08.20.59

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SL MARGARET JOAN

SR. MARIE CHARLOTTE

SR. ANNE MONICA

SR: ANN DENISE

SR. BERNADETTE LOUISE

:SR. HELENA MARGARET

SISTERS OF.NOTRE DAME de NAMUR TO STAFF FIRST DIOCES¥N REGIONAL HIGH SCHOOL IN DARTMOUTH

The ANCHOR

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An Anchor ,of t~e Soul, Sur, and Firm-ST. PAUL

Fa'il Riv.er, Mass. 'Thursday, August 20, 1959

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Notre Dame Sisters Eager To Teach at Magnificent New Bishop Stang High ,By Marion Unsworth With back.to school time almost here, finishing touches, are being appIieq to Bishop Stang High School, North Dartmouth, 'for the opening of scJiool on Wednesday, Sept. 9. And in Waltham six Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur are '~all ready and ahxi~us" to take up their duties at the new DiOcesan high school. They are presently waiting word that their new convent is prepared for 'occupancy. "We do not know the exact date we will move into the convent,"

,'Bus Service . For Pupils

reports Sister Anne Denise, S:N.D., who will be superior and ArraDgemeDts are' beiD&, principal of Bishop Stang, "but J ~. , I~ 0." , ,, Aathori-i at 'all RI.... Ma•. $4.00 per'." •• made with the UD,ion Street it will be soon. There isn't, too .ailway, of, New Bedford to much time before school opens traDSPOrt' children from the' and there are many details to DiocesaD' area to the Dew be seen to. We'll go as soon as , Bishop Stan&' High School, we receive word." Rev. Edward J. Gorman. Dioc~saD superiDteDdeDt of schools, The new school's registration' is.almost full, said the principal. annouDces. With room for 240 in the fresh, Stu d eDt s will purchase 'Changes and t~arisfers aimounced today by the Sisters man class, there remain only a' tickets at the relrular stuMercy, Province-of Providence, affect 21 Religious who few vacimcies for fortunate studeDts' rate which is 'oDe-half, dents who will begin their high , will. come, into ot leave the Fall ~iver Diocese,· or will move the ZODe rate., Fall River stuschool careers in the most moddeDts will take the', regular within it from one house to' another. They include Sister ern educational plant' in ' New Fall River-New,'Bedford UDion :M-arietta, transferred' from late Conception, will join the England. Street Itailway bus which will. St. Xavier Convent, Provi- fllculty of St. Louis School~ Fall 1:0 out PleasaDt Street. Pupils . 'Bishop stang will be the first dence, to Mount St. Mary River, residing, at Mount St. foundation of the Siste~s of from points east of Fairhaven Notre' Dame de Namur in ,the will •ride the Capeway ~us Convent, Fali River; Sister Mary Convent.. , Fall River Diocese. The comFive Sisters now at MounTSt. and conDect with UDioD Street M~ry Jacoba, from St. Michael munity will become the 27th Railway busses, probably iD Convent, Prov~deri,ce, to Holy Mary Convent, Fall River~ 'are active here. Fairhaven. Name Convent, New Bedford; affected by changes. Sister Marie Founded in France in 1803 by Sister Mary Bernadetta, fro~ Lorraine and Sister Mary Phyl- , : AcushDet aDd Fairhaven St. Michael's to St, Vincent's lis will teach at Mount St. Mary studeDts will take' the relrular , Blessed' Julie Billiart, the moth- , Academy, Fall River; Sister Home, ,Fall River. USRR busses aDd transfer in , erhouse was later transferred to ' Namur, ,Belgium. From "there the New ,Bedford center to' . 'Sister . Mary Priscilla, now at Mary Amabilis will go to St. Sisters established foundations take a' bus directly to the Mary's Convent, Newport, John the Evangelist, b-ttleboro; in England, Scotland, Italy, the school. ,'" come to St. John the Evan- Sister Mary Caroleen is assigned Belgian Congo, South Africa, ~,Classes will start at 8:45 gelist Convent, Attleboro'. Also to' St. Joseph's, Fall River; and China, Japan, Hawaii and the ~.M. Father Gorman said a assigned to St. John the Evan- Sister Mary Anton will go to st. United States. complete bus 'Schedule will gelist Iw, Sister Mary Victorine, Mary Convent, Bay View, Riverside. be ready withiD a few days. Turn to Page Five now at O~r Lady of Mercy, East Two Sisters will move from Greenwich. ' Sister Mary Benita, now at St. Joseph Convent, Fall River; to 'other city schools. They are Immaculate Conceptio'n, Westerly: wIll transfer to St.- Pat- Sister Mary Annita, going to St. ' ri.ck'ConvEmt, Fall ',Rive'r. Sister .Patrick's, and Sister- Mary TurD to Page Twelve Mary: Mercita, also at Immacu-

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De'dication Nov. 11:

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r': 11 Sis'fers of Mercy,

~In New Assi.gnments of

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, Bishop Connolly aDDounced today that Ricliard Cardinal Cashin&,. Archbishop of 'Boston,- will preside and deliver the princnpal address at the dedieation of the school Wed- ' nesday. Nov. 11. Bishop Con:': nolly will start the dedication eeremony at % P.M. The Cardinal will speak at 2:30 in the auditorium. Cardinal C~shinlr has manlfeste'd intense iDtereSt in Bishop Stal1&' Hi&,h School sinee the start'of the fundraisll1&' campai&,n.' addressi.nc and blesshi&' the volunteer campaign workers at the solemn opening of the drive in St. Anthony of Padua Hall. New Bedford. Speaking at the luncheon following the consecration of Most Rev. James J. Gerrard. D.D•• Cardinal Cushinlr presented a check for $50,000 to Bishop Connolly for a chapel at the new school. in memory of the -late Most Rev. iames E. CassidY, Bishop of Fall River from 1934 until hLi death iD 1951.

Regional Hig~ Offers Finest Facilities For ,Ambitious Science Students

Avis C. Robe~ts "Bishop Stang High School will have one of the finest science departments of any school in the Eastern Seaboard States," Rev. Edward J. Gorman, Diocesan superintendent of schools, told The Anchor this week. Located on the third floor on the Slocum Road side of the school, the department will include four laboratories-a complete general science A 15-week lay teacper traini!1g course for the greater laboratory, 45 by 25 feet; a the Kewaunee Manufac'turing, distributed in this area by GledFall River area, sponsored by the Diocesan Confraternity of biology labqratory, 36 by 25 Company, Adrian Mich., and hill Bros., Inc., Boston. Future scientists of world reChristian D'octrine, will be conducted on Saturday after- feet; a physics laboratory, nown may well come from the noons beginning Oct. 3 in St. Louis Auditorium, ~radford 45 by 25 feet, and a chemistry laborat'ory, 54 by 2' feet Bishop Stang laboratories, comAvenue, Fall River, Rev., "Present and prospective lay a m~ to' pletely equipped with facilities Each laboratory is capable of to-challenge the most gifted. Joseph L. Powers, Diocesan teachers of Christian Doctrine C C D director; announces. should be particularly, encou~­ handling six sections of 24 stuIn a setup almost unique Instructor will ,be Sister aged to t!ke the ~ourse.. ~t WIll dents e~ch. 'WASHINGTON (NC) among high schools, both the , ., not be a course 10 RehgIOn or The labc;>ratory section' 1nb chemistry and' physics laboraMarie Charles' of the MISSIOn doctrine, but one in,the methods eludes a large SUPPlY room, two Sister Margaret has een, tories have' separate advanced Helpers of ~he S~cred Heart, and techlliques of teaching Reli- storerooms, two 'preparation' named president of Trinity' "work areas for, the use of unuspresently s.tahoned 10 ~oston.. gion. It is suggested that each rooms and two -lecture roomS. 'College h~e, Sister Elizabeth : ually talented ,students; Here "Men, women, and high school pastor appoint a, chairman of lay , The supply room is served bY;1n Carmelita, Provincial Supe- . experiments may be set up and seniQrs from the Greater Fall teachers' for his parish. 'J,'he elettrical. '.(1umb- waiter which rior of the Baltimore Province, left ir!-', pl~ce until completed

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Confraternity to CbnCluct' Te~cher Training Co~rse .

36-Year Old Nun N d Heo d Trinity College

River parishes are eligible to priests will' be most welcome to take the course upon recom- ,attend the course, "along with mendation of their pastor,". Fater , . their.,parish group. ' Powers! announcement states. ' , Turn to Pace ,Tweln

can, be lo~d~d '~rom th,eground Sisters of. Nptre Dame de Namur, : without ',fear of interference flo<if..r,ec;eivll~,room. ' , ' , • ',' hasiu).iIouhced..... _ , ' , . ' .. froiD' 'others needing space. "AI'1 equiPJ!i~nt .lis"supplled,-b;r"'" Turn to Page Five Tum,toPqe Fivo


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OFFIc·r1AIL. ~.. '.' 'f' F-'I'li ~ l"v,e,rT 1!J,1:<ocese: 0 "CJt I'!)\.

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DIOCESE OF FALL.RlveR, MA• •

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B'Uffaloj Pl'elote:

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Stu,dey of Fai.th\

Reverendi Robel1!;i F: :Kii:bT' fi'orm assistant: atl StLRoch!~) Fan Rivel'l, t4:J. assistant af Sacred!. Heart, FaW ~ivelT.. . Reve1"endl

-~HE ANCHOR

~urs., Aug; 20, 1959

"B-liIFFALG) (iN<J::t--Biiltl'-, Josenn, A. Bum' of BuffalO '. hUJcalled upofutliose:attendl. iog;' the Summ~' SchOOl' f1I.

:& FolSter' tioI St, ROchlsl. Fall, Rivetli,

CatHolic Actiom here' to· have' • "tiol~' dissatisfaetton withl'yow k!;towwdge' ancf practice' of: yOVll Eraitlh'"

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Sneaking to: more thaa _ priests; Sisters' and, hig~. scbool students here; Bishop Burke said: "You must'; not, become satisfied with your knowledge , as,fan-as your Faith is concerned. . ()nce: you become satisfied, your; spiritual being begins to die;'" By' atteriding the Catho. Action school, the Bishop added, "you are constantly. learning mOlle. about your:: faith and thUi caD only lead to tlie holy. dissatisfaction that; I speak abou~ He' urged them: "Study more and use it as _ antidote' for tlie false philosophies' which threaten to erase our God-fearing society. But abovel all, in addition to .learning your faith-practice it. Don't be .a lukewarm Catholic. Be a fe... vent one whose onl~ desire' is to ", g~) aut: and. win 'more souls ttl , GOdi· besides .savingr your owe BOU!:"

F'illm's M\oru:11 VaIIU!e,' MO;Iel Im portan,t' 'Yh'a'D Aes:tI1'e:fi:c: 1

By William' H~ Mooring , Bing' Crosby; has been "JJla:sted" more vioHm1JI:w than "Baby DoIF'. His, "Say One' for. Me", say certain, <Catholic press, men; is "junk", "a, shocking, piece of mush", "a, puerile story", "a. glob of tr~ade"; "basically hnmoral" because'its·. theme' combines sex romance What. do we, as <l:atholicsj' ask; and religion in' a comed;y- of the Hollywood' f-ilin: prodrama that 'Was 11. eve r ducers? _ Morally 'decent entertainment planned as a work of art. .

appealing to a variety of tastes, with a, touch. of artistry, when.ever. possible? Or a heavy, diet: of: art~ for art's sake.? . We should make up our ininds, because: 'other. commercial, l}\fMACULAlTE HEART OF'MAR:Y(': The Feast of. the movies' dealing with. religion and'sex; are on the way. Disney's Immacula.te Heart of Mary will be' observed' throughout. the' Buena-Vista comparfYi is about Catholic wodd Saturday, honoring'the, Immaculate ·HeaI'tj ~s.tresses to:,. offer' "The Big' Fishemmln;~" . from\ thee Lloyd <l:. --.Douglas as a· s,y;mbol. of love~ NG Photo, ~. . ST. BERNARD (NC)-'-"Thls II novel, MGM will follow with tHe? golden age' of opportunity a $))2;000,000 production oft "Ben .. . . for: the lay apostle," 300 young Hur." '(Thristian stuaentS welle told, at La~e Subject" to· Criticism, tHeir second Southelln regional , 'l1hese, like' CHiCAGO (NC)- - F a, th e'r ' . . . , " .study week, in Stt BernardCo,I,. films, are· sub.. (Capt.) John C. Borley, O.F.M. .cente:,· offened the Mass ~bne lege, here in Alabama. jed, to criticism as art,. CQmmercrar ent'ert'ainment or a mixture offered Mass under unusual standmg .on III platform sup..· Th~ speaker, James M. She, . of' both. Are' theY' to' be dis- circumstances below. the choppy ported by t~o torpedoes' in the asSociate' editor' of[ the' <l:athollc paraged, by the~ new. avant'-garde waters of' Lake Michigan here.' fonward . compartment oft the Telegraph Register, Cincinnati'.· Father Borley post chaplain suBmarine. U.S.S. 'Torsk while archdiocesan newspaper, said! among, Catholic !ilm, commen.. the. vessel' was 100 feet, belOw "'l1he Church is' demanding Y<MI; 'tatm:s;, as' was Cecil B: de Mille?s of the U. S. Fifth Army Support thee sur£ace~ of Lake· Miohiganl. "Tlie TIm Commandments,'" in not. merely to be good but. to. (i)~er.head, four warships and, join! in' the work or the Churc~ spite of an A-t Legion, rating·, public endorsement ofi its, moral FRIDAY-St; Jane--·France& De tlu::ee sq!Jadrons of planes, were to· unite· among yourselves, arid' and artistiC qualities by at least.Cliantal, ·Widow.· Double. stalking' tlle- sub', in' simulated' to work also with men of gOod' one Cardinal-Archbishop. and; a, White; Mass: Proper; Gloria; war 'maneuvers. Father Borley will outside . the' Church'j' i., alsO! preached to the Catholics order: to· create: a' society where thunderous success in ever.y; theCommon. Preface. afer it. played? SATURDAY _. The Immaculate in· the' 5-man' crew;. Earlier' the. virtue; ,morality, and decertcv, ()r are they to be fai111yl and! Heart', oft the' Blessed: Virgin' Franciscan priest heard confes- will be the normal. elements.". sions., "Your primary.' work is not, to constructively reviewed. by Mary. Double of' II' Class. Cathoric . writers, without-lofty Fattier.' Bbr.ley~ who usually, argue those outside the Church White. Mass Proper; Gloria; disdain. for. the movie tastes of, Second Collect Ss. Timothy perfollms; his clerical functions into it,~' he continued, "but to be ·the",mass audience? . and Companions, Martyrs; on land; came, to, the assistance &. hard~ uncom:Qromising; una!'1~ Desta;uctive criticism. in. the Creed; Preface of Blessed' of'tiie' Navy' when it was learned' sweraBle fact-ai Cliristian factI Virgin. Catholic: press,' esp~ciallYI whenl that: lil Navy chaplain was notl ..-a Christian :·witness, in the this seems to value' aesthetics SUNDAY - XIV Sunday After available for.' the' warfare drills; world." more: highly than morals; cannott Pentecost. Double. Green. Later, Father. Borley was .made fail to discourage future output' an' honorary' submariner; "a' ot sCJ:.eenplays. touching'. upon re" Mass Proper; Gl()ria; Second' t11ie and" loyal son of- the Wearligion;. whether . these present <l:ollect St. Philip Benizi, Con- ers' of ·ttie' Dblpliin;" by' the sub. artistic potentialities. such as fessor; Creed; Preface of: Trin- m~ine's skipper. . come to pleasing fruition in, ity·. Gooc1 ~Y·. "'the 'Nun~s' Story" 01'. aJ:e mere, MONDA,Y - St. Bantholomew, Aids~ "Say One for Me,'" unpreteft- box-office pot-boilers lik-e' "Say, Apostle. Double of II Class. 011> BURNER,S BURLINGTON' (NC)-Father, ,tiously written ,by Robert One For Me." . Red.. Mass Proper; Gloria; 'Alactl complele' Boiler:..BorDeI'· Jeremiah:. or:: PiJr.till, S,S.E., 5u.O'Brien. as a. frankl~ commercial' .. " C' d p" f f ". ·em P.urnace. UDlts.,: Efficient .. :effort ,which 20th Ce l1tury-Foxc , H?~" III any: event, does a, film\ '. 'ree'; Le ace 0 Apostles~' . perior. G'elleraL of the Societ:wof .row. cost heating:, Borne, and; J " ho l2ed might. repeat -thepublie,., tha~l~,; ~orally. approved; fOft TtJESDA:Y-St. Louis, King and·. St~,-,Edinund;, has· again been, ,fuel, 011 sales lUld, service. ' · success ot "Going' My, Way.," pre.: 'a<f~~ and. adolescents: by. the' <., Confessor. Simple. White•. named; cliairmim of' .the special ,sented, script problems.. Thelle! L~gIOn of: Dec~ncy, as, a, mouth~ .,'.. Mass' Proper; Gloria; Common, gifts committee for the Vermont; lnc~1 ''studio I .tcouble-shooter Fvank' pIece for our BIshops, come' to) be) ,., . . :rref.ace~, .. , tSOI Mt; Pleuaut Stree.·, I . Cliaprer,,&tfu:itis and Rheume:Ne- Bedtol'ctJ" .' Wl" 3,.2eM I McCarthy dido hisl best to~. re-~ "bllisu:d'~' as. "i~m~ral!'inl ,aL WEElNESDAiY:-M~S8\ofi the Pre- tiilnl·Foundation..: ; ~lve in voluntQl1y C!ooperatio~,. Catho~~. pubI:tcahon. , yjous\Sund~y'. Simple~, Green.. with a Hollywood' spokesman. tor." . ~<\ss Rpoger;'.N'mGlcmia.;, sec.. " ., '. _ . \ ... _:, . .,..; . .' '. : the Legion of Decency,~a' good1 . ,on¢ C()llect.St; ."Zephyrinus, .,", :;;", -.",. - ..•. '. ..,. " . . . ......' aii...c , " : try. ',. The following' films are to be Pope, . and . Martyr;, Commoll __ -'added' to:. the ,lists in' their~· Preface. '. , , ' . . spective classifications: ' , THURSDAY-St. Joseph Cala,II;' FORTY HOURS . Unobjectionable for' general' sancius, Confessor. Double.' .; • patronage: Have. Rocltet\ Wil11 '. White. Mass Proper; Gloriaj,.,"· DEVOtlONI Traver;' Yi:!llowstone Kelly. ' .. Common Preface. -- .. " , '. C'O' 0'.,...,'. '.' ., . Aug. 23-Sacred Heart, New Unobjelftionabie' for adults and ' . l C l ., ' Bedford. adolescents: bevil's Disciple;. S1; Joseph'S- (])r.phanage: Unobjectionable~ for. adults:· . . ' ' ..' __ ., Fall'River.•. Possessors; Three Men' in a Boat~ IlIO .108' TOO 810, -- .... _' 1 Obje'ctionable' ill. partJ·, for.\ all: NONE' tOO $MAlI.: .•. -. , Aug. 30-St. Anthony of the Cr.y- 'l1ough (suggestive'. ,se-· Desert, Fall River. quences; excessive ,,,brutality) ; St. John the: Ra p tist, Law (low morartone; suggestive' Central Village. costuming' and ·situations. T.hisJ ~lassification applicable only to. PRINTERS Sept. 6,-51. Louis' ot France;. printS. shown, in, thecontinentall Swansea. ) United States). ." llalnOlflee aDd· P ....' Our. Lady." otMtI .Carmel,. I. LOWELL, MAss. Seekonk.' '. .. '. . Teiep~Ww• . . .. .. OTTAW:A:, (NC)-Msgr; JUlgelo. 'sept. 13:.....St. Anne, Fall River. Sacchi" 38;. has' ~rivedj Here to' St. Dominic, Swansea. assume~ duties as secretary of, the). Ap.ostolic, Delegation:. He had ,~·PIMtit, . served; . in a' sim.i~ar··cllpacity'· __ 68t_'_.,,_01( ....',_,i_il'._Co_n_y,_·I1ien_·_'_IRe9_'_u_:lK_,_,K_i1i_9_'o_nd_J_Fo_m_'i1Y_,_siZl_·-.-.I' THE, AN'CHOBi since' 19570' at LeopoidvilUl; Bel... BOSTON, ·second.elaBa maiL privilog... , autillirlncl; giameongo;. A native.of,Ita~';,he' at FilII. River; MiLas, Published ever.,; OCfANPORT'. NJ J. . loItlecl ..... ..-..,,01.."'"' ·~G.;e:--~I w~s ordained,. 'iI!-: -19441 His firstt, Thursdily' att 410 HigHlandJ Avenue;. Fall' River.. MasS... b~ the eatholic. Press'ofl the' appointment. was'to the,A:pos1oli~' ,PAWTUCK&T-, . ~ l! COCA..(!OtA· BOTTlINGJ CO~ oIi' . Dioc",,!, of' Fall:. Rl~~, :SubseriptioJl prlile .Delegation by mall, poatllllld P\Oll,per<7_' . MIl\ AlVER, MMS, . in Jerusalem..).;l One columnist describes scenes that are not in'the picture, indi-eating he' may . h a v e attacked\ the film be£o~e troubling to see it. Bing says he does not resent 'c 0 n s t ·r u c .t i v e criticism ·-but cannot · savvy a ·pat on . the back for playing a lush in ,"'l1he' Count))y Girl"" (soon for re"release) and Ii left to' the jaw for portraying a priest in "Say One' For' Me"~ He knew this was; not'going in for tl1eology. Or Art. , Morally approved' for "adults and-adolescents" by the National Legion of Decency, this picture .is going well with' the cash cus, tomers, but who among us cares about the American movie~ public? O'ne' Catholic commentator' deplOl:es that tl\e box-office' sue..· ceSs, of Bingls' "Going; My, Way," "insured, the' later appear.ance of 'The Bells of .St.. Mary's,' 'Come to the Stable' and, lesser' known but just as obnoxious; fare~;' .. How many, ot y.ou: who paid foi see these films found: them, "obnoxious?" . "Going, My Way" got a "fam.-· ny" rating from the I:.egion of. Decency and an A-class Oscar · for Art, as well as, making. a. fortune and millions of people. · happy. What was so wrong with: that?

Opportultitj 'or ·1.ay Aposfol-ate

Priest Offers Mas~in' S:ub'ma:rine' 10.0, Feet 'B'e,low Mi.chigan; .• "

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Council to Manifest Truth of Church -'

DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER. MASS.

Maine Considers Ways to Solve Bus Problems

VATICAN (·CITY (NC)-Pope John XXIII has revealed he intends to work for the revitalization'" and strengthening of the Catholic' Church so that its truth be easily recognizable by Orthodox and Protestant Chr\&tians. Concerning the com-, . iog general council of the Noting that there are frequent international I]1eetings nowadays Church, Pop~ John said it . between members of various offers ,itself 80S a manifesta- professions and trades, the Pope

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tion of the truly universal Catholicity of the Church on an exceptional and vastly important scale. The idea of convoking a counen came to him like a spontaneous flower in an 'unexpected Spring, the Pope said, rather than maturing slowly after long consideration. The Pontiff con_ tinued: "With the grace of God We will therefore hold the council, and We intend to prepare it bearing in mind what is in greafer need of being strengthened and revitalized within the framework of the Catholic family and in line with the designs of Our Lord. . !pvitatlon to Others "Then when We have carried out this undertaking, eliminating everything that could hinder expeditious progress on the human side, We shall present the Church in all her splendor. . . "To all other people separated from Ulr-Orthodox, Protestants and others-We shall say: 'Behold, brothers, this is the Church of Christ. We have striven to be faithful to her, to pray to the Lord for the grace that she may always remain as He wanted her to be. Cornel' eome! This is 'the road open to meeting, to a return. Come and take, or resume again, your place,. which for many of you is the place of your' ancient fathers! "Oh wha't happiness, what prosperity~evenin the civic and social order-may it be possible to expect for the whole world from religious peace, from the. l'eConstituted Christian family!"

AUGUSTA (NC) - T h. Governor's office says a special session of the Legislature may be called in OctOoo ber to deal with Maine's schoolbus situation. . Gov. Clinton A. Clausen's office has issued the statement after a conference between the Govern.or and Mayor Albert L. Bernier of WaterVille, one of the Maine towns involved in the transporta tion con troversy. The Maine Supreme Court ruled in May that tax-paid transportation of private school pupils can be provided constitutionally but at present such arrangements are illegal because there is no permissive legislation from 'the state's lawmakers. This ruling plus, a failure of efforts to get a special legislative session before school opens in early September has left the situation confused in many towns which for years have • provided bus rides to and from school for all children, regardless of the school they attend.

asked: "Why then could there not be' a meeting of those who agree in exulting in the most memorable fact of human history-that is to say the victory of civilization in the light of. Christ?"

Bishop Presides At Final Rites Most Rev. James L.Connolly, Bishop of Fall River, gave final absolution following a Solemn High Mass of Requiem Monday morning in St. Louis Church, Fall River, for Mrs. Joanna (Reagan) Connerton, wife of the .late. James E. Connerton and mother 'of Rev. Francis R. Connerton, S.S., v)ce-rector of St. John's Provincial Seminary, Plymouth, Mich. Celebrant was Rev. Thomas .,.. Walsh, .pastor. Rev. Edward J. Burns,' assistant at St. Louis, was deacon and Rev. William R. . Jordan of St. John's Centr~ Village, subdeacon. Seated in the sanctuary were Most Rev. James J. Gerrard, D.D., V.G., Auxiliary Bishop of the .Diocese; Msgi'. Hugh A. Gallagher; pastor of St. James Church, New Bedford; Sulpician Fathers and Diocesan clergy. Chaplains to Bishop Connolly . were Rev. Felix S. Childs, pastor of Immaculate Conception, Fall River, and Rev. George E. Sullivan, pastor of St. Dominic's Swansea. Bishop Gerrard's chaplains were Rev. William ir. Harrington, pastor of Holy Name, Fall River and Rev. John J. Hayes, administrator of S1. Mary's, New Bedford.

Sisters of Mercy· Receive Habit, Pronounce Vows at Cumberland

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THE ANCHORThurs., Aug. 20, 1959

Congressmen Insert Articles in Record

FRANCISCANS HONOR BISHOP: Most Rev; James ·J. Connolly, D.D. wears the robes of a Franciscan following affiliation ceremony in Our Lady's Chapel, New Bedford. At left is Rev. David J. Fleming, rector of the chapel, and at right Very Rev. Celsus Wheeler, pro'vincial of the New York Province.

Two Fall- River Homes for Children To Open Pre~Primary Day Schools Day school&. for ,pre-pr:imary and. kindergarten pupils· will be' opened next month at St. Vincent's Home and St. Joseph!s Hom!'), Fall River; according to announcement made by the Most Reverend Bishop. The schools, each to. accommodate upward of 50 chil- tors or' by calling 'the' o~ice of dren, will provide hot lunches the Diocesan Superintendent of and competent supervision of Schools, 368 North Main Street, play and teaching periods.. Fall River, telephone OSborne

The Diocese is providing the new 'facilities "in response to Nine Sisters from this Diocese appeals from various participated in solemn ceremon~ Bruce, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. frequent quarters to provide shelter and ies at Mother of Mercy Novitiate Frank J. McCann, 602 Durfee Street, Fall River; and Sister · care for children of parents who, chapel, Mt. St. Rita Convent, Cumberland, R. I., Provincial Mary Perpetua, daughter of unfortunately', have to spend time Judge and Mrs. Walter L. Con- away from their children and at' House of the Sisters of Mercy. They included four postulants sidine, 12 Parker Stree~, New 'work," said Bishop Connolly. Inquiries as to enrollment of who were clothed in the reli-' Bedford; and niece of Rev. John gious habit and given names in J. Con'sidine, M.M.,· Rev. Ray- youngsters may be made of pasreligion; two novices, who pro- mond T. Considine, and Rev. nounced temporary vows; three Arthur G. Considine. 'Sisters who took perpetual vows, . Perpetual ,vows' were pro. The postulants, all from ·Fall nounced 'by three religious, all originally from Fall River. They' River, who will enter upon a CHICAGO (NC) Msgr. 7ear's novitia~e, incl~d~ Sister w ere Sister Marie. Roselle Joseph· Donnelly, nationally daughter of Mr. 'a'nd Mrs/Manuel. Mary James Francis, daughter' known mediator, in bibor diSSilvia,' 59 ·Pitman Street.. 'of Mr: and Mrs. James Doyle., Also Sister Mariie· Bernadette, . putes,'wilJ preach the sermon at 192 Dwelly Street, and' niece 'of daughter of Thomas P. Ryan, the 1.6t~ ,annual Labor Day Mass .. Rev. Edward D9yle, O.P. Also Sister James' Mal'J'. 110 Bowen ·Street and nieeeof · ill' !foI,. ,Name Cathedral here daughter 'of Mr. and"Mrs. James .' Si~ter Mary Cleophas,. -R.S.M: on Sept. 1.. Coyne, 210 'Fourth street; Sister" . and Sister Mary Hildegarde, He is· a-founder and board. Marie Paula, daughter of Mr. R.S.M.; and' Sister Marietta' member of the National Catholic daughter' of. Mr. and Mrs.' wii~ 'and Mrs. Orner Bedfard;' 670 Social- Action Conference, and· is 'Ply'mouth Avenue; ';l9d Sister' liam. Walsh; 102 Oitkland.;Street. "(HI-ector of the Hartford ArchMary Aquina, daughter .'of Mr.··. fo-r.~uns . diocesan' Labor Institute. and Mrs: William Lomax, 11 n Snell Street. Temporary Vows. NORMANDY (NC) _ A new The two novices taking temcollege run exclusively by nuns IT'S' All RIGHT TO porary vows were Sister Mar, .fot:' nuns taking advanced deSHOP AROUND' FOR. grees .will open in Missouri this SOME THINGS, BUT Fall. Marillac College will be atOth~rs tended by Sisters from a dozen CINCINNATI (NC) - Eightdifferent" communities, with the day retreats, now taken for teaching faculty composed of 38 202-206 Rock Street· granted by many sodality units Sisters, 15, of whom have doc-. Fall-River. in the U. S., wilt" be an inspiratorate degrees. tion to sodalists in other coun'IS. ~ PlAtE I'D tries, an international sodalit, GET A PRESCRIPTION official has declared here.' R. A. WilCOX CO. FILLED! He is Father Louis Paulussen, OFFICE' FURNITURE S.J., vice director arid general secretary of the World Federa.. S""'" fet I~ ... ~ia.. De.H...., tion of Sodalities of Our Lady,' • DESKS • CHAIRS with headquarters at Rome. FILING CABINETS In this country for the World • FIRE FILES • SAFES Sodality Congress to begin today FOLDING TABLES in the Newark archdiocese, with AND CHAIRS the working sessions at Seton Hall University, South Orange, Father Pauluss~n visited Xavier University to meet with Jesuit 22 BEDFORD ST. sodality moderators of the ChiFAll RIVER 5·7831 cago Jesuit Province.

2-6262. A fee of not more than $150 per year per student will be charged. ..

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WASHINGTON (NC)-A series of articles Richard Cardinal Cushing wrote for a daily new~ paper, plus another one he wrote for the archdiocesan weekl7, have been inserted in a sing" issue of the Congressional Reoord. Rep. John M. McCormack 01. Massachusetts, House majority leader, inserted a series of three articles written by the Archbishop of Boston and which appeared in the Boston Daily Globe explaining the communist conspiracy against the ~ . world. On the same day, Rep. Thom.. J. Lane of, 'Massachusetts ioserted an article the Cardinal wrote recently for the Pilot, Boston archdiocesan newspaper, explaining his opposition to the September visit of Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev. ....

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STANG .. HIGH, SCHOOL

North Dartmouth, Moss.

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others of which we are, justly ,proud ,

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St. Jerome's School and Convent

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North' Weymouth. Mass.

Blessed Sacrament Church

,St. Patrick's Convent ,'

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St. Brigid's Church" Lexrngton, Mass.

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St. Tarcisius' School and Convent

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""t '. ! RAPIDLY NEARING COMPJ... ETION: Only final touches are necessary to complete Bishop Stang Regional High School at North Dartmouth. Modern and practical, the school will. provide students every facility for high- school education second to none. Left photo shows one

of the four laboratories designed and' equipped with today's emphasis on scientific train'ing in mind. Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur who staff school will reside in, convent in center photo, with chapel adjoining at left. Combination gymnasium and cafeteria building is shown in right photo.

I

New Re,gional High Reg.istration Nears Freshman Class Capacity' Continued from Page One

Mary's, Lawrence. Sister Berna~.'.·----"--'··c-··-·····-.l .• dette Lou i s e The first school in this countr7 ~"I will teach sciwas opened in Cincinnati in 1840. .I' ence and reliIn 1849 the Notre Dame nuns gion at Bishop. arrived in Boston. The' com'Stang. Her munity is divided into four background i~­ American provinces, each with eludes graduate its own novitiate. Throughout work at Boston the world there are over 5,000 C oUe ge and members of the congregation. teaching expe" In the Boston Archdiocese rience at St. alone there are 33 foundations, Mary's School, with many others t h r o u g h o u t ' Boston. Music, the New England States. EmSr. Bernadette English and remanuel College, Boston;' and Louise ligion will be Trinity, Washington, D. C. are subjects taught by Sister Maralso staffed by the Sisters. garet Joan, who r; has previously , Primarily a teaching' order, the been assigned eommunity also includes other to Presentationoccupations and is active in School, Brightforeign missions. on; St. BoniSix Sisters face's School, New Haven; Six Sisters have been assigned and St. Augusto Bishop Stang High School All are natives of the Boston tine's, .L a wrenee. She Archdiocese and did undergrad- has a brother, uate work at Emmanuel College. Rev. John DonThey are headed by Sister Ann Denis.e, hol~~r of a ~aster's de:e::e~' inw ~h: L·~r. Margaret Fee In RelIgIOUS GUIdance from__• Bt)ston ArchJoan Providence College. diocese. Sister Marie Charlotte Bel' previous .experience haa l will instruct in ......~ Uleluded three .! history, English years. of teachand religion. A ing Latin at graduate stu'N 0 t reD am e dent at FairH i,g h School, field UniverBridgeport, and sity, she has nine years as had previous principal of'St. assignments at Theresa's High St. Michael's School, ProviSchool, Exeter, den c e. Her N.H.; St. Mary'S, work at Bishop Sr. Marie Lawrence; and. Stang will be Charlotte Star of the Sea, solely~adminis- Beverly. She has a sister in the trative. Not reD a m e ' _ The principal community, Sis..... has two brothChristine Elizat Sr. Ann ers who are beth assigned Denise XaverianBrothto J~lie Billiart en. one a superior in an African H i g h School, mission, the other stationed at Boston. Sister the community' pro v inc i a I Ann e Monica bouse, Baltimore. She also baa" will teach Latin a sister in the Notre Dame com- and religion to munity, Sister. Magdalen Joseph, the Stang freshMlpervisor of music for this men. She did province. advanced work Serving wit h Sister Ana. at Boston Col-

~e:~ g ~'~d ha~:~'

Denise will be Sister Helena Margaret, who will teach alg~ bra and rehlion. She did

ll'll, :ua.te f ~olrkd at ., aIr Ie U' 'ty Her Dlv.ersl t' h ~VIO~S eac 15asslgnmen bave been at St. Kark's D Q r _ t' .' S" • .. • • • e r Prov, .. 'l"bereaa's, "nee; and St.

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Sr. Dele.. MargaN

Condemn Book

trrRECHT (NC)-The 'Bishops cr« the Netherlands have issued • "'tement condemnin'g a recently published book. dealing with all e g e d apparitions of .. tt. Bleaaed Virgin ill Amsterdam.

The Sisters' eagern~ss to reach . t their North DartmouUl conven is heightened by the fact that only Sister An.n Denise has Th see~ the new' school. ey exclaimed, "As soon as ~e ~ frigerator and stove are 10, we 11 . h t a ft er them. be rig

,It

New ,Translation TOKYO (NC)-The Franeis-' ean Biblical Institute lJere has, published the second volume of its translation of the Old Testament into colloquial Japanese. The 202-page volume comprise. the 'Book of Leviticus.

THE ANCHOR-

.

Thurs., Aug. 20, 1959

5

Science Labs New School Feature

Continued from Page One Portable fume hoods are Another advantage for the another outstanding feature of gifted will be special study the Bishop Stang equipment. rooms in connection with the Whereas old-style hoods are physics and chemistry labora- stationary, making it difficult for tories. Here technical books and teachers to use them for demonCASTELGANDOLFO (NC) :- magazines will be available to strations, the new models may His Holiness Pope John XXIII students. Research and advanced be moved from place to place offered Sunday ·Mass for his reading can thus be carried on and also have shatterproof glass Summer neighbors here, and in in conjunction with laboratory panels for easy visibility by students. a brief sermon urged them to work. "With the current trend tomake their participation in the Also included in the science Mass a living and conscious act. wards con'solidation of facilities; department is the domestic: Bishop Stang is almost alone in The faithful should become science division. This feature. aware of the fact that in the the generous space allowed to the most advanced thinking in Mass they are united in the wor--- the sciences," commented a the field, in ·that it· is primarily representative of Gledhill Bros., ship of God, he said. designed for demonstration use. Pope John said that many well, acquainted with school labIt is ~onsidered more practical people when, attending Sunday oratories in this area. Separate rooms have been al- and realistic for students to use Mass are distracted, and often do not even see the celebrant. He lotted to chemistry, physics, school time for demonstrations of homemaking and to put them recalled that when he was Apos- biology and general science. tolic Delegate to Bulgaria in the Equipment incorporates many in practice in their own homes than to takeclass hours for actual early 30s, he visited Yugoslav spe.cial features, including Kemcenters where the faithful joined rock countertops in the labora- r cooking and housework routines. with the priest in reciting the tories. It is pointed out that future Kemrock, a specially treated housewives will be working in prayers and chants of the Mass. stone 1% inches thick, is nonReal participation in the Mass, a home rather than a school the Pope said, means that the absorbant, resistant to chemicals situation, therefore they can and heat and possesses a high faithful must really feel that better practice' domestic skilLl they are a part of' the ,feast of load bearing capacity. It was in the home environment. developed' for use in laboratories charity ~nd faith. by the Kewaunee organization. DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER, MASS.

Explains "Import Of Participation

Heads Trinity Continued from Page One Sister Margaret succeeds· Sister Mary Patrick who had served as president of the liberal arts college for women since 1953. . One of the youngest college presidents in the country, Sister Margaret is 36 and was graduated from Trinity in 1945. The former Susan Margaret . Claydon of New Rochelle, Sister Margaret joined the Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur at Ilchestel', Md., in 1946, taug~t at St. Hubert's High School in Philadelphia, then at Trit1ity Prepara-tory School,. Ilchester, before joinirig the Trinity faculty in 1952. The Notre Dame de Namur Sisters will staff the new Bishop Stang regiomil high school in . Dartn:lOuth.

Taunton K of C To Visit· Shrine Msgr. Coyle Council 82, Taun- . ton Knights of Columbus, will sponsor a motorcade ~o the Shrine of the Jesuit Martyrs of North America at Auriesville, N. Y., this Sunday. Twenty-five Tauntonians will join a Boston pilgrimage to the shrine led by Cardinal Cushing. Others are welcome to join. the group.

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What's This Jazz From Columbia?

6

-'Enough ,Is Enough

-THEANCHOI

Thurs., Aug. 20, ~ 959,

A three-week conference on rural educati~n has just finished at. Teachers College of Columbia University. The group of twenty-seven participants was made up of' !,\up~r..; intendents, principals and supervisors fromsevente~'n states. Here is one of the resolutions made by the group:,' -,~ "The public' school system constItutes the best system' TODAY;-St. Bernard of CIa. . , for democratic education on the elementary and secondary vaux, Abbot-Doctor. He W8lI levels. The public education system needs and demands ~he born in 1091 near Dijon, France. At the age of,22, after persuading best thinking and support of all Vnited States citizens. " 30 young noblemen' to follow, "From an educational, democratic and financial viewhim, he joined the struggling point, duplicate educational systems are 'wasteful and abbey at Citeaux. Upon finishing his novitiate he was sent ~ inherently undemocratic. . bis abbot to Clairvaux; where be "The expansion of duplicate' school systems on a secbecame regarded as the real tional and nationwide scale, constitutes 'a very grave threat founder of the Cistercians. Du.... ing his lifetime he founded 88 to. the continuing progress and improvement of the demoCistercian houses, was adviset:' to craticj'!chool system." popes, kings and councils, ancl What drivell And to try to hide under the banner of was the preacher of the second democracy a scheme to, capture education and to make the crusade. He died in ~153 ancl was declared ,a Doctor of tbe public school system ~ splendid as it is - the only vehicle Church in 1830. of democratic education 1 ' " That resolution gives a candid insight into the thought FRIDAY-St. Jane Frances d8 Chantal, Widow. At-the age of 14, processes of many individuals who are in the educatio~al a motherless child, she wu 'picture'in this country. And what a frightening thing their placed under the care 01. • attitude is 1 ,. I ... " -worldly-minded governess. She In the' first place, it is foolish ~ and unprovable ....:...- to , offered .herself to the Mothe.of God. She was married to the : Ilay that the' public school system is the best syste!ll for 'Baron de Chantal'and her home democratic education. Columbia is using ,the technique of was a model of domestic happistating a thesis with so m.uch authority that no one ness. After the death o,f her huedare question it. , " band, she entered the religioua The fact is that the more than eleven thousandparo-, life and fourided the VisitatiOil 'Order. In this work she was ... chial schools in the country have "yielded up not a single aisted by S1. Francis de Sale.. atheistic or communistic teacher, and ,that is more than can be said for any other school system. Not a single nonChristian or non-American principle is taught in, these , By Father ,John I .. 'ThomaS, S.J. 'oring' the Immaculate Heart ell schools, where, on the contrary, patriotism is taught as a Mary as a symbol of love, thiII virtue and a d4ty. Ass~staht,Prof\.ssor ,of Sociology feast was institu ted by Pope , Furthermore, if, as the 'resolution claims, the public Saint ~uis University, Pius VII, assigned a proper ~ IIChool system is the best on the elementary and' s~ondary Do you think that married women 'with chiidren shouid fice and Mass by Pope Pius ~ , levels, why'not'be completely 'logical and, call it the best on work outside the home? I have J'ust r,'eada report of a meet-' and extended to the Universal Church willi a permanent date _ the college and graduate level. What is the ."best" on the " iilg of experts in the East, stating that there was no rela- ,, by Pope Pius XII. lower IEwel surely would be "superlative" oil. a higher'level. : tionship be.tween working mothers and juveniledeiinqueDcy But Columbia, while not afraid to bring the parochiaischool or family disorganization.· SUNDAY-St. Philip Ben.... , Nevertheless,' some 20 Per' ' Confe'ssof. H~ was born in FIOI'.•ystem jnto its sights, would,notdare go aft,er the great , On the face of it, this strikes . cent (2.85 million) of the motb-_ ence on the Feast of the Assump, private colleges and universities of the country. So -dem- 'me as strange. I'd like to ers of preschool age children and . tion,1223. He eniered the Servite ocracy is in danger only where ,nuns and brothers anp priests 'read your comments. over 40 per cent (4,65 million) 'Order, whfch was foundcll OIl are teaching children and youngsters. On the college level, , I don't think we have to' de- with children between' the ages the day of his birth. His virtue pend upon experts to tell us of 6 and 17, were in the work 'won him respect and admiratiOA. it can shift for itself iii complete security. force as of March, 1958. He died in 1285. Columbia would make education the concern of, the , where ,mothers ,with small chilIt is estimated that about oneMONDAy' - St. Bartholomew, public school system exclusively; That is making the servant dren s h 0 u I d third of the employed married' ,Apostle. He carried the Gospel the master. Actually education is the right and privilege of s pen d. their. women are year-round full-time through the most barbaro.. workers, while the rest, were in the l?are!1t. The parent's right a~ teacher is established not time. By their very nat u r e, and out of the labor force or countries of the East, penetrating' only by natural law but by American law and tradition. into the remoter Indies. He WM part-time employees. On June 1, 1925 the Supreme Court of the United States children nee d martyred in Armenia. a f f e c t i 0 nate However, there ,are about two decided unanimously in the so-called Qregon or Pierce Case ca r ej instrucmillion children under six years TUESDAY-St. Louis IX of the 'compulsory attendance at public schools was an illegal t ion, training, of age whose mothers are work- France, King. He led two erttinvasion of the rights of parents to educate their children guidance and ing full time. Rou'ghly, two- ,sades against the infidels and dis c i pline if fifths of these children were was noted, for. his great zeal , as they saw fit. ' taken care of by relatives other for the Faith. He died in Tunil The decision reads in part: "The fundamental theory of they are to de,velop normally than'the parent's, including older in 1270 leading his army on hill liberty upon which all governmen.t iii. this Union reposes in our society.' 'children in some case~. _ ' second crusade. excludes any general power of the state to standardizetlw Although others may serve as Another fifth were looked ' , WEDNESDAY - St. Zephyrtehildr,en by forcing them to accept instruction by public , substitutes for parents in' s0rrle ,after by their own fathers and waysj they normally cannot sup~ mothers who either worked dif- 'nus, Pope and Martyr. He SllCteachers only. ply the love, warm personal in- 'ferent shifts or whose working ceeded Pope Victor I in 199 ao4 . In one of the strongest court decisions ever written in an . terest, and sense of belonging and conditions were such as to per- 'reigned un,til 217. Case and the Prince vs. Massachusetts Case, the Supreme being wanted that children re- -, mit the' children to stay with them.' , ' , ' It'seems unlikely that expertll Court has held the rights of parents over their children',s quire. No advanced societies 'have AIJout one-fourth of the chil'would make this statement. Wh. education ~ being. grounded: in the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution of the, United, States as ever been I able succ~ssfully to dren were cared for by neighbors they probably said, was that we , replace mothers ~n thi~ regard; or other ilonrelatives, and only 'had no empirical studies to show "unalienable'rights" guaranteed to every American~ , , though the Russians tried to do around five per cent were placed : that 'juvenile delinquency WM In one of the srongest court decisions ever written in an 'so for a'time.and it appears that in "group care centers,"',such as ~caused by the employment of educational case, the late Justice McReynolds, in the case of Chinese Communists are making day nurseries, nursery schools, 'mothers. ilettlement houses, etc; Needs Careful Study Commonwealth vs. Armstrong, said: "In discharging this· another attempt. ' Before giving a complete an-, Receive Some Supervision . This lack is not surprising. -w. duty it is the undoubted right of the father to designate SWe!' to your question, it may be' Approximately three million "know very little about the cau~ such teacqers either in morals, religion, or'literature, as useful to look at the present situ- children between six and 12 of juvenile 'delinquency in genohe shall deem calculated to ,give correct instruction to the ation in our country, years of age had mothers who "eral, and it would be very ditParticip{ltion '.pf mar r i e d f II t' k A ficult to sho,:\, the connection bechild. No teacher, either in religion or in any branch of women in the nation's, labor were u - Ime w,?r ers~ . fair tween 'working mothers and deeducation has any authority over the child except what he force ,has continued to increllse percentage t ~ b th:~e. chIl~ren linquency unless careful studietl derives from thenarent or guardian and that authority may steadily since World War II. were expec e yell' J!lot ers .: were continued over a period oi take care of themselves, while, ' . d l' ' ay no* be' withdrawn whenever the parent, in exercise of his dis- Currently, a little over half (H,8 to the others received some super- ,years smtce e mquency m ciplinary power, may think proper." million) of the women in the .. f d lt id . appear a once. The same observation appliell force 'are working wives VISIon rom a u s or 0 er ChIlSo let those responsible in Columbia have enough labor , dren. f amI'I'd' . t' tho living with their husbands" Wh d th 'th II to y IsorganJ<l:alonHI democracy to read and understand and let others practice whereas only one-fourth are <:h'ld y 0 ~~ ers WI sma may take years to manifest itself , the provisions laid down in the Declaration of Independence, single, and somewhat less than, 1 ren wor , '.' clearly enough to' be studied. 'one-iourth are' widowed, di-' In so~e case~, they are wld- Also the mere fact that a mother the Constitution of the Unit~d States and the decisions owed; dIvorced, separated" or does not work outside the home the highest court of the land. And please~a little leM of vorced, or separated.\,) have an. '. unemployed husband. does no t prove th a t sh' . ,Before World War II" only, 30 Th '. ' e s d~0_ this jazz about.educational systems and democracy 1 e maJorIty work to Increase . d" b t h ' per cent were married worrien, the family 'income. , ' a goo JO a orne. . '. dose 'to half were single It sIi ouOld be 0 bVIOUS ".. 'th' a t if the In general, , while .' . ' 1mothers With Isma1I ....... women. , This \ change resulted .moth· I d I ,chIldren shou d not be emp 07__ primarily from the greatly in- ,'. er.IS . emp oye on y p~rt- unless there is no other W87 .. creased labor 'force participation ,tIme or IS m and, out of ,the, work provide for the children. In iJudl ot· , . among marrit';d women, though.' force,, " her employment , ' : may n'cases, mo th ers mus t 'ta k e ~ the currently larger pecentage aff~ct ,her r~latI,onshlp, to, her ,ticular. care to develop the aflee, of; women who are married was ,chIldren, ti ' <--" A 'f II' very t" , serIously. , .' " ona1 an d emo t"IOna I aspec.. _ . u Ime ,worker, however th· 1 t' h' t 'th . ' ~ , OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER" OF THE DIOCESE OF FAll RIVER , also a factor. '11' fi ' . ' . '." elr re a Ions IpS 0 ell' C _ WI,. ndJ.t, ext~emely dIffIcult dren~neither the' child Publish~d w;eidy by Th~,Catho,licPress ot the' Diocese of Fali 'Riv~ Most Available' , to gIve her c~lldren adequate ,adult lives' by bread alone.' ,n 0' Highland Avenue' , ," ' " • l The highest labor force rate care and attentIon, so that only ' OSborne 5-7151 Fall River, 'Mass. oamong married 'women is in the very serious reasons can 'justify 'Grandmothers' DaY 'PUBLISHER . ." 35-to-54 year age bracket. This 'lUchemployment.' SANJUAN (NC)-The <fa&group is most avai~able 'for 4\l~- " ,U, mothers have, such anim- olic'Daughters of America hfJIIIi Most Rev. James L' Connolly, D.O., PhD. , ployment since they are past the ,portant, role to fulfill in the -observed the feast of St. Arm. GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MANAGER main childbearing period 'but' home, 'Why do the experta say "Grandmothers' Day." St. A-. Rev. Daniel F. Shalloo,"M.A. Rev,. John' Drisc~1I bave not yet approached' the 'that there'is,no relatio'nship be~ was the mother 'of the Ble.ecl , MANAGING EDITOR ,usual ol'etirement age ·forwor~- tween working ,mothers andju.. ,Virgin, and the 'grandmothelr' ~ , Hugh J.. GoldeA era.. WDile delinquency! Christ. 1-. 1)' ~'\ DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER. ~Ass.

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Papal TroublesJ"ooter in Paris

~m POPE JOHN XXlD: All Authorltattn BloP'aphy By Zsolt :&radi, Msgr. JamesL Tueek, and James C. O'Neill. Copyright 1959.

7

. . Farrar Straus and CUdahy, Ine. Publisben

DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER. MASS.

PART IX Archbishop Angelo Roncalli sat in his office in the Apostolic Delegation in Istanbul one morning in December, 1944, , and read a telegram from Rome with mounting' disbelief. "I think they have lost their minds in Rome," he said to an assistant. , ' mo~ent and he immeThey hadn't. What Rome critical diately had to face a delicate had done was to appoint situation. All. sorts of passions him as .Apostolic Nuncio to and, hatreds were unleashed in

In all he visited 85 of France'. 87 dioceses while carrying the

Paris with, orders to ,go there as France, a wind that concealed quickly as possible. Always obe- the germs, of revolution blew dient, the future' Pope . John over the country. XXIII wound up his affairs and "Roncalli's smiling goodness, arrived in Paris on Dec. 1, 1944. his calm, his patience, his firm~ France in Upheaval ness, his ability to overcomedifThe foilowing morning, in his ficulties and obstacles saved the eapacity as dean of the Diplo-" Church and France from real matic corps in Paris--an honor catastroph~s." accorded to the papal representa, Asks for Proof tive in many countries--ArchArchbishop Roncalli's first bishop Roncalli delivered ,the success came in 1945 whp'l ,tlie tradi,tiona} New Year's greetings government of Charles de Gaulle to General Charles de Gaulle, , ~ithdr~w its' r~quesi that any provisi"onal head of E:ra~ce. bishop accused of friendship The Fl1lnce to which ,the 63- with Vichy be removed. , year-old papal representative He was asked to remove 33 bad been assigned was in up- bishops. When. he first negoti~ heavaI. The country had been ated on this problem with the just liberated from the Germans government, whose foreign minUNIQUE SPIRITUAL QUALITY: This portrait from .. end the Battle of the Bulge had ister was, Georges Bidault, be, life of Pope John XXIII is the work of Bernard Godwin of been fought in mid-December. cal1nly pointed out that' the Even before the ouster of the "proof" against the bishops ac- New York, a widely known painte~. "His, countenance had Germans there was a' violent cused of collaboration consisted about iLa unique spiritual quality," the artist relates. NC' reaction of the liberated French only'of newspaper clippings. 'Photo', '" , ' ,,' ' . against the Vichy government of Politely he' asked for adequate Marshal Petain. Those who had investigation and documentation move ,'about in the city's diplo- French politician ~ports, but lent support or who even ha~ of'the charges. The government matic and social areas. He also said nothing. passively cooperated with the " 'consented and t~e investigation entertainedaf his dinner table Travels Widely Vichy government were hated lasted about one year. .At the the leadirig personalities in Paris Few' popes have traveled by many Frenchmen, especially' 'conclusion only three bishops at the time. France as' widely, since the those who had fought ill the resigned. His tact and good manners Middle Ages, as did Archbishop French underground. " ItaHan Soc i al Democratic' were well known. One incident' Roncalli. His first journey took Out of the first days of libera:.. ' leader Giuseppe Saragat, Italy's exemplifies tl).is. As dean of the him to the Benedictine Abbey of ,tion there also emerged a strong "first postwar ambassador' to diplomatic corps in France he Solesmes, world famous for its Catholic political party, the France, told the Nuncio of attended- the 2,000th anniversary Gregorian chant. In 1947 he pre;> Popular Republican Movement, 'France's grejit admiration of of the city of Paris. sided' at the Marian festival at (MRP), lead by the brilliant 'Archbishop Saliege of Toulouse. The mayor, Pierre de Gaulle, Le PUy, France's most ancient Georges Bidault, a hero of the This ,great Archbishop took a was brother of the General and ,shrine dedicated to Our Lady. underground, which took over 'defiant stand against Hitler dur- ,an adversary of the MRP. In his In 1949 he visited Le Mans and formation of the new gove~ ingthe war. Although almost welcoming speech' he, implied Rheims and then returned to m e n t . c o m p l e t e l y paralyzed be bad ':that ,the presenee of the Nuncio Rheims the same year to tak~ Resent vaUean pOsition himself carried into hiscathe- showed that he too 'was against part in the belated commemGration of the300th anniversary of During the war the Vatican dral ,on a stretcher and there the MRP. eontinued to recognize the ' denounced the racial persecu- , 'Somenewsrnen have reported the birth, of St. John Baptist de Vwhy government as the legal tions of the Nazis. that ,Archbishop Roncalli re- la Salle,fouhder of the Christian sponded to this by s;howing the Brothers. lovernment of France. The Cardinal Saliege ',' Apostolic Nuncio, the then,Arph-, Saragat informed Archbishop 'mayor.a book of manners written bishop, now Cardinal, Valerio Roncalli of France's regard ior by a Bergamo author. As a mat~ Valeri, followed the government this courageous churchman. The I ter Of fad the Archbishop did to V i c h y . ' Nuncio .in turn looked into the not indulge in the reported disThe French' of the Resistance matter 'and then recommended play of bad manners and denied ' movement and General de to Pope Pius XII that ~ch­ the story when 'he heard it. I';lstead his speech of reply Gaulle objected to this position bishopgaliege be made a cardion the part ot, the Vatican and naI. He received the red hat in made no allusion to the mayor's remarks and throughout the eveto, the failure of some of :the the ,1946 consistory. French bishops to take a stand Archbishop Ronca1li~s line of ning he carried on a lively, witty against the Vichy regime. ,conduct was l'iimp l e and precise: and non-political conversation. Nationalistic fee 1 i n g rose the Church in its ministry obeys By the end of the evening the higher than ever in the wake of ,Rome and remains apart from mayor's bail taste had been for"; the liberation and certain resist..; ~inporal affairs. He achieved gotten. Wins Anti-Clerieals ,.nce'leaders expected the vat.:-, success in following this policy Writing of Angelo Roncalli'. lean to' remove those bishoPs withollt making protests to the who were accused of having' government. During his nine time in Paris" the newspaper Le openly collaborated with the ,years in Paris, he sent only two Monde reported, "It is a fact' Vichy government. or three official communications that in .Paris he won the symA papal nuncio was required to ~h~ government,' none ot pathies of aU political shades, even: in those political circles who could handle delicateques'- them. notes.ofcomplaint. tiOJ;lS and whose ,personality whose members indulged. .in ,an would dispel,tj:J.e initial hostility , ShowsT~et outdated and aimless anti. 'whieb prevailed in certain cirSpeaking to Jaques Dumaine, clericalism." cles. While there wuno' ques- one-time <:hief of protocol for Among his close friends ill tion of the loyalty of ma~ the ,President of Franee, ,he said, ,France was Vincent Auriol, a Catholic leaders 'to ,the Church, "My mission in France is the long-time Socialist and Presithey were, nevertheless, dissat- 'same as, St. Joseph's. :r have to dent of France from 1945 to 1953. isfied with the "static" attitude watch over Our Lord"andprotect After his term expired, Auriol of some members of the hier- ,Him iii a most discreet manner visited Venice where he recalled archyand the clergy. I show myself as .few times a~ that the' then Cardinal Roncalli There was danger in -the sit-' possible to the goverriment, only embraced, him in the lobby of aatiori and. ,quick aetion on the when they show ,a desire to'see the ,botel, "to the great surprise ' "part of the Holy See was re'- ,me. Bidualt told me reproachof all'the people on their' knees." qui~d. That is why Archbishop' fqU7 that our meet'ings' become Later the Cardinal showed Roncalli was dispatched with, rarer and rarer. Now we have 'Auriol :the rooms of St; Pius" X, " unusual speed from Istanbul to, agreed to meet every once also Patriarch of Venice. Paris. ' weeks." 'AUriol teealls saying' at the Saves Situation ; , While his official visits to the time, "And 'the' successor of Pi/Js • was, his' ,taskam,ong others' government were kept :at a miili- Xli will coine from here' too. . ." to ,create a ~~w atmosphere mum, Arch~ishop Roncalli, did Angelo Ror;ca,llism.il~d, ,the favorable for negotiatioI)s leading to a reconciHation between the hierarchy 'and, the new ':~.t:Emch government, born of the,' resistance. He' saved the sitUa.. ' tion which seemed almost irreI)arable. He was able to do so ,through ,innumerable contacts; it was really the force of hiB . personality that eased the situa-

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Msgt'. Giacomo Testa ~o'.w, ,Apostolic Delegate in Turkey ,Ilftd a long 'associate Of the future Pope, says: -se arrived' ia Paria at a

THE ANCHORThurs., Aug. 20, 1959

full load of work as Apostolic Nuncio. Yet with all his travel'ing, he found time each Summer to return to his home at Sotto il Monte to spend four or five weeks with his family. Archbishop RoncalU also vi,. lted Algeria, for that territory, according to the constitution at. the Fourth Republic, was an integral part of France. During hia 1952 visit there he said at the cathedral in Algiers: "Algeria is living in a period that is full of sadness. Never until now have two ideologies clashed in such a tragic way; love and hate, war and peace. kindness and violence. . . My dear brethren we should resist the voice of hate; we should remain faithful to love, peace and kindness. . ." Pieads for War Prisoners In the same spirit of charity he urged the repatriation of the 'more than 250,000 German p~ oners of war still in camps twe years. after 'Germany's surrender. Pope Pius XII made an Opell appeal in June, 1946, saying that "sacred rights;" were being violate4 in the detention of these prisoners. The French cardinals and bishops asked the government • comply with these rights. Whell the government still hesitated. the French episcopate put the case openly before the French ,people in a March, 1948, pastoral letter. , The bishops declared that the repatriation of the German pri,. oners of war was a question of conscience for French Catholics. Then the government complied. .Needless to say, the representative of the Holy See had mlUlJ' occasiolilS to talk over the issuea with the Freneh leaders and W8JI instrumental in reaehing a j\Ylt solution. (Next Week-Roncalli aod the W orkeT' Priests)

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M~n's Summer CI~thing, Needs Cooling-Off and Overhaulin'g

DIOCESE OF FALL R,IVER. MASS.

Form New Club 'In New Bedford

, By Mary Tinley Daly . , Two commonly talked-of subjects which are anathema, to the Head oLthe House are weather' and clothes. "Why discuss the obvious?" he asks when we harangue about the heat, complain of humidity. His' annoyance level is low also when we get going on of blue and white hadn't been ~o styles. "You all look good to perfect, Jack's costume would me, H he says. "I don't see have' looked beatnik~ Where'd why you ,let some French he get the duds?," , dressmaker dictate what you're going to wear. Nothing could be prettier t han that blue dress 01. your mother's." ' ; Thus endeth the lesson on fashion. , "The, pretty blue dress" referred to above has bee n replaced over the years, ,more - or less keeping up 'with styles as they change. Just so there is a dress of a certain 'shade of blue In my wardrobe, the Head of the House is satisfied. I sometimes think he' honestly believes it is the same blue dress I wore the' Bight we met! , As to his own sartorial splen':' dor . . . Esquire magazine has never petitioned an article on "What the Well-Dressed Man Will Wear" from the Head of the

-THE ANCHOR ,",urs., Aug. 20, 1959

Forty-five couples are charter , members of the newly organized CO\{ple's Club of St. Lawrence • parish, New Bedford. They are headed by Mr. and Mrs. Paul R. Cwory, preside~' couple; Mr. and Mrs. Albert a , Lachapelle, vice pre sid e n t couple; Mr. and Mrs. Edward Go' ,Norton, treasurer, couple. ' , Also Mr. and Mrs, Theodore J. Ca 1 n a 11 , ,recording' ~ecretary couple; Mr. and Mrs. James .A,;, Hayes, ,corresponding secretarY, coupl~. Mr; and Mrs. Daniel F. Dwyer 'serve on the executive committee. ' , 4Ppli~ationsfor membership are available from Mr. and Mr& . Calnan. All married couples' ol the parish are eligible to joia the organization, which is primarily 'social, The first regular meeting will be held Sunday, Sept. 13 at a time and place ~ Pe anz,.ounced. l :,

Still another: "Tomorrow I'm ,going to wear a costume like that' downtown." Dressed that way, a ma'n can work. Trussed up, we're stymied." Over and over the term "costume" was repeated - one that was dignified, appropriate even in the metropolitan center, in which we 'live, yet one that lets a man breathe. SOUND OF MUSIC: Actress Mary Martin and Mrs. Comfortable and Decent Maria Trapp sit.on a bench near the Trapp Home in the hills' The "costume", assembled f St Vt d' .' R d H quite by accident? A pair of 0 owe, ., lscussmg a new 0 gers- ammersteiri. musiwhite Irish linen trousers, a cal based on the Trapp Family Singe'rs. Miss Martin will clean blue - brown _,and - white play the role of Mrs. Trapp. NC Photo. ' plaid sport shirt buttoned up .to I ..... the neck (but no necktie), a dark blue silk coat (left over from ~' one-trouser silk suit).' '. Had the Head of the House I q~ Record Crowd Attends not been so intent on catching ,SP.R.INGFIELD (NC) - Cale- virtue in. their growing chil~ Somerset Lawn Party the foreign visitoFbefore he left lessness of Catholics in matters dren," he added. town, no doubt he would have of dress was scored here by "Christian modesty cries out . , A record crowd of over, 12,ooe people attended the, four-day: put on the conventional; suit Bishop Charles H. Helmsing of 'to all of us to observe ifs disci(even summer-weight, hot); Springfield-Cape Girardeau dio';' 'pline. Otherwise our vaunted Lawn Party and Musical Festi- • Dusiness shirt with starched col..; ,cese in MisSouri. love of Mary becomes a mock- ' val which closed Saturday at ~ 1 d 1'1' "b ' " d " Patrick's Church, Somerset. ,ar a n p as IC ones; an The Bishop, just returned ,ery. , I Grand Prizes necktie, final torture' around a fr,om leading a' pilgrimage to Fall R'lv'er ,Te'en-Ager;s ' House (thou.gh it has 'printed h o t an d perSpIrIng . , nec k . European shrines, said so many The' ' winners of the grand and reprinted his' well-known " More and more; recently, Y'e American' tourists abroad had' To Conduct Elections prizes .were: ' "In the Doghouse" tale.) have heard opinions...,-from pulto ,be reminded by both guides Teen-age, ,officers for the Pony, with saddle and cowbot No Beatnik pit and" pew, - as ,to what is and police that they could not coming year will 'be, elected this outfit, William Bissonette, 138 Not a beatnik, . nevertheless proper dress for men to wear- to e~ter churches and other public SaturdaY 'night, Aug. 22, at the Kaufman Road, Somerset. • the Head of. the House has alSunday Mass~ places because of immodest dtess, ,Catholic' Community C en t e r, Boat, fourteen foot with oars, ways worn rather much what he I~ we may v,enture an opinion, that it was an indictl'I}ent on Franklin Street, Fall River. They pleased. There have been curb.. we d .say that m Augus~, let men, national lack of modesty on the ..will have charge of all social ,Rhea ,Barnabeo, 255' Center Street, Somerset. log influences, I admit. Either attend Mass, dressed III cle~lD, - part of Americans. activities of the teen-age group his wife or one of his daughters cool sports shirts, and comfort' ," , a t the ,center.- ' " Mink stole, genuine, Margaret :keeps a weather eye on what he ~able slacks. Certainly they are' "I.t ~s clear that many of our Following ar~ the candidates: Conroy, 296 Centre Street, Fall "as on as he ,leaves the house. "decently dressed.'" , ChrIstIan men t and women ' d en t - W'll' 'River. ' D -/ in - P resl 1 lam F or t'In, '~any a time he has meekly sub'We're all for forgetting the ou~ own counry are fO'olishly Stephen Lopes, Joseph Moore, Wristwatch, womail's, Mr& mittedas a different necktie, or stuffiness of the 1920s-and wel- apmg the pagan standards of 'Carolyn Murphy. Emile Gregoire, 719 Main Street, 'a shirt that more nearly matched coming the 1959-ers in "garb of dress - or rather undress....:- all Vice-President _ Robert Gau- 'Somer'set. his suit was suggested. the day." " ' about us," Bishop Helmsing said, thier, Manuel,Pereira. ' , Wristwatch, man's, Timo~,. . "When we are. greeted I'n pubSecretary'-Treasu'r'er'-. M'l'chael 'Dickinson, 140 Maple StreetToday ho' wev'er he' r e a l l y ' ' , Somerset: broke loose-so we, hear from, ,7'" ... Per Cent Increase'i, lic, on the streets and in stores Megna, Elizabeth 'Mills. Camera Set, Mary Souza, 341 variou'squarters: including'his 'In Mass Attendance by our girls and teenagers in Boy Councillor William own version. ' very scanty attire, we can only p'Elia,' Ro~ert ~a'rchand: Rich':' "'N6rth"Main Street,FallRi.ver~, It came about innocently. In" AGUAS BUENAS. (NC)..,.. conclUde that their parents have ard Medeiros." , " '" ' ' , Radio, Larry Souza, 430 High "'home clothes" he was knocking Seventy-four per cent more' lost all sense of modesty, and Girl Councillor' ' - Jo-Anne Street, Somerset. out some 'copy' in his writing Catholics assist at Mass in Puerto that they have failed to inculCasp~r,' Margaret McCallum. ,Cooking set, Mary A.. ,EaOllt room. Nobody else was' in the_' Rico now than 10 years ago, 'His ,cate this important Mary-like Evelyn Wills.' -, County Street, Dighton. house. Came a phone call. An Eminence Francis ,Cardinal bnportant foreign visitor-necesSpellman disclosed in a sermon here. sary to his story-could be inter- ' Yiewed. Speaking in Spanish, the;Arch"So I just put on a coat and 'bishop of New York asserted went downtown." , also that' three times more Comments he heard, and those Puerto Ricans received Holy transmitted to us by phone con-, Communion now than a decade firm a long-held, double convic- ago. tion I've held: 1. That men are Chatham Penny Sale more ,sheep-like than women; 2.· That' they are longing for The Association of the Sacred release from the iIJ;lprisonment Hearts, Holy Redeemer Church, ,eI. silly, almost tortuous·styles. Chatham, will sponsor, a penny "That summer costume of sale at 8 Thursday evening, Aug. Jack's was the best looking I've '27 in the church hall. Mrs. aeen in my 25 yea'rs in this/m~n's Charles Bladen, ilchairman. town!" one friend telephoned" .. Prizes will' include an electric, .. From another: "If those shades' frying panas door prize.

Prelate Scores Women's ,Scanty' 'Att' re . A' pi ng Pagan St;' and ard s

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Whlle'.'Gui'mand :'Farm,s:" A, Quality' MiJJ< is important to' 'a, growing child~s"di~t~don'tpester Oad at 'v.C?rk to re~, plenis~ 'the' family .'rn.ilk :s,:,pply.

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Ask youtGuimondF~rms Driver-Salesman to: ,leave an

extra quart each ~eliv~;rY:day. Your childre,n will ,be be.tter ,nourished •.. Dad won't :have to be an errand' boy •.• , peac~ a,:,d harmony wiU reign ,throughout' thebousehold.

"

,os BL!ND, WRiTES NOV.ELS: Novelist' Beverly Butler, 27, of Chicago, bgnd since 14; 'presents a transcribed copy of her first ,novel, "Song ,of the Voyager" to Alex Skpzypek of the Chicago Public Library, asher seeing eye dog Heidi and a friend, Sister M. Huberta, S.S.N.D., look on. NC Photo.

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PENNY FOR PENNY :YOUR BEST FOOD BUY , '.

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Grandmother's 'At:t:ic May~old Treasure of Old iFurniture

THE ~NCHeR-9

Thurs., Aug. 20, 1959

DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER. MASS.'

Taunton Sisters Suffer 'Theft

By Alice Bough Cahill To be ifaced with.thetask of cleaning orie'~ ownattie may be ye:rY distasteful,but to ,get into an old attic where treasures of ·past days have been stored Jory-ears '(often because some young Iperson thoultht them too "old :fashioned" to be endured) :caD :Mass can ,be salvflied ;for be a thrilling experience. aSun~y '\love seat. While we do not subscribe t1'he .latrge ,tole ;tray'can'be'.used to the 'theory ,·of hoarding, 'if for .the ;top ,of .a ,coffee .table;

,~

people are ,discriminating in .the things they save, you may:strike t:b e "jackpot." Bring some of these cast - off pieces you' find in Grandmothe!"s attic back -to .life. T ak e tor instance 11 rocker in the veorner. Dust it and. you may fiIuI it's just like the reprociuction til a decorator's 1 lIhop. ' 'Don't pass 'by '8 quilt -that'me,y hfolded in '8 ~box. The ,gay patchwork can;easily be iturned .into a gaycov~ring :for 'the eooker seat and:back. And:lucll;y rou Bre if therets more Ithan .one Quilt, for they :make .wonaetful IPreads fo.r your beds and (can often set the; color scheme .ifor •.room._ fA marble-topped ta151e 'that bas ~en gathering dust rfof:yeal"8 ~y make 11 'perfect and 'practical coffee table if cut down. If there's an ·oId organ, ,we sug8est you keep it, even iifyou can't play, for ,if .used only:as'an accessory, it -will comple.te your !tid-fashioned room. Make U~e .Old New :Searching 'further,if you find _Empire .so~, '01' :some :Vic.. torian "parlor'" chairl1, .donr.t despair .at -worn covering ·and _gging spriI)gs.. When you see wbat can be done bY'br~ght new ~pholstery, ,you'll boast Jibout tIleir beaut;y.:MaQY .a,:householq, toQ, has a .tall . Victorian ,searetat:¥whic~ w.as:relegated '.to J4e attic .when··a ,newer :.came· won the. ma:l'ket. IBl.'iJ'l,i$l1ch ;a 'i,piece ,into i:tbe IIgJtt. of day. Wash off ',the ·.CO))... webs, wax '01' oil :the :sur.fa~e .and ,pain.t ',tlte, int~~ior ,of <doors '.nd -.elves III live~y ,J:olpr.:1o:;piQk.lf.p eolored ~ofa,pl1lows ,or Jdrape.s. :You'll have ,ano,ther ~treaSlire .~ be .proud of: ' 'I'm sure aI)yone 'who .lived in the pre~electric'light era .would .ot suggest that ,we ·gobackito _ing oil lamPlJ, -but ttlie old- . timers that are :found :in' many .WCB .can be cOlllpletelyrevivitied with wiring.and new shades. <nean the glass lamps ',very care,fully, getting an .the .oll stain eut of the 'fonts.(this :may require soakimi ;for a few days). Now all you 'have .to :,do is to .rew in an -ad~pter .wlthcord ....d ',you .ha"'~ 'a iJamp lasunodern . . its ,.wiriqg • f,todt\Y. Low, ~uatty,!anfpJl s!loUUi':be-:l'.eserved rIM' bedrooms .and rplaces ~here i,tIley' ,are not ,'requiredlot' read-

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Place ,tall 'bl'8Sll ·.on~, ]'beauU:; "111' polished:and JaClguereli (a ,;professionaljob,,.which' is .not too .JCpensive',will ~';the mo~tiSQtis­ .,..ctory. 'way ,,-of "~habUitating :!them) on tables ~near ,chairs or ceofa where'one -can .read .In '.£om:tort. One can use ~ .16 ',or .18 .inch .ahade· on suCh .)al1\Ps. .Sum a t*hade wllI diffuse.plentyof:light. ' . can be .parchrDen*,chin*, ,Dr ....-en tailored .. silk. . Many ':THasura We haven't begun ,to .think of . e things one may find: in an eld attic - things 'your grand;Parents and their parents grew _ with and l.o~.Theo1d car;JIiage seat that was put 'in the '. ..gon to take the rfami~y Ito

Stile Show

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Mrs. Manu~l O. Correia Is ceneral chairman of a style sh.o-w ..-cheduled by Msgr. Noon Circle, at. James Churcb,New .Bedford, tor 8 Tuesday evening, Sept. '29 _ Kennedy Center. A .prepara.tory meeting will be held at· 'I Wednesday evening, ~pt. a ill ~ church basemeni.

brass candlesticks can :be ~pol­ ished and placed ,on ,the 'fireplace mantet and colorful china.will go.well in an open secretary. !An organ which lis no longeriunc:' tiona I can 'becoverteli 'into. receptacle for television or :hi-\fi. Hooked or 'braided rqgs will;add col.QJ' ,to .any room. IDnce you' have decided what you,can use out·of the attic, and have eliminated all ,the ''impossibles;" give some .thought ,to your color scheme, floor, walls and accessOliies. Yau can ;paint 01" wallpqper 'y,our.walls, ,you can use drapes .01' ruffled glass eui'tains, but follow all '.the gooa rqIes you know 'for color. Consider. theiocation of your room and 'the,pul'pose"for which it is to be used and you will find 'that yesteryear's :cast-offs can ,be today's ,prized "possessions. You ,will enjOY liviI)g with them partly because :you .·find them satisfying artistical!Y,and partly. because ,they 1lre' a link with gour family's' past.

TWINS MARU1ED,: Rev.Edm~d G. Francis, 'SS.Cc. pastor of ·St. 'Mary's, F.airhaven" extends best wishes to Mr. and Mrs. Ray,mond DeCosta, :left ,couple, and Mr. and Mrs. Alfred E. Gallagher. Brides are the fot:iner Patricia A. and Priscilla Costa, itwina.

GoodCounse'1 League Announce~

Weeker.ld Retreats ,for 'Women

. Good came out of evil last; week for the Sisters of St. Dorothy at Villa Fatima, Ta\1nton, as a lawn festival which seemed doomed to failure turned out instead to be an overwhelming success. ,Gifts and articles of merchandise which had 'been collected from Taunton merchants and stored in a barn on the Villa grounds 'had been stolen or destroyed by night-time marauders just .a few days before the scheduled festival. The Sisters and their lay aUltlliary, Villa Fatima Helpers, planned to cancel the event, but that was before warm-hearted Tauntonians heard of the catastrophe.F.rommembers of all religious denominations gifts poured in to the Sisters. Mer- , chants made second contributions and money collections ,w-ere taken up in some business 'establishments. ' As a result, the .festival,under the .direction of. Mrs. JoSeph Silvia Of the Helpers, went on-lUl planned and, with the added attraction of fine weather, WM termed a big success by Mother Bartic"R.S.D., secretary of u.. community in the United States. Proceeds will benefit the novitiate of the Sisters of'St. Dorothy. Villa Fatima is also the American motherhouse of the congregation, which staffs 0ur Lady of ,'Mt.Carmel school, New Bedford. . ,

'Our ,Lady of Good Counsel and 'banquet' sessions will be Retreat League \wJIl ,hold a series other highlights of the meeting. of retreats f()r Women of ·.the '<i>bject of the convention is the Diocese during ·October and 'No- intensification of retreat partici'vemberat the retreat house, pation in Dioceses throughout Prince.ssGrace :Aids. East Freetown, under the direc-, the country. In Fall River this British Parishioners tion of Re,v. vv,illiamJ. ,Mc- ideal is realized ·through the reL0ND<i>N (NC) - Princess Mahon, !lpiritual director of the treat schedule ·at ,Our 'Lady' ,CIt Grace of Monaco ,has helped .90 league. Good Counsel Retreat House. parishioners ,of ,St. Edward :the ,All retreats ,begin at 7:30 FriRetreatants put aside their Canadian Sisters Have Confessor~church ,inLowic~,. d~eveningand close ,at 3 Sunusual activities to devotes few English Language Unit near Berwick in northeast Eng- daY 'afternoon_ Dates thus far days to prayer, meditaticm, study .DQRVA,L ,(NC)-The SisteN land,.to make -a .silver .jubilee scheduled ,are 'Oct. 2 ,to (4; ·Oct. ,23 and discussion of spiritual sub,~f st. Anne have set ~pan En,. gift ,to their .pastor, Father John to .25 and ,Nov. 6 to ,8. jects. Inspiration for the retreat lish-langu~ge ,province of QueCorrigan. movement. is the Gospel account 'Enriching iExperienee bec,which will administer .A . padshioner ,wxote .:to ,the of0ur Lord's withdrawal into Urging ,all cwomen 'of the DiPrincess ,aboiltthe ,eVElnt ,and ocese to ,participate .in ;oneof 111e the wilderness for ,40 days balor.e schools in Montreal, Lachine. Dorval, Terrebonne, Caughnaasked' her assistance. .Frolnthe retreats, 'Mrs. Raymond Hamel, the beginning of His ministry. W<lga, St. Regis and Noranda. palace at Mouac.o ,cam.e a ,parcel league ;president, notes that "~a Accommodations Available TQe 'new 'n1otherhouse will De containing twoattrae.tive -:dolls week-end .retr.eat promises an :Retreats are arranged by at '.Queen of the Angels Acad~ for "the subsctiptionfund.'" enriching spiritual. expeDience ;8S FatherlMc'Mahon for special 01'.;Hroceeds ..from .tbe;sa.le. of :the well as .!relaxation .of ,mind .and . ganizations ,or other ·groups iD- . here .andthe provincial superior w.ill be Mother Mariedolls' helped the ,parishioners to body." . -te:rested in such an activity. AcLo~ise:-'Ida.The Sisters ,of St. present a check andty,pewtiter !Mrs.:Hamel will Join >Women commodations include ;pri'V:ate Anne is a community founded. tGFather Corrigall. active in ,the :lay, :retreat ·move- rooms ,and ,excellent meals. A Vaudreui~, Quebec, in 18so. ment from ;all ;over 1the .United library ;and 'comfortable lounge ,Some 2,500 Sisters aN membe. -Plan :Reunio~ States' at the 11th national 'con- inv.ite ,relax:ationand ,prayerful . otthe communi.tT. ,Graduates ..of :the cclaS$!S ,of vention of the LaYiwomen's ;Re- thought, as does the ever-opeD . 1949 and 1900 ,ae,st. .AnthonY's treat'Movement, :tobe held m chapel. !I'he usual offering fora weekHigh School, ·New B~fol'4, will Buffalo 'Frid~y', Sept. (1l :thro~b end' retreat is $15, but more hold their cfirst.;reunion ,Satur- SundaY,Sept. ,13. ~y., .AJ.!,g. 29 :in -:the Crystal Bishop John 'J. 'Wright ,of less may be ;given and it is ,urged thiit no one be deterred from Room, 'New ,Bedford ..Hotel. lmtsburgh, Episcopal .advisor to I4-HOURWRECKER Emilien Berthiaum.e is general the 'retreat ,movement, '~illad­ attendance by lack of funds. A ehairman for .the ,event, ·which / dress the convention ,on its yearly retreat for every man SERVICE will include cocktail4,dinner theme:' "Joy''Fhrough;Holiness.'' and womania the goal of 'the U HillMAN STREET and -dancing. . Pontifical :HighMas8eS, lectures league. ,hlEW8EDFORD WY 6-8343

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WASHING:rON ;('1liC,)-'.A~key­ note address :given ":in cljalogue format ',will ,highlight ,the Lleadetship ,training dnstitute ,of the National 'Council ;Of (Catholic Womena.t "the Collue ~of the Hol,-.Name.s, l.QakJan4,Cali:f., next M:onqay. (Coadjutor tBishQPioJoseph ':L. il'ederal of ::Salt .Lake :Oity "and Marie 1.',hoIlWSOIl, :al!!';') ,:of .' Salt Lake City, a member of "the NCCW 'bQard (of ,\directol'l/, ·w:ill combine in giving .the dialQgue .add~ on "The ,Mystical ,Body of Christ and tthe ildea of Community.," it' .was ,anniumced at flrCCW headquarters:here. The ,theme ,of the <Oakland in;ltitu~, one .of., seven planned by .the NCCW" board.and :staff during the -Summer, 'Wt!lbe "The Catholic ,Woman .' •• :HerCommunities." .mphasis .will be placed upon ;.tbe needs and :problems of the registrants' cOmmunities, and ~the accompallying responsibili"ties of Catholic leaders in these communities, lit.· was stated. Specific problems to be treated will be those 01 youth and child. -welfare, of the aging, of inter-' ·group relations, and of the effect of international relations on the local community, NCCW headquarters said. Central to each olthe four.ck\I' ,trainine; meetilUlM will be _

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, D'IOCES~ OF F.A,LL RIVE~, M,":58 ,

S~ggests ,PriYat~ . ,Prayer Crusade '. , Fo'r" ,Ru's·s.··a,

AURIESVILLE (NC)Richard 'Cardinal Cushing,

Archbishop of Boston, will lead a Massachusetts, pH. (NC) ~ A ·prl• 'grimage to the. shrine of North ,· WINONA , Ani.e'rica's jfirst canonized mar-' vate 'crusade of prayer and tyr here ne,xt Sunday. penanc,e for the conversion ' The, Cardinal wi'll ride in the of Russia tocoiri~ide with first of more than 100 buses al";' Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushready chartered for the motor-', cade from Boston to Auriesville,' chev's U"S. visit 'was suggested here. site of a shrine' to seven' Jesuit Martin H. Work, executive dimissionaries. PIe had made the rector of 'the National Council intention of the pilgrimage, the' M Catholic Men, made the sug-, ' foreign missions of the Church gestion in an address to a d!ocand the persecuted Church be-' esan Holy Name Rally sponsored hind the IroIl Curtain. . · by Bishop Edward A. Fitzgerald Included in the pilgrimage, of Winona and the local Council will be delegations of soldiers, ..... saiiors, marines and. Boston · "Would this not be in keeping police and fire departments.' with the true spirit of ChristianOthers taking, part will be mem-, ity-the Christianity bf ~h~ cataber's ot religious communities 'combs' where' the lay p~ople, and the Knights of Columbus. : '.prayed, for the ,conversi9D of '. . ' ,', ' .' ' ' -.. . . ' , 'h' 'h ld" " French, Italian' arid Polish. thel' r pagan oppressors?'" he PILGRIM ~ MANY MILES 'TO GO:' Carrying a woOd,~ncross '011 ,IS s ou ,ers, a~ 'group:~and. o't~ers befrien!'ied ~sked., .. ' y o u n g : SIcilian, walks into a ,rnod~rn scene' in' Gen()a, Italy• ..I!e w.as, ~n' .~.is ~ay .fropl by', the. C~rdil)al-::-have, also · (In Boston, a public novena!n, 'Palermo Lourdes', J20-mile walk, to 'f~lfill a,religious·proqIise.,-NC. Photo. " , "given Jlgti~e .'tP~~ ~ey'wil1. ~ archdiocesan churches' tobegm , ' " , , ... ', , ,,' " ,.. ", " ' , '. ". _ . ':' " p":t:esent at, the rl;J,igious activitie&, on'Sept. is; 'tpe·day·Premier. ""0' The 'setviccll start·. with ~ 'Khrushchev ' arrives" ,hl,ls 'been 1"I11III "" recitation of a Rosary as Cai'-, 'announced by His EJJ;linence~ ASHINGTON (NC) _. A ' . " ", ' '.'.' ' , . ' d ' 1 C' h' " ' t ·R'I'ch'ard Cardinal Cushing ArchYI. ' ' . . , tion: "For what doth It profIt "the' Catholic, Center, in Hong ,; ma. us mg en ers,the, shrine, ,., ' ,. " " " " onetIme-wealthy; h~gh~y ~ucce.ss- . 'a man, if .he ,gain the whole Kong. 'It: occupies five· ftl?prs··in""ith"the pilgrims. This. will be . , bishop, of Boston). , , " ful b~sine~man now IS wCl,rkllig , world.' •." He was born into. a' 20~story, office bu~ldin~., He .followed by ",Stations' of :the Wotk called it ':pity" 'w!th()u(~eeuni~ryreward t?n be~~ family' of five 'in' ¢Qble!lz, " a~taffof 6O'persOnsworkirig 'Cross~ 'CarrlinaL Cushing then that the.Red ruler will have the h.alf~f .hopt~1.es~~hag~~r~, :hun-. Germany.' In 1932;'he went to : .under his" direction.:" "willC!atry 'iheBle.ssed·Sacrament . honor.of,being received ,in ,this gry refugee~and,gettmg,much the Far ,East 'where 'he gained," .. Varied Activities" . in a procession. to the, ravine ,eountry~ ,;". more satisfaction out:of, it ~~an : wealth;:hixu~y:and -succ~ssas. "'The center houses the Cath-' where 't,he' 'Jesuit martyrs lie, ""Ho~; far have we gone down 'in the dliYS ~hen he was, pl1l~g "business' man-ager'of an i,mport- 'olic' pre,ss; a Catholic infor~,a- ,buried. A_~ass wi~l fol~o~ in the, , the road away from Christian . up' ea~thlY nc~es., , : : ' e x p o r t firm 'in ,Canton ,and HQitg tion 'center,tlie CathOlic Truth great cC?I!SeUm; at whIch th~ principles that it becomes': a- " . He IS Fa~her. Charles J.I~' Va~h.. Kong. His. spare time he devoted, Society which has issued' two 'Cardinal Will preside an~ preach 'llecessity iil America,n foreign The field, of hIll 'labors IS Hong to work for the Church. ' "milli6ri' p'ublications,' the lay a sermon. policy to offer the hospitality ,of, Kong; where refugees',. have ,"As a boy, I had the idea' of aIlbstolate' council, a library, a free religious people to, com- swopen the normal 6.00,000 pos~ becoming a priest," Father Vath 'chapel which is crowded all d,ay; , Po-rtrciit Pqtron .. munism's chief' apostle-:whose World War .p~pulatlon to ~o.re said', "but abandoned it and ~ent aCIub for'workers where w.e :1., ~efugee Church " gospel preaches that .there is no than ~h,..ee. mllbon,.' into the business ,world. In ;laterserve 400' me'alsa day," Father ,God, no Son of qo<i,.no soul, no Refugee Year ,life the idea came back 'to 'me Vatli said; , , ST. LOUIS (NC)~Hungarlall ,beaven'and no hell; who laugl1 s - "We'are hard at-work now. in 'but, I b'elieved that I was too' "He .also serves as editor of refugees here now have' a lifeat freedom and all the things the World Refugee Year," Father old to study for the priesthood. three "Catholic papers, two of size painting of St. Stephen, their -' tbatas both Christian and, Vathsaid. "We have ,established Still I kept asking' myself ,what which are published in Chinese native country's patron, installed American we have fought and two large centers for'vocational : was the use of piling up money." , and the other, the Sunday Exam- in their "parish" church here'. , died for." training of refugees, one in Ho~' While still in the Far East, iner, in- English, He also conThe parish is St.' Mary of Kong, the other in nearby Kow- 'Father Vath stuQied ,philosophy, ducts-a workshop for refugees. Victories, which Archbishop ' 'Na-mes Kenny ,Editor ,loon., We're doing our best. to and Latin privately llt the He' said that in his work' with Joseph E. Ritter of St. Louis , , " : teach tbe refugees a ,trl!de,Jej , Jesuits' Aurora'College in Hong refugees he i's aided.'greatly"i5y established as the official parish ,Of M~c~ig.an Catholic,'o benefit them~, t,hey area.cc.epte,d, Kong, In 1948, he decided to Catholic Relief Services.-Na- for Hungarian refugees after in:" .' - DETROIT.. '(NC),.- John. A. for iesettlem~l).t.iI! s9m,e other study for ,the priesthood and, ~ional Cat,hotic ,Welfare Confer-, viting : hundreds to the arch'Kenny 49" veteran 'Catholic cQu~t,..y.:,: .',: ... " ,.' ,. went to Beda College in Rome: ence. diocese.' Pastor is Hungaria~ . journaiIst, has b'e'en named nian~- F;ather' Yath s~opped'off,~n the He was ordainediil 1952 at the speakin~ Father Stephen . Vra~ aging e,ditor of the Michig~J? l!~ti(?ll:s capjtal' on, Qis.'vvay back age of' 42 and :decided to work in' , Grant' to School bely-, on loan from the Diocese of • Cath'ollc,' archdiocesa"n 'news- t9 Hong,Kong:frorn ;Rome"He the 'missionary diocese of Hong ST:' LOUIS (NC) ~ A. $60,000 .' ~a:ry; Ind~ " ." ". ' , .., : ' ~ ,'paper;-:ii 'has', b~nannounceci. ,had journeyed to the" Eternal Kong. ~ree-year grant. from theV.,S. 'by Archbishop 'John F. Dearden ,Ciiy, ,Wit~ .pis sup~rior" 'Bishop, Father Vath is the director of Public Health ,Servic;e' has bee~ :of'Detroit, to succeed the .late 'Lawrence Bianchi of, "Hong awarded Dr. ,William A. R;:night, Edward A. McDonnell. 'Kong, who'had made his "ad.Suggests 'Khrushc'hev Jr., who heads the St. Louis , :. Mr,Kenny has serve4 on the limina" visit to. the' Holy, See to d ;featuring School' of Medicine's , archdiocesan paper for 23 years, ~epor.t" 'oi).' conditions in bis Stu y . eca og ue , Vniversity r,E!search and training programs, liThe; .Gas,light, Room~! iltarting, as a pho,tographer in diocese. ' 'TORONTO' (NC}~The hope in gastroenterology.:, ; , '. ,Ideal for Communion'Break- ' .: 1927. He has served asCiiy and ,,' "G(lspel Story ,, . and prayer of Francis 'Cardinal fasts, grganiZation Banquets youth editor and also as sports The Father -Yath, story, is .a re-, Spellman is that Soviet Premier imd y,outh columnist. He.is the 'e n llctment of the Gospel acirnoni- Nikita Khrushchev will read and' 386 Acushnet Ave. h'ld d . ' stu,dy the, Ten Commandment:; ' f a th er 0 f f Ive '" New' Bedford c I ren an IS a L.·Yestock P,I'an' " .. ' member ,of St. Mary's parish in during his visit next month in Call 'WYman 2-1703 nearby Royal. . PARNDANA (NC) _ Catholic the Unite4 States. ' Mr. Kenny also is the Detroit pari~hioners'in this settlement, Commenting on the arrival of area correspondent for the on King Island in Australia have the Soviet leader, the Archbishop 'A Delicious NCWC News, Ser,vice.. Father inaugurated a "livesto.ck scheme" of New York said that "it would Treat Richard T. Parrish is the editor to,provide for their church and be 'a 'woriderful 'thing if Mr. of' the MIchigan Catholic. The ,parish, priest. They are already Khrushchev would have the oppaper was es.tabl~shed.in 1874 ,caring for 129 "church sheep," portunity of reading; studying, and has a circulation of, more . and have the nucleus of· a herd meditating on, and with the than 100,000. C!f dairy cattle. extraordinary grace ,of God, practicing and believing the Ten Commandments." "What a wonderful transformation ,would' take place," he added, "a miracle such as has not taken place since the, time of Christ. I shall pray that God will work this miracle to save our world from imminent and threatening destruction." , "JOSEPH M. F. DONAGHY ·owner/mgr. 142 Campbell 'St. l BEFORE YOU New Bedford, M~ss. ' BUY- TRY

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SMILES FOR HAWAII: President Eisenhower greets :Governor William Qu:inn'_o(Hawaii and Mrs. Quinn atth~ .... AUTO BODY AND ; White House, when they called to extend. an invitation'~oGENEiALREPAIRS President and Mrs. Eisenhower to p'articipate ',iIi a 'Novern:- ." . ' '. ..- ". 'her statehood cele,bration i,n ,Ra,w"ai,i. The.ne.wly ,eie'cted-gov- ,iSBellvilleAve. WY 3-7661 , New' Beafofct .', ernor and his wife are Catholic. NC photo. " : '.' " . , .' . ". ... ' ~'

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.. THE ANCHo.~ 'i'" Thurs.~ Aug. 20, 1'959'

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'8''iesse(l,Virgin Is', 'Mayor Forever' Of La Estrella

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DIOCESE OF ',.ALL ftIVER. liAS••

Organize'Sunda,y Sales 'Campaign In Cleveland CLEVELAND (NC) - A campaign . against Sunday sales has been launched here by Sunday, Inc., a group

MEDELLIN '(NC) - The Blessed Virgin has' been named "mayor forever" of the city of La Estrella in C.olombia. A decree giving the Virgin the title was issue.d by the government of the state of Antioquia. An image of Our, Lady in a shrine in La Estrella has been venerated since 1685. In a papal hull dated Nov. 28, 1958, Pope John XXIII granted permission for the coronation of the image, which will take place oll'Sept. 13. The image of the Virgin in La Estrella is a copy of the statue of Our Lady, of Chiquinquira in Colombia, which has been venerated throughout the country since its restoration in 1586. The coronation of the image in La Estrella will bring' to 15, the number of,solemn1y crowned images of Our Lady in Colombia.

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formed to promote enforce~ent of Ohio's revised Sunday closing laws. Members of the group include Harvey Yoqer, industrialist and former president of the Cleveland Protestant Church Federation and Alex Brady, former pre;ident of the Cleveland Holy Name SoCiety. At the organization's instigation a warrant was issued by the poli~e prosecutor's office against the president of Giant ;I'iger Stores. A warrant was als'<J ,issued again$t the owner cif Fur~,

Labor D~y Ma,ss" t~e At Sy'racuse , '

'OUSTKERALA'S RED REGIME: Indian Presdent :Rajenda Prasad has ousted 'the . to violence when Furniture and Appliance Dealers' Reds tried :to take 'over 'Kerala's 7,000 Catholic and ,other private schools. Placard demA 'ssociation, whi'cii -is :combating onstr'a'tl'o-ns l'n'Tr'iva"ndrunl, in which man'y' -women particip'ated, demanded "deliverance" Sunday sale.s:', ' . '.' f~om .the Red regime. NC Phofo. . '. ' '

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: . SYR~CUSE .'(NC) - T~e ,firs~ 4

Labor Day Mass 'in the Syracu,se '(lio~ese honoriJig'St. Joseph the

Worker will' be' offe'red Sept. ., in theCathedralof"the Immaculate Conception; : .'" ... .~~~ 'statu.te. It', ~~s, back~ii~ by .. ~OJiC~~r~llJ~~)'"'7A;pr,i~;rt W'ashington spokesman for the be~ed not t~ be~r false y,,'it;"esS 1. At "'Bishop'. Walter ,'A: Foery'S civic ao<i, 'relIgiOUS o~gam~a- . whose, boo~ .has' ~een r~~~:V:edUnited States Information Agen- . against .m~ n~ighb,Q,t. .' .suggestion; it' will' be a:' joint tiQns. I ,'. from display:at.t~e A:merican eJ!:- Cy which is conducting the ex~iNo Enforcemelit labor-management' Mass.' Cel~ 'J. Arthur Begam, attorney for ,hibition in :t'4oscow, says he \Voul~biiion said the books are being "To prove their point that my ,ebrant· will be Auxiliary Bishop Sunday' Inc.,., said ~he group "be "more worried" if t~e Soviets . withheld until Soviet and U. S. book gave a biased view of the David F; Cunningham. Father wants secon.d convictions on. ail" had ,not objected to ~IS wC;)7;k. ' officials attempt to reachsomeSituQtiori they misquoted some , R,ichard M. McKeon, S.J., dire~ ~primt; viola~rs.'1 Thi!!, calls for . . Father 'G,~rges.· :l3lssonnette, agreement'regarding their dis- 'passages from th,e book. and left 'tor of the institute of 'industrial • 10-day jail sentence a~ well .as. A.A" dir:ector of the schoql. of play. 'out parts where I made con- relations' at, LeMpyneCollege, a fine. -Mr. Begam said Sunday ,foreign studies' at ,Assumption Reds Quote Bible cessions. They took issue with will preach. ' inc. will not take action against 'College here in ,l\Iassachu~tts , The 'USIA spokesman said one passage in which I described On Sept. 14 at the cathedral at small neighborhood 'stores. He whose ,book "Moscow: :Was My' '~herewas 'an agreement that some 16-year-old girls working' the request of Cathol:c attorneys, expects the campaigq to take at Parish" was. among. /lome' 3Q "bOoks displayed at the exhibition on the roads. Their answer was 'Bishop Foery will offer a Red least. a y'ear ,with ~ppeals,' and books withheld from the M~sc~W would 'not be of an objectionable that this was patently false be- Mass, marking the opening of the other legal man~uv~ring. display. ' , The ,A~sumptIo!=llst or provocative nature. The books, cause there, is a law in the Soviet courts for the fall term. served as Catholic chaplain to generally;' a're'studies of the vari- Union that, a person under 18 A' ° F h T ' Americans in Moscow from 1953 ousHspects: of Soviet history, cannot be employed for hard . ppolnt ,at er roy . to 1955. He said: government, customs and culture. work., 'President of College ·O' "I don't feel badly about the , "You know, they gave my book .' ,"Well the fact is that there are . , , RussI·a·ns bannl'ng the .book.' I ' WHEELING (NC) _ Father J aca d '. REN S.SELAER (NC) -. Young thl·n·k I'd b'e·more worried-if they 'a very bad 'panning -in their pop- a lot of iaws on the books that ,W'll' I lam F . T' roy, S '" ernie are not observed." " den t an d d ean' 0,f Christian Workers w,ere . urge~ h·ad not obJ'ected to it. I'.d· fee, 1 uhir humor magazine; .Krokodil," ' 'd .vlce-presl th ' th . . ""That' 'the :Assumptionist sal . Puerto ,Rloca:ns . "Gre·et Wheeling College here since i* here toq stre~g en, elr ,move.., that I'had not given as objective was in April priest 1957. They ment s I't .will ,be a, for.midab,l,e.. a, rep'ort as I· trl'ed to do." " " " ·11' enrolled, its firsLelass in 19:55, ~'uoted the Bible' to me, te mg. . . .. ' , . t d' 'd t force 'against eO,m,mumsm and ... ' E ... that t should have remepl- ,CCI.rd .. 10nal Spellman hasd been e , presl en, World Almanac rile t ' appom . . tlie Red' effort 'to 'reach yout~. ~ , -' v.en. " SAN JUAN, (N'C)-Hundreds an ree or.; , " . R ts.. from.,M e l :He succeedsS.J..-F'·.ather Father Lawrence ""E'd"m'und· The-appeal came ~romFather ,epor .osc,ow rev a~'eW Ad·ul'·t Ed· uc' a'tion' ,:'ofpriests ,and .laymen gree.ted " ''D.'McHug''h,' Ph· 1'.11'';' N·e'tter, chaplain' of, a, . over., 70 controversl.a.l. books, had ...... . .. . . , ,.n '" d 1 t th "C'··' ,. t S't h011 .Francis'" Cardinal Spellman, A. McGreevy~. S.J., has been young-Christian Workers group been put ,back ~~ . ISP ,ay'~ ...e ' ourses' a · one I Archbishqp of New York" on hi~ 'named the new academ'ic vicein New York City and assistant American exhI9ItIon..,....but. thiS < Very Rev.:. Ri<;hard H. Sulli:- :arr~val ,at International Airport ' , ' , . ' , 't 'to Our Savior's parish - time they ar.e under'plexiglass so van CSC',', S'tonehill ,. College, here. president afld $lean. . , pas or a , .. d th t'tl b t Father'Troy, a native of Readthere. ,', . ., '.. v:isitors may rea , e. 1. es·' u pre~ident,' has· ami.ounced' that After a .brief talk at' the air- ing, Pa., served as headmaster "There are many challenges: ~~~~o:e~:~~~~~'k~~~';t~D~~~' ,new Institute of Adult Education port; the Archbishop of New of Gonzaga College High School before you and may r present Ohdisplay is "The World Al- courses will be o~fered begin- York left ,for the central 'offices in Washington, D. C., before he one that you can never he~r too . 1959" published by the . ning Sept. 22 and continuing of ~he Catholic Migration, Com- came to 'Wheeling. Father 'Me:", often,," Father Netter said to :anai rk World-Telegram and evenings 'from 7:30 to 9:30 ~ntil' 'mittee 'and the Catholic Young Greevy, whoSe home is Baltisome 500 young men and ,women ,ew 0 Dec. 15. All courses will' be ,Workers in Simturce. There he 'more, had previously"served 88 a.ttending the nat~ona.l conven- SU;~me 30 ,other "b60ks which iaughi in the 'new 'Holy' Cross :blessed a St~tue of Our Lady of principal of Georgetown Prepabon of the orgamzatIon at St. ' '. . th" ... ' 1 U S . Hall; and· the college library:,' 'Providence and visited sections ratory School, outside WashingJoseph College here 'completed e orlgma ' . ' cafeteria and lounge, facilities 'of the building. ton. . ~. W display did not' reappear. A ,Will be available 'for the lriSti. "It IS commumsm.' . e c a n , ' The' Cardinal made his trip never rock ourselves to a sl~ep "', ~'.e·w Rec' t o i ' t u t e . primarily to visit the 165 U. S. of contentment for the enemy i s · . . . . .. The courses, for which well- priests and nuns, most of, them everywhere . . . Ttlls we must ALEXANDRIA (NC)-Father known professional educators from his archdiocese, who are oppose as members of the In- John Wakeman has been named and business leaders have been 'studying Spanish at the Catholic carnate Body of Christ in the rector of the'MarYhill Seminary ,retained, .include Certified :pro,:, University of Puerto Rico and world ~oday, the Mystical Body, in Pineville, La.; by 'Bishop fessional Secretary Refresher learning about life on this island the Church. In this struggle, we,· Charles P. Greco of Alexandria. 'Course; Great Books; Real Estate so they clm 'better care for namust take sides," he said. "We Father Wakeman served as a Development In Our Area; The ,tiveswho have emigrate!i to the must enlist, the aid of others to radarman aboard the USS Eisner Bible: 'Old Testament, New Tes:' 'United' States, especially to the NEW B~DFORD strengthen our YCW movemen~, 'which did convoy work in the tament, Epistles; Public Affairs; :rarge cities such as New York. _ so that we will be a formidable Atla~tic' and Pacific du~ing Communism; Revolutionary be:force aga~nst the enemy." World War U. . velopments and Problems of the INDUSTRIAL OILS ,Modern Public School and How White's Farm Dairy, To Bolster, Your English.. HEATING OILS The new' Ohio law eliminates alleged'

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" 22 Graduate Students :Receive Fellow$hips' WASHINGTO~ (NC) 'Twenty-two students in the ,graduate s~hools of five Catholic universities are among 997 grad'uate students· awarded .fellowships under terms of the National 'Defense 'J;:d\lcationAct. ' The Department of Health, Education' ana Welfare said the fellowships are set uP' in 272 graduate schools, all of which 'met the requirement of new or ,expanded programs, to qualify 'for fellowships. . The Catholic institutions are: 'Catholic University, of America, 'here, two' students in statistics ~and' ~problematical .. theory; PREFECT APOSTOLIC ~ The newi y appoin~edPre:' ,Ge'orgetown University here, five feet APdstql~c 1v,l~hdi, NewGuineau,'Msg;~ !irmi?l\t:~ ,in . Russian area' studies; Loyola Schmidt, O.F.M.Cap'.~ is shown 'followi~g,hls ,~nv~sbture :Uni~ersity,. Chicago, four In ceremonies in St. Augustine's Church; LawrenceVIlle, Pa; :psychology;-, Notre Dame Unisix in,·En~lishj and S~. Left to right are'l;Ushop Frederick W. Frekiilg,of Sa)ina, . ,versity, 'Louis. (Mo.) ,'University, five in Kans.,; Bishop Jo.hii'J.\ WJ.'(ght~ o~ Pittsburgh, arid Msgr., ,S~,anish,'and . Liitin . Ameiican ,,' :Schmidt. 'NC Photo· . , . stUdies. ,.. .. ~ , . _.' c:

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,DI.OCESE OFFALL,RIVER,'MASS ,

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~y Most 'Rev. tRobert.~. !Dw,y,er, IDJ>o'

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[Bishop of Beno \ny Most.Rev•.Ftilt~n'J. Sheen. D.D. . ' I The \low 'stone walls lline .the ~Toad 'from :Palma ~to ffiEltra. 'A, :dist~guished :Pl?ychiatdR of Wienna clivedthrouglJ. ·,two Beyona itne ;walls are itne' dry fields lof i.the iMlillOl:can i.inlprisonmtlDts; .oneunder ·the ~Nazis, ·tb otherunder.the ~Oom­ rmunists. :In :each ~concentratioD camp,' ,he -endured :.the 'most .eountr-y.side, (each with 'itsguincunxof ,oli:v.e ;or 'fig tt:r::ees, ,<U:cr.uciatiQg :tormentsof <mind :and .b0.4:r. ·Duri)Jg.those ;3'eal"S cot set 9ut',at wide intervals .sothat tthecr()ps,can ~gr.owiWhen ·-per.;eeution}and' ten:or:'he 'carefulty "observed the .c.onduct,andatti:the .rain .comes.B~:yonathe ..tuiles ~of ~those ;who sl1ffereil .-with '~im.~risonet'S,ever:ynowr.m'i INearly ,two '<:entmies (flew U~y 1\then"Would ·be;given 'at:few:cigareties',whhlh ' ,~ields"rimniing ·the lisland ;to 'between ·the .tit'ne :he ljQggeii 'loff ',thlW,;'W.Oulii :Share ,with .their [fellows ~who Ihe ::west land north ,and in ,thedonkE:Y ;car.t "to 1P.aIma I.to "were :\'J.y.ing :in .,:reat ·,pain. \But there \1W.ere .8outh';.,r-ise +tbe ·stark ,mounstuqy 'for ·the :priesthooii lin tthe .ec.~ptions ..to -:.this:r.ule :of(chadty.Ulere (,we ains. Memor,y ~tugsat"your 'con- Collegio .of :Blesseii I~y,mond . ',Iet~the:P!!Ychiatrist~peak:",'Ihe',onlyexceplSCiousness; 'you have :seen ':this Lull,and ,the _d~y ·w.hen Imen ,ttions 'to ;this . .w ere ,.those 'who :bad clost <the :countl?Y 'before, came .looking ~r ilis :bittlunace . . w.ill ,to ,live <and wanted to' 'eqjoy' :their.last 'anii 'it is :almost w.ith,word that ,he 'was lRe1rals \day.s. r.rhns,~,when ·,wesaw.:a :comrade ;SDlok. l&S 'tho1.!gh :you real ,claim .to .,eveilaStiI!g [gloty.. r.iJlg :his .:Own ,cig'areUes.;w,e iknew ;,he 'had 80ula identi~y;it : !Petrais ,pleaseiibut mot ,sur,given .:JIg) ':faith :in.,his ,str,ength ':to ,:carr.y con, es ,to. place 'ana priseii. 'Miguel :Jose .was ra igooii !~, ,:once; lost. the 'will .to'Jive seldom tre- ':<';'" marne. .'ll'·h(en boy, .~nd :his ;parents, Iff tth~y ~turned;" :In :other words, ;selfishness ;and (Ii:, ~ou :know: .:it 'is were ,poor, 'wex;e 'goo,ii IRetra 'egotism ~re' :signs ·.that ,the·,love-inwulse )@ 'California, !±:h,e stock. None :better ,in .-au '.the i.towar.iI~methinghigher, ·has~bee,,",killed •. coastal "P'I<a'i'Jl world. , M~ .lb,o<ve 'Santa : ',House ~rv.eil tHe ..who :has .any '..wHY ,to.liv.ing··oanbear$ !Barbara 1:0 San ( 'OU-l'STANDING: .Joseph tan.y :HOW..of Ihdng. 'Love:QLGoiiand'1l~ghborscan make"3nything /L·ui.s ~Obispo. ( rFather :serra~s ; home. Lthe tPaareJunipeFo ;humble .house con'la ;;.Side rs.~t IR. Qarry,great :gr:eat,grand- 'bearable. ,:B,ut,the 'man iWho','hugs;supert'Tuities to himself just ;as .the Serra came half' , where ,he <was {born <and T.livel:i .son of the ~meiican-:Indian' ~pti...e·;SOUl'in'~a:C()ncenttation:canw,l!has '81so ,lost .:the r.W'ill,to live• !As,;sOon las pe.qplel'say;they have n6thing.to,oexpechfromJife,:,tb.e7 way .across '.the '.w.or1ii Lto ffind eut .. ~his ,childhood ,and tear!,. "have iailedto .realize .that'liie .expeets -;something..'fromthem. bimself at home ,again. youtlJ, is beautiftil!y~preserv.ed. <Chief :Spokane, .has 'been Petra, biith.Place ;of tthe .A,poa- mhe .acrid smell of 'fresh 'w1iite~ chosen Most IOutstanding , , • :of ,California, ~is ,11 -sleepy ·wash pe,r.vaaeo 1t ~at 'Sun~y American Indian 'of 'North o{Ghari~y ds crelate.d ,to~the;thrill .ofdiv.W. -lAnd .wb:d~greater:ed . . . .nough village .ona ,sunday 4ifternoo'n, ;ana.the Uittle ~arden 'America. :A"Ca:tholic, 'he 'is-a "Is;ihere.than,.that oftfulfilliqg ~Qur Lord'.s w.ords to serv.e:those~who :afternoon. 'It ~has lchanged 'little in back was "as gay with gena- member of the Idaho House tlann6t· ,serve ·you 'back. "Then "1Ieav..enLmwrt~reward,:iou. -Give.:Det .•ince .that .mo.J:~g 'of,No". ':U, niums ,as it might well have .been ,.tothose<.whohavedorth~ycancrew.ar.dy,ou in turD;,gh~e,<.sa·id..Our of Representatives. INC Ilho1c'fJ.'S, when, ,a ,son ,was:born ,to <when Lhettl1~gedat ,Iiis mother1s :lLor.d"t,o ,those ,w.ho~cannot~y. T-Iu&t ,~r._s,the isw.eei.b.urden. of Antonio Serra. and ;Margarita -apron' and ·t6li:l her' ot the 'love ,to. .thankson ,God. Those ,who "have ,not;' .,are "Africa, .Asia ·.land .t:errer, and .w.as;~ptized,M~guel:of God .that ·.was ;swelling .his Oceania..Shar~&' ,with :them·'keeps,;·7.ouonoonal. ,y.our :sonl. ,blesseCJ. j'ose that .same .iiay.' ' 'heal"t :to bursting. ,and 'YOur .ioy,unbounde.d. "Now .do not turn over .this page ,and .It clings ,to lits ,0utcrQPpi'ng·ol. 'Theyhav.e .put ;back .furniture ,'forget'the missions; 'rather oPiCk"UP,'lkche~~book':and ,send:a sacriContinued .from 'Page 'One ,(I()ck ",with' za ,peasant ctenaci;y" ;which ro",ghly·might' 'be -the :fl~..to .the ~HQIY :Father's' So,clety ,for iibe 'Pr~agationof·tJJ.c'Faith. "'l'here 'will"be '00 tuition :fee .and its patiSh,church'.of:SLR~.ter $lme-as Antonio'w.as·lil:He,to',buy 'for -the 'Comse. 'T~ "cost ·of .the ,~PPIOpriatelJ'tenough) :domin- 'for -his 'Margarita, 'but 'it ':has 'texts required 'for '.each 'person GOD :J:,O:vE ';yOU ,to·::W:·:G.K. for~$3 "!We went .to ,a ·fr~ concert :.tes it Jike ,a mo,tner .hen :enfold- 'been kept '.very ·sit'nple, ~aslt ,taking. the course -,will .be,less ~g ,her ·.chicks beneath ,her should -be. It is."tl 'glimpse, 'back than five dollars. Each parish instead of :the movies;"...,;to GiN..for ;$l·"·~M~ ,monthly ·sacrifice".•• wings. Peter is on his .rockand ~through 'thecerituriel?, -at ~what ,w:ill be billed 'for 'the;,books used 'to '''Teenager''';for~2;50 ''iThese.Jare','m,y,weekly ice-cream 'sodas".. :the,.earth . r.edeemed. 'honoral:ilepovedy"was 1Uke ,in: :by parishioners I.taking ,.the :to:'B:R~F"'f<i~{$5 '!Becauseilf£eeH~ ()~ght·.to".: . to RiR.,;'for:.$lOi50 ~'A 'Built tfor lEiernity a tlittle ·Manorcari~illage. ,course. Those ,succesSfullycom-. friend ofnune .;gave rme ,;a 'free .:rIde:!and~refllsed·to -take lany""ffiOney lit is ;a .fine uild cchurcn, rlAth IA 'iioor;or 'so ':awaystands -the. (}lleting .the . course :.will ·be 'fromme. It,would liketto giv.e:this in'ilis-name".. : to.'J';S.O.>for:$5 ""In ;eentury, 'cwjth tits !s.tern ;Spanish 'museum / of '·Paiire'Junipero lawarded ·the: GCD 'I.reacherls:Ger- repar.ation:for my :sins"... to:.Mr. &':.Mrs.I'.!W"E.C.-£or'-$4 '~We'Jare:rololr ,jn'.the f famUy3and!.'here is.:a-;dollar from each of :us"• Ifothic ovedoaii d!y tthe 'expe~ted. !Serra.:Unfinished 1lS 'Yet, ;it ;will .tificate':' accretions of :barogue .and plater- ibe '8 <monument eto t.the ·'excellent , ':Sister Marie Charles .attended. esque; but ':1lQt rso,as ~to,ae.traet ".tasteof ,those ··Who/conceived ,it ,Fordham University 'andcreceived Ott our 'WORLDMlSSIQN ~ROSA'RY -Africa is representfJil-'t,y sUbstantia:!ly £fr,om ,its :nobili~y.and ,are n()w,.-eharged 'With 'its .her \Master's :degree;Jlt<N.ew tYork '~~'Jbeads.,Asia·j)yyelLow ,~Oceania>:by bble:coDes.lYo,u;can.:IlUPIke· eutsiae':it is weatherbeaten,' completion and T~ulation. ~University. 'She tbrIngg ;;to ':her ..a \double ,present: ,pviqg .this ,:Bosat',. <10 ,a 'frJend .and .'$2 'for ,·the ,.nd ·theooIJ.llte 'car.ving 'of 'its 'Under ·the ,patronage :Of 'Bis ,new .-field ,:0£ lactiv.iW :in ~tbis ,iMissums., -iY-e.u "can ,make ~ I'Jlo,1tblet;sacrifJce' 'for ,the .<Missions: ~tbat 1\lIOSe 'window nUmost in'diStin'Excellency, -Bishop 'WilliQger-of ':Biocese 'not ',only ira !philQsQphical ::ef fPrltyer~andlof :maierial"g~c1s. SeJUlS'Y.our,:i!e.quest:an:df$21Offeru.. pishal:ile, :but'eonser.vative.fjuifg- Monterey-Fresno; -ttie 'Francis-, and· theological ,:bac1f!gr,ound :hIlt 1"'~_.and"w,e;+,Wjn:aend,J'.oll,the~WOBL'DMISSION .fBOS41tY. \IIlelit 'wotiRl;agme '.!habiFis!,go9CI can Friars.of :Santa·Barba~, ;also,years 'of .experience in ·:the l1ot" ;anotlwr' $00 ~earS ~Qt ··the California, [have ~nlisted i:the ;aid ,tfieldo{ the ,Co$terniW JfIil ' twry 'least. , o f many .americaoS,illr.chitectlJ" ,Christian ,Doctrine. She has ,given courses ,in :the ·Cllbout:~this'eo1umn,;;pm ;your 'sacrlfioe oo,Ct J an'dl\BllliLit1io ibe T~y built for ,eternity 'in -the· .students, ,and ,!IeDet:Ous.,minded ,methods of teachio.gtr.el,igion.-t iMost [R~v. fFulton .~. Sheen; ~ational(Director.of '.';I'he·.Socie~j;Wr IMth <centul'Y:. -lIn ~the 'baptiStJ:y.ilI ~~men ,and !lay,w:omen, '.in:,buildl&he"font,-:noiloQger,useii-but;pr-e- "ing 'the .museum :and '':furniShing Oatho.lic Univ,er~ity-<j)fAmet:i~,:tbe Propagation ,1Of-the.!F:aith;·1366 'F:ifthiA!v;enue,:lNew 'Ly.'OI'.k J".'l(. '-'Y,... .erved·as an <oQject,Of'l'ev.el'en~, ~it.:so as Ito :make :itca ~tilie~aeriter Washmgton; " Loyola' "::Co~ge _1'~urIDlOOES:A:NtDIaECT.oRRE~>R,AY.MOND'7.~C.ONSID.IN~. Baltimore; !Dominican COll~ge: 1M ·North ~ain~Stl'eet;.liF"allERivez:, ,iMaIlI. . . where 'Miguef.:Jose 'was '-waslred .1$1.' Set:r-a :dev,otion. 'U1:the .watel'S<dfmfe. . 'A:s:time goeson:it.wiubecoine ;San,"Rafael,' 'calif,; Univ.ersi~y(Jot. ;'r--~-----------""",!------~-----!lII , ' lDevoti9ns ,zoe mV9l', 'and ::ttMI- ,aIP,lace .01 .pi!grit'nage, .:.:iocal ·!Detroit;Univ.ersit:r ,of ,n~yton ! - ,DAUGHtERS ,Of ,S'. JPAUL "uster <Of \WOIDen, \black-clad ;point ;'for ·.all,who :are ,inspired dAIld..at Ge9~get().wft ,UniversiW. : ..vile \.,.-.,g «giI:h . (l4.DI ... ,~b.r ,I": 'III1ii ,weatherbeaten ':-as' ·,their :b,- :the :life .iand 1holiness .of .the ~;i.t:.,_t.,wieey.Clrd :.,,~po"".,of··tt- ~ ,ohul"ch, -iirifts ~ow.n ',the 'street ':little man :with . .a .~lit'np ;,:who ~'un ,tEditiOllI: 'P,es., :Ilcidio.• MovieS <and ·Te'..': l . . ,[I~. ;• HI" • tAD 'Join the ilords:and:masters ~brought :the 'Faith .:and :civ.Uiza"lisi• . :',with ",ode... ,mean,. ,,,,_I'. OJiitting.in cane 'chairs 'outsitleLthe "iionto ,California. . Qontinued .,from,~age (ODe ,~ ..i_ry ·:6dten .bring ,'CItmt:. "Ooctl:inel' ,.aoorways'in !tlw ...shade., . J'unipero Sel'l'll .brought .hhnella, ·.to ',88. :Reter land :f'aul, ... al. ,'..garCI.... ,of . fOce. ,......, ' . ' ...... ~ .f.or iftforlftcitiool _ri.. '..: I: fA 'car '1ll~y lcome ;lllong, ]'honk:- 2Saints with ,;hit'n .to ...c alifornia. 'resid~ lat "Mo.Uftt :st.Ma..,. ,REV. ·MOTHER ·;S.~E11I01t I, (JBg ,like;a ttb:ing(obsessea, ':but, 'oit . ''lrhe shrines of ,the \.C,oUegiate \,C.on....ent. ' . "s,. rl!"'Ul~S ,AVE. (8QSlOH' en},y requires .a half-inch hitch ,Churchof.8anBernardino'jgav e . ~Fr.Qm ·St,;PatrJ.ok:s,tE.aU~Riv:er, . .[10, ~MAU. .' ,' *cthe,chaird1Oavoidtthednev.it- '':their 'names, 'one ~ter ;another, Sister 'Mal'Y Mauritia ·,will ' . 14b1e, and it·tis useful ,to specu- ..to ,the.missions:heestatiliilhed,ill ~ St...Joseph/s, ·,F.<8l1 i-River, ,alii . . (late on .:these ,cl.ericalstrangel'lll ~is '1ar':flung 1~po~6late. a~perior. ' Sister .'MaliY lAgneseili twho dress ,so coffii!y '(are they , - Jass!gned ,to .Cathedl'alConvent '''atholl'CS :or ·.h·._ ..•'-.) . a nd .who lThe 'memOt'Y ,of:a . ', ,.......,"'u=: , ,1Smalll:bQy . : ;p.,.rovldence, "~ito. 'Ifleach , . "'*be I, l~em·'.So intel:'.ested· inr,Ui.eir \Pl'.IW·ing ·in,thecd.usk, ;J.oOki~ t.gJ) ~~yler School. ;Do '¥.ou\WOfk~4n"a!!F.actollY, i llellow..townsman "who 0"1,". "v~~ '«0' :tbe'd>en~gn ::f.8ces ,,0£ aii. s· .~ .';/1' '&,1;1 ... - <friends ,in .hea:,ren,Gandd'ecalliog ~ 18...,.. " .. any ,P.et1!ea, ,now ·(M qGatqle. 'Machin.'{Sh~.{Or I l.terday '.went sift '.to' 'NewWor!d. 0the l1J., don,g }y~ars ~a:fter'::as Hhe ~.Vincei1rs 'Home, ,rFoall lRi'v-ef, ~. . \CdsO&ne,Statiori? {to converl..the;lndians. h ' ,.:w:ill,sellve .rat \<Nazar.e . . th :H~l.l,_ MoSt&mous'Sou ~~ed;t e,dUS~y,;hlal1s,of...O~S h I liW. (,pick l~ ~nd c~.'hfer, (..clean I, Not that ~'-!~ ,'No ,m'dl'fferent ,fOl'ma, "N,as fPe.tr:l<S Alast tbl~1qI ;.c GO . ~or'Exceptional~hildl'el,i, .r<c.uc.. _ .to it !!laD ,Rwer; ..and ,!Sister "Mar,- ;~ . ..... ~repciir(~",.r:d'''. 'Also•..we "nove " {.... ,the :m~ ,of :J'unipero -, ~ as :,we· ro~oaw~y'.:our ~ita, rnow .at :iHolY' ,'Name ') ff.o ";~plete . ~in. ',''Qt 'Cov.e«i,lt, !?P.antl : lSerra.It takes :abe.comingpride ~pUgrJmage'~ompleteQ;'We:n~ght ,Convent, ,New rBedfor.d; ..wiIlJallO '~~Shif1S,v~r.~le. .. .- - . ~ I'" ~er !IIlo.st ffamous, ~n,who (have fffiet -hlm'cat rt;he Gtw::n~ng,etJl go:to Nazareth <Hall. llearned' his 'Latin rat the ,Fran-' ~the road, ,and returned .hIS ,~rav. . From St. Kilian's, ,New ,Bed'.. ~1W... r~a""c...Gnd -wa-"lGnYi'Olty, , .tf'!V ~ tJlr.easy ~.. . ,( leiscan friar.y cdfffi1ln'-:Bernardifi(~, ,o;salu4e. 'Ifor,q, ,Sister 'Mary ,Geoffrey 'will ldown the str.eet:1r:om, St. Peter'~ 'IPlan' ·l·~ftr.·· 9 .go, ,to St.Patrick~s; 'F.allRivef; i\Wk; I~ \~l"'" ,w. ~SvPPtY f; iand.who:I.o.'leiitto(siqgtthe chant it ' , ' ·.r. "",~ ..Ima e~ndf£mm St.,.J'ohn.,thej,Evaqgel_ tof the Church;in :the ,coDlpanY~oP,r:iSQnCan\p .Jet, Attleboro, SisterlMal'Y'Geor_ lot his~uturetbrethr.en. d .- ''''/1' 'LONDON, (oNC) -Plans :are ""in~ is t cans'f·erI'e'IIU~".lount St ~lIIt, tl6n~ .'''lUI 1£ -B' °to 'h ,. th ~being made her.elIor;;an:1llir 'pil- .·",Mal'Y Convent,Fall :River,,'; . lAS ; ~r,l lS~,a. 0 lei fgrimage :to 'Dachau, isite fof '.the ~teachat ..St. "Louis 'School. 'Sister '~l 0 J' .- ,. ~p -to"fo , . f amous 0"f ,th \( - ' . ' LI . ,01n .In ,: e" IOn cmos t 10 e ,nazi. 'con- . ~Mary 'Teresina, <aI,so ,at'St. 'John ........ ' '~Z" QRowalld 'A've•• ·New .Bedford LOND0N (NO)--:British Cath- t:tientmtion ..ca.ri!ps. :.It .will'star.t '.the \Evangelist, -will ;go·.to :st. • . Se t 1 th 20th Kilian's, New~Bedford. b ...e ~I9';;6U4'ior.;WI 59..642511• • • • • • ;Olics have .been :asked ,to join in iOn _p. ,; e··" 'anniversary •.worldwidelleUtion ~to the Holy ,of the invasion.ofcPolandJwJhe tOdl~m-bans!in'.Korea iSeelfor(thecbeatificatiDnlof,Louis (Germans. ..ndLAzelie-iMade rMax:tin, r,par"CooperatiQi ,is.the <All ~iN!ght 'Have ,:'New :S.~peliior .ntsof St.-Ther,ese:o'f,Lisieux. ~:Vigll Group, "which organ!zea SEOUL (NC)·- ~Eather 'Nell They were<aSked~to,send.~pa- ;,weekend 'f!Yin.,g ipilgr1mages .B~yle, SoS.C., .'a mative:of'Bayete petiti:ons 'for 'each -of '.the Gfrom 'Britain :to ',:bouraes. The unne, N. ,J., has :been-:;appointed iParents to Msgr. ¥ernonJohn- pilgl"ims .will take planes .to 1>a- <Sl!periorof the Golumban;~ath­ ,son; a promoter' of devotion ·to chau '.on Sept. 1 and return to ers in KOl'ea.:He'succeedsoFatller St. 'Therese. The .appeal ,.was I~Bl"ibain -the following day.' • ,Brian Geraghty, :8:8,C. !: ,made particularly;to ~the, [many :Dachau was built in 1933. @f ,¥,ather Boyle'will:hav,e char,. ~ritons who journey .to Lisieux. ::the' "2;500 priests incarcerated ..of 102 Columbans ,assigned AlO ·1 , "It would seem most IPr.ob- ~there, ,only 800 survived. Many .two vicariates apostolic in '-K"o-til .-ble," said Msgr. Johnson, "~that ,of ,these' were,' tortured So ·rea-:.KwalJgjuin ',the :southwest :ill, the - providence. of 'GQa' ,s~verely that they still cannot .and· Chun .Chon jusbsouthof·the ,Lis~lCuX may be the rallying carr).. out their priestly duties. , demilitarized ·zone. :.The .Colum,point for ~h.e ~Ch.ristian 'home in ,The room in ,which (condemned ban ·Fathersare .working .in )55 Successors to DAVID DUFF & SON en age ~hen ·the 'forces 'of ·e~U' victims were 'keptthas been con- ;parishes in Korea, 'two :of the 640 'PleasantStreet . New 'Bedford .~ ste&h!y _disr,4pti~g it;" __ _. ,<ver.ted..into ;a,ch~pel. parishes in Seoul.

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Prelate Asserts Church's Hope Is Africa

THE ANCHORThurs., Aug. 20, 1959

DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER. MASS.

Six Cardinals To Participate In Congress

SARANAC LAKE (NC)Stressing that the Church places its hopes on Africa, as communism places its hopes on Asia, Auxiliary Bishop Fulton J. Sheen of New York praised the missionary work of the White Fathers on the Dark Continent. Bishop Sheen, national director of the Society for the Propagation of the Faith, was the principal speaker at the blessing of the White Fathers' new St. Joseph's Seminary near here. Archbishop Egidio Vagnozzi, Apostolic Delegate to the United States, presided. He was assisted by Bishop James Navagh of Ogdensburg, N. Y., who offered an outdoor Mass in the after- .. noon. St. Joseph's is the only U. S. college operated by the White. Fathers community, which has 2,500 priests working in Africa. Bishop Sheen stated that when Car din a 1 Charles Levigerie founded the White Fathers in 1668, he sought a group oj men so tough that they could adapt themselves to the Arab way of life. Of the 6,000 missionary priests, Brothers and Sisters now working outside of the United Stiites, Bishop Sheen said, 3,500 are members of the White Fathers and the White Sisters.

Seminary Rector Marks Jubilee UTICA (NC)-Father Sebastian Weber, O.F.M. Conv., rector of St. Francis Seminary, Staten Island, N. Y., and form'er First Assistant General of the Conventual Franciscan order, celebrated the silver jubilee of his ordination in St. Joseph's Church here where he once was an altar boy.. Five married brothers of. Father Weber served the Mass, . and two nephews were acolytes. Preacher at the Mass was Father Francis Edic, a.F.H. Conv., former Minister Provincial.

13

CATANIA (NC) Six cardinals will take part in. the National Eucharistic Congre"ss to be held here on

VISIT AIR I"ORCE BASE: Sisters of Mercy inspect the cockpit of an RC-121 Super Constellation Radar plane during visit to Otis Air Force Base on Cape Cod. Left to right are Sister M. Annunciata, Sister Miriam, Sister M. Zita, Sister M. Dosithea and Sister M. Immaculata.

Restless l(ids .at' Mass Only Express Outside ,What Grow,n-ups.qften Feel Inside By Russell Collinge If you are like the rest of us you have probably spoken about the behavior of children -in church. And, like the rest of us, you have probably deplored their 'all-too-evident restlessness ... the squirming an'd twisting-the aimless fiddling with this and that. No doubt you have felt that something should be done about it-that 'someone should point out t~ the children that the Mass is But how about our mental be a bad idea for all of us every not just a period of time to squirming? time we attend Mass. be endured, but is the living, And while we are telling them Bebind Pious Look how they should sit let's think vital core of their religionHave you ever muttered, while

and 'that they, should, at least, pay attention and stop acting in a way that is distracting and irreverent. Of course we must remember that they are children and have not learned to control their active exteriors. We, on the other hand, can maintain: • passive physical appearance, a somewhat stolid and unobtrusive quietness. We look ~ll right.

Archbishop Says K~rushchev Visit Prospect Is Heart-Sickening

outwardly devout, "Wouldn't you know? The one morning I'm in a real hurry and there has to be a letter from the Bishop!" Or, with bent head and folded hands, planned to rebuild the garage' or worried about that error in the checkbook or wondered if the shade of blue is really 'becoming? Or noted that the Whoozis are up in -~ront and Mr. Whoozis is ,with' them? Or just plain counted the minutes until Mass is over and you can escape int~ the busy, fascinating outside world? . Maybe you don't perform any of these mental scratchings and coilings ... but a lot of us do. , And, somehow,' this mental fidgeting does seem worse than the open and outright unrest ,of , the young. And that earlier point about someone telling the children about .the Mass ... let's go over in our minds just what we will say and how we will say it when we explain the real meaning of the Mass. We may decide to skip the kids and just go on telling our.elves about it. Which wouldn't

ST. PAUL (NC)-Archbishop paper of the St. Paul archWilliam O. Brady of St. Paul said diocese. He said that Vice-President Nikita Khrushchev's visit to the U. S. "will sooth Mr. K's wounds Nixon, while in the Soviet and tighten the chains, on the Union, could have followed up captives he has as well as those the Captive-' Nations thrust with questions, such as "why Rus.sia he plans to secure." . The prelate said the prospect has'violated more than 50 of her of smiles and handshakes, wel- agreements with us, why there coming ceremonies and diplo- has. been no expianation of the matic chit chat His enough to shooting down of our planes, why the Soviet forces are in make one sick at heart." Hungary, in Germany," all \ Discussing tile Captive Nathrough the Baltic and lately tions Week resolution of, the come to Albania." U. S. Congress, whi<;h' the So-' "But no! He was extending viet premier had railed against invitations. He was expressing in a speech, the Archbishop said pious but impractical hopes! it "has been a fraud' (because) , "W~ are ,now comJ1li,thid. to • the diplomats did' not mean' it." smiles and ha4dshakes, to,', we!'; "How stupid can we get, espe- come ceremonies and amiablecially, when, almost withou,t un- . diplomatic chitchat, 'all of which derstanding why" we had Mr. K. . will soothe Mr. K's wounds and on the defensive? We"had a knife tighten the chains on the' cap':' . in him in a most sen!litive spot. tives he had, as well as those be It hurt. plans, to secure'. It is' enough to "But no one had the sense to , make ,one 'sick at heart. . . follow up the thrust, to twist the "There is evidently no refuge knife around, to take, advantage in statesmanship.. Let WI conof the opportunity and to push tinue to take refuge in prayer." the blade in further till it touched a vital spot. " Diocese of Pittsburg "Instead we have pulled back our hand and kilied t~e scratch," Schedules Red Mass, PITTSBURGH (NC) - The he said. The Archbishop's comments first Red Mass in the Diocese of were made in his weekly column, Pittsburgh's history will be ofthe Archbishop's Observations, fered Sept. 17 in St. Paul's Cathein 'the Catholic Bulletin, news- dral here, sponsored by The St. Thomas More Society of Allegheny County. Bishop John ~. Sees Rapid Growth Wright of Pittsburgh will pre:;' Of Church in Africa side and preach. NEW YORK (NC)-That the The date of the Mass eomes political future of British East • few days after the opening in Africa appears uncertain but' its western Pennsylv;mia of general spiritual future ia brilliantly court sessions. It also coincides apostolic as a result of a rapid, with the 172ndanniversary of unprecedented increase in Da- the adoption of the United States tive vocations to the priesthood ConstitutiOll. is the opinion of Father Edward The Red MasS lmploretl God'. M. Baskerville, M.M., • priest- grace on tbose who are responphysician home on furlough after sible for the enactment, adminis.ix years in the Maryknoll m»- tnition lU)d interpretation of the aioDi of TaniaD¥ika. lew.

'C'a.pe Nomination's

Prescriptions called for and delivered' HEADQUARTERS FOR

Donates $10,000 'To fire Victims GASPE (NC)-Premier Maurice Duplessis has announced a $10,000 contribution by the Province of Quebec towards relief of Gaspe residents who lost their homes and all'their posses-" sions in recent forest fires. A 95 square mile area was swept the fires. The provincial contributiOll was made 'after an appeal wa. made by Archbishop Paul Bernier, Bishop of Gaspe, who ellplained the serious plight 01 residents in the bumed out dilltricts. Archbishop Bernier added $2,000 to the relief fund. In public appeal Msgr. Alcldas Bourdages, pastor of SteAnne des· Monts, said mucll more assistance would be needed to see the stricken famllietl through their period of readjustment.

of a good explanation for the angular contortion of some of us older people-the one which is neither sitting nor kneeling, but may well be called the "liturgical attitude." Surely "someone" should prepare the children for Mass ..• and that "someone" is, rightly, the parents of any individual family. If they understand and College President love the Mass themselves, it fol'BUFFALO (NC)-Sister Cathlows that their instructions will erine of Siena, a graduate of make attending Mass so exciting D'Youville College, operated b7 there'll be no need to worry the Grey Nuns of the Sal!'red about inattention.Heart, has been named presitient Oh, by the way, if you were of the institution, succeeding giving your whole mind and' Sister Regina Marie who ha. heart to the Mass-how did you been chosen to head Holy Ange1tl know the kids were restless? 'Academy here.

CENTER

, Mrs. Ja~es R. Bresnahan, Mrs. ' Paint and Wallpaper Robert Hatl,1away and Mrs. John Dupont Paint Connors' constitute the nominPARKING ating committee for the Guild of " . Rear ot Store the Visitation,Eastham. They Qo«:.t. a;.; 422 Acusb. Aft. will present, a slate of officers .t • meeting set :for 8 Monday cor. Middle' SteV,ening, Aug. 24. . New Bedford

LARIVI ERE'S .Pharmacy

the island of Slcily from Sept. 6 to 13. Pope john XXIII has named Marcello' Cardinal Mimmi, Secretary of the Sacred Consistorial Congregation, to be the legate to the congress. He will be joined by, Joseph 'Cardirial Wendel, Archbishop of Munich. Also scheduled to be present are Ernesto Cardinal Ruffini, Archbishop of Palermo; Giacomo Cardinal Lercaro, Archbishop orI. Bologna; Giovanni Cardinal Urbani, Patriarch of Venice; and Santiago Car din a 1 Copello, Chancellor of the Holy Romaa Church.

11

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This Time'y Message Is Sponsored llyThe Following Public .Spirited, Individuals' arid Business Concerns, Located ·in Greater Fall River

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Clyde is only three but alreacJY he 'has known more pain and suffering and cripp'ing than most of us' m~ ift a lifetime. Paralyzed by Polio, Clyde - up to now :....: at least has h~d the help of the March of. Dimes. But - now· the March of Dimes' has run oUt . of money: 'Fifty thousan~ pGtie"..

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like Cly. stiR depend on the March of Dimes, some o~ them for the very breath of life itself. Thars ,why the March of Dimes funds now. Give must have . more . . generou.sly to the Emergency Appeal of. your .•o~al ' March .of Dimes. o

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nn: ANCHORThUf's.~

Aug. 20, 1959

15

DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER. MASS.

·Want Your Parish .to Go Down in History? S.tart Saving Records for,' Posterity By Maydell Murphy Author of the history of St. Mary's Parish, Taunto~

Some few years ago one of our legislators started a battle with tradition. HWhat good is the past?" he thundered to group of citizens happy to join him in turning a dedicated Village' Green into a public parking space. "The first settlers are dead," he continued, "and so are their ideas, dead as a dodo!' Meaning, no doubt, that those in their graves no longer could.· . through the dust of the age!!? Collect all the early data you be expected to rise up and First, you recording secretaries, can and get facts and figures vote. He knew perfectly well, you keepers of the Parish Pound, straight-before it is too 'late. except for political purposes you dignified orators and mas- Send out a clarion call for old

a

, .ELEVATED: POpe John has named Msgr: Charles A. Buswell, Bishop of Pueblo, Colo. NC Photo.

Pope Sets New Papal Style

. that .there' are still those among us who honor the past, who believe that today is built upon yesterday, and tomorrow is determined by both. H~story? Local history? What good is it and why should you bother? And how would you go about it if you did bClther? The moment you begin to formulate these questions, history comes tumbling like Niagara, and properly directed you have the wherewithal to write. Who wove the beautiful rug in the sanctuary? What kind of man was the pastor who stood up in his pulpit . and addressed l;1is .new congregation thus: "I am E. J. Sheridan' from St. Vincent's parish, South Boston; am 180 pounds of·brawn· and a ton of spunk and I don't . need' any. advice from anyone of you". Or why did Harvard University, a centu'ry ago, when prejudice was rife, lend St. Mary's Parish, Taunton, $30,000 toward the erection of a new Roman 'Catholic church? Who said the first Mass .in: the parish? To what saint is the church bell dedicated?'

ters of the written word, be photographs. Scour presentday newsstands for postcards. Use wonderful persons yourselves. your own cameras at church Inject some of yourself into gatherings. Invite an old (,lasseverything you do. mate to tea and shamltl,essly 'Don't Be Morose If your official records· must . reminisce. Make a hobby of collecting be dignified, let them not be moro!le, add ~n illuminated. every scridge of information phrase; coin a human' postscript; ever printed on some famous keep a certain-sized manila en- personality in your parish. And don't forget, it is the complete velope into which you can thrust TRANSFERRED: Bishop clippings, photos, letters, docu- file that is priceless. No rectory ments, and your most successful should· be cleaned except by John B. Franz of Dodge City project for raising funds during somebody with an historical will head the Diocese of sense. your year of service. Peoria. NC Photo. For you may preserve for the On New Year's Eve sort them out and hand over the remaining future not only the jewelied word, the John Hancock signa- . contents to the keeper of a VATICAN CITY (NC-:"El_ ture . rescued f~m a Rehoboth locked file in your local Youth . the Israeli national airline, . . . Center;· As the yeal"s go by, bonfire, but even a pair of altar these loose-leaf files will be candlesticks that may later land flown a basket of red and whit, priceless. in '. museum and be labeled gladioli from the Holy Land til Pope John XXIII. speciaiization is the keynote. with your name. . Historical Societies often use scrapbooks centered upon one topic, such as the early railroads of the tQwn, or the local shipmasters. What wouldn't I , have given, in writing the history of St. Mary's to locate data . man)' mot,-ers will soon .·be sayinc &0 themselves as the .ast ' heir and heiress have· left home &0 prove again that there aN ·on· our early choir-masters and ,. . such people as "school angels." If ·YOU take their· choirs; programs of early the expense aDd effort "to launch" a lew church concerts; ;t c:omplete ot your own ebildren on the road to knowtlist, without bothering everyone . edge and multipl;r It by several thousand from here to Jericho, of the boys you will bave an Idea of the problelDll of the parish who entered the .whieb are pressing on Monsignor Ryan .. priesthood and what their mid-. this moment. He must prepare thousan. dIe initials were-it is considof refugee children &0 return to sehool ered obscene by some editors to within the ned few weeks. He needll present a man' to posterity prayers ••• he needs money •.. he needs patience! Can YC\ll without his middle initial. . help him in his difficulty? $25 will educate a refugee child f . . , . Chancery offices do a good one term. Why not fill out the blank at the bottom of this cotjob; schools and convents assume amn and mall it in today. responsibility for complete files AND STILL THE FIGHT CONTINUES AGAINST HUNGER of yearbooks-although I might WHICH EACH" YEAR DESTROYS SO MANY REFUGEB just as well have hunted for the CHILDREN ... $10 WILL SUPPLY AN ENTIRE FAMILY FOB Kohinoor diamond in our midst A' WEEK ANI;> SAVE THE CHILDREN! as for a certain Jubilee issue. Recommends Microfilming "HE LIVES IN THE HEARTS OF 1t...1:oS.t. THESE POOR PEOPLE." the bishop 'V We recommend' strongly the of Ernakulam, recently wrote us in ~ . microfilming of early parish describing the love which the people records. We rejoice that we now of Kuthiathode have for the memory ~ have The Anchor files, newspaper sIlecial editions, tape recordings of important speeches, and l'adio transcripts. But there ·..'1 .·.·.·: .·,·,·,: . " ;; is still much to be done. much for them. They are $2.000 short . of the complete amount. They caD TIx Holy Faihrr's MilliOl1 Ai4 do no- more ••• can YOU help! for 1& DrifT/tal OJurril

Flowers for Pope

CASTELGANDOLFO (NC)His Holiness Pope John XXIII. bas introduced new papal stylet:' by wearing a white summer hat and red·' Morocco leather shoes. The Pope first appeared in the white hat in a' vis~t to the sum'" mer villa here 'of the college of the Sacred Copgregation for the. Rich in Tradition Propagation of the Faith. The .. One reason a great parIsh is Pope usually wears a red bat loved is because it is rich in trimmed with gold ribbon.· tradition. Every village church The Prefect of Apostolic in 'the Diocese is su~rounded by Ceremonies issues a booklet enchanting trivia that can iniannually which lists various. tiate pride in heritage or bring garments worn by the pope the smile of delight. These are throughout the liturgical year. the anecdotes, the amusing remThe booklet lists only two hats: iniscences, the local evaluations. a silk ·one for summer wear and and the specific detail seldom a velve"t one for winter we~r. known outside the membership There is_ no listing for a whIte of organizations or existing hat. merely as folklore in the memWho Knows? ories of individuals. These are the trenchant items that everyIn referring to the white hat, body overlooks, the loss of which Pope John is reported to have makes us poorer, and the dissaid, "Now who knows what coverY of which makes glad the they will say?" The Pope's habit of taking modern historian: How can you reco'rd these miswalks made his red velvet cellanies, gather these 'diamondslippers impractical, and he chips that shfne sO brightly ordered a pair of red Morocco leather shoes.. At the beginning of his pontificate he wore black shoes and then switched to the velvet ones 'prescribed by protocol. Representatives of. Queen at . IOdalities; Rev. Joseph Spitzig, Many other popes h~ve in~r()oo duced variations in papal clothPeace Sodality Union of the Fall professor of theology at St. ing. Pius XI wore a lightweight River Diocese will attend a con- Mary's Seminary, Cl'eveland. white overcoat in the summer, Als6 Dr. Frederick Leone, proveniio~ of the lay apostolate and Pius XII wore a white tunic. fessor of statistics at Case Uni:\'donday, Aug. 31 through SaturPope John gave novelty to the versity, Clevel~md; Mother Mary day, Sept. 5' on the campus 01. Colette, Sussex, England; Rev. papal wardrobe the past winter by wearing a camauro, a soft . Boston College. Bernard Bassett, Sodality organizer of London, and Re~ velvet cap trimmed with white The Fall River delegates will fur. In recent times, use of the commute to Boston ·by bus to at- .John Kerr, Ireland. camauro ha's been restricted to tend the sessions 'scheduled each The daily convention program the vesting of the body of a dead day and evening of the week. will inclUde lectures, workshops, pope. dialogue and sung Masses, disCentering around the theme cussion groups and varied field "Schools of Perfection and· of the trips. Hotel accommodations are ·Apostolate," the convention will have two sections, one for ·available for those coming from distant points. . adults, one for teen-agers. DAYTON (NC) - Urgency of.. utilizing the press, radio and From Four Corne-:s television in transmitting FranMen and women are coming from the four corners of the ciscan ideals to the modem globe; from India, Australia, world was called ·10 the atten- Formosa, England, .IrelaQd, Plumbing - Heating tion of Franciscan superiors ift Switzerland and Canada, to parOver 35 Years a resolution adopted at the 40th ticipate in the convention. Small of Satisfied Service Franciscan Educational Confer- discussion groups will be organ..:. ence at St. Le~nard College here. ized af~r' each lecture.· 806 NO. MAIN STREET The reSolution called upon the International authorities OIl Fall River, OS 5-7497 IUperiprs .to accept "the chal-, ·the lay apostolate will lecture lenge of the newmissionar.y On .topics grouped under seven horizon of radio and. television headings: the Social Apostolate, through .the appropriate training '. The. Liturgy, How the Saints of friars for this. apostolate . Prayed, The Psychology and' through the establlSment '01. Technique 'of Leadership, The own Franciscan training '~enter " Ecumenic;al Movement, The Vic'- : b' radio-TV." . tims of.. Society and Making In Carbon ' . .y . . . . . . . Training in journalism hi the' ~ristian Public Opinion VOeat :::a tIeIDinary program and publica~ S~akers will include Richa~d Distributed by tion of a comprehensive Francie- Cardinal Cushing; Rev. Shawn "ean anthology "of the best Fran- Sheehan, 'president of the Naciac8l1 writing efl.orts," DOW. tional Liturgical Conference;Beverage Co. limited to :relatively llIDan cireu- :Rev, Louis :paulussen, executive lation in provincial periodicals, ,lM!Cretary 01. the World Fedei-a331 Nash Rd., New Bedford abo were NCOIIUIWnded ill tbe tion of. Sodalities; Rev. .James .J. WYman 7-9937 . -.oNtion. lIcQuade. DBtiona! promoter 01.

Diocesan Sodality Union Delegates To Attend Ap~stolate Converiti~n

Cites Value c.f Using Radi'o, Press, TV

G~ORGE M. MONTLE

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THE IMMACULATE HEART OF MARY -'(August 22) has moved the he'ar$a .. AUGUSTINE and MATTHEW. Tbeir love f . Our Blessed Mother bas led them to lone for a share in the priesthood of Her SOL Can you help them toward the altar? Eaell boy must have a sponsor who will pay hilt necessary expenses of $100 a year during the -L..:.::..;,a~=-~:::s six year seminary course. Why not adopt one in gratitude to Her who has given us so much! A PRAYER A DAY AND A DOLLAR A MONTH WILL EASB THE SUFFERING OF A LEPER WHO IS CLOSE TO CHRIST.. Devotion to tbe IMMACULATE HEART OF MARY has led SISTER JULIETTE and SISTER RACHEL to leave home . family .•. friends so that they might follow Her example and care for the Mys_ical Body of Christ. Will your devotion to the IMMACULATE HEART OF MARY lead you to help these girls. Each must have a sponsor who will pay her necessary expenses of $150 a year during the two years of novitiate training. Dear Cardinal Spellman: I am anxious to beg Our Lady's blessings on the comlnl school year. I would like to help one of the refugee children so dew to Her Immaculate Heart. Enclosed is $2;> to make it • possible for a refugee child to attend school this' term.

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Welfar1e Is ·· 'C f Ch h .rst· oncern· 9 ',urc F By Msgr. George G. Higgins .

16 Thurs"-:~9~~~cl~~~' Name Father Mark'Tsai President ,Of Free China's' Catholic College

DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER., MASS.

TAIPEI \ (NC) -'- A Chinese college for girls, it is recognizecl priest well known to many by, the Ministry of EdueatiOil . I A' D • £ Catholics in New York and New here. " ,. Director NCW C . Soela etlon . epar.men. To MI'ssl'on Hospl'tal Jersey has been appointed presi:father Tsai obtainecl his M.A. Will a Catholic be nomin~ted for th; Presidency i~ 1960 NEW YORK-A 47-year-old' dent of the only Catholic college from Columbia University . ' and, if nominated, will he be elected., Who knows.. 0.ne doctor has left here to return in Free China... New York, in 1943, and his doeman's guess is as good as another's. Even the professiQnal to his post at the White Fathers The board of directors of tonite in school and educational gamblers can't seem to make up their minds, although there ~ission hospital at -lirapa, Providence Girls' English Col-, methods from Fordham Univer. t . t of ' ---' Ghana lege, in the Mary.knoll-staffed "~ty, New York, in -1951. 18 a cer am amou;n It would also-and more im-' " Prefecture of. Talchung, bas Father Tsai was profeSSOl' of money around which, says portantIy-open their eyes to the He is Dr. Henry Archambault' ratified the nomination of education at' -seton HallUniv.erthat both parties will. nom- fa(:t that the Church is a ,super- , of Detroit. A native of Bar~e, Vt., ,Fath.er Mark Tsai as, cOllege sity, South Orange from 1951 i t ' a Catholic candidate natural iristitutio~ and t~at her ' he ~as ~raduated fr,om Creighton president. ~,e succeeds Father until 1952: when he W8ll apna e . . primary concern IS not WIth the Umverslty, Omaha, and served Joseph Kung. . pointed regent of the Institu. tor the vlce~presldency. who passing phenomena of partisan' for 10 years at Providence HosProvidence College was estab- of Far Eastern Studies. Once agam, h~we~er, politics but with the spiritual pitaI, Detroit. He has been home . lished and is staffed by ProviFor more than 14 yean he ~~~ y. fo~ 0 ;af welfare, and the eternal salva-, 'on furlough after' four yeaI:s in dence Sisters from Saint-Mary':' lived at the' Church of Our Lady mattei, w hat tion of all the children of men. Ghana. of-the-Woods, indiana. A junior of Guadalupe. in New York. ,d iff e r' e nee would it really make one way or the other? I What, if anything,_ could it, possibly be expected to prove? Fun d amentally.. it proba b I y wouldn't make any sub, .. stantiaI' difference one way or 1363 Pleasant Street - Fall ~iver the other. Nevertheless, the prospect of having Catholics Oft '!> both tickets in 1960 is a very '. Intriguing, possibility. Even if , it didn't prove anything else, ,.'it would'demonstrate rather dramatically that Catholics are not constrained to think alike and to vote as a monolithic bloc iIi the. field of p'artisoh politics Surely this would be a whole80IIle development, for the numfr' ber of. otherwise well informed I ' and 'politically sophisticated Americans who at least half-way subscribe to the opposite myth is rather staggering. There are, of course, many other ways of dispelling this perennial 'myth. It would, be $ simpler, for example, ~o make a meek-list of the contradictory editorial opinions expressed Oil matters of public policy in a randoin sampling of Catholic neW9- ' papers during any given week. Here, for example, is what you would find for the first week ot August: (1) Many diocesan newspapers severely criticized President EIsenhower for inviting Mr. Khrushchev to the UnitedStates, but o~~rs, after carefully weighing all the pros and cons, thought that the Khrushchev visit might conceivablT ser\i-e a useful purpose. . Disagree on UN (2) Two Midwestern Catholic -~ newspapers expressed almost diametrically contradictory opin-, ions on the United Nations and, ' . '; more specifically, on the subject ~ .-;'. 01. world law. ,(3) A priest-c;:olumnist eulogized the memory of ~he late S~nator McCarthy of Wisconsill in ,a chain of Catholic papers. During the same week, however, U ' . -In THEIR FIRST internationally famous, Cath, .' , ~.~. FULL-LENGTH, olic layman,' while being entertained at the home of the Bishop FEATURE I .. of the diocese to .which this same' priest is attached, stated, (in the course of a front-page interview Getthe'ColpixRecordof THE THREE STOOGES . in the local diocesan newspaper) Sin~AVE that McCarthyism, in his. opin-, r------------,r------~--...----., , ' ,WIU ROCKET,'•• TRAYa ,. "Hey, they're really blasting ~. ton; is "a morbid symptom of a I , malady that affects a democracy." (4) A priest-historian was flUoted in an Eastern diocesall newspaper as having said that the "liberalism" condemned by the Church is the "liberaliSm of today." The managing editor of. a Midwestern newspaper vigorously disagreed 'with this conclusion and characterized it as a ' dangerous oversimplificiitionof • very complicated problem. These few examples will be enough to'indicate that Catholics WITH are not committed to an official , Writtea bJ RAPHAEL HAyo). Produced br IfARRY ROMM .'Directed br DAVIO LOMU.IICII party line in the field of partisan . " .. . .. . .' politics or on matters of ,public policy: If space permitted, addi:' ....... ,. tional examples could be cited ,": . from other Catholic newspapers published during any given week Plus The Fabulous Co-Feature AttractiOil of the year. It might be added that IUl occasional look at the Catholic press by some of our liberal friends would serve a number Starring • .MICHAEL ....., I ANDON . JO MORROW - . of,other useful purposes in addi•

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Emphasizes Easy Divorce Be gi Ii s National Decay . ISLE LA MOTTE (NC)elJ:ncreasing divorce is chipping away at the foundations of the home and easy divorce

Confessional Provides Comp.lete Privacy In Conferring Sa.crament of Penance By Rev. Roland Bousquet St. J9Seph's Church, New Bedford Tbe Christian of the· early Church was probably more keenly aware of his position in the Church than we are today. The gifts of bread and wine which he brought to Sunday Mass not only manifested his private interest in the Mass. These gifts were mingled with those of his brethren to form the corporate gift of the Church to Almighty God. The early Christian thus understQOd his important role in the Church; he was a _member of that living organ-

makes the beginning of moral decay that ruined the pagan emp.trell and enslaved women." Bishop Matthew P'. Brady ell Manchester, N. H,. gave this admonition to ·more than 1,000 women who came from all parts of Vermont on a pilgrim- isin, the Churcb of whicb Christ age to St. Anne's Shrine here is the bead. ill their own State. Sin, on the other hand, was Jl'uniiT DesVadioa not only a private affair between "The insidious crusade for the individual and God. It af'equal rights' is apt to deprive fected the whole Christian comwoman of the privileges she DOW munity. The whole body suffers enjoys and which are her due because of an injured member. and protection," the New Hamp- The reconciliation with God" in shire prelate said, adding that - the early Church, -thus 1005 on Hollywood newspapers and lit- a public .aspect. The 'whole erature conspire to accentuate Christian community joyfully glamor and glamorize immor- received its brother once lost to ' ality, to tear down the protective sin. shield of modesty arid to "rob The bishop or priest usual17 woman of her dignity, her re- heard the confesSion of sins ..,ect and her security." . secretly and the confessions of "In our own country recently," the dying were also heard prithe Bishop said, "the- Congress vately. Those who were guilty of American Women met in New of public sins, however, which York and declared its objectives had scandalized the Christian community made a public to be: 1) to take housekeeping out avowal of these sins. of the home so that women may Assigns Penance ·become servants of the world, No matter whether the con2) to establish government fession was secr~t or public, subsidies to make child-rearing everything else in the conferring a .function .of the state instead of of the Sacrament of Penance CONFESSIONAL the family and St. Joseph's Church---;North Dighton was public. On the appointed 3) to eliminate family meals, day, usually Ash Wednesday, the and to put disawashing, laundry penitents entered the church in deacons with lighted candles The penitents' units have a service and other home activ- procession and prostrated them- opened the doors of the church kneeler and are provided with tiI ities on a communized basis. selves before the bishop seated to admit them. The bishop at the an image of our Crucified Lord. Pagan Influence at the throne. The assisting throne, symbol of his a.uthority, A small sliding panel permits The Bishop referred to these clergy and the congregation pro- stretched out his hands over the priest to hear the penitent. as "two alluring objectives to ceeded to sing the seven peni- them and imparted the absolu- A grating or screen is secured entice, and one-~razen and dia- tential psalms and the litanies tion. They could now approach to this opening. The priest is prQbolical-aimed at the destruction of the saints. The bishop imposed the altar to receive Holy Com:' vided with a seat. Doors. or of the family," the Manchester heavy cu-rtains close each unit. his hand on them and assigned munion and take an active part Ordinary told the women, who in the Mass with the entire conMost churches have construca penance to each after he had represented 20 Catholic organigregation. ted special confessionals for the given them a rough penitential zations in Vermont: This practice was continued hard of hearing, Most confessors garment which was worn while "Your objective is a strong, the pen~nce was performed. in the West, until the sixteenth appreciate it, as do the hard of increasing faith, the protection century when it was gradually hearing. Mass for Penitents of your God-given dignity, the The Sacrament of Penance is abandoned in favor of private '!be bishop led them to the alertness of your individual reconfession. At· first a simple. often called the tribunal.of pen- . .Ponsibility to God and the door of thechurcb where he bench was used by the priest to ance. Jt. is indeed a tribunal be..,read of the Kingdom of God blessed them. During the course· -hear confessions. Confessions fore' which the penitent seeks and eternal truth in the hearts of of. lent, they had to fast, wear much like our own were soon the' mercy of God. The seat prothe rough penitential garb and found to be more practical. all men." vided for the confessor symbol"As Catholic women, step not perform the gpecial penance T 0 d' a y confessionals are izes this fact. Neverthless, conout of the home where you reign assigned to them. They could fession should not be looked as queen; at least let not any not offer the bread and· wine ptaced in conspicuous places upon as a sacrament of fear but other iritereSt come before this, for the· MaSs and usually re- normally close to the doors of of love. Our Heavenly Father mained outside the church build- the church. We may see in this ,seeks nothing more in this 70ur glorious heritage." a remnant of public penances; "Let not a pagan world influ- ing during the divinE' services. sacrament than to embrace the A spectal Mass was celebrated Although -the _ confessions are prodigal son in the arms of forence the atmosphere and ornamentation of your home," Bishop for the penitents on Holy Thurs- hear confessions. Confessionals giveness and salvation. itself is 'found in the body of day. After the gospel, two .subBrady 'advised. the churcb.

Profession Ceremonies to be Held At Holy Cross Brothers Novitiate Six from the Diocese will par- ceremonies will be followed by a ticipate in reception· and profes- luncheQ.D for the religious and sion ceremonies this Saturday their relatives. and Sunday at the Valatie,.N. Y., novitiate of the Brothers of Holy Cross of the Eastern Province. Now in retreat in preparation for his canonical year of probation for the religious liie is Brother Richard Demers, son of Mr. and Mrs. Francis Demers, Taunton. He will receive the religious habit Saturday, and will then begin the year of formation, to be followed by the taking of first vows and academic training for the teaching and mission apostolate. Sunday Ceremonies Participating in Sunday's ceremonies will be Brother Charles Cote and Brother David DeThomas, Taunton; Brother' .1ohn· Collins, North AttlebOro; and Brother Frederick McAuley, Attleboro. Their first vows will be received by Rev. Cletus Mc• stops rust Cathy, O.F.M. Cap. • stops drlpplnC pipes Sunday afternoon Father'Mc• stops llnc INIInt Carthy will also' receive per.ltops nc petual profession of vows from 14 Brothers, inCluding Brother ............... MOI4 .1oseph LClvito,.a faculty. member Mel .... ., Coyle High School, Taunton. Both Saturday arid Sunday'.

Three compartments Three compartments usually make up our modern confessionals, one for the priest and two for penitents. ·Each soundproof unit is cl;lmplete in itself.

, Cat:lcer Research

.JERf!EY· CITY (NC) - Dr. Murray Nussbaum of- the Seton Hall College of Medicine here bjis been given a cancer research grant of $15,101 by the Amer.ican Cancer Society.

THE A~CHORThurs., Aug. 20, 1959 .

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DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER. MASS.

Holy Name Men To Participate In Pontifical NEW ORLEANS (NC)All persons who attend the Solemn Pontifical Mass during the national convention of the Holy Name Society here in October will be given the opportunity' of . taking part ia singing and making responses, according to plans being made

here. The Mass will be offered by .lames Francis - Cardinal McIntyre, Archbishop of Los Angeles, on Oct. 17 in the Sugar Bowl stadium of Tulane University Plans call for giving each perSOD who enters the stadium a leaflet on the parts of the Mass to be sung-the Kyrie, Sanetus, Benedictus, Agnus Dei and the responses. The· proper of the Mass wiD be chanted by the Scala Cantorum of Notre Dame seminary here. The Gloria and the Credo will be sung by a special choir composed of members of various parish choirs, seminarians and students of Catholic elementary and high schools. The faithful of the New Orleans archdiocese will have an opportunity to familiarize themselves with the singing Of the Mass by assisting at the Holy Sacrifices in th e i r parish churches during the five Sundays from Sept. 13 to Oct. 11, it was announced.

3,400 Couples Attend Marriage Courses MONTREAL (NC) - Some 3,400 engaged couples took part in 1,600 marriage preparation courses conducted in 60 parishes of the Archdiocese of Montreal during the past year. Collaborating in the coursell were 125 married couples, 60 doctors and nurses, 50 notaries, 264 other persons holding responsible positions in daily life .and 150 priests. Paul Emile Cardinal LegeJ'y Archbishop of Montreal, congratulated the leaders in thi. work. He said one of the great benefits being derived from it was the deeper spirituality apparent in the lives of those wile bave followed the courses. .The Cardinal suggested that they !let as their new goal 10,000 persona. Cardinal Leger drew attention to two other matters ol prime importance-the need for vocations to the priesthood and religious life, and the success of the Great Mission to be held throughout the archdiocese ia 1960.

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Labor Day Mass PI'M'SBURGH (NC) - Secretary of Labor James Mitchell has .ent word that he will attend the Labor Day Mass in St. Paul's Cathedral here. Bishop John .1. Wright of Pittsburgh will offer the Mass and will preach.

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85 North Main St., OS 7·9411


18 Thurs., ' -THE ANCHOR Aug.- 20, 1959

·'Harry Golden's New Book ·Makes Effortless ~eadin'g:c'

DIOCESE 0F FALL ~IVER. MASS

Supreme Pontiff Blesses Liturgy , Wee'k Delegate'~'

. By Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S.' Kennedy, ; . Harry Golden, editor, of the' Carolina Israelite, hit the _jac}<pot with his first book, Only. in America. It, qu~ckly, became a best seller and led the list for many months. Parts1 of it have been adapted for the slage by a pair of uncoJP.monly successful playwrights ~e r~calls the purchase of = and this production is sched.." bakery "seconds." Kids could tiled for Broadway in the 'get six cuts of day-old pies, six · fall. Mr. Golden now does a different kinds, for a nickle.

NOTRE DAME (NC) ~ Pone John .-XXIII has sent his blessing to all who will be in atte~dance at the 20th

widely syndicated column and Among the Jews, he says, the is in great demand as a lecturer~ heroes were not athletes or cowSimilar rewards' boys, but synagogue cantors, will' probably , othe'r musicians, writers, "and accrue to, him above everyone else the Yiddish 'from his second ' aCtors on the legitimate stage." He more than suggests the 'in~ book, just pub- o~, lished.' It 'is " tellectual vitality thattnere ealled For 2c was among these immigrant Pia i n (World ' people, the interest in ideas and $4) and is a especially those concerning sofurther seleccial betterment and political tion 0 f his means to it. He gives many w r i tin g s for "." samples' of the idiom peculiar to the section. ("You always reperiodicals.' ferred 'to tuberculosis ail "~a The title may mystify all but those born on tOllch.' ") the East Side of New York City. Now Vanished : "'Th'e entire East Side civiliza;.. The comedy and tragedy, the tion,"lYlr. Golden tells us, "was, mores and modes of thought, the addicted to seltzer (carbonated family structure and the n~igh­ ,.6 ~ water) ... : A small glass cos(!l borhood relationshIps, the at-, Penny-'Give me a small plain.' mosphere and pace of a way of· ··No syrup. Syrup cost ,another ~ life that haS nOW all l>lit van. penny., For a large glass, you ished are all vividly recreated. ·

~We~Eii:.orci~~:~~ts~~~:~h;

are by no means without" syrup,

'MURDER IN THECATHEDRAI1: T. S. Eliot's versedrama attracted some 14,000 persons at the recent festivals' 'is T~fl~~dh:'i~~ma~~~r=: a:~: in Trier, rendered in the tent-chapel Were. The same opera Puerto Ricans, who. will move, Will be suhg in Boston's Holy Cross' Cathe~ral on Sept. 25. on in turn, succeeded' by -:-: NC Photo. . .'

annual North American Liturgical Week, whiCh opens here Sunday. Officials report a large number of advance registrations from bishOps, priests. religious anQ laymen who have never before attended a. Liturgical . Week. The conference spokesmen credit a burgeoning interest in the place of the laymen in the official worship of the Church, which they said was given a strong impetus through the Instruction on Lay Participation issued last September by the Sacred Congregation of Rites. , 'With "Lay Participation in the Mass" as its theme, this year's Liturgical Week will focus on how to put the Holy See's Instruction' into practice in parishes and churches. ' The biggest' single attraction 'of,the,week for both newcomers and veterans is the expected presence of His Eminence' Giacomo Cardinal Lercaro, Archbishop of Bologna, Italy and one of the world's most enthusiastic supporters of the liturgicalpastoral 'movement.

and that in two ways. First,'they pleasantly flavored; second- whom! , .,., some of thell). have more than In turning to the South at Ii touch of syrup iJ,1 the sense of present, he depicts the position · ientimentality. 'But saecharinity of the' Jews' in that part of' the · is not feature of Mr. ,Golden'lI' 'country. He touches 'onpolitics \) _yle generally. ' within the synagogue -the ele.,. Increase~' TAIPEI (NC)-The U. S. Catholic Bishop&~ relief Early Years New York ,ments in the choosing of a rabbi, • What' does he write about! 'and in the retention or termin- agenc;y is 'distributing food and other supplies here to thouAbout almost anything. Like ating of his services for example. sands of victims of Formosa's worst 'flood in 50 years. Five" . HARRISBURG (NC) , - Gov. , practically every:one 'who reguHe gives considerable space to David,' L. Lawrenc;e has' signed days of torrentiaLrain that inundated' half of iormosa took larly turns out a newspaper lund-niising, as in the, Bonds • law strengthening Pennsylva'eolumn, he', ranges over, the for Israel drives and dinners. Ii tragic toll of life and caused means' o~ an airlift to send su~, nia's 165-year-old bans on the whole field of human interest. He shows the Jews 'to be, aft , tremendous property dam- plies to' southern Formosa. Sunday sale of certain items. ,', But his specialties seem to be· enclave,and yet being more arid age. Appeals from missionAreas siaffed by Maryknoll - Passed,' by the Pennsylvania analytical reminiscence of his more assimilated. aries for aid to ,the victims missionaries have been hit hard- House by 'an overwhelming 181, early: yeqrs in New York .and His treatment of the Negroes' 'reached the Taiwan headquar- est,' with the Taichung prefec- to 21 vote, the new law provides a $100 fine the first offense and • !)bservations of Hie w~ys of ~he position is eminently sane., qn , ters of Catholic Relief Services-- ture' almost entirely flooded .. a $200 fine or 30-day -jail senSouth, with particular attentIOn the one hand he speaks power- , National Catholic/Welfare ConThe'Taipei archdiocese'S Miaoli in .both instances to the Qutlo~lt fully o'f the'ir rights as' human ference through partially recounty, sta~ed by Maryknollers tence for subsequent offenses iwdstatus of, his fellpw. Jews beings, 'trenchantly. makiI1g , it stored telephonic communica- : under the' direction of Bishop within a year. The old law had '. Segregation and integration case that is unimpugnable; On tions.· . ' , Frederic' 'A:, Donaghy, M.M., of prescrbed a $4 fine for offensel ~ncern him often. He comments the other hand, he sees integra":' Father Francis J. O'Neill, M.M. Wuchow, a native of New Bed- and was often paid by businessel on religion, on, politics,. on the ti9n as inevitable: it is going to of Woonsocket, R. I., who is di-ford, MaSs., has been badly ~hich COnsidered the slight pen: Changes' in America during, the come sooner or later" no matter recting island-wide relief for flooded. But the missionaries in aJtr, a sales expense. past 50 years. He dips into the the worst its opponents',can do. CRS-NCWC, . said:, "All avail": Taichung and Miaoli county arts and waxes philosophical Praise -for Negroe!i able supplies have b~en diverted were reported to be safe. DOW and then. ' , For the 'conduct of Negroes in to the stricken areas. More than \ · His manner is unpr-etentious the continuing crisis, he has 1,000 tons of powdered milk, for the most part, but he "can nothing but praise. This is a cornmeal and flour have been become a 'bit sententious on point which most of us may no-t readied for Distribution." occasion. He rattles on with have considered; but as he states CRS-NCWC has obtained the, WASHINGTON (NC) - The ,seeming effortlessness, in a chat- and illustrates it, it- is seen to cooperation of a. U.S. military, National Institute of Health'has CITIES SERVICE 't,. sort of way that makes for be true and impressive indeed. advisory group, and the Chinese announced a grant of $216,642. to fairly . ef{ortles~ reading.. But Some of Mr. Golden~s views, 'Air Force has flown more,than the Catholic University of AinerDISTRIBUTORS one is always engaged, either however, are, highly q\!estion400 tons of {1upplies tQ Taich\!ng ica here for aid in c()fistructing' being amused or 'being stimu- able.' When he tries to make'. in central Formosa. ' arid equipping a biology buildiated into thinking, or in, dis~ case for the proposition that "in Gasoline Bishop 'Donaghy Director ing.' , , agreeing. " ' its, earliest ,beginnings, ChrisThe Bishops' relief agency' has " The grant was made under the ,f"el 'and Range · And one can readily under,,: tianity. was a woman's religion," hired truc~s to trans'port more :Federal medical agency's Health .tand th'e 'popularity of Mr,. he is substituting fancy for histhan 400 tons ,of supplies to 'and Research' Facilities Con';' ....... Golden's work. It is provocative, " .an d be'·mg.more' " . th all" flo6ded Miaoii county south ,of' '~truction: Grant pr-ogram. The . 'torical fact without being annoying, ~nter- 'slightly absurd. ' Taipei. The agency is seeking by NIH is' located in suburban' ,Oil BURNERS taining wi.tho~t beip.g" m~~e. enHis musings. on immor~lit,. .. ;B~thesda, Md, tertainment, rich in common ,and eternity are jejune. His re", BOILER BURN" , Bel\$e' w!tho~t being common- 'vie~a'nd 'projection'; of man's CINCINN.ATi (NC) - F~fty, :place, optimistic without,beinli', oourseare.arbi6.. ary, to'say ,the five Catholk,educatorsfrom II FOr., prompt deliverY .~ICAIlD#S', fetuous~" .. ,',' " least. And so on, in quite few -' states in ~his 'country and, three- . & ,Day & Night Service , Talkies~1,919 Versi~ . ' ',instances,',"'., , ' . , '..,.:' ,,;, "'provincesof Canada will take" , .. ' What he ~alls,with abu~dant:",But if Mr;, (}olden, is .nQt".rt.OpBrt in an inStitute" 00' ~"rhe' BOttled', GaS ~rYice reason the ,civilization of, New., . 'wi~' as ,he supposes;, and' ·ifhis· Philosophy' of Education" to be ASHLEY ~lYD~ York's East Side as it. was in phlloSOPP-Y hasn't the depth,~nt!. ,conducted from Aug., 3 to 14 at .,. COHANNEl St:~_ his boyhood, comes alive 011 the acuity that he seems to thmk, Xavier University here. , :o,p.St. Kilian Church' .. I ' . ,TAUNTON 'page under his~ pen. characterize it, he is undoubted- . ' Free Parking Free Delivery , Attleboro - 1'40. Attleboro " "One'movie theatre on Second ly a man of good will,' ,has an 'Taunton Avenue tried 'talking pictures' observ'imf eye; 'a reflective cast ' ....~. Bedford WY 7 ~a2"1 way back there iri 1919," he tells ' of' mind, and a certain genius in, us. "In opposite box seats a mall homelyO expression. and a woman, talked' through B. F. GOODRICH, Dist. m'egaphones in an attempt to follow 'the action OR the screen. , C RECAPPING DONE, Often ,they. spoke .in Yiddish t~ IN OliR OWN PLANT 365 MAIN STREET the lip movements of' Mary ., N or th 'Attle b' oro K nl'ghts of' Pickford and William S. Hil rt" , FAIRHAVEN Columbus, Thomas' P. M~ D onand it was a scream. I'd give ough Council, will hold installaWYman 7-4501 every thing 'to see such a ,per- tion of Roger' M. Sarazin 'as ,formance again." ' grand, knight Wednesday, Sept. 23 in the Legion Home. R.epe~l Ceremonies will be conduCted WASHINGTON (:NC)~ Presi- by'District Deputy Leonard dent' Eisenhower has signed into Murphy, Scituate. Plans are unlaw, a bill that eliminates the . dec the direction of Bernard J. Miramant.. / requirement that each, Navy BOYS WANTED for the chaplain. submit an annual' reOther officers to be seated iri:. Priesthood and Brothemo~d. port of his work to the Secretary elude Leonard J. Quinn, depu'ty lock ottundsNO impedi-, of, the Navy. Repeal of the law grand knight;' Robert Paquin, "had been urged by Msgr. (Real' chancellor; Earl LavIn, warden; nlent. Adm.) George A. Rosso, chief E.dward G. Lambert, Jr., recordWrite to( BREAD of Navy, chaplains, who' said er; Atty. Robert G. Funke; advo- ' that when the law was enacted cate. John A. Graham, treasurer'; P. O. Box 5742 in 1860 the Navy had only 24 Miramant, inside guard; John J. .Baltimoreo a" Md. ,chaplains, Bevilaque, Jr., ~utside guard.

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Bishops 'Relief Agency Aids Victims of· Formosa' Flood,

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Catholic. University Gets Biology Grant .

New' Law Sunday Sales Penalty

,W.H.,RILEY &, SON, 'Inc.

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ROLAND'S ,TIRE SERVICE ,

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Trinitarian Fathers

io'in the SWITCH TO

NEW SATTEl: WHIPPED

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C~hip Competition:

""'AHCHOR-

Thurs., Aug. 20,,1959

To Climax, eya Season,

19

DloaESE OF FALL RIVER, M ...98.

By; Jack Kineavy'

FBiI Announces

SomenM,RiA'Jl: School'COach'

Se'foUS:C,ilnes

CYO baseball is' moving, rapidly,. toward' the' climactic not: beyond the. realm. of' probability· that: the competing, teams wilt be' the. same thatl viedi for tlle'title a;,ye8r"ago. M'ollDtlCamnel: has: already, garn~redJ New' Bedf~" ~()nol'S ,. 8Ju{: fblfuwed; olOsely' the JUly 28t1i1 stands': ready. to meet· tHe celebmtion" at the- Cutian rev.... Tauntoll'~ entry in the lJestl olutionists; The Roehest~ Red'! of thnee: semi,.final seciesJ Wings' of' the InternationaF Diocesan~ playoffs and~ it/s.

ChIlnereo.. WASHINGTON' (NC) ~ Small&< crime iif. on; the . . ~ in the:- t:rnilie'd.' State&, and, itt, is a.. very (IDstly proposition;

'ThiS:; has beern ravealed b.r some.' figures relimsed by the R(jderal BUreau of{ rn~stigation covering! the year 1968~ MajOl' crimes' increased' more than eight. per cel!lt last. year, setting an all~time recorcE The FBI estimates that the citizens, of the U. S. are paying an "annual $22. billion crime bim'; that the cost of crirrie eaoh', y<ear amountS'. to $128 fo.. every nerson in ·the nation 01' $506' for every famil;y; that :fop every $1 spent on education crime' costs $1.11, and, that for $1 contributed to a church crime costs $12. Noting' that "the: arrests' Gf persons under 21. years of age constituted 20 per cent of 'the total arrests" in. 1968;,.T. Edgar c.:... ~ Hoover, director of'the FBI, said. "righteousness, honesty and CEIt11IFICATE OF APPRECIATION:, Mal!tin, Work', obedience' to the', law have 1M executive secretary of the National: Council' of Cath01i~ meaning whatsoever to rna,. youths;,'" He added Men, accepts' a Certificate of Appreciation] awarded. his ~ .<\'m:eriean that: "the significance of thill ganization fon its' "outstanding: assistancef " given to The situation, is that: we as aduitll GI!usade~ for' Freedom. in' support: of RadiO' Free' Europe:. have failed the· younger gene:raMaking. the presentation is John: & DeCha~ right Wash.. ' tion." H'epoints out tlill~in 1958 ~ . , ing,tbn'directorofRFE. NC Photo~ sonS' 177 years- of age or young~ .,counted' for' 22 percent of ,the .arrests, for robbery;, more tha 48·' per cent of' the' arrests fOl' ,larceny.; 50· per: cent ot' the arrests' for burglary, and 64' pel. WASHINGTON (NC)""-'" GomgreSSInan Gerald R. Ford' Jr. has Xla., teen_agers. In 3. letttm u,. cent1ot'the a'uto'theft arrests. I suggested, that Nikita Khrush'; President. Eisenhower; the Sen"We~ are no longer dealin« chev, be taken to church serv- ior. High Fellowship of: the with delinquent chllaren," said: ices' during, his visit to the GovernmeI}.t Street Presbyterian the FBI chief, "we' are de<;lling United'States, schedulecL to be- Church, saicL the Soviet Premier. with vicious young. criminals." should.. return home "knowing gin an Tuesday;, Sept. 15. The FBI leader: said. juvenillt The Michigan Episcopalian that: we have. not, only, military crime will decline if younll legislator said: "t do not. think power" but, also something far, ~eople ca~ be taught "respeqt Mr.: Khrushche:v can, fully un- strol)ger,.--the power and 1o¥e for the'. l'lghts of others, i_ terest-o in our, Government,' love derstand, us' nor evaluate the of. God'.~' of. decency." He believes that basic: forces' in American lif~ unless he. sees'some expression. Lewiston 't.o COactinu. '''thebest way to teach 'these principles to our sons and of. our: religious:- faith." Bus liranspor.totiOnJ' "What, would be more approLEWISTON (NC)-The Board daughters is to lead the w~ priate thall' to have' our: dis>- of: Education haS' decided' to ourselves." tinguished g u est accompany transport' some 800. par.ochial S:or' Convention Mr.; . Eisenhower,' to the Presischool' pupils to and' from school MIAMI (NC)-The traditional dent!s accustomed: place· of, wor;'; B:rother Theodore this' year, despite' a\ lack of, per.. - Red' Mass will mark the opening ship in' Washington or.' at Gettysmissive legislation. Pronounces Vows of' the American Bilr Associatioa burg? If this is not, feasible, let Superintendent of' Schools JI. Rodolphe Letendre, son of Mt, him. attend ,one or mOre of' the Weldon Russell' reported the Convention here· on Sunda:lli' and Mrs. Anthony Fazzins of 'services ofanYichurchor denom- board's'decisiorr to continue the Aug. 23; Bishop Coleman F. Ca.... roll of Miami will· be the cel~ 134 Eaton St., Fall River, proination." practice. . brant; Bishop' John J. Wright GIl nounced his first vows as a Meanwhile, a, similar' request The Maine' Supreme Court Pittsburgh' will preach'. Brother of Christian Instruction big fellow remained adamant, Satur.day in St. Joseph Church, he was peddled to' Philad'elphia. came from a group of 'Mobile, ruled, in May that transportation of private' school pupils on taxBiddeford, Me. Without Gene; the' last 'place It"S SMART TO &cllith~fu Attend supported' school. buses does.' not· Brother Theodore, as he ia Phils. would~ be' gravitating' toviolate" any, constitutional reknown in religion, is a' former ward, the International' League. PJ~ YOUR> FRIENUS. strictions, but, is' illegal when Those or you who' viewed the Novena. EJuJ'.ing Visit: bUt. DOC' to· piecea member of Notre' Dame paristr, Baltimore Colts; _ College; AllBOSTON) (NC)-Richard Gar.. carried, .out without permissive and attended Notre Dame and' Prevost Schools. He has just Star. game last Friday, night saw dinaL Cushing has' announced a legislation' frOM' the state!s.1aw", . a, couIlle" at: former. Boston: Col- special: novena, ill'his archdiocese makers; RfiNOI:;DS:'DEWAL completed. his ,'canoni<;al year ofl lege' stars' turn"'in: terl'ific p:er- to begim the' day.ofi Nikita An~ attempt~ was' made' to, get, novitiate and· will' continue liir' WilliaJ:t1' & Second S~ Gov;, Clinton· A. ClausOn to: call "studi'" t T - M . Cool forman-ces. Art Donovan;' 270- Khr.ushchevJS'!arrival; Sept. Hi, ~... a'..... enna'l~ CII8i'..... All' n taO, Ckl.~, . and , New?' Bedford ,wy 60.8234, Prayers to ·Our-l;adY: o.f'Fatima· !If" sgecia~ session: of;' the legisla':' Alfted' Me;' , .". "PDWJ..., ',...131'0 ; 110' ,:.0 1rill'J:je, offered. ,fbI" nine· day~ ,ture. before ~hooL opened; Iiutl it , Rt •'D.~ 10K. ,..~ __ , ' p' -lPeedy,' Al:t, ,SPinney, a mitey • .....,"" .uSlP'. ~g4J • .~ at': 235' t . J'olinSOJ'l' vicar 'genetal::--of the mI.' ' , , ' wer~' ,eammates seeking her inter.cei;siorr· in' he- ,1!Va s::. im~ccessfuL., The-gpvernor dioeesee~f':Portlimd. resided: IItt diIr!ngr the~ late' penny Myers' }jal!' oflthe:people'and~'rulerit'Ot said h& ftrst wanted' regorta c Soviet!- Uniaw,captive; '08- fr.om· the: attomey;; general: and the ceremon' s:. ' p , . regJme'? at, tHe:; H'elgli~s .. Donovan , "'h'" BrOthl~ ...:~ "Ch:" t' '11-" PlSy,ed:gu,ar.diirt hig,intercollegi- 'tions;' refugees; prisonerS" and' the'staut department of: educa;;. ;a, .. ers. .... rls Ian.... .. 'd' In'd d' ' t d fi ht· PeaCe· inJtli:e~ worla1 . .'., ..' , tion. Soine' 2Q,towns: and citieS structiOlJl .wliO' staff Prevostl a.e a~ '; s a w~a?o e , g, , Tlie> Gar-dinar said: "r urfieaR' :have' for:' mim~ 'y,ear8- given bu.sHigh SCh~ol are reli' 0 '. referee In1 N"e~: Yorkl., m t~e,. 30 s , " • gJ. ua; and: 40's~ Spmney. captamed peoIlle,. of the archdiocese; ctlil- 'rides, to. pupilS: of' nonpublic schools.' , , teachers devoted exclUSIvely tol tHe' B'sto ' C II tea . 1948 the- education of' young: 'men. " o n 0 ege .' m I n . dren.and' adults, to' participate' in these. religious servi.ceS'j' either Their world' headquarters' are on., B'ishop!Walsh privately. or.' publicly; Jersey' Island, England. "It',will be the' greatest· eontri.. Seriously i'nJCh,ina butlon SCRAP METALS, we' could: make toward~ WASTE PAPER'- RAGS ,.' HONG;. gONG '(NC)~BiSb,op easing' the,' tensions. of' these' ;TRUCK5-, AND; TRAfLER5:c FOR James' E. Walsh,: M:M;, the ..last tl'oublesbme'timeS'and the great-, American.. missionary. incited est,encouragement. we could' give , PAPEft DRIVES 'China, is' gravely ill and' under tP the 'silent Church' and to all CHURCHES; SCOUTS and treatment in a:Shanghllihol>pital, peoples: suffering under" the " CIYIC ORGANIZATIONS' ': ,1080 1 Shawmut. Avenue according to, a report ree~v.~ tyranny of dictatorl!," the Car.here. . '.'," 'New, Bedford WY2-7828 dinal said in a statement. ..... The Maxyknoll Bishop, a native' of Cumber.land, Md:r,,'.!'s":a \ ~,.' , :- '..:.... Yeteran. of three deca'a~$~:;~f I;' ~ RDS.ARIES,MEDALS, servIce in ;hina, but hei·.has ' : ,,' ' ' " " "~: been severely limited in ,:'his 1' CO' , AND STATUES activities for the past, several ", . •.... ~' ~'t years. A r.epon in. January said ~:: LI,_,_ .ft~.. :En. All Price Ranges., the, Bishop was "well," but still ~;,rJieQtlftg>'\iltfS' , 'I·:1 , under' detention in a Shanghai'~ '... ~ :1 hospital.· ~': ~) 1 'Make.' ali arrltll1rentents thru' .. In December; 195&1 it~ was re" ;1 Emily C. Perry.' ~. FALL RIVER por-ted that the Bishop was ::365 NORYM FRONT' sTilET:~ ,: 5'62'County St. New Bedford! pl8ced: under' "house arrest" and ::: NEW' BEDRORD " TRAVEJi. BUREAU was" beinlf'. questioned ~!lily GP... St. Lawrence Church' ~ Relll'7 S. Fe.1te1berC', Tre-. about his contacts; with. "foreign~: WYin~n2!'553.; ::: .I !9,No; MaJrt 0'8 S';'7tOlI' acentiJi,w' ". ~;:. ' .: ~ J"

ItI, Fan: River,8anto Ch'risto;,

defending DIocesan championlli and, Iinmacu.1 ate' Concep- ' tion, Northern Division titUsts, will a g a i n square off for city honors and a berth in the fin' a 1 round. The same teams met in '58 and the series went the route. The playoff is scheduled to get under way on SaturdllY' and it'll tie: a best of three series.' We had a great, deal of' catohing up to do·'on.the local baseliall picture after a premature departure for and a two wee~. tour of duty in Key West, Fla. In the interim two' AJl':'Star contests were played under the'arc lights In Fall 'River and from what , 'we gather: both were- enthusiast:. lcally received. Playing;under the lights !elf'no innovation down in Dixieland, however; PerhapS' that; accounts in some way for' the larger" proportion of'Southern boys' in professional ball, since the minors now play nigHt. ball. almost. exelusively., At any rate; each) at the high schools we encountered from Virginia on down had complete arid separate light installations for both baseball and football. In Key West there were iwo baseball fields with' excellent lighting facilities and at, least. three such softball fields. The intense heat, precludeS! day ball' to a' great. extent but nevertheless these people have gone out of their way to provide for night. play from the Little League on up. Hot in Havana With Havana a short 90 miles. to the south, Florida papers;

League' aren't, likely to forget; ttilltc date; They were in Havana to' n1a¥' toe; Sugar. Kings- and a ~w. of: the- bearded gentry decided:to' shoot up the place. . Coach: Frank Verdi dutifullybolding: down his third basepost was mercifully, spared serious injury' when a richochetting bullet' grazed his helmet. liner. SHowing, no 'partiality, some misgUided' revolutionist, also picked: off, Ute- home- team rightfielder, wounding him slightly in, the. leg. The Rochester elub lost no time' in. making, the first flight out of town, pausing long enough, enroute to indicate that, they had; had enough of Guban hospitality for this year; This attitude puzzled' Havana' authoriUes. who relfsoned that one of' their' players- had' been, hit! tOOi but,they<-weren't complaining; President Frank ShaughnesSYJ thiS':' we-ekt .made: a pcrg()nal inspection. of( the' Havana,' situatiom Sugar K'ingsl president. Bob Madur.o· repovtedly was' resigned to· gj:ving up, the franchise· when Rremier' Castro' personally, ex;. tended'the necessary. guarantees; The. K;ihgs-: are, due, backl shortly fr.om an extended road: trip at which time it will be interesting to see what develops. Wonder ,how the umpires' feel? McDermott Piilchhitter With the Miami. Marlins are a couple of former:' Red Sox stalwarts Mickey' MoDermott and Norm' Zauchin. McDermott is the club's No. 1 pinchhitter and in between plate appearances the erstwhile: boY.: wonder does an occasional' stint on' the mound mostly" in: relief. Zauchin sent down in June by the Se~ators, has oeen sidelined with a bad back. Norm has'. youth on his side but Mickey appear.s to be playing .out: the string; Wouldn't' ~ene Conl,?y,~s 12 victories; gp nicely into Milwaukee's record!' T.he Braves, currently' 3:!kgames off, the pace in the tight National League race, took a dim view of Conley's playing basketball with the Celtics in the off season and when the

Protestants SU·9gesf American,s Take, ICh:r,ushchev to Cfturch

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[ 'f 'LET'S EAT: The kitchen' is one of the busiest departments of St. :Vincent's 'Home; Fall' Riv'ef,,,and: its labors are aided by a'loyal corps of ~ volunteers.' .,At '~elt,colle.dt~rs ;.pi¢k 1.lP food donated by Pocasset Street. :A:& P. Left are Ger.aldBowIing and Patrick McGowan.' In left center 'picture" voltirtteersbf,ing p~6du~e into St. Vincent's kitchen. Left to right ··areHerman 'Mello; 'Sister 'l\1ary Regis, R.S.M.,. kitchen supervisor; and ! ( ".. " ...... -'. .

~lfred McNally. Keepinl,( guard over a>rn;an-sized piece of watermelon is three-year-old 'Patrick Mullin, home's. youngest resident. At' right center Joseph Dudek;.chie! ~ook;'prepares. rolls 'fqr Breakfast. At·fa:r.right volun~ teers enjoy supper after making grocery. collections. Left to right,' Rev_ John' E. Boyd, home chaplain, McGowan, John Sullivan' arid Cle'ment .. '. . Dowling. . ..

~No,rthAlnericar.'~ .. Grocery Collectors for ·St. Viiicent's' ·Hom.e ~',:".J~isb()~·.Flanaga~ :C~lIege ,Alumni::. , . Find' Food and Fellowship' AiiractiQns ..T.akes Ov.er, See F I 10 II f' " h . tl b' k'" 't,'l t"b t'" .On Sept. 25 Plan Reunion'" c.~ ROME (NC)";';"About 300 or near y years:" sma group 0 m~n .as qUle y ee.n .ma mg.a VI a con rl u '10~ ' " W0 RC EST E R (NC)-

to the operation of St. Vmcent's Home, Fall RIver. EverySa~urday ,mght they ,make. the 'B' h .B~rnard J Flanagan rounds. of cit! marke~s, ~ollecting food donated by merc,hants. ~o', the"hom~.· "An~ i ~s, op " h '. " he e:' t~;h~p~;',e~~.lrr~i:e~I.Sina.1o.~~· ,they're not faIr. weather frIends," says Rev. John. E. Boyd, chaplam at St.. Vmcent's; ~wIldl.bB·~ ~n~ rofneWd as t t s be ·"Th' 'e on the 'ob 52 weeks . . . '. '. . . . . ." . .on IS op 0 orces er y · thIS October to take p'arnri tJ;1.e - . ~~ ~ d J " f thO , children spend a good part of . is a boys\',realm at St. ·Villcent's, ·Richard Cardinal Cushing, Arch.'lOth. annual meeting of ,·th.e .a·year, an some 0 em their vacation. . .' .the girls having other. tasks, . bishop of Boston, on Friday, ·alumni of the' Pontifical North ,have been helping us since The day starts at'6 in St. But net result' of all the labor 'Sept.: 25 in St.·Paul's cathedral 'American College ·here.· .the project started." "It's the Vincent's kitchen; with break- is rewarding: dozens of healthy . he~e. - The. meeting; the' ihird_ '~o 'h.e .good suppers we get after making fast served at 7 in Winter and .youngsters, ,hundreds' or' satis-Bishop.Flanagan was formerly .:American clergymen, includ.· . .

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held in Rome,. brings ·toget!ter

the colIections that keep us com:. 7:30 in Summer.' During the ing," joke the men. But their' schooi year youngsters from st. contribution of' time and energy. Bernard's Church, .Assonet, for · 'experien'ce of living. their stu-throughout the years, as.well as whom S·t.. Vincent's, is parish :dent days in Rome.- .. '. .': their dependability, are greatly school~ swell the lunchtime' ~~ll. The alumni meeting will take vahied at St. Vincent's. call. This year, with the opemng · :place here in .conjunctfon wit~· .. Original members of the group 'of a pre~primaryand kindergar'the celebration of the 100th an,,- 'inCl.i.Ide 'Clement J. Dowling and ·ten department, even more chil· .niversary of the founding of the -Herman ,Mello. Coming only a ·dren will h;1ve to be fed. c 'North American college;.' ' ~ittle' later were Patrick Mc-.· Not to be ,forgotten, are ~t. i. . Expect .Pope . · · G o w a n , Alfred McNally and .Vincent's famous suppers. Held . ,.. .With the Dow:" .four times The alumni will take pl\rt. in ·JohnSullivan.. . . ' yearly, each attracts h 'th-e . official commemonit[on' of :lings,' helping St. Vincent's has about 300 guests-and lceeps t e 'the .college's' 1ooth' 'anniversar)" 'become a family tradition. . kitchen busy with preparations :00 OCt. 12 at which Pope John' ", .....So·n Gerald, now in the Army, for days beforehand. 'XXlII' is expected to bepf~~nt ,helped -his dad from th~. time he . Scattered through the y.ear are 'The ahimn·i.liiso·loQkforward.to was 'able to carry a box'of gro':' 'other functions.· 'The', Clover aUdienc~ .with . the Hol~ _ .ceri~s;. and· he's· still ·.on deck'Club, Exchange Club;' Knights of 'Father. . c whenever he's' home on leave. Columbus bowling league and , At the Oct:'13 dinner, the th~ee ,Li~tle brother Joe is being Fourth Degree Knights all hold · , .brokenin to the same routine: meetings at least once a' year' at traditiollai speeches will 'b~ : Markets'. that contribute to St. St. Vincents. All illVolve refresh'given by three graduates. ,Frim';' ,Vinc,ent's every week includ~ ments. cis Cardinal Spellman, Arcq- ·fourA. & P. stores~n Fall-River, . A. new' project. has. been ,bishop of New York, will offer~St~p & ShOll. and the Te~minal monthly meetings of Alumni and the toast "To. Our· Country;': . Bakery: Other merchant~:sell(~ 'Friends of St: Vincent's. This ·Msgr. Francis J ..B.Flynn, P!\~tor, sUp'plies fro om~.ime to time, and group. 'sponsors ,a 'clamboil at ,'of Blessed Sac~amen:t Cathedr,al, S : t.. Vincent's ii;glad to .. send a per,iodic intervals, an activity inDetroit, will propose the..toas~ t k . k . 0, 1l1? e Pl(~ . -uP!l.,~n 'volving the kitchen from the wee . ."'To· Our College'," and ;Bish,oP.'· ~m~s~en~~.~., .:my.d,ay. of the week.. '. . • hours of the morning until.serv·Ralph . Hayes ofDavenp~)l:t, la:, ., S· f 11 . h f 1 "fo'riner . rector,.. ·o.f the colleg~,': ,- ?~p,er 0 owm~ t e, ood co - ing hour'at about 4 in the after,~echon has become a cherishe4. noon. will offer' the traditional. speech. ,SLVincfmt's tradition. Friendly Big' Business .' '''To Our H'oly Father." . . . disc!-1'ssion .of everything. frpm So food:is big busineSs 'at Sl · In addition to Cardinal Spe,~l- politics to the liturgy is likely to Vincent's. But efficient organiman, Their Eminences Richar4 contihue for hours, as 'ev'eryone iation;in which the home youngCardinal. Cushing, A,.r~l1bi~hop of. gathers around a big table pre:' sters play an. important part, \. . .~Boston, and Jphn C~rai~al sided over by Father BoYd~ . helps to lighten labor. .When, O'Hara, Archbishop of Phi~adel:-" ... - .. . . . for instance, the Saturday night 1 Many Activities' phia, will t~k~ part in the ,~e e~ :But providing' supper for the collectors bring 'in bushels of · bration. ' group: is only a small part 'of the fr\lit ahdvegetables; meat and fish, bread and pastries; dozt:ns activitY of St. Vincent's'kitchen staff..The loyalty of the volun- of young hands· help in the job . teers is more than matched by. !>f puttiitg..:away. . Boys· are kitchen aides in er~nce· the records oj Sister Mary Regis; ASSlSi (NCr-Priests aild lay':" R.S.M.; Joseph, Dudek, known ~very department, says Sister men will meet for a week's dis- bett~r as ~'Duke"; and' Joseph Regis, and prove of much ascussion of the Bible at the ann~al Lima,. who, among them effi~ sistimce to ,herself, Duke and Joe Conference of Christian Studies ciently feed 135 youngsters three Lima. 'The kitchen, incidentally, here at the'end of August. . meil1s a day·and, in the cou.rse .of , Amleto Cardinal Cicognani, the year, plan an~ serve many ;'Academy Chaplain former Apostolic Delegate' to the hundreds of extra meals: . '. COLORADO SPRINGS (NC) U. S., will speak on "The Bible, Sister Mary Regis, kitchen su- ~Father (Col.) Stephen· J. O'the Sealed Book:" Fernando pervisor, has been at the home: Connor, C.SS.R., has been asCardinal Cento, Italian Foreign since 1926. Duke, chi~f, cook; signed.to the Air Force Academy Minister Giuseppe' Pella and came to St: Vincent's at the' age . here as 'Gatholic cadet chaplain, . Merchant Fleet Minister Giu- of 18' months and started work succeeding Father (Col.) Conseppe Spataro will also take part in .the kitchen in 1929. Joe Lima, stantine E. Zielinski, O.F.M. in the conference:' . also originally a youngster at the Conv" who leaves active duty A series of cultural activities home, is second in command and this month to return to St. Mary will inc1upe choral singing, a during the Summer is in charge Minor Seminary.at Crystal Lake, night of drama and a progra,m of of the kitchen at St. Vincent de Ill. dances. During the conference a ,Paul Health Camp, where home festival featuring competition..... among songs ~ith a religious Winner of Bible Quiz' You'll theme, will be held. . .. . RAVE"" , The conference will end with Meets lJen-Qurio.n : a out em • midnight Mass in the Basilica' JERl,TSALEM (NC) - A Do- •. EVERYBODY DO.ES I of St. ·Francis and adoration of ~~inica~ Broth:r who wo~ liprize +. Bar-B-Q Chickens the Eucharist. III a. BIble' qUIZ sponsored by a . '. ea' .-Is Cal·.-forn."a·'· . Je~i~h' agenc.y!n Algiers was REALLY FRESH • · H .~ celVed here by' Premier David . EGGS SAN FRANCISCO (NC)··:.:...· - Ben-Gtiri.on -and" Rabbi Jac'ob', , Auxiliary Bishop Merli~: J.G.uil-:" !.fqle??no,: ~ini~ter lot Religious'·- '. ~ . . ·~oy'leo~. San FrancIsco, h~s~ ~aIr~.. '. . . ,,' ' : f:.:' . FARMS ; · wrItte!lhis 'second' boplc. ,on thi.s. \ 'Fhe "pr-Ize,' a- thr~-wee~ tour '.145 Washington St. I'atrhavea •. state, entitled "CalifornilliS~te~' of .Israel anq· 'its ,holy" sites, was, ' .: 'J\lSt off Route'.' .. ., ·..·cof Grace:', :, ·w;on bY.' Brother Pierre' Lambert:•.. ~ ,

~priests, mon'signors, bishops an~ .cardinals sharing' in cO~!D0n ~h~

·fied 'adultguests who remember .St. Vincent's, in addition to its 'other attributes, as the 'home of 'some of the best meals in Fall' River.

·Bishop .of Norwich, Conn. His . transfer to Worcester' by Pope . John, was. announced last week ·by Archbishop Egidio'Vagno.zzi, : Apostoli~ Delegate to the U.s. .

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