The ANCHOR
An Anchor of the SO?A.l. Sure and Firm-ST. PAUL
Fall River, Mass. Thursday, August 7, 1958
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2, No. 32
Second CI••• Mail Privilegea Authorized at Fall Riyer. Ma....
PRICE 10e $4.00 pe'. Yea'
Consistorial Congregation Deals With Personnel VATICAN CITY (NC)-The Sacred Consistorial Con gregation is the executive personnel department of the Catholic Church. Through it, Pope Pius XII chooses and checks on more t'han 200 Archbishops and which is one of the 12 adminis 1,000 Bishops, governing 400 trative bodies of the Church, has million Catholics all over the three distinct jobs. Its major re world sponsibility is the selection and supervision of the Church's hier. A ctually the Congregation, Turn to Page Ten
GUIDES LIVES OF RELIGIOUS: All aspects of the Jives of men and women in religious orders are the concern of 76-year-old Cardinal Valerio VaJeri in his post ~s Prefect ef . the Sacred Congregation of Religious. He is pictured with Msgr. Pietro Palazzini, Under-Secretary of the Con gregation. NC Photo.
Publishers Warn Tension Eases Parents Resist Over Trouble Bad Movie Ads P.oland
II,
.VI
Asserts Physicians
Can Promote Peace
BRUSSELS (NC)-;-Catholic doctors and nurses have major roles to play in promoting world health and peace. two U. S. delegates told international congresses here. Dr. John R. Cavanagh of Washington, D. C., a former president of the Catholic Psy chiatrists 'Guild, addressed the First World Catholic Congress on Health. Anne V. Houck, executive · , f •••..".,.'"1.,""' . 1.:••• secretary of the National Council of Catholic Nurses, spoke at the Sixth Congress of the lnternational Catholic Committe of Nurses and Medical Social Assistants. The Catholic health congress, which opened with a Mass in the basilica at Koekelberg, was fol lowed by a radio address from His Holiness Pope Pius XII. The Pontiff told delegates that Cath olic doctors and nurses should so practice their professions that people can see in them the imi tation of Christ. . Promote World Health .Dr. Cavanagh told the con' gress that the time has come for Catholic physicians to adopt a world perspective and reminded ti:lem that they have a duty to Turn to Page Eleven
Prayer Novena Now Going On In Diocese The Novena of Prayer for peace and for the persecuted Church, recoJl1mended by the Most Reverend Bishop, is now taking place in the 105 par ish churches and the 82 chapels of the Diocese. . _ This Novena, preceding the Feast of the Assumption of Our Lady, was called for by the Holy Father who pointed out that the Church has always. looked to Mary in time of special danger. All indications are that many of the faithful are making the sacrifice to attend the Novena. This is especially true of the vacation areas of th' Diocese where many visitors to' the Cape and Islands are joining with residents of the Diocese in this united prayer for the intentions set forth by the Pope.
Pope, Asks Nuns Adapt .Rules To Times
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JUBILARIAN: Rev. E. Souza deMello (left) pastor of Our Lady of Lourdes Church, Taunton, will celebrate a Solemn High Mass Aug. 15 on the 50th anniversary of his ordination. Assistant priest will be Rev. Arthur C. dosReis (right) pastor of St. Michael's Church, Fall River.
Father deMello, Taunton Pastor, Will Mark' Ordination Jubilee Plans are nearing completion for the celebration of the golden jubilee of Rev. E. Souza de Mello, pastor of Our Lady of Lourdes Church, Taunton. He will celebrate a Solemn High Mass of thanksgiving at 7 :30 ·p.m. Aug. 15, the Mello's jubilee include a testi 50th anniversary of his or- monial banquet to be held Wed dination by the late Most nesday, Aug. 20 -in the Cotillion Rev. Daniel F. Feehan in Ballroom, Taunton. Parishioners St. Mary's Cathedral, Fall River. will 'offer a gift and spiritual His assistant priest will be Rev. bouquet at this time. Arthur C. dos Reis, pastor of St. Father / dos Reis will be the Milchael's Church, Fall River. featured speaker and honored Rev. Joseph Hanna, C.S.C., will guests include Rt. Mev. Msgr. preach. James J. Gerrard, Vicar General; Other plans for Father de Turn to Page Fifteen
(NC)~
Sister. Mary Vital Will Celebrate ~;~ ~~~in=~~t~~et~~u~,;:~ Golden Jubilee of Profession VATICAN CITY
. to develop means of selfsupport and be ready to adapt· their rules to the requirements of the times under the guidance' of the Holy See. The Pontiff spoke in the final part of three consecutive radio addresses beamed to cloistered' ~~n~ ~hrougho~t th~, world in an InVISible audience. The third address on "Living the Contemplative ~ife" was. a cOffo1pleme.nt to the first two dlscourses, gIven on July 19 and 26, on knowing and loving the contemplative life. Turn to Page .Eighteen
Sister Mary Vital,. SS.CC., has a well chosen name ,for vital is the word that best describes the petite grey 'haired member of the Sisters of the Sacred Hearts _and Perpetual Adoration, who celebrates her golden jubilee next Th d urs ay. machine age caught up with the For· 49' of ·her 50 years in Sisters 15 years ago, and since "religious life, Sister Mary then they've been driving to Vital has taught at St. school; Joseph's school in Fairhaven and Born in Kortryk, Belgium, lived at Sacred Hearts Convent. Sister'Mary Vital entered reH "For 35 years," she re~alls, "we gion at Tongres; an ancient city waiked from the convent to the which still has remains of Romiln installations. She made her pro school every day, a half hour fession at the Sacred Hearts journey each way. Maybe that's Motherhouse in Paris, then stud what kept us healthy!" But the ied in Spain for a year. Turn to Page Twent7
LOS ANGELES (NC) ARSAW (NCF-Impor Newspaper publishers ·here· tant agreements have now have warned the m.otion been· reached in the crisis picture industry that parents between the Polish govern are rebelling against objection ment and the Catholic Church. able movie advertising, the Hol On July 21 the government lywood Reporter has disclosed. raided the, Jasna Gora monas The daily film trade publica tery, site of the famed shrine of tion said Arthur G. Pollock, Our Lady of Czestochowa, and chairman of the Los Angelea charged the Church with p:ub Newspaper Publishers' Associa'; . lishing unc!'!nsored material tion, had written a letter to all there. An agreement has been major studios asking them to reached whereby documents clean up their advertising. Turn to Page Eleven "More and more parents are rebelling about their children being exposed to some 'of the present theater (adverti~ing)' copy," the' association letter said, accOl'ding to the Reporter. Studios were asked by Mr. By Patricia McGowan f Pollock: "Will you please be Fifty years of service to the Diocese will be mar.ked next Tuesday by the Sisters your own censor? , .. The last thing they (the publishers) want of the Sacred Hearts and Perpetual Adotation. . Unseen, almost unknown, one of the most important spiritual activities of the Dio to do is to act as censor and be fQrced to censor all theater cese is carried on unceasingly in their quiet Fairhaven chapel. It is the perpetual ador copy." ation of the Blessed Sacra Although perpetual adoration The diStinctive habits of the The Hollywood Reporter ment that has been main was inaugurated. in 1914, when Sisters are much admired. With quoted Pollock's letter as stating tained since 1914 without a the ,/ community had sufficient ,in the convent white is worn, that the downtown dailies were moment's halt. members to maintain a schedule with. a colorful. embroidered getting "more and more com Although it is impossible to of round-the-cl?ck ,prayer, the medahon representmg the Sacred plaints about some of the cur measure the graces that' have ~acred. Heart SI~ters have been Hearts of Jesus. and Mary. Hand rent -theater advertising." come to the Diocese from this In Fairhaven smce 1908. On ~ade by the Sisters, the medal Can A void Ce'nsorship silent powerhouse of prayer we Tuesday, Augu~t 12, they mark }ons use ?O less than 10 colors The letter, reportedly written f e It. I'tS energy as we VISI . ·te d'th e the .50th anmversary of the of embrOidery thread . f k and re on orders from publishers of all convent and watched the white blessmg of theIr con.vent. . presen~ hours 0 wor. the dailies, said if "those respon The only commumty of their OutSide the convent the · t f b e d , re d -cape d S IS ers on 0 t·· th U·t d s· t rf bl k A d sible for your copy will keep one 1'0 ficial vigil. Each Sister of the congrega IOn m t e . ISde .wdeadr . ac h' Ani e re f' c~P:l thing in mind-young people of 40 h th ·t States, they opera e the cad IS onne urmg ours 0 vigi " w"o codmtpose Ifehcommu~lldY emy of the Sacred Hearts and before the Blessed Sacrament. an impressionable age read IS asslgne wo ha - our perlo s . S . these advertisements"-possibil f d t' d N'ght two parochial schools, St. Jo "The Blessed acrament IS not ity of newspaper censorship o. 'la ora lon h per. lay. th I d seph's and Sacred Hearts, both exposed," explained Sister . '1 Vlgl S are an our In eng an . F' h h th' A th . . '1 f S dH ts eould be . avoided. are scheduled once a week or ~n air ~v.en, ~ ere ell' mer ony, prmclpa 0 acre ear Turn to Page Twelve oftener for each Sister. lean nOVItiate IS also located. Turn to Pag-e Twent,.
Fairhaven Sisters To Observe
50 ¥ eRrs Service in Diocese
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-THE ANCHOR Thurs., AU9~ 7, 1958
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State Supreme Court Again Upholds Anti~Sunday Sa les Statute
Hyannis Knights. Plan Clambake
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HARTFORD (NC)-Connecti cause it prohibits the sale of cut's highest court, for the sec
candles on Sunday but permits ond time in as many years, the sale of antiques. . upheld the constitutionality of
Associate Justice Samuel Mel Father Mc'Swiney Council the state's law tightly' regulat )itz, handing' down the high #2525,. Knights of Columbus, of ing Sunday sales. court's unanimous decision, said Hyannis, will hold its' second that "in considering the validity annual clambake Sunday, ·Aug. In a unanimous decision, the 24, at Veterans Memorial Park, Co'nnecticut Supreme court of of a classification by the legisla ture of articles'it may from time Hyannis. Errors held that there was "no to time see fit to exempt from Robert Childs, fraternal activ error" in the town court convic the bar of the statute. We must ities chairman, annou.nces that tion of a Milford store owner, or bear in mind that tl' primflry tickets may be obtained from in the subsequent refusal by the purpose of the legislation: is not Paul Donovan, 'Harwich; Daniel Court' of Common Pleas in New to enforce an institute of reli~ J. Slavin, Hyannis; Stanley' A. Haven County to set aside the gion." McLean, Centerville; George ·conviction. Valid Power McGoff, Osterville, and. Edward , V~n Cleve Shuster, owner and While conceding that the stat .Walsh, Hyannisport. operator of Van Cleve's China ute in question, and others, may Recently elected officers of and Glass' Store in Milford, was have had religious origins, Jus the Council are as foHows: convicted of violating the law tice Mellitz declared that "they John J. McConnell,' grand by selling two candle!,! on Sun are upheld' as a valid exercise knight; Daniel J. Slavin" deputy day. In his appeal to the Su of the police power in recogni gra~d knight; James' Hobert, preme Court he maintained that tion of the fact 'that the first chancellor; Robert Childs, war-. the law is unconstitutional beday of the week by general con den; Ubaldo Nugnes, recorder. . sent is set apart for rest, in ac Claudio A,lexandel', treasurer; cord with the general experi John F. Donlay, advocate; Rob ence of mankind that it is wise ert Campbell. inside guard; Ed and necessary to set apart such CARDINAL AND CHAPLAIN CHIEF: His Eminence ward Welch, outside guard. a day at stated intervals for both Very Rev. Leonar(1 J. Daley, Functions to be held in con Maurice Cardinal Feltin, Archbishop of Paris, is shown at the physical and moral welfare pastor of St. Francis Xavier Lourdes where he presented th~' Legion d'Honeur to Major nection with the six-point pro of a state or community.''' Church, Hyannis, chaplain; Ed General Patrick J. Ryan, right, Chief of Chap1<dns, U.S. gram of'the Knights of Colum Noting the trend to liberalize ward J. Bennett, Geo/l'ge McGoff . ' bus have been announced by Army. General Ryan led a group of American service men Msgr. James Coyle' Cm.incil. 182 the Sunday law to permit recre and Stanley A. McLean., trustees. ational activities, Justice Mel Delegates to the State Con and women in the 'first International Pilgrimage to Lourdes .' of Taunton. litz said' it could be assumed velition are Edw,··, J. Bennett. and celebrated a special Mass for them in the Grotto of the, The calendar of events for the that the acquisition of aJitiques and John J. McConnell; alter Shrine of Our Lady there. NC P h o t o . ' ' next two months is as follows: . was ·the pursuit of lin enjoyable n.ates are Daniel J. Slavi,n and' Sept. 8--First meeting, with hobby and·.that "the recreational William K.CroweIl. the. newly elected officers; 13 and cult~ral aspects of Sunday Grand Knight McConnel) an Installation of officers 'at Taun are being further~d' by permit !10unces the six~polnt committee ton Inn; 27-Past Grand Knights' chairmen are as follows: . ti'ng such articles to be displayed party "at K of C. home, Broad ',Edward Bennett Sr., gel~eral way. ...• ...9rOOld on that daY." .. He added that the' exempti()o 'cl1airman; Edward Welch, C'un: KYOTO (NC)-lt was an un In April, '1949, he was ap,.. Oct. l";':"Living' 'Rosary; -]3 9£ antiques from the operation of cit' ;:tctiv\ties; Rob!!rt Childs, fra usual congregation for . Cath pointed' the. first Apostolic Dele the statute' ".rests upon fair dls ternal activities; Da,': I J. Sla-· olic church. The front' pews gate to Korea and was conse';' meeting and first degree; 23 second degree; 26-third degree. tin~tions.,j . , ' vjn,membership and insu'ra~ce; were filled with Buddhist 'and' crated' in Seoul cathedral on A special program 'is being , In the i956 decision the court .Tames HObert, publicity; D::iniel Shinto priest!? and' Protestant June 14,.1949. He was captured plaimec:I for Columbus Pay arid .' iuled against.' a ,Milford delica Hatton, youth activities; and ministers. in June of the following year, by the' 65th anniversary party for Paul Keavy, Catholi'C' activities. teSsen owner who had appealed ,They had come to 'St. Francis the North Korean communists \ . the Council will be held 'in No' a conviction in the lower courts Xavier cathedral here to attend who had overrun the country vember at Roseland Ballroom, on a. charge of seiling meat on . a Requiem Mass held at their and l~ter died from Red treat ~\unday. ' request, in memory 'of an old ment during the for<;ed march . the public relations co'mmittee .announces. friend-Bishop PatJ;ick J.'Byrne, north to the Yalu River.
Bishop Pauf Furuya of Kyoto
The Most Reverend Bishop M.M.; of Washington, D. C" who died at the' hands of the 'Reds celebrated the Pontifical .Mass
presided and gave the final ab.,. during the Korean war. and delivered the sermon. After
solution at the funeral Friday WINOOSKI PARK (NC) Bishop Byrrie, a missioller for Mass, Bishop FtIruya held a of Mrs. Minnie E. Sullivan, NEW DELHI (NC)-A special' Father Gerald E. Dupont, of the many years to Japan', was' well luncheon for the visiting churchmother of Rev. George E. Sulli Society' of St. Edmund, has been Lourdes suplement has' been men. " van, pastor of St. Dominic's liked and remembered for his pUblished here· by the Ind'ian· named president of St. Michael's work in the Kyoto, area before Church, Swansea. College here to succeed Father Express, a leading secular Indian Father Sullivan celc~brated.his and during World' War' U,The . Francis E. Moriarty,' S:S.E. daily. Bishop remained in Japan 'moUler's Mass at HoLy Name Father' Dupont has been aca::' The supplement contained four throughout the war, escaping Church, Fall River, .assisted by demic dean at· the college since pages of material on the centen internment because.. of his ex Rev. Donald A. Couzn and Rev. HOLLYWOOD tNC) - Joan ary of the 'apparitions of Our 1946. His appointment as presi tensive' charitable activities. Daniel F. Shalloo. Leslie, Jane Darwell and, Bobby dent, effective Aug. 15, was an Lady of Lourdes, and the mii" . At the time of the .final sur · ,. Ghaplains to the Bishop were Driscoll will 'star on August" 10 acles that have occured there: nounced by Father Jermiah .T. render, he' spoke over the Jap ! . Rev. Edward L. O'Brien and in a Marian Theater radio pro Purtill, Superior General of the Many Catholic writers contrib anese radio to assure the people : Rev. Joseph J. Welch. Master gram story entitled "Jamie and Society of St. Edmund. uted articles. that the American ' soldiers :' of Ceremonies was :Rt., Rev. the Promise." At the ~me time, Father Pur . The suplement was edited by would not harm them in any , Humberto L. Medeiro:J, Diocesan till design'ated Father Vincent B. The· story is about a husband Frank ,Moraes, Catholic. editor . 'way.. 'Afterwards" he' received ," Chancellor. , . Maloney, S,S.E., as religious su;' credit for much of the success who learns that neglect of his of the Indian Express.. perior and Father Thomas D. of . the peaceful 'occupation' of wife and child. does not pay. The ·Sullivan. S.S.E., as vice-presi .progt:am will be .presented over Japan. .dent of the college. the Mutual Broadcasting System EDINBURGH (NC)-The Roy network at 9 P. M., E.D,T. al So£iety of Edinburgh' pro Marian Theater is produc~ ·claimed a Notre Dame nun FRIDAY-SS. 'Cyriacus, Largus Sister Monica Taylor, from Glas~ and Smaragdus, Ma·rtyrs.: SilTl:" by Father Patrick Peyton, C.S..C., founder of the Family Rosary- ,gow as the year's most dis.; pIe. Red. Mass' Proper; Glo : tinguished . Scottish "~aturalist ria; Second Collect for' Peace; I Crusade. , ., and awarded her its annual Neill Common Pr~fa.ce. . . .Third Order Regular of Prize, it was announced here. 'SATURDAY - St.John Mary St. Francis V:ilinney, the Patron of Parish The following films are to ,be
·Offer to Young Men and Boys
Priests; Confessor. Do.uble. added to' the lists in their re
-. special opportunities to
White. Mass Proper'; Gloria; spective • c;las~ifications: ' study for the Priesthood. Lack
Second Collect Vigil of St. APPRAISER of' funds no obstacle
Unobjectionable for Adults Lawrence. Third Collect for REAL ESTATE For further information. write and Adolescents-Blob,' How' to ' <, Peace; Common Preface•. to Make a' Monster. SUNDAy - St. Lawrence,. Mar FATHER STEPHEN, T.O.R.· Unobjectionable for Adultstyr, and Eleventh Sunday after INSURANCE Badlanders, Certain Smile; FRANCISCAN
Pentecost. Double of II Cla's8. WY 3-5762 :P&EPARATORl' SEMINARl'
Red. Mass Proper; Gloria; Raw Wind in Eden. 13.6 Cornell ,S&' P:O:BOX 289
, Objectionable in Part for All Second Collect Ele;rp.nth Sun New Bedford day after Pentecost; Third -Forbidden Island, Hot 'ROd 119LL1DAl'SBURG lZ. PA.
Collect, for Peace;. Creed; Gang,- Tank Battalion. PATRON OF PRIESTS: Common Preface. Condemned - . Night ':HeaveD St. John M~ry Vianney, Con fessor, popularly known as MONDAY -:- Mass of Eleventh Fell. Sunday after Pentecost. Sim the Cure 'of Ars;. was born ple. Green.. Mass Proper; No near Lyons, France, in 1789. 910ria or Creed; Second Col FORTY HOURS, ~~AL ESTATE, •. , INSURANCE 'He completed his study' for lect SS. Tibuttius and Susanna, DEVOTION Virgin, Martyrs; Third Collect '.the . priesthood with much Aug. 10-St. Theresa, South for Peace; Common Preface. .,difficulty. Assigned. to Ars 21 Bedford St. ' . ,: " Attleboro
.' as a parish priest, he silent TUESDAy - St. . dare, Vi.rgin. St. Theresa, New Bed Simple: White. Mass Proper; ford ." " , ·the rest of his life there. Citizen's Savings Ia.nll BuDding River. Mass:' 9loria; Second Collect: for .our Lady ofVictory'--: Peop:e from far and 'wide' Peace; Common Preface. .' Centerville ..came to his confe~sional, WEDNESDAY - Mass of Elev Aug. 17.,-si: ''';;oseph, Woods enth SUf).day after Pentecost. where during the last·. 10 Hole":' . Simple.' Green. Mass' Proper; · .years of his li.fe he 'spent· 16 Our Cady of Lourdes,
No .Gloria or Creed; Second' .Wellfleet
to 18 hours a day. He· died Collect SS.· Hippolytus' and ,Our Lady of Graee,
· ju~t 100 years ago, and was . Cassian, .Martyrs; ~ third Col:" . North 'westport
•declared patron of· priests,in' i¢ct· 'for Pea~;" Common' Aug: 24-Sacied Heart,New
'Preface. . .: 1929.- NC Photo. Bedford::"
THURSDAY-Vigil of ,the As-· St. Joseph'Ii" Orpha~age,
sumption. . Simple. '. oVi6'Tht:· Fall River. . .
THIl ANCHOR Mass Proper; No ,Gloria or Al,Ig. 31-St. "Anthony of the.
Seeond.elass maiJ prlviiegeo - authorised 2666 NORTH MA~ ST~' FALL RIVEI Creed; SecOnd;.· COliect St. 'at Fall River. Masa Publisbed eve.., Desert, Fall River
· Thursda) at 410' Higbland Avenue. 'Fall Eusebius, . Confessor; .Third St. John the Bapt!~t,
River Maae., bJ;. the Catholic. Preea. 01 the .TE~PHoNE 5--7992 Collect for Peace; Common ~:p .Diocesp ot"' Fan Rivet ·SUhC:;{''';fltio!b prao. Central Village" Preface. .... mail. postpaid ".00 pu rear.
Taunton Knights List Activ,ities
Catholics, Buddhists, Protest,ants At Requiem .f9.' .Bishop Byrne
Bishop Presides At Requie,m
Indian Daily Paper Features Lourdes
Name Father Dupont College President '
.Marian Theater' Program Slinday'
Receives Award
Mass Ordo
The Franciscan' Fathers
Legion of Decency
JQ'mes F. OINe;1I
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FRANK'S. F~ITELBERG 0;01
O~ 6-~246
Fan
GERALD E.
McNALLY
GENERAL CONTRACTOR
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rrlvate School Tax Exemption
Deleted by Senate Committee
THE ANCHOR Thurs., Aug. 7, 1958.
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WASHINGTON (NC)-A pro- the Senate unit would make the
vision to exempt private, nonfirst $1 of any admission charge
profit schools 'from payment of to a sports event, movif; or other
Federal excise taxes has been attraction exempt from the 10
deleted ,from a House-passed per cent Federal tax, It has been
Applications are availaUe for measure "'y the Senate Finance estimated this will lose the gov
the final two weeks of attend: Committee. ernment about twenty-five, to
ance at St. Vincent de Paul Day The committee, under Sen. thirty millon dollars a year.
Camp for Catholic boys of the Hauy F. Byrd of' Virginia, This loss ,accounts ,for m~st. of
Fall River,area, it was announct;d ordered reported the bill, H. R. the forty-fIve .to fIfty mllho.n
today. '7125 which makes numerous dollars a year It has been estl
The camp, located at Westport, revi~ions in the administration mated the government :will lose
has been operating since June 30 'of ~cise tax laws. It now awaits from all' provisions in the, bill if under the sponsorship of the St. action 8n the Senate floor. passed as approved by the Vincent de Paul conferences of If the bill, as changed by the committee;
Sacred Heart, Holy Rosary, St. finance committee,' passes the Roch and St. Anthony of Padua Senate, a Senate-House confer churches, ence will be held to iron out the Enthusiastic and generous differences between the versions' praise of its'spiritual, physical passed by the two bodies, ROME (NC)-Each apostolate and social accomplishments by Private schools pay excise ,begin:;; with the liturgy because
parents of boys in the 7-12 age taxes on many items of equipthe liturgy is the' contact point
bracket indicate the success of ment as well as on miscellaneous with Christ, His Eminence Mar
the camp in its first season., items such as long distance telecello Cardinal Mimmi said here.
Mr. John O'Brien and Mr. Ed phone calls, Public schools have The Cardinal" who is Secre
'ward Haponik, both of the Som always been exempt because of tary of the Sacred Consistorial
erset school system, direct the their status as units of local, Congregation, addressed a con':'
activities with the assistance of government. vention of the diocesan assist-
junior counselors. Rev. Donald Fomnd Recommendation ants of the young women's see-
Belanger is resident chaplain. The provision to exempt prition of Italian Catholic Action.
Busses pick up campers daily vate schools was recommended Speakihg on the subject of
at 8 A.M. at Ruggles Park and _ originally last year by Rep, Aime "Liturgy and the Apostolate,'" Columbus Park and retur)1 at Forand of Rhode Island. His recCardinal Mimmi saia that tI1e' 4:30 P,M. On arrival at camp the' ommendatic" came after his liturgy is the privileged point oi' boys assist at Mass. Morning 'subcommittee of the House meeting between Jesus and man activities are followed by brief Ways and Means Committee "and 'it follows that the first spiritual instructions given, by held extensive hearings on exapostolate is the liturgical one." ,Seminarian' counselors. Sports, cise tax administration. ' "In every apostolate;" he deMODERN RELIGIOUS ORDER: Mother Mary Martin" arts and crafts, and, swimming In House hearings on the bill, clared, "the starting point is seated, foundress of, the Medical Missionaries of Mary in at a fine private beach make up the proposed exemption for pri- Christ who sacrifices Himself on Ireland (1937), is shown at the dedication ceremonies of· a the day's program. vate schools was opposed by Ule, the' altars. In 'the liturgy of'the Enrollment is not limited to new novitiate, the American house of' her Order in Win Treasury Department which was: Mass, is born 'the'atdent prayer boys ' of ,the four sponsoring chester, Mass~ Pictur,ed with her are two of the you'ng Sis fighting all loss of revenue. In of the apostle -who wants to parishes, but is open to all Cath the Senate hearings, however,' conquer the world to offer it to ters; ~ister M. Catherine Anne (Sheila Daugherty) and olic boys in the stated age the department did not reiterate Christ." 4 • ' ' :.Sister M. Joan (Joan Suprenant), both of Chicago. Their bracket and in good health. its objection to the exemption. Social Powers Applications for either or both "habit" is almost identical to the uniform of Irish and Brit r ~p. Forand has estimated tha't Add'ressing the same meeting of the final two weeks may be ish' nurses. NC Photo. exempting private schools from His Eminence Giacomo Cardinal obtained from Mr: Leo, P. Smith, taxes would mean a loss of only Lercaro, Archbishop of Bologna, OS 2-6737 or Mr. P. Henry Des about three million dollars from' declared in turn that the liturgy mond, OS 2-4421. the estimated ten billion dollars has social formative powers. the taxes produce annually. "The liturgy is social," he said, Mention The Anchor
Ot~er changes approved by "The structure of the liturgical BOSTON (NC) - A modern Vatican approved, her plan. act itself as well as the cere , religious community for women Early, in 1937 the Medical Mis To Our. Advertisers
monies, phrases, chants, even the' has just opened an enlarged sionaries of Mary were founded uniform movement of the faith novitiate in suburban Boston. officially, and Mother Mary ful taking part in the liturgy Present at the dedication cer~- Martin returned to Africa with shows this." monies was the foundress of the her 'first two Sisters. " , The necessity to rise above Number of ' Novices Doubles our own individualism in God's community, who has seen her work grow from one small reliToday the Medical Mission family is the iogical, forma'tive gious establishment in Africa 21 aries of Mary have hospitals in and binding conse,quence of the years ago to more than 21 houses Africa, field hospitals in the liturgacal act, he stated. CITIES SERVICE
in Europe, Africa and the United African bush, and three schools States. , , . .' in Nigeria for training \ African DISTRIBUTORS
, O ' The new novlatlate, whICh nurses. Since ~he community will house 40 novices and was was founded, its members J'lave Gasoline
ST. PAUL (NC)-A St. ,Paul dedicated by Archbishop Rich- treated more than one million couple who have aided mapy ard J. Cushing of Boston, is the African patients, one-third of - Fuel and Range
Catholic causes, part' ularly in American house of the Medical whom were victims of Hansen's the field of' edlucation, were Missionaries' of Mary, ~ounded disea'se. , "honored' by His Holiness Pope in Ireland in 19,37. The 360 Sis'The Medichl Missionaries of Pius XII in 'Castelgaridolfo, ters in th.e community do not Mary came to the United States Oil BURNERS according to word received here. wear conventional type religious .in 1950 at the invitation of ArchIgnatius Aloysius O'Shallghhabit but one almost identical bishop' Cushing of Boston. G. E. BOILER BURNER UNITS nessy, a prominent-financier and to the uniform of Irish and BritSince 1950 the sisterhood has oilman" was awarded, the Order' ish nurses. flO\lrished at the American FOf' . prompt delivery
of Knight Commander in' the The Medical Missionaries of ,house in the Winchester section Pontifical Order of St. Gregory Mary weee founded by Mother of Boston. The enlarged novi & Day & Night Service
-....··... the Great, with silver star. His Mary Martin, the former Mary tiate there now has postulants Rural Bo"led Gas Service wife, Lillian Smith O'Shaugh- Martin" an Irish' nurse, Her, and novices drawn from all nessy, was awarded the Cross father, a Dublin lumb~r merparts 'of the' United States and 61COHANNETST.
"':;;:~ Pro Ecclesia etPontifice (For chant, once, employed Matt Tal- "from Canada. During' the past TAUNTON
Church and Pope). . ,bot, now a candidate for beatifi- five years, the number of novAttleboro - No. Attleboro
Both awards' were made dication. , ices has doubled each year, with t rectly by the Holy Father" In 1921 Mary Martin went to a record number of applicants Taunton
~, to a cablegram re- -Africa as a nurse. There during scheduled to enter in September. oj according' celved here from Archbishop the next four years she treated ++++O+++++-X.~:-: . .>+'~)<Oo""'''':-+':-:-~';''>·:··:··:·<O'·:-:-+<-<*<OH ,'-l. William O. Brady of St. Paul some of the most horrifying who was at the ceremony.' diseases knowl1'lllto man. 'While Mr. O'Shaughnessy is said to if} Africa she was appalled by the be' one of the most generous spiraling death rate among the Called For and Delivered contributors to Ca,tholic educanatives who died by the thou':'
tion 'in the United States. His sands from diseases which, in
wife has contributed to the Sis- many' cases, could have been Once-A~Day in Somerset and Swansea at 4:30 P.M. ters of the Good Shepherd here p'revented or cured by modern
by providing funds for construc- medicine.
tion of a new "transition home" 'when she ;returned to Ireland
for girls about to leave the in 1925, Mary Martin presented
,- Sister's institution. to the papal nuncio in that coun
try her idea of founding a med
, r ,Surgical Appliance Co., ical mission commu'nity espe Pharmacr , cially for African nlttives. At , WORCESTER (NC) -- Ground that, time the Church was wary • ' . Hearing Aid Co. , INDIAN MISSION: Mis , has been broken at Holy Cross about women engaging in obstet Arthur J. Shea, Prop. , sionary among the U.S. Ind": College here for a'new $1,157,000 rics arid it was not until 1936, science building. A feature of ians, for, 58 years, Jesuit the building will be a radiation after careful examination of all 202' and 206 ROCK Sf. , . TEL. OS 5-7829 the factors involved, that the ~~~.~~~~~~~~~q~y~<~.~~~.~~~~~~~>~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Father Louis Taelman, top, laboratory having heavy con recently observed the 60th crete walls and a solid lead door. The building is expected to be anniversary of his ordina tio;'. One of his parishioners, ready in September, 1959.
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Telpah, bottom, a, Flathead Indian, listens to the priest's ; sermon rendered in Salish dialect. during' a service in the Mission Church at St. Ignatius, Mont. The 92-ye'ar old pdElst is still active 'as a chaplain' in the mission's Hol~' Family Hospital. NC Photos. ' I , l' , , ,,'
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Pilgri~s
Indi~n Priest Says Communists Fai'l
Visit Site of Grail
In Only State Which ,They Control
WASHINGTON - Communists are failing in the only state in India where they are in power, a priest from India declared bere. Father V. Chathaparampil, di rector of St. Joseph's Institute. and Youth Center in ShertaUy, in 'the state of Kerala, India, said "the communists are failing flOW 'and this is due in no small meas ure' to Catholic efforts againSt Ulem." Kerala is th,- smallest of the . _14- Indian states, but it is the most thickly populated, with about 900 people per square. mile. It has a population of 13,~00,00, about2,500,OOO of them Catholics. In January, 1957, the Communist party-with a ma jority of only .two seats out of 128 in the Assembly -- gained control of the Kerala state gov-' ernment. Expose Failurll Father· Chathaparampil said the' communistCOlltrol. is in a- sense a "good thing" because it will eventually expose the fail ure of the Communist party to
.Anti-Smut L.aw Meets .Test WOODSTOCK,Vt. (NC) The first court test of the state's revised obscene liter'ature law has been sent to the Vermont Supreme Court. In granting the motion for ap peal of the case to the 'high court, Superior Judge Leonard., W. Morrison said it is now up lO that tribunal to ,decide at what point a magazine stops being· "gaudy, trivial or risque and be-· comes obscene." Attorneys for Verl\2,m News Corp., of West Lebanon, N. H., filed a series of seven motions' in Windsor County Court here seeking' dismissal of an indict ment that charged the company with distributing "off.:nsive and improper" literature to two deal ers in the White River Junction area. 'f,he indictment cited sepa rate issues of eight magazines. Judge Morrison said he .passed .h~ case to the Supreme Court under a' Vermont statute that says that when exceptions are filed in a county court proceed ings, the case may be Ilent to the high. court for hearing and a Attorney Thurmond Arnold of '. 'Washington, D. -C., onetime "trust busfer" in the Department of J~stice and former Federal Court judge, filed motions seek ing dismissal of the charges against .the Verham firm on grounds the action is in viola tion of the 14th (due process -of law) amendment of. the Con stitution. All were dismissed by Judge Morrison. Mr. Arnold and Howard Squadron of New York joined two V~rmont attorneys as coun sel for' the Verham News Corp. Attorneys Arnold and Squadron said they were "inter:ested in the / eighth count· of the indictment." That count names the March issue of one magazine as an obscene ·periodical. . Attorney General Frederick: -III. Reed said the' state had no ebjection to the move that placed the case' before the high court, but State's Attol'hey John Brockway of ,Windsor County indicated if the, Supreme Court. .rules the publications are not ebscene the finding will be ap pealed to the' ·U. S. Supreme Court.
Canadian Air Force Aids Stricken Nun PEMBROKE (NC)-A - Royal Canadian Air Force helicopter rushed malaria serum from Rockcliffe to Pembroke to re lieve a nun who .had been stricken with a severe a.ttack of malaria. The Rockcliffe· RCAF' station is at Ottawa, about 100 miles from Pembroke. S'ister Mary Vianney, of the Grey Sisters of the Immaculate Conception, contracted the dis ease while serving for nine .years as a missionary in China. For the past three years she <ha been serving in the Dominican ·Repub-.' lic. When' stricken she was 'in Pembroke on leave•
...
live up to its promises. "The communists must work within the framework of the Indian Constitlition," he said, "so they are' now on trial, as ,they have' not been elsewhere-:-such as in Rumania and Poland, We believe it is in, the provi-' dence of God. that the cemmu nists are in power. btieause if they fail-and they are failing there will be ne more wmmu nists in· power in .•my Indian state." . .. Father Chathaparampil as serted that the 'comm,unists re gard St: Joseph's Institute and Youth Center'as their' number 'one enemy, lmd have. referred to it'in the state assembly as mili taristic and anti-communistic. Social Apostolate But he stressed that although' the St. Joseph Institute is under. mining c~mmunist influence in Kerala, it is doing so indirectly. "The primary purpose of the institute," he said, "is a social apostolate, to better the lot of the working people." In working toward this goal,' the 'institute's 5.0 social workers lecture on' principles of. social justice 'in rabor organizations, issue a weekly publication in structing the' people about the · value",of cooperatives and use a station wagon equipped with loudspeakers to keep the people informed' . about current' issUft and to counteract. communist propaganda. The institute was founded under the' patronage of' the Ern~kulam archdioc~ 15 years ago. Father' Chathaparampil ha15' two priest assistants at the'insti tute, and 12 Franciscan SisteFll who care for babies of the work- . ing poor and conduct a health center. To, help finance its work, the institute employs sev- . eral hundred Indian people who hand carve religious figures that are sold by the institute.. Father Chathaparampil said that in its work the institute gets the cooperation of such political parties as the socialists and the MusQm League. "People of other religions, like the Hindus and Moslems," he stated, "are· beginning to realize that the Reds are not.only .against the· Catholic religion; but against all religion and constitute a threat to the independence. of India." '\
Eastern Prelate~
Pray for Unity
BRUSSELS (NC) - A Mass m<lrking the 25th anniversary of the .national movemeT!t to 'bring about reunion between the. Church and Orthodox Christian ity was concelebrated bere by six Eastern Rite prelates and many pdests. The, Mass, held in the Church of the Risen Ch~ist at the Vatican pavilion' of the Brussels World, Fair, was televised. It was at tended by Queen Elizabeth of Belgium; His Eminence Euge.!le Cardinal'Tisserant, secretary of' the Sacred Congregation for the the Oriental Church; and Arch bishop Efrem Forni, Apostolic Nuncio to Belgium. Concelebrants of the Mass in cluded-Archbishop 'Pierre Chami. of Bosra' (Syria); ArchbishOp Michel Assaf of' Petra and Philadephia (Jordan); Bishop Georges Hakim of Akka (Israel); Archbishop Elie Zoghbi, Patri archal Vicar for Egypt of the Melchite Rite Patriarchate of Antioch; Bishop ,"~:Iyacinth Gad, Apostolic Exarch for Catholics · of the' Byza;1tine Rite in Greece, · and Bishop Paul Meletijew {If the Salesian Institute here. .
GLASTONBVRY, Eng I and (NC) -- Thousands of pilgrims, including many who walked, gathered here for the annual devotions at England's oldest known Christian shrine. The pilgrilI1S' gathered on a hHl . overlooking the site of the mar tyrdom of.the last abbot of Glas tonbury, Blessed Richard Whit jng, and tw~ of his m6nks. q;shop Joseph E. Rudder)lam of Clifton and many" of his priests led a procession to a field opposite the ruins. .They carried ST. JOSEPH THE WORKER: A hand-carved w;oodell 14· large wooden crosses and 'statue' of St. Joseph the Worker, made by students 'at ,St. ereded them in two lines to an. open air nave before the Joseph's Institute and Youth Center, in Shertally, .state form altar where Bishop Rudderham, of Kerala, S: India, is presented to MsgT. George H.iggins, , celebrated Mass. direCtor of the Department of Social Action, N.C.W.C., in This year pilgrims were more Washington. Making the presentation is Father y. Chatha numerous than usual since this pararnpil, director of the Institute, accompanied by C. J. ,shrine, dedicated to our Lady, Mathew, alumnus of St. Joseph's and now a' graduate stu- . has been recognized as a Lourdes dent at Marquette University, Milwaukee. Father Frederick centenary shrine and all visitors may obtain a plenary indulgence. A. McGuir.,e, C.M., (right); executive secretary of the Mis Legend relates that the shrine sion Secretariate, . Washington, looks on. NC • Photo. _. r • was founded by St. Joseph of - Arimathea, who took Our Lord's body from tne Cross and laid it in a tomb, and who brought with him the Holy Grail, the chalice Dominanc~ actually used at the Last Supper. ROME (NC). - Although i~ through prison 'camps, labor The Holy Grail which dis camps, abortion .and steriliza. thinking is today dominated by appeared during the Dark Ages tion, he. continued. events in the crisis-torn Middle may still be somewhere in the . Encourages Immoralit7 East, the.. West must f10t forget area C)f the Abbey. He said the num bel' of peo~le the plight of Hungary, Msgr. sent to prison or work camps is' Bela' Varga; president of the Na five times larger than the num VATICAN CITY (NC) - A ber officially published. Seme tienal Hungarian Committee, Vaiican spokesman has denied 20,000 Hungarians died in the said here. reports that astronomers jJl uprising in. 1956 and another Msgr. Varga, onetime presi charge of the Vatican Observa 2,000· have been killed in the dent 'of the Hungarianparlia t.ory have accepted an inyitatioJl ~st two, years, he added. ment, said "the. Russians and, 10 attend the World Congress of According to Msgr. Varga the communists _the.' world over are present regime in Hungaray is Aslronomy to be held in Mosco·w. protesting the'sending of Amer actively encouraging immoral,,_ The~rvat'ol'Y's staff is headed ican troops to Lebanon although hy Ameriean Jesuit Father Dan ity among youth -and has puO it was done at the invitation· Gr· .licly sanctioned abortions aFMl iel 0'Connell. the Lebanese.· the Use of various antifertility and anticonception techniques. "But .who speaks for Hungary He rePorted that 'officially . teday? Hungary where then: are Iffimmunists placed. the number Russian troops who ha.ve not of abortions in Hungary's pu&lic been' invited by the Hunga hospitals at 40,000 in' 1955; 80,000 rians:" . in 1956 and 120,000· in 1957. . The press conference was one These figures do not include the of several held by Msgr. Varga private abortions in Hungary' in European capitals to call at-· for these years, he said. tention to the situation in Hun- By encouraging the use of va CHARlES F. VARGAS gary.. Msgr.· Varga flew' .from rious antifertility drugs, an esti 254 ROCKDAlf AVENUI . the committee's headquarters in mated 45 to 50 per cent of the NEW BEDfORD, MASS.. New York to talk to the press women of Hungary who have corps, of Paris, Berne and Rome. • used them have 'been' rendered He had planned to fly to the sterile, Msgr. Varga declaretl. Moslem countires to present his' He suggested. United Nations count.ry's case, but said the ~tion in Hungary to remove events in the Middle East make Soviet troops, to free the Hunga': the trip impossible now. r,ian people and to establish a new 'independent, neutral gov': Aide Identity ernment.. He said the Soviets have' ad mitted to keeping 60,000 Russian ,Ij troops stationed in Hungary but that the total actually is f1lore . GUARANTEED than 100.000. Many of these troops, both army and political police, wear civilian clothes and'. SERVICE - REPAIRS
work in Hungarian factories and Member R. T. T. G.
offices watching for any sign of JAMES E. NORTON
rebellion, he- added. 46 Middle Rood
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Hungary,'~ the Monsignor said. He asserted that they have de ported . Hungarian . citizens to Russia and· that Hungarian po litical prisonerji are known to be working on construction projecls' in' China and North Korea. .The Russian~ al~d their com munist allies in Hungary are· de I!troying the Hungarian people
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Infant's Failure To Develop Ties Seen as Cause of Delinquency Foundation of St. Paul. It .was open to. clergyme~ of all falths~ Dr. Lippman said t?e p.arent chid relationship "maKe.s It pos sible for t:he parent to Inculcate in the child the standards that society wants the youngster to accept." He added that when doctors in child clinics ~ttempt to devel0':l a SOCial c?n science in a d~hn~Ue}lt chI1~, they ''!'ave a real Job on their bands. Ne&"ativism "Most delinquent children who' are antisocial, who are bitter and cruel," he continued, "have been emotionally fixated at the period ()f ~evelopment between one and a half and three years because they have felt that they have been deprived or unloved al that time' and they will attacb PONCE (NC)-His Eminence' themselves'to the negativism which is typical of this age and Francis Cardinal Spellman, never give it up, because they Archbishop of New V,ork, pre think it takes care of their emo sided at the 10th anniversary tional needs." celebrations of the Catholic Uni The most important part of a versity of Santa Maria hel'e in person's life in' his personal Puerto Rico. • ity development is from his birth During the ceremonies he to six years of age, Dr. Lippman blessed the new Aguayo Build declared. ing constructed at the univer "I think it would be a 'istake sity. Cardinal Spellman also presided at the school's corne~ to say that personality develop ment stops here, though," be stone-laying in 1948. The U,lll slated "because the child will versity's plant includes a Cardi keep 'adding. influences on his nal Spellman Building. character as he gets older. But The Cardinal arrived in his early years are the most im Puerto Rico by plane' at San portant developmental period." Juan's International Airport. One of the front tires of the air liner blew out during the land ing, but the pilot kept control' of the craft and no one was injured. . BOSTON' (NC)-Father James Se'Veml thousand Puerto RI F. Geary, S.J., has been named cans were on hand at the airport superior of the School of St. to greet the Archbishop of New Philip Neri in Haverhill which York. Cardinal Spellman has is dedicated to fostering delayed visited Puerto Rico four times, vo~ations in the priesthood, it twice in the last 10 years. He was announced here by Father was accompanied on this trip by James E. Coleran, S.J., Provin Bishop James P. Davis of San cial of the Jesuits' New England Juan and Msgr. John McGuire province. : and James Wilson of New York. Father Geary succeeds Father Governor's Greeting George M. Murphy, S.J., former Following his arrival in San Army chaplain, who founded the .Juan, Cardinal Spellman trav school and was its prst superior. eled to the historic La Fortaleza A native of' South Boston, Palace where he was greeted by F~ther Geary was educated at Gov. Luis Munoz Marin. From Nazareth School, Boston College there he went to the city hall High School and Boston College where he was made an honorary before he joined the Jesuits. He citizen of San Juan b~ Mayoress was ordained in 1937, taught at Felisa R. de Gautier. Boston College and at Holy.Cross During the city ball ceremony College 'and served as an Army, Cardinal Spellman read a mes chaplain during World War II. sage in Spanish, congratulati~lg Father Murphy during his Mayoress de Gautier on the spir service as a World War II chap itual and material progress of lain saw the need for the school San Juan and her interest in the for delayed vocations and welfare of Puerto Ricans living founded the School of S1. Pbilip in New York. He described his Ned in 1946. Since the school's Tisit as "an experience whicb establishment 150 graduates have 'improves even more" relatiollll been ordained to the priesthood between the people of New York for 56 archdiocese and dioceses and San Juan. and 21 religious communitjes. Bishop pavis announced dur 1ft acidition 372 graduates are ing the ceremony that the Car c~)Jltinuing their studies for the dinal wou ld bestow the eccle priesthood in 66 archdioc~ses siastical honor of Lady of the and dioceses and 28 religloWl Holy Sepulcher on Mayoress de communities. Gautier during a future visit she will make to New York. Presents Donation EDINBURGH (NC).:>- The 'While in San Juan Cardinal Royal Society of Edinburgh pro Spellman presented a donation claimed a Notre Dame nun, Sis to the new Our Lady of Provi ter' Monica Taylor, from Glas dence Hospital which will be gow as the year's most distin built there and offered Mass in guished Scottish naturalist and the city's 400-year-old cathedral. awarded her its annual Neill The New York Archbishop was greeted at .the Ponce air-' Prize, it was announced here. port by Bishop James E, Mc Manus of Ponce, who had in Tiled him here for the anniver 88ry celebl'ations at the Catb .lire University. ' At the university the Car dinal conferred with a group of. priests and religious from the New York archdiocese who are studying Puerto Rican culture and the Spanish language there during the summer. The train ing is aimed at increasing the effectiveness of their work among Puerto Ricans ,in 'New Y@rk. Cardinal Spellman, who is a1se Military Vicar of the U. S. armed fen:es, visi ted Personnel 'all.., signed to Inilitary bases in Agua dill. and, laid the cornerstone 01. a new Catholic hospital in S_ PRESCRIPTIONS Gennan. IoHph A. Ntlrris, ~.
He spent part of his time .. Ponre in the La Playita secti~
Reg. Pharm.
_ of the city's poorer quar
686 Pleasant St.
..... where he administered",
New. Bedford ,.-cr.ment ()f Con8rmatioa .. '. WYMDn 3-391' _ _bor.-: elf, penon..
COLLEGEVILLE, Minn. (NC) -Juvenile delinquency is ofte~ closely related to an infant s f ilures to develop close ties ':ith his parents, a psychiatrist told 40 clergymen attending a pastoral psychology workshop h Hyman S. Lippman, director ~f the Amherst H. Wilder Child Guidance Clinic, St. Paul, Minn., said that "the rel~tionship of the parent and chIld very early in the youngster's life is of primary importance in de~in quency." The workshop, held at St., .John's Mental Health Institute, was sponsored by the Hamm
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THE ANCHOR Thurs.• Aug. 7, 1958
Seminary Course Must Educa'te 'For Today LONDON (NC) - Semin ary training must' adapt it self to the needs of modem times. according to Arch
guidanc~
Cardinal Presides At Celebration
Former Chaplain To Head School
Nun Scientist
GOLDEN WEDDING: Achille and Sylvia Pirossino ~f Corona, Cal., flew across the country. to cel~brate t~elr golden wedding a,nniversary by renew.mg their marrla~~· vows before the same priest who married them, Scalabrl~1 Father Pio Parolin, in same church, Our Lady of Pompei, New York City. NC Photo.
.Distilled Alpine Flowers Support Missions and Schools of Marists CARMAGNOLA, Italy (NC)The Marish Brothers are known throughout the world for their boys' schools, but in this village 'which stands in the Piedmont plains their ,name is aBsocia!ed with' a distillate from alpme flowers known by its trade name, "Alpestre.", As Chartreuse is t6 the Carthusians, as Benedictine is to the Benedictines, so "Alpestre" is to the Marist Brothers of Carmagnola. All are potables of distinetion which in origin at least, were devel~ped and marketed to provide a means of support to apostolic works. But whereas all were developed 'as drinks" "Alpestre" departs from the others to become also a general household remedy. There is hardly any village 'in Italy where a bottle will not be found in some home being used as a kind of cure-all. Ital-' ians not only use it as a drink in various forms, but also brush' their teeth with it, disinfects cuts ~ith it, massage sore muscles with it, gargle, with it, treat dandruff with it and use it as an after-shave lotion. Many Uses Its recommended uses are: as an apertif, as a digestive, as a tonic as an after-dinner drink, as a' cocktail base,' as a water purifier; as a coffee rectifier (dating from the war years when only ersa~ coffee could be found), as a preventative against colds and as a general disinfect ant. Because of its varied uses, it is commonly found in the
packs of alpine mountain climb ers, in the glove compartments of automobiles, as well as in the
kitchen cabinet.
The concoction had its begin
ning in 1857 in the Monastery de
I'Hermitage near St. Chamond,
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:St.Jude Novena:~ ~ :~
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572 Pleasant Street New Bedford
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France, when the monstery's in firmarian, Brother Emanuel, de vised the for~ula while studying the propertIes of ~ocal herb~. Brother Emanuel mtended It original~y as a ?isinfectant and named It Eau d Arquebuse. It was only later that some ad venturous soul discov~red that it was also not bad to dnnk. It was in 1903 that the Broth ers established themselves in Carmagnola, where they con tinued producing Brother Eman uel's formUla. In 1930 the name "Arquebuse" was' declared pub lic domain and the Brothers changed the name, to d1stinguish their own product, to "alpestre." ..Alpestre" is a distillate of 34 herbs, of which 25 are cultivated while the others must be gath ered from the high altitudes of the Alps. It is made only be tween the months of May and October when the flowers are in bloom. During this time 2,450 iitres are produced daily. After being distilled, the produce must be left to age for about three years before it 'can be marketed. All the profits from the manufacture. of '''A'lpestre'' go to the generalate, of the Marist, Broth-
ers, where it is distributed to
their orphanages and missionary
endeavors throughout the world.
bishop' John C. Regan of Liver pool. "It is not necessary to be a' prophet to' foresee that in years to come a far larger proportion of our parishioners will be weU educated," the Archbishop wrote in the Ushaw Magazine, journal of England's northern seminary which has just celebrated its 1501h anniversary. "Partly through better oppor tunities for fUI·ther education and partly through the radio more ordinary people are be coming what for want of a bet ter term we may ~all 'cultured,' .. he added. "UrHe~s the priest is also cultured he will be a stranger among many of his more intelligent parishioners." Science Need In the past pl'lests knew less, about general science than school boys, he said. "The next ,genera tion will not know or care if the priest can translate Greek. • . But almost everbody will know the jargon of popular science. The priest by modern standards will seem uneducated if he is ill-acquainted with elementary science." Regarding preaching, the Archbishop pointed out that, since radio pl'ograms are sharply timed, broadcast speeches sel dom OCcupy more than 12 and a half minutes. "Their (the listen ers') minds therefore are con ditioned to short speeches. The priest who occupies the pulpit for'half an hour is bound to bore and perhaps enrage his flock. It is likely that the greatest dif ference in seminary training in the future will be in the produc 'tion of men-now regarded l!s geniuses -:- who are cap ,Ie of preaching a first class sermon in five minutes."
Pray for C_ause 'DUBLIN (NC)-A day of spe cial intercession was held here for the success of the Cause of Blessed Oliver Plunket, martyr and Primate of Armagh.
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The Holy Father' has given the whole Church several intentions ~hat should ,be ,the objects of our prayers during the current 'novena that is taking place ,in every church and chapel of the Diocese at the present time. . It wo~ldbe verym~~h worth' while to make t.hese' in tentions ,personai' to ,ourselves and to' our, prayers· ins'tead " .'of aCcepting them and praying for,the:rn' without 'even '~nowing":'nat they' :p-e. That may he very dutiful a'I>: , proachbut.it isnoUntelligel1t and there,is noi-eason why., we ,cannot be dutiful and intelligent at the same, tjme., ,". , '" Surely the,re are many advantages to knowing these interitlons and prayjng for-them carefully., By so doing, we unite in an even more intimate way , 'with our' fellow' Cath()lics throughout the, Diocese and the world with a unity of purPose behind our prayers. 'The intenti~ns that he suggests to us break us away from the ,littleness in praying. that we can so easily fall into. Our prayers can become a series of very limited re quests centered around ourselvesand,our needs of the mo ment. These intentions of the Holy Father give us a great: er view of the ,Church and ofou~, role as individuals in the Mystical Body of Christ. , They center our thoughts and prayer~ upon, others In need, upon the great dangers to the Faith, upon the present problems that rise up to confound men and ~omen today. They make us realize that what touches the Church in, her persecuted children, in her weak children,' in her young and old, that what tou.ches anyone of the~e touches each one of us. The Church is the Social Body of Christ and no one of us .is' isolated 'from Christ or from the other members of, the Body ,of ChJ'ist.
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Weekly Calen~ar Of 'Feast Days
,l.:' T'he'
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Assumpti,o:n ' "
-THE ANCHOR Thurs., Aug. 7, 19,)8
TODAY-st. Cajetan, Confes-, IIOr. He was born in 1480 a't Vin \ c~za, Lombardy, Qf' pious and noble' ,parents, who 'dedicated ',' . bim to the Blessed Mother. He 'renounced riches to devote h'ill to the sick and poor. With Peter Caraffa, who later bec~me Pope Paul IV; he founded the , ., community of Clerks Regular, . known at. the Theatines, which played a prominent part in the 'counter-reformation, He died at Naples in 1547 and ,was 'canon ized in 1671. , ToMORROW '7"'" SS. Cyriacus, Largus, Smaragdus and Com panions, Martyrs. There were 23 martyrs who were put to death in Rome in 304 under the perse
cution of Diocletian, St. Cyria
cus, a deacon, was their leader.
SATURDAY+St. John Mary
Vianney, Confessor. Popularly
known as the Cure of Ars, he
was born at Dardilly, near Lyons, France, in 1789 and was a '19-year-old farmhand when , he began studies for the priesi hood. He completed his studies Sage and Sand 'with much difficulty and was assIgned to Ars as parish priest. There he worked' the rest of hill His, confessional 'was iife. thronged with all classes of per ,The Jehovah Witnesses have concluded a Divine Will sons, who came from far and 'International Assembly at Yankee Stadium and the Polo wide. During the last 10 years By Most Rev. Robert J. Dwyer, D.D. of his life he spent 16 to 18 hOUri Grounds in New York. ' 'a day hearing confessions. He Bishop of Reno, , The 'witnesses are a zealous and an enthusiastic group. The important thing is to know w,hen to stop. Once the died in 1859, was canonized in Theseve~y qualitieH have led them to some strange and, at 1925; and was declared patron of point is gained, only harm can c,ome ,of belaboring it., The ' , parish priests in 192~. times,ludicrous posit.ions. . \ ' j' old Romans summed it up in the ne quid nimis: "nothin'g too They are very much, concerned 'with the end ·of the world. Not the end Of the world as it ",ill come for each one , much,", either by way of forensic argument or artistic deco- ,SUNDAY - St. Lawrence of ration. The road ,of excess is cart. Instead of 'a Russia work- Rome, Martyr. He was born at of us-when we close our eyes 'in death-but the,final de the road to ruin. The Irish ing' out her destiny in terms of "Huesca Aragon, Spain, and with .truction· of the world. While acknowledging also that politician -Isaac Butt who the common aspiration of the his family came to Rome, where Iluch a day will surely corne, we say that<ifis the flamboyant did so m~ch for the ev~ntual West for liberty and equality, he joined the clergy and became that seems to attract the Witnesses. And they do violence ..- d f' h' tr d the road of excess has led .~ the one of the' seven deacons of the om 0 IS coun y, earne J "" , ·t d P St S' t II to the Scriptures to set forth de41ils about the exact number .uee that t'tle fo h' b' g h b divlsion 'of the world into two CI y un er ope .. IX us . In I 1 ~ IS 10 rap y .y a'rmed c'amps, .for w, hich co": 258, three days after the mar and those who will be saved.' , ' never earmng , . existence is, only another. name ' tyrdom of Pope St.. S),)Ctus, he , The Witnesses profess a great reverence for the Scrip-: the sec ret of leaving well for a truce' before the cosmic' W?S put dea~h. by bemg roasted , tures. They seem not to have taken, to· heart the words of enough alone. conflict;" alIve on a. grIdIron.
St. Peter in his first epistle: "This; then, ,you must under
The French By lUi-, almost singular good MONDAY-SS. Tiburlius and stand first. of all, that no prophecy of Scripture is made by Rev 0 I uti 0 n ·fortune,' the'American ,rev,olt 'Susanna, Martyrs. St. Tiburtius need n eve r , from 'the British Empire was was the son of a high officiai of private interpretation." , , ha~e acquired preserved from the ~orst con,.' the Rome I~peri~l Court and " They ignore thl~ further re~arks of ·St. Peter in speak its reputation comitantS of excess. The contrast was beheaded for the Faith in, ing' :about the epistles of St, Paul: "In these epistles there for sav~gery, between 'the experience of. .the '288. St. Susanna, said to have , are certain things difficult understand, which the un brutality, and young Republic, guided by the been a niece of Pope St. Caius, prudent leadership which 'it was was martyred during the reign learned and the 'unstable distort, ju.st as they do thereat disregard . for the hum a n her good fortune to enjoy during of Emperor Diocletian in 295 for of the Scriptures also, to their own ,destruction." rights it ,wa,s her formative years, and that refusing to marry the emperor'. The Witnesses show what' happens when people leave' 1 n ten d e d to of her sisfer RepublicS of Latin aon, a 'pagan.
the safe guide to the Scriptures which God' has established ,vindicate. By the time liberty, America, - where such' modera-
TUESDAY-St. Clare, Virgin. here on earth. " " : ' eq uality, and, fratern,ity had tion was lacking and ,excess ran She was born at Assisi in 1193. been secured by, the overthrow ,amuck, is ind.eed the very' greai-A book-even a book that contains the Holy Word of " d" . . At the age of 18, drawn by the .', ,preachings of, St. Francis of All - God---eannot interpret itSelf. 'Th'is God knew, and 90 He of the ancient and artificial IVJ- , est of ou.f\bles,sings.' sions of society into the three A ,l11erlca h as no t a'Itoge th er' sisi, ,she ran away from home gave us His Church knowing that there can be no conflict estates, its aims had been ac- avoided ,the road' of 'excess, 'and took the veil of Sisterhood between His church and His written W o'rd. The ,Church .eomplished. .' . whether in internal balance or 'from S1: Francis. She founded is the means by which' God wills to uni'te men.to HiJJiseii. Had it been possible for the in inte,rnational imperialism, but the Poor Clares, governed the This is the message also of the Bible" the plan of God for moderates to hold the line at per h aps more earnes tl y th an any.. community for 40 years, and was that point, the' whole sad history th t' h h d ,man's holiness. ' of the Civil Constitution of the o. er na IOn,. s e a s rna e a consulted by Popes, Cardinals mIghty effQrt to hold to the De and Bishops. She died in 1253 Thj;!re is much in the Bible that is easily understand and was canonized two years Clergy, the subversion of the quid nimis. able.There are other matters that need the guiding hand throne, 'and the coming of the
Slower Process later.
of the Church for our interpretation. There are many more Terror, might have been avoided. But France took the road of But revolution is not only a WEDNESDAY-SS. Hippoly omatters that are still free from discussion among scholars excess. Under the whiplash of matter of sudden political up- tus and Companions, Martyrs. as long. as there is no conflict with known truth. As the a few men,vowed to violence heaval. It can be accomplished S1.' Hippolytus was put to death Holy Father has,said in Divino Afflante Spiritu, an encycli and acquainted with the tech- by, the slower process of social for the Faith by being torn to cal on Bible studies, .. ; •• among the many matters set niques of mob oratory', the genu- and economic change. Here too, pieces by wild horses in the forth in the Bible there are only a few whose sense has ine accomplishment :o{ the however, the point is arrived at third century. After his death, been declared by the authority of the church, and equally movement was lost ina welter where the reasonable demands his nurse,' Concordia, and 19 of blood and vengeance. What of the various groups are ful- other Christians were beheaded. few on which the' opinions of the Fathers is unanimous.' could have. been one of the most filled, and beyond which lies • There consequently' remain many matters, and important glorious chapters in human free- the familiar'road of excess. elements 'and individuals who matters, in the exposition and explanation of which the dom became instead the nightThe social conscience of Amer- would blithely lead us down the skill' and ingenuity of Catholic interpreters dm and should mare of Marat and Robespierre. ica has been at work from the road of excess. very beginnings of the Republic Some of 'them are inspired by Excess Unnecessary be freely exercised." Few revolutions, as such, have to secure not only the blessings \ Marxist materialism, and so have The Witnesses, in interpreting the Bible, let enthusiasm ever been desirable or neces- of political liberty but of eco- no regard for the Christian real and zeal, substitute f(lr scholarship and known truth. And sary. In most instances, at the nomic and social justice for all ,ism which made the American that is not the way of God. precise moment excess took over, her pedple. ' dream possible; others are sirn the basic aims of justice and Given the inevitable limita- ply carried away by their exces 'freedom had already been tions c;>f our humanity, whereby sive enthusiasm for a particular achieved. the absolute ideal is forever es- cause, say, the economic welfare This is eminently and pain- caping our grasp, we have come of the workers" to the point fully true of the Russian tragedy as close to its realization as we where all other considerations of 1917. The downfall of im- ~re justified' in hoping for. of stability and even of justice perial' despotism was immeBeyond this lies the excess of cease to have relevance. diately followed by the estab,. a socialism which is fundamen.. , There is evidence that these OFFICI~L NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL ,RIVER lishment of a government which, tally destructive of the human elements are' out to take America by moderation and common perl!onality, and 'the introduction ov.er according to their own Published Weekly by The,~atholi,c Pres's rit'the Diocese ot fall Riv:er -'sense,' promised to the Russian of a class warfare which would ,warped pattern. They' are not 410 Highland Avenue . people the complete fulfillment overturn the. entire structure of impressed by the fact that prac Fall River, Moss. OSborn~5-7151 of their reasonable aspirations. American ,freedom and democ tically every reasonable demand Russia might have been saved racy. , , of justice has already been ful PUBLISHER for a happy and ,useful destiny.' We ,have to, study once agai.n filled or is rapidly coming to Most Rev. JCJmes L. Connolly. 0.0 .. Ph.D. It was the interventiOl\ of it where to stoP.. We have to de fulfillment. \ ASST,G~NERALMANAGER GENERAL MANAGER .handful of men" again' dedicated termine, .r:ealistically, Where, lies They want their own private to violence and the world con our point of ,no· return.,' , revolution. They would urge us Re~. Daniel f. Shalloo. M.A. Re~, John P. DnscoU quest of their theory of dialectic Want: Private Revolution to travel down the road of MANAGING EDITOR materialism, advertised as Com For there is rio question but ex'cess. It leads to the City III ' , Attoll'Oey Hugh J. Goiden munism, that upset the apple- ,that there are in America-·today Dreadful Night. 'a
a'
The' Witnesses' and the Bible
No~erta
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'. life
,Warns Americans to Avoid Ruinous 'Road of Excess
to
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'@rheANCHOR
Prelate Advises African Women Keep Culture,
I
THE ANCl-fOR Thur~.,
Aug. 7, 1958
7
Pontiff ,Greeted At Summer Villa
LOME, Togoland (NC) Africans shquld take what is best in other cultures, but "npt a~an¢lon what is good, in ,ours," Auxiliary, ,Bishop
CASTELGANDOLFO (NC) An estim:ated 9,000 pers~ns stood tightly packed' in the blazing sun to' greet Hi's Holiness Pope ~iu. XII during the first public audi-': ence,sin~e the PQntjff arrived at his summer I;esidence here. " }
John K. Amissah· of· Cape Coast, Ghana, 'declared here.' Addressing a seminar spon-, sored here by the World' Union of .~tholic Women's Organiza Appearing on a balcony facing tions under· the auspices of,., the inner' courtyard of hiS sum UNESCO, Bishop Amissah con-' mer villa 15 minutes earlier than tinued: "Who but women can scheduled, the' Pope was greeted' best 'know and preserve the by loud and prolonged applause. good,' . making suggestions for His first' words were io expreSs improvement and putting out, his regret that so many peopte what is to be condemned.',' CITATIONFO~ FATHER'OF;EIGHT IN'RELIGION: Father ,Lawrence A. Walsh "prompted by Faith and love One' mission of the African S.J., pr~)Vost Of Fordhat:n: University, 'presents a ,special citation to Richard T.McSorley, for the Vicar of Christ" had had 'woman, he suggested, should be Philadelphia attorney; eight of whose 15 children have entered religious life. Pictured at to undergo the discomforts of th~ ,study of African customs in the ceremony are,. (left. to right), front row: Fatl).er Ri'chard T.' McSorley, S.J.; Father the heat and crowding. re~tion to marriage and the The informal audience here at
Walsh;, M;r~McSorley; Bishop-elect Franci.s J. McSorley, O.M.I., of the new Vicariate of family in order to preserve whatever is best in them. 'Jolo, Philippine Islands and Father Patrick M. McSorley, S.J. Rear row, three of the Castelgandolfo' was markedly
different from' the gen~ral one.
Nearly 300 women from nine McSorley sisters, Sister Marie Beata, S.H.C.J;; Sister Rita Joseph, S.M. and Mother St. held at St. Peter's in Rome.
territories of West Africa at John, S.H.C.J. Another, priest. !J0~!- _s.tat,ioned ~n the, Philippines, ,and a daughter, a nun tended the seminar, the first of The Pope sat aione on a smaD
its kind ever held in West in Lima, Peru, :were una~le to att~nd the cerempnies. NC Photo. balcony, and himself gave a
Africa. The theme of the meet light touch usually lacking in
ings was ,"The African Woman the more formal occasions in the
Considers Her Mission." Vatican. He began to read off
The opening session was at the names of the various pilgrim
tended by' Sylvanus Olympio, , groups' present, pausing after recently elected Prime Minister WORCESTER (NC)- Father each for those named to ac OWERRl, Nigeria (NC)-I'm "We had no idea that Nigeria of Togoland. Georges L. Bissonnette, A.A., knowledge their presence with glad I came to Africa," John is so far advanced," Mary Rose Solve Own Problems' Krupa of Los Angeles said. "I from Boston remarked. "It is former chaplain to American loud cheering. The Pope evoked In her address, opening the Catholics in Moscow, has been laiJghter when mention of one like the work." He is one of the more civilized than we dreamt." seminar, Marie de Rostu, presi assigned ,to, Assumpt~on College group was met only by stony nine members of the Lay Mis With a shade of' disappoint dent of the World Union, ex here. He, will act ·as chairman silence. After a moment's pause. sion Helpers Association of Los' ment, Paul Tucker from Jack of the p'oiiticaI;' economic and' he sa'id offhandedly, "Perhaps pressed the desire of the inter Angeles working in Nigeria. ,'son, ,Mich., told what' had sur national association to aid' Afri they couldn't make it." social studies division and will "I like It fine," said another prised him. "We have seen no can women to solve their' prob super,vise the college's recently of them, Mary Rose from Bos "wiid' animals," he said, a little With ,Three Groups lems and to develop their own ins,titutec:i, ~orei~n ,affairs I?ro-, ton. ' plaintively.. An overflow crowd came here gram. ' organizations. They came to Nigeria last Sep Kids Out of This World to see the Pope, and several, Fattier Bissonnette was in Archbishop J9sepl1 Strebler of tember --:... five young men and He was visiting Owerri from tho,usan~ were I,mable to get into Lome, welcoming the delegates, fou'r' young women. Their home Calabar; about 140 'miles away. Moscow;'under the terms of the the inner 'courtyard for the audi 1933 Rooseyelt-Litvinov agree rec~lh::d the address of His Holi addresses are in six states, from' 'The othe'r Lay Helpers in Cala ence. But the two goosenecked ment, when he was expelled by ness Pope Pius XII to the inter-, Massachusetts to California, but bar are Paul Smith from Los microphones before him car-' the Soviets in March 1955. The national congress of the World they a'll' came Ii'nder the sponsor-' Angele's, Lovina Baldwin from ried his voice not only to the Soviets at' the time offered no Union which met in Rome last ship, of His Eminence James Tol,edo, Ohio, and Rita Patten throng inside the courtyard and explanation for 'his ouster, 'but year. He reminded the delegates Fra,ncis Cardinal, McIntyre, from Iowa. ' nearby roof, but to the others in it was later determined that the that the Pope had said that the Archbishop of Los' Angeles. Paul 'tucker was enthusiastic the town square outside the young associations of Asia and l'!i~y are members of the Lay about one, section, in particular, , action:was taken because of' the villa. A new network of ampli United States' refusal to extend Mr:ica, need the help of their Mission Helpers Association 01' of the Nigerian population. fiers had beeri installed prior te more experienced, sisters. This ganiz~d 'by Msgr. Anthony Brou~, "The k\ds/' he said, "are out' the visa of Archbishop Boris of the~ Pope's arrival. 'the RusSian Orthodox Church, lieq'linar, the Archbishop de wers, director of the Society for of this, world." who, Was, then visiting in this One effusive pilgrim to Cas clared, was an answer to the the Propagaiion or" the Faith of BilF Sutton from Monterey, country. The U. S. State Depart telgandolfo ~as able to identify Holy Father's appeal. the Los Angeles archdiocese. , Calif.; busY,manager of the Cath himself with three separate Archbishop Strebler pointed
Five of' them' assist the Hoiy olic LealieI' he,te, could not be ment 'held that the cases were disSiinilar. groupihgs called out by the Pope. out that the work of the dele
Ghost missionaries here' in reached fora statement, 'on the cheering along with the Israell Since his return the Assump gates w'ould be tremendous be Ow'erri.· This diocese has now evenIng i"called. ' Biilhas a cauSE! "there are many difficul
about' half a million Catholics, h'obby". 'U;;at~. 'puts h'im in the" tion1st pri~st has been 'writinl delegation, and also when the Pontiff called out "the English ties aild prej udices to be over
probablY ~e' largest Catholic Apost~e~'tompany even in his and studying. He is pJ:esently a speaking" 'and "those who have oolne before God's hoiy plan for PQ13ulation of any diocese 'in' ho,:,rs; off., .',The printing plant' caJid'idate for a,doctorate in pub Columbia University. come' from Brooklyn." women can be'restored."
Afrii:a. Four of the Lay Helpers' . had long since' closed, for the" lic law "Polygamy and free' union ace assist' the priests of St. PatriCK'S .day;" ai'ld, Bill had gone fishing. but two of the principal enemies SoCiety 'in the adjoining diocese • fRANCIS J. of th'e Afrkan woman," he con of Calabar. , tinued. "The World Union, of , Produce Newspapers . o' , NEW" YORK' (NC) --, The They 'come as volunteers 'for " Catholic W;omen's Organizations American track and field team three-year periods and fot any;: , P~RTLAND, .ore.' (NC)-His must" make it their sacred aim which recently c~:npeted in Hohness' ·Pope· Pius XII was , .. 690: PlEASANT STREET to, ~,elp their Mricao sjsters to . tasks ·that will 'help 'the missionS. Here they help to produce two "delighted "to' hear about the in- , Moscow' , against, their Russian develop public opinion in favor WY 7-0746
,counterparts "was jeered only of wopog;tmy and the b~ilding Catholic~ papers The Leader in creased number, of persons at
once-when one' of the Ar erican NEW BEDfORD, MASS.
Owerri and c'atholic' Life in tending, Mass and receiving . , of real Christian homes," he said. Calabar; they run the Assumpta Communion, in this country as women made "the Sign of the Cross before, attempting a toss Press and conduct the Catholic a ,result 'of, ey.ening Masses and with 'the javelin. ' book, store here; they do secre the ~~axed Eucharistic fast. This' 'incident was related by 'GENERAL tarial work ,in both places. ThIS wa~ the report brought SALZBURG (N~) - The un How does life in Nigeria agree back from the Vatican by Msgr. Rev. Bob Richards, a Baptist INSURANCE minister and Olympic pole-vault with them?' Thomas ,J. Tobin, Vicar General yeHing and blessing of three champion here., Relations be new' bronze doors for the Salz~ Those whom I met look well of the Portland Archdiocese, who tween the U.S. team and the burg cathedral climaxed the and happy. ' One of the' girls ad talked to the Pontiff in private opening of the First Biennial mits that she has put on weight. audience during a six-week visit Russian athletes were more ~""-,---------------~ cordial than at the Olympics in International Exhibition of Con Some of them say that. Nigeria to Rome, Australia in 1956 during the temporary Christian Art here. is not what they thought it Hungarian uprising, he said. The new doors were designed would be.' They came ready for by three of Europe's leading ROME (NC)-'-'A. dr§ft bill to hardships and dangers that they W"a~ Catholic sculptors: Giacomo have noLfound. ' extend the current government Manzu of Milan, Italy; Ewald sickness and old age pension and . "I was surprised to see so health services to Italian priests Matare of Duesseldorf, Germany; much progress ,here," Ralph has been submitted to the Italian and Toni Schneider-Manzell of Tolentine from Chicago said. "I Plumbing - Heating Chamber of Deputies. Salzburg. Archbishop Johannes didn't expect to find so many Catholics.'~ , Rohracher of Salzburg presided Over 35 Years
54 PLEASANT STREET :
"The heat is more bearable clad in Cardinal-red' robes worn of Satisfied SEl'"vice
:
NORTH AnLEBORO HOLY CROSS ACADEMY . than I expected," said John by Archbishops of Salzburg as ,
806 NO. MAIN STREET
Conducted by the an ancient privilege granted by Krupa. who was "glad I came." Fall River OS 5-7497
, TEL ~Yrtle 9-8231 :
Sisters of the Holy Cross
Finds People Friendly the Holy See. 535 Boylston Street
Patricia ,Loftus from Lake-' The exhibition, which is being Brookline 46, Massachusetts
wood, Calif., finds the people held in the Oratory of the Salz Resident and Day Scllool for Girls
"extremely friendly." burg cathedral, features works Grades 9-12
Pat has "a few words" of the by leading artists of 13 nations. Mfiliated: Catholic University
'local language now~ But the Accredited:
Helpers can work with English, New England Association
especially, where books and papers are concerned. Anybody, PHONE: School LO 6-8627 DUBLIN (NC)-Since the end who ,is literate in Nigeria knows Convent BE 2-7419 of World War II the Dublin some English. archdiocese has built 15 new churches, six hospitals, 24 sec DAUGHTERS OF ST. PAUL ondary schools and a ~arge num Invite young girls (14-23) to ber of primary schools. labor in Christ's vast vineyard In addition many existing as an Apostle of the Edifica churches, schools and hospitals - tions: "ress, Radio, Movies were enlarged. and Television.' With these Cost of the building program, modern mea'ns, these Mission carried out under the leadership ary Sisters bring Christ's Doc of Archbishop John C. McQuaid trine to aU, regardless of race,' ,of Dublin, has amounted to some color or creed. For informa BREAD $22,500,000. Part of the program, , tion write to:' which gave employment to about Rev. M()ther Superior 3,000 workers, was aided" by ~
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Nine Young Americans' Like'Work ' Former' Chaplain On' College Sta ff As Lay, Missioners in Nigeria
.f Russici'ns"J,eer,
Holy Father: Happy At C ommunlon
Sign, of Cross
LAW'LER
•
Bless New Cathedral Doors at Exhibition
Benefits to Clergy
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Protect
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Insurance Agency:
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THE ANCHOR-· '. Thurs., Aug. 7, 1958
At Our HO.use
Household Orderliness Seems Trivial in IPresence of ·Bishop· mercy~that's
a
.~::lty ~:~::,.jij: , " .' '.
:~racking;·.,
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'WOND.ERFULLY .GLAD TO BE BACK': Back in the United States' after five years imprisonment in ·~ed China"
Father Joseph McGorinack, (left) Of Maryknoll, N.Y., and Father Cyril Wagner,O.F:M.,: ()f.PiUsb'urgh say they 'are "wonqerfully glad" to.OO b~ck, .·Meeting·_th~jn in~an Fran;.'
eisco is Mrs; 'Sylvester' Wagner, 'Father Wagner's sister-in-' law.. NC·Photo. '.
'~:eak~~~cl:a~a~~e~e::e::
·,Polish·S·tud.entspto.·f.e.·ss 'R~rlg' ion ,'. ttiem,..,-,.· - ... .
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NEW YORK-Feel a bit uncomfortable in Church during these hot summer months ?Think of· Father Joseph P. McCormack before complaining. The 65-year-old Maryknoll ·.missioner, released last month after five years in a Communist prison in China, should give you spiritual refreshment after med itating on the conditions under which he said' Mass. His Church? A dingy Red cell.
His" congregation? An unsus
pecting Rtrd guard with glisien-' ing bayonet. Using' hosts and '. wine smuggled in under 'the . guise of medici'ne; the humble
prisoner ca.lled Christ down .to earth the ve,ry same as if ,offered' .. : in a. great .cathedral· or. magnifi-' · cent~hurch.But instead of an ·elabora.te cere".lony :and )arge. 'copgregation to .join him 'in '~'is" · worship,fhe. ~eteran .:mi~siop~r . would huddle m a corner of hi' cell;' cainouflagin'~ his acHons ·.cup of coffee and 'a cigarette," over a' ti'ny 'fragm'ent of'a Mst· .' . and a' t)limble measure of wine. And despite tbe 'grotesqueness and brutality 9f his con1it:Iement; what does Father McCormack: have' to say of his experiences? , "You. really appreciate what the sacrifIce' of the Mass mearj' when you offer. it under .these conditions. I never felt so hum- . ble in my life!"
O'II$" ._B~.ad~u~~n . ,," 'Wecould,see tbe gestureS, but WARSAW (NC)-:-About tWo- : '~tbe foll~)',,,ed re.ligio,~8 .prac-' ·.:Ma,:"y's. "summ:er:lln. a 1l8l:~ ·.we couldn~t,:hear' the, words..• ·th· d" . f 'p 1 d" '. 'it1; ticesfrom·tIme to time because . ~ould.be u~ut.terablY,l,on.ely !in,d; TJle .,Head'~f' .the House..wal· '. Ir S. 0 . , ? an ~ .' un.lver~ ..., .of the.environm'en1.".· Oniyone · ~ring wi.t~0';l~ ~~~,ose:.w:(),~~erso~ . Pointi~g .toward the . driveway; ~udents profess rehglous behefs . out of eight declared .thathe was' a pd want '~iajisrn: 'to . spre'ad . ~ecidedly anti-religious•.... lIl~rcy. . ."'. ' .. the .Bishop gave.;' a "D9n't TPe: gailg .. ~ :bOys land girls bo·ther-about':nie-I'm.,.fine" wave; th'roughout the world,.acci)l~ding· . In answerw the question "no' IIary knows from '. school-;-havl;! .of protest and proceeded up that· to survey conducted' here. ". you want the worldto turn to 1>een mak~ng . our" h,9 U l!f! ~he.ir lOng ,flight of front steps.'. '. Results of· its special investiward· some form ofsocialisni.?" , beadquarters.. Singly'· or .. m . a So .we greeted our dear friend gation .were announced by the 70 per cent of the' studentsre-' .roup they' come'by, letting her .at. 'the .front door-':"and were so department of social sciences 'of ~ plied in the affirniative, while 19 in oJi"all the' news'of their teen glad to See him ,that the morn Warsaw 'University, which took per" cent" expressed no opinion" .age. world 'from' ~hich otherwise ing' newspaperto.ssed· c~asually a soundillg of students' views on, and 11 .per cent gave a negativ~ , .'. .tie would be exCluded. on the couch· the drooping . world affairs ,from October.1957 answer. \. . An'd there is a'lw'ays Janie ... ; . houseplants .add '~Ii the reSt to June 1958. Replying to a series of .ques '';'0111 little Jane Ourand with never once entered._ ~eonThe survey carried out at the 'tions concerning :political 'and · ~r pink cheeks, clo~e cropped sciousness.. . -. directive of the Polish Ministry' economic imt>rovements in Po":, Large F.9,:"i1ies
. He had Come,' iii his. benevo-.- of' Higher Education, was con land since; the workers' uprising · blond' hair, her ready wit an.d bei. knack"of making Mary feel lence,. to bring Mary his ~less-. ciucted in ·the form of a ques:'" of .October 1956, 88 per cent. of' Giv,e;"Vocations
'«e>mfortable hasn't missed a iiIg and that is all that mattered., tionnaire containing 150 - ques the students felt ·that the couri-. . M'ARYKNOLL (NC) -A re-' ' . One. doesn't ·think. of triviali tionspertaining to religious, try's international situatioil had' cent survey' of Ma,ryknoll's June · .ti8y ·yet.·" .. . :'jaiIie has 'a iullUme job, :fam- ties ,in. the p'resence of Bishop economic' and political matters. . ameliorated. Regarding Poland's' i958 ordination class reveals that; IJ.Y chore!!." and ~. iia~ce':""';but sh~. McNamara! Replies received from 725 8tU- ec;:onom~c structure .78 pe~ cent. more' vocations definitely do always manage.s to pop in for at. V ". I dents showed that; despite 12" ..noted· Impr0.vement, whl~e 83 come· 'from· large families. The; five minutes of an evening;. ocatlons ncrease·.. years of communist- rule, 66 per; per cent saw I.~provement m the. survey shows that of this year.'l: W on a Saturday morning, ot a Among Graduates. cent professreligio~s beliefs an~ . ge.ne~al .. polItIcal atmosphere class 'of 48, the average ordi ~ _ainy SundaY·'e~ening.;. . . CLEVELAND (NC)-,-A IUr practice·theirfaithto varYing~lthIn the country. But .only nandus comes from a fa!Dily of, there' are' 'the older' · .. rThim '., , '. . . vey of high' school·girl graduates de'grees, whl'le 12 per cent ex- 4.9.3 ti p.er1c.e.nt noted an amehora-.. five children. «uests: Rica Dowd . with, ·her . here indicate's all increase,this . pressed no' opinion on the matter' _ on 10 IVIng·standards. In this ordimition class, the. Dre~zy 'S~mday- afte!n<lOn' visits; . I . to ·.and 2,2 ,pe,r. 'ce,nt de.clared ·them:._ .third -Iargesqn Maryknoll's.his . .. .. . '... Q' '. A year in. the number. p annmg. - - Wai.ting Period, tOry,:'a large per!:entage of the., the c:ulhane~, the . lun~e~s; ,\lnt join religiC?,ul communitie.·oI. selves to be· "no'n-,believers." ..
ordinal1di' come froni. a familT :Margaret~who: walks the two . . In the. latter' cateory',however, 'Lesseh."·s.. CClSe,S .
miles t~' and from 'our hoilse for., women.. one student out of four stated' of nine and ten . those che'ery visits; arid "the' Le ' . At Regina High, School, 16 to DES MOINES (NC) The .ion of Mary pai"iBh visitors, 20 of the 123 grad,!ates. were re: Sovi~t' Army'. Po'per Iowa, division of vicll statistics' · ealm . Mary Corbett with a po~t~d as. plannmg to enter noted a sharp drop in the num-' friend promising to continue r~hglOus hfe. Seven graduates Seems Worried ber of Iowa divorces for the first ·praye;s. • . And, of course, ·en.tered convents la:;;t yeat:.. . B~R~IN' (NC) _ The Soviet five 'months of 1958, in a report St. Joseph Academy 'expects army apparently:is worried' its issul'!d here:
Father Lyon, regularly bringing .'ber Holy Communion. . . that 14 of its 207 graduates will, own .memberS are not'swallowDuring the period there.'were
"uner.' . Mary loves all her visitors. become postulants in the SisterS iIlg party-line 'propaganda on 1,559' d.ivorces, 260 fewer 'than
Director. And we love them for-remem of St. Joseph who operate, the atheism.'.. in the ·five months of 1957. . .
1I'ering o\1r Mary. school: This is four ,more than. A recent issue of the army . The report said the 60-day . t69 Locust St.. Fall River So, the days 'go on and 011, last year. paper "Krasnaia Zvez"da" re- waiting Period in divorce cases. OS 2-3381 each brightened by kindn~sses. At S1. Stanislaus High School, ceived here '''omPlained tliat 'which went into effect July:l, Easier' Through .Kitchen . three girls are planning to eJ}ter "scientific atheism" is failing' to .~ 1957 may be an important factor: Yesterday Mary had a surprise religious life.' Tell ,graduates of,-' spread in the army. It called its' in the decline. . ". NICKERSON' telephone call from a ,deat: old Lourdes Academy have·the"sam~; own propaganda"op. this subject' friend-citizen cif two worlds if. plan-both totals, ~e :in~ease.:' inadequate and unconvinc}ng.. FUNERAL and ever we knew. one-Bishop John over 1957. . .' , . Another complaint. was that OMONUMENT :M. McNamara;" Archbishop Edward' F. Hoban' " there' ,are not enough books . "I'd lik.e to c.ome" ou.t an~ give. . BI'shop of Clevelari:a,: .u,rged.. stu.~-: bl B h M ~ ai:>out 'atheism in Soviet army SERVICES '''~neral B~~~ 70U my . essIng, . IS op' c-, dents this year to. pray for'reli'::;' libraries-and that there are .too Nama:ra said a~,d, With a ch,u"ckle, g'I'OUS vocatl'ons fo'.r':9p.e a·nother.~ . . " ' BOURNE' .. SANDWICH, ."'A~S; "'N d bt II b h few r~quests for those they have. - 550 Locust St. •~ ou you e c om~. " ,Three years ago, "be"';orgariized" , .. " Fall River. Mass. Serving
Dh, . my ~~odnes". B!.shop, the League of St. John the.Apos , .' "OS' 2-2'39. CAPE COD
.:Mary gasped, I mean, Yo~r Ex- tie to pray for religioul. voca-: . ..d·Su"oundlng Conilllunitia
Rose E.,' Sul·Bvan., =~~~::~,,-;-: why, w.hy, } d. be tions. '," Jeffrey E.. SUlliv~n ,"Now the Bishop·has·had some C' t M" " '" trouble with one fool,'; the Head' . oriver Issloriary . '. of the House warned us all .at· Nun to Visit Home Michael c~· Austin · breakfast this ·morJiing. "He TOKYO' (NC) -,- Mot~er ~erC~ '-p~ .. . ; ,123' . ~ROADWAY'
8houldn't climb those:fro'nt steps; Cedes··Ruth· Downing, whO,' be., Inc:.- . -tQO many and too s~l~ep. I'll go came a' Catholic after'serving'8s , .TAUNTON; ~ASS.· '.
. FUNERAL HOME , Mit front and direct Father' . . : . II Protestan+ missionar.y', in Toky. ~. FUNERAL SERVICE. "'..:. Coyne ·to drive him arotind .the' more than'·. dozen years,' bas", .' ., .. VA~dylce 2-2181. .. Plymoutb Ave~ ., back' way and be' 'cnncome' left for"her" first visif hom'~ to (o'all River .. .. through. this' short· :way." .He '. . . . 54' COUNT)' ST• - . the United States·: in "UU-ee waved •. hand toward the .. decades. '" . OS 3-2272 BONNER. FLOWERS periphery area of the breakfast NEW BEDFORD, MASS. alcove. ~ . Mother Mercedes- was ·con;.· Spect'ahstB :m' "The Bishop come through th~ .verted during her stay in -a~con-," S'Pecial /t'li>ral ~Atrangements kitchen?" I choked on a piece centrati~n camp in Japan' during:. FREE' - '" Audiometric hearing examination-demonstration . v of toast. World War II. She. 'joined' the Funerals •. ' Corsages "Easier for him," the Head of. Missionaries of Ou\-.· .Lady .. of Weddings .• -Hospital the House answered noncha Mercy in 1946, and hils direete9. 2082 Robe.son St. 'lantly. "We'll just slkk up the the Keon Elementary School for. '. Please send free booklet to Fall River back part of the house instead of girls, which her congregation" OS 5-7804' Wor'ld's First and Still' Finest .' the front - and do take down conducts, since her.' professiOll:" . · Name _ _ , 1hose wet duds off the line." Accompanying Mother:"';Mer EYEGLASS' Street __ _ _.._ , _ .. "But- .they're bla.nkets and. cedes on the trip is" :Mother , O'ROU.~KE bedspreads and they're sopping Asuncion.' Makiko, .a Japanese HEARING AID . City , _. State __ ' wet!" we protested. nun who is to study at the con ;'Home "Easier for the Bishop," 'the gregation's house 0'1. studies' iii, '.' \571,SecdndSt;
Bead of the House repeated. .' Kansas City, Mo. ., Down came the sopping wets;' ,: .- THe Misstonaries of Our Lady Foil M~ss"
· dOWI;l <;ame clothes: ljnes.·: of Mercy stem from the'Order of:',:' '. ..: .~~ ?_~~072 ," . . ' ,Billy, the. no~-and-tl\l~n: grass . Ouz,~<Lad'iof Mercy' founded.'by.. . "MICHAEl- j':':McMAHON · cutter mowed that ·baek. yard . St:' Peter Nolasco irt "Spain iI;:" ·into . a crew.: cut, ;and: - raked~-· 1218; branching Gut,as a J;J1ission~ Licens~'d 'F~ri~f~l O'irector fRANCIS I. "NNI. I;, S.·, R[G; PHARN. ~'"'' ·.away' ,.every.. stray, .stick .. and ary congregation in ,1926.: Their Registered"Embalmer ',. --,,, ROTC" ST. CO•• ARNOLD ' NEW BEOfDAO,MAS5. , ." .tQQe. We awep~. th~ driYewU" motaUh~ull! ill .. Benia:' &paiD. , ,'.
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D. D. Sullivan & 'Sons
JEfFREY E. SULLIVAN
DOLAN
Memorial F.un·eral :·Home·
.HARRINGTON
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Mass in Sec ret Greatest Joy In Prison
you'r~
the recipient ,of those corporal works Of when you appreciate the true meaning of Christian charity. . .. Take "visiting the sick," for example. This summer, a world of sunshine has been and the back steps-:-instead of. brought into the life of our the .front. ' . . bedridden Mary hy kindly . And the kitchen had a clean visitors.. Lying flat on her. up job done as if-well, as if the back in huge cas1, Mary find.. .Bishop w~re coming! W? tossed it 'hard to read-rngular books the morning newspaper mto' the are 'too cum-' living room; switched the droop'" bersome and in~ hOl~s~pla~ts on the 'kitchen it's a' strain wmdowsl)] with the fancy ones even to ,read in the living room., paperbacks and
At Front, Door () ~agazines at
One doesn't roll a red carpet ·.uch an. awk-'
. over alirioleumed floor-but the ward angle. The,
fresh wax job on that kitchen radi!i' becomes.
floor was symbolic' of said car tiresome .and, '
' pet. · be.,:" own f1imily,
. -We .waited and'watched out of · we ··s·u p p 0 ~ e;'
Mary's. front Window; . ; ';Father Coynl;! with His Excellency drove after. a .wh.de; ;::::\
. When
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OTARION
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LISTENER .
Todays Fashions
Gorden Jubilee Marks New Life,
'New Fall, Winter Wardrobes Include Jumpers'and Jerkins
TULSA (NC) - Celebrating her fift,ieth anniversary as a nun. the director of the School of Nursing at St. John's Hospital here, Sister M: asked to takc up a new career.
By Ellen Kelley Jumpers are back in fashion for Fall and Winter wear! 'f.he reason: they look so f~sh and new in Fall's chemise, trapeze and fitted silhouettes! Some are designed with necklines that make them "dout1Je-duty", to wear with ' There's Fall fashion news' in a blouse for daytime' and on the new hoods, too! When their own for after five! they're attached, they're skill . Another trend is the jumper fully shaped to convert to flat with deep-slashed leckline to show off a blouse, shirt or Iweater worn underneath. .Jerkins are very much in the news for Fall; in wool, as an extra piece coordinated to a skirt; in sweaters. both pullover and weskit styles; in leather, very new and smar1. Yes iJi~eed, the jerkin is a new fashion way to vary 'your, "separates" outfits and is' distinctively charming, ~! ' ," Tbe' .lm.it dresS wlll'be a' fasb ion favorit~! The chemise silo. houette, already So aecepted in knit dresses, takes' ()D' new lIllartness by'wiii of'acceD"... that change 'it 'from a "sack'!' look: Hipline accents break the line: low looped'-througb:belts;sasbeS; hip pockets,' blouson efI~ts that can be worn .well below the waist if desired, long line 'over:" blouSe tops, too! . . ' :High~waisted accents also'vary the chemise' line: there are high placed yokes and poc!te,tS.., Back interest is new; 'is achieved via low bows, belts, yokes, cocoon sh'aping. In addition 'to the che mise there's a new' and lovely triip~ze silhOuette' and the new and popular "baby doll" Silhou eUe attracts much notice with its elasticized hem! ' Reversible Dress New neckline treatments fol low the shapes of new sweater necklines, by way of smalf col lars, shawl collars,. middy colleI'S, and' boat necklines. A new novelty is th:e reversible dress that can be worn one way for a eowl-front neckline, worn in re verse fGr II wide-spread 'collar' effect! Mohair is exciting faShiQnfab-, ric' news. ItS Souffle' texture is' I,nkingly beautiful iii co~orsaS wen 'as black. 'Plat' and ribbed knits are very important, new~ ' e8t .. a matelasse weave. In fibers, 100% wool leads, but tbere are also many blends with orion, nylon and other synthetics -very much to the fashion fore! Estron (nylon and acetate) is fabric success news' .for late Winter and early Spring. Tweedy knits" both flat and textured, look good, particu-, larty in gray, beige, black-and White, brown-aod-black and red and-black! ' ,Glowing, colors feature the new Autumn shades of pumpkin, russet, bronzed and ,emerald green, plus bright red, bright bhte and sapphire blue. Black, as usual, continues as a top deMand fashio,n "color!" . Sport Coats There's a new fashion line in _pus, casual, and sport coats tor you gals! Some feature the chemise influence in silhouette, the drama of color and colorful DOYelty patlerllS, the plus of man-made or real fur. All this adds up to sport coats that an, veritably, fasbion pieees, as a change from the classic look ()( former years.. Al though the neutral' color basic ea r coat will be much in dema,nd, thit: Fall it will'beonly one part of a collection that sparkles with "unclassic" .fashion news! ' Color in car coats is a page one fashiort story! You'll note poplin anJ wide-wale corduroy in aU the rich, tangy Autumn Woods tones, plus bdght red and blue, even high-fashion ma genta, ,wools in, c()lodul tweeds,. bold plaids and checks in wide yariety! A newcomer in car eoata is tbe heavy ribbed eolJtOo .knit. G~ linings add to the colorful bnpression! There a~ linings of Vera! (a ,man-made fur), dyed to-match poplin and corduroy _ta. Other linings feature lIoral and paisley print, eottow.. lIOI11e fake leopard,some ,quilted. lhNn... Hd man, aiP-out, I i .
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collars. Other sport coats have their own color-coordinated, but separate helmet hoods, tueked inside the coat collar. Coordinated outfits look won dedul! There are car coats with coordinated skirts in" tweeds. plaid wools, corduroys and knits. Leather Coats A renewed trend is the leather coat! You'll admire it in smooth' capeskin; say it's high fashion in lluede!New, fashion, interest eome-s from chemise lines and color'.~, . .." Here again, Autumn Woods colors are to the fashion-fore, include such rich tones as russet.' duil gold, mossy green, pump kin,plus clear· 'red, emerald; sapphire and 'slate blue; 'Black, however, is very im})Qrtant!FUr eoHars, best 'when detachable, feature long::haired furs, the newest favorite: ly.nx! ~anlPus Ma~e-Believe' fur coats w:iU, be very' ,popular; :"Rah-coon": duplicates, 'ver:: ·ef:' fedi"Qly, .. real raccoon: and "W.el·e.woU~ is, a stunning new long-hair, ,silvery, make-believe fur! (Needless to add, their price is-;thrlfty!) " Several of my readers would' like to' know more about "Mo-, hair" as a fa"shion-fabric. Inci-, dentally, "Mohair" is a magic w()rd; throughout Fall and you'n see it.-just about everywhere of importance! "Mohair" (the long, lustrous,. silky hair of the Angora goat) is ,combined with traditional wools to give them surface and textu,re, interest, to make them fluff:" .brushed, shaggy, bairyk Moh~lir 1000ps are widely used to' outline big plaids and eh~ks. Too, there are mohair jerseys, mohair knit.~, mohair sweater yarns an'd surfal."e interest, that stimulates the appearance of Mohair! Indeed, many, ~f Pall's ImaJ'test suit, hat and coat fash ionS will be made of tbis beauti ful-looking, wondrously warm, attention-getting "Mohair!"
The Sislel', observll.g her Golden Jubilee in the order of the Sisters' of the Sorrowful Motl:Jer, will end 25 years of service at the nursing school and hospital to become a pharmacist on the staff of the new St. Anne's Hospital in Truth or Conse quences, N. M.
NOTHING 1'0 FEAR:, There's nothing to fear in ·the operating room of the world's fir,8t CaJholicchildren's hos 'pital; this young patient learns after long study of the toy , operating room shown here. It i~ Qrie',of ,the many "props" used at Cardinal Glenno~ 'Memorial Hospital for Children in St. Louis Mo., to 'acquaint children with hospital faCilities. ", NC Photo.
8;00.0 See 'Festival,off:>solms,' Believed First Ever Produced'
(NC)::"':'People'"c~~ Welsh;, Spanisr and German by from 'many parts' of Britain aDd soloists. , , from abroad to"aUend a "Festi-' The Festival of Psalms waS val of Psalms'" produced 'by' produced by th~'Grail, a British Catholics here. 'natiof!al Catholic y'outh OI:gani 2;ation' with over 10,000 mem-, Over- S.OOO people packed the Royal Albert Hall here for both' Del's." " .' afternoon and' evel'ling performCister~lim'an d Bene~ictil~e' anceS, 'which were' believed' to monks cooperated with, the ,Grai! be the fitst of their kind in the, in the presentation. Clergy fJ;om world F'rance;' ':Belgium and the United , The', psalms, in, English, Set'to States, some 'of 'whom !';lad c::ome' the 'melodies of Father Joseph to London specially for the Gelineau; a French Jesuit, were ,.fe;;,;s;.;;t.;.iV;.;3.;.1,;,;',..;w.;.e;;;'r;.;;e;...:;p;.;;!.;;;e.;.se;;;n.;.t;;.' sung and acted by choirs ' a n d ,
:,LONDON
"I'm still young enough to start a new career" was her reply when asked how she came to make her decision. "I'll miss a, lot of people but 25 years in 'one stand is long enough ... I''!l looking forward to my new duties," she said. ,Sister Gratiana., during " her tenure at the nursin~ school, • credited with graduating, cover 800 nurses;, As a,.matter·of faet she turns 'her nursing school directorship over to ,one of ,her former students. Sister Mary Irma" a, 1942 graduate;" " The present -Inter,national Di rector of the order of the Sistel"5 of the Sorrowful Mother, Mother M., Olivia, is also one of, the students Sis,ter Grati~ma trained.
Mass
labor DQY
LINCOLN (NC) ....:.. Bishop' James V. Casey of Lincoln will offer a Labor Day Mass in St. Mary's Cathedl'al here in honOi' of St. Joseph the Worker. Father' Austin Miller, S .•T., director of the -Institute of Indust.rial Rela tions at Crei~hton Un;v("''';'v in Omaha, will preach the sermon.
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ballet· groups. Outstanding feature of the program, was an exhibition of psalm 7 dancing by 22 deaf-mute girls from the deaf institute of SLMichielsgestel, Dunbosh, Hol land. ,They danced to, Psalm 22, (The Lord, Is My'Shepherd) and the Magnificat. ' Pancing wall based on Hebrew. d~neelt Which ciate back' to ,pre Christian, BiblicaItimes. To ,show that, the new psalm 'ody is'.adaptable to any language, one psalm' was sung in Polish,
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'DORSEY LANDSCAPE & TREE CO. Designing-Planning-(:onstruction,
Specializing in Church Property
FRANCIS W.', DORSEY
FALL.,YE.
316, FIFTH ST. OShome 4-5698
c· ,::::::.
Swansea Guild Pions Whist Party Aug_ '8
only the best
Plans ..for the coming seasoD and .£01' a Get Acquainted Whist to be held Monday, Aug. 18 were ' discussed at a meeting of the, Women's Guild of Our Lady of Fatima Church, Swansea.., Next meetillg of the grOUplViU be held Monday, Sept. 8. Slides taken Oil a world tour were sh(}wn by Miss Alice and Miss Eleanor LeneghaD of PaD River.
'ora~ges
are squeezed by Hood
to give you
Pt~n Three Schoo's
.
HARTFORD (NC)-Plans for the construction of three new . Catholic high 'schools to serve the greater' Hartford area- were alHlouflced here by Archbishop Hem-y J; Q'B'rien of Hartford. The schools wHI open in sep:. tember, 1961. They will, be 10 cate<l in Hartford a'ild in the ad jacent towns of West Hartford and Manchester. '.,
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'tree-fresh, ·flavor" ·.in· every glassful WHAT 14. liFT! Everything in the
NO~
JOB TOO BIG NONE TOO SMALL
orange that's good is' yours in Hood Orange Juice.
SUUJVAN BROS.
WHAT A RELIEF! No mixing or unfreezing for you. All you do is pour and drink to a happy day!
PRI1~lEItS
In quarts at'your store or door
LOWELL, MASS.
Bring Florida to your table with
·Tehohone L.weH
... 6-6S3S and GL '·7"
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BOSTON OOEAHPORT. N. J.
'PAWTVCKET,.L L
ORANGE JUiCE
WATCH "2-6 -MEN" EVERY 'SUNDAY',7·7:30 P.M;"
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· Honywood' in' Focus'
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Pier Angeli as B·f3.rnade·tte..
Meditates ·in Free Time
By William H.' Mooring Had I not' known that the dainty figure; tiny face and
pensive eyes were those of Pier Angeli it might have seemed
that Bernadette Soubirous, once again, had come to the
Grotto at Lourdes to await the Mother of God.
At the' Des i l.u .studios pletion before attempting any
. where' Lucille Ball and Desi review,. it appears that Desilu
Arnaz once worke<l- when are making every effort to con
'they could \get it--forRK'O- centrate in 45 minutes of active,
Radio, a one-hour story of St. TV playing tim:e the essentials of
Be'rnadette was' beirig telefilmed Bernadette's personal experience
for the Westrather than the miracles which
inghouse - Defollowed; an inspirational drama
silu Playhouse as distinct from an essay. on the
this .Fall, probsupernatural.
ably a r 0 u n d Japan Likes 'Marcelino"
October. Father Anthony. F. Moore,
She was not O.F.M., of the Catholic Church
needed' for the Shinmachi,Gumma Ken, Japan,
squalid scene of having read in this column ref- .
the Soubirous erences to the reported "tough'
hovel in the Cachot, where Bruce going" of the Spanish film, GENERAL AND SISTERS: The first National. Confere'1ce on Traffic Safety for Gordon arid Marilln Seldes, as ~'Marcelino," here in the USA, Catholic Schools was held at Saint Mary's College, Notre. Dame, Ind. General George C. Bernadette's\ parents, were' in writes, to tell. me that "In Japan, Stewart, executive vice-president of the Na.tional Safety Council, chats with representa angry argum~nt over "food not with only 250,~OO. Catholics, fit for pigs to eat.". . .' people flocked to' it." R'was a .tives of seven' sistel;hoods beforeaddressin g the Conference. ·N.C.. Photo. So little ·.Pier Angdi, ·in the . great box-office succeSs·and aI
:. coarse Serge' slip and eheap, ·cot:.. . most everyone, for a long while;'
ton. blou'se,. her head swathed··in . seemed to be ,singing· ,the' 'Mar-': •. skimpy, black bandana; sat .. celino' theme song.'; .' .' . ,: · .i1lone'''; befote .. the: simulated' ,Father j;ays' '.several· pagans' . Co~tinued from. Pa,-e One who. are Bishops with fUllpow~r . These. visits are officialiy reeeIW ' . 'Groth> onJi~sabielle; a seeming- .·,came, to'hi,s Church .just ."to·se~' .archy:· It alSo must"care' for the' ~o.go:vern .ad~o~ese;.~\soCoad,.; A!~. ari.d .the Bis?ops)eave'8 ~er · "ly .perfe~t··B~rJladette. ~e was :the same church' as 'Marce~ino"":',"spiritual'~elfare'O f'all Catholic . Ju~or.~~d Allxl~I~rY~Blsh!>ps.an~':' ~IfI~~tE!. fecor~Ing the '!ad IlJ~ ·:'''', .": .. dt:~p i~ ~~ditliti99~:AlS ~.A,-:.e\IV.' ... II~J~:Ub~st~at,..th~~~res.p'~d· th-;:. emigran.t~;<:if·.tn~ :Latiil Rite~n~ Aposto!IcAdll1}mstrators; In t.he '. I~a ... v~~~tl? ",Ith .the congre8a~ · . . ...: he.~ from. her' reverie I',feJt .like .:. rellglO,lls. me!lnm~ o~the,I?I~'tur~, '.for' the' intetnatiorialsupervisioo ' .V.~·. a~onE! I~~t.year. the..~ongr~~: ...ti()~.··:· . '.' ... ' . :. ", .··::o.ne does' when: ·distu rbi~g~n';'. .l?~,t t~e; 1I~n9~~llce'8ncl::g.~f?~Tless·'· of .:the ''Apostohite' of-the Sea..::.: ".' ~abor .nopllJ;la~e.d ~5~lsl1ops. ·m: .• '''ThE!fiv~-yearreports "keep' t~ . , ; ' ",' :o~lier .in 'prayer;:':. :: ....... :. :' .:.of .t~.e h~~e;boY:-J.n the 's~9~y~~o'<li'; I" "d: "'d'" ' f ' '. ' .~O. lltat~s,·.· . - : ' . ........;~. Cl;)llgre~at(on·'thoroughly posted . ...... "Thrilled With 'nole··. :'; w~s ~dopted bY'the.padres,·"cap".:''J! ~. eas~ .. e~an. Ing .~I~:" ·:C.reabttg ne.w. '~lOce~ . and·,- 'on' the"state:of'religious life and' .. . . . , '. t d th .. . . . t · · · · . Jobs today IS the preparabon of h ' B' h' PS . 1 ts· ." , . ..: -:,'" ~ ·'''This. ~~'my~tir~tj~porfant:TY' .. fU~te, '. "ell': Imagma .IO~ 'and' af:... matt~rs'to t>ediscussed i'ri con':' '.' Cf~IlI~g d,":' IS °k T,·r~d~!r;eds" o . '. affairs th~oul!h~Ut.the' w'oild, ··H role ". saId'· Pier "and· I cannot ec IOn. '. ., . .. .. . . '.. :". . · . t · · . . f ' · . . 0 "groun wOr. 0 IVI e ex-.. the reports· are 'not satisfactor.y' . ..".,' . ' , ' I J' th" 'til' . . '.' .' :. SIStones-It gets 1 name rom' .. t' . d'· . th' C .. '. 'I' , · '. • . ··tellanyonehow·thrill'~dI:am:.'to·.n. apan . e m-was're-btled. 'th': ·t t'h" '. . ' , .ISll~g. lOceses, e· onslstorla;·;·the·Congregation may'. discusS " . . . ' .. ' "Kegar k' It ". (. hi" meets .'. C on gregat·lOn, . wor k'mg WI'th .th e····.' them with the' . Bishop concerned . play .Bernadette·;" She was' such" .. e na u· azura.· ·roug y.. . .IS . du '. hy-where . C" ". . e Pope . ' If;ll" .,.. '" , meaning "I . t M" h' f") WIth t e ardmals. It fu I ed A t r N . D I' t f ' . . this function this June when '.' POaSrOt.IC 1 unclo °tr ' . e ega edo If circumstances 'justify it, the 'a: shlmple: dchl1d, ~et s}!e .. knew.. Father 'An't'hnOnnOycenff . hl~.c .I~ .', suc won erful· rapport with" .' ." 0 ers Is"pray-' P , . '. . . .' .. ' l' . a p ICU ar coun ry must . e-· . Congregation may send anapos- . .. God." . ,ers·that ."the'filin·may 'yet be'·, o~ PlUS.. XII held the Irst, termine·how. the new 'diocese is . 'folic visitor·to· make a~' on-the:.. . B ~ f ore "th '. . shown I'n' every ·t .' "A' . . consIstory to s be et up. It mus t . appor . t'IOn . . .. ' . mI four• 'years. . .,. spot" mvestigation. This official · .... s h ot'a smgle·.sce l1 e· . " . . . . . CI y. I.n· . mer~ . ~. for this new teleplay, the"c?m- .lca.·It ce.rtal~lY· ·h~snot':bee~..~henthe ConsistonaIC~ngre-. panshes,. s~hools, .h~~pitalsand . reports on' his findings' and the · ~a?y rehearsed six straight 'days, ... . MeanwhI!e .~n 'SpIte of· ·th~lr ?atlOn was perma;nently s,et up other rellg~o.us.faClhhtes so t?at ~. Congregation' takes whatever ac ~Olng through the whole' stor¥ rep~ated.. promlses (cou.pled· WIth m 1~87 by Pope SIXtUS .V, .It ~ad the new ~mt ~s self-suPP?r~mg.. tion is 'necessary, . . hke a stage play. This". Pier' the!r· heated. complamts' ·that conSiderable power, mcludmg. from .a fmanclal and religIOUS . E h'" . -'. · . 'Chur ', ' Amer.:. ' th e power 0 f crea t'mg new d'10. t certam of . t h mks IS . "a better methodtha'h: .. c h 0 ff"ICla Is· m most pom of· VIew, and can .take care ., act ' "year b"·t h' /blocs . ,. . d' . . . I Itt· 't I . . coun nes su ml t eir reports in rehearsmg . then shooting dis" lCan lOceseshave fal1ed to do ceses. n a er cen unes 1 .ost of the' needs'. of the Catholics' I I h • · jointed sce'nes" as is usual in th~··.. anything offi~ialiy to heip the most of it functions, u'ntil St, within its bounda~ies: . : regu a~ cy~ e,. t, us preventing Holly~ood ni~vie studios . ' :'picture\ United. Motion Picture Pius X rescued it fq;>m near exSelection of a priest a~ a can": .00' grea a Jam of. paper ·work She is plea'sed too, that' in this OrganiZ,ati0l1sof. ·New.York" as tinctionin)908,He.gjlve it'wid«; didate for the episcopate also reO: m anr ~n~ ~ear. . ' . TV version, no a·ttempt· will'be the film'sodis~ributors.~n;·the jurisdiction to which other Popes . quire!? painstal;dng investigation ~ope PIUS ~II, has .. a.dd~~ to made to show the apparitions, as. USA .an 4 thell'.·agent.. In:· Los' have added. and care..The .method' of, select;..' the. Co.ngregabon.f· manY-~lde~ ·they didinthe. Jennifer Jones'.. Angel~,s, sO· far ;have.'failed ~ . Heading the ConsistoriaICon-. ing Bishops in the United StateS . d,!hell; ~hat of car!Jlg forth.e in~ · movie, "The ~ong of Berna- .. show, .. Marcelino,'~ . .for pU'-:Poses .' gregation as prefect is Pope Pius .was .~areful~y.outlined by' the . te~national g~?eral secretan.at 01. : 'dette,:' made in: i94~.. - .' ...!>f .r~v1.ew;eitner .tMhe, er as far xii.. He ,is assisted by II! Cardin- Congr~gation in a. decree. isslieiI,-·t1~~. 4po~t~es.}l1p .~f. t,he S~a aAd . " . . "qnly little.'~~rn\l<lette'semo",:'. as·I can:.I~al'll, ~ny oth,er ~ol.ly-_, . als, MarcelloCardinal::l\'fimrrii is : in .1916,.., '. .' ':. :. ' . ". ':,of pI:(),vldI,n~ .rehgI<?uS 'care . ~ .'., .' .·tional and phYSIcal reaetions.to . wood crItic. . "'.' , .. ' secretary· of ··the. Congregation' .,The, .. pro~ess! .. accordmg. ~o a:. G~~hohc.em~g~ants of the. Latlll ",'. tne beai.Itiful visions she· sees' and is .responsible forit~ Q'[el'aU:.. 1916.decree, .!?e'gins inthe,pl'iest'!! '.. RI!e.~ :,. . .. , . · wi1l·C<?ilvey.~tothe.TVii·udieiJ.~e·' .~9 .IS :." e-:n.inory. '.. 01)~l'ation;Assisti:ng.hiJ!lis.Msgr... own dioc~se. His Bishop' suggell.ts:', r-~!"'""~""-!"'""_""_-",,-_ .t,them.ystery.andwonder of h~r" Link With Giuseppe Ferretto,' th!! assessor: his na~ea~ 'a' can~lidateto·:the , : . :,R~A; WILCOX CO,>·, '. . :xpenence," says Pier,· who '. DUEHAM E'ngland' (NC) St" or 'un~~r~secretaI;Y:' . ' . ·me,t!-,,0,?01itan.Archbishop:and his..·... : . ' "'. nows.thattc;> create this effect, Cuthbert's' Gollege'af Ush ..•..·.Mostof the ~orld's hi~rarc~y" cal)W:f.'acy,is. discu~se4.d.u·ringa·..· . . .' · must. chalenge, to the· depths,. England's' gre ''t .. ' th" a~, ., isun'der the jurisdiction of. this' meetlng .pf-the B!s~ops·of. t.he , , .... stoe.. i~r' immo~i~to DOIiY"". ! he~~~le.nts as an actress. . ' .' miry' linked ~i~or15~rn Congregation. But not all. Bish- . rp.e.tropolitan'province, held on~e', . DESKS' . " . CHAIRS . IS IS why, when·not needed priests of the R f t · ' " ops in mission territories are' every,two yE!a!-"s.·. . FILING CABINETS elsewhere sh d't t b f e .orma lOn, c e l e - · . ' L' t . f . t . '. .' ' e me. I a es e. ore brated with' t t" I" ' . under the' Sacred. Congregation . .IS s .0. pnes s· _approved m • 'FIRE FIL'ES • SAFES the SImulated 'G rott 0, " . ' . the 150t-h merna lOna ac-f " for the Propagation . th ese mee t·mgs are·f'orwarded .. . gomg' claim of the Faith to " . FO'L'D.ING·.· TA'B"L'ES· over and ov " . h . '. . .annlversary 0 . .J:' th A . t I' D I t ' . ."how Bern . er m er mmd, its foundation. " .... " . ' . and prelates of the Eastern Ri.tes· . e pos 0 IC ~ ega e m :Wash..:. . . .adette must have felt Ushaw priests from B' '.. under the Sacred. Congregation mgton, D.,c., he III turn send.s the AN,? CH'AIRS as she· w aited for Our Lady to and ·over~eas·' and some' :~tg~~ of the Oriel}tal Church' names. to the . Cong~egation, . appear t0 her "and how,"- when I 't' . ".' . . '. .' which conducts. 'its own inves•• . .• tho blessed . mo'ment .. ' 'd' th'e al y ga.there!l. In where the tI'gatI'o n o'f. th e propose . d' can.... 2"A BEDF"RD ST, . . anlve, 'th .for . the mam 'cere. . .'some tcountnes · :I. .... .huinble and 'holy tog th" f'll d mony Qn e vast grounds of the .' appom ment of BIshops and esdidate' " . lierspirit with raptur~ "t,r J.e , college ·a..fewmiles .frolli, Di.Ir-. . tablishment of dioceses are mat- . Thus.. '. h' 'th' . .' .' FALL RIVER 5·7838 .. 'Facts' Without Cone',· . ham. ,which' h!ls .produced· five. ters· of 'state, the Sacred Con- .. 'ing a s~o'Wst' eer'~' f Qreflslal n .open . . '.. uSlons cardirial .... . th 3 '. gr ·t· fo E 't 'd' .. , . o· care u y Inves-' ... ~.=~==~==~=~=~':A:"" This teIeplayis based. Mar.... s, J,llo.re· .an 0 bIshop's' ega ~on. r .. x raor .ma.ry· tigated names is ori'han'ddor the .
garet Blanton's 1939 bool ."B· ... a~d oyer. 2,000 . pn~sts.. EccleSIastIcal Affairs has Juns- . 'Pop'e' t .... .... 'k'" h' f"··1 .
· ...... . ' " er-. Ushaw t' to' di t' b t k 1'1 ·th ' 0 \.1se In rna . mg .' IS Illa· Six' day' 'h It
nadette .of J,.ourdes;" reprihted in.. , ' . , . . was .s~ .' ,?P ". su~ceed, '. c Ion .~. w?r s C ose y 'Y I,. .. choice' of -the'man he. v,;iH' narhe' .s s a . '. .., . . . ;','" ,thoula~r"and 1953 a~ "The.' "Mi!a~les' of ,. Dl?Ua.1.,. ..t~eE~~hsh. semm.ary. ~hle, .C~nsI~tonal.congrega.. bon... B,is~()'p. \ .' l,ourdes.. "· . ' ,..... ';".'- .,o~e.n~~ l.l).~rance at,tQ~ Reform:-... ThIS. Congregahon can. erect· . "A"II:'b' h .. .. d" '.th·· ' •. ' .,: I . ' . . ' . ." M BI t " ...' " . ahon a.nd which before 't' I ' 'd," ·t .d"d' '1' .... IS ops un er e Con- ,.s~.alt.do 'jill thy rs... a~ oV,.:an EpiscopaHiui .' 'ure'd .... ~. '. . . ". ..1 S C os- . loc.ese~; .as 1. 1. . . ast·.y.ear· l~" :. ~isto~fa" Congregation;"iniI i'-"·b.-; '. work.., .. ·.... ' ..', ; an~thewlfeofpsychintristDr..' . u~mgth~.French.~evolu:-.,theVmted·States.when ..ltcrE!_."mit'd'ta'I" .. ' '.s, s~.: ...... , ".... "'oSmlley . Blanton,',' student·;ahd. . ·hhon~.hi!!l ..se~t..a ~teady stream.of:atedthe dioceses' of,. Rockville, ,,: dio-c'es"'a~n/a'fefd .. ~~po,~.~ ,~!!- ..tJf·'1~Ir. . De to 5 11 ..: ··ft·· d f S· ........ , . .".. " erolC mlss~onary priests bacls: t C t · NY' d N Ul ' air" once ever.y Ive ·~,'....u . len . 0 Igwund Fretid,.· was" - .. , ." . .'. _. ,0· '.' en re,· ;" an . ew' m;·., jrears·· The ,:. ' 'il' b··..·' > .:.' '.. ''' '.,'. :'. ,' .
visiting. the Set. for'. her'.'first-· ~~m~a.~n...t~e }!'alth ~nderg.round Minn;·· .. ' ' . ' ... ' .' '. . .'. . .', "dY~SU~ h Y' S~ rn.l~ }t '-" '.~". '_ gl' f f' . ...!. : .. ' . In t~ls.,country;., .' . . ' . .. . ' In persoI! unngt elr ad .hm-·,' .'".' . . .lmpse 0. l11'!1- m a.!f.ing,"·· . She~ . The "h' f"" ''1/'' . . ..',; ·.-,It carl: nomInate· ordmarIes"jna'~.'·visit;toRome The·terin "ad ..... ·told'me tha~ while her:'stoty dif:. .'. , .... I,!? orla!l .' Ingard helped . ' · · I i · · ' ,; . ' " . .... .... " . , j JEWELE!) ,.eROS·S,. '. f" rOlJI'··F·· ... ' . to.... fo.und Ushaw. . " mm!! . m~an~ .to the· threshold '. COM'ANY ... fers ' here' an'd'.. thOere ranz·'· , .' 'after 'e'scapI'ng. . d',' '''f.'' ....,. ,. .. . . '. . Wedel's "Sopg: of. Bernadette t,.' 'fr~~-P()uaLin .1808:. H~' is 'now .' . 0 :Annive~sory .. 8t,l ". ~~ c.rs to a ,.r.e.9.uired.. y,isiC·.:· .' :.~~~~':~:::'~~;s":" I . .'. : she .has tried as dici' werfel. t;. .,.. l>ur;Ie~ in.,. the .co)eg~ seminary. . .whi<:~·.~~sh~ps· mu~tpay·.to t!I~ .:. CR~CIFIXES- ARr:I~lES·.o. DEVOTl9N 'relate'facts witho~t'dniwing'~on- One of its stu~ents .who Aid nQt. OF,St~Pci·tr,ick'S to~~S.of ~~s.;:~~~er and'. ~~~u,""J.• '. . ...... ..... ' .. elusions. . .' O' ." ~ .. , becom.e .;;1 p,nest .was '. Francis ' . ' . ." . .'. .l<:noJ.""".t,;..',j'" "J.';',~""J..:; ...l.w.t~j · '.. , , · Cond~ns~dF'''.: ' . ' Thomps0l'!, 'the .'pOet.: .~..... : .' ..' NE\V YOR.K (NC):-HlsEml~ .~~~~':t..f,,~~~«~. O .'
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preside at a· Mas:; .in· St;· A. , · ~as an~ alcoholic;·f>el'haps.a~·· d Cr.EVEL~NP,· .(NC).-Elght;-.·,.Patrick's··cathedral:here. on. '.. .. ., " .. , ," .. ~~~atenal point in'..: the .. es.seri-. 'i:~h~e~~~a;.~t:~~~-:deVel?~r~nt. August '15, .marking the ·.lOoth· - .' Ia y CO~de~s~d TVf?~m:, Bo~h.' becorriiri -.- a"'i .. ?vem~n, ~l,~ . . anniversar:r of. the 'cathedral's _ ',' : ,.' ..... ~ r', • , •.•. ,.' ':.,. Mrs. Blanton a~d .P~el'·An?eli· "last mo~tf.p~2~r·rer~.. In ..tQ~ .comerstone'laying.:-··· .»' SAfE-'DEPOSIt' BAXES AT 'LOW',C'OST .~ are glad there IS nelthe.r. time' . . : aJTmen a n d . . . '..
. ~" nor. pla¢e· .in. the. telehlay 'for' ..~olJl~n. h~~e,~lv~l1.u~'~"'\lVee~'s '..'. ArchbIshop ~ohn Hugl1e~ or", ': :" .' ..'. '.' " . . ARE AVAILABLE ··AT· .'.,.
suggestion' of a "ro·r:ri'ln ce:.that':'·. vacatlon:,tlme ,.to tak.e I>art'J I~ '.,' .New Yor~ pres~ded a~ the. cere':-. . ' ." ~'. " :.' , ...... : ' '.;"- , . . . . . './' ni.ight-hay'e~been" such 'as fig'-" .the r~~r~eatll,. s~onsored'by' loca,lmony .on .August.15, 1858, the -: '. , .' ALL OF. OUR THREE' BANKS· . ured betwe~n Jennifer JOJ;les sodaht1e~,.· .." , '. . . . . feast of .the Assumption., Soine' ~' ..... .... . " '."" '. _'.'.' . ., ,
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spires '. . ' the. ~ .. ~ Rod.ncy.·, . ' •..• . . . . ... , ; : .1499.: movie· by Char.l~~ Bg:k;iora, be-' . ColulJlblar;l .. CO.~~llI1I~!S .... h~ve . tenure .of Arc~blshop Michael -~: J'~chBlvd, : . "oJ;~~BAN.. A:c~:~ .-, comes a .composlte-ot ·.Bean and started l:I'new dnVe to.~nflltrate AJ.lgustmeCorngan, .from 1885. . ' . ' .. ' . .' ','" Bishop': in ,the:hail~s' I)f ~·"icior ... this .countr-Y.'Il·lab9r,;.~riions.by., .-to 'i902;' and, the . ~~y 'Cha~1 . .:~. ,·()F NEW, ~PF.~D. '.: ;';,.. ' , . " ... :.,,-:~, ....:' ~ Abra!J~a't;l ': Sofaer, .. w~ qe,>;~dn . ,~me.an~'ofa,~re.~ ·ca~'?,ai~n.,~he,was \c:~mpleted in- 19~..; ': ..... :' , c.: " MAINIANtc.~ ,p"'lIicHASE . AND' 'SrIIlEITS 'to"~"~ ' .. " ...<•• ",,".<,~Sob~!,.as,Fa.t~~r: P?,~.'.a~ ... ;,!a\f~s... R~?s •.:aJ.:t!.. ~su:,g.,.!-hel1;.>:c~IlJ)~aI~n" .··It,:ha~.been estimated. tha~·.. , : ,.. ,.i .... Jtew"~M",'Mer.i De 't I~.C ':: .,~"- .'
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1HE ANOfO. Thurs., Aug. 7, 1958
11
Parishes in U.5. Receive Ideas From Missions
Promote Peace
Continued from Page ODe
KANSAS CITY American parishes day be repaid for nancial support of
promote world health. "Disease knows no national boundaries," he said. Notil1g that the physician is an "important and indispensable figure in world affairs," he added that "medicine is the same throughout the world.' And, moreover, direct medical aid is tangible evidence of the good will of one people toward another." "Medicine may be the com mon denominator which, regard less of language, culture or religion, would promote world peace and understanding." Dr. Cavanagh also declared that the relationship of the phys ician to religion is especially significant at the present time, saying: ' Influence of Materialism '~The physician, because he
(NC) may one their fi the mis
sions - but not in cash. The re.p,;:lyment will be in the spread 'of an idea and a technique. The idea: In a period of social fragmentation, the parish must be something more than a "sac ramental service station." The technique: A form of par ish organization evolving now' in Africa, the Philippines, and Japan. It is designed to knit person to person, family to fam ily, and thus to make the parish once more a genuine, function ing community. Maryknoll Father Bernard Meyer, a veteran missionary, de veloped these suggestions, in an interview here.
realizes the importance of reli-. ,MEMORIAL ALTARS AT MARY'S SHRINE: The Catholic Daughters of America The mission devices, as he de gion to his patients and to the . scribed them, have a .striking eitizens of the world, cannot· have increased a gift of $100,000, made four years ago, to $250,000 for five memoriaL. similarity, although they were plead that as a scientist he has altars to be placed in the north apse ofthe National Shrine 1 of '. the Immaculate Concep-: adopted .independently. All of no interest.in these matters., As tion,. Washington,- D.C, Architect's sketCh shows altars as,they'will appear when com them','he pointed out, were de a Catholic.. man of science he P,!.et.e.d,'.' NC. Phot.o.; ,', .. , .' .. ,' . . ,. "': " . signed ·to meet problems basic must make this. his apostQlateY, ally similar 'to these found in the
This ·.is ,particularly. true, he,', ',', .. ' '. ". . .' • :'" American ur~an· parish.
added, in regard to the·growing .., 'Bloek'Orglmiiilt'ion"
influence of 'materialism ·.which , . ' . . . . .' . d . h' .' "has already le<,l us' to, a,·great·· ConUnu~d from. Pa«e One . scJr .:On October 28 1956Cardi- given full 'cooperation of !De: .:. The fun liDlerital'ide.a be Inc,t .. J•. ~~l of .. moral an·d,1ntellectul!~."'printed for 'distribution among . !l~!' WySiyn~ki, at 'long.'las~ r~.,. 'goyer!lrp,~ll~ iiJ. di~trjbutiflg i~" th!-!se,',p~~gra~.::, .~~.ther. Me.y~r"
eh.a.o!"".because it :.denies· G. oct the "clergy WOUld. be: "exempt,', .leased from captivity, was weI" .. sh~pments, of clothmg, foo~and... decla.~edA'w~Sb;~hn!I<:~PNatel~ ye~...,. d f ' , ed' Ii' '. W . b ' ,medicine.. But when the. ~fovern- ag~ m . rc, IS oP.. . 0 s pro ~nd leaves the mm 0 ...man" from censorship. ChUrch plibli-. "~~~ring ~i:rtk~nOf h~~~fthfl,l,'lllent ,~id ..that' ~$40,QOO".w~uid;, graml?r ':block' o~~aniza!io.n': ~f, unsati!;fied., ,,'., , cations' meant fot general distri-' . 0' n''e.'of t'he 'Ca'rdl'nal:P'rl'mate's hav,e to be ,paid .in 'cu.stom,'s du't1es" , every ,pa, rlsh. T.hiS, he said, 111 "As a scientjst the Catholic 'bu'tion ,woula . be· submitted 'tel ' th h it f h l physician will ,be listened ; to,"·, the Office' of 'Press Control. 'first" acts, was ,to :makt.. the pil .. o,na b 91Jt5,78,000.,wor:th ,of cloth-,,' , ,~ . ea .~. IS own proposa' he observed.. "He ,mustaggres " , . grimage to Czestoch~~a himself. ,ing ,w.iJ.ich arrived' in: t~e port of The' Fort Wayne prelate' sug sively combat this false· philos- ' .'.I.'Pe sec 0 n d j s sue. that , Dual LeadeJship Gdyma in. the 'spring, relief gested that in every parish, Holy ophy. He must proclaim ,that ,threatene?, the, unsta~le .peace of 'The' nation raiiiedunder, the work cam~ to, a standstilL,'Later; ,Name .men shoul,d be appointed there is a God that man has an' Poland was ,the government de spiritual .leadership 'of Cardinal the AJ!1erican supervisor; of' the as block captains and Iieuten~ immortal soul destined for union cision earlier, this year to impose ,Wyszynski ,and, the political p r 9.g ram , Father Edward:' Syn.:. ants. !h~ "bl~ck". would not be with God, and an intellect and, ,customs dutie~ on shipment~ of leadership of Mr. Gomoulka and oWlak, of the Buffalo, dIOcese, geographical; ItS size would vary, a will which are free." food an~ clothmg sent to Polalld a Church-state commission' be was refUlled a visa to reenter with the ,concentration of Cath "He must 'insist that there is' ,by the American Bishops" over . gan 'im~ediately to try to loosen ,Poland. , olics. "I would say each '?l.oc~ a natural as, well as a positive seas charity agency, Catholic, the impediments that the 'StaIin An agreement has now been would have 15 ?r 20 famIlies, law which go 'v ern s man's' R~lief Services-National Cat~- ists had set up " against the reached whereby, goods piling 'Father' Meyer said. actions.., . . ohc ·Welfare Conferenl;e. Church at an, accelerating 'rate up. on. Polish docks have' been' One function of the block cap "The Catholic physician should ' But the symbol of the ebb 'and since 1949. ~ent to victims of recent floods tain' would be to maintain per fiIrthermore teach that medicine flow of Church-state relations Last October, when student m. souther.n ~olal1d. The goods petual census of his area. An must work in harmony with the remains Czestochowa, where the riots, in Warsaw brought renewed wIl.l ~e ~lst.rIbutedbY ~flood other would be to welcome new natural 'Iaw as it is evident ,in ancient icon of Our Lady Queen· fears of Soviet in,tervention, the rehef CO~l~llttee set up m Cra comers-and, beyond this, tq in man's nature. Medicine should of Poland is the traditional pil- .Cardinal -was again the concili cow'l!nd Jo~ned by three ·Chul'ch, tegr"te them fully in the life of work. also to understand the grimage point of all Poles anl;l aating influence. He told a huge representatives., ,tneparish.,' . ,,-he question of future, ship':' nature of ,morality and regulate, focal point of. Poland's religious . studenf .crowd 'that while he "But the program doesn't s!op 'its advice to patients in·terms ,&f and, national. heritage. ,sympathi;ied . wiUi'''your light m~n~ of ,charita~le supplies 15, ' the!e,", Father Meyer' cautioned. ebjective right and 'wrong:"" . . -, , " for .' freedom of. '-Speech and still In'doubt. " ·~.rhis 'is only the beginning, tht; 'S"ec'Inl 'Part fo' r' Nurses, Silent P r o t e s t , ' . . .. ,thought,~' -moderation and build " ' . ' 'structure." . The internation'al meeting of ,Jt,·was at Czestochowa on Au ing', for the future' would serve rge, 5 Sense F'" th . ' f th 'bl' k ' . h h " ' . or e success Catholic nurses was told by Miss gust 26, 1956, t at one and a alt, Poland' be.tter than viole~ce~ F.. .A' t D' '. . ' . 'i ,. h .d, t ·0 r .e ' oc Houck that "the 'great ,army of ,million.pilgrims·gathered in a' ,." " " , ,', ".' 0 rivers, Ran" e.S81, wo, ,lings, are " 1 t b t' . t k bl, t' t. In ,the c~lUrse o,f tl1 e. year, th~ VAT' CA necessary: 1· nurses ,in many na t Cath OIC IOns' 51 e? u unmls a a ,~pro es Gomoulka regime clamped down . ' . I ' N, CITY (1'!C)-':-Vati..:' "F' t ' t " t' . f th has.a special part to play in the agamst the three-year' mcarcer-" .' " .,'." ' c a n City 'comment on reckless ' i r S ; ,par IClpa IOn 0 ,e . t· f th P' t f P I d m a number of ways on the new people on a neighborhood level• . salvation 'of the modern 'world."·' a Ion 0 e rIma e 0 0 an, f d . f th P' l' h 1 driving 'stated that,no amount of
' ' . ' p She defined tWo types of, ,His Eminence Stefan Cardinal " }er, o~ 0 th e.: 0 IS .leo e traffic ,'regulations can' assure Second, formation of·leaderS by Wyszynski That rally' coming mc udmg e. relmpOSI 10? 0 ordered traff' unles's drl'v'e'rs meetings with priests." n U r s..e s.·, t,he "humanitarian" . ,' . " press censorship. The Card mal's nurse, who feels that "her onlY' two m?,nths after the: repr,~ss.lOn, attitude stiffened. In His Christ become' conscious of their 'moral
professional obligation is to·· ,?f the bread and freedo~ riots mas ll1essage-not broadcast this responsibility.
carry out· conscientiously the In Poznan, had an electriC effect time-.,-he spoke of "the terrible ,'~Prese~t-day increase of traf
SILVER and Bt!ASS orders of the physician or sur-· on aU ,Poland. peace of unfree people, a peace. fic gives rise 'to this particularly
geon for the physical welfare of By mid":October, the' P9lish among slaves," but' said that the serious moral problem," it said.
• CANDLE' STICKS the sick and injured," arid the United Workers' (communist) day would come "when we will . "It is the duty of each individual .• CRUCIFIXES nurse motivated by Christian '. party its'elf had undergone such rejoice and be ,happy." ' to respect life-his own and that charity. ' ' f h'III nelg . hb or- t 0 respect his pressures that Wladyslaw GoNew Obstacles 0, . , BOOK-ENDS The latter type, she said, "will' moulka-who, ha,d himself ~en . . and ,other persons'. health and also be conscientious 'n her min-' jailed , . ' This. spring, the Polish gov sa'fe.ty. Thl's I'S of the '~I'fth .com' _ under the Stalinist regime " , ... istrations for, the physical wel- " ,ernrrient erected a new obstacle . mandment; It is, the' duty' of able teld seize the "helm of, to Chu'rch-stat'e relatl'o'ns .by I'~ fare of her patient. But her hori- -was th .. ~ ver 't t t b t t . . will ' e party an p'"os"I'n'g''-.tarl·ffs on.' r'e"II'e'f' goods 'e Emily C. Perry zon is not sO limited; ' she " - 'set the nation . on. ' , tyone th no 0 cove,' t f'h' u 0 re h ' . ,a tack which, gave the, ,Polish. sent by CRS:'NCWC. The' Amer spec, ,e ,proper y 0 IS." neig 562 COUD',' Street ,c'onstantly be aw'are of the fact ,people freedQms unheard of in ' . bor; as .well as not' to abuse, his, "Opposi&e S'.Lawrelicp Church that nerI:1atient h~s spiritua( ills" any".' other' communist-ruled ican bish'ops~" agency" had re':' 'own:' This is" of the Seventh , New. Bedford. Mass. , as well as physical. . '.' . , ti . . ". . "sumed ..its' .. Polish., relief, ,work . com,m"an.' dment"... , " , ,," HShe will strive to be a good na oli.·, . 'last September, and' at first was' _ -...- -..._ - _ _.......-J
Te.nsio,:'n' Eases'Over' Trouble In Poland
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Story of Jesuit ff'ii8Ssioner ThriUing .and· Heartening
-THE ANCHOR Thurs., Aug. 7, 1958
Bad .Movie .Ads· I
B y 'R t. Rev. Msgr. J 0 h n S. K enn ed Y From his boyhood d~IYS in Butte, Montana, Thomas
Phillips had but one ambition: to be a missionary priest in .China. In youth he entered the Society of Jesus, still wanting to serve in China. At that time, however, only European Jesuits had mission fields about. some particular of the there. His desire, it seemed relatively far past. For example, could never be fulfilled; But, after being interned by the Jap then the Yangchow area was anese during World War II,
Continued from Page One The Hollywood Reporter. explained that advertisements for the local daily newspapers on key bookings are generally pre pared in. New York City and then turned over to either the studio or to the the'ater or ,thea ter circuit for pla~ '''Ilent. The latter have no control. over text generally, except in the case of a few individual theaters or "art hou:;es." The Reporter said papers in New York. Chicago and Minne apolis had' been exercising in..: terliiifying censorship of theater ads for some time. Ful"thermore, the paper· con-' tinued, Mr. Pollock for the past five months had been verbally, cautioning studioS, theater cir-· euits, , exchanges and indepen-, dent· exhibitoi's here on .the' C()))-" . teXt of ads which ."stress ~md. violence." . " .'
IG:dSanl:;~he~:u
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By Most Rev. Ful',on J. Sheen, D.O.
The tragedy 01 the -World is not so much what people 'suffer' but what they miss when. they suffer. So much pain is -wasted beeanSe tbere is no one to love; nB one for whom the sufferinc may be offered. ',' " , , So it is with giving. The Americans are
the most generous people on earth; but there
is so much giving that never sanctifies the
giver; because it never sanctified thereeeiver.· .
Our Lord had this in, mind when He asked:
"Which is greater, the gift or the altar which
consecrates the gift?" The altar is God's
always; the gold becomes holy because offered
for the altar. No one need fear that his offer
ing is too small or too unworthy; the altar
sanctifieS the gift that is laid upon it.
assigned to the Jesuit~ of the Cal- Father Phil1ips returned to the ifornia province, and young PhilUnited States briefly for a re~t. lips, still some
About this. trip one interro.. time before or gator said to him, "When' you dination, was
arrived in San Francisco (iii sent to China.
1945) you left the customs shed He remained
at the,' pier to talk to a· man · there 25 years, across the street. He was an' B' I . agen . . t , :wa~ 't h e..,,, N 0,. b e The reason the altar iu the Old Testa..,
F· ..' the last three of whicl). he spent . was Father Phillips' brother-in 'lIleot ~netifiecll the citt. was beeause it Wall
is' Communist' law.··, . sprinkled'seven times with the blood of . prisons. It is' . "'rhat they should' b8ve • .',.. ,. 'sacrifiee;'~ reason ~ albr' iJa eur churches sanctifies is because> ·principally \the infonnation about his activities .~. :7"::f~~~~'" ~... ~.!!~~~.~nt.is offered tlaeftoJt; it, ill . r y of those in San; Francisco, '6,000 miles ..,.. _ .... ~ - - - "'...IlS.. three years that, . away a~ross the Ocean; ad year; Pr~iude t~ Cra.ekdo:w~· " . ><. "'- .' ." '~' •. ~. '- told in I Met~~Ore the commun~bad OOIile . ft is beiieved; concluded' the "1J~i}~ ,gyn\nasitinis;'bboratories, . scie'I.'iCebuildin~ dormitorrea • Traveller by to pOwer in China, .seemed. t~" money', but also.<t.ve where'y'our-~~t is· Reporter, that Pollock's 'Ietter and auditoriums witb"'OW' oT .... .,.... rather Kurt B.ecker, S.J. (Jrartally incomprehensible.' •• The Lay ' vour.offerin~.on ,an al1aJ':'m'Vie~'~bere 'converts is the prelude to a' crackdown ·sane,tified. ,. . . . s~dden realization th~t ~n. his unless copy is changed ~olun- 'are co.urlted hy;v~Iages; ~.it. on a newly bUiItaltM in Korea'where: :..r, ,StJ:aus. and Cudahy.. $3,~O),. ',In ,1953, Father, Phillips WlU;, own' country ,there .' . . , .had.,'been .. tarilyby' those who place' .it in. __ th'e"bJoo'd of a hundred 'thoUsand ma-nyrs,'t:!aS"been sprinkl.ed;'":bY·it , the newspapers. " ' o n t.he altai-of St. Peter's by' g·iving· it to the Holy" Fatbe'v' for' new' -~~tioned i.n "Shanghai, .as..I,'ector., those to follow and investigate of 'the Church of Christ the. :King. him, and send to C o m m u n i s t s . i n c h u . r c h e s ·throughout mission"la,nds: " ,".:' " ,.;' . · h' , b' h ld In' the meantime, the Motion ' "',.,,," C lila reports w lC WOU . one He played a lead.ing part in the , . \," .. Picture ;ASsociation of America' yery active Catholic life of.. that day wind. up in the dossiers. of .. ' .' .... expressed hearty support of -the . All the sac'rifiees )'ou send to the So~ieiy'tor tlie Pr!ipagaiioo' the Shanghai Secret Police was . "eity', . a. ri.{,f was, interested. in .·all. .. p'ubl,ish.ers'. effo.'rts -t6 eliminate: ot tbe·F·aith are forwarded. to- His Holiness for 'd·istrnniiion.' Abov·e'." , 'the educational and' sOCial sickening." - ... all offer your, own. lives in sacrifice as'St.:Pa·ulasked:'''And 'DOW "flagrant and offensive .mate · e~de~vors . whi~h the Chi.l~ch: . The CommunIsts wanted no . . ' . , . . '., riiit"'· from their ad columns.' br~tbreJi; i aJ~Peal to y~U l)yGOd's merdes to' offer up your'b'odies Yigorously 'c{;ndueted' there....,. Ct]ri.stian martyrs. Even 110•. . , 'Taylor Mills, public r'elafions . asa jiving' sacriiice; conseerated to God' and 'worthy 'of . His As the Communists. clamped .there was physical mistrea~ment, acceptanee," down, Father Phillips was busy some of it..extreme. Father Phildirector o( the MPAA, wrote to Mr. Pollock -commending the with refugee work, helping poor I ips tells of a priest suspended . b h d ff f d d publishers' move. , GOD LOVE YOU to R&R.C. for $8 "This is our Eighth Wed y an cu s or ays on en , people to get out of China before Mr. Mills indicated that the the -',Red juggernaut crushed and he himself was given an ding Anniversary, we are celebrating it by oUe.ring this $a for the them. ,He also arranged '"an in overdose of serum which made publishers should have made missions." ... to E.G. for $5 "I had such a very close call with 'death . clear that their complaint was apostolate of preal:h.ing him violently ill. · tensive crossing the street 'yesterday that all I could do when I got my primarily against distributors of breath was thank God and promise this little bit to the Propagation and instruction. Prayer Only ~ope . . what he termed "sex" films not Shortly the Church would be of the Faith." ... to J.L. for $8 ~'I'd been looking at a certain dress ·11 he held out·· The chl'ef capr'YI'ng .the Production Code St. erippled-that he could pl(linly " . ' for about two weeks and finally, bought it 'o~ sale'. This is the reason was prayer. "The only' Seal and whose' copy is not sub 38e. The faithful, therefore, .reduced rate saving." '. should be drilled in the elements means of preserving any sem mitted to MPAA Code Adminis 01. the Faith and strengthened to blance of sanity and strength tration. Are )'OU the somebody,'reading tbis wbo has never seeD • withstand the pressure to apos "'!as to k"ep .himself constantly On the heels of this, Daily WORLDMISSION ROSARY?' Who does not know that eacll tatize which would soon be ex . mindful of God ... There is here Variety here reported that' Erie deeade is a different cOlor'(red, creeD; bfue, wbite and yellow) to no question of any special gift Johnston, president of the asso:" el'Cised upon them. s,.mbolize· each 01 the 'five miSsion continents and to remiDeI )'OU of prayer. . . It was a dry, con-' ciation. has expressed to studio Becomes Prisoner stant continuous offering. It was heads his concern over the cur to pray t.". the sufferinlr: world? If the "somebody" is 70u-bere's He was not surprised when, on a matter of asking for the grace ; rent shock~ and horror cycle of ;what to do---:-sencl a $2 saerw:~ .oner~ with your request and we
June 15, e was arrested ;nnd and strength to 'persevere in that' 'films aimed' at .teenagers and will send the WORLDMiSsIDN' ROSARY to you.
'. -.. ~, ..".. . ' ., . thrust into Loukawei prison, enervating and dreadful isola dealing with teenageerime: where he was to ,remain for'23 tion all the days ofbis life,. if Variety said parents bad be-·· : 'Cut to and mail it to the months. He wa,s put in a cell ne<.oessary." ..,.,.," gun to send in fibn ad pages Most Rev. Fulton J .. ~ei1, National Direetoc of The Society for: ,....ith . another man; they were He kept track of the' day~, and from their' local newspapers, the Propagation of the ~aitJi, 366·Fifth Avenue,.New York 1, N. Y., 3triCtly forbidden to speak to' knew a particularly desolate asking: "Do .you expect me to or your' DIOCESAN DIRECTOR REV. RAYMOND- '11'. CONSIDINE, eIlCh other; they were under con"" time on Dec. 24; 1954~ Christmas . send my chiidren to su4:hpic 368 North Main Street, FaD Ri.vet', Mas8. Eve! But a day and a night just tures?". .~tIlnt surveillance: . They were required to sit \ilP like any other in his nightmarish
right on the cell floor. for hours place. " ., .Pari~h at • time. 1.eaning against an.y- . Finally' he got' to sleep. He . thing was proscribed. Father' was awakened by a sound oot- . S Upp ?hillips was even told that he 'side th~ prison. Someone' was SAN FRANCISCO (NC) :nust not pray. 'playing Christmas carols Oil a Parish libraries should not' be Two meals were !!Crved daily, :Chine~ flute. "Christ bad cOme. meant to compete with or re-·· the barred Wl'ndo place the publ.ic library, but to ~ach consisting of a little soggy, ' Thl'ough . w, :'iee with a few bits of some disguised as the sweet notes of supplement it. This '/egetable and. occasionally tiny a f[ u t e, H e h a d come. " . is the conviction of AI-. . F a th er Ph'll' phonse F. Trezza, executive' sec ~:CC'8ps of meat.' On wet .days, I IpS was mov ed to ns was somet·JJJJes pu t . retary of the' Catholic Library O'ther :'ain blew through the unglazed . proISO, . a . C!l.}l WI'th many - 0 th ers, Association, which .,has hcad 'vindows, and on wintry days II~ 'th a f ew, somet'IDles quarters 'at .villanova 'University t· Aasts,of cold air. somelmes Wi outside Philadelphia. wl'th 'but one . .He was m' perl'I At night thc prisoner~ were ''The parish'library," be said f •pom I'nformers . He saw men ')ennitted to lie upon the floor. ·,'here' were no. blankets. A crack, sink. into a stupor, go mad. ill an intervie':V here, "should. Speciat. Arrange~ts for . of co~ntrate on the sp'iritual ~ri~ht light was always kept' He sa w, to 0, the r ag rosarIes .OUTING, tESTIMoNIAlS' AND QAMeAm other prisoners.' He even' got a reading that is over and above · ,urning, which made sleep dif :'cult and, when finally it came, chance to do priestly work, sur . that spiritual literature .vailable , f • troubled sort. This routine reptitiously: to comfort, to in at the publ'ic library." For fulti Information Contact '~ Father Phillips to exclaim, ,~truct, to impart absolution to a processwhicb would' improve ROLAND GAMACHE':":' Wy';'an 9-6984 "HeU begins at fiv.e in the morn man who signalled. his desire . " . . . ::lg." and dispositions for ito,: his shockin~ appearance. He' ,was also taken' on a month's But if he was never peJ'lllitted One cellmate. he brought from . tour of the "new" China, wbieh ") -, -lIable wI'th the man -b' paganism . to membership in ~ the. impre!lS~ . 0 ' .him very little. . · -,lared the dreadful cell,. Father 'Mystical Body. At odd, ·snatched· . At liberty. in Shanghai' he ....,:'hillip·s was none the less .'" _._ mOments he presented Catholic found the Church stripped of..,:' , lJired to talk.,--to a sucCession of doctrine, explained it, answered bishop' and clergy, .with a few
· lterrogators. With th-e"se he bad questions. \.
priests who had capitulated to , )me 200 sessions while in Lou At washup time one morning,' the Communists eonducting serv ·.'lwei prison. . he said to. this man,. "You have ices, The infidelity of this hand The sessions might be sbort or sornetflihg"in y'our ey'e:" Let me . f l ')ncl ' Ch'mese. Jesuits, .u, udmg - :onizingly ·prolonged. They help yo,:!:" ':"Al'ld'fr'om"the rag in . deeply grieved him.' · 'ight be'suavely conducted, or his 'hand," says the author "he What of the futl,1re? The · "fen with a snow of friendliness, squeezed the sacramental w'aters Church is suffering, and terribly, r they might take the' form of on the other's !for.ehead, saying', . Ch'ma. But Father P h'III ips is 111 'erciless grilling, gross abulle, in soft Latin, the ancient ,for sure',that once again she will be · .louted accusations. mula." free. Always the purpose was to gel .On a memorab~e,day he was Ind,eed, ·thc Communist irHer'- ' given a p'ackage from America ... lude may, ironically, nave 'Ie prisoneJ: to incriminate him·· ·If: and others, so to condition It contained two bottles labelled helped the mission endeavor in 'in that he would be a pliable "Vitamins, 'to be taken daily by. years to comc. For one thing, Id useful instru]Dent in thE~ persons sufTering from lack of it· has smashed ancestor worship, !Ods of his caotors. nourishment." a major obstacle' to conversion. Like so many others, Father One, he djscoverei:l;·w~S-filled, _And. another obstacle it' has
,:,illips was also required to with capsules ,of sacramental eliminated, too:" the custom' of .
rUe inmimerable accounts of' wine, the other'with altar br .·s mail's having more. than one
s whole career in" China. Eacb betwecn necco wafers, He c~',;d wife and family.
.-aft would be declared incom- say Mass again! And he did so, Father' Becker relates this
~te and ~nsatil:fa!:tory, and the daily, while his cellmate of the sad but triumi)hant history very
'illOner would be told to boy momenl kept a lookout. well. He has taken excellent 'ain, linecombing his past and Eventually came release. Be materials ,and given them excel FALL RIVER OS~ 8-5286 ;ncealing nothing. fore he could leave China. 'he lent expression's; His book i. OuImiDjl13, he wuw~ be lIKed wa~ subjt..ctecl ,to a fa«eni 6: .upthrallin" and 1leartenin&- '
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THE ANCHOR Thurs., Aug. 7, 1958
Bishop Doubts' Sporting Events' Give Cure for Intolerance
13
Produce Leaders
For Free China
SACRAMENTO, (NC) -- The conviction of· a Chinese Arch bishop that mainland China will one day .again be free and in need of leaders is producing re sults. About %,000 young Chinese men and women are being trained in a program directed by Archbishop Paul Yu Pin of Nan king Who is now living in the United States. During a visit here, the prelate revealed that through the Sino American Amity, a non-secta r'ian group with headquarters In New York City, about 50 young men and women are annually given aid iii.· their education. . Archbishop Yu Pin said that as a result of this program, there are about 1,300 studying in the United States, 500 in 'Europeanel ]00 in Japan. . '!be u'ndergraduate students ilt the United States,. mostly non,· Catholics, are sent to Catholic "niversities to study. • The Archbishop .said that the l'esult of this program has been well-educated. potentia. leaders, inculcated with the principles of a 'free world and prepar.ed to lend their abilities to the re-' building of a free ·China. '
CARDIFF, Wales (NC) true and lasting cure .must lie Bishop John E. Petit of Menevia f(lund is far greater than nation in a sermoil here disputed the al prestige or pride and far deeper than man's desire .. theory that bringing nations to gether in great sporting events serve his fellows purely from a motive of service. Only by muis 'a cure for intolerance. The Bishop called for a mutual ~ tual love of one another ... as a love for one another as a result result of our individual love of God can be found the cure of of our individual love of God. th~ world's distrust, fear and Preaching to a group of more than 6,000 attending Mass on the , hate," the Bishop stated. Before the Mass about 100 star grounds of Cardiff castle to mark the opening of the British athletes from some 20 countries Commonwealth 'and E m p ire walked in pI'ocess'Ton to the games, the Bishop declared that open-air Mass. Of the 1,500 international inc ide nt s' have. athletes participating in the g'ames; only about 100 were many times arisen from the Catholics. Canada had the larg sports rivalry. est contingent with 17; Autralia "Once national pride and p'restige become involved, who had' 14. knows, where the process will. Catholic authorities in Britai. end?" he said. .estimate the Catholic populatioll "Neither education" no," in'.. of th'e British Commonwealth at ereased' personal contact nor about 30 million. experience of the pasi seems to. have proved capable of'restrain-" ." . . ing man'.once d!>minated by .b~s . EA.RLY MAY() OPERATION :On,e 'of the. first opera- .. lower nature." LOS ANGELES (NC)-Paro tions py,the Mayo surgeons' in :?t. Mary's' Hospital, Roches,:,"', . , .Not C ll rell .' , ebial schools in Australia enroU' ·ter, Minn., 'after it op,ene(i in 1889 is' the ·.subJ·ect ·ofth.is· Citiilg..the League of Nations, . the 'Concert of'· Europe, . and ene of every' five Australian painting that hangs in the phySician,s'rooril there. It depicts United' Nations 'as'lnoniiments to children imd effect approJl:imate . the ,first of· the famous team of surgeons, Dr. William Wor- '. man's· efforts· to overcome the. ly~ a .20 percent saving to "lI~' raIl Mayo, superyising as his tWQ sons perform the operation; tendency of nature to drag him payers in .education costs: . His Eminence Norman C.; Portrayed with the two Franciscan .Sisters is Edith Graham, below the level·of :the beast, ·the Rochester's first' trained nurse, .who late'r married one of . ,Bishop, continued: .. . dinal Gilroy, .Archbishop .. , ' . . "These are·not cures for this Sydney, gave these figurei be-, the Sons; D~splayedbelow the painting is the first operating. deep trouble in' the nature of fore sailing for home from ,x.. table, the-same orie"~hown·in the"painting. NC Photo.' . man. Tile source/rom which the Angeles Harbor.
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MarY the Way to Christ: ' e d Ob e THEANCHOR.... :--'"1'4 Thu,rs:.Aug.7. 1958 . Reunio;n o.f M ; an"'I'I1" Ject: k 'f W'. 'Id W-d' kl . Japanese:Bible .. A.-d,s'. -.n ,'W'o'rk . 0 ', ~,or·. • e'(-,I~ovenCi Y'
Cat,holic.. Authors Urged To Write For 'Major Secular Publications'
LOVELAND (NC) -Catholic this 'through books, newspapers writers have an obligation to use and other periodicals . must be their talent in the Church's careful,' he'·' warned to "form" By Joseph A;,:Breig: apostolate, a veteran missionary yourselves'" intellectually and . '.~' Cleveland -Uni·verse 'Bulletin·' " '15510n5' . edi.to~. -told young _wo~e~ at a spiritu;a~ly,::~n·~: ~.f;ulti~~~,~he , . I wonder how: many oCus have. forgottep that. World TOKYO (NC) -Mjssion- writt;~~~ wqr~shoP'c?nduc~ed at.. ,t~£hnjqu~s ...of:~rit~~g.'.,:", . ;:'.::. ~~r, I~ ended on, the feasfo(the,A~sumptiQnof the Vi~giIl, aries' in this country" are ." GraIlvIlle Commumty College "If our Wrltmg IS not up to . ", the' m"o"n"u',m"e'nta'l' wo'r'k" of a" here."" ',' :, "par," he said; "the truth'"is de Mary into Heaven., :'.'. :.," .. ':' .. . . f d d -. 't d'" th d t A 14 1945 Sa,·l·.'e,.,s·,l"a'. 'n'· ,"p~l·e·.st~t··h· e·'tra.n.s._" F"llther' Nit:holas: 'Maestrini' 'orme"'an we are no rea. . , . h In the western h elniSp ere, . e a e was ug.· ; . . ~ P.I.M.E., U. S. Superior of ,th.~ He "suggeste'd' three ,rules . for' 'sed a champI'on' latl·on. I'nto colloquiai.· Japanese ' promI when he f th t th f s e eve 0 e eas. . ' , , Missionaries of SS. Peter" ';i'nd Catholic"Wr:iter. :, " " ., . . . .' . ....' ." ., .. 1 "AI a try to be po Tve. In.Ja'pan, where the eease- 'who would come through the of the New Testament. f' h It d> th t'f - th woman to, crush the head of Witli :' 150,000 copies sOld to ::~~~id~ ~~~gi~:~Sd:i1t;~~, Oft~ia: w.tir:e' ~o mu~h ~~~,' · Ire a e e S rl e, : . e Satan: . date. the success of the book writitfg' must' exploit 'that ,'gift .. paper, 'ihk and energy, to point:." feast itself. had dawned. ~t, . ~~'prily with trust and confi- published by Father Frederico . t'l d t h to' · M h . B·ar'l!.a·r' 0 'r'eflects t'he efforts of ' not: merely' for his own adv'a:ri:': m~tt',ou feVI, enoug' was A ssump t IOn D ay. dence: N ever has our ot er reu th an th no T d e' . " . , ···· 11 'h f1 k . hundr'eds' o·f' ml'ss"I'onarl'es wh'o tage or 'pleasure but 'for ·build,;. se mg' or . ~e pOS1' Ive oc . h d b O ur prayers a e ill. an-fused us. W e'invite a t e oc ing 'up the city ~f GQd;"' " 'trine of the .Christian faith;" swered. The roentrusted'·.tO· usvtb place themsince "Catnolicism was 'intro . h d . . Aiding' the' Church's aposto2. '''In all our ,writing, we sarles we a .selves confiqently':under her produced in Japan have. sought to ..,.,' ,...... ought to express the 'correct', 're cite d, ·the tecHon," .wrote Pope Pius; " .. ; translate the Scriptures into the la~. d,~sn.t. ne~essarIl~ mean philosophy: of life. What's .the", Com m unions It'is certairi' tha.t at the end the spo'ken language of the country. ~ting. for the CatholIc press, f' ·t· 't 11 I . F th M st" . , 1" d "Le' t use 0 Wrl mg a a un ess we we had r eChurch, like Christ our ReAccording to the writings of a er ae rmI exp ame . '. t 1" t · l··tl th t eeived, the sac'deem~r .. ,will have a peaceful two Je~uits here in 1565, the first us Dot draw an' iron curtain down ~onvey".a 'I :~a~ un~ lC:h ~" a rifice,s we had ~ictory over all. enemi~s, .• We' complete: translation of the Gos between ourselves and the secu. ea~n .IS I e s goa, a man la ''''h 'ed . 't' g·th· IS created to know and love God ' mad e, . h a d nourish the ~ope with certainty pels was' done by Father Joao r press, e warn • Cl m e d th r' to H'''" saved Christenthat she (Our Lady) will not in.. Fernandez, S.J., who accom need for..reaching the non"::Cathan .~re ore serve 1m.. . dom once more, any mann'er put aside . . • the panied St.' Francis Xavier to oliereaders of the major secu3.· As. the Holy ,Father re-, as so often i.n history. . unive'rsal prayers of Catholics." Japan in. 1549, Unfor.tunately, Jar publications. ~ntly '. coun~~ed a group of w, we are engaged In a . ", JournalIsts; gIve not only the No this translation was df..3troyed in ,Apostolate Always _ tnith,_.,hut the whole truth,.. , world-wide noyena; led by Pop~. a mission fire in the year 1563. But in both Catholic and secu Pius.XII for a profounder peace. Several years later Japan closed D' e' plore C' hu'r~h' Us'e .' 'II 1 . a'n" lar . publications, . he, insisted, The novena WI c ose on r~University her doors to Christianity and "writing must 'always be' an'. ARMAGH'(N~)-:ehurch au ethel,' Assumption Day,. they. remained closed for more apostolate. Every word is ~cred, thorities have deplored the use ': M'" Turn to God NEW YORK (NC) - Faculty than two. centuries. . ft b' . tr' d W,hen. ,Japan dl'd reop'en her becalJs~ every word is a creature. of' St; Patrick's cathedral here We pray for much more than members are ow emg ame of God-and the creatures of as a 'hiding' place by three men • sheathing of llwo.rds, which in. for Korea's Catholic university, doors in 1854" the need for a God 'must. be used to give God who' were arrested after placing' our time take the :form, as Pope which is now under construction translation of the Scriptures was glorY.~' a bomb outside the Armagh E, Kil," immediately felt. Th h d t k t· d l' t t' Pl'us'sal'd'" of weap.o.ns of such in-. in Seoul. Father'Kenneth . . 1 d h W'h' l'l~ Prptestants had already . ose w 0 un er a e 0 0 po Ice s a IOn. human IJower .that they "can loren, S.J.• revea e ere.
--.--'----=-------.,_--,--.--....,..---.-----,,---".,.,---,._---. "submerge in universal exterFather Killoren, superior of Pllblished the. earliest complete
mination not only the defeated the Jesuit· mission in Korea; Japanese edition of the Bible. in .
but 'also the victors and the made the announcement while 1887, C!ltholics had made only
whole community,'" . , visting fellow Jesuits here. He . partial .translations of the Old.
We are asking GOll, through .' stated that,20 Jesuits were being and New Tes~aments. Our' Lady, ..;for the reunion of prepared in this ,country and in ,Most Successful , · This is the' startling question' Bi~hop P~th'anamuzhi of Kothaman~ I~ i905 a Paris forei:tn mis mankind in one fa.mily.. Germany. to be members . 0'f th e calam (India) put·to us the other day. ,"A,tjger on the way to Mass?" How can this be accomplished? : iin'fversity faculty; in addition . sio~~'r, ..·Father Emile, Raquet we repeated. I;lis Excellency smiled and Only by a turning to God as our there will be a 'number of'lay.,. cow.ple~ed a translation of the went on to explahi. celtis, not the tiger ·Father' on I Y b yare t urn t () H'IS ' ' on. th e sa ·t ff . . Ne,·w .. ,Te,starn.ent into "bu.ngo... · who Is' going to Mass, of course. but the men . d'Iga 1 S on. ' is . .10 the so-called classical Japanese poor parishon'ers 'of MUlliringad: The' . house.. ,like the Pro The school, which located If'.we will put away our prides the Korean capi'ful, .is expected language. This work was most Catholic Church nearest 'to MuUirlngad and lusts; we will find God wait-to be completed and opened by successful as a :iterary work and Is two arid one half hQurs distant and to reach it the people must walk tog with open arms. April, 1960. There will be a was used by Japanese Catholics . we must no t Sl't WI'th But freshman 'Class of about 300. He \ for almost half a century. through a.' w.ild rest andto along . Then' I.'n 1930, the Salesian :"'" ·.>..:.:. hills. ,During' this. fO.journey Mass,'steep It ' is those, who pray only with th elr estimated that 95 per cent of the. t' , d Fathers •made a ,translation of , . ::, : ' . not 'Un!lommon to' find the path· 'blocked ,! , mouths. We mus rIse up nil go student', body would be .Don ..:·V ': b, wild' animals." There are nearly 500 back to our Father-'s house. Catholic. " the Gospels into Japan's spoken Then we shall find our.selves language. The spoken language "~\:):.': Cathoiic. iD this""parlsh" 'of Mulliringad .epping from. da~kness into New Church Era diffen!d from tfie classical and P.~ MissitJlf Aiti. ~dui~, are most 'anxiollll to ben a light, from hatred into love, Father' Killoren said ~ was far' ~asier for the ordinary' ..Chur.cb f)f their own, The total cost (in from .ugliness into,:beauty. Church must have the facilities person to understand since it eludiq donated labor It, the peOple) ,will be $3.'000•. WlU 'ou hel~ to bring 'Christ to the m01lDtain fastness· of IndiaT. ,State Without Religion to "accommOdate those seeking was the language of everyday . \ I As Pope Pius, ve'n~rable with knowledge of the Faith and life. . YOUR WILt. IS GOD'S WILL WHEN" yOU MENTION HIM AND .:rears and sacrifice, told us in his despite the 'financial problems· , Colloquial Used encydical calling' for this' noinvolved, the Jesuits, have ac:" ' . After World War II the, sUfi • HIS IilISSIONS OF THE NEAR EAST 'lio{ YOUR' LAST WILL 'AND' . TESTAMENT. DOlT TODA Yl .. vena;' "Every intelligence not· ce.pted·· ~e responsibility of classical style in public' docu enlightened by the l.ight 'of God building and 'conducting the uni"ments and official publications EVERY FEAST OF MARY BRINGS JOY TO THE CHRISTIAl'f Ileparates itse U little by little versity. / . . was abandoned. This paved the • • • and this 'e.... the eenteDlU7 .,. our Mother'. apparitions at· '-. frani the fullness truth. Dis-. 'The opening of the school, he wa.y for the .use of Japan's collo LOurdes.: ctves added meallin&' ad depth' to. ,
eords arise. increase and gr~w." believes, will mark the opening qUl~l language for the Sacred :Her .feas&s. Aucast 15 will be' the Feasi. of th!! ~ ~.
The mind arid heart disconof a' new era for the Ch,urch ill ~nptures too. ,. 'Assumptloil: •• '. ·what have you· done this year, ,~ ~,
nected from God 'are like L'1mps Korea-its influence being felt In 1950, ~athc:r FrederICO Bar to &how your love' and .!o,aUYle &lie' .Mother ,~. ~'.
wben a storm has 'forn down the thn!Jughout the Orient. baro., publIshed the Four 90s ·of Goof Here Is a suggestion . . • why Ilot ~'IJ "~, ;
electric lines. '''',- Where' ,t.here . g b Ul'l't 0 n a ' pels 10 the everyday , language adopt a boy and/or a girl who desires to . c l v e ·
T h e· sch 001'IS b em . . should be illumination, there is "t . ·th' . th 'ty lim' and m 1953, the entIre New Tes a .Utetime. of service ,to the Mystical Body 'of
• blind groping, 50-acre Sl e Wl m e ~I tament. 'Chrlsi and ,the Queen, of Heaveli. FRANCESCO.
There cannot be tI.:Uo peaee on its of Se~~l, about a mIl~ from The complete New Testament anll FIORENZO wish to leave their homeland
earth, there 'cannot be a happy., the ,~a". Iver. in Father Barbaro's version is to work lathe mission· fields of the Near t;ast. ,
'. human family, when the Church A t obiles' . now being put into Roman let Before they can ,be .ccepted ,and·ordained to work for Christ at the esS is persecuteu,. and when even U om ters to facilitate tpe use of the aUarthey myst Clo~p'ete a. s.b:ye~r. s~mina'r, cours~ at the Po~tifl- : many who think., theq)selves On Seminary D a y ' text .for foreign miss~on~rs. T~e cal Gr~ek College. The total ,Clost for each Is '$600. You c~sent\ the' ,money la any manner conven,lent while your "son In Mary" studt.. Christians wallow.in pigsties of' . MELROSE: PARK; IlL (NC)prevIOUS work was wr:ltten 1ft ~d prepares himself fOl' t!lls creat work!' . evil :reading, entertainment and The blessing of thousands ,of au-' Japanese characters. ,'behavior. . tomobiIes will be a highlight of To date ,ther~ has be~n. no MASS OFFERINGS ARE ESSENTIAL TO YOUR MISSIONARY
"i\. ~state without. religion." the Seminary Day to be observed complete Cathohc transl.atIon ?f · PRIESTS ... THEY ARE A SOURCE OF FOOD FOR THE PRIEST '
Pope Pius said. "cannot nave on August 16 at Sacred Heart the Ol~ Testament pubhshed 1ft. AND·A MEANS OF'SPECIAL GRACE FOR YOU ••• REMEMBER
moral rectitude or .order." So, Seminar here. . 'colloqUial Japanese. But Father THEM TODA ¥l . · much for communism.' . y.. Barbaro has already started on The blessmg wlll take place the ~Old' Testament . and hu . ACROSS THE HIGHEST MOUNTAINS AND THROUGH THE ·Need Atonement between 2 and 7 P.M., on the· completed sev~ral books DEEPEST SEAS'. . • the spirit of St. Catherine of Siena pierced. grounds of the seminary, which, . ~'
"Many write and spread their . . . . the ,hearts of SISTER LAURENCE and SISTER works," wrote the Holy Father, is cOQ.ducted by the Missionary Almost ' Ev~ryone
'\~ BRIGITTE.' These girls wish to enter the Order Fathers of S,t. Charles. The bless'.
"not to serve truth and virtue, of St. Catherine of Siena (Dominican Sisters) In ing'of cars is being spon'sored byCathohc Here o or to give readers a true diver Mosul, Iraq. They have naught to give but their the respective mayors.' police. QUEBEC (NC')" - The total sion, but to 'excite turbid pas:, . lives ••. they .look to you for the $300 which each
chiefs and fire chiefs of Melrose population in the Archdiocese of sions for the purpose Of gain, or , will· need to pay the necessary expenses of novl-'
Park and Stone Park. Ill. Thirty Quebec numbers 634,408, and all to offend and soil" with lies, I..!- tiate training, Can you remain deaf to such an
nf,ighboring villages have been except 5,673 persons are Catho calumnies and abuses all that is r appeal? You may adopt one of these chosen souls
invited to participate with emerlic, latest statistics. here dis sacred, noble and beautiful." , . and pay the money In any manner eonvimlent gency vehi~les and equipment. closed .~' So much' for the literature, while your "daughter In Christ" Is preparing for her life of service drama and entertainment which At noon on' August 17;, Father There - are' 620,083 French la the Army of Mary. leaves unclean the hands of the Armando Pierini, Provincial Suspeaking ;md 8,652 English GIVE TO WIN THE WORLD FOR CHRIST. western world. _ perior, of -the Missionary Fathers speaking amorig the Catholics, it We pray, therefore, for a vast of St, Charles, will offer a field was .reported, Their total is an MONEY IN THE BANK-BRINGS PEACE OF 'MIND runs the old pilgrimage of mankind to.the Mass at the seminary's Calvary increase of 11,954 over last year. ..yine ••• and how trae it Is ..• Money in MARY'S BANK bring. atonement needed to make of Hill shrine.. ' The shrine' is a Other statistics reported: 1,003 • peace 01 lOul because yoU know yo~r money our plane.t what the poet Francis . mec~a. for thousands of visitors, diocesan priests and 385 priests ___ will be used ,to help dedicated young girls pre IUInllally. '.'. Qf religious communities; 29 Thol'QPson envisioned it to be _pare for the great work of the religious life in a great censer. ~reathed in' . religious communities of men the missions 01 the' Near East. Why, not join and 40 communities of nuns; 275 MARY'S BANK today In honor of the Blessed clouds like iI1cense, swinging in onorS! Cha'plain 'adoration and love before the parishes, including 3t in Quebec Mother. The dues are' Ii dally prayer for mis throne of God. ;WASHINGTON (NC) ~Msgr. City, and 20 missions. aon vocations and a dollar-a-month for' the We addr~ss our nine days of Edward A, McDonough, chief of ·support of novices who some day hope to be
special petition to God through chaplains in the Veterans Ad nllDS in the mission field. Do it todai in honor
· Mary because God. made her our ministration with headquarters Mother in making her Mother of here. has been elevated to the our brother: and ,redee!TIer, . ranIe of,,:domestic prelate, 'With ChJ;ist. . . .the titleol Right Reverend MonUnder Hcr Protectiollt Isignor by~fs ~olihess Pope'Pius FRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN. President
-:-:" Because Christ. 'is our Sav'io'r," x:g~ ~sgr(;MeDonough, who was Msgr•.Peter P. Tuohy. Nat'I,Sec'y
He is the· way to God. Because ·.made '3' papal chamberlain' with' LEO. H. BERUBE. Mgr:•.. M.ary is His Mother, she is the . the title of Very Reverend Mon Send all communications to:
way to Christ. God so willed it signor in 1953, is a priest of the CATHOLIC NE~R EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION.
"951 Slade si: Tel. Of· 5-7836 · even in the Garden of .Eden. Archdiocese of Boston. 480,Lexington Ave: cit 46th St•. New Yoitc:' 17,· N~·Y.'
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Adult Intrusion Only Fault In Little Leagu~ Picture
Ancient Column
·To Be Repai,~d
ROME (NC)-':'The coium'n of Marcus Aurelius in downtown Rome's Piazza Colonna is under By Donald McDonald goi~g its first major renovation Davenport Ca&holic Messenger since the restoration ordered by Little League baseball for the nine-, to 12~year-old boy~ , POPEl Sixt'us V in ·1589.. The 'imposing column ilil seri in this country has come under its usual fire from the critics. ously in danger. The exterior I t seems that every year some group feels called upon to, ~arble has begun to crumble denigrate the Little, League baseball program,It may be the and some of the great bloCks of psychiatrists one year, edu ' stone of which it is constructed are displaced. eators another year and soci • game. Much later, of course, when According to archeologists, ologists the next year. Lat . they are in high school and col~ on the. monument was be est criticism is that, of all lege, they will be taught by their work gu~ in 176 A.D.ami was finished· things, Little League base elders that games· are a serious, in 193. It was built to 'com ball is no cure-all for juvenile deadly business, which must be memorate the viCtories of Mar delinquency. ' not so much "played" and "en vus Aurelius over the .Quadi About 'the· only people who joyed" as "ferociously fought" (HWlgarians) and the MarC6 enjoy and ben and in which one's appetite· for ·marini (Bohemians) and once efit from the victory must 'be satisfied at had a statue of that emperor on Little League. almos~ any, cost. its summit. It has a tot.al height, program a l' e Some of the things I have seen including base and statue, of 145 the pIa y e r s . in Little League baseball are feet, and is made up of 28 cylin themselves and extremely reassuring to me. drical blocks carved in bas the adult man I have seen boys with unseem- relief. agers of their Iy braggart inclinations turn Great Importance teams, as well almost quietly moderate as the The column is of great his as the friends, price of "acceptance" by their' torical importance because of p a l' e n t s and teammates and the consequent the costumes of -the times and relatives of the chance to play with them. ' the events that it portrays. It I have seen other boys whose players. alsQ records the overlap of Im Since no Lit tempers seemed, at the start, un perial Rome with the beginnings tIe League of controllable, who could not for of the Christian era. One scene • ficial that I know of has claimed give themselves for striking out depicts a divinity sending rain the program is a cure for juven-, at a crucial point in a game, and to the troops in answer to their He delinquency, the most recent yet who, ovet a period of one prayers as they were fighting criticism seems to me highiy season, learned to control their under the difficulties of heat and irrelevant. temper for their own good and thirst in the Carpathian moun Indeed, in the official litera :for the sake of their teammates. tains. This would have been the ture published by the organiza And I have seen boys ,of an 12th legion , which was com tion, there is specific disavowal introverted nature drawn out of posed mostly of Christians. of any such anti-delinquency their self-made shell and acquire .Slight repairs were done to pretensions, though it is sug normal social habits in the give the column in the last century, gested-too modestly, I think-and take of team play. but the only serious restoration that children who are busy play ing baseball for six or eight ~ cann6t say that Little League ",as done by order of Pope 8ix tus V. It was at that time that weeks during the" summer will 'baseball has prevented or even the statue of Marcus Aureliull probably have little time and reduced juvenile delinquency. was replaced with the present less inclination to get into delin :But I do not know of any in ,statue of 8t. Paul. quency-type trouble. :stance-and in my own:commun ity 375 boys are playing Little Psychiatrists for Parents League baseball-in which one It has also been charged in the 'Df these boys has been in'tolved past-and I suppose, the charge :in such. delinquency. will be resurrected next year or So the "delinquency argu Maintenance Supplies
the year after by some reformers ment" is pointless, and the social SWEEPERS - SOAPS
who have never witnessed a and psychological· analysts will 4 DISINFECTANTS
Little League baseball game do all of us a large favor if they that the youngsters do not have will plow other fields and let . FIRE EXtiNGUISHERS
the emotional maturity to cope ih b ' with the pressures Of organized ese oys enjoy thei! :b~~e1?all,
SCHOOL
IFathe·, de'M.e·I·I.o'
'."D.-\HI,LL CO.
baseball at their level, that they are keyed up to 'an unhealthy IBlll6 PURCHASE ST.
emotional level and· a're in gen Continued from Page One . 'NEW BEPFORQ
eral unequipped for the tensions :Rt. Rev. Msgr. Humberto S. W'Y 3-3786
of competitive sports. :MedeirQs, ChancellQr. , Since' one of my own young . With Brother Andre sters has' been playing Little Born in MattapoisettFather de League bal~ for two years I have Mello attended public schools been able to witness the program ~there and in-New Bedford. He .t first-hand a'nd I can report that the only people who show entered the minor seminary in' Montreaf and completed his much tension or emotional im maturity are some of the parents studies in Angra, Terceira ISland, Azores, returning to Fall. River who watch the games and per jfor ordination. While' in Mon haps a few of the adult managers who apparently think their· llreal he was closely associated with the famed "Mi'racle Man of personal honor and reputation Montreal, Brother Andre. are at stake in every game. Father ~e Mello's assignments As a matter of fact, this adult nn this diocese have included intrusion, this, projection of assistant at Mount Carmel adult immaturities into the boys' Church, New,Bedford, and Holy games is about the only fault I LOURDES, CENTENNIAL 1958
:L"amily Church, East Taunton. have been able to discover in In 1913 he was appointed admin the Little League picture. And FLIGHT OF THE
istrator of St. Joseph's parish, this fault cannot, I think, be HANDICAPPED TO LOURDES
North Dighton, where he charged to Little League; it preached in three languages,
Accompanied by Chaplain. Doetor rest$ with-the adults themselves. and Nurses Let the psychiatrists, educators :L"rench, English, and Portuguese.
Leaving New York and Boston September 24th Returning October 1 In 1916 Father de Mello was
and sociologists go to work on AU inc]l1~ive; air, transpOrtation. l~ransferred as pastor to S1. Eliz these spoil:..sports; I think they hospital accommodation, etc. abeth's Church, Fall River. He may find a ~old mine of material. , $350.00 (under 12 years)
lremained there until 1933, when And yet it would be mislead , $617.00 (adults)
ing to imply that the Little, he was appointed pastor of Our :Lady of Lourdes. PAY LAT~]R plan available
League program is generally The Taunton pastor will mark marred by these immature Write or wire for. reservations and information to:' his 80th birthday Aug. 16, the adults. There are relatively only day following his ordination a few paI;ents who interfere MRS. SEAN 1. O'SCANNLAIN anniversary. In November of this with .the game, "ride" their Dirl.'Ctor Catholic Travel Service :t>ear he will cell~brate the 25th youngsters, or show an ugliness 62 West 46th St.reet anniversary of his pastorate at of temper because,' they say, New York City PLaza "1-5925 Our Lady of Lourdes. official agent.'i for all ]>ilgrimnge tours their boys are not playing as \ . often as they think they should, or a manager has made a deci sion with which they disagl'ee. Even where 'a parent or a manager has, in a rare instance, put winning above all values, above fun and sportsmansh'ip, it is a curious and refreshing thing to see the· boys themselves re storing the balance between competition and fun, -.insisting • BANQUETS WEDDINGS • PARTIES on enjoying the sport for its own sake, welcoming a victory when • COMMUNION BREAKFASTS it comes and refusing to brood when it doesn't. Something in the nature of 1343 PLEASANT ST. FALL RIVER nine- to 12-year-old boys will not let them grow grim over a: game. To their uncomplicated way of thinking, a game is still
.
USO Club Director Wins Navy Award
QtJONS~T POINT (NC)-The sented the award for Secretal'J' Meritorious Public Service Citaof the Navy Thomas Gates Jr. tion Award from tbe' U.S. Navy Mr. Byron has been a pe;ma has been presented to Daniel E nent staff member of the USO . . in Rhode Island 'since 1942. He Byron, . dIrector C?f ,the Provi- 'has earned the "Man of the denceUSO club operated by the Year" award three times at the Nati~nal Catholjc, - Community air station; the "Good Neighbor'" Service. " , a w a r d in 1956, as well as com ,Capt. Thomas B. Payne, commendations from two rear ad mander of the Qu~nset .Point mirals ..nd five captains of the N~val Air Station here, preU.S. Navy. .
SUPER-RIGHT HEAVY STEER· BEEF
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THE eRiAT AJlANlIC & PACifiC lEA COM'AN'
..
The Family Clinic
Settle Domineering Mother Problem· Before Ma"riage ,
S~ints
In Cross'words
Towns Plan Bus Ride Referenda '
' - - - - - - - - By Henry Michael------oJ
.
By Rev. John L. Thomas, S.J.
Assistant Professor of Sociology
Sl. Louis University
I'm twenty-two· and presently "disengaged" again. I~'s George's mother. She wants tornn our Ilves as she does everything else. The present clash resulted from her insist ence" on buying us a house near her= When Irefu§ed and George sided with me, Rhe faked a heart attack, so George gave in. Back went his ring! conc~r1i your future mother~in George is not a weakling law; but George. When children but he's no match for her have been raised in ... mother tricks. Is there any hope dominated home, two general that we can work this oun types' may result. The· answer, Mary, 'is probably One may be quite norma'!, o yes, framed in though perhaps somewhat imma a border of ture in decision-making and "ifs." But beself-assertion. The second may fore discussing be a product of what the psy your problem, chiatrists call "momism." I wish to comTheir dependence ·is so deeply pliment y.)u on interwoven into their person ref u sin g to· ality from childhood that they drift into marare lost without "mom." Actu riage with the aily, they are incapable of ma romantic hope ture family relationships, and that all probone who marries them soon dis lems will be· covers that· he has acquired a • e ttl e d once child, not a .partner. you've mad e -So you see, Mary, you'il have your trip' to the altar. to make sure that George isn't ,.~ Whatever may be tpe merits this .latter type. You describe
of your stand, you were wise in him as "no weakling," and since
postponing your marriage 'Until his mother had to take drastic
the relationship with y:ur future measures to scare him, I rather
1n.,laws was thoroughly clarified. think. he's normal but a little
The time to settle such prablems slow in asserting himself.
is before marriage - onll' then &, Need Plan of Action,
'can you s.till give back hill ring.
What should you do? First, Yarious Types Now, Mary, let's look at your problem. First,strong, efficient mothers who are accustomed to dominating th'eir family drcle are not all alike. A good many of them have assumed this role either because they are very capable or because they had to under. the circumstances. They. became very efficient at running the family; but unfortunately, like many efficiency experts; they sometimes tend.to 'gorge the human elements involved. Often with the bl:st intentions in'the world, they domnate the lives of their maturing children, even to the extent of trying to control their marriages. Since they ar.!! not used to meeting opposition in their own family circle, they regard the independence o~ an "outsider" as a nuisance and may COll8Cquently resent it. ~ At this point, another type of dominating mother may emerge. Although the majority sooner or· later resign themselves t.1» the fact that their children have grown up, a few refuse to aecept it and use every ·possible "ll'ick," as you put it, to maintain con:' tr~l. George's mother Sel)OlS to fall in this type. (/ Lost Without 'Mom'
you'd better have a good,. calm, objective talk with George, in which you explain that although you respect his .love for his omother, he must choose between her and you when it comes to planning the future. He'll probably agree, but pro test he doesn't want to hurt her either. Your next step is to for~ mulate a plan of action. You may discover that she controls George's finances. Get this changed at once. Next., go ahead and' make def inite plans about your marriage. If you can marry within the near future, pick out an apartment or home, see your pastor about a possible .date, and when things are pretty well linec;l: up, tell your parents what preparations you h"ve made. Th'en· wait for the explosion. If his mother sees the .game UI up, she may concede the victory -for the time being. ·If she pUUl. on an act, both of you should know how to' interpret it. 'Work Together'. Finally, in forming your plan. for the future, it will be best to steer clear of aU your immediate in-laws for the first year or two until you have become firmly· established in your own marriage. This sounds rather drastic, and it is, but the· situation calls for it. You have to learn to work to gether as partners, and to de velop deep loyalty through shared experience before you can run the risk of possible out side interference., Does this program sound too . difficult, Mary? Well, it has been carried out successfully ·by oth ers. On~ final word: make no· con cessions. If George doesn't want to follow through, he's free to choose, but then drop him· at . once ,and absolutely. . It would be a serious mistake to drag such an affair on fur-' ther. Give George back to "mom," and find yourself a man.
Second, the' real question you ,"\~ust answer, however, does· not
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-THE ANCHOR Thurs., Aug. 7, 1958
16
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Solution on Page Eighteen "-:
Busy Ma ryknoll Mission~ ry P~,stor Finds' Himself: at Home Eve~rY,where CINCINNATI (NC)-The real "man of the '~orld" is the Catbolic missionary'. ·Take for example Father Leo· ;J W M M '. te . eel' . '. a er, .. ' ., l~ rVI~w durmg. a VISit ·to hiS mother, Mrs.. Frances ,Walter, of nearb,. Withamsville, Ohio. Since his 6rdination in 1941 u a Marykn'oll priest he has made himself,at home in a Japanese eoncentcatton c~p as a pri... ouer, in the U. S. Army in the Far East as a chaplain, in .China as a busy 'missionary even while virtually a prisoner of the Reds, and. for the past six years as pastor of a 375-year-old church in the Phili·ppines. ,... . . Father Walter s Phlhppme parisll of. San Pedro Apostol (~t. Peter the Apo~tle), f.ou.nded. In, 1583 ,by Spamsh, ml~slOnarteS, had been neglected In recent years, he said, and the church itself was badly damaged during World War II.
it
Mass Attendance In the six· years since his as signment to the parish of about 7,000 persons, Father Walter haa applied himself steadily tore bUilding it physically and spir itually. In addition to giving the church a new roof-it had none at ~II when he arrived-he has
brought. Mass .attendartl:e Oil
Sundays from about 250· liP ..
an average of 1,000.· .
Characteristically, he has de-"
veloped a genuine affection for
his adopted country. "As soon as
you get off the ship or plane at
Manila," he said, "you ca~'t help
VATICAN CITY (NC)-Cath otic officers and men of the U. S. Second Fieet, based at Hamburg, Germany, are participating in the novena of prayer for peace from Aug. 6 to 14, it was revealed V ISI'fATION: yery Rev. here. Paul J. Hoffer, S.M., above, . Accor~Hng to a report from the PONCE (NC)-The first 'Ponce
- Superior General of the So-. Second Fleet's chief· chaplain, diocesan congress of the Legion
eiety of Mary (Milrianists), the Catholic personnel, about 35 ' of·Mary will be held at the Cath
has arrived in New York per cent ofdhe total, are lIlaking olic Un iversity . of Puerto Rioo
here.' _Aimed at strengthening
for'a seven month inspection the nine days of prayer preeed the lay ap<J:otolate, it will include
~r of three American fl'rov-. ing the feast of the ·Assumption y their: .resPonse w "Meminisse discussion, of . youth, .thepress.
'. 'inces of., his . Society. NCjuvat;" the 'recent enqclicaL of .. relilliGUs irultruction· .and 'faaliI,
:p~ " ...f ! '..•Hi$J{oline8s'Pope:',PiuIXIl.
.Jt.fe. •,..
BROOKFIELD (NC) - The first referendum on providing public transportation for pri vate school pupils since the en actment of Conn'ecticut's· school bus tcansportation law last year will be held in this Fairfield County town Saturday. One week later, on Aug. 16, a similar referendum will be held in nearby Ne·wtown. Both towns will have Catholic parochial schools in operation for the first time this September. Provision for the referendums was made by the state legisla ture in 1957 when it passed a law granting any town, city, bor6ugh or school district the right to provide transportation services for children attending private, non-profit schools if the municipality wished to do so. Catholic men of St. Joseph's parish in Brookfield and St. Rose's in Newtown circulated petitions asking the referendum vote. With more than the neces sary number of signatures se cured in each case, town officials set the referendum dates. Father Walter R. Conroy, pas tor of St. Rose's, said that his school will open in September with 190 pupils in five grades, and will reach its maximum en rollment of 3.60 in eight grades three years from n0'o/. Tremendous Responsibility By that time, he said, the school will be educating an esti mated 21 per cent of the town's·
elementary school age children. "By assuming the task of fur nishing an el~entary school education to one out of every five Newtown children," Father Conroy declared, "the new St. Rose's School will take on a role of tremendous: responsibility in the overall Newtown educational program. The· tcansportation services Te quested will not increase school transportation costs for tax pay. ers, since the St, Rose's pupils have been attending public schools. No alteration of regular but routes will be necessary. Here in Brookfield, Father Vic~r E. Piaskow~ki, pastor of St.. Joseph's, said that the trans portation services for his pupils will "involve no change of routes or time. schedules. The same IlCrvice of transporta ·tion is requested that is given the children at the present time. , ,It is a protection to the children on the way to 'and from the school, comparable to fire and police protection given to all citizens and institutions."
saying·to yourself, "This is a Catholic country.' " "In the taxi or jitney," he went on, "you are confronted immediately with a picture of 'Oue Lady of Perpetual Help. Medals and Rosaries are everywhere. Homes are filled· with hoi,. pict6res, religious calen dan, crue.fixes. The whole at mosphere UI Catholic."
Chief Problem
Chief problem in the Philip pinees, he believees, i.I not com
munism which has "more' or
less ce~ to be a threat to the
government," but lack of knowl
edge about the Faith. . . Although the people recogn~ . "EI Senor" (Our Lord) and thell'
favorite saints their instruction
in the Eaith 'is scanty, Father
Walter .said. The great need UI for Catholic schools, he believes, which in turn will lead to an increase in· religious vocations ... ... ., Priests In the Phihppmes average about one to every .12,000
Catholics, he ~id.. "From. my
own parish in the Lipa Diocese,"
he added~ "there have been onl,. one priest and one Sister in ita entire 315-ye~r history." A sec ond young woman is now pre paring for her religious profe.. sion, he said. .
ous
HATHAWAY OIL (0., INC. NEW BEDFORD
INDUSTRIAL OILS HEATlNG ' OILS TIMKEN , OIL BURNERS
Sales & Service 501 COUNTY ST. NEW BEDFORD WY 3-1751
Legion Congress
)
, COCA-COlA ;.IO!ftJNG·
. ..FALL·~V"~
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,
\
THE ANCHOR~ Thurs., Aug. 7, 1958
The Yardstick
Suggests Research Group, Unions Study Inflation By Msgr.
Georl~e
Color Da r Stops Saying of Mass
G. Higgins
Director NCWC 'SeeiaJ AetioD Department
KEIMOES, South Africa (NC) -The administrative board of a reservation for colored people near here has in effect stopped the celebration of Mass there, according to Coadjutor Bishop Francis Esser, O.S.F.S., of Kei
The Committee for Economic Development, in a policy statement released for publication. on July .23" said that the private economic power of business and labor unions, might be able to cause inflation in the United States 'e-veJl if the governmnt followed eially great contribution here by the proper anti-inflation pol presenting a clear and funda icies. The CED is a prIvate menta! statement of their philos search .organization composed of prominent businessmen. ]t .. gen~rally
1'-
«a I'd e d as a
'tlphy 'of the desirable extent, t'haracter and use of union powet' iJl our society." , ~ Should Review ~otll While . I do. not fully share CED's faith in the so-called laws. of competition, I would not be opposed to a public review of labor's poweI: if the power of organized business were also re viewed in the light of the public interest. In this connection, it is not enough to say, with the CED,' that while "we do not have the beginnings of a public philos ophy about the proper limits to the powers of' labor organiza tions," we already have and have had for a long time "a public policy in favor of competition in business." That's begging the question. What is the next step? There is no point in talking unilaterally about the causes of inflation across the fence which presently divi~es labor and management in discussions of this kind. That will get us nowhere. I '!ould suggest, therefore, that the officers of the CED for mally invite the top leaders of the national AFL-CIO 10 co operate with them, in equal ,numbers, in sponsoring a joint study of the causes of" inflation. The sooner .the better if the problem of inflation is as serious as the CED and the labor move ment regularly make it out to be.
"m 0 del' ate" ltusiness group. While organ izations like the National Asso dation of Man ufacturers and the U. S. Cham 'be l' of Com merce have long charged t hat
union wage pol icies were in flationary, CED had riot done so before its recent statement en titled "Defense Against Infla tion-Policies for Price Stabil ity in a Growing Economy." And even in this report it frankly admits that the question is still open. Follow Own Principles It is'rather refreshing to find an influential business organi zation like CED exercising such M:bolarly restraint in its analysis ef the causes of inflation. On the other hand, it is difficult to reconcile this note of restraint with CED's implied assumption, in other parts of its recent re- )lOrt, that wage rates are, in fact, one of the principal causes of inflation. Incidentally, this assumption is so strongly emphasized in the I'eport that one of the members of the CED Policy Committee, William Benton, felt it necessary
to object to it in a dissenting footnote. The CED was being perfectly ~nsistent with its own principles when, with a viE;W to the future, it recommended in its recent Fe";~ port on inflation "that the" basic. Jaws of th~ country be reviewed ttl see whether they permit labor organizations to have a degree of ec:onomic power which is IWt in the public interest." Questions Realism This recommendation presup poses that the American econ omy is "basically organized on the principle of competition" and that this p.' lciple should ~ontinue to be its guiding norm. An organization which sub scribes to this theory is being eompletely logical when it ex
presses concern about the poten tial power of organized labor to interfere with the free exe~~ise of the so-caIled laws of competi tiQn. Whether or, not it is being realistic when it assumes that competition is now the guiding pr:inciple of the American ecolII omy is, of course, another mat ter. The CED is not the only busi ness organization which has sug ,ested in recent years that the power of organized labor may "e proved to be incompatible with ihe public interest. This is a familiar refrain in the policy statements of the NAM, the U. 'S. Chamber of Commerce.. and a number of other organizations. However, it should be noted, to its credit, that the CEO, has phrased its recommerdation more diplomatically and much Jess emotionally than is the wont of these other organizations. Labor's Opportunity In calling for an objective p'lblic review of "the proper limits to the character and ex tent of union power in a cOm petitive, democratic, free so ciety," the CED explicitly warns against the danger of permitting this discussion to degenerate into a pro-labor - anti-labor fight. Moreover it expresses the hope that the leaders of organized labor will take part in the dis .eussion. According tQ CED, the leaders of organized labor "have All GPportunity to make an 'espe-.
7
moes. Bishop Esser laid his charge of interference at the local au thority of the Colored Re" "ve of Steingopf, Namaqualanu. in the northwestern part of Cape' Province. He said there is no Catholic church on the reSel"Va tion, and that the priest from O'Okiep, 28 miles away, used to offer Mass in the home of one of the Catholic families. The family received a letter from the Steinkopf Reserve Board to the effect that no gath ering of more than five persons
is allowed, the· Bishop said. So not to jeopardize their position, . the priest then offered Mass in another house on the reserva tion. Bishop Esser said that the second family then received a letter from the board stating that no "divine services" could be held in their home without the board's permission. The Bishop said' that the O'Okiep priest had not yet sought the required permit. The action at the Steinkopf Reserve w~ seen here as part of a pattern of 'growing restrictions on the Colored persons of mixed race - by the Nationalist party government, whose poliC7 of apartheid or race separation was originally aimed mostly at Negroes. .
DO~E CHAPEl" FOR MISSIONS: This geodesic dome, displayed in Buffalo, will be dismantled and shipped to Jesuit Father William Walter, missionary in .the Caroline and Marshall Islands. He will erect it for use as his chapel of Our Lady of Hope. It will .accommodate 200 persons. It is made of plywood sections, without beam or joist. Colored plastic panes fill the windows. The project was sponsored by the Western New York (K. of C.) Anchor Clubs. N.C. Photo.
Pontiff Tells Doctors and Nurses Be Imitators~f Jesus Christ
BRUSSELS, Belgium (NC)others." Christian doctors and nurses and The Pontiff also noted that all those engaged in the field of this intellectual obstacle in health should carryon their eludes the general difficulty of professions in such a way that listening to younger persons and people can see in them the imief changing established habits tation of Christ, according to and routines. His Holiness Pope Pius XII. He said that the moral obThe Pontiff expressed this ·adstacie to, collaboration, despite -vice in a French address broad"the spirit of devotion and sa£ east from his summer residence rifice in health groups," arises at Castelgandolfo to the First . out of "motives which betray the WOrld Catholic Conferem:e on eommon weakness of humanity Health meeting here. -sensitiveness, ·impatience. the The Pope also stl"essed that aU desire. to prevail, intolerance_of health officials should avoid discipline; in short; the exagger ~ considering the si.ck as mere ated affirmation of the indivi cases, or treating them in ways dual and of his convenience W : FOR PLEASURE convenient for the health servthe deriment of the demands .. . EAT· • ices but not convenient for the arising from the unity of the f)atients. group and from the interest of The Pope told the delegates the community."
that "the foundation and develBearer of Christ PROVIDE"'JCE (NC)-Fathef' opment of your various federaThe Pope also declared: Albion F. Bulger,a priest of the lions corresponds to the need if> "We wish to underline again : FRESH CUT.... POU'TRY Manchester, N. H., diocese, bas eombin,e the efforts of Catholics the bighest characteristic, most been appointed vice redor of the ill an important field,'~ and dinoble of your therapeutic activ American College at the Catholic rected. most of his remarks ity, the one which designates University of Louvain, Belgium. toward urging collaborat.ion beyour present conference by the ••• 145 Washington FARMS St Fairhaven Father Bulger, assistant pastor tween the various groups and name 'Catholic.' Just off Route 6 at the Church of the Holy specialties. "You must not simply look Angels, Westville, N. H., succeeds Among obstacles to an eff~- upon it as an extrinsic J'\'ame Father Daniel J. Ryan, a priest tive inter-cooperation' the POll-' without influence on the object of the Providence diocese, woo tiff enumerated "two principal of your work itself, as though has served since the fall of 1956 causes, one of an intellectual Catholicism only had to propose as assistant to the college's recnature and the other of a mQral to its adherence a code of Jer tor,. Msgr. Thomas F. Maloney: nature." fected-deontology, a minutely The appointment was anTwo Obstacles detailed list of ,acts which are nounced here in a statement of The intellectual difficulty he permitted or prohibited. JOSEPH M. F DONAGHY the "In reality," he cO'ntinued, Hit b dcoli f e g e 's administr~tive singled out centered "on a cerowne"I mgr.. oar 0 U. S. Bishops. Bishop tain narrowness of judgment is quite another thing. Christians '42 Campbell St. Russell J. McVinney .of Proviwhich, willingly or not, refuses in effect are the bearers of a
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Members. of Famed Sistine Choir ,'Train'at 'Vat'ican MlJsic School
18
-:-TH~ ANCHOR Thurs., Aug. 7, 1?58
Pontiff As~s Nu~s Adap't Rules
Continued from Page One women and charitable woru The Po~ told his 'cloistered toward the sick and the poor.. ROME-'-A few P!lCeS (rom'· .Belgium and Austria.: After the audience that "ihe convents and "The conterilplative life does _wntown Rome's busiest intertOur they go t~ their own stim- " the nuns must~ ready to accep't not essentially consist in the ex · ilect10n; do)Yn a: tiny backsti~t mer camp on the Adr.iatic .shore.. · 'the excnange' ot:ideas and col-' ternal profession of religious · and through a dark doorway .' Ea~nfngs 'from. the • concert labi?ration' 'which the' Holy 'See , ..discipline," he added. '''This in :'~hirid . the Church of 'Sania 'tours help defray expenses of .maY propose to 'them. Th. )' must fact is nothing but the frarrie Maria in' Via, .is the goal of the school, and a portion of the
.especially try ~o' establis.h re- ·work for contemplation: it up many Roman boy's dreams. earnings, is put aside in a bank
. spectful' ahd trusting relations holds it, encourages it, preservea ,it is the Sch'ool of the' Sistine account which is. 'preSerittid 'to'
, 'with the Sacred' Congregation of 'it; but does not constitute 'it. Chapel Boy .gingers. each boy upon his graduation.
'Religious,'~ . , ., ' "Thus while repeating what Among fhe traits inostchar A boy's contract expires when
He said :thafthis collaboration "We have already said, We beg · acteristic of Ih 'ians is their love he completes "sc~ola ~edia." If
is particularly 'cailedfor' "when .of you insistently to dedicate' for 'the Church, for their child ·at that time it is seen that his
it is a question of constituting yourselves with' all your' hearts ,ren and for singing. The com-' 'voic~ will' have a permanent ~ federations of conveQts. or of to . contemplative prayer, your bination of these three makes' ·qualitY,·he may be admitted as orders, or even a confederation essential mission for which you admission to the school a golden a permanent member of the Sis "of' federations." have· renounced the world. opportunity for the Roman boy'. tine Choir: .' Normal school subjects are Besides Msgr. BartolucCi arid' The Pontiff. alluded to the Interior Balance placed side by side with a rare Father Catena, there are five necessity for this readiness to In urging cloistered nuns to musical education. Besides the other teachers in the .school. cooperate with the directives' of develop some plan of work for COPENHAGEN (NC). the Holy See in' an enumeration regular elementary studies, such Mlisic students other than the their own self-support, the Pope Twenty-eight of the group .of 70 ugeography, mathematies and Sistine Chapel Boy Singers are also called the attention 'of sailors _ who jumped off the 'Of the great problems sometimes religion, its young students are also accepted in the school; but presented by houses of cloistered Ordinaries of places and Supe Polish liner Bator'y last, August also taught music theory, instru they are regular paying music nuns;· riors to their obligation' to see 22 rather than return to Red mental music and' G"egorian 'students and are not a part of , ."There are," he stated, "conthat '''nuns 'never lack in indi dominated Poland left here for chant, with the' emphasis on vothe choir. . vents which un~orturiately are spensable, aJ?propriate and re-' the United States. QI techniques. Their education One of the school's finest dying of hung'er, neglect and munerative work," The "Batory. group," 'as they also includes Latin and modern assets lies in the talents of Msgr. privation.. And there 'are'others He made it clear that he was '. are called, left by train for Ham languages, among which is En Bartolucci himself. He composes which 'because of mat€ " '.al diffi-· urging work not orily on those liin'g, Germany, where they ,fish. . music expressly' .for his bOy culty, lead'a "ery painful life. nuns who' are in need but also joinea another. group of refu ,The school is a' Vatican in singer~. It is music, w.hichis ,gees 'and were flown to New . "::rhere· are 'stilfother convents upon' all others who are not in atitution. It is directly under sometimes compared with that 'York in a plane chartered by which, without living in need, need so· that they might help the the supervision of ·Msgl·. Dom of Claude Debussy, noted"French ''often' declihe "-ecause t"ey are poor. He pointed out that work the Intergq"vernmental Commit enico Bartoluc'ci, the permane'nt composer who died' in 1918. separated, and isolated frol1' ",11 not merely ,a means of liveH tee for European Migration. . director of the papal choirs: Its Transportation for the Batory ·'the ·others. Moreover, laws: of hood but is also "an efficacious ....perior, Servite Father Giovan-' grou'p was provided, by the · the cloisier often are too strict , means' to .keep interior balance:" frequently provoke great, diffi~' ai Catena; wa.s named. by His, Froin. Dome ,United States Escapee program. culties'," ' , . ./ _Holiness'· 'Pope Pi.us Xl I. 'It is Sponsorships for the .Polish BUFFALO (NC )-'-A'geodesic mliintaJned' by the ·Vatiean 'to Essential Element. dome on dispiay here will be escapees Were secured by Cath train boys to sing in the Sistine :dismantled and shipped to Fa 'olic Relief Services· - , National . Turning. to. the. essential ele"S~~qAL MILK Chapel C~o~r,. . " ther William Walter;" S.J., a ,Catholic ·Welfare Conference ment of contemplative Hf which From Our Own . Limited Number' . missionary from Buffalo 'who is acting in: cooperation with th~ is· interior contemplation, the Tested .Herd" riow' assigned in Faratilep, the . . Polish -"American Imm;o<ration A~though mal1Y' .Roman boys Pope noted that there are cer. '. and Relief Committee of New Caroline arid "1ar./lhall Islands:' tainactivities which are not inAcushnet, Mass. WY 3-4457 c~ . try. .out each year for admission York. . He will erecUhe dome for u~ compatible with the cloister. to.. the school, only a small num Also on.. his way to the U. S.· .as a. chapel for' his mission. It 'Among the works which couid .• Special Milk . ber of them make it. The num was Boleslaw Kamieniecki; a 27 will . accommodate 200 . people. ~e uhdertaken by nuns "'vith • .Homoge(lized Vito 0 Milk . ,ber of students taking the year-old Polish seaman whose ·discernn.e·nt· and moderation" .BecaiJse of its unusual' shape; it • Buttermilk .ch~l's four-year course, is for immigration was likewise ar cannot 'be distorted or destroyed the Pontiff liste:d the giving df • Tropicana. Orange Juice ·the time' being limited to 30, by' extreme pressures, making "it ranged by CRS-NCWC. religious instruction, the educa• CoHee and Choc. Milk , There' are several pl'erequi Mr. Kamieniecki received po an ideal place of worship for "toe tion,'o£. girls and of children re•. Eggs _ Butter sites ihat place other lim'itations litical asylum in Sweden five typhoon area. treats' and spiritual exercise~ for· on admiSSIon to the sch·ool. The years ago and has been tryirig The dome chapel is pieced to
age limit ranges between 10 and to get to the U. S. ever since. He .H. This is because the school gether from plywood sections missed receiving a visa under without beam or joist. The inter~
is classified in the Italian edu space b_etween the sections form the Refugee Relief Act of 1953. cational system' as a "scuola Last year he worked on a ship J window' areas, which are filled
media," roughly the equivalent which sailed from Sweden to wiUi colored plastic panes. The
of junior high ~chool. These at'e interior floor diameter. measures American west coast ports. It ,the years that a boy's voice is , . . .. I 39 feet ahd the ceiling is 19 feet was during a brief' stay in Port at its· best, ..Msgr, Bartolucci 'at top center.
land, ~re., that he met his pres See' us for the BEST DEAL ina says, and a boy's voice is· good ent sponsor, Walter Spoke, who . The, dome was displayed by Ford 'Car or Truck' for only about, three years be the Western New York Anchor. assured him that his dream of fore it changes: . Clubs. The clubs were inspired' . emigrating to Aineridicould be Also, ·because it is only a ,to build it my John P. Corrigan, work'ed out. ~. ) .... day sc.hool, students must come fORD DEALERS FOR' OVER 38 YEARS the clubs' county coordinator; from the 'immediate area. It is ~nd other members particularly. for this rl;ason. only that the 1344-,8(» Purchase S,t~ New Bedford, Mass. Interested in the Jesuit missions. ... boys 'are required to live in or near Rome. " . and
Most of the boys are brought 'Th~' Family' !hat to the school by their parents. If a boy is found to have a good' SUCCESSORS· TO Prays Tog~ther voice, the school enters a con tract with the parents whereby John B•. Stays Tog~the~' it 'is agreed; for a period of'two . ..... three or four'year~ depending THE on the boy's age, to provide him Anthracite . &. .Bituminous COAL t··: . . with . a schQlarship, including . AUTOMATIC COAL STOKERS -BAG WOOD - COAL AND" '"', books and other expenses. and Sons, Inc~ CHA~C()AL - HEATING' OILS . On Tour ·OSTERVILLE Attleboro-Solith Attlebore
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oft
K of C Plans Preliminary Trials for T rOlck Meet
Atheistic ~n~m Wins Award
By Jack l{ineavy 'Somerset High &:hool Coaeh
RUggles Park, Fall River, will be the site of the mam moth Labor Day CYO track meet, it has been announced by' chairman Tom Patten of' the sponsoring Fall River Couneil, Knights of Columbus. Plans have been formulated for preliminary ,meets to ,be phia. The Russians again are held in Taunton, New Bed allegedly pushing for the same ford and Fall River and type of scoring system-(I) a cOmbined men-women score and entries are now being re ceived. The New Bedford trials will be held at Sargent Field, Aug. 21
at 6 P.M. In Fall River the date is a bit earlier, Aug. 17; the place, Rug gles Park. All parishes in the area have been contacted and it is anticipated that the turn out will bring into focus the finest schoolboy and college athletes in the locality. ' There will be two classes in competition. The Junior Division will include boys 14-16 years of .age, the. ~enior Division those over 16. ,Junior events include 75.-yar~ dash, 220, 440, 220-yard relay, high jump and broad jump. Senior dashes listed are lOa, 220, 440, also the .880 yard run, 440 relay, high jump and broad jump. ' Trophy for Winm~r Ribbons are to be awarded those placing in the fop three in trial events. Medals 'will go to the first three finishers and members of the winning relay teams in the finals. To the city polling the most points in the two-division meet will be pre sented the Bishop Cassidy Tro phy, emblematic of CYO track supremacy. The trophy was donated by the Bishop Cassidy Council, K. of C., Somerset-Swansea, in honor of the late prelate of the Fall River Diocese. Interest in the meet is running high and in some areas trackmen have al ready started preparing for the competition. The inclusion of track under CYO auspices brings to four the number of major sports con ducted by the Dioce!'3n Youth Organization. Last Spring a Soc . cer League was established, ~n,d, of course, basketball and base ball competition have long been an integral part of the CYO program. The subject of track was given the front and center treatment on the nation's sports pages last week. This in itself was a novel ty in a non-Olympic year, but the occasion of the U.S.A. . U.S.S.H. dual meet in Moscow captured the fancy of the public, including the non-sportsminded element. ·Arbitral'7 Seorin~ Prestige-wise the Americans had the upper hand, even though under the Reds' point system the Russians won the meet. For the U.S. scorec;l a 126-109 victory in 'the men's division with the bulk of the American point derived from' firsts. The distaff Ameri , cans, as expected, bowed to their Russian counterparts, 63-44, to ,give the Soviets a combined total of 172 and a slim two-point ·victory. . , Overlooked, however, was a lleCond Red scoring stratagem without which thebosts could not even have come close. This was their .insistenCe t,hat 'the 'second place relay teams-4,OO and 800 meters-receive three points for their efforts. In a dual ,meet, this' is nothing short of 'silly because lleCOnd is, in'reality, last. , The Soviets knew, of course, that' they couldn't match the Americ.ans' speed in these two events. They didn't but U1e six points they picked up as a result ;0£ their arbitrary ground roles 'enabled them to salvage ·some ·face before their beleaguel-ed , 'lOOters. aeturn Meet 'Ii return meet is scheduled 'fOr' H59 ~t Franklin Field, Pbiladel
(2) ~ee points' for the relay loser. However, George Eastment of, Manhattan', College, coach of. th~ U.S. squad, didn" 1lUY it. Definitely not", said George. "We never P' II them in the Uniied States. Why, I don't think we've got more than. 200 women in training over the whole country. When we meet next year, it will be two dual meets -one women's and one men's, counted separately just as this one was supposed to be." . Cynosure of Russian track fandom was not Raf( ~' noon, winner of the decathlon, and "fair-haired" boy of tt~ Amel'i.,; can contingent, but the fabulous shotputter Parr.· O'Brien of whom 75 minutes of motion pic ture film was taken. M?' lchusetts was well repre sented in the meet in the person of Villan'ova's Ed Collymore who won the 220· meters, placed second 'n the 100 meters' and anchored the wimling 440 meter relay team. Ed is another in .. a long line of Rindge Tech,Cam bridge, products to matriculate at the Philadephia s c h 001 • Olympic 400 .ileter champion Charlie Jenkins is, no doubt, the best known of coach Jim Duffy's proteges that went on to stardom at Villanova. Just this past week, we came across an item about Jack Kelley, former Boshn University track· star and now the U.S.A.'s top marathoner. John is teaching in Connecticut but he's already, pointing for the 1960 Olympics and a shot at the title that eluded him a couple of years ago in Australia. His training program calls for no less than 100 miles of road work each week. For the average man this would be a killing pace, but Kelley actually' thrives on it. A firm believer in interval training, John 'might run five miles, jog a bit, and then do a series of 70-second 440s, m;lybe 10 or 15, and finish .up his day's WOrk with a'like number of ~s. , Anyone for scrabble? .
Initic:lte Program
For Talented
19 I
THE ANCHORThurs., Aug. 7, 1~5~
FASTEST MILER: Head Counselor Leonard Mullaney presents prize ribbon to John Scarpellini, 15, of Mansfield, winner of the one-mile rclce at track meet at Cathedral Canlp. .
VATICAN CITY (NC)-L'Os
servatore Romano expressed sur
prise and indignation at the
awarding of a prize to a film
satirizing·the Biblical'account 01
the creation.
The Vatican City daily Fe 'ferred to an animated cartoon entitled "Creation of the World" made by Edouard Hofman of CzeChoslovakia which was given a prize at the international ex hibit of ,documentary films ja Venice. c L'Osservatore's editorial said: "Hofman's animated cartoon is nothing more than an ironic interpretation of the first pages of,the Bible where the creation of the world is described. In par~ ticular the film devotes itself to blaspheming and, with unique intensity, to spreading atheism in its last part concerning the creation of man. The whole show is a grotesque satirizing 01 Sacred Scripture and on the . whole is all the more sacrile gious because of its subtlety." The editorial then noted that < the leftist Rome paper L'Avanti praised the flim for sneering at God the Creator. Unbelievable in Italy "It is well known that in Cze choslovakia the Church is perse.: cuted and stopped from raisina its voice to protest against su~b grave. public blasphemy. . Czechoslovakia as in other coun tries with communist regimeS the Church is not able to defend the things that are most sacred nor is it able to rise up when God Himself is made a carica ture of. . "B'ut is it possible that in Italy a film which strikes at and vili fies the Faith in such an open and unjust manner is able not only to be shown, but praised and given awards? We have al ways believed that in any work of art, including films, it is nec essary to refer to spiritual values to be judged a work of art. "But we have seen that uiD was not the criterion at Ven\(,>e. So then the anti-religious propa gll1lda of those without God • able to penetrate' even where c01111llunism does not r,cign and ;:I .1;cnl:1V of documental'ies and shorts becomes a, school lor HLlleism."
.Pra.y~ th~:' P~pe' S. Intentions
In
The specific .intEmtions' listed by the Holy Father for the preserlt nov~na of 'prayers are: That pastors who. are kept from' their flocks • . or ·who. are impeded in the free exercise of their ministry may be reinstated as soon as possible; That th'e faithful, disturbed by' deceits, errors and discord, may attain complete concord and charity in the full light of trl)th; That all who are in uncert<;Jinty of doubt and who are weak may be strengthened by divine grace so that they may be ready and willing to suffer anything rather than break away from the . Christian Faith and Catholic unity; That individual dioceses may have their own legitimate shepherds; . That .Christian law n;tay,be freely promulgated in all religions and among, ~II c1a~ses; That yo~th in' elementary and high schools, in workshops and fields, may not be ensnared in the' ideologies of materi~lism, atheism and hedonism;
Complete
That the roads of truth may. be open every where and no one will place obstaCles in its way; ,
SPOKANE '(NC)-Father Ed And that missionaries mund W. Morton, S.J., Gonzaga' university president,. has an possible to their people. nounced the inauguration of 'an honors program specifically de signed for stUdents of excep tional talent. "The honors p~ogram is con.,. DUBLIN (NC) - Father Pat structed around the principle rick Peyton, C.S.C., the "Rosary that challenging subject matter and exacting procedure will dG . Priest", will preach ,a special' sermon at the Marian Shrine. in more to induce growth than any Knock on August 10. It will' be other educational formula," 'Fa part of ceremonies in connection ther Morton declared. with a pilgrimage organized. ~y Students' of acknowledged the Dublin subcommittee of the ability and achievement .will re:' Knock Shrin~ Bureau ~iety. ceive sustained and rigorous direction in the first three years of their colege careers, he said. The fourth year may be utilized to fulfill requirements fOr a INSURANCE specific degree. ~ , APPRAISEit
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GOLDEN JUBILEE: IN FAIRHAVEN: The Fall River Diocese has benefitted fro'm the prayers and good works of the Sisters of the Sacred Hearts and Perpetual Adoration for the past 50 years. In left photo Sister M; Leobin, prioress, and Sister Anthony are shown in convent garden. Devotion to the Queen of Peace is' dear to the hearts of the Sisters, as
shown in second left photo. Two Sisters in second right photo kneel in chapel where . Perpetual Adoration is maintained. At right Miss Muriel Lebeau of Fairhaven, an aspirant, and Sister Catherine Mary of New Bedford, listen to playback of a tape recorder in the Novitiate. .
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100 Attend Service in Carolina Town
~isters' Jubilee'
STONEVILLE (NC)-Almost . Continued (i'om Page One 100 of the 768 people in this Academy, ·"to symbolize OUI' North Carolina town attended particular'dev()tion to the hidden . - the first night· of a two-week'" Chl'ist!' Catholic mission, conducted out 'Another devotion dear to the doors from. a "motor chapel"-a Sisters is that to the Immaeulate specially constructed bus which Heart of Mary. MembE!rs of the houses .an .altar and other facili eongregation observed the First ties for religious services. Saturdays, made 'famous by the It. was directed by Father ehildren of Fatima, long before Cranor F. Graves, pastor of St. the Portuguese apparitions. Joseph of the Hills'· church in 'Enthronement of the Sacred Leakville, N. C., 11 miles away. Heart in homes is a project sp'onsored by both Sacred Hearts Fathers and Sisters. Until it was
shifted to Washington, D. C. in,
1946. the National Center for
the Enthronement was at Fail'
baven.
Three hundred students, from
kindergarten through 'high
school, . are enrolled at Sacred
~?:&;: :.' :. :. :. :. :.,'.','.', Hearts Academy. Of these 30
'W}} are boarding students. From
Uleir ranks have come several
members of the community.
S~C~ED HEARTS CONVENT At present in the novitil.lte is
Sister Catherine Mary, daugh
ter of Mrs. Charles O'NeiH of Continued from' Page One tended vespers at St. Patrick's Holy" Name parish, New Bed At the end of that time. sh~ CathedraL I'll never forget the ford. An 'aspirant is Miss Muriel Lebeau, daughter of' Mr. and , was assigned to Fairhaven, only chotisters, especially the boy PLATE GLASS sopranos!" . Mrs... Roger Lebeau, Saered . a year after the convent's open , CONTRACT
ing there. She has glowing mem.:"· Hearts parish, Fairhaven.' Music is one of Sister's chief - GLAZING
ories of'two days. spent in New.: interests. She has been in charge Founded in France Fifty years have' seen many York upon arriving in the United · of:school" music at St. Joseph's
.BATHROOMS-KITCHENS chiinges in the Sisters' Fairhaven· States. · for many years, and plays, the 686. Cotta'ge: . St. New:Bedford . . "We arrived on the feast of' organ. for Mass 'and vespers at convent. They began operations .. WY 1)-7388 the Assumption in 1909. ancJ..-at- . Sacred Hearts Convent every
in' a .small wooden house, now ased as the novitiate. In 1926 the Su·nday. She was .also the organ
present large building was red Hear . FatJ:1ers), Europe, ist for' funeral· Masses at ·St.
.. et'ected, and in 1947 the Ameri and the British' Isles.. Their Joseph's for 35 years. . an novitiate was opened, re . works. includ~ schools,; and. 'Highlights of Sister's life' in t»aint and" Wallp~per moving the necessity 'of sending. retreat and guest houses;..' the United States came in 1924 eandidates. to France .for train . Candidates are receivec;1' from ·when. a ·priest. brother visited _Dupo.nt Paint ing. the age of 15 to 28, and may. in-' her from" Belgium, and in'1928 ". ~. The congregation was founded quire further: from .Rev.:·Mother,. 'when'her mother made the same ~ ' . . - Rear of Store , I . . in· France at the height of ·the Superior, ~30. Main", Street; .. trip.
. .' Q.t;,t~ ~22 Acush. Ave.
French Revolution by Countess Fairhaven. .... > Asked what changes she had' Henriette, Ay'mer 'de la Chev'a cor. Middle St. Flowers and fIelds s~rround noted' in school'children in . \ . . !erie; 'who had been imprisoned ~acred ~earts Convent and make ne.arly five decades' of teaching, New Bedford arid sentenced for sheltering· a It. beau~1ful,. but as we left .,!"e the jubilarian commented' that priest. With Father Marie-Joseph thought ~ore o~, the quotatIon 'this is the age of the "switch-on." Coudrin as co-founder; she from SCripture" The beauty of "You can switch on machines to . began' her work in 1797. th~ .K~ng's daughter is from do' your worl!: at home, but you Today the Sisterhood has withm. .'. , can't 'switch on learning," she,. Window Company houses in North and South' From withm Sacred !I~arts said. '''Today's. children don't ALUMINUM
America, Hawaii '(where the walls comes strength, for I~S own seem to re,alize this, and they WINDOWS - DOORS
£8I1tous Father. Damien was members and the wh?le DIocese.. .resent having to work at schooL" lIIUOIUl the members of the Sac~ . CANOPIES - AWNINGS
As we .sleep; the SIsters pray. She added that she finds tele .Ray Hunt
~ision a powerful distraction · from study among her pupils, . , 1783 Acushnet Avenue
and also deplored the trend WY 4-4551
towards working mothers.' ."If mothers would only stay home!" she said. . Sister Mary Vital's' jubilee celebration will include Mass at ~Iumbing - "Heating Sacred Hearts Convent, cele brated by Rev. Stanislaus Ber 915 Acushnet Ave.
nard, SS. CC., 'chaplain,' during At Weld Square
which she will renew her vows. . I . 'New Bedford Following, Mass there will be a r e c e p t ion· for friends and New l1edford/8 Leading
students. , Plumber ,
St. Joseph's is the only Catholic Church in Rockingham County. Out of a total population of about 65,000 people in the county, 150 are Catholic. Prior to the recent mission, Mass had never been offered in this town. The mission and the motor chapel are' part of a program of Bishop Vincent S. Waters of Raleigh, N. C., aimed at bring ing more knowledge of the Faith to all persons in his See.
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