···1-4ortOI1 Pastor .to·Direct
The ANCHOR An Anchor of the Soul, Sure and Firm-ST. PAm.· . . '.
fall River, Mass.
Th~r_sday, Sept. 8ee~nd ,CI.... M.O ,Prl"Ue"M' ... uthorl.~ .t F.U ·Rlnr. M.....
10, 1959
Building Fund Campaign For Bishop Feehan High Rev. William D. Thomson, pastor of St. Mary's Church in Norton, will serve as epis. copal chairman of the drive for funds to build the planned $2,250,000 Bishop Feehan High School in Attleboro. This announcement concerning the' second dioceson regional high school was ,made today by the Most Reverend Bishop. Selection of five honorary . chairman and six, active of St. Mary's North Attleboro. chairmen together with two Rev. Gerard J. Chabot, pastor executive secr~taries has . 'o~ St. Theresa's, Attleboro. also' been announced at the Rev. Edward F. O'Brien, pas-
Chancery Qffice by Bishop tO,r of St. Mary's, Mansfield. Connolly, .' . ," , Rev. ,J. Om'erLussier, pastor , " PRICE IOc' 'The, co-educational Attleboro of St:- Stephen's, Attleboro. '$4~~per Year regIonal school, which wills e r v e ' Rev..'Cornelius J.. Keliher~ ad880. pupils, will' be' named in miJiistrator of St. Mary's, AttIe, memory' of the second Bishop b!>ro. . , of the Diocese,Bishop: Connolly' , has' 'reported. , 'Rev. Edmund ,J. Dickinson, ,a'ssistant at Sacred Heart, North The, following will serve in Attleboro. on honorary capacity in the drive for 'funds which' will be ' Two executive secretaries seconducted iIi the, dear future, lected by ,the' Ordinary are Rev. Edwin J.' Loew, assistant , for the new school will open in at' st. Mary's, North Attleboro September 1961: . and Rev. James F. McCarthy, '. Rt. Rev. John J.' Shay, pastor assistant at St. John the Evan· of St.· John's' Attleboro. gelist, Attleboro. ,Rev. Joseph S. Larue, pastor The Bishop Feehan High ·of Sacred Heart, North AttleS!=hool will be the first major 'boro. ' diocesan institution in the Rev. John F:' Laughlin, pastor Greater Attleboro Area. Its anof Holy Ghost Church, Attleboro. REV. WILLIAMD. THOMSON nouncement last week at a meetRev. Ubalde J. Denault, pastor ing of representatives of all the of St.' Joseph's, A~tleboro. The following have been as- Greater Attleboro pariShes was Rev. John J. Casey, pastor of signed to serve in an active warmly and enthusiastically re, Immaculate Conception Church, ,capacity as chairmen:ceived by the Catholic populace North ,Easton. Rev. Edward B. Booth, pastor Turn to Page Eighteen
Asserts Sordid Movies Injure . NURSING SCHOOL ENTRANTS: Three , diocesan " 'girls. , ',Film Industry "
Prelate Favors Drive 'To .End Steel Strike
register for the entering class at'St.Anne's Hospital S~hool' ./ ' L<?S ~~GELES (NC)-A f Nursing in, Fall Riv~r. They are, left to. right, Roberta .. ~ovle crlb.c he.re has warned' "The present steel strike is very unfortunate, as is the th t d d fIb f t attitude of industry towards it. It's causing bad blood and Medeiros: of New Bedford, Carol Berard of Taunton, Sister, . a., SOl' 1, 1 ms ,y ~s - a hardening of attitudes at time when labor and manageprpducers are harmmg, ment should be developing maturity in their relationships Madeline Clemence, director and Mary Brennan of Chatham. buc~ ',,' , ," , the mdustry. Philip.K. Scheuer of the Los towards' each other." So de- ' , Angeles Times said that those I d V R M dispute. "Round thhe clock care ery ev. sgr. meetings would at least show a who want the motion picture to George ·c. H'Iggins, director willingness' to work toward• .s urvive, as theater entertllinment must ,ask themselves one quesof social action for :the Na- . agreement." 0,'
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Enter ·St. ',An,ne~s~, School of N~r$in'g"~'",,,':,, Twenty-eight girls from the Diocese are amotig the 39 who enrolled this week hi St. Ann"e's School of Nursing, Fall River. New Bedford leads in repres,entation" sendin'g 10 girls to the school. Fall River is:next with eight. Three are from Taunton,' two from, From Fall, River come Sister Somerset and one each from Alice Thomas, S.U,S.C., Claire Fairhaven, Chatham, South Audet, Allfiette Desautels, Cecile Dartmouth, Berkley and Ducharme, Anne Marie 'OuelSwansea. The new students hope to be settled i'n St. Anen's new school building by 1960. At present the old quarters are still in
use. , From New Bedford New Bedfordites at St. Anne's include Louise Amaral, Aline Cayer, Sandra Dalbec, Rtta LeBlanc, Patricia Ladino, MadeUne Manha, Roberta Medeiros, Eleanor Mellody, 'Suzanne Menard, and Kathleen Veer. '
lette,' Anne Savard;. 'Muriel Thiboutot and Murielle Guerette. Taunton is represented by· poris, Begnoche, Carole Berard, and Eleanor Kokoska; Somerset by Claudette Cote and Patricia O'Brien. Mary Lou Andrews is from Fairhaven, Mary Brennan from Chatham, Barbara Cardoza from South Dartmoutq, Danielle Desautels from Berkley arid Gail Padden fro!U Swansea.
liturgical Week Conference Thrilling for A.ttleboro Man "A woriderful experience" is the way Donald Antaya of Attleboro, speaks of his participation in the twentieth North American Liturgical W~ek conducted at Notre Dame. Mr. Antaya attended the 'conference as a'consultant arid observer ori Church Structure art to learn what I could about ~and Participation, in the the latest trends." Mr. Antaya is Mass, which was under the associated with'his brother in ehairmanship of Rev. Pat- makin,g religious articles in
rick O'Donnell of the Glenmary .Attleboro. ' , Amateurs ,Are 'Wilmers Home MissiOllers. " "The entire ·conference. cpn.. : "What 'made it most thrilling was that our group was the one cerned participatjon. ,in the responsible for bringing ,Cardi- Mass," he said; "accordjng '.to the Instruction of the Congregation nal Lercaro over to speak," Mr. Antaya added. "He is' a most of Rites, Sept. 3, 1958. Our group colorful personality; and his talk presented aseties Of l~ctures by was the high point of the con- . members of clergy and laymen ference. The Cardinal also spoke on Church structure and art, particularly as it affects 'lay privately to our group." ' Mr. Antaya worked with participation." "It was really something to Father O'Donnell in preparing material for the group. "I also meet people from all over the worked up the presentation country, experts in their fields, medal, designed by Father and to see how much is being O'Donnell, for the architectural ,done towards lay participation award," he explained, "and by people from other, parts of Turn to Page Eighteen . attended all the conferences on
'tion: . ' . tional Catholic We~fare COhfer- ' "It's my guess that the Pres"We must ask ourselves if we • ence, in Fall River, to preach ident, will invoke the Taft-Hartwant ,to see it survive on those " at the Labor Day Mass held ,in' ley iaw to send the steelworker. terms-in a welter of 'exploita- ,St. Mary's Cathedral for' ,the -back ,to their jobs for an 80-day · tion' q\lickies that wallow in sex, city's .United Labor Council.' cooling-off period," said the gan'gsterism and juvenile delin. He - said that the five -day priest.. "Of course, that doesn't quency." week prevailing in negotiating solve 'anything; just gives more / The issue, according to Mr. sessions did not indicate any time for bargaining," he added. Scheuer, is "mass versus class." eagerness to settle the lengthy Turn to Page Eighteen "Hollywood is a house divided against itse:\f," he' said. "The Turn' to Page Eighteen
P~iest to
Teach At ,Coyle High The Most Reverend Bishop has appointed Rev. Edward J. Mitchell, assistant, at Sacred Heart Church, Taun-
Six. New Faculty-Members At Coyle: High.in Taunton
Six new members have been added to the faculty of Monsignor James Coyle High School, Taunton, and two Brothers have been named to special' assignments.. The new faculty members are: Brother Armel Latter~l, principal at St. Thomas School, Brook. Brother Fran'cis Leary will lyn, 'will teach freshman teach French and English. He is English and serve as Ath- from Dujarie Hall, Notre Dame, letic Director, replaciug Ind.
ton to teach Religion t.; the Seniors at Monsignor Coyle High School. Father Mitchell will Brother Joseph Roos, former continue with his parish work. Director, who will take charge Father Mitchell, in teaching of the ,Coyle Barid. the three divisions of Seniors at Brothers William Babbitt and Coyle, will follow in the footsteps :of the iate Rev. Raymond . Maur.ice Healy, both formerly on the staff of Holy Cross High. B. Bourgoin whom many Coyle School, Flushing, will teach alwnni will remember for hi; teaching of Religion in the 1940s. Latin and History, respectively. Brother Joseph Lovito of St. Edward's . University, Austin, , Texas, will teach Latin and Biology. .
James D. Lanagan Jr. will assist James Burnes on the football coaching staff and teach Sophomore English. ) ,Special assignments include: Brother Thomas Gallagher, who has' been at Coyle for six years, ,has been named 'assistant principal and Brother Richar.d MacDonald has been appointed Turn to Page Eighteen
Cardinal Lercaro Spurns Notion Of Coexistence With Communism
WASlIINGTON (NC)~Giacomo~ Gardinai Lercaro has said' there' can be "no, coexistence" between the free world and communism; The Archbishop of Bologna, known as a . ' bitter foe .of commi:mism~ made, the statement after an informal hour-Jong meeting ~t 'lator~ 'th'at the principal center the, U. S. Capitol with' a of Red activity ih Italy is'situgroup of" Congressmen; in- ated within, his See of Bologna. eluding members of the Sen-·. The Cardmal was reported to
REV. EDWARD J. MITCHELL
, . . , h a v e had a "very pleasant exate ForeIgn RelatIOns CommItchange" with the Congressmen, tee. who questioned him extensively Observers who attended the' about communist strength in meeting said afterward that the Bologna. Congressmen questioned CardiThe Cardinal was said to have nal Lercaro closely about comtold the legislators that "the munism in' Italy. The Cardinal heart of the strength" of the was said to have told the legisTurn to Page Eighteen
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THE.A'NCH9R~pi~ese ofF(lII' Riv~-Thur$.; Sept:l0, 1959: . . , " .
Boy.· Scouts Pia. I
-, .p rlmo'rlY - . ._, G. enera·.I C'hounel .. . urc. .Improveme.. n., ',t,·.. ,,·,·.,~: For 'Ch
Award Tests,
".. Dates for ~he AdAltare Del .Board of Review have', beeIl :.,;.;':announced' :for Diocesan' '.Bat ~outs ..· rhe' a~ards,high~st.iII H
. CASTELGANDOLFO (NC)::":""His Holiness'P()p~",Joh~; .,·~tholic, Scollting,.wi~~ b~,p'reXXIII ·said that' theforthcorriing eCuInenicalcouncH"WiIl"be J.. 'seriieci iltSt. "Mary's Cathedral, ; above all for the improvemeIW'Of the C a t h o l i c ' C h u r c h ' ; B i J t ' ; ' : ! \ ' ' F i l n"RiVer, 'Sunct'ay",:'Oc( '2~: the 'L he i added that''8ep'arated' Christians 'cali take ·iii':ihe. feast of Christ the King~':::'~' '1 . " th y . ' t . . .... "':N~w' Bedf6rd' 'boys·'.imolJ J6 ". ::C?UnCl smce mus co~-.' It is antic'ipat~d ·th~t Pope . submit papers' of applicati'on' to · . sIder the C,athohc Church as . 'John will invite. separated ';"Rev: Leo .Sullivan at Kennedy '. a thIng of their own because ..Christians: to attend some ses"Cen~r' Sunday afternoon: '~pt. the Church ,'is. the 'f~mHy " sions>~f the forthcoming council, ":2~,be~yv'e~n'3 arirl 5: The. boa,rei ":fr~m wbich. 'they':~caJ;I1e '~i~toric- ~·It.- is likely that nothip.g:will . of review will meet to. eXij.mine '.' ally. : .... .., " ".... 'released for . some, ..", ..C,a.-Ildid., ,."ies." ·7.:30.... WAd.n.· . .' '. ..... . , . . . .be ... , . . .time. . . ". It. . ... ..e sda... , · They are ill vited' to ~eturn, to '. wa,s re~all~d ?ere that ·rope PlUS evening, Sept. '30. ": .. the. family of theChur<;~, the ~ s. 1OVltatIon to .. Or~hodo,x . , In .Fall River .papers may ~ .Pope.said, and if .th~y attend the .patrIarchs~ was ~~rrJed 10 .the . ,Sll~mitted to Boy Scout head•• council i~ wgI' b~ possible, to ~~wsp'apers before the pap~l , '. . . . . . . . ' . quarters, 240 Elm Street, ,or to expiain and discuss means for .me~senger was abl~ to present I~ " DIOCESAN, VISITOR: Eric P. Matias, left, Divisional ,."Rev:, ,William 'O'Connell, ,S~ , b' . 'b t' th·· d f' 't · ..to the patriarchs' themselves" . , .' '. .. .., '. .. ,', " ... """( . P t' '. d P l' t · · 250 ". rmglng a ou eIr e 101 e re-, , h··'· '.. . .... Personnel. Officer Ce'flh'al Ri\ilwa:ys Bombay Iiidla' 4.ux-·:''':: e ere an , au. rec ory;, ':. ".' turh ,'" I.. ' .. , T eY'lrefused to recenre the let-·;. ":'. " , ' ~..". _ ' ··t, ' ; "Snell' Street, by.~Monday;.sepL. · . 'H'e' ad'de'd' that h'e "had '~;<Ipen ~.:.ter because' f, .t,he previo.us p'ub- .-dlary BIshop J·ames F.'TrIpp, executIve..: , 28. 'T.h·b ' f t review .. ' WI'n """" . '' . . .' J,·Gerrardand .. . . , Phlhp. e· oard· 0 " the' ihitilltive' in" convening.the'., ·licity.. ' . ' ",;' -'director New Bedford J:Iousing.. Authority and.a"n;!ember;, ine~t· at. the 'CYO bUilding, on " ecumeriicai councl1but thiit" he' ,': " . . '.". of Serra Club .of Greater New Bedford. Mr; Matias'; delegate. ,"Anawan Street at 7:30, Tuesdll¥ 'did not know' whether the' ~ordc the Second Wo~ld' Congress of'M~~iaIi SodaHty,js's'taYlng","'everiing, Oct.· 6. . """. would perinit him to carry. it out --h M T' hi'l' N B' df '.1 H I t d to th . 'In T . to '1' t·o hb Itl to' its'conClusion' because' its·, WIt r .. rlpp'wem,ew,e. orq. ewasee~e., e .. '. aunnapplcal ns.su executive council of the federation of ,sodalities. . ':!" 'be brought to Rev.J~m~s L~ons · preparation ,is. a··lon~·and·c~m';·':':·:BUFFALO (NC}~Dea~ o i ' , t h e ' · \' '! .. ", ,'I'. at Immaculate Conception reeplex undertakmg. . '" :' 'Btlffalo, diocese clet-gy and' one ,S' d' .·. '0'.'U'p: tory; 387 Bay' Street, by Mbnday, ,', Good of' Church .. : of the oldest active priests)n the . Sept.· 28. The board, of review In saying that the councIl. was '. united States, Msgr. RiChard will meet at· the CYO building primarily for the good of the ~. OiBri'en, pastorof-Aniiunciation . nn~a.: at· 7:30 " Wednesday evening, Chureh, .the Pope,repeated what, Church ,here 'has celebrilted' his M~st Rev. James J.Gerrar·d, . J. McMahon, Rev; Lucien Jus- I Oct. 7. · he has often said: that the 'Coun- . 97th 'birthda~ anniversary.. ' c. D.D.,. Auxiliary Bishop.• ~f., ..the seaume,. Rev. Joseph F. 'O'Don11I... cil will be concerned in great ,.'., "I'm not·quite:ready.:;forre_, Diocese together with R.t:R~v.·.. n~ll ..",· . . , a h c a... ,CC~,pts l"IIlew ."".par~ w i t.l,1 .mcKIernizing the ad- ;.<ttrem~nt . yeV'; .. Msgr:'\O'Br'ifm. Msgr. jarries'j:· .I>olil~:"Rt,'.'):tev.,:.;. . RgV;. An~hony ,¥.. ,GQn.>:e~,,:aev., ,;Envoy Eroni .Japan . . ',' ministration, .disciplin~ av d law /i,gaid: "'There a~e ~iillsome things '. ~M . H'h A" G 1 'gh' . 'd 84 ,Donald A. Couza, Re\l...Edmond ". . , , " . " .' . ".,,0£ the, Church' better to. ~eet "1 want to do." '. ot~~~~ r:e~beI:~·. ~-: the:~':e~gy:::~..· Di9Jdnso~, R~v,.Ii~Y~.~i1d)V: i. V~TICAN'CITY'(~~) '~'::n" the needs; o~ tp.e. t~es: '.. ": Highly,: popul'ai' in' thi~"area,. "will make their' iUlfitial retreat .. ~, H.ilme.l,.ll.ev.. James,Y, ,Lyonll. , : :.Ho.ly ·,See hasacce~ted th~. IIp. ':!'.I . . ' Va~~cal~\Cou.nctl· ':.: .. ,..:~sgr ..;.Q';Brien o~e:rs.·Ma.s~.:aaily; .next week" at Cathedral' Camp.' Hey. Robert ~" ~t~~tqn,:,R~v.,~,:,"polntme~t'of" a new J:~panese '. The Pope said that by'means hears confessions 'officiate!) at :." Retreafmaster'i's,Rev.,William Ernest E. 'Blais" Rev. Acialbert' 'am~assad6:; N()rltakce Yoshioka. 'o~ ·t?e·, council he h~pes those nuptials and offets two Mks~esA. Robbins ~f the Oblates of Szklariny; Rev.··Bi·o~is'J.au~·Szy- .. Unli~e ~IS, 'predecesso:~; "M&. th.e 'Chu~ch.. ~I~l be.~b.le .. : eac.h .Sunday. " , ,. ':"""~ i" .... ,." '. 'Mary Mission 'Band, .Newburgh, ' : mansk,i," Rev. ~eginald M. 'Bar-"' YoshIoka IS not a ,?athohc. .,'. ·.outslde to th tId 19 n tt ' . " " " .' "," ,. . .", Mr. Yoshioka comes to'";the seeeessen ~a !vmeor, I , ':i·The,Monsignorcwas"·botri,in"· 'N.Y. . ~eR~e·v .. ~ WI'lII'am' "'.1.' s"h' o"v'e'l'ton' 'Holy See ftom'the"post :Qfam" c., of the'Church, and Will therefore :''', .the' village of :Alhion" inc'western The group of' Dio:cesa'n pri~sts' , includes tne following: Rev: G'eorge' E. 'Arriara( Rev.·basSador.'to Ca'mbodia, He'pre· be drawn'to'returriio'the l;l,~use . Ne~ Yorkn Septemoerl;''1i162, .. , of the Fat?e. r ., . '.. , ' ,.. ' '. ..' just .16 ,days, before ,. the,ploody i . Rev. Armand Levasseur; Rev. ;, Johd ··P. Di'iscoli,Rev. 'Edw-ard .... ; '9'i6usly held diplomatic pos'Ui ill France,' Poland; China an'd' Bel· Although nothlI~g offlcl81has. :~: battle. of Antietam ,was· fought . William Smith, Rev. William H. 'A." Oliveira; Rev. .Albert' F. ""'been announced ab9 u t the"p~s-" 'in th~ War Between,the··Sta.tes. Dolan,.Rev,. Edward B; Booth, Shov·elton·.· " .. ' ./ glUm." . . sible att.endance of no~-C~thohcs ' Big News Rev. F. Anatole. Desmarais. 'Rev:. Louis R. Bo.ivin; Rev. "', at the council, it was recalled The Monsignor retailed that . , Rev.· William H. Harrington, . Thomas J. Leblanc, Rev. MauI'ice ATTENTION' . here that Protestants and memh h boy of 14 the big :Rev.. Joseph K. Welsh, Rev. ·E.Parent; Rev. Manuel Aridrade, ... bers of the Orthodox communw en e was a. Walter j. Buckley, Rev. Joseph Rev. James P. Dalzell. IRISH-AMERICANS · . ·t d t th 1 st news of that time was the mas- . . 10n~ were m:"'I.e 0 e a sacre of Gen. George A. Cusier F. Sutula, Rev. Edmund TremRev. Willi~m E. Farland, Rev. Read Americais Foremost VatIcan cO);lncII 10 1870. and 276 soldiers of his 7th C~y- b l a y . · Rudolf Frick, Rev. Joseph OliIRISH· ,MAGAZINE.' aIry command by the Sioux In-, . Rev. Joao de Medeiros, Itev., veira,Rev. George J. Souza, Rev. Y.early subscription $1.50 La Salette Pi Igrlmage dians at the Little Big Horn Arthur C. dos Reis,' Rev·.Andre P. Jussaume. ' IRISH-AMERICAN RECORD :For Pope's Intention River ~ Montana, He said: Asdrubal C. Branco, Rev. J. Rev. Norman J. Ferris, Rev. 1170 Broadway . "Several years later I stood',on .Omer Lussier, Rev. Au'relie.n,L. Henry T.-Munroe, R.e·v. E.dward Several Jusand New EngM · · . . ·New Yor~.i ..N. Y. landers are expected to attend th,e spot where Custer made.,his . oreau:., ,', . " A:, ,Rausc.h, ·Rev. Roland: J,: ,Bous' .R e v . Edward .J. ' ,Gqrman" Rev. . ..,que . 't',.·.... 'D Ed d .,.1 .' Bur:'"s la st' s't"n'd" · ~h f'fth 1'1' . f <1 • , . ev. ,war ..•.. I. " ~ e I annua pi grimage 0 'Ehe. man who has lived un'~er Jose. ph.~. 1,3: ~vIla, Rev. C~r. 'm ' ;.,i,,_.i..i_ _ ._ _"" :. ·l'Union S1. .Jean Baptiste d'Ame- ' 1 J' K el 1 h r Re M e ' " Rev. 'Luciano Pereira," nev , .' v rique to the'Shrine of Our Lady seven:.popes, .19pr~sidents :and. "Hne/LusM': ·t 7 'R v'.J maeurlcF "' :John A. ·Ross~ey, Rev. Roger L.· .. through· five major,. wars also ..... ;. a on agne,. ev; a s . " G R Ed d 'J' Le .....,.. "; ..... of La Salette', Attleboro; at3 this . b d' '''All m' i'ife' /. ha've" McDermott.· " . " '. agne, , ev. m~n ". ,. . . When it's .,time : -:.. :.,. Sunday. afternoon. . ,,0 :;erye " .. .'i. . b"'" .'. 'Rev . William D Thomson' ,'vesque, Rev. JameS'. A, Clark. , . ., . .. 'had the good fortun.e tq e,asso-. , ' . . , , " ...: ":,.., '., "B , . ".'"'. · RtR~v: M~gr ...Donat ~. ~ett,~,.' .1ate9-)SI'th·:good: eople;','Theyr': 'Rev. -William E. Collard,Hev. Rev. Joao. C. Martms, Rev,... " .. to. retire,. _. ...y, <., :,~ut~am, C~nn;,s~te chaPlalO!O~ '''~ave''ini;~e '~yplfth·easier:be- .., W~lIiam R Jordan,:·R.ev.'H~\\."ard,R&P.~ Levesque ,Rev,·Gerald T..::, ,,'.' " ' . ' ~",~, Bento, '. ~l UOlon, WIll" preSide. Rev. Ar cause 0f th' elr d evo t'IOn t 0 .. '.'.Our .. ,'.' A·. . .'Waldron , '. Rev' "Alfred" . . R .... Shovelton,.Rev. .. " ... . . . R,.Fr.aga, .: . . :: th!-.1~,..L, ,J31~~V:~V~~I' ,P<lst~r:<:,f 'Lbrd;' ,t:If"'tiier-e'irW, a'ii:yihi(lg to "\ Forni. . ' . . . ..,cRev;·.Ar:qtan,dq ~A..Anl)u.nzlato. ",:;' ;.. " ... ... \. YCh.f!.st th,e,. ,~mgChurch, West which_1 can at(rili>u~e.mflohgeRev. George "S;' Daigle,'Rev.'·" Rev.;-·J..- Adr}en';BernieF;'!Hev. ,: .\.'. 'j., ,,', ,.... ~ 'i. , .•.;~ar,~i~f." ~Ill pre.ach. . vity it. is the basic·r~i¢:()f.'life ""Henri-Charest; Rev;,Roland B,..,:~.dwar~;O;Paquette, R~v; Ar.thur! . ,:. r~',. '" .J~he ::);111grlma~~ IS be10g ..~~l~ I have 'irie~to follow:.whic~.·is <:;]:30ule,.'Rev. L !. M... Gurry.,'·Rev. K. W,mgate;' Rev;·' iVmc:eIlt'·, f. ,,: , ''''., ,•.for t~e. success of the Ecumemcal .. d' th T n Q'omniand- ;, ..".Bernard .1: Fenton." ;,,, ,Diaferiq. f " " ' , ". "!" , · ··Councll convened by Pope John '. contame 10 e e.,.. .... . R' . L t L· H 11· '. R . ",;c, , , ' , . . , '.. '", . ments." . . . ev.· es.er.:. u, ev. · XXIII. The Guard of Honor and Alfred .1 Gendreau Rev Henri "Marian Cadets of Sacred Heart Mass R. Can~el '1ev.. 'Clare~ce J. f'arisp, Brockton, will take part . . 'd'Entremorit 'R'ev. William. H.. 987"COUNTY STitEIET ,-, ",., in th\il ceremonies wh~ch willin-FRIDAY'-:"'Mas~of th~~~:·previous. "'O;Reilly.' .. ' . . " ,,'" NEW BEbf.9RD. :"'.. "elu.de a sermon, statIOns of. the ._ Sun'tlay..Simple. Green. Mass . Rev. John G. Carroll Rev. "Cross; "procession, singin'g of Proper; No Gloria;.")5econd Gerard Boisvert Rev. William ,hymqs, consecration to Our Lady Collect Ss. Protus ',and 'Hya. .' . . '... · of :La.·Salefte, benedicti~ii, vene-.": dnth; 'Martyrs; Common p'ref-~, ; Leg icnof ,Decency , "ration of a' reHcof Christ's Cross, , ' ...ace.' .,:. ; . " .. blessing of the sick· and blessing' .,'. . ' The' following filmS are to be, . '. 234 SECOND STREET.' ,-of automobiles. . -, . . SATtiR'pAY~Most Hply. ~~me added to the lists in their respec- '. ,.~76 Ce~t~at St., Fall Riv~r' Religious, arrangements for' the ,;. of' ' Mary.' Greater'" ·Double. tive classifications: "' . FALL RIY~R:: ,':.',: osborne 6~8279 ',event, open to all French-speak- " White. Mass Proper; Gloria; Unobjectionable for adults and .. ",../:' , lng Catholics in New England, Creed; Preface of Bl'e-liSed adolesc~nts; Ghost of 'Dragstrip ." P R I NT I·N G /; , , are under the supervision of Rev. Virgin. : ~'; Hollow; Tingler.": Unobjectionable for adults: '_:'Rene Sauve, :M.S., director: of the SUNDAY-":":XVII "Sunday ,After Attleboro shrine, in cooperation Pentecost., Double. Green. Yesterday's Enemy; !Hue Denim•. COME S~E··. ~tJnd DRIVE 'with Theophile Martin, fraternal 'Mass' Pr'oper; Gloria; Creed; Objectionable -in part for all: director for rUnion. Preface of Trinity. Bticket of Blood (sadism;, low . . moral tone;' suggestive' BeMONDA Y~Exaltation of the' quence). . "The World's Most Beautifiilfi Proportioned CanHoly' Cross. Greater Double. -. ·at·· . FORTY .HOURS, Red. MassProp\ilr; Gloria; DEVOT,ION Creed; Preface of Holy Cross. .Cake. Sale / TuESDAY~Seven' .Sorrows 01. , . '. Sponso'r'ed by Sept. l3-St. Anne, Fall River. the Blessed Virgin Mary. St, .Jos~p~'s Women's G~i1d St. Dominic, Swansea.' . Double .of' II Class. .White. FORD DEALERS FOR OVER 38 YEARS Sat,/'Sept~12,19S9 S~Pt.. ~~ve~Ol!~rOss, Fall-Mass ProPer; Gloria; Second . 3 to 8 P.M. St. Joseph, Attleboro. Collect St. NiComeaes, Martyr; .1344-86 Purchase St. .New BedfOrd,' . ·Sept. 27 - St. Anthony of Sequence; Creed; Preface of St. ,Joseph's School · . Padua, New 'Bedford. Blessed Virgin. ," . Sacred He'art,"Taunti:Ui: "., ·:·'WEDNESDA;.Y---Ember Wearles-. No. Hi~h Street, Fall .River. Oct. 4-Our Lady of the Holy .1,. d~Y'" Qf." 'S~ptember: S~·ple.', ------~~---_.;,;;."...;.' 'l" ....., Rosary, Eai~ River.". .~ '" ,.hy~ol~t; Ma~ Proper;, No cG)o_,' Our Lady' of th~' Holy rill; Second Collect Ss.C,or- ~ , '.':'" Rosary, Taunton. I neHusJ Pope, and . Cyprian, , Our Lady of.the,:A:ssump;." """Bishop', Mai't'Y'fs;'Tiil'i'(f'c~l.fect, '".' tion, New Bedford. Ss. E\l'phemia, L)lcy .~J;l.4 Gein.ELECTRICAL .., '; .'. ' . . . . inianus, . Martyrs; 'Commoo ... ~refaQe.: :.C' . ,._ " CONTRACToRs .Residential .;;.., Commercial., · THE ANCHOR THURSDAY - ImpressioJ\': Of -. SeconCl.class· mail' pri\>ileges authori~'" ',' '. 'Sti'gmat3 on ;S't: ':Fr~ncjs, ConIndust?lal .... ': ' '. ! 'T~u::J~y ~~ve:io r.:.f.r"IiIa:r~:~~ue,eF~ fessor. Double. White. Mass , 6~~Broqdway, ~H River , Rive~. Mass.•),y t1I~Catholle.'P.reB8.of thll. " .ptoper; Gloria;' Common Pr~ , OS 3·1691 DiOcete' of Fall:Ri'ver. Subseriptioll' price • fa'ce,.'• • ~, ." • ' • llF mail. postpaid U.OO per )'elll'.
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Saturday'. . Night lSoci.al..Group': Helps Keep'"
Pastor of Victim
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Fall RiverCYO Dances, at ,High Level
NEW YORK (NC) - The : t f 0 th sla'n b .pas or 0 gang a y uhas called 1 Y ,teenage for ,th·e.irilmediate jaiIi~g of "aD ,known' members 01. juvenile
By Patricia McGowan.
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THE ANCHORSept., 10, 1959
Ordin~JrY
Polish
Lau~sAmerlca
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,,0 ~ m~t With juvenile delinquency more and moreproniiriEmtin today's news.. it's re~reshingF" .' C'h' . _ a quintet of, youngsters, who are far· from being., nro,blems•.They're the n.ewly" O. r",.. Grltv
"" installed offic.ersof the Saturday Night Social Group'at Franklin Street CYO, Fall Rive'r.:. SOUTH ORANGE NC)~ Tbeir. job is, to .help·tile weekiy,CYO dances.. maintain theirpreseiIt high of popularPolish prelate gave a new :....ng~.~ . , ' ." itiwith yo~ng8tersaJ1dap- '. . . . . . .. meaning" Jhe old phrase '. ..Msgr. Joseph i. McCaffre,.,proval by pareritfCAlthough ' , at:ihe second World Sodality ... 'pa~to~ .': of Holy. Cross Church, the 'd~nces have :been going: . CongreSS ,b:e~e when. h~-said '. ,ma~e . th~ plea i~ a serm~~ oft· ·for. severai,~eason9 ihis' . '. ":rh~'ll\!-n;pever.sets o~ America. :. pceached at a Requiem Mass ..... ;., . " . .,:,.f . . cl,arlty.... . . " . Ax"" h'b'" h', J h" G . l' · "'hifOh he offered for Anthon,. will ..~t~e ·fIrst y~ar t~ . '. ,.. .. , . . . . . . ' . t· th m se'1 h . " C ,IS op osep "r .• , aw ma, . '~es ~v~~-, c.x:~z,esmskl" 16. The l'4o~slgn~r. ~r°';1P;~r~, Ordinill~Y .for PolQli in .~xile and , . ~r:rnerly sery.ed for. 30 years as ' "lclp,a, ~~, el~. p.~nmll~ .:" ,episcopal director of the World '~, ~~aplai.n with, the city police ", new: ~~\:t' Inau~ura, ~. ld . "Federaiion of. 'Sodalities of Our , ~{)a'r'tmenh" ' . ' ' . ~a8te~n t e ~g. .c:ten;Oi~· ..~ . Lady, gav( the keynote addreg ~ ..¥04 ng ~riesins~i 'a,nd 'R?b-. '. ' ~ ur day .mg th ad n. nmll- . , at theopering plenary session a& : '~t Young, .also 16, ~ere vic~lms .Ion tll~e. ' urmg, e anee. Seton Hall University: here. eta knife' a.tt~cJc· carried out in. , ' , '~,ed&'e Servic:e Hi~ .refere....ce to America. : • pla.yground n;ar rimeS Squ:~.e. ,Da.,!cers cl~ared th~ floor. and , charity caine at' the end of his "by memb~~s0 a een~ge g an ~Isle '!Vas made With colored talk on the congress' theme: ,~no,~_n as d,ThedYou~: ::r:~rlC>t >treamer~. Down it walked' the' "'The ~ocation of the Sodalist ill .Tn'" twobea.~oi. s h ' .' new. officers: Jo Ann Casper, the Crises o.f the World Today." e rs ,«angdrrem l 7 ," 0 I~b ave a~~tephen Lopes; Michael Megna, . "Looking, at America" he said, reste two 1 dy~~r-o tt ac .0 . Richard Medeiros and R0ger t "r see how among the shadows of : reput~dl~ ave e :h· ... ~nGauthier. One by one they 'materialisin (there) emerges a ear · persons k I It ISf Yt gl~ pledged service and loyalty to bright image her. spirit III ~e.w YOI' as;l resu 0 eenat~e .CYOand 'lit' a candle i O c h a r i t y . . . . ' . v~?lence, . . token of their promise: . .. . " . At about· the same time Msgr. .' . ' .. ' As,an eXile himself, who hu 'McCaffrey was off~ring Requiem , • Thent~e musi<; ~t~rted ' a g a i I t t r a v e l e d a r o \ l n d the .world,' h. MaSs in his church, near: Times,·and the hvely evenmg went on. . noted that ,"I am able to stat~ a. ··Square for the Krzesinski youth,' But· the..dances . have l\learit ,an eXllert, that the noble Amer'8ervices . were' beil)g 'held in mQre ,to Fall River teen-agen . ican patio,n possesses the h,ghest rmmaculatEi Conception· Churcn than a Saturday nigh pastime; . (lul.ture of charity'." · in the Bronx for the Young boy., ,"We' have strict rUl~sas to' ..•... Archbi~hop Gawlina said that ., :' . . ·Lenient Jud!l'es ,.behavior and dress" said Misi :.- .he saw ;l.wor~d,divided·intotw'e ' .. camps,o the. ~asterr. half, under' . ~ ,Msgr. McCaffrey demande~: "catherine 'Coughli~ lrieharge · ~at police' be instructed "to fight. ··o( the. affairs . "anJ .it's really: . , ., ". .' . comm\lnismand the western. at · fQ~ce with f~rc~~he on~y .lan..' "~~CJe'~ did~r¢~ce in 'the the '.' 'CYOOFFICERS: Left: to fight, s~ilted; Robert Gauth~' libert~. B';It,he ~id,. "theboun: guage the J.uvemle cr.lmm?ls, b:Oys an(t.'g~rls act.".. ..._.. ie.r,~?Anr.Casper. St,~n.ding, 'left.tc( righ~' Stephen ~ary hne: IS ,not' stral~ht" Sub,who are takmg over the Cit,.·· ' '" , . . . .. . . .Mich~el Megna, Richard Medeiros. . . Jugated .peoples, he saId, wonder ,understand." , .. ,. :' . Onre 'at the dance,' the' teen-' "if .the Christians of the West" , "We cage wild animals," be ·ag ers,,9t.h to 12th graders, c~n't Startiilg,with~haV:e~ag'e"~ttend_" will have monthl,. meetIngs of' u,nderstand, their tragedy. ,The,. , l8id. "Shall not these boys, and. . ~an~~ .lnan~ out of the bUl1~.' " ance' of ''80,' dances now' attrjlct 'officers, assisted" by 'Robe'jot think, .he declared, that. "com.. girls be caged? What we should, . mg. Jf th~r g? ou~, they do?·t 175' to 200'. weekly; " . ' ". ,Gauthier, . vice president and munism h.as only on*,aim, (the) · 40 is pass a law by, which .all·· come back, ,said MISS Coughhn,' ,. Young "OfficerS' '." Notre Dame parishiol1er~ . p.olitics o.f c~nquering the whol~ known members of. gangs would As a' re~ult, . nearly everyone The n~~office~s hope' to' add More power to these Diocesan world;'~.while the West has three be arrested and sent to jail." . stays. unhl th~ ;ery.last.dance- other' 'soc'ial activities to the y!>ungsters who're. combating aims; ~'poli.tics, . business an4 He charged ,that. lenient . and .for ~any It s the on~y such .dance sch~dule.Maybe there'll .. delfriquencr the fun way! . comfort." Judges, over-sympathetic youth' ,a(falr their parents pern:lt them be a bowling'league, picnics,. and board consultants and other. . to attend, because they re sure .so fOr"th. Orie sure th'ing is that "coddlers" are "obsessed with of .adequate chaperonage. :the'teen~agerS' help oui at the senseless theory that there Add Records' Weekly a penny sale' Pllmned this Fail fa no such thing as a bad ~?y." . Sharing the supervisorY. role by the center's.auxHiary. "It would be as sen~eless, he w'ith 'Mis!! Coughlin' are Miss .' "E~entu~ily, thought says. · sa~d, "as to say: ther~ IS ~ such Mary 'Cronin, assistant director Father ,Sullivan, ','~e hope to . thmg as a mad dog. 'of the center' Miss Janice Hurley have muc.i:l of, ti).is activity on a ,·C' 0',' .nd Clement' J, DowlIng. . ... '.parish ·basis.The area CYO 'sup. J o h'" ' "the n M urray, a . D'urf"ee ,HI'gh . .'plies' h " need h',where 'parishe.' School student is disc: jockey. 'd,~nt .a':~.,t ell:.own recrea~Choic.~ 1""lIIII " ' two or three . ' otherlj "b facIlIties/', alld aree ' " :- tlonal .....'.' .. . " , . The Sisters of Notfe Dame' de ~rig trained t~ supplement 'him. . ".: . :;The F~n: Wa,. .\ . 'Namur are happy to be affiliated ~'We'd ,like eventually ~'have . Specific duties. of ,the' young w.ith' .the educatiomil 'pr!>gram .. a .teain ot',youngsters -.able to . officers iiiClude,' for. ·Jo Ann, a "UNION.WHARF, FAIRHAVEN, MASS. · of the Dioce. oj Fall River and ke~Pt~ingsgoing," said Misl'Sacr~dHeartsAca~emystudent,. Diocese, in turn, .is grateful Coughlin. ', . ,the' main.taingof, ,contact· with·.. J 41JlT.,dfJ).T41JlT~T..,~T., T., ,~,41JiT ..'41Jl.TdfJ).T .", ~TdfJ).T ~T 41JiT 41Ji~ '/ tor' the. Sist~rs'cooperation in' "Ttiin~s'are'gay now hb~ever, ,'~irl~att~,idi?g"d~?cesa'ndcarry~ f;;I' . staffing the new Bishop Stang·· . , , t f ' . 1 mg. their wIshes, to the rest '.01. .~ .. , ' . ..' :.. School. . what WIth at leas, our specla, thO 'ff"" ",,' S'' h ' , ·b l' <p": e:' Re g.10 nal '''h ..> ' , ' "d " d . 1 U' e 0 Icers., . e., e ong. """ .<!'I f;;I' .. Most .Rev. James L.· ~onnol1,. " . ress-fuI? 't' a,:,c~s yeatr y, ,l!-d ·Sacred'-Heartpai'ish. ' . ..:! : . lly welcomed' the Sisters sorts ~ : I,ll et:mlsslon, ex ras an ...:",. . .. ~ eo. o...ff,the ICla. . ",. d th th dd d tt . Richard' Medeiros boy Diocese MondaY"and ex-' now. an , en e a e "a .rac-. ' . ' ... -. - ..' . ,', , . . counL .C t 'E . T'.I ms> ' " :.. · tha k to Mother tion of free refreshments. ',', ,ed~o'r", ~Ill con,tact bpys In the ,":., OW OS' asy er., ' r;;.t .pres~e d h IS . n s. . .. '~"'.', -., ,same. WilY. He's a,Durfee student ~ f;;I' .Josepha of St.FrancIs,./.N:~.. . The speCial dances c.ome when and also: parishioner of Sacred :..: " ,~ !lnd :- M~ther Eleanor ,oseP,' officers ,are _inst~He~," as. last Heart.··....... :, .,.~' . .. . :.,; '. .~. 1""lIIII, ' .. S.N.D., " . S;aturday,' at \ Chn,sfmas,' elth.er '.'" '. L: . The" Superio'rs congratulated' before or after Lent and' at grad· : M~chael. Me~na Ill· secretarY'•. '.' ~ fOf the.. purchase. 0,'f .. '; ,, ~ the Bishop'and the people of the uation~At'least'10 new records treasure!' 'and'In' char~e. of"cC?r~ ~ ~ , 'Di~cese on the splendid accomare:added to·the CYO collection rlesP?~denceSatnuJPUbhl~CltY" ~eh,- , .~. . OR'. USED CAR'S ~ plisi:lme.nt o.f providing .every ,weekiy' a'nd old favorites are . O~glhg. to . osep spans ..:. r;;.t. facjlity, for, ~~ucating, .Catholic continually in requests; too. ,he salso at Durfee, . ~ l;>' ,.outh in the. new ,school., . . . . , .' . . . . ~tephe,:, Lo~s, of St. MI~h- 'a...: Mother Josepha of St. Francis, . Keepmg .an eye on .eveI;ythmg ael spa~lsh and Dur~.ee High ~ ~ Mother Generai of the Sisters . IS, Rev. Walter ,Sulhvan, cyo School,. IS group president. He ..: ~ of .Notre Dame de Namur, has director...~t. least on~e du~mg ~ ~ her headquarters in Frascati, each ~vemng, he. manages to near Rome. Mother Eleanor drop In. and say hello to the alllnlt1~ ~' ,~ .Joseph is 'Mother General, with hundre~s of youngsters present. '. :,' rl 6.J ,,:., ~ headquarters in Waltham. 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Dedicate Shrine ' At ,Navy, Station On Midway.' I
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., - Sept. 0., 10, '1959 • \ . , .' \.
,Fall Season Opens
"The Parish ,Pa,r~de
MIDWAY ISLAND (NC)o -An outdoor shrine of, the •. and Philippine mahogany :' sheltering a whi'te marble
SS. PETER AND PAUL, ST.' PATRICK'S, "FALL RIVER " FALL RIVER , October activities of the Woin.. The parish auction postponed , statue :of' Our Lady of Fatlma ,from Aug. 29 will be' held at ,en's Guild will include, rum- ,,:, has been dedicated 'at 'this naval mage sale in the church hall ,7:30 this Saturday evening, .'installation In ,the mid-Pacific. Wednesday and Thursday, 'Oct. Sept. 12 in the schoo', auditorium, Fatlier (Cmdr.) James C. ConSlade Street. Items to be auc- , 14 and 15. WedneSday evening Dolly, . O.P., Catholic chaplain, hours will be from 6 to 9 and tioned ' include ,china, living' dedicated the shrine' following 'room sets, tables and chairs' and Thursday's schedule is from 9in ' an afternoon Mass, recitation ell the morning until 1. A harvest other household furnishings. , the Rosary, and consecration to supPer will be held hl the hall ¥rs. William T. DorinellY,and the Immaculate Heart of Mary• • large comrrfittee are in charge We~nesday, Oct. 21. Participating in' the ceremonT 'of the auction: Joseph M. SANTO CHRISTO, was Capt. William S. Richards, , McManus will be ,'auctioneer. FALL RIVER the' commanding officer of the There is no charge for admission. The Council' of Catholic installation, who accepted the Women will hoid a meeting and shrine as a part of- tlie naval staOUR LADY OF HEALTH, tea beginning at 2 SU~dai after:" ti<in. -Cmdr.. I. A. Kittel, execu~ALL RIVER tive officer of the station Wal The women's, guild will hold noon, Sept. 20,-in Fatima House. a guest of honor. The Catholic a meeting anti potluck supper at ' Mrs. Theresa Bazinet 'is chair~ j man. 'personnel of the station and their 6:30 Monday evening, Sept. 21, at dependents attended the dedica'which Rev. George, Souza, tile SACRED HEART, tion. parish's new curate, will be wel-, FALL RIVER Built along simple lines, the ,comed. Other Fall activities in'Boy Scout Troop 6 attended a shrine is made of tile and brick. clude the annual banquet, W~d pre-school camping trip at The roof and altar are made from nesday, OCt. 28,' and a turkey Myles Standish State Forest, -Philippine mahogany. ' On the .upper Saturday, Nov; 14. South Carver, under the direc,wall .behind the. sfatue are 50 tion of Thomas Grady, scoutmasOUR LADY OF ANGE~S, stars, representing the stars of ter. Activities included swimFALL RIVER , ' the 50 United States and also ming and hiking. The Women's Guild will hold representing Mary's title as, Star 'a penny sale at 8 Friday evening, ~CULATE CONCEFnON, of the Sea. Sept. 18, in the parish hall. Mrs. FALL RIVER "It is the fervent prayer of all --' Olive Canario, is chairman. A 'the Catholic people on Midway," The annual membership ,tea ,fashion 'show is planned for , 'of the' Women's Guild will 'be' ., Father ,Connolly said, "tl1at thi.' ,Tuesday, Oct. 20, at Pocasset held Sunday afternoon, ,Sept. '20, , \ simple shrine which, they 'have 'Country Club, with Mrs. Oc~ in the church hall, preceded by , '.erected 'il! honor of Our Lady' of via Hilario in charge. Fatima; will be a perpetual \, Benediction at 3 'in the church. 'prayer before the throne ol All women in the parisli ~e ,{ "ST~ JOSEPH'S, invited.' '. ." TAUNTON FIRSTFRIDAY CLUB: Merrill Maynard . Divine Mercy, pleading, ~ FALL RIVER 'The 'first meeting of the . , Mrs~ John J. Mullaney' 01. with his 'seeing-eye dog 'greets ,'Mr. and Mrs. Antone Rose of '" stantly through the loving intacession of Mary for the conver, Women's Guild will be held to- Attlebo~o, 'president of Fall , ,night, at 8, and will be high- ,River Diocesan' Council ,of '52 Harrison Avenue, Tatintpn,.at firsfmeeting of the C~th- " sion .of Russia, and a just all41 oIie Family'First Friday' Sup{)er Club. , ,lasting peace for all mankind." lighted ~ ap' ,old-fashioned Catholic Women, will be a guest. ' , .tyle, show. " A food and cake sale will be held Saturday afternoon, and : 'evening, Sept. 12, from 3 to 8 in the school hall. e, Real Estate loans NEW YORK, (NC)-Increased ~ision . we have to know,? how' Savings Bank Life Insurance ST. MARY'S, , these media, operate, the chancooperation on the part of the NORTON Church organizations with the nels t~rough which they can be Christmas and Vacation Clua. The Catholic Woman's Club mass communications media was reached, the' kind of material Savin. Accounts will hold, its first Fall meeting 'urged here by Bishop La~renCe they can use and the form in at 7 Tuesday evening, Sept. 22, J. Sheilan of Bridgeport, Conn. which it must be 'pr~sented," be 5 Convenient loccltions m V.F.W.Hall. A potluck supsaid. Bishop Shehan said CatholiCtl per will be served after the busi"Unless we take the trouble ness session, with Mrs. Harvard must be informed, adaptable to learn these things, unless we and frien!Jly in dealing with the , Dyer in charge. ' are willing to adapt ourselves .' communications media. A cake sale is planned to . esseritial requirements, and 'The : B l' i d g e POl' t prelate October under the direction of unlesS our approach is marked Mrs. Clarence Rich, ways and 'preached at a Mass opening the by that friendliness, which, 'first national Catholic communiineans committee .chairman: , aiter 'all, is dictated! py charity, cations /seminar, held at ManOUR LADY OF FATIMA,' hattan College here. His theme there is little we can expect." Some ,100 priests, Religious SWANSEA was repeated by other speakers The Women's Guild will meet during the five-day conference. and laymen in public relations and publicity work attended the for the first t~me this seaso~ at 8 Bishop Shehan is Episcopal I ..: Monday evemng, Se,?t. 14,,1ll t?e moderator of the Bureau.of In- . general sessions and work church hal~. The soc.lal h,our ~1l1 formation, National Catholic groups. They examined ChUrch feature, a sllen~ auc~lOn to Wh~ch / W~lfare Conference, which'spon- problems in public relations, publicity, the general press and mem~ers, are requested to b~lll.g, sored the seminar. donations., Mrs, John ponals. 18 The Bishop said there.is an radio and television programin charge of refresh":lents. "increasing awareness" within m i n g . ' A rummage sale .wIll be h~ld the Church of the importance of '" ~aturday, Oct, 3, With: Mrs. WIlusing the communications media liam Andrews as chaIrman. "to get the Church's story, her' ST, STANISLAUS, teaching and her policy before FARMS' FALL RIVER . the general public." 146 Washington St., Fairhaven An open house and coffee hour • BAR-B·Q Chickens Knowledge Necessary will be held by the PTA and • CUT-UP Chickens "But in order to cooperate Alumni Association Sunday, • DAY OLD Eggs v.:itiI. the press, radij> and teleSept. 13. • . CHICKEN Pies • POTATOSALAD School Supervisors • COLE SLAW ,To Attend Meeting • BAKED' BEANS (week-ends) " The seventh annual C~mfer, ence for Supervisors and :',Priri• CHICKEN SALAD. cipals of Catholic Schools in ~ New England will be' held' 'at Boston College Satu'rday, Sept. 12, sponsored by the Boston ColIT'S ALL RIGHT TO lege School of EdIication. SHOP AROUND. FOR., Rev. Charles F. Donqvan, S.J., SOME THINCiS; BUT pean 'of the School of Education, will give the opening ad<. dress. Dr. JoSeph Leo 'Driscoll,' Director of the Student Teach, ing Program at Boston College, 202-206 Rock Street will discuss ·"Problems Faced' in Fall River Stilaent Teaching and Teacher IS !!:!E PLACE "0 Placement." .\ ,GET A PRESCRIPTION FI LLE'O! ','
a:
Bishop Urges Catholics,' Cooperate With Media of Communitations
" Check The~eBQnking' Services
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10'Otl' BIRTHDAY ,.~t~
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MIS,SlON' DE:LEGATE: Miss Elizabeth Reid of Brisbane, Australia, a member of the Grail Lay Apostolate, will take a pro!TIinent part in .the 10th anniversary meeting of the Mission Secretariat in Washington, Sept. 28 to 30. NC rhoto.
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Cardinal Asserts 'Kerala Battle Is Only Half Won
Ambry Secured to Sacristy Wall' Provides Practical Safeguard for Ht?ly ',Oils
By Rev. Roland Bousquet St. Joseph's Church, New Bedford' Oil, from. time immeIporial, bas alway,S been held in great respect. Kings were ~ oin~ with it. The athletes of Ancient Greece and Rome made their limbs supple with it. India has removed the c'ommu- It served 'as soothing ointment for the sick. At dusk, every housewife lit 'the oil lamps. Ilist government of Kerala state , The olive tree represented vitality and prosperity to the ancient world. It nourished, ~m office, "only half the cured and strengthened. The ' 'Xerala battle is won." branch of the olive tree re"The greater battle remains," he said. "We' are worried abOut mains the standard of peace. Kerala. Kerala's people should The Church has always hera BOMBaY (NC)-Valeriaa Cardinal Gracias, Arch,bIshop ., Bornbay, said here that even though the President of
be very vigilant, and not be ,oliVe oil in great esteem. She eomplacent after their victory." uses it in her sacraments and in India's sole Cardinal declared her most important blessings.' that'it is a standard communist The symbolic significance of its technique never to admit defeat, use by the Church harmonizes and always to be confident, about with its natural use. Oil serves ·to sweeten, strengthen and renthe next round. der supple. The Church uses it His speech followed tbe publication of an official version of for these purposes. the report by 'Kerala's nonBaptism makes us participants communist governor, Ramain the royalty and to a degree krishna Rao, concerning the conin the priesthood of Christ. We duct of the elected communist can participate actively in Our government of the state. Car- Lord's sacrifice because we are baptized. 'Kings' are anointed dinal Gracias called the report the "best, justification of the with oil as a sign of their royalty. The head of the baptized stand we took in Kerala." person is also anointed as a sign' , Urges Examinatioll that he now belongs to a royal Then, noting that certain forand priestly ·race, the ChUrc.h. eign papers had been critical of The candidate for baptism i. the agitation against the Kerjlla also anointed with Oil of the Red regime, and aiso critic~ of Catechumens to remind him that Indian Prime Minister Jawaharlei Nehru's stand (which even- he now possesses the grace to' 'wally brought about the re- overcome the snares of the deviL The hands of the young priest lime's ouster), the Cardinal said: "I would ask American news- are consecrated with Oil of the Catechumens to remind him that papers to examine the Govern,his whole person is now dediOI"S report and' tell us whether cated 'to th~ worship and service there is more democracy 'iD 'of GOd. 'America than here in India. -He is now another Christ em- , "The Catholic citizen is at full powel'~d to bless and heai souls liberty to vote for any party or individual whose views, princi- and. bring them safely to their ples or programs do not conflict eternal home. The oil of the sick with Catholic faith and morals. comforts the dying and strengthConsequently he cannot vote for' ens them to .make the journey a party officially condemned by to God with fulness of everlasting iife. the Church. New Lite "The Catholic vote must unreservedly go to candidates of This eternal life is immortalfine character and public spirit. ized in heaven by the vision of For India's moral crisis is even God. Ho~ever,' this eternal greater than the materi~I." life begins here on earth at the baptismal fQnt. It is weak, subject to temptations, to ,be sure, this side of heaven. Yet it is a new life, the Divine life shared LONDON (NC)-Some 6,000,- by the soul. In the solemn con000 Britons spent a half-hour . ferring of baptism baptismal water is used. And ,this water is inside a Carmelite convent through the eyes and ears of blessed during the Easter Vigil with Holy Oils consecrated by television. 'By special permission of the the bishop the previous ThursHoly See, the British Broadcast- day. The cathedral, on Holy Thurs,. ing COl'poration was allowed to take its cameras and commenta- day, becomes the scene for the blessing of the three kinds Of tors through the gates of the eonvent at Presteigne, North Holy Oils: Holy Chrism (a mixture of olive oil and baim, a Wales, to give the nation a ({limpse,at a 'eak viewing period resinous substance extra.cted from certain aromatic trees), of. the strict silent way of life of a small group of dedicated Oils of Catechumens and ,)il of th€ Sick. The bishop in the com'Women. pany of 12 priests representing Simple Lite 'The program showed the nuns the 12 Apostles, seven deacons, as a happy, composed and digni- representing the seven first deafied communit~' iiving a siniple , cons of the Church and seven life in austere conditions, work- sub-deacons consecrates the Holy ing and praying ,:!riously and Oils during the special Mass of the Chrism i,n one of the moSt intently in a convent which they built themselves. Viewers Saw solemn and impressive ceremony how the convent is administered, of the Church. We can thus appreciate more the work the nuns do, their devotions and even their commu- keenly the intimate relation nity room wher~ they spent be- between the Mass and the Sacfore the cameras their few daily raments in which these Holy Oils are used. The sacraments ininutes of recreation. The feature, entitled "Out of derive their power to transform This World," was handled by and elevate from the' Cross. Hywell Davies, a toP 'national Without the Cross the Holy Oils eommentator. Critics generally would remain empty symbols ,at most, the sacraments empty hai.led it as a B.B.C. triumph. ---gestures. Safe Placle The reverence of the Church for 'the Holy Oils is surpassed MONTPELIER (NC) - The only by that with which she Vermont Supreme Court upheld honors the Ho4' Eucharist. AJJ a • Windsor County Court gran(J matter of fact, in the early cenjury indictment charging the turies of the, Church a definite Verham News Corp., of West architectural parallel was often Lebimon, N. H., with eight sepa, rate coun'ts 'of distributing inde- established between the two. The Sacred Species' w,ere reeent magazines during January aerved in golden doves susand February, 1958. pended above the altar and the Attorney General Frederick ,H91y ,Oils were at times reserved •. Reed said he expects the case in silver doves suspended above to be tried "very shortly." The ,the baptismal font. . indictment against the news As time went on it became " company i. the first test of apparent, however, that stricter Vermont's obscene literature lew, passed by the 1957 legislature. The indictment charged In, 1911, the Sisters' College the corporation with distributing at Catholic' Univerity was es.ight different indecent magatablished at' the proposal of .ines in the White River JunoBishop Spaidina: of Peoria. ~ area.
Nuns' Convent Television Scene
,AMERY FOR HOLY
oil;
measures were necessary to cabinet is secured to the wall of safeguard the Holy Oils. From _ the sanctuary near the main the ninth century on ,various , altar, preferably on the gospel councils and, synods made it ._,side. A similar ambry often mandatol'Y to place the Holy adorns the baptistry. Oils in a safe place. The Holy Oils are stored' ill No definite prescriptions were silver or pewter containers propformulated except that the Holy erly marked S.C. for Holy Oils were to be kept in church, Chrism, O. C. for Oil of Cateunder lock and key, and were'to chumens,' O. I. for Oil of the be handled only by priests. A' Sick. Each container is tightly practical solution was found in capped. Smaller oil stocks are placing a cupboard or chest in also used for 'the administration or on. the sanctuary wall near of the sacraments. the main altar. These cupboard. A fresh supply of Holy Oib were the prototypes of our is procured each year on Holy modern ambry. Thursday by a priest of each Small Cabinet parish of the diocese. This liturgical discipline emphasizes the The ambry is a small cabinet, usually of wood although marble hierarchical character of the and metal are used, provided sacraments which unites so inwith a, door on which are .in- timately each parish church to scribed "Olea Sacra",. Holy Oils. the Mother Church, thecatheThe interior of the cabinet may dral; each priest, each recipient of the sacrament, to their combe lined with white silk or with purple if it serves to hold the mon father, the bishop. Oil of the Sick exclusively. The "(Next Week-The Thurib~
5
End Controversy Over Sisters As, Teachers STEUBENVILLE (NC)The grade school in Churchtown, Ohio, which for the past three years was leased by a parish to be run as a public school, has opened this year under Church auspices, thus closing controversy -over Sisten as teachers. The opening of St. John's parochial school, last year known as £hurchtown Public School, was announced here by Msgr. Henry Grisby, superintendent of schools for the Diocese of Steubenville, in which Churchtown is located, Although St. John the Baptist parish leased the school to the local public school board for two years previously, last year four nuns were brought in as teachen and this stirred up controvefsy over the arrangement. The Washington County School Board told the Watertowll District School Board, the unit whose jurisdiction' includes Churchtown, that the Sisten could not be retained as teache.t'll this academic year. Want Sisters Retained After this announcement, • was made known that Churchtown parish and the local school bQard would not renew the lease. Bishop John King Mussio ~ Ste\lbenville commented througb a spokesman here that the controversy was a matter betweea the public school board for - Churchtown and the, county school board, and did not in, volve the Church. "The move to open the school as a pat:ochial school was taken ,in response to appeals tha~ the Sisters somehow be retained as teachers in the school," the Bishop was quoted as saying.
Bishop on Visit ' WEWAK (NC) -Bishop Leo C.' Arkfeld, S.V.D., Vicar Apostolic of Wewak, has left New Guinea by plane for a visit to Australia, Europe and the United States by Nov. 9 to attend' the golden wedding anniversary of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. G~orge Arkfeld of Panama, Iowa.
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THEANCHOR__ Di~es~of Fall,River-Thurs;. Sept.lO.1959;
"Out,: With "Mack".. ,'"
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"Mack the Knife" has been· banished: from. an entire network. His sins of more' than two hundred 'year ago have' , caught up with him and. he has been, Classified as eJefinitely ',~' ," tlelinquent. ' The' Cohimbia Broadcasting System has announced . that all vocal versions of the' song, "Mack ,~he Knife,'~..ar~ being banned from the ~ir, The song is one of the most .popula.r hits from a long.:standing off-Broadway production, and a current rock'n'roll version has Mack swinging through a knife murd.'er, The song is supposedly ,based on a,character who lived in England t~o centuries ago: But, 'as a CBS spOkesman put it, "Why broadcast/songs about knifing and throwing, people into theriv~r; it, could encourage young hoods to commit crimes,". . So' ·Mack is another victim of the New York attempt to put the· lid 'onetime especially among. the' juvenil~s 'of '. the·.city, And·it. is interesting to hear .an-,ad~issio~ from one of the' commuhicationsmedia that what people hear: can influence' actions, .... . . ./ . . .. When that point'is .brought 'lIp to officials Of the .radi~ and'television~hdmovie industries, .these'so· often lOok the' other. way· and .just cannot imaghie how: normal: people can be affected .by"their.offerjngs to ~o. what is wrong,:: Well, perhaps normal people would l\ot be affe~ted to any setious .. .. . '. degree; bilt more and mO:repeople. and' many-among· the' · young are .mentaJly· disturbed :or, at least, are .the legitimate eonceni of' the :whole' field of mental health. And these. minds can be and areaffeded by what they see and hear.
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..TODAY - St. Nicholas Gf Tolentino, Confessor." He .~ .. born in answer to the prayers CIi a holy mother and ~as promised before his birth to the service CIi God. His austerities were cODspicuous even in the strict order of·the Hermits of'St. Augustine, to which he belonge·d.,He djed'ill 1310.
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TOMORROW-SS. Protus and Hyacinth, Martyrs. According to tradition, they were broj,)lera, Romans by birth and servan*in the house of St. 'EugEmlL seiZed in the persecution. unc:ter ... ' Diocletian, they were scoutged .. and beheaded about 257.. SATURDAY _ Feast of .... Most Holy Name 'of Mary','1irilI 'feast W~1i instituted by order CIi . Pope Innocent XI in 1591 ...... . commemoratetbe victory' of iW . ChriStian Forces over ,the' Tuna. - at Vienna, Austria; Ii a"i ii.4 '. through. her intercession:. : ..... .' 'SUNDAX~t: Phiii pi .Mart.1'&. He is said to have been;'ibe father of St, Eugenia, 'in'whoM household' SS. Protus: arid ~ya: cinthwere er:nployed. Traditi_ . has it that he held' the high,'r~nk of prefeCt at Alexlimdria i . . Egypt, but resigned his post • . be baptized a Christian. He .' .said to have been martyred ill It used to be that when' a youngster got seriously out 'Egypt in the third century. ' of -line,. th~ nearest adult' would ste. p in and'take whatever Exaltation'CIi .., , . theMONDAY-The Holy Cross. Constantine "".. Iteps were ne~essary to restore order. This was expected of " still wavering between' Chl'i.the adult and by the child, and the peace of the neighborBy Father John L. Th<un8s, S,J. tianity and' idolatry when a Iehood was kept.. . <: Assistant Professor. of Soeiolon. . . minous cross appeared to him'.. , ~', :,But today, the' 'adult· who daJ'~to~eorrect another'." i . " '. " Saint Louis University the.heavens. bearing the. inserip" d h'IS. .own -b ' . 'd at ..... ;" ' ··m I': ,19 . an~]J.l d'~ I9ye ' .', WI'th'a m::m· . . ·35'. years . " W:e:wan't . ~.~«;nquer," tion:uIn Hebecame this sign ashalt. ibo. e h 1'ld' ,'IS, t.0ld ,. ~ t !,~ I' e,as t , to ,mIn'. usmess:.~n ,', 0"Id. ' .. C6risiiMl:. · times, h,as ~. m>1~~eman at his .'door to .en~orce th.e rel;uke, ';'. .to.get:marrie;d but· live iiI a small community 'and are,~ft:ai4',.A .few. days'later;' his .n1.Qtnei. ,. .. .The Catholk'Cori!mit1;¢e' chairmaiJ· f.or .the·WhiteHou~ '. ',that we~llbe the>laughirig stock of the~town;, We really cJo··, ~t;' Helena, f~und theCroSl. -- . , " Conierep~e: on' .Clifidi~il: ~iI.d-:Youtli .l,)eIleves :it ,"lO~e 'each other,andl'm"qtiite mature 'for, my-age~ Althouirii ::which· .~<;>ur..., ,Saviour', $~ff~r~" : the ,~~? w~y.:_:~~ns'~gn?r ~~ynio~~,Ga,ll~ght;r:·~f.;Cb~vel.~nd ':. ,J'.~e '~\8C~ssed ,t~~ :probl~m.·', ~·.ate~ .ye~rs .'oider· ~.. ~:: ::r~e~:~e~~:Isr~~~~~:rt:i:' fe~ls,: th~~ the .~ld.way·tr-am~d :.a· 'mOre .respo.nslb~.gro':lp, /.0,( agedI~ferencesln,;m~r- .. majority: Of cOup'I~"si~ he. is '. from .Chosroesi 'King ofj)er~' et ~itizetui·g~n~r~tion~ftei'.g~neratio.n:·,... ',~, '.' ... :,:·'.'riage in. a .previous article; the acknowledged breadwinner.:, into whoSe hands it had.falie-. " ;.'- .:<ThepreseiIt ~ttitude':seems'to coni~ from, a mjs~ided: :thequestionkeeps reeurring .and m.ust be,'. able ~ sUPPorta' the' Feast~·the.,·."Finding~': ~ · BOtio.n· of privacy when' ··!children 'un ·wan.der·to the brink : .~·.iriy correspondenceiFor'ex:-' family before he can prudently. insti.tuted In::me:mory·of. th~ d.i8:-. . ... o~ ··~rs?nal.:· d~sa.ste~. with~ut any adult's' reaching out to:·" aJnPle"o~~)~~te~r~adS,,?am ,a . ~~rz~ fhe ag~'~p~ead iJi' y~~r ~ ~1~iE:rli::io~i~e~~eb~!t~~= prev~nqt/'·A.n4:.t~is is c.o.mpl~men~dby the "it's~none-~f. ·i:~~'tv,ith ~ ease; Helen;Clea'rly differs:fromr~OVery oFthe cross bY·.I~e~~ mY'7b\,ls~:ness" ,reacti(m of many adults, A,nd'so people ignore man 27. All my the' average: ;Does . this imply Ii~s. . . . . , . ·their respon'sibilityto -the community and the need of otherS f r ie n d s· feel· that your chances for happi.ness . , TUESDAY-:--:-Feast of the Sev.· for help' and guidance. ~ . that seven years and success. are less· ~han aver-... Sorrows of the BI~ssed M~theL . '.' .'. .' ". . '. -,' ", '. . ... is' too great a age.? The answer wIll depend The seven 'sorrows' were: p.!'O"" One of the horrlbl.~ ~e~ul~ o,f s~,ch an at~Itude came to difference. Is not on your differences i~ age pheey of Simeon~ flig.ht, i...~· light after- the; Korean pohceactlOn, It was dIscovered that age so import"but on your characters.. . Egypt; loss of' Jesus in Je~ one of the American priso~ers .of war tht:ew a companion .' -ant?" As I read Christian Coileepi ~lem; meeting Je~us on the w~ out of the p~iso~ hu.t and let J.1ini die of coldand starvation. .: through the s e .. When Christians marry, they tofCthalVcary; ~tandmg a t 'tf~eJ f~ l 0 es_ 'd .th"IS W h'l . ' .'th'an thOIrt y oers th" wa t Ched,re. f ' letters ,,0 ross, H. e d 1. Ie more ;usmg . d I keep .' . agree. to work. for. the. . mutual Body'·e· from 'theremova Cr'oss' and'burial' to interfere,b~~aus.e-::an.d. this is' a quotation from the offi- . : : :theer/ ~h: develo~mentandsanctif~((8t~on·of~Jesus., ..' '" .-: eial investigation:of the case":'- "I didn~t think it was any of :;,: . I ' . . oftherr partDl.~rs by ~edlcat.l.ng. WEbNESDAY~SS Corneii_. , .; ,;.,~.. • .. , . pro? em IS new, themselves ·to ,the service of new ~. '..,. . ' :.'. .. ' my b,usmess, "'..' ". .. ..or w h e the r . life. Hence marriage is .. mutu- . 8!1~ Cyprian, l"Ia~tyrs, S!. p~ ..., ... ' The right of. parents to 'rear their children certainly . ,it ~as: al.ways ;' been,' ar~u~d. alljr"perfecting partnership itt . ne~I~s,' a :~om,an, su~ceedec,l.~. . . t b·.. · 'f" "'d d 'A' 'h'.'. . . '· .. 'd·· . . ' ... , . However marriage, statistics·. ". . . . . , ... '.. Fabian as Pope durmg .-Deem.' :. JJlUS, . e sa_~gu.a.r~.·, · t t e same tlme!~ lIltS ,must ro~ahze 'i" d'·· 't "t'h f there is s' g'rowing ~ th~. task 01... bearmg .an~ ralsmg .. ·p·ersecution:'lin"~51. ·St.. C';p:ri~" . O h .., l.'l' ·t' to' ' t thO t th' ' f n Ica e a . ' . 'chJ1dren ' " .. .' J. ~ th t . th ...a . ey·. ave an pulga Ion . mSls ~. a e peac~ o. a· .'tendency .for~partners t:o be ..•. , . ' of noble' birth, led' aa e'!i1 ~ · 't be k ·t A'd" ts 'f t th' b' ,.. I ','" . . thO Because men and :women ,are . 'hi ' h ' '-' t'" 'ddl 1·.... : eoIIlmum Y. ,·ep .. n :paren.can. os.er . IS' we';"al;>out ,the same age, 1IO . IS . complementary' they cOinplete:.m. s !out, 'uU _In. mI.... e· ..~ .: .~o~.in.g . tr,e; hel~~n~. h1l~ of..s~~~l,andci\':i.c. a~~horiti~s aJl~ ',may ,~ccountfo~ some t of the . e~ch other: in' ~a'rdage n~t only:' was ,conver.te.d.. to ehrJ~~I.~r!~, . : ev~n .of. neIghbOrs .w:tlo.:mayoccasu:mall.y- s.tep In 'to correct .~.nfll~orabl~ .altt.ltu.des 'ktodward in terms of. reproduction but of'.' ~ente.red ,·.,. htpe . PfrI(~s~hthoOdaHnp. ~ BIS op 0 Jar age, e,W8ll '·. ~n' . thOe spOt"'" ,.,. h'ld"· h ,".' .,' " ' , 'marriages lOvo vmg mar e age . t· 1 . . 1 d 1" . t carne 'some e IW '0 IS steppmg'out 'of hne, .' .".. .' '·f·f· - " . . mu ua persona. eve opmen. as . ~d . . "f' . 'th' 't d .. "g 'the · . '. ·T·h·· ' . 'be" " : t 'to'" h' 'Id' f h; .. ' 'b • dl eren~es., . . followers of. Christ. , ,/. : r~ven ;~o~, E, CI,y, .urJ!1. ". '. . , Is/may, are ~rn ., teo. -as IOned way' ut ',If False Assumptie . Th'i" '. ff i" .' d' persecution :of.DeclUs, later :w, I . t to' th 'ld f h'" ed ' t t' t' f l " · . s reqUIres a ec Ion an " 11 d l ' WM it .Is a soa re.urn ." _ .- . e,~ - as IOn. '. s a IS ICS ~ ow. At any rate' Helen, it: is well love mutual service andaS8iSt.:.r~ae ·.a,na. b su ~equent Y" , · j,uv,enile ~eJinqueIicy :~uid ~g're~ter respect for.'authority it . to keep in milld it is noi how ail~, a sense of loyalty arid beheaded. In 258, ' will be welcomed ,by al~ " . ',..... ' . . ' ., 'old you are but/wha~ you a're responsibility, constant sc>lici:- Ursulines' Open' fi~t that makes for,happiness ~nd tude for the 'good of the partner, success in mar~iage, Beeause and so forth; Permanent School: : A safety expert has estimated that' almost seve~ty marital ~ompanionl!hip ,is.. cur': '., Suggests Questions The· first· successful attempt million automobiles were on the nation's highways over the. r~ntly ~emg so strQ.nglY,stressed, . It follows that in considering hi placing schools on a :permaLab D k d P' rt" t I th . t h ' f ur the fals~ assumption .IS. so~e- your chances for success and ' nent ,foundation ~n United dor d ay ~ee en h' dr?POd· Iontahe Yh'. , he mor~ an °t times made .tha~ th~s necessarIly happiness in marriage', Helen, States was made by the Uisuh uln .re persons w 0 Ie on e Ig way~ represen ,a implies .simIlarity mages. , h you can ignore .the relatively line Sisters in' 1727. When')O re abvely small number, But those who dIed and theIr ,Partners who are roughly ~,e superficial fact of' age differ- . sisters of the Ursuli'n! Order families cannot be· expected to look at the figures in that ~me. age ~!e. supposed to fmd enceS and ask the following' landed: OD August 7, 1727, Uie;way, . . ' . 1~ eaSIer to a?Just_to one another questions: . ;'!'ere t!te first professional. WOO:s~nce. they wIll presu~~b,ly share What do I know about the.' men/ school teachers on what .' O~c~ !l10r.e It ISS ma~ter. of a~ceptI~g responslbIl!ty- like mterests and actlvItJ"S. . Christian rt.eaning. of marriage? ·.;becam~·. United States soil' : of reahzmg that a couple of·tons'of metal and chrome IS not . Taken as a ~road generahza- What 'am I prepared to contrib-: _., " ,.'... . ,... ' an adult vet:sion.of "-the dodgems" but a letlial weapon in ti~na~d consld~r~d.fr~m t~e ute in terms ofcompanionship;',ishe.faithfulinattendingChuteb the hands of'a driver immature in mind and·emotions. !le~omt of c.:mp~nlO~hl,p persc>rial'service, ·de'votion eto services· and .. ·regulating. bill ay With schools again in'sessi6n .arid YOlmgstersrininiiIg1 . faloneth' ,there bel'~~~~ a~l; duty, loyalty.and resPoIlsibility? ,~ctions~, according. to Ca..~holie 'h b" , ,'. ' . . . ',.' '. '. o~ IS PI?PU ar,. Ie" n ou . -Knowing niyself:as I do, am I .. moral codes? .' WIt a ando.-n, ~crQs'3. ·'I~treets;"'. drIvers mu,st be even. more culture, at least,. It ·~ms rea~on- " now' prepared to dedicate' my- "Do'. "you . know. his.· pr.imai7 '.' aware of the fIfth commandment - Thou shalt not kIll. .. ab~e ~ assume that :ml~nage self to the more or less monot~~ _ inte~e~ts' and goals ~nd are .th~. I;)artners who ar~ approxll1:la.t~lr nous'task of bearing and raising acceptable to' you? Is he' eme- . ,~e ~ame age will te,nd. t~ ~nJ()r chiidren and ,running' a home? "tlonally rilatUl'e', .that' ,.is,· DOt t he sam.~ for~s of- entertamment . What .about· 'my· ·partiler? ~'overly dependent on his famn" and sQcIal. hfe.· . '" ,: . Reflecting .that '-jninarriage it is' and reasonably' capableofniaia.. • . 't':.." ....~ ..•..••,: .. : ..., ' .,: "e:' ..:' :'. . ... ' .... ",' .' ~" '.. '::,'. ' .~, ... Depends on .Character not ,sufficient love you.r part-· taining '·his balance "and' ';se.. - , T h e r e obviously exists some ner, you must be able to live 'control,'under' trying 'cireu~ ~. 'relationship between one's age. with· him, ask youl'self -the fol-' stances?' r: .'" ':, ,OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FAll RIVER ami' the' types of Sodalactivity. lowing questions' about' him:·. ' . If you scoreweU·· on" ttJe.- . Published weekly by The' Catholic' Press ofthe Dioc~se of. F'all.River "in~hich one tends to engage, " Can'· he' ho~d: a ·job, 'tpat is; is .' questions, ·yo~'re. ready for.rna.:. · ...., . 410 H" 'hi' nd' A·.. ·:·· '.' "," '.'.' .'" 'For' example, younger partners he w~1li.ng and, capable of sup- riage and'you seem to have 'your . , . - ... I~~. .venue.· . ' are more likely,to enjoy ~ancing POJ:t~g ,a family?' Does he show .man! Don!t worry about: wbet Fall R~ver, Mass, ,.OSborne 5-7,151 than playing cards;' though this adequate resp~et· for you and you'imagine'otherS"may 'W" . ',. PUBUSHER. is only a generalization, qualiyour· opinions or does he' appear or s a y : ' " . .,': .: ". Most Rev, ,James L. Connolly. 0.0" PhD. ·tied in actual cases .by t~mpera- self-cen~ered, 'domineering, and Mature people. w~ll recognm. GENERAL MANAGER . . ASST. GEN'ERAL MANAGER \ ment and previous training, determined always to have his that. this i1l yOljr marriag~ and . . ' , .'... As I have indicated,the age own way? it is up to you to choose y~ Rev. Daniel F. Shalloo. M,A., . Rev. John P. DnscoU . differential in' the' average What are his a,ttitudes toward partner, If. YQu:i-e Sur~. ot' yoa.,. MANAGING EDITqa. , c:oupleentering marriage today having a family? Is he .more ~lves, .the .thoughtles1lopirt~ Hugh J. GoldeR . ia slight. The husband tends to' Ulan a nominal.Catholic, that is, of. others won't see~ ~i>on-.'
,Age D,ifference R,.elatively.· U, n.em·..p'.f;)rto'nt :.e n M·arr,.eag'e·
Misguided·· Attitudes
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese ofFan River-Th~rs." Sept.IO, 195'
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.. ' From POPE lORN xxm;Aa AalhoritatlYe Blorraphy B~ Zsolt· Aradl, Msgr. lames L Tucek, and Jamell'C, O'Neill, Copyrl&'''&' 19n. Ilr Farrar Straus and Cudahl'. 1ne.~bliSben
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The"Patriarch
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Work
In March, 1958, Cardinal Ron"ealli was sent to Lourdes _ papal legate for the dedicatioa of the new Basilica of St. Pius x. So . large was the church that
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. Every tourist who goes to Venice'owes'Pope John xxm '. debt of gratitude. During the'five years he was Cardinal ·fatriarch of the City .of Canals, Augelo Roncalli made a ·special. effort to make. its religious' and artistietreasures more accessible'to the pub-. ' but optimistic. I n~ver heai-ci' -lie. Among his most endur- him condemn anyone." . .' ·ing projects was the renovaA journalist, Ettore della Gi~ ·tion of' the great Basiiica vanna, recalls that he inter.." .
Cardinal Roncalli performed pallt of the ceremony from the back ofencircled an oPen the convertible. which. Chureb three.times as prescribed by the liturg'y.' .' , On leaving Lourdes, he WM beseiged by the French repon. ers to sa,y one last thing for the ...01. ,l;lt Mark;s,.one ol.t!:le rl!l's vipwed the Patria~cJ:iin' ).956. p~ess. Angelo Roncalli responded . ,most impressive churches. Car- DUe to that fact that 'he was with the words which the ,. had 'the'Byzantine to Cardinal Roncalli ' Blessed Virgin had spoken' __ · mosaics of the church, repai~ed by,,'aletteli from ,il priest from 'Bernadette Soubirous: "Penand, ~leaned. He. had .'the tomb Bergamo with left - of _ center ance, penance, Penance." ::~q:;i: Mark bro~g~~ uP~o'y~ew le~ii;~ngs.':Carp.inai'Roncalli weI.. This w,as' the same" messa~ .y'~ere it could be see~.by aIJ:;" ~fu~.· Pell!l"qio~ahria jokingly be' gave to his own Venetian. bu(pointed!y oy saying: "Your a few .days alter his return from .' ; ' . Rooms ~f Pius X h~it 'is'; w~ite; you should have ,Lourdes, when inil pastoral letHe also' planned to have the mp~.,.polit~cal judgment." tei', he wrote: "Oh, my brothers, . ". eliancel screen in fron'tof the ,. , '.' . my children! Penance, penance. sanctuary lowered so that the . Speaks OD Communism' 'FIRST VISITOR:.In Venice 'one of Cardinal Roncalli's penance, for your personalsiM faithful in the body of the One of. RoncalIi's former seef'lrst projects was the renovation' of the rooms occupied' by and for th"..,. sins 01. the whole otar' V. • h tho to ehurch could see what was going re Ies m ·emce as 18 say world." of him: . St. Pius X when he was Patriarch of Venice. The first visiten. at the altar. In this be' ran ' When the sad 'news of the afoul of the Italian Fine Arts "It would be a mistake for .or to the res'tored rooms was, Francis ,Cardinal Spellman . death Of Pius XII reached him. . hi anyone to allow himself to t>e 0 f New York. . . . on Thursday, Oct. 9, 1958. he C ommisslon w ch refused to . 'sanction any change in the ;bill- dec~ived by the Pope's simplicity began to make the .first I ·ePaJ.torie church. ". , into thinking that he is a simple- negotiations" between Catholics'F¢stival,' which had received ations for his trip to Rome. · . This is said to be. the only ton. His si~ple ~anner' is the' and' Marxists· "have never been, . .passive·andactive opposition'be-' . "'battle" Cardinal . Ro'ncalli;';'lost result of ~IS holmess". b~t his nor, ..co~ld ,ever be,' opened in fore his time, was welcomed into Leaves tor Rome 'While in Venice. Later;' when:'he character IS more than .~h18., He,. ye~Ic~. . . ...S1. ~~rlt's, f~r. a. "Mov.i~ M~ss.". .Hls secretarY'i'M:sgr: Loris' ..,became 'Pope an " arrangement . ~ v.~r~ c.~mplexan~ profollnd - In Al;1gllst. th~year, ,before, . (H bee m' th f' t P trl rcll ovilla' who was to remain witla ,....as 'worked.' out· .'so·. ''tha't . the' "l1e1'sonaHtY\"keen and 'alert;-and '.. he' had made"hIS, poslbon on ""'1 t'h~I" h' at e fe V~'rs:" at a... .. Pope John hi the Vatican; ':re. ~.tth·lng,"b Ut·· ....,... m i" . t k b' ,. ' ne l s ory 0 ' "emce 0 VISlt I "p'a'nels in' t"'e·',scre'e·n: ......u·ld,/be .·.l.a.....·. .SImpI e,·.' . ·.!I.,·." . .. " ,COPl .oJ:) sm unmJS a a ~y·,. c-lear trl"'1< .' ,.',. ' . ates that the, Cardinal, pa(:ked 11 i to l I th"e'. 'Ullpor~n:t VenIce' Biennial "'Iowered. 'by .hltigesso'. that~the j;"loiF.ebr;uai'y, 1957; an ilujdlialT! ~i' ~., :P.a:s.. ,r,~. ;,~tt~r }~ddre~,yArti' Exhibit:~onsidereiFone "M.. hiB own bag.' Among ,the iteIn8 ::eongre'gation co·uld.look through .;.j;.~..I},j,l\I;1,qJj) ~f Jp.,~: Vepic~,:r.~~r~ar~-, . ,ro,t?~cl~~g ~~~l~llty~~V!:~l.l.ce. .... . t· . t t I';"l"'h .. i he inciuded ~as 'the red "cap, 1be'screen iritothe sa'nctuaty; ate was transferred to another.In d; ~e d~plored the so-calJ;¢d ';"..e,mos .IDlpor an .~18ns OWII:"}la: magna", the":great ~lip:e"6f. ,,·'''onAnm..."to' the' left" Thl " :i)"q.(·.I:~od.ern. art...;.. '. ;::, . ,'.! ..;;...•. ' ' . Prin....... o·t th"e 'Chu"rch'· W'·....I·C·Ia .. I .. :Among his' ·first'proj'ects"'·:in"d~o.Qese~,'!l'his' bishopo",was' criti- ' .. "~ .. ' . . . . . . . s was ~~ II .,: Venice' 'was the" renovlltioii,hd" C,lZ~d"by, some ·.forbeing·.overly r fav~~ by,certain,pa~ ;ofthe /lit 1;1 !S~r~~p.lll .. ,,~Q~calU. ~ .:~ .,ini~~",!., .·.would, 'be needed in these'sad "repair of the patriarchai palii'ee . ,,,·achve....When·, he· took,: possession . ,,~~~tIan,.,.I?eOlocrabc Par:ty::, , , .ated·.. an annual "Jo.~f~~l~~.,. ~e.s only ,in, giving homage, ,t. ass . pile of elegant m'arble Wh'I'ch' of. his Diocese anonymous' call.."For; Catho.lic,s,,".' wrote ,Ca.r- patron,,on the .fe~t of their newto'pope. St. 'Francls de Sales. And .the chance wear He it never had • • 11 th t t tea I R d was falling slowly into ruin. . ings ,cards.edged in black, like .', lOa . orlca...1, . IS cons 1 U. . th ere,·was· II'kewise an annual . . >or. . 1 ft' V ." . th· .... .' .. M f . . .ne e emce on elf..... th o~ use d to express mourning. "a ser IOUS miS tak e and a Ilaof grant violation ,of C.atholic disa!;'!!Qr the arhsts and !:fafts. A M . t ram . 40 .' R ome . t 1· StThe. P rooms X h hIS. pre~ec.essor, P ttl h .' w'ere dis''''I·buted. u' men of Venice. '. on 0 c. .., . lU.S ,w 0 was a ~re ;Cardinal Roncalli. took swift .cipline.·.. The people might " . .', . 1958. The thoughts of 1l\Pre thaD of Vemce. when he was elected action. He leveled brief but . be m~s1E~d by the deceptive . It was C~r~inal Itoncalli v.: ho , one tur~ed to another departPope, claImed .the attention of . severe. sanctions against those . axiom ·that to' carry out social gave permISSIOn to the RUSSIan ure from Venice-that of Car-t~ge~ ROnCa~l. The rooms .had in the escapade. H-owever, in : justice,to. help th~ poor of aU composer Igor S~anYi!lsk1 to . dhial Giuseppe SartO who w~nt ~n ept as ~ ey were from the private" the Cardinal remarked ~classes an!! to create respect for perform an oratorIO dedIcated to to Rome alnioSt 50 years before days of Cardmal Sarto but the . jokingly that the Bishop ,"would . taxa:tio~· .~w~,. ,one must absoSt. ~,~ll':k, in the Basilica. The and who was elected Pope lon~ years of disuse had left have hel d God H' If in lutely aSSOCIate oneself with . Cardmal. attended the perCorm- .Pius X. their mark . pe. Imse h' h" . . 'ance~ Again in 1958 Straviri'. . . . ,,' " creatinl: the world." t ose w 0 dIsown God and .who '.sky'directed· an'o·ther ora"to'r'lo in .Talk.mg WIth stah,onmastea' " Open to P u b l i e · · ' · . . .' .·are·· ·.the ·oppressors of human V tt d R C d I Ro • . ,I. ..(:hristmu Messag. freedoms' Th"s' r" t6 '.' "Venice, this time on 'the theme ;. 1. ~rlo.. e . ~sa, ~r lOa. n..' Cardinal Roncalli' had' these " ..,'. . '. " IS 1 . won.. m ,;; of ,the Lamenfatio08 Qf the .callI saId' U~at on hIS re~urn be rooms renovated and' 'the .first ". ,', .At·. Christmas· time, 1955," the . i~. pr~se and fata~ in. its. .~.p- . Prophet Jeremiah. . . wante~ to ~ISCUSS a certam ~a'visitor to the restored rooms was' ·"Cardmal's·' annual message'· 'of plicat1on~":' ,...., ,,,' :. ,. '". tel' with him. De' Rosa repliecl: · His' Eminence Francis Cardinali.'pe~ce'·an~ brotherhoOd' dealt··A m~nth later the Cardinal :'.;',''. '..; .Co~vokes SJ'n~,.. ·' _'~n is my good wish for yo, ,Spellman: of.New York. A .sh,ort :,:mamly ' WIth pro~le~~ ,of' u~- received the civic. co~mit~ In 1957, the Cardinal also COilYour Eminence, that .you ,will ·:1ime later. they. were opened.. to ,employment. He exhorted 1>us- ,.of ttte ,'.\. christian Democratic ~oked a synodof the bishops and no~ return." . .the' public as a kind of 'museum ,·'inessmen,· technica~"corisultartta l;"arty an4he Once again speliect:,'i:letgy··of·Venice. ItfoI-eShad- i,i 'Th~ Cardinal hesitated a mia. ..and 'Cardinal Roncalli enjoyed ,',and·' ec~nomiststo r~metJlber:Q!-1t.. hisJlO!lit.i~~: .... ,:. ~; '~wed hiscaIIing·of-;.the 'first . ute; 'lost in thought,' and ttH. .•!showing...visitors:through :the .. t~at theIr t~l~nts had,: nO~·.~D ."<! ·:.~omrnl\Ilism ,1lnd.. 1IQciaH~ .o,sy:nQd"ev.er, held in Rome",after,.. ariswere'd:·'.'My hope'is·t.o retUlla .,moms and telling them ab.outthe .' 19lven"them"·merely··to adJUst .. ~ve.,.the .same.. philosophy: and )~~ el~t~o~ as, pope. ;1;, '< >; ',,' " ... toVeni~ within 15 day.... · , ·...life of Pius X. as he remembe~ed ., :budgets: 'but to be the mi!'1-isters are,. ,irt:~!=QnciI~J)le with Chiillibiouata _ni-oi-mouda od¥e<tisiq, ........ it from his student days in-Rome..", of: ,pro~.I~ence to· the adv:ntage,tianj.~Y.There.is ~o .possibii~ty bokay.... built and sWfed '" cbe' iIIGiiIIt In' his five years in Venice . of all: th~ ?u~an family. of ~gret!men~ I>;tween Morxism cbemoeI.... co meet the llfO~ios.te-ad. . Cardinal Roncalli visited every:':· Whtle sympat~etic. to ~ and the Gospel. What Started ... 1",&11·--" ~ baked by band' in the kitthm 01 ., one of his pariShes..Often·he '. proble~s of t~e unemployed, Patron Of Arts Trappist mooas<ety hai blossomed inm & ~ would visit a parish on impulse Angelo Roncalli would' not tol- '. E thO th t 'h ed ... . ' . e te . IT t' ' f h ' very 109 a appen quality loaf produced. wid> <be llCCUl8CJ all but as one of qis priests put·lt, ~:'t'~ovefs~~~71CathlOn 0 IS his city attracted his active atmodem scialrilic IOOhoda. . \ "always as a father not as a a 1 u e. n , e governte t· E f f . l' " ' m e n t announced plans to' close ~ ~on. .v.ery acet 0 . the life The Trappist 0rW . . .~ 01-1 po Iceman. th . t' , . • ,pfhis spiritual children 'fell membets YOWl of obed~ and pDVefty• . " . Each eL'Ustaita e arsenal . year he joined the entire th It l'at Vemce. . ' un'der h"IS pastora1 touch. Even Iad& co & life of simplicity. bud ~rrc. ~ .. _~~.l1~tian hierarchy in making a . tn, e a Irtan dcotmmh t uthn- the ,venice International FUm U&Il'luility. PerpetUal St.·1ena: is ~rooed. Thel spIritual retreat and once a IS n~wspaper, repo e a e .. monks aever converse .. ith each orher. Whea it is BbsOlurelt necesSary m disaus some p"-.'morith· he 'met with .the cletgy·"P.atrlarclt would order.' the 01 their wOtk. they we & siB" IaDguase in"",,'" 1 fora day of recollection. In a .. ,chur.chbells to. be rung.. inJ~FFREY E. '" Cisrerc~ & rbousaa4 ya<J .",. Al~ Bpah of five years he 'built more ,.protest and that he would .cele,SULLIVAN Trappisa spend much of rbeir clay in p~ · thim 30 churches and a minor ; .br.ate a "~ass, of protest... · . and COIllaDplaliOo, each IIlODk ~ his dalIr 'seminary. '. 1 "'~Denies Story ~ '.. ~. ~. workiJ!s foe. the ..bole romm"o" An' md,v,dual """'" OWQ5 nothios; even ... . Golden .Jubilee \ ". The' sto~y 'also wentori :to say "'550 Locust 8t. habit be wars belongs to the community. ~ Fall ·River.· Mass. . .In 1954 he went to Lourdes on .that Catholics and communists· ....rIc is ODe of bis dliefpetl&DOCl. The Trappilt PlOSt&'" is neatly summed up ill ~ _ • pilgrimage accompanied by all .. ~ Ve~ice' had entered discusOs 2-2391 1"To wOn: is II) pea,.-' . . 'I the bishops. of the Triveneto . si<:ms to s~ttle th~ir difficulties. Rose E. Sullivan Rea'. Nutrition region. From there he journeyed . ~~~. Car:dinal issued. a pro~pt The Monks"""",,,,,,,, '" ........ J~~~e~ E. Sullivan .. pIoaG"'.! toppIr _ dle _ _ III In.'Loafi . to Spain, dressed as a simple . denial of the story, saying that· opecial. - I ~..at. no. A IO!'* 01 Moab', Ik-ead ia ridl' .-p.. ..... l!w boo.. _ oJ.... bed '" _ . priest pilgrim .to· visi(the shrin~ . . . : olluiti.., value eO be & - meal in iaelf. Ir hoa oolr • , . . pol" fo< AI Hili A. M. .... of Santiago di Compostela . ~e :. &' Ii>' be, .foe cbe' Trappist moob who deft&. ~ ... dar ." ....... pMoo ... ... ~me year he celebrated his 50th "'~ ~.. . ,.J . opocl_ ia .,telicious Ioef_ DO - . ~ ia lbrit ~ _IlL . .Funeral Home>" oc 8I'eod is the bedd>oac of their oimpIe . Whe.. You plooo.dlii i0oi"' ............. anniversary of ord~riation. '.' diet. Oaly cbe 6oe« _ ....: -_-.,..-Drioedle-'· __ In November,' 1954, Pope Pius 57.J Se~ond. 5t~ ......Iea<hed 800ufor the white ~ o q e c a b I e ' . !lent him .to Lebanon as pap.a! 469 LOCUST STR E1' Fall River, Mass. Ihonmio& .~ auichmeM, ridIl. milt delegate to a national' Marian· '" E 1OIido.. ...,.. and saIL Trappisls '1Ia.., ...... .eoogress at Beirut where Car-'" F~~( RIV~ MASS.. OS 9;.6072 ft.mniia toe cbeir ~madc' b-a _ ...... edinal Roncalli presided over·the ;.. ~ OS - 2·3381 ,., .' MICflAEL J. McMAHON ~,.a. .. ·.eEOwning ,of c;>ur Lady 01. Lebo'Wilfred c.-·Jame,,·E~' , '." UCftn'sed' FU'n'el'al DirectOr , Registered Embalinet " ,.~r;~hdeacon Giuseppe .. ~ ~i.;,:,D..;.r;,;,'iscoI~·_1...._ _..-..;5u..;.l,;.;,h_·v_a_~_,_J;;i,.,r_.'" I ,_, ,!.'eCalls that Cardinal Roncalll ,.," always find ,the good side '.,..,...... ,'.. -,.:A, .... ' -. ... . etpeople, He always showed·' aD ft ".,.. . , · .. extrllordinary respe~ for" the human person. - ' FUNERAL HOME -.. Confirmed Opt'imW 986 Plymouth Avenue "'It was his man~er to stand, .• Helen Aubertine Braus.. · Fall River, Mass.. . . Toi.' os 3:22n . . . matter who entered the room Owner and Direc&or . .J '" 'and to accompany the mOst 'Sp~cious 'Parking' A'rea . .!>At'lIE~. ,,~ HARRINl)TOH
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O,f 'Rooms; Val'ances Versa:file. By !\lice Bough Cahill _ 'As you prepare for the Fall an~ Winter months ~he,ad, you ,will probably face the problem of re-curtaining windows. Using a valance on windows adds height· and a look 'of luxury. A shaped stiffened val~mce is low-cost 'glamor. The correct depth is most importo . ,House plants are, inexpensivoe ant._One-sixth to one-eighth and, you can use them to imthe total length of your dra~ prov~ the look of your windows eries is about right for, a despite their style or the 'di-
.River, will be among participants' in tbe 13th annual New England regional conference 01. the Confraternity of ChristiaQ Doctrine, .to be held in Burlington, Vt., Friday, Sept. 18, through Sunday, Sept. 20. She will take part in a panel · Oft the religious instruction of mentally retarded children at .4 Saturday' afternoon, Sept. 19, ia the Burlington High School. Other members' of the panel are RaymOlid Mulcahy, assistant ,director of State School; B~an·don, Yt.; Rev. John Hackett, State School chaplain; and, Mrs. · Leo E.' Wright- of Br~tt1C\~ro, Vt. ' : ' . . '. ' . ' , Miss 'Lahey's topic will be .' "Program arid Methods for Use' .. 'in Religious Education Of Retarded Children." . . .Active Three Yea... A teacher of retarded children in the :Fall River public school 'system, Miss Lahey has been active in the field their reli- . gious education for three' y,ears, organizing three First Com"munion -classes in Fall Ri~r and , ORTHOQOX 'PRELATE ENTERS CHURCH: Richard l\Tew Bedford. " Cardi~al'Cushinicongratulates Monsignor Dmitri Nicholas; · . She ,is at present planning COft- ' classes for ,the retarded whose acceptance .into the Eastern, Rite a~ ~priest wa~ ap.:, ,firmation · of the Diocese. They will be proved by the' Sacred Congregation for the Holy Office. inaugur!lted this Fall.
ceiling-high valance. Pin up'a rection they face. Glass shelves piece of fabric at the top of your adjustable to plant" size let you window, and add color and, pattern of vines, let your eye leaves and flowers in winter. judge, Too deep' The way you dress your win.,. • valance looks dows will do 1110re 'for your -retOp~heayy; too decorating scheme than .-any Ilarrow 0 n e s ' . other single thing you can do look skimpy. In ina room -,and for less rrloney. ene sit t,i n g Curtains do not have to be ex100m, where a. :pensive, ,p'articularIy "if 'you. ' lot " of red' is stitch them yourself. " . 1I8ed, ~ sUC"',' There's generally one essential cessfully treateonstru,ction trick behind each eel the windows '!ljndow. ,~eat~ent., Once you. bY' adding ·in-' know ,lhat trick,You ~an vary Bidel shutters. ' it' end~e~ly. For instimce, the The frame work of the windows .trick ',of getting professional- . • white, ttie:, shutters natural looking pleats iis' not to ~kimp pine. A full ·valance. or red 'un- " 'on 'fabric and to'spaceaccurate1y ,lazed chintz': was used at the" fot a ,well.tailored look:,' top, the small rod at the center ' was painted to match the wood:" ,Ms~r. Nicholas, who served for 20 .years as 'a priest of: the, work and we used white plastic Synan Orthodox'Church, has been assigned to the shiff of ,Sisters of Notre Dame on the, St. Basil's' Seminary, Met'hu'en, a' training center for Cath- : Hoye ~ew ,Su'perior " , .' " .', Fifteen student nurses from ,. The curtains are white cotton St: Anne's ,hospital attended ,the' olie priests of thE! ,Eastern Rit~s. 'NC p'hoto. " , " 'CI:r-rGINNATI, (NC) -, Sistel' easement cloth; edged top . and '"A~n~s, 'wQohas been working , bottom with the Saine red u'n- Boston 'CongreSs,' of ~ Lay' here; has ,been appointed pro,lazed chintZ 'iJsed in' the. val:' . Apostolate, forming. the largest , _ ' ' vincial superior of the, Cincin·arice. The top of the cafe 'cur- single group. from the Diocese ,tain is scalloped . and 'the plastie. at Hie meeting. Ali .other 'sch~ois 'Amb~g natiprovince of the Sisters of ~ou;e p'am~-:de Nam.u'r,by· 'Sist~ , ring is 'attached at'eac.h point. ' hllving, sodality 'units were' alSo " MIi.yv~ti;KEE CNC)...".A bishop ~mustle~rn and this ~e' ~u~ Joseph' de' Francois, ' ·Mother, , "'.Ga;Ptivacy, " ; .repres~rit~~. , .. , . " teach ". he said. ' , " ' , ·.~enera.l; ~t has been announced; said herepe,:wishes modern day Cafe curta'ins are·gay.and they .. , The St. Anne's 'girls . listed' , "'sure ·pjiv.!lcy. too. YQu ,bin 1Dake among. their inost Strikingiin~' · pa'g~ns c;ould say of ~odern day , Th~ ,prelate spoke to a lead~~~ ',Sister ~ Agnes, who' !lucceedl ,them: of any . mate'rial"':"'.: small :pressions ,of the'week:-Iong event 'Christians, ,"Be~old, how they . ship, training' 'institute' held 'at' . Sister Ellen ofSt. Jolin, is for- ' .. loveo~e!lnother,"; I;>ut that's~ot . ¥arqu~tte University under the 'mer sup~ior of Julienne' High · pattern,"~' a 'sheet~)n oJ1erOo~ ,tbe"oriimtation 'tour they.made ,the case., , auspices of ,the NlltionafCouncil' :School, DaytOn, and also taught where cafe 'curtains· were used of BostOn Coilege. ca~p~s, parAuxiliarY"Bishop Leonard P. of Ca!holic Women. at the :.community's schools ill at • corner winddw, there was tlcipatioll ill sung, MasSes and No.tm~ that ~he'i theme of a~ Columbl,ls and Chicago. She is, a the 'probiem of' ','turn "corners'; workshops, arid attendance at, : Cowley of St.' Paul, ~irin.,spOke with' no light between the out-: • solemn })ontifical Mass pre- . here of the love that should exist the InStItUteslB The Catholic 'sister of the late Msgr. Raphael, · among' Christians because 'Of the . Woman, .•. Her CQmmunities;'" : Markham of, Cincirinati. · ai~ eilges and the wmdow. The' ' sid~d at by ~ardinal Cushing. Bishop Cowley c()mment~d that " IOluti.oh:hang ~ecurtainl\ from' .. ·~·~speeche. "opened two "spiritual bonds that unite them Afghdn ista t1 Bound • pOle' on brass ,I:ings except ·at big. doors," said • St. ,.Anile'. · through Baptism to Christ, head :"it .calls all: ()f yo,u back to,yo~ .1?aslc c~~mltments as Catholics." MILWAUKEE· (NC ~ Neva the. edges. where'they ·"turn". sodality spokesman; '''One was 01. the My'stical Body. , . ' , , .', The prelate said that'wl1ile '. White, '..chief ,cataloger at the · The~etliey Sho\ii<i 'be hung by on ,ourselves,: lmd one, on, the "Wtl have 1>een' taught well. Catholics must' be especially in- 'Marqliette' University Mem'orial '" '. -hOoks "fasteheci'·tO'.the:fi:ictlire•.. lV<>rld. Our ;reatest 'j~y 'howIUPportIng'the ·pole. ' ,. ;", ,ever, waB in: . finding .a' better ',We have ,counfless:good exani- :'t~rested in the "household of the' . ':Library, has' been granted a tWo-, , : For .·<room.' 'like a kitchen, understanding of, our part ill - ~.es ,i.n .the lives.of our Saints..:: • faith," . they': must also concern ,'year, leave ·to supervise and · where yi)\l,want:pleitty ~f'light,; the Mystical'Body of· Christ. 'We , I~ Ch~ist ,we ha,ve theWay,~'tt)e; ~hemselves .with, ,·th~, spiritual, develop the' libraries· ot" Kabul, ,; . '''.. ' · try .fuli'vahiiice exiendjng~-' want-to be saints ... tO see'bett~r , Tr.u~h: ~ ~I}d. the, Life.. Thi. we,'" and material help of all persomi.. :,U!1iversity,. ·Afghanistan.·· )'ond the winQow"frame and '\!se . the ,problems of the social: order ::i .: two. tiers of side' p~lIiels; leaving, : and to get into action ourselves. , . ··,!}I..\ '. the : entire, "",indo,,,,, ·,j~pen'. Cur- : A wide program ia waiting, for :. \ '.','. tains of this type are easy. to lIS;'" ' ear~ '.fOr, because· you cap' iroB --" .. ', . them'flat like a·handkerchief.," Women's S,ociety Urges, . ;: ~other . way of using every '. ; 'ray/of ·light is io ·use 'a"delicale;',,:Sacrifice:·During.Visit, lacy patte1'J1 'of metal val.ance (which comes in section's) to CINCINNATI (NC) - Prayer frame the window. Be sure, that, andsacrjfice during, the U. S. visit " of ,Premier Khrushchev ~ions U~~k for e~uiy clean- '. were 'r~commended 'in a resolution adop~ ~d by the cincinnati - .' PlantBUseful' Chapter of Kappa Gamma' Ptants' can help ~,:oblem ·win- national Catholic women'.boOOI' dows. In a dining room where societY. ' , ,two. ,yindowsare sep!irated bY,:.' ~,' ,Tbe r~lutio~ ,acknowledged ,:' 1 . ','. ", . ';"'" . ". ", . ,",\ ..•....--' . .wOOcren J)anel,. ?ne;i c~m,solve .: that Hpolicies Of :far· reaclling .. : , : . , . . ri . ·th.e problem of, ~mfYlpg th~m by , coiisequenceinay be fOlmed.88 a ;!, './\"!! . ,. v~lan~. an.d drapes. and tbe : l\esu~ ~,Premier.,Khrushchev'. •1:"" i ,,'.... l~. .. ·u~. 9~ , p~a,nts .,on met~l ~ang~~. - visit,"'although' he' ·'execute. .• ' . ' . .' .. ', : ", . . '" . .... .... ~ , ":', ...... :- ,swmgmg a~mll }>n t~e; c~~t~r : policies contrary torigbt priD",.' . pane~ ..G~a~-~vy,and, ~hI1oden-.' dies....;' ". ,~ , . ' :~?n ,yalletles are suggested f~r " , p, . . ' ,:. .. for;nily of ' ; .•..' .se ,Wltb suCh hard-to-treat wiD"', Tbe resoluti~n also lIrg~ that, ·4Iowa.' .', . J';" ' , each :member, ill "a spirit. '01. . .·Guiin~md farr,ns ;/A Quality/,milk runs ouL'''~'' ". , , Christian huinility, pray and ilae. ,/ .. ,. " ongreg''a'tio'ns' of Nun. . rifice during Mr. ·Khrushchev'. . r : visit for bis spiritual enlighten[' to 'remeclY'. is :Obs~~ve ArnJvers,ary ';' ment and for 'whatever good inl: , to :have' your, Guimond Farms 'Driver-Salesman leave an 'BERLIN (NC)~Two congre- : ~r~'~ti()rial .effects' 'his JJii~oii ' ,0 • extra quart 0~,1A ~Qualityl milk' each delive~y ·d~Y.· ' ,, '.ations '0.1 Sisters' in.'lhe· Berlin m.i~ht accomp~ish.:" '. I 'diocese are observirig their',aim'i" " . ' . versaries. .....' , ," Man,. ·Wife,to 'Train ':~ '7
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: The Sister~ of H~dwig ,are As' Lay Missionaries , .' celebrating the lOOth anniver. S,¥~CUSE (NC)-qerald, M., eary of their foundation. ItS ~hattuck of 'Syracuse, a member " members, work in hospitals, ,orof' Ulefamily '!lhich holds a'; phanages and old age and refucontrolling ...interest in. the X gee qomes. '. Schrafit's' restaurants lO-bain, has'~ A, .community of, Benedictine "announced that he and his·wifi:l~.',~: Sisters is observing the 25th an- plan to start training Sept. Cat'''' Diversary of the establishment of Paterson to fit themselves as lay:' ,:' a priory in Alexanderdo'rf, near, missionaries., .j , rossen in the Red' Zone of GerMr. Shattuck was until July 1.:':'~ many. , manager of Schrafft's in' Syra-', :t i;.:I·, ,New Colleg'e Head' «luse. He said he arid' his wife " • will 'study at the training center PHILADELPHIA '( N C) '"':"'" of the Association for InternaMother Mary Aloysius has been tiona1 Development (AID) in' named president of Holy Family Paterson for mission work either' i College, a liberal arts institution' in Africa 01' South America.:) for 'Nomen" cori4ucted ..by· the '. They will take 'their. ,thie~'; Sisters' of the' 'Holy Family of..: month-old BOD; Gerald· Jr' j with. ' Nazareth. them.
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THE ANCHOR-
N·ervou's Vacati6ni;.l9' "Gra'n-dma
9
'Sept.', , 10,' 1959
Happy to,l-Iear;'of:~New Baby
Women's Leader Endorses Drive
By Mary Tinley 'Daly This column announces the birth in Tennessee of Ant'ltony 'Bernard Brennan III, grandso~ of the oldsters at our house, son of our daughter Eileen'. and Anthony Brennan, Junior. New baby is brother of ','The Little Hillbilly," a 1-6-month-old doll who, will can vacation whi~ we wait." aever be displaced in the, afLast items, bathing suits, were feetion of her kinsfolk. stuffed into the already bulging There is, Eileen tells us, a bags, cases stI:apped.
WASHINGTON (NC)-An en. dorsement of the 1959 United rund and Community Chest campaigns was voiced, here ,by Mrs. Mark A. Theissen of CoVington, president of the' National' Council of Catholic Women. Mrs. Theissen urged "aU Americans to support the manT worthwhile health, welfare and recreational services and charibit of "sibling rivalry" asd>syWODded.u. Time table programs ineluded in theJr ehologists and sociologists call it. It was a wonderful vacation. once.:a-year appeaI." "Nose out 01. Day ,by day, the Head of the She pointed out that whea joint" was the House looked and felt more local, state and national ordown-to-earth rested. I didn't look any better, ganizations are able to combine term used by but felt so. their fund-raising drives in one our parents and Came time for the return trip, effort, a tremendous savings ia a 'fund-raising costs and in the ::ts f:: r:i[U: a leisurely drive as we like it. time and effort of both volun, ' Check-in at a brand new motel ation that has ,near New Havef1 and a call home teers and contributors is'effected. been going 'on' "to give our whereabouts--'-this "The campaigns this fall are .nce the time being no time to keep incom'seeki~g support for more thaa of Cain -an d municado, vacation OJ:. no. , 27,000 individual agencies which Abel. Lit tie After a luxurious dinner and DELEGATE AT CANADIAN SHRINE: The new Apos-, serve more than 77,000,000 perMary' can't untolic Delegate to Canada, Archbishop'· Sebastiano BaggIo, sons. This is better than onederstand why ,a movie, wl! returned to the -third of our population," Mra. t b i I stranger motel to find a "Please call Opaccompanied by an honor guard, is shown as he visited the Theissen said. ' eame .to nUdge her off - the erator Nine"message ..• new Rosary Basilica at Our Lady of the Cape Shrine, ia "Through the programs ol • throne as uncontested queen of "Hi, Dad!" came Markie's joy' ' agencies supported by the United tile household. ous voice. "Little Tony's here,- Cap de la Madeleine, Quebec. NC Photo. Fund and Community 'Chest Eileen' and Tony are trying, here on this earth, I mean. Eight campaigns the hungry are fed, oommonsense-wise, to keep even pounds, five ounces-one hour ~'Shake-Down', the naked are clothed and both the balance of affection between old! Everything's fine. Tony the temporal and spiritual needs the sman and the even smaller -just ~aUed, Now 'you two ~njoy of the people are served, to 'the hillbillies. Probably, by now the' the rest of your vacation." betterment of the moral stand-' G E 0 R GET 0 W N (NC) ---' • ~ount this on your building fund. sibling rivalry is decreasing. At "Well?i'the'Head of the House ards of our nation.",' Farmers weren't the only one ,This is a shake'down!" last hearing, 'Mary had learned' ,beamed'as he put the phone back to say "Hi!" to the new brother ,in its cradle, i • '" " who got in on the harvest here Though a few farmers werl! New Bedfo,rd Meeting' , -and this'time without picking:" SirilUftaneous impulse brought '. this summer. ",St. John's parish surpr"I's'ed w''he"n he ·show"'ed' up', The Couples Club of 81. John tip a' toy to accompany the "Hil" , us both to our knees. 'Together, sold enough oats, barley and" '0' ne ",'pa,r,ish,io,ner, s'a,id, ever,YO,n,',e , "th e B aptist' h C urch, New' B'ed-, That 0' years'.. estliblfshed \ve sent ferv~nt prayers of wheat to raise $2,300 for -the was' generous to the truck's ford, hold its first Fall'meesnew rectory building fund. ' driver 'hi, the black suit' and household: is becoming an ever" :'ihanksgiving heavenward from .. ingat 8' Wednesday' evening.' Blore'" self-sufficient unit an, 'that ,completely impersonal Considering that the parish white ·collar. ' , 'Sept. 23, in: the church halL ~ lndep'endent family as' God jnotel, room' in New Haven. owns only a' square' block of vil- , "N~ ~;:.;; knew how much the , , fleers will be elected. ',' intends' ~li young familiea' to' ,I 'Born on a Mountain •• " !age property, _this might "be pick:upheld," F~ther Mct'4ahan become. " " I' "~"tQ8st',, for Davey?" ',The called "a 'pretty good yield~" In ": explained. " . " , ',0 J(ead of the House pic~ed up the 'raising it, Father Louis Me- ,,' S enil. 'c! .:iJriderestimated' the ,AccordiDl' to Plan phone and "lrdered ice. ' Mahan, the pastor, used ingen.:.' truck;~ capacitY by 20 buShelS, A week or'so ago, in somew:hat "'Davey'?" I :was still in a uity rather than husbandry. "but;" he hastened to add, "no Jittery grandmotherly fa~hlon, daze. "1 thought they 'were Whe'n tIle harvest approached" one seemed concerned about and' from a 'distance of 600' goin'gtO call him Anthony." last month he told his parish- 'how much they were being taken miles, I ' wondered how they , "G ' "th' H d' 01. th ioners; most of whom~are Min- for."' Several' farmers told 'him h' ld I 'liO ' ran rna, ' e ea, e would manage. S QU. go H t h' ' d nesota farmers, to get ready for to come back for al'other load. 'I'ennessee'!' " ou~ pu IS. arms aJ'oun me. • visit' by the parish pick-up . . "Not at all, Mom," i;ileen aIt, You re ~ hteral. J.tememb~r, truck. . CHAlLIS P. YAIGAI IlUred by letter. ~is :s vacation, Born, on, a, mou~taln top In "When, yOu see me coming;" tS4 IOCKDMI AVINUI ttme,' f0t . you and Daddy . Come Tennessee: How s,about" a d nee"" he said, "just get ready to unload . . ...aD, MAIS. 8ee us later-for fun, not work!" " a . your combine hoppers into the As ,'I ,packed for vacation,' "! He; #~cked ,em 'the hi-fi and.....,.. , ~'l' ' ,", ' ,Excavating 1 there ,was still hesitation. Wasn't ,'by 'c~inciderice: or by extremely, pick-up.", 1 Lest' anyone get' the idea ~hat , I this bmng a little heartle!!S and ,clever, fixi!,lg,o Came the- straina ,.,. Contractors ' "., ~he(irilin ' they' "c~ntributed",' 8elfi9M Was that' hired help as, "of ".pa~av.y, Da-,avy, Crockett.'" ,\ Could ~ °applie4' again"t, build-. f efficient. as.. Eileen, thought? .It " Little 'Tony" 'Wasn't exactly ,ing !und'assessmerits he'war.:ned: , ST., FAIRHAVEN was the night before,' take-,off; ,., born::-- on 'a' moUntain ,top"-but '"Doii't get the .idea yoU. cali ' WYMan 2-4862 bags almost ready, c~r checked. it was in Tennessee-and the , ";' '" , "llather stay here' and await simile was good enough for the the long-legg~d bird?" the Head time being. Female, Sales 01. the House asked. "It's O.K.. Grandparenting-it'l worider. ,Help Wanted ,,', with me." full i SPARE TIME' IWONEY easily mo.de showing' Robinson Christmas and That did it. He looked so white 'Every Day c.irdB to your friend., ~d tir,ed, really in need of a neighbors UlIing 'our home service Grade School Girls ; plan. ~·6 dollars an hour can b,e made change, surcease from o!le of COMPLETE ",ith little' effort on your part. No the most enervatmg summers' Aid Hospital Benefit ""perience needed. and It costa nothing to try. You get our exquisite ever, t~mperaiures' flirting with DENVILLE (NC) '- Add to LAUNDRY SERVICE sample boxes on approval....:.our 67 the hundreds day after day. people never- to-underestimatedelightfnl' popular.design Christmas 64 HICKS STREET Personal , imprint album FREE. Phrase came tQmind, "Duties 01. the-power-of-little girls. NEW BEDFORD Write at once! ROBIN!SON CARDS one's state in. life." When the Ladies Auxiliary of ':Dept, ~21. Clinton, Mass. WYman 3-4777 ".of course I not! We're taking St. Ciare's Hospital held a beneoff. according to plan. That baby fit and raised more than $900 for ian't even due for a while. We the institution, little Wendy NEW ENGLAND Drobes organized a group of '>-1.' " _I " grade-sehoohirs at nearby White Meadow Lake ,to raise some' "" New Bedford ~ Fein, River. ~ MaHapoise"' . A E., , moriey too.' Their project: a car~', r nival at the home of Wendy's \ , Every Sun~~y -:- $2.95 parents. " 'in~l~di~g A Live Lobster The day after the carnival, . PlANT CHAMPION',TER; NO:'DARtMOUTtI' " : they turI)ed the ,proceeds, $37..36, ' .' ., . ' I · . .' . . , I '6{,er to' Sister' Mary EriimetIka; every ,Garment: motn-controlted Tr84;1ted,C!'f ItO eJctra~ hospitaI:.administrator" with ,the tOgg~hall Bridge,' Fdirhaven 'teqt,lest that she "buy something OR DRESS for the hospitaI." As a result, ClEANED, AND PRESSED-CASH CIftd CARRY , " the hospital nursery now has six dozen new baby shirts.
Pastor's Harvest Puts $2,300 in Buildi'ng Fund
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DONAT ,BOISVERT INSURANCE AGENCY I ' All Kinds Of Insurance
BANKING SERVICE
.. WILLIAM STREET NEW REDFORD. MASS.
for Bristol County
••• then', ioin 'the
Bristol County Trust Company
5W:iTC'H TO
'COMPARE
DIAL WY 1-51 n 'enon~
POSTULANT: Miss Vivian,Gamache,'daughter,of Mr. and Mrs. Gerard Gamache of 431 Washington, St., Taunton, has entered the Holy Union of the sacred Hearts at Groton, MaSs. A l.%9 graduate Of St. Mary's High School" Miss 'Gamache attended S~' Jacques SChool,
Gene's Lobster Shack TRY
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SEA FOOD PlATE FOR 98c
146 Huttteson Ave. Rou.. 6 Near Fairh~veD Drive-In WYman '6-5127 Uwi and Boiled LOBSTERS
J'~ntoR.
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Service
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TAUNTON,
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MASs.
THE BANK ON TAUNTON GREIN Member of Federal DePNII InsuraneeCOI'pOI'aliOil
NEW
8Arr••' WH ,p.,.1J
"'Sunl/eam BREAD,
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THE ANCHOR,-:-Oi.ocese of Fall River-Thurs.,·Sept.1 0, '1959 . ' •
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Jean A. Arcikowski
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Mary L. Simcoe'
GROUP OF 13 DIOCESAN WOMEN TO AFFILIATE WITH THREE
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RELIGIOUS COMMPNITIES
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Thirteen Postulants Enter ·Th.ree Religio,-,s· r ~rs,'
~f:~r~~~st.he Ancient Order of bella, American Legion Auxil-
Th1rteen 'young women"of the Dibcese, 12'giaduates . Mr. and Mrs.' John Arcikowski, . was active in sports; 'class re-··
Mis's Moniz, daughter of Mr. ,48 North Plea~ant street, Taun- ,porter f~r the sc~ool paper, and Mrs. Manuel Moniz, 1305 ton, is a c?mmunicant of Holy.. Class. W111 Co~mltte~, .~rom .N ' ::i~~,M.r;na~tr~.e;~~:. :~c:~::~.~ · . I" ·t·· ·th·onth. Ten entered the ,Ro~ary par,IS~. A member of the' . CommIttee, SOCIal Commltte~ p enter re.lglOus communllesl~,m , .. ' '.... June, 1959, graduating class of for four .years;·a member. of the She was' a member of Sodality, Holy Umon Postulate at 5?O of Mrs. David W. Boland, 1455 St., Mary High, she was active Dramatics Cl.~b. aQdltstrea~- Glee Club, and' Sports Team. · Rock"Stieet; Fall River, ~n . Highland Avenue, a member of in Sodality' work, dramatics, urer dur.ing ~er senior year.· During her four 'years of high . . 'Holy Name parish..and . SIS . t er .Glee Club,. an.d Ros~ry CI ~'. b She .For four years she was active . school she did Memorial voluntel!r Home. work · Tuesday, to; begin. spiritualthe at the Catholic formation and teacher train- of. Sister Mary DaVId, SUSC. served as aSSIstant art edItor of as Ii lay catechist at .Immaculate . ., . , .Conception:,Church. She was Miss 'Levasseur was a highest · jng courses at Sacred Heart At Sacred Hear~s Ac.ad~tny she the ,y~arbook~ · S h' 1 I Education' and, three was glee club. presIdent, . ~nd ,. Miss 'silvi" '124 .. Somerset '1' also an active member of the . honor graduate, second in 'a · ~llo~,~ . mbers " other active in the . orc~estra,sod~lItY;.AYenue· Taunton, is ttte daUgh-, .Immaculate ConceptiOn'Women's'. class of 55. She is the datighter · ::mnj~nitie~e .' . . .' , dra~a~icqour.~al~~alld>~~r~s·ter o~ :.io~.n.f\f.,·Silya:.S~e w,a~: a ' ·GuH~,Ju.nipr.,Datighters' of;Isa-,,:' of ~r. a!"d Mrs.Peter/Levasseu~, '. "', ". .". ' . 'c'."" ·"MissNobrega,·daughterofMr.: member'.:of·,tl.J,efJppe.,graduat,mg. . ..•.. .. : .'.' .1 ..,:. ",22.; Bla Ille.Street, St. Roc~~ .'-rp.e . Holy, U~lOn.·postulanU. . . and.Mrs>John~cibrega, 80'Tr~:"'''''.,. class at ;S't; . Mary: ,HiglI,·where, ,', ·:pa.r:ish..;Si!1ce, gra4uating from jnclude:Mary'Ehzabe~h:B~lan~,,, ' nia,n Aye,;.,;Som.ers.e~;.St::;Jo~~.·. she,:, heldo~fice ..:on,;thestud:ent,: : . .,' f3~ O.'.v.~ high ~ch.~ol .she has !l~r~ed.~s . Barbara, NO?ret:a;j:c~.rol.:Re:~n,:;of ,God: Parish,: WaS' se~retary: .. ' Council, was lJ.Qion: deleg~te f.or, .. r~c,ept~~!'11!!~ al!d teclln.lclan '.. n~ · andMary Lou S!mcoe,. June:19 ,9,tre~s~er.~f. ,,~~~.~ra~atIc31u.b,.· the S<;>!ia!ity!: alum~a,e. ed,I~Of.' pf: :. ~ p~, ",.n :,.' the, o~£Ices of ~r. COrrIgan and .. ,rllduates fro~i~a;red ~~:~~~; "a sm)ra':10.~o~9I.srmtb.~:g!e,e,.cl:u.b, .. tl;1e yearbo.o,k; and, ~ m.e~ber o~ '.. " 1'he,.H:oly .See 'is to ...bestow ';;'. Dr;~l,~te~ . · A.~demy! ~all . e . _ . . a' ~.eP:l~~r oUhe~rch~,s~a" ~n.d.: ,the' 'Rosary qub, ·".Glee ;..CI,!b,.. ,papal ho.n()rs,o~:the.Oider. of·toe'·, . PatriCla,JUchard is on the staff Also ..Margar.et Oljveir:a'; ..claSs' ..: act~ye.· ~n .t.h~ ',l!<;l~ality" J()~r:J.la~~;.,,· Orchestra,a~'d" Dtamatics 'Clu~~ '. Holy ,Sepulchre upon ,Most .Rev;.,'· at' si: 'Anne's School;.of ,Nursing ,of,.,1:956, an~fEleaIior:"Mt:Na<lIY;·. "i~,.:a.~~:tlP~t:~;;' ~ .. ;":;;,::';";-";::;"". -A ;comm':l.~iea~t .0~:,qui'IfdY· .of, .. •~Obn.; C~mber,~:.M., :S\ipe-'-' "', of~~pieh,' she, is~agradua.te. S~e · dassof:l950;F.~oIli th~19~9"cl:i~~' ,..... -,~i~\:~J:\~g~iI;;:.-~,t~J,>~::.r:im~jng}:.; ~~,r~e~:"'p~rIs~;,'·:. f~a9~~ ~ /·w~s :, ;ri~: :Per;tei~~ of,:Mary~noll;:Mrs~··" : holds '~" .pursing ;.degree fro~ Of,St. Mary;s HIgh ·SchQ.ol,'1Tau~- . - studetiUor four.years; graau~te.d,·: actIve, : In'.' Le~iop ._, of.:,.. Mary. ',. Mary. F. Greaney of ,!J,Westland ' ".' Boston College .School 'of Nurs1on,,'Jean;A~n'Arc.ikow~ki,~\J~~;::..wi~ .. ~(~.~~~~:;,il~f1?~s,:,~eC.oni:Li,Il' ; pr~jects:,:: ,;" .. ?'" >;:' . . . ~; .. -~'.':;. ': St.', .~orcester; :ariq~lidie:Fra.n.k ,:. "ing~: ,p,a~'~~~~r f Mr: and' M~~ anne MarIe SI1vaan~.:A.nn ,P~Ui" : . :cla~~;,Q(i·64:-~Ae IS ,w.ej~.augilte,r:, .' .MisS'Tallerit; .l~ W,asl,iington .' Morrissey of J;loston. .... ,;,. . ' Ulde'ric Richard; 297'.Brayton : erine ''1'~I~ent '~re' e~~e!.~hg :th~~ , ':pf:M~:: 'aDd Mr~,' ~an¢is:'Rega~..· ,S'J.:eet~"Ta.~ri~o~, .is. the':?aiJ~h~er' ',' Bis~9P .'.' Com~e~ :. i~ .; "~o be A ~e.! she, "i~ '.~ .. metnbt:~ of, St. · ~m~u'Hty., as..IS l*l.cI3;,Heath,. ~300 ~I.nd,en.St.reet,Sacred.Heart':·:of'M rs. G..'·Everett"Parlow. A 'knighted' in:. the Papal Order, WIlham'~ parIsh. . · a June' gradua~e.~f ()hv~r '~lnes . parish.' Sh.e .was ·preted;.of;t~e:·"'communicapt· ,.of' .Immacu.late .:Mrs. 'Gteailey is to Qeco1:De a'lady' ''"'!'''.'_ _.' "" ho ' ~ig~ ·S9. :<>I,.E.as.t.oq.....: "," sodali~y;violil1ist in the orc~e~- . ,C~nception. par.ish, sh~ gradu- of the Holy .sepulchre' and,Judge A DeliCious ' T~' Enter~Medi~al MissionarieS' ~ tra,a'.llb'r:ary aiq~, ~~Q :activ.e in. _ated in June from St. M.ary High . MorrisSey a Kniglit of the Holy : . ' . , . , spor~. ': :'. ' ~: ~ " . 'School. She served as first .vice- Sepulchre. . . . Treat Ir~ne..Le~asseur, ~a.c~e,~ Hea~ts . ",Miss Simcoe, 537 Gardners· p.refect of .the sodality, assistant'· .. ,.... Ac~o~my.'.~?ll ~hve~, c.lass _~f . Neck Road,:Swansea, Our Lady literary editor of the yearbook, Mrs. Greaney. IS k~own for·her. 195?',;en~er~d the ~a~meht~ PrI- ~ of Fati~a.parish,i~,the daug~t~r . and was'a'I~ember of the ·Rosa.ry ..VI'ork?!l ·~ehalf. of. Most ~ev. • ory, . ~a,~rmgt~~, last ..mont~. ,'of Mr'. and, Mrs. Augustus SIm- • 'Club Glee Club and -DramatIcs FrederIck A.. Donaghy, M.M., Ma~g¥ret, MonIZ. <!f, thiS. 'yea~ s coe She .was' a'" prominent· Club' '. r . .' a. n,ative of ,New'~Bedford' and d~~,•.e;v~ere~ th~. C~~mehte SI8- <}' debater', w~nning the gold cu'p, " E t n Entrant. . "'exiled J3~shop of W'UCllOW;.,Chin!!. te~!> ..\'to,r"..·.th~ ~1g.ed ~n', Ger~~~-:. ,and m~dal as member of the " ". '. ~ as.o ' .. ' " . - 'Bishop .Donaghy is now working toW~,:,Pa. Patnpa Richard, cla~"?-b t d b t t . th Rrovi- .. PatrICIa H~ath.. 1~ the"daughter ···among the Chin,ese.o,!l Taiw~n.· ofj,j1950; "win>jo~n ,the Medic~l.'~~r, ~s ~. ~ e.. ~a~ 11:1- •• e" . 'of lVI r ..and Mrs. Arthur. } I e a t h ' ...... M~~si~mailes':0£ :·Mary,:. Oakdale" J},4.e ?ce COI.leg~ ~Igh'~h.oo~:eb!!te .of 59' Elin Street, ~orth Easton . month.' .'. fournament. as., sppng.: e was .-and '''a communicant ."0.£ the." . .... " ' , " .: Pa'.; Miss Boland .is,the daughter . also accompam.st f9,r. gli.e~.~~l~b. ,:'Immaculate CoriceIlti~)U" Church~' ,.. . /. ;" ;..' , '. ':' '-, ; a~d orche~tr~ :~nd,. ,!lc. IV~~.m:, She graduated with hOnorS fr0ll!'.
of schools conducte~ 'Py the, Religious of the Holy' Union · of the Sacred Hearts,and 'one public high school graduttte
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B:LUE' RIIJ.BON..
Fa'll· 'Ri Y~,r :,.' Y.o~.th.· '. ?'P;:::;' ~l~v~ir~;w.ho,~~~~ie~d~: ~~~~~~:,:~~~g ~~~~;~~~~~,l ~~~.. R . - : " "H b-·t a three year .nurslng course a t . . ....... .
.;; LAU.ND itV' <'-: :" ','.". , j ' " " ' . ' , , , . :'. . .e~~IY~s,.· . ~,~I,. ':" ~ ~~jth~~:~g~~~p~~a~~l1i~n~'O~~~:-:: C~hill .Provide·s'.i=ir~t', ..~,:~~!~,~c,E~irRAL~,~V,E.~:~,~:y .:':
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· .. ~ou~ 'Jun~ .1959.' ~r~auat~s o.f"1 ; F~al1!t Oliveir!i:95 W~st:~~oPer t'. Ce"tr~1, H.~g,h$choot.,., · De La.~~~eA~!l!i~m!,.Newpol'~ • street . North ,Tiverton. Sh~l was .;; 'The-first" c€mtraL'highschool :; ~ :tt;:~~~~~~;~h.~r:~:~d~~~fi~~:·'·~ all 1\o~?r :gi-:ad~.;tte-#oiri.'·sacred ' " ~",e,s .i~~· b~!gfn~; }h~ .g~nerollity !, ! Schools Monda'y'a't'th~d3r6ther~'·.Hearts,A~demy"a.nd;,~sa.~~-: ~nd. mten~gence~'.of ~homas~. ) ... ' ""t .'. t'B',. '. 't··:"· in the'~orchestra" and.. ,Cahill, I a:; .deyou.t'., laYlllan" of n N' 'y', " ., ~phonist. i N~v~hl1 ~ ~ , _~~t:y ?W ,. ~_'. ,': member' . of, 'the sodality: arid ~ Philadelphia;' ..,' : < '. . .
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: .... ; "~AmQng.",,t~~j;e~ inyeste<!,;~ai ; Sttid'erit·c~unc.il '. ._,.." ." -h~s ~ill;'dated';Au~st23, · J'rank.. Silvia. 'of' ·31)6: ~r!ln<;h ,. . . : ...~ ... '>. '. ..• ' , . - 1873'he'provideQ"tha( the' bulk "... '. S~eet. ~Fan Riv:er:>Sori of" fvlr:" '." ':;~ :ra~nton .:En~r~n~ 9fhls estate :sbould 'be,:'devoted.. . ..._ : and Mrs: Fr:mk M.. Sjl~i~, and~ a;" Miss'-·,McN~I!y" daughter of. "to the-'establishmeM of school . · meIl'.lber·.oCS~. ,J.osel?h:s parj,sh:: Mr.and--Mrs: ~artl~r., McN~lly, ·for the.)fee'.ediicaiion.of, I>9'Y8 ,':'.;: il(J.' .;" . ..... " ,:The-ne*.l'elig~ou~,r~~e~v'e<!:l~e·48,~·"rC:!.spe~t':.St,t¢~t":):i~crf?~ : 'overthe"'age:'of:n"years)n'the ':,. :' ".,~.., " ·Dame:o~"B.ro~her;~ob~rt]anies. i'. H~a~tP.l;lr.isl;1;,~a~b~~ a ~em:-'Cfty of:Philadelp~i~;.:."·.i:'-,'~i. . i~ '.,',:';'. . ".:. . .,:WhIle at De La ~alle.~ca_~emy, "b4tJ',of theo~f,i<:e,:t.Qrte)at..River-, ... ',!1'he ·.'School'" establIshed was : ; ,~.":.,.: ".. . ,.," l1e' wal(i>iOlp,lnenCiri ba~kei6ail"' si~e "PreSs; '. H~~gl:tto~;,:~~i.fflin!:: n~med The:RoiriariCathiPllc High ::.." ... " .
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115 WILLIAM· ST;
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NEW BEDFORD,. MASS.
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Arthur Janson, Reg. P~arm.: 'DIABETIC:. AND SICK ,ROOM . SUPPLIES ·204 ASHLEY BOULEYARD " BROTHER. ROBERT :.J~S, . :. ....! , .~. ;.... :
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THE A'N.CtfOR-Oi~ese ;:,...
Patricia Richard
Irene Levasseur-
Mary E. Boland
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Eleanor McNalLy
Patricia Heath
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of ~a" River"7Thurs., Sept; 10, 1959 ' '.
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Carol Regan
Margaret Moniz
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YOUNG WOMEN PLAN TO DEVOTE THEIR LIVES TO THE HO NOR AND GLORY OF GOD
,Former
" omman der' O'f R' ed Guerl·"1.as R tF e urns to · alt h C
which encouraged me to attempt to bring about his conversion. I suggested that he should write LONDON (NC)-Luis Taruc, the ,45-year-old former inar organized by SEATO and was visiting the prison that he his story to sort' out his ideas" supreme commander of the communist guerilla army of took the opportunity to fulfill was "having trouble with his and obtained his agreement that the Philippines, k~own the Hiikbalah'ap, has renounced a long-cherished desire to meet atlieism." It was this, and the, I should help him in this. -My . " him. On the first occasion that I knowledge that asa Filipino he first aim was to bring him back. communism .and' returned to the. Church.' He' had been , was able' to do so I had to get wa.s" likely to have had some. ,. " ' , t o the Faith, rather than to get brought up as a Catholic b u t ·also provide powerf u"1 ' myself smuggled unofficially sort' of Catholic upbringing I'ng the Chu'rch wI·th power, .It will drifted out of the practice ammunition in the fight against into the jail. But I started disprivilege and the exploitation Of with him which were the poor. of the Fal' th when he was a communism· in ot h er vital parts .cussions able to continue with oUicial ' ~ socialist in the middle 1930s. of Asia, too, where there is an approval thanks to the ·enlight:- . Two Promises He later accepted the Marxist acute shortage of good anticom- ,eried 'apprQach of security, I was, however, able to peratheism of the Communist party ~uriist lite'tature of Asian origin. intelligence o(the J?hilippines. NAPLES (NC) - Msgr. (Lt. sulide him to make two pI'omises and became one. of their top On. May.I.'t6, .1954,··Mr. Taruc I had read .some time earlier' . Cot) John B. Rettagliata, Arrny of decisive importance. The firs" leaders .. surrendered 'as leader:of'the out.:.. chaplain at'·: Camp Ederle near was -.that he 'would attend Mid:' .'. . . lawed: Huks; By, that- time his in 'a).'fational Cath<¥ic Welfare" here" has condoucted a· six":day' , • He,is now iQ a military prison' . , . '. : ' '..' '.' . Conference. dispatch that. 'Mr;, ' ". night Mass on Christmas Eve 1D on charges : arising. from the': oung wIf~. (w~o,"!".as ~ ,~rac~l~'" TaruchadOllce told a priest whO . seminar; for Army wives on , the.:priSo~ chapel; the secon~ "hilk" rebelhon.. .. . ..... mg Cathol~c) had.~en kIlled m . . _ , '. ' ., " . ".. methods of teaching catechism. that 'he would discuss hiS prob' ;" . t' part'"les; '. ,a .goverIUllent-o~gamzed ambush, t· ". The.' 'women,' about 30. in ·num.';; " .lems afte.r I hadg'one with Fa.ther':· Of .a 1'1 th e commums .' ..." , .' , ...... ... . '.. w.h'1Ch t 00 k up' .':' hIS was. 'In• JaIl,. and. personal": ". . ' . berand'all members of'theCon- " Michael Nolan,' ,a Columban'. eas t A' Sla , ·son ,... . . .' ...., .' '.'. .. . " i n S·ou th·· ft th 'd f tho . P "fi . Bnd.po1Jhcal feuds·.were sphttmg fraternIty ofChristiim Doctrine; . pr~~~t.·' " .•' ;~s ~ e~h'l~ e~ 0,.. et BCI c . the, party;' Mr. \ Taruc",was' de;' ...., .• help Msgr. Rettagliata:in 'giving , ar,' e'. I ppmes pary.ca~~. tainedby'-the':army:,as'a. "maxl- . W"A''SHI"N""G""T'ON' , (N'C) , 'FBI _ religious i,nStructio,n. t.opupils o,t The.. Midnight: Mass achieved', . nearer to' success than any. other,:. ' ,. . ,.,. ". ;- .'" . ....:.. . .' _. " everything I 'had hoped of it. Mf'•.. with .the :excep' tion Of·that led ;,mu~,~~~r1.~y'rlsk .,r1soner..and .·Duector·J.. Edgar Hoover has, ,the,Arm", Dependents School at Taruc wrote' me at the time,' ,.: He . bee'n'a honor the base·.. '.' :" .' . .. h._.... . . in Vietnam.. bycHo ,Chj-·Mmh' · .: held .",. '·mcommunicado. .....,'. .. , ,' ' "was ;",. . W arded• .the '.·h·lg·hest , ..., '.. . .".' saymg that,he relt as he watc .,.... ..':' . ;" " . ·.d, gIven B'. sentence .. of 12.. y~arsofthe Catholic War Veterans':of :,', . Two"" :American semmarians ' it that he had "come home." By, ·· . Aild 'of all the .. commuDlst imprisonment- " " O'f . .. . . ' , . CMrIes'>IUepe' an~ "Willi~~ May, 1958, he',had .been toCon-"" · guerilla" leadersln:thattIDport;;':: . . ... :' •.. ' :...... ; ' . : . " :theVni~e~' States, the r~e~ .Q · ~""'n i . f th IdMr Taru.e . . start ~iSeUS8I(~D . ..St.. Se!>a~haI!..' Naberhaus,. tookpart m the sem- fession for the first time for t ,an - .... 0 e wor . .. . d b th . . B th . . t· d nt t the ., • · was certainly the m'Qst colorful. ... Iri' No~einber, 1957,1 wtmFto ~~; Hooyer ~as. cite y e · · mar.. ' . O' a~f7 s.'u e s a . very many years. " ". the Philippines to attend';i sem- .:veterans orgamzahon as "a bul- ' .Cathobc . Ur,l1.ver"lty at. Inn~Powerful A~munitlon. . . ' , , wark against a waY.of life which bruck;: AustrIa. Mr. Riepe: IS ~ He has' now told 'm; story in would' deprive the American -studying for the Archdiocese' ,a book ~~ has written in his people of.their democratic priil- ofBaltjmor~ ~nd.Mr.Nab~rhaiis -prison cell. It will be of great ciples." .: ,for the DlOcese~ of Oklahoma importance. to' security a.uthorQUEENS .VILLAGE (NC)...,;,A The medal of the Order of St.· City and. Tuf~: ities in s':!ch countries as Malaya, , ~veterari Catholic 'leader in' the' Sebastian. and a plaque. we~e ......;. ... ..., B~r~a ~nd. _Laos~ '~lv;re, c~mfield of intergroup relations has - pn;sented to Mr.. Hoover m, hIS _ mumstrebels are shll m achon. been named' ,recipient of 'an.': offIces here ~y Robert T. .~ORREIA .&, award 'given for' outstanding~'Leary of BaltImore,' Md., na.. _ONE STOP contributions to better Jewish ~ tu~n.al cOmmander. of the .Cath.,. ,SHOPPING. C::::NTER' Christian ·relations. . " ... obc War Vete!ans: . . ' . S. In, his resP9nse,Mr. Hoov~r Dr. John J. 0 Connor, profes- . declared that the awar<;l. is "l1ym- ., ~'~el~vi~ioD .• Furniture SEE THESE .A. A. Kirk, National Director sor. ;of...histor~ at Georgeto~n bolle·. of'the',great 'ideals upo'n • AppHanees • 'Grocery of Catholic Service for the Boy Umv:er,sl.ty, w.as named to r~- , which our nation was founded." , ,." ~T' M~ ,Scouts of '4merica, wiJ) speak at . ceive 'the 1959 Edith Stein u' . ..' ' '104 Aih~n St.. New Bedford. ,a :spiritual. meeting for men and' A" d f th Ed'th St' G ild ,',l'he Cath01Jc' War Veterans , WYman 1-935. . women ot:the Diocese engaged. w.ar o. ~'.~ em u • ex~mplify the . principles of, L.._...._ .... ....-.~ KITCHENS .: . ' .. WhICh a~ds JeWIsh converts to :. n 1'b t and justice . -' in Cub Scoutipg and I;Joy Scout- '. Catholl'CI's'm Dr O'Connor 54 mora 1 y, 1 er y ,of fr.·en'dly w ' ood' , . " " way iIig at 7 ,~und~Y:' '~yening, Sept.," wrItes a .monthly ,~olumn for~he , which··form f lif "h . the. a'd' American .. ""." ..:,
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Interracial Review, published by ,0 e, e S, I.. C~urch ha/ll,-.~aun~on. . ' th~ Catholic Interracial Council :The gathering will begin with . of~ew Y()I':J!;:.,.: ,:~.< '!". . Solemn' Benediction and con;:; ' . :I'he award ,w,ill.be ,.presented Inc. tinue with Kirk's talk: and a" Oct. 17 at a, COIllll1\Ul"9Il' break0 ER5 , buffet supper. TQe speaker .. isfastof~e ~dith. Stein Guild in M V .. secretary and'advjs~r to. the J'fe;w York; it,.w~samiouIA.ced at Fall R'•• y:·.e·Sr,ERNVeINw·GBe·dfo'rd' Catholic Committee on Scout- ·guJ1d headquarters here. ing and editor of the Chaplain's. " .. ,. .. C~pe' C~ Are~ ,. Bulletin. . . .. '. . .. He promotes development o.~ ~ '5', . . AceD': Catholiclaymen's 'coiiunittees in ., 1. ,; \. • ~,'. ' ,.'~ • AERO: MAYFLOWER ""'. Dioceses and, IOclii Scout' coun.;~ ,'" '. INC. e~; assists in .conferences' and ·~,,,,.:Nation-wide Move,. serVes Ion the faculty of 'the ! .. <"<WYmcin3-G904 " N~tional Training School for ' 3 0 t Kemp&oDSt.New Bed~orcl p~ofessi,onal' Scout' executives. ,: 24~HOUR' WRECKER :10 1950 he led the national· ' .' ~. . ~~ ~ itibilee pilgrimage of'BoyScouts " SERVICE to Rome and was received in : 653 Washington Street special audience with htsgroup by Pope Pius XII.. He is a memFairhaven WYman 4-5058 ber of the Knights of Columbus and Holy Name Society in addition to his Scouting activities. So. Dartmouth
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12
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fa" Riv«-Th~., Sept. 10, T'159
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Predicts Best -Seller'Rating' For 'Advise"and Consent'
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-God Love You ';,
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By Most Rev. Fulton J. Sheen; -D;D~ .. )
By Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S. Kennedy .One of the best sellers for months. to come is certain tD be Advise and Consent by Allen Drury (Doubleqay. $5.75), which. is accurately descri~. as "a novel of Washington . politics." A veteran ne~8paperman, the author 'hassince 1954 covered W. ashi~gton for role in the contest on the nomthe New York Times, and he ination. Under the direction OfobviOJIsly knows whereof he . the majority leader, senator writes. il) this whopper (in . Munson, and ~i~ th~ ~ssi~nce
..y was in prison", Our Lord will saY. oh t~e't)ayof Judgment. Every devoted follower who ever looked· out through iron bars or • heard the rattling of handcuffs, or who' served in a' cOncentration cainp 'in 'Notth:ern Vietnam or China, was Christ ,re-living His Passion Days '-lnder Herod and Pilate. And He wore stripes too-. those made on His Body by the lashes of His jailers.
1Iize, that is), which runs to 6141- of a number of his distmgulshed eversize, closely printed pages. and lev~l-headed colleagu~, the Ifo one is going . v~te wIll go as the PreSIdent
But the words have another sense. Is not Our Lord In prlsoll whenever we are' in prison-but a prison in whieh we turned the keT, snapped closed· our own Irons, and lMl~d as' our OWD ;laDers? When our soul. "are'imprisoned 'by ~eed, selfishneSs, .and /' evil, Our Lord· Himself is therebT ". imprisoned. He can do nothing to . release liS unless 'we will to be released. What ~ood does it do to cry to Him: ''Deliver me from . my chains but let me keep my evil· ways"! The moment we free ourselves, that moment 9hr~st is freed. . " ~ ., How' canj open prison' 'doors to Our Dord11b. in MriCl! so that He/may heal ,lepers, lead::::1 young natives to seminary doors" offer the$\' Memorial .of' His, Death "to Korea, infuse 1:F the BlOod of the King iD.to . the 'people of m: Papua,' unless I br~ak' out:.of· 'm:y' fet~ers oC'; egotism? Who imprisons Christ the more: The ignorant 'Soviet soldiers who "know not what they do" as they send priests to conCentration camps? Or the Catholics of the United States who average 26 cents a year to the' Holy Father to supply his 135,000 mi~ . sionaries throughout -Asia,' Africa and other parts of the world?
• hail it as an Wishes. '. artistic master~uestlon Associa~ODS . . As a matter of form, a subpiece. VerbosIty 'tt .' . ted to' h Id and . 0common~ com~u ee IS appoln .. ' .0. placeness char.~earI?gs o? tQ~.n~IJ!.1OatIon. • e t e r .iz e its He.admg thIS group. IS Senator lit Ie' It' is 'exBrtgham Anderson,. who, at 37 ~i~elY'- in.!Jas already establish~ :himself \ HAUl PRELATE: Arch-. deed .excrmciatas un~su.ally able ~dsure .to Iogl;- long. It .be a: gr~at and mem~r~b~e sena- .bishop Francois Poirier of .tarts almost tor as hiS ca~'eer contmues.· . . ,- Port-au-Princ.e is the center painfully slow' ~nders~n IS a.man and a legiS,: . of . a church-state' controIF. For a: consid- \ .Iator of. 1OtegrIty, seru"u~0';lsl:r versy inHaiti,since the gov- . _able span it picks up only mln- h~mest, deepl.y conc~rned to. do Imum .speed.' And even when it hiS duty, ~nd 10translgent ~ga1O~ ernment expelled two French does move into high gear, ,there ..compromlse where the l'lght IS priests in late August. NG Photo. . are lulls which strain the read- concerned.. . . er's patience.. It comes, finally. The hearll~gS are rou.tlne u~tIl t. \ '. to a series of climaxes, .but the someone b;1Ogs ~p a q~eS~lOn, resolution .. of the very elaborate. about. ~e!.f~ng,,:ells assocl.abO?s ( Perhaps .we '''kn~w ~ot what we do.... But may this eolumll plot is .far' from entirely plaus,. . and activities when teach10g m .' A. Inspire.you, Samson-like, to.break dowrt'the prison wall of egotism ible. . ,,<~ollege: A witness accuses h ~ m " .... which hoards .for. self.. and the~ebY rel~ai;e Christ to. move more The' subject is a- Senate battle' of hav10g fo~~e.d. a cell tO~IS- . "freely amOlig, those who stumble toward tbe Light! Sa~."Oh· Lord. ever the :confirmation o~ Ii nom- .. ~uss the l,l0sslblllhes of adap~mg·' , .. ' . ' ..• , '.' '. i h~.v~· k~pt T1!~e' .in p~U!~nlong enou~h;. I~ave' shori~ned Thy' Inee for ,the,position of Secretary, . ~0ffi!llU~1lS~ to,. t.he~mencan. CASTE;LG A ,N ,D 0 L F 0 .arms,~reac",o~t tosolils see~ing;,ThY Tr~th; I have' put my hand of State. The time is supposed,., scen~: I;eff.mgwell11~sistson con- .' (NC)· ....... Pope, ·John XXIII,' :to!.hy Mou~~ ;~ deade~. Thf, SUJD,.m41DS '.come un~o .Me'; I. have Iy in.. ,the future,. perhips. the;,. front!pg hI.s.,acc~s!,!r alld .clever-. praised the strong faith of', . fettered Thy Feet as lost sheep bleated in 'vain~ Now I shall fling near'fJ..lture. ., .ly ?~s~redlts hIm Jl0t o~IY as A' , . .•.. C. ·· h" .. ' . '. " open my prison by a.sacrifice·to ThyViear,ioh'n xxm'who,lik•..... ' .. e,v~de.nc. e. . merican . ~t olics a n . d , . , The .author l'S careful to l·ntro-.· .h,aVlllg..no suppo.rtl.llg. . 'Pe~r, ..eeomes. unchained as my. liberty becomes. Thy ..liberty"" duce ~eference to the Eisenhow- .. but al~o as be~ng.mentapy.un- thanked them for their generous, . ' r o ' . .' ; ' .. . .. , . ',',' .. admin,istration as beirig in the.:rta~l~: It looks.,as if LeffIn.gweU ~harity, 'during'an" audience. .~. , ;.. , .,. '" past .whenthe> events he.has ~ 10,; " .. " .;' granted '~ officials of Catholic .. , ';COD YOU -~',RiK~'f~r ~. "~t of. iove Ifor·the,'Mis- . bnagip.~d upfold. It, is clear, .toO, ';' ~ut then Se.nator A·~dl7.l\SO~ reo:'. Relief .Services-National Catho;. . sions" ..".. to M.F.L. fo,:, $15 '''l1hatGod would help me,to overcome· that the' U.S.S.R. ha's mo~~d ~Ives ateleph~n.e ~a~l, )a~:at lic'Weifat~' C~ll~e~~~c.e~ " . " .my possessiveness", .... to ~'Three."lfor.$3·;'IWewere.all set to: have', .,. farther . ahead' in its cold naght and at his h~me, which. Present at the audience with . cocktails at·lunch and to drink to our health, 'but instead.......here is to war with the. U.S. than we like proffers. corroborahon .of the Msgr. Edward:E. SWanstrom, exthe health of ,the Missions". , ...to MiSs W.·."I have prayed<fora' to. think is now the-ease.,or the' char~~s. Instead of elosmg ~ ecutive direct9r Qf CRS-NCWC,· , ..speciai.favour,andit was granted to l)le" .... to Mrs.. T. '''We've arprobability . hearmgs he announces that they were Msgr. Andrew. P. ,Landi, ,.rived late in the town and could not get a free room in the hotel. I . will be continued, without 0 - the agency's director in Italy; think I had a glimpse of what it must be like on the Missions, where Controversial' FI!l'''' plaining why. . Father Fabian Flynn, of the 90 'often it's not a single night, but every night is like that-no place '!'he unnamed President (who Now he. is subjected to mass-. CRS,-NCWC mission i~Au8tria, to sleep" .... to R. for $4 "I have managed for two weeks on lIlT til many respects resembles the ive, weli nigh irresistible pres- and Edward Kinney of the CRS- 'wee~ly, allowance, so one week .goes to MiSsion lands". most colorful of the chief ex- sure to reverse this' course and NCWC in New York. / . . eCutives in the recent. past) to' speed the process ofconfirPope John expressect hi. ap-' , Don't eav,.· tIMi weaUh,. maa who has "the world .. hh chooses for the principal spot in mation. The pressurei. of· var- . preciatio!1 to American Catholics flareriiPli'·. For a '2 donation 70. eaa 'hold the world in your Ilia ca~inet a former'college,pr~-. "~ sorts and from, ~veral . for the good use of their dolla... : . ftarerilps•. The live-colore•. WOJl"'D MISSION aOSARY hel... lessor who has filled a nUJllAel" Q4arters,· including the White . and cents in practicing the virtue. ~..... rememlHir all the world in 7 ' " PraJeI'II. eI. executive positions in the gov- House. It runs all the way from of charity in assisting n~y! emment, and, though an, able cajolery to threats. He with-people in the 61 countries in' administrator, is an. extremE-I, ..stands it. . . which. ,t~e U.~ .. l;lis~?ps" ~orld- :..>- '. Cut.eMit this i:olumnj~ui yoUr' sacrifice to It and man it to the controversial figure. His is ,.' It is then determined that''l.e wide rehef agency operates. ·MostRev. FultoQ 'J. Sheen National Director of The Society for · Robert Leffingwell. must be destroyed. The means,' . the Propagation 'of the Faith;' 366 'FifthAvenue, New York 1, N. Y.. Leffingwell is th~ darling of ~ortuitously,. are at hand. Th~re 01' TOur DIOCESAN DIR~CTOR REV. RAYMOND T. CONSIDINE, Ihe professional liberals, and IS. one ~ubl?uS and damag10g , In Coming Council '368 North Main Street, Fall River; Mass. many Washington correspond- epl~e .10 hIS past knoWll only ents, for the daily pr~ al!d ~.~ to. himself. an.d one ~ther.AlTOLEDO (NC)-The spiri~"r----~-""--~---~------------"" riodicals, are ·his .champions; ~e . th~ugh ~e Isunaw~re of the fact, leader ofSYJ:ian Orthodox Chri~ . ': DAU~t{fERS, OF' ST. PAUL Is detested by conservatives/and ;. the~e '18.' somet~n~. concrete tians in North Ainerica Said., leVi.. ,ouna girti (l4-UI ....bel .. Is suspect. to lJIanr .who be~QnJ' .,~hl~~ .po~nts to.N~·~,~ltr:{s~ret. here the ecumenical council an..', ... Chrilf·s va.t vineyard CIS CHI Apostle of .... to neither camp butfea'riui fatal' "Thlsthmg faUnnt? th~ hancis nounce<J byPope"John XXiliiti . Editi~i;' 'PresS; Rcidio,. Movle.cind , ... any softness toward the U.S.S.R. ?f a Supreme COUI1 Justice w1?-~ . "the first hope in almost 2,0'00 ,,;.ion. With lIIodenl _ns, ...... There is bound to ~ conflict I~ the b~lw,ether of the profe~- . years for reuniting .all of ChrisMiSliOllary Silt.... bring Christ', DoctriN over Leffingwell, and no sooner slOnal 1.lber~~s ,and .meddles. 1ft tendom." ~o=:':'~:::' III' «HCI. is his name sent to the Senate ~ve~yt~mg I? Washmgton:. The Archbishop An'thony Bashir of REV: MOTHER SUPERIOf 'nes begl'n to Justice gets. It to tl\e Preslden.t, New York, Metropolitan 'of the . than the battle II h d t V A k S" O· h 10 ~. PAU.L'S AVii. 10 •. ITON II. MAn• . '.' form. Despite ·the determined ~ 0 sen s It 0 ~~. c e~m~n. ynan rt odox Church .. ill. opposition, it seems certain that T.he last-named 11!SpIres 1O~mNorth America, made the staM- '., -----~----- ....- -....- -.....- ....~-----....~ the, nomination will b~ approved. uat~ng t.elepho~e calls to Anderment during a news conference. 'l'he rejection of a cabiOOt nomb' son s wife, ~mmous messages ~ at a convention· attended by \.: ' ',", . nee is' a rarity. (the .~.k:;.w~r. ~nderson .hlms.elf, ~nd a~eat 'Syrian OrthodoxChtistians from ,'" , '0 . ,: " , . ,I of 'tt· bef" 'th libelous piece 10 the press. He 49 states, Can~da;'~':MexieO: a n d ' · St course, .=I),~ d ~r:e ~ further 'promises to ma.ke'incim- AustJ:alia. ~~' <c/: ., " ' , ; . c', .. ,. ra~dss et~I ~ 'than be'al;·..:'~that dalou's revelation" in' a 'speeCh. to' . Afchbishbp Ba'shir declared .:::. .;;,. ".,'~': . ~. .' · r : . . ·consl era Ion IS e . 1='" a 'be d], d h rtl Ad '.. th , . ' ". ," ; . ' ..... < .' ",' '" " at particularly critic~l ~~in~nt . ~ were.. s g y:. n er,soD.·. at '~Dl~y;.,~o.ng'phristia!U;b1....: . A"; "~.:.;. .....•.,:'. ,>. ill. international relations" a IS What on .the foIl br10k s' of rum. -forceNI weapon which ' ~ I,". ... ".;. ...:.: . ., .'., the re '".. . er. the .. ,most 't."':; . sed ',.'. . .,...'. . I'." .;> President is entitled to his ,pte.' ", ow,. . .~~.~.\~.etlI1'..':••""u . a!lalnst.,th,:'· com.... :;;: 1-:. ., "~ ,( : ." . . ' : . ••....;.:. ..•' :;:.'~' · fe ' h h'. h' f: . . tantO shou~~. not r,eyeat, For It wouldmuDl~ athelshc' campaign • . ' ., .... .' , .' rence w ere IS c Ie assls. "1 the . . .. h' h th . ' . . .' - _." .• ..... ., .. . ' .. " tor foreign affairs is cObcerned SWl.;. suspe~se.'WIC . e au- . world domiIili'tiOO." .. ' . ......< '~IANQUETS' .MDDINGS -. '. PARTIES . _.....,. thor, has contrived to w9rk· up '. . . ., . Two 'Senators .. and ~ustarn, despite,the slacken. '.' , .' .. , '!'he extremistS in. their camp in~!' t~atoccurs because. of his'" . B, 'COMMUNI~BREAKFASTS" ~ are, respectively. _Senator..Sea-· prolixity" a1)d his editor's fail'1343 PlEASANt S, . ItAU.· RIVbright Cooley (anti-Leffingwell) ure to insist.on aprop¢r cQ,astenFUNERAL· HOME; INC. . , .. .r and Senator Fred. Van Acker~ ,ing of 'what must have·· been a . a. Marce! R~Y''':' 0: Lorraln. &or' OSbotone"3-n80 man (pro-Leffingwell). Cooley . mountain of manuscript. Suffice ... ao- LaFrance " / is a veteran senator,a Southem- ·it to ..say that the book ·moves, ~NERAL DIRECTORS er with exceptional seniority, a however lumberingly, .from one slick mastery. of prOcedure and peak drama to another until the Ii IRVINGTON CT. maneuver and has bitter hatred rather unlikely close. NEW' BEDFORD of the n~minee because of the ·Mr. Drury has wi-itten_a,work WY·5·7I3O latter's once accusing him of be- fiequently unwiel~y'a.lld balt-:Ing a liar. . ":". .' ing,. but on.e which,' doggedly IMO.' Van Ackerman is an opPor'_Overcomes these h~dicap~; It.: is .. ttanist withouteonvictioIis' orin': no . sense edifying, but·may. consci~nce, who delights,in; the have a salutary shock effect. . ,. headlines he achieves and •the. ) . .. . consternation . he causes,... by.: ' . . ' . . . ..'. 8peaking for COMFORT'(Cotit-"G' '. '"For, YOw Pr~. .,. mittee on Making FUrth~iOf;'" .' " .... .... • . . . . I) '. , BuvFroiw fem for a Russian T~uCP.). "/uJ Plumbing .~Heatin9· ,for me,''' Van Ackerman Scream. .PERFECTION N before a leftist audience, "I had Over 35 Years rather crawl on my knees to 1~ RockdaleAv.. . of Satisfied Service. Moscow than die under an atom FRANCIS J. DPi~· ARTMUI J. DOUCR New Becltorcl ; ;'106 NO.MAIN:·STREET bomb!" lit; does not seem that either 363 SECOND ST. WY5·7947 FaU River . OS .,5-7497 _tremist will play a decisive
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i·-· 'THE-'ANc:i:tOR -.:.::.;', ,.. ,~ . _..'- ~ , ........... : .. ",.~ Sept., 10. 1959.' . . ' . ' .
Plan' ',Conference". ' For Thi;d; Order'
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Legion· Chapl~in Deplores Power Of Disloya Ity
PlDLADELPHIA eN-C) -:"'The', first regional cotIference of the Third Order Secular of St. Fran- ' eill will be held here Sept. and 20. Delegates are expected from Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Delaware and New York City.
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MINNEAPOLIS (NC) Disloyalty flourishes in the
Auxiliary Bishop J. Carroll McCormick of Philadelphia will offer Mass for the delegates in' the Cathedral' of SS. Peter and' Paul. In addition to addresses. by several spea\!:ers, the conference will .include workshops on Third Order affairs. .
home, business and government; Msgr. John J. Twiss of Boston told American Legion members in a !p.emorial service at their national convention in, the Minneapolis Auditoriur~.
"Court calendars are flooded with,cases involving contract Th Third Order Secular of st.. breaches or. violations," he said. Francis is an organization of "Perjury'.is taken' in stride." laymen who, ,while living in the Kathleen Donovan' Judith McKnight Nancy· Smith' . Anne Poisson . At a Mass inSt. Olaf's Church world, try' to apply th'e teaching . , here, Msgr. Twiss, national chapand example Of, St. Francis of lain of the legion, said the orAssisi to their lives and to live ganizati~m is "sy.nonymous with according·to the Franciscan r u l e . . Three Fall River graduates of Mount Saint Mary Academy, class of ·19'59,. will enter"- law an<i libel·ty" because of it. , Moth~ of Mercy Noviiate, Cumberland, R. I., to beg;in training 'as. Religious Sisters of support· for' law and its 'defense Says Vietna~ ,Needs Mercy of the Union. One member of the class, of 1958 will enter Maryknoll Sisters of St. of. "The' liberty. American Legion wiD Catholic' Pr~ss.Work Dominic, Mary.knoll, N. Y.Those entering the Sisters of Mercy are: Kathleen Cecilia Don- never stand .to see our instituavan, niec'e of Mr. and M r swere . 'the glee club; so- . She was a recipient of the Fireti ons s h ~ tt ere, d" h e sal'd."Th BONN (NC). - The need for academy e Catholic press work in southern . John Travis, 7 Vestal $treet. dality, at~letic association, dra- fighters" Auxiliary scholast\c . American Legion will never be Vietnam to offset the inroads of· Kathleen is a member of St.matics, science club arid work on award for the 1959 school year. guilty of, contributing too little lleCularism wai stressed by, a Joseph's parish. While at- the Mercian, school newspaper. Nancy Elleil Smith; 507 Second . too late." , .' "isiting priest from that country Street,' is the daug'hter .0fMr. . In his discussion of. disloyalty , '. . tending the academy she was . Drive for Converts, ,in Am~rica!1 life, he observed , Father Thanh Lang" direc.tor active inthe.glee club"liturgical . . . and Mrs.· EV'~rett Smith and· a th t" 't 1 d' I It· d ~'Gets 310 In''qu.or.oes· 'mem.berof .St. M.ary's Cathedral a. ISQY.l:I y Is.rea ~ the press' an·a'inf.ormation ....0 ... and sod a l't 1 y. '1 a·t 1ma~l . t'd" d thO t·" p'arish, Her schoo.I activities· in- .1 Y 0 era e • an . a person. letvice of.·the newly' established Award .Winner . SYDNEY (NC)-Within four can easily, pass from spouse. Catholic Center In southern Judith Patricia' McKnight, 24 days of the opening of a drive eluded the glee club 'arid .athleticspouse." .' ,. . Vietnam, said his country ill Garfield Street, is the daughter : for converts, 310 non';'Catholics association. ·,nuringhersenior . "Such disloyalty," he ~id, H • . ,oing throug,h the darkest. stage . of· Fire Marshal and Mrs. James wrote to the inquiry center here year. she, ~as, head chee·rleader. now frequently rega'rded as rO01. its history, and that a Catholic' P. McKnight. Judith is a mem- for-a" explanatory prochure on . ,Anne Marie Poiss'on,' c~al!S of mantic, acceptable' and even'propress would be vital weapon in her of St. William's parish. a free course of instruction in 1955,-i-esides' at ?13. Hamlet . gressive."· .' , helping Vietnamese CatholiC.. Among her .activities at the. . Catholicism. _Street. She is the daughter of Msgr. Twiss also observed that aolve their inaf.lY problema. 2 L T h : The response came after the .Mr. and Mrs.. ,Conrad PoisSon Hthis.'decay in moral standards" 9 O· ay eac ers Australian Catholic Inquiry . and isa member of St. Anne'. is not universal a'nd cannot unHe Itated that a Catholic PITTSBURGH (NC) - Some Center inserted its first paid ad- parish. She will enter'the Marydermine' the United States, prQnewspaper in Vietnam would be 920 of the 3,450 teachers in vertisement on the Falth in Syd- knoll Sist~rs.. During' her four videa "we return to those valUft the most effective mtlans 01. . schools of the' Diocese of Pitts- ,ney's Sun Herald newspaper. years at Mount ·Saint Ma~y '~nd :virtues. that clliim:~d .theuneounteracting the voice of secu- . burgh during 1959-60 will be lay·.·' Among the letters. asking :for. Academy' she was an honor :~~~- comproinising allegiance of thOlll8 larlsm. He added that such· a 'people, M:~gr. ·John,B. McDo~el~, 'more details about the 2l-.week . dent and ranked amQng the top who' founded our. nation.~ . newspaper. should deal with ~ superintendent,-has announced. : course were two fromminisiera. .ien in 'her 'gradmit'ing class. she .... ":Without adherence'to God,· litical, economic, 'social a~d eul-' . The diocese will have\1l4,OOO en- :father Thomas.A.White, dir~';' ';;M active hi' the . acade~y or,.:' .. ~said, :"th'ere:can b:e no j)urit1•. tUral themes M well as reHgioUll"rolled in elementary schoois, aRd tor of the center, called the re- . chestia; 8Odillitj: and' con1'mer." . staliility' or permane~ce .. ~. JaeWII. . 19;500 In secondary ~hools. , . 'sponse "overwhelming.", . 'eiai club.'" . hfe' of'the nation."
Four Fal,l River,ites Enters Reli.g·ious' Orders
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A ,HILARIOUS SEE
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River~Thurs.;Sept>10, 1959
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Text of ·Msgr·' Higg,ins L~b~r Day.Sermon' at,' Cathe~ral . . . .
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Cbarib' Is patient, is Jdnd: triumph of the Christian ideaa zeDs of the industrialooplmu- ,operation.of the en.terprille .hM -_.. of the great fam HUoJ- of' labor." .Dity; victims, ilt worst, of indu- opened 'wayam which the uniOil charity does not envy•.' is ...... . , . , Pretentious, is not puffed uP. . Current Investigations trial serfdom'; or, at· best, bene- serves its own members; worken • not as' well known a's J·t fiCIaries of a ,degra ~ing type 01. Senerally;'and the nation. n IS is not ambitious, is not Be It. seekiDg, L not· provoked: ought to. be' that· tfiese early paternaliSm. Instead of that, ·they Economic Problem. lUiinks no evil, does not rejoice pioneers of the American labor are now ~ble to ~tan.d. on their Preventive unionism is admit. 'ever wickedness, but ~eJoices movement. tried, alml;lst from .own fee.t'a~ mature. cItizens of a . tedly a good thing as far as it with the truth: bears with all the beginning:tO give a religious ~ev.elop~ng eco~~mlc, d~m~racy goes,. _'but it doesn't go. far things; believes all things, character. to .Labor Day. They which, 10 turn,. IS an 1Odlspen- enough. n stops at the level 01. ·Ilo..es all thn:..: ... endureS all ;never, regarded it as a purely sab~«: bUlJoY.ark support 0If the individual enterprise or thingS. . secular holiday. As' early as political de':Oocra~. company. Wliat we need in ad.I Corinthians, 13 1909, and at regular intervals. , . D~n't Turn ~k . . Miian .to t>reventive unionism • You may wonder -why;, St. thereafter, the American FedI,.can.say in summary that the"an organiz~d' system of .labor·Paul's classical defiilition 'of eration of Labor 'deSignated the ", .labor. IIlovemen·. is now .bi~ger "-management c'oQperation at .the 'charity' has been'seiected as the Sunday preceding Labor Day as : 'an4 stto~g~r and, all t~ings CpD- . industry-~ide:as w:ell as 'the na'epening~ ·text. for a: labor' Day LabOr Sunday and requested its .. ~j!iered, more. influe.ntia}. tpan' ti<mallevel to antiCipate and to .Bermon, Wouldn't it be more affiliated unions ,to cooperate .. ev:er . b~f~re in. its.. hist~ry.· sOlve', in 'cooperlitioq with" ·the .appropriate to, lead into-a ser- wi.th, the churches in securing" . Whec\'!as Hs I1l.em~ershjp at. the government'if necessaty; the mon.on labor-management rela- "attendance at special',services . tiine of tQehistpl\ica,1 C~lumbus larger economic prpblems which lions with a forceful and chal-' devoted .to.the 'subject of ;conventio~of. ,1,886. w.as J).um- . transcend·theUrnlts of the.indi.l~nging text on, the· virtue of ·r.eligion..;at'ld;..lab'or.. . . ·... P!!re~, pp)y jn.. th,e. tens oJ .tho~-· "Yldiu:iIenterpHse or Company j~~tice? .Well, it prOhably~would, ,..1-...have ,'. d~I~R'eratelY ~pha",s~~d.!J ,~t, t~~ ;v~fY .most,.t.~d.~Y.· ":a:.ild.,i~ a'cerlainell:.'telltat lea;st but· then again, from' another SiZed the sPJrltualmeam.n~ .of ..... ~~J1!.ar~ a,PP!~~~atel.y 17 mll- ':'are beyond their immediate: con~int of view, itwouldn't~·Adlnit- "LabOr Day \.-n th~'i~~roduc~ion .' Jionm~I1l.b~.r;~.. tn ,the.. ~mbi .n,ed ;It~ol.'· THe problem' of mass un·tbctlY in the words :of' ~the late,·, ',to this· sermon at the' conscIous. QU,EEN OF MART,.YRS: . Arl,r;C;:IO.:a~,d.,.i1n.ot~~r.: milljon "empioyment a l.lsing out of autO:Jtope Pius XI, charity canQot risk of appeari~g ,tobe naive .or or two in q~n!l ~ide. independent mation'" or technological im."'liubstitute· for ;l1stice which_~..,,·,A()pelessly uninform!!d about the .September is: the 'Month of . unions. · ' p r d v e m e r t i S ' isa"case in' point: wrongfully denied~" 'On the other ' findings of the current 'Congres- "the Queen of Martyrs.'. The The.f~ar or' suspicion of unions It stands to reason, of 'cow-se, hand we are pomtedly r('mind- sional investigation -into the sUb-:- . Ca'tholic . 'Church . observes . -the inability to understand the "that labOiaild tnanagement will ed by ,this same Pope.• ,author.!)f, jed of labor racketeei:ing. My . the' .Fe'ast' of.. the Seven Sor-. necessity and the'ever increasing . never be able to solve this kind ", the greatest Of all the encyclicals purpose in doing so has ~en to iri1~ortance of trade unionism ill ~ of' . problem or to fulfill their On social justice, Quadragesimo sound ~ warning against the un- .rows of, the Blessed Virgin ·modern economic life-is suffi- 'proper role in'society ~nlesa the Anno, that "the law of charity, derst8nd'able' but regrettable Mary on' Sept. 15. NC Photo.·. ·cienUywidC$Pread to· be a con- .' individual men lind women who "which is the bo'nd of perfection',' . tendency on the'part of many \ " , ..W1uing, calise of concern to all 'belong to unions and em,ployers must always take a leading role". ,Americans to become ,cynical or" like 'the 'nominal members of .a.·those.who a~ interested in the . ·associations are convinced that tit .oUr - effortS at social reform to throw' up their hlinds in.'. church~ho come to services on .. future· of lab?r~manag~ent re- . th~y have 'Ii. moral obligation, .in .~ social reconstr~cti~n._' : ~desp~ir .abQut ~he ~U!ure of the Christmlis and ~aster and; ~om- . 'lations :in the United states. It . j ustice'''and charity; to assume .' iSimilarly . our· preseqt. Holy· . labor movement. . .. . 'placently let it go' at that..·' has .,already done' conSiderable ' their full share of responSibility r~therPopeJohnXXIlI;hason Following ....the,·lead of His ·:'For' U{e:.good,.Qf the labor,·hanit.:lt has "r:esulted. for ex- for the poijcies:ofthese organitI1i-ee diUerentoceaSions':during:' HoiinesS I' wanted, to emphasize movement and ''fdrthe common cample; 'in· :tbe.enactment of so- :mtions. . . . . ' . .. tits first 'year In the Chair of at the V~ry outset that is is not good of the nation asa whole, it .,Called.,righhto;.-work· laws·:in ~:. '·popeI'iu'i. x:r{~miQded u, '. ~ter emphasi?:ed ~I!e import- the.. ,mos!:".constru~tive·;sPirit: m:,t,·iS',highly.im-portarit 'that this :dor-' i,:seventeeD .or"eighteen 'states; , '. ~ie'~c:y~~s:~gQ' ~*rSPirit~~l u~e of charftY·,·in: the. field of whi~h ~.,::,l'.~~o.~~ .\~~,~.~,~I;!.-, "." ~a..~t:~!;1~'i ...of "s.ocial respimsi- ..;·,.':.iI,.would':, li~eM to.:' think,'?<J w - ..; :~r,~atli. Ne.:p!!F: ,of..th~·~~~ .~. ~i':;;;':"Diil~!1g~~~t>' i~Ii!:t1~s. an~ 'of ~abor's'annual nobday.· bJIity»e, ar~!Jsed ~nd trans~ated ever, that It IS' not"iU1.e. doml;nant '... p'or,~.I\t,W~a,~!l ...o~,.deYe~o'pI.~g. ~~~s ·.U~f.~i·?ro~?~rs," ..~e':said, .for ~~icism; :.!in:c"other' words, is,,·,irt'fd"a'ctiorL'~· "'~; '-' ': J \,;'p6iiit,'of;"'view": in.~the:',,'~nited"',Ai~~~~fd!!O~y,I.:~~~sipJlity.•. .iD eifample, 10 DIS recent eficycbcal not 'a Christian vir~e, nor is it . This will n~ver ha,ppen,}~o~:',;Stlites.;;;at:'the,:present. t!me:..tb:at . ',,~~.;;fl:l~ ~(,~pilgem~n~:lUld eJt.: Christill.n unity. "Everything, the normal .~xpresslon of the, . ev.etil/\\~l)~s, jthe;·ran~-lI.nci-fJle " ,.. th~,\,p,eople·'.~ho :"really" .cou.nt "~j~9,r. ~:.\",t·. .,,,; ,:.;' " ,,' tlierefore; must be setUed by Ame~ican temperament. W~~n ~em~ers of th«: Jf.l?Or mp~e~ent .. i' in.:Ameri~~n mdustJ:Y.'~as',con- .", ,., .•... ,.A~toJiC1;LeacJel"iJ .:,' '. 'ftlEmdlyagreement and with ~~s,~<w,~~ ' .. Grov:~ J~lecvela~d arc::.~~b.,:,:~~ ~Hli, :the:sIHpt of .:,tr~t~d:wlth;'some"of,,tl~e·,~ocSpecialized retreats __ fOr.~ ~iitU:al' fJ'a:ter'n~1 chaJ'~tf.~l" . , ~.slgiled an' Act Of' 'Congr~ss In "ideahs.m ',.wn~ch chll.racterized, ""trmll.Jres who ·now..cla:un. w··.'·be . pl'oyersand ,professional milD as . · j, Attitudes HardeniDg 1894 .establishing· Labor Day as that· little group. of dedicated. spe~k!ng' for" the· business com- .. well as forvi;o~ker~re not the ; ~We have it on good authority, an annual hQlidaY,he signifi~ men"who m!'lt in ,convention iii 'm~tyLare too· realistic and too . ,~nlym~ans of developing such then-the authority of the in effect" th.at we are not 'a, ColumBUS, Ohio;' 'in December, . hono~ble to want to. go ·Dack to . leaders" b4t, surely theY are one Church, which is the Mystical .nation o( cymcs.. 1.88~, for the p,u~poseof estab-. ·..the ba? old days of the 20s OJ' the . , of . the. most important•. In. the '. BOdy. ofCbrist....,...that the virtue Theory' iii Soa~d IJshmg the ~merl~an F~de~ation e~rly.30s. T~ey still ~l!..ve their words of the encyclical, they. are of, justice, while indispensable.. Our national temperainent, as of Labor. f,ortu,?-atel y ' ~t IS,. not .differences With oJ;gamz~d labor, a "school9f the spirit~ in which 8t.~ course,' to a sound social' .it publicly eJ;(pre.sses itse~ in the, , ..~~c~~li.~Y.~O st~am our Ima?l.na- but I· hope 'and pray th~t they "not only are the best of Chri;;order, will inevitably fall, short. 'observance of Labor Day; is gen- ti.or~ ,to v.~suahze. the ,sa~rlflces .are' now read! toac;lmlt. that tians c;leveloped but true .ap,ostle. ef its .objective unless it is' ac';' erous and ideal~stic. As a peop~e, ~I~h those early pioneers . unions are· desJrable and neee.are trained ~or ever.y conditi.on companied by the. virtue.of .we;are'reasonably well informed wJlhn~IY made fo~ the .callse of sary. .', of life and are enkindled With Christian charity, which is' "tile about the sins' of the labor.' , or~an~~~d.l~bor I?: the ·years ,Both M~lIowtni 'the 'fire of the heart of Christ." bond of perfection." • '. " . movement-mote so' today, of" iJrimedlately follow mg.. the origi-' This doesn't· mean 'that we ~, Patron' of WorkingmaD : Presumably the teaching . of, 'course than ever before-but nal<;olumbus con.y~nbon. "have'reaClred,themillenium, but ".~ .. ' ".. , '., .. b : th4! Church would '~ reasoD . . , 'i." 0',,",' i' '., ,. Cites 'The 'Record': :~Heast it would seem 'toiridiCate In ~hl~. conn,ect~on and Y: w~y .. . ." I .... . . '. ·te·f ~. conclu'sl'on let us recall that enough for selectmg '.the v irt ue" we know " . that . . these ;" . are. the. ex- . . '•.. 'nJe:,;'Amefican labor ..movethat management, 10 SPI o"a11 .. ~ .,' .. ,.~ .". ' ". . ofi charity as ,the··moti.f"ot' ,the .,;,;~ep~lon.rather,.,an the rule. W. ment has come a long way: in- 'appearahees"to the"cOIitrary,l is.~e,are ~C;1ebr~,t1Og.t.?day t,he re. ,.. D' ' .. knowAhat the· theory and, prae:'" ,".,,:. '.. ;",', ".."'" ..... i •• , " .• ' ,.. . .,.,... .. ' . ' . "th' ce'n'tly' e"'tabll'she'd Feast of' St. keynote.of a L.abor .ay.i·Sj:lrm0Oo·', .. ,... " ,"'''.' '.,'.,' . ';' ." deea"smce Samuel Gow~rs ;was "mellowmg' 'in' Its "attltude 'WI ..... " . ,." s"" ',_.,'. "'. .' n;oi:matter. when or wher.e It was ~~~t~f ~~~es~~':r~lsmbal~~:~ elected ;fir.st· pres~dent or:;'the :' :regard'tO. ~r~de~~niollism',and ;;Jos~J?~'.,~~tro~..of the. ~?rk1O.g be~ng delivered.. There ;Js; hOjlV;:j _ . ;' , . y . Am~~.ic~nif.e<iet1lW)D of ~ab;or that '''the' relationship between ~~n, S.u~,~ly .~t w llS ,provlden~181 ey~r, another ·and· an: equall~. ~und: We alS();know that ~~.,. ill 'ja8~:;"May I('never f9rget "manllgemefit'"," ~rid' 'organi~ed J'\!it..t~;~~ ~~w.:~ea~~ sh?I1.1d. ha~e c:Owpelling reason for :dOing"30'" ~I>?r leade.rs, ,.~rhcaps the.~ .where it· has' come'froIll:',:1f it "'labot"m "the' 'United 'Stliies'.'is ... :~~,~I~~,n t,o., 3 at a ~~zpe ,,:hen tr.i·lthe United S.tates in ,th: ~e~' Jorlty, are mS~lred, to a consld- does, it will ineyj~~b.ly;.loses~gbt more amicablethiln·the( official, "men ~g~ .'Y.Qme? ~v~r~wh~re are 1~9. The' year '1959,~:whlcIr'~ era~le... ~.egree:at least, b.y the .of where it ought to begoi.n.g. propag~l,1da ~f both groups I~?~in~~or ~~~ C~~n~t~an an~wer DQl'N ,ihr;ee;.quarteis ·'sP.filAt;'.:'haiJ .•Ch~lstlanIll~tJv,e,of lterv~e . ~ " Gompers'aili!;:hiscpjoneeraSso- '~'ioril'etiines matte' it out to .·,~.so .~~nY}lewa~~, hlghl~ combeen characterized thus far by .theJr fe~l?w workers and their ciates in the,establishment. of .. By the same: tQk:en, orgamzed }jhcated pro~~ems m the fJel,d of .niiunexpected hardening. of at- ,;,.J~IJO~.,clhzens.: ' . . ..... the American' :federation' of . 'labor, in spite ~f appearances to: E;conomic and soCial lif~. Who tltudes 'between labQrand mll.n~".,L~bo.~ -pay, then, is an a~ua1 'Labor -were not the only heroes' "iiieoontrary 'is'mellowingin its Bette't thl!JlSt. Jo~eph, by his agemerii:,' which, if ii gets ariy :emmder of-t~l:! ~act t~at ~er- of the labor~o~ement,.The "~ttittidewithregardto mal1~ge- :~ example... and .•bY his he.avenly worse, could lead to serious ~can trade umonIsm, Ir,t SPite of men who parted company with' ment.'·... . ' . . '. intetcesslo~, can help us ~1Od the trouble in the years ahead an,d I~ ma?y flJ~lts· andlmperfec- the Federation in th'e middle ',"," Preventive Unionism. answers to these problellls? Who could rapidly negate or cancel tIO,?-S, IS dedlca~cd to p~r?o~~ 30's to es.tabli~h the Congress of ': We. have come a long way 'in- better than St. Joseph:can ~e~ch out ml,lch of the .progress :which.! . whu::h; ~e, b?-slc?-lly spmtu~l. "Industrial Organiiations .also ''deed since 1886 in the. field of us,. 'for e~alllPle, the Chhs~lan we have so laboriously made the PUrsUit of Justice and chanty made an impm·tant contribu- . labOr";'management relations.' '1'0 philosophy.of work and help u.· iii';the .field 'of industrial rela'" ,I .·,a nd the adva.nc~men~ of human tion to the'cause. . be' sure, we 'stilt have. a long to realize, in the word!! of. our ~~ns during the past.,qIJarteE of br~her~ood 10 ;~he field of ecoOn~ ~?-y of measuri?g CIO's ·"~a.ytOg(); 'but, all,things c?n- ~oIYFat~~rthePope t~at "work • cielltury. ; ,,". no i~ )Ife. ' . ' contribution to the cause of· SO-.'·sldered, the outloolt for the 1!Il- IS • • • a profou!,!d moral force, '·1 .Lack of Charity . . I~~g<!~.for an.ofus,as cial justice an-d to the strength:' mediate fufure,'isfairly bright and the human race of workerS This .. hardening of attitu,des mdlvl~ua~i and, as members 01.. ening of American democracy is and optimistic, or, at· least,. it is is a socie.ty which. not only probetween labor and management. or~amza~lons,,' . i to --remember. 'to ,. ealnpare 'the statistics :OR not.· entirely black and dismal.' duces things but also glorifies has manifested itself duririg,the ,were we, :am~ from and wages, hours and' working con- Weare entering a period,which God; that'man can consider his paSt . several months at the i ,to., ·?9. back .. ;;o our pla~.. of, ditions of millions of men and' a prominent labOr leader work asa 'true instrument of his . political level as well. as,;ln, the ; :orLg~n'.no.w .alJ~ then lest we women"'in the'mass" production cently'characterized as the era sanctification because by workfield of" collective .b¥gaining...·\ forget the sacrifices which . were. ind,ustrie:; before .and after 1935. of'pr~ventive 'unionism" , ing ~e makes pe?eot in ?imse~ To some' extent it probably de- made by 9ur forebears and our The'recor<J speaks for itself,. and A few years ago, he salll, the .lmage of GOd, fulfllis hIS rives from our co¢mc;)Ii failure pre~ecessors on our beh~ and ,itl·must ,be ,credited. 'In large "people thought.'of ~ u,nion. as duty, and the .ri.g~t. to gain for . to practice the virtue of soCial ~hlCh alone. have. made ,It po~ measl,lre to 'the efforts of the ,CIO entirely a matter of clearing c uP". hiinself' and 'his dependents the j.l}stice" but I: suspect that,,·. in :slble. fo~ us to acb.l'~v,: success III andtts affiliates.' poo,r'working Co~ditiops- wln:., necessary"susterianc.~ and m?-k~ tne"final analysis, it results pri- our various undertakings; Freedom .nd Brotherh~, nIDii" strikes 'and battles" fOr' himself a useful umt of society; marily from a lack of Christiall Nominal Unio~is". In-the final' anaiysis, however, 'higher 'pay "arid' Detter worker . that bringing his'order into ex'isto ' c!;J.arity, the queen ollill· the':' Frankly there .. reason 'to, this remarkable improvement in' .treaunimt•. TodaY this concept of , ence ~ill obtain.for'hilll~curity, virtues. . fear that this' may be. happeIr.< the. material, standard, of, living trade unioniSm has expanded' and; ·at the same, the ·~ace. on • ;,'" Labor Day' Mean.in« .., .. lrig, to sonie~xtent .at least,' "9£ ·~il~io.JYl ..of i~dustr~al workers· ·to'~' the union as a fo~. for . ~th' proc.IaimedbY thellllgels!" i .me late PoPE; Pius. XII,·in. within the rankS of organized ·is ~e.ss important. than' ero'!, hia- "maintaining good conditionS aDd" , "Silent Saint .: I addressing a pilgrimageof,E~~ .labor,!ltthe present .time. It • . torie contribution,. at what iN preventing trouble, looking . Or, aga~ who'better than st. ~a,n';WQrker~ .in 195~,::~¥~~a.t-·::~r9Ur imp.ression, 'in other words; might.ca.llthe;spi~~t'J.al·level,to. ~~t:'~ture;p~'obl~,:< j9s~I>h,~th·E;liu~ble'.carpenter of i SiZed' the spmtual mearnng. of'. tbat,~too ~ny. of the "newer the cause of human ,fr~om,.and ""arid'ereatltqr-"the . Cl:unate ·of . Nazareth can give us the. coura,. : Lllbor: pay,. which, youuri.!,'··members·oOhe labOr. movement, , ..h~ma~J~r:othe·r.hood. We are not· labor - managem'ent "partnershIp" ····to "go o*"doihg" oU¥'!>it: .for' social : do~bt~'qlyknow, is celebrated·;iW.",the YoU!lg'sters eM:! Jo~y-coDie- "~~e!,liiig 'speci#~Uy to whadhe"itf'iwhi~h' 'ftequen~"'wot~ 'stop;;.:· justice ~pite .. Qf QUi. lowl,. , Eut.ope on the' first, ·of ,;'May,,~ .·latelies, are like spoiled children' cm 'lias' done, for example" to pag~'beconie qnnece$sarj';" .' status"iii society arid .our' lack of i~s·\;ead'. "Of,· 'as . ,in. ithei~,United"'.")I.who have h~., 'everythini Pr:ot:Do,te ,the cauSe ()f interracial ""Preveiltiv'e"'1;ini'dn~in,{:ie ·coD::,.. ·w6rIdly ·poWe.raD:d.influen~and: S~tes,' on the first Monday of handed to the~ oil a silver . jUstice.'.' To be sure; thatw~.a':cludecl, iiF'son1etliing' more'ttum <.'~Uf.apP¥a~rit1{l(:k·.01 ;,mmediate! .September. Labor Day, he said, platter. They know very ..little" . very. important contribution' to putting on boxing gloves !-or. success!' No' One of. us is quite so ' "having. received 'it ."were, .' 'if anYthing; --about "the' history ...,the strengthening of· American .:: periOdic "'slulntinit'matCh' .with a insigni6.cailt' unsuccessful Christian' baptism·.·;.far· from' . ltndthe:early.struggles 'of the'democracY,'but- what we. wish' beIllgereht'advetsary.... Preven- 'froin the'wi>rldly"point of view I being a .stimulus . fordi~o~cj,.· . labor movement, and theyhilvi . to' emphasize in particular is the tive unionism establishes ,the u· Joseph was.·. \ hate and violence, is and will be inherited very little of .the broader 'contribution made b,. avenues of communication, the St. Joseph, '"the most silenot • recurring invitation to mod- spirit of sacrifice which charao-' the CIO to the' cause of self- '. frarikdisCussion of problems,. . saint of all," I'atron of U,le Uniern society to accomplish that terized its founders. They pa,y government.' . resulting'in higher':paY'arid bet-:-~. v~r~lq~qrch all:4 now.t,¥ apewhich is lackin,g for social peace. ' their union due~ more- or Ie. In, the absence of strong . ter. working conditions.. R~I-' '.CiBl' pat'I-9B ~ t'b~ ~ork4qgman. It is a Christian feast therefore; willingly, but they seldom a'" "Unions, banded together i n . riition·'tfuit'the'fon~':'i-li.iiitldDter.:.''praYfOr"'Us'that'we'may help" that is, a day of rejoicing.-for tend it unioiJ.~eeting.·They are· strong federation, these.workers ests 'oftidUl 'liabSr:"lin(fmana'ge-" 'restOre"llil':thingsin' Christ, our ~ concrete and progressive 0ll.I7 I!Ominal' trade unionists- would have been voteless cit!- ment depend on the successful Brother and 1'our Fostec SoA.
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of
Chaplain Hits Prejudice Toward Former Prisoners
tan
1S
River-Thurs., Sept. 10, 1959
MIAMI BEACH (NC)-The general prejudiced attitude of society toward men who have served prison terms was scored by the president of the American Correctional Chaplains' As'sociations. Father William F. Wilkins, chaplain . at the Woodhouse Almighty God the day he died. (N.Y.) Correctio.nal Insti- But his debt to society is contute, addressed the opening tinuing to be paid b~' his family session' of the five-day 89th and children,' due to this' movie
and television presentation," annual Congress of Correction. Father Wilkins said. "Society is cruel, unjust, unPositive Side fair and at times inhuman in its "The negative side of prisons treatment of the men wh() have has had the headlines too lond," served time," the priest said, Father Wilkins said. "It is time "and by that eruel, unjust, unto take the offensive and accenfair and at times inhuman treat"" tuate the positive and to impress ment, is responsible .for repeat~rs upon society that not all persons' and recivedists (persons who in prisOns are vicious, hardened serve more than oDe term· ill criminals beyond rehabilitation. prison). " . To quote the late saintly Pope . Same C~_ . Pius XII in his address to the . HMembers . of society put eYeryone in prisons in the 'same Italian jurists shortly before his: death, 'Society. has a duty. to elassification," he said. "In the: welcome back the. man who has eyes of society, everyone ~ho '. . . ' d ti 'Ja d ,paid his debt to society and giv~ h as once, serve me. a a:Dhim. a chance to prove himself,' .. gerous, ~arden~d crimln~l, per- 'Father Wilkins said. haps a potential sex fIend 01' . . murderer." . Pointing out that every person.' who has had experience in penal"F work knows that all inmates are lI~quents not in the same classification, VATICAN (NC) HTeddy ~.. Father Wilkins, noted that chap-' Boys," the European name for lains' files are filled with evijuvenile delinquents, have been dence to support the claim that called "a fearful phenomimori althere are many accidental ofmost reaching the limits' of the . fenders, men and women ,who incredible," by L'Osservatore c:ommit just one crime. Romano. Payin« Debt . The Vatican City daily, in' a . . front page edit.orial by its. editor, "'Practically speaking," he Pe- Count Giuseppe Dalla Torre, Marked, Hthere is no such thing,. :proposed" systtml' ot" Christian ' - .. paying one's debt ,to sOCiety,.' education as the best method -. ' 1Iio' matter how many years one. offset. delinquency., " . ' ,. ' . '., :.' may spend in prison,fo!' ii crime.' ·:.'Count Dalla Torre calieci "TedSociety; wants· one to pay' and. I . eli' Boys'" the "heirs of the ideo.~ . keep one paying as long 88 ~ Ogy, Of.. the: PlIilQsophy . and 01. lives .nd"a~ times,' 8bci~t:P·. the~catash:opheoftwo world w!lra wants one I children to keep OIl of. which they. are .. t)Je psychiC; pa!i~g. , . '.' , . ' and physical' bad. seed." lie said Right no~. tber~ 111 a movie . they w~r'e bOrn andr~are.d in a~ and • teleVISion series' OIl the atmosphere'" that' exalted arrolife 01. a. once not~rious gang,:, ganCe; of parents who employed .. sterwho IS now dead. He ~rved .iid· suffered brutality partieuhia time and died a natural death Jarly during the last. w~r. . . after his release. I nold no brief " , No PessimiSm .. lor him, he had to answer to "'This serious 'diagnosis does not exclude remedies, nor should . it lead one to pessimim:n," the editorial declared. "For centur- . ies there has exist~, and there VANCOUVER (NC) - Msgr. still exists, a system of education' 3. M. Fraser, who led more than ~r: the civilization of humanity 130 young men into the, priestand for the redemption of child- . hood and has spent' 40 years ill hood: the Christian system." the China and Japan mission Instead of, seeking ways to fefields, has left here for anoth~r press this phenomenon of juvenmissionary assignment in Japan. i1e delinquency, the editorial The 82-year-old, missioner ia c:oncludes, one must seek to preihe founder of the Scarboro For,:,,.e,.t it. development by taking' e.ign Miss~on' Socie~, only;E,:,g..; advantage 01. ~ Christian: educa- . lish-speakmg . fore.lgn mlSSJon tiOD for youth.·· . J band in Ca~ada,. He has. spent......·.. · . '. • : half hi~ li~e in the ,pri.ent, open-' " tng missionary ~rrltory and '., .'. . . b,uildipg churches. ; ' ,. The slightly-built, casual ariel' ,The first general school law humored missionary said . 01. ,the .Church in the Uilited· he ill not through .yet.....,thathe 'states waspa~d at :the First just wants to be wherever he can' Provincial 'Council of Baltimore do some good for the Church and ift 1829. It was decreed: HWe right now that looks like ·Japan.judgeit absol~telynecessafY When asked bow long he' be- . that schools should be establieved this missionary tour lished, in which· the young may would last, his matter-of-fact be taught ·the principles of reply was: "Until I'm incapacl-. faith and morality' while beinC tilted, I guess." instructed in the letters."
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Which month of tbe year Is observed as the Month of the PMsion?:- (a) February? (b) April? (c) May? (d) ,September? In appointing a bishop, the Pope issues a leaden-sealed docu- . ment called the:- (a) Papal encyclicai? '(b)' Papal Bun (~ Motu Proprio? (d) Apostolie Brief? ' '"The Vener;lbJe Bede"'wasthe 01. a:- (a) .Bl~ R~ I8ry? (b) Prayer? (e) A renowned· Pope? (d) A 'BenedietiDe lCholar? . / .,' \ Six. years alter she had· witnessed the apparition 01. Our LedT of. Lourdes, Bernadette:- (a) Died? (b) Entered. a religiOUll' .community? (c) Was eaDonized? (d) Married? Who was the apostle martyred. on an 'X-SJ:lIlped cross name4 after. hiin?:- (a) Andrew? (b) .Jude? (e) .Paul? (d) S~mon One, Holy, Catholie and A~lic are 4,~arks associated witb:-:(a) The 4, Cardinai Vlrtua? ~ The 'mae. Church? ~ The Gilts of the Holy Ghost? ' To shelter the homeless, to :ftdt the siclt, and to bury the dead •••• these are l!IOIDe 01. the:-,- (a) Corporal Works 01. Mercy? (b) Cardinal Virtues? ~ Eight Beatitudea? . ~ Gifts 01. tIM . HoI,. Ghost? , , _ Who ili known as the apoRIe oi. ~ Negr0e8! (a) BIe88ed JIalIItiD de Pores? (b) st.' ~ ,tbe BaptiA? ~ PE. JaquetI _ _ quett&? (~ St. Peter Claftl'! .Gkoe 70Uneif 10 marks fw eedl COIT«'t "'~On Patte l8. BatiD&: 8O-beeaeDt; ~ Good; 8O-Good; 5O-1'm.
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Diocese Has :Successfu' Program Of Retreats for .Married Couples
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Sept. 10, 1959
New Pressures Vindicate Catholic -Education. Sys.tem By Most Rev.
Ro~rt
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J. Dwyer, D.O.
01 Ke...
Over the past s~veral years American CathoUe edueators have been- examining their conscience. This is a most
praiseworthy- practice, reComm~nded by all ma~ters of the spiritual life, and it is not "intended as a m~al)s of exalting self-~s~eern. Actually, it is a, the mill these past fe~ decade/ perenmal process, and should know how grievous has been.the it ever be abandoned or temptation, periodically, to ·let neglected the' product itself, down the bars. .. Catholic education woUld munediately suffer. ' Much of this e x ami nation has been carried 0 n 0 u t lou d in anguish~d if not strident notes. It has been confessed in 'the market _ place th'a t 'Catholic echools are not all that they should' be that there a~e ~eakDesses in the structure, in curriculum in methods in teachertraini~g. We have 'been 'warned' ....ainst complacency, warned against the casual assumption trutt all is rignt as right can be. In somewhat hollow accents we have been told that a tremendous effort is required if our schools
- CLEVELAND (NC)-The COIl-along to see If 1Il1' wife eouN sensUs among folks who have keep quiet for two days.· ,made a .retreat for . ,married Grandparenta,otber relati~ coupI~ tb~ Summer appea~ andiriends were~ called ~ by be -: Let s have more of them. retreatants to 101Yetbe babyThe retreats at the Diocesl,\D, sitting' problem. One coup" Retreat House on Lake Shore. with four children bad ali a sitter Bou~evard ~ere opened. ~.the • sister,-in-law; who baa t i " general. pubhc f9 r , the fir~ tune' children of her owa. this year: They attracted couples raging from newlyweds to , Most of the c~pIes said -they couples married more than 30 like the idea of having the re,years; from childless couples to ~at discussions aimed at marparents of nine children. ru~d' couples. Father John R. A husband who has made a, Storey, assistant d~ector of the number'of retreats for men only,', retreat. ho?se, Bald the~ has commented: "When a husband been .agltatIon fo~ some time for goes alone, he leaves his troubles marrIed couples retreats. H. behind with his wife _ overac- add~ that the response. has tive kids; unpaid bilis, leaky assu: ed that ..the retreats will be faucets. Two days later he comes -contmued. A numbe.r o~ the r&bome spiritually elated and full treatants obs?rved. If" yota of good resolutions. But his' make one, you 11 be back.
Now that sterner thmkmg hu reasserted itself in the American educational field, we have ample reason for reflecting upon the wisdom of our tradition: The fact that. our Catholic BROTHER HENRY, F .I.e. schools, by and. large, have re. sisted. the bl~ndish,ments o~_the. ry~ wife's problems have, increased , expenmentalists places us m an 'and she is in no mood for a spir- ' . excellent and. enviable. position I W· itual uplift. If they go together PHILADELPHIA (NC)-Luke so far as the immediate' future is I ..... spiritua~ benefits' come to E. Hart, Supreme Knight of the concerned. We are not faced with Brother Henry G. Vanasse; the both." > Knights of Columbus, has been any drastic revision of o(ir e~u- FIC, son of the'late Mr. and Mrs. Exchange Ideas chosen. to receive the LaSalle cational philosophy 01'. of our Louis Vanasse of Fall River, Aspeeial feature of such re- College Alumni Association'. essential curriculum. has been appointeEi superior of If we do need to tighten our Mount Assumption in Platts- treats is the lifting of silence for 1959 Signum Fidei Award, pre. several Periods for 'an exchange sented annually to a person who discipline and raise our stand'th burgh, N. Y. of ideas among the retreatants. . bu ,made "a most noteworthy ard s, we. are hno t con. f ron t e dthoWIk Brother Henry, who was During one such period a hus-· contribution tr the advancement any maJor c ange m our ming or poli,cy. . awarded the degree of master:of band commented:. "I just came of Christian principles." M oreover, an d.. w h a t IS per- arts in theology by the Univer- , h t t f sity of Notre Dame, is a fo,me.r aps even more.lmpQ: an. so ar member .of Notre Dame' parish. .as the huma,n equation IS con- He attended both Notre Dame" ceroed, our teaching personnel , . f' , and Prevost Schools before join. may weI1 be conscIOUS 0 a con'::. fa tile Calhollo Church." This was tIM descripttOD ainDot t... . tiouity which has been justified. iog the Brothers of CtlristiaD parlsJa 'ChurcJa 01 Si. ADa (west Fori, Trlchur). 1& wu at 0_ Instruction. in 1930. are to reach that pitch of 'perOthers Marvel Before leaving for graduate Um. a teatllDOD, ID 1&0De to tile faUb aDd tect!o~ whic~" i~ the - ideal of ~e look at our~elves'imd study at Notre Dame University, i ' sacrifice '01 the people, bui the' be•., ral_ Chnstlan. educatIOn. acknQwledge' our shortcomings. 'Brother Henry was .prinCipal of and bl,b winds bavo takeD their tolL Tile Sound ,Criticism Others look'at us and marvel at, La Mennais Preparatory School·.'.. buildlD, \ta now a Ihambles. But 1& II !DON 'haD • 'destroyed building, It fa a challnc. This is ail to the good. If we the accomplishment. Certainly' in Alfr~d, Me." ' &0 tbe parishonerL Under th. leadenhlp cl there are those whose dislike'lor, constitJ1te ourselves our own 'heir" bishop and their mlSslonal'J prien.. sev~rest critics it is evidence of freedom of educatioI) is an occu- ' 'hese ,ood peopl. ,athered togetber and health in our educational body. pational disease. Praise or even provided the materials, the labor and tho Some features of the bill of parbarest recognition ,from them ia mODe,. t\t tho present moment the, are but $2,000 short 01 tile ticulars may have been over-' not to be .expected. . HONG KONG (NC) - The , iotal'Deeded. Can possibl1 belp them III their trlalr drawn; individual critics' may But' there are millions of Catholic population here in-' have overplayed the role of the Americaris, men and' women creased by 19,314 during the·past WE HAVE OFTEN ASKED FOR MASS OFFERINGS .•• AND devil's advocate, failing both. in capable of honest judgment and year as Ii remarkable postwar '. WE MUST CONTINUE TO ASK ... THE NEED FOR THEM . charity and rea~ism. ,comparison, who are emphatic in convert movement continues ill c;,:ONTINUES . . . YOUR SPIRITUAL NEED . . . THE MA.'Sound and constructive criti- their admiration of what our this colony at the doorstep 01. T,ERI,AL NEEDS or Y~UR MISSIONARIES. • eism will not launch. out into Catholic schools have been doing Red China. some dream-world of the impos- . for America. , The yearly diocesan, census THE FEAST OF THE SEVEN DOLORS OF OUR BLESSED sible and unattainable to estabThat is why, at 'the opening of here reveals that the Catholic MOTHER (SEPTEMBER 15) brings to mind th.dltllcultlea and lish its point of cOf.llparison; it every school year, we are be- Church in Hong Kong now numwill reckon' with the realities of. sieged by requests for th'e entrials 01 the Blessed Moiber while she was bers 146,464 members. This reon eartb. Her tdall still eon&lnue, 110 close the situation and sl,lggest those, rollmerit of non::CathoIic. stu- flects a growth o'f 138,966 since fa her union to' ever, follower of Her Divine concrete improvements which dents when we· are hardly able the' end of World War II: The Son. PAUL and ISAAC bave Ulought and may ,be within the actual grasp to take care of' ..the children of .total population of i~is city' 'ill - prayed over tbo sorrows of tbelr Mother . of those charged with the burden the household:'. ' . now_3,OOO,OOO people. and they wls~ to belp. It Is ibelr desire to a school. system in the throes of A further' item :·of.· selfbecome pries~.. They bave dODe everytblnc the most rapid expansion the appraisal touches the matter of possible to attain their goal.' t\t the present' world has ever known. moral discipline. We have never time each ·boy:must bave • sponsor wbo will But examination of conscieQce, wavered;in our position that a' be willing to pay bls necessary' expenses of $100 • yeu for tile however searching, 'should not school exists not merely to train .ax year seminary courie. Would 1011 Wui &0 hav. ". priest fa blind us to the worth ,of what minds but to form wiils. the ~amilyr" I we already have. If we .have For a long time this was popu-' Dot attained perfection it does larly, regarded as, educatiOnal , ' WOULD' YOU LIKE TO HA VE THE POOR 011' CHRIST AS " OIL BURNERS -. not, follow that what we have -medievalism. Now; under the YOUR GUESTS? YOU CAN _ $10 WILL FEED A REFUGEB 't\tso compleie' Boiler-BUrJler been doing was mistaken or mispressures of 'our times and in the or' Furnace Units. Efficient I'AMILY FOR. A WEEK: .."OFT COMES CHRIST II( guided. , , glaring light of America's' tardy low cost beating. Burner and ~ STRANGER'S GUISE." It is hard to avoid the. impresdiscove'ry of her danger, the fuel· oil sal~ and service. lion, in reading some of the Jrend of thinking is suddenly THE SORROWS OF OUR LADY have Infta~ed tbe he.... critics, that they are _victims of reversed. ' of SISTER JEt\NNE and SISTER CHRISTINE. The, wlsJa te their idealism. ,A candid .stockHere again our system-stands t80 Mi. Pleasant" Sireet iii.. devote their BVIlI to Ule service 01 tile takil)g of Catholic education in vindicated. There is no need for New Bedford WY 3:-Z66'7 !llItl poor In LebanoD. Tbe, will giv. e.,e~ America assures us of the presus to recast our view of moralUlln; In' Uleir power. BlIt tbta fa not ence of values which are of perity, or reassess. the bases of, a enougb . . . each girl must bayo .spo.... manent wox:th, the ba!lis upon _ natural law philosophy or sor who wID pa, .ber ncceSSlll')' expenslll which the ideal system of tosearch the skies anxiousl~' for 01 $150 .a ,ear. for the two ye.r period morrow inay be built. some fresh revelation. of novitiate training. Can '011 belp . . • . Wisely Conservative The whole' story Is an echo , bave YOll been mo"ed by Ulo IOfrOW. of American Catholic education of. the fable' of the tortoise and Our Lad,r through the 'years bas been' the hare. Steady does it. wisely conservative. This has ~ . • CLEANING UP ODDS AND E~DS .•. WHY' NOT TAKE A been the general and predomit LOOK AT YOUR WILL . . . 'HA VB: YOU MENTIONED THB nant characteristic of our teachCATHOLIC NEAR EAST MISSIONS ... WHY NOT HELP THK ing during an era when experi-', , HOLY FATHER TODAYI mentalism, based upon a behavioristicphilosophy, has been Contractors SCHOOL BELLS RING t\ND CmLDRE'N SING. at least _ fairly. rampant in the stateJOSEPH M. F. DONAGHY pea the ol~ son... The begtnniDc 01 school fa aa exciting t11Dll' supported schools of the nation. owner/mgr. for cblldreD and pareD. everywbere, EXCEPT In .the pove!17 • It has not always been easy to , 142 Campbetl St. 'and fe.r riddeD lands 01 the Near East. $I will bu, a GALA-' maintain the conservative ,line, 464 Second ~ New Bedford,· Mass. Bt\ Y t\ (scbooI ,uii) for a ref~ee child. WW .011 make ODO ohild or to insist in season and out happ,r FALL RtVII' upon the basic disciplines, and WYman 9,;;6792 , those who !lave been through HEADQUARTERS' FOR YOUR MEMBERSHIP OFrERINGS are strength to til. banet. OSborne 2-2141 , COLONIAL AND' 'of the Holy ,Father ill hil work to help tho poor of tho Near TRADITIONAL FURNITURE. .East. Perhaps you would Ute to enroll youne!f ••• ,our famJl7 ••• or tbOllO who bave' gone before you. .. , LOURDES (NC)-Fifty French ,INDIVIDUAL ANNUAL MEMBERSHIP •••••••••••••••••••1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .4~~~. senators and deputies took part . FAMILY ANNUAL MEMBERSHIP .. '. ,' •••••• .-•••••••• in the annual Frenc~ National INDIVIDUAL PERPET~AL MEMBERSIDP •••••••••••••. 10 Pilgrimage to the shrine of Our ,PERPETU AL' ,.AMILY MEMBERSHIP : •• ,.............. 100 . ". . . ' \. Lady here. olve '10 WDI T~ WORLD Faa CBIUnI ~ The group walked the two and -INDUSTRIAL and DOMESTIC , a half miles from Lourdes to Bartres:' There they visited the farm where St.' Bernadette tended sheep. . ~FRANas _CARDINAL SPELLMAN, ~ Among the group of govern:' ..,.,...". ,MIty, Nat'l '":ll ~ ment officials was the Minister . hM aII_ulllcal*-... ' .•. of Justice, Edmond Michelet; , 'CAlHOUC NEAR EAST WELFARI, ASSOCIATIOit' ' two vice-presidents of the Na312 Hinman St. WY'7-9162 tional Assembly, and a viceAve.' at 46ttt, St.. NewYodc 17, N. Y. . \' .. president ot'the Senar
Sr·other. 'Hen' e· S'upe.r.·or·.
Honor K of C Head
-"THE DILAPIDATED 8U1J.DING 01:: THE
coilER
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Ho':'g Kong Catholic Population Increases.
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Stanley Oil 'Co., Inc.
'SOUTH END
IE'LECTRIC
BOW·EN'S·-
.Furniture Stor~:
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E'ectricol
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Government Officials ,In Annual Pilgrimage
"ANDERSON & OLSEN ,
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HEA rING - PIPING and AIR ,CONDITiONING 'CON TRAC TORS
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'dh'l1ear &stOlissio~JiI 'r.. {
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. THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs., Sept.10, 1959
This Time'y Message's Sponsored 'By ,The Following Public Spirftecl, Individuals and Business Concerns Located in ((reater Fall River
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Watch out for children when you drive ' -adults must accept the responsibility 'for, their safety. The·'schools and our Police 'Departments throughout Greater Fall, River ore doing their, utmost
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to teach safety to' our . '
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But because'they ore children' they' ,sometimes forget. Be sure your cor is mechanically'
safe. Don't speed ••• obey the', Ann Dale Products, Inc.
traffic laws. ~. practice 'caution at all times!
Brady Electric Supply Co. Cascade Drug Co. Connon Travel Bureau ' Enterprise Brewing Co. Globe Manufacturing Co. -
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Gold Medal Bread Hutchinson Oil Co. International Ladies Garment Workers Union MacKenzie & Winslow, Inc. Mason' Furniture Showrooms Gerald E. McNally Contractor George R. Montie, P.lumber PJymouth Printing Co., ,Inc. Sobiloff Brothers Stafford Fuel Co., Inc. Strand Theatre Sterling Beverages, Inc. Textile Workers Union of Ameri~a, AFL:",CIO Yellow Cab ,Company
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,Continued froID. Page 0 ... · the United States," he repor,tecL
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Continued from Page O'ne'opening in January of 1960. The Spea!dng of the ar:chitectural northern area of the .1liy'!'en .an? clergy however, will contest, the participant exDiocese. pegin their' share' of .the work plained, . "The Architectural ..·Atthis "pilot nieeting~' of-the'· a l f!l9 st im:medillt'elyj' :with··.· the building at 'Notre Dame wu elergy .'and'laity 'the . Bishop . 'spe~ial gifts' campaign starting filled ~ith ~ode1s . a~d designa ~rinounced ,tha( '''you . ajrea 4y..,. later this month, and the o f f i c i a l a c : c o r d i n g to· liturgical decree. ~v.e $50,090 in.th~ kitty.", ~,' . kic!C-off . J!le~ting 'scheduled in. It :Was' inte.r~sting to see that !'And.there'll be ·plenty·more;...·;' late November.. Before"the first . .of· .t.he .,threeil"';ards weN lihouled . one' 'oltne. joyouS"~t~ : ~p~defuH~ 4ugatthesite,-peop~~ °wc)o' by students, rather 'than OF .;, '.' ~r!<i .. ants ,a•. the .·~e,eiin.g'\vhi~h . ;~vJ!L J.laV:e·, b~~n conta.c~d by' a 'practicing architects.' '.' , . ., . 11 . , '. . ' ~'Wedecided . ihis might be ~ conducted 'in' S.l ,JoJ.ln;, the)ma .but'powerl~l,'army'of men. becauSe established' 'ar~hitect.· .~!angelistParish,hali.(::·:':: . ,:After :th~. meetipg;:the, mea . : BishOp: Connolly impre~':"gathen!d'in. small' groups dis':' 'alreadY ,liave ,f~l,ln~ th'en: style, ,~;ga,the~i~g ~ti~m-he,~~d)h.f",~t.is~:i!lg;~h~::~ri~?rrriliti~~·ahds~~: " . " a n4 are trying ~ sel~ something. ~w. school .wIll be, ,ready fOl' '~est~ons whu;h had been:contrlb.-'while . students .are . aiming at .", . eomplete :9CCUpapcyin'the .F~il ..'!tea bY·Bi~9()~:C9iuiQ.llY,,Mon:~:" . really true creatioD," he addecL " et ne:X:t.·year. '~Thissta'tement ':signor. Shay;, and by Msgr. Joha .' ~bey seem' more· adaptable.. ". , , brought Ii standing ovatfon,!rOOl' ft.. Silvia an~C~sgr;:'Hugli' ~. ....i: also was honored 1n m~ .'·resPonsiveauaien.ce;» '.•':' . C?allagh~r. ~ N:~'Y .BE;dford; ~¥ ,Ing 'Mr.s, Otto Spaeth, from New ... ,.;:.. .. '. 'Presen~ Challenge, " " ",n..~d ,~~~en .o~ tht:1r, ~~~rlencea . York· City,". Mr. Antaya sai~ '. "". . . .... . '... '. wlthtlieu school drlve.-,., ' ." ." .. ." ,.., .. ' ,:' . ',"and in'· ,ha~ing lunch' witla . ' ]\t',Rev, Jo~n J.ShaYi p~stor--,,'· CollectivelY'lirtd 'individually", .', ,APP~ECIATIONBANQUET: T,he FaIt Rlyer.CYOyoung, IArch.bishOppearden·.of Detroit, ~ St.·John the Evangellst·par,.: th'" :', ".' 'd'"'' h .... ·t'··· . -'. adul.ts dance conimittee members at an ap'preciationb.·anq·ue.t Fa·the.·r. 0.', 'Domiell and" Father , ish'" 10. Attl e b oro .. 'n d upon . ' . the", '.. .ey .expresse . ',Bishop's. .ent ' " .'USlas .plan:, . Ie..sup,'and . ar¢, .' I'e,it ·.Orl&t . ht, 'C aro' 1 Ad ams R 0 bert Ma:ucinone' ., ' . " J ~ h'.n.... . C onway,o. . f 0 ur S und ay fa.tllt'l" th" .ca' '..e to'· ' .... port .forttie Patricia' ' .. , .. , '. '~d' u~n th e'hr~: '. . ~lh' 'in particulai-tti.e need .fot such Pullen' and John Sullivan. . ' . " '.'.: '... ' "'" '. ,Vi~itor.· . ". . .' ,.~ .. ~ee . . e c a enge,: . a ,., a sehoolinthe.area> One·gentle.'..... ' ':. . ·...Mr.' Antaya's interest· in the ~ords ~t1.e. first . opportum~y ,f?~ :' man from Attleboro 'gave voice .: _. 'Fa~ liturgy and association ' witla Catholic secondary education In to th f T {th hI' ' , '.• Father' O'Donnell dates back t. 'the Attleboro area.: ' . . " . . . . . ~ ~~ l?~ 0 '. ~-w~ e g.roup '. , . , . tho time' he was serving in the . 'I '}' '. . 'th th l' £' M'" "as.·he. said, .This ·IS the oppor-·Co.ntin.ued from Page One, '.; Questioned about the inf1~ ' . . . ' 'y hn.,. Slnh.e.wIAt'tl' be~,efao •.•,. sgrt~ tun. ity the' 'pe',op·.le,.'hav.e been.. . . , ' . " . , . ' . . e'nce of James H'offa"on' t"-!. -V.·S~·:·Navy, At that time, ..0 n ay e oro or a SOl' Commenting on the comproI n : : : ' O'D . " ," . Father 'f' .h" . "t b'l . o';"t':" ,. , 'th" '. ~liop'ing .and p.r·a.·ying £01'/' , ' . . . .pu.blic .attitu.de tow.ards l·a&.·;".,,· .. onnell w.~s a layman, He • c an a· e race e ween. e '. ., , . '.' .' . mise Congressional labor b~ll. uv.· 1a.tel' enteredG,limmary', served ....; d'ff' t ' h " .. "'~ t , . . ' ,.,',.. , . . . President Eisenhower' is' ex- .lVIsgr. Higgins opiDed "Possibly ,. ~~~:!:~~o:aA~il:~~ror,~~[:c,t~o:e.·-.' ,.pe~ted~o,~ign, Msgr, Higggins :he isn~t 'personally as bad' as . : ;~~~tr~~~~o~:~te~n:n;.~t~:a~e: h . . ·.,'·Continued, froin.Page· ' , One':.' . said· he had discussed it with he's. been '. e boro 't.ey .were. . " painted', . .but . he starids . ' affiliated in .the lit.urgiCal, move· _~ N or th Attl aure', they would', "mote 'than 'Direttor' of. Stu<Iles. J: . Secretary. of. Labor James. p.,in the. public milld as a·sym~ol ment.: They , kept in toucb m~et 'their quota!"" , . : . "Memlfers 'of the. Coyle' staff,. Mi.t~heU,'wtio:fo;resaw adminis-.of labor trou,ble," ~ , . " . . '.. "'through ':Ule'years and wben ' . THe praetica1;)le' minded-'in the,wli.o'.ha've 'r:~ceived: other assign:.:' : . ~rat.i~e di~f~~ulties i~ ~ctivllting', lVIsg r , Hrggi~s'. ow~ -choi~e·.fOZ: .' Father: O'Donnell was. askedte .... , .. , II'OUP brougnt· out . the· selling" ·m'eilts·· ate: ,'. '. . . ,.~ :. . "', ",~, Its .~ompll~lI.teli .provlslons,..., '.' t!Ie,most pr,ess~~g problem m. the, take ~c~arge" of: the" study 'group, . ·..·Poin~ tha,t not only, were. ~contri~ '.: " .. Br(jthe~ 'C~r'istiari sttnne1t ~;,.:. . ,'trlle . Se<;fetary said' it.. ;was,. , .fl~!d., o~ 'soci~l act i9 n , ill ,that·of he' a'ske(i' Mr;; Antaya to .asSist; . '.. " iM,tti 9 ns .. deductible;, ' 'but·'.-: tti'e' '~is'UintpHncipai for 'four, y~afs,too,early .to', tell how well the.. .r.ll~rant w(;ll:ke~~,~e.tFm.ed i~' bim.·In return Mr: Antaya ~ . .. ~. " Rhool would.save.the city'and: . will~ Sel'Ve in ;the miSsions. ia .. legisl~tio~~w:o~l~ w~r~;"! Said, :- '- ~~~ .greatest.sm~l~. prol;l,lem ia ~ived, in 'his words, "an JnfMiOwns -thousands',. of dollars, in:· ,Uganda':EastMrici . ~s~r., HlggmS,.explaInmg. that _ the, <:~Rn,try··t~ay.': . "'" - ,., ... gettable ·experience."' , . ·t8xeti. " '" " ". Brother Eldr~d" ReiseI).~ebe~; It. woul~probably be-a' year "", He I!! a member·' (If.a four'-man' . . . . ' ~... '.,' ,,' .Start:'in Mareh' '-.'.' . "director of'theBaIid'anifEnglish before all wrinkles in 'adminis-' .-committee. appointed· by the', HospltalFashlonShow '. Construction Of the new school instructor. will 'assume.' similar ti:ation are -ironed o u t . - , ·~ecr~tarY'.of~abor .to study, the" The" Friends' 'of' ,St. Anne'. : ' .: ..... I. wil"beginnextMarch; with'bids. duties: ·at.. ; Notre'" Dame ;"High' '~Thelaw probabl;~on'thurt, . ~exi.c~n .. fa~m .wor!ters:,prob1Eim: __ Hospital,FalL River,. will holcl ." . .. '.. " .. . .. ','School West Haven' Conn',," large, unions 'but .may make it' ·a!1d give him, recommendations .. a :Fashion. Show at 8 next Mon, ',_ ·Bl'other Christoph:, Ta;aska' more difficult for small i.l'nioris· ·to· carry. to Copgl'ess -in 1960... 'day night at' White's Restaurant. ' '. _ . . . , has been' named 'assistant direc- to organize," said 'Msgr'- Higgins.' .'.wh.en, the law ,g~>vern.ing, impor- .. Furs will be featured and dessert : . CoriUnued·.from Page olie '. tor :of a ne\\.- grammar ~chool in ,The'Washington :prelatedeCIared ',' ~tIO~' of foreign. wo~kers ' is.. will· be served. " Mrs. Raymond '<iuit, film for ",hich ,the 'm~re Wilmington; Del.' A Taunton .another effect might be,a slow... con~ldered .for renewaL.. ." Dionne' and Mrs. ,GeorgeBou.8erio·us . moviemakers' have native, he taught so~ilii studies' .'ing down of the organization ' HIS stay.I,n Fall River was cut .. oakes !Ire co-chairmen. ' ..' of Southern workers and: an' short,.because he .had to ·return . . The, ,Auxiliary will hold it. , , fought ·so.long and'so hard' has at Coyle. . become a reality-but so has its' . , B I' ot her' Ferrer '. McHenry, . Increase' in the "flight"of indus~ to :Wa~hington .to ,meet with the ' . first Fall meeting'at ,2 next abuse: by .the fast-buck boys. Latin instruc~or" 'will be supe- try to less unionized SoiJthera ,COmf!llttee.."The:matter .will be' Tuesday afternoon in the hos,And the specter of censorship is' rior of~St. Joseph's' SCholasticate states. . discussed fUrther at a.. ,meeting pital cafeteria. Mrs. Thomas F . .gain rearing its 'ugly 'head." . in Valatie, N. y . . ' ' He' .saidthat. he. him~elf had in; .eliica.go. i~ . NoveIllber,'~ . he C?llil}!!, - chairman of volunteer '., . SaysPre~inger Leader Brother 'FranCis Ellis" Latin preferred the ' sug~sted' EiIiott . said, alsostatmg th~t the AF.L- w.9 rkers at ~arney Hospital ia · Mr, Scheuer'~ article:t09k cog- and geometry'teacher;an'd coach' bill to that eventually passed by ,CI<? was. attemptIng ,to 01'- Bosto~, will speak. '. ~~ance of the protest by leaders of Freshman 'football; .will teacb CongreSs., . .,gamz~. ml~rant workers but,' ef . the National Council of ~aHn' at VihcentiariInstitute, A It d ", b' t acti~ity m.eetu'!g: with great . difficulty ~huTches'ofChdst against "sex ·Albany. . , . . ... Ch ~ . ~. ;a. ~~ f' 1 . of t~e 'because ofthe tr.arisitorY nature .' . '. , . tor" sex's sake' and Violence. for. Flfank' Aimaida,' biology 'in?rc I!!-.. ~ ~e d .of soc~a~ . of, their employment. . ,' ... ' . ~ violence's sake." . . " .' structo'r aild.· assistant football ..;,ChO;, Msgr.,";lggms SIngled ~u~ . Of the labor. picture in· gen- : . 10' · . 'Mr: Scheuer said the leade~of a'rid basketba'lt coach,:'wiU teach' . art ord, .C:I:Il<;.ag~ ; and". lI!'e~~r!ll, ~Msgr, H.iggiiI~ said; ',"Now, .' . • .' • .. ~. revolution toward.' bold . a'ndcoacn at;w'areham' Higb 'k~~~as,cltIe:'.w~er~ th~re : Ill.... tpat:th,e compromise' labor bill iOUTE .6, HUTTLESON AVE. t,h~mes had b~n, Qtto . Pre-: ' .' SChool, Wareha.m.: . , ' . , .. '. 'worke; t~Cil~d:~:h()~ ;I,~lt, .~.nas paSse~,. I 'for.ecastil -l~llin .. Neew' ,Fairhave~ Drive-In ."I,nger. ',' .'. . . ' : _ . ' " . , . .: , . , , ' . . .. ,', ." . .sc.~o .. ~n.,.. labor ,affaIrs.· The' MCClellan:' . ,.o,pe~atIon;,-!;Ie. m~ntIon~d ~ '. eo~~ittee :wiUdo.ubtlelis g9 ',out . .h~lian :Dinners Our Speci~lty , .' ~'Fh~ mat:! Wh~li~raIJzed.,~?r: , ....11'·, ~' • ..,. . "; .:' . . ~r~ck~d; a<:co~dmg:~·..the'(lew:- . I~~,; ;~O ,~~J.s.~"~e p«:£~anr-~~bor: sch9~11l fOI:P\ler~; .' C)f'e,xlstence' and:~weshould hav.e· " Serviee '~'Patte ' ",' •. ~int)the. Producti~nis C~e~~-,· f~m,tll~u~~.,f~o~ In New-Yo~~ . 'lapq;U;i~e~t~p;·e~r;io;d.·;fo;··'r~·.. :se~v~e:r~a~l,y;·e:a;rs:;~'! . ..:;;;;;;~;:;:;:;~ b· Ylcatnhse °Argam~e~ , ''most'single-handed the pro... ..COrnmu~~llt party, 10Pa~e'~~e.' Italy .IS B~" . R ..sso~laho~ of Cathohe.· .. , ' '" . .~..""""",,,,.•,,,,.,,,,,,,,,,,, hi. the
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"ducer' ditector' 'harned Otto 'logna,arid uilif one:.fourtti'of aU' Tr~e l1'momsts: " ' ": , . Preminger,", ", Ine~ch pi~ture'iheReds in Italy are in·hisS~e.,. ,.Thepriestsaid Chureh'activ':' ',' , ' Preirii~ger werit a . little farther' '. Since' the end, of World' War iI, it~ in the South is hampered by' . '··o.rt~and 'a 'little' farther th~D::hClie added;,h.,(had ,prayed 'cori~' .. the"fe.wne!lS~f Catholics.·AI.. · ~ ·,ilad 'to;" Mr: Scheuer' said.'·: , .. stantly. 'for ,guidiince in ,winning: th.~)Ugh.. ,some' members f!f' ·the' . ~ ".' ,<'·Mr. Scheuer said" premiiigei." '. tt~e .. youth ofno'rtherri'!taly away hierarchY.': are' vocal in tpeir laadenough of' truth and':"class" "from' the Reds... ' " " .ehampj~n$hip 'Qf 'workers, I they, :' ."each· of his 'pictures 'to Dlake' . 'Asked. why.. ', so ' many. ol;·the ,ar~ .almost ~'voices crying in the ." ". "bis'arguirieilfsstick.. Bofhesaid ~.peopleol. Italy;",traditionally. a • ~I~derness~ •fOI:. they, are paicl·' 'Uaefinaf ineasureof Preminger'ii Catholic nation,· 'had accepted lat~le ~eed. ,:-~, "aartistry and conviCtions' a 'yet . 'communism; ;the,'~ardinal:was to be' taken. " " . said' to have ~epliedthat they. . , 'are "a: peo'pleof ·extremes.'! ,He POp·~e Gives' Bre~iary , .. attributed nluchof the success .of commuRismin Italy to the Ang'~~an Canon' 'rise'of liberal thought theredur- ' LONDON (NC) - Pope John ing theplist century.' • .., .. BOYS' WANTED' for the' XXIII has given the' brevil~Il'y . ! he used whim he was Cardinal ,Facts, On Faith PriesthoOd and BrotherhOOd. Patriarch of Venice to an AngliANSWERS: 1 (aY; 2(b); 3 (d); Lack of funds NOimpedi•. can minister" it was revealed 4 (b); 5 (a); 6 (b);7 (a); 8 (d).: mente • • ., 1 ,
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The Very Rev. Donald Rea. Church. of 'England canon' and ~icar of r ~own of Eye, in' Suffolk, said he was given the breviary by the Pope after an · audience las' June. .' Canon Rea told the Daily Tele, graph, published here,. that Pope John' told him ·that in working for. Christian unity "it is necessar, firstly to be very. ~eek and hllI__ble, secondly to be. patient" and know how to await God's hour.'~
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, BEURON (.C):""':'A fire de'"stroyedsomebuildings .belonging to the' Benedictine St. Mar- , Uri'sarchabbey neill-here i~ GermanY ·but ,the cloister and '~hurchwere not damaged. Fil-e:' ' men were able to:bring·thebiaze ' u,nder control in time to permit ,the evacuation of about 100 swine' and 4~ ,cows, out the' abbey'sreserve& (k wheat arid ba,. were destroye<L' . .",. "
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CHEVROLET " ' . . . . ".
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,. .NEW lEDFORD, MASS.
WYi-9486
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SACRED."HEART, SCHOOL SHARC?N,' MASSACHusms
TH,E. BROTHERS Of THE. SACRED HEART
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'. SPRING ST.,. FAIRHAVEN WYman '3-2611,
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. Grammar grades ~5~7-8
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A RESIDENT SCHOOL FOR BOYS
,Thomas~).,Monaghan.k:.
.(;~mple,•. ;; Building.' Mci'eri~li _..
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, O. Bo•. 5742 ,Baltimore 8, ~d,
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Write to:
West :Newbury, Mass. Conducted by 1801 Brothers of Charity 1959 'Private Boarding'JSchool for Boys. Grades 5-6-7-8 Write. Call '01" come for Information 'Tet HOmestead 2-4663
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Ney( Bedfo,trs Oril~iAuflto':;z'ed :7,,~ :.,.'"CHEVROl.ET .DEALER
TrinitariclI' '.: Fathers'
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SHELl. "Premium" . ,Famous Reading HARD COAL NEW ENGLAND ... COKE DADSO~·Ofl" Bl!RNERS'
.·2.~-i:t~ur .OU' Bur~er: Service
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.. ".142 S'EC()ND;STREET~ ,
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.FAll RIVER
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:. CharcOal' Briq~'" , '8(Jg
'''c~j ~ Charcoal
GLEN COAL & OIL CO., Inc. Successors to DAVID DUFF & SON 640. PI~asa~t Street .Tet·WY 6-8271·
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Ttt£ ANCHOR-DioceJe of
Fon liver-:-Thurs., Sept.10, 1959
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ACTION IN FINAL GAME: Santo Christo of . Fall R.iver retaine~i' scoring' the first run in the left photo. WInner's pitcher Moniz crosses the Diocesan CYO baseball championship by defeating the Immaculate the plate in second left phot.o. Umpire's decision is questioned by Santo Conception parish team of Taunton twice in the wee}{~nd playoff series. Christo coach in second right photo. At for right Father Anthony Gomes, Final game action photos at· Tauntcln' show' Ni¢olayof .the wining teanispi~itual' director of, the Fall, River team, is enthusiai3tic rooter' •
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Several~.Di()te·~ci" Golf.ers~,·· A,,"bi'sh,oli·(:onnolly Cardinal SaY$,Tre'mendous Amount
·.·I.n·· ,A''..n·"n .,. ••a,.,·. :1..··.~ .~ "\.·.y··.o·'. T'0"':' U",.f. . n',. .y .:." ';:"~:~~L~~:1)~:rsCe:i!hOP' ,Of Wo,..lthf' Do.ne,'to,")\void Work , T h o m a s A. 'connollY'of .Seattle, ' .. WASHINGTO~ (NC) -'-<-,·The ""is 'downright· imm:oral." To''each . ,.:By,,·Jack Kineavy , 59, lias obsetved.his 20th'anni"tremendous amount of" work"'m~n a d·ifferEmt·task is"·gi~en. ':'e"..
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.' Somerset High"Sc'hool Coach ',' ".".' '. versaryas il bishop. '" , d o n e just .to avoid work" is "un- but for every man "his "work A top flight late season sports attractipn'is" t'he·anllUaIArchbishop..'. C~i:molly , ~s. a h,ealthy,' unholy and .unfortun- is the :chfef' means of his salva. . ate." Richard eardinal .Cushing, ... tion,"Cardinal Cushing said. CYO .golf tourname~t.:which·~bfs year is beiJlg staged' at . native of San Francisco: He was . Archbishop of Boston, declares. ." 'Themore'work a man does '''the ,Ponkapoag in Canton. Afield of 201 contestantS'has entered"·e~nsecrate!i··'I'i.tl;ll~~',·B~Shop'of A . staternenttitIed '''Why more merit he is in a po~ition . . h· his·'d'IVld . ed. mto' . , Sda and AUxIhary Bishop of . to d" the pre. the competItIon W Ie t 'h"ree d"'" IVIS~On8----: en-·e'· the 'Archdiocese of Sari Francisco - Work?" . made' by the Cardinal .. garner b e f ore G 0, iors, under '26;' lri.t~rmedi. ..... ,." iii 1939. .. for the Paulist' Feature Service. late added. . d 19 . d J .... . ". 11-3 Sunday to. corichlde the,· . .' .' , here, was released in connection '., "The hands of Jesus ~eflected ates, un er an .. Ulllor.s, championship series and 'add He w.as enthroned .~$ Coad- with' the observance 'of Labor" all kinds of ·work." the Cardinal under 16. Represente~ wIll another illustrious' chapter in jutor BISho,? of the plOcese of Day. said. "He had the hands Of a .. h' s a th 1948. · t young go If"mg the annals of the paris b e th e f mes .Seattle e SeApnl ttl' 21. . f'fth B' hHe be"Work is not popular with our .manu.al worker as long as He . th e area. L ea d'I?gco~- I e t'lC en d eavors. . . cam e s When .1 op on h talent l~ . May 19. a1950. theIS Seattle generation." the Cardinal said. . was In th e car)Jen t er sop. .Wh en tender lD t~e IntermedIates IS, Roger Mello. stylish Christo's See was raised to the status' of "The shorter working week. ~e t?Ok up HIS work o~ preac~Il.t ate Jumor' . righthander, carne up' with a an archdiocese in 1951, the then shorter working' day. shorter l~g m. the years of Hl~ public ·tIt Ie - ~old~r seven-hit effort' in shutting out Bishop Connolly became it~ first working hours are the cry of the hfe: HIS hands g~ew whl~e; and Bo.bby Klrovac' 1. C~ .Silturdl;ly . at South park, Archbishop. . . times. As a ml}tter of fact there whIte they remamed untll they of Sharon who Fall River. The big blow of the is a tremendous amount of work were reddened, as all Conselast year retir.ed game w.as Ed AVill.a's t,hre.e-run done just to avoid work. Labor crated ha~ds must sooner" O!I e ega e 0 resl e 'savl'ng devl'ces are a 'symbo'l of later be. WIth the blood of Calth e CYO J umor homer in the si'xtli inning off tro,?hY With. his loser Dick Fag~n, Bob ,¢ar:y-alho. '. "f ··Closing· Ceremony the times. . vary. Every worker's hands can ve tho lrd straIght Len,. Nl·co'lar,. ... "n.d Avl·lla·•.·.,.each :TEUTOPOLIS (""C) . A'rc h- . "Some' the" ·redi.ic'ti~n in we the share' redem!>ti. .. ...... -:.-., ,'., .'of" '·.·.1 .' 1 '.' of"'h~ve.·a mISSIon 'par~' whIch 'Wlth vIctory. with two hits led the attack; on 'bishop ,EgidioVagnozzi.·· Apos- ~ork. IS. u!1dE7rs~an~a~ e., ,~nd .l.Jesus." ,,: K i r 0 v a cis. '. ta~an:,. W~o,g~ve, 1l,P'only .,ei,~ht: tolic Delegate.:·to· the 'Uhited even deSlr,a~le but the ~~p~g- "" .. ,,::i.. expected to be safeties over the route. ' .. ' ,States; will preside ,at the' clos- .. nance' 'for' work; tl:Xe .WIsh -to c hall eng e d . " . . ' _..' " , ,ing of the' centenary' year' comavoid work af"li'lIcClstS·. these are .prin.c~pally by . ' .. ,. CostIY,lnjur y. , · ·,memorating the:'conHng of ,the unhealthy, unholy and unfortunWalt Sharis of Beverly.' an In- ". The'loss' '6f . ;r'~d . McGc;rv~rn.),. Franciscan ,Fathers.'to '< the' Mis- ate signs of Ute times." ,0," . ..< termedi'ate finaiist "in '58 and : i: C:'s . re~uta~'" 'thirc;l·· . ·1;)a.senl~n. sissippi' Valley·' on'O~t..4. feast . Devout men who 'live out '1';1,(, .i.·~~r~9age semifinalist in the ,State ·Aril!l- who spr8:ined 'hiS ankle the :of 8t; Francis of· 'Assisi, it "'Was Christian I, .. philosophy ". accept . ",rr, teur. in July.. Alsa· ra,~~~ ~p eve- of the cna·mpionship se·r.i~s. announced here.: ,," ·:work as'3 duty, theOa:rdina~ as- ".' ..•• '\1:( .. adviC~·e· choices in this division are Fran- hurt Taunton's cause. McGov,ern Nine Franciscan. 'friars . pionse·rted. 'and, the chronic loMer·, I.:. ·'1 ,'" cis Twomey of Arlington. '58 was one of 'the club's better ..,.eered,the .first foundation, of'-the '. is . hot only.'.a cnuisance· but, semifinalist. and Ed O'Brien of hitters.' Fir.st baseman Johnny 'St. . Louis-Chicago .'Franciscan judged .by Christian:standards,·· ·.c:,.. Watertown. '58 Cacldie champl()n. Lewis, tWCl 'hits' iiI'four trips, , ..Province· of the "Sacred. 'Heart". . Co-Favorites was the only i. C. batsman who .'. here ;1.01 years ago. From here ";.':' In the Jllniol( bra~ket.'Dave . found Mell~'sslants for more .,Vi,e priests extended their .work NO JOB TOO BIG , . Harrigan. present State Caddie than one safety. . ,to ~ore thlj,nc 100, parishes in 13 .'. titlist. and Mike. Kry:sa.~\,mnerSanto Christo jumped off to· . 'Midwestern '. states.' ,Ther.e, now NONE TOO. SMALL · up to Kirovac in the State an early 6-0 lead in Sunday's . more' than 800 Franciscans Junio~ ar,e.~o-fa,~o~~d:.:.Str?~g tilt ~t Hopewell'. Park after doing the work which was startchallengers m the Semordlvl- which both teams played runless ed by the original nine. sion for the title won the pa.st ball to the seventh. The game · two years by Charley Volpone appeared to be a replica of '. PRINTERS R. A. WILCOX CO. of Ould Newbury include D?n Saturday's, contest when I. .C. MaiD. Offlee aDd !"111M OFFICE FURNITURE Curly of Rockland. ·Ed Krovltz suddenlycam~to life scoring . of Revere, and Dick Ganong' of three . ~uns' anddi.-ivfng Billy. .. Stock for Immediate Deliv., LOWElL, MASS; Newton. Moniz out of the box. • DESKS • CHAIRS 'J!eIepbODe Low. ",1, The qualifying round for the \ . . FILING (:ABINm" ... '.., .:SEE 'THE competition now in its 20th .Enter th~ ~e con""o~ the AV1~la GL 1';8811 IlDdOL ,-..... • •FIREFILE:S ,..' year was 'staged on Tuesday with boys. Ronnie, who pItched hJt'. . FRIENPLY FOLKS' t FOLDING TABLES'·" .' the low 32 scorers in ·each class less. baR the rest of the way, at, . ,Aux~PIe.. to enter match piay Wednesday striking out half of the b~t~rs AND CHAIRS and Thursday. The final. also whom. he faced. In addlbon, . BOSTON The Old Red Ban'k' match play will be held on Fri- Ron had 3 for 5. at the plate... R_ A. WILCOX CO. OCEANPORT, III L day:'" • drove ~n 3 runs and ~n general 131 years of mort~ 22 BEDFOIlD ST, A strong contingent from the had. qUIte. a day for hImself. PAWTUCKET, R. L gage experience will FALL RIVER 5-7838 Fall River Diocese will particiCarl Gilligan started on the help you pi~k the mort- . pate in the Intermediate divimound for 1. C. and Johnny gage that fits your needs '. sion. Diocesan champion··Dem'lis Lewis finished tip, A good size best. You. can choose' McGrath' of Taunton heads the crowd, estimated between 5()Oo five man group which includes 600, was on hand for the game. . from-Conventional, FHA Bob Placido. runner-up to McSanto Christo's five run outburst \ and GI mortgagesl Do You Work in a Facto;y, Grath, and Richard Roy, both in the ninth put the is~ue on ice Ga.rage, Machine Shop or ';'. ,Opeft. F~ay evenings till .,. J,. :'. of Fall River, and 'Barry Byrd but up till that time I. C. was :.",1, •. and Bob Martin of Taunton., very much in contention~ Gasoline Station? CUDDiff of Taunton . '. . ..,., , '. ..,' ..,.. . " We pick ahd deliver,' dean james Cum;liff,' also of Taunand repair overalls. Also. we have ton. will be the area's soIEl.com-',· .' ,,"i'RI\V~S ·r;. . .' ~.complete Of, Covera.II,. Pants.·" ;";,,, ""on~ Shirts for sale. . . . petitor in the JUnior' ranks, The. $'hoe" iRe'p'"0" .·t.-n· 9 "'~D'·· ~ .:1', boys were selected to play as a·~· .. WfJ reclaim and, wash) any oily,: .' ... . .... result of their fine showing' i n , : , .. .1027·Stafford Rood ditty or greasy rags. ' the recent Dl~esarr·t9urneyand ·~r'·:·J: ; they are being sponsOred by the Shoes Dyed '" '.' "~~oe Shine . . .t1l:J. ~ - . . J, • "Why Buy" W~"W.SuPPl¥ ,.' CYO. .Jim Lenaghan. Of". Fall. Shoe' Polish:" Shoe laces .Pan .Ri~~, Savines Bank·· River will aeeompany the group I. Invisible Soling' to Canton. ..' . ".. .. 141 NO.·MAIN ST. The veteran SaQtO"Christo Expert Work . FALL RIVER nine made short work. of ~h,e . ," 'Ke).;s Made' " .. defense 'of 'its CYO title b;' ", ,. " , .-. 'ht 055·7868 '. ':' , downing Immaculate Conception S&H· Green Stampl ar Boward Ave•• New Bedford .. lIPbone WY 8-6424 01' WY 9-642 11 of Taunton, 6-0 Sat~ay and
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