08.14.58

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-Bishop Connolly to Preside

At First Annual Labor Day

Solemn Mass at Cathedral

The

ANCHOR

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An Anchor of the.,Soul, Sure and

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Solemn High Mass presided over by His Excellency, the Most Reverend 'Bishop will h~ghlight the' first annual Labor Day Religious observance of the United Labor Council of Greater Fall River. This was announced today by Clement J. Dowling, assistant secretary

[i'irm-S~. PAUL

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of the Nation~l Association of Letter Carriers, general chairman for the event.

Dowling also announced

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Fall River, Masso Thursda", August 14, 1958

that Rev. Hubert C. Callaghan,

S.J. will preach' at the Mass.

I $4.00 per Year Father Callaghan, on the faculty

- ; - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - of, Holy Cross College, Worces-

ter, is director of the -9 college's .~ Institute of Industrial Relations and an arbitrator for the Amer­ ....I ican Arbitration Association and 1"'IlIII the Federal Mediation and ConSister M~ry Elizabeth, SS.CC., a native of Stonington, cili<ltion Service; He is also

tonn., who has been teaching at the Sacred Heart School . chaFman of the personnel rela­

in Fairhaven since 1951, has been named principal of a ~;~;:t~~~w board of the city of

BeW elementary school the Sisters of the Sacred Hearts " Mass at 9

staff in Gardena, Calif. ,y." ....~ .,.. ,..:.....';",.;) The Labor Day Mass will be

Vol. 2, No. 33

PRICE lOe

'Second CI••• Man PriyilelrH Aothorized .t F.1t RiYer~ M....

' Fo.-r hoven .... un 'to D•reef ew Cal.-forn.-o School

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The newly - designated principal, who has been particularly active in civic mat-

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ters at the Fairhaven school, will leave this Diocese next T\lesday to take up her new tltlties on the Pacific coast. .Sister Mary Elizabeth, who also spent considerable time teaching needlework to 'students at Sacred Hearts Academy in Fairhaven, has successfully '\tided her Civics class into one o~ the top 10 scholastic ratings in the United States for the last three consecutive years. In connection with their expanding activities and program in, the education ,field in United States, the Sacred Hearts Sisters will open a new convent in

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celebrated at 9 A. M. in St.

Turn to Page Seventeen'

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Mu·st Att'end \ "1-#\AII <;cd

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Ma ss Tomorrow Today,

the Vigil of the is not a day of

fast or abstinenc~.· • '" \

. Tomorrow; the .Feast of the

..Assumption of ,the Blessed

Virgin Mary into Heaven, is

a Holyday of Obligation.

Since the Hobday falls on a Friday, the law of Friday abstinence does not apply. Catholics may eat meat to­ morrow.

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, Assumption,

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:~n~~~~~eW~~hL~~ei~n;~~e~ ~~ /', the Gardena school. SISTER M. ELIZABETH, SS.CC. SO'" anhago Teenager h) Study Here /. ,'/ Un d er In t erna t 10nailII Program. /vt o

Last year, the three little Cassidys of 66 Pleasant' Street, Somerset, learned lots of F'rench words from their student guest, Franchette Laurent of 'Tourcoing, France. "'h' th ey 'II b'e ch a t t · . S j[)aTIlS '. h ' parents, ...' IS y'ear ermg m. ,for,tJ:1eIr Mr. and Mrs, Arthur, F. C 'd' I '.. 'd y, 80. e~Joye . d ,~hen' . armen, secon children, 0 dest m a CaSliH,. family of seven Said .JCp~lrIment In mternatIonal she made 'application ,in Marcb ' .friendship th,at they've for the .year in· "the· ',United ..

.~ew Law' Limits

S dB' I u"..... ay Jusiness\\ '-\,. ASSUMPTION OF THE BLESSED VIRGIN MARY~ n .~ew ersey Tomorrow is the Feast of the Assumption of the Blessed I

'NEWARK (NC) -

Gov.

Robert B. Meynerhas signed i,t9 law a bill prohibiting the sale of clothing, as' well as home and office appliances and furnishings on Sundays.

'!he ,legislation is directed primarily at large and retail outlets along markets' major state

Virgin Mary, holy day of obligation. NC Photo.

It's Hard to Be.eo,me' Sa.-n't Eve'n, Harde'r to' Me.et Test

VATICAN CITY (NC)-It is hard to become a saint,'

b u teven ' h arder t 0 b e d d one b ecause 0 f th e ' s t rmgen

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ecI are highways especially "in the' sCrutiny carried on by the, Sacred Congt'egation of Rites,

" northern New Jersey. area. f' th,e Congrega t"IOn ~ 'worcen k ' t ers. on th e " Th e b u·lk o· ,Scor~s E?,~mptJons· investigation of, the, 'lives, 'A single case can require ' Three, counbell, are. ex elJ1pt yirtlles and miracles 'of per- 'more than'l,OOO pages of docu­ .~ned their hOl1)e to, allother, ,S~t~~s. Her,kl:tOwledge of English , ~rom ~he ,measure. Cape ,M~y" sons proposed for beatifica- lTlentation and 10 times as roan,. 'at.udent 15-year-oid' Carmell ' '....... ,Atlantic and, Ocelln .. countIes hours of work, The cause of . ". ." ' ....ra IV Page Fourteen Turn to P' T" 't tion and canonization. Moran of SantIago, Chile. ag-e wen y, American-born Mother Eliza&.'

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The girls came to the Cassidy lIome under the auspices of the 'International Student Program' H the National Catholic Welfare £onference. The program places' Ioreign students in American homes during their last year of lIigh !!Choo!.' It is designed to increase international understanding and live the young people of other~ countries the opportunity of ob.erving American family life at first hand. This year the Casaidys are among 95 participating families in the United States.

E"courage Blind To Participate:-~ In Liturgy "t" PHILADELPHIA (NC)­ Blindness should not exclude • parishioner from full par­ ticipation in the Church li­

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turgy nor from membership in parish societies, it was stressed at the national convention here of the American Federation of Catholic Workers for, the Blind. "The complaint of some blind persons-that they feel snubbed or left out of Church affairs­ _n be overcome if sighted par­ Ishioners show extra cO,nsidera­ lion until the handicapped be­ eomes one of the gang," Father Richard M. McGuinness told 45 participants who attended the ""'o-day meeting in BenjamiD Franklin Hotel; Father McGuinness is director ~ Our Lady of Mt. Carmel Guild Turn &oe Face FCHII'

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S'· isters to' Staff" Ne',~, ~ •• S'JftL 00'I· ,u N ew'B e df'ord N' Otlle 0 I'" •• , ~

' b e t h Seton has already filled IS, volumes, 2,677 pages, and in­ " ""eludes 800 personal letters writif ten by the Baltimore nun whet ""• • founded the Sisters of Charity of By Patricia McGowan Cjncinnati, Ohio, in 1809. Th I 1 . ,At 'present' there are more e new mmacuate Conception School in New Bedford; which will be opened in than ,70 canonization causes unSept,ember, will be staffed by Sisters of the Holy Names of Jesus and Mary. Three Sis- der consideration and more than ters of the Congregation have takelJ, up residence in the freshly painted and furnished 800 possible beatifications. An­ convent at 171 Davis Street. Th'ey be joined by two others at the end of the month. other 50 causes involve groups The community will be" Castelo ,Branco,pastor Qf Im.of persons proposed for honorl the 26th in the Diocese and' maculate Conception. tiny cltapel with its modern of the altar. t.he s'eco'nd 'to 'c'ome 'her'.e I'n Qfparticular interest were the~ 'el,ectric organ, and the former Duties Are Heavy attic, now converted into four While the making of saints recEmt nlOnths; ,In June the' attractive bedrooms. and blesseds commands much Religious of the Love of God Father Branco has made the Turn to Page Eighteen began work in the parish' of building and ,staffing of the OUI' Lady of the Assumption,' school his chief project since aralso in New Bedford. riving at ImmaCUlate Conception two and a half year~ ago. Open House The Sisters of the Holy Names Hundreds of visitors attended have taught vacation school in the open house conducted by the the parish for two summers, and Sisters Sunday, admiring the STEUBENVILLE (NC) their motherhouse has now renovatio~ job 'accomplished un­ -Bishop John K. Mussio of Turn to Page' Twenty R der the direction of Rev, A, A. .

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Bishop Stresses Mora I Duties 'Of Motorists

New Lebanese Head Maronite .'-\ Ri,te Catholic

Asserts ~estern Nat.on Pol icies\\\ Irl'ito'te Asians WINOOSKI PARK (NC) -The West may be losing the "invisible war" in Asia, students and faculty mem­ OOr8 at St. Michael's College here in ·Vermont have been warned. Fllither Anthony J. Parel, S,J., declared' that, while the West has met the threat of Commu­ Dism, militarily, Hin the eyes 01. TUG &e Pace Sixkea'

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BEIRUT (NC)-Lebanon's President-elect, Gen. Chehab, is a Maronite Rite Catholic kno~n for his attachment NEW SUPERIOR: Father James F. Gary, S.J., of South Boston, has been named superior of the School of St. Philip Neri, in Haverhill, which is dedicated to foster- . ing delayed· vocations to the priesthood.

to', his alma-mater - the Marist Brothers' school at Juneh ­ and as the benefactor of social and educational projects. - He is looked to as the man who may bring an end to this country's civil war and' facilitate withdrawal of U. S. Marines. In electing Gen, Chehab the ,TiuD to Pal'e Nineteen

Steubenville has reminded the faithful that traffic

safety is not just a slogan but an expression of ~oral obliga­ tion to preserve life, In a pastoral letter on high­ way conduct,' ~ ishop Mussio said that "behind every reason­ able traffic regulation stands the moral law, ordering us to safe­ guard our life and that of our neighbor ftom unnecessary danger," , "Keep ever . '1 your mind your obligation to drive, not like the proverbial bat out of hell, but rather like U' zealous keeper of the things that are of God," the Ohio Bishop said. Traffic safety, 0 according • Turn &oe Fal'e Four


Pope Pius Values, Research Work

WASHINGTON (NC)-Americans worried about the impression' they ma ke on the, rest of the world can take heart from the fact that 12 months in this country have

made 90 foreign t4~enagers into 90 firm friends 'of' the

United States. ' everywhere, their custorr'ts are;l;'t, The students spent, the the 'youngsters declared. School past year- as partieipants in 'Worit;for example, .'is a' good

the international high school' , deal lighter' here than' in their

countries, ·they said. ' .. , studl;mt program sponsored by AlI" students who take part'in' I the Educational Department of the program, begun 'in 1951., have the' National Catholic, Welfare reached a point in their schools Conference.' , 'at home comparable' to 'the Included in the group was senior year of high school here. France-Marie L~urent of TourIn this country they live with coing, (France, who made her an American host family and at­ home with Mr. and Mrs. Arthur tend local Catholic high schools. F. Cassidy at 66 Plea!lant Street, Jose Fong, 17-year-old from Somerset, while studying at Havana, Cuba, w'ho stayed in Mount St. Mary Academy, Fall ,_Fremont, Ohio, remarked that , River, from which she was grad-" one thing that makes American END YEAR'S STAY IN U.S.: At the headquarters uated in June. schools easier than those of. b 'ld' f th e N' • other countries is the fact that ' Ul mg 0 atu:JnaI Ca th 0 l'IC W eIfare Con:f.,erence In During an interview the lively "you can choose yo~r own sub- 'Washinglon, Father Francis'Hurley, Assistant General S~,. youngsters, ranging ,in age f r o m , . " 16 to 18, displayed an affectionjects." A good point of Amerretary, greets some of the 90 teenagers who participated· ate' understanding f.or almost ican schools, he added, is that 'in the international high school student program which every aspect of American-life. "you can take a more active part placed the stJldents 'in U.S. schools and hO,mes for 12 They were on their way, back to in discussions" during classes in months. Pictured, left to right: Louis DeLangue of France, ' h omes" In E u ro pl.'and Latl'n J'ects. sociology" history ,an,d other sub' . . thelr Marina Gradoli of Italy, ,Mark Arruda of Brazil, Father America. ~ , The, YO,ungsters Ipveled their Hurley, France-Marie T..a!Jrent, France; and Father .John J. A group sampled at random .. agreed unanimously th:lt the imstrongest criticisms at the AmerGreen, O.S.F.S., of the' National Catholic Educational _ pression of America und Amer- ican emphasis on sex_Utoo much Association. 'NC Photo. ~"''\ icans that, they had r:ece ived at sex in everything," ,J~ Fong home and other ,sources' was nothing like the r e a l i t y . , Michele Bouard, 18, of Croix- described dumb." '. Nord , France, summed up for aU HEIDELBERG ' \' , But 'other teen",ae' ,f.'ld's won" " ' (NC) . ' - Amer , - c hild r~ are orp h ans. when, she remarked that, on the thel'r approval. R'egl'na .... n " generosity 'Corlle- ica . 'is, chiefly , ,re When Belgian Premonstraten­ basis 'of , her' prior information II'U'S rec'a'lled' t'"'-t' "c'om","n'g ,over sponsl'ble f or the fi rst - glr . I s an d sian Father Werenfried Van abOut the . U. S., she ""mad a feel. G ermany, w hic h on the' boat we.... laughed 'at Ber- b oys'' town In Straaten and German Jesuit ing I didn't know Americ,ans at h . st b d the 10th ' all when I first c;l,me' here." muda shorts. Now all of us wear ?sJu 0 s:rve ' .. anF~ther Johan,nes Leppich, bOth m." The, youn'gster'.', agreed nJversary of. Its found.ahon. , famed for their charitable enterthe Michele' spent h her year in 'a Wil­ that rock 'n' roll music is a Iet is the Catholic "Youth Vilprises, learned of Father Mag­ mette, Ill., orne. , matter of personal taste" and lage Klinge," located 011 the I'oad nani's undertaking, they 'imRegina Cornelius, 18-year-old said they had heard it first in b e t ween H el'd e lb erg an,d W uerz-, m ed'lat t en d ed their aid to e yiex from Hamburg, agrceed' and their own countries before eOm- burg, in the Odenwald forest. him. added that she found "people are ing h e r e . ' Its director is Father Heinrich The church, dedicated to exactly the same here as ,in Ger- M . f h t ' many. They are ,very friendly." AI~hough the illdt~pendent agnam 0 t e own of Buchen, Blessed Bernard, patron of the Her 12 months were ]passed in spirit of American W'Elmen is to whose pari~~ i~ belongs. state of Baden where the Klinge sometimes regarded ,a-s unique, Father ,Magnam s sister was camp is situated therefore is Joliet, Ill. . M f '" the students reported that it is Henfl~tte ag~ani, the owner 0 the center of the village. To. Customs Diff'ell shared by women in their naa mUSIC school, In New York who build it, as well as some 01 'the But _if people are the same tions. "They just don't let it t~rned over all. th: i";come de"family" homes, the help wa~ show," explained 17-year-old, f1ved from 1?-er mstltutlon, to the ,enlisted of the international Or­ Maria Artana of Turilfl" Italy. ,KI,inge proje~t up to the time der of Builders, organized by ­ She stayed in DenviUt~, N.' J.,' of her death In March, 1955. ' , Father Van Straaten. 'At the during the year. Father Magnani 'first came inKlinge camp, so far, they: have The students were' sui'prised to contact with' youngsters ' contributed 8,000 work-d~ys in CINCINNATI (NC) -- Several by the lavish way Americans among refugees from the East t h eir vacation periods, free of ................. persons in the CinCinnati al'ch­

spend their money and by the who had found a temporary refcharge, toward the accomplish­ "'~'diocese known widely in the large amounts they have to uge in abandoned, barracks in ment of this great mission. \. field of Catholic al·t will fill spend. "Teenagers ' here' have the Klinge region. Soon 1 he. took ',' Th,e girls and boys are as­ major roles at. the two-day more money than Jon :gurope," Catholic Art Association con­ Gunter' Schoenweit.z, 'l!J, of over' t~lOse sha~~s on behalf of ~mbled in small groups of eight vention in Our Lady of Cin­ Kempten/Allgaeu, Germany asCatholIc chafltlel'l\ afd fitted at one time, in individual homes cinnati College, st:Jrtinl: Aug. 16. serted after a year in' Chicago, them out as best he could with and under the care of a "moth­ Archbishop Karl J.AIter of Ill. At home, he said, a reasonthe modest means, available, to er" ,who looks after them, cook- ' Cincinnati will offer th.e opening able allowance is one pfennig- accommol:late, tuberculosis-ridiog and washing for them a'nd Mass in the college chapel. Ar­ about 12 cents-per week. den r~ugee. children alid 'city" providing a true family atmos­ tists, designers, teachers, pastors, " Active' Religion youngsters who bad lost their phere. Home economi~s training families. is given to the girls. ' at;ld members of the laity in 'all The students declar~d that ' parts of the nation are expected ' Ainertcan Catholics appear to Family Homes ,The youngsters at Klinge to attend the seSSiOllll. ' practiceAtieir religion more ac:' It was a beginning ,made with range in age between 10 and 25.

=~te::~e~~:st:.a:i~dat~: Youth Village BuUt,With U.S. funds :~:~n:~

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-THE ANCHOR Thurs., Aug. 14; 1958 '

2

Foreign ~,'~'M~ents Return, Home Firm Friends of United ,States

M ,arks A , nniversary, in Germf;lny

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Artists Convention Opens SaturdOl]'

yATICAN CITY (NC)-W,hile the ,Church looks toward the. future it' cannQt disregard t~ "wealth of wisdom and ex peri:' ence" it has accumulated in'~ past. A 'letter sent on behalf of His HolineSs Pope 'Pius XII to ,Dr. Stephan Kuttner. professor, of canon law at the Catholic Uni­ versity of America, on the, oc­ casion of the international ,con­ gress on m,edieval canon law at Louvain, said that "as you are aware the Church, through its apostolic mission" looks toward the future • • • but strengthened by its, centuries-old traditions the Church cannot disregard the wealth of wisdom and experi­ ence contained in the history of its institutions and laws. "Encouraging research like yours," ~it added, "the /Church truly surpasses the noble per­ spectives of, simple scholarship and rejoices in enriching the trea~re of its past to the ad­ vantage of the new tasks coo­ stantly ,confronting. it."

Mass Ordo FRIDAY-Assumption 01. the Blessed Virgin Mary. Double ',of, I 'Class. White. Ma811 Proper; ,Gloria; no Creed; . Second Collect for Peace; Preface of Blessed VirgiA. Holy D!'y of Obligation. SATURDAY-St. Joachim, Con­ fessor, Father of the Blessed Virgin Mary. Double of II Class; White. Mass Proper; Gloria; no Creed; Second Col­ lect for Peace; Common Pre­ face. SUNDAY Twelfth Sunday after Pen t e cos t. Double. Green. Mass Proper; Gloria;' Second Collect St. Hyacinth, Confessor; Third Collect lor Peace; Creed; Preface of Trinity. ' MONDAY-Mass of Previous Sunday. Simple. Green. Mass Proper; No Gloria or Creed; Second Collect St. Agapitus, Martyr; Third Collect for Peace; Common Preface. TUESDAY - St. John Eudes, Confessor. Double. White. Mass Proper; Gloria; ~o Creed; Second Collect fOir Peace; Common Preface.

WEDNESDAY - 8t' J Bernard, 'Abbot, Confessor and DoctOir of the, Church. Double. White. , Mass Proper;, Gloria; Creed; Second Collect for Peace; C9lllmon Pre~ace. , ' THURSDAY-St. Jane Francetl De 'Chantal, Widow. Double. White. Mass Proper; Gloria; no Creed; Second Collect for Peace; Common Preface.

Vice P,ostulator

tively on both the material and almost nothing. Today there are, Many of the older ones, after spiritual levels than do ,Catholics some 300 girls and boys -quar- ,going out to take on. jobs in the SANTA BARBARA (NC) in their own countries. tered in 11 .ifamily homes," each world, like to return for visits Father Noei'Moholy; O:F.M., ai" 'They said they were especially one under the. supervision of a and informal retreats. TQ ac­ ,;~he Old Mission Santa ,Barbara' iJppressed by the large number "mother'" who looks after the commodate them, a special guest '~;. here in California, has been ap- arid vitality of parish organiza- 'children and makes them feel house is availai?le. ' pointed vice postulatOl: for the tions, and by the widespfead at heime. ~ention The ,Anchor canonization cause ~j! Father' practice of daily Mass and ComThere are workshops in the Junipero Serra, early California mUllion. ' camp to train the youngsters for To Our Advertisers . missionary. "At home," Regina Cornelius various trades and' schools to 'Fathel- MoholY succeeds Father' declared, "they separate Sunday provide them with an elemen­ : TRAIN CASE, 21" O'NITE ' Eric O'Brien, O.F.M,. who has from the rest of the week. But tary education. The village also _ U"PULLMAN : held the position since 1941. The here Christ is right in everyday has a model farm of 30 acres : 3 Pieees appointment was made by life." which produces enough to make - Plus tax .,' APPRAISER Father Antonio Cairoli, O.F,M., Among the 90 students taking the campself-sustaining in case REAL ESTATE postulator general lor the Fran- : part' in the 1957-'58 :program of an emergency, a nursery, a : Vis~t our ne"f Lower Level: ' ciscans.' . were youngsters from Austria, swimming pool, sports facilities : ' , for Exceptional Values ~ France, Germany, Italy, Bolivia, of all- k'inds and even an ama­ . INSURANCE Brazil, Costa Ric,!-, Cuba, Nicateur stage. FORTY' HOURS ragua and Honduras. wY 3·5762 ./ Cost of transportation between 'Some 200 people attend to the 136 Cornell, St. 586 Pleasant Street , DEVOTION! their own country and the U. S. needs of these young people. , Ne~ Bedford Aug. 17-St. Joseph, Woods :_:~ ~~~~~~e~!~r~._. is shared by the youngstel's' par- The youngsters often' have ar­ Hole ents, and by the U. S. State Derived as 'nervous, wrecks from Our Lady ,01 Lourdes, partment's ,International Ex- starvation camps in Yugoslavia, Wellfleet change Service. Hungary and other coUntries. Our Lady 'of Grace, Auth~ntic fashions In --this country th~ youngsters Although depressed and almost North Westpo~t are given room, boal-d and inci-_. hopeless, they soon regain their Aug. 24-Sacrlld Heart, New for the kindergarten dentals by their host families. composure and health under the Bedford They received monthly pocket~ f1.!re of expert welfare workers, St. Joseph's Ol'phanage, money from their own parents nurses and teachers. All the to ca~pus ,crowd Fall River

Aug. 31-St. Anthony' of the

,···.. , 'Desert.. Fall River',

St. John the Baptist, '

. Central Village

'of, Sept. 7-St. Louis of France, The following films 'are to be "• More value for your money Swansea. Our Lady added' to the lists in their re-' ,..,__

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spective cl,assifications: ' I"Vf' Your Protection Seekonk. Unobjectiona.ble ',for' General BuvFrom USE Patronage -Buchanan Rides Alone, Trial at the "·Vatican. GRANT 132 RockdalE Ave.

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Russia 'To Have I)ragon by Tail In Red China

THE ANCHOR­ Thurs., Aug. 14, 1958

·Sugg~sts

Farm Crisis Solution

PITTSBURG (NC) When Red China becomes the equal of Soviet Russia, there will be trouble-:-for Russia. This is the opinion of Father Cyril Wagner, O.F.M., recently rdurned to his family's home. after five years in a prison in' China. Moscow may have a "dragon by the tail" in its alli- . ance with mainland China, the F:ra,nciscan observed. False Impression '''I'he Chinese communists will. not be content to be. anything less than a world power. They believe the whole world fears them' because of their huge popula.tion of 6(l0 million peo­ ple," he said. Father Wagner, a mISSIoner in China for 17 years, was ar­ rE,sted in 1953 as an "imperial­ ist;" and 'confined in a prison until about a month ago. He disclosed he was able to say Mass occasionally in prison thanks to the Red Cross, a CIviL amin tonic" and a package of candy wafers. From the fall of 1956 until his release six weeks a~:o, Father Wagner' washos­ pitalized with' an asthmatic con­ dition. In the Red Cross packages he received, was a small bottle of liquid, "to 1,le taken after meals due to the lack of vitamins." Medical Disguise This medicine actually was wine disguised by an authentic­ looking label designed' by an American druggist whose broth­ er is a priest, Father Wagner said. The candy wafers· were au­ thentic, but the "paper sepa­ rators" were small discs of un­ leavened bread which could be used as hosts, he related. Often during his hospitaliza­ tion, he explained, he would of_ fer Mass lying in bed, using the tillY cap of the "medicine~~ bot.;. UE" as a chalice. Boss Rule Father Wagner also spoke of the duties of the hospital physi_ cian in his prison. The doctor was given his'. orders by com­ munist bosses and carried them out-OI' else. "A patient in one bed is' to linger in suffering," he related. "In another bed there is a pa­ tient who must be made to re­ cover immediately." "The health and duration of the patients' lives are subject not to God's will, but to the will of the political bosses," he mid. .

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THREE Y6UNG WOMEN ENTER JESUS-MARY . NOVITIATE: The three Fall River young women shown above leave next Wednesday to enter the Jesus-Mary No­ vitiate at Hyattsville, Maryland. They are, left to right, Antoinette Gamache, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Rene Gamache of 332 Eastern Avenue; Miss Lorraine Blanchette of 49 Smithies Street, daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. Emerile Blanchette; and Miss Gert­ rude Lav,oie, daughter of Mr. and Mrs: Wilfrid Lavoie of 49 Middlesex Street. ~', \ '\

Catholics Should Be Moved' by Duty, of Charity To Win Over Unbelif:vers,Says BishopSh.een .

JEFFERSON CITY. (NC) Decentralization of industry could solve the current farm r~volution problem. Bishop Joseph M. Marling, ·C.PP.S., of jefferson City, ad­ dressing the ·nationalconven­ tion's of the Catholic Central Union and the 'Women's Union, emphasized that this solutIon to the farm crisis would 'require the' combihed efforts of non­ partisan committees, of capital and of labor. The Missouri Bishop referred to the exodus from the land, lowered farm income and crop surpluses as' "evidence of an emergency in the farm picture." Must Be Overcome' An added incentive .to· decen­ tralization of industry, the Bish­ op said, is the need, to avoid' a threat of atomic dis~steI:. in case of war. Bishop Marling said that to guard the "precious treasure" of the land, acres must be "re­ tired in scientific fashion." He added that ·for farmers affected by the program, to whom "s0­ ciety' owes protection and com­ pensation," a high 'standard of living !'seems achievable if a balance can' be struck between industry and farming." "All are familiar with the roles of political intrigue and partisan plotting in the forma­ 'tion of farm policy," the Bish- . op said. "In a democracy, like . our own this is a weakness hard -n, ·correct,· but one that must be overcome,"

Bishop Sheen then stated that On a Catholic's duty of char­ '. Catholics' a)so have duties of ity toward Jews; Bishop' Sheen charity toward the Orthodox, stated that "the believer' must arid the several hundred milnever say that it was the Jew­ lion memoers of the Russian, ish hands that nailed Christ to Greek and . Eastern churches His Cross for 'Our' Blessed Lord which once were in the, bosom 'said He would be delivered 'in­ of the Church. to the hands of the Gentiles' to The' Bishop said Catholics be crucified." should not forget the thousands "There is. no person in the

. of priests who sUffer~d martyrworld," he' added, ."not even a

dom for their beliefs during the Buddhist or a communist" who

Bolshevik" revolution, or the can say he is innocent of the

New Novitiate millions' of Orthodox in Russia blood of that Man.

ST. BONIFACIUS (NC)-Con­ who. were ·sent to Siberia for no..... '" .

struction of a new $3,000,000 other crime thall that of believ. The belrevCls are bound 10­ novitiate of the Society of Jesu. ing in God. bmately to the J~ws, not. only ·here in Minnesota will be started because as Pope PIUS XI saId we shortly. The novitiate, with ac­ "Shall (w~ forget," he said, are 'spiritual Semites' but also commodations for 200 students "that b th.eI fi.rst hc,hurch in hRussia because we call the Mass the A and 32 facuity members, will re­ was .UI t 10 onor of t e s- iulfillment· of the sacrifice of place the present Oshkosh, Wis., sumptwn of Our Blessed Lady 'our father' Abraham He is our novitiate' of the Jesuit Fathers' centuries. 'and ce~turies before father as well as theirs . • ." Wisconsin province. charity of Catholics toward the doctnne was defined? Shall Communists, the Orthodox, we be unmindful that in the In the final part of his speed). Protestants; Jews and the mis­ Kremlin in this evil hour there Bishop Sheen turned to' the sions. is unused ~hapel to the' As- ' duties of charity of Catholics Bishop Sheen's opening' state­ sumption?" ' t o w a r d missions. Every Thursday : ment was to denounce the posi­ Duty to Protestants Noting ~hat "'the burden is : tioll generally taken that the; . . on the belrever" toward the 1.5 : 10:00 A.M. - 12:10 : "burden of overcoming this ig­ In the. thIrd part of thIS' ad:- .billion" pagans in the world, most 5:10 -7:00 - 8:00 P.M. : norance, heresy, schism, hate dress Bishop Sheen s.poke on of whom have a natural religion .: and bigotry" and of coming to duties of charity toward Proteswith a high ethic which has the Truth is on the unbeliever: tant~;w h h . . served them for centuries, he : OUR LADY'S CHAPEL : In religion, he said, "the bur­ e ~ 0 ave the FaIth 'declared: : 572 Pleasant Street : den of charity and understand­ must admIt that 400 years ago ", . . . New Bedford : : ing toward the unbeliever falls the Church needed a reformahTheh b~~eve~ IS to brmg to -,------~-------------on the believer, or those who' tion because of the decline of ~ em t e istonc1l1 truth that ~t have the fulness of faith, and the spirit 'of Christ among its ~s not man who goes to God; It .c I erg y an d··t 1" h e sal'd . IS God not upori. those who 'have. frag­ 1 s f al'thf u, 'tt' first h' who . comes to man, , CONTRACTORS ments of it." "The protests' of the reform r~mI I.ng I.S Sl~ ~n"d endowmg at that time were right·, the him WIth HIS splnt. He warned, h owever, ~h ·a t h'IS statem~nt did not refer to the reforms. of the reformers were BUILDERS realm of' principle, but rather' . wrong. The reformers began ·in...·· ~ . to the realm of charity. side the Church but their re­ formations led them outside it." No Compromise John B. "Coexistence," the Bishop de­ Therefore, he said, the "Cath-. cIar'ed, "has nothing to do with olic should always look upon the compromise of the truth, but existence of Protestantism as, to rather charity toward unoeliev­ some extent, a judgmen,t on PRINTING and ers ... Truth is not of oUr mak­ himself. The Lord punished us and Sons, Inc. MAILING ing, but God's. We have no 'for failing Him in the way we riglits over it. About truth there' lived. OSTERVillE must be intolerance; about per­ Noting that ."each i;>f the hun­ GArden 8-6509 sons who do not possess truth, dreds of Christian sects has some there must be tolerance . .." fraction, fragment or piece of The attitude of Catholics, the Divine Truth - ~ome more than Bishop declared, must therefore others," the prelate counseled be that "of the open heart" that "though the Protestants are which "humbly recognizes that sepa1,'ated from the rock upon one can see the Divinity of the which the Church' was built, Church, not because he is more they are not separated from Him WHOLESALE AUTOMOTIVE brilliant ,than the unbeliever, but who laid that rock," and because God has given him the. ~ ~ fulness of the light 'of ·faith . .. INDUSTRIAL SUPPLIES (and which) confesses that every religion under the sun has a • qENERAl TIRES '. DELCO BAnERIES segment of the circle of truth."· Turning then to the attitude • PERFECT CIRCLE RINGS FALL RIVER - NEW BEDFORD - HYANNIS - NEWPORT of Catholics toward communists, ~ Bishop Sheen declared that "we must love the communists and hate commun'ism, as the Church hates sin, and loves sinners.

BRUSSELS, (NC) - The task of winning over unbelievers to. the Faith .lies primarily witli .Catholics and finds its soUrce in their duty of charity towarli non-Catholics, Auxiliary Bishop Fulton J. Sheen of New York said here. The prelate, who is national dir·ector for the United States of 'the Society' for' the Propaga­ tion of the Faith, spoke at a. conference 'held in conjunction with the Internation;J.l Catholic Days of the Brussels World Fair. The conference was attended by scores of internationally prom­ inent lay and Chu'rch dignitaries. In a five-part address on the subject of coexistence between believers and unbelievers, Bish­ op Sheen examined the duties of

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Getting News in Moscow Tough' Bu~ Getting Jt Out Tough.er

'My Immaculate Heart Will Tr!umph'

Promises at 'Fatima. Basis.} For Optimistic Outlook ~.j;"l' . By Joseph A. Breig, . \,

~

CleveDand Universe Bulletin

Often of late I have been asked why I am so very op­

timistic about the world's future. Let me try once ".lore to

explain ' , '

Forty-one years ago, in 1917, three children in Portu­ , gal reported that the Virgin' the West Germans call the Em­ Mary was appc;aring and pireof Satan. giving them, messagell forThat blasphemous, anti-G~,'­ ma'nkind. 'despotism has been bu~1t ol'1.the ., Their accounts never varied, terrible, passive suf.ferinll:s of matter how often they 'the Russian people. But Russia were ques,is going to return to God. tioned, singly With· that return, communism or together. will fall in chaos. The iron and And yet' they bamboo curtains will spliinter. w ere v e r y The cold war will end. Hliman you n g, and dignity apd freedom will rise. co u 1 d nei"An era of peace will be grant­ ther read nor ed to mankind,l-and God grant write. that"mankind does' not .forget T h i r tee it \ whence the peace came; from years of investigation ~y, • God. Through Mary" Chu'i-ch commission c~)Il'~m~ed This final promise of the the bishop that the VII'gm m­ Virgin' to the children was un­ deed had appeared to the conditional. ,The conversion of

youngsters, six' times in aH, and Russia is certain. had prophesied to them. , A' few years ago, Pope Pius 'In 1942 Pope Pius XII publIc­ ly made 'the bisho,ps' judgme~t XII, walking in 'the VaticallL gar­ den, w'as given 'the same "isi.on his own by broadcasting II mes­ of the miracle of the sun which Age to pilgrims assem bled at was seen by the Fatima children Fatima, where the apparitions and by thousands of others after had taken place, the Virgin'~ final appearance in Evidence of Authent.idty October, 1917. Before and since, ,miracles at Now, on the feast of thE' Vir­ the Fatima shrine, togethE,r with gin's Assumption i,nto HE,aven, the ibmense spiritual good, ac­ we have completed a worldwide eruing, have given oveJ'wh~I~­ novena called' by this same Ing evidence of the auth«:ntJcliy Pope.' Is it optimism or FEillism of the visions and messages. which causes me to hope for a Travel mentally with me back great gift from God. th:rough­ tel 1917. Mary to mankind-flOOn? '\1;~ World War I was rag5ng. But tt' was the war to end' ~'ar. So everybody thought. This war Con.tinued from Page One would "make the world safe for for the Blind, Newark, N. J. He democracy," in President Wil­ was voted into the presidency ,of son's words. the federation by delegate:s rep­ The children of Fatim~l, aged resenting guilds of 13 dioceses. ~ine, seven and six, said other­ , "Since a sightless person de­ wjse. 'pends so much on his sense of The Lady, they said, had told hearing," . Father McGuinness them that the war soon would said, "it is advisable fot'the blind end but . . . Unless mimkihd to assist at a Dialogue Masa Bto~ped 'offending God, ,an even . or at'Mass where the conl~regamore. terrible conflict would tion sings and prays aloud." .M)()n follow'. Enter Activities ' JM)

Encourage Blind

o

Asioundinc PredictioDII Note what astounding predic­ tions issued from these little ones as they reported the warn­ ings of the Virgin. "Russia will spread her' errors through the world," they said. Russia? Why, Russia was prostrate, smashed by German arms. What influence could Rus­ sia ·have on t'he immediate fu:.. ture of the world? America, France, England ­ these· were the powers. So it seemed. But the children went on quoting the Lady. Russia's er­ rors would give rise tt) wars and insunections. Religion would be persecuted., Good inen and women would be martyred. So dreadful would bE the up­ heavals that- some nations would' be destroyed. ' Everything the children pre­ dicted has come true -- execpt one- thing I have not yet men­ tioned. 'In the End. Russia's enors have spread.

We have had World War II,

Korea, Indochina, the bloody

,conicts in'Spain and Greece, and

all the rest.

Soviet imperialism has en­

slaved many countries. Commu­

nism has seized China. And some natioris literally have been destroyed. The Russian:; deport­ ed the peoples of Latvia, Estonia and, Lithuania, and sent in new populations frfom remote places in the SovieLUnion. But the children said some­ thing mOl'e. , '

"In· the end,'" they .,quoted th~

Virgin Mary, "illy Immaculate

Heart will triumph; Russia will be converted, and ;,>n era of, peace will be gran Led to man­ kind."

'Era of Peace' We know, therefore, that God is going to collapse the very foundations of the tyranny be­ hind the iron curtain--of what

.50,OOOTH BIRD: Father Justin Spoden, O.S.B., is shown banding a thrush at St. 'Procopius College, Lisle, III., the fourth largest among government stations in the 17 inland states where the migratory habits of birds are recorded. NC Photo. {\\

Boston Prelate' Pions ,

Chapel for ~ospital

BOSTON (NC)-A new Cath­ olic chapel will be constructed at' Long Island ,Hospital in BOIl­ ton Harbor. The chapel, accommodating' fI()() patients, will be connected to the main hospital building by a tunnel to make attendance possible for .those who are ·un­ able to go outdoors', It will be equipped with ramps and other' facilities for wheel-chair pa­ ~ients.

Since the chapel will be 10­

eated. on municipal property,

Archbishop Cushing has an­

nounced that he will donl\te it

to the City of Boston. The main' a'ltar of the chapel will be dedi­ cated' in honor of Mayor John B. Hynes of Boston and bis family.· '.~"'\.

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SYRACUSE (NC) Bishop Walter A. Foery of Syracuse will bless and dedicate Loyola' Hall, the new Jesuit j[aculty residence at LeMoyne College here tomorrow. The $HOO,OOO

building will house 46 Jesuits.

~

-a manned rocket and the para­ SAN FRANCISCO' (NC) ­ chute return of the dog, Laika, Gettirig news in Moscow is hard passenger in Sputnik No. II. enough-getting it out js some­ times harder. . "Americans want to revel in their own deficiencies, it seems," That's why Daniel Schorr, vet­ Mr. Schorr said. "They want to eran Moscow correspondent for be told how much better the the. Columbia Broadcasting Sys­ Russians are doing~in science, tem, 'sums up the problems of edueation,rockets and missiles. reporting for, America.n con­ Newsmen constantly are under sump~on what goes on insi.de pressure to supply the 'big' Russia: ,The 42-year-old New story, and the more it makes the Yorker'was in .San Francisco Soviets shine, the better." following the lecture trail which Mr. Schorr said that emphasis eventually will, take him back on sciences and mathematics ill to his Kremlin beat-his third Russian schools has been known year on the assignment. lor' several years, but acquired Mr.' Schorr said' that U. S. newsmen are liinited to coverin'g news value only wheh American. became aware how it pointed up ~ 25-mile radius around, Moscdw, must . get special permits to U. S. shortcomings. One of a reporter's major travel :farther: More than a third handicaps in' Russia is the of the country is closed com­ inability to verify the lacts, Mr. pletely foreign correspondSchorr said. Kremlin officials, ents, he said. . Amorig areas recently opened from Nikita Kruschev down, clam up when questioned' about is the city' of Lvov - in the details or veracity of stories, Ukraine. One of the first report­ ers allowed' in the area, fIo1.r. Censor's Job Schorr described it as the only Real news not available at the place in Russia where he bas sources must be secured second­ seen young people attending hanii- through newspapers, ra­ church in any <!ppreciable num­ ber, where religion can be , dio broadcasts and the like, Mr, taught more or less unhampered. .·Schorr said. Everything sent out by newsmen is censored and the "It's former Polish territory ~ensor's job is not to separate and strongly Catholic," the CBS truth from falsehood, but simply newsman said. "Also it has been 'under communist rule only since· to protect the government, he added. 1940, so religious traditions and , "Most correspondents spend spirit still are strong." roughly half their day checking No American Priest newspapers with a translator," Mr. Sch~rr said that inMos­ Mr. Schorr detailed. "They look oow,' foreign Catholics still at­ for items of significance, try to tend Mass in the Church of St. read between the lines, pore Louis of the French, where a through the edi,torials-Russiall Lithuanian priest is now in papers 'are heavy on these, in­ charge:, He expressed doubt that cluding some on page one-for the Soviets soon would relax hints as policy of possible their position arid allow an Kremlin moves. American priest to be stationed "Then there are the diplomatic: in Moscow under terms of the receptions-a good chance to Roosevelt-Litvinov agreement of tryout your favorite theories 011 1933. The last American priest the upper leaders." to serve in Moscow, Assumption­ Perhaps the most valuable ist Father deorges Bissonnette, sources of news are the diplo­ was expelled more than three mab; from neutral' or so-called years ago. uncommitted co u n t r i e s .. Mr. -rhey are holding out to get Schorr said he has obtained some of their Russian Orthodox of his best ~aterial by way of church leaders into the United the Swedish embassy. Least States," Mr; Schorr sai<i. likely to produce ~ew~ worth The appetite Americans have writing are Soviet press confer­ developed for a particular kind enees, ~ccordiJJg -to, Mr. Schorr. of RuSsian news discourages AmeriCan correspondents., in Moscow, -Mr. Schorr said. He ex­ plained: '''The wor~e it mak~s us appear by comparison, the "!ore our people seem to be inter­ ested."

Untrue Stories

WET WASH

He blamed what he desCribed

DRY CLEANING as "American masochism" for some of the sensational headline FLAT_ WORK

stories-later admitted to be un­

1066 COUNTY STREET true - ,which hav~ appeared NEW 8EDFORD under a Mosc,ow dateline. He Aid that among such stories WY 7-9798 were the firing and recovery of

Moral Obligation one Continued 'rom Page ODe

the Bishop, means nothing more than the practice of the love of God. Pointing out that young people should be especially im­ pressed with safety in' tratl'.ic, Bishop Mussio condemned an He.' encouraged blind persons use of the highway for· "prank to enter actively into Canli, con­ strips, emotion discharges, port­ ferences and pre-mar'ital groups, able 'pars and'lovers' lanes." discussion clubs and the more Parents were'called on by the common societies, such ;,s the Bishop to give a' good example Holy Name and the Sodality. in d'riving. "When parents. es­ Speaking of the special apos­ pecially in the presence of their tolate to which the blind belong children, ignore the rules of the because of their handicap, the road, they are giving their chil­ priest said the sightless "must be dren a green light to disaster," l!.ware of their importance in the continued the Bishop. work of saving others by prayer. "We are extremely presump­ example and conversation." He ~u'ous when we exempt our­ said the blind have the ;ability to achieve a high degr'ee of' s~lves from the reasonable pre­ cautions established for safe sanctity. driying. There are few emergen­ . While praising the work of cies in life sufficient' to justify 'guilds and other organizations which assist the blind, 'the priest' our endangering the safety of others on the highway." cited' the abiding responsibility which families bear to assist ,their afflicted ~em~rs.

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National Director L,egion Speaker

THE

ANCHC~­

Thurs., Aug. 14, 1958

Rev. Francis Larkin, SS.Cc., Ilutional director of the En­ thronement the Sacred Heart, was principai speaker at the Curia meeting of the Legion of Mary held at St. Vincent's Home, Fall River. A Praesidium report was read by Our Lady Queen of the World PJ:'aesidium of St. Anne's Parish, Fall River. Assignment of re­ ports for the September meeting include Our Lady of Fatima Prllesidillm and' Morning Star Praesidillm. The Curia I>icnic will be held

starting at 1 p.M. Sunday, Aug.

24, at Cathednll Camp. The an­

nual retre<lt will be held Oct.

10-12 at 'the camp.

Counsel reports were read by

the pl'esident as follows:

GIFT TO CHURCH: This lakefront lot a t Chatham, gift of Ralph Guida of Brewster Cork, Ireland, reported that to Holy Redeem~r Church, Chatham, was sold at auction to Nils P. Herdenberg. Photo 250 Legionaries attended their

congress. SOllth England I"eports shows! lef.t to right, ~eo Farrenkoph; Alfred Sankus, president of Holy Redeemer,Holy that 1,000 Legionaries in that Name SocIety; Mr. GUIda, the donor, and Freeman Phillips. Holy Name Society spon­ district made a pilgrimage to sored the auction. ", '_ (. {:;~ Lourdes.

Paris reports progress in Ex­ tension. Bombay-Calcutta Curia VATICAN CITY (NC)- The 'hundred years, they will now hands on the clockfaces which now has 12 senior and 10 junior praesidia. Reports were also read 'machine age has invaded the lie discarded in a great store­ have a diameter of i3 feet. from St. Louis, Chicago, Puerto. ancient towers of St. Peter's room near the belfries where Wall Records basilica and forced its t~o-cen- they ponderously ticked out the Rico and Venezuela. Apart' from an occasional in­ turies old clocks into retirement. years. Their sole contribution to spection and oiling operation, On visitation of Praesidium, F'rom now on; for who the newcomers will be their lead Our Lady of the Rosary and Our there will be no need for anyone Lady of Fatima will be visited. knows how many centuries, the weights. to climb into the belfries 'any­ The new clocks are not Roman, more. But memories of the past On extension, Santo Christo, St. giant cogs will turn to move but Genoese. They come from Mary's and St, Jean Baptist par­ ,the hands' and mark the hours, will remain there in several andl all will be done mechan:" the factory of Roberto Tubino recor"ds ,marked on the walls by ishes in Fall River and St. Peter's in Dighton will be icaHy. Other wheels will move of Uscio near Genoa. Tubi~o and bellringers. to toll the bells that sound the his two sons, descendants of visited.

One ,tells of the death of a hOllrs and mechanically call the three generations of clock beUringer: "On January 4, 1883, Priests in attendance included fail;hful to pray the "Angelus" makers, were thrEle months ~in Felice Borzoni passed to a better Rev. Albert Shovelton, St. three times a d a y . ' building them. The cost: $4,800. life." The last of seven gener­ James, New Bedford; Rev. Louis No longer will men like Felice Same Appearance ations of Borzoni bellringers died Boivin, St. Joseph's, New Bed­ But the clocks like the Church, only a few years ago. ford; Rev. Francis Regis, SS.CC., BOI~zoni and Francesco Neri go their way through a maze of always willing, to adapt to the Another inscription marked in St. Joseph's, Fairhaven; Rev. Ed­ corridors, passage ways and age- while preserving the tradi­ pencil records that "new springs ward A. Oliveira, Our Lady of 'stairs to climb into the clock tions of the past, will not change were fitted (to the clock works) Lourdes, Taunton, diocesan mod­ rooms to wind the springs and in appearance. The clock faces on July 16, 1880." Church his­ erator of the Legion. ring the bells. All we' be done will remain; only the mechan'­ tory is noted in one which tells by the new mechanical clock isms'will be replaced. Outward­ that "the happily reigning Pon­ works and automatic bell-ringers ly the only di,fference ,will be tiff 'Leo XIII was made Pope which are now being installed. that they will now tell the time BUENOS AIRES (NC)-Arch­ on February 20, 1878." The four mechanisms which correctly. bishop Mal'io Zanin, Apostolic A case of mistaken identity is are going into retirement made T~ree new works will dp th'e ,Nuncio to Arj!;C'ntina who repre­ noted in an inscription that their det-ut in 1769 when they job formerly done by four. In r~ads; "On October 17, 1831, b~ell­ sented the Holy See during for­ were instalied by the Roman times past the two clocks on the rmger Francesco Neri was mis­ mer President Juan D. Peron's outside of the basilica and the taken for a well-known thief violent anti-Church campaign in clclockmaker Raffaele Fiorelli. 1954, has died here in Argentina After performing their task more two clocks on the inside each had and arrested." or less faithfully for almost t~o its OWl! mechanism, Now the two from diabetes. clocks will be tied to the one mechanism by an axle 100 feet Tuning, Repairinc long. &: Rebuildin&, The new machines, with auto­ matic winding systems an'd bell­ Our Lady of Victory Confer- over the French National Rat.!;o. ringers, stand six feet eight ence, St. Vincent dePaul SoHis appearances with the world inches high. They will mov~ the ·Co. cicty, will sponsor an organ re- famous Boston Pops Orchestra cital at 8 P. M. next Sunday at have been carried over every Designers & Builders Our Lady of Victory Church in major network in the country. of Centerville. On last April 22, Mr. ZamPIPE ORr.ANS . The recital will feature Berj kochian received a special invi": Zamkochian, celebrated young tation to play for the President , P. O. Box 347 ,New Bedford organ virtuoso who has gained in the White House. Berj Zam­ WYman 3 ·8683 the international reputation as kochian has gained special dis­ one of the leading organists in tindion for ~is many dedicatory the' United States. recitals. He is at present the muMr. Zamkochian has presented _ sic director of St. Theresa's concerts throughout the United C;hurch,. West Roxbury; and States and Europe; his per- i.ecturer in Music at Regis Col­ forma nee on radio and televilege, Weston. Ilion has been presented to all Committee members include parts of the world. Mr!;. Walter E. Baker, Jr., Mrs. While repl'csenting the United Edward Kelly; Jr., Mr. Arthur States at the Third World ConD. Maddalena, Jr., Mr. Henry gress of Music il'\ Paris last sum- L. Murphy, Miss Jean McDon­ mer, Mr. Zamkochian's concerts oug'h and Mr. Edward Welch. were played throughout, France Tickets may be obtained by _ _",.,.-'~_____ calling Mrs. Walter E. Baker,

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Clocks of

St~))eter's M~derni%ed With

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Practice Religion In Reformatory ELMIRA (NC) - Of the 430 nom ina I Catholics admitted to the New York State Reform­ atory during the year ending last April, 90 per cent (387) has seldom if ever attended church. Also, the parents of 89.5 per ceQt of the men (395) were not regular church goers. Of the 342 "Catholics" admitted to the re­ formatory C for offences other than parole violations, 83.9 per cent (287) had never attended a Catholic school, and only nine men-2.6 per cent- had attend­ ed a Catholic high school. The inst.ih~tiQn's Cathdlic chaplain, Msgr. Francis J. Lane, says, "Most of these men know nothing about religion and have never received any sacramentS beyond Baptism." Spiritual Rehabilitation "Even with a very good vo­ cational and academic program, if there is not instilled in the hearts and minds of men the spark of religious, moral and spiritual values of life, any at­ tempt at rehabilitation will be in vain. This can best be accom­ plillhed by individual treatment, by interviewing and counseling each one separately." Although attendance is volun­ tary, the prison chapel is filled to capacity for Mass on Sundays and holy days, and a weekly novena service is held in honor of St. John Bosco. During the year there were' 16 converts to Catholicism among the inmates. Of 350 men paroled during the 12 months, 90.9 per cent (318) returned to the practice of religion while in­ mates of the reformatory.

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-:'THE ANCHOR Thurs., Aug. 14, ,1958

The Sign 'maga~ine fbI' August quotes a ,pen~trating statement of Father' Louis -Bouyer, a' French Oratbriari and one of. the ,Tn()st brilliant of the liturgi~al schol~rs. , ' , Father Bouyer, in explaining that the liturgical move­ m~n~ is neither esoteric nor ~istocratic, says 'th~t,.it ineans ,TODAY - St. Eusebius, Con­ gettmg everyone--clergy, and laymen-to partIcIpate ac­ fesSor. ,He was a Roman priest tively in Divine ,worship and cease acting as patrons in sometimes honored as a martyr. a cafeteria. ' , During the Arian troubles, about ,Patrons in a cafeteriaar'e' essentially individuals, each , 257'; at· the order of Emperor 'Coilstantius, he was imprisoned ' one intent upon ',getting what he wants wIth rio 'sense of ' by' being shut up in a room in' any coimecti()fl"with his'neighbor: ' I , ' his own house. He died after Many Catholics go :to Mass, with" .that same '-attitude. BPending seven months in con­ Each one attends Mass as an individual. There is, no corrt­ atant prayer in the room-prison. munity sense-no realizatio'u that he is n'ot here alori,e, but " , ,') , , ' ,"., ",.' TOMORROW-The Assump­ that he is united with all others at Mass, that he is amem-: tion' of the Blessed Virgin Mary. bel' of a wor.shiping community. There is no idea of social : This Feast, a Holy Day, of Obli­ gation' in' ,the, United States, - worship~adoring and thanking and ,petitioning and aton­ ing'to God as aJ!lember of a worshiping'group.' " commemorates the taking up, 'Sometimes a Catholic at Mass will, not even' realize ,soJ.!l and body.. of the Blessed that- he 'is uniting' with Christ, offeting his' own prayers' Virgin into heaven after her , , '. \ ' death: and sacrifices through Christ and with Chri~t arid in Chr~s~;' "Who alone ,makes, these worthy of ,presentati~ri, to t h ~ S A T U R D A Y - St. Joachim, "husband of St: Anne' a'nd father " , 'Father. , , ,', . ' of.the'inessed Virgin Mary. VirIndee~, the attitude at Mass is often'one'of',thecafe-;': , tually nothirtg is known of his teria patron-what can the individual'get-'Olit, of it; ,The Month. life. He has,been honored in the ,fi'rst purpose of' the Mass is the first purpose of li1'e:-.-.:to, 0(. Eastern Church since, its earliest adore 'God. The i~di\'idual must never lose sigM of ' i h e ' d a y s , , , a n d i n the Western Church . f~ct that he was created by GOd' for one' reasoJ.l ~umptio'" ,lPflc,e the 16th century. to worship God, and that he must do ·thisnot only as an. SUNDAY-St. Hyacinth, Con­ individual but as member of a worshiping community-:': fessor. He was a member of an the Church-and that this ean be ,GOne adequately only,' Hollywood in Focus n illustrious Polish family, who in. union with Christ. . . . '. ~7. ~l became a Canon of Kracow but

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Men have lost,track of the meaning of worship. It is. a word that is unfamiliar and an idea that ,is' unknown. ,I 'Worshi.p does not mean asking God for things; It does DOt mean beingapa'ssive spectator, at. Mas$. , Worship is, in reality, the great spiritua.l 'action of man. In it man joins the: whole Communion of .Saiilts in reverent adoring delight in God. Worship is Hie little human spirit's humble adoring' acknowledgement of. the riJe.l1sur~ leas gloI:Y of God. ' ',.:,' "What can I say', .my God, my Holy' ,Joy! Wh, a~t ea,n

Anti,cipates With ,Pleasu,re ,::Jj~:~g t~~. ,g~:~~ca;:llO~i~;' R t' f Ha r'd'yam F I-I y"',', , ~'f-.:;\' journey to Rome in the early ' e urn 0 .) \ a1200's. He made, three great ap­ . . '

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ostolic journeys; which took him from the Scandinavian peninsu­ ' Remember' the Hardy family? They. are. reunited at laT t~ Tibet. He died, an old Carvel and will shortly visit your loc~l theaters. If,you, are ~an,.m Kracow, and was canon­ tQo young to rememl:!er them, I urge ~ou to mak'etheir Ized m 1~94. , acquaintance, ther.e; If you recall tl'te long and 'su~ce8s.:ful MONDAY-St. Agapitus, Mar­ MGM series; you will n e e d ' tyro Patron Saint of Palestrina, no nudg' tions, and believable family sit.u.; he was of noble birth and lived any man say when he speaks of Thee?" That, in the words' mg. atlons than the loyalty and in.,. in the third century. At the age of St.' Augustine, il;1 the spirit of- worship. " ,,' It appears that only Andy, terest of the movie-going fI,mer- of 15 he was arrested as a Chris­ , "My .soul magnifies the Lord, and my spjrit rejoiceS. Hardy ever went away;· HiB, ican fa!TIily. tian aM was thrown to wild in ,God my Savior." That is Mary's -worship of God. , return to fill the honored place This has been so IOf\g 'beasts in the ampitheatre, but That must be our spirit of worship at Mass, t90. We' of .his father, Judge Hardy, who neglected as to feel practically the, animals did not harm him. · d WI'th ac t or ignored, 'in Hollywood's pursuit Th' mlracu . Ious even t was foI d Ie must J' oin with th,e membe,rs of the Church, and ,u,nite Le . St0 of wide screen elaborations upon I IS d b' H ourselves with the priest and with Christ, the great High' fo;::':: the s~~~ deep and disturbing themes. beh~a~:dnYb;o~;de::I~~sEm~ Priest, in that kind of active praise of God. We mustdelight· jcct of "Andy My guess is that "Andy Hardy peror Aurelian. in the Glory of God. We must acknowledge that God 'is Hardy ,Comes Comes Home" and its immediate sequels, tipped off by a final all that matters, and that.it is His glory that makes any:, ,<Home",. ' TUESDAY-St. John Eudes, The ' '~dden "to be continued" line, willstart Confessor. A Frenchman, he was thing else worth w h i l e . . ' emergence 0 f a movie cycle that dr'aws back the founder of the Eudist Fath­ Deep down in man's soul there is the persistent sense 'Mickey Rooney to the theaters the long_absent, ers and the nuns of Our Lady of that this is true. This sense must rise up into conscious- in Andy's over-" ,family ,crowd. This may mean Charity. He continued his mis- , ness'andwe' must time it to that universal voic~ofadoi'-. sized judicial :rob~s 'maybe a , you will not be seeing the Hardy sionarY,labors beyond his 75th ation which says' at all times-Holy, holy, holy, Lord. GOO ,'shade' overboard, but the Hardy family, on' your TV sets for at year, and was the author of sev- ' of hosts,! Heaven and earth are fu)! of Thy Glory: Glol"V : family still, remains, ,on~ of few least a,: yepr or two. ,end ascetical works. He died' ~ oJ : evet depicted in the movies, as in 1860. " be ,to Thee, 0 Lord, most !Hgh: " -,truly representative of' Amer-' MO,re Double-Talk " " . That is the active role that we must take when ,we' ic8n, small':town l,ife. Once,' again Eric Johnston, ,WEDNESDAY - St. Bernard 1'0 to mass and as, members of a' worshiping gro'up unite' , ' of Clairvaux, Abbot-Doctor. He spokesman for the major Holly­ , wood, mO'06ie producers, has been w'as bOl'n in 1091 near Dijon, Fay Holden, as ~a, with, Christ in praising God. 'On the' originai Carvel Street' talking oui of. both ('orners of France, At the age of 22, after llet, standing these many , years his mouth. , ,persuading '30 young noblemen I,S, like a ghostly memorial on the Before the Warren R. Austin to ,follow him, he joined the, 'MGM studio backlot; my wife, Institute in Burlington, Vt., ,he ,struggling abbey at Citeaux. Up­ A short while ago Rabbi Morris ,N. Kertzer., directorandt had a box picnic with the argued that "those' who say that' on finishing his novitiate he was of inter-religious' activities for the American Jewish CoJri-' Hardy'family, theothel' evening" America is somehow, distorted ,sent,by his abbot to Clairvaux, mittee in~ew' York, was awarded a'gold r:J.Iedal bj-' the ,Then they,.took', us into, a studio" or destroyed, in the eyes of, the where, he became regarded as Catholic International ;Pro, DeO University in' Rome. He: theater to see th'e film. ' world by this particular film or th~ real founder of the Cister- : was given the medal for promoting American :democratic -It 'was"'a'wonderful evening, that, are,' censors". He knows dans. During his lifetime he principles. ' " ,nostalgi~ of course;' "arid ev'ery t~at propaganda, has, made the, founded 68 ,Cistercian houses,: b·t '1..' "g' '. ""1 ,,:word "censor," an ug,ly one,'.. ' was advi,ser to popes, k.ings and' , This Cathol,ic u,niversit"y was foun, <led with the ,-Il'm',' 08, I . as p easln as a rea reunIOn ~ '~'with 1<ing':missed friends, which, -In New York he warned studio ,.~ouncils, and wa!3 the preacher. bringing democratic influences to bear on pubHc 'lne "in a way' it was. heads' "at the preval'nce ,of· of the second crusade. He died ' through the press,' radio and other mass media. movies' dealing violently with in ,1153 and 'was declared, a Ende'a'ring Fay Holden' must be a' d's't' ' stories); the theme, of J'uvenile delin­ ,Doctor of the Church in 1830. Thl's kl'nd of an' award " I mc t em b arrass-' " ,(moth~r in the Hardy ' m en t t 0 th ose cn't'ICS 0 f th e Ch urc h w h 0 accuse t h e' C hurch Sara Haden, whom you recal}' as ' quency has given rise to' increas­ of being an, agent of totalitarian,ism,' foe of deml>cracy Aunt Milly; CecI,'lia Parker, the ing, protest on the part of MPPA, through public relations American parents and resistance in every form. Itmust be maddening to those who cry out original sister Marian and, nat­ on the part of authorities abroad. officer Taylor M, Mills, re"lies: that Catholicism and democracy are' incompatible, that one urally', thE: u'biquitous Andy This latter thought gives John­ "It's not us" : . our ads are clean, ' they are passed by our own Ad­ .' (Mickey Rooney) were there, t eanno t b e a goo d C , , as' well as' new members time s on cause for concern at the vertising'"'Code office." . atholic and be a good American. ' , It is rather' ridiculous that such puerile barbs - "has added to the H'ardy clan. public ~'" Arelations d ' level. It is true that ads for foreign still t.h~ main ammunition of· those . who~e only pr,etense ~ ',Teddy Rooney, for in'stance, edge t~~:o:haiie ~:~~t H~~~n:.~. films and others offered by in­ to rehgIOn seems to be that they are agamst the Church.~ an eight-yt\ar-old image of his films might reflect due credit dependent· peddlers and pro­ The Pro Deo University's award is simply another Pa, plays Andy's son inthe'new upon our country, many others moters are mote frequent of­ indication, if, indeed, sign.~ are still needed,that 'the Church film, with Patricia .Breslin as cr.eate false and dangerous im­ fenders than those which paSll recognizes and praises worth where she finds it I1d' _ 'the you~~.wifeandm~ther. ~is- pressions overseas. Only a, poli- " through the Ad, Code mill run en ter MarIan's son has grown Into t·· " by the MPPA. This is far from a eourages those th' e gang l''ng you th amusmg ,. 1Y able . the ads ' I IClanfact. would dodge this unassail­ , W h 0 promote the cause of truth " saying' that all Issued by --------_-' portrayed by Johnny Weismull~r major, Hollywood studios are A diplomat would recognize d t M f h Jr, and' "things have changed" the difference between a censor' ecen., any 0 t, em are not. W,hat is more, producer-mem~ the way we all know they do'in (in the ugly sense) and on~ of real life. ' , , keen, moral sensibility. Only a bers of the MPPA continue to Fay Holden was teJling me politician, with a flair for play­ devise, for their publicity cam­ that nothing but the 'Ma Hardy'. ing both ends against the middle ' paign books, double ,;ets of film role would have pulled her ads: some clean, qthers definitely t 'would tell'the public one thing and those who seek to cater to, otherwise. Only when the pub­ OFFICI~L NEWSpApER OF, THE DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER • of retirement'.. 't, h 0 lishers or the public object are ~~"I've,~ had I't", she sal'd~ "but I I anot er.' . Published Weekly by The Catholic Press ot-the Diocese ot fall Ri'v~ suggestive and salacious ad lay~ do agree the public needs more You Can' Help outs withdrawn and cleaner ones 410 Highland Avenue pleasant stories about family In much the same fashion the submitted. Fall River, Moss. OSborne' 5.715,1 This system tips of! the whole people ·instead 'of social and Motion Picture Producers Asso-.. , political problems; so I will play· " ciation ' att" "..,ts to dodge the game. The idea is to get away PUBLISHER this- part', as "long as I 'and the' issue of ' .. ·ty film advertising. with all that can be gotten away Most Rev, ,James L Connolly.D'.D.. Ph.D. series can stand up". ,The Los Angeles' Newspaper 'with. Fortunately newspaper, ,GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MANAGER PUblishers As_ociation recently publishers turn the heat on the To be Continu~d Re". Daniel F. Shallo9: M.A.. Rev. John P.- Driscoll asked the film producers to '~act film advertisers when enough . ,How' long this 'may be will as their own censors" and stop ,indignant readers write in to MANAGING EDITOR;, depend more upon the writers'discusting. ad. copy. stop their papers, Attorney Hugh J. Golden .... kDack ~or ,life..,like characteri2.3- , With· pained innqcence &be And does this include you!,

' By Wilham, ,~. Moormg

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~ ~he ANCHOR

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Stonehill Names'

Drive Chairmen

John S. Ames, Jr~, Dr. Jacob Brenner, and Atty. Daniel Buck­ ley have been named honorary co-chairmen of the forthcoming $100,000 Stonehill College East-' on campaign, accorc.Iing to an­ nouncement made today by Abraham Brooks, community chairman. In making the announcement,' Mr. Brooks said: "The accept-" am;e of three of Easton's most honored citizens, representative of all faiths, as honorary chair­ men is an important step for our Stonehill College program. Their acceptance is based on the nonsectarian admission pol­ icy of the college, as well as the advantage of .having a Liberal Arts college located within the borders of Easton, open to e"ie.·yone, regardless of race, color or creed. As Stonehill Col­ lege grows, so shall com­ mimity." Frank H. Sargent, Jr. of North Easton, has been appoint- , ' ed Memorial Gifts Chairman for the Easton Campaign. The cain­ p~lign wilt be conducted this fall and will be the first, of 16 Com­ munity campaigns to be organ­ ized for the Development Pro­ gram in the immediate service area of the cO,llege. The Memorial Gifts Commit­ tee under Mr. Sargent has ac- ' cepted an objective of $60,000 of the $100,000 Easton goal and win solicit individuals,organi­ zations and business firms for gifts of $312 or more, payable over a three-year period. A meeting of the planning committee' for the Easton FUnd will be held at a dinner tonight at. the college. Mr. Brooks will preside.

MONTREAL (NC) - Thousands of pilgrims from Canada and the 'United States have made the

The annual outing of the Fall

River Catholic Nurses Guild

will be held tomorrow at the'

summer residence of Mrs. Mar­ garet Quinn in Lakeville. Members, are permitted to bring guests to the affair whi~h will start at noon and will in­ el.ude,swimming and card games. ,Those planning to attend' are ask~d tQ bring box lunches.' ,BE;yerages and,dessert will be ,~~rved. , " ~,' . ,,' \

THE

ANC~OR­

7

Thurs., Aug. 14, 1958

was for

the beatification of Brother Andre whose cause ia now before authorities in Rome.

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BYZANTINE RITE: Arch- . bishop Constantine Boha­ chevsky; top,' Apostolic Ex­ arch of Philadelphia, has been, made a Metropolitan, by the Holy Father. Bishop A b S ' m rose enyshyn, O.S.B.M. bottom, Exarch of Stamford, is head'of the suffragan Ex- ' archy which includes - St: John's Parish in Fall River., The" Bishops have ,jurisdic-, tiol1 over Ruthenian Catho-: lieS of the Byzantine' Rite. ' NC Photo. . ~ ~<

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Jesuit TeQ'ch.es New Math Systetn

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CHESTNUT HILL (NC) -..:.. schools and be tried in sev­ While most children head for" eral more this coming year.' ' the' nearest swimming spot tms' 'Surprisingly' enough, English summer, 48 youngsters rush out' plays a large part in the study of to Boston College each morning' mlnibers" .Fot how can you de-" for a' refreshing dip hlto a new' tel"mil'le' whaT operations 'are to·.. system of mathematics. be performed 'unless you'know' The youngsters, with' the ex­ ell:actly 'what is meant?" ' cel:itiori of one, have' just fin­ 'To'dram'atize this, the chil.:;' ished the eighth grade' and were' dr-en analyze the Constitution selected for participation in the: the United' States., Its: language," Mathematics' Institute' on tbe' amd, ,provisions determine what basis' of general, rather than' is"and ,what is not .lawful in' our:.. mathematical ability:' society. When applied to'mallie-', They study numbers as writ­ matics\ the assumptions. a ,pupil!, ten in Chinese, Babylonian, begins with, ,the terms used 'and, IVJ,ayan, Ancient Egyptian, and th-eirmeaning, determine what Greek: Then they are invited to' operations can be performed in dElvise a number system of ~hei.i" th,e: mathematical system., ow,n, Al,ong with the HinduTeachers Observe " Arabic system, which uses a "Wh'l th h'ld th' k th • base of 10, they are taught to' Ie, e c I ren In "eIr: th ' b" t . . h' h' way through the problems pro­ u~ e, mary sys em, .w IC IS posed" by Fa ther BezusZka, 88: the number theory behmd mod­ th t' t h' s't t:i hi d ern electronic computers. Then ma, ema ICS, eac ers 1 e.n' the q'uinary system, using the' them obse~'vll1g the proceedmgs." base five is thrown in just for Later! ~hlle the students' wor,lt " 't' ' practJce problems under the' dl-' prac Ice. , tt f - t ts" , th 'It's all part of the theory of rec on' 0 aSSIS an , In -auo er' the Ilead of the Boston College room thetea.chers eVa1uat~ ~he rriatheriuitics department, Father lesson and dl.SCUSS the teacbmg' StilOley J. Bezuszka, S.J. He be­ methods requIred to get the, con­ lieves' it better to, solve one cepts acros~. Ill'oblem, in 10 different- ways The'teachers "'epresent 75 dif­ rather than'to work 10 problems ferente" sc~~ls, hail, from 131 in' the same way. states, Wasl'ungton, D. C., 'Puerto Father Bezuszka spoke on Rico,,' arid Baghdad. Thirty teacb "New' Trends in Mathematics" in public schools and 58 are:. at the third annual convention n'iembers' of religious orders" of the Catholic Teachers Asso­ e:ither priests, Brothers" or ~uns. c:iatioh 'of the Fall River Di'ocese, As part of the control of the' at St. Anne's School, Fall River, e,llperiment, the children' 'must last April. leave the "textbooks at school. , Devises Textbook This insures,' no cramming or For the past two and a- half help from home.. "The beauty of years he has been working with this, system," says Father Be­ mathematics teachers,in devising' z'LlSZka,,' "is-that you don't correct 11 new textbook in modern high parents' homework. They' IIchool mathematics. Published couldn't ,help the children be­ and revised under the name of cause they wouldn't know what "Sets, Patterns" and Operations," '\life', were talking about. For ex-, the text has already been used ample, bow many parents' are tMl a controlled experimental familiar with the binary syste~ asis in some Massachusett. L~t alone the Theoa' DE Set.a!"

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THE ANCHOR- , .

Vac~fion With6randchildren D-ot' I Re-Elect

Is 'LJnJorgettable E x p e r i e r i c . e M i s s Maguire

By Mary Tinley Daly.' , . A trio of eldest grandchildren have spent-the p~t three days at our h o u s e . ' . " "Gran'rna," a copfidential whisper was purred into our. ,ear as we stopped for a red light, Lu Ann's soft" brown hair · brushing our ch(;~k, "Want (Here's hoping Mommy will me' to blow the lIghts green always have breath tmQugh for for yoU?' Blow :e~l green all, an "upsa-daisy!" and never rtl/ich the way?!' , o u r puffing stage!) ,

BOSTON (NC)-Julia F. Ma­ guire.of Topeka, KanSas was re­ elected national' regent of the National Circle, Daughters of Isabella, at' their 59th annual convention held at the Statler Hilton Hotel here. More than 1,400 delegates from the United States; Canada andt the Philippines attended the Personally, we could think' of . Lesson in Relax:~tio~!, , four-day meeting. Public climax nothing more red-carpetish than . We even re..,learned the I'eof the convention which was deIUch VIP treatfI'eshment of an' afternoon nap. voted mainly to' business meet­ ment n~thing Somehow, . watching children 'ings, was a Solemn POl1tifical ~ut g~een lights relax.,soeffortl~~~ly in the stil~ Mass in .the Cathedral, of the the way ... ' ' of the early afternoon mak,es'~he , , i\. Holy Cross, ,offered by Aux!liary "I'm blowing "How to Relax" al'ticleswe read ..' , " , '. '. • ' '. . ; M 'M~\ Bishop .Eric ,F.. MacKenZie ,of Gran'ma." L~' .eeni}utile.', ,"." . A NUN S STORY: SIster :Mary Thomas Mor~l .' .... 'Boston with Msgr. Edward J .. Anne 'took a, W~ a?u~ts, in thcn:e, a~tlc!es, .. first nun to intern at Bellevue MedicaLCenter, New York, -,Shea ~ational chaplain, as arch.­ .·e'ep "breath are,: advisec;l to'Dlassag~ ~r:"-examines a heart:, patient'· in' theeme,rg~ncy ward. Sister Pl'i~si and Father Joseph ~ and . blew; until,should~rblades, ,w rub the bac~ , :Mary .expect~ s'tudy trop.ical medi~in.e befor~ going to'8 ,BeattY~, Ma5sachus~tts S t a·t e )aero face was of our necks, dO a round-and~ mission probably' in the South PaCific. NG Photo. ,chaplam, as deacon.. .. aear,ly .a~ red round with the' fil\gcer'1l ' at the' . , ", ,'" . In the sermon, Msgr. FranCIS the light. 'temples. .. " " . . ' , ., J. Lally, editox: of The Pilot,

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IS Boston archdiocesan newspaper, told'the members to model them­ Sean." she. 01', . . If' you watch srn~ll children, I selves after the Blessed Mother. dered the backseat :p'assengers, , you find that you Just h a v @ , t o " ' A l t h O U g h ' M a r y r e p r e s e n t s a " re gonE,. , , Miss Hocy'~ topic wHlbe wom' ' "Blow!" • ,. ' . fl 0P7-an dyou '. WASHI NGTON '(NC) - Coo " , < perfectl'o'n which cannot be . th e d e.i l' g ht. 0 f d' , ' 'f '1 tee1'S an's 'service 'to the '.local com­ Th ere.ls ,Three pairs of lips pursed and .. .ISCOVtributions 0 wom~n vO,un equaled, he said, this fact "does 'the concerted blow-or the fact evrmg the/ fascmatlOn lOthe to the growth of the Church and mUhit)"; Mrs,' Lee's, the world not reproach us or put us to that time was t.p -- made the commonplace:, a ~utte:r!IY. poised improvement 'of communities .in community; Sister Maria del confused shame.. On the con,.. lights turn green as the children O? a .flowe~; a bird .clilggmg for the United States will he re- ,Rey,:the missions, and Mrs,. Sultrary, it is our solace and, hope clapped their hal1ds in satisfac- hiS dmner m the ram-drench.ed viewed at the 29th national:.-conlivan, government . of salvation. It is because of her '·tion.· . . earth; a swarm. of an~ bUSily ~ention of the National Council Miss Hoey has'worked through purity-strange, consoling para­ 'Blow '''~m Gween'. carrying sand, one ~:ram at a of Catholic Women. . the Kerby.Foundation to endox-that we who are defiled' '-We alwath blo~ 'em gween' time; even an egg frying, changSessions will be held starting courage understanding and ac:', 'can find' in her not the portent with ceptance by Catholic iaymen 'of our ,punl'shment but the pledge for Daddy,", Deirdre' testified ing'texture It' b th every d second. ti .• 'Se'pt, 20 in .St. Louis: Some 10,,' seen a and 'women of their role in the o'f OU' l' own perfection." 801emnly. "Now v.'e blow 'em h 11 free- 'tay vaca on 000 delegates are ,expected to . we S, a never orge.. ../"' ,,{\..,.. attend the five-day meeting 1;>ecivic 'life of democratic society. Mrs. LOUi'S Budenz spoke at peen' for you,' Gran'mil}'.' -,VI , . we Mar kS AnniVerSI:Jry ,. ~,. invitation of She' was awarded ~he Sienna the natl'onal banquet, w, ith Helen How to keep up tlris magIc, '~_,I'ng' held' at the " wondered? Let's see .. : those . , . ,,' Archbishop Joseph E. Ritter of Med'al by Theta Phi Alpha, naB. O'Donnell, national di'reetor, St. Louis and the, St. Louis "tio'nal Catholic social sorority acting 'as ch·airma.n and Mrs. lights are. synchronizec!:. for 30, O f Her Profession.. ' miles per hour-if we drive 30!h, . A former member eI. st. Archdiocesan Council ofCath- ,and NCCW affiliate, for her 'Carolyn B. Manning, past na­ ,·we'd approach while the1 were.,' Mary's parish, North' Attlebol1o, olic Women. achievements. .tional regent, as co-chairman. ' still red and the "blow" .would ',is. observing the 25tb .anniver\' Noted Speakers \ Mrs, Lee was appointed to the Among those from New Bed­ do the trick. It worked every sary of her' profession as a M.argaret Mealey, NCCW exInter-American Commission, a ford taking an active part in the time; all the ~ay. to th~ super':' Carmelite 'nun at Holy Cross,ecutive secretary, has announced 'specililized, agency of- the. 01'sessions were Mrs. Ernest Leten­ market. And there, ~he children Monastery,. 317 East B "-Street, that Msgr. Paul F. Tanner, gen:ganization of A~erican Statesdre, Regent of Hyacinth Circle -Wished" a parking space. , Iron Mountain, Mich. , eral secretary of, the National 'b~ Presi.denfEisenhower in No. 71, who served as Chairman . Sean in the basket seat, the Sister Mary Saint John of the . Catholic Welfare Conferenc.e, 1952, She was elected vice chair- 'of the Committee on Nomina-. two' girls holding O;ltO, the. sides, Cross, the form'er Miss Catherine, parent body of ,NCC'w, will dis':' mini of' the 'commission at its, tions; Misses Lydia Pacheco and 1 we made 'our leisu rely way ziich of Pl~ihville, was ,professed' .cuss '~Woman's Service to the ." 12th Assembly' at the Pa~ Amer-. Martha A. Douglas, Past Regents around the market. as a clo'istered Catmelite on the 'Church.". . ' ican Union in Washington in who.served as clerks fOl' the conMy daddy's to~atoes ar'e big- .. .feast of the Nativity.: of ,tht) ,He will be joined' by four' 1957. . vention; Misses Natalie Ferreira, <) ,er'n those,' Lu A~rie scor.!1fu,lly, Blessed Virgin Mary, Sept. 8; women noted for their personWell Known Works Alice Miller, Dorothy Gibbs and waved a hand, at the pile of 1933" at the" carmel at Grand al careers ,,of service: Jane , Hoey', Eileen Marshall who served as S i s t e r Maria del Rey joined , 'tomatoes.' "My,' daddv. 'says that Rapids, Mich.' N....w a'nd Washington, D.C., the Maryknoll nuns in 1933, 'pages. Mfss Mary F. Maleady of ' ., .. York ' God makes the sunshine and .. In November, 1950 Sister Mary dl'rector of the Ke.rby Founda- Fall River and Mrs. Lillian. Among books she has. written 'rain make, his tomatoes big 'St. John was one of II group of tion and former director of the are' "Her Name is Mercy," "In Guthrie of New Bedford were 'cause they'i'e goo.d for children. '. nuI')s sent to fou~d a'new carmel bureau of public assistance of and'. Out the Andes," "Nun in ,·co-chairmen of the tour to his­ Only -sometimes'," Lu Anne hesi- 'at Iron ~ountairt· on l:J;te ~ic~ithe U. S, Department of Health, Red' China," and "Bernie Betorical spots in the vicinity of tated, "Daddy has to water 'em gan pen~nsula at the mVltat~'\ Education and Welfare; Mrs. comes' a Nun." Boston. '. wit.h the hose. Well, Igues some':" of the BIshop of. Marquette. ' ~ Floyd W. 'Lee, San Mateo, N,M., ' _~~~.~••~.~•••~~ ••• ~~••••~.~•••_ •• ~~~ times God's too busy to make it Alumnae Group Plans' b-' U. S: deJegate . t~ - the .Inter­ rain." -. ' . , . ..:1 Amencan Commission of Wom-. There wa's something theologDinn'er, Fashion Show en; Sister Maria del Rey, public Ically 'askew here, .. We hastenSacred Hearts Academy (Fall relations director for Maryknoll ed to add that God is never too ' K Sul River) Alumnae Association will Sisters and Rep. Leonor . ­ busy~but He expeets people to hold a combined, dinner and livan, of Missouri. work for their tomatoes, to give them a drink when they need it. fashion show Monday, ·Oct. 20 at ,'~I wanila drink," Deirdre White's Restaurant to replace spoke up. "Hav'e you got enough the annual Fall banquet. ' 'When irs time: m 0 'n e y to get us cokes, Mrs. Helen Foley Hargraves Gran'ma?" and 'Miss Anne' Marum are co­ to retire ••• Buy chairmen of the .event, which.is. Someday Is Now open to the public;' . . There was enough money for The membership drh'e, headed that-but almost not enough by Mrs. Veronica Heywood money at :the check-out stand, Dunn, . will be held Sept. 15 thanks to· Sean al1d his own through Oct. 15. -, Private shopping. Mrs. Maureen Kenne,dy Kenny "My favor" Grand'ma," he presided at the executive board would say at every aisle, pitch­ meeting . .iJi the aosence of the ing a can of a paekage of his president, Mrs. Jeannine Letour­ , favorite 'fruit, cereal or peanut neati Dionn,e. butter into the basket'. ,But with

that intriguing srriije and t,he", ~-·_·_·_'-,· eonfidence that his '.'favor" was automatically his-for-the-ask­ , .' ONE STOP' • . ing, who were we t6 re'sist?

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alert preoccupation 'with things .:. _ _ o~~~o~~~_ _ of the present, the lhdng to the fullest of every single minute~ o "Someday," "next week" have no meaning, If we'rc~ going on a picnic, we go 'now and start· Rt. 6 ~ The Narrows in North Westport / packing! ' There were tears and, spats, bumps and bruises, but no hold­ Where The ing of resentment. Entire Family .' '" At RATES THAT WILL SAVE YOU ,MONEY And the utter frankness! C~n pin~ ~mparisons 'are convincing! Come in and get the' .~igures . -HI like your face' when you're Economically .lIffiiling, ,Grandma, but I don't : · like it when you get that crack in your forehead." , _ ' "I like your house but I like :. MIl'S better." : '. '. _ "Of. NEW BEDFORD ,"Why ,do you 'Uumph"

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Savings' on' Coats, ,Jackets ,By Ellen Kelley "­ . This is the year when 'coats inlJi~t on being noticed! JU8t about everybody allplauds this new fOCus of fashion's spotlight! Wonderful, for instance, is the prirrm donna coat with great fur collar above an utterly simple column of a wat. Indeed, there's such they ar'e cleal', rested and shin­ an entirely new school of ,ing. Don't be afraid' that care­ thinking about coats this fully s,elected eyewear will de­ year, that' you'll want to tract {rom your attractive,ness. Protect your preciou& vision ­ try 011 all the new shapes and and wear your eyewear for decide which style, is just for adornment! Toll! Incidentally, right now is the If yOU have an oval face wear pear-shaped or Ha r 1 e qui n Yery best time to buy a cloth eeat, a fur-trimmed cloth coat, 'frames, The bridge should be softly ctlrved. Lower part ,of er a fur jacket, stole, or coat the frame should be designed to, because you, thereby share in the savings offered by ,these covel' oliiscolorations or eye-cir­ cles. "pre-!;eason fashion" promo­ tions!" :Wusionsof Width Speaking of new.season coats~, , I( YGU have an oblong face, to )'Ou'U applaud, t,ll~ bea4ty, the, create the illusion of width keep Yersatility of the cashmere coat frames within the margin line which is actually fine for year. of the widest point of the'cheek­ 'rot"tnd wear!' This season, it's bone. 1rhe bridge sh'ould be 9Oft­ loomed 9Ofter'than cotton candy 1)' curved, ' and is available in fashion's most If you have a round face, ere­ flaHet'ing new and classic shapate an illusion of slenderness by Jogs. wearing frames slightly wider Added to its, beauty are the th_ the widest point of the I'8pturous colors of Autumn, plus. facial outline. The bridge should • reasonable price tag! The re~ be as widens possible, and IftIlt? A wide, impaccably tail­ sHghtl:r arched. There should -be oroo lIClection of affordable a definite upsweep to the iow­ cashmere coats in natural, vic: er part of thc frame. una, black, blue and red tones! If you have a square face, cre­ Cosmetics Important ate the illusion of width, by Va<:ation bound? Before you' wearing a franle slightly wider .ven glance at a travel brochure, than the widest point of the or tal<e your lu.g~age out to air, jawline. The bridge should be make a bee-line to your favorite arched, to create seeming length eosml~tic counter or shop! This from the bridge to the point of is the one time in your life you the' chin. The lower part of 'the won't. want to take a holiday fr'ameshould have a slightly from your usual beauty routine. upswept curve. Take these bottled bits of beaut,. For Triangle Type magie with you and stay pretty If you have a triangular shape the easy way! face, create as much width as If you'd spend leisure mo­ possible by wearing' upper ments beautifully' dressed, you'n frame!l slightly wider than the .elect one of the lovely, easy­ widest, ,point of the jawline. The oare dacron-and-cotto dusters! bridge should be slightly curved A beauty I admired this week is and form pal't of an upswept everything a duster should be,' line. Lower par·t of frame should' it's fully wt,beautifully tail­ repeat. grace[ullyupswept move­ orM and prettily detailed with ment., ace piping. If you have an inverted­ What's more, it's done in drip­ "triangle type bee, keep width Of. dry dacron and cotton, that frames within temple. hairline, makes it a perfect .... travellet". _ Upper' bridge should be softly You'U pack it into your vacation curved and lower frame should wardrobe' and wear it around be full and downswept to the the house, too - every chance outer Jawline. ,ou get! I{ you have a diamond-shape W4~ar the new cap of feathers face, accent the width above the - a blaze of jet black and gold. chee'kbone, as with a modified It provides a rich, jewel-like ac­ Harlequin shape. Use wide, flow­ cent for the new silhouettes of ing ~Ipper bridge line. Lower Fall. Wear' it (leep back, and frame should be full and down­ let it cover your hair it's swept to the outer jawline. DeWll! Problem eyes and features can Great White Way be al·tfltHy camouflaged. Yes, White is right - and tops fo," indeed, your eye-Ir'ames can be Mid-Summer! Take cover -.: un­ decorative and flattering, adding der ;a frosty whitc hat so pretty greatly to the impression that over the colorful prints and here is a person whose eyewear deep, trans-season tones of youI"' reflects her own individual mid-lICason costumes! Some are beaut,.! ~ ideal for daytime wear, others , '0~ '\. are ',martly styled ehill-dlasers WOt·kin Bible Study'" for the cool of the ev~ning. Go Wins Vatican Praise . the great white way ,this Mid­ aummer and listen to compli­ PURCHASE (NC) - A nun­ menta! schol.ar at Manhattanville Col­ l~ge of the Sac~ed Heart, here Do you wear' eyeglasses? Are has r,eceivc - a Vatican letter ex­ TOll certain that you're wearing tend'iHg ,"sincere and well de­ the right frame for your face­ type? A photograph or a paint­ served" 'eongratulations to' her ing gains beaut.y and importance for her work in scriptural studies. by proper fmming. Please do Sent to Mother Kathryn Sulli­ lICe to it that you're face is ad­ equately "framcd for beauty!" van, the letter was signed by His Eminence Giuseppe' Cardinal Incidentally, a rimless eye­ PizUlrdo, Prefect of the Sacred glass i&, virtually, an unframed Congregation of Seminaries and picture. Simply add a frame ­ Universities. who commended the appropl'iate and flattering Mother Suliivan for displaying frame - and you have a "beauty "the utmost djligence" in Bibli­ pI WI" instead of a "beauty cal studies. "Your works in the minus!" ~ field." he wrote, "have been of :E:rewear for Adornment the t~reatest merit." Many present-day frames are Mother Sullivan is, professor enha!lced with charming 9 r na­ of Sacred SCI'jpture at Manhat­ mentation. Choose your frames tanv.ille College. She has collab­ for beauty with the detailing at orated with Msgr.John E. Stein­ the point you would accent ­ muHer, pastor of St. Barbara's on the brow-line to move with church, Brooklyn, N. Y., in work the upsweep - or a, cluster at on a Ca'thr,lic Biblical Encyclo­ the end to give the face width. pedill. N'ever per'mit the detail to be Mother Sullivan, a member elO8Cr to the nose than the in01. the Religiom of the Sacred Del" corner' of yoUr 'eyebrow', kearts, is the author of numer­ Avoid a horizontal decoration OWl books and articles. She is en a wide nose. th~' first woman ever admitted : Make sure that,when t~,:m.n to, membel'ship in.the CatholiC:' ill TQw-llfe'loOkS inio'·:youC:e¥e..~' .B4b~'A.aBodati" " ' , •••• ,

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CATHOLIC WOMENCONVENTION:T.he 29th Nat­ ional Convention of the National Council of Catholic Womea will meet in St. Louis Sept. 20-24. Handling details for the 10,000 delegates are, left to right, Miss Mary Donohoe of the NOCW staff, Mrs. Donald T. Shawl,co-chairman of 'the convention, and Mrs. William B. Knupp, Convention chair­ man. NC Photo. _~~,

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Canada's National Shrine of Mary Wi II Observe TEIN Assumption Feast "\ CAP DE LA MADE , ' ..... , Que., (NC) - The . ~entena~y of the Lourdes .apparlh~ms WIll be celebr:ated WIth speCIal pomp at Canada's national Shrine of Our Lady' here GO ~ugust 15, feast of the AssumptIOn. Hi~ Eminence Pau~ Emile Cal'dmal Leger, ArchbIshop of l\;I~ntreal, will officiate ~t Pon­ tIflcal ,Mass at,10 A.M. . The day will,open with a ~.idnrght !,\fass m. the ~sllica~ offered by ArchbIshop Glovanm Panico, 'Apostoli~ Delegate to Canada; a .'Mass mthe ora~ry by ArchbIshop Paul Bermer, Bishop. M Gas'!e and former Aposto,hc NunCIO to Panama; a~d a Mass at the .pavilion b! ,B~s~op G, L. PelletIer, of TrOll Rlvleres.. , Other Masses will be said con­ tinuouslyat the altar of the mir­ aculous statue of Our Lady, the centerpiece of the shrine, from midnight until noon. Blessing of Sick Blessing of tl!.e sick by Ax:ch­ bishop Maurice Roy, Archbishop of Quebec' and Primate of Can­ ada, is scheduled ~or 2:30 P.~.,

JEFFERSON CITY (NC) ­ To promote decency in the com­ munication arts, 'a thorough study of the "censorship ques­ tion" has been urged by the,42nd national coll\1ntion of the Na­ tional CatholIC Women's Union. Delegates at the Union's so­ cial action meeting also singled out three deficiencies of gen­ erai education in the United States: 1) a lack of compl'ehensive and sQHd 'programs in th,,'uPl>er grades and high school; 2) al­ lowing immature students to se­ lect their own subjects and 3) a lack of 'intellectual and moral discipline. Consumer Protest Approved resolut.ions called for a restoration oC parental in­ fl,uence with children ana point­ ed out the importance 'of Chris­ tian 90briety a~ainst the alarm­ ing gl'owth of alcoholic over­ indulgence. The wonlen commended the "splendidllCl'vice" Of the Le­ gion of Decency and the Nation­ al Office for D'ecent Literature. "Their work," the resolution read, "is the exercise of 3 con­ stitutionally guaranteed right of fredom expression - in the category of criticism, and con­ sumer protest, but not censor­

of

ship." "We insist government author­ ity has the right and duty to enforce an abridgement of [ref'­ dom of speech in the interest of

at th~ pavilion. A Mass will be offered -there at • P.M. by Bishop Emmanuel Mabathoana, O.M.I., the common good," the resolu­ of Leribe Basutoland tion added. "To 3\'oid the ne­ At th~ same ti~e- Bishop gleet of duty and the abuse of Joseph H. HQdges, Administra­ power, we 'urge a thorough tor of the Richmond Va dio­ study of the entire problem cese, will preside at' a ~~ecial freely called 'ccnsorship.''' ceremony for English-language Two Great Evils pilgrims, Speaking oC public school ed­ The llorchlight procession at ucation, the group found the 8:15 P.M., will precede a Mass system "assailed by two great to be offered ,.t the pavilion by evils," which it· identified ... His Emiilence James Cardinal political interference and the McGui,gan, Archbishop of To­ lack of religious and moral ronto. Cardinal McGuigan also training. will officiate at a Pontifical Mass at the shrine on' August 11). ''That Catholics, haye .the{r Prior to the f~ast of the own schools," the resolution Assumption there will be'. said, "should in no wise induce 'novlma conducted from August them toasstlme an, attitude of 6 to 14 by Father Gerard St.passivity OJ' disinter~stedness Pierre cH' Trois Rivieres and a toward public schools." trjduu~ from August 12 to 14 The women called for a closeI"' conducted b,.Father' Martin E. contact between Catholics in Norton, O.M.I., of Lowell, Mass. public schools and the Church.

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Davenport Catholic Messenger

.... The present crisis in the Middl~ East presents us.~ith another classic ,illustration of the need for a juridically based, supra-rational organization within which inter­ national. disputes ean'be settled without pre,i udice to any of the nations' invo~v·ed. today lies precisely in a s'upraThe prQspect of the "big' national organization' based' o'n .' powers" meeting to settle law, to which each m~l:nber na'­ the fate of' the' "little na­ tion yields its power of' aggres­

counterparts in major provisionS of the two Federal aid to edul cation proposals brought tQ' by· an adjournment-bound 'Co~ ~ress.

life

The two bills,. differing ill some provisions,. pr'ovide fede::' ral fun~s ~or scholarships, fel­ lowships and loans to college students, for purchase of certain educational equipment, for teachers' institutes andofor .other aids.

tions," like .Lebanon, _ even if ,the big powers were in a

sion and 'in return,receives' un:' . conditional asstirance'that there­ 'fore it can never' be the victim genuinely frame con­ LAY.. . RETREAT·AN'I'S CONFERENCE'. "The lo\'e of ciihitory of such aggression, of mind _ is A word federation corresponds. Christ urges me on," is the theme of1fue'National Catholic one which is not only to then'ations' desire Laymen's Retre~t Conference, to be heW at Cincinnati, Ohio, live in peace, b",t also, as not only unap-.1.

Aug. 21-23. .Shown discussing convention plans are left to The House measure provides Pius' XII has more than once

P'd R I I P ea lin g (t 0 . t e d .ou t ( no t a bl y m . h" IS April ·right: William J. Ha,lloran, rOYI ence; . ., nationa pres-' for a total of about one billion some big and pom most little na­ 1951 and December, 1953 3d­ ident; Bishop John J. Wright of'Wor~ester, Mass. Episco­ dollars, $500 million less than tions ali k e) dresses on world government), pal Advisor; Father Thomas F. Middendorf, Covington, Ky., the Senate proposal., ,but also un­ .to man's grow~ng recognition of national executive secretary and Charles L. Eppinghoff, Offer Scholarships promising, the essential unity of the human . Cincinnati, general chairman. NC Photo. Ii';'\ In both bills, graduates . of Pope' Pius race and the community or fam­ J 1\ ~ public and private high ,schools , XII, a m o.n g. ily of nations. . . . , will . be eligible ·to compet'e for others, has . Influence Liniitt~d Federal scholarships to any ac­ long insisted .What 'happened in Hungary, credited . institution ofhighel' that nat io oa·l· dignity and Korea, Viet-Nam, 'Poland,Ger-' education. ' identity, territorial, .politi'~al, many and 'the ·Middle 'East could' WASHINGTON (NC )':'-:Bishop

culfural arid eConomic inegrity, never have happened inside a Leo A.' Pursley of Fort Wayne, .Mary.Thp~asine,economics pro.:. . The measures· provide. rough­ must be respecte;:n~s fully in the world federatio~ in' wlhich';la-' lrid" a!ld' ,u.. ~.. Secretary of . fessor at Rosary' College, .'River 'ly about $205 mfllibn for approx,: . imately, . 23,000 '. scholal'ship8 ..little" nations.... a~·they; are in ',tional' aggression is effectively . -Labor James P. Mitchell will be. .Forest,IlL the' larger ones, and that 'pOlit­ . outlawed.·' ~ among ,the principal .~peakers a.t· 'A feature of the Second day "spread .over·a four-year, periOd. ical and ~conofjl\<P?werc;an~ot ',' President'Eiserihowerisrigbt the' fourth ~ational .. Catholic·· ~ssionswill be a panel·discus,..·.··The scholarships' will be· valued' be the determinant of' one's .in irisistin'g that a Middle' 'East 'Social Action Conference· to be 'sion ·'on '''Points of. Concentra- 'at between $500' and"$1,000 'for moral obligation .. io· 'th,is regard.' summit . conference, if coriferheld Sept. 5 to'7 at'the Univer"" .. tion :forthe Cathopc SocialAc-' each student' each' year;' 'Power and Rights .encether:e will be, must be"heid sity of Notre Dame, it 'was an-· tion Movement," at which Father within the framework of' the nounced here, William J. Smith, S.J" director Both bills also provide about It ~as too much, of course, to· United' Nations, The United Na:" . , of the St. Peter's CoUege lnsti$220 million for loans of as much. . The',Bishop and the Cabinet t u te o f n I d ustnal ' Relations, J e r a's-$1000 to coUeg e s t u d en t s. tions I'S the only I·mpal.tl'al a n d , .expect the big 'nations to dis­ member will address the con­ tinguish between power and disinterested world organization ference dinner on the. night 'of sey City, N, J., will be the, The Houj>e bill requires re­ rights . and. even today it· is· we have. . chairman. payment and specifies that col­ Sept. 6, it was announced by . . doubtful whether any of the ·na­ But the United Nations is not Louis F. Buckley, NC$AC presi­ .Panel participants will include leges and universities admin.i­ tions, in either East or West, a' federation, it has no law, no dent. who is chairman of the Harry O'Haire, executive secre­ ster the p~ogram, It requires acknowledge tIiat distinction or judiciary a~d only so much ~xconference. .tary of Serra International; Chi­ these institutions to put up 25 are prepared to give it meaning­ ecutive and police power as cago; James J. Lamb, South per cent of the total of funds ful recognition in internationai mem!Jer nations wish to permit' Theme of the three-day meet­ Norwalk, Conn" consulting en­ given them for loans. conduct. to it, The United Nations is irt-. 'ing will be "~Areas for Analysis: gineer; Ed Marciniak of the Encourages Teaching But if the rights of the little fluential only in the area -.f pubPresent. and Future." Father Catholic Council on Working nations in the Middle East are lic opinion, a significant area to 'Leo R. War~ C:S,C" philosophy Life, Chicago; James O'Brien of The Senate measure provideS considered of little 'account, be sure, but not- as Hungary professor at. the University of the United Steelworkers of. the loans to be administered by th· '1 d demonstrated' - a decisive area. Notre Dame, will be the speaker America, Washington, and a state agency, It also provides .elr 01 r~sdourcfes cornman a at the opening general session. Father Gerard Rooney, C.P., as­ that the borrower may work off different km 0 respect, Oil is Se'e What Happens . HI's tOPI'C wI'II' be' "The. I'mage of . 'ddl E' , . . sociate editor of The Sign Mag­ 20 per cent of the'loan for each th e M l e a s t s "power". and . Now the usual argum~nt 'of .Man I'n Contempo'rary E c o n . o m i c ' . " til' 't ' a z n Union City, N. J. yeoar of teaching in either pU.b)jc e reason f 01'1 s present posi­ the anti-fede,:alists is. that "So'Society," The i disc.ussion l ee a d e r, ' . . , " . . '. Summary by Msgr. Higgins . or non schools'Also 'n ti on· 0 f "pron:mence. ··viet Russia won't go along.. Wl~h ~ .. will be Emerson Hynes' sOciol- . - public . . ,.~. ­ '.' . , .' . A meeting· of additional conterest 'on the loan' is'arrested . . " . But the Ar;ibrl3tions, like the .Jt. . , ... ,,:~. . '. ,.':..:. ,'pgy. professor at ·St. John'sUni~ : :terence groups has been Sched- . 'while ,the borrower is engaged' . new nations i~ :Africa, ~ind Asia; I amwllhng .to grant that :pos- .'. versity . Collegeville ~Mfnn. 'u'led for the 'second' d.ay.·.·The· in teaching. .' ' . . .. , not see. whywe~ ." ... , .., .., .. ' . . . . a lso' have a g'l:ow'Jng se'nse of sibility.but.. I. ~.o· , In meetmgs of conference "conferences will: . concern the' . ;. .. \ . their own identity, as nations," shOllI'd erect a pOSsibilWr intQ it· . ..' ..: ...., .., . . '. . . Fun~s for the purchase'of 8c~. , ' . t· t·· ' . 'h ....: ., '.;." 'groups' the fields 'of rural life, :'fields"of labor-management et.Iu::' . en'titic" ip'ment' and "sOme and a "summit'! conference of cer am y, . or .w y. the' !JVestern. ·1· ..· .... . ." "t"· .... d :d···· catl·!ln., .hea"ded· 'by Fa·t·her· F.ra·n-··.. . , • . . . t;' . . il···· th '. t' 1 ·emp.()y~r. orgamza IOns an . !-. ·o,ther ..ed.uc.ational ·.aids are·· ...........

·.···· the big powers; patterned as it. " na IOn!! .a.~ .w~., ,as e ne~.ra. "'Ocesan sociaTa'diori directois'will 'cis J: McDon:riell of'the"Catholic y--Diust. ·be ..o.n 'the.. cynic~il power or ,: ... L'ab'or Gu'I'ld,,' 'Bos'ton·', "'u'rb'an 'posed h .uncommItted 'ld t· .hEastern . .. nahons.. . ' .. , ·.•'",_ on: :.... exp'Iore d . .Th'" . ese··'''d'ISCUSSlOns .' . ..iii.. the, bills.' .. . . • . conference c>l the past 'half cen- ., s. ou. no go .ar-ad . w~t.h nlans will be led by Father Michael P. 'community planning, headed by The House measure. proyidee 'ur' . a I read for a . federal character .; ' . . secretary· of, ·.Tonn.· A:' McDermott, . • y, IS y 'passe,. 0 b s: 1ete ' , '. ... , confer: .' ,Dmeen,.. executIve 'Catholic . grants on I'y to states for this, and doomed 'even befon~ it laKCS eJ;lc~, Issue.. In,vltahons;. ,a,nd see. the"Nationaf Cathol1c Rural Life . ·Housing Council, Philadelphia, 'while' the Senate'bill contains'" . ' )What happens, . C. on f'erence; D es M" '. "an d .1ay aClOn t· , t'IOns, ,prOVISion .. f I 'IC sc h)" p l.ac.e..... ' Another argument is that o.mes, I owa~. orgal11za or b non"pu 00 II F t t' . "f H . ' . . .' John Q. Adams, preSident, Man- 'headed by Donald Thoman, as-. to r.eceive·· . .low-interest loana' . rus ra l?n.. 0. opes :" ,world f~derah()? IS .an utt~rly hattan' Refrigerating Co.iNew 'sochite editor of Ave Maria ma~-= from'the government to finance The 'fact 1ft Without relevance· Y0 'rk'" d Mr"'J . h F . Don' . . N 0 t re D'ame,. I n d . thel'r .p"urch·ases, . .. '1" '. , an. s. osep - .'aZlne, . , .. that participallts -remote.lde.al, , any summit .meeting fall into ~ today s prob e.ms: Meanw~lle, nclly; 'director of, the, Hartford There will be a g~'ie;'al 'ses­ two obviously, hostile 'blocs ­ tIme. ~nd spa~e ba. ~n,ers contIn.ue Archdl'ocesan 'Labo'I' lns·tl·tute,· . ProPo~eS 'Ii1stitutell .. ... sionfo..r reports and fin.dings of· ., .. C ommumshc. .to dIssolve, th.e ·,world. ha.s dwm- , . 'New Ha'ven", .Conn·, . f"1 " ' " .. provlslon .... "­ h '11 b . a.Q.d k . ,Western ..:.. . 'llie 'confereJlce groups,'a sum­ .I nama ·maJor ­ w 0 WI e. J~c .. ey~ng fo.r polit';' dIed to a nelghborhoodl,. some booth bil.ls, ·p.ublic and no.n-pub)ie,· , ... Nun .Dlscusslon Le~der ' . mary 'of the conference by' Msgr. ical,' propag.a~dis.t.i.",.. an.d··eco'1':· of the neighborscan'tsta'111d' ea.·c·.h· " . .. "G' g': G H'g " d" t· f school teacher.s may ·par.·ticipate.· . omic 'advantage, selllS 'the" frus­ other and have' weapons 'leUla("" At an leyenirig ~ssion on .the. eor e . I gms, Irec.or 0 in government-financed in8ti-' tration of aU 'hopes for' a~y per­ enough ..to. blow' every.Uiing 'to'ope~ing day, Father Joseph Fi~~ the' Social ACtion' Dcpartment, ,tutes to ·improve... teachers' •. : manent solution ,to the !'diddle. kingdom 'co.me. , .,. patl'lck,S.r, of Fordh,am u,m_National Catholic . Welfare Con­ , . . .. .~ ·t N Y k 'u k ference; and' a bushic'5s meeting "fields such ,as general education,' Easte.rn-·proble~si whether they' . :.,' .. : .' " ...~" versl y, ew or, WI spea on h' 'student coun'sell'ng and· torel'g'D' . ~'\ '''Tn T .d T .d Wh't· 'on t e nal day of the confer':' be interrial ol,'il;lternational. 'astre,w'ster rlest . ". ... e. . re~ . owar . ~ ,I e k' F"Itzgera . I'd ,'-...Ianguage I'nstructl'on,' H,o'w'ev":;",' ...,.. . .' CoUar SocIety,'" The 'diSCUSSIOn ence.· 'F'a th er. M ar. ....

to

Bishop, Cabinet Member to Speak At· Socia I A -. ction Con f erence

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equ.

By. wHat .mayseem a paradox, . the .on'ly guarantee of any. na­ 'tion's integrity and' self,.identity

p. "' E B· Now Shrine'Dire,etor . 'leader 'will be Dominican Sister ' . .'. .' . . . . .. . - ""....... EN·F~IELD'(NCr,..o.:.FatherW~lf-~. ,.". "th'..,..... T' .. ~.~ ~ "" "gang J:. 'J!'odie'r, fo~rrier': provin- ..; "'. a 0 IC . eaC~,.ng

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C,S.C.; ~f 'Notre Dame's economics department, is' in charge 'of 'arrangem.ents for' the> conference.

although entitled to att~ndj non-' 'public school 'teachers 'will .Mit' . receive the.stipends made avail-~ able'to pup,..h..·c school ...teacher,.5.• "

. , " . . . · cial' ,of- fi'\e ,:LaSaletf~. }/athers,' . ROME. (NC)-D.e,lega~esfrom r-----"-!o,;,;;,~-...;, ......:._........-----------~--;.;.,;, ..

stationed 'hi':, East·, Brewstet- has 26 countries will attend .the f&ur' . ' ...

been' appoi~ted dire~tor .of-. the.' day sec'ond International Con':' ',. LaS:lfetfe :ShdQe. h¢i~1 in' Nevi, gress 9f Catholic Teaching, s t a r t - . . .. , • ., >, , . .. ~ ~

.. Hamp.5hh:e: ':", ' i n g h e r e Sept. II-. .The organiza-' , ' SUCCESSORS TO , . . . .-

He: "succeeds -Father Roland'. tlon seeks to link aU culturai, " , ' . Bedard"who willbecome mastet :spiritual and professional organ­ of' novices at the community's' .,. izations l' of Catholic primary novitiate in Center Harbor,' . teachers in one unified group, Anthracite & Bituminous' COAL · .:... ~~........ .... . . ~."

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K'n!ghts. of C'olumbusto National' Conlvention Next.

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CLEVELAND,(NC) -- The . program of activities for teen­ 76th national .convention of. the age· sons and da'ughters 'of deleKnights. of 'Columbus will be . gates. held here from Aug.. 17 to 22. ·More than 2,000 are expeeted to R. A. WILCOX CO; attend, . . OFFICE FURNITUR~ . A Solenl'nPontifi'cal Mass will In Stor.k t'or I m.mediat. ~f'tjvel'7 be offered. by Archbishop Ed­ ward F. Hoban, Bishop of Cleve-. • . DESKS .• CHAIRS land.. Bishop Lawrence J, She­ FILING CABINETS ", han of Bi'idgeport will preach' 75 YEARS TN S'OClETY: the sermon. . . . . . . . . .,FIREFILES • SAFES , fOU~ING TABLES., . 'Father Laurence). ~~enny,. The main 8()cial'event vvill ,be

.. S.J., 94, 'professorenieritus .., a ~tate Di'!ner, or;A~g. '·.19.:·

~ND ~HAIRS: of history :at St. LOlll'is Uni- '. Speakel willbe AU,xiliary .I;listI-~·

,.' 1. ,"'. • . . ' op John .J.,:·'Krol of Cleveland' - •• ... •

. versltY,.has Just cele.brated . and' ,Supreme" Knight . Luke E;' .,. . BEDFORD his 7Flt,h year 'in,~hecSociety Hart:, . . . . . " " FAll RIVER 5.7838' ..

ofJ e~llS. ,NC Phu~.o. . There ·",~~·.·be.'an~ugme:nted,.',.. ~_ _.... ....~ .....,

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1ME ANCHOIt-

Thurs., Aug. 1.4, 1958

11

Tells Ab!:tainers

'. Give Empty Glass

University Head Says Education Too Complex SAN FRANCISCO (NC) American education .has ex­ changed "beautiful simpli­ city for what often seems chaotic complexity,!' the presi­ dent of St. Louis University has told the American Public Re­ lations Association. Father Paul C. Reinert, S.J., reminded association members they must never lose sight of the essential nature of the learning process - ··the st.imu­ lation of a young mind by 'a, wiser one to pursue and ex­ plore and embrace trut.h." An address by President James A. Garfield in I87l was cited by Father Reinert, Pres­ ident Garfield had said that all he needed for a good educa­ tion was a long bench with him at one end and Mark Hopkins, an educator, at the other. However, today,' the "proc­ ess of teaching and iearning, in keeping with most facets of American life, has exchanged' beautiful simplicit.y for what often seemS chaotic com·plexity. • • • This whole bewildering.. . process of bringing .teacher. and studel1t toge~her has become one , . ' o f th e mos t expensive un d er.-. takings that·highergoverilment. or private philanthrophy has ever tried to support," Father Reinert declared. C'ij\i \

Holy Father Pra,· ses . .....ew Cathol,·c S,·ble .....

~EW YORK (NC) - A new

Catholic Bible hal) received

praise from His Holiness Pope Pi~s XII. The 1,452-page volume, known as "The Catholic Bible in the St. Peter's Edition," has been pub-

ON PILGRIMAGE TO LOURDES: Among the pilgrims in the party led by Most Rev. Archbishop Richard J. Cushing of Boston (left) was Rev. 'John E. Boyd, Fall River Diocesan supervisor of charities and director of radio activities.

j\\.

Primate of Pol.and Orders .SpeciolPrayers

"\ WASHINGTON (NC) - Spe­ cia] 'prayers of atonement· will Archbishop Gawlina wrote: be said in all chapels. and "As you know, on July 21 a group. of p'oiice, agents invaded churches in' Poland every eve­ ning for the next ·tpree months the' Primate's "institut'e at Jasna in reparation for recent govern-. Gora, 'where preparatory work for the holy Polish millennium' ment raids, on the Jasna' Gora Monastery. The prayers were . . is being conducted, and made a ordered· this week by Stefan sudden search . . . The search Cardinal Wyszynski, Primate of lasted from 2 p.m. until midPoland. . night and was very violent. Ar­ • rests were made, Several sacks The prelate's action was seen of documents and books related both as a protest agalns t new ' ' d t.t k ' especially to the millenium" as governmen t -lI1Splre a. ac s m the controlled press and as a well as Veritas. publications, weakening of the truce that. has were carted away. existed between church and Orders from Moscow state since 1956, worked out by· "Even, during the recent first the Cardinal and Wlaclyslaw Goattempt at a search,the t.hreat moulko, Communist leader. of arrests were heard, with these Jasna Gora is the site of the words added: "We can arrest famed shrine of Our Lady of

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r

CI b" u u'G;i -d S . A .- S. .ea men

(Cardinal) Wyszynski, too! The ·fight .agalnst the Cnurch is again b' . .' . ecommg more acute. Orders . in­ .f rom M' oscow ".mdicate its tensification. '. ' days, dear count.ry­ "In a few men, we will celebrate.the feast of the Assumption of our Most Holy Queen. Pope Pius XII, who' in 1950 prOclaimed the dogma of her glorious Assump­ tion, calls the Catholics of the whole world in the encyclical Meminisse Juvat to a prepara­ tory novena to beg for a better future for the persecuted Church behind the Iron Curtain. Seeks Divine Aid "Obedient to the call of the Holy Father, we emigre Poles

NEWARK (NC) - "To make an empty glass a gift '.J God -is a child-like thing," a meeting of the Catholic Total Abstinence Union w'as told here. "But your gift· of an empty glass is an act of sacrifice sym­ bolic o( true love, for out of love you sacrifice what might have been in the glass in a good, nor­ mal; human pleasure." Father David J. I athe, chap­ lain at Villa Marie Claire, Saddle River, N. J., made this statement while speaking at the banquet of the union's 86th annual conven­ t.ion in the Robert Treat Hotel here. \ "And .this is a good Christian practice," he continued, "to do child-like things. '-or only a Child of Christ would have t.hought of the simple things that go to make up Christianity: Things like water which be­ comes Baptism; bread which be­ comes the Body and Blood of Christ; tables that become altars for the Sacrifice of the Mass; oil that is used in Confirmation and Extreme Unction; structures like t.elephone boot.hs that become CQnfessionals; and a' sacred holding-of-hands that become . Matrimony ... "All these:'-child-like thingS',.. ·' .Father Pathe said, "given to UII by Christ and His Church and' made. into sacred things' that sanctify. nso .you do well," he declared, "to: add tQ the instruments of Grace-an empty glass-may it continue to sanctify you and save others."

Ita I·lans Decorate Papa., I Ph YSlclan ..

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Q

BOLOGNA (NC) - The Ital­ ian government has decol'ated one of the consulting doctors who treated Pope Pius XII dur­ ing the Pontiff's grave illness in December, 1954. .

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Italian President Giovanni Gronchi cited Doctor Anthony P 1 Gasbarrini, as an "honorary doc­ ular edition will be out Oct. 13. to observe the Feast of . the 0 and, which was and is a I tor" of the Italian state for hill B'bl /1 umptl'on tomorrow The gov bulwark of Christianity. L.et our . f h ProductIOn 0 t e new I e .. ss . . MOBILE (NC)-The Catholic "enlightened contributions to was an intel'llational project, in­ ernment raided. the monastery :Maritime Club here provided, .bishops, priests and faithful not the~ most' complex problems of ,volving the collaboration of both on July 21, char'ging the Ch!-!rch dormitory facilities for 7,550 sea~ deprived' of the di~ine aid meQical pathology and care .. ," . 'th pu bl'IS h'111 g .unce'n'sored ma . and comfort which thel'r brethBritish and Americ;jn scholars. WI . '" men during the past year, ac-.

OF. Gasbarrini is president-of The volume is illustrated with. terial there.. . .cording to its annual report re"; .ren· abroad "ca~' ~btain by pray­ t.he medical faculty 'and director reproduc.tio,:!s of g~eat. ~orks .,of. ~tc~bishop,-Joz~f G~~lina" .leased 'by Gerald Strang, club 'ers. . ' . of the hospital of the University art on biblical themes, an~ witi1.,.. Or~ll1ar"y f.or Poles m EXile, has' director. ." . "We· ai-e" certiin ihat,'e~pec~' of Bologna. ,. '., nunlerou;; map·s. It measures ·7% ' . a~serted m ::Rome .. that· the. , . Highiights of this year's club ially in the 'j\lbilee year' of her inches by 10lf., inches, is' more,', ~ 1g.h t . a g ~.l.n's t :the Chu~ch . activities were the welcoming Qf 'apparationsinthe Lourdes grot­ r~ FO·.R"PL"EA·SU·R·E··' than twoinches thick lind weighs m 'Poland .1S agam becommg . the 1OO'OOOth seaman to visit the to, 'the Immac\lj;~teMother ~ill • ~bout six pounds. " JrIore acute" a?d .that .':ord~rs. club a~d an all-day celeoration: not want~ to r,eject or disr.egard· •. . _ .EAT .• , . ~rom Moscow mdlcate ItS 10­ of Maritime Day which opened . our' joint"requests, I beg you all • ~~.\ tensification.", '. with the offering of Mass lind ardently, .dear countrymen, to • '. ROSEMERE (NC)-'-The larg.:.· l~ a letter.to hiS, fellow .Pollsh closed with a dinner and .dance. join ~a~h day 'in prayer from • g est statue made in a' Canadian' .emlgres ask.ll1 'for prayers for attended by some .150 seamen Aug. 6 to. Aug, 15 'before the • That-R-Rich'N'Yellow-Robust foundry will be placed in the the Church·m Polanc;l, the Arch­ and, their friends. throne' of theQue~m of Poland • 110-foot belfry of'the new 'Probishop also said that ~·t.he free­ Father ThomasW. Murphy, to "obtain' her protection over. FRESH CUT·UP POULTRY vincial f!:ouse of the Brothers of· dom ~f the ~hurch i~ !)ur~ather- port chaplain in Mobile, esti­ our riation . . . .' • the Sacred Heart here in Quebec. 1apd IS agall1 threat,e ned : mated that 90 per cent of the . "The gates :~f hell 'will not, • " •. The 'statue of the Sacred Heart· H~ wro~e. the l~tter m con­ visiting seamen voluntarily .prevail over the Church of G o d . FARMS is 22 feet high and weig'h's'12,000 .. fI.ec.tlO. n. wl.th the.. r.ece.nt encyc­ come. to M.ass. He said Spanish and Mary, Medilitri'x of Graces: .• h' . .145 Washington. St -.Fairhaven · pounds. There 'are 18 feet be- 1 l~a I. m w h IC h H l~ H 9 1I~ess P ope and Italian seamen come most w h 0 t r~ump s IJ;l ,all God's trials, . Just off Route 6 • tween the extended nands. PlUS XII asked .for ',nme day~ often to the port of Mobile and, will triumph over them.'! 4 · of pra~er for the persecuted they are' usually strong Cath­ ,......-----------...;.--_...-:.:~~~~~:;;;::;;;:;.;:;.:;:.;::.;::~=_;;; ..Church prior to the feast of the 01"." . Assumption.. 10 " Gerry, Strang said that more ~.'.' ~nl(.ng . u\.\ tJ:1an one-half million magazines, books and. games were distrib­ .• Real Estate Loans ·T -f' 0 . •. uted by the club to seamen of .• Savings Bank life In"uro,;ce 0 . visiting ships during the past 14 , CINCINNATr- (NC)-W ~ e n ' years. • . Christmas and Vacation Clubs . t~e 19t.h Annual Nol"th Amencafl. The clUb's report showed that • ·.Savings Accounts Llturgl,cal.. We~k o{lens her~ next from ·July 1;' 1957, to June 30, ~on~ay, It .wlll be returmng to 1958, about 1,200 ships came to • 5 Co,:,venient Locations •. lt~ blrt~plac~... . the port of Mobile, and an esti­ Thehturglcal conference on­ mated 444 804 seamen visited the ginated as an annual event dur­ clUb. 'Thi~ exceeded by almost ing a national ~onvention ~f ~he 6.000 the number of seamen who Archconfratermty o{ Chnstlan h'ad visited the club the previous Doctrine.. ./ year. The original liturgical week ...._. • in 1939 drew only a handful. of participants. Some 20,000 persons from all over the United INSURANCE AGENCY

States and Canada are expected Do You Work in a Factory, at th'is year's gathering. 'All Kinds Of Insurance Garage, Machine Shop or Among'the participants in the 96 WILLIAM STREET first liturgical week who will . .-(7.asoline Station? NEW RF,OFORO. MASS. attend the meeting this year' are We PIckup and :Iell"e, clean Father Damasus Winzen, O.S.B., !

and repair overalls. Also' we have DIAL WY 8-5153 Godfrey Diekmann, O.S.B., and ) complete line at Coveralls Pants Personal Service W. Michael Ducey, O.S.B: ...

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Serv,ces . ,.

· Conference Returns PI' o ace rig n

NEW BEDFORD

INSTITUTION for SAVINGS

DONAT BOISVERT

. \,"\ -:-" TROUBLE SHOOTER: Record .Number """1 Robert D. Murphy, top dip., WASHINGTON (NC)-A r e c - . . lomatic trouble-shooter for ord number of 3~652 students en­ 'IPLUMBING &. HEATING, t.Ne. the State.Department, work·, rolled for the 31st annual sum­ for Domestic jng feverishly to help ,bring mer session' at' . the Catholic . "~ & ,Industrial ..' . ~." . Sales "and peace to the troubled MiddlE! University of Aqlerica. Of this - .. , •.... .Service' . East, played 'a large part in. number 817 are priests,. 1,304 .Sisters,672.laymtm and 859 iay­ . WY 2-9447 . the. election of Maj.' Gen', w~men .. The greatest number, 2283 i.CU5HNET AVE. , Fuad Shehab as president 1,940, are registered in the gtad~ , " NEW BEDFORD : of Lebanon. NC Photo. . . # #• • • • $ uate school of arlls and sciences..

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Altar' Sonctifies the Gift

iBridgels· Garrulous Novel I,Readable and Diverting ·

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God Love .You <.

.

By Rt. Rev. Msgr; ,John S. Kennedy The Lit~rary Guil9'S ,nod to ;summ~r frivolity ,its , :dispatch to its rriemb'er~ of Ann Bridge's The Portuguese. · Escape (Macmillan. $3.95) as its August choice. This 'pur­ 'oorts to be a ronlantic' thriller, but its strong point is its ~laborate and admiring de­ narcotics smuggling. They tell ·"cription of Portugal and us that Jrom China' hugh SUIl­ .things Portuguese. plies of narcotics are carried Ito It is much more satisfac­ Europe and then' distributed: by

is

I

Sh~,

D.O.

Our Lord's' first sermon to His own people in nis O,WD home town was about two Gentiles. His home-town people be­ came so angry ·that they tried to throw Him off the brow of a hilI. If charity did Dot begin away from home, the Son of God would never have left· heaven and em­ braced the Cross in theloreign mission of the. sinful earth. .

» •

'tOl'Y as a travel book than as

By ,Most Rev. Fult.on J.

It was not a Christian but a pagan, Terence, who said, "charity begin's 'at home."·Our Lord said that charity begins away from home. In t.he parable He praised the Good Samaritan for whom charity began with someone who _was 'not of his race or country, one who was considered even an enemy!

a

Communist ugents'both hereanld in this hemisphere. . The money from their' sale finances the elaborate and e1~­ pensive Communist spy rings: . "Abraham's faith was tested by bidding him And the Communists, hope that, This, lengthy by spreading drug addiction th~;y to leave his own country and kind and go ~"a n d garrulous .. , '. ,into a strange country. Every bridegroom is · novel 0 pen s

'can speed the demoralizationl)f. '. Diyinely bidden to leave father: and mot.her the West.', : ~ith a leisurely

· luncheon meet­ ' These, remember, 'a~ factsrt~- ' . and start the charity of marriage el!?ewhel'e thanun?er the paternal roof. ., . . · ing in a glam­ ported.in the past f~' weeks.by ... . orous setting

veteran American',correspo~d-.. ' : f AUSTRAr~IA - BOUND:

O¥erlookii1g the

ellts. Miss MacIIiries;'one SUP-.yery," ·.L~wrenc.eG-. . ' :Milil~ns 01' dollars, are ava'ii'able at home and 80 lew are

oses, R began t WI'orkt· .• ·.c:H.' No~th : Tagus, between, , PF · S. VD.. na.'tlve·ofOt," :JiyeD of Christ thei.r fi t t rom orne a eas·a· ·year a",o. . ,." , .... ". . .. ".for·the,p.agans .., . . who are. wit.booat . "" .a knowled~e .. a rs secre ary 'A d h t ' ·t··b u"t'; ,The link .. taw:i'Ohio ha.s been,appnint~·~.; Savior and Jt·edeemer. A little less ornateness at honle could builel' n w a IS I . a 0 . ,()f the Ameri­ . . ,., . . '1. 4 • h h'" Vi t h t" th th . ,etII1 embassy

between. CommUnif f controlled . .ed-- Regional Supervisor for : ,.~~n.~. cur~ es. n ~ n~m were conver s run ;mto. e. OUA.DdS ev · __.... 'a f.,·rst sec­ drugtraIfic.·and· Sovie~-espion.- . A t ' '1, 0 d" ed' '1934 e;n ID a slDlde parish. How would the Church m the United ...... ' ht us ra.~ a. r am .' I~ , .~ateshave been built up if France and Germany in the early days · retary of the British mission. . .age. T~~ lovely ladYlt~?""s w, ~'. he has ,~en ProvmcIa] Su: Sliid: "Chari,tYbegins.at home"? The Society for the Propagatio. d' . g goes' o n . , ' .Th.e yo.ung men .ar~ ,Ifsc~ssm .;. '·Susp·ensefui.hie perior of the Divine Word of the Faith l:'ave to the United States alone ten million dollars iItIie ~mmment arrlva 0 .0l:'u-; '. She"aiso krlOws how to spin a ·Missionaries in the. Midwest to build ch~rches and IIChools. Is there not a~ oblil:'atioD .. be tess Hetta Paloczy who has just· ,.' . grateful f til t l:'ift. d t .t t f R,i!d :spankmg,. suspenseful tale, and for the past six' years. NC or· a . manage 0 ge OU. 0 .. to do so in a witty, literate waJr. Ph t " · Hungary. Also. having"lived for some' time 0 O. , ~ '\ A~ St.. Pliul said; "Charity does not claim its' rights" it i. In time th'e youthful countess in the United· States' she can . mindful of·th~ world. Really, charity' begins with the Vicar of Christ. reaches Lisbon, drably dressed draw. authentic AmeriCan char­ He must be pr6vid~d with alms to and all the missions. This is done · and enormously serious, in'coJll- · a d e r s . · w· " through his S<!Ciet.y for the Propagation of the Fait.h. All t.hat you trest to her wealthy,. flitte:~y The chief of these is Bill L a m _ i t ., give. to the SoCiety you give to him. Send Y,our sacrifices!

mother,, for dyears bestablIshed " a p I' aywrl'gh't . VISI . ·t·mi.." : d' . . t'10 ' mt' t er, CARACAS (NC)-Rear Adm. Portugal an absor e m socle .y.. R b' th f" t'" d t.1> . · The old girl is a determined but orne. 0, . or a vaca Ion an , .Wolfgang Larrazabal, P.resident· GOD LOYE YOU to Mrs. M. B. for $'70 -"Three years ago 'OD ._.....ff· tl • I I' "--r get-a start on a new stage ven- 'of the governing junta' of Venour 25th Wed~ing-Anniversary we received among other things l,..t eren y succes- -- c 1m"", . 'h' b' k . . ture. Eleanor Halle: 'VI! 0, .1'0. e _-ezuala has denied charges that these '70 silver' dollars. I've been keepinl:' them for memories' sake Hetta in Danger her ,engagemeTlt to Bill because his g~vernment is cooperating' but after reading all those God Love You corumns ) have decided She is anxious that her daugh- 'of 'his complete preQCcupatioll. with the communists and de­ .to send my' 'hoarded silver"to the Missions."... to G. ·G. for $2.40 tel' sui tab I y arrayed Il ll <l.'· with the world of the t~eatr.!!, ciat:ed Uiat as, a .Catholic- he is "This is the pr:ice of" round-trip ticket to the ciiiy-I decided to ~med, .plunge into the gay and,' is wor~ing at the' Ameri~an e~.­ . against comnlunism. stay liome instead and. einjoy the good country air:'... to L. T. for "Htteril1'" round. But Heta has bassy m t~e eter~al cIty. BIll .. TheP.~·esident's ' stateme~ $4.:!O '~Tryinl:' to crush a bad old habit with a good Dew one-this · ~ gri~ things, has suffet'ed,", stm:loves' her, hutsh~ ~as latelJr came in answer to what Caracas repre~u 14 days of 30c sacrifices of a packac-e of cic-areUeS a ::'\U come to prize only the'hero,:, b~come engaged to Co,unt ,Luigi' day!" :sm.' of steadfast men like Father ·Pirotta. That is that; and BilJ ill.' ,periodicals termed· a "tenden­ . . tious; campaign'; conducted by .-\ntal Horvath who resisted and preparit~g to 'g~ home. ' ., " . ' . • Ce,' rtairi jNorth Am.erican. news­ In summertime as you enjoy the green countryside while taking to some extent balked the ComBut. his last night'in, Rome, 1 a· vacation drive through the counu'y think of all the. joys that God · raunists in Hungary and, for" as h~ smol}es a .cigarette on. UH~ papers and magazines to show has given you: Then take the WORLDMISSION'ROSARY in hand ,whom for, awhile Herta llad·. balcony, outside his 'ho*el~room; . th~t.: th:e 'goverri"?,ent ?f Ven­ and remember that the green beads represent the green hills and .:~ h~usekeeper a~dcOOk. She :he",witn~sS.es an,. incidel'1t. ill :'YN~ .' .!zu,ela 18 .commumst-allied. forests of Africa and pray for those who do not ·yet.' know the joy of tries to. 'meet her." mother's. snadowystreet. which. puzz!ell : '.' "I am '.a Catholic," the Presi­ loving God. For a sacrifice-offering of $2 and your request we will . wishes, but does so with a heavy' hi~.; In no ti~e at ~ll he ·u,' derit said, "and as such ply po­ . ·.ileart. ' '. dr~~n in~o ,~series. c4 .stranfle . sition ,is to fight communism, for send you Ii WORLDMISSION ROSARY; , ahd Peril()us exp~riences. Catholicism and communism are Then comes word that Father . He does not leave" Rome. as'·antagonis,tic. But I do not agree IIoI'vath .has been got out or' .scheduled, but. inste,ad ·'startJl.· -that communism should be out­ Cutout this column, pin your sacrifice to it' and mail it to the f(ungary and' is on his way to Most Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, National Director of The Society for tearing around the city and tee, la~:ed, for Iwm not be a partT ·t.isbon, whence he will leave for country-side to the nQrth, cha,s-,to '. fighting ideas curtailed ill' the ProlJagation of the Faith, 366 F'ifth Avenue, .New York 1, N. Y., :he United States. At once the 01' your DIOCESAN DIR~CTOR. REV. RAYMOND T. CONSIDINE, ing and being chased, an<! finally' that way," Communist agents in the Portu­ 368 North Main Street, Fall River, Mass. He also said that '''the most ':uese capital spring into action. s~cceeding 'in saving ~d. w~n­ llInl: back Eleanor. and m!hetm g effective. way to combat com­ 'l'Iu;y will do their best-or def~a~ on the ~ommumsts . munist penetration' in (Latin) a ''''Orst-to seize and liquidate the ThiS IS a plaUSIble story,. t~k~n America is to contrihute to the doughty. priest, and' since Hetta at a smart pace, abo.undmg. 10 recovery of the, destitute class­ :s his friend, she, too, is ia color, ,and peopled by mterestmg "dd' th t; thO \ " ' es, a lIlg a 1n IS way we ,*,ger from them. f o I k f roT!' a II ranks 0 f socIety.

shall have an unbreachable Plot Complicated Superficial and, Boring- .

barrier against communism." British'mission people, Amer­ Joseph Hayes's latest offermg, --------------'4:\-' c :can embassy' people, British The Hours After Midnight (Ran­ ~;ecret service people, Portugues'e dom House. $3), is pompously give a psychiatric scrutiny. I~'~ :1Olice and secret service people, described as "a new' study in this he is superf~cial and glib at best, and eventu'ally quite bor­ a chic and brainly English news­ suspense." Perhaps it is too ing ·'aperwoman, a' plain and spirited studied to be successful. Seeking to explain all, "he :'}'lglish spinster, a suave mOll'­ It deals with a rebellious 17­ really explains nothing or ~l­ ,:ignor' who is a kind of unoffi·· year-old girl, Julie Elgin, at odd. most nothing. Meanwhile, the :;ial ct:Japlain to the expatriate:l with her parents and nasty to the tension slackens and' the reader FRANCIS J. DEVINE ARTHUR J. DOUCET :" Lisbon and Estoril the emin·. nice young man who is seriously . " r;n't Duke' of Ericeira' and hili' interested in her. Out on a date begins to Tawn. That is alway; '>opulous household-these arc with the latter, she suddenly, on fatal. Abnormal. Psycholo~y. ;'<Mne of the' person, who busJ' a whim, sends him Packing~ and Ngaio Marsh, who has few : ttemselves with thwarting the takes up with a crazy mixed up peers in the mystery story field, '';ommunist.s' scheming. kid . named Nolan Stoddard. Stoddard, instead o.f driving introduces a considerable por-' The plot. is immensely compli·· tion of abnormal psychology in Cape Cod . . '.'ate<!, but moves at a stately, her home, secretly calls the Elgin her newest production, Singing . STEAMING '. ;....1 NAJIVE ducal pace, with plenty' of time house and, not identifying him­ in the Shrouds (Little, Brown. self, informs her father. that she "ut for discussion of· port wine $3.50). And at the denouement will be safe so long as the Elgins ·'.lasses, Portuguese tile-making, M\ SWORD. do exactly as he says. He will .it appears that the killer cannot .. ,~ description of towns and be h~ld responsible' for the call again in ten minutes with : lodscapes and an.cient churches, 2 Ofs. crimes committed. ' fudher inst.ructions. ~ lid even for a minute detailing FISH The killer's identity is hard to Thc Elgins are stricken and , f the ceremony attendant upon apprehensive. Julie, of cOUl·se;. spot. But this is not because Miss :, midnight snack in the noble Marsh plays unfair. The story is, knows nothing of the call and uke's town· house and the as usual, deftly constructed. The goes along with Stoddard. He' is ::oodies in a prodigious picnic clues are there, if not obvious. !:Joth frightened ~by what he has ,'mcheon. UNION WHARF FAiRHAVEN, MASS. • The proceedii1gs are rapid, done and eager to keep it up, ~ ~ Miss Bridge's book is readable; eventful, and set out in prose .: iverting, and instructiye" if o enjoying t.he sense Of importance such as one'rat'ely encounters in and power Which it gives him. ,·.ever very exciting. She has this, genre. A capital piece. of Becomes Boring . · 'lme rather weird ideas about work. ~. How far will he go? wm he ,\mericans, but then what Eng­ . harm the girl? Kill her.? What : ish writer doesn't? will her parents do? Will the' Soviet Espionage police come into it? Much more tuut and slick is . Were Mr. Hayes satisfied with '.felen MacInnes's adventure yarn keeping us. guessing about these .forth From Rome . (Harcourt, things a'nd driving his ,thriller' !HelenAube'rtine Bra ugh ':raee. $3.95.) As the .title incli­ forward' at a brisk clip, the r.e':' Owner and Director NEW ~fORD, MASS. 545 MlU ST. 'ates, it is laid in Italy, and it· suIt might be an engaging story. Spacious Parking Area .;-. in neatly w:th recept news of its kind. But pulling a long ,.tories. face and putting on a profession­ WY 2-2957 al IT'!lnner, he has sought to These stories ~inlc ~nviet es·· New Bedford 1~.AHen St. "~ with Svv:C~-~~OllSOred Dlakc a\ a clinical l'eport, even to

tin~ling account

of intrigue, skulldugge'ry, high life and t.he rough course of troe love.' ,

,·MaC.K..

Rev;'

/'

Den'.ees' A·II.-a· nee . h S ­ ov.'et

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Still Vacation Time

Tllis Time', Message's Sponsored By TII~ FoI颅 low;ng Pub';c Sp;,路it~ Individuals" and Busi颅 ness COllcerns, 'Locoted in Greater, Fall 'River

:.

Ann Dale Products, Inc. Building Materials Jnc. Donnelly, Painting Service John F. Doyle, Contrador Enterprise Brewing Co. Globe Manufaduring Co. Gold Medal Bread ' A.G. & W.J. Howland, Inc. Insurance Hutchinson Oil Co. Macl<enzie & Winslo'w, Inc. Mason Furniture Showrooms

DRIVE CAREFULLY

Gerald E. McNally Contractor George M. Montie, Plumber Stafford Fuel Co., Inc.

The highways are still ia'mmed' with,

" Take an extra hour or day to get where

vacationers seeking a, respite, from a

you're going' so that- yo~ get there

year's toil and labor.' -

safely.

Sobiloff B,.,thers $te;lin9 Beverages' Inc.

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'Textile Workers Uni~n of Ani'erica, AFL-CIO

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,Many ~f them will drive as though it

(The Original)

Too many lives are lost through excess..

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will be the last vacation of their life- '

Yellow Cab Company , Wm. N. Wheelock ~L Inc.

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time - and well it, might be.

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ive speed and ,careless driving on our ,highwaysand the toll. is rising daily.

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SLOW路UPand Let Our

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The Family Clinic

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;::~::~4';~~ks

Marriage Is .Life Voc:ation) · ·Based. on HolyContrac\~ )"J

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14

THf ANCHOR­

By Rev. John L.

.

Th~mas, S~J. .~~~\

Assistant Professor of Soci,ology, S\. Louis. University

Begin Sunday

/.

A' Pre-Cana Conference for engaged couples and those. contemplating marriage within 'the near future wfll be held Sunday . evening at .8 o'clock in the CYO Hall in Taunton. The Conference is arranged by the Family Life Bureau of the Diocese and is conducted by priests, physicians, and lay couples. The Conference is open to the' non-Catholic member to a mixed mar_~iage as we Ii as to Catholics.

,f' II

Do the.parents of an '18-year-old boy have the right to withhold their consent to 'his mar'riage 'in an effort to 'try and prevent his marrying at this time? .Ourboy will soon be 19 and has two more years to go serving in the Marine .. Corps. His girl is about the Have ,they thought about what same age. They have stuinp.­ they:) will do after the two-year ed our every argument and stretch i: finished? Adjustment now threaten fo marry' with­ to civilian life and emplo)'ment

out our consent. Her parents after leaving;military service is' finally gave their 'consent, but r difficultei:lOugJ1 for most boys; don't feel right it mo ' .prqve extremely trying about it. What

for a yo'ling'hiisband whc must can I do?

provide·for.a· wife' and possible NEW YORK. (NC)-The next I think you've

family. . :". national converition of the Cath­ answered your

I thinky6u should put these . olicPress Association will fir s t question

questions· to. the young couple . TO STUDY HERE: Carmen M. Moran, 15-year-old San., ~~ held in Omaha, Neb., May 12 to yourself, Amy.

honestly , and without emotion. . . ~ 15 1959 You have the

. :Marriage 'is'a life vocation !based tiago girl, points to her native Chile on the. map for Arthu% _,' . _ right, but what

on a holy, Sacramental contract. F., Jr. and Mrs. Arthur F. Cassidy, at whose Somerset; 'the Chilean teenager is right at goo~ will it do

In all fairness to themselves, home she will reside while studying. at Mount St. Mary . hom~ with the Cassidy youngto refuse con­ they should.: enter it under con­ Academy' Fan R i v e r . · " ster's;' all pre-schoolers. "When' sent if they in-.

ditions best calculated to make '. ;V. Francette went home," said Mrs. tend to get.

it a success.'··.·. , . ~ j/ Ca~idY, "she left three little married a ny­ Suggest Wadmg , broken he'arts behind her." Hut . Fi!1ally, why are they in such way? Under the Continued from Page One tiation into the ways. of Amerearmen is rapidly me.nding those circumstances, I think the' most 8 hurry. to get married! Obvi­ counted ',heavily in her favor ican students with a week's athearts, to judge from the way ::;J-prudeQ.t approa'ch is to grant ously,·to enjoy marital partner-' when the applications were re­ tendance at a summer school of the children cluster around her. your consent provided the)' have ship and companionship. viewed. She' attends St. John's' Catholic Action, to be held at So it'll be "Si Si" instead of given. serious thought 'to the More basic; though frequently Villa Academy in, Santiago, a Fordham. University, New York. "Oui, Oui" at 66 Pleasant Street following problems. _ unrecognized in such 'cases, is combined grade and high school, Coming fI'om a large family, this year. Where are they going to set the difficulty of observing pre­ as' are all Chilean schools. "In up . housekeeping? Is .she going marital· chastity~nderthe cir­ 'grade school all classes were

·to live with her folks during the cumstances. .

taught' 'in English," she ex­

next two years? Move about plained "and 'in high school we

- In this connection, Amy, you from place to.. place with him, should point 'out to them that . coritlnU~d to study the language.~

• • ..... liv·:1g either on the' base or off t?e observance of marital I:has­ B'rowrieyed, .darkhaired Car-' of it as the conditions may re­ t1ty al~o demands a great deal of men says that her favorite schoo"; &he people of Pothukuzhi began W» clear the forest io search 01 land tile,. could cultivate." &be Bishop' of KoUuayam (So. India) recenUy quire? If he is' sent out of the restral.nt and· self-control ·.from subjects are history,' literature, . w'rote to us. "For twelve years they have country for a time, wiil she fol­ ChristIan .spouses. M.any ~oung. and algebra, She wants to at­ '. . ~~S t worked and 'fooght .disease, 'wild animals him or remain. here? couples ~aII to reco~mze thIS and tend. the Catholic University of .. ',(" """". ~.. and unfriendly' climate," Bishop Thara)'il' Possible Consequencell hurry Into mar.nage as· an Chile; majoring in political sci­ .. ttl' . -:;.. continues, ·"and now they are finally mak­ - Will the pres~nce of !l baby ans~er to all theIr problems. ence. She then hopes for a dip­ .' ~ 0 ing progre~." The first thooght of these affect their plans concerning. WIth these facts before them, lorna tic career. ~ ::3 good' people when they began to make why don't you suggest that the " , living arrangements? They are gi~1 get a job and that they both Asked about ChI1ea~ react~on fA headway was to build a church and school + to bring God's blessings on themsehres .8 young couple. It is highly like­ -~art saving and planning for a to, the . r~cent e,xpen:nces ?f and their families. They have already ly that the bride. will become future marriage .whic h can be VIce-~resIdent Nixon In Latm purchased tbe land and tb~y staod ready pregnant within' the' mix! . two started with much gre'ater hope Amenca, she declared that h~r to provide ALL the .labor necessary. They yel!rs provided they do not of happiness and success! countfymen d.eplored ~he a~tlnow need $2;000 to buy the materials­ employ immoral contraceptive Two years added to their Amencan feeling of neIghborIng certainly this ·is not· an unreasonable re-. measures. . . ,young lives will put· them at republi~s.. "We a~e frien~ly ·to . qu·est. Will you croWD the work 01 Uais Are they rea.iistic~ily facing just about the' righ't age for th~ .Umted S~tes, she saId. geilerittion bi a donation. for the Bouse of God? ' the'. consequences . or' possible marriage" ".' ~ Date 10 Groups · future pregnanCies in terms of . ' . . .'~" On a lighter topic, she said THE PRIESTS OF THE POOR HAVE NO MORE THAN THE PEO­ travel, expense, 'housing, separ­ that she ha~ never dated alone. PLE .THEY SERVE. $25. WILL BUY A CASSOCK FOR A DEDI~ atiQn, and so forth? . ." "We date In groups," she ex­ CATED ~RIEST .... WILL YOU' CLOTHE A PRESENT DAY Many COUPles in s'uch drcum­ plained·iri.hei·quaintly-accented" APOSTLE! YOU WON'T .MISS IT 'FROM 'YOUR VACATION stances enter.:.. tnarria·ge with the .;' MANCHESTER ,.(NC) -"The ~~glish'. ~erhost~sssmiled. . MONEY", int~ntion .thai the bridl will be qUiet America!) who gets things . I- m· begmn~ng .to thmk that we . THE .FEAST OF THE IMMACULATE HEART OF MARY (Ao­ employed '01ile the' husband is done" has. marked up another should' ask· for less pret.ty stu­ in ~h~ service. This doesn't indi­ . succ~ss. . dents/' she .said. "Our girls ~ave gust 22niJ> brings to mind the complete' dedication 01 ·the Blessed F th 'G'. cate very realistIC. th',nking .on It .d f been so popular that we don't. Mother to the service 01. Her' 'Divine Son. It is , i tlle, part o:fyoung couples' who .. a er. ~orge u ro, a Fran­ see';enough of them ourselves!" also a good day to make it possible fora young 'are': bound to:obser.ve.the moral' ,.clscan.·90nv~~tual, 'from, S:,ra­ Carmen will attend Mount.St. 'heart to· follow the God-given vocation of total la~,. pertaihing.·to" marital relac!Jse,,~S,?p.~Jpng:;·th~ pew St. 'Mary!s Academy, Fall River, dedication to the work of'. the altar..THOMAS. tio~s. '.' .' . . , C~ares .. church here In England. under the sponsorship,' of Rev•. and MATTHEW wish' to devote their lives to the. Have they,~,,,c'6n'sidered.··the. It ·was :c~nstructed at a cost of Ed. wa.r.d . .J . Gorman, pastor of St.. service of. the Church as priests. Before' they. . . . '., " ". $270 000 . can. howeVer, thcy must spend six y.e.ars in tire pro.blems Involved. in' securing , . '" . ;. P~tliick's parish, Somerset. Next Seminary at ,\.Iwaye. India.. The entire coW'Se · earlY marriage adjustment under He .has . raised more than Sullpay. she. Wil.! begin her ini- '. the: cha~ing .unsettled condi,,$7pO,QOO .. for .St'. Clare's ~hurch r-,~.--. will oost· $600 for. eaeh boy. Would;,you.car~. to . tiou:s of military.. service? All and school. SInce 1948' when· he "adopt'·· one of .'these you~g men?' Yon. can ~~Ild~the money. in any. ma.lln~.r Conyel.lient whqe your "son in Christ" prepares to Imitate" marriages start .o~t as relatively came to England. . . , '. Te'r~ific the Immaculate"Heart of Mary. '. .' fragile, shallow 'associations, .no , .- ~at.her Ru?ro.rsfirs~ task of ,': ,\ . matter how great the'emotional buIldIng a frIary was completed ".. ,Traffic WHAT'· YOU PLACE IN THE HANDS· OF .THE ~HOLY- FATH.li:R' disIjlay may appear. Lain t1e9r5a3naftetr h~ raised $d5d7,OIOOto' ;., ." b' YOU PLACE IN THE HANDS OF CHRI8,T .. , MAKE ·A "STRING­ ,,,. T,hrough: shared. experit!hce, :,'.. " ex; enSlOn was a el . . • • • ;T.ESS GIFT"TODAY TO ENABLE OUR HOLY FATHER TO HELP' deeper understariding, and muthe. school at a cost of $129,000. .' '.~ THE POOR AND SUFFERING' OF THE NEAR EAST. MISSIONS! .., tual adaptation the coupll~'grad-': . ,ThiS year the American priest ually grow together.. and . estab-, : opened ·a new, school at a l:ost Sister ANTONIA" and, Sister' MICHELLE lisn the firm bonds of an oo~,' of $315,000. wisb to serve tbe poor and' suffering people or breakable union. .---~--------_.-. Lebanon. Tbe)' 'wisb 'all 'people to know and , "hen' the husband is in mili­ . to serve the' IMMACULATE HEART 'OF MARY . . . but before &bey' can do thiS a two tary service, it is extremely dif­ ,.ear period of novitiate training wiD be oeo­ ficult to provide the conditions essary. Tbe' total' cost 01 this will be $300 for which foster the growth of such eacb girl. In honor of the Blessed' Mother wiU unity. you ~'adI!P.t" ·one of these' cirls! You maj pa,. 591 SUMMER ST. Reunion Disillusioning the· money in any manner 'convenient ,while' In my analysis' ot' hUridred~ of New Bedford WY '3-1346 your "daughter ia lIal'J'" prepares lor her . ' . broken war marriages' I have creat voeatioD.· AU Bundles Insured While discovered··that the sou;ce.ofthe in Our Posses~ion N0W· MORE THAN EVER MASS O.F~ERmGS. ARE NECESSARY

dffficulty 'was pretty the IF YOUR MISSIONARY PRIESTS ARE TO HAVE THE BARE

same in all.' The" n- 'ly'\veds ..' ESSENTIALS OF LIFE.•REMEMBER THEM TODAY!

were unable to establish durable marriage relationships under the .. ~OVE THE RATTLE :OF GUNFIRE you caD

circumstances. 'still· hear tlie crieS of hungry childrea in &be

'ongwearing rugs Shared experiences, were too .', ' ;' . strife riddeD lands of the Near. East. And to the 1=::-ao_~"'"T'''''

few. The common feelings, atti- '. ' " ..... '1ar&"e Dumber 01 rel1l&'ees the coDtiDuinc strue-'

. or wall to wan gle' daily -adds "new orphans." Old' and ,.oung;

'; boys and girls, chlldreD in armS:-all tum to our ",,~!!~t~

MQREI\icy's PRICES ,IIoly Father for help, Will yoaenable the Viear. /",

young- ii .... of Christ to. feed them ... will.yon make 1& pos­

,'A~ Lowest of. All I couples who were forced to live' ,,'., x'.,....•· .. ' • sible for him to clothe them? $10 will feed a

apart for a time, it.was discov- . "'. . :';,"::;':. '.' . "'., ", ref~ee family r• • week. Take U"from YII­ 'ered that they knew too' little ~ ,. " ; ," ·~Uoa DIODe,.t ' each other to foster growth in Ttl,omos F. Monogfl'on Jr. GIft TO WIN THE' WORLD FOR CHRIST. . mutual underst<:\n(;ling and. sym.­ . .Treasur'; pathy through the medium of letters. ".~~PURCHASE ST.

Frequently :'t 'h'e i r.· 'reuilion 142'SECOND STREEt NEW BEDFORD

fRANC;:IS CARDINAL SPELLMAN President . .proved disillusioning for one or FALL RIVER ". Msgr. Peter P: Tuoh'" Nat1 s:.c·, both partners because they di~­ ,. CA_RPET· WITH EASE" covered' that they' had· grown . .' Send all eommuniccltions to: . " , aparf rather· than together· arid , CATH()UC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION OSborne 5-7856 at MORENCY'S. now as husband and wife had

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Thurs., Aug. 14, 1958

To Give Princess

African Tribal Queen Studies Government

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First Communion

SAN JUAN (NC)The Catholic BRUSSELS (NC) - A~xiliary queen of the Kaiyamba tribe in Bishop Fulton J. Sheen of New Sierra L~one is in Puerto Rico, York will give First Communion studying' the .government's pro­ to Princess Marie-Christine" gram of community education. daughter of King Leopold III of She is Mme. Ella Koblo Belgium, tomorrow. Bishop Gulama, a member of the Sierra Sheen will administer the sacra­ " Leone House of Representativ~s ment to the Princess while he is and supreme chief of the Kai­ a guest of the Royal Family of yamba Kingdom. Sierra Leone Belgium dufing the International is a British protectorate OJ) the Catholic; Days held at the Brus­ west coast of Africa. sels International Exposition.

Rome 'Festival Honors Mary

ROME (NC)' - The Blessed Mother opens and closes the "Festa de Noantri,". which ia eelebrated at this time each year in the 'area of Rome across the Tiber, ,to witness the fact that its people, the Trasteveroni, are different. , At a time prior to the Chri&­ tian era there was no bridge to eonnect Rome on one side of the river with the people' directly on the other side, :n Trastevere. Thtl absence of a bridge provided llUfficient separation to make the Trasteveroni different. There are ~everal bridges now, NEW CIVICS. Two of the CaJ.\ but the difference remains. The pus School, model elementary Catholic school at Catholic Tlil]steveroJ}: are proud of the University of America, are presented with copies of the differences, no mdter what other ' new official harl<;lbook "Gpod' Ci,tizen", prepared fpr use of people think about them, and the Catholic Civics Clubs of A~erica. Making the presen­ they annually celebrate. "Noan­ tri," which in their d,ialectmeans • tation is Rt. Rev. Msgr. Joseph A. Gorham of Philadelphia, "W'e others." director of C.U.'s' Commis~ion on ,American Citizenship,· The feast opens on the first while W. Wingate Snell, left, his assistant looks on. The: Sunday after the feast of Our students are Elaine Downs, and Louis Goffredi. N.C. ,Photo., t,f~ Lady of Carmel. On that day a statue of Our Lady of (;;armel is ' taken from its pedestal in St. Agnes church in Trastevere and is carried through the streets to St. Chrysogonus church where it is venerated for a week. At the Nine girls from St. John the prayer-life should be: end of the week the statue is Evangelist Parish, Attleboro, "Every morning on rising, carried in procession back to St. were among the 1800 teenagers Sodalists shall make acts of Agnes and the "Festa de Noan­ who attended the Summer faith, hope and charity, give tri" is closed. School of Catholic Action con­ thanks to the Divine Majesty ducted by the Jesuit Fathers of 'for benefits received, offer to Color and Honor the Queen's Work at Holy Cross God their labor of the day, make When "La Madonna del Car­ College, Worcester. an intention to gain all possible mine" passes down Trastevere's The Attleboro group, accom:" indulgences that day; and say main street the first time, there panied by Sister Mary Margar­ at least three Hail Mary's in are bright 'tablecloths and da­ et :md Sister Mary Dolorine of honor of the Blessed Virgin mask counterpanes hanging from the Sisters of Mercy, included Mary. every window to give greater Antoinette Fratoni, Ellen Loew, "They shall· set 'aside and color, and therefore greater Marilyn Condon, Mary-J6 'Be,1­ spend at 'least a quarter of an ' honor, to her ·passing. The pastor, q lava nee, Jacqueline Malouin, hour in mental prayer. If pos­ flanked oy his curates, walks in front of the "Madonnina." She, Judith Leach, Nancy Judge" , sible, they are to participate;! in Marilyn Smith and Janice Ewen. the Sacrifice of the Mass. standing on a dais festooned with flowers and ribbons, is car­ With the encouragement and "They shall recite the Rosary. ried on the shoulders of the assistance of Rt. Rev. Msgr. In the evening, before retiring, leading men of St. Agnes parish. John J. Shay, pastor of St. they are, to examine their con­ Behind her follow the members John's, the Sodality of the Bless­ science caref\llly and make a~ of all the pious confraternities of ed Virgin Mary is being estab­ fervent act of contribution for the parishes of Trastevere, wear.­ lished in that parish. all the sins of their life and es­ ing their distinctive costumes P.urpose of the Summer School, pecially for any committed that ' and singing their o~n Songs, in now in its 27th year, is to in­ day." , honor of th,e Lady. culcate knowledge that will help .. Pope's Interest No sooner has Our Lady come ' OnE~ to live the life of Divine to rest in her place of honor Grace to its fullest extent. To Pope Pius XII indicated his, ~ inside St. Chrysogomis than, achieve this end the Jesuit interest in ,the work of Soda1­ the vendors roll their carts in Father:s offered to the Sodalista ities of Our Lady when he, ad­ from the side streets to the cor­ and prpspective Sodalists of Our dressed the following words in' ners of Viale Trastevere. There Bh!ssed Lady ,a variedcurricul­ 1948 to Father Paulussen, direc­ is candy made fresh and rolled urn consisting ot four 45-minute tor of the Central Sodality Sec­ out on blocks of white marble to periods eacli day. retariate: ' cool, cut still steaminr- and Emphasis on Sodality , "Don't think that I love the sticky. There is suckling pig, Subjects included Way of Life Sodalities for sentimental rea­ roasted whole with I)erbs. Boards for Youth, Life That Is Grace, sons,' merely' because I am a laid end to end make long tables·' Training of Leaders, 'Mental: Sodalist myself, and because I· where the thirsty can have their Prayer, Sharing Your Faith, love the 'Blessed Virgin very flask of dry "(hite wine. Numer- ' . Super Life" Sodality Rules Ex-, much. All that is very true. But ous trios-a guitar, an accordiol1' ph,ined., The Mass and Y-ou, and there is, a reality much greater and a singer-wander the streeu Woman's Place in the World To­ and much more profound, and producing spirited songs, in diaday. ' , it is this: Tpat as Pope, I have lE.'Ct. ' " Throughout the various lecvery grave duty to bring it Singing, Feastior: .' tures empha'sis was placed on about, to' see 'to it, that' the Colored lights by the thous- thE! Sodality Way of Life. De­ Sodalities of Our Lady flourish aTIds are strung from tree to tree votion to Our Lady has a pri~-' everywhere, all, the time more along the avehue, and are arched ileged place among the mea~s and more,' all the time better. over the street. The nights, are 'Sodalities use to reach their aim. Because, the SOdalities of Our warm and everyone is (>Utside, The Common Rules set the pat­ Lady are almost the greatest eating, dancing, singing or just tern of what the' Sodalist's need of the Church today:' •

HANDBOO~:

studen~s

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S,odalists Attend Jesuit. Catholic Action Summer School

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DI·oc·esan Councl·l, Catholl·c Wom'en 1" E' . Portuguese V··' ISltors -A',

looking. Only the '''Madonnina'' il; inside where she is . -.lding

court with the faithful who ~"

come in from the noise of the " 0 nt~rtaln streets to give obeisance' ,t~ the 'A group of 14 young men who plans were made for the lun-V Queen of Trastevere. recently were graduated with cheon, entertainment and tours On the last night of the f e a st' f or th e vlslors. "t P resen t at th e ,engineering degrees from the there is a great fireworks disUniversity of Lisbon in Portugal meeting were members of the . d . P lay. And, if you are standing on and are currently touring:eight DIOcesan Boar In the New Bed­ the Esquiline Hill on the ruins Cit,ies in the United States will ford area and representatives of Nero's Golden House, you can h M t C be guests of the Fall'River Di­ of t e oun, armel Women's look past the Colosseum toward ocesan Council of Catholic Club, St. John the Baptist Par­ the river and see the sky r~ above Trastevere as it must have . Women at a luncheon at 2 P.M. ish Council and Immaculate looked on \ the night when his fi(~xt Tuesday in the Turquoise Conception Parish Council, all soldiers put torch to the Tras­ Room of the New, Bedford affiliates of the Diocesan Coun-" tevere slums. Hotel. ' cil. The slums are still there and Invited guests of honor at the The visitors are expected ~to the Trasteveroni, are still there. luncheon include ,Most Rev. arrive at New Bedford Terminal But this time the fir~ is, on pur­ Bishop James ,L. Connolly; Rev. at 1:25 ~uesday and leave for J>ose and it is lighted in honOr 01 Thomas F. Walsh, diocesan 'Boston Wednesday at 9 P. M. '\ Our Lady of Carmel. moderator of the Council; Rt. ' ~ <~ Rev. Msgr. HU~h G:allagher, New Bedford dlstnct~oderato~; CLEVELAND NC) ~ T h r Rt. Rev. Msgr. AntOnIO P. VI­ • ( e II"renc res_ ent • . ,eua, ' R t Re M gr J h A good example of the folks he . v. s. 0 n . l' d ·th t J . g H f WASHINGTON (NO)' - P resl­ 'S:ilvia' Rev. Asdrubal C. Branco. 'lve WI a ennm some or; dent Rene Coty of France· h a s · ' . ,,' the Aged here was one reason been selected to receive the 1958 Also .Consu~ Vasco Villela an~ George Blagun, 75, became a International Peace Prize of the Mrs. Villela, Mr. and Mrs. BasIl Catholic-less than two months Blue 'Army of Our Lady of Brewer, and Mr. and Mrs. before he died in the home's Fatima. The annual peace prize Charles J. Lewin. . infirmary. His daughter, Mother is given for "outstanding service Mrs. Emmett P. Almond, Di­ Mary Agnes, is'Superior General for victory over communism and o<~esan Council president. pre­ of the Sisters of the Holy Ghost 101' world peace." aided at a, mee~ing at which who administer the home•

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The Yardstid<

Two Schools of Thouglht .ApP·raise 'labor's Probl4em

.Saints In Crosswords u

By M1sgr. George G; Higgins

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CINCINNATI (NC)-A "Bib­ lical-Liturgical meeting" which will bring together some of the nation's outstanding Scripture scholars will be a highlight of. the Liturgical Week here. ' This meeting, sponsored by the Liturgical Conference and ar­ -ranged through the cooperation of the Biblical Association of America, will be the first of its kind held in connection with the annual Liturg·ical Week. Chairman of the sessions will be Msgr. Robert Krumholtz, vice rector and professor of Sacred .Scripture .at Mt. S1. Mary of..the West Seminary, Norwood, Ohio. Among scholars participating in the discussions will be Father Gerald Ellard, S.J., of S1. ·Mary's college, S1. Mary's, Kansas, and Father Lawrence McKenzie, S.J.• professor of the Old Testament at West Baden college, West Baden, Ind.

Father Ellard, an author, edu­ cator, and le<;turer, is best known for his often-reprinted" "Chris­ tian Life and Worship," used as a text in many Catholic colleges. Father McKenzie is the author of the "Two-Edged Sword: An Interpretation of the Old Testa­ ment." Archbishop Karl J. Alter of Cincirinati is host to the conven­ tkm .which will be held here August 18 to 21. A feature of the convention will be Msgr. Martin B. Hellrie­ gel's "Demonstration of the Holy Sa·crifice of the Mass" which is expected to draw a large aud­ ience. .

Director NCWC S~cia:l Action Department

In recent years,· and particularly since the McClellan hearings started early in "1957, there has been a steady flow of articles and books by a variety of writers wlb.o pur­ pOrt to know what's wrong with the American labor movement an'd what should be . . .' According -to· Mr. Dayton, done' to correct the situ a- American labor is a frightfully tion. . dangerous political influence in If the elected officials of the United States and one which

~ labor movement have been reading all this material, they nust ha·ve the feeling by now of being caught between the devil and the deep bllie sea, for the ex- "er ts have

,Deen g i v i n g th e m contra- clictory advice. There is one 3c h 0 0 1 of thought which says that the labor movement has lost its sense of "mission" and is con. . tentedly resting on its laurels. A well known'economist from Columbia University, Neil W. Chambel"lain, says, for example, in a new textbook entitled <CLabo "th t It f ost . 1', a ., as a.resu 0 p. war prosperity, the fOJ'Ward imf lh I b t f petUS o· e a or movemen 0 tile 30's was lost. "But beyond the loss of pace," I.e continues, "there was no long5' any sense of mission or pur1 I 1,lOlle. Th e game was arge y won. Unions had been granted their l'lace within the existing busi- rtCss system. They were winning . 'more, more, and more.' They had 3ITived, and hence they had no )lace to gO." This diagnosis is frequently coupled with a· critidsm of labor's lack of ihterest in politleal action. Thus for example, the lead article by Dick Bruner in the Aug~st issue of Harper's Magazine says that "nearly everywhere the political power of organized labor is nothing but a myth." ' According to Mr. Bruner, who recently resigned from the staff al one of the' more "liberal" international unions, the unions' waning political power reflects <l basic loss of strength and prestige of organized labor among w0rking people. That's one point of vieJoV'. Dangerously Powerlhal There ,is another school of thought, however, 'whieh says that the American labor moveIDeOt is dangerously powerful in \ 1te political order. Currently, EO(" example, the Republican ?olicy Committee of the U. S. '3enate is distributing a 216-page .> ~mpaign handbook, the very !iit\e of which ("The Labor Boss'~America's Third Party") re-, !lects this' point of view. This handbook - which was ',)£epared by the staff of the P"olicy Committee and doesn't ~essarily reflect the views of :he Committee members - di:"ectly contradicts Mr. Bruner's aegative appraisal .0( la·bor's ?Olitical infh..lence. It says, for example, that CoPE - the AFL-CIO Commit~ee on PoliticaL Education _. is ''the most highly organized and :uost adequately financed. polit­ :eal action operation in' the' 1Jnited States today." Moreover it directly contradicts Professor OhamberJain~s thesis that labor :i8S lost its sense of mission and is sitting on its hands. According to the Republican ~dbook, "Because _the .labor oosses are, to use Staliit's phr'>se, 'dizzy with 'success' their plans foc the fut.ure ar-e bold and im­ aginative." , This point of view is expressed even more vigorously in a new tKtok by Eldorous L. Dayton en­ titled, "Walter Reuther: Auto­ orat of the Bargaining Table" • which, incidentally" deserves 38Rl.e kind of prize for viewillg ttae labor movement with. more ·aierm than any other book of re­ O8Ot yean..

will eventually foise a totalitar­ ian government on this country unless all good men and true rally round the flag and muster up, enough cburage to stop the tyrants in their tracks. . Take Your Choice 61 Well, there you have it. You .. can take your choice. According (0 some of the experts, labor.is resting on its laurels and is poIitically impotent; but, according to others, labor is pursuing a 79 bold' and imaginative program and is politicaly so powerful and'

influential as to' be a serious threat to the very fOUJ)dations , of the American Republic; '- 1 8 .. ~:;'R~';:~rlI might point out that while i ""0 camel h I ' · ave cited on y two exponentS 7 S"o "f Ad.....

.6'

11 U'eKt"r. 1'1 ()harge with air

of each of these contradictory points of view, I could ·quote from a number of others if space permitted. The moral of all this is very simple. Don't be disturbed if the I bo I d next a r e a er you meet in front of 'church. on Sunday

-, VISITED .. :~ ·ii,d'uw OF WORKERS III Trille. 8lI lIIt.mbar4 II

1

(:~;~~nln ~ 'f.~~: (.bbr.)

listen rather attentively you will hear' him muttering: "You can't win - you're damned'if you do and damned if you don't." Incidentally, ·if you· happen to meet one who isn't talking to h' If Imse , yOU. can safely· conelude that he is ignorant of what the expel.ts are· saying about him and his~ colleagues in the labor movement. Wh'l I ld'· . Ie n t want to pear to bewou a philistine or.apan

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as a teletype operator to enter the seminary in 1953. After completing a period -of Postulancy he made his noviti­ ate at Holy Cross Novitiate in Bennington, Vt., and made hi. simple professio'n Au~. 16, 1955. Now .• second year philosop~er in the major seminary, he will receive his degree from Stone­ hill College and "the Holy Cross Fathers Seminary in June, 1959 and will enter Holy Cross Col­ lege for his Washington, D. C., theological studies where he will finiSh his preparation for ordination to the ·prieSthood.

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Continued from Page One the Asian .. .. .. the military threat is not the most impor­ tant." Communism need only "ex­ ploit conditions' 'existing in the economic and social fields in Asia, he said, to make a strong appeal to the masses. . Father.Parel also declare·d that short-sighted immigration pol­ icies of several western nations· antagonize Asians by making it appear that they are -not wel­ come in the West'and are-being discriminated against.

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Taunton Notl.v·e to Make Perpetual' p,'·ofession 0 f V'o,vs Sa t ur d·oy.

Holy Cr?ss Fathers in solemn sponsored by Knights of Columceremomes next Saturday, ~t ·bus Council No. 86, has had a the Hqly Cross Fathers SemIbusy program of aCtivity. nary, North Easton. The~Spiritual CommittE.'C co~ . The profession w~ll be preducted a religious quiz program' Sided. o~~r by the Rev. George and the Social Committee under S. Depnzlo, C.S.G., Eastern Pro­ the c h air man s hip ~f PaiJl vincial of the Holy Cross Fath­ Sweeney, planned a scavenger _ ers and a nativ~ of Mansfield.. hunt which .was a great success. Mr. and Mrs. VItal J. BourgeOIs, The Civic-Cultural Committee 120 Smith Street, Taunton. He put on a shadow show in which is a parishioner of St. Jacques Nodilio Almeida. Paul Charland. Parish· and received his early Paul Sweeney; Paul Dutra, Alan education at St. ,Jacques GramManning and Jerome Foley mar School and Coyle High participated, School. .... , A sport's night was also eo-:. He served in the United Stat.es Joyed by the Circle. Air Force for six years, foUl' A cake sale is scheduled to be' year~ during W~rld War. II and held at McWhirr's' on Sept. I two year~. dunng ~e Korean ,from 9:30 A.M. until 5:30 :P.M. War. Durmg the penod between \' All Sq' . t 0 a tt en d service time . he acquired hill ulres p Iannmg . . the Annual K of C clambake are B. S. Degree In a~countm? from urged to contact Daniel Foster Bryant' College In Provl~ence, foc tickets R. I. He left the PrOVIdence Chief S~uire Robert'Silva anJournal wher:e he was working nounced that Circle meetings will be conducted on Thursday nights. '

FUNERAL HOME, .INC.

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C I b· S . '0~ Mr. Henry Bourgeois, C.S.C., 0 um Ian qUlres~ a native of Taunton, will be Schedule Cake Sale ,perpetually professed in the

BROOKLAWN

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Solution on Page Eighteen •.

anti-intellectual,· I am ·inclined· to suggest, in conclusion, that there may be something to be said for this .kind of ignorance. '""

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'6

Thurs., Aug. 14, 1958

Bible Scholo rs Highlight Week

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Sage and Sand

Vote Will RevE~al Strength Of Nativism in America

THE ANCHOR'11 Th .vrs., A ug. 14 , 19 ~';8 9

7' '

Bishop Connolly to Preside at Mass ments for the Labor Day observ­ ance include, in adidtion to Dowling, George Quinn, of SS. Peter and Paul parish, and a .member of the Insurance Work­ ers Union, wilo is making break­ fast arrangements and America &mos, St. Michael's of the Furniture Workers Union, in charge of publicity'. Also Clarence Banks, Sacred Heart, ot the TWUA, in charge of 'The closing event 'will be a motorcade arrangements; and bl'eakfast fot: labor union dele­ Edward F. Doolan, St. Mary's, cates and members of ·the clergy. presideAt of the United Laber Guest8 will include Mayor Johp Council, who be master ef M. Arruda, representing the city ceremonies for the breakfast of Fall River; 'Rev,' Arthur W; pregram. Tansey, Diocesan Director 4)£ Fat.her Callaghan received a Social Action; Rev. Richard doctorate in sociology fl'om the Hasty, sponsor of the Protestant Catholic, University of America observance of Labor Day; and Rabbi Samuel Ruderman. The 'in 1947 and sil~ce that time has been assigned to Holy Cross, He breakfast will be .featured by is a member of many sociologie­ an open forum at which Father al and hibor associations, includ­ Callaghan will discuss ques­ ing. the National Fatr'ly Wel­ tions pertaining to labor. . fare Conference and the W OJ'­ Prominent .Jesuit cester Council o~ the Fair 'Em­ Others in charge of arran~- ployment Practice CommissioB.

Mary's Cathedral, Fall River. It will be followed by a moforcade ·to William Medeiros Playground and the Mariano S, Bishop mon­ ument, where wreaths ""ill be laid. Starting point for the motorcade is Spring and South Main StreetS'. The public is in­ vited to participate in both the MaSs and the' motorcade.

I~eno

Bigotry is hard to understand. The average American Catholic of today, confronted with a demonstration of it, is apt to be completely be'wilderedby its violence and sheer Jnalice. Especially is this true when the object of bigotry, ns so frequently is the case, tural climate of the nation as a is something SO dear to him whole. and so normal to his "'ho)e They have the further advan­ eoncept of religious liberty 'tage of the accepted American in America as the Catholic IIChool system. He simply cannot fathom the bitterness engendered eve II. umong his neighbors and wwn­ folk, by the lact that he and his fellow Catholics prefer a reli­ gious education for their child­ ren and are willing to pay for il Hatred of Church If he lives in California, for example, he is baffled by the persistence 0 f those who are determined to reimpose taxa­ tion upon pri­ '"ate and reli­ ,Illous schools below colle­ liate level. The m 0 s t obvious thing about the movement is that it is in­ spired by ha­ tred 0 f the Church and all that she stands tor, Actually in the present cam­ paign, very little effort is beine made to disguise this ugly facl Knowing the Church as he does from the inside, sharing her spirit with his bishops and his priests, and finding not the slightest tensio,n between his Catholicity and. his American­ ism, he is frankly puzzled by the antipathies thus deliberately aroused and fostered. The answer, in the worn phrase; is that we cannot escape history. What is happening in California or wherever there is an outbreak of bigotry is a sur­ vival of that Nativism which has played so prominent a part HI the course of the American .tory. Sources of Nativism It is not superficially the same Nativism which produced the "Know-Nothingism" the 1840's and f;O's (and incidentally wrecked the political party sys­ tem of that period), but for aU the changes which have over­ taken ,it, it remains essentially an anti-Catholic force of \In­ doubted vitality. Nativism, aecol'ding to the accepted definition, is an "in­ tense opposition to an internal minority on the grounds of its foreign (i. e, 'un-Americanism') conllection$," Father Colman Barry, the IICholarJy Benedictine, recently summarized its source as three­ fold: the colonial, heritage of England's fear p' the Papacy, of Spain, and. of France, together with the dislike ot the immi­ grant, largely though by no Illeans exclusively economic in origins, which characterized the national period 'prior to the Civil War; American alarm over for­ eign radicalism, dating back to the first years of the republic; Bnd the pervasive de '~trine ot Anglo-Saxon and Anglo-Ameri­ can superiority over all' other races and peoples, Retain Herital:'e The heritage of fear is still strong ih America. The genera­ tions of indoctrination in the bogey of the Scarlet Woman have built up a whole cultural complex of suspicions and hatreds. It is too much to expect that this should be eliminate r ' in our time, for that a majority of American Protestants should completely outlive this heritage. Millions of them have, thanks be to God, but millions more still retain it as a half-conscious memory or as the obscure matrix of their thinking and acting. Those who hold to it deliberately and consciously are probably only a small minority, but they have the advantage of the l:ul­

will

b4~lief that the public sChool s)'ster:n is somehow "Ie ultimate test, the heart and the center" of. the national experimenl How Na,tivism came to identify itself with this notion, and how it chose this platform for its prop­ al~anda, is one of the most fascinating themes of modern American development.

Public Schools Stroll6bold According to Nativist inter­ FATHER CALLAGHANr~ pretation of America, it is the public school system, dominantly Protestant, dominantly Anglo­ A,merican, and dedicated to the total conversion of the country WILMINGTON (NC) - When to these beliefs and these preju­ a six':'foot high statue of Christ dices, that is the last stronghold , RENO (NC)-Bishop Robert which is to be part of the sRFine o'f its peculiar culture. ". J. Dwyer, of Reno has termed in the ;gate;"ay to' Ule new All entertainment given in some A frontal Nativist attack 011 Saints Cemetery for the Diocese Nevada hotels as a "serious the Catholic Church in America moral Issue." He has called for ",'ould be doomed'to failure; tlJie etWilmington tinally arrtves, it will be a much-traveled. pieee "instant and emphatic protest" nation would not stand for any­ of statuary. by all "right-thinking people." thing so barefaced in its bigotry The Bishop's pastoral letter Originally promised for deliv­ as that. But an attack on some­ did not specify a particular 'type ery early this year, the figure thing which in the popular mind meems 'peripheral, like the was' missent to New Orleans otentertainment, but the Ne­ Catholic school system, is stilt . trom Italy. When no ORe there , vada Register, Bew;,-paper of the Re,lO roocese, said his comments capable of eliciting powerful could find ·out its proper desti­ support. ' nation, it was shipped back io had special reference w the ~ever increasing 'cheap' enter­ Italy. The dormant prepudicell are tainment at Southern Nevada awakened and the determination Cemetery o~ficials, concerned nightspots." is strengthened to keep America about the missing stab..~, got in Three hotels ()fl the famed Las solidly in the right camp. ' touch with the artist whe made Vegas Strip recently introduced The minority of active bigots the original sculp'ture in Chi­ operates upon the sympathies of cago. He asked a relative to floor shows featuring semi-nude those who retain only a vague check with the casting firm in ' chorus girls. cultural memory of what the Livorno; Italy. The shipping All Are I-ehsdecl ,origial quarrel was all about. mistake was discovered and the '"Let it be clearly stated," But it would be extremely fool­ statue now is maki-ng its third wrote Bishop Dwyer, "that aU }Iardy to discount the 'residual kans-Atlantic trip en route io Catholi~s are strictly forbidden !:trength of this influence. Wilmington. by the divine law itself to have But the statue wir co first to Victor;, Throuch Destrlletio. any part in en-tertainment which N of its nature indecent, sug­ California, for a variety of Chicago where the artist "".j)) inspect it before it is' sent to gestive' eN" calculated to excite (~thnic and cultural reasOns, has Wilmington. Eventually the'sta­ thoughts or' actions contrary kt long been a rallying cround of tue will be part ot a colonial­ the Sixth Commandment." Nat~vism. That is why the deci­ brick gateway to the new eeme­ No . Catholic is pe'rmitted, UD­ llion that will be made there this tery, due to be completed thN der pain of grave sin, "t'l pal'­ Ira II, with the' vote on what is Fall. tieipate in the management, dilisted as Proposition 16, lleeking t:o reimpose taxation on the non­ public schools, is of far more l:han local impOI·tance. It is a test ,of the strength of Nativism in America, and upon its results will depend, unques­ tionably, whether the nation will be permitted to develop its Americanism in peace and har­ mony, or whether the hideous spectre of Nativist divisiveness will again stalk the land. For Nativism would think nothing of destroyin'g America to gain its victory.

Statue Makes Three' t Ocean Crossings

NO JOB TOO BIG NONE TOO SMALL

,

Bishop Assails ~eno Hotel Shows, Warns of Serious Moral Issues Fection, production or even the advertising of sucb entertai. . ment," the Bishop declared. "And it most positively me~ that Jlf) Catholic is perm.itted .. ee a spectator at such a produe­ tion. Let those who al'e visitOR or strangers in Nevada take n.· at this. They are bound by tM same law, and there is no vaca­ tion from the Ten Command­ ments." Many Complaints Bishop Dwyer said that it III "encouraging to note that some of the strongest opposition to tm. perversion of popular taste alMl this assault upon decency baa came from the better elemen'­ at the entertainment world it>­ ileU."

The ~bree hotels in Las Vegall that &ave introduceCl the semi­ nude chorus lines have met ,,·i. criticism from many owners ... the area's large gambling hotel.. The Las Vegas Sun has al~ 6JilPosed the new shows. The da,illY mewspaper argued tAat they will have a bad effect upoa tl:le town's economy by dissuad­ inc family groul'S from v _ tienin~ there.

AND IN

SULLIVAN BROS.

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Continued from Page One

By Most Rev. Robert J. Dwyer, D.D.

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18

~THEANCl10R 19,58

Thu~s.,Aug. 14,

timony and iniracles j'n causes of canonization and beatification­ are observed. 'To'" protect tite' Church he must, object 'when­ ever :there is any question in the life, works or fame of a person proposed, for sainthood.

e#" the congregation!s tiine;this: tn~stedto the, Congr'egatioh of· .. not its sole ,responsibilit,y. The' Rites. It, must. J>e'on-.guard ofrel~cs a.nd eongregation 'also ' supervises " against the'' selling, . ' , it h must everything in connection.. w i t · prescribe the rulell' . ' of , ~~A~'AB tile liturgy 'of the Mass and the' , exposition of.rel.ics, so thatiheir ,Close' Scrutiny :.­ eeremonies used in, administer'-' a~thenti~ity and.. their ,ve,il.era­ CAR T CEREA' . ~ cause reaches Rome and log the seven' sacraments in .the tion is provided· for. ','" the con~regation ,only' after. a, 'Western Church. The Sacred Two other prerogatives,of'the' ,thorough canonical investiga­ ~ngregation ' for the Oriental congregation are the elevating of tion has been made in 'the di­ Church ' governs '. the Eastern churches to the rank of basilicas • DKLL! RA N ocese of the person proposed,for and the authorizing" c A Rites., . of the sol,.. sainthood. All the information emn crowning of images of Our Into the congregation's office ' , , gathered on the diocesan level Sow a constant stream of mail Lady., " . is turned over to a lawyer ap­ from priests and bishops seeking ,Larg.e Stall' , -011 5 .~ ll. A Ii proved by the congregation who !': Information about the various' Heading the Congregatiorl of, makes a summary of it. c1etails governing the cere-. Rites is the, Prefect, His E:mi':' Msgr. Romani's office then monies of the Church. nence Gaetano Cardinal. Cicoggati.n of Rites meet in execustudies the summary and can' This, congregation not only nani, the 76-year-old brother of tive session at the Vatican every send it back for further study, watches over all the various : Archbishop Amleto . Giovanni' Tuesday mornirig and Cardinal or if necessary reject it. The Kites 'of the Church but also all Cicognani, Apostolic Delegate to· 'Cicognani takes the results of promoter general lists his ob­ the details which surround the the ,l:Jnited States. Twenty-one the congregation's work to the Mass and, the Sacraments. 'Thus cardinals have been appointed",: Pope. for his. approval on the, jections and the lawyer can an­ It has the final word in matters to the congregation by His Holisecond and 'fourth Friday of each" swer them, When all the objec­ tions of the promoter general' .oncerning church mush:, art, ness ',Pope Pius XII, inclUding month. . have been overcome, the whole .xhitecture, vestments and His Eminence Edward Cardinal , One other official of the con": document is forwarded to the . Mooney, cif De·troit.' ' .cred vessels" gregation has a regularly schedPope. The. Pope signs a docu­ For example: In response to' a ' The congregation's Secretary.. uled audience with the Pope.. Third Order Regular 'of

ment introducing the cause but query in 1956, the congregation is Archbishop Alfonso Carinci He is the promo,ter general of , St; Francis

writes only his first name, in­ Riled out the use of radio or who will be 96 iii. Novembe~ but the Faith; better known as the dicating , that he 'is not acting Offer to y'ou~g Men and Boys

phonograph music in church and who, despite' hjB age ,is at his,' "devil's advocate," Msgr. ~ilvio, in the' full authority of the pap­ special opportunities to prohibited the ,use of movie prOdesk every day directing the ad~ 'Romani, who has held the, office acy. study for the PriesthOOd. Lack jectors in church to illustrate ministrative details of the con- 'since 1955, goes to t~e Pope on of funds no obstacle, The, next major step is the let"mons or teach catechism, :gregation." ,... . the, third Thursday' of each For further, information, write investigation into the p'roposed Last year it formally approved A total of 70 ,officials and con-.' ,month to report on the progress: to saint's 'writings, life. and his the use of Gothic vestments arid suItors make up tpe" staff of the, ot'the various causes for beati­ FATHER STEPHEN, T.O.R.

practice of'virtue to a 'heroic this year it ruled that the Sanccongregation which, is housed :in . fication and canonization under degree. Following this' there FRANCISCAN

tus and' th~ Benedictus may·tJe, , the Palace of the C;:ongregatioN, , consideration. . must ,be two miracles worked PREPARATORYSEN.UNARY

..ng together in a Solemn Mass" ~n Rom~, , , The "devil's advocate" func-' through the saint's intercessbn. P 0, BOX 289

Liturgical Calendar ,. ., Report to Pop.e t~on is to ma~e sure that all the , Msgr. Romani has to, be com-, HOLLIDA YSBURG 12 PA.

, The Congregation is also in The cardinals of the Cong:rerules ,for the verification of ..t.",~ pletely satisfied' that they are eharge of the liturgical calendar ', Il.~\ truly miraculous and not attrib­ and the composition of the Mass utable' to chance, 'or illusion. ' missal and the Roman,Brev:iary.'

Necessary Requirements .,:9- The liturgical calendar, known

'as the Ordo, contains directions When the ..two miracles are for the ,Mass and the Div~ne Of­ declared valid, the' person mal' Ike to be said every day of the ·be beatified. This meanll that he year. Each diocese and religious' may,be called Blessed, and may order and congregation has its be vel' ~rateci and accorded hon:' c»wn Ordo, or at least a: supple­ ors of the altar, but only in the ment to that of the Roman dioceses where he lived or iied,' Church, which contains its own and in the religious congregati, ,1 special feasts and observances. which the' newly proclaimed All these must be approved by Blessed 'founded 'or of which he the congregation and no changes was a ~ember. ace permitted without the con­ , J Two furth~,: miracles,inust oc­ , gregation's approval. . cur before the 'beatified can be Another of the congregation's proclaimed a saint. ' responsibilities is the compo­ In certain cases there is a sition of blessings for various offr,iendly wood process known as equivalent , p occasions, such as in 1953 when canonization. In 1931, Pope Pius it published' the formula for Warm and companionable, with X~' proclaimed the equivalent blessing seminaries. ' This was many work.-saving conveniences : canonization of St. Albert 'the first used for the dedication of •.. in new NATURAL FINISH. Great by naming him a Doctor the new campus of the N.jrth of the Church, St. Albert was, or ehoice of lovely colors. American College in Rome: In Send coupon for colorful l>ook­ beatified in 1622 but had never. 1957 the congregation publ ished formally been declared a saint. let showing new model kitchena. , a blessing for radio stations which was first used in connec­ Costly Procedure . .Mo.'f Covpon T0 d or f tion with the dedication of the

Since the long process of can- . '. ,

new Vatican Radio plant.

onization requires much re- E~W---G-O-O--D-H--U--EPatron Saints search, ,travel expenses, and ••

The Congregation of Rites :also

thousands of photostats and

designates patron saints for di­

copi~s of 'documents, it is very oceses, cities, countries and var:.. expensive, It has been estimated

ious, occupational groups. This

that a complete cause costs Middleboro, Road, Route 18 ,ear St. Clare of Assisi was about $50,OQO.This explains why) EAST, FREETOWN

proclaimed patroness of the t,~lemost causes are of persons whol I plan 10 bUl'ld0 remodolO.Ploo.e.ond",_ I . . vision i9dustry and in .1957' St. were members of a religious' bool<lol wllb plctw.. of .ew ....dol klt~ , HEADS C,ONGREGATION OF RITES: His Eminence community. I Bernadine of Siena was chosen The community 'er-! Nc-., -'-'--_ _ I Gaetano Cardinal Cicognani is Prefeetofthe' Sacred Con­ , petuates ,I the memory of their 1 as the patron of public relations I people, gregation .of Rites: The 76-year-old Cardinal is a brother of outstanding members and is! I The care of relics '~also en- .the,Apostolic.Del~gate.,t9t,his.~ountry.NC Photo.' II' ,~, , often, anxious to undertake ,the L - - - - - . , . , - - - - - - : - - - - 'J '

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cost to bring honor on the con­ gregation.' . " Papal' canonization has been traced !>ack as far as' the lOth: 'century but it' did. not become an exclusive prerogative of the papacy'untjl the 17th century., For centuries saints were pro-, claimed by various 'bishops, and for, a time popular acclaim was' 'sufficient to, mark a' man as a' saint. To correct the Church's lit­ urgical bo~ks of saints, the con­ gregation has establish~d a spe­ cial section of' historical re­ sea~ch. These scholars study 'ex­ isting documents, arid have from time to time removed the names of those ~ho pr.ove to be legend­ ary rather than real, ,or those who through error were ac­ claimed saints ,but who are not worthy of the high title.

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Sports Chatter

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THE AI\I':'t· - - ­ Thurs., Aug. 1: '

Taunton CYO -rracksters Practice for KC: Meet By Jack Kil1leavy Somerset

Hi~h

S(:hool Coach

Practice sessions for the Taunton area CYO track . tl~am .are being held Monday and· Friday nights in prep­ aration for the big Labor Day CYO Track Meet to 'be conducted by Fall River Council No. 86 Knights of Colum­ bus. bo:ys' live tOgether' and work in The Taunton squad of 17 Brewster. candidates in the senior Handling GlYl1n's slants is

Pete Marchegiano, who was All':' Scholastic at Archbishop Will­ from St. Mary's, four from Im- ,iams Hig~ this past Spring. Pete maculate Conception, three from' is the younger brother of Ro'cky Sacred Heart, two each from St. Marciano, former world's heavyJacques and St. w{!ight champion from Brockton. Paul's and one Durfee football fans may recall from pur Lady Pete as the fire hydrant type of Lourdes who backed up the line for Jack In the Junior Garrity's undefeated Williams' Division (14-16 eleve~ last Fall. . years) are three :Pete Griffin, St. Michael's Col­ each from Saclege is pitching for Chatham. rl~ Heart, St. Tom Harrington, ex-Somerset Joseph's and St. luminary now at R. 1. State, is a Mary's parishes; starter for Wareham. With Sag­ two from St. amore are the Cleary brothers, Paul's and one Bill and Bob, both of whom each from Our Lady of Lourdes were outstanding hockey and and St. Anthony's. baseball ,players at· Harvard. .Two of Coach Luke Urban's 1957 Bill Casey, Taunton High Durfee State Champions are also School track coach, is handlin~ with Sagamore, Al Lavoie, 'first the squad, with Jamer McGovern baseman, .and' Doug Baxendahi, as . his assistant. Bill Colleran, centertielder. . Taunton High track captain, is A,ll-Star football starts tomor­ sl~rving in a like capacity for the row night. CYO track and field men. Father Catholic college graduates with Francis B.' Connors is' CYO the pros include Jim' Martin, director for the area. Notre Dame; Steve Junker, Sports interest in the Taunton Xavier, anq. a couple of lads area is not confined to track, frllm the University of Dayton, however. CYO is sponsoring Claude' Chaney, halfback, and tennis tournament to run .ail Bob Sakal, tackle. The latter two next week from Monday to Fri­ are rookies. Martin, in his ninth day. It's open to all boys and year. of professional ball, is. <iris in the area, regardless of. listed as a line-backer but his church affiliation. duties now are largely confIned to kickingjoff and booting field Cape Baseball Excellent goals.

Amateur baseball has fallen

Junker, a second year man off considerably of late in many with the Lions, had a tremendous a,reas of the country, but Cape freshman season. fIe was partic­ Cod isn't among them. In all ularly effective as a pass re­ there are 12 teams in action on ceiver, scoring twice in the the Cape, six in the Upper championship game against the League and a like number in the Browns and racking up a total I.ower circuit. Each team is made 01' 109 yards on five completions up mostly of local personnel, be­ overall. ing allowed only six ball players Playing with the College Stars from off the Cape. will be Ed Michaels, a 21S-pound The calibre of ball is excellent guard from Villanova; Fred Du­ ;md the team rosters include gan, 200-pound end from Dayton, and Dick Lynch, 190-pound many outstanding players from halfback from Notre Dame. c:ollegiate and high school ranks. Lynch made the select ranks of Pitching for Brewster and boast­ ing an 8-0 record is righthander N. D. immortals last Fall with a quick tour. around right end .ferry Glynn, Coyle alumnus, against mighty Oklahoma for who now 'attends the University the game's only touchdown and of Massachusetts. Four of Jerry's a 7-0 Irish victory. Dugan, a. U. of M. teammates - Bobby universal All-American choice, Hatch, Ned Larkin,' Bobby Ei­ is certain to see plenty of action chorn' and Paul· Wennik - are for ute Stars. also with BI:ewster. The five

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·S.panish t,~?!!ks Pray for D~ad MADRlD (NCI-The Abbey Nullius of Santa Cruz del Valle de Los Caidos has been erected here to provide religious serv­ Ices for the mammoth memorial crypt, erected near here in honor of Spain's civil war dead. Appointed abbot of the new monastery was . Benedictine' Father Justo Perez de Urbel known throughout Spain for his studies in medieval history and his work in Catholic jour­ ilalism. Abbot Urbel will govern the monastery's community of 12 . : . ' ; . monks and ,eight lay Bro~hers V~/' who will be in charge of reli­ ~HAMP VI.SITS CALIFORNIA MISSION: World heavy­ g.ious services ~t t~e ne,:" memo­ weight champion 'Floyd Patterson, a convert to the Catholic rIal crypt which IS adJacent to 'th F rater Cary Martin ' . (left) and Frater . the monastery. F aI'th ,Clh a ts WI. E ;ted "T th ~ · . . . . , . ­ . rec 0 e memory ua D onan P ask ey d urmg a VISit to CalIforma s MISSIOn San those who gave their lives in the Luis Rey. The champ's Oceanside training camp is six miles crusade for the peace of Spain,­ from the mission. NO Photo. the monument commemorate. all Spaniards who died during " .. II' the Spanish civil war from 19341 to 1939. The monument consists in a t~1 gigantic cross, taller than the Eiffel tower in Paris, rising PEQUANNOCK (NC) - The Dericks, provided 'four class­ above an undel'ground churcb r Board of Education here has de­ rooms in the parish school free carved out of the mountainside cided, after a five minute meet­ of charg~. in the Guadan'ama range 38 ing, to refuse- the offer of four However, some residents de­ miles north of Madrid. The re'nt-free classrooms in a par­ manded that religious statueS in bones of thousands of soldien ochial school to relieve' public the classrooms Used by the pub­ kj)led during the civil war ·Jie school oyer-crowding. lic school children be removed. buried behind the chapels ~ The board's decision appar~ Father Dericks refused. ' each side of the church whicb~ ently was based on the opinion This year, the Board asked· for almost 1,000 fcet long, is one ol of its attorney, Joseph D. Dona­ the same rooms and offered t~ the largest in the world. to, that use of church school pay rent in order to haVl~ a basil! facilities by a public school for removal of the statues. Fath­ would be illegal. ' . er Dericks a~reed. Part-Time Schedule Statues. Must Stay But, some board members ob": Two years ago, the same over­ jected to paying rent and others crowding of public schools ex­ even objected to having the PlIQ­ isted and the pastor of Holy lic and non-public school pupils Spirit Church, Father John H. share the same corridors and lavatories. Ii) To end the controvel'sy over money, "quickly and peaceful­ Continued from Page One 'ly," Father Dericks offered the Parliament of this half-Chris­ classrooms rent-free, but with tian, half Moslem nation ad­ the furnishings customary in hered to the tradition that the most Churl:h schools. It was this president must be a Maronite offer the Board rejected in its Catholic. five minute session. The president of' the Board This tradition 'has its basis in of Education has said that in the fact that Maronite Rite the next school year, eight pub­ Ca.tholics form the largest single lic school classes would be put religious group in the country. on part-time or half-day sched­ According to the same unwrit­ ules to accommodate pupils. ten law, the Prime Minister is always a Sunnite Moslem. The constitution' provides that rep­ resentation in Parliament is de­ cided on a religious basis, not one of political parties. Maronite Rite Patriarch Paul Meouchi of Antioch praised the General as the only· man who can restore reace and security to strife-torn Lel:?anon.

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New Jersey :Scl1ool Board Refuses Offer of Four Rent-Free Rooms

Lebanese Head

I\ Fall River Students to Receive

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Two Fall River residents, both former students at Monsignor 'Prevost High School, will re­ ceive the religious. habit of the Bl'Others of Christian. Instruc­ tion tomorrow in St. Joseph Church, Biddeford, Me. They are Benoit Lelievre, son of Mr. and Mrs, George Lelievre, 99 Ridge St., and Rodolphe Le­ tendre, son of Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Fazzina, 134 Eat.on St. A former member of St. Anne's Parish, Lelievre was graduated from Prevost in June, ]957. He has been attending La

f

ATTENTION OUTING COMMITTEES

GEORGE M. MONTLE

.Mennais College, Alfred, Me" for the past year. Letendre, of Notre Dame de Lourdes Parish, attended P"e­ vost and is a graduate of La Mennais Preparatory School, class of 1958. He attended the' past summer session at I.e Men­ nais College. Very Rev. Brother Elisee Ran­ nou, FIC, superior general of the order from Jersey, England, will attend the ceremony. Right Rev. Msgr. George P. Johnson, vicar general of the diocese of Port­ land will pres'ide.

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- AT NEWUOME IN NEW BEDFORD: " Thurs:/ Aug. U, 19~8' IrxSisters of' thelloly, Names, of Jesus an,d " , ".MarY"held open house Sunday at'thelr 'F,"lm on H,osp:tal'Convent i.n Immaculate Conce.ption Pa.r.ish. II ' : ' Left to rIght, photos show SIster' WIlham .. ~Gains Praise M~ry ~t ldtchen table and talkIng to Sam-

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, ' N' th • ',. \ ;' VENICE, (NC) ~ The' 10 , If" , ' ,·sters to to e~ ,'C 00 ~./ ' \ fnte'rnational Exposition,of ,Doc- 'iff" ,' Ho'ly , , 'am"e" " "IT , amentary Films has singled ,out 7' Con,tinued from Page ODe' " , Sisters 'now on duty, at 'ImDurocher, also known as "Rose fur praise a short film: "telUhg found it possible, ,to assign five macula'te Conce'ptl'on I'ncl,ude, I'n of C d " 'fr'o h . , re. "an,a .. a m .er, n~me,m the ,nistoryand worlt of the Sisters to the parish ona year addition to Sister Veronica of hglOn, Mother Marle'Rose. To-' Hospital of the Holy ~host in round basi~. : " Mary,' Sup~rior, Sister Mary day 'it 'numbers 'nearly 4,000Rome, Three hundred children are, Angela and Sister William Mary. members and staffs 265 schools ,The full-color oocumentary ,registered'!n" the neW' school,', Still to arrive are Sister Rose teaching over 88,000 children.' '. details the past and present hiswhich will open with 'kindergar-' Esther and Sister Agnes ¥ary, It is active in ho~e and fortory of the hospital whi<;h ~s ten and first, second,' and ~hird, Their congregation was foundeign missions, teaching Negro' closely' with the history grades. As soon as possib~e, ,ad':' ed I'n' Canada I'n 18'4'4 by, Eulall'e h'ld· "Fl 'd d h" . (I'nked , , ditional grades wil~ be illided, , c I ren° 10 orl a an. avmg ef the Anglo":Saxons who 'cam"e, (ji' , seve!)., fou!ldations in, Basuto­ 'th' e elg 'hth cen t UfY, Blessing school 'Aug. ,,;n"Duilding "Sunda' y Sa les' , II,~ 1an, d S out., h Afnca.

~ , , to Rome m ,The modern The scope of the movie begins in.cludes a <;ombination auditoriThe :Sisters, 'at Immaculate

in -the tiines 'of the Roman' Em- Continued from Page ODe , um. parisp· hall, and cafet,erfil; in C.onception are proud of their Peror Nero and ends with the addition io" classrooms, 'The wer~ excluded to protect retail lovely convent and up to the modern, hospital, its medical widely-scattered children of the ~trade in coastal resorts, Gov, minute'schoo!, but tl1ey put first 8tafT and'the technical and spir. Meyner has taken issue with th' fi t Th It. ual' training given the nuns 'parish will be transported in a lOgs rs, ey told the re­ iJewly obtained' 54 seat school this provision, He called on the porter of two'members of the who staff it, !' bus, Hi§ Exclill..eri<;y:,,-.J4E~_..Most'" Legislature to 'amend this failparish, each of., whom spends The hospital, not far from Reve[E!nd Bis~l bless the, ing in the.. measure, . two' ,md a half hours a day in Nero's garden where St. Peter to new building at ceremonies on "I am reasonably satisfied' the church, absorbed in prayer, and many early Christian marSunday, Aug. 3 1 . " ',: ' that public sentiment favors a . '. reasonable degree of control "With, such support, how can ty rs were' put 'to death, is near , ~' r " ' over commercial 'we fail in our efforts here?" St, Peter's Basilica, Ou \Bans~ C ontrac,eptlv~s' ctivities whose rapid growth has dras- asked Sister ,veronica. f ' As' Cance'r Threalt . ,If I ' , Rebuild CenteJ~ tically changed the charter of' II A ' . It grew up first as a series LIMA (NC)-Peruvian Health Sunday· as a day 'of rest," the . a' oon scension ef inns for pilgrims who came Minister Francisco Sanchez Mo- Governor said, LANGELAAR NC) _ Some to Rome to visit St, Peter's in reno has issued a decree banning ,. Also critical' of penalties' im- 3,500 persons paid, cash on the Ute 'early centliries after the Emthe, manufacture and sale of ,posed, b~, the ,measur~, G!lv. line to, see, the secretary of the Peror 'Constantine freed ,the bidh control devices for -women, Meyner characteriied the pen- ,Roi,tei-'dam diocese go up in the Church from persecutiqn. ,In 725 The decree said that, instead alties as "obscure and too 'air, h,ere: ' Kin ',Ina of the SaX;!>J1s estab-' of protecting .health or pI'event~ vere." ..' " lished an inn: on" the spot 'and. ing disease, as is sometimes ' Fatheh'E;-Gulj'e made a hal.;' to this day the' hospital, carries claimed,such d.evices "'can' Heavy Penalties,'. , loon asCension froiD· a meadow the name of, the Holy Ghost, "ilt ,threaten; their :u~iers w~th."chron- ' . The measure provides 'penal- " here "in 'a 'demonstration staged Saxia" referring to ,the: earlY.' ic "pre..:caricerous processesY' ,~,\:',. ties .ranging from a fine,of$25 . tQ ra,lse fU,nds for the,new. minor I:ngli~h pilgrims, The hospice· ' According\o :M:r~Sanchez, ,the.,:, for... the, first offense to 'impi'is- , ,seminary of the' Rotterdam See, burned in 847, decree was issued after ,consul- ~ent for up to six moriihs for' ,,", ' ' , tation with Peru's' National the fourth and subsequent vio-', " ,' , It . was later restored.' as, a Cancer' Institute, and was' not lations,' ." ~S lI\ed~cal center, a sort of. sO~lal necessarily connected with the ,; During debate in the Legisla' , ~rVlce cent~r, ~or !OUnl~, girls, teaching of the Catholic Church ture, State' Senator John A. St and a food dlstnbuhpn'p.omt, by that positive birth control is a Wadington, Democratic minority' u~n, ure ore, \t~ )-~rder of ~ope Innocent fIl, who ,'violation 0'£ the natural law: leader from Salem, assailed the JOSEPH M. F: DONAGHY eonfided It to the Order of the bill on grounds that, it violated, . owner/mgr.'

Hospitallers of the Holy Ghost ,'.Se,cond Centu, ry', ,," freedom of religion, ,Tile legis-

In 1198. Pope Sixtus IV rebuilt, , ' l a W m makes no mention of re~,142'Campbell St. , 1471 d 't h d ST, BONAVENTURE (~C) --;-" , ' ·'·N,~w,B.edford·. ,M'ass. It 'm an I as serv~ as,St. Bonaventure University,'cel- ligion, , ' , • hospital from that time, ebrating' its 1'oOth' anniversary Opposition to the . legislation' , " .:. ,WYman 9-6792 , .. , The script of the documentary with a year-lo~g, observance, came ,pri~dpal1y from., repre'" HEADQUARTERS 'FOR was prepared by Professor Pi~- will inaugurate its secondceh-sentatives of. resort 'merchants. .. "COLONIA'LAND' tro De Angelis and the film was tury of service at formal reded- ,They" contended that 'Slft1day directod by Giovanni Paolucci: ication exercises Oct. 7. ' business is" essential to them: I TRAD'1TI0NAL' FURNITURE

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FRANCISJ. AT HIBERNIANS' CONVENTION: A solemn Pontif­ • leal Mass in the Cathedral of SS, Peter and Paul, Provi-·' dence, officially opened the annual national convention of the Ancient Order of Hib~rnians and its Ladies' Auxiliary.t', ,..,,-Pictured 'following the Mass are, left to right: P. Frari~ I. ,..IKean of Brighton and Miss Mary E. Hurley of Belmont, : national presidents. Bishop Russell J. McVinney of :(>rovi­ dence, host to the delegates and celebrant of the ,Mass; A~hbishop Patrick. A.O'Boyle of Washington, national , chaplain, who preached, theSel'DlOn. NC Photo. \." ., ... ,

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uel Galvam;Mrs. Joseph Amaral signing guest book while Sister Veronica of Mary I09kS on; Sister Veronica of Mary opening door of new school and playing organ with S' t W'll' M r t' ' ,lS, er 1 lam ary .,IS emng.

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