07.23.59

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Bishop Asks Prayers For Refugees Sunday An Anchor of the Soul, S1lre and Firm-ST.

PAUL .

Thursday, July 23, 1959

Fall River, Mass.

Vol. 3, No. 30

The Most Reverend Bishop has declared Sunday a day of prayer for the refugees of the world. f'his is World Refugee Year and the Holy Father has called upon aU Cath· olics and all men to become increasingly aware of the plight of the many millions of · vict!me of the war and communist persecution who have been driven from their homes and countrie$. President Eis. , enhower and the heads, of most of' the countries of the free world have asked their

!Second Ctas. Mail PrlyiJecel Authorlz~d

at Fall Ri.er. Ma••.

DIOCESE OF FALL

PRICE lOe $4.00 pe; 'Yea'

citizens to realize the difficulties under which millions of 'these refugees are living, especially those from the Iron. Curtain countries, those in Hong Kong

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R1VI~R

Prayer for. Peace

FALL RIVER. 'MASSACHUSE'j"j'S

.18HOP·S OFJ'ICE

July 26, 1959 Dearly Beloved in Christ:·

"0 God, the Author and Lover of Peace; to know Thee is to live, to serve Thee is to reign; shield Thy suppliants from all assaults, so that we who trust in Thy protection , may fear no enemy.' Through Christ Our Lord. Amen."

On Sunday next, we pay our homage of devotion and I?rayerful affection to our Holy Fatver Pope John XXIII. Although new to the heavy responsibility that is his, he • • • • • • • • • • • • + • • t has already shouldered the burden and wonderfully inspired and the Arab refugees from Palus. estine. The Catholic Relief His fatherly sympathies have reached out to touch th~ Services has done much to proLAUNCH WORLD REFUGEE YEA:Jl: Launching of these with food and medical the "World· Refugee Year," also marked the 16th anniverhearts of all men. His dedicati?n to the ideals of peace, vide supplies and some of the other troth and charity, have found eloquent expression in deed necessities of life,' The. free sary of the establishment of the' American Council of Turn to Page Sixteen Voluntary Agencies for. Foreign Service, Inc. Among the as well as word. Not alone has he been receptive and respeakers at the Council's luncheon were (left to right) Very sponsive to every human want, but he has gone out like ' Rev. Francis B. Sayre, dean of the Washington, D.C. Episthe Good Shepherd bringing blessings to the afflicted and Faithful to Give copal Cathedral; U.S. Senator Hubert H. Humphrey of needy. He speaks the universal language of kindriess. His life is a living testimony that goodness is spent'and spends. .Spiritual· Bouquet Minnesota; Msgr. Edward E. Swanstrom, executive director of Catholic Relief Services-N.C.W.C., and chairman of the itself for the Glory of God and' the betterment of human•. For Holy Father kind. . , ,Individual pledges of prayer board of '.directors of the Council, and Moses A. Leavitt, Let me urge you to be mindful in prayer and com- for ·the Holy Father and his executive .vice-chairman,' American Jewish Joint :{)istribuJrlunions, of our spiritual shepherd, Good Pope John. May intentions, to be given by all tion Committee. NC Photo. the Lord spare him to us a long time, and give him joy the faithful of the Diocese, and success in His, seryice. May he be spared the sorrow are requested by Bishop Con- ' " ., of seeing the world so much divided, ami may he be and nolly in, a letter. addressed to " , pastors this week. r.emain the instrument of true unity and .peace. Forms for the pledges have In token of devotion affection, been . and . in proof of .filial , sent t~ all parishes and will . you are asked to contribute next Sunda~r; in Peter's Pence, . be distributed at all Masses COIMBRA (NC)~The sole' survivor of the 1917 Fatima to help the Holy Father in his material needs and make it either next Sunday or on Sunday, . apparitions has reJ' ected as "inexact" and "regrettable" ' possible for him to exercise the Charity of Christ in favor A ug.2. In his letter, His Excellen~y recent predictions attributed to her. 'l'he rejection. of these of those that turn to him for aid. Let -us think joyously points out that Pope John XXIII, s~ ·called.prophecies was made by Sister Lucia, now a Carand generously of Pope John XXIII and give him evidence; " Turn, to Page Eighteen melite nun' in Coimbra, ' spiritual and material, of our love imd loyalty. . , . ' " was quoted as having said that . through a formal statement '''God is going to chastizethe It will be a happy privilege for your Bishop to bring Bishop, to' Give' , , issued. by the chancery of- world ... 1960 is not far off, and Our Holy Father personally the gauge of your affection. fice 'of the Coimbra diocese. ~hatwill happen then will be I am confident it will be warm-hearted, and generous since Pope Offerings (The prophecies were alleged- a very sad thing fdt all ... if bethere is no one of us who can SilY or believe that it is n:ot Of Faithful ly made to Father Augustin' fore then the world does not . well deserved. He is a benevolent father to us all. We' canFuentes of Veracruz, Mexico, in offer prayer and penance.") . The Peter's Pence Collec- an interview he had with Sister' not fail to give proof that his kindness is not wasted on us The chancery office of 'the and th~lt we love and reverence him in fulness of heart. ' · tion .will be taken up in all Lucy in December; 1957. Wide Coimbra diocese said Sister Lucy ,Believe me, with a cordial blessing, and every devoted' churches of the Diocese on circulation has been given to gave the following answer to Sunday, August 2. This col- the priest's report of that inter- questions 'put to her by the diocgood wish, ' . esan authorities: lection ,is the annual offering view. 'Faithfully yom's in Christ, · of' the faithful of· the Diocese' (In that report Sister Lucy Turn to 'Page Sixteen

5.·s'ter' Lucy ReJ-eets' R'ee'en't' Statem'ents.

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Father Larkin to Observe t· Ordination Silver Jubilee

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Rev. Francis Larkin, SS~CC., will celebrate' the 25th aimiversary of his ordination Saturday, when he will offer a Solemn Mass at 10 a.m. at his home parfsh, Holy Trinity Church in West Harwich. Father Larkin is national directQr of. the Enthronement, in the' Home. The jubilarian was the first American to' enter the novitiate of the Congregation of the' Sacred Hearts at. Fairhaven, and was professed Oct. 18, 1929.. He made his studies for the priesthood in Belgium at semInaries of the, Congregation located at Tremelo, Courtrai and Sandhoven, where he was ordained July 25, 1934. He was professor of philosophy at Sacred Hearts Seminary, Washington, D. C., from 1935 to 1943 until appointed national director of the Enthronement Jrlovement. He founded the mag- ' azine U Preservation of the Home," and is now_a contributing eqitor. Father Larkin was the founder the official organ of the Tarcisian youth movement, "The King's Reign" and is the author .......:rurn to Page Eighteen

to the i-Ioly Father. It is sent to the Pope to help him meet the many calls upon his charity from all portions of the world. The Most Reverend Bishop will have the pleasure of presenting Pope John the offerings of the faithful personally when . he makes his "ad limina" visit to the Pope' in, October. This is the visit that every Ordinary makes to" the Pope at least every five , years to present'a report of conditions in the jurisdiction under his control. " .' " ~ . The Bishop has called upon the · clergy and faithful of the Diocese to renew their ,traditional devotfon to the Holy Father and to express. this' in prayerful re,meinbrance . and 'generous sup~ port.

'History of Taunton, Parish Labor of Love by Author By Russell Collinge How many times have you dragged that box or old letters, bills and what-have-you from the back of the clQset, because you must look over and sort the contents? And how many· times-after reading one or two letters and a 1947 bill~h~ve you' shoved be faced with the accumulated it right back in the closet, "boxes" of 100 years, with no where it will wait patiently, chance· to push them back in still unsorted, for the next' the closet or just throw 'em out? cleaning session? And how would you like to

Ne.wHigh Sch~~I.· In .Fil:lal Stage Of B~ilding " ':Bishop. Connolly announces today that the work on the new Bishop Stang High -'School in No. Dartmouth is

of

B.EV. FB.ANClS .LARKIN.

rapidly progressing and is ex-. pected to be completed by the middle of August. The Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur, who will staff the school, will take up residence shortly thereafter. An open house will in all probability be announced for the latter part of August. . Official . dedication of the school, however,will be post•poned until the Fall; .

RT. REV. JAMES DOLAN

That situation is exactly, what Miss MaydelI Murphy had on -her hands two :rears ago, plus the fact that she had to look for a lot of the boxes herself! Miss Murphy had just retired from Taunton Public Library and intender to spend her time on the Qobbies she'd saved up: study of the theatre, painting, cramming 'for her lectures on current eveI;lts, and reading all , the books she'd been waiting to get at. But no writing. For Mi8.1 Murphy h<ld also retired from 22 years of meeting deadlines at II columnist. Should Be Hister,. But her pastor, Monsignor Polan, began a plaintive needling. Seems no one had ever written a history of the parish ..• no one had ever gone over' the old records. ~ut it really should be done by someone with the training in research. Yes, the history of St. Mary'. Turn to Pa"e Ei"hteen


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2

Chi"nese People'RejectReds But Yield to Pressure~

DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER. MAS6.

VANCOUVER, (NC)-"Under t~rrible pressure, the ,Chinese people 'say to their communist ,masters' 'yes,' but in their hearts they -say 'no,' ., the former Apostolic Internuncio to China said here: Archbishop' Antonio Riberi made

C h i l d r e n Petition Y o u t h ' s Release

, the statement during an iri- . the~act 'that he' was then suHer,t~r'\Tiew~ He was here on a' ing from angina pectoris, a painstopover while going. to his . ful heart disease~ "I had to stop

new assignment as Apostolic sev~ral ~~es ?,n the w~y. t? the Nuncio to Ireland police statIOn" the Aich~l!mop Based 01'1. Fo~osa sinee his recalled, "It was agony." expulsion from the Chine§e Main ~urpose of ,he interroga- . mainland in September, 1951, tion wa,s to find grounds to the veteran Church diplomat aUack the'native Chinese bishsees "a wonderful optimism" rips.. '!Th~y asked me if I was in . among Formosans. contrasted contact 1/I'ith any bishops. I told with "terror and terrible pres- 'them I :was in' touch with all sure" on the mainland. the Chinese bishop~, it was my "In Formosa the increase in duty; but I refused to name any," cOJiverts. has been fantastic," he "he said. ~' . said. "~n the past 10 years the ' His in,terrogators,working in Catholic population there, has relays,. tried to break his resistincreased from 10,000 to 70,000. ance with threats of life imThe 60,000 are converts." prisoiunerit. Accept Faith Interv'ention, '. The majority of the c~nverts Finall' in a mock~trial he'was are refugees frorp. the mamland, 3f , . . the Archbishop said. "With the . sentence~ to 10 years ImprlSOJ)b ' k f >h' f '1 d h ment. The sentence was later rea rom '.. ~lf ami y an t e cha'nged :'to expulsion following strong. tradItion of ances!or direct mtervention by the Indian WOrshIP, ~ey acce~t the. FaIth ambassador, a personal friend, AILING STIGMATrC PRIEST: Padre Pio, famed stigmoret readily 'than 1D their own WI·th communIS I • t -l~ d-' Ch~ " ...a .... V~ matic Capuchin priest of the Monastery of Sal) Giovanni coun ry. En-lin. Rotondo, Italy; is shown saying Mass, the day before he Archbishop Riberi was less Signifi~anUy 01l4e e h a I' g e suffere~ a relapse from his recent illness, NC Photo•. hopeful iorthe mainland. ''The '1 I d I ' • t' the Archbishop Ch' . t fa ti eve e agams ,. l.nesecomm~m~ ~ are na cs, ,was "fosteriltg the Legion of 1

-THE ANCHOR

Thunl., July 23. 1959

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~:;:i~~~::Uh'::S:i~~ • for.~ of M~ry.":World.FamousI t a l i a n

From Reds CHICAGO· (NC) - ' FollY .hundred grade school children here have formally petitioned Vice-President Nixon to intercede With Soviet. Premier Khrushcllev for an 18year-old boy who is behind the .Iron .Curtain in Lithuania.' The pupils of Springfield Township grade school, near Michigan City, Ind., have asked the Vice President to appeal per-, sonally to the Sovfet chief on behalf of Gedeminas Kavaliunas, son of Jones Kavaliunas, one of their teachers. Mr. Kavaliunas fled Lithuania in 1944 with his wife and yearold daughter. He has been trying to get his son, left behind ia Lithuania because of illness, to America for 15 years. Mr. Nixon is flying to Moscow Saturday to open the American ,Fair. The petition was forwarded to the Vice-Presiderit by Rep. John Brademas of Indiana, with his own recommendation. Mr. Kavaliunas, who lives' ia Chicago when ~ot teaching i. Michigan City, became an Amer, ican citizen in 1956.. His wife, a ~eal estate broker, became a citizen at the same .time. Au, their eUorts for an exit viSa for t~. son have beim 'futiie. . , ,,:

Stigmatic Askfedtha~?puttt?et.seAemm~ Sllt.c- recalled. ,"I was Ve1"y prOud \ to eurlsy ttac cess 0 e a rIO lC SSOCla IOn h: d ' tho " G 0' VA NI ROTONDO of Chinese Catholics,'! the Nun- ,ave o~ IS. SAN' I N , '. I . , , ' , "(NC)-"How i.~ Padre 'Pio?" "Is' year, he' suffered thtipleurisy I cio said:' "We don't know how C I _. . attack. His lungs have been , N a m e s ·:.Catholic hard' the people ,are being .0 ~ge' nlhate.s . he really dying." "Ask him 'to blest! me onee 'drained five' times since May, 'To'·H.-gh· PO.st' " 'pressed. Visitors who go there' -Id' PI ' ,but doctors must be careful beUI In9 an, more." ·are deceived. Their guides are 'Round-faced 'Brother Vin- cause of the strain such treatTHEHAGUE~NC)~LouisJ. 'earefully' trained. men. The com- " ST:PAUL (NC)'-:With t~ se- :cenzo,' door-Keeper at the small, , ments puts on an aging heart. M. Beel,' former. premier' of the munistS coe'rce the peop'Ie l"t· t f' . , On July 1 Padre Pio was, able . Netherlands. has been named ec Ion 0 arc h·t 1 ec II or a new 'white-washed Capuchin monas'through economic pressure arid library btIilding the College of .tery 'on the slope of Mount Garto say Mass in the nearby church. . vice' preside'nt of, the Council .01. brainwashing. It is practically St. Cath',· a gano; ,hears the questions, the .The following daY' he was vest- State, Queen Juliana's motIt erme h ere h as "-gun imp~ssible to resist." 20-year,: $10,000,000 building pleaS for prayers .and blessings ing for Mass when be collapsed important advisory group. and' was taken to the hospital This is the first time in the Al'chbishop Riberi has firStprogram. i 0 a hundred times a day. hand experience of the methods The program will include. Outside 'the· walls a sense of across the street. After 'two days history of the Netherlands that there 'he was returned to ihe a Catholic has been chosen for used by China's new masters. dormitory and classroo.m build- concern and anxiety, especially the post. Appointment of Dr. When, the Reds began theiring, convent, aitd fine arts build- after Padre Pio's Collapse at the monastery at his· own request campaign to dominate the ing in addition to the new Ii- beginning of July, have been to get him away from some of BeeI,57, is effective Aug. 1. He his overly~demanding admirers succeeds Dr. A. A. Rutgers, 75, Church in 1950, he' was taken brary. I . growing' steadily. But it appears who resigned because of his adto police headquarters for daily .,The .estfmated cost of the new that fears for the life of Italy's who sneaked into his room interrogations lasting up to 14 library building is $1,000,000. famed stigmatic are premature. despite police guards at the door. vanced age. hours at a time. ' With con~truetion beginning this Brother Vincenzo can tell his Confident 01 Return Pope John XXIII has honored , ,..~~ allowan~e was made for .'£all, it i~ hoped that the 'buildingquestioners, that Padre Pio' ,is 'With his illness, Padre Pio has Dr. Beel by naming him' a will be ~adY for oecuPancy by 'somewhat improved, that. he has . had to leave his· confessional Knight of the Grand Cross of the ·.·t"'es: I-se,ry th:~ f;ill O~1960: " . ' .. ' , ; had something.to eat, and ·that where' he' customarily spends Order of Pius .IX. The only other , St. Catnerine's was founded by he is praying for all .Qf them.' ,·long,. hours listening. to ,people Catholic in the Netherlands who Refugees. the Sisters of st. Joseph' of For the amazing fact is that 'unburden their troubled" con-' holds this ho"nor is Joseph M. Carondele't in 1903/The campus the 72-year:old. stigmatic, who sciences. Today people 'just- kiss' ."Luns, Minister' of For e i g n COLOGNE ,(NC) - Mankind covers an,area o~ mor.e than ~O~ ,.i·-h"as carried on his. body the imthe empty confessionaL',· Affairs. must not forget the misery of acres, and :contams eIght maJ,Qr iqts of the Passion of Christ . " ' Awaitirig hir, improv'emerit'· is r-----~------refugees and expeilees, Joseph buildings.: ,.'·,:>,'fot:·the past 40 years, is rallying "the office for assigning numbers Cardinal Frings, Archbishop of' 'G d" f P,. ,>;:~.fter an flt'tack of pleurisy, com- 'to 'the 'hundreds who come' :to Cologne, told 80,000 Ca,tholies ar 0, Ora IS~., '..".plicated by pneu~onia.:... , San Giovanni and patiently wait who had left Silesia; a territory New Bis,hop'sS~,".,":" ,;. At the 'end of April of this "'for' days to go tei co'nfessio:nto Plumbing - Heatin9~ which formerly was held by Padre Pio. The office door is Germany but which has been NEW YQRK (NC)-Abishop are Deal Over 35 Years ":closed now am. Brother Vincen. un del' Polish administration recently ~onsecrated here 0 qu of Satisfied Service since the end of World War II. serve as Ordinary of .the Garden BOMBAY (NC)-The poor are 'zo cannot give the pilgrims any certain date when it will again , of ParadiJe.. '" ' ': not g~tting."a 'sq~are deal" fr?m 806 NO. MAIN SyREET eardinal Frings declared. that At'leastl that's how natives of" th.e rIch, HIS Emmence Valefl~n be open. ' Fall River OS 5-7497 expellees have a right to their the area iefer to the',newinde': Cardinal Gracias said here' In . But there is a feeling' of con:' native country and urged the pendent Prelature ~{'·Co~o'i~o,;.urging Catholics to assist the fidence _that the door of the Silesians to preserve peace, unitY.Bolivia ' which will be dfrected' poor. office will be opened again and and their Faith. ' <, that Padre Pio will again be by Bishopl Thomas R. Manriiilg;: Mass'Ordo back ,in his confessional. Chancellor Konrad Adenauer O.F .M., after his consecration' in , of Germany said thaf,no part of St. Patriclh cathedral~J.·~, ":~,,4. FRIDAY-Mass of the previous about, 'e", the former, territories of GerTtie designation as"Q~td€n'of': . Sunday. Simple. Green. Mass : EVERYBODY DOES I . many could be cut off without' ' Paradise i$ given'· io )he'area',j,y:':" Proper; No Gloria; Second a peace trea·ty. He ,alSo pr~sed the Aymafa 'In<iilins, :w.ho;·make,: ",' Collect St. Christina, Virgi~ • 'ar-B-Q. Chickeltl _APPRAISER the way the British, French and up the m;poritY<,9i';th~.p~ula~.~· > ,and Marty~. 0 • REAL mATE U. S. delegates to the Foreign tion. Indian tradition'nas it'"tha't, 'SATURDi\.y-=-st. James, Apostle. Ministers Conference in Geneva" tlie first tnan and woman a6d"";, Double of II Class.. Red. Mass have· defended German inte.rest. the first'hJman speech origiI';~i~~, '. '~Pr'oper; Gloria; Second Collect INSURANC' against-the Soviet Uniop,... there. 'They believe also that the,:' iSt. Christopher, Martyr; Creed; •• FARMS town of sOrata, near the bOt.,.;'.< Preface of Apostles. .WY 3·5762 .141 Washington St Faim._ 136 Cornell S'. FORTY HOURS tom of 21,000-foot Mount Illam- ,,: !;iUNDAY-:-St. Ann~, Moth~r of • . JWIt off Route 8 . New Bedford I .Pl.l, is the: site of the original the _Blessed Virgip Mary and . DEVOTION' Eden. X Sunday after Pentecost. July 26-St. Stt~phen;·'Dodge,.. . . .Double of I Class. White. Mass Ville. St. . FranCIS., of l.e·9io~ of Decency Proper; Gloria; Second Collect "',SSISl, New Bedford, ,-I . ,J ":,' ~of the Sl,mday; C~ed; ComSt. Pius X" South YarThe following films are to :be" mon Preface.. mouth. .: :added 'the 1the 'lists in their:Fe..: MONDAY-Mass of the previous Aug. 2-:-St: George; WeStport... \spective" ciassifications: Sunday. ~imple. Green. 'Mass Sacred Hearts; Fairhaven." ~~:: .uiJ.objec~ionable ,for adults 'Proper; No Gloria;. Second Aug. 9-St. Theresa, ;~.SOuth .; ·.and·, adolescents: Curse of the Collect St. Pantaleon, Martyi'; Attleboro '.. . :, . Undeaii; H6liday for Lovers. ' , .Common Preface: . ~"St. Theresa;' New.Bed.~ unO,bjeCtil"o,nable fOl' Adults: TUESDAY- SS. Nazarius and forc;l. " ,,:.;: Rebel Sel Companions, Martyrs. Simple. Our" Lady of VictorYi~ .<, Objectio~.ablt.: in. WJ;t f~.,.al~:, Red, rMass. Proper; Gloria; Centerville. '. Women Are Weak' (suggestive' ... Common Preface. Aug. 16-S.t. Joseph, Woods;: eOst~ng)l'~·:· '.' ~9NESD4-Y;7St7,. ;¥~rtha; VirHole. Condemned: Lady 'Ch~tt~)y's': ' gin. Simple. White. Mass J>rop-' " Our Lady 01 Lourdes, LOver.Thi!s' filmeondones aduler; Gloria;.Second,.Collect St. "' Wellfleet. telyand.. ~nstitutesv'an" Felix', PoPe,and~h.is CompanOur Lady of Graee, North scionable' ittack upon a funda-' ions, Martyrs; Common Pre1Westport. mental t~n~t of JUdaeo-Christian .. ace. . morality. :This is, the more: THpRSDAY-Mass of the preTIlE L"lCHOa '. ;,', ,.reprehenSible· when.: it eomes vious Sunday. Simple. G-reen. 8READ- . Seeoncklass mail 6'ri;'ile_iautbonzed ,thfough enteitairilnerit media Mass Proper; No Gloria;' Secat Fan River. Mass. PiJblished '"very d . f'" '. bi ~-'~' . . C 11' SS "Abd d Thursday .at (10 Highland Avenue, Fall . eyold () ,.~ason~. e....:..eguardg;. ond 0 ect . on an R!ver. Mass., by ~e Catholie !n;ss of ~e for the~ youilg and impressf<mSennen, Martyrs; CommOD DIOCese of Fall RIver. Sub.erlptlO,.. pr_,' ·'ab'-'·,' ".., ...... ". . Preface. by mail, postpaid $-4.00 per 751'." , '" ." ......, .1·'.' .'

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THE ANCHORThurs., July 23. 1959

3

Vatican Requests Aid For, Poor Countries

DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER., MASS,

Prosecutor Asks More Stringent Anti-Smut Laws

ANGERS (NC)-Catholics' were reminded that they have a duty to aid the peoples of underdeveloped countries in a Vatican letter sent to the 46th meeting of the French Social Weeks here. Some 2,000 Catholics from 'many countries throlighout the ' ers. This, he recalled, sometime. world including many groups leads to revolution, from Africa, met here to No one, he wrote, can oppose discuss this year's theme: the hopes of millions of men to

PHILADELPHIA (NC)~ Tighter ,city and state laws .were urged by p. S. Attor,ney Harold K. Wood to combat filthy books and other porno,graphy. Mr. Wood testified at a public hearing held by a Congressional ,subcommittee under chairmanship of U. S. Rep. Kathryn E. Granahan of Pennsylvania. "I believe we should have stronger city and state laws to cope with the situation," Mr. Wood declared. "The Legislature of Pennsyl. vania has got to sit down and study court decisions and come up with an act that will stand the test of constitutionality." Mr. Wood said he could not at the present time recommend a Federal law that. would help curb the traffic in filth. "I think that careful limited censol'ship may help within the ftame of the Postal Department." he said. "But I do, not think it would cure the 10 or 12 bad violators - and we know who they are - because if we get they by censorship in'New York, they simply. fly to Boston, Chicago or San Francisco and 'they're back i;'" business under another name." Favors Jail Terms Mr. Wood also said he favored jail terms Instead of fines for offenders. Dr. Nicholas G. Frignito, medleal 'director of Municipal 'Court reported' sexual offenses bY' 'youngsters are increasing. He blamed the increase on obscene literature available to youth. ' . "Children in the ages from nine to 14 are most affected by this indecent material. The filthy ideas implanted in their iminature minds impelled them to crime." Dr. Frignito, a psychiatrist, said "moral depravity is on the increase." ,

Co rd ino I Urges Safe Driving,

MUNICH (NC) -A German Cardinal" warned against- reckless dl'iving here as he blessed 30 vehicles to be used for pastoral work among refugees. Joseph Ca r din a 1 Wendei, Archbishop of Munich, blessed the vehicles in the cathedral square here. They included small busses to take ~efugee children to religion classes and cars for priests. Cardinal Wendel said at the blessing that whoever uses all automobile must show self-discipline and be aware of his responsibility befol'e God to drive safely.

VINCENTIANS MEET: Discussing program at meeting of Fall River Particular Council, St. Vincent de Paul ,Society, at Health Camp in Westport are, left; to right, Owen Gilligan, Immaculate Conception Parish; Jerome B. Foley, president of the council; Manuel M. Rezendes, St. o Michael's Parish, and F,rancisco C. Silvia, 'Our' Lady of Health Parish. ' " '

Cardinal Says' People Want Truth ,as Morality.Declines LQS ANGELES (NC)-The U. S. is undergoing a dedogma'is disregardel;l, yet the rank and f~Ieof ,Americans are increasingly' hungry for' truths 'to believe. This appraisal was made here by James Francis Cardinal McIntyre, ArchHe said the "outburst of exbishop Los Angeles, iIi an pression of reverential resp~ct exhortation to priests of from all sides in the occasion of the archdiocese at their an- his death revealed that ,vast c~ine ~I~ m9rali~Y'as

of

numbers of people had been nual retreat: .' The Cardlllal said a summary .reading the ,Holy Father, His analysis of curr~nt 'conditions utterances had become, a dogmatic inspiration and a moral presentedconcl~slOns that must guide to vast n'umbers-and all be attended with some apprethis unrecognized by themhensions." , . Am?ng matters slllgl.ed out as selves." The Cardi'nal cited the greater alarmlll~ by. the Ca~dllla~ were the mantal Immoral~ty, dlvo.rce, "n'umber of information inquiries, growth of communIst, atheism, and of converts, as' evidence of the trend among more people to and a general laxity in principIes, convictions and moral look to the Holy Father for guidance and inspiration. conformit,Y. He urged the priests to reflect Need Leadership on these conditions, to face them In the face of this situation, as a challenge, and to meet them he said; le'adership is needed in with' increased instruction and the exposition' of dogmatic and preaching on dogmatic and 'moral truths, in virtue and example, in social conduet and in mot'al subjects. ethical viewpoints and public rela'tions. ' Indiffel'ence to God and religion, the Cardinal stated, "J:1as been fostered now for many years in secular educa,tion. It ha;; been festering in the minds and the hearts of the American people." Without acknowledgement, of God~in education, he added, and without recognition of God's providence, "the stage is set for making real a complete: separation, a complete alienation of. religion fr.om government" a truly ,Soviet state," M~ltiple' Marri~ge Problem The divorce' problem, 'he con'tinued, has become the multiple marr,iage problem, "The question now is not: 'Are you divorced?" but 'How many times have' yOIl married'!' " "Yet, strange to say," the Cardinal stated, ~'it seems quite apparent that in the minds and hearts ()f the rank ,and file of the' American people there is a strO!lg tendency to dogmatic truth. They al'e hungry for dogmas to believe." He referred to the universal response last fall at the death of Pope Pius XiI as "a' revelation". '

Italy Urges Priests To Promote Safety

NEW SUPERIOR: Mother

St. Jean Baptiste, R.J.M., haIJ been named superior at Jesus and Mary Convent in FaIt ,River. She' has taught 30 years at Notre Dame School and is moderator of the Jesus-Mary Academy Alumnae.

ROME (NC) -Italy's parish priests have been urged by the Italian government to help end the anarchy of Italian traffic. . The government r e c e n t I y passed a new road code which brings Italian traffic \la'wsin line with those of m 0 s t countries of the :western world. The Ministry 'of Transportation has sent educational material to 'parish priests. Included is'. booklet written by Father Lea'nardo Azzolini, S.J" and edited by Civilta Cattolica, the magazine of the Rome province of the Jesuits.

"The Advance of (Underdeveloped) Peoples in the Human CommuQity." The letter was sent by His Eminence Domenico Cardinal Tardini, Vatican Secretary of State.!n the name of His Holiness Pope John XXIII. Addressed to Social Week President Charles Flory, the letter warned that the peoples of underdeveloped nations are aware of the "scandalous contrast" between their own poverty and the wealth of oth-

Lead in Number Of Credit Unions MADISON (NC) - Catholic groups hold a commanding lead in the number of credit unions formed among religious organizations in this country, according to statistics released here by ,the Credit Union National , ·Assbcia tion. The CUNA 1959 yearbook disclosed that of the 2,306 credit ,unions among religious' organizations, 1,184 are Catholic groups. Next in line among the religious groups, are: Baptists, 97; Methodists, 55; African Methodist Episcopal, 32; Jewish, 24; Presbyter.ian, 15; L4theran, 12; Episcopal, 9, and 113 among sev, erat other denominations.

Prominent Lawyers Attend 'Red' Mau PERTH (NC) - Distinguished lawyers from all over the world attended a, Red Mass-Mass of, the Holy Spirit-in St. Mary's cathedral here during Australia's National Legal Convention. Among them were Associate Justice John Marshall Harlan of the U. S. Supreme Court, and Lord Somerville of Harrow, one of. England'l' eight Lord Justices of Appeal

be saved from the danger of famine and disease. And, he added, "it is an unquestionable duty of justice and charity ••. to do everything possible to make sure that these undernourished people have food." Safeguard Stability The Vatican letter also called for a more rational exploitation of agricultural and mineral resources everywhere, At the same time, it saia, efforts mlJst be made to safeguard social stability in the regions affected by' economic changes. Leaders of all countries and races, .it continued, should be given access to knowledge and culture. They should also be given the responsibilities of civic ,life and, where possible, political freedom, it added New Dimensions Catholics of privileged nations, he stated, must be made aware of "the new and enlarged dimensions assumed by their permanent, dutieS of respect for the . human person, and Christian charity." Catholics 'of underdeveloped countries, the Cardinal declared, , should show a spirit of peaceful cooperation toward nations capable of aiding their own homelands. Catholics in underdeveloped countries who take part in '. public life, he continued, must "make effective social, cultural and economic progress prevail over the sterile demands of prestige." Christian Solution Faced with the proble ' of underdeveloped nations, Cardinal Tardini declared, Catholics everywhere must face it with. "will to provide a Christian solution to this problem, whose breadth might be discouraging to narrow minds and whose consequences might frightell cowardly hearts."

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Explains Viewpoint on' N'ew Christian Trade Unions

I "

derstanding "at the Brussels headquarters of the International Fe d'e rat ion. of C h r i s t ian Trade Unions, I should like to. correct it. The column did not say that C h r i s t ian unions as such· can be ""tragic for social justice." It merely questioned ~ he advisability of est a b I is h ing new ones in situations where they are likely tl) hinder rather than, - promote the cause of Christian socia~ iecoflstruction. Two'situdions of this kind

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well" and refers to him as "one who, from the very outset, does not favor Christian unions." Historically Necessary Let me ~att~mpt to put the record··straigh t. First of all, as I clearly indlcatp.d in the coiumn under discOssion, I am all in. favor of C~ristian unions wherever. they' ;are needed. I have' sair" this to Mr. Vanistendael on many occasions, and, as he knows, ~ have also said. it as plainly as possible to some of the soci~lists on the staff of the International Confederation of Free Tdde Unions in Brussels an<fto rrany American labor leaders. ,

FRIENDSHIP CIT A TION : Auxiliary Bishop Josef Hiltl of Regensburg accepts a ,certificate of outstanding service to German-American friendship for. 85-year-old; Archbishpp Michael Buchberger. Presenting the' certificate was Col. Paul L. Bates (right) commanding officer ()f the, Seventh Army Training Center while Father (Capt.) Fred:" eric S. McTernan, looks on. NG Photo.

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Secondly,' I do not regard Christian tr~de unions "as a kind , of regrettable remnant of sOme were men"tioned, namely, Italy, unfortunate! historical' eve n t , and Cuba. The establishment of ' . Christian unions in Cuba at 'the during the past hundreds of years or so.;' I think I know as . present time, it was said, would well as Mr, Vanistendael dOes . be a serious, and possi'bly even a that, historicaily speaking, the CLEVELAND (NC)-Rep. Michael A. Feighan of Ohio tragic, mistake, for it would iso- establishment of Christian unions has called for the Knights 'of Ohio. to "take the' initiativ~ late from the mainstream of ' organized labor'in 'Cuba the few was agsolutely necessary in cer- necessary to expose the motives ~d objectives of all hate' Catholic labor leaders who are tain countri~s. . organizations now operating on the American scene." At a capable of dealing e,ffectively Advise~ DiscriniinatioD t t· . 1 d' f th with the communists. Thirdly, t6 say that Christian' es lmoma mner 0 e division on the American scene on the basis of r~ligion.';' He Similarly it was argued that unions were historically, neces- Cleveland Council of the add: the recent establishment of a sary in some countries and are Knights of Columbus in honChristian Union in thc Fiat auto,:, still necessa'ry in certain parts or of ;Archbishop Edward F. seek. to Divide Country mobile company in Northerq of the world does not mean that . Hoban; Bishop of Cleveland, on "So I' belie~e it is urgent in Italy was a move which is likely new ones should be established bis 81st birthday,' the Congresstbe extreme that ' thinking to do more harm than good. indiscriminately. man attacked the idea of any reAmericans ban together for the' , Reference was made likewise The adviskbiliiY of establish- ligious test for candidates for, purpose of taking a hard' and' to the current controversy. in ing new Chtistian unions in any public office. honest look at the question of Germany over the establishment given country at the present "It is almost unbelie~abre that what motivates those 'whEi seek in that countr) of a minority time is a mattec. of judgment. in these enlightened times we to divide our country by bring,.. ing into questioft the loyalty of Christian union, but no opinion All I kno~ is that my, judg- . see the qualifications of a candianyone because of hill religious: was evl:m implied as ·to the pros ment is. s~a~ed by man~, if ~ot date for public' office put into beliefS." ' and cons of this continuing dethe. maJont:l:;, ~f ~athohc SOCial question oecause of hill religious bate. "Obviously," it was said, achon expf:1rts In these two '-faith" tbe Cleveland legislator He 'especially issued a eall to "it would be foolish for this countries, it;lcluding a number stated. He ~id such people'have the Knigbts of Columbus" which writer or for any other putsider of ecclesiastical leaders. raised tbe ·particular question be said.. "was founded tor the to try to resolve this contro- -, If these mbn are wrong, so am 'of wbether a Catholic is fitted avowed .purpose of defending, versy." I, but I w~uIQ hope that Mr~ to be President of the United· and protecting, the holy office OpinioD Debatable Vanistendael and his associates States. and the person of all' CatholiC This writer's opinion as to the in'the IFCTU will give us credit ,Rep. Feighan ,called ,ll\leh priests/' to "take the' initiati~e for being J'us't as de,voted as they questioning the work "of a small necessary to expose the motivetl inadvisability of establishing " I and objectives of all hate orgaa.Christian unions at the present are to ·the ,cause of' Christian band of professional 'bigots," time in Italy and Cuba ts obvi- social recons,truction. ' who he said operate in "hate or- ,izations now operating on: the American scene." ously open tc debate. I ganizations, some of which have I sincerely regret, however, ors~s attracted national attention by that it has' been misinterpreted the violen~e of the falsehoods by the General Secre-tary of the which they seek to permeate International Fe d era t ion of CLEVELAND (NC)~The time into our public life." Christian' Trade Unions, Mr. may have coine for another look The Congressman said he August Vanistendael, as an indi- . at the indust~y council plan sug- 'would. not name the organizacation that I am opposed to gested in patlal ""ritings on, lations, "but I would 'group t;hem Christian unions as such. bor, a Cleveland labor leader all under this appropriate title, Mr. Vanistendael, who is a said here: 'Eitots and Other Un-Americans very clear personal friend and a Jack McGinty, executive secUnited for the Spread of Falseman for whom I have the great- retary of thel Cleveland Federa"hoods and Disunity Among the est admiration, makes this tion of Labor, AFL-CIO, said American People.'" charge, affabl~r put very point- that the industry council plan Saying that "'this is hardly an edly, in the July 1 issue of his may be one ,way that the public opportune moment for the proorganization's newsletter Christ- can express i~s interest and parfessional bigots to undertake a labor. ticipate in such basic industrietl widespread propaganda camHe is not ill the'least off£mded, as steel.: ' paign calculated to spread dishe says, by m~', column of May The public: has an interest in unity and to weaken the fabric Paint and Wallpaper I '18, but "he feels that, in'spite of labor-management relations, he of our democratic way of life," Dupont. Paint said. He re~alled that boards Rep. Feighan said that "nothing " ' . PARKfNG which included representatives could better serve the despotic Rear of, Store of management" labor' and. the purposes of atheistic communpublic had nelped produce inism and the plan of the' Russians ' ,.Q.t:i.t....... " .·422 ..t\C,USh. Ave. dustrial harmony during the for world conquest than to cause, ... cor, Middle St. Korean War.' , : ' New Bedford I

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ANCHOII

Thurs" July 23, 1,959

Reds. Develop Martyr Cult

By Msgr. George G. Riggins

a

4

: DIOCE~E OF F.ALL RIVE'R'. M-AoSS

Director NCWC Social Action D~partment

The May 18 release of this cOlumnwks entitled "ChristIan. and 'Neutral' Trade Unions Today."! In at least one' of . our subscribing papers this was revised to read as follows: '''Christian Unions Can Be Tragic for t&e Cause of Social Justice." This alternate title thorough ~nd "long study, bis wasn't completely accurate, American 'friend doesn't seem and since it has oc~asioned to have understood the Christian certain amount of misun- Trade-Unidn Movement very

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'Leg. IS -I a t 0 r Urges,K 0 f C ' TO'o' Exp.o·se "H ate G.ro·Up.'.5

, HONG KONG (NC) ~ The Chinese communists, who in the process of eradicating,: religion have in effect' substituted their own top brass for saints and deities are .now developing their own martyrology. The government radia in Peking announced the opening in Sbenyang of' an "exhibition on the deeds of Martyr An Yehmin" ~ apparently a soldier killed duririg the: bombardment of the Nationalist,.held island of Quemoy Peking Radio: said: 1,500 persons ~ including party, govern.. ment and military -leaders' ~ at.. tended the ceremony opening the exhibition, which depicts' An's childhood', photographs of him and books he' read in his' younger' yea!'s;. his army diary, aild: his "heroic: deeds" duri'ng the bombardment.. , "People visitirig the ex,hibiti@D have been deeply moved by Martyr An~s deeds, and have expressed their' deter-mination to learn from hinr" to step' up PI'Oduction, and to: contl'ibute. to the socialist construction of the fatherland'," the. communist radi• Cl~cludecL

Urges Prayers F'or Coune;,I' PHI~ADELPHIA (NC) ~ Hi. Eminence John Cardinal Q'Hal:a, C~S.C., Archbishop of Philadelpbia, has urgea all Catholics of the archdiocese to j,oin in pray.. ers: for the success of the eculnenical council ,announced by His, Holiness Pope John XXIII. To formalize the prayers, the Cardinal ordered. in a pastoral letter that the prescribed' prayer (or-alia imperata)-recited at' Mass each day :,e tali:en from the Votive Mass of the Holy Ghost. To the usual prayers' after Mass, the Cardinal urged thatthere, be- added one 0U1: Father, one Hail Mary", and the invooalion. "Seat of Wisdom, Pray for us." "If, we pray and! do penance M' we mould'," the Cardinal wrote, "God win bles:.- abundantly the sununit conference called by the Holy Father, and the 'Holy Will, of God 'will be done. on each u it is in heaven."

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PORTLAND (NC) ~ AntiCatholic, sentIment was/reported' here in 2,900 answel'S received in a Fourth Dis~rict 'poll'in Oregon on possibl~ presidential candidates. Rep. Charles Porter of Eugene,' Ore.~ said "well over 100" persons wrote anti-Catholic sentiments o~l the margin of 'the questionnaire[which includes th~ name.of Sen.'-!ohn F. Kennedy of MassachusettS, a Catholic.

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lME ANCHORThurs.• July 23, 1959 ]

5

Postmaster Says Obscene Literature Drive Effec~'iYe

DIIllCESE QF FALL -RIVER. MASS,

Easy' Sentences, Impede Fight On Obscenity

WASHINGTON (NC)-Postmaster General Arthur E. Summerfield said here the' Post Office Department's cur· rent drive to rid the mails, of obscene lit~rature is paying off in increased public awareness of the pornography menace. Mr. Summerfield said sup- the determined plans of the filtb port of the campaign by racketeers to continue expandinl newspapers, members of their business." Congress, and civic and reIn a special statement the

WASHINGTON (NC) The chairman of a .Hoose postal subcommittee investigating' the obscenity problem complained here that li,ght court sentences given smut peddlers are a major impediment to effortllto put them out of business. Rep. Kathryn E, 'Granahan of Pennsylvania charged that ''the minimal sentences handed down by certain United States courts" affiGUnt tG nC) more than a "license fee" for distributors of. mail order obscenity, , Rep. Granahan pointed out that violations of anti-obscenity laws are "offenses against 'the public morals and inflict indignity on the public conscience." "Sentences bearing no reasonable relationship to the seriousness of such an offense against the public, or which are inadequate to' the point of absurdity •.. neither carry out the intent of the law nor serve the public purpGse for which the laws are enacted," she added. , Rep. Granahan said investigations conducted by her subcommittee show that inadequacy and lack of uniformity in sentencing have been major weaknesses in efforts to implement the antiMISSIONARY HOME ON VISIT: Sister Mary Regobscenity laws." . inald, R.S.M., right, a New Bedford native who has been She cited one instance in teaching in Belize, British Hondura.~, for the past 13 years, which, in May of this year, a chats with Sister Mary Edward, ~.S.M., mother superior West Coast distributor of objectionable material was sentenced at St. James Convent, while enjoying a brief vacation at to lliI months in jail. She 'said Star of the Sea Villa, South Dartmouth. 'the sentence was "no more than • 'slap on the wrist,'" and pointed out that material which U the distributor has sent through' the mails has been described by postal Clfficials as "some of the NEW YORK (NC) - During · American Theater," Aug. 2; Pa~1 vilest material" ever coming'tO the Sundays in' August the Hume, author and music editor their- attention. Catholic Hour radio program of the Washington Post and 'will present an on-the-spot Times-Herald, "A Report on series of five discussions from a American Music," Aug. 9; recent symposium, "A Report Charles Bracelen Flood, author, on American Culture," it was "A Report OIl American Literaannounced here. ture," Aug. 16; John P. Shanley, WASHINGTON (NC)-A suit o Produced by the National television editor of the New has been filed in Federal District Council of. Catliolic Men and York Times, and Richard Bree~ Court here to overturn it Post carried by the NBC radio net- Academy Award winning motion Office ban on postcards carrying .' work, the Catholic Hour is a repr@duction of a nude paint- broadcast each Sunday at 2:30 picture writer, "A Report on Mass Communications: lI'eleviing. ',\ P.M., EDT. sion and Motion Pictures," Aug. The suit was filed by United The symposium' was held last 23, and Father Gustave Weigel, Artists Corporation, a movie month. at Rosary College, River S.J., Woodstock (Md.) College company. It na!Jled Postmaster Forest, Ill., and was co-sponGeneral Arthur E. Summerfield sored by the'Thomas More Asso- · professor, author and lecturer, · "Moral Values in American as defendant. ciation and the Rosary College Culture," Aug. 30. In early May the Post Office department of library science. Department' banned mailing of Subjects 2,268 postcards carrying a reproThe speakers and their subduction of the painting "The Naked Maja," by Francisco jects for the series' are: Leo / Brady, professor of speech and Goya. The cards were intended drama at the Gatholic Univeras promotional material for a sity of America, novelist and film of the same name. playwright, "'A Report on the The ban was upheld in midCITIES SERVICE J'lUle by Charles Ablard, Post Office Department judicial' offiDISTRIBUTORS cer, whQ has final say within the department on question's of mailGasoline ability. Mr. Ablard stated that the Fuel and Range postcards are obscene, although the ()Ciginal painting is not. ·He pid. a siogan appearing on the eards intlicated that their "plain Oil BURNERS purpose" was "to .appeal to pr~ , rient interests." G. E. IOILER IURNER ~NITS United Artists h8llcomplai0e4 " ' t ttae postal ban violated ita For pl'ompt delivery riCh,tt1 uftder the First Amend.& DalY & Night Service --.t.

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Legistature Passn Sunday Closing Law IlADISON (NC)-A bill which weuld require new and '1Ued autemobile sales agencies to close _ SI:mdays has been approved b,. the Wisconsin Legislature: It was the only piece of Sun4a,. closing legislation passed .uring this session. A bill which , weuld have required all nonessential businesses to close on Sunday was withdrawn by its author's after opponents loaded it with crippling amendments. GOY: Gaylord Nelson is expected to sign the auto closing bilt, introduced at the request of the Wisconsin Automotive trades ~iation. The measure passed Nth houaes with a comfol"table

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ligious organizations "makes certain the importance of this problem is being brought home ~ the parents of America." 'However, he added, "persistent, intensive action on a nationwide scale will be necessary for • long time to come, to cope with

Congo Schools Show Gain in Enrollment LEOPOLDVILLE (NC) - Enrollment, in Catholic primary schools in the Belgium Congo drew more than twice as much as public school enrollments last year. In 1958 this huge central African territory with a population of 12,660,000, had 1,553,300 pupils in its primary schools, an increase of 24,000 over 1957. Catholic schools gained' 57,000 pupils and public schools c 28,300 during that year, while 'Protestant schools,lost 61,300.

Postmaster General repeated earlier warnings that the traf. fie in mail order obscenity hat doubled in the past five years, to the point where it is now • half-billion-dollar annual business. It "can double again by 1963'" unless concerted community action is taken against it, he ~dded, Mr. Summerfield estimated that between 700,000 and one million U. S. children will ~ sent obscene mater,ial, or adver. tisements for such material, through the mails this year. He said he has received manJ inquiries from individuals an4 organizations asking what theJ can do to help combat the men. ace. Among other things, 1M suggested that parents whOM children are sent objectionab" material save it-and the en,.. velopes in which it comes-an4 turn this over promptly to tbI local postmaster.

"A ROOM WITH A VIEW ..."

would be a &,ood delScl'iption {or ~he neal hUle pai"iliih Churcb Posidonia (Sira-Graecia) whicb stands in tbe midst of CU&'eed but beautiful countr)'. The parishonera . are quite proud of tbeir parish Church and sometime aeo 'he)' began a campaien &0 celebrate the centenary of their Churcb b1 making some necessary repairs. AU went well, until near the very end 01 the work thcy were caueht by spiraling prices. They finished all the work the, planned - except for tbe wiDdows! This is now a "Church "ith a 77x Holy Falhtr~ MiiJio" vicw," but with no glass' in the wiDI"- tht on" I r L __L dows. You can imagine what will hap1",fit VJlITm pen to the interi!)r of the buildinl'! '1,000 will' supply 'he I"lass and' allo.w for the necessary pohJ'iDe &0 make the Churcb waterproof again. Can you belp,! fit

Ai,

SO YOU'RE TAKING YOUR VACATION IN AUGUST THIS YEAR. HAVE A GOOD TIME. PERHAPS YOU WILL REMEMBER THE REFUGEE CHILDREN BEFORE YOU TAKE OFF! TEN DOLLARS STILL BUYS A FOOD PACKAGE! IF ~OU TOOK YOUR VACATION IN JULY )'ou are pro. abl, saying rigb~ now "there's no place like home. Theile SUIDmer piowes are alright but they don't have the things I have at bome." And you are right .. , there's no place like home where )'ou have everything you want and in its proper place. This ma, be true in your own home. BUT, it certainly isn't true of the HOUSE OF THE L()RD in the mission lands of the Near East. Tbe need is desperate for the bare essentials. Can you help? You mal l:'ive an article for your own intcntion or for the welfare of the living, or the eternal rest 01 a departed one. Candles $25 Mass Book $25 Ciborium ... ' $40 Sanduary Lamp 15 Altar Stone 10 Crucifix .••••••. %5 MalIS Bells 5 ~Mass Vcstmcllla 50 Picture 15 NOTHING MUCH TO DO 'fl'IESE SUMMER DA YS? WHY" NOT CHECK YOUR WILL TO BE CERTAIN YOU HAVE MENTIONED THE CATHOLIC NEAR EAST MISSIONS .•. MAKE YOUR WILL GOD'S WILLI YACOUB and WAfUB wil'h tot bring Christ and HisCliurcb to the land 01 'he pyramids. They wish to work as pricsts among their Iriends and neighbors. Each bOI will need a spunsor to pay bis neC!!)lI.'!arl ex. penses 01 $100 a Jear during the sill year aeminar, course. Would :rOll like "&0 adopt" Me of them! MASS OFFERINGS UNITE THE SPIRITUAL AND THE MATERIAL ... THEY BRING SPIRITUAL STRENGTH TO YOU ••• MATERIAL NECESSITIES TO YOUR MISSIONARY PRIESTS .•• REMEMBl!:R· THEM TODA YI "'STU CRUNE and SISTER BARBARA III.... a .aee.. c1esIN tit ...... 'lieir Ii.." .. tlte se"1ee ., &lie Mot"er ., GM .. aal'bdatl.......... ben i. &Ite re. . . . more titan ODele fa recent !DOD AU ...... remedt. lIaye' bee. IUl'ceate4. bat we It_w that ....... peace e_ _ 0Db wMit the aooeptanee of CItrtst aad Ria Motber. Will :rou llfOlp thae ,01IoC I"rls Utrouell their "eried of novltiale kalDlnc 'so the1 lIla:r brlq Christ and His Mother &0 tbe~ friends and neighbors'! Eaeh eirl must baTe a apoilllOl' who will pa,' her DeeeSSI..')' expenses 01 $150 a Tell' .uriog the two tear Dovitlale ,&ralnlng. Would ' " care to line -a Dan III the· rami I,!" '

0'

GIVE TO WIN THE WORLD FOR CHRISTI

~'near Fast Olissionslitt. FRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN, Pr.sident Msgr. '.ter'. Tuohy, Nat'l Sec'y S.nd all communications to:

_

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• ,.

.Prayers "tor Refugees

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Pet1£~ful

Coexistence' .

Weekly~alendar Of Feast Days

The Bishop has asked that Sunday be observed throughout the Diocese as a day of. prayer for the refugees~f the

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,TODAY ---, St. Appollinaris, Bishop-Martyr. He is said t. have come from Antioch witb St. Peter' and to ha've beEm appointed the first Bishop of Ravenna. His life was one of continuous suffering at the hands of persecutors ami. he is said to have persevered through a long serieso( tor~ures. He was ban- , ished three times froI!l Ravenna. , . He died fron: the effects of torturean,d fatigup, during the reign of Vespasian in 79 A.D.

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. It is a good thing to pause in the midst of vacation time and summer distractions to bear the power of prayer on such a serious Gonsideration.' ' The ;arrow mind; p~'ayerful orily for its own needs, has ,no place in Catholicism. The prayers of the Catholic must be the prayer of Christ and lIis prayer was and is always for all men and especially 'for those who can put forth the special claim of need: The refugees of the world have t~is. special claim to our prayers. They are suffering, but thE1Y do. not even have the opportunity to suffer in their own ,home andcoulltry. They are wanderers of the world, disposessed, stateless. The burden of their sorrow is intensified by the fear that they are forgotten as well.

TOMORROW - St. Christina, Virgin-Martyr The dates of her lifetime ar~ unkrown, but she is said to ha"c been a Roman who was converted to Christianity. She destroyeQ some golden idols wh'ich belonged. to her father, a pagan magistrate. For her action . she endured tortures, and at length was put to death on an island in the lake oi; Bolsena.

The power of prayer is great, becauseit is of God. The prayers of the faithful of the Diocese next Sunday 'will, , . ' ' in God's providence, help the refugees ;to carry the cross of sorrow and homelessness. The supplies that the faithful have sent to them through the Bishops Relief Drive and the Thanksgiving Clothing Drive will be fortified by the I sact:ifice 0 f prayers. ,

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SATURDAY - St. James the Greater, Apostle. He .was the 'son of Zebedee and Salorrl'e and

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was brought before King Herod Agrippa and accused as a Chris· tian, his fearless confession SO I e e moved the public prosecutor that .A leading Methodist monthly --:. World Outlook - is . he declared himself a Christian · k" 't 'd ··t A t ' t . 'd " 1 on the spot. Both accused and as mg I s rea ers m I s ugus 'Issue () avOl any appea . By Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S. Kennedy accuser were put to death for to or from religil?n" in next year'~ presidential election.' . '"Mary Ellen Kelly, author of But With-the Dawn, Re- the Faith: Coming from a responsible Protestant source, this is - joicing (Bruce. $3), was 12 ye~rs old when it, became plain, SUNDAY _ St. Anne, the a refreshing contribution to a s'ensible approach on the. that she was a victim of rheumatoid a.rthritis. All through mother of the ·Blessed Virgin whole question ofa candidate and his religion. her childhood there had been small, transient signs of some . Mary. She was far advanced in . 1'1 b t 't age when 'Mary was born. She The editorial says, "Religious convictions may influence' physica al ment, U I , was her. She gets rides in am~u-· was the spouse of St. Joachim. . . • •• positions, but,in a secular democracy, the position is· not until 1.935. that there set lances, but more often, it .seems, the criterion' and not .the religious belief,'" in. the ':pain which was more in hearses ("As two enbillmers' MONDAY - St. Pantaleoll, , . ' . . carried me up a narrow path for ·Martyr. He was a physician and The article points out ·that relig'ion does affect a or .less' to be my compamon a better, view,: looked into the with St. Luke is 'patron of med,. . . of my Ilife. It sky and prayed silently, 'Dear. ical . men. It is said th.at early.. ia 'candidate's position. on cpublic affairs an d CItes -the stan d . theremai;-der taggM along wherever went, · . . . I d f God, thank You for creating his life he was led into apostasy; 'of Methodists on probation,' Quakers nabona e ,ense, interfered with undertakers!'''). And' she has, but' later re-embraced the Faith. Christian Scientist$ on health. Members, .of these religious. nearly' everyridden -thousapds'of dusty mile. It is certain that he suffered . bodies as well .as Catholics, are influen¢edby their religious - :::~:r~p~~~~~ in baggage cars. : martyrdom at the imperial resi-' convictions; the monthly states, and 'the test of a candidate, sleep." Miss Kelly w'rites light-heart-. dence of Nicodemia between 301 must be how well he will live. up to hili h'ighoffice 'with the The K e 11 y edly abou~ her travafls as well and 305. positions he,takes on i s s u e s . · . 1 'Family,' hving . as her travels. How can she be TUESDAY _ ·SS. NazariUl!l, I .... , .' ., in the Iowa so • happy ,in the midst. of what' Celsus' and' Victor, Martyrs. St.' The fact .that a M;ethodist journal has pointed out that, town of Marcus, many would construe as tragedy? Nazarius, who lived in the first religion should .not be an issue in politics' or ,if it is made an· had not had "My career is one of· illness century, was the son of a pagan issue in the case of' a Catholic, then it becomes just as things easy. The and sacrifice," she ·explains. Roman army' officer 'and em. 'much an issue in the case of a MethQdist or Quaker or .~ de p r.e s s i on "Just as in any other 'career; I braced the Christi~n faith of hi. can be successfuI,ma<jiocre; or:' mother, Perpetua. With S. Cel/ Christian Sci~ntist i~a .Yaluable' contribution t9.~I~ar·thihk~: ,h ad· reduced them to severe • flop, Naturally, I want the first - sus, his youthful companion, be ing and politi<;~l candidacy. straits. Mr. Kel-not only' for the usual'reasons was beheaded under Nero ~ ,ly~was. wiUwut work. The litpe. :":"'bl.\J;. because 'in' this case suc-' Milan.' St. Victor.' an ·African. refreshment shop run by Mrs. cess"means my;wjll being one" succeeded St. EIeutherius·.H . ." . ' . :,. • "., . ""!. Kelly had to close. ,On top of all ,:with .GOd's'" ane th€.more it; is," 'Pope iii 189 and ruled' until 191: 'h If t f' d'l' I' . th"o r . this, ·th,ere ·.came : the ,illnell8 of "G'"d' . '.' ' . k th 'b· F our an d.o~e-. .' ' : .. a .. on~ 0 ',. ~e Icas,u,pp l~s,~or .. ~' U ' their only daughter. the ore .. ocan.:wor·. roug;. ~~, ,,: wEDNESD;\Y~St. Martha f1I.: hundred thousand dollars have, been presented to Dr;'Albert me. ". . ' " '., :.Bethany;,Yirgin: She' ,was the .. Schweitzer ·for..·.hi~· medical ·mission. TheJJ:~~arkabiea~p~t .".Mary, Ellen was five years i'n a' , She.has. accepted:'; her 'plight., sister of St. Mary Magdalene and of this is that the supplies were:collected,fl'omFrance'and, hospital.' The disease had stif- She, sees it as hel"vocation..This St. Lazarus., They entertained Italy' ' thr.oilgh . th~ 'effort,s, of '.~.' ..thirtAAn' y'ea'r old A.mer.icait,,'. ·fened her arms, legs, spine, n~k, . is ' ~hat . C;;od has, appointed for ~ "Our. Lord in their home, She i. Y. , s o t h a t she could not.move.OI' her. She agree~ to it; She finds it said to have attended·Christ· ia boy who began ;the eollection 'by trying to send a .. Dottle do anything for herself. The Pllin an, opportunity for' ,pertection. His Passion and rejoiced with of aspirin to the. missioner.' , . "', . ," " .. ~' .... , . was excruciating, She underwent It has, for example, provided her Him after the Resurrection. It . .' lie'r, musician .. series of operations, eachftean with solitUde,' with t.h.. e time an.d ;is .said that with her brother • On rec,ei.villg the :sup'plies, the p·hilosop' '. J .".' .' • . ' .,ordeal in itself and in its a r- the silence .·for medita~ion. She and sister, she went to Marseilles and cdoctor said, '''I. never thought a chil!i could do so niuch math. One operation enabled her has hours for prayers, and' she' arid aided: in the introduction 01. for my hospital. It is an extraordinary t~ing." to move her arins just enough 10 strives to advance in the practice Christianity in France. , . , that she could write. of praye.r. People, even wise ones, are forever 'underestimating the power of an ind.ividiml'and the influen:ce of even a youngWrites Regularly What is ,more impodant than . .' that? She perceives the great during the procession, she made ster. That is why so 'many live each day completely unaware In the years th~t follo:w ed , blessing under the·' appearance . her plea. There was no cure at ' ' of the influence they are h~ving on those around 'them for both at home and In hospItals, of great deprivation, and she all. OOd or b a d . ' she has done a great d~al of rejoices. g . "Regret ripped through me writing. She now contrIbutes like a fiery sword, leaving a Helps Others A Catholic especially is a source Qf good or scandal regular columns to newspapers I and' magazines, has composed She has beneficially affected path of scalding. tears. Several a though he may not advert to this. There 'seems tQ be the full length articles for religious the lives' of more people than agonizing moments later, I waa general knowledge that more is expected from Catholics, arid general magazines, and her are truly benefitted by the rest filled 'with a sweet, indescribable that 'there is a definite' way of living tnat Catholics must 'latest production is this book. of us Viho can get about, as we peace and clarity that left no . room for confusion. For sudfulfull to be true to their convictions. ' She is the foundress of the' - ,choose. On board ship, for ex- denly I knew beyond all doubt ample, as she heads for Europe, Just, as a youngster with an· idea cOl1ld bring so much . League of Shut-In· SOcIalists, strangers are required to do that God wanted me· to. remaiia . . . .m F renc h E qua t ' I Africa, . nowdisabled numbersmen, about 2,500 things for her: a stewardess. h.as an invalid-a complete invalidd goo t 0 a mISSIOn oria so a person which sick and women. and that only through this living the Catholic ideal can bring the wealth of good ex- and children in "'any parts .of to feed her, a ship's carpenter physical imprisonment would I , , .... has to work on h~r cot. ample to the. lives of countless of his fellows. the world. The league p~blicabe led to eternal freedom. Thi. tion, Seconds Sanctified, Miss' She has a chancc to talk with was God's Will, and all of me Kelly prepares; it goes out to them; they 'communicate confi-' accepted the decision." people in all 50 states and in dences; she gives them light on Miss Kelly pays tribute to aD three dozen countries from Pak- life 'which they haa.. not previthe people whose kindness hal istan to Peru. _ ously known of. made things somewhat easier for In her trips to. different her. Her highest praise is re~ Miss Kelly herself is hardly a shut-in as that word is normally \ shrines, has sh~ ever asked. for served for her mother who, since interpreted. She has travelled all a cure? At Fatima she prayed OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF' THE DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER over the United States, has for a partial cure. ThiS would the death of her husband, haa borne the burden, day and' night, Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River· journeyed on pilgrimage to the leave her still an invalid" still of caring for' her daughter. , '. . principal shrines of Canada, has doing her job with the, shut-ins. 410 Highland 'Avenue . But then, Mrs. Kelly has an crossed the- ocean' to visit Rome, But it would help her to do the' . Fall River. Mass. OSborne 5-7151 Lourdes, and Fatima. She goes job better if .she h<.id some sup- extraordinary daughter, as this PUBLISHER out to the' movies, pays visits, etc. pleness in her hands, could move' b60k strongly attests. It is not Most Rev. Jame.s L. Connolly. 0,0.. PhD.' Yet her illness holds her fast. her head, could be less depend- merely_another of those increag. ingly numerous accounts of the GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MANAGER How does' she manage all this ent on others.' . over~oming of major pandicaps, gadding a~out?' . . . Sees God's Will Rev. Daniel F. Sholloo,. M.A. Rev. John P. Driscoll but a moving reco,rd of the 'rec" MANAGING EDITOR Grateful for Undertakers Hence, when Christ in the ognition of, and assent to, a H~9h J. Golden Well, 'there a.-e frienWi to EuchaFist, wasrili~ed over her special and noble"vocation,.

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From POPE ,.TOHN xxm: AD Authoritative Biography By Zsolt Aradi, Msgr. James I. Tucek"and James C. O'Neill, Copyright. 1959. bJ' Farrar, Straus and Cudahy, Inc.• Publishers.

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THE ANCHORThurs., July 23, 19S9

DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER, MASS.

, PART V , Popeo Benedict XV summoned 40-year-old Father- Anhge.lo bRoncal!i to Rome in 1921. Thirty-seven years later IS rother Cardinals el!'lcted him to succeed Pope Pius XII. The 56-year round trip to Rome and back fittingly began with .the education of 0 M '. f h J;l ay 3, 1922, Pope Pius XI 'h f t t e uhu,re pope In on.e Ch f ld 0 t e 'decreed that the he'adquarters, urc s greatest Ie s, of the Society be transferred to the missions. Father Ron- Rome and he provided a new calli's job was to help coordinate the activities ,of the Congregation for the Propagation ,of the Faith. The problem of coordina-' tion was not an easy one. None of the three subsidiary, mission organizations which, contributed heavily to the financial support of mission work were located in Rome. New Approach to Missions The Society for the Propagation of the Faith had its headquarters in Lyons, France. That of the Society of the Holy Infancy was located in Fribourg Switzerland. And the Society of St. Peter the Apostle for the native clergy was administered from Paris. For many years the popes were content to, have these organizations remain outside of Rome. But after World War I it became clear that it was not desirable in some cases to have one country

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to deal detail unsolved with Bulgaria and withincertain problems of the 50,000 Catholics who lived there in the midst of the members of the Orthodox Church. The problems were many and complex and they involved other nations besides Bulgaria and there was a need for an investigator. to learn the facts first hand and to report. Pius XI made up his mind quickly. He appointed Angelo Roncalli Apostolic Visitor to Bulgaria. The date was March 3, 1925. The appointment carried with it the rank of archbishop. Thus Angelo Giuseppe Roncalli on the 25th anniversary of his, first arrival in Rome and on the feast day of his patron saint, St. Joseph, ;March 19, 1925 was consecrated a bishop in the church of San Carlo on the Corso, dedicated to St. Charles Borromeo. . Visits Parents

constitution for, the society. From then,.on,it.was to be known, as, the Pontifical Society for the Propagation of the Faith. Father Roncalli remained a member of the supreme council, and president of the Italian national branch. He a,lso received an, additional delicate task. This was to help form new' national branches. , Between 1922 and 1924 he, traveled often to various European capitals, giving advice and explaining the' new statutes, helping the nati,onal organizations. to overcOme difficulties. More Work These trips took him to Paris, Brussels, Munich, Amsterdam, Vienna and elsewhere. It was important that everyone concern,ed should properly under,stand the reasons behind the reorganization and that the transfer to Rome did not aim at

The next day Archbishop Roncalli celebrated his first pontifical Mass at the altar said to stand over the tomb of St. Peter if). the Vatican Basilica, the same Mass altar where he had said his first after ordination. ' ' Because he was not governing adiocese his title was' that of Titular Archbishop,of Areopolis. ,re was 44 years old. Before assurning his new duties he went

cl~sely idel)tified with the oper- unnecessary centralization. ation 'of missions in Asia and 'Angelo Roncalli ,was one of , Africa. It was seen that with the th~ p e 9ple whom the Pope knew" 'rapid developments of modern Weil. PhIsXI,knew his capacity' ",times, ,a new approach was" for work and so he did with R 11" h t h d'd . ,.. ' needed to meet the demands of, ' onca 1 w a e I WIth others ',' , 'P,'O,P, E PIUS, XI'. D'u';'r"I'ng hI'S pontI'fI'cate, Father' 'Ron'missionary ,work.' " 'of similar stature: he gave 'him home to Sotto il Monte. , ~enedict XV had this in mind more work" " " calli wa's named a Prothonotary Apostolic which gave him' He visited with his 58-year-old when he called Angelo Roncalli, In 1924 the Pope announced "the raIlk and, title of l\1onsignor. ' ". ' ' ': ,mother and his' 71-year-old , to Rome to study the possibility' tha't 1925 would be it Holy ' Y e a r . f a t l i e r . lived in the, th . " Among other proJ'e t th' 'p' the Church both east and west ficient time to do pastoral work, farm house where the m";ority · t' oassociations. 109 Pope ese knew varlous, , ".' '" , c s e ope was'tirioroken.' ... sisf coor dma The of deCIded to set up a rnissiollary "hearing confessions, 'preaching, 'of his married brothers and " RQnl;il,lli's outstanding or:ganiza- exhibition, the first of Its kind. ,',' T~is profe1lsorship was of great and· giving retreats for priests ters also liv.ed. The ,new' archtional abilities an'd sound spir- !Ie chose Msgr. Roncalli for, the value -to him in his later assign- and laymen. bishop ~nd his peasant fS!Dily itual, political and intellectual 'Job; naming him to the central :ments., His knowledge the While, Angelo Roncalli was and friends shared those few 'qualities. He had 'known' inti-' committee of the Holy' Year, ':.. Wo~ks of the F"thers' of the 'busy learn!ng the workings of brief' weeks togE;ther. Then they matelY,Bishop Radini Tedeschj The missionary exhibit was so "Church, was to be bound up with the Roman Curia offices which said their goodbyes 'and the and through him knew what dear, to the heart 'of, the Pope :' !lis' 'assignments' in Bulgaria, ,admiflister the over-all affairs .. archbishop headed East not at . k' d f . d th that he mentioned 't t th C Turkey arid~,Greece in his' con- ,of the Church, a young m,an of' all sure of what the fut~re held. .. , m 0 a' prIest'!l:n man e " I, 0 ,e v ar tacts w,ith t~'e' 'Orthodo'x' and' the .' ' "Bishop's young secretary. was., dma~"'.' m"a speech,3;fJ ,early as 35,.' Benito Mussolirii came to (Next week Peacemaker Pope Pius XI J\.i3:Y, 1~23. It was to ,show, the ,n<:>n-Latin 'Rite Catholics' of. power as Prime Minister under ,lor t-'e Pope) 'Three years prior to Roncalli's, ,daily,. work of the missior;,aries ' those nations., " ',King'IVictor Emmanuel III. , . appointment, the' Pope had,"'se- ': ,a,04. the life of their,people: in It also' gave l,tirn ·the cha,nct\ to .' "It was, to be ,another interest-:-, ",lected another' close friend' of" ~~rl~a, Australia, 'Llitin, A,m'er- form~late defini.te vi~ws'·ori.'t~e ing fact that in his years which When it's tim. .r .. : ' "'Bishop Radini Tedeschi, .Achille .l~a ,a~d t.he F~' ,East. ,,:, , ,9?ellbon ofr~un~on.\\?th tile ,~IS- 'groomed him for the papacy, '" Ratti; for a' cruCial task. Ratti ;',," ,~lDS, p~pfs . P,ra,ise' .'. . sfd~,n,t ~~ur~h~s of.. th~, Ei~st. Angelo Roncalli was not to be in ,to retire .,. •..."uy ; " had' been sent.' to"'Poland.aS a, ,It, n.~ed~~, more tha~ O~~.inary,T!:ur,try'e?rs.}~terh~, wa~ t?~n- Italy while MusSol.iIii held lib~ . , papal ,representati~e to investi- :' or~~m~at,l<;ln~~,t!l:~ent ." ~~~o.ntact '", n~,u,,~~lCll,lll. Ill~Il t?, C9I1vo~~; an "l~te .vo,wer. , " .~ g'a~e ..'th~ chan~~ for a rie~ ap- all missionary centers;' CQ~~di- ecumem?aJ",. ~~~!,l'rIl. '\!>" ~x~Jore "i"" ',;Named,'AHlhbishop ''''','; ',,1,' " h t ' d',R', . 'h"" h" na,te the w,ork and, select a.n"d'set "t,he p,osSIb,Il,lbes of umon. : ""At the:'beginning of 1925 1 Pope ,; I Ji'r~a?, qwar 'cit'revolution. ,lJ,SSla 'N Ie:. , was ,,:'up ,the , ".. , pIctures.' , .'. ' ',:, " '" , ' ",Priestly, . . . Duty, .'" . .was ' , "in the throes displays, charts, ,'PlU~ XI~ll, !lttenhon. ,,drawn, ~ .' Be~ed'ict' XV died a "few" " ~sgr .. Roncalli worked, with a "~co BusY. as'hemight be with, ,his ::!.. 19 ~as~~rn Ji:ur!3pe., In February , months after he called Roncalli legIon of' enthusiastic dedicated " 'three: or four jobs' Msgr: Ron-, of that year, the Apostolic Ad-: ,to Rome. Thene\v Pop~ who pl'iests. He himself' dealt with ;; calli, bever gave up his priestly '~'m'inisiratoi' o{'Ultiri Rite Catheinerged from the' conclave ~as ,t?e'" press, Ita~ian and intel.'na-' ' vocation for' the' care of, souls. ,'; 'olics died at Sofia; Bulgaria; Achille Ratti whom Benedict ,tIonal and' WIth, Catholic' and" 'For Angelo Rbncalli the priestly The event required the Pope ," had made a Cardinal le~ than non..:Catholic scholars. ' d u t y ' w a s part of his' nature. ' .• year b'efore~ " " " The e~hibiti.o':l wa~, in addi-,':Ev~n 'in.'R~m,~, in spite afhia Pius. XI was a scholar, a man, , tlOn t~ Its relIgIOUS Interest,. of " bU~Y. days; he always had sufSCRAP, METALS of qUick action. He had met great Importance to ethnologISts ' '. , WASTE PAPER - RAGS Father Roncalli years before an~ anthropologists. Out of j.t "'!, ~,"'!, ---~~~- . . TRUCKS AND TRAILERS foR ,~hen as avery young priest the':" gr~",: the, present EthnologiCal future Pope John' XXIII had'; MISSIOnary Museum, housed in f'' , 'PAPER DRIVES CHURCHES, SCOUTS and embarked on the ambitious pro-' the Lateran Palac~, considered ",',', ',',', 276 Central St., Fall River ject of writing and editing 'the .. :..one of the best VIsual ,exhibits CIVIC ORGANIZATIONS 1080 'Shawmut Avenue pastoral travels of St. 'Charles ?f peoples' ways of life gathered' OSborne 6-8279 New' Bedford WY 2~7828, Borromeo in Roncalli's native In on~ place. diocese of Bergamo. ' , ~he :~p~ was sati~ied 'with , O I L BURNERS , Named Monsignor theexhlblhon and he praised the ' Also ,complete ,Bone~Burner Ratti asked Father Roncalli to e?,pert.s, 'the scholars, the' mis-' ~:~ ~~~ra::at~~~tsBur~~~C~:~ remain in his post at'- the Pro~ SlOnanes and, of cour~, Roncaill. fuel oil sales' and service. agation Congregation. 'He named . Teache~ "gaID.. I 0'1 I '' him a Prothonotary Apostolic B e s 1. des h~s orgam:atIonal ,ta ey "I 0., which gave him the rank and wo~k, 'hIS travelIng and hIS other 480 Mt. Pleasant Street' title of Monsignor. dutIes, ~sgr. Ron?all.i we~t back New Bedford' ' WY 3-2667 Pius XI also appointed Ron-, to teach mg. BegInmng In 1923 calli a,member of the board of ~e became a professor of Patris'the Society for the Propagation bcs ~the Fathers of .the Church} of the Faith, the governing body at tlie Roman SemInary where . of which was still in France, he ~aq been a student 20 years aQd also president of the Italian' earlIer. He. had taught a similar course .national branch of the same' ,:THE association. at th.e Seminary in Bergamo. It. . ,Roncalli's task was to make ~equ~red him .t} keep constantly PLAN " , further studies and suggestions In ~I~d t.he 'fIrst 1~ centuries of on the coordination ,of all the C:hnshamt,Y, espeCIally the first sWilsidiary agencies of the Con- ,SIX' centunes when the ,unitY of gregation of the Propagation of ThomasF. Monaghan Jr. the Faith, a study which was " already well-advanced: Treasurer Father Roncalli helped prepare the new statutes of the association and acquainted himself 142 SECOND STREET AUTO BODY AND with the thoughts of the Pope on the missions in general, on' FAll RIVER GENERAl REPAIRS' building up the native clergy, ,~ 75 Bellville Ave. WY 3-7661 and on the legitimate aspiraUolUI ,OSborne 5-7856 for independence in the spirit' New Bedford of the universality'of the Churc:b.

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BuiJt-:fns'A'ns~~r Sto~ageN'ee'd Add Decorative' Note' to_ 'Home

'-,-THE· ANCHOR T~ur5 .• J~ly23; 1959

DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER, MASS,

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By Alice Bough Cahill' ' , Built-ins simply ,intrigue me, but wh~n they're mentioned to some people they object, "but those build-ins are only for modern." Today's ingenious storage ideas and duaIuse features ate not restricted to moderh, for youc~n find themeqllally suitable, in ~ provides and the small 'amount home furnished in tradition- of space it ' takes. al style. If you have a small We think of built-ins as someroom, you can open up lots thing 'recently discovered, but in

Beauty Winner Yields Title

OMAHA, (NC) - Mary Jeall Belitz, 18, resigned as Miss' Omaha of 1959 because, she said, she was told she could not reenter Duchesne College here if ,she went through \Vith.abathing suit contest for the title of Miss . Nebraska. Miss_Belitz, 'a' Catholic, holds a four-year scholarship to the college; which is conducted by the Religious of the Sacred , Heart. She said she was also told she could not transfer to Cre.igh:" ton. University, a coeducational Catholic school, if she t~ok part in the ,contest. , " ,

more living spa'ce by building in furniture flat against the ·wall. Bliilt-ins.w.ill o c c u py 'floor' spiice w her e conventionalsized furniture won't fit; and

the '.ear:ly 11900's many homes had built-in china cabinets and how theY:dflto:: a house! These cabinets wrre the, pride of their owners, b~cause they provided ample' space for dinnerware and linen storage, eve;" if they 'didn't add much to the appearance of the room. Even .the loveliest they will' take porcelain 'lboked junky piled in "1 put my Catholic educati~. .up less·, room.. uneven','statks in' them. " CEN'. . ' To,. prove this, , . ,'ERVILLE PARISH BALL: The committee for above the otherj"she said.. we took out our What' wouid you do: with stich .the .second annual Summer Ball of Our Lady' of Victory' 'tape measure . a cabinet? Here's an idea worth P h -C t '11 ' and here are . copyjrig. 1£ you want to keep this . ~rIS " en erVl e, pause at intermissign with their pastor,. Holy' Ghost Missionary. prac'tical'built-in, but w"ould like Rev. Howard A. Waldron. Left to right, Arthur Maddelena . :~nets.mel!sure.,. to change i:ts drab iook, remove Mrs. Arthur. Maddelen~, . Father Waldron, 'Mrs. Stephe~ To Tea'ch in' Japan' TECHNY (NC)-A nun whe . Eight'een inches as minimum,' the glass doors, replacing them O'Brien and Dou'glas-J\furphy.' .. . . has served as a teacher. and a' depth from the '~aILwould be with doors trimmed with mould, magazine editor has been all;tsigned to a mission post . ia Japan.· . adequate for most bookcases 'each 'end, 'backing this space· .. '(yes,"you:,mayhave' a big dic-' . with . ~irrors to reflect planters I ' IC ., Sister IJ'Ylmoll~ta Rei'da, whose tionary,anq sOipeare books '~hat, 'you placeo:n bottom shelf. Have ,PORTLAND (NC)-A study inigr~nts ascended faste~ the hometown is Ornaha; has beeil' ,need. mote' s.P' a.·ce, but 'they'll'., ~e,doQrs aqd tdr.a~er pulls carr,Y p' conducted two' University ' , ' t th tl' dby O . I ' . t "d'of ' s.ociaJ: scale over the prec'ed'ing appointed to head' the English' robabl,y fit· e)sewh,~re..:. 'F.or a .."ou..th, e,IIge.o.ip,.e riC. pa.ttern. You,.ll . or an, reo SOCIO d h' t' 't'h'" 'b "togls ' t s III' 1-f · g'eneratfon, in terms of 's'ocI'al and department at the Holy Ghost " Pbench built flat:;\gainst' the' , L.'; ....,. " ~I .e , ?t t e dIfference thiS ca es . ere.~ay. e . w~ ypes 0 economic status. . .. , . , Missionary Sisters' juniQr college' . wall, 18' inches' is enough depth; .fa~~-hft1ng··1 make. to an ,ugly'. Cath?~lC',mlddle:class,. ~arked . . j . ' in 'Akita', Japan. Sister Immola'ta . but at least· 22 .'inches 'are 're-.' cabmet.· '.' ." by .dlfferlng, soclalobJect!ves. In the t:N O 'types of classes, the is a former editor of' the sisterof the older immigrants quiredfor a' cOrnfortable sloPed-". "An'Qther built-in helped con~n one group, according to the , _children befoFe 1882 ~ leaned toward hood) magazine; the Master'. , batik bench. " ,. . ' vert 'a ,smaU room into a guest· survey, are descendants of immi, 'Uselui Wall Seats room', and' sOlved the problem of· grant families which arrived in .wanting security. "Many of them Work. For the' past 11' years she' .,." Take for"instan~e a room' linen' 'storage. The room was to .. this ~oul1try before 1882. The w~nt ;to work for large 'corpora-' has taught 'schools in' Greenville and' enjoy fringe be'nefits," and Jackson;' Miss. She' joined " withri'gh't-angle casefuent w'in";' , ililye 'a daybed, and so the ~wners second group arrived alter ~882. ' tions , , the' sisterhood in i934. Dr.Liu said'. But children of the. , , ,; jl~w:S"Y9U:,ll fin~I;, t/:I.at ~ by ~uiid~::,: _buiU ~co,qt~i?ationheadboard': ~efor~ ] 882, .acco~ding to . newer immignint families lip"".. ,The, Akita college was opened " ing wall seats on two SIdes of the· ,~torage·un!tl WIth a deeP drawer 1!0cIOlogiStS Father DaVid Fosselpeared to ,care less for security." in 1954"an~ has, 125 students. room there'll be. so nlll~li added . for the' pill4w; 'shelves for books ' man, C.S,C" arid Dr. William Liu .. Connected wJth it are a kinder- , .eating, spacet,h.at ,~ivin'g,a big :'~~d ,?e,d.i~~Il; and a~abin,et for many , immigrants "were Irish:': "B~~ause their roots aTe' still garten with,228 children a jun- :. . party willbe,a,ple~ure: A.dd.a" sheet~. and:. blankets. Becailse . British and Dutch. After that' in the old rural cultural tradi. ineial-liilec:L planter. ,behind, 'the' .' there..~a!l 5,pace to st~re thihgs date the . largest number were tion; , they' still showed signs of ior high sChool with ·-155 students, a senior high' ~chool wiUa . .eats. where the .bench curves." , 'neede~, onIt for ,sleeping, the'. ·froni. eastern J or- southern Euro- . entrepi'eneurism a'nd ofa will- 'and 1,146 students. ., , Storage'space in' ~eats gives' . space d?ubI~,Q.as 11 den alief se~-' pean countries, su'ch as Poland, ingness to .struggle for status and this built-in Ii' doubie'li'fe; 'Pr:o":' . ~ng :r~J'Yl ~he,~ 'there were '1'0 !blly and Hungary, they said. achievement," Dr. 'Liu reported:' .' . , . . viding you with space for linens g\les~s.·, ' The "new" generation of· im,Material for the study came . ,am.~s, ,and other. items.' Foam~ , , 1r~m a sIDnpling of 10 per 'cent willlJ)'ake 'comfort,:. of· the . total Catholic ·students· able, eaSy-to-move covers. A-I~w' . 1 / enrolled in seven colleges and . 'pillows' 'add comfort lind 24-HOUR WRECKER " uriiversities' in the NOrthwest.··; color. . ' . '.' .' .... ~" " . . . , I ~ . SERVICE FJitherFossel1Plln and Dr. Liu / ., Do yoli have 'Ii 'window' in LOUISVILLE·(NC)'""'-Catholics'" to the missions. wilJ. . report on the. survey at a 35 HILJ,.MAN STREET 'alcove? Hci~ about study 'desk' h'ave failed to communicate' -, ' . in this. space? .A . board .fr·om· their ia:Jth·l·to others, a lay': The club has members 'in 49 ' September meeting 'of the AmerNEW BEDFORD' wall to' wall makes the top; with missioniiry ,4eclared' here. - states, ,Hawaii, and HI foreign ican ' SoCiologic~l' Society ill WY 6-8343 ' , Chicago. .i ' a ·shelf berow for' stationery or ' ." , .., ~ .. countries. . Elizabeth ~eid, an Australian' supplies: Book shelves. on each who 'is a member of the Grail ,w?ll will, be' COI~Vel1lent; the, Mov~ment aelivered:' the' key,, wligmhdto,;W dWlfl} provl~,e plent y, of - note addr;ss'at the national cond mg, an. tt ort' evel1lng rea . " 0" L' d f F . d .k I abma ' ventlOn :. of " 1ur, cia y '0 . add an a rac Ive es amp. ,1£ you don't want a desk in ·Rosary MakIng ub... ' ,such an alcove, how about a Of the more than two and 11,: dressing table if it happens to be half billion people in the world; in a bedroom. The window fur- Miss Reid said" there are only. nishes ideal lighting for daytime 500 million: baptized persons. use of a makeup mirror. "We' are here for a purpose," In Dad's den, .. shelves, cup-. she declared; "to turn history in boards and a desk, all built into a God-ward ,direction." ~ wall, provide several facilities Our Lady I 'of Fatima Rosary' ~ a sJ:Y!all aMount of s~<;lce: Di';;, ,Making "Club was founded in Vide the . upper part In. three; , LOuisville by the late Xaverlan . have c~?b~ hol,:s abov.e the,desk ' Brother 'Sylv~n in 1949. Its Dri10r wrrtmg "., suppll'es'' .o. ' n 0 ne .Sl"de : mary ,purpos~ ' ." . is, to answer Our, • liel~ " es. for book,S, and, Ori the Lady's pleas' at Fatima by fur- ' other sld~,.. slanted· shelves to. Fnishing handmade rOsaries tree hold maga Zl l1es.. ' " . . . I . Below the magazines y'~u' can' build cupboards for supplies'. It'. ", .) .' , \. amaziJlg_ the ,convenience '.;thi. "

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Irish 'Nuns TakeL Over·"· Hospital in Nigeria OWERRI (NC) - Three Missionary Sisters of the Assumptiott: from Ireland have taken charge of the ·Mbaise)oint Hospital at ,th~ request of Bishop Make all a~rangementll thru Joseph B. Whalen, t.S,Sp,,' of FALL RIVER Owerri, Nigeria. '. 'l'he ' hospital, which opened ·TRAVEi.BUREAU .with 32 beds and an out-patient Henry 'J. ~Feitelberg~' Trea's.., ; clinic, wa~ blessed by ...'Bishop 29 No. Main: . . Os 5~'740il: ,; Whelan.

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THE ANCHOR--

fo Fight FiJi:hMerchants'

Thurs .• July 23. 1959

9

D.IOCESE OF FALL RIVER. MASS

Pre'ying on'Your'Children'

St. Pius X Statue Gift of Alumnae

By Mary Tinley Dilly An appalling situation has arisen recently in America. There is imminent danger to your house and ours-any home where there are children. I refer to the mailing of pornographic literature to youngsters. In the bulk of mail, including the "J'unk" variety rolling . and photographic laborar-eceived daily by every fam- tories are processing poison that ity, this venomous poison may well destroy the bodies and may easily be ove.r1ooked un- 'souls of your youngsters and

. WASHINGTON (NC)-The International Federation of Cath-· olic Alumnae has fulfilled a pledge by gi~ing a statue of Pope S1. Pius X to the national Sl1dne of" the Immaculate Con.,. ception nearing completion here. The statue, a high-relief figure . in stone. the work of (korge Snowden is already in place on the ext.erior wall of the edifice's east porch. The IFCA has presented a cheClt for $3,000 Which it had pledged -to pay for the work. The alumnae group already had given $20,000 for two rose windows which will be fitted into the east and west walis of the great church. .The· IFCA has a membership o~. more than 500,000 women graduates of Catholic secondary schO(}ls and ~l1eges.

less parents are on the aler.t. ours. . Please be alert. The stuff' is . How . do these, money-mad ram p a J1 t fiends gain entree to our homes throughout our and our children? country. From m~iling lists, of course. . You may, as Where they ge: such lists is anywe have always body's guess. Perhaps from notadone, s imp 1 y tions of eighth grade graduaiions, a epa rat e the . ft'om births· registered during m ail e a c h the- 1940-45 period-or from inmorning: letters. noeent "send-aways": "How to addressed to. get rid of adolescent pimples"; "Mr." go here; "How to· be the ..strong man of "Mrs.'.' .there; your neighborhood." and :1 pile for Lists .procured, the bombard- . each child. ment starts. For 'two dollars,-. .l'Tever" . unti: .' . easy baby sitting money-you • Women Distrib'ute Cord the past ~ew months, have we., may have many, many issues of scrutinized me mail addressed startling this-and-that. You may PROGRESS IN HEART SURGERY: At St. Francis Rosaries in Missions OMAHA (NC)-SomeI9,0Q0 to our child'ren, Now we do. We rece!ve pictures. . Hospital, Roslyn, N. Y., Dianne Stein, 9, points to a machine feel justified' and believe. you. Parents the Key which took over functions of her.heart and lungs while cord rosa!"ies are scattered in Cath.oIic mission centers .around will too when you realize that "Parents," says the Postmaster surgeons mend.ed a hole between' .the inner walls of her the world,. thanks to 15 women not only YOllr teenagers, but General, "are the key to effective heart. Two years ago, St. Francis surgeons' repaired identihere joined under the title of even grade school children are' action against this racket. They' . . M. ary, 61ft . " the in h earl o.f h'er SIster, , e·',·b y "freezmg Omaha Rosary Circle. receiving, completely unsolicited, should mobilize community' sup- cal.. defect. . 7'hree ye'ars ago the wom·e.t some of the most vile and deport behind" 'adequate law en- her t() slow down heart beat. photo.' . banded . together, Since then, grading "come-ons" imaginable'. forcement, raJ1y public opinion . ' . .. . they have produceil a regular. . Money the Answer' bebindnew a~ct stiffer legislaflo..y of the. cord rosaries by. Why'~'this' infamous assault' tiqn.'" wor.king at them in their spare made upoq the ch'i'ldren we Iiav~. As "key'.' people, we parents' r\.. time. . tried to train, fro'm infancx, to can 'detect this' affront as it en.,.·'ROME (NC)--"The represen-·. "Its easier than crocheting." t~ Cllristian' Democratic gov-' become true followers of Christ!'" tel's our mail boxes. It would be tatives ·'here . of the American said one member who is now Mon~y is the answer. A great' a mighty· unsophisticated and Bishops" 'charities organization ernment of being indifferent to adept in the art of taking four "traffic'" in children, exploitation deal of money. ' .' uncaring, parent who couldn't declared' that the main. concern of the poverty i:,f parents, and of yards Of thin cord and, with the Purveyersof 'filth have struck spot the "list" material by its in its adoption operations is the aid of a small instrument, knot• lodestone' as they seize· the '. addressographed" appearance,! future happiness and .welfare o:f ignoring the wishe.s of the child. ting the cord to form beads. A opportunity to extract quarters, though it is directed to 'out chil'- the Italian orphans,and children M!lgr. Landi made the follow- ,cross, and crucifix and scapular half-dollars' and dollars· from dren·. .', . sent to the U. S.for adoption. ing ..statement: are attached to each. those childish wallets· filled The Congress of the United Msgr.~drew P. . Landi, The women report that moia"Tlie offi~ beg~n working in with pictures of pet dogs and States has 'become concerned Brooklyn priest who is director sionaries who receive the cord th'isfield in 1951, when. the U. S. elassll\ates - even holy "carda. about this menace, with special in Italy of Catholic Relief ·Servrosaries are enthusiastic aboUt Out of those hundreds of thous~ommittees apPointed to study ices-National Catholic Welfare passed special legislation for the them, not only because of their . imm.il:ratloD Of. children . for aods of red, brown .or pale blue the problem.' As a first step, last Conference, made· the statement spiritual value, but because nawa'llets come allowances, babyyear a. law was passed which in the wake of attacks in Italy'. adoption. We have been in close tives like the different color~ sitting fees, lawn-cutting pay, permits prosecution of criminals left wing Press against adoptiiHl association in this with tbe Pon- cords used, and they are tifical Reliel Association, OUt" able and even washable." surreptitiously 'purloined by the . sending' out 'such filth, not only procedures. . Pied Pipers of Perdition as they at the point of mailing but in He stressed the careful CU,}- counterpart in Italy." . promise I'thrills"- :md "the sboCk- . the community in which it ~. work of the !IOCial workers inOrleans Food' Sale Countering eommunist claimt ine facts of reality.; received; volved in adoption.cases. both • that· '3,800 youngsters have been ~t. .Joan of Arc Friendi, Club, Alarm right from the top of This makes it much easier for in Italy and the United States. sent to the U. S.; Msgr. Landi Orleans, will sponsor a food sale. the U. S..' Postal. Service ia us, as' parents,. to start appre-' He' 'alsO" noted that the w()rk &I. said that since September, 1957. Friday, Aug. 2.1. Mrs. Carolyn lOunded by Postmaster General hending the villainS.' ' CBS-NeWC'm . the adoptiOft· CRS-NCWC bas assisted in pIscCushing and Mrs. Josephine Arthur E. Summerfield as he What to do when your home' , field is a voluntary effort.. · inc aMK'oJtimately 500 childr';!l\. Hortan are co-chairmen. tells us that these vicious would.Msgr. Landi's statement ·fol. th h ' and your children are outraged lowed the airin in the press M. be destroyers of our you ave by such pornographic literature, ... ~dlIhT.AT ~T 4lIkT ~T ~T ~TaTATdllhT ~T d1IhT ~T~T d1IhT-4 parlayed their filth racket into or.the threat thereof? incidents which took place at ~ . ~ a half-billion dollar business, It Rome's Ciampino Airport. One has doubled in the past five . Do not throw it away or burn involved discrepancies in pass- ~. .Loolc you can a .~ years. It "can double again by it. Save all materials, including ports issued for Italian children 1963" Mr. Summerfield predicts, envelope .and all enclosures. entrusted to an American lawyer unless concerted community ac- Turn the whole thing over im- not in any way 'connected with tion is.· taken against it. He mediately to your local post- CRS-NCWC. estimates that this year between master, by mail or in person. Political Fodder 700,000 and one million U, S. Only by such forthright action Communist and leftist sections children will be sent obscene can you save not only your own - of the press seized on the events material, or advertisements for children but those of your neigh-::: . d as political fodder, and accuse such materials, through the bors and compatriots from bemails. coming victims of one of the Perhaps your children will be most vicious rackets ever per. exempt-but that is the figure. petrated. The Postmaster General notes,· further that "even chilc:j.ren who Catholic Students Rank · b" B. F. GOODRICH, Dist. are ne.ver expose d 't~t.h e? sce!"'e .:, High in Examinations' RECAPPING DONE G' matenal may be. vlctuulzed .by:· . ~ l' sex criminals whose mihds 'have .' R"A-NGOON (NC) - Students IN OUR OWN PLANT ~. ~ been debauched by it." from St. Paul's Catholic school 365 MAIN STREET 1" All too often papers record _ here h~~e w?n t~e first ~our FAIRHAVEN ~ 'such grisly inciderits: 'You read' places' 1n;'nahonwlde' examma-" ,. WYMan' 7-4501 ~. them so do we. tions for entrance into the state. ',~."!,,_ ....._ _- - _ - - - - - " , ; : .~ As 'yOU read the words of this universities of Rangoon and eolumn, printing pI;'esses. are . .M~ndalay:. ,.' . .\ .. . . S1. Paul's, run by the Christian Trinity Alumnae to ·Brothers, '. is the first Burmese school ever to win. the first four .. ~ ~'~ Aug. 12 in OsterVi II places. Its students ll1s0 won 7th, ~ an Area alumnae of Trinity Col- 12th and 17th places in the state 299 ASHLEY BLVD. lege, Washington, D. C. will hold scholarship exams. opp. St. Kilian Church a reunion Wednesday, Aug. 12 at the home 0:.' Mrs. Robert F. Hyacinth D of I Free . Parking F.... Delivery .. ' . . Blodgett, Starboard Lan~, OsterHyacinth Circle 51, New BedNew Bedford WY 1·8281 ville. ford Daughters of Isabella, will . . Trinity alumnae who are sum- hold a mystery ride, Tuesday, mer visitors to Cape Cod,.are July 28.· Mrs. Julia Morris' ill invited to attend, in addition" to chairman, with Mrs. Mae Man.those expected from New York ning as co-chairman. 'The' Famil~ That and the New England sta-te•. Lunch will be served at noon. Prays Together

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Female Sales

St. Anne Sodality of St. Hyacinth Church, New Bedford; will hold a dessert bridge agd whist.' at 2 Wednesday afternoon, Aug. 5 at the home of Mrs. Eugene LaFrance, 235 Hawthorn Street. In case of rain, the event will be held in the parish hall Mra.· Philiaa Chartier ia c:hairmAa. .

Help Wanted SPARE TIME MONEY eaaily made sbowing Robinson Christmas and ~verJ" Day car€M to your friends, neighbors usiuC oar home aervice plan. 4-8 dollars an hour caD be made with little eftort on your part, No experience needed. aDd i& costa nothinc to try. You get our exQuisite I&IDple bolt"" on ..appro...l-oDr 5'( delia'htllal popular-design Christman PerwoJUO! imprint album FREE. Write at one" 1 ROBINSON' CAJm8 Dept, 421. Clinton, M....

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Bishop~-Receives

Papal Tip-Off On Council ' HONOLULU(NC H-Bishop James J. Sweeney of Honolulu returned here from his "ad limina" visit to .the Vat-

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Ancient, Many-Faceted Art_ o~ Organ Building I 10Thurs.,~~7::~cl~~~ Intrigues, F all Rit~er Craftsma.n .' I__

D_IOC_ES_EO_F_FAL_L",--RIV_ER_, M_AS--,S.

A'slender young Englishman, a recent convert,is one of the few practitioners in the Gallery Proposes Diocese of the' ancient art of .organ building. He is William Collins of St. Joseph's parish, To Bring· Artist Fall River, and he is a man in love with his craft. Still considered an apprentice, Collins has beeniearning the intricacies of organs fo r nearly five 'years: ,"It may take' 20 years for 0 0 a man to perfect himself in' . ' '.'. '.' . '. . ROME (NCr -,Rome's only one aspect of the work," ,Augustinian Friars have he says. The organ, largest opened a gallery ofcontem-' or musical instruments, emporary religious art "to' '

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ican with a: tip-off that theecumenical council announced by ;His Holiness Pope John 'XXIII will be held in two years, The tip-off, .the Bishgp exbraces a fuultitude ~f' crafts in bring art and the artist to God... , plained, came from l}on'e other The words are those of Father than the Pope himself. It hap- 'its construction.. Among them are woodworking, metalsmithing, Carlo Cremona,O.S.A. He is' pened this way: Prior of the Augustinian com":. "On leaving the Holy Father, 'leather work, ahd' electrical 'enmunity of Santa Mafia del PoI parted with the words, 'I will gineering. 'Mathematics'· is impolo and ,cocreator' of the new see Your Holiness in five years," portant, too. Among workers in gallery called the "AgostiniBishop Sweeney said, explaining Collins' company is a Harvard ana." that his next "ad limina" visit is graduate Who specializes in pr9blems involving wind presThe Agostiniana is housed' in s~h~duled in five years. "But redecorated vaults beneath the Pope John replied quite em- sure in organ pipes. Mostly Unseen Church of Santa Maria del Pophatically, 'I will see you in two Like illl iceberg,most of an polo. It is flush against the Piazza years at the council.''' < del Popolo, where Rome's comThe words "ad. limina," short- organ is unseen, "If people could munists hold their now diminened from "ad limina apostolo- only go behind an organ and ished rallies. The scent of pines rum" (to the threshold of the. see its wor;kings," says Collins. from the Pincio Hill contends apostles),refer to the visit bish- Ninety-five, per cent of the in~ with exhaust fumes from a. per·ops must mak~ to the· Holy See strument is handmade, requirpetual traffic jam. ,every fiv~ years to report on ing hours of individual attention from diver~e craftsmen. , Since its opening this spring conditions in their diocese. Most of tis thi~k of organs as the Agostiniana' has exhibited Studying English an integral part of churches, but works of 75 artists. Most have Bishop Sweeney said that the they were' :actually in secular ·been paintings, but there have Pope does not as yet speak Eng- use for centuries' before their also been sculptures, bas reliefs lish and he conversed. with the admittance to ecclesiastical servand ceramics. Holy Father through an inter- ices.. They, were invented in Great Interest .preter. But, he said, the Pope rudimentar~ form about 200 B.C. The gallery has aroused in'said he is studyIng English and and' were ~onsidered' a fitting ternational interest. Visitors also added "when you come to gift among kings. from many countries have sought the council, you will hear disser- , Not only:. interested in' the out the little gallery. \ tations in your mother tongue ,n.echanlcaf:~spect of the organ, CHECKS OLD" ORGAN: William CollIns che~ks pipes Father Gremona says the' through facilities similar t6 those bur ih'its, his'tory and' playing, of his parish.' organ, SL Jos,eph's, Fall River. A fine example Agostiniana is the result of a used in the ,United Nations." Collins has (j: sinall,library o n , casual chat with Aedo Galvani., director of th,e Fontenalla Gal: . The Bishop said, it is evident the sUbject,'as' well as phono:' .of its type, he terms it a well-voiced instrument. . that the Pope is loved deeply by graph' records of,w~rid-famous w' , h 'h~ .. ', 'd h ." ha've:' ,varYl'ng characterl'stl'CS, lery in Rome. Now Mr. Galvani d' t th Ag t' . It ihe Roman people. He said that instruments.' ,His ,ambition is .' est; t e' igher altltu e aVll1g it to such. an extent. ' said, Coltins. Andth«;! organ is l~~Bc St the A OSt.1I1.1ana ,as wet the Pontiff is energetic, looks e ve.ritually.. '.· ,~o ',. o·..·.w.n·, .':a·n :.·orga·n.,..· ·affected ". 'Organ' men' ,tak~,gJ:eat' pdde one 'of the few instruments for ' u egos mlana IS a na ...",' ,", ',' .... '. "." . iJr.al·,outgrowth. of., the,August'and a :ts younger than .·his' years doing, much "of its, 'bUl'ld'l'n"g himself. ' . ' : .1 . : .' ; :.,.. " in their'work:It'S"ridt urj(:ommort,'. \yhI,ch plec~s are. wntten that iriiim apostolate in general and and inakes everyo~e,feel .com~ ·S comp·.alny has wo'rlc'e'd ,'on Saili Coilins,' to find names of .can't be. played by.every organ " of" our apostolate . ,. at Santa. Maria pletely: at home...' . , . '. . , ' .. ' ", ' .Hl : :.' .. many orgarts fri the Diocese.workmeti inscribed on various ~,ny, .. :pla.n~,. ,for l.nsta.ll~e,... can ~del Popolo in particular/, Fathez Among the . largest in .this area parts of old instrllmeqts. "A.man pl;lya?y plano com'posltl~~; but Cremona says.' is' that' of Notre Darrie"pari'sh, may have been ,dead .50 years, when!t comes to ?,rgans, Pomp "Saint Augustine was a gi'eat Fall River. 'fI" . very old 'instru- but liere's something he made an,d CIrcumstance, to name one lover of art.' Augustinians have inent, now replaced, ~as in St: th'at's living after. him." example, can .only be play,ed been patrons of some of the VATICAN CITY' (NC)-Pop'e . Patrick's Church·,.also Fali River. Organs of' different countries adequat~ly on '~nstruments WIth world's 'greatest artists, such as J~hn XXIII paid special ;,tttention And ColHn~ singled out for the eqUlpme~t ~t calls for. . Raphael and Bernini. to documents of the Church's special mention the orgim in Organ statistIcs are fantastic, ' Artist at Mass councils during a tour of the his own parish, St. Joseph's. . The flute stop on an organ, for "Here at Santa Maria del PoVatican's secret archives. "It's a veryiwell..,voiced organ," Pilgrim~ instance, is the .equivalent of polo we have some of the finest VATICAN CrfY (NC) _ His' 56 flute players. PIpes vary from paintings in the world. Artists . The. Pontiff studied documents he said.By."lvoice",organmakerl! e' a half iqch in dia.met~.r to' whop'7 from the Via Margut.ta, - ' the of the Councils of Trent, 1545, m.ean the sO,und,S .m.,ade by t hHoliness Pope John XXIII will . . th t h h th t pipes' co.mposing, the pel's' ,ree sones . Ig ,a a aritists" quarter of' Rome naand the Vatican, 1869, including various . .,. ,grant general' audience at , h i s ' lk ,·t' . It +-k . • man can wa mo.. ,~.es turally come here for Mass: stenographic transcriptiori'ii of inst.ruine,nt".These.are v'e,ry deli.:', summer resi'dence of Castelgan-' ht th t . t b 'ld the 'Vatican council. He also ~ate, llffecteCI by',terrip~ra'~ure; , Clolfo every Wednesday',and Satelg" J.Don s. 0 a year 0 Ul , "Our apostolate to these arhumidi.ty, and.:ev,en--dust. An old . an average;-slze org.an, and th«:, tists demand' that 'we, put the lIcanned the decree of, the Coun. , urday afternoon at 6 P.M. . b fl' . d ., . , JO 0 c eanmg an repall~mg' source of all art within their cil of Florence, dated. 1439, that organ which has bee'n a 110· wed t'o' '. This 'was announced by Msgr.· one ' 1a. 'ready insta I ' occupy reach; No. one thirsts for spiritedIcan announced the' reunion "of' the bec.ome dusty' m'ay' s'ound all Mario NasalH Rocca di, Cornelth f f ree or.. our. men .or .weeks. uality like the artist." ·Gre.ek Church withRom~: 'This right when played, 'C'olll'ns sal'd,' hmo, the Maestro di Camera, . who Among organ-makers and orreunion proved. to be short lived. and after cleaning, ma.y be com- ' makes . the, arrangements for ,'t th' . . t d 'ff gams s,' f.'ere. are grea .' I 'erThe' Pope looked: into docu- Pletely out of tune, 'because dust . papal audiences and ceremonies. t t h . had. sealed ml'nute openl'n'gs' and ences 0 opInIons as oec nlques ments concerning his ~ativ~ Dio.IT'SALL RIGHT TO .He said the audiences will be . and materials of manufacture. cese. of, Bergamo and' 0,£ "St. Cracks l'n woo'dWol'kl'ng ·parts. held in a new hall that ·the Pope SHO'P AROUND FOR. . . h' But there's agreement· on one Charle's Bon:omeo, about. whom Ll'ke' W"omen was scheduled' to open, upon IS thing: the organ is here to stay SOME THINGS. BUT, he has' written several volumes. "Organs are like women," he arrival ·at Castelgandolfo. . and, far.from being static, it's an Eugenio, C~rdinal Tisser~nt, said, "all different and all tem. The Pope· will continue . his instrument that's' growing in popularity. the Vatican librarian and archi- peramental." 'They are influ- custom of publicly reciting the PHARMP_~Y vist of the Holy Roman Church, enced by altitude in addition to Angelus every Sunday at noon. It's entirely possible that guided the' Pope on the tour. 202-206 Rock Street o th er f ac t ors.,' 0 ne company, for His voice will be heard simultan' William C()llins won't be· the 't ·worked on an -organ . eously in St. Peter's basilica and The Pope also examined work ms Fall River ance, only do-it-yourselfer to build being done under the auspices f or a S a It L a k elY C 't c h urc h . I n square through a special conhis o,wn organ. ISTIi,g. PLACE I'D of an' international committee on per f e c t condition here, it nection to his summer residence, GET APRESCRIPTION wouldn't I!1ake a sound in the ,which is located south of Rome. the cataloging of the archives. , FILLED! .

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Pontiff Exa'mines . Early Documents

Pope to Greet World

TOUHEY'S

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How Do:You Rate' on F'acts 'of Faith~t

Catholicism Interests Students in England

MANCHESTER (NC) So many of the 6,500 ' students at Manchester University in England have been inquiring' ahout the' C~tholic Faith, that instruction .Classes will be started in By BRIAN CRONIN ,October, it was annou·nced. .' 1. The· hymns "0 Salutaris" and ,"Tantum Ergo'" are usually' "There is a big. interest in resllng during (a) High Mass? (b) Benediction? (c) Requiem ligion generally througllOut the Mass? (d) The Stations of the"Cross? '! . university," said Fr. Benjamin 2. Which one of the follow.ing apostles was riot present at' the 'Winterborne, S.J., the chaplain. Transfiguration?:-:(a) James? (b)' Peted (c) John? (d), "About 1,000 attended each day Andrew? . i. . during talks we··had earlier this 3. What was Christ's first miracle'in His public life on 'earth?:- year,. and 'many quest,ions were (a) The cure of the leper? (b) The miraculohs araft of fishes? 'ask;ed.": . " (c) The cure at the pool? (d) ·The changing of \v,ater irito wine?; > .Arphb~shopJohn,C. Heenan of, , 4., " On what day is 'the 'actual founding oftlie ,whole Church com- • LIverpool is expected to visit the· memorated?:-(a) Holy Thursday? (b). Easter Sunday? . (c)-' university - early next t~rm. to' (c) H.oly: .P~ntecost?· (dYChristmas' Day? ".;., C. . . - ';'. ~peak to, the .stud~nts. ~ 5.. James "Hopan. was an eminent. Catholic' a~chitect who de-' ,,' '" . , , ,... , signeg,i,:.~a).St. :.Peter'sBa~'uca:? (b) The!/.hife House? (c), r:",-~-",~-"- -,~--- -~;: St. Patr}c,ks·. Ca,thedral? (d) The Empire ~ta~e: I1ui1ding? ' , 6. Where>is. :the ·well-known.picture of 'OU'r,:,I'L'aay of Gu'ada.: ... : . . -. ..,. ,. lupe?::- '~a')' The Vatican?' (~) 'Panama? (c);'Guatamala? (d) ., '. CO : MexIco?, . ~ ," " ' .' :.,: • ,. T. The Je;;vish'pfiests' and :;Ph~risees resolvei:i'ori: the' dea'th'''of ' . . Jesus following . what mii',acl~?:::-(a) The ~r~#i~gofLazarus : '. eatn~g; IS": to life? (b) Th~iraculotis.draft of fishes?·(c)" The walking .:. 1 " , on the water? (d) The multiplicalion of loaves? . '. , , Which of the. :following decades of the Rosary is a Joyful! .' .' , " : Mystery? :-(a)_ The. Crowning' of: the 'Blessed Virgin in Hea: 365 NORTH FRONT STREET: ven'! (b) J'he Ascension? (c) The Nativity?: (d) The Ressur-' :' NEW. BEDFORD " re.ctlOn?, . " . : GlV.e yourself 10 marks for.each correct answ~r on page 18. : .. WYman 2-5,534, .' Rating: ;80-,-Excellent;. "'-Very Good; 50-Good; 50-Fair.. • , , ,, : ,

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THE ANCHOR11 English Catholics Pulpit Is, Reminder of Our Lord's Injunction Thurs., July 23, 1959 Aid Thousands To Preach the Gospel to Every Creature Of Retugees Propaganda Film By Rev. Roland Bousquet LONDON (NC)---:-On the 8t. Joseph's Church, New Bedford Urges Distrust eve of the opening of the World Refugee Year" the .. ,An anxious mother was' bringing her little daughter to church for the first time. Of Church DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER, MASS,

annual report on the Relief ,Ev~rything went smoothly,., The little girl seemed absorbed by the graceful mo~ements 'and Refugee Committee of Eng-;o"f ,the ,p'r,iest' ,at the" alt,ar,. The mother rel,axed as she compliment.ed herself o,n havmg such land's Catholic Women's League , S d was pUblished.' :':a, .well behaved child. ' Just, then the celebrant ascended the PUlpIt for the un ay sermon. It contained this mite of hap- "The girl turned to her mothpiness from a table of tragedy.' er and said in no low 'whis"The children enjoy 'themselves, per: "Look, Mommy, God's enormously, make good and commercial!" Too much tele-, quick progress, 'a're liked by, 'Vision? Probably. Yet the Sun-

~~~rar~e:c:oe~:cea~dco~:t~s::;~~;

day sermon advertises ,Heaven and the means of getting there and pride to their, parents." The Church continues, Sund:lY These youngsters, now at ,after Sunday, to heed Our school in Britain, are children of Blessed Lord's command: "Go Hungarians who fled from their into the whole world and preach homeland less than three years the gospel to every creature." ago, when 17,000 Hungarian The Church did not invent ~he refugees arrived in the United sermon. As a matter of fact, Kingdom. 'there existed at Our Lord's time More than half of them were 'a rigid custom' in all synagogues Catholics, apd th'e Catholic to read a passage of the Scrio-, Bishops of England and Wales, hire on the Sabbath. An elder when appealing for money for an invited guest always ~x­ their relief, appointed the C.W.L. 'plained the reading of the ScripRelief and Refugee Committee ture passage. ' , to receive and administer all the Our Lord introduced His Kingproceeds. dom to the world in the syna- I Eager to Work 'gogue of Nazareth after reading Many of the refugees were a passage' of the prophet Isaias vigorous young men and women, 'which dealt with the Messias. eager, to work. Today all but one In the course of his missionary of the 'hostels opened for them journeys' St. Paul goes to the have been closed, says the re- synagogue and takes the opporport, arid "work of some kind tUriity afforded him to explain ~~~" been found for practically the Scripture passage by preaching the goo~ news of the Gospel. "Lawyers work as elevator The early Christians incorpormen or porters, managing direcated this explanation ,of the tors as factory hands; musicians Scripture into the Mass: ,This as \ waiters 'and so forth. One was 'the foreruimer of our pres':' fenCing' master has stuck to his ent serm'on. Although we 'can sabres, and it brilliant "luth:i'er find notable exceptions, such' as WHITE MARBLE PUI"PIT , (lute and violin maker) is estab~ Origen and later S1; 'iTerO'me arid 8t Law~ence Church.::"'New Bedforo. lished as an exp'et-t repairer,'witn st' Augustine before, he became his son as apprentice." , a bishop, it was the'bishop's excimdle. The Paschal candle 'is wh~re 'it is placed on the (pistle Hungarian priests, had to be elusive prerog~tive',to address a' survival of this tall column side. It is usually raised above obtained' to minister to their the Christian community. The of wax. Until Pope Pius XII're-' the congregation so that the exiled countrymen. Today there' bishop spoke' from his' throne, : stored the Holy Week services preacher may be able to see the are' four Hungarian Catholic ' either seated or from the steps tlie deacon and not the celebrant faithful and be seen by them. chaplains at, work in Englanq. of the throne. This was a clear blessed the Paschal candle. Although no special material or One of them, Jesuit Father,Bela expression of his 'teaching auToday the ambo is practically design is prescribed, the pUlpit Ispansky, was imprisoned with thor~ty:' abandoned. A few fine examples harmonizes with the whole His Eminence Jozsef Cardinal ' This was not always conven- still exist in some of the ancient church. It is usually equipped Mindszenty, Primate of Hungary. ient. The bishop's' throne was basilicas of Italy. One of the with a small reading stand. Today he maintains his chap- often to be found b,ehind, the finest that can ,be found is in'St. We can see in the pulpit the l~lincy , at ,Mindszenty House" in altar." In" order to be 'heard Clement's in Rome.' However, symbol of the Faith explained London. ' more' distinctly St.Ambrose and the aml;>o is no longer used in and adapted to th'e needs of each Catholic Hungarian clubs have St., Augustine, among, others, the liturgy. silcceedfng generation. At the' be,en founded.in London, Man:' . preached from the ambo. 'The An exception can be found in altar-rail we 'receive the body, chester and Bradford,' and are ambo' was an' elevated reading the Ambrosian Rite in Milan blood and divinity of Our Lord. invaluable centers of' welfare desk or pulpit consisting of Ii where the gospel is still sung From' the pulpit flow the words work. But four chaplains alone raised platform enclosed, by, a from tmf ambo.' This general of the good news which Our cannot cope with the problems railing and reached by 'a flight abandonment of the ambo began Lo'rd came to give this troubled of now widely dispersed Hungarof stairs. in the Middle Ages. It coincided world. ' ian Catholic refugees, and in a In the early churches and with the founding of the men(Next Week - Sedilia) host of ways the C.W.L. Relief basilicas the gospel and epistle dicant orders who gave a new and Refugee Committee is active were chanted, or read from, the life to the sermon. in ,their support. ' ambo.' At' first there was only Their main work was to one ambo, which was placed, in preach missions. At first they the nave. Gradually two am- used the ambo. The desire to be bones were installed in the heard more clearly initiated the setting up of the preacher's platJOSEPH M. F. DONAGHY screen or lattice-work that sepaBERLIN (NC)-Reports reach- rated the choir and sanctuary form in the nave of the church. owner/mgr. The invention of public ading here from Moscow's recent from the congregati!ln. t42Campbell St. Union Conference on Questions The one on the epistle side was dress systems permitted the pulNew Bedford, Mass. of Scientific Atheism state that normally lower 'and less ornate. pit to return to its proper posiWYman 9-6792 a campaign against "religious The sub-deacon sang the ep stle tion in the sanctuary. Today the superstition" was demanded. from this.ambo. It is interesting pulpit stands on the gospel side, HEADQUARTERS FOR Speakers were reported to to note that our present g:-adual except in cathedral churches COLONIAL AND have said that the majGrity of takes ''its name from this ambo. TRADITIONAL FURNITURE Laymen's, Conference people in the Soviet Union had Members of the' choir stood ,on, COVINGTON (NCr-The 18th freed themselves from what was the steps of this ambo to sing, 'biennial National Catholic Laydescribed as' "religious' preju- the psalm that s~parates the men's Retreat, Conference condices." However. the speakers epistle from the gospei. The latin vention will be held from Aug. 4 .,~ admitted that a'number of' be:' word.,forste,p is 'fgradus," hence to 6, 1960 at the Sheraton Hotel. . lievers, in God still exist in.' the gradual. J;hiladelp,hia, country. '. " On, the gospel side stood the ~et lr~t It \\Tas stated that during 1958 ,more elaborately decorated ambo there were 335,000 lectures in which the deacon mounted to the Soviet Union on "atheist and sing the, gospel. Close to this scientific" subjects, in contrast ambo rose'. tall candlestick, to the previous year, when there i'eaching m'onumental proportions at times. At vigil services were,206,OOO ,suc~ lecture's. However, it was reported that a great taper adorned' this canduring the' first quarter of 1959 dlestick. Soviet citizens listened to 90,000 ,It was the deacon's office, as, lectures dealing with atheism the general servant· of the for 'Bristol' County' and science. chu):ch, ,to bless' 'and' light this

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A movie, with a message, will be coming the public's way this fall, courtesy of Protestantsand Other Amel'icans United for Separation of Church and State. The movie is called "Captured." Its message is fear and distrust of the Catholic Church. "Captured" won't win any Academy Awards. In fact, it won't even be seer. at neighborhood theater.>. But the POAU is hoping that Protestants in various communities will see in their church how the Catholic Church is trying , to "capture" th'e nlition's pu blic schools. A small group of invited guests' watched a' pre-release showing of the movie here, With a little prodding from POAU associate direr.tor C. Stanley Lowell, they got the mess'age. Captive Schools Speaking informally before the film was shown, Dr. Lowell told his audience that one of POAU's biggest problems is making people believe that these "captive schools" exist. However, he added, the incidents depicted in the film really have occurred - "usually not once, but' many times." Dr. Lowell stated' th'at "POAU did not create these incidents." He complained that POAU is often called an "anti-religious" or "anti":Catholic" organization., Instead, he said, POAU's role is that of a "surgeon." He explained: "We have not created these situations, but rather have tried to resolve them, to ameliorate them."

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Confirms' Family MELBOURNE; (NC)--:-"\ll five, , "ROSARIES/MEDALS, members of one famIly were,' , , .' given the sacrament of confirma-' . AND STATUES tion here on nlhe"same day"by ',' Auxiliary Bishop Arthur F. Fo~ , Iri All' Price ':Ranges of Melbourne. They are Mr.. and , ' " .. ' " Mrs. H. T. 'Riley and their three adult daughters-all converts to the eatholic -Church. The three Emily C. Perry daughters received the sacra562 County St. New Bedford ment in their local church, but because Mrs. Riley waa ill, Opp. St. Lawrence Churc::h Bishop Fox went to the Riley bome to confiml' the pareAk,

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RebuiJf ~.e"man' Churches: Mani:fest Love· for Faith

.12."Tnurs.,. -:-~~E~~~HO~, July._ 23, 1959

, . ,Tri'but~ .to.:,·V·iccl~~ of', Christ

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.~i.~CESE OF FALL··~'VER.. : MAS-S'

God. Love- You'

Bishop or' Reno'

By Most Rev. Fulto~ .T. Sheen. D.D~

By Most Rev. Robert,J., DwyeJ;, D.O. The 14 years which have elapsed since the ending of World War II have proved a trying time for the, Church in Germany. Not only has she been faced with the ,enormous problem of physical reconstruction, of reb!1ilding her ruined cathedrals, church's, and ' This very urgency has argued schools, but she has had to for the employment of contemencouriter the still moredif- porary forms for speedy and ficult matter of assimilating relatively less expensive· build-

"The Communists' in China recently told the Sisters, who were imprisoned in their convents that they' were "free" to take part in "study sessions of Communist indoctrination.'~ One night cries 01 "Fire" rang out beneath their windows. As some of the nuns went into the garden to inv'estigate,' Communists lept o~er the wall, seited' them and' forced tkem, to follow the "free" study sessions on Communism. Thr~e points are' developed in these classes: patriotism, Bishop Kinoj:' of Shanghai, and Pope John xxm. Anyone who- insists on accepting the. teach· , iugs of the Church is termed "unpatriotic" for which there are appropriate cruelties. Next, they are asked to denounce Bishop Kiuug as, a "running dog of the. imperialist countries, such as the United States." Knives are exhibited Which, to the Communists, prove that Bishop Kiungkilled children, Finally, PoPe John xxm is attacked as "more 01 an enemy- than Pope Pi'us' xn." What a tribute to the noble Vica~' of Christ!

ing. Even where individual taste the millions upon' millions of refugees from the Soviet zone might adhere to the older forms of the Romanesque and Gothic, who haye the' . exigendell of time and poured aCJ:0s~ pocket-book have die tat e d . the border, ieotherwise. «ally or illeSo it is that the student of . gaIly, to escape, ~odern. eccle~iastical art and what they architecture finds much in Gerrig'bUy considmany' today to: hold his interest a living and' to' sharpEm,'his appreciation; cieath. In almost every Diocese commis,T'h e magnisions have bee'r,i set up to co-ortude 0 f " t hi s dinate this work and to approve Uoiaspora" can the. sugge'sted ~lans.. These facts evoke. two spiritual reflections:' Fi~st:. ,OUr Lord b a'r d I y be is Jiving His Passion again in,nis Church. "As, they have hated Cites ~xample . SCRIPTURE SCHOLAR: ir~~ped by , The incidencr' of genuine in-' Fi: 'Raymond Brown, S.S., · Me, so wili they hate you." When the Head .suffers, the Body, mere' reference to statistics. which is· the Church, agonizes with it., Second, this Passio,n of Every Dioc~se, every city, every 'spiration in arf at any time is a has Just> returned to the Christ is ours here in these United' States by sympathy. As rare miracle. S~me of these Gervillage in the Federal Republic United States from a year's St. 'Paul said: "If one member' suffers anything, .does not the whole has feit its impact and has been man contempo~ary churches. are body suffer?" If someone steps on your foot! does not your he'ad pretty dismal ilffairs, cold' and' study . of·· the' Dead I Sea .. seriously' affected by it. It has complain? Now,the Church in China is part ·of otir Body, .the led to an' unprecedented rear- mechanical, better fitted, one . Scrolls. He was awarded a Church; the Catholics there are our 'brothers and sisters in Christ. thinks, for. factories. or . ware- research .fellowship by the rangement of ethnic, cultural, Do' you feel· their agony as your own? Does the crown that is' on houses than for temples of the and r'eligious groups. Areas of the' American School, of Oriental their heads ,prick your, .fingers?, Do the lashes '-from, Communist Living God, Rhiileland and-Bavaria which in Researchdn Jerusalem. NO ~~ips re!,!d .your .body?; .But there are ,enough examples {oillier 'tiines were aimost solidly of ,those which.~ucceed in:giving,. Photo. ' --~ .. Catholic' have' received 'heavy warmth 'and dignity through the it we were pe~secuted by the Reds,. would we no~ expect, infiltrations of· North and East of modern architectural simChina to aid us? For the sake of the Christ. whose wounds are 'German Protestants. reopened in Cliina,,:and whose scars of Resurrection, once more Similarly, areas of Hesse~nd plicity' to convince the most hardened skeptic that the thing are made red in Shanghai, deny yourself some·:tiny, little thing· Hanover where Protestantism 'each day. Thus we may be able to. give,.to the, Holy Father was' once in full ascendancy have can be done an(. that the Church more than 26c each -a year, not only for China, but alsc» for all FRANKLIN (NC) Archbeen 'inundated· by Catholics can be fully herself in a contemporary setting'. ' the missions 01 the Church. Remember that, ,the Holy Father bishop Egidio Vagnozzi, Apo(ffrom Silesia and other Eastern If a glorious kxample is to be tolic Delegate 'to' the. United · receive~ 'yoursacrifices through his ',society' for tJ:1e Propagation' districts where the Faith 'was cited, it, could well' be the" States, on Aug 9 will-bless the of the Faith. This is his society; it exists not' for *heben~fit 01 skong. Church of St ilban, just conse- new' St. Joseph's seminary of one' order, but for all, not'for one ar~a.OIthe mission world, not, Praise Nuncio crated in the city of. Cologne; t_ one nationality, but lor all. .... , .. the White Fathers, situated near To provide for the material' The r e extracirdinary daring, Onchiota, N. Y.,in the ~aranac and spiritual needs of their felunited to a fine!sense of propor- Lake region, it was announced low Catholics thus uprooted and GOD LOVE YOU to M.L.M. for $15.' .. I am enclosing this tion and mass,: has achieved a ' te give to their Protestant monument not unworthy of the here. money for the 'S6ciety for the Propagation of,.~,he Faith. I made countrymen a Christian welcome great Cathedral :which dominat~ Auxiliary Bishop Fulton 3. thiS from the sale of my gift cards among friends." . . . to T.N;l.B. ,·<teeper than ~ere ~ords has the Rhine:' I • Sheen, of New York, national "I work in a State .Hospital and know what it is like to have the taxed the charity and ingenuity director of the Society fo~ . th~ . sick l,md needy next to you. I thank, you .fQr giving me the opAltar Ap~intmeD" aI. the Catholic' rank and file. . And for all that the German Propagation of the Faith, ..will portultity of sending my donation apd c;me dol~ar for your sick With one accord they are eloarid needy . . . to A.G. for $5. "I 'promised that I would send this CaUlolics have been hard pressed ,Preach at the outd60r' Mass, . Cluellt in their praise of .the· money 'to the Society for the Propaga~ion of. the. Faith if. I got a which wilr be offered by Bishop to build and I ~build their. assistance given them in this James l.J\ravagh~ of..Ogdensbur'.... job' 'fQi the summer. I aI1l 17 years 'old and wanted to show'love lIDdertaking by the Pap a 1 churches, it is a ,constant marvel for the missions by giving this small amount." . . . to C.C.M. for to see the richness, even the Muncio, Archbistlop Aloysius The White Fathers, a missionlavishness, of the altar appoint-' ary society· Jievoted exclusively $1.. "ThiS, small amount ,is to' help fight, co~u:nism." Meunch, Bishop of Fargo, North ments. ' . Dakota. Wit' devotion and fine to work in Africa, will transfer Artists and! craftsmen are their seminary': from 'Franklin., understanding he and his staff n;'youhave' a Lady of Television S~tue in your living room! called upon to design and create have worked consistently with Pa.,' to, Onchiota. this .,fall.. If not, send us your request and a $3 offering and we will be happy . magnificent tabElrnacles and vesthe German hierarchy toward to scnd' one to you.. the reconciliation of one of the sels, furnishing~ and statuary, stained glass and vestments. The major trage<;lies of modern,times. Church once again emerges as a Cut out this column/pin your sacrifice to it and mail it to the Use Modern Forms major patron of the arts with· Most Rev:'~'ulton J. Sheen, National Direc~or of The Soci~ty for Today the Church in, Germany the Prop-agation of the Faith, 366 Fifth Av:enue, New York 1..N Y., HI'far advanced in its. program renewed understanding between LONDON (NC) - About ,50 or your DIOCESAN DIRECTOR REV. RAYMOND T: <;::ONSIDINE, the churchman and the artist. ' of reconstruction. So far as is '. This may not be the most sig~ lay persons from Scandinavia ~368' North Main Street, Fall River, Mass.' . humanly possible the historic nificant phase of German Cath- attended a meeting here designed shrines are being restored with. to give them practical help on olic recon·struetion,. but it is painstaking fidelity to the origDAUGHTERS OF ST. PAUL how to do convert work in Nornot without its I due weight of inal plan and detail. way, Denmark, Sweden and 'nvite ,oung (lirls (14.23) to lobar in interest. It bespeaks a living But what is perhaps. more inChrist's vast vine,ord as an Apo,tle of the tradition, In spite of the errors Finland. teresting and significant is the Editions' Press. Radio. 'Movies and rele· and mistakes of the past,.it is ·The visitors, accompanied by ", willingness of the Germa!,! hiervision. With "'ese modern means, these eloquent of an abiding love for a ,few priests, have been spendarchy to experfment with mod!Ai.sionar, Sisters bring Christ·, Ooct,ine the Faith and a' determination ing several days l)ere as guests ern forms in the building of to all ,egardless . of, 'ace, calor 0' creed. scores of new· churches needed '. to give to .God ~e best that is of British Catholic lay societies. for information write to: times... everywhere. It is douhtfuHf the . offered by our ,own REV. MOTHER· SUPERIOR' , .. The ScandinavianS, most of Church at any; time in her, expe- . SO 5T. PAUL'S AVE." BOSTON, 30. MASS. If it'is not ~et time to say' them converts, said the' main 'rience, even in AIDerica during that 'modern art; hasbe~n .bap.- , 'obstacle to the growth of Catholthe great tidal;O;wave· of immitizea in the Christian spirit, ,it· icism in their countries is the gration, has been faced with a is not t90 early 1 to 'suggest that shortage of priests. Another COME IN - SEE '. ~!,d..DR.IYE· ,construction job of greater size it is trying to ~ be an honest drawback, they stated, is' that and urgency. catechumen. 1 Catholics. are scattered in small , " :r . communities spread over a wide "T~:- _~~rld'i Most' 8eautifullyPtopo!tio"e~ Canarea. :,,' ;; .,.; ;" '. at IN A

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THE ANCHOR- c Thurs., July 23, 1"959

13

Layme'n' Have' Major Roles During liturgical Week

DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER, MASS,

SociaI Service School Ends First Year

NOTRE DAME (NC)~Laymen will play leading roles in the program of the North American Liturgical Week opening here on August 23. with "Lay Participation in the, Mass" as its th.eme. Dr. Thomas Caulfield, a Boston psy-' chiatrist, will speak on Aug-- Register, Cincinnati archdio'cesan ust 24 on "A Layman's Re- newspaper, and' Mrs. Shea will action to Participation:'· At lead a workshop on "Liturgy and ' a general session later in the Family Life."

ROME (NC) - The exp e ri'm ental International School of Social Service has completed its first academic year. 'It gives promise of becoming a much needed, help in the mission field. Tp,e school was set up in Rome by the Pontifical Relief Organization. It grew out of the meetings of the executive committee of Intermitional Caritas, Catholic charities organization, held in Belgium last year. 0 The school aims at giving spir- ' itual preparation designed as a solid base for social workers in countries where the needs of , the people are' great, especilllly the mission areas. All Women There are less than 10 .students, all of them women. They come from Kenya, Sudan, Nigeria, Eritrea and' Japan. While enrollment is small, the course, of study' is impressive. The 'faculty il\ drawn from, the, Pontifical Gregorian University, the ,Italian Institute of Statist.., tics and the Rome University. 'Among 'courses taught last' year were principles' of philoso-' phy in relation to social service; general and, case work social service; methodology of social research, and fundamental problems of relief. _ Practical Courses On the practical side two study sessions on the socIal, life of man and biological develop;' mimt of man were offered. Under the social life of man there were lectures on the elements of the ethnology and history of re,ligion, ethics and natural law, ' comparative positive law and el- ' ements of economics. Other lectures in medicine, with the emphasis on eastern and African 'diseases, and applied psychology completed· the course. ' ,

,MO'rHER OF BLESSED VIRGIN : St. Anne, ~ife of Joachim and 'mother of the Blessed Virgin, is, depicted in this Flemish "Saint, Anne'Altar-piece" in' the Widener Col)ection at the National Gallery of Art in Washillgton, D.C. Her feast day is observed . throughout the Catholic, ,world on J tily 26.. NC Photo.

week, Theodore Marier will introduce a film strip, "The People's Part in the Parish High Mass." Mr, Marier is a lecturer in Church music and an associate professor at Boston University. This will mark the first showing of the audio-visual aid for laity participation It is being pro.duced by the National Liturgical Conference for use by parish societies,' study groups and choirs. Mrs. Mary Reed Newland'!>f Monson, Mass" will be chairman of a study group on "Home and Family in Relation to the New Instruction in Participation." Mrs. Newland, mother of seven children, is ~he author of "We and Our Children" and ~'The' Saints and Our Children." , Elizabeth Reid of Grailvill~ Loveland, Ohio,will be chairman of a stuqy group on "Participation, in l\o1ass in the Missions." . James M. . Shea, ,'assOCiate editor of, the Catholic Telegraph

Director to Report On Legion Activities ,

ENGLEWOOD (NC) ~ Father Ronald, F. Gray, O,Carm., national director of the Matt Talbot Legion, will visit Rome next month to report to the Holy ,See on the' activities of the legion. The legion has 10,000' members and Father Gray will bring with him many of the letters his office has received from those who have found relief from alcoholism through Matt Talbot'. intercession, Matt Talbot was an Irish laborer who died in 1925, 41 years after conquering an addiction to alCohol. His beatification cause was introduced in 1931 and the apostolic process, or final investigation, wal completed in 1953. Father Gray's headquarter. are at St. Cecilia's Church here where the Matt Talbot Museum is located.

Firs,t Nun CONAKAY (NC) - Josephine Blake, the first native of Sierra Leone, British West African colony, to 'become a 'Sister, has been professed as Sister Alphonsus of the 'Immaculate Heart of Mary' at the" Convent of the Sisters, 01. St. Joseph 'of Cluny in Guinea.

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John B. Mannion, director of development and training for th~ National Council of Catholic Men, will lead a workshop on "Liturgy and Lay Organizations." Full Participa.tion All lay people will participate as fully as possible in all the Masses offered during the week. The large number of laymen on the program reflects in part the· increasing number of laymen who have become mem bera of the National Liturgical Conference. More than half of the persons who have attended liturgical weeks in recent yel\rs have been laymen.

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Pre.late Says Families ~ail To, Aid Vocation. ,Grow:th

·tAmerico·nHome- Mis's'iorls ;!tNeed "CWaritable $~pport .~~

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By Father John L.- Thomas, S.J.~

NEW YORK (NC)-Bishop Lawrence J. Shehan of Bridgeport, Conn., stated. here that "the Catholic family is failing to do its part in 'the important work of .developing ,priestly ~nd religious vOCations." He spoke at Fordham University's Institute on attempt, he said, to "provide a Vocations. Bishop Shehan hpme dominated by love, by attributed the family's fail- 'peace and good order-the kind ure .to contribute to the of home in which the well:'

Assistant Professo~ of Soci~logJ' Saint Louis Universit~J . •

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}' . While in South Dakota .recently, Wy longstanding·iri;:terest in Indian affairs prompted me ;visit Holy Rosary :':"Mission at pine Ridge. The school with its 500 boy~ and· ; girls' is doing a tremendous -job, offeri:ng the bright-eyed · t th ol"d S lOUX youngs ers e s 1_ "Thou sha·.lt love thy ne'I'ghbor education that is their one as thy self." And who is my . 'hope of escaping poverty neighbor? As' the disturbing and holding the kind of J' ob' parable of. the good Samaritan

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tha(will enablt them to support . a family.. Yet the superior,' . Fat her ·Law· rence Edwards, tells me the ;,school ,is des, · perately in need iaof help. I'm · not a Catho 1ic, but I feel every' American ought to chip in to , ·give these kids ,i'· a fair break for ;'. h g I'. a c an e. As I r e a d , .tl:irough you r . t t' g' . t I Ch' t' ; III eres man<.. ru y rIS Ian i.'. letter, Bob, I kept thinking of , .. ',tl'1e, ·hundreds. of "Pine· Ridges" thrpughout the country, with ! their "Holy Rosary· Missions'" nd their dedicated, hard-work. ll .. ,~;,ing, unknown leaders like "Father Edwards. I've visited ~; them amon~ the migrant Mex-

reminds us, it is. the weak, the' h I I t'h f t t or una e one,: the p ess, ., eh ,un f 11 th . e man :w 0 e among e robbers an,d was le~t by the way'd SI e. , Left weak, helpless and fre, quently 'exploited alongside of , CONSECRATED: Most the busy, prosperous currents o f . .' , t y, th' our a ffl' uent socle ese we Rev. Thomas. R. Manning, cannot phllrisaically pass by as O.F.M., a 'Franciscan of' the if they ha~ no claim up.on us. New 'York Province, 'was Who are these neighbors of consecrated Titular Bishop ours that' missionaries like .of Arsamosata for the PrelFather Edwards are calling to ' - ' f '. acy of Coroico, Bolivia,. at our attention? They are ound primarily !among the uriassimil- St: Patrick's Cathedral by -ated minorities still found in 'His Eminence Cardl'nal Spell-. our midst.[ man. NC Photo. . For. exaniple, the're are. over . 100,000 Catholic American Indi,~lun ans recei":inp; se~vice from 112 I~

" I k rounded, well adJ'usted personal· t f th 0 f voca t IOns grow ac . ity canj'develop; for it is only in. of knowledge and lack0 ofear, aware'ness of its obligation. He added: such a personality that we are ' likely. to find a vocation. , "Many parents are afraid that They should strive to cEate a a seeming vocation may lead to. the unhappiness and tragedy of spirit of confidence between a false and irrevocable choice. -themselves and their children In spite of all that has been said' which will make discussion of on t.he subject, they cling to the vocation a natural sort of thing thought of v')cation as an inner . so that it will be easy for their revelation of God's call. children to' seek their advice Tun' , e and. agal'n the Church has and guidance." . insIsted that neither an interior Msgr, John J, Dougherty, nor exterior revelation of God's professor of Sacred Scripture at design has any part in voca- Immaculate Conception Semintion. .. God's will ... is mani- ·,ary, Darlington, N, J., discussed fested simply by 'the presence. of the vocation to marriage~ Msgr. - certain signs. that this "'or that Dougl:Jerty ~_aid: . . ,person has the qualities that fit. "The morning 'alarm clock is him for the priesthood or; the not as romantic as the monastery religious life." bell, but it demands obedience .Well-motivated parents should of a working father. He can make it. the obedience of a disciple by his intention, The cry

•.Author of ·Re·ad.-ng· Instruct.-o,n Met h0 d .Sees. Return to Ph'0' n'etlcs -

of a sick child at night is not as mission centers, 404 churches poetic as the morning lift of and 60 mission schools. WASHINGTON (NC)--r:here's 'Be'nedicamus Domino' but it deThere are nearly a half million a swing from ."sight learning" to and 'What is the word?'" Sister mands obedience of the anxious Negro Clltholics with some 461 .. phonetic instruction in teaching' maintained. . mother. . . Bills and taxes may :chiJrches or chap~ls and over "Th' bl th I to' d . . d tu I t 0f .iCcaalnl'fowrnOl~ak,eraSmiOnngCOtlhOeradpOuearntdo 325 schools. There are roughly reading, says a Sister whose own' . IS ena es e earner theemamnarrml'eodr It'haacn athePovvOewr Yd'eI phonetic method has received.- attack each word systemat, 'Ricans in New York among the four million Spanish Americans 'wide attention in and out of the ically," she 'said, adding her be- mands of religious., What I am :. Negroes in the South and the of Mexicah ancestry living .pri- education wotld. :. '" lief that this process' overcomes saying comes 'down 'to this: the industrialized cities of the North, marily_ in the Southwest, though the "drawback' of memory in home can be school of Chpis._ they are a'lso settled in or near. Sister Mary an nun Im- sight learning and the trouble in tian dlsclp . . I es h'lp as we.II as the IoU nam'e 'only a few examples.' . . " maculate HeartCaroline, of Mary ' are always the urban centers .in Michigan, M417 who teaches. at St. Ann's School,. I sOm.e p·re.vious phonetic instruc- ,monastery', the convent or the The purposes same: to 'teach sound principles nesota, and Ohio., '. San Bernar:dino , Calif., also said . tions, in which le'arners were ~,~tOTY. • ." · ' . : of Christian_ f.amily life, .to help Victims' of Exploitation: i hi a'n I'ritervl'e'w 'here' th'at' 'sh'e .given1solated··· soulids·· . ·and no . '. smooth the'adfustmemt to new the exception of ,the·old firmly believes there's' a conriec'" trainillg 'in how to'rilate sounds' ,,~situations, to train and prepim!i .' ,native groiIp, theyareuniformlY;" tion between juvenile' delin- 59 ,they" forma~ord." ,," _ , youth ,to make ,use of .the .oppor- poor, suffer marked discrimina- ,quency and the inability to read . -Sight learning .in ,which chil- . :,MU:ENSTER (NC) ~ An. ~nter­ .1unities our country ,hol<is,o,uUo '; 'tion'in ~d~c~ti~n, Ia'w, an:dsi>cia{' or, spell. . dreri' rely heavilY.on·mem~rY'for national Christian labor organ.'. them. life, and the :victims Qf wideSister Caroline's success with 'iead'ing' and spelling is general .ization haS recommended that Paradoxically, it seems we are spread and flagrant exploitation 'her phonetie instruction method 'now;- Sister admitted, but she iSbighly industrialized countries ,more likely to',forget these mis- .,.n the ec~rlOmic' sphere. . ' has resulted in invitations·' to ' convinced ·phonetics is being re- ,di~tribute part of' their annual sionaries in our midst than those ,Lastly, there are around, three Speak to both public anej paro- "g;ll'ded ,with n!!w respect.. "Some- .incomes to help needy nations. .,...who labor in foreign', .lands. . quarters cif' a million, Sp;l.nish- '. ehial school teachers and superthing has to be done. Everyone . The recommendation w~s' made , There is something colorfulj'ex- . speaking ! immigrants fr:om visors"in her appearance oIl' a knows· that. Too many school here in Germany by:the 19th ! ; otic and challenging about the Puerto Ri~o, clustered.:primaiily .: '. TV· program: wid ely' shown ' children ar,ellot learniRg : how Congress of the .International ,',foreign missions. . " . i n andar?und New York City. across the U, S. and in a request ~ to ~ead' or 'spell p·roperlY. Just ,.,Orgallizat.ion of Christian unionl .I . .. ' . .Po,verty, langu.age and c~.tUFalfor a handbook·: explaining· her ,,~ook at the large number of re- 'of the Textile' and .Clothing Inn' nterest and curlOslty'are ells- . diversity, Itogether" with tragic . method. .. ~~,dial reading couJ;"ses neCeS- dustry In its resolution the . . y aroused as we read of-strange: .,over _. cro.l.-ding . in ' ind~strial " . . tod . II th'" . . to . . . , ""customs; places, or peoples; and' I . ' A:ttack Teehniqu~ ;",sa,ry. , ay,.,a,~.;.~a>: up" ,group said that' a strong. union "w' 'th"th d····· '.' d""Go , ...slu\lls, crt:;ate seriOUS obstacles '." SI'stAr de'sc'r"I'bes' her me'tho'd- .~ post-college level." ..... ,' , ..movement,.organized on ChrisI . e' Ivme cornman; f Ch' t' - f 'I 1"' . d '" . .: teach" ye: all nation's;" ,'gently or rIS, tan ami y" .IV~g;ln now use!! succ~ssfUlly not only .... ·.As,.for.. ·juvenile . . delioquency, ,tian... social. teachings,: 'is' nec.es,'" prod'ding' our: consciences'- we the. practHie of ,the ~alth among ""by' 'hHself, "but 'several other Sister thinks that.-a ·pe~son. who .·sary in underdeVeloped countries ~ener6lfsly suPP.ort 'tlle : brave !.. ~h~~:;~:~ ,.:;;l~:~s·w~ILin,'the '~te'~7heril i':J~: (;~iif?rriia~a.s .'b~,!leddoesnot.:,read well, :e-ven',':after ·'so. ,that .national, income may be men ;-.nd.. ~omen ~h~,h~ve left ::,first.,· lace we . ~ust' see:the . _ ,o~v .~ four.~.part' ment~I.''proc,esa !~hooling, has . a:,gl1eate~otional ,\' divided justly. . ...." '- - , ," all "to'. preach Christ among the '. . p, . '" '. . .' . {\l that she ¢alls "techmques" of· ,"'flcar;.. ~~/1ey,;fe~1 :.Yf1 r y;,lnadequate .).;8ations still dwelling;' in : dark- It, I~ .~o ea~y. to,. ?ass,~y ~Wl~~OU,t .'., attack:'; .,,,', , ." :.:.': " .. ,;.in"~PdaY;~s~society,,gea:red so~uch :'-', :\ .,,;, . ' 'T"'~ '.'.:' '." '" .'" :io.ness... '... :. ." ,' ..., ";"'" ;·':li~okbctlhngf~~etllt;·dlSttulb!ll1g,~ Igthht,.""., "Anyone" with maturitY"and to readmg;" she asserted. .," ,,\..,., . ',I~!~U.$ . , ' . ' .. '. •... . " .'" e, e lrs" w.o .rllv_e ers;lD ..... e ,.I'd·· "'. 1'.' '.1." 'f" .. · '.7 't .! ~O"'" ".;' .!.'Eigh,ty-sevenper·cen~."ofthe.;" .. '." .'.';':' ,'. Treat, '" ··,ThIS IS ,as It shou!d be;,:wro the, ,parab,le... j '., i. ': '" ,: ," .... ,".. ;:""a' CISqC~?r~ntehe' '. 'k~lolmf .. °d' I' "-b ~adn J'uveriiles in trouble with the law ." ., ';i'exten,t that ·they 'grasped'.,' the ,c' Many .~atholic."orga.ni~ah.·.9 . ns " ,Ul, e ,,,.,,s,l 0 rea I~g,a~e , •. , meanmg of- the Gos.pell the "g6od. h . dl . d . II t ' . on. Ule follr-part mehtal p. rbcesa:: are :: retarded :r~aders.;; 'Sister .' . .ave ren ere ~xce e~ ,serYolce "", h"'h'" k"'th" .'. "t·'" 'H'·said.. "Y.et no:where': ·neat" that ~inew.s", meant for' all mankind, iri'yarious 'ways Q,nce their a,tten- w IC .as s ese ql;1e~,l~ns. ". ow , ,.' ,Christians ·of every age,··have .. tion. was dlled to specific needs. ,,~oe~ ~h~ w:C?rd be,gm ',. ' W~~t are ,percentage· has: any .other,·form unselfishly' shared iii the "work , Perhaps 'o'ne t.he.'gt.o.·ups of Its vowels?' 'Wh~t do the~ ,.s~ . ,.yr, . of:· mental, ·retardation. I·Many " f th .. . ' , , • , ~h a v: e above.:,average- intelli- ' o emiSSIOns; . . . . " , o o wpich you!are pr~sE)nt~y a.,m;~m-, N'~w genc~/~ 'she .said. ." But there ·is another'conimand '. ber.~ould ~elect !1pecia~ mis:;;ion . , ". ", ..' of Our Lord that should also or service and' make it' their " stir the Christian conscience: ·pe~~o~'a1. r,~sponsib~litY.'·' " B,OSTON . (NC)" Father ,W,hlh~'s ' .. :: ' i .Canisius . Hazlett" C.P.:·of. ,Wal- ; "SPECIAL: MILK . !. ,.pole, rector; of. St. Gabriel's .From Our Ow~ ~. . monastery, Brighton, waS .elected .', provincial of the Passionist Jt'athTested' Herd~' . ~rs of, Eastern United States' at . Acushnet, Mass.<WY 3-4457 the 33rd ch~pter of the Erovince ,. ,9f St. Paul of the Cross here. " • Special Milk". He-:-previously seryed' as first • Homogenized YJt: DMilk provincial consultor from 1950 to • . Buttermilk' . .. 1956. Father Malcolm. La Velle. ,C.P. of Rome, Passionist Super• Tropicana Orang. Juice ior General,presided at the • Coffee and Choc. Milk .Ask For Them Toeiay week-long: sessions. • Eggs - B'utter I

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With~

Labor p'roposes Aid For Needy Na'tio"s

ate

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A' D

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of

'Father',"Can'isius ,Passionist·· Provindal

a

Far", Dairy

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Made Rite Chips

The messu;" of a . _ &0 lOOt the number, of hia' servants but ill the number·.of people .who.. 1M - - - .

New

England's Wonde','and 01 Fun!

. REYNOLDS-DEWALT . 'Willilm & Second Sts. "'"' .New Bedford.

WY 6-8234

BEFORE YOU . . LEAD THEOI.. OGIANS: At the anpual meeting of the' Catholic Theological Society of America'I'the IIew president,· Monsignor Lawrence J. Riley of Boston, seated left, accepts the gavel from retiring president, Monsignor Michael J. Murphy. Looking bn, left to right: Father Thomas W. Coyle. C.SS.R., v~ce-president; Father Vincent J. Nugent, C.M.. secretary, and Brother Celestine Luke $alm, F .s.C., treaa- . urer. NC Photo.

BUY - TRY

PARK

MOTORS OLDSMOBilE

50,ACRES FREE -' PARKING

Ilenault· ":' Peugeot. 'Simca 67 Middle Street. f'.lrbavea

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OF AMUSEMENTS . .' .

.~OOO

,CARS

. AMERI~A'S'FIN-ST

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K,IDDIELAND . '

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DIOCESAN SERRANS PLAN PROGRAMS: Left photo, P. Henry Desmond, seated, Fall River president reviews list of engagements for Speakers Bureau with George R. Harrison, speakers' chairman. Center photo, Russell Brennan, left, Attleboro president plans events for altar boys with John B. Antaya, chairman of alt&r boys program. Right photo, program for first year is being studied 'by New Bedford president Dr. William S. Downey, Jr., seated, Daniel F. Dwyer, vice-president and program chairman, standing center, and Dr. Arthur F. Buckley, trustee.

Prelate Warns Of Red Peril

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THE ANCHORThurs., July 23, 1959

Serra Club Members Are Chosen Catholics, Strive to .Foster r ocations to Priesthood

DIOCESE OF FALL R1VER. MASS.

ILOILO CITY (NC)-Archbishop Jose M. Cuenco of Jaro has emphasized the need for a Nearly 200 men throughout the DiOCese are members of the Serra Club, a unique strong student movement to organization with the twofold purpose of pr.omoting and sustaining vocations to the check Red infiltration in Philippriesthood and fostering friendship among its members. Membership in Serra amounts pine schools. The Archbishop said in a pas- to vocation for laymen. "Next to faith and family, Serra must be first," says the toral letter: national organization's ex- Jeneral interest. charter in April and has Rev. "Our school campuses today ecutive secretary. Atten-, This agenda is far from repre- .lohn F. Hogan as cnaplain. are crowded with many student Lay presidents of each area are organizations which do not satis- dance at weekly meetings is" senting the total of the club's interests, however. With the William S. Downey, M,D., New ty the greater and higher needs compulsory and members Bedford; P. Henry. Desmond, of the students-their moral and who do not, fulfill this obliga- common purpose of promoting vocations, groups sponsor activFall River; Russell E. Brennan, tion are dropped. . - spiritual guidance." Mass Movement The .club ,began in 1934 in ities for altar boys, regarded as Attleboro. Chief social function of each He'said that, in place of these Seattle, Wash. Its name honors a prime source of future priests; group is a yearly Bishop's Night, many organizations, there.should Father Junipero Serra, the Fran- vocation talks in schools; speakbe a common Catholic student to which wives and families of ciscan who founded California's ers' bureaus, which accept invitations to appear at meetings of movement. '~Only such a mass members are welcomed. Joint first missions. It is modeled after student movement," said the other service clubs, with the ex- , other clubs; seminary tours and meetings of area clubs are also altar boy awards. Archbishop, '·'can fa,ce and (lOnheld from time to time. ception that it is founded on a In this Diocese, Serrans are quer the dangers of. ~mmunistic Serrans are chosen Catholics. spiritual ballis. " infiltration and other.· similar 'Weekly meetings" include responsible for units of the, This is emphasized in the organi- ' dangers. that threaten, GUI' luncheon· or dinner, a "quickie"· Knights of the Altar, an organi- Uition's literature: "Membership, 8Chool~." , '. ,,'. talk from the: group's chaplain zation for altar boys. A bill- , in Serra isa privilege granted; The Archbishop cited Student board project of the Fall River and a speech- on some topic of not a right obtained. ,This is Catholic Action as the best campelub came in for special attention always kept in mind when members select new associates. Men us organization, which meets the at the 17th annual convention of requirementaof the' mass stu- \ Serra International, held last are' chosen who are dedicated and' dent movement he has in mind. month in Pittsburgh, and at-' sincere, whose loyalty to' the Student Catholic Action ia 'a tended by nine delegates from· Church and to the successors of, PITTSBURGH, (NC) :- St. Philippine .form of Catholic A~­ Paul's Cathedral here will get' the Diocese. the apostles is unquestioned. tion .founded to meet the needs its exterior scrubbing this Sum- ' Forthcoming activities include "Serrans recruit members who of Catholic students in the many, mer, according to plans anBPecial Masses Friday, Aug. 28, can and will fulfill their obliganon-sectarian ,schools in the anniversary . of the death of nounced by Msgr. Andrew J. tions of membership. This is islands. Father Serra; and a day of recol- recognized as their duty because Pauley, the rector... lection for altar boys in the Fall. ' New smoke-abatement -laws these men who are chosen have operating in the Steel City have Serra has been active in the to provide brain as well as WARSAW (NC) - Pope John made it practical to clean the Diocese since 1952, when its orbrawn to meet the challenging XXIII. had named a third bishop heavy soot deposits from the 53ganization was encouraged by tide o'f atheistic communism and, to minister to the Catholics in year-old structure, Msgr. Pauley Bishop Connolly. It started in to carry out th,e responsibility of the Opole part of 'the archdiocese said, with the hope that the Fall River with Rev. Daniel F. the laity in the Church today. whose See is in Wroclaw. The building will remain clean-lookShalloo as area chaplain. He "The Church needs a group of Secretariat of Stefan Cardinal ing. .till holds that office. responsible laymen in the lay In announcing the. summer In 1956 a group became active apostolate. Especially does she Wyszynski, Primate of Poland, said that the Pope has elevated cleaning project, Msgr. Pauley in' Attleboro. Rev. James F.' need them in Serra's work in the McCarthy is its chaplain. Last lay apostolate." Msgr. Henryk Grzondziel to the also revealed plans for 'a new cathedral high episcopate to assist Bishop Fran- million-dollar Diocesan unit to affiliate with Serra International was that of ciszek Jop, Ordinal'#, of the Opole school. The new school will be New Bedford, which received its built b#, 1960, he said. haiOn. f"

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Schedule Pittsburgh C'athedral Scrubbing

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Stresses ActiQn In Spirit of· Love MANILA (NC) - Archbis~op Salvatore SHno, new Apostolic Nuncio to the, Philippines, told Catholic Action representatives on his arrival here to continue their "wol'k for the welfare of the community." ,After praising the Filipinos' love of the Faith, the Archbishop t' 0 I d representatives of a' II branches of Catholic Action on the Islands to "do everything in a spirit of love." "Love alone will give you the strength and courage to overcome the ' difficulties that confront you in the accomplishment of 'your mission," he said:'

ChiriE!se Escape

. MUONG SING (NC)-A 'Red edict ordering the execu,tion cl all feeble persons over: 60 is re. sponsible for, arrival of a stream of refugees coming, aCl'~ssthe border to this Laotion town, it was reported here by an American Catholic doctor, Dr. Thoma. Dooley, formerly of the U. S. Navy.

New Polish Bishop

HUTTLESTON ; Sunoco Service What Blend Do You Use? Gas - Oil - Accessories 122 Huttleston Ave. Fairhaven next to Roger's Dairy Bar

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NO JOB TOO BIG NONE TOO SMAll

SULLIVAN BROS. PRINTERS Main Office and Plant

LOWELL, MASS. Telephone Lowell

GL 8-6333 and GL 7-7500

AuxiJIary Plane.

BOSTON OCEANPORT, N. J. PAWTUCKET, R. I.

WM. T. MANNING (0. WHOLESALE AUTOMOTIVE and

INDUSTRIAL SUPPLIES FOR VOCATIONS: Vivid reminders of Our Lord's invitation to youth may be seen

at various locations in the Diocese. The billboard projeCt is sponsored by ,Diocesan

• GENERAL TIRES • DELCO BATTERIES • .PERFECT CIRCLE RINGS FALL RIVER - NEW BEDFORD - HYANNIS - NEWPORT

Serra Clubs.

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D .j!. c.. trtrO:u:uQe:rs .~'8, :r~e.,Ik" rD T(ltGtmlSe . [11(0 [Black1ist :S,ulbY(eiT-s:i~es'

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. ~T!iE ANCHOR 16 ThlJr.-s., J.u~y :23, 1939

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:DIOCESE :c>FFALL RI~ER. ''''''55.

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[Form:osG iPlreJate

~)' \Wiilliwm liB. 'MOOfli~g . 'ffihe·<A:menican rra~giion '8t~te ;COnMelitioII fu1 iHoll~ood (.hoOk itihe lffiOViie ,ana 'DW Ueadel'8 ,in :thek .ow:n ii~oW 'ito,wel'8~ 'mhe lliEml iOll$1\ Na:tional ~Gon:ven1Jionnext 'rm:>n:than~y ~do Intone. /A1meriican [,.El'gUonnames .cannot :stomach ithe jiaea '!that . l'kno.wn -sub,\ter-siv:es !should of 'the ~business, <finn ;assurances mot ~Oli}yfue {emjllQyed :in oo",wh ich Ito tballe:an ;Qll-iindustr,-y !Amenican ~mOy,ie8 ,and 'T¥;,' ;pl'Omise Ito rthe lpublic. fbtit the /gi,v:en JAcade~lhon­ ~ees ;MenaCe :er<s ,to \hoot. :Ilhose 'decliliitlg ao 4commit

Waif.nsCa:thol.ics

\Of PltopGgG:nda 'TAIPEI JRC) - ATchbis]l(~P

.i10SEWfl [[{;uoof 'Formosa

Ihas Jssueda ';pasto:r.& Jetter

:aimed iiLt preYentmg Catho-

:lics .!rom ,being :in11uenced~ birth control proPaganda. INo ,matter thnw cone wiews so- tthenisel.ves . should ibe: 'JIluolic!,. lIn ,it :the ArChbishop referred ·te!illed '!blaok-iliSts''',· "tteij.:.lists" ,identified. '!J1ho,re Jl!enew'iqglthis to .~ :increaseoI propaganda ;er·"whitc.Jlists':, mon"communist IPledge,sholila 'be <favoring birth control. 'He -said i!the Jfact is tthat , constantly 'guided .;and iinfol'med :the :pastoral is .intended to enunethe ,entcuhiin-;; ,so ·that -they ,may ;keep 'faith ,eiateclearly the Catholic teach'lIlent 'm,o.. g u,l,s " "with !the :public. 'Risks fof injusing on birth control, ,and to keep [be'vle 'Ireneged '.tice :pale lbeside tth.ose :of 'Fed the .faithful 'from .falling into ithe ,on ,a :pl7omise ,hifiltration. errors of, artificial birth prev:enQto the ,Amer.tionand other acts enda~gering ·'11heeIfor.ts 'of ;a mara core of· ,jean public, not. the ends· of marriage. oreds to ,gain influe!1ce lin ,moY-ies l:Lo 'e'm,p'loiY .China News, English-language 'and 'TN .a1'e ·e.'ti:dent. mh~y ;ha.ve ik,n o,w'n. comdaily, recently carried an 'edi- ' 'made :dangerou.s .innoads. ;So ifar ;munists nor .othel's .declining -to nelatively.'little,direct,pro-Mar,x'torial demanding that measurel ,clear 'themselves. To <:fool :the ist ,p1'OpaganCla ·has 'been planted be introduced to reduce Ithe 1)U blic ·some producer!!! {have .been number of abortions. . either .in \movies (or TV. There :.hiring .unrepentant -Feds 'and I·has 'been ,a con:;ideI.'ltble ·amount ' . 'To ·avoid the danger tohealtb ififth 'amendmenteers, .under.false ,of the .sly,subtle\variety .;and existing in abortions, the news·mames. paper called for dissemination unless ·.vigilant securitymeas\When 'IRobert .Rich" ,;won :a of .knowledgeaf birth control ·.ures :are ·re-:'2stablished and IN 50.th ;SfrArrE: Father Henry ,Siystermans, sS.ec" methods ;so .that. those 'desir-oul ''JII'citing Oscar :for '''The 13reve (marntained Il::!y ,mo:v1ie and 'TV One" in 195.7, :producer ;Frank :leader..!?, ·there ·.will ,soon be ·mu~b ':S'uperior ~GeneI:al ,of -the .Cong.regation .of the Sacred Hearts, of limitiqg the family may do .so. 'King '!kne.w :nothi~ about l'mOFe.. ;places.a lei,ommpnumen't;atformer;gra:ve of FJatherDamien, The 'editorial ended with the mich". Recent!y ;Kiqg ,admitted 'following statement: "The judg';wollld ,fa-mous rher-o ,of the I~Pet settlement oat MoJokai. In 'iWhat iMo;v.ies 'iMa,y Teach '.to,methat he':d "lkno,wnlaILalong 'ment of the individual fam'ily, ''Lad;)'' ,Ohatte:~ly~s :!Lover" ',was 1936 the remains wel'e 'r-emoved to 'his birthplace in l~el-. :that .Rober:t lRich <was .Dalton' 'instead of law, ethics or religion '3 slo,~ ,and pautlw :sordid 'ftlm', igium. 'NC :Photo. ,,0 'oT1'lunbo" . ,should be the determining factor . I . .:based .on ,a,n ,old":fashioned ,H. D. Another !l!hoJ!Y ;Name :in practicing or in rejecting famLa.wnenGe ,essay Ion ;aaultery as a ily plannif\g in Free China." ,Stanley Kramer1s ;pl'ess ,agent, ·social .leveler. Catholic .sociologists, .including 'William ;Blowitz {self admitted Continued \from ·Page ODe. ·-The .Blessed V'irgin gave In striking down the New Father Albert· O'Hara, S.J., of filrmer C.P. member) told me Father Fuentes spoke to me, ·the~ a mandate' to establish deY<>rk state ban on this film, nine the National Formosa Univerlast August th~t ~the "lNathan ~E. Supreme Court ,Justices ruled it llS he is :the postulator jf.or the vohon to .the ImmaCUlate. Heart .Douglas" named ,as .a oWlliter ~n ;unconstit,utiomil to .prohibit lthe beatification causes lof :theseiv-' of Mat:y, ;and ·she prophesIed ·the sitY,hold that increased indu9"The 'Defiant Ones" was.Nedrick public . showing of this ·film. ants 0'£ God ja'cinta and Francis- puni!!hment 'to be meted out to . trialization can solve the :so:E. Young, who in April 1953, Justice Stewart noted tthat .the co Marto. We .dealt' onJy with :mankin~ if her mandat~ were called population problem. U. S. , econoniic adN'isers here have ·truculently refused to affirm or 'Fir-st ..A mendment!s 'basic guar- things . related lto this point,.so not fulfilled. deny 'communist 1panty ,liffilia- .antee is one .of "freedom ,to .ad- .·that everythin!i else .to '·which he The .punishment she .foretold :frequentl:r remarked that ithe ,tWns. Yct ,at. this .same time ,vocate iideas". This 'he says, Pl'O- refers 'is inexact 'or untrue, ·which was that ,Russia .would spread resources of Formosa !hav:e not by any means been fully devel.Blowitz ·was :bu'i;ly !issuiqg ;preSll .'tects ,the lQd.v.oca(~y of lthe (opinion . :isregl'ethible. 'd: do ,not ,unaerher crrors .throughout :the woEld" ·.atatemcnts that "The D.efiant :that "adultet:.y may :sometimes ,stand \what ;good lcan come lto 'pl'omoHng war:s rand per:secuting oped. Ones" was a first -writiqg -job by ;be propcr." ,souls :by ·things which are ·not the .Chunch; lthe good :would :be ,'Nathan E. :Do.4glas 'and'a 'Harold So ~hile, under the 'Constitu- . fOlln<Jed on God, 'who is the mart.yred; .. .the 'Ho~y Eather .J'acob Smith. 'Last April Young dion, our (Children ,may 'not ibe Truth. 'would ;have 'much to suffer; and -received an 'Oscar in 'the :name taught :the llen ·Oommandment. "I know nothing ..nor ,can I, .:V?I'ious ,nations 'would 'be ,anni~ ·01 'Douglas! ·in .the ~mecican Jpublic ~schools, .say anything about '-slich chashdated. ;Prescriptionscalled for 'The' Acadel11Y .of "Motion 'Pic- (they Im~y .be ItaUJ~ht ito lbl'eak,one ·tisements, .;which have 'been '\When Sister Lucia was seriandde"iverecl ture .Arts '~passed 'the 'buck" to .of them ,in the JAmeIlican ''falsely :aUiibuted ·to me:" ous~y :rll in it939,she lSaid :she ,the Motion P..iCture F.roducers :theater:s, iin :theirlownlhomes, wia 'HEA'DQUARTERSFOR . '11he chancery statement ;also obtained ?e~ssion.;from ·the Association. 'Now the ,producers TV, or even in :the .same lPublic DIETiTlC SUPPLIES .said that since :February, '1955, ::~:ed YI~gll1 dt~ WrIt~ :~u.t the -would .like Jo ,pass it back. ,600 Cottage St. ,WV 4-7439 schools ,should those in (charge ,Sister .Lucia '·has ,said, _nothi~g ., lrel,SeCl'e ,anI' dO ~Nea t'I to·lI1 ;~ben, .Easy· ,Remedy .0£ them lchoose.:ko :run !this ':fUm :New 'Bedford about the 'F.atima apparitions, eny ()Jle .n:'ax ~e ,,' 0 . . Meanwhile ,the Motion .P.icture· ,or pl~y ito,ver Ithe{olassroom ',TV ' and thus 'had not authorized opened :until 1960. . Iindustr.y ,Council, ,set .~p .. few 4lets. .., anyone to make 'public anything ",ears. ago to ;affoFd ~all :branches . on this subject. ,of the business;a united, ,policy The .story ,of .the Eathna ap.and 'a ,clear. .-single .voice jn .this ,pad tions is .as .follows: subject, 'ha~ 'been ,guietlydis- W~ns . The 'Blessed Yirgin ",~p'peal'ed .solved. This resulted from conCLEVELAND (NC)-~ ,priest 'six .times in 191.7!to Lucia Abofusion .and 'intim:idation spread in Hollywood by a handful of who !hav.e 1iperit all ;50 years of 'bora ;and !FlranciscQ ,and Jacinta his priesthood working with 'the ,Marto, three .children .who' red sV~lpathh;ers or indulgent dea'f~ was ~honoro~d :at. 'the rOth' herded sheep in ~the fields near 'liberals who 'had drawn 'Dutch convention. of the 'International 'Fatima and AHustitei. She ·gave courage from .recent 'Supreme .Catholic 'Dea'£ AssoCiation ·here. :them thl1ee .secrets. :Court rulings. .He is .Father' E4gene ,Gehl, 'In 1927 Sister Lucia was ,As .Jack :Warner .now IPoints dineclorof.st. .Joho'.s\Schoo1}for allowed to reveal.:thed:irst ,two: ·out, the .Ametican·L~gion ,casts the Deaf, Milwaukee. Eather -The 'children 'wel'e :given a 8!!pet:sions .on loyal and _dislQyal Gehl w.ascommended 'in'a reso- ltel'J'ifying 'v.ision .of .hell.. element~ ,alike.•The loyal ones 'lu tion'aciqp.ted 'by' some '50 'priests ,have a sure and .easY remedy. who work with the .deaf. .• • • • • • •,•.•,.'••••••••• ,Public confidence can be re'Father Thomas Cribbiq, 'Brook.stored 'by 'immediate -re-activalyn, 'N. 'Y., diocesan mqaerator of tion of .the Motion picture ·activities for the deaf, said 'the Industry Council. two major needs of 'the TCDA This .could be ;given lfulI au- are more .prieststo work with' thority to seek from the HollY- the dea'f .and I .mor.e· :CathOlic / wood 1\cademy, <the 'P,roducers' 'sChOols 'for them. , -Association. ,the IvaIlious 'profes'He .said there are currently . sional guilds and .other .branchel rabout 130 ,priests In "'the .'field.most .of ·them Oll/I.Y ;par:t 'time.....; . I ,and 'nine Catholic 'sChools, .SODM . :O()n lyon' the eleml~Iitary'level. ~Hond.kaiP ;to ::Bur.il1g tthe.•pniosts' uneeti~, a NEW YORK {NC)-Paul oM. standardized '<eo;n1ession ifonmWHOL'£5MiE'& 1mB cButler. chaimian «()f 1theDemo- was ·>spprovett. PYepared' \by emtic ;National Committee .and - lFath~ IOllibJjin, tl!iI~ ....W.:alter :.J.' ·a Catholic, 'e~pr,essed~1he :beliel -nar<?y, 'New .Y:or,~, ..anti :;rather .5I:tU.OKID ~MS ·t'.sadlyenough" .that ;beigg a •.p.llDes !Egan, 'Chic~, 'the coll'$1EI;MERS - iftIEIS Catholic <WoUld fuam~r ·\the 'fesSion 'form'v'iill \be ;Belit ·t9 'llilt eitances of a presidential 'eandi- .prlests itA It he !QlKJStolate ;for·the (:.,.~,..,.." ~- ~, ,.., ;. ·~in ~the J..9.60:c3ll\Palgn. .\WIf. ,~: IDEIlA1:ER~ lWJDiUN ~: However ·MT. :Btttler <and8en. !A ,l-5 tMWE.MEA ~~ ,T-hrustonlB.;Monton,dflK<entuclw, to' rjl /. ~ ,ahairman of '.the ·R~publicanNaTPS;;U'll'" >I ,tiona I .Committ~, .eJl;pressed·the .1i.erm.on~'Soila:iers rfior iR4!lstaul!ants ,. llnstitutians -~'Roadsiae ~Stlllnas 'beliefs that l'eligion will be:less BONN (NC)~;]'oseph 'Cardin1.I:arge ,'M "Small ~Ql:ambakes . ,.of :an issue in J:06O .than:<it ,w,as :a1 Wendel, Archbishqp .of .Mun::' ,in 1'928 ",,>hen \G:oy. !A!IfrediE. :ich -:andlFreising, ihas leaped .on 'Smitn', ;a 'Ca'tholiG. ,was :de'feated ~German,soldiel'SitoadQpta chivin the presidential race. 'alrous 'attitude in keeping with \We~nS'4P.pl.Yil:Obstef'S, ·O,ysters When he ,w.as ,askeawhether.their ,Christian ,'faith. ~Shri"lPs,':Scallqps [in 'Seaso.n· Catholicism wouldbe.a handicap, The Cardit~al spoke to themiin ~Seaweedfor ,Olambakes :olso Mr. Butler r~plied: "As ,a Catho- ·his capa~ity as 'Military Vicarcof iAvc:iildble lic and one 'Who ,has .been..in 'the 'Gellman ,aumed forces at a .politics .33 years, ''1 .certainly ·:do 'PonUrical 'Mass in the cathedral ' be.lie.ve'that <Would rbe ,true, sadly hel'e. _rHe,told Itht!soldiers that enough." Mr. Butler then 'added they should 'hold' <themsel\\es '30 'fH1RD '5T;, ;F~ll~RIVER his opinion .that !the IPublic ;;atti- ready ,to dEifend their homeland ·OS-borne ·4~5693 ,tude ·'towat!d·a canilidate~s i:reli- . ..am~, 'both con ,and 'off cduty',give .lton haM·changed since·192s.' "an'examule .of·.C~ian liv.ing. . • • • • • • • • • . • I!I ••••••..

S:ister 'Lucy Rejects Statement

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THE' ANCHOR, fhurs., July 23, 19-59

17

Pa'ntiff Ccwfions, Cafhal ic Action Agai.nst Change

DIOCESE OF FALL RIVE'" MASS.

- W orl.d .Refuge'es

v ATICA'N CIT.Y (NC) Pope-, John XXIJJ. has cautioned' C~ltholic A-ction leaders, against indulging in a

Continued from, Hag," One countries of the world are being asked to liberalize their immigration laws sO that more of these stateless peoples might be able to establish new homes in peaceful 'and decent su~ound­ ings. Keep Sympathy The Bishop has called: upon an the faithful of the Diocese to' keep alive their sympathies for these dependent people, and to realize that these are the con,cern of all Catholics: Many churches of the Diocese' will have special holy hours, of prayers on Sunday. All pastors of souls will urge their parishioners to' make a sacrifice of prayer for these- refugee"s and to keep them in prayer constantly. The Bishop' has called attention' to the "Christian obligation to pray always for the afflicted,"' and has asked. that filn prayerful attention be· given to the recitation of the Pray~r' for' Peace' which he- has ordered! to; be . FlRSrr GLIMPSE; OF U. S.: Gompleting the first. leg; off a: long' recited by priest, and:; congJ"ep,. :Korean~ or.yhans behaved" like' seasoned trav;eHers u.pen, tht.'ir arnival tion after- each Mass;

PoPe' f'el,i(; itates: I'rish Presid:ent' DUBLIN (NG) - Among the' many congratulatory, messages: received by President Eamon deValera f{)llowing his recent inauguration was one :from Pope' John XXIII: The Pope's message expressed! sincere felicitations and: prayerful good wishes for Mr. de' Valera's' well-being and for' peace and prosperity for the' "noblEr , Irish people." The' message' was transmitted by Domenico Car'dinal Tardini, Vatican Secretary of State. Another message was from His Eminence Francis Cardinal: Spellman; Arclioisho'p of' New' York. He'said': "I wish you every;, happiness in' your' new distinguished post'. Witli' pray-ers fOr I I' e I and and its wonderful' people." , The 'Apostolic Nuncio-d'esignate to' Ireland, Archbishop Antonio Riberi, sent word' tllat Mr; de' Valera's' election crowned; Iii!>' "great lire' of glorious' service' to dear Ireland"" Messages' a:lsu poured' in fI-mit members of the· Irish Hierarchy and from' Prntestant prelates;, Among the- c9ngratulatory messages frQm o:verseas 'wereo thoSe from, Norman Cardinal' Gilroy, Archbishop of'Sydney, and An:h'bishop- Daniel ManniJf of' MeTbourne.

spirit· of' change: which is today "presented witli excessive insistence as a demand, of the iimes,~'

journey, these five,at, the' .Seattle.-'Facorna Inte)"national Airport from the Columban Sisters' hospital in Mokpo; Korea. There- to greet th,e:~oungsterswas Rev. Lawrence' Mr. Willenborg;. Archdiocese of Seattle's direetor of res~tt1E~ment. Accompanying the' children was Sister Mary E'nda; former hospital superior and now. a. mem.ber Of'McJkpOf hospitaHs' medical' sta::flr~ N€' P'ltofu.,

The'Popesounded the warning in an audience.. granted to priest assistants on the Italian Yiouth of Catholic Action. _ "No one denies that one must take into account changing ex·ternal'conditions. But when one reaches the poiiltlof undermining - and' rather thoroughly< - the principles' which are the very framework ora· delicate and important activity; then one must be very' carefu~ and arm oneself with' shrewd alertness." The'Pope urged his listeners'to ,concern themselves with others; particularly those who are struggling in the darkness of error and a, deception' imposed by violence;, and asked' them to pray' especiirlly for the many people, who.imareas where they' lire' oppressed; nevertheless persevere, in their religious faith. He also'reminded' them of their duty of increasing, love for theil,· separated' Christian brothers;

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ALL PREVIOUS: AnENDANCE ·tKOIDS, - SMASHED! IURN ., AWAY CROWDS, AT EVElY PlR'fORMiN€E!, 3) SHOWS DAilY

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Shuts Do.wn -Seoul's Catholic.-O,wnedDai Iy SEOUL (NC)-SeouL's Catholic - owned' daily. Kyonghyang Shinmun, whose- cl'osi'ng' by the Korearr government in' April brought on Ii storm of protests, has been shut down again only seven hours after a court order said it could resume puolication. The Court of Appeals here ruled that the 'newspaper, Korea's second largest, could'reope'n pending. a-' decision. on, its case by the country's Supreme Court. Then, after an emergency two,. h 0 u'r cabinet meeting, the Korean government suspended Kyorighyang Shinmun's publish~ ing license. The daily's staff wasnotified of the suspension while preparing what w.ould hav~ been the paper's first edition in nearly two months.

Fill'ed wit,hi unexpected

d1rama-deep within a seldom se:en world'deeper in the, pag,eant and violence of the African C(i)ng0~ and deepest of all in the co:nsc-i ence o,f a young' arrd beautifu.l

Sociol,ogical Soc,iety To Hold Convention CHICAGO (NC )-The American Catholic Sociological Society; will, hold its 21st annual convention' at Mundelein College' from Aug.. 21 to, Sept: z; it; was announcec~ here. :Bishop J,()hn 'J. WrigJ\t· of Pittsburgh', honorary president of' the society, will give the' epening, day luncheon addre!tS: Tentative'topics for the' program include "Race Rt'lations in a, Southern Dioceile;'" "Lnterl'acial' Marriage in Brazil;"' ana, "The' Catholic Press' arid, the Nationall Cause- in, N~i Germany.'" ,

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, I DO NOT. THAT WA~NIT THAi WA~ COWARDICE, THE CQWAR.DICE OF, £DMEONE UNWILLIN,G iO FACE LIFE,'OF i t;OMEONE AFRAID TC) ~lAFFER I.IFE A<; GpO WILLED IT.

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18

'It's All i.n the.Family At St" Mary's Parish, ,Taunton . Father Larkin· Continued from Page One " of ':Enthronement of..the Sacred , ,'Heart," a popular pocketbook edition which has 'sold over 73,000 copies. " , The Sacred Hearts father is ,the former national director of the Tarcis'ian yputh movement and for se'veral years was the ,Ullited, 'States pro-postulator for the cause of the,beatification of Father Damien" de Veuster,

-THE ANCHOR Thurs., July 23. 1959

DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER. MASS Continued from Page' Qne parish,' Taunton, should be written-by ,someone with the . special training and perhaps re, , tired-the. history of the, parish ought to be done, particularly as "ROME CNC)-Italy's sick' and the Vatican was urging early suffering ',have 'been' asked to ,parishes to preserve their recoffer up a day of prayer in h'onor "ords, by someone with the' train-", ' of Our Lady on Aug.!. ,ing and time who had be~n born , The' observance is sponsored -:in the parish and lived in ,it for by'the Volunteer Center of Suf:, 50 years, Miss, Murphy agreed SSH~C~as the first priest to re_fering,' a pious,' association. The that someone should write the ceive the, anntlalFamily Life,' association has the support of the history-bu't not she. - However, Italian hierarchy. she 'would use her special train,Bureau ~award. Aug. I will be the first anniing to get the old records in Father Larkin organized two triduums of successive Masses at versary of the consecration of order for w'wever did write it. the Chapel of Apparition, ParayItaly to Our Lady of suffering. So she started with the, boxes le-Monial, France, in 1956 and A special ceremony commemof old letters and bills and not'ices 1957. He founded secretariates orating the day will take place 'of dedications and the blessing , of the .Enthronement ·throughout at the Lourdes Grotto during the of the church bell and programs all areas of the United States. annual pilgrimage of ill priests , and all the ~rantically miscelfrom Italy. ' With Joseph' J. Ellicott of laneous collection of church records which had, been stored in , Chicago; the jubilarian. cooper, ated iii the 'erection of 13 Way:" the rectory. side Shrines of the Sacred Heart CINCINNATI '(NC)~ Father Then there were, the old throughout the country and the Malcolm La VelIe, C.P., first leather-bound volumes of, the construction ,Of the Sacred Heart 'American to hold the position of parish register, and ail the newsChapel in Washington, 'the Superior General of the Passionpaper files .to read: They led to American "Paray': Ie -'Monial,'" ist Fathers will preside at the the Registry of' Deeds to check' , and organized the First Solemn triennial provincialchapt'er of old laild I,'ecords and particularly Novena to be.held in this chapel Holy Cross Province which starts ~obias Boland affair. in honor of the Sacred Heart for tom'orrow at Holy Cross Monas• Much Research HISTORY OF PARISH: Rt. Rev. James Dolan, pastor th~ Feast of the' Sacred 'Heart ill tery and Retreat' House here. . ~Naturally good working June of this year. knowledge of the early, church , of St. Mary~gCliurch in Taunton, is deep in thought while His two sisters" the only surin America was needed as back-, readin,g his parish history as compiled by Maydell Murphy. ANSWERS: i (b); 2 (d); 3 (d); viving members Of his immeground 'for the parish research' 4 (c); 5 (b); 6(d); 'i (a); 8 (c)~ a few incidents about her in the 'people"of the parish who entered diate 'family, will be pr~sent , and MJSS Murphy read everyreligious 'life in addition to other manner of a loving daughter, and with other relatives aiid friend. thing she could find on the subto add one more thank you for , at the Mass. , helpful work; the:editor,'Wplilim / ject. Two books were of outthe magnificent contribution she T. HurleY,Jr.; alumni and alum:standing, value and interest: has'made to m:y native city." , nae' of the parochial schools, who "The History of, (he Archdiocese Maintenance Supplies financed the book: the friends ROME (NC)-Italian Catholic As soon as the book was ready, of Boston," by Fathers Lord and among'the' clergy' who'read the, for distribution, Mi~s Murphy Action now numbers some 3,262,SWEEPERS - SOAPS Sexton ahd "The History of the , manuscript and added anecdotes; took off for her Summer home 000 active, members, including ,~ Catholic Church in the' United DISINFECTANTS and, of. course; Monsignor Dolan, in Falmouth Heights to get on' abo\Jt 316,800 men, 650,000 woStates," by Joh~ Shea.' FIRE EXTINGUISHERS the movin'g spirit ~lnd a shrewd men and 1;800,000 teenagers. The with the hobbies and program 'Shea's book' is out of print she tried 'to start two' years ago..· balance is made up of elemenbut Miss Murphy, .had a cop'y, c~itic. , " Happy Parish tary.sc'hool students (about 400,At least, that's what she hopes. which had been presented, toher The purpose . and fiavor: of ' 000)., college ,and professional grandfather by "one of the first 18B6 P.UR'CHASE ST. For those' with n~stalgic or students and 'alumni' groups All 'in The Family. is 'best· expastors' of" St. Mary's. ' NE~ BEDFORD ' historical interest, All In The pressed' J.nMiss Murphy's Qwn (abo'ut 22;000), 'and,'more thaD For two' years " the' material ,Family: An Informal Sketch of 8,000 teachers: words: ,"I wanted a' book 'as hisWY.3-3786 was' searci?ed, sorted, checked, St. Mary's Parish. may' be had torically' accurate' as I could 'and pI.! t itl ~rder: And then, of make it" but my chief aim was 'by writing Rev: William Morris, cOurse,' there was only one thing to achieve an informal record of '; St. Mary's Rectory, 14 S1. Mary'. for Miss Murphy' to do: write Square, Taunton. '~i Electrical the hi"story of St. Mary'spar,ish'. a happy parish, 'with, pastor and Truck' Body' Builders people working in harmony. She,did....:...131 'years' after. F,r.' V~ Contractors Aluminum or Steel "St. Mary's needs ·no advocate Robert Woodley celebrated the 944 County St. • first Mass in Taunton and on tne .:"-1 have merely triied to gather

'Sick to Offer ,Day of ,Prayer

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SCHOOL,

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DAHILL CO.

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golden anniversary of the foundS· , . featuring ingof St.MarY'sparochialschools.P.n IITh~ .Gaslight· Room l l The finished book,. "All 'in Continued from Page One' Ideal for Communion Break:" The Family",; is obviously a work in his' .first address to the whole fast.s, Organization Banquets of lo,ve and c~os~ cooperation be'" world last November, asked f.)1,' tween the author, the editor and prayers, appealing to "pious 386 Acushnet Ave. 'the print~r. It contains foui ral:e heat;ts, fervent· hearts of all the New' Bedfo!,d photographs taken, when the . WOrld.", Call WYman 2-1703 ,parish was fairly: young - but "'We 'beg you,' Pope' John the other pictures were take I'! , said,' 'to pray alway:; to the -Lord \ . specificaliy for the "book by C,' for 'the Pope,'in the intention of, ,'It A. WILCOX CO. Emme('Calvey, with on one oc-' obtaining for him the perfection casion, ,help, from ,.the ,first' de-" .'of meekness~"nd humility: We ", :OFFICE . FURNITURE.· ~,.. partment. ' The, printer should are very certain that great riches ': '?:;i~ :S~~~k. 'i~ ~:. rl,~·fn~~~';~:~e&i~~:;.<: ~ take -just pride ina firstrate job will follow, these devotional" '''>DESKS:' '. .'.' .. ,"cHAiRS , of typography"reproduction 'exercises.' " , {'<FiLING' C'AB'NETS layout.. , ' , ',' \, "So' speaks' the' ,Vicar of '.'FIRfFILES • SAFES The history, was, indeed, a Christ," 'Bishop Connolly con"family alfair""-,-with help from ,cludes,'''he wbo claims no title FOLDING TABLES, , '• . all' sources; including the ,~urate other than to bea good ~heriherd . AND CHAIRS , who crawled over, around and tending his own, and Seeking the' through, the church beams in many others' not of,"the fold order to check the inscription on 'whom he'~ust lead'so:that 'there..../ , ,22 ~ED~(JRD ST, .. the bell; the Nuns, who made a be' but one fold and one shepFALL RIVER 5-7838 cOnl,pleta'list of 'all'the ,young" herd." '

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THE ANCHO~Thurs., July 23. 1959

Giants' School Rece'ives Enthusiastic Response A strong turnout of 41 youthful aspirants reported on Tuesday to South Park, Fall ,River, where Giant scout Frank Seyboth conducted a' baseball school' under the au'spices of th~ :Fall River CYO. Assisting Seyboth in administering the program were ex-pro Frank spirit shown by the' boys and M Regan, former Diman coach, indicated that he woul~ toltow Ed Sullivan,· ~att Burke and closely the fortunes of several. AnibaI Arruda. A twelve The short July horne stand ')f

TEHERAN (NC)-Radio Moseow was denounced here for "crass ignorance" in' having "golle to such lengths as to have an atheist broadcaster hold a memorial service" trying to' play on the religious feelings $ Moslems. . The government radio in' this Moslem country said that Soviet propagandists had feigned "respect for Iranian religious' suseeptibilities~' by commemorating the assassination of Huseiri, grand lIOn of Mohammed the Prophet. The aim of the broadcast was simplY "to i,mplell'lent Soviet im~rialist designs," it said. "Soviet rulers have for yeaFII disregarded ethical and human' principles and have capitalized on anything ,and everything to attain their filthy designs,' ineluding God, religion, and belief. .rid things held sacred," the Teheran radio said.

: I

LegislctZlB"s Laud Archbishop Sheil

By Jack Kineavy,

Teheran Broadcast Hits Propagandists

I

DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER, MASS,

Somerset Hilth School Coaeh

inning ball game in which all candidates saw action was the feature of the four hour session. Ray Carvalho, Bridgewater Teachers and Paul Gibson, Durfee outf i e 1 d' e r , slammed homeruns,. while :Ed P ~ rei r a and Tony A viiI a . had triples to lead the hitting parade. Pitching was :the order of the day, however. Al Costa, Coyle ace, Bill, DeCosta, Somerset mainstay, Terry Lomax, Durfee, and Ed Berube. Junior High phenom, were pilrticula~'ly lInpressive. Due to the high humidity, pitchers were limited to ~wo innings on the mound, The fielding gem of the day was turned in by centel-fieidp.r Johnny O'Brien, Sacred Hearts' talented gardener, who raced into rigl1t-center to pull down a long drive ,goihg away. Heading ,in the oppo~ite direction, full tilt, was rfghtfielder Tony Cor, reia. The catch and.'the collision appeared simultaneous; both boys ,went sprawling, but Johnny held the ball. Incredibly, neither was hurt.) All-Star Team At the conclusion of the game, Seyboth met with his assistants to select an All-Star team. As is usually the case in such matters, there is general agreement on most positions. However, tl;1e battery departments see,med to comprise more than a fair share of talent so that multi selections ,were made at these posts. , lB Bill ContrerpS" Coyle ,2B Ed Avilla, Santo Christo 3B Ron Gagnon, Durfee Tech S8 Len Nicolay, Santo Christo LF Tony Cotreia', Immac,ulaie Conception CF John O'Brien. Sacred Heart RF Paul Gibson, Durfee ' Tony Avilla, Santo Christo C Ray Carvalho, Bridgewater Teachers p' Al Costa, Coyle 'Bill DeCosta: Somerset Terry Lomax. Durfee Ed Berube, Henry Lord Utility John Raposa, Santo Christo Ed Pereira, Our'Lady of the Angels May Expand School The enthusiastic response to the program may result in its' augmentation to a three day affair next Summer.' Father Walter, Sullivan, FaU River CYO Director, was assured by Scout Seyboth that the' Giants' ol'ganization would be only too willing to cooperate to/expand the offerings of the school. Seyboth was impressed with the hustle and

19

WASHINGTON (NC) - TWi' members of Congress have in-' serted articles in the Congre.sional Record praising Auxiliar~' Bishop Bernard J Sheil of Cbi~ tlago on his recent elevation te, the personal rank of Archbishop Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey 0: Minnesota and Rep. Roman C, Pucinski of Illinois paid tribuk' to Archbishop Sheil's work in the Chicago Archdiocese in remarks delivered to their respective houses. Both requested,that editorials from. Chicago newspapers congratulating the Archbishop be placed in the Congressional Record. Archbishop Sheil's work with the youth of Chicago was cited by Senator Humphrey. Mr, Pucinski said that the Archbishop's contributions as a spiritual leader t, humanity "have served as inspiration to peoplt, not only in Chicago but throughout the nation."

the Red Sox just concluded went long way toward reviving baseball interest in Boston. The attractions were the leagu<~'s best - New York, Chicago and' Cleveland - arid near capacny crowds viewed a majority of the l2-game stand, Five straight" over the Yankees captivated the local 'baseball populace and the excitin~, if not altogether high calibl'e, ball displayed in the White Sox' and . (;YO BASEBALL SCHOOL: Coyle High Outfielder Indians' ,series caused Boston's Bill Contreras of Our Lady of Lourdes Parish, Taunton stock to rise appreciably in the baseball world. 'left, confers with New England territory Giant Scout Frank Gets" Off Easy Seyboth, center, and Somerset Baseball Coach Jack Kineavy, We think Manager Joe Gordon of Cleveland ,got off light right ,at CYO Baseba)l School held at South Park, Fall with a three-day suspef\sion and River, Tuesday. a $200 fine after the ruckus Friday night. Gordor twice ca,me '" on the field-after he had been VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope thumbed out--'::'to renew tlIe aJ,'I John XXIII has transferred obgument over an interference cad 0 ' servance of thf! feast of S1.. Johr1 at second. .VATICAN CITY (NC)-L'Oselusions froIr.. these facts and we Vianl1ey. the Cure d'Ars, to Alii, ,The 'case' of Minnie Minoso'" servatore Romano said in • 'prefer to wait. Needless to say, , 8 this year. 'who was called out onstrikf.'S' front-page editorial that Churchwe shall be the first to rejoice if The feast is ordinarily cele,while standing 15 feet from the "State relations in, communistour fears prove unfounded. At brated on Aug. 9, but that d_ batte-r's box presented ·a far mQre ,ruled Poland are "becoming . present one can only say that falls on a Sunday this year.' '. dangerous situation'. The volatile :, more precarious' every week." the: threatening words proThis year is the centenary of La~in' blew his stack at plate 'The Vatican City daily cited nounced at the largest congress the death of the Cure d'Ars, the ! umpire Frank Umont and but ,',news agency reports of, recent 'of .the 'United Workers party' patron 0'1. parish priests, and 'taw ,for'Rocky Colavito who clamped violent" poliCe interference with, were, n~t s imp 1 e rhetorical Pope has been encouragin,; a bearhug on' Minoso, there's nOCatholie worship in the town of 'solemn celebrations in his hOllOW. exercises ..." telling what would have hapKraznik Fabryczny., It added' pened., " that there are "other facts less Trader Frank 'Lane, Cleve- visible but probably more threatland's G.M., was 'particulady ening." The paper said that'last nettled by the' suspension of April, there was a decree pubGordon and Minoso. If quoted .llshed in Poland's "Bulletin of correctly,' he alleged that the the L'aws" regarding confisca- ,. American League umpires were tion of all Church. property in nothing but a bunch of punchthe so-called Western Terridrunk, ex-football players. ' tories, formerly belonging to He alluded to the ejection of G erm~ny. Tr.p~l.t , Berra and Duren last week and observed that it's still the YanAfter reviewing what it called . b harassment, of . the 'Church in k eesl 1eagl.le, nel'ther h avmg een ' ' Th Poland by the literal application d suspen d e. e cases, of course,' of, 'regulations and by pressure 'were no t 'a t \a II paralleL Berra, , tt' f f 't on religiOl,ls instruction in the as a rna er 0 ac, apologized immediately for his part 'in ,the' ,schoo.ls, the newspaper said: rhubarb. ' ~'W~ do not wish to draw con-

a

Polish Church-State Relations More Precarious Every Week'

Feast of Cure D'An .... Observance Aug. 8

Prom the

Monk.

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'Fo~mer' Seminarian~ ,t-l,qld Annual binner MAYNOOTH (NC) - Vexilla Regis, ,a society of former students Ireland's national seminal:Y, st. ,Patri~k's, Conege', who ,did not ,g{) on, to the priesthood, held its 10th annual dinner here. Father P. F. Cremin, speaking at the dinner, prais.ed the founders of the society, saying its ex~stence removed an implied stigma in the public, mind on those, who had left the semina~y,. He" also noted that the society has given help and advice to the former, Maynooth students; ,

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SISTER STUDENTS: A teacher~s dream is Sacred Heart School of , ,Sister Peter Maria, S.U.S.C;; Sister Claire Marie, O.P.; Sister. Joseph, -Marie, O.P. Infight center'pict~re, Sisters check homework before class; Edllcation in Fall River. Without exception, students are 'attentive, indus. trioul;l-'--'and 'all their hom'ework. The institution for nuns, how in its " ;Inrear' are (left to right) Sister Maura Teresa, S.U~S.C. and Sister Bernadette'Patrick, S.U.S.C. Both are from the community's mission in Elizabeth 25th y~ar; is conducted by the Religious of the Holy Union of the Sacred' City, and 'traveled farthest to ~ttend the summer school. In front are Hearts. In left picture, Sisters from scattered Holy. Union houses work on, (left right) Sister Teresa' of the Holy Ghost, S.C.Q. and Sister Rita of library, assignments. Left to right are Sister Isabel Mary, ,S.U:S.C., Ports': the Crucifix, S.C.Q.At far right, Sis.ters.. pause between classes (left to q.,' mouth, RI.; Sister John David, S.U.S.C.; Patcbogue;N.Y.;' Sister Willhim right) Sister Nora William, S.U:s;G."Sist~r F'lora Aimee, O.P., Sister Therese, S.U.S.C., Mt. Ephraim, N.J. At leftcente,r, phychology students, Catherine Michael, S.U.S.C. and'Sistei''-Mary, Pab;icia, O.P. ' ~ , participate in cla~sroom disclission. Left to right, Sister Mary Rosa, S.U.S.C: o '

do

N.C.,

to

,20 Th'urs., " ~THE ANCHOR' Sacred ',lleart S'chool July 23, 1959

, .

, DIOCESE

OF

FALL RIVER. MASS, '

of Education's· 25th' Year : Expe,ct Approva,l Recalls Thousands of Religious · Alumnae · Of New Sunday .

' r s . 'l\Iark'mg 1't8 25th". anmversary . . S acre d H eart S Ch 001 0 f Educatu;m; . 'con.:. Sales. Measure ,. rges Ed uca t o t h'IS year IS \.... ' ducted in Fall HiveI' by the Religious of the 'Holy Union of the Sacred Hearts. Offering HA~RI~:J:)URGH (NC):Supp'ort Grapho. 'courses in higher education 'to religious of all communities, it has served thousands of - Approval JS expected soon III Ana Iy'sis Meth'od, has Sisters from the Diocese andsurrouridingareas. Its Dean, Sister Mary Aloysia" S.U.S.C. the S~~te House of Reprethe distinction of having sentatIves her,e for a new

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·ST. LOUIS (NC)-,A ca.n

for educators to, bac~ the use of handwriting analysis in schools was issued here by Mother M. Cecilia Koehler at . I t' f , the 30 t h annua conven Ion 0 . the International Grapho Analy,. sis Society. .

b' 'e'· . t 'h th' h I newly-opened Debrabant Li- not required ·to take qualifying bill- banning ,unnecessary Sune n. WI. e • sc 00 brary, which possesses the latest examinations. ' ' day business, according to throughout Its eXlstel)ce.'. in equipment and study facilities. observers. From 1934 until 1953 she 'Out of town Sisters are housed At the Prospect Street house, , .The measure was sent to the was registrar. Since then she with consideration for their for iri~tance" special' rooms are .. floor by the House Rules Comhas filled that offke in addition after-school. study needs. available for evening study mittee without change from the to holding the dealnsh'I·p. '. They attend classes in .the periods. Spacious' quarters and for'm, I'n WhI·C.." I't passed the HI'" quiet surroundings c,ontr.ibu,te to . H Many Communit.,ies 0 y Sisters' original' building , a n 'atmosphere con'ducive 'to State Senate' early in May. Throu,gh the years many com- at 520 Rock Street and.'in a house ~he bill spells out a long list . d Ias t summer at 603 mental effort. munities have, been represented acqUIre of iteins which may not be sold t Courses off ered in the school, ~s stud,~nt body.. T.his P rospect Stree. Sisters 'traveling farthest· to on Sunday. It provides for a . ' year 'include , . , two $100 fine for first, offenses, and summer the 106 religious regis- ,-this art, 'education, this summer's courses are tered include FrElnciscan' 'Mis- . English, history, mathematics," from - the' Holy Union's "Negro ; $200 fines for second and subse' . philosophy 'and religion;. niissionin '. ',City, N.C,.' ,que,l1t offenses. . Elizabeth sionaries of Mary" ,I;>ominicans, musIc, I '. in. seSsion year- ' ,Others have, cpme , Sisters .of Cha.rity illl, d Reli,gi,ous . Th' eschooIS : from ·New . ' The.., measure·lists ' clothing, , , 'of ,the Holy 'Union. .' . , rouiId and the Winter program York State and New Jersey in furniture; appliances, toys, jew-' High standards are. maintained is even ":more extensive than addition· to'many ,from Massa:.. -'clry .an~' building,' materials forthe faculty. None, said Sister . the Summer. chu~etts . and Rliod~ -: Island' 'among items .which'maynot be Alo'yshi, has' ever :possessed less It is affiliated with' the Cathcommunities. . sold in retail stores on Sunday. , thalf, a master's degree before olic University of America, I~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;\ ~~;;;;';;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ teaching at th> scllOol." which means tha't"its' students 1-" Summer school ~;tudents make may, transfer without loss of constan~ use of ,the school's,- .credit to other colleg,es and are:

Looks , Speakil}g,on "A Teacher . at Grapho Analysis,", Mother Cecilia, a certified grapho analysist, urged 'the adoption of the grapho tE)chnique in school testil'lg programs. ' , , ."School authorities recognize," the Ursuline nun said, "the.,lirriit.s of present methods for measuring inborn intelligence, the iJladequacy of tests .for vocational determiilations, and the weakness of ratin~ 'scales for the per-. sonality .trait of emotional im. maturity." . Mother Cecilia said that t h e ' . , grapho analysis method is "98 per: ccnt accurate" andempha-' JEANETTE (NC)-More than The state education council sized its quick and easy value 500 C,atholic school children will voted unanimously against the in arriving at the "determina- be' transferred to local public request. The local school board tions desired and required" in schools as a result of a decision had approved the rental plan by th'e inodern classroom. She stated of the Pennsylvania State Coun- 'a vote of six to one. / . "-.... that it is' espec~ally useful in cil of Education. Oppose Action counseling and in understanding teacher _ pupil ~ parent relatio'nThe children are those who Catholic officials had asked to ships. ' w~uld have. enrolled .in the first rent space in the public school because of' overcrowding in the thIrd, fourth. and, fIfth grades Addressing the Grapho Analy- of Sacred Heart School 'here. , . ,parochial schoo( It was pointed sis Society 195' graduating class" In a letter' to the Jeannette out that the public school is not Mother Cecilia praised the pro- Board of School Directors, Fathcompletely.filled. ' 'When plans for the proposed fessional ethics of the ·group and er Harr! G.: HYI?-es of Gree~surged a continued spirit of loy- burg, dlOce,san schl>O~supermrental were made public, a local alty. She, compared grapho .~,en?ent"sald the~c.tlOn was a citizens' committee was organanalysis to 'psychiatric in its fight' temporary,. emergmg meas- iied to oppose the· action. The for public recognition, and ,ac-' ure." . ., groupdisclaiihed anti-Catholic 'ceptapce. ,Father Hynes elcplllined thil t bjas as a reason 'for its opposi-' The educator, who has served' the decision to transfer the tion . both as religious superior and Caktholic I SChfotol t~l:tudet' nts wdas o. H. English, chairman counselor in he... community, also . t a .en on y. ~~r le,~ a t e e. u- of the Committee on New Legispointed up the potential value of . ~ahon councIl m HarrIsburg re- 'lation and ~chool' Organization grapho m,ethod in the training of Jccted a request ~he local bf the estate educati0Il ' council, R,eligious.' ~. school ?ol!rd to, ~!'lasefour classsaid after the,negative vote that ro~ms !na publIc school to the there is a "definite,legal quesC. <It. holi~'University pa10chIaI school.,' tion" whether the local school ".. - district~, ~as," authority to rentDivi de d Gernuiny Is" rooms toa..j>'~.rochial §chool at. P:lans Wind' Tunnel WASHINGTON (NC)-A pro- Threat to Peclee ,_ the, same time public ,school 'eet to develop an inexpensive 'MEPPE~ (NC),~ A: 'divided,' classes are ,in' session. supersonic wind tunnel for Germany is a gaping wound able teaching ptirposes haS been start- to 'endanger the peace of the, • . cd at the Catholic University of world, ~ishop' H.elrnut Hermann America School for Engineering,' . Wittler of Osnabrueck said to"a it has been announced here. pilgrimage of women here. . \ : The Bishop asked· the women The National Science Foundato form a prayer crusade for,.'f. ~'For' Your Protedion tion will finance the project with (. Buy From a grant in the amount of/$14,260. peace. ..", Anew type of equipment, using "Modern' atheism wants to PERFECTIO....-..ill . . government surplus material, liberate men from the,' fear of ' k ' will be designed to bring the sin," he' said, "but Catholic' . cost of a supersonic wind tunnel, .. , for teaching purposes' within the budget, of . mos~ engineering. , ~ttioJ' of ,the Christianperso~al., "vVYS~7947 .schools. . , 1 y. . ~,. . . . ~.;...' .

Co~ncil Fl~rcestransfer of SOO .

Catholic 'I)upils to Public Schools

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PERFECTION

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SUNDAY.' JULY 2'6 FOR THE ANNUAL FEAST OF

GOOD SAI'NT ANNE \

Come and Pray to

ST. ANNE'S' SHRINE 'M'ASS~

FALL RIVER,

In, the' Basement ,of 'St, Anne's Church C;orner South Main' and Middle 'Streets ' •

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DEVOTIONS'Ul~ 'HONOR

OF

. 'GOO.D,-st.' A:N,NE ,

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:MASSES.· ~,7,'

8, 9, 10, 11 a.m., noon

PERPETUAL SUNDAY AND TUESDAY DEVOTIONS IN HONOR OFST, ANNE AND ST. JUDE Every Sunday and every Tuesday of the year, there are perpetual Sunday 'and Tuesday Devotions in honor of St. , .Anne and of St. Jude. ' DEVO'FION HOURS ON SUNDAY: 2:15 p.m.-3:15 p.m. SUNDAY PR,OCESSIqN: 3 p;m. DEVOTIqN HOURS ON, TUESDAY: 2 p.m.'-7 p.m.


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