The ,ANCHOR An Anchor of ehe Soul, Sure and Pirm-ST.
PAUL
Fall River, Mass., Thurs., Sept. 22, 1960 V~I. 4, No~· 38
© 1960 The Anchor
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School i,n Fall River Marks Golden J~bilee Highlighting the golden jubilee, commemoration of Espirito Santo School, Fall River, will be'a Solemn High' Mass at 10 :30 this Sunday morning in the parish church. Rt. Rev. Msgr. Humberto S. Medeiros, Diocesan Chancellor, wilt preach. A r eu n ion connection with the ~'!lebration of graduates and present notes that Espirito Sa~to School students from 1910 to the was first thought of ~n 1908, durpresen't will follQW the Mass ing ~e pastorate of ~ev. oToao B.
and a' banquet will be held at White's restaurant the following 8uilday, Oct. 2~ , A.' jubilee book published ift
'De' Valles. He established a night school for adults' in the. 'church basement, ,himself acting Turn '0 Page Elghteea
Scientists Disagree· On Food Production
, CARDIFF (NC)-Top British scientists meeting here in. Wales to discuss the world's food ,problem gave little support .to contraception as a solution. Experts at a day-long symposium on population growth and food resources pOinted out that contrary to popular . beiief the world's food pro- tion for the Advancement of Science. . du~tion is fast outstripping ':Qespite arguments from.· adits population. The sympos- vocates of birthc"ntrol, the conium was part of the annual eonYeRtion of the British Associa-
sen.sus of expert opin·iQn. was Tara to' Page Eighteen
Qrdinary Issues Mandate F'or Erection of Parish CCD . : More than 200 priests .of the Diocese attended an'; institute for the promotion of the CO,nfraternity of Christian DOctrine and heard Bishop Connolly issue a mandate for . the erection of, the Confraternity of Christian.Doctrine in ev~ry paril'!h in the Diocese. l-n' his" rem!:l.rks at the close of the day's activities, the B ish 0 p emphasized the
The former Prescott. estate on Tucker Road, North Dartmouth, situated next to the Holy Cross Fathers Mission House, will shortly become new novitiate quarters for the Dominican Sisters of the Congregation of St. Catherine of SiEma, which has its motherhouse at 37 Park Street, Fall River. Renovations will probably start late next month, said Mother Therese de Jesus, O.P., Mother General. The 17 room house, which will accommodate 20 to 24 religious, will be ready for occupancy about Christmas. PostUlants and novices will use the new quarters which include 76 acres of land. The move will mark the first time the community's novitiate has been separated from the mother.house, said Mother Therese. The only community founded in the Diocese, the Dominicans of the Congregation of St. Catherine of Siena, has been located in St. Anne's' parish, Fall River, since its beginnings in 1891 when Reverend Mother M. Bertrand and two companions came from Carrollton, Mo., to take charge Turn to Page Eig~teen
St. Anne's Nurses School Graduates 3 ~ Next' Sunday
St. 'Anne's Hospital School of Nursing, Fall River, will hold annual graduation exer,cises at 3 this Sunday after~' noon in St. Anne's School AUditorium. . :Qr. Frederick J. Sullivan, pres.,. 'ident of the hospital's medical staff will present greetings to the graduates and Judge J. Edward Lajoie will present the afternoon's program. Vocal selections by the Nurses' Glee Club will be followed by the class essay, composed by lYIis~ Turn to Page Seven
Bishop to Bless School Building In Fall ~iYer' "
.. Bish9P Connolly will bless . the new Holy Name elementary school building in Fall River at 1 Sunday' afternoon, Oct. 2. Father William H. Harrington, pastor, has engaged the nUllS of the lJoly Union of the Sacred Hearts, to teach in the new parish enterprise. Additional grades will be opened each . year until eight grades are in .operation.
DARTMOUTH DOMINICAN NOVITIATB
Management" Report Evaluates' Church NEW YORK (NC)-rhe American Institute of Management has raised its evaluation of the Church's manag&. ment efficiency from its rating in 1955.' The nonprofit me. ganization of 12,000 individual members' said His Holiness PoPe John has ·brought "a have been remarkably im..completely new· spirit" 'to proved." . . the management of the In the organization's efficiency Church. rati!.'g, the Church now has 9,010 "Its function and efficiency
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.Ordinary Leads Delegation .To Charities Convention
Bishop Coimolly· and Auxiliary Bishop Gerrard wit head a group of Diocesan Priests and laymen in attendance at the 50th ,annual convention of the National Conference of Catholic Charities that will open tomorrow in New York. Some 3,000 workers- in or- convention aimed at stimulating ganized Catholic charitable community . responsibility . in and social serv-ice fields as American Catholic charitab~ wen as non-Catholit"'leaders" organizations.
,. will participate
in the five-day
Tura to PaS'e El«hteeG
B'ishop Con~olly, to Preside At D,ighton Nov~tiate Rites
. Bishop Connolly will preside at opening ceremonies for the Dighton novitiate of the Dominic~n Sisters of Charity of 'the Presentation of the Blessed Virgin Mary at 3 Sunday afternoon, Oct. 2. Five postulants·· will be pioneer , entrants to the novitiate, first to be established by the community in North. America. In the Diocese the
necessitY' of the presence of the CCD ~hrough0':lt the Diocese. Rev. Mcderic J. Roqerts, CCD Director in the Diocese of Worcester, showed how the Parish Executive Board is. the cornerstone to the 'en tire structure and the driving force in its success. Father Roberts insisted on the that his experience has taught that the entire Catholic life in a parish will change when the pastor instills in members of the board the fundamental purpose of life-the salvation of souls.
fact
Rev. Luiz G.'Mendonca, Parish CCD'Director of Our Lady of Mt. Carmel Pal'ish, New Bedford. proved the truth of Father Roberts' statements by explaining how the CCD has helped the New , Bedford Parish. The day's program was opened by the Rev. Joseph B. Collins, S.S., Director, National Center of the CCD, Washington, in a talk tracing the history of the organization and stressing, the many Papal observations and deGNes on the subject.
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CONVERT MINISTER CONVERTS WHOLE F AMILY: A former Lutheran minister, who was received into the Catholic Chu rch in 1954, Ernest Beck and his wife were the sponsors for the Karl Newman family when they received the Sacrament of Baptism in Oklahoma City. Formerly of Wichita, the Newmans have been receiving instructions fi-om Mr. Beck for six months. Left to righ t: Keith Ann 16, Jennifer 13, Mrs. Beck, Mrs. Newman,Jo~n 12, Mr. Newman and Mr. Beck. Cynthia 5, is in foreground.. NO Photo.
Sisters staff St. Anne's Hospital. Their only other foundation in the United States· is a Washington house of studies, although they have many houses in Europe, the Near East, and South America. The Dighton house is located at 16 Elm Street. It will provide room for future expansion, in addition to present accommodations, said Mother Pierre Marie, .hospital superior. Four of the entering postulants are from the Diocese. They are Claudette Salois, Notre Dame parish; Jeannine Ouellette, St. Anne's; Mildred Midura, Holy Cross, all of Fall River.. From Taunton is Sandra Souza, St. Anthony's. Elizabeth Chesbro is from Arlington, Va. Mother Pauline du Sauveur and Sister Gertrude Marie will be in charge of the novitiate. ThlW arrived this month from the community's motherhouse in Tours, France. Formerly, aspirants to this Order were obliged to travel to Tours, France, to make their .novitiate. .
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,Bishops to Send' 1,000 Missioners'
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs.,Sept:22,1960 .
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S~onehill
CoUege Offers Program Of Studies in Medical Technology NORTH EASTON - Stonehill College will offer a new program of studies in medical technology, it was -:mounced . today by the Rev. Richard H. Sullivan, C.S.C., Ph.D., President of the College. The program will be offered tn affiliation with St. Joseph's Hospital, Providence, Rhode Island, and will be available im.mediately. . ·A four-year' course of study, the program will include three years of undergraduate study with regular college courses on the Stonehill College campus.~ It will be followed by a period of technical training at an approved,hospital laboratory. Qualifying Exam Upon successful completion of - the hospital work, the student becomes a candidate for a college degree (B a c h e lor of Scie.nce) and is eligible to take
To Lafg!n Amer~ca WASHINGTON .(NC) The American Bishops hope to send 1,000 U. S. priests. Brothers and Sisters to
the qualifying examination of the American Society of Clinical Pathologist~ for registering as a. laboratory technologist. In addition to the study at St. Joseph's Hospital, permission may also be obtained from the, Dean of the college to study at . 0 the r laborator-y technology schools that are approved by the Council on Medical Education and Hospitals of the American Medical Association.
Latin America in the next in-. years, an authority said. here. Father John J. Considine. M.M., also told newsmen that th9 Bishops hope to open 50 new high schools and colleges and universities during the 1960s. They will be staffed by Y.liL teaching communities. Father Considine, who' said the plans were undertaken in accordance withl appeals from the Holy See, is director of the Latin American burp-au of the National Catholic Welfare CODoo ference here.
Pilgrims Honor Jesuit Martyr
USK (NC) - More than 1,500 'pilgrims came to this village on the Welsh border of England to honor a Jesuit martyr and the townspeople who tried ·to. preThe Maryknoller spoke to • vent his execution. closed meeting of the 11th anBlessed' David Lewis, S.J.. nual 'gathering of American miswho was executed here in 1679, sion-sending societies sponsored is one of the 40 English and by the Mission Secretariat. He summarized his remarks aftelloo Welsh martyrs whose canonizaII tion is now being sought' in wards 'for reporters. Rome. ':I'he 'pilgrimage arrived Father Considine .said that in here for the 281st anniversary his address "to major superiors of NEW YORK- (NC) - Bishop- of his martyrdom. men's missionary societies, he designate Edward E. Swanstrom Father Barrett J. Davis of the .~ asked for consideration of three win' continue as ex~cutive dii-ec:' nearby town of Ebbw Vale told YOUNG ADVLTS: Officers of the newly-formed.Cath- points in relation to stepped-up tor of Catholic Relief Services....:.. .' the pilgrims that· after Father olic Young Adult Organization of, Greater Fall Riv'er check aid to thet::hurch in Latin Amep;. National.Catholic - lelfare Con-' Lewis was condemned to death •h d .' R W I A S II' S ,. d 1 f ,ica: 1) The assumption of m~ pIan~ WIt mo erator, . .ev.· a ter . u Iv~n. eate" e t sion-territories; 2) the openin. ference after his elevation to the the local 'sheriff delayed the ex": to rIght, Mary PlitrlCU:l McGrath, recordmg secretary; of new sqhools; 3) The use of iav U. S. hierarchy. ecution so long that he' was The prelate, who directs the.. eventually fined for undue ,Maureen ,Sullivan, . corresponding secretary. Rear,' Judy .' apostles in accordance ""ith. the overseas relief agency of the U.S. delay. When the execution date Davis treasurer"Edward Cox ·president.· J Holy See's recent appeal for • corps of "p~pal volunteers..•. , " Catholic Bishops, was appointed was finally set, the local execuby Pope John as Titula" 'Bishop tioner and carpenters vanish~d of Arba. He will serve as Auxih. with their tools, and no one 'iary Bishop to Francis Cardinal could be found to... build the gal. Spellman, Archbishop of New' lows. VAT:'CAN CITY (NC)-'1'he BoycoU Blacksmith Young adults of the Greater Maureen Sullivan, also .Holy York. , A prisoner was bro!Jght from. 'Fall River area are in. process Name, corresponding secretary; : Vatican City Post Office wiB In a statement issued af·ter the issUe a special series of Chri~ the local jan to set up the gal- of 'forming a unit of the Catholic Judy Davis, Sacred Heart, treasappointment was announced, mas. postage stamps' this ye~ Bishop-designate Swanstrom re- lows. He was stoned by the Young Adult Organization,' a urer. _ townspeople before he could group affiliated with the, CYO qu~sted "the prayers of all my Moderator is Rev. Walter A. as .tdid in 1959: friends in this country as well hang, the priest, and a black- but offering a program designed Sullivan, Diocesan Director of The series of three denomi~ as those with whom I am happily smith was paid to take his place. for single men and women from the Catholic Youth Organization. tions will U be rf")roductions of associated in our work of charity Afterwards no one wo'uld em- age 20 up. The new group will organize the ~ativity by the 17th-centulY At .initilil meetings Edward · activities of .social,' cultural, Du'tch painter Gerard van· Honin :so many lands around the ploy the blacksmith at his trade. A non-Catholic friend held Cox, SS. Peter and· Paul pari~h, spiritual. and recreational in- thorst. The original hangs in the wo·x:ld." the priest's 'hand until he' died, was named. president. Serving terest to young adults. Uffizi gallery in Florence. Father Davis said. The crowd with him will be George O'Already on the agenda are a prevented the executioner from Brien, Sacred Heart, vice presi- · raffle and a Thanksgiving night FRIDAY--'-Ember Friday of Sep- carrying out the sentence of disdent; Mary Patricia McGrath, dance.. A bowling league' is 'm tember. Simple.. Violet, Mass emboweling while the priest was , Holy Knights of Columbus and memName, recording secretary; · process of formation. Proper; No Gloria; Second still alive. bers of the Serra Club, fro..: . The CYA0 will meet monthly Collect St. Linus" Martyr; the Greater Fall River area wiH Blessed David Lewis, who at CYO Hall, Anawan Street, join in attending a retreat at Our Third Collect St. Thecla, Vir- was raised as a Protestant, was Fall River, on a Sunday, night Lady of. Good Counsel Retreat, gin; .Common Preface. buried in the local ·Protestant· to be announced: . SATURDAY-Our Lady of Ran- churchyard: For many years his Ho~se, East Freetown, tbJs; CONCEPTION (NC) - The som. Greater Double. White. grave has been decorated with wee!tend. Benedictine monks of ConcepIn·st~II.· . Mass Proper; Gloria; Second flowers. .. tion Abbey here in Missouri will Collect Ember Saturday of N:ew officers for Bishop Feehan'.' publish monthly a· new combin- Circle ·of Columbian Squires, September; Creed;",Preface of ear~Old Blessed Virgin. ' ation missal and magazine de-' Fall River, will be installed this signed to encourage lay partici- Suriday at ceremonies in K ofC SUNDAY-XVI Sunday After Pentecost. Dolible. Green. MasS Home by Jeffrey E.Sullivan, CHICAGO (NC) - Eighteen- pation in the Mass. Unlike standard missal for- chancellor of the Fall River Proper; Gloria; Creed; Preface year-old Roger Majak, of' St. mats,. each 64-page-issue will Council, K of C. of Trinity.Anp~'s parish, Lancing, Ill., one MONDAY - Nor t h American of the nation's best young ora- feature an editorial section OB I ' Martyrs': SS. _Isaac' Jogues, tors, left here by plane on BR the liturg~', Scriptures, and lay John de BrebeuI,' and their eight-month world tour under spirituality, as well as the re\. Companions, Martyrs. Double the :'·.:spices of the, United quired Masses for 'each month. FUEL OIL AND The missa1':magazine will be ~ . of II Class. Red. Mass Proper; Nations. called the Altar and Home f Gloria; Second Collect SS. BOilER WATER , Roger, a sophomore at NorthCyprian' and Justina, MartyrS; western University, Evanston, Pocket Missal. ROUTE 6, HUnLESON AVE. TREATMENT According to Father Maur Common Preface. Ill., won the' top trophies in Chi- - ._Near Fairhaven Drive-In TUESDAY-SS. Cosmas and Da- cago's American Tournament of Burbach, O.S.B., eetor of the Brokston Chem. Co. Italian Dinnen Our Specialty mian, :(\1artyrs. Simple. Red. Orators and a $4,000 scholarship missal and rector of Immaculate 37 Silver Road Mass Proper; Gloria; Common in the 1959' American Legion's Conception Seminary bere, the Servlee O~ Patio . Brockton 19, Mass. missal will conform to the new Preface. national oratory contest. WEDNESDAY-St. Wenceslaus, 'He was offered the trip by the rubrics recently announced by Duke and Martyr. Simple. Red. International School of America the Holy See. The first issue is scheduled fOIr Mass Proper; Gloria; Common a specia,l U.N. project, when he , Preface. won top honors- in the national January, 1961. THURSDAY-Dedication of St. high school tourney conducted . Michael the Archangel'. Double by the National Forensic League LA-CROSSE (NC) - Bishop of I Class. White. Mass Proper; in Miami Beach, Fla., last· year. SHARON, MASSACHusms John P. Treacy of La Crosse pre- ..... Gloria; C~eed; Common ·Prefsided at cornerstone-laying cerace. emonies for a two-million-dollar A·RESIDENT SCHOOl.FOR BOYS The following films are to be cathedral of St., Joseph the ~ Grammar SlJrades 4-5-6-7-8 added to the lists in their re- Worker being built here. FORTY' HOURS .spective classifications: ~ THE BROTHERS OF 'ii'HE SACRED HEART , Unobjectionable for, general. AnLIEBORO'S DEVOTION patronage: Freckles. TeI~ SuMet 4-5762 Leading Gard.en Center Sept.25-St. Anthony of PadUnobjectionable for adults and ua, New Bedford. . adol~scents-: Man in a Cocked Sacred Heart, Taunton. Hat; Sunrise at ':amP9bello; Oct. 2-0ur Lady of the Holy School for Scoundrels; Seven New Rt. 6 betweeta Rosary, Fall River. . Ways from Sundown. South Main & Wall Sts. lE':1gland's Our Lady of the Holy Fall River ~ Unobjectionable for. adults: Playground Rosary; Taunton. New Bedford_ Hell Is a City. Ocl 9-0ur Lady of the CA 2-0234 Assumption, New Bed_ Neeli'oOogy .ford. St. Roch, Fall River. TillE ANCHOR lists the anniversary dates of priests who . Oct. 16-St. John of God, .~!tM8fEUX served the Fall River Diocese Somerset. PWMBlNG" HlSATING, ONe. since its formation in 1904 Our Lady of the Immacu\ fur. Domestic fASH~ON late Conception, Taunwith the intention that the & IndWltrtlti ton•• faithful will give them a Sales end prayerful remembrance. Oil Burners - . ServiJiiG " TOE ANCHOR SlEPT. 241 Second-class· :nail privileges authorized WY 5-1631 M~llL~OfN",DOlrLA~ ~£lLrLWiOOM a' Fail River. Mass. Published eve17 Rev. Joseph E. C. Bourque, 1955Tburada1 at no Highland Avenue. ,Fall 21283 ACUSHN~" ~w. RIVeT. Mass•• by the Catholic Press of the SElP'l'. 26 CAU ROLAND GAMACMll:' - WYMAN 9-6984 . \L'\a1EW Iam~ORIll). ' Diocese of Fall River, Subscription price . Rev. John J. Donahi.le, 1944. b7 mall. postpaid $4.00 per ,ear•.
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Fall River Bishop Ordains Four La Salette Missioners
THE ANCHORThurs., Sept. 22, 1960
Bureau to Make 'Family of Year' AWQll'd Annually
Four young men were ordained ,to the priesthood as Missionaries of La Salette by His Excellency, the Most Rev. James L. Connolly, D.D., Bishop of Fall River, hi ceremonies at La Salette Shrine, Attleboro, last Sunday. They are Rev. Raymond G. Lacasse, 'son, of bor, N. H. His major seminary Mrs. Maria Poitras, Man- studies were pursued at the :Atchester, N. ir.; Rev. Donat tlebqro house of the community. A. Gauvin, son of Mr. and He .will sing his First Solemn Mrs. flruno .T. Gauvin; West Warwick; Rev. Rene J. Gelinas, son of Mr. and Mrs. Berame J. Gelinas, Waterbury; and Rev. Gerald R. Biron, son of the late' Mr. and Mrs. Jules Biron, Springfield. Father Lacasse, born in Manchester, attended primary and high schools there and entered the' seminary in 1948. He is the . 'youngest of 12 children and the ,Seventh to. enter religious life. His entire ,family, ,with the exception of a .brother, Rev. Lionel Lacasse, M.S., stationed in the Philippines, attended the ordina_ tion ceremonies. Father Lacasse will sing his First Solemn Mass at 11:30 this Sunday in the Church of St. Anthony of Padua, Manchester. .'ather Gauvin ,Father Gauvin attended La SaleHe Seminary,. Enfield; La Salctte College, East Brewster, and made his first religious pr~fession in 1955 in Center Har-
Pri.est-Son· Sings Mother's Mass 0
Most Rev. James J. Gerrard, Auxiliary Bishop of the Diocese of Fall River, presided at· the Requiem Mass ofered this morning at St. Mary's Church, Fair-. haven for the repose of the soul of Mrs. Mary (Sousa) Francis, mother of the Rev. Edmund Francis, S5.CC., pastor' of the parish: ' . Mrs. Francis lived in Providence until she moved to Fair,. haven to become housekeeper at St. Mary's Rectory, that city. In addition to her son, she is survived by a daughter, Inez Franeis of New Bedford. The officers of the Solemn High Mass of' Requiem wel'e: Father Francis, cele'Jrant; Rev. loseph F. Murphy of Providence, deacon; and Rev. John Godelaer, SS.CC., sul:ideacon. Rev Harold' Whelan, SS.CC., of St. Mary's Church, Fairhaven, was master of ceremonies.
Altoona Rite ALTOONA (NC) - Francis Cardinal Spellman, Archbishop of New York; will offici~teon Wednesday, Sept. 21 at the enthronement of Bishop J. Carroll McCol'mick as th . fifth spiritual leader of the Altoona-Johnstown diocese.
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WASHINGTON (NC) The Family Life Burea.u of the National Catholic Welfare Conference will establish an annual "National Catholie Family of the Year" award.
Mass at 11 this Sunday in Christ the Ki~g Church, West Warwick. Father Gel{nas and .Father Biron pursued the same course of studies as Father Gauvin. ¥ather Gelinas will sing his First Solemn Mass this Sunday at 11 in St. Ann's Church, Waterbury; and Father Biron's Mass will be at' the 'same time in' St. 'rhomas Aquinas Church, Springfield.
The winning family will receive a' specially designed plaque which will be conferred for the first time on 'January 8 next, Holy Fa'mily Sunday. 'It will be' given for the practice of Christian principles exemplified in' the family chosen.
Bishop ,presides 'At'Nun~s Mass Most Reverend James J. Ger~ard, V.G., P.R., Auxiliary Bishop of the' Dioc.ese of Fall River, presided Tuesday morning in the Holy Name Church, Fall River, at the Solemn, High Mass of . Requiem for the repose of the GREAT DAY: Rev. Raymond G. Lacasse, newlysOul of' Sister Francis Benedict, ordained. Missionl;l.ry of La Salette, with his mother, Mrs. S.U.S.C. ,Prominent in music for. many Maria Poitras, of Manchester, N. H,. The missionary, years, Sister Francis Benedict youngest of 12 children, has three 'brothers priests and had taught that su1;ljeet in schools' in Taunton and Fall three sisters ·Duns. The whole family, with the exception River staffed by the Holy Union of Father' Lacasse, M.S., stationed in the Philippines, was of the Sacred Hearts. Her last present at the Mass, assignment was at the Immaculate Conception School, Taunton. The former Esther Lyons, she was a native of Fall River and' a graduate of the Sacred Hearts Academy and the Boston Con,servatory of Music. The 14th . New England Regional Confraternity of' Rev. Thomas H. Taylor, pastor Christian Doctrine Congress will be held in Providence on ~f the Immaculate .Conception Oct. 14, 15 and 16, according to information issued by Rev. Church, Taunton was the celebrant. He was assisted by the David J. Coffey, CCD Director for Providence Di~ese and Rev. Donald A. Couza and Rev. General . Chairman of the sizing adult lay leadership, will Hugh J. Keenan, deacon, and event. The Congress, which be given on Parish Executive subdeacon, respectively. Chaplains to the' Most' Rev- win show exhibits and hold Boards, Parent Educator Service and Discussion Group Techniqu~ erend Bishop were. Rev. John H. HackE;tt, Episcopal Secretary, . sessions in the Veterans' and Procedures. General Sessions will be held and Rev. James F. Lyons, assist- Memorial Auditorium, includes ant at the Immaculate Concep- all the dioceses of New England on Friday evening, Oct. 14 at tion Church, Taunton; . . . -Boston, Hartford, Bridgeport, 8 P.M., SatUl:day, Oct. 15 at 2:30 Norwich, Providence, Burling- .and 8 P.M., and on Sunday, Oct. ton, Fall River, Manchester, 16 at 2 and 4 P.M. A Solemn Portland, Springfield and Wor- Pontifical Mass will be held Sunday morning at 11 at the Cathecester. ' \ dral. of S8. Peter, and Paul at I The new Mt. St. Mary's AcadExhibits which Richard Cardinal Cushing emy, Fall'River, was blessed this' . Exhibits will feature the latest of Boston will preach. morning by the Most Reverend in religion texts, teachers' man-' Bishop James L. Connolly. in the uals, outlines and audio-visual presence of Monsignori, priests aids. On Saturday, O<;t. 15, two and members of the Sisters of hour training' sessions be Mercy staff at the new school. given in the m~rning, in the Following the blessing, a mus- afternoon and. in the evening. ic~l program was, presented by This six hours of class instructhe Academy orchestra ,and glee tion, ·given by experienced .club in the school auditorium. workers, will be given to train A luncheon was served to the lay leaders delegated by their members of the clergy in attend- pastors for the course. The Most ance. Reverend Russell J. McVinney, D.D., Bishop of Providence, will present certificates of completion to those taking the training instruction. The training course, empha-
Providence CCD Scene Of Regio'nal Congress
Bishop BlessesNew 'Academy School
will
. Nominations of outstanding Catholic families will be sought through Diocesal) Family Life Directors, family groups l;Ind the Councils of Catholic Men and Catholic 'Women throughout the country. They will be processed by the 128 U. S. diocesan family life d irec tors. • ,
Prelate Presides At Investiture NEW YORK (NC) - Two bishops were 'named Knights of th.e Grand Cross of the Equestrian Order of the Holy Sepulchre of Jerusalem at the order'. investiture ceremonies at St. Patrick's Cathedral. Francis Cardinal Spellman. Archbishop of New York, presided at the ceremonies as honorary Grand Prior of the ecclesiastical order which dates back to the Middle Ages. Named as Knights of t~e Grand Cross were Bishop Jerome' D. Hannan of Scranton, Pa., and Auxiliary Bishop Thomas McDonough of Savannah, Ga. 'At the same time 38 new knights and 36 ladies were invested into the Eastern U. S. Lieutenancy of the order. A total of 54 Knights were elevated to the ranks of Commander and Com':l1ander with Plaque. Knight of the Grand Cross is the highest of the four degreell of the order. The others are ,Commander ,with Plal\ue, Commander and Knight. A special class consists of the Knights of the Collar which numbers no more than 12 persons.
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Young Workers Plan Educati~n Campaign BRISBANE (NC) - A cam- . paign to prepare young people for marriage and p oo"nthood is being plane. j cor next ye' ~ "y Australia's Young Christian Workers. Plans for the campaign were announced at the yeW national conference meeting here. Hundreds of YCW members and their chaplains from every state attended the conference. Also attending were groups from the Philippines, Hong Kong, Singapore, India, Ceylon, Malaya and -Thailand. The YCW council voted to send a delegate to the international YCW meeting in Rome next yea'r, The meeting plans to prepare 'a world report on youths' preparation for marriage.
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PATRONAL FEAST: Bishop Connolly blesses Mrs. Betty Fulton, Denver, Colo. at Blessing of the Sick ceremony forming part of the observance of the Patronal Feast of Our Lad~' of La Salette at La Salette Shrine, Attleboro.
BROOKLYN (NC~:"- Chester A. Beatty has been appointed business manager of the Tablet, Brooklyn diocesan newspaper., Associated with the Tablet since 1938, he was assistant for the past 15 years to Claude M. Becker, business' manager for more than 50 years who died the past July 14.
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St. Mary's,. -Mansfield, Monument to' Faith
THE ANCHORThurs., Sept. 22, 1960
Of· 40 lruh Families ~of -Last Century
Urges American Catholics Match Reds in Zeai .
. By Marion 'Unsworth More than 20 years before being forma lly established as a parish Irish "'Catholics around Mansfield organized as a group, planned, subsidized and built a chureh - a remarkable achievement for 40 families. This was in 1871. Catholics had settled in the Mansfield area almost 40 years previously, having corne from 1833 to 1836 to work on the construction of the Providence and Boston Railroad or in recently opened coal mines in West Mansfield.
WASHINGTON (NC) Auxiliary Bishop FultonJ. Sheen of New York has urged American Catholics to match the communists iri missionary zeal.' "We belong to the most prosperous country in the world and we have to fight that prosperity, not wallow in it," declared Bishop Sheen, national director of the Society for the Propagation of the "'aith. He spoke at a Pontifical Low Mass he offered in the National Shrine of- the Immaculate Con-ception during 'he 11th annual meeting of mission-sending societies. . Bishop Sheen recalled the Scriptural description of the first Christian missionaries as "the men who have turned the world . upside down." The world is "being turned around again;" but this time by the forces of irreligion, he said. "Has not the time come when,all of us who subscribe h the teaching of Christ, the sanctity of . marriage, the virtuous life, are considered 'off the reservation'?" be asked. Pre-Christian State Both numerically and spiritually the world seems to be returning to its pre-Ghristian state, Bishop Sheen said. He pointed out thal communism controls 35 per cent of the world's· population and U-.at although the populat:.:>n of Asia increases by 24 millior yearly, only 14 million Christian con-:erts have been made in Asia in 19 centuries of effort. Today, tqe Bishop said, "we have the truth, but the communists have the zeal." "They are setting the world on fire and are turning it upside down," he declared. ' Three Ways Bishop Sheen said this chal,. lenge· must be met by Christians in three ways: 1) "We have to be all-out missioners." Only two per cent of the world's Catholic foreign missioharies come" from the United States, and only six per cent of all U. S. priests and Brothers and one per cent of the nuns are in foreign missions," be said. "Shall we, the most prosp'erous eountry. in the world, hoard our men and women?" he asked. "God will not bless us if we get fat ... fat in hoarding resources at home that should be spent . elsewhere." 2) "We have to develop a spirit of identification with the mission world." For those who realize the meaning of the doctrine of the Mystical Body, Bishop Sheen said, "there is no such thing as a trial in the mission field that we can stand off from and look at objectively." 3) "We are not to despair of this world -situation, although I think we are going to have communism with us for a .long, long time."
Rites to Mark C!<ose Of Tercentenary PHILADELPHIA (NC) - The Vincentian Fathers of th _astern pro ··1.:e of the --nited States will mark the closing of the tercentenar; year" the d ath of S'. Vincent de Paul next Tuesday. Solemn Pontifical Mass will be offered in the Cathedral of SS. Pete' and. ....aul here by Bishop Tohn A. O'Shea, C.M., exiled from his Kanchow, China, diocese -ly the ~ommunists. Auxiliary Bishop Fulton J. Sheen o. New York, national director of the Society for tne ~-:( 'agation of the Faith, will give the sermon. Philadelphia's huge convention Hall will be the scene of • the tercentenary dinner to follow the r -~ss. Part-of the' -.rge ..uditorium will be converted . to a museum showing the life and works of 3t. Vincent de Paul and· bis two religiou. communities, t' Congregation of the Mission and the Daughters of Charity.
Six Pamphleh Prepare Youth For Service
The Catholic colony formed by these laborers and their families beca: ie part of' the missionary circuit 0_ the . o,;ton Diocese. .According to tradition, the first Mass in the area was celebrated at the West Mansfield home of a Mr. Sullivan about 1838. By that time, a parish, St. Mary's had been established in Taunton. However, because of the large area of Massachusetts and Rhode Island· covered '.Jy that parish, visits from priests to Mansfield were infrequent. When a priest did arrive, Mass was said and the sacraments administered at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Patrick O'Rourke, at·101 Oakland Street; Many Missions During the following years, the Mansfield area became a mission ~f Easton in 1851; North Bridge_ ~ater in 1857; Foxboro in 1859; and North Attleboro ·in 1863, as these respective parishes were founded. As the Catholic population continued. to in.£rease, larger accommodations became necessary for th~ celebration of Mass, and Union Hall, presently the "old freight house," and Unitarian ·Hall, presently the Town Hall, were used. Finally, on Nov. 20, 1870 the Catholics of Mansfield met in John Fox's shop and made plans which resulted in the purchase of a lot on Church Street for the erection of a place of worship. In January, 1871, title to the land was acquired. By July 26 of that year, ground was broken and tha. Christmas Day Father Conaty, a curate at North Attleboro celebrated the first Mass in St. Mary's Church, Mansfield. Rev. Philip Gillie, then pastor· in North AtUebor'o, had assisted in the planning of the church. , However, the North Attleboro parish at that. time included Foxboro, Norwood, Mansfield and Walp-.le as well as the Attleboros, so Ma:.u was possible in Mansfield only occasionally. St. Mary's, Mansfield, was established as a parish in 1893 and Rev. Thomas B. Elliott was· named first pastor. He purchased land across from the church, built the present rectory, and bought land for a cemetery. By 1900, the parish was declared free of debt. The second pastor, Rev. James M. Coffey, served from 1905 to
Chapel Anniversary PONTIAC' (NC) . The 120th anniversary of the establishment of 8t Patrick's chap~l at Oxbow -J ·'~e was opserved with a Mass offered in the original chapel, with families and descendants of the original Irish settlers atte!ld_ ing. The c:lapel, founded in 1840, was for a time the only Catholic church betwf'c Detroit and ·Saginaw.
NEW YORK (NC)-Sis pamphlets designed primal'i1y for the- youth the armed forces and for young
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men about to enter military life have been published by the National Catholic Community ~ vice, Washington, D.C. Frank M. Folsom, chairmaa of the NCCS executive committee and a vice president Of the USO, said here in announcing the pamphlets' publication that such subjects as sex, marriage, patriotism and moral, spiritual resources and adjustment to military life are included. Villanova Author All six were written by Father Edwar:d V. Stanford, O.S.A.. former president of Villanova University, at the request of the NCCS. Mr. Folsom said copies of ~he pamphlets will be sent to di.>cesan directors of youth .lnd eduCation, Catholic chaplains in the armed forces, and to all uSO dubs throughout the -.vorld. Copies of the pamphlets are available'a~ NCCS headquaners, 1312 Massachusetts Ave., N. W.. Washington, D.C.
Catholic Hour Honors Saint's Anniversary This Sunday's presentation of the Catholic Hour on radio ·will feature the life and work of St. Vincent de Paul, in honor of the _tercentenary of his death Oil Sept. 27, 1660. ST. MARY'S CHURCH, MANSFIELD. The program will consist of a dramatization, "The Spirit of 1909. He was succeeded by Rev. ' . nuns from Taunton who teach. Charity," by Anne Fremantle. It William H. McNamara who re- there every week. and a similar program presented mained during 1909. In March, . Future plans include a Cath- last Sunday mark the first piays 1910, Rev. Hugh B. Harold be- otic high school as soon as it i~ to be offered in the 30 year hiscame pastor. In 1914, the original possible. tory of the Catnolic Hour. wooden church was destroyed by Active organizations in the fire; and in a little over a year, parish, include the Christian a new brick edifice was built and Famil· Movement, the Catholic dedicated for the parishioners. Women's Guild and Boy and Girl Stained Glass Scout Troops. Father Harold remained at Spiritual life of St. Mary's is Mansfield for 25 years, until in attested tp by the fact that in April 9f 1935, Rev. Hugh A. August, three. parishioners proGallagher was appointed to the nounced their· final vows: HarCommercial • Industrial pastorate. In 1942, Father Gal- old Qualters in the Brothers of Institutional lagher made extensive improve_ the Holy Cross; Sister MaryPainting a~d Decorating ments in the church and rectory Frederick Creeden in the Holy including three unus.ually beau~ Union of the Sacred Hearts' and 135 Franklin Street tiful stained, glass windows por- Sister Mary Elizabeth Cha~bef8 traying the Nativity, Crucifixion in the Dominican -isters. Fall River OSborne 2-19" and Ascension. The present pastor, Rev. EdMAILING ward L~ O'Brien, suc·ceeded Father Gallagher in NoVember IN NEW BEDFORD of 14142. His curates have been DIAL 3-1431 Rev. William R.. Jordan, Rev.. Edward O. Paquette,· and, since last Spring, Rev. Tohn Galvin. So. Dartmouth From.the original 40 Irish f~m_ . and Hyannis ilies of the mid-nineteenth cen'tury, the parish has grown to So. Dartmouth IN FALL RIVER some 780 families, the majority WY 7-41384 DIAL 2-1322 or 5-7620 (- which are of Italian descent. 720_ children attend Christian Hyannis -2921 PRINTING Doctrine classes taught by three
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs.,Sept.22.1960
Warns,' of Current Trend To Complete Socialization
Portugal Welcomes Carthusian Monks EVORA (NC)-The Carthusians have returned to Portugal after an absence of more than a century. Six Carthusian monks under a French superior have taken up residence in the Evora monas-
By Most Rev. Robert J. Dwyer, D.D. Bishop 01 Reno
Can we escape history? Is the course of human events 80 fixed in the decrees of God or of fate as to make it impossible, futile, for man to attempt to change it? Certain. it is that what's done is done; we cannot hope to escape Jiistory in that sense, any specific meaning of free-will, more than we can live our is for us the ever,asting enigma. lives over, desirable though which is yet. the everlasting that might be. But what of reality. history in the making? Is it true that the world is governed by inexorable laws against which we pit our feeble . powers all in vain? There are millions of our contemporaries who are taught to answer that question with a flat affirmative. There are the Marxists who make their act of faith in the dialectic of materialism which ordains the total subjugation of man to an historical procesa which he can neither advance nor hinder. But there are othel'll as well, citizens of the .free world, who agree that the influence of free-will on history is essentially an illusion. They may not state their position as badly as the Marxists, but it comes down to much the same thing. Some follow Hegel and stiD call themselves liberal in defiance of the fact that they reject the basic principle which makes liberalism tenable. Others call themselves Existentialists, at least those of the school of Sartre, and for them freedom ill only a torment for man's apirit, a drive which has no purpose, an urge which has DO justification. Analysis 01 Demoerae,. There is a group of historians, from Spengler to Toynbee including' some of the most brilliant and fascinating of modem writers, who frankly hold that history ir a process wholly independent of man. The laws of cultural growth, domination, and decay, operate on a level altogether apart from and above individual influence. The king, they say, may rule, but he is an errant fool if he imagines, that he- is actually shaping destiny. A Napoleon or • Hitler may strut his hour on the stage, exulting in his power, but history is' Onl7 mocking him, waiting for the ineluctable moment to switch puppets. I
So ,runs their analysis of democracy. Only here the illusion of freedom, being the more widespread, is all the more pitiable. The people's will reSl!9Jlsible 'leadership, purity of elections, all the domestic apparatus, are empty forms. The dynamic process goes on in absolute indifference to the efforts of individual men or of groups to change or deflect Ii from its predestined course. God, if there is a God, looks down with dour amusement at the puppet show of history; better still, blind fate neither k"ows nor cares what is going 00.
Appalling View . For the Christian such a view of history is appalling in its perversity. It destroys the whole meaning and purpose of life, the entire economy of salntion, the very reality of the zedemptive act of Jesus Christ.
a is perfectly true that here below, under the limitations of our minds, we cannot fathom the mystery of God ill bistory, nor can we reconcile the polar facts of divine foreknowledge and' our human freedom. '
Seek Compromise Yet though we reject determinism as the ultimate heresy, we are always prone to compromise with it as a kind of working hypothesis. We exalt freedom ·in our theology,but we tend to settle for a kind of historicism in our attitude toward many facets of our AIDS THE BLIND: A political, economic, and social veteran of 23 years work for life. Because the exercise of genthe blind, Father Robert J. uine freedom is always diffiShea, pastor of St. James cult we seek to excuse ourselves parish, Rocky Hill, Conn., is from it by attributing our fate the new president of the to the stars. In the face of. n pop u I a r movement which American Federation 0 f threatens to get out of hand we Catholic Workers for the whimper that it can't be helped; Blind. NC Photo. This is gravely true of the current trend toward the socialization of the wnole of' life. Cardinal's Concern In a letter addressed to the Semaines Sociales, a French Catholic group devoted to the study of social problems, dated VATICAN CITY (NC) July 12 of this year, His EmiThe Vatican Secretariat of nence Domenico Cardinal TarState has received confirmdini, Papal Secretary of State, had some very pointed things ation of the death of Bishop to say about this tendency. His Peter Pavel Gojdic of Presov concern was the gradual dehu- last Juiy in a communist prisom manization of man implied in in Czechoslovakia. the whole concept of historical The 72-year-old Byzantine determinism. Rite Bishop was reputed to have While . cordially recogniztng been a stigmatic. He had been im jail since 1950, a year before he the immense benefiu. conferred on mankind by ",e awakening was sentencea to life imprisonof the social conscience, he -was ment by a communist court on emphatic in declaring that charges of "treason." there were limits beyond which Eastern Rite socialization could not be ~ar Bishop Gojdic ·headed the ried without sapping man's only Eastern Rite Catholic See personality and destroying his in Czechoslovakia. Born in Slodignity. vakia on July 17, 1888, he joined "Does it follow," he asked, the Byzantine Rite Order of "that the process of socializa- Basilians of St. Josaphat and tion is impossible to control. was ordained a priest August and that, increasing constantly 27, 1911. . in breadth and depth, it will Appointed a bishop by Pope one day surely reduce men to Pius XI in 1927, he was made the role of automatons? Cerhead of the Presov diocese by tainly not. For socialization is Pope Pius XII in May, 1940, not the result· of forces of when Slovakia had become a nature acting according to a HiUerite protectorate. determinism which cannot be In 1~50, when Presov counted changed. It is tha work of man. 321,000 Eastern Rite Catholics of a free beil1g, conscious of, and 341 priests, it was marked and responsible for his acts." for liquidation by the commuMan's ResponsibllitJ' . nist regime. Early in the year, It would be well if America, Bishop Gojdic was arrestedIn this critical election year, along with two Latin Rite were to ponder the Cardinal's bishops-and his auxiliary WILl forthright assertion of 'man's exiled. historical responsibility. Too Life Sentence many of our contemporaries are BIshop Gojdic, confined f~ revealing themselves as prac- months in the Leopoldov prison, tical Marxists in regard to the was tried in Bratislava in Jan.,. socialization which is engulfing uary, 1951, and sentenced to life the na'tion. They may lament the trend imprisonment. According to reports reaching but they act as though nothing can be done about it. No, dear western Europe five years later, Brutus, there is much that can Bishop Gojdic was held for some time 'in a prison at Kosice, im be done. We can still fight like men and Christians, and with eastern Slovakia, along with 70 God's grace we can win. WG other Byzantine Rite Catholics. There were later reports that are still free. the Bishop had received the stigmata -:- the imprint of tM . wounds of Christ.
Report Confirms Byzo nti ne Rite Bishop's Death
Holy Father Honors Former UN Official
VATICAN CITY (NC)-Norris E. Dodd, former director-general of the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization, has been .named a Knight Commander of the Order of St. Sylvester hy Pope John. One of the few Protestants ever to receive the papal honor, Mr. Dodd will be invested in the order by Archbishop Patrick A. O'Boyle of Washington at Georgetown University on Tuesday, Oct. :8. Mr. Dodd, ·who is now 81, was FAO'director-general from 1948 to 1954. The former Oregon rancher had served :IS U. S. Undersecretary of Agriculture from 1946 to 1948.
We only know that in God'. mind the. are reconciled, and that the moment we lose grip ROME (NC)-Pope John has _ either one we are lost. We .ent a gift of $5,000 to Pole. CllIlnOt allow the dehumaniza.... of man wbicJa hbtorlcal ...acuated from their homea dlltthis Summer'. dJsalitrOUll 4le4ierminism clemands. J'l'M. . . individual 1reeclGla; ill . . . f100dII ill SO\Ithena PolaDd.
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Weekly Calendar :Of Feast' Days' '.:", TODAY-St. Thomas of ViAanoV-a, Bishop-Confe:;sor, was . . Augustinian friar of the 16t1a century. He became ArchbishoP of Valencia, Spain, was dist. guished for' his learning amipiety, highly regarded for bill eloquence and' beloved for Rii aid to the poor. He died in Vale&cia in 1555.
The International Telephone and· Telegraph Company has jUst obtained a patent for a clock that is to be used by space ship navigators. The product of its senior sCientist, Dr. Maurice Arditi, this remarkable invention is said to be accurate to within. one second -in three hundred years. Between now and the year, 2260, there should be .no more than a single second of inaccu'racy in this clock that' employs a' quartz oscillator corrected by the oscillation of. a sodium or cesium or rubidium atom. This is inaeed paying much attention to time. It is using ingenuity and skill to measure time to a degree of 'accuracy that alm.ost defies the imagination, let alone the mind. 0 This clock will help solve many problems of a technical' and scientific nature. And it· cannot help but bring up another question of a different type. ' , If so much' talent and energy is spent on time and its measurement, what of eternity? How does man ,measure the eternity into whkh each one is surely headed 1, The answer is on the' first page of a penny cat'echism. ''"Why did God make you 1" "He made me to know Him, to love Him, and to serve Him in this world, and to be happy with Him forever in thenext." ' Not a~ complicated as the atom clock, is it? But 'even more accurate a gauge of' eternity. And with such eternal consequences for the one who lives by it-or neglects it.
,TOMORROW St. Linus, Pope-Martyr. First Successor of St. Peter as Pope, he governed the Church for 12 years, suffered ,martyrdom lind was buried on Vatican Hill near St. Peter. It ill said that it wasSt.\ Linus who insisted that women should never enter a Church with UD-. covered )leads. SATURDAY - Our Lady fifO Ransom, commemorating the foundation of,the Order of Lady of Mercy at Barcelona • 1223, established for 'the release of captives from the infidel. The' feast was extended to the w»versal, Church in 1696. '
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Appeal to Athletes ~'We athletes have the greatest oPPQrtunity in the world to set the example of Christian living. There are many people, especially boys, looking up to us. To them anythin~ we do is just the right thing. We have to be careful to live the kind of lives that are above criticism." These words of St. Louis Hawks' 'basketball star, Bob Pettit, may seem somewhat "corny" but they are true, nevertheless. In these United States where the "play age" ,of children extends into young adulthood, where youth-and especially boys-all too often .make more of .a st,udy' of rhe editor oj the Question and Answer colum~ does not' guarantee Ie batting averages and shooting percentages than of algebra IInswer anonymous queries nor letters Jrom unidentifiable sources. In every and languages, the professional athlete and even the local instance the desire 'for anonymity wiu be re~pected. To that end, name& 'lITe '/lever appended to the qllestion&, but unless, the letter ~ ,sigMd high school hero have an influence that is tremendous. • ere " no assurance that any' com ideration will be given it. Perhaps it is' all out of proportion to'what it should be, but diction to make deductions on During the' course 01 a mlsthat opinion does not change' the fact. the bills, even though his moti\1e 'on that I made, the preacher And so the athletic stars are used to sell breakfast was dishonest. ' 1IP0ke about "material" and eereals and razor blades and just about every other comHformal" sin. I'm not sure that To get to the real point 01. mercial commodity. And, as Pettit says, they are also "sell- ... understood exactly wllat each misunderstanding - the master one means. Would you explain ing"-or downphlying-Christianity. by· their lives. commends him, not on his disth~ plea.;e? , honesty, but on his prudence in Let an outstanding athlete mention God or the power . FORMAL, sin is, a sin in .the providing for his future comfort. of prayer or give some other type of example-vocal or by true sense,' as we understand it. Perhaps the irony of the siaieaction--af high morality and goodness of living and it is It ,is' a' deliberate violation of .ment is not immediately obvious, featured in the press and communication~\t!).edia. And the what our conscience tells us is but Christ quite clearly states sports page-as any irate father knows-is the one neces- the divine law: Even' though the the moral lesson i ' the ninth thought, word or act is not actu- 'verse--the last sentence in the sity (jf a ,boy's life and almost his exclusive reading. So the , ally Sunday Gospel-"Make friends against God's law, the fact athlete's words and actions.are known and-consciously or that one thinks it is and then for yourselves with the mammon otherwise-imitated. ' . does it makes it a sin for this of wickedness, 'so that when you individual, because he is acting fail they may receive you into So an appeal is made and should be made to athletes of the 'everlasting dwellings." The against the dictates of his own every degree of proficiency to be the man not only on' the conscience. 'everlasting dwelings of the football field or basketball court or hockey 'rink. The stamMATERIAL sin is actually a mammon of wickedness is HELL. ina and fortitude Viat are displayed in, those arenas have transgression of the divine law, If we continue readi~g the sixteenth chapter, we come to .. but the person performing the an even greater place and more worthy goal in life. act does so without knowledge sentence in the thirteent'h verse No one has ever claimed that it took courage to do evn~ . of its sinfulness or without free which helps to make the point only self-indulgence and opportunity. The real test of an consent. Therefore 'it is 'not a even clearer: "You cannot serve athlete is not only the gamt!--"-it is the serious business of true sin for this individual, since both God and Mammon." Our Savior seems to be saying, life. Their. attention to this can give significant 'direction it is not a wilful transgression. Perhaps an example might help in effect, that if we spent one to'their own lives-and have unbelievable influence oil thA to clarify this: if a person takes half as much time and energy lives of' others. " the property of another, (which and' ingenuity in spiritual en-
SUNDAY - Sixteenth Sundar after Pentecost. Generally tblll date is the feast of St. Cleophae. Martyr, one of the two discipl.', tG whom Christ appeared OR the way to Emmaus on the fll'IIt Easter Sunday. He is said to haw been murdered for his Faith Ja the house where he entertained the risen Christ. MONDAY-The North Am.... lcan Martyrs, commemoratintf the martyrdom of six Jesuit priests and two Brothers slain bF Iroquois Indians during the 17tb century while serving as m . sionaries. The priests WeN Isaac Jogues, John de Brebeuf. Gabriel Lalemant, Anthony DaDiel, Charles Garnier and Noel Chabanel.' ('The :Jrothers weN' Rene' Goupil and John de ]a Lan~e. ~hey were canonized .. 1930. ',TUESDAY-SS. Cosmas' 'and Damian, Martyrs. Cosmas aM Damian were brothers, nativee' of Arabia, who became physiciaNl and refused to accept fees Jor their services. They were ... rested as Christians in CilIciIl. Asia Minor, during the persecation under DiOcletiar. in the -MIl century. They miraculously ov. .' came many torments-fire, ~. ,cifixion, stoning, arrows and ' being cast into the sea-:-but fia-' ally were beheaded. With theM died three brothers, Anthimu..' Leontius and Euprepius.. WEDNESDAY-St. Wen~ 1aus, Martyr.' He was the son of a Christian Duke of Bohem'ia, and a pagan mother. He was educated in the Faith by his grandmother, Ludmilla. His mot~ attempted to seize the goverament when his father died. She formed a combination with ~, second son Boleslaus. Together they persecuted the Christiarw and fought against Wenceslaue. who had l.lanaged to retain poesession of a large part of the t~· ritory. Wenceslaus was murdereCl, by }:lis brother at thc:l door 01. • Church in 935.
is wrong) in the mistaken notion, ,deavors as we do 'in taking care that it is his own, he commits of our material pursuits, we' no s i n . ' , would be assu'red of salvation. Needless to say, we are not •• Few there are who would advocate the adoption by this allowed to set out intentionally Should one keep their eyeS eotintry of any of the policies of the' Soviet Union. But the to delude ourselves. If there is directly on the crucifix until any question in our' minds as to te~ptation is strong this' time with this piece of Russian the end of the Prayer Before whether a thing is right or a Crucifix to be said alter Holy, PROVIDENCE (NC) - The news. , wrong, 'we must find out for Communion? Can the indul- , former rector of an .Episcopel In the Soviet Republic of G'eorgia, antlparasite laws certain before we can act. gence be gained when the church h~re, his wife and thre. have been passed. Those sentenced as "idlers" can be taken erucilix is covered with a purchildren were received into tbe to labor camps for terms of six months to two years~ They ple cloth ~n Lent? Could you explain the GosCatholic Church. pellor the eighth Sunday after are considered as criminals for attempting to dodge work. It is, not necessary to keep the Robert L. Williams was reet. - particularly the eyeS' 'glued' to the crucifix iB: of Christ' Episcopal church here What a weapon to give into the panda' of prof~~sors Pentecost pari that refers to the 'mamorder to gain the indulgence since 1958. He is a native 'of and teachers on every educational level And wba,t a marVemon 01· iniquity'? ' while reciting the "Prayer BeUtica, N. Y., served with ~ lous incentive f9r study! ',. fore a' CruCifix" but this would Army during World War II and If ever a poll, should be taken This is when'it would pay every student to be anti~Red. , to determine which of Christ's certainly be helpful iri. focusing was graduated from Harvard .. . parables are most misunderstood, the attention on the prayer being 1950. He studied for the Episco, this Parable of the Unjust Stewsaid. You know, of course; that pal'ministry at General Tbeoard would surely and' easily be while this prayer is ,recom- , logical Seminary, New York a.MI 'listed among the 'top ten'. This ,mended for the period of'thanks- 'was ordained in' 1953. He parable is' found in the sixteenth giving after, Communion, there rector of churches in Patersoo" chapter of the Gospel according is no obligation to say it. Surely N. J., and New York before c0mto St. Luke, verses orie to nine. it is commendable to take advaning here. His wife is the fo~ A Commentary on the New tage of the opportunity at Com- Ann,May Zachar of Asbury Park, OFFICIAL NEW,SPAPER. OF THE DIOCESE OF FAll RIVER Testament states that the debtors munion time to gain -the' plenary N. J., ,and their children . . , .probably had not borrowed this . indulgence which is applicable Cecilia, 5; Barbara, 3 MIll Published weekly by The' Catholic 'Press 'of the DIocese'of Fall River oil and wheat but owed it as rent to the' .souls· in Purgatory. Theresa, 1. 410 Highland Avenue .~ for the use of the master's land. Even' when. the requirements The Williams family, we .... 'It further states that certain of confession and Communion ceived into the ~atholic Fai~h br Fall River, Mass. OSborne 5-71~1 points are obscure, since we are have. not been' fulfilled, anyone Father Cornelius B. Collins, PMPUBLISHER not fully acquainted, with the in the state of, grace can obtain tor of St. Michael's Church heN. Most, Rev. James L Connolly,D.D., PhD.' economic customs of that time an indulgence of ten years for Paul Van K. Thompson, EngUlla and place, but these details are the suffering souls by reciting . professor at Providence College, GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MANAGER, unimportant. We, do know that this prayer. These indulgences also a former Episcopal. recto., Rev. Daniel F. Shalloo, M.A. Rev. John P.,DriscoU the steward was empowered 'to may be gained even though the and his wife, both converts, weN MANAGING EDITOR act in the name of the master, crucifix happens to be covered the sponsors for the WiIli_ Hugh J. GGlden therefore. it w~s within his juria- as is the case during Lent. family.
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lItE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thun.,Sept.22,196O
4,NN P. AYLWARD New Bedf~~
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PAULINE CHARPENTIER . MAUREEN T. CONNORS New Bedford Raynham.
JUDITH C. CORREIRA Fall River
GRADUATION EXERCISES AT ST. ANNE'S SCHOOL OF NURSING IN FALL RIVER SU,NDAY AFTERNOON
Ask Catholic Men See Basic ,Issues'
Sc:hismaticC-hineseBishop. Repeats. Communist Line ·in Interv~ew
MILAN (NC) -'- An·"illicitly consecrated Chinese bishop repeated the communist line in an interview published here by Corriere della Serra.
WASHINGTON (NC)-An exposition of the relationship between Church and State has been slated for study by affiliates of the Natiopal Council of Catholic Men: The question is one of 15 "basic issue~" selected: for study and action by Diocesan Councils - exa!Dple, low-income housing, of Catholic Men by sotfle 50 traffic safety and care of the presidents of these units. ,aged. The presidents held a fouy. International!
The interview was given to.a
said ill' an interview: "We co~ . . sider the Pope a: -'hismatic Un reference to the Gospe!." He also accused the Pope of abusing the dogma of papal infallibility.
correspond~nt of the Milan daily in. Red China by Bishop Chang'
He said that the Vatican haD tried to make Catholics of tho Chia-shu. The schismatic prelate Chinese and to make them sub- . said that the ·Vatican is an "in- servient to the interests of capstrument of imperialists" and he italists and imperialists. attacked Pope John! Chinese Catholics who belong day meeting here. In the international communBi~hop Chang was "elected" to the Patr:iotic Association are Fifteen "areas of concern" ity, these were given as "basic earlier this year to replace the nation's 1 true Catholics, he were ,listed in the meeting;s issue~": . '. '. Bishop Ignatius Kung of Shang_ continued. He admitted that the "basic issues" statement. They 1. Sympathe'tic assistance., in hai. Bishop Kung was imprisoned association's members are conwere divided under the headings solving the ChUTCh's problems in for life by the Chinese commun- .forming to the demands of the of issues in the Church, in the Latin America and Africa. istS in. March' on trumped-up' communist government, but said family, in the local and national 2. Knowledge 'of the whole that these do not require theni . Charges of treason and spying. community, in the international' complex of international probto be atheists. community and in an overall lems,' familiarity with what" is .Consecration JUlieit view. ". . required both by the universality . RE' ~e "elect.ion~~-took place at !l In the Church, the basic issues of the Mystical Body and by the 'CLASS P SIDENT Shanghai meeting of the comset 'for study are: . . . responsibility now· thrust· upon GAIL' F.' BARTON munist - sponsored schismatic .1. Fo'r~ation of .Catholic lay our countr.y for the leadership New Bedford group, the Patriotic AssOciation. leaders. ; of the free world. of Chinese Catholics, which has 2. Greater participation by. The.,last "basic issue". an-' been conl;lemned by the Holy the laity.in the liturgy.. nounced .was the awareness of See: Uilder the association's ausCO~PANY 3, Development of the meanthe responsibility of .the National Continued from Page One pices about 30 schismatic bishops ~g and potential of Christian CO\1ncil· of Catholic Men as the . Gail T. Barton. Graduates will' have been illicitly consecrated Complete Line unity, in the spirit and with the offici~l representative of Amer- 0 recite the Nightingale Pledge to further Red efforts to separate Building Ma.terials aid of the approaching ecumen- . ican Catholic laymen. after rece.iving diplomas. .. Chinese Catholics from th~ Holy leal council. \. . Catholic Schools ProcesSIOnal and 'TeCes:Honal "See: . 8· SPRING' ST., FAIRHAVEN 4. Study of the needs of the During their meeting, the will be played by Dommican:... The ~hismatic Bishop, autoWYman 3-2611 . parish so as to provide trained· presidents' heard from a prom:- Academy orchestra'. matfcally excommunicated.' 1>6and.responsible laymen helpers. inent educator on the pr.oblem~, . cause of his illicit consecration, 5. :Use of Catholic publications . and' challenges facing Catholic SPRINGFIELD (NC) _ Gov. as a "primary sow-ce"of the . schools,' especially because o( William G.' Stratton of -Illinois knowledge of the 'mind of the their growth. . . . ". has proclaimed November as Church, as applied to modern "~irice 194'5, the sYstem hilS Religion in American Life lssues._ . groWn 102 per cent, while the Month. The proclamation is deFamily Issues, pub:lc school system has grown. signed to ;:tid promotion· of· .: In the family, the presidents only 52 per cent," they were told 12 - year' ~ old nationwide proagreed these were the issues to by Fa ther C. O'Neil D'Amour, gram to encourage a: _Americans; be studied: . dire<;t6~ ~f the Department of . to worship regularly... . 1. Promotion of religious eduSchool Superintendents of the . . cation of children by parents. Nation!!l Catholic Educational 2. Development of sound fam-. Association which has head- I 1· quarters here. . . . By recreational practices to.'. "Do you.' realize," he' asked, I ' . I make better use of leisure time and protect the family against . '.'that the' Catholic· people are t "the increasing moral laxness . contributing 'almost one and a four da" half billion dollars annually to I 0 ' d Ige d seIf-Ill an3. u nce y. maintain these s.chools? And thl.·S I I Formulation and0 fulfillment of the father's proper role. figure does not include the huge • In the local and national cominvestment of the buildings 'al- L _ munity, the representatives of ready in existence." tile men's groups saw these as "This system,' in all its grand_ "basic issues"; eur, 'is' a monument to the faith 1. Development, promulgatioll of the Catholic people;" he said. _ _~~---1"and acceptance of the Christian Teacher Shortage solution to the racial problem. But it has its problems, chiefly Z. Exposition of the relationshortage of religious teachers, he ebip between Church' and State. said. "Within the next four years, 3. Exposition of the' correct t·· te there ·11 be one we al) lClpa .ill . yo ~ relatl'on between tho jndl·vI·dual . lay .teacher. for every two reli. .
FAIRHAVEN LUMBER
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good, as, for example, the public control of obscenity. 4. Stu'dy of the great number of developing social problems on which"laymen must be familiar with the Church's mind, as, for
Seminaries Report Large Enrollments DET -IT (NC) -Record enrollm'!nts were reported by both Detroit archdiocesan' seminaries. A total of 212 major seminarians ar enrolled at St. J"hi:'• Provincial Seminary in Ply_ mouth, Mich. This is' 20 more· Btu:ents than last year. Sacred Heart, he minor ~m tnary, has a total e- 'llment of 731 student::., 264 new to seminary luI'! The total is an ine:rease of 110 students over last' Fear..
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Saying that Catholics can help. '. . K I T.e HEN. . Father D'Amour suggested they -Am.rfca".· most envIed .kltchen.-. . work to foster religious voea-. tions. "Everything in our society in,spires against a religious vocation,~ he charged. "You, as heads of Catholic homes, must counteract such emphasis." Middleboro Road, Route 18 At RAll:StHAT Will SAVE YOU MONEY He also suggested the mel:l , EAST fREETOWN. L 'volunteer to serve. their local Comparisons are convincingl 'Come· in cind get the figures Catholic schools. "I be'lieve that . 'the clergy and teaching profes- 0 piease senclliteratu~e ' sion are now ready to accept lay participation, even on . policy_ 0' Have ~alesman. caD at no making levels," he said. . obl~gation. . You must make the home aOd 0 N BEDFORD school group an effectivoe instru- . Name ~~ .•~ ••• ~ .:.." F, EW , ment for the implementation of Addras :•....:...•••.•••~~~ ' MAIN OFFICE.,...Union and Pleasant Streets the Ca~holic p:lilosophy ofed~ '. ... NORTH END-1200 Acushnet Avenue cation," he' said.·· City;.;..••'..:.-; ;.:. .:.•• ~••~_ ~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~ ~ ~ ~ ~ .c
USED
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Whether it's a NEW or. USED CAR you can . Get· an AUTO LOAN
FIRST' .SA'FE DEPOSIT NATIO'NAL BANK
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""THE 'ANCHeR';";'Di~'of FOil. ·.Ner-Th~N"Sept;:2*, -1960·
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CElJILE N. COULOMBE
Fall River
MA~"¥ ~.
COYLE
CLAUDETTE DUFRESNE
MADELINE' FRADO
lOAN M. GALLIGAN
New Be,'ford
Somerset
North Dartmouth
'Fall River
PAULINE J. GARCIA .
Fall River
BISHOP CONNOL~Y TO PRESENT DIPLOMAS' AT NURSING SCHOOL COMMENCEMENT' EXERCISES
Cheerful Express Man Gives' Cardinal Cushing Keynote Speaker Family Lesson in .Living... . ~~~~t~I~;C)~~~e~::.S?~~;'~:l~~ven. By Mary Tinley Daly.,
King's Fiancee Charity Worker
MADRID (NC)-The Spani81' ard cardinal Cushing will de- . tion of the National Council of ' fiancee of King Baudouin Of It was a hot and sticky evening in the midst of one of .. liver the keynote address in Las. Catholic Women from Oct. 31 to Belgium is a profoundly r~U Nov. 4. gio.us young woman who founel-: those unseasonal:;lle mid-September heat w,aves..."This is·like Margaret Mealey, NCCW exed and operates a c~arity bureau . ,trying to go to school'in the tropics/' Ginny complained, ecutive secretary, said some 3,500 here. .. laying out .homework books on the dining room table. "And Catholic women from all sections Fabiola de. M9ra y.Aragon, • , , t d t S G A of the country are expected to 'Yere expec e 0 concenhis 'name), exam~ning the roping WA HIN TON (NC) .,attend the' sessions. Various trate !" ."If that express man of the box, scrutinizing the ad- bishop long noted for his work workshops have lJeen planned to ~ daughter of the late Count· qonzalo de Mora, who received, 't f thO b f dress, smiled with real satisfac- speak in the Catholic press field will d oesn come or IS ox 0 at the 30th convention of . provide program and project his title 'from Pope Leo XIll, Markie's books, she won't be tion.' " the National Council of Catho- assistance in all phases of NCCW ., Miss de Mora, 32, spends rnaOf' able to study either," I counter"Yah, that's ·goot. F'. strong lic -Women in' Las Vegas, Nev., work. . of her weekends visiting the complained. "And after I've box. This will make the trip from October ·31 to November The address of the Archbishop poor .of the shantytowns on the' , spent the aftereasily. Two days anl;! it will be ,4. , of Boston on Oct. 31 in the Las fringes of Madrid. . noon packing there. Miss Margaret Daly will Bishop Thomas K. Gorman of Vegas Convention Center wilt' be' . The announcement of King' tho '-t." -:." open and be glad." . Dallas-Fort Worth, Tex., will keyed to the convention theme, Baudouin's engagement was "That's the' ay this .time, Magoo. was:" speak on October 31 on "The "These 'Works of Love." It will made (Sept. 16) by the Belgian ~ay it goes,\' jumping around the man's feet, Mind of the Church-Our Ae- be deliverea at the first general the Head of the li~king -his shoes, olIi over on cent," it was announced here by assembly session of the conven-, government. It· came while newspai>ers, ~'. Euro~ . aDcf ~~Juse sighed, her back'in her. somewhat show- Margaret Mealey, NCCW execu- tion.Mrs. Mark A. Theissen of America were publishing a rlP tying the last off way. tive secretary.' Covington" Ky" NCCW presimqr that he was about to reknot' anc movChange of M~ Editor' dent, will preside. n~unce the throne in favor of ing the big car. The man's ~rong 81 •.18 lifted A year after his ordination, The NCCW is '1 federation of· his ,brother, Prince Albert, and . ton ~lose to the the heavy carton and swung 't Bishop Gorman became editor . t" f C th li orgamza Ions 0 a 0 c women e~ter a 'Trappist monastery. f ro n t d 0 0 r . hise back. throug h ou t th e ,coun t'ry. Th e or"They p r o m ion s ' "I bring my t:eceipt of the Tidings, Los· Angeles . me, but pad from ':,e truck," 'Ie promised archdiocesan newspaper, and ganizatio~s affiliated' with the to co as Magoo followed him served from 1918 to 1922. In NCCW h ave a total membership they , down the . what do steps. "Now schweste- ", said 1935, four years after his con- • f ' . '11' C th l' ~re?" Oh we were a jolly. lot ' 0 mne ml Ion a 0 IC women. e, 'softly to Magoo, "you come back secration as the first Bishop of that evening. into 'the house an . . be a good Reno;. Nev., he ·founded the Precedin'g the first assembly Bang of a truck door' and little AmericaL dog." Nevada Register. Shortly after session in the convention center heavy-footed clomp up the front P' Solemn Pontifical Mass ams ta kingly, the man made' he went to Dallas, Tex., as Co- . will ' steps were folIo"· by Magoo's out the- receipt. "Is goot to send adjutor Bishop, he founded the o~ered by Bishop Robert J. violent barking. Ready to attack, IDce . pac k ages," he beamed. (And Texas Catholl'c as the newspaper Dwyer of Reno, Nev, The sermon, our two-'~og-long, half-a-dog- we'd been grumbling over the of the diocese. He has served as "The .Nature of Love," will be CHARLES F. VARGAS high. loxie stuck her pointed' , ' ble' of getting . that box episcopal chairman of the Press .given by Bishop Allen' J. Bab254 ROCKDALE AVENUI nose into the opening of the ready.) Department.- National Catholic cock. of Grand Rapids, Mich., NEW BEDFORD. MASS. screel1 door and let out barks "Yes," we' entered into .the Welfare Conference,·and now is 'episcopal chairman' of the Desuch as we have seldom hear~l. spirit. "It is good. Y9U see, these episcopal moderator of, the partment of Lay Organizations "O,K., Mag The Head, of 'lU'e our· d aug h ter's h NCWC Bureau of Inform'atl·oo·. National Catholic Welfare Con~ sc 001 "ooks." the House tried to push her "Books?" The g"'n widpned ference, which' includes the aside wif' his foe' - ·.d open (. 'en more. "Books, you. say? M' Directo.rs th . . NCCW. the door.. "It's the expressman. iss Mealey saId e maJor the noise'." Why, you get the book rate! 'You business for' the delegates durNow, stop save ri).oney. Now,' ·;t that fine? . . the f'lVe- d ay conver. tIon " lWI 1 "C' Jd evening.'" A burly man ml! I make out a new recebt." be"lth e e 1ec t'Ion '0f d'Irec t ors f rom ith a widl grin came in and . W "Please, sir," I asked, taking the NCCW's 14 U.S. provinces. squatted on the fIt ,his hand the receipt. "What were you Th . 1 d th ff' f th extend£'d to pat the sP".barking ese 'mc u e eo Icers 0 e ~ ragoo. Then followed a flow of saying to the dog?" federation of Catholic women's a 'orei::;n langua,,:e in which we "Ach," he smiled, "Ju"t some' organizations with some nine BOYS WANTED for the little sweet-talk. That's our million members. could on" distir.guish the word secret." fJI Priesthood and BrotherhOOd, "schw,ester." Lafk of funds NO impedl. North Attleboro D of I '.3tonished Dog With a final pat for ]I!agoo, ment. Benedict Ciicle, North Attlewh? by this time was ready '. If it is possible for a dog to go right along. our friend boro Daughters of Isabella, will Write to: .... look astor.ished, surprised and. whistlin[ly descended the .front hold an Autumn festival from pleased, that': the way Megoo steps, climbed into his·truck and 10 to 6 Thursday, Oct. 27 under -Po O. Box 5742. reacted.-Ier liquid brown eyes drove 'off. ' chairmanship of Mrs. Janice Baltimore 8, Md. r :ew and Mrs. Mary Brennan. look~d up app' alir>gly at this The night had not really benew-found riend. She began licking the .broad, stro.ng hand come any cr"'" or' . hum~d, that patted rer gently and lis- but t\-· atmcsphere had changed tened as though she understood at our :Juse. Warehouse Salesroom ever word. The Heaci of' the House ex_ New and Used. "He's speal.dng German?" I pressed' the thought in the minds OffiCE' EQUIPMENT whi ered to:le F':lad of the of all of us: ·We show a large assortment o'f used House who understands quite a "NOW, there is a man who is and new desks, chairs,. filing cab. bit of that language. really living!" inets, tables, etc" in wood and steel. "Yah. Yes," answered the ex-' Also metal storage cabinets, safes, rr~c~er press man. "She knows ",he'I'm Diocese Opens Home _ .' . shelving lockers, etc. SCi. 'br . 'on't you schwester? _-~~-__ 108 James For' Unwed MotHers She' ermall, of cour::!?" 653 MIAMI (NC) - St. Vincent "He's telling 'her she's a dear . . 'WYman ,4";5058 NewBedforll little Gerr "n mdden," the Head Hall, first home for unwed \ of 'he House explained, "She mothers in ·southern Florida, has WY 3·2783 . must remember tIi from her been opened hereby the Diocese 'of Miami. . puppyho, "." Located on the grounds- of ,. ~ "A·1 It certainly seemed that way, Miami's Mercy Hospital, it will' : CHRYSLER ,. r'though it has been many a year since Mc.goo emigrated from her . be operated in cooperation with ., PLYMOUTH ' ., A 19 SECOND STREET . FALL RIVER native Gprmany. Catholic Charities for a limited .' IMPERIAl: The man (we neve' . did learn number of ,applicants. Sisters of : St. Joseph of St. Augustine who ~ . . VAliANT ~ . Distributors For . Stonehill Guild staff tije hospital will be:, in· ~ Sales _ Service _ Parts ji KENT FLOOR POLISHING and Stonehill College Gu.ild will charge. _ _ KENT VACUUM MACHINES hold a luncheon and fashion Private living quarters wliich ~ ~ JANITORS' CLEANING SUPPLIES show at 1 Saturday afternoon, include bedrooms, kitchenettes - ~ . FIRE EXTINGUISHERS . Oct, 22 at Bruno's Restaurant, and a recreation area for eight MOTORS, INC. ~. North Easton. A meeting on the women are provided in the new , . 13 MAIN' STREET ' BUILDING MAINTENANCE EQUIPMENT campus is planned for Thursday, b'uil~ing. , Medical car~ will',be :. : W. Deliver Throughout The Diocese - Oct. 20, Miss. Margaret Murphy, ,provided m·t~e m~t~~n.1ty sectIon ,. Hyannis SP '5-4970 ~ ,c ' Phone OSborne 7·9100 ': "Easton; lis presiderif 'M'the' unit> . of the generat hospitaL·, , ,; J. '1~':-i: .. ~ ..~ .:~..'':''.:''~;'~~:''~~..''
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,Gives Many Hints ,for Planning Attractive· Color Schemes
College Dean Describes African Students as Astute, D'iplomatic' I
LOVELAND (NC) -
~ative
African students are "just aa By Alice ~ugh Cahill keen" as white ones in Europe Are you puzzled over 'what color to select for a scheme ,and America, a New Yorker that will be restful, soothing, and glamorous? We suggest who became dean of women at that you start out by analyzing the over-all effect. you w'ant a South Africa,n university reto achieve. Maybe you like an informal, countrified setting. ported here. Mary I. J:iuckley... a member of A 8c~eme that has been used very mellow mood was created. the Grllil Movement, described successfully and is not hard If .you have red walls (be sure her students at Pius XII Uni~ copy is the use of a plaid to select· a red- with a brownish versity College in Roma, Basutaand a plain color. For a room cast, with no hint of pUrple) you land, as "very astute, very dipeurnished in maple or pine, a - plaid with a gre~n background, eombined with Fellows and Ileds, w 0 r k s out nicely. Rere the green dominates, next iii furniture in a golden tone aad on the floor one could use an inconfPicuous neuval rug. .Now we could l'eVerse this color scheme ill another room, using plain color on the walls and plaid for drapes and slipcovers, the plaid still dominating. To carry t hill ~hemc into another room, a sun po;..ch, for instance, you mig?t have a plaid rug and a plam eolor for the upholstery on bamboo chairs. 'In these. rooms we have combined the 'greens and golden coland have used the eye-catchingred sparingly in cushions and accessories. White is popular now and using it stresses textures and acIOCnts. Here's where one can Bplurge on a beautifully textured fabric for chairs and sofa. Over the sofa is usually wanted 1& large picture, but be very selective about the picture and frame. On a white wall a picture .with a lot of red shows off beautifully, flanked on each side by candelabra, fitted with tall black candles. When you use a white backfIrOund, plan on accent.colol'll of red emerald green or delft l>lue, tor' instance. The accent fabric might be flowered or plaid but • must· be emphatic. Today, the idea is to build _ly one basic scheme, to give ,"our home a unified look. The color in one room can be part· of the picture in the room adjoining, evetl if seen on1F Ulrough a doorwllf'. RavIng selected key colors, pou might use twO of four colGI"Q, sparingly, ill the _ living 100m, but let those two co!.01'8 become dominant colors in. other rooms. Suppose yo¥ selected mustard, amber-gold, black and a russet-brown. If yO'l like these key colors, use them with different emphasis from -.om to room. A red room seems a bit startling, but I have seen red used .oWl such discrimination that a
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Junior D of I
ZUnior members of New Bedford Daughters of Isabella ww. attend weekly sewing classes at the organization's clubhouse, 11 Robeson Street. They are schedoled for Thursday evenings from t to 8. t· j i i i. t c~· F:~:: ~',;. i;r1 (~i. r~ t. [i,'r r ~
moil caus~d by the South African government's apartheid pol-
icy.
Sucordium Club To Hold Tea The, Sucordium ClUb, mothers" auxiliary of Sacred Hearts Academy, Fall River, will hold a membership tea and reception from 3 to 5 this Sund"ay afternoon in the convent auditoriWllo Prospect Street. .Mrs. Elmer R. Stafford, president, will welcome present and prospective ·members and outline the organization's program for the coming year. Faculty members of both the elementary and high school departments of the academy will be present. Mrs. Stafford notes that membership in the club is open to mothers of students in all grade-. from pre-primary up.
.. Little Opportunity Many of the students who come from the Union, Miss Buckley said, find little opportunity to use their' education even though they are equippe<t with degrees. Other students come from Uganda, Rhodesia, Swaziland will find· that· the wood tones lomatic, and without any intel- and other nations in Africa. and a biege rug can give you. a lectual handicap." . Miss Buckley said that it is a warm, closely-blended look. . The Grail Movement, which great sacrifice for' parents to Select a fabric with a small has its· headquarters . in this send the students to college. Alpattern for the upholstery and Ohio community, prepares young though the tuition is only about have a plain beige rug. Of women in America for the or- $210 a year, it is still more than course this closely blended pat- ganized lay apostolate of the most Africans make in a year tern (as suggested for uphols- Church throughout the mission of work at Johannesburg. tery) might go on the floor in- countries of the world. The school year begins In' stead of the furniture. February; There is a four week Fall River Girl Enters Dean of Women It's easiest to get a c1oselyvacation in July, and August, and In the past six years, Miss lectures continue until Novem- Cloistered Community blended look if you start by choo!ling patterned material BuckleY, who attended Hunter ber.. The month of December J. Miss Eileen A. McC'Jrmaclr, first, Bnd then find the wall College in New York and the given to examinations. daughter of Mr. and' Mrs. John color to harmonize. You'd be South African University at A. McCormack, :0 Melville La,. ApOstles Witwatersrand, taught politics surprised how well such a color 'Street, Fall River, has entered Teachers at Pius XII College and served as dean of women at scheme fits into a mod~rn ranch the postulancy ...f the Dominican include Oblate Fathers and lay the'Basutoland college. Founded house where there's a liberal use Nuns of tine Second Order of of wood, or in a room' with a in 1945 by the Oblates of Mary men and women. There are two Perpetual Adoration In Nortll Immaculate, it offers liberal married couples from South Guilford, Conn. beamed ceiling. . The open pllW of today's arts and teaching degrees for Africa, two from Holland, and The community lives a strictly two from the United States, African men and women. homes demands a color scheme cloistered life of prayer, penance that flows from room to room. Because the college is in the Miss Buckley said. All of them and sacrifice. Members support Suppose you have a pine-pan- British protectorate of Basuto- are lay'· apostles, working for themselves by' the art of illumineled room. adjoining a room land instead of the· Union of small salaries to raise the level ation and the embroidery of where you are introducing a col- South Africa, it has been rela- of education in Africa. vestments. The "')rth Guilford The school is supported main. or scheme. Here you could have " tively undisturbed by the tur11' from Canada through the Ob- house is one f 11 throughout carpet .and ceiling colors carry 'late Fathers, and also through the United States. through from the adjoining Dominican Nuns Plan Miss McCormack was a student the Society for the Propagation room, since your walls are' panof t!te Faith in 'Rome, she added. at" Mt. St. Mary'o Academy, Fall eled. Draperies could repeat the Concert on Od. 6 River. . Teachers Needed' key colors. Cecile Clement Grobe will be . Whether you have lots of featured 'performer t a concert The greatest need, according money, or merely the proverbial to be presented at 8 Thu':sday to Miss Buckley, is for "hunshoestring, .to spend in furnish.,. night, Oct. 6 by the Dom:.lican dreds of teachers" who will go Bui~ding ing your home, it doesn't matter, Sisters of St. Catherine at to Africa. . you'll face the same problem- . Dominican Academy Hail, 3-'1 "Africa will welcome them if building. a color scheme. Park Street, F"ll River. they really want to help," she :said. What is necessary, she With proceeds to be'1efit the Expect· 2,000 Delegates novitiate building fund, th'! 35- added, is that they "are equipped piece DQminican Academy or- to help and not arrogant." At Sodality Congress Africans are "eager to take chestra, under direction of C. EdNEW YORK (NC) - Some w41 Gardner, will ...£fer a varied' their place in the world com2,000 delegates are expected to prog:"am 0:: classicallllnd contemmunity," Miss' Buckley stated, attend the second American porary works. "and Americans have much to . 7 JEANETTE STilEEJ Sodality Congress Of the Lay offer them in achieving this Mrs. 'Grobe,. a Fall. River FAIRHAVEN WY 4-7321 Apostolate here today. native, will offer- three works goal, provided we ·give· them . Father Francis K. Drolet, 8.J., by Chopin and. a Mozart con- what we hav&-wtth love." eastern regional' Sodality pro- certo, among other selections. moter; said the congress is part She is on the staff of the Carof a national effort to carry out negie School. of Music and DOW the recommendations of last llves in New Jersey. year's World Sodality Congress at Seton Hall University, South Villa Fatima Orange, N. J. LOAN ASSOCIATION OF ATTLEBORO The neyvly completed aovlTheme of the congress II tiate of the Sisters of <:'!t. Dorothy "Sodality in a Decade of Deci- at Villa Fatima, Taunton, will be sion." A symposium of "The open to the public and officially Church Faces the World of the dn all Savings Accounts dedicated at 3 Sunday afternoon, Sixties: The Main Issues and Oct. 2. Auxiliary Bishop (" }rrard What We Can Do About Them" will preside at the ceremony. will be held Saturday, Sept. 3. Mrs. Ann S. Perry of Villa 1 Extra Oft Systematic Bonus Savings Fatima Helpers w In cha1'ge 0( Past Regent to Receive arrangements.
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National Circle Award Mrs. Carolyn B. Manning, past national Regent of the Daughters. Electrical of Isabella, will be honored wi.th Contraeton presentation of Ill' special award from the organizllltion's National Circle at a tea to be held at D of I Clubhouse, 11 RobeSOlll . Street, New BedfOll'u, from 3 to i this Sunday afternoon. Also to be honored is Rev. lohn J. Hayes, newly appointed chaplain of Hyacinth Circle 71. 944 County St.' Mrs. Agnes Botelho and MiS3 New Bedford Martha A. Douglas will be 00chairmen of the event. ., l" r', i·~. ii"" ;:,"i)'i:"i i:-1 i;~: r.L" 1: f:"r--t. 1 1\., ,!b,~.~,,"?'j,-;.'~',~.,~,_~,,~,•.~7'--'''~'~'''''·'~'~~.,•."!",,~... ",_~c~.,"'!'.·""""
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs.,Sept.22,1960
ROSEMARIE MOTTA New Bedford
JANET M: MULLOCH East Taunton
~!\RGARET ~.
NESTER Fall River'
ROSEMARY E. NORTON New Bedford.
BARBARA M. PECKHAM Fall River
ABIGAIL C. POWERS Newport
SUNDAY GRADUATION 'WIL,L CLIMAX SUCCESSFUL COMPLETION OF MOST PRIZED PROFESSIONS
Wide U·se of ·Compro·m.ise in G'o·vernmen·t Esse ntial By Rev. Andrew. M. Greeley
MANILA (NC)-More th~n 200,000 pounds of foodstuffs and 5,200 pounds of clothing have been iSSi.ied by .the
ing a church in an, underprivi- Body of Christ, where every leged area of the Philippines. member commiserates with the It all began when Mike. Madsuffering of the other members.·· den of Irvington spotted an ad in a Catholic newspaper in Dollar-a-Month Club 4merican Bishops' Relief Agen- which Father Leonidas Oandasan . . . ' . I ' ' cy to victims of recent floods in' . One who respondeu to a Mike 'Oile hears p~riodical1y.the cOqlplaint that· both the the ·Philippines. of St. Jude's parish, Pagudpud, Madden ad was Kathleen Con-, ' ~an.'didates for president are po,litician's.. I.t is som.eh.ow.',tak.eri .'. The bulk o~ . ' Ilocos Norte, P. I., requested. roy, a Iso 0 f l ' t on, w h ' these. supplies books and magazines. rvmg 0 smce to be' unfortunate that we do ~othave a,chan~e ~ho~e from Catholic Relief Services-· - has formed a ."dollar-a-montllbetween .an .amatel,JJ:' ,and· a professional,. or evenl. better, NCWC we'nt to flood victims in Whe,n Mike.. Madd;,I fjlled the club" in the office ·where she' , ' .. Luzon, the largest island in' the' request, a corr~spon enc~ sI>~ang, . -Works. Her group is 'now beiil&i; . betwe~n ~wo ~~~teursas.·we: honest, R~ther' it 'is 'a brav~ m'a~" ,Philippine archipelago.' ,.' up between ,him and the pru;st., 'given a daily remembrance ill: ·select 'our chIef . executIv~. who" "lias enoug'h' courage 'and "'.' T'h'" fl'" d ' .. ·d·· d th .' '." Soon ,l\{J;'. :M:;tdden 'was sen,dmg, the' Masses 'and' prayers at' ,. . ' . '. ." ': . •~. . , . . . '. . e 00 s,.c~mSI ere e re- . d la 'ng ads in ., ' . ,Impl~Cit in such a ~ompla~n~. e.no\l~h;trust in his pr1J.d,e~ce. to.·. .gion's worst, resulted from' al-' ,~oney '~n . even p CI .. · ..... Jude'·s.· . .' • h t' th t l't' ~ t " .. t 'h f d d " . '. the ,Advocate, newspaper~Qt the. W,'th:,' h'. . . t '. 'F' t'h .. . ", _: t,~ no IOn a ·pollc~vel1u~~.m.o,suc.a'~onu~,;.~~ ::.,.most,two,weeks ..oCst~adY rain, Ne'wark archdiocese andPater-·,;···l. SUC. ~8Sls.~J.1Ce, a . - : ' ~ a ..<)orrupt 'pro~e~s~o~, and tha~' 'd,ange.ro~·fl:e~d;' ..,' " :. >b!o.ul:'.~t 9n. by' a set:ielj: of ty':'.. '. -'. d':' .'. . Oandasa~ has wr,ltten that· be ' , • j)l:ofession,lli. polit4;ians ate' much : " ; Pn..Id~np~ :IS ~h«;: art ~ ~h,e. P.Qs-, : ., p)l,oolls.. a~q th~ sOI,.Ithwest· mon- .. son .. I_o~e,se.:.,... . . . . . . ,:. hasbeeit ,encouraged to go ahead: '. more' lik~ly. to . . ,Sible, !t.'~orks c.~mpt:~~I~Si nC?:L . SC?on, . ~ G~~t.~, ,r~ngmg·frolll$2.to ,$2~5, ' . with plans. for a school. ·Beside.·· ' be . di~honest~~tw~en.;go~t :n.d~v.!l"dbut ~-: , Ragi~g ·.fl~od waters surged_' :~;;i~:~~~e~t~~o:;~t~~~~l~~= funds, he h~s asked for "bOOk~: tha~ ~·ama~e'ut t~e~~co~t IC"m·g· ":l,g~~, S,. '. e.; :. through ·broken dikes and se'y tow';';s'·· ""lie'y' led'Fat'tier Oan- dictionaries, encyclopedias, ma~' . , "A . ft ween grea er" an d essert goods . h d' ".'" h····'·' .' . ' . , , ' . - .. ' ~'" . .. . .' 'charts,' microscopes, telescope. -: one~. n '.~ '.' 'b t ' . d'--' . . . l' . , " . .d' .w.as. e . awa.y . ,!>u~. s,_ t.ore, u.p ,.dasan to w.-i'ite to his' Irvington,. . ' , . heat;d, 'f'\mencan .. t6' :ween m I;VI~l!b 't g~pd ,a?i . ,portIOns of several hIghways, inbenefaCtor that in readin-g the.and other science ,equipment.·' . dJct~~ s u nl S, .til ~tcomm::n ~oo ~wee; eV.I ~., , uhdat~d,ilO' towns' '~rid' : caused : 'letters "your'vision gets blurred' ::y a::rlo;~l~e~i-~~l~~e~:~~ :. .up ~hIS theory "~l ...,mhu. '" . e ~te~be·roYt'~I··· '~tn'd: .heavy damage. to crops in an· ar'Id yo'ur :heart ISwells 'frOM the ---: p' e' r f e c t _ eVI S . ~ ICf". mus _ , . ~.o era e • areacov:ering five: provinces, . , .,' . .. will!lo very well for us." ly, ':T?e .tro~- ( for.l!-.tIJ?~ .I~st rrlOr~·:1)a~~ t~a.~.· About 200: square miles of'rice- C,'a r.d.ir,aI to. Presid,e ble WIth poh.good ,be:do',le by, .thelr Imme(h- ,hind were heavily' dama'ged by . ...' . ' .a~e eradIcatIon, , . . the fioods, resulting in the 10.8s ,At Fatima Ceremony A DeliciC),us' ·tics is tha.t you h!l~e, .to ,comd.Thbei' ,mofrfal t,prll1cI Ple .?f the .. of apout 150,000 .tonS of rice" F} :IMA('NC)-GiacomoCar-' · promIse" oue . e. ':'ec",','accor t· " . ' . . . Archbishop . . .of . Treat' . .:.l.. : ". . , h' h' . h" d mg \" •to . rea d y f or th e h arves. .. "dinal.. Le:caro '.' . ,·.l!'hIS IS, a. strang~ and "novel .' w IC, '0',le J';ldgest;~ mot:!lhty :' .. '.' . ,', , " " . ' .' . . \ '.' th . t. t' d." . . of'an actIon. whI'ch has' both good Total losses were not, ImmeRAlogna, WIll preSIde at cereDO on .In , . .. -- .d'Ia t.~.1y.assesse "', d ;, but It . ,I~;·known . . ' . .- -: h'ere' m~rk'lI1g th~, . 43r~ .. t'l ern ' t lra ItIon. . and ,'.... evil, effec';'" ·must'. be us·ed'.·. mor: . ewes as un I recen y,con-, . ' . . ...,. '" tl." t't"" . '11' i 'I' . , f h'" ", ,,' w c h h h ·III'd:ered po l't" by. any politician ..a· uey WI ' run. nto mI hons ann~versary. 0 t e last app~ar- .. 1 ICS an. h'onora bl'e. Constantly ' , . Nor .. , _eo dollar ," . .~ th Bl d V' • .'.... ealiiJ:lg and th,e ability to comc~n he be. c.ertain that the de.~i~:.:"" 'II; __ e es?e Jrgm . ..., .. ". . t ue,. I n d ee, d tal e nt . Slons made after careful ·deII·_.. ) . Series of -or - k.... ,' three prOnl.lse a 'VIr ~. . shepherd- chI.ldren. . . etJ.r.mpromising .conflicting .Wha t· h a db' \-:as• a~qounced BIShop. "u . . 'de-. benition:are··always . . . . .the . best', .lor . een,' a "h s or.t· t'Ime, ..J Thl!l .0 V' . byfL" Jria~ds. ,is : per~a.ps the..most im....·: tae .will. r.ever k~~wwhat: wO\lld :. ,~.for,e a: fertile area,- became oao ~ e~eIra.-, .enar.!ClO.f? ,~JrIa, m PQrtant of political skills. If a ~ave.h~ppened ,If he'.'had: ma~e, 'Series ot' lakes wiUi nothing "M ~hose, dlO~se th~. !amed · '. i ' . . . ' . th'" · t . d · , '. " ; ... : ",' ... ' anan'shrme lJes. _, .pol.hclan IS tobecpme. a samt.. e OPP9S~ e , eCISIQn,. l . " .vlslble ·above· water' except· trees''', ... ,' ';.'. . ' . ,:' . through. his-work·he'wm'.be.., '.' ". ",~ubtl~Art·.. ·.. ·, ;.. :) aild the· housetops"of isolate'd': .C~~mal L~rc~r.ov:"..- to h~v~ · come-a saint :bY. his lacility at . ". It.. lB. n:otmr:.argumenL,tha,t villages~·. .., ... '.. . ·pr--:;lded~tlast.MaY'sc~~emoni~s ~ran~!ng. 'c~~promises/ ...." . ' . ,the~e". are .no.. 'mor~l,'pr;~~Cipl~';; . 'Pea' I~' m:' ~ed",; ,h' . ' '. '.commem.o.r~,ti~H~ t~~. annivers~ry p ',_ .~ ', ' ., c'omp. Iex ' . V;'" ' ..' . whIch .'., evacua p~ .t~e'doob .In, .··tO~ses. Inge.. ". ' ..hay-e. ," a 'rele\iance~in '. ,: -, ....·po.Ii;..' ',',' ''''''were .' y ....rescue, eams'"of·. the fIrst a . parIhon, . . , . but· . ..Ill.;;' , ., , ." bcs. In"ever.y pohtIcal decISion '..... l<' t'.. h'b' . '. 'f't n~ss,prevented hIm from.commg.· .. · ,~uch, 'wor,ds sound ~hockin, ~ ,.there .is'. a ,better (or~~st)'way :u~mg ,~oas, amp 1. }O~s cra " , .. ' '. .' .;,.:.. '. ", .: the '~ir:tside-dopest~r;'~,'the h~ad- ,of .applying.one's principles to . ,a.~4;, h~hcopte.rs~ P,$, Al~ .FQrc«;,,: ;Sisterhoods' to Meet' '.' li~~r~a.df~g. AmeJ;'~dm' ·who· ' iti'e solut19n of a problem." . ,.I;I~l~co~ters from p~rkA~rB~se :'. WHEATON (NC)-The'Fra" \hinks all. political . i" olems "~re . "th.ls· , bet~~ . ' . 'way.. .;·.ill,'; '." ~. . ., aided·t·" mthe. , rescue rehef,.' . ciscan' " n- . ,. . " ... ~,.o , But " , ' and '.. teaching sisterhoods wiU' the result. ~nfhct between ,~ecessiu;~ly ..obv.ious. <The. 'exer- ' . f?P~~~ 1O.~. hold their :ninth national' meet- g09~,and. eVil al.}d can.-~ ~ ·s~t,., ·.ciSe.of-t~e·."ir.tui of prudence in 2,' 'B~ca,u~'~h'ef"o~d ~~ters ,n~~ .ingat 'Our'--Lady of ,Angels' Made: Chips h c ~led' ~erely, ~r. tpe :·~Pl?h~~;tJ~,. t~•..taq~l~' '·'World. -.0('. h~mail.,. m.apy' ,areas ~If~I.C~L" to rea.- . ,. lpott,Jerhouse ,here,·,Nov. 25 and' . AsIc for TheM Today;' . ~ fl~~a~ prmclplest~ ·p~htIcs.:, . . gQ.v.erriment .is b9 un d tol·be, 9~S7~G~C d.l~trIbt.Itedsome 0.1 : 26.··. _~. ,.. , : . . Such conflicts do exiSt . 'but tricky and, subtle' Its Sl,lpph~ thr_o~g!l' government . : , . ."r; tb,e ivast majority .~fpoiitical There ~r~ times," ~. ~ur~,' .." 'al)'d civic ~ a~encies ~hic~ h.as,. .~~~~~w~~~~~~w~~",~~"'",,~M~~~_",,"" !coi1;ie lrom the clash . when compr<;lmise ·becomes of enter,; '. '.·.. ':,'S" y' between . opposing'goods. and possible.., Thomas . More '1 could' }.n~,~u<;ta> areas:.. A~..th~" f~o~ ,,,, ·must be' r.eSolved,bY: Lhe.·use of: .co~prQ~ise-·~it~ H~~IrY'~ ,VJIL.: ,waters.·.r~.<;~?~d" .~~ ~.IS?O,PS' AS A" 'MO"'LY' CROSS FATHER the :virtue of prudence-'the com. 'longe~, than most,men but there' 'A.geR<;Y"~9Jlbnued .to. dI~tnb.ute 'plex' virtuewliich' e·n~1.?lesrus 'to " 'Vas It ,point. beyond.::whichhe : •. ~9od, ;,a.~clothin~., ,~h,~ough,. its, priest-Teache.. . '., ., 'Home Missioner· do itheriglit thing' at the. right eould' not,go.:There. 'are ~evil8 .' l,Isua~:,_c~,allllel!l,.~h~~IU:tsh.ppelJi ".=oreign: ~1"siO~:, ," ... Parish P~iest time. ....,." . ' ..Q ' t?~t· al:c sO bad thabi<>thintdus::' ~n4.parls~ 0r.gam,zat.I?~S, For InforlftOtIon ~uf th4t · ,In a .recent ar.ticle inTheN~w ~~lIes·their,temp()~ary toleration. . . R~portl? sQow ,that. ~ore. tban ~epublic, ~teph~ri. Bailey, a :>I.}: ..... Therei~ c9rrup,tion and. dis:" 78,0()() families" C9.r,asisting .of.a~- . : HoIY"Cross Fathen or 'Utical scientist turned' mayor of. l,ton~!ltY.ap'enti in politicaUile' m.ost. h~lf 's'n,lillion peol>le,·.. sUf- '. . . Brothen,wrih! Middletown" Collnecticut,-' said: ....which the honest· politician must .. ~red' from flooqs. . ' ' ..·. .O.·.LY CROSS', F·A: . rHE~S' .' '''Many years ago, one: depart- fight. "with. all his strength, But .ment store· was farsighted his problems are .not helped. by" ~rth EastOft, Massachu..... ~nough, to .'~v.e bo.ught: some' .simplists iRthe electorate who: land for off street· parking: This' proclaim ·Ulat.allOOmpromise gave the store 'a competitive ad-' immoral., ..' ,,,,' , ,'.... .' . vantage. The city in a.new.muni.;.· , 'Pro's', .Best, Equipped," eipal parking program; neell.ed Pqlitics,is.indeed a dirty busi.. , · ap!>rtion. of the privat~ parking .. p.ess, not· i~' the sense of being' . .' ,.' lot ,assembled,· by the stllre- .', .' Immoral,. but.· ift the sense '·of, .. 'W:hrn .es~bl~s~ed, the :ml,mici- h.avin,g ~·-dealw.ith.t!'l.e ~pas,.; pa.~,lot mIght. destroy the sto"e;s· sIons:,aqd·frai1ti'e~of human.nat~:·, " ... '.' . '" eOTI).petitive adyanttlge:.: Ethical 'ure. The ,politician' muSt involve. 'q~estion: at what point"does the'· himself :with·:the aberrations of : · public interest.d~mandthat pri-' J.I1an at ·his· worst and,.seldom·; ThomasF. MonaghctA~:· . ". :. vate farsightediui~,.~ perillll-' gets' an ·opportunity· to see man '~~QuEts· :.~ WEDDINGS , . pAte liES. ize~?" ",.. at ,his.best. . . Trealurer I. Thi~ and 'the ·other :decisions . So I rejoice that next Novem- . . ':"':,eCOMMUNtON BREA~FA.STS Mr, Bailey lists in his· fascinat-' ber I will be able to choose be·142 SECOND srREET .i~g report a!e typical of the hyee ll· two shre'wd p.oliticians,: '11343 PfL~SANT ST. FAll RIVER dIlemmas WhICh face politicians Political amateurs have their·o ' . . OSborne 5..7856 every day. .. place and their function,' but' OSborne 3-7780 . To .attempt ·,to resolve such : normally , the' "pro's'" are.' the 'FALL .RIVER difficulties to the best of .one's. best' equipped .to govern' our ab~lities is· not ::orrupt or d;stempest\,lous republic.- . " , · · ·
Msgr. George G.Higgins .will be in Europe for the next several weeks. During that time Father Greeley will be his guest columnist. Father Greeley is the author of the book The Church and the Suburbs (Sheed and Ward, 1959). A second: book on the probiems of American young people is scheduled for publication. in early 1961.: , .
Bishops' Agency Ad· in - Catholic Newspaper· Leads Aids Philippine To Building Church in Philippines NEWARK (NC)-r::atholics in awareness that it's really a great. Flood . V.. -ct-m ,I S northern New Jersey are build- thing to belong to the Mysticai
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs.,Sept.22, 1960 "
"'I
, .", ''-:MARY Lou RYAN Fall River
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CLAUDETTE C. SALOIS Fall River
SANDRA J. SOUZA Taunton
DORIS J. TETREAULT New Bedford
L~o" . ,':,' RUTH A: ZYGIEL Fall River
JANE E. ZAWROTNY Fall River
MANY SECTIONS OF DIOCESE ARE REPRESENTED AMONG GRADUA'rES AT ST. ANNE'S NURSiNG SCHOOL'
Many Proble~s Attend Office Of Deacon
Rome Priest Gets Idea From 'Goi,ng My Way" Asks, Taxatjon 'A d U h ClU bS to F·'/h Chu~ches n ses Y out,' 19 , t Re d's ' ~Of NEW QRLEANS (NC) _
A group opposed to racial intef.(ration of schools has asked Louisiana Gov. Jimmil' Davis to place all church prpperty on the
ROME (NC) _ The proposal to, revive the office of "permanent 'deacons" needs great study, according to an
ROME (NC)-A very thin wall and a very big heart separate two boys' clubs here. One belongs to the communists, the other to a white-haired priest with an infectious grin and a will to win. Father'Guido Galli needs both the grin and~the willpower to keep the wall stand'ing which separates the first Of his four teenagers' clubs in Rome from his article in Civilta Cattolica, Rome, neighbors. In fact the wall were vel'y' strong in Bologna and ' The 'glee club and choir were magazine published by the Jes-' is a "symbol. "Communist many people didn't like, priests. the first object of the club. uits. prop~~anda,". he s-aid, "is Then along comes this picture. Today the club has a, 160-voice Father Gius'eppe Rambaldi, specIfIcally aImed today at' Everyone was impressed with choir of boys and girls who have
tax rolls. The White Educational Assa-
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gration of public sch'Jols in Lou_ . S.J., notes in the periodical Ulat', ' the humanness in the priest poi:"..; perfor'med in Rome and else. ' , the I'dea 0'f .o'rdal·o"I'ng de'acons' teenagers. To attract youth to a trayed by "Bing. The movie house where. F ather Galli later added isiana's embroiled sch(lol situawho would not gi.> on to the Christian outlook, to help ~hem was jammed.and I could see that a sports p,rogram, English les- lion. priesthoOd is O~jj1g chainpioned meet the tremendous presliures bringing people to God through" sons, orchestra and jazZ bands, The association's directors sent ; especially in missionary areas. '- brought to bear by .communists' singing was a great idea." " radio 'and ,TV repair courses and a letter to'- Gov'. Davis explaining· Such deacons would assiSt it 1s necessary," t~' bu~ld y,~uth -, Bing Crosby ,~at the heart of all-religious the 'stand against ,the church,~: pr~ests in the apostolate, l~ading:" centers ,.and. .re~reational ~nd' :Father GallL did 'hot. get hhi' instt:uction and' spiritual qilid": It said: ) worship when 'no' priest is 'avaH"' cultu~aJ ;spo~s ,whe~e th'ey ar~. .at chance to work- on' the idea until ance. "This request is'made in light J' able to offer Mass, distributin,.' home and, m, whlct.l!heyfmd ,he came to Rome in 1949 to take Many Adivitles of the fact that-the churches of : Communion, and teaching." ~heoutle~for th~ir talents and ,graduate, degrees in theology , this State, and ,p~rticularly i.; , Assist Priests' " Interests., . " and canon law. His 'first move "It's the teenager who IS ImOrleans parish (county), have: Some missionari~s h!lve 'said' '.' ~ ;Four C,ente~, ' 'was to get, to know some of the p~rtant in 'terms of the future,", been ta.ki.ng 'an 'active par~ ~~ t~i!l pr~posa~ wqulq give g~eater- -' ~ather G~lU,..workl~g, ah~lOsttltousallds,ofboys who just hung' .the priest said, "Next door we ~nd~rm1l11~~thelaws a~d tradl-., assistance to riests in mission, entIrely ,w~th, donah?ns" ;has aroun,d public parks and'squares' have a communist club for poys.: hons o~ ,thiS state and, In eff~ , , "th' ",opened ,..fQur, ceilte,rs In, Rome: d'oing, nothing. They know how important the' breachmg the wall of separatloa ; are aa S n'd ' 0 PI'd' h i ' e pt'".ope .. WI" ' ....., h"IP: , th h t w uf Wh'IC h now h ave a m~m.,.,rs '''1 went down to,the Circus' you th'IS. W e can It b UI'ld sc,h 00 JS,' of' C' hll~, '.I and . S ta'te, The ac t·lOB; e, s or age 0 , voca lOllS. . ,of about· 550 and a staff of 15' Maximus,'" the priest explained, . because there isn't time.. We : of the: churches has been most: ]y It.has be~n repo~d fre~~e~~-:- workers,' Among his volunteer" "with some candy and a soccer have to . reach these teenagers obnoxiol'" in rel~~"" to the se&-.se S I' vaflOUS th t °trh 0 tt e workers are' Natalif: Croc~ of: ball. I, got them playing soccer- now and in terms they under;., regation problem;" C a thin OIC press a e rna er 'S' F' '. 't t u·s st d ' ." 'Il b d:' d d" th ., an ranClSCO, secre ary 0 " , and in a short time I suggested, an. r " -...-----~---.... WI. e. ~scus~ ':1l'Ing e Ambassador James D. Zeller- that they might like to sing in· Christian Aims Second Vatican' Counc:ll, bach , an'd several Americim _ a glee' club with,me." "It isn't, enough for the govern, No IllusionS,. priests studying 'in Roine. ,Basement Club ment to sponsor housing, When W. time Father Ra,rllbaldi, said, that Ambassador ZeUerbachhas, , Ti)e si,;ggestion,he, says, wall, churches, schools and hospitals. those who favor'. the proposal visited the first Of the four. taken 'JlP with delight but it left What we need are youth cen,,~. retina ••• Buy hav.e no illusion about "the ser- 'centers, which is lo~ated near the problem of where to sin,. tel's attached to Ute new develjous spiritual; pastoral and, ev~n' the ';Church' or' St. Peter" in , Through som~ friends he \V~s ' opments where young boys and ' economic' problems conn~cted- Chains." allowed to use some basem.,mt girls are together and where wi~ this'/ltep," , ,Mother HelpS' , roo~s, in: a clubhouse belongi'lg' they can grow up close to He said these:' people' are 'Father 'Galli's closest collab-. to ' R <> me's. ,street;.sweepers ' Chri~ian principles, and 'with a~~re of the. ,neces8i~y ,"to' p-ro- . ~rator,- however" is i)is 87-year;.,' ~nion. . ' real ,knowledge of mOI'ality." • '-"The first t.me in there it was Vide for t~e Jl1tell~ctllal and 'as-' old mother: eeUc formation ,·of--: th~ -futu~e, . "To ,.the boys and gir~s 'in·j"; impossible, to ,stay," he, recall~. deacons''''I'here is also needed mother, is 'their- mother. They" "It, sm~lied .bad and there was, " an as~;uran.ce, of a, "tenor" ;of' cothe to "talk 'with her 'in our mold,nOlight:and a ,nightmarish D~BROSSEOI,L spi~~tual and materia~ lHe ~hich house-"everYd~y;"thegi~ls par~ quality.about . theplace. I backed CO. would ena~le, the,!YJ,to . cOl1d~c;t ticularly... She is very. 'smiling out' of -the room but the boys themselves as p¢r~ns' truly ~lJld' 'alway1S verY.,patient," he pushed:, me back ,jn, and we consecrated to the Lord;" Said.·,' , . " staye.~," he reCalled. Pro,blems , , T h e Bologna.,,~rn priest cred-'! : . Dream Grows Among other problemscon-' its his idea for' the teenagers' "Father, Galli 'started with • nected with the proposal; :the clubs 'to the' inspira'tiori' he got bioken 'chair and a haH for a O'NEIL ,TIRE .' '. -.' , ,FISK" ,.'''. Jesuit wrote, is ,wl1ether to use' 'from seeing BirigCrosby, ~ . coat-hanger. "Despite t h.r e e 365 NORTH FRONT STREET the deaCons' services, "only on '''Gt>ing My Way,:;', , .. , " : " fl9(>ds wliichpradic:ally ruin"ed 276 tentral Fall Riy. , ", ... '. St'.; ' . ' NEW BEDFORD "I first saw, '~he p'icture "in "the'premises in 1952, 1955 and . ,fealit days' a'nd fOl1 a"few. houl's . during the week, lea;ving them 1946," he' said. "The communists 1958,.' tije" 'cl~b 'grew. With it ,, , OSborne 6-8279 WYman 2·5534 free, the rest of the tiJile to prac. ' grew' Fatl)et Galli's 'dream. tice . their profession,' or to use' C~lIe_ge:t~' Featu re.. 'H~' branched ,,' out, opening: them pel'manently and fully, all ' Commun.·sm Course three 'other clubs and taking in ' - - - - - - -....--;",..-..;.------~-----.... deacons, providing them natu- ' as m~rribers bOth boys and girls IIYOUR.: rally with a dignified lrem\1nera:-. C1NCINNATl, (NC) - 0 u,r arid 'cven children. The only cost . J tion." . , '!. Lad)' of Cincinnati College ,will to members: is' a ,charge of 100 SLADE~S Moreover, it must be decided . teach a course ',on communism lire (Hi c~nts) monthly to meet "whether' 'they' shouid beie~ tnisyear. . '" "', ':" government taxes; '. : SOMERSET, MASS.·- Next tG St~ & S~p quiredto practice ,celibacy or be ., ·'~he two-semester course will r. invites your,' pOi'ticipation In the • ,• • . allowed to marry.", The' second" be given by Irwin S. Rhodes, , solution has "the more :general Cincinnati attorney and former ,IT'S -ALL IUGMT TO growth, of a, new Bank,ing Institution 'support," Father' "ttam~)~idi not-' . research director of the Amer~ ".'. . .. . • . 'COMMStCIAL and SAVINGS SERVicE .. ed "and gives rise to thought of iean':- :vish 'League" Against' 5HOP'AS\QUN~FOA. "'." MORTGAGES _ AUTO and APPLIANCE LOANS the relative consequences." Communism. Ba'sic text in" the SOME TH"NGS, Bln' • ' , . New Temptation: ' ': cO\1rse will be' FBI "direCtor "J. Accounts Insured Up To $10,000' Among these is the possibility ,Edgar HOQver',s "Masters of ', Memb~ Federal Deposit Insurance Co. that "with the freedom to'marry Deceit!' ,I Harold J.,Regan, Presidenl and practice ·a profession, might Out Lady of Cincinnati is a ,202-206 Roek Street ,not the diaconate ultimately be- ,women's college conducted by . , ·, S·IS t el'S . of Mercy~ ", - Fall ·RIVet' come.a new temptation f or those the Re1Iglous peopl¢ called to the prie~hood ' , 'fS'~"'~ACE-I'O .. ~SHEL~ Heati~g • • • ? "Might it not COntribute ,~T, A,PAI;SCRIPTIOH' toward a decrease in their numR. A.WllCOX CO.' . Famous Reading H~~D .cO~l ~~n C~ FILLED! ber, leading them to stop at the , N,EW ENGLAND CQKE, ~ ~ O~~ OFFICE RJ"NITURE preceding st~p, which i~ easier ,Ia 8todI . . I.~""'~ !hit"., DADSON OIL BURNERS, ;::::::~ ~ and more humanly, 'attractive,.' • DESKS· • CHAIRS' which repl'esents also a conse'2~~Hour Oil Burner ServiCe ~ SHELL FIliNG CABINETS cration to God?" ~\Il Gl ~.. Charcoal Briquets ~'~~ • ARE FILES • SAfES Regional Meeting FOLDING TABLES Bag Coat - Charcoal ~"'''h' LITTLE ROCK (l'T'":)-ProbAND CHAIRS lems of concern to the Catholic press will be discussed at the anR.A. WILCOX CO. nual meeting of the south central Successors to DAVID DUFF & SON 22 BEDFORD Sf. regLn of the Catholic Press FAll RIVER 5.7838 Association hel'e next Thursday New Bedford 640 Pleasant Street Tel. WY 6-8271 and Frida~
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thu~s.:,Sept.22, 1960 ....,~,i·. .
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.'·8·,lt,ish··:-:-World··:'War'··Officer Writ:es Real Life Thriller' .
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By Most Rev.,Fulton J. Sheen, D.O.
By Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S. Kennedy . Lieutenant Colonel Sam I. Derry, author of The Rome ~scape Line (Norton, $3.95), 'is an Englishman and an Anglican. In 1943, as a major of artillery in the British army', in Africa,. he was taken prisoner, escaped,. was retaken by the Nazis and sent to a pris- would ., mean the quick iiberation oner of war camp in Italy; of Rome. But again there was While being 'moved by train' stalemate. to another camp, he leaped For many months, therefore,
Everyone' knows tbe .differen~ between an In~rmittent affection. and a lasting love. Our Lord criticized those who followed Him rather for the bread He gave them, than because of Himself. Expressed in psychological language, there are dif,ferences between a sentiment and a disposition. The Pharisee in Ihe front of the temple had a very conscious sentiment of religion and all that' it 'involved, "such as fasting and paying tithes. The publican In tlie back of the temple had a disPosition toward religion which was, less on the surface and by which he instinctively knew to beg God 'forgiveness' for his sins.
1!rom a moving coach, hid in and some of these during the Sentiments are consciously formed; dispositions are unconsOme woods, then made his way harshest winter Rome had sufsciously formed and are what we call "instinctive." He who goes a farmfered in memory, there was susto Mass reluctantly on Sunday has a conh 0 use. The pense, waiting, danger, and the Scious sense of duty; he who goes to Mass age d couple necessity of daring and ingennaturally. to-Iove and worship God, has a who owned the . ious provision for an ever indisposition or a second nature of religion. farm were ter- . . creasing riumber of escapers rified on first British, Am~rican, and many others. So i& is wi&h our attitude toward the Seeing him, but " Hazardous Tasks Missions. Those who think of It as a Mission then fed and Derry reviews in detail the Sunday duty are a long way from those sheltered him. . operations of 'his organization, wbo think of the Missions, whenever the, He discovered' . and it is a narrative replete with think of· tbe Holy Father and tbe Mission .0 his' astonishthrills. Billets in the city and . of Christ to ,preach the Gospel &0 aH ment that he N~W'AUXILIARY: Msgr. the c6untryside had tii be pronalions. was only. 15 Edward E. Swanstrom, exevided. Money had to be .promiles from , Do you know how we would like 'YIMa cutive director of the NCWC Rome. He was almost as"aston- cured and distributed. Food and clothing hjid to be secured. in . to feel about the Society for. the Propagation Catholic Relief Services" has ished to discover that he was by quantity in the black market' 'been named Auxil~ary to of the Faith? Like a.. man working in a, boiler DO means the only British Sol::'- . factory, 'who bardly notices the noise, ex-cept dier hiding out in the area. Put and conveyed to the concetlled 'FranCis Cardinal Spellman; when it stops. Prayer is to be like that. We are always to be III contact with other escapers ex-prisoners. The tasks were Archbishop of New York. subconsciously aware· of God, so that we know when He stops being (that is what he calls them; not, vast, intricate, hazardous. there. This is the·way the. Society for the Propagation of the Faith NG Photo. They had, of course,' to' be mercifully; "escapees"), he Is .to all the Directors, all who work for ~. The slightest stopping learned that he ,was the one managed in the utmost secrecy. of our dedication to it even 'heightens our sense of duty tow9rd it. officer, hence under obligation The Gestapo was incessantly on the prowl, abetted by the worst to take charge of the rest. . Can we not cultivate that dispositMn In your soul, througb the He knew that' providing food of the Fascist bullies. . following facie to remember: Informers 'had to be guarded and clothing for these men was ENNIS (NC)-A firm stand 1. 'Otere are 200 missionary societies in the chureb. ,oing to be well nigh impossible,. against. Infiltration of the oragainst c'ommunism and the pro2. No one. society aids. another financially• .tor 'the Italian peasants there- ganization by enemy agents had motion of religious vocations S. To equalize distribution &he Holy Father, as Vicar of Christ. abouts, while willing to. help, to be prevented. The Commu- will . be the twin aims of the mllst have his own Mission chest &0 aid all of Ulem equally. were extremely, poor.. Hence nist' underground's disregard for three-day· convention of theNa4. The money for &his aid he ga&hen, Ihrough his Society for Derry got the idea of making human life and fanatical contio.nal Alliance of Czech Cath. the Propagation of ·the Faith. . eontact with someone in' Vati- . centration on its· own narrow obolics to be held here in' Texas 5. Any, co~tribution of yourS 'goes ~ no one but him. ean City, which, although in the ject'ives had to be reckoned w:ith. beginning Sunday~ Deny yourself a tiny pleasure"every day, as a fifteenth cigarmidst of 'Nazi-held ·Rome, was And a corps of workers, some . Msgr. Mar.tin Krizka, supreme ette, 01" a firSt cocktail and send the sacrifiees at the end of tbe independent of Italy and neu- escapers in disguise, others Italians ready for heroism and cq.aplain .of the NACC and pastor' month to' your DioceSan .Direetor. This will develop in you • tral. beautiful disPOsition--G 'Propag~tiOli of Ihe Faith disposition. Meets Monsipor , cruel risks, had to carryon gal- of Blessed St. Agnes parish, ChiThi~ he managed to d~ through lantly. But nothing would have cago, said in announcing the con~ODLOVE YOU toB. MCB.'for $30 "I promiiled this if I could 'CIte village priest, received some been possible without' the as- vention that the delegates will . money. and then was asked to sistance of. priests and brothers alSo discuss means of strengthen- . rent a certain piece of property." . ; . to L.W;C. for $10 ''Please use this for the Missions and the poor." ... to. Mrs. E.· McC. for $5 come' to Vatican City to meet recr.uited by M:6nsignor O'Fla.- ing the organization and expand i~ activities in various fields. '"'This is for 'the' poor' of the wopld in thanksgiving for ,8 favor I bis benefactor. He complied with berty.. ·Bishop John L. Morkovsky of received through the intercession of St. Jude, St. Anthony and the the request, femul that in going. Fantastie ExploKe Infant Jesus." through. Rome he would be recSome of the organization's ex- Amarillo, Tex.,' will offer a egniz,ed as an enemy alien and ploits were fantastic. One, for Solemn Pontifical Mass at st. Our Blessed Mother loves all of her childrea the world over• .an escaped prisoner. example, was getting a British John's Church to open the three . But, at first hidden under a soldier suffering from :> '''urBt day convention. Bishop 'Thomas . YOg' can prove thaty~u share her Mother-love by praying tbe WORLDMISSION ROSARY f . the poor'oI the worlel. The load of cabbages and then boldly appendix, into Rome without an K. Gorman of Dallas-Fort Worth, sacrifice-offering 'of $Z that you send' aloug with your request escorted over city streets thick ambulance, into a. hospital' ~or Tex., will preach. for .&be .WORLDMISSION ROSARY will aiel materially those Gov. Price Daniels of Texas with Nazi uniforms, he made it an operation, opt of the hospital wbom yoUI' praJen aid sJ)iritually. will welcome the delegates' at safely to the German College, as soon as he came off the table close to St. Peter's. and into one billet after anothe; the opening session; His benefactor proved' to be . to. pr~v'ide 11im time for conva.The NAtC, found~d in 1917, is . Cut out this column, pin your sacrifice'to it and mail It to the' the genial and imperturbable' lescence. active iIi 450 parishes throughout' Most Rev. FUlton J. Sheen,' National Director' of the Society' for Monsignor Hugh O'Flahe.rty, an ,.. At)ength there came the 'lib- . thE,l United $tates. its illirpose is Irishman attached to the Holy era~ion of Rome. At that time to unite Czech Catholics for more . the I"ropagation of the Faith, 366 Fifth Avenue, New York 1, N. Y., Office. "He's been at the Vati- "the Roman' Organization had effective. religious; 'civic, char- or, your Diocesan Director, RT. REV. RAYMOND T. CONSIDINE, 368 Norih Main Street, Fall River, Mass. '. eansince 1922," Derry was told, on its books the names of 3,825 . iUtble and. educational activities. "and seems ,to know everybody escapers... Fewer than 200 Its headquarters is i'll·Chicago. in Rome. Everybody knows were billeted actually in Rome Monsignor O'Flaherty and, but of the thousands in th~ ,& .. -what's more important, they all 'count~y branch' most, by far;, P~«:!JIJ'iH,') ~@t~ Birthday ONE STOP adore him." , were 10 the rural areas imme- Ob$ell'v~~ce at Home Supervises Organization diately surrouriding the city' SHOPPING C~NTER TORONTO (NC)-Msgr. Jean .,.Plumbing - Heating At any rate, Derry was soon ,scattered in groups varying i~ Marie 'Castex, perhaps the oldest. Over 35 Yeqr13 permanently'· established i n size from three to ~ore than a active pastor in Canada, is look• Televlsioo • Furol&u" of Satisfied Service Rome, from which he supervised hundred." . irig ."'lrward to his 90th birthday • Ap.,llances • Grocery the British Organization for AsThis exciting book is a ~al next July 22. T:. '1 he will take 806 NO.,MAIN STREET' sisting Allied Escaped"Prisoners Hfe thriller, and it enables 'one a trip home, Mia- the famous 10041 Allen SI•• New Bedford Fa" River OS 5-7497 WYman. '-935t of War. He lived for quite some te meet some exceptionally . Lourdes shrine ih France. p time in Monsignor O'Flaherty's brave, enterprising, and unselfHe was !;lorn in 1871 in the own room in the German Col- ish people - not only the '. village. of Secour. When he Wall lege, but eventually had to go doughty. major and the resource- seven, 'his mothel". tOok him to· DAUGHTERS OF ST. PAUL into hiding 'in the quarters of ful monsignor, but other, mar- the new shrine at Lourdes, -just Invite ,0llft9 g1rt1 .(14-21) to' labor .. the British legation within Vati- velous· characters like the in- 20 years after' the' apparitions Chris"g '¥Mt vitl.,ard at CHI A. . . . 'of tho Nn City. trepid Furman and SimpsOn. there,and dedicated him to the' Editions: Pr.... Radio, Movi.. and t ... Originally it was hoped that the· magnanimous Maltese wid- Blessed Mother. viii"; Wltll ...... Illodoftt' _liS. ...... ftle organization's work would ow Mrs. Chevalier,. and' many "I~ Sisters. brill•. Christ'. .OoctriM When he was' 20, the l'.~oR Dot have to be maintained for more who, although merely' to an. regard.... of race. co" . ' crMd. signor caine to Car"'" He enPor iftformaliOll write .. to. long.. The -Allies were progress- glimpsed, played, their costly rolled at the novitiate of tiM REV. MOTHEA IUHRIOIt ing up the Italian peninsUla. part. ' .Montfort Fathers near Ottawa II If. PAUL'S Aft BOSTON 10. MA~. However, they became stymied and was ordained. to the priest-·· lit the Cassino line. hood on May 30, 1896. He has Hopes .were raised again by served in the' Kingston archdioChe landing at Anzio. Surely this 0 VIENNA (NC) -,Hungarians cese, the Victoria diocese and fa .~ ~. crowded their churches for Mass the -3l'ooklYn,' N. Y. diocese. He has worked in the Toronto arch·· f on the feast of King St. Stephen 0 despite' the communist regime's diocese since 1910. He was named, SAN JUAN (NC) - FourteeR celebration marking' "constitu-' pastor of the church in PenetanSalesian seminarians have ,ar- ,tion day," it was reported here. guishine 22. years. ago. and atiK ~ $upply' rived h~>e from Cuba in the . High Mass of the feast honor- conti,nues his duties. first part 9f an exodus from that ing. Hungary!s .first king :was 'COMPlET~', ' Bed-infiltrated country. sung in' St. Stephen's basilica iR RENTM. WORK· UNtFORMS Nine of the 'seminarians are Budapest by Bishop Endre HamSpaniards and five are from the vas of Csanad. ' Dominican Republic. They came Jozsef Cardinal Mindszenty, bere from the Salesians' major Primate. of Hungary; whose Also Reclaim Industrlat Glov.. seminary, at Arroyo. Naranjo, ill' Archdiocese' 'of Esztergon inHavana province. cludes Budapest, is reported to OIL BURNERS According to Father Juan Rill, have offered his Mass as usual Also' oomplete ' BoUer-BurDel' S.D.B., Salesian superior here, in his ,quarters in the U.S. legaOil' Furnace Units. EtJiclenl 16 philosophy students were ex- tion in Budapest. He has relow COR beating. Burner aad 'pected here from Cuba by mid- mained at the American legation fuel' oil ales .and service. . SUCcesNl' to September. Father Riu said that ever since he was forced to seek New Englcmd avera" & Supply Co. 15 Sal~sian novices have already haven there when Hungary'a 20 Howard Ave., New Bedford 480 &It. 'Pleasant Stree& left the Arroyo Naranjo semin- fight for freedom ht 1956 was PhGIle WY 1-078'1 Of' wy' 7-0'788 New Bedff'rd:: WY a-2m " ar.,yfor Mexico. . . Suppressed by' Soviet RlWSia. 'f.;I.'-!' .... ,f; r. Ii ITt t:fJ HH [ H I: f! i' !. rt: ([ r r. t [J [t:r. r;r. r lifJ.:[ IU 1'1: D ('Ii I; 1 Ii
to
Czech Catholics Plan Convention
GEnRGE M. MONTlE
jtungarians .Observe' Feast f St. Stepken
CORREIA
'SONS
TT·E·NTION
Salesian seminarians .Cuba Move Out
INDUSTRIAk~~~~sSERVI(E Wh,S"., We
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INDUSTRIAL LAUNDRY
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'.' f OZANAM SUNDAY: St. Vincent de Paul Society'members throughout the Diocese, together with families and spiritual directors, mark Ozanam Sunday honoring Frederick Ozanam, Society's founder, at a Holy Hour at St. Francis Xavier Church, Hyannis. Left, Rev. William D.Thomson, Diotesan Director of Vincentians, meets with Very Rev. William A. Donaghy, S.J., conductor of the Holy Ho~r (right). Center, a participating
Seek- Volunteers' To Aid Program In Latin America CINCINNATI Holy See's call volunteers" is extraordinary
(NC)-The for "papal "the most challenge"
Fall River Native Now in Tanganyika Notes Congo Situation with Espe.~ial Interest By Patricia McGowan ' , A native of St. Mathieu's parish, Fall River, who is .now a Brother in the Society of the \ Divine Savior is among those watching the present situation in the African Congo with especial interest. Stationed in Tanganyika, Brother Venard Blais writes, "The situation in the Congo has us a little worried in view of the' fact that Tanganyika is to get its freedom, I should. say the city where Brother Venard walked eight or nine hours to self-rule, next year. The is stationed. be present,said Brother VenBrother notes that the area , ,Among the missioner's activi- ard. ~Ighter Side has no land· ownership at ties is publication of a monthly
ever given to the Church in the U. S. on behalf of its Latin American neighbors, says Msgr. Edward A. Freking, national chairman of the Catholic' Students' Mission Crusade, who saw more than 4,000 delegates at the' present: ''The headmen and 19th national convention enthu- chiefs control certain areas and when a man wants to move to siastically endorse th:: new proa new area he contacts the headgram At CSMC headquarters here man there and is assigned a Msgr Freking said the delegates piece of land. Since the population is small ... there is plenty adopted·a resolution ,at the convention at the University of , of land for everybody. However, Notre Dame urging crusade units I believe soon after self-rule begins, 'laws will be passed rein 3,100 U. S. schools to seek volquiring everyone to file title of unteers for the program of masownership occupied by them. It sive religious and technical aid will be difficult at first to make for Latin America. The CSMC National Center the people realize the advantage of this to them as the population already has set in motion a longrange program to follow up the grows." Brother Venard was born Holy See's appeal, the MonLoriot Blais. After living iI). St. signor said. Matheieu's parish as a boy, he "It is especially noteworthy," he 'added, "that this is the first moved to St. Anne's, also in tinie Catholic colleges and uni- Fall River. The family later versities in the United States , moved to Providence but one have been asked to dig in and brother, Anqrew Blais, is still a tackle a mission project that will resident of Fall River. Brother Venard joined the Salchallenge the students intellectually, morally, and spiritually." vatorians after World War II and was assigned to Macao near The program of "papal volunteers for apostolic collaboration Hong Kong until 1954 when he came 'to the United States on in Latin America," announced June 30 by the Pontifical Com- home leave and was then sent mission for Latin America, ought to Tanganyika. to be in full operation "within a Golden Anniversary couple of years," Msgr. Freking The missioner is due for home predicted. leave now, but is waiting until By then, he said, he expects next Summer, so that he cap to see ,"separate teams of Cath- join his parents in celebration of olic young men, young women, their golden, wedding. anniyersand married couples going to ary. _ Latin America - qualified in In Tanganyika the Salvatortechniques, and provided for ians are in an area which is financially from home bases in expected to be named an indethe U. S." ' . b pendent Diocese this year. The ,
University of petroit Has New Presiden-t
DETROIT (NC)-Fath awrence V: Britt, S.J., dean for fOl'':' years of Detroit University's college ...f arts and sciences, has been named president of the uni_ v-:lrsity, succeeding Father Celestin J. Steiner, S.J., who has hen'led thp. 14,588-student instit..:tion sin : 194Father Britt, a native' of Grosse P-lnte Park, Ill., attendtd the university itself. He entered the univetrsity itself. He entered th~ Society of Jesus in 1933 and was ordained to the priesthood I' 1943. He holds a master's degree from Loyola University, Chic~go, a licenciate in sacred theology fre West Baden (Ind.) College a:-.d a do~torate in educational. administration from the .University of Minnesota.
family from Holy Name parish, Fall.River. Front pew, left to right, Mary Louise, Mrs. P. Henry Desmond, Elizabeth. At rear, Timothy, Mrs. John Dyer, grandmother, and Patrick. At right, attendants from St. John the Evangelist parish, Attleboro. Left to right, John J. Carroll, JOhn V. Nihan, Myles F. Daley; Mr. Daley is president of Attleboro Particular Council of' the Vincentians.
cathedral will be built in Masasi, .
WESLEY
"Mission Diary," which he sends Life in the missions is not to a mailing list of some 600. In without its lighter side. Brother one issue the native celebration Venard tells of a priest proudly of the feast of Corpus Christi is showing a collapsible gasoline described. Brother Venard notes stove to surrounding natives. that a special feature is dec,ora"Admiring eyes followed his tion oil the paths along which every move.' But the contrapthe Blessed Sacrament is cartion wouldn't work. After watchried. ing Father sweat over the thing "Using red and black earth, for a few minutes, one of the lime, pebbles, and different col- men silently brought him three ored berries, designs and pic- . stones and some kindling. The tures were worked into the path. old saw fairly exuded from FathThere were pictures of churches er's audience: Old things are and chalices and monstrances best." and inscriptions in Swahili such On another ,occasion the as 'The, Blessed' Sacrament,' Brother overheard tnis dialogue: 'Jesus, Mary and Joseph.'" ~Get up on that ladder while I Some of those attending the hold it." Cor pus Christi ',celeQration "I think I'd better not. It looks pretty flimsy." "Oh, don't De afraid! Here on SOUTH ORANGE (NC) the Mission you can get' free Thirteen grants totaling $574,- medicine." 744 have been awarded to Seton Hall University's College of Medicine in Jersey Citr by the . O'ROURKE National Institutes of Health, Fune,al Home U.S. Public Health Service, B!'!thesda, Md.' , 571 Second St.
Fall River, Mass.
'JEFFREY E. 'SULLIVAN
(. P. H~RRINGrON FUNERAL HOME 986 Plymouth Avenue Fall River, Mass. Tel., OS 3·2271 DANIEl
\. HARRINGTON funeral Directo, Registered Embalmor
license~
and
Funeral Rome 550 Locus\ St. Fall River, Mass: OS 2-2391 Rose E. Sullivan Jeffrey E. Sullivan
D.O. SULLIVAN &SONS FUNERAL HOME
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AUBERTINE·' Funeral Home
RENAULT - PEUGEOT
Spacious Parking Area
Complete
BANKING SERVICE for Bristol County
OS 9·6072 MICHAEL J. McMAHON Licensed Funeral'D'irector '-Registered Embalmer
H'I'en Aubertine Brougll
10 E. Main St.· HYANNIS
LIMA The leading seeular newspaper in Peru's capital city of Lima is praising the work of an American missioner who is distributing an' oral anti-tuberculosis drug to Indians in III remote mountain mission. . "El Commercio, II r~ports that the distribution of the new drug' by Maryknoll Father Robert E. Kearns, M.M. of New York, N. Y., has done much to check the spread of tUberculosis, the greatest scourge of Ayma~a and Que. chua Indians living in the altiplano of the department of Puno. "The Church's interest in the material welfare 0". people is very important in an area where the Communists are active, cri'Ucizing the Church at every turn."
Gets 13 Grants
,MOTOR SALES Parts· SaleS • ~rvice '
Daily in Peru Pro ises Priest
Bristol County· Tti'Mst Company Il'AUNTON, MASS.
469 LOCUST STREET FAll RIVER, MASS.
OS - 2-3381 Wilfred C. Jam~ E. Driscoll Sullivon,Jr.
THE BANK ON T~Ul\nON
GRICEN
Member of Federal Deposit Ilosurance CorporatioD
Owner and Dlrec\or .
WY 2-2957 129 Allen, S\.
New Bedford
CAMPANELlA & CAROl (ONS'RUa~@N
co.
BROOKLAWN
READY MIXED CONCRETE _ nUTlUMiNOUS CONCRETE
PHARMACY
DRIVEWAY cO,N~'jj'~llBC1r!ON
Joseph, A. Charpentier Reg, Pharm TEL, WY 6-0772 PRESCRIPTIONS 1902 ACUSHNET AVB. NEW ' . BEDFORD
FREE ESTIMATES ."ALL WOIltK GQ.JIARANTICED Driveways • Sidewalks • Private Streets - Parking Are~ Tennis Coorts • Land Clearing - Concr.ete Forms Excavating • Foundation Work
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Main Street
GA 8-2433
GA 8-2407
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L.atinA~erica" Spreads Faith On' Airways,
THE ANCHOR-DioceSe of'fQlffRiver-Thun.• Sept.22.19~ "
·14
Explains' Father's On Daughter's Marriage
,
RIO DE JANEmO (NC) -There are 57 Catholic'ra, dio stations and one Catholic Association' of. Radio and Televisionstation broadcast ing in 11 Latin American coun.tries. .
nyFather John I.~·Thomas, S.J. Ass't Sociononr Prof.-8t. Lonis University P "Is· all right to marry against your father's will? I'm 21 and hope to marry in a few months when my·fiance , returns from military service. He's a convert and Dad says he's opposed to him on that score. My mother has been dead
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for, some years, so I've .b~,~nf~nctio~,thatis, it assumes th!1t... .These figures. are contained running the home. It seems· 'children'are not capable ofseIfin reports to the first Latin American Congress ,of Radio and Dad doesn't want me to government and need outside Television which was held grow up. He's grown bitter ~istance.. '.' Rio de Janeiro under the' ausHen c e, paternal authorIty t owar d me an d WI'11 have' n'ot'ht l' , t th d' pices of the International Cathi t d .'th v wedding' musa ways aIm a' e goo ng, 0 0 WI m.. of children, and' l:\s such, it. olic ASsociation of Radio and plans. W h ~,~ ceases' to exist when children Television. should . I do, become capable of directing The reports show that there . Mq~t parents 'their own lives. For this.reason,· were 1,570 radio and 51 TV stafmd It hard, to it' is often called pedagogical tions' in the Latin American accept the, msince like a teacher it should countries. However, the 60 deleevitable law of, aim" ~t; its own disaJpearance. n a tu r e that . . , gates from 17 countries to the 'theii children MISunderstands ,Authority congress were told that there t u a 11 y At your age, and because of ANCE H I F '1 H'19h S c h 00I are many Catholic programs--: eve n to be the responsibilities you have. SCHOLARSHiP D : Qy amI y both rad.io and TV"':""being broadfro~ upend _ been' carrying successfully, it Alumni and Alumnae of New Bedford supp~rt dance for ,', cast over many of thesestlitionS. , , nt ,e ~n' ~nd seems clear that you should be . their .scholarship fund. Left to right:' Mr. and Mrs. Richard' en When capable of making reasonably ,C. Fontaine, Miss Anne Harrington and Atty. Maurice F. , The main problem listed in wo~en'children mature decisions. . ' . . ' . . " 'most of the reports was the lack: ~e t t t tAlthough you, should respect DowJ;ley. . ' of sufficient funds for the apost.;, drs , s ar hal yoUr father's opinion, in the ' n olate of ra'dio and television. d 109 sc 00" experience quite . l!ens~d t PIR\~nc<'!Ju ~®~~ U~e. ,f" a$«::@U e@~otril$ Quality of the programing also • ten many. mothers at~h you ' glve....1't'catreful bY ~ I.f' was criticized', And the reports h k discovering that conSI era lon, you are no o. lID 0 '"\J":' . r6) " 0 0 ~e~r O~ith~r~ wholly depend- ligated to fol,low' it. , Indeed,' lJ@M/p>$H\\.~O!ro@an~,l!} @Xe$ @[]'i) ~e~D§JB@~$ pointed out that there are few ent youngsters do, very well t~ere sheems .gOOfdt·hreaso~ tOdbeBERLIN (NC) -Poland's cla.shes. between. Cathohcs and' schools to train Catholics in the broadcasting field.· ' without them-for a few hours, heve t at your ~ ,~r mlsun er communist government is .clamp- communist police. ....,... ..:... ...........,... _ r parents learn stands the funchon of paternal ing ruinous t.axes on' religious t M 1 t t ~as.· a u e, . th 't . a to enjoy the first signs' of mde- au ~n y. . " ' communities, it is reported here., pendence and divide' loyalties. But you haveRa secln~ quesThe 'Polish internal reve)1.ue , d' the protest "But tIon to answer, ose, s yourb . 't' th a~ etxpre~dse In" ' '. 'self sincerely and honestly ureau' now IS axIOg e comIS ersal ." h h f" . , bined incomes of all the memh:R!l many ChrisUans :whose ancestors. centuries a~o. feU into, " Later on during the teens, w et er, ~our I~n~e. poss~ses bers of religious communities, snhism and refused to recognize the l'o9C of Rome as the Su.. Jr- _. f~thers and· mothers expect the qualIties nee e to rna ea. thus artificially raising the tax . preme Spiritual Ruler of all Catholics. their children to display an in- ,go~d, husband dan~/athe:" Wh:t to six times what, it would be if Slo~ly bat surely, since the first quar, d g ee of self 'assertion traInIOg or e uca IOn oes e the members were taxed as inter of our. own' century, these good ~~t~Slt~g e r d resp-orisibilit/ hav~? Is he capable of holding a I people bave' been ,returning to the IDl Ia Ive, an . d ' b? " dividuals.'.They feel th~t these are good stea y JO . , ' fold 'of Peter. In the village of 't' d h uld be foste.red Remember you and· yo.ur Chll,As a result religious communir,Hl!V AWR." one' of the oldest Chrisqua l lIes an s o . . d' . '11' h e to· 1" off h's ties are finding it impossible to ' " For some strange reP"')n, ho~ren; WI Whavt hI:,e, Is ,I tiancenters on the Malabar coaSt. 'd . ble number' of earnmgs, a are IS goa 10 pay the taxes levied upon them. ,Catholic Missionaries have been a ever, ts cOtnsblber~y ignore ,the 'life? Is _he emotionally stable? Communist authorities are con.b~ging bJlck the people in ever inparen s u or . ' "H 'd h t t ' th ., Th fiscaHi-tg their, furniture, farm c'reasing numbers. To care. properl7 obvious implications of puberty oW o~~ fe 'h~ea 0 erfs .. 'I :. . and late adolescence'for their mem b ers 0." IS oW'!" . amI y. equipment· and even Iivestock. for their ·gpiritwli needs it is neCesrapidly developing teenagers. Does h: dlsPla~b'~'t r:asonable Rich Ma~'s.Tax nt Holy Farkr~MiJ.siin AitJ sar,. ,io erect il modest CbaPeL Aside . ." from' 'them baving a' 'fitting place to It's almost as if they expected ~~' 0 ~espons~ 11 b t if Income tax levied on mem." for tht Orimtal CJHnrh worship God. a ChaPel, filled with .their sons and daughters'to be- . . co~rse you t~ve bun, u bers of religious communities : &hese devout people, Will be an,·additional incentive in attractinc Come mature adults without cor- .y,ou can'thanswer e a ove'~tu~ll- as individuals would 'in most me ~ssurh~nCet,.l w~.:. cases come to between 10 and their neigbbors back to the Cburch. $2,000 Is the amount .., responding .sexual development t~ons Wdl St°to DIOne,. required to build the' ChapeL Cnn you belp? 1 d ires to establisn be pru en gIve 1m lme... 15 per cent. Levied on their ag-' or nil~rma r ;:s. . own. settle down after he returns from greglite income, it. comes to III faIn Ieso elr . military service so' that you can t. OUR MISSIONARY PRIESTs ARE DEEPLY GRATEFUL Foa' Betrayal of AffectioB . acquire more insigIU into his ·"rich man's tax" of 65 per cen' . MASS OFFERINGS' , " . Because they lack a sense ~f character: In Poland, an annual in~ome. , reality, ,such parents act as if Advises CautiOll' of allout $4,000 at, the official, '" 'I'HROUGHDUES OF ONE DOLLAR A MONTH-4be MON- ' their family circle were self-.. . ., " rate' of exchange, is taxed 65 ICA GUD..U belPs in supplying vestments, and altar, furnishings sufficient. Hence they regard,;,.. ThiS ad~lce IS aL. the more per cent. "f'orMission' Chapels; the BKSILIANS help to build and maiO: the contemplated marriage of unportant In your ~ase because .Religious communities are un.:. tain Mission Schools. . WUl yoa become a BASILIAN or a one of their children as a:. ,unqer the present,cU"cuqIstances , able to appeal- for 'help' to their MONICA? Your membership in one or boih of ihese Clubs wiD threat, a kind of betrayal of, fyoudahr~ cons~nttlYt'hforceb~ tot,dehouses in other countri!!s since "ring needed aid to our ,Missi~naries,, .. faF'ly' solidarity and parental, en, 1m agams , e 0 Jec IOns ·the .sizeable funds needed to affection, I , .. of your ~at~er. '.. . help' ttJ,em pay the .new taxes , ALI~ OF US who of the household, of tbe' faith 'know fun, Of course they' don't express'" ~ence It~ IS ~ot easy to, mam- 'are also subject to confiscatory' well the truth of' the inspired words of the Psalmist, "Thou. 0 this view openly ,for it runs con-' tam an obJective,. bala~ced out- impOrt taxes. . . Lord, are sweet and mild, and plenteous trary to public sentiment. Rath-; .look, and you ~a~ ,eaSIly ove,rth t k more subtle ap- . look some objectionable traIts " Fiscal 'Weapons - in mercy to ail that call upon thee." er, heYb a / ~ng something ob- ,that you cannot a~ford to ignore The coril.1~nunist, government' "Missionaries in pagan lands are striving proac. y m in their child's 10 "t e n t a sbinding and has also supplie'd itself with sevto bring our faith to millions of people jectioriable a m COt"mlmtol h' ' who know nothing of the· wonderful choice of partner, Insisting that essen,la , . ,your appmess as eral fiscal weapons that could. tenderness and mercy of the God who they. have only the best inter- marnage., ' . tax the Catholic Church in Pol~ 'made them; among the' natives of these ests of their child at r""t"t, they' ,Mthough your fa~er's oppos~- and to death. In April, 1959, it Missionary countries are Catholic boyS g e to find something tl(~n may' cause you _orrow, don t adopted, but did not publish, a and girls preparing to become priests let it either deter yea: from mar- decree forbidding the Church .to m a nga 'th the "I'ntruder." '. wron WI , .,.. • d' , h . it . . . and. sisters, preparing for an apostolate In your case, Rose, there is . rl~ge, or .~a you to, ru~ mto6wn any 'real estate io former' · ,of trying to bring the precious gift of faith to all of" their counan added factor though it folbh~dly. T~ke y~ur t~me. German territory wl;1ich was trymen, GEORGE MATTOM and PAUL MECHERRY are now lows the same general prInciple. . MeanwhIle, It WIll ~robablYtakeo . over by Poland after' si.'Udents' for the priesthood atSAINT JOSEPH'S SEMINARY in Since y.ou have been, rUllning .' Qe useless to argue WIth your World War II. This annulled aD ' INDiA; SISTER STELLA and SISTER ALICE are novices of , the home for the past few years, f~ther about th~ matter. Make .i!diet of 1946 recognizing 'the' · the SISTERS' OF. SAINT 'JOSE,PH, also in INDIA. To prepare ' your father faces a considerable upyo~r own mJ.Pd and proceed right of the .Church to church George and Paul for the Priesthood will cost $600; to prepare disruption of his family routine' accordmgly. buildings and other church PI:OpSister Ste.lIa and Sister ·Alice. for the Sisterhood will cost $300. if erty ~bandoned'by the Germans When' their training is finished they will teach others' about the' Ji~uo~~~~iy resents the 'perwhen they left that territory.' mercy ot' Chrf~(and give tliefu some understanding of the reasozi for their existence. Could you pay for the education of one ,of sonal in'convenience your marAlthough the decr~ forbidtbel.e boyS or girls? . " } ' . riage will cause, and ignoring ,CHICAGO (NC)-Heavy winds ding the, .Church to own real' your right'to found a': "'tmily, of during . ~ thun ierstorm ripped ,property Ji{' the territory was AMONG THE SACRED ARTICLES nccessllrJ' for the Liturglyour own, he's selfishly trying' .the roof off St. Pius X School in'" not immediately published, it· "eill worship 'of God. aft' those In the folloWiDa' list. Coulcl you to keep 'you from marrying, on suburban Lombard. Books, sup-was.commimicated confidential-, pve one' of them forase In '8 Mission Chapel? the pretext that your fiance is. plies, and desks' in the eightly to government officials conAltar ...• ' .. ;$'75 Ciborlam: •.. ,$40 Mass BOok .... '.$25 a convert.' " "classroom school v:ere, soaked. cer'rled with' its emorcemerit. Ita vestinelDtli ' , , ., 50 ,statue 30 StatlOllll . '; • ~ .. ' !s ' '; Two 'Questions Parts of the roof blew trite> the application, has been' sporadic, Challee 40 CruIJb:, • • .• • 25 Censer ... . . • •. 20 What should you do? Well, adjoining convent, rioped a hole but where' enforced it has beeD: , Monstrance'... • . Tabernacle Z5 Altar Linens ,. 15 Rose, you have two' questions to h-• .its roof and broke six ruinous. ·GNP THOUSAND DOLLABS WD..L COMPLE'rELY FURNISH' resolve.' First, what is the extent windowf, .. Welfare .Fands' of your: father's authority under Filther Edmund O'Neill, the A,MISSION CHAPEL .. Uie cti"cumstances? In other pastor;, his, assista::-.t,·' F,ther Also in the spring of 'last year l words, are you obliged' to ~~ "James Stor,in, and rl-:o:s. RoSemary' the communiSt government: ',i'EXT BOOKS, COPY' BOOKS, PENCU.S---:.these are some of 8pect'his wishes regarding y()ur Kempi!1~rs,parish 'secretary" "brought into force all, taxea'oB : the essentials that we must fimiish for the PalestiJie Refugee marriage? ,.p""one4.,,parishioriers for, aid. A" Church income 'which had prechUdren who are in our two scl,1ools at DBAYEH and JISR E{; We can find the answer by delarge gr9up , ,; reached at' a viously been' suspended or ap- , BASRA in LEBANON. Even the smallest donation' to help' fining .patern~l authority; T~is ~cal::,bowling alley, wher"! Ii plied only hi' part; This meant malntaia these two schools will be deeply appreeIated.' authOrIty fulfIlls a substitutIve, ". parisn .tour,riet was in nt"ogress. ,that Church income used for ThebowiE!rs suspended their. :' i~iaJ ,welfare the' construePLEASE REMEMBER GOD AND His MISSIONS iii YOUR - , ~cates g~es and summoned other Aionor repair of churches was ,:/ . LAST ~D..L·AND TESTAMENT .' " GARRISON (NC' - Francis'" parishioners. A total of .200 Subject,;to "taxation. -, " Cardina,l Spellman, Archbishop. \$owed . up: Under.floodlights ,Communist authorities have ~" . '11ea' . '. ..,~'~ ~. of New York, presided at th!!,~' f .'0". led by the Lombard fire 'also 'prevented~ construction ' ... " . DU .,1;. j. . \,,~s.,aons dedication of the new St. Pius X department, they remov~d the ,of new churches by withholding Seminary at Graym )r Monasdamaged books, ~esks, and sup- building permits or confiscation,' FRANC'S CARP'NAL SPELLMAN. President . tery here, The new ei:'l story plies to a -=hool under construeof land upon which the churches , . ........ ,. T~. Hat'I SM"f .. building, begun in 1958 and com- tion. They put a plastic sheeting were to have been built. This ia " . Send oft'~'b ' pieted this month, is a major over the damaged school and several instances provoked loeCATHOLIC NEM, EAST WELfARE ASSOOAnON , I' ',' ' seminar~- for li'ranciscan repaired as much damage all al Catholics to demonstrate ill ,480 Lexington, Ave. at. 46th St. ~ York 17, N.Y•. Friars of the Atonement. possible. ' fOl"C7' and has result~ in v~,/ ,"",,"-'.~£'.,""
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THE ANCHOR-~iocese of Fan River,...,.,Th,:,rs.,Sept.22, 1960
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Fall means back to school and back to work .•. and time to 'ch edt your pantry shelves too! Now - at value prices such as those below - you'll really save at First National as-y~ replenish yoour food staples for the busy ,days ahead.
" KE MIXES Betty Regular Crocker or Pil.lsbury CA 3 Flavors FINAST' - Elbow MACAR'ONI 2 Also Thin Spaghe"i TissueSOFT·WEVE Bathroom 8 White or Colored BEEFARONI Chef Bo,-Ar-Dee 2 Loma NABISCO SHORTBREAD Doone ITA·FLO ·STARCH WINDEX WINDOW CLEANER DINTY MOORE BEEF STEW
NEW BEDFORD TEA: Mrs. Gilbert C. Motta, pours for Mrs. Vincent J. Worden, hosptiality chairman, and Mrs. Louis L. Dumont, president of the New Bedford Catholic Women's Club.
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ib'eO;;::h Parade
SANTO CHRISTO, FALL RIVER Members of the Holy Rosary Sodality will hold a weekend observance of their patronal feast the weekend of Oct. 8 and 9. Events will include a procession on Saturday, Oct. 8 and a high Mass at 8 Sunday morning, Oct. 9, followed by a Communion breakfast, and an evening ceremony at 7.
ST. CASIMIR, NEW BEDFORD The St. Casimir Circle is organizing a bowling league. An October rummage sale will have Miss Stella E. Gonet as chairman. Next regular meeting is set for TUesday, Sept. 27.
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HOLY NAME, FALL RIVER Blessing of the new school wiD take place Sunday afternoon, Oct. 2, with, Bishop Connol17 officiating.
ESPIRITO SANTO, FALL RIVER A banquet in connection with the parish jubilee celebration, , SACRED HEART, will be held at 7 Sunday night, :NORTH ATrLEBORO Oct. 1, at White's Restaurant. : Mrs. Arthur Cloutier will serve as president of St. Anne's SodalST. MARY'S, ity for the new year. With her MANSFIELD will be Mrs. Anna Plante, vice At its opening \ meeting, the president; Mrs. Gerard Desilets, Catholic Woman's Club heard an secretary; Mrs. Henri Desautel, address on the public school sittreasurer; Mrs. Albert Davignon, uation in Mansfield by David B. publicity chairman. Ingram. A Hallowe'en party and CardO-Rama are planned for October. ST. ANTHONY OF DESERT, New officers will be installed iA ,FALL RIVER November. ' A parish ce'ebration will be beld at 2 Sunday afte~noon, Sept.· ST. JOSEPH, 25 in connection with groundATrLEBORO breaking ceremonies for a parish Henri Paradis will be presiball and classrooms on QualT7 dent of the Holy Name Society Street. 101' the coming year. Serving with him will be George Juaire, OUR LADY OF ANGELS, vice president; Armand Pinault, FALL RIVER . The Women's Guild will hold treasurer; Romeo N. Proulx, seca penny sale tomorrow night in retary. the parish hall. A preparatory meeting of the planning commit- NOTRE DAME,· FALL RIVER' tee will be held tonight. The Council 01 Catholic Women ~CULATE CONCEPTWN will hold its first Fa-: meeting at ,'1:45' Monday evening, Sept. 26 ill . CHAPEL, NORn;: FALMOUTH .Jesus Mary Academy auditorium. Mrs. Roy Stratton will be la Mrs. Jean Paul Goddu' is chaircharge of altar fl1wers this man with Mrs. Armand Raiche month and Mrs. Francie McCar- as co-chairman. thy next month. The next reg. A musical program wW be ular meeting of the Altar Guild featured and members are l"&quested to make returns of ifl set for Wednesday, Oct. 5. fashion show tickets at this time. Mrs. Wilfrid Garand, youth ebairman, announCes' a skating party for teenagers at Lincoln LIMA (NC) - The Apostolic Park :!!'riday night" Sept., sa. Nuncio to Peru said here that Tickets are now available. "the heresy of racism" is a major cause of the priest shortage ill ST. MAltY'S CATHEDRAL, FALL RIVER' Latin America. ' The Women's Guild will spoDArchbishop RomuJo Carboni, speaking at a dinner celebrating lOr' .a Harvest Supper followed the 50th anniversary of the ordi- by Square Dancing at 6:30 M;onnation of Father Siro Simoni, an day night, Oct. 3 at the Catholic Italian priest who came to Peru Community (:enter, Franklill as a missioner 40 yearS ago, Street. blamed the early' colonizers of Latin America, for their refusal ST. MICHAEL'S. to· ordain' Indian, and in many FALL RIVER cases, men of mixed Indian and The Council of Catholic Womell European blood. "Christ wan" will mark the feast 01. the Hol7 bis priests "from. all races, not ROsary this Sunday with atiendjust European races," be said. emce at Mass, a tea and Benedie-' The Archbishop annou.ncecl tioD. Activities for the year wiD that RichQrd Cardinal Cushing, Inc:lude a November penny sale, Archbishop of Boston and a I'e- • December Christmas part~ cent visitor tID Peru as Papal . and a dance, supper andfasbion Legate to the national Euchar- .oow 101' the first,months 01.,1961. lfext regular meeting will be Istic congress, has liven fuR Kholarships to liz Peruvilllll Wednesday, Oct. 18, with MrL Dorothy Farnham. and MraJ. Dorill seminarians. '1'belr wtn studT • St. .John'. Semlnel7, Bri. . . . . Cordeiro as hostesses.
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16
THE ANCHOR-'-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs.,Sept. 22,1960
The CathoUc ii1 America SANTIAGO (NC) Archbishop Enrique Perez Serantes of Santiago 'said there is now strong unity in the Catholic: family 'in eastern Cuba.
Pay's Tr~bute to Courage
Of Bishop John Hughes
The Archbishop, spe8klng at a banquet in his honor in • hall at the national shrine of. Our Lady ot. Charity ot. Cobre, said that the existing unity of the Catholics of Oriente province t. heartwarming at this time.
By !Rev. Peter J. Rahill, Ph.D. The rock-like determinatiOIol of Bishop John Hughes was not a sudden impulse. Born in Ireland of good family, he had not permitted a financial disaster to thwart his ambition to become a priest. On coming to America he had Hughes was excoriated so taken any kind of job to earn his tuition in the semi- soundly that neither political party would promise relief of nary. After he was ordained any kind. The bishop then took {for the Dioc~se of Phila-' the bold step of entering a delphia, he led in adopting various methods to quiet the storm of anti-Catholieism. Reminiscent of the path followed by John Henry Newman from the Episcop'al ministry to the Catholic Church, he has found- , ed a Catholic Tract Society in 1827 to publish booklets explaining the Faith. In these years debates became more popular than pamphlets. In 1832 Hughes accepted the challenge of the Reverend John Breckinridge, a Phidalephia Presbyterian pastor. It was agreed that each contestant would publish articles alternately in The Presbyterian and ill a Catholic 'paper. There b,eing no Catholic pubUication at all in the Pennsylnnia city, Father Hughes raised the money himself and commenced the Cl!tholic Herald in January of 1833. Opinions of '~mmeptators on the outcome of the debate varied much ,according to their prior inclina-' Uons, but undoubtedly the enero and ability demonstrated by Hughes contributed to· his selection as bishop in New York.
Ca tholic ticket in a school electionand its vote' was sufficient to cause the Democrats to lose. p'artial Victory Neither the city nor the state legislature ever aocepted /the proposals - Hughes had made, Nevertheless, victory in part came when the reading of the Protestant Bible was dropped in many municipal schools.As recently 'as this past Summer a popular national magazine compared John Hughes unfavor'ably with other Catholic prelates who hiter attained national, distinction similar to his. That this Bishop (later Archbishop)_ of New York was a vigorous and forthright 'individu,al is absolutely true. But suavity and unction would have made no impression on either the leaders or the mobs who in his days were violently anti-Catholic. Courage to Use Force A time comes when force must be ~et with force and John Hughes had the co~age and simplicity to use it. Their ap- petites . whetted by the blood spilled in Philadelphia, the agitators who rushed to New York in 1844 w~uld never have listened to words, however persuasive. But the armed resistance of - the church guardians whom Bishop Hughes had marshalled slowed their r::alevoleDt rush to a sedate walk. \ This smoke-bla'ckened decade for American Catholics had commenced with the destruction of the Charlestown convent. It ended abruptly with the burning of the churches. in Philadelphia. - It ceased so quickly because John Hughes fr,om his cup ot. American citizenship had "runk deeply the invigorating red wine of American courage. Next Week: The Rise and Decline of Know-Nothingism. .
Anti-Catholic Textbooks Particularly in New York City the new bishop found, that the King James version of the Bible was being read to public school pupils, usually followed by a commentary .abusive of the Catholic Church. Moreover, the textbooks used not only were highly sympathe~ic to Protestantism but blatantly ridiculed Catholicism. Hughes reasoned that children. from even solidly Catholic homes would be shaken in their: faith from constantly hearing repeated such a phrase as "deThe First Friday Club of Fall eeitful Catholics," to quote one - River will attend 6 o'clock Mass of the least offensive terms. ::riday evening, Oct. 7, at Sacred . Though he was promptlylab- Hea::t Church. Rev. Joseph L. 'Powers, Dioceled as an enemy of the Bible, the bishop sought allocation of esan director of the Confraterthe school funds for construc- nity of Christian Doctrine', will tion of separate Catholic institu- address the organization at its tions. If that would not be October meeting, to be held at granted, he asked that Catholic K of C headquarters on Frankpupils study the Douay version lin Street. He will speak on the Confraternity and the lay (a Catholic translation) of HolT Scrip,ture. teacher.
To Explain CCDWork To First Friday Club
SISTERS IN SISTERHOOD: It was a proud day for Mrs. Mary' Ferro, South Dartmouth, as she witnessed per.petual vows ceremonies in the Sisters ,of St. Dorothy, Villa Fatima, Taunton,. for her daughter, Mother Cecilia Ferro (second left). With them are Rev John O'Connor, S.J., rector of Weston College, who presided, and Mother Mary Ferro, another dlJ,ughter in the community.
Modern Life Causes Indifference To -Obse'rvance of 'Sunday CASTELGANDOLFO (NC)Modern life has caused many people to be indifferent toward the observance of Sunday, Pope John told the Eucharistic congress in his native Bergamo diocese in northern Italy. Theme of th~ congress is, the Third' Commandment: Remember thou keep holy the Lord's The Pope noted that an almost general silence surrounds the honoring 'of the Lord's day," as though it were outmoded." He said .the "most ancient and fervent interpreters ot. Biblical though succeeded in presenting the narration of the ~~"ation in such a lively and eloquent way precisely to 'celebrate the meaning of the Lord's Sabbath." In contrast" the Pope' wrote, "the worldly spirit of our age, tired and distracted by the deceitful vanity ,of the surrounding chaning attractions, exercises an invitation to remain insensitive to relations with God the Creator and with Jesus the Saviour and lifegiver of the human race." The Pope concluded:' "May this Eucharistic congress be a voice as of an immense crowd to .praise .the sacrament which leads the Catholic to the most mysterious and surprising intimacy wtih the Divine Master, and 'may there spread from Bergamo to the greatest horizons the will and
Former Student NoW' Stonehill Professor A former Stoneh~ll student' who earnE'd a doctorate in Canon J,.aw will join the college faculty this Fall. Rev. William F. Hogan, C.S.C., a native of Brighton, will teach theology and also ,be prefect of the new temporary dormitory accommodations for freshmen in the former 'Pius X Seminary building. Father Hogan attended Stonehill College from 1947 to 1949 before transferring to Notre Dame, where he received an A.B. in philosophy in 1952. He did graduate work in philosophy at Catholic University in 1955 and was ordained in Fall River ,/ in 1956. • . , He taught -at Stonehill in 1956-1957 and then entered Gregorian University, Rome, where he earned his canon law doctorate.
I PRIESTS' INSTITUTE: Principles at the Confraternity of. Christian Doctrine 1I18titute for priests held Tuesday at .Stang HiZOh were, left 'to right, Rev., Joseph. 'D. CoHina, Washington, Bishop CoDl1OH¥, and -Rev. JGilepk .L.Powen. DiooesaA. Director, of the CCD.,
New additions. to Stonehill College faculty include a husband and wife who have served for nearly'U years in work connected with the United States Army, and a native of AlsaceLorraine. ' , Ronald J. Fraser will become an instructor in English and speech. His wife will be an assistant librarian. Mrs. Marie-Louise Weber 01. Alsace-Lorraine will teach German at thec:ollege. She received ,her cOllege degree :frGIIIl the URtveraitt ,01.' Nanq.. •
The celebration in honor of the- Spanish-born prelate came less than a week after cancellation of a so-called Catholic congress which Archbishop Perez Serantes had denounced lUI lADauthorized and divisive.. _ The Archbishop, who onee befriended Fidel Castro, was the first Cuban Ordinary to issue a pastoral warning of communist infiltration in Cuba. He has become the butt or'repeated verbal attacks on the part of the propaganda agencies ot. the Castro regime.
STONEHILL COLLEGE Co-Educational Institute of Adult Education
~ay.
Husband, Wife Join Stonehill Faculty
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intention to sanctify the Sabbath and the Christial} feasts accordin!! to the ancient commandment."
The banquet marked the 50th anniversary of Archbishop Perez Serantes' ordination' to the priesthood. It followed a Mass for which people flocked to the Santiago cathedral to honor the prelate.
Tuesday eveniags, 7:30 10 9:30,' SepfetDb« 20 10 Decemb« 11 (omi It Registration by ~ ow 7 10 • p... Sep___. 20 GIld 'D -ia Hair Crow ..... No PrerequisileL Credit COllrses. Foe .$15. to. 12 . . . . . . GREATER SUCCESS IN REAL IESTATE TODAY Mr. Henry W. Palm« of the Greater 8os'- Real Estate Board and ....... 01 the Society 01 Residential, Appraisers and the 'Providence Real Estate 80ard jointly offer this timely sequel 10 the Spring cour.. "How To Start, Stay Wit... and Succeed in Real Estate." , CREATIVE WRITING Professor Brassil Fitzgerald, M.A., well-knOWll au1hor 01 2 popular boob and 150 articles and stOrie.. professional editor and manuccript "doctor'" for aUthors, will present principle I and methods 01 creative writlttg, CIIld ti.... criticism' and comments of student participants' work. PORTRAIT OF THE PAPACY Reverend William f. Hogan, C.S.C., J.C.D, recently returned 10 Ston"'" Conege afte.. 3 years' study in Rome, will describe the elect;- of· PopoM (33-1400 A.D.), the temporal power of the Pop" In the Middle Ages, lImits.oI Papal power today and influence throughout the world and how the Pope governs today with the aid of Curia, and Cardinals. CURRENT EVENTS THIS PRESIDENTIAL YEAR Associate Professor Cornelius J. Cleary, M.A., Chairman 01 the Department of Social Sciences, ,Stonehill College, will analyze local, national and intemational problems. DEVELOPMENT PSYCHOLOGY OF THE CHILD Assistant Professo~ Mary E. Shaughnessy, Chairman, Public Hoafth Hvraing,. The Boston College School of Nursing, win lecture on thi. yital and papular topic. Thia course supplements the Spring course "Understanding Adolescence." BUSINESS AND COMMERCIAL LAW Attorney George P. Connolly, local candidOte fOf' State Senator, wll ghe a survey course considering contracts, businell organization., alJ<lftCY, parmship, employment relations, sole.; btu. and note., creditor's rights, and Unif_ Commercial Code. SECRETS Of THE powns GIRL n... John Robert Powers School of 8oston will offer this caur.. exclvliy'" for the ladie•• There will be two-hour sessions on september 20 aftd 27, October 11 and 25, Noyember 8 and 22, Fee $10. Non-credit course. EFFECTIVE SPEAKING AND THE CONDUCT OF MEETINGS Mr. Herbert A. Wessling, M.A., Assistant ProfellOf', Stonehill COIIege-"l.eanI how easily you can gain a maltery of yourself and be iso control of the situationa which confront you." PREDICAMENT OF THE MAN IN THE NOVEl. Reyerend Robert F. Griffin, C.S.C., M.A., Assistant Professor, Stonehill CoUege,. will consider Crime and Puniahment by Dostoevski; Moby Did< by Melville; AI The King's Men by Warren; The End Of The Affair by Greene. INSURANCE-BROKERS AND AGENTS EXAMINATION REVIEW COURSE Mr. Abraham Brooks, LL.B., local insurance agent and broker, Lecturer CIt Stonehill College, will lecture' from the lat8st revision of the Standard Answers for Massachusetts Insurance Agent. and Broken. Actual experiences Itt the field will be cited and augmented by advice relating to home, car, and busin. . insurance policies, choosing the company, choosiftg the ageftt, self-inourance" distributing tho' premium dollar, etc. INTRODUCTION TO FEDERAL INCOME TAXES Mr. Danial J. Looney, Jr., M.B.A., Instructor, Stonehill Conege, wilt ..... you dollars this year and pIaft y_ next tax yoar. This is an inYestrneM ,willi a life-time relurn. DRAWING AND PAINTING Mr. Charles Kerins, local portrait pointer of Pope John XXIII and Popo Pius XII. designer of'the coyer pages of "The Catholic Boy" and "n... Catholic Miss", iIIuatrator of books, painter of 48 U. S. Navy oil scenes from Perry 10 the. ·Kor_ War, and portrait painter of many prominent Americans will teocII you 10 draw and paint for ·pleasure. You'll 'paint the first nightl AMERICAN ECONOMIC POLICY: A PRIMER FOR THE INFORMED CITIZEN Mr. Jamel L Wiles, M.A.; Assiston. Professor, Stonehill College, will consider basic economic problems such' as inflation and unomployment, monopoly .. business and in the trade uni_ movement. international economic relation.. economic growth, and the policies for coping with the.. probl...... Inclucr. ... an appraisal of the Soviet economic system. MODERN PHilOSOPHY Mr. Lawrence S. Stepeleyich, M.A., Instructor, Stonohlft CoUege. wll ~ siCler modern theories, their background, and their authors. OFFICE PROCEDURES SEMINAR Moderator, Mr. HenrY M. Cruickshank, M.B.A., Chairman of the Department of Business Admini"ralion, Stonehill College, will-present the talents of a. dO_ well-known business' firms with national and, international reputation.. A do_ speake.. will demonstra~e up-to-date office techniques and show you "100 W,..,. To Soye $s In Your Business," ' Please register with: Directdl' of .Adu.lt Education, Stonehlll CoIJeeaI, Nardi Easton, MaSiochu~
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HAPPEN TO YOU! Watch out for children when you drive-· adults must accept the responsibility for their safety. The Schools and our Police Departments thrOughout Greater Fall Riye~ are doing their utmost to teach safe~y to our children. But because they are children they sometimes forget.
They dart into the streets • • • ride their bikes .without a thought to traffic conditions and in most cases are oblivious to the dangers around them. Be sure your car is mechanically saf4;t. Qon't Speed Obey the Traffic Laws • • Prodice Cautio.-- at all times! 0
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. This Message is Sponsored. By The Following Individuals and Business Concerns ;n Greater Fall River: Bta~y
Ann Dale Products, Inc. Enterprise Brewing Co.
Electric Supply Co.
Globe Manufacturing Co.
International ladies Gar,ment Workers Union
Mason Furniture Showrooms
Gerald E. McNally Contractor Sobiloff BrotherS! Textile
Wor~ers
Gold Medal Bread
Sterling Beverages, Inc. Union of America, AFL-CIO
George R. Montie, Plumber Stafford Fuel Co., Inc.
Cascade Drug Co. Hutchinson Oil Co. MacKenzie & Winslow, Inc. Plymouth Printing Co., Inc. Strand Theatre Yellow Cab Company
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18
Mcinagement Evaluates Church
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs;,Sept.22,1960
Scient;$U's 'Disagree on Production Continued from Page One 'help in evolving new 'and simple that the world's resources are tools appropriate to the situaperfectly adequate to provide tion in which they_ would be food for present and future pop~ used, he added. ' ulations. , The' president of the present In Britain alone. said William convention, ,Sir George Thomson. Davies' in his l)residential ad-' said he believes that in the'long dress to'the agricultural section ,run the solution would have to' tliere are 17 million acres of be the restriction of births to "completely under-developed match the falling death rate. countryside." Ot", these more ':, Another attack' came from than, 10,000,000 are on' easy Professor David V. Glass of the, slopes p'resenting no difficulty, London School of Economics. He ' to. modernfarmirig 'tec~niques. deplored Catholic opposition to D~uble Production, the, .sp~ead of contraceptive in, ' . ' ,struction' through international H. L. Richardson of the gl~nt organizations such as the United lrriperial Chemicals Industnes ,Nations.' " Ltd. declared, that underdeBirth: Control veloped countries' could double He also said that in' Britain: their domestic ~ood production iIi less,than one 'generation. By among the couples married becultivating' land: not at present tween, 1935 and 1939 over 70 cultivated they co~ld' produce per cent practicecf birth ,control, HEADS PROGRAM: Msgr. still more food,' he added. ' , including at least 46 per cent of Sir Alister Hardy,. professor of 'the Ca'tholics. Surveys of more Patrick J. Ryan, of St. Paul, zoology at the Uni~ersity of' Ox- recent marriage, groups in the United States, showed' a still l\1inn., former chief of U.S. ford ' said that the number of higher incidence among the fish' in the" sea' available ~or, ,white population as a _whole- ' Army 'chaplains and execti:. tive vice-president of' the human consumption could be 1l1creased tenfold if one-quarter of "with over quarter of all reg-', Catholic Digest since 1958, ular' churcbgoing Roman Cathothe worid's 'redatory, fisl). \Vere has been, named director destroyed by a, systematic on- lic wives using prohibited meth-' ods," he' stated; , , the' National Catholic Decw· slaught. .' : Professor Glass, was not very ency in 'Reading Progr~nL World population optimistic, ,however, about the' NC Photo:' ' , The representative of the Un'l':' spread of birth' control in underted Nations Food arid Agriculsocieties. He said ne'w ture Organization, Norman' C. developed techniques and birth control Wright, pointed out that the, clinic~, "even where 'permitted' wodd population is e:ltpected to 'or encouraged," are having little' reach 6,000,000,000 by the year, impa~t.' ESSEX (NC)'--A corivert from ZOoo. He said' the world would Catholics were l!ffiong the Islam took his perpetual vows as need, a 100 per cent increase in ' 1,500 scientists, taking part. They' ,a member of the:Oblates of Mary eereal production, and from a 'attended a' special Mass in St. Immaculate here 'n New York at 200 . to 300 per cent increase in Mary's church, Cardiff. Our Lady of H;ope Shrine. meat production. Mr. Wright Anglican Prelate Brother Peter Nami, ostracized added that at least half the by "amily and' friends when he world's population today is eith" At the Anglican service in became, a Catholic, will complete '6 undernourished or' malnour, . tShed. He said it is inconceivable 'Llandaff Cathedral, Car d iff, his studies for' ·the priesthood Bishop Glyn Simon said during at t: , Oblate College in Wash,1tiat any important incr~ases his sermon: ' '" ington, D. C. eould be met if world food pro"When immense quantities of ' in, the Phil~ A native of Sibutu duction merely' adheres to, its food are being thrown ippine Islands, Brother Nami 'present slow, trend. Far, m?re surplus into the sea, we are faced with whose ,fatheI;' is a Mohammedan -. drastic measures are essentIal, what is morally evil and wrong. high priest, became interested in he declared. " Mr. Wright rejected the idea Talk of birth control in 'such Catholicism when he attended circumstances becomes an insult a 'high school 'conducted by 'that the undernourished nations to the Almighty." ' Oblates In the Philippines. After should rely on the food surgraduation, he was received into' pluses, of other countries. He the Church by Bishop Francis J. lIllidthe only effective and long,. McSorley, o..M.L, Vicar Apostolic te'rm solution' is to secure the Continued, from Page ~ne of Jolo. ' , ' necessary increase inside each Priests .. attending from the individual country, and,this can Shortly after his conversion, be done by the' widespread' ap-, Diocese are Rt. Rt., Rev. John J. Brother Nami "became the first plication of recent scientific Kelly, Rev. William D. Thomson, Moro to join the Oblates. He atRev. John E. Boyd, Rev. ,James tended San Jose Seminary in technical knowledge. F. Lyons, Rev. ,John F,'Hogan, Manila, then made his novitiate New Tools Rev. Edmond L. Dickinson, and at ,Mission, Tex. " The lesson for the West is not Rev.,Maurice Parent. The Oblates have worked hi flo thrust undiluted Western Laymen from New Bedford the Philippines since 1939.' They 'techniques of mechanization on who will attend are Dr. David' conduct 22, high schools, three .primitive~ small 'holdings' in Asia and Africa but rather to 'Costa, Manuel Sardinha, 'Gordon colleges,a radio ,station, news.,. Baker, Sylvio LeBlanc 'and paper in the Sulu province. Both Ernest Menard, Taunton will be provinces are inhabited predomrepresented by William Fagan. inantly bY,Moros- and Filipino . Continued from Page One Twenty-two membe~s of the M()slems. of St. Anne's parochial school. Fall River Particular Council , In 1894 the' S'isters opened of the St. Vinc~nt de Paul Society 'Newspci'per Cheers Dominican Academy, and today' will also attend the convention the community occupies several They include H. Frank Reilly' In Latin Way buildings on Park St., Fall K.S.G., Jerome D. Foley, Fran~' PITT<;BTTRGH (NC) - The River. The need for expansion is cisco C. Silva, Louis Chabot and r ~nnant fever of the Pittsburgh , evident from the fact that these Adrien Bolduc..' Pirates' baseball team has inbuildings house the elementary Also Antone Jose, Henry La- f~cted the Pittsburgh Catholic, and high school divisions of the jeunesse, Everett LaFleur, Henry dIOcesan newspaper. Dominican Acaderriy;the Sisters' V. Seneca, Albert Petit, Edward' The paper, in a page one box, motherhouse; the, preparatory, Lacroix, Edward F. Kelly, added its voice to the "Beat 'em, school for aspirants to the com- Charles W. Woodward, Raymond Bucs" chorus of encouragement munity and the novitiate. Roy and Emile Dozios. for the National r ,eague leaders. The group also lists' J. H. Leon In strictl:-, liturgic~l tradition, Gauthier, Louis Letourneau Al-' the Pittsburgh Catholic sang out: phonse Vermette, Wilfred Mor- "Vincite eos, Pirat;le." rissette, James F. Diskin, William E. Wl1ite, and Edward Martin. . NEW ENGLAND' _ According to Msgr. George H. ('LA M Guilfoyle of New York, con,I'crence president, the immediate B-A K E purpose of the convention will Every Sunday ~ $2.95 be to improve and implement nationwide Catholic welfare includil1g - A Live Lobster programs through 'an evaluation THE of past experience and future' social needs. CASA Sacred Responsibility Co~gshall Bridge, Fairhaven ,He added that it is the 'obligation of the Catholic Charities movement to remind America of its '''sacred responsibility to lead the world in its crusade against MEDALIST: The 1960 ideologies and ways of, life that Home ~ade 'Catholic Action Medal of St.' are inimical to the vast interest CANDIES, Bonaventure's University, of man and his society." CHOCOLATES Also participating in the conhas been awarded to Chrisvention will be the St. Vincent topher H. Dawson, disting- -De Paul Soci~ty, which will 150.......V arieties uished British scholar who conduct .its annual meeting conROUTE 6 near holds the first Stillman currently with the convention. President Eisenhower will Fairhaven Auto Theatre Chair of Roman Catholic speak at the conference's golden Studies at Harvard Univer- jubilee banquet in the' StatlerFAIRHAVEN, MASS. sity. ·Ne Photos. Hilton Hotel next Monday•.'
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Conv'ert: Takes Obiate" Vows '
Charity Workers
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'New Novitiate
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Continued from Page One points out of an _ptimum rating of 10,000. The previous analysis , made in 1955 and published the" following year, gave the C~urch 8,800 points. II' 1955 the Church was given the highest, possible point total of 1,000 for "social function" and this, is maintained' in the s~pp:ementary audit. • 'Church Facilities. The institute said the 'Church is not, developing its facilities at the same pace as its membership growth. "The n u m b e r of churches' has risen from 416,466 to -421,527, or a gain of but one per cent, compared with a membership gain of 11 ·per cent/' it said ,about ','growth of facilities:" But the' study qualified. its criticism. It said that it:J, North ,Amer:ica-~'area ",,:' its greatest wealth"-the Church has definitely gained. "The con'tinent has now become the bulwark Of ,Catholicism, due perhaps to both , greater affluence and therefore greater need' fo'r the seilse of stability' and 'security that the' Church ,offer!>." The Church, got 350 of a possible 500 ,points in' the "growth 'of facilities" cate'" gory, ,a drop from '375 in 1955•. ,Social Acceptance . In its, "membership' analysis," the institute said nomination of a Catholic for, the presidency is a reflection '''of the ,growing social- acceptance of the Catholic minority in America." It praised the continued membership strength in the' United States and said "a "favorable trend will undoubtedly con,tinue." The Church was given 1,100 of a possible 1,300 pointS. The ecumenical council was -described in the study's section on "development programs" as· "destined to be an 'outstanding event," "This meeting ... will provide means of improving the ecclesiastical administration, and will point the 'Way to enlisting lay persons for more 'active participation in the work of ,the Church," it said. 'The Church rec ived 650 of a possible 800 points for "development pro:' grams." Creditable Performance The Church was praised for a "most creditable" performance in ' "fiscal policies:" Bu ~ the insti-' tute said: "In the final analysis, the gniatest wealth of the Church is the resources qf' its 'members and their willingness' to provide on call." The Church got 700 of a possible 800 points. ,, Better delegation of authority , was prai~ed in the study of "operating efficiency." The Church received 650 out of 700 point for ,this.. Its look at trustee analysis-the Church's weakest point in 1955showed "vast strides" toward greater use of cardinals, the institute said. The Church went from 525 points to' 700 out of a possible 800. ' ' In its look at "administrative
evaluation," the AIM said Pope John is "seemingly effective in grasping the situation that confronts the Church, everywhere." It raised the Church from 1,100 to 1,160 out of a possible 1,200. "There is less of a Roman clique' behind to-day's decisions in the Church and more, of a hard'Yorking cardin;11ate," the il)stitute said: "All down the line there has been a noticeable improvement in plactri'; the right man in the right position of authority.~'
Leadership In' studying, "effectiveness of lead~rship," the stUdy spoke in terms of political leadership. It claimed the Church has a ."benign and constructive influence" in Europe, but has yet to show "such sagacity" in South or Central A ll1 erica, the Carrib_ bean or Africa, all trouble spots. The United States was not mentioned. " ,"No dO,ubt the supreme test of the Church's abilities as well as spiritual, influence' will be felt :in Cuba in 'the coming two 'years," it predicted. The' stUdy gave the Church 2,000 of a possible" 2,100 points in leadership effectiveness.' . ' One' Point Denied' One point raised in the institute's study was' denied and explained ,by a prominent theologian in Washington, D. C. , The study said, in discussing, "organization ,structure," that "the Pope is the supreme .ruler of both a church and state government, and members of the Church owe ~llegiance to him in ,both respects." This is not accurate, according to Father Edmond D. Benard dean of_ the School of Sacred Theology at the Catholic University of 'America, Washington who was asked for comment. ' , "The Pope as a civil ruler," he explained, "has civil authority over citizens of the state of Vatican City, not'over citizens of other sovereign territories. All Catholics.owe him spiritual allegiance, but only Vatican city. citizens owe him civil allegiance."
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.. Schoolboy Grid Schedule Underway This Weekend
THE ANCHOR-
Thurs. r Sept. 22, 1960
19
lay Apostolate Must Influence Environment
By Jack Kineavy Schoolboy football pries off the lid this weekend with a full slate of games scheduled throughout the area. The gridders have been working out since September 1 and they're rarin' 1;0 go. Most teams have had. two practice scrimmages, s 0 m e even den after the genial redhead mor~. Highlight of the preguided the Jewelers to a' 6-1-0 season training period was season and a' second place finish the Saturday night Jam- in the Class C State standings.
CINCINNATI (NC) - A Catholic college president said here that the job of the lay apostolate today is the conversion of the environment, rather than the individual. . "This environment is ~he ke,. tlo individual conversions and individual holiness," s tat ~ d Father John F. Murphy, presi. dent of Villa Madonna College. Covington, Ky. "Only a laycentered, organized effort C9n change the environment," be added. Speaking at Xavier University in a workshop sponsored by the High School Federation of the Cincinnati Archdiocesan Council of Catholic Youth, Father Murphy addressed principals and moderators of organizatiOnal of nearly 20 high schools. Socia! Apostolate ~e called for a "social apostelate" that seeks to "substitute) new and better institutions £01' 'the old ones that need to be cast out."
boree at Falmouth which fea- Cassidy, after an extended suctured the host school Lawrence cessful tenure at Case, also faces a large scale rebuilding job. His High, Barnonly returning backfield starter stable, Bourne is fullback Captain Jim Gravel. and Wareham. Durfee partisans await' with Spot checking interest the 1960 Hilltopper edithe opening day tion, the first under the direccontests - our tion of Don Montle, a Durfeelistings are not Springfield product: The Red as yet complete and Black had a disastrous sea-let's look first son a year ago, losing all eight at the competigames played. The return to tion facing the form of Captain Lee Wolbrlan area's two 1959 who was hampered )est year State champions, Class C Coyle and Class D , with a leg injury should provide Mansfield. The Warriors are at a big lift for the Hilltopper home to Dartmouth High in the forces. series inaugural for these schools. New Bedford Strong DIOCESAN CHAMPS: St. Patrick's baseball team , Fall Coach Jim Burns faces a major A State power in '59 an'd rebuilding job at Coyle with tabbed for similar stature this River, won its first Diocesan CYO baseball championship in only two starters back, center year are the Crimson of New defeating Immaculate Conception, Tautlton, 5-1. Left to Jim McBride and guard Dicit Bedford. A 13-13 tie with New , right, Jack Morrissey, Taunton captain; Armand Gendreau; Souza. , Bedford Vocational was the only um'pire; Richard Michalewich, St. Patrick's captain. Some of the "environmental Lettermen Dick Brezinski and blot on New Bedford's escutcheon pressures" that make it hard for Frank Gorman w1ll lend 'expeJ'i"" which,included shut-out victories lay people to work out theil' ence to the Warrior forward wall over such grid powers as Saugus oWn salvation or assist In the at end and guard, while Jack and Chicopee and culminated 'in salvation of others are thp. cup., Smith, a guard last year, is being a 42-0 rout of Durfee on Thanksgroomed for a halfback spot. giving Day. Captain Bob LyonNEW . ORLEANS (NC)..... my area. We need a seminary rent attitudes toward commota '\ Directing the' team will be Gerry nais, All-Diocesan halfback last Bishop Constantine C. Luna, and it will take fr~m $50,000 to things; 'Father Murphy said. Cunniff, a senior who is' nO year, has been shifted to quarterO.F.M., never has any difficulty $65,000 to build it. Later we plan He cited the "planned obsoleSstranger to the gridiron but who back by Coach Tom Eck. finding his way around his epis- to build parochial schools and cence" puilt into homes and is perhaps better known for, his copal "palace" in Zacapa, Guat- other facilities.'With educational gadgets to make them wear out Another change has erstwhile baseball exploits. AI Andra<le fullback Stan Tenters moving up emala. facilities, we can combat igno- quickly, the persuasiveness ct and Bob Burgmann, reserves last front to bolster the tackle posi-' The Bishop's living quarters,' rance and communistic propa- some advertising, the impoverseason, are the leading tackle tion where he'll partrier rugged the diocese chancery office and ganda. It is on ignorance that ishment of some kinds of fooc\ aspirants. Beyond these boys Curt Hardy, the '59 pivotman. general headquarters all are communism, thrives." the exorbitant prices of ma~ there's no varsity experience on The Junior High program has located in one room, situated Bishop Luna has seen, firstdrugs, the frenzied attitude the squad. next to the 300-year-old ca- hand, the workings of commuprovided a wealth of talent for toward leisure, and the absence thedral there. nism. He was a missionary 1ft of guiding principles concerni&« Dartmouth, new to the Coyle the Varsity and a whole host of While visiting here, Bishop China for 14 years before, he clothes. schedule and playing its first sophomores are expected to see plenty of action during the Luna was a guest of the Fran- was expelled by the commuother Dangers full Bristol County grid schedciscan Fathers of St. Mary of nists. He returned to his native . Ule, will seek to rebound after a coUrse of the year. Adding to the pressures is the the Angels church. Describing Italy, completed gradua1,e wo.rk Once again the Crimson, who sub-par 1959 season in which the current flood of obscene literaGreen mustered only one victory opeQ Saturday against Provi- 'conditions in his diocese the and received a degree 111 mls- ture, ,widespread religious and s~ology from the Urban univer- racial prejudice, indifference fie in eight games. Making his dence C~ntral at Sargent Field, Franciscan prelate said:' "There are only 26 priests in' slty in. R.ome. He was assign,ed needs of neighbors, and casual coaching debut in County ranks will play an independent sched- ' . as a missionary in Guatemala in w1ll be the Green's Kevin Cad- ule. Three major changes have 1951, was consecrated Bishop 0If treatment of the marriage bo~ ieux, former Fairhaven star and been made in .the 1960 listing Father Murphy said. t Zacapa in 1956. for several seasons mentor of the which finds West Springf.ield re'The Bishop vividly recalls his Because of these presBurel\ renowned 'Fairhaven Varsity placing Chicopee, Brockton takarrest by the _communists in Father Murphy continued, bigb ing over Fairhaven's spot and Club team. CORAL GABLES (NCr-The China. When the soldiers arrived school boys and girls are madted ' Malden Catholic standing in for Somerset at Mansfield at his mission, Louis Young, the by irresponsibility, disrespect oil North Quincy. Brockton State A generosity of a member of forThe Mansfield picture is not champions imd coached by Chet mer Notre Dame coach Elmer Chinese house boy, pleaded with authority and of learning, and' unlike that at Coyle. Graduation Millett, former Holy Cross great, Layderi's last football team will them: ''Kill me. Don't kill Father an enormous concern for reetook a fearful toll of the. '59 reportedly has another power- enable a Miami Catholic high Luna, He is needed. I am not." reation, mone¥-. and automochampionship unit but Coach house. school to have itS own gymnaThe Bishop observed: "It is biles. Bill Parsons still has Ron Gensium this Winter. not often a man wants to die fOr Moving Capeward, Gov. Fuller another man." tili, All-Diocesan halfback, and The entire cost of the $106,000, undoubtedly one of the best ball Field, Falmouth will be the 750-seat building now under The communists granted the players in Southeastern Mass. To scene of the first game in Tri- construction at Christopher Co- house boy's request They arCounty when Lawrence High utilize Gentili's fine passing lumbus High School is being rested and expelled the Bishop ability-he's a pitcher of unusual meets Wareham in what should donated by Howard Korth of and they killed Louis Young. promise-Coach Parsons plans be a thriller. Mike Gaddis' Little Flower parish here. to shift the big fellow to the charges showed lots of spark and A native of Bay City, ~ich., Honors Bishop hustle in last week's Jamboree the 'former Notre Dame tackle it:l quarterback spot. ALTOONA (NC)-A 54-page 273 CENTRAL AVE. and they'll be out to avenge a 6-0 Mansfield will be at home 110 , set1?ack at the hands of the visi- now president of Aaxico Airlines. supplement was published by the He is a past chairman of the Dio- Cat hoi i c Register, diocesan Somerset Saturday in a nontors last year. Coach Frank NEW -BEDFORD :lmorate the league contest but one which Almeida's Capeway eleven has cese of Miami Development newspaper, to COl enthronement of Bishop J. Cardown through the years has good size up front and showed Fund. According to Bro'ther Benedict roll McCormick a_ the fifth WY 2·6216 proved an exciting curtain-raiser. defensive strength in Saturday's Henry, principal of the high spiritual head of the AltoonaThe Raiders, defending Tri- action. l>..:hool, the gift is the largest Johnstown diocese. County champions, will be under single donation ever given the In other games around the the direction of Coach Sherm Kinney who succeeds Carlin circuit, Fairhaven, under new Marist Brothers in over 30' years. Lynch, now at Bishop Stang. coach, Hal Cornforth, will be at Open Mission' Good field, no hit is the capsule North Attleboro; Taunton is SINSINAWA (NC)-Four Docomment· of the Raiders' skipper down to visit New Bedford VocalINe. who is confronted with backfield tional in a game listed for Fri- minican Sisters of the Most Holy day; Oliver Ames travels to Case Rosary 'will leave their mother problems of major proportions. for a non-league contest and house here in Wisconsin to fly A traditional County League Yarmouth is at Hanover. to Bolivia in October to open opener has Attleboro at Durfee. their first Latin American misBoth schools have new coaches. sion school. New Seminary Jim Cassidy takes over the AtSAGINAW (NC) - Eightytleboro portfolio from Bill Madthree candidates "')r the priestreported for first classes in German Reds hood the new $3.5 million St. Paul CONDIT~ONBNG FUNERAL HOME, iNC. Seminary here. The seminary Close New Church a. Marcol RoJ' Po Lorralno .80¥ BERLIN (NC)-An old bam now offers the first two years of ARTHU~ J. couco P:RANCIS J. DEVINE ROller LaFraDeo which was converted into a . high school, but will eventually lfA~L IlUVEl g MASS. Catholic church by the volun- offer all fout: years of high school ~~3 FUNERAL DiRECTO~S tE: ~r labor of Catholic and Prot- and the first two of college. 15 IRVINGTON It;}T. estant workers has been closed WY 7-7830 by the communist regime in East NEW BEDFORD Germany. COME IN - SEE ~ and D~IVE The new church, which was tc have been blessed this month, la F.urn~ture located in Kollwitz, near Magde"The World's Most ~utifuUy Proportioned CGrs'" DONAT BOISVERT .JOSEPH M. F. DONAGHY burg. The Reds say a Catholic ~ . . owner/mtllr~ church is iloi' necessarY ·there. SNSURANC~ AGENCY The parisp..cpnsjsts .of .800 Cath.f42 Campbell Sf._ All Kinds Of Insurance fOR~ olics coming from 10 nearby vilNew Bedford. Mass. lages. . , . : ..... 96 WILLIAM STElElE'l' WYman ,906792 «:OM~ANY Prior to the bam renovation, NEW BEDFOmn. MAS& Sunday Mass was offered in the HEADQUARTE~S a:ot:! FORD DEALERS roR OVER 38 YEARS DIAL W'Y 8-5153 local Protestant church, while COLONIAL AND weekday Masses were said in W:i lI'ersonal SGflVOOO ~344-186 Purchase St. U\t~'W ~<dl~@l"d, MaBs. TRADITIONAL i=URNi'D'UJJmi! attic room. ,
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Recalls How Chines:e House Boy, Bought Bishop's,·LifeWith His Own
'Former Tackle Donates Gym .
BLUE RIBBON LAUNDRY
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs.,Sept.22,1960
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~Laity ,Has L,ong .Helped
S hi' Staf .' at· 0 IIC C 00 S h f C WASHINGTON, (NC)-A Iiumber of circumstances e
'eombl'n'e to recall·a.n e'nterpris.elaunc.hed here J'ust 100 years ,ago. The circumstances include. the 'start of a new school :year, the approach of the Civil War Centennial, and the· I .I . t h ~,large ro1e ay eac ers. p ay .the centennl'al 'p'er'·I·od.. Archin the· 14,000 or so Catholic 'bishop. John Hughes of, New ·sCho~ls throughout the' na- "York preached at the dedication . :tiOll. On September.17·, 1860, 'of the church· on October. 16, 'within a 'year of. the dedication 1859, and President James·.Bu:, 'of Jesuit-coriducted St. Aloysius' 'chanan and several members of his cabinet attended the' cere':' . I t h :church here, seven ay eac er:s monies. staffed a parochialschoolbel.!un . ' . in the basement. of the .(:hurch . Gen. William Tecumseh She~with ,25.0 pupils enrolled. man and his family moved' int~ • the territorial confines of. the Douglas Mansiolll ., parish' in 1869, and Mrs. Sher"Conditions 'were not' ide'al, ,man (Ellen Ewing' Sherman) is however. and after a shori time credited with bringing the Sisthe school moved to the Douglas ters of Notre Dame de Namur. 'Mc",c;"n on New Jersey Avenue, to Wasl:J.ington to' conduct the' the occ~lpants having left for parish school for girls. Her own .an extended Western vacation," .daughter,. Minnie, had attended ',says one chronicle of this his-nuns' academy in.R~ading,·Ohio. to~c occasion.' The Do~glas SUb~equently, Sisters' of .Merc~ 'Mansion referred to was the took charge of the parochial ·house of Stephen A. Douglas, boys' schools, and since then .who ran against Lincoln for the' thousands. of· Catholic boys and' .presidency that, year. The house girls have received 'instruction stood within two blOCKS of the in these two schools:: .. church. Senator Douglas' was '';'' su~vey made in '1959 'showed not a ;Catholic, though there are that 25,450 lay teachers 'were those who ,mainta,in that he among the 102,622 teachers who' • eame' into the' Church' on his staffed 10,278 Catholic .elemen'deathbed: Mrs. Douglas was a 'tary schools, arid that there were Catholic and' the couple held 49,648 lay teachers among the Number One pew in St. Aloysius 171,'181 ,faculty members in 13 _ ehui'ch. . 321 Catholic schools' of all level~. Negotiations were begun almost at .once to have Sisters of Hong 'Kong' Catholics .Charity take charge of the school, Build Soc'ial .Center but the. efforts were unsuccess~ul, and the Jay teachers con- . HONG KONG (NC)''':'- Hong Untied to staff it until 1863, when Kong· "'atholics' are building a Sisters of Mercy came to the three-sbr. social center at the parish. The Sisters of Mercy . refugee-filled town 'of Tsun Wan found. it necessary to give up as a resuJ~ ·of World r' fugee their convent in Washington, Year. and the chronicle recalls that a W.o:· on +lte building, which "Mr. P. J. Brophy took charge of ~ill cost almost $100,000, will 'a separate boys' ·school· and provide vocational training for· women lay' teachers returned to youths to enable them to obtain' instruct the girls. By 1867, 250 industrial jobs. Tsun Wan is a girls and 300 boys attended the manu' 'turing center' in. this schools, approximately two- British C' ·ony. thirds paying no tuition." The center will also in, 'ude a Historic Interest recreation center, a nursery, a · With the nation preparing to clinic and a nOOdle-making mark the 100th anniversary of plant. A'large hostel for refugees the outbreak of the Civil War, from Red-rule·' China is' also 'a great deal of historic interest~ planned fer Hong' Yong Island. will center on the capital, and A .contribution from German '.upon the Catholic parish, St. Catholics for World Refugee Aloysius, whose historr spans Year will underwrite construction of· a 300-bed general hos'Gun!d foD' ~ioflld Meets pital 'f
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~n Fall IROY~D' StUlD1'dlay
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Father Joao Rezendes 'chats' with Sister Mary. Our Lady ·of Mercy, faculty At right, attentive students follow explanation given by Sister Mary Sylvia.
SCHOOL 'OBSERVES 50th ANNIVERSARY: Espirito Santo parish ·school, Fall River, is marking its Golden Jubilee. At left Octave Leite and ·Harold Mosher discuss catechism les~on with Sister Maria Anjo. Center, .
The Fall River Catholic ;uild for t~le ::Jlind will resume monthly meetings Sunday. Jo Rosary and Ben-,diction in Sacred Heart Chu.rch at 2:15 will be followed by a social hour In the parish school. Rev. James F. McDermott, pastor € Our Lady of Fatima Parish, Swansea, is Fall River regional guild director. Rev. George E. Sullivan, pastor of St. Dominic's Parish; Swansea, is Dioc~san d·ii:ec·tor.. . ,
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E~~:i~~!~fr~ma~!eoone
:cardMinaICLushi~~ Emphasizes Need .F·or· ore atin ~merican Priests
as i~~sc~~~ followed in 1910 by BOSTON (NC)-Richard Carthe erection' of the. present ,dinal Cushing says Latin Amer.school which opened in Sep- ica needs 100,000 priests to tember of that year with an combat communism. .. enrollment of 220. It was .. Cardinal Cushing, who re.staffed by the Franciscan Mis- .turned. last week from I>eru sionaries of Mary, who are stHl ,where he served as papal deie. . m . th e parIs '. h. . servmg 'gate to the National Eucharistic . First Portuguese School .Congress i~ Piura, said he. sees' Espirito Santo School became no "immeiiiate danger" .from the first Portugllese Catholic 'COIl'l.muhists in Peru,but the school in the United States. Pas-' .' '. .. .tors .followi~g Father .De Valle~ c' This Drive-in 'theatre contmued hiS emphasIs .on e~u- A'· .R' .. ' ,, catiQn." "in a. parish that n.ever . SSIStS .ell.glon
. T~e
Cardinal. said he
had
~eard. estimates .of' th.e number
'was ri,ch', but always. manag~ ABE~NA'J;~Y, (NC) - Since 'of communists working in Peru ·to keep going." . . the. acquisitio~. of' a drive;in ' . . f Rev. Manuel S. Travassos' foltheater for a' dual purpose, at~ rangmg rom 5,000' to 40,000. lowed Fathe'r De Valles, serv- tendance at Mass arid other serv- ; "The truth is, however, that 'ing the parish until his death ices by the' Spanish-speaking in they are very 'activ~, regardless in 1953.: Rev. Joao V. Resendes this Texas area has increased . of the number,." he observed. is the "present pastor. ' considerably. Over 33.Years Experience , Father Joseph Brennan of· St. Puerto Rico to Have' Elizabeth's parish, Lubbock, said First Consecration some 275 persons assisted at a recent Sunday.evening Mass af .PONCE (NC)-The first epis- the drive-in'-'After' Masses and . BOn LED AND BULK GAS' copal ·coilse.cration in. Puerto oth~r· ·services,· motio . pictures .. "GAS APPLIANCES' Rican history will. take plcice. in Spanish are shown. The drive4 Show Rooms to serve y~~ Wednesday, Oct. 12, in Mary the in is complete with a confession Hyanni. '. of Falmauth Queen church here;. booth,· and a 'collection at each' 696 E. Main" St. ' • E. Main St. On that' date Father Luis Mass takes· care of the, film SP ~ . KI 8-1560 Aponte Mar.tinez will. be conse- rental expenses.. Orlean. Pravineetow.. crat~d Tit'}Jar' Bisl,lOP o~~a"es . Abernathy· is in the Anlarillo ., ' R~ute 6 'tiS Comine~eial St. al)d AuxiI.iary,. Bishop, ,of Ponce~ ,diocese, which is said to' be the; 585 , 858 . The consecrator will be Arch- largest· '~liarcero diocese" in the Harwich - 1494 ' bishop Lino 'Zanini, Apostolic countr~.·· . . , .. . Delegate to Puerto Rico and' Apostolic Nuncio to the Domin" iean Republic. Coconsecrators will • be Archbishop' James..P. Davis of Sail Juan, P. R., and Bishop James E. McManus, .' . C.SS.R., of Ponce.' .
.SUBURBAN 'GAS CORP.
Ou·, Lady ofGQod Counsel 'Retreat ··Hou·se
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FALL.
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Sept. ~3'~Pio'cesan Laymen Sept. 3D-Diocesan L~y~omen Oct.. 7-l~gi9n of Mary Oct. 14-Diocesqn Laymen OcL . 21-Dioces~n laywomen Oct.' 28-Fren~h Spe~king Laywome.n Nov. ...4-Diocesan Laymen Nov. l1-Diocesan Nurses
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Electrical Contl'actors
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PAU RIVER
OSborne 2-2143
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FU'esh Seafood .Dai Iy
FISH LOBSTERS
Fall River Diocesa'n Retreat House P. O. Box 63-Middleboro Road . East .Freetown, , Mass. . Please reserve a place for me .for the Week-end . Retreat beginning
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MaclEAN'S SEA FOODS FAIRHAVEN,MASS.
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AddreS$· U~1I0N WHARF
Archbishop of Boston added: "The best program is to.get more priests to go down there from this country. The sooner'. we' get them there, the better. Other bishop's will have to allow 'priests to go to Latin ,America. ~: "Probably'100,000 are needed. T~~ people are religious 'but uninformed. They may be visited ~y c~mmunist agents~very day ~h~le seeing a priest every ;~onth." .
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