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The ANCHOR
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An Anchor of the Send, Sure and li'irm-ST.PAUL
Fall River, Mass. Thurs~ay, A~g~st 21, 1958 V·0.I 2, N o. 34
Second Cia.. Mail PriYileCelI
at Ifaln Rine. Ma••
A~thorlzed
PRICE 10e $4.00 per Year
Maronite Prie'st Approves Ma'rine Use. in L.ebanon· ~-
; Lebanon, a country much in the world .spotlight ~t present, has sent a priest to the Fall River Diocese for the' Summer. He is the Rev. Emile Eid, nephew of Chor-Bishop. Joseph Eid,. pastor of St. Anthony of the Desert church, F~II River. Father Emile, currently on leave of absence from the Le!ianese Diocese of' Sidon to pursue advanced studies at the Pontifical Latin Institute in Rome, is here to assist his uncle in several special undertakings. One project is the cause' for canonization of Father Sharbel, famed Lebanese hermit, of which Chor-Bishop Eid is in charge. Another is a campaign among Maronite Rite Catholics in the United States to raise funds for the rebuilding of earthquake leveled churches in Lebanon. Speaking through his uncle as interpreter, Father Emile de elal'ed that most Lebanese ap prE~ciate the recent intervention of United States Marines in FATHER EMILE ElI) their country. He expressed ap proval of President Eisenhower's tau!:ht in his diocesan seminary six point plan for the Middle and acted as a dean of. his di ocese. He is studying. canon and. East. The young Lebanese priest civil law in Rome. While in the Turn to Par:e Nineteen· . Was ordained in 1~51, .then
DR. HELEN WHITE
Dr. Helen. White Receives Annual Newman.Award CLEVELAND (NC)-Dr. Helen C. White, author and chairman of the English De partment of the University of Wisconsin, has been named recipient of the niIith annual Cardinal Newman award. Known especially for her his torical novels, Miss White was chosen to receive the honor on the basis of· intellectual, cultural and social contributions to American life, in 'keeping with Turn to Page Four
Seventeen residents of the. Fall River Diocese were among the 46 Postulants who were clothed in the Habit ot the Sisters of Mercy and given their religious names at a ceremony on the. Feast of the Assumption in the chapel of Mother of Mary Noviti- abeth Marie Joseph, daughter of ate, )fOtlnt St. Rita Convent, Mrs. and Mrs: George Joseph, Cumberland R I . 224 Brayton Avenue, Fall River. ' M" L' .Sister Mary Adrianne-Elaine R V . ery. ev. sgr. OUlS W. Rita Costa, ·daughter of Mr. and _ D~nn, vice-cha?cellor of . .the . Mrs. David Costa, 427 Tarkilo DlOCEtSe of PrOVIdence, presId.ed Hill Road,New ·Bedford. a.nd was celebrant at Benedlc'Sister Mary Julene-Marlene hon. Rev. Clyde Walsh preached Gertrude Newton, daughter of the sermon.. , Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Newton, 20 ~any priests, relahves .and Bentley Street, New Bedford. '. frIe~ds of the newly 'receIved Sister Patrick Mary-Patricia NOVIces were present at the Leary, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. ceremonr· Patrick Leary 80 Palmer Street, -Novices ~hose ?( '1es ar r in .Fall River. ' ~ the Fall RIver· PlOce~ are USister Charles Marie-Suzanne foll?ws: , . . .. . Marie White, daughter of Mr. ,SI~ter MarIel - Patricia Ann and Mrs, Charles White, 3 Mor . D,El~a, daughter of Mrs. Yolanda gan Terrace, New Bedford. Sister Mary Ann Elizabeth_ D.Eba, 10 Cottage Street, Fall River. Turn to Par:e Fourteen 'Sister Mary DeSales - Eliz.
Holy Union Nuns Priests Attend To Staff School Crash Victims At Nantucket In Fall River . :Very Rev. Edward
The Religious of the Holy Union of the Sacred Hearts will staff kindergarten and preprimary classes at Holy Name parish, Fall River, begin ning Sept. 3: They will also teach parochial catechism classes three times weekly. This was announced today by Mother Gabriel Clare, S.U.S.C., Mother Provincial of the cong~e gation. The Holy Union Sisters will succeed the Missionary Servants of the Most Blessed Trinity who for the past six years conducted the nursery classes and cptechetical wo,)rk of Turn to Par:e Fourteen
New Assignments For 32 Sisters Of Mercy
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Dowling and Rev. Daniel E. Carey of Our Lady of the Isle Church, Nantucket,were among the first summoned to lend aid in last Friday's crash of a Northeast Airline plane at the island resort Working from the time of the midnight crash until dawn Sat urday, the priests divided their efforts between the wreck scene and Nantucket Cotta~e Hospital, where the'injured were received. They administered last rites and conditional absol.utic;m to victims' and offered cOl1!lOlation ,to the Turn to Paire Fourteen
Thirty-two transfer~ in the Sisters of Mercy con vents in the Fall River Dio cese have been announced by Mother Mary Catherine, R.S.M., Mother Provincial of the Providence Provine. . Sister' Mary Rosalie, R.S,M. from Mt. St.' Mary's Convent, Fall .River to' St. John's Convent, Attleboro. Sister Mary Geralyn, R.S.M.. from Mt. St. Mary's Convent, Fall River to Salve Regina Colj lege, Newpo:r:t. . Rev. Paul J. Dalbec, M.S., a member of the Province of .Sister Mary Dionysia, R.S.M. . the' Immaculate Heart of Mary of the'Missionaries of Our . V ATICAN CITY, (NC) -The Sacred Congregation of , from Mt. St. Mary's Convent, . Lady of La Salette, has been appointed Direcfur at the La Seminaries and' Universities is the Holy See's top. agency Fall River to St. Xavier Acad- Salette International Scholasticate in Rome~ tJo supervise more than 1,000 seminaries and a worldwide· emy, Providence. ' .. . iaetwork of Catholic universities. . Sister Mary Juliana, R.S.M.A native of New Uedford, Hill Road that city. He received Advances in the fields of; stud.ents: A to.tal of 590 minor' from Mt. St. Mary's Convent, Father Inl;lbec is the son of his early education in the schools · d t' .' semlllal'les counted 92,000 stu- Fall River to St. Brendan's Conlate Arsene and' Amanda of New Bedford, graduating ed uca t Ion an prep~ra Ion T to P. Ei ht Turn to Pa"'e Twent.. D.albec formerly of Tarkl'ln from St. Joseph's ·Parochial f~r the priesthood' in the . urn J'ge g, een .. ~ School in June 1932, Holy Fam past 100 years have inAI I ily High in 1936, and from New creased the importance of this ~n Bedford Institute of Technology ~ ~ in 1939. eongregation. Today it· supervises, advises anc guides many #'i After two years' service ill of the most important centers of ~ U research laboratories, Fr. Dalbec . By Patricia )fcGow,an entered Assumption College, Catholic scholarship, science and education. If you asked young Paul Smith, the son of The. Anchor photographer, about the Worcester,to prepare for the priesthood. His studies were in As of January 1, 1957, there Servants of Our Lady, Queen of the Clergy, he'd probably tell you they're nice Sisters terrupted and he served four were under its jurisdiction 400 who understand how important it is for a little boy to have a strawberry, ice cream cone years in the Military Intelligence major seminaries with 21,500. on a hot summer day. Turn to Page Seventeen But the priests of St. Anthony's church, New Bed ford, who are fortunate in having the Sisters staff their rectory, cC;>uld add much to this description.. They'd go into the details of the Sisters' unobtrusive efficiency and ability to keep a 20-room house, ahum with the activities .of a busy parish, running smoothly. As we stepped off noisy, dusty Acushnet Avenue into the gleaming coolness of the rectory, the first thing we noticed were the well-waxed floors. Their Turn to Page Five
LaSalette'App'oints Father Dalbec Director of Rome Scholasticate
Special Congregation Supervises Seminaries and Un.iversi.ties
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Declares Divine Worship Rich In Liturgy
GUIDES 1,000 SEMINARIES: More than 1,000 semi naries and a worldwide network of Catholic universities are under the jurisdiction of Rome'H Sacred Congregation of Seminaries and Universities. His Eminence Giuseppe Card inal Pizzardo, 81, right, a veteran of 50 years service in the Roman Curia, is Prefect of the Congregation. He is Mlown with Archbishop Montini 'of Milan. NC Photo.·
CINCINNATI (NC)-The riches of the Church's treas ury of divine worship-the liturgy-have been describ ed as the way Catholics exercise their Church citizenship at the 19th annual North American Liturgical Week. Archbishop Karl J. Alter of Cincinnati, Episcopal patron of the four - day continent - wide . Turn to Page Nineteen'
'BEAVER" AND FRIEND: "Well, maybe just a teeny weeney fib, once in while," says a young television star Jerry Mathers in an attempt to overwhelm the dubious chuckle of Marylmoll Father Francis J. Caffrey during rehearsals on the set of the '~Leave It To Beaver" TV show in Hollywood. "Beaver" is a member of St. Joseph the Worker·parish in Canoga. Park, Calif. NC Photo•
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-THE ANCHOR
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Ideals of Parish Life Prevail"
In-=Little Americas"'of Europe ,
~hurs.,
Aug. 21, 1958
F" h at er de ' Mello M a rk s 50 Y ea rs In Prlesthood
KANSAS CITY, (NC) - The tuted a trainingprogl'am for ideals of Catholic parish life catechists, who, because of the a sense of community and a lack of Sisters, must come from closeness to the priest and the the ranks of 'wives of serdce ' Church - are easier to approach ment. The busy catechetlca.l . e in the "Little Americas" of schedule follows the Confrater Europe than in the urban cen nity of Christian Doctrine plan, '. Rev. E. Sousa de Meno, paStor of OU,r' Lady',,' of ters of the United States. . he added. :' , These Little Americas; com Parish ,orgam,zations of the plete with chapels, schools, "Little Americas" are affiliated Lourdes' Taunton, theaters, libraries and bowling with, the military branches, of sang a High Mass alleys, house the families of U.S. the National Councils of Cat'h of thanksgiv~ng for liis50 years ,troops assigned to the defense olic Men and Women. in the, priesthood at 7:30 P.M. of Europe. Even the names of Msgr. Murphy; a native, of on the Feast of the Assumption. the villages echo of American Danbury, Conn.,' was (J:rdained Deacon of the Mass was Rev. history _ Ben Franklin, Mark in 1936. He ill, a priest of the Folger, SS.CC., ofJaf Twain, Patrick Henry. ' Norwich, Conn.,' diocese'. He free, N.H., grand-nephew of Catholic life in these trans joined the Army in 1942,scl'ved VISITI G Father de Mello. Rev. Joseph' planted bits of the U. S. abroad in World War II for 26 months, . N STUDENTS: Two of 14 Portugl,lese engin Oliveira o~ St. Anthony's, Taun was described by Msgr. (Lt. has five 'campaign ribbons, a e~rs are welcomed to the Diocese. Left to right;Carlos de, ton, was 'sub-deacon. Col.) Charles J. MW'phy, who Bronze Star, and 'a Com.menda,-; S. Portela, Luis P; Teisceira, Rt. Rev. Antonio P. Viera,
Rev. Arthur dos Reis, pastor visited his brother, Msgr. John tion ribbon. For 17 months he Pastor of Mt. 'Carmel Church, New 'Bedford and Mrs. of St. Michael's, Fall River, was J. Murphy, pastor of Annuncia serve~ as chaplain for Operation ,Emmett. P. Almond.', master of ceremonies and Rev. tion Church here.' ' Greenhouse, the A-bomb exper~ Joseph Hanna, C.S.C., pr~ached Msgr. Murphy, has just com iment in the south Pacific, and the sermon. " , pleted a 44-month tour of duty was chaplain for the Universal e ' ' " , '$eated in the were in Heidelberg, Germany; as dep Military Training 'experiment at Rev. Msgr. JamesJ. Gerrard' uty European theater' chaplain Fort Knox, Ky. 'Fourteen eng'ineers, graduate V.G.; Rt. Rev. Humberto S' for the U. S. Army and as a. ,students of the University of and, the presidents. of : the Medeiros, Diocesan delegate for His Eminence Fran Lisbon,' toured New Bedford women's guilds ofNew Rt. Rev. Msgr. Hugh ,Gallaghe: cis Cardinal Spellman, Military , the auspices of three PQrtuguese parishes. They and Rt. Rev. Msgr." John A '.Vicar of the U. S; armed forces. board members of the Diocesan were luncheon guests of the' 1;iilvia, both of New He admitted the weakness of ,Sister Emmanuel'.Alexandrin Council, of Catholic Women Diocesan Council at' the New Also Rev. Francis Connors, 'the "Little Americas" plan as h headed by l\1rs. Emmett ,: P: Bedford Hotel. Rev. Edward A. 'Oliveira, Rev. "far' 'as contact with Europeans a, F.S.E., the !ormer Miss, Hilda Almond.' ' L u n c h e o n Guests", James Lyons, Rev. Joseph Cabral, willpfmake her Pl~rpetual ~ The students', .. on 'a tour of I n a dd't' O'Donnell and Rev. J 0 h n Z'Ie ' oncerned. profession religious vows in 1 IOn to the visitors' ' . ' is ,C >Liritited , the Holy Ghost provincial House United States Industrial centers honored guests at the linsl!;:i of Taunton; Rev. LauJ:e , the ., in, putnam, ,CQt:Ulecticut, sponsored by the International included Rt. Rev. Msgr: Hum-' 'ano dos Reis and Rev., Anthony ,not ,h~m~ m G~rmany, bU,t, 1ft ., o~ Satllrq,ay. His Exc,ellency, ~er- Education Exchange "SOciety, berto S. Medeiros, representiIlg ,Gomes of Fall River; Rev. ,Luiz the ~., he B';1t ,he.' d- "nard, ,J.Flanag~n" ]).D., J3ishop have been, 'entertained in ,;,thisthe - Most Reverend BishoJ1;: Rt.' '" Go, Mendonca, ~ , Rev. ' ,James " ~~. It ,IS only a, ,hrrlltE.d Isola- < of, Norwich, will,presidE! at the ". country by' groups', affiliated' , Rev., Ms~r. Antonio P. Vieira;.' ~ndes and.. ,Rev. .George E.· ,tl()tl," made necessary by preb ceremony. " ,'.,',',' , ' W i t h the -National Councils of Rt. Rev.' Msgr; Hugh A .. ,Gal_<"A!l1aral of !'lew:' Bedford; :.'and ,lelY\s of cost,: and SIlPPO~t _ Daugilter of Mr. 'and Mrs:' Catholic'" Men and, Catholic, ,Jagher, New Bedford 'district ,:Rev.' Bento Fraga of Somerset. ~ho,:,:sing.' food, an~ a hun~~ed Manuel Cabral, of, '37c:iHope' "Women.' ,Before reaching New, ,moderator. "" , , M u s i c was sung' by,the.senior other thmgs !l faJ!llly needs. Street Fall River' Sist,er' Em-' Bedford they 'visited New York ,"Also·Revs. Asdrubal C. choir" under, the' dU'ection of. ',Fora chaplain the ,situa'tion m'anu~l Alexaridriilha"entered 'Washington,Scnenectady, Pitts~,' James Mendes and Lui's, Men~;" ,Charles Geer, <?rganist; presents' wide, opportunities, to the" Congregation of :the Daugh-': burgh, Bu£falo, and Chicago,,' 'donca;', Portuguese, Consul and' " A: buffet 'luncheon: was served re:;tlize, ~he "par,ochial cont:ept,'~: 'ters"of 'the, Holy Ghost irt'Sep- ,', Today they' are in Boston. ',Mrs. Vasco Villela; and Serai':rn"" after the Mass' in the t;~urch Msgr. Murphy said. Parish 10- i' tember' of 1953 and pronounced Arriving on Tuesday, the stu- Eo., ~ello, City Auditor, repreh~ll for the clergy; relatives' and ciet!es are strongly supported" her temporary Vows, in' April ot' dents were ,met by Mrs. Almond, sentmg Mayor Francis LaWler frIends who attended. annual ,are held" noc1955. Sister has since been en'-' I Portuguese, parish nlembe;s " " , ,turnal adoration draws heavy "gaged in active work in Our, entertained the - students, on' Can attendance. Lady of Mercy Parisl),'Plainville, T uesda Y ,night and, arranged' 'LAS PENAS ......., Many of the t Maryknoll Missions in Bolivia ."In the Little Amel'icas," he Connecticut. . ours· 0 f industrial and scenic I and Peru are, located said, "most of the tl'OOPS are Rev. James M. Murphy, O.P., oca t I~ns yesterday. 'O n the ' high in, the , N B to be visited were the ,Andes Mountains. But the mis what are called 'housekeepers,' ass" r 0 has been named Dean of Men at agenda M 0 d R W d . . Whaling Museum SlOn support troops, headquarters FRIDAY-The Immaclllal,'e He'art Providence College, the Very ew edford . h ere seems to have the rec staff, and others. The combat of the Blessed Virgin Mary. P ev.. illiam D. Marrin, O.P., an varIOUS textile installations. ord' for altitude. ' troops live in regular military Double of II 'C'la 'Wh't reSIdent of the Providence ColPresidents of parl'sh affl'll'ates "Loc'ated aIm' t th ' "1' , S S . ' I e. lege Corp,oration and Provincial f th os ree ml es barracks. Ma'ss Proper,' Gloria,' Sec.ond 0 . e, DCCW ,cooperating in high. in the Andes' rarefied a' I'r" "I' I th e c h ' hOUS1 n g an d en t ertaining the reports Father Joseph W. Beau' _ n 'b0 th paces apIam, Collect SS. Timothy and Com- of the Dom.inican Province of St.' Jdseph"has announced. s"!dents M J · as won d er f u 1 access to h IS panions, Martyrs;' Third Col' : were rs. oseph Rego soleil, Maryknoll' Missioner of h'parishioners.' In. the Little " " Iect, for Peace', Creed,' ',preface' Father ,Murphy s~cceeds the . ·..:·,t of the New Bed-' E as t H aven C onn "a dog 0 R e,v; ' . , . Martin J. Jordan, O.P., w."ho f d d' " , ,., wner America.s he is a very vital part . of Blessed Virgil}. ,_ " or ,}strict council, and presi "h~re claims that his watch, ,dog of community life. He eats with, returns to t~e teaching faculty , . ..... ~1.. ,,,)li1cn's ' "barked nightly at 'Laika' .when rs SAT,URDAY-St.' Philip Ben,'izi" ,as Professor of'Philosophy. ,Club' ' k.. II passed overhead." ' ' e com a p , s 'a r e s th'e'r I -.: , ""/f U ; August A'l VI a St' S putnI h S troo b t th tough 'life, ,and is ;I1ways there Confessor. ' : Double.- White. ,A native of Cambridge, Father, John the Bantist parLo,", ";':'''''): to help." . Mass P-,:oper; Gloria;, Second Murphy was, graduated from, ,and Mrs. Benvinda Rod~.rick: _ Collect' IllunaCulate" ' ,Religious Articl~s 'trea't Mov men't ' for Peace; Common Prov~dence College ,in 1942, re' ",onctlpuon par,:;,I' .• Preface. ceived his M.A. at Notre Dame' council Support Re A retreat movement started in and his Ph.D. at the Angelicum TIie p' ' t " ' including 'r Chaplal'n ('Col.) .Ed SUNDAY - St. B a r t h o l o m w , ' He was ordained in ' ,or visitors had as in e Rome. lead Auguese t· unde 1954 'Kirtiey" win a Portestant, is Apostle" and XIII" Sunday. er, n OIllO T. W. Carrisso Rosaries ',~ Chains
after, Pentecost. Double of II _Washington, D. C. in 1949. and as interpreter Luis Pinto' strongly supported, by ,Protes CI . . ' Father' Murphy was, named, Te1·xe1·ra. ' " -' Mass Proper; ~ ass. Rec;l. Medals -'Statues
tants, Catholics, and' Jews. They , Chairman of the Sociology De Gloria; Second Colled XIII , share the use of the Alpine Inn . .. partment .at Providence College SCHOOL BAGS , , Sunday after Penh~.cost·, Th,ird retreat house in Ber'chte~gaden, last y~ar and will' continue in " ' Collect for Peace', Creed,' BRIEF CASES,' where there are accommodations that post in addition to his new Emily C.' P.Elrry for 150 persons at a time. The ,Prefa~e of ~postles. duties. SCH~OL SUPPLIES
562 ,Count;, Street Protestant retreats are pattern MONDAY-..:St. Louis, King and Rev. Thomas Shanley, O.P., Of
BOOKS Opposite St. Lawrence Church ed after the Ignatian method, al Confessor. Simple. White. the ECOl;lOmics Department; has > New Bedford. MaSl!o though Protestant retreats are ,Mass Proper; Gloria; Second been named rector of Aquinas ADAMS BOOKSTORE not so firmly scheduled as the Collect for Peace; Common Hall, res ide n t building for .... /j ----INC.--...:. Catholic. Preface. upper-classmen. 165 NO. MAIN ST. Jewish troops have what are TUESDAY-Mass of XIII Sunday FALL RIVER, MASS. after ' Pentecost. Simple. called ~'Torah' conventions," dur Green. Mass Propet; No Glo ing which' Scripture , s-tudyis EVERYBODY DOES I ,ria or Creed, Second Collect ; emphasized, Msgr. Murphy said. St. Zephyrinus; Pope a'nd Mar-, ,-----.... The 80 Catholic chaplains in Chickens tyr; Third Collect for' Peace; , the' theater - ' there are 275 , FRESH' APPRAiSER Common Preface. ' chaplains altogether _. conduct -Fresh, ,aisp, easy-care, REAL~Y EGGS' REAL ESTATE monthly retreat days. Msgr. WEDNESDAY-St. Joseph Sala jumper dresses-in a
, Murphy said the retreat' masters sanctius, Confessor. Double.: complete size, range.
are among the best in Europe. White. Mass Proper; Gloria; INSURANCE Second Collect for P';ace; , FARMS," Wives Are Catecbilits 'wy 3·5762 PA~OCHIAL Common Preface. ' Msgr. Murphy said he insU 145 Washington St. Fairhave~ 136 Cornell St.. ~ . Just oft Route 6 THURSDAY;- St. ,Augustine, New Bedford SCHOOL ~ ' Bishop Confessor and Doctor FORTY HOURS - of the ClJ.urch. Doubie. White. Navy Blue DEVOT~ON Mass Proper; Gloria; :Second JUMPERS' Aug. 24--Sacrl:d Heart, 'New Collect St. Sabina, Martyr; Bedford Third Collect for Peace;; Com- ' White St. Joseph's Orphanage, mon Preface. ' Fall River A co~pl.ete line' of 'BLOUSES A.ug. 31-St.' Anthony of the Legion of DeCelliCY "OOD FIBRES and ARTIFICIAL FLOWER SUPPLIES Desert, Fall River, Plus'a Coinpl~te Line The following films are, to be .' . ,,' for all your artificial, flow&!, ~ St. John the Baptist, ,added to the lists in their )'espec-" BOYS/and G~RLS' Central Vjlla/{t' ',\ :Genuine Calart Flowers and Trees
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Trenton Prelate Highly Praises
Father Ha Iton
THE A"'~HOR Thurs., Aug. 21, 1958
3
Pontiff Asserts Lourdes Lesson In Brotherhood
1'RENTON - B ish op George W. Ahr announced this week that he had been 'riotifi'ed that Fr. Hugh 'Hal
LOURDES (NC) "- Pope
ton, 0, P" 'director of the' Aqui Pius XII encouraged work nas Institute, Princeton, for the
ers to use the lessons they past six y¢ars, has been, given
a new assignment. have learned at Lourdes to In a letter to Bishop Ahr, the face the tasks of the working Very Rev, William D. Marrin, world with a Christian spirit.
O,P., provinCial of the Domini
The Pope reviewed the prog can Fathers in New York" in ress that has ,been made in social formed His Excellency that Fr. justice since the time of the Halton will pursue advanced Lourdes apparitions 100 years studies and research at Oxford ago, and encouraged the assem University, England, under the bled workers to press on in a direction of Professor Arthur fraternal and Christian spirit. Goodhart. It was under Profes "At Lourdes:' he said, "yoll AMERICAN JESUITS LABOR IN 'BAGHDAD: Iraq, hot spot in the strift-torn sor Goodhart that Fr. Halton Middle East, has more than 200,000 Catholics, only five per cent of the population. , must thank God (for all that has studied and taught prIor to his beert accomplished) and, while Ameri~an Jesuits have been operating Baghdad College for the past 27 years and recent Princeton ,assignment. thinking of the tasks of the fu ]y began construction of AI-Hikma, University, 'four, buildings of which are shown under ture, you must be prepared to "It is a' fine tribute to Fr. face them lik;e Christians. Halton that his abilities are so way in early June, 1958. NC Photo. ,"Take back from your pil highly valued," wrote Fr. Mar . grimage the great lesson of rin in his letter to Bishop Ahr. brotherhood 'that you have Commenting on Fr.' Halton',s learned from the sight of so new assignment, Bishop Ahr many men from every kind of aaid: social. condition gathered like "I shall be sorry' indeed to children around the, same lose the services of this' bril:' mother. ' c liant and dedicated priest. His " The Italian, Communists were set for a big day.' The hammer andsickle'flew boldly "Truly what possibilities could, sole purpose has been to safe- over the vast Piazza del Populo, sound trucks stood at ready, and the Commie bosses were be offered, today," he declared, guard in difficult circumstances 'the faith and morals of the stu- ,clearing th,eir throat~,for another assault on democracy. Onthat,evel)tful May Day of 1955 , "by a loyal and sincere collabG d~nts committed to his' care, 'Only, one thing was missing ,- the ,people. A half-million workers had chosen to spend ration, among Catholics who, in their working life, would habitu 'and he haS carried out hisre- :Labor Day (observed' on ' ' " , , Founder of the Catholic Church' princ,,i~l"e"s a,re tliere-,,'they have ally put 'into mutual relation spon'sibilities with extrilOrdinary, ,May" 1 'in E,urope)' in ,St.,' , , , 'wa's a carpenter by trade, 'its 'not as yet been' ,gathered to their different but complemen-: competence. and great courage. ,'Pete'r'.s- Sqtlare. l·,nstea',d.' Thel'r ,fi r.st"" ~ ' " I'nto a' syst" .. 'A' d' pope, a fi sherman, I'ts," grea t - 'ge'ther' My' pt'ayerful good wishes and ' . em. n cer- , tary professional tasks." . gratitude go with-him as he em- host:, Pope PlUS XII~ ", 'est'missionary acarivas-worker. tainly a newspaper ai-dcle and The' Pope recalled that a cen barks upon his new duties." , • In, the, sh,ad~ "of,Sti,Pet~~~ ,Witl1 such a begin~ing" could the its unskilled author are neither tury of effort and 'perserverence .' 'd t 0 ' towering facade the Holy Fath-' Church be anythmg but prG- the medium ~or the man for this had' made Christ better known Fr. H a It l was asslgne ' , '.'. . '" . 1 b 'I ' " , , . Princeton in 1952 as chaplain to . ~r sat .to receive the, glft~ of t~e, '. a or, , " stupend,ous ,undertaking. , and better loved in the working the Catholic students attending" laboring ~l.ass: A far~er from -', The average ;workmankno~s' B'eing Ii novice to the labor world "as the only Saviour, the , the university. He criticized the Abruzzi presented him with a , well .eno,ugh th.at the, Chu.rch IS field however has its advan-, true hope 0.1: those who suffer , writings of Professor Walter T. fluffy-white lamb; !lilversmiths on, hiS Side, When ~e assists ~t I tages. You ca~ make sweeping and are burdened." Stace Stuart Professor of Meta-' from Florence offered precious the Labor Day Mass m St. ~ary s, proposals without the slightest He said that it was to the physi~s' the book Morals and candlesticks;, factory workers Cathedra,l, when he sees Bishop 'fear of losing your reputation credit of many good and militant Medicil~e, which he said misrep- from Milan, plac«7 d before his , Connolly su~cessor of t.he For y~u have none to begin with: Catholics in the past and of many deeply Christian families resented Catholic teaching on feet bolts of til'll! cloth. Apostles -:- praymg al~ng. With So with this in mind here is a those that certain interests have not O n an d on th ey ca me , bearing him " he Will such matters as euthanasia ab. feel much ,hke 'pr o p o s e d Theology of' Work. · t'll . 1 b' th ' I the fruit of their labor And workers m St. Peter s Square. ' been able to drive a wedge be t or lOn, ar I ICla Ir contro , . H '11 f I th t ' , B t - I should tell you first of all and rna th b' t d for each the Pope had a word of e WI ee a way. u, ,' , tween the Church and the ny 0 er su Jecs, an . d ,'1 there is something he needs to that this crucial theology will worker," also the book The Roman Cath'- praise an a sml e. , . t he t d . , '. , Guide and Father, know, He needs to know clearly, n~ pu own m the custom ollc Proble~, written by Pro, The dee I what God thinks of hu ary learned books. Rather it A Delicious fessor Emeritus George ... ElderThen came the climax. p y, . , . ,. " k' ' H o l y Father ascended the blil- man labor. Only a theology of Will be made mto a movie. To Treat t~ast September, with the cony high above the square and, ,work can give him that answer. 'be exact, four movies. opening of a new school year' spoke to his working _children. ,Labor Reforms
.A man on the second ~hift at at Princeton, President Robert He warned of the twentieth cen, Without, knowing what the ;Irestone would, not pick up F. Goheen announced all "priv-' tury snares fo~ the w~rking man Cr~ator thin~s of w~rk, ~e can 'The" Manual of Labor. Theo ileges" extended by the uni- and offered hiS solutIons. . - ea~IIY. fall mto thiS kmd of logy, but he would, P?,sSlbl y , go versity to Fr. Halton -had been As /Ie came to th~ end of hl.s thmkmg:
to see a film called The GQd 'withdrawn. talk his arms went out, in a "Labor Day is coming. That's of Work:' especially if it were Priest's Right to Speak touching ,gesture: "Dear working, our, annual joke. ~or a whole
Turn to Page Seventeen Bishop Ahr in a strongly men and ~women of the whole, ?ay we. stop pourmg co~cr~te
worded t t 't t d Fr world - let Us extend to you mto highways and buI1dmg
Electrical sa .emt.en , SUPtpothr e th . the tenderness of a father's af- atomic sUbmarines only to listen
Halton , pom m g ou t a e, h t 'th" h' h t h . "Basic issue is the right of a fechon, such as ~ a WI 'w, IC 0 sern:ons on w at a noble thmg
Contractors priest charged with the spiritual J,esus drew to J:Ilm!l.elf the mul- work IS:. .
'are of Cath I' t d t . . tltudes hungering after truth "Well,ls It? Let's be honest
C o IC s u en s ,10 a .. . b d th t . . 1 I' secular 'university to speak: ut and Jushce; e assure)", a In With ourse ves. We get b Isters
in defense of the faith ,:nd every ne,cessity !OU will have 011 our, hands. building a' better'
morals of those committed to at your Side a gUIde, a defender" world that Will one day crum his care," a father. , , ble to dust, for a wage that is
The Bishop stated that the "Yes, beloved workers, the" quickly snatched fr:om us, with
Thomas Aquinas Foundation was Pope and the Chur~h, can~ot the sweat of our-brow and the
,established and its director ap- ~ithdraw ~r?m the dlvl,ne mls- loss of our liberty. What's so
944 County St. ,.". , pointed "under the authority of SIO~ of gUldl.ng, protectmg, ~nd noble about that?"
the Bishop of Trenton . . . The r lovmg especially, the suffermg, When this man looks you in
Ask For Them Today New Bedford first representations made to the who are all, the. more dear the, the eye ,and tells yOU, in effect,
Bishop of Trenton in this matter more they ,are m need of de- that work is nothing but the
by anyone of official standing at fense and help, whe~her they be grim punishment for original
the university came in August' workers or other children of the sin, it will do little good to re
when I was informed of the depeoPl~. . d bI' t' W call to him the sweeping labor
cis ion which Pie board of trus"Thl~ dutyfan ~ tlgad lO.n, toe, refor:ms of Leo XIII and Pius
, 7t. the Vicar 0 ChrIS eSlre XI M d" f tees had made In June In my 'I 1 'th th . t . oreover, a ISCUSSlOn 0
opinion it was in effect an ulr~afflrhmtc elalr y, WI e. In, ethn- Capitalism, Socialism and Marx . " , , hon t a a may recogmze e. . 1 ' I tunatum from the board of trusd' ·t fIb" Ism Will eave him caId,. Igm y 0 N a or . . .t ' e r n,a T'h 'n WI't'h th e wor k man ' s
tees to remove Fr. Halton as di." VA 2-2282 rector of the Aquinas Institute 'A d ew east k n f' h's badge on 'his personalitv spends,
I thO d f h' k' h , n now, as a 0 e 0 or have his recognition and privlove for all workers everywhere, one- ~r. o. IS wa .mg ours
i~eg~~ withdrawn by the univerhe was giving to the world a grappling With a thmg called
alty, new feast, the' feast of St. Jo- WORK. He wants to kno~ wily
His Excellency then declared h the Worker Labor Day the Church says that ,hiS IS a
that to have ~emoved Fr. Halton been baptiz~d, and the nob~e, a holY~ a creat~ve thing.
under those circumstances would cheering of the St: Peter's crowd ~e IS ~ot askmg for history. He
have been "tantamount to placcould be heard in the Commu- IS askmg for theology, a theo~"'~~~~~'~'~~~~~~~~~!WJ~"'~~'~'~' ~~~~~~~~ ing the responsibility for the exnist 'camp over' a mile away! logy of work. ~I.r.; ~ · .. isting situation upon him. This The new liturgical feast came ~orry to say, none has yet been I am unwilling to do." as a surprise to the world" but written. The facts are there, the The "privileges" wit!ldrawq by not the Church's blessing .on the university included permislabor. This is as ancient'as the sion to march in academic prGChurch herself. The Divine cessions; the use of the univer sity bulletin to publish schedand:r. ules of Masses and other services at the Aquil')as Institute; t h e . B U ~
use of university rooms for lecThre.e Conyenienf Offices To Serve You, ~
'tures, and guest speakers, and h "
the listing of the institute and Jo n B. b , " South ,B,ank ~ , No,rth Bank I l 499 himself.in the, university cater· %Rodney . I I e I oglJ . ;, I'renc"hBl,vd. '(~"",-'-' "A Fr, Halto,n, 'born in Providence, 'UU~ . f t .ACAu~Det ._ i R. I., was educated at Harvard and Sons, Inc. OF NEW BEDFORD and Oxf:ord Universities. He
holds degrees of Doctor of Phil- ' OSTERVILLE MAIN BANK - PURCHASE AND WILLIAM STReeTS osophy and Doctor of CivH Law, JI_ber Federal Dep01!V lMKran~ Corpomhow (!j; I
both earned' at Oxford, and <hal' ' GArde~ 8-6501 ~ @'$.
• licentiate in Sacred'TheoloU. OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO ~'~'~~~~~~'.~~~~'~'~,-~I~~f'~"~~~>I"~>~'~~~~"
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Hollywood in Fo«:us
Sees Film Reviewert in Frequent
Lake Plac,idPrelate Sendls Ripple .Through H~n'YWo()d
Clashes With Movie' Importers
By William H. Mooring The six-month ban imposed by Rt. Rev. Msgr. Janles T. Lyng upon the Palace Theatre, Lake Placid, N.Y., led to ' anything but placid conjecture among theater and public rel~tions men here in Hollywood. This localiz~d Catholic .taboo, following upon other stayed "on top" for 25 or 30 ,and various forms, of local years. -.. ; action elsewhere, came too !'Hitch" drives where McCarey late to prevent the promQt- draws people, although 'geniality ers of Brigitte Bnrdot's "And hides'with the genius, behind the God Created Woman" from, thinnest veneer in each case., turning 'a foul Neither is, taking any, bl!atings film to fair forfrom ,"the Secular 'and al~nostic tune. movie creators" my corresponThe psychodent prefers for "their artistic logical e f f e c t freedom." was much more McCarey looks for stories with powerful. Theaa tear among the smiles.' He's tel's that have a sentimental Irishman ~,nd an not yet shown American patriot; presently VICE POSTULATOI{: the film may making ~Rally Round the Flag Father Noel Moholy, O.F.M., now think twice before doing so. Boys," with Paul Newman" of the Old Missioh, Santa Several exhibitors immediately Joanne Woodward, Joan Collins, Barbara, ',Calif., has been were reported to have given 'up' Dwayne Hickman and Jack Car intentions to show it. son among his cast. He directs named vi<;e postulator' 'f~r More importantly, however; them with caressing gestures a'nd the canonization cause Of the perplexing questions now assail , misty eyes. famed Franciscan mi,ssion film industry leaders at various ,"Hitch': prefers stories to ary, Father Junipero Serra. levels.' freeze your blood so that he can Father Moholy, has taught For instance: "Does ihis Lake let loose, with his funny, dry Placid incident presage a tough'" stuff and thaw it again. At pres dogmatic theology and sac ening of the official, 9atholic ent he is resting after "V,ertigo" red litu'rgy, at the historic attitude, in particular against while ,TV replays him every Old Mission for 13 years and condemned films which 'slop Sunday. and has had an act{ve part in over' from the 'art' theaters ' McCarey never shows Stella, its restoration. NC Photo. which, usually show them, into his Mrs., what he has on' celIu neighborhood, family houses and loid until his ,film is finished: drive-ins?" (This tne Bardot , Th en. s'h' e s h'I,S b est cn't'IC,. film did to the tune of a $3,000, 000 gross,) "Hitch" gets his Mrs. (Alma -Continued from Page One ' Reville) to write most of his , the Catholic ideals of the New , Nati~nwide Action sCripts for him. His Sphinx-like "How much financial dalTlage gaze over her'shoulder may' come man movement. and loss of public prestige might Writer-Lecturer 9f a Je.suit education, but he the film industry suffer if all knows she is his·best co-conspir Miss White will be awarded the Catholic bishops together ator. As Catholics both ,Hitch-, were to bind their people to stay cock and McCarey have plenty the medal at the closing banquet of ~e National Newman Club away for six months or more; of ,agnostics I know, lick€~ to a from every theater in the USA frazzle. Federation's national conven where such, a filin had been tion, Saturday, Sept. 6, at Ohio shown?" , Gregory Peck's 20th Century ,"What effect could such nation- 'Fox film, "The Bravados;" is State University, Columbus. The wide action have upon the tot.al among the 10 box-office bits of' Newman Federation serves tnous' 'box-office receipts if it were this'lean, Summer season. The Newman Fed~ration s e l' v e s imposed when the picture were Legion of Decency okayed it for thousands of Catholic students just beginning, instead of wind"adults and adolescents.''' This attending non-Catholic colleges ing up, its public runs?" column gave it three st.ars as and universities in the United Although everyone is too cau"excellent ,entertainmen~ ,in' States. tious to be quoted, there is which spiritual undertom!S give An enthusiastic teacher with strong Hollywood' opinion that purpose to external violtmce." a special interest in young writ the movie industry (some segThe story, a Western, telil's how ers, Miss White has been part of ments of which have recently a tough fellow (Peck) hunts ,'the Univ'ersity of Wisconsin tra presumed to ignore National Ledown and kills three lTlen he dition since shortly after World gion of Decency objections and believes guilty of the attack War L ' 'condemnations), couid not, unmurder of his wife. Then he One of the first women, to hold' del' prevailing, businem; condilearns he has taken vengeance a full professorshJp"at the state lions, "write off" the. effects of against innocent people. university, she is known at the united, nationwide; Catholic acThe'townspeople not knowing: institution for her frequent ap lion. ,the truth, hail him a hero but ,pearan~es at the Newman center Hollywood ,could not even afafter unburdening his conscience where she has lectured and taken ford to risk a campaign that before' a priest, _he' asks the , part in pa'nel discussions. ' aimed merely to ,give maximum crowd to hold him in, its prayers 'effect to the final·, clause of the instead of its esteem. It is inciLegion of Decency pledge. dental that this movie character' In taking this pledge, Cathis a Catholic. ' . olics promise "to stay a,,'ay alto:Everybody know's how it feels I know that gether from theaters which to tussle, with a guilty _ llon thou canst do show them (condemned movies) science, which most likely ex as a matter of policy." C>plains why word-of-mouth pubt all things, Until recently, this was un:' licity (the besf'kind) is dlrawing Job. 42:2 del'stood to apply to so-called more and more ticket-buyers to Hart" theaters with a special "The Bravaoos." clientele. By official' decision of the Legion of Decency, however, JEWelED CROSS, 'it applies' to any theater, the· , COMP'''HY
HO. AHLEIOaO, ""ASS. •
management of which books a -", OF TAIPEI (NC) -An American film' condemned by th,~' Legion' CRUCIFIXES AND ARTICLES "'DEVOTION Jesuit, Bishop had, the joy of ~ 'after such ,condemnation has, " ' seeing ordained in For.mosa, a been made public. student he sent,to a seminary on Lake Pla'Cfd casts reflections the mainland of 9hina in 1947. for- the faithful' as. well as the , 'film folk to, look at. Thirty-six Father Aloysius Chang Chen million Catholics mean a lot of tung was ordained by Arch tickets, bishop Joseph Kuo of Taipei. Men, Minds, Methods Present was Bishop Philip Cote, I am invited to write' about S,J" of Suchow, China, a native CITIES SERVICE "people al}d things," by someone of Lawrence, Mass" who nas' who asks, "Does being bound DISTRIBUTORS' been a missionary here since his ,to the same religious, philosophi expulsion by the Chinese Reds. cal and moral outlook account In 1947 Bishop Cote had! given Gasoline
for Catholic writers, producers young Chal}g permission ,to join and directors being less free 'the Congregation of Disdples of .Fuel and' Range
and in;Jaginative in their work ,the Divine Lord, of which Arch- , for the movies and TV'.''' bishop Kuo was then Superior Ouch! I hadn't noticed it. You General, and sent the boy; just could not findtwo'men less alike' graduated from high school, to OIL BURNERS than Alfred Hitchcock and Leo the seminary of the congn~gation McCarey, whether in' the han in Peking. ' G; E. BOILER BURNER UNITS dling of sCl'eenplays,' actors or' hamburgers! Both, are Catholic For prompt deli~ery
born and raised, :,
WASHINGTON (NC) -- U. S.
& Day & Night Service
! I have I known "Hiteh" from Secretary of Labor James Mit'
the early 20s when he' doodled Rural Bottled Gas Service . chell will join a leadIng Catholic
humorous sketches to liven up educator in discussing U, S, edu
sad, silent-film sub-titles. I have 61 COHANNEl. ST. known and sometimeS"worked ,cation, its future and implica
TAUNTON tions for the nation's economy
with Leo l\,lcCarey since he made Attleboro =- No~ Attleboro' ' Bing C,rosby's "Going My Way'''' at the 29th n'ational"' convelliion
Taunton (now on TV) in 1943. Both' of the National Coundl of
,"Hitch" ,and McC;ucy. have Catholic Wome~ in St: Louis
.
Dr. Helen White'
Wom~n."
Threat to Society -rhe picture story concerns itself with the life of a young girl who is in love with a man other than her husband who demonstrates a complete lack of ' harmony with Christian ideals of matrimony," Msgr; Lyng saId. Stating that when respect for womanhood is strong, the moral fiber of society is equally strong, Msgr. Lyng added: "H<?wever, when people come ,to consider women merely ;IS sources of sensual pleasure, when we cease to honor them as the queen of the home ,as the ever-ready source of strellgth, devotion, trust and fo~e,' 'then the community building block the family-is weakened and every member of, soCiety is thereby deprived of a great po tential for good."
'"Condemned Film "And God Created Woman," featuring French actress Brigitte Bardot,,is being shown in bot,h dubbed and sub-titled versions. Variety called the film "easily 'th~ most successful iforeign im port ever to hit the States." The motion picture was eval uated in Class C-condemned'::"" by the National Legion of De cency of Decel11ber 5, 1957. The legion's explanation said:, "The th'eme and treatment of this film, developed in an at.mos phere of sensuality, dw~ll with out relief upon suggestiveness in • ·costuming; dialogue and situa tions. '
"In the field of motion picture entertainment, the extent and. WASHINGTON (NC)-Father
intensity of the objectil:inability John Rogg Schmidt, of, the
. of this picture constitute an open School of Canon Law, has been
violation of Christian and tradi named director of studies for
'-- tional morality." the ecclesiastical - schools and
Dignity of Woman 'affiliated seminaries of the The film has been called' Han Oatholic University of Ameri~a.
Studies Director·
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, attack on the dignity of wl)man,. kind" and its principal character has been referred to as "an ac· tress whose very' name is as sociated\with those things which are ,contrary to, decenc.v and morality." This charge came from Msgr. James T. Lyn'g 'of Lak,e Placid who placed the town's movie theatre out of, bounds· for six months for Catholics because it exhibited "And God Created
NEW YORK (NC) - A trade publicat'i'on has predicted more frequent clashes between review groups and importers of foreign films, ,such as the French movie, "And God Created Woman:" Variety, a weekly show'busi ness review said the "danger of coilisioJ;l" has probably increased because importers are now dub , bing English voices into foreign films in the hope of attracting a wider audience. Previously, the majority of imports had only sub-titles. Par tially because of this, they were shown in relatively small thea ters and did not' attract large audiences. '
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r''; ~.~. DEDICATE LIVES TO SERVICE OF PRIESTHOOD: Efficient house keeping at the 20 room St. Anthony's Rectory jn New Bedford is the task of four Servants of Our Lady, Queen of the Clergy. In left photo Sister Mary Angel, superior, answers one of the numerous telephone calls; in second left photo Sister Ste. Germaine operates vacuum cleaner while THE ANCHOR Thurs., Aug. 21, 1958
5'
Sister Ste. Eleanore dusts. Recreation time finds Sister Mary Bernardin de Siene, Sister Ste. Germaine and Sister Mary Angel pondering a Chinese checkers problem, with Sister Ste. Eleanore looking on. Right photo shows Sister Bernardine de Siene at familiar task in kitchen. Sisters offer many of their prayers and works for the work of the priests.
S·IS t ers' Voca t·Ion Is Carlng · For Rec t orles ·
Dominican Tertiaries To Meet in Rome
. Continued from Page ODe
congregation's motherhouse is sacristy, and finally in his old still located there. age in retreat houses for retired ROME (NC) Over 2,000 clergy." laymen, with' their local and Their literature explains their provincial priest director, will purpose of serving Christ in His Candidates for this Sisterhood priests: "Our whole life is dedi, should be between 15 and 30 and meet at the Second Internation~ Household Tasks cated to the priest. In him we able to speak and write French. al Congress of the. Third Order We met Sister Mary Bernadin see Jesus, Saviour of the world. Entrance dates to the commun of St. Dominic here starting. MARQUETTE (NC) d~ Siene, in charge of the kit Our desire is to place our merits ity are July 22 and January 23. Aug. 25. "Moral Re-armament is a re chen (anra ice cream cones);' in the hands of the priest to More information may be ob Delegates from 30 provinces ligious movement which en- . Sister Mary Angel, superior; assist. him in saving souls, We tained from Reverend Mother in 21 nations representing more eourages religious indiffer Sister Mary Ste.· Eleanore and wish to help him in his seminary Generil1, Motherhouse of the than 75,000 fellow tertiaries ence and attempts to reduce all her partner, Sister Ste. Ger years, in his activl~ ministry Servants of Our Lady, \Queen of will study the relationship be creeds to a common denomina maine, both of whom do general through care of hjs house and the Clergy, Lac-au-Saumon, tween the Dominican OI'der and Ilor. housekeeping for the rectory P.Q., Canada. Catholic Action. Bishop Thomas L. Noa of Mar and care for ironing and mend quettc cited these errors of MRA ing. They showed us about the in issuing a pastoral directive house, for which Sisters of their banning participation in the cOI!.gregation have cared since movement to Catholics of the I!H2. ,OTTOWA, (NC)-Canada has Cape Cod Marquette diocese and all other Their day begins at '4:45 A.M., agreed to admit another 1,100 STEAMING NATIVE Catholics who come within the and includes a busy breakfast Hungarian immigrants. They limits of the See's jurisdiction. 'schedule, since each priest eats are among 9,000 who fled from Moral Re-armament operates at a different time, the prepara their homeland after the upris SWORD 'one of its two international train tion and serving of lunch and ing against the communists and ing centcrs at Mackinac Island, dinner, cleaning, mending, laun who have been in camps in Mich., in the Marquette diocese. dry, and always answering of Austria and Italy. FISH Its other center is at Caux, ·the ever-busy door and tele The total number of Hungar Switzerland. phone bells. ' ians admitted to Canada sin(; Lacks Authority Motherliouse in Canada the uprising now will be raised The Bishop warned that it is There's time for recreation, to 38,215. Only a few hundred UNION WH!'RF FAIRHAVEN, MASS. "'both dangerous and futile for however, including strolls in the have returned to Hungary. They Catholics to seek guidance in rectory' garden, and games. did so, mainly, beca~se their matters of faith and morals from Chinese checkers is a favorite, families were unable to join those who do not have a God and Sister Mary Bernadin's the them in Canada. liven authorit.y." one to watch in that department, More' for U. S.. . "It is our'duty," he declared, we were told. Canada wi,ll pay the steamship "'to bring to· the attention of 795 MIDtnE STREET fare for the immigrants and also Catholics that MRA, whatever , St. Anthony's is the only par FALL RIVER its good intentions, assumes the ish in our dfo~ese having, the accepts l'epsonsibility for their role of spiritual direction and Servants of Our Lady, Queen of care during their first' year in guidance for which it does not the Clergy,"but they are active this country. As of July 23, only The Only Catholic Nursing School in more than 30 rectories, semi 150 Hungarian refugees were on have a divine authority" nades, and bishops' residences". relief in Canada. In the Fall River Diocese The M 0 r a I Re-arm~ment All 9,000 refugees remaining movement, also known as the in the United States imd Canada. Founded in 1927 Founded" in 1929 by Father in Austrian and Italian camps Oxford Group and as .Buchman will be moved to Western coun ism, was begun by Dr. Frank Alexander Bouillon of Lac-auFull Accreditation from National Nursing
Buchman, a Lutheran minister, Saumon, Quebec,. Canada, ·the trieh before the end' of the year. Accrediting Service
The United States has agreed to lin. 1909 at Princeton, N. J. Rome Warning accept another 3,300, For Further Information write to
It professes not to be a new '& of June 30, Canada had religion, but aspires to reform SR. MADELEINE CLEMENCE
admitted 37,115 Hungarians ref the world through the propaga:.. WASHINGTON (NC) - Harry ugees; the U. S, had taken 38, Director of St. An';e's' School of Nursing
tion of what are called the "four W. Flannery, president' of the 260; Britain 15,360; West Ger absolutes:" absolute honesty, Catholic Association for Inter
Fan River, Mass. OSborne 4-5741
many 14,903; Australia 13,621 absolute purit.y, absolute unsel n.ational Peace, has sent a letter ) and Switzerland 11,372. fishness and absolute love. to President Eisenhower laud Despite its <;Iaims that it is not ing his recommendation made OpeR Fridays until 9 - Free parking a religion, Bishop Noa pointed before the United Nations Gen out, the movement was banned elral ASsembly on Near East b, Bishops in Germany and Ire- . Peace and regional development. .!land when it was still known as Every nation within the United !the Oxford Group. In later"years, N'ations should welcome this when the movement came to be plan, Mr. Flannery said. Occa e a 11 e d M:oral Re-armament, sional financial aid would not Bishops -in England, Germany suffice to. prevent communism and Italy forbade Catholics to f"om spreading, nor would _it pertieipate. make friends-for the Free In 1955 a warning on MRA ""orld, 'he added.: was issued by the Holy Office in Rome, which expressed surprise that Catholics were seeking "certllin moral and social objec tives, however praiseworthy VIENNA (NC)-The Hungar . they may be, in the bosom of a ian Red propagafi(~a machine is movement w h i c h possesses now quoting its own broadsides neither the patrimony of doctrine in an effort to show that Toheir lH' of spil'ituallife, nor the super Eminences FranCis Cardinal No problem persuadl;,g boys to Dress Right-natural, yet natural means of grace which Spellman, Archbishop of New distinctive styling. in well tailored clothing, or practical, rugged &be Catholic Church has." York, and Jozsef ,Cardinal Minds school slacks, dungarees, shirts-you'll, find a wide variety of Zl~nty, Primate of Hungary, are newest in fashion' here now at seeking atomic war. But the communists added a CLEVELAND (NC) - Bene Fall River's largest mens' and boys' apparel store new twist in. a Radio Budapest dictine High School .will re Introduce a course in Russiaa broadcast. They said the alleged language and literature this Fall. stands of the Cardinals "do not with those Of Pope PiUll GOURSE: & SONS, fALL RIVER, MASS. lt had a similar course ducWC .IlL- ' . "odd War II. "
Prelate Forbids Faithful to Join 'Religious Group
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upkeep is a weekly task of the four Sisters assigned to the rec ' h t ory, b u t 0 f course there IS muc else to keep them busy.
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Canada to Admit More Refugees
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MacLEAN'S -SEA i••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• FOODS
'St. Anne's School of Nursing
Peace Plan Wins Flannery Praise
Reds Adopt New' Line 'In Church Attack
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Iboys Iprefer school clothes 'from The Hub!
Teach Russian-
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THE HUB YOUTH CENTER
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6 Thurs., -THE 21, ANCHOR 1958
The Quality of Movie·Ads~
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Al,Jg.
The public is long suffering. " . ":,,::~, . , People cal) beconditione.d to accept aJtposti:~JUTthmg. It is all a question of how to go' about .i~..· " What is normally offensive amiiri:p60r"t~st~ c~n be 'dished up to people, so that they. not'· only' do not fe~l offended' but come to accept it with '3, . ce rtai l1. attitude of' expectation. . ' .', .': ~ ' .. ' Those of low moral caliber are delighted at the r'l~sults. .. Those with a high sense of morality are so!"~!times . h h 1 tt . offended but more often oblivious of· t e woe :ma e~. . Those whose character is still developi~g .are surely v harmed 1:>Y the results.· . .' .' ... . '. . Someone makes money - an~. there .IS the JustIfIca~lon.
Weekly C~lendar . Of Feast Days }
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of what is done: .. . Just pick up almost any niornn~g or even.mg. paper and tt1rn to the movie page and there IS the. classIc example
th~~e
TODAY-St. Jane Frances' de Chantal, Widow. At the age of 6 a motherless child, she was pl~ced . under the care of a
worldly-minded governess. ~he
offered herself to the Mother of God. SHe was married to' the Baron de Chantal and her home was a model of ,9omestic happi-' . ness. After the death of her hus band, 'she entered the religious life and .founded the Visitation
Order. In this work she was as-'
sitted by St. Francis de Sales. '
~;~~~~;~;~~~~,
of movie ads on that page contain pictures and copy. that no editor in the world would dare print on any other
~
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But if it is on the movie page - no one seems to mind too.much. . " '., . . . Slavering monsters, indecent I5oses, suggestive, dialog~,e _ these. are mild fare dished up just about every. day m
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Im~~~~~~~:arto~~=;y~~:~~
oring the Immaculate Heart of
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and extended to the Universal 'Church 'with a .permanent date by Pope Pius xn. SATURDAY st. Philip Benizi, Confessor. ·He was born the movie ads. . . in 'Florence on the Feast of U:Je Any intelligent person of good' morals and' balance Assum'ption, 1223. He enter;eii eould come to only one conclusion after a week's study of the Servite Order, which was the movie ads - that the movies are .catering to a group founded on the day of his birth. of sex-maddened adolescents whose emotions ·are touched Sage 'andSand
. His virtue won him respect and and whose movie-goin~ interests are stimulated only by the . '
I ·admiration. He died in 1285. . 'ddl d th t' ' t h 0 IC . SUNDAY-St.Bartholomew, tawdry, the cheap, the sex-rl e, e 'sugges lv·e, e . Apostle. He carried the Gospel bizarre. . . through the most b!lrbaroul The movie ads'of themselves, apart from the pictu~es countries of the East, penetrat ·that they are hawking, are an: offense to ~~y gr<itJpof., . \ . By' Most R. ev. R~bett..J. :Dw·y".er, D.D.· irig into the remoter Inqies. He decent normal people. .'.' . '. , '. ' ,". ':': .... was 'martyred in Armenia. Of cour'se the excusing plea is madethat thead;s.have. ' . . Bish~p'of'Reno . ' ·MONDAY-St. Louis IX: of 'oftentimes little or no relationship with the movie.· .' . . . There ~as a time ·when Qve~ ,this 'broad lan~ of ours .France, King. He led two cru .4," " th f S t b h ld sades against the infidels a,nd Have.Americans beeomeso hardened to a d Vel~ISJrig . the approach'of the mystIc mon 0 ep em er was era -. 'was noted,for his grea.t zea,l ~~r' ·that the' only' thIng that can break 'through th~ir shells'. ,ed' each'. year by :a cfoudburst of I sacred' 9ratory on ..t he' .the Faith. He died in Tunis ~n and touch their ·interests. is an appeal to cheapness? theme of Catholic, education. 'Sunday afterSun~~~,.a~~'J\u~:" .,. .1270' wliiie leading his army on . Have producerA or exhibitors become s() intell~~tuany lIst dragged:' through' the . erals .of the reli·gi~t'is.·!C)rd~rii· .:h.~s.. ~ecorid c~usad.e. . ...• " 'bankrup~ that a ,treatment of n:'0vies r,nu'st r~n·along.\the dog:'days, ,t,he'~eyereild irtruggie'.. through th~ ..,8u~m~i-. 1: .. TU.ES'pAY:.~ S1. :Z~'?hyri~~s, track -that travels the gutter. . . .' . • -. '. .Clergy-would1;>uckle on the days and nights with their' li~ ·.Pope a~d ;Ma~tyr, He suc~ed~ · If the ads b~ar little or no resemblanc~ to the movie - ' armor of justice, take UP. of "obediences" ~n a futile effort, .;: Po~e'Vlctor I.. m 19~, and reigned 80 much the worse the situation is. The original guilt of· the sword. of the spirit, and to please the blshops,and pas- .,un,tli ~~ 7. joseph . . 'h'" . d . d d b d' h t' d mount the .pulpit steps,' to do tors. . ,WEpNES AY -:- St. . d~aw.mg up suc . a S JS c?mpoun.e .Y ~s ones y~m an bRt t I . ' t h ' There is much satisfaction Calasanctius, Confessor. He was insulting view of ,what kmd of gImmIck IS needed to lure th e WI t' each, y"ear in reading the "Cath- borri. in Aragon in 1556. He '. , ' ose recrean . . f h . th od . in the public. " .... . ..,. , . . iouls (mostly
oUc sch~l en~ollment statistics, studIed or t e p~les .0. )~ Should such adR be tolerated m famJly.newspapeys? . I among the ab-
now commg close to the live:- ..Rome and was ordam~d m -l~8~. At this point the righteous' defenders of free:speech sent) who fail million mark. There is consid- He founded the Or?er of Cler~s . . ' . ' .. .' . d bl 1 s t ' f Co 'n the Regular of the PIOUS JSchoo~s,. start the cry' of "censorshIp." But 1)0 one has suggeste ,ed to see eye .era y ess. a IS ac I n I. . . known as the 'Piarists dedicated · . . ..... ' . d Wh t b' t ' ' . t t ' to e e with the thought of those who cannot be . ,"" . eensorshIp m .thJS regar. '. ' a ' a o~. ,consum~r pro es. . y h on the . ,enrolled,.' the. JOhnny-Come- to c~~e ~f fhildren of the ,~r. What about,the canons of gOQ<l taste,? ~hat. abOut theru1e~::~t.·. '
.LateHes 'who'have to beturned~ In .hls old age he :was unJus~lr . of-common sense?What.:abo~t,thepubhc'srlgl,Jt to,~~pre8S,; was a time
. away because there' ii"':io roOm "'acc~,sed,bro\1ght before the HtrolYI 1;.[' ·" t h 't" . ' I t · , . .... " ' ., , th ,.. ' . .~ OffIce, and removed from con 0 ; d ISgUS .ove! w.. a... lA l~SU mg. : for th~m..m '~ '. .: • . . w hen Canon E;I~~.. . ... ' .-:K./o(th~ "community. Eventually . ~ . _. Is. Itconslst.ellt ~J~~ newsp~pe.r.p'ol~.c!.~ decry erll'lle. ':Law c,ould.be Cat~o,~lc ~duc~~lOn I? Amen-:'}ie w~s restored an!i '!'Jis pati~nce and delir~qlien~y.,on page one,or the:edItonal"page an~ then .q u 0 te d WIth. .eIl has arnved,. but ~t has by '.. "earned 'for him th.e titleof'a 'print on the mo~rie page ads,that are offensive to de.~ency? g r.e a t .effect, nle~ .means· solv~d all Its prob:,... ·. ·...sec.ond Job.';' He was' carlOoize4j 'Co th t' . when the Papa l ,.' ms.·. . . ' . in 1767 · mmon sense answers .. e ques IOn., .' ,...Encycli.cals on C;atholic EducaMeet New ChaiJenge . '.... . ~_ _;;.Wha~ a~out ~he perso.ns who a~pr:ove these .ads. ' . . tion could be reviewed at length Its' very, success has created ing, .it.'is bound to cost still m.~re The only ones approvmg are those who hope to profit. and in detail, with pertillent ap-. new iSsues. One of the 'first 'in . as time goes on, ' . ·in the pocketbQ()~.froni the ads or the movies,they repr~ plications. to the local situ~ti~n, .importance is that all of us,' 'Tlle employment of larger .' B e n t . . ..... ,'.. . . ~nd when the. dal1ger~.of .mdlf- . clergy and I~lity alike, will have' numbers of lay teachers is only And surely 'it would be----i 'naive ,person 'iiJdee,d who ferentism.anq secularIsm m.the .to getrid'of the idea that' the 'part'of the total problem. ,Re:' '~ .,.. . hI" ld be' 1". h' neutral schools.. cou1 4 be CIted 'only proper .teacher in a Cath- ligious communities as well are that the, no·. arm. Jle I' , h th e l aImed"d' 'h'ads h' .do f' , . t wou d th " '.' tede d an denounced . ' These are the . 0 I'IC SC h 00 IS one w 0 wears e confronted wI'th' steep I'ncrea'se's ' careIesl'! .. rIver w ..o It a armer s c0'Y' an en. protest.. .echoes of yesteryear, from the religio.us habit. in the' outlay needed toedticate that he dId th~,ammal no· harm. The farmer I:ephed that it'far away and long ago. It is still, a powerful prej- .and prepare their subjects•. ' the driver could point out what good the bump had done Need Buildings, Staffs 'udice in the minds of mimoris,' 'To cite a 'specific instance, the the cow he. would be glad to pay the 'm'an for 'his trouble. There:is small likelihood that But there simply are not enough, "Sister Formation" program al Anyone claiming that these ads do no harm'has,-at best, you will hear much about Cat~:- religious men and women, to go ready. instituted by 'many com. poor taste or moral standards or is ignorant. of the olic ,education fr0O?- the pUI~lt around the class.rooms, ~nd, munities in ~nswer to the Holy ,'... . ., . .this August. Very bttle certam- what's· more, there IS small hke-:- ',Father's directives' concerning . forces that ;can affe~t ~nd~vIdu~ls.. S~ch ad~ .can hurt y?~n~.,. Iy; in a hort<ltorr vein. There lihood that there ever will' be; the ad'equate preparation of the, . religious for their· vocation, ill sters, can fIll the ·mmd WIth WIld Ideas, ,can blunt"the .sensl-, may be an announcement, al in our time. bilities of mature and .youthful so that all becomeindif most sotto voce,. to the effect· It\is not ~ much a question a heavy charge upon their re ferent to what %1hollld be offensive. that diocesan and parish grade of a dearth ·of vocations' as it sources. What can be· done about such ads? .and high schools will open on is o~ meeting a new chanenge The day is passing when school
Th L ' f D k'" • such and such a date, and there senSIbly and' maturely. support could be met by haphaz ecenc!: can.. rna e .s~me ImpreslHon In may be some enlarge~ent on It is sheer obscuratism to sup ard and casual means, Our Cath . . e eglOn 0 insIstmg th~t such a?vertIsmg IS offensI.ve:-the perennial theme of financial pose that intelligent and quali oIic high schools and colleges, Those m au.thorIty on newspapers can be more par... support for the schools. But few lied Catholic lay teachers are extremely costly· undertakings,. ticular. After all, would they run ads for. heroin or a do-it priests, alas, will feel the, urge incapable of doing the job. . must be underwritten much · yourself Kit on ,murdering.one's mother-in-law? Would they to plead, with anything l~ke t~e Granted t~at ther~ is a kin~ 'of, more intelligently than they are. take a movie ad drawing and print a photo of·it on another old fervor, for all Cathohc chl~- sympathe,tJc ma~l<: ab?ut the For the plain fact is that if page' dren to attend our Cathobc holy habit of religIOn, It by no our Catholic people want 'their means follows that the garb it . schools (and it is clear that " '. '. .. •. . IIChools. But the ultImate answer IS stIll. .wIth the mdIvldual. Yet the reason is not that we self guarantees the teacher or they want nothing quite 80 And'-as was said,in the beginning, people can be conditioned. have succeeded in .reaching the supplies the qualifications. much) they must be brought to to accept almost ,anything. Or can they? goal of educating all our young. In America, over the years,.a full realization of the sacri peopie under the standard of the tradition was. built up of the fices entailed. Cross, The reason is that we have exclusive fitness of the religious It' was a tre~endous v~ntu.:e not been able to build schools in the classroom, and we are UPO& which the American hier fast' enough to meet the mount loth to abaridon it, To be quite archy set forth a century ago ing need,. and,,' moreover,_ that honest about it, the tradition when the decision was made ~ we are pressed to the wall to rests in part at least on the fact inaugurate the school system. staff those we already have. that the religious, as vowed to We bless those bygone Bishops Everywhere in America our poverty, have been willing and ,for their foresight, but we must OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER IIChools are overflowing, with able to get along with far less' reckon the cost even more 'real financial remuneration than lay istically than our fathers who · Published ",!,ee.kiy by The Catholic Press 'ot the Diocese ot Felli River' classroom census ligures p'erilously verging on the absolute teachers who have to support' . followed them'. 410 Highland ~venue maximum. EV,erywhere .the in~ themselves and their families in There is nothing alarmist 'in Fall River, Mass. OSborne 5-7.151 sistent plea of the laity is 'for terms of contemporary costll. 'all this. Problems must be met . PUBLISHER' more schools. Cost Increases and solved, not shelved and igMost Rev, James L. Connolly. D.O., Ph.b. . Whe\-ever two or thJ;ee pasBeyond this, our Catholic ed- nored. We have had the courage GENERAL MANAGER ' . ASST!GENERAl MANAGER . tors are gathered together the acational ~ystem is caught, like of our. convictions thus far; with Re". DanIel F. Sh!llloo. M.A. Re" .. John P. Driscoll· talk centers on how on earth to everything else, in the spiral of God's help ourcourllge will not ,'.' MANAGING EDITOR accommodate the crowds of . inflation. If it' is to expand' its fail in the new age that is UpoD )'oungsters. Harried Mother Gen- facilities and improve itll teach-. UL . Attorney HUih J .. GOlden, ,::"""'",,',0,' ~
'Cat h I- SCh.0'0 IS DO" . d .M' ore' ' S''qcrl . -f Ice . ',emans
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@rhe ANCHOR
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This Timely, Message" 'Sponsored By The;Follow~, , i"g Public Spirited Indiv;d~" .. uals and Business Concerns' Located in' Great~r' Fall . :' River '" ';.. ,
Why '~ust, T,he, Carnage Along ,'Ou:I('Highways'" 'Continue?
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,Betau'se" of ,Careless'O'riving?
Cascade Drug Co. " Connors Travel BUi~au '
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Duro Finishing Corp.
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Needless Tragedies, Can and MUST
Enterpr.ise Brewing Co.
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The Exterminator Co. (Leo laCroix)
Pr~v'ented,!
Globe 'Manuf~cturil~g Co. Kaplan Furniture'
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Kormon Water Co. MacKenzie & 'Wins~ow, Inc.
SLOW·UP
Meyer and Regan, \ Accountants , Mooney and Co., Ir1Ic~, , Newport Finishing Corp.
And Let, Our Children
Nira Warehouse Mart Sherry Corporation' Sobiloff Brothers '" Sterling Beverages" Inc. '
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.THE ANCHOR~, .' Thurs., Aug. 21,.1958~
• '40- _ "
St. Chris,topher 'lsPas's'~'ng~~ In·We.stbound,Station, Wagon:.' o
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D·.of I Deplore 'Sunday'Sales ,
" Sunday shopping 'and juve'nile joyriding were. cited as two subjects for legislative correc tion by the Daughters of Isa bella at the Boston Convention.
Other resolutions at the four-
day m~eting of the charjtable
and fratermil organization urged
efforts to increaF~ the circula tion and' influence of the Cath olic pre!OS, to combat indecency in literature and movies, and to
nonchalant 20, 25 or 30 m,p,h. rific speeds-and ~71t~ the bves "unearth and expose, by prompt
to the 55' or 60 demanded on of so many people, mvolved. You and vigorous aCtion," communist
the highways. 'understand?" activities which threaten the
At that stage;· Dickiec~uID1_t the idea. . common good.
St. Christopher As is their way-of-life, whereThe resolution on Sunday
is, still with '" ever they ,may be: ih 'motels, ' shopping 'predicted that, unless
them.' As they,. iF tourist homes,in, swank hotels, , APOSTLE OF THE SACRED HEART: Father 1yIateo it is discquragednow, this prac: tell us it's at ,'!I the Galihers will kneel.;and say :Crowley-Bovey" SS,CC., great apostle of, the Sacred Heart, .tice "may be' the forerunner of
15' that he be- I' the, rosary each day. They 'will' S d H t'" regularly selWduled iridustrial
_ns ~ get un:' 'go to daily Mass 'if at .all possi- . who· preached' the "Enthronement ;Of the. acre e~rm'.,work on Sunday in America."
easy, jumps out ble. the United StatE'ls, and Canada' and, alI over the world ~or, ,"It seems a paradox that at ,a
at 70, and from And' each \ morning "lH~ore': many years, is greeted in Valparaiso, by Msgr. James G·time' when Saturpay has, become'
there on, you're 8tarting off, they will:kne~l and Wilders, director ,of the Hospital Apostolate, Archdiocese,,' a workless day, Sunday has be . . your own. . l18ya prayer for a'safe journey,' ()f New York. A native Valparaiso, the 83-year-old priest,' come Ii shopping 'day," the reso-
The s e last for themselves and for others' ,lives there~at th~ ColIegeOf the Sacred Hearts. They are . lution added. It urged. "with weeks of Auon the'road: St.C1rristopher will shown with Father Charles' O'Hara, S:J,•., Of Marquette' . hsaOrylding~oOf, stuhpepoPrattronnoangee,ssne~~t~:i
lUst, t ra d i, . be the seventh passen~er in that tionally favorite vacationtlme,. statio'; wagon with its Di:'1rict University and Senor 'Jorge Via ,V~ldiveso; ,Governor of :Sunday business ~s an effective . will see families from the East of. Columbhi license plates, 'Valparaiso Province. N.C. Photo. means to arrest the undermining . 't' A un.., t1'e Mame in."Tndian. . ,'. , . ' ' .. , " of the time-honor'ed Sunday rest -.lS.1 .mg Far If, : so.meon.e, passes you 1011. a . 1 f . , . ,.or Americans in. this age of III>Ohs; f ami 1es . ro,? th.e ' curve you may. be BUre itia ~ West will be ':droPpIn~ m" o,~ Dot~e Galihers!' . I eco~ I technology.", ' and Cousin E r m e . .' , ' J O Y Riding A un t Mable ' . ' "Happy tnp and Hsafe borne"" "J In. Boston; m1d-wes.terners.w1ll .. <_ th'e'Gal'.l·her~---'-nn',d-t'he ','same The resolution oon Juveme 1t h " ' ' ' - - ' ' e f , " . .. '' C· . ' .R' , 'd " "' h tie tak,ing th.ei.r cholce.o . er ->- a'll,o'f A'm'er1'ca' -0'n-wheeJal ' 'k th t 'h' . . ,,' J'~y~riding urged members of the .., - . .PORTLAND ea",- '. speah wL en hI'a mac 1 medIS Qn" eoast, or possibly ,r.o. ~lmr~ d own .. " . . (N . )'':7'," " .. , ,Daughters of lsab.ella to give:. ing i~ fast, becommg_a~!ost art. . Fat er aug In dec are .' ,SUo pp'ort 19 "any legislation that :Mexico, way. W'.oma.n W'alks 900 ' . Father Tomas h L aughI'm, L .' k er asser t e d t'h a t "the ~ - ,t ' , . Th'e spea seeks to prohibit anyone under Typieal Family Miles' t'o Fatiril~ in teacher' af Portland Cel).tral more' you' watch, the mOre pas:'. 18 years of age from driving an Typical - or at least we hope , . Catholic High' here in Oregon,.: siveyou. b!,!l;ome, ,the less .intel':' automobile at night, or otherwise typical - is the Galiher family, . FATIMA (NC)'- An 81,·year ,blamed their'respo~sible use of ligent, the less movable,. the less .. ,.tQ control, within, the limits &f' tall handsome Galihl:rs, liv- old woman has completed, ·her °ielevision for the loss of good' ~huinan." . . . '. ,right •reason, ,the operation of ./," ing in the sophisticated world of fifth pilgrimage to our Lady'.' reading habits. " ' , , m o t o r cars at night by ·y.ou~h~111 1958 and enjoying a.ll the good shrine'here=--on foot, from I'arlil; ". "ReadJng.a[ld itSc6nsort, ..1n-' 'Nuns,' Register to Vote" "drivers!' things with which the Lord has,. About, the. same ~!m~" twO. tellectual conversation" have , . ' • • ' , ' ., "Joy riding at 'night places in, endowed them, yet filled with a ,Spanish one-legged $oemaker. been P4shed ~'ut'of:our l,ives," Jlnder· 'ReligiOUS Name "Jeopard£the. physical and moral deep sense of mission,~' ..' ,hicyded ~heir \lVay ,here o~ :~-., ,he said 'in l~menting the, "monMiI,.WAUK.EE (NC)-Catholic weIr-being of th~ occupant~ of Today the Galih~r~ left for.. ial 'one-pedaled bikes. , ~poly" of ~elevision.:,,~e told ,a , nuns Inll1Y" register for ,voting automobiles, espe,oially ,~olJrig
Ave week trans-continental trip Mrs. Madeleine Fuehet, frc>m group of:'Sum~er School, ~rad7: ,under 'their religious names' in'" people, and l«:ads to preventable
~ car. . ' . her 'home' near' Pa~is, ~alk'e(rto uates that it vvas only .through "the City of Milwaukee, 'Harry: G: ...,.traffic accidents' and the occa·
"It may be the' last summer 'the. shri!1e for' the .fjf~h Jime e9ntinued 'reading that '. th~y ., Slater',: deputy city attorney, ,has sion for,' serious delinql,le/lcy
th~f the children will '~I1' want over:. a, distance ex(:~ing,900 .wQ~I~ go on learni,ng. , ruled.. ". " :' .. ': . , ~roblems,'" the resolution stated.
.to be with just the family," miles. 'Determined, as.•lway~, : "If you grad.uates, and, others.'. . Mr: Slater ,said that to requii;e. ,''- Other' resolutions .~dopted' at
Phillis commenb;d realistically. to get hereon foot, ,she ,reJfused ~, like you wm not read, who will? a ll.un to register under her legal the convention, continued !!Up,
'"Dickie 'will be 17 next year; .a~l~id'es.~~eretiher~o~r~ Thepassi~e entertainment of aname""wotildresultin r'egister-'port for bishops'and pa~ors.lD
and young"Phyllis, '16 ~and' way. television set can demand al. ing her u,nder a name she neve,r '~eir undertakmgs;andi.mater1al
',they'll, probably take 'jobs.' So 'The, bicycle ,pilgrimage' of tlie, ' your time"'You don,'t ,hilve.,tO 'uses,: 'and ',by whic' 'she is u~.. and Spiritual works .toincre,ase
while' all' six, of us can be to- ,., shoemakers' is, not the 'first nOr think, ,you 'don't even h~ve to known ·among her associates;" , . , and encourage ~ocatlOns.
,ether '- well, we feel that tiiey does it appear ·to,.be the 'laSt.
Might to 'see their own country. They rode to Rome last ye:ar on
and Dick and I'd, like' to show "their one-pedalect bikes" and,'re..,
"", it to: them." vealed .here they' intend 1:0 ,gO', 'b·'.·" "., I In. family consultation, the to' ~urdes next. year.
trip, was organized: go b)' the
~~~" '"... '. Borthern route, returninH by the , ~, ' Name Valedictor;ian ," . lOuthern. 'During the plannirig lItage, ,geography books came .to i Celebration Queen I Jife: those blue and pink, and' ,SEATTLE (NC)-Judy Paul green squares became not ju-~ son, 18,' president and val~dic IOmething to be memorized for torian of the 1958 se~ior class a test, but fascinating prospects at Holy Names Academy here, of "what we'll see" for Dickie 'was queen of Seattle's '·S~afair." and Phyllis, for ll-Year..old"Fa It is an annual week-long Civi.e . ' . . tricia and eight-year-'old Kath-' celebration, with parades, sport leen. ing events ,and festivals. One of the prize-winning floats in the Business and Pleasure , 'Q , grand parade was named ''Tbe
A combination business-pl'eas Mystical Rose" arid depicted the
1IJ'e trip, it .will mean convention Blessed Virgin. ' , attendance 'for Dick Senior in . both San Francisco and Los An ;eles - with social doings for ~J:Jor HOOd. half· the families of conventioneers.. ,o,llOnS' at rour' '.. Packing a car for a five:"week, " 100Po/~ 'lore, ~"i :, jotitney, can include' only min- ' Every Catholie' hnal requirements ·for six peo-, , W 0 man 'should pIe :.ctrip-dry clothing and the 'belong ,to ;irid': DeCessities.So,. for' the .'fancy. take ., 'an ., active duds required at the other end, patt in ,her parPhyllis shipped on boxes with ish Guild: ' .... crinolines and fluffy dresses for Every Guild is the girls and herself,dress-up affiUated wi ,t h ' clothes for her 'husband and son. the Nat ion a.! , One child at a time would be Council of Cath-',
"done", practical Phyllis: decid-, . olic,Worrten: One
ed, and began weeks :ago, with N C C W purpose
Patricia. Four. weeks later. when is to support the
the others were "done", young Catholic, press.
Patricia had gained' seven Your ,p a st '0 i'
pounds and the clothes had to wants a copy of
. be completely "redone" . . . The Anchor de:. Finally everything was shipped. livered to, each Just before take-off, Dickie h 0 nl,e' weekly.
triumphantly passed his driving Make ,c e r t a i n
'test and came home, exultant .You~ Guild ciin-',
with that coveted new ·permit. ducts a subscrip " ,'I "Now the three of us can take . , ' .; tion Campaign as
THE' PERFECT. ,:SUMMER the wheel;" he, told. his paren~.: ' a Fall project.
.".' ". -, ,,' , Daily MaSs and Rosary." " ",Adopt the sub-,
'c ' ':. "Yes, and no, Dickie",' Dick,." .scripti~n "cam" .OOLER-OFFER"., .', 1r8vely broke the news. "There ' paign ., plan 'ai
' ..,. . will be places where it will be ,'" your'next meet-'
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By Mary Tinley Daly America-on-wheels will be even more so from now on' lin til· after Labor Day. Thpse wheels-=-white walled new tires or old black retreads-will be turning over f as t elr as Americans' joyously take to the' superhighways, confident that the dolorous sta tistics ' "B~t itia-kes more experience " are always ,about somebody 'and judgment than anyone can . else. Sunday' drivers WI'11. m- .acquire in 16 years to drive on erease their speed from a a superhighway, wi~h those ~er:..
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~ HOOD ,"COOLE:R-OFFER" Coupon worth 15¢ toward,'! pint of Hood Sherbet ,on ha.lf-gallon~ of Hood Ice .Creaql ~
Stock up on H:ood half-gallons now! Clip 'coupOns, take them to your store and save 15¢on each p~nt of refreshingii~~ Sherbet
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Deluxe Broadtail· 'ILa:mmoire' Newcomer i'n LUXtliiy Fleirs' \.
By Ellen Kellley
"Couture Furs" are keyed to ]l"all and Winter fashion silhouettes! Many of them reflect silhouettes featured for Fall and Winter fabric fashions, eKemplified by individual fash ions. A newcomer in luxury furs is "Lam moire" a de
Chi Id Mor,rio'ges
:Are on Decline
WILMINGTON, (NC) - The ancient custom of child marri ages in India still exists al though 'such marriages are for bidd~n by Indian law. Bishop Francis. M. Simon of Indore discussed the child mar riage custom with members of the diocesan matrimonial board while visiting here in Delaware. He said the custom still is pop ~ular among members of the low er castes. of Indians. But, the Bishop emphasized, nearly all marriages ( '1tracted in India tend to lead to per .manent famlly unions. Divorces and separations of marriage partners selmodm occur, he add ed. OBSERVE GOLDEN JUBILEE: Sisters of the Sacred A native of the Netherlands and a member of the Society of Hearts and Perpetual Ado~atiou marked the 50th anniver the Divin'e Word, Bish'op Simon sary of their Congregation. in. the Fall River Diocese with is on his third visit to the United Mass ~nd Benedi~tion~01lowe4, by ,..a,. n~ception' in Sacred' State~. . Hearts Academy, Fai~haYen.' 1n the photo, left to right, He said that educated Indians are Rt. Rev. JaJ:lles J. Gerrard; v,.G., ·pastor of·St. Lawrence now prefer to allow their chil";' drento choose' their own mar Church, New Bedford.; Mother Mary·George, 'SS.CC.~ Su riage· partners rather than fol.:. ~ri~r at Sacred Hearts, Ac~demy, and Rev. Eugene-Robi low the custom of, family ar taille, SS.CC., celebrant of the .Golden JtibileeMass. . . . . .' " . ' , ranged marriages which pre-' vailed yeal'S ago, .
luxe broadtail-so e:l{quisthree-tone, striped pattern on itely processed that it rethe horizontal idea in a. dress sembles silken black moire! length boa. It also appears stuff It Btands shoulder-to-shoul- ed with feathers and there's a der with mink. brow-tilting toque in Red Fox Yes, indeed, Mink has a rival and satin as deft accompani this season. Perhaps, this statement! ment doesn't quite cover the Hearkening back to Lanvin ease; rather indeed, should proCastello, a feature of the Fall elaim that "Lammoire" and colleetion is a svelte Black Mink are the two top fur fashB.-oadtail Suit featuring a·short, ions for the new season ahead! gently fitted jacket and a wand . slim I admi'''ed' only··.yesterday, a .skirt trimmed .with Black just,·arrived"Lammoire" full- .Dyed Mink, It looks fabulously length coat.' The peltries were eXI)eil's~ve, :but, strang~ly enough arranged in' 8 new and ·delight- ":':'isn't!· ' lui spi'ral:'fasliion and ·the 'style \. ':Thl~re's intense ·interest in the was a . sI'1m,', t apere d l'me. A ny . new :fashion fabrics for Fall and gal wearing' it will certainly . Wint.~r! . Re~ently have done a look like a'· queen·. . 'bit of research on "Mohair" and Nee'd I' say that despite its !'Moh~ir 'BI~nds" fo~ you read exquisite beauty and fa'shion, its el·S. Only yesterday, a buyer price is still far short' of that asked! me just what the term 0( Mink. «Hope I've induced you "Cashmere" meant. Catholic Civics Clubs
to inquire about this new and Mal~y of you, no doubt, be lieve as she did that "Cashmere" d e ft m'te I Yglamor . ous f ur be auIssu~ New Handbook
ty)r is a type of wool. Not so! "Cash WASHINGTON (NC)-A new NOTRE DAME (NC)-A for- ,Washingt<;m, .;lOd ..received her . ..,.. mere,~' aristocraLof coat fabrics, official handbook: ·for· Catholic mer-lieutenant commander in, doctoratt;..in.Spanish .from ·Bryn Flari·nll' Sleeves 'is dedy,edfrom the soft, under Civics . Clubs of America has the Navy's Waves has made her' . Mawr. She has been named Hip'-Iength capes in your fur';' fleece of th~. ral;e "Cashmere preference promise to be a min- 0· Goat,'~ found only. among the · final vows in another uniformed,'chairman of the moqern.language been issued by the Commission . organization at the motherhouse . department at St. Mary's College o·n American Citizenship of the ority Fall fashion, newest in soft- ·tolJnwst crags of the mountains Catho~ic University of America, of the Congregation of the Holy ~here, while civilian;' she Iy muted pastel Mink.' A new in the Far East. . Cross.· ' s e r v e d . a s . assistant dean. of sponsoring .agency of the clubs. fur "cocoon" short jacket by ·'The. ilristocrat of .a11 "CashThe new 52-page booklt:L, Sister Kath~rine' ElaIne, the. women ·fr~1Jl 193.9.,.1943. Lanvlri Castillo' catches a soft-· mereH" is "Mongolian Cash- . with patriotism as its theme, in former Lt. Commander Eleanor · ly shi.:red·· baclt \ in a straight iliere." "Juilliard" imports it and cludes chapters on the principles O'Kane, served with the Waves .. Sister "Helps Police band of ·mitlk, . widens it' at the \v·caves,. into a heavenly-soft of Christian denl0cracy, how to in Washingti>n.· during World' neckline to form an upstanding .. cashmeJ;e ·fabriC. To me, a Cash .Apprehend' Burglar form. a Civics Club; writing a . War II. She then worked for collar;' .... mere c()at is much more than a the Central Intelligence Agency 'CHiCAGO (NC) -:- A nua . model constitution, how to con Pie'rre' B;llmain places en'ilong-time fashion-value invest duct a meeting; parliamentary before het entran·ce into the con,.. played a' leading rol~ in the phasi$' on flaring' sleev~s on a 'ment.,ltell.circles you in an aura proc~dure, the work of commit · gregation in 1953. . "c'apture of a. burglar who was full-IEmgiti .coat,· as shown. re'7' . ~'f bc;l~ty.; clegance and warmth, tees, the importance of prayer, This year the Roy~l ,Academy 'shot and' wounded by police. eenUy. The coat, a breath-tak- . gives you.a look of absolute lux how to get publicity, club proj Sister Georgellen, a teacher in Madrid, Spain, wilJ publish a ing beauty, was' fashioned· of ury, imd will be fashion"right ects, the place of the parish, the .at St. Ferdinand p a I' 0 chi a I dictionary of 10,000 pl;'overbs black brQadtaif with widely .the year-al'Ound for years and United States and the young cft school, said she was unable to compiled .by th~· Sister Kath sashed· 'waist' and iiarE;d cape years .to come! izen's respon'sibility to the sleep because of the heat and like sleeves 'that extend off Inciderltally, the price is b4t 'erine Elaine in het Spanish re world. Copies are available at was looking out the window of search worl!:. sable-eiiged tinder-sleeves.' . II small :fl·action. of that of even 10 cents each. The 'newly professed Sister is her quarters when she saw the "LiiUe .F\J r.s ;; are 'making fash': .the nwst ,modestly priced fur burglar. a graduate or Trinity. Colleg~, ion headiines ·these days - iri_ coats! Mongolian Cashmere coats ·She· ·watched him remove a OIROURI(E
side the fur market and out! are available in Milium. (insu basement· screen in a home Jamaica Bishop Warns· across An ingenious American milli lated) linings or crepe back Funeral 'Home
the street. She immed ner, "William J." has "dreamed satin linings. Favored colors are iately ·called police. A' detective .571 Second St. Against Sterili~ation up" some absolutely fascinating Maple, Ebony and Navy. . responded to the call, found the KINGSTON (NC) - Bishop Fall River, Mass. shoulder wraps to accompany Fa/)ulous Silk Tweeds, lean burglar crawling out' a window. John J, McEleney, S.J., of King his equally· fascinating hats! and ·relaxed of silhouette, are OS 9-6072 When the man tried to flee' ston has warned Catholics of the They do indeed stand out as in· our fashion midst and are the detective shQt him. He wa~ MICHAEL J. McMAHON
new fur fashions in their own nothing short of delightful!' immorality of certain steriliza then apprehended and taken to Licensed Funeral D'irectOf'
tion procedures in medical right and arc instant attention They'l'c lined in beauty feature a hospital where his condition Registered Embalmer
schools and hospitals in Jama getters! narrow-lirie skirts with tops is described as serious. ica. He declared he has "certain One of his new, most devas~t- soft and easy and are, virtually, knowledge" that the local Uni ing fur fashioi1s is "The Pillow," "every inch a lady!" versity College Hospit,al seeks 'JEFFREY E. a feather-stufTed ·fur creation. It This is the look you'll wear written consent from patients to huddles lightly, luxuriously and right now through early Au submit to sterilization opera chin-deep over your shoulders, tumn and for several seasons tions to prevent conception. in elegant Sable, It is shown, in hence! Colors are wonderful too, FUNERAL HOME Funera' Honae cidelltally, with one of his head they are available in softly Bishop McEleney pointed out 550 Locust St.. covering Sable hats! muted pastel tones, deep, vi that this practice is morally evil. '86 Plymou~b Ave. Fall River. Mass. Broau1:til Suits _ brant tones and always-popular, o He reminded medical students . Fall River Alaskan Goat is a new fur staccato black-and-white!
OS 2-2391 in particular of "the eminent men in the medical profession entry that shows off its White, Tennis Court Styles
Rose E. SullIvan
.OS 3-2272 shaggy, long hair in big blanket Jeffrey' E Sullivan
who corisider such operations wraps for evening ~ear. Here in the city and adjacent physically and psychologically vacation areas, Summer fashions harmfu1." Natural Red Fox comes into (stili vel'y much to the weather DAUGHTERS OF ST. PAUL its own, is worked to achieve a fore)· "have invaded. the tennis ,.. Invite young girls (14-23) to cooi·L;. Trfm··new ·styies are seen labor· in Christ's vast vineyard as an Apostle. 01! the Edifica-· ·in:,short'.ski.ds: (some "skoi-ts" tions: "'ress, Badio, . Movies b.lOoJl';er~and· .skirt combines) and ·Television. Witt1 these shil'tS an.,d jackets, ,' . . . . . . :MONUMENT modern means, these MiSSion . '. '.Ali add touch of fresh femi- . ... : .. ~ ... SERVICES ' ary Sisters bring Christ's Doc~ ninity.to this popular sport; Yes trine to all, regardless of race, i!1deed, Summer's comparatively ·B~URNE • SANDWI~~. MASS. color or creed. For informa new tennis Jashions combine Serving .. tion write to: action-fl'ee ,comfort with flat-. CAPE COO Rev. Mother Superior terinv; new styles! 50 8t. Palll·~ Ave.. Roston ao. MaRS. • n~ Surrounding Communities "Flower Color Stockings" set ofT a Sumnier fashion - won dedully! The ne~ and lovely colors'alrd shadings are definite ly· flattering, too! "Apricot" is a vel'y popular shade and bier,ds beautifully with orange prints. "Rosy Red" is heavenly with a red print. "Marine Green" so 123 BROADWAY softly tinted that it's almost no - c'olor on is another fashion fav .TAUNTON, MASS. / OI·it~. VAndyke 2-2181 : SELF POLISHING -SLIP. RESISTANr : li:IlITOR MOURNED: Fun ' , : WATER REPELLENT : eral services were held in Gilbert C.OI;vei~a Michael·C. Austin' Sumter, S.C., for Miss Kath :'TESTED AND APPROVED BY ,: . INSURANCE . erine L. 'McKiever, 66, wide .. Inc. .. RUBBER MANUFACTURERS ASSOC., INC. ' ly known Cathol~c news-· : APPRAISER '. . ... ;.' . and~. . '.' . :' '; .! paper woman'. ~mre<Jitor of. . 'FUNDAL ,SERVICE
REALTO R: UNDERWRIT.ERS lABORATOR.I.ES,· I.Ne. : " National Ccltnolic" Welfare Conference Feature Service. ,; . '. "54" COUNTY :sT..·· ';•. '.
. . . OS : She joined the N.C.W.C. ..:20 No. Main S~. : 14b6 Massachusetts Ave .. ,!;," ,,'.. i.;'; A;"'hgto~' staff in 1927 and' retired last NEW 'lmfORb, .MASS.
f",Ar~ "r. ~!~~Jt. ' :.. ',iijl\< If'':·:::~'.:··.~-·::;:,~;'i::·~~.~~:~·~::~i.,i l;::.\~~ 1~.;~t;~: ~~~~:~ . ' , -~" ' .• :':': ·~l.~_ 1ear.... NC·,;ph()too:.~, ..· .... '~.~,~';. :i~i:·· .';.",-.'. ~,1·C,.·' ..." : ' .. ~ .:. ~-"",;,----"~---";"-----''~"''''",-'''_':-''''-'-'''-'''''''''''''-'''",-",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,--,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,-';',
Former WAVES Commander Takes' Final Vows as Holy Cross Nun a
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Health
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VATICAN CITY (NC) ....... Vatica~ City's health insur ance program matches the best medical coverage ·of~.
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By Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S~ Kennedy • The father of Eiiz~b~·th Vandon, 'who" tells. of ber slow 'approach to the Catl'iolicChurch in "Late Dawri" (Sheed and Ward, $3.), scoffe~at religioif and 'resolved that his c.'fiild should be brought ,upan unbeliever. Hermothler.had · ?~ce had some kind of ~aith The' stylli is br~zy, ~~ri1e In. God, and vaguely WIshed times slangy. If there are sen .that the child 'might' be sational aspects, ,they are simply . christened, but readily sub-' stated; ·.never ~xploited. 'fhe
fered in the World today, but 'its . philosophy is based on the words . : of the first pope, St. Peter. Known as the -Health .Insur ance 'Fund, the program covers 6,534 persons. They are, the . citizens of Vatican City. and 'their dependents; employees of ~he Holy See and of the Vatican Cit¥ mitted to her husband's views.' author concentrates on; depii;t,;. State; and their families. . Elizabeth therefore was. well ing her idea.s and emotions as' Cardinals, monsignors, ushers, I c h 0 0 1~ d in; ..
she went her way; first dow~':' chamberlains, workmen in St. atheism and'
hi'll, ,and then, painfully" uphill. Peter's basilica and' Vatican mat e ria 1 . Glamor GOlle store clerks all come under the ism, although
. . .'. C S ' W. H. LeWIS, brother of . . program, which has as its motto: there occaSlOn . , l' 11 fl' k d'
LeWIS and specla 1St on seven "Above all things have a con a y IC ere m
teenth century 'France, details stant 'mutual charity among . '. .... h er. a wonder in' interest in
the hfe of Antome first Duke of ~ " . yourselves'" (1 Peter, 4:-8). :;., t d
Gramont, who lived from" 1604 ....' . . " . . The' fund' was established by . C ..... IS ant hata CATHOLIC WAR VETERANS MEET: Thousands; of I His' Holiness Fope Fius XII in f~~ling .to' 1678'" . ~ In A ssauI t· 'on 01 ympus 'b ' 1 i t y, (Harcourt,. Brace, $4). veterans convemid in Washington, D.C.· foithe 'al)jll,j~l ,.-- JUly, . 1953:·It repl!1ced. an ~SIC rea . · W~~ m iss i ng. This .exqu~sitely deta~~edand meeting' of . the' Catholic .·W eter~ms" of'. eai'!iet;. not-s();'incl~sive mediCal S···p· 'd I' . '., "ht : d f' ·]·1···· 'care'plan'setupmI929wheD · f 1;.0 m her arbanely written book 1:5 not so U mted tates. Icture pannmg.amg para e,o . .' . . , ' .' . (ee;:·, Va·"tl·c·a"nCI·tyb·e·came a soverelgD · • c: h.e m ~ 'of' much a biography as.a lltudy of g~tes are~.Ieft to ·rlght: Mrs. Gertrude, Carr, -president/of" state. . things. '. . , .. ".; a ric~ and, fateful 'period and, ,the Ladies' Auxiliary,· C.W.V:, Fither' Bede 'Scully; O.F.M~ , .;.... F~~e Services' . . aut, in fact, she carried he!' especially, of the ,mea'ns by' father's ideas much,beyon,d . whicha·resolute and"carmy'man" . Cap;," National 'chaplain, and Pe.ter . ' ... ,.'J. :JIopkins, . , ,Jr. . ,:Natio'ri~' . Employees contribute two per where' he did. He had certain. ro~' from. provincial obscurity al Commander.' N.C. Photo.. . : ,.... .... -',.. ,. cent of their salary and the Vat atandat.·ds of conduct" of right·.. $0'. one of the first pl~ces . at ican administration pays.into the' anei. wrong. The logical Elizabeth .. court. It charts the tortuous fund. an additional three "per ''War;'y Request",. eould see no warrant· or 'sanc~ion course of amDition paihsilakingly eent. This entities all bene for these,and would not accept' a~hieved. . ficiaries. of the program to the' Jore,igri A i d " them. . . , ',' ".. ..... Gra'm'ont, his·brothers,.andhis services· of: specialists, ,doctol'll .Wben a suave, glib. doet6r#':" chiidren are' interesti~g enough;: . .wA~HJNGTQN (JIlC); 77'" T~e. ~~it.io.ned Congress to .plac~.an and medicines free of charge. · d~ced her, after first ge'tting li~r' buHor one rea:de~ at ieast their, _23r~ .~ll~hoHc V'ia,r Veteran.s' na.-. I elTlpargo, on trade ~itl:dhe. 1;),0 0 ' c"When a· ; member of the plan ir;'Q the habit of taking morpJ:!:ill:" chief value is the focus' theyaf~ , tional convention has called for' . ~iet ..Union ,or its satellite..oa feels· ill· he gOes to the Vatican · ~hich he. supplied, she .l;>e~a,~~. ford'a:" searching' look' at" lm. "amore"intelligent and realis:'" tions,·. c~lled,.upon:the"Federa'l for a.medical examination or has , go~er~m~nt to pUblici~e inev.erY, a ,doctor come to. his home. The t l\iSi mistress, and so rerriain~ci. era"imd'a waY9f 1ife':Whi¢h, tic"foi'eign·-a:id~rogi'ain.·" " .Apprmdmately.2,300 veterans wi!-y'; PClssii?le the suppression by for !hree years. He ~he~: t~I~, frori-r a'distimce;' appear s~fftis~ei. rrlE;dicine· ,prescribed can be ob gatl1~~ed . at a :five-day m·eeting. t!;Ie, S9yiet Union of.Hungarian, tained free:atthe Vatican's drug· h.fr. th.at .he was goiI;rg ,.to»e with"g1iunor. Close;.up, 'they 'are . . :. store. ri:r<!rri~d -to S9ineon.~ e.~s~" 1?u~, raddled and pockmarked:'''''' h~re:.al,so: urged ~hat !,u.rplus . Fre.~doms.. foods.be... ~:;~d in place of ';D0ne:: ,An:hbislJ,op Patrick. A. O'BoyJ~ The health iservices are situ th~ir relationship co~t:inue!i '~~,-:.TheFrench Revolutiori;'with ,tary .support in the, progr~m, oL Wl;Ishington, host to.. the con-, ated· in a ·building put up by e~!1;;e of her need of dr,ugs.,, .... , itS"horrors and itS'brutal attack' ~h!cJ:r ·~h~~.·said,shouldbe lim:-' vention, was awarded a 'plaque~ order of Pope Sf. Pius X. There .... , . Longs for Change. '.: ,.', oir.'the 'Catholic C:hu'i'ch,\vas'j'usi' Ited to nahons 'not opposed to by·. the. men's organization . .in are 20' modern eXilmination and' . "'By this time .she was thor-· a"'hundred years' ahea~",he'n' theU~ited 'States 'and the' moral h,onor of his personal jl')teres't:,n treatment 'rooms. eughly 'disillusioned arid aching,", Gr'amont died. Reading'this' principles for:' wnich we stand." the' .veterans' organization." If it.is necessary for a patient ly unhappy. In self-dis~ust, 'and book,one wonders that it did Ip their resolutions, the vetNational Commander Peter J. to go to -the hospital, he can . get also in despair, she longed· for' not 'come sooner. erans opposed reducing . the . Hopkins of Yonkers, Y., was full free' care at one of Rome's the impossible to be born Intolerable Situation strength of the Army National re-elected head of theorganiza-· hospitals which has been desig again "into some completely Guard d,;,ring fiscal yea! 1959, tion: ' nated by the fund administra new kind of life." . For we see a vicious court, She struggled to rid herseif· of rapacity .and utter lack of Bishop f o r New K o r e a n V i c a r i a t e he wants, however,. thedrug habit. She tried psychoscruple canonized, the ealm as choose his own doctor :,rnd go to
analysis, thinks that· .she got sumption that peasants should onsecrate at a ry n D '
an~ther hospital, the patient re~
Soine benefit, from it,' butfourid gla~lr ~ta~ve in ~I'der that, .the . . o· B e . . . . .
celves only a flat fee stipulated
't d'd' t...... . h',.,',.j" . ' nobility might enJOy glory; con MARYKNOLL '(NC):-Bishop that I I no <n,swel. er ueep, At ,present he IS VICar GeneraL·. by,' the· fund 'contract and' m'ust t't t" d"I' h . "t . '. 'f" . h'f -',,' '''':d' . s I u Ion an CIVI ng ts swept el~~t James V. I:'al,'dy, M,M.,~m ~verillas enng,.,1 m!: 0;:1. e.r~~ 1'.:. . . a e t r'" I <' he d .' be' consecrated Titular B'ishopof o~,,1Ylaryknoll Fathers ..in .~orea'.paY additional expenses out' Of Imd yearnings. " '.," '. "... ~w y, s cre p~ Ice .unl:as ~-; ..,A.y.xjlil:iry Bish<;>p. F:ul~on . J.. his' own pocket:' . '. . . '" ". Her father died ~j.jd;'~'iiilost'his·· I~ general." a situatIon 'mdefen-" Ir'e'nopoii' 'Qri" Sei'!t."!-6 :by .Bishop Sheen of New York ~ill deJiver ",., ,. 'f' " . t .... , d' . "T''h'" 'd' '. , . :.... Sible and mtolerable.··..· ,., , Bryan J. McEntegarf'of Brook': the: serinon ~t the consecr~ti~~' . ',. ." ....enelcll,mes: . as wor s were e' '-'UriS my .,' . cerer(ioii y , which wiII be the"first: ,~r~. ,B9ccard(), w'·. qua'lifies Shepherd." Then' her . mot~er ,. 'The ·.union of 'Church'" .and,. lyn';'llt ·,'the' Maryknoll Fathers' t. be' held in the new chapel. at a~ ,)~~ olc;lestbenefi~ial'y, was · ijied, and. her last words ,~ere, ·.I,;Sta~e produs;ed, as usual, end-i, headquarters here.. MaryknoU headquarters.' . I born In. 1854 and comes under .' Bishop-ele~i - Pa'rdy, 60,' wili iHGod bless you." There'inter, in less and most grave abuses. For: "':8' s ii eh' t h . j- W"ld ,.;n the fund's 'program because 'she ~er anguish of spiiit,ElizabetH ",. example,it was pr()posed that,: serve' 'as Vicar Apostolic of the ?Pfi l~ls~P er, ·dAf[·. ·?I . ili'the m'oth'er cif CaI:io Boccardo, ~ometimes called desperately on for the sake of benefices, Gra-; nhvly" 'created' Vicariate' of o I?rmg e , ass., an, UXI -. secret· h' '.' f th p' t'f'" God. .' . ''';,.. .. mont's. brother Philibert should: ChongjiJ," south of Seoul, :Ko~ea: iary'B'ishop Philip. J; Furlong~f ar! cas .Ier 0 e. on I ).;,. :,," . ,.. ,. . . ' .:. .<.... . cal InstItute of Sacred Music I: She took. uP'paintiHg,work~4 ,bf,~ome, a p~i~st. He could have. New York Will be co-consecra . . . .... . . t . ,.... .' . AJ:rother . exceptIonal beneli. "'.' .. Priest ·,Gets· Army llard at it, "established 'something been, but demurred. ., '. '. s .?f ... ',' , . . , ..; ciary"of the fund' is Mrs. Ger ~f name, and sold 'h1any ot her . How well qualified for Church '.' r.~e ~ishop~e~ect ~as fi')!it-,astrude 'Venturelli, almost -100 Chaplain' Citation' pictures. Art she regarded as office he was,may' be judged by years old, who is the mother 'of 'WASHiNGTON'· (NC)~Father Signed .to missIOnary. wor.k II) her god, but it suggested the fact that in later life, upon (r.t Col.)· Edward' J. Saunders~ Korea m 1932. Imprisoned by an usher at the properties ad thoughts of the design in real hearing. the Lord's Prayer' for the Japanese after the outbreak ministration office of the 'Holy . today received it special1:' pre.. ity' and of imperishable beauty. the first time, .he found it strik-, pared citation miming him Ariny' of World War II aQd repatriated See For a holiday, a~d .for sketch ing indeed. and asked who had in Ilrisoner of war. exchange, F~nd .. administrators report Chaplain of Year for 1958. jng, she visited Ireland. Staying composed It. . .. h~became a U. ~. Army chai> that· neither of these elderly . The citation, given by the Re in a Connemara village ,she ob We read of bishops and prIests lam and .served m Europe. for women has proved a drain'Oft serve Officers'· Associa tion' of the serv'ed that the simple 'people absorbed in court matters, :United States, was presented at the remainder of the war. In the fund resources' because of about' her, for all the hardship money matters, military matters, their go~d. health. t Fort Meyer, Va.' . 1950 he was reassig;ned to Korea. of their, lives, had something she diplomacy, etc., while. the in . Bishop-elect Pardy. was bor.n 'Father Saunders, who was or lacked, so~e interior .security struction of .the people~n~ the in:aropklyn .on March9;j~·9~. dained:' in 1935,washonored 'for and serenity. advocacy or "justic," ,..f.[)r them his' services· both 'peace "and ·lie· studied at St. Fran'cis Cor.:. R~cieh;ed irit~ ehJr~h ". \" ': went. und~ne. .' lege~"'Fordham . University'; 'arid war> A priest of· the Archdiocese .' , .., ... '. -'.. . ;1 the Cath'olic University'" Amer':' OIL~' iNC• of Chicago;·he became a Regular She went to a village dance. /Cites ;In~idents "',.,iJa:' He joined the' M~rykAoll Army, chaplain' in'· Januar-y', 'i'he priest looked··inon 'itand:.·',' As for·those/who' belileve" that '. A·tlantic 1941; served'·withthe~rd.Infan Fathers in ] 925 and .was' Qr~ was introduced to her. Priests aristocn;~y arl(r'king~hiii are ;. ! diiinedin' 1930. . .: ' . ",,. :. try,Regiment in. Newfoundland to' her were the . ultimate in' ig":-· necessariiy :superiorto· democ . The ~ew V,icariate of Ch~;;gju in. World; War II; was .24th -In norance and' superstition;' bu{ , racy, Mr;; Le~is 'has many in .'.: .lieQtin.9 Oils formerly a 'part of the. Di fantry ..Division chaplain: and as". this one,. the first she had ever structive incidents to' ci'te. Once, ocese of Seoul. The province'of sistant 10tP. Corps chaplain in met; impressed her. T6 her sur- .' for example, . Gramont~as sent INDUSTR.IAL ~OR
Chungchong, ofwhic}I the chy Korea, and' holds the Bronze prise, she found herself calling into Holland to parley with the of. Chongju is the capital, is Star. decoration and the Com.,. DOMESTIC; SERVICE
at the rectory and pouring out Prince of Orange. This rliler was , about the size' of Massaehusetts the story of her life .and disinsane, but madness ..'iil great 'mendation Med·al.· .Cl:ill 2-2725-9-6825'
and contains some 1,500000 .tress. . ones was ignored. . r He w~~ .se~r by the A~my to people.' , . 'make studies at:-. the Menninger He got her to promise to pray Also, there is this"labout the daily (to our Lady), and to call King of Hvngary ort" the eve of :F0l.ln~ati()~".,i,n:' Topeka; .. and , .' F~EE""';' Audiometric .h,arine. exami~ciiicn:i"'::de;"~~5tratiCHi wrote '~The. Chaplain' as Coun:" on a priest. in London when she his election as Holy Roman Em which is used by chap ""selor," return~.ilofrie. Sh~did both, ·peror.-His Majesty wa!:,piaying began a 'course of instr'uctions,bowls"on\ the la~n as a'heavy . 'l'aigz' ~~roughout the Army. OTARION LISTENER· ,. ........
was' amazrd " by Christianity; rain· streamed d6wiI:' Some of Please sendf~ee·booklet'·~· ·which'was" not at all wha.t the' the rain got il)to his. mouth, ·caricature ..of i( .communicl!te~ .. ,whi~h usually hung open. He W~rl.~'s Fi~,t, ~,!d.S.ti!t Fi~t, .~~~~ :.,~:,.;..:...'.:.. :_~..~: .. ~..~~~_ ...:..~~ ....:';', to her in "youth 'had 'Ied' her to .. complained to a friend who,. Truck Body . Builders EYEGL).S$' think it. having thoroughly considered , , Street :..:.._._...::..:__.:.:........:....._:.....:.:_..-...;_
;l~lumi~~m .~~ .$~eel ' .. '. ... She wa's '~ecehfed"""irito' the ,:the' 'matter, advised hiilrto :shut .,' , HEARING AID
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Rome's Madonna of' Grace Shrine , Still Popular After 450 Years
THE ANCHOR- , Thurs., Aug. 21, 1958
11
Latin America
Sees Progress
ROME-A person approaching cO:llstruction without going into St. Peter's Square from the debt." . north passes one of the most Following Albenzio's death, beautiful of Rome's many street the other hermits living at the WASHlNGTON (NC)-Despite shrines honoring the Blessed hostel found themselves in seri a rapid increase in population, Virgin-the Madonna of Graces.. ous financial difficulties. Work there are indications that prog Barely 10 paces away from men who had been repairing the ress is being made in Latin this 450-year-old shrine is the chureh were clamoring for their America toward' ,solving the Piazza del.Risorgimento (Square pay, and the hermits' usual bene problem of the scarcity of of the Resurgence), which com.. factors were unable to help. priests. memorates one of Italy's most It is recorded that on June 10, Statistics compiled here by 1610, the hermits turned to their turbulent periods, the wreSting Father William J. Gibbons of of the Papal States from Vatican Madonna for help. A short time Loyola College, Baltimore, Md.. control in' order to create a later a sack. of coins was found' and Noticias Catolicas, the Span ulli.ted Italy. on the altar of the Madonna. It ish language edition of N.C.W.C. ' Set at an angle in the 'corner contained sufficient funds to pay .News Service, indicate that al of a building, the Madonna of for the repairs and to meet cur though each priest in Latin Graces faces the Square of Re rent expenses. America still is entrusted with
. the spiritual'~care Qf about 5,000
surl~ence as a symbol of all Since that time devotion to the Italy returned to peace under Madonna of~Graces has grown. people, ~he situation is gradually the one Mother. On June 9, 1644, the Vatican improving in some parts of the cOntinent. At any hour. of day or night Basilica Chapter' solemnly BON VOYAGE GATHERING: The LaSalette Semi In Central·America and Mex vi~W litjhts c~n be seen flickel'-' cwwned the image at the order nary of Attleboro was the scen~ as Very Rev. J. A. Dutil, ICO the proportion of faithful for ing before the Madonna and of of .Pope Urban VIII. '. . ferings of flowers are fOlHid every priest dropped from a high ,.No .other significant event took . M.S., Superior General bid farewell to ,Most Rev. L. P. th~:re 'in ev~ry' s~ason.. Everyone place ·.until 1887, when the third , Whelan, D.D.: Auxiiiary Bishop Q( ~ontr,eal,and Very R:ev. , of 9,026 in 1950' to "5.,077 five who p~sses" whether on foot, oJi ce!1jte.n./lry ~f. the. image's trans Philip Le Blanc; M.S.; Pr9vincial Superior, as. he tf> years '''Iter. During' the same time' in the bi<:y~le", "lotorcycle, or in a,':l. fer 1'rom Jerusalem to Rome was leave and, aSl'lume his new dutiesin Rome. . . . . Caribbean islands the number of· auto, .turns briefl;r for a prayer~. cel'et>rated. At that timeCardi-' . faithful' ca~ed for by one priest f~~ s~~I*i a/?d: m~kes ,.he sign ~f: naIl Uaffaele Merry del Val, arch,. decreased' from 9,46'4 to an a'ver-' the', cross. , ,;. 'priest ,of· the·, Vatican Basilica, age of 6,139. It is a common sight to find . sol~nly croWned the image ,lor .; . .,~ " Better'Situatlon men, w~e'ri 'arid children kneel the second time.' " . iog on the sidewalk before the But, the story·Of the shrin,e . Figures also indicate . that points iii ,other. contemporary ST.·BONAVENTURE, (NC) shrine. . does not end there.' Shortly be coj,mtries . with higher educa:' Roots in History . fore World War II,' the" little A call. to include ps~chological thinkers." tiona I and living standards ~ Devotion to,the Madonna' of' church 'which .sheltered· the perSonality.~ Te,stS science ,in • the courses given fleet a better 'religious situation. Graces may 'De ·.found, in. the·' image was d'emolished' to make.. ,Franciscans training for the In another ··paper,· on "Per In Chiie, lor example, where 80 strikjng' beauty. of' its mosaic:i 'room for ,a, wide, new s,treet,.the per cent of the population caD' . sonality -Testing and Measure 'priestho~ was included among w.ork; ,but it, has deeper roots . in" Via di Porta Angelica. ,,' read and write, each priest ta'kes' : m~nt,"·Fatlier. Carhill Tageson history. . ." , .... ' "The'image Of'the Mad6D11aof' reSolutions adopted here· by' the the' spiritual' heedsel ' O:,F.l\;I.;~' ?efet!de? . pe~S()nallt; care The niche'in, which' the mosaic Gr'aces 'waS transferred, to anew' Franciscan Educatioo1alCtmfei<..c te~ting by use;of q·uestionnaireS. about" 3,oobpeopl~.· But in Gua'.1 is;set marltsthe same 'spot' whel'e , parIsh" church' in 'Rome which eiice. temala,' wl;tere 70 per <!ent of the ,Fattler ,1;'ageS~~ , said Uiere. j~ the,Church of the Madonna' of: t.oo!c· the same name.' That was' 'Aci'~d Pllon 'duri~g . the' 39th, little. 'rea~n to fe<,lr' that' such. p¢o'ple: are' iHiterate; the' propo";;' Graces ,once stood. That church.' iri 1~941. tion rises ter 11,539 faithful for t~st,s "would. ever invade' the was built. to ,house an image' 'A . copy of the image' was' annual.meeting,. the resolution each pastor.: , .'. .. ~Or:bid,qen~r~as" of the soul of' stated' that since' psychology b~ought from Jerusalem in 1587' . plal~ed""iri 'a" niche built on: the "'Atihe "same time the relatiW man. . .. ':.. ' ;-. . ' ." by a hermit named Albenzio de' spot· where the former' church "has provided v~luable'insights' deg~ee of prosperity enjoyed by Rossi. . . had 'litood' and the faithful· of , "They; can ,,~~ll liS,", ,he .con intO'the human personallty," individuals seems to' have an in Encouragedby.Pope SixtuS,Vi' Rortle 'continue to pray at"itS t-;nded" "no ~ore nor less than. fluence on the' every .effort 'sho~tld be made to bel' of i-di:' the' hermit built the church and' fe'et:'" .' . add 'this' science to ch~ricai' co.uId , I;>,e ,determined by any, gions vocatiori~ obtained in every 'erected a .small. hostel adjoining· "'Like those' of -former t.hnes,'· t.rili~ing "according to' the Fran':' shI'e~d, ul)bias~d obseI~ver over country... In .Haiti, where the it to house other hermits who' tOd.i'Y's pilgrims pause briefly 'in cisciul. spirit of 'learning: open-) a,l~rg period' of time." He added' average yearly income is $74 per came to Rome on pllgl·image. front of the Madonna' before ness, :Oexihility anel modernity." that "their ad.v~ntage lies in the individual, each priest has 'te A chronicler of the time wrote: continuing their- journey or .re shortcut they' provide us and insure the spiritual care of 6,024 The conference here had as "Since he had no money, Alben':' tiJrning to 'their day's work with in the greater accuracy which people. But -in Argentina, where zio de Rossi had to rely on the renewed confidence in the 'pro- . ·its theme: "The Mind of Modern they give in determining the ser the aVerage income is $496, eacb .. MilO." The ·thl'ee-day 'session help of heaven to .complete the tection of their Mother. iousness or. strength of d'itfer pastor-is ,responsible for the care was held at St. Bonaventure. :ent' tendencies that we observe." ol.3,565 faithful: University. In' a 'paper' entitled "A Criti . 'que of Modern Philosophy," ~Greeting Fath,er Ronald La,wler,.· O.F.M:, . Whether you're buyi~g,.lookin9-f~rthe future or would , MILAN, Italy (NC.) - One of, drawing principally from Mil.:. ... 'Conv:', ofSL ,Joseph's Monaster.y, -1 a~'s '. Brera~rt Academy< ~n~' :a~~sr Ka?, Il rg ?d Cathol~~ phil li~e t~ s~e~ our counsel f!:wa pr~spective gift, we'll try our" rtil1y's'most outstanding' culhfi-':" , ",j of the' first' alms 'of these semmosophe,rs not, to Ignore theIr e~n,bes.tto ,make your Xis it. a pleasant one. No obngation al centers is ,the Jesuit':'operated ar~is'to ri:!scue the ccintempor~' temporarills.·, ' . . We've been" dping 'it for,·yeq,rs .. Complete, assortments, San Fedele Center here where ar)' ,artistic world from danger':""~'One,ofthe most u'nfortu~ate , :alw.ay~, ,awa~t you~, selection. , . " " . great.i'nfiuence is being ex~rted' oui; . ,c'~:lrrithunistic influences:,' ~f coni~inporary. ,philos,,: oil the artistic; literary, film 'and' 'The 'ilctivities' of ,the art ,sec'~' fault~· , Come' in' and Browse '., oph.ers ".is their e"clusiveness; s(lciat' trends of tile riation. . . ; :1 tion re,<,Ich' their climax with tj}'e e.a,l;h,l!diool considering jts op,.. :: You're Welcome, A~ytinie! "The San'.Fed~l~ C~~ter- is i~ awlirding . of tl'!e annual :San p,Qnents. not merely wrong, bu't r~~lity. a i~arish, ,project ~here. lf~deleP:-ize~ .'Out ~f' several out~ip~ real ,ph'UosOphy,"he about.30 Je!1ui~ priests 'attached, tl101iSand young artists who'sub':'. said. / . to, the, Ba~ilica. pf Sa.nta Maria 206' South Main St.• ' Fall \ River' OSbo;ne 3-2661 mit 'their 'w'ork' to an opeit'sh'ow, I:. . . , Modernissu~s deUa Scala carry. out . a speciaJ,-. a special jury chooses 'ab()ut 106 He .claimed that, "philosoph," iji:ed c u'l t .II l' al de,velopmen~ finalisti;~ 'From' these' the' .four ical growth ha's' always fed ,on Program. ,His housed in ,a four- :: ,. ",,'inrier's"are chosen~ .. ' . a ..diet of contemporary prob story building bes~de the basili..., lems," ,and added that St. Au-' Moving Pictures ca. There the four sections gustine and,St. Thomas Aquinas literature, art, moving pictures The moving picture section is were "vitally concerned with the and 'social studies' - provide 'ac sfriJilar to many moving picture' . issues of their Own, time - and tivities nightly. forul;ns conducted throughout . the pressingness' of .contempor Organ 'for the literary section I~aly, e~cept that San F.edele ary issues stimulated them to is. a magazine entitled "Letture" w'orks in closer contact with the their' greatest wortli:" . (Readings), which' has a nation producers, directors Bnd actors. ~'F9r. t1:te Catho)ic philosopher ,al citculation and enjoys con.., Me'mbetship of the' filni center. ·t()~ve11:ie.t. W4Y ::' to' igno~e . contemporary philos siderable prEistige for i,ts critic'::'. i{ 'd~a~n' aliriost 'eritirely f~om oppel'S is"a violati.on' ,of a sacred 'isms. It re.v.iews 'not 'only books; uriiversity" students. Films', Of trust,", he aSSerted. "He has the national and foreign, Pllt alsc>, p;u'ticJlar . significance a;e,pie dvty. to enter, the ,philosophical films and theater ·productions. , sent~<;l to ni.e /:nembers,·.'",'sUlii.'IY battles of his time, both for. the A unique ~eature ,of. the liter,,:: bJ; .o~e 'of tile princlpalactors. . , purpose, of defending the- truth After'the showing, they are 'dis 'ary section is its consulting of~ he .,cherishes, and for the sake cllssed. ' , ;flce for libraries and, bookshopsl of developing and deepenirig his 'Several specialists are kept busy ., 'X 'commission for children's thoughts with :the valuable 'in" this department alone, pro~ film!1~onducts yearly filin s.J~~ A SERVICE FOR EVERY NEED viding information on both re vey. It 'chooses. a n'Umber of fifms ligious and secular publications. from the Venice, Film Festival . . ' . SAVINGS ACCOUNTS competitors, and. shows them. • REGULAR CHECKING ACCOUNTS Encourages Artists Chosen "Best Buy" In, the ·schools..throughout Italy. • SPECIAL CHECKING' ACCOUNTS The principal activity of the • BUSINESS LOANS A. referendum of ·the films is . -art section is in encouraging and • PERSONAL LOANS taken amo·nc'. the' pupils anQ,' Ilstablishing y.oung and unknown ". these.findings are studied bt· the ' . Picked' ,No. 1 "[mport ,Buy • AUTOMOBILE LOANS • .APPLIANCE. LOANS artists." Its completely equipped members' of--the .film eenter iii' ': . Bcelled ,by-Reputable Servic£ • HOME REPAUlLOANS art gallery., oecupies the first Milan. • COMPLETE TRUST 0001' of th,e ,San Fedele Center, ,DEPARTMENT SERVICES where a continual "show ,of ' . SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES I 6'1" ,Mid'dle Street, Fairhavel" ,painting., 'sculpture and ceraih:-, .', ',". :., \'" WYman ;'9:'6479. . : I ics is in progress from 'Novem- ! ,. ''The F'ornily' That ." :, I)·RIVE-i..··WINDOW·SERVICE' , bel' to June. 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Pruni~g PersQ:n'al·,·Activities First Step"'to' ~i'd1plic'ity . By Donald McDonald
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Aug~ 21 ~ 19~8i": Sacrifice" for O!k~rs>' .'
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Love cYou By Most-Rev. Fult,on J. Sheen, D.O.
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In the Old Testament God ,ordered the Jews to offer five kinds of sacrifices' in reparation for their sins. The lambs and goats' 'and heifers which' were sacrificed were' s'nbstitut'es 'fo~' sinners. Dying in their stead, the animals acknowledged that the sinners deserved to die.
Davenport' Catl.!olic Messenger
If I had to name the one quality most conspicious by its absence in American life today, I think it would be sim. plicity. Simplicity is not, to be confused with,simple-mind edness, simplism 'or over-simplification. The enemies of simplicity are not intelli' thinking. of a Madison or a Jay' gence, subtlety,·or the habit or a Jefferson. Today.the art of distinguishing. They are, of politics has yielded in great rather, . organizationalism, measure to the art of public re
The sacrifices were the symbols and prefigures of Christ Who was to substitute Himself for us and die for our sins on the Cross. I<God was in Christ, reconciling the world _ to himself, establishing' in our hearts His · message reconciliation, instead of holding men to account for their sins." (2 Cor 5-19)
of
material and technological af- lations in which· candor and ftuence and' a kind 01' physical courage and wisdom - the mor- ~ . activism which al correlatives' of the 'political is Sometimes art \.,- are considered "useful" Nothing good comes to us buttbrough thought 0 f as only if they contribute some . sacrifice or another's suffering. Our "busy-ness." thing to the engineering of pub mothers suffered and went' to ' the very Simplicity is lic consent. \ rim of death to dve us birth. No ,pieee ;h,:: In education, Father Paul Dot easy to de- of coal. warms us without the miner' golD!:" . m,;;nop CARROLL fine but it is Reinert, 'S:J.; president of St: .down" into' theb~wels of. the earth, and . lJt easy to recog- Louis ,university, said only the \",ith~,~,t the, co~l~pe~iding}~seif :~n~ being .~i~ DAze. 'the p e r " o t h e r . d a y that our' American·lnstall· lJPent In the hearth to be our fire. tM son of simpli- 'schools. have exchanged "bea'U-' city is:oile,who 'tiful simplicity for what often . The merits' of 'Christ 'do apply to .". thinks' c l e a r l Y " ' , c e m s chaotic complexitlr.", ' unless :we die to our lower selves' and offer .S;;' bas an' accu .. J'he essential nature of eduPITTSBURGH (NC) - The · sacrifilJe ,for others as He did. for' us. Have' you, 'for' :example," rate, e x act. ':'c~t.ion, he said; is ~'the stimula'Most _Rev.· Co~eman F. Carroll thought 'of 'doing any' other";penance for your. sins th~n saying knowledge . of . iiQn of a 'young mind by ,il wiser will be installed as the first the few' Hail Marys the priest. gave' you in confession? iIave'·yoil the hierarchy of values in: both .~n~ to pursue and explore and Bishop .of Mia.mi Oct. 7, the · ever offered' yourself as a substitute for 'those' who suffer 'in the temporal and spiritual ()£embrace truth." And he reFeast of the Most Holy Rosary. CommunistpriSOl1s? 'How can we claim that the' Chinese Catholics «leI', and can invariably peneminded his listeners of Pr,esi. are our brethren unless 'we' freely make a' sacrifice to shar'e the'ir .. wate, undistracteg, by irrelev:.. Archbishop Francis P. Keough .. ancies, to·theheart of a matter, dent Garfield's remark that all of Baltimore will officiate at the. sorrow,?· size it' up' and form a judgment he needed for a good education Miami ceremony. Archbishop in terms"both of the matter .it- ,was to be sitting on one end of Keough. is M;etropolitan of the IIelf and its relation to human "a Jog 'With the educator Mark Provin~~ 1;)(. ~altiJnore, of whicll Every week deny yourself a newspaper, a ·package ·of· cigar- .. destiny i'n both the city Of man .. Hopkinssitting· on the other' the Di.q~eseof Miami becomes, a , "rites; a . cocktail, or even cut' into ,the "~cred cow" or your. capital' and the City Of God. ,.en~. '" su'ffragan see. . ., . and send It to the Holy Father who is the Vicar of Christ for' Simplicit~. is the one q'ualiW . Father' Reinert's listeners, by'The .n~w. Diocese of, Miami,'," all 's~fferiDg Catholics under .Communist nile.
inevitably present iii. great 'art " the Way'; were members of the 'cl'eated ,by, Pope Pius XII, em and great sanctity. Indeed, it· is American Public Relations AssO- . braces 16 'counties in the south- .... ' .; '.
Gne of'the distinguishing marks . eiation," .r ." , ' ern part of. Florida· which 'were :' , ~ '.' GOD LOVE-YOU to RJ.C, for $116 "The attached check (Salary' .
ctf the'''great artistS and great . C.iI:'Get, Off Treadmill "formerlY part· of the Diocese of' :of, two weeks) is in thanksgiving for a tremendous -favor receiv~d
_ints,"" . Lest'I myself be accusel'of' ':St: Augustine. Bishop' Carroll" ,; from Our,'Blessed ·Lady"· .. '. to 'Anon for $5'''Because''they need
Art alld Mas.e '::ov~r.-simplification 01: simp1i~m '" h~s been A.ultiliary Bishop. of it" ...-,to Mrs. F.W. for $20 "This' is the amount I'saved by taKing Contrast '. the simple, direct 'in my 'plea for a recOvery of'" Plttsbllr~h,sl!1~e 1953., . . a cheaper r~m il) the. hospital." . . . to Mrs: M.C.B. 'for $5 ''r was lltat~ment!) of the .Greek scul~ '$lmplicity, let me Say thatl am" . WheJlI:Ushop " Gol~man, Cllr- • go.ingtoget a new hat;" '. : . to J.K;, for $1' "I'm sending one dollar tors, or of, the Me<iieval and n~t as~~'ng'for ar,eturn toprim~' .roll ta~espossession of the S~ .. ,th,i-t l,didn'tthink I could afford ,until I read the·little"magazine: Renaissance painters ,with' the it~vism;or a universal Bight to Of: Miami, .hvo. brothers 'wi!) be", MISSION.~ . tortured, ""irivolved" writhings the lana;'or a renUnciation servin~ .. ~.· ,qrdinaries .,in U. S. '. aDd cutenesses of some of ou. I' one.'s responsibility to meet indioceses. When Bishop Howard. , AmericlillS sPe~d many hours viewing television. The hours moderns; the difference is be-; ,escapably complex 'problem.s, or ~. Carr~l\ was co~sec!"ated Bish- " . could ,often be '$pent far more profitably.. As ·you ..w atch television tween great and abased . art. ' ,.a. scuttling' of those .c.ivilizin. op of "AltQona-Johnstown on , . " ..' ' a statue of OUR,LADY OF TELEVISION atop your set would 're;' . Or, ,wHh due regard and ac-, ,perle.fits which have come to ,uS Jan. 2Jast, it marked the eighth knowledgement of the need for . along with less desirable items. 'tiine'in the'liistory of thiscoun- ':'mind you to lift you~ heart and mind in a,quick·little prayer every sO often. Send yotp" sacrifice-offering of $3 along· with a request .. · .. e.xperim.e.nt" compare the .chao-As, a b,egi.Jl.ning,. tho.ugh, ....w.e.'· - tr1y thta td bl 00td - b rot h ers had been ;!' . for the statue and we will mail the statue to' you.' 'tie, deterIitinedly anarchic mumight reevaliJati' :our"pers9'ilal': :e eva ~ to. he episcopacy. sk: of .in:Ost c'ontemporary clascommitments· to :'vai'ious clubs' .,., , .ical composers with thc',econand organizations; we Might· . r' Cut out this column, pin y~ur sacrifice to it.and mail it to the omy', c1~dty im!i ordered majesty. ask, in the case of our schoolNEW, YORK. (NC)-His Enii-'" 'Most .Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, National,Dh'ector of Th'e Society for ef works,· by 'Brahms, Bartok,'" going 'childl'en, which non·;:':-llence ..Francis .Cardinal Spell.. " the Propagatjon 'of the Faith, 366 Fif~h Avenue. New York 1; N. Y.,' Mozart, .Beethoven. leaming school activities are: man, Archbishop of New York, Or'your DIOCESAN DIRECTOR REV. RAYMOND T.'CONSIDINE, The :~ai~ts are people' of utreally importan!. in their lives"; "has celebrated a Solemn Pontif-' 368 North Main Street. Fall River, Mass.
JIlOSt simplicity. They have an and'of those organizations, clubs ical Mass of Thanksgiving in St. ~~"~~"~~+4~'"+4~"~~"~"+4~.'
.unconlplicated way' of riveting/ and societies to which bePatrick's Cathedral. commemo- , .lI
their good and sometimes scorn- . long, we might .re-examine their rating' the 100th anniversary of
ing and denouncing, with' function and honestly try to" the laying of the' cornerstone of
"shocking" ferocity, that which . answer the question of whether the cathedral. .
is evil, whether that evil is to any' of these' groups have be
be found in high or low places. come so interested in the ap-
Georges Bernanos, the late paratus and technique of ';pro
French, novelist and pamphletducing" their various projects
eer, tried - with' more success that they have little energy, in
than m9st artists - to charact- genuity and talent for matters
erize the saint in his novels, and of substance. , _, Ilis fictional saints were simple All I am suggesting, as u first' people who exerted a mysterious step to the recovery.of simplic attraction even on' .those 'who ity, is a tidying :UP and a prunCHARLES F. VARGAS
yleast understood them: ing o! one's dispensable activi 254 ROCKDALE AVENUE Well, as I say, I think slmplicities so that w.e may begin to .
. Special ,Arrangements foto NEW BEDfORD, MASS. ty ·is a rare qliality in America liberate our time and energy OUTING, TESTIMONIALS· AND CLAMBAKES, today; both the simplicity"::oi that those who feel they are on one's interior life and :that sim:.. a·-trceadmill and. don't like it can ". For Full 'l~fQ~mati'on Co~~~ct ,': .', :;", plicitY of external- conditions, ~eLoff;""" .... ...'
. and institutions which so strong-':; ' .. ': ~ ,.. ,.:,. .
ROLAND' GAM.ACHE'L.'·WYman 9 c 6984
ly influence interior ,iife/ ' '~:: Asserts"Silence Is
' ~ · .. " . . . .". · Obscnre 'Reality .. 'c, . . . , ' . .... ' . I~. 0: eco ec Ion There IS hardly an area of.:.. . ." ';:"", " , " .,' ''''
humal,1 activity that has escaped .TC?RONTO .(N~)--:--Th~; hou~e'"
the ?~ight of ~nnecessary com- WI fe s ~erenm~l ,?lal~t,_ ,If only .
plexlty, excessIve. concern with I had tIme to· thmk, ml~ht- be.
appartus rather than (~ontent, solved by morE! 'silence' in the
and undue attention to the inhome. .
consequential at the expense of , pl'. I;awren~e' ~ynch 0;£ St. . the fu'ndamental. .Michael s College, professor lof Politics, education, -eve'n; ~e-. phi~osophy, told d¢legates to the ligion, have become layered with na.t 10 o,a I lay. retre?t workshop, questionable accretions" that th<~t silence l!\ not Just a lack of
more often S2em to obscure n?ISe, ~ut also the a~sence ?f'
I' th th ' 1 1't' dlstractlOl)S, and thus IS an aId
a e~. anlc:vea real y. . to' thinking: While the lIturgy the official H' . d '1 ' · ~f,be ., ' has not ,e ulge to more Sl ence as d"a., rt.:============~ wors?lp. Church, contribution recollect·o' lost ItS SII le d' t' d'" . . I n, an · ,11)., Irec, 1I)1m::- l~' id'neans of "rep.ossessing . onself." . ~te natu! e, p.ersonal .d.ev~b.o.':''':R~dio an~:'t~lev~sion, he said, are
mstea,~ of mO'~I~~ n~tur~UY~f~om.:~j;!1'e,,~hi.d,/'.unhe:Ge$sary'physical . .' . . .
C?rpOl ate WOIS .up mto.:,lpedlta-' . '··'a iii'tlactioiu;'"ii1 ':illti'"home. t~ve and cont::m!>latiy'~(prayer 'Dr. LYI~ch,r~ahed that spir hie, ~eems l11')re o£t~n to. reHUli l . wl'Hers :.regard silence as ' JOSEPH M: F. DONAGHY
~ess.,mto ~,~na th~m~~lcal !n_~ua-. "someH~i,!~~ positiy.e. ~a.~her than owner,/mgr.
tlon In wh I efflCacyis ,.meas-," ,.negahve.' .'.' :' 142 C~mpbell St.
.' ;'... . . 1',<:: ~'~. '. ~ ~": ~_~.-" '~ ~ ured~ :q~an;titaf,ively ,and sheer ';In our efforts to allovv' 'the '. New Bedford. Mass.
multlphc:o:tI~l~ .. '9.{,;, p.raYl~i!S;:·/ts.; '~1i):tellec,t ,: :}5t:( en~ighteii~d\ by ',' wv,.rio-,{'fj:'6792· ".
,.~¢.:~'e~m.o·"';J"Qahy·',P~()d.u,.fs: thou~ht to l'.E·,"'e., t~e' outeon:re;2'::'~'~Ul'e' Holy~:,GhOst" 'li"·· said "we' " .
'~.,~.~ ~·~,I., :'.~ ,.!,,',' ;· .. n... ;,!,:;~"·~,,.: ~'i1..:. '~:?l':: \.. '~"'" . :.: P:ib:: -. ~ ~'taa3ns ~ . ~ - ai'c-... engaging i..{ a 'comm~rdca'-' ;.HEADQUAmis·~·fOa" ..... ;\', ",:. ;..: .':.< .. RIVER~,OS.a-5286,·,:,., '<:''',''J'';:',,\, ,'. ," 1ft ~litics ,~~" h~s be~9::;~::~ll~l~~'J\"i~~!N:,~:~!c~,~g~s,!,. ... J;>ey~nd w:ords, .'. (·"clOLONJAL·./,ANO :'.,~d,,; ,< ..~·i~rt.~ ;;. :'.,~~,; 'i .. r: ,:. '..... ..:~. .~.~.. ~ \ ":',:~ \'~ ~- '~~;:i~.. F·< : ,:.,~'7~l,,::";";:"~ :': .:.. ~~;.:::; I'; ~ ·.l: ,~ , ~. . ,: ''1 ~I~. I~"" tim<r ..sl.nec . .,,"e. hao . tl1e·· a.-communIcatIon of love. where'· ,,:~.titADITlONAL'i,fURNtTURf':
..: :i{~ .... ~:i;;·:'=' ... t .,(:.,;:'l)~:~.rt:.' ... ~~ .. ,"J~;··!"~,:",,~,,~'d :;,: ,~_·J1""!_.r.:{;";'~'f~::;4··~~~~·":. .;::le"; .~., lotIic, -~..gf,\t!;'~~"""~':41!-",~~~~,,,8!;.8f'i..;.,...s,ij~~~~~;i~1},~~ltm~.ui:M~'':;'· ,::. ;l '" :,... L. :..... ,;.~:.'.:".:'. ,,'.,' '•.' - .•.:..•
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U.rgesHusband Help Solve Spouse's Diet Problems .
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Reburial Rite's F~· Wife MISSION CITY (NC)-'
By Rev. John L. Thomas, S.J.
A Benedictine priest, or
Assi8~n. ProfeSsor 01 Sociology . '81. 'Louis University
dained six years after his wife died in 1945, officiated
How ean' I get rnywif,e to stop.dieting? When she goes on one of her hunger strikes, it's almost impossible to. live
with her. Naturally she's grouchy and short~ternpered when she's half starved, but I don't think it's right that the - children and I I:lhould have wisely decide to corre!;t the situ to. suffer while she's fight- stion. ing her battle of the So you see, Jack, the problem
bulge. She's not· really over- of dieting has -mMy different
at the reburial services lor her
in the new memorial tower of Westminster Abbey here. He is FatheI' Bede .Reynolds, 66, a widower and convert, and the tower is a memorial to the family of his wife, Mrs. Patricia
Pfitzer Reynolds. It was the un flinching faith and good example of Mrs. R~ynolds which brought weight anyway, she just wants aspects. Wives protest ·that they her husband into the Catholic to look younger than she is. How are blamed if they 'let themFaith and made him a daily can I handle . selves I~O, and mocked i~ they communicant before her death. this problem? try to reduce.
Abbot Eugene Medved of J a c k , . I" m . Modern society offers them no
Westminster Abbey, blessed the a f r aid you're appropriate models at this stage. memorial tower on the 10th asking me to They feel too young to accept anniversary' .of Father Reynold'. walk in where the usual advice to "grow old CONGRATUtATORY WISHES: Governor Furculo solemn profession as'a Benedic
angels fear 10 - gra~efully," yet if they. i,ry to. ...... . t rea dl M 0 s t remain girls, nature..is against COngratulates Rev. RiChard' H. Sullivan; C.S.C., President. tine and the seventh anniversary
w 0 m.e n. have. them, ~md .they . have to fight' Of Stonehill \College, the new member oJ the Massachusetts' oJ r his ordination to the priest-.
hood. . .' .. their own ideas every step of the way. '.. Board of Collegiate Authority, "as Father 'Fra:nkGartland . . . ':. · . TtIree months after his wife's' about. dieting,. Wlfe.'s V.iewpoiDt '" __ .C.S.C" .e.:litQr o.f the Catholic Boy, watches. d~ath Father Reynolds began his and, right or . ,What's the best WlsY" to handle. . . studies' for the pri coil, ~ ~ 1 Six wrong, I don't bl . ' years later he was ordained. .. ,"our pro em? First, it will help think we can do .to ,try to see ~ings from youi" "For 18 of the .. .l ;, ',is much to.change 'f ' . . '.. married. life Father Reynolds' w;les' viewpoint.. Why is she W".• . them. Not that their decision to w,orriedl about her weight? May-. was a Protestant. lmpn.:ssive. diet is wholly arbitrary, but be she ,thinks she's been too . JEFFERSON CITY (NC)' '._ funeral services in St. Vibiana's their 'reasons for I't ra ge f ' I eial and . . ec'onom' I' C progres's, per .. . n ro.m eare ess in the past. Rich nations should. share surcathedral, L.os Angeles, for his, '., following a current fad to sheer .Per.haps she feels' a little in- pluses with needy neighbors sonal Iibertyand' political. inde-. wife's brother, who was also a necessity. ·pendence." . . . secure. Some women do at this with no strings' attached, but convert and a priest, led him to . Emphasis on Youth time of life. Have you been' tak- . should be' mindful not to place' Such a prOgram; the declaratake instructions 'in the Catholie . h er pre.tty muc h f or granted? their . . own welfar~ in jeopardy, tion said, w ..0uI.d do much'. to . t Y. we. mus t a d' mit· mg I n a II .h ones Faith. . .
that many American women· Do.you notice it when she weari·theCentrl;l1 Catholic uri ion of~weaken .the ."empty pI'opag!lnda 'Mrs: .ReynOlds died in Loa
have their problems in this re- something n e w ? : A m e r i c a has resoived. slogans" (of the communists)' Angeles and was buried in the
gard . Becau s e 0 f our. cu It 0 f Calvary Mausoleum there. Her
Th . When was the last tiiYie you' . e 1. 03 -year-old social action' . designed "to mislead and en youth, the feminine ideal is detold her how nice she looked in organization which has' about trap the backward nations'~ and· body was brought here for re
internment in the tower.
picted not as a motherly matron a certain outfiq Or do you think 68,000 memb~rs in 16 'states, has. d!'1~sely populated .regions. of : Father Reynolds h!ld a varied
but an immature woman. she's too old to appreciate com.,.' urged the adoption of a code of' _ ASia, Africa and Latm AmeI;1Ca. career. He was .the youngest son
The lithe,. emaciated creatures pliments? international . social' justice al .such a code would-also, it was who typically serve as models Second, you can sympathize an' aid' to world Peace. . lltated, do .much to· count~ract of Henry. G. Reynolds, former·
have figures. which. tend to be with' what she's trying to· do. . '. Sh S "1 the impressions~of "the'" leaders' secretary of the Michigan Agri
more masculine fhan feminh'le. You may· not-want.·her to diet.. are urp uses ~ thO b k d' .. cultural.College, and was edu ~ It I ' 1 1 d f f' 0 v".e ac war, natIOns, who" Our much publl'cl'zed "beau t y k ' show her that:··· ·· l a lsot .ca e . t or. "f ree'.' access ' and A mer · ca'ted at· CO~'nell University and Jac, but you·can h ...e d ucat e d'm E urope b 1. a na (0)lS . 0 a. aIr s. ar~ ica; have 'come 'away with an the University of Califol'llia at
queens" are girls .rather than YOU. understand. her problem .. Berkeley. He was a civil engin
women. ., '. and are willing to cooperate." .' o~, ~atl,l~~l resources as ,required uUer contempt for Western ma~r and became· vice president
This emphasis on. masculinity. . Dieting makes' some people for. theIr ~resent need~ . and for terialism: imd·· self-indulgence and youth is something of a short-tempered,' 'fir~t, because their eqUl~a~~e and. reasonable' and with the' determination· io ·.and general manager' of- .the
paradox in ~ ~lety in which they resent having.to use -this. devel?p~en~. .... ilse their knowledge. of Western " 'Pacific .Gasoline Co., in LotJ .
AngeleS' . the average woman is a mother 'means, and second, because' they '. ~e unI!>n s stateme?t ~n shar~. t~chniques to rid th~ir countrieil '. Father Reynolds now is • and lives to be 70. have to do it alone.. A little" lng surplus raw !'Jlateqals and . 'of Western political and, t~acher at Christ the King Sem Fur*er, 'many American .. sympathy will go 'a long way,prOduc~. sai~ this should be'. J;aO.'.ril.ic domiri~tiori." imiry 'in. the -Van cover diocese. wives are made overly conscious. here, even If dieting' is solely her ' dQ~e. by natI~ns "wi~~out ul.; 0.( their weight by the dire. pre- ..own idea. _ ,. te!,lOr. economic or polItical mo dictions .of "beauty" experts, Finally, why not cooperate tivation,·~.hile mindful ~ot~· .... advertisers, and magazine writ- . with her by suggesting some alplace their ·own welfare' . In ers that they may, iose their hus-· . ~ernatives? 'Somecouples 'd~ive jeopardy,:' II bands if they de;l't retain their out into the country or go to the ,,··.. The UnIon also urged the free girlish figures. Evidently, Amerpark arid take a hike' together. It' ·nations to maintain a "suffici.. · ican husbands remain incurably will b.~ good for both of you. , . ' ently powerful: collective mili' youthful. . 'There are well.designed exer:..'" 'tary, political and economic de Mat"re Women cises for .keeping in trim; sug- fense to deter the communists . .
Finally, the modern family gest some of these, since most from any ·.agression likely' to cycle works somewhat to the dispeople tend to use only certain - l~ad to all-out war."
advantage of women in this resets of. muscles in their daily , Defeats Slog-ans
gard. . . work.' j\ code of international social During the early stages of the Provide opportunities'for your justice, the union maintained, ',' . eycle, they are. too ·.busy, bearing wife to get out socially; encour- would place "before all the peo-. and raising children to ·think of <Ige 'h,~r to become interested in pIes of the world a .positive and
.', anything. else. Once the last some ol'tside activities if she can . dynamic Western program of so child is off to school, the presspare the time. .
, ,; Urges Public School
sure slackens a bit, wives have Let's be honest, Jack; none of more time to. take stock of themthe above methods will make BREAD . Religion Courses selves, and they may become her lose a pound, but they will . -MANILA (NC) Teaching of suddenly. aware that they are no help both her figure and her religion in Philippine public longer girls but :mature women; dispOliition. schools hfis been urged by Dr: Some may dislike the physical Remember, you're partners. Vidal Tan, former president of Implications of this change and She has a problem; either you fight desperately .to remain help solve it. satisfactorily, .. or the University of th~ Philippines. EffOl;ts· to est~blish. religion youthful. Othel1s may· discover you must take the consequences. I.. that the .past busy years made In marriage, either you .solve ~ courses in the past have. been them somewhat careless, about your problem~ together; or you . stymied"l>Y minority grou·psof· . p!>liticians and educators.. He their appearance,· ·..·.nd. '. they. suffer separat,ely. : 'maintained ·that "rellgion·is a strong ..for~e. in the fotmatioll of .;' gQod; character andt~at a good.. ·man without .religion .will be a.
'better man with 'religIon...
~~-._._...;.n_~_n·_._ COLLEGEVILLE (NC)-The patient good, although we al1
'ob of the psychotherapist is "to recognize that successful therapy
heal neurotics," not "to convert for the disturbed person may
sinners or to reform scoundrels/, make him a better person in a religious and .ethica'! sense even
a University 'of Minnesota psy cologist told 40 clergymen at a' though the methods ·used to im
"for Tour Protedioil
pastoral worksllOp at St.. John's prov(! his .bad behavior were
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University here." • Dr. Paul ,E. Meehh the psy-. moral ·and. non-religious," Dr.
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ehologist, told the clergymen Meehl said. that "the goal of the psychotherClergyman's Role. 132 Ro'ckdai£ Ave.
apist when he enters in a thera peutic relati!>nship with a Patient Dr. Mpehl said that ~e role New Bedtord
is to restore the patient's psycho- of th,e clergy ma ll in !l~aIing ,~ith WY 5-7947
.. :: logical integrity." a person who has committed a
"To put it cl,'udely," he . said, serie&1lof sinful acts is quite dif- .:+~._._._._ Ifthe secular therapist's Job 'is to ferent from that of a psycho.,. ,.,
.• !. help the neurotic sinr;:er become therapist,who treats the patient ,. a healthy one." '.' to discover the psychological , . '. .
Dr. Meehl said that a patient cal,lse~ dOl; theacti~~s;·.of the :"., . does not go to a psychiatrist '''uhhea,lthy siniter." " ; 'j::::~ 'I~i SO·
, " .. seeldng to become more. SanctiIt is the psychiatrist's .job to . ., .' ',.',.. . . , .. .
fiedand .dded "jt is inap~r.o:-. help. restore the dist1,1rbed·per~. : 59l·stiMME~: : ~ .;; ~" prlate behavior, for the· psychia- . 'son PhY~.lc~I).n~·.~.syc4iC. .' N' . .... ·r • .' _ . trilt ·to .enter:iritoa..' ,missionary· "health, Dr.-Meehl gfll(J )V~I1e.V~~ ,'. ew, hd.fordWT, 3 la46. . " :.:it " . '. '. ,.. -' ', ..', '. ',' .
l'ela,tionship with !., ." .: . "'''rhe therapiSt doesn't'-assume resdtor.e .talhe.hs'~~l't~f(r 't,o ..'.~~Fltual ;{ .. ," ·~:.Oa,~~~~ .. ,.':., " . '" '.; ,,' ' . ; . ' , '. ..,,<.: •..... .,.. ibat ....... l~inl':M'" make,,·"" ••n 810' '. ea . . . . .' .... - " , ; - . '~.;.,.,;,; ....;.\.;.;';;..';;,;;•.,;;;, .., .. ;.;'....';"';';"''';'';':''''~;;';''',;,''';'';''' ,;,;"'~',;,"'.' .. '.;,;...,;;..,.-,;;.",;",'.-..;';..,;" ;,.....;,...;..';';"_ _·~·s. .·."_ _,;,,_,;,··~·. ~,..,:::,'
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" . ·400 'Boys Enjoy Healthful, VClcation "At' St. Vincent de, Paul' C.an.p .
THE ANcHOR':' Thurs.• Aug. 21, 1958
14 1
American' Heads Ursuline Nuns
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camp:
St. Vincent de Paul ~ealth Fall· River, New Bedford, Camp in South Westport, an Taunton, Attleboro" North At : agency of the Diocese of Fall '. TOURS (NC);"'-Tpe Society of River, supported by the annual .tlelJoro; Acushnet, Assonet, Buz ,St. Ursula of theBle~sed Virgin zards Bay. Catholic .Charities Appeal and has electE!d' an AmeriCan as Su Bishop's Charity Ball, is con Centerville, Fairhaven, Fal perior General for the first time? cluding its sixth summer of mouth, .Hyannis, . Ma!1Sfield,' . in its 350-year history. operation under seminari~ North Dighton, North Easton, Mother Marie' de Lourdees, leadership. The 12 seminarian NorthWestport. . who served the past six.Years as counselors' are directed by Rev. Norton, Ocean Grove, Oster American assistant to the former John E. Boyd, assisted by Re~. ville, Provincetown, Sl!ndwich, Superior General, Mother Marie Donald E. Belanger, the camp's Sagamore, Santuit, Seekonk. Veronique, 'has been chosen to resident chaplain during the Soinerset, . South Dartmouth. head the congregation. Sou'th Dighton, South Yarmouth, Bummer months. The Society of S1. Ursula of Swansea, West Harwich, West Free vacations are provided the Blessed Virgin is a non annually for over 400 boys in' port, Woods Hole. ·cloistered teaching congregation, One hundred boys from the the diocese, whose ages range founded in 1606 by the Vener from six to 12. The boys are' city of Fall River lind environs '" able Anne de Xainctonge. It attended during the first two sent' to camp on referral from conducts schools in the Diocese weeks. . their parochial St. Vincent de of Providence. The second two weeks 'l'Tere Paui Society. The central office Born in Manhattan 38 years attended by 100 Taunton-Attle of the S1. Vincent de Paul So ago, Mother de Lourdes is a boro area youths. ciety of the Diocese, located in ST. VINCENT DE PAUL CAMP PETS: The camp's graduate of Manhattanville Col 'The third two 'weeks wer~ re Fall River, is responsible for the puppies ate the center of attention of Jimmy Souza, Pro . lege of the Sacred Heart, now at served· for' 100. bo)'s from the smooth operation of the. camp. vincetown, Charles Texceira, ,New' Bedford; and David Purchase, N. Y. She received ~ ew Bedford area of the di Something new .at the camp her master's degree from Ford McCarthy, Attleboro. ocese. .ham University. The new Su this summer was the beginnirig The final two weeks were perior General is the former of a day camp, operating on th~ ,made up of 50 youths from Regina Ahern, daughter of the camp property under the direc late John F. Ahern, who for more tion of Mr. John O'Brien and .tow~ on Cape Cod, and the MAARSSEN (NC)-Investiga died 30 years ago. other 50 from the four cities of than 30 years was chief jury Mr. Edward Haponik. tions have begun here looking Dir~~ting the tribunal is clerk of the New York State . ·the Di6cese. Both the day and the regular to\\;a~d the possible.~eatification Bishop Francis Kramer, O,F.M., Supreme 'Court in Manhattan. · seminarian-counselors worked. I.' of Msgr. Alphons Anens, Dutch of Lu An Chir who has been She' is cousin of Father Theo hand in ha'nd this summer to champion of trade unionism who residing here'since his expulsion dore Hesburgh, C.S.C., president provide a fun-filled stay at camp . P~pils by. the Chinese Reds. . of the University of Notre Da~e. for those in their cjlarge. BROOKFIELD (NC) - By a Though the day and regular margin of five-to·-three, voters campers had separate programs .of this Fairfield County town CO~tinued f!"om Page o,ne a planned by their own counselors, have authorized toW!l authorities less Seriously injured. a wonderful spirit of ,coopera to pro,vide bus transjlor.tation for ,., Father "DOwling' and Father DO. blood from a turnip'.' . : 'small crops mean ~al~ moner ...•. DO lion charaCterized ·the. 'entire' pupils in Brookfield's first Cath i crops mean'no mone)'! And every. farmer .. ' .. !U1d e~ery walre earn Carey fonned part· of a rescue setup. .. .. () . . olic parochial school; which will clforf that' called upon all the ".' ' . " : . ' . ' . ' . er , . . wili understand &he ~ift'icuUies of t I'h . tb~ people of &h«; village'. ot Marykulam .All those persons connected· . operi;.its doors next month.. reSources of Nantucket. oi 34 "~~.~S "J" . (Cbanganacherry, SOuth "ndi:l). Six, yeaJ'!ll ~ith St. Vincent's Camp .,...- it's ·Some 150· students entering - aboard the ·plane. 22"werp l;"'~<i ·V·~l' ':'ag~ tbese people arrived lii'Uie depthS of · director and chaplain, its cler the ~ew St.. Joseph's school here at the' time' 'of the crash. Re& :~. &Iii forest &0 buiidboines arid start farm leal and lay staff, wish to take. are eligible for transportation. 'cuers braved "flames to·' rtaCn ~. ."ing\ Uw~ not &he. best'ISUe·lmaginable. this opportunity' to expr~ their.. . This was the first referendum . some' of ·the survivors. Seven 'of .~. '''VI but it was &he best ·the, could ge&. T. heartfelt thanks' to the' many to be ·'heldon· the school. bus :the; most seriously injur'ed: w~e + 't ." da" the ,crops are' small' and so is their benefactors of the' camp. Espe issue since the 'Connecticut State flown to MaSsachus~tts:Geher-al Income;·. bU&'dhey ·an most· anxioUs' *-. · eiaUy do we. thank .the good. Legislature :passed a law·' last Hospital, BostOn. Others were' . build a church and sehool. They ··havo · people of the Diocese.'af Fall year authorizing towns to.pro cared for at Nantucket Cottage worked hard, and tbt:y are wiUinl' &0 ciye vide free" bus transportation for Hospital.. River, without whose help ttte "&bat IiUle ed.:a" &0 have Christ come *-' 1958 season .at. St. . Vincent'. nonpublic school pupils if tbey The crash occurred as the nr Holy PtJthrr~ MisJirm Aitl live am".>ol' ,them. 'l'hey will supply tbo desired. '. Northeast Airlines plane at would not have been the suc Voters gave this 502-305 ap land and. &he .labor, U we can raise $3.001 for tJx OrimJai (lmrrb cessful one that it wa.s.... . tempted to make an instrument lor the' neceslIa!'y material•.. wm you help , proval -of 'bus rides for the . The fu'ture 'iooJcs 'bright for' paro~hia(school children despite . landing at fog-enslirouded 'Nan to buIld'. church dellp In &he forest 10 thai Chrlsi may live el_ &0 &hose' who love Him? '. . St. VinCent's' Camp, a future in' attempts t,jy ~ ,loc!!J. committee tucket Airport. which the youngsters ofihe"~io- .. ~ getthe..proposal defeated. The HUNGER AND SUFFERING KNOW NOT A ',v ACA'l'ioN ... CAN cese will be provided with' eveh oPI:lOsition. corrimittl~e worked . YOU SPARE A BIT OF'YOUR VA~TION TO HELP THE, POOR more activities to assure them of with Protestants and Other Continued from PaKe ODe
. ··c,:. , $10 WILL FEED A REFuGEE FAMILY FOR' A WEEK. '.' • e~en greater fun, enjoyment and ,Americans United for the Sep . YOU'LL ·NEVER MISS IT .... THEY'LL .NEVER 'JrORGET ITl .' education in a truly Catholic aratioit of Church'and State. The the Fall River parish. .
.T1)e MiSsionary Servants work.;; THE BURNING LOVE OF'. GOD may be seen .J.p"tbe 'Ufe ..•nd·... ~mosphere. national POAU organization sent the ""UiO'KS of S&. AUgusUbe (feast August 28). Can tbe ·Arne bo · 'From june 20 to Aug. 23, 400 a representative to. Brookfield onl¥:iii"areas ~hei-eno parochial. ., .sald o;.~ur 'lives .nd our work .•• and yet., b6ys from the followiri.g cities in the week preceding the refer'" Scli"06iAs in prospect. 'With pI3.~'J iJHjr~:;Seb~1 in Holy:Name par- "': . -Ole love~' :God0sllouid dominate and dio" K"'~""""""~rnIS and towns of t~e Dioce~ en enduro to 'speak 'at local m,eet-: iilb'Pt~~:i:!'r~inquished 'op~I;ation rect' everythlni we do. We. can ·sh'OW. our
joyed a two-weeks . stay. at the' .ing. I ' 1 o£,::t1le-?p!i-e;'sch601 project to the..,: love; ;or-:Almlgh&y 'God. by making 'It pos Hoii;~'Union Sisters,: w~o \Yill .slble for~FRANCIS or' JOSEPH '&0 serve
., also;:st'aff:: the new;' pilro\.':hial .'him·at {he"altar: These boys wlsh"tO enter
Continued.from Page One nity Mass in the chapel .Sat sch~l upon ·its completion. ". ·the seminary·'at Mangalore. India'.· •. 'they
'Elizabeth'Margaret Price, daugh-. urday. at the close of an eight HeY'. William' H. Harrington, have the 'physical heaUh .... the' 'reciuired'
lei- of ..Mrs. John Price, 200 day retreat conducted by ·Rev." pastor of Holy 'Name, ntis an: : intelligence ..• and the necessary spiritual
Franklin Street" 'F:all .River. . : :Matthew. .F. MorrYiO.P. . noupced a. special 'registration .'c· .tre~li1h .'•• the' one thing lacking' &0 'each
:'Sister Mary Carl ' - M.arg~re.t· . Monsignor Durin celebrated peri<><i from 1 to 2 P. l\iI' Sunday' is '$600' to 'pay for. his support for six years;
. . .. Mary Wfobleski, daughter" of, ~e Mass. and presided at. the for ,the kindergarten 'and, pre You may pay the money in any manner convenient while "another
,Mr. and Mrs. Milton· Wrobleski.,. ceremony:. The sermon :was prirtlary sessions.. Children foat :. AU&ilsU~e';' prepares to bring the love of. God to all men: 822 Second Street, Fall·River. preached by Rev. Americo Laby the"'end; :of December may. enter".pr¢primary classes. THE HANDS()F. THE HOLY FATHER ARE THE HANDS 0,.
Sister MarY .·Mauricita-Mar-pati, Novitiate chaplain. ' Daily'~l:l;Sses will run from 9 CHRIST •• ~YOUROFFERINGSMAKE THEM STRONG TO HELP
garet Elizabeth .Stapleto~, dau~hThe Fall River, group included , to IJ.·:45;'· according 'to Mother . .THE POOR 'OF THE NEAR EAST.
ter of Mr. and,. Mrs:' Maurice 'the following: Stapleton, . 29 ,,.Bel'kl~y. Street, Sister Mary Trinita daughGabrlelda r e, but· chilthen may THE SECRET WEAPON OF THE CHURCH in the mis~ion lands
Fall River. '. .' . ter of Mrs. Lo~etta RO~deau 42 arrive at the parish hall on Read of the Ne;ar East Is a strong and properly prepared native clergy.
Sister 'Mari~ Christine-Flor-Kiiburn Street. ' Street from 8:30 on. . "A neighbor's child" can speak &0 and work 'for his countrymen
e~ce Dewhurst, daughter of Mr. Sister' Mary Rochelle, daugh with' greater success than men and women from ac~oss the -seas! U
and Mrs. James Dewhurst, 330 ter of Mr. and Mrs. Ftocco Pos Is the earnest wish of the Holy Father that'· we devote our prayers
FRANCIS J. · Sh~w Street, New ~edford. tiglione 366-Warren Street. and spend our money to tr~in and support native priests and nbos.
SIster Mary Carolanne-Norma ' You can take part in tliis important'work'byjoiolng the CHRYSOS
Lillian Theroux, daughter of Mr. Sister Mary Aaron, daughter' TOMS. The dues are a daily prayer for ttlis'sion vocailons and a dol. and Mrs. Eugene Theroux; 686 of lVIr . and Mrs. Henry Rocha, o lar a month to support those who' wish' to ;0110'" the vooation God _ Cambridge Street, Fall Ri.ver.652 'Second Street.. .690 .PLEASANT STREET has given them. You will never miss the dollar a month •.. and the Sister Mary Jogues-Carol Ann Sister Mary Angelo, daughter WY 7-0746 .,' .priests and nuns you assist will never forget you at tlie Throne of Murray, ,daughter of· Mr. ana of Mr. and Mrs. W;H;am F. Hef God. NEW BEDFORD, MASS. . " '. Mrs. FrE;derick Murray, 1032 fernan, 6;1 Snell Street. Wildwooa Road, New Bedford. Sister Mary Laetare. daughter MAsS OFFERINGS ARE A TWO·EDGED SWORD: ... THEY SUP
PORT A MISSIONARY PRIEST . . . THEY BRING YOU AND
Sister. Mary Gilpatrick,.-Patri";· of Mrs. Mary Reagan; 104 Wil cia Mary Harrington, <;laughter bur"Street. ,
YOUR LOVED. ONES CLOSERit'O GOD ... REMEMBER YOUR
GENERAL MISSIONARY plU~STS TODAY. .. of Mr. and Mrs. Patrick J. Har-'Sister Mary. Genevieve, daugh
c' . INSURANCE rington, 144 Presidential.Heights, ter of Mr. and. Mrs. Walter J.
SISTER MARY RICHARD AND SISTEK · New Bedford. .Leach, 175 Jackson Street. MARY GERMANE have all the qualification. Sister Mary Stephen Josf:!ph- '~",~x~~-:""~"'O>o:-'.-x-.x-'.-:-"." ...-..;..;.~ necessary &0 follow the ~ Divine call &0 the re Beverly' Anne Moore; daughter' . . '" : '. ligious life. Someone niustO supply $300 • )'ear of Mr. and·Mrs. Stephen Moore, for each girl while she 'has a two year period of 399 Warren Street, Fall River. ,~.~. ' 1~ novitiate trainlng.. 1n Mangalore. India. Will yoa Sister Marie Walter ' - Lois' . . '. make it possible for one ,of ·these young girls &0 Marie Eveleth, daughfer' of Mr.' Called For and Delivered spend her life In uniou with Christ. You mll7 and Mrs. Walter Eiveleth, 127. . ' ..... ~.-TIME.SID pay the money In any manner convenient· w.hllo Cory Street, Fall .River.' . ..your cadopted daughter" drawJl closer &0 ,her Sister James Mari?Kathleen>· '-Otlce-A-DayinSomerset and Swansea at 4:30 P.M. Dlvi'ne Spouse.. · Marie Riley, daughter' of Mr>:' ". . . and Mrs. James Riley, 63 Snell GIVE TO WIN THE WORLD FOR CHRIST. · Street, Fall River. . To Sister Charles M'ary-Nancy • 6
Con~ider Beatifying Ch'ompion of Labor
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I t:h'near list OJissiQUSJtI
.Tane Leach, ' ' .,.'" sp'uhra9rimcaalc·y.APPliance Co. and ,Mrs. 'Charles· Leach, 'J.VI.l':' 236,.-. ',. I Cushman . Lane; 'South Daft-· mouth. ' . '.' . . ,"i. ,. . . '':.~_: . ' Hearing Aid Co. Si;'; Sisters whose homes· ar.e" : ' in Fall River:Zvere in th~ group . . .. ;." Arthur J. Shea, Pr,op. 0tef 21 Novices WhtotlProCnounced . 202 'and 206 ROCK ST.. ~ .. ; TEL. OS 5-7829t mporary vo~s a Ie ommu~~."...-:..;."."••:...~x~:...'H)~~X~~-:-+
FRANCIS CARDINAL SPJ;LLMAN, President . ,';
.Msgr. Peter P. ru.ohy, Nat'l Sefy , Sen'd all communications to:
CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIA'TION'"
480 Lexington Ave:, at 46th St.
New York 17, N. V.
I
THE ANCHOR-
Thurs., Aug. 21, 1958
15
Lourdes Pilgrim Claims Miracle' ~
Bishop's Protest Stops Indecent Shc)w at Hotel LAS VEGAS (NC)---:...The owner of a hotel which stop. ped performances of semi nude chorus girls after a Bishop's protest, has said oth ers should "reconsider" their en tertainment policy if it conflictl with considered moral judg ments of clergymen. In a telegram to Bishop Rob ert J. Dwyer of Reno, Beldon Katleman, owner' of the EI Rancho Vegas hotel, said: "Please accept my personal re assurance that it was at no time the intention of the El Rancho Vegas to offend public decency or moral standards with our show presentations." Demands Protest Bishop Dwyer issued a pas toral letter following the intro duction of semi-nude shows in three Las V~gas hotels, includ })RIZE WINNING RIDERS: Philip Davignon (left), ing E:l Rancho Vegas. riding counselor at Cathedral Camp, presents first prize rib The pastoral was a reminder bon in Chiefs-Fine Riding division at field day exercises to that "all Catholics are strictly Dennis Mullaly of Assonet, extreme right. Mark Munroe of forbidden by the divine law it New Bedford,second left, won second prize and John Clem self to have any part in enter rney, second right, won third l!rize. ' tainment ,which is ,of its nature indecent." It urged "instant and emphatic protest" by all "right Coyle High Graduate Pronounces Vows thinking people" against objec John Joseph ?opahue, son of .A graduate of Coyle High tionable entertainment. Mr. and Mrs. John J, Donahue; School, Brother John Donahue Mr. Katleman declared, if en tertainment policy draws pro Sr. of 154 School Street, Taun entered the Juniorate of the tests from the clergy on moral ton, has, pronounced his first Brothers of Holy Cross, Valll.tie, grounds, "it, behooves everyone New York in the summer of 1957. involved in the entertainment vows of religion as a Brother of After profession, Brother John Holy Cross at St. Joseph Novi policy to reconsider his standards will continue his academic train of show productions. tiate, Rolling Prairie,' Indiana. ing at S1. Edward University" He is a member of the Eastern Austin, Texas" preparatory'to Support Bishop his teaching, apostolate ' ' all' a Province of the Brothers of Holy ..It is to be hoped that, El Rancho's action of withdrawing Cross . with headquarters at Brother in one of the many schools in the East. such features from' a show will Flushing,N. Y. be J'ollowed by others in Las Vegas.", " , , The criticized shows are still being presented ill two Las Ve gas hotels. However, owners of many other hotels in the area have objected to them and ar';' guedt that they could hurt the town's economy by discouraging family groups from coming here. Protestant ministers have also been critical and some have said the controversy win increase the possibility of an initiative peti tion to end' legalized gambling in Nevada. Community 'Insult ' Dr. ,Donald O'COl'lnOr, pastor of t.he First ,Methodist Church herE:, one of the largest Protest ant congregations in the state, 118id that f'a referendum has been coming fo~ along time and such a move has been hastened by the battle over nudity on the strip and the resuitant nation wide publicity." He warned operators of hotels featuring semi-'nude girls th,at they should not interpret in creased business as ,"the voice. of the people." He asked: "How many of ~these people' are tour ists in, town for a good time and how many are responsible citi zens who live and 'Work here?" Rev. Walter Bishop of the First Baptist Church here also criticized the semi-nude presen tations, saying they are an insult to the intelligence of the com munity:
F;LORENCE, (NC) - A vic tim of tuberculosis of the bone for 10 years, 'whp has been par''--. alyzed for the past 18 months, walked into the railroad station here under his Own power after arriving on a train from Lourdes. " Remigio Soldani, 48-'year:'0I,d farm, laborer from Rassina, a small town in Italy's Arez~o
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BOSTON '(NC) "- Robert D. Murphy, Deputy Under Secre tary of State" will be the first to receive a special award from the newly formed Catholic Lawyers' Guild of Boston. The award; to be given lit a banquet in Boston following tile annual Red Mass Oct. 1, will be designated each year for "one . prominent in the field of law and conspicuous for his adherence to thE~ principles 'of ChristiaJ'iity," the Lawyers' Guild announced. Mr. Murphy, widely known as thEl government's top "trouble shooter" in the field of foreign relations, will be cited for 41 years of service 'to the Depart ment of State. PriJlcipal speak er at the award dinner will be Auxiliary Bishop' Fulton ~. Sbeen of New Yo)'k.
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province, attributed his im provement to the intervention of Our Lady of ,Lourdes. A large crowd gathered at the station as rumor, of a "miracle" spread through the building. n Messaggero, a Rome daily news paper, said the man's case his tory appeared to be well docu mented 'with x-rays and medical reports.
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The Yardstick
Sit. E~~a:L6de"·~. of H~illgary
Pope S~ts ldeal of.. Chc:lrity
Sai~ts
,11--_.-
As Goal for Labor Unions,· ~ fiIl"
.
In Crosswords
By Henry M i c h a e l - - - - - -...
By Msgr·. ·George G. Higgins Director NCWC Social Action Department
Last December I ~as privileged to deliver the sermon at the :Mass for the delegates attending the National Con vention of the AFL-CIO in Atlantic City, New Jersey. I tried to fltrike a positive note, emphasizing the con . structhre role , that labor' can 1,OOO-page commentary on 'play in the American econ American life. and manners en omy and encouraging the titled "America as· a Civiliza delegates to keep alive in tion."·
.,.
16
-THE ANCHOR Thurs., .Aug. 21, 1958
Rela.xing of Fast :Brings Increase Of Communions COLLEGEVILLE (NC) A survey of religious com munities· which make altar . breads has disclosed that since the Eucharistic fast was relaxed in· March, 1957, the re-' ception of Holy Communion has.. ' increased as high as 34.5 per· cent. . The-survey was made by Wor ship, the monthly magazine pub lished here by the Liturgical Press. "We appealed to wliat we thought the best source of in formation: religious communities that make altar breads in the East, Midwest and West," the magazine reported. "Of eleven of whom we in qliired, eight were able to fur nish the figures requested: for May 1956, 1957 and 1958; for June 1956, 1957 and 1958. Sever al of them spontaneously offered the figures for Lent 1956, 1957 and 1958 as well. • "We chose the months of May and June in order to have some estimate also of the relative de crease of reception during va cation time. To arrive at fair comparisons, ·we asked more . over that as far as possible the 1957 and 1958 figures be com puted on the basis of the same parishes that were supplied in 1956. Here are the results: "May, 1956, 4,066,353. "May, 1957, 4,275,032 (an in
crease over 1956 of fi,ve per
cent).
"May, 1958, 4,672,639 (an in crease over 1956 of 15 per cent).
"June, 1956, 3,246,090.
"June; 1957, 3,749,787 (an in
crease· over 1956 of 15.5 per
cent).
"June, 1958, 4,216,627 (an in
crease over 1956 of 30 per cent).
"Lent, 1956, 4,702,547.
"Lent, 1957,.5,701,800 (an in
crease over 1956 of 21.3 per
cent). . . .
"Lent, 1958, 6,357,824 (an in
crease over 1956 of 34.5 per
cent)." .
the labor movement .the spirit Creativeness Overlooked t. of' idealism which had moti "The doughtier champions of vated so many the trade union believe it has of their pio-· cont~ibuted much to re-establish neering prede the dignity· and pride of crafts cessors. manship, yet one may be skep Immediately
tical. Given the obsession with after thc Mass
the prote.ction of the job, with one of the dele work rules and seniority, with gates-a promi absence of discrimination, with· nent officer of
. wages and hours and fringe the AFL-CIO benefits, the ·creativeness of the added a foot work itself has been lost sight of. note wbich was
"The trade-union would do much bet t e r well to make the performance of than the sermon
the job in its fullest sense the itself. He· told
core of the worker's responsi me that one of the worst things bilities. But it can do so only sa IK:ltchen ACROSS 4' COllrle &I Beliefs "tenall abQut labOr· racl<eteering was when it feels confident and se 6, Bag of 81 Small sb"lter 1 s-ort 10 " JIIurt 87 Short motto Vttrmnnl eqnlpment that it kept the labor movement cure enough in its a<:ceptance.by 40 lPackal'a 18 No..... aagao • llIoard 68 A metal 4! I~il'ht orl'aD. from concentrating on the ob- the people." 11 Spar 49 Strike 011' DOWN 4,; BlUer oratlo. 50 Untamed 16 r,,"alolnl' to Jectives it had ouHined. Mr. Lerner may have over 1 V.... s..1 " SHI': BE J~RIENDIllD a r.:hc.lr 51 Title of ! Mal.. fowl He and his associates, he said 9tated the case to some degree, III ii1HV. WAS :I Sw"dlsh coh•• 66 Id·i.'ii'tlcal . ,KNOWN FOB 5! ~i.r:;~a,. 'SHII: LIVED -with a note of weariness and but, in any event, he has given A.T .. IJSrtner .......... OF 5S l'onUfh frustration in hill voice-were the unions something to think . . Coremon,. CHAKI'l'Y 64 l'ossesBh. I t:;:~:t~.,.t·i n HER FA 11 EJ(~I ..maUo. being required ·to spend the bet-. about once they are:in a position 15" f.~o:~~ker THER WAS pit)' (:hamps .. ter part of their time and energy to turn their undivided attention • Wooden shoe 18 Flrot. 5' Hem for sale 1 Thlnlf of vala. 40 Woman'.
19 A ""C'....bl. fighting the negative evil of cor to their essential role of apply ~~'WWA~olat . S GermaD river name
(pl.) ruption and dishonesty in the ing the principles of justice and III TraDlmlt
CALUmA • Olslnterrate 110 SaUlc 8l nrlol, Ilk. 10 (la,,110 52 I"enedicll... QUEEN IN labor movement, with the result charity in the constantly chang ·adog THE or 11- SHKISONK 6a ~~~~'uAD that they were· necessarily ne iog field of industrial relations. 81 Stree&s OFFt:W GOD ~ro :-.. HEa (abbr.) 60 Preposlti,n. .......... WOMEN gleeting to do a lot of things that JEWELS 63 Discover SA.ll'ITS Row they might be doing, and ought In_ striving to· help the aver 65 Burn U One .. bG &l Comparath. U AdJo.ted to be doing, and really wanted age worker develop his human deRervefil 56 Agonie. 1lI Wiser 51 lit anele4· 1lO Paid nn'l... 14 Rosslan 86 ~~~~f.".n to be doing, to advance the cause dignity in and through his daily monarchs 27·0"f""ta ~::::'d 86 f~:':'~C;;;ln. 1lO Pillars 16 SHE WAS of social justice and promote the. round of work in the factory or SENT TO 61 lOevli.
· SO Aillog. 67 l'rlck general economic welfare. the shop, they will· in the IIEB HUS. GZ Charger
82 Cnmbus$lble 69. r::::~~\)'of BAN!) IN A 6~ J,ast act
matter That's very true, and it is an words; again, of Pope Pius XII . tbr",,' ..........OF 65 :1.141.6
Anelell t Cha!added reason, of course, for. -"come to the ideal proposed _ · BS deBn city SILVER 67 Small mark. 71· Prononn · SIl IIlan·. 7Z Rumlnat. 18 Cloth In 63 Jewish labor's moving as rapidly as pos by the Gospel to those who' are 7. 1.~woShmfJ re.velation · ni~knBme Bib.Ie t<1 put its house in order. "invested with social responsibil-, 86 jJ)lstrlbot.. rtI Came together ZlI ~~~':.fbatiena '0 Hntlmate 88 Boug·ht h. Z8 Sea level 18 Inclined ity-the ideal' of .charity, which " Pedal digit (abbr.) walkway !ldvllnce 18 Spoken More Than a Job is not ·in any sense merely. occa to led.t . S t <:ollar 79 Glvo alert ~: ~~a~t~h But what are some of the chal sional condescension but is 81 ";uropeIlB ~Z Ward ott :~ ~~~P:.ft~: S4 LIls...... " Make. Iaolltl countrl . lenges and opportunities which, rather a constant concern for the 80 ntan·. name foot 85 Well-pi........ 88 l .. egen 117 Natloll . 8<l Fraeao 82 111eadoll' to· some extent, are being ne-· welfare of som.eone else and for " ria•• glected by the labor movement his .personal and social fulfill Solution on Page Eight~eD because of its current preOccu ment in the order willed by pation with the problem of rack God.". eteering and because of its re lated and possibly hypersensitive ST. PAUL (NC)-Conventual M:ONTREAL, (NC) Par fear oJ: punitive or restrictive Club work: and urged the. dele Franciscans from all parts of the ticipation· in 4-H Clubs can help legislation? gates to continue their conser-· United States will hold· their Let'·s look at one example LISBON (NC) The fifth ~ young people become re.spon vation projects which, he said, 12th annual three-day Inter which was referred to-in ge~ centenary celebrations honoring : sible citizens, Paul Emile Cardi are economically necessary and Province Conference at Assump eral terms and with nb explicit Portugal's Que e n Leonore, nal Leger, Archbishop of Mon help to preserve the beauty of tion Seminary, Chaska, Minn., reference to the United States foundress of Miseric:ordia'" hoi nature. . starting Aug. 26. . in a recent Allocution by Pope treal, has declared. pitals in this country will begin Pius XII; "The forest is big book: and Oct. 26, it was announced here. I refer to the responsibility Established 1885 you must learn from it," the' The queen, honored through which labor jointly shares with out Portugal. every 100 years Car~inal told the young people, management; to create condi tions oJ: employment which will since her death, established state whose clubs are sponsored by (mercy) hospitals Quebec Forestry Associa help the average worker; par- . controlled ticularly in the mass production during her· reign in. the 15th tion. "From the forest you must " MAKERS FOR OVER 70 YEARS OF AMERICA'S century for poor people who learn also to dominate your pas industries; to take pride and to were unable to pay for medical sions like a· tree resisting the find satisfaction in his job, and FINEST CASSOCKS ••• SUITS AND CLOAKS •• care. wind)' llo look upon it as something Cardinal Leger praised 4-& more than a means of earning After her death these medical FOIt PRELATES, PRIESTS, SEMINARIANS a livelihood for himself and his institutions spread all over this family, . country, and to Portuguese pos R. A. WilCOX CO. In discussing this problem 1ast sess(ons, includ·ing Brazil. GARMENTS KNOWN FOR THEIR New o·nes, in her. mlemory, are January" with a group· of em OfFICE FURNITURE EXCELL,ENCE THROUGHOUT THE ployers and management repre-" still being built. There will be a UNITED STATES AND CANADA sentatives from the chemical cornerstone Jaying ceremQny in • DESKS • CHAIRS industry, Pope Pius XII referred' CaIdes de Rainha for another FILING CABINETS to the various influences which Misericordia hospital, as part of determine· the behavior of. the ·the centenary observance. - FIRE FILES· • SAFES BLAKE BUILDING - The queen is not only known worker at his task. FOLDING TABLES for her enthusiasm in aiding the "It seems," His Holiness re AND CHAIRS 59 TEMPLE PLACE 501 WASHINGTON ST. poor. She also founded the Mon marked, "that the most outstand astery of Madre de Deus near BOSTON 1.1, MASS. ing of these is an active interest here. Art objects relating to the In his .task, which engages the ·22 -BEDFORD ST: attention of the man and gives 'queen and her work are to be FALL RIVER 5-7831 ~xhibited in the monast~ry. bim the feeling of putting his NoB.-Our' outfits for pr-elates··are official in shade and personal resources into bis work and developing them. ",ad. from ·.the finest imported materials. "The worker then feels that be is using not only his muscu . Serving. Fall lar power but also his very soul, and that his labor is recom QUALITY FOODS at REASONABLE PRICES pensed, first of all, by pride in" the work accomplished, which Since 1897 grows within him." . By coincidence, two prominent Americans have also emphasized the importance of this problem ' .. in recent months-Secretary of " Locations: . Labor James P. Mitchell and the well known author and publicist, 177 Cottage.. St. _. 325 Bedford St.. 927 Stafford Road Max Lerner. Mr. Mitchell's .284 Br'l»adway - 435 Charles St. statements have· already been amply reported in the CathGlic .Owned & Operated· by .and se·cular press. . . .
of
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=
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fold.
Canadian Cardinal Hails 4-H Clubs
Portugal to· Honor Memory of Queen
Franciscans Confer
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To the best of my knowledge, however, Mr. Lerner's views · have Il()t been given mueh at · tention. Here is· what· he .says ,
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~'hat
God Thinks About Labor
ContilIlued from Page Three being shown at his labor union or Holy Name meeting. BaS4:d on Old Testament Are you ready for Ule first reel? . Then hang on to your imagination and let's go! Our first movie is based on the Old Testament. It introduces us to God's thoughts on human labor by showing us just jmaginf~ it a God who works. We suddenly behold a God who creates the universe and aU that it contains. He speaks, and things are. He BaYs, "Let us make Man in Our own image and likeness." God "makes" man. We now begin to see something quite remar....able: God choses for himself a human fam.ily and His divine labor IS foreyer after characterized by a new quality, something like fa tigue and affliction. An unknown, so to speak, has been introduced: man's free will. And this has its telling effed upon God's work. So much for God~s "work." This first film must also show us what God thinks of ma.1's work. It must graphically depict God creating man in the center of the visible universe, master of animals, plants - the world; He has given him a wonderful garden to cultivate. Work is not at first the fruit of sin, but part of God's fundamental ")lan for our ·race. Factor in Redemption Then along comes originlll lIin, and something is added to the gi:ft of work. Work becomes difficult and painful ~nd oiten takes on the character of a pun ishment. The last scene, however, holds out a bright promise: human work, by the grace of the Re deemer, will become a factor In our redemption. (Music up and out ...) The second movie of our the ology of work - for those who have the courage to come haek - will be by far the most in teresting. For it will show what God thought of human labor when He Himself became a Man. As the na~rator tells us tilat
Father Dqlbec Continued from Page One corps. During that time, he at tended the University of Utah at Salt Lake City; Pomona College, Claremont, Caiifornia and the Military Intelligence School, Maryland. He was assigned to counter-intelligence w 0 I' k in Europe. Upon his return from the Armed forces, he resumed his studies at Assumption college. In September 1946, he entered' St. Mary's Seminary, School of Philosophy, Baltimore, where he obtai ned a Bachelor of Arts de gree in June 1948. After some theological studies at St. Mary'. seminary, Roland Park, Balti more, he en tered the Congrega tion of Our Lady of La Salette, at Attleboro, until his ordination to the sacred priesthood on September 19, 1953. Since his ordination, Fr. D..al bec has served as professor at La Salette Seminary, East Brew ster, and in February 1955 was named Provincial Secretary and Treasurer, with residence at East Brewster, Mass. F'ltfler Dalbec: is scheduled, to l13il from New York on Aug. 29.
the Infinite God has become a Man, our camera lens will search the Plilaces of Athens, Rome aud Jerusalem to discover the earth ly throne of this God-made Man. Finally in desperation, it w".l· zoom in on a poor carpenter lIhop in Nazareth, and the full scope of· the Incarnation will burst upon us: God has become a laboring Man. With fascination we will watch Him as a boy, a young man, a mature adult, taking orders on wheels lind fences . . . making them . . . delivering them. Our sound track will pick up the praise He receives for His work, and s9metimes the insults. And our script will make much of St. Joseph's influence on the manly formation of Jesus the· Worker.. And then, in the last mo ments of the film, when· our vlewers are gripped in the spell of Godl who was a Carpenter, we will surprise them with a little-known truth: Christ was a manual laborer not for humil ity's sake. Preachers have misled uS"a little in. this. matter. They point out that Jesus has given evi dence of exemplary humility in choosing a manual task. Without a doubt Christ's whole life was Cross upon Cross. But His labor was truly a man's labor, some thing loved for itself -·not first, last and always painful Did He experience the mon otony, the routine, the captivity that work inflicts on the rest of us? Undoubtedly. But the joy of a laborer does not come only from his contact with objects, nor is ir·taken away by the pen ance that this contact often in-. flicts. Jesur. works in and for a hu man community. He did not bend ,over His work-bench just to give us an flxample in penance; He worked .lor a pre cise end - the people of Naz 'areth who needed His services. The (liay-by-day routine was compensated for by the joy of serving His Fatrer and His neighbor. Do you think our viewers would see the point of ~ll this, 'that Love, a supernatural ll)ve. of God and neighbor is the an-· swer to work? Of course, a second and thi,'d movie could be produced on Our Lord's apostolic labor and His direct teaching on work and riches. But these are not the last two sections -I had in mind. Reels three and four deal rather with labor guilds and Popes and American bishops. I think ~'C'u will enjoy seeing them. So, if you haven't been made too dizzy by all this "celluloid theology," you can finish the ar ticle in next week's copy of The Anchor.
Union Men to Se·fve Labor Day Mass WASHINGTON (NC) - Two union officials will serve the .sixth annual Labor Day Mass of the Archdiocese of Washington on Sept. 1. , 'Archbishop Patrick A. O'Boyle c' VI'ashington will offer. the Mass. . The two· union officials are· Joseph I. Creager of the Inter national BrotherhoOd of Elec tric'al Workers, and John J. Mc Burney, counsel for Teamsters Joint Council 55. Msgr. Joseph F. Donnelly, director of the Archdiocesan Labor Institu~e, HartJford,' will preach the ser mon.
The Franciscan Fathers Third Order Regular of .St. Fronds Offer to Young Men and Boys special opportunities l() study for .the Priesthood. Lack of funds no obstacle. For further information. write l()
FATHER STEPHEN, T.O.R.
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THE ANCHOR. ~ Thurs., Aug. 21,1958 .
I
7
Bishop Shehan Suggests Religious Adopt Needs of Modern World
NOTRE DAME (NC) - Every Religious community within the Catholic Church must "stand firmly rooted in the Faith," but also must become "flexible 'and 8dapt~ble" to modern conditions. Bishop Lawrence J. Shehan of Bridgeport, keynoting the sixth annual Iljstitute of Spir:: ituality, told 500 superiors of women's Religious communities that what the Church needs "is not so much the multiplication of new societies, but rather that spirit of flexibility and adaptab ility which enables existing or gani~ations to grow and to adapt themselves to the v,arying needs of each generation." . "The mOdern Religious, firmly grounded in the Faith and se curely formed in the religious life, will reach out into the changing world, seize what is good and proper in the field of . modern development, make them her very own and use them for the attainment of the Church's divine purpose," Bish op Shehan said. Changes in Garb CAUSE STUDIED: A plea Human organizations tend to for letters and documents ~ grow rigid in the structure, written by Cardinal John in their tradition and in their programs, and women's religious Henry Newman has been is congregations "are likely to be sned by the vice-postulator specially inclined in this direc for the 19th century church tion," Bishop Shehan observed. man's beatification ~LUse. Too often, he continued, "their The above likeness of the holy rule becomes. not a means prelate is from. a painting to an end, but an ~nd in itself," and those members who dare to by Ossani. NC Photo. suggest a change, "even to meet the most crying need," are re garded as "a' species of traitor." P~oposal Some groups of nuns have CINCINNATI (NC) - Cincin been slow and reluctant to mod nati mailmen have given their ify their religious garb, the support· to proposed Federal Bishop noted, but 'even more legislation aimed at puUing a important, he said, is flexibility tighter ban on use of the mails "in the things which are essen for the distribution of obscene .tial to the welfare of the com material. munity itself and to its partici A resolution adopted unani pation in the Church's mission mously by Local Branch ~o. 43 for which the community exists." of the National Association of Too Complacent Letter Carriers recorded the "Some of us," Bishop Shehan mailmen's approval and support contended, "are far too com of an anti-smut bin. now being placent about the effectiveness studied by Congress. The local of our educational system par has about 900 members. ticularly on the elementary lev Versions of the legislation en el. dorsed by the letter carriers "Because we have remained h"ve been passed by both the comparatively free from the House and Senate, and a com worst fads of the time, we con promise measure is expected to be enacted. The bill would ·make· clude that all is quite weI: with it possible to prosecute smut us. On the other hand, because distributors at the place where much of modern secular educa obscene mail i~delivered.At tion has been seriously affected present, they can be prosecuted by these fads we infer that it only where the objectionable material is placed in the mail. An anti-smut resolution is ex BELFAST (NC) Mr. and pe·cted also to be introduced at Mrs. John Lowry of Belfast and the convention of the National their 10 children left on a three Association of Letter Carriers, to week pilgrimage· in Europe. They be held in San FranclSco from are the largest known family in Aug. 25 to 30. William C. Ireland to undertake such a trip. noherty, former Cincinmlti let They planned visits to Lourdes ter carrier, is president of the and to St. Theresa's Shrine at 106,000-member organization. Lisieux, France.
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has nothing worthwhile to offer. Neither of these conclusions iI correct. "All too often," the Bishop said, "we are content with a. mediocre or inferior grade of • good thing, whel'eas our true aim must be nothing short of excel lence." Noting the tremendous expan- , sion of hospitals and medical facilities in this country since World War II, Bishop Shehan declared that "the full and ef fective use of-these facilities de mands the best . professional training on the part of relig ious communities .engaged in this field." "One must bear in mind" he warned, "th~t excessive ab~orp tion in physical exoansion and professional devel~pment can produce a certain blindness to the true spiritual purpose which is the ultimat.e justification of the existence of Catholic hos pitals," he declared. Modern Techniques ·Bishop Shehan also stressed· the role of women's religious or ders in caring for the aged and operating correctional and men tal institutions. Sisters, he said, must be ready to make use of the knowledge and the tech niques developed by modern psychology and psychiatry. "The time is long past," he· emphasized, "when we can write olf the whole course of modern psychological. and psychiatrical development as FreUdian, ma terialistic and rooted exclusive ly in a rank and unwholesome soil of sex. "Along with a lot of trash • great deal of treasure has ~n dug up. Those who are engaged in education and in the treat ment of. all sorts of human ills ·must be able to discern the treasure from the trash and must be prepared to use the treasure wisely for the eternal and tem poral good of those for whom they are responsible," he said.
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..,' CO~·g. ~eg~atio~. of ·Sem.in~rie~.'.... " '1 . 18 '.' . . ~THE A~CHO~I" Po.ntiffSay's' HumCJn Achievements '.:' Thur,s., Aug. 21,. 1.958. M' t L d" t . 'Ad 't'. f G d" . 'ea ora :Jon
ConUnuedfrom Page One with religious orders. to • staff . . .~... US 0 0 ' 0 • nts.. ~hile' a~other' 13,500 ~min~ries 'in t~o Latin.".Amt:i~·
-ounger .boys..""ere enrolle.d. iiI . :lc.an.dIoc..eses which ~.e.!~ unab.l~ ." . BRUSSELS (NCj .:....:. Admit-Fair here. 'The message was d~ 'prepar~tory ... ··~iitinary ,to, ,:,p~ovlde' the proper teac~mg '" '.' , ' . ,.' n, ,'. ation' for:;the accomplishments' of . livered by 'the'· Pope's Legate to .clwols... . ' .:,': " '. . ". ·'sta~f.... . " .. " :'" < s human '-intelligence displayed at .th~ meeting/His Eminence qiu ".:.' lInddthb c'oriireg~tio~'s'juris- : .. Alt~oug~ .t~e.r¢,lire hundre~s -the Bru'ssitls'international expos seppe Cardinal Siri, ~rchbishop ., . : ~ction come. the great pontifical ()f UlUverSI tI~s ':and colleges.' 10.
. iti.on, ha's no meaning unless' it , of Genoa, Italy: -tulive~sities .of . Rome.. and" 34 . the. wo~ld whlch.a~e operated. by
A leads to !I dora tion of God .:and . In his message the Pope recog· other' : Catholic- univer~ities. ~athoh~aut~o.rIt~~~s,,,t~~ term
respeCt for His .laws: . nized the, exposition as a truly throughout the world,' including Cat~olIc unIV,e;fslty ."j~ g.en . Moreover, nations 'which have -marvelous display of the riches f. three in the United Shites.·These ·e.rall y reser.ved to those .mstItu been'blessed with rich resources of God's creation,and what man Catholic universities are auton-. tlOns canOnIcally ~rected .by. ~he
..should help those land~that are . had accomplished by them. omous hut they have "been given' C"I.lgre~a~io? of Seminari,~s and
.poorer. But he emphasized that the UniverSIties These thoughts were at 'the 'meaning of the C.atholic com special recognition by the Holy. . .. ' See and are directly l{n'ked to it The three C!ltnolic ':universi core' 'of' a personal message memorations during these days through the, congregi!ti<)fi. . , ties in the U. S. are the Catholic which His Holiness Pope Pius was to 'thank God and praise' At its"head is the Prefect, His University o~ Amf;!rica,. Was?ing XII addressed.'·to participants in· Him for all the things which the to.n, ]). C.; Niagara UnI,Versity at . . Eminence . Giuseppe. Carrlinal the Catholic Days ,at the World . exposition displayed. Pizzardo, 81, veteran of 50 .Nll.~gara: N:. Y., . andPa,:,l pares' others for' teaching pas He especially underlinea the -)'ears service in the Rom~n Un~vers~ty.m Chicago.. Ca~hohc . toral. theology in .seminaries. "serious duty of the privileged Curia. In all, 24 Cardinals are UnIverSI~y, was . canOnIcally The other institution, the Pon nations, blessed with the re ,members of this congregation, ~re<:ted. m 1889. The latter two tifi.cal 'Regina Mundi Institute, sources of the earth a!1d with an authentic culture, to work gen BLACKFOOT '(NC) - , Retail lncludl'ng HI's Enll'nence FrancI's mshtut.lOns, .both cond.ucted by w as es tabll' s hed'm 1955 t 0 g'Ive · rdl'nal Sp'ellm'an, .Ar·ch·bl·sho·p th.e . .vInc.en.han F.:athers.,·...wer;e. u'nl'versl'ty c'ourses l' n theolog 'I, .. erously and with a spirit of . ' , stores in this'Idaho town of more Ca -.6 New york·... .' glv.en. ponhfical' ,r. ec.o?nIho.,n 10 P.h'l"h . peopl.e . . 'will be closing' service for the economic and _ 10SOP Y an d . canon. I aw to .~han5,OO.0 . ...'.. ..' 1956 and 1957 respectively;' d . t t dI ' social development of 'their less Thirty speCIalists, called con. '. . . . nuns an In eres e aywomen.· on' Sundays: ' . fortunate brothers." , IUltors are at the service of the <?ana~~ . has 'four p~:mtIfical . A number of other institutes The 'City Council has passed eongre~ation. ·.A.rnong them 'are unIversltl~s:Laval'~mv:rsity; of higher learning for women an' ordinance prohibiting retail . ' Bishop Martin' J. O'Connor, rec-.· Quebec City; t?e· U.nIVersIty of : have been· 'opened in recent stores from operating on Sun- • tor of the North American Col Ottawa; the UniVerSIty of..Mont:.. years. It .was only last year that· days foilowing the city's recent lege. in Ro~e; .Father .Re~inaI4 real'kand~ the University of Sher Cardinal Pizzardo appealed ,to vote to close the stores. MarIe' Garngou-Lagrange, O.P., broo e, m Sherbrooke, Que. the superiors gene'ral of religious' " The l!rdinance; similar to one French theologian;Father Agos . When the congregation canon. congregations to encourage their already in effect·in nearby Bur lino GemelJi, O.F.M., Italian Ic.ally erects a Catholic .univer members to attend these .insti- . ley; will permit only ~rugst,ores, . .educator, and Father Francis sity authorit~ is 'grant~d \0..con-. tutes in: greater numbers.. He 'service' stations, garageS, and' NEW BEDFORD ... Connell, C.SS.R., . American fer degrees In recognized fields also called on them to establish'" places which seli' food for 'con- ' moral th~ologian. ' . ' . of studies.T,he·con~:regationap"' new .ones as the need ar.ises.. . 'sumption on' the premises: to ." To supervise the activities of p,roves the universi.ty's consti~u- . The accent is more and more 'remain' operative. INDUSTRIAL the world's seminaries, the con tlO~s and ~oncurs In the chOice on the higher, specialized educa- . ';':~ .. gregation relies ii"fainly on re of ItS preslde.nt or re~tor. . ,tion of priests, nuns and. laymen.. '- . , HEATING OILS
. Although th.e ~athohc.unlver-. The congregation is already"; ports and apostolic visits to each 'of these institutions at regularly slty.o~ Louvam In l~elglUm was' working on the erection·of Cath- • • TlMKEN
.cheduled intervals. canOnically erected In 1425,most olic universities in Portugal and : CO. : . '. . of the world's Catholic universi Argentina. The number of OIL BURNERS
!\ll semmanes must s.ubmlt de ties are of recent date. Almost seminaries has' had a continual : taIled reports every fIVe years. .all of them have'been e s t a b I I S ' growth over the years as well. , ' Th e repor t s list t h e in.stitution's lished in the last 100 years, four & faculty members, theIr educa of them la'st year Through the Congregation. o f ' ti ona I b ac k groun d , t h e religious Seminaries and Universl'tI'es the .~• . •~ Among the far .flung C th l' 501 COUNTY S,T. l~fe, ,and statistic~l a~d.. financial universities canonically earec~el~ Holy See meets the challenge of. : 365 NORTH FRONT STREET: flgl;lles. Apostolw vIsitors tour by the congregation is the S h' the fast growing body of human. -., , NEW BEDFORD the .va.rious institutions .for the . University in Tokyo;, the o~n~~ knowledge an.d the need for bet-, : NEW BEDFORD :. WY 3~1751 ed~cattIon d and ~t?rmahOn of versity of St. Joseph in' Beirut, tel' educated, better grounded .. , -, WYman 2-5534 : PrI:s s, .a.n su bml a repo~t on Leb,mon; the ,Louvanium Uni Catholic scholars and educators.", their VISit to the )o.cal bishop versity. at Leopoldville in the . ;"~"~"~":":':"':"~"~"~":"::"':"~"~"~":"::"':"~,,!,~,,~,,:,,:._=============~ and to the congregahon... Belgian .Congo, and the still Not included under the con functionirig Catholic Univ~rsity · gregation's jurisdiction. are the of Lublin. Poland behind the • SUCCESSORS TO seminaries of religious orders; Iron Curt~in. . , . . and those seminaries .situated· in In recent years' the ~eed for ~reas already under the author specialized tI;aining jEor religious BOYS ··WANTED for the tty of the Sacred Congregations has given' rise 'to two new insti for, the Propagation of ·the Faith tutions in Rome. . Priesthood and Brotherhood. , Anthracite & Bituminous COAL of the Oriental Church. The Pontifical Institute of Pas- ' Lack of funds NO impedi AUTOMATIC CO~L STOKERS - BAG WOOD - COAL AND Much of the Congregation of toral Studies was formally ment. Seminaries and Universities' ac erected this year by His Holiness . CHARCOAL - HEATING OILS Write to: tivity' is devoted to guidance or Pope Pius XII. The ,institute P. O. ~~ 5742
the soiution of specific problems gives adva!lced training to di..,
facing a seminary. A long sta.d-. ocesan a':ld order priests' for
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WYman 6-8271 .6:40 Pleasant Street ..,... New Bedford · ing poli.cy 'of the congregation the pastoral ministr,y and pre has been an insistence on proPer' .
training. in Latin 'for-all prospec;'~~--""---"'''''''''-'''''~-~''~~'''
,t, tive priests. Last it issued , letter urging'superiors to make : ~ure that seminary Latin teach- : TRAIN CAS~. 21" O'Nl'rE' , er~ _ aI~_.well. traine,~. in, the.if, : ' . 26:' ~ULLMAN , subJect; and also that theIr stu- , 3 PIeces '1' dents are given su.giFie~t tiIl;Je i:: Pl~s tax '. . to :lear.n the Latm language,'Visit our new Lower Level: which IS closely related to the : . ' . f~r .ExceptlOnal . ~alues, : ChurcQ!s history and cultural , contribution to civilization. : 1 cl' An'example of how·the·con-' U : NOW.· 5 BIG ,S.TORES TO 'SERVE' YOU' BETTER! ' ~regation . gives spe .fic. help 'in ,.: 586 Pleasa!'t Street .. : NORTON:' E. BRIDGEWATER-.. 'RANDOLPH, PlAINVILLE
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Sports Chatter .,
THE ANCHORAug. 21, 1958
Thu~s.,
eyO Track Teolm Tryo\lts At ~I Bedford T onl9 · ht I~ew
Liturgy Group Continued from Page One
By Jack Kinf!avy
Somerset High 8el1001 Coaeb
Plans for the annual CYO Diocesan track meet sponBored by the Fall River Council No. 86, Knights of Columbus, are proceeding according' to schedule.' Elimination trials have alr~ady been conducted in Taunton 'imd Fall River and the New Bedford squad '11 b approximate or even exceed the WI e selected tonight at Babe's timetable en route to his Sargent Field. record 60 rolind trippers, the Approximately 50 boys typewriters start clicking and competed for berths on the Fall River team in the preliminary meet held at Ruggles Park last Sun, day which saw St. Thomas More, Somerset, take parish honors in both the junior and se",- . ior division. Fr. Pat ric k O'Neil's boy s chalked up a total of 50% points in the day's competition to 24 for Immaculate Conception, the runner-up. Bill Gastall, Somerset High four letterman, and Gordon Andrew'former Durfee luminary, Wllre the only double winners
19
the word gQ.es out this may be it. Like the four-minute mile barrier, Ruth's record will, no doubt, one day be surpassed. But it vv'ill take an awful lot of doing to erase his total of 714 cir,. cuit blows. ., June 15 Turning Point If the Yanks don't hurry up and snap out of it, the rest. of the .league is apt to disregard the.ir clippings and treat them as just another ball club, They've' OFFICIAL AND STAR: Gordon Andrew (right) of fallen under the ,500 mark for Immaculate Conception Parish, adjudged outstanding parAugust and haven't had a startticipant in the Fall River 'area CYO trials for the K of C er go the route in tbeir last II 'sp.onsored Labor DaY.Jtleet, chats with Nap Dufault Jr., games. The result of such add t f thl . versity has cut their Icad 'to a .lrec or 0 a, et~cs' at Hatch Prep, Newport, who served mere 12th games which will as clerk of course. '. . hardly cause Casey to' lose any' slel~p. Not just yet, anyway. Casey made an interesting ob-' . , .. ~o 0
F-Irs.t AI. h I-IC Saturd' ay Cl u b . Grows Successful in Parish
th~3f:~~no~~ ~::::lljU~:' :~v:;~~~ ~ee s:~~e~h~:~h~nt~;~=
gathering, reminded the participants the "most humble Catholic" is "the true cosmopolitan, a citizen of the world, a true nobleman made such by the grace of God" Citizenship Rigbt The Archbishop adde~: "In the liturgy, he exercises his right of citizenship; yea, more, he speaks, imd acts, and sings in accents of familiar but solemnly reverent intercourse with his heavenly Father in the great and holy sacrifice of the . Mass." The Archbishop called the' Liturgical Week participants "a distinctive and representative Catholic body." He said liturgy, as diyine worship, is distinct from private devotion, "There are some," he said, "who lay great stress on the fact that practical Christianity should be concerned with human wel fare to make this world a better place in which to live, Emphasis on God "The true and most important emphasis must always be on God, not on man; on the Creator, not the creature; on spiritual
~~;:~ ~o~e~i~i~~~'
=e social corol while Andrew led the way in ing point of the 1958 season PHiLADELPHIA, (NC)-Alout-of-the-way parish located in The Archbishop said "Our . 'the 100 and the high jump', ,Both "came on June 15, the trading ,coholics wh9se past may have, ,a.Negro-Puerto Rican district of religion is not only·.. a creed to boys were 'competing in the sen-' deadline.,· Trades 'weren't ,'in- 'ihcluded' excessive "dubbing".! the city:, be believed,not only a code of ior divisi6n. ' 'r volved; however. That' was ,the '. on Saturday nights are mem-' Al h l' "conduct to be' followed, but a .' . " dal' that the Yanks, hold.irig a :.:~ be,1'8,:of .. a Satur.da'y· afternoon, co 0 Ism or some phase of way of life to be lived,'! He said Andrew Outstandini' ' it is discussed after devotions by The highlight 'of the meet' seven game le~d over Boston, Cl!1bhere whi<;,h'is', oner~ted by, a guest lecturer who may be a .' the purpose and function, of the came in the 880-y'a"rd rel'ay. St. ,were shut out ID both ends of.·apriest. . ", . ,. , s h' tr' t hi' t liturgical movement is to explore a doublehe d b D t 't '. .'.. P yc la IS, psyc 0 ogls or sothill. way of life. , ,'" Thomas More .with a '20-yard a er y e rOl ;,. , It's no knotty' pine cafe nor cial 'worker experienced in fam lead~ goin'; into the final 'leg ap- " ,'Unfortunately B~ston dropped ,', midtown bright spot but the ily tragedies brought on by"-.· In his sermon at the closing , q two to Kansas CIty the same ' " . - Mass, Archbishop Alter s!lid: peared to have .the race sewed ". ". ,'. Club does have atmosphere heavy drinking. . up. But Gordon Andrew, runafkrnoon. The golden oppor. dl j'glit g' . d ,"To make the LitUrgical tunity had gone by the boards ,'~an e 1 ,or an 'mu~lc an A newcomer at his tirst'meet- . Movement succeed and come ning anchor for Immaculate Things might, h"ave been dl'ffer~ male and female,. vocalists. ing receives a membership c.ard alive, we need to have our.CathConception., turned 'on a' tre'About 40, members· .mee.a t t St. . , of ent, said ,Case, if the Yanks,:n if he wishes and his 'name is olic people gain a new vision
>
:~~d~~:n~~:::,tL~Uee:O~~aovae:~
win going away. Off this performance and his earlier double, Andrew was adjudged the meet's outstanding participant. , In the J'unior div,ision competition St. Thomas More had . things pretty much its own way. The Somerset contingent swept the high jump, Ray Ready and Will St. Onge tying for first, followed by Bob Dean. The Bar'otheI's, three sport stars' tek br at Coyle, chipped in with two fil:sts to swell the Somerset total. Pete won the J'unior 75-yard' d ',ISh and Fred the senl'or 220. No official time was kept. The meet was run off under the direction of Chairman Tom Patten of the sponsoring couneil and a committee of fellow knights. Nap Dufault Jr., director of athletics at 'Hatch Prep, Newport, was clerk of course. These officials will act in the same capacity in the' Diocesan finals which will be held at Rug gles Park, Fall River, on Labor Day, Sept. 1. Reports emanating from Tau~ ton and New Bedford indicate that preparations for the big meet are well underway in both cities. The Taunton squad' ill working out twice a week un der the guidance of Fr. Francis B. Connors, CYO Director, and Bill Casey, Taunton High coach. The New Bedford trials, sched u led tonight, are expected to yield a for:midable squad, what' with the. success the Crimson has had on the cinders the past few years. Babe's 80 Unequalled The greatest figure in 0\11' na tional pastime, Babe Ruth, passed away 10 years ago last Saturday, but most of the rec ords he wrot~ are still with us and figure to be for some time. Most notable of the' Babe's achievements is the record 60 home runs he hit in 1927, a num ber that has been approached. leveral times but never equalled. As far as Ruth, himself was eoncerned he was, of course, proud of his home run record. However, the Babe was equal lY proud of a lesser known achievement, that of pitching 28 eonsecutive Scoreless innings in World Series competition. There ill one record that's apt to with .tand the test of time. Of the '6 records Ruth wrote into tbe books, GO IltiIl :remain. Each year when a ,home . . . Wtler ,et.. bot IlIMi
»eam. ..
SMatlaCdhY s .Churhch each' first a ur ay, slDg ymnstogether . t"IClpat e m . novena devoan d par Seasons Overlap tions to Our Lady of Fatima. Here and there: a cooling Problem, drinkers' belong to thought in these August dog days th e c1u b , so d 0 non- d rID . k ers and is that the hockey season IS not. ref orme d d rm . k ers. Their organ-' far . t'Ion h as no d ues, no Officers, h off. The Bruins launch their . Iza oJne season Oct. 11 against the and no other purpose ' than to R angers according to the sched provide the spiritual guidance u 1e re1eased early this week. which alcoholics. need in their H ow the sports seasons overlap! efforts to rise' above a disease . . . Wonder just how many of W which afflicts 12 million Ameriarren Spahn's 16 victories' cans have been by a one run' mar-' . gin. Fairly. close to two-thirds Aleoholics Anonymous. I'll wager. .' .. "Ranging in. age from the mid, , " twentI'es upward 'nearl II f rrhe . I . .dream. 0 f an enc osed' the 'e. bers ar ,f y II . a th0 (overhead) stadium is about to' m m e 0 owmg e beeome a reality in Tokyo, Jap- Alcoholics Anonymous plan for an,' The roof of the. proposed overcoming their chronic ail70,000 capacity layout will be ment by means of a three-fold made of glass imd erected IlOmeremedy:, 'physical, "mental and 230 feet above the playing sur- spiritual. It's the spiritual phase
face. The project is being under- . ,of the AA program which the
written by Matsutaro Shoriki First Saturday Club seeks to im-'
?ewspaper publisher and pres~ plement through its' monthly· ident of the Tokyo Giants, often' meetings at St. Malachy's, all referred to as the father Of ~ baseball in Japan. lead, had been sliced' at that' time. "
Father Eid
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Pa«e One United States he plans a sUrvey of the spiritual situation of Lebanese here. Because he is active among both Maronite and Roman Catholics, he has been' granted the very rare privilege .of saying Mass in either liturgy. :rather Emile, joined by Chor BLShp'p Eid; sounded a special, appeal for support of Lebanon "a little i!lland of Christianity in. tb4~ vast ocean of the Moslem world." As "Christianity's .reat est stronghold frOm Gibraltar to India," .it needs and deserves help and prayers, according to the Lebanese priests. :Father Emile will remain with Chor'7Bishop Eid until late Oc tober, returning at that time to· ' hilS studies in Rome. It is his first viSit to the United States.
for Brjstol County
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added to' the club's list for monthly mailings. How well known he becomes as a membel' depends upon his own choosing, No roll is called at meetings, No induction ceremony is carried out, There's no "get acquainted'.' program. Several married couples attend regularly, so do professional people, white-collar workers, .and laborers. A handful are non-Catholic.
the Church-of what it really is." Spiritual Empire Only when Catholics' grasp "the full meaning" of their mem bership in the Church, he sai'" ,would they be able to "appre... ciate the full meaning of the liturgy and our sublime privilege of participating in it," . "What a p'rivilege," he exclaimed, "to be a member of the extraordinary society w h i c b bi"idges the c has m between
600 at Course
"heaven and earth, whiCh 'Emlolds within her mantle all races and generations of men', w h' l' Cb 'stretches out her' spl'rl"tual em-
STILLWATER (NC) - Nearly 600 s t u d ents fr om 12 states " attended the first Summer School of Catholic Action ever held in Oklahoma. Sessions of the' sum
mer school were conducted .at
Oklahoma State University~
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Ce.mas Ttmlin. O.F oM,. Franciscan Fathers ' New ~rd, Mass. , '"
S72 ........1 Street
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1343 PLEASANT ST.
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- THE ANCHOR Thurs., Aug. 21,1958,
20 ,
·British 'Historian Unde.rgoes M~re Medical Tests
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Assignment's
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WASHINGTON (NC)""':' .ent, Riverside.
Christopher Dawson, Brit - . Sister Mary Viola, RS.lV£., ish historian who on grounds from Mt. St. Mary's Convent" of health has been dfilnied ~. Fall River to SS. Peter and Paul visa to enter the United States, School, Fall River. is undergoing further medical · Sister Mary Kateri, R~.M. tests, according to State Depart from,' Mt. St. Mary's Convent, ment and Public Health Service Fall River to Mt. St.' Mary's officials. Academy, Fall 'River. ~ Some Washington higher-ups ',Sister Mary Emeline, R.S.M., feel the 68-year-old historian, a from St. Vincent's Home, fall convert to Catholicism, has a . River to St. ;Kilian's: Convent, ,goOd chance of being admitted New Bedford. 'to this country. . : Sister Mary Ricarda, RS.M.,. Britons Disa&,ree from St. Vincent's Home, Fall . Mr. Dawson was scheduled to River to St. Mary's Convent, No. come to the United States in the Attleboro. Fall as the first· professor of' : Sister Mary Amadeus, R.S.M., Roman Catholic studies in the from Holy Name Convent, New history of the divinity school of Bedford to' Our La:dy of Mercy . Harvard .University. He has' Convent, New, Bedford. never before :visited North America. . "Sister Mary, Lillian, R.S.M., Early in July' the State' De-' ;"omHoly'Name Conv~nt, New, partment reported' that Mr. Bedford to St. Patrick's', Con- " Dawson· had been .. denied" an Yent, Fall "River, entry visa, because chest x-rays .. Sister Mary Laurentia, R.s.M.,· indicated he haspumonary, tu from Our Lady 'ofMercy Con-' berculosis. British doctors say vent New Bedford to Mt. St. he has no tuberculosis. Mar;'s Convent,Fall River. Spokesmen for the Public · Sister Mary Leander, RS.M., 1iealth Service and, the State from the Convent of St. John Department told the N.C.W.C. . ,the Baptist, New Bedford to 'News Service, the original med Holy Family High School, New. ical finding~ are being rechecked Bedford. . . and further. tests administered., Sister Mary Mauriee, R.S.M., Keep Place Open from St. Joseph's Convent, New · Besides !Jecoming the first Bedford to St.' Louis SC9001, Charles Chauncey Stillman pro Fall River. fessor of Catholic studies at the Protestant - orientated Harvard : Sister Mary Frederica, RS.M., divinity school, Mr.·Dawson was from St. Joseph's Convent, New to have conducted a series of Bedford to St. ,John's Convent, lec;:tures and seminars during Attleboro. this year's Summer session at ' · Sister Mary Clarella, RS.M., Gonzaga University, Spokane. from St. Joseph's Convent, New The Harvard pro~essorship is 'Bedford to St. Charles' Convent, being kept open in case he is Woonsocket. admitted to this country. · Sister Mary Dolores, R$.M.. A convert to Catholicism from from St. Kil'an's COllVc;I1t. New Anglicanism in his youth, Mr. 'Bedford to St. Mary'S COl),vent, . SACRED HEART ENTHRONEMENT: (Left to right) Rev. Albert F.Shovelton of Dawson is known for his beli"!f ·North Attleboro.' that only a return to the Spll. St. James Church, New Bedford ; Joseph;> 4; " Teresa, . 6 %; holdiii~.Anne Marie, 2 mos.; itual traditions' 'of Christianit) " Sister Marie Merid, R.S.M., David, 7%;' Thom~,. 5; paniel, 9: holding Margaret, 15 mos.; Mrs. Kennedy holding save civilization. from St. Kilian's Convent, New Mary Grace, 2 ; and, Mr. ,Mortimer 'Kennedy placing Statue of the Sacred Heart -in home ,Bedford to the Convent of St. Iohn' the ':Baptist, New ·Bedford. at 80 Valentine Street; .New Be.dford. Kathleen, 11; and Maureen, 10, are attending girl · Sister Mary :Mercedes~ RS::M:.; scout camp. Mr. and Mrs. ~ennedy are active Legion 'ofMa~y workers. MARION (NC)-Membership from St. John's Convent, Attle dr:ives have been recommended boro to Holy Name Convent, as major· projects for local coun New Bedford.' , cils of Knights of Columbus in Indiana. A survey reveals only I' 'Sister, Mary Margaret, RS.M., 4.6.per cent of the Catholic men ftom St. John's Convent,Attle . . ' in the State are Knights.. boro to Holy Family .Convent; Ne'." Bedford;· .,With, th.e, closi~g 'o{ the recent d~ocesan~wide Novena .f.or r~~e" ma,ny: have' won - Sister, Jean'ne' Marie, RS.M.; dered how its· spirit· ,could: be carried into daily .life. An answer to this question is pro from St. Joseph's Convent; Fall . vided',bf a popular;.di~votion, the Enthronement of the Sacre4 Heart .in·the Home;' ' 'River to St. Kilian's Convent, ~SPECIAL MILK ' The Enthronement is a crusade to res tore Christ to the' famiiy. It consists'in the :orew Bedford.. ' . From .Our Own ~a~il~> once c~nsecrat~d; bless .ILthe~~ ·und~~taki~gs." Sister Mary Anselm, RS.M:;· instatlatio& of a . picture. or" :Tested Herd~ . . ~y t~e sponsors, ~hould be. dls : Many indulgences are' avail'; from St. Joseph's Convent,' Fall' statu~ <?f the Sacred' Heart in the principal room of thetmgUlshed by lov~ng obedience !Ible to night adorers and to ,River to St. Mary's Convent, , ,Acushnet, "Masi. WY 3-4457 honle, and in the cOllsecra ·to the ~o~ma.nQments,'a ferv~~t those whose homes ·are conse ~orth Attleboro. EuchapstIc ,hfe, a~d th~ splnt 9rated', to .the Sacred Heart.' De • SpeCial Milk Sister Mary Lucia, R.S.M., tion ,oJ' iachmember of the fam' • Homogenized Vit: D Milk., from St. Patrick's Convent, Fall ily to the Sacred Heart. This o~ pena~ce't Ifn ~leparl~fhon.t f~r scriptive literature is ·available. • Buttermilk ' JRiver ,to 1 Holy Family School, ceremOny is pt:esided over by ~a smg, agams. ami y I e, I IS from -the National Center. This . t'f t 'II 'bl It further suggested that the prac devotion has been 'approved by • Tropicana Orange Juice New Bedford. pries 1 a a POSSI e.,may tice of night adoration in the ' . . b' d t d 'L fl t _ the last four Popes and by many • Coffee and Choc. Milk Sister Mary Louis, RS.M., be performed by any. priest, no h' ~e. e tah' OPde . t' ea e s eXb members of the American hier from St. Mary's Convent, North special faculties being . required. p 10ammg • Eggs. - Butter IS evo IOn are 0 archy !Attleboro to St. Matthew's Con Night' Adoration tainable from the National Cen ~~~. ---, :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: !gent, Cranston. . It is emphasized ~y the Na ter. Sister Mary Pascal, RS.M., God Is First from St. Mary's Convent, North tional Center of the Enthrone The Enthronement of the ment, Washington 17, D. C., that Attleboro to St. Joseph's Con the Enthronement ceremony is Sacred Heart in a home indi vent, Fall River.. merely the beginning of the cates that the familr mempers Sister· Mary Jacinta,. RS.M., reign of the Sacred l;Ieart ~n a have put Our Lord and His in from St. Mary's' Convent, North family. Many devotional prac terests ahead.. of -their own. In Attleboro to St. CatherIne's Con return they may except to share tices are sugge'sted to those con vent, Belize, British Honduras.. secrated. They include frequent in His promises to' St. Margaret Sister Mary Julien, RS.M., attendance at Mass, observance Mary: "I will. establish peace in from St. Mary's Convent, Bay of the First Fridays, recitation of their homes; I will give them all View to Mt. St. Maryls Academy, the Family Rosary, anti special the graces necessary for their Fall River. observance of the Feast of the state of life; I will comfort them . Sister Mary Anton Correira, Sacred Heart and the· entire in all, their afflictions; I' Will, R.S.M., from St. Mary's Convent, month of June. Bay View to Mt. St. Mary's' Con vent, Fall River. .Newman Conclave OPENS
· Authentic fashions Sister Marie de Prague, R.S.M., COLUMBUS (NC) ~ More DAY CLASSES
from St. Patrick's Convent, Prov than 1,000 Catholic students and Week of September 8
for the kind~rgarten idence to St. Vincent.'s Home, chaplains from secular colleges Fall River. EVENING C'LASSES
and universities will attend the · to campus crowd · Sister Howard Fleming,.RS.M., 44th annual five-day con,;rention' Monday, September 22
from St. Matthew's ·Convent, of the National Newman Club Cotrlplete Business
Cranston to SS. Peter and Paul Federation which opens here and .
School, Fall River. Sept. 1. • Sister Mary Leocadia, RS.M., Secretarial Courses
from· St. Patl'ick's Convent, Val More value for YQur money Write or P,honeWY 5-7024
ley Falls to Cathedral School, .' ..... Shop Grant,s for apparel and school supplies for c9mplete details'
Fall River. GOOD FOOD Sister Mary Laurita" RS.M., THE
from St. Anthony's Convent, USE Pleasant ~tmosphere
East Greenwich to St. Joseph's GRANT "ask anybody·
Convent, Fall'River. No Money Down - Take Months To' Pay Air Conditioned
Sister Mary Jeremiah, RS.M., from St. Anthony's Convent, . 386 Acushnet Avenue, 908 PURCHASE STREET'·- :' 860 PUR<1HASE ST. West. Warwick to Holy Name " NEW BEDFORD New Bedford NEW BEDFORD Conv~nt, New.,.Bed.ford.
will
Far Too Few
Enthrolietnetl:t ,,0' Sacred Heart:. ·Now. Is ' Popular' Devotion
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