08.27.59

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Record Enrollment In -Catholic Schools

The ,ANCHOR

Over 21,000 pupils in Fall River Diocesan schools will be among the 5.5 million studentg•. ' a record high total, expected to enroll in U. S. Catholic colleges, high schools and grade schools this Fall. For the three levels, the totals predicted' in a nationwide report are Grade schools: 4,307,050, an increase of 205,097 over last year. High schools: 831,001, an increase of 34,260. C o l l e g e s · , _ and universities: 387,488, an increase of 14,903. These figures were released, by the

An Anchor of the Soul, Sure and Firm-ST. PAUL

Department of, Education of the National Catholic Welfare Conference. The expected enrollment in PRICE lOc schools in the Diocese will in~4,.OO per Year clude over 18,000 in elementary schools and 3,000 in high schools, representing an increase of 280 in the former group and 240 in the latter. Sevep ele'mentary schools, addinga higher grade will account . for the increase of 280.· St. Joseph's and St. Anthony's in Taunton and St. Joan of Arc in Orleans will add an eighth grade; Sacred Heart, Taunton, and St. Turn to Page Eighteen

Fall River, M,ass.. Thursday, August 27, ~959

Vol. 3, No. 35

lI""ond l;laaa 'Mail PrivUecelo Authorized at FaU River. Ma...

CCD Announces Training Course In New Bedford Rev. Joseph L. Powers of . Taunton, Diocesan Director of the Confraternity of C h r i s t ian Doctrine, an-

AT PR'OFESSION CEREMONY: Three Sisters from the Diocese participated in Clothing and Profession ceremony of Dominican Sisters at St. Catherine's Convent. Left to right are Sister Joseph Marie, Sister Mary Martin a~d Sis- . ter Marcelle Marie, wearing simplified veil adopted by Do- . minican Sisters. (Story on Page Four).

Superiors Anl\lounce ~ransfers of Sisters

Transfer of Sisters stationed in the various convents in the Fall River Diocese are announced today by Superiors. One or 'more changes in faculties staffing the various schools, academies and homes in the Diocese will become efSister Estelle of St. Dominic fective with the opening of schools in the Diocese next and Sister Mary Agnes from '-St. month. Transfers affecting Bernadette's Convent, N ~ w 21 Religious Sisters of Mercy Haven to St. Catherine's Conin the Diocese 'were announced in last week's issue of The Anchor. The following changes are announced today:

Dominican Sisters Dominican Sisters, Congregation of St. Catherine of Siena, announce the transfer of Sisters Celine from St. Dominic's Convent; Plattsburgh, N. Y., to St. Catherine's Convent, Fall River.

vent, Fall River. Sister Mary Lawrence· from St. John's Convent, Fall River, to St. Anne's Convent, Mooers Forks, N. Y. .. ,. Sister Mary Trinity, Sister Philip Marie and'Sister Maureen Theresa irom St. Catherine's Convent, Fall River, to St. Bernadette's Convent,' New Haven. Turn to Page Eighteen

Says Catholics Contribut.e To Sunday Sales Increase

nounces that a 13-week teacher training course sponsored by the Confraternity will be held for· the Greater New Bedford Area beginning at 2 P.M. Saturday, Sept. 26 in St. James lower church, County Street. Men, women and high school seniors of the area are eligible to take the course upon recommendation of their pastors. Instruction will' be given by Sister James of Our Lady of Victory Missionary Sisters, prel!ently doing catechetical work in the West Harwich and Chatham parishes. Those successfully completing the course will receive the CCD Teacher's Certificate.

UN Lauds Wo~k Of Maryknollers Among Indians pUNa (NC) United Nations officials here unanimously agreed that the Maryknoll Fathers' cooperative program has created a new hope for thousands of Andean Indians. This is the report of Msgr. John O'Grady, secretary of the National Conference of Catholic Charities, Washington, D. C., who recently completed a tour of the 'area as a member of the Andean study group of the U.N. The Department of Puno, the most heavily populated area in Peru, is located high in the Andes . mountains along the ,",urn to Page Twelve

ST. LOUIS (NC)-Catholics may be partly to blame for the increase in Sunday sales throughout .the country because of unnecessary purchases they make, St. Louis' Archbishop Joseph E. Ritter said here. "Recently there has been an alarming growth in all priests of the archdiocese to commercialization on Sunday "give speq,ial emphasis on . the in many places in the United matter of unnecessary buying States," he said in a letter and selling on Sunday':" in their to his priests. "Seemingly St.

Louis is much better in this respect that most large cities of the country, thanks at least in part to the efforts of various civic and religious groups, our own (Archdiocesan Councils of, Catholic Men and Women) included. "But indications are that we are losing ground in the struggle to maintain Sunday as the 'Lord's Day,' and as a day of rest." The Archbishop noted .that many Catholics bought and sold on Sunday, without any thought of doing wrong. "We cannot permit them to eontinue in ignorance or fo);getfulness," he added. He requested

sermons. A sermOll outline accompanying the letter concluded with four "Practical Things to Do" to discourage Sunday sales: 1. "Make sure your family confines its buying to weekdays. Peq;uade relatives an!i friends to do likewise." . 2. "Sunday employees: Gently ie'mark toempioyer that' em- . ployees deserve to be away from counters on Sundays. Sunday employers: Examination of conscience and consultation with confessor on justification of Sun.,. day business." 3. "Group effort needed-join organization campaigning for Sunday observance-e.g., Social Turn to Page Eighteen

VISITS PARENTS: Rev. Edward F. Donahue, S.J. is enjoying a vacation from his duties in British West Indies at the Taunton home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Richard A. Donahue of St. Joseph's Parish.

Jesuit Father Visiting Parents in TauntQn After four years as a teacher in the British West Indies, Rev. Edward Francis Donahue, S.J., is vacationing in Taunton with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Richard A. Donahue of St. Joseph's parish. A Jesuit for'23 years, Father Donahue taught in Portland, Me. and . Lenox, Mass before his pres- six weeks and will remain two more b e for e returning to ' ent assignment in Kingston, Jamaica. He is seeing much of Jamaica, where he is an in- a brother, Richard, who resides structor at St, George's College, a high school equivalent institution. Father Donahue combines parish work, especially on weekends, with his teaching. He terms Jamaican youngsters a bit better-disciplined than American, but on the whole much the same as their counterparts here. He has been in Taunton for

in Fall River, and a sister, Mary, in addition to his parents. Another sister, Mrs. Dorothy Ferreira, is in Maryland. Born in Wareham, Father Donahue was .brought up in Taunton. He attended Taunton High School and transferred to Coyle upon its opening. In Jamaica he teaches mathematics and 'religion to his high school students.

New England Confraternity Conference at Burlington The 13th annual New England regional conference of the Confraternity of Christian Doctrine will be held in Burlington, Yt. Friday, Sept. 18 through Sunday, Sept. 20. Under the patronage of Cardinal Cushing. and the hierarchy of ' New England, the--:conArchbishop Henry J. O'Brien, gress will include sessions Hartford, will celebrate a solemn for teachers, high school and pontifical Mass to close the concollege students in addition gress, and Cardinal Cushing will to special meetings for priests and religious. Bishops to address the convention include Bi~hop Matthew F. Brady, Manchester, N. H.; . 'Bishop Bernard J. Flanagan, Norwich, Conn.; Bishop John Hackett, Auxiliary of Hartford; and Bishop Christopher Weldon, Springfield; Mass.

preach. Other features of the meeting will include lay train. ing courses in the work of the Confraternity and instruction in discussion club techniques.

Speech topics will include "Religion in the Home," "Sharing Your Faith," "How to Become an Articulate Catholic," and "Teen Age Problems."

Ordinary Appoints Father Ferris T.aunton Nurses' Guild Di ..ector Most Rev. James L. Connolly announced yesterday the apt>ointtnent of Rev. Norman J. Ferris, 'assistant at St. Mary's Parish, Taunton, as chaplain to the Taunton area council of the Diocesan CouIl&il of ,Catholic Nurses. He succeeds Rev. Joseph L. Powers, St. Mary's Cathedral, Fall River, assistant at St. Joseph's by Bishop Connolly, Father Fer:' Parish, Taunton. Father Fer- ris was first assigned to St. rig: was born in Fall River Joseph's Parish, Taunton. On

REV. NORMAN J. FtRRIS

and educated in the local schools. August 1, 1953 he was transHe. attended St.. Charles College, . ferred to his present assignment, Catonsville, Md. and completed . St. Mary's Parish, Taunton. his. philosophical and theolpgical In addition to his parish work, studies at St. Mary's Seminary, he served with the other priests Baltimore. . of the parish as chaplain 10 Ordained on May 23, 1953 in Morton Hospital, Taunton.

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-THE ANCHOR Thurs;, Aug. 27~ 1959

DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER, Mf'SS,

Fatima 'Secret' in'1960,

'Pope JohnPro~ides :Good Example Of Excellent Publ,ic. ,Rel.ations

NEW. YORK (NC)-His Holipearance in St. Peter's basilica ness Pope'John XXIII provides .and on his balcony and the ae"the perfect ~emplar of public .'claim tha~ he receives 'generally relations in its 'truest sense," a thr'ollghout the world .. '. Take public 'relati(ll~S'executive tOld especial note of the significant delegates to a national Catholic' 'tact that statements of the 'Holy communications seminar; Father' are never persOnal ex-. ThOmas J. Ross spOke at the cept to ·prilise." . , , opening sessio~ of the five-day Public StMement.i " seminar held at Manb"attan He said that "no Pope iil o . College. " time has been injudicious in h_ -here 42, years ago, and now, a divulge<I only at the onset of The senjor partner in the pub- public statements." Carmelite'nun-"is to be opened World War n. Before then, her lic relations firm of Ivy Lee and '~'To sum up the significarree after" Lucy's death,or at the spiritual directors did not allow T. J. Ross said that "any busi-. of these manifestations which latest in 1960." He said that . her . to speak or write of them neSsm'an performing a service to' are only a few," Mr. Ross 'went "therefore it shall be opened for the public. : . the public would be happy in01;1, "you' have in tJ,le Holy in 1960." .Prayer and Penance deed to be as Lnfailingly sure of Father the perfect exemplar ot The final part of the Fatima To the world at large, the its quality and importance as public relations in its truest message does not consist of Fatima' message 'known theretoyou can be of what'the Catholic ·senSe-authoritativeJ articulate, threats .or prophecies of woe. fore was: simply that of prayer - Church teaches." unafraid, gentle yet firm, unerJlLucy herself, in her strictly ep- and repentance. But' LUcy. haci Inspiring Example itig, ideal aod worthy of imitaelosed Carmelite convent iB made allusions todevo.tion 'to Colmbra, . th~ old Portuguese the Immacuiate Hearl of Mary , Catholic public relations prae- ' 'tion."~, ' . ' ' ,,: university.town some .50 miles 'b-om 1927 onward. .",. titioners ''have the most inspir:north of 'Fatur'1~, hal1 recently d~At ,the'time Of.' theM:ariaa ing ex~ple" in': Pope .Joml Died that· she foretold' terrible "apparitions at F'atiina'.,-there SISTER LUCY XXIll, -. Ross stated. . " ~ 'jm'ilishme'nts lor' the world in the ,were six, begi~ on May 13, 1 , "~he Ho~y Fath~ is the: m~ ,' .. 8~ape of new 'wars and the de.,. 1917, anderiding th~ fonowing ,avallable, .prelate, m the.wGrld. • 'VA: TIC AN CIT Y (NC).•truction of whole cities. Oct. IS-Lucy could not read or hecon~ued. 'Compare ~e ' 'ROme's' diOceSan syn~ "c~ed DiscOurages Speculation "write. 'She iearped to ,do, !l0 only . press receI;ved by the POpeWlth .. 'by Pope JaM Xxm'as a model . Noone ex~pt SiSterLuC)' after. 'She lett her parents' house that~eceJ.ved l;>~ any . oti1er for diOceSan synods throughout JAMAICA (NC) - State' 'As'knows what the third part of the at, the age of 14, in ,1921, to go sovereIgn •• " coDSlder biB apthe world, pro~ablywill begiJa semblyman Alfred D. Lerner has "secret" contains. But Bishop! to school: . urged an all-out crusade against meetings before the year's end. .Pereira Venancio,.whose diocese In 1941, Lucy -then a lay Magr. Carlo Maocari, secreobscenity, 'including the estabinCludes Fatima, discourages .. Sister in the Congrega:tion of t,aiY' of' the synodal commission, 8Peculation about the message. the Sisters of St. Dorothy-wrote lishment of a "tough," uniform anti-obscenity statute to be COPENHAGEN (NC)-Arch8a.id that preparations have "Tell the people not to preoccupy themselves with' that, at the request 'of Bishop' Correia " adopted by individual states, moved and .rapidl,. ., . ' smoothly . ," . b 1'sh,?P M ar.tin, L ucas, S ,V. D His four-point program also' recently named by th~ Holy See siJ1,ce,Pope John erected,th~'~m'but to do' what' Our Lady has. da ·Silva a full account, of the aIreadytold to dO/' the Bishop first parts o(the, Fa~ima message calls for increased fines and jail' as first Apostolic Visi~tor to the ';mi8!!l9n ~ February. ., said when asked when the sealed or ~'Ilecret.", .This manuscript,' 'se'ntEinces; ,more' p\.l1?licity· and Nordiccountriesi was received, In. all, ,800 articles have ,,·beell 'envelope containing the "secret". ,thethiI;d whicti Lucy. wrote for 'community . cooperation; and in a special audience' here by ,tentatively approved -ior'.' subwill be opened. the Bishop about the, appari~ Federal legislation: to create the ~ing Frederik IX of Denmark. _mission to .the syn'od,and for The year'l960 was fixed by , lions, is in the episcopal archives' post of Judicial Officer in the The Dutch-born Divine Word eventual inclusion in a code oi Post Office'Department to spark -prelate is-making his first' fact: Lucy herself, for the opening. at Leiria. , diocesan regulations. But the Bishop' said he does not ' None of Lucy's accounts has a! concentrated crack-down on' finding tour throughout Scandi~" .1\~accari recalled thAt ·know at what time of the year yet been pUblished in its en-' pornography sent through the navia'. He was, accompanied to' this. will be the first, Rpmaa or .JVhere the message will be tirety, but accurate typewritten. mails.' . Amalienborg Palace to see the dio~ synod since before the Assemblyman .Lerner pointed opened. Neither does he say . copies of them exist and t:an be,: King by Bishop Johannes Theocouncil of Trent. The, last W811 who is to open the envelope, seen by persons whose' busil1ess out that "repeatedly in the indor Suhr, O.S.B., of Copenhagen. held in 1461. vestigation' of ar]Iled robbery, which is .understood to be still it is to know them. extortion, embezzlement, forglocked in a drawer of his desk,"" ery as well as rape and other No one; not even the late crimes of sex, authorities find Bishop of Leiria, Bishop Jose those guilty of the crimes were Alves Correia da Silva, who was I early collectors of obscene picCULION (NC)-;-Father Joathe, confidant and friend of Lucy tures and films." for so many years, has read the quin Vilallonga, S.J., 92-year-old chaplain of the Culion leper coldocument. ony in the Philippines has been elected to receive the 1959 Ramon Magsaysay, award for public' ' service, Clinics conducted by tile Fall River Council Knights of ke,ceiving the same award was Maryknoll Sisters in Korea will I ,.' Columbus will hold their annual Daw Tee Tee Luce,. founder of a benefit from the successful charelambake at 1:30 this Sunday' i home for waifs and strays in ity drive conducted by the Cath,'FciirhaY~n afternoon, Aug. 30, at Gardner's' Rangoon, Burma. Concerning, olie Pharmacists Guild of St. . , .. " . James; Fall River Diobese.· . PaVilion, Swansea. Vilallonga and Miss Luce, , ObJ'ect of the ·driv.e is to pro, I Tickets must be purchased by - Father the trustees of the Magsaysay, tonight 'according to general foundation noted that these were vide 'funds with which to pur-. ehairman Bernard O. Demers. selected for the awards "in :rec-, chase medicine, for the suffering', Games ahd "sports will follow : ognition of their compassionate " ana 'sick' in·' missionary fields 'PRE~p,nMA~Y 'KINDERGARTEN the bake, highlighted by a soft- service to. others whom society" throughout the 'World, with a ball game betw:een adult Knights JOSEPH'S HOMfE,' 56 ST;:JOSEP~.,S1'REET~ FALLRi~ has cast aside." 'different· group chosen each-year, and junior Columbian Squires. The' trustees added~ , a s beneficiary. ST. VINceNT~ HOME,28~J\IO,.. ,MAIN,'ST., F=All ,RIV,~R "Caring as did Raqlon Magsay~ . 'Anthony RRuggiero of Fall . 'SaturdoYIAu~ust28~2-4P.M. 6;'8 P.M. ,,(, ,·of; say, for 'all' people as. individuals River' was l;hairman. ::. ,\ ',. ' '~undciy; ~ugust 30--,2-4 ,P.M.' 6-8P.M; The following films are to be an,d believing in the!r dignity: -' . All ,C,aPlolic, registered, phar, M~l'lday~ .Tues~ay,WednesdaYi Thursday,Friday-6~8P:M. v,, added to' 'the lists in theit re- ,and importance, this Spanish macists in the Diocese are: eli-· _ FOR INFORMATION spective' classifications: priest and this Burmese woman gible for me,.1bership, in, the, Unobjectionable for. general have sought particularly to im"guild. Executive secretary is. St. Joseph's Home-OS 2-2943 St. Vincent's Home OS 2-5223 patronage: The FBI Story; Ore- prove.the lot of the unfortunate Timothy P. Keating, 415 County -A smc;iHregistration fee win be required, which ~ilI be gon Trail; 30 Foot Bride 01.' and, like the late Philippine Street, New' Be'dford. indud~ in the' ave.-all. tuition. Candy Rock. , .president, 'approached the task Unobjectionable lor adults and' \Vith selfless devotion. H adolescents: .But· Not for Me; West Newbury, Mass.' , .. . ' Christ in Bronze. .. Conducted by Unobjectionable. for "adulte:.; ,: .',' c, . • . , " " , ; ' 1807 Brothers ~f Charity 1"959 Sapphire. ' FRlDAY-St: Augustine, Bishop;' ' •. ... ·'.t,', .. <, Confessor and Doctor of the . 'Pr:iY~ "b~etin~ schOol ".~,':', ·l~;lo I .. "·'Church.' Double. White; for Boys Grades 5-6-7-8 T~ tC"-l.M. . . ENNIS (NC)-Bishop Jqseph" Mass Proper; Gloria; _.j '.' - ,... ;. . Write:·Ca.n~'~me for, - ;.,. 'Roogers .oLKillaloe has' blessed . <;:Oll~t 'St. Hermes, Martyr~, .,: , "'.". , Information' , a new luxury' hotel' built' for :.. Creed; Q9Dunon' Preface. ' Tet. HOmestead 2-4663 VA 2-2282"""'" ...... . . tourists in;:'tliiS.:ai'eaolCourity .~ATUIU):t\;X:~Beheadhig of· St. . , { . -' Clar~, Ireland. " John the Baptist. Greater, , ,.;. .;, . i -".~ .... '.' " Double.: Red. ',MaSS Proper;:, flfee 'TREEs ::. SHRUBS Gloria;· second Collect St.. · F ~ l?abina, ~tyr;qom.mon,PreFORTY HOURS face. DEVOTION . SUNDAY-XV Sundq After PLANTING J;'entecost; , .. Double. 'Green. Aug. 3o-St. ,AJ{thony of the Mass Proper; Gloria; Second DESIGN Desert,' Fall River. ~; .. Collect St. Rose of'Lima, YirSt. .lohn the B a p d"s t, gin; Creed; Preface'of Trinity. I;Ugh 'St,..t, 'Assonet, Mass. Central , Village, ' MONDAY-St.' Raymond Non'. . . Tel;" MI 4-2821 natos, Confessor. 'Double. ",' Sept. 6-St. Louis of France, , .' White. Mass Pr<>per;GI!5ria; .. , ' . ::S'Viinseal. ," , ,,~ , , .' Coinm6ri Preface,' <'. " , Our Lady of Mt. Carmel, TUESDAY-Mas!! of the ~'Pre­ ~kQ.~,'''' ;.',,' ,'vious SUhday:'Simple. dieen. Mass Proper; No Gloria;;SecSept. 13-St. Anne, Fall River. ond ~llect, St. GHel;", Abbot; Horri~ made " "StDomin'ic, 'Swansea; . , Third Collect Twelve :':H0ly ,'. CANDIES h, ' ; Brothers;' Martyrs; COD.lmOB Sept:"'~H6Ii :Cr~ ,Preface. ' CHOCOLATES River. .'-1 WED~DAY - St" Stephen, St. Joseph, Attleboro. 150 Varieties . Kin and Confessor.' Simple. at . Food, Sto.... hi JUST Whit;e. Mass Proper;' Gloria; - ROUTE 6 near SoUth Easterll THE ANCHOR ASK ComDionPreface. '" Second-class mail privileges auttK;rized' THURSDAY-St. PiuS X,Pope . Mac Gregor Fairhaven Auto Theatre at Fall River. Mass. Published ever)' ·FOR IT, Massachuseltl· Thursday at 410 Highland Avenue. Fan Q and Confessor. Double. White. . BR.AND FAIRHA YEN, MASS. River. Mass.. b7 the Catholic Press of the Mass Proper; Gloria; ComDiocese of Fall River, Subscription price mon Preface. • .mai1, postpaid' U.OO per ;veu.

FATIMA (NC)-The 'Bishop entrusted with the third· I and final part of the Fatima u~ecret" qiscl~sed that it will definitely be opened before the end of 1960; Bishop Joao Pereira Venancio of Leiria said that the.sealed.envelopecoD-' taining the account' 'Written 'The full account' of the firSt' 'by Lucy--=-Solesurvivor of two parts of the "seeret" which the three children whom the· the Blessed Virgin gave Lucy at Blessed Virgin appeared Fatima on July 13, 1917, were

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Urges Campaign Against Smut'.

Danish King Greets Apostolic Visitator

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92-Year-Old Priest Wins Service Award

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Pope, President. Salute Students At Meeting WASHINGTON (NC) Pope John XXIII and Presidfmt Eisenhower are among leaders of Church and State who have saluted the 16th

Fall River Maryknoller Sister Enjoys Vacation From Teaching Assig,nment in Hawaii "Hula hoops have nothing to do with hul a dancing!N declared Sister Ambrose Irene, MM., the former Betty Powers of St. Louis parish, Fall River. Stationed in Hawaii for the past 10% years, the Maryknoll missionary teaches an eighth grade class including Chinese, Hawaiian, Japanese, Filipino and Portuguel;le youngsters. "All the children learn the hula," she said. "Propertiple dwellings." ly done it's very graceful Interracial Harmony and is intended to depict the Sister commented on the interracial harmony characteristic entire history of the Islands.

national congress of the National Federation of Catholic College StUdents, to be held Aug. 31 in St. Louis. The Pope bestowed his aposBut hula hoops - they were a tolic blessing on participants in craze with our children for a the meeting while President short time, but bear no resemEisenhower sent his greetings to blance to the dance." the congress. Remote Subscriber In his message, the President Pt:obably among The A~described as "particularly time- . chor's farthest-off subscribers, ly" the theme of the meetingSister receives copies "as the "The Catholic College Student in boats come in," sometimes three • Pluralistic Society - Corri'mitor four at once. "And believe ment to Intellectual Excellence." me, I devour them," she said. ·"To meet the challenges of this In the United States until hour, our people rriust make a January for a' re-dedication probroad commitment to intellecgram for which Maryknollers tual excellence," he said. "Only return to the motherhouse at by the finest training of heart Ossining, N. Y., after every 10 and mind can our young. people years of mission service, Sister be prepared for the responsibiliAmbrose Irene has been visiting ties of mature citizenship." relatives in the Diocese. They include a brother, AmFaiih Aids Achievement brose Powers; of Our Lady of News of the Pope's blessing Fatima parish, Swansea;' a sister, 1Vas conveyed in a message to Mrs. Roy Keller, Sacred Heart the meeting from Archbishop .parish, Fall River, and her stepEdigio Vagnozzi, Apostolic Delemother, Mrs. Ambrose Powers SISTER AMBROSE IRENE gate to the United States. "As Sr., St.. Mary's Cathedral parish. . .' members of the Mystical Body of Among Sister's most exciting teacher in New York City before Christ, freely enlightened by the recent experiences was sharing assignment to Hawaii. There she teachings of Faith, your Godin the Islands' rej oicing at beteaches in St. Anthony of Padua given intellectual abilities must coming the 50th state. "Our parish, in a poor section of be utilized to the full," Archchildren were on retreat on the Honolulu. bishop Vagnozzi reminded parday the announcement was "Slums are not so bad there "ticipants in the congress. made," she recalled, "and' to as here," she said. "Most people "For only in. this manner will their credit they didn't break it live outdoors the greater part of it be evident to the society in -but when school was dismissed the time, which cuts down on which you live that your Faith, they joined everyone else in celdisease, and there are few mulwhen. joined in proper relationebrating. And of course they got ship to reason, aids rather than a free day to mark the occasion!" hinders intellectual achieveSister has been a Maryknoller ment," he added. 17 years, spending time as a Al'chbishop Leo Binz, Episcopal Chairman of the Youth VATICAN CITY (NC)-AntoDepartment, National Catholic nio Cardinal Caggiano, Bishop of Welfare Conference, told the Rosario, Argentina, has been delegates: "It is incumbent upon PARIS (NC)-Abbe Michel, named Archbishop of Buenos you to understand the nature of curate of a parish in VarenneAires, it was announced here. the society in which you now en-Argonne, has been awarded The 70-year-old Cardinal suclive, and in which most of you the rosette of the Legion of ceeds Archbishop Fermin Lawill work out your salvation." Honor for his World War I exfitte who died Aug. 8 after beploH of helping French prisonArchbishop Binz emphasized coming head of the Buenos Aires also that "sanctity and spiritual ers of war escape from the. GerSee on June 25. The late Archmans. excellence" must "underlie all bishop succeeded His Emin~nce One prisoner he assisted was • tasks of mind and body." \ Santiago Cardinal CopelIq, who Capt. Charles DeGaulle, now the is now servirig as Chancellor of President of France. the Holy Roman Church in Abbe Michel, in 1914 an inRome. , fantry non-commissioned officer, Cardinal Caggiano will head was himself a prisoner at the one of the largest archdioceses Fortress of Ingolstadt in GerDUBUQUE (NC)-Archbishop in the world, with a Catholic many. He .was credited with Leo Binz of Dubuque will offer maintaining the high morale of population of 3,2'47,000. Rosario the annual archdiocesan Labor has a Catholic populatioll of the other prisoners and of asDay Mass Sept. 7 in St. Raphael's • sisting in the escape of several .990,000. Cathedral here. Labor and manofficers, including Gen. De, . agement representatives and Gaulle. The priegt was earlier civic officials have been speawarded the Knight's' Cross, eially invited. Chevalier. The sermon will be preached by Msgr. Francis J. Gilligan, Fall River native and pastor of "For Your Protectiotl 8~. Mark's Church in St. Paul, luy Fro", Minn. Long active in the field M 01. labor-management relations, MAKES YOUR' Msgr. Gilligan has served as an CAR RUN lEna. ilrbitrator in man, labor dis132 Rockdale Ave. putes. He has also pioneered in IV ..... DeaIM~ ... New Bedtord .bor education. .... Serv.. Statiui The Labor Day Mass here will ·WY 5·7947 IftryWheN , ~ sponsored by the Catholic Committe fOl: Laboc Da,' Obeervance.

New Archbishop In Buenos Aires

France Honors Abbe Michel

Prelate to Speak At Labor Mass

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BL'UE R1BBON LAUNDRY

of Hawaii. She said there were no racial tensions among the many nationalities represented in her classroom and that this is typical of the Islands in general. "The Church is growing in 'Hawaii," she said, noting that in the past year the Islands' Bishop, Most Rev. James J. Sweeney, has blessed six new churches. Sister Ambrose Irene, a graduate of Henry Lord Junior High School ~nd' Durfee High School commented that she'd "just missed the 25th reunion of her Durfee class." In Fall River she divided her time among her relatives and was also the guest of the Religious of the Holy Union at Sacred Heart .School yonvent, Seabury Street.

Courtesy Reca IIs . Heroism of Nuns BALTIMORE (NC)-The century-old heroism of eight Catholic nuns is still commemorated today aboard ships of the. Baltimore Steam Packet Company. Ever since 1855 the line has provided free passage on its ships for Daughters of Charity traveling from their Emmitsburg, Md., motherhouse to their institutions in Norfolk and Portsmouth, Va. Charity Nuns The steamship line's courtesy recalls the heroic dedication of eight Daughters- of Charity who remained in the two Virginia port cities during the Summer of 1855 to care for victims of a yellowfever epidemic there. The epidemic claimed the lives of more than 3,000 people in the two cities. Though half the population had fled the area, the eight nuns remained behind nursing the sick and dying. The si!!,ters did not contract the disease.

THE AHCHORThurs., Aug. 27, 1959

DIOC!:SE OF FALL RIVER MAS•.

Prelate Stresses Value of Laity In Apostolate . ST. LOUIS (NC)-Knights of Columbus attending their 77th international convention here were urged to become "mediators between the Church and the world" by mean. of the lay apostolate. Bishop John P. Cody of Kansas City-St. Joseph, Mo., urged the knights not to waste the resources 'of their organization Oft "the pursuit of the trivial." He told them: "As individuals; you cannot rest in your efforts to know Christ and to make' Him known to othe"s." 'Bishop Cody preached at a Solemn Pontifical Mass offered by Archbishop Joseph E. Ritter of St. Louis to mark the start 01. the convention. Some 3,000 persons attended the convention of the .1,200,OOO-member Catholic ~en's fratern~l society. The Bishop described the "more profound realization ofthe nature of the Church reached by so many members of the laity" as one of "the great advances made by the Church within recent decades." Included in this deeper real~ zation of the nature of the Church, he said, is "a fuller understandin~ of the position of. the Christian laity." "A Christian laity must not be conceived. of and defined ill purely negative terms." Bishop Cody said. "To say, that the layman is the C:.ristian who has not received the sacrament of Holy Orders, or who has not made profession of the vows of religion, is an altogether inadequate description."

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lioly Family Senior Attends'

4

-THE ANCHOR

Thurs., Aug. 27, 1959

I

DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER. "''ISS,

World SodalityCongres~

Serrans to Have October Retreat

Representing the Diocese at the second World Sodality Congress at Seton Ha,lI University, N. J., was Ke\\in Tripp, president of this area's Queen qf Peace Sodality Union, and, a s'enior at Holy Family High School, New Bedford. He was

Members of the Diocese's three Serra Clubs will sponsor a weekend 'retreat at Cathedral Camp, especially impressed, he said, this characteristic of sainthoodLakeville, Friday, Oct. 18, by the universality of the magnanimity." thrpugh Sunday, Oct. 18. StartChurch manifested by the Cardinal Cushing reminded ing with supper at 7 Friday eve42 countries and 4,500 dele- his listeners thqt Christianity ning, it will be open to all busigates at the congress. Activity has· not lost "the power to proness and professional men of the Of the sodalists in Communistduce sainbl." area. persecuted Oriental countries What It Is ,Serra Clubs have for their also called forth his admiration. The Diocesan president expurpose the' encouragement 01 Eight Languages plaint;d the sodality as an organvocations and this spiritual ac:Congress speeches were transization of Catholics, mostly tivity will1>e stressed during the ' Jated into eight languages by a ,laymen and women, who pledge retreat. This, however, "should system similar to that in use at themselves to a deeper spiritual not discourage other busineSl the United Natoions, said Kevin. life and active participation in . and professional men 'from atTheme of the meeting was the the work of the Church. tending. Rather, it should serve vocation of the sodalist in today'! The m~ve~ent.is among the . as an added inducement, since world crisis, and all major -oldest of Its kmd m the Church, the encouraging of vocations il!l sp'eeches, delivered by prelates . having been' established ·more everyone's concern and the need t1Uch as Cardinal Cushing and than 360 years ago. In the past for further spiritual developBishop Leo C. Byrne, executive fa years-it has been organizelil on, GLOBE TROTTERS IN ROME: Harlem Globe' Trot- ment exists for all," states Wil- . episcopal moderator for sodall~ world basis with headquarters ters recently visited, Italy's Boys Town ap.d played an ex- liam S. Downey Jr., M.D., chairties, dealt with it. in, Rome. ' . hibition game there. Monsignor Carroll-Abbing, director Qf man of the retreat committee. Kevin, who' has ·been a .!=oun,Sodalists pledge to observe 67.;>' Reservations may be made selor at Cathedral Camp, East rules, the most important of Boys Town, accompanied the team to Castelgandolfo, where with Dr. Downey at 337 Union Pope John XXIII received ~hem and w~tched them play Freetown, this Summer, will also . which c.all for daily meditation Street, New Bedford. He furattend the Congre!!s of the Lay and examination of conscience, basketball. NC Photo. ther notes that attendance at all ,Apostolate at, Boston College frequent reception of the sacraretreat exercises is not compulnext week, together with repre-' ments, recitation of an Office of sory, should retreatants have sentatives from all Diocesan so- the Blessed Virgin daily and professional or other commitdalities. There he will chair a consecration to the BlesSed ments which would call them' meeting during teen-age ses- Mother. away during part of the weekwere Sister Joseph Marie, daugh-' Among Dominican Sisters parsions. The rea rea n estimated end: . ter of Mr. & Mrs. Joseph LePromote Magnanimity , '8,000,000 sodalists throughout' ticipating in ceremonies of revesque, 255 Shove Street, Fail At the New Jersey congress, ,the world, includin 1.8 milliOIi ligious clothing and profession Particular Council' Kevin said, Cardinal Cushing in 18,000 groups in the United' at St. Catherine's Convent, Fall River, 'and Sister Marcelle Marie ,daughter of Mrs. Irene Parent; The regular monthly meeting called on the sodal~st!? to proStates. of Fall River Particular Council, " River, were three young women 52 Coulombe Street, Acushnet. mote the virtue of magnanimity, 'With other members of'~their Society "of St. Vincent' de Paul, of, the Diocese. " which he defined, as greatness community, the ,newlY:'clothed will be held Wednesday evening, of soul.' , . Sister Mary Martin, daughter Sisters are wearing the' simplifiSept. 2, at 7:45, beginning with This virtue, he said, "has to do of Mr. & Mrs. Martin Delahanty, benediction in Immaculate Con.with' honor and honorable ac1106 South Main Street, Fall fied veil adopted' by the' Dominican Sisters in conformity ception Church, 55 l'homal PRAIRIE DU SAC (NC)-The tions. It makes noble deeds its ~iver, made profession of tempioneer group of Swiss Cisterwith suggestions made to the re- Street, Fall River, and continu· end. It inspires us to desp'ise the porary vows. ligious ,women of the world by ing with a business session in the petty, whether in personal opin- cian nuns which established the 'Pronouncing perpetual vow. the late Holy Father, Pius XII. church basement. ' ions or public policies or social first convent of Cloistered' CisterCians in this country less than At Radio M-eeting programs .,'; ~ The magnanimous two years ago acquired two new natilln is a nation without members when Mary ',Davis of GENEVA (NC),:-Two reprepolitical chicanery and dediChicago and Rose Tacasc of New sentativcs of the State of Vatican cated to humane statesIlJ.anship." York City were formally clothed City are attending the' InterHe declared that magnanimity national Telegraph Union's Or"is not found' in the lexicon of here as novices in the commun'dinary Administrative Radio communism. Within 50 years it ity's traditional white habit. Ther~ are now three AmerConference here. They are has conquered two-fifths of the New Bedford's Authorized ican novices, at _this convent Father Antonio Stefanizzi, S.J., earth and swept beneath the which bears the name (jf S~. Ida,. director of the Vatican' Radio, Iron Curtain somel 900 million a saint widely revered in Switzand Father Henri Riedmatten, lOuIs. It has seized two contierland. O.P. nents, set fire to' all others, en545 MIll ST. NEW BEDFORD, MASS. The Cistercian foundatiori was -r-------~---gineering the most skillfully ,made from the nuns' 'motherexecuted power grab in hid,-,"'V .. house, the Abbey ot Frauenthal .~ . D.espite all this, we must reach out~ we must aspire for ·near Lucerne, Switzerland, under the sponsorship of the Cistercian monastery of Our Lady Prospective Brothers ' of Spring Bank, Okauchee, Wis., At Workshop Week after Bishop William P. O'Con-' OIL BURNERS PASS CHRISTIAN (NC)-A nor of Madison had invited .the Also complete Boiler-Burner nuns to his diocese. , workshop week designed to acor Fornace Units. Efficient quaint young men with the life, The nuns, whose, principal lOW cost beating. 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ANCHOR5 Prelate Stresses Over 500 Boys Receive Spiritual and Physical THE Thurs., Aug. 27, 1959 Social Influence Benefits Qf St. Vincent de Paul Health CU,mp Of Participation When St. Vincent de Paul Health Camp, South Westport, closed its current season Sa'co to Continue NOTRE DAME (NC) it had played host to over 500 six to 12-year-old boys from every part ofSaturday "True social awareness" is a the Diocese. Certainly the most enjoyable pro ject sponsored by Catholic Charities, so far as School Bus Rides result of participation in the

I

DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER, MASS.

liturgy, His Eminence Gia-

....

,--' ,

. ".~ "

SACO (NC)-Chairman Walthe younger generation is concerned, the camp was staffed by 12 seminarians as counselors; ter Lumb of the Superintending Rev. Donald E. Belanger, School Committee has announced chaplin, and Rev. John E. that "the transportation of chilBoyd, director. The proceeds dren to Saco schools will conof the annual Bishop's Ball, tinue this year as in the past."

como Cardinal Lercaro, Archbishop of Bologna, told thousands of priests, Religious and laity participating in the 1959 North Arne ric a n Liturgical co-sponsored by Diocesan units Week here. of the St. Vincent de Paul SoThe Cardinal, famed for hia. ciety and the Council of Catho'Yigorous anti-Communist cam-. lic Women, also assist the camp. paign and broad program of Happy Dollars aocial action as well as his proAnd surely 'no dollars go motion of the liturgical revival, for happier uses. Youngsters atwas the principal speaker at the four-day meeting. G en era 1 tending the camp are selected on the basis of physical and spirittheme of the Liturgical Week ual need. They ~ enjoy all usual was "Participation in the Sacred camp activities, plus a thoroughLiturgy." "In the vellY heart of the litur- going spiritual program, caregy, represented by the Holy', fully worked out during Winter months by the seminarian counMass, everything - and Holy selors. . Communion above all - draws Camp objectives are twofold: and leads us with supernatural ta keep accidents at a minimum force to the spirit of brotherand to build up physical stamina hood," he declared. and spiritual knowledge in the "I would even say," he added, "'that the supernatural power of boys. Counselors' employ the the liturgy is so strong that it ,group discussion technique to get never fails to achieve a deep . campers to do their own thinking and make their own decisformative influence among the ions. Tact, patience and subtle people of God. "But it is certain that the more suggestion are employed to deeonscious and intimate is the velop the independent spirit. active participation of the conCamp activities are 'manifold. ,regation, the greater and richer They include a nature shop, with many animals OIl display, at ia this influence." which conservation and fire pre- . Interior A"itude Moreover, he said, the sacred vention .are stressed; an art denturgy "will not only determine partment featuring plaster work and rosary making; and a humexternal rules 'of action or patterns of community life, but it ming waterfront department, suwill create a spirit -and an in- pervised by Red Cross li~savers. terior attitude that will enable A special feature of the Health people to enter into a communCamp is the Indian depaI:tment. ity with a generous and broth- Its Order of the Cross and Arerly disposition and with the row sets the theme for the entire eapacity to work. In this com- camp. munity, they will form the cliSports are, of course, eternally mate congenial to a human popular. This season's program. 80cial order, based on justice, had featured weekly baseball and permeated with charity." games with Cathedral Camp, Describing the nature of the Ea,st Freetown, plus regular perlacred liturgy, the Carinal em- iOds of intramural baseball and phasized that it il "the action basketball. of the community, where the whole Church meets; its vastness Bell«.oas PrOATam extends beyond the boundaries A concentrated catechetical of the visible world, stretching program was begun two seasona out to the very heavens, having ago at the Health Camp. It inthere an everlasting abode; it cludes Mass to start each day reaches also the beloved dead and a daily talk _by one of the who have died in Christ ...The 'seminarians after dinner. Night liturgy is always an action and prayer~ in the chapel come' after a prayer of the community- supper. even if some acts seem to bear Also on the schedule are twice . an individual character." weekly informal catechism classes. Closing the day is the rosary Film Showing Opens said by each counselor with hi. own group after Taps. Brief Tercentenary Year prayers are said before and after PARIS (NC)-A documentary bus trips and other activities. film of the life and work of St. Visiting days are scheduled Vincent de Paul will be shown at for parents and friends during the Palais de Chaillot'during the each camping period. formal opening. of the tercenThe camp's calendar is rich ill tenary of the saint. special events in addition to the The film is being produced in France under the direction of regular routine of work and play. These include talent shows, J'ean-Marif -Marcel and Etienne boxing, field days, mystery rides, Lallier, b "ther of Archbishop variety shows, campfires and Marc An Jand Lallier of Marmovies. -eille. Indeed, the thought of the , wholesome- fun enjoyed at St. Vincent's by needy youngsters of the Diocese should make the Summer happier for all contributors to the annual charities appeal. .

Pupils in private schools haw been riding in city chartered school buses for many years. The committee decision is based on a legal opinion. handed down by Saco City Solicitor George Brickates. Mr. Brickates said that in opinion it is not a question ~ appropriating public funds for the transporting of private school pupils, but whether or not such pupils shoulc> be tran.. ported, at no cQSt to the taxpayer, in buses chartered to carry public school pupils. Charter fees ar'e not based on the number of pupils carried, Me. Brickates emphasized. The Maine Supreme Court ruled last May in a case involYing the use of school buses ita Augusta, that public funds cannot be appropriated for tran... porting private school pupib\. without enabling state legislation. Saco has made no suc~ appropriation, Mr. Brickate8 said, and would have no right to do so. In his opinion, the . Augusta decision does not appI, to Saco, Mr. Brickates said.

h.

FAREWELL TO CAMP: Ryan John R.oderick of Provincetown bids goodbye to Joe Lima, camp cook, at season's close of St. Vincent de Paul Health Camp. Father Donald Belanger, camp chaplain, joins in farewell.

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Sodality' Aims

17Je Red New Look?

: The' Sodality of Our Lady is a three hundred and sixty year old world-wide organization of some ~ightmiUiQn Catholic men 'and women dedic"ated to personal sanctification ' and to making holy the society in which they' live. . " The Worid COngress of the Sodllity whieh':\Vas::hei<l'ln: Newark had as its hosts the' one-qtillion eight hundred. thousand Sodalists of the eighteen thousand groups 'iIi the United States. '" . . . :. . '. The Sodalists have both. the personalan~ a social outlOok that characterize the devout Catholic. They. are· pledged to'cooperate with God's grace in their own santifica,,: ~ion and this, especially, through Confession and Communion and the Mass and through meditation and examination of conscien"ce. . .. They are pledged, further, to, correct the elements of lOCiety. which cause the victims of society. The Sodalists know that holiness is a light that shines before men and in the darkness of the world. They make their own the words, . of Christ, "For them do I sanctify myself," and they strive by· the goodness of their lives and by whatever steps lie in their power to change the environment in which they live, to change it an<! to charge it with the spirit of Christ. Mary gaye the "light of the world" to men. Sodalists place themselves' under Mary so that they too may bring Christ into the world. In this Diocese the Sodalists are especially active in the high schools. It is to be hoped that this recent World Congress will give Diocesan Sodalists renewed energy to enter fully into Sodality plans of the coming year.

Weekly. Calendar Of' Feast: Days' j - .•

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. A role of the Church that is sometimes forgotten is the

Chu~ch's title - won deservedly through many centuries of'civilization ~ of "patron of the arts." As Pope John

Of .

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The Target Remains

By Rev. JamesA.Mc:Carthy Holy Name Ch...eh-Fall :River \>

When did the Koman eollar . first come into use? From the very earliest days of. the Church, the "collaro"· was used to distinguish the' clergy from the laity. This "collaro" was a vest-like garment of black cloth with a stiffer 'circlet or ~nd of the same black material around' the neck. This was the forerunner 'of what is known today as the 'rabbi' or 'rabat' ,,(pronounced rabbee). In the seventh century, it became customary to wear a removable piece of white linen over the nec\!:band as a ·protector to prevent fraying and soiling from perspiration, friction, etc. In ,time, this protector pecame the stiff white Roman collar with which we are now 10. 'familiar. •

•••• •

. Who is the official that Clan. the cardinals together to elect a new Pope? I read tbe account . of tbe procedure prior. to 'Pope Jobn's election, but ClaD'ootrecall, the title of the .official.

'. The "Camerlengo, also called Cameral'ius is the name attached to the individual holding the office of chamberlain of the Roman Church. Ordinarily, this official' is a cardinal. It is he who' certifies the death of the Pope and calls the conclave for electing a successor. He is also in charge of the properties and finances of the Holy See and of the revenues of the Sacred College of Cardinals.

•••

. Where is the ambry io the churcb, and what is its use? The ambry is a closet or chest in which are kept the Holy Oils needed for Confirmation, Baptism and Extreme Unction. Usually, the ambry is attached to 'the wall of the sanctuary.

••• Boston Radio .Station WBZ is to be congratulated for What is tbe name' given to Its presentation of an houTs'radio dOCumentary on pornogthe two broad ribbons banging raphy. This program has been presented twice during the from tbe back Of the bishop'. last week and will undoubtedly be heard from again in the mitre? The two bands of cloth that near future. Without sensationalism and with a high sense ,. of integrity, the program officials gave a clear picture of extend from the' back of the mitre are called vittae (plural Note to the inquirer who this five hundred million dollar business that threatens of "vitta").and infulae (plural of asked about confessions and the morality and mental health of youngsters. 'infula') but they are commonly Masses: Senator Estes Kefauver, in presenting legislation to , referred to as lappets. Your letter has been forwardprovide stiffer penalties for mail order smut distributors, ed to the parish you mentioned. ••• Why does a Clardinal use the has stated that "some progress has been made in the battle Needless to say, the priests of a .ignature: first·n~e, Cardinal. parish are better qualified than against smut peddlers, but the war is far from 'won ~ •• iast name? . priests outside the parish to The number of smut peddlers who have gone to jail has been The reason cardinals so sign know what their program is, and infinitesimal." themselves, v.g" Richard- ,Car~hat they can fit into tHeir The danger spot in any codmpaign against evil is that dinal Cushting, is tradition. It schedule. Confessions are schedafter the fIrst enthusiasm wanes complacency $ets in. would be quite correct for tlled regularly in that church, Recent months have seen a )'lave of indignation from par- Bishop Connolly to sign his as well as in other churches in name-James, Bishop of Fall the' city, and any priest will ents and responsible officials .against pornography sent River; this was customary until gladly hear an individual's conthrough the mails or displayed in stores. Congress is con- comparatively recent times, and fession when requested. Your sidering bills that will do much to put the merchants of this form is' used even today by suggestion is certainly based' on filth .out of business. BuJ there must be constant vigilance on some European bishops. While a worthy motive, and we are this custom has fallen into disuse sure it will receive proper conthe part of parents who must watch tneir children's mail with bishops generally, it has sideration as tp feasibility. and keep an eye on neighborhood stores. ) . persisted in the case of cardinals. This is rio time for complacency to set in. With such Perhaps the derivation of this Bishop Sheen Speaks responsible programs as WBZ's portrayal of pornography, tradition is based on the general usage among royalt:· 'and nobilOn British Television the business of filth will remain a target for decency. ity still pertaining to thL time LONDON (NC) - Auxiliary

..

®The ANCHOR

OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River ,410 Highland Avenue fall River, Mass. i OSborne 5-7151 PUBLISHER· .. Most Rev. James L. Connolly, D.O., PhD. ASST. GENERAL MANAGER GENERAL MANAGER Rev. Daniel F. Shalloo, M.A. . Rev. John P. Driscoll . MANAGING EDITOR "Hugh' J; GoldeR Q

.

DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER. MASS. ,

PatrOl) of the' Arts pointed out when he' was Patriarch of Venice, "Wherever there has been progress in human culture, the Church has been there.'" . The Twelfth Biennial Convention of the National Gatb-' olie Theater Conference has been reminded of this ApOstolate of the Theater by Coadjutor Bishop McDonnell of Wheeling: ,Mention of the theater at times calls up the eoncepts of "increasing indifference to GOO and religion" and "immorality and indecency' in literature, dress and entertainment. \ But Catholics do not· back away from a field of activity because of dangers that lurk within it. Bishop McDonnell, in speaking of the special attraction that the theater haS . for" young people, lias pointed out the opportunity' that .Catholics have to make their influence felt in the theater world. The plan to bring the operatic version of T. S. Eliot's .play "Murder in the Cathedral" to many dioceses throughout the country will show many Catholics the' Church's interest in 'fine arts. Interest in dra'ma by the Church· in America ,is just another sign, and a happy one, that the Church is truly eoming of age hi. America and showing forth all the riches of her patronage. -

6 ' Thurs.,~THE AN~HOR Aug. 27, 1959

. TODAY-St. Joseph Calasanotius, Confessor. He was born in Aragon in 1556. He .studied for the priesthood in Rom~ and was ordained in 1583. He found-. ed the Order of Clerks Regular of the Pious Schools, known atI the Piarists, dedicated to care of children of the poor. In hi. old age he was unjustly ac, cused, brought before the Holy Office, and removed from control of the community. Even-: tually he was restore4 and hhl patience earned for him the title of a "second Job." He WaJ! canonized in 1767. \ TOMORROW - St. Augustine of Hippo: Bishop-Confessor-Doctor. He was born November 13, 354, . in Taga:;te, North Africa. Despite early training by hi. mother, St. Monica, he spent his youth in vice.' He became a rhetoric professor and taught . at Tagast~, Carthage, Rome and Milan. He was baptized at th~ age of 32 by St. Ambrose, the same year that ~is mother died• He' lived a short monastic life near Tagaste and in 391 was ordained at Hippo. Three year.' later he became Coadjutor Bishop of Hippo.. Noted for hUl wr~tings, he is famous for ~i. "Confessions" and the "City of God," and also f()r his defense Of the Church against ,heresietl' and schisms. He died August 28, 430.

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SATURDAY - Beheading 01, St. John the Baptist. This feast· c'ommemorates the courage 01. ,St:- John for publicly censorin, Herod Antipas who took to himself Herodias, the wife' of the King's brother, Philip. The saint was beheaded at the request of Salom~,' a dancer who was the daughter of Herodias. SUNDAY-St. Rose of Lima, Virgin. She was born of Spanisb parents 'in 1586 in Lima, Peru, and her childhood was patterned after that of St. Catherine of Siena. She lived as a Dominican tertiary in her home and, like her model, was favored with extraordinary mystical gifts. She died in 1617. She is the first American-born person to have. been canoi!ized. She was raised to sainthood in 16710-

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MONDAY-St. Raymond Nonnatus, Confessor. ~e. was a member of the Mercedarian order, instituted in Spain to ransom Christian .captives, and succeeded St. Peter Nolasco as the second roaster general of the community. He not only spent all his valuables in ransoming Christians, but is said to have surrendered himself as a hostage to fr'ee one of. them.. Lat.er he. was ransomed by his comm).lnity. Pope Gregory IX created him a Cardinal. He died in 1241) and was canonized in 1657. TUESDAY-St. Giles, Abbot. He probably was a Provencal by . birth and was Abbot of a Benedictine Monastery on the Rhone River, where the city of St. Gile. now stands. He became one' of the most popular Saints of the Middle Ages and his shrine is a popular place' of pilgrimages. More than 160 churches in England alone were dedicated in hil name. He died about 712.

carried over into' the hierarchy Bishop Fulton J. Sheen of New WEDNESDAY-St. Stephen 01 of the Church. The Queen of . York, noted for his t~levision England would sign official appearances in the U. S., spoke . Hungary, King-Confessor. On documents--"Elizabeth Queen". to millions of British TV view- the death of his father, Geza; in Fro m literature we, recall ers over the nation's commercial 997, Stephen became king of the Magyars of Hungary. He mar"George Gordon, Lord Byron"; network. ried Gisela, a sister of EmperOl' newspaper accounts of a few This independent network gave St. Henry II. Together, with the decades ago familiarized us with the whole 'of it~ weekly feature, "Edward Prince of Wales;" and "About Religion," to a recording help - of the Holy See, they more currently the press speaks which Bishop' Sheen had made ~ Christianized the country. He organized dioceses and founded of "Alexander, Viscount Monthere during a, stopover on his abb.eys, bringing many famou. gomery". All of this,however,- way to Rome for an audience foreign monks and priests to the is merely conjecture as a poswith Pope John XXIII. country. He was the father of sible explanation. Actually there Bishop Sheen gave the proSt. Emeric. In his late years, he. is no definite indication of the, gram the title "Five Times Marorigin of this tradition, or at ried," and spoke on the parable . was beset with misfortunes and difficulties. He died about 1038. least such indication bas not in St. ,John's Gospel about the eome to our attention after woman whd was married five He is the national saint-hero. of extensive researc~ . ' times. Hungar¥.

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Our"'New Pope:

Roncalli,and the Worker Priests

From POPE JORN' XXIII: As AlIthorftaUye aloeraph,. a,. h . Aradi, Mscr. James L TUcek. and James C. O'Neill. Cop,.ricbt. 1951. .,. Farrar Stnus and Caah,., 1Ile. Pabllsben

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mE ANCHORThurs., Aug. 27, 1959

DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER. MASS.

PART X

.... 'Among the m9st difficult problems f~ingArchbishop Angelo Roncalli duririg his years as Nuncio to Paris was that of the French worker priests.. The worker pr.iest proJ'ect, still. unde~ consideration today, sought to answer th,e frightening de-Christianization of arrested for participating ia France's. working masses. demonstrations. One such dem' t'lCal tS d ' . 1943 onstration was directed against Stat IS U lea .In . showed that there were 110 Gen. Matthew Ridgeway, COJ1\-

Eve~ the Russians praised hI.for not handing down pious leetures to them. They did not rua to the nearest church to be hap.. tized or to join the Church; nevertheless, the seeds of Ro.... .. calli's activity will bear fruIt. In December, 1952, Archbishop Roncalli received the news that Pope Pius XII had elevated hiDl to the College of Cardinals. Archbishop Feltin of Paris, went immediately to the Nunciature to congratulate him and found him rf,!ading his breviary. The Nuncio looked sad and said: "Now I have to leave Paris, I have to leave France and all th. is painful for me. !tis painful io think that I should end my life among Roman paperwork, in tIM Offices or Congregations."

areas in France where only 20 mander of the NATO Forces. per cent or less of the newborn In addition' it was found· that were baptized. they had little time for recolleeThis figure becomes terrifying tion and prayer and. even for when it is realized that all, the the celebration of daily Mass. great cities of France are Rome Inquires located in these 110' regions. In 1947, the Sacred CongregaTo combat this the 'French tion of the Holy Office in Rome Hierarchy in 1941 set up ,the was forced to ask certain quesMission of France. tions abou.t. the way of life and Priests' were selected for the about the spiritual exercises of task of bringing the Gospel. to' the worker priests. It posed the rural 'or urban areas where the questi6n whether other methods people seemed totally fallen and ways of life could not be Ret)lrns Home away from the Church. These found for these apostolic souls, The French Republic gave his priests were trained at ·the that would be more in conforma memorable ·farewell. President seminaries at Lisieux and ity with Catholic doctrine on RECEIVES RED BIRETTA: When Archbishop Ron- . Vincent Auriol placed the ~iretta Limoges. Even so~ it· soon be- the priesthood. calli was elevated to the College of Cardinals late in 1952 the on the Nuncio's head in the pre;... eame evident that even these Archbishop Roncalli journied ence of diplomats and French " . specially trained priests. could. to a 11 th ose regIons In France French Republic gave him a memorable farewell. Following s tatesmen. Al so th ere t 0 wa ..... ... not· reach the people solely by where the worker, priests were a 400-"year-old 'tradition President Vincent Auriol placed were· the mayor of Sotto • preaching. engaged in actiVity. The month- . the red biretta.on the Nuncio's head.· Monte,the .. new Cardinal's viIThus arose .the worker·priests. ly magazine,' Esprit, protested' lage, and some of his childhood . 'ts,saYing . 'they problem'. ,.literary: or religious values> of .. fr'l'e'nds w··hom' 'he had ask'ed The:se priests, at firsbwere most- agaI'nst th ese VISI J.y "diocesan, 'but were, 'later raised the.. q~stioq·whether·the"·· ,"'Very. :shortly, ,bow.eyer,. ~~. _. any peopl~ should be ignored or Auriol to invite to the ceremofiJ'. joined by. members of. the· ·reli- Nuncio considerec:t the bishops are going to ask John XXUI to' neglected. . :' LeaVIng Paris, he was made a gious' orders. Their... ,vocation . .to be the successors of the .'. tellus his views, and we will tell " .....The .. 'regar,dless' means :Commander of the Legion of was' to work' among the workers, ,..Apostles or merely Vatican h~m. o~r experience with the that one should take these values Honor., Behind him remained the functionaries to whom he could movement and our intentions into maximum' account. We constructive and lasting resulta livI'ng alongsl'de of them. Truck Drivers and Miners. give orders. and if he does not approve .\>f should say loudly' arid> clearly o{his ~ork: He did not irit~rfere Toh-ey'.. went into the 'factories' .Th,iswas, the .only. time :Arch'the~ we will go on studying' the that 'UNESCO 'wishes all ,·to be in domestic politics, but he had . , as steel, chemical and electrical .. blshop·Roncalliwas criticized in pro~lem. We will think ii'ov~r respected." "an undeniable influence on the· workers. Tht:lybecame ..truck, the I?ress.· And it is significant· ., again more prc,Loundly ~~d .will .... In the UNESCO meetings fundamental issues which beset drivers' and teamsters. ·They that I~ the following issue of the' search for the best form. .whe.re Angelo Roncalli spoke, his . France and French Catholics. By worked as miners in the coal magazine ·the author declared UNESCO Observer words were heard by.all races, helping·to restore p~ace withia pits, .as electricians in plants in t~at. the ·Nunci?'s visits to the During hi's stay in France religions and ideologies, by the the Church in France he enabled the Alps and as waterfront bI~hops regarding the worker Archbishop Roncalli was' apSoviet Russians and the dele-' the French episcopate to exerciSe laborers sailors and dockhands. prIests was a purely religious pointed by Pope Pius XII as the gates from Outer Mongolia, as moral leadership over the entire , matter and wI·thI·n b' d . . well 'as by Scandinavians and Archbishop--now Cardinal___ Th A . IS omaIn. Holy See's first permanent ob- South Mricans. . . people. _ Feltin of Paris stated publicly I .e postolic Nuncio certainserver at the United Nations Now finished, he returned • that the worker priests had y dId not recommend that the Educational, Scientific and Cul'Roman Paperwork" his homeland for the well brought about many conversions worker priests be disbanded. He tural Organization (UNESCO). One of the American delegates deserved rest due a man who hati He said that all those wh~ knew. from his own experience His first appearance at a: observed: "In private talks, at worked hard and was 71 yeaa knew the worker priests even how Important. it is for a priest meeting in 1951 drew cheers . the dinv.er table (or at small re- . old. if they did not agree with .some to. have constant personal contact from' other delegates, for the ceptions people' seemed to re-. (Next week-Patriarch of of their political or social ideas, W~h p~ople. ' . , 'diplomats accredited in Paria' member what the Nuncio said. Venice) eould always admire, their . eS~lIte, Roncalb s efforts, the knew him well., Their enthuapostolic zeal and could easily slt~atIon re~arding the worker 'siasm for the papal representaimagine how their· radiant prles~ deterIorated. The French tive asa person did not mean spirit reached the souls of remained deeply attached and . that UNESCO as. an organizaothers. grateful to him because it was ,tionor many' of its member " '." thanks to his efforts and his re":' states necessarily agreed .with . In 1945, Archblsh~p ~~ncall~ S . porting of the truth that the Church policies. fIrst year. as NunCIO' 10 ParIS, Holy See delaYed its final judgIn his, first speech to .the or.. rumors spread tha~ the Vatican ment on the matter. 'ganization, th.e future Pope JAhn..: '\vas worried about the w o r k e r . " '.. v priests. Some circles, 'still feeling' . A~c~pts. ~uggestiOll "said in part: . reserltment against the'H:ofy See At bis . suggestion the three : "UNESCO should be a great· for not denouncing the wartime ranking. mem.bers of the French cooperative effort for justice,. Vichy government, found new hierarchy, Cardinals Feltin, Ger- freedom and peace for all fuel' for their claim that the lier and Lienart, were invited to peoples of the earth, regardless Vatican was reactionary because Rome for a long audience with of race, language or religion." it questioned the effectivenesS of Pope Pius XII. ' Heard by All the' worker priests. Mter they returned to France, Mter pausing for. emphasis, It was true that 'Rome was the French episcopate issued he repeated, "Yes, regardless of concerned. The Holy' See had orders that modified the worker race, language or religion. And. never given 'its full authoriza- priest movement. The essentials if I underline this clear position , " tion. 'The movement had' been remained. The worker priest. ' taken by UNESCO, which is part permitted only temporarily and were allOWed to work in fac- of its constitution signed in 1945, . Bnd for experimental' 'purposes tories, but for only three. hours, in London, which deals with' under the jurisdiction of the not for the entire day. UNESCO', purposes vis-a-vis bishops. . , They were forbidden to as- race, language and religio\Ul. sum.e posts of responsibility in relations, it is because the Advises Dela,.· labor ·unions. The majority of drafters of the constitution clearBut the Holy See did not ma~e the more than 400 who received ly employed this word 'rq,gardany open statement about the their training for the movement less' in intending that no racial, worker priests until 1947; It was obeyed the order and continued Archbishop Roncalli who' ad- the work. Many of the recalcivised Rome to wait. The move- trants later returned to the ment had his sympathies and Church. . ONE STOP . he knew well that any sharp, The important thing was that premature statement of a disci- because the problem was hanSHOPPING CI::NTER plinary nature would inflame dled delicately but firmly by the public opinion and create prob- Holy See-advised always by • Television • Furniture lems of conscience for the work- Archbishop Roncalli - French • Applia.nces • Grocer,. er priests themselves. Catholics also came to underAs they inspired confidence in stand that no priest can identify 1M Allen St•• New Bedford tbeir fellow workers, the worker himself either with the rich or WYman 7-9354. priests were given roles of coun- with the underprivileged; that selors and arbitrators in labor Christ did not· preach to classes disputes and it was here their or groups, but to individuals. difficulties began. Hierarchy's Feeling , In ,France it is not possible to After .Angelo Roncalli was . secure employment 'in. mines elected Pope; Cardinal Feltin and :factories without belonging spoke of the, French hierarchy's to a labor union and thus many feeling on" the worker priest BOYS WANTED for the of the ,priest workers,' as natural· movement. He said: Priesthood and Br.otherhood. leaders, soon were charged with "His Holiness John XXIII is responsible positions in these well informed about the problack of funds N'O impediorganizations, many of wbich, lems and about the difficulties. ment. . at that time, were communist- He had to deal with the' question Wrlt~ t« controlled. when he was Nuncio in Paris. Also it was impossible for Nevertheless," when he was P. O. Box 5742 1659 AhlfRllA'S DfPf~DABlf FOOD MfR{HA~T 1959 them to avoid disputes and Nuncio'in Paris, he did not exBaltimore 8, Md. atrikes and finally lOme were prea all7 opinion about the 0

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CORREIA & SONS

Trinitarian F,athers

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Byways ',Be~ter ·tha.r,· 'Righways, ' Touring, Couple 'Dis~overs

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.-THEANCHOR Thurs., Aug. 27, 1959

DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER, MASS,

.

Pledges Prayers For Counci.I

. By Mary· Tinley Daly .~ The question of "the high road" vs. "the low road" is a controversial 'one at our house. Recent ),ourney was no exception. This time, I had thought (as always), we'll hit a highway, connect with another super highway, arrive at destination in 'jig time. For along. Never set any ,speed reconce, get where w~'re going ords but we saw things, and met ,within an approximation of people!" the dispatch friends display'·, Also, we saw things, just: as

MURRAY BAY (NC) ~ The Daughters of Isabella have" pledged prayers for the succeSi of the coming 'ecumenical council announced by 'Pope Johll XXIII. The promise was contained ia a resolution adopted at a meeting here of the National Board' of Direction of the National Circle. . In other resolutions adopted at the meeting, the Daughters of Isabella: ~Urged parents to realize their responsibility to provide a secure home for their children. , ~Called on all members of their' organization to continue their prayers for religious vocations. . ~Repeated their opposition W artificial birth' control. ~Urged, members to dress with dignity and modesty at aU times. ~Promised to cooperate fully with the President's committee for the White House Conference on Youth. -Praised the efforts of all who are trying'to bring the menace of , drunken driving to the attentioD 'of the pUblic. .-

"You really did some driving, in the old days. Away from the .Jack, old boy!'" they'd say clap- standardized "service station" . ping the Head· meals, we enjoyed a homeof the House on cooked New England supper at, the back. ' Lizzie's Lunch and made a lifePer hap s I long friend of Lizzie. We even sounded off a spent the night at her 'cousin 'bit too shrillY, Emma's house, went' out to her in anticipation, brother Jack's lighthouse, paid of this hollow. a visit to Sacred Hearl Church, honor. met the pastor who turned out' Conscientious-' to be the son of an old schoolmate ly, the Head of of the Head of the House. ' the House fol- ,- Needless to say,:'it was far past lowed the green noon before we left our Exit 6 lines the man adopted town. "Highway for: • had crayoned, ,while?" the -Head of th,e :Hou~e tndicating streets that ::get ou suggested. "You're right~ it gets eut of town in a hurry. you ,farther, ,faster.", Before we had a chance for a So we highwayed ,it, appreciJlostalgic. fare-well to o~r own .ating, the speed, the safety of 'city, we had hit the hIghway, transportatiol}. ' sPeeding along the. radar paMore Fun trolled road, every mInute leav- ~ "We may be missing a lot of In'g 'mile behind us. ,'fascinating things, down there." "s up e r highwars,. the;. re I gestured toward the open fields mnazing,", I philosophlz~d. .To ,besitle. our ribbon of asphalt. , , . "Centerville Women List think that man's engmeer~ng From 'the next 'exit on, until " ' , " ' 'tenius ,makes pos~ible g~ttIng 'ultimate destination; we ,took SENHOR daPEDRA: Mrs. Maria Souza k,neels before AutumnSchedule one geographIc,al pO,Illt ,to "th,e . low 'road." This was like statue in Our La~y of the Immaculate Conception' Church., . . ......m &ioU ~ Mrs. Bradley Parker head. , another ..." , . ,old times. We slowed down for New Bedford, officers who will serve the HUli-hllh," the' Head of the ~battle markers, read,inscriptions, , women's, guild of Our Lady 'Hoiise rendered lip service to ~~e 'realized with awe ·that here was Victory parish, Centerville, for philosophizing. "Sure are, terrIfIC the cradle of freedom for this . 'the coming year. engineering feats-shortest di9- country: Now'and then we'd stop: , 0" Elected to work with her were tance between two points. 11tat's ,to 'browse, tourist-like; talk,te·.. The feasts of the Senhor da '. Mrs.. Edward Welch, first vice what :you're about to disc,over?" townsfoik, pick up 'souvenirs: , Pedrailnd Our Lady of Sorrows" servances ,WIll be .followed bV:l president, and Mrs. Jack Jax:' 'How could he hav~ know,n, ,- We/ustopped by for, a visit" at will 'be marked this Saturday H.:ert. and auctIon to benefit 'timer,' Second vice' president. , "what was em ,the, Up of my, : most Catholic churches-prayit,lg and Sunday at Immaculate Conthe parIsh ,sch~ol.. Also ,Mrs. Neal Fitzpat,rick, re:. tongue? Just from_having ~~llrd ,.ill.' ev~rything from: original ception Church, New Bedfl>rd.· p ~he .feaJt d~:' th~l Senbho~ cording 'secretary; Miss Kather:' 1& for twenty-some years? - frame buildings' to: completely, Parishioners will participate ine. t~a, ~ aBI ~~nad yo. s:rved ,'ine Dooley, corresponding secreExit., Exit, Ex" ' : modern edifices. .Always,' of in a procession bearing the par, l' ~ ,theWt e or V'?larIFs an 'tary; and Mrs. 'Ernest Labadie, 'along' . there '" " a so In e own 0 f 1 a ranca ' 'I'wO hours 0 f ,h U mming , , ,'eourse, was t h at 'sma11 re d' -.Ish statue 0 f the Senhor da Pedra St M, . h '1 A' f' h' b' treasurer. , < abift of drivers, ,anoth~r . two sanctuary lamp burning its mes-' from ,the school hall to 'the ' . IC ae ~ h.zores" ro~ ~ .IC Activities' of the guild include ExIt , 18 sage ,that, ' here was .the Ble~sed' ... c.h urc'h a t 7 S. aturday . 'mg~t. . many , ' sa1e t 0 b e 'h e ld t omorrow hours anoth er' h'ghway' 1 . came. ' parIS' lonen OrIgInally a food two ~iles to the right. " Exit 1~; Sacrament. It was home-away-. Solemn HIgh Mass 'WIll b e ' on the_ lawn of the Howar!l . Exit 1'7 11 miles ahead; .. , EXIt from-home. (Irlshlike;' we said sung at 11 Sunday morning, with It.. commemorates Christ'. Smith Home, next to Centervillo l'J.; EXit'16, 15 miles ... Service 'three prayers' in each~versioris a sermon commemorating the scourging and crowning with pos~, 9ffice. ' ' : station 20 mile's'a~~ead .. '.' " of the same three we have been Scourging at the Pillar. Another ' thorns. The parish statue depictTentative 'Fall plans call for. . Talk grew, desultory, :~t ,is, 'making 'for ':the- past' quarter-' procession will be held at 3' ing this event.of the Passion has 'September rummage sale, Octo"kind 'of monotonous,'" I conce!ied century.) , Sunday afternoon. Both Satur- ,been' a ,treasured possession of ber card party and Christm~ with a ya'wn. "Not evtln a billFrom' now on, "high road" vs. 'day and Sunday's religious ob;., the church for some 30 years. , baZ{lar in November. board." "low road" will no longer be "How'd you know what I was controversial~we like the comthinking?'" the Head' 01. . the blnation. Bouse' '6sked. HTook ' you' tWo days to. let Just the same twenty-some here?" '0 u r friends gasped. 7ears association. (There was no back:"'slapping.)' HAt least we can MOP at this "How'dyou get,loSt?" _vice itation. Need gas any-. Not lost,juststraYed-delightwa)'." • , fully ,:'0- ' ' Back into the blue car, return ... the whizzing highway~mile Feature- Audio;;, Rides, after tedious mile. "!We don't have· to stay em At Fall' River Bazaar ' hiehways the whole time," ,I Paris~ioners of St. Patrick's , ..entured. "These exits are for Church, Fall River, will hold exiting, you know. I mean now a. b,azaar and auction' tonight, tomorrow and Saturday' at the and then? See parts of the school,grounds, Slade Street. ' country that are different?" Attractions .ill inc 1 u d e ~Well, you know me,", The Driver grinned' as his eye caught 'booths, ··children's 'pme.~· and ,: mine momentarily while taking . ponY'r~d~8, A snack bar will:be ; , ' - , ">.. , _ note of Exit 6, five 'miles ahead. open.. '"'I"always tho,ught you liked the , T,o!'!ighfs hours will,' be from, ,There's o'nly one, Guimot:ld Farms 'A Quality' milk and nO . , to 10;, and' tQIDorrow's ,from I w~y we traveled~ju8t mosey matter how young, they ore-they can ~ell' the' difference. to '10) On Saturday'ihe bazaar will' ,be. open from 10 ill the, Once your youngster tastes the ,'wonderful, farm-fresh RedOryHo~sekeepers morning ti1110 at night. ' . goOdness of Guimond Farms 'A Quality' milk they n~ver Mako, Annual Retreat ,Special featurei. liSted tor C!lOOKS'PON (NC) ~ A rec'Saturday night: include an 'auewant ony o t h e r . . . ' 6 erd n_ bel' 01 52 women from . lion :at 7:30' with Joseph' lIf. Minne..ta, NOI'tft Dakota, ,South' ,McManus as auctioneer. 'General Dakota I~ -and Canada' at- , chairman is .Mrs~ Edward G. 'Try Guimond· Farms ,'A' Quality' milk (lnd, dairy products tended'th. third annual ret~ea't . DeCi~cio, a~isted by ., latge " ' at your door or o~r stor~s. ' fOr rectory housekeepers at St. committee. .Joseph's Academy here. • Bishop Francis J. Schenk 01. Esp,irito Sante> Clamboil Crookston, in an address which A clamboil will be' held this Gpened the retreat, expressed enSund~y, Aug.' 30" in Espirtto 1Jllisiasm that the retreat move-, Santo ~hutch ~a.rd,' "all River, ment among the housekeepers is for -the benefit of the school grow'ing. He spoke of the im-' building fund. 'Ai1tone Cabral is portant role of housekeeper in general chairman aDd the wom'the Catholic rectory and of the, en's cpmmittee·iS headed by ..ery speciai vocation which it M;rs. ,Isabef Leite. . carries. The retreat was conducted 'by' Father Joseph Sibe- ' "naller, S.J., from the 'Jesuit Retreat House in Minneapolis.

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South Dartmouth Supper Parishioners of S1. Mary's Church, South Dartmouth, ,will 'sponsor a ham and bean supper, at 6 Saturday evening, Aug, 29 on the church grounds or in the " ball, depending on weather.

Excavating ,Contractors 9 CROSS, ST., : FAIRHAVEN WYma.. 2-4862

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A Qualm; ..IItdk>,

PENNY FOR PENNY YOUR BES.r 'FOOD BUY


Ingen4~ty Makes~rJ:xtra Room' In Alm'ost Any Dwelling . By A~ee Bough Cahill If you've been living in cramped quarters' this summer -in a hotel, seaside cottage, or motels, you'll probably welcOple the spaciousness of your QWD home. But even home may not meet all the family's needs and to tell you that there i8 'an extra room in your inviting room in your house. house may sound like a pipe-' Too many people make the misdream to you. However, in take of furnishing a year-around almost every house there 'is porch with castoffs, then wonan extra room - maybe not der why it's seldom used, whT empty or unused, but it's there. it's just another enclosed porch. The difference G~e Room is-it's not beIf you have an attached garage ing used to full 1!lat is heated, or to which heat advantage. The could easily be added, your room you' r e extra room may be found there. looking for, the A lot depends, '\f course, on how room you' v· e badly you want the rooin you dreamed about; have in mind. Dad may have is ,h i d den in a hard time deciding whether he • p,a c e that's wants to shelter his car in a poorly organheated garage or let it shiver in ized at present. a carport, while he warms himBut where, Db self at the fireplace of a new Where, is this room. AT FALL RIVER CEREMONY: Bishop ~nnolly, who presided at the Ctothing and extz-a ,room,' you ask; .Your But with building costa being- Prof . C f h H extra room is where you find it, what they are today it's probeSSIon eremony 0 ,t e oly Union ·of the Sacred Hearts in Sacred Hearts Academ,. -wherever space is not paying ably easier and ch~aper to bwld chapel Saturday, is shown with the 11 Diocesan residents who participated.' Seven were fts another garage than to add a clothed in the Holy Habit and four made perpetual profession. Seated with His Excellen.... way. wing to your house. You might I ft t . ht S· te J ~, Round the Cloek replace garage doors with a barare, e 0 rIg , IS r oseph Marie (Gloria Proulx), Sister Margaret William (Donna If a den-guest room would becue fireplace, or have a~glass McLean), Sister Marita Therese (Jeanne Linhares), and Sister Margaret Damien (Be.... solve your problems, why not wall. erly Menice). Standing are Sister Maria Dorothy (Barbara Nixon), Sister Barbara Thommake' one of your bedrooms Don't overlook your basement as (Barbara Walsh) ~ Sister Kathleen Mary (Maureen VanZandt), Sister Irene Dolorea work around the clock. You an? extra room and don't (Irene Silvia)" Sister Joseph Thomas (Ann Delaney), Sister Joseph Leonor (EveJYll may discover this room on .a for think a basement room has to porch that's used only a' be ,the usual rumpus or recreaRogers), Sister Thomas Mau~n (Patri.~ia Goggin). months of. the year. If your livtion room that stands idle when ing area is too small, your soluthe' family i. not iii a partY .. tion may be found in a base-,' mood.' ' Reverend'MC'ther Mary WiIerend Mother PbUomena unanvery ,close io the Catacomb 01 ' ment, an attached garage, or a ~ake yours a,lived-in room-, Ham," Proviricial of the Holy imously re-elected for a second Priscilla. dining room. : ,,' a cool retreat in summer; a snug Union of the Sacred Hearts; reterm of 'six years. The former' Motherhouge, ..' Here's a' suggestion :tOr yowl:' firelit room in the winter. Since tltl'oed this week from the GenIt also was unanimously voted den-guest room, plus ;l' m.-0st basements, nee~ all the era·l Chapter 9£ 'her, Congrega- to transfer the Gener-alate M Tournai will become the Provift,o eialate for Belgium. . roo'rTi for'mother. Build a·cloSet' light they can g~t, li~~ green tion. which was held in Rome. Rome. Until a new Generalate all across one wall. Keep walls. and a white, ceiling are Pr.'or to the formal opening at is built on recently acquired seCtion at the end partitioned practical the Chapter, the, members were property, the Mother General, for' a guest closet, with shelves" '....... ,addre~ by' Father Lievin, and her Council will reside at and' a built-in dresser. The re-' , 'Flying Nun' Unable C.SS.H., a member 01.' the the Community's house in Rome, maining section houses family . '11 •• Congrega~ion for Religious. FolVilla Santa Teresa, via Ostriana, things-mother's sewing equipTo. Fuffl Amblhon lowing th~ preparatory conferment, shelves for bedding. NEW ORLEANS (NC)-Sister ences, Mon~iflrior CasSelli preShelves should be so arranged Mary Aquinas, knoWn'as "the sided at th" opening 01. the tT'5 All RIG ..T 10 that the sewing machine can be flying nun" of Green Bay, Wis., Chapter and at the "~lection 01. 'SHOP AROUND FOR. wheeled ~der one, shelf. You was ·disappointed here when au- ,the Mother Ge.'\el'al, with Kevcan conceal your ironing board thorities said tbey could ,not iul': ' CHARLES F. VARGAS SOME THINGS, BUT -s~ very essential in a sewing fill ber ambition to flT a super- $tudeht Nu~se$ to Begin 254 ROCKDALE AYEN. . 1I00m-by placing it in back of a' , sonic jet, plane. Train'ing. ot St. Anne.''s NEW~, MASS. window drape. '. The authorities at the Navai I n , ;room where. thia . wa~' \ Air Station told her Sister', Thirty-nine 'students have been 202-206 Rock Street· clone, the wmdow was 15 inches ,AqUinas SaId that l;>ecau~ of the accepted for·'the ChlS$ to begin Fall ,River from' the corner; allovilng 'jost , he{lvy traft'i; of reservists get-" training TUe'sday; Sept. 8, at St. enoiigh wall space for ail ironing' , ting' their S!-UJ1mer' trajiling they Anne's iSchool of Nurs{ng, .Fall , IS '!!:!! PLACE "I) board, which the window mape' , were :unable' to make' accomm:~' River, 'according 'to announce.. GET, A PRESCRIPTlOH, bid completely. ' dation for her. ment made by Sistet Madeleine '"., , FI LLE'D' ! Place a comfortable sofa bed Sister Aquinas, who has flown. Clemence, school director. on the opposite wall and furnish B36s and "Flying Boxcars," bas' It, is anticiyated ,tb,at the stuth~ room with chairs, tables and logged more ,than 160 hours in dents will be able to move· into lamps. A TV set can be put here, flying time. She administers:'a the new; school 'now, under contoo, thus reserving the living national program of science, struction ',by: the beginning 01. room for folks who want to. talk health, safety, civil defense and 1960, said Sister Madeleine. or. play bridge. first aid, which she instituted at Twenty-six nurseswilI gradu. :Now you have space that·, th'e .Catholic University of Amer- 'ate from the::scllool .iii. .cereworks around, the clock and iea in Washington. She also IS· monies-set forS'aturday, Sept. 26. when guests' arrive, you can science supervisor of the Green welcome them into a room that Bay diocese school system, where FemaIe· Sa.les is charming and inviting as if she supervises a science training .Help' Wanted • were reserved for them·alone., program for students from the SPARE TIME. MONEY easily made Use 01 PoreJl first to eighth grades. showing Robinson Christmas and Ev<2Y D..,. carda tQ' your friends• We mentioned 8A unused . neighbors using: our . home ..,rvice porch. True, you may have to Corporate Communion plan. 4-6 dollars an hour eRn be made with little effort all "our part, No do some remodeling to make it Notre Dame Women's Guild, ex~rience 'needed. and It ,,,,,,,til ~ kind of living room you Ilothiitg ,to· t". • .You get our 'exquisite Fall River will hold corporate sample liQI'e8 cia apl>roval...our 67 wiln t, but you'll be very lucky cOmmunion at 8 o'clock Mass., .. . delightful 'l'Ol>ular-derill'n Chriatmu UlYour present fireplace abuts it, J'eraoniU " ',impriDt,. ,&Ibu.n·, FREE. Members are asked to meet 'in: Write at onee I ROBINSON CARDS because it may be ~ossi~le to I.:": .. ' the vestibule at ~:45: '. , , Dept. 421.. ClintQn. Malla; have a fireplaCe the p6r~h .'; I. \. against your brIck wall.. :Dress it up by using a frame of. color, '. ,FOR PLEASURE ceramic tiles."' ", , , ' 'Retain the open-beamed, eei1~ , , , , EAT·" ... ,· mg, if your porch has one, and finish beams in natural wood. With the addition of heat, a 115 WILLIA.M ST. NEW BEDFORD" MASS. fireplace, comfortable chairs, That-R-Rich~ellow-Robust and a restful co16r scheme, you FRESH CUT-UP POULTRY ean make a porch into the most

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10

'Prerogatives' Dispute . Bars ·Labo'r-ManagementPeace

.

-THE ANCHOR Thurs., Aug. 27, 1959

DIOCESE OF I"ALL RIVER. MASS.

By Msgr. George G. Higgins .. " Stud~nt Meeting Director NCWC Social Action Department the sugar-coating of sweet phrases concerning Urges Courtesy the partnership of capital ana labor, there lies the'bitter pill To . Khrushchev of class war." So writes the well known soCialist labor economist, Leo Huberman, in)!. recent book entitled "AmerST. BONAVENTURE • L a b"or In . M'd' " (N. A ·nation.wide gro'up lean 1 passage. try and/or the abolition of While~e majority of econ- unions. of Catholic teen-ager~ said omists, reporters' and other The fact that the steel indushere that Soviet Premier' experts in the field of indus- try, with the moral support of Nikita Khrushchev should be trial re~ations are much less pes- a large and influential segment accorded the "courtesy due a simistic than Mr. Huberman, a of the' press, is apparently deterguest of the cOI,mtry" o'n his U. S. growing nummined to end the arg).lment once visit next month. ber of the m and for all with a theoretical This was. the conclusion h a v e recently formula is a discouraging omen reached by a panel discussion expressed confor the future of labbr-manage-' about the Khrushc~ev 'visit at a cern about. the ment relations. session' of the annual congress future of laborAmong other things, it would. . of the Third (:)rder of St. Franmanagement seem ,to indicate that the i~duscis. at St. Bonaventure Univerrelations in the fry has yet to learn that' collecsity. United States. tive bargaining isa two-way The panelists agreed that dem'\ Their point is street and that ,any attempt to onstrations against, the Soviet well taken; T o c ' o n v e r t it into a one-way street' Premier as a spOKesman for the· · call it "cla'ss for either management or labor communist doctrine would be war" would be' is" a Clear invitation 'to Cla;s against the Franciscan message. putting' it ·too warfare. : The' 'delegates also heard a strongly, I am It would also seem to indiCOMMANDS CATHOLIC WAR VETS: At thEntimual reminder .that no matter into sure but there is no doubt thatcate that the industry's 'current convention of the Catholic WarVetElrans of America, Rob-' what language the word "Gosthe 'collective bargaining at- approach to collective bargain- ert T. O:Leary" left, of· Baltimore is' co'ngratulated by Bis- pel" maybe translated, the basic mosphere is much less healthy ing is excessively legalistic. 4 n d hop John J.Wright of "Pittsburgh' 'on his beitig eiectedidea underlying. it is that of at the present time than it was that, too, is very u n f o r t u n a t e , . "good news," from Bishop Euseven as recently as two or three ,for experience has more ·.than national commander. Looking on outgoing commander tace Smith, O.F.M., Latin Rite years ago and it is steadily de-. amply demonstrated (nowhere Peter Hopkins of ~onkers, N. Y. NC Photo. Vicar Apostolic of Beirut, Lebteriorating all the tim,e. ',/ more dramatically thah in the anon.

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,Meaning and Scope ' ..o f En,.' g l a n d ' s .. of an outdoor High The currEmt crisis in' the'steel cannot.belegalistically deter. . . . .Mass ,opening the fifth annual tndustry'js.thc most drama'tic' minedinatheoretical:vacuum.Five·Million:CathoUcs Are Irish" youth congx:ess of the Third ·case in point. This is no ordi~ary ',It. must 'be flexibie enough ' t o ' . .' . '. '. '. .. , . " , Order of St. Francis, .<Bishop , bread - add - butter strike over cope realistically with the' par"LONDON (NC'j - The young Irish· imiriigration~"Young.• Smith urged the tertiaries. to 'wages and working conditions in ticular.needs of ipdividual plants' irish migrants ·now streaming healthy boys and girls are com- "spread this good news." ". the usual,' sense of .the latter and companies and with the new , .·steadily into industrial' England' ing over ,here to enjoy the: post- .'. . "It's the best news humanity 'tcmn ·r. • .' . . ". are rocketing.the.'number, of"'war,'boom,,-by the thousands,· can.Iisten tot ,he said....The .-, . . ,and ,increasingly'complicated" a'c'tl've "Ca.tholics in this' country t' .It 'wou.ldsee,mtohave ·'re-' . ptobtems~'Yhich are:cons.tantlY,· s aymg on,. marrying and multiGospel. is something that' is " sulted,"ih large measure, from a' ,;veIl up past. the five .. million ·.plying, he said. ,timeless. It is :for every.one, for deep-S!!llted philosophical. or .. arising in our rapidly changing. "mark., '. ' ,The big' cities' are' Irish aU ·ev:ery age inCluding, the space . ecol)omy.. . .. .'. ideological. disagr.eement" b e-,Probable,.Alternative ." 'Since the start·of·the In'dus- ,over agafn"'where the Catholic" age, for every clime, for every tween. labor, and managemen,t in ..Half tli~ battle ,would.·be 'over' , ·,trial·,Revolution;· '. ··successive· .' comlnunity 'is :·.coiic~rne,d, ·'iust ' . c.ir~umstance."· big steel over the 'mea~ing and.. if Amedcan employers and their . waves of": impoverished' Irish- as happened. at the time of the' . ._"'"._ _...... .. the scope of collective 'bargain- r.epresentativeswould rid them- plUIl refugees from war-torn Irish' potato famine 100 years. A Delicious ing. selves ot their alleged fear that Europe - have expanded the ago. "Catholic London is not Treat "Behind the steel strike," says labor wants to take over the Church phenomenally within.' English," he' said. "'It is Irish." the August issue of Nation's management of American in- 130.years. But never has the The 15,000' converts made Business, published by the U. S. dustry. pace been s~ fast as it is, today. among the. English here each. Chamber of Commerce, "is the. This .is,·a completely .unwar,. Now the Church in this country 'year, the steady but not sp~c-' business. community's increasing ranted fear, and'th'ose news-" is more "Irish" than ever-about tacular incre.ase· in the- English 'concern over union encroach- paper editors and' politicians 75' per' cent. ' Catholic birthrate, the arrival' ment on the responsibililty., to, who cater to. the p,rejudices of . . 'One disadvantage is that .the. of, Catholic immigrants from. manage. BasicallY from a busi;' management bv keeping it alive Clilirch,' because of 'its "lrish-:E)':,lroI>~',th~.ugh important, seem ·nessstandpointj that)s the big; . are doing 'a'great disservice ihot~€ss;",i~ ,failing:' suffiCi~ntly to. to pale by comparison with what ., is~u.e whi~h .'underliesthe i only to Iabor' and irianag~m:e~t;· B;ttiacl ' .the ()f(lin.arYE;nglis~- the n~w lr~shimmigration will"," f.trike.:.~""" ;,.,',! , .. ," '. " but to the:,e'conomy as a"whole:,uoutsider," . who 'is "'inclined'to IIl.:.dU.~.'.C9GrsePJ:o~UCe·. I.·n. ,ii-esh': ,. : 'That'~ , ' " "able.alte.rnatiY¢i ' ... alieri;\""~ b erS·,ofCathoHc~,h~sa,id.· ' ohe' way ,'of putting'it.:: " ',.. .' ~he,prob. to'" r:egar4'it"~ssli~h£ly .~~lII;, Needless to".,,§aY, ). ,however;': Iabor~'i'nanagenient coope'ratl~n;" . These POhltS ,,:e~e "made at~' spokesmen ,fotUie Ste~lwork~rsi says'Pro'fe'ssor Davey of I~:wa. ty.'o conferences; one at Oxford' Union would state the Issue dlf-, '-State College in a new'booki:Qn _ ~n~the othe.r a~E?Ceter,bylead-. 'TAVA'RES' ferently; :rney: w6uld say that' colle~tive' 'bargaining; . '!is g~v,. ',"w g J?e~1?~rs :oft~~ 'i;Ne~~an' the basic' issueinvolyed in the: ernmen.t pri<;e ,and wagl? cont~ols ,4ss0Clabol), C~thol.le, .grllduate .. strike-:--'o\ier above thepe-'; .orse,clilat: ihflatii)ll."" rgrou~ . named .a~t~r • th~ , gr,eat. ',' 'ALLWORK ,reQl)ialqu~stion,9f ,wag~s. --T is i :aut' unfottullllteij;' 'he ad.ds,' 'Engbs~ con~ert leader of the. ,CUSTOMI'MADE' ." I .'labor's'right' to' .share, 'not' in" ... ,. . , ' . , . 1 ' . ' , age " . "Second·Sprmg."·' .mana ".' ·':··g'·"'. ;..'m"·'e"n'.'t·,'a's""s";:;'h"but' in the ' .• ,t,he ,cqntrove.rsy,over }nfl,n. -.. '..,.',.,.: Sta.g.·ger . .. i ,n: .. E.if . . e ·:,' ., ' . '_ . DAY ..... WY'Z:'289i 'J',' . U<;, , c ment: ahdunion"pretogatives '., .... NIGHT - WYC ·681Z m.a.kingof,:.those:manager,ial'd~- ,'perhp;ps""tnore thaniuiy'O'ther on~:: (·A:E..c. W. 'Spencer; an econ- . . ,... ..p ';ISlonL, WhIC::h dlre~t~y or indl-;"-fa~ctor,~as'imI>~~edtl.ie~ogicalomist, di~ectorof -.the: 'assoc'ia~ '. "Z48 North. Front' 'Ask For Them: T~ay rectly ~~~c~}~e rl~~ts .of. Ute.· e'xtf7nsionof union-!l1anagement tiori's "demographic survey," New Bedford -', "...orkers. . " .cooperation." ~ said at Oxford that he estimates Two-Way Street This statement by one of the' the Catnolics iP England and. Nation's Business is corr~<:t nation's leading authorities' on Wales' at present" to' 'number SHE~L " P remium" :when it says that this argument collective bargaining' is recom- about 5,250,OOo-nearly.2,000,000 . " over managerial rights and pre,,: mended t6 labor' and. manage-' more. than th~. estiinated'figure Famous Reading HARD COAL rogative.sis neither new non:on- mentalike for' their prayerful of 3,422;500 given' in the CathNEW ENGLAND COKE ~ined .to .the ~teel industry but . consideration., . olici Directory. ' . i has been going ~Ol1 in ·every: in..· "." .. " . i .'•' He ·told·· a Summer school of DADSON OIL BURNERS · d.ust~y· ev,·e.r':s~li .c e uriio~~ .w~re.,.:. .~'. p,.e'·o'· p" o~'f .. ·I"a'" n'd Catho.lic professional'and social 24-Hou.r Oil Burner Service first establlshed. " . ,." ." ',' .•.,. " workers that w:hat has impressed ":. What 'it neglects to saY,how- . 'Lo'ya':I' to' u"rch" him most in his investigations of ·CharcQal. Briquetll ~ver,)~ tJiatth¥"s~~l;ip.dus~~to :;;. , , 'i.',.· ' . : • , ; the Catholic population is "the ,Ba~ Coal ...,. Charcoai · the' contrary;". notwlthstandmg, ..,. CASTE:LGANDOLFQ {NC) _' staggerin,g effects of. the new there is ~ay'of ending the 'Pope J6hnXXIII £elegraphl;ld,: , argu1J1ent once' and for all, short. _ his .' blessings to the people of: ;." ,of government control of ·indus- Poland 'to encourage them' in' I : the~r "virtue; 'constancy and loy~' Successors to DAVID DUFF (,0 SON'. Nal!1e SocietyOffic,ial alty" on the ·Feast of . the AsELECTRICAL 640 Pleasant Street New Bedford sumptlon. o upreme ol,rt In a message sent to'Stefan CONTRACTORS LOS ~NGELES (NC)- A Cardinal Wyszynski: the Pope Residential - Commercial judge who believes that a jurist's sent his ttpo$tolic benediction to Industrial best .qualifications are "heart, the predominantly Catholic, but 633 Broadway, Fall River' conscience and common sense",. communist-run country. The. was nominated to the California ~ardinal'repliedwith a'telegJ,'am OS 3.1691 · State Supreme Court. of thanks, and assured the Pope Governor Edmund 'Brown has 'of . the, loyalty of the Polish picked'iustice Thomas.P. White,people' to. ~e Church.' .' .70, who is presidi.ng· Justice of . Pope John's. message began:' the District Court of AppeaL ,"From t~e chapel at Castel-' A native of Los Angeles"Jus~.. gandolfo, w~ich our predecessor, '. tice White is president'of'the St. Pius XI dedkated to Our 'Lady' !, Vincent,de PauI'SocietY·ofthis.'· of. Czestocllowa, in which'iwe <; archdiocese.. ' . . fervently pray eVery day for all, i,: D';lrin g his. 46 y~arS as a jurist, ., of the' Church, it' isa pleainlre:\' I.' .rushee' WhIte maugurated a for us today, the ~east of the" , i> number of reforms; He intro- Assumption,to greet you aU~ toF~E~ OIL__ A~D . ~ duced a women's court, organ- gether - the' members of the ' BOlLE WA ized a probation department,:and· hierarchy;tl:1eClergy .and t~e R: . TER established the first farm for' Polish people." . "" .TREATMENT alcoholics. ' . In the message he asked "tha't i, • ~_-.:.--,,--,--_._ BREAD' .' ,,' ,.' A member ,'of the ~nights' of you·.lJ~ confirmed. in.' 'Virttle;: 'Brokston .Chem. Co. Columbus for 52 yea'rs, he has . constancy': and in··loyalty-and·.'· ",37 Silver·Road. ' , been State Deputy, and a' Su-, that you be filled' with abuil...,....: . Brockton ;19i'M;'ss. : p'r¢me Director.__ . da~ce,o~ 'beav(mIYQies~ings5';,,'

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Balanced' Attitude Primary Purpose' of Sex Education

THE ANCHORThurs., Aug. 27, 1959

11

DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER, MASS,

Bishop Orders Rest Month For Clergy

Bv Father John L. Thomas, S.J. Assistant P~ofessor of Sociology Saint Louis University

, rm at a loss fQr words when it comes to my l1~year-old d~ughter',s questions concerning the facts of life. She pals /HILDESHEIM (NC),WIth a gIrl from the same Catholic school whose nioUier Bishop Heinrich Maria J ansseems to tell her everything. Yesterday my daughter asked sen of Hildesheim has Qrme about adultery. That did ' dered all priests of his diplain whatever facts' are neces. , ocese to observe September as It. I've no intention of telling sary so that she will feel confia "rest month." her about these things y'et. dent that what you teli her in , "Shortage of priests and growLater I wish to explain sex all such matters is reliable and ing tasks are endangering the In a way that isn't disgusting trustworthy. health of our priests; therefore, and cheap. Isn't she still too Further, since your daughter we must make new attempts to young for such is approaching puberty, you , get some rest for them," the questions? . must prepare her for the bodily Bishop stated. Like many changes and new experiences He decreed thqt during Sepgood Christian ~he is a,bout to face. Help her to tember the priests should not parents, you regard these as both normal and preach sermons at Mass, give seem to have desirable. ' religious instructions u n 1 e s s the right intenShe is now entering the final these are absolutely necessary, tions but the stage of physical. development and should not attend conferwrong approach toward mature womanhood. .. EXPELLED FROM HA.ITI: Two French Catholic ences or meetings.' He also said in this matter. Point out to her that these Obviously, it' cha'nges indicate that she is com:' prl~~ts" Father Joseph Marr~c; left, pastor of St.· Marc, , the priests should not offer. more , is 'crude and ing into mature possession of a HaItI, a~d Father ,Eti~nn~ Grinenberger, C.S.Sp., rector ~f than one Mass on Sunday. -Because of the shortage of unwarranted to great privilege, the power to,proSt. Ma;rtIal C~llege ar~lve m New York froIrt Port-au-Prince secular priests in Germany introduce young create and bear new life; that many of the clergy cannot take girls to'the negsex and everything related to it followmg t~.elr expulSIOn by Haitian President Duvalier for a vacation. . ative, aspects of sex or to its have a special dignity and reasons of ',mternal security." NC Photo. various deviations before they sacredne~s precisely because new are old enough to have acquired life is involved. You will suca positive understanding and ceed here to the extent that you WASHINGTON (NC) - Alappreciation of the facts and help your daughter feel proud fredo Cardinal Ottaviani, Provalue,S involve'd, to have been born a woman. Secretary of the Supreme Sacred You rightly question the proPersonal Meanhig PHILADELPHIA (NC)-John -priety or need to discuss the It is well to keep in mind that Cardinal O'Hara, C.S.C., Arch-' W0I;UQ be. empow~redt~ ,t,ake , Congregation of the Holy Office and a recent visitor to the United subject of adultery with your the so-called' facts of life have ,bishop of Philadelphia, has ad- ~~t~ounb~~~~;UbhCexhIbItions, States, has written a special ll-year-old daughter. Besides it personal meaning and signifi- vocated support of a bill whichTh C . " .. ' article on the Church's defense would be a waste.'of time. Until cance, with;,the. result that one' ~ould prohibit the .public show- tinue~: ardmal s edItOrIal con-' ()f man's freedom. 'It is given she has some positive ,under- of the primary aims of sex edu- Ingof obscene movies; ".'. Prominence in the August issue standing of love and marriage, cation must be the development 'In a signed page -one editorial , , 'y;e s~Ill have protection of the American Ecclesiastical she can have no balanced view of balanced, Christian attitudes" in, the Catholic Standard' and" a~amst pOlson, and heavy penalof infidelity. towards these facts.. 'Times, 'archdioceseannewspaper" hes are' ~ai~ 'on those who 'fail Review published by .the CathOn the other hand, I am' puzIt is not so much the fact as titled "Label It Poison and Lock to label pOlson for what It is, olic University of America here. zled by your reference to "later." " the attitilde toward the fact that It Up!" the Cardinal said there.' ,md/or 'who ,are remiss' in their 'Haven't you completely under-, is import,ant. Indeed, knowledge, now is a,"challce in Pennsylva- duty to guar~ it against unWarestimated the l:"ate' of,', your of the facts without correct at- nia to stand Up ,and be counted, , r.a~ted handhng;and' u~e.. daughter's intellectual and phys- 'titudes, 'that' is; without under- under, the, ,banner of 'common' ,We have thIS protection in' lcal development? ' standing their personal implica- decency.'!' common with animals. Wha't we If she is a normal girl, she tions in terms of love, inotal ,He pointed out that there is ask now is sometliing proper to has probably been talking about standards, and the Creator's plan ~ending ,before 'the State House ~a~: the right for the state to ' where babies come from since can wor~ grea~ harm, as modern of ;Rt;presentatives a bill that label moral poison and lock "it, she was six or seven and it is experience shows all too well. "meets objections leveled in the up. Our nation needs the morill, likely that she will start to men':' Hence true sex education im- latest decision of the U. S. Su- fib~e and the courage of youth, struate within the corning year. plies, the "fitting in," the inte-,preme Court against a censor- gUIded by common 'decency." , , You still regard her as your gration of the whole phenom-' ship law." ' ' baby, but she's a growing girl, enon of sex-as it app.ears' in The bill wouid set 'uP a' ~A. following the normal pattern of onese~ 'and in. others-int~. an three-mem:beZ:,censor, board to ,'Inc. " ' growth and intellectual develop-' 'adequate Chr~stian"philosophy,,' review, films before they, ,are, ment of all littleg'i~ls. when,~ 'of Hfe. ,", . sho~np~blicly in the state.; The', MOVERS,,·· questions arise, "she', ,iooks 'for" ' .• Sire~s ~osUlve Asp~c,ts ,,' ,b,ill ,w<;>uld provide" penalties" SERVING' answers. . ' ','.". " Sex ~s 'an eSSential part ot'the, fro~ ,a, $500,tp $1,000 fine or six' Fan 'Ri~er,' New Bedford Sex is only one, otthe areas' human pers<)fi,hence it DU,Ist be:, DJ-on,.tlis 'iIi "prison, or. both for" ,tAU'NrON, , " 'C~pe CodA~ea-:: abou~ which she is cOrious, kild ·accepted-,-,unde;stoodlintegrated, convictions under the law. she will show no undue\'intetest and reg)llated In terms of the d e _ M e e t s Objections " '" in it, provided she: is t~ld what velopmentand 'perfection of the , The Gardinal. said that ,since - , AERO ,THE BANK ON girls her, age are e¥peeted to total person. . t~e. ~easure meets tl;l.e objec-,' ',' TRANSIT CO. 'INC. , TAU,N!ON GREEN know. .". It is consequentJy as harm'ful ,ti!>ns, 9utlined by the Supr~me 'First Step to ignore it as to exaggerate its. C~~rt, .,Pe(1nsylvania authorities. ' "Nation-wide Mo~e"" Meirlherof'Federal Deposit , . ,',WYm(II;3~0904, , ' . ' ", In', , ' , ", It seems to me th~t the. first signifiCance; to postpone fac~ual 304, K~mptoD S~. N~~ Bedford " ,.su...a~(l~ Corporation " thing you should do now 'i~'. 'to" inst".uctio~ ". a~ to give nothing find out what your daughter: further·" ".' " ' i " knows about sex 'and 'related' No: d~ubt, .it is d~fficult to FUNERAL' HOME, INC~ phenomena. If you have neglect- mainta4J, a balanced ,ai>woach to a. Marcel Roy '"- C. Lorraine R';, ed her education on such mat- sex' :under present' :conditions, ROlrer LaFrance ters. until the present, chances but' if you stress its positive asFUNERAL DIRECTORS are that she knows many things pects in terms of creative privl that aren't so, and you will have ileg~, new life, and the mature 15 IRVINGTON CT. to start the process of reeduca- man,lfestation of human love, NEW BEDFORD tion at orice. ' your daughter will grow up with WY 5-7830 Keep 1n mind that there is the balanced outlook you so nothing to be gained by making much des~re. ' a mystery out of, the biological facts of life, The J;lhysical proFall River Whist cess of human reproduction is Alumnae and friends of Jesus neither mys,terious, unthinkable, :Mary Academy, Fall River, will , Funeral Bome, or unmentionable. ' Sllopsor a lawn whist, and, bridge This does 'not mean that you party on the convent· grounds , '550 Locust St. have to use charts,and diagrams at 2 Wednesday afternoon; ,Sept., Fall River. Mass. or give her a rapid resume of 2. Committee members" headed OS 2-2391 the Kinsey reports! Find out by Mrs. Lucienne Dumais, chair.., Rose E. Sullivan 'what her questions are" correct man, and Mrs. Rita Raiche, coJeffrey E. Sullivan whatever false information she chairman, are in charge of ticket may have picked. up .from' her . ~ies.· • '. classmates, and then arrange , .' your program of education ac-' cordingly. Give ,Correct Answers Funeral' Home Young girls differ a great deal ,Fun~ral In the questions they ask and 571 Second'St. ' mo~ are satisfie~ with relatively H&lel'f Aubertine Braugh Fall, River, Mass. simple but correct answers. UnOwner and Director THE OS 9-6072 lesS" tlieir curiosity is unduly , Spacious 'Parking Area stimulated by conversation with MICHAEL J. McMAHON ot~ers, there's no need to go into , WY2-29Si licensed Funeral Director PLAN details. 129 AileD St. New Bedford Registered Embaimer' . However, if you discover . that your daughter has teen exposed to wild, stories and lurid , details, you should'. <:a11'"1y . ex-

,Card-.nal Advo'cates Suppo' rt 'of B·.II Banh.ng, - Ob scene M ovie Sh' owings

, Writes for Review -

'Coinplef~

BANKING

SERVICE

for Bristol County

D. McMULLEN

'Brist,ol. County Trust. Company MAss.'

~YFLOWER

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.BROOKLAWH

JEFFREY E. SULLIVAN

, Loans

Savings

O'ROURKE

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Day of Prayer LONDON (NC) ' - Tiie',Hier-' archy of England and Wales has made Sunday, Sept. 27, a special day of prayer for refugees. A collection will be taken - at ' all Masses that day to heip' the World Refugee Year'campai~

c. P. HARRINGTON FUNERAL HOME':

9~6

Plymouth Avenue Fall River, Mass. Tel. OS 3-2271

DANIEL C. HARRINGTON, Uc,enleO Funercir' Dir.dor ' ...cI .e9h~ered '_ Em~lmer

D:.b~ ·'SULUYAN & SONS

"''fU"ERAL HOME 469 LOCUST STREET , FALL RIVER, MASS. OS - 2·3381. ' ,Wilfred C.Jcimes E. Driscoll Sullivan, Jr. p.,

,

Dial 206 Union Street WY 5.7468 H~w Bedfprd


Voice ofSt~John Viahney Echoesi,li, Pontiff's Letter

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-THE ANCHOR Thurs., Aug. 27,. 1959

Pardon filnd ~eparation

~

God Love y~u

DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER: MASS ' , .", .. : ." .

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

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:

By Most Rev~ Fulton J. Sheen,I).D.·. ';; People in all ages have"sinn,ed. One of the, great "'if1~ren~~s, ' however, . between· the Christian Middle Ages and today is' thatlD those days men knew they were sinners. Today they niay'be ri.e~ rotics or pSY$otics, but they ,are 'never sinners. '

, ' Bishop of Reno To the north of the great industrial city of LYOR, ,west, .f 'the Rhone, lies the 'plateau ,country called Do~~es. ,It might easily double for a portion' of the America~ Mid,~le West, along the Ohio or the Wabash, set down by mlsta~e m

ThiS~xpl~iDsthe difference tetwe~n, ;the W1Us of Christian, the very' heart' of 'France~ 'The church has been damaged people anCl the Wills of pagans. Christians leave money in repar-, There are the same gently and truncated, but enough olit ation for their Sins; pagans leave money to . r-olling hills with their inter- rem,ains to nourish the illus~on keep their names, before the public. Even vals of leafy hollows and the of ~e old days, when the Samt a Christian who leaves money in his Will . . said Mass at the altar and heard to promote his own name ,may hear the qUIet. streams ,runnIng down to his interminable confessions in Lord say on the Last Day the most tragic the rIver. Here and there, as the the box with the'worn threshold. of all words: "You have aheady had your landscape • ., reward." It is not enough to have sins broadens, a bel' . Be Is Everywhere forgiven~ hi addition to the pardop., there fry mar k sa, Few places hold the presence must be reparation for the sins. The best viII age. The of grace as, does An. The reway to do this is to leave the money to the e h u rc h e s are mark is anything but original. I most divine of aU purposes: ' m 0 s t 1 y ,19th, You kneel before his chasse, the ,a-) To spread the faith amoD&' those w~ century struc~ somewhat tawdry and dusty have it not. ture~; the, typ~ 'glass coffin above the side altar b)' To, give it, to pagan . lands, _where ical ' Frencbad':' which contains his body. ' charUy will be unknown, except by <,iod. aptation of the Th~ skull is preternaturally c) To ha.ve it distributed b,. the Ho17 R 0, man,. - , ,large, the skeleton so meagre Father, the Vicar of Christ. esque, durable ,as to be shocking. But you can-' but 'iminte,rest-,' , ' " not -localize him there; he is " "These conditions are 'fulfill~ when you leave' it to: rh~ ing~' The land,,'.. ' ,'. ', everywhere, praying at his .. Society for the Propagation, of'the F8.ith~ the National O,qice, of.. to your casual eye,looKs P;I'~uc- shrine of St. Philomena,' workwhich is. at 336 Fifth Avenue, New Y~k City. ' tive, not exhilarating., ' " iog his way from the confession':' The road signs flash by, and al to the sacristy, mounting the . Th~ Lo'rdma~ bless you for building a gymnasium. but Bo you persist in reading ~em out rickety pulpit steps. ~' will bless you more' for building a leper coloD7 in Nigeria. Your ~ud with that maddemng asAt any' moment he might relatives may be proud of' you because you have your name on suniption peculiar to all traveltransfix you with that calm a science building. but the Lord will remember you longer if you lers, that the rest of the party glance and settle his appointue nameless in ~uilding a tabernacle in Bong Kong. is illiterate or b~ind.. " ment with you fJ)r your vocation .. --Over '~here IS Dardilly, 90, to heaven. And if you not ready yet to make yourWm, begin practi~ many kilometers,' Ecully. so' " . for it now by sending your sacrifices to. the Holy Father's SOCIety many'in that direction, and'Bell-,' , ' " His Succe!lSOrs " ' , for the })ropagation ~f the Faith. ey, farther north, rates a prom' The 'evening Angelus i!i, ring- ' , , inence 'befitting its I imp,ortance ing;' and you go out to, visit the GOD LOVE YOU to MV. lZyearsoldfor $3 "Grandma g&~ as a see 'city. rectory and 'orphanage. The me this money fOr ~ new, outm for mY doll 1 sewed ne~ dresses But ·,this is not the country present Cure 9f Ars is,your gUi'i1~! , lor her myself 'and send youth~, money sO 'that the Infan~ lesus you ,had imagined for the set-",', a g~il'tIe ptiest,somewhat pr~- .' ' may come to,a'1i"legirl in.~ar ~ission lands" . ~ ... To ~.W. for ',' ting \of the life of the Cure of" cupied. You 'think: that of ,all $10 "A- Catho!icfriend of mine asked 'me,;to send you the money Arso; What is wrong with the "the' assignments within the',gift , ' I would ha.ve' spent on a gift for her" . ; .. ; to MrS;. 'O.KP; for $30 pioture? HaS the, Abbe, Trochu" of the 'Church' none could' t>e WORLD'S LAR(jEST? "Suddenly I'''reatized that it's an~ther, kind ofl beauty treatment that.., painstaking, biographer, 'mote"ex'orbitant thai!. this,,:non,e' Bishop Allen J. Babcock of that I need i _ a spiritual keatment" .•.. to G.N.M. for $10 "My failed to paint his backgro,:!nd ' 'more crushing' ift its awesome- the Grand Rapids Diocese own 'phySical pain made ine realize the; sUffering 01 otbers and with sufficient accuracy, or has" nesS: <,. " .. " " ,'" ;.. gives the sermon at the dedithe despair when there is none' 'to come with relier" ••.. to W.M. Henri Gheon played, false with, Yet in the past hundred years ' for $1 "I would ha.ve speni it OD trivia". . . . to "Thirteen" tor $1: the ,stage ,sce.perjr for his Drama there have Deen a good ~any cation of the 55-foot crucifix "I will try to save one dollar every month through mJ' ieens and of Heaven and Hell?' successors to the Cure, priE;sts at Indian River, Mich., CathlIeDd Ii to yea".' ,. Not at all, you coNellS. Th,e living and working in the shad- oUe Shrine, to which the four fault, dear Brutus (and not for ow of that tretitendous memory, ton bronze corpus bad been A little bOy whose family clld not own a: television set w:,rote to the first time), lies with your- 'for An needs its Cure now as us asking for a Sta~ of Our Laday of Television in hope that it lIelf. Will you ever learn to stick much as ever. recently' affixed. It is one of ' might persuade his parent~ to buy one. _We hope that you', who do to the plain facts? Not likely., 'It 18 a position, certainly,- the largeSt in th~ :world. ,Ne' oWn the television sets will do likewise-write us asking for the Cure's Entrance which leaves the present suc- Photo.. statue of OUR LADY OF TELEVISIqN, enclosing your offering of Then someone remarks quite' cessor little enough time for :e"', $3 for the Holy Father's Missions. placidly, "There's Ars." The ob- flection'. There e the ~nendmg 'Cut out this colUDin, pin y6ur sacrifice to it and mail it to the ' vious thing to do, ~e dramatic, crowds, the .stupId questl~ns fo~-" . Most' Rev. Fulton J.' Sheen, Naticfual Directo~ of The Society for entry, would be 10 stop the car, ev.er recurrmg,the morbld.curl-" Continued ~rom ~~e ODe , the Propagation' of the Faith,366' F~ Avenue, New York 1, N. Y .. get out and wend your way OSlty ,about the b\lrnt bed and ; s~or~t; of: L~~ Tltlcaca", the, or your D~6cEs~,'DIRECTOR.,' REV.; RAYMPN;!> T,. CONS~IJ,IfE. afoot. ' ". ' ,'",. the mealy, potatoes. ,hIghest lake In the ,world. Th~,,; 368 'North MaiD. Street, Fall'River, Mass., it would be 1818 rather than ''Man Inspired' , : majority ,of ,the800,QOO, people." " , 11)5!}driste~d of a ',warJl\isl)., May Iii 'addition;' tli~syearhas'beeh,' , li~in.g in, this ,re.~ion are. Indians , " DAUGHTERS, OF ST. PAUl 8f~ernoon It wo~~~ b~ a, dreary the' :Centenni~l. ,The Letter" (If ,-illIterate an~ ~pov~nshed. " In,,;a-yo.,ng vi" (140021) to labor 'ill wmter's day, WIth the ", ~round Pope' John 'XXIII, just pubHshel;! , '~Jo ,~.ffs,et thlS:Slt~~P.0r., ~arf~ Christ's VClStvin.yard as CID AJ'GSfl- of the fog rising 'and the "hoarfrost for ·the fea'st~day;' is' a wiiole~" kn()¥pri~sts",,~hoflrst m,oved Editions: Press; Radio. Movies ,ond T.... ,,' rim,ning ~he.bushes., ' souled evocation of the spirit 'of' into ;~e."area ip. 1943, s~~fte~",., , vision. With ,the.. ,mode. . . . .anl, th.~.. You would watch the bent St. John Vianney in ,his favorite campl,l,I,gI): to WIn, th~ fr,le,n,d$jp, 'Missionary' sisle" bring' Chrilt'l Doctrin. figure of a priest; prematurely role as patron and model of all of HIeu,s~allr"austere aQd.. sus-;, to ~l" re9"1r~le~1 ,~f 'rcice,'colo;or,~~. gre,Y .a~d', inexcus~bly, shabby, par:ish priests., ' .,:} ':. ,pi?i~),\IS !Ind,ians/' the l\IIonl'~gn()l": ... :information write to: ploddmg al(:mg the ,road ?f. Ars~, Heart, speaks to heart, as m sal!i... " ; ".... ,'.',,',"" ; "REV: MOTHER: SUPERIOR , followed at a respectf~1 dIstance Newman's motto, and the sim"The mISSIoners ,described, for. SO 'Sf. PAUL'S AVE. BOSTON 30, MASS. by an old wOIJlan and a cart plicity and directness of the Pon- us tnetrials they had, been filled with the pitiable possess- tiff's words find their full conthrough and the problems they ions of the new Cure. ' t e x t in the sermon which was had to overcome to win the conYou would .see,him f~ on his the life of the Saint. fidence of t;he Indians. Graduknees at this spot, kISS the The two Johns a hundred ally they made progress through ground of .his parish, ,md remain years apart, spe~ to their a cooperative program.". absorbed m prayer for the bet- brother priests with the same ,The Maryknoll credIt move- ' te,r: part of an hour. Then, as ~e , , authentic accent. ment was started, in San, J':I aIl , arose, you would acco~pany hIm "His words were simple and parish iTi1955.. 1t began With 23 Where- 'ft1e mto his village,' qis world. " Wit.~out the ~east ¢, but he members. ", ~~day,jhe', ,credit Entire &1amil7 . Prayer of Gratitude spoke to them as a man inspired, union boasts some 3,000 members Can Dine' , Alas, for ,the ..flam~yance of with a heart so' ,filled, with,:,. and $250,000' in' savings: 'At the EcoDomlcal~ ' drama in this practi<;al world. voice so touching, that hearing Bishop's" Conference lle~ ~" in You drive into Ai's: like every- ': him it 'was, 'impossible" no{;to JanuarY, ,i958,' Father ,)Daniel )., " .. bo<;ly else, find - ,parking pla'(!e believe that a divine fire burned McLellan, 'M,M" ~a,s authorized in the shadow of the basilica, and within him, lifting him far be- to extend cooperative credit resign yourSelf'to the custom- yond himself." , throughout the ~ntire country. ary routine of the pilgrim tour-" The voice :of, the 'Cure: of AN He has set-up a c,entral office for 1st. stUl echoes in our ears. ' this purpose and already baa 'You filtd your way into, t h e , established 67 credit, unionS, Mold church 'and ,breathe prayer'", German Seminarians cording to Msgr. O'Grlldy. ' ' of gratitude that the amiable.. : _.; I _' _ ,"During a meeting' at which re Train As Laborers ' , 200 Peruvian officials discussed philistines of the 1880's stopped before., the~ could lev~,l' 'ESSEN (NC)-Seminarians in their problems 'w,ith the' U.N. it and replace It ~Ith the arch~- I this diocese 'have one unusual' mission, three Maryknoll Fathtectural monstrosity they badIn 'course which is mandatory in ers told their stories," Msgc. mind. , , _ their training. ' O'Gr;1dy reported.' " ,.' It was touch-:-and-go; save ~or ' They are assigned to work as i'Theymade Ii profound' imthe grace, of God ~nd some, dead. laborers receiving practical pression' on the U.N. officials, Bishop~s tough common sens~,' training'in different ,branches of who were quite, enthusiastic in Ars ~ight ~ todilY 'anothe: :",heavy industry. Tp.e purpose ,Qf " . eJ!:pr~ssing, ~eiradmirat~~n f?l' Fqurvlere,s or MontIrlar~, a froz""'/:the tra,ining" is to bring the, the work of the Maryknollers Hl . ' an essay.In ma~ble.,' , ,seminariansinto Closer contact' the 'area: They felt that'Mary.Of.,· 'r"1 'R· '. 'B ,'.' ; ': ,,'w:itb.')iib.~rers' and the working, knoll:had ou.treach~d e~erybo<lY\ Fa" Iver,az'!ar: wo'rId':" _.. " ' , " " : " " ' ; , el~, ~r;t ,the~r, SQ~I~log~~ ap:';.", AMUSEMENTS· . t ,St. Patticlt',& parish; 'Fall,River Twenty-nine seminarIans are 'proach to the IndIans." , will open itsanililal ,bazaar to- now working as laoorers. They , " ',' ,"", ',' night at 7; Opening hours for meet frequently to exchangee Abstinence Union '," "tomorrow will be 5 and on Sat- ideas and at the end of the labor HARTFORD (NC)-The Catb-\!iday morning' 100'cl~ck. Clos" ,trainiiig they will make a general oIlc'Total Abstinence Union OIl 1ng hour each n,ight wili be 10. evaluation' of theirlpractic.al exConnecticut WIll hold its 88th A 5 o'clock suppe~, !ind aucti~Il- per~E!rices. T,he seminaria9s ,a,lso annual convention here 'on Sepl will feature ,Saturday night's have ,school training and a vaca12, it was ,announced; by Father program.'Mrs,,' E'~ward' G:' D¢,.. "tion. pei-iod speQt ,in deacon'. 'John W. Keogh of Philadelphte, Ciccio is general chairman. " duties.' the uilloii;~ hatronal president.

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Priest-Composer. Regular Piani~t For Symphony WASHINGTON (NC) Whtm a priest plays a,piano, it's hardly news. But whenlike Father Russell Woollen

School's Out, But Dio cesan .Sollalists Hold Thurs:, Aug. 27, 1959 13 M~etings Throughoughout Summer Mon.ths Answers At.tacks By Patricia McGowan . THE ANCHOR-

DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER. MASS.

Summertime means a holid'ay from books, but not from the Sodality, of Our Lady. That's' the attitude of high· school sodalists throughout the Diocese. At the final meeting of Queen of Peace Sodality Union, at which all area sodalists are represented, Sum-he plays with a major symmertime meetIngs were recommended. A group taking the suggestion seriously was phony orchestra, that's some-' the sodality ,of Mt. St. thing else again. Mary's Academy, Fall River. Since 1957 Father Woollen, professor of liturgical music 'at They've met every two the Catholic University of Amerweeks all Summer. "The

Against Church In Mexico

MEXICO CITY (NC) The director of Mexico's Catholic Social Secretariat, Father Pedro Velazquez, has

replied here to attacks on the sodality is a way of life," exChurch in connection with the plained Sister Denisita, RS.M., centenary of this nation's soMt. St. Mary's moderator. "It's called Reform Laws. not something for school time The Reform Laws were passed only. The members have spiritin the years following 1857 to ual obligations which aren't laid systematize and enforce the antiaside during vacations." Catholic provisions of the conEncouragement . to. persevere stitution adopted in that year, during the Summer in these whteh separated Church and duties, which include frequent State. attendance at daily Mass and reFather Velazquez was answellception of Holy Communion, ing press comments on the cendaily mental prayer and recitatenary, which alleged that the tion of the rosary, is one of the Church had followed antisocial aims of the vacation meetings. policies an'd amassed und ue Students have also followed a . wealth prior to the passage of discussion outline, taking up difthe laws. Mexico's clergy was ferent topics at each meeting, aillo accused of being the enemy including the liturgy, home attiof progress. < tudes 6f teenagers, standards The priest, who is also presiapplicable to E'ntertainment and dent of the Inter-American Conthe problem of Communism. federation of Catholic Social But everything hasn't been . Action, said the Reform Law. solemn and serious. for the were partly' anti-Catholic defiIJ..' l tJ" Mount youngsters. Much fun has spite the fact that all Mexican. been mingled with the Summer SODALITY OFFICERS: Left to right in rear, Barbara were Catholic and took' advanget-togethers, attended by an Botelho; secretary; Joan Macomber, vice prefect. Front, tage . of the nation instead of average ol 15 to 20 sodalists. Frances Thomas, prefect; Valerie Polka, treasurer. . serving it. They've been held at summer He said that '. . \ the charges' that homes of the students, and swimS.J., area director of sodalities. membership was almost auto- .. the clergy owned enormoull ming, refreshments and much Select Group matic for whole student bodies . wealth are untrue. Most of the chatter have held an important Sodality organizatioR has in years gone by, the sodality ia Church's' possessions,' he deplace on each agenda. now considered a selective so-:, changed in· th~ past five years, clared, had largely cultural Last Summer, said Sister said Sister Denisita. Whereas ciety, and its obligations are value and its treasuries did not Denisita, sodalists from the seriously undertaken. belong 10 the clergy but to all whole Diocese held' joint meetthe faithful. Moreover, he added, Consequently, fewer but more ings at Jesus-Mary Academy. such wealth served a socilll purearnest members are to be found This year, however, the indiNEW YO.RK (NC) - Twenty . in C~tholic schools. An imporpose, since" 100 y-ears', ago all vidual school plan was tried, and scholarships for the beginning of educational and wel,fare activtant sodality event for them has 80- moderators were present at Russian studies in the Fordham been the World Sodality ~o'it-' 'iiies were in the 'hands of the meetings. University Institute of Contemgress h'eld last weekend at Seton Church. "They have gone well and porary Russian Studies have 'Hall University, ·N. J. Still on have diweloped initiative in the been made available by the New the horizon is the convention of . ~"~,-~"'~".,"""'~ girls," said the Mount moderaYork State Department of Eduthe lay apostolate, to be helCi ' tor. In all likelihood the pattern cation, it has been announced by Monday through Saturday of . . will continue for forthcoming Father Walter. C. Jaskieviez, 'next week at Boston College. ~. Summers.·The vacation meetings S.J., institute director. The Mt: 8t. Mary girls held a: ." are recommended throughout The scholarships, which cover penny jsale during the summer. the country as part of the so': tuition and fees in full plus a to lielp raise funds for 'attenddality prograf!i' and are espe- . commuting allowance of $25 per ing this meeting. From seven to ~. NEW ROCHELLE (NC) - A chilly 'encouraged in New Eng~ semester for the 1959-1.960 aca10 members are expected to be ~ .Mosaic, described as the most land by Rev. Edward Stimton, . demic year, will be limited to present, including dark-eyed, " expensive of its kind in the public' and private elementary enthusiastic Frances Thomas, : 365 NORTH' FRONT STREET ~ country, has been purchased by and. secondary school teach!!rI prefect; Joan Macomber, vice Charles H. Juergens of NewRo~ NEW BEDFORD : in the state. . prefect; Barbara Botelho; secrechelle for presentation as a gift : WYman 2-5534 : Registration win be held at U!ry; and Valerie Polka, treas. to his alma mater, CreightoD LONDON (NC)-Vice-Admiral the institute on the Fordham urer. , .. ~ ...... ~ ......... ~~ ......... .,;.." ............f University in Omaha, Neb. Sir St. John Reginald J. Tyrcampus on Sept. 12, 14 and 15. The art work ill almost 2,000 whitt, member of a well known To be eligible applicants must aquare inches in area and Ia Catholic family, has been appresent the recommenation 01. Yalued at approximately $100,pointed as Britain's Second Sea their superintendents or super':' 000. It depicts the ruins of the Lord and Chief of Naval Per- vising principal and must .state Roman Forum and will be feaionnel. INC. their intention of continuing in tured ·in a million-dollar library . Admiral Tyrwbitt, 54, was one their teachig position. beyond to be built al part of a long01. the Royal Navy's outstanding the coming academic year. range construction and expandestroyer captains in the Medision program at the Jesuit uniterranean in World War n. He versity. ill at present Chief cif Staff to Mr. Juergens, all insurance the Commander-in-Chief Allied company executive, was· graduForces in the Mediterranean. ated in 1930 from the CreighHe will take up his new poet ill . Joseph A. Charpentier ~n University school of law. December. Reg.' Pharm. Sale of the mOl!l8ic was negoTEL 'WV 6-0772 tiated through Theodore. R. , ARTHUR J•. DOUCET. FRANCIS J. DEVINE PRESCRIPTIONS Greene, ow,ner. 01. the Greene Gallery iR New Rochelle. The 1"2 ACUSHNET AVa. .nosaic had been on display ~ NEW BEDFORD the gallery for'·the. past leVeR COMPLETE months. It was completed about 1812 . LAUNDRY SERVICE by C. 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ica, has been putting teaching theory into practice as regular pianist of Washington's National Symphony Orchestra. Father Woollen's association with the orche~tra stems from a casual conversation with Howard Mitchell, conductor of the National ~ymphony. Explained the 36-year-old priest: "He was saying how hard It was to find a pianist for the orchestra. Then he asked me if I were a union member. " 'Sure,' I said. 'Why not?' .. 'Why didn't I think of thIs before?' he said. 'You're hired.''' Father Woollen pointed out in an interview here that his schedule of afternoon classes at the Catholic University permits him to rehearse with the orchestra in the morning and play in its concerts at night. Composes lor Masses Besides performing with the orchestra and teaching, Father Woollen is also . a composer. "Right now," he said, "I'm finishing the third movement of· my first symphoQY, and I'm. working on a harp chamber piece. I hope to finish these and various commission pieces before classes start again in september."· , Father Woollen has also composed music for' several Masses. Though these have been criticized by ,some conservative church musicians for their modern technique, thii priest-composer defends. them on the grounds that they are "not as extreme lUI thinga in tbe concert hall."

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Mosaic Shows Saint On Assembly Line LUTON (NC)-A large mosaic: ahowing St. Joseph in modern working dress at the assembly line of an automobile plant bu lM:en built over the front entrance of a new church at Luton, a center of the British automobile industry. The man responsible for . ehanging St. Joseph's trade, in a town as well known now for iii automobiles as it formerly was for its hats, is Father Arthur :Brewer, pastor 01. the new chureh dedicated flo Sl Joseph the Worker. "Had St. Josepb lived bere ill modern times, it is quite likely he would have been a ear worker," be said. The mOl!l8ic shoWll the Mint, wrench ill hand, WOl'kinc 011. . . eDiil~

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Urges Veterans Face Problems With Dignity ~I'ITSBURGH

(NC) More than 3,000 Catholic War Veterans assembled here were told by Bishop .lohn J. Wright of Pittsburgh "to face with spiritual calm and religious dignity the local, temponry rows that we sometimes get all worked up about." ' Citing the patience and the cosmopolitan character of the Roman spirit, the Bishop cautioned the veterans '''never to say the word that would alienate forever the person' Rome would 'Wish to convert." . "Rome is intolerant of vicious ideas," Bishop Wright commented, "but it is alway·s very patient with persons. . . . It always leaves a door open, even if it is only the door of the nearest confessional." "For example, Rome condemn. communism," he declared. "In point of fact, no one condemns communism so clearly, sO con.istently, so unmistakably,' so unequivocally 8B Rome. But Rome never mentions names, M it never knows when it will be jn a position to convert. Rome always leaves a bridge over which it can go to reach the errant, or the defiant can come to be reconciled. Apostolic Watehtower' "'Rome does this," he said, "benuse Rome remembers the historic, swashbucklers like Conmntine, a politician who helped Arianism almost to wipe out the I'aith. But God always holds the trump card, and Constantine, who finally made his peace with the Church, is recalled by most for the Roman churches which DOW bear his name." He termed Rome an "apostolic watchtower, looking out over the orb of the world, back over 20 centuries and forward to centuries uncounted, not with any fright or nervousness, but with the majestic calm of God Himself.'" "Read those papers that play up what Rome has to say," Bishop Wright advised. ,"If you do, you will have a much, more aIm spirit in these troubled times." .

Lutherans Plan Study Of Catholic Theology COPENHAGEN (NC) - Professor K. E. Skydsgaard has been Il'anted a year's leave of absence by the Copenhagen Univsrsity theology .chool to establish the Lutheran World Federation's in.titute for the study of Roman Catholic theology. An internationally known Latheran theologian, he is to de'Yote full time to settng up the institute, in Geneva, Switzerland. The institute was first proposed by a committee of German Lutherans. A committee to study. 1be project was chosen by the executive committee of the' Lutheran World Federation at its meeting in Minneapolis in Aucust, 1957. At the time tl\e original study committee was named, Dr. Carl L. Lundquist, executive secretary of the Lutheran World Federation, said that one of today'. Deeds is "a thorough theological encounter with the Roman Catholic Church." Stating that each generation of Protestants must "rethink" the decision of the 16th century, he said: "We 'must be able to say why we today are not Roman Catholics."

Seminarians to Hear Theology Professor' TORONTO (NC) - Father Gustave Weigel, S.J., professor of theology at Woodstock College, w~ll be' principal speaker at the 12th annual Seminarians' Conference; to be held at the University of St. Michael'. C0llege here Saturday. The meeting will be attended by seminarians and priests from the United States and Canada. Its theme will be: "Communications and the Word of God." Father Weigel will discuSll the modern Protestant and hy .... tltude towucl the Church. •

Station's of· the .Cross is Devotional Practice Richly Endowed. With Indulgences By Rev. Roland Bousquet . St. Joseph's Church, New Bedford The active participation in the official prayer of the Church should form the nucleus of our worship of God. Every Catholic thereby realizes in a most important manner his role, his mission in the corporate body of the Church. This is what we attempted to show ill explaining the church ,appointments. 'Alongside this official prayer are many. devotional practices which help tis . grow closer to God. No devotion is more popular nor more richly endowed with indulgences than the Way of the Cross. The practice of meditating on the various incidents of OjJr Lord's passion and death takes WI back to the· dawn of Chris-' tianity. According to a pious tradition, Our Blessed, Mother visited daily the sorrowful scenes of Her Son's life. These places, hallowed by the redeeming blood of Our Lord, quickly became the center of attraction for the pious pilgrims. St. Jerome mentions that great crowds came from every country to visit the holy places in Jerusalem. ' Connected Chap'els . A relatively ,small number of fortunate people, however, cQuld· make the arduous journey to the Holy Land. We must remember that the means of transportation at that time were quite primitive imd expensive compared to our modern airliners. . .' A desire to reproduce the holy places in other lands to satisfy the devotion of the people hindered from making the· pilgrim,. age to Jerusalem was m;mifested at an early date. In the fifth century, St. Petro'nius, pishop of Bologna, had a group of connected chapels to repreljent the more important shrines of the Holy Land. . . Organize PilgrlmaS-etI . The Pope, in 1342, entrusted the care' of the shrines in, the Holy Land to the Franciscan. and granted indulgences to those who meditated at these shrines. Under the Friars', direction. a definite route was established for the pilgrims' who wished to follow Our Lord's steps from Pilate's courtyard to Calvary. In the sixteenth century exact reproductions of the holy places were set up in different parts of Europe. The most famous were to be found at Louvain, In Belgium; Nuremberg, in Germany and Dauphine, in France, 10 mention but a few. . The builders of these shrines not only attempted to duplicate the most hallowed spots of ,Jerusalem but also. endeavored 10 reproduce the exact distance. between them. Great pilgrimages were organ" !zed all over Europe to visit these shrines. Th~ became even more popular than the holy places of Jerusalem. At this time Palestine was under Moslem rule and Christians wer'e not always welcomed. Another reason which made the European shrines attractive to the average person was their accessibility. . At this time there was no uniformly accepted method to make

Largest Seminary ts In Comunist Section AACHEN (NC)-Bishop Otto Spuelbeck of Meissen has cai~ed attention to the large number of priestly vocations in communistcontrolled East Germany. The Bishop, while on a visit to his home here, said: "Over here it is very little known that the largest theological seminary. in Germany is not·· situated in the Federal Republic (West Germany),. but is in the German Dem~r~t,ic Republic (East Germany). It is the regional,se~ mary of Erfurt which serves the dioceses and parts of dioceses located in DDR (East Germany). It has an enrollment of 300 students."

TWELFTH STATION OF THE CROSS St. Jean Baptiste - Fall R~ver' . the way of the cross. This de-. pended largely on .'the devotion' of each person' or on the priest conducting the' publie exercises at these' shrines. As a matter of. fact, itwas not uncommon to begin at the scene depicting the crucifixion and to end at the'shrine representing Pilate's courtyard•. . The number of stations and the incidents also varied consid..; erably from place to place. Pope Clement XII, in 1731, set the number of stations at 14 and permitted the erection of the stations of the cross in' every church. MiJiiature Pilgrimage Today the stations of the cross. grace the walls of the nave of even the most modest church. Fourteen pictures or sculptures help us recall the important events of Our Lord's Passion and Death. These tableaux are usually arranged at intervals around the walls of the church beginning on the gospel side. ~ The indulgences, however, are not attached to the pictures but rather to the small wooden 'erosses which surmount the image. The piCtures' are not necessary but only serve to remind us of the incidents of "Our Lord'. sacrifice.

Servlee On Patio

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ther communist cold war ambitions by visiting the United States. The Archbishop of Boston declared that the thinking behind the' Soviet Premier's midSeptember visit is based on the philosophy .that "the front is everywhere; anything goes; whatever advances their cause is legitimate." "Every foreign visitor' of any rank who has 'come or will come to this country from behind the Iron Curtain is a master of deceit," he added. "He is by long and thorough training the best equipped soldier for a warfare of words and treachery and anything else short of the firing of atomic weapons." The Cardinal described the current cold war as "a Third World War" in which "reserve officers are on the forward edge of the battle area, while regular officers, .in a sense, are on the flanks." In toqay's warfare, he continued, "the masters of ideology, psychology and every type of deceit are the shock troops in the only battles that' inay be fought in our lifetime. In the' arena of economics, public opinion and the 'underground', war. are now fought and won." , Gardirial Cushing stated that in the cold war "the battle i. three-quarters over when the guns begin to fire. The truly' modern military genius must labor to break his opponent'. will to resist or fight, in advance of any formal declaration of war."

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CAMP DRUM (NC)Richard Cardinal Cushing said here that Nikita Khrushchev intends only to fur-

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The stations of the cross devotion is '. miniature pilgrim-' age to the .Holy Land. We can thus .appreciate more fully Our Lord's love for us. He' gave up His life that we might live. The way of the cross also reminds up to take up our daily crosses and follow Christ, remembering that without the sufferings of Calvary there would be no joy of Easter. (Next Week - Choir Loft)

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THE ANCHORThurs., Aug. 27, 1959

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requires of is membera vows of obedience and poverty. Thia leads '0 a life of simpliciry. bArd work. aod tranquility. Perperual ail...ce it OboelVed. Tbe IIlODks never cooverse wi.h each other. W'ir it llboolu.e1y _essuy to discuu some phue oJ !heir work. they use a sign langua8lO inven.ed by Cistercians a .housao4 years ago. AI.hough TrappislS spetl\i much of their day in pny.. and con,emplatioa, each monk eams his daily bread '" working for !he whole communiry. An individual mook owns no.hing; even the habit he wear. belooss to the community. Hat'" work is one of his chief penances. Tbe Trappi. program is neatly swomed up in their mono: "To work i. to pray.·

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In 19111' a small pioneer band of Trapp. 'Cis.ercian monks' oJ .he S.rict Observance from !he Mo.her Abbey oJ Gemsemaoe in Kcnrueky founded· a new mOO45.ery in the Genesee Valley. Tilling .he fields and raisiog new buildings wi.h their owo hands. mese hard-working mooks, are l\IItling their land in", a model farm. When the monastery was raised to aa abbey - which meaot thar i. would be c0mpletely self-SIIppotting - bread was chosen to be the chid SOIIrce oJ income. Tbe smAI1 kitchen Slove originally used to bake Monka' Stays Nmtdt, fresh longer Bread had be replaced wim a reslaunoc oveo. Bu. vioi.on spread reports Oi mit deENRICHED BREADS: licious loaf 10 npidly that wi.hin two yean White • W..- Wheal. RaIsin WItHe Monks' Bread was being sold by mail .. far AT YOUR GROeER'• ......y u Hawaii. II. the loafI reputatioo ap«ad .

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Expect Greater Red Activity After Visit . WASHINGTON' (NC)

The 'Communist party in the United States is expected to increase ,its activity, and possibly its membership, as a result of the exchange of visits by President Eisenhower and Soviet Russian Premier Khrushchev. This development is fully foreseen here, but since the' Tisits are "in the works" there is nothing that can be done about it. It is not expected that the American Reds will seek tO,meet Mr. Khrushchev while: he is in , this 'tountry, or that he' will attemp! to ,make cOntact ~ith them. Rather a certain reserve on both sides is looked for. But, since prestige is' one of the things Mr. Klu'usl).chev hopes most to obtain from coming here, it is understandable that the Communist party will seek to capitalize on any advantage he gains. LaboritesCool Of course a great deal ilepends upon how Mr. Khrushchey's Tisit tui-ns out. His stay in Great Britain was not a complete triumph. Before he left London it was widely reported that a definite coolness had developed be-, tween Mr. Khrushchev and, not the Tories, but the British Laborites. But whatever mistake he may have made there, it is not expected that he will re~at it here. , United States officia~ are bending over backwards to see that Khrushchev suffers no'indignity while' a guest here. The American people' see~ fully willing' to go along with their Government in this respect. So, Mr. Khrushchev will have a'mple opportunity 'to exude charm and the appearance of being a peaceloving individual. If 'he succeeds, he may iull a great number of easy going Americans into for,etfulness. ' Awalt Readloa There are reports that the program of the Comniunist party in this country calls f()l' it to move more into the general stream of American life. If Mr. Khrushchev but so much as opens, the door, American Reds can be expected to step up their" , infiltration of various key groups and organizations in this 'coun-

try. There are those who see in this no particular cauSe to worry. Such peopl4;! say, that the Communist party membership was not large, relatively speaking, even when it was at its height. What they forget is that the Communist party is not large, relatively, wherever it takes over a country., And where there are more actual Communist party members there' are bound to be more fellow-travelers. And they can cause an awful lot of trouble.

ANCHOR Aug. 27, 1959 Confrat~rnity .of Christian Doctrine Enrolu 16 Thurs.,,,-:THE 1 Laypeople in Many-Faceted Program 37 Handicapped By Marion Unsworth DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER. MASS.

"1"his past Spring 64 lay men and women on Cape Cod received certific~tes as teachers of Christian D'octrine. In 1958, 151 completed the same course in Taunto~. In the fall, hundreds more will participate in similar programs to be held in the raIl RIver an~ ~~w Bedford areas. These men and women, who devote th~ir time and ,talents to the rehgioul talks themselves. "The books fOI' instruction of children, f o r m ' an "army" of some 235 lay_10 the clubs are ar~anged ~ the, " k' d th basis of 16 diSCUSSIOns on differ~ople wor Illfg tun ~tr e ent topics.' Each group has a Diocesan Con ra erm y 0 f leader, who keeps the meeting

On Pilgrimage

NEW YORK (NC)-A group of 37 handicapped persons left

Grand Central Station here by train on a pilgrimage to the 'Shrine of Ste. Anne de Beaupre near Quebec. The pilgrimage was arranged by a Jersey City woman who was cured of bone cancer at the shrine eight yean ago. Highlight of the departure w. an evening Mass offered in the busy railroad 'station by- Father William Hornak of St. JOM Nepomucene Church, Guttenberg, N. J. Father Hornak ae-' ,companied the pilgrims 00. their trip to the, shrine. . The pilgrimage was organized by Mrs. William Var.ic~ -who hall been raising funds for the trip for more than a year. Included in the group were two men OIl stretchers, 12 blind persons, iD'eluding a nun; and a number of persons who use crutches and wheelchairs. Also making the trip were • non-handicapped pilgrims, including a volunteer doctor a04 three volunteer nurses. Two railroad cars were assigned specifical1T for use by the pll, grima.

Christian Doctrine, assisting parin orde'r and suggests discussion ishes by teaching, home visits, points," ,the Diocesan director transportation and many other added. means. "In this Diocese, the Coui1c~ ~ Rev. Joseph L. Powers, St. of Catholic Wom'en,promotes diSJoseph's parish, Taunton, Dicussion clubs too." oce~n Dir.ector of th~ ConfraThe Confraternity of Christiall termty, estimates that m the,past Doctrine has been in existence year more. than 24,000 elemenhere since the beginning of the tary. and high. s.chool !oungst~rs . Diocese, its greatest impetus received re,hglOus'. mstructlon coming from St. Pius X, whose under the Con~ratermty program reign began the year before the from approximately 600 lay Fall River Diocese was estabteachers. lished. The first teaching training "It is a great means for the lay ~urse was held a fe'!' years ago apostolate," Father Powers said, In Attleboro. Each IS 15 weeks "a method of using the assistance long and after the two courses FATHER POWERS of the laity in a very Catholic scheduled for the Fall, every area wa " ' 'in the Diocese wilJ.l have been ,y. . . covered. They include 'suggested glous diSCUSSion clubs for adults;, A New England reglon~l concurricula for various age groups, parent-educators, who promote ference of the Confratermty, for methods of pre'sentation, and a religious practices in the home; I ~ Bos~on and Hartford. Provsurvey of audio-visual aida and apostles of good will, who mces, '!Illl be held at Burlington, available. I help 'to promote the Church Vt.. Sept. 18, 19 and 20.. among non-Catho,lics. In high school groups, for example, there is a recommended '''All parishes do not have, all series for each year on doctrine of these cate'goril~s," Father: Powof the Church. i'Ideally,"..- Father ,ers' said. "Some have just teachII the dream of evel7 bo, (aDd (irl &Go!). Ii Ia aIao a Aan ... Powers explained, "classes are ers others have teachers and eesalQ for the rel...l.... who operate aD Infant sehool. PI'imu7 divided 'into groups of eight hel'pers, ilnd so forth, as' parisll sehoo&. adult MacaU. eentei', a each, boys 'and girls s~parately, Deeds dictate. ~~ , !,IJ,. sehool for eaiechls*a eie...... The with an adult leader." "West Harwich probably ,baa .c. dOd' bard8hJPI and ,dUllculUes have alwa,. ~, ~. beeD ..reat but Ulese dedJcaied womFor the first part of the class, the most perfect organization ia the teacher explains Uie lesson the Diocese," he added, "There ~' ~ ea have never once ralaed • ~mfor that week, then the individual Our Lady, of Victory Missionary ~ fA plUDt 'or asked for uslstsnoe. a.. groups discuss it. Sisters, including Sister James. + • oeD"" the, asked for help bm on~ But religious instruction isoot who conducts teacher training &0 enlu..e the Center so Ulat an .... the only project of the Confra- courses, use all the C.C.D. methCl"easln.. number of conven. migbt ternity of Christian Doctrine. A ods: a parish executive board, be helped aDd Instructed. The, wiM national organization with head- fishers, home visitors, teachers, a Iar..er buJldiq with more rooms L ,1M Hr"'J FrL,.L U~ ",.1 quarters in Washington, 'p. C.,' helpers and group discussion 1W'JfT~ lnml/llll nM for .lJlstruciloll _ we han approv" it is a bureau of the National, clubs., ' "" Iht 0rilfII4I CJ»m/, the :reques& BUT onlr • eoadJU. 'Catholic Welfare Conference. "The Sisters conduct classeil t1t.t Ule Dew buUdJqoCODtetD some UviD.. quarten for the nUD&. The national center functions u in a motel across'the street from 1& slmpl, does not lIeem right to have the eDtlre facuU, Lift a cleariDg house for C.C.D. in- the convent, where, they use the IN THE S•..ME ROOM. The rntefal CODvens have alread, eo.. formation, furnishing, facts and rooms for 'small, ,separate kibuted Dearlr two th01lSlDCl dollars. t4,Oot wiD complete &be suggestions to Dioceses request- classes," he said. "Classes are job ••• caD Joa helpf ing it. Each Diocese is auton-, held twice a week in West Haromousunder its own director, wich and in Chatham." HAVE' YOU SENT YOUR CHILD TO SCHOOL YET • '•• ~ and each parish cai-ries out its Other parishes mentioned by MEA:N, OF COURSE, YOUR REFUGEE CHILD ••• $25 WILL program ,ull(aer this director. Father Powers forming comMAKE IT POSSIBLE FOR MONSIGNOR RYAN TO SEND A Many partial and plenary indul- plete ,CCD units included those REFUGEE. CHILD TO SCHOOL FOR ANENTIRJ: TERM ••• gences are' attached to memt>er- in Hyannis, Osterville, FalTHIS INCLUDES BOOKS AND CLOTHING ••• A REAL ship. mouth, Wareham and Fairhaven. "BARGAIN" IN EDUCATION. -""'" Discussion Clubll Six Types "A STRONG NATIVE CLERGY IS OUR ONLY HOPE," eald ' Several"'parishes, including st. There are' six types of memPope St. Pius X (Feast September S). To eam on out thla wlsb Joseph~s, Taunton, and St. bers: teachers, who assist priests of th. Saint of the MlssioDa U hu beeD the and religious 'in catechetical Joseph's, North Dighton, have go~1 of the Pope. of this eentllr1 &0 educate work; fishers, who make home' discussion clubs. For the clubs, Dative bo1.S for the sacred minlstl'J'. FLAVI· there is a recommended schedvisits, check absenteeism, take AN and PHILIP are two bOn of the mIscensus; helpers, who provide ule of topics, but lay members alODa who wlsb to serve u missionaries of the group make arrangements transportation and classroom among thelr friends and nelgbbon. CaD JOD facilities, prepare classroom for meetin-gs and conduct the belp them? Eacb 'bo, must bave a sponsor material and distribute Catholic: wbo wUI pa, his DeCeSSIll'7' expeDS8S of $100 literature; discussion club worka ,eu duriD&, the six fear semtnal'J course. WouJd JOu like to ers, who conduct and attend relibave "a priest iD Ute famUJ'"

Theologian Speaker' On Catholic Series NEW YORK (NC) - During the four Sundays of September, the Catholic Hour Radio program will feature Jesuit Father, Robert W. Gleason who will speak on ''The Four Last Things." Based on his best selling book of last season, "The World to Come," Father Gleason's subjects will be the ultimate realities' of death, purgatory, judgment and resurrection. The Catholic Hour is produced by the National Council of Catholic Men in cooperation with the Na. tiona1 Broadcasting' Company and is heard each'Sunday at 2:30 p. Jil. Father Gleason, who is cbairman of the departments of theology and rellgious eCI\lcation ~t, Fordham University, holds some, six: pOl!t-graduate degrees, in- eluding doctorates in both phil-' , osophy and theology. Music for the September, series will be provided by the world':famed Pius X School of Liturgical Music of 'Manhattanville College of the' Sacred ·Heart., Purchase, N. Y.

"A ROOM OF MY VERY OWN•• .'~ ,

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Moscow Daily Opens. Drive on Religion

Need Happy Relation Between East, West CLEVELAND (NC)-"Heartto-heart and mind-to-mind, un-, derstanding" is' the first thing needed for, better relations between Asia and the, West, Dr. Paul K., T. Sih told a group of Catholic men here. Dr: Sib, a Confucianist who became a Catholic, said that inany, eastern na tions are in revolutionary'flux and must take a choice between communism and the West. The West, he said, has what Eastern peop~e reall,y want-Christian truth. Communism's godlessness is contrary to their deep, and 'ancient spiritual traditions; he added. . He' urged that the U'. S. take a lead iii bringing Asia and the 'West together. To do this, America should send envoys,show regar~ fQr ,Asia and make- an effort to win the confidence of the 'Asians. :

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.. BERLIN (NC)-A new drive against religion h .. ' been opened in the Soviet' Union by the Moscow daily, Pravda, according to reports reaching here. The newspaper, the report. said, claimeii that the clergy is using new tactics to keep religion alive in the U. S. S. R. In its campaign against what' it 'called "religious prej udices," Pravda said that the clergy is trying to reconcile religion with ,science, and to convince the people that communism can coexist with religion.

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Mauriac Theme Is Futility Of Seeking" Social Rank By Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S. Kennedy Newly translated and publis1:led is a novel which Francois Mauriac wrote a good many years ''ago. The English version, done by Gerard Hopkin~ is called Questions of Precedence (Farrar, Straus and Cu<Iahy. $3.50). M. Mauriac Bays in preface, "I think that which the family has attained, if 1 were writing it today, 1 her brother schemes to bring should treat my characters Augustin back or,' failing that, with greater kindness. H Cer- \ to 'have an ambitious young man tainly if he were writing it to- impersonate him. day, he would bdng to it a more Family Buined developed art Both- the real AuguStin, much than that which changed, and the impersonator he commanded confront Florence at the same 'at the time he time. The result is disastrous. produced this The family is ruined. At the end, work. It reads Florence is just leaving a mental more like a hospital, and the narrator is scenario than a groping toward genuine religion. novel of depth, cohesion, and Whereas M. Mauriac is specifpolish. Ie about scenes, personal pecu:' It is laid in liarities, atmosphere, he does not and abo u t . spell out either action or mean. Bordeaux, and ing. A school dormitory, in the Concerns social twilight, is 'described as "twin eastes. The narrator is a member rows of beds loo'king like chil.of a family which does not be- ''dren's graves." long to the local aristocracy (all At the start of the October in the wine business) but would term, lie says, "ahead there dearly like to be accepted by stretches the 'grey destiny of the these mean-minded snobs. He is school year blazed with the glitan orphan, and he and his sister tel-ing splendours of the great Florence live with an aunt and feasts of the Church.", Of a choluncle, aspiring vulgarians. eric woman it is observed that This quartet thinks of little "she would. gladly have sacrielse than getting ahead socially. ficed the whole human race on Howeyer, for all their maneu- the altar of her liver." . vering and fawning, they achieve But if there is something ar-' only a series of vicious snubs. bitrary in the action of the narBut then a strange' young man ratiye, and, if the link between named Augustin comes into their cau'se andl effect in what happens lives. is sometimes obscure, there is Complete Outsider no mistaking the point which Augustin is a classmate of the the novelist is making. narrator at a school attended Questions' of social advantage chiefly by the sons of the arist... and precedence not only preocracy. He is a mystery to his occupy people but so construct and warp the mind and heart contemporaries. Nothing is that there is no room for real known of his background, hia , family. spiritual 'concern. Augustin is He is obviously not a person privileged in having' been born 01. means; but just as obviously and in living all his life, outside he is a person 9 f respectable all social castes. He can, therebrains. And he simply hoJds him- fore, consider and do something 8elf aloof from all the' squalid about what the Gospel tells \IS business of jockeying for place \ in the one thing necessary. and prestige. He is a complete ,... ..., Gutsider. It is )J. Mauriac's purpose to .how how this misfit is both the makJng and tpe breaking of the Plumbing ~ Heating social fortunes of the narrator~s family. He becomes their friend, Over 35 Years falls in love with Florence, of Satisfied Service spends the holidays in their ' home. 806 NO. MAIN STREET And the clever Florence sees Fall RiVtt' 'OS 5·7497 how to use him in a way th'at will intrigue the family's betters; It works. She makes a match with one of the most eligible and influential yourig men of the region. ~ugustin, disca~ded,. dis~p­ pears. Greater BeaUty But he has awakened Florence and the narrator to the fact that there is a much greater reality than social rank, has made them aware of Someone whose favor is incomparably more important Thomas F. Monaghan Jr. than that of the local bigwigs. It 'is not that he has' effected Treasurer a conversion from their materialism and practical atheism, but that he has planted a pebble 142 SECOND STREET of awareness which will disturbingly lodge in them for years to FALL RIVER eome. Those years are sketched in the chapters leading to the denOSborne 5-7856 nouement. They are outwardly successful for Florence and her brother, but inwardly full of disorder and discontent. When it's time The bored Florence; her marriage a fiasco, gr'ows more reckto retire • • ., Buy less in her affairs, and to prevent her destroying the position,

GEORGE M. MONTLE

MONAGHAN ACCEPTANCE CORP.

Expect Pope to Join Priests at Retreat

CASTELGAr-TDOLFO (NC) ..:.:,' Pope John XXIII is ~xpected ~ visit the nearby Jesuit retreat house at Galloro in September, to join parish priests 'ot' Rome preparing for the Roman synod. All the clergy ol Rome has been request~d i to attend Sp'ir-:!tual, exercises in preparation for the diocesan' synod, which the Pope hopes will do much to adopt Rome's spirituaJ and ,relilious life to the needs of the modern city of more than two million people. No date has been set for the pope'~: visit to the rekeat' house.'

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Record Catholic School Enrollment· Continued' from Page' 0';"'

5,138,051 will mark the first time this combined figure has passed the five million mark. No estimates were given by the NCWC r"epartment on school Duildings or faculty members during the new school year, but such figures w~re released in 1958. Catholic eleme~tary schools in 1958 were reported as totaling 10,098, with 98,100 teachers - serving in them. Of that total number of. teachers, 76,011 were· reported to be Religious, while 22,089 were said to· be lay people. Thirty-one junior, high schools were reported 'in' the 1958 NCWC study. They were staffed by 214 teachers-165 Religious and 49 lay'persons. The report showed 2,289 senior high schools, taught by 39,515, .teachers, ' 4,524' R~ligious and 2,365 lay persons. Institutions of higher education fe . men were given as 89, with 14,337 teachers, 8,590 lay people and 3,805 Religious. The report for the ,1958 school year' also showed 219 major seminaries with 2,440 teachers of whom 2,303 were Religious and, 137 lay people. The, number of minor seminaries. was .set at 145, with ~,493 teachers, including 64 lay Eeople. \ The total of diocesan teachers colleges and' normal. training schools was given as 26, with 703 instructors of which 51 were lay persons.

ANCHOR 18 Thurs.,-THE Aug. 27,1959 DIOCESE OF FALL ~IVER. M'ASS

John's, Attleboro, a seventh; St. George's, Westport,' a sixth, and The Sisters of St. Joan of Are, Immaculate Conception, New staffing the Bishop's Residence, Bedford, a fourth. St. . Mary's Cathedral Rectory The opening of Bishop Stang / and Notre Dame Rectory, Fall High School with 240 freshmen River: will account for the increased Sister Clement from St. Mary'. high school enrollmel?t. . to the Chancery Office, Boston, At the same time, officials of replaced by Sister Therese of the the Department of Health, EduInfant Jesus. cation and Welfare estimated 'Sister Denise from Notre that the combined grade and Dam~ to Arctic, R. I., replaced by high school enrollment in the Sister Mary Estelle. U. S. public school system for the ,~ coming year. will be 35,986,000. The combined enrollment for Catholic grade and high schools The Sisters of St. Dorothy, In this country will be 5,138,051, VISITS WASHINGTON: Giacomo Cardinal Lercaro, Villa Fatima, Taunton and Our according to the newly released right, Archbishop of Bologna, visited the National Shrine Lady of ,Mt. Carmel School, estimates. This means that one' the Immaculate Conception" h~d a,n informal meeting New Bedford: of eighth, or approximately 12.5 Sister Nancy Harnois from with a group'of Congressmen, and was guest of honor at a Villa Fatima to St. Dorothy'. per cent, of all grade and .high school pupils in this country dinner' arranged by Archl;>ishop Egidio Vagn"ozzi, left,·· Academy, Staten Island. during the coming School ;year Mother Souza from Mt.CarApostolic Delegate to, the United States. NC Photo. ' 'will be attending Catholic . " mei 'School to principal of St. schools. Patrick's,- Staten Island. The total for the three aca., Mother Rose Lynch from Mt. Continued from Page One Vitolda to Carteret,' N. J., redemic levels may be 5,525,539, Car,mel School to Newport. Sister Mary David from St. placed by Sister Julia. . an increase of 254,261 over last Incoming to' Mt.· Carmel ;" year's enrollment, according to Anne's, Convent, Mooers Forks, School are Mother Beatrice Gonthe NCWC figures. N. Y. to St. John's Convent, Fall Th e S·; calves and Mother Mary Fraga. R' IS ers 0 f St• Ma rtha, 'Mightiest Enterprise' Isv~rt' M . G . f staffing .La Salette Seminary at IS er arie ermal11e rom ' Msgr. Frederick G.' Hockwalt, St R 'C \ t A h t to Attleboro and East Brewster: director of the NCWC .education ' Costhe s . o?veFnl'l R~uS ne, Sister St. Praxede transferred 'The Sisters of Divine ProviSt . a erl11e s, a Iver. f th Attl b S· d unit, said in commellting on the dence, staffing St. Joan of Are Sister Rosalie from St. Catherrom.e : oro eml11aryan totals that probably Catholic Sch~ol, Orleans: . 'sconven," t F a 11 R'Iver, t 0 replaced by Sister...., St. Edmund. erll1e . . education is the Ch\lrch's might-. Mother Tharsilla, Sister DomiSt. Anne's. Convent, Mooers', Grey,~uns lest enterprise in Am 7rica. tilla and Sister Hilda Marie, Forl~s, N. Y. Transfers of Grey Nuns 'who newly assigned to the Orlean. Noting that the American, o staff St. Joseph's Home, Fall convent. Cat hoi i c schools were' the River, and Sacred Heart Home, Sister Mar.y Victor, and Sister _ largest Catholic system in the The Daughters of the Holy New Bedford include all at St. Mary Elizabeth, going from world, he said that the awareGhost, known as the White SisJoseph's Ho~e: ' Orleans to Stamford, Conn. ness of the spiritual needs of . tel's, in charge of Bishop Stang Sister Mary de Montfort treaSt, Sister . Mary Linus to Plyyoung people on -the part of Day N~rsery, Fall R~v:r, and uJ;'er, transferred as princ'ipal to r· mouth; ·Sister Vera Marie to parents had encouraged tbem conducting home nursl11g servThetford Mines Canada' reSouth' Weymouth.. to cooperate with their bishops ices in Fall River and New Bed-. placed by Sister 'Peter Go~zales. and priests in the provision of ford, have the following changes: ' Sister St. Reina, in charge of !. a school system which reprePITTSBURGH (NC) - The Fall River: Sister Yves de St.' older girls to Lambton Canada sented a tremendous contribu- 'Catholic War'Veterans of AmerThe .Missionary SIsters of the Jean, superior, to Waterbury, as superio~' replaced by Siste; tion to the welfare of our Most Blessed Trinity, at Cenacle ica went. on record here as Conn., repl::iced by Sister Agnes Jane Franc~s. country. "deploring the' recognition and convents in Attleboro, Hyannis, Lucille; Sister Charles Amelie to Sister St. Leonide, in charge Osterville and Wareham: "Our expanding enrollment is honor afforded Soviet Premier Fall River as cook. . . of older boys, to Ledis, Canada; certainly a tribute to the work of Attleboro: Sister Rose Thelma Nikita Khrushchev In the ofNew Bedford: Sister Elisa replaced by Sister St. Madeleine. our teachers and school ndminto Southington, Conn., replaced ficial invitation extended by the The~ese, superior, to New-port, .There , are no changes at by Sister Joseph Regina from istrators who have made so President to visit the United replaced by Sister Renee TheoSacred Heart Home. States." ' ' Wareham. many sacrifices for the pupils dose. Hyannis: Sister Mary Geneunder their care," Msgr. HochIn a "special resolution" The Sisters of the Third Order vieve to Brooklyn, replaced by adopted at its 24th annual miwalt said. Sisters Servants of Our Lady of St. Francis at St. Mary's Sister, Elizabeth Marie from tional convention., the CWV "The opening of the school Queen of the Clergy" staffing St. Home, New Bedford, have the Rego Park, N. Y. urged its membership "to fosyear offers an excellent opporfollowing changes: Osterville: Sister Ann William ter special religious observances' Anthony Rectory, New Bedford: tunity to tell not only our 'Sister Mary Eleanor is reSister M. Grace Pierre, supeto Rego Park, replaced by Sister for the 'Conversion of Russia' Catholic people, but the public rior, replaced by Sister M. Mary Trinita from Paterson, and a spiritual campaign calling / placed by Sister St.' Peter. generally what the Catholic Auxilia, superior; Sister M. JosN.J. upon Almighty God to direct school system is about. Our tree~usetta· replaced by Sister Marie ,Wareham: Replacement for and guide' the officials of our mendous contriQution must be The Religious of Jesus-Mary, Agnes; Sister M. Mauritia. reSister Joseph Regina not yet Government in any relations brought 'to the attention of the at Notre Dame School and placed by Sister Marie Perpetu,8. announced. they may have with the Soviet fair minded 'American public, 'Jesus - Mary Academy,' Fall Premier." who shoul,d be quick to realize River, announce the .following ....--------------------~----'tl. the gift it. receives from its The resolution alSo asked the transfers: group's membership' to "exhort Catholic neighbors." . Mother St. 'Vincent de Paul to all Americans to join,the silent Double 1945, Enr.ollment Highland Mills, Mother St. Laucaptive m'illions and engage in a rent to Woonsocket, Mother St. ' The estimate given for the Fall . ,rade School enrollment 'indi- . concentrated· 'Crusade of Pray-, Florence to Pr6vidence, Mother. ers for Peace' during those cruSt. Francis de Sale's to Auburn, cates' that these schools 'will double their 1945 enrollment, 'cial days w~ile Premier Khrush':' N. Y., 'Moth~r Mary Loyola to chev tours,our nation.". 'the', year unoffic1a]ly recognized Hyattsville, Md. New religious coming to Fall by numerous educators as the River are: Mother St. Narcisse beginning' of the current "enfrom Goffstown, N. iI.; Mother rollment boom" in Catholic Ii St. Robert from ProvidenCe, ,rade and high schools. MILWAUK£'E(NC) ~ Two' Mother St.· Bernard ,from SasThe combined high school and.. Public H'eal-th' Service .grants of katcheWan, Mother St. Daniel, 'l'ade School 'enrollment ,riI. ::n:'-ore than $300,000, have been, and Mother Good Counsel from ,awardedto the' Marquette·Uni-. Hyattsville.. versity dental school, for continuing,research.in dental mateThe Franciscan Sisters of st. WAS -H I N G TON (HC) ~ riais and for,. new ,faculty ~raiIi- JoSeph at Holy ·Cross School;, Georgetown University here ha,.!' ing program., " Fall River, aimou'nce the followreceived a $350,000 grant from ,. Dr~'Gunnar~yge, 'professot' ing transfers: "., the Public Health Service's Na-. 'and'chairma:'it"of the· department Sister'Symphorian to De~roit;.', tional . Institutes of Health to~ ofdentai materials, will receive Sister Assumpta. to' Fairfield, ward the' construction of new $85,;6'/:5:,during a five-year periOd Mail thia coupon or ,phOM ,OSbonae 4-4621 Conn.' as superior. Repla~ments .health facilities. to continue and expand a reare ·.not yet named. . The .grant, which is to be search progr:iin 'in the chemistry, matched by the university, will physics and metallurgy of dental "The Felidan Sisters at st. go toward the new $3.5 ·miliion"ma,terials. Ife was awarded preI,SMO Dur'" Trust 00. 1 Stanislaus School, Fall River, Science and Basic HelYth Re- vious Public, Health Service 1'111 River, I ' . anno~nce' rep~aceIiIent of Sister search Building plannedfor con- grari~s of more than .$100,000 for Alexia, 5th and .6th grade teachstruetion next' year.. The :grant .,th}swork. "~ . . ~ " ~I ~leue ~ lend me tr.. In1omlat,ton ~ • ,Charge Pl~ appU-' er, by sister' ;Mary Philothea. was announced' by the Depart'::.. '.-;·AsclX,lrdinator· of . gradu~te ,catton form. '.' . . . ,, . " mentol' Health, Education aria· .,~t':l4ies in :dentistry,.;Dr.,. Ryge' Sister Alexia will go to Webster, i. ..: I Mass: ' ., ""', '. Welfare. , " "." w,ilL~lso airect th,e new training .. N'~, ,.:;.: u •••••;'•• ! •. . - : _ ••••• ., •••• I Father Edward B. Bunn"S.i; . pr?~ram: i~ which stip~nds a':ld . presi~ent 'of Georgetown,'- said " ,.',tUItllW WIll be prov}ded f~~ I,.~DR. . :'· : .•.•••••••:.:', •• ~ •.• , .. .-•.••.•• ~ ••••• Bernardine Sisters. of ,the the university is grateful for the ': f~culty ': lJlembers seekll~g add~7, .-Third Order of St. Francis, staffgrant which will allow :t:esearch ~I~nal gradua~e work. n~ ~asle ing Our Lady of Perpetual Help \ ' -\.I.... r ; ?" ". cooperation .with the Nationai scIe~ces.o~their dental spec~altyf. School, New Bedford, announce Retailers _: If you liav.·not JOiiIed the Durfee Trost· Institutes' of Health. ., ,.' " ' the following' change: Siste.J;' Q. ' I OIarge Plan, just check here ' ! ,W. will send you com,: i plete information. ", " "NEW ENGLAND'

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Continued from Page One ·Action Committees of Councils of Catholic Men and Women.. 4. "Ideal to keep fn mind: St. Augustine tel'ls us 'Sunday foreshadows the· eternal repose not only of the spirit but also of the body.' Sunday prefigures the day when 'we'shall rest and see, see and love, lov~ .and praise.'" ','

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By Jack Kineavy

19

THE ANCHORThurs., Aug. 27, 1959

Taunton CYONine to Meet . Fall River Team in Finals

DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER. MASS.

Smut Purveyors Vicious' Enemies Of Children

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Somerset High School Coaeh

A strong. Immaculate Conception nine, replete with former Coyle lUminaries,. became the first Taunton CYO representative in several years' to' advance to the diocesan finals by 'taking two straights, 3-1 and 5-1, from Mt. Carmel of New Bedford in a best of Conception, 4-Z, in the opener three series over the week- of the Fall River CYO championend..The Taunton team must ship series. I. C. outhit the winnow await the outcome of the ners 9-7 but errors of judgment

TORONTO (NC) - Pi60 tures and books which 'COl!l'Upt •the moral fiber and ideals of youth "must be

eliminated if we are to discharge our sacred duties to our chilon the bases proved detrimental Santo Christo-Immaculate Condren," Francis Cardinal Spellto the Southern Division standception series in. Fall River. man declared here in an address ard bearers. Santo Christo, to the_ 61st annuai Fraternal defending diRoland Garant, Paul Thibault Order of Eagles convention. The ocesan cl1am.pand Theriault had a brace of Cardinal was presented' with the ion, holds a one hits apiece ~ a losing cause. Len order's Ten Commandmenw game edge in. Nicolay with tWo basehits and Award. the series which two runs batted in was the big "Thousands of dedicated mea will be renewed man for Santo Christo. Both and women," the Cardinal',said, next Saturday. clubs played excellent defensive "are striving by example and Splendid pitchball. S; C. pulled off two double concerted efforts.to protect .and ing. performplays both started by second TAUNTON CYQ CHAMPS: Barry Bird left, retained his preserve, our youth, our counances turned in baseman Ed Avilla. singles championship and Jack Carvalho, right, teamed up tries and our civilization, from by Dick Fagan The scene shifts to Lafayette ' .,. CYO . the (ate of Sodom and Gomorrah, and Johnny Park Saturday for the second with Lee. Gibbons to cop doubles honors. In Taunton despite the determined effort. Lewis keynoted I. Co's spectacu-< game of the series betWeen: these 'tenniS; pl~yoffs. .' . '. . of .vicious,' venal enemies. ai lai shoWing' against formidable old rivals. The setting is pretty. . . yoqth,. ,those evil men ,and MLCarmel which took a 17 game women who deny the one true much the same as last year when winning streak into the series. santo Christo took the odd game God and live ill open defiance ai· Fagan tossed a four hitter OIl His Ten Commandments." and the series. It would surprise Sanwday and then combined The New York prelate I sa*i . with Lewis to hold Mt. Cannel =:;:m~ve play go the route For the second straight year, SIngles, combined with Paul that for "adults to desert God to five lIeattered hits on Sunday.', Barry Bird of St. Joseph's ParFerreira to smash out a victory is tragic, but to teach chiidrea Dick: also shared offensive honAlumni Clre" ish reigns as the CYO tennis over Tommy Spillane of st. to abandon' Him constitutes a ors with teammate Bob Martin. The FaIl River CYO A1~ . champ in Taunton. Barry, Coyle Joseph's and Brian Fitzgerald of heinous crilDe, the bi-utal,rape Each chipped in with three hits, . circuit will windup its first High grad who'will enter Provi... St. Mary's. of souls!" . Martin laclring only a single to .. season ,of play this weekend. The dence College next month, wail Jean Andrade, winner of girl's' eomplete the eycle. six team' league which has the only repeat winner in the Junior title, combined with Fran p~ved very popular in the area . !singles .division, while Frances Reilly of St. Mary's to take the DefeDlle Superb will then swing into the playCleary of St. Mary's and Irene doubles title also. The Taunton defense was more· offs. St. Mary's currently in sec~ ,AlmeIda of St. AnthonY'S reAll of the winners will be prethan adequate throughout the" ond place is the only club with· peated in the doubles. sented trophies at a dinner series being charged with but a chance of overtaking league nose two 16 yeaI' olds, both sponsOred by the Taunton Tennis two miscues, both coming in Sat- . leading SL Thomas More of Taunton High students, and Association sometime in October. urday's game. The I.C. inner corSomerset. chums on and riff the courts, Father Francis Connors director don sparkled on Sunday pulling pretty much dominate the scene of Taunton CYO wa; pleased off no less than three double The determination of the in the girls' division. Last year. with the large ttJnout of tennis plays in the early innings to titlist could go right down to the playing as juniors (12-15) Irene enthusiasts. choke off incipient New Bed- wire. The two teams must play was division champ, downing ford rallies. Carl Galligan, I.C.'s each other once more and St. Frances in the finals. This year Contlactor. rightfielder contributed the Mary's has to go .against third moving up to the Senior division fielding gem of the day with. place Sacred Heart before com(16-20) Frances took the chamdiving catch of a sinking line pleting its schedule. Somerset's pionship in a close match over in the third inning of the Sun- record currently reads 15-4 with Irene. Each year they have com464 Second St. OIL COMPANY' day game. only the St. Mary's game rebined in the doubles to whip An estimated erowd of 600 maining. The Cathedral club everyone in sight. FAU. RIVER Yiewed the Sunday tilt at Hope- stands 13-5, 1 games out, with Carvalho-GibbODS Win well Park. Mt. Carmel saw its two left. In the junior group two new OSborM 2-2141 greatest scoring opportunity go The Somerset club which has champions were crowned. In by the board in the second in- put in a most active season boys singles Paul Ferreira of St. Ding. A. single and two walks· under the direction of Bob Joseph unpset top seeded Ron South • Sea Sts. loaded the bases with none out Danis will meet arCh-rival Sac- Doucette of St. Mary's, last but Johnny Lewis bore down" red Heart under the lights. at year's champion. In the girls' Tel. HY81 ,Hyannis to, strike out the fourth batsman, Fall River Stadium tomorrow . singies,. Jean. Andrad.e,·a~ and then proceeded to bail out night in an exhibition tilt. The .. St. ,Joseph's, finally .won out m . of the tight situation by enginproceeds from thegame,'spon-: .:I;l ,:~lose. con,test ~lth Ml;lrtha R. A. WILCOX CO. eering a pitcher to home to first sored by the Somerset, A.C., will Hewey of.St. Ma.ry s. '. OFFICE FURNITURE. inning-ending double play. be used to send some deserving " ;In ~e boys,semor. d0!lbles the Mt. Carmel's Roy Santos baseball aspirant to the Tigers' .' to~, seeded ~ndeIll.. of :aarry. .. Stodl· for I",.edlate OeJiT.., pitched well in defeat on Satur- baseball school in Lakelanli, Fla. '. ~u'4 l!:nd~en Ferrell'a, broU~er DESKS • CftAIRS day. The Carmelite ace gave. up ; next February. " o f ~aul, was up~t bf, , Jack: . fiLING C,ABINaS " eight hits, struck out nine and .';' Carvalho of St~ Joseph and Lee didn't walk a maP.' Nobby GuilA .number of maJor ,league .. G~bbons. of: St:Mary~s'. CarValho , •. FIRE, FILES • SAFES henne was tbeteading hitter in scouts attended ~e Somerset-, is a sophOmore at Providence FOLDING TABLES the series for the New Bedford . Blackstone Valley ~ - S~rs College. Lee is a student at Coyle AND CHAIRS titlists with tWo safeties in sev- game at Hansen Memorial Field H~h and was the doubles champ, OX CO en trips. . last Sunday. The St. Thomas together w.ith Ron Doucette, last R. A. WI LC . ~ore team ~ck:ed up an ~ec- year in the junior' division. 22 BEDFORD ST. Fall IUvel' PlaT'" bve m0';Uld J~ by Tom Harrmg. Doucette, still playing as a . FAU RIVER 5-7831 Santo Christo launched Ita ton, Umverslty of Rhode_ Island '. junior although upset in the. . . . title defeD.se on a successful note righthander, to complete a sweep " . ' of the home and home series·. r.;;:~i""ij;;;;;;""'~i""ij;;;;;;""'~i""ij;;;;;;""'''''i""ij;;;;;;'''''~'''';;;;;;'''''~i""ij;;;;;;'''''~ Saturday by ed&ina ~ulate FOR SAVING AT wiUa the Rhode Islanders.

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WIN BOWLING AWARDS: Father Bernard Sullivan, assistant at St. Mary's, Norton, shows trophy' to winners of parish CYO bowling league awards. Left to right are Cheryl Bologna and DODJla Dunn, who tied for girls' high single, with Miss Dunn also ta.kipg girl's high uiple; Armand Lizotte, boys' high triple, aad Roland Bernard. boys' high ~l~ .

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C.YO .Baseball Organized' in' Three Cities'of ,Diocese


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