09.03.59

Page 1

Urge Renewal of MoraIViI'I'ues To Solve Labor.l~dus~ryCrisis WASHINGTON (NC)~The :current criSIS in U.S. labor-management relations "cancel out much, of.:th~ progress which has been made in recent years," the Social 'Action' Depa.r;tment, NationaI:Catholic. Welfare Conference, has warned. In its 1959 Labor Day statement the department declared that labor and·management· must recognize their "moral responsibilitY' to' deal with' one another sincerely'and generousiy in a spirit of mutual respect for 'one another's rights." The statement also called for threat~ns tQ

The ANCHOR An Anch.or of the Soul, Sure and Firm-ST. PAuL

Fall River, Mass.

Vol. 3, No. 36

Thursday, Sept. 3, 1959 Seeond CI... M.II PriyUelletl Authoriled .t F.II Riy.r. M....

PRICE lOe $-4,00 per Year

D·iocese to Build Regional High I n Attleboro·

A second diocesan regional high school,' costing upwards of $2,250,000 will be constructed in Attleboro and will 1?e re~ldy for occupancy in September 1961, the Most Reverend Bishop announced at a" "pilot 'meeting" in Attleboro last night. , Bishop Connolly revealed his plan to move nearer realof the of Diocese's goallaity of five regional high schools ization at a' meeting clergy and of the Greater Attleboro area' in St. John' the Evangelist parish ball in Attleboro.

labor and managerilent to develop "a deep sense of their joint responsibility for' safeguarding 'and promoting the public interest." . , The N.C,W.C. 'agency said the comments'o~ labor-management relations made by Pope John XXIII have been characterized bya -"no'te of cheerful Christian optimism." It is precisely this spirit, the Social A'ction Department said; which is "sadly lacking and badly needed' at the present time in the field "of labormanagement relations in the United States." Danger of Cynicism "For lack of such Christian optimism," the statement continued, "we are in danger, it wO\lld ' seem, of becoming cynical about the tutur.e of labor-management relations in this cou~try." It added: "There has recently been' so much bickering and controversy in the field of collective bargaining, and we have become so preoccu-. pied with the seamy side of labor-management relations, that we are beginning to question' or doubt 'the power proper to truth' and to sneer at the many evidences of solid goodness and integrity which are all around us. . "In more practical terms, this means that labor and management, having become unduly suspicious and distrustful of one another's motives, are being strongly tempted to rely on economic force and political pressure and on public relations stratagems and propaganda gimmicks as a substitute for good-faith collective bargaJning and labor-management cooperation." . The Social Action Department warned that ''If any 8uhstantial number of emplo.yers and, ".. , Turn to Page Sixteen

VERY REV. MSGR: GEORGE G. mGGINS

NCWC Social Action Department Director

D.-o·c·esan· 1"!4. om~ m·.•-ss.-o·n SC'hedules F.-rst' Sa".'C r'ed'" . u·· s'.-c· Se' m.- nar ~

high girls schoot will the accom-. M :,' ,' .... ' .The approxi~ately .second Diocesan modate 880regional boys ~nd from 12 , parishes serving' th~ "area behve~n Seekonk and. North. . .' .." . '. . .' '. .' .. l:: f rom Mans f'IeId t 0 N 0rth .E'as. t' on. " , , The DIOcesan has. . scheduled' a Semmar for. "orgamsts choir . " . . MUSIC " Commlss.l0n ,.. ..- -. . ',' '.. ' ,Attl euoro · t ers o·f Mercy WI'11 sa . t' ff th e new . Grea t er·· 'Attl', and We.dnesday mght, Church , New e- ' d.lrectors . " .. choIr .,' 'members ..... at,8 '. ';''','' . .' "Sept.· 23 at St. James . Th e S IS borG institution. " ". ' -.' ," Bed~ord, to, show those re.sp(msi~le for music ,in the 'parishes .of the Diocese what is B' h' C II 1 . d tha t' th ' h' I' '11 . expected of them., The Semmar" cOrnea a$ a result of many, requests from various organ· . 1S OPt donno y 'ta sbo tannounNce. th A , e sc dooN' Wtl .' ists and choir directors' fora. ' . ~ " . ' .,' . . .' ' h be ·cons t ruc e on a Sl e e ween or venue ~n or,...· 'd t '1 'd d' . d".' Th¢ seminar will give organ- the congregation in participating ..., .. St t ' Attl b Th" h I '11' 1 d f more e al e ISCUSSI0n an . . t . 'd' h' . " ...' laln ree, In' e .oro~ 'e sc 00 WI . mc u e our 'demons ", t ra t"Ion 0 f . sacre . 'd' IS..S ",an " c OIl' dIrectors and in' the sacred actions of the . . ' . . . b" ' k I' .,' , laboratorles, domestic' arts rooms, comme.r;clal department, ; . '.' . . ' . . ' . memers· ~ ~reate~' ~ow edge. LIturgy.. .' eafeteriaauditorium and gymnasium in addition to a con- mU~lc eSP~Clally m -lm~ WIth of ~~cleSI~~tIcal mUSIC' from A 'listing of th~ organist and '. , , . • .'. .. . '. the mstructIon of . Pope PlUS XII !loth. a SPl;rItual and technical choir 'director of every parish in Tent-.for the rehglous asslgned,t() m~truct the boys and gIrls. last Fall. 'Viewpoint. It will show musithe Diocese has been made witb The new, school will serve the following parishes: ' The Music Commission formed" cians' the part that' the Church Father 'Powers so that the ComAttleboro-St. John the., Evangelist, St. Jo~eph's, St.' 'by the Most . Reverend' Bishop , ,wi~h~s ipem'to play in the wor- mission can work closely witb Turn to Pace Fifteen

after the release' of the Papal ShIP of God and the encourageInstruction, has as its members . men~they, in furn can give 'to the Bishop, Rev. Maurice Souza,

Rev. 'Alfred J. Gendreau, Rev. James F. Lyons, Rev, Joseph L'. Powers, Rev. Arthur G. Dupuis 11

and Rev. Paul G, Conn9 y.

Father Is Away; He's at Priests' A 'nnual Retreat . "Father is on retreat this week. He won't be back until Saturday." This is the in~ formation that will be -re-

CONVENT BLESSING: Most Rev. James L.Connolly blesses the Convent of the BisHop Stang High School in the presence of, left to right, Rev. Edward J. Gorman, Diocesan Superintendent of Schools, Rev. John J. Murphy, Bishop Connolly, Rt. Rev. Hugh A. Gallagher, and Most Rev. James J. Gerrard, Auxiliary Bishop. ' '

peated over many rectory telephones this week and next. It ' explains why half the priests of the Diocese are absent from their parishes this week, and why the other half will be' away next ~eek. The Fathers are on retreat.' During the - whole year the priests 'of the parish are interested in the. needs of, their parishioners, administering the sacraments, instructing prospective converts and Catholics . who 'would be better informed' on their religion, follow,ng up marriage cases, aiding the poor and those in .nE;ed in so many . ways. ' Out of Reach They ar~ working iii parishes and 'schools and in special Dioc- ' esan assignmenfs. They are, at the beck and call of anyone who dials a rectory phone number or ririgs a rectory door bell. Young' or old, rich or poor; thoSe Tum to Page ThilieeD .

these, especially in this comin&: First Seminar. . '

'0 rd'.-na';ry to. Pres.-de A't Labor Day Mass

. Mos~ Rev. !ames L. Connolly, D.D., Bi~hop of Fall RIver, WIll preSIde at the second annual Labor Day Mass at9 Monday morning in St. Mary's Cathedral for the United Labor Council. of Gr,eater Fall River. Very Rev. Msgr. Geor.ge C. Higgins, director '. ' . . . of the social action depart- hshed 10 former years and that ment of the National Catho- by means of spiritual exercises lic Welfare Conference, will . :~oeu~~~:~~r~~~e::b~~da~~ni~~~~:

preach at th~ Mass and .speak . try be strengthened and inspired at the ~reakfast t~ follow 10 the to the point that all might work CatholIc Commumty Center. for the common good In a letter to Clement J. Dowl' ing, ge.neral chairman of. the Period of Strain Council's Labor Day observance "As you know, 'we are going Bishop Coimolly' said: "I trust through a period of strain and the representation will continue stress and there is all the more to be on the high level estabTur'n to Page Sixteen

M9ther :Mary' Regina New, General Of Sisters Mercy of the Union :On August 28, delegates of the Sisters of Mercy of the Union convened in General Chapter at toe Generalate in Bethesda, Maryland, for the purpose of .electing a, new Mother General and General Officials. The election of the Mother General was presided Mother Mary Stella Maris over. by the. Most· Reverend Bergin of ,Baltimore was elected Patrick ," A.' O'Boyle, D:D., Mother ,vicar. General; Mot~er Bernardme Purcell of CmA rc h· b'IS hop, 0 f W as h'm gton.. Mary cinnati,' Councillor General; Mother Mary Regina Cunning- Mother Mary Jeanne Ferrier of ham of Chicago was chosen New York,' Councillpr' General; MoUier 'General. . She' succeeds Sister Beatrice Marie' Costello of the. il/.te Mother. Mary Maurice . Omaha, Secretary General; and Tobin' who :c;lied on March 4, . Sister Mary Liguori:Curry of 5L 1959. . Louis; Procur'!tor G~eraL .


• I

THE ANCHOR:-.Diocese:of.Fall River-Thurs, Sept.,3; 19~ , ,

Ordinary Gives Final Absolution Most Rev. James L. Connolly, Bishop of Fall River, gave .final absolution following a Solemn High Mass of Requiem Saturday morning in Blessed Sacrament Church, .Fall River, for Mrs.. Variana (Quintin) Boisvert, widow of Alfred Boisvert and mother of Rev. Gerard A . .Boisvert assistant at Notl'e Dame Pari~h. . , Father Boisvert, celebrant, was assisted by Rev. Donald. E. Belanger, deacon, and'Rev. Adrien E. Bernier, sub-deacon. Seated in the sanctuary Vfere Auxiliary Bishop .James J. Ger:rard, Rt. Rev. Humberto S. Medeiros, Rt.Rev. Alfred E. Bonneau and Chorbishop Joseph Eid. Clergy and nuns attended the Mass. . Chaplains to Bishop Connolly were Rev. Arthur W. Tansey and Rev. Alfred J. Gendreau. Bishop Gerrard's chaplains were Rev. Raymond W. McCarthy and Rev. John F. Hogan.

Mother Ceci'lio': H'elen," 9~ Corm~, Qbserves Silver '~ubilee of Religious Pr~fession

· Pri'ncipal Notes · Places for Few .' More Pupils

Sister Ann Denise, principal "It's ~eally a humdru~ life," said the. little nun w.ith the ...Sc.otch. accent and ,kind brown eyes. "Nothin.g tremendous has ever ~appen~d-Just takmg" care' Qf . old peo~le;. and sn~rior at the new Bisho. StallA' High School, will be ~ staying with them at nigh~ when they're dymg, laYI~g them o~~. She paus~?,. lookm~. ' .tile school ThnrSday, Frida7 back,over 25 years Of serVIce to her beloved . a~ed. No" nothmg remarkable, she r&: and Sa.turday of this weekte ., aceePt new registratioM for ~aied. But there are 'those '. <" . , the few places remaining opeD who -disagree with Mother, iii the first Freshman Class. Cecilia Helen. All the resiRegistrations will be condents of the Catholic Memorducted between 10 and 12 ill

ial 'Home in Fall River, for in.., the morning and 2 and 4 ita stance who benefit by her loving the afttlrnoon on' the three sOlicit~de for them. 'Father Eudays. gene Robitaille, SS. CC:, who The registration period .. came from Sacred Hearts Novifor pupils desiring to attend tiate in Fairhaven to celebrate Bishop Stang who have not , her .silver jubilee ¥as!l and previously registered. preach on 'the subject of her 25 Applicants will be accepted fruitful years in the· Lord's OIl first come, first served vineyard. basis for the few openings. And Reverend Mother Angeline Teresa, Mother General and Foundress of the Carmelite Sisters for the Aged anq Infirm, who journeyed to Fall River to With the approval of MOst Re~ join ~ tribute to the nun who James L. Connolly, Bishop 01. has ·been her co-worker for 25 Fall River, Very Rev. Cels~ of the 30 years the community Wheeler, Provincial of the New bas been hi existence. York Franciscan Province, an"Like Your Wa:ke" nounces the following transfeJ'll And. Mother Cecilia Helen? and appointments of Franciscan She. took her great day ligbtly, WASHINGTON (NC) - CaliFathers at Our Lady's Cha~ , fornia's two Senators and other chuckling, "Your jubilee's like, . New Bedford: your wake-every~one thinks of . members of the state's Congres-' a. few kind things to say about I Father Justin A. Eeles; O,F.M., -sional delegation took part in a. you!" former director of the Catholie .ceremony in National Statu~rr. . . , .Her 'service to the Memorial Information Center at the Hall in the Capitol-commemoratChapel, has been transferred to Home, of which she is now suing the .175th annniversary of perior, dates 'from 1939; when St. Francis· Friary, New York Father Junipero Serra~s death. City.' she came as a· member of the Senators Thomas H. Kuchel' first group of Sisters to staff the ,Father Alcuin L. Metzger and · and Clair Engle and Rep. Joh~ new house. Off and on she has . Father Mathias A. Tumulty, who F. Shelly praised Father Serra's been in Fall River 11 years, .and ~,were assigned to the Chapel for missionary work along th~ bas been superior at the home · Summer duty" have been. asPacific Coast from 1769 to 1784. since 19'52 with the exc~ption of signed to St. Anthony's 'Friary" The ,ceremony took place i~ Arch Street, Boston, for further 11 . months spent at Our Lady's . studies in theology. front .of the statue of the Fran- Haven in Fairhaven, another in·'ciscan missioner placed in !!tatu- stitution staffed by the communFather Cels.us A.Tolan, prevtJUBII...ARIAN CELEBRATES: Mother M. Angeli'ne ously assigned to St. Stephen's ary hall by Californ~a in' 1931. ity. Other assignments during her Teresa, O.Carm., foundress and slJ.perior general of the C~r­ FriarY"New York City, has been Each state can honor not more Z5 years in religion have includthan two prominent Americans melite Sisters for ,the Aged and Irifirm, left, chats with appointed to the staff of OUilt ed service in St. Joseph's Sem- Mother Cecilia Helen, O.Carm., right, superior of th~ CathLady's Chapel. in the hall. . inary, New York City's archdiFather Stephen Gregory McThe event was sponsored by ocesan training house; 81. Leo's olic Memorial Home, Fall River, on- the occasion of the Mahon has been appointed to the California legislators and latter's silver jubilee. .....serVe as Vicar of the FrancisclUl the Fort Belvoir, Va., Serra Clu~, Abbey; Florida; and Mt. Ca~mel Home, also in New York City. Community at Our Lady's ~ one of an international orgamwhere there's'· a minimum of eluded a banquet for the Sisters, ary. Family Best Plaee zation of clubs of professional rules and guests are as free as guests and home residents, a and business men devoted to fosHow did she choose her specthey , would be in their own special movie showing for res,itering religious vocations, espe- ialized vocation of caring for the homes."· dents" and many remembranc~' cially by helping to defray finanaged? "Well, I, considered beShe is one of six children, and for Mother herself, including eial costs. Our Lady of Victory Missioncoming a teacher," she said, "but ·was born in Glasgow, .Scotland, f10raltributes from the resi'dents Wreaths from Serra Interna~ then I thought that almost ev- coming to New York City in her ary Sisters, ca~echists' in West and other friends. <tional and the F9rt Belvoir Serra ery one foves children and is youth. 'Her three sisters were Harwich, announce,the following Yellow is Mother Cecilia Club were laid before the statue. willing to work with them, but with her for her jubilee celebra- Helen's. favorite color, and _,it ebang~:, Sister, Mary Regina, Greetings to the gathering were not so many are drawri to older tion. They include' Sister'Marie superior, has been replaced br received from several persons, people. I've always loved the' Antoine,. a Sister of Charity sta- . wasn't forgotten in planning Sister Viola. . decorations for the jubilee Mass. . incl1,iding Arcbishop EgJdio Vagold and I wanted to spend my tioned in East Harlem, New GlowIng golden chrysanthemums.' ,.Sister Marian has been renozzi, Apostolic Delegattl'to the lif'; .caring for' them. Most of, York, who celebrated her own plac~, by Sister'Mary Germaine banked the altar, reminding :Ill United states. our"" old people here are very and Sister Teresa Martin bW silver jubilee .. five' years ago, that this was indeed a special saintiy," she added. "They Jive . Sister Callista, ' Auxiliary Bishop Philip M. and the ' Misses Helen and day: spedal for the ilun who ha'ci . with the Blessed Sacrament Catherine Reilly of Brooklyn. . . 'Hannan of Washington gave the given 2ir years to God, special Benediction . at the concluSiOD and they' spend much time in Two brothers were unable :110 for the' Sacramental Lord who ..: ~"-",-",.".,""'~ ~, ~ prayer." . of tbe ceremoll¥. attend. blessed her from His tabernacle. "The best place for an elderly . In addition to Mass and Beneperson is with his 'own family," , , diction, sung by, the Sisters' . emphasized ~other, "b,ut wh~re Choir, the jubilee observance inThe following films are to be , that isn't possible, the next best , I added to the lists in their respecthing is a residence such .as ours, tive classifications: . .~Unobjectionable for general WHOLESALE AND RETAil. patronage: I'll Give My Life. FRIDAY-Mass of the Previous ,. Objectionable in part for. aU: SUnday. Simple. Green.. Mass : 54. PLEASANT STRES ~ BETTENCOURT & SON. · Blue Angel (the low moral tone Proper; No Gloria; Common : NORTH Am.EBORO : and sensuality pervading the dePreface. Votive Mass in honor 796 CHUBCH ST.. New BecHord BOYS WANTED for the velopment of the theme tend to of the Sacred H~art of Jesus WY4·2585 : TB.. Myrtle __ 9-8231 __4 Pr.iesthood and Brotherhood. negate the film's positive val,,;, permitted. Tomorrow is the lack ot funds NO impediues)' It Started With a KiSll First Saturday of the Month. ment. (suggestive dialogue and situa- SATURDAY - Mass of the tions); A Summer Place (refl~ Blessed Virgin for Saturday. Write toe acceptability of divorce and JUS, Simple. White. Mass Proper; '. P. O. Box 5742 tifies remarriage; also condonetl . Gloria; Second Collect St. immoral actions). Baltimore 8, Md. Lawrence Justinian, Bishop , and Confessor;. Preface 01. Blessed Virgin. SUNDAY-XVI Sunday After FORTY. HOURS NICKERSON Pentecost. Double. Green. Mass DEVOTION Proper; Gloria; Creed; Preface FUNERAL, and of Trini~y. Sept. ~t. Louis. of France, ¥ONUMENT MONDAY-Mass of the previous Swansea. Sunday. Simple. Green, Mass SERVICES Our Lady of Mt. Carmel, Proper; No Gloria; Common UNION WHARF FAIRHAVEN, MASS. Seekonk. BOURNE: • SANDWICH. MASS., Preface. TUESDAY - Nativity 01. the Serving Sept. l~St. Anne, Fall River. Blessed Virgin. Double of n CAPE COO St. Dominic, Swansea: Class. White. Mass Proper; ... s.-u~nt eo....... Gloria; Seconq Collect .St. COME IN ~ ~nd DRIVE Sept. 2Q-Holy ,Cross, Pall .St. Joseph, AtUeboro.· AdTian, Martyr; Creed; Prd~ of Blessed Virgin. ' , River. WEDNESDAy-st. Peter ClaVei',\ ~If ·!leaVeil. _ one.· alld ~tIi~ ~ ~.' Confessor. DOuble.. : W)1i1e. eo • .ted t o _ , .. to ..... ::: Sept. 'Z'i"": St. , Anthony of ,.,,~ .. , Mass Pro~r; Mass as ill' the W • whole, ricIl ....,.0114 priee ..... Padua,New.Bedford.· . Supplement to ..the Missa!-'fOl' _, Sacred Hear,t, Taunton. soine places; Gloria; Seeond Collect .St. Gorgonitis, 1181'REYNOLDS·DEWALT tyr; CommQn Preface•. THE ANCHOR Second-el88s lD&i1 privUl!If1!lI! andaoriBM THURSDAY, -:' St. Nicholas 01. 'William & Second Sis. , FORD DEAlER$ FOR OWR 38 YEARS III Fall River. Mass, Pubbshed evel'l' Tolentino, Confessor.' Double. 'ntursday at no Highland Avenue. 'Fall ~~ wYW2M Rivei'. Mag.. by ~ Catbolie !'~ of ~ White. Mass Proper; G19l'ia; 1344-86 Purchase St. .' New Bedford, Mala.

'~ew Assignment

For Franciscans

Legislators Lqud 'Father Serra

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West Harwich Nuns Announce Changes

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TM£ ANCHOR-Diocese of Fein River"":'Thurs, Sept. 3, 1959

Bishop Evaluates Liturgical, Week As Magnificent

Catholic .Labor Convention To Debate Secularization

.NOTRE DAME (NC) - ' The 20th annuaJ North . American. Liturgical Week . here was "a magnificent ~n{erence," according to Au~­ iliary Bishop James H. Griffiths .01. New York, secretary of the new Episcopal Committee on the , Liturgical Apostolate. In an address at the closing session of the Week, Bishop Griffiths also referred to the Hepoch making" instruction of the Sacred Congregation of Rites issued last September on participation in the liturgy. The instruction formed the theme .of the Liturgical Week. "If we apply the instruction," he said, "we shall make a tremendous advance in active participation-far beyond our expectations of a few years ago." The Bishop called for an attitude of "patience, sweet char• ity, and obedience" in promoting an understanding of the Holy See's summons to active participation. He warned against "acrimonious, bitter, bilious, lampooning, or caricaturtng" kinds of discussion. · "Let the understanding charIty and· .patience of our Holy · Father, Pope John, be our guide · in. these matters," he sai<i. The Liturgical Week drew more than 3,300 persons from - all parts of the U. S. and Canada, · including 12 'bishops, more than , 1,100 priests, close to 1,000 lay men and women, nearly 900 Sis.ters and more than 200 seminarians.

3

MONTREAL (NCF....:..WheIi the 95,OOO-member Canadian Catholic Confederation of Labor (CCCL) holds its annual meeting in Quebec, Sept. 13 to 20, 'the question of dropping "Catholic" from its name will be very much to the fore. A controversy has been ~h?uld. the ~CL finally agree tirred Up by publication of . to Jom. ranks With the labor conS • , gress It would have to become a 37-page statement by five subject to the rules and regulaformer chaplains - includ- tions ,of the larger body. There

ing two of the founding chap- .' have been discussions with a . lains of 1921--'-protesting any view to setting up a form of move to drop "Catholic" and association which would permit charging a trend to secularizathe CCCL to retain its own tion of the CCCL. character. The matter has been Origimilly, 'the confederation under discussion f~r more than · drew its members exclusively two years and wIll be heard fro m French .. speaking and again at the Quebec conventioll Catholic workers in the province of the CCCL. of Quebec. At its peak it had Chaplains Protest more than 100,000 members. The five former chaplains of In recent years it has been the CCCL in their protest against recognized that to b.:l more effecdropping the word "Catholic" tive in major industries, the from the confederation's title, CCCL must open its membership insist that the CCCL continue to those who may not be Catholic its policy of following Catholio or French-speaking;~t no time social doctrine rather than be-has the CCCL been able to coming just another union.. claim a majority of union memThey said it is abnormal that bers in the province of Quebec. in a predominantly Catholi. RECEIVES DEGREE: Giacomo Cardinal Lercaro, left, ,International unions still hold. province such as Quebec, the ma.. f h d t f the lead. jority of workers should be Archbishop of Bologna, reCIpIent 0 an onorary eg ee rom The two largest Canadian affiliated with' non-denominathe University of Notre Dame, is shown with Bishop Leo A.. . labor organizations-the Trades . tional unions. They felt the reaPursley of Fort Wayne. NC Photo. - . ' and Labor Congress and the son for this was that ttt. Canadian Congress of Labor- .' information given out by ttt. jO,ined ranks in 1956 and formed . CCCL on the purpose of the · the Canadian Labor Congress, .. Catholic labor movement and. with a membership· well'in ex- ·its character, was inadequate. · cess of a million members. Talks The· five contended that ttt. NOTRE DAME (NC) A symbo~ of the true character and degree from the University of .sp~rit of the ancient city; alive were also initiated between the. survival of the Catholic labor · CLC. and CCCL' regarding the- . movement was at stake. They Notre Dame is "a kind of popular 'for ever and ever." ' · possibility of the confederation maintair,led there should be no , US" I p~sspor! throug~out the ...,. The citation accompanying the affiliating with the new organaffiliation with a neutral labor HIS Eminence GIacomo Cardmal honor bestowed on the Cardinal 'ization. body. They urged a renewed and Lercaro, Archbishop of Bologna, saluted him as "a man. of great Claude Jodoin, prgsent presistronger spreading of social declared as he accepted an noncourageous .heart, heroically, · dent of the CLC, is a French education and Catholic teachinc Fostering Vocations orary doctor of law. degree." compassionate in his ministry Canadian and Catholic. on labor matters. J:le called ~ttentIon. to . the to all the people, ·and chiefly Christ-like Activity u.mq~le reputatIO~ of thIS umverto· the poor and the young whose QUINCY (NC) - "There is silY.In the AmerIc~~ world, due suffering and confusion, whose nothing more Christ-like tllan to I~S noble tradItIon of. ~ard hunger· and homelessness are recr\,liting for Christ," delegates studies and, sport competItIOns ever close to him and to his alto the 14th annual meeting of P~£-PR"MARY -that is to say, for the wonder- . ways open doors" the American Franciscan Sofully complete formation, both . ciety for Vocations were told ST. JOSEPH'S HOME, 56 ST. JOSEPH STREET, FALL RIVER of the body and of the mind, here. human, education and Christian ST. VINCENT'S HOME, 2860 NO. MAIN ST., FALL RIVER CAMPBELL SCHOOL as well." Father Pius Barth, O.F.M., . 908 PURCHASE ST. The Cardinal'pointed out that Minister Provincial of the Sacred Every Evening 6 to 8 "it was the study of law, togethNEW BEDFORD, MASS. Heart province of the Order of FOR INFORMAliON er with the study of medicine, Frial's Minor, made the statethat won the glory and fame St. Joseph's Home-:OS 2-2943 S.t. Vincent's Home OS 2-5223 ment in an address to the meetC~mplete Business for the University of Bologna.~' ing at Quincy College in I.lindis. A small registration fee will, I:>e required, which will be AND "The high honor conferred on Delegates to the conference inincluded in the pverall tuition. me at .Notre Dame," he said, cluded members of the Frfars ~ --~~~~~~ ......~-Secretarial COl!rses Minor, Capuchins and Friars of' "perfectly agrees with the noble tradition of my city, and it acOPENING DATES the Atonement., knowledges in its archbishop the Days--Tuesday, Sept. I , In fostering the developing'vo- . 'Nights--Monday, Sept. 21 . cations, Father Barth said, "our Sou thAttleboroPriest problem is to keep spiritual men Sat. A.M.-Sat., Oct. 19 spiritual and educated men eduLaotian Battlefield For Full Particulars cated." ' In the midst of crisis in Laos Write or Phone is Rev. Lucien Bouchard, an "We have long horizons ahead WY 5-'7024 anytime Oblate of Mary Immaculate and in' constantly improving the At 20~ Stores son of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Bouquality' cif our vocatio,ns," he chard, 892 Washington Street, added, "for a vocation is not Female Sales merely confined to the seminary South 'Attleboro. The missionary's territory in . but is continuous throughout the Help Wanted Sam ·Neua province, Laos, is in We of. a Religious." SPARE TIl\U, MON.'Y easily mad.· showing Itubinson Christmas and the battle area, but he has I Every Day' en rds to your friends. written to his parents that he is neighbors 'uHing' our home ·service plan. 4-6 doJlal's an hour can be made in no immediate danger from the with little effort on your P8rt. No • skirmishes that are going on. experience 'nced~d. and it costs nothing to try. 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4

THE ANCHOJr-Diocese of Fan

River~Thur.s,

I

Sept. 3, 1959

Dedicates Large Outdoor Crucifix

Sees Rural Areas Drifting 'Into Form of Paganism

INDIAN RIVER (NC)-Bishop Allen J. Babcock of Grand Rap. ids, Mich., dedicated an l8-ton crucifiX, one of the largest in the world, before a crowd of 9,000 gathered at an outdoor shrine here.

By Most Rev. Robert j. Dwyer, D.D. Bishop 01 Reno

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The question was inevitable: "What about Communism in Milan and other cities of Italy's industrialized North 1". Our guide through the city, by courtesy of the Archdiocesan Chancery, was a keenly knowledgeable man in his fifties, a cleric in minor orders, ity, whether in faith or in mormember of a confraternity also But in origin it signifies infounded by St. Charles Bor-romeo for the service of the stead the rural resistance to the

The crucifix stands atop a hiB renamed Calvary Hill. It is made up of a four-ton b!"onze figure of Christ attached to a 55-foot redwood cross. The figure of Christ is the work of artist Marshall B, Fredericks. Bishop Babcock disclosed that he ha§ requested Mr. Fredericks to proceed with designs for 14-foot figures of the Blessed Virgin, 81. John the Apostle and Mary Magdalen to complete the crucifixion scene. ~ishop. Babcock stressed the significance of the crucifix aa a perpetual reminder of the re:deinption of mankind by Christ. The redwood .cross, erected bere in 1954, has since drawn some 30,000 pilgrims annually.

Faith. The Christian conquest of great Duomo and the Archbishop's curia. Without aspiring to the Roman Empire was largely a victory of the city over the the priesthood countryside. Long after Conor belonging, stantine had made his peace properly, to a with the' Church the pagani, the religious comcountryfolk, remained faithful munity,' these to the old gods, less thi!' deities men render a of the Roman pantheon than the . unique service , animistic tutelaries of house and and are accordfield. ed an honored HEADS LITURGICAL CONFERENCE: Father FredThe Christian penetration of place in the erick R. McManus, left, newly-elected president of The Liturthe rural areas, even in Ita]y, functioning of was a' slow and painful process, gical Conference, receives the congratulations' of Auxiliary one of the key retarded by disintegration of the Bishop James H. Griffiths of New York, secretary of the Dioceses of Empire aiTd the breakdown of Christendom. episcopal commissiono on the liturgy. NC Photo. the social structure. - His measured answer, not inProcess Advances . tended as a complete sumll1ation of the problem, nevertheless It was Benedictine monachIsm BRESSANONE (NG)-Bishop threw a new light upon it. It which did the most to evangelize Guiseppe Gargitter of Bressa-. Conv~rt was not, he thought, so much a the countryside of Europe. - It none has set up a mis~o,n center matter of concern with the setbridged the gap between the dePONTIAC (NC) - The laitY. pends on you and some .foreign for vacationers in . Cortina tled industrial workers, those cimation of the cities and the must take a part in present day - nations do also." d'Ampezzo in order to discuss habitually employed in the esurban revival which heralded society which cannot be filled by Father Juraschek told the con- religious questions with nontablished factories, and who had the dawn of the modern age. the clergy, Father Erwin A. Jur- vention to read and st~dY tJ:te churchgoers. The success of the their homes and their families. 'But when, under the hammer achek of San Antonio, told the' .latest methods and technIques.m center has encouraged officia~ It was a problem involving blows of'Reformation' and Revo15th annual Convert Makers of doing convert work, and to grow who report that talks by theothe hundreds of thousands. of liItion, the monastic system it- America convention here. spiritually through daily mental logians are well attended even peasants, largely from the South, self was destroyed, there was prayer, spiritual reading, and when other vacation activity ~ who have been pouring into the no adequate substitute found to Father Juraschek, national didaily attendance at Mass. jn progress. industrial areas ever since the keep rural Europe genuinely in-" rector. of the _ CMOA,- told the war men and women cut off tegrated in the faith. convention: "The 'secular world fro~ their roots, the .contadini Throughout the 18th and. 19th ·is becoming more and more comwho are, in the exact meaning of · centuries the process of rural de':' plex-and God is being pushed the term, the modern pagans. Christianizatio'n advanced insid- out of the. heart of society. Lay Peasantry Real Strength iously, a spreading paralysis. people have a part to play in that Prescriptions called for He did not deny that there There were areas, surely, where society that cannot be done by are plenty of industrial workers the faith held and still holds, the clergy. They live, 'work, play and delivered AUTO BODY AND who are Communists, or who ·firm; but there are also areas, . in a secular world-and they HEADQUART.ERS FOR GENERAL REPAIRS regularly vote the Communist vast in extent, where religion must bring Christ into it. They DIETETIC SUPPLIES ticket. He was convinced, howis no more than~ a thin veneer. must use their'talents and train600 Cottage St. WY 4-7439 75 Bellville A;'e. WY 3-7661 ever, that the real strength· of There has been a' certain re- ing for the benefit of Christ's New Bedford New Bedford the party was drawn fro~ the luctance to face this fact. The living Church.'~ derllcinated peasantry, those who idyllic picture of a devout peas.,c had dropped their religious hab)( JE J( ",E antry was a commonplace of the JC Militant Group its along with their - regional Romantic imagination. Father IJ~raschek recalled tl1at costume when they came to the The grim reality of religio de- the CMOA started with a handbig cities those who had nothpopulata, the country churches ful of members and has grown Co-educational ing to los~ (as they would see it) defaced and almost empty, was to 'an organization of thousands. and everything to gain· by going ignored or denied. He said:' along with the Communist agifaThe Ars of St. John Vianney, . tion. . , unfortunately, was far more of "You are a group militant, to COURSES No question but that the chal..; 'a symptom than an hicident. It carry the convert-making aposlenge these people present to was the forerunner of the con- tolate through. The nation de- TUESDAY EVENINGS, 7:30 to 9:30, S~pt. 22 to Dee. lS (omit 8l the Church is one of the most dition which Bernanos· has desdifficult and trying in her entire Registration by ;"ail or 7:30 to 8:30 P.M. Sept. '22, Holy Cross HaD cribed in his Diary of a Country experience. Priest. ' No prerequisites. Fee $15. for 12 sessions. ,/ BONNER FLOWERSCertainly his analysis 'tallies The wheel would seem to have with what has been. observed · come full round; once again, as Spectal~8tB tn CERTIFIED PROFESSIONAL SECRETARY REFRESHER COURSE and commented upon throughout in the days of the Roman .EmSpecial Florat Arrangem.ents Personal Adjustment and Human Relatioris---Dr. Reuben J. 'M~rgolin, Ed.D Europe, in, France and Spai~, pire, the strength- of the Churc~ . .' Columbia Univ. ' Belgium and Germany, and In .• Funerals • Corsages is in the cities, her weakness IS Business Law For Secrelarics':-Mr. Abraham Brooks, LL.B. Boston Univ. the British Isles. •. Hospital • Weddings English Usage-Mrs. Mary Yosgandes, A.B. Emmanuel; ·M.A. Boston Uni.. in the rural areas. This is tr e Everywhere the industrial real pagan revival. 2082 Robeson St. . . GREAT BOOKS cities are being flooded by counTo American Catholics ,,11 this Fan River . OS 5-7804 R~d and discu8&-Shakespeare's "Hamlet": Dant~'s "The Divine Comedy-, tryfolk in search of a new way may seem unreal 'lind remote. Milton's "Paradise Lost", a'nd Melville's "Billy Budd". of life, and it is characteristic 'Rural America has never been REAL ESTATE DEVELOPMENT IN YOUR AREA of them that they are ready prey Catholic. But there is much eviProminent speake~ discuss "Organi"ing for Action or Master Plan"; for the agent of' provocation. dence already at hand to show "Functions of the Really Liccnsing Hoard"; "Advertising Our Wares"; They have no stake in society, that large areas of it, especially "Multiple Listing Service"· "Research Is What We Need"; "Urban and they hav.e no real interest in the.. in the South, are drifting into Suburban Transportation"; "Lahor Market"; "Banker-to Builder"; "Zimine established order. They ha.ve a form of paganism. We may l"aws"; ''Taxes and Industrial ProgreS8"; "FHA Appraisal Techniques"; only' their abject poverty and . "Public Utilities Look Ahead". be closer to the problem than their dreams of pie in the sky. THE BIBLE: OLD TESTAMENT, NE" TESTAMENT, EPISTLES we realize. JOSEftH M. F. DON~GHY Baffling Situation Survey the elements of Seri Ptu~e study (Reve]ation, .Inspiration, Biblical owner/mgr. Now the enigma and the trag~ Canon, Texts and Versions, GeograI,hy .nd Sacred Antiquities); reading and 142 Campbell St. clae& discuS8ion. edy of the situation is that most Hew Bedford.Meiss. of these countryfolk have been PUBLIC AFFAIRS FORKSHOP • WASHINGTON' (NC) - Postnurtured in traditional CatholicSelected national aDd international problems analyzed. Includes claM WYman 9-6792 ism. The seeming ease with master General Arthur E. Sumparticipation. Audio-visua] aids will supplement class discussion. HEADQUARTERS FOR merfield warned here that "orwhich 'they cast off their faith, HOW 'TO BOf,STER YOUR ENGLISH COLONIAL AND ganized crime" will take over or at any rate its practice, and First hour: "English Grammar The Painless"Way". _ 11lADITIONAL FURNITURE the smut racket unless there is the casual way in which they Second hour: "Vocabulary Building for Wri~ing and Speaking Succe8ll". assume that this is the normal immediate . action to .end the' , . BANK SEMINAR thing for them to do, is baffling pornography trade altogether. Prominent bankers and business le.i,lers will consider banking problems .iti Mr. Summerfield said that the and ·heartbreaking. investments, ,guided by American Ban~ing Association practices. Granted that they are not, so distribution of obscene: material EFFECTIVE SPEAKING AND THE CONDUCT OF M~ETINGS to speak, the cream of the peasthrough the mails' is alreaay a Learn how ea~ily you can gain a mastery of you~lf ~d be in control of the antry, but rather the failures half-billion dollar annual busisituations which confront you. who are unwilling or unable to ness: As it becomes more lucra.' COMM1JNISM cope with the hardsh!psof the tive, the danger increases that The theory and practice of Marxian Communism will' be explored ohject.ivelr rural economy, still· they pose 'organized crime will move in, he in class. Ideas will be examined. Lecture and discussion. . the anxious question of the paadded. . REVOLUTIONARY DEVELOPMENTS AND PROBLEMS gan revival. "We need. legislation to deal . OF TJlE MODE,RNf1JBLIC SCHOOL Paganism is a term widely with these criminals," the PostThe background and actual case studies of salaries, 'curriculum changl!8, _ misunderstood and misused. It. master General told delega tes to load, buildings, administrative headaches, PTA, and politics will he treatOlll is taken to mean, 'broadly, the the National Rural Letter Carin round-table discussions.. modern rejection of Christian- riers' convenion here. He promTO:' Direct~r Of' Adult Education ised that the Post Office DeStonehill College partment would wage. "war to North Easton, MaS!!. 'CHICAGO (NC) - Auxiliary the finish" against smut peddlers. .Pleaeeregister me fO£ the fol1owi~ _rlMl: .•••••••••••••• · .. Archbishop Bernard J. Sheil of "This vicious business' - the Chicago has been named "Man mailing of filth to our childrenName •••••••••••••••••••••.••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ill a challenge .to every decent of the Year"by the .Greater Fall River OS, 8-5677 American," Mr. Summerfield Chicago Committee for the State , Add'rese . said. He called on all citizens to of Israel Bonds.. He is the first 373 New Boston Road (Pl~ make ehecks payable to Stonehill College). person not of 'Jewish faith tel join in a "crusade against the' be so honored. most vicioli6 racket of out times." )e M x M x

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Smut Racket Beckons To Organized Crime

Honor Archbishop

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fart River-Thurs, Sept. 3, 1959

Holy Cross Nuns Ma~e Changes

Sacred Music Glorifi,es God and Enhances .Many Byzantine Rite Catholics Splendor of Church's Ceremonies

Sisters of the Holy Cross and Seven Dolors announce the following assignments in the Diocese: To St. Joseph's School, AtUeboro: Sister Mary Louis-of-Valence; Sister Joseph - des - Lys; Sister Mary Leon-of-Naples; Sister Mary Luce-Ella. To St. Anne's School, New Bedforii: Sister MarY-des-Lys; Sister Mary Lucy-of-the-Trinity; Sister Mary Joseph-Edward; Sister Mary Paul-Andre; Sister Mary Marcia; Sister Mary PaulHenry. To St. Anthony of Padua School, New Bedford: Sister Mary Eveline-of-the-Saviour; Sister Mary Pauline-of-Jesus; Sister Mary Helen-of-Jesus; Sister Mat·y of Perpetual Help. Also Sister Mary Rose-Alma, Sister Mary Justa; Sister Yvonne-of-the-Saviour; Sister Mary Ernest-Albert. . To St. George's . To St. George's School, Westport: Sister Mary Rosalie-of-Sieile; Sister Mary· Regis; Sister Mary Boniface. To Sacred Heart School, New Bedford: Sister ,Mary Michael; Sister Mary Alice-Claire; Sister Mary Yvonne-of-the-Cross. To St. Hyacinth's School, New Bedford: Sister Mary Flora. To Holy Rosary 'School, New Bedford; Sister Mary Carmelia.

By Rev. 'Roland Bousquet SL Joseph's Church, New Bedford Nothing exemplifies more fully the eorporate nature of the public worship of the Church than sacred music. Just as each voice must blend with other voices so each person must learn to submit his own private devotional practices to that of corporate worship of God- SO that an harmonious melody of divine praise may ascend before the throne of Our Heavenly Father. Musie na- ' turally fulfills man's yearning to express the deep sentiments of his heart. Sacred .

Pledges Enforcement Of New Sunday Laws

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Period of Peace The conversion of Constantine to Christianity and the peace accorded the Church saw the efflorescence of the vitality of the young Christian community. Its organization,.its liturgy flourished. Innumerable churches dotted the countryside. Follow- • ing the emperor's example, many cities built magnificent churches along the classical lines of the period. A simple altar, slightly raised above the sanctuary, became the focal point. of the church. The bishop's throne stood behind the altar, while the assisting clergy sat on benches placed on either side of the throne. A choir composed of subdeacons, minor clerics and a group of young boys all wearing long white albs occupied the forefront of the sanctuary. A low railing separated the choir from the nave of the church. In the Southern districts of France and in some Roman basilicas the ch~ir occupied the center of the nave. The choir'. role became easily recognizable. They were part of the liturgical function, representing the community before the altar. Their· chief function was to alternate with the congregation in the singing of psalms.

PHILADELPHIA (NC)-PoDee Commissioner Thomas J.. Gregorian Chant Gibbons has announced a program of "total enforcement" of. St. Gregory the Great (590 to Pennsylvania's new Sunday clos604) brought a new vitality to ing laws in this city. sacred music. He assembled the The new law becomes effectexts to be sung by the choir. tive on Sept. 13. After that date The style of music used for "there will be no exceptions, resinging psalms and hymns has gardless of personal feelings," since been known as 9regorian the commissioner declared. chant. It consists in unison singThe legislation which the coming without regular rhythm. missioner pllins to enforce rigidIt is based on the style of the ly was signed by Gov. David L. Synagogue and the art of the Lawrence on Aug. 10. The legis- . ancient world. lation was passed easily by the This pope al~ instituted the .tate legislators. "schola cantorum," the school of cantors. This famous school of . music gave many popes to the church. It also sparked the enthusiasm of other centers for liturgical music. The most famous outside of Rome were at Metz and St. Gall. Music was thoroughly practiced in these schools founded for the purpose of enhancing the liturgy with the utmost splendor and beauty. Introduce Organ Until this time, except for rare exceptions, only the human voice was deemed worthy to accompany and complement thesacred functions. In the twelfth century, Notre Dame of Paris took the lead in introducing the organ to sustain the choir. By the fourteenth century the organ was perfected enough to· make its entrance in the larger churches. Organ-lofts were pro-vided for the new instrument. Pope Gregory ~, in 1377, l'e-

LABOR PIONEER: Peter I. McGuire (1852-1906) is hailed as the "Father of Labor Day." Co-founder of the American Federation of. Labor, he originated the idea of the annual holiday ill 1882. NC Photo.

On Pilgrima·ge

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music is the vital conim:entary of the mysteries of the altar. The origin of our church music goes back to the temple choir in Jerusalem. The first Christians, reared in the customs of the Jewil?h tradition, brought with them the melodies and styles of music played in the Temple. The Church went underground with the persecutions. Its divine services were often curtailed and at most performed with the utmost simplicity. The emphasis at this time was on the personal identification with the suffering of Our Crucified Lord.

Newman Alumni PJan Conference ALBUQUERQUE (NC) - The National Newman Alumni Assoeiation, an affiliate of the National Newman Club Federation, will hold its annual conference September 4 and 5 at the University of New Mexico here. The conference will be held during the National Newman Club Federation Convention. It will include meetings and discussion groups concerning the purpose of Newman alumni a&sociations. . Highlight of the conference will be the presentation of - an award to the outstanding Newman Club faculty adviser. Among the speakers will be Father William J. Daly, national chaplain 01. the alumni association.

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UNIONTOWN (NC)-The

vanguard of thousands of Byzantine Rite Catholics 00gan flocking here for the 25th annual pilgrimage to the Shrine of Our Lady of Perpe.tual. 1felp at Mount St. Maerma m Pennsylvania. Before the pilgrimage ends on. Labor Day, the total number of pilgrims is expected to reach upwards of 100,000,· Many of them will ·have spent the entire 12-day pilgrimage period at the shrine, and as an act of sacrifice will have slept outdoors on the grounds. The pilgrimage is the largest of its type in the United States, and for sheer masses is rivaled in North America only by the feastday pilgrimage to Ste. Anne de Beaupre in Quebec. The Apostolic Delegate to the United States, Archbishop Egidio Vagnozzi, will preach at the Divine Liturgy (Mass) scheduled for Labor Day morning and will preside at the Eucha;istic procession closing the pilgrimage later that day.

Slovak League, Protests Visit CHOIR LOFT St. Mary's Cathedral- Fall River organized the schola. Mostly composed of laymen the choir now forms an independent and self-contained group in the church. The churches built during this period provided .a special place for the choir. At first the choir stood at the rood-loft (a high singing gallery standing between the sanctuary and the nave). In other places, such as Notre Dame of Paris, the choir was placed in a gallery elevated above the eastern side of the sanctuary. This practice finally

gave rise to our, choir-lofts, which are often found in the rear of the church above the entrance. The choir is an integral part of the solemn liturgy of the Church: Its function is not only to enhance the dignity and splendor of the church's ceremonial but primarily to give glory to God and to edify the congregation in order that it may be better disposed to benefit from the sacred mysteries of the altar. ·(Next Week -'- The Am)bry)

MIDDLETOWN (NC) A strongly worded letter of protest over 'the U. S. invitation extended to Russia's Premier Nikita Khrushchev to visit this country was sent to President Eisenhower by Philip A. Hrobak, president of the Slovak League of America. Ever since the United States recognized Soviet Russia 26 years ago, Mr. Hrobak said, this country has been "abused and reviled, attacked and insulted" by the Soviets. He also asserted: "Khrushchev, like Stalin, use. power with utter contempt for human lives, moral scruples and democratic principles."

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THE AN'C:HOR-;Diocese of Fall River...,...fhurs, Sept. 3,

1~9

\'

, Salute to a Protestant Group

Mat Will1le ,feet "'., " ...

Weekly Calendar Of Feast Days

An official of the National Council of the Churches TODAY-St. Pius X, Pope.:EII of Christ has said that the time has come for Protestant was Giuseppe Sarto, born in 1831 groups to speak out against Hollywood movie!,! that overemat Riese, a small village in northphasizesex and violence. . . ern Italy, and became the first George A. Heimrich is the director of the Council's . Pope to be canonized in 241 . years. He was serving, as CsWest Coast Broadcasting and Film Commission. He is presdlnal-Patriarch of Venice in 1001 ently in New York City to speak with· Protestant leaders when he was elected to succeed there about a positive program against offensive filins. Pope Leo XIII. He became Another Protestant leader, the executive· director of known 'as the "Pope of the · the. Council's National Commission on Broadcasting and' Eucharist" for bringing about the custom of early First Hol~ Films; has 'said that his group tries to avoid outright conCommunion and advocating fredemnation since this. only increases box office appeal. He quent reception. He also wal .has' 'suggested that the best approach be to "encourage noted for revitalizing the worlul Protestants to speak their mind" when their sensibilities' of the Confraternity of ChristiaD Doctrine, and for bdngiT)g about are offended by certain movies. reforms in, Church music. Be It is gratifying to know that the dangerous potential died on Aug. 20, 1914, was beatiBeen in. some movies by the Catholic Legion of Decency is fied in 1951 and was canonized · not just a· figment of Catholic imagination but is recog... on May 29, 1954. · nized for. 'what 'it is "by other religious groups. ;And the TOMORROW - St. M~ Prophet. The Hebrew leader and Catholic Church welcomes the effQrts of the National law-giver, who is described ,ill Council of Churches of Christ to speak out against what , the Book of Exodus in the Bible. is offensive in movies. . . He died at the age Of 120 00 the Already the Council is feeling what the Catholie borders of the 'Promised Land. · Legion of Decency has been enduring since its foundationL SATURDAY - St. Laurenee The vice president in charge of' production at Columbia Justinian, Bishop-Confessor. He refused the offer of a brilliant · Pictures spoke u~ quickly to' answer Mr. Heimrich. He marriage, fled from his home iii · pulled out .the "sarrie old chestnut" about the public's being Venice and joined the CanoDli .- permitted to decide what it wants and the fact that no Regular of St. George. He be> individual or group has·a right to c~nsor the industry. Came the first Patriarch of VeoIf is amazing how tenaciously the movie industry hides ~ ice and died in 1456 at the a8II behind the sacred' word "censorship.'; The very cry is sup_ st. Z\chal-!lnl, )(ft:l~d to crus..h the opposition and turn public opinion against ~ny ·group. that opposes Hollywood production. And yet · the Council of the Churches 'of Christ has said-as does . . By Msgr. George G. Higgins Barachias and became known .. ~ the'Legion:oi Decency-that it is not a question of cen~oring' D,'irector NCWC Social Action Department Israel during the' reign of Kin« ,Darius, ,as,'a c0!1iempora~1~ 01. 'BCripts: or dictatihg.what Hollywood would give the .public 'Reliable statistics on thesocio-economic status of Amer- . the: Prophet Aggeus. Both'~ .. ' };)ut., telli~g the movie .executives what -·pleases and what iean Catholics and on the percentage of Catholics, in, the i. tribtited by. thfHr exhortation..tO . ". : ~:ffends:.::- .", <~, ~', · American labor move,ment arenotorioQsly difficult to come .. "sP.~d;ing up the ~or:k ~: ~ ........ ,. .'The' Co'lumbiaPictures executive' asserted that "DifbY.I would guess, however" that Mr. Vance Packard is sub-' ,., ;bu~ldmg of the ~ec0':ld T~mp~ :' ~. ferel'ices shoui'd· 'be discussed, but no one has the "r~ght .. stantiall accnrate' when .he ' , '., .'" " . " , - . MONI?AY-St. NemorI~s ~ .• .Y.,. , " '. ' what the purpose of umons rea1- - Compamon,s; Martyrs. Regl,s~~ ·tc)'~foi'ce his' Opinipns on someone else." That' is ·'preci~·ely -." '." : th~:,p~iIitth~.t 'tp~e Legion of Dece,ncy and now' the Protest~iIt ; says 11) hIS new book on ~lass ly is or what the labor mov~ ,in, the Roman Martyrology as 8t. . : Nemorius, he is also' know.n 'M . ~oup is. making. No one-a~d that includes the moving · behavior in, the United ment is all abOut. ,. States, The Status Seekers, P J h. XXIII d 't . St. Memorius but is more ~ . :pjctiire : indus6'y~has a right to force its, opinions On ~ that a 66 per cent majority of opeth. 0 n t' o~.s~tl aJ?- . 'larly venerated as St. Mesmia. anyone,. and if a group finds a picture offensive and 'refuses Catholics belorig to the so-called tSWher b IS ~ues IOn extp ICl . y In '.. He was a deacon of Tro,e., e la or-managemen sec t Ion 0f F ' W' h fi '. . : to patronize it the industry must accept this not as-censor- ,- "lower" class h'IS t E' cr 1 Ch' . rance. It ve compamoDli (I don't partict· rec~nt' 'bnctYh Icda on . ~Ids. he was sent by 81. Lupus, under · , ship but as the free choice of public group. . .' h li d t h' . "OIl.' , Ian unl y, u e oes provi e 'th h 1f 1 I t 'th w om e serve , 0 t e camp . . . And. then, of course, there is always the question of ularly care .' for us WI a e puc ue 0 e. Att'lil th Hun' h' then' WM the term) and answer when he says that "parI. e , ':" 0 .. moral 'standards . that ,the movies Qmust not break down. that "Catholics ticular care ... must be taken . ravagmg Gaul~ to Implore rperesr While there may be djfferences between Catholics and have a higher that progress in the moral ~phere .. of the b~rbarIan leader. Attil~ Protestants along these lines, there are certain minimum percenta?e of does not lag, behind progress in had all SIX beheaded, abou~ 45ol.. . the economic field" . - However, the prayers of Bls~ standardsthat all would accept. It is good that both Catholie people In the trade - unions . . St. Lupus were answered and and Protestant groups make the movie industry aware that than any other "The dignity of Christians and Troyes was spared from rav!lge. they will speak' out for these. ' . religious body." even of human beings," His HoliTUESDAY. - The Nativi~1 01. Mr. Packard ness reminds us, "demands. this. the Blessed Virgin. The· feast 88YS that "the For what will it profit the work- commemorates the birth, free explanation for ers to gain a greater supply of from original sin, of the Jewish A report in The New York Time's spoke of the numbers the predomingoods and enjoy the benefits of . maiden of the house of David, \ antly working-class composi!ion a more educated life, if they 'destined to -become the Mother 0( parents, .non-Catholics, sending their children to, the of the Catholic Church is easy to have lost or overlooked what of God. Her parents were sa. parochial'schools of New Yor~ City. (Incidentally, the find." His own explanation is the concerns the immortal soul'?" . 'Joachim and Anne. parochial and private elem,entary and secondary schools familiar one that the majority- of Danger in U. S. . WEDNESDAY-St. Peter CIaof that city teach thirty per cent o.f the school children.) American Catholics are the de. ver, Confessor. He was the ... icendents of immigrants. His'Holiness is not suggesting of' a farmer, born in 1581 lit . A reason given for the yearly increase in the number here that the labor movement ' Supports Right Verdu, near Barcelona, Spaia. of children enrolled in Catholie ·.schools is the reputation should contentedly rest on its . . J . 1601l. I doubt that the explanation . laurels or that its members He ?o1Oed the ~suits In , the schools have for good education, discipline and personal Is really' as simple as all that should complacently settle for ~tat~oned at MaJorca, he .... attention. Surely the immigration factor is their present standard of living.. msplred by St. Alphonsus. ~ The Catholic school system throughout the country not the only reason that Catha- Nor is he recommending that r~guez ~ith. the desi~e to. do m.... . has built that .reputation through.. the years as the result llcs make up such a large per- workers take. the vow of poverty . Sion work 10 Amencl!. He ... . centage of the labor movement. or that the labor movement sent in' 1610 ~ Cartagena .. of the sacrifice and dedication ·of many persons-Chu'rch ... . '. .. .. Central America, the central ' I ' ,Another reason.' I shou.ld th1O.k, transform itself into a religioWl sla've' mart o'f the West In'do·1ead ers who have ca led for schools, devoted laypeople who ._.. ' hi. th~ fact that CatholIc SOCial o r d e r . ' and for' the next 40 years deh ave s~cr.if.I.~c/el;lto finance schools, school o.fficials who have teachmg so strongly supports 01. . . Iii the spirit of the Beatitudes, voted himself to the drawn up courses of studies than can stand beside those the right of labor to. orgamze . welfare . ba . d th t C th l' k " t he is merely cautioning, us Negro slaves. He IS said to \JOe of any sch~ol system, dedicated priests. and hrothers and. an a a 0 I~ wor ers, 0 a (working people, employers and baptized and cared for !DON sisters who have given their every day to further· the cause . gre~ter degree than many of the r~st of us) to keep things than 300,000 of them. He died ill of Catholic education. . '. theIr fellow-worke~s, have been in proper spiritual perspective. 1654. He was canonized in 1888 encouraged by their Church to d d I d th . t o t . " The quality of Catholic education has become recog- exercise this right. . . ' He reminds that, whiie in,vo,1_ an ~c a~e. e pa ron . · CatholIc missIons among Ne~ I nized outside- the Ch~rch as well as by Cath.olics. Indeed, The.f ac t t h a t CathOICS are untary poverty (we still have a in 1896. 'sometimes' Cathollcs have had their attention called to proportionately more numerous lot of it in the United States) what a' great school system they have by those not of the' in American unions than are the is an evil to be deplored and Pope Receives 'New . members' of other religious remedied it is, nevertheless, evFaith.' ' , -_ ,. . . ' . '. . ' groups means' that they' have a erlastingly true that· the "poor. ,Chllean Ambassador As schools open, parents would do· well to thank God proportionately greater respon- in spirit" are' blessed in the eyes' CASTELGANDOLFO (NC)'that the Ca~holic.:schools of the Diocese .are extending libility for what goes on-and of God and that they alone- have Pope John XXIII has reeeiVed .the work of the home in such.a wonderful way." what doesn't go on-in the labor .been guaranteed eternal happi';' the credentials ·of. the DeW I ' . movement. ness in heaven. Chilean ambassador to the ~ It would be interesting and See, Fernando Aldunate ErnPope John's l:ncyclical was rather encouraging" I think, to directed to the entire world and zuriz, who is the third member look at the many good things and of his family to represent i.the lesser .number of bad things not to any particular nation. country at the Vatican. But· surely its emphasis on the that are going. on in t~e. labor The Pope sent his blessing tID movement at the present time.' moral purpose of economiC pr9g- 'President Jorge Alessandri R0dress and prosperity is more . But for the purpose of this riguez of Chile' and the natioirll applicable to the United States people annual Labor Day column ,during a formai ~ OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL R.IVER which is 'frankly intended to be than almost any other country, mony, and then invited the cUPfor ours is by far the most affluPublished weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River a sermon on the spiritual side of ent, most 'economically prosper- iomat into his private libra,; . . what isn't going an and presuma short visit . . 410 Highland Avenue ably should be going on in the ous nation on the face of the, Toe Chilean envoy' ~ Fal1 River, Moss. .OSborne 5-7151 globe. field"of organized labor. . establish, and was the first'~ . PVBLlSHER Presumably, therefore, it 11 dent of the Chqean' Ca~ Better still, let us narrow it Most Rev. James L Connolly, D;D., P,hD. \ down ·to one thing in particular the one most in danger of be- Migration Institute, and. ~ -namely, the failure of too coming spiritually soft and helped to found his ~ou~ GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MANAGER many trade unionists, Catholics flabby and the one which ~will Catholic charities organiZatJoe. Rev. Daniel F. Shalloo, M.A. Rev. John P~ Driscollincluded, to look beyond the be most· strongly tempted to Caritas. He was Chilean a'mbiI.MANAGING EDITOR present moment and ask them- rationalize, if not delete, the first sador to Argentina during . . Hugh 'J. Golden Ile1ves, preferably on then: knees, of. the eight Beatitudea. aDd. 1951.

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Encyclical Stresses Moral .PurposeoflPtosp~rity

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan Rlver-Thurs, Sept. 3,1959

OurNew Pope: From POPE .JOHN XXID: An A~thorllatfve Biography By ZlIOlt Andi. Msgr. Jame~ L Tucek. and James C. O'Neill, Copyright, 1959. '" Farrar Straus and CudahJ'! IDe. Publishers

pART x' Sitting in the Nunciature in Pa:rih one January morning fa 1953, Archbishop Angelo Roncalli paged through the n.ewspaper Figaro with a practiced eye. On the back page he spotted a picture that filled him with grief. It showed a funeral procession matters of international . .watery , coliseand the melodramatic cap- quence were the daily routine. tion under it read: "Gondola Venice, once the ruler of the of Death." The scene was East whom the Sultans feared, anmistakably Venice and the in the 20th century' had reaped subject was the late Patriarch .the r~wards of a splendid old Carlo Agostini.· age; Its· past glories and triThe Patriarch 'and Archbishop umphs, its ageless beauty and Roncalli had both been named' a unique place in 'history and few weeks before by Pope Pius geography drew the world to ita XII as members of the College of hundred islands. Cardinals. Angelo Roncalli cut Like Venice, Cardinal RoncalU out the picture and slipped' 'it had known East arid West. A tnto his breviary as a reminder man thorotighly imbued with the to pray for the former Patriarch. civilization of the West. RonHe did not realize that he would calli had ,spent 20 years ,of his be praying for his predecessor. life in countries which were , Welcome Assignn,ent completely under the spell of On Jan. 15, the same day 'on Eastern Christianity and which which he received the Cardinal's had been once its principal biretta from French President source. Vincent Auriol, Cardinal 'RonHis arrival in the City of ealli was named Patriarch of Canals was a dignified and relaVenice.' , .i tively peaceful change from his The assignment was a welcome former assignments. There was, 'one.' He had already spoken every reason to expect that it sadly of the prospect of retul1nwould be the final 'chapter, to tog to Rome to end his days amid long and distinguished' career~· the paper w.ork of the. Roman ": \. . Blesses All Congregations. Instead, it,;was ordained that he should at last ' Amorig his first acts asPatrlhave the opportunity, to be. a atch, Cardinal Roilcalli paid' a 'pastQr of souls in the f~llsense ,col,lrtesy call on Mayor Armando .~ the word, ' '.: Gavagnin in his offices' at the The new Patriarch on March city hall of Venice; With the lS. 1953, took possession of 'his mayor 'to receive the Cardinal , lee. Almost every launch and was the city council; including gondola of the city turned out socialist and communist memto meet him and accompany him bers; , through the watery avenues in Praising them for working for a floating procession. the common good and the adGolden Basiliea ministration of the city, the To the peal of the city's bells Patriarch alter noting that there and the chant of Patriarchal were "several here who are not\ clergy, the 71-year-old Cardinal called ·Christians," extended his' entered the Basilica of St. blessing to all without, distincMark's, the so-called "golden .. tion. basilica" which would be - the It was with such gestures' of seat of his reign as the 43rd ,good will that Cardinal Roncalll Patriarch and the 139th Bishop settled down to Venice. of Venice. ,From what he was later to say In a moving speech from the and do, it is obvious that he expulpit, Cardinal Roncalli told the .. ,peeted to end his days there. assembled bishops and faithful "Everything seemed to indicate of his early life, of his trust in ,that he was setting his house God and said to them: "In beholding your Patriarch, SHRUBS TREES liIeek the priest, the minister of grace and nothing else, because he wishe's to express in his ministry this vocation given 110 PLANTING him by God." During this sermon, Cardinal DESIGN Roncalli was interrupted by repeated outbursts of applause. HIgh Street, AssOnet, Mass. He chided the congregation, reTel. Mt 4-2821 calling to them that Pope Pius X did not like applause, and that on the day of his coronation· the saint announced that he did not want it. 'Please Lead the Way' - .. ' , Five years later Cardinal ROIl- ," caUi, during his own coronation . as Pope John XXIII, was to' SIlence the cheering of the faithful in'St. Peter's Basilica when they shouted during the ceremonial burning of the flax. Pio Pietragnoli, editor of the cJlocesan newspaper of Venice. later' recalled the festIvities 01. ~he. day of the Patriarch's arr.ival. He said that toward the ~ of the evening, when' the ~ousands of well-wishers had drifted away to their homes, there remained only himself and others. The new Patriarch turned to . . :r~etragilOli, who was then,. wanger to him, and said:' . "Well, the bride is marrIed 9ft ,a'nd the guests of the Party ,\' hav:e all gone away. Here I'~ with a big beautiful palace and I ,do not know how to find my way around it. Would you l~ad the way for me please?" ' Peaceful Change The life that Cardinal Ro. ealli was to live during his five ' Jears in Venice would be that ' of. a man. putting ~v!'lrything,ill :;' , order. Like the city· itself, he lied known greater days· whea

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Patriarch of Venice ehildr~n and have Christma.

with me?" 'Modern Pope' The Patriarch liked to waDI: through the streets of Venice. simply clad in a black cassock, topCoat and clerical hat, and talk to his people in a neighborly way .·as though he were the village curate in Sotto il Monte. He' owned no gondola of h~ own and used either a motorboat borrowed from the Venice Police or the public means of transportation. Despite the fact that the motorboat is competition for the older, more graceful gondola and noisily churns the_peaceful waters of the canals, a Venetian gondolier, at the time of Pope John's election, proudly declared: "He will be a modern Pope. He never used a· gondola always a motOJ;boat." City of Opportunity While Venice was a far cry from the problems, he faced when 'Nuncio in Istanbul or Paris, the city presented many opportunities to Angelo Roncalll in which he demonstrated h~ skill as an administrator, diplomat and priest. The scope of ,his activities' fa Venice in itself needs a chapter to cover it even briefly. For Cardin.al Angelo Roncalli wlUl i\RRIVAL OF PATRIARCH: Archbishop RoncaDi not a man to. rest on his laurels, to end his days quietly in the 'C~ose a motor launch instead of the tra~itional gondola for warm sun along the VeIiice lagoon. his entrance to Venice. ;, (Next Week: The in order' for the man who wa~'" . ragnoU, suggested he cancel the Patriarch at Work) lectures' but the Cardinal refollow him. He remodeled the crypt be- fused and completed his schedneath St. Mark's and brought uled talks. At the conclusion 01. ' the last, one he himself anback the bodies of former patriarchs from the cemetery island nounced her death and asked of San Michele and placed them prayers for her soul. The first Christmas in Venice. there. Among the tomBs one was left empty' and unmarked. He 'Cardinal Roncalii was drawn to Eugenio Bacchion, President Of intended it for himself. • the Men's Catholic Action in Be,l"ins Lectures CHARLES F. VARGAS Venice, who was mourning· the ShorUy after his arrival bl death of his wife. 254 ROCKDALE AVENUI Venice, he undertook a seri~s of. NEW BEDFORD, MASS. "Tomorrow is Christmas," said lectures on· the unity of the the Cardinal. "It will be your Church. For more than 20 years first Christmas with an empty he had worked for this unity - with words and deeds, easing place in your home'. . . would tension between Catholics and yOIl come tomorrow with your ~inner

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THE ANCHOR,...Oiocese of fanRiver-Thurs;:Iept:3,'l?,59

Academy Grads 'Merit Awards'

Sophistic~ted Fashio'n Model's

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Three graduates of, Mt. st. Mary Academy, and two from , Jesus Mary Academy are among Greater Fall River winners 01. By Mary Tinley Daly scholarship awards from the Massachusetts S c hoI a r s li i P Smart, career woman if ever I saw one, this KiKi. As Foundation, a private non-profthe saying goes in commericial circles, "A good head for it foundation. ' business." We met at a press conference where Kiki was They are Mary Joanne Medeirshowing advance fall fashions. Her suave excitement subtly' os ,Teresa M, Silva and Margar-; et'Ellen Whalon, all of Fall Riv"Well, those new Fall clothes eonveyed the idea that this' er and Mt. St. Mary graduates: year's style~ are really wortli of yours will cause a sensation and Claire M. Delisle, Somerset attention-something worth in Mississippi," someone else and Jocelyne J. Cyr, North W~ writing about our papers. ventured. port, of Jesus-Mary. , , We were all 'charmed witt\"New clothes?" Kiki laughed Elementary Education Kiki herself, svelte and chic in . aloud. "Honey, all I'm takin' Miss Medeiros, daughter of Mr. • smooth _ as, _ ' down home ar!! some old cottons. and' Mrs; Antone Medeiros, 21. vel vet basic I'll can peaches and tomatoes for Carl Street, will 'attend Bridgebla{:k with a fit my 'sister-in-law" take care of water' State Teachers College, as perfect as 'its her and the new baby wh- 1 they, majoring in elementary educaprobable price ,come home from the ,hospital. . tion. tag warranted. I'm really going 'to live! I'll Miss 'Silva, who plans a "B I a c k i s make some, li'l or school dresses' career as a medical secretary~ back!" she ex'for my nieces. Want to see their will attend Cardinal Cushing ulted, then propictures?" Colle'ge, majoring in secretarial eeeded to sho~ Out of her smart 1959 top-ofstudies. She is the daughter 01. Blany b I a c k the - fashion handbag, Kiki Mr. and Mrs., Joseph S. Silyia, aumbers, ,each brought.forth a wallet with page, 262 Division Street. "with ideal, acafter cellopha'ned page of pic, , ' , ' / . , ' Also to att~nd, Bridgewater .. eessories - as tures ',of small: ni,ece's and nephTON BOUND H' I F· '1 S .' . ' Miss Whalon who hopes to teach K ik i'I own d!ws--"Aren't they cute? This is BOS , " ' : 0 Y, amI Y emors leavmg for Lay ~ overseas D~ughter of Mr. and were: exotic earrings and heavy little Catherine. She was named Apostolic Convention at Bost~n College are Shelia Mitchell, Mrs. John E.' Whalon, 89 Ash bracelet of gold and jade.~er for ,me, and,l hopenoboay ever Blake-up, too, was flaw'les's, with tells: her 'that my name is any- , left, and Raymond Lagesse, center, with Miss Mary Manning' 'Street, she will maj!>r i~ mathe,'. , " , ~ : _ ' matics and education. tawny-rose mat' finish on face thIng but 'Aunt Catherine,''' ' ' chaperone. A language major at Stoneand neck, green eyes accentuEnjoying steaks together at hiil College', will, claim ¥iss ated by greenish-blue eyethe' nice-little-place-around-theDelisle,'daughter of Mr. and Mrs. shadow and masca'ra, dot at the, corner, we' got a whole new conMaurice Delisle, 30 Qrant AV~ eorner to elongate the eyes. Lipception of glamour jobs. emie, Somerset. She pla~s a .tick was the' new light sha'de "Ju'st so long as you've got' career as a high school teacher. that looked "like strawberries one person ,of your own kinfolk" Miss Cyr will attend Lowell lQuashed in cream and obviously came to mind most vividly' a's I ,OAKLAND (NC)-The presi- -- ers from 40 states who attended' the 1959 regional confer\lnces in State Teachers Colege and majo~ 'brush-applied-not smeared on sat down to write of that fashion dent of the National Council of Ohio, Vermont, Virginia, Louisi- , in music with the, goal of becomfrom a lipstick as was that of, show. Catholic W:omen ,has urged the ing a teacher. She is the daughana, Wisconsin, Kansas and Calimost of us women reporters. nine million women in 12,000 ter of Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin We had come to report just Contest Sponsors Act organizations affiliated with the' fornia, studied the plight of the world's refugees: They suggested, Cyr, 342 Old Bedford Roa~ another "advance showing" but To Meet, Obl·ec.tives nationwide Ca"10lic federation, Kiki had us intrigued. as well as all other Americans, ' World Refugee Year activities, North Westport. Will Go Far 'LONG BEACH (NC) - Long to respond with compassiori to for affiliated organizations and local' communities. ' "There's one who win go far Beach sponsors of the "Miss the plight of millions of refugees New' Bedford Couples hi the fashion world," the -eUniverse" beauty contest have 'lVithout homt;! and hope in t!J.e Mrs. Theissen reminded the Plan' Dinner Meeting porter' on 'my left whispered. announced plans for a new ',present ~orld Refuge~ Year~' Oakland institute' participants The Couples Club of St. Law"She lives her job. Someday, beauty pageant in which contestthat NCCW now operates. Feed-, rence Church, 'New Bedford, wiD we'll do an 'I remember when' ants will appear in attire other· Mrs. Mark A. Theissen of piece," than bathing suits.' . Covington,' :Ky., NCCW presi- ' 'a-Family/,programs in 12 areas ,hold its first Fall meeting, at The ,clipped, sophisticated ,They said they were acting' as dent, urged widespread support, overseas in cooperation with 7:30 Sunday evening, Sept. 13. The" gathering will take the form eomments in a thoroughly cos-;' a result of "objections ... 'from Of the col,ipcil's foreign relief. Catholic Relief Services - ~aBlop'olita'n,' unprovincial iiccent' various religious groups," ,projects. These include sales, tional Catholic Welfare Confer.,. , of 'a'dinner at the Ga~light I.tOOJll , Th' of W,or,ld R,''ef.u.gee. Y"e'ar Chrl'stence. of the M&K 'Coffee' Shop. , went on and on, keepIng us ' a l l ' e sponsors said they would interested in the "thrillinif', new' ,call the new' competition' ~e, mas, c:ards ; 'Gooperation in obShe asked each woman and Planning committee members fashions. "We were absorbing - Hlnternalional Beauty Congre~~" , ' ~rvances ,<?(the 0. S. Committee, each organization "to' reach out, will, ~ontacti>rospective attend'iM)me of K'iki's enthusiasm. ' They said they decided on a new for Refugees, and 'broadening, of in a personal way to the neediest antS -by telephon~. ':t='a·r.ishiori~rs" 'Finally, it 'was over' arid we naine' becauSe' they refused to U. S. government programs for' families around the' glot>e" by wishing to join the ,group should, were all sorry. pay a swimming suit company, use of surplus food abroad. 'purchase 'of a $5 Feed-a-Faniily: make application by SaturdaJ. "Well," 'one of the. reporters' which owns the title "Miss Uni- , More than ~,300 ,NCCW leadpackage each month. ' ~ept. 5. sighed, "with Mr. K. coming, verse,~ for continued use of the there'll be scant room in papers' name. ,for writing about what American The 1959' Miss Universe con- ' women will be wearing. If 'Mrs. test became a center of contro.•.. K. were t<> come," she chuckled, versy when a Catholic girl ,from, "I'll bet this Kiki would sell her ""the Santa Fe, N. M., archdiocese on a 'basic, black'-and 'probably said: she would participate delOme of those underpinnings?" Spite a warning from Archbishop Press conference over, ,a few ,Edwin V. Byrne of Santa Fe that of us lingered to, talk with out' she and her family would be decommentator. nied the sacraments of Confes'''Hungry, girls?" Kiki was still sion and Communion' if she did. talking "fashion-runway style. However, the girl later with"Want to go to a nice little drew from the contest. • eak place around the corner?" Bremen Catholics Have At the "nice little place" we got to know Kiki. Three New Churches "Yo'-all had 'your vacations B~EMEN (NC)-The dedicayet?I' she asked with a Southern tion of three new churches here drawl dripping with magnolia by BisHop Helmut Hermann b~ossoms. "I'm just about fixin' of Osnabreuck gives perto have mIne. Next week ~ . Wittler ma'nent houses of worship k» Dewey's battle at, Manila Bay was tame 'compared to Mississippi!" . nearly 10,000 Bremen CatholiCs. "But isn't this, your, busiest the uproar caused when someone tampers with Junior's who have awaited. themsinee time?" one of the presswomen war. ' asked. "Opening of anew seasupply. of Guimond Farms I A Quality' Milk. ,,The' 4,000' Catholi{:l' Gl ' S( lIOn?" , ' ' ,' :' Nichola's' parish have heretofore' , / , "Sho' is, honey/'Kiki 'smiled. had their Masses.' in' it former ': -Sut I figure it this way~when you want to keep ,his temper on an even keel, have Nazi party building'" The 3,5QO-' you' get a ,chance to go' HOME, , member congregation of tbe new ,·your Guimond Farms Driver-Salesman le'ave an extra that's where you, go! Just, so St. Boniface's' church' formerly " }<>ng as you got even. one person quart each delivery day a'nd watch him grow-grow-, worshiped in a .local movie thea':' left of your own kinfolk, you 'ter, while St. George churGP's \ groY;1 ' manage ,to sneak, away to - 2,000 parishioners used the rooffill 'em! I left my kinfolk 10ng ago, Of a neurological clinic for Sunto find 'glamour' in New York. day Mases. And it's not much glamour." Sudden Change Eastham Guild Plans The metamorphosis we were • witnessing left us ail a bit adrift. September Social "But won't it be hot in Mis- • Members of Visitation Guild, .issippi?" somebody asked. ' :Eastham, will hold a social at 8 "Who minds a little heat?" Friday evening, Sept. 18, at the Kiki shrugged her shoulders. horne of Mrs. Edward Benz,' Of 'Specially when you're home." County Road, North Eastham. "A business meeting is scheduled / Fairhaven Alumnae for 8 Monday evening, Sept, 21,' Alumnae of Sacred Heart. 'at' the home: of Mrs.' Robert R., Academy, Fairhaven, will spon- ,Hathaway, new guild president. lOr their third annual style show Other new officers are Mrs. at 8 Tuesday evening, S~pt. 15 at Ja~esJ. Bresnahan, vIce presiKennedy Center, New Bedford., ~ent; ,Mrs. John Connors, seereMrs. Frank RQgers is chairman tary; Mrs. Emil DeVille, treasof the planning comm,ittee, and mer; Mrs. Leroy Babbit, chapMrs. Joseph Cataldo Jr. heads "lain; Mrs. Helen Carron, pub'ticket sellers. ' , " , licitidirec~Ol'.' "

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THE ANCHOft...,.Oiocese oHan River-Thurs, 'Se·pt.' 3, J959'

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Dollars You Inve~t in Kitchens Return Dividends in Efficiency

Holy Union Nuns Plan Field Day

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By Alice Bough Cahill ' ,~e'd just been inspecting the new display of a company of!~rmg 'to renoyate kItchens. As we left the showroom a frIe~d WIth us said; "1 want a kitchen that is modern 'in deSIgn, but 1 don't want one with a lot of cabinet doors that are either too high or to make that "hot kitchen" as too low, doors to open and obsolete as a coal stove. The close and to wipe off con- wood paneling. will camouflage stantly; I'd like an old-fash- the air conditioners and the

ioned pantry with just one door." Perhaps you've never figured tb u sl Y, bu t there' is quite an advantage to an old-fashioned pantry. There ,one can have her mixer .et up, on the shelf above, the items one uS\" , ally puts in it; and below the pans' in which to place the mixtuxe. True, most ,of us do this with .the kind of cabinets we have today, but often we must lift the mixer to 'put it in the cabinet and clear the counter when we're through.

radiators. Here's a room where you can go aU out for Americana-pine table and, chairs, copper, brass and pewter accessories, but don't fOJ;'get a. comfortable day bed on which Dad can get 40 winks while waiting for dinner. You might even add an old-fashioned pine rocker and a small footstool. Then there's the kitchenlaundry combination that fits the plan of other homes. The laundry will house your automatic washer and dryer and food freezer. Make your kitchen as 'compllct and effic~ent as a ship's galley. In one of the new homes where kitchen adjoins the living-dining-den' area, the·kitchen was raised a: step above, so when the cook presides at her range (the cooking peninsula acts as l : a 'room divider) she can enjoy the companionship of the family . assembled below. When you build. a house, a big investment goes into the kitchen . and when most people remodel. bringing the kitchen up to date is the first thing they plan for -and the, thing many houses need most. The newe'st of appliances, plentiful well-planned cabinets, carpentry and paint, can run into money but every dollar'invested in a dream kitchen returns many dollars worth of. efficiency.

Useful Pantry a pantry one' is able to see lit a glance what stock needs replacing, this without bending.. reaching, opening, closing. Such' • spot' should provide a large' workirig shelf with chopping board arid electric outlets and other conveniences. 'Another idea our friend had was a center table like her Il'andmother's. The top is hexagonal, the base is full of drawet'8 W;ith slanted fronts to carlT out a clapboard effect. You pull them out by slipping your hand ander the edge. 'No handles mean no finger .arks. to scrub off. The,. had Mill another unorthodox idea, wh~ch was, to place sink and sClove, into comers, ,giving them light and air from both sides. Variety is the keynote ill ~ltehen planning and it's alway. enlightening to get different 6d.eas, as the one above. Toda;, '; It seems many housewives prefer }) .... open, part-of-the-house kitchen. With this type, the builder can use sliding doors to divide kitchen and living ·room. Partial division of kitchen and living areas ,can be accomplished by eounters usable at both sides. On the living room side, these cabinets can be used for books and display of show pieces of china or crystal.

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Mrs. Mullaly Will Head Assonet Women Named to head St. Bernard's ·Women's Guild, Assonet, for the coming yea,rs is Mrs. Linus J. Mullaly. Assisting her will be Mr,s. Thomas Lynch, vice president: Mrs. Pierre 'LaBonte Jr., treasurer; Mrs. Henry Nadeau, secretary; Mrs. Paul Couture, assistant secretary. , / They will atten~ an officers' meeting at, 8 tonight at Mrs. Mullaly's residence, together with Mrs. Marianno Rezendes. ,an!! Mrs. Raymond Doherty, di-

On the other hand, your dream. kitchen might combine a :iining room or den. A "living-kitchen" ean't really attract the famil;, beyond mealtimes unless it eaters to their leisure. By building • peninsula' where you caD. place your range, backed by • 8e!'ving counter, you can remove the living from the cooking area without in the least isolating the ; rectors.'

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MEET TWO DOLLS: Still smiling though abandoned ' an IS-month-old girl has one steady pal~a marble figurin; , of a sea~ed child that greets visitors at St. Vincent's Orphanage, ChIcago. The abandoned toddler was left with a travelers Aid employee at a railway station by a woman who did not return. NC Photo. '

Hospital Administrotors Recognize . Sister's Extraordinary Service NEW YORK (NC)-Public acclaim that comes seldom to a Franciscan nun was given here to Sister Mary Wilhelmina, ad:m!nistrator of St. Joseph's Hospital, Syracuse, N. Y . · Sister Wilhelmina was admitted as a fellow in the Ameriean College of Hospital Administrators, in recognition of "service beyond the ordinary demands of her position." The college's annual convocation took place iD. the Me'tropolitan Opera House. The former Miss Helen FHa-

.

Cape Cod Picnics Youngsters from st. Mary'. Rome, New :Bedford, and St. Vincent's Home, Fall River, were «uests at two picnics sponsored by SL Vincent de Paul Societies and Wo.men's Guilds of Corpus Christi parish, Sandwich; St. Margaret's, Buzzards Bay, and St. Mary's, Onset. The third year for the double outings, they were held at Bourne Scenic Park on Cape Cod Canal. Clayton Tucy, chairman ef Bourne Park Department and _ active 'Vincentian, was .. eharge of arrangements, assisted .,. Frank B. Cook and a comma-. . . ol. pariah ~Uvea.

The fourth annual field da;, .and bazaar for the benefit of the Religious of the Holy Union witt be ~eld Saturday, Sept. 26; accordmg to Mrs, David Boland. gener,al chairman. , The all-day event will take place on the grounds of Holy Union Preparatory School, Nanaquaket Road, Tiverton and will u:clude children's ga~es, pony rIdes and a ,merry-go-round. Highlighting the program will be awarding of two foreign cars to winning ticket holders. Tables will hold records and other items for teen-agers and a new feature will be a "Euro~ean table" offering noveltiea, lmens and laces from abroad.. Other booths will offer Christmas gifts, parcel post items, dolls, religious articles, food. books, clothing and miscellaneous merchandise. Refreshment. will be available at 'the Shamrock tea room. Assistin'goMrs. Boland Yrlll be Mrs. Francis Fanning, field day chairman; Robert J. Nagle, programs; Mrs.' Thomas DiNucei, New Bedford chairman' James Giblin, Taunton chairm~n; and representatives of the Knights of Columbus, in charge of' a penny sale table. -

Fall. River Style Show Members of Holy Rosary Women's Guild, Fall River, will hold a style show at 8 Wednesday evening, Oct. 7. Miss Clara Sasso and Miss Elva Bertoncini are co-chairmen.

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decided to write him and offer her assistance. The veteran ~oner replied that his greatellt need was multivitamins. "Miss Drury wrote to drug companies asking for the vitamins," sa!d Father SW~J!.e,. in atecent letter of gratitude received here. "McKesson ok Robbins came to our aid and one .day out of a clear blue sky we received 31,200 capsules of the '~st multivitamins." The New Britain priest operates mobile clinics, staffed by five doctors and 15 nurses administering to thousands of leprosy patients in 63 stations thro'ughout central Korea. Father Sweeney has devoted 22 of his 39 years as a missioner to work among lepers. He directed -the famous Gate of Heaven leper colony in South China from . 1933 until he was expelled from the country by the communisUl bl 1953.

In' this way; Mother is' never-' . N'.·.or:'t,h' W'es.tport' ,Mee'"tl'ng'-;.' left out of conversation arid fUD " going on in the. den.' PineThe first meeting of Our Lady paneled walls are most satisfac- of Grace Women's Guild, North tory for such a living' area and,. Westport, will be held at 8 Tues-lI1ay we suggest ,that you plan day evening, Sept. 8, in 'the • pair of window air conditioner. church hall. All members are lor thi's room. This is the way lUiked to attend.

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gerald, daughter of Elizabeth and the late John F .. Fitzgerald of Lansing, Iowa," Sister Wilhelmina has been administrator of the hospital since 1951. Before serving as administrator, she was director of the St. Joseph's Hospital School of Nursing in Syracuse from 1943 to 1951.

'California Woman's Efforts Aid Thousands of Korean Lepers NEW YORK (~C)-A young woman i!1 Bakersfield, Calif., teame4 up with an unportant drug firm to help. a Maryknoll' priest in Korea administer .vitamins to'thousands of lepers. When GIs returning from duty in Korea told Miss Ella Drury' about the work Father Joseph A. Sweeney, Maryknoll missionary, was doing for victims of Hanson's disease (leprosy), she

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DAUGHTERS OF ST. PAUL Invite young girl. (14.231 to labor in Christ's vo.t .vineyard a. an Apo.... of the Editions: Pross, Radio. Movio. and r 010' wision. With mod.rn mean., Missionary Sisters b,ing Chri.t'. Doctrin. to oK, 'egardless of race. color or .rHel. For iftformation w,ite to: REV, MOTHER, SUPERIOR SO Sf. PAUL'S AVE. BOSTON 30; MASS,

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THE ANCHOR'-Dioceseof Fall, River...,..Thursi ,Sept;-·3, .1959:· ...

Priest ·Restores Chapel as CentEi Of Modern Art · COURMAYEUR (NC) An enthusiastic priest-moun~ tain climber has transformed· a tiny chapel in this town in, . mountainous northern Italy into a center of devotion and con-' temporary art. · Father Giuseppe Beltramo, who teaches in Turin in the Winter, is Summer Chaplain at the ~ small 17th-century chapel.of St. . Germanus of Auxerre' here., When he came here five years ago he found the chapel in dis-' repair, , He asked the townspeople to help restore it and soon was able' to banish the neglected look of the' small' church. Then he' set, about getting art works on religious subjects for his chapel. Outstanding Works · Most outstanding of the works' donated to the chapel are Stations of the Cross and a bronze crucifix by' sculptor Umberto' Mastroianni which was awarded, the international prize 'at the Venice Biennial Exhibition of ~odern Art. . . FOR NORTH AMERICAN COLLEGE: 'Richard Cardinal Cushing, Archbishop of' , ~other artist who -has do-' Year-Old Law Boston, inspects the' oil porfrait;of Pope John XXIII by .artist B~natd Godwin,rig:ht, of nated his work is Felice Carena, The Post Office pointed.o~(New York City; which :.the "prelate will personally present to the N9 rth American ColIeg~: anartisdrom Venice whom His that' proceedings a~l,lin~t., ~e. Rom.e on Oct.1,l~.diir.·itlgthe.centennial ceemonie.s there. N,G.:;Photo. . . ' ..'Holiness Pope John'XXIII kri.ew~ dealer were instituted under a . when ,he' was Patriarch of Ven";'

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work on a mailers of .obsc.ene, materlal In ' . ' WASHINGTON (NC)~ Some" together delegates representing Father Frederick .A, JI.1:cGUI.r.e',~,. ,': In addition to fitting out the the judiCial district where 'the' 700 priests Religious" and. lay: about 6,000 American missioners . - C:.M" "a veteran of C~ina ~is":;. s'mall 'chapel with many contem-~ materHll is received. Previousl~,: . people c6n~erned 'withefforts ·of,166sOcielies.Bishop F~l1ton·J. ,s.lOns, has been exec~tlVe,secr~- porary w9rksof art, F.ather Beldistributors coul.d be prosecuted. . the mission 'fh~lds all. over )he .Sheen;'hational· director of the tarY 0.£ the secretanat smce: l~.;"·traino 'has the distinction of beonly at the point. of origin of the world are expech~dto'attendthe' Society 'for the ,Propagatjon of~as formed. 10 years ago. ',:.:irig the only priest who has eel-' material. they mailed. . . 10th arinualmeetirig ,ofth~ Mis~' .. the,Fait!I and :A-uxiH~ry Bishop of .. :A highlight will be' t~e .pre~- .... ebrated Ma~~ '?D. ,the peak of: . Also '. during.. ,July" .the.. PoSt.. 'sion' Secre'tariat:here this month..... New. York, WIll presl~e. ' . entation of the World mission 15,8QQ;.foot 'hlgll Mont :J31anc, the Office' hearing examiner recom: , . .... .., .... :: '. ..-' 'The Mission Secretariat,head- A.war , given in recognition for: .. liighest peak 'of the Alps. ' d mended that a magazine, pub- ":The three-d~fIDeetip~,~peJ}.-:·, quartered' here, . coord'inates outsblnding services to. the lished in Chicago, be dep.ied sec- ,ing Monday;, S¢pt, 28, ·,will bring. American mission activities. Church. by a l~y Catholic. This, ond class mailing privileges. The -- . , ' . 'bearing examiner contended tbat Tf'S ALL RIGHT. TO the publication employed "vile, " ' .. , . '. :. '~'eed p'. their work in the field of mlSSHOP AROUND FOR. vulgar and filthy language m. I~ '. '. sion eaucation. SOME THINGS, BUT its articles, " '. ' . MANILA (NC)-The~e are 22 . Mr. Spaeth is editor of tll.e An obscemty. order, ~h~ch ~uts million' refugees' in Asia' alone work as men," He said that fa- Shield, Cincinnati cpublication of off mail addressed tO,a dlstrlb.u- . who seek '8 'life of freedom; a ciHiies'such as hospitals, orphan- the Catholic Student's Mission tor of obscene mater.lal, ,,:as .1S~ ,'. 'p'rie;t· s~id" her~ in urging in- ages and other welfare institu- Crusade. The Spaeths have b.een "', , . . u" . 't "1 bl 't f durl'ng July agamst dlstrlbsue d . . . , . '. ereasedaid for refugees. . . ons are no aval a e 0 re u- aSsociated with the Catholic Stu202-206 Rock Street utors operating In St. Loms anli.,' .' In" 'a" plea trlad.eiilcqnne,Ytion gees, and that employment' op- dent's Mission Crusade since the' Fali River Clayt~.n, Mo. . . ' '. :; ,wiihW~rl~'I!-e~~gee, Y~ar, Msg~; '. portuntties are scar.ce. early, days of their marriage. IS'!!!,g PLACE I'D The department sald It had~r~-, ... J'oseph ·iI. Harnett' has urged"the . eeived ."hundreqs of comp,lalD~.s .' organization 'of voluntarycoiri- . '."As a result," he continlled, GET A PRESCRIPTION ••. from. almost eve~r state, ~nd mit~ees 'by: ·e:;tch. Iiati9n .to belp "most of the. refugees face a FILL~D ! m~ny fro~ Canada. regardmg . solve the' problems or refugees daily struggle of bare subsistence thls .operahon. It sald on~ .,:,as Tile prelate is the director,in the from a mother who· wrote. ,My Far East' of Catholic Relief Serv"; and generally.live in, the worst 12-year-old daughter ~ecelve.d ice~National Catholic Welfare of conditions. Up to now many the enclosed in the .mall. It 1.S, . Conference' . w.orldwide ;..relief agencies haV:e given' these refu-' unnecessary to deSCrIbe our _rt:-. " 'f' , th'e . U :S Ca't'holic gees a lot of welfare' serv'ice ~'nd OIL BURNERS ct' " . a.gency 0 "". a Ion. Bishops. . , .Also" complete Boiler-Butner' • ~aterial aid, but the basic human or Furnace Units. ElJlcient ""The .international refugee cost heating. Burner arid Emig~ees. -pro'blem .'is'· the responsibility. of . question of ~etting th,em live as . 'Iow' fuel oil sales and service. the international community," men has b,e~n denied them," Msgr.· Harnett·said. "The rapid (80 Mt. Pleasan' Streel " HONG KONG (NC) - A resettlement .of 140;000 Hunga'New Bedford WY 3-266'7 Russian Bishop of the Cath- rian refugees has shown that rapid solutions are possible. But SCRAP METALS' olic Byzantine Rite estimated millions' of other refugees still WASTE,PAPER - RAGS here that there are stilI await international, assistance." TRUCKS AND TRAILERS FOR 10,000 White Russians in vario~s Msgr,' Harri~tt .noted.: ';iil the PAPER DRIVES parts of China waiting to escape Fa~Ea:st there is need :for large CHURCHES, 'SCOUTS and . to the free' world, ' . scale international.aid,.particu~ CIVIC ORGANIZATIONS Bishop Andrew Katkoff, larly ,for the Chinese in Hong 1080 Shawmut Avenue M.LC., as chaplain to migrant. 'Kong, 'and for .the' refugees in New Bedford W.Y 2-7828 Russians, arrived at this figure. India, and Pakistah.'~ He added . after completing a fact-finding . that' "voluntary 'l!genCIes . cart. visit among' the several thou-· seek solutions" to th~· problem,".-· sand Russian refugE!es in Hong but "the United' Nations .must Kong. During his stay he also .furnish the means necessary to OF investigated the special problems carr,)' out planned solutions." of those seeking 7isas for South AMUSEMENTS "The main problem facing· America or Australia - those refugees," he declared; "is reset-, with' domestic difficulties arid ·Uement. so that they, can live and FREE those'in poor health. PARKING The 43-year-old Bishop praised BO,ard, the efforts of the Hong Kong' LEWISTON (NC) . -','Father, governmental and volunteer re- .lean Paul Cossette,' O,P.,. was fugee organizations as well as nominated as one of t~e: 'ni.ne,,: the cooperation ot'the Australian 'member State' Committ~e' ,on people that had' made "upossible Mental Health' by Gov. Clinton England's Wonderland 01 Fun! for thousands of Russianrefu- A. Clauson of Maine. . gees to emigrate to that conti/ nent. Asked about the Old Believers' -schismatics from the Russia'.l· Orthodox Church-who have al. ways' lived on' the land ~nd who comprise 'the majority of the White Russian refugees, he said that a~ farming settlement has D!st.ributed .by , been established on West. Queensland, and it is hoped that more refugees will be able to . BeverageC~. go back' to the land. .MeaJ:}while, they are working in facNORTON 331 Nash Rd., New Bedford PLAINVIU! tories and living in the' cities of / Route 123 WYman 7·9937 ' Jet. 106 & 152 Australia, he said.

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of ~QII River-Thurs, Sept. 3, 1959

11

Protestants Plan Study of Movie Industry Code

Orthodox Prelate Enters Chul1'ch As Priest

HOLLYWOOD (NC) , Protestant leaders are studying what to do about too much sex in movies, and,

BOSTON (NC)-Richard Cardinal Cushing, Archbishop of Boston, announced the acceptance of Msgr. Dmitri

about the industry's production' code which they say is, "running wild," ' A high official of the 10-yearold Protestant broadcasting and film commission which operates, a unit here to advise 'on movie prOduction, disclosed the uneasiness of Protestant chur,ch leaders over many recent films. George A. Heimrich, director of the West Coast branch of the National Council of Churches' broadcasting and film commission, said Protestants are opposed to a system of banning certain films, "but very definitely something should be done." Mr. Heimrich said the industry's overemphasis on sex has been especially noticeable _re- , cently. "Many films have been stressing sex when it was entirely uncalled-for,'obviously in the hope of building up box-office appeal," he charged. "The situation has been get-'

Nicholas as a priest of the Catholic Church. Msgr, Nicholas, who served for 20 years as a priest of the Syrian Orthodox Church, will become a member of the staff of St. Basil's Seminary, a +raining center for, Catholic priests of the Eastern Rites. Msgr. Nicholas has been accepted into the Byzantine-Melkite Rite of the Catholic Church at the rank of Archimandrite (equivalent to a mitred abbot in the the Latin Rite) which he held in the Orthodox Church. His conversion marks the first time in the history of the Archdiocese of Boston that a priest of a schismatic church has become a Catholic priest. The FAMILY, GIFT: A statile o(Our Lady of Grace has been donated to Taunton State Catholic rite in which he will H.ospital by Mr. and Mrs. Antonio J. Gomes and their family, East Taunton. Mr. and Mrs. serve is substantially the same Gomes are.the parents of Rev. Anthony M. Gomes, assistant at Santo Christo Church, 'Fall' as that in which he has previRiver. Left to right ~re Mr. and, Mrs. Gomes; another son, Ma~uel, nurse at the hospital, ously worked, except for the fact that it is united with the Holy and Rev. Daniel Gamache, hosp~tal chaplain" who blessed the statue. See. ,Cardinal Cushing sponsored ting worse during the last' six ' Msgr. Nicholas' petition for months;"'he said. ;'" :':'" , ,~~y , :Runnlng Wild' ",,'CINCINNATI (NC)-A stoclry ,,:tlll;'~~ll.l~mth visit after six years, worked there as a carpenter, ar- admission to ,the Catholic priestAs for, HollYWOOd's production, ' g~od-natured Maryknoll Brother in the" missions of Guatemala. chitect, plumber and electrician hood several m~nths ago. The eode, the industry's own set of' ,~~~ .undertaken th~ task- of re," Since his arrival,there in 1953, in his efforts to repair the an- decision of the Sacred Congre-, gation of the Holy Office was 'rul~s on what is 'acceptabl~ i!'l' "p.~lrIng the, cer,ttunes.,old Spar,t- nt:other Carl' has served as a cient buildings. ' , movies ,Mr. Heimrich asserted: IS~ c~~z:ch~s In the mountall~,: jack-of,.all-trades at several ,RecalJ!ng the many skeletons forwarded to the Cardinal by . ' " .' " '" " . , ' , wI1derl,1ess' of 'northwestern ' Maryknoli mil;sions "located, in : of Spanish colonial churches long 'Archbishop ,Egidio Vagnozzi, ,HElther It has'l?rok~n dowqor',,: Guatemala.' ," 'the Department of Huehueten- without priests or, prayer!;, the Apostolic Dele gat e to, the it i8not being applied. In any" " ango---,.:a remote area in the Broth¢r remarked: "I consider United States. The petition had event, 'the code seems 'to be run-,:,,:That's' 'the chal~enge facing Cuchum'atal,1es Mountains near i~ a privilege to try to restore been formally presented to ,the ning wild." , ' , " Brother' Carl PuIs; M,M:, ofCiri';'" 'the border of Mexico, inhabited these once majestic edifices so, Holy Office by His Eminence Afte~ Il).aking known his 'crit_' ; 'clbnati . presently' horrie on Ii '.by 300,00 people. Brot".er Carl "that the people can, again wor- Eugene Cardinal Tisserant, Seclcism" ,!l8M to, be the ,first time:" ' ,',," , ' ' ,ship their GO,d in a proper man- retary' of the Congregation for a spokesman for the Protestant" "~A n,er," the Oriental Church. cOmmission has made pUbllc'crit- • Msgr. Nicholas' ordination in . , At present there are 40 Maryicisin of the industry as a whQle" knoll priests and three Brothers the Syrian Orthodox Church was Mr. Heimrich' departed for New York. NOTRE ,DAME (NC)-Active, derstanding' and appreciation of staffing 26 parishes in the moun- accepted as valid by the Holy , tain province. The main problem Office, and no new ordination or There he was to confer with participation by the clmgregaQf the Holy .. See~s call for active facing the Church there as in, other rites will be necessary for Protestant officials on a course tion in the Mass is "not just a congregational participation in most sections of Latin America, him to exercise the powers of t~ of action. ' " gimmick," a Boston, psychia,trist the Mass. priesthood. , is an acute shortage of priests. In the meantime, the Daily 'declared at the 1959 North (/ , ,' Resisting Change Guatemala, as a result of eight Hollywood Vari~ty, a trade Arneric.an ~iturgical W~k at 'Dr. Caulfield 'deplored what decades of persecution and oppaper, said it learned some Prot-' the Umverslty of Notre Dame. he called "the cu'lt, of I'mmuta' , pression, has a greater shortage Up to 1840 at least 200 Cathestant officials are think~ng ,of' , bility" among those who resist of priests than any nation in , olic schools had been erected; ~rgingmoviegoverlj: to stay away He is Dr. Thomas S. Caulfield, change of any kind. As examples Central America, the Cincinnati more than half of which, were from, films for a set l~ngth 'long active as a layman in the' followers of this cult' he Brother pointed out. Less than- located west of the Alleghenies. of time il). protest against over- 'liturgical movement. He went' offered "those who defend with ,half the people ever have a In 1920 the Catholic school enemphas is 0' n sex and violence 'on to,' say that "participation is' , ,,' . ; such vigor the outside seat in' chance to receive, the sacraments rollment ha,d risen 'to 1,970,507.. 'an action of faith and devotion' , our pews,'" of Penance and Holy. Eucharist. a,bout 1.8,%' of the population. ' 'leadfng us to a greater awareness :of the infinite price offered Other attitudes that tend to . foX; our ' ' slow down, active participation, Redemp~ion.. 0" he ind~cated, are, the reluctance MANILA (NC)-Divine Word Renewed Devotion of' long~silent congregations to missionaries' here have cel-, Dialogue and sung Masses in, speaking or singing out loud in ebrated the golden jubilee of' which the people take an lfctive church; 'and their fear of being their arrival in the Philippines.' part 'al~o' ';lead us to a rene~ed considered, "holier - than - thou" Fifty years after their arrival, ' devotion to, all those actions, ,by o~~ers. , the Society of the Divine Word which, in the, mind of the, "Much of tl)e individual and numbers 2Hi priests, 27 Brothers Church, lead us all to eternal 'collective resistance to particiand 45 scholastics. life,", he said~' pation will give way," Dr. CaulToday all the parishes of the field predicted, "as its, use Abra independent prelature are Speaking Monday on "A Lay~ spreads and its value becomes run by Divine Word priests. Par- man's Reaction to Participation," more apparent." ishes in East and West Mindoro the Boston physician declared Islands are also in their ,hands. that clergy and laity must work In addition, they staff parishes in together ,to bring about an un": Cagayan, Pangasina'n and, Manila. Two bishops in the Philipp'ines Maintenance Supplies are members of the Society of SWEEPERS - SOAPS the Divine Word: Bishop Odilo DISINFECTANTS Etspueler of Abra and Bishop, Inc., William Duschak of Mindoro. FIRE EXTINGUISHERS Divine Word Fathers instruct 'FUNERAL SERVICE 583 seminarians in seminaries at' Vigan, Palo, 'Tagbilaran and 18196 PURCHASE ST. 549 COUNTY ST. Binmaley. They also conduct .' NEW BEDFORD two seminaries for their own NEW BEDFORD, MASS. society in Manila and Cebu. WY 3-3786

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Place Sunday Closing Question o,n B.allot FREEHOLD (NC)-Placement of the Sunday closing question on the ballot for the November eleciions ,has been 'assured in Monmouth County, N. J. More than 4,500 petitions requesting the referendum under terms of the state's recentlyenacted county-option Sunday closing law have been turned over to the county clerk. Only 2,500 petitions signed by registered voters are required under terms of the law. Although petition drives are being conducted in a number of other New Jersey counties, Monmouth is the first of the state's 21 counties where petitions hwe been turned in to the county clerk.

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12

THE ANCHOR~DiOGese of Fall River-Thurs, Sept. 3,.195~ . .

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Says Essay on· Cure' d'Ars Reveals Secret of Saint

.. Prayer With Sacrifice','

God Love You

By Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S. Kennedy . This year brings the centenary of the death of St. Je'a,n Marie Baptiste Vianney, the Cure of Ars, whom Pius. xi canonized in 1925 and, four years later, nanie~ patrop. of all parish priests in the world. The pres~nt Holy Father has made the centenary the . meals when he w~s a boy, the occasion.af an encyclicallet- countryside in which, and the . ter dealing with the cure sky under which, hi.; early years and the ways in which the..,.. were spent. . ' 'tate hl'm It lB' • e1ergy sh ou Id l f f i l . also the occasion of the publication of a book hich m a k e I :se of newl ." discovered ma~ terial concerning the saint and offers a stunning array of more than a huhdred photog rap h san d prints Entitled The Cure d'Ars' (Kenedy. $10). it has a text by Bishop.. Rene. Fourrey of Belley, and pictures, by Rene Perrin. After a preface by the Cardinal Archbishop of Lyons, Bishop Fourrey's lengthy essay is printed, foll~wed by the pictures, which, in turn, are followed by explanatory notes. , The separation of notes fro~ pictures makes for some inconvenience. No picture is identified on. the page where it appears; to learn what it·· is, one must. hunt up the note referring to it. At first this is rather awkward and annoying, but one soon gets used to it. . - Material iD- Notes . . , Another dISCO?Certmg feature 01. th~ volume IS t!'I~ fact t.hat Pl'actIcally all the bIOgraphIcal material is contained in' the ~t~s.T?us, the per~n unfa-~ m~b~r ~Ith .the ~etal1s o~ the. samt. s hf~ WIll have to be?lR by readmg what comes last III .the arrangement of the book-I.e.. the notes. . . These can be read straight . ' through, WIthout reference to

We see the semmary where he . h d'ff' If . .1 ICU lei In preparmg for th~ prIesthood, a~d the scene of hIS first years In the ministry, Ecully; where he had t.he inestimable privilege' of observing and be~ng guided by a tr~ly saintly pastor.. ~n less than three years he was aSliliglled his own parish, and. the camera enables ?S t? come ~long . the road to Ars JUst as he dId,' to observe the hamlet f~~m afar, then closer up, wondermg at the miracles of grace which we now know, apd he then seemed ~ sense, were' to be perfo~E;d. 1R that obscure andunprepossessmg place. . Extraordinary Career We see the modest, ramshackle presbytery, Jhe church, the confessional in Which he' was to spend an average' of-15. hour!! a day, the pulpit from which his marvelously. effective sermons were preached. Contemporary prints, quaint and .sometimes crude, supplement what the camera can tell. We follow the extraordinary care~r' down to the end-seeing the discipline which the cure .used on himself in order to do pe'nance for those who came to him in the confessional; the pot in which he cooked and kept the potatoes that were virtually his' entire diet· the threadbare cassock the mU~h mended shoeS the battered hat he wore. ' Dead a hundred Years he is, "but sorrieth~ of the ,~iving ~_ son' and even of the prodigious sai~t, becoin~s .quick and cOlor-' lUI thanks':to 'the graphic arts as h I- . 'd. ere emp oye ,

By Most Rtlv. Fulton J.Rheen·,· D.D~', I ' " ' We always knew, but never so profoundly as now, th'at the way to r~ceive f~vors is not merely to pray but to sacrifice. Have you 'been making novenas, perpetual and otherwise, and are still without response? You must 'do more .than beg. Make a novena of sacrifices, doing without a dessert or a package of 'cigarettes each day for niIie days and send the equivalent. to the Holy Father's' Missions. Also promise that when the favor is granted you will make a more substantial sacrifice: If your prayer is bes& for God's glory and your soul. your favor will be .grantecl.

encou~tered suc

. HOW LONG SINCE LAST CONFESSION? Most Unhappiness comes from our' sins: most hatred of religion comes Jrom an' uneasy conscience which· would destroy the .institutions that, uphold' morality and decency. Persecutors wrongly'fee1"that if they could destroy the Church they·couldthen sin with impunity and never again have a pawing conscience. If you have been away from' coirl'esSion fora long time. prepare " for it by sacrifice for the Holy Father's ·Missions. Once you empty yourself to help give the faith to others. Qur Dear Lord will fill up that emptiness with His grace 01. .repentance. .

.NFCCS AWARD: The an- , nual Archbishop .Noll Award of the National Federation of Catholic College Students will be preseIited to ~ Senator ·EugeneJ. McCarthy of Minnesota. "for otitstand;ing Catholic lay leadership." NC·Photo. .

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LET THE HOLY FATHER DECIDE Which kind of a giver do you prefer? One who gives' you $IOO•. but tells you. to buy w~tli it a vacuum cleaner to be.used iD the dining room only, or one who gives you $100 and. tells you to do with it whatever you please? The Holy Father. too. prefers the. 'second kind of giver; He knows best what to do with your .sacrifice: he alone can start a new Diocese in another part bf the world! Therefore, when you sacrifice for the Missions: Give to the .'Holy Father! Let him decide!

Th~t is what the Society for' tile Propagation of the Faith always does, because it is his own Mission Society. S!ilnd your sacrifices 'to the Society for .the Propagation of the Faith, 366 Fifth Avenue, New York 1; N. Y.

For CClnada GOD LOVE yOU to It. for $10 "For an the graces I've received in recent times" .... To 'R. LoS for $15 "On my vacation Koos;34, a mechanic, his wife trip I've bought souvenirs for friends '!Jack home. Here is • soaMaria, 26, and their' eight-yearvenir for friends I've never met" • " . To M. KJ.S. for $50 "TOday old son Attila be.came .the first - is the anniversary of Dl7 being wounded. I celebrate it in a thanksHungarilin' refugee family to -giVing way because it was the event that brought me back to the . Church". , .. to Mrs. M. for $5 "Out of' love. understanding; and . emigrate from Sweden' to 'Can~ little' savings I could manage" •.•• to "Little Girl" for $1 ..~ ada during' ihe International .. aDf,lle gave it to me for ice-.crealB." . Refuge~ Year. ;. BREMERHAVEN (NC) _ Pal

. The Kooses' saile~, from ~ere' for Mqntreal, 'em' the· SS Seven Beas. .' ...• tile pictures, for an introduction. Awareness 01 Goel .Catholic . Relief \ Services .-:-. ~ the cure, then consulted again . Bishop Fourrey's essay eom- . National Catholic Welfare Con-' bt conjunction with the se~eral -Pletes and crowns' the rest. ference, worldwide relief agencT . .pictures. Finally, one takes"up, "DI'awing on many of the books the text, which is more analytiwhich have been written about' of the American Catholic Bishops, arranged the details of eal than biographical. 'the cure, and also on previously this family's emigration. Their The notes are succinct and unused sources especially lettransportation was provided by meatYJ a model of. concision a~dters, the bishop 'takes up various well ordered sequence. The PIC-' . features .of the character and the Intergovernmental Committee for European Migration in tures are, in general, superb.. work of his subject, and, in each cooperation with the United Actually, only one ph~tograph_ instance, says something revealStates Escapee.. Program. of the cure exists, and t~lS shows ing and, often' enough definitive, him laid out in death. about the cure. But the camera has thoroughly The key to him and his story Investigated the setting in which would appear to. be his lively ROSARIES, MEDALS, . his extraordinary life was lived, awareness of God. It·is from this and strikingly recreates it for that all else flows, by this .that ' AND STATUES the person who never has seen, all 'else is ·shaped. "Wha't jo'y," never will see, Ars, Dardilly, and. he once said "to be aware.11I. In All ~rice Ranges the few other places assoCiated God.'" w.ith the saint. He was so, even from childParish Assignment hood; this it is which, for exam. .. • pie, explains his long hours' of 'Emily C. Perry. '!'hus, we are shown. hIS bll'th-. prayer- while he was still very 562 County St: New Bedford ~ce, th~ table at WhI~h he and 'young, and this j.s the bedrock of Dis famIly took .theIr frugal the holiness which he built anti Opp. St. Lawrence Church refined, day by day, year after ~e~r, throughout his life.,

. Nothing is treasured more thana gift of iove. GOD LOW YOU MEDAL is such a gift. For what 'can prove· your love more 'than your offering for the unknown' poor, homelessmil1i~s,.hun(try for physical and spiritual food. At your reQuesl: we, will sen~ you the medal of your.choiCe: $2 Sma~.silver medal; $3. Small silver me~al and chain; $4 Small 10k gold fi~led medal and ,chain; $5 Lar8'e /!ilver medal;' $10 Large 10k gold filled medal. Cut ,out this column, pin your sacrifice to it and mail it to the Most Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, National Director of The Society for the Propagation of the Faith, 366 Fifth Avenue, New York I, N. Y.. or your D'IOCESAN DIRECTOR REV. RAYMOND T. CONSIDINE, 368· North Main Street, Fall River. Mass.

KEATING'S

Name Father Rigney Recto-: of University .

CHICAGO (NC)-Father Hat-: old W. Rigney, S.V.D., has' heeD appointed rector of the' University of San Carlos. in the Philippines. The Chicago born priest, a former prisoner of the Chinege communists, received WQrd 111. the appointinent. in 'Liverpool, England. He was assigned there as a Society of the Divine Word provincial following his release from China in 1955. Father Rigney, now 58, was imprison~ by the Chfnese Reds in 1951, when he was rector of the Catholic University in Peking. The University of San Carlos, w:hich is in Cebu City on the island. Of Cebu, has 7,000 stUdents in six oolleges.

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Associate Editor ST. LOIJIS (NC)-F Ii the r Raymond F. Rustige had boon named associate editor of the St. ·Louis Review, archdiocesan newspaper, Archbishop, Joseph . E. Ritter of St. Louis haa

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. 'i't1E ANCHOR-Di~e5e of Fan Rive~-Th~rs,

Missionary Says Reds Entrenched In Latin America

there is strong evidence that the Reds are deeply, entrenched there, says Father James W. Mundell, Maryknoll missioner, who is back home in Washington on a brief furlough after six years in the missions of Chile. "There is a wide gap between the rich and the poor throughout most of Latin America and naturally, the communists are exaggerating social .and politiCal injustices perpetrated by the upper class in their Marxist appeal to the working class," Father Munde!! said.

AT K OF C CONVENTION: A.rchbishop Joseph A Rit- .

ter of· St. Louis and Supreme Knight Luke E. Had chat at . the States Dinner of the Knights of Columbus 77th annual . Supreme Council meeting at St.' Louis. Supreme Chaplain , Monsignor Leo M. Finn of Bridgeport is at the left. NC Ph.oto.

VATICAN CITY (NC) -:. The Holy See lial;! confirmed reports that it has named administrators to govern four dioceses in communist Hungary .:.- including the Archdiocese, of Esztergom,' the primatial See of His Eminence Jozsef Cardinal Mindszenty. The Holy See's acknowl61dgment of the appointments came about a .month after they were· made. The confirmation followed inquiries after the Hungarian Catholic news service, Magyar Kurir, announced the, appointments had received the official approval Gf the Hungarian government. The, appointments are believed ro be .the first of their

Priest$' Retreat Continued from Page One coming to give and those ~oming, to receive, all have the right io claim the 'priest's time and efforts on their behalf. These two weeks of September are different. During each, week approximately 85 priests. of the Diocese, including the Bishop and the Auxiliary Bishop, will be at Cathedral Camp in Lakeville. They are away from Diocesan and parochial assignments and problems. They' are out of the reach of telephones and door bells. They are spending the time in prayer and. meditation and silence, bolstering up their own spiritual powers that they may better aid those whom they serve the'rest of the year. Compare' Notes The priests' retreat extends from Monqay night to Saturday morning. The retreat master is a priest from a religious order or another diocese-a priest who gives, several talks a day·"on matters spiritual to all. the retreatants. This year he lis Rev. William A. Robbins,an Oblate of Mary Immaculate. There are periods of silence-when each Father withdraws into his own souL. with' God. There are periods of prayer, when all the priests together recite parts, of the Di:vine Office, the Church's official prayer book, composed of psalms and scripture readings and prayers appropriate to every mood and need. There are also periods of recreation, when priests from the Attleboros renew acquaintance with their seldom-seen Cape Cod brothers. There are softball games, when the Fathers take on the Seminarians who care for the camp, and show them that the "old pros" have something to offer along athletic lines. The Fathers compare notes on the best way to orgimize groups, to foster vocations, to increase interest in things religiousieven to raise money! Retreat is so valuable a time that the Fathers look forward to" it eagerly. It is so important that Church Law makes provi-. .sion for ',the priest's making.• retreat. And as each priest cele,brates morning Mass on one. of the more .than 25 portable altars set up for the purpose, he thanks God for this, opportunity to strengthen himself to return to his assignment better able te serve those for whom he waa ordained.

Social Work Experts To Convene in Italy GENOA (NC) - An international meeting of specialists in social services will be held' here· from Sept. 13 ,to 22 under the sponsorship of the International Catholic Union of Social' Services. His Eminence Giuseppe Cardinal Siri, Archhishop of Genoa,' , , will preside at the opening meeting, which is expected to be attended by, representatives from several nations. Professor Claire Rousseaa of the University of Montreal will be in charge of the meeting. He will be assisted by two experts from the United Nations. The Catholic union is composed of II professional groups and ao ....

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Vatican Appoints Four Diocesan Administrators in Red Hungary

WASHINGTON (NC)-Despite the eurrent trend to underplay the threat of eommunism in Latin America,

cia! aervice achool&.

Sept. 3, 1959

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kind since shortly after the 12ftsuccessful Hungarian revolutioa in the fall of 1956. Thus they are the first'since the publication laA Spring of the Hungarian Red regime's decree requiring ,government approval for ,appointment. and transfers of all' bishops and priests. The decree-sa id to have beea in' force for nearly two' years before it was published-stated that when a bishop's post'is left vacant for 90 days, or a priest'. for 60 days, ~he government h80l the right to. fill the'vacancy.: The Vatican confirmed the Magyar Kurir ,report 'OIl the names of the four administrators. '

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese

of Fait River-Thurs,

Sept.

3,'195'

Laymen to Staff Mission School

Advises DrasticTreatment, Of 'Husband's'Miserliness .

NEW ORLEANS (NC)-Two laymen will leave sOon to spend two years 'as volunteer lay missioners with the Maryknon ~ Fathers in Yucatan, Mexico, in response to an appeal in an issue of the Catholic Action of the South, New Orleans archdioeesaa newspaper. The two are Richard Laiche, 22, a native of Amant, La., and Gerald Endsley Darring, 'also 2Z, '8 resident of New Orleims. The men w~re selected' from. seven who responded to a Catholic Action of the South article reporting that the Maryknoll missioners in Yucatan' needed ,two men to teach English and conduct an athletic program in a high 'school.' The' story' in the' Catholic newspaper was written by Father Elmo Romagosa of the local unit of the iSociety for the Propagatio~ of the Faith.

By Father J~hn 'LT~omas. SJ. Ass~tant

Professor of Sociology Saint 'Louis University .

How do Y9U live witlia miser! We've been married ~ix years and have two children. My husband handles all the money and does all the shopping; He ~fuses to give me any 'money for I]lyself and if I absoUitely need to have some he begrudges it to me. IIi case ask for mOI.ley, be says you're of emergencies I have to',bor,,- '. aiways nagging. " .. row from the neighbors. We' As a result;' you, fin,d you've hayen't been out togeth~r.in, ,grl?wnbiHer,:for: though you

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almost a', year, and -l can't 'go "try to' resign y,ourself; the con· aoy place becauSe I have no' stant embarrasSment and humilmoney, yet h~ , iation :of being withoGt"money earns a v e r.y' even for emergencies has' b~ good salary and come more than you can~ar. s,ave s a great · •. ·U~ges SholVdo~' . deal':'. . / Eileen,' .it )1l:!emS to' me .you'd The remark.better have a showdown. This a b1 ~ t h i n g should have ,been done at the abou't .a virtue very beginning' before the presiii Ulat you only ,ent pattern had shaped up, and have' to shift it there was a better chance to' a li~tle in one ' show your partner that he hadALBUQUERQUE (NC)-Some' dire~tion or a.t;l. married a person, that is, a part. OUSTED FROM NORTH VIETNAM: With the expul- 1,500 young men and women, other and you . ner, not a $ervant or a minor. have a vice, In At any rate, you should have sion of~Columban Father Terence O'priscoll, left, secretary representing 700 colleges and t h' e practical it out with him at once. Insist to. Archbishop John DQoley, S.S~C., right, Apostolic Dele- universities, are attending the 45th annual convention of the order, there may be very'little that if you are to run the home, real difference in the way a you .must have a certain amount , ,gate in Hanoi, the Holy ~ee's last listening-post in a com- 'National Newman Club Federationat th,e University' of New careful saver and 'a miser act, each, week or month to cover ~unist-controlled country has been closed. NC Photo, , '. Mexico here. -y~t."one is a virtuoqs man and your own needs and thOse ot" the the other is not. A generous man family. . spends almost as much money You are partners in a cominon · as a spendthrift, yet one has a , -enterprise, and there's nOjustisense of responsibility and the . fication in ·treating yoU, 'an . LOUVAIN (NC)-~Y'diH~~ other does not. It almo~tcollles' irresponsible child, Even this ences between theology and', sci"down tf? the old saying, "IHs~'L;,soiution is far from idea1;'<sirice ... the equivalent-Is ,the '~hymn'" sunc b, the people' 01 ChelD-, what·,you do, if; the'way that husband and wife should' work, ence are actually due to errorS 'kaIai,(Tricbur) as ,&hey ,push their way througb the dense forcommitted by the representatives you do it." ,out· the entire family :'b~dget . 's t f h '. ':est; on &he wa, to the parish Cburch. of 'the two' fields, a'ccording to' ('What' does this have .-,to· do together, Pooling their mutual ~'b~'J.I~ ,Th,i;s Is a new vi~lage, ~hich baa' conclusions reached at the .13th with your prot'em? Well, Eileen, knowledge and experience for ~ .9 .. ' . SPJ.:UIl& up lJl the depths 01 the for,genera. assembly of PaX RoI think yoJ,i'll find it. makes it , best results.' Under Ule circum"" ~.' , .~f lJl recent years. The eniire viI~. 0 ""i!ige Is Catholic bat the, have ,~ 'm'!ch more difficult to h~ndle.' stances, however, an.' ilIi~~anee mana, .an international confater:ati.onrofn'ational " ~iv~rsitT ¢'" ="been able to build a parish Charela Your husband argues that. he's will be a start. Catholic federations which for+. . .fA· \lecause' .the, were too bUll' tryinc on:iy saving for your and the Only Wat Catholic student opinioD. ; + to keep alive and S!lfe from &he wild· chi.ldren's future-and this' is Don't n'ag or argue with 'him:- . mulates on 'important questions. . ' animals which surround them oIi aU true., ' tell him! What if he refuses! , Talks by leading educatol'll sides. This month Uie, manaced .. He' points out that he spends Take you"r case to yoUr pastor. . stressed the relationship of sciclear enough land and the, have be.very, little. on himself. Again you What"if your husband refuses, ence and' theology at an- assemDr HtJ, PiI/&ri Missktt All cun &0 "ather materials. The' .... must, admit it's true. He mainto cooperate? Well, Eileen, bly here. and led to resolutiona .fw tbt 0rimJ.J ~ reaeb to begin to erect. ,their 0 . . tains·. it's good' to have some rather than to continue to grow , Church. 'Can 'OU help Utem' TIle that the two fields are not ia savings to fall back on in case embittered, it, seems to me 'you conflict, and that there must' be oos& will be $4,090. Perhaps you would like t. offer &his ChUl'c11 of misfortune or sickness. Surely would do well to get an apar~ a better understanding betWeeD. u' a blnhda~ preseetto Oar Laeb (feast Septem~ 8). you can't deny~that! ment, hire a baby sitter or find ' the two--:-areas. Scientists at the HAVE rOU ·rHOUGHT ,OF YOURSELF RECENTLY! OUR He 'lells .you that many couples a day-care home for your chil-.·' meeting 'also pledged that they SUSPENSE PLAN' FOR GREGORIAN MASSES WILL HELP neediessly multiply their family dren, and go back to teaching. will attempt to secure from noo- YOU WHEN YOU CAN NOT AND OTHERS MAY NOT PRAY probl~ms by spending beyond You won't be 'a good mother Catholic scientists their goodwin .FOR YOUR ETERNAL HAPPINESSI ASK ABOUT IT. their incomes - and he's probif you become bitter or must toward the coming ecumeitical ably correct. constantly nag and argue. To, council called by Pope John. LONEL~ SACRIFICE AND QUIET PRAYER Is a cGOd cleo Has Sound Answers return to teaching while remainIIeription'of Ute life ofa misslon~ pries&. JAMES and ABRA. h to h ing with him will do your dis-, HAM know this full 'weD .because . I n fact, e ~ems ave a position no good and will still the, bave lived among missionaries aU sound answer to most of your, deprive your children of needed By Uteir .lives. Tbe, have seen them in aoobjections, As I pointed. out, the .:.: care. \ As early' as 1~40 French Cap&ion ... they know' their loneliness and Of course this is' drastic . uchins laboring 'among the · margin between the mIser and hardship. Tbe, wish to follow them be~h~ c~eful saver can ~ ~~,rr?w action! But, generally it's the II1dians o! Maine estabUsbEld cause they feel Christ Is cailing' them to 'bjl missionaries among their t;)WD ,PeOple. U1Me~" d'ff' lt to'd I only way to bring'a man like a. school' for their clulrgea. lsers are so 1 IC.U " i t;a .' your husband to his senses. CardinaL Richelieu took particThe, are read" to make the ,aorifice with because .theypracbce what . Marriage.is meant to be a mutu- , ular' interest in this vEmtu.r¢. ••• there is 'one thing'lackiiii. Each bo, ,they p~eac~. T~ey be~ome so. ally sanctifying perfecting proe- transferring certain propertY mUllt have a sponsor wbo will PQ $100 utterly Irksome l~ marrIage ~' ess. When it c~ases ,to promote rights to the Capuchins to proa year for n.ecessar, expenses durinc the sU year period 01 lie... cause they ,try ~o. force ot~ers to . this, the couple~must change vide a permanent endow1neDt inary training. Will you help'" of th' n'" for the undertaking. .accept their distorted, th . view ~ t' . elr ways or co ha'b'ta.:l....,n 10.-. LABOR DAY MEANS -T-H-E-,E-N-D--,-O-F-T-HE SUMMER AND THB money and share ell' s lOU 'ts', t'f' 't'" ' way of life. " ' ,. ' I JUs 1 lca IOn. BEGINNING OF SERIOUS PROBLEMS FOR MONSIGNOR 100 _ RYAN , .. YOU CAN HELP HIM BY SENDING A REFUGU: , There is a narrowness and ' 11Io.. CHILD TO SCHOOL FORA TERM.. $25 WILL DO IT. meanness about a miser' that . ~t 0 IC ...... colors his whole personality. TRENTON (NC) - A 15-:'m~ NONI TOO SMAU. " SISTEK ODKTI'B and SISTER CELESTINE wish to JOin tbe Because he considers money,.,or, ute weekly radio newscast called ranks of the heroie women who serve &he poor and outcast ia the mere Saving of money, ,as .; ."The Monitor of the Air," hU &h'e boly cit, of' Jerusalem. Each girl has left an end in itSelf rather than a been started here by the Moniher, home. frlencls and famU, and now. la' means, he subordinates all other ,,' tor; newspaper of' the Trenton . : rea~, ,to, foDow the CIaO of Chris&. There .. considerations to it; with the re-" diocese. The program is being PRINTERS' but one' ttiinC' lacking:'-' sponsor whO will suit that his lifet>ecomes narro~ carried by Radio .Station WTTM. be able top., ber necessaryexpensea of $lM Mal. Olflee aDd PIMt and dehumanized. ' ,a. yeardllrlnc &he, two. ,ear, period 01 nodo In this connection' it is well to .. .&iate tralnlnc. Perbaps ,.. an' &he answ... LOWELL. MASs. BEFORE YOU' note that the root of all sin is ~to a n~'. pr8)'er;~ .,' TelepboBe Lowell to use as an' end in itself what 'BUY - Tiy~\ \. SEASONS COMB AND. G01JUT A CHILD'S APPETITE GOES was meant to be only a means. . . a,..68IS . . . GI. 'f-UII. ON FOREVER ... REFUGEE ,CHlLDRE;N ARE NO EXCEPTION. This applies to money as well $10 WILL' STILL FEED A REFUGEE FAMILY FOR A WEEK as to power., pleasure, or .sex. , ' , (CHILDREN INCLUDED,. . AftIIIUor ..... Might,- Sick Man " .' .. 4' NEW SEASON .• ~ 'A FRESD START ••• be~'yoa !teo BOSTON'. How can you cope with this OLDSMOBILE eome &00 involved lit, theproblclllS of &be FaD perhapS , _ OCEANPORT, It. J. situation? You say' i~ seems to - Ilenaulf ;. Peugeot • Sirnca mfkht cive some &bought &e the' MISSION CLUBS. The duea are be getting worse. You've thought PAWTUCKET, It L, $1 • month and a prayer a da, for' the particular work 01 tbe/ ,61 ,Middle. Stree,t, Fiumaveo about going. back to teaching Club. You can Joill for your m&entlollor ia memori of • in order to earn. some money for loved one. yourself, but you feel you just MARY'S BANK ••. for " ... PALACE or GOLD ••• III' can't bring yourself' to neglect' suppon of, novltles. ; '. &he agin&'. . . ORPHAN'S BREAD, •.•.• , . BASILIANS ••• for _ .... your children. , '. . '. .' Now the' fact that your hus:..' Famous Reading HARD COAL abandoned chlldreJl. .CDRYSOSTOMS ••• for lie. . . MONICA GUILD. ~. to, faPo ,tnarilUlll, band would not object to, this . NEW ENGLANQ' COKE ~ nisb chapels.i', :' .' , :.. ' . clearly 'indicates the extent of DADSON OIL BURNERS ,', DAMIEN LEPBit F~D"••• .0 ease &he .... ~. a,e ~u&.,. his miserliness. He's earning a very good salary and is saving 24-Hour Oil Burner Service ,' . , :mVETO.'yVIN THE WORLD FOR CHRIS'Ill .money; whatpossiblejusfificaCharcClm, Briq~ets tion can be found under these circumstances' for allowhig you Bag Coal .:.'-Charcoat to neglect your obiigations as a' . FRANCIS CARDINAl SPELLMAN, President, ' ! mother and retupi to teaching? . Mag,. PeterP. Tuohy. Nat'l,~'!I: ' . We can only conclude he;s, a . . Send all _nlcatlon. tor . mighty sick man!' • CATHOlIC. NEAR' EAST WELFARE ASSoaAnON' . ~ ,,-;:SUc~c550r5'to~DAVID DUFF You say he nlfuses to di;cusS . ' 480lexingJon Ave. Cit ~ New"(~17, N,_ Y: the matter with you and accuses , NewBedfonl 640 Pleasant Street Tel.WY,6-8271, you of bcing selfish. When YOI1

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,mE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs, Sept. 3, 1959

Father Robbins to ·Direct Priests' Annual Retreat

15

Ordinary Dedica.tes Seminary GAR~

(NC) - The Capuchin Seminary ,of St. Mary near Schererville, a Gary suburb; was dedicated solemnly by Bishop Andrew G. Grutka of Gary who also offered a Solemn Pontifical Mass of thanksgiving at which Father Gerald Walker, O.F.M. Cap., preached the sermon. The institution is one· of the newest and largest Capuchin

Rev. William A. Robbins, O.M.I., of the Oblates of Mary Immaculate Mission Band in Newburgh, N.,Y., will be retreat master for the annual retreat to be held for priests of the Diocese at Cathedral, Camp, Sept. 7-12 and 14-19. Father Robbins, a native of V. Resendes, Rev. Thomas F. Buffalo was ordained i,n Walsh. ' , 1922. Following ordination, Rev. Raymond T. Considine, he served on the Oblate Mis- Rev. James E. Gleason, Rev.

Joseph L. Cabral, Rev. Francis sion Band and then did parochial work. He has held pastor- A. McCarthy, Rev. Leo J. Duart. Rev. , John J. Griffin, Rev. ates in St. Benedict's Parish, John J. Hayes, Rev. James E. Seattle and Holy Angels' Parish, McMahon, 'Rev. Arthur G. ConBuffalo. His next assignment sidine, Rev. Bernard H. Unswas Provincial of the Eastern worth. American Province of the Oblate Fathers. Rev. Gerard J. Chabot, Rev. Arthur G. Dupuis, Rev. John J. Presently assigned to Our GalVin, Rev. John T. Higgins, Lady of Hope Seminary, NewRev. Laureano C. dos Reis. burgh, Father Robbins has speeinalized in retreats for priests, Rev. George Saad, Rev. Arsisters and laymen. thur W. Tansey, Rev. Ambrose First week retreatants are ae E. Bowen, Rev. John E. Boyd, follows: . Rev. Thomas F. Daley. Rev. Daniel E. Carey, Rev. Most Rev. Ja::tes L. Connolly, Edwin J. Loew, Rev. iLeo T. D.D.; Rt. Rev. Alfred J; Bonneau, Sullivan, Rev. Ernesto R. Rev. Augusto L. Furtado, Rev. Borges, Rev. 'Manuel M. ResenFelix S. Childfl, Rt. Rev. John des. A. Silvia. Rev. Daniel F. Shalloo, Re:v. EXILED: Bishop Rembert Rev. Patrick H. Hurley, Rev. C. Kowalski, O.F.M., exiled Thomas H. Taylor, Rev. Edward 'Ernest R. Bessette, Rev. Herve Jalbert, Rev. William A. Galvin, L. O'Brien, Rev. Joseph A. from his Diocese of' WuRev. John J. Murphy. Cournoyer, Rev. Eugene Dion. chang, China, in 1953, is Rev. Donald E. Belanger, R€v. Rev. Joseph Eid, Rev. John John J. Delany, Rev. Stephen J. . shown at prayer at St. Mich~. Casey," Rev. Lorenzo H. Downey, Rev. Joseph A. Marael's Indian School,' Ariz., Morais, Rev. David A. O'Brien, tineau; Rev. James F. Kenney. Rev. Joseph R. Pannoni. where' he is spending the Rev. James V. Mendes, Rev. Rev. George E; Sullivan, Rev. Summer. NC Photo. . William F. Morris, Rev. Luis G. Ubalde J. Deneault, Rev. Christopher L. Broderick, Rev. Joao 'Mimdonca, Rev. Daniel A. Gamache, Rev. John F. Hogan. Rev. James A: McCarthy, Rev. ""'1 Raymond W., McCarthy', Re~. l"'lIIIIU Joh ll F. Denehy, Rev. FrancIs' ST. LOUIS (NC), _ ,Nudist ' A. Coady, Rev. Arthur· C. Le,- - magazines are' obscene within vesque. th . f M' ' . t t:->C - . Rev. James F. McCarthy, Rev. e meanmg o. ISSOU~I s a u~s, a representative of Sunshme t Rev B er trand R . Ch a b 0 , . Ed ' d H Ith" t d . h' be' ward C. Duffy, Rev. Joseph 1.. an ea was 01 w. ~D' , Powers, Rev. Roger P. Poirier. asked ~ county pro~ecutmg at- . Rev. Rene G. Gauthier, Rev. ~rney if t~e m~gazme could be . 1 L . F reI·ta s, R ev. F rancls . CIrculated 10 thIS .stat~. D anle B. Connors, Rev. JohnQ> H. Jasper Vettori, chief 'assistant , Hackett, Rev. Cornelius .J. prosecuting attorney, disclosed O'Neill. that the nudist magazine repreRev. Laurenco M. Avila, Rev. sentative called on him for 00- . William F. O'Connell,' Rev. vice. He referred the repre-' Justin J. Quinn, Rev. John J. sentative to a 1955 Missouri Regan, Rev. Casimir S. KwiatState Supreme Court case which' kowski. put the ban on nudist publica- , Rev. 'James W. Clark, Rev. tions. Paul B. Connolly, Rev. Paul F. Meanwhile a report from Chi- . McCarrick, Reo. John P. Cronin, eago said that a court had ruled Rev. Patrick J. O'Neill. "Sunshine and Health" was ob. Rev,. Clement E. Dufour, Rev. scene and found three dealers' , Edward J. Sha:'pe, Rev. Charles guilty of exhibiting obscene, B. Poirier, Rev. Luiz A. Cardozo. FATHER ROBBINS, O.M.L matter for sale. Municipal Court .Judge Daniel J. McNamara Jr•. set Sept. 11 for sentencing of the dealers, the report said. Police Continued from Page One Lt. Edward M. O'Malley, who Mary's, St. Stephen's, Holy Ghost andSt. Theresa of the arrested the dealers last February, told the court that the three _ Child Jesus.. <!J were "devoted neither to BU~. North Attleboro-St. Mary's, Sacred Heart. shine ,nor health."

seminaries in the world and the ' dedication occurred during the 750th anniversary of the fouRQ. ing of the Franciscan order. During their four years at the seminary, the major work of Ute students will be the study oi humanities and philosoph;,. Some 70 friars arrived at Sche.. erville last June and reside .. the new building.

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Mansfield-St. Mary's. Priest Editor North Easton-Immaculate Conception. Norton-St. Mary's. ' , SPOKANE (NC) - Father .John P. DO,nnelly h'a's been' Seekonk~Our Lady of Mount Carmel. named. editor of the Inland In addition to the Most Reverend Bishop, other Register, newspaper of the Spo- . speakers at last night's meeting inciuded Rt. Rev. John J .. kane diocese, it has been an- . Shay, pastor of St. John the Evangelist Church, Attleboro, nounced here. He succeeds' who is Dean of Upper Bristol County; Rt. Rev. Hugh A. Father Terence Tully,' who as editor of the paper for " Gallagher, pastor of St. James Church, in· New Bedford, eerved 17 years. . who is Dean of Lower Bristol County, and'Rt. Rev. John. A: Silvia, pastor of St. John the Baptist Church in New ....- -...... Bedford. JOHN E. COX CO~ Msgr. Gallagher served as chairman of the drive, Inc. which was conducted in the Greater New Bedford area for Fabricators of funds which were used to build Bishop Stang High School· in North Dartmouth. Bishop Stang High, the first of the Structural Steel five contemplated regional high schools, will open, 'and next Wednesday with a Fr.eshman class enrollment of, Miscellan~~us',~ron approximately 240.

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Pilgrims Escort' Can()ns to Abbey LONDON (NC) - About 1,000 pilgrims walked in procession through picturesque rural lanes, escorting a dozen White Canons back for the first tim~ in more than 400 yean to their old abbey at Titchfield, Hampshire. ,On the lawns of the rooflessruin, standing beside the white gravel bed marking the site of the high altar, the white-robed Canons Regular of Premontre chanted once again Vespers. Later, the Premonstratensians and pilgrims moved to the dereJiet cloisters where benea~h an enshrined statue of Our Lady, tbe Bosa17 .... ~ited aDd a

speccial prayer offered for Queen, Elizabeth, about to become a mother for the third time. It was on the same day, the Feast of Assumption in the year 1232, that the canons, then one of the biggest orders in Engla'nd, took over the abbey. It was the last of 33 they built in this country and it remained in their possession until they were expelled 4-24 years ago. '

Religious Psychology Rev. Dr. Shields, of the Catho1ie University, was the first to apply psychological principlea ill the .teaching of religion.

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16

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-T~urs, Sept. 3, 1.959

Labor'Day Statement of National Catholic Welfare Conference

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Pope John XXIII, whose transGospel, lived by all even with and workers throw themselV'ell parent goodness' and openpersonal sacrifice. - on the mercy of God in a spirit hearted simplicity have so These characteristically hopeof humble prayer. quickly won for him the admir- ful and encouraging words of In summary, the advice which ation and affectionate esteem of Pope: John XXIII, which, though we would give to labor and manthe greater part of mankind, has addressed to a particul~ Euroagement as they jointly observe already found time, despite his' pean aUdience, were in reality this national holiday is ver, extraordinarily 'heavy schedule me'ant to apply ~o all the worksimple. In the· words of Pope of official duties and appointers <V' the world and to employJohn XXIII, we would encour- ments, to deliver at least two ers and management representaage them "to be ·faithful to major addresses on 'the subject .tives as well;'provide us with an God's' law, in the constant fulof labor. . appropriate int:'oduction, to this fillment of His holy will" and The second of these two talks annual Statement on the mean"to be always apostles of gOodwas the more significant, if ing,of our own distinctively ness, of gla~ss, and of good only because of its greater length American Labor Day. will. . . ." and solemnity. It was' a very We use the word "appropriate;' This may not seem to be very fatherly message of encourage- here advisedly, for if there, is one "practical" advice at a time 'ment and, like all.of the Holy thing that is sadly lacking al1"d when labor and management are Father's sermons and, public badly needed at tQe present time confronted with so many diffistatements, profoundly optiin the field of labor-management cult problems of a controversial mistic in'tone. , relations in the United States, it nature. . Its purpose was not to rebuke ~ is that note of cheerful Christian Prayer First Dut,. or chastise the wayward few, but optimism which sO markedly But more things are wrought rather to congratulate the faithcharacterized the Holy Father's by prayer than this world ful majority of workers on their, first major address on the subdreams of. Prayer alone, of devotion to duty and to the cause ject of labor. course, will not and should not of social justice and to assure Power of Truth be expected to provide us with them of the Holy Father's For lack of such Christian, a workable solution to all of our warmly sympathetic interest -in optimism-solidly based on co'npractical problems in the tield their personal welfare, material fidence in the grace of God and of labor-management relations, as well as spiritual. manifesting' itself in genuine rebut surely it is our first and most All Deal;' to Pope spect for the dignity and sincercompelling duty anQ. our only This address was delivered to ity of our fellowmen-we are in certain guarantee of success in a large' gathering of -workers danger, it would seem, of becom•the fulfillment of all our other who ha'd come to Rome on May ing cynical about'the future of obligations. 1 of this year to observe the- labor-management relations in "Seek ye first the Kingdom of Feast 'of St. Joseph the Worker, this country. God and His Justice," Our Lord which coincides on the ContiThat is to say, tliere has reWILL LABOR IN AFRICA: Father Peter J. Carter, has instruc;}ed us, "and nent with the traditional Eurocently been' Sl:' much bickering of .Buffalo, poiJ:l,ts to a map of ~frica, where he hopes to be Himself all these things shall be ad~ed pean Labor Day. and, controversy in the field of, a missionary in the near future. The diocesan priest, a unto you." . "In you," His Holiness said, 'collective b:ugaining, and we "'we see all the working"people - have become so preoccupied convert and a Negro, who took instructions from a of the world.... We greet them with the seamy side of labor: man Club chaplain at the University .of Michigan in 1939, ,all with fatherly, enthusiasm, management relations that we hasnow joined the White Fathers. NC Photo. ' Continued from Page One whether, they accomplish their' are beginning to question or . spiritual activity using the taldoubt' "the ,power proper to more and' more responsibility- our principal labor-management need for our Catholic leaders to problems at the pr~sent time are stand up and be counted in favor en~ of intelligeri~ and, of cultruth" and to sneer at the many ultimately too much responsibilof the spiritual'";lnd social ideaw basically, motal problems. ture; whether' they use the evidences of solid goodness apd ity from the point of view of strength of their arms in the integrity yvhich are all around sound social ethics-for the or'We are, confronted today with of life more than the merely tem· poral and material. ' service of society; workers in the us. _ derly and successful operation of at lea'st a minor crisis in the field "The peace' of the world and fields and in the mines, in indusIn more practical terms, this our national economy. of iildustrial relations, as witthe true prosperity of our nation try and in' crafts, in the factories means that labor and manageThis would be a calamity not ness, for example, the, cynical depends on this more than most and in laboratories;, those who merit, having become' unduly only for labor and management, hardening of attitudes between people ,know or suspect." work in the home and in shops, suspicious and distrustful of one but for all the people of the -labor and management to which ,Newspaper Column" -or rice plantations or in offices. another's motives, - are being United States, whose economic , a number of, expert observera All are equally dear to Our _-stro!lgly tempted to rely on - welfare and- political freedom so He conducted labor courses at have recently called attention. , heart." 'economic force and political largely depend' on the successful , ' <-"This crisis, in our opinion, win Catholic University prior to his "Do not -fear, then, beloved pressure and- on public relations' _ functioning of our industrial renot yield to purely technical appointment as director of the IIOns- and daughters," His Holi- stratagems l!nd propaganda gim-, lations system in an atmosphere social action department. He is solutions. Technical· improveness counselled his listeners. micks as a substitute for goodof voluntary labor-management ments in the art of collective editor of a monthly bulletin, "With· the power proper to faith collective bargaining and cooperation. bargaining and similar improve-' "Social Action Notes for Priests'" and author of a weekly column truth," h,e continued, "go out to labor management' cooperation. Higher Moral Plane ments in the field of labor legisaU wherever there are intelliGovernment Intervention We do not wish to exaggerate lation are admittedly desirable which appears in The Anchor., gence to be enlightened, wills ,to If any substantial number of the danger of our becoming cyni"The Yardstick." and possibly even necessary. Msgr. Higgins holds memberbe strengthimed, energies to be employers and labor leaders suc- , calor: overly .pessimistic: Whi~e Moral Responsibilit,. ship in many national organizechanneled- toward good; whercumb to this temptation and be-' the f danger, lD our oplDron, 18 They will accomplish very ,tions including the National ever there are tears to be dried, come cynical or 'disillusioned, more real than imaginarr, it is little, Qowever, unless· the reSafety CoUncil, the Catholic A!J.. uncertainties to be overcome, they will live to rue the day. being counteracted, to s~me exsociation for International Peace solitudes to be enlivened. Cynicism in any field of human _ tent at least by a groWlDg ,ten- spimsible leaders of labor and management at every le~el of and the National Catholic Social Practice of Holy Gospel relations is a' negative and de-' dency on the part of many reauthority are· convinced that Action Conference. "With gentleness, meekness structive force. . sponsible labor leaders and emHe is a member of the pub. . and patience approach the dis1£ permitted to go unchecked ployers -to put the practice of they have a moral responsibility review board of the United Autant brothers who probably con- iri the crucial area of industrial collective bargaining on a higher to deal with one another sincerely and generously in a spirit tomobile Workers and the clergy ceal a wounded heart behind relatons it' will cancel out much moral plane and, more sp_ecifieof mutual respect'· for one anadvisory panel to Americaa tqeir negation, which is in need of the ~rogress which'has been ally, to recognize that· it must other's rights and, equally im- . Motors Corporation. of love and of understanding. made in recent years and will - somehow or other be made to deep sense of Make them understand that it is aimost certainly compel the govserve the public interest more <portant, with Day's Program ,their joint responsibility for not in hate that. the solution of ernment under any political ad-' effectively., In addition to Msgr. Higgins, safeguarding and promoting the their jilroblems is to be found, but ministration, ,to discipline labor Obviously'there is still a great representatives of Protestant and in the voluntary, coherent and and management 'more severely deal of room for improvement in public interest. Jewis observances of Labor In other words, the only adeDay and Very Rev; Arthur W. decisive practice of the Holy than ever before and to assume this regard. Nevertheless we quate solution to the crisis curfully agree with the authors of Tansey, rector of the Cathedral rently confronting us in the a recent scholarly 'treatise on and Diocesan director of social collective bargaining when they field of laoor-management relaaction, will speak at the break..tions is a profound renewal Of fast. Continued from Page One The Social Action Department say that "within the house of Union members throughout 'labor leaders succumb to this pointed out that its 1959 state- . -labor and the management com- , moral and spiritual . values, the Diocese are invited to ai.munity an increasing number of which, of course, will never temptation and' become cynical ment was in contrast with those come to pass unless employers tend the Mass. or disillusioned, they will live . of preceding years in being "a influential leaders are beginning to ask the important moral ques- to rue the' day." purely spiritual message," rather The statement predicted that than a comment oIl- some specific .tions" and that "this is at least the first step towar~ -the formu'a continuing crisis in labor-manproble~. \ agement relations would cause The department said this was lation of the right answers." . This annual Labor Day Statethe government "to discipline done "deliberately" in order to BUFFA,LO (NC)- Employees disputes. Strikes, slowdowns ~ ment has only one purpose and labor and management more - "underline our conviction that of Our Lady of Victory Hospital work stoppages are ruled out by a very limited one at thatseverely than ever before." when all is said and done ou; ' in nearby Lackawanna have the contract. namely, ,to encourage labor and And excessive government in- principal labor - manage~ent The agreement provides a 40voted 156 to 30 to approve a management to continue to foltervention in this, ,field, the problems at the present time are one-year union contract, thought hour week with minimum pay of low the latter course of action in statement added, would result in basically moral problems. 'to be the first in New York state $1 an hour, except ~or student spite of many provocations to , i~ .a.ssuming "too m?ch resp~nThe,current crisis;-the departthe contra'ry and to remind between a private hospital and nurses. It also calls for a pay insrbllIty from the pornt of view ment declared "will not yield crease of 10 cents an hour retroits npn-professional workers. of. sound social ethics." to ,purely technical solutions." them, in the words of the Holy , active to Aug. 1 of this year and The contract has been negotiFather, that it is their "vocation ~This would be a calamity not The only "adequate solution," it to help one another and to ated by officials, hospital and anot~er '10 cents an hour on the only for labor and management, said, is "a profound renewal of serve one another in charity, members of AFL-CIO Hospital same date next year. but for all the people of U~e moral a Ii d spiritual values, and Nursing Home Organizing Addltio_1 BenefHll with patience ..• following the Uni~ed'States," the Social Action which, of course, will never example of our Saviour." Committee, representing. three Employees covered by the c0nDepartment said. come to pass unless employers unions who share membership tract Will receive extra pay for Spiritual Message On the positive side, the deand workers throw themselves In previous years our Labor of the hospital's· 258 emplo~ working on New Year'. Day. 'partment declared, there is, "a on the mercy of God in a spirit Day Stateme~ts have been conEaster Sunday, Memorial Da,., Par Inoreases growing tendency on the part of, of humble. prayer." cerned with specific arid rather Independence Day, Thanksgiving Our 'Lidy of Victory Hospital many responsible labor leaders, "In summary," the statement controversial problems in the arid Christmas. is the first .of 12 private' medical .and employers to put, the prac- -conclUded, "the advice we would field of industrial relations. We In addition, employees worllltice of collective bargaining on give to labor and management offer no apologies for confining institutions in this area to con- ing the '3-11 shift will receive all clude negotiations with the- 0r- extra five cents an hour and • higher moral plane and, more as they jointly observe this . ourselves this year to a purel,. ganizing committee. Three of jbe those working the 11-1 shift wiD. specifically, to recognize that it national holiday is very simple. spiritual message and for ignormust somehow or other be In the words of Pope John ing almost completely the tech- . 11 others now stalemated with get an' extra seven cents an howr. ;made to serve tbe public interest XXIII, we would encourage nical aspects of the, problems the' committee ,are Catholic iDObservers of the union-hospi.mor«.; effectively." them 'to be faithful to God'~ law currently confronting us in this stitutions. tal negotiations say the chief dif"This is at lea!!t the }irst ,step in the constant fulfillment of tield. , The contract establishesall'lJ1to- ference between this contraet toward. the formulation of the His holy will' and 'to be always We have done so deliberately usual "Citizens Ileview Board" • n d o t her business - uniOD ri~ht answers," the s.tatement apostles of goodness, of gladne~ to underline our conviction of five persons Which will haw contracts is the review board aDd saul. _..- . - and of good will.' H that, when all is said and done, the final S8I' ill union-hospital 1tI power to resolve diSpute-..

New-

Labor Day Mass

a

Statement Stresses Moral Vc:ah'es

'Catholic Hospital Labor Contract Forbids Strikes and Slowdowns


THf ANOIQR-DioCete of Fan Rtver-Thurs, Sept. 3, 1959

17

ASal·ute to Our Members '"

J

LABOR DAY The productivity of American Labor has made America the mightiest nation in the world. Labor too, has made immeasurable contributions to the American standard of living - the envy of people everywhere. Come and join with the Fall River Labor movement in the Second Annual Religious observance of Labor Day. Attend Church Labor Day Morning!

UNITED LABOR COUNCIL OF GREATER FALL RIVER AMERICAN FEDERATION OF LABOR and CONGRESS OF INDUSTRIAL ORGANIZATIONS e Journeymen Barbers, Local 3_31 • Amalgamated Clothing Workers o(America, Locols 1.77 and 375 • International Ladies Garment Workers Union, Local 178 • Insurance Workers, Local 21 • Musicians Union, Local 216 • Brotherhood of Railway Clerks, Victory Lodge No. 2097 • National Association of Letter Carriers, Branch 51 • Textile Material Shippers and Clerks • Stat~, County and Municipal Employees, Local 1118 • United Furniture Workers of America, Local 159 • Textile Workers Union of America •. Brewery Workers, Local 137 ~ •. United Hatters, Cap and Millinery Workers, Local 28 • Theatrical Stage Employees, Local 57 • United Rubber, Cork, Linoleum and Plastic Workers of America, Local 261 • Plumbers Union, Local.135 • Iron Workers, Local 31 • Fall River Typographical Union, Local 161 • Moving Picture Machine Operators, Local 424 • Bartenders Union, Local 99 efiTefighters Association, Local 1314 • NationoJ FederatiOn of Post Office Clerks, LOE:al 51}

IN MEMORIAM '.

To Dedicated Leaders of the Fall River Labor Movement JOHN GOLDEN

JOHN t. MACHADO

JOHN REAGAN

WILLIAM R. MEDEIROS

JOSEPH P. DYER

r

JAMES TANSEY

MANUEL J.

LOPES

, MARIANO So BISHOP

_.


18

nff ANOlqR...,...Diocese of Fan R.iver-Thurs,. Sept. 3, 1959

Labor~'ndustry Progress

Cites Huge .Influj OF Converts

,

Demands Mu,tual :-R~'spect

SEATTLE (NC) -

There III

so many recent converts to Cat!

. ST. PAUL (NC)-A~c~bishopWillia,ni O. Brady, a fan. River native, says it is a mystery to. him "how'so many smart men in management and smart in iabor are not ,smart enough to,build constantly improve9- human relations for the!r..comnion, benefit." ability to build and' hold loyalty The spmtual leader of St. in worker·s." Paul made his comment' in "It has done little to anticihis column, "The Arch- pate labor's often legitimate' re-

olicism in Korea the Church 'hard-pressed to' care for ther Bishop Harold W. 'Henry, Vicl Apostolic of Kwangju, said ( his .arrival in Seattle. A Society of St. Columm missionary, Bishop Henry serv~ _as an Army chaplain with combat engineers group in EI rope during World War II, b1 has spent most of his life as priest in Korea. "Since about 1950, the infltJ of Koreans into the Church hl been really extraordinary Bishop HMry said. "In 1957-f alone we had more conv~rts i Korea than the Archdiocese l Chicago, Ne\y York and Wasl ington, D, C., combined. "Back in 1951, we had exact] 8,059 Catholics in the vicaria' of Kwangju. As of June 30 th year, wf? had 52,002."

men

bishop's' Observations," 'which quests and often enough has he writes for the Catholic given grudgingly and only under Bulletin) official newspaper of pressure the gains that have imthe St. Paul archdiocese. '. proved industry as much a~ they Reviewing the general accomhave bettered the lot of workplishments of labor and manageers," he wrote. ment in past decades, the ArchAs for cooperation between bishop asserted that "we must' the two, the prelate said, "It still remind ourselves of what seems at times as if labor and we have not been able to do." management talk of each other . "Labor needs a: definite proas if they were two_cold, impergram of interior improvement. sonal, mechanical units that The ,unions have done much to mesh for a while under economic fatten the pay envelopes of their comp.ulsion, ·then draw apart to men. It is probably much too call each other names, then move mild to indicate that the integin to bash their 'heads together rity of leadership in some unions like mechanical monsters." CATANIA (NC)-Two Aral must be improved if unions will W.hat is needed, he said, is will present wheat grown' at tt retain the confidence of the' respect for each other. "Honest RELATIVES AND RELIGIOUS: Visiting together in Biblical town of Capharnaum , country. . '. respect can be more' powerful in making hosts for tt Fall River .for, the first time in eleven years are, left to .Ibet aused "This is up to the men, the and less costly to all concerned I ian National Eucharist ..~ion members, and they have right, Mother Lucie, and her two nieces,. Sister Claire Marie Congress to be held here frOl than a strike," 'he commented. Dot yet acted, probably because and Sis.t~r Catherine ,Francis. Sept. 6 to 13. they 'are foo easily satisfied· if only their take-home pay is' annually increased," he wrote. A Delicious \:. Turning to, manjlgement, ,he· ST. LOUIS (NC)-Some,12,OOO Treat lI8id it needs vision to go beyond, six - year - olds are undergoing .nnuallyjncreased.profit~.':IVi:antests here to determine just " For the first time in eleven of St. Joseph, Le Puy, whose agement knows how. to . build . where they'll go during their years, three religious, relatives Provincial' House is on South plants and impro~e production enjoyed a brief visit .together in Main St., Fall River, is a sister first weeks in school. methods,'but it has shown scant The tests are being adminis- . Fall River. The three are Mother of Mrs. Adolph Just of 1ll,Fieldtered in each parish, under the Marie Lucie, S:5.J., the former' en St. and of Mrs. Michael Dube_ direction of the Archdiocesan' Antoinette Faucher, and her, Main St., North Tiverton. nieces, Sister' Claire Marie, She is presentiy superior of the . Grade School office. " S.M.I.C., the former Dorothy Sisters of St. Joseph in Vipton, "The tests are strictly for the VigileilUlt, and Sister 'C~therine Louisiana. Before her transfer' Rev. Leo P, Maxfield; M.S., information of'the individual Francis, S.M.I.C., the former. there, Mother Lucie taught for I director of vocations for the La schools, however, rather than Irene Morisette. over3(i years in schools of Fall Salette Fathers has just· comthe archdiocesan school office," Mother Marie Lucie, a Sister River,' Swansea and Ocean pleted attendance at a public Msgr. James E. Holfi'ch, arch,. Grove. _ relations seminar for personnel diocesan superintendent" ex::"· Sisters Claire Marie and Cathin rei i g i 0 u s communities plained.. "They \\Till help in erine Francis are both Missionthroughout the country. -'5,000 determining the level of the ary Sisters of the immaculate ST. LOUIS (NC)-More than Held at Manhattan College, ability of the" child entering Conception and are stationed to5,000 converts have come into Riverdale, N. Y., the meeting school for the first time. gether in Midland, Texas where was the first of its type. It was the Church as a result of a series T.he tests are designed to test of annual Information Forums both teach. Sister Claire Marie sponsored by the National Cath-. learning aptitude, rather than instituted in'the St. Louis archis the daughter of Mrs. Just; olic WeHare Conference and general information a pre...,school diocese ffve years ago, 'ArchSister Catherine Francis is the reviewed public relations consister of Mrs. James Welsh Ask For Them Today bishop Joseph E. Ritter of Sl Cepts . with the idea of imple-, child posseSses. of 153 Walker St., Fall, River. Louis disclosed here. menting new programs· to The Archbishop noted' there acquaint the public with Church were other results, in addition to '. activities. Newspaper, public relations, , St. Stanislaus Parent-Teacher "th~ conversioQs, ,whibh, gave cause for thanksgiving. ' radio and' television personnel and Alumni Association Fall ."Thousands of..' other" souls formed ,the faculty and, were River, will sponsor its sixth an. iuest speakers at ·many. sessions. nual' children's' day program' were rec'laimed 'for' Ch~ist,_ or . , were benefited' spiritually ill Father Maxfield, ordained in from 10 Sunda'y morning, Sept. 6 one way or another," he said. Fall River and ·now assigned to until evening. . the community's novitiate in To be held at Urban's Grove, Center Harbor; N. H" formerly Tiverton, the affair will benefit" taught at La Salette College, the school rerlOya1Jon· fund. It East Brewster, will include two, barbecue' sesTruck Body Builden 'sions, sports, music,' special Aluminum or Steei events arid a social hour. Joseph , , 94:4 County St. Amaral and, Joseph Gromada are co-chairmen: ' ' NEW BEDFORD, MASS. Most Rev: 'James L. Connolly, WY,2-6618 -D.O., Bishop of Fall River, has approved appointments made at St. Anne's, Church, Fall River, . featuring· by the Very Rev. Thomas M. BREAD Rondeau, C.P., Prior Provincial. ''The Gaslight Room H of tne Dominican ·Fathers. , Ideal for Communion Break, Appointments are ,as follows: fasts, Organization Banquets Rev. Augustine Langevin, O.P., 386 Acushnet Ave. replaces Rev. Francois M. VailNew Bedford lan.court, O.P. ' Call WYman 2-1703 Rev. Antoine Lanoue, O.P., has been named general chaplain of Le Circle Lacordaire and Jeanne d'Arc in, the Dioces.e, replacing Rev. Raymond M. Bedard, O.P: Rev. Pierre E. Lachance,.O.P., • a native of Fall River, is named ELECTRICAL director of St. Anne's, Shrine. GET· CONTRACTORS Rev. Raymond M. Corriveau, OUR . 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THE ANCHOR-Diocese"ofFdll

Taunton crO Champs Seek To Dethrone Fall River ,

Rive,.~Thurs,

By Jack Kineavy

Santo Christo, defending Diocesan CYO champions, moved into the final round of the 1959 playoffs with COB'8ummate ease last Saturday by annihilating Immaculate , ·Conception of Fall River, 16-4, in a loosely played g'ame at Lafayette Park. Standing in Cleveland ean tail off to a .500 the way of a second succes- pace and still be reasonably sive title for Christos is for- assured of the title. Should midable Immaculate Concep- Chicago play just .500 ball,

Cleveland wilt still have to win tion of Taunton. I. C. qjIalified for the cham- 75 per cent til their remaining pionship round by disposing of games to gain a tie. , The. picture in the National Mt. Carmel, League is, by contrast, 'way out New Bedford of focus. None of the four constandard beartending teams-save Pittsburgh . er, in straight' -has been able to mount a late sets, 3-1 and season streak that amounts to 5-1. The opener anything. The Pirates, 12 games of the best of out early last month, have now three series is moved to within 4 games of the scheduled for top and have won 9 of their last Sat-urdayat 10 outings. So u th Park, One big reason for the Pirates Fall River and IN MEMORY OF BABE RUTH: J~hn Costellano, presdelayed success is the return to on S.un<\ay the ident of Catholic University Chapter of Alpha Delta Gamma form of Bob Friend, a 20 game ac~e will shift to Taunton. fraternity, presents· Mrs. Ruth a scroll of a plaque to be winner in '58., The big rightIn the Fall River Alumni CYO placed in Memorial Hall of the National Shrine. Tammy eircuit, Somerset was two' outs hander, currently 8-15, has been a tremendous disappointment Meloon, Babe's grandson, looks 00. NC Photo. away from the title when St. but he has won his last 'three Mary's catcher, Paul Borkman, starts, each a route going per-' tied into one of Al Costa's fast balls to bring Dave Bowen all formance. Sooo, while San the way around from first with Francisco, Los Angeles and Milwaukee draw the raves, dOQ't the sixth and deciding run of the (NC) - A . discount Irish Danny Murtaugh's , WASHINGTON ball game. The victory boosted ptedge made a decade ,ago by Ne~ ~Ork espeCially for the crew., St. Marys to within a half game , b f t' 'I C th r dedicatlOn ceremony. The mem e;s 0 a na 10n~ a 0 Ie plaque was' presented to the One of the best records ill of the pacesetters who have now as fratermty 'Y fUlfl11~d, here shrine on behalf of Alpha Delta m' 0 d ern semipro ball was concluded their regular season. when a plaque was dedicated to G t' 'I C th r 1 snapped Saturday' when the Cathedral, on the other hand, baseball's' immortal George amma, na .1Ona a 0 lC coh:ls one niore to play with Sacred, Somerville Red Sox defeated 'Herman (Babe) Ruth in the' l~ge fratermty; by Father' RobHeart. A victory that one the Malden City Club in the National Shrine of the Immacuert J. Imbs, S.J., ~f Roc;khurst would elevate St. Marys into a ,Suburban League playoffs in College, Kansas City, the fra· h 1a t e C oncep t lOn ere. t 't' t' 1 d top rung tie, necessitating, a Boston. On the mound for erm y s na 10na mo erator. . Mrs. Ruth 'came here from playoff to decide the title. In Malden was Ron Perry, former , . The ceremony was· held in Somerville and' Holy Cross, the event that.happens, the game , connection with the 28th annual basketball and baseball star. will be scheduled during the convention here of the fraterLabor Day weekend. Playoff Perry took a 20-0 record into nity. plans for the league are indefthe game only to be defeated by DENVER (NC)-One member Babe Ruth came out of obinite at the present time. his former mates in a tight 3-2 of the Colorado State Legisla-' scurity of old St. Mary's Induscontest. ture is an outspoken advocate of trial Home School in Baltimore, Spirited Play The most harassed ,major giving parochial school students where he lEi!arned to play baseSerious injury was narrowly leaguer this agent has seen in transportation on public school ball under the tutelage of the averted in Sunday's Somersetsome time was Gus Triandos of buses. . . Xaverian Brothers, and rose to St. Marys game at Ruggles. the Orioles whose best efforts at She is Mrs. Betty Kirk West immortality in the national pasCenterfielder Gerry Elias and rightfielder Tom Carroll, con- catching Hoyt Wilhelm's knuckle' of Pueblo who introduced a bill time. He pitched and batted himin the last sessIon of the Legisla- self into more baseball recordsverging at top speed on a baH ,balls Sunday very nearly resultEl<i in, his being logged ill. hire which would have per- many of which still stand-than hit by Somerset's Bob Souza baseball's record book. In each mitted public school buses to any other player who ever lived. eollided with a thud th9t was of the first two innings big Gus pick up non-pUblic school chilIt 'was shortly after Ruth's heard all over the ball park. was charged with two paSlled" dren', provided that. the bus does death from cancer on Aug. 16, Elias escaped with a lllceration balls. .. " not go out of its way to drop 1948, that the members of the on the bridge of his nose. Carroll them off. The bill was referred Catholic fraternity' decided to King Footban sustained a neck bruise. The into a committee and smothered. erect the plaque in his memory The advent of September hercident obviously un n'e r v e d ' Mrs. West said that the state at the shrine. alds the opening of the football Cathedral starter, Bob Borge, season less than three weeks , Attorney General had ruled in who subsequently was tagged away. High schools in' the area ': 1941 that "a school board may for f~ur runs before being agree that. children attending reported on Tuesday, Sept. 1, lifted for Red Lavoie. to prepare for 'first round 'of ,parochial schools may be transEvidently it was a bad weekported in a public school bus as games scheduled on Sept. 26. On end for outfielders in general. far as the public school or that the collegiate level, Boston ColSanto Christo lost the services children may be trans~orted to lege-Navy will pry Off the' lid of centerfielder Tony Fernandes a parochial school in the public on Saturday, Sept. 19. who injured his knee while school bus when such parochial : attempting to haul down a long The Middies have had at least school is on the route of trans-, drive by I. C.'!f Roland Garrant. a ~eek's headstart on the Eagles portation set by the school X-rays proved negative but due t~ the fact that classes at the board." She added that her bill Tony's status for the Diocesan Naval Academy open, earlier "simply enunciates and clarifies ehampionship' tilt Saturday is than at the Heights. Academie such a practice. It is permissive stiil undet~rmined. . attrition of last years freshman -not mandatory." . squad has clouded the B. C. picApproaehin&, Series ture considerably but nothing About the, only problem the like what John Moynihan's abWhite Sox have' now is whom VATICAN CITY (NC)-Coad-, to scout in preparation for the sence is apt to mean. to Holy Paint and Wallpaper jutor Bishop Jean Maury of TarCross. Dr. Anderson had"groomed annual World Series. The Chibet! and Lourdes, France, has .1ohn to fill the quarte~back spot cago elan after taking four DuPon~~ING been named Titular Archbishop vacated b7 Tommy Greene. straight from second place of Laodicea in Phrygia and AposRear of Store tolic:Delega'te to French Africa. . ~~., 422 Aeush. Ave. eor. Middle St, New Bedford

Dedicate Plaque"at National Shrine To Memory of F~mous Babe Ruth

1n

Solon for Parochial Bus Transportation

Delegate Named

PICARD'S BAKERY

~

Rabbi Cites Inc'rease In Catholic Good Will .' JERUSALEM (NC)-A' spirit of good will toward the Jewish community, greater than ever before, now prevails in the Catholic Church, Rabbi Abraham L Feinberg of Toronto declared here. Rabbi Feinberg told the press here he believes that Israel "now has a much better chance to establish cordial relations with the Vatican than it has ever had." The Rabbi, a special emissary of the Canadian Jewish Congress on a fact-finding trip which 'includes Europe and North Africa, said he had a private audience with Pope Johs XXIII. His main purpose in requesting the audience, he said, was to thank the Roman Pontiff on behalf of Canada's quarter of a million Jews for eliminating the word "perfidious" from the prayer for the Jews in the Good Friday liturgy. .

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WASHINGTON (NC) - .A. , prayer for golfers has been eomposed by Msgr. (Maj. Gen.) Patric~ .1. Ryan, former Chief 01 Chaplains of the U. S. Army. Magr. Ryan, who retired froOl active military serv.ice ,last November, is now executive vicepresident of the ,Catholic Digest magazine. His golfer's prayer was printed in the official program of the Women's Amateftr Charp.pionship Tournament of the U. S. Golf Association held here. The prayer: "0 God, Our Heavenly Father, we commend to Thy care and ask Thy blessing upon the members of this association. All are devoted to the, ideals of sportsJ'llanship and fair play. Bless in a particular way those who are competing in this tou,rnament. May their conduct on the course and the integrity of their lives ever be an example to the youth of ',America. Help all of us, we pray, to keep always in the fairways of virtue and to avoid the rough of sin, so that when we' finish the course of ,life we may turn into'the Eterna(Keeper of scores, a record worthy aI. Christian athletes."

OLIVIER

299 ASHLEY BLVD.

MEDAL OF HONOR MBN: Four Catholic holders of the Congessional Medal of Honor'met in Los Angeles at the convention of the Lath' AI~u~rican v~terans organization. All are of Mexican descent. FrqlJlleft are: Sgt..Jose Lopez, Capt. Jose Rodriguez, Rudy Hernandez and Sgt. Cleto Rodrigues. All are still on active duty except Hernandez, who is On 100 per cent disability pensiOil ·£or' wOunds suffered ill

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Composes Prayer ~or Golfers

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Sept. 3, 1959

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THE ANCHOR-:-~ioc~le of Fait .River~Thurs, . Sept. 3, 1959~,

Jesuit"S,-ggests

Pla'ns t o S h o w : "

~road'er 'Social.

R9sory

~,

Films ";,

Action

Co-:,cept In T h e a t r e BOSTON {NC) -- '..The , ST. LOUIS (NC) - Don't • ,ArchbIshop of Boston has for-get American Society's purchased Loew's Stat e new, and subtle' ailmen~, 'Th~atel',· in 'Boston's Back; , such as working wives,' too B,ay". area; Richard ,Ca~dinai ' niuch cred~t and the ~ameness of . Cushing, Archbishop of Boston, suburbia, :U. S. Catholic social actionists were urged here. , an~o.un~ed.' ' . Father Thurston'N.:Davis, S.J., , Beginning October, the theater' editor-in-chief of America, a will be used for the screening of 'weekly national Cathoiic review, specia~ religiou,s films, for con-' t~ld ·the third annual National' ventions; lectures, commenceCatholic SoCial Action Conferment exercises and meetings. ence: . "I refuse, to believe that The theater was erected at a t1.J.ese ... are not problems with cost of two million dollars and ' which we should be wrestlingopened in March, 1922. With a: 'with as much energy and deterse,ating capacity of 3,583, it.is the mination as we now devote to second largest theater in New right-to-work laws, the ConEngland. It is believed'to be one, sumer Price Index and the fine of the half-dozen largest theaters prnt in the Taft-Hartley labor ip. the United States. law." First use of the: theater as an ! Jesuit Father Davis' theme archdiocesan-owne'd house w.ill was call for broadening, of the 'SISTERS OF ST. JOSEPH:, Left to right, rear Sister Marguerite' du Sacre Coeur,' be made Oct. 1, when Cardinal' cOncept of social action to Icover Sister Victor Marie, Sister St. Julienne. Left, to 'right front, Sister Lucille Marie; Sister Cushing presents "The Fifteen more 'than the traditional socioMyster~es of' the Rosary," a ,,',', ,,- , economic problems such' as rec- St. Ida, Sister Jean Marie, Sister Henri Bertrand. three-part color film. - , ognlti~n of labor, the stability of The parts-each of two-and~ the farm family:' foreigri' aid, a~half hours' duration-dramaAnnounce Transfers o f o f St. Joseph, immigration, migrant workers , Three postulants received Fall.River, presided at the cere<, St; -.Jean Bap,tiste' to St. Roch's, tize 'the Joyful, Sorrowful' and and refugees. " Glorious Mysteries of the Rosehabits and religious names momes.. Fall River. -" , 'The'se are "some of the central ary. 10 S' t d Transfers mcluded that of To St Jeari Baptiste d issues of. our', economic life," : Present ,plans are that the seran _ IS, e~s rna e or reMothe~ Rose Philippe, from ,'St. . Sister,' Agnes du Sacre Coeur Father Davis ,admitted. He said, ies will'run', in alternating'secIJ.,ewed relIgIOUS, vows at Roch's Schoo~, Fall River, to the, ,from St, Michael's Ocean Grove that, as progress has been made tions or 'groups of mysteries, c~remonies at ~t. Ter.esa's .Co.nposition ,of superior at St. Louis to St. ,J~an Baptiste, Fall Riv.er. toward solving, them, "new and, v~nt, Fall. R~ver", provmcial de Fran~e School! Swansea. . 'Sister Mar~e Xavier: from St. from Oc'tober, the'month of, the subtler ailments (have) spread house Holy Rosary, through Christmas, of the SIsters of St. JoAlso SIster LOUIS de Gonzague Michael's to St' Louis de Fra . through the body of contempo- seph Ie Puy. E~ghteen members ~nd Sister Elisabe!h de la Trin- Swansea.,'· - nce, Lent and Easter. rary society.'" ' . o~ the 'commumty were affected Ite f,rom St. LO~IS de, France, ,Sister Louise Angele from St. Filmed in Spain ,"Please don't misunderstand by transfers annou~ce~ by Rev- Swansea to St. MIchael,s, Ocean Therese's, New Bedford to : "The Fifteen Mysteries of the me ", he added. "It is indubitably Mother Provmc.. a~. ,Gro.ve; . ' Blessed Sacrament, Fall River. Rosary" was filmed under the and forever to our credit that. e~end . The postula~ts re~e.lVI~g habSl~ter Paul Mane from St. Jo, Sister St. Ida, Sister St; Anne general supervlsion of Father ~hen theYvlere most needed,' Its,an,d na~es m rehg!on mclud~eph s, New: Bedford to St. ¥ath-, and Sister Lucille Marie asP:atri~k Peyton, 'C.S.C., director th~re ~ere Cathoiics who were ,ed MIS~ SImo.ne Rodngues of St. leu,. Fall RIv~r.. signed to:St. Teresa's, Fall River. of the Family Rosary Crusade eilger and' able to 'srand up a~d Joseph s pansh, New Bedford, SIster Mane FranCOIse, from Sister Marie, Solange ret l' and of the Mutual, Broadcasting" be counted' on the side of organ-, now Sister Marguerite du Sacre, St. Joseph's, Jlfew Bedford to 'i1ig to .the Dio e e fro 'Le ~ nSystem's Weekly radio pr'ograIru!, ized'labor." , Co~ur; ~iss Made}eine Pellerin, St. Michael's, Ocean Grove. France, aSSign~dSto St~Josep~'~:' tl).e Family Theater and, Marian' ", So Much More' ; St. LOUIS de France; Swansea, St. Joheph Nuns . New Bedford ' ' , The~ter: ~ "S~rong, intel,ligentand imaginow Sister Victor Marie. ~ Sister Marie Ange and Sister " native, leadership in this and, Shot entirely in Spain, at the Also Miss Marguerite Carrier, Paul dela Ocoix from' St. ,Police Discover allied ,fields has" never been Biddeford, Me., now Sister St. 'Teresa's Convent, Fali River to' , Sevilla Studios" Madrid, and in w.imting. Moreover, it assuredly, Julienne. St. Jean Baptiste, Fall River. Stolen, Crucifix' t~e surrounding hill country, the isn't lacking now.. ' What I am ' First Vows Sister Marie Ernest from, St. pictures ,CASALE MON-FERRATO (NC) , ,were more th an a year getting at is that Catholic social ' vows were pronounced' Teresa's, Fall River,to St. 'Math,First iIi the making. ' -,-An, ivory and ebony, crucifix,', , action needs to recognize that by Sister Lucille Marie, 'former-, ieu, Fall River. , there' is 'so much more besides," , ly: Of St.' Therese's parish, New Sister Claire dukt. Sacrement' 1Q feet high and valued at $165,- , -m Boston, the Rosary films'i' Bedford, and, nine other Sisters and Sister Jean de IiI Croix from 09 0 has been dis<;overed by po-' will be shown for. the, support! hr asserted. , , To 'illustrate the areas he, sees' renewed their religious profes- St; Jean Baptiste to St. ~herese's" lipe buried in a' chicken rlin bE!~; 'of"L~tin"Ainerican,missions. In.. ' IQnging to:'a farmer'lnthis north- ' cooperatio!1:with Father Peyton" outside the traditional oneifof sion. Rev. Anatole Desmarais, 1'!:ew Bedford. ' pa-storof St. 'Mathieu's Church,' Sister Marie' Alphonse, from' ern Italian town who was one': now in-:'Chile maklng,prelimin;" :concern to social' actionists, , . •. of 8' gang speciali'zing" in steal~:~ a"ry' ~rrangeinents, proceedS of· Father Davis cited the "beat" gEmeratiOll; credit cards; "toProfessor' Asserts M a r k Twain's dng religioHs 9 b j e c: ts.. ' 'f'; the Boston run will be sent to, , , Discc;)Very of the' crucifix re-:: Latin" America, 'where ,the ,films' getherness," the 'uses, of 'leisure; "sick'; jokes, the, Organization 'Ant.i-Cathol i, cism,' ,E,(ag"g' erated' sulted 'from an investigation b'y,', also ',will: be, shown, later this police of the theft of .two,v;alu- ; 'y¢ar. , ,:; ",.: ," man the' "sameness 'of, 10,000 CHICAGO (NC) Mark . d~ughter Jean had been sent, to" a,ble, 15th century, paintings 'PT - 'r'~'-~--;.'..;'....; .... subu'rbias," , "olir ,nation'al love Twain's anti-Catholicism ,has 'a con.vent school' and said .that, Martino 'Spanzotti froni,' the'J' :affair with television," the'rising incidence of mental illness, the ' been greatly exaggerated, ac- he wouldh't, be 'the least bit ,,'church of St. Maurice atnearbt : aging population and the decline 'cording to a University of Notre sorry' if she became 'a good" Conzano Monferrato. ' ,".l'he police found it buried ~ of home, life and parental au- ,Dame professor who has made strong, unshakable Catholic.' " a study of the subject. , about one'foot' below the surthority. "Twain's anti-Catholicism has Mr. Gross noted that Twain' face of a chicken run of a farm- ' been made into too simple a was brought up in a' Calvinistic ,er's ho:me. He and another accom- : Pope- Desires B~tter case," said Seymour L,. Gross, society, and as a young man suf- plice, were taken into custody.' NEW BEDfORD, Relations With Israel associate professor of English at fered severe conscience pangs, Police are coIitinuing their in-. the university. "What ha~ never and even nightmares, about ,the vestigation to learn ,if more JERUSALEM (NC) - "Pope been sufficiently pointed, out is Bible. This conditioned his life members of the gang are still at John XXIII expressed to'me his INDUSTRIAL OILS that there are two. faces to when he la'ter became a skeptic,' large. To date there has been' hope that rehitions between the Mr. Gross observed. t race 0 f th e t wo pam . t'mgs, Twain's attitude' -toward the no, Vatican and Israel will imHEATING OILS Church, just as ther~ are two But the Notre'Dame professor \\~hich led the police to begin' prove," Melkite Rite Bishop Georges Hakim of Akka said faces to everything else he ,con- e1p.phasized the many passages the investigation. TIMKEN cetned himself with. in many of Twain's works which here on his return from Rome. "He was, as his closest friend, are friendly to the Church, while, The Pope "was very sympaOIL BURNERS' ACE Joe Twichell, commented, 'a admitting - others which are thetic toward Israel and all that strange Mark full of cot:Itradic- baldly anti-Catholic. 'Priests fare is be'ing done here," the prelate ,Aut() Body tions.' , . . , relatively' well in Twain's fieti(lIi, declared in an interview pub"He was the committed ration- he noted, less well in the travel lished' by the Jerusalem Post. 24-HOUR WRECKER During his recent audience alist who understood ,that the books. SERVICE 501 COUNTY ST. 'heart has its own laws and with the Holy Father,' Bishop NEW' BEDFORD 3S HILLMAN STREET Hakim reported, "His Holiness .thumps about things' which the NEW BEDFORD showed great interest in Israel's intellect scorns.' He was a rigid WY 3-1751 WY 6-8343 determinist who nevertheless Catholic community. I was happy suffered all his life from what to report .improvements; alhe termed his 'trained Presbythough some problems still need a solution., I have the feeling , terian conscience.' , that some matters still need Daughter in Convent School ICE CREAM o clarification before Israeli-Vati"He was the lambaster of what can relations will improve." Do You Work in a ~actory, he felt were ,the evils of Ca'thoHc LEO H. BERUBE, Mgr, , Bishop Hakim added that the, 'priestcraft and superstition,' Garage, Machine Shop or 951 Slade St. 'Tel. OS 5-'7836\ Pope had expressed his' great who was 'very glad' that his Gasoline Station? feelirigs for t'-~ Jewish people We 'pick up and deliver, clean a'nd had recalled that during the war ,he had been able to help and repair overalls. Also. we have many Jews while serving in Tura complete line ot Coverulls. Pants key as a Vatican diplomat. 'and Shirts ~or sale.

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