Re~ional
High School -Byildmng Fund Total Now Over $615,000 With more than $150,000 contri buted and subscribed wIthin the past
week, the building fund campaign for the Greater New Bedford regional high
scho,ol jumped ov.er the $675,000 mark today.
Extremely well pleased with the generous response being shown by a
'Yinarsday, Oet. ,
.... 1 Yo' I• 1,1"ilO.
~11'l\ Seeo';,d elM.
&."11
Mail Privilege. AuthorIzed at Foil River, Mo...
2~o
1951
PRIC\: 10F
$4.90 per Yew
receptive community, Most Rev. James L. Connolly, D.D., Bishop of Fall River,
reported the new' campaign
fund total today.
Receipt of the $150,000 repre
sents the second-largest-week
total since the initial phases of
the campaign got underway four
weeks .ago.
House-to-House
-The continuing generosity of
the Faithful in the campaign
area certainly indicates that the
first school campaign in the dio':'
cese will be a complete success,
'the Most Reverend Bishop said.
Men, who comprise the 3,400
volunteers who will conduct a
house-to-house canvass in the
30 participating parishes in the
Greater New Bedford area, have
been attending sessions with the
campaign directors this week. 'Turn to Page Four
Parish Receives Building Gift
The Frank A. Days Jr. property on Court Street in Provincetown has been given to St. Peter the Apostle par
YOUTH WEEK PROCLAMATION: Rev. Edward J. Gorman, M.A., LL.D., Diocesan superintendent of schools, officially proclaims the observance of National Catholic Youth Week in the Diocese. Annette Jusseaume (left) and Rachelle Labreche, students at Jesus Mary Academy, Fall River, represent their school at the ceremony.
Catholic Youth. 'Week To Start Sunday Next Sunday, the Feast of Christ the King, has been' designat.ed as opening day of National Catholic Youth Week and' Youth Communion Sunday, with all yOttng people in the. Diocese urged to receive Holy Communion in .their . parish churches. "Healthier, Holier and Hap , . '1 pier" has been selected as the . Observance 0 f N atlOna theme for this year's observance. eatholic Youth Week was An. estimated five million 'begun in 1951 by Rt. Rev.Turn to Page Seventeen
.
ish to be used as 'a convent, Rev. Leo J. Duart, pastor, has announced. The home has been donated in memory of Mrs. Anna Days by her husband who makes his home in Boston with a son. The convent will be known as
St. Anne's Convent, Father
Duart said. Nuns will teach parish children their catechism, and teach in a pre-primary school. Father Duart said he hopes a school may start within a year or two. There must be four nuns in order to start such a school. Deeds of a transfer to the par
ish were signed last Saturday. Father Duart expressed, the
gratitude of tlieparish for the gift, and added that the dona tion saves the parish many thou sands of dollars. The house contains nine rooms.
,Dispensation Give'n The Chancery Office an nounces that a dispensation has been granted by the Most Rev:' erend Bishop from fast and ab stinenc,e on Thurs., Oct. 31 and from abstinence on Fri., Nov. 1.
itllillli1l1;ffillW""
'
FATHER KELLAGHER
Three Priests .Are Given
New Parish Assignments Appointment of Rev. Edward C. Duffy as an assistant at St. James Church, New Bedford, was announced today by Bishop Connolly who also approved the assignment of two Sacred Hearts Fathers in this diocese. . Rev. Columba Moran, SS. as assistant at LaVerne, Califor CC., who has been serving as nia, as administrator at St. Boni administrator at. St. Boni face Church, New Bedford, re face, New Bedford, has been placing Father Moran.
Father Duffy, who served as a transferred to St. Joseph's Church, Fairhaven, where he chaplain in the United States Navy until recently, has been at will also serve as administrator, St. James parish in New Bedford Very, Rev. William Condon, since his discharge ·from the SS.CC., provincial of the Con gregation of the Sacred Hearts service. Father Moran of Jesus and Mary and of the Father 'Moran has had a long Perpetual Adoration of the history of leadership in the Con Blessed Sacrament, announced. Father Condon also announced gregation of the Sacred Hearts Bishop Connolly has approved . having been Novice Master, Su
the assignment of Rev. Charles perior, Pro-Provincial and Pro Turn to Page Twelve
Kel1:lgher, SS.CC., no~ serving
Tau'nton Parochial School ~oy Studies by Telephorie ,.I
,
,,[t
Thanks to the magic of the telephone, the schoolroom
has come to the bedside of a pupil of the Immaculate Con
ception School in Taunton. From his bed, Daniel Martin,
nine year old son of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Martin of 45 Avon' Street, keeps up with his under corrective treatment for clllSS in the fourth grade. a Perth hip, a mysterious J:j'one Danny is confined to bed ailment, necessitating long peri
Msgr. Joseph E. Schleder, Direc tor of the Youth Department, Na tional Catholic Welfare Confer ence, to focus attention on the' combined efforts'Of youth and its leaders engaged in a program 'of wholesome, healthful and char acter-building activities. So enthusiastic' was the re sponse of youth leaders, school officials and young people them selves that the observance has become an integral part of the youth program of organh:ations and schools throughout the coun
try.
Banquet C~@$e~ Jubi;ee Progr@M A Parish Banquet at 6 o'clock Sunday evening in White's, Fall River, will be the final observance of the Immaculate Conception Parish, Fall River, Diamond Jubilee Year. All the parish societies are cooperating in making the banquet a parish turn-out. The Immaculate Conception baseball team, this year's dio cesan champions, will be hon ored at the banquet by receiv jog sweaters and awards. Rev. Turn to Page Nineteen
FATHER MORAN
KEEPS ABREAST OF CLASS BY MODERN METHOD: Daniel Martin of 45 Avon Street, Taunton, is home-bound, but yet he manages to keep progress with his fourth grade classmates at the Immacu,late Conception parish school by means of a telephone system. At the right Catherine Gazda and Sister John David stand close to the speaker, located in the classroom, which' carries. the class work to Daniel at his home. Daniel can . also speak with Sister at the Taunton school.
ods of complete bed rest. The "school-to-home" service makes it possible for the home bound youngster to listen in to all the classroom instruction and recitations, and to respond and participate in the greater part of the activities in the classroom he would ordinarily occupy. The mechanics of the system are simple-an intercommunica tion unit engineered for use with telephone equipment is placed near the teacher's desk facing the students. This unit is wired to an amplifier and then the sound goes out over a regular private telephone line to another unit beside the shut-in youngster. He can hear every ,thing that goes on in the class
room. The flip of a switch turns
his receiver into a microphone,
so that he can recite in turn and
take part in the classroom exer . cises as the teacher directs. This relatively new telephone teaching method gives a sense of belonging to the home-bound youngster. He is able to identify himself with a group, and to sustain daily social contact with his class. All the mental and physical therapy, and most of all, the spiritual therapy that instills the' will to live and fight which are so vital to eventual recovery are present in this ingenious "school - to - home" teaching.
\
2
THE ANCI:IOR
Thurs., Oct. 24, 1957
OFFICIAL
"Jewish Scholar N'otes Growing Secular "'(r.end
Diocese of· Fall River CLERGY APPOINTMENTS
NOTRE DAME (NC) The typical American has .developed a. remarkable ca pacity for being serious
Rev. Edward C. Duffy from Chaplain United .States Navy to assistant at St. James Church, New Bedford. Ef'; 'fective Thursday, October 24. The following, appointments have been approved by the Most Rev:erend Bishop: Rev. Columba ivIoran, SS.CC. from Administrator St. '" Boniface, New Bedford, to Administrator St. Joseph's Church, Fairhaven. Effective Saturday, October 26. Rev. Charles Kellagher, SS.CC. from Assistant La Verne, California, to Administrator St. Boniface Church, New Bedfor:d Effective Saturday, October 26.
about religion without taking religion seriously," a Jewish scholar declared at a symposium here at the University of Notre Dame. Dr. Will Herberg, sociologist and author, made the statement . in a symposium on "Roman Catholicism and the American Way of Life." The symposium was sponsored by Notre Dame's history department. Dr. Herberg conceded that the United States is "in the grip of ~@Dth a great religious boom," but ,he stated that "the very same people WASHINGTON (NC) - Pres . .. as Qeveloped' through the who are so unanimous in identi ident Eisenhower has said Na fying themselves religiously do tional' Catholic Youth Week is home, church and school, is a "an opportunity to strengthem most appropriate one for com not hesitate to acknowledge that the faith and work of all p;u'tici~ batting, this materi;l1istic phil religion is quite peripheral to osophy. I have full' confidence their everyday lives." '. 'pants." that we shall be· successful,'! he . The Chief Executive, in a mes Unequal Alternatives wrote. sage praising the observance, To the question of how Amer Oct. 27 to Nov. 3, said that "the Icans can be so religious and service of God and neighbor secularil!.tic at the same time,' he leads to the fulfillment ot your replied that "for increasing num CITY COMES TO SISTERS' AID: Two nuns walk theme: 'Healthier, Holier, Hap bers of Americans religion serves quietly past the smouldering ruin~ of Ottum~a Heights pier' citizens. May I expresS my WAsiIINGTON (NC) ~ a ,function largely' unrelated to Academy and Junior College in Iowa. Residents of Ottumwa, best wishes to our American seve~ - mill.ion .dollar develop the content of the faith." youth for the success of this a city. of 33,000, have volunteered to help rebuild the insti . great He contended that religion, in ment program of the Catholie. national civic undertak stead of one's ethnic or, natiort tution, a $2-million loss. .Families have opened their homes ing." University of America will be alistic background, has no~ be ,to now homeless students, while the nuns and other students Pres. Eisenhower's letter was outlined to graduates during the come "the prevailing form of are housed in an unused wartime navy airbase. NC Photo. made· public, here, by Msgr. Jo alumni association's 68th 'aimual defining one's identity as an seph E. Schieder" director ,of the homecoming, Nov. 1 to 3. American in c'o ilt e m p 0 r a ry Youth Department of ·the Na American society." More than 2,000 persons are ,tional Catholic Welfare Confer Dr. '. Herberg declared that expected to attend the affair. ence; Americans are coming to regard Bishop Bryan J. McEntegart of This year will mark the sev Catholicism, Protestantism, and BrOOKlyn, former rector of the LOURDES (NC) - A recently enth annual observance of Youth Judaism "as' three alternative,' prudent silence, Father Peyra university, will be presented the', discovered contemporary ac Week which will have as its though 'not necessarily equal, association's Cardinal Gibbons count of the apparitions of the male' writes: "I would not care highlight, National Youth Com expressions of a great overarch Award for distingUished service Blessed Virgin to St. Bernadette' t'J have my hat know what I am munion Sunday on Oct. 27, the ing commitment~which they all here will soon be published for thinking." to the coun.try, Church and uni Feast of Christ the King. share by virtue ot? being Amer , the first time.. versity. ican.", He described this 'trend as . Millions to Participate The account is contained a . the "Americanization" and "thor :Msgr. Schieder said that all oughgoing secularization" of letter 'addressed by the village FRIDAY - Mass of Previous Catholic young men and' women pastor of Lourdes, Father Pey Sunday. Simple. Green. - ,Mass are urged to receive Holy Com religion. ramale, to his brother Alexandre 'Proper; No Gloria or Creed. munion on this day. He stated Religion Reviva.l on March 9, 1858. It shows that Second Collect Ss. Chrysanthus that millions of Catholic youth He said it means "that we a traditional interpretation of and Daria, Martyrs; Third Col in almost every U., S. di<X;,ese, have in America an' invi~ible, the ~priest's attitude toward, Ber lect for Rain; Common Preface. and in some parts of Canadaaild fonnally unacknowledged, but, nadette as, sceptical and harsh SATURDAY - Mass ot the Mexico, will participate· in the is unjust. very potent ,religion-the relf HWS a whale of drink" Blessed Virgin for Saturday. week. A mt:!Ssage of best wishes gio~ oj democracy, the religion The letter was unknown ex Simple. 'White. Mass Proper; for success of the week came of the American .way oflife--:--<lf cept to members the Peyra.. 17 DELICIOUS FLAVO,RS Gloria; Second Collect St.' Eva from Gen. Alfred M. G~uenther,' which the conventional religions male family, who kept it hic;lden ristus, Pope and Martyr; Third· president of the American Na BEST SINCE 1853 are felt to be more or less ade in their archives.' But a 'report 'for Rain; ,Preface of Blessed tional Red Cross, Msgr. Schieder :' quate expressions." of its existence reached Father ,Virgin.' . said. WE DELIVER '. Another participant in the Laurentin \ several years ago. SUNDAY - Our Lord Jesus The former NhTO commander symposium said there is, little Father Laurentin , has b~n CALL Christ, King, and' XX Sunday declared that 'the observanCe indication that' .the' 'so~called studying and collecting docu WY 9-6264 After Pentecost. Double of I "provides a welcome opportu revival of religion has had "any ments for a Lourdes centenary Class. White. Mass Proper; Glo nity to pay· tribute to ,the mil and 9-6~,65 volume which is scheduled to be important effect upon' member 'ria; Second Collect XX Sunday lions of' young peopl!'l in America published this December. ship in the, Catholic Church." After .Pentecost; Creed; Preface and around the world who are' This opinion was ,given by The priest asked the Peyra of Christ the King. striving to make this a better Father Francis X 'Curran, S.J., male family for permission to professor of history at, Loyola read the letter and, if it proved MONDAY. - 55. Simon and world." Seminary, Shrub Oak, N.Y. He interesting, to publish it. The Jude, Apostles. Double of II "I have had an opportunity to attributed the increasing number family gave their consent, but Cla'ss. Red. M;ass Prope.r:; Glo see, at first" hand, the intense ef 45 SCHOOL ST. of American: converts to Cathol the letter could not be located. ria; Creed; Preface of Apostles. forts which international com At So. First St. icism -'- about 1,750,0000 since For more than a year, the let TUESDAY- Mass of XX munism is making to lead the , 1940--to "the lessening 0" anti ter was missing. Then suddenly Sunday After Pentecost. Simple. youth of the world toward an NEW BEDFORD Catholic prejudice and' the it turned up among the p"pers Green. Mass Proper; No Gloria atheistic concept. Your them~ greater presence and prestige of of the late Henri L:.>sserre. a or Creed; Second' Collect for Catholicism:'. ' leading historian of Lo~rdes. Rain; Third Collect for Peace; Father Law-entin's - Lourdes , Common Preface. centenary volume waE already WEDNESDAY - Mass of XX SIOUX CITY (NC)~On the being printed' when the letter Sunday After Pentecost. Simple. The Onl'll Catholic CoUege in the Diocese 01 Fall River 10th anniversary of his conse- . was turned over to hin, After Green., Mass Proper; No Gloria . c.r:ation, Bishop Joseph M. Muller a quick consultation with his or Creed; Second Collect for of SiouX' Falls has' been named publisher, the priest arranged Rain; Third Collect for .Peace; by Pope Pius XII as an Assistant to have the letter added to the Common Preface. volume as a special appendix. at the Pontifical Throne. THURSDAY ~ Mass of XX Believed in Visions After Pentecost. Simple. Green. Father Peyramale's account of Mass Proper; No Gloria or Bernadette shows that the usual Creed; Second Collect for Rain; FORTY HOURS
picture of the villa:'." pastor as Third Collect for Peace; Com postHe to belief in the appari DEVOTION
mon Preface. ,tions and as rude to Bernadette Oct. 27-St. Peter, Province IS untrue. The letter reveals town that, although Father Peyr,lInale St. Michael; Fall River LOS ANGELES (NC)-Msgr. treated the saint wtih firmness, Patrick J. Dignan, superinten St. Patr~ck, Somerset ' he was deeply moved by her sin dent of schools in the Los An cerity and believed in ,her Nov. 3 - Notre. Dame, F~ll geles archdiocese, has been ap River . visions. pointed by Gov. Goodwin Knight St. Thomas More, Som Aware of the importance of ,the events,' the village pastor to the Historical Landmarks Ad erset lisitor8 Are Alw4f18 Welcome wrote an. unusually loni 'letter visory Committee of California. Nov. lO-St. John tlie Baptist, to his brother giving the details GET ACQUAINTED. WITH YOUR COLLEGE New Bedford ' of the visions a'nd of the mirac .Sacred Heart, Oak BluUil . Vinton A~~lwa1l8 Werc~~ - ulous cures. Nov. 17-our Lady of the Isle, HELP YOUR COUEGE GROW Wrting -less than a month , Nantucket ELE'CTRICAL
" St. Anthony, MattaPoisett " after the, first apparition ,'of the ~r'~'~ Virgin' to the. young girl, Father CONTRACTORS·
01 Rev. THOMAS C. DUFFY, C.S.C•.
,Peyramale reveals· his favorable Residential'- Commercial ' , THE ANCHOR'· , attitude toward the Blessed'Vir- . ',' lJ.irector 01 BUildi1tg .Fu:nd Sto1te1tiUCoUe~
. Industrial S~~nd-class mail privileges authorized gin's declaration' to St. Berna. .--' : 'PHONE CEdar 8-2221
at Fall River. Mass•. Published ..,ery dette: "I am the Immaculate Thursday at 410 Highland· Avenue. Fan 633 Brocietway, Fall River River. Mass.• by the Catholio Press of the NORTH 'EASrON, Conception,., Dioeese of Fnll Rh"er. Subscription price OS 3-1691 ... ... • , . . . . •• . ,"J . ' ·1 Pledging his. b rot her to lw mail.' poaq,aid' $4.00 per·year. .
,President·· Proises 'YoMi~ Week As Time to Strengthen
Catholic. University Expansion Continues The
Newly Discovered Letter Sheds Light on Lourdes Apparitions
in
Mass Ordo
WHEATON·S
FAMOUS
BEVERAGES
a
of
Hiram Wh~aton and Sons, Inc.
STONEHILL COLLEGE
Honor Ordinary'
Names,MclrnSiognor
AIME PELLETIER
to
- - ;.
- -
.- '- - -
MASSACHusETTS" ~
~
Night Worker in Foundry Wins $500 Scholarship at Stonehill A young father of four who is a foundry worker by nigh t' and a college student by day is the winner of a $500 scholarship at Stonehill College. Robert Whitney, 25, 161 Matfield Street, West Bridge water, a sop hom 0 r e at water where he went broke Stonehill .run a filling . , has been awarded trying to. .station. the Idlettta E. Stone ScholLikes Mathematics · bl' h d b J "I sat down and thought arsh Ip esta IS e y ud~e things over,'~ he said. "I had an
Harry",K. Ston? of Brockton 1!1 aptitude arid liking .for mathe memory .of. his mother. This matics. What I wanted to. do was sc~olarshlp.IS awarded eac~ ye~r to teach high school mathe to a deservI~g n~n-CatholIc stu,,: matics. not run a filling station. d~n.t. .who lives m Brockton or So I enrolled at Stonehill.'" vlclmty and who meets scholar.. ship requirements. ~nnounceOne J:lour with FamIly ment of the award was made by ~he ~hltneys get together for the Rev. James J. Doyle, C.S.C., thC: lr big meal of the day at 3 Dean. p.m. when fath~r and daughter, Despite the fact Whitney put Val;'ghan Cyn.thla, get home from In an arduous 8-hour shift in a ~ their respective schools.. Except Brockton foundry each night for weekends, the famIly has and afterwards many times only one hour a day toge~her. helped his wife who was not well The. problem of ~ducatl~n was eare for the children in the wee c~mplIcated l.ast wmter with ~he morning hours, he managed to birth of the.lr yo~ngest, Bnan make the Dean's List at Stone_ Lee, born a Jaundiced baby due hill. to the RH .factor. The father Whitney and his young wife, watched while doctors pu.mp~d Priscilla decided the sacrifices t~e ~ad blood from the vems of necessar~ to earn a college edu hl~ ~nfant son. Last sl;'mmer, cation would be more than offset Pnscilla r~turned t~ Mame ~or by the advantages to their four an operation. Relatives rallIed children, Vaughan Cynthia, 6; round and he~ped care for the Grey Edwin 4' David Harri youn.gsters wIllIe she recuperated . ". for five weeks. son 'th 2 , and Bnan Lee, 6 Nearly 6 feet a'nd a lean 140 m on s. d s, Wh't . th· 't 't d'ff' It' Wh·t poun D espi e I s I ICU les, 1 . f I bney . gives l' ht e Imt Dey believes there is much to be pressIOn 0 emg s Ig excep . ,. . for strong hands used to work. said fo.r a man s stnvmg for. an Sports and social activities are edUC~~~~~:f~~~i~:sh:~s~n~:llIY. behind the Whitn~ys fo~ a few "When I got out of high school, years. After ea~mng his B.A. I 't d f 11 g "h degree at StonehIll, he hopes to ,;"as,l,l rea or. co e e~ e work for his Master's. "Win :a~~~W~OI:~:::u~~~o~;o~~:;~~ ning this scholarship. wil~ make f '1 P"ll d I '11 further study pOSSible. The ami y. n~c~ a an are WI Whitneys are members of the ing to sacnflce a few years to U· l' t Ch h' 0 kl . d that end." nlversa IS urc In a an. Whitney and . his wife are natives of Oakland, Maine. Whit ney's parents, Dr. Elmer Whitney and Dr. Leda Whitney are practicing' physicians of osteop FATIMA, Portugal (NC) athy in Oakland. He went to About 200,000 pilgrims from all Williams High School there, en over the world joined in the rolled briefly at the University celebra"tions commemorating the of Maine before leaving to enlist final apparition of Our Lady to in the Navy for a four year period the three children of Fatima in and manied his childhood sweet": 1917. heart, Priscilra Livingstone, Despite the wind and rain daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edwin which lashed the shrine, the pil Livingstone of qakland. grims, joined by 36 U. S. soldiers Whitney came out of the Navy who had come from Germany, with some knowledge of engin eering and refrigeration and maintained an outdoor all-night vigil before the Blessed Sacra settled down in West Bridgement. Twenty thousand people re ceived Holy Communion at a Pontifical Mass offered by Gae tano Cardinal Cicognani. In her sermon, the Cardinal· Sun~ay referred to the political and reli In observance of Catholic gious sit\,Jation of Portugal at the Youth Week, Rev. Walter A. time of the apparitions: Sullivan, Fall River CYO direc "What a difference there is," tor, announces that the Catholic he said, "between the present Youth Ceuter for Girls will be Portugal and the Portugal of officially opened Sunday after those days; between this pil noon from 2 to 5 o'clock at the grimage and the abandonment Catholic Community Center, and, unbelief of that age." Franklin Street. The pilgrimage closed the cel Fall River District of the Dio ebration which has been con cesan Council of Catholic Women ducted since last May, the anni will serve as hostesses for the versary of the ~irst apparition of opening ceremony. Our Lady to Lucia Abobora and This Catholic Youth Center for Jacinta and Francisco Marto, the Girls is opened to various age three shepherd children of groups, ranging from girls in Fatima. Grade 7 to post high school age. Registration cards with activity lists ar.e now available at the CLEVELAND (NC)-Mrs. Ed Center. The hours for register_ ward T. Butler Jr" national ing are Friday, Sunday afternoon chairman of the National Coun during open house and Monday, cil of Catholic Women's com_ Wednesday and Friday of next mittee on cooperating with Cath- • week from 2 to 5. Registration olic Charities, has been honored cards must be submitted with by the Cleveland Community the signature and approval of Fund. the parish' priest together with Mrs. Butler, mother of three a fee of one dollar. children, was presented the An eventful program ,is being Community Fund's Distinguished planned for Catholic Youth Service Award, which is given Week which includes Recitation annually. She was one of five of the Catholic Youth Pledge recipients. and Youth Prayer and an Ac quaintance Dance which will be held on Friday, Nov. 1 at the Community Center. Volunteers from all Women's "If You Love Me, Guild and various Catholic or Keep My ganizations throughout the city will act as councillors for this Commandments." ' Youth Center. John: 14:15 Also in observance of Cath olice' Youth Week, CYO Boys' Division will take the Youth Pledge and recite the Youth JEWElED CROSS COMPANY
Prayer. An exhibition basket MO. Ant.UOR~. ~5:r.._
MAN4/FA(ruotEfS OF ball game at CYO hall is planned CRUCIFIXES"" ARTICLES Of DEVOTION at a date to be determined, rather Sullivan annoWlCea.
r
200,000 Pilgrims Pray at Fatima
To Open Cente, For Girls
Honor Mother
SCHOLARSHIP WINNER AND FAMILY: Seen at their home, 161 Matfield Street, West Bridgewater, are Robinson Whitney, Stonehill College sophomore and recipient of the Idletta E. Stone Scholarship, his wife Priscilla, and their four children, left to right Greg Edwin, 4, David Harrison, 2, Brian Lee, 6 months, and Vaughan Cynthia, 6.
Vote to Retain Emblem Cross
Offers Plan for School Tuition
WINNIPEG· (NC) - A plan which would see Manitoba Cath olics owning and operating their ST. PAUL (NC)-The Minne own 'schools and the local public sota Statehood Centennial Com mission has voted to retain a school board paying pupils' tui tion from public' school taxes cross in the 1958 centennial cel ebration emblem, thus ending has been suggested to a provin a controversy over whether the cial government commission on symbol "violates separation of education. Church and State". ' The plan was recommended The vote of the 15-member to the Manitoba Royal Commis commission was 10 to 3, with 2 sion studying all facets of pri abstentions. The approval up_ mary education in the province. held a two to one vote of a com The conference said the pres mission sub-committee which, ent public school system, forced had public hearings on the ques by legislation to be non-sectar tion. ian, is unable to satisfy the The controversy oyer 'inclu needs of Catholic children in re sion of the small cross in the gard to the teaching of religion emblem began with protests and the provision of Catholic from representatives of the teachers. American Civil Liberties Union, At present, Catholics may op of the Seventh Day Adventists, erate their own schools, but they Lutheran, Unitarian, Episcopal receive no tax relief for their and Universalist churches, and services. of a Jewish synagogue. In addition to the p1an for In April, Archbishop William Catholic-owned schools with tui O. Brady of St. Paul said that tion paid by public school opponents of keeping the cross boards, the conference suggested in the emblem were waging a other solutions. campaign against "imaginary bogeymen in the dark." The Archbishop is a native of Fall River. Noting that the part played by religious missionaries in settling Minnesota territory,' Archbishop Brady said that to try to deny this fact by ignoring it would be a falsification of history. "If today's, pressure removes the cross from the emblem that mar~s the past," he said, "to morrow's pressure will attempt to tear it from our churches and our homes."
It said that public school au thorities could build and staff Catholic schools with Catholic teachers. It also pointed out that in some other parts of Canada, such as the Provinces of Ontario and Saskatchewan, groups which establish their own school sys tems tax themselves and are ex empted'from public school taxes.
APPRAISER
REAL ESTATE
•
INSURANCE WY 3-5762
Complete
BANKING
SERVICE
BOWLING - SI<AliNG
Special Arrangements For
BANQUETS
for Bristol County
TRAPPIST-
Preserves and Candies Sold at
Haviland of New Bedford A few door. from Our Lady'. Chapel ,<
Fernandes Dairy
JB
Bristol County Trust Company
LUMtSrER CO.
TAUNTON, MASS.
So. Dartmouih and Hyannis
THE BANK ON
TAUNTON GREEN
S~.
Dartmouth
WY 7-9384
Member of Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation
Hyannis 2921
HOMOGENIZED and
"Save With Safety"
PASTEURIZED
at
Milk •
Cream'
Dial OLdfield 4-8711 651 MAIN RD.
TIVERTON, R. I.
New' Bedford &0 Acushnet
C0-9perative Banks 115 WILLIAM 5T. ~-_....:_----.-
-~-
-
NEW BEDFORD, MASS. -~--~-.rr--.-
-
--------
Invites Church Help to fgght Youth Cfsme,
Books of the Hour
Pef~itts (QiMtwe~~~ M@~its
Of. J'oh~
~[(a~rt)eo~ ~@wte~
'.
By Rev. D. BeJ11ard Thean, O.S.B. A novel likely to be much publicized and talked about
during the next few months is an import from England,
John Braine's Room at the Top (Houghton Mifflin, $3.75). This is a first novel by a young man who seems very angry with modern civilization as Sheehan (Farrar, Straus and · d't b ' 't Cudahy, $4.00). h e f In S I Y many cn Mrs. McCormick began report ics he is being compared to ing for the Times during the Colin Wilson who wrote.last pontificate of Benedict XV. One
year's sensational The Outsider. The plot of Room at the Top is simple e n 0 ugh: a , to ugh, ambitious youngster of 25 Joe , Lam p't 0 n arrives in the Yorkshire town , of Warley from the mu ch smaller village <> f D u f ton, where his early .life has been hard and unre. warding. He is now deter~med to get on in the world, and IS not particularly anxious to observe ethical rules in the process. Exploits' Women As handsome and charming as he is ruthless, Joe discovers soon enough that his best ro~d to ~e top will be one paved WIth femI nine conquests which will hav.e uti~ity as well as pleasure. H~ IS . deeply involved before l~ng w~th, two Warley women, AlIce AIS gill, wife 'of one of the town's wealthy citizens,. and Susan Brown, daughter of another. The affair between Lampton and Alice is brief but very in tense and described in the book _ With' great detail.' Before it is over, though, Joerealize~ that the courting of Susan WIll be more profitable. As the book ends, Alice has been killed in a~ automobile smashup brought on by her drinking to forget Joe and Joe is about to marry Susan and take a lucrative job in her father's business. He is on his ,way to the top. ,The theme of man's ruthless exploitation of women to gai.n his own ends is not new, nor IS there anything striking about Mr. Braine's way of treating it, gave for a savage intensity of sensuality in the writing. Adult ery and fornication feature Joe Lampton's relations with wom en; Both women are given to an intolerable amount of baby-t!llk arid 'silly sentimentalizing, so Uiat' the two affairs lack any thing of the literary'seriousness that such things have in, say. the works of Graham Greene. The positi~e merits ?f the book ~re simply not enough to outweIgh its serious, defects, literary as well ~s moral. Th'eology Simplified' . The syndicated diocesan news paper columns of Frank Sheed are gathered together in a sys tematic' presentation of Theology for Beginners (Sheed and Ward, $3.00). This' little book com prises a shorter and simpler con sideration of the basic truths of the' faith than is given in Theol ogy and Sanity. It should have value for the average layman' who wants to know a little more Ui~n the catechism tells him of what he believes. For the convert or 'prospective convert who wants an introduction to the faith it is more, substantial than A Map of Life, yet less "in'teHectual" than Theology and Sanity. As in his writing, Mr. Sheed shows here h'is ability to instruct without boring and to simplify without insulting. This is a fine book for tne parish library and the Catholic information center library as well as for the lay man's personal collection. View Vatican As Frank Sheed can write un derstandably about theology for the layman, so could Anne O;Hare McCormick present in ternational politics and worla d~plomacy in her New York columns. A collection of thirty years of these writings centering about one theme, the Papacy and its influence on' the, modern world, is presented in her Vati ean Journal, edited by Marion
of the finest chapters in the book assesses the greatness of. this Pope, now s!' often overlooked and urid~resti~ated, ~ecause ~e is seen eIther In the hg.ht of hIS ~reat predecess?r, .St. PlUS X. or of his 10nger-reIgmng successors, Pius XI and Pius XII. Here -also are chronicled the rise of Mussolini, the delicate maneuvering that led to the Con cordat between the Vatican and Italy, ,and the coming of. war to Europe.
. NEW YORK (NC)
Mayor Robert F. Wagner has· been advised to invite leading voluntary 'agencies ...:.- among them the Catholic Charities of New York and Brooklyn-to help in the batUe again$! juvenile delinquency.
The petition was made in an il1terim report to the Mayor by Ralph W. Whelan, executive di rector of the city's Youth Board.,
, CARDINAL SEES POPE: Pope Pius XII, in white, stands, with James Francis Cardinal McIntyre, Archbish.op of, Los Angeles, during an audience at the Pope's summer.
residence at Castelgandolfo. The meeting was. their first , since Cardinal McIntyre was named to the Cardinalate in i953. NC Radiophoto. ,I
Continued From Page One The, general house-to-house Recollection Day canvass' will get underway in two weeks: Archbishop Richard J. Cushing of Boston-will· deliver , the. keynote talk at the official launching of the concentrated' OUR LADY OF GRACE,' drive. WESTPORT The Archbishop will bless the The second annual I "Day of :workers, as will Bishop Con': Recollection" wili be held next nolly, as they begin'their taI'k of Sunday by the Holy' Name attempting to push the ,total con Society ,with Rev. Olivier Ren tributiePs over the $1 ,500,000' mark. The Greater New Bedford aud" . O.M.I.conducting the services. schooi, which is the f!rst of sev . The schedule for the day is as eral contemplated regional high follows: Opening service ~ in-, , schools in' the diocese, will cost struction from 12:00" to' 12:30; in excess of $2,000,000. ' Period of recollection on 'the Directors Pleased " church grounds from 12:30 to, Very Rev. Hugh A. GallagtIer, 12:45; Refreshments served' in pastor of St. Ja,mes c:hurc~ ip. , the church basement from 12:45 New' Bedford, who is serving as to 1:30; Rosary from 1:30 to ~:45; campaign moderator, and Dr. . Second period of, instruction Arthur F. 'Buckley of New Bed from 1:45 to 2:15; second period ford, general' chairman of the, ,ofr~collection on the church' drive; expressed their pleasure grounds from 2:15 to 2:30; Open and ,satisfaction wi~h the result Forum '''questions, and answers" of the campaign today. 'from 2:30 to 3:30. Edward Bou-" Joseph P. Duchaine, too, hail dria was chosen chairman of the words of praise for the men day. 'working with him on the memo rial gifts committee. lndividuals ST. JOHN OF GOD, and corporations are being of SOMERSET fered an opportunity to assist the The committee for the spa,. fund through memorials in the ghetti and' meatball SUPPer held' new structure which will' care its final meeting on Monday for the educational needs of 1,000 night, in 'the parish hall. 'The boys and girls in the Greater supper will be served on Satur- ,
New Bedford area. ' day. Oct. 26, from 6 to 8 P.M. Parishes from Westport to and will be followed by a sale. Wareham are participating in Mr. Thomas Rose, the general the campaign. , 'chairman, announced' the fol lowing committee: Mrs. Frank Record Sermons Thomas, Mrs. Mary DeFaras,' PITTSBURGH (NC) - Eight Miss Virginia D,eFaras, Mrs. talks by thenatfonalairector of Mary Holden; Mrs. Stephen L. the Archconfraternity of Chris Silvia, Mrs, Joseph Flores, Mrs. tian Mothers have been recorded Manuel Rezendes,' Mrs. Emma on'long-playing records for use by confratern~ties, groups and individuals. The 15-minute sermons by Fath~r Bertin Roll, O.F.M. Cap., dealing with' the purpose of the Archconfraternity, the impor tance of·the mother's devotional practices for the home, mOdesty in dress of youngsters, dating and other subjects, are on four records. ' all fur lined at.. " , The records may be purchased through the archconfraternity headquarters at 220 37th Street, Pittsburgh. 55 William St., New Bedford
The Parish Parade Laureano, Mr. and Mrs. Julio Luciano, Mr. and Mrs. Victor' Soares, Mr. and Mrs. Josep~, ,Gagnon. ST. LOUIS, FALL RIVER Children' of th'e parish ~il1 be treated' at a Hallowe'en party Saturday morning from 9:30 to 12 in the parish hall. The parish priests will be assisted by mem~ bel'S of the Confraternity of Christian Mothers, headed by Mrs. William Davis. , Prizes will be awarded to the funniest, most horrible and most original costumes.
Foundress Dies ' BRIGHTON (NC) - Mother Mary Kevin, 82, founder of the Franciscan Missionary Sisters for Africa, died at the community's novitiate here. A native of lre land, Mother Kevin retired as' superior in 1955, after 52 years in the missions in Uganda.
"",,---------------- AUTO TOP SHOP: AUTO & FURNITURE UPHOLSTERING
All
BARDAHL
MAKES YOUR
CAR RUN BETTER
'At New Car Dealers 'and Service Stations Ev~r,ywhere
R. A. WILCOX CO.
OFFICE FURNITURE
• ..; Stock (or Immediate Delivery
• DESKS • CHAIRS FILING CABINETS • FIRE FILES ,~ SAFES FOLDING TABLES AND CHAIRS
R. A. WILCOX CO. 22 BEDFORD ST. FALL RIVER 5-7838
.
A Delicious : , ",.",--------------- , Treat" , , , ,
, , "," ,, , ,, , , , , ,,, , , , ,, , , ,
, ,, , , ,, , , , ,,, , , ,,
, ,, ,, , ~ , :,,
,
Under the proposed "ham ap proach," the voluntary agencies woulq be represented on a stand ing committee working with the Youth Board. The agencies would synchronize their anti delinquency activities, analyze youth crime problems, and "keep, abreast of the total community resources for combatting the problem." , ' The report declared that "reli gious' groups should be strongly encouraged to expand their ef,;, forts with respect to preparation for family life and parent arld child education, with particular emphasis on reaching parents not actively affiliated with their' particular church or synagogue." Mr. Whalen urged that Mayor Wagner' meet with religious leaders to solicit their "all-out effort" against delinquency along the lines recommended in the
report.
Fire Extinguishers ALL TYPES
SALES & SERVICE
'Frank Lawrence" Jr. 44 Whitman St. New Bedford , WY 3-4136
upholstering : FABRICS' ':
Electrical ContractoF$
O. E. NERBONNE, Prop.: , ,
----------------------DON'AT BOISVERT INSURANCE AGENCY All Kinds Of Insurance
944 County St•
96, WILLI~M STREET NEW BEDFORp, MAS&
New Bedford
DIAL WY 8-5153
Personal Service
A'BREAU
HANCOCK
MONUMENT CO.
970 ASHLEY BLVD.
.~-
., : ,
,
k~nds
1868 Purchase St" Ne.. Bedford .3 Center St., Hyan~is .
Hooded Parkos
CARTER'S,
:,
':
The report l)oted that several agencies are working, often si multaneously, with members of the same families without co ordination of effort. The result" Mr. Whalen found, has been "duplication and conflict with ineffective results."
NEW BEDFORD Main Office & Faet'ory QUINCY, 'MASS: Open Everyday WY 6-5556 JOHN RICClUTI'& SONS. Inc.
WHITE'S
OIL SERVICE, Inc. BURNER SALES
& SERVICE· 21 Wilbur-St., Taunton Phone VAndyke 2-0582
Fomily Restaurant
, Rt. 6 at The Narrows in North Westport Where The Entire Family Can Dine Economically
"
~ Made Rite Chips ~
:
Ask For Them Today
For Reservations Phone OS ~7185
:
----------------------,
,
Bishop Connolly . Urges Science Of Holiness
Fall River Catholic Guild for the Blind will meet Sunday in Sacred Heart Church at 2:15. Following Rosary and Bene diction, an entertainment will be presented in the school, under the direction of Mrs. James Wilcox, with Miss Barbara Gas par, Miss A.dene (j.'aspar, Miss Julia Harrington, Mary Eliza beth Wilcox and Mrs. Charles Wills. Hostess_~s will be members 'of St. Jean Baptiste Women's Guild.
"We find ourselves on the threshold of discovery that may make Columbus and 1492 fade into insigniti eance." In his sermon given at the Solemn Mass pf Thanksgiv ing Sunday observing the 75th anniversary of the founding of SS. Peter and Paul's parish in Fall River, the Most Reverend Bishop contrasted the startling discoveries of science in physics and dynamics and space, and the sad neglect of discoveries into man's spiritual side. "Those who have a penchant for penetrating ·the heavens have no idea of what it is to have the beginnings of heaven in one's soul." The Bishop noted men of sci ence likp Carl Steinmetz and Charles Lindbergh who, after lifetimes of dedication to the advancement of science, could say that men must look beyond' material forces and seek to know God.' This is the science of holi ness, the sCience of the saints, that has been preached these 75 years in SS. Peter and Paul's Church and in ever~ Catholic Church. It is a science, the Bishop said, that asks the ques tion .of Christ, "What' does, it profit a man if he gain the-whole world and suil'er the losS of his tIOul." , The Bishop spoke of the for mer pastoI's an priests of the parish who taught this science by word and example. He spoke warmly of the parish school and the wonderful work done in it by the Sisters of ME\rcy. The Bishop urged the parish Ioners to follow the words of their patr~n Saints, St. Peter and St. Paul, to ,be "a chos~n race, ,. royal priesthood, a people God ,means to have for Himsell," and to "put on the Lord Jesus Christ." The Anniversary Mass was celebrated by the Rev. John J. Kelly, pastor, in the presence of It full church of parIshioners and former parishioners, 30 priests, the Sisters who now teach or formerly taught in the school, Bnd some 5isters who are natives of the oarish. On Monday there was a Sol emn Requiem Mass for all de ceased priests: Sisters and par ishioners, and :m Tuesday a '.Mass attended by the children of the school.
">
with the schools of the secular world." "We must expect to find in the secular schools," he ~id, "wide varieties of personal opinion, great d'ivergences from our fun damental beliefs, but God con fers abilities and scholarly gifts in mysterious ways, so that even from the mouths of unbelievers we freque!1tly hear the truth."
0
Beatification Cause Moves Ste~ Nearer
TH!: AN{:!-(On
Fall River Blind
To Meet Sunday
I
PATERSON (NC) -A sub .tantial step has been taken in the cause of beatification of Louis and Azelie-Marie Martin, parents of St. Therese of the Child Jesus, the Little Flower. Bishop James A. McNulty of Paterson reports Bishop Octave Pasquet of Sees, France, has ap_ pointed members of a tribunal, which will question six wit nesses, one of whom is the 90 year-old daughter of one of the lace-makers who worked with Madame Martin. Bishop McNulty also disclosed that letters urging the cause were pouring into Paterson by the thousands.. The letters, ad dressed to Pope Pius XII will be, forwarded to the Vatican by the Paterson prelate.
More on Faculties According to Professor Ker win, the number of Catholics on faculties of the secular uni PARISH ANNIVERSARY OF FOUNDING: Bishop . the versities is increasing. He Connolly gave the sermon at the SS. Peter and P~ul Church, warned, however, that the Cath Fall River,-1ast Sunday when the 75th anniversary of the olic scholar "should not look founding of the parish was observed. Rev. John J. Kelly, upon himself as a kind of self pastor, (at right) is shown with the Mos't Reverend Bishop. appointed missionary to the non Catholic world." Rather, the vet eran Chicago professor said, "it remains for the Catholic scholar to convince the secular world of Univer~ity scholars that he is capable of o,,)jective scholarship and is not' NOTRE DAME (NC)-Refer man, but I must bow to his efts just a propagandist." ences to America's secular uni covery of truth whatever his per ''There may always remain a versities as"communistic ,godless, sonal convictions may be." temptation, nay, even a neces pagan, immoral" may be made Fraternal Cooperation sity, for the Catholic scholar to with fervent sincerity, "but they Mr. Kerwin contended that place .himself in the role of de create neither respect' for the Catholic attacks' on the secular fender of the Faith as long as he Church nor for its adherents at universities appear to the non meets with aby'smal ignorance of the secular schools," a Catholic Catholic scholar "as assaults on things Catholic among his, non professor at the University of the whole field of, objective Catholic colleagues," headded. Chicago said here. scholarship and on freedom of Political scientist Jerome G. opinion and ,research. They af Kerwin, speaking at a Univer feet adversely the reputation and NEW YOR,K (NC)-The na sity of Notre Dame symposium work of the Catholic scholars, he on "Roman Catholicism and the added. ' tional secretary of the Catholic American Way of Life," attrib Daughters of America today an "Let us not forget how our uted such charges to "an unrea nounced a spiritual bouquet of . forebears 'of the 12th century soned opposition to our great 6,000 Masses and a gift of $10,000 flocked to the Islamic universi centers of scholarship." has been presented Pope Pius ties of Toledo and Cordova to XII on behalf of the CDA. Miss Cross Section absorb the learning that made Frances Maher, supreme regent the accomplishments of the 13th He said "these statements are of the Daughters, made the pres ce~tury ~ memorable," Mr. entation while in Rome' at the made for the purpose of defend Kerwin pointed out. ing our own institutions - - World Union of Catholic Wom and they need no such negative The professor urged "a frater en's 'Leagues and the Second defeQse. I do not appreciate nal cooperation 'of our schools World Congress of the Lay Apos-' tearing down a neighbor's house in order to build one of your own!' Mr, Kerwin, who holds an honorary degree from the Uni versity of Notre Dame, acknowl edged- that "there are non believing members on the facul ties at the secular schools." "But let us remember," he said, "that these universities pre sent a cross-section view of American'life and t/:1at no matter how deplorable it may be that these scholars are godless, they are most, often competent men lui•• F. hi flwo,. , .... Sowft in their fields. 2'602 Ec"o Woy Soc'.M."'O J I, Call'.AkI "I may, wish that Professor 'X' were a, devoutly religious
Professor Says III, Will Follows Attacks Secular.
Gift for Pope
8 out 'of 10 new homes
SAN ANTONIO, (NC)- The 1958 Congress of the Discalced Carmelite Third Order will be held in San Antonio starting Oct. 3. Theme of the congre'ss will be "A prac~ical View of the History of Carmel in the Life of a Ter..:' tiary."
Upholds Law WASHINGTON (NC) - The U. S. Supreme Court has denied a petition filed by the Adams Newark Theater against the City of Newark for a rehearing of a ease involving a city ordinance banning burlesque shows. In a previous decision, the highest court had upheld the vaUdity of ,.abe law.
5
Blames rQlU'ents' For J~~ensle Crime Wave ~
NEW YORK (NC)-"De linquimt children are rarely born; they are made by bad example," Francis Cardinal Spellman said here in a speech calling "delinquent parents," the "root-evil" of juvenile delin quency. Too many parents, Cardinal Spellman said', neglect their chil dren's religious training and fail to guide and govern them prop erly during their formative years. "Parents who are derelict in their duties stand guilty of ,the crimes their children commit and s'hould be judged more severely than the young offend ers themselves," he said. Parents and educators, he went on, should realize that the "only effective prescription" for pre vention and cure of juvenile de linqency is spiritual strength de rived from religious training. Declaring that delinquents are made, not born, Cardinal SpeiI man continued: . "How often would a child treat another child cruelly, if he had not taken example from his eld ers? How would a child know another child was of different race, Color, or creed unless he learned his prejudices from hi. parents?" He severely criticized "men or women who produce stories of murder, "lust and violence through any media to which children have access."
Swiss May Accept Papal Decorations BERNE (NC)-Swiss citizens may accept papal decorations despite the fact that the constL tution forbids them to receive awards from foreign govern ments. This was stated in a unani mous decision handed down here by a special committee of three Swiss Supreme Court iustices. The judges ruled that such decorations are bestowed by th~ pontiff' as head of the Church, not in his capacity as sovereign of the state of Vatican City.
choose
LOUGHLIN
CHEVROLET
\,
New Bedford's Only
Authorized
Chevrole. Dealer
A
s
80
N~arly % of all new home buyers and build ers select GAS for heat ing and other house hold services.
545 Mill St., New Bedford
Tertiaries Congress
Thurs., Oct. 24, 1957
WY 7-9486'
The Franciscan C:at~1ers Third Order Regular of St. Francis Offer to Young Men and Boys special opportunities to study for the Priesthood. Lack of funds no obstacle. Candi dates for the 'religious Lay Brotherhood also accepted. For further information, write
to
~TEPHEN, T.O.R. P. O. BOX 289 HOLLIDAYSBURG n. .PA.' . :..
FATHER
o>
FALL RIVER
Before you build, buy, or remodel, ask your gas com pany, architect, b u i 1 del', heating contractor and appli ance dealer how GAS mOd ernizes old and new homes and keeps them modern at low, cost.
GAS COMPANY
6 Thurs.,Y.HEOct.ANCHOR 24, 1957 Weekly Calendar . Of Feast Days
®rheANCHOR
OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER
THURSDAY St. Raphael, Archangel. One of the three Angels venerated by name in the Church. St. Raphael, accord ing to the Book of Tobias, is "one of the seven who stood be fore the Lord." Many churchetl are dedicated to him.
Published Weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River 410 Highland Avenue , Fall Riv~r, Mass. OSborne 5-7151 PUBLISHER Most Rev. James L Connolly, D.O., Ph.D. ' ,GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MANAGER Rev. Daniel F: Shalloo, M.A. REi";. John P. Driscoll MANAGING EDITOR . Attorney Hugh J. Golden
FRIDAY , - SS. Chrysanthus and Darai, Martyrs. St. Chrysan thus, an Egyptian, with his wife, Daria, a Greek, were distin guished in Rome for their zeal: ous profession and practice of Christianity, which led to their arrest;' persecution and death under the Emperors Numerian and Carinus, in the third century.
Christ the King' ,"Thou sayest it: lam a king." WhiI'e tJ.1e Catholic. world was celebrating the ~ixteen-hundredth aninversary of the Council of Nicaea (325) during which the divinity, of Christ was defended, Pope Pius XI on December 11, 1925, estab lished the new Feast of Christ the King. He designated the last Sunday of October as the day on which this' new feast should be universally observed.. World 'War I had left terrible suffering in its wake. Hatred among peoples and nations prevailed unchecked. People were suspicious of their fellow men, govern~ents were'unstable, faith even in God had been shaken. To coun teract all these:evils, Pope Pius XI instituted this'new feast with the express purpose of promoting the "Peace of Christ in the Kingdom of Christ/' While the feast is not old, the doctrine surely is. Isaias visualized Christ as the "Prince of Peace." Gabriel said to Mary: "Thou shalt call his name Jesus ... and he shall be king over the h()use of Jacob forever; and of his kingdom there shall ben() end." The, Magi came seeking "the newly born king of the Jews." To Pilate Jesus answered: "Thou sayest it: I a~'aking," and and Jesus died with the inscri~ tion over His head" "Jesus of N~zareth, King of the Jews." , And St. Johntells us, in the beautiful book of the Apoc alypse, that on the judgement day the 'whole world will rec ' ognize , . Christ . as "King of kings and Lord of lords.'! " " Pope Leo XIII has declared how wear~ the subjects of Christ the King. "All mankind is under the power Of Jesus Christ. Nor-is any distinction made between individuals, the home, or civil society, since men are no less in the power of Christ when united in society than as single individuals. He .,alone is the source of individual and public, welfare; Neither is there'salvatipn ,in any other, for there is no other Name under heave,n given to men whereby we must be saved. He alone is the author of prosperity and true happiness both in the individual citizens and in states.", , ' Th~ rule of Christ is spiritual. This spiritual ki~gship of Christ over individl,lals and nations is this: ,as individuals and as nations, all might recognize Christ as legitimate King over the minds and hearts and wills; all must recognize , His infinite love for all men; His laws shouleJ not be contra , dicted by civil 'authority ; the place of spiritual values in, the, lives of men 'and nations must not be scorned or neglected: Happiness al)rl peace can, be, achieved only wh'en men and nations . measure up to the, standards of Christ. To the degree', that they faU short' of, those sta~dards,',t~ tha~ degree, is there persQnal .unhappiness a~ddistrust among -, ' nations. '
SATURDAY - St. Evaristus, ,Pope-Martyr. He was born in Bethlehem and became the sixth Pope. He was martyred in Rome In 112' after ruling the Church for nine years. Grim Humor SUNDAY .-: Feast of Christ the King. This feast 'on' the last Sunday in October was insti tuted by Pope Pius XI to pay homage to Christ, the Ruler of the world. Consecration of the By Donald McDonald
world to the Sacred Heart is Davenport Catholic Messenger
renewed each year at this time. Well, we have had, our fun ringing all the changes on Generally this date is the feast "sputnik;" the first earth satellite launched into outer space of St. Vincent and Companions, by Soviet Russia. Television comedians have just about ex- , Martyrs. His 'companions were Sabina and Christeta. They hausted sputnik~s topical gag 'possibilities. Public ~peak~rs, SS. were Spaniards who were mar, cartoonists, editorial writers Communist propaganda, few' tyred under Diocletian at Avila ,have managed to drag sput people, in or out 'of government, about 303. Little is known con nik references" into their have drawn what I should call" cerning them.. " work i]l every conceivable. Hultimate conclusions" from the MONDAY SS. Simon and Soviet scientis'ts' remarkable Jude Apostles. These Apostles 'way. triumph. And now, I susnect, it is time ended their careers together in that', we con~ ,' martyrdom in Persia. Simon'. It is not simply that more " sider 'the Rus students specialize in science missionary field was' Egypt, , sian accom and research in Russia than they North Mrica, Masopotainia and p'lishment with d.o in the U. S. It is not simply Persia; Jude's was Mesopotamia and Persia. Jude (Thaddeus)' the seriousness that Russia officially encour it deserves., If ages scientific learning. And it was the brother of St. James the Less, and a relative of Christ. is not simply that a few Ger sputnik is a man scientists were captured by Simon came from Cana 'in Gali joke, the humor Russia after the "last war and lee., is grim' indeed. were put to work by the Soviet TUESDAY St. Narcissus, And I don't Union. Bishop-Confessor He was Bishop think the r e of Jerusalem about 180 and is was anything but deadly seri Food for Thought said to have lived until the age ousness as Russian scientists These fads are important, but of 116. One mircale attributed to perfected and orbited their I think they 'are not as impor v him consisted of changing 'well ,satellite.
,tant as certain social, psycholog- water into oil for lamps used in White' House Syrup
Icaland cultural differences be the Paschal feast. I can understand, the psycho tween Russia and the U. S., dif WEDNESDAY - St. Zenobius, logical "necessity for official ferences which I think we ,might calmness in Washington, but I 'profitably consider if, as we Bishop-Martyr. He was Bishop, also a physician, at Aegae (now think the ,American people are suspect, Russia is now.outstrip 'Alexandretta on the coast 01. mature enough to ,preclude the ping.us in science and research.' Asia Minor. He is said to have . necessity for ,some of the sooth In recent years, American been martyred with his sister, irig syrup being released in cal tourists, returning from' Russia, St. Zenobia, under Diocletiao, eUlated doses by White House have' spoken 'disparagingly of about 290. ' . press secretary Hagerty, Sher . the low standard of living in man Adams and others.. the clothing worn by the Rus ~eav~s I think it' is possible, and nec,,: sian woman, of. the long hours essary, for Wf,lshington to be of hard work of the peasant, his . Program ' I . calm without, at the same time wife and children, of the scar NEW' YORK (NC):- Bishop being misleading. And I think city· of luxury articles in the Fulton J. Sheen annouced here . Sunday is the: beginning of Catholic Youth Week all, it is misleading to pretend there Russlim stores, automobiles on 'he is retiring temporarily "from , is no great "significance'" in the the Russian streets, and televi.., the lights, of television for the over the country. It is a week during which 'all our Catholic' Rmsians' accomplishment. sion in the Russian homes. • shades and shadows of the young mtm and women review in their own lives and before American and English sci Somehow, the, conclusion cross." the rest of us their standards, their ideals, their measuring entists are not so political mind drawn from these facts was one The Auxiliary Bishop of Ne~ Up to their Catholic responsibilities. ed and they have rather candid oi confidence,almost smugness. York said in a statement that he , . t . declared that the successful How could any nation so bereft is leaving his regular series, In union there IS cer amI y s t reng th . An d thOIS week'IS ly launchl'ng of an earth satelll'te' , of these elementals of civiliza "L'ife Is Worth Living", on ABC a week of union. It is a week when Catholic youth is urged into outer space is a consider tion be a threat to tl:Ie U. S.? to receive Holy Communion. It is a week when young men able scientific accomplishment But I must confess that as I 'TV "to devote more time to my first duty, which is to Qe a beg and women are asked to look deep into their own lives and pregnant with mili~ary signifi listened to our returning tour gar with a tin cup in my hand for see how they are living up to the Christ-like life that is cance. ists, their observations left me the poor of the world." theirs by ,sanctifying gr;ace. It is a week when. they are Remarkable, Triumph not with confidence but with a Bishop Sheen said here that ehallenged to look at their environment an<;lask how Chris The' Russian feat means the 'certain, unease. For it/seemed kinescope recordings of past pro . ts can Iaunch th e, l'nter to me that there was in the tian it is" how Catholic 'it is, how they are aiding or hinder ' S OVle grams have been requested by continental 'ballistic ~issile, Russian, people a hardiness, a stations and will be ing the 'cause of Christ, 'What they can do to change their whose trajectory would "peak" health,y' unconcern about soft television made available' to them. His world-for the better. If' all our Catholic young people act in outer space before the mis living and easy transportation statement did not disclose his this way in the week ahead, the impact of their thinking sile would descend to its target. and creature comforts in gen plans in regard to radio. and praying and acting together should make itself felt in, It is true that the problem of re 'eral ~ qualities that were all ,As for the return to TV, every home and school and, community. ' 'entry into the earth's atmos the more disturbing when one Bishop Sheen said that "as the , phei'e is a formidable one, ,but surveyed the American scene retirement was dictated by spir 'Another point. This is a week in which th~ strong can the Russians' have ,obviously and made comparisons. itual considerations, so will· be help one another, and the strong can give encouragement' to worked out the first half of an It seemed to' me 'that Russia, , the weak. How often,young'people get into trouble ,not be I~BM's journey, a stage at today, is in the same dynamic, the moment of return." cause they like it but because they are afraid to break with which Western scientists have psychological situation in which the gang, fearful of going against the tide. The common not yet arrived. the U. S. found itself, say. in dispelled after generations of f t' . . II t ft' ' t h After a flurry of I-told-you the mid-19th century when hard work. . , d . t enomma or 0 ac IOn m any group IS a 00 0 en e so's and stronger recriminatory' there was 'a premium onhardi-. I do not think our civilization foolish scheme ami not the right thing to do. It takescour remarks that had 'unseemly pol;. nesS, when the American found bin an irreversible decline, nor age to stand up and be counted for the right, especially when ' 'itical partisan overtones in them' challenges exhilarating, not de':. do I think that we have allowed one's companions will laugh and ridicule this. (as if this were just another pressing or distasteful, and ourselves to become hopelessly The power of example is strong. Our Cathoic youth is Republican vs. Democrat issue), :when purposefulness was, never soften'ed by a civilization of our . discussion of the Russian satel-' substantially: undermined by own' making. I think we' can asked to let their example be"the right kina, be influenced ,', lite and its meaning' has lareely pleasure.' ' reverse 'the decline and cut by the comman~mentsof6-od and the Church and the st~~d. subsided. away the softness, but only if ards of c~urtesy,andwisdom.,Ifa few-in a groupdo'this" the ,The military meaning of the Comfort and Survival ... we are stern enough to make ,.". :others will be given a'guide of action. -But it does take a few,' satellite is emerging, thanks to Russia, I suspected. has now the 'necessary sacrifices. . , to se't th e pace.' , .. . _on both','I all the advantages of' the 19th: Walter, Lippmann, recently' .' . ' . . ,outspoken ' , scientists, ~<'L ': : , ," Catholic Youth Week is a we'ek in wltich"our Catholic sides of the,Auantic. lIut; aside century American environment, l8ised the,question whether we, .,' ,,', ,.., , . " " '.',.. '. ' from 'a certain amount,of 'busy~ ",but none of its disadvantages; a"nation, couid have comfo'" , young: men ,and WOlpen ~e ask~ to JIve. ~p to what IS ex~, neSs" in our Information Service ',none of the technological arid arid SurvivaL' This is a questioll "pecte<l of them:by,Godand the Church. and the community.. , 'abroad as we seek'to neutralize'lCientific ignorance which- waa that is·bothering me., . :
Catholic Youth' Week
Nat-ion Mus't Halt Decline To Stay, Abreast of Reds
Bishop. Sheen ·Television
'
,.,
as
l11eology for Lavmen
Ex'~~t!Jjgns Great~$t
THE ANCHOR Thu~s., Oct. 24, 1957
Why 'Charity Is of .Virtues'
7
'..Laity N~'W ~~~dy To Me'<et La,rger
By F. J. Sll1eed Faith is directed to God as supremely.truthful, Hope to God as supremely desirabl~, Charity t9 God 'as supremely. good. Faith we have already glanced it is the ;Simple acceptance of God as our teacher. " ' . ~:, ',' " ,
'Role 8E1 Ch'iSrch
at,
H.ope is more cOp1plex~" Th~e are' three elements iIi it: it desires final union with GOq, sees this as difficult, sees it as attainable. The, nature of hope comes out more clearly as we see' the . two . ways of 'sinning against it, bypresumption . and by despair. Presumption ignores the diL ficulty, either by assuming that no effort on our part is necessary, God will save us whatever we do, or by assuming that no aid from God is necessary, our own effort can save us unaided. Despair will not believe in the attainability, the sinner seeing himself as beyond the reach of God's power to save. The an swer to both is St. Paul's "I can do ., all things in Him, that strengthens me." Charity is simple again. It is love·of God. As a necessary con sequence it is love of all that God"loves" it is love of every image or trace or reflection of Go,<! it finds in any creaturti, W~atever the soul in charity , lo,,:,es, it loves for what of God' is'' in' it, the amount of God's good':' ness it' ~xp~esses or mirrors. This" Is true love, since it means lov;' . ing" thing~ or persons not for' wha.t they can do for us but for what is' real in them: it means loving things or persons for what they are, and it is rooted in loving God for what He' is. (This we have already noted in the strongest reason for learn ing what He is - that is for studying Theology.) Habit Grows in Us Faith, Hope and Charity are called habits by the theol.-ogians, and this is not simply a tech., nicality. If we think over our natural habits; we see that there is Ii "real change in ourselves after ~e' acquire them; some': thing in our very natures lead in~' ~.s to: act in certain ~ays ~ to' qrink cocktails, for instance,' ol'''answ~r. back sarcastically. We say that a given habit grows" on u!l. Really it grows in us, becomes 'secorid nature. The' theologians 'appiy the word to an)" ,modific~tion, whether in bOdf .or soul, which disposes us either. to do things we did not dol;>efore or do more easily, or competeptly things we did. The skill of a pianist is a habit. ' It is in this °sense that the Theological Virtues are habits. They are really in our very soliIs, ..and they enable us to ,do things which without them would be impossible for us. They differ' from natural habits in the way we acquire them. A' natural habit is acquired ,grad ua!Jy, as we repeat some par ticl,llar action over and over aga,in: supernatural habits are given 'to us in an instant by, God. They differ again in the way they are lost. To be rid --of a natural habit~rinking cocktails again-we must make a long series of efforts: super natu!-'al habits are lost by o~e morta,l sin against them. But while we have them, habits they are, in the meaning just given. Supernatural and Natural 'The drama of the Christian life is that, acquiring the super natural habits, we do not lose tlle 'natural habits. Our 'soul bas the supernatural power to act' towards God, but it has a luit,u!-,al habit' of acting 'for .se~'·. !IInoririg God., It, has the super n~tut:ar 'ability to maJ,te'the uJ1- , ~n' itS 'goal, but a naiural habft· of"being' overwhelmed by the'
CJNCINNATI _ (NC) - The larger role in Church affairs n!>w , being offered to the layman will brin~ our na¥ure .a'~d its habits ,find him ready. wholly into harrrio.nY wit~ super That's the opinion of Jesuit nature arid .the habitS that be .'Father'Vincent P. McCorry, vet erpn retreat master 'and author, long ,~ ii. .' who opened the Xavier Univer_ For all ' of us it is a'· lifelong sity Forum lecture series.
struggle. And its· scene is the <lAs an official and trusted col will. The will is that in 0 us
laborator with the clergy," he which" decides, and it decides told an interviewer, "the layman accordirlg to what it loves. In will be given more freedom of obedience to God, our will is'the' opinion and action than he haa point' of contact through which had in.100 years." . the supernatural life flows to us. "The job of the priest has ,ASK CANONIZATION OF 116. Inspecting Archbishop <;) A mortal sin - a, serious and deliberate choice of our own will John'Mark <;:-annon's latest book, titled "The Martyrs of the grown to such magnitude," he explained, "that he cannot do it as against God's - breaks the 'United Statet3 of Arnerica)" the basic documents of the by himself." contact, we lose the virtue of -A-merjcan bishops" plea to Rome for canonization of 116 The New York Jesuit cites Charity;· supernaturally we ,are missionary martyrs who died in the U.S., is Msgr. JamesM. these reasons for 'llis conviction dead. We may still have the that the lay people in the Church habits of Faith and Hope, which Powers, at left, secretary of the commission in charge of are prepared to take on greater can be-lost only by sins .direct- editing the new book. NC ·Photo. ,responsibilities in the Church: ly against them. But they are no longer life-giving, only Char 1) The "astoundi!1g frequenc;y .Reli~ious ity makes the soul and its habits of reception of the sacraments, THE HAGUE (NC)-The Na come alive. That is-why "the CINCINNATI (N9 - Purcell compared with 50 'or. 100 years tionil1 Congress of the Young ago." This, he said, points to "a greatest of. these is Charity." High School boys will find a Family has deplored the growing (Now re-read I Corinthians, grade on their report cards for certain m~turity in the spiritual tendency in the Netherlands of. ity of ,the Catho~ic layman." Chapter 13.) religion "lab," as well as for reli married women to work outside 2) The Catholic layman al gion lecture, next·~semester. the hollie. ready is "very definitely en MONTREAL (NC) ~ One of gaged" in the work of the Church HIt is undesirable that mothers The' "lab" mark will be based of young children work outside -p.articularly in the work of ,the' most sUccesSful and popular on the practice of religious train ing':received, in· classroom and th~ home," a Congress resolution' the Catholic press. programs b~oadcast by the Mont said. '"The care and education borne, will be given for 3) The 'extraordinary growth real. "La ,Presse" radio. station ,taking Credits part in .the Holy Name, . "of the young child ought to be in 'of ·the retreat movement. "If CKAC has completed its seventh , school and parish spiritual activ the ha':lds of th~ m9ther personthis isn't a sign of maturity," be year.:....the, nightly broadcast 'of ities., ally..~" . , said, ~'I don't know what is."
Lab
Popular Program
ACT NO,W
OFFER
,,'l
:.
.' '.l
,. ..... 1. -..,
LIMITED
.• BLANKET GUARANT~i:D
2 YEARS.'
It's a high-quality blanket similar to
those enjoyed by thousands of satisfied
customers. It's made by the largest
manufacturer of electric blankets and
is approved by "Underwriters' Labora
,tories, Inc. Comes in the popular rose color in full size soit may be on either double single ·bed.
\. ',.'
or
used
"
:;
BUY FROM ANY DEALER ANY'
"FREE ELECT,R'C '~£ANI(ET W'.TH
MAKE DRYER LISTED BELOW AND ,WE'll' DELIVER YOUR
A NE.W "AUTOMA TIC ELECTRIC 'CLOTHES DR'YER BOUGHT' AN'D ,INSTALLED ON 'OUR 'LINESD'URING THIS' 'SPECIAL OFfER!
I'
'.
FREE ELECTRIC BLANKETI o
,Your' new dryer or' contbinationwasher.dryer will bring, " . you a world of new:,comfort and convenience.You'll dry, ,your clothes safely, indoors, any time" any 'day, the' easy. electric way. No more waiting for drying weather. No-more ...~~png~"stooping, .~tretchi'ng, clothesp~n, p~shin~. In faet,·,· no more hard W9rk. See your dealer. no.w. Aslt hIm, to s~ow you.~ ~h1." . . ", ~. ~: ,t .•
~~~t'~~:~~~~~s~~h~~~~~~r~~" ';':,~'\: I.. :,,',
the··sbpernatural. '.we m~y, with~ eUt'own'eftorts. and dOd's grace.";'
Child Is Loser
"'J'!,-:;:;;"
:'"'",, """"," :"V;,i'
.
,
,',',' :, ~."'; \
.,I i : . l ;.-
: 1'
::.
": ; .•
.'
~
;,:'
Easy
Frig'idaire
General Electric
"Hotpoint Kelyinator '. Maytag. ': RCA -eWh;;lpoOl Westingh()use' . '." . .. :" '. ' ~
-:'
·,:'~, . . FA~L'~:"R·I-VER,EL.ECtRIC:·,:LIG.Hi":co~:· ....
.r,
'-.1, ,":',i" 'l';l'I,,:,;;.r-.
~~.~
,'t,l)
:-!.•.•,.
~(". ".:'1",' ·'!!I .. ·ni"
~"I'"';-
~'" .~ 'I,:' ....· •
~.,,;
.-{
:
~'~
\'
:." "," ..: , '
.., ',I'. :;""h'
'>
",'.'
''';,'J " ..
· . : : i ....
. ,.". ;:'.-
_I.
~~
"'.. "".,,
".1"",
2.·
.,.,:,' .:.:' ;",,:'
....~.,. ..;M, .... J..
',~'''''''''~'' ,.
~i
)"..' ••.,
'~:":+ ,l"~ :,.:·l.,j,.:.. :: ..
'.I~f:~J ,f'~'.).:<j· F~~~'
~ ~.
; . . . . ,"
:
-:.,.: '.
;1~.1.,;.'~~'J·
'il:,.:·- .•.
~'i.:
.•• J
I.
-At. o.r l'teUse .,","
",'"
"
8
'1'": '. .: "Th~rs;,O~Ct.24, l!' '.' . . THE:ANCHO:
:.~.~'. "(. ....
.f)~r ..to..Door . ColI~cting' Pr9ve~ Fin~ Experience fcit Writer .
.
.
1·
I
....
·Sist~rs 'Qf .Mercy, to ,Cond~t ·Regional' Educational Conference
..............
~
Approximately 800 Sisters of Mercy teaching in the. Province' of Providence will assemble Fri
By Mary Tjnl~y Daly ". '. . day,.Nov. 1, at Saint Mary Acad This is thetim~ of. year when thousands·of volunt~er
emY,Bay View, Riverside, R. I., workers, like 'the author of utl!is ·col.umn and many· of ~ts · for their Regional Mercy Edu readers take to the asphalt as collectors for theCotnmumty cational Conference. ~ '.Chest, United Givers Fund : - or whatever it's called where The aim and theme of this
you live. ' . and. just by chance, we happened
conference is Sanctification,
Ingrained in our con~ to have pictures of our own four.
Education and Unification. Sim
science is the respons~bility.. She h~d a wonderful pattern for
ilar Regional Mercy Educational
Conferences are held annually
of' taking part, to the best knitting a Christmas stocking,
all over the United states in the
of our ability, in' helping 'the one you can knit ·the child's
nine proviilces of the Religious
community care for its' needy.' name into. It's, a honey!
Siflters of Mercy of the Union.
For many' of Then we got to talking about
us, "the best Of the children who don't have
The program will begin at'
our ability" is grandparents-some of the chi.ld-
9:30··A. M. with, the celebration
simply doorren in whose behalf we had been
·of the Holy Sacrifice·of the Mass
bell r i Ii gin g collecting-and we reali.zed· that'
'in the' academy auditorium. At
and asking for we'd overstayed our time.
10:30 A. M, the Mother Provin' SISTER CARMELA, R.S.M.
con t rib uThirty-eight. mor.c possible, . . cial, Mother Mary Catherine friends? Eagerly we climbed the FIRST YISIT: Super!or Durkin, R.S.M., will extend her St. Xavier Academy, Providence,. · tions -,- prob-· ably the humth.ir<j. flight of .steps. This 'was a. <{eneralof the Congregation greetings to' the assembled'Sis. as discussion leader. blest in ~he family whose chil~ren had'gone •. of Our Lady of the Retr,eat tets. This will be followed by
Sister Carmela has completed
social. serVice to. grade school WIth .our ~h~~e ,iii the Cenacle, Mother Clare the general session. tasks. Good-. MIddles. As for UGF,.t.hey. gIve d'.' k' h . , Departmentai meetings will be a term as national secreta'ry of
" k now s "W?I, at the office" but wanted to make Cor onmer, IS .ma mg er the Sisters of Mercy Education ,held at" 1:30 P. M. until 4 P. M. ~:S' ~e' not an additional home contributi~n. first visit to the U:-S. fro.m These, groups include: 'College, .Conference," all provinces, which equipped to sit . ·.Ple~sant and. .Natu.ral.. : . . her 'Motherhouse.' m ParIS. ,Department, Secondary Schools, meets annually in Easter week, on policy-making 'boards, but So it went. After the 1DIbal The' Congregation' conducts. and the Elementary School Divi simultaneously with the National Catholic Educational Association we do have good feet! . . jolt, it w,as in general. ple!lsant. retreat houses for. women. sion.- At 4:15 P. M. the final gen And so .. , ,when one III the and natural, though It was a . " eral meeting will be held in the 'in various parts of the country. higher echelons asked, wha~ many-evening assig~ment,. of NC Photo. academy auditorium when the. · could we say but, "Yes, gladly! course. People were not home or M f ld Women reports of the various workshops . A fool-proof package was de:- were entertaining' gues~&:-hence. ans Ie will be given. Bemidiction of the' livered arid .~~ spent the fir~t.· a call-back. And th~ paper-'Y~rk Sponsor ,Supper . . Most Blessed Sacrament will 'evening, studymg the multi-. 'after each excurSiOn - m.akmg A spaghetti, supper will be dose the day's program. & pamphlete'd assignment: Go up the figures balance against the ed in St Mary's Hall Mans , Sister Mary Carmela, R.S.M., Incorporated .. this street and down that, both actual cash~ It should, and' did, ~7:~ at· 6:'30 tonight 'by the. prin" of Mount St'. ·Mary· sides of tli.e next one, aro,und eventuallY.:. '. Man~field Catholic Woman's Academy, Fall River, is chair FUNERAL SERVICE' the corner and another blockThere ~as the stray .cat wh~ch Club for the .benefit of the Rose man and secretary of the Sec-' 40 hOl!ses in all. accompamed us· oneevemng Hawthorne Cancer Hospital ,in ondary School Division. The' Serving Central Cope "You'll be asked ma~y. ques: from door. to d?or,: the ~V pro-. Fall R·iver. . .' program for that department is tions" one of. the headlmes ad gram we saw I~l takes as we Mrs. Elvira Brogna, chairman, as follows: Tel. 684 Hyannis~ Mass. vised. Like. a fifth grader ~~arn- visited. house .afte; .house; the ~ill . be assisted by Mrs. Olivia Secondary Schools ing a catechism l~sson (Sup- roller skate WhIch~hterally threw Carbonetti, Mrs. Assunta Fron
Address on "Scholarship: Ac
pose a non-Catholic should ask us; the sUd~en show~r when one gillo, Mrs. Victoria Linari, Mrs. . .. tivating Spirit in· the Dedicated
you . . .?") we s.um~oned ~p of our contrIbutors drove us:back Mary DeGirolamo, Mrs. Rose N. every memory gimI)'llck ",:,e d. !o our car; the open-hearted·tellSarro, Mrs. "Josephine Todesco, Teacher," by Professor James J.'
Gribbin, Ph.D., of' New York
ever known an.d learned the 140 mg of why there would, be no 'Mrs.' Prita 'Shea and Mrs. Rosa Truck Body Builders University, formerly of Fordham
agencies, their .names and func-. contribution. '.' .. ' ~ ..,GeminianL . Aluminum or Steel
University. Sister Mary' Car-:
tions. At the .40th hou~e, we dIdn t A clqthing demo.nstration will . 944 County St.
Theory to Practice heave a SIgh of relief. We were be conducted in the ·hall Tues- melita, R.S.M., M.Ed., of, Holy Then the transition from kind of sorry "it was over. day; Nov~I2, by. Mrs. :Mary Pa'- Family High School, New ·Bed NEW BEDFORD, MASS.
'theory'to practice. Armed with And then on an inward dare, 'lanza: and .Mrs. Angie Turinese. • ford, will be recorder, at this WY 2-6618 literature, we d~ove to a' handy we approached Mr. and Mrs. The annual turkey whist will be session.. Workshop . on "Catholic Phil -corner, par~'ed and took one last First House. Instead ~f the self- held Tuesday, Nov. 19.' I osophy: Essential for a ScholarlY look at the theory. Forty houses, conscious SMILE, we just held . Speaker 'at the October meet 40 .different families, most of up the credentials as the porch' ing was :probate Cour.t Judge Mpde of Life," with Sister Mary them strangers ... An inferiorlight shone and the door was. Beatrice . Hancock Mullaney, 'Olga, R.~.M., M.S., superior at ity complex burst into full opened .a crack: "Came' to give 'whose" subject was "Divorce, Mount St.·Mary Convent, as dis cussion leader and Sister Mary· bloom, hands grew clammy" you the receipt for your dollar," One of'rodaY's.Problems." Dionysia; R.S.M., B.A., as re knees wobbly ~ Making the sign we said, "And to see if. you want .Club officers' are Mrs. Mary . of the 'cross, we ascended the. to give continued support. O.K.?" Lovely, president; Mrs. Beatrice corder. Workshop 1>0 "Basis of Schol . first flight of ·steps, drew a long It was O.K.. Jackson, . vice president; Miss arship: An Enriched Reading breath, rang the doorbell· and Rose Vasanelli, recording secre': adjusted THE SMILE. New' Bedford Nun tary; Mrs. Honora Clemmey, cor~ Program,'" with Sister Mary Urban; R.S.M., M.S.L.S., of St. "Good evening!" we grinned . responding secretary, and Mrs. Mary Academy, Riverside, R. I. as the porch light fiashed on and On' League' ·Board Alice Armstrong treasurer. the door was opened a slit. as discussion leader. . "Yes?" a teiHlsled man holding 0 Sister Mary Virginia, R.S.M., Attleboro Women NEW BEDFORD Workshop on "The Place of the evening paper in one hand principal of .Holy .Family High Guidance in the Development of Anthracite & Bituminous peeked suspiciously through the School in New Bedford, has an n ge arty . Scholarly Attitudes" with Sister crack. His wife, watching TV- in- been named to the executive The annual Fall bridge will be I Mary Marjorie, RS.M., M.A., of' side, yelled, "Hey, Joe; who- board of the National Catholic held Tuesday night, Oct. 29 by ever it is, we don't want any." Forensic League. The league the Attleboro Catholic Women's A collector with savoir-fa.ire directs ,its efforts to;ward the for Club in the Kniphts of Columbus Automatic Coal Stokers would have made capital' out of . mation ofo articulate Catholic Hall, Hodges Street. Mrs. William Bag Coal' - Wood this remark. This collector just leaders. ' Perry will act as hostess. Mem .Charcoal gulped, apologiz~d for "intruding Debates and. pubiic speaking bers are urged to contact Mrs. on their leisure and in one rush contests are 'conducte.d in .Catho Perry 'or Mrs. Leonie Flaherty gave the rehearsed pitch: "I'm lic secondary schools throughout· for, ~eservations. from the United Givers Fund the nation. by the league. The For Complete and wonder if ,anyone here league spo,nsors a grand tourna.
would like to ·make.a contribu- ment each May to reward studD~. Laundry S~r..,iee tion or make a pledge of· help?." ents displaying an outstanding Inc.
Inadequate Volunteer ability in speech and debate. The 1668 Pleasant St. "O.K, lady,". the tousled one awards' are in the form of sCholM'O V. ER S 640 PLEASANT ST. said, taking a dollar bill from the, arships to Catholic colleges and SERVING Fall River OS 9-6497 pocket of his slacks. "Here y'are. universities. .. Fall River, New Bedford WY 6-8271-28-3 Whatever you'~e collecting for, Cape Cod Area it's probably all right." Agent.. . Bang went the doo~ISta~din: AERO MAYFLOWER : "'................................. ..
before that irrevoca y c ose . TRANSIT CO. INC. -, , door, the bravely conjured up , , smile faded, the hand holding Nation-wide Movers : : the pledge card, the "Ten Ques.. WYman 3-0904 ' , tions Answered" leaflet and the 304 Kempton St. New Bedford : : "We Gave" window .sticker, ' ' . _ ,
I,
DOANE, BEAL AMES'
'I
SEGUIN
• •
0
DAVID DUFF
AND ·SON
B ;d
PI
P
.
COAl
.Pf€IE!R/LfESS LAUNflJR:Y
HEATING OILS •
A'-
McMULlEN.
,
0
DADSON
OIL BURNERS
ATWO,OD.·
1
OIL COMPANY
began to shake. What a woefully inadequate vo,lunteer the p 0 9 r UGF was stuck with. . . Thirty-nine more such expeI:iences? Going down' tho'se, t;l~rk . front steps (the porc;h light had been flicked off) somehow the. gelatin in the knees disappeared
:e"r:~~~~~r:~s~~::~~~e~or:;::~
SHE L L KEATI 1"'....' G _ , . O I L S :lIII .
. : JOB TOO BIG .: NONE TOO 'SMALL ,
Sea Sts. Tel.. HY
81
S'ULL'I'V'AN..BROS ..
::~ ~;.t badly. ~ett~r IU,ck next ~ :' EDDI.ES,. , I:'~>. ".. .. ;,:" ·.::SUP,ER MARKET:" ex'.. .'.~ . ,
'tti~e:I~;~.~I:~e::~.! .~~.i.gh .•~~S iJ:l.
.
~ ~ ~,,:··.PRlrfrERS·
;;.............. ,;. ......,..... ;;. .. .... ..
, "Good evening/"'Ye said s a n s , · ' exaggerated smile at the next house,."As you See·by this," ~.. · , tending the literature, "rve been •
t
,.East Taunt~~!~.
:
:
,
J~()
• South Hyannis
:,
•
.;
•
. .'LOWELL, MASS.,.·
:-'T.leoh~n.Lo~~U
.
,Gt,.U3,33 "i.GL 7.7500
. :'
:
.1<'
i·::-t"· ~ic.. .nci "I.~f:
.
':~. ' O'
A~ilia,y';P;""'"
,
:Called For and D e l i v e r e d :
;-:: 6 :TI·MES DAI·LY IN' FALL RIVER ' : :' Once~A.Day in Somerset :and Swansea at 4:30 ·P.¥~I" : ~ .. '.
:
.,
Sped"fAttention Given. T . '. 0 Emergency Prescriptions .. . .', . , '.'
~ .... ,A ' i~~A ~~ . 'A,-
S"rgicaf Applia,nce'
'Ol;C.t~y~·i:id~~:tl[~~~~t;i~~~ {.- ·.:·Food~·.S~9Pp~ri·gf; l'BOS'T~N :;',,!~t~:, .... . ; ~~I~:;.Y ,.. ~a~m~.· ~" ...,":--:'" .
•, "
OCEANPOR:r(i;N~"~
';
': .':'
,... : ..': :"
"'." "'ea.~i~9 .Aid. (~. Atihur· .J.' ._IMcIi.'f9P....: ·
': :i' .:. .,'.., ,, ,
~~>::-:-; :".
;"
, .. ~: ;"'" . -:., >:. : '. .
.:,~..,_~:":', ':=~llh~tCO~ib;~~~: ;~~:;~.' 0:.',: ". CE~tER~' ,.~ PAWTueKEr~' Lt.' ,.' . .··:';jf:Z '-:;'~~.~~= .~ 1~~~:.:~,~.~,~~~,~ .. ~~ ..~~,~,....,! ~.,'''--~ :.· .• '-!_~,~., ,i.j\ .;:' \.:'~?".:,.)f,.:j,' ;·: ..,,~l~~~~~,~r~~,~~;~~~~~~,i;~;·.:~~~~~~~!!~~~~!:;~~·.:-~~ 'L:;. 1-:":'C:.::"':'l .,>-•. ~,:..:. .r-........~ ~.~:t.', ]. '\<';~"1' ~_: _.l,,,.~~~-.:',!'JT~~ ..,.,"'
.. ::i:;:..:., ••
.
i";...... /.::.67..
..'),., .••
••
..;'. ".'::'-..::.,C".s.'.>','..;." .:'; ••
.. ',.:;!;-- .•':"}.,., ::""'.• ,.
,-';':
••'
'-'.
..
!i"-------.. . .
.-- < (
r
THE ANCHO,.R, ~ , Thurs., Oct, 24, ~ 957
Women ,of.,Attlebo,ro "District P,lan. You~h l-Iou'ratLaSalette .'.
,.'9
since 1953. She is a gradl,late of Trinity College, and did gradu ate study at Harvard, Columbia, A Catholic Youth ,Hour, .spon.. -: Mrs.' Fred Endler, Catholic and Catholic University, from IlOred by the Youth Committee Women's Club; Mrs. Alfred Mc which she holds a master's de of District Four, National Coun Nally, Daughters, of Isabella; gree. She is secretary of the cil of Catholic Women of the Fall Mrs. Armand Penault, Jeanne New England Regional Unit of ~iver Diocese, will be held at the D'arc; Mrs. John Lee, St. John's the National Catholic Educa Shrine of Our Lady of LaSalette, Mothers' Club; and Miss Lucille' tional Association. ~tUeboro, at 7 o'clock next Pareseau of St. Joseph's Children In the fall of 1956 Sister wall Wednesday night in observance of Mary; Sister Mary Joan of one of 25 secondary school rep Qf National Catholic Youth Holy Ghost School; Seekonk resentatives invited by the Col Week, Oct. 27 through Nov. 2. Mrs. Sewall- Pattengall of St. lege E: t ran c e Examination Mary's Parish. Board to 'participate in the Col The event will be the first in Dodgeville - Mrs. Raymond loquium on College Admissiorul the two-year program scheduled Pellitier, St. Stephen's; South held at Arden House, Harriman, by the Youth Committee to en N. Y., in, joint session with the courage participation in parish Attleboro-Mrs: Celia Major, St. representatives from 50 member CathoHc Youth Organizations. Teresa's; North Attleboro-Mrs. 'colleges for men and women. District Four includes parishes Ralph Patunoff, Sacred Heart; The Archbishop Williams in Attleboro, North Attlebro, Miss Ann Murphy, St. Mary's; Mrs. Helen Mullin, Catholic High School is staffed by the Mansfield and Norton.. Women's Club; Mrs. Frances Sisters of Charity of Nazareth. Miss Shirley M. Givens of Reilly, D~ughters of Isabe~; It 'is .one of several regional Attleboro, Youth Chairman of Mansfield - Mrs. John Coyle, Catholic High Schools sponsored the 'District, announced the,' CathoHc 'Women's Club.; Norton by Archbishop Cushing's educa Youth Hour. She wil) be assisted - Mrs. Margaret C. Bernier, tional ,program. Its applicati9D CATHOLIC YOUTH WEEK NOW: Robert Bennie -of for ;ldmissioD to the New Eng
In the' program by the.follo~ Mrs. Winifred Simmons aDd Anna Shea. parish representatives: Attleboro , Washington, looks at his picture on the riationalpostet for lahd .~ciation of College,s aocI
,Catholic Youth Week with Msgr. Joseph E. Schieder, Di-'. ,Secondary Schools is a step for
ward in its educational develop
,Bishop Is Guest ',.reCtor, Youth Department, Nati<mal Catholic Welfare Con The Academy of the At Somerset Tea ference. Catholic Youth Week opens next Sunday, the ment. Sacred Hearts has been an ap Members of the Somerset Feast of Christ the King. It is national Communion Sunday proved member of this' Associa, ,tion since 1941. It was re-evalu Rt. Rev. Msgr. Timothy 1'. Catholic " Woman's ,Club were for all Catholic youth of the country. NC Photo. O'Leary, Ph.D., Boston Arch- hOllered with the presence of ated for continued membership diocesan supervisor of schools, Most J:{ev. James L. ConnOlly as in February, 1957. ,will be prIncipal speaker a~the guest at their annual acquaint biennial College' Day of Massa- ance tea held Sunday afternoon. U. S. Servicewomen chusetts Chapter, International His Excellency was greeted by Affiliate with Federation of Catholic Alumnae: Rev. Patrick J. O'Neil, clul;»
WASHINGTON (NC) - Sl
at 2 o'Clock Saturday afternoon 'moderator, and personally intro- . Sist~r John Elizabetp., susq, consideration by this Central Ann's Sodality in Izmir, Turkey, duced to each member present. principal at the Academy of the . Committee, their recomenda Othe,r ··guests in attendance Sacred Hearts, Fall River, was tionsare sent to the General As • t Regis College, Westo~. is the 41st group of American Colleges affiliated' with the, sociation for final action at the' servicewomen and service wives State chapter include Anna, included Rev. Joseph K. Welsh, invited 'recently by the New in Europe to affiliate- with the Maria, Paxton;, Archbishop pastor of St. Thomas More England Association of Colleges annual meeting in December. and Secondary Schools to serve six-month-old Military Council Prominent Edueat~r Cushing, Brookline; Emmanuel, Church, Somerset; Mrs. 'Freder Fenway; Our Lady of the Elms, ick Tuttle, Pre,sident of District, on the Inspection Committee Sister John 'Elizabeth has of Catholic Women and the Chicopee; Newl9n College of the I. Diocesan Council of Catholic which visited the Archbishop been principal at ttte Academy National Council of Catholic Williams High School in Brain"; W'omen. Sacred Heart and Regis. Repre.' Wom~n. and fMtrs· Gilbert Low tree, Mass. ~ The sodality, established in h ' f th II '11 ey, regent 0 e St Patrick's sen t a t Ives 0 ese co eges W1 C' I D ht f Isabella Mr. George S. Miller, Director April 1956, now has 25.members, ~ p e a k , ' Ire e, ,aug ers 0 " , of the Evaluation Program: for who have developed a program . Miss Kathleen M. Birming";", Some~set. Independent Secondary Schools, of religioUs instruction and s0 ham, Ret;is' ,alu,lTu:t.a " heads ~e' 'Mrs. Souza Chairman in response to a request from Rt. cial activities for youngsters in committee, which mcludes Mlss Rev. Msgr. Timothy F. O'Leary, the . American military com Josephine O'Farrell, governor; 'ew e or u Superintendent of Schools, Arch munity in Izmir. Miss Julia McAn'drew,past govThe following officers have diocese of Boston, appointed' 'ernor; the Misses Marguerite been elected for the year by the this Committee to carryon the Hem, Eleanor Flanigan and Mil- Coy.le Mothers Club of New inspection necessary to deter dred Bowman; and presidents Bedford: ' When'it's time mine the school's ,eligibility for from affiliated high schools and' Mrs. George Souza, chairman; membership in the Independent to retire • • • Buy academies. ' Mrs. Antone ·Rezendes, coSchools Division of the New The program will include c~airrrian;. Mrs. Zephyr D. Pa , England Association of Colleges Benediction in the convent quin, secretary. A treasurer will and Secondary Schools. chapel with Msgr, O'Leary as' " be, elected(;at th.e next meeting., . The five member committee, celebrant, a tour of the campus, , , The group WIll hold a cake, under the chaii'manship of Mr. Bnd a tea hour. : sale at the Star, Store Thursday, James W. Wickenden, Head ',Nov. 7. Next meeting will be , niaster of Tabor Academy, in held Monday night at the home cluded besides Sister John Eliz River Club of Mrs. William J. Trought, 28 abeth, Rev. Joseph D. Fitzger Planning Supper Calumet Street. All mothers of ald" S.J., Fairfield School; Mrs. SISTER JOHN ELIZABETH The Sucordium Club of the Coyle students and of Coyle Livingston Hall, Headmistress Sacred Hearts Academy of Fall graduates are invited • of Concord Academy for Girls; River will hold a mother and and'Mr. John C. Boyden, admis daughter harvest bean supper the affair assisted by the follow sions Officer, Deerfield Acad ing ',club members: Miss Nose ond parcel post salE; at 6 next HARDWARE
emy. The committee spent Machado, Mrs. John C. Corrigan, Saturday in the cafeteria of the Monday and Tuesday visiting GARDEN ACCESSORIES
Mrs. John M. Welch, Miss Helen Sacred Heart School on Pine classes and conferring with Street. Mrs. David W. Boland is, E. Crotty, Mrs. Frederick H. teachers and students. The re Dagata, Miss Helen M. Shea, DEJ~SUS in charge of arrangements for ,276 Central St., Fall RiveI!' port of their findings is sent to the supper. The committee for Mrs. Joseph T. Sullivan, alld Mrs. 766 COUNTY STREET ' Joseph T. Canniff. the Central Committee of which the parcel post sale is headed by NEW BEDFORD OSborne 6-8279 Mr. Boyden is ,chairman.. After Pourers will be Mrs. James E. Mrs. George E. Duffy. Members WY 3-4497 Sullivan Jr and Miss Alice C. of the executive board ami room Harrington, past presidents. In mothers are assisting in prepara strumental music will be pro tions for the affair. vided by a trio from B.M.C. Dur fee High School. .
.
.
',.
Mea.
Catholic Alumnae Meet Saturday
Sacred Hearts Academy Principal Named to Evaluation Committee
Of N
NCtW
B df d CI b
FISK
Fall
CENTRAL PAINTS
O'NEIL fISK TIRE
GUS
Fall River
Wom~n's
Club Tea Sunday The Catholic Woman's Club of Fall River will hold its annual tea and reception for new mem bers from 3 to 5 o'clock next Sunday afternoon in the club house on Highland Avenue. Mrs. John J. Crawford Jr. and' Mrs. William A. Healey are co chairmen of the cOmlnittee for
BROOKLAWN
,PHARMACY
Joseph A. Charpentier Reg.,Phar~.
1902 ACUSHNET AVE•. NEW BEDFORJ). ..
TEL. Wr 6-0772
,
PRES~RIPT.IO,NS,
c-o t
M. D. KENNEDY
Window Company
E IS
Stainless Steel Track Window
Ornamental Iron
Chain Link Fences
'Electrical Shop
1533 Acushnet Ave.
New Bedford WY 4-1332
Home Tel. WY 9-6505
1726 ACUSHNET AVE.
NEW BEDFORD
E.1~ctrical Contractors.
HATHAWAY
OIL (0., INC.
THE
,'SQUARE PHARMACY , PRESCRIPTIONS M~DI~AL, SUPP,LlES . T~Qs. 'P. Selleck, Reg. P~. , 1 'ST. MARr'S SQUARE TAUNTON' : VA 3-3300'
--
---
=======
_
.WYman 5-7555
- ,-
dE': < . .
~S;lqt;£
£/.,4,
'NEW BEDFORD
MASSACHUSETTS
October is Anniversary
Month at the Star, Store
NEW BEDFORD
Watch 'for'New
:,',."!
StoruehiU C@~~ege, ~c fElf.e~t
New
$hJj~el1i)fr UBlD@!J11 e<e~t~lf
Ground was broken Tuesday for $25,000 Student Union Center at Stonehill College-the third new building to grace the ' beautiful 588-acre campus within 10 years. Another step' forward in Stonehill's extensive develop• ment program, the new building follows the college style of Georgian architecture.
and celebrities from home and abroad, The Fathers of Holy Cross Notre Dame, Indiana, acquired the estate with its airport, three large ponds and meander ing brook in 1~35. Th ey used 1·t first exc1USlve · 1y as a semmary . . t 0 t ram 1 It was no t un t'l · pnests. . 1948 that they turned it into· a . d uca t'IOna1 co11ege t ramm
'. . g co-e students in liberal arts, science . StudentL and faculty witnessed and business. the early afternoon ground:- . What was the Ames' mansion breaking as the Rev. .Tames J.' serves as the ~ollege administraSheehan, C.S.C" president of the tion building, housing library, college, turned over the f i r sand treceptIon . Chapel, offices, shovelful of earth. rooms. The Holy Cross Fathers The Student Union Center· built a well-'equipped science includes a .kitchen, dining halls buifding and a classroom buildfor both stUdents and faculty, ing, the latter opened just this book store, students' lounge, rec- year. A la.:ge building which reation 'rooms, conference rooms once housed an indoor .. swimand offices' for student organiza- ming po'ol was converted into a tions. The kitchen will be a gymnasium and stjldent recrea• . $100,000 delight to culinary ex- tion center. WHITE MASS AT ST. ANNE'S HOSPITAL: Physi· perts, the last word in electronic Seven more buildings are cians, pharmacists, and nurses attended the second a')nual efficiency. From this center. of planned: another cla~sroom White Mass at St. Anne's Hospital, ..Fall River. BIshop stainless steel, ceramics and .bUllding, Chapel, F~rary. audi· Connoil (center) officiated. Dr, Francis J. D'Errico, presi~.. electrical. living, more than 500' totium and dormitories. Stone- ,dent of St.' Luke's Guild, issho'wniwith the Bishop and .R.ev.': tiot mea~s ,will· be turned ·outhill l1as' 450 studerits. The Holy d h each day for students. faculty' Cross Fathers also 'operateNotre ' ·Edward·H. Howland's:r, who I?r~~ch.e t e sermon.
a
y
Colleg~,
and .college was staff. . the beauti-: .Dame, ·Ind·:;· Pa.; ·King's'. Stonehill once Wilkes Barre. .University of ful estate of the late Frederick' Portland, Ore.; "'a'nd others iIi Lothrop Ames, mecca .for thou.s.Sou,th Ameiica,' Canada and ands .of d,j,stinguished s.Qcialites .' India:. . ...'
J'
e:s'·u.Ot Speaker qt, ·W·h.•Ote Mas.s
Prelate Scores Red' C~B!l1a Bid For QJJN Se«fJt BOSTON (NC) _ Catn.
olics in China are being sub J'ected to "a new, subtle and
and serious form of persecu tion," Archbishop Richard J. Cushing of Boston told 1,200
guests at a Chinese-American
Friendship dinner here.
"They need our prayers," the
Archbishop said, "and they need
our help." He' emphasized the
need for resistance to ."voices in
this .country and the rest of. the
free world .which would give d
Red China respectability an
stability."
These voices, he continued,
advocate jncreased trade with
the Peking regime, American
recognition of Mao Tse-tung's
government, and admission of
Red China' to the United Na • tions, with a seat on the Security
Council.,·· "The full fury of the atheistie' assault, and the application of every. tQrtux:e·device,. have been used' upon Catholics in ,China.... he. said.· ..It has run all the way.. mr' f 1'h()u
c
chthe.b·ydiSchrUegdeitincgam.Opfal'gt~!.....
God. Practicing medicine .in the charging it ~ith .peing the in-:
C th l' k the 0 strument of the imperialists, to
that the soul as well as the body . a 0 lC manner rna es pro . the demand fo'r a 'purely. Chl.'-,·
. f· t" th t n lead .
must be treated if complete eSSlOn avoca IOn· a ca ; nese church' divorced in th~
cures are to be effected, Rev. not only. to. health..but also to . . .' , , Edward H. Nowiand ·S.J.·said' 'ology as,. o,rg.aniz;ltiOil . .,... .'...... ," . , . , ",. .' from. the Universal Church." : I ""C' . ' i Q ',' ' his sermoh at the White Mass" . In:.. brief remarks after the ... QY Most L.... Mass' Bishop Connolly' com': Prloeis'.t'·':, :Ye''o"'r's. , . .... .". ". Connolly in the new. chapel at inen,i~d on Father N:owJand's. __ STEVENS' POINT (NC).:....l·Catholic· schools. in' thisS,i. Anne's' Hospital;'Fall, River, text,~~asking all to obtain their '. CALCUTTA. (NC)....::..A mulu..:
eountry 'J:lre a~monume~t 'to "seJfl:~acrificing generosity~.· Saturday' ·morning. .understanding of the treatment nation homage was .given\ to In-'
and to i:h~~h~ity arid injustic'e~ :Aqxil~ary.Bishop Jo~nJ. Krol'.· . '" of. the sick from St. Luke's Gos-. dia's oldes~ prelate, Jesuit:Arc~
Cleveland said" at' the dedicati<.>n of the new $700,000 ... In'' attendance was· 8· large peJ, .~rittenby·the confidante .o~. bishop Ferdin'and Perier·Of..Cal...·
. , . . . , •. t ' , 'gr6uP of physicians;' dentisfs, Mary, M,otller' of Christ., The.' cutta; on his 60th anniversary iii
Maria Ifigh ..Schoolhere,..in. , ,:".: .,... . ". " " :.... ....', "Sisters, n~rses" .ph~rmacists and' . Bishop a~ked 'tl:!:e congtel;f~tioll: tl1~J.esuit ~rder" .' , .
:. . . . . :. . .. Theta r.ead 8,t. Cfospel The occasion also the'
New ,Marla HIgh School- . . . , ~ ,. , " . '.. ..... . 'M'a'ss'··was in honor of St. Luk.e. to' ~crea!le the vir~ues of love,. 1 t ' 82 d bi t"'d 'He s'" 'd 'h 't .. th preaes n ru ay. wa
"'is anoth.·er mo.nu. ~e.J1t .to.,.th~ ...'..n·. .p'atrc)ll 'of' physicians., ... ,.cO~p~sslon ~n c an.y. Ill.,", e . born "in Antwerp', Belgium.'," and . .' . , . .. " . '.. practice of med.icin,e. ... right of parents to have. schools. : "";': . f .en~ered the Jestiit'order' .at th~ ... .., on d to th' ' 0 Father Nowland, . He exptessect to Mother p. ierre th,at corr~sp ,elr rer19l. h iprofessor t 'B t'0 age of 22 ous convictions, and to educate clinical psyc 0 ogy a' os on· Marie and the Sisters of the hos.' . their children in such schools," WASiUNGTON (NC) College Graduate School, pointed pital staff' the gratitude of all ;::::.===========~ B IS . has not abated out' that the body of man should attendl'ng' the Mass for making . Chez Lo'u,.sette · h op K . ro1 sal'd . The "need M . be considered not· from 8 am the. chapel available. "It is· a natural ~od..,given but rather increased," Balticheistic or Jansenistic viewpoint RELIGIOUS ARTICLES right. It is a constit!1tional right more's Archbishop Francis but as a cathedral, a house ofHonor for Two .which has repeatedly been de- P. Keough said in announcing h WASHIN.GTON (NC)~Dr. A. GIFTS. . .Jeanette LeBlanc Patnaude•• fended by decisions of the Su that the ninth annual Thanks at 0 IC lI110nlsts Earl Vivino, medical girector of. preme Court,". he stated, giving Clothing Campaign wi 11 ttl t . Prop. be conducted nationwide· from 0 e. GC e eers Georget9wn University Health 1871 ACUSHNET AVENUE' Double Taxation Nov. ,24 to 30 for the benefit of . NEW YORK (NC)-TwentyService, 'and' Msgr. 0 James ·A.· ~EW, BE.D,FO, R.D·'."., "It is Ii: monument to ·the self.:, the needy overseas. . . four cases seeking ·to . free .some . ;Mag~er, pro~urator of The C~thTh~ chairman of the Adminis-' 1~300 Negro, and. S p a n i s h - s p e a k - . . ..,; Tel. WY 6-43'96 sacrificing; generosity of parents whoinsis:f upon the exerc.ise of .trative Board of the National ing workers from racket. unions olle' University of America here, that rigl1t'. Unfort.unately, ,it is 'Cathalic Welfare Conference in have been instituted before the have bee~'lele~ted prel!i4'ent '~nd also a monument to the inequity a letter to members of the'hierNational Labor Relations Board·vice.presidentrespectively of the . -the inj~stice which prevails in 'archy th~oughout. the 'nation Dy-the Association of Catholic Distr~ct of Columbia College our coun~ry·" ". _ . pointed out that the collection Trade Unionists. Health Association. "All p.a~ents contribute by has had an annual average of Norman' C. DeWeaver, secre their taxes to the educational 10 million pounds of "good DAN DWYER
tary-treasure~ of the New York funds. Since they have the con- usable art~cles" for the needy. XMAS LAYAWAY AT chapter of ACTU, said: "The tac Funeral stitutional right to 'educate their ",Last' year," Archbishop . 'Home
tic of an NLRB election and/or children ~'in religious schools, Keough said, "the truly magni 127'CHESTNUT ST. they also,' have ..a. right to share . ficent figure of 16,592,833 pounds, strike. under the leadership of an honest local has pi-'oven the most in the educatiomil funds to which of clothes and blankets was NEW BEDFORD effective means of unseating a · they cont.1·ibute. It is an injustice sJ:1ipped to those in desperate IYour ,One Stop Shopping
racket locaL" . WY 4;3942 to coerce them into a system need throughout the world. Center for Religious Arti~les
which is tantamount to double "Surplus food products pro South of St: Anthony'. Church
taxation, of contributing to the vided by the generosity of the 1347 Acushnet Ave.
support of both public and' their United States Government have WY 6-0348 New Bedford
own private schools," the Bishop through this agency of the THE ALL NEW .CAR . :oaid. American Bishops been distrib - FOR 1958 uted to millions of destitute'· Bishop Krol outlined the people in Europe, Asia, Africa See and Drive It growth 9f the Catholic !lchool at system iiI the U.S. to the giant and South America. Our broth of today with nearly five million ers in the episcopate and their ". missionary priests plead' with us pupils in~ 13,000 schools, PL.UMBING & .HEATING to continue this'aid so gratefully 54-56 Court Street . 266 NORTH FRONT ST.
Sovereign Fact recejvedimd hopefully· ex Taunt~n, Mass. pected. With t~at record, "it seems al NEW BEDFORD
most incredible," he said, "that WYman 2-5400
the Catholi~s of our country, be e j L1NGUICA Electric Drain & Sewer
DINEAl sides paying ta~es, contribute Service CHOURICO an estimated $1,200,000,000 an • MORCELAS · nually to state and local govern At Grocers - Super Mar~ets ·ments. by voluntarily support DELIGHTFUL CUISINE OPEN SUNDAYS • ing the schools in which their Special Children Prices children are educated.' LISBON SAUSAGE CO. 386 ACUSHNIET AVE. 433 So. Second St. ,Near Union st. New Bedford Catholic parents accept the WY 3-7645 , For Res. WY 2-1703 sacrifice of a dual government and s~lf.,imposed taxation be cause . of the deep conviction , We're Proud to'Be Your EDSEL Dealer for that God, who is the sovereign fact in life, must of., necessity New Bedford' and Surrounding 'Towns' be the sovereign face in educa-. SEE'AND DRIVE THE . tion; that education cannot maintain a strict and lofty neu trality towards God; that such neutrality is inconceivable in theory and unattainable in prac tice; and that every a: tempt to 480· Union Street,. New Bedford , WY 9-6241 preserve such neutrality has .re Salesmen sulted, by default if not intent, MANUEL MONIZ Jlt JIM CARNEY in religious' indifferentism, sec BERNIE NISSON ARTHUUR TAVEIRA' ularism and in the final and to BEN BLACK tal impact of anti-religionism," . Dealers ARMAND TAVEIRA Bisho» Krol asserted.
, 'S ave' .. T·axpCl.yer. . S..· Catholic.' .. SC.hools. D II .. A" 1'1'" . Over.' B.•Olio' ,IC~i1.. 0 at$. .... n,.ua .,y': '"
Physicians .should .remember
Heaven.theJesuitFathe~said.
offert~d
Rev.J:a,m~s
~
~.ell;.,as ,.6'0.
of
Wiscon~1ri.
.
.~:
-:A~chbi·shopS'e.es:····lab~f~t~rYtechni~ians:
. . I' 'c"rease' ." d' 'e"e"· N d' For CIoth•.ng
Luk~'s
. ......"
oft~ri
rria~ked
. .
'C
I· U · ·
B
R k
].
The
IEL1F:
FRATES '. . GIFT SHOP
\
EDSEL
ALBERT Eo SMITH
so
I
~~~'"
e'
M.& K.
RESTAURANT
AMARALIS
1955:·':EDSELat
FURNAN:$'. AUTO CO·
MARAN DAIS
(.,.
.;
..,
Comfoif for
M@t~ors
Unbaptized'infants Enjoy Unalloyed Happiness By Joseph A. Breig A mother in Baltimore has asked me to write some thing to help her bear the' ,sorrow of having lost a baby before he,was baptized. Slnl--began by thanking me, as have other mothers, for the article about ,the Pope That would be an eternity of and for those whose bap great happiness, not to be com 'tized children have died. pared with sharing God's hap Then she added, "You piness forever. To understand have lost two children but you have the wonderful consolation of knowing your babies are in Heaven. Can you i mag i ne how you would have felt if oJ:\e of them had die d without baptism?", I can, more than imagine it. I have good reason to hope that our children were alive when baptized. But J have had, to live with the possibility that they weren't. Therefore I know the hurUn the heart of this mother. "I am heartbroken about 'it," she says. '1 am hoping you can write me 'a few words of comfort - an article about babies dying without baptism. There must be many other mothers who have had'this same experience' and feel as i do," ' ' There are' millions of such mothers, and' there is indeed comfort for. them',in the 1eaching of St. Thomas Aquinas. We must begin by grasping firmly the. difference between the natural and the supernatural; between human happiness, and the hal?piness ofcGod. Human.'.happi~ess'properly oe-; longs to p'uman nat~re, as such. Super-natl,tral happi,fles~ ,~ 'the' sharing in the divine happiness of the Blessed Trinity - does not. This is an inexpressiblC' gift which God gives out of His overfiowing 'goodness: Divine Happiness We cannot imagine this divine happiness. 'If som~ody died and came ba~k to try to tell us about it, he could not _ no more than we can I describe a Beethoven sympho~y to one who has' n~ver heard sqund. ' Even St. Paul could not tell us about it. He could only say, "Eye hath not seen, eaT hath not heard, Ileither hath it entered into the :mind of man what 'God has prepared for those who love Him." ; , This supernatural happiness is absolutely above and beyond anything~ 'of which we can' con ceive in ~ny way. We would not suspect that God wants us share it, had He not told us so. But there is another happiness -human happiness. And this is a great happiness, even though it is infinitely less than divine hap piness. St. Thomas teaches that un baptized infants suffer nothing nothing exterior or interior; neither pain nor sorrow nor sad ness nor regret nor anything of the kind. Therefore, if I understand St. Thomas rightly, infants who die without baptism live forever in an unalloyed natural human happiness. Perhaps God does
something further for them; we do not know. But they are happy. They are happy with a great
human happiness. St. Thomas says they are separated from God in the sense of not par ticipating in God's own glory, of which they know nothing; but in another sense they are not separated from Him, because they participate in na-
tural good which comes from and spea!<s of Him. Eternity of Happiness I think we;might put it this way: suppose that I lived forever on earth, knowing nothing of the possibility of a human be ing sharing God's own happi ness; knowing only what reason told me about God; but free, from pain and sorrow; free above all from sin or guilt; free to be as happy as human nature in itself is capable of being.
how much happiness it would be, ' we would need to' realize, far better than we do, how magni ficent human nature is; what a noble being is a man or wom an who knows no sin.
a
DIOCESAN COUNCIL AT MARTHA'S VINEYARD: Officers of the Diocesan Coun cil of Catholic Women held a two-day weekend conference with officers of Women's Guilds of three Island churches. Shown here are, left to right, Mrs. Maurice Healey of Sacred Heart, Oak ,Bluffs; Mrs. Edwin Bettencourt, St. Elizabeth's, E(lgartown; Rev. Gerald Shovelton, moderator; Mrs. Emmett Almond of So. 'Dartmouth, president of the Diocesan Council; Mrs. Francis Metell of St. Augustine's; Vineyard ;Haven.
Such is the happiness of the infant who dies unbaptized. Certainly we would be im mensely foolish if we left any stone unturned in the effort to see that 0\,11' babies are bap tized at the moment of birth, if ' necessary'; because the divine ~riest h,appiness is, beyon.d the power ,of th~ mind to conceive, bound WASHINGTON (NC)-Father Raymond A. McGo\yan, long l~s.sly grea~er tl1an natural huOfficers of the Fall River Diostressed. Announcement was active in Catholic;Social Action, maQ, ,happiness. ' , cesan Council of, the National made of the Catholic 'God-Home has been named to receive th'e But there is much comfort Council of Catholic Women held Country ~ward for 4-H club a two-day meeting with officers members. The award is pro , 1957 Peace Award of the Cath for' those 'who do lose unbap olic Association for International tized babies. And always we and members of three Women's vided by the National Catholic Peace. ' must rest our hearts at, peace Guilds on Martha's Vineyard Iiural Life Conference and pre Saturday and Sunday to explain sented by' a Catholic parish to a in God's infinite goodness. He The presentation will be made worthy 4-H club member. will"never fail to dry the tears the structure of the organization. Nov. 9 at' the annual meeting of of those who strive to serve him. Any member who has com the CAIP. : President Mrs. Emmett P. ,Al '", mond wal> accompaniec:l. by Miss pleted at least four years of sat Given annually since \!152, the isfactory 4-H club work and who Mary A. Cole, Diocesa'n chair award is presented to an Amer has a'commendable record of in man 'for youth; Miss Louise Fin ican whose achievements in the , nell, '. chairfl1l1~ spiritual ,de ' dividualand group activities in ' opinion of the CAIP have helped the club and in the work of the , .' ' """ velopment, and Vice President further the Christian' princ'iples ,Ao' , 'Mrs, Patrick Hurley who repre , 'church is~ligible for the, award, of justice'and charity in inte'tnaribbon"decoration.. i;ehtel:I 'Mrs. George Hurley, ,a medal ~~~ :'!' 'l' -, ',' 'tional life. ' SPOKANE (NC, - Ariappea\ chairman ,of disc~ssion clubs. ,Mi$ Finnell ~explained the' Father "McGowan, "a formei-' I for Catholic college graduates to ' 'Activities, during National ,purpose of the spiritual develop ,director of the Social Action' contribute' their' service for, ment committee andoffered,sug Department,. Naiiona'l' Catholic y,ear's teaching ,in diocesan 'Catholic YOuth Week for,health 'gestions to carry out the theme Welfare Conference; currently is schools was made here by Bishop ier, holier" and happier youth of the year, "To Know Christ serving jn San', Antonio, Tex. thro,u~hout the year ' were B~J;nard .t.' Topel of Spokane. " as' a Person." .' Born on June ~3, 1892~Father "Bishop, ,TQpel, in his sermon McG In has been connected during the ,Mass of the Holy, with the NCWC since its incep Ghost opening the academic year tion in 1920. EPHRATA (NC)~The growth The new scnool was completed at Holy Nl\qles College here, said: of Catholicism in this difficult ,last summer and is staffed by "Why should not a laywoman Bernardine Sisters of tlie Third enjoy the privilege-and it 'is area has been commended by Order of St. Francis.' The ma , exactly that, a privilege-of giv-, Bishop George L. Leech of Harrisburg. jority of the children in the ing a year of her life back to God, school are brought from rural teaching in a Catholic school, so "I never thought that I would districts. Parish school buses that a school may be opened ... live long enough to see the day travel 60 miles a day to pick up or so that Catholic children can when a Catholic school would be ' the children. receive a Catholic education who FLAT WORK'· would not' otherwi~ be able to , built'her~>;tlleBishop said as he ' do so?" " , de'dic~ted, the first parochial WET 'WASH
Pointing' out'thai graduat~sof "'s'chool in the to'Vri'.
DRY CLEANING some C<ith6liC" coileges in the Ephrata.is situated in Lancas 1066 COUNTY STREET U. S. are already teaching in for ter county and has a population ,Merchandise is arriving eign mission, schools, on a one NEW BEDFORD of about 7,000 persons, most of . year 'basis, Bishop Topel said, whom are Amish or Mennonites. While, Stocks are WY,7-9798 that the present need for teach When the Redemptorist Fathers .Complete, ers in this country would be first came to this territory in greatly a~leviated by graduates August 1914, there were only SELECT AND LAY-AWAY volunteering for parochial school five Catholic families. Now there work. ; are 322. "I am: convinced" he said 586 Pleasant Street "that' our parishes ~annot bea; co. the financial cost of employing New Bedford I ST. JUDE NOVENA I many more lay teachers, espe i EVERY THURSDAY ,AT cially if our economic condition 0 A.M. - 12:10 P.M. - 5:10 P.M. deteriorates." 7 P.M. - 8 P.M. r--In a reference to the tradi [ Broadcast WSAR-8:45 P.M. tional volunteer mission work DAILY MASSESdone by the Mormons and Je 7 A.M. - 8 A.M. - 10 A.M:. hovah Witnesses, Bis!:lOP Topel co., 12:10 P.M. INC. asked, u:. • • how much more CONFESSIONS - DAILY should fervent Catholics such as , 8:30 A.M. to "9 P.M. "For Your Protection you be willing ,to give one year 'Buy From S,T. ANTHONY NOVENA AND of your I life' to the service of , Every Tuesday at your Church, 'for the love of God 110 A.M. - 12:10'P.M. - 3 P.M. ,and, ,his ~other?'" 5:10 P.M. - 8 P.M. 132 Rockdale Ave. roadcast Tues.- WNB,H 10 344 Court St., New Bedford
New Bedford A.M. & WALE 7:30 P.M. Wed.-WSAR 7 P.M. . WY 5-7947 WY 2-3177
Catholic Peace Award For Texas
Officers of Diocesan Council Address Members ~t Vineyard
B'i'shop,." Requests'
Grad'uates Serve' "'S.: T""eac'h'ers
of,
a
Never'tho'ugh" I'd See the Day
North End
LAUNDRY
HO~IDAy-1
CUSHING'S
J. f. ST.' AUBIN
PERfECTION
OIL
PAINTERS
I
TAVARES
UPHOLSTERI NG ALL WORK CUSTOM MADE DAY - WY 2-2891 NIGHT':" wy 4-681~ 426 Belleville Avenue New Bedford
PERFECTION"
r
'I
o
For Further Information and Novena Booklets
Please Write to:
Our. Lady's Chapel
Attention Mechanics!
FRANCISCAN FATHERS
DQ You Work in a Factory, Garage, Machine Shop or Gasoline Station?
572 PLEASANT- STREET NEW BEDFORD, MASS.
We pick up and deliver, clear. and repair overalls..Also, we have a complete line of Coveralls, Pants and Shirts for sale. We reclaim and wash any oily, dirty or greasy rags. Why Buy When We Supply
, Complete Nell( Line , 01 ' . Religious Christmas Cards NAMES PRINTED or ENGRAVED , Select yours PlOW and, be certain'
!
-
FaURiver
-
.
NEW ENGLAND OVERALL & SUPPLY (0.
F. A. FOREST CO. 206 So. Main St.
DECORATORS
OS 3-2661' L
---"'
20 HOWARD AVE. hone W¥ 9-6424 eli' Wy, 9-6425
..J
' .. ~ Fa!,,~ ~lin~.
_,..
_,',
" ."
'"
\
,12 Jh~r,s.,Q~t:~;4,: .. THE,ANCHOR-I ~957 ,
·>····:Divorced:: ;Cat.lloli(;"~"'iM'~st:;~:,;-;;~,
··ReIY·o"God'i:'F~ie~~s~~~.:
,
By Rev. John L. Thomas, S.J.
AC(llde~y
,Plans ""DaalyPrograms
.
st. LouiS Unive'rsity
"
My wife and I were divorced six months ago after being ~married for nearly two years. She wasn't interested in hav ing a family and insisted'on holding her'job after marriage. O,ur pastor tried 'to help but got nowhere. I've just heard that she has remarried. Need Divine Help, ' Where does that leave me? How do you acquire this? In I'm 26 and have my whole t~e first p~ace, you.' have the .
hIghest motives both m term8 of ~ving your soul and gUarding ready discovered how difficult your' r,eace of mind. You 3.,ve' it is to live alone. What can I the firm con"iction that you are , clo now? ' ' livir.~ in friendship ,with God • • • and a('cording to Hh law. Secor.d, It won't be
you need divine help. God offers much consola-,
this to you through prayer and tion to you,
the sacraments. You would be jack, I' know,
a foolt~h if you thought you could b!1 t ; ev er y: year L:::."
handle this problemalone..Third, around 800,000,', ,~p
you must use common sense in menandwomen '
organizing your life: This 'means find themselves
that you will be lioilestwith In your predic yourself in' avoiding company ament because
with the opposite sex. You will fif ciivorce.AC-:-'
. be tempted to fool yourself here,', cording to reli ,but look at the eXpeJ.·;.'m<.e of able estimates,
tithers, It ,also ,means, th~t ,you the majority of lJlust find some activities which them eventually remarrY, as will be wor-th-while enough to your wife nas already ,done. If take up your time, energy and they were validly married in the interest. Some ,men find this in firs~ place, they.are not capable additional schooling, or by en of contracting another real mar gaging in charitable and religious riage during the lifetime of their actiyities which are' !!Ufficiently former cfartner, no matter what, important to require their best .that partner may do, As yOIl ~ffort. There is generally work well know, their attempt ~, 9' such nature to'be done if one' marry again is not a marriage has an eye for it. before God. 'They are living ,I agree '!Vith Yl,)u, Jack, this is together merely with state or .no easy program: Remember, civil permission. They cannot the stakes' are high-your own receive any saving grace through. :.elf-respect and peace of soul. the sacraments. They are l,ving The .civil 'law allows you to fol .t odds with God and with their low the crowd, but you must own consciences. always end :up' by living with y{'.~r own conscience-and with Facing Difficulties (;'(ld.
hfe ahead· of me. I've al
As a (;a'tholic, you reco~ni:r:e Ask~ Industry Help'l these facts, but as a normal adult male living in' modern SOCI.:.'ty, For Private Schools I CHICAGO (NC) _ Non-tax you are beginning to' realize that you face tremendous difficultie!ll. 8upporteli universities do 1m out There are many reasons why standing ,'service for the" com 'his is true. First, you' were munity,and iridustry should do trained 'and grew up with the its utmosl to support ·,them a: expectatiortthat marriage was business executive silid here.' to be your vocation in life. Your The need for industry to heip outlook, habits, education and ,private uniyersities finan<;ially . work were more or less closely was stressed by ,William. :,J. ~lated to this expectation.
Stebler, presjdent of the General Second, although your mar American Tr'ansportation Cor riage was apparently not a happy poration. He spoke at Loyola one, you did acquire some of the University's annual appeal 'to in dustry. ' habits and experiences no.rmally associated with married life. This Outlining the upiversity's im implies' that you now probably' portant i'ole in the Chicago com-, have a better- understanding of munity for the past 87 years, Mr: what a successful marriage could Stebler said universities like mean in your life. In this re Loyola"serve the community "by spect, your problem diff':!rs from educating the future industrial the normal unmarried male. executives and by helping to Third, most of the, strictly shape the intellectual, social and social activities in modern adul1 economic history of the area." Society are organized ar lund and SORRY! No Herdng Gn the basis of the couple or or Lobster Stew family. This means you will find BUT, you're sure to it difficult to participate in them Fall in Love with as a singl? person. '
PIZZA at the NEST HERRING RUN
Leads to Love Fourth, Jrequent association between a man and woman of marriageable age easily le'ais to mutual attraction and love. 'As a result, you cannot' safely trust' yourself to go on dates as an un married man could~ You may, argue that there's nothing wrong 'in dating a girl: only, once, but
the number Of available respect
able girls is limited, ar.d you
would soon find you we.re dating
the same girl more frequently,
Hence, we can only coilchide
that you are going to face frus
tration of your hopes for'mar
riage, added difficulty, in con
trollil)g your desire for affection
and sexual experience, and con
siderable restrictions on' YOllr
, social activities. How can a nor-"
: mal. man "handle this situation! :: Let ,us: be frank and realistic"',. !}You need herbie' virtue if you' are' !;i~ perse~e~~. ' . '<:/,:'" ,1",
Catholic Youth 'Week will be observed at Jesus Mary Acad.. emy, Fal,l River with daily pro,": grams in:,theauditorium; With the cooperation of Rev erend Mother St. Vincent de Paul, principal, anp, M. Marie Adalbert, sodality moderator, 'activities will, be conducted by leaders and secretaries of vari o,:,s student groups. Monday's program wHl in elude the reading of Father Gor man's proclamation by Annette Jusseaume. On Tuesday Pauline Gagnon wHl.deliver a'talk on the theme of the ,week. A'nnette Cousineau will point out in a talk on 'Wednesday the" benefits derived from the Com 'munion' Crusade as e~plained .by Archbishop: Cushing in his exhortation on daily Com- " ,', ",MERCYCREST" STAFF ME'OERS: ""Living and ,munion. Learning" is the for·the 1958 yearbook of Mount "A'·Youth's, PI'ay~r" 'will be' ~airit, Mary's Academy. :Senlors'wh'o are'rapidly completinlr presented by Claire Durand at ,plans for the "Mercycrest" are left to right: Carole Lena the. assembly Thursday. ''To - h a't S l' H ' " Become Christlike" will keynote g an,co-e I or;' y Vl~ oule;' co-editor; Carole Mattim0re. Georgette Nunes' 'talk Friday; '" editor-in-<:hief andAnn~ Marie Poisson, co-editor. SportS Chatter' , ' , Ra<!io programs will be' pre sente«;l on :WALE at 10:05 next Washington, Master of 'Novices Tuesday night and on WSAR at in Ireland and more rece~t1T the Saine time Wednesday' night. , Continued. From Page One attached to OW" Lady of Guada Parti~ipants will be Richard Val vincial for' a period covering 20, lupe parish in La Verne, Cali cOurt, and' Victor Delisle of years. At present he is Vice- fornia. Msgr.: Prevost High: Annette Provincial of the United States Father' Kellagher was born in Parent arid Lorraine St. George' Province. He has also served at Ballinamore, Co. Leitrim, Ire of Jesus Mary ·-!\cademy. Our Lady of Lourdes' parish, land,' and made all his Minor Jeanine Babin and Cecile Na Wellfleet, and Holy Trinity parand Major. ,Seminary studies in deau will be iriterviewed ,at 6:20 . ish, West Harwich. Belgium and France. In Belgium P. M. Saturday, Nov. 2,· oil Fath~r 'Moran was' bOrn, in he studied at the Sacred Hearts W A~. ., ' . Ballinamore, Co. Leitrim,' Ire": Fathers Seminary in Tremeloo. Pontifical Honors land. He made' all ,his ecclesiasThis seminary was erected next CHICAGO (NC) _ Samuel tical studies in Seminaries of the ,to the homE3 of Father Damien, Cardinal Stritch; Archbishop of 'Fathers of' the Sacred HeartS in' ,', the leper priest of Molokai. In Chicago, _presided here today' at Belgium and Holland and later' ,France ,he studied at the Catholic a con,vocation in observance of was a seminary' professor in', University, of Toulouse. pOntifical honors accorded: to \ Kaatesheuvel, Holland" and Father Duff,. DePaul University, conducted by ,Aarrschot, Belgium. After his Father Duffy, w~s o~dained in the Vincentian Fathers. The arrival in the United States in " "h . ' 1925'. h,e studl'ed at'the Catholl'C 1946 by the late' Bishop Cassidy onors In recognition of DePaul's ' ,in St. Mllry's Cathedral, Fall educational' work were,' granted' University in Washington. R,iver. Following ordination, he through a decree of, the Sacred' , Father Kellagher' , served as an assistant at St. Congregation of Seminaries and ~ ~he newadministratot of St: Francis Xavier' Church Hyannis Universities at the Vatican. ",Bonifa~eParish returns to the, , for eight 'years and at St. Jameti ,( Fall RIVer Diocese afte.r an ab.,. .Church,· his. new 'appointment sence of 10. years.', At that time, ' for a brief period. His tour of Editor Dies he ~as aS~lstant at St. Francis ,duty ,in the Navy included 27 PHILADELPHiA CNC) Xa;lo.:ler P,ansh, Acushpet. Father, months' ser,vice as chaplain at Father,' Ed"{ard' J. 'Draus, 43, Kellagher _was formerly ~uperior , the Naval Air 'Station at Atsugi managing edi,tor 'of the Monitor,: at Sacred Hearts Seminary" Japan. ' , , ' newspaper of" the Diocese of TrentoJj, died here -in the Uni versity of Pennsylvania Hos pital from 'post-operative com plications. A native of Phila FOR THE delphia, Father Draus was or dained 18 years ago.
Rte•.6
theme used
Three' Priests
YOUR LOCAL TRAVEL AGENT
LourJe,s Centennial Pilgrimage
8
Connors Travel Bureau 1418 SOUTH MAIN ST.
OIL BURNERS Also complete Boiler-Burner or Furnace Units. Efficient 'low 'cost· heating. Burner and fuel oil, sales and service.
St~n~ey Oil Co", Inc. "480 Mt. Pleasant Street
New Bedford WY 3-266'7
Mattapoisett, Mass.
Taunton Travei ,
Approved by Bishop Connolly
.' INC.
,'
'Bureau,
..
'
'
WORLD WIDE,T.RAVEL ~ERVI~E .Specialbi'!9 ii,
PILGRIMAGES '
! as advertized in leading Newspapers ,&
M~gazi.nes
ALSO AIR, STEAMSHIP CRUISES AN,D TO,URS' ' '
'For Free Folders Write or Call
. ~~ndyke 4-9691 " .. ..
'
"
J
Taunton· On ll ,(Lo.b,by)
.
Next to Co~rigan's Drug Store
LOURDES', CENTENNIAL' PILGRIMAGE "Approved by The Most·Rev.Jomes L. COQ'noily, " Bishop of, Foil River:
fALL RIVER OS 3-0951
.. ,:.'".:J Church Enc'ouraging;Acti'v~ Collaboration 'with .·La'.ty:· ~
. . . ,• • • •
f~'
>:.".~'"
THE ANCHOR - • Thurs.; Oct; 24, 1957.
Radio Broadcast HOLLYWOOD (NC) -
The
By Rev. »eRnUl J. Geaney, ().S.A~ These lines are being written while the 2,300 delegates from 91 nations are still in Rome participating in the Second World Congress of the Lay Apostolate. In the opening address to the assembly the Holy Father said: "If today the with an iron hand while he 'love conscience' of lay apostles ingly protected them from the has been awakened and if exploitations of the city slicker the term 'lay apostolate' is must change with the times. one of the most widely used Changing gears for older priests when one speaks of the activity is not easy; and ·for that matter, of the Church,
I suppose, the majority of the it is because
laity would just as soon have the collabora things' the way they are. But tion of the laity
thank. God there is an even with the hier growing number of priests and arc h y has
lay people sensitive to the never been as
Church's mission in our times necessary nor
and sufficiently restless to de .practiced in
sire change. such a sys We can expect to see many tematic way."
changes in the roles of the . There is no priest and iaity 'as time goeS on. doubt about it. 'Recently I attended a banquet of The Church Is throwing its full our diocesan Council of'Catholic . weight behind the lay apost~ Women. "Instead of the priests· late. It is the demanos VL tile and laity sitting 'at segregated times, the very urgency of the tables I noticed the priests were hour, that is pressing the Church scattered at the tables thro&gh to engage the laity in combat. out the hall. This is a mere It is either a mobilization of the straw in the wind but a' telltale laity or a gradual withdra~al sign of the direction in which . from the. Church's influence we are moving. , among men everywhere, It is simply an "either or" proposi tion.
a
Serrans ·to Meet At New. London
Decline' Lay Action The layman has always had a share in the mission of the Church. This was particularly true in' the first three centuries. However, during the Middle Ages, due to political circum stances the roles of Church and State, priest and layman, were not delineated, with the result that to a large degree the cler ical side of the Church absorbe~ the functions of the lay. They even ceased saying "Amen" to the liturgical prayers of the Mass. They became reduced to passive, contributing members. Historically it was the advent of the industrial era that point ed up the problem. For the first time in the history of the world mass education became- a pos sibility. This widespread search for trutI. began and is still tak ing place to a. large degree out side the sphere of the Church's influence. The tremendous ad vances in the social and tech nological sciences took place without the ancillary presence of the Church.
The sixth New England re gional conference of Serra Inter national will be held tomorrow and Saturday at New London under 'the patronage of Most Rev. Bernard J. Flanagan, D.D., ·J.C.D, Bishop of Norwich; Two panel workshops will be· held Saturday morning following mass at St. Mary's Church. Bishop Flanagan will address the Serrans at a Saturday luncheon. Two more panel workshops will be held Saturday afternoon. A social hour' will be held tomorrow night and plans will beanounced for the Saturday sessions. Adrian J. Brennan is District Governor of the Province of Hartford, host for the regional conference. Elmer Philbin is District Governor of the province of Boston which include!l the clubs in the Fall River Diocese.
~
....................
So says James F. Powers of Dorchester, Mass., whose growing family eat well, yet whose budget is thriftily in balance. They speak for thousands as they tell youlhe answer: First National's lowest prrces forf.nesl quality every food shoppmg day. Shop and compare.. You'll see for yourself! ~
CASH SAVING SPECIALS . .
Candy Bars Kleenex FaCi~~::sues Delsey ~alhroom Tissue BC' Cocktail S..eel Pickles COlllstock Apples Sunshine Cookies 'Cake Mixes
2BO:~gof27c
4 - 47 41: REG ROLLS
31~:~~z49c
~::
43c '21LB4oz33''C' ~:~ 37c
2 1LB4oz59c'
Peter Piper' Midgets Sliced lor P,es
.
Oatmeal and Molasses Spice
Belly Crocker - White, Yellow, Chocolate, Spice
CANS
.c
'PKGS
Cash Saving. Meat Specials I
.
Ready Cooked
Mild lean Sugar Cured -
Shank Section
Face Section
HAMS u59c 43c LB
Mildly Cured Lean Ends
CORNED BEEF HAMBURG 3 GAL JUG
%
IOc
~~G:
ruAJ
~ci~L
Butter PRESERVES - Mirabel Pure
'Ra,spberry Ci'i(ker Barrel Cheese Borden's 2Cream 3 25c Cheese oz PKGS
Cloverdale Sliced White Colored. Swiss. Pimento
Cortland - U.S. Fancy 2 1,4" and up Crisp Juicy
A P P l~ S
5 B~~ 39c
69c Grapefruit 4 LB ~l: 69c eel e .r y 1
Florida Juicy Nutritious - Good Size
JAR 39c
'IILB PKG
80z PKG lhLB PKG
Joan Carol
Apple Filled
Don't Delay START YOURS TODAY
DICTIONARY Assemble It Yourself 15 Sedions
8"9 c"
IICYION 2 · "
ILB 2 oz LOAF EACH EACH EACH
19c 43c 3Sc 3Sc
Frozen Food Specials! Famous "YOR" GARDEN Brand
~.RENCH· FRIES
2
:K~S
2 9c
2pk~s
49c
BRUSSELS .SPROUTS 2" ciz 45 c . Nutriti_' lender MlCI
"
10 P1CGS
.
IACICAULIFLOWER
WItII A.,
Flavorful'.
2 .
10 G,l
•
39 C
........ . Ww:white HNdi ' ·PKGS. Sa.- _~~ s.tt,$erva Pr~ iii An St~~ ill Thia 'Vicin~W.,R~Vf ..... iGht~~inlit~tit~ . :". ,. . ..". .. ,:. . . ". .. .rwo_
29c 1 9c
Bakery Specials!
39c Old Fashioned Bread Lemon Pie 33c Silver Loaf Cake 2Sc 'toffee Cake
6th Week -
~_:
FOR
Crisp Pascal - Low in Calories
Big Dictionary Offer Continues!
Wk.
LB
PKG
BUNCH'
Sharp
': 25 '. '.' 'c
•
.. It's NOJtional AplPDra Week m
October Cheese Specials!
.Hcrt~N No. ,
59c
$1.00 LB
LI 39c
Freshly Ground lean Beef
IROCKSIDE ..:. Fresh Creamery
.;
24 BARS'
Orange and Apricot JUice
Appme Cid~lr
,1" •
eTNof 89c
All Popular Varieties
~
.
,.,
Cross CatheCltal· :bY· ;'A'reh~'
b~.~P.Cus·li~~··~·~~~~~~·.··L~~:;:;:==~!~~~~~~=~~~~~::::===~~J ,mc... ~ ~
",: ..... " .... _ ~"'." ~. . ·NC·Photo.:;'.·-;~ ..' ,::;":.~'.:; ':., :"t:...·,
;
, P..... II'_:~e· .'!'hla rneallll ..th",:'.the ~ .~-::,.' ~..!..YM~=:~JW./_ipaat··'" ;
• • Naturally; We Shop Fi rs t N-a t ion aI!
New Pack
:
will
.to ,Us •
~h@rtening ~,;~.
Answer-Teamwork There is no mystery to the fact that the current of life does not flow through the rectory door. It is a place one goes to arrange for a baptism, a ma'r rhlge or a burial service. People may ring the doorbell occasion ally when they are at wit's end to know what to do with a'stray ing partner or an alcoholic member of the family, but rare ly do they come to the rectory to find how the truths of Christ have relevance to the economic, political, . recreational, and ed ucational areas of· life. The lay apostola'te is the an swer. It· is not the lay people on their own without the in
spiration of the pr~estj nor is it
NEW. PRELATE:' Bishop the priest calling ~e plays and Bernardino M&zz~r~lil\,.O.F' telling the ·lay people wiiat to<>do. !'Teamwork Does.: It'''' must. be . M., of the Ptei~hi~tU~'uII1\i8 'the 'illogan for.ttie enlighlen'ed' .ofOlancho,:llonduras;' has·
pastor and the zea~ous layman. been· eonsecrated' . in' , Holy
.
Saving in Cash - Mean a lot
MARVO - Pure Vegetable .1 LB CAN 3(/)c
Church Understaffed . The democratic state and the 1naustrial world were born when the Church was weakest. Karl Marx was a product of' these times and his teachings went for long unchallenged. In Pony case he stole the initiative from the Church in the dawning of this new era. Add to the melancholy litariy of the 19th century the popula tion explosion of the twentieth, when the Church is asked to cope with the rising numerical tide of peoples and their new felt national aspirations at a time when the Church is under staffed clerically in some of the older Christian countries.
Pether Pfltrick peytoB, JII'OtI'IlI'i founder &nd director, annowMl4l& The broadcast be carned by the Mutual 'lJroadcastiDJ System.
~ 01. the· thkd' llOIl.owlul mystery of »le Roaary, "The Crowning With Thorns", will be presented .. on the :Marian .Theater radio program nex't Saturday, Oct. 26, Holy Cross
13
··r·.
-_
••
_~.
.
!Fall Activities
14' .THE ANCHOR'-I , Thurs., Oct. 24, 1957 ~
1
The.'·PaJJfish P~radle
urge~ to attend and bring a guest.. The meeting will feature a program followed by. a coffee hour. The membership drive will ' conclude with a.tea an~ reception, for new members on a date to be announced later.
ST. JEAN BAPTnST~.
ST. MARY'S,
IFALlL RIVER '
NEW BE~FORJI)
SACRED HEART,' New members were welcomed The St. Mary's ·Theater Wing NORTH ATTLEBORO o by President.Mrs. Thomas Tache will present a comedy at the next Approximately 200 parishion at a meeting of ~t, Jean Baptiste regular meeting of the Women's ers were served at a Harvest sup' Council in the church hall. Guild; schedtilfZd' for Wednesday, per, sponsored by the Ladies of Mrs: Omer Martineau was Nov.' 13 in St. jean Baptiste Hall St. Anne's Sodali"ty, in the parish chairman of a Hallowe'en cos Acushnet Ave., New Bedford: hall.. The National Council of tume.·party .following the meet Owen P. Devlin, president will ,Ca~holic Women, District 4, were ing, .with pr-izes going to Mrs. Mrs. Owen' P~ Devlin, p,resident, entertained by thf;! Sodality Lucien Laroche, Mrs. Albert Pel will preside.' '. members at a buffet luncheon in letier: and Mrs. Anitq Turcotte. .conjunction . with their' first Current trends and fashions .bY Miss Margaret Considine, stylist, .'SpeCial awards were .won by quarterly meeting. Mrs. Henry Camara, Mrs. Ray featured the October meeting. Mrs. Theresa L'Homme, presi- ' mond St. Germain 'and Mrs. Prizes were awarded to .Mrs. dent of the Sodality, introduced ., Louise Belanger.. ' Joseph Boldiga and Mrs. &y" Re.v: Edmond L. Dickin~on, All members were invited to mond Rocheleau. ' . Spiritual director of the society, .attend, ,the. ·Queen's Daugqters who welcomed the guests. Mrs.. annual t~a Sunday afternoon at ST. ELllZABETH'S, Yvette Patunoff, President of the Bishop Stang Day Nurser-y for !FALL RIVE~ District 4 Council, presided. the benefit of the White Sisters. , Very Rev. John J. ShaY,mod Mrs. Alice Hayden and Mrs. They . were also reminded by erator of the Council and pastor Kathleen Fernandes are C0 . ,Mrs. Theophane .Lavoie of the of St. John's Church, Attleboro, chairmen of the committee Eveningi' of Recollection to be BE W.! R E PITFALLS: opeped the meeting with a pl~nning a Hallowe'en Costume ,held in the church tonight under prayer to Our Lady. of Good Archbis,hop G'i 0 van niB. Dan~e in the parish hall Satur the sponsorship of District One Counsel. Rev. Joseph Larue, day night. . Prizes will be awar<i Montini of ~jlanurged deie-. Diocesan, Council of Catholi~ Pastor of the Sacred Heart gates to the Second World ed. Women: . The Wornens . Guild will be C~urch, North Attleboro, com Congress of the Lay Apos Mrs. George Casavant is one 'of the hostess groups at the plImented both organizations for chairman of a committee plan Hour of Recollection to be ob their united efforts in' promoting t6late in Rome to love those ning a whist party after the Nov. they are seeking' to bring in' served tonight at 7:30 at St. Jean Catholic action. . 11 meeting. Other committee Baptiste Church. The second quarterly meeting to the Church but warned members are Mrs. Aldrich'Bam The guild 'recently Yoted to of the District 4 Council will be they must· beware of falling.' do'nate five dollars to the United ford, Mrs. ~auline Rl,lymond, ,held on Monday night at 8 in into their errors. Mrs. Joseph Lavoie' and Mrs. Fund. .. St. M~ry's Parish Hall, Seekonk. Welbrod Desmarais: J arrangements and ticket returns' ST. PIUS TENTH SACRED HEART" will be made at, the 'meeting FALL RIVER, ST. )IICHAE~'S, YARMOUTH . FALL RIVER Tuesday' night, Oct; 29, in the ·Plan!l for participation in Cath Mrs., Raymond Connors and:" . ' . ' olic Youth Week were disc'ussed Fatima House. Mrs. P. Frank O~C·onnell,. co Events planned by th'e Ladies' Committee' members include:" at the first Fall meeting of the chairmen, are' lil charge of the Guild includes a pot luck sup MA~K ANNIVERSARY: .Catholic Youth SOCiety w'iui Mis: Emily 'Borges; entertain'" Harvest Supper: slated for WE!d-' ,per in ~tie :h,a~l Wednesday, Noy. ment: Mrs. Agnes Rezendes and' . . . 20, to be.>followed by the regular Celebrations',' marking the' Vice-president, Miss' H.el en e · 'the .nesday, N ov. 6 "In School· auditorium, . sponsored by ~e meeting.. Chairman Mrs. Carol 25 t h anniversary of the Shaw, presiding in theabse~ce • Mrs. Theresa 'Bazinet, Mrs. Anne Faria;" 'Mrs. Palmira Aguiar and Women's Guild. ' Francisco announced that mein-' Apparitions of Our Lady at of William Lettney, President. Mrs: EmilyOldridi .: . Mrs. Williani S.Sullivan ~nd" bers maY,bring a guest. ' Beaur;:ting, Belgium, to' five Duncan Inches, prograincom Edward Farias is in charge' of mittee chairman for the harvest Mrs. Robert +'Je!fderman, coThe' guild 'members will be chairmen, ,were '~ppointed to hostesses for the February meet 'children, will be' observed dance, announced that plans will directing the motorcade;' assisted' bead the "Guildola" to be held 'ing of th~ Fall River Chapter, Nov. 29 to Jan. 3. In 1933, be completed at the November by ·'Mariano··Mendonca, Mariano Amaral and Louis' Michael. after the Christmas holidays. The Catholic Guild,for the Blind'; , Our Lady.. of Beauraing .. ap meeting. It was voted'. that offi date is to be annoimced in the President Mrs. Johanna, Mey..,. peared ,to Andree Degeim c~rl> could be elected each year HOLY. NAME, near future. relIes has urged all members to at the May meeting and histalled donate gifts of groceries at the. bre, Fernande' Voisin, Gil . at the October meeting. FALL RIVER November meeting for' Thanks- . berte , Voisin, .. Gilberte De The third parish' reunion Mrs. Philip T. Silvia waS HOLY NAME, giying:baskets for needy families geimbre and·,Albert Voisiri. . sponsored by the Holy Nam~ seated as president of the Altar FALL RIVER of the parish. ' NCPhoto.· . Society and the Women's Guild and Rosary Society at an instal October 27 is set aside for 'the Members ~ec¢ived Comri1u~ion featured a tUrkey dinner and en~ la tio.n meeting in the ·Read Street observance of "Father Breen. at the. 7,:3,9 M,ass Sunday. Break zoni,' Mrs. Frank Barressi Mrs. tertainment. in the parish hall. parish hall Monday night. Other Sunday". Rev. John Breen, M.M., fas~followed in ~h~hall. . . . . Carl Mello, l.\!Irs. Perry,' Mrs. . Rev. Christopher, L. Broderick, officers for the year are: Mrs. the only miss.ionary priest from NOTRE DAME, , Albert Bernard, Mrs. P. A, Emil pastor, ~poke. Francis J. D'Errico, vice presithe parish, is performing' d~ti~s FALL RIVER ',Durand, Mrs. Charles' Santos dent; Mrs. Thomas F. Higgins, at present in Guatemala, Central The Women's Guild will spon-:' Mrs. Louis Sisca, arid Mrs. 'Joh~ SANTO C~RISTO, Sr.; treasurer and Mrs. John J. America. The Mafyknoll Father sor a concert at'S P:M: Sunday ,Conforti. ' ;. FALL RIVER Neilan, 'secretary. Directors inis the son of Mr. and Mrs. Youth, Mrs. Mazzoni, chair- ., l?l1i~s a~e' being formulated clu,deMrs. Charles E.Brady, MiSs Michael J. Breen' of 71 Renwood Nov.. ~7 in St. Anne's auditorium: Lillian Hart, Mrs. Thomas Mc Street, FaH River. ··All members ,Artists' will be Jean·:·.Lussier ' man; Mrs. 'Thomas Marcucci' for arnystery ride to be conpianist and organist; Conrad. ,Mrs. Michael Sicilia', Mrs.WiI~ d~cted by men:bers of the C;oun- Nally and Mrs. George E. Nugent.. of the parish are asked to re cll of CatholIc Women' .at 7 Rev.. James A. McCarthy, modmember him intheir prayers on Briere, violjnist, 'and Les Gais liam Seneca, Mrs. Americo Gas .' Ch~~teurs de Pawtucket. :Mts.· perini; Membership,' Mrs, John Saturday, Nov. 9, starting 1rom erator, expressed" the apprecia;" Sunday." - ,':: '., ' Antonio Lagasse is chairmat't.'and Souza, chairiri.an, Mrs. Adolph"" the. church parking lot. " , ' ti9n o.f thep~ish·,clergy, for the, ~ .Mrs. Rola~d Desmarais tIcket. Petrillo;', ~~s. Charles Peroni, ,M~s. Mary Me~donca,. v.i ce-, excellent work of. the organiza- , HOLY NAME, .. ,.,. c~a,irlIla._9.'r: ' , ,M;~s..A!1thony Ragonesi, Mrs. pre~ldent and chaIrman. of the tion. He'showed.-colored .slides in' NEW BEDFORD ~ "
Imbriglio, Mrs. Antone Marga outmg, announces th_a~_ :i~~,?-al a ,Jl'avel:.'tal\c•. , ::' .• . . At the invitati()I1 of the' :-Rt~'::'
letta and Miss Lena Bevilaqua' f:;;:;;:;;=:;;:;;:;;;;;;;:;;==;;' .. Rev. Msgr. Ti.moth~ P.,Sweeney, HOLY ROSARY. ... , ' , l',' A~tar ~Qciety, Mrs. Gino Di~ "'," pastor of Hqly J'lame parishar,id . FALL RIVER . .' chaplain o:t, 'the.Daughters 'of - :: The fol~<?wing stan'ding com . Nucd','ch'iiirman. ..... . . .., Isabella, Hyacinth~ Circle, ',' Ii 'mittees ',have .been announced to ;,.·Sdiei:hIled events inClude 'tll'e ' Memorial Mass was sung at the serve during the current Guild annual parish' pilgrimage to .', Church for-' the deceased mem- year by Mrs. Delbert Frank . LaSalette Shrine in Attleboro .on Oct. 27. Mrs. John Conforti will bers of that'-" organization. Cel-, ~ president: . '.' . . '. ' ebrant of t~f;! 'Memorial Mass FJ:9spita~ity, ~iss L~cy' Acce... serve as chairman A .membersh'ip 'd~ivewill b~ . the Rev. Leo r. Su.llivan. tulo; chairman; Literature, Mrs,' WJ..IAT .launched at an open meeting in Th~ Guard of Honor ~ciety Frederick Squillace, chairman, -~, November whic:;h members are .wER.E:. held Its regular meeting on the Mrs. Frank Perry; Program, Miss I First Friday 'after' attending the ~o~e..Furguiele" chairman; Pub,:, SHIN Rosary and, Fir~t· Friday devo-· lIClty,; .l\!rs. ,Alphonse Saulino' PLASTERS tions aS?i grp.up. 'The next me~t- 'chairman, Mrs. Florence Spear.' CORR~~.A S; SONS :, IN CI-VIL ing of the GJard .of Honor So .Catholic Charities, Mrs. Jell WAR ,ciety will be. on Nov. 1. me Imbriglio, chairman; Miss ONE STOP DAYS . The Holy' Name Society-<held Rose Sal.!:Iino,~Miss:Clara Sasso;. "SHOPPING 'CENTER Its monthlY'meetingat the parish Mrs. Lena' Renzulli, Mrs. An hall on CountyS'treet with Mr ,thony Pannoni, Mrs. Frank Maz-' • ·Television: •. Furniture. " TheodoJe : rred!!tte~ presiding: F;;;;;;:;:;;;;;;;';;;;::=;;;;=~;;;;;;=:;;:;;=; • Appliances .• Grocery RefreshmeJ;lts were served after h... . I the meeting. " ' .~ . 104 Allen St., New Bedford , WY~an 7-9354' SACRED' HEART,
0
~:;;:;;;;;;=~~~;~===~=~~
KNO"W ·you, AMERIC'A
was
·l.,A GI'S
NO. ATTLEBORO'
Brownies and Girl ScoutS will
begin National Cath'olic Youth
Week by receiving Holy Com
munion at theS.:30 Mass Sunday.
Leaders are Mrs. Florida Rien deau, Brownies Troop 12' Mrs. Cecele Jette~ Giri Scouts 'Tro~p·. 13; Mrs. Lea' 'Meunier Gid Scouts Troop 11. The inv~stiture' 'ceremony ·will be held in the church Oct. 29. '
P!umbing" - H~a'ti~g
New Bedford
Bus. Ph. WY 2-3089
• •,,-
,. MONAGHAN ACCEPTANCE
•Res. Ph. WY 4-8770 . You'll I:'llll In
Lo,,'•. With
NORMAND'S ;DO~UTS' .
Thom~·~;'·F. Mon~~ha~' Jr.
'.,
'r
'~:; CORPORAnON .Treasurer
.AUBERTINE
Funeral' :':Home .
Shinplasters were banknotes;,depre'ciat~din~alue~
712 Acushnet .Ave.
".,\:.: "'~" ,:;1..:,-":.
.• ' .
.;J.' ;i;:,~:::i~·.·., •..•• ~~~ ·_ ... ·~l._~ . . "-1;J ,,;
142 SECOND STREET
Helen Aubertine Braugh
Normand i s'~:f~~
Owne~ . and' Direetor
Spacious Parking AD'ea
,21, KINDS OPEN . Zit Ashley Bly... 711. Ashley Bly... ' · -
WY 2-2951
129 Allen st.· , ,:Ne~ DeMorcl
EVENINGS
WY4"-098C
WY '7~925I
FALL RIVER
.A
O,Ualiifj'.' .;",":: M.ol' .... J'f UtR" .
\ol •
,OSbo,rne 5-7856
:4RMS
.. ;....,.. . 058-5286
- FALL
' .:
.'/
I
•
;', •
')~"
',.,
~
RIVEIt,"·:MASS."·;'::'-,· . .,.r.
I
.:
~~
..... _ • •
"..... •
I
' " '. ,
,.' ':
l. , ,;.. ~'-,
, (
Red Tito Gives
West Germany
Double Cross
Foundation for Blind Honors Hub Priest NEW YORK (NC) - The American Foundation for the Blind, Inc., presented one of its two Migel Medals, annual
WASHINGTON (NC) Tito has finally dropped his pose as 'a fence straddler in the East-West conflict, and a lot of observers here are tempted to say "I told you so." By according' recognition to the Soviet puppet government in East Germany-a major double eross of the West German gov ernment, which had befriended bim-and by aligning Yugoslavia solidly with Moscow in the United Nations disarmament de bate, Marshal Tito has jettisoned Yugoslavia's attempt to play the role of an "uncommitted" na tion. He has rocked Yugoslavia back on its rightful course as a satel lite-still a maverick, but wilp an orbit much closer to the Kremlin than Sputnik's. Tito's sudden announcement that Yugoslavia would exchange ambassadors with the East Ger many he had promised not to recognize was an ideally timed propaganda move for the com munist world.)t came on the eve of the first session of the newly elected West German Bundestag, held in West Berlin to emphasize the Bonn government's conten tion that Germany should right fully be unified. Thus instead of stressing the need for unity, the meeting served only to empha . 8ize the chasm between East and West. . Chancellor Konrad Adenauer's government had stated in the past that it would sever diplo matic relations with any nation that recognized the East German regime. So while Mr. Adenauer was said to oppose any drastic move against Yugoslavia on grounds that it would prove nothing, it came as a surprise here when Bonn recalled its am bassador from Belgrade. Double Cross Still in the air was the ques tion of German aid to Yugo slavia. In the past year, the Bonn government has granted Tito a 99-year loan, of about $57' million and agreed to pay over $14 million as World War II reparations. Also still in the air, and very much so, was the question of United States aid to Yugoslavia. Since Tito's break with Stalin in 1948, American aid to Yugoslavia has come to a whopping $1,200, 000,000. A Yugoslav economic mi$sion headed by Tito's finance minister held a three-day. con ference with American officials here in Washington in the early part· of October. Backs Soviets When Yugoslavia's recognition of East Germany was announced, the State Department officially announced its "regret" and said it doubted the move would "con tribute to a settlement of the German problem." The same day, Yugoslav For eign Minister Koca Popovic rose up in the U.N. General Assembly to give what he' called an "un biased appraisal" of the disarma ment conflict. He promptly as serted that the stand taken earlier by the U. S., Britain and France was devoid of "real rea son"and thus"wholly untenable," and wound up backing all the demands made by Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko.· So the Tito regime is now "an nounced" on the Kremlin side in all major foreign policy matters -even including support of the puppet government of Janos Kadar in Hungary. When the State Department expressed its regret over Yugo slav recognition of East Ger many, it m~de'no mention of the American aid program. But it was assumed here that Congress will have much to say when it returns in January. There has been opposition for years to aid to a government which abuses and enslavr.; its own people. But it has been overridden by pragmatists who claimed that such assistance was insurance to prevent .yugoslavia from again becoming a Soviet satellite. While aid mi&l1t have setved some useful purpose· in the past,. a new day has' now come.
awards for work for the blind, to Father Thomas J. Carroll, director of the Catholic Guild for the Blind in Boston, largest
professional agency in the field in New England. , The other Migel Medal went to J. Hiram ChilPpell, Office of' Vocational Rehabilitation, U. S.
THE ANCHOR Thurs., Oct. 24, 1957
15
Department of Health, Educa tion and Welfare.
ii'
Super-Right fine Qua'ity Meats, One Price As Adverfisedl
•• •
Week End Special! Super-Right, Tender, Juicy and Delicious
·u
Cooked HAMS
c LB39 PORK LOINS
c LB35
•
•
. SHANK
•
Q
PORTION
•
Week End Special! Super-Right, Tender-, YO'ung, Corn-Fed Porkers
.•
••
7 -RIB PORTION·
• .
•
TO ROAST
•
4th B~fI Week!
Oranges
SWEET, JUICY, FLORIDA NONE PRICED HIGHER
3;
c DOZ98
lBSO 2S
',' SNOWY WHITE NONE PRICED HIGHER
Mushrooms" .Ce Ie,y He.arI s·
•
•
C
Fresh, Crisp, Calif. None Priced Higher PKG
•
4
.....
C .
•
•
CHECK THESE A&P ANNIVERSARY, SPECIALSI
ANN PAGE. BOSTON STYLE OR 1 lB 9 WITH TOMATO SAUCE -CAN FOR Be'CIns llB PKG 4.FOR
Crispo Fig Bars A&P' Corn CREAM STYLI! 1 lB 1 OZ'CAN 8 FOR
Grapefruit SectionsA&P ~~~6 FOR
Waldorf Toilet Tissue 12 ROLLS . BirdsEye 5. PKGS S:rozen M acaronl.. & Ch eese PKG 6'.FOR BIRDS EYE FROZEN 120Z Squash
•
Your Choice:
.' . ,
,
o .
..... _
II ..... _1IlIItlI ........
-----
:::::::
~
.
iowdoIr.
1IIlIMr. I ' ...
'. ~
Sale price only for quantity ..ated
"'tel.... ,..., ..,.,' ~.... II IIlls
1_..
1" .,.. ......'"
••
,
• •
,. ••
,.•
".
.···l·'
\
Sodal!iy Adive
1
.
Spotlighting' Our Schriols
..... •
THE ANCHOR
116 ,~_ _T_hu_rs_.,_o_ct_.2_4_.1_957_ __
God love You
MOUNT ST. MARY ACADEMY, freshman, won a Philco radio, IFALL RIVER' . one of the prizes in the National . The Sodality of the ImmacuCatholic Decency in Reading . late Heart of Mary has two Program. The high salesmen for groups functioning this.' year. the last seven' days of the cam The juniors and s.eniors who paign are Elizabeth O'Brien, were received last year meet Maureen D'Andrea" Patricia Tuesday evenings: under the Souza, Barbara Gaspar, Mary leadership of Mary Margaret _ Boland, Winifred Welch and Lomax, ·prefect. A probation Jayne Stafford. Leading the class is conducted Friday aftei'-' school in this' activity is RoOIV 2 'noons from 2 to ~. Kathryn MaunCie'r ~ the leadership of Sister griby was chosep leader of this Maria ImmacuUita, S.U.S.C. group which is studying the '. Because of the 'prevalence of aims anci rules· of a Sodalists the flu, the, ring ceremony, way of life. scheduled for Oct. 14, has been Both groups are working totransferred to next Monday gether on an apostol.ic, project night. . " of obtaining Clothes for needy Following the baton of Sister ehildren~ The. sodalists will Stephen Mary, moderator of the mend, clean and .package . ~he Orchestra Club are the. follow o NEW PRESIDENT: Mrs. clothing for distri~:>ut~on. JUdlt.h" ing new memb~rs of the orches McKnight of the J~mor .class IS tra: Corrine Hambly, Joanne ~Johrt·F. Doherty Jr., of'116 the chairman o~ thiS .proJect, asGoyett,- Cpnstance 'Foster, Mary Winthrop Street, Taunton, sisted by Paulllle ~asa of the Sullivan, Mary Curt and Bar probation ,class. .' SIster Mary bara Gaspar. is the new president of the De .. sita R S M IS the moder- . , . III , . . .. ' . Sophomore lIbrary aldes-- Queen's Daughters of Taun ator of ,the SodalIty. .. . . P lt " Sister Mary Olga, R.S.M., Cec~le QUlgle Y ~leen G ~~ra~ , a kag er M.S., superior of Mt. St. Mary JudIth hHuln~ an. athry ta Convent, and Sister Mary Car -are. e plllg ~ e, s s .0f ticipate with the Coyle boys in mela, R.S.M., M.A., principal of chec~lIlg books m and o~t, ~IS the prodl\ction, Happy Days, at St M A demy attended the 'playlllg new books,., decorating Coyle High. Suzanne Driscoll, fifth :~~uafaregion'al meeting of the libr~ry' bulletin board, and Margaret Spillaine, Leona Morin, tfie New England. Associatian catalogumg the bOoks; Maureen Kiley, and Janet Con-' of Colleges and Secondary ~ligible .to. take the Scholar_ roy have been cast in the speak Schools held at Brandeis Uni ship QualIfymg Test free of in!;; roles. These girls will also versity, Waltham, Mass. PJ:Ob 'charge because they maintained have solo numbers. !ems discussed included: "Prob the highest scholast,ic averages The school has taken member lems of Accreditation," and for th~ee years· were Fernanda ship this year in ihe .Catholic "The Needs of the College Carreiro, Mary Castro and Helen Freshman - Are They Met!" Gannon. This high level schol-. SChool Press Association. As a result the C. S. P. A. will indi At a' recent. meeting of the astic aptitude test, designed to cate -the strong and weak points freshmen' of room 4, Jane', Ouel single out "top notch" students, lette. class president, presided. was also taken by Ann Delaney" of the annual yearbook, Corcma, Way~ and means of' increasing' Mary Louise,O'N~i!a~d ~arbara as an aid in infusing sound pi-in ·the sales Of chocolate bars in th~ Levesque. The exammatIon for 'ciples and good craftsmanship in the journalistic endeavors. current drive were discussed. this National Merit.Scholarship The funds from this campaign Program.s offered by the Col will augment the building fund lege Entrance Examination .JESUS MARY AC~DEMY.
of the academy. Room 4 fresh Boar~. FALL RIVER ,
men are .striving for top place : M. St. Athanase and M. Marie as the leading sales ladies in the MSGR. COYLE mG~~· school. . Room 7 freshmen hold TAUNTON - . Nathalie, faculty members of the top place at present. The following 'students tOok French departme~t,'with Yvette Mem bers of the freshmen the Merit Examination Tuesday: Franklin Bearse~ Gec?rge Costa, ~dria, Claire Delisle, Colette dancing class are looking for David DeThomas, David George, Dussault, JocelJ;'n Cyt, Jeannine ward to a social evening' with ·invited guests from one ()f the Terrence Kendall, Richard Mc- ~ Fortin, Elizabeth Lee, Margue neighboring schools. . Morrow, Walter Precourt and rite Picard and Claudette La- Steve Turkalo, all ,of Taunton. pointe, were delegatE!d to repre SACRED HEARTS ACADEMY. Also Henry Forcier, .Richard sent J. M. A. at the Fourih FALL RIVER The annuat" three-day retreat Grace, 'William Purdy aI).d Re Franco-American Congress in' will' be concluded tomorrow. mille Rebello, all of Fall River. . Woonsocket, R. I. "La Sadalite During these days Rev. Law Also John Corbett, Stoughton; Franco-Americ'aine" was the rence J. Poetz, S.V.D. is conduct- ' John P. Kennedy and Ronald Letheme of the conference, with lng discussions and giving "lec Francois, New Bedford; Fred Theophile Martin Secretary. tures which will lead the stu MacAuley', Robert .Maigret and The students of the journalism dents to a fuller spiritual life. David Stuart, AttlE!boro; John class attended a meeting on jour Daily Mass and, Holy Com McNamara, Mansfield. nalism 'at the Elks Auditorium, munion constitute an -impol'tant ' ~ Fall River, last night. Themem
. element' of this intensified spir ,ST. MARY'S HIGH. berS of the club are Catherine
'TAUNTON . itual program. Goulet, Annette Hubert Lorraine
Two students of the senior Siste'r Francis Sebastian, Blanchette, Dorothy-- Forest,
class will be eligible to take S.U.S.C. and Sister Frances Jeanne Plante, Gertrude Lav.oie,
without charge the National Mary Ann Levesque, Jeanne Le-'
Aloysius, S.U.S.C. attended a re Merit exam. They are Patricia gional meeting of the Catholic vasseur, Muriel La Chapelle,
Cooper and Patricia Goggin: This Classical Association at Emrrtan Annette Parent, also Claude'tte
uel College Saturday. An ad ..entitles the girls ,to compete for Grillo,. Louise Gamache, Clau
numerous scholarships' if 'they dress by. Rev. Mortimer J. Mur dette·Caron, Maureen O'Connor,
come out in the highest schoL phy, S.J. of the School of' St. Doris" Mathieu and Annette
Philip Neri was the highlight of astic bracket. Jusseaume.
the event. Thirty-five girls have been Mary Elizabeth Badway, a . chosen from Saint Mary's to par . HOLY FAMILY HIGH,
NEW BEDFORD
ton.
d
Major Problems'
By Most I!ev. Fulton 1. Sheen, D.D. THE HOLY FATHER has a Congregation of the Propaganda in Rotite which is charged with the administration of all the Missions of the Church. Recently this Congregation sent.to all the office~ of the Holy Father's Society for the Propagation of the Faith, a summary of the major problems of the Church in the Mission world. UNION OF SOUTH AFRICA The Church has refused to < accept the law th1,!t negroes are not to enter churches opened since January 1, 1938. The' Bishops have answered
saying that the churches .are for all Catholics
regardless of the color of the skin.
SUDAN The government of Khartumhas . seized Catholic schools to secularize them. .Two hundred village schools, 40 elementary schools and.3 normal sChools were taken. This represents a fi'nancial loss of $3,000,000 and this in a land; where the congregation· was aske'd to colied money to buy a bicycle for a newly ordained priest so he C(luld visit his missions. All the generous people='could scrape together was 60c. The Bishop had to
supply the $23 to buy the bicycle.
INDIA The smallest of the Indian states·
'is Kerala-the most Christian state in India.
Out of 13,500,000 people about 3,500,000 are Catholic. But the Com
munists control Parliament. Their first action was to declare war
on Catholic schools by making the'm educational centers for Com
munism.
IF YOUR FINGER HURT or you were in danger of losill&' your, hand would not your whole bod,. serve the injured or threatened members? Now, we are the Body of Christ. The Cath.. oli~ of South Africa, the Sudan and india' are part of the Mystical Bod,. as much as our arms or leg-s. As' Saint Paul says: "If one member suffers, does not the whole body suffer?" Do you feel their pain as your own? If you do the'n ,.ou riot come to the rescue of the Hoi,. Father throug-h his Society for' the Propagation of the Faith. By g-iv'ing- to him you equalize distr.ibution to the wbole mission Church. Deny' yourself a luxury and send your sacrifice!
will
GOD LOVE YOU to A.S. "This is no' real sacrifice because I won the moneY-$20-i.n a telephone quiz." ..'. to R.E.M. "After three long yE!ars my husband finally got a raise-'-this is our·thanks giving gift of $15." ... to T.S. "Our wh~ie family decided to give extras each month a,nd here is the latest 'addition $8.77".
up
.
,
. After the storm comes the peaceful calm and the rainbow. Our WORLD MISSIQN ROSARY is a lovely r;;linbow of. colors on which you ca!l pray for the Church throughout the entire worid-you can pray that all men may enjoy peace in Christ. Yqur Sacrifice' offering I>f $2 will help' our missionaries to bring the message of the' Prince of Peace to all nations! Send your offering and· request to: Society for ~he Propagation of the Faith, 366 Fifth Avenue, New York 1, New York: or your own Diocesan Director. . Cut out this column, pin your sacrifice to it and mail it to the Missiops. The address is The Society for the Propagation of. the Faith, 366 Fifth 'Avenue, New York I, N. Y., or your DIOCESAN DI . RECTOR R;EV. RAYMOND T. CONSIDINE, 368 North Main Street, Fall River, Mass.
ag
......
~. ova" HAL" A C&NTURY
GR.....nR HEW 1l801"O"W
'8£ST kNOWN NAME·.N
COFFEE.
BROOKLAWN' FUNERAL HOME, ·INC. R. Marcel Roy - C. Lorraine Roy
Roger LaFrance
CO~ The Senior class has sponsored the first social- event of the school year, the Senior Soiree. f"------~~~~~--------:
Miss Lois Mahon and'Miss Carol Comeau planned tJ:te. effective CONSULT : decorations, a French scene amid : \ Confr,actors brilliant· aut u m n a 1 coloring, : NORMAN C. : which formed a background for : EDWARDS: the ·dancers. , : Hair &. Sclap : 464 Second St. The Theta Chapter, Delta Epsi , SPECIALIST , lon Sigma, the National Honor-' : Roo", 6 : FALL RIVER Society for 'students of Catholic " 688 Plea8anl St. , Colleges and Universities, has , opp. post oCfice , announced the nominatien of ~ New Bedford : OSborne 2-2143 Martin J. Bartley Jr., to mem.:. : Tel.WY 4-8523 : bership in the Society. Mr. Bait-· ley is'a 'graduate of Holy Family High and a senior .at Providence College. Reports for the first six weeks of the school year will, be dis eat more
tributed on Friday to all stud.. ents. This year on ·the· Tuesday NATIVE • •• CAPE BAY
and Wednesday evenings, Oct. 29, and' 30, following,the dis tribution- of the reports the fac ulty 'wiil be available 'at the school to meet the parents and to talk with them about problems indic;ated 011 the report cards. It is hoped' that many parenu, will UNION' ""hiARF FAIRHAVEN, MASS. ,·avail themselves of.thisoppor..: .tunity.
:
,
SOUTH END
FUNERAL DiRECTORS . 15 IRVINGTON CT• NEW BEDFORD WY 5-7830
1lALDNESS
ELECTRIC
:
Electrical
OLD 'CAPE COD
&
I
. DIRECTS 400 MISSIO~ARIES,: Erirol;lte to Tokyo is·, Father Apollinar:is van Leeuwen, O.F.M., at right, with Very Rev. Pius R. Barth, St'. Louis Francisc~n ·Provincial. He has been named to serve as general ~elegate of the Order in the~ar East, where he will'-he represEmtatiye of the Franciscan General in Rome., He will supervise 400,.mis~ aionaries. NC Photo;... .'
SCALLOPS
lb.
95 c
MaclEAN'S SE'A FOODS
,
,
Youth Week Wins Dulles Plaudits
WASHINGTON (NC)-5ecre tary of State John Foster Dulles stated here that Catholic efforts on behalf of the nation's youth "are helping to meet the chal lenges of a mpst critical era". Mr. Dulles made the statement in conjunction with. National Catholic Youth Week, which will open the Feast of Christ the King. In a letter to Msgr. Joseph E. Schieder, director of the Youth Department, National Catholic Welfare Conference, Mr. Dulles said: "By inspiring our youth to cultivate and expand spiritual values in everyday life, you are helpin'g to meet the challenges of a most critical era." "The continuing efforts of youf yout!- council to guide our youth on the road to good citizenship deserve the gratitude of our en.. tire nation." Farley Praise Tames A. Farley, former U. S. postmaster general, wrote Msgr. Schieder: "I feel honored to have the opportunity to olTer greetings to the seven million young Cath olics who will participate in the seventh annual observance of National Catholic Youth Week.
·This celebration will be mosUn spiring to Americans of' all ages, and its influence will' have far reaching spiritual and practical effects at a time hen faith and hope are so gr::atly needed in our daily lives." . Archbishop Leo Binz of Du buque, episcopal chairman of the NCWC Yo\.: "1 Department;wrote that on the occasion of youth week observance, "we must help our young people to grow in the knowledge, the love and the service of God".
Honorary Degree • LANCASTER (NC)-Dr.Leon E. Doste.rt, director of George town University's Institute of Languages ard Linguistics, Washington, has been awarded an honorary doctorate of letters by Franklin and Marshall Col lege. Dr. Dostert organized and di 'rected the simultaneous trans lation'technique at the Nurem berg trials and later at the United .Nations. During World War II, Dr. Dostert was personal French interpreter for President Eisenhower, then commandef in-chief of the European allied forces.
TOUCHES HIS BEART
A story like Ulis appeals strongly W Ule
Twenty five years ago III ,India Ule "Re union- Wlth·Rome" movement .started. In ElanJimel 50 families (300 persons) were receh'ed Into the Church. At that time they put up a small temporary chapel. Despite the increase since" they are stili Ulere. Now U is hopelessly small; AI· Ulough now in awful condition. It still serves also as a schoolroom on weekdays. In all these years these poor people have not foul'ld the means to build an ade· quate chapel. So, they finally begged the Ho!J' Father Jor $2.000.
HOI)~
}'ather's beart.
+ Tbt Holy Fa:htr's MiSJiurr Ail
REMEMBER NOVEMBER You'U want to remember your beloved souls with Masse'S. Send your olledngs and Intentions TODAY and within a few weeks our mIssionaries will say the Masses. It's a precious charily to them. Inquire about our SUSPENSE CARD whereby you ellll als(> arrange for Masses for your own soul when you'll need them m!'sL
CHRISTMAS SHOPPING IN PEACE Why fight Ulose crowds for Uinkets? Surprise. your friends and loved ones with a MEANINGFUL GIFT. Our special, artlstie. GIFT CARD for Christmas an nounces a "spiritual" remembrance with long-lasting ef fects: (1) you had Mass said for them; OR (2) YO'u en rolled them In the rich spiritual benefits of this Asso ciation: OR (8) yon gave a sacred uticle w a mission ehallp.1 In their name. We'll send It anywhere and enclose PRESS~D F1.0WERS FROM BETHLEHEM. Some suggestions for the gift card: Mass bell .... $ II Ciborium or chalice Altar linens... 15 Candles for a year Crucifix 25 Sanctuary lamp
$40 Tabernacle •... $211 20 Altar stone ... 10 15 Statue or leon. 111
HAS GOD A PLACE IN YOUR WILL? JESUS YOUR THANKSGIVING GUEST How better say your thanks than to invite Him
(In the person of His exiled countrymen) to your
ThanksgIving feast. TODAY send the invitation
-price ($10l of 11 FOOD PACK' for 'an Arab
REJ<'UGEE family. They'll eat for a week. Then.
on Thanksgiving Day set a place for Him at your .
table. You'll be happy both today and then.
We'lJ thank you with a HOLY LAND ROSARY.
TO SERVE CHRIST THE KING If a friend will help us wlUl the yearly expenses ($100) 01 vlllD
lug a lad during six years, we'll be able to send another cilptain Into His army of native priest5--lIke Andrew at the Greek Collelte In Rome, and MnUhe~ and Joseph In India. Pay as you like.
FORGOTTEN HEROES Help for training native Sisters Is even more need
ed. We have three times as many to support. but
somehow fewer friends understand Its great Import.
ance. If we find no friend to "adopt" SISTERS
JULES-MARIE (Lebanon), ELENA (Egypt), MARY
EV ARIST, HILLARIA, JUDITH and EUDOSIA (In
dia) by sending the $150 each year for two years, only
God knows what we'll do for them.
~'l1ear FastOlissions~
FRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN, President -;
Msgr. Peter P. Tuohy, Nat'l Sec'y ,
Send all communications to:
CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION
480 Lexington Ave. at 46th St. No. 1360-0dober 25, 1957:
New ~ork 17, N. Y.
I
THE ANCHOR -
Thurs., Oct. 24, 1957
17
You~h ''¥e~k
Continued From Page One Catholic young people received Holy Communion on Youth Communion Sunday last year. The Fourth National Catholic . Communion Crusade which opens Sunday will continue until May 25, 1958, Pentecost Sunday. It will beo carried on for the . express intentions of pr~ving that youth are true sons all(~ daughters of the . church by guarding and following her teachings and to increase reli .gious vocations 'in every Diocese in the country. . Group Assignments I The Fall River Catholic Stu dent Council has made plans to participate in the crusade. Each of the eight groups represented in the council will be assigned' a specific week during' which as many members as possible will attend daily Mass and receive Holy Communion. Assignments already announced .include Berchmans Club, Oct. 27-Nov. 2; Dominican Academy, Nov. 3-9; Sacred Hearts Academy, Nov. 10-16. . Other student groups repre sented in the council are Epsilon Sorority, Mount St. Mary Acad emy, Jesus Mary Academy, De La Salle Academy of Newport and' Monsignor Coyle High School, Taunton. Rev. RobertL. Stanton, assistant at Immacu late Conception Church, is mod erator. . New· Bedford Observance A program for youth and adults from 4 to 6 Sunday after noon will oe the opening activity in the miw Youth Community Center. Adult counsellors and youth officers will be introduced. An address will be given by Miss Mary Manning, who represented th~ Junior Daughters of Isabella at the National Youth' Conven- . tion in 1955. A musical program will be offered by Anne Marie and Jane RImmer, David St. Germaine, Sharon King, Judith Lanagan, the Dowerettes and others. Rev. Raymond McCarthy, assistant at Sacred Heart Church, Fall River, will address the gather ing.. Registration of new members will be taken' in the new Center on Mopday night from 7 to 9 for boys and on Wednesday night between the same hours for girls. A panel of youth on parlia mentary procedure and the U. S. Constitution is scheduled for Friday night, Feast of All Saints. Attorney George Thomas will. direct the discussions. The meeting and the observance of Catholic Youth Week will be brought to a close by Solemn Benediction of the Blessed Sac rament in the Center with Bishop Connolly as celebrant. Attleboro and Taunton A Holy Hour at the La Salette Shrine has been arranged for Attleboro youth with the co QPeration of Miss Shirley Givens, youth chairman for the Attle boro district of the National .Council of Catholic Women. . Plans for ·the observance of the week in Taunton include a dance at the C.Y.O. on High Street and election of officers on Wednesday, Oct. 30, and a Memoriai Mass at 8 A. M. on Saturday, 1'-:ov. 2, at 'Sacred Heart Church for all departed members of the C.Y.O. and their benefactors.
PREPARE EOR OPENING: ,Four young women are shown doing their part in preparation for the opening of the Catholic Community ,Center on Franklin Street, Fall River~ They are, left to right, Alice Coyle; Eleanor R. Shea, Vir ' ginia A. Martin and .Mary T. Hurley.
Knowland Again 'Warns of Danger In Underestimating'. Re~s' Gains SAN FRANCISCCO (NC) To underestimate Soviet ac complishments, nuclear or satel lite, is to endanger the frt:(!' world. This warning came from ·U.S. Sen. William R. Kn0wland of California, in a talk at 'the As sociation of Catholic Newsmen Communion breakfast here. Prefacing comments on ·Red China, Sen. Knowland outlined Soviet foreign policy' as, char acterized by two·things: 1) Unrele.nting pressure aimed at "the destruction of human freedom everywhere." 2) The worthlessness of 'inter national agreements or treaties. signed by the Reds. Always the Same "Soviet policy may change its course, - may zig from right to left, but· its long-ter.m objective is always the same - to wipe out freedom," Mr. Knowland said. "Toward the major powers, the policy is to' drive a wedge between them. Toward smaller nations, it is outright intimida tion~ . . The Senator said that as a member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee he had heard "no testimony presented to show a change in the Soviet's long-range goal." He pointed to Russia's record on treaties. "They have violated every treaty signed with non communist nations - and at a time that suited their conveni ence.
Free China "This includes nonaggression pacts with Albania and Poland, non-intervention treaties with Czechoslovakia, Bulgaria and Rumania, and the United Na tions Charter itself in the Kor ean War. Less than a year after ROCKVILLE CENTRE (NC) - The seven-year-old Family the Korean cease-fire, the Krem Communion Crusade is working lin admitted that it had lent moral and military support to to hav~Congress and the Presi the North Korean communist dent declare the Feast of the Holy. Family as National Family forces." Day. The crusade is trying also On Red China, the Senator said its admission to the United to encourage a World. Com Nations, "will undermine the munion Day for families on the moral position of'the UN.''' He feast day. spoke of the value of maintain Edward R. Shiebler, a direc tor of the Crusade, has urged ing a 'Free China on Formosa. the writing of letters to con "The 9,500,000 Free Chinese gressmen favoring the designa there give overseas Chinese a tion of the second Sunday in source of hope.. Chiang Kai January of each year as Na shek's army of 600,000, fourth tional Family' Day, The Holy largest in the free world, pro Family Feast falls on that day.. videsa military bastion against A bill. to achieve this proclama the Reds. Loss of those troops tion has been introduced by Rep. would let the Reds cut our sea Gc'orge Me~er of Michigan. lanes in the Far East and would
National Famil·y Day Crusade Objective
drive a wedge into our line defense.
at
Jefferson Statement
'And Formosa, while it stands,
means the flag of .a Free China
will be kept waving at the
United Nations."
The Senator continued:
"As long as there is hope for
'freedom, there is hope for a free' world. If we lend support to keeping people behind the lr.on Curtain, we destroy that. hepc for freedom. I know of no better pledge
than. Thomas Jefferson's state-··
ment: 'I have sworn on the altar
of God eternal hostility to every
. form of tyranny over the mind of man.'''
Winona Pre;ate Named Bishop ·WASHINGTON (NC) - Pope
Pius XII has named Msgr. Fred..
erick W. Freking, 44, spiritual
director of the North American
College in Rome, as Bishop of
the Diocese of Salina, Kansas.
Bishop-elect Freking, who was chancellor of the Diocese of
Winona, Minn., when named to
the staff'of the Rome college in
March 1953, succeeds Bishop
Frank A. Thill as spiritual leader
of the Salina diocese. Bishop
Thill died on May 21 at the age
of 63.
Bishop-elect Freking was born
at Heron Lake, Minn., on Au
gust 11, 1913. He was ordained
in Rome in May 31, 1938. He
studied at Immaculate Heart of
Mary Seminary, Winona, and the
North American College and
Gregorian' University, both illl
Rome.
The Bishop-elect was the first
editor of the Winona edition of
Our Sunday Visitor, newspaper
of the diocese, now known as the
Courier and published indepen
dently. He was for a time secre
tary to Archbishop Leo Binz of
Dubuque, v·hen the latter was
Coadjutor Bishop of Winona.
0
Convel?t Dnes BlNGHAMTON (NC) - Prof.
Henry C. F. Staunton, 79, an
Episcopalian pastor who became
a Catholic in 1925 and taught
English at the TJnive-,it. of
Notre Dame .from that year to
1952, died here (Oct. 5) in
Lourdes Hospital. Mr. Staunton
was the recipient of the 1943
No~e Dame Lay Faculty Award.
-
..
They hav'e an opinion of the hier Pe~ce archy~hich should make anY' right-minded American hesitate DALLAS (NC)-The master Conflicts of Law to live in the same town as a idea of Pope -Fius XII is the Father Kenneth R. O'Brien of bishop. The dogmas of the ,"vision of a world at p~ce, the Los Angeles, spoke on the con Church are beneath ridicu'le or /' dream of the human 'family or flicts of canon law with local contempt, though sociologically ganized in collaborative unity and national civil law. He said By Most Rev. Robert J. Dwyer, n.D. interesting as auries of cultural . under. a universal law;" Jesuit that generally speaking the dio ~. Bishop of Reno conservatism. It is only in the' .Father Timothy L. Bouscaren cese adopts' the civil law of. an It :has been .remarked, acutely enough, that there 'are field of Catholic morality that declared here. area, but emphasized that a dio two varieties of Paul Blanshards at work in America today. their temper wears thin and the cese never will subscribe to a The noted author and canonist There is the kind that goes under that name, the darling of candid reader is treated to an civil law which contravenes the addressed the national conven the POAU, and there is the exalted intellectual sort that outbreak of exasperation. divine law. tion· of the Canon Law Society. would scorn the name or Delicate Art . It is curious and instructive to Father. Bouscaren, who has Msgr. John F. Gannon, Chan the association, yet differs is not, of course, that they observe how these. purveyors of been stationed in Rome, said cellor of the. Worcester Diocese, from the professed bigot doItnot with him, heartily, J sweetness and light manage' to . that the Pope has .pointed .out spoke on church insurance, par Rot in kind but only in ·a hatredshare for the Catholic Church. fend off rebuttal and still pre to jurists the necessity of bas ticularly fire insurance. He degree. The difference is that they would serve the outward marks of lib . ing their science on the only pointed out that in the last year Blanshard, under his own hold the tiger in leash, minding eral impartiality. They would name, has pretty well shot his its manners, and even smiling. Qf'arly love,. they say, to present· foundation which cim 'support some 50 churches in the United it - the moral law. States were destroyed by fire bolt. He has written and talked now and then to show its gold the "other side", but how unfor and said that in 15 of these cases Canonists have been bidden himself out, and about all that teeth. Not for them the crude tunate it is that the manuscripts C8q be expected of him now is a bludgeoning of the .big stick but submitted so rarely measure up by the Pope to look to Christ as it was apparent that the fires the Leader in whom alone is had been caused by arsonists. rather tedious repetition of the the delicate art of the poniard. to their stern standards of liter same stock. charges against the -Tli.ey adopt, with proper inter ary excellence' or to their con_' the hope of freedom and unity of mankind, Father Bouscaren Catholic Church. This is by no pretation, the hi"storic motto of cepts of' controversial politesse. means to underrrate his clever And they are admirably adept.at said. He said that the way to Maryland:. Male deeds, feminine unite mankind is through love ness or his perspicacity. He is in words, l.nd it. is sheerly amazing. closing correspondence; ·in the heart of .Christ, and he comparably more able, or should · how very feminine their words" There is no one' name for this reminded that the purpose of we say facile, than the soinewhat can be. other kind of Blarishard. He life is to achieve eternal happi heavy-handed type of Catholic= Take, 'for example, the edito_' wears many names and writes ness by just relations with other baiter who preceded him. But even so, there is an element of rial policy of any of a dozen or with many pens. But he writes men in local and international' .the same old story. Just now, as fields. coarsen'ess in his appeal and. his so of the magazines which pro Banking Is Handier
go0<i a name as any we could fessto cater to the tastes and in associations. When You' Use Our
·suggest would be James Gould terests of. the American intelli Blanshard on the same lecture GUARANTEED Cozzeris, on the strength of· his gentsia. They are uniformly platform with assorted rabble la.test novel, By Love Possessed, CONVENIENT rousers of dubious background liberal, or at least they try des T.V. and RADIO
The bright reviewers have .cho . and unsavory reputation has not perately to be, and they are al SERVICE
.BANK - BY - MAIL cut a graceful' figure. Indeed, most excessively urbane. They rused its praises, arid there is no AUTO RADIOS question that it has a certain never dream of descending to there have been occasions when SERVICE! Member R.T.T.G. he has quite obviously labored · billingsgate, though they are not . fairly mOderate-literary gloss.
But it is the old case of the voice
above an occasional sly dig' at Ill1der some embarrassment from Whether you want to' make Christian morality. But it is of Jacob and the hands of Esau:
his entourage, not so much be deposits, take 04t ..sayings 'characteristic of them that they . It is Blanshard refined by Pul 46 MIDDLE RD. ~ause of what was said as because or make mortgage pay . .of the gross manner of saying it. accept for pul;>lication, at inter';' itzer. ACUSHNET WY 5·7548 ments you can do it by vaIs too regular to be purely co It is the price a man pays for 'mail. This is just one of incidental, articles which' m'ost engaging in the kind of profes many modern banking ser learnedly and professionally dis sional campaigning he has fol vices at THE OLD RED BANK, the bank that's al lowed for the past decade or so. pose of the Church. Admirably co., Inc.
ways first in service! His lines ha~e been cast with written, they rarely display the SHEET METAL
some remarkably unpleasant slightest note of irritation- or bad and temper. They are witty, amusing, people, and it is hardly surpris .CONTRACTORS
The ing that he should periodically and devastating. 253-261 CEDAR ST.
o lapse into their language and Temper We'ars Thin .NEW BEDFORD
method. Jacob Teser, Pres; & Treas.
They take it for granted that Indifferent Success John B. WY 3·3222
Besides, it is. difficult' for a Catholics are fools and that the' man who hates to .be consistently ·Church is a conventicle of fools. dignified about it. Strong emo tions of the sort are not kept f. DO~AN under restraint without an al and So~s, Inc. Me90Q@lI"8al most superhuman effort,' and Fall River Savings Bank poor Mr. Blanshard has had Ji'tluerad Home OSTERVILLE rather indifferent success in .this 141 No. Main-Fall River Arra,ngements & Services
GArden 8-6509 regard. His pathological hatred Personally Supervised by
for the Church has upset him 70 Washington Street only too often, with the result MRS. JOHN F. DOLAN that he h;;lS lapsed from the high TAUNTON. 123 Broadway Taunton (>' . est standards of a gentleman. In VAndyke 2-2181 ~ a word, he has committed the VA 3-3371 unpardonable sin of boorishness. .INC. It is this, .together with his ;"'~"""'------"--1 ~ ~ characteristic propensity to mis,. quotation, which has rendered him, in turn, an object of' some ~ ~ embarrassment to these other ~ ~ Blanshards who dwell in 'much . more rarified atmosphere of ~ ~ ~.. ~ intellectual contemplation" They . ~. ~ regret his brashness, they look : 273 CENTRAL AVE. : FALL RIVER " askance at his platform buf foonery. One is rem i n d e d :~ NEW BEDFORD :~ . MAIL'ING'·.SERVIC'E .... strongly of the attitude of gen ~ ~ FRANCIS J. DEVINE '. ARTHUI(J. DOUCET .. teel and polite murderers toward :. WY,2-6216 : SECOND ST. .FALL RIVER ~ So vulgar an enterprise as Miu , ~ .~. Inc. Il.. l ~ ~ .:.,.;. __ ,.~ :' •. ,.. ' .., . ~, ;4.#'
Sage and Sand
Cozzens NO.vel Symbo~i%'es Refined Paul Blanshards'
Vision @f Werld at
.
James E. Norton
NORRIS H. TRI PP
CONTRACTORS
..
BUI.LDERS:
OLD
RED
BANK
JOHN
O'KEEfE
Funeral Home
D & D -Sales and Service,
Complete Printing and Mai/i.ng
,.;. , '7,: "'.' 234
: BLUE RIBBON: : LAUN·DRY :.
.~RIGIDAIRE
REFRIGERATION
APPLIANCES
AIR COND.ITIONING
. '363,SECOND'ST:
"
FALL ,RIVER,' M·ASS.' . "
Sports Chatter
.Knights Present Awards to eyO
THE ANCHOR Thurs., Od. 24, 1957
Interscholastic Season Reaches Halfway Mark By Jack Kineavy Somerset High Sehool Coaeh
, Inclement weather and the high incidence of flu com-'
bined to curtail drastically the scholastic grid program last Saturday. In all, there were 10 games scheduled in the area, only four of which were played. A fifth, the New Bedford be Stan Kupiec, one of the Walpole tilt, was an un county's better passers. Stan scheduled, last-minute ar can call .upon halfback Gerry rangement. New Bedford Elias and fullback Dick Bonale-' originally had an open. date. When Walpole's opponent was forced to cancel because of the flu, NeVI Bedford, which a week earlier had fallen victim to the "bug", filled the date and came away with a 7-6 win. Three of the postponed con tests were rescheduled for Mon day. Among these was the Attle boro-Coyle clash, a focal point in . Bristol County competition. As for the remaining games, only the Falmouth-Somerset meeting has been reset. Friday, Nov., 22, the open weekend prior to the traditional Thanksgiving Day classics, was the date mutually agreed upon. No word has been received on the' status of the Case-Yarmouth game, and the Taunton-Wareham is presumed cancelled. Season Half Over It hardly seems possible but last Saturday marked the half way point of the 1957 scholastic grid season. However, area fans can look forward to some terrific ball games coming up startihg this weekend. With most teams getting into the' "meat" of their schedules, the competition should be lively from here on out. Four top notch attractions are listed in Bristol County, play:' New Bedford is at Taunton, Fair haven has a date with Durfee, Attleboro travels to Vocational, and Coyle goes to North Attle boro. For Attleboro and Coyle, Monday opponents in Taunton, their Saturday games will be the second of the week. Looking at these clashes indi vidually and in inverse order, the Coyle-North Attleboro setto should produce plenty of fire works. In their two appearances to date, the Warriors have been most impressive, downing Barn stable and Stoughton. North, after an opening day 7-7 tie at New Bedford, has steamrollered North Quincy and Canton. Both teams are studded with veteran personnel. In size and speed, they're well matched. The nickel stands on end. The Attleboro-New Bedford Vocational tilt will feature a stout defense against a versatile offense. Coach Bill Madden's Jewelers have given ground grudgingly this campaign, with Durfee the only opponent in three games to register more than once. Attleboro lost that one 14-6, then rebounded to, de ;feat Taunton 6-6, following which came a 7-7 tie with Fair, haven. The Artisans, meanwhile, have yet to win a ball game, but their explosive offense" featuring the running of "Scooter" Morris and Ed Harrison, and the passing combination of George McMul len to Martin Gomes, have given their opponents fits. Vocational dropped their initial encounter to Taunton, 19-14, succumbed at Fairhaven, 14-7, and last Satur day' went down before Durfee, 27-14. Off compartive scores against common opponents, At tleboro would would seem to rule a one touchdown favorite. But • . . ? Fairhaven at Durfee Fairhaven will put its unde feated record on the line at Alumni Field, Fall River, on Saturday. The Blue has been tied twice (Dartmouth, 0-0, and Attleboro, 7-7) and owns victo ries over Vocational' and Barn stable. Durfee is '2 and 1, the loss coming at the hlinds of pow erful Archbishop Willi~s. Spearheading the Fairhaven attack will be the versatile Barry Behn and the elusive Ken La noue. These boys operate behind one of the best lines in the area. DU·ect.in& the Durfee attack will
wicz to advance the ball on the ground. In the air, Kupiec to Baxendale is Durfee's No.. 1 combination. This one will be settled up front when those two rugged lines tangle. The New 'Bedford - Taunton joust at Hopewell Park, Taunton,
rounds out the County schedule. This should be anoth~r good one between two teams that have posted successful records thus' far. Coach Tom Eck's eleven is undefeated in three games. The Crimson has downed Barnstable (14-7) and Walpole (7-6), and has a 7-7 tie with powerful North Attleboro. An opportunist club, New Bedford has shown to ad vantage in the late stages of each 'of its ball games. Quarterback Ernie Torres and halfback Bob Sylvia are the main cogs in the Crimson of fense. Taunton is 2-1 for the season, w*th victories over Vo cational and North Quincy. The Herrings were idled last week by the flu. Coach George DiRubio's boys have done a commendable job in this, a building year. The Herrings have good size up front and in co-captain George Hodg son one of the area's better of fensive backs. A toss-up.
Narry Sc~ools Active All Narry schools are sched uled for action this week but the sole league encounter is' the, . Case at Falmouth affair. Other things being equal, this should be an easy one for the Cardinals. Dartmouth travels to the tip of the Cape to engage Province town in what should prove noth ing 'more than an outing for the Little Green. Dighton plays host to powerful Mansfield in another no-contest affair. Bereft of the services of starting quarterback Antosca, who broke a leg in the Oliver Ames game, the Hornets still figure to sting the Lions, but good. Somerset goes to Scituate and this game should test the Raid ers' mettle. Each tea~ has lost once, Scituate to Case (33-14) and Somerset to Mansfield (21-7). The Case game· score doesn't reflect accurately the closeness of the contest, which wasn't broken open until late in the second half. In the, final game of the'day, it will be Ware ham at Barnstable, the unde feated versus the yet to win. Another· easy one for Coach Clem Spillane's juggernaut.
~AvE
titUNEY
FORMER EDITOR: New Bishop of Salina, Kansas, is Msgr. Frederick W. Freking, spiritual director of the North American College, Rome, and formerly the first editor of the Minnesota Win ona edition of Our Sunday Visitor, and now known as the Courier. NC Photo.
Banquet Closes Continued From Page One Walter A. Sullivan will present the C.Y.O. award. The banquet has been planned by the Rev. Felix S. Childs, pas tor, with the assistance of Rev. Ro~rt L. Stanton and the Rev. Paul G. Connolly. . Speaker at the affair. to which all former curates of the Church have been invited, will be the Rev. Edward J. Mitchell of Sacred Heart Church, Taun ton, a native of the parish.
Wins English Honor
WASHINGTON (NC)-Queen Elizabeth II has presented a high British honor to ari American priest for his "outstanding con tribution to the cause of Anglo Anierican friendship and understanding." ' He is Jesuit Father Edward J. Whelan, 70, who has been desig nated an honorary officer of the civil division of the Order of the British Empire. The California Jesuit was one of five Americans honored by the British Sovereign in ,a quiet ceremony at the British embassy during Her Majesty's visit.
Talks by Joe- Dugan, Re4 Sox scout; Dick Reynolds, schoolboy sports editor of the Providence Journal Bulletin and Rev. Walter A. Sullivan, CYO director in Fall
River, and presentation of num erous aw~ds highlighted the annual "Knight of Champions," held Tuesday night in Catholic Community Center. Fall River Council, Knights of Columbgus was host for the event which honored CYO cham pions in three sports, baseba~l, basketball and track. Immaculate Conceptions and St. Mary's each received two trophies, and St. Elizabeth's Jun iors got one for capturing Dio cesan basketball honors. Immaculates, directed by Ed Harrington, swept to the Dioce
san baseball championship and won the first annual K of C track meet. St. Mary's were first in senior basketball and junior baseball. Faithful Navigator Jose Costa presented the Bishop Stang Assembly Trophy to the Immac ulates for leading the field in the track meet. Awards were also made to boys who finished first, second and third in each event. Tie clasps bearing a figure representing their sport were presented to each member of the winning baseball and basketball squads, numbering 60 players coaches. Albert Riley, chairman of the KC Youth Activities Committee, gave the welcome and Advocate Charles J. Hague, and Nap Dufault, director of athletics at Hatch Prep School, Newport, were masters of ceremonies. The gathering was led ,in prayer by Rev. Felix S. Childs, pastor of Immaculate Conception Church, and KC chaplain" and Knight Armand Medeiros sang , the Star Spangled Banner. Grand Knight Ernest F. Potter, Jr., spoke briefly and helped in the presentation of awards. A luncheon was served.
Enrollment Gain DETROIT (NC)-The Univer sity of Detroit's enrollment in all its schools for this year is 11 ,908, as compared with 11,477 last year. Freshman enrollment dr<;>pped 333 but there were increases in the Jesuit university's evening program and in its non-credit courses. About 250 students are taking lecture and demonstration portions of all or part of the complete fresbInan liberal arts curriculum on television from the, university station.
I
o
" , " " " " . " " " " " . -,, ,,, , ,, ,,, ,, ,,, , ",,. ,,
,
T
, ,~, ,,, ,, ,,
',
'.
, j
,
h
'
,,,,,
e
, ,
A ',, , N ',
"
,, ,,, ,,, , , ,,, ,, :,, ,,
, , ,,, ,, ,,', . ,, ,,, ,,, ,,, . ,,
' ,,,
,
- ,~
,;
,, , , , ,, , ,,, , : ,, , ,, ,,, ,,, ,
,,
C
"~
EVERETT MOTORS. In~-' , , 'OLDSMOBILE - CADILLAC
0 R
' '
Safety- Tested Used Cars
~, ••••••,
WM.
T~
'
, ", ", ,, ,, ,, , :, ,, , ,, ,, ,, , "
,
Telephone OSborne 8-5236
of
••••, ••••• _~_!
MANNING CO.
WHOLESALE AUTOMOTIVE' and
CHARLES F. VARGAS
They
INDUSTRIAL SUPPLIES
NIEW BIEDFORD, MASS. '0
..
H
254 ROCKDALE AVENUE
u.s.
TIRES • DELCO BATTERftES
• PERFECT CIRCLE RINGS
FALL RIVER -
NEW BEDFORD -
HYANNIS -
NEWPORT
YOUR' DOLLAR BUYS
Patronize
Us!
MORE FORDi'n..195-7
HEATING Olt
of
,
880 SOUTH MAIN ST. - FALL RIVER
~ c(//~ ~~~n.
~ss~·
Advertisers
,
YOUR OllIlEAT!
(Dr f/U/~/( delivery D!
the
.,;,
O~
,
Patronize
THAN EVER BEFORE
See us for the BEST DEAL in a
Ford Car or Truck
MOTOR SALES COMPANY FORD DEALERS FOR OVER 38 YEARS
13+'-8.6 Purchase St.
New.Bedford,.
Mass.~"
•
°.11
I
\
1 I
WORLDWIDE CATHOLIC PRESS CONVENES IN VIENNA: Mo re than 400 Catholic editors, publishers and journalist~ from 32 nations are meeting at the fifth World Congress in Vienna. Among those promi nent at· the session are (left) Frank A. Hall, director of the National <!atholic .welfare Conference news service; second from left is Floyd An derson, editor of the Newark Diocesan Advocate; second from right photo shows Dr. Friedrich Funder, dean of Catholic journalists talking to Arch bishop Franz Koenig of Vienna; and, at the extreme right is Count Giusep..p.e , Dall Torre, editor of Osservatore Romano arid president of the Interna tional Union of the Catholic Press. NC Photo•
ffollyw-"'d 'in focus
Pr~~~®~ DD~(qJint.lTee C@Mln1fy"
.Says YOllJJri'il9) I?Il'Dsoll1er -New MOll'e. Vidous
MANSFIELD (NC)-The av . erage . prisoner eritering Ohio State Reformatory, a prison for first-time felony offenders in By William ·H. Mooring
the 16 to 30 age bracket, is a .' "Raintree County", MGlVI's. three-hour translation of "slightly more' vicious type of the bulky Civil War novel by the late Ross Lockridge Jr., criminal." will be widely' compared with David O. Selznick's movie of
But Catholic Chaplain Father Margaret Mitchell's "Gone With The Wind.". Some will say William Conces offers no opinion ieis better, some that it is Then too" MGM were able to as to why this is. Characteristic of the young not as good; still others film "Raintree County" in their crimin.al today, said the chaplain, that, since the. two books new wide screen process, Cam is his utter disregard for the were ali!:e only in period and 'era 65, using improved Techni rights of others. Of the 1,347 who color and sound recording un quite different in' other essen entered the reformatory last available when "Gone With The . tial respects, there is no sense year, 297 were Catholics. Wind" was filmed. in comparison. Personally . I Ma~ Sweep' Board find this film, The Southern femme fatale is. downright smutty. Its crude "Raintree of "Raintree,~' Susanna Drake, .situations and coarse dialogue County" more vividly brought to life by Eliz almost incurred Legion condem to my taste 'abeth Taylor, seems less a crea_ nation. It is sad, therefore, to t-h an. "Gone ture of theatrical fiction than note tnat Dorothy' Kingsley, a With The Scarlett O~Hara who, in "Gone practicing Catholic, wrote the Wind", just as With The Wind" brought Vivi screenplay in which three bap [ did the book. enne Leigh an Academy Oscar. tized: Catholics, Frank Sinatra, Ross Lockridge Jr., )Vith his And speaking of Oscars, one Rita Hayworth and Kim Novak DOvel, won the $150,000 firs.t foresees that "Raintree County" co-star. '. Even the director, prize in MGM's story-writing may "sweep. the· board" next· George Sidney, proudly claims contest, which neither raised his March. Elizabeth Taylor, as the· one Catholic parent .as evidence hopes nor doused his discontent. sadly possessive wif€ of 'John of ~easonable respect for decency &) much for financial success Shawnessy is almost certain to in entertainment. llJid. Hollywood fame, neither of be nominated and may win. So .Kim N~vak Refuses which now means as much' to may the film itself" as· did "Gone One may' not have come to hiin . as the tiniest prayer. With the Wind" in 1939. look to so'me of these people for . As "Raintree County" begins a Eva Marie Saint, as Shawnes high example'. in Catholic be highly. publicized ~'road show," sy-s Northern Sweetheart Nell, may also' be nomin·ated. and' havior, but Kim Novak, in recent which, to .you, means' advanced among many brilliant support press -interviews, has made some ! prices at special theaters, the irig performances' those of Nigel point of. her Catholicity. Re · name Ross Lockridge Jr. is Patrick as the eccentric profes!?or . cently Miss Novak refused to go '. barely discernible at the bot tom of the lengthy screen cred Stiles . and· . Lee Marvin .as ~~us:o~:~n~al~~~~~~":t~~a ht;h its,' . while that of Montgomery "Flash" Perkins are well in the running, . I' enough. She promptly won a Clift, seen as John Shawnessy, · blazes at the top. Young Lock More often than the Lock raise. ridge book, this film draws veils Her refusal to appear i~ "Pal ridge had gone, by tragic. deed, of delicacy over the displays of Joey" because its moral quality lorig befor.e.his widely discussed human passion. Whiie, like a was not high enough to satisfy novel could be batted into good book, tackling it is a leis:" her conscience, could' hardly screen shape as has now been urely exprience, even those who have carried less moral force. done with some fidelity by Mil feel provoked by its controver Especially s~nce each story they lard Kaufman. give her is worse than before. sies, will recognize its scope and : . Civil War Background integrity. Had she'been joined by others Lockridge etched his ,char I think "Raintree' County" is in such a protest, the quality of . act~rs. against a background of the film might have been raised, a great motion picture. the Civil War, while Margaret Stars Are Silent apart from the moral value and· Mitchell plunged hers more One is often asked why Cath~ effect of raising the question. deeply into it. Lockridge took olic actors consent to appear in Too often it is the relatively more account of the color line plays that are so bad, morally, small actor who speaks up for arid in his defence of abolition that their fellow Catholics may decent principles.. The price he hinted with more heat at equal . ity. This tends to bring '~Rain not, with a good conscience, 'pays somlQtimes is heavy. patronize them. Powerful. stars, safe beyond tree County" clo'ser to current , This is easy to over-simplify.. reprisllls, too often remain silent. racial controversies than "Gone With The Wind" even though Some Catholics do refuse. Others slavery, not segregation, is de accept offers which present prob_ bated in the theme. "lems of conscience, either in the Lockridge chose for his cen hope'that they can In:inimize the tral male character, John Shaw moral defects or the belief that nessy, an idealist of strong emo results will not be as bad as tional drive and puny physique, they eventually turn out to be. · a role in which Montgomery Some appear' not to care in the AnLE~ORO, MASS. o Clift at times reveals moods of least to what kind of shows they Daily. Masses: sickness that are apparently lend their talents. Columbia's 6:0, 7, 8 ~. M. shared in reality with the char-' "Pal Joey", from the Rogers and Confessions Daily: acter. "Gone With The Wind" Hart musical which originated ... 6:30 A. M. to 9:00 P. M. kept in central focus the hand with Johri O'Hara's bGok, seems some, m'uscular Rhett Butler to Devotions on. SUNDAYS to fali into the latter class. whom the authoress imputed begin year round at This film, like the stage show, that rom"antic irresistibility 3:00 P. M. which is the theatrical delight Perpetual Novena to Our of all movie hams and their Lady of LaSalette every fans. evening at 7:30 P. M. Again, while she set her nar rative largely. in and. around Organizers of the city of Atlanta, Lockridge Pilgrimages favored rural backdrops in i ' ICE CREAM Please Contad: a . mythical Indiana county. These have been caugh<' with Rev. Father Director LEO H. BERUBE, breath-taking grandeur in and i95~ Slad'e St.. Tel. OS 5-7836 around n"nvill€ , . Ky~, Tipton TEL. Attl~boro 1,.0008 !...-.:..:. - ~ ' ~e, Te1ll1., and Natchez, Miss.
·As ·Gwae@i Motion Pi<eture
r
-
LaSOJ~efft~ £~rrine
I~~.,~,
I
~r. I
Former Chap!air. Bishop to Speak Guest Sp<eaker At St. Anne 6 s . At Breakfast Breakfast .
An interesting account of his experiences in Japan where. he had served as a Naval Air Forc.e chaplain was given by Rev. Ed ward C. Duffy, assistant at St. James Church, New Bedford, principal speaker at the Com..; munion breakfast of the Newman. Club of New Bedford Institute of Technology. Introduced by Rev. John F. Hogan, chaplain of the club, Father Duffy discussed the so cial, educ.ational. and religious development of Japan since World War II. Praising the edu cational achievements of the country, espeCially in Catholic education, he 'pointed out that Japan has the lowest rate of illit eracy in ~he world. ·Rev. Louis -E. Prevost, pastor .of St. Joseph's Church where club. members received Holy Communion, greeted those in at .tendance. Seated/at the head table in addition to, Father Hogan and Father Duffy were D.~. John E. Foster, president '01. the Institute; Mrs. Foster; Don': aId G. LeBlanc, president of the' club; Mrs. L€ B lanc; Professor and Mrs. Leo M. Sullivan and Professor 'and Mrs. Anthony.J; John. .
Members of the Holy Name Society of St. Anne's Parish, Fall 'River, will attend their semi-annual corporate' com munion Sunday morning, the the Feast of Christ the King, at St. Anne's Church. Immediately following a spe. cial, mass to be celebrated at 8 A. M. at St. Anne's Shrine, a breakfast will be served at St. Anne's School recreational hall. His Excellency Most Reverend James L. Connolly, D.D., Bishop of the Fall River Diocese, will be guest speaker at this tradi tional gathering usually attended ,by some .41l0 men. It is expected that not only members of the Society but also every parishioner will be eager to hear the message of the Bishop coming to St. Anne for the special e~ent.
Noy•. 4 .Theatre Durfee
,-'
~
,"""-,-~------~----~ . , :, .Com. plefe ,: ~ BA'NKING .~.' ~ SERVIC.E .~,
, ,
.
: :
ForGREATER NEW BEDFORD
,
.: :
,
: THE
:
: First Safe . Deposit : : National Bank '.:, ,
,, of New Bedford, Mass. ,, .
: : : : , :
Main Office Union ~nd Pleasant Sts. North End Branch 1200 Acushnet Ave~ Member Federal Deposit .]nsurance' Corporation
"
: : : : , :
Reservaiions Held
until Nov. 3
Reserved Seats $3.00-$2.50
Balcony $2.00 , PHONE DURFEE BOX OFFICE 05 7-9357
-----------------------
/
FIX UP YOUR HOME NOW
WITH A LOW COST
H~me Improvement LOAN
I
Three Convenient Offices To Serve You
Bank~ ~. .. ...: lEa.· '. CllIAm'S.·' '. Nor~~9~ank . 4.. A I
South 2 Rodney French Blvd:
"oG3f184£. BaNK
cA~~net
OF NEW BEDFORD
MAIN BANK .... PURCHASE AND WILLIAM STREETS
Member Federal Dep/?'Bit Insurance CorporGtiMt.