Mass Publisbed eve.., . Tbursday at 410 Higbland Avenue Fall River Mass" by the Catholic Press ~f 'the ~~)ioces~ of FalJ :Ri\'cr Sllh~r"intioD price
··rby· ma,I.:.Jl(llltllllJd
$4.09~per1eal'.
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HEADS ASSOCIATION: Brother J. 1\lfred, :F.S.C., of Christian·Bl"other.s' College; Memphis, Tenn., has assum," ed office as president of the Catholic Business Education AssoCiation,' Chicago. Active in business .. ~ducation for many years, .he taught at Evanston, IlL.; Boys ToWn .. , Nebr.; Winona, Minn .. :In'd St. Louis. Mo. NC Photo. ' •
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, WEDNESDAy...:.::...'St.Appolinaris, Bishop and Martyr. Double. Red. Mass Proper; Gloria; Sec ond'Collect St: Liborius, . Bishop ,and:.Confessor; Third Collect . ~or' Peace; Common Preface. 'THURSDAY-':Mass of Previous Sunday, 'Simple. Green. Mass Proper;- No Gloria or Creed' Second' C'olleet' Sf. 'Christina: ,yirgin and Martyr; Third Col J lect for' Peace; 'Common Preface. '
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·Sist~ersRet.urn to School to Plan
Re~,ised Social ~;tudies Program
THE ANCHOR
Thurs.; July 17, 1958
PORTLAND (NC)-Any pa- . educators to make "Catholic nfchisil school student would be schools more Catholic." From delighted to see what's going on that came the formation of • at St. Ignatius School in P<ort Commission on American Edu land this month-the Sisters are cation at the Catholic Vniver "back in schoo!!" sity of 'America in Washington, And that's not all; thel"re D. C. . findi!1g "school" to be h ud The commission came' up with
work. a . complete course' of study for
Officially, the 27 Sislers all subjects in the elementary
from 13 religious communLies ·school, known as _"Guiding .. throughout the Archdiocese of Growth in' Christian Socilil Liv · Portland are taking part ir.·a lng." More than 80 dioceses in 'si,,-wl~ek "curriculum w.lrk this country have adopted ft as shop." the basis for parochial school But more· specifically, they .. instruction. '. . are putting together a sodal The social studies program fol
• tudies course for Catholic grade lowed in Portland archdiocesan
schools. Sister Mary Adrian, schools was drawn up at a teach
archdiocesan superior of scho lis, ers' workshop in 1952' on the
sums it all up by saying that :he basis of the recommendations
workshop is an effort to :JUt contained in "Guiding· Growth."
more of a "Christian impact" in
However, answers to a ques the teaching of social studies
'tionnaire sent to elementary
Portland's workshop is part school teachers last year indi
of a national movement which cated that the program needed
began when Pope Pius XII asl:ed revamping.
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3
Irish Policemen Finish Course In Sociology DUBLIN (NC)....:.- Thirty uniformed members of the Irish police force were hand ed diplomas by a visiting
cardinal after completing' a three-year course in the social teachings of the Church. They were part of an assembly of 800 students who were given diplomas by His Eminence Nor- • man Cardinal Gilroy, Archbish op of Sidney, Australia, in color~ ful graduation exercises held at the Dublin Institute of Catholic Sociology. 'cardinal Gilroy, here with • group o~ Australian pilgrim. ending a European tour of Mari an shrines, presided over the '\ event at the invitation of Arch bishop John McQuaid of Dub Bisl~op lin. Present· at the ceremony was Bishop John Francis Nor ton of Bathurst, Australia, who WA~:;HINGTON (NC) - M:Jst Virginia, has a Catholic popu accompanied the pilgrims on Rev.•fohn J. Russell has bE en lation of 144,877 in a general their tour. I NOVENA STARTS TODAY: The intercession of Good transferred from the Diocese of population of more than 3,500,000, Cardinal Gilr,Py said that' re Charleston and has been nalT ed according to the latest Official St. Anne will be sought at her shrine in the basement at cipients of the diplomas had Bishop of Richmond. Catholic Directory. There are St, Anne's Churc~, Fall River, through the nine-day period been enriched with knowledge Msgr. Michael Hyle, pastor of in a diocese a total of 294 priests beginning today. Her feast will be observed Saturday, that should be of profit to them St. Mary's church, Baltimore; has and more than 800 Sisters. . JQly 26.6n pedestal is relic from' St. Anne's House in in their daily dealings with their M gr H I been named Titular Bishop of fellow men. . Christopolis and Coadjutor, with S • lye. Jerusalem. ' the right of succession, to Bist oP. BI.shop-elect Hyle was born 10 He warned the graduates that Edmond FitzMaurice of Wil Baltimore, October 13, 1901, the the Church expected more from .. Arm.y Chaplaincy ·to M,ark. Birthday mington ,Delaware. son of John W. aI,ld. Elizabeth them than mere appreciation, WASHINGTON (NC) - The armies, but this was the first and wanted them to use their The appoin,tments, made in' (McCloskey) Hyle, both of whom Rome 'by His Holiness Pope P .us are deseased. He attended the U. S. Army. Chaplaincy will' action officially recognizing them knowledge for the benefit· of as a part of the Army organiza XII, were af).nounced here by Cat~edral Grammar School in commemorate its 183rd anniver mankind. . · His Excellency A. ~hbishop A n Baltlmor~, St. .Charles. C~llege, sary on July 29, it was an · tion. leto Giovanni Cicognani, Apos St. Mary s Semmary.' Baltlmor~, nounced here by the Office of Msgr. (Maj. Gen.) Patrick J~ To Study Proposal tolic Delegate to the United and the North Amencan College the Chief of Chaplains, Depart Ryan, Deputy Chief of Chap States. . ' in Rome. He. was ordained in men't of the Army. For Review Board lains of the Army, issued a state The Diocese of Richmond }tas . Rome. on .March 12, ~927, by ment . stressing the importance' MIAMI (NC)-A proposal to It was on July 29, 1775, that been vacant since the death of Archbishop Joseph Pallca. ·the Second Continental Con · of chaplain's work with service establish a Dade County decency Bishop Peter L. Ireton l)n The Bishop-designate l).a~ men.. review board to call attention gress passed a resolution stipu · April :~7, 1 9 5 8 . . hel~ pastoral assignments at the ~ting, that the pay of chaplains "In this 'time of testing for our to violations of the Florida' Bishop Russell was. born in ~hr1l1e o.f the Sacred Heart he~e in the new Con'tinental Army country and its free institu State obscenity 'laws is heinl • Baltimore, December 1, 18!17, 111 Wash1l1~ton, and at St. Peter s would. be $20 a month. Before tions;" he said, ,"we can gauge ·studie.d. and made studies for the prie ;t church" Libertytown, Md., S~. this date, there had been chap more nearly the true dimensions The propOsal calls for' a sev hood at St. Charles College a ld Stephen s church" Bradshaw, lilin~ serv'ing on an informal of our task: the moral and spil.'- en-member' board to review mo St. Mary's Seminary ther~ and at Md., ~nd St. Mar~ of th~As-. ,basis'. with the various, colonial· 'itual strengthening .of our mili 'tion pictures, still pic~ures, the North American College in " sumptlon chu.rch 1I1,Baltlmor.e" tary forces;, on wl:tich depends books, magazines and comic Rome. By an interesting ch~ in He has ~lso se~ved a~ ch~plal.n '.~ Syrian. ' Prelate . Dies · fA> •. large . degree the present' books. The' board would report of .circ:umstances, he' was <r o~ St. Ehzabeth s. H.0sPltal ~n thiS preservation of those finest 'of to authorities any cases which dained to the priesthood in . Clt~ and as admlDlstrator of Mt..At . Hc>me in Egypt human values which we ~er appeared to infringe on the ob-: Rom~ in 1923 by Bishop Willi~ m OlIvet Cemetery here. $AREH .·EL DAHER (NC) icans 'hold dear." scenity laws. T. Russell, his father's b r o t h . ! r , A r c h b i s h o p . Clement Michel then Bishop of the CharIest)n . Bakhache," '. ~atriarchal Vicar
fOUl'DOL'LAR See to which Bishop John Rt s for Syrians in _Egypt and dean
sell sUicceeded as the seventh . of the world's C.atholic bishops,
Ordinary.' has died a.t hili. residence, Diocesan Statistics . The 92-year-old prelate was THAN EYER BEFORE In the ~ight years since Bis.h >p . ·raised to the episcopacy by Pope Russell's installation as Ordi 1 :Leo> XIII, Sept.. .- 24, 1900, ten See us for the BEST 'DEAL in a ary, .·the Diocese of Charlestc n, ,'years after his ordination ·to the Ford Car or Truck : embracing the State of .-:outh . priesthood; 'as Archbishop of" Carolina, has .enjoyed impre s Damascus. He was a native, of sive growth. The Catholic pop J . Aleppo, Syria. lation has increased from 17,0)() . FORD I?EALERS FOR OVER 38' YEARS to more than' 30,000, according Terrific 1344-86 Purchase St. New Bedford, Mass. to the latest Official Catho; ic Directory. The number of prie! ts Traffic in the diocese has increased fro m 102 to 121, and the number (If Problems Sisters from.. 230 to 348. . At a ceremony in NovembE r, Solved 1956, . it was announced thnt j since 1950, churches, schools alld other structures had been erect ed at an average· of one buill l MSGR. MICHAEL HYLE ing a month. 'I'he 'piocese of Richmon:1, which embraces most of the per annum State' of Virginia and eig:lt eounties in the State of West
Russell Goes to Richmond; ·Msgr. Hyle.Wilmington Coadjutor
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The Family
. THE ANCHOR Thurs., Ju!y 17, 1958
Clini~
Suggests High Schools Give Formal Marriage Courses
4
Summer Ball
Continued from' Page One The Ball, scheduled to be one ,of the outstanding social event. of the Cape, will fea'ture Massi's fifteen piece orchestra and a vocalist. Advance, ticket sales through the Cape, from Buzzards· Bay to Provincetown, indicate that the Ball will be a success. Tick ets are available from members of the J::enterville parish and . will be sold outside Our Lady of Victory Church on Sunday after all the Masses. Tickets will also be on sale at the Ballroom next Tuesday evening. Rev, Howard A. Waldron, pas tor, of Our Lady of Victory Church,' will be assisted in the receiving line by Arthur Maddalena Sr. and Harold K. Bragle of the St. Vincent de Paul Society and their wives; Edward A. Welch Jr. and Ellis E. Johnson of the church Men's Club and their wives; and Mrs. Henry L. Murphy, Mrs. Stephen B. O'Brien Jr. and Mrs. Raoul H. Beaudreau of the church Guild a'nd their husbands.
By Rev. John L. Thomas, S.J.
"Of:
Assistant Professor of Sociology
St. Louis University
Why can't senior girls in Catholic' high schools wear .engagement rings on their fingers? I'm told that over half the seniors' are engaged and wear their rings pinned inside their uniforms with the pin showing so everyone knows they . are engage? This is .a big Under these circumstances, event for gIrls. They dIsplay.. the school will. best fulfill its the rings outside of school function if students are offered and besides, everyone knows adequate instruction concerning
the;'re engaged. What. is gained the Catholic viewpoint on dat by making them resentful of ,ing, courtship, and marriage.
• c h 0 0 1 disci Distressing Dilemma '
pline?
As a remedy for early en . Well, Janie, gagements, this instruction a good many would' obviously come too late teachers and ·if provided only in, the senior students h av e year, though it'were better given discussed t his here than not at 'all. que s t ion ,at Since roughly four out of five length during girls don't go on to college, the past few whatever formal marriage years. I gather courses they are to receive must from your let be given in high -school. ON SUBMARINE TV PROGRAM: Sister Mary Irene ter that the de-' Your question touches upon a of the Sisters of St. Joseph chats with Rear Admiral T. M. cision has gone relatively small problem, Janie, Dykers, USN (Ret), World War II submarine skipper and against the stu but' back of it looms the dis now producer of ,IThe Silent Se~ice." The series will drama:.. dents in your city and possibly tressing dilemma' of adolescent tize Sister's war-time rescue from Bougainville by the sub Resolution Condemns others. It may help clarify boy'"girl relationships' in our ou'r thinking if we r,eview some society. Nautilus.' NC Photo. Distorted Sex Films of ·the pertinent aspects ·of the The toleration~ if not promo ST. ALBANS (NC)-M otioll problem. tion, of early dating, steady dat pictures embodying distorted at ,Pr~ss Marry Younger, ihg;' and unsu~rvised aissocia tiiudes toward sex and morbid' As you are probably aware, tion between boys and girls· horror has been condemned by the age at ,which people enter years before they are mature the Vermont Fraternal Order MILWAUKEE (NC) - .....The College, Davenport, Iowa' Don " marriage has dropped consider enough to reasonably. c6ntem Catholic Press and the Role of aId J. 'Leydori, College 'of St. .of Eagles. ably since 1940. White couples .plate marriage should cause par In a resolution adopted at the . the Laity"will be the theme of Thomas; St. Paul; Father Virgil , tend to marry somewhat younger ents' and teachers alike to ques orgimization's 11th annual state , than nonwhite. .' tion'some of their attitudes and the National.Catholic Education Blum, S.J., assistant professor of political : science, Marquette; convention, delegates partieu During the past few years practices. What are they doing al Press Congress to be held in larlly scored films in which such Milwaukee November 14-16. Donald McDonald, editor of the close, to one-half of the first to meet the overall problem? themes. a're use~ to play on the The congress is sponsored' by Catholic Messenger: newspaper married brides married before By the way; Janie, are you a .reaching, their 20th birthday. senior with a concealed engage the Marquette University College of tile Davenport, Iowa, diocese; undeveloped emoti!>ns of young . of, Journalism and th,e Catholic Father Franklyn 'J. Kennedy, people. Indeed, about one-tqird of 'all ment ring? Another resolution called for Press Association. Plans for the editor, the Catholic Heraldfirst-married brides married at B~sinessman ,Opens
program were ann'ounced by J. Citizen, newspaper of the Mil- . intensive training in 'sociology ages 18 and 19. and. human relations for juven These are natiqnal statistics, Club for Teenagers.
L. O'Sullivan, Dean,of the Col waukee archdiocese, and Wil He court judges, and condemned lege of Journali~m and Director Ham· B. Ready, author and li and we have no way of knowing the practice of electing juvenile LOUISVILLE. (NC)-A busi of the School'Press Association. brarian.. -- . how fully they apply to the , , nessman is opening a downtown . Approximately 2,000 students judges found in 'some states. Speakers on the theme will in Cathol~c' segment of the popu la'tion, thougJ:!. there is little rea club for Catholi<: teenagers elude F?ther Be~nard J, Cooke, who are members of publication son to believe that Catholics which will feature "live" bands, S.J., aSSIstant professor of theol-. staffs in Catholic colleges and ogy, ~farquette Universit.y; Don nightly, and will provide gym high schools and their faculty differ. from the general popula nastic and recreation equipment aId J. Thorman, managing edi advisors are expected to attend. tion in. this regard. Summer Resort for' the use, of boy~ and girls tor'of Ave Maria magazine. Notre . . c It follows that a good' number Dame, Ind,; Robert G. Hoyt, ed ;""""~"""'''''''''~ of senior girls in high school from 14. to 21 years of age. Charles Steel, who leased itor 0 f th e· C a th OIC l' R egister, ~' ~ may be engaged. Whether this . ~ B40t. UH-eont. .eR80nal ... property for club use, is backed newspaper of the Kansas' City, • 1"'II1II .~ is true of over ,half, as you re Soda ~'o~'"tain fully equipped 120' ~ • port, I'm not prepared to say, but by ten local merchants in the M d ' ""o)t ~iring, adjustable shelving. dill.. nonprofit enternrise, A ""ip~t. m~~agil~~ese~di~~~~PhIn~~:;~~o~: Every Thursday : play ta.bletl. cash register, 73' artesian I really doubt i' is so in most well. J"t pump (overhauled 1968); Brother or seminarian win . be . NY' ~ high sG.hools. .toraJre tank. hot water h""ter. toilet invited. to be present' dUl';II:! magazl~e, e~ ork, N. Y.;· ~ 10:00 A.M. - 12: 1O· : 'aeiJitj~s· -AU ~n good eondition. ~ . Father Robert C. Dressman, S,J., ~ 5 10 7 00 . ~ Source ,of Distraction I.Al'}'d A rl's-corneor lot next, .. : -: - 8:00 P.M. , What is the purpose of an dancing hours, according to the of Sophia, Universit.y, Tokyo, and~. Communit.y House and includee . . by-laws of the c l u b . ' d • , joiainll' lot -Both Zoned for Bue. engagement ring? Obviously it 'Teenagers .need "anatm06now a gra uate student at Mar- ~ OUR LADY'S CHAPEL ~ 'or Inlormation or Appoint_.t . . . . , uette. . : : is a sign or symbol that a cer WRITE P. O.BOX 185 phere of beipg Catholic among Others who will speak at gen- '~ 572 Pleasant Street ~ tain young couple have agreed .FAIRHAVEN. MASS. New Bedford : to marry and wish the public to Catholics," 'Mr. S'teel said. "The eral sessi6"ns. on subjects related :: club will give' the!!1 a .pl.llce to the theme include: Rep. Eu, " " " , .. , " . know about it. . :...-_::...:....::..::.-~::;:=====::;:=::;:======~I gerie J. McCarthy, of Minnesota; ,_--.,. Girls are usually very proud wjlere'they can enjoy real,coJJi Father E,M, Catich, S!-. Ambrose . of their rings, so that it is easy panionship a~d friendships.'" , An early September. ,op~ing to understand their resentment is scheduled. Membership' re at not being' ailow-ed to wear quires the approval of pastor NO JOB TOO BIG them while at school. What is the' purpose of the. and parents. An' estimated' 9000 NONE TOO SMALL Catholic high school stud~nts prohibition? Clearly 'it is not are eligible for membership, against eIther the idea of 'en Mr. Steel said.. ,gag~ment rings or of marriage. However, many teachers feel ·that this concern with rings, marriages, and so forth, has no Main~ Office .nd Plant place within the school It is bound to be a source of distric: LOWELL, MASS.
tion to the other girls, particu-' JOSEPH M. F DONAGHY Tele..hone Lowelt
larly those in the lower· classes. owner/mgr.
At the same fime, many teach GL 1,6333 and GL 7-7500 ers fe~l that girls are generally 142 Campbell St.
too young and inexperienced to Auxiliary Plants New Bedford, Mass.
I marry as soon as they finish WYnian 9-6792 high school By forbidding them .' BOSTON
to' wear their' engagement rings HEADQUARTERS FOR
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this source and possible discour • SAVINGS ACCOUNTS age some girls from entering ~ REGULAR CHECKING ACCOUNTS such. immature marri;lO'~S. • SPECIAL CHECKING ACCOUNTS • .BUSINESS LOANS I feel. these are the peritnent MEW tl'ilLI\IlI"l ttlittDl" '. . • PERSONAL LOANS facts and assumptions in the • AUTOMOBILE LOANS ' . . case. What do I think about the • APPLiANCE LOANS prohibition?, Frankly, Jeanie, I • HOME REPAIR LOANS believe that it doesn!t accom • COMPLETE TRUST DEPARTMENT SERVICES plish its purpose, creates un • $ArE DEPOSIT BOXES necessary resentment, prob"bly weakens the lasting influence '.. ' • ;.' .,....... RI1IU _.NiW _ _
of teachers on their students' and- consequently had best. ~. ':' discontinued. S,rvillg TIN umjjllmity Shut 182' Granting that 'such early mar"' riages might well be' discour aged in most cases, I don't think this' is either an effective' or . Special. Arrangements for rensonable way to accomplish it. Such early engagements occur OUTING, TESTIMONIALS AND ClAMBAKES because· boys and girls 'have . been keeping company for some For Full Information Contod .' ...65. NORTH MAIN ST. time, This. is clearly a parental ,Look for this ;~Io" MOdern banking .erY,~ ~LAND GAMACHE WYm'on 916984 Jlrobl,,\' and should be handled . , . ' . " ( .'.i1y them. ~ ~.
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SERVE TWO CAPE PARISHES: Four Our Lady of Vietory Mission ary Bister$ find time for recreation (left photo)' in busy schedule of
activities at Holy Redeenler Parish, Chatham, and 'Holy Trinity at West , Harwich. Sist~r M. Thel'elle Martin is 8h~wn at organ, with (left to right)
Fac:ulty Skeptic:s I l MOIY Ha rm Fa ·tl Of Students ,
CLEVELA~D (NC) Teachers who carelesdy yoice skepticism about religion may do great harm to tine development of values by eollege students.
Dr. Dana L. Farnsworth, director of the Harvard" Uni'\; ersity health service speaking at the' National Education AlSOeiation's convention told the del- egates that "one sarcastic ;;keptic on a faculty may desJrQY faith and instill doubt in hundleds of students, confusing them Ilnaeces!;arily." He p'ointed out that any in' L.lera' nce manifested by relig .... ious groups "can be reallily matched " , by that of 11very 1 in~el.- f ligent persons in a 'eve.... 0 . t h re opposed to all *>Cle y w 0 a religious teachingS and 1 rho sbow their resentment of leaden • religious activities in m anT ways." Dr. Farnsworth described ~hdis attitude as "the bigotry of b rc a mindedness." He said that," tol-' Hance 'amOng men of good will ill educational institutions lnay be on the iJ~crease, but it lias a long way to go and needs en coUragement." Discussing the intoleranCE of religious opponents, Dr. Fa:'ns worth observed. "This intoLerance of scientists is of a difEerent sort from that of mystics, but it. can be just as harmful. "Science has no data on which .., make any pronouncem mts en a problem such as tha', of inimortality, and a scientist has, therefore, no right to jUI tify interference with a faith in im-' Dlortulity of a believing pel son. person."
SisterM. Leona, Sister M. Joseph Marie and Sister M. Regina, Superior. TransportatioJl between parishes is no problem as center photo shows. 'Driver is Sister M. Leona. Back seat occupants are Sisters M. Joseph Marie and M.Regina. In right photo, Sister M. Regina presides in kitchen.
, ' Our Lady of Victory Si'sters on Cape Cod Coatiaacd from Pace 0..
Once at catechism classes, the reclaimed for God and the ehildrentake a course of instruc- Church." Transportation of catechism tion similar ~ ,their regular The motherhouse, Victory .tudents to and from their motel work in that they are tested and Noll, is at Huntington, Ind. Its classrooms 'is another tale of co- receive report cards regularly.' ,name is taken from Our Lady operation. Some 126 mothers are Honor students are rewarded . of Victory and that of Bishop drivers, arriving at the West with an outing at the end of the John Francis. Noll, the communHarwich and Chatham schoolll year. This summer a trip to the ity's greatest benefactor. simultaneously with the regular shrine of La Salette is scheduled, 'There are over 72 mission con school busses on catechism days. to be followed by a visit to Lin- vents of the order throughout Catholic teachers in the schoolll coIn Park, a combination pr~ the country, some caring for as
shephE»"d the children into the . ably not often made! many as 7000 children. In all "catechism cars," with Mrs. In addition to their catechetical nearly 100,000 children are un Donald, Strout, already, men- work, the Missionary Sisters do der instruction of the 355 mem . . duty to ensure parish census-taking with tne _ bers of the communI·ty. tlOned, on speCIal that there are rio accidents durassistance of lay people, desig.
nated as "fishers." With the aid Cape Girl Novice . ing the loading process. 0 b of these helpers, 1,406 homes, ,ne mem er 0 f th e F a II R er
rv:
ew ,Cathol•. c Center n To Study Lep'rosy
,
.
t\ire(:tOll"•
NEW YORK (NC)-Dr. Hugh Scott Taylor, retiring dean of Princeton university's graduate school, has been appointed the first president of the Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship Foundation.
Dr. Taylor, a former presi dent of Pax Romana, interna tional Catholic student and intel lectual movement, and a member of the Pontifical Academy of Sciences since 1936, will leave
his post at Princeton after more than 40 years as a professor of chemistry. He has been dean of the graduate school for the last 13 years. The Woodrow Wilson Fellow ship Foundation was established last year to grant graduate fel lowships to students intersted in academic careers.
both Catholic and non":Catholic, ~lOcese ~l;\s, enter~d the MIShave been visited in the past slOnary SIsters. She ]S the former year " Marjorie Nickerson of Holy Re . decmer parish, Chatham. Now GENEVA (:N'C)-The SoverNon-Catholics Help a .novice, she will .be professed Non.:.Cathoiics, in fact a~ of Au, g. 5. Her name, in religion is eig~ Military Order' of Malta h I . great e p to the Sisters. Some Sister, Margaret Louise. are catechetical drivers and one, has" created a Catholic inter national center, with headquar a photographer, has ta'ken many Missionar;r Nuns Candidates for this community ten h ere, t 0 study the physica1, pI'ctures for t' he comm'unl·ty'. Sister Mary Regina tells of should have a particular interest moral and spiritual needs, 01. ' one mother whose four-year-old in the catechetical and mission yictim. of ' Hansen's diseule daughter was in the' Sisters' ary works 'undertaken by it. The • C (leprosy). kindergarten. The little girl, Sisters do not teach ·school or Inc. The decision to establish the younger than her classmates, had conduct 'institutions, devoting M 0 V ERS eent~r was etaken by memben trouble learning her prayers, and themselves wholly to catechet SERVING
of the Order in responSe to 'a wasn't earning 'any gold, stars. ieai instruction, social service, Fall River, New Bedford
wish expresse9 by His Holiness Sister suggested to the mother, and parish census work. Age Pope Pius XII when he' ad that she give' the child some limits ar~ from 18 to 30 and high Cape Cod Area dressed delegates to. the first In.. help at home, even though both school education is desirable, A:en': ternational Congress for the So were non-Catholics. but not essential. AERO MAYFLOWER cial Rehabilitation of Lepel'l, This was done, and soon the Further information may be oh on April 16, 1956. little girl headed her class, the tained from the Superior Gen TRANSIT CO.' INC. At the same time the Order of possessor of dozens of gold eraI, Our Lady of Victory. Mis Nation-wide Movers
Malta also signed a convention stars. But' far more important, sionary Sisters, Victory Noll, WYman 3-0904
with the Spanish government, the mother, from learning the Huntington, Indiana. 304 Kern,ptoD St. Ne,w Bedford outlining a program of assist- prayers, became interested in the r--------------...::============~
arice to victims of the disease. Church, and was converted, being
The cO(lvention provides for the baptized even before her little
establishment of an international girl.
training center in that, country Have 72 Convents' for doctors, nurses and social The community of Our Lady <) workers of different nationati- of Victory was founded in 1921 at ties who wish to dedicate themby a Chicago priest, Rev. John J. o selves to the fight against the Sigstein. Its purpose is to give disease. religious instruction and practical Christian training to children and adults who have not re ceived Catholic school education. The Sisters "offer every pos 115 WILLIAM ST. NEW BEDFORD, MASS. LONDON (NC)-Two Card-, sible spiritual material help. inals, 12 archbishops and 25 bish- . that souls may be converted or ops walked in pr~'cession through the streets of London in England-opening of the new St. George's cathedral here: 'INC•. Built to replace the old cathe Third Order Regular of dral, destroyed in World .War' St. Francis II. St. George's is the cathedral of Southwark diocese, which in Ofter to Young 'Men and Boys 'cludes London south of' the speciaJ opportunities to study for the Prlesthooa, Lack Thames and the counties of Sur Of funds no obstacle rey. Sussex and Kent. For further information. write The opening was an inter to national occasion; for the work of rebuilding was financed part FATHER STEPHEN, T.O.R. ly through contributions from FRANCISCAN many parts of the world. Queen FRANCIS J. DEVINE ARTHUR ~. DOUCET PREPARATORYSE~NAKY Elizabeth II of England herself P 0 BOll 28'
MASS~ ill among those who contributed' ROLLIBA Y8BITRG 12 P&.
»,the,restoration of the edifi~ .....
A. D M MULLEN
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Open New Cathedral Blessing of Truc:ks In South London At Enfield Shrine ENFIELD (NC) - T!1e t :lird. anr\u;d "Blessing of the Tru :ks" baa been held at the La Sa: ette Shrine here in New Hampshire, ScOrE!lI of trucks from :Ilew Hampshire, Vermont and Musa ehuSE~tts proceeded up the mc .un tain to the shrine, formill g a eircle past the altar. Each tJ'uck wu "blesse~ and the driver giv tlIl a medal of St. Christopller. The ceremony was descr ibed by New Hampshire Motor' Ve hicle Commissioner Fredericlt N. Clad,e as the only one or its kind in the U. S. He called it a IIPlendid gesture on the palt 91. I"ath.lr Roland Bedard, the silrioe
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;"'".,i, A letter was sent recentiy from Milan to Rome. Few
will hear of this letter, but
'r,"
' ., ',,':': 1dJJA or:"
":.':"\"
'it
points up ';1 problem that bas faced the Church at various periods of history , The letter, written in the name of the Holy Father by Substitute Vatican Secretary of State Monsignor. Dell 'Acqua to Archbishop, Montini, was sel1t, to, the eI~h~h National Week of the Pa~toral Refresher C~urse. ThIS 18 a meeting of a movement founded in Milan and aimed at ' th e examining yearly the most pressing pro blems facmg Church. ' >. " , ' ,Monsignor Deli'Acqua wrote that am~mg the' most im portant tasks for Catholics--clergyand 1ai~y~is, tl1e r~establishment of a living contact between ChrIstIan thought
"
,.,.,., ,.."
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-ruL!- 6 ' n - ~ "S II
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-THE ANCHOR Thurs., July 17, 1958
Weekly' Calendar , Jf Feast Days
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TODAY _ St. Alexius, Con fessor. He lived in the fifth cen tUry and was the son of a ROPlan senator.' He fled from the lux;' ury of' home on and, the day he his wasfather's to, be married in order to serve God in humil ity, disguised himself as a J:>eg~ gar. Later he returned and lIved ' in his own home, unrecognized, as a beggar. Only after his death and modern culture. ' was his identity revealed. ,', Progress extract~ its price. " : ' ',' TOMORROW-St. Camillus of , When people witness rapid changes in science, in econLellis, Confessor. At the age of Gmic 'niethods, in, communications and transportation, in ' 19 he entered the military serv standards of living, in art, and music and arcpitecture ice under his father, an Italian when these changes come ,about within a comparatively nobleman. After four years of campaigning, found himself, 'short span of years, then change becomes the watc h word through his he', violent temper, 'reckless habits and passion for of the day. Change in many areas brings about a frame of mind in which change is expected.in all things. gambling, a discharged ·soldier , Christian ideas and ideals and concepts are looked on in straitened circumstances. A few words from a Capuchin friar With scepticism. If so many things have changed,' why led to his life, conversion. He entered not 'change in these areas also? And so modern society and, religious was ordained and modern culture ask for a re-evaluation of truths and 'stan founded the community of the dards that other ages took for granted. Why not a change Servants of the Sick, which was in dogmas? W.hy, not a change in morals? Are the un-' confirmed in 1586, by the Pope• He died in 1614. . fl eXI' bl' changing truths' of Christianity. really so m e.· -"rOr;,We see this attitude reflected in the writings and in, SATURDAY-St. Vincent de Paul, Co'nfessor. He his waslife born the lives of many otherwise intelligent men and women. in 1576, and devoted to ,The principle of cause and effect once had' great powers More Zealous than Intelligent the care of the poor and instruc of proof in reasoning to the existence, of God ; now men, t R tion of the rich in 'ways of char will question the validity of that self-evident truth. a,nce ugges e a IS IC O n C e p i t y . Soon after his ordination, 1 d d he was captured by corsairs and all ,men accepted, the pririciplethat we, shou d all o goo You' th, Refo'rm M.ethods taken to,Barbary, 'Where he coI) ,and avoid evil' now many question that there is any such verted his renegade master and \ thing, as evil: ;nd even if there is, whyshoul<,l they avoid .it: -By Donald McDonald with him escaped"to France. He , ,It is not enough to say that such-and-such is a P : r m - D a v e n p o r t Catholic Messenll'er founded' the 'congregation of eiple of Christianity and therefore' all must follow: ,it. ,Th,e if good intentions were all'that is ,requ,ired to solve Vincentian 'Fathers and Sisten . t y mus,t be. moral problems ,or clean up meSSy situations in this world. ' of Charity. He 'Pariswu' on : prpb,lem: is more basic than th.at. Modern SOCle September 27, 'died 1660;at'and , shown that there is such ,a t~llng as truth, that there. ~re ,'of oUTS, I ,suppose, most of our problems would long since canonized in'1?37. , 'absoiutes, 'that truth, is inflexible and ,'e~ernat The Idea ,have been solved. ' ' " , . " , ' stiNDAY~St.,J~romeAem that',~verything IS relative-:-even morality ~nd dogma&--: ' But too often indignation, "lyrical" they wi,~l be is a?p~er iliiln,: Confessor. A 'Venetian, be 'must..be' faced 'and answered. , " " and zeal for reform seem to matter, and I can t help thinking, was, miraculollsly set free after
, For that is the challenge that modern culture throws bulk s'o much larger than'the that a contest, if con~est there .. praying' to the Blessed Mother
, '" II' d ' must be, should be directed to upon be~ng taken prisoner ,!hil~
wpto ,the Church. And unless that cha en~e _18 a~swere ,. intelligence and perception professional song-write~s so that 'serving 'in the army. ,Later be
',' with intelligence and' competence by Cathohc~, clerIcal and, - that is needed if reform is to be ~ '!cleam~ess?' would have the suP-, ',tQOk Holy' Orders and devoted
' 'lay' 'then we' Catholics 'run the danger of surrendering by realized. An~, when ,this bap :port of ,competent musicianship, bimself ' ,to charitable works. sil~nce';'and inefficiency. The cause of, Christ is,' deserving,' pen s, reform , thus denying to teen'-agerll the He founded a congregation of . of, menaild -women who will, recognize the darigers, to ,is, not '0 n I y 'opportunity to assert-as they clerics ,regula~, called the Som , " h aschi for: the little town of Som ('postponed, it is - seem 'always so ,ready to assert Christianity, will' keep themselves '.from the taint of t ose 0 b s c \Ired by , that what is clean and pure and asco in Lombardy where it wall errors, and will set out to combat them with zeal ag:ainst new confusion good is also very dull and boring. started, dedicated to the care of , But my principal objection to orphans. ,He died in 1537, aged the error and with charity for the erring. " and new 'frus Men and women of this day must be shown that in tration. the present lyric-refor", move- 75, an ilnness contracted while :the realm 'of religion change comes not in God and the , T h i seonfu tending the sick. He was can . ment is in its method of dis suading youn~ lleople from pat , Ilion and likely onized in 1767 and in 1928 waa things of God but to the' lives o~ those who would 'serve f r u s tr a t ion , ronizing the i,mmoraI. declared .the patron of ,orphaM The sponsors of this movement and abandoned children. GOd. These are, absolutes which do not: chang~; although 'arise consist list five questions about ~ re " our understanding of them can grow ,and our live!!! und~r ently, it seeI!ls _ MONDAY-St. Praxedes, Vir their influence can ,deepen and ch~mge for the ,better. , ' to me, -in, the', . corded song and they unequi:v'" gin. She' was' the daughier Of Christianity 'is nota collection' of, antique ideas' ,and, matter of, mor . ocally declare to YOU!1g ~ople 'a Roman senator, Prudens, and' a 'rr... als for' YOl,lth. ,that ..~; one has, to answer :no', sister of ,St. Prudentiana., She Iltandards; it is not a religious,: museum into Jwhic~'one goes ' Is 'there sOmething particularly to, any of ,these ,qu~s~ions, the rendered great service to r~ , lOgaze 'and not to' li,,~.Christiarii,tY ,i~a,~"'p1!Xle_rn, a~d:' , baffling abou't' the mi>ral' PfQ~-' record iS,not -Worth, listening to" 'ligionin the 'first "and ~nd , necessary to pr,esel).t-d~Y living as, th~ eternal living Cht:ist. ',le,ms of youflg people, ~r 18 ,Jt : dancing' to, playing" singing, cenhiHes,: using' her wealth .. , "But this must be 'shown to :tOday's people. , , ,that t~e older, generatIon; 80 buying." reliev~ 'the poor. An ancient , '. , " , ,' eager .to prevent young people, ' church 'in Rome perpetuates her I list the questions ~elow: from committing t!le sins of. its H(1) po the lyrics, Qf, this song, memory. ' 'TUESDAY-'-St. Mary Magd~ , ISIOIl 0 own youth; cannot taketbe time basically tecognize the ~ignity An advertisement presently making the rounds of mag-' "for"cool and inte.llig~nt ~easure- ,and purpose Qf. love- and mar - len; Penitent. She was raised by , .. ,.' d tl .' I "h"d 'r ' , ment, of ,an evIl sltuatIo~ and ,riage? , , .' " , ' Christ',froin a, life "of. S,in to take " ~,azmes shows a rel~~e, gen ema~ m a "awn, c aIr, ,r~w mg the pr~perw.ay to combat It! '. ':(2) !?<> they, promot~ proper her place' among the saints of the " ordersthrou~h a mIcrophone whIle a ynarvelous machme, at, ' Whether It be modesty 1ft , atbtude~ of respect for parents, "Church. ',She was ,one of ~ ", his bidding, trims the hedge and cuts the lawn. dress" ,dating patterns, or a school and all other authority! , family "whom Jesus so loved" , , ,This is a vision that the ,future holds out to, us-.-free- ,question of after-scho.c:'l.-hours "(3) Do they encourage proper , that he' raised' her brother, St. Gom from work ' w o r k , the fact that opinion on respect toward members of the Lazarus from .the dead. Sbe B t'th : h 'tch r~f?rm-tactics is so ofte~ ~harply o.pposite sex, esp~cially on par stood ~ith' the Blessed Mother u, ere IS a 1 . . . , , diVided among CatholIcs, even ties and on dates? and St. J9 hn at the foot of ,the ,/ What do we do ":Ith the tIme w,e thereby have,. Catholic experts in' t~ese mat"(4) If fads, dress, talk, moo~s : Cross 'during the Crucifixion. People can do only ,so much restmg. They are phYSIcally ters, indicates conf~slOn and. a are implied or mentioned in tbis When the faithful were scat and psychologically capable of only so much recreation. certain lack of. rea~lsm ~nd dls- song, do they help to protect my \tered by"persecution; it is said After that, what?" ' ' c e r n m e n t that IS dlsturbmg. difonit y and self~respect! that she found refuge in a cave The tim' may come when enterprising firms will place ' The most recent example of . (5) Do they enc?urage me to in Provence, France, where she whllt I mean comes from a most Increase my SOCIal contacts lived for 30 years, Her sister . ' e.. . .. " ads m magazmes mVltIn!t:> people to enJoy ,a new form of ,hon~rably motivated Catholic rather than to 'gO steady?" was, St. Martha. youth movement in one of our - One could say, I suppose, that activity-work. Entrepreneurs will Qpen up work .centers WEDNESDAY-St. Apollin':' places w.here people can get away from I:.eflt and relaxati9n large Middle West cities.' were, 'these, ,five q.uestions aris, Bishop-Martyr. He is said ,This group has set out to clean worded negatIvely their ~ross to have come from Antioch witb and do some work. Can you imagine the flood of Madison ',A , th t 'Il be d t toll' th' fun of up the lyrics of the popular songs error would have ,been aVOided. 'St. Peter and to have been ap ven.ue copy a, WI . groun ,ou ex mg e ,'our young people are singing, The fact remains the~ were pbilit'ed the first Bishop of Ra~ listening and dancing to, by (1) worded as I have just quoted venna: His life was one of con workmg? '. .. So why not enJoy the VISIOn ~f the future now - and persuading them not t~ buy re ,them and, as such, they reflect tinuous 'suffering at the hands enjoy the fun of working! At least realize that it is neces cordings or patronize in any way a wrong-headed approach to the of persecutors and he is said to aary for man's happiness here on earth. .. have persevered through:a long suggestive songs; and (2) off~r- problem., , . ' .' ing prizes for the best· song lyriCS Fo~ example, I can think of series of torture!;, He was ban Ilubmitted by 13-to-19-year-olds' many songs-perhaps not of very: 'ished three' times from Ravenna. ,'in a contest sp,m~red by the recent vintage, bub still , to, be 'He died from the effects of tOr Iroup. " found in record shops and beard ture and fatigue during thereiga So far,so good. We don't want on the radio, etc.-whicb have of Vespasian in79 A.D. nothing' at all to~ say: about the :our young people's, morals sub verted or attenuated by song 'desirability of youth's increasing "Blue-Tailed Fly'''' preach no any more than we want them their' "so~ial contacts" or wbich' , "respeetfor authorit'''and OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE' DIOCESE OF ,FAll RIVER subverted by 'direct il-i'docti-ina preach: not a word ,about the nothing about "proper respect'" tion 'or bY evil companions. ' . " ' , ',. " '~dignity, arid purpo1'!e of love and , towards' 'one's pal·tner "on par ' ',ubHshed Weekly by The C~holic Press ot the Diocese of, fall River And the 'sponsorship of a marriage'~ but which are about ties or' dates." Is youth to con ' "clean lyric" contest givell this, as morally inoffensive and neu ' '" 410 Highl,and Avtmu~, , , clude ,th1\t they are, therefore, fall River; Ma'ss. .oSborr:te 5-71-51 reform action a, positive note tral as,a song can be. "immoral?" PUBLISHER ,- not always present ina' reform ' Novelty and patriotic' IOngll I just wish that one of these Mostlfev. James L Connolly, D.D.. PIi.~.· " 'Ilitua~io~, though I t~i~k i~ is, abounc:iabout .w~}ch" one~ would days, reform' in the matter of ASS') GENERAL MANA'GEI perrrussible to entertain serious .ha"e to answer 'no, to one or youth's morals would, be ,realiS GE·",·ERAL' M',''~'N· A'G'ER ,' - . , , ' , doubt about the ability of teen- mOt'e of the test questtQns. tically" conceived and I have a I.". Daniel F. Shalloo. M.A. I,~e". ,John P. Driscoll" '- agers, to write songs. ~ Cohan's "o'ver There,'; noveltiell hunch th'at our young' people , MANAGING EDITOR, ,There isn't ~any' doubt their ,like "Gotta Match?" and ~'Mairsy would, appreciate a measure ei ,:Attorney 'Hugh J. Golden '8Ongs ,.u.u ....clean" but ,bow Doats," and, folk-sonlol .' liD , '~m-realism also.
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avoId offense 1:10 the traveling pUblic,' it was announcer!. 1 •
C:urb Posters LONDON (NC)-The British Railways system has decided to impose strict censorship on ad vertising posters iIi order to
7.
THE ANCJ40R-
Thurs., July 17, 1958
The decision came after Cath olic women's groups a ..u v.......".IS other organizations had' passed
resolutions deploring salacious ' posters.
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Thrilling First- National Offer..•Tremendous Savings on L'88EY"safedge"~ glasses ' . A ""'" gla.. eac1I -t.. Sicut 10 build ,our set _ I
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NEW BISHOP'S BLESSING: Bishop Robert 1.. Ho- .
• Lib~ "'$eWe- ~I, no<h~.quali". • No p.m..... requlntd boor all , .... want ••• WOIIderful gilh, _ . M
following his consecration in St. John's College Chapel there. On the left is Father Edvrard J. O'Donnell, S.J., of Marquette University, Milwaukee. Bishop Hodapp has labored in the Central American missicn area since 1936. NC Photo.
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historian, said here that, al";.' : though. U. S~· authorities d4!nied 'him a visa OR health gro' inds, his' own doctor has 'given him "a Cl~an bill of health." . Mr. Dawson, reached a! b~ home in this Devon town b'r the N.C.W.C. News 'Service, 'con firmed reports he has beell re fused. a visa to enter the U lited Banking is' Handier States following chest x-rays. When You Use Our The 68-year-old historian was ·to have conducted a serit's of' CONVENIENT lectures and seminars dl Iring the summer session of Gor zaga BANK-BY-MAil Universit)r, Spokane, Wash. Be ginning next fall he was s<hed SERVICE! uled to become the first pr >fes- . sor of Roman Catholic st'ldies Whether you want to make deposits, take out savings at Harvard University's divinity or make mortgage pay
seho()l. ments you can do it by
D($pite the action of A ner mail. This is just one. of
ican o,l'ficials, Mr.' Dawson said: modern banking ser-
'"tty English doctor has !:iven . " many vices available at THE "IIn~ II clean bill of he~lth." OLD RED BANK. the bank . Hl~ added that he had wIitten . that's always first in tG Ha,:vard, giving the un .:Ver-· vice. ' aity aU the facts of ih~ case. He"" " said· his future "plans de pend · ···,upon the university's reply and.' '. whelther visa authorities will re- " :.", . , .,consider their· decision:,' . M:r, Dawson declared, he stiU· .,hopE~s to be. able to go 'to Halvard.· .'" r : in September. :,', (tJ.• So' State· Departmen'; of.., ficials in, Walshington:' D. C.; . , were unable to' provide illlme-,· . diate information concern in ~ the, . . Rwer, S;"';';'ng8 .B~ Dawson case. They. said the3" had, . 14,1,' NO. MAIN· ·ST. asked U. S ...authorities' in Lt'm-,. ., FAU·'RIVER·"· I don for information"but hall not,:..,::. :;;.,. Tel.' 05"5-7868"" "" as Y4~t received a reply.) &1 -.&11 ...
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: ' ~lthough in charge of thE 'Sis': .1 ," 'ters of 'Mercy, 'the Belize lools, are' public, spOnsored by the'.. . " govE,rnment. Thirty-five S;sters VArlCAN CITY, (NC) - The stationed there at prE sent, falUM (jf a heavy' fragment of 22' tE~aching in elementary gl'ades m,arble, koma , statue, atop the
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'community received-worldwide" .. publicity' recently when lliem-' bers were pictured with Pri: icess
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CHUCK ROAST
~ontinued from Page 0: Ie 4th ga:ade during the remainder.
'Sister Mary Jacinta explained, Tile St. Mary's assignment was
are in session all surrmer. her first. Like the other Sisten
Classes begin at the end of June in Belize, she will teach eate
and run until the end of Maj the chism in outlying parishes in
.following year, with se ,eral addition to regular school work.
short vacations instead of the On vacatiGn, Sister Spent last
long Summer break custo: nary week "visiting Sisters at St.
in the Uriited States.' , Joseph's convent, Fall River.
Another difference the North She has returned to North Attle , "'Attl4~boro Sister will find is in bore for the time until her de
'the' grading system. First and . parture. Her travel' plans 'call
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t>:t:: By' Mary Tinley Daly . . • States of.A.merica, but in many ,Under the somewhat remote spell of the f o r e s t p r i m e - . r e s p e c t s his wife has a 'bigger eva}· we at our house have been vicariously anticipating ta~kh~ keeps tabs on the eight the 'murmuring pines and the hemlocks, the zip of "up, . Stepovich children and that's no girls,' and at 'em" at 6 A.M., the open fire at twilight, the . small order for a First Lady. . ht h'ke' . ' Mrs. Stepovich, interviewed Overmg . 1 • ding Ginny and her camping Regaling us. with tales of had'seemed to be relegated to. here. made it clear that the Gov ernor's mansion in Juneau iI' last summer's camping ex- second place-and now this year. primarily a home and that she
perience, Ginny has been Into out .consciousness sprang runs 'it like one.. .
wondering which of "the old phrases, sentences, even ,whole. "Raising a big famiiy is the
girls" will'be back. if the coun- pages of. t~x~ ~n "the ~mport: same in Alaska as anywhere."
.elors will be as ance of mdlvldual chIldren. . she said. "It's the children who · mice as they We wondered if Ginny would set the pace. meals. schoolwork, · were last year,. think we had let her down, . trips to the doctor. shopping. · if' her swim"Johnny and I cooked thiS We don't get out much." ming' will still up to surprise you."Ginn~ was .. F.our of tHe children-;-Anto~ia, be in' the fair.laughing, 'showingus the .lmeup Maria, Michael and Peter-will to - ni. i d d i i n' of shoes: sneakers. sturdy. ~ x - . be in Nativity School in Juneau atage. . fords, galoshes, the bathmg .' this fall. The tra,nsfer from In' 0 the r clogs,. "It's fun to be grown up' . Immacuiate Conception School W 0 r d s we've enOUgh to do, things for· Y01lrself .in Fairbanks' eased one p;lrenW. "e ~ R. ~in the -it's 'being a real Girl Scout." concern. according to Mrs. S~e.throes" of what . : "A mighty good G.irl ,Scou~," >. povich, Fairbanks is 600 miles is· cas ua I"l y. 'i:': we tried to take it in .the same north of Juneau. . tossed off by . spirit of practical helpfulness.. "In those extra-~oldwint~n the more. offi:' . . ..' "Now; let's see .about.the. unI was' always worried they · dent. as :'getting. a young~t~r off checked items." ·It was a mmute weren't wearing .enough .warm
-0 camp." ..... . " or so before o\lr eyes would clothing.' The thermometer can
-: Fortunately,' it all· came in. foc';ls on that . list.. · ..Just the drop mighty. fast up there;".sbe "ages; much' ,like )ii 6rk. in g your blankets, thewarmb~throbe,; Said. . way up in politicsArOrn the pre- pajamas. 'and the wo()l J~cket~ . Mrs. Stepovich' beJ!eveI..iD .:inct lev~l. 'O~ April 10;- .no . ·"Uh:'h~h. they:re .In, the attIc. keeping her. children' close'" later,' no .. earlier -.: apph.catJ~n and I knew you d know where , .' . home ·"where I know. what .ndregistr~tron.f~eh~sto.bem·~tofilld :em.,~dlhaveto·go. BLESSED VIRGIN AND .HER M.· OTHER:'J.ulY .2 6"is they're doing." "If the neigh Accept~d; ,stage' one! ":. . for my pre-ca~p"check-up. You . bors' kids want to' 'come over, : Next,We .m~e\.ing With ot~er . f~ll out ones~de a:,nd Dr. Rude universally observed as the Feast e>f S,t. Anne, ·mother of;.. fine," she stated, "but the ~i.ght· .. parents ,0n.May~0. >an~ :r:ece~v- . fills out the other, . the Blessed· Virgin .Mary; The. spouse of&t. Joachim,·St•.. Stepovichs play in their OWIl' big the. de!?Crip~Iveht:rat.ure. , Wh~n .wecaJ?e ,~theblank Anne W3:l'\ far advanced in age when Mary was NC backyard." worn threadbare' by thiS bm~.. marked "behav~or~ we' had a~·Photo. '. . . . Likes Frieodship , The purchase of. hew camp um~impulse to wrIte . "'Wondedul The Governor's wife' sa.id she , fon.n, Ja~~ ye~r's~om!?letel~ out~ but. not toe~b~rr.~ss our ::couto ,'likes' the Close ties that exiSt ,row-p; unearthmg a suitcase we entered It as normal.,. ·.ambngn~ighborsii1Ala~k!l' she , 20" x.i2" x 8", . . . Night before .take:-off; we bad"' said this feeling of' friendship And then"in~o' the back ?f .o~r. . Ginny!s favorite r':'1ne; -.hamextends 'to Catholic parish life, mny ~ . burgers-'-and took the lee crea~. comiciousness .. ~~nt ST LOUIS (NC)-Despite the .' of· medicai ,missionaries even with priests . arid' parishionen ·"'camping .. a~. 0".( a.tten~IO,n .w~s, and' .cake .dessert up to. Mary I, fact tqaf her Medical Mission": the blind,c;an see." she .added. "It· exchanging frequent. v·isits. ." · poig'himtly .' centered. Qn,' ~:Jr~ room. so. we coulda,ll be together. ary -Sisters 'have quadrupled in is' no secret any more that half' . "The ' Stepovich house ( . and .her .()pe,ration. DUring the. ~arly,next mormng,-we:loade<i size.' during the past decade, of the World is born; lives' and Fairbanks) was 'almosfan anoex . anxiOtisday.s. rut'll~iiig ...0 '~",eKs our Scout .,onto .the 1?usload of ·Mother.Anna Dengelisconvinced' dies without· its due 'share of to the parish rectory·... ,She .ld.early J.~ne. our thoughts, ·.t;reeJ?--:-clad campers.. '" the world's missionary areas .still spiritual and physical aid ~vllil- stated. "Bishop' Gleeson' took .P~ayers'aii~ .inte~e,st .were fo:-, .~>,.. .. 'Bye, ,Mom .,nd, .Dad•. ~f:e need more 'Religious as doctors able to the other haIL" charge of the grill whc'lcver we' eused o~a';suffermg young 19:-·.wav~d .out :Jhe wmdow.Ill and nurses. '. As:doctors and' nurses; 'relig- had a barbecue. He's an exeel year-old in bed· number tw~, .~rite to'you e:very day -; 'but The sprightly GO-year old ious are' welcomed in" places lent cook." . room' 516; of p.royiae[lce Hospl- 'don't, expect)o~g l~tters, cau.se ¥other General is perhaps more . they would never be welcomed . Bishop Fra'ncis D. Gleeson, tal: ... Tm going to have. a. bla~t!". '0' than.any other person, .respon- me·rely ..as missionaries, Mother ,S.J., is Vicar. Apo~tolic ·of . . Le' Wor.k "We'll write, too." we shouted sible for a. Vatican· ruling 22 Dengel said~ . Alaska. '.' .. . g . I over the' roar· of the 'departing g 110 'ng nuns to be . . M Stepov' h . s asked if ··After. -Mary. complete In ong .b·· "H'" I bI" t ' ' ' ' years a o. a WI .... - . "Stability is important." she' .. . rs. . . IC . ~a . . . ..: east, 'was, more"or lesscomfort:·\:us,_ ave a reaa,s. . c:,0me doctors of medICme., . says.. ."The fact that we don'.t . It IS diffIcult gettm~, to, MaSi ablyfms,~O?Se.di~her~wn.be~. < StGeorg·e Parish> On her way to Pome to re-, conie 'into 'an area and then .. when the mercury hits bottom. 'at home" It was to GInny .. we • " port on the growth of her order, . leave, makes an imp';ession. Arid .. "No ~all .job,'~. she replied. y looked f~r the leg work: "Ginn. , Plans Lawn .Palty . i ~he not~d .the 5?O professed Med-. the fact· that as 'Religious we.ded- . Even ,WIth ,the d~adbolt. heate~, take this mail up to Mary. WIll St. George Parish of Westport . Ical ~ls~lO~a.nes today repre- icate our lives beyond our ow~ (~warm water clrcula~Ing de.... \ you?"; "Ginny please. take the~e Factory. Dartmouthwill·hold"a· sent a Slgmflcant growth over spiritual good to the 'good of vice to protect the engIne) we ( pillows down ·and hang them m lawn p'arty on the church the. 96 .in 1945, and the four in' others undoubtedly has an im- had to start the car 20 minutes .the backyard to a.ir'~; '~Will you grounds on the evenings of July 1925. when the community was p a c t . " . . . . before we left to get it warmed fix a pitcher of Ice water and 24 'and 25 and the afternoon and founded.
up and the windows defrosted." take it up to Mary?"; "Ginny, even'ing of July 26 to raise funds But the' need for Religious
there's somebodY at. the front. for a parochial school. doctors is greater than the com door. Please run down and see Mrs. Richard Munroe is chair- . munity's· growth. she said. And
who it is"; "Ginny. trot on down 'man and Mrs. Raymond Martel the doctors have to be first:'rate,
Rt. 6 at The Narrows in North Westport to the basement and turn. up the and,Mrs. Raymond Cormier; co- . 'T'here's 'no room for 17th ceri
.hot water heater." chairmen of the committee, tury mediCine. even in far-off Ginny's willing spirit and her w'hich includes members' of the mission outposts," she said Where The · sturdy legs never failed us and parish, wom,en of the Guild. "There is practically no place in Entire Fa~n,. _. I'm afraid, we: took advantage => Cub Scouts. Holy Name Society the world so· remote today that of both, '. . and C.Y.O.· . its people do not r~ognize good. Can Diri~ Economlca1l1 "You're ·,mighty good to me. Over 20' booths will be fea- hospital care. . . "Pr9testants·ai.e th~re already, Cinny," .Mary. remarked one day tured.. Ni~htlyawards wi I} be' . 'professioiuil people. Other •' fter.: a. long series of up-and- .made"with a grand awar4. Oft with bo·spitaill . ar'e ~onstantly increas downs such as these. . the final night. · ~hat's all right," Ginny ad~ . . ing their professional standards. , ' . . Fa' . " Riv.er" . Paris .• h. /We can't' lag behind,", ' , rose spread on Mary's ans' .40;Sted'the IV. • ... . -. Stability Imporiaot Reservations '. -, tied.~·Itjll.give me practice being' CI" b'·. ·k . t R' 'h 'b th' ., . "The ne.e..d.·O{ · . ·eommuni.-. , ' • '1lC)pper'at camp' next ·week."" 'am a e' a .' e 0 o· .. y Phone OS~71.5. · '''We.:aInl.o~i 'droppe~'the vase of SS:p~t~r ~rid,P~ui ;'P~rish; . . Ro·:m'e...A··rt.··•• st· :_. .' .flowers.· 'we 'were',; arrangiJlg~ .• Fall River; willoo~duct a clam:'· . ...: "!Next-· .... week! . . . . Camp . . . starts nex t' '" bake:Sund ay, .J u'1'y' 27 ,a' t H orn-'. RO.ME.·.·· .(NC)~.uid'o Gregan-· bine;s Acres onH,orni!ine Road, ·.ii, the ai,:tist who ,ex~cutedthe · >. ' . R eh"0,0 h' thO .'.'Ch ower 'd a~d fi'tters frescoes in the new North .. An .Marked I . Amer. . .. '.: ';'..1' t I P M: nd' ican College here has ·left. 1 be · '·, " n'ext f Mo.nday." ou,r. wil' servcu a . ". , ~ . .for .<' ..,! ...v . '" e p , the bake at 3P;M, ' . Miami, Fla:. where he will dec · ..mper-grinned. "But l'ye got Mrs.' William ·:t.. O~Neil ia orate the c~apel of. Mercy Hoa- , . Your . nearest mail box is' a First . :·:·.·:aews 'f6r you, Mom: '. Come Oft chairman and . Mrs. :Everett C. pita!. Fed~ral "branch off ice" ; hal's 'e;ut to 'my' room'," .' . · Cowell, co-chairman.. :' sporta . open. 24 hours a day··.t9 milke. . ,i. ;." ·Scotc'h..tape<i to· her wall wail' program is: ooingplanned... ' ..; ,the' list. ()f equipment. required, _ ..... '. lMIvjng easy Jor you:No frafJic~ no FU" HOME INC. · with check .marks be'side almost 'plIr'king,"no 'weather problems,· • ·e~e'ry·item. On' her' radiator . Witlldrawals are just as simpl~e were'. carefully laid piles. of For ·the .Lips . a. Mareel Roy."::' c. Lorraine Roy 8S s.avings payments. shorts and shirts. dungar,ee's; Use ·the marvelous lip stick Roger. LaFranee sweaters; underwear. sox, bath- Silence. It is· particularly good .... , '. FUNE~AL DIREctORS' towels, washcloths.' sheets apd. f.or lips. that hav~, b!ien' distorted . ' '.' ~ . FRU ,ave-by-. • • • .' on for • • pillowcases. by unchai'itablIL'gossip.: . 15 IRVINGTON CT. •• • S d US th .. co~P.. . torti"" 0" ": en d detalb on , "And they're all 'marked!" For Lov.ely.IIaods· . '. NEW BEDFORD 11Il• •':~FREEIKIT. ,.\all fo;",' on . , · Giriny told' us triumphantly, '. There's realiy-onlY:"one"prepaW~:5":!.~~~.,.,{ Insured,., ci«'"i nt• i' '. ;" ~~ ' : . showing us the carefully .pen·ned: ration to use:;,Jt.'is:"~alled;Gene- ", .;~============~ . bt()·,·8. - • I)' " . _ .•.• Virginia Daly.' on...,each. iterQ.- ':rpsity. Get aJ~rlfe si~e jar;
o.v',. '",. Savings • SlGI\IE --oj. ",., . ." •.,.
"Johnny got me a laundry mark- ' . For,F~iaI'i'C!ne ,
AUBERTINE"':~': Agency" . !II' ~t. & NO: : , . . , . . , • ,"
" .. ... ,. lng' pen"":"'anQ look what 'eJse he':, :,i Expose tlu;!;:.~ace to:~!~e t:p.orn
gof'me-a poncho;' adu'ffle bag, .' Jilg air, esp¢,£!1l11Y bet~ee~ six . .•
'cITY • pocketkni~e and. a flashlight. ~nd,e!ght,pl~lo~\t, Tqe aii:o l1 the I've: sure: got a goodbroth«:lr."· .~' ·",ay·;'to. M~.BS·, is'especilllly re ;) .. t foil RIVer • . 'Helenf.ubertine. Braugh . Associouon -4bb1 " .' "Qh, Ginny,"'we pilt ouiarms' freshing atld.,~plifting.t,.<. ,',. .' Owner and Director .. . And.lo(l~. S, let OS 4. .. •.•••• ., aro.l:md her.dtew· herclose-=' ..:: AWooderful' Cleansiog Ai'tld ',,;
'. No ,.No.. M(nn .ia•••• ·~·· . '..; , ..... those ,.piles· of marked garments 10. '•• ,. ., ... €o'nfes!!ion..'i': :.!:::;.'\:.'" .,;;. Sp~~i~us P~rking .Ar~~
..• • • • • • • •,. . . . WE PAY ·POSTAGE. seeming "like' reproach:--'We' '.--Iii~al conditioner'" ". . .. ·w:t"2-:2957 , ' '.' " remembered. that' last year, and Beautifier . fr•• ·po5t-paid, addroued .nvelop~$; ready to mail 129 Allen St. , New Bedford '.coming right after Eileen·s. wed": . Holy CommuniOn ,
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,roday"s Fashions
. -THE ANCHOR Thurs., July 1O. 1958
Intr()duction of: New Fashions Mar:ks Transiti,c>naf Season
9
Ex-Navy' Nurse To Become Nun
By EUm KelleY"
PITTSBURGH (NC)-A nurse who gave up an II-year career '"Transitional" is an important July word. Increasingly, in the Navy last month will don overy Summer, ,there's a definite set of new fashions intro the gray hab'it of the Glenmary duced in ;ruly, hence the term "traditional fashions" for a Sisters on Sept. 8. She is Barbara Taurish, ana;.. "transition" season-from Summer into actual Fall. -In .' tive of South Greensburg, Pa., dress 3.nd separates, that much use out of another cool, who declined a promotion to lrneans pleasantly cool cot easy-cal'e, wash-and-wear ,cotlieutenant ,commander when she tons and blends in the new, ton! By the way, once you wear left the Navy to take up work in a new style, last year's look home missions. deepened Fall Colors that dated! If you have one chemise, Miss TaUl'ish will become the (:low like Autumn foliage! In you'll want another. The long81st Glenmary Sister when she llccessol'ies, "transitional" means torso chemise is just wonderful takes her vows. The Glenmary the introduction of colors that community' of nuns, founded "go with" those new, ready-to-. on! The new b'apeze silhouette is flattering, too! Furthermore, in Glendale, Ohio,' in 1941, is wear tones~ on these hot days, you'll love j the sister, communitv to the For many' fashion-conscious wearing a gay, full-skirted ootGlenmary Fathers. The Glen women and girls, July's a "black ton print! . . ,j mary: have hr ~Ises in the month." This is the time when nothing looks as shadow-cool as Fall Separates. are here and "<1' Cincinnati al'chdiocese and in black. For them, fashion is ready that beautiful! Indeed, you'll. . _ - , . the' Columbus, Owensboro, and ,,,ith black crepe dresses (brown exclaim over the new trapeze Wheeling dioceses. ...td dark green, too);.' black separates, some with doubleRE-ELECTED PRIORESS GENERAL: Rev. Mother ,The former Navy nurse first .noes, dark stockings, black trapeze coordination! The litTherega of Jesus, O.P;, '(seated) has been re-elected Prioress learned of them' while dationed' tie trapeze overblouse comes to .at Camp Lejeune in North Caro "cIvet hats and handbags!" the waist. It swings out over General of the Dominican Sisters, Congregation of St. ·Cath... 'lina, :where a Glenmary Father The Fall coat season starts in ,the smal·t trapeze skirt. The erille of Siena, 'at a chapter of'the Congregation held at the told her of the work being done .lruly! Indeed,. this is the tradf tional .month for winter coat 'skirt is lined to hold the shape! Motherhouse in Fall River. Standing, left to right, are Sister among Negroes in the' Sout~l. "promotions," partic,ularly for .It's time for transitional cotM. Ceslas, b.p., Superior at Peru, N. Y.; Sister M. Rose, 0.1'., Impressed by the community's "precious fiber" coats like cash . SUI>erior at. Acushnet, and Sister M. ·Dominic, O.P., F<>ll record, she dec.ided to request tons In separates, as well! The ... admission. But after consulting rnere (actually four-season new cottons have that "into-Fall River Prioress. Chapters of the Congregation are held every with her confessor, she first (lOats!) and for' the handsome feeling!" You'll wear them witb six years. signed for a tour of duty overClOats of man-made furs! Inci comfort through September.' seas, where sh could become ac dentally, many wise shoppers ' Many call the new shadings "Inrnake their selections now, be dian Summer Colors!" Ope' US 0 quainted with foreign mission work. c~use of attractive (pre-season) .lruly priees! The new Fall sweaters are in. Has Commendation (You people in Fall River are She d' h SllIow Fall Styles WASHINGTON' (NC) - His .trip' to units of.' the., Military -. ' ~as soon ..spen . ng muc particul.a. rly . .fortunate, because of her tune 0 k g th F th Council of Catholic, Women J'D Frallcl's X w r I' In SWJI y~ 9l~e,' right n~)\y, in the' . you nave a 'famous "sweater-' Holin'ess Pop' e Pius XII has said fa S er maker" mill located there!) 'Yes,' he is "well acquainted with" and '. Europe. The audience .with, the'" h' 'U·. . ..e,,:er, .., 0 0clIepths of mid-Summer, it's . "very proud of'~ the .. .work' of Pontiff was the highlight of her' '. p Ia lllversity m Toky?, Fath.er Autumn in ,th~ fashion world! ; you can stal·t· collecting sweat. .' ... Meyer !!a(l taken on as hIS speCIal J~ashion shows all over the c,o.un ers ,now,~for Fall. They look .American Ca~hoVc.",:,omen. _, tour, ~hlCh ·~overed. mIlItary. m- project' the rehabilitation' of trT (partic!llarly .the interna-' compl('tely different from last Mary Donohoe,. organization . stallahons m England, Italy, I I ' IC . l' F ' , 'G . . R'agp'IC k ers V'II J age, a arge sum tiOt;lally, famolis Amos. :.P.arris.h year. The whole fashion idea kcretary of the Nationa ounci rance, '. ermany, Spam, Mor- 'area 'in Tokvo inhabited b th Jrashion Clinic in N~w York!) now is. the "longer' chemise 'of Catholic Women, said the occo and Turkey; where - she'. . .. . . l'd ,y e Pope told hel' of his pleasure' worked to .streng'then the Mili-:. POfoot·rh'ecCrI:tpyp. e. and handlcap~ed 'lI"e showing, commenting upon ,sweater." It looks just like a .\Cad selling fashions and acces:' '. stunning overblouse. Many 01. in the work of American CathotaryCounCII.' MJ'ss T . h hId · .., Th e M'l't' I organ-' . ' m aUflS e pe obtain 'Gries fOI~ Autum!) an~ Winter, the deli....htful new sweaters.' I Ie women durIng an audience I I arT C ouncI, surplus d' 1 I' ... , . d' . . lru::7 to 't C th I' e lca supp lef the 1858-59! feature' the "shaggy mohair" graflted to ·ber. IJle ·m· "'., '. um e a 0 IC vHiagers a d ' . t d F th' look 2Hld' are' available in AuShe said, tile.Pope assured her women's' groups at military inM . ~ .n assis. e a er The new "precious, fibre" he intended .to pray for all those- stallations with NCCW now in- . .ed~er.m hIS campaIgn to build lJOIIts are the lovely new Fall tUOln leaf colors and shadings. ' a Ispensal'y and a seh I They coordinate' wonderfully connected with the work of the cludes 55 affiliated organiza. 00 . ~~hmeres. They're available in with colw.(ul tweed skirts! women's council. " . tions. It was initiated at the rethe tapered chemise look, the Miss Donohoe recently re-. uest of military chaplains, serv trapeze look, the fitted look, too, Feather Hat StuDDinc turned from.a three'-month field ice women and. wives of military fOr those who want a more con A fashion favori~e right now personnel stationed in - Europe. servative type coat. There's
is the feather hat'. It weighs--,.. 'House 01 Our Lad,.'
vicuna, too, one of the most ele nothillg. comes in 'the most beau- .. 'lant coats extant, at. an opulent tiful col~rs; wi'll be perfect with Miss 'Donohoe's trip' was uni ClOSt!. your new . dark cottons and' . dertaken both to visit already ,""C Coats j~or Fall and Winter in cl'epes! The feath~r hat is smart LOS ANGELES (NC)-Lack existing units Of th'e' Military of Idve will frustrate a child. 'A Council and to' extend the or the new '''man-made furs" are too; with the Summer suit and is ,ganization. New units, of the J'eally 'stunning, look like fur, absolutely stunning with after-' good spanking won't. (lOst but a fraction of fur! The dark :fashions. as well! Fu-rSo 'says'FaiilCr' Peter Ciklic," council were ,set up in ·Spain. ttL I U· . Morocco, Turkey and England _ _Il'1-o..... ' I" new mink mutation colors are them'lore,' the feather wig is an a psyc h 0 ogls a oyo a 111 beautiful. They're made. with a absolute "fashion-knockout!'-, . versity here: He offered this adduring her trip. SEE THE S I
new process, now. Many of them vice to a personality and mental Her tour was conducted in ~
Velvet' hats· appear' on 'the look exactly like beaver, like hE:alth institute held at the uni-' 'co?peration ~ith Nati?nal CathM~I Mid-Summer fashion horizon vel·sity. ollc Commumty SerVIce, a USO Ileal. like mink! They have high ,and al'e s'1l1artest in shadow-cool fashion styling, too. Some fea · "If a child is frustrated" he affiliate, part of whose program IT'C HE' N 5 " , is giving assistance to military . . black. Taffetas and satins are tlJre the exquisite draped che. said, "it is due particularly to mise back, some the new 'trapeze here too and look smart with lack of attention on the part of chaplains. of friendly wood· the dark Fall crepes. For travel, look! the.pal·ents for the child, and to' Miss Donohoe said that one Warm and companionable, witb Travel in style· in new, Fall I recommend the new casual a lack of wholesome love." of the memorable incidents of felts in advance Full shapes and many wO"k-!Uty;ng convenienca IlUit! See Fall's choice collec "The theory that a child is her. journey was a visit· to • _. in new NATURAL FINISH, "House of Our Lady" at Ephesus t:ion! There are new textured COIOl'S! frustnlted by the proper adminin TUl'key, where tradition says or choice of loyel y coiors. wools so fine and light-weight, . GU81'd your complexion today istration of discipline-a spank ~rhere al'e suits in newly impor from the hot, actinic rays of ing for' instance-is nonsense. the Blessed Virgin spent,the last Send coupon for colorful book
t:alit tweeds in blues, reds, the SUll! As I've mentioned re- Children musf be disciplined," years of her 'life. Two French ie! showing new model kilchen..
he said. priests serving as custodians of
l~reens, and black/white! MaIl)' cenUy, lave your skin with lo the shrine in that far-off spot Moi' Coupon Todoy'
of Fall's new suits follow the tions and creams; w~ar big, Father Ciklic, a student of promised to pray for the work .
I:hemise and trapeze looks! flol)PY hats to shade your face of the women's couricil~ she said. (Plenty of softly fitted and and tinted hair, and emerge as mental illnesses, told his audi ence that there seems to be more boxy-jacketed suits, too!) a natural beauty in the Fall, disease today only because'means' . whell many oj; your friends }'ashion Standbys of detecting' such disorders have: al'e wearill'g unbecoming "half improved. .U 0.· "Transitiona I" dresses hint 01 ~ans!·.' ",' & lrall, yet are delightfully. cool! ',. n " "A<:tuallY;"" he' added, "no one MiddJeboro Road .. Route 18 'fhese . are, the marvelous "dark is aosbli.JtelY·'free .fromalI menEAST· FREETOWN oottons," some featuri'n'g the tal disol'der, just as no one is AUkin9s upholstering. ! I"';';' build [] r~~O:rteo;•• end"" . lflowing colors of Autumn! The ~~r.~ci~~lPleteIYWell't)hYSi~allY,,, ·;~, ..FABRICS· C • • , . ' ; baoI<let w.... plctw.. of .... -.lei, k _ . I ' .~tton-blends are wonderfully . .: ,. -'., ....... " .
, II l~ol. for rif.(ht-now- wear. One '~1 would say' that 'it is normal . O. ·E. NER80NNE. Prop. Rovely I adl11ired today' is lJ. FORT WAYNE (NC)-Catho to be' a little' abIJ'Ormal," he 'con-' 1861 Pa,chaM 8t.. ,N•• U.dfo,t1 I cluded. . . ' U C... le, SI.. aoannl. .Iark-ton,ed dacron in the neVII· lie themselves must have a clear ! ~-.l.---=-=.c:.:;__ er understand.ing of the Faith-be t:rapeze style. Because it's dac fore attempting to "give it to 1:'On, its all-amund pleats never Radiation Project . othel·s." . "come ouU" . Furthermore - il NOTRE ,DAME (NCj-The haseasy·-care charm for back t< Fahler Stanley L·. Manoski, University of Notre Dame 'has IIChool, to college, to--just abou1 FoH . Wayn~ .di~cesari Director received a J1CW grant of ~354,314 anywhere of fashion interest! oj Lay A~tivitiesi recommended Do You Work in a Factory, from the U. S. Atomic Energy r~adillg of spiritual works and The new dark crepe dresse! Comlilission. The grant will \be Garage~ Machine Shop or are ,fashion-fil'sts . for Fall' participation, 'in 'Confraternity used to support the school's ra . Gasoline Station? of Christian Doctrine progranls They're dal·k. but cool, in tissue diation project for another year. We pick up and aetiver. c1ea ... weight crepe. Ri~ht now a. black to learn more about the Church.
_-'~..,;. He spoke to the Council of Cath crepe dl'ess looks shadow-co01 and repair overalls. Also we hove olic Women. "There is no sub land is just. that! These dresse! : FOR. PLE~SURE . :
o complete line ot Coveralls. Pants stitute for knowledge of our
lire wonderful in the new sil and Shirts tor sale. • EAT,.
Faith," he said. llaouettes and certainly ·date last We reclaim and wash any oily. :rear's 'black crepes! These "styles Father Manoski urged the wo
'dirty or greasy rags.• incidentally, are just about per IDefI "to be ready to ac~ept the teet for town or· travel or out Why8uy When We Supply responsibility to help ih lay' ac-. That-R-Rich'N'Yellow-Robust. lIOCially, in the eveni~g and will tivity." He said that all parishes lie YOUI' fashion-standby for are in need of men and women : FRESH CUT-UP POULTRY • _w-through-September! active in lay programs. T,.."pelle Overblouse Sm.... He cautioned. members to
"keep in mind that the Chris": • Right now. is a good tilJl~ ttl FARMS : lMIy "ont: more Summer dress." tian fa~ily must be preserved," +14fi Washington St Fairhaven. 2' Howard Ave.. Nt'w Bt-dfnrd . Jlndeed, some of the hottest dayt. termirtg . the" fanlily "the' most. Just off Route 6 , . . Wl' 9-6424 or WY "-IH~f. " lMautiful ci~cle ill the world." ~ • • • • • • • ~ • • • • • •4 lYle Mill· ahead, You'11 I8t •
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10 Thurs., tHE 'ANCHOR- . July 17, 1958
.
Delineation of "C,h'oracte'rs
Lacking· in O'Brien to4ovel
ASsertsChi.nese People Hungry For 'Gospel
. By Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S" Kennedy
Of the three novelists whose latest works we scrutinize this week, by far the most famous is Kate O'Brien. She has PORTLAND (NC)-The been turning out . full-length-fiction for many years now, people of China are "hungry much of a superior order. That can hardly be s'aid of As. for the gospel," the superior Music and Splendour CHar .' , general Of a missionary com , Clare. and Rose, though craftily . per. $4.50) , which, thou'gh in differentiated and each fitted munity .of nuns reported in her some respects uncommonly with a .set of characteristics,are return to Oregon after estab engaging and expert, is lack more' puppets than' persons. lishing a new mission near Hong ing in one crucial' respect: con Pages and pages are given to Kong. vincing delineation and devel telling us about them, but they "Graces a're poured on those opment of the
never live and move in their people because of the suffering central charac .own right.. In fact, on page 182 in the interior of China," de ters,
Rose is referred to as Clare, and claredMother Mary Leola, head Thl;lse are two one quite understands the slip: of the Franciscan Missionary girls, Clare Hal even to the author they. are not' Sisters of Our Lady of Sorrows. vel and Rose unmistakably real. More Conversions Conversions among the' Chin Lennane, both Miss Maggie 16 when first The people in' Una Troy's ese are showing a marked in we meet them book Miss Maggie and the Doctor crease,. she said. She recalled in a drab music (Dutton. $3.75) . not only are that, when she was' last in Hong room of a Paris born in Ireland btlt stay in Ire Kong . in . 1952, the .cathedral convent in 1886. land. W'ell, that is with the there was "nearly empty." Now, They are' new ~ exception of one who lights out she 'said, ·every Mass on Sundays to the convent, for Philadelphia.· But he even is crowded. lately . arrived -tually recovers his wits and 'The Chinese, she added, make from Ireland. They' would have comes back'to Erin." . . "zealous converts," partly be .been pursuing. quiet, humdrum, Specifically tp Ballybeg;near. cause 'they find in the Catholic modestly gratifying careers in Waterford. -This tiny"but hardly, Church a rich liturgy that re their respective native villages, ddyilic' village is the scene of places the pagan rites they gave had it not been for the fact. that Miss Troy's narrative, a mean up. each possessed a, singing voice deririg yarn that would give the THANKS FROM CARITAS-CHILI: Father Raul Silva . ·Mother Leola· said she ob . cin';xceptionalquality." experts, on the construction of a Henriquez, (left) president. orCaritas-Chili, Catholic relief served'~ "very great decrease" . ~~cause of these. voices, the novel 40 fits.. .' '. agency, ~isits the New York office of Catholic· Relief Ser-' in the strength· of communism liris have been uprooted and We first 'see Bailybeg through vices-National Catholic Welfare' Conference to express' around 'Hong Kong during her "packe'd off· to Paris for testing the eyes of a young do'Ctor, Bill th k 'f 12' '11' d' II th f" 1" f ' od . recent stay there. She credit8. and training. In a sense;' lhey .Drummond, who' is to'take over ". ?,n s· or ~ome , :mI Ion . 0 ~rs w~r ... 0 ',:r:~ Ie go. S ~.the British. with. taking "excel are'. victims. They· have not r tlje practice Of'a lately deceaseo . shIpped' to :hls country ~ Father. SI}va, sup~rIOr of the Sale~. "lent· 'care'" of· the continuing '. . chosen' thexind .of' life now' medico who dosed himself withiari' Techiiical lnstitiIte at"Santiago;i's shown with Msgro" floOd of 'refugees' that come to looming before them.·It has "whiskey, neverkep't liP with the ,; LuigfLig~~ti. of Des 'Moines, ,Ibwa,"director-o{the Na'tionaf 'Hong K~ng from' co~munism. been forced upon them ·by well:' a~vahces 'in his 'profes~ioh, btitCatholic, Rural Life Conference, and Father.A. Joseph Louis . ·.,'~choolsFlourlsh meaning relatives, ·friends, and' was obliging' enough" 10' pull ". S . ." NC P h ' '. Escapmg .from the control of t o ben~ctors. teeth on. occasiori~ '.. "", ,'" . S.J?B:i .dIrector of. aleslan MISSIOns.. ". . c:.. •' communism 'is risky bus~ness, ... Study in' Rome .Bill is' not" keen "im Ballybeg; . , ... . . . she declared.'" Those who are The Paris convent is m~diocre'" and he is,downright'disgusted . Requi~es·. caught attempting an escape except for' the . presence of, a' with the· wreck of'8 house' that . ' . are' . shot. TwO .weeks before. o nun somewhatinysterious, who goes with ,the practice. But that
Mother Leola left China, eight has ~a gen'ius fordiscerriing and is where Miss Maggie' comes in-'-
VERSAILLES (NC)~Teache~s ' Noting that families 'are geiJ:- '. men were executed by the Reds. 'directing 'rare 'vocal gifts. She Maggie Daly,"a'j,ewel Qfa,house should' recognize their .limita erally demanding to be mOle" ;'~YoU' ask them' why they risk perceives that Clare' and Rose . keeper and a 'font ·ofrustic wis tions and closely' collaborate closely associated to the educa it, and they tell'you there is no· have the makings of great oper .dom. with families and youth organi tional activities of schools, the living 'in the interior, so they 'atic artists. Un!ler her they .It is Maggie who eases Bill. zations in ta'sks of education, ac Vatican letter firmly placed the take the chance to come to • begin to learn the art. into Ballybeg society and couri cording toa document reieased family first in the hierarchy· of free land," she said. /. They' have to slave at it, re try doctoring. And .she is the. by the Holy' See. rights in education. . Catholic schools are' consid lentlessly. For them, there are confidant both of .Johnny Gub This advice was issued in a Education is a' social prob ered a great boon in the figh.t no holidays. They arE! sent ~m. to. .bins, an uhdauntable terror of a 1 tt . t f th V l' n t o lem, it said, because s.cho:>ls de against communism in Hong Rome, to study with Signor. boy, and of Jenny Barry, a sum teh erFsen h' rosm. leWa klcab Id . . th' . ht f f 'I' Kong, she reJ!larked, because Buonatoli and associates with mer visitor who sets her cap for /' e renc OCla h ee . t~ rlve·. elr ng s rom aml les .they refuse to tolerate commun aspirants like themselves, ex the doctor. . ' .- here. P';1rpose 0 f t e mee ~ng and are directly responsible' to ist doctrine. There are more than '. d ' gers . coaches and Johnny though a scofflaw is was to dlscuss the ,moral, soclal, them for the formation of future . 100 Catholic schools in the ·Hong penence sm ., , . , It· 1 d . pt' blem's generations maestri, and all the lesser fj.gures· unusually bright. Under the cu ura . ~n .~conomlc 0 " .Kong diocese. alone-all oper and' harigers-on of' the realm' of doctor's' patronage .he wtll,.· it. ,off edt ll.cl~bOt~. m. the present state .-. Re!erring to" the problem of .ating on a double-shift basis be opera.·' '. seems, 'iget·' the higher;; education' . CXI1Z~.1011:, •... , '" educating youth. toward accept-.,, ~ause of, the,. demand for ad . They' begin -to perform ,in.<,which hids so capable' of. taking. . .Th~lett,e~'was :written' on be ing their future'responsibilJties, .~i5Sion.• ,; minor opera houses. Ros~~s r~se:, ~ Jenny,:'t~ou~h many,: ~ear,s t~~ half of HisIlbli1'es~~o~e Phis the letter warned against the,~ . is swifter than Clare's, and she doctor's Jumor, will" 1t, seems,. XII by Msgr. ;A-ngeloDell !\cqua,'dangers of'8 .strictly technicillR:eceives 'Grant is recogriizedas. '~I' prima;:'dOn?a become hi;; .wife. . , '",: Substitu't~V~!ica?' S7,~retary ,?f' for~ of educatlOn. ;.' Wi\.SHINGTQN( NC )--George at La Scala:. whl1e Clare ,lS sbll . ' Amusing ~ttempt .' State, . ~~d addf,esse,d. ~ ;pre~l"Education" it said" should', .tQWn university ;has received aft struggling. . '.. But '~theb:; shddenly, slje ,i~,. :;dellt ~~arl~s !lor~.o~ th~ ,Soclal avoid premature specialization of .. um;estrtcted $6,000 grant from 'But. this is a story not merely killed in a car-' crash and the Week, who read· it 'at the open youth and protect ~e rights of . the Westinghouse Educationa) of singing, but· also of love. Rose doctor, cr:azed with:gri~f streaks ing session of the' assem}?IY. gerieral culture wl1ich. ~t called ~ , Fo~ndation. 'of ,Pittburgh. The takes.9ne iover,then.~. second.:' off for 'Phiiadelphia.. ·joimnY's' " Thel¢tter' 5tatt~d;' that a: na '''the inost vahiilble': capital of a, .. m~mey il!. to, be ,used for publica At the story's close she is going .. schooling comes t<t a halt, arid'" tion .'coriscfous' of, . its 'future ·people." Education should also, ' . tions.. '.. :off on an American tour;accom-' . he heads· for .Erigland and 'a' should give corisidei:able"atten,:, . n"acided, prepare young' peopie" ,---_~~~~-----_ .panied by, a" proper Bostonian career in crime. '. tion ,to the' pi:obleiJi' of' the edu-. . to assume their future Jroles as.' . with whom,' one' gathers, her " End 'of' the 'book? No. The" cation'it gives to"iur·Youth. mempers of a nation'aI and in-, t.elationship will not be proper. ~octor has successors. Four· or' It saio' that modern states ternational community. ., . Clare becomes !!tvolved in a~ ,five of' them' come' and go, with should give full freedom; 'to pri '. 'In ,this' respect, . the Vatican . ,u'nnatural love affair,. ,though the speed of the participants in vate· initiatives in matters. of letter said, teachers should rec~,. -------~------_ p'urs'ued by three men. Of these. a comedy chase. We get to k~oWeducation; and recalled in this-. ognize. the ~imits of their pro . one is a. rather.. sinister ·type i.n their names, and that's ·about all.· respecf'a passage 'of an address' fessional competence and collab PRINTING and whose past the mysterious Pan . Maggie 'finally' retires, and· is' given by' the Pope last Novem- .. orate with youth movements and .' MAILING .sian ·nun figures. . '.' - thought to be sinking down. to ber to a 'group of representatives !lrganizations .which are a ' death, while thingsgo bad~y for of' European private 'schools. "school of life." More Puppets Than ~e.rsons .. Rose -and.' ,Cla!e :slIde ~waf ,some' .'good .folk· of the village',~" The "Pontiff;' declared 0'.: at; that from the' practice of their reli 'and 'some villains wax fat. But', 'time:' ", '" '1)' ';-,. Sailors Aid Ch~rity" gion. Occasionally. they talk of Johnny' returns; obviously;from" "i\; i\' t : iif'li tal{ to·: 'tself' LISBON (NC )"'-Crewmen of '.' sin; but;. altho~gh'they.· ate , .prison, to .set ~he sc~les~'ri~ht, eXclu~:e~ ~hec. ta~k e'~uca:' ~ver?l u. ·s: Navr' ships :'visit-: . troubled 10 conSClence and have surely a strange agent of Justlce.. t' . d' 'h'b'ts' . te ,', " mg LIsbon have"donated'19 cases':'
l moments in which they' face And Dr. Drummond retutns to . lOn. at~' pr,? 1d . ..prdlv.a. dor:-t' 'of. u~ed ·clo.thing to 'Caritas a"'" '.1':'
. '1 th t lk . tl . ., .ganlza lons . ·an In epen en .. Catholic .charitable' organization;" . , , . th elr gUl t, . e a recall MaggIe . ,," f'rom ;.', '.. .t·h'···' . . . . t· . IS f m.os h'·y ..... . ' from . . .the . . brmk of . group" assummg elr re-' . , . .. porous rabonahza lon 0 t elr the' hereafter and 'resume the: ·b·l·t,'.. thO 'fi'l'"r k' ..~._. . flagrant'wrongdoing. ' . .' local practice' with Maggie".5Ponls~111he~hln. I~., e ', m 8;bels, DO"'A·T·· BOISVE'RT f'· , . a calm w lC IS' mcompart1 e I~' . t d b W h a t IS sugges e, y way 0 runnmg. the house. ' 'th th f d t l' . ., ., extenuation of their' sin, is that Th'is attempt at a riovel is. WI. ts ; th u~ a!l1en a· req~lreINSURANCE AGENCY' they have, invQluntarily, been fairly amusing. It is literate and mEm 0, .e, uman ~erson. placed in surroundings and a perceptive, with a few dramatic 273 CENTRAL AVE.
All Kinds Of Insurance
wa'y of life where temptation is passages and a few. flickerings · the liv~s of h;1rdworking priests . 96 ,WILLIAM' STREET
very strong', an easy code. pre- of fun. But it isabou· as ram · who· have' so ·much to contend NEW BEDFORD
NEW. MASS.
vails, and' .immoral, affair are .shackle as the house that ,Dr. · with and;; often, so little to show . :BEDFORD. . . 'for' their' la15ors;""Few' books . cpmmonplace. There is also Druminond walked into on his' WY 2-6216
'; . :DIAL WY 8.:l5153. about the missions are 'as reveal"; more, than a hint, not only of first day in Ballybeg. ing. 'ersonal .~'ervice . the tyranny of art but,-too, of ,African Missions . ) the evil which its service. can A good account of African , effect in one not crystal-clell~ as .mission life is given in Ffre in' Tu.nin~., Repairin~ to its' limitations. ' . . the' Bush by Paul Bernier ttans&; Rebuildin~. This is a book rich in period' lated from the French b;Roch .' atmosphere and riotpus in color.· .. LEi Page (Kenedy. $3.75). -It The author is· /impressively . ,purports to be a ·novel and we .. \ knowledgeable about music .and· '. are war:ned not·.to take it as l CO~ musicans.· The international' autobiographical. .·While heed-" world. of. opera, at .the' close. 0'£ .. ing ~he 'warning, ,we need not"· Design,rs·&.·Build.rs' ,~".
the nil'\.eteenth ·century:· she.··honor·thEi 'claim."· .'.' . of, .""
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acters are n,umerous, and at ~east . mative, conlltantly;engrossing in ' . ' '. ,.' ',~< ~45:'~I:~l N~ -lEDFORD, .MASS.
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11
THE ANCHOR
"urs., July 17, 1958
Continued from Page One work must be done "to improve basis of our modern ffi.lrriage and strengthen this position and system ... To those whll have reach certain individuals who fallen under its spell m: Irriage have permitted secular forces to becomes not a way of li :e, but dominate their marriage and the way of life." , family relationship." KILLARNEY (NC)-Streels' Speaking about individualism Mixed Marriages bedecked with flags and bunt 8S the second characteri ltiC of An address on the - "Factual ing and cheering crowds greeted th,e secular i<leal of rna rriage, Picture of Marriage ,'and the His Eminence John Cardinal Father Cervantes said tht aVel" Family Today':- Socially" was' D'Alton Primate of All Ireland, age romantic marriage d<,es de-. .given by Brother Gerald J. as he ~rrived here to preside sire children but not f >r the Schnepp of St.· Mary's Univer at the, annual congress of the right reasons. sity, San Antonio, Tex. Catholic Truth Society of Ire This type of marrial :e, lie He said that "of all marriages land. SUited, does not, want children in which Catholics are involved, Civil authorities later gave an "for the glory of .God, or tor the about 30 per cent are mixed official welc'ome to the Cardinal good of the children, or ::or the marriages." Stating that "there in the Town Hall. The speaker so,~ial welfare of the commun are good reasons to believe the at the ceremony recalled the ity, but because the wife would mixed marriage rate will in fact that a few years ago Kil fe(~l frustrated if she did not crease," he added: "If we can larney had named a new row of have a couple of childrl'n and not stop the trend we should' at houses D'Alton Avenue in honor th,e husband would tire of the least take steps to decrease the of the prelate. wife unless she had the added disorganizing effect of mixed' In his reply the Cardinal ex interest of children to decoy marriages," ..pressed the hope that the aims his interest and economic sup-" Brother. Schnepp ·said that of the Catnolic Truth Society port." , although the divorce rat~ de would be made better known and "Romanticism logicall r de creased 12 per cent between 1950 that greater public interesf in mands a planned progr am of and 1955, "the problem is still the association would be sex selfishness which iIlcludes a major one in terms of the aroused. contraception,' 'abortion, lterili number of people involved." PLAN WORLD MARIAN CONGRESS: Franciscan' ,The society's publications, he zation, divorce, mass insti tution "In 1955 there were 377,000 Father Carlo Balic (left) il'! founder and chief Mariologist declared, "are meant to deepen al placements, adoptions and a divorces involving 754,000 adults general denial of social r espoJl-. and an uncounted number of of .the' third Internationa1 Mario-Mariological Congress our' knowledge of the Faith, to increase our pride in it by help sibil~ty ," Father Cel vantes which' will convene in Lourdes, Sept. 10-17. Father Balic ing children," he said. "In that' same us to realize the inestimable said. year there were 1,531,000 mar is shown with his Eminence Gregory Peter XV Ca-rdinal privilege which i.s ours in being Roles Confused riages ... This is a ratio of one Agagianian, Patriach of CiliCia of the Armenians. NC Photo. members of the one true Church The ·third characteristic of the divorce to every four marriages." . . of Christ." seeular. ideal of marria ~e, he An integrated approach tow continued, is "a confusion of ard modern family living' was WORCESTER (NC) - The the. roles of husband anI I wife, urged. by .~lphonse ClE!mens ~, Continued from Page One Salette Minor· Seminary, Hart Confraternity of St. Christ9pher,' mother and .f,ather, pare.lt and of. the Catholic University' of S~minary,' Enfield, N. H:, SI;1':', ford, .in i914, .to prepare for the.. national safety group wit~ head child." America, Wastlington; perior of ' La Salette Seminar~., Priesthood. Il,l 1922,he .left for qua~te~. here, will prelle,nt itll . "The. philosophical b~ sis of' ... ' . iPter~~~e~ A~proaeh" ; Attlebor~, 15\lP~rior alld Master • ~e,igium, where he !itudie4 phi~: annual St. Christo'pher Award this confusion of roles,'.'~ ne de:" Mr. ClEime:ns" ~epl~red . "ihe of, Novices at La Salette Semin-" ospp!:ty' and theology at the ~au,l-, to John G.Deedy, Jr" editor fIi cl.lred, "is,the denial of the nat ininimal approach:so Widespread ary,:EastBre~s'ter,until the No':: .•ci:Joi,J;· Seminary, the .Domini ural law, theespou~l of the· in Catholic' famlIies which :uses vitiate was transferred to Cent~r 'can Fathers' House of Studies,. the 'Catholic Free Press, cultural. theory of social ~enesis as' its only ··nOrin the sinfulness Harbor, N.': H.,' in 1953; where. a,~ Tou,rnaLIt was at '.roitrnai th.at and a romantic·.mis~nde:·stand or sinlessness of a givenprac ·Father . ."LeBlanc again' became he was ordained to the Priest in,g of the meaning of the term tice." He' called, for an "inte:" Superior and continued his hO.Qd, on March 26, 19~8. democracy so that any rc Ie dif grated approach which envisions duties as Master of Novices. t/ . As Provincial Superior, Very ferentiation between the sexes norms beyond the field of Born in Amesbury, the son of P~·'.~r,md Father Leblanc takes' is considered 'undemocratic.'" morals and in the fields of Maxime LeBlanc and Philo-. ov.er· the duties of. Reverend ~ ova" HAL' A CIlNTURY Father Cervantes cor cluded dogma, liturgy and ascetics." . GftaAT1I" Haw ISIIDFO"D_ that the American secular image Mr.. Clemens declared that the mena Landry, Father LeBlanc" ' .. v"Lgaf.g J. Fortier, M.S, who
of marriage and the fami.y "has practice of asking whether some~' . receiv~d his primary education has'just completed his ·term. His
yielded to the infantile p ,easure ,thing is a sin should be replaced at St. Joseph's Parochial School". duties' will give him charge of J the numerous houses' of the principle and megalomani a in its by questioning whether it is in Fitchb~rg; until he entered La Province in Massachusetts, New an.tisocial individualism." conformity with the mind of the
Hampshire, Montreal, New "How this immature lecular Church and a total Catholic cul Brunswick, Canada and the Phil ideal can be baptized irto the ture. ippines.. maturity of faith ,is nQ small "Ohly then," he said, "can we CREOLE (NC)-Sacred Heart challenge," h e d ec I are d . hope to find that integral Cath church here was blessed by and
General Picture olic way of life 'which refrains Bishop Maurice Schexnayder of Another speaker at th e con from measuring necklines, the Lafayette, La.,. a year after it vention, Lee Blaske of Catholic number of minutes required to was practically destroyed by Social services in Detroit, discharge the Sunday. Mass obli '. Fath~rs
warned about subtle sect lar in-' 'gation or,. the nU\l1ber of times Hurricane, ..." . . .Audrey. . John 8. fluences that threaten family _ a teenager. lllay d.ate the' same l~ his ~ermon .at the dedica '., BOYS, WANTED~for the
strul.'tures,' but he added tha~' person per., week.;', ' . . :.. ,t,ion Ma~, \)'ather Alvarez Gil';": .Priesthood and Brotherhood. ·'the general picture, ofC litholic: .. "Only then," he" concludeq, bert,' M.S" 'pastor, recal.ed: "A, marriage '!!nd family life ~s can we. hope t;O have our,CathQ.: 'year ago we wer~ .a.•most hangin( , Lack of· funds NO impedi"" ·ment; good:" .' . lic family cultl,lre, ;premised . frQm .the rafters. of the church, '. and, Son;, Inc. Write,tol, Mr. Blaske' spoke' on "Mar upon love (w!!,ich is t!:t~. distinct,' riding Qut. the storm, 'and none riage Conflict: The Sacrld-Se~... ' . hote of .Christianity) inl>tead Qfo dre'amed .,that·,a year lat~r: we OSTERVILLE ,~;(f 5!4~ ular Hierarchy.".: Hedelcribed fear." ' . . wpuld see the dedication of the . Baltimore 8, Md... GArden 8-6509 sacred values as repre limtirig restored church." .. '. ' "all ·that is fixed and ur.chang.:. I F th .,' (j.·lb 't d 50 . h . . I' t h' ,., ..' " a. er . I er .an pans ~• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ~ . th . ing 10 e ,marrIage re a cons Ip . , ioners topk refuge in .t~e.• choir ~ based on the principles'hlherent loft 'of ,the· church dUru;lg Ule in Ule natural and moral law." , storm. The ,loft and.. neaJ,"b.y stor- <) . , . VATICAN 'CITY - His Holi"'· • "Secular values in ou:: hieti. ' , ' ness Pope Pius XII "received age'.. room'.s·\vere above. the c.rest • KIN G Extra Lge. atchy," he said, "repx:esllnt the' of the tidal wave which came in . ' fluctuating standards: s~nsisin, members' of the. Philadelphia 'the wake of the hurricane;. The SIZE Orchestra in a special ,audience old' rectory was demolishe~. . • King Size pragmatism 'and 'rel~ tivism, . th rea t in the Hall of the Consistory Only its empty shell remains LOBSTERS which is such a serIOus . f 'I while the group was in Rome LOBSTERS· to stable marrIage and amI y . today behl'nd a mode..rn brick .. . . for a· concert. " structures at the present(th time." rectory built a's wing to the . lb.,'. ,' Leading the 115, musicians, . church. 1b Declaring t h at "h t e a 0 IiC C . managers' and aides was con family enjoys a favorabl e pOSI- . h In conn.eetion.. with t.he de.dica.... tio.n when compar.ed, '(I' our. ductor Eugene .Ormandy, w 0 • ,'" , " .. .. . ' ' . ' " had brought the orch~stra heretion' ceremopies, . Bishop Schex,,:, '~N'S' sacred-secular.; hierarchy,': M r . . na'yde'r administered Co.nfirma....: .. IYI A Blaske added, howeveJ', that:' after "dnping, acclaim for reci UNIONQ WHARF FAIRHAVEN MASS tals in the Soviet Union,Poland ... tiqn ~q ,If- C;lasl!" of 70 adults and', " " , . '. d ' ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• "and Western Europe.,,; : " . .chil,ren.;. i . The Pope, .'presented a .., large· ...:----:.-:....-:....----:----,;,..,;",,.---; ': '., . ,. . silver medailion, to Mr. Ormandy' . . Ith'
'Cheering Crowd Greets Co rd ina I
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. New La Salette Provincial
Safety Award
BEsT KNOWN NAM£.N
COFFEE
Prelate Dedicates
Restored Church
CONTRACTORS
Trinitarian
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LEBEL,
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Orchest'",'a G.·y'"e'n ,Pap'a.. I'A'udi'ence, ",
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"MISS DEMOCRAT": Bon nie Jean Brown, win:ler of an essay contest 0:1 the theme: "Why I Should Exer 'eise. My 'Right ~ Vote," turned out' to be a 2~:-year old DomInican·· nun, Sister :M:a~y Consflia.. ;NC P!ll ito·
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'~~~:h:r::~::,s~:d~~sa't:~~~ei::i~ "n".~S,UP.~Jt hffJ',I vidual members: ~e' chatted' 11 ,"r"lJ.
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SEA, 'FOOD
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"SOLEMNDE,YOnONS TO ST. ANNE
·.with Mr. and Mrs. Ormandy and with individual musicians, 'in cluding violinist David Madison, . associate concert master, and assistant conductor Will i a m Smith. . The orchestra,' which was to " go to Austria to give' a con'" cert in Graz after its Rome per:" formance, 'was given a, reception' at the American Embassy in, Rome.
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in preparation for her Feast July 26th BEGINS Sunday, J~ly 20th' at 8 P.M.
Devotions held Monday thr~ugh Saturday ,at:
10 a.m.-Mass, Novena praye~ 12:10 noon-Mass, Novena pr.ayers, B!i!nediction 5: 10·. p.m.-'Novena prayers, Rosary,' Ben~~Hction 8 p.m.-SERMON.,· Novena prayers, Benediction \ Sermon every evening· at 8 P.M. ~ by'Fr; Robert Lyncl:t, Q,F.M.
DAUGHTERS OF ST.. PA,UL' Invite young girls (14-23) to labor in Christ's vaSt vineyard as an Apol!tle of theEdi~ica tions: Press, Radio, Movies an'd'·..Television. With these:. modern means; these Mission ary Sisters bring,·9hrist's Doc.., trine to aU; regardless of' race', color or ·creed.. :For' informa-' tion write.,to: ..
Rev.' t,\other Sup,riot:
. " . St. ·Pa'!,I~~.~~':~:•. 'i:8~8ton .3~. M.• ~s .. ,
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.OUR LADyiS CHAPEL Franciscan Fdthers
512.;,. PLEASANT . STREET: .. , .' .:. NEW
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,G::tL~~~avey~~
-THE ANCHOR
Says .bisney'{o'i1df'IS~::71Walf~s;;;,;~:;<:,·,,·:,\,Ih~,rs., J,~ly 17, 195,~ Most Acc'e,s~ible;Sh~W~as'~ .
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,By"M08tRev. FuJ',on J. Sheen,D.D.
Jh
William, H. Mooring.
This week I' h~ve some ~ords, to':eat.
, Have you ever,made a convert! Have Y.OO loved your lalth_ . much that it overflowed to make others 'share the JOYs 01 ihe GOs- ' , :' pel! Could·there not be spiritual birth-control as well as physical birth control! If the spirit 01 a Catholic stifles .the generation 01' Christ in ~tbers, is it not serious as is the robbing of the earth 01 the fruit when tIJe seed is planted?
· After attending the D~:meylanrl prem~ere in July 1955, I said Walt Disney appeared to have "brought qown from the realms of imagination, into our world of crass material ism, 'his kingdom 'of creatures with their' fine paro dies of human strength of weakriess". At Disrieyland they. cOilld "be touched by ar.ld 'touch' us, for a quarter or four bits a ride." I feared that by using his fairyland char actel's "to cajole ins tea d 0 f
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. fornia ..;md a mecca to most people liv,ing here." ;, Message From Garcia President Carlos P. Garcia of the Philippines. visited 20th Century-Fox studios, the busi est a'nd most confident in Holly-' wood these days. At luncheon he was feted by the Motion Picture AssociatioIJ.'
To the m~ITied, the,single> and all the faithful will be asked on Judgment Day: Where are your children'!" Some will have to give account Of the generation of the flesh and all ' must give account of the generation of ihe Spirit. Is the United States canonical-minded or evangelical-minded; does it consider only the sheep within its own fold or do we re~ ,member that Our Lord said: "Other sheep I have who are ,not of the fold."
Film stars, ~nn Blyth, Irene Dunne, Virginia Mayo, Ronald Regan, Jeff Chandler, Rod Stei ger, ~une Lockhart, Joan Fon taine and others' were present. Many top producers, directors and ~riters were there too.
The United States' has eleven times as
many Catholics, as South Korea .bu~ counts
less than twice: as many. converts. Th~
U~ted, States h~s fifteen times, as many
priests as .. Sout~ Korea. :However, eonver
sions in the United 'States Dum.ber less than
three per. priest per 'lear while, in . South
. Iorea conversioqll' aU;inber two hundred test per yeK.
eharm tis," Walt had "done vio MARTYR PRIEST: Fifty lieilCe to' his y~ars ago, Father Leo Hein itO c k p i I e of , richs; O;F.M., of St. Eliza imaginative and ever re-play-: beth's Church, Denver, was able movies." I was wrong. I" had ,under-estimated the power President Garcia already had kiHed by an anarchist,. while . . H 0 Iy 8tI. Disney's art.. nd over-esti-' seen President Eisenhower. He he was'· d'18 t n'b utmg Jaat~d' public resistance to hill "had made 'outa 'good for Communion at Sunday Mass. --' essentially, commercial show-', stronger U. S.-Philippine, Because. there was ~o, one ~ teach them religion,' four non- " ' . an d d'IpBorn in Oestrichs, Archdio , _nship. opera t JOn on economic Christian villages 150 miles south of Seolll'began a '''do-it-~ourself'' By, now almost 12,000,000 . lomai'ic levels.· Hiss message to cese of Cologne, Germany, in conversiOn campaign. Now two thousand are ready for Baptism and, people have enjoyed Disneyland.. Hollywood boiled down to this: 1867, he entered the Order many more are asking for instructions. ~ About 43 per cent of them came "Please send us more motion of St. Francis at, Paterson, . .
"--m out,sl'de of Call'fornl'a, VI'S pictures which reflect ideals . uv N.J., in 18~(?,being ordained If you have never had a convert. it would be well as priest or
'ltors have represented over 60 your country and mine have in layman to lJegin making sacrifices to send misionaries or teachers
foreign countries. You might common." in 1891. His cause for beati of catechism to these areas. This can be' done -,for about· $25 a
think of the place as mainly for He did not say, but seemed to fication has been present~d month.. Whe~e could $25 a month or any multiple of it be' better·
young 'children, but adults outinfer.. that not all the Hollywood, to the" Vatican. ,A special spent to 'prepare' 'for a happy eternity,? What a joy on Judgment
Ilurilber' children 3% to 1, in age mov'ies sent to the East in these . plaque may be' &een ..in . the Day to learn that through our self-denial converts will rise up to
lit any r a t e ! : " " \ :days;, express or exemplify the D.env~r .Franciscan ,Church, declare us blessed lor aiding hi giving them the faith. The ques · "Adds New Attractions "-:'better side of American life; . ' " . Disneyland' has grown in size This message from Garcia. aSking' th~: faithful to~ pray,. . tion .of, ,where your' sacrifices: will be sent to make converts, will
as always ~epen'd ap~n :the, Holy, Father~' When you give to the'
Mid scope: An original invest": 'should be taken. seriously to· for him. Instead,' they come Society for the .Propagation of, the Faith, you give to' the Holy
to pray to him. NC Photo.', , menf of $17,000,000 has been in ,'heart by the Holly~ood movie Fatber and by all~wjng, him to decide where; the sacrifice must be
OI'CaSed to '$23,600,000, the new'- . ·'people. ,For as President Garcia ". .ent you bring, apon yourself, an "exira blessing!
est attractions including a $300,':' '. "pointed out,· the Philippines is ".:' ' ,'-,- 000, full-scale' replica of the 18th 'one of Asia's strongest rallyhig aentliry windjammer, "Colum:' ,points, against: athetistic commu "GOD LOV~, YOU to H.K. for $5 "To thaflk' God for His many
bia," 'which was the'first Amer-' "nism, It needs films to help,- not ", .. " , ' , . ., blessings.'~, .. to M.L.S. for. $5, ... to M.:A.B:·'for $3 "I promised the'
i_I ship to sail, around the 'hinder. CARACAS' (NC)~Yenezuela's Missions this sacrifice if l won 3 scl,1olarship for high' School; 1 did."
'world. Scnses· Politi. .Catholic, ,Action movem,e~t has •.. tq J.P., fot:, ~l.~, "Frc>m, t~e fortunate for the ,unfortunate." launched a campaign' of eivic , ' '' ,,' , ..
There 's also a new 0I1e-~I'I' •a According to one report C a r l· . .,wa.'f trip through Tomorrow-· Fnre'man's "The' Brl·dge. on the afld religious~iilstruction ........' T a k' e, the owh 0 I'e wor , ld'In your " '. hands. ,." , can do , _just . . . that. . . . if'.
' ~ fulf'llto preh' You land ,and :other delights ranging River. Kwai," already believed pare the pe,ople to I t elr you pick up a WORLDMISSION ROSARY and circle t,he globe' in ......._
duties 'as .ei'i'izens. >lIVI1i space ships to an imaginto have taken in $6,000;000 dur p}'ayer. For ,3 sacrifice-offering. of $2 ~long with your request you .. ...,..scurry "down the hole" with" ing less than 1 000 theater runs, The campaign includes a can have',a rosary on which ,you will remember to' pray. for all ~be Alice in W~mderland. " -, in the USA, is '''not acceptable" courSe for leaders oi the move-' Miss.i~s of the world because ',the multicolore~ beads reinin'd you Fro!ll the 'start Walt has said ·for Eastern_ Berlin, where the ment, gi~en by pr6iniQent )ay ,of the Mission continents.· ttaet .his Disneyland may never Reds ha\'e the s1ly-so. This may and' ecclesiastical .personalities· _. '-.-,- be fully and finally completed. indicate the commies think. the at the parish theatre' of :the Cut out"this 'cojumn; pi~ your sacrifice'to it a'nd mail'it to the It will constantly be changing, film is "agin 'em." Church ,'of Our Lady of Candle-. Most Rev. F~lton J. Shee~.National Director of The Society for _w attractions rising. . Aduillly, do .any American mas here.' . ., , " , . ' the PropagatIon ~f.the Faith. 366 Fifth. Avenue, New York ,I. N. Y.. or y~ur, DIOCESAN DIREC~OR REV. RAYMOND T. CONSiDINE, On . a recent. weekday>. 10 films play' Eastern' Germany It deal's with such. questions ' , ~uthful company, I re'-vlslted ",these'days? If they do the nUI1l- . 'as the position ·o{ Catholics with ·368 N9rth Main ~treet. , Fall ,River. 'Mass. .... Disneyland., I f.ound courteous, ber is small and the ,take micro .regard to political parties, and c~eer:Cul staffs, .Improved facili-scopic. 'This tale about "Kwai" the'rol'e of the Church and the. S~ ties for hancpmg the crowds, sounds mighty, lik"e ,a political,' state in the .field of the general ~lenty. of good, low-priced, eatpublicity gag to me.
welfare. of the people. It also WASHINGTON (NC) - The 109 pla~e~ and well shaded, rest"Kwai" teeins with' One includes a study,of social quesROUBAIX, France (oNC) Senate has confirmed without
fal patl?~. , World ism and since when have tions arld,o{ the rights of farri- ~he five chiidren and" 26 grand opposition President Eisenhow
Hies. in m'atters of education. · EXCltmg and Instructive' the Marxists objected to that? children of a prominent indus er's appointment of John A. Mc
These help to create the gen " In a'nnouncing the campaign,. trialist attended his first Solemn er~l atmQ.s~!lere of happin~ss, Catholic Action leaders declared. Mass in the Church of Saint' ,Cone, Los Angeles businessman,
as a member of the' Atomic
gaiety and contentment which DENVE~ (NC)-A Pontifi that if was' their movement's Martin' here wHh' hundreds of Energy Commission.
pervades Disneyland, as ftlll cal Mass and a pageant featuring . mission to insure "proper gufd his fotmer employes. , Mr. McCone, a Catholic lay
lIIeeking family groups move "100 Years of Catholic Faith in P ance of the faithful ... in order. Andr~ Lepoutre, 69, left Rou man and a Knight of St. Gre
through the magic of yesterday, Colorado" will be among the that they might be 'practicing baix shortly after the death of gory since 1955, represented tHe
. today· and tomorrow. On every contributions of Colorado Cath Catholics and better citizens in his wife 10 years ago. Leaving President at the March 1956, cel
side ideas spring at one end olics tp the "Rush to the R'ock the exercise of their civic duties the several' wool p'rocessing ebration of the 80th birthday
lessly. Most of them are excit ies" centennial celebration here. and rights." plants and mills he owned in the and 17th anniversary of the cor
ing as well as instructive. ' l' n F l' 1959 J hands of his relatives, he went The group of lecturers giving e )ruary", .onation of His Holiness Pope
Disneyland has become' a place to the Benedl'ctl'ne Abbey of St the course in civic and religious . Pius XII.
,'to wonder as well as wander. instruction includes Auxiliary Andre near Bruges, Belgium, to From 'Mickey Mouse to Dumbo' acas, ~hq, ~s also Military Vicar study for the priesthood. Mr. McCone' disc1os~d here '\ Donald Duck to the Sevel~ f He was ordained by His Emi that it is understood he would Dwarfs, David Crockett to tt~ ": Bishop Ramon Lizardi 0 Car ~ of. Venetuela. ,nenee Achille Cardinal Lienart;· 'be named chairman of the: A. I Sleeping Beauty, aU the charac Bishop of LiIle, in the catHedral 'E. C: He"succeeds 'Adm:' Lewis'
!.ers: on which Disney, has based t' t of that city. .L. Strauss. "former' ·chairman'. '
his~ unique 'reputation,'as . the ~, r------~ -"'l.
·1:~~·:"·"7';-~·-:~~·~~~I!· w~1d's ,g:r~atestp,urveyor of , . fam.lly en!e'rtainrneiit,';,combine ' DIMMICK (NC) - Members O·· . "I 110 make pf Disrieyiarid':a. 'pul:' of Sacred Heart, parish, in 'this ' . , .;: . ' • .. i.', ,- '
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C.\ am,po ign B.egins In Vene'zuela
,Former' 'Industrialist u. Senate'Confirms ,SI·ngs 'F'.·rst M'ass, McC'one Selection' ' .
Colorado' Centenary,
P \ . h' G S arls s· uppor From .Fa'rm Lands
. . . . . ----... .; , ATWO" ···:D···''. A B REA,u,r. '. " ..'.: ;' ",
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S:f;i~~~i~¥{~:~:i~:
Dame Disney-~t~ri4s'for: Far from satiating public in terest in the' theater "and TV . pc~~rams provided, by Disney, Disneyland 'so blends artistic and oornmercial appeal as to stimu 'lat 't
~"h' el . man
~' has done what no cM:h~rs have attempted. He lias lIlade his 'name a seal and guar~ ' antee of good, clean fun. for the nst family audience. While many modern showmen have' starved us of entertainment re fleeting the sense of child-like wonder innate in us all, Disney has, reached out, via theater and llome screens, to provide healthy re-recreation, even incidental education, in its finest popular forms, Arid in this plan, I now see
,~ has made Disneyland hi.ll
,reatest and' most accessible
showcase. No wonder it· i s . -...u.t" to all those visitine Cali ,
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The men of th~ parish, ahnost
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49th
G,()vernor· . M'ICh aeI
81' ATE:
A. Step ovich of the Territorv' of Alaska is _a native Ala~kan, son of a pioneer immigrant of the golil rush days. 'First Catholic ever elected to that office, he is a graduate of Gon7.aga Univ.ersity, Sp() kl!ne, and Notre Dame Uni- . versit~~ law schooL The· 39
year~ld war veteran is the
father of ei~ht children nnd
is a daily' Conununicailt.
have farmed it in their 'spare time. ',' ' '. I So far, proceeds froJ!} the par.;,' :' ish fann have provided a new heatingplar1t for the' church" new sacrist.y doors and' other improvemenJs. Chief 'crops on the 120 acres are corn and soy' beans. ,...--------------.
South Hyannfs
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Real E,tate l_ns Savings lank life Insurance CMistmas and VacatiOn Clubs Savings Accounts 5 C_venient locations
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Astronomy SC.IOO' at Georgetown Opens Space .4~ge to Students
THE ANCHOR
Thurs." July 17, 1958
13
Assert Church Promi~es Hope To Christians
WASHINGTON (NC) - The Graduate llChool of astron I>my c:onducted here ill the nat on's c:apitol at Georgetown' Univer sity :is one of the ,largest in ·the world. Authority for ~he lrtatenent is Father Francis J~ Heyden, S.J., who 'directs the s~hool. He said it is the only Cat~olic scho( ,1 of astronomy in thi~ country, al through there are some 59 ether Buch schools in thJ nation. Ther are some 10 studem s at the school. One ot the uni ver Ility'r. most distinglJished gr,ldu ates in radio-astr~nomy is Dr. John P. Hagen, noW the dirE ctor of the U. S. Nav:y'a Vanglard project.
In search for truth rather than , I a race for supreD:\acy of s ~ace the a,stronomy llCh?ol at George town was found~d 123 )ears ago. The roll call of students and scholars who jhave come to: the ~iChool over t~e years reads like a "Who's Who in Scieltce." The courses· are ~asic a'fid fas cinating and the ~"'dents tomc from many parts· ,of the W'lrl.d.
while advancing in the know ledge of astrophysics. The very word 'astronomical' has come to symbolize size or great magnitude. Computing problems relating to the solar SAN FRANCISCO (NC) system used bya mathematical -"The Church always looks genius. like it is going down in dis But at Georgetown's school of aster-this is true in every astronomy a time-saving eiec age. Our times look the worst. tronic computor has been ob But the Church is not. going tained. It is an "electronic brain" down. It is Christ living again formally known as ElectroData in .each member in each gener E 101 manufactured by the Bur ation, and not communism nor roughs Corporation. The "brain" a' million devils can stop the is able to compute .in a manner Mystical Body." of minutes problems which used The man talking is Father to take a mathematical genius Martin D'Arcy, . S.J., former
days and weeks to solve. master of Campion Hall, Oxford New Meaning University, now lecturing at the With the. coming of the space · University of San Francisco" '. . age, the Institute of World Poli His message: Hope. \ ty, founded in 1945 at George,. In a world beset by problema town by the' late famous scholar,' each Christian individual "must .Father Edmund A. Walsh, 5.J.; imitate Christ in struggling with has taken on a new significance. · his own crosS; knowing that he The institute 'originally was will be knocked down, but know founded to deal with problems ·ing, too, that he is winning aU of international affairs concern the time." 'ing war. But now there' are Father' D'Arcy acknowledg~ problems in unchartered areas Early Y~ars ' the perils of the time: commun and there are global matters Father James 'Curley, S.J.,· never before dreamed of as man
123 YEARS OF ASTRONOMY: Founded in ·1835, the ism, war, strife, poverty, each founded the schoCll in 1835 He kind looks C)nce again to· the school of astronomy at Georgetown University,.Washing-, man's personal struggle. But he' Iltarted the practice of kee ping glory of the God-made stars. ton, D: C., is the only Catholic school of its kind in the nation i~sists "G'od's on our side." a daily record ofl temperatures and the'largest in the world. A noted astronomer, Father Need Virtue ~f Hope . noon, 3 p.m. and, q p.m. Balom Francis J. Heyden, S.J. is its direCtor. The ,toll call of its "He's ~ million times more eter readings w¢re taker. at .' . powerful than any devil," Father ' noon. He entered! the infO! ma gra d uates reads like a "Who's Who in Science;-'~ The George- .D'Arcy reminds. "With .the ReDon faithfully ot~r 50 y'~ars, town .Astronomical Observatory; .pictured here, was begun . demption the dev.il was defeated prest!rving the d~~ for future POINT ,(NC)-A $500,- on the campus in 1841. NC Photo. for .aQ time-that's the message scholars. He hardly could :lave 000WEST renovateion p'roject isunder-' of St., Paul. We should remem- .,' realized that this: practice one way at the Chat>el 'of the Most .' bel' it. The devil's been check- .. day would. develfpinto Jront. ,Holy Trinity at the Uinted States: mated forever. Of course indi page news. ~cademy'here. l:.. viduals can perish through their In 1841 the astronomical ob':' Military A new tower will be built for O.C' .~tory. own fault, 'and there will al nervatory was begun at the uni . the gothic structure' and the STOCKI{OLM (NC) -'Radio The 1'10,000' Crowns Ques'-" ways be' natural anxiety: but. ,'.. versi.ty campus al'ld in 1845 the first observations were II ade. chapel' sanctuary 'and choir 'loft ' listeners and 'teltivision viewers tions" and the answers given by '. there.. is no cause for pel?simism..... , in this predominantiy Protestant Haakon on the Swedish radio . Ho~ is a virtue much needed. The dist~nction determi !ling will be 'expanded; 'In 'addition, the chapel' base. cou'ntry were given a lesson in' and teleyision" shl>w were the . today." • ',' the true meridian pf Washington . Father 0' Arcy believes that. was achieved in' 1850 by the ment will be enlarged and an' the history. of the Catholic following, 1) Which pope was all-purpose room will be con- Church during' - the past 'few . imprisoned in Castel Saflt' An- Catholics are too much infected ' Jesu:it university. ' structedfor.meetjngs and lec- weeks by a 13-year-old schQol- gelo during the !1ack Qf Romc with .Jansenism-"tal!:ing· the In 1911 the latel Father Fran , and was freed upon payment of neg·ative·view that God is toe cis A,'Torndorf, S-{, fo~nded 'the tures. The work is expected' to b o y . , oeisll1010gical observatory a1 the be completed about Christm~s.·' . Haakon Josephson of, this city' a ransom? (Cle,!,ent VII, 1523-·, . s.evere, emphasizing the stayin, SCh(4)l. There day tn and daJ out' 'Most Holy Trinity. chapel, a . attracted nationwide attention' '34);. 2) Whi~h p«?pe took the : away. from sin instead of em teleseisms were r'1corded ar d in parish of the New York arch- whim he appeared on the Swed- . initiative of '. the first Crusade?,. phasizirig doing good." The Jesuit' scholar and edu-' 1923 Georgetown I Was abl.! to diocese, was built in 1899 after ishr~dio and television version '(Urban' JI, 1088-99); 3) Which recor.d the great (!arthquake of·' a spe~ial act of Congress author- of "'Double or Nothing." Choos- .' Pope. allowed Charlemagne to cator thinks that the doctrine TokJ;o 12 hours b¢fore the n~ ized use of government land for ing the history'of the papacy'as be crowned on Christmas Day in of the- Mystical Body holds prominent news $ervice' of the a Catholic church. The parish his subject, he won the top prize St.. feter's? (Leo Ill, 795-816); ,promise .of restoring hope .. "now serves some 750 .cadets of 10,000 -Swedish crowns (about 4) Which. pope four,Jded the Sis-, Christians. .' His advice is en day reported the fUsaster: and several hundred officers, $2,000)afte~ giving the correct tine Chapel and was alse >in- graved in the motto: "Living th. Space ~ge enlisted men, civilians and their answers to a 'series of questions volved in "the cOllspiracy against truth in love let us grow up Today there ar~ new use:: for families. about eight popes. Lorepzo de Medici? (Sixtus IV, in Him who is' our head, Christ." the observatory, instrum ~nts. The chapel has always, been As an. additional prize, Haakon' 1471-84): 5), Whi,ch pope ex"Too many Christians are like Atomic' explosion$ may be' de maintained witho'ut governm'ent was given' a .free trip to Rome, commumca~ed Savon,arola and St. Thomas the Apostle: the.., tectcd in various parts of the caused thIs' reformer to be ". . . highlight of his fourh d d b d h t'? want a sIgn, they are not willIng world. Now that 'the space age support. A national committee where. the ange an VI, Ul"lle1492-1505); as a ere IC. t 0, b e"leve l' 'th ou t seell1g, . "he d ay VISI't came w h en he was reunder the direction of Gen. J.' (Alex'ander 6) WI has evolved from ~he atomic age, Lawton Collins' (U.S.A, Re.t.)is ceived in audience by His Holi- Which pope's troops defeated s~ld.. But we must no~ ask for the big problem if a better un funds for the renovation ness Pope Pius XII. The Pontiff, '. signs; Our Lord remll1ded us which were tak~n' at 6 a.m., seeking project. The special, gifts com- who had heard about the school- those Empel.'qr Fredel'lk II.a~ that ;Blessed are they who see derstanding of ~hotosyntllesis mittee is headed by Gen. An- boy's interest in the history of Parma: (Innocent IV, 1243-~4), not but believe.''' thony C. McAuliffe (U.S.A. the popes, encouraged him .to 7) WhIch pope was the subject . Largest M em bers h·., Palrish Has I Splenl~id Ret.). continue his study of the papacy. of a famous paintfng by Titian and ratified the cC4~titutions of Vocations ~ecord New York Bound the Jesuit order? (Paul III, 1534OMAHA (NC)-The Catholic Gen. Collins said that. COhWESTPHALIA (NC) - V7hen tributions to be the project can Shortly before returning to 49); 8) .Which pope, under whose Daughters of America now has the Church of th¢ Visitation 'in be sent directly to the chapel Stockholm, Haakon also re- pontificate the 'dogma of papal its largest membership, 209,000, this little commlmity on the here.. The General stressed that ceived an offer to come to New infallibility was proclaimed, in the 55-year history of the 'plains of central T~xas celebl'ated anyone "interested in having a York to qualify for the $64,000 voluntarily took the position of organization. This was an its 71ith anniversarr, nine pI iests corps of ·offi.cers· with proper Question quiz show. He accepted being' a "prisoner in the Vati- nounced here at the national and 21 Sisters w~re amon~ the spiritual training" should be in- the offer after obtaining his par- can" after the unification of convention of the Catholic worn. natives. who retul'"ed' home and terested in the 'project. ents' consent to make the trip. Italy? (Pius IX, 1846-1878). en's group. too~ part in it. There are only 163 fan ,ilies in this all-CathoJ.)c 'commu nity, but in recent years:- there nave ~fl< 48. ,vocati0rs-,-10 pi iests ' .nd 38 SIsters. ," __ J
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MARTYR'S ~IECE: Sis ter Benedicta, ~.N.D., teach er at St. Pete~'s paroc hial, Cheraw, S.C., is the daughter of Korean < vi~e - prEisi' li:nlt"· John Chang. Her aunt, Sif! ter Agnita, M.~., was Pro vineial Superior!of the Mary knoll Sisters. '1n ~orf lern Korea when. m~rtyred bere by the communists in 1949. NC Photos.
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THE ANCHORThurs., July)7, 1958- I
4
ST. ,LOUIS, (NC)-A -priest • who" has spent the last decade FRANKFURT (NC) ~ Bishop . -'working among Negro 'poor in St. Louis has been selected 'by Joseph IGwanuka of Masaka. the Society of the Divine Word Uganda, ordained two p~iests of to become rector of the Divine th«: ,White Fathers here for the Word College in Washington. African missions. He is 67-year-old Father, Wil He will ordain five more in liam A. ,Benz. Munich on July 20. 'This is 'the Catholic schools, the ne~ rec tor believes, are urgently needed , first time a'n African-born bishop has ordai.ned 'pries!s in_this dty. to· win Negroes to Catholicism.
African Bishop
By Msgr. G*:orgeG. Higgins , Director NCWC Social Action Department On July 1.wages and other labor costs in 'the steel": Industry went up automatjcany.unde~the terms of the third " and last year' of the Steelworkers current' contract.' Why' didn;t the industry (fo(the twelfth, time since ' the end of ' World ,War II) counter im-' BI h' b" '.. " ." 'I' ," . h . oug s rmgs ~s dlr~t y to·
. t I ~ed la WIt. a substantial the point of this·.column~ . It is
~crease III prices? ,debatable whether or not the
According to Business 'steel industry should increase itS
CORN-FED, STEER BEEf W~ek, that's th,e main topic of prices this year: imd whether or'
discussion these days in the not it should have' raised them.·
iteel and re' 11 times since the end of World
lated industries. War II. '
It is also being , " But -that's beside the pOint."
discussed in the The point is that the decision as'
daily press. to whe~her or not there' ought to CONDUCTS SERVICES:. Bus i n e s s 'be another' price increase in an . Week says that industry as important as steel Father Robert Lynch O.F.M. the~e is ~o sinshould not be made in a vacuum . will conduct solemn devo
gle ans~er to 'but \;hould be coordinated with , tions in honor of St. Anne
t his question, the price' (and wage and profit) at Our Lady's Chapel, New beyond U.' S. decisions of other industries. Bedford, July 20-26.. . . SteePs s tat e,What Next?
ment that it is . At the present time,' unfor not going to act tunately, this can be done -orily "until the situ':.' haphazardly, if at all. ,There is
ation clarifies." And that's about no organization nor federation' sUPER-RICHT the siz~ of it. ' of organizations in which labor
If is taken for, granted; at. and management from" the, PITTSBURGH (NC)-St. An '7~INCH course, that steel pi'iceswill major industries can meet even thony's Seh'ool for Retarded
eventually be raised, either one ' to, talk about, much less sys'- Children in nearby Oakmont,'
.SHORT at a time or all at once, but tematically coordinate, their 'Pa:, is $10,970 richer through an
-Until the situation clarifies it- wage-price-profit decisions ,in'· anonymous gift in soiled 'and de llelf," ~ven the experts can only· ,the best interests of the econ- . comp()sed ,bills. , ,,-:, ,
TIP FIRST' 2 ·RIBS LB, . guess as to why the industry "omy as a whole. ' , The money' 'arrived at' the cOntrary'to its past policy, is '-I can only 'conclude', there-, sehoolby mail in a dirty and teinporarily holding-the 'line. " fore, with the same set of ques- .'bulky 'White envelope': ',There" 'Se~~r;l t~ntativeexplan:~tion~,<tions I ask~d in.,...th.!.~column tw~ 'was no indication of its sender's bave,. beep., ;suggested.,',Onei is"" ago,: identity. The mostly in' th~t..,the ~teel.indu~trY's.unex",,?Owe go_ft:O~,:~~re,:".' . , $20 bills, ~~s mailed in~itts~cted ,de~,sion to PQstp~ne;, if ," ~o we gO,J):~,.ll~ph~~ardly, as burgh. - " 1, .: '.'. • COME"" , n4)t.tO fQrego,: another' increase,"".m ~he I?ast~ :WIth;i,httle,:~.r .no ~o-,j':' . Fa~h~r Artru~. G~r,Qm" d.I- ,'. ,', ;, ' in ",prices ,was t,y,a tile: ;ffiaJ.!>r o,f" ,the, "said. , ' " " ",JOI,l1.L. desire, to curb .inflation, and , duSt~I~S a~a'UDl~llS?;.H so, ,we" t?a~" tb.€!: ~o.ney .,was ,evIdently. ;, ther;eby lJ.elp to ,cure .the cllrrenl have It on th~.a~th~~Ity of Mr. , b,:,r~ed. " . " ,~~s~ ·ho:.v,l~n~,. no , ,;',' SAVE, economic recession. :a,lough-who 18 .c~rtamly one of ,,0r,te ,~now,s:,.Tli~ ,bills, are ',the, ", .. Th t' ,. t t' h "the two or three most .impor- ,~me, lJize as billsI).oW used;" . ': AI • '. '. 't. aaCCsordanl' gln eBres ~ng twcory ", tant business .,.executives in the ' . , "I' did.iI't try. to handle.' them " n '0 USIness ee" U""t d S ' " ",' 'h"li " ", , k bu there probabl t isn't an thin . ~ 'm ~ tates ,-,.that ,.we shall ,~uc,..e added<beca~se'when
it. ,For -one u~ng; it ru~ssr:ack contmue to hav~ mflabo? I ~uc~e~ one "It 'started .. to,
up,againstan official U. S. Steel. _ Remem~,erw.h;;lt he ~Id: "No . cr~",lble 10 myhand. .'~he bIllS,
position, made ublic last. Au- ,one co~pany,.no ,one lTIduStry,/~'f,e.~ not stacked, or ~ven ~und,
gust b Ch' P . Ro ' M : andnoone,uDlon'canal()ne'5top' marubberband,-butJuststuffed
Y bef alrmathn Kgef r '" the ma'rch of inflation...· 'in the envelope!' .. ore . e e auver ' " " ' BIough Committee investigating' steel" ,If, 0t:I the~t,her han~, we agree O~ the, adVice o~ ,~,n attorney price rises. -, ",' ,that the major co~po~ations' and and ~ocal bank offiCIals.. Father , . . . . '. ,.the major unions of. the United Garbm ,~nt ~he mor~ey an. d enMr. Blou~h recalled that In States ought to" , rdinate th .,ve~ope to the ,curenty redemp May . . ,m· the best ,<;00 . ' ell'· ,~, "d' ,. . f' te, h U' in . 1948, fl t' WIth the hope of curb' .. "pohcles 'interests of, ~on ,IVISI(~nO . S. Treas-.' , r~C~~'$al ~05n, U~ S. ~teellowe~" . ,the e~(momY,as~a,wllole, are we, un'. , 'Jihe ,goyerpment r~d~!Ded
'ran't .. ' p~r t~n ~nd refused prepare~ to _take ,the next logi- ,t.be ~118 ~ft~.J:", ~Pilratln~ . and
~~em~g~a::,~~~re::e'tried ,cal steP ~y,~t:inging" them tQ- ?ount,ng the~: ~ pr~sS ,th~t
SUPER-RIGHT HEAVY STE£~' 't " '., " ' '. ;,' . " I{ether ,for, thlS P\1rpose in, some "mvolved ~hem.lcal treatm~nt In
.,I()tt1.' ..... 8LQ~K ~:~:e~'i~x~:~~~:~n b.~flth! Sort, ,of' l\at~on:l1 .IabOr-J!'~nage-,:'~e ~", o~ ~dIT",~ecornposed
""./1: , .', ,,' , . , , g ,~n, :ment council? "" . . . ' b~11s. , ' ti~.~,?d" So th~e~. m~nt~ 1,~~I', ,; , . ' , ' , ." . " . . ' . ' . ' , , ',., .rl.'th~c' Garbin"Silidthe IriOne,. .;, ' . ., we ,eha.d ,to .. rescmd our price I doubt It. There 18.,nO.indlC8--' '11"''.:.' _"oil f"'" .,,' ',. ,.... 01"'" 1:. " ." . ' - ,'. . ','," ' .' tion th t the ' . , th t be' WI u<:: u...,.. or renovation
~.19J:l, }ncrea~}he,pay.,of ~r' " .': . a .. ' po\Vers- . a ~.lD two dormito-ries. ,St. 'Anthony'. ' " " t
~Q.rke,l's;:,'~nd;,;-Jr~·to catcb up Amenca~ 1D~ustiY.. would'agree"'is·c'arrY·-i(··'···' .. , .'.' ,'.", ',.,. . . , .-', It_taught' 'anyfhmg'of th,e'kincl "," within""g"ram "'U'" e:·' '. '.' , r ',....' s".,.'.,' ,'", , .. ",.._ '" , , , .. , 1".,;"10 _' .tbe'fo-reseeable"ft "" ' to1nd' u eI"",capaclyuOID . : _. no one co.mp!1ny, ,~o,~ne. '.' ... ,U ure.' ' ," "100 to' ZOOhild" " ; - , , , industry, and no orie union caQ' ," , Lafer "00,', if" the" ecOnomic"" ., .. c,;, reno alone. stop the march of infla- crisis getS lilY' worse;they';m~bt ;,;: U~ry,." ,' 'be" pers':lad,rd .f:o.l~iye~t a try, " . ' ,That. last bllt for time bej.ni:tbey, are· '. Gef:Il:1a.I:J.Y , SupercRight, Delw<e,Extra d~se Trim .not likely ~: ito 90\. . ' , ~~niature .. bo9~.et "'" .mea$uring ,"._", ·SM~KED •. SHANKLESS' . La . :' ' ConclUSIon:' In the words of'" o~ly a Jittl~ more t~im' six tbou- , ,, _': economist John K'. Galbraith in sandths of.a square' inclt 000- ~ · T!:teAf~luent 'Soci~ty, "Where tain~ng, .the: Lord'~, P~a;er --:iriflation' is concerned nearly .. seven languages, has been placed· .. evel:yone firids"'itco'nvenient to on sale here.· · cohli'ne himself to c.onversation." The 14-page, booklet, so ti07 that three copies can be placed on a penny, is being sold to I raise funds to rebuild the Johann Gutenberg Museum here, which LISBON (NC)-Portugal has _ was destroyed during the. war.. issued two new series of stamps T~e, Our, Father is printed in representing two' native saints , English, German, French Dutch, who are venerated in 'thiscoun- Swedish, Spanish and '''Amer try. '. _ . ican," as the publishers call it. W The stamps bear the images of · St~ Theotonius, a 12th century
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_, .. ,NEW~BEDFORD :. .. " J'HUR$DAY" F.RID.A~ , ~, 'Iive-e~udo ,stamp. The brick !'ed' AND SATURDAY ONLYI 90MME.~10RATIVES: The and violet d~noininations"of, the INDU,STRIAL OILS .0 blcent~nmal ,of the 'birth ,.of St: El'izabeth'series have .a,fa'ce' ,lIIio' It hOt or icedl,: An,tQJ.1io C~nova, (1757-1S2i6 c" va~t1Er, ~~., o~e,~nf2:':>9' eScudos, . HE'A TlNG 'OILS fa.med sculptor im'dfirst' di..,,:~~s.lle,~h~~~y,;. , , , ' ",~. " ;, , ,I,TlMKEN. rector of the Vatican mus- " " Mi1d !Ind' Mellow, ' • J 1:h.·...·l99 eums, is commemorated' in OIL BURNERS ' th'ese: he'Y,y~ti~an Ci~y,post..;· ~ '..,-" Chosen .~'Best ~u~.. ;. ,'.' III lAG . ' $e;'~ice age:: stamps; The sedes' of ' , ,., :,'\
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'Former Member of Jewish Faith
Ordained Sacred Hearts Father
Golden JubileEl
Continued froJll Page () De
at Mt. St. Mary Convent "here
to Wareham for two more yeaJ'l JAFFREY (NC)- A former me is at present ftationed.
member of the Orthodox Jewish of study. Sister Margaret, Mary, R. :l.M.,
,faith who was converted to 'In 1955, he was sent Rome, • native of Some~set, Mass. has Catholicism during a three-year where he made studies at the taught at St. Joseph School, Fall University, from period of military service has Gregorian River, Holy Family School, New· been ordained a priest at Queen which he received the licenti Bedford, St. Mary't School, ~:orth of Peace Seminary here. ate in sacred theology this year. Attll~boro and I Holy ~ ame ' Bishop Matthew F. Brady of He is to return to Rome in Oc School, Ne~ Bedfprd where' she Manchester ordained Father tober for further study. He ~ is now statIOned. ' Simeon Polen in the Congrega remaining ,in Jaffrey for the Sister Mary Catherine, R. S.M., tion of the Sacred Hearts~ The summer. • native of Newfdundland, after young' priest's father, Samuel Most of the students now at some years of t~aching a; St. the Queen of Peace Seminary Polen of Pinebush, N. Y.,.and his Joseph School, F~li River, was sister, Mrs. George Pederson, here are expected to be assigned appointed Mistres~ of Novices at also of Pinebush, attended the to Japan, the foreign mission of Mt. St. Mary Convent and later the' congregation's . American ceremony. became the Mothfr Superi'lr of ,Father Polen, born . Simeon province. The congregation was the l~all River Corpmunity. l~rom Stanley Polen in New York founded during the French Rev 1939 to 1957 she was Cour cilor City, became a convert' while olution and now has 1,400 priests, Provincial at Cu~berland, R. I. serving with the U. S. Army 1,000 students, 300 Brothers and Sistllr is at presert assista:it to -Signal Corps. He was baptised 2,000 Sisters. the Superior of M~. St. Rita Con on the remote Aleutian island vent, Cumberlandl R. I. New Superior of Naknak, Alaska, in April, Sister Mary Gertrud~, R.S.M., 1949, by Father George Endal, ROCHESTER (NC)-Mother a native of New Ifedford, u ught S.J. Mary Callista has been elected in St. Louis School, St. Pa trick The soldier had attended John Superior General of the Sisters School, St. Jose~h School and Adams High School in New York of the Third Order Regular of Mt. St. Mary 4cademy, Fall prior to entering , military serv , St. Francis of the Congregation River; St. Mary ISchool, rforth ice. Following his discharge of Our Lady of Lourdes. She Attleboro and St. Kilian Sc hool, from service in 1950, he joined succeeds Mother Mary Alcuiu. New Bedford whf!re she is sta-: the Congregation of the Sacred who has been Superior General tioned at present.! She has been Hearts at Wareham. He toek since 1946. Superior at St. P~trick Con vent, Mother Callista has Ilerved classical studies there for two Fall River and Principal cf St. years; spent a ,year's, novitiate since 1952 a1l general councilor Patrick'School, Joseph S*ool and general vicaress of the ewn- ' and St. Kilian S~hooI. Hel' sis MOTHER SUPERIOR AND PRESIDENT: At the at the congregation's house in munity. Fairhaven and then returned ter, Sister Mary Anthony, R S.M., White House, Mother Francine Marie Lepicard, (above) who died in 1~55, was also Superior General of the Daughters of Charity of St. Vincent among those professed on July de Paul, accompanied by. three other members, visited· 16, 1908. ' Sister Mary Ttresita, R S.M., President Eisenhower and presented him a painting' of the foundation was laid for 81. Mary's Church, EUAD, Archdiocese • n;ltive of Taunton, Mass, bas the head of Christ. Visiting, her community's houses in «it ERNAKULAM. INDIA. Financial conditions prevented the Churcla taught in the elerhentary grades the United States and Canada, Mother Lepicard will return from belne built. In the past few year.. at St. Mary Cathedral School the parlshloDers" aU, POOl' farmers. bave. to her headquarters in Paris today: NG Photo. and later'as supervisor of lliusic with extreme difficulty and hardship ' and Art in St.' 1\.:Iary Cathedral tbemselvetl, beeD able to save $2.000: Wltla School and St.' Mary St~hool, this mODey to buy materials and tbroUl'b New Bedford. S~e is at pI esent their OWD labor they built, tbe walls .. , stationed at Our iLady of) I[ercy, , TERN!. '(NC ),-An'· 'official "This episCopal c~ria, after their ehurch. All their savings have bee. Convent, N,:w Bedford. .tatement issued' by' the, Terni careful, consideration, deClares + used aDd cODditions, are such at prese..t and Nanli diOCese' has dismissed· that the aforementioned 'facts' tbat the pittance thei earn ~ardly eov,en any element of-' divine -origin, 'exclude in the most, absolute .. the expenses of'thelr daily Iivln,. lJnle. Per~ecuti,[)n" ··in recently 'reported apparitions way the extraordinary inter a root Is put. OD the eburch the monsoona
. of Our Lady l?~a! here. vention of, God and the Most JAo Holy FaJhtr's Mi.rJiIJn Ai' will ruin the 'work already done. Tbe oDI~
~ow 'Thestatement was issued the Holy Virgin am!- are theref9re . ''- tht Orimtal Ch reb tbln, that the parlshlo!1ers can now eo...
LAUNCESTONI (NC)-I'erse day .befpre a 'second promised· devoid of any prodigious, char , : r Ii tribute Is th. labor. $5,000 will buy tlie nttion of Catholi'csis not today Hmiracle" was to take place' arid iacter of' divine origin.':' . mate~lals ~ecellS~ry to'complete the roof and tlte interior. The Arc..... impossible even fn th,e En llish- , instructions 'were giVen that· it The statement was signed by 1»lsh'op of ErDakula~ humbly requests our ald. Any help tbat yCNI BPeaking world, Archbishop John be posted ,in all churches of the Msgr. Giuseppe Vanni Martini, might be able to I"lve will be deepl)' appreciated by .the Archblsho~ C. Heenan of. jLivc:rpool Aid diocese~ An earlier promised Vicar General of the diocese. and tbe people or St. Mary'. Parish, EDAD. INDIA. "miracle"-the cure 'of an infant here. ~' He was addres ing some 5,000 -failed to take, P l a c e · S u ' g g e s t s Ca'tholic A HOME IN OVR OLD AGE. ALL OF US WANT THAT. oua persons gathere in this :::orn "PALACE OF GOLD" 'CLUB GIVES SISTERS WHO CARE FOB The statement 'declared: Fest.·vat ·.n Ireland wall town for ttje annual com HAt Maratta Alta 'on the out , THE AGED, THE MEANS TO PROVIDE THE HOMES. memoration of themartJ'rdom skirts of Terni two children (11DUBLIN' (NC)-A suggestion of Blessed Cuthb~rt Mayne, pro 'year-old Gino Armadori and .9- for a national Catholic .festival VOCATION PROBLEMS tomartyr of' the I British 'sem year-old ,Paola Piazza) claim, to in Ireland was offered here by - AeeeptaDee of a religious vocatioD Is Dot always easy ... many'" inary priests." I bave repeatedly ·witnessed ap- Chief Superintendent H. O'Mara . tlte trials and problems, spiritual aDd material, to be met and r.. (The "seminarr' priests" were paritions of the, l\:tadonna. Also, of the Dublin police force. ' Hived, 1I0t ODly at the time of the acceptance of, priests ordained abroad ,lit- the - other.- persons claim they have Superintendent O'Mara sug...: .a YooatloD but ID' the followin, through. One of time of the. Refo~mation ~n ,Eng had Visions. As·,a'·result·'of the gested such a. festival' would ',the ,reatest dlffleulth\s faced'b)' bOYI ID the Near land. A' law pa~sed during the reports, put ';out by the press, show the' contribution Catpoli East,ls a material one; how to find the financial reiltn of Queen ,~lizabeth I ~ade large.,crowds f!(lIli the town and cism ,has made to Irish life and meaDII to follow a vocatloD. The eost for -the it high treason j.punishab Ie by other areas have flocke'd to the culture. . INlDuDary tralnlilr: Is $600 ... "100· a year tor shl death for a "seminary ,dest" place fof the repOrted' appari .As' ari annual event, he· l8iCl, ~ean. ALEXANDER and SEBASTIAN -are' two even to be in En~land.):, ' , tions). " it would also . serve to' attract 1»011 In INDIA without the flnanela. meaDI. They' "Powerful ,",!odern, I';ates", visitors to Ireland and, would are now In tile seminary and. wltll many other ,- Aid Archbishop JIeenan, "are no 'Aid to Talented "consolidate the' work of aU lIemlDulaDs, are prayine that 110m. ODe will adopt them Indpay f . less determhied! than w~ ~ the . , Catholl'C Action bodies· in Ule &belr lIemlnar)' eourse. BosToN (NC)"':""The Carnegie England of, the I first Eli::abeth 'Corporation ,of New' York has eountry." ,THE MONEY IN' "MARY'S BANK" IS USED FOR THE ·TRAINING to ,stamp out th~1 ancient I'aith". given a grant, of :$85,000 to Bos-' 'Supei'intendent O'Mara made OF NATIVE SISTERS. MONEY DEPOSITED IN THIS ACCOUN'I' ]i'ar more pers4ns are no'"" suf ton College to subsidize; in part,. the suggestion at the annual . " BRNGS HEA VENLY DIVIDENDS. fering for their' jFaith thall ever the, . institution'.s- program for . convention, ,of Vexilla Regis, before, he declared, so th it the especially talented stuQents, the alumni' organization of St. Pat PERFECTION 20th century co",ld be cal: ed an college announced. ' rick's College, Maynooth. To be perfect! Thousands religions life are strlvln, for perte.. age of martyrs. aOD through the vows of poverty. ehastity and obedience. To be poor "All Europe 'has seen swift Is a great trial., to be willing to remain POOl' changes in our o~n )ifetiml," the --~.......~--.., wben one mlgbt ,trive to better oneself require. Archbishop a~ded. "Nobody great faith. SISTER JOSEPHINE and SISTER dares prophesy what will be the CHRISTINE have willingly chosen poverty for polftical comple~ion of his or life as BASILIAN SISTERS In LEBANON. Sinc. any other coun~ry in 10 or 20 they are already poor, poverty will be nothln. years' time. Forces hostile to new ... tbey are however sanctifying tbemselve. all religion, are in the ma rch. It tbrough a dedicated accepta'nce of poverty. is not inconceivable that even Could you help them towards a full life. dedi. in the English-~peaking world, cated to God iD tbe service of otbers? The cost Catholics may have to ~hoose of their tralnlnl' Is $300 . , , $150 a year for eacll between faith a)ld pe'rsor al se ., &he two years they will' spend ID the novitiate. curity."
to
stl
THIRTY" YEARS AGO
Dismi~~ Report of, Appa'ration,
SEles Possible
'
in
STONEHILL COLLEGE
GIFTS
An<ti-ChurCFh La~s
0'"
Remain Books MEXICO CITY (NC) -- With the ruling Institutional Revo_ lutionary party (PRI) rl mning far ahead in ullofficial I eturns and the' electi0r assured of its · pr;esidential ca~didate, }.!fonso Lopez Mateos, tbe laws hostile to the Church in this country arl~ expected ~ remain ~n the books. , ' ' It is anticip:lted that, asiD' other recent PRI administra tions, these laJs probab: y will not be strictly lenforced. Presi dent-elect Lop~ MateOll is the 110111 of a Catholi\= family a:ld was educated at. a ldar,ist BIothers' IIChool here. Official ,returns of the election arl~ not expected! to be ann i)unced until. Septembet.
Do you have relatives and friends who "have everything?" ... and do you won'der at the time of blrthdaJ:s and anniversaries what t. give them? On such occasions. why 'not give something to God i. their name? ., something to be used In the celebration of Holy Mass. ,. for us~ at Benediction ..• aomethlng to beautify a mlssioa .Church or Chapel: . Mass Bell ..... , $ 5 M.onstr,anee .;.: ,$40 1 Altar Stone .; •. Crucifix .• • • . .. 25 P,lCture ' . . •• . 15 Statue ,' ...•. ; , 3. Altar 75 Candles 20 Chalice : .. If you ,would like to give such a ,1ft In ,the name of a· relative 01' friend, we would be ~appy to lend a GIFT CARD indicating your ·klndness. Sucb a gift "",ould bring spiritual benefits to both the giver and the' receiver. "
I
HOLY CROSS FATHERS , . FOUR-YEA.R "COEDUCATIONAL COLLEGE, for Information, write to:
THE
~EAN
STONEHILL COLLEGE
North EaSton, MassachuSetts
f.'
~'l2ear Etstffiissions.r:t
.
FRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN, President Mlgr. P.t.r P. Tuohy, Nat'l Sec', , Send all communications to:
"
. ,(ATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION
480 lexington Ave. at 46th St.' New York 17, N. Y•.
·Sage and. Sand
Time ·I'ncreases. Fascination Of'.Newman's Personality By Most Rev. Robert J. Dwyer, D.O.
Bishop of Reno
With. that .formal solemnity which is . rooted the
tradition of the Church, the cause of John Henry Cardinal
Newman has been introduced in the ecclesiastical court of
Bi~mingham, England. The Archbishop of that see, suc
in
1. 16
St. Jude
Saints In Crosswords
- - - - - - - B)" Henry l\lichael--------' IZ
IS
II'
••
17,
2\
21
j
-mE MilCHOR Thurs., July 17, 1958
London Commies ,Plan Infiltration Of Ireland LONDON (NC)-London headquarters of t,he Commu nist party is . preparing agents for the infiltration of -Ireland. The existence of a spec ial "Irish' bureau" at party
headquarters is alleged in aD
article in the Catholic Herald.
weekly newspaper published, by
Douglas Hdye, former editor ot
the London Daily Worker who
is now a leading Catholic journ
alist. .
"Irish members of the party," · he wrote "have been undergo ing special preparation for the day when an economic crisis hits Britain. This, the Communist leaders calculate, will bring witll it mass unemployment. Tens 'of thousands of Irish people 'will return to Ireland which, in the circumstances, will itself be in · the throes of an even more sev e:re depression.' All Angels "If and when this happens. the communists' in*ention is that lOme thousands of card-holdin, ·Irish Communist party members will be among them. Overnight the party will be established ill every part of .the country and eommu~ism will be' 'taken by Ireland's own sons and daughters to practically every town' and Yillage. Those who Ulus returll will have 'gone through the spec ial training which is now be ing organized for them." Pilot schemes, Mr. Hyde add-' . ed, are already being. tried' 10 find the most effective ways of 'reaching the Irish.. They have been aimed at intellectual· as well as manual workers and at , the Irish Republican Army. Ev ery avenue is 'being probed u a possible "tranmission belt for Communism", he said.
eessor to the doughty Ullabeen made t~ cast doubt upon thorne who was Newman's Newman's absolute integrity. · unwavering friend and supThis is the work of an agnostic, porter in the hierarchy, has Geoffrey Faber, grandnephew of constituted a commission to be- that Father Frederick Faber gin the long and involved process . who was one of Newman's earli of examining est recruits for the Oratory of II his title to be St. Philip Neri,. but who, in the .. ranked among co'urse of the years, became 5\ the Blessed ahd sadly estranged from his mim 59 given the hontor. ors of the altar. Reading Faber's book one has There is much the feeling of a noxious slime to be accombeing spread over the image of pUshed in this the Cardinal, as, from wholly in 71 extraordinary sufficient 'and inconclusive evi case. The study dence, he' attempts to prove a 77 of the cardibasic and unworthy lack of manDaI's life and limiss as providing the key to' 'Yirtues must be his career. .
tr-I.=-;--,\'f'--+--+-;- 'undertaken, not Church Seeks Virtge
from the viewpoint of a biograThat Newman was hypersen ACROSS 49 KIDd of bIrd ll'I' SeDlor to KItra · pher, but in search of the mfn~t- sitive goes without saying.. That 1 Young eow . 60 A eolor .. Cltl' ~~_ &l OarmeD" · est scrap of evidence which he found it exceedingly- difficult I KiDd .f pal. 1Il Oreek t.ttw D O " " ' . Z Overlalet tr...... . 1I11 Vletl. 1 Oambol eould swing the scales ~me way to forgive injuries seems to be 11 Dlleolo'" . 113 Look I Alort .. Notleee 17 Fra«rant woo4 54 POlI....lv. I Salle... . . Ala... . ...... ' . . the other. too clearly es'tablished to admit 11 Woman'. _ . prono.. et.prlvati_" KDowID. His writings,voluminous as of controversy. That he made It HE 18 ; " Web. & ms • .. ltejeet OF DESPER. B. loriI''' OCT. II .. ,Deel.... they are ,including thousands ..mistakes of- judgment anel wu AT. CAUSa II Take..... • C.t apan thousands of personal leta pool' assessor of men, espe . . . CIt.,. I. ltal.. pereDDI" 'Wl.«ed .. Math". II H.WAS II A ,Ia'" . .I.pba.... ., HQlP.7 tel'S, must ,be re-examined in dally where friendship had once '~' light of rigorous and conbeen given, are characteristic= ·~~~.:r.. Calla:I~. ~ fI~;:l~o 11 NI«bt. .. epOllI.... • I.ctl.enml.. AS . astent orthodoxy. hardly ,to De denied. .:M Ear (ee.... .. Swlf&l.. ._ber • form) .. KI.d ........ It Appnlo....' A= And as a preliminary step, it One 'is reminded, rather' str.ik • D.elal. II Truek.
II Backbone ~ 11 M';.e ..· ·_ must be established ·that his _, , . f ingly, of the likeness' here be 17 Bevera«.
Dol.n.. U 8_11' e..n.... d._ · enthusiasts have not thus ar
IS 11.eae.. ,
. . .ove ~ 11 C....-ect II A"bl . . everstepped their bounds and tween Newman and Pio Nono.
• Tall,. . . Orebestra . lit "'ntb .. L .... . whose cause for beatification ia .Ploce .. member 11 Oba.n.. II 11'1'._ f.raltaro II P ..t II. ., 11 SlIa" II 0." _ N ' antiCipated the Church in probeing strongly urged at this verT'
II Femal.... "KInd eI. " Cr"'t ., Admin'" BOuncing upon his sanctity or in
. lit CI')' flower II BledrlfW 61 Seale establishing a "cult" in hi.t time. But the Church, we re
III Tb.. 'fI Swl.. ..... pa....el. tlO Packa... mind ourselves, is not seekinc liS Of a bee '8 Allot . • . 010.. ." Tele."" bonor, / perfect· holiness in those .. She lit Irlobme.
"_Beaeb obel'" .. FrlA'ld lave.tor to Tboa..o
19 Saered.'It DorbeeOee 'fl Straa«e ' Scores of Biographies honors, nor even perfect eoi.. Hefas..
83 G....at L.... .. nail.. ...... II N_..I.... .5 Hoarded
811 HE WAS ....... loon., ,. Wom••' • Few men of modern times respondence with grace" but .. HE W A8
BY PERSIA'" • Boe.. name have evoked the passionate inonly' conspicous virtue risin, AN IN Let. .. :rlto '16 Part eI. • ., Cit,. la ee.86 S..rved Ita If BE ebDreh terest and partisanship tha~ ~as above weakness and transfigur AI WAS fDrpoae VISITI!lD ._..... f8 Bover...-e eentered upon Newman. Living, ing the whole.. ,KIJ.I 1t . . DvolDat..... III Be perol..... 80 Klad ..r .... be was a very symbol of con ',<WITH HIM ubalatlo. II Peatl_ 11 Demen", troversy, both within the Church Should' it come about-and' , and out of it. And in the seven this is by no' means'to assume 8olution _ Page Eighteen decades since his death his per- that it will-that Cardinal New man is found worthy of our LOS ANGELES (NC)-It may sonality, far from diminishing ~nstitutes 'In the perspective of time, has "cult," our honor as an elect of be true that in Philadelphia' emerged with ever greater fasciGod, it will unquestionably be nearly everybody 'reads the aation. difficult for, us to prefix the, · Bulletin. There are scholars, Catholic .appropriate term to his name. . But, it is just as true that ill VATICAN CITY (NC) - His theology, pastoral practice, eat chism, sacred oratory, liturgy. Wewak, New Guinea, nearly and non-Catholic alike, who St. John Newman might sug Holiness Pope Pius XII in in religious sociology, pastoral sta Itave made the study of his life gest.' even, the "Sinjin" of ac everybody smokes The Tidings, stituting the Pontifical Pastoral tistics, Spiritual guidance, ped . and writings their chosen field cepted English usage! Like the Los Angeles archdiocesan paper. agogy and psychology and medi af research, and his biographies Venerable Bede, the' old name ia Institute in· Rome hailed it as For this bit of intellig~nce cal and pastora'l psychi~try. ' are now numbered by the scores. too 'deeply engraved to be lighiIy , a center where "the broadest and 70U can thank Father Francis complete studies" will . prepare Hardly a year goes by without· cast aside.. ' But to pray to God Mihalic, S.V.D., 'who was inter 1ft· addition 10 these cOurses viewed' befote going' back to the publication of some importhrough John Henry Newman priests ,for the ~art of arts" .tbe the constitution stated that there pastoral care of souls. Wewak after terriporary duty in should' be' special coUrses of "ap tant item of ·"Newinaniana," and wOJlld be hard to resist. The institute, which was plied .specialization" for the Southern California. the total body of critical l i t e r a - · I . founded in 1957 and has alreadT He receives The Tidings fa training' of priests" capable of lure devoted to him is literally graduated more .than 100: stu carrying out the apostolate Ia New· Guinea, reads it, thea .taggering, d~nts, was. officially instituted many specialized\ areas such .. passes it on' to his native parish Wilfrid Ward's two volume and sanctioned by the Pope in book and publication editing, or ioners. Life was the first full-length his recent Apostolic Constitu portrait of the Cardinal, painted SEATTLE (NC)-The Ameri When they've read it; they use ienting public opinion, enter tion "Ad Uberrima," Its publi with affectionate detail by one can Committee on Italian Migra it for cigarette paper, king size. ~inment, .acial action, Catholic whose own father, William tion has announced -Archbishop cation was announced' earlier by . associations and helping variOW! Mighty valuable, ~. Eacll . George Ward, had ranged him Thomas A. Connolly of Seattle the Pope himself during 'an audi elasses of citizens, in particular, sheet is worth a coconut. .elf with Newman's sharpest will receiv,~ its Award of Merit ence with a group of graduate. workers, farm laborers, shep Smoke, anyone! opponents. It was an amende for 1958 for .his "sympathetic of the institute. herds, sailors, soldiers, peo honorable, but for all its bulk and" active support in the ,field "By virtue of Our authoritT, fessional people, artists, people 'R. A. WILCOX CO. and its liberal use of intimate of migration and· resettlement We officially establish the Pas responsible for social life arid others.' ' papers and correspondence, it of refugees." The presentation toral Institute'. It is Our wish OFFI<::E FURNITURE was understandably far from will'be made ~ept. 13 here. that it be given the honorary definitive. Announcing the award, ,Guido title of Pontifical within the • DESKS • CHAIRS Pontifical Lateran' Athenaeum." Most fortunately, Newman's Merlino, chairman, said Arch FILING CABINETS the Pope said in the document. papers were preserved almost bishop Connolly "has always • FIRE FILES • SAFES intact at the Birmingham' Ora been in the forefront in' activi 'The Pontiff added that in thw
FOLDING TABLES tory, and a vast debt is owed ties concerned with migration institute "priests of each· and
Plumbing - Heating AND CHAIRS to the late Father Henry Tris and' resettlement. He. has also every clerical status may leam Over 35 Years ' tram, wlfo gave years of his life contributed to .various causes all the sciences connected with of ,Satisfied Service
to the careful collecting and col ··that benefit the people of Italy, the care of souls and the many lating of the documents. as well as helping Italians who sided 'arts of arts' to attract anel
22 BEDFORD sT.
106 NO. MAIN STR~ET For him it was a.}abor of love, have recently come here 10 lead sOuls to Christ. FALL RIVER 5-7831
Fall Riv.... OS $-7497 andoubtedly, but, it was equally : settle." . The constitution proscribed a labor of scrupulous impartial The award will be a bronze a 12-month course of formation ity. Much 'of the spade-work plaque bearing the following in to prepare seminarians to be has thus been done for th~ eccle scription: . shepherds of sou~ and, for or 'siastical commission.
"In recognition of his·dedica dination' to the priesth~. It An:-lican Interpretation
tion to the principles and ideals also outlined a two-year ad The magic of Newman has at upon which America was foun~ vanced course for the formation tracted a great deal"of modern 'ed; for outstanding contributions of "the future ,professioDl fII. French scholarship,' from th~\ to the welfare of his fellow men; pastoral ·d,iscipliner somewhat disorderly genius' of for his many labors"and selflesa The Pope. listed the' studies the: late Abbe Henri Bremond service which furthered the mi to be conducted at the institute, to the clinical touch of the Abbe 'gration, reception, and resettle including· the various parts 01. Louis Bouyer, whose Newman: .ment of Italians in this country." (Everybodys Changing' to Ma~Gregor Brand) His Life and Spirituality has "' FOR BARBECUESrecently appeared in English. LEVIS, Que. (NC). - Father Anglicans, from Dean Church to contemporaries such as R. A. Calixte' Ferland, who spent With Luscious Chunks of Pork ELECTRiCAL
neady 50 of his 70 years at Levw Middleton and B. A. Smith, CONTRACTORS,
College, is dead. He was gradu have striven to interpret New at. Food Stores. .. JUST' man in the light of their own ated nom the school in 1907 and Residential .-: Commercial returned there to teach after hi. rejection of his solution, though, South Easten. Industrial ASK be it said, with unvarying cour:' ordination in 1911. He remained Mac Gregor Maaachu..... FOR· 633 Ikoadway, Riv'" . at Levis College as a professor tes)' and admiration.' BRAND Only one serious attempt, 90 or spiritual director until aU; re~ OS 3-1691 . ·,Iac ali ·the;· writer· know~ '-- -tiremen-t in 1953. ~
fin""
'f w.....
.":oQi..·........ :
I
•
...
H- "'--T.
'Catholic Newspaper Has Twofold Use
Holy. Fath.e,. Center For P.astoral, Care of Souls
Seattle Prelate. Award Winner
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R. A. WILCOX CO.
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V(utican ~ongregation Regulates
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Stonehill Professor Says Quality Education Needed in Quantity
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7
More Laughter Continued from Page One look and that the theater should help people relax. "In 'times like these I think we'd all be best helped by laughter. It's a great relaxer, and we're all too taut," he said. "And it would greatly ~e duce the lines at the psychia trist's office." "Not escape theater - that'. 'not what I mean, although in a sense it would be an escape ~rom the awful grimness of the tImes -but rather a more elevated view of life and ourselves, High comedy can do this," he ex plained. ' , A ttends Daily ~ass Mr. ~itchard, who ,attends Mass daily, believes the theater is a profession rather than a business." He ,advised starry eyed graduates to seek. pru~ent counsel before plungIng mto the grease-paint life. Re said that being a Catholic in the theater can be tough at times, but that "some of the finest people, and some of the best Catholics I've ever known, are theater people. It's the ones c"! who foul up, however, who get the headlines. You never heard of the heroic lives of some.'.· . '~. "It goes back to your home
training-':'and this is where, t~
parents' .';'responsibility is ,.
great: if you receive the proper
training you can lead a good
Catholic life in the theater p~o
fession" just as you can in busi
ness or law," he declared.
Church 'to Observe
150th Anniversary,
DAMARISCOTTA MIL L S (NC)-Bishop Daniel J. Feeney of Portland will be celebrant of a Pontifical Mass in St. Patrick's Church here today to mark the 150th anniversary of the church, one of the oldest in New Eng-' land. The building was dedicated
on July 17, 1808, by Most Rey.
Jean Lefevre Cheyerus, first
Bishop of Boston. At that time
Maine was a part of Masssach.
setta.
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I
THE ANCHOR-
C'Dntinued froOl Page 011 e ,must supply f~om seven to. 10
_J . , trustworthy wItnesses. PhYSIcal
. . the claIms of v~li~ but ~ ~on- evidence, if any, is usually de consummated maJ,'r18ges. ..Ir,tce termined by court-appointed the l'1aim of non-consumm~tIon h"
: d' lit· 01 the . p YSlclans.
can ,lead to a ISSP u IOn , Throughout the hearing, the marriage vow-o~e. ~f a p~,pe s diocesan-appointed defender of heaviest responsibtlItIes--~ . o~al the bond does his best to destroy bishop may not er en ~egm n~- all arguments that might permit vestigating ,such ~. claIm ltn.til the dissolution of the marriage he is expressly Iflv~n per DlSbond. When he has no more ob luon by the congre~atIon to d I) so. jections, the hearing ill closed. Short H~to...,. A full report together with the Commonly known as the C~o~bishop's recommendations is for
gregation of the $acrament S, It warded to the congregation.
has a short hi~~ry. It was Full Investigation
established 50 years ago b! One of the 35 consultors ex-
Pope St. Pius X. Befor,~, It amines the case on its arrival.
existed the vari~1 u s dispe nsa- If he is satisfied with the for
tions and proble S connected mal presentation of facts--and
with the seven sa raments were often he is not-,-he turns it over
scattered among alf a d )zen to one of the congregation's own COPTIC RITE PATRIARCH: Archbishop Silvio Oddi, older congregation . ~t was <lten defenders of the bond. Either a problem and s?~etImes a r ~~zthe ,consultor or tfie defender of Apost~lic Internuncio to Egypt, presents the s~cred pal de 1<:> know whlcll congregc t~~n the bond may send the case back lium to the new Coptic Rite Patriarch of AlexandrIa! Egypt, had jurisdiction [" a spet:iflc to its. dioc~se ?f origin for furStephanous I Sidarouss, in a .ceremony. in the Meadl Semm case. ' t h e r mvestIgatIon.
Today the only arriage< ases After it is examined by the , ary. As head of the Coptic RIte CatholIcs, the prelate ranks which do not CO~Ie within the defender of the bond, the case ,second in dignity to the Bishop of Rome. NC Photo. jurisdiction of ~i co~greg~ tion then goes to three commisSaries are those involvm mIxed JIlarwho examine it separately. They riages. These invo~ve' matt:)·s of each submit a written decision, differing faiths an<J. are aS~lgned with the majority vote deciding
to the Sacred CongregatIon of pro or con. Once again it goes the Holy Office. ~ back to the defender of the bond. NOTRE DAME (N~)-The physical sciences sho~}d be From the Co gregation.of He has a chance to attack the taught in the nation's lIberal arts colleges because they Sacraments com~ such pen'~ls- r4;!asoningof the cons~ltors if mons as that whlc? allows t l~nd they conclude the marrIage bas truly Jiberl\lte the mind from the here and now, from the priests to memor~'e' ~e y<,tIve not' been' consummated. merely apparent, from the welter of facts, and open up to Mass of the BleSli" d Vlrgm and Finally, after the defender of it the beauty, and simplicity ,field a~e interesting and beauti to C:l~lebrate it roughout the the bOnd draws up ,his conclu logical rigor of general ful, and he can discard large year instead -of following the sions; the case: goes to'thEi car laws" Rev. Thomas E. Lock- tracts only with a severe wrench Jlorml,ll,lituJ;'gical ~alen~Clr. ' dinals in 'plenary session., They S C' professor of phy- ,to ,his aesthetic sense. ~ut choose It is tMs ,congre,gatIon also pass on it and then it goes to the a,ry, . . ., , ' , he must if the course IS to have that grant~ permi,s~'ion to ,~es ~r,:e Pope, WhO,gran,tS'ordenies the Sics at Stonehlll College, North greater significance for, the stu the :Blessed SacI' ment 10 pprequested disp~nsation. ' dent than a catalogue ,of facts." vate chap,els, DUI:'i g World ~ar ,Sometim,es 'the :congregation • Easton, Ma.ss., decll\red here. U it relaxed mary peace;une 'submits the case to the Sacred , Phrsics and ma.thematic~. for ' Father Lockary blamed pro-,
regu~ations, permi,ting a sh(,r~er Roman Rota, the Church's eccle example, belong 10 the !Iberal gressive education, with its em
arts'curriculum, Father Lockary phaSis on teaching methods
pre-Communion fast, authllrlzsiastical court. The Congrega rather than intellectual content,
ing the use of kht,ki al~arcloths tion retains its jurisdicti()D over contended, not because- of .the cold war or for other "ta<;tlCal ,for "a general deterioration" in
Ilnd vestments ;;Ind ~llowmg l~ass the decision, independentof the and utilitarian" re~son,~' SCIence ,-the teaching of physics, mathe
to be celebrated 1m the' a;:ter- Rota's d,ecision. ' education, he saId, can and maticsand the' other arts and noon. The need for careful documen sciences 'in the nation's high . While it govern~ th~ daily use tation, painstaking investigation should be justified, on grounds that were valid in th: y~r 1908 schools. Until the trend to lower of the sacramentsl t~IS.co~ g~e- and the part time status of the standards is reversed in second gation does not have Jurlsdl( tlon commissaries and, defenders of and will stil.l be valid In 2008, quite indcpend~ntl! of. the" tacary education, he said, "there is over the cerem09ies and rites the, bond makes the congrega tical or strategic sItuation. really no hope of dramatic imIlUrrounding thes~ sacram, mts. tion's decisions slow work. An This is properly t~e work ?J the average case requires about two F~ther LockaI') , who holds a provement on, the college level." Sacred CongregatIfn of Rlt, !s. years from beginning to end. doctorate in physics from Notre "We need quality education,
Cardinals ~embers, , MarriaKe Courts Dame discussed "Physics and and we need it in quantity,"
Heading the Congregatioll of The third commission superthe C~isis in Education" at the Father Lockary declared. Simply
Sacraments is i~ 79-yeaI-old vises, the administration of di annual educational conference rejecting progressive education,
Prefl~ct, His Emin~ce Bene< ,etto ocesan marriage courts. These of the Holy Cross Fathers. here. he said, is not enough. "To the
Cardinal Aloisi asella. The courts must send a detailed re "The Teaching of Science 10 the older tradition that the purpose
Cardinal has ,been an officii 11 of, ,port each year to the congrega Liberal Arts College" was the of the school is primarily intel
the l~oly See ~or more tha: 1 50 tion. The reports list the names theme of the two-day sessions.
l ectual training must, be added yeaI'll. Much of ~i~ experi mce and qualifications of ~ll offi~ials.
Physicists, for the most, part, ,the realization that education was ,acquired as a Idlplomat repof the diocesan marnage trlbu have failed to devise good phys ,must somehow be a.d~'?-ted to the resenting the Church in P< rtunals and states the number and .' courses 'for th e ll'beral arts 'needs and the abIlIties Jes . oft all, h gal, Chile and'Arglntin~. nature of the decisions h~nded ' t u dent who is not majoring in ,and that sound educatIve. ec A total of 20 cardmals are 'down. ,sth Ii ld, in Father Lockary's ,niques are needed," he saId. ' e e , , h' members of this 'congrega lion. Each marriage case brought opinion. , ' He: insists that such "Only after such a syn.t eSls Those living in Rome '!neet before a diocesan tribunal must ·.courses "should be rigoriously has been attaine?," he contu;lUed, every Friday ~ di cuss its p robbe tried twice and the two ver "will the AmerIcan educational n the se,~nd dicts must' agree.WhefJ. theY , scientific.. , lems and, work. "It is misleading and dishon system be worthy of the mo.ney y and fourth' Monfa of ~ch 'don't, they ususally ate sent to t "'he observed' "to present the which is going to be poured mto month,the Prefec has an audi-" the Rota '!ot firial adjudication. ::udentiJ with a 'sort of popular it in next years.. ence with His ~oliness Pope , In most countries, the appel mechanics course under the guise th~n will 'the ~rlsls, n~t Just J,n Pius XII to keep im abreailt of late court for suc~ cases is 10 f . n'e" He believes that "in sCI~nce educatIOn but m educa the congregation's activities and cated at the metropolitan see or o scle c .
. '. 1b t" ••• to plresent its d~sions for his archdiocese chancellery. Thus in the problems which it treats, the ~~:.~':'.'::'::..:.._._ course should be as fundamen personal approv,l or disapthe United States, for instance,
prov.':ll. ' there are mahy appellate courts. tal, _as.Jogical and intellectually demanding as the course for the Thirty-six cons,Iltors arE on But in the Philippines the con ONE STOP the congregation'sj staff. Tnese ,gregation set up in 1957 a pilot specialists." The college physics course fot,
SHOPPING C:NTER are priests, mostlJ(' membeIs of project with one single appellate liberal arts students should be
religious orders, Wiho are experts court located ip Manila to re
restricted to a few major areas,
• TelevisioD. • Furniture in canon law and Irelated fi ~ld~. hear all cases brought before the 'Father Lockary said. This pre
They serve as a pa~el of adv, SOl'S diocesan tribunals. • Applia.nces • Groce...,. sents real, difficulty, he ob Ilnd specialists gU~ding the carA spokesm.an of the congrega
104 'Allen St.. New' Bedford dinals and, ultJ,',ma~~IY, the Fope. tion said his off~ce ,is still stud~ served, since "for the specialist, , WYman 7-9354 all the npoks' and crannies of his Most of them livel In Rome and ing the effectiveness of thIS have a full-time j?b in add: tion single-court method. He said it to their work fortihe congrega- has proved to have ~ome very .;"""'-,-----,----~- tion. great advantages and IIOme Three Comqiissions drawbacks. ~ Besides the cdnsultors, the While hailing .it as a "mile- ~ ~ Congregation of sfcraments has stone in the gradual process' of threE! commissionsr The fibt is canonical procedure," he said it devoted to problef.l s connet:ted is mu'ch too, early to c~nclude
with the Sacrame'"t~ of Holy 01'that a similar system might be del'S. This comm,ission; w l1ich introduced in other countries.
~ currently has 18 ofticials, stu dies ~ 365 NORTH FRONT STREET: such ma'tters as t*e val~dit:~ of : NEW BEDFORD :' ordinations or thje oblIgatIons connected with ~ajor orders ~ n yz : WYm~n 2-5534 : and how they are met by hose ATHENS (NC)-Several hun dred Catholic .sailors,d received who have been orClained. b th ~--------------------- Th,e second CO~~ission ceals Holy CommunIon un er o.
species for the first time <bf their
with valid but non-cons umlives when they attended a By-. "Electrical mated marria'ges. It has 80 , . zahtirie Rite Divine Liturgy priests on itS staf~5 comiDlS(Mass) aboard the USS Saratoga ,Contractors I5Bries and 25 de~1.nders of. the marriage bond. Ltlke the '.on- he.r~e 'ceremony was arranged aultOI!'S most of Ithese pr: ests J ]j i ddT by 'Father' (Cmdr.) John . have full-time jo IS n a I l?n Burns Catholic chaplain of the eo. their work Wi' the comIDIS-, 't aircraft carrier, while this um ilIon. . of the Mediterranean 6th Ileet When a local bis?~p is grall~ was anchored in the Bay of Ath permission to investigate a claIm .t of nl)n-consummalion of 11Iarens recently. The; Divine LI urgy 944 County, St. ~( FALL RIVER T di was 'celebrated by Father Isidore' ' riage, he appointf a oc.~san in.....v Rigoutcos, S.J., of St. Paul'ssemNew Bedford eourt to gath~r thF, facts. lloth . '. ".J )JIal'ti4~ to the eonteste<l man .aae __
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Cf<YPTIC O~DERr; FROM WAC,/-IINGTON SENP YOUNG U,C ,·CHAPlAlN riM AHEMNON A NEW A(;~/G;YM~NT. iT I~ WITH. g/l~PI?/~1i Tf{AT HE CE£~~ THE: , DE~TIN.4TION OF THE"' p/ANfi. ".'. . ..
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{]P;qrJfAL GUIDANCE OF EXTREME
DeMOC~IE~·. gwr iHE' COMMI..fNlgT~ Pl-AN ~EAI.
IMP01<TANCe. NATURALLY, you WIL,l. CHAPLAIN
TROlABL.c. WE MIA~T CONTACT EL. KA~HA.
AU", MEN ABOARD;
Bur TH/~ ONE GROIIP
if'. TO I?ECerVc
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·q.PECIAl. . ArrENT/ON ." .
'
IN "THE MOL./NiAlN~ BETWEEN LEgANON AND
G&JIIP OF
.f/AND'PICKtD /v:AI?INE~. THE PREf'.{;URES THeY WILL I4NlJER Witt
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"""'HarVest Time Is Near ,.
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".18.. Thurs.,-THE ANCHOR ,July 17, 1953
'
. La.·ym.e.na. nd'W,om'en 'Leave Sh.o.rtly .' To Se,rve on Foreign Mi.ssions..
- LOS 'ANGELES-Thirty-four The Lay Mission Helpers wear laymen and women; includillg no distinctive·garb; but °llly a two ma·rried.'couples with chU- ring inscribed: "Weare Goc;l'. " < .' . ' B y Joseph :A. B~eig. . ". . dren, will . leave -this',country helpers." During. ~h~ir service' soon to work in -the Church's in' the missions they receive no Cleveland Universe Bulletio foreign missions. Thirty persons pay J)eyond room, board, med I recall: it w~s Chesterton 'who said, 60 or 70' years will go to Africa and four to ical care and a monthly allow ·ago, that if ,St.,peorge were to come .back to life, he would 'Ecuador.. ance of $20. take a long look at the world around him-and prepare to be. ,Each' of the 34 personspos:. Typical' of the 34 who wiD • martyr again. . A sesses askiU needed in mission leave soon for the'inissions are Today, my guess is that I would observe, for example, work a.nd has volunteered to re- the· two married couples, Mr. .. that racial, national and Chlsa. main overseas for at least t~ree . and Mrs. John McGhee' and Mr. ':Chesterton . , y e a . r s . ,' and'Mrs. Frank Bohler. . ' and St. George, .if . discrimination'no longer can pre.~ ." ., .. .. h.ey .are members ofth.e ~ay ..they could come among us tend to any real respectability"';":' Mr. and Mrs... McGhee wiD Ilow,rnight. take the long not in our South, not in South. W· ~Isslon.· Helpers . Asso<;latIon" teach at"a' mission school in loOk together, and get ready to Africa, not even in India where I~establisheq: here three y'e~,rsa~o 'Quito; Ecuador. They will take .be, in' one, way or another, the castes are crumbling. ,under t4e,patronage?f HISE~Ill- their young adopte~ daughter ,apostles, . niisThe wrongs surviv.e; but their < ~~c~ Jam~, ~~~n~ls C:d~ with them.' Mr. McGhee,. who ·~nari~s. foundations .. have been. washed . VATICAN' CITY (NC)- The ~ n y~e, rc I~ op, ' 'holds • master's' degree, is 'on B ei n g no away. There is no durability,in ·National Broadcasting ~ompany Angeles., . , . the faculty of the Los Angele. · :prophet, I m~y them now. . .. in .the U. ~S. ·.and the Canadian Cardin~l McIntyre .. recei,!ed. . Traae .and. ,Technical College~ · ,~mistakeri, but I ,would perceive t~at· such . Catholic '. Broadcasting Systt!m . ~he. solem.n .promiSeIi· of: the 34 .' His' wife~ Rosema'ry, is an ele think: . we are' foolishness as divorce with' its· ,have joined networks .in many., meh..and,.,w-omen.ata ceremony mentary sChool teacher. .mergjng from restlesS seeking for' other mates; . partS of the world in asking' for:,' in' S~. Vjbia~ut's "C~t~edral .here.' " . Mao,. Areas ' 'elil:' long..hap. and birth prevention' with . its' . "hookups . with·. Vatican: Radio :They:pledged .~ obey the bishop' 'Mr . Ii'Me 'B hI' "Il tism of; blood ·.nerv'ous'-nelly fussing 'over pop- . for· speCial papal broadcasts. ... of the'mission area to ;which tliey '~ t' an k' ·h!l· 0 d ~rfwI COt·~ . .. Th b d ts·· 1 d" , " . t , 'n d' to k' . t th' ..uc a. bo0 s op an In orma 100 .-ancl' fire . .! see ulationgrowth; are beginning', to . th,·e f rtoha. cas 'lllndv~,~~ ..abre· ,akr~ll~fn .t·ah .' If,w!Jrf·ta .~U' center in d.owniown Nairobi. .,.the emling of the period in which look as imbecilic as they are: " . ose 0 e sQ"ca e . IDVISI l e .',s .I S ,o~. e we are 0 ' he ml&- K . Af'·· Th ,'11 t k " ". '-e' . ·h·' ad to' . use' most, of .our enS h th' .. . . .audiences" wllich His Holiness "·sions. . enya, rIca. ey. WI a e - uc' lOgs' no longer 'have' P p . ' XII' ;. l' 'd ' . . . ' T "Free P i tii. their two'young sons·with them. ,ergies' in'· holding the fort ·of --any power of attracting vigorous ope IUS IS glvmg c Olser~ . : , " . O. . ; ' : res, .... Mr. '~ohler, w.asa pilot ,on a , _tehgion and civilazation.. youth. ' 'nuns throughout ·tlJe world: , By ,servIng In the mlSSlona 'N' .. ft '. d' " If ,my' judgement is correct, I wouidm~rk weil:th~fact Other rt:qu~sts fot:, hoo,ku~s ·.theY,wllr'free m~ssionary priests 'V:o:rd~:~aII ~~~rr:~~K~:;~: , ,the'persowwho is ·in his. teens that even the . mo~t' e~orm9us ..have: .come, from .networks In . and'".Reli~ious fi-om ~~ch~e:. ·War.' ," . bigotry in .all history~thE!'COrn- Italy,. ~rance, Spall), Portuga1-, .:chanlclll .' and ,'admInIstratIve . In' addition to, . Ecuador "and · ·.r 20s now ought to'look forward 'ehiefly .to.. e,xpounding truth,' munistbigotry agairist. God ,.al).d. Irelan~,.an~ ~he Net~erlan~s. '.' ..work,.~l)d enab~ ~hem to ~~v?'te Kenya, other'r;iission areas)o rather than chiefly defending it, religion,. and against ,man as. Th«:~nvlSlble audIences WIll 'more :~un!,!,to,,!lPlr:ltua.1 act~~lties. 'which the Missi~>n. Helper!! wfll as .we 'who' went before them God's image arid: likeness ~ is be. broadcasts. of Mass offer~d . The~rdep'arture WIll brl~g. to go are Mwanza'in T,ulgimyika. found it necessary to, do. lieaving imd splintering from the by: the !'ope. and· a p~pal dls- '.54 the number. of' .Lay MIssIon' Gwelo' in South RhodesIa Pre · I agree ~ith those ',whO feel pressure of" it!!' own' ignor'a~t. co~rse. Intendedespeclall.y .for .. Helpers,~rom·,LosAng.e~~s who . toria .ani 'JohilIinesburg in the 'that a new· wind is blowing contradictions. '. . ~~Ol.:e~e~ nuns. ,TheY~ln be :ar:e nowIn,over~eas mIssIons.. Union 'of 'South 'Africa, 'Calabar across the 'world; dissipating the . If I were young, I wou,ld judge IVI e f IDdo t~r~e far~~ on~r~:, .. ' Am~Ilg' th~ sevet,t men and 21 and Owetd in Nigeria, and Ta old .fumes of error, hatred, prej- that th~ fu~ure. belongs to. those:~~a~u~us:~~' u y an . ,wom~n !ire SI.X r~glster~d nl,lrse. mille in Ghana.. 'adice, 'lies; 'selfishness, greed who wIll .. '1arvest the see.d so Th' d' h d '11 The Among ..their assignments will ., ..", e Iscourse on eac ay WI ' and ., 1 f~ve d' ,teachers. '. f N'group . '1 also t ,..: .and. 'ignora!1ce, . . 1ong watered WIth blood and b b roa. d' t t 5 30' EDT' me u es 'a, ormer avy plO ,a. be teaching .social and medical , :' Our' centuries. of tribulation . tears. '... , , ' Teh p cas'lla . :. k ~.mF·· h,' liJ!oOty.pe 'operator and photo en- ,'work . editing mission news . e ope WI spea In renc. . .. ' •. 1 t" .1 ".' .' . . and misunderstanding have been I wou!d ,resolve to devote my- T" 1- t· 'II b . " "1·1 graver, seyera. .prac}ca nurs~s papers operating supply center. .diJe .. . lf to ·t· k' .I d rans a Ions WI e gIven In a , . d' 'n id' " 1 .. k ' , " or for the .most part to a mad se .. POSI Ive wor ..., woul .: ". .. i . .'. th d' f 1- ~. nurse ~ 'a. "l?8, .• soc~a "r . -.and handling'secretarial duties. fudiviciuaiism" which blinded try to grasp firmly, and set maJ?r anguag;s, on . ~ ays 0 ,ers;' an artI~t" secretarIal work- - ' - , .' men and women to the common forth' for· others; '., the~.splendor ~~~~ng the. 7dlscoursr,s .fFom; . ers!8: ~achines~op woz:ker 'and '. , < '
· ,ood, to the duty of loving.and of religious' dedication, of holy· ' . .a.m.to .'p.m...lj: 'r.. ·.a,hbra,nan...·<,. .
. ,serving' ·fellOwmen everywhere'. marriage, of :family life; 'of good '. Va~lCan RadIO, wIll use the ...; ~Me'mDers' 0.' ,the"gro.uphave· He that i.I
On earth." . government" of human dignity, fIrst d~y of. the broadcasts, July . spen~ an ~'average '.of :12 hQunpatient; .. ' ... , . In 'insane' rebellion': against .: of the' literature that, elevates.' 19, tma~g~r~te~ ~ew bbroa:d. perw~e~' dl.i,rin.g .thep~s~ year' ,~it~OV~~~ ; : the Iildividualist insanity"move-, rather:' than degrades, of wise cas l~g 1sc t e .~;'" e "Fearn h .. l?repar·mg them~elves spIrItually' ,
,:meilts like fascism,nazism and' .education, of people'-to-people ~eg~ ar y" 0 . rIca : I~ renc.". 'and··materially for worK iti .the" wiSdo~Jl..
,communism blackened the' world. help, of right international reor ll.guese andEn~h~h. mtsEiions.. , . . . . Provo 14:21 .
with vioi:ence, cruelty, injustice, lations, and the like.. . . French 'Government···· Unde~the diJ:e~tion o.f'M~gr. · falsehoods and wars. I would look upon television . Anthony Brouwers; fouilderand : i think the pendulum now is and 'radio,. nuclear power, the Honors, Ma'rita'in , director "of the mission assoc;:ia JEWElED CROSS nearing the center. We have had dr~ma, modern medicine, .bank-. . PARiS (NCr-Noted French tion,theY,have studied tlieology, CO.PANr 'more than enough of hatred and .. ing and business, as colossal op- philosopher Jacqi.ies MaritaiJ:l ascetics, Scriptllre, first' aid and' NO. ArnE '010: MASS. IlAHUfACW';U 0 ' " .. lies. ,Now we want love, truth porturiitiesto do colossal good.' has been,named a Grand Officer the history 'of Uie·area where. CRUCIRXES .... ARTJOes ~ DEVOTION and, justice.:.We are seeking the Oh, if I were a young person of 'the . Legjon . oi' Honor-this .. they wili.serve. ,~~ peace, :whi'ch only right order - today, I would be filled with. ,country's top military afld civil.. .". can give: .We ask for guidance. . hope' and determination - and ian award-by the council of
,If r were a youth today, lookc o u r a g e . . . Ministers of the Republic~ .
H Mr. Maritain,'who served at
in ... forward to q career'. and o wishing to serve God and man c, ome Econtim ics one' time as French ambassador' . .. . 'Ca'lIed .Forand· Delivered ..;, •• , ~,."~V'hU:. "hl1K not so much . ST. LOUIS (NC)~Two nuns to the "Holy See, is a professor oFrefuti~g objections as of rewho helped establish the only, emeritus of Princeton' Univer : ~ TIMES 'DAILY IN FALL RIYER ve~ling th"e depths, breath and graduate program in 'home eco- sHy.. ' . . . ...,
, Once-A-Day in Somerset and Swansea at 4:30 P.M. beauty~of goodness, divine and 'nOlnics education offered' ,in a At the saJ;lle, tiq{e :,the Council,
.human. . ,1. .' . U. S. Catholic' university 'have of Ministers bestowed the award .:1' would,. wish to fit myself received a special papal blessing of Commander of the Legion of
n~t' y,:;'argue, but to .~nlighten and commemorative plaques Honor 'on' 81~year-61d Father'
To Emergency Prescripti~ns and" 'inspire. I would . concern from His Holiness Pope Pius Henri Breuil, 'il' .French: ,priest
myself less' with preparing ·to XII.' ' and paleogiapl;1er of ',wodd re .' '. .' . Surgical CO. battle evil things;,and more with ~hey are Sister Mary Anselm nown. ,. :. . ' ~ U Pharmacy ~ai'ning myself, to propagate and Sister Mary I;'ierre. In 1950 Father Breuil :has visited grot ~ nobility. I. wouid desire to ed"they were instrumental- in set- toes and caverns ',throughout . , c. . ' . . Hearing Aid Co. ucate' 'rather than dispute.. ting up the graduate program ,in France, and in Ireland,' North
Arthur J. Shea~ Prop.
I. would be heartened in 'this home economics education cif- anc1 South Africa; and. Spain in
course by n:tariy'facts about the fered at St. Louis University,. his studies of i>re~istoric paint 202 and2()6 ROCK ST. TEL. OS 5-7829 modern wodd. . . here. ings and inscrfptioQ.s. ••••••••••••• 0 •••••••••••••••••••• 00 •• 0 ••••••• 00. Cros$Word.Soluti~iI
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,V.cifi.can . . H.ookup'
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PRESCRIPTIONS
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, Special Attention Given
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~ppliance
S'pCl,rts Chatter
51'ory of Farrell's Courage Object :Less:on for Youth
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THE ANCf-lO":'
1958'19 Thurs., July .17 L...--
1
Five Per Cent Average Time For Relig~on:
By Jack Kineavy .
SomerM t High School- Coach
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We mentio ed in p~,ssing last week that the National League All-Star iroster included one Richard Joseph Farrell, ace reliever of Ithe Philadelphia Phillies, never dreaming that the big ri~hthandel' would play such a stellar role in the annual clas~ic. Farrell's Talking about bonuses, the. pitching as a mJltter of fact Philadelphia Phils paid out the W S th~ rankihg achi,~ve~ amazing s~m of $600,000 ~ col a. I . lege and hIgh school st- In the ment In what has been ies- period 20 May to 20 June. We scribed as an. 01herwise
suspected that the Braves were the leaders in the bonus league, His striking ",'" ' but faint so. Also re bonuses, out the Sox' the Baltimore Orioles have just contingent of signer' two former Connecticut Jensen, WilCYO products, Charlie Symion Iiams and Malof Stratford and John Papa of zone represent Stamford., , ,one of Dick's Torres Tosses No-Hitter all-time baseThe first win for the Somerset ball thrills. You Junior Legion team 'will be well ; can bet that he remembered in that it involved was giving just a no-hitter, the season's first in ' a little bit extra the circuit. Lefty Jack Torres, against the boys' All-Narry with Dighton this past from Boston. For I it is COD" mon season turned the trick against knowk'<lge that the Broolrline Attleboro last Thursday at Pot native was given Ithe wait-andtersville Field. see treatment by tr~ Boston clltb Tino De Giovanni, Attleboro upon his graduation froD" St. catcher, was the only .visitor to Mary's High. I. get on base, once on an cJ:ror, Perhaps .Qick's I physical oonagain via a base on balls. Fall dition u'nduly i~fl~le~ced the River, 6:'1, .leads the league by Sox. He had beell stnckell by 211.. games and is an odds-on 'polio when .little mo~e th m a 'favorit~ .tP. ann~x ,th.e tItle and bab~' and the drer d diseaSE left move mto the mter-zone com him with a crippled leff leI:. He 'petit'iori late this month. . . worl~ a brace u~til hewa '13 '. Tom :Courtney, ~x-Jfordham years old' and er en after the 'flyer and Olympic 880 met~r brace was discardfd; Dick h id ~ champion,}s set f~r his ~irstfling have ste'ady treatments until on the cinders on the current two years ago. Russian tour.. Tom plans to hang Today Dick mares ~he tril? in up h~s spike!; after he takes from the bull .per wl~h a' limp an,other shO,1. at the 880 melee that is percephbl owmg t<) the world mark, ,1:45"7,, held by fact that his le~tll~g is one-third Roger Moens of Belgium, smaller than hiS pght. But once His' lltudies a~ the Harvard he uets on that rpOU1l,d he ge~- Graduate ~chool of Business Ad erates power plus. DICk v'as a ministration didn't permit Tom slender lad, just: out of high to train 'regularly this year and' school when Isawl him wod last. he found getting in shape for the That was in 19qO in Plattsburg, Russian tour arduous. But Tom N. Y" when he pitched the Burhas won major races on all the ling, ton Cardinals Ilof the now decontinents of the world save fund Northern, League ~ a Asia. He hopes to rectify this 7-2 victory over ~he home ,eam. against the' Russians.' '. DIck has com~ a long way Italian' national sports idol since then, ~ow al strapping 6'3", Ercole Baldini, was received in 220 pounder, hiS }as,t bdl is 'a' special Papal aUdience with his morE!' live'· than eye~, and i;' t~e mother.: B'aldiilf, '25 is a mili short haul he' Ci)mpares hv~r- tant member of the ItalianCath abl~; with any lof. t~e. J owerolic Youth organization and, as hurler~ in'the ml;lrors.t~day Last he always does, wor~ its insig ye'8!: Dick ,had 13 ,fi~ Sf ason. nia on his 'coat u,apel w,hen he was In fl2 appearance~ ,hepost'!~ an received 'by HIf Hoh?eg Pope excl~llent 10-2 record a,nd h ad. an Pius' XII. '. earll~d run. aver~ge of 2.31 1• • Recently, 'Baldini won the At this writinlf he has a ~-~ 2,500 mile Giro d'Italia, a"bicycle mark and owns a: league ~ea~mg race' which is orie oj ltal:¥'s ERA 'of I.l7 in the,55 1n00ngs .major spotting eventS. 'In 1956 he h.as' pitch'ed. ~rilY '24, Dick's be ,won several important vic best years lie ah ad. Th~ (Ieter- 'tories in the cycling events 'of the mination he has hown In DverMelbourne Olympics, and' in coming what appeared to )C an that same. year went on to gain insurmountable }Iand,ica p s~ould the world championship. be an object less n for a l l " , The Pope receiv.edBaldini with Long hot great, cordiality and congratuSeveral Great r Boston All- ,lated him on his achievements Scholastics who e~tered proin the field of sports. The Pon fessional basebaH With Ton Artiff, then inquired about 'Gina ruda and' Russ Gibson are back Bar:tali, another great cycling home after brie~ :flings h'the champion of, the .past and . also min.ors. Joe Ca'SfcgliOne 01 Wo- ,an active member 'of Italian burri, 'Russ Run e of Reading Catholic Action. At ,.the end of and 'John~ Silvon c of :Lyonn.: :aU . the ',audience, t~e P,ope' gave of whom. were if .the ,:Reu ,So.x . Baldini's mother a, roSary': and system,':" recently 'Were ,handed "the. cyclist 3 silver·medal'of hill th~i.I; release. Ea h, -won. a three pontific~te.: ' " sports star in h gh schoo, and ' " . , . might,~ave had, is.~.().llege ed~:: ration assured via athletic sholarship but h~ chose W, pursue a car~er in p~o ball. . MANGALORE. (NC) The Of ,course, if ai b,oy is 0 'fered Mysore governinf 't has apolo a substantial b0!Jius, one 'which gized for the desecration 9f a wo,ild ~ecure !'Jisl future rE~~u~- Catholic Church. . ," ' less of what happens to him III It called the desecrator "a va organized' ball, trere's foe d for - grant suspected to' be 'of unsound thought. OtherWIse, a lad who mind." : ... turns his back on higher educaThe government's statement tion is taking ~ te" '-'c risk, was in answer to a Catholic ap Most major leafue scouts are peal. The Catholics had called the first to encoUl'age a toy to for protection of tneir religion go to school but Ithe lure,)f the from fanatic Hindu elementS diamond' proves bften too great. which' they claImed seemed in The odds of succl.ss in org'lnized terested in ,setting up "subver ball are estimatel at 100 10 1, a sive iorce~" to destroy churches. real long shot. I ' ' The statement attribut~d, to pro football coac~ Buddy' I'arker PLUMBING & HEATING, INC. to the effect that I"Good co;chi.ng .' ' f o r Domestic is more perspiration tha n ....n:.. ~ ' . spiration," remihds us oE, our ~~~. & Industrfal ' revered physic~ profess1lr. at . ' :.. Sales and ~ Boston College, :rr. John 'robin, _._•.••Service who always ins~sted thai acawy 2-9447 demic success was based on 90 2283 ACU.SHNET AVE. per cent pEmipir~tion and lO per NEW BEDf=_OAD ' cent inSPiration.! ' , -, ~ " " .. ,' l' ' . '. " . .,
• GENEVA (NC) - Ren. gious education occupies an average of five per cent of the time in courses of study
ilrab
gam(~.
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Church' Desecration' A Brings pology
CONFIRMATION IN NAVY CHAPEL: Bishop Luke' K. Arai of Yokohoma, administers the sacrament of Con firmation to Cpl. Milton Morris of Waquoit, Mass., and 13 others at a camp chapel in the U. S. Naval Air Station in Atsugi; Japan. Standing in rear is Father Gerald J; Ryall of New York, an Augustinian missionary in Japan.NC Photo.
Citizens for' Decent Literature
Meet to Expand.' Movement
of public schools in 73 nations, according to a report" made pub lic here at the 21st International Conference on- Public Education. The study was prepared by the International Bureau for Ed ucation and the United Nations Educational, Social and Cul tural ,Organization (UNESCO). It showed that religious train ing occupies as much as 19,5 per cent of the time in pUblfc schools in some countries. ( Commenting on the report, Msgr. John Fen',_ ~:,.lO, a I'epre-' sentative of the Holy See at the education conference, said the Vatican delegation is "greatly satisfied" to learn that religioUi education is given so much at tention in. the pu blic schools of So many countries. However, Msgr. Ferrofino, a member of the Apostolic' Nun ciature at Berne, added that J his delegation was "deeply grieved" at the evidence that religious training is exclud"ed from public schools in some nations. This situation is mitiga~d, he said, by the religious training given in private schools. He cited figur~s prepared by the Inter national Bureau for' Catholic Education at the Hague. which show that some seven and a half million children study in private schools- in West Germany, the Netherlands, Great Britain, Aus tria; Belgium, France, Ireland and Italy. In the United States, Msgr. Ferrofino pointed out, about five million children receive religious training in pJ'ivate
ASHLAND (NC) ~ Citizens for Decent 'Literature from all • the obscene literature trade, over Ohio met here to form a the Cincinnati attorney said. statewide unit of the civic 01'"Compared with them," he de clared, "we are just a bunch of ganization and lay plans for a boys trying to play in the big national group. . leagues. But boys or not, we In an aU-day meeting the 60 have to go down into the jungle ~hools. CDL representatives adop{~d a '" and fight them and beat Msgr. Ferro fino praised a resolution citing the extent of them," shittjrrient of the ·U. S. delega the pornography trade and callWarning that "any good. cause tionto .the'conference that "one Ing for the banding together of draws a lot of crusaders and do of the objectives of educa~iOJl org~nizations which oppose its gooders who 'are, over-eager and in the United States is to ob'tain spread. . <0 ,under-educated," Mr. Keating a . high standard of spiritual, . The resolution pointed out ,urged CDL members' to famil ·Jllor.al and ethical formati'oh."' .that in recent years· there has ,iarize themselves: -with the Ila: 'Such Ii definition of the goob " been "an ever-increasing numture, of the obscenity trade;..and :' of education, he' said; comes bel' of lewd, base and pornothe laws which try to.-restl1'1ct it. closer to the ideal of "complete .graphic magazines on our newsEnforce Laws 'education" than the mere "moral stands." Estimates of the Dum education" cited in 'the publk , bel'. ,of indecent publications Louis Arata" also. of Gific'in education programs of· several issu.ed in, this country mn as nati, recalled that Citize'ns, for nations. high, as 10 million oopies " Decent' Literature was fOUl)ded monthly, it ,said. in tha,~ city less than lour' y~ars A Delicious . Th' - 1 ti' dded that the ago. We saw that the only .. ...e .reso u on a . feasible approach to, theprob Treat p~ncI~al theme. of these m~g-,/ lem was legal," he saiq. "We aZI~es ,IS, S~X'. w~th no restt:lc- found good laws alteady' in' ex tions or lImItations" and as. " . . t t 0 f th em f'In d JS,tence on the City, county serted 'thamos ' ,and . . . t the hands of state levels. . • But downnght their way m 0 , apathy on the part of the pub college-age or younger youths. lic seemed to be the chief reaPress Freedom son why they were riot en "We believe in and cherish. forced." the freedom of the press," the resolution declared, "but, be lieve the material to which ~e have referred .. , falls outside of the p'urvi~:w: of thisfreedoRi." .1
"The resolution concluded' by
urging all Ohio organizations
engaged· in the fight onobscen
:ity to "band together and give
their wholehearted support and
encouragement' to statewide
organization to be known as
Citizens for Decent Literature
Inc."
The CDL representatives
heard Charles Keating, founder
and. director of the movement,
describe the battle against por
nography as a "jungle ~ight."
.
ft.
Made Rite Chips Ask for Them Today
Criminals, communists and
unscrupulous persons willing. to
make a profit at any cost to the
well being of society are part' ~f
L E:M lEU X
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C.aJlwJ.ia..· OF THE 7att~We~ .Z)ttJu4e mE MASSACHUSETTS 'CATHOLIC ORDER ·OF FORESTERS
A MESSAGE TO AU ...•
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'. A state wide~ Catholi~> fraternity, founded in 187.9., now .('Hers· you financial protect,ion. against these" hazards of .life. ,
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: SIc;·KNESS
ACCIDENT
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YOU' ARE ASSURED OF
THE· MASSACHUSEns CATHOLIC ORDER OF'
• . 'Just consideration' of every elaim~ .: • . 'P;o~Pt -~ayment of Medical, 'Hos'pital and S~rgic~l Bills. • Income from L~ss.of Time .through Sickness or Disability. •.. Insurance carefully fitted to' your income and to your particular individual needs. . •
Premium payments as you wish; Monthly, Quarterly, Semi annu~lly or Annually. . . ..
'YOU MAY HAVE,at no cost or obligation, complete details on all of '., these insurance certificates. Simply fill out and mail this ~oupon... '
347
COMM'ON'\VEALTH AVENUE.'
.is a statewide, non-profit fraternal, sc>ciety whIch haS paid over
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$6~,000,000.OOin
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insurance claims. Now, in
additio~.to
our life ins~rance .
program, we offer low cost insura~ce for the entiI~ family fro~ infancy
'. to advanced ye~rs,' affording financial protection against ACCIDENT'S,
SURGERY, HOSPITALIZATION, MEDICAL ATTENTION and. LOSS'
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OF INCOME. Each protective certificate is written for the particular •
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need of each individual and fitted to. the individual income. These low-cost premiums are parable as you. wis'h~monthly, quarterly,' semi-annually or annuahy•.
Massachusetts Catholic Order ·.of Foresters. .
FOREST~RS
~osi6'N 15
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Fa. Ri. 7-17-58
§Please· furnish
ine with complete information on your
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OUR FUNDAMENTAL PURPOSE all through' the past- 79 year~ was,
AC;§'
~cident, Surgery, Medical,· Hospitalization, . and Loss. of .Income~
-:-~Insurance. ,
~Name
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I will be under no obligation cforthis information.~ . . . . Occupation : : : ; ~ : : : ;.....•.•.: ~ ;.~ ~ ·..•...•. Parish:.. ~ ; ~· ; ;.;.. § .
and still is, to pr'ovide LIFE rNSURAN:CE ·.p.rotectionfor all mem
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bers of the Catholic family. Whole life ---, 20 payment life· or en dowment. Divi~ends· are paid annu.ally and ·we are proud to say that
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. over 1,000:000.00 b~V8 been. ret~ned to th~' members of our order•
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