10.15.59

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'A~CHITE~~L DRAWIN~ OJ!"- BISHOP FEEHA~ REGIONAl. HIGH SCHoOL FQR;~RtATERAmEBORO AREA

-:.: ','e Th 'ANCHOR .

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

Fall River, Mass. .Thursdqy, Oct. 15, 1959 PRICE 10. V I 3 • 42 tle.ond Cia•• Mail'l'rivilelles I ~ _O. ___

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Authorized _'_ at Fall ·R,·ve•. Ma••,

$400 e Y . --:-,-.~p~r_ear

Ad Altare De'i ·Crosses For 74 Diocesan ·Boys

Seventy~four Boy Scouts of the Dio<::ese will receive

Ad Altare Dei crosses, highest award in Catholic' Scouting, from His Excellen~y, the Most Re~erend James J. Gerrard, Auxiliary Bish.op, at solemn' ceremonies in St. Mary's Cathedral at 3 Sunday afternoon, of an annual Diocesan-wide Oct. 25, the 'feast of Christ presentation. Scouts will assemble at St. the King. Previously awards have been made in individ- Mary's School, Fall River, at ual parishes hut' the Cathedral ceremony will mark the start

2:30 to form in ranks for a proTurn to' Page Twelve'

Interracial Council Names Two Silver" Medal Winners NEW YORK (NC)-A San Diego civic leader and a New' Orleans attorney. hav.e be~n. n~med .to receive the 1959 James J. Hoey Awards. for their contributions to interracial justice. The .awards, given annually by' the Catholic Interracial Council of be Percy H. Steele·Jr.; executive New York, will be presented director of the San Diego Urban on Sunday, Oct. 25. Recipi-. League and John P. Nelson Jr., ents of the 1959 awards will .Turn ~o Page Eighteen

Arch-itec'f D"Uv~_rs' PlaiiS .For ~ishop' :Stang'High

. . At a meeting of 800 men from the Greater Attleboro Area;' Most Rev. James 1. Gerrard, D.D., V.G.; Auxiliary Bishop of the, Diocese, unveiled: a picture of the Bishop Feehan High Sch()ol arid announced: that bids will be opened in January of 1960 and that construction of the school will begin in March of 1960. The regio~al high, which will be erected on 29 acres of land in Attleboro at the corner of North Main Street.and Commonwealth Avenue, will be

~Diocesels

P:lanning -Cath.olic Youth Week'

built at a cost of $2,500,000. It will open in the Fall of 1961. This meeting was the final CYO units; throughout the Diocese are planning obstage of the S;>ecial Gifts Committee Training Program, Special servances of Catholic Youth Week from Oct. 25 to Nov. 1~ Gifts will be solicited now and op.ening with National Youth Communion Sunday, Oct. 25, the first report made next week~ Feas~ of Christ the King. In all parishes of the Diocese, Th'g . e oa I 0 f th e d' rive IS 'youth will .be urged to re- insfallation of ' district officers, $1,225;000. Advance Special Gifts, . t C . named at previous elections. l\Jready includ,':) $25,000, given by . c~~ve· corpora e . ommumon In Fall River the' religious Barney Doyle, Publicity Chair-- WIth many parIshes plan- portion of the installation cereTurn to Page Seventeen ning Communion breakfasts mony will be held at 7 o'clock and an area breakfast scheduled at Santo Christo Church, folfor the Taunt"on district. lowed' by a program at CYO In E.'all River and -New Bed- headquarters, Anawan Street. ford, .area meetings pf parish Highlighting the program will CYO ",nits will be held Sunday be presen.tation of plaques to , eveniQg, Oct. 25, hig~lighted by Turn to Page Two

Cadets for C'hrist In High Schools Aid Vocations

CINCINNATI (NC)-EIder High School's "Cadets fQr Christ" program may be imitated elsewhere as a

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'~ational Holy Na:me Society

·Conclave· Honors Six Men

result of its success here in the NEW:C>RLEANS (NC)-A gerieral '~'nd a judge are past two years. among six men named to receive achievement awards at Msgr. John' E. Kuhn, dean, reported that 2~ Elder students the seventh national CQnve~tion of the Holy Na)TIe Society have begun studies for the now in session here in Louisiana. Brig. Gen. John H. Mcpriesthood 'o~rot_herhood in the Gee, comIr).anding general ~f The fjve-day convention will two years of the program's oper- . the Antilles Command of the conclude' next Sunday. ation. Although no~ designed espeU. S.. Army, and. Circuit. The' Holy Name award will cially as a vocation recruitment . Court J.udge David. A; Mc~ also go to: . program, it emphasized Mass, . Mullen of St. Louis are among Bert M. Cass, sides representaCommunion, and sacrifice as the tive for the Bostitch Midwest the sextet to: be,'honored before essential elements of any good a Candlelight Mass .in Tulane Corporation of New Orleans. Catholic's life. Louis C. F.ink, a public relaUniversity 'Stadiulll, Saturday,. Members of the first degree of tions representative for. the Oct. 17. Cadets pledge. ;:hemselves to atJames Francis Cardinal Mc- Trust Company of Georgia, DeTurn to Page Four Intyre, Archbishop 'of" Los An- catur, Ga. Turn to Page Eighteen geles" will celebrate the Mass.,

Indiana Editorial l.auds Catholic School Role

NEW ALBANY (NC)The Catholic school system was'lauded for the key role it fills in community life in an

rERCY

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STEELE, JL

.lOHN P. NELSON, JR.

editorial which appeared in the Tribune, New Albany daily newspaper. . Written 'by Perry Stewart, managing edi~or, the Indiana newspaper editorial said that if the Catholic schools of New. Albany decided to discontinue, more than 1,600 elementary school children would be un-. loaded on to the public school system. , . ''The Catholic schools are supported by members of the Turn to Page Eighteea

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GENERhL McGEE

JUDGE McMULLEN


THE ANCHOR":-Oiocese of Foil River-Thurs., Oct. 15,·1959

Laymen ·Conduct Mass Institute

House Subcommittee Offers .Program for Fighting Smut

WATERLOO (NC) - MoN . than 300 persons attended 811 Instit~te on the Catholic Masa, eonducted here by .the Dubuque Archdiocesan Council of Cau... 'oUc Men. · Sixteen laymen made up tbe · "'faculty" of. the' institute held 'at .Columbus High School her.. The pUrpose of the one-day in.. stitute· was to train deanery' leaders to conduct· 15 similar insti· tutee on' November 22 for mOM than 2,000 parish leade. throughout· the diocese. .

WASHINGTON (NC)-A Congressional committee has outlined a sweeping six-:point program for dealing with the »roblem of obscene literature at the Federal, state and local levels. "The youth of our land are being bombarded from' all &ides. with loose portrayal '. 2) That national org~niza­ of sex that serves to weaken tions urge their local chapters to . the qloral fiber of the future take action against obJectionable . leaders of our nation," the literature. .'

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House Postal Operations' Sub'Committee declared in making its recommendation. . · . In. an "interim report" issued , after a series of hearings earlier '. this year, the subcommitte~ said it' believes that "there is. a direct connection between recent increases in juvenile misbehavior and the reading of sordid . literature.'" . . The subcommittee's six-point program for action recommended: ' 1) That community leaders set " ' ", . liP publIc mformahon and legISlative prograM!> in. their com-. "t' t I t 't' to th mum les 0 a er CI !Zens. e. problem and to. encourage law enforcement 'officials to take , action against obscenity. ,..' "

3) That state' goverrilnents consider adopting more ·uniform anti-obscenity law, and set up keyn~te adci~ess, "Puttinc " state legislative commiSSIons to .the Mass in Focus," was delivstudy the problem. ered by Richard J. Wright of Local' Governments Marshalltown. Workshops were 4) That local governments conducted on the subject, "What adopt "more effective ordiWe Do at Mas~ and 'WhY," and nances" against obscenity. "Getting in on The Act," a ses.5) That th~ "various branches sion on lay participation in the of the ,publications and movie Mass. A demonstrati~n Mass Wall indus~ries" se~ ~p self-policing conducted by Father John Parr measures to el~~mate smut from ,of ColumbUs High School tie the mass medIa, , ; dose ~e day. ,6) That the Post Office ~epartment continue to advIse Congres leg' 1 t· e . l' Legion of Decency s on .1S a Iv. ac Ion needed to render ItS anh-obscenThe following films are to be ity campaign more effective. added to the lists in their respeo- ' ' . . '. . ChaIrman of the House fostal tive classifications: Operations Subcomf!littee:is Rep. ; U~~bje~tionable for g~neral Kathryn E. Granahan' of, Pennpatronage: Battle of the Coral sylv~fnia, who sponsored legisla. Sea; Libel. . . , N~w Jersey Prelates tion in the last session' 'of Con· 'Unobjectionable for adult. Continued from Page One program, and tokens will be .Laud Charity Nuns . gress 'to' strengr.henarid streamand adolescents: '.' . . Four-I> Man. , CONVENT (NC) - B ish 0 p line Post Office administrative , CYO ,units outstanding in the presented to the 'outgoing group Unobjection.able for adultsl procedures in 'dealing with ob- ..four departments of organization .in appreciation of their services :.Jaln~sA. l\'l:cNulty of Paterson . . . . . ; , ~ activities: . spiritual, cultural, during the. year. .' ·Jay Hawkers; Pillow Talk; Web ". and Auxiliary Bishop Martl.~ W. 'sceniniterat'ure . New BedfordCYO district will ·ol·,Evidence. Her bill'· was passed- by the . social and ,athletic. " ., Stanton of )l'ewark have lauded Will Make Awards . sponsor a.pance· at· Kennedy the. work of 'the Sisters of Char- House, but' the Senate failed to act on it· before' Congress' adSlated to receive the 'spiritual Ce1,lter Tuesday ~ight, Oct. 27. ·.. Mark ~AnniYersary ity. of St. Elizabeth here in New .. iourned. " ' •... award, is the CYO of Blessed The event ~will also serve as · LISBO~ (NCl~Thefirst POJloo Jersey on the 'occasion of ·their · Sacrament parish in recognition an cx.:casioDI for young people .. tuguese Conference of St.' VinlOOth anniversary observance.. , to register' at the Center for . cent de Paul has celebrated' iy '. Mass O',do ," .:Bishop McNulty recalled ia of ' its, outstanding exhibit for forthcoming· adivitles. . . 1859 the congregation had but :FRIDAy ~ St.Hedwig,Wlciow. Vocation Week. Holy Name and . On. t.h.e'. last day of Y~uth . ·lOOth anniversary.' There are now 58Jsuch conferences workImmaculate Conception' units Simple~ White.. Mass Proper; ,seven members and how it num· will . share the cultural award Week, Sunday afternoon; Nov. ing ~or the poor in Por~ugaL' Glo~ia; Common Preface: · ,bers inore 4.hall 1,800. ',' 1, a Diocesanwide observance for their' CYO choirs, which will Bishop Stanton saluted the SATU~DA'y-St.' Margaret Mary ,'give will be held at Kennedy Center Alacoque, Virgin., Double. · ing. selections during the even- at DUns who now care for 50,000 1:30. It' will . be highlighted White's. Farm D~~ry White: Mass P.roper; Gloria; by election and installation of · patients. annually in their hosCommon Preface.'· .Santo Christo CYO will re- officers for the Diocesan Council pitals and teach 70,000 students. "SPECIAL MILK The Sisters, he said, "have given SUNDAY-St, Luke, Evangelist, ceive the. athletic award, while of Catholic Youth. Each of the From Our .Own arid XXII Sunday"After Penthe units of Franklin Street and five areas, comprising the Dio.ervice of avery high .quality, Tested Herd" ~cost. Double of II Class.-Red. Anawan' Str~et centers will cese: Fall River, Taunton, AtDOt only to c~aritable w~rks of Mass ·;Proper; Gloria;iSecond share the social awal'd in rec- tleboro, New Bedford and the mercy but also.to civil society." Acvshnei, Mass. WY 3-4457 .. Collect of Sunday; Third Col- ognitionof their weekly dancetl Cape, will ·present two cft"di_ _ . • ... SpeCial Milk , Wom~n Fou nder lect FOI: the Propagation of the which form a major 'attraction dates ~for, election. From them will be chosen a ·.on. Faith (from the Votive Mass); for area teenagers on weekend ,. Homogenized VIt.D Milk ' . Creed; Preface of Apostles. . nights: Of Propagot. Diocesan president,vice' ,presi-.' 'Buttermilk ' Mission Sunday, to. be, noted MONDAY-St. Peter of Alcan- /' Emblems of office will be·· dent, ,secretary and treasUfer,. • . Tropicana Orar:'ge Juice In :all churches of the Diocese .• taraj·Confessor. Double. White. passed .from outgoing to incom~ who will be instalied by His' • Coffee and Choc. Milk ... .t his week, recalls ,tlie unique· MasS Proper; Gloria; Com- ing area officers as part of the Excellency, the Most Reverend • Eggs - Butter story of the :foundress of the mori Preface. James 'J. Gerrard, D.D., V.G. Society for the Propagation of TUESDAy.:-st..J'ohn Cantiu8, Vocations Increase the Faith. Not a religious, she' Confessor. Double. White. . LIVERPOOL '(NC)-A record nevertheless laid the' foundation ....Mass Proper; Gloria; Common total of 70 students have been for what' was to become' the Preface.. ·accepted 'for Liverpool's archgreatest single agency for misWEDNESDAY-Mass of the pre- diocesan seminary. 'Last year 34 AS 'A HOLY: cioss FATHER ,I 'ionary support... vious Sunday. Simple. Greeri. were accepted. Priest-Teacher Home Missioner Her interest, far ahead of Iier Mass Proper; +'fo Gloria; Sec.... ~. .,', Parish Priest Foreign ~issionary times, in the spiritual and mateond Collect .St.Hilarion Abrial welfare of workingmen 'prebot; Third Collect Ss. Ursula ~ Information about_ the 50th' ANNIVERSARY eeded 'the Papal encyclicals on and her- Companions, Virgins Holy. Cross Fathers or the SPECIAL· iabor and had 'an influence Oft' and Martyrs; Common Preface. .Lay Brothers, ,write ta: the Jocists and other reformTHU~SDAY-", ..:Mass of' the preVIGRAN VITAMINS movements.. vious Sunday, Simple. Green. HOLY CROSS FATHERS 30 Day Supply FREE with Living in 19th century France, Mass Proper; No Gloria; ComNorth Easton,' Massachusetts · I , Bottle of 100' Pauline' Jaricot began her aid mon Preface. (&IeloH this ocI with reque.t) (G) . of the missions at the age of 20. , . . - - - - - - - - - - - Although she met with many dif:" . ~RTYHOURS ficulties; her organization evenDEVOTION tually assumed pontifical status. Cor. Cove Rd.' & Water St. Oct. 18~t. Hedwig, 1( ew Pauline Jaricot's cause' f~r' New Bedford WY 4-2465 Bedford. beatification has been introduced Our Lady of. the Immac. in Rome and she may' well be ulate .C.o nee p t i 0 Il; considered a model fol' lay, , Taunton. aposties. Sixteen, pretty and a leper, Oct. 19-La Salette, ll: a I t for her' the pitiable Brewster. . eonditioDtl of the older patients . Oct. 25-8t. Peter, Provinceis a fearful dream' of 'her town. own futUre. St. ~ichael, Fall River. , St; Patrick, Somerset. But Carmel need not be Nov•. '1---: St. Thomas More, . mutilated. by leprosy. A new Somerset.' CHARLES F. VARGAS wonder' drug arrests \ the Sacred Heart, Oak Bl~f:fli.,. dise~se completely. 254 ROCKDALE AVENUE

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Ca'tholic Youth ·Week.in Diocese

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FOUR WAYS TO,SERVE CHRIST.

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Rev. Edward F. THE ANCHOR

Second-elass ~ail privileges authorised at Fall River. Mass, Published ffVe~ Thul'Ilday at 410 Highla~d Avenue. Fall River. Mass•• by the Catholic Pre&lI of the Diocese ·of Fall River. Suhseriptioa price , Il:r man. pOIltpald ' ••00 per , _ . . \

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Report Indicates 38,503 Studying For Priesthood .'

WASHINGTON (NC) Religious order priests win increase their numbers at a faster rate than the diocesan priesthood when students in major seminaries today are' ordained, a new study indicates. The total number of young men studying for the priesthood

Amtce Is Worn at Holy Sacrifice' of Mass To Recall Days of

By Rev. Roland Bousquet St. Joseph's Church, New Bedforfa ' A few days ago, II called at the home of a family in our parish. The mother was busy at the ironing board. She gently maneuvered, the iron into the folds of a charming white qress. A few, brightly wrapped packages werelaid neatly on the table. Her daughter was 10 years old and the family was giving her a birthday party. We all feel a natural desir~ to prepare the important 'of... wearing the amice in the events of Our lives. The "fanon". The fanon is a second Church, is also a Joving amice or shoulaer cloth made of' striped silk' worn over the mother who prepares for the

is18~:~t~~tical report on Catholic leminaries says that there is one priest about, to celebrate the major diocesan seminarian for ,Eucharistic Feast special' garevery four diocesan priests, ments, the liturgical vestments. while there is one for a religious The forms and fashions of order for every three religious modern" wearing apparel are too priests. ephemeral to ~lothe the celeSi.lce the study by the Sem- brant at Holy Mass. Her long fnary Departments of the Na- experience has tau g h t' the tiona I Catholic Educational As- Church to adopt the classical sociation is the first of its kind, design of the early Roman the report does not say whether period as best suited to enhance the diocesan-rel1gious' order prothe beatJ.ty of her ceremonial. portion has been the same in the The am ice is the first of the past, or predict what will hap- liturgica1 vestments worn over' pen to-it in the future. ' the cassock. 'fhis blessed garThere are 31,961 diocesan ment consists in a rectangulat' priests and 20,728 religious or- piece of white linen to which der priests in the U. S., accord- two tapes are sewn to its top' fog to the 1959 Official Catholic corners. The celebrant first Directory, published by P. 'J. kisses the small' cross, worked Kenedy and SOliS, New York. with red threarl in the center of , The NCEA report says that the amice. He, allows it to rest there are 7,135 religious major on his head for 8 moment before seminarians and 7,661 ,diocesan. 'he brings' it down on his shoul- " major seminarians'; ders:The,' :tapes' are ,..fastened: , 381 Seminaries ' ,,' about the b,OdY to keep the amice . Other highlights of, 'the study" iit 'I>l~c~.' , .ndertaken by the' NCEA's ,The amice, like every other major and minor', seminary de":' Mas! vestment, was' not alway." partments inClUde: ,'8 liturgical. The pr'~est,' for 'sev, -There are 381 U. S. semina- e'rafcenturies; 'wore ordinary ries, institutions offering acaclothes both at the altar and' demic and splritual"training to for everYday:u,se. By the seventh ~ndidates for the priesthood.' century it was customary' to keep ': ~Of the J81,' 131 (34 pel' a special. set Qf· "best clothes" in eent) have been founded since ,the sacristy, to be, worn by the .i945 and 108 (28 per cent) since priest at sacred functions. These 1950. garments, however., were sti'll .-There are 166 seminaries similar to the civilian clothes of with an enrollment of less than the period. . 50 students, 152 of them conThe clergy acquired a distineducted by religious orders. Of the 381 seminaries, 282 are Asks Red ·Tito Free eonducted for candidates for the C(.Irdi"al Stepinac religious order pI:iesthood arid LONDON (NC) - A Catholic 89 for the diocesan priesthood. For diocesan candidates, there ' newspape~'s appeal :urging freeare 26 major seminaries, 46 dom for Yugoslavia's Cardinal minor and 27 in a category of, Stepinac has been broadcast by the British Broadcasting Cor.,. "'major-minor," which include all or part of the major and poration's service to Yugoslavia. , The UniversE.', London Cathminor programs. For religious order candidates, there are' 97 olic weeklY,dedared: , "The free wolld should unite in major, 111 minor and 74 majorasking Marsqal Tito to release, minor. The study comments that the Cardinal Stepinac now. Let him' seminary movement' is in its return to Zagreb,' not in 1962, infancy in this country and that but in time for Christmas." . His Eminence Alojzlje Cardiwith the population •increase, "the indication is that semina- nal Stepiliac, Archbishop of Zaries will be built at an even greb,\vas- sentenced to 16 years faster pa,ce than 'in the past ~ine of hard labor in 1946. In. 1951 he was released from prison and ~ears." has been confined to his native Taunton Vincentians villa~e of Krasic.

Plan Pilgrimage The fifth annual pilgrimage of the Particular Council of Taunton to the Shrine of Our Lady of La Salette will take place at 8 Wednesday eVlO'ning, Oct. 21. Pilgrimage intentions will include giving honor, to' Our Blessed Lady, Protectress of the Society of Saint Vincent de Paul, and the Beatification of ,Frederick Ozanam, founder of the Society. Active and honorary members from all sections of the Diocese are invited.

Dismisses Religious Practices Charge MIAMI (NC)-A Dade County Circuit Court Judge has dismissed a suit, charging that the county school board violated the U. S., constitution by permitting Bible reading and other. religious activities in public schools. Judge J. Fritz Gordon accepted the. board~s mo~ion for' dismissal, o~ the suit. filed by 'Harlow Chamberlain, a salesman who has three, ,children in public schools. ' Supported hy the American Civil Liberties Union;' Mr. Chamberlain had opposed Bible reading, Bible instructio(\' after school hours, recitation of the Lord's prayer, hymn singing, observailce of Christmas and Easter by schools, "religious symbols" in classrooms, baccalaureate programs and a reliaious census.

Unheated Chur,ches

THE AMICE tive garb in the eighth century. This was indh'ectly due to,the influence of the _ Germanic peoples. Their ,.hor'l; costume was accepted as' more practical 'for everyday use' than was the long garments o'{tht\ old Roman style. ,The' clergy, 'however, did not ;adopt- the, new ,fashion. The 'gracefui lines' of the long flow~ ing garmentS' of the old, style thus 'became the liturgiCal insignia of the Church. Arrio~g these garments was'. neck'-cloth' o'r'scarf wor.n by men. and women' round ,the' neck 'to' protect the thl"Oat' against the cold and also to preserve the garments'. This' neck-cloth was,' 'bythe ninth century, firmly estabHshed asa liturgical vestmEfut. It was tht: predecessor of the modern amke. The pope and ·his assistants wore' it over the alb on great solemnities. We may see 8 relic of this former way

.Dock Strike Truce In Name of Charity NEW ORLEANS (NC)-,-Af,ter being idled for two days by the strike of 15,000 longshoremen, the New Orleans waterfront 'came alive on the third day 'when a truce was called in the name of charity. . More than six tons of food were unloaded from the stores :that were aboard various ships "for crew members and passengers. The food was given to the Little Sisters of the Poor and to Hope, Haven, vocational school conducted by priest~ and Brother:s of the Salesiaru of Don Bosco.

chasuble at paoal ceremonies. The priest, until-the thirteenth century, w.ore the' amice as a head covering going to and coming from the altar. At the altar it was pushed oack off the head forming a cowl below the neck. The bishop to this day at the 'ordination to the SUb-di~conate, places the ami:e on the head of the newly ordained sub-deacon.' The biretta replaced the am ice, in the latter part of the thirteenth century, as the liturgical head piece. Today, only Domin_ icans, Franciscans, Trinitarians, Servites and "Ilembers of other old religious .,rders still wear the amice in the old tradition, "that is, over the hood of their habit. , The secu~ar 'and most religious ,merely rest the amice on the· head for a momer,tt' befot~ they , let it fall ,to thE' shoulders, While, .doing,so the priest prays: "Place"" .O~ord" on Diy head the' helmet of salvation, that I ,may ov.er'.come the assaults .of the' deviL" The .Church sees in the priest' .:vesting ,for Mass, '. the spiritual warrior preparing hitnself' to 'battle agaInst the forces "of evil. In order to' serve under the standard, of Christ the' priest :inust'wearthearmor of'faith. , (Next Week- The Alb)

Return Pilgrim Virgin Statue to Portugal FATIMA (NC)-The statue of 'the Pilgrim Virgin of Fatima has been flown back to Portugal after a five-month tour, of 92 Italian cities. Bishop Costantino 'Caminada of Sant'Agata de', Gott, vicepresident of the Italian National :Committee for Marian Congresses,' led the group which accompanied the' statue on the flight to Lisbon airport. Among 'those meeting them ~t the airport were Archbishop Giovanni Panico, Apos;olic Nuncio to Portugal, ,a n d 'Bishop Joao Pereira Venancio of Leiria. ,Three white pigeons which accompanied the statue from Italy were released when the statue was returned to the Chapel of the Apparition at Fatima. One of them perched on the han<;ls of Bishop Caminida who was prayir.g in the chapel.

THE ANCHORThurs., Oct. 15, 1959

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Says Immigrants ,Find Adjustment Difficult Here NEW YORK (NC) - . priest .. sociologist has declared that Puerto Rican immigrants to the United States "are not nearly as great a problem fot' New York, M New York, is a problem for them." "The marvel is not that there has been so much delinquency, but that there has been so littie," said Father Joseph P. Fitzpatrick, S.J., in an address at Fordham University where he ~ a professor of sociology. The priest cited the history of New, York to show that immigrant groups have always experienced difficulty in adju'sting to life in the U. S., and have frequently had high crime rates. However, he added, ,"the gang was not the product 'of evil foreigners. It was the product of life in New York-the by-product of generations lost, in the confusion and bewilderment of the uprooting." . Referring to the problems of ,recent Puerto Rican immigrants, Father Fitzpatrick declared that "delinquency ~11 not something ,that Puex:tC), ~Icans bring, witJa. them. It is something that ha~, pens to them when they let here." . Life Is. Confusinl' . "Uprooted from 8' way of life ..... .they took for granted," he said, "they find themselves strangen 'in a way of life they' do not understand. Things that were right in Puerto Rico, they finel 'are wrong here. Things that were wrong in Puerto Rico, they ,find are right ,lere. Things"that brought them honor in Puerto Rico, invite ridicule in New York. "Life becomes confused. • • The suffering that has marked. the coming of every immigrant now begins to shake the frame.w<?rk on which their life wu built." .' F'a'ther Fitzpatrick, called oa residents of areas in which the 'immigrants arrive to "receive the Puerto Ricans as· our broth'ers and sisters In Christ." '

GEORGE M. MONTLE Plu~bing -

Hea~iri9

Over 35 Years of Satisfied Service

~:'

806 NO. MAIN STREET Fall River , OS 5-7 ~97

Lodz Auxiliary LODZ (NC) - Bishop Jan Wawrzyniec- Kulik has been named as the, third Auxiliary Bishop of the Lodz diocese.- His Eminence Stefan Cardinal Wyszynski, Primate of Poland, has announced .he appointment, which was made by Pope John. Bis~op Kulik, born in 1918 in Mi1E~jow, in central Poland, served as cha'ncellor of "the Lodz diocese in 1957.

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St,. Germaine Probably not. For Germaine is the Unknown, Unloved,' Unhonored Saint. Unwanted and regarded as worthless durinl' her, life, this lovely girl fares ~caroely' better todayIN, SPITE 'OF THE FACT 'that, she has been canonized as a Saint by the Church-IN 'SPITE OF Pope Gregory XVI who said "Germaine is the Saint we need"-IN SPITE OF Pope Pius IX who called Germaine "A new star shedding a marvelous glow ..• over the' Universal Church'." ~'Go: to Germaine," he exhorted-IN SPITE OF THE FACT that Germaine has been one of the greatest wonder workers of all times., The story;, of Germaine is a strange, enchanting, astonishing tale-written in English for the first time by Msgr. Joseph A; Keener. Read this remarkable booklet. Once you come to know Germaine, 'you will never be able to get her out of your mind--or heart. 'A 'complimEmtary copy of Msgr. Keener's booklet '''Germaine-The Saint We ~eed" and a special prayer in honor of St. Germaine will be sent entirely without cOst to all who request' them. Send your request to:

MSGR. JOSEPH A. KEENER St. Germaine Guile!

2695 Winchester Drive


4

THE ANCHOR-Dioces~ of Fall River-Thurs., Oct. 15, 1959

Explains Church" s Position On- ~sy~hiatric Treatment By Father John L. Thomas, S.J. Assistant Professor of Sociology S.aint Louis University

"I'm very upset about my married sister. She became, quite nervous after having her last child. Now'she is constantly depressed, is suspicious of the neighbors, and seems unreasonably worried about family debts. How can we help, ,her? Sometimes I'm afraid Perhaps we can put it' this of what she might do. What way: A normal person is one does the Church think of who'conforms to tQe average in psychiatric treatment? " .his methods of thin~ingJ feeling, You have good reason to be worried about your sister, Mary, though she may on 1ybe run down physically and require a good ' rest to snap out of her present condition. Hence you IIhould have her con sui t her ph y sic ian at once and if she is u~willing to do this s 0 m e membe; of the ' ,family should seek his advice I concerning .her condition without delay. If she needs a rest or temporary assistance, this should be provided at any cost since she it! obviously near the~ breaking point.' " , Many Mentally DI On the other hand, it is necesI3r y to face the possibility that IIhe may' be suffering from some mental disorder and consequently needs psychiatric care. Unfortunately, the terms mental disorder, mental illness, or mental abnormality still frighten many people unduly so that they are.reluctant to admit that on~ of their family may be mentally

mNevertheless, mental disorders, rank high among the seriously debilitating illnesses in America today. Over 180,000 persons are , admitted for the first time to mental hospitals each year, and another 70,000 to 80,000 are readmitted to such institutions. ,On any given, day, ,ro~ghly 750;000 persons are hospitalized for mental illnesses and approximatelY,55 per cent of all hospital beds in the nation are currently occupied by these patients. These statistics' cover only 8 8IDall segment of the' total psychiatric problem for they do not include a ,count of private hospi-: tals,. nursing homes, or' general ,hospitals, nor do tlley take' in neurotic patients who are bodily ,handicapped, psychosomatic , cases, alcoholics, addicts, the retarded, or the great group' of patients who need but have not yet received hospital care. Difficult to Define What is mental abnormality? It is' sometimes. defined as the opposite.of mental health. However, no two authorities can agree on an acceptable criterion of ment~l health, so this doesn't help us much.

Cadet Program Continlied from Page One tend Mass and receive Commu~ion at -Iea"t twice -i' week. Those in the second degree promise Mass and Commumon four times a week. Those in the third degree promise Mass and Communion six tim'es a week, daily Rosary, il., weekly offering to the pOQr, and an hour ,?f charitable work each week, usually , as a hospital' volunteer. Spiritual GUidan~e Each Cadet is placed under the directiOn.of a priest on the Elder faculty who meets with the bQy every two weel<'s to check art his progress and discuss any problems that arise. ' Occasionally through the school year days of recollection are held at St. Vincent de Paul ,'Church for the Cadets, at which lthe sole topic is vocation. Last year' nearly 100 Elder students took part in them. Of tlie 317 seniors enrolled at Elder, 225 are active in Cad,et,s for Christ. Plans call for exten, sion Of ~e proeram to juniors.

and ~cting, is reasonably happy,

~motlOnally bal~,?ced an~ ad-

'lusted, and posItively onent.ed 'toward future goals. The. ' abnormal person, however, l~ one who, to a greater or . lesser deg~ee, ~or a mo~e or less p~olonged penod of tI~e, devlate~ fr?m the 3:verage m w.ays ?f thmkmg, feeling, and ac~mg, ~ unreasonably unhappy, ~~o'honally unstable and unadlustable, and poorly oriented to future goals. REMEMBERS SCENES LIKE T~IS: At Maryknoll, headquarters in'New York, If we use the above as working definitions, it follows that there , F~~her Joseph P. McCormack, M.M., released last year after five years in a Red Chinese .'ill no clearly defined line be- prison, looks over a painting in the seminary's "Hall of Memories." The mural depicts the tween mental nor~alcy ,and ab- trial of ~ Catholic mis~ioner standing ooundbefore a People's Court in China for, the n?~malcy; abnorma mental ~on" "crime" pf, preaching the Gospel. NC Photo. dlhons are merely exagge~atlons of the normal. . M~mories Experts DIffer\ . Experts are far from agreemg MARYKNOLL' (NC) - Ten' Bishop Patrick J. Byrl,le, M.M., Carey, M.M., Father Rocco, P. ~ the classificati~n' of ,mental ,dIsorders or on theIr causes, and years ago all columns, of ,victo- Father Daniel L. McShane,/M.M., Franco, M.M. Brother Gonzaga consequently there is consider- ,rious, blue:-clad communist in- Father Gerard A. Donltvan, Chilutti,M.M. able diversity in current view. fantryparaded through the M.M., 'Father Wilijam J. Cum'The eJ:templary lives of these on how to treat them. It is in- streets of Peking, Mao Tse-tung mings: 'M.M., Father Joseph H. Americans serve as f.9undation '. ' teresting to note that differimt officially procllHmed the People's , Shrubbe,M.M. stones, strong and lasting from therapists" using different- types' Republic',of China 'and installed Fathe~' Otto A. Rauschenbach, which Maryknoll semil1arians of of treatment' based on different his Marxist h~er;J.rchy among the M.M.,' Father Lawren,ce A.Con- today draw inspiration tAt theories of mental illness; are lacquered halls and yellow-tile leY, M.M., Father Robert J. strengthen their missionary voCairns, M.M., Father Thomas J. eations~ successful in: helping some cases roofs of the Forbidden City. and fail in,others. Today, glowing Red reports, . - This ,suggests that we are far documenting the alleged achievefrom understanding the basic ments of the People's Re'public, causes of 'most mental illnesse's are heralding the tenth anniver' or th e' essential elements in their sary of the Peking RegIme. cure. The human person is exBut here in America, at Marytremely complex and we are knol~ headquarters high above only starting to discover some of the_ Hudson, there is a small the factors that make him , rQ'Om which stands as a silent , Top Round, Bottom Round "click.'" , indictment of the true nature of How to Help , atheistic communism. Rump How can we help family'memPreaching 'Crime' bers suffering from such illnesses? The first step, of course, Called'the "Hall of ,Memories," is to put them under expert care. it is devoted to the Maryknoll This implies that we accept the, priests and Brothers who gave possibility of mental illness as their lives in defense of an ideal. we do that of physical sickness. One of, the outstanding features Both types occur frequently, of the Hall.is a huge mural deand we have to face up to them. picting the trial of a Catholic Because we know so little about mission~r' standing bound beSUPER-RIGHT mental 'illnesses or have miscon-' fore a PeopJe's ,Court in Cnina ceptions about their causes, we for the "crime" of pre,aching the HEAVY STEER BEEF LB ,. tend to' consider them a blot on Gospel. the family tree and consequently Incorporated into the mural are blame people for haying them. the names of 109 Maryknollers , This is ~ike blaming a person who were caught up in the for'getting cataracts or cancer. flood tide of Orientat'communism ,Need Patient Support' and expelled from China. The We must also' recognize that theme of the mural is: "Beati persons suffering from mental Qui Persecutionem Patiuntur illness are really sick. Because ' Propter Justitiam"-Blessed are their trouble is psychic, we they who suffer persecution for sometimes imagine that they can justice sake. get rid of it if they want to, so Violent Deaths we try to talk them out of it. The Hall also contains perFurther, olice the patient is sonal effects of Maryknoll priests . , under treatment, other members and Brotbers ,who have died vioSHORT SHANK of the family should cooperate ' whh the therapist-and follow his . lent deaths in defense' of an ideat 'For ,instance, there is the 4TO 6 LBS' advice closely. Most cures take sweater worn by Bishop Francis ,time'and will endure only if the X: 'Ford; ]Id.M., before his death family circle lends patient sUP-" ,in a damp'communist prison cell. port. There is the rosary that accom,Opportunity for Charity 'What 'does the Church thin'k' panied Bishop Patrick J. Byrne, , , M.M" on the communist deathof psychiatric treatment? .As we march to the ,Yalu River during have seen, this is a broad term, the Korean conflict. 'There is the covering a great variety of tech- rope used by Manchurian ba~­ niques and approaches. In gen- • !fits to, strangle Father Ge~ard Prices $boa II this ad guaranteed eral, the Church relies on the prudent judgment of trained J. Donovan, M.M., in 1938. CIlrGoolIIJ Sat.,d.,. oet_ 17 & effl!CUvt ;. '_II therapists. ' , In addition, the Hall is also _lIIIlftIty lllICl ,Iel.ity As in medicine, She insists dedicated the ~emory of ,the that treatm,ent must not involve society's, co-founders, Bishop. 'James 'A. Walsh and Father immoral acts, and must be di- .. Thomas' F. ,Price-the two di-' rected to the good of the' patient ocesanpriests. who shared a as.8 person. Hence ,clients are dream born in the pine-clad hills n'ever to be uS;ed like guinea pigs FORA of Father Price:s North Carol~na, for exp' erI'mental pur'poses, and and LIMITED on the narrow, twisting ita new type of therapy is to be streets of Bishop Walsh's Bos-' nME ONLY tried,there 'must be reasonable 'ton, an'd' fashioned it into ,the assurance that it stands a good ,VIGOROUS chance :-telp the patient. reality known as Maryknoll. . AND WINEY Mental 'illness, like all iIl-' Exemplary Lives nesses, offers an excellent opporAlong one wall, under the 'llI tunity for the display of true heading "Caritas Christi Urget charity. It may make heavy' i:le-" Nos" - The Charity of Christ ONLY mands on our'patience, kindness Urges Us 'On - are the pencil YOU SAVE8c YOU SAVE 4c and tolerance. ,But the exercise sketches of 12 Maryknollers who of real Chiistian charity is nev'er died violent deaths in the miseasy-unless' it is prompted by ,sions. They include: love. Bisho» Francis X. Ford, M.M..

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A.verso Religious Unity Only Sure Hope for Peace PORTLAND (NC)-"The unity of religious belief is the only sure hope of peace on earth," Bishop Joseph ·M.

THE ANCHOR5 Fall River Parents Proud of Seminarian Son Thurs., Oct. 15, 1939 Pictured with Holy' Father, Bishop Feels Individual "We were very proud."· That was the quiet comment of Mr. and Joseph Delaney Mr~.

of 424 Linden Street, Fall River, on the honor that came to their son last week, of being photographed with the lJoly Father, Bispop Connolly and Msgr. Humberto S. Medeiros on the occasion of the Bishop's ad limina visit to Rome. Young Joseph Delaney, a seminarian at tne North American College in Rome, was chosen by the Bishop to accompany him on the visit to the Holy

Gilmore of Helena has told del· egates to the 10th Northwest regional congress of the Confraternity of r.hristian Doctrine. "The teaching. of Christ and Father. · the spirit .)f Christ must be He also served the Bishop'. brought to '.he minds and hearts MaSs at a memoria. altar in the of men," the Montanan stressed. North American College which "'The immediate task of the Concommemorates the late Msgr. ·fraternity of Christian Doctrine Patrick McGee of St. Mary'. · 18 the religious instruction of. Church, North Attleboro. youth and the further developFive Children ment of the Apostolate of Good Another son, Edmund, is also Will. It is chiefly in this second a seminarian, now in his second field we answer the prayers and year of theology at St. John'. fulfill the wishes of our Holy seminary, Brighton. Joseph will Father," he said. be ordained in 1960 and Edmund Truth and Unit;, in 1962. "The unity of Christendom is The Delaney&' one daughter is the goal that has been set and a novice in the Religious of the ·our every effort must be directed Holy Union of the Sacred Hearts. to bring men back to 'the harbor Now at the Rock Street provinof truth and unity of. faith,' to cial house of the community ill that one true folc established Fall River, her name in religion by the one true Shepherd of all · 8()Uls," Bishop Gilmore declared. 11 Sister Joseph Thomas. Two other sons are still ill "The basic cause of the evils school. Daniel; recently married, with which the Church has to contend in our e;tay is apostaq isa senior at Stonehill College and Thomas is a freshman at from God and religious ignorCoyle High School; · ance," Bishop Gilmore said. "To "They never gave us a bit of. the Confraternity of Christian Doctrine was and is assigned the trouble," recalled Mrs. Delaney. basic work of reform and recoil- Bom in Tipperary, she and her ·.tructionj the acquiring and the husband have lived in Sacred parish, Fall River, imparting of religious knowledge Heart throughout their married life. through a well defined program Delaney, a patrolman on the .e1 catechetical instruction. Fall River police force for 21 Faith and Charity years, is a fainiliar sight to resi"As members of the Confradents of the section from North ·tern ity of Christian Doctrine, engaged in this apostolate. you 'Main Street to Highland Avenue, .participate in a positive way between President Avenue and French Street in the teaching mission of the He patrols the area daily, Church. The Confraternity of ·Christian Doctrine in the parish keeping a benevolent eye on neighborhood youngsters. "I try is the bond of faith and charity to' straighten things out with with the Vicar of Christ." them between ourselves," he ex'plained. "I don't want children to have to go to the police station unless it's really necessary." Q~ick Trips QUEBEC (NC)-The Catholic The patrolman's busy times Bishops of Canada have pledged come at noon and school closing to "preserve and develop Cathhours. He's on duty both at olic life in Latin America" and Sacred Hearts Elementary have promised to "increase more and more" the "apostolic co- School, and the Highland School. operation" of Canadian Cath- He shepherds Sacred Hearts olics with the Church in Latin' youngsters across President Avenue at 2:30 then hurries to the America. The pledge Is contained in a Highland for its closing at 3. All the Delaney children at.tatement :ssued at the annual meeting of the Canadian Catholic Conference, a voluntary altaociation of all the Bishop. of. Canada. SHERBROOKE (NC) - Pope A committee of Canadian Bish- .John XXIII has ,elevated Sl ops ·will meet .in Was~ington Michael's Cathedral here to a Noy. 2 with representatives of minor basilica, and the seminary the .D. S. Bishops and the Bish- of the Holy.Apostles will become ·ops of Latin America to study an affiliate of the Lateran Uniaolutions to the problems of the versity in Rome, it was anChurch in LaUr. America. noimced here by Archbishop According to a recent surVeT Georges Cabana on his return .of Canadian missionary activity from his "ad limina" visit to the to La tin America, more than Holy See. 1,000 Canadian priests, religious Archbishop Cabana said the and laymen are serving in 18 Holy Father was pleased to learn Latin American countries. that there have been many reliThe Canadian missioners con- gious vocations in the archdiduct about 300 foundations in ocese. ~he Pope'also commenlied Latin America and are entrusted the missionary work being done with the care of more than by the priests from the arch1,600,000 souls. They operate diocese in Brazil, the Archbishop more than '25 seminaries, almost said. . 200 schools and about 40 hospitals and clinics. .

Promise· to Help In. So. America

Cathedral in Canada Now 'Minor Basilica

Anglican Clergyman, Family Are Converts OAKVILLE (NC)-A .former Anglican clergyman who was recently received into the Church with his wife and three sons has ·expressed the hope that Anglicans( generally may some day "'know the Catholic truth in its fullness in union with the Hol7 ·See." Hamilton Hess, who was a yicar in the Anglican Church, was recei~ed ini9 the Catholic Church with his wife Margaret and three SODS by Father Mark ~. Hurley, principal of Marin Catholic High School, San 'Rafael, C~. .' Mr. Hess said his studies of the writings of the early Fathen 01. tile· Church, which took him .. Mae major libraries of. Europe, IDcludin,the· vritieall Librii7. ·w him ~waN tM CMbGIk. 'aa-eJL.

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Rights Endanger Common Good

ST. LOUIS (NC) - The good of the community and nation as a whole is being ovorlooked as a result of modern day overemphasis on individual rights; according to Father Paul C. Reinert, S.J.. presi~ent of St. Louis University. He made the statement in a sermon at the St. Louis archdiocesan Red Mass for lawyers. Among examples he cited in which the common good is sacrificed to ill-conceived individual rights were: Legal obstructions thrown hl the path of urban renewal projects by neighborhood groups which seek only to protect their own selfish interests. TJIe current steel strike, ill which the welf;:tre of society is injured when labor and management consider only ~heir oWD profits and advantages. A recent court decision Ja which a confessed rapist waa freed on legal technicalities. Bigotry which seeks to make religious commitment "a legal handicap for public service."

Rural Life Head

.

THAT'S OUR BOY: Mr. and Mrs. Joseph R. Delaney look proudly at copy of last week's Anchor, featuring a picture of their son with Pope John XXIII, Bishop Connolly and Msgr. Medeiros.

a

. tended Sacred Heart parochial school. The boys, who served Mass at Sacred Heart Convent chapel on Prospect Street, have especially fond memories of Sis-ter Mary.Cordula, S.U.S.C. Now in her nineties, she trained all of them as altaI boys. "I've been pretty busy with the children up till .now," said Mrs. Delaney. "but I think I'll be having more time for outside' activities." A weekly trip to

ASPEN (NC)-Bishop Joseph M. Marling, C.PP.S., of Jeffersoll City, Mo., has been elected president of the National Catholie Rural Life Conference.

WHAT ABOUT. YOUl

Brighton for the practical purpose of keep young Edmund supplied with ·clean laundry is an outing she and her husband enjoy, and Delaney makes no secret of the fact that his favorite avocation is fishing. "A good Catholic family"that's the phrase that 'comes to mind in thinking of the Delaneys. A credit to the Diocese, the "bonor that came to them is well deserved.

Pontiff Appoints Auxilia.ry Bishop_ . A~ministrator of Oporto Diocese LISBON (NC) -The Portuguese Foreign Office has announced that it has been informed that Pope John XXIII has· named Auxiliary Bishop Florentino de Andrade e Silva . t. A post OIC 1· Admm_ of 0 poroa.s t trator of the Oporto diocese. In making the announcement , the· Foreign Office said that "this is the will of the Hol7 See." _ B i s bop Antonio Ferreira Gomes of Oporto had long been critical of the' authoritarian regime of Premier. Antonio Salazar. Several months ago ·diocesan officials confirmed that Bishop Ferreira Gomes had gone abroad. He 11 believed to be in Rome. . At the tm;.e of the 1958 presi-

dential elections Bishop Ferreiftl Gomes sent Premier Salazar a letter criticizing his policies. In the letter, parts of which ha~e leaked out the Bishop reported' . . al 17 gave warmng that Portug . . face. the threat 01. a Violent lOCial upheaval of an anarcbicommunist nature.

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Twenty-Six Cents

Sunday.is Mission Sunday, the day when Catholics of the United States make their annual offering" to the Holy Father's Society for the Propagation of the Faith. That annual offering last year came to twenty-six'cents from each Catholic in the country. ' The average American in that same time spent fjfty-six dollars on alcohol and thirty-six dollars on cigarettes. But the average Catholic gave twenty-six cents to spread the Faith to one billion five hundred million souls, in the world and to support the one hundred and,thirty-five thousand missionaries who are ,giving their lives to preach the Gospel by word and example 1;0 every creature. Will the American Catholic average of twenty-six cents remain the same' this year? Or will there be a ,greater sacrifice on the part of a greater number to give the' Holy Father a greater opportunity to help more missionaries? People like to "keep' up with the Jones." Sometimes they are reproached for trying to do this. But here is one instance when it is wished that Catholics would keep up with the "Protestant Jones;' in contributing to the missions. For Jast year the average Protestant in tl}e country gave two dollars, and thirty..four cents to Central Missionary bureaus. : The' Holy Father is not asking that people do the impossible. He is asking for a sacrifice so that the Missions benefit not only from the money given but from the , .pirit of sacrifice that prompts it. And, as St. Paul states it, ...... it is to be a free offering, not a grudging tribute. I woulq remind you of this, He who sows sparingly will reap sparingly; he who sows freely will reap freely too. Each of you' should carry out the purpose he has formed in his heart, not with any painful effort; it is the cheerful giver God loves. If

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We~kly 'Calendar Of Feast Days

TODAY~St., Teresa of Avn.. Virgin. As a' child of seven she ran away from her home • Avila, Spain, hoping to be muityred by the Moors., Brought home, she said: "1 want to see God and I must die before I Call' see Him." She became a Carmelite nun and was entrusted, witla , the work of reforming the ordes. Without help; often misundel'stood, she founded 32 convent. and her reform spread all ovew the world. She died on OetobeW

, 4, 1582.

TOMORROW - St. Hedwig, Widow. Daughter of the Duke of Dalmatia, she was married te the Duke of Silesia, to whom she bore six ~hildren. By mutual consent, they separated later ia life to lead lives of perfection. She'spent the remainder of hew life in the convent of Trebnia. D_ear, Cracow, 'where she Hvecl tinder the rule 'of her daughtM. G~rtrude, who was Abbess. Sne died in 1242. • . . ; SATURDAY - St,. Margaret Mary' Alacoque, Virgin. KnoW. .. as the Apostle of the devotioa . to the Sacred Heart, she ,W811 gifted with visions of Christ imcl revealed to mankind the favor. in store for the custom of HoI,. Communion on First FridaYL Aa a 'child, sh~ was paralyzed for four years and was cured miraculously t h r 0 ugh the By Most Rev. Robert J. Dwyer, D.D. Blessed Mother. She was a nw. Bishop 01 Reno . of the Order of the Visitation 01. ',"What is not, acknowledged by many public ecrucators' the Blessed Virgin Mary. She is that the omission of positive religious instruction is in was born in l'Hautecour, France, In the course of taking a parish census, the visiting itself a form of religious' instruction." This could not be in 1647, and died in Paray-Iepriest, usu~lly inquires if any new Catholics have moved better said,- and as published in the Liberal Protestant Monial, France, in 1690. She WM into the house or neighborhood. Sometimes he receives an . "Ch' " ty an d educational system has devel... canonized in 1920. JO~~~I, _', riStlam SUNDAY - St. Luke, Evananswer; more often than not he is told "I don't know" with CrISIS , It may betoken a oped in this country it has been gelist. He was a physician at the full implication of "I don't care." changing viewpoint among forced into seCUlarism. It is Antioch in Syria, who was con;. No one would be so ill-advised as to institute a Catholie the stalwart defenders of bound to prOfess indifference verted to Christianity and beprogram of minding another, person's business. But this the "Wall of Separation" theory. betw~en atheism ~nd thei~ by came a fellow-worker' of st. lack of knowledge of and interest in one's fellow Catholics: Certainly, the author, Milton ~he slJYolp.le expedient of Ignor- Paul. In addition to the Third D. ,McLean, is mg religiOn altogether. Gospel, he wrote the Acts of the does not square 'too well with St. Paul's admonition to the himself deeply It may be true that the per:. Apostles. He preached in southfaithful to have a special concern for those of the household concerned o·ver ". sonal influence of the vast ma- eastern Europe after the death 01. the blank neujoiity of teachers who are public St. Paul; and is venerated as a of Faith. employees is anything but athe- Martyr. A persistent traditioD Grouped with their priest ,around the altar of God on t r ali s m 0 f istic; ~ut it i~ equ~lly true that. 'holds that St. Luke was a skilled Sunday morning, the Cat~olics of a ,parish form a familY, state-supported Am~rican pubthere ~s a qUietus Imposed ~~on 'artist. Various pictures of the and renew, in the Body 'and Blood of Christ, their covenant lie ,education. them In, regard to the posItive Blessed ,Mother, venerated iii with God that they are His people and He is their God. They His \-. concern is defense of theism. Religion is Rome and elsewhere, are attrib:- ' 'not rej~cted, it is simply omitted.. uted to him. . unite in praise and prayer and sacrifice and give themselves evidently shared ~ MONDAY-St Peter of Alca... by· the 0 the r " Indif,'erence .Is Positive , 88 a family to God and pray His help to' make them more writers in an' But tre neutralism of the p~b- .tara, Confessor. Early in life he 'Worthy members of His Body, the Church. . 'issue devoted to }ili school .system implies, n.ecea:- 'entered the monastery of tM But when they leave Church, why do they lose sight the problems of . .l3rilY, a value-judgment.' 'If a ,Discalc~d. FranCiscans. He rose, of ·their corporate character, of the union that they have i~ ·religious education on alllevell' 'lVhole.,. reillm. "of ,~nowledg~ .is to high posts in, the order, btJIt ',oJPitted ,in :ire, ~ducation, of insPired by 'a desire for penance, 'Christ with one. another, of their social quality 88 all of American life. . The atheism of Soviet educa- American youth. it can' have' no :in 1539 when he was 40 years 014 , members ' of the Body of Christ:, " , tion is an intenseiy pqsitive form. other significlmc~ than that ,it la, 'he founde4 the. first: comrnunitj a parish should ,more 'aware' of. this of " . ':Members ~ 'of the "Strict .Observance." He religious instruction.. It, goot animp9r tant." ' . .family. spirit"this corporate action! The same unity that is to immense trouble, intellectual' "Religious jndifferenc~ is: ofte,ft ' ·died w~ile kneeling in pray. ' .hown ,'in praying the Mass together shOu'ldextena itself, apd emotional, to convince· th~ . ',regarded ,itS •. p'!rely n~gativ..e in 1562. .. 'TUESDAY":'-St. John Canti. . youth of Russia amphe satelH~ .t~ing; it· iJ.!,,,,rather:, enormously 'outside of church-in praying f?r.0ne a~other, i~ helping that God does not exist. 'an!! a~tJ~ely ,positive. ' It,le!ld.s 'ConfessOr. He was born ill those. ~f the parish in need and s6rro'w,'in supporting parish' countries It is not content with a' mereine,vitably to the formulation of ·KentY,Poland, in 1403 and activities, in volunteering services to aid inteaehing and denial of· God imd the super.- • mind ~~ic~ regarqs r~l~gion as 'studied at 'Cracow. For a shari 'encouraging the young in their' endeavors. natural; 'it'invokes the full appa;- .a~ best peripheral to .the mai ll 'time he was in charge of a paPratus of its warped philosophy 'of .concerns· Q~ li.fe. . ' ish but returned to Cracow as a materialism and determirusm to In Ule s~ale, of values 'religion, professor. There for many yean educate the minds of its victim'. by simple' omission; is graded he lived a life of unobtrusive Th~te is real tragedy in the disclosure that "the fix into a firm 'belief in the 'fundadown to'. something much less ,virtue, self-denial and chari~. mental irrationality of the uni:" than' athletics.' , , He died in 1473 and ,was canon.w~ on" in many of the defunct television quiz shows. verse. Religious Illiterates . ized in 1767. The tragedy is not that there were men who planned It is actually obsessed' by the Enough studies' are emerging WEDNESDAY - St. Hilario... the ,suspense and who disclosed answers to contestants and idea of God; it cannot leave it to substantiate the fear that Abbot.· One of the best knowD who rigged the shows. These, with some sort of strange , alone. In, the stdct sense of the America is rapidly becoming a Palestinian Solitaries, he WM reasoning, built up the quiz shows in the same manner word Soviet education like So- nation of religious illiterates. born near Gaza of pagan parent. that they would build' up a dramatic offering. It does not viet 'philosophy, is ~rimarily The contemporary revival of in- about 292, but while very youn, with theology. terest in religiop .,among the 'was baptized and visited St. An, seem to have occurred to them-at ieast so they elaim- concerned thony in Egypt. On his return te Hope for Awakening youth of America, about which that this was dishonest and that a quiz show differs from ' In the long run this is all to 80 much has been made of late Palestine, he found his parentll one plainly marked as fiction. the good. It is at least positive. by those of optimistic bent, offers dead, distributed his wealth te The tragedy is that ordinary and appa~ently honest And the more the Soviet mind no assurance that 'the tendency the poor, and retired to the w~ derriess of Egypt. ponders the basic theological has deflected its course. , everyday persons could twist their consciences and go along ,question of the existence of God It is principallY manifest in with such deceit. The tragedy :is that -the contestants the greater hope there is of an the higher educational levels than the proselytism he fir. themselves were looking so long and hard at checks that awakening of the intellect. where it is assumed that- the encountered. Indeed, it is precisely ,this ming!i~g of those with religious AmeriCan Protestantism hae they lost a sense of moral valu,es and refused to point out possibility' which haunts the educatiO~al b!1c~grQlInds a~d been extremely slow and reto the promoters that what was asked of them' dreams of the architects of So.. those WIth nothmg but their', luctant to realize this dange~ dishonest; The tragedy is the, terrifying power of the 'viet policy. They dread this far secularism to sust~in them will ,Long after the turn of. the ceo;dollar in America today. more. th;m they dread the recog- have sOll).e. benefiCIal. results. tury .the state-supported school.. nition by their people of the . . Greater Dang,er ,nominally neutral-. in religiouJ economic differential between ThiS IS what the Fathers of the matters, remained substantiall,., Russia and the West. - American Catholic school system Christian and, Protestant in the. . : foresaw' more than a century influence.,. , Glve~ an er~ of peace ~nd ago. It was not the atheism of This influence has 'now pra~ pro~perI~y, or given a smashmg a "godless". education which dis- tically vanished. At least two ~o~.let vlct~rrh~v~\~este~nlcap-, turbed them, but the clear recog':' generations,. of Americans havit l~ I. erentla can liition that religious indifferentcome to maturity educated in _ OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER 1 a IS~, ~n ~ ehmmated or Ignored. ~ut ism is itself a positive 'and de- atmosphere of positive indiffeJi9ublished weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of F~II River given contact between atheism tr t'v 'nfl e d th . d h d' t s uc 1 e 1 uenc. ence. . , 41 0 Highlan~ Avenue ' an elsm,.an w 0 c~n pre .IC Archbishop Hughes o{New The form of religious inst~ . OSborne 5-7151 Fall River, Mass. the theologIcal explOSIOn which New York was first constr ined tl'on they· have recel'ved ha's be..... could result? ' . . , . a . PUBLISHER . .' . to protest agamst the Protestant based upon the value-judgme", Atheism and Neutralism , indoctrination of' Catholic chil,;, that religion is unimportant. . Most Rev. James L Connolly, D.O., PhD. There' i~ a vast difference be- dren in the public schools, but he It is at least encouraging .. GENERAL MANAGER' ASST. GENERAL MANAGER tween the positive atheism 01. lOon enough realized that' the note that SOllie Protestants .. Rev. DanielF. Shalloo, M.A. Rev. John P. DriscOll ; Soviet education aJ!,d the neu- . neutralism which resulted from 'this country show signs of reoMANAGING EDITOR tralism of the American public his protest was a danger even ognizing this fact. It is. shall . . Hugh J. Golde~ IChooL &, the 'sta!e-supported greater. because more SUbtle, I18Y. high time•.

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Protestants 'R~alizing Need Of'ReUg,ion in Education


Oatholic 'Schoofs Doing Fine Job Educator, Says"

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<THE' ANctiORThurs., Oct. 15, 1959

Prelate Oppos.es UN Recognition Of Red China

SACRAMENTO (NC) -Parents should feel very' optimistic about: what" i~ going on in our Catholie schools," says Dr. F. Roman Young, associate professor in eharge of ~he graduate school program at Mount St. Mary's College, Los Angeles. These words of praise for the Catholic school system are important because Dr. Young itI West Coast advisor for the Scholastic Testing Service lnc~ ef Chicago, an organization which computes scholastic medians for students. Two Weak Spots Dr. Young, in Sacramento introducing a new diocesan testing program for both Religious and lay teachers of the diocesan elementary schools, noted the high results in the basic subjec~ ef students educated in Catholic schools. At the same time he readily admitted the weak sPotS In the system~one is the science eourses, another the reference material.' , "They are continually being bnproved," he stated. "However, they obviously are the areal where the greatest expense is Incurred. This naturally' prelents an obstacle to private schools which have no recOurse to state money. Fringe Benafif8 , Dr. Young has a pet project for the betterment of lay teachers in the parochial schools. Here it is in brief: , Let parent organizations ta,ke • portion of the money they raise and place it in a fund to subsidize the education of the lay teachers in their schools. The money could be used for scholarships so that the teachers could take special summer courses to perfect their teaching cred~n­ tials. "We are unable to compete in the salary field with public education, ::Jr. Young observed. ""but by offering these fringe benefits to the teachers, we help advantage." ' '

Fall River CYO Elects Head Fall River area CYO officers, to take office Sunday, OCt '25~ include Thomas Costa, Our Lady f)f Health parish, president; , .Jeannie Comeau, Immaculate Conception, vice president; Mary Rose Sullivan, St. Louis, secretary; Barry Machado, St. Mary'. Cathedral, treasurer. ' The new slate will work with outgoing officers on plans for Catholic Youth Week until official installation ceremonies on the 25th. '

Cardinal Leads Daily Broadcast of Rosary MONTREAL (NC) - Paul Emile Cardinal Leger"Archbishop of Montreal, has begun the tenth year of daily broadcasts of the Rosary over radio station CKAC here. ' On 'the anniversary the huge Basilica of Mary, Queen of the World, was filled by per~ of many walks of life who have shared in the. broadcasts. The Cardinal recalled a number 01. spiritual benefits which hav~ resulted from the daily practice. Cardinal Leger personally~bas led most of the 3,285 daily bJ;'oadcasts of the Rosary which have taken place since its inauguration. Only when he was overseas did he fail to lead the recitation. Otherwise, no ~atter where he might be in Canada, arrangements were made by 'the', station to 'have the broadcast emanate where he was.

New Officen HUNTINGTON (NC) - Two editorial staff members 'of Our Sunday Visitor, national Catholic publication, have' t>eea elected officers by the trwneea of the nonprofit corporation. Father Joseph R. Crowley, OSV editor, is the new vice president, and P'rancfs A. Fink, managinl editor, is the new secretary.

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WASHINGTON (NC)Auxiliary Bishop Fulton 1. Sheen of New York told. press conference that he eaa see no advantage resulting from United Nations recognition CIt Red China. ICJ:' can see many disadvllftoo tages," he told reporters wile questioned him at the National Press Club. The Bishop, who was here tit participate in the 16th annual meeting of the U. S. missioR SIXTIETH WEDDING ANNIVERSARY: Mr. and Mrs. Euclid Boivin of Taunton sending societies, said he is not marked their 60th wedding -anniversary with their family. Front row, left to right, are in favor of an, "alliance with • Sister Pauline Louise, S.U.S.C., Sister' Gabrielle, S.S.J., Mr. and Mrs. Boivin, Sister Anna government that does not repre\ Imelda, S.U;S.G. and Sister Lucille Theresa, S.U.S.C. Standing, left to right, Joseph Boivin, sent the people."_ He also' said that if Red China Mrs. Thomas Donnelly, Mrs. Philippe Be!iard, Father Louis R. Boivin, of New Bedford, were admitted to' the U.N., it. " , Mrs. Jean,B~ Pelletier~nd Euclid 1.. Boivin. next step would be to ask f« separate representation for various provinces in China, suell as Manchuria. Red China would . ' " do this, he added, on the pl~ 'that the large populations in va, rious provinces are entiUecl .. separate representation. By A vis Roberts Effect of Visit As Mr. and Mrs. Euclid Boivin of 48 Danforth' Street, Taunton, observe their' 60th Asked what he thought of Sowedding anniversary tomorrow probably th~ir greatest pride and prayerful ,thanksgiving yiet Premier Nikita Khrushwill be that God. selected five of their 10 living children to serve Him. Mr. and Mrs. chev's visit to the U. S., the Boivin are parents of a priest-th,! Rev. Louis R. Boivin. a curate at St. Joseph Church, Bishop said it is too early to assess the impact of the viait; New Bedford; and of four , at st. Jacques S~hool hall. C~l- ago. For 45 years Mr. Boivin but he added that the thousands daughters,llll teachers, t!J.ree ebrating with them were 135 operated a grocery adjacent to of people who viewed Mr. of whom are in the order of . relatives including their 10 chil-' the Danforth Street house. Now Khrushchev in this country rethe Holy UnIon of the Sacred dren, 35 gran~children and 12 he's a real estate dealer and at sembled a funeral cortege ratper Hearts. The latter three are Sisgreat grandchl1dren. Unable to the age of 82 cares for all the' than a welcoming committee. Be tee Anna Imeldl&; S.U.S.C., Sister attend ,:"ere two nephews, ~ho property he c,wns, including, said the visit has had a "very Lucille Theresa, S.U.S.C., both are prl.ests--t?e .Rev. Lu.c~en painting and decorating. Mrs. good effect' on Americans beof Groton and Sister Pauline Mador, m servIce m the Phllip- Boivin, 80, is a spry lady wbG 'cause it ,stiffened their, op~ Louise, S.U.S.C. of St. Cecile's pines, and the ~e~. Wilfrid does all her I)wn cooking and tion to communism. Parish of Pawtucket, R. I. The Nadeau, S.J.. who 18 m Canada. housework. ' Declaring there is "no doubt religion is on the increase _ fourth nun daughter is Sister A money bouquet was preRussia,' the Bishop added: "there Gabrielle, S.J., of St. .Joseph sented to grandmother and should not be any religion at aD parish New Bedford. 'grandfather by Lucille Bedard, in Russia, according to the MarxThe' five religiouS and the re- 11, and Rita Donnelly, 10. LOS ANGELES (NC) - Ex- ist edict. But religion, has not maining five Boivin children Pastor Speaker perts on Church law from all followed the Marxist dialectic.were on hand for day-long fesAccordion and guitar music over the United 'States will atAsked if he expected Orthotivities last Sunday in Taunton, was supplied by grandson Philip tend the 21st annual meeting of dox bishops to attend the ecuhonoring the i r father and Donnelly, 16, and Mr. a~d Mrs. the Canon Law Society of Amer- menical council announced by mother. Other members of the Boivin's 'next-door neighbors ica to' be held here Oct. 21 and Pope John XXIII, Bishop Sheea family are Jo~eph of 8 Fou,:h Danny an~ John Majkut. M:ai~ 22.. . replied, "Yes, but not as a body.Avenue, Taunton, a Post .Offl~e speaker' at the banquet was "I'm hopeful for, reunion," be Delegates to the meeting win clerk; Euclid L. of 478 Brlttama Father Boivin's pastor, the Rt. hear addresses by three canon said, "but think it will come Street, Taunton. a carpenter and 'Rev. Msgr. Louis E. Prevost. law authorjtiesand take part in through charity and kindneSltreal estate agent; Mrs. Alma PelThe hall was decorated in blue a series of discussions on prob- not by the battering ram of dJeletier of 11 HC'pe Street, Taull- and white and numerals "60" lems of canon Jaw as they affect 'lectics." ton; Mrs. Maria Donnelly of 71 were in evidence. ' ,diocesan'chancery offices, diEldr:idge Street, Taunton, and ocesan marriage-' tribunals and Mes. Rita Bedard of the DanAnother gr:>ndchild" Philip semil)aries.ST. PAUL, (NC)-~ citize" forth Street address. The latter Bedard, 12, addressed the honor campaign has been launched ill The speakers at the two-day , the Twin CitieS of St. Paul 'and. three are housewives. Thirteen guests. " " ,' Boivin children were ,born but Mr. and Mrs. Boivin were mill meeting will be: Father Clement Mi'nneapolis to help law enforce,three are deceased. workers together, several years Bastn~gel, ';Ieo/l ~( the ~hool ,01. ment officials keep obscene u.. Canon Law at the Catholic Uni- erature off newsstands aJ,ld _ Son Celebrant versfty of AIn:erica, Washington, of mails. . Father Boivin celebrated • D. C.; Father James ,A. O'DonoHigh Mass last Sunday si: hoe, professor of moral theology .Jacques. Church, Taunton, honBOSTON (NC-;-The Supreme and canon 'law at St. John's . . JOa 1'00_ oring' his parents who were mar- Lodge, O'rder Sons ,of Italy in Seminiuy, Bi-"ighton, -Mass., a~~ " ried Oct. 16, 1899, at Immaculate America will honor Archbishop Father Nicholas Gill, CoP.. proNoNE' 100 'SMAIL Conception Church, Taunton. A Egidio Vagnozzi, Apostolic Dele- fessor of moral theology and few years earlier they came to gate to the United States, at canon law at St. Michael's SemTaunton from their native dinner on Saturday, Oct. 31 ia Inary, Union City, N. J. Province of Quebec, Canada. , Washington. At Sunday's Mass, the Rey. Joseph Gorrasi of WobUl'll' PRINTERS Roger Cyr of Cite Jacques-Car(Mass.) Supreme Venerable 01. .... om. ........ tier P.Q., was seated in the the Sons of Italy, said members s a ~ c t u a r y. Father Boivin from a seven-state region will LOWRL. MASS. preached the sermon. take part in the tribute. Judge Tel I....a Following Mass, Mr. and ¥rs. Anthony Julian of Watertown Boivin were guests at a banquet (Mass.) recently appointed • 011 BURNERS the U. S. District Court of MuAlso complekl BoUer-Buraer sachusetts, will be the principal 01' Furnace Units. Efficient low cost heatine. Buraer .... speaker. fuel oU sales and service. IOSTON DETROIT (NC) - ParticipaOCEANPORT, M.J. tion in high school' journalism is , &80 Mt. Pleasant Sweet important to the student even if PAWTUCKEI', LL New Bedford WY 3-Z", he never works in the writ~g SCRAP METALS fields, Father James ~. Conroy, WASTE PAPER - RAGS youth editor of Our Sunday TRUCKS' AND TRAILERS FOR Visitor, told more than 1,100 2 PAPER, DRIVES members of the Detroit Student CHURCHES, SCOUTS and Press Association. CIVIC ORGANIZATIONS Father Conroy urged young 1080 Shawmut Avenue journalists to dedicate themNew Bedfor<i WY 2-7828 selves to truth, the "faithful presentation of the facts." He said: "You have the most highly developed means in all t,he free world for spreading the truth. To use it for more propaganda would not only ,be disaster but "shameful disaster." ' JOSEPH M. F. DONAGHY The priest-editor said that the ,own-er/mgr. work of the high school press 'ill 142 ,'Campbell St. important to the staff because New Bedford, Mass. "there is no better way for students to acquaint themselves WYman 9-6792 with the' flow of national and HEADQUARTERS FOR lliternational life than to relate COLONIAL AND these events in their own 'lives TRADITIONAL FURNITURE and those 01 their fellow students."

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Priestan,dFour >,Nuns at' Parents' Observance Of 60th'Wedding 'Anniversary in Taunton

Canon Law Experts Plan An,.ual Meeting

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,THE ANCHOR-Di~cese . . . . .of . Foil River-Thu'rs., Oct.' U4 . 1959'

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. Tau'ntonWomen Install Slate

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Silver's Nice to Own But Needs Lot~ of Work toKeepCjea~

Mrs. Clifford Shachoy headl officers of Taunton Queen'. Daughters, installed at a banquet meeting. Serving with her wiD . be Mrs. William R. Powers, vic&-, president; Mrs. Stuart P. PlaCe, recording secretary; Mrs. Jam~ L. Downing, corresponding secretary. Also Mrs. Thomas J. Wynn, financhl1 secretary and Mra. James W. Blount, treasurer. New spiritual director for the group will be Rev. Joseph Pow. ers. Members heard a lecture (Ill Pakistan illustrated with colored slides and presented a check te , Mrs. Dominic Procopio, speaker, for cliild welfare in that country.

By Alice Bough Cahill When I hear young brides who are using dime-store flatware say, "I love my wedding silver but it's so hard to _keep clean that we don't use iJ daily," I want to tell them that they can get more beauty from their silver by using it' constantly. :hat-us~ng it trays you should follow the CODconstantly - IS the SImple tour of the individual item. _ secret. to adding mellowness To remove heavy tarnish from and depth of, color ~to your highly ornamented areas, gently

Ailver, The more you use' it the brush on polish with, a ' softmore beautiful it becomes. bristled tooth brush. Don't reS 0 m e ,t i me, move all tarnish from design rewhen you are cesses because some 'of, it is to a, museum, needed for contrast to bring out examine the silthe beauty of the pattern. 'Yer on display. CI~aDing Candiesticks J,:,nior Daughters Start You will dis' . ColleCtion for Orphans «over that .the A .word of v.:armng about 'hn' of ancleamng candlesticks don't CONCORD (NC)-Louise Col~~ue~~lver hi strain the joipt of ca~dlesticks lins, chairman of the Junior McMAHON COUNCIL- SOCIAL: District Deputy aT)d , Daughters of America, has aftdue to generaor other hol~ow ware pieces that. · tionsM' daily h~ve, ~een cemen~ed ·toget~er Mrs. Arthur J. Shaw 0,£ Taunton, ,le'ft, hesitate during the nounced the organization's 12t~ ,ate- roof that , with vigOrOU~ rubbmg or ~ hfeBall to exchange pleasantries with District Deputy and Mrs. . annual, "Sweater and Sweets'" " it'. ~Od sense' and-death grIp. Thafs why some collection to assist orphane4 George M. ThomaS of New Bedford. ..:.. g . ur s"l ' candlesticks get, twisted at the children in foreign lands is now , '.~ Th ey s h ou ld. be poI'IS h e d , · - use yoften Iall- possible Don't Jom.... , under way. < :::reasit°away for speci~l occagently, following their contour. The Sweater and Sweets pro.rons, , Live with it! , When you are' satisfied that gram, is cOllducted in conjuncFirst let's understand what the tarnish hi oH; 'tmd you've tion with ·the Catholic Relief · Idlver Silver flatware is obwashed each piece in hot, sudsy Services - National Catholie '.tainable in many patternssterwater," you 'are now ready to WASHINGTON '(NC) - The difficult for her to teach her Welfare Conference, worldwide Dng or plated, and shodld be ,rinse your ~il~er in. hot, 'cl~ar Chinese ,widow of Gen. Claire relief and rehabilitation agenC7 dau'g\!ters' Cninese because, IIelected to match the spirit of water, Dry ,it .lmmedIately WIth Lee Chennault, leader of the when she asks them' if they maintained by the U. S. Bishops, , 7 0ur ' china. Sterling sliver is a clean, soft cloth. The~ pla~e FlY4lg Tigers of China in World would like to speak Chinese, which distributes the sweater. ~lid silver composed of 925/1000 it on a towel, let it cool to room , War II, is having a blisy time and sweets to orphans abroad. ' they 'reply, "Bou hou" (No). " , imre silver under United'States temperature and dry, thoroughly trying to teach her two daugh"American 'children, you The Juniors also have launched law., ' before you put it away. ters the value of two cultures. know," she sighed. "TV'. the their "Penny A Week" saving. The remaining 75 partll are I'~ sure you've all struggled thing.'" , drive: This is an annual camBesides teaching the girls · eopper, which provides necessary with silver salt sh~kers. .Salt, Claire, 10, and Cynthia, 9, the "Both girls are 'A' studentll at 'paign to aici the charitable litmength and sturdiness. Plated ,ma~es ,tiny black Pits in sll~er Chinese language, Mrs. Chen- Annunciation school," she said, , forts of the Holy Father. The , ware consists 'of a copper-nickel- whICh are very hard to pohsh "and they like their after1958 gift of, the Juniors to the nault has been occupied in vari, zinc alloy plated with silver. It 'smooth. If black s~ots, caused by llchool French, piano and dancHoly ,Father amounted to $3,000. ous other activities since the • produced in different grades, salt or salad ,dre~smg, can~o~ be ing lessons. But when I try to death of her famoUS husband on It was forwarded along with. .ependent upon. the amount 01. removed by ordmary pohshmg, July 26, 1958. teach them Chinese ,'. ." , customary spiritual bouquet. ailver used. ' they ~ust be buHed out by a sil"Saturdays we speak only Chi-She is a member of a group 'Why It Tarnishes versmlth. at the Georgetown University, nese here," he added. "Naturally, , Sisters Plan Drive Of course silver will tarnish. Be careful about keeping II8lt ,p]anguage office here that is ex- Ii ttle i. said." ' : For Motherhouse',: 'This tarnish comes from coal or shak~rs in the drawer with your perimenting with Possible me-, . gas fumes or food (a combination silver .if ,there ,~'any. P?S8ibi.li~T chanization 01. translating Chi- , N,ew,' Bedford' 'Auxiliciry I .cALDWELL (NC)-;The D9'of sulphur and the silver itself). ~,sp~lled grams slftm~ mte . minican Sisters of Caldwell have nese 'into Engiish and English , . You've 'probably noticed, this, .~lver ,rolls or boxt;t'. ":'Ith reann'ounced a campaign 'to raiile lDto Chinese. , ,- To Hay-e. Bean Supper: , . clark tarnish" appearing ,after ,gard to storage of fme pleCell, it Members 01, the Infant 01, ,$750,000 ,in public !!ubscriptiolW ~be teaches Chinese at the 70u'ye 'used -mustard eggs, .. . iii suggested that they be wrapChinese' Institute of Culture ; Prague. :Gulld" auxiliary.., ~, ,St. ~ for the, $2.(i ,million e~pansio. .lad dressing. ' " ' ped individually in' anti-tarnish 'here. Mary's Home"New ,Bedford; will ,they plan for th~ir ~other!'touse \ , When washing' the, breakfast, flannel bags which will .erve .. -She J. working on a book ,ho,ld 'a, beilll supper Sat~rday", and f~r Caldwell College :kJw dtshell,'- if you notice a dark egg a ,meanll 01. protection.. " ' . women here in New Jersey. ' about her life with Gen. Chen--. , ,Oct. 24.. , ,'" , 'Th~y'will a~so spons~rcooking " The' nuns plan to l:>Uild ani~ , .tain ~n a-fork or spoo~ry rub" Dault. _elasses for girls a~ th,e pom~" ~ ,firmary for sick and aged Silt- bing a little salt' on the spot Parents Delay Spiritual Call Sa,. 'No' be conducted, by, students from ters 'and a 'new science wing and 'witb"the end 'of'your fInger. As T" '. f' Ch'ld Mrs. Chennault, who attends : New Bedford ,Vocationai ,High 'residence hail for the' college .aon asthe.spothas disappeared, raining 0 I ren be sure to wash the fork ~r spoon PORTLAND (NC)-Too meny Annunciation Church, said it is -School. they founded in 1939. ' . In hot, soapy water and, rinse ,parents" well, intentioned in well. ' , other, fields, delay the spiritual 'Once someone who was help- ,education of their children untn' Ing'in my kitchen wrapped some they reach school Me, Michael infrequently' used spoons seStepovich, former Governor (,f , eurely with a rubber band. ,Hor- : Alaska, declared at the 10th 'ror of horror&-that is the worSt,. Northwest regional CODQ!ress '(If , thing to 'do! Never even wrap ~ the Confraternity . 01 Chrlsttaft 'rubbe'r 'bands around flannel ,Doctrine. , roils of flatware. It's ;llso unwise ' jParents realize the importance to store silver in adr~wer where 'of, training in formative years in 70U keep. papers, boxes and penthe matterS of diet, h~lth, good · dIs witIi~ rubber 'erasers. '~manners, obedience, respect for " -Daily use and careful washing : the property' M others and re• will retard tar'nish; However, 10 ,,pectfor elders, the former G09, «ive your silver the care it really, ernor said. \ deserves, try to polish it about' "If we recognize the impor: .nce 'a month.Seiect a good ,tance of the training of, the child ' ..\ , ; brand of paste, cream, or liq'uid in the' home in the physical and ) . ~ .iiver, polish, that is', free from 'social realm, we cannot overlook ' : vii..' ' ',' ' itfl,importance in the realm of the , The: job at cleiuiing silver ill spiritual," be said. "And yet, it " imiple ,.'ifYou org:uliie, yoUr is precise))' this religious in'Don't worry, Sonny! They'll survive' "v~n though th'ey' . ,itnictionwhich is too often post') ; work: ,'.t~e 'first' thing ill, tos()rt ' ,poned until the child, reachei missed a meal.. But -not. so.with; .gr.owing', youngster.s! : Ole 'silver. to 'prevent knife " , , biad~, ~r heavy "p~ecell 'from school age, even, by ,parents who They've got to,' have their regular, s,:,pp'ly ,of vita~ins, knockiilg against" and, marring . are not remiss in other fields." , ,..... minerali and 'calcium. ' . . , . , , ' " ~" ," ; _ther p'ieces. It stands to reason The former Governor stressed is, best' to follow'- direction. 'the example' of parents and a 'Best way to solve this. • .i'\;en . ~n .. the eonta,it\er' of thereligioull ,abnosphere ,the .. ~ polish you are going' to use~ 'home as an important means of 'A 'Quality' milk. 'at· ~eVf#ry, me,at '~nd" with betw~eh~o1eal -'~ Use' i.'clean; .90 ft, : dampened ehild, educatioa ill spiritual "'fiannet cloth or sponge with" ,yelueL snacks. There's nomil~k '1i!<8, G",imQnd Fa'rm's-:-fty, it, and' se,e' plenty 'of '"polish on" it. Polish for yourself~ ':~,", . ':, ' , " : , ' ' Teutonic College Marks knives, forks and spoons briskly ,~: wlUi -Iengthwisestrokes. You'll .': C~mtenary of 'Founding' , Dotice, we say "lengthwise", Qe- ' ROME (NC);.;... The Teutonic, Cause when it comes to such College of. , Santa' Maria dell , iii~ces as water pitchers; com:' .. 'Anima -is ~bserVing the first potes, ~egetable dishes, and ceritenary of its foundation with ceremonies.' ' Hospital Auxiliary Plans public . The ceremonies are attended Teas and Reception by Joseph Cardinal Frings, Friends of St. Anne's Hospital, .. Archbishop of Cologne, 10 Ger-' Fall 'River, will hold a tea hon-' man . bishops 'and about, 100 " priests, former students. , ~, , oring new students of nursing , According to its statutes, the from 2 to 4 Tuesday afternoon, Oct. 27. All other hospital per-, college' accepts 'only Germanspeaking pries~ ,who wish to IIOnnel are also invited to attend. Mrs. Carroll Gettings is chair- pursue advanced studies in theman of the tea. ology and canon law .in Rome. The auxiliary, will' conduct a ,In its' 100 years,the college has', ' board meeting at' 1:30 Tuesday' pro<luced -762 graduates. Eigh(" , afternoon, Nov. 17, to be followed of these were eventually raised , at 2 by a tea and reception for to the College of Cardinals and new members. G went onto become bishop.. "

Mrs. Chennault Has Difficult Job 'Teaching Ch~nese' to' Daughters

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I· THE ANCHOR ·Thurs., ·Oct.·',15, 1959

Not to Repeat Lunch at Dinner' Almost Impossible for Wife

No, he takes the corned beef and cabbage where he can find it-and find it first-at lunchtime in Pete's Place, or wherever. Meantime, we've soaked corned beef, steamed it, put a _ plate on to keep it tenderly firm, cooked potatoes and cabbage, finally serving the. whole thing up, expecting nostrils to quiver with anticipation. 'Special This Week' We can almost tell by the way the Head of the House says grace whether the next comment will be, "Had this for lunch." Long ago, we gave up the "two minds with but a single thought" sentimellt and sought more prosaic reasons for this coincidence. Foremost, of course, is the economic one: lamb, for instance, is this week's special. We buy lamb, saving perhaps a dollar. Restaurants buy it by the carload and save hundreds. Trying to circumvent this basic' rule of economics, we have, on occasion, snubbed the "special" - bought steak when poultry was on sale. What did our lord and master have for lunch-steak! . We've'tried doging this luncheon-dinner 'coincidence all up and the price range. Serve meat and down the price range. Serve meat loaf, he's had it for lunch; roast beef, he's been to an official VIP luncheon-and guess what was. on the menu .•• Just to prov~ a point, one time we served the same delicious dish for dinner that we had enjoyed at an alumlle lunch~n, chicken livers on rice. The family grace was loud and clear-indicative of real appreciation ".•• these, thy gift's ..• Definitely, this had not heeD OIl anybody'. luncheon menu, except mine. "Want some more?" the Head 01. the House was ladling up seconds as plates were extended. "No,' thank you," from our end .m the table. We understood, for once. That battle cry will never again hold the same threat. Twice in one da,. is .too much.

AWARD RECIPIENT: Mrs. Anna A. Charon, New Bedford, (right)· secretary of L'Union St. Jean Baptiste D'Amerique Conseil St. Antoine of New Bedford, receives an award for her 35 years of service to the society from .Jean Picher of Woonsocket, secretary-general, (left) in the presence of Rev. Henri Charest, eouncil chaplain.

Collegians from 12 Catholfe women's colleges will address . Diocesan high school students at the second annual Catholic College Fair to be held from 2 to 5:30 this Sunday afternoon, Oct. 18, at Sacred Hearts Academll. Prospect Street, Fall River. Under sponsorship of the' Sucordium Club, representatives will be present from Albertus Magnus, Anna Maria, Boston, Chestnut Hill, Cardinal Cushing, College of Notre Dame of Maryland. Also Salve Regina, Stonehin. Emmanuel, Immaculata, Merrimack and Trinity Colleges. The 'program will include the opportunity for individual conferences with collegians and the' display of photographs and catalogs from each college. Sophomores, juniors and seniors fro.. area Catholic and public high schools are invited to attend tM program, in addition to paren.· and school guidance officers.

Fall River Catholic CI~b Plans Recepti.on Sunday The annual reception and tea for new members of the Fall River Catholic Woman'. Club will 'be held this Sunday afte.noon from 3 to 5 in the clubho~ on Highland Avenue. Officers and members of !be executive board will assist Mn. Michael J. McMahon, president. in welcoming new members. In charge of the program aN Mrs. William E. White and Mi.Marion E. Fahey, co-chairmen.

Women Praise Stamp' Theme WASHINGTON (NC)-A letter of commendation for use of a ·trust in God theme on a com'" memorative postage stamp has been sent to Postmaster General Arthur E. Summerfield on behalf of the Catholic Daughters of America. Margaret J. Buckley, CDA vice supreme regent, wrote the Postmaster General in connection with the new commemorative stamps to be issued in 1960, stressing the words of Franc,is Scott Key in the fourth verse of

Statue of Christ PIT-TSBURGH . (NC) - A 13foot copper statue of Christ crucified will boon look down on Pittsburgh from the cliffs above the Monongahda River. The statue is being. madf" in Holland 'for Duquesne University's Women's Guild. Over $6,000 WM aised for the project.

The Star Spangled Banner"And this be our motto: 'In God

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Kentucky Judge Stresses Women Hold Key to Halt Modern Suburbia COVINGTON (NC) - Model'll from mortgages to morals," the woman has the power to "check judge warned. the 'new heresy' of 'the com"Many a tiny chameleon must Dmnion of sin and the forgiveturn green with envy as it ness of saints'," Judge William watches this frenzy of adaptaI. Dammarell has told delegates tion to conform with the mateto the eighth annual Covington rialistie standards of wen Diocesan Council; of Catholic ,planned, well heated and well Women convention. pltimbinged 'surburbia,'" be : "The' Church which ha. 0011said. Catholic Conseienee quert:d the Roman Emp~re and "It isn't merely that"everyone tamed the barbarians is now takhas to keep' up 'with the Joneses; iftg on a new: challenger. The it's rather that now everyone has Church is meeting 'suburbia,' to be a Jones," Mr. Dammarell and don't think for a moment jibed. "To be different is to be tltat 'suburbia' is a pigmy pushdivisive and that, of course, .. ' over. This ma,- seem like a sman a dangerous word. Education, 110mefront annoyance compared recreation, theory of life and to the gigantic effort against pattern of livicg are all keyed to what is called 'spacious livworld communism, but the Proting in a free society,'. a concept estant revolt began as a homewhich cali be fine, indeed, .but front annoyance when Christendom' was struggling with the which can still carry a dangerous Mohammedan world, Mr. Dam- potential." "·The answer' 110 the present Jll,arell reminded the womelL lies in the present and it .. Communit,. Thinking The "affluent society" with it. largely for women to answer !leisure time, emphasis on· com- since it grows out ·of the woman's world-the home and the munity living and widening cir• of social contacts, he said, .. family," be chailenged. "She .. the key to ,stopping this drift -"ning many a new housing deYelopment-and many an old toward surrendering Catholie one, too-into • sort of junior conscience to the morals aDd "'country club set" where the big mores of secularism iJl which word is "togetherness" and the- purely splrit1l81 standards l'6hie idea .. "comm.m.itF tbinll- eeive a sbOl't of amused to.le.-

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9

Cathol ic College' Fa iron Sunday

By Mary Tinley Daly Fighting words have. resQunded throughout history: battle cries such as "Scale the walls of Jericho !", "Remember the Alamo !", "Shoot when you see the whites of their eyes!" Jericho, the Alamo and eye-whites besi.de the point, , how's about the one: "Why, old adage: "Two minds with but I had this for lunch !" You've a single thought; two hearts that apent time, care and money beat as one." ill preparing a favorite But does he take that chance? dinner-then that. Granted, the expression cornel out impulsively. . ',. ' '. I We've caught the Head of the House valiantly trying to recall the phrase. One time he almost made it. "Why," he.exclaimed, "I had tho .. I had • hankering for tlbis." "Had it for lunch, Daddy?" from a chIp off the old block who has grown up on this peculiar coincidence that brings out the red f~ag.. Fellow Sufferers No· wife is alone in this ~ luriating predicament. As one who gets around a bit, I've found tile problem not unfamiliar. "So I buy'herring," says a fellow marketer. "My husband, he eomes home and says, 'Why, I had herring for lunch.' How can J'Ou win?" You can't. By some strange quirk of. thought-transference, we 'cooksat-home seem all too often to get 011 the same wave length iR menu planning as the cook itl· ~e's Beanery. Or maybe it's the mef at the Press Club. Whoever is our counter-ego downtown, the result is the same. We arI'QIlge a de luxe dinner-he has already been served the same 81 • de luxe luncheon. It's a chal-" lenge not only to our imagina-' Mon, but to our culinary ability.. A few times, during e~1y . married days, a softly sentimen-' tal attitude used to take the place 01. the frustrated irritation of nowadays. We'd think" "While. I was planning this treat for him,' be' wanted the very same t'qing. Bow sweeU" After a whale, W~ DO longw . .eet. If that mutuality of. thinking were working 100 per cent, our 8Pouse would know what was in the works for him at home, curb file old appetite, settle for a hot dog and await testing out of the

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"0" , THE:A~CHOR~Dio<;e$e:of

Fcllt~River-'Thurs~~ <Oct.:' 15; 1959/

Decis,ion Upholds Right of Sisters

. HolyS~e 'A'pprovesOver'due

To Run Hospita I "

VaticanSalq'ry Increases' VATICAN CITY (NC)-How much does a Roman eardinaI. m~ke? Who got the biggest salary increases in the Vatican City pay'raises? These and 'many other questions have been answered by His Eminence Domenico Cardinal Tardini in an unprece- also receives an automatic in':' dented news conference', crease every two years. Thus an which the Vatican Secretary, usher with 10 years' service and " of State held at the request' a family of three children would ~ journalists.' . ' make about $215 a month. , The total cost of salaries paid · L Homes for Workers by the Holy See runs to, about' .What do Roman cardinals six million dollars a year, Car";. make? Cardinal Tardini said dinal Tardini revealed-$2,300,- ,tlley are paiG about $750 a QOO of this amount due to the pay' month. raises. which went into effect In addition, the' Vatican has last July 1.' built 800 apartments for its , Cardinal Tardini made it clear workers and is examining plans that Pope Pius XII had been for additional units, the Cardinal concerned with the' salary prob- said. "This financial effort may lem before he died. Pope .Pius compel the Pope to reduce his ordered a thorough study of expenditures for, charity. But what needed to be done to bring this was a problem of justice and 88laries more in line with pres- justice comes before charity." ,

~nt liVi;;u~;st;~~~ s.;~~~ When Pope John succeeded

to the papal throne, he confirmed'

Name Interracial A'ward W'· .•t:1ners,

his predecess6r's instructions and CHICAGO (NC) - A priestl8ld out a five-point approach, ~ditor, a student youth leader,. to the problem. Cardinal Tardini an Illinois legislator and a Chi-' said the Holy See found it ,could' cago hospital have ,been named DOt afford all the raises first, 1959 recipients of awards for:. contemplated. ,It 'was decided: ,to.. "outstanding service to the cause keep the percentages of in- of interra~ial justice." , ereases for, the higher grades' at.' They will receive' the Thomas ~ore' modest levels, with~ut J. Crowe Awards for 1959, given trimming the raises for those in annually' by the Catholic Inter- .' the lower ,ranks. " raciai Council of Chicago.' • Tlle Cardinal emphasized that' ·The recipients are:' Father ~ports, of the Holy .See's "fabu-' John La' Farge, 'S.J., associate ~us" ~ealth' are "truly a fairy editor of America magazine and tallil." ~' ·a' founder of the Catholic Inter- , ,Dependentlj'Allowanee' 'racial 'Council movement and He, pointed out that under the Michael ,E. Phenner, imin~diate new' pay scales, secretaries of· past president 'of the National Vatican congregations, who are Federation of Catholic College among the highest officials of the Stlidents, who sponsored a vigRoman curia, get the minimum orous interracial program while ~crease, 12:29' per cent" while NFCCS president. ushers get the . maximum inAlso: Illinois State Sen. John crease, 35.92 per cent P. Meyer of Danville, 111., who Thus a congregation secretary, led a,recent fight in the Illinois who use!i to get ~bout $310 Senate for passage of a Fair Emmonthly, now receives about ployment Practices bill and the $340, while an usher of the low- Mich~el Reese Hospital,'Chicago, est grade, who once received whose board and staff, by "pUrabout $8g, now gets $115. suing a policy of complete inBeyond this pay boost, the tegration, wer~ instrumental in Cardinal' 'explained,. the usher rehabilitating -a run-;down secnow receives about $20 a mQnth tion of Chicago's South Side," for each child and an allowance according to, the Interracial of about ,$16 for his wife. He Council. '00

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Stigmatine Fathers Will Conduct Missions ,in Cape Comm'unities The Stigmatine Fathers of . founded in italy in 1816 and take Sacred, Heart, Retreat' House, their nlime from the Sacred Waltham, will'con,dud a mission Stigmata of,Christ, to which they In Corpus Christi parish, Sandhave particular devotion. They wich, from Sunday, Nov. 8, are ~ctive 'in Europe, South through Sunday, ,Nov. 22. Ameri'ca, the' United States, The missi,on will be preached Canada and Thailand. Dot" only at Corpus, Christi 'Fall River Native Church but in, its two missions, ...'. St. Theresa's, Sagamore; and St. Of t~e mIssIonarIes comm~ to John's; Pocasset. Sa~qwlch, Father C:ha~~l I~ a Rev. Samuel Chameal, C.P.S., natIve .of St. PatrIck ~ parls~, and Rev: Joseph R. Morgan, Fall RIver. Now statIoned m C.P.S.', will conduct the missions Boston, he founct~d SacredHea:t at Corpus Christi and St. The- Re~reat H~use m ~95~ and 18 resa's from Nov. 8' to 15 and at prese';lUy vIcar .provmc181 of ~he St. John's from Nov. 15 to 22. Am~rlcan provmce of the Stl~­ The Stigmatine Fathers were matmes. He was for~erly ~I, rector of the commumty's mls-' sion band:Father Morgan is the present director of Sacred Heart Retreat House and former direct~r of the Stigmatine mis~ion in Guam and , ,the Stigm'atine House of Studies in Washington.

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IN GUILD PLAY: E~est Medeiros, James Wilcox, Jr. and Janice Desrosiers, left t6 right, are principals in a scene ~rom '~Ou~ of the Frying P~m," to be presented 'by Blackfriars Guild of Fall River Tuesday and Wednesday nights, ~ct., 27 and 28, in Sacre? Heart, School auditorium.

Says> Materialis~ Main. Impediment' To Conversion of J~panese .

LOS ANGELES (NC)-Japan immune to' the Gospel message is ridi.n g. the crest, of a 'wave ~f of supernatural goodness. D!aterla~ls~ ,and only wh~n thIS '-The ,gross materialism pre- ' economIc swell br~aks .w~ll the valent in the country, whose Jap~nese people. be wl1hng. to people ,are enjoying their highconSIder the spIritual, accordm~, est standard of living in history, to Father Thomas .Takahas~l, -Lack of a spiritual tradition. M.M., ~ome on a VISit .after SIX. -Cynicism abOut Christianity,' years m Japan. .., ,caused, by, the bad example of ,.Fa.ther Takaha~kllS hlffiself, a some western businessmen and' ~I~I - an AmerIcan-born U. S. U. S. GI's in Japan. cItIzen of Japanese ancestry" L'k 'c th J" Seh I The Maryknoll missionary deI e a 0 Ie 00 8 clared that foreigners who come Father Takahaski, who has to kn,6w,the people of Japan are. taught for, the past three years invariably impressed by/them at the J:iotre Dame Sc~ool in WARSAW (NC)-An organiand ~ee in them a great poten- ~yot~, dls~lose~ that, unhke the tial'for Catholicism. . sItuatIon m thIS country, non-' 'zationaimed at eliminating reli- . gious instruction in Poland's But despite l;l1e efforts of hunCatholi~ parents in Japan "comdreds of Catholic missionaries pete WIth one another to send schools has' stepped up its activities. . sent into the country since the their children to our schools." During the first six months of end of World War II he added ,"Often in a class of ,40 stu1959, lecturers, the Society for nothing resembling a' mass con~, dents 8.t Notre Dame School, version movement' has begun there will be only two or three Secular SchoQls, delivered more lectures than they did during the ' there. Catholics," he said. . Cites Reasons The young- missionary priest whole, of 1958. One course, "Knowledge of Religions," is' Father Tak:Jhaski attributed- warned that the Japanese are this to several reasons: especially susceptible to' com-, being taught widely by commu- ' -The high degree of natural munism because of, the 'stress it, nists. It seeks to disprove religoodness among the Japanese, puts on material betterment of gious beliefs by the use of , "scientific'" me~hods. the masses. which makes them in some ways

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Red Poles Campaign: Against Religion ;

ThC)usands' Gratefu r. ' For Peace in Cuba SANTIAGO (NC)-Thousands of faithful gathered at the Marian shrine in the town of EI Cobre near here to offer thanks to the Bles~d Virgin for the peace restored to Cuba. Auxiliary Bishop Evelio Diliz y Cia of Havana presided at the ceremonies at' the shrine of Our', Lady of Charity of Cobre. Among government officials attending was Prime Minister Fidel Castro. Our Lady of Cobre was honored in processions and Masses throughout Cuba. Widespread publicity was given to a prayer by Bishop Diaz imploring the :a'lessed- Mother for her protec-' tion during' Cuba's 'period of moral and social reconstruction.

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'IRVINE (NC)---:The right of the Benedictine Sisters of' the Covington diocese to operate the new Irvine-Estill. ~ounty Hospital has'been upheld by the Estill County Circuit Court here in Kentucky. The predominantly Protestant city and, county negotiated with the Sisters to, take over the" $354,975 hospital on the basis of a' 99-year lease with a nominal. $l-a-year rent and the right of renewal forever. A group of 49 taxpayers of _Estill County, headed by a Baptist minister, filed suit .in the Circuit Court to prevent the Benedictines from taking over the hospital which was constructed with public funds. Attorney Jesse K. Lewis' of' Lexington, representing the' minister's'group, contended that the lease violates portions of the Kentucky and,Federal Constitutions concerning separation of Church and State. He charged that the lease constituted a delegation of a public function to 'a char~table organization and amounted to a preference for the Catholic nuns in' .. violation of the constitutions. l'4r. Lewis demanded that the' city and county take over oper- • ation ,of the hospital. The defendants-:-the Ben~dic- ' tine Order, the City of Irvine and Estill County, asserted that' Irvine is prevented by law from rimning the nospital 'and the county is not financially able to conduct i t . , ' ' Judge Alex P. Humphrey· ruled against the demands "of the minister's group for a court, order directing the city 'and county to take, over the operation of the hospital.

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,THE ANCHOR-Diocese of fall ,River-Thurs., Oct. 15, 1959 '"

Bishop Gerrard Celebrant Of' Annual White' Mass'

Bachelor Leaves Estate to Build Hospital Wing

Most Rev. James J. Gerrard, D.D., V.G.,. Auxiliary Bishop of the Diocese, will be celebrant arid preacher at the fourth annual "White Mass" at 8 Saturday morning in St. Anne's Hospital Chapel, Fall River, sponsored by St.' Luke's Physicians' Guild. Catholic fluence is' spirft~al, suppiyillg physicians, dentists, nurses fundamental principals of action and others in the health field and, providing the'members with have been invited by Dr. counsel and moral guidance for, Francis J. D'E:-rico, guild president. Adopted by the 75 guilds of Catholic doctors comprising the National 'Federation of Catholic Physicians' Gullds, the annual Mass to honor their patron is celebrated 'in hospital chapels, parish churches and cathedrals. Purpose of the guild is fulfillment of Catholic aims and ideals as they apply to those in the field of medicine. The motivating in-

the daily p'ractice of their profession in the light of Catholic teaching. Rt: Rev. Msgr. Hugh A. Gallagher, pastor of .St. James Church, : is moderator of St. Luke's Guild of New Bedford. Rev. Daniel F. Shalloo, general manager of The Anchor; is moderator of the Fall River guild.

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HANFORD (NC) - Most of the $1,300,000 estate of a wealthy bachelor who died' last month has been left to '

I

Synod May Split Rome Into Zones

- ROME (NC)--A plan to divide Discuss Worker ' Rome into zones to be adminisby var,iotls auxiliary bishApostolate Pia ns . tered ops is expected to be "discussed

PARIS (NC)-No decisions were announced after a meeting of French bishops to study new methods of the

at the forthcoming Rome synod: Competent sources say the zoning of Rome into ecclesiastical jurisdictions would aim at apostolate to the working cl'ass better administration of various PRESENT CHECK: Trustees of Our Lady of Mt. Carmel following the Holy See's final groups and classes. The zones banning of the priest-worker ex- would be laid out to include a parish, Seekonk, present a testimonial check to Rev. James majority of one or another level periment. ' E; O'Reilly, pastor, on sick leave. Left to right are Joseph Attending the meeting, were of income. Castro Jr., Joquin Hendricks and Adrian Vincent. It has been suggested that' bishops of dioceses where a branch of Worker Mission exists. each auxiliary bishop of the CarThe mission was set up follow- ' dinal Vica.r of Rome who ading the restrictions placed on ministers the' aiocese for Pope the priest-worker experiment In John should establish "branch" 1954. It coordinates all etf<iTts ':curias so that Catholics would SAN FRANCISCO (NC)-The she says. "The Protestants dG of the apostolate to the working , have easier access to the various world's poor do not hunger for class, especially the activities ,ot dioce~an offices than is possible bread nor medical care,. as much much more than we. And the mission bishops are so anxious the Young Christian Workoers' with the centralized curia. as they do, the esteem of their to provide help if we can get it movement and Workers' Catnobetter-off brothers, says Mother . to them. True, much more has lic Action. ,, I Anna' Dergel, a little dark-eyed been done since World War II, His Eminence Maurice Card-, woman ,who has given her life ' but a tremendous amount ,reinal Feltin, Archbishop of, Paris to helping the people of Asia ' mains ,to be done ...." and head of the Worker Mission, NEW YORK (NC)-The laity and Africa. noted at the meeting here ~at was called upon to rectify the Mother Dengel believes that Mother Dengel, foundress of all priests engaged in the apos- "distorted" public image of th~ most Americans, and other Westtolate have accepted the Holy Catholic Church 'by Msgr. Fran- the Medical Mission ,Sisters, a erners, do not fully appreciate community begun in the United· See's recent ruling with perfect cis J. Lally at the annual Comthe mission picture. "There is a States in 1925, said: obedience. muni6n breakfast of the Ladies considerable lack of knowledge -"The people of underdeveloped End Experiment of Charity of New York. and understanding," she says. The aim of the priest-worker Msgr. Lally, editor of'the Pilot, nations 'want to be considered on "Too often the missions are glaa . l«wet with others,'as human experiment, started after World Boston archdiocese newspaper, morized. This is not the correct War II under the leadership of said that most non-Catholics "see beings despite their ignorance" picture: the missions are interCardinal Suhard of Paris, was to us most often in our negat~ve ~eir illness, their poverty." . esting, challenging, but not glaMother Dengel went to Rawal- morous. And I haven't seen' bring back to the Church the moods: They see us condemning largely de-Christianized French and forbidding, 'they see us as pindi, India, in 1920 as a lay snakes or lions' yet except in working class. Priest-workers censorious, authoritarian," the medical doctor. She saw the' zoos.•." need for an order of medical took jobs in factories, lived in priest-editor s:\id. Mother Dengel is realistic In working class districts and wore i'To be sure, there is a place missionaries, so she founded one her appraisal of missionary workers' clothes in an effort to and necessity for this in'the life with the encouragement of Pope' needs: "You must be willing to reach 'workers and overCOIlle of the Church . ;; but' to see Pius XI. Now she keeps close work to learn the native lantheir traditional distruSt of the Christ only in anger is not to see c~ntact with some 27 hospitals- guage, to learn their customs,' Church and priests. the whole Christ, and to see His founded and staffed by her Med- . th'eir mentality," she advises ical Mission Sisters in India, missionary aspirants. The .experiment ran into nu- Church only in its disciplinary ' merous difficulties and l~ 19M' degrees is not to see the whole Pakistan, Ghana" the Congo, the Orange Free State, Nyasaland,' it was curtailed. Priest-workers' Church either." I Burma and Venezuela. were ~mitted to engage in ..... I C I BEFORE YOU BUYmanual labor jobs for only three I~atlona - She visited the San Francisco hours a da~ and had to attach ALTOONA (NC)-The threearea as p'art of a tour of U. S. BE WISE-SEE themselves to a parish or a com~ d~y national convention of the establishments in Atlanta, St. munity of priests. In a letter Catholic Knights of ,St. George Louis, Philadelphia and Moundated July 3, the Sacred Con- and its auxiliary will open in tain View. Her headquarters are gregation of the Holy Office Altoona (Pa.) next June 5, Dis- in Rome. ended the experiment complete- trict President Thomas PI Read Small Contributions q. has announced. Mother Dengel is not one to scold or reprimand, but she is, ROUTE 6, emphatic, about small contributions made by Catholics for foi'- ' FAIRHAVEN, MAS~. eign medical aid. Ask About Our F.H.A. Plan! "Weare like a grain of sand, N

Missionary Sister 'Says World's Poor Need Esteem of Brothers

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jhe Dominican - Sisters for the: construction of a wing on Sacred Heart Hospital here. William L. Scally of Lemoore, Calif., ,died at the age of 79. He did not have any known relatives. With the exception of several bequests totaling about $50,000, Mr. Scally left his estate to the Sisters. AbQut half of the estate is in cash and the rest is real estate. Mr. Scally, a University of Santa Clara alumnus, operated a store in Lemoore until 1937, when he'retired'to manage his, land holdings. His last known relative was a n.ephew who was . . kil'led in an automobile accident _ in 1951. Sacred Heart Hospital has planned for a new wing to be added to its present hospital, but lacked the funds to ac'quire the property neccfsary. Plans to build a completely new hospital I at another site were dropped last year. I.

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THE ANCHOR-D!o~ese of Fall River-Thurs., Oct. 15, 1959 "I

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More Sacrifice, More Love

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'Conce'ntrati-on of EconomicPower Presents Problem

God Love:'You 'By Most Rev. Fulton J:Sheen. D.D.

By Msgr. George G. Higgins Director, NCWC ,Soc"i!,1 Action Department

MISSION SUNDAY . October 18 is the SUnday the Holy Father has asked the Catholic world, under the auspices of his 'Society for the P-ropagation of the Faith, to' make sacrifices for the, missiolUl wherever ,they be.

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During the p~st, two or 'three years we have heard a rreat deal ~bout the power' of labor leaders, but relatively little about that .of corpOration executives' and mana'gersor administrators of great financial holdings. In recent weeks, however, tWo specialists in' ship' in referri~g--to an agglomerthe field of corporation law' ation of industrial capacity like and corporate finance - Dr., General Motors is," he insists, "Adolf A. Berle and Dayid T. "to put it kindly, overripe. And the simple designation' of our system as one oased on 'private' property is not merely, overripe; Jishing ,imporit is a calculated deceit." tant treatises on Dr. 'Berle '!lay·s substantially the gro wing Cloncentration of the same thing, although in less financial power provocative'language. "We live," iii the Amer-' he says, "under a system delean economy. scribed in obs~lete terms. . . . ,Both writers We assume that our economic me to' subsystem is based on 'private propstantially the erty'. Yet most industrial propaame conclusion erty is no mon. private than a -that economic ' . seat in subway train, and inpower. in the deed it is questionable whether United States is much'of it can be called 'private' eoncentrated in , at all." the hands of relatively few men, 'People's Capitalism' ,~ who, for the most part, are not T.o co~roborate this conclusion, Rally the owners but simply the, Dr. Berle points out that, conmanagers or administrators ·of, "trary to what we' have been accumulated capital. reading in thoie advertisements Dr. Berle's treatise is a book about "People'~ Capitalism," in entitled Power Without Property the decade ending in 1957 three- ' (Harcourt, Brace and Co. $3.75). fifths of industrial capital came Mr. Bazelon's is a le!lgthy and from the retained earnings and provocative essay entiUe~ F~cts depreciation allowances of cor-' imd Fictions of U. S. CapitalIsm porations. iR the Sept.. 17 'issue of The One-fifth was "borrowed, Reporter. chiefly from banks. The other Basic Issue fifth came from the public: But IIi recommending these two most of it was routed by way of. pUblications" I do nof mean to the great insurance companies, east aspersions on the integrity so~called mutual funds and penfIl corporation executives, and sion trusts. financial trustees, nor do I wish Perhaps five per cent of into suggest' that. big business vested capital, according to Dr. ought to be cut down to size. Berle,' represents individuals I am inclined to agree with wnohave saved and have chosen Dr. Berle and Mr. Bazelori when 'investment as an application of they say that bIg business is here their' savings; The balance ill, to stay and that the main prob.,. either in the form of inter11,a11'1 , !em.'confronting us as a people is generated funds or f~nds whose I\Ot to whittle it down or even use is administered by profe.to keep it from getting bigger, sionals. but somehow or 'other to make it more directly accountable to Admini*red System ille public. "The capital system,"- Dr•. :This, I take it, is also the basic Berle concludes, "is not in manT Issue confronting us in the field respects an open market system. of. organized labor-not to reIt is an administered system. duce the size of unions nor ~ The ultimate ownership . . . ill dip the wings of labor leaders, so far· separated from the actual but to look for ways of making use,of savings that we may fairly· them serve the publi-. interest say administration has only the more effectively;" /' , vaguest relation to its supposed :The Berle-Barzelon descripowners or beneficiaries." , .on of American capitalism will ' Frankly, OIie gets the impre..ome as a great surprise to those sion that neither Dr. Berle nor who nave convinced themselves Mr. Bazelon know:s precisely --'Or have allowed themselves to what to do about this problem 1M! convinced by institutional of concentrated and largely se11advertisements about the glories perpetuating economic power. eli so-called People's Capitalism But that's perfectly unde~ -ithat the ·ownership and control ,standable. Who does know what et property in the United State. to do about it? iii widely distributed. . ' The ,really important thing 'Private'. Property that these two writers have 'done 'Mr. Bazelon says very bluntly is to make 'us aware that the ~at so-called "People's Capital.,., problem exists and to give ua isin" has as little to do with some understanding of its sig-' eapitalism proper ali "People's niftcance for the future of AmerDemocracy" (a popular,' com- iean econ'9mic life.. This, ill;' itDlunist slogan) has to do witll seif, is ·great 'public'se,rvice and . democracy pr9per., one, for whiCh 'ought w, . be "The use of the word 'ownet'- deeply,gr~teful." "", ", , . \ .,'. .' ", ' - ...

" The reaction of the Catholics of the UnitedStatell to this plea of the Vicar of Christ depends not on their means,' but on their iove of Christ. ", The night of the Last Supper Our Lord said: ' 1. He is the Vine-the'source of Divine Life, Faith and Love. 2. We are the branches: we have no higher life, no faith, no grace, no right to call God"Father" and Mary "Mother", except through Him. , 3. But there is one thing we can do because of our union with Him-we can bear fruit: we can convert pagans, heal "lepers; educate the Koreans, spiritualize .the Japanese, give refuge to the victims of Communism.

Bazelon _ have balanced ,the scales, to some extent,' by pub-

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Boy Scouts : Continued from Page One cession' into the' C'athedraL Awards willbc presented to the boys by the Knights of Co~umbus Councils of their respec.!ive districts and the Guard of Honor ,for the procession will be furnished by Bisnop Stang Assembly, . Fourth De~ree, of Fan . River. ,- " Following the presentation of awards,by Bish"p Gerrard,'Rev: Walter A. Sullivan, Diocesan Director of Scouting, will preach. ' Scouts will recite the Scout oath and laws 'in unison and theceremony - will ·close with solemn benediction. r' Award recipients will include 34 Greater, New Bedford boys, 26 from Greater Fall River, and 14 from the ',Attleboros, Maruifield, Middleboro and Taunton. New Bedford Scouts include, from Troop 1: Richard St. Aubin, Edward O'Leary, James Maciel, PauIMonfiis,Ste"en 'Payton. Troop 3: Raymond Duphily. Troop . 5: .Gil Bellefeuille, Joseph Boucher, Pierre Martin, David 'Costa, Robert Newsham, . Paul Cloutier. . , Troop" 11: Edward Macedo. Post 11: Edmund Rego. Troop 1« Kenneth L. Patnode. Troop 16:, Gerald A. Mailhot, Arthur L. Lafleur. Troop 1'J: Paul A. Thomas. Robert P. Mello, Robert A. Avila, AnthOllF L Poente. . Troop 111: William Houlihaw;.. , Troop 19: Micqael McCormack, Robert W. Souza, Edward Hummel, John Rohl'. Post 19: Ronald Per~ins.

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He leaves it to others to plead: "Giv~ generousiy". Our plea is: I,ove 'God and you' will sacrifice; then sacrifice more and you V(ill love more. Last year the Catholics of the United ~tates gave to the Holy Father for&~, all his missions under the Cong!"egation of the Propagation of the Faith 'just 26 cerlt "'''''' apiece, about the equivalent of a package ot:q?~ cigarettes. This year, we know God will betit 'loved more, which is, the same as saying you "';' will bear· more fruit for the Missions. If there is no special collection taken up in your church or If you read this after ~ the, collection and your heart regrets that you did not deny yourself, send your sacrifice to me and I will answer YOll. We will simd it to the Holy Father in answer to his

plea. GOD LOVE YOU' to Mr.. and Mrs. B. for $50 "Today is our 6th Anniversary. Our present to each other is this small contribution to others less fortunate· iha~ we."... to,P. F. for $50 "In restitution for my sins"... to J. R. 'for $10 "I always meant to send you something but never got aroiInd'to it until I saw'the pJcture of the woman who was 40 years old but looked 80. My mottier ill almost 40 and rd never ,want to See her like that"... to H. M. for $15 '~Enclosed check is 'our last payday's collection' for the Society for the Propagation of the Faith, from our group Of Contributors at a Main Post Office" • • •

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---' Life is made up of three mys~ries; .. ", " ' The,Joyful: because we are looking forward to Ia4lrillee with Jo,... The Sorrowful: becauSe Christ first took the Cross, " ; The Glorious: because the CroSll leads.to the Spirit .,in our lIOuis and the finai Resurrection. Sa,. the WORLDMlSSION ROSART" and 70U can pray for all the pagans in. the world that the light of 'faith ma,. be theirs. For an offering of $2, and yoUr request, wW send ,YOII thia, WORLDMlSSIONROSARY. '

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, eut' out this column, pin your sac~ifice to it and mail it to the Most Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, National i:>irector of The Society for the Propagation of the Faith, 366 Fifth Avenue, New York 1, ,N. Y.. yoUr DIOCESAN DIRECTOR REV. ,RAYMOND T. CpNSIDINE, 368 North Main S,treet, Fall River, Mass. ' .

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DAUGHTERS OF ST. PAUL'

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invitol YGUttg gi.... (14-231 10 labor'" , Christ·s vast vin.yard as _ APo.... of the Editions: Press, Radio, Movies and , .... ,wision. With th_ mod.m Means, th_ Missionary Sist." bring' Christ·, ,Doctrine 10 aB. regard I... of rclce. colal' or c...... For informafio... write to: REV. MOTHER SUPERIOR 10 R. PAUL'S AvL' I9STON .10. MH.

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From this union comes sacrifice for the Propagation of the Faith. "The. branch that· does yield (ruit, My Father trims clean, . so that it may yieid more fruit"... God seems to shape our lives with ,a prunin~ knife, purging us,' inspiring us to selfdenial, that we may increase our anion with Him. ' ,

Troop 41: John C. 'Holland, James ~ajewsk1, Anthony Ko-

Mattapoisett and Fairhaven Troop 53, Mattapoisett: l'tftchael T. Ellis. Troop 56, Fairhaven: Leonard V. Sylvia, Paul R. Gelinas, Robert Gaudreau. Troop 14:' Mansfield: Joseph Walent, Robert Blackader. Troop 13, Midcileb~ro: Dennili McGrath, Richard' Giberti Troop 1, South Attleboro: Richard P. Reetz. ' Troop 6, Taunton: John FlaBagan, John Colton. Troop T,' Taunton: David McGovern, JosephWade Jr., Timothy McKenna. Troop 21, Taunton: John P. - Briody Jr., John Dupont. ' 'Troop 27, North Attleboro: Christopher Jaconis. Troop 4f, North Attleboro: Rolarid Robi. taille. , ,Greater Fall Riv~, " - Troop 50: Robert Ahaesy,·De.... , ,nis Boucher, Paul, Boucher,' . Roger Gaudreau, John Horan, . Norman -Pell~tier, Andre Provost. .. _ Troop 6: Waltet" WUcox. TroOp 12: Morii. Carpentier..,Troop 20: Richard ValerllOrui, Arthur Desrosiers, Normall. Dube, Oem. Lussier, Robert Michaud. 'Troop 28: 'Michael. Medeit'Oll, Alb.ert Roy. ' , ,. From Sw~ea : . .; ~oop 16: Pierre Hebert. TroOp HEAD N€W UNIT-Officers of'the formed'CYO Z6: Michael Flanagan. Troop 38: '.' ' unit at St. Jean Baptiste Parish, FaD River, are, "left.lo Alan Grenier. right, Paul Marlin, president; Annette Cousineaa,viee-. : Troop 40:" AntbollF CasiUi, Gerald Durette, James Faria, president; Susan Landry, secretary, a!1d Paul Berube. traM- . Ri~ard Faria, Roger Lambert., ~e~ Boger Lizotte, i'rancla Bogell&.

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,SHRINE AIDE:' Father Lawrence J. Frank, O.M.I. . has been named assistant to the Director of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception, in Washington. He will be in charge of pilgrimages and devotions. He is a. native of Pittsfield, Mass. ,N.C. Photo.

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nt! ANCHOR~Di~eseOf Fan River-Thurs., Oct. 15, 1959

OBSERVE DECADjl: OF ACHIEVEMENT-Cathoiic Theatre Guild of New Bedford has begun its 11th year drama broadcasts on alternate Sunday nights. Prominent among the many member who have' assisted in the . 8ucceS8 of the radio features are, .left to right, Mrs. Vincent Worden' .

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Cardinal Asserts All Sflare Blame For Delinquency VENICE (NC)-"We are all responsible for the present situation" 'of juvenile delinquency, Giovanni Cardinal . Urbani told a conference on youth problems here. The Patriarch of Venice ll8id all share the blame for the present situation "in so far as society bl general should base itself not only on traditional value. but above all on eternal ones." The Cardinal stressed "the need for a greater discipline of the press which, reporting the 'feats' of juv"nile delinquent. under big headlines, only flatten their pride, which often ill a factor encouraging them in their acts of daring and pushing them further along the road from which we want _ to redirect them." Feel Lonely Cardinal Urbani said that to-

. Charles .Reckords; Stephen Markey and WNBHengineer William E. Mendoza, in center panel; Manuel Almada, playwright and actor, with Vincent J. Worden: guil~ treasurer, in second right panel; and Director Christopher A. Best, WIth MISS FlorenceF. Mello,organist, in background, at far right." ~.

Catholic Theatre Guild in New Bedford To Conc~ntrate on Modernized Plays . By A vis C. Roberts Catholic Theater Guild of New Bedford, Inc., has started its 11th year of radio broadcasting. Programs are aired over Radio Station WN:BH from 6:30'to 7·P.M. every other Sunday from ~eptember to Ju~y. This year, according to Christopher A. Best, radio chairman for the Guild, the group,will concentrate·on modernized plays teaching Catholic The radio group is 'but a segprinciples, faith and morals. casts are .held during the weekLast year there was a series and a half-hour before the pro- ment of the Catholic Theater on Catholicism and Ameri- gram gets ,~nder way. Each pro- . G~ild of. New Bedford. ~e .' . . ". gram now IS taped and the CTG guIld, WhICh produces CatholIc camsm. Smce. ItS .mceptlOn has 21 tapes in its library, avail- plays regularly,. gives all ita

Lithuanic;l Con'ti.,ues Persistent, Ruthless Catholic. Persecutions '

SEATTLE (NC) - The new rabbi of one of Seattle's synagogues is a Catholic University of America graduate student.

Rabbi Raymond Krinsky ef. Herzel Conservative Congregation is working on a dissertation . for a doctor's degree in Semitie studies from the Catholic University in Washington. His advisor is a Redemptorist priest . able for loan to interested proceeds over immediate eX- and Semitic languages and literature professor, Father Louia achools or orgaJ;lizations. I penses to a Diocesan charity des' Best is' searching ·for new . ign a t e d b. y B'IS h op C onnollY. .~ I II. Hartman. IICripts and would "be delighted," 1955 I th . t' Rabbi Krinsky, 33, i, one el he said" to read any plays by' a one e organIza .Ion pre- lleveral rabbis who have studied amateur authors hi the Diocese. ' , ~nted. $1,125 to the bishop fM in the university's Semitics de,New Bedford's radio group was St. Vincent de Paul Health partment in the past 10 or 11' .purred to even greater action in . Camp. yearil. the Fall of 1957' when the .late Pope Pius XII jss~ed an encycli. cal ~iscl;'ssing the. ~ield of ~o~­ . mUnIcahons - radIO; ,teleVISIon . and moti~n pictures. Pope PlUS noted that the three branches of com.munications in. fluenced the mmds of modem "men and could "elevate or de. ba "th se em. . Publicity Avenaea Thus encouraged,the .radio group procee~ed to publicize its work by sendmg announcement. of programs' to be read in inprep<:2ration for FEAST OF ST. JUDE-Oct. 28 'churches throughou.t the Diocese, Chapel novena devotions daily at 10 A.M., ~ to convents, schools, old age 12: 10 noon, 1:10, 7 'and 8 P.M. homes.arid other spots: Its littie . pamphlets encouraged nsteners . to tune in and its .slogan became, SERMONS: Fr. lucian Gallagher, O.F.M. "We· are praying that you'll be Mission~ry from New York listening." . •

the program, UnIque In the Fall River Diocese, h~s dramatize.d the lives of the salOts. ' . The first program of this sealIOn was dedicated to the life of St. Gerard Majella, the second to Pere Marquette. The latter was the work of Manuel Almada, a member of the radio committee. ·Best has authored some of the programs and other plays have been .written by AIm'ada and Mrs. Yiolet Holton, both, active 'members of the CTG radio committee. Timothy P. Keating 11 another member of the commitday practically all young people tee and Miss Ellen M. Gaughan feel lonely and that they have ' a CTG no faith in their elders who s e emember k ' also is author of aeverlil radio scripts. . to Impress them with the weight of' their experience but who Many Hands avoid them. WNBH don t broadcast time A program to combat t h e ' a es lOurce of juvenile' delinquency arid all authors, ac\ors ~nd other s h.elper d volu.nteer theIr work, wall discussed by Italian Minis- ti t ter of Justice Guido Gonella me an aSSlS ance. who summed up: Founded on the principle of "The consolidated healthy atspreading the word'of God by mosphere of the family and of dramatics, the radio broadcast is the school; the campaign against very well received in Greater corruption of entertainment and New Bedford, east to Cape Cod reading material, against misery and the islands, north to Brock'and unemployment and unton and west to Greater Fall healthy environment must proRiver. Listener response is vide the principal remedy' fM heavy and letter. addressed to this social sore, the fruit of up- . the program committee show the heavali of war, of the anxietiea program also haS'·much appeal to and uncertainties creating the non-Catholics in the ar·ea. anti-social attitude of youth." Rehearsala fM the live broad- .

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VATICAN CITY (NC)-Reli- . first arrested in 1946 and spent giou. persecution ill· Soviet10 years in a Soviet concentra-, !.,..~--~'""'!'~~~~'""'!'--~ occupied Lithuania is' continuing tion camp-was deported Oct. 17, for all Catholics. 1958, to Seduva, a town near his Father Ulisse A. Floridi, S.J., diocese. It also reported .Bishop reports he has received a letter - Vincentas Slad~evicius. who was:, from Lithuania which says ill consecrated two Ye.ars ago, is not part, "We beg you to convey our allowed, to exercise his palitoral ~ most, cordial respects to Pope functions. John XXIII. He can be quiet in The Jesuit !laid "present-day , NEW BEDfoRD mInd: Lithuania; the fortress of atheist-communist oppression in the North, is safe. The powers of Lithuania ill' more ruthless and hell wiU not prevail against it." more persistent than in any other 'INDUST~IAL OilS Father Floridi declared the epoch of history. HEAT1NGOILS letter was authentic "beyond '~Not 'only is the publication of doubt." The letter revealed 86- liturgical and religious books year-old Bishop Teofilius Matu- forbidden but so Is religious in·TIMKEN 110nis of Kaisiadorys-who WWl .truction of children. OIL BURNERS "Everyone is aware of the cal$112~343 vary of suffering of tJ:le bishops, & Service : BURLINGTON (NC) - In a priests and Catholic faithful of one-day solicitation 187 workLithuania. In 1956 a few surers collected a total of $112,343 vivors from the forced labor 501 COUNTY ST. toward- the building fund for an . camps returned home, but the addition to the Christ the King latest reports from the Soviet : . NEW BEDFORD parish school. Total cost ,of the Union indicate . that another oIChool expansion project will be wave of persecution is in prOi- , '. :--WY 3·1751 I'~.. $350,000.

Raise

Rabbi Graduate Student at CU

"ON RADIO WSARFall River . 1440 on' your dial Every Thurs., 8:45 p.m. ;

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., ST.' ~ . JUDE'S SHRINE, , Our LadX's Chapel-Franciscan Fathers : ~ 572 Pleasant Street, New Bedford, Mass. , , for: ;, :., , : : ~ Please 'entet:' my petiti«;ln in the Solemn Novena for , .. , the -Feast, October 28th, -and send me a nov'ena : ~. leaflet and a blessed medal. : ,, N arne __•..•..••••.._ _. ..•._•.••_ _ _._.. , ,, . . . _._ , ,Address _ ~ ..•._.__; _. , l ~ .: City or· Town ;;, ;; : : ; :

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ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs.,.';"Oct.,l5, 1959 -," .. . ". . ~'

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West Novel Offers Spiritual "Adventure and Suspense

ROCHESTER (NC)-Any moeducated at Aquinas Institute tion picture theater owner would here and at the Holy Cross Fathbe glad to have a problem faced ers Seminary ill Notre Dame, by Father Joseph Tierney, Ind. By Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S. Kennedy C.S.C., who returned to his home Ordained in 1950, Father Tier", A superbly constructed and written novel for the aault town, here recently after five ,ney was sent to Pakistan in 1953reader is The Devil's Advocate by 'Morris',L. West (Morrow. years in Pakistan. Lan u Problem The problem? How to seat· If a«e $3.95). It comes to us garlanded with' words of praise from 5,000 n~tives for a movie. The language problem he m~ a number of well knoWn and diverse authors, al).d these comFather Tiern~did come up '. was overcome when he learned with a solution, of sorts: to speak Bangali and Garo IanD:lendations are' thoroughly to withhold the information he He set up a sheet on bamboo guages. deserved. Mr. West, 'an Aus- is seeking. poles in an open field and seated "About 80 per cent of the natr.alian who s e previous But Meredith is a shrewd, seahalf his audience on one side tives I work with are Moslems,books have not had much . soned investigator, and graduand the other half on the oppO-: he said. ''They are Garo aborignotice in this country, jumps into ally \here emerges a portrait of site side of the sheet. ines who are also nomadic MODthe front ranks of contemporary the stranger who slipped into "It's true that half the people golians." artists in ficthe town at the time when the got a backward look at the film, The missiona!'! team, comtion wit h the Allies and the Nazis were warbut they really liked it,- Father posed of three priests, covers the present work. ring in the area, who went to Tierney said. territory assigned to them four .h live with Nina and fathered her Not Many Movies ..times a year, living in a village It Qpens WIt child, who rallied the people and Monsignor "But, the missionaries in Fa- for about a week a~ a time. Tht. MONSIGNOR LUPI Blaise Mere. got them safely through a terkistan still face quite a prob- 'means that the natives only hear dith's be i n g rible winter,. who suddenly belem," tlie Holy Cross Father said. Mass when the, mission team told that he has came a sort of recluse given' to • "The movies afford us the only shows up. cancer and can unbroken prayer, and who was way that we can get the natives "The work is hard," Father Jive a year at the put to death by Communist par- , WASHINGTON (NC) - Msgr. .to listen tol,ls - and, we don't Tierney said, "but, we receive Ac~ille ,Lupi; auditor at' the' have.many to show them." most; the preitisans. ., just compensation when we arbability is that Meredith. concludes that Ne- Apostolic Del«'!gation' since Sept. ,In MarchFather Tierney win rive at a village and greeted he will be dead rIme, though once an' unbeliever' 1953, lias' been, trans~erred to. return to the Holy Cross Mission enthusiastically by our converts m u'c h sooner.. . and a sinner like St. Augustine., Rome 'to: help with preparations Center at Mymensangh, the ,sec.. who areveiy eager to attend Meredith 20 years a priest, is an underwent a genuine conversion for the forthcoming ecumenical ond largest ~ity in East Pakistan, Mass." Eriglishm'an: who holds a position. and thereafter lived"in high holi- ' council. Archbishop Egidio Vagwhich'is in the Dacca diocese. While here Father Tierney • In the Congregation o~ R~tes ba ness and died a martyr. But this nozzi, Apostolic Delegate to' the , Father Tierney, the son of Mr. trying to raise funds to buy a D . Rome.' is not the point 'of the novel . United States, announced the and Mrs. M. Joseph Tierney, now camera, filmS of a religious natransfer. Faced with death, he reviews Real Priest of Bayside, Long Isla~d, N. Y;, ture, tape reco~ders,a slide prohis' life and finds it .not ,0Qly Its cop.cern, rather, is to show . Msg~. 'Lupl, a native of Crebut formerly of Rochester, was jector, a generator and a jeep. . empty of achievement but withthe change in Meredith himself . mona, Italy, served' as, secretary .,; out priestly 'savor, wit~out ,an,. . and in. ~~e people with he of 'the Apostolic Nunciatures 'in vivifying contact with human is in touch. He helps these men Haiti and. the Dominican Repubbeings. and women - the doctor, the lic befo're he was assigned to. the 'He has been a dry -' as - dust priest, the countess--to come to. staff of the U.S. Apostolic Dele~No beach a& aU ••• This u the 'erJ bl which the residen" of bureaucrat, shuffling ,papers and. terms with themselves and with gation. He visited the Fall River i 1lDall, StateD IslaDd community expre98 pride In their home conforming to a rigid ,office rouGod.' " , Diocese 'last Spring for the co~ toWn. This pride .. larrellrootecl In tine, but never fighting any great He is no longer merely the iitsecration of Most Rev. James J. a beautitul church aDd modem sobooL battle of the spirit. It is now too, quisitor, but a human being who ·Gerrard as Auxiliary Bishop ~ The reslden*, of AINZ In SYRIA need late for him to cha~ge. learns to be kind and patient, a Fall River. the same se.... of commonJ&1 and Pal'Receives Assignmeot priest in the fu~' sense.·He dies Ish pride that the, may grow through , B'ut wh~en he reports his condthappy and at peace, his last retheir hardshipe with digDl" audselfquest that he be buried iB, Gerespect" Your ceneroua AmericaDtion to Cardinal Marot~, prefect mell.!!, Minore where;' "for thfl dollu gift wiD BUILD A CHURCH .. ef the congregation, the latter· first time, I have found myself MEXICO CITY (NC)-Stefan the villll4re of &Ina. The church will unemotionally assigns him t~ iilas a man and"a priest.Cardinal Wysz}'nski, Primate of "-- \ . cost $3,500. The whole or.. part from vestigate the case of Giacomo Mr. West has woven his stolT Poland, thanked the eatholics of 100 will be deeply appreclatecL II' YOU Nerone, who died some years with extraordinary, dexterity. Mexico for. their gift of a reproPREFER, a speciflo MEMORIAL «;iU"l' earlier in the Calabrian town .01. He keeps one reading intently, duction of ,the image of Our' will make a HOME 01 U1ia HOUSK Gemello Minore and whom the sometimes almost breathlessly, Lady of.' Guad.alupe and told OF GOD. peasant folk of the area are p~o- not just to discover the truth them that "Mexico is for Poland Douncing a saint. . about Nerone,. but also to see an example of faith and of strugMala book ••.. '25 CiboriUDI ' , Monsignor Mereditll~ is ~ be what is going to happen to MereAltar, stoDe . .... 10 Cmclfis ••••••• 21 gle ~n behalf of religion." the devil's advocate .in,.the case.,· dith and 'the otherliving'pririclM88l!I vestmen" ..50 Plctun •••••••• U Without speCIfically mentioJl4 sternly testing the claims Of. pals. ing the persecutions the Church heroic sanctity made for Nerone. This is II. spiritual adventure has endured in both countries ~ Already withering and in pain, . and' suspense' story, in which iJi the past' generation; Cardinal Meredith starts for the sou~h of there ,is not a false step, a ,wasted Wyszynski said in his message: Italy. He stays afew~days with.~' scene, word, or, gesture, one "Mexico, though geographically ·the Bishop of ,the. diocese of, which mounts steadily to an eAdistant, is very close ,to the Valenta, and in this astu~, pro- tirely credible climax.. hearts of the Polish people." . gressive, and prayedul cl~urchThe paiiltingof Our Lady Of man finds a .friend'_ something ,Superlative17' Writte.· which he had. been ,niisS~ng all There have 'been' some Com- Guadalupe.L.: patroness of Mex· years.. ". , piaints ":ihat the.·.. 'bOo.'.k',issues '.- ico ':..:- is to be enshrined in the , " h 15 !,He then.move!! on~rGeinello bitdown';ihai the' resolution. U1' parish chu'h:hin Niepokalanow~ Minore its~lf; a small, stagnant, ,more perplexing plaih. " near 'Warsaw: . It was sent te squalid hamiet in,a ~~r;'··harsh. These I cannot second. I will ad- Polimd'in 'gratitude for the gift, landscape. ,-'There he ,me~~ the' Diit to some tear that this ihtri.... made to' the Mexican Church ,In' pepple who ~knew, ,91' k~?w of. cate performance could not con- 1955 by a: grou'p of Polish exiles, Nerone:' r ' . , tinue to the'last without a slip, of ineprodudion'of the paintiDa of.Our' Lll'dyof 'Czestochowa, pa-' "iO ne is Dr:AIdo ¥eyer;;an: agbut it'provedquite unfounded. Dostic' Jew~ Another is. the Mi. West has rounded off his' trOness of Poland: The Polish' Marian image is installed over Countess Anne Louise de Sane- novel asskillfully'as'he'has SUBtis a maiiciou's Englishwoman tained it' through its·, earlier an altar in ·the Church of Our· · Lady of Perpetual Help here. who is the padrona of the' com- stages:, munity. ' . ' \ l '. Mr. West writes superlatively. 'A third is Nicholas Blake, a His - every character-and most pecuiiar English artist. Still an- of them are comple'x-rin'gs true. other is the local priest, a surly He has searching', pungent things . OTTAWA (NC)-"Pope JOY man who has been a soUrce of to say of the human condition, m a simple, compelling, forthscandal. Finally, there ,are Nina of religion, of popular avidity right human being," accordinc While they are already ricb In grace, we speak of the POOR Sanduzzi and her son Paolo. for miracles, etc. It will be hard to YousefKarsh, portrait phoSOULS IN NOVEMBER because they ARE SUFFERING In al)Shrewd ~vestigator. . for him to top this book. tograpller of famous personaliUcipation of their final reward. Masses for YOUR Poor Souw ties, who' visited the Vaticaa will be s~id In Novembe~ If you sead In your offerings NOW. Each of these has a reaSOn for · and photogrll,Phed Pope JObD, keeping secret whatever he or · XXIII. .Later the' pope ~nt SEBASTIAN .. eacer to anealcotatecIIJ she knows of Nerone, All seek: Cablegram to Mr. Karsh voicinc risk the sufferlnp of his Pa&roD Saln& and ST. PAUL (NC) -Excluding to mislead, Meredith or at least ~AMES Is desirou .. lmita&e the UterlU'J migrant farm worken· from' "delight" over the color photo.. graphs which Mr. Karsh seDi ~enius of his apostollo predecessor. $600 will minimum wage guarantees is a him. laelp make possible these miraclea of graee "discriminatory" practi«=e, a SenDescribing his experience at -$100 for' eacIa of tbelr seminary .~ ate labor subcommittee was 'told the Vatican; Mr. Karsh said: ST. LOUIS (NC)~DedicatioD.' by Father Edward S. Grzeskocourse. , "One of the' most magnificent C)f St~ L9Uis University's:' new " wiak of St. Paul He is a mem. WILL YOU MAKB THE MISSION? This II the reminatn., Pius XII .Memorial Library' will' ber of Mlimesota Gov. Orville L. <faces I have ever captured bequestion your pas~r asks you every year or two. Each week. longed to Pope Pius XII. Photo.. be held Sunday, Nov. 22. Arch~ Freeman's Human Rights Comand most earnestly on MISSION SUNDAY. we ask you to help graphing; his succeSsor has been bishop' Egidio' Vagnozzi; Apos,,:, . mission. make ·ONE OF THE NEAR EAST MISSIONS a worth, plac:. an equally rich experience. 'tolic Delegate to the United' Father Grzeskowiak' asserted for CHRIST-WORSHIP and CHRIST-TEACHING. AND-m These two· Popes, .bOth men Gi States, will officiate. ' t, " "at least 30 per. cent" of the chilolive seed· rosary FROM THE HOLY LAND will be sent to yoa God, are' different· men. The $4;250,000 building wu·'· dren'·of·-out-of':'state .fal'lD.,work.. soon as we receive your, $10 oUerini to the Holy Father f~ completed last May and has been', ers' do' not,complete the ~hool "The. 'former; reserved and a REFUGEE FOOD PACKAGE. ' in use, by students sin'ce. that: :term'iil their home' state, and are ascetic, 'somewhat removed ,time. In addition to the book co~ therefore usually re~assigned to frOIIl ·the ordinary life of the The GregoriaD MIl!Jiles--A SERIES or THIRTY MASSES-lectiori, the building houses· the' . the same grade when they r~turn common man; the latter, good will' be an UDusualb beneficial remembrance lor your decease4 unique collect;on of microfilm, home. ,'He said this causes the humored, earthy but still saint'parents or childrea. We wW be happy" give 108 mon Info.copies ,of mamiscripts' iIi' the' children .to "drift"" 'thl:ough like, 'gregarious'and unashamedly maUon about UaJa. Vatican Library in~ Rome; 'The school and to quit "in disguSt" at· fond of people; the kindly father microfilm copies are the only.' an .early age. . intimately' concerned with ,the source 'in., theWestern ',: Hemi.The. Minnesota. cleric called welfare of' all his children; de. sphere for much material ,valu-, for inclusion of ,migrant worktermined "to' learn by firsthand . fRANCS ·CARDINAL SPELLMAN, P'e.lde"" . • able to research in fields as' ers under Federal minimum experience as much as he can Mlgr. Tuohy, Nat1 Sec'y/ varied as the history of·.sc~ence wage guarantees. Not 'only Ie about humanity-from workers ~ncl all comtllunlcotlon. f9l and the history of' music.. More this a matter of justice to the to convicts, from the priests to CATHOUC NEAR EAST WELfARI! ASSOCIAnolf '" . than 11,000,000 manuscript .pages. workers, he said, but it is'. also the sick: Pope John is a simple. 480 LexlngfClon A"e.:at 46th ,~.w York' 17, N. Y. are reproduced on the microneeded to. prevent child. labor c:ompelling,' forthright human 1ilms. . and other abuses. being."

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Primate. Says Mexico. 'Example of Faith'

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Urges Minimum Pay For Migrant Workers

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Ml ANCHOR-DIocese of Fan River-Thurs., Oct. 15, 1959

ACTIVE CYO UNIT-A variety of activities, planned and carried out competently, keeps members' interest in the Mount Carmel CYO unit at a high level. At left, Rev. Luciano Pereira, director, discusses project with, left to right, Norman Medeiros, vice-president .and'investigating officer, and President Norbert Guilherme. In second len panel plans for Buddy Com!llunion breakfast on Noy. 1 are discussed. by, .left to right' seated, Dick Dias and Raymond Sylvia, and, standing, Leroy Medeiros

Nothing. Official About Meeting WI-th Orthodox

and Joseph Arruda. At second right a chess game is the ~ttraction"for, left·to right, seated, Recording Secretary Anibal Medeiros and George Souza, and,. standing, David Souza, Treasurer Ronald Rogers and Cor. responding Secretary Michael Col,lto. In right panel Norbert Guilherme presides at a Confraternity of Christian Doctrine discussion with, left to right, John Furtado, John Rita, Joseph Vieira and Fernando Tavares. Father Pereira is emphasizing Youth Week Motto "Spiritualize Youth."

Youths of Mi. Carmel CYO in New Bedford' Cardinal ~ushing . Lauds Laity Role Are Spiritua.l,· At.hletic, Financial Go .. Getters rolePORTSMOUTH (NC) - The of the lay teacher in the

GENEVA (NC)-A prom. "Unity, sanctity, action." This is the slogan of the dynamic Mount Carmel CYO of Catholic education system drew Greek Orthod'ox arch-· 0 ur La dy 0 f Mount CarmeI Ch urc, h N ew Be dfor. d CYO h ea dquart ers 0 f th e ch urc h a t Cushing, the praiseArchoishop of RichardofCardinal Boston, bishop has declared that the Bonney and Rivet· Streets has just undergone complete facelifting. With their own earned here, scheduled' meeting between money, 100 members of Mount Carmel's CYO have completely refurbished the clubhouse The .Cardinal was principal representatives of the Roman and painted it in bright speaker at a kick-off dinner to , an dOth Sunday following Mass· there is, en of public school children i nraIse ' one ml'II'IOn d 0 11arsor f the Cat h 0 IIC r 0 d ox Ch urch es colors. The members also in Venice next year will not ' a general CYO meeting in the the Confraternity of Christian construction of the St. Thom811 have any official character. raised enough money to do- 'Church auditorium. ' Doctrine classes now being held Aquinas High School, a seacoast Archbishop lakovos, spiritual nate $1,500 toward a' new To finance tht' refurbishing of at St. James Church, New Bedarea high school at Dover' Point, l'nent

leader of Greektspeaking Orthodox Christians in North and South America, made the state'l t to hi men t h ere w h I e enrou e s · N ew Y or. k Th e h eadquar t ers In ' h op,- --wuo was. e 1ec t e d Arc hb IS one of six presidents of the World C ounci'I 0 f Ch urc h es a t ' its recent mee t mg on t h e 'IS1an d of Rhodes, had just conferred with the Orthodox Patriarch of . I t b 1 Constantinop1e/.In s han u 't . R Vatican aolO, w en I re. 1 September that vea 1e d In ear y IUch talks are to take place, also emphasized that they would be held on a strictly informal level. When press agencies first reported the talks, during the Rhodes conference in August, spokesmen for both the Holy See and the Orthodo~ communion immediately denied they· would have any "offiCial" ltanel-

addition to the club which will start a-building next month. They p'ledged and have n.early co.mpleted pay'ing $500 for Bishop Stang regional high school, North Dartmouth,. and they have a balance of $500,50 in the bank plus a few other dol-' lars i,n the organization treasury.

their quarters ..his Summer the boys paid 25-cent weekly dues, held cake sales, a carnival, newspaper drives, record hops, minstrel and variety shows, They did all interior painting and carpentering, The only professional J'ob in their quarters is that" of linoleum - laying. Colors are clean, fresh and' bright and the Spiritual advisor to the group paint job is carefully executed. ill self-effacing Father Luciano Most of the furniture is painted Perel'ra who h'as been trl'ggering to harmonize with wall colors in Mount Carmel',,' CYO Sl'nce 1955. the various rooms. "The boys have done everything," Father Pereira says. Adults Hel)) "They. deserve all the credit. I;ni ' For the first time this year willing ,to talk ~bout our fin'ances ·Father. Pereira asked a small and. how, we .raised ·money.' to group of adults to help him plan spur other CYOs in the Diocese. activities, "If the boys don't We have .a wonderful gr'oJ"i p 'of come, to 'Mass regularly, this boys. have only 100 mem~ group helps me round them up," ber,s b\1 t..we' can iet' mQre' .in Father. Pereira explained. when we have more room.'" ' There is a solemnreligioult ift. itallation of officers each year. ing. Msgr.-AntOnio 'Vieira, vener~ 'This year they includ.e Norbert . , a b l e pastor .at Mount Carmel, has Guilherme; president; .Norman purchased land ,west'O;f *he pres- Medeiros, vice president; Michael, ent CYO' building' for_ an 'addiCouto, c·orresponding secretary; Shrin~ tional indoor,gameroom.·· Anibal Medeiros, recording seeHAVERHILL (NC) -Bishop . Mount Carmel 'CYO is not· retary;.Ronald Rogers, treasurer,' Tohn King Mussio of Steubendedicated to sports on1Y. It' re'" and 'Ronald DeMello, sergeant-;ille dedicated a highway shrine gards sports '''as a 'medium to 'at-arms. . bere in Ohio honoring Our Lady bring' youn'gsters closer. to- the The boys participate regularly of Fatima on the 42nd anniver· 'Church." , in Pony and CYO baseball sary of the Blessed Virgin's ap. Habitual Champs leagues and in the basketball parition at Fatima in 1917. But the boys are proud of their league' 'at Kennedy Memorial t of record in basebalL From 1941 Center. t The Shrine includes The constl'tutl'on of Mount th through 1943 they were New . d stha ues the Blessed Virgm an e ree Carmel's CYO re'quires that 'ld h 'tnessed the Bedford city champions; in 1944 c h I ren w 0 WI . " h mem b er mu st b e a pracF. ' and 1945 they were Diocesan eac series of apparitions at atIma. ' t i c a l Catholic and seek at all Parking space ;s available at the champs; from 1946 through 1959 outdoor shrine, and free literathey were alternately city and times to be a worthy member of M oun t C arthe church." ' h ture is provided on the Fatima D IOcesan camps. message. mel's CYO team was the first to All members of the organizaThe Ohio Highway Department win the Diocesan trophy, for tion are required to receive Holy keeps-the Bishop James Cassidy Communion in a body on the bas estimated that 7,000 vehicles Trophy which it won in 1945 following dates~ First Sunday of pass the site of the shrine daily, after nailing the Diocesan cham- ~ Jamiary; Passion Sunday, Mothcarrying some two million , h'Ip f or t wo years In " suce r s ' Day, Feast of Our Lady of h per' pIOns Ions each year The.s rine II cession. . Mount Carmel and Feast of location is marked on official Christ. the King . d 'In Th e g roup was org anlZe Itate highway maps. The shrine was 'built and is December 1938 and· has been pi. Communion breakfast followl maintained by Our Fatima loted by the following chaplains: the Passion Sunday Mass to FamilY,.an organization devoted' Father John Rezendes, the late which pareJ:lts of the boys are ' to the upkeep of the shrine and Father Jose C. Valerio and invit,ed. the spread of the message of Father Joseph Cunha. Last year Father Pereira inFatima. The first floor of the newlyaugurated Buddy Communion decorated Mount Carmel CYO breakfast during National Youth center is used entirely for its Week. The secor.d annual Buddy members. The second floor Communion breakfast is schedbouses other oarish organizauled to follow Q:30 Mass Sunday tions. The bOYb, 14 through 21 morning, Nov. 1. Members may Fall River members of Providence College Alumni Associa- . years of age, have the use of the . bring a sister, t:rother or friend club nightly and on weekend to the breakfast free of charge. tion will hear an address by afternoons.. Boysurider 16 use Cost of the BUddy.Communion Rev. Charles B, Quirk, O.P., bead of the college's departptent· ·the club from 6'30 to 9 and boys breakfast will be defrayed. this over 16 have its use from· 6:30 to year by other Church societies of economics, at a dinner meet10, Mondays through Fridays. which have raised money for ing to be held at 6:30 Wednesday The center is open for all 'boys the affair with cake sales and night, Oct: 28 at St. Vincent'l Saturday and Sunday, afternoon other parish activities, About Home. 500 young people are ,;;ted Other activities on the asso- from 1 to 5. The boys attend Mass in a ·to attend. elation's calendar include attend. group each Sunday morning at To fulfill the religious aspect anee at a eollege basketball game, Ladies Night in April and 9:30. Members collect pew rents of CYO, several Mount Carmel 'at the Mass and Usher. Each CYO boys are training as teacha di.nner dance in June.

Bishop Ded icates' Fatima

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ford.' . lteligiou8 Aspect 0 h . . 1 d t ers are preparmg to ea CCD discussion groups with 6th, . 7th, 8th and .9th grade public school children "This organization is not formed J'ust to let the boys play ball," Father Pereira stresses. "It's a sociable, charitable and religious group, No boy can join unless his primary reason is to be closer to the Church," The rooms of the newly-decorated center include a television room, reading room and library where members can do homework quietly, d kitchen, not yet ready for'acticm but with a snack bar planned at a later date, an office for the spiritual director, two game rooms and a dressing room. There ia • ·large hall where outer elothes are hung and a shower room in the basement. Father Pereira supervised the drawing ,up of the new constitution whicQ says "The purpose 01. this organization shall be: (a) to provide our' Catholic youth with an adequate program of leisure time activities such ascultural, social, recreation and athletics, and (b) to establish thus a sympathetic contact bet ween th e c h urch an d th e youn g people of the parish-in a word, to make each member a better Catholic." .

N. H, "This is an historic occasion," the Cardinal declared, "because th ' th t h Id b k e vOIce a s ou e spea . g to you IS "1 . I't a In Sl en t. I d eem g rea t h onor t 0 represen t B' . IS h Oil Brady here." A sser t'mg th a t "the 1ay t eac h er . h ere to say, t "th IS ' e B os t on p..:e· late said he knew of a number of instances in the United States where there ar~ more lay teach. ers th l'g' th t-"· an re I IOUS on e s aUOI of Catholic schools.

A Delicious Treat

Made Rite Chips Ask For Them Today

Fr. Quirk to Address Fall River Alumni

'6# ,.....-: \tI9 supel'Vlslon 01 th. TRAPPIST MONKs 01 the Abbey of tile ,~sea ...AAf

Trappists have been famous for their home-made bread for cen· . turies ••• Monks' Bread brings back a long lost satisfaction the simple joy Of eating substantial, hearty bread. Rich in,.&fe<Uems. s,kjUfuJ k~ading,

and great care in baking give this bread its rare, superb flavor. Monks' Bread, tall and slender, firm in"texture, brings an exciting new discovery in honest good eating to yow family table.

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs., OCt. 15, 19 5~ /

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"M, fellow ~'~ . CC'J'hCft are ~y things about oar nation which excite a·sense orPride.... ~ ODe quality oCAmerica 8~ out••• thia is the quick r~nse ofour citize:DI to their neighbors in need. ...e "The chi1d'aaccidest,

tile' trapped minen,

the ~ering in atomado-these am . exampl~ .of the emergeilcie. of life. We read'and hear about them and'~

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an: moved to sympathy and help. But.mosI. of thc~human crises which·ocair each day'.. .

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never read1 the headJineJt•••• ~ mUll keep an eye on them and' show us·the Way II) help..... This iI the puqJOBe of ~ united ' mmmunity ~piigns..;.. '

,cRigJ!t now these united campaigns at"O getting under way in some two thousand . CX)JM1unitia.·aaoss the land. They provici

with a splendid' oppOrtunity to ~e8I the traditi:onal neighborly concern of America.~.84)

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"The ·campaign. in your area ••• representt -the Iarg~,.the most incI~i~ annual j

appeal to· which any of. us will be asked 10 • th·, . J0 ined 1D • ... are the Aamuar r. ·1· gtVC '.18, year. voluntary 'agencies that care for our childreD, give 00UDSeling to 1roUb1ed families. heal the lick of mind and body•••• Indeed, I dOa·t·know of any 'one- gUt we 'can make whidl

will meaD 10 much to so:UiaD7 people. •• ~ .• ••. 1 am ~t that our· hancfg and' h~ "ill' be ready to welcome the volunteer . wcdzer who will soon call on III seeking

our pledge ,of support-....•

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GIVE'THE U'NITED ·WAY ..

This Timely Message Is Sponsored .By . rite FoI-

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·Iow;ng Public· Spirited

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Oct. 15, 1959

Regional High Conti~ued from Page One man of the Drive, and $10,000, given by Joseph E. Fernandes Jr., Chairman of the Special Gifts Committee. Mr. Fernandes' talk at this meeting engenffered an enthusiasm never realized before ill this Area. The picture of the .chool also gave those in attendance a visual ~dea of what they were working for. Several Buildings In the picture as reproduced by The Anchor, several Quildings will make lJP Bishop Feehan High School. At the left in the. picture is the garage which will also provide storage space for lawn equipment. Then comes ·the' Convent w:th complete living accommodations for 42 Sisters of Mercy who will staff the new school. ' The next building is the Chapel which will serve both the Sisters and the .tudeni body. Classrooms Then comes the. Classroom building which will contain 20 general classrooms; four science laboratories; domestic science laboratory; art studio; two typing rooms; business machine room; study ball and administrative office. This building. Ii eapable of extension in the future if the need calls for it. '!be Library build'ing comes next in the picture, This 11 the bridge across tbe driveway which connecta the Classroo~ building with the Auditorium wing. The Library will be an all .lass and Dletal structure. . Separate Auditorium . The next building in the picture lathe Gymnasium which will take care of athletic functions and spectators at games. Locker room facilities are beneath the

afm.

Stresses Pa renta I Duty to .Give Children Relig:ious 'Education

Honor Group Starts At St. Mary's High

How Do You Rate on Facts of Faith

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LUIGI CERRONJl'

Greater Attleboro Area Rallies to Regional High School

Archdiocese Opens 24 New High Schools In 10-Year PeriC!d

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LEO COSTANZO

IncreasIng enthusiasm for .. in my hopes of giving my oIliest do anything that will help' build son a Catholic education_because' our new high school." Catholic high school in AttleLuigi 'Cerrone, 16 Hawthorne boro is being manifested daily as . there was no room at Coyle. I bave a younger .son, and am Stree,t, North Attleboro, Venerresidents of the area, convinced able Ruler of Torquato Tasso of the need of continuing Cath- looking forwald to this new school as the means of giving Lodge No. 147P, Sons of Italy: olic education through the imhim a Catholic education. I know . "I believe there should 'be a portant teenage years of a that all the .members of our Catholic high school in the Attlechild's life, voice their approbaLodge are ready and anxious to boros because high school traintion of the DIO.:esan project. Officials of. fraternal organIzations in the area have issued the following statements: Gabriel. DaCosta, 15 Linden Street, Attleboro, president of ALT()ONA (NC) 7 ' The' pri- with the teache~s of their chilthe Portuguese-American· ...Club mary duty and respt)Dsibilty of dren. about the progress of their of Attleboro: parents is to educate their chil- education and to see to it that "I have six grandchildren, and, the children regularly perform looking forward to their future,· d~en, especially in religion, I am greatly in favor of the new B,lShop Howard J. Carroll of their assignments, Bishop CarCatholic high school. It will' be Altoona - John'ltown has again roll declared. emphasized. . He also stressed that parents a big asset to our ep.tire comParents cannot absolve them- are expected to support school munity, and espeCially to ~e selves of the. responsibility to authorities in the matter of disyounger generation." educate their children and the cipline and order. The Bishop . Leo Costanzo, 208 Pratt Street, , school has the right 19 expect· reminded that "there is no easy Mansfield, Venerable R u I e r, the fullest parental cooperation, or royal way to learning" and Cristoforo Col:ombo Lodge No. Bishop Carroll said. that those who get the most out 1109, Sons of I t a l y : ) Educators properly expect of school are those who put the "Like many, Catholic parents' parents to keep :n constant touch most into it. in this area, I was disappointed

The Auditorium is a separate area of the building and will accommodate 1.100 persons. Both the Gymnasium and Auditorium are individually accessible from a common lobby. The Cafeteria which caD .erve the entire student body 11 located beneath the Auditorium. A13 the picture is viewed, the LA PUENTE (NC)-The Z4th athletic fields are east of the new Catholic 'high school to be parking lot. Proposed route 95 built in the Los Angeles archruns across the top of the picture diocese in the past 10 years has and the drivewny to Harvard St. now been dedicated. runs down to front left of the Bishop Amat Memorial High picture. Holcott Drive is at the School honors Bishop Thaddeus upper right. . Amat, C.M., who headed the DiThis second of the Five Re- ocese of Monter,ey and Los gional High Schools will serve Angeles from 1854 to 1878. He the 12 parishes m Attleboro, No. founded the diocese's, educaAttleboro, North Ea'ston, Mans- tional system when he brought field, Norton and Seekonk. It the Daughters of Charity of St. will be co-educational accom- , Vincent de Paul to Los Angeles modating 800 students. where they opened the first Sis- 0 ters' school in 1856. Bishop Amat High School, coinstructional for 1,200 pupils, The National Honor Society serves 14 parishes in eastern San Gabriel Valley. The school is will be inaugurated after first product of the Youth Education report cards have been distrib-: uted, with the school chapter to "Fund started ill i949 by James be known as Debrabant Chap- Francis Cardinal McIntyre. Sacred Hearts Fathers staff ter. tlie boys' department. ·while the Student Council memgers are girls' department is staffed by p!anning a Halloween Hop and Benedictine, Bernardine, Imfurther all-school projects. maculate Heart and St. Louis Phyllis Kosinski will head the Sisters. Lay teachers also serve Rosary Club this year. in both se<;tion~, .\

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GABRIEL DaCOSTA

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A Cardinal correctly addJ;'essed as:-(a) Your Excellency! (b) Your Emin~nce? (c) y:our Worship? (d) Your Lordshlp~ The first martyr of the Church was stoned to death in Jerusalem. Hi. 'mime was:-(a) Stephen? (b) Simon? (c) John? (d) Palll? After what event w:as a voice from hf;laven heard to say: "This is my beloved son in whom I am well pleased.":(a) The Crucifixion? (b) The Resurrection? (c) The Nativity? (d) The baptism of Jesus? ' Zachary and Elizabeth were the paren.ts of:-(a)· St. Joseph? (b) Our Lady? (c) St: Pa,ul? ·(d) St. John the Baptist? The Angelus commemorates the:-(a) Annunciation? (b) Incarnation? (c) 'Resurrection? (d) Immaculate Conception? "Servant of the servants of God" is a signature that appears on documents issued by:-(a) The Pope? (b) Cardinals? (c) Religious brothers? (d) Bishops? . The letters A.M:D.G. meaning "To the greater glory of God" in Greek represe~t. the motto of the:-(a) Cistercians? (b) Capuchins? (c) Dominicans? (d) Jesuit:;? Who was . the first apostle appointed by Our Lord:(a) Andrew? (b) Ptrter? (c) Judas? (d) Thaddeus? Give yourself 10 marks (or each correct answer on page 18. Rating: 8O-Excellenti 70-Very Good; 6O--Good; 50-Fair

ing is vital iii forming the bask pattern of a child's life, We know that faith and its teachingf. must be the backbone of our endeavors; .Without faith, love and understanding our world cannot continue to exist. . "The training a child receives at home and in grade school sl10uld be continued through the busiest yearsot study and social activities in high school. Lel there be a Catholic high school so the child may retain his most important teacher-his religion," Rene Pinsonnault, 163 E381 Street,North Attleboro, president of L'Union St. Jean Baptiste, Duvernay Council No. 42, North ,Attleboro:

"The new regional Catholic high school'to be built in Attleboro will be beneficial to the . area in that tne students wiJJ receive the added benefit elf character formation, so necessary to c.-nbat the juvenile delinquency tr<lnd. "This training. carried on m P~rmit parochial schools, will certailll~' help the parents in whose homes this training should originate, to cope with this problem b)' MIAMI (NC)~Commissioners school age. About 450 are enencouraging them to 'develop of Dade County have refused rolled in pubhc schools. Some these necessary character traits,'· a permit to the Diocese of Miami travel as mu~b as five miles Edward A. Dion, 11 Cros~ for construction of a church and daily to attend a Catholic school. Street, Nor t hAt tIe b 0 r 0 , school in the southwest section Halt Rectory Masses representative of La. Societe of Greater Miami. Faris Cowart of the Metro L'Assumption: . The Miami l\'Ietropolitan ZonCommission commented after "The society has been awart> ing Boardr:ecommended prior to the decision that refusal of the of the need for a Catholic request set a "'very unfortunate the commissioners' decision that Regional High School in thif. . the diocese be allowed to build precedent." area and the members of our Meanwhile, Father Louis C. the new church and school. HowRoberts, parish administrator, local have dedicated themselve~ ever, the Dade County Metro to help bring this great instituwas served 'with a notice of vioCommission overruled the zontion to compl~tion. Being the lation by the Metro Building and ing board recommendation and Zoning Department for "holding father of two c~ildren, I personturn~d .down the request. any, have an interest· in seeing Church Mass" in his rectory, Figures Show Need that we have' a high school in contrary to zoning regulations. ~At the hearings counsel for this area. I have a very high Father Roberts was directed opponents of the ehurch and to discontinuf;l services in the regartl for the teachers and the school buildings argued that the disciplIne that my children will r~ctory, lo~ated two blocks from school would tiisturb the quiet receive i~ a Catholic schooL" the property involved in' the of the residential neighborhood zoning dispute However the in which it was to be located. notice was beheved to ha~e no . C. Clyde Atkms, attorney for .connection with the dispute over the Miami diocE-se, said there is the proposed church and school. no reason to IJelieve that this would be the ·case. He also pointed out that a nearby public school has an enrollment in excess of its permanent facilities, . and construction of the parochial SGhool would relieve 915 Acushnet Ave. some of this overcrowding. At Weld Square There are more than 1,400 Catholic children,in the parish New Bedford concerned. Over 900 are of New Bedford's Lef1.ding Plumber

Miami Declines to Build New Catholic Church and School

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EBENSBURG (NC) - B'ishop Howard J. Carroll of AltoonaJohnstown officiated at the blessings of two new high schools in the Pennsylvania community. He blessed Aquinas. Hall, boys high school, C1nd' St. Joseph'. Academy.

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18

THE ANCHOR-Dioc.ese of Fall Riv~r-Thurs.,Oct. 15, 1959

Medal Winner~ Continued from P~e Oue lawyer and m~mber' of the faculty of the Institute of Industria.... Relations, Loy 0 I a UniversityNew Orleans. : . The H~ey llwar4s.,wElre ,established in 1942. They are namedl for James J. Hoey, who was one of the founders and the ·first:: 'president'of the New York Cat~ olic Interracial Council. The awards-·two silver m~da" -are. prese~ted each year on th~ Feast of Christ the King to a 'white and a-N~gro Catholic layman judged, by the New York council to have made outstanding contributions to interracial

.Harvest Suppers

The Parish Parade ST. MARY'S. NORTON The Catholic Women's Club will be ,hostess for District 4, Diocesan Council' of Catholic' ~Women, Monday night, Oct. 19, in the high' school. Pan~l diseussions will feature' eiplanations of disc~ssion clubs, spir:Uual development; youth activities and parent-family educa-. lion. . . ST. JOHN QF G0l;). SOMERSET William F. Frado Jr., preside'.'t' of the parish CYO,' has been named a semi-finalist in the' National MerIt Scholarship competition. He will take exa~in~tions to' qualify as a fmahst Dec. 5.

ST. JOHN'S, ATTLEBORO 'The Mothers' Club will hold a bean supper Satux:day night, Oct. 24, at the school cafeteria. Mrs. .Joseph .D\Vyer will be preside'nt for the coming season, ,aided by Mrs, William Demers, vice president;· Mrs.. Charles Galligan, 'treasurer; Mrs. Gerard Jodoin, secretary. ST. ANNE'S, FALL RIVER . ' Mrs. Yvette ~atton:,will head St. Anne's Social Group for the coming year. Scheduled activHies ·includea rummage sale Tuesday and Wednesday, Oct. 20 and 21, and a turkey whist Sat'ur d ay, N ov•.. 7

.ju~tice.

ST. STANISLAUS, ST. MARY'S, 'FALL RIVER NORTH ATTLEBORO The Parent - Teacher and Holy Name Society officers Alumni Association will hold a will 'be installed this Sunday, harvest dance Saturday, Oct. 24, Oct. ·18"" following afternoon ,at Polish National Home. Mrs. church s~rvlces. John J. Iaconis Bertha Pensak is chairman. will be, seated· as president, as- .Fifth and sixth grade mothers listed. by James. Strjgas, vice wer'e 'named hostesses for the presid~nt; James, Cullen, treas~ovember meeting. "uret; and Frederick J. MarSACRED HEART, CtouUier, secretar!. . NORTH ATTLJ!:BORQ . POPE JOHN LEARNS ENGLISH: Present at many 'IMMACULATE C:;ONCEPTlON," . " . TheCYO, will hold' a hayride' papal.audie~ces b~t s~ldQ~ '~hot9g!aplie~ :i~' ME!~r~, Thomas FALL RIVER; ." .'.'. at.:7' Saturday 'nigh~, .Oct.. lJ1, "Ryan; left,·native of .T.ipp~rarY'. The .Irish, priest :is assigned . The' Women's 'Guild study· ,meeting'at .the ·churci\;'.:Celine . club, will nold' its' first·' Fa~l ieBlallcis' in.'charge "'of reser-' ~to the Vatican Secretariat· of State: and',ukthe Pontiff's' meeting Monday, Oct, 19; MIl" '·v:ation~.·' ." . ", ;, . " , · EnglislC£utor. NC Photo::' '~'" ,,,,;'.; ..:,:,,, , ", :,: ", .. ,".:., ,. ~'. '" l:· ,'. • '~·.l . . . .,. ~~ •. " """. t ...... . ._", ' 'AlmeTur'geon is,chairman.··, ST. KILIAN'S.""

The Parish, Par.ade:

~T ·PATRIq{'S. . . ' . . " .FALL' RIV~R" .... , _ ~' '. .... '. ,Th~ .Woinen;,ll Guil.d will h~Jd its annua~ ta~hioii shoW.T.iie~d~~!' Q~~: /2Q) 'at rW'~iite'!( ~E;sta~ra,?~., Miss; lYIary Holland and, MI!lS

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BaJ' State .Native 0 Mr. Steele, Negro award winner, is a. native of Hopkin~on, Mass., where ne wail born on February 4, 1C)20. He is a graduate of North Carolina State College, Durham, N. C., and the Atlanta (Ga.) School of Social Work. The 39-year-old civic leader was executive secretary of the Morris County, N. J., Urban League fiom 1948 to 1953, when he became executive director of the San DIego Urban League. ' ', , Southe~1I Lawyer . Mr'.Nelson, 38: was born ill Gulfport, Miss.. Aug: 5, 19.2.1., ,ILt 'the' outbreak' of World War Ii: ·'he enlisted 'in the Army a:ndro~ · from t~e.rapk pi priY!lte to./caP:-: 'lain. Following, hi!l discharge; , Mr'-' N el~dri' ' s'indied '.af Loyola Univ~rsity,"Ne~ bri~ans'" ana the'Loyola school of law. He ~as :P~acticed I?W privately until. '~954, ~erved as,..assist,ant dist~i,ct· , ~tt9rn~y ,for: ·the" city .of Ne~ prIeans, ,arufla,8t .ye¥"he ~o!n~. ~he, facu~t~,.. o~ 'th,e 'Loyola Unt· versity Institute of 'Industrial Reia'tions,' whpre' he teaches i Cour'i;e on "Civ:l Rights and ,the South." ,"

:NEWBEDFORD: 'The Women's Guild will hold oUR ,LADY': OF . GRACEo ." ' s~. JOSEPH'S•.. ' a ~l!r~eSt'd~n~e Sa'turday, Nov; 7., NO. WESTPORT . 'ATrLEBORO'. . in, Hie; ·schPo.l' .atidiforium;·A Mrs. Tillie,Costa wils wet~·.. Rev. Ubalde' Dena~Jt; . paStol,whist is. sla'tedfor Monday;'N0";. corned' into the Guild by ·'Mrs. spi'riiiial . directOr . oj' .t1ie ' 16,'also'·in.theauditoriur,., Jean'nette Butler; ~iss Katlierin~' 'Ladtes '6f ··sf," Anne;' has' Sheil~ Higgiris'-'a~e Co-cha,irmei1~ .. '.' ,'.. ., ',., . ," . .' '- ,., ST. JOHNBAPTIST.. ·· < Lekbm thanked the p'artiCipantl"nounced the following officers BT.ROCH'S, ·NEW BEDFORD" ' · in the Living Rosa:ry. ,,' for the year, Mrs; :.Toseph Nadeau, FALL RIVER " , " ' . Mr. and Mrs.' George Ladino . The next meeting will be"held' honorary' president; Mrs. 'Romeo The .women's Guild· will h~ld :head the Couples Club {or thi!l on the evening of Nov.' '3 'and ~ichel,' president; ·Mrs. Fran:. I • calendar party Monday, Nov. yeal", with Mr',' and Mrs. V; Manwill start at 7:30. A whist p'arty 'Cis Tetrault, fir~t vice-president; Z. ·Mfs. Wilfred .Belisle and Mrs. 'uel Camara as vice presidents;' will be held after the meeting; Mrs. Wilfred Joubert, second Charles Fortin are chairmen for Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert BraZil, seePrizes roilY, De left at the homes vice-president. , . Continued Crom Page One the annual Christmas party. The retarib; Mr; and Mrs. Jesse V. ,of Mrs. Butler ·or Mrs; -Elsie, church' and do not tap the publie Mrs. Leopolti Turcotte, secreguild will sponsor weekly teenSantos, treasurers. A Halloween Laurendeau.. A homemade af": treasury for aid," the editorial tary; Mrs. Julien Forget, treasage dances, from 7 to 10 Friday costume party is planned for ghan will' be' one of the special . urer;: Mrs. . Armand Boucher, said. "At the same time the nights. :Wednesday night, Oct. 28, in the Pt:izes .awarded. people who support the,paroST. MARY'S CATHEDRA.L.church hall. Refreshments were' served by D1i~tress of certc>monies. chial schools pay taxes to supFA.LLRIVER Mrs. Maria Danis and a large NOTRE DAME, '. port the public schools... ' .... ST. BERNARD'S. A harvest supper is planned committe~. ' FALL RIVER '''No doubt a.jout it, 'the paroASSONET .' . for 6:30;Monday night. Nov. 2, at ere won by ,c Parish' teenagers,' will have ~ chial school plays a 'key role iD . The, Women's Guild will meet Birthday' 'cakes 'Y tbeCatholic Community Center Monday pight, Oct. 19 'at 6 :n ,Mrs, Maria Theroux, Miss Kath-. meeting the sc1':ool n'eeds of the' by the Women's Guild. the Legion Hall. Speaker will erin'e Lekom, Mrs. Louise Perron, . x:oll.er.skatiilg, party at Lincoln communitY,and'it is needless to Mrs. Ernestine Monast,' Mrs.' Park Friday 'night, Oct. 16' under mention what a big part it 'play. be Miss Margaret. Lahey. A SS: PETER & PAUL, auspices of the Women's Guild, in holding' do~n the: public whist is scheduied for Wednes- Edythe PelleLer, Mrs. Maria with FALL RIVER Mrs. Wilfred Garand. as day' night, Oct. 28, at 8. It will Campbell, Mrs, Leah MedeiroS; school. propertr tax bill." Mrs. Robert E.Colbert and. chairman., Busses will' leave the Mrs. Lorraine Edmond, Mrs. Mrs, Ro'scoe Postiglio[le are co": ' feature, a' turkey raffle. Maria~na Silvi'l.,Mrs. Marguex:ite corner of Eastern Avenue and chairmen of a harvest supper ST. MARY'S, Briand, Mrs. Winifred Lawton St. Joseph Street· at '6:30; " planned for 6:30 Wednesday NEW .BEDFORD' , and Mrs', Tillie' Costa. Door ,Guild members are reminded night, Oct. 21, in the church hall., Miss Beverly Botelho will be prize' w'as won by, Mrs. Be~tric~, of a retreat for French-speaking A Halloween party will be held CYO pr~sident tor' t,he 'comil'1g , , ~ women to be held the weekend at 8 Wednesday night, Oct. 28.. ~ear. Rev:. James Clark is spirit- ,picard~. . Prescriptions called for ·;of "November 6at Cathedral aiso in the hall. ual director. and delivered , " ,Camp, Lakeville" with 'Rev. OUR'LADY OF ANGELS. SANTO CHRISTO. Maurice Viens; M.S, as retreat HEADQUARTERS FOR· FALL 'RIVER' , : Continued from Page One FALL RIVER master. DIETETIC SUPPLIES A fashion show will be held at Dr, Francis P, Kilcoyne, dean A mystery ride to.. .benefit the 600 Cottage St. WY 4-7439 Pocasset Country Club Tuesday, parish CYO beseball team will of administration and professor New Bedford Oct. 20, under sponsorship of t~~ pe held Saturday night, Oct. 17. of English 'at Brooklyn (N. Y.) 0. Women's Guild. Mrs; Octavia Cars wip In'eet ·at· Canal' Street College. . A~SWERS: 1 (b); 2 (a); 3 (d).; , Hilario and Mrs. Dorothy AI", Victor A. Miller, an attorney. at 6 o'clock 'and proceed to South " (d); 5 (b); 6 (a)'; 7 (d); 8 (a). meida are co-chairmen. , 'Park.' Transportation will be of St. Nazianz, Wis. 'The Family That·· Mrs. Olive Canario heads a. available for 'thosedesiring H, The recipients are being honcommittee arranging a whist Mrs. Rose Botelho heads the ' ored for their outstanding activPrays Together '. Saturday, Nov. 21, at the parish. flrrangements committee. Pat-' Ity as Holy Name men. They .. . , , hall. 'The annual Christmas riciaCabral is ·ticket'·chairman. were recommended for the Stays Together" party is planned for Wednesday, Refreshments and music will be awards by the local spiritual diInc. Dec. 16. ; provided at the destination, with' 'rectors of the Holy Name SoTHE Antone Souza as chef and Por- ciety. The awards, instituted for ST. 'JEAN ·BAl'TISTE. tuguese dishes to be featured. the convention are sterling silFUNERAL SERViCE FALL RIVER . Proceeds 'will be used for'- a ver medals, with the Hoiy Name A'Halloween, costume party is celebration to honor the base- · insignia, the Christ Child, on the planned for Friday, Oct. 30, with 549 COUNTY ST. ball team, first in Fall River to front, and the words '.'Holy Miss Barbara Gariepy as chairA.U1eboro-Soutb AUleboro win the Diocesan title tw:o ye~rs Name Convention 1959" on the man. Seekonk NEW BEDFORD. MASS. in succession. back. ST. FRANCIS xliVIER~ HYANNIS ST. ANTHONY OF THE A rummage sale this month DESERT, FALL RIVER and a Christmas bazaar ,Tuesday, . The newly-formed Women's ·Dec. 8, are among th~ activi~ies Guild will meet to o,utlinesoc.ial planned by the Women's·GUIld,' ·and spiritual plans.·in the', near.. Do You Work in a Factory, to 'be headeclthis, year 9.y Mrs. future. Mayor John' Ar'rilda was AUTO BODY AND 'Adolpl}e Richards, supporfed, ~y amo?g' ~uests o~' ?onor~ :~ere::' Garage. Ma~hi,ne Shop or Mrs. James' Lynch, vice preSl- / mODies' mauguratmg the group, Gasoline Station' , - ' ~~NE~AlREPAIRS .. dent· Mrs. Edward McCarty, re-. in which 100 were" enrolled, , W. pick up and deliver, clean cording secretary; Mrs,"Gilbert . receiving· emblems~a_ndreciting 75 Bell~ille,Ave: wy, '3-7661 ""IOII~'... and repair' o·verails.' Also. have C 'Martin eorresponding, 'secre- .it p!-edge of loyalty: ' <.', New Bedford , , .,,: . , ,. . 0' complete line Of Coveralls, PantS t~ry;Mrs>Julius P. 'Mo'rin !r.. .SACRE·~ HEART. . . .. .. r' and Shirts for .sc.... ' " , . . - ",'. treasurer. NO.ATrLEBORO . . " .. . , .We rec'ail1" and wash any oi'" ST. PETER'S, St. -Anne;s S~daiity.will·con';: , " dirty or greasy rags.' DIGHTON duct 'a pilgrimage' to' 'LaS~lett~ , "& .. .. :.The Women's Guild WIll spo':'Shrine' tHis afternoon., 'l'.eil ;will' Why Buy When W. Supply 'ONE STOP SOl' a spaghetti supper from 5:30 . be served in the' hall at i o'clock SHQPPING CC!NTER to 7 Saturday night, Oct. 17, a.t 'arid departute' is .scheduled', for Dighton Elementary School. 1:30. The Rosary will be recited TelevisioD Furniture' Mrs. ·J.ohn Medeiros and Mrs. at the Sh'rine 'at 2 o'clock and Appliances Frank Torres are' co-chairmen: Benediction will close the cereGrocerJ' The annual turkey whist is set mony. 104 Allen St.• New Bedford for Wednesday, Nov. 11, also at Mrs. Joseph 'Bonneau is iD z~ Howard A.ve.. New Bedford WYman 7~9354 the schooL 'charge .ofar,rangements. • • • • • •lPb~u. WY9-642~ or WY 9-6425,• •_ • •111

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Coyle" to Tackle' Attleboro In Top Saturday Grid Tilt

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs'., Oct. 15, 1959

'1'9

Major Leag'ue Catholic Ball Players

By Jack Kineavy

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AMERICAN LEAGUE NATIONAL LEAGUE CHICAGO WHITE SOX: MIL W AUK E E BRAVES. pit8hers Rudolfo Arias, Dick pitchers Bob Giggie, Joey Ja7~ The:a-tea's No.1 attraction this Saturday is the AttIeDonovan alld Bob Shaw, catchers , Don McMahon, Juan Pizarro and boro-d~yie ~1~8~ Hopewell Park, Taunton. Both are ~n­ Earl Battey and John Romano, Bob Rush, infielders BobbF defeated; Coyle has been tied once. The Jewelers, currently infielders 'Luis Aparicio and Sam AVila, Johnny Logan, Felix, Man_ tied with No. AWeboro for County leadership at three wins Esposito, outfielders AI' Smith tilla, Johnny O'Brien, ,.Red and Jim Rivera, manager AI Schoendienst and Frank Torre, assumed blr bard-rUBapiece, have averaged three wHi Lopez and coaches Ray Berres, outfielder Hank _Aaron and touchdowns, per g~me and ning Joe DiGiammo. John Cooney and Tony Cuccin- coach John Fitzpatrick. have yet to be scored upon. New Bedford High, leading ineilo. . .. LOS ANGELES DODGER8t Coyle has an, opening day . dependent tearn in' the area, CLE VELAND INDIANS: pitchers Danny' McDevitt, .Clena win, over Mat.ignon and the hikes to Chicopee Saturday for pitchers Dick Brodowski, AI Labine and Johnny Podrel!l, aforementioned tie was a 6-0 what proposes to be anotherCicotte, Don Ferrarese, Mike catcher 'Joe Pignata~o, infielda f f air wit h stern test. The Crimson, unde- Garcia and· Herb Score, catcher ers Gil Hodges and Norm Larker~ power f 11 1 feated and untied, feature a deEd FitzGerald, infielders Vic outfielder Carl Furillo and Stoughton. fensive unit, the Japanese AssasPower and George Strickland eoache$ Joe Becker, Chuck Las t Satursins, which earned the plaudits and outfielders Rocky Colavito, Dressen and Greg Mulleavey. day's open date of all who saw them in actiOn Jim Piersall, Churck Tanner and SAN FRANCISCO GlANT8e against Saugus last week. The g a v e JIm Elmer Valo. . pitchers Johnny Antonelli and Burns and. his solid 16-0 victory over the Class NEW YORK Y A N K E E S : Jack Sanford, catcher Jim He. staff a chance A ~achems caused New Bedpitchers Art Ditmar and Ryne gan, infielders Eddie Bressoud, to catch Attleford's stock to rise appreciably WINS PEACE AWARD: Duren, catchers Yogi Berra and Orlando Cepeda and Dan~ bOlO in action ill the grid market. The 1959 Peace Award of Johnny Blanchard, infielders O'Connell, outfielder F eli p e against FairTony Kubek, Gil McDougald AIou, manager Bill Rigney and haven. AJJ in Stepping out of class Saturday the' Catholic Association for and Bill Skowron, outfielders coaches Hank Sauer and W~ previous con, w i l l be undefeated-untied MansInternational Peace will be Hank Bauer and Hector -Lopez Westrum. testS, Coach Bill Madden'. field, the area leader among the presented Msgr. Edw~rd and coach Frank Crosetti. eleven combined alert play with Class D. schools. The Green PITl'SBURGH PIIlATES: iaE. Swanstrom of Brooklyn, a versatile attack and a stout Hornets are scheduled at home DETROIT TIGERS: pitchers fielder Bill Mazeroski, outfielddefense to jolt p:airhaven, 20-0. against/Canton' which last week N. Y., executive director of Jim Bunning, Paul Foytack, Don ers Roberto Clemente and R0Fullback Ed Chase went over filshio,ned a 4t~ period T.D. and Mossi and Ray Narleski, catcher man Mejias, manager Danny Catholi.c Relief Services twice for Attleboro to lead the successful conversion to edge Lou Berberet, infielders Frank Murtaugh and coaches Geor,. Welfare National Catholic scoring and 'the Jeweler line .Taunton, .22-2(l Mansfield' deBolling, Rocky Bridges, Ted Detore and, Frank Oceak. ., Conference. NC Photo. again played aggressive ball. 'feated Ohver Ames, 26-6, last Lepcio and Eddie Yost, outfield,CHICAGO CUBS: pitcher Moe A featur~ of the 'g~e will" -ti~e out. Its other victims have er Johhny Groth, manager Jim- Dr'aboksky, catchers Earl AveriU, mie Dykes~and coach ToIJUnF 'be the comparative'quarterbac\t- ~n Somerset (16-~) and Fran~ Jo~n Goryl and Tony Taylor, iaHenrich. . ing performances of two of_the lin. , fielders Walt Moryri and Lee BALTIMORE' () III 0 L E S r Walls', and manager Bob, Schd'area's best play callers; George In other games'throughout the : ' 'Burns' of Attleboro and All- area, Dighton is at home to Santo- Chri~to base- pitcher Arnie Portocarrero,in- 'fing.. , . . fielders Chico Carresquel, Jim Diocesan Bill Hoye ,of Coyle. Marshfield in another' battle of ball team of Fall River, CINCINNATI REDLEGS: pitchFinigan, Billy ,Gardner, . Billy ers Jim O'TOOle, Bob Purkey and Both are excellent passers ,and the unbeaten; Wrentham travels Diocesan champions for the Klaus ao.d, .wi~ly Miranda and Willard Schmidt, infielder Frank each has his favorite target. to Provincetown; Ayer visits second straight year, will be outfielder Al Pilarcik.. Hoye has Mike Fitzsimmons who Oliver Ames; Case goes to YarThoma's 'and outfielders Gut fet.edat ~ parish banquet at can go and get 'em with anym.outh,~. the .slxth undefeatedBOSTON RIm SOX: pitchers . Bell and Jerry Lynch. White's on the Narrows at 0 Frank Baumann, Jerry Casale, body, 'while in Attleboro, the untied eleven m Southeastern ,ST; . LOUIS CARDINAL8t Sunday evening, Nov. 8. Burna to Frailk DrisColl comMass. arid Wareham has a nonMike Fornieles, Leo Kiely and pitcher-Ernie Broglio, infielder bination' is equally well reo:. league encounter with MiddleMost Rev. James L. Connolly, Bill Monboquette, catcher Pete Stari' Musial, outfielders Gino garde~. This one should be a bolO. . Bish9P of the Diocese, will be Daley, infielder Frank Malzone Cimoli and Gene Oliver, manthe princ~pal speaker, mid~ft~ctacular,. . . Making an iJnp~ession in interand oiltfielder Marty. Keough. ager Solly Hemus and coaches Individual and team awards Howard Pollet and Johnnr In other games around' the collegiate ball 'are a number of KANSAS CITY ATHLETICS: _ Cou~ty circuit, the North A-~tleformer high school, stars fro~ , will be ma<le. Funds are being pitchers Tom,Gorman, Bob Grim Keane. PHILADELPHIA PHILLIEII raised to send the champions on boro Roc!teteers, who are really this area. With Columbia Uniand Russ Meyer, catcher Harry a weekend trip to New York the Chiti, infielders Joe DeMaestri pitchers Gene Conley, Dick Farin orbit' this season, play. host versity are Bob ·Asack, starting Jack first week in December. to a Tau~ton t:leven which. left tackle, and reserve center, and Ray Jablonski and outfield- rell,' Reuben Gomez, Meyer and Ray Semprocb, • till seeking its first win. North'. Luke Urban. Billy Marr of Santo Christo, undefeated bl ers Bob Cerv and Roger Maris. catchers Val Thomas and Cm raml;lUng ~-captain John Per- , Swansea is Prulceton's No. 1 ita last 24 contests, is the'first WASHINGTON SENATORS: Sawatski, infielder Chico Ferkoski 'carried for three touch-' blocking back. Steve McGowan, Fall River CYO team to win the downs agains~ Vocational Satur- playing his thirci year of varsity DioCesan title two straight year•. 'pitchera Camilo' Pascual, Pedro nandez and outfielder WalJr day ,br~ging his -season's,' total ball at Boston. University, is a The only other CYO team to Ralnos and John Romonsky, in- Poet. to six and firmly establishing ltarting end fQl the Terriers and duplicate the feat was Mount fielders Ken Aspromonte, Reno Bertoia, Julio Becqtier and Bill7 him 811" the County'. NO. 1 Tony Abraham is at center for Carmel of New Bedford in the ,Consolo, manager Cookie Lava;. llCorer. A. long afternoon for Boston .Coliege. early 194Os. ROSARI~S, MEDALS, getta and coach Sam Mele. The parish council of Catholic Taunton. On the freshman level,' Bob AND STATUES At New Bedford, Vocati,!)nal Hargraves is a' fixture at right Youth is sponsoring the banquet, which has won, tied and 1.<lst in end for the Holy Cross yearlings. '.at which aBos~n Red Sox .lft AH Price Ranges three games to date, takes; on Charley Carey and ~ick Bonal- player will be a speaker. winless D~rfee in the Imal ewicz are at, quarterback and . 'Rev. Anthony M. Gomes, parCounty gapte of the day. Oll tackle respectively, for' the ish CYO director, will present compaJ;,ative scor~ against North COlby'Fr08h.-With the powerful the' aWlU'ds. 24-HOlJR WRECKER Emily C. Perry Attleboro, Vocational wO,,!ld . Bridgton Academy eleven is SERVICE : rate a three touchdown favorite Jack Carreiro. Jack and Charley, 562 County St. New Bedford HILLMAN STllEET over the :a:mtoppers whose first' cousins, wi~ pla;y against ST. LOUIS (NC) -MissionOpp. St. Lawrence Church NEW BEDFORD latest setbac~ 'was a ~-O defe~t eac;:h' other Oct. 23 when ,the minded students in Christian by Dartmouth. Voke S' last win young mules p,lay host· to the WY 6-8343 Brothers' U. S. schools increased over Durfee was in 1956. The;y prepsters at WaterVille. their donations in the past year could be hungry. by 52 cents each to an individual A couple of interleague tilts 'average of $2.62. The 53,796 IT'S AL\. RIGHT 10 are scheduled Saturday. Count;y boys reporting from 89 IlChooIa members Fairhaven .and DartsHop 'AROUND FOR. in .the six Districts of the Chrismouth are at bome' Saturday to tian Brothers gave a grand total NEW YORK, ~NC) - Two SOME THINGS. BUT' Tri-County'. J3arnstable 'a n d of'$143,275.78. Peter Poulos, Manager thousand students from Catholic Bourne respecti.vely. Barnstable high schooIa,representing 'the Registered PharmaciSt is another of thE' area teams that We will pick up and deliver youth of the. New York archdihas yet to find the key to victory, ocese, formed a human rosary at your prescription at no charge while Bourne after a promising the Polo, Grounds here' and 202-206 Rock Street 253 Union' St., New Bedford .tart was low-bridged bY Som- .promised FranCis Cardinal SpellFall River .Paint and Wallpaper WYman 7-41l~2 erset, 34-0, last ~iJDe out. man they would live according IS !!;!g PLACE I'D Dupon~~~nm The victory proved very costly to the Ten Commatldments. GET A PRESCRIPTION for the Raiders, however. Vet.Rear of Store The Archbishop of New York R. A. WILCOX CO. FILLED! eran quarterback Billy Taber 4.e:.ta; 422 Acush. Ave. suffered a fractured' right leg ia impaJ,'ted . Benediction of the OFFICE FURNITURE • cor_ Middle St. the third quarter and will be . Blessed Sacrament atth~ close .. ·Sloell for I...edi... DeUyen of the 17th annual religious rally lost to thl! te~m for the re~t of New Bedford • DESKS • CHAIRS under the auspices of the Archthe season. Somerset entertains FILING CABINETS Falmouth this week in the only diocesan Union Of the Holy • FIRE FILES' • SAFES Conference gam e scheduled. Name Societies. It Was estimated The world .. full 06 FOLDING TABLES Coach Mike Gaddis' dub ex- that some' 50,000 persOns atTHORNS ploded against Nantucket last tended the rally. AND CHAIRS We jut don't ha....··to . The 2,000 repres~ntative of the Saturday to win handily, 32-0. _ THEM•. youUJ," pledged This will be Falmouth's third archdiocese's league game. Wareham .deci- they would be JOs .9.f a d~ferent 22 BEDFORD ST. REYNOLDS-DEWALT . ,- sioned them 8-0 in the first one. kind-juvenes 'pei ,(children 01. FALL RIVER 5-7838 God). -'" Then followed a sCoreless tie William & Second Sts. , with' Bourne. -U's a 'veteran' club, NeW' :Bedford WY 6-8234 that figured: well ,up in pre-' season prqgnost~cations and Sat-·, , ',' urday's victory may have given' the club the, l~ it ha. need~d•... SOmerget, 'which gave 14:0 Washington' St.~' f~irbaven INDUSTRIAL and DOMESTIC evidence of having jelled against . • BAR-B~Q'ChickenS: Bourne ·will be sorely' tried to • CUT-UP Chickens replace the injured Taber. Coach ELECTRICAL • DAY,.QLD EggCarlin Lynch was particularly CONTRACTORS • CHICKEN Pies pleased by the Raiders overall Beatdential - Commeretal performance in the Bourne tilt. • POTATO SALAD Industrial Junior Jim Rebello ,who haa • ROAST CHICKENS seen lbnited .actio~ 'will be 633 Broadway, River • BAKED BEANS 312 Hillman St.' WY 7-9162 New Bedford Taber'. replacement and' the (week-ends) 3-1691 bulk oi the Somer* offen.. ~ "

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