Greater New Bedford High School Campaign Total Over .$8 1,500 ,
The ANCHOR An Anchor of
Vol. 1, N@. 30
As plans for the climatic push to assure the overwhelming success of the drive are being completed,
(\
R.enuaem M@Ji$S
"'\'J At Cathedr~~
Most Rev. James L. Connolly, D.D., Bishop of Fall River, announced today that memorial gifts for the school building fund, campaign have now passed the $801,500 mark. The new school will be built in Dartmo'lth, near the New Bedford city line. It will cost in excess of $2,000,000. the Soul, Sure and ~7irm--ST. PAUL Organized in advance, of the official opening of the fund cam- , paign, the 900-man memorial ,.A& Wi gifts committee has been working diligently under the direction of Chairman Joseph P. PRICE 10e • Duchaine of New Bedford, This Second Cia.. Mail Privilege. group will continue its efforts to $4.00 per Year Authorized at Fall River, Ma88. further increase', the campaign total until the solemn opening of the drive which is scheduled for 7:45 next Wednesday night at St. Anthony of Padua Church in New Bedford. K of C Escort Most Rev. Richard J. Cushing, D.D., LL.D., Archbishop of Boston, will speak to the workers at the official opening. Bishop Connolly will introduce the Archbishop. Both Archbishop Cushing and Bishop Connolly will bless the workers. Turn to Page Four
Fall Riveii', Mass.
On M€)nd«JI
'
,Quarte~
Million Hospital Gift For St" AnU1e'S
KEYNOTE SPEAKER: Archbishop Cushing of :Bos Dr. A. Daniel Rubenstein, ton will give the principal Director of the Division of , talk to volunteer workers at Hospitals, State Department the opening of the 'New Bed of Public Health, has advised ford' regional .'high school Mother Pierre Marie, Superin- building fund campaign next . ENGUSH COMPOS!'J['iON WORKSHOP: Religious tendent of St. Anne's Hospital, Wednesday night. the hospital will be granted and lay teachers who st~ff the schools of the diocese that the sum of $250,000 under th~ Gir~$' attended ~ Workshop on English Composition at the Sacred Hill-Burton Construction Act for Heart School in Fall River last SaturdaY. Sister Mary the construction of a school of Ceilt'elf Opens Elizabeth, SS.CC., of Fairhaven (left) and Sister Mary nursing. This grant is the second re Jeremiah, S.U.S.C., of Fall River are shown with Dr. John ha ~QlU River ceived by St. Anne's Hospital He Treanor, headmaster of Francis Parkman School, Boston.~ under the Hospital Construction By Patricia M. McGowan Act. The Hospital had applied In a whirl of flowers, for aid when it started the Diocesan, School Taunton Honors Maternity lights, and sparkling decor wing. At that time, ated rooms, the Girls' Cath there wall no money available, Memory ~f Late and hospital authorities were olic Youth Organization Tea~heg"s Hold of
New
Joseph N. Elias,
A Workshop, on English Composition was held Satur day afternooon in Sacred Heart School auditorium,
In dedication ceremonies held Sunday, the Weir base ball field in Taunton was re named 'the "Joseph N. Elias
Fall River, for teachers in ele mentary grades of the schools of the Diocese. Over 700 Religious and lay teachers from Acushnet, Fair baven, Taunton, Orleans, Attle boro, North, Attleboro, Swansea and Fall R.iver attended. The workshop wa. conducted by John H. Treanor, headmaster Turn to Page Twelve
Field" in meJ:ll0ry, of one of Taunton's best-loved citizens and an ardent supporter of all charitable activities and a tire less worker for the local CYO. The CYO was among the first of many organizations to request such a public dedication. Last March the CYO put into annual competition the Elias Memorial Turn to Page Fourteen
Indulg;ence M~y Be Gained For S@u!s in P~rgatory Saturday, Nov. 2, All S~ints Day, is the day of the -Toties Quoties" indulgence. This means that as often as a Catholic visits a church on All Saints Day to 'pray for the dead, he may gain a plenary indulgence for some soul in purgatory. . also be fulfilled, that is, ConfesA ~lenary mdulg~n.ce may sion within the eight days imme be g~med for each VISIt made diately preceding or following on that day. This indulgence the day to which the indulgences is applicable only to the souls detained in purgatory. The indulgence may be gained from noon on Friday until mid&ight Saturday. The prayers to be said at each 1I'isit consist of the recitation six times of the Our Father, Hail Mary and the Glory Be to the Father for the intentions of the
Pope. The other conditions for gain.... 'llMtnary induigenceamuat
are appointed, and Holy Com munion the previous day or within the following eight days. Those who do not obtain the indulgences on All Souls Day itself may gain them on Sunday, Nov. 3. The Church also grants a plen ary indulgence under the usual conditions on each day of the octave of All Souls to the faithful who visit a cemetery in a spirit TurD to Page SeveDieeD
advised to wait. Yet, the needs Turn to Page, Three o
Congress Ready To ReQlpprOD§e F~reggn Policy WASHINGTON (NC)
The World Series is over,
Queen Elizabeth II of Eng land has departed our 'shores, and the football season
is far advanced. The country is turning from these diverting events to find that it is still deeply involved in world affairs, and that they are as complex and
ominous as ever. There is no ques~ion that we still· have a "cold war" on our hands, and Nikita Khrushchev, Russia's smiling "super sales man," seems to be waging it as ruthlessly; though differently, as Stalin ever did. Dangerous Situation Marshal Tito, the Rerl dictator of Yugoslavia, recognized East Germany's Red regime and re o vealed a whole pattern of Mos . cow power politics. And, what the United States does regarding its future relations with Tito could be the most important de velopment of the entire affair. A dispute between Middle East countries has crystalized into a tug-of-war between the United States and Soviet Russia, and some people fear it could lead to World War III. Soviet Russia has made enor mous propaganda capital out of. Turn to Page Sixteen
w )j The customary Pontifical Requiem Mass for deceased bishops, priests, religious and benefactors of the Dio
cese will be' celebrated. in St. Mary's Cathedral at 10 Monday, Nov. 4. The Most Reverend Bishop will be celebrant of the Mass, with Rt. Rev. James J. Gerrard, V.G., as assistant priest, and Rt. Rev. Edmund J. Ward and Rt. Rev. John A. Silvia as deacons of honor. Deacon of the Mass will be Very Rev. Hugh A. Gallagher and subdeacon, Very Rev. Alfred Bonneau. Acolytes will be Rev. Henri Charest and Rev. Leo M. Curry; thurifer,' Rev. John J. Galvin; book bearer, Rev. James A. Clark; candle bearer, Rev. Edward A. Oliveira; gremiale bearer, Rev. Thomas J. LeBlanc; miter bearer, Rev. Roger Gagne. ,Masters of ceremony will be Very Rev. Humberto S. Medeiros and Rev. Paul McCarrick. Singing will be by the Priests' Choir under the direction of Rev. James F. McDermott.
Thursday, Oct. 31, 1951
Work!>hop Here
,
An intensive house-to-house .campaign, designed to bring to a successful conclusion the drive for $1,500,000 for the first regional high school in the diocese, will be launched next Wednesday by 3,400 volunteer workers in the 30 participating parishes in the Greater New Bedford area.
CYO
Fall River was officially opened on the feast of Christ the King, .- opening day of National Cath olic Youth Week. To those attending the open house at '31 Franklin Street, headquarters of the new organi Turn to Page Seven
Anchor Readers Invited to Enter Spaeth COn~e$t Readers of The Anchor are invited to participate in a contest for $2,850 in cash
prizes offered-by the Spaeth
,0
Foundation for the best five
articles to be published in the
Catholic Press between Dec. 1,
1957, and March 31, 1958. The article, to be written on the general subject of "The Artist Today and His Relation ship to the Church," may be written by a free lance contribu tor or a staff member of a Cath olic publication. Since eligib1C articles must apj) pear first in a publication whicb is a member of the, Catholic Press Association, The Anc!tor, will select a board of judges io determine which of the entries submitted to this newspaper will be published. The sponsoring Foundation, headed by Otto L. and Eloise A. Turn to Page Fourteen
St. Vincent de Paul Work Little Known ,to Catholics Rev. James A. Clark
St. Mary's Parish, New Bedford
A most puzzling feature of the modern-day Church is that one of its most pow~rful organizations, powerful both spiritually and materially, is very little kn'own. That or
ganization is the St. Vincent de' Paul Society. "What is the , St. Vincent de Paul Society, Father?" That question has been put to every priest in the diocese,' possibly many
REV. lAMES A. CLARK.
times during his career. It is asked by those who may wish to join the Society; or by those who are in need of help of one kind or another; or by an every day Catholic ever-anxious to know more about the workings of the Church. Actually it is little known because its members do their God-given work in a humble and unassuming manner; and they do this not only to protect the privacy of those whom they help, but also because they real ize that the spiritual benefits from their work are more plen tiful when their great charity is unknown to ~e rest of mea. TurD to Page Fifkea
Fre~ ~(9)®®~h New
THE ANCHOR' Thurs.,Oct. 31, 1957
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PI'PTSBURGH (NC) - , "Freedom of speech is wide. spread, the ·fear of criticism!! almost but not quite forgot
NEW YORK (NC)-Bru tality of communists, in crushing the heroic revolt of the Hungarian people a year ago must never be forgotten, a U. S. Senator and a national labor leader declared here. Sen. John. F. Kennedy of
Massachusetts and George Meany, president of the. AFL CIO, were two of. many !eade~s throughout the na~ion who paId tribute to 'Hungary on the first anniversary of that nation's abortive bid for freedom fiom Soviet rule. . Live Forever Sen. Kennedy said no amou~t of 'Soviet rock~ts to the moon would ever "wipe out the memory of Russian tanks firing on hospitals and churches, on aged refugees 'and crippled chil dren." He declared that Oct. 23, 1956, the day the Hungarian' revolt
began, was one "that will live
forever in the annals of free men· and nations-a' day of courage and of conscience and of tri Ulllph." In a talk carried by the Amer,- . lean Broadcasting Company, Mr. Meany urged all "lovers of free-: dom" not to visit the Soviet Union until its army of occu pation has-,left Hungary. . "Civilized mankind must never forget and never forgive the communist tortures, deportations
and murders of Hungary's brav
est sons and daughters," he de clared. lFlays Reds He encouraged leaders of Asian and African nations that had won their freedom recently, to "take' the lead in having the 12th United Nations General As sembly unseat, the Hungarian delegation - handpicked and, handcuffed by Moscow." At the offices here of Catholic Relief Services-Nationa~ Cath olic Welfare Conference, Msgr. Edward E, Swanstrom, executive director, received the following telegram: "Today, on the first an niver DrY' of the. Hungarian national uprising against communist tyr anriy and Soviet i!TIperialism, we join to express our heartfelt gratitude to you who helped open to us the doors to free doni." T~ telegram was signed by -r'he Resettled Hungarians, Utica, N. Y." Of the '32,000 Hungarian refu gees W]lO have found freedom in this country, about 20,000 have been resettled by CRS-NCWC, world-wide 'relicf agency of the U, S; Bishops"and the Hungarian Catholic League of America, I~c.
New Voc(QJl'oon LONDON (NC)-Lt. Col. Leo Korwin, after 30 years in the Polish army, was ordained as a priest at Southampton at. the age of 59. A captain in World War , II, he was marched out to be shot by the Germans, but was spared at the last minute when it was realized that he could speak six languages. He has. become a Marian Father.
BA'D EXAMPLE KEY TO DELINQUENCY: Delinquent parents are the "root~ evil" of juvenile delinquency, Francis Cardinal Spell'man, Archbish~p of New. Yor~, at extreme left, told guests attending the 13th annual Alfred E.Smlth MemOrIal dmner in New York. "Delinquent children are rarely born; they are made by bad example, he said. With the Cardinal, are Clare Booth Luce, former U.S. Ambassador to Italy; James Francis Cardinal Mclntryre, Archbishop of LOs' Angeles; ¥ayor Robert Wagner of New York City and Gov. Averell Harriman of New Yprk. NC Photo.
Cites Big Gain In Blind Aid
In Brritish
UnDversity Role CHICAGO (NC)-The signlfi c'ant role of a Catholic university in training leaders was stressed by· Samuel Cardinal Stritch at a convocation in obervance of pon~ title'al honors accorded tone Paul University. "The university exists to train leaders," Cardinal Stretch said. ..It is not just a place where knowledge is obtainable.' It must concern itself with the will of man." . Declaring that "the Catholic .university recognizes genuine academic freedom" and "is never afraid of scientific advances," the Chicago Archbishop con tinued: ;'The Catholic unive.I:sity, therefore, aims at training lead ers possessed of profound knowl edge of holiness; who in humil ity attract others to share in their excellence." The Cardinal said the. decree bestQwing "a canonical status on DePaul UniverSIty challenges it to' carryon the very highest type of leadership and to serve both Church and country." The pontifical honors were awarded .in re'cognition of De Paul's educational work through a dgcree,_of the Sacred Congre gation of Seminaries and Uni versities at the Vatican.' • As a ,part of the canonical de cree, the university's school of. sacred music education and its faculty were 'declared affiliated to the Plmtifical Institute of Sacred Music ~n Rome.
CO[R~~~A & ~:ONS
. Cardinal Wyszynski ", Father Labujewski recounted that while in Warsaw he 'visited
His Eminence Stefan Cardinal
Wyszynski', Primate of Poland.
"Today he is respected, hon ored and loved as the spiritual leader of the nation," the Am bridge pastor said. "Step by step he is achieving the work of won der. Thanks to him, religion is once again a principal subject in the schools; the Catholic press is . in motion, and he is earnestly trying to efface the scars of war, famine and immorality, espe cially among the teen-agers. This he intends to accomplish , through religious study ~nd training."
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Cardinal Notes
P ,
FORT,Y HOURS
-No'{. 3 - Notre ,Dame, Fall River St. Thomas More, Som ,erset Nov. lo-St. John the Baptist, New Bedford Sacred Heart, Oak Bluffs Nov. 17-0ur Lady of the Isie, Nantucket St. Anthony, Mattapoisett . Nov. 24 - St. Stanislaus, Fall River St....Anne, New. Bedford / St. John the Evangelist,· Attleboro.
Mass Orelo
FRIDAY-All' Saints. 'Double of I Class. White. Mass Proper; PITTSBURGH (NC) -Cath- Gloria; 'Creed; Common·Preface. HOLY DAY OF OBLIGATION. olic services to· the 'blind have 'Votive Mass ill honor of the increased 400 per cenfin the last· Sacred Heart of Jesus not per 10 years. . 'mitted. Tomorrow' is the First The estimate' was made by Saturday of the month. 'Jesuit Father JohnJ. Klocke, ' ,SATURDAY - Commemora- . director of the Xavier Society tion 'of All the Faithful Depart for the Blind in New York. ed.· Double. Black. Three MassA: measure of this success, . es may be offered by every Father Klocke said; belongs' to priest; the first Mass is offered the Catholic press since the dioaccording to the intention of the cesan newspapers have brought 'celebrant, the second for all the increased attention to the work Faithful Departed, and the.third in this field, and have attracted according to the intention of the finanCial assistance and volunP0p.e. . teer workers to the cause of aid SUNDAY Twenty-First for the blind. Sunday After Pentecost., Double. Father Klocke spent 15 years Green. Mass Proper; Gloria; in the classroom, four years in' Creed; Preface of Trinity. the Army as a chaplain and has ;. MONDAY-St. Charles' Bor been director of the Xavier Soromeo, Bishop and Confessor. ciety"for the Blind for the last 11 Double. White. Mass Proper; years. The Xavier Society is a Gloria; Second Collect Ss, Vital national Catholic' publishing is and Agricola, Martyrs; Third house and library for the blind. Collect· for Rain; No Creed; The Jesuit priest said he fa-, Common Preface. vored Braille books and talking TUESDAY-Mass of Previous books equally in the education, Sunday. Simple. Green. Mass spiritual guidance and entertainProper; No Gloria or Creed; ment of the blind. Second Collect' for Rain; Third Collect f~r Peace; Common Convert Campaign Preface. WEDNESDAY-Mass' of Pre Doccese vious Sunday. Simple. Green. MANCHESTER (NC)"':"'A two Mass Pro'per; ,No" Gloria' or week conversion: campaign', ha~ :Creed;' Second Collect for Rain; been lau'nched by Bishop An Third, Collect for' Peace; 'Com ' drew Beck, A.A" in the crowded mon Preface. ' . THURSDAY'- Mass' of Pre:' industrial diocese of Salford, vious' .Sunday. Simple. Greert. England. . )~'lass Proper; No Glotia or Main aims of the;! crusad~, cen Creed; Second Collect for Rain; tered on Salford and the city of Manchester, is to encourage Third' Collect for Peace; Com mon Preface. Catholic laymen to try to' make converts and also to encourage ll..n""lMe& ~@fi' C<OlrdlDII'i)(tlI~ . the Catholic Inquiry Center, na."'l .... tional publicity' organization TOLEDO (NC)-Qne of the
working for the conversion of three high schools to be built in
England. Similar campaigns with the Toledo area will-be named ~pecial Masses, Holy Conimunfor His Eminence Samuel Car-· ions and prayers, have already dinal Stritch, Archbishop of Chi taken' place in five other English cago. The Cardinal was the sec dioc~ses. , ond bishop of the Toledo diocese.
ten." That's Poland today according to Father Stanislaus R. Labujew ski, of Ambridge, who recently returned from a visit to the land of his forefathers.
"When they gather on the streets in groups, the people are not disturbed or told to disband," Father Labujewski said. "I was amazed and pleased to hear 'Yankee Doodle", coming over the radio. Radio' Free Europe and the Voice of America, as well as radio stations in Rome, Mad rid and London are tuned in freely." . Father Labujewski credited the endeavors of Wladyslaw Go mulka with a large part of the change in Poland since Oc~ober 1956. Since then, the priest said, "another spirit has entered the hearts of the Poles in Warsaw
and throughout all Poland."
Disappointm.ent "The Poles," he said, "cannot Comprehend why they, who- were, in Combat on the side of the . Allies, were forgotten and de-,' serted by the 'Allies and es~
dally by former Presiden~,
Roosevelt and Truman at the peace table." . ,'.,
202 and 2.06 ROCK ST. ' ..:
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Senator Asserts
Religio,n Offers
No Problems
Legion to Adopt
Positive Method
Judging Movnes
NEW YORK (NC) - The f.act that, he is a Catholic should present no difficulty to him in administering the
LOUISVILLE (NC)-The
Legion of Decency is going
to 'adopt a more positive ap
proach in evaluating motion
pictures. Mrs. James Looram told dele gates to the International Fede ration of Catholic Alumnae of an expected change "in the aims an<\ set-up" of the Legion as a result of the encyclical Miranda 'Prorsus (Remarkabl~ Technical Inventions), issued in Septem ber by Pope, Pius XII. ' She said Legion officials have . consulted with theologians on the applications of the encycli cal, and that a statement specify ing Legion changes will be made at the annmil meeting of the " Bishops of the United States next month. The Bishops' state ment will include directives re lating to television, she added. "Further, we are gomg to do more positive work," she stated, "not only condemning bad pic tures, but commending the thea ter for the production of good pictures, and commending thea . ters for not showing bad films." Msgr. William J. MacDon;l1d, acting rector of the Catholic Uni versity of America, Washington, told the delegates that as a re sult of the emphasis on science and technology "the classics and , philosophy are likely now to be come more ahd more the domain of women." Stating that "even sputnik circling in the heavens is likely to raise other questions," he added: "We need, more scientists, but we must guard against a lop sided education."
effice of President of the United States, Senator John F. Kennedy of Massachusetts said ,here.
Redbook magazine for Novem-, ber carries an article entitled "Senator ~ennedy's Crisis," and' says "the religious issue" may have a strong bearing on the 40 year-old legislator's "campaign for the Democr'atic nomination" o for the presidency. Andre Fontaine, author of the . article, say:. "we asked John Kennedy this question as bluntly as possible": Interests of Many "Senator, if you were running for President, we would want to have one question answered be fore deciding to vote for you. Conceivably there could be a situation in which the dictates of COUNCIL P.RESIDENT AT NANTUCKET: Mrs. Emmett P. Almond, (right), presi your Chu\-ch and the demands of your 'country would conflict. dent, of the Diocesan Council of Catholic Women, addressed members of Our Lady of the In such a case, where would your Isle Women's Guild. She is shown conferring with Very Rev. Edward F. Dowling, pastdr higher loyalty lie?" of Our ,Lady of the Isle, and Mrs. Charles Flanagan, president of the guild. "In th~ first place," the article quotes Senator Kennedy as re Catholic Vets Honor plying, "I can't think of any issue where such a conflict might Nationcil Review arise. But suppose it did; nobody NEW YORK (NC) - The an in my Church gives me orders. GREEN LAKE (NC) - Comaffair of each what choice he nual "Ame~icanism Award" of . It doesn't work that way. I've munity organizations to promote had made," said Father Ford. the Father Duffy Distinguished been in Congress for 10 years, sobriety, including'total abstain-' He pointed out that although and it has never happened. ers and moderate drinkers as alcoholism is the common foe of Service Cross Post 54 of the People arc afraid that Catholics .membe~s, h~s been ~uggested?y all te'mperance groups, many Catholic War Veterans has been take orders from a higher or a Jesuit pnest at a MethodIst churches and individuals dis presented 'to the "National Re ganization. They don't. Or, at School of Alcohol Studies here in . agree on whether moderation or view." least, I don't. . . Wisconsin. total abstinence is' the more Post Commander Thomas J.
"Besides, I can't act as a pri Father John C..Ford, S.J., of practical approach in preventing Seventh Year vate individual does; my respon . Kelly, a Congressional Medal of Weston, 'author and lecturer on illcoholism. ' sibility is to my constituents and NEW YORK (NC) Th~ problems of alcoholism, made Total abstinence is the only Honor winner, presented the Christopher Program has start to the Constitution. So if it came the proposal at t~e school ~eld as answer .for the alcoholic himself, award to the magazine which ed its seventh year on the air, to a conflict between the two, part of the Amencan Baptist As-, Father Ford said. "On this point was praised' for "intellectual, with nearly 1,500 stations c'arry and not just a personal moral sembly. the experts are unanimous, and factual, courageous and candid ipg the, presentation, broadcast issue, I am bound to act for the Father Ford said that such it is absolutely agreed that the writings (~hich have) created a throughl)ut the country for the interests of the many." organizations might be the practical goal (}f treatment must 'new awareness in its readers "full 52 weeks of the year. means of bridging the wide gap be complete abstinence." of the insidious attack upon our
separating the two main schools Triple Sickness
constitutional form of govern
of thought on temperance.
ment."
THE Continued from Page One " . To the more than 4,500,000 alcoAll Its members .would be holics in the United States to of the Fall River population for UNITED FUND pledged to, the practice of soday "alcoholism is a triple sick more hospital beds were such briety," said, the Massachusetts nes~ 'of body mind and soul" he OF AnLEBORO that the hospital authorities de Jesuit. "But it would be left to said' , NICKERSON cided to proceed' with the con the individual to decide whether . struction, the Sisters themselves he would choose abstinence or Father. Ford refuted the mis FUNERAL throwing in it all their resources. moderate use" taken belief that total abstinence Unexpectedly, when the building runs counter to. Catholic spirit. '. B t and • ' O ne In os on was near completion, the State .. "Catholic theology teaches ab. . THE FIRST NATIONA Similar orga.l1lzatIons, ~e said, stinence," he ·said. t'Many of our Authorities advised Mother Monument Services
Pierre Marie that the Hospital have been. qUite use~ul lJl Ireseminaries require or request Serving the Cape and
'BANK Construction Act would pay 40% land, BelgIUm. and lJl' Bos~on, student priests to take the pledge Surrounding Communities Attleborl)-8outh Attleboro of what remained to be done. where Catholics have. JUst for at" least five years, and there , , CAPE COD, MASS. Under this provision, the hospi formed such a group. are several active Catholic ab tal was granted $136,000. "The more perfect choi~ stinence societies, though they have declined in number and Until now, only hospltals and would more often be total abstlnence, but not ~lways, ,and it influence in the last 50 years." atmilar facilities had' received money in, Massachusetts under would be the pnvate, personal . . the -Hill-Burton Act, and St. 1 "-------------------~ Stonehill. to Survey Anne's is the first SCQooI of : HATHAWAY'S : Nursing to profit by it. A special Co",munity Attitude atudy by a 'commission appointed A 'survey of community atti : LAUNDRY, Inc.' : TO WI-IOM DID by the Governor to investigate tudes'to determine the potential : CONGRESS GIVE "finest since· 1877" : the shortage of nurses in the Commonwealth recommended development of Stonehill College'
$20QOOO AND in North Easton is to be under-. : Same day service , :
that existing schools of nursing A TOINNSHIP taken Nov. 1, it was announced
be strengthened. Simultaneously, : if desired! : OF LAND IN ANY today by the Rev. James J. Shee the Department of Public Health . UNOCCUPIED han, C.S.C., college president. undertook a survey of all schools : WY 3-5528 : PART OF THE The survey will be conducted of nursing and of 'practical by the Rev. Thomas C. Duffy, : nurses in the State, and found UNITED SlATES 6 CAMPBELL ST. : that more facilities were needed C.S.C., development director, WJ./fOI J./E MIGJ../T NEW BEDFORD : and it is expected that every : in order to guarantee adequate SELECT segment of the College Ji'amily nursing care. will play some part in seeking Program of Expansion information aimed at providing Since 1950, St. Anne's School a workable solution to' alleviate White's Fal1'm Dairy of Nursing has had to refuse the present needs and to prepare "SPECIAL MILK qualified applicants because of to meet future needs of the col insufficient facilities and, the From Our Own lege. construction of a new school Plans include constructive Tested Herd" was part of the total program of suggestions for erectio.n of ad LaFayette, December 22, 1824 . expansion of the hospital. Acushnet, Mass. WY 3-4457 ditional college buildings, reno The school will be erected on vation or alterations of existing • Special Milk the land owned by the hospital facilities, expansion of the schol • Homogenized Vito D Milk south of Oliver Street. It will arship program and other vital ' . Buttermilk include teaching facilities and needs of the institution that will • Tropicana Orange Juice dormitory' space. Preliminary soon enter its 10th year of serv • Coffee and Choc. Milk sketches have been submitted by ice to southeastern Massachu AImy, the architect. The struc • Eggs - Butter setts. ture will be three stories high, Part of the survey calls for the over a basement. It will inC'lude, indoctrination of the' general in addition to rooms for 160 stu public as to the aims and pro GALLIGAN'S dents: science, nursing and diet gram of the college. Advice, FLOWERLAND . laboratories, six class rooms, of counsel and guidance from the formerly Tiberii fiees for the faculty and a faculty ,. area's business, professional and Floral ArrangementS lounge, recreation rooms, recep civic leaders will ,beSought by Under personal supervision of tion room an a gymnasium-audi volunteers recruited from stu Fred Sowle and Dori. Sowle torium with • seating capacity dents, parents and friends of the 811 'As~ley Blvd. ef·350. college.. ' ' New Bedford' It' is expected that the eOn It is expected that the results WY 3:::2613 IlU'uction wHl start in the Sprinc of the survey will be made pub
Weston Jesu'it, Urges Community
Gro,ups to Promote Sobriety
St.
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Give Gene,ously
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Continued from Page One The ceremony will open with a procession led by a color guard of Fourth Degree Knights of , Columbus escorting Archbishop Cushing, Bishop Connolly and the reverend clergy from St. Anthony's rectory to the sanc tuary of the church.
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By Rev. Dennis J. Geaney, O.S.A. , One of the dodges used to beat the integrated school is segregated housing. There is less integration of races in the North's big city schools than \ve might imagine, simply because we have segregated housing patterns. When Ne groes are confined to certain pIe paragraph on the' neighborparts of the city, the schools hood: "We believe that any fam in the area will be de .facto ily should be free to choose its Negro schools. Right now' place of residence. We 'would
A decade of the rosary will be reCited by Very Rev. Norbe:'t Zonca, O.F.M. Conv., S.T.D., and pastor of Our Lady of Perpetual tIelp parish. Immediately fol lowing, Rt. Rev. Msgr, Albert Berube, host pastor, will briefly address the workers.
the New York school board is welcome neighbors on a person plagued with the problem of al basis without regard to race, trying to find creed, or country of origin." a solution to Tangible Results their' segregat- Copies of the letter were SATELLITES, WAY TO PEACE?: U. S. satellite Duchaine Pleased ed schools. The distributed othrough 'churches model gets a brief inspection from Edmund' J. Habib; elec- ' The ceremony will close with board is in the and on a person to person basis. t ' exper t a t th e USN . romcs . . avaI R esearc h L a bora t ory m , Benedic!ion of the Most Blessed process of 'reThere was no pressur~; nor were zoning the dis:' signatures obtained, simply to Washington. He believes that while it may be wishful Sacrament. Rt. Rev. Msgr. James tricts to bring make a good showing. There was thinking to 'say that the sudden widespread interest .in J. Gerrard, y,G" pastor of St. Lawrence Church, New Bedford Negro, Puerto the unde!'standing that the sign,.' outer space could be a major step toward peace, it at'least will be celebrant, assisted by Rican or white ers of the letters would have gives people something' to talk about that is not a weapon Rt. Rev. Msgr. John A. Silvia, pupils where their names appear in a paid ad "in the sense of the H-bomb. NC Photo .. pastor of St. John the Baptist there had not in the daily papers. For this
Church, New Bedford; and Rev.
been any previpurpose a contribution was Louis E. Prevost,. pastor of St.
ously. asked of the signers. Some 1,400 nl9 ts to tten Joseph Church, New Bedford.
The foliowing is a list of the Since segregated housing is people, all voters, made this pub- Memorial' Mass the root of the North's ' Dr. Arthur F. Buckley of, New
parish toials for memorial 'gift, 'd segretion lic 'profession. The community. ,An c invitation has been ex 1 fi rs t conSl era Bedford is in' c~arge of the gen gated sc h 00, has ,already seen some tangible eontributions and subscriptions should be given to integrating resultl1 from this expression of, tended by' Rev. George Saad, eral drive. Meanwhile, Mr. Du for the Greater New Bedford the neighborhood. Such a bill goodwill., Administrator of ·Our La<ly of -ehaine 'expressed his extreme regional high school drive com pleasure with the work of his' ,has been before the New York A number of cities around the Purgatory Church; New Bedford, piled as of last weekend. City council since last summer. . group thus far. "It is certain," The bill would compel apart- ,country have shown interest in to ,the McMahon Assembly, 4th New Bedford he said, "that memorial gifta ,ment owners to rent without rethe open letter approach to betdegr~" Knights ,of' Colum!?us, St. James, . $94,003 ,total will move much higher 93,89Q gard to race, color, or piace of ,ter communities.' Essentially, and their' families, 'to ~attend the St. Lawrence before Dr. Buckley's grO\fj> of ., It' ltd' to what it does is ask People, to 8 ,o'clock m'ass to'mo'rrow nl'ght, 55,020 St. Joseph workers go to the general orlgm. IS mere Y ex en mg stand up and be counted. There' 53,940 private housing what is already are countless' people in every 'Feast of A-ll Saints, which will be St. .John Baptist public." 38;620 Holy Name the policy,for purlichousing. community who never have the 'Celebrated~for the souls, of the '33,000 deceased members. St. Theresa L ong Range J 0 b opportunity to express them 29,530 M()unt Carmel R. A. WILCOX CO.
If it is wrong to refuse a Ne- .selves on this issue but who felt Final arrangements have _been i8,985 , rro food in a restaurant, cloth- deeply the blows inflicted on made for the infprmal annual St. Mary OFFICE FURNITURE
16,750 St. Anthony of Padua ing in a clothing store, or seat minority groups. There are dinner dance ,of the McMahon I. Stoek for Immediate Delinry 15,860 Immaculate Conception in a theatre; it is equally wrong others for whom it would serve Assembly to be' held at 7 Satur 15,040 .. DESKS' • CHAIRS to refuse him a place in a neigh- as an' examination of conscience. day night, Nov. 16, in 'the New St. Anne 12,530, Sacred Heart FILING CABINETS ' borhood simply because his col- Others, too, never giv'e the matBedford Hotel. All' Fourth De 11,540 ' 51. Kilian or does not blend with the mater a thought and in a crisis gree 'members of other assem • SAFES • FIRE FILES Our Lady of jority. I don't think the logic would be swayed by which side blies are invited to attend. FOLDING TABLES Perpetual' Help iO,~90 . can be beat, but we don't solve had the stronger voice. Tickets may be obtained by AND CHAIRS 10,540 St. Hyacinth Social problems as we do geome- 5 amue1 M a d ruga, There is great psychological eon t ac t·mg 9,6]0 51. Francis Assisi try problems.. We must not, only merit to, the- open letter. It is ticket chairman, ,officers of the 7,440 Our Lady of Purgatory ask if the solution is morally akin to Billy Graham's Decisions assembly and at the Knights of . 22 BEDFORD ST. 5,860 51. Hedwig tight, but also if it is workable. of Christ. It is riot enough' for Columbus Home. Wednesday, 4,440 St. Boniface FALL RIVER 5-7838 Will'it solve the problem? It Billy, to have people listeri to Nov. 13, is the deadline for res 2,760 51. Casimir .oems' to' me that such a bill ~ him and verbalize a few Amens. ervations. Our Lady of the might drive more city folks to _ He asks for a positive commitInvited guests are Very Rev. 2,500 Assumption the suburbs' and more deeply ment. I think our Catholic parHugh A, Gallagher,' Faithful , Acushnet Durfee enirench the patterns of whit~ ishes and press should take up Friar of the McMahon ASSelIlbly, St. Francis Xavier $9,540 suburbia while developing more a crusade for Decision for Inand Judge and Mrs. Thomas J. Fairhaven extensive Harlems. . , tegration, Basically'a decision .spring. Judge Spring is MasSt. Joseph $22,850 FALL , RIVER We may dispute the merits of for integration is a decision for ter of the Fourth Degree' in the Sacred Heart 5,2]0 the bill, but there is no escaping Christ. eastern half of Massachusetts. ,Sl Mary 4,580 , the long range job of all, inter- ,~ , , ~attapoisett, ' A large class of candidates ested in interracial.)ustice to at er rsenau t will be initiated into the secSt. Anthon'y $35,270 help people make voluntary ,ond degree, McMahon Councit: South Dartmouth commitments to, on uc s etreat , the principle 'Knights of Columbus at 8, TuesSt. Mary $29,110 of integration in all its ramificaRev. Louis Arsenault, SS.CC. day night, Nov. 5, in, the Knights Wa~eham
tions. ' AB., of St. Francis Xavier ' o~ Colum,bus Home. St. . Patrick $11 ,300
A mid-west community of Church, Acushnet,' served a's' reWestport·
'70,000 with a growing Negro Because of a visit to New Bed $23,285 population of 10 percent' has treat master at a three-day ford by Archbishop "Richard J. 'St. George made a conspicuous start. A French speaking retreat given to Cushing on Wednesday, Nov. "6,
small group of citizens asked 40 women from New Bedford Grand Knight A. Edmond Allain
themselves som ear h' 'g ',' , announces the change of date. NO JOB TOO BIG e s c In quesand Fall River', at Cathedral The fourth degree m'embers wl'll tions about community race re ,NONE TOO SMALL lations. , They came up with the Camp last week-end. act as escort to the archbishop. idea of an open letter which F~ther Arsenault concluded On Sunday, Nov. 10, at 8 the people could sign as a profesthe program on Sunday, with candidates who receive the sec- , sion of faith in American ideals. Holy Hour in honor of the Feast' ond degree on the above-men The open letter spelled out the of' Christ the King. Rev.' Wiltioned date will receive the 'democratic principles in terms liam A. McMahon of' New Bedhonor of the third degree at the
of schools, : employment,' ~nd ford conducted Benediction of Northend Guild Hall,' Hicks
. i n Office and Plant other areas of life. Here is a samthe Blessed Sacrament. Street. ' '
K . hAd
Parish ,Totals
a
R. A.. WILCOX CO.
Noy. ,4'
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Theatre
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. SACRED HEARTS ACADEMY EDITORS: Publica catIOn of the Fall River ,school's yearbook will be directed by, left t? right, Lesli~ ~alvo, edito,r;'Joah Boulay, photo layout edItor, and PatrIcIa Sousa, .business m;ul4;lger.
FATHER STEPHEN, T;O.R. P. O. BOX '289 HOLLIDAYSBURG 1%, PA"
COMPARE ••• then ioin the
SWITCH 'TO \0,
NEW BATTEI WHIPPED
Sunbeam BREAD
Pharmacis'~ Guild
Fall Activities
Holds Meeting
The Parish Parade
'ST. JOHN THE BAPTIST, NEW BEDFORD Rt. Rev. John A. Silvia, pastor and spiritual adviser of the Couples Club, installed new m¢mbers following a semi a"nul!-l' Communion supper at White's Restaurant, Sunday Dight. ,Officers inducted are as fol lows: Mr.,and Mrs. Manuel Alex ander, presidents; Mr. and Mrs. Ma'nuel Homem, vice-presidents; Mr. and Mrs. Charles Duponte, IeCl'etaries, and Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Correia, treasurers. Mr. and MI·s. Edmund V. Perry were admitted as new m"mbers during the club meeting held held Wednesday night in the church hall. Because of, the Thanksgiving holiday, the meet ing scheduled for Wednesday, Nov. 27, will be conducted on Tuesday, Nov. 26, President Manuel Alexander announces.
ST. DOMINIC'S, SWANSEA November 15 and 16 have been set aside by members of the Women's Guild for their an nual Christmas bazaar to be con ducted in the rectory hali with Mrs. Walter Urban in charge. The various chairmen ap pointed include Mrs. William Nadeau, gifts; Miss Yvonne Gad bois, aprons; Mrs. Gerald Vau dreil, religious articles; Mrs. _ Manuel Travis and Mrs. Henry Cousineau, white elephant table; Mrs. Adolph Soroka, food table; Mrs. Katherine' Heald', plants; Miss Dolores Silva, doll table, and Mrs. Frank Soloman, gift wrapping. , The "technique of wrapping gifts' attractively" will be shown by Mrs. Ra'ymond McGrane, who will be a guest at the' next monthly session, scheduled for Monday night, Nov. 18 in the rectory hall. Each member is SACRED HEART asked to bring ribbon and scis NORTH ATTLEBORO sors in order to participate in Plans were completed at a the making of bows. Appoin,ted meeting conducted by the Ladies in charge of refreshments' are of St. Anne Sodality for a "Yule Mrs. Fred Mason, Jr., Mrs. El tide bazaar" which is slated for dred Rose, Mrs. Robert Berard GIRL SCOUTS AT CATHEDRAL: Members of Troop 10 o'clock Nov. 14 in the parish and Mrs: George Shott. 11, Fall River, observed Youth Communion Sunday by re ball on Church Street. ST., MARY'S, ceiving Holy Communion, at St.. Mary's Cathedral from Mes. Paul Laramee, chairman. FALL RIVER announces her committees. They Rev. Alfred J. Gendreau. Altar boy is Robert Williston. Committees for the year will include Mrs. Roger, Corriveau, aprons; Mrs. Edward Ringuette. be announced by President Mrs. cakes; Mrs. Bruno Lalamette,. Frank E. Duffy Jr. at the monthly session of the Women's handkerchiefs; Mrs. Raoul Pre Guild, slated for.8 o'clock next Fall River Council, Knights of MILWAUKEE (NC) - Floyd court, hand-made items; Mrs. Monday night in the Catholic' Columbus, will remember its Anderson, 'managing editor of Blanche Landry,. food; Mrs. Community Center. Mrs. Law dead at two memorial services the Catholic Newark Archdio Joseph Pelkey, jewelry; Mrs. rence A. Coyle has been chosen next month. cesan Advocate has written a Raymond Desilets, novelties; hostess for the night with Dor Grand Knight Ernest F. Pot children's novel which 'is being Mrs. Paul Paquette, parcel post ter Jr. announces that Knights published in the Catholic Treas-. arad white elephant; Mrs. Roland othy Dower of Mansfield, comedy hat stylist, as guest. The Cathe and their families will attend the ury series. Entitled The Bishop's Letourneau, centerpieces; Mrs. annual memorial mass in St. Boy, it ~eals with the adven Eugene Campbell, toys; Mrs. dral discussion group will meet at 7:4;; next Tuesday night in the Mary's Cathedral at 9 Nov. 11 tures of a 12-year-old boy who Ralph Patinoff, decorations, and school. for departed brothers. becomes the riding partner and Mrs. Leo Piette, publicity. ,The annual memorial service messenger of Father John Car ST. MICHAEL'S. ST. PETER'S. will be held in Knights of Co roll of Baltimore, later the first FALL RIVER DIGHTON lumbus Home, Nov. 18. U. S, bishop. The new sc'hool auditorium A turkey whist sponsored by Knights heard, a lecture by The Catholic Treasury series will officially open at 8 Wednes the Women's Guild will be held tries to acquaint children be Rev. Roger P. Poirier, assistant day night, Nov. 27, with E semi at 8 Wednesday night, Nov. 13. tween 10 and about 14 with s0 at Notre Dame Church, on formal dance sponsored by the in the Di~hton Elementary priests' vestment at their meet cial conditions and historical young people of the parish. Mrs. School, Co-chairman Mrs. Mary ing this ,veek. events involving the Church Joseph A. 'Ward, organist and Pavao will be assisted by Miss through well-written literature. Bishop Stang Assembly, director, heads the committee as Anne Frank and·Mrs. Mary Enos. Fourth Degree, will hold a di~ general chairman, assisted by' Other members of the guild are ner meeting, Nov. 20, at White's. Richard Arruda and Mrs. Irene Mrs. Oscar Dube, president of assisting on various committees. Wives will join their husbands Archambault, co-chairmen. Bud the Fall River Council of Cath at dinner and also for a sociai to ST. ANTHONY OF PADUA, dy Reis and his orchestra will olic Nurses, announces that the follow the business session, VALL RIVER furnish the music. New England Regional Confer Faithful Navigator Jose Costa Executive officers of the Wom ence of Catholic nurses 'will be announced. en's Council met at a special held on Nov. 9 and 10 in the session to formulate plans for Statler Hotel, Boston. Mrs. Dube an "old fashioned" fashion show also announces a meeting of the AURIESVILLE (NC)-Nearly MARYKNOLL (NC)-Military which will highlight the next council for Wednesday, Nov. 13, a half-million pilgrims and vis service definitely contributes to monthly gathering on Tuesday, itors came to the Shrine of Our in St. Annes Hospital, Fall River. some men's choice of the mis Nov. 19, in the parish hall Lady of Martyrs here in New sionary priesthood, according to President Mrs. John Silvia pre York State since it opened in vocational statistics at Mary acted. early May. The shrine 'closed knoll headquarters. In observance of the Feast of last Sunday. Father Carroll J. Quinn, M.M., Christ the King, the Holy vocation director of Maryknoll, Name Society received com said that since the end of World munion'in a body at the 7 o'clock War II 200 ex-servicemen have mass Sunday morning after entered the Maryknoll mission which a breakfast was served in the church hall. Rev. Joao C. ary society. HOMOGENIZED and
In addition to the number of Martins gave the invocation. veterans accepted for the Mary Rev. John P. Driscoll of SS. PASTEURIZED
knoll priesthood and brother Peter and Paul's Church deliv hood, thcre are now 96 young er'ed a sermon during services 0 men in the armed services who conducted Sunday night at 7 at are corresponding with the vo which time the Holy Name men Dial OLdl=ield 4~8711 cation department. , renewed the pledge of Loyalty Many veterans said their serv to Christ. 651 MAIN RD. ice overseas was one of the Nine new members were in iIVERTON, R. U. major reasons for their choice of ducted by Rev. Laureano C. dos a missionary career. Reis, administrator. President Jack Reis presided.
Fall River Knights 'Plan ,Two Services
New Book for Boys Being' Published
Primary purpose of the work of Catholic pharmacist guilds is to elevate ,the profession of phar macy in accordance with the teaching of the Catholic Church on moral issues, speakers stressed at the 5th annual meet ing of the Catholic Pharmacist Guild of St. James of the Fall River Diocese at Stonehill Col lege. ~ The meeting was preceded by the annual Mass for living and dead members at St. James Church, New Bedford. Guest speaker was William J. Habig Jr., president of Coving ton, Ky., Catholic Pharmacist Guild, who spoke on the work of the guild in the South. President Anthony R. Ruggiero presided. . Officers elected for the coming year were Virginio Macedo, New Bedford, president; Normand H. Menard, Fall River, vice-presi dent; Joseph Perry, Fall River, treasurer; Ti.mothy P. Keating, New Bedford, secretary; Everett Emety, New Bedford, Anthony R. Ruggiero, Fall River, and Charles Pelissier, Fall River, trustees. Rev. Albert Shovelton, assist ant pastor of St. James Church and spiritual director of the guild, closed the meeting with remarks on the guild's work and possibilities. A Holy Hour in the college chapel followed.
Oblates to Meet The Oblates of St. Benedict, Fall River chapter, will hold their regular monthly meeting at 7:30 Tuesday night, Nov. 5, in St. Vincent's Home with Mn. Frank S. Moriarty presiding.
BILLY BOY CANDIES always fresh
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Far Service Call
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"Try 'em you'll like 'em" Billy Boy Candi•• N .... B.dCord
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OUR LADY OF ASSUMPTION. NEW BEDFORD The annual pazaar will open tonight and continue through Sunday at the VFW Hall, 561 Purchase Street. Miss Judith Fonseca, general chairman, Mrs. Frank Almeida and Jose Cruz. eo-chairman, announce the var ious committes: Secretary and publicity, Gl'egory Centeiro; Treasurers, Manuel J. Cabral, Aquinel Rose, and Earle Bar gasse; Awards, Joseph Jacintho, chairman and Lawrence Cabral eo-chairman; Miss Personality contest, Mrs. Miguel Silva and Mrs. Isidore Barboza; Auction eers, Felix Monteiro, Allen An diade and Peter Antunes; En tertainment, Frank Lopes. The Richard Cruz orchestra will provide the musical enter tainment. A turkey dinnel will be ~ed from 2 to 5 on SundaT afternoon with Mra. .1ohD ForteII _ ebainnalL
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rrlS'A,HOLY ANDWHOLES'OME THOUGHT" , " PRAY FOR THE DEAD /'
®The ANCHOR
OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RIV~R
,
6 Thurs.,THEOct.ANCHOR 31,1957 Weekly Calendar, Of Feast Days o
TODAY-SS, Ampliatus, Ur ban and Narcissus, Martyrs. They lived in the first century , 410 Highland Avenue, '. and were mentioned by St, Paul , Fall Rive", Mass. ' OSborne 5-7151 in his 'Epistle to the Romans. ,PUBLISHER Greek traditions mention St. Most Rev. James L' Connolly, 0,0., Ph',D. Ampliatus as a Bishop and aU . as disciples of Our Lord who GENERAL MAN!'-'GER ' ASST. GENERAL MANAGER preached the Gospel' with 'St. Rev, Daniel F.Shalloo, M,A.. Rev. John ,P. Driscoll Andrew in the Balkan' coun MANAGING EDITOR tries, The Roman Martyrology Attorney Hugh J. 'Golden' adds that they, were slain by Jews and Gentiles, TOMORROW-All Saints, In addition to the persons whom the Church honors by special This is Halloween, the time when witches roam abroad designation, or has inscribed on
in the persons of small giggling girls, when tiny figures
the Calendar of Saints, there
are many whose names ,are not demand a treat under penalty of tricks too sinister ,and
recorded, Pope Gregory IV, in dark to even hint at, much less to be invited by a refusal the nint:_ century, decreed' that of ransom. I t is a time of frolic and fun and market ,bags this Feast should be kept by filled 'with all sorts' of good things to eat. It is a time the Church in honor of all the
saints, named and nameless,
when the seriousness of the world is shot through a little
known and 'unknown, with the innocence of children's games and masquerades;
, SATURDAY-All Souls' Day, The very name "Halloween" tells its own history and which commemorates all of the full story. It is the eve of All Saints. And the children, faithful departed, All Souls' Day with that practical wisdom that we often find 'in' children, was 'introduced by St, Odilo,
who lived in the 11th century
a touch, perhaps of the Creator from ,Whose hands .they and was Abbot of the famous
have so recently come, the children celebrate this Feast ,Sage and .sand ~" Benedictine Monastery a,t Cluny,
of All Saints with happiness and gaity. Out, of place?" ~,·m.i~h France, Subsequently the comNot at all. ' , , 11 Ii ~ Ei"" memoration was ext end e d A recent best-seller told us "Saints Are Not SaQ." ~. IlL A· throughout the Church, and by ll2 If there is any' characteristic that crops up to an almost o~aC$ a: decree of Pope Benedict XV embarrassin~ degree in the lives of the saints it is their: , By Most Rev. Robert J, • Dwyer, D.D. all priests are permitted to offer three Masses on All Souls' Day. sense of humor; their gaity of soul, their love of God who, Bishop of Reno . ,SUNDAY-St. Quartus, Con gave joy to theil youth. Saints are not sad, not morbid, We,gather that Lord AItrincham, was not invited to fessor, He lived in the first cen
Dot neurotic creatures making life miserable for themselves accompany his Sovereign on her good-will visit to America. tury; he is mentioned by St.
and everyone else. They are balanced persons who pos It was hardly to b~ expected; he was the peer who en- Paul in his Epistle to the Romans
the Christians in
leSS the' joy of 'being in love with God. livened. the summer' doldrums by denouncing her speeches as "greeting Some traditions describe And so from the children we receive the message of on the score that they made Catholic subjects were definite17 Roine," him as one of the 72 disciples, November the First, All Saints Day. It is a day when her sound like a particularly second-class citizens, others add that he was a Bishop. we rejoice with tpe champions 'of God who are in he,aven. rissy schoolgirl. Since we MONDAY-St, Charles BorFait Accompli romeo, Bishop-Confessor, Scion There is only 'one way fittingly to observe All Saints P not much in the habit H are The House of ,Windsor (anof an ancient Lombard family, Day. And that is to stand with "Blessed Mary, ever Vir of listening to royal pronounceover in those days) did not take he was,created a Cardinal at the gin, blessed Michael the archangel, blessed John the Bap 'ments, ,or even of reading them kiildly to Catholic Emancipa- age of 22 and made Archbishop
tist, the holy apostles Peter and Paul,' and all the saints" when, published, we have no tion back in 1829, Poor old of his native Milan by his unCle,
' b'g and to pray to the Lord our God with and in and through op'inion in the matter, But. it G eorge III' was 'a no tOrlOUS 1 0 t, Pope Pius IV, In an age of lax does Occur to us that he might w h 0 wen t rna d w h en W'll' I lam discipline, he was a model of Christ at Mass. All Saints Day will be a happy' one for have saved his ammunition' for P'Itt fi rs t propose d re I'Ief f or th e austere virtue, He was largely us because of this. .something of relatively far CathoI'lCS 0 f E ng1an d an d I re:responsible for the success 'of greater importance, He might land, and only recovered (temthe Council of Trent and for the 'I 't t d t) h have reflected on ,the wisdom of poran y as 1 urne ou w en administration of the Council's h'IS minIS " t er promIse ' dnever ' t0 the B ritish Crown in ignoring decrees, Throughout, Milan's ' d 10 ' 'th e The doctrl' ne of Purgatory and the poor souls who the religious faith of by 'far the brl'ng 'up the hated subJ'e'ct' HI's grea t p 1ague, h e remame lu'ffer there are very much l'n the Church's praye'rs and greater number of its subjects, son, of whom' better thl'ngs ml'ght, City, cons t an tly a tten d'mg th e petitions. Saturday, All Souls Day, and the e;ntire month It ,is an old story ani an old, have been hoped, inasmuch as sick and 'dying, He died in 1584 " It It'IS a,bl'10 d sp, ot l'n the his real wife, Mrs. Fitzherbert, and h~'s body wa's enshrl'ned of November are given over by the Church t 0 al'd'mg th e Insu, ' was staunch in the Faith, re": under the High Altar in his - ,an'd f ought E,man- ' Cathedral. poor members of the Church Sufferl'ng who are ~nable to administration of the Empire verted, to type ' help themselves, whom we, can aid by our Masses and which in the past has already cipation to the bitter end, ,Yic-, TUESDAY-SS, Zachary and f St con'trl'buted heavily' 'toward the torl'a pra'yers and l'ndulgences gal'ned on thel'r behalf. , J0 hn ' . accepted I't as a fal't accom- ' El'IZ3 b e th , paren t s o 'weakening 'of the bonds which l' , b'u t s he m,a ' d e no .. pi, e ffort," the'Baptist, The opening passage N o t th a t th e '; Church forgets thes'e m'"em'ber's 'a'toany c ' e held it together in world- ' h''d "h ' dfn h,er 10,ng reign, ~o 1 e, of the Gospel of St.· Luke reh Mass tha t t I time. She asks in eac' e Lo'r d b emm u'I WI'de'. dominion, It is a: ,relic of' through d ' t' th' her pronounce an Ipa ,Ies, cords the story of the' Angel of His servants who have gone bef.ore us with the sign, the Protestimt Ascendency There, is persistent, story" Gabriel' appearing to Zachl\ry for~iture' that Ed war' d VII ,w h 0 reac . ted of fal'th and sleep'"the sleep of peace.' T·,'o ·th''ese,' 0' Lord" which s,till risks the ' arid informing him that his wife, 'n Chrl'st, gr'ant' a' place' of r'efre'shment, 01 loyalty because ,of, its' insiststr ong1y' to every th'109 h'IS though ,advanced 10 , years, wou ld " and to all who rest"l ' so . , ' ,ence upon 'a ,point which has mother taught him and expected. bear a child, Zachary was struck light and peace . '" , lost long since any validity save But we, the 'mem b ers 0 f th e Ch urch M'l't ,I I an t on eartl.... its power to wound the feelings of him,. had ,a priest to minister, dum,'b until the angel's prophec7 to him at his deathbed, but if was fulfilled, It was St. Eliz we must be reminded of our obligations ,toward our dead of' Catholics, 'In the p r e s e n t , f it is so, the priest took the proo abeth, a kinswoman of the crisis of the world it is worse - Wl'th h'1m, our relatl'ves and frl'ends, our nel'ghbprs and· teach'ers,,those: , of,it to h'IS own grave Blessed Virgin, who at the Visi whose only claim on our charity"is thatthey:are our brothers than an anachronism, it is stup- And Edward, who certainly pos- tation uttered, the words which f and sisters iri Baptism - claim enough. We must remem- klity, .' sessed a more catholic \fiew 0, are now a part of the Hail Mary ber to pray for' the forgotten, for those,who have, no one Constitutional Protestantism his office than his forebears or -"Blessed are thou amongst . to successors, failed to break down, women an-d blessed I'S the fruit'of and. sisters theThconstitutional e re f erence , of course , to remember them. We must pray for, priests Protestantism the barrier of accumulated prejthy womb," and brothers, men and women who gave their lives not of the Crown, In spite of the udice. It has remained an obWEDNESDAY - St. Severius, to one family but to all faniilies with the hope that prayers fact that Catholics form the stacle to unity, an element of Bishop-Martyr, He was Bishop might go up for them from those whom they influenced., largest religious group in the discord in the Empire, which, of Barcelona in Spain and was Our prayer during the month of the Holy Souls could Empire, or even in England it- whatever else may be said apout put to death in 303 under Dio it, is needed today for the coscletian's persecution, His mar matter ' if religious well be this one from th,e Coptic Liturgy 0 f ,t. S Gregory: self t'for that , be taken as a standard, , mic struggle for freedom, tyrdom consisted of having hi. "Remember,' Lord, all those who fell asleep and rested 'the prac coronation Ice, oath. still preChurchill's Attitude head pierced with a spike, while in ,the priesthood and in' any order of the laity. Grant vents a Catholic from ascend(ng This persistent and defiant a resting place to their souls; feed them in a green pasture" the throne, It may be only a Protestantism of the Crown has ~oved by the waters of comfort, in the paradise of joy, the place symbol, it may have no actual had no more eloquent or able MUNICH (NC)-The perform from which the broken heart, sorrow imd sighs flee, in the relevance, but it remains as an an exponerit than the man 'who ance of a new play about reli , unnecessary irritant, It Dis a labored so strenuously to pregious life under a communist light of Thy saints. Make them rest in that abode; and pOl'nt commonly forgotten by , serve 1't In ' our, t'Imes, 'S'Ir W'Inregime got a surprising recep US' also, who are sojourners in this place. Keep us in Thy those champions of religious ston Churchill, He leaves us an tion here, The play, Torn Souls, faith, and grant us Thy peace unto the en<h~ freedom who are forever dwellenormous body of writings to written by Father Vlad,' so ~ Ing upon the iniquities, real or judge his temper and his men moved the audience that, instead 8lleged, of Franco's Spain, 'tality: If he cannot be taken of applauding when the curtain &d; actually, thttre is more seriously as an historian he can ,fell, they began to p):'ay aloud Marshall Tito, of Yugoslavia, by officially recognizing to it'than mere symbolism, The be taken very seriously as a for the "Silent Church." East Germany, seems to be, swinging back toward the Crown has been made the rally- propagandist, Not only in his ' f th t d' h d t' massive study of his great anpurpose, transparently, is to g-pomt 0 a le- ar an 1SovI'et Russia from which 'he broke in 1948. Just what In Catholicism which is still so ,cesior, M:arlborough, but in his hymn the glory of the Elizabeth has been gained by the pnited States inve~tment of one powerful an influence in the popularization of the history of an settlement and to magnify its billion, four hundred million dollars is hard' to say. Free World. This is not to say the English-speaking peoples, enduring powers, If more facts, Can this country "buy" allies with money? I Are ther~ 'that the actual Queen or her, he has dedicated himself to the troublesome things~ interfere, let them be overwhelmed by el communists with whom we can do business and communists family shares this spirit. or this vindication of Protestaatism, oquence, and there is no con with whom we caimot? Has the best possible use been p.!.ejudice.' It is not especially So far as Churchill is contesting the avalanche of Chur'ch of Americ'a'n dollars in winning' sympathy ,f,o,r our ~clear what Eli~abeth II's religcerned the' final word on 'English ' made illian ,eloquence' once it 'hal ious convictions are, and ,there histOrY" before 'his summation, way of life? Have our propaganda efforts' revealed com- is 'no question of her right to was written by, Thomas 'Babing started rolling, inunist colonialism 'for what' it i s ? ' express or repress them as she ton Macauley, ,If there is an, But it belongs back in, the 18th These and many more related questions must ~e an",' pleases. But 'it is a questio~ of other interpretation, or if a'leg-, , century, So does this other thing' lWered, and soon, in a new and realistic evaluation' of our' ,the prudence of he~ adVisers end has been fostered with 'sub- we have mentioned. The Noble' ' ,q. ',.' " , ,(who may '.bethe same who lime indifference to the facts,he Lord who dislikes the Queen'. foreign policy. Else we cOntinue to.w~dk. and;,wor~ ,and, write her speeches) in prompt- is either unaware of it or coin- , speeches might address' himSelf whiatle in the dark. '.. . , '" ",:'lne her to behave 81 though her 'pletely unaffected by it." IDa to it with greater profit. : '
Pul:-li~h'ed Weekly' by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fail ,River
Halloween
Br
, Of
L1.#le
· Crown Rany",nog'nt, d A 't'·I"",Ca th nOrn
Poor Souls.
a
lB'
to Prayer
Tito's Swi,n,.g,'
eYO·Center . Continued from Page 0 ... mtion, the scene was one of brislt; animation. From 2 to 5 o/clock, crowds, mainly Com . posed of the. youngsters for whom the CYO is" intended, £lowe(! through the bright club rooms, getting a preview of the activities planned for their fu ture enjoyment. . . Upstairs and down, the build
ing hummed with life. In the
game-roqm, pingpong paddles
andbadl;T\inton rackets were in
vitingly at the ready, and check
erboar,ds were set up for seekers
of ,less energetic recreation. Aci
joining the game':room was the
immense central lounge, with its
invitingly grouped armchairs, .
couches, and bridge tables.' From
the organ in one corner flowed
• gentle background of music.
Bishop Attends
At the time of 'our visit His Excellency, the Most Reverend Bishop, had reached this point in his tour of the building. Obvi ously enjoying himself, he stood in the middle of the lounge, deep in conversation. "I want to show
him the rest of the building;"
murmured CYO Director Rev. Walter Sullivan, "but I can't get him out of this room." And look ingaround, we applauded the Bishop's choice and thought, too, of the frantic cleaning and pol ishing preceding this gala day. Only those who'd worked be hind the scenes, we mused, could
really appreciate the finished
product. The anxious consulta
tions, for instance, over the lighting of the lounge, the many combination of ceiling and side lights that had been experi mented with before the "just rig~t" effect of this afternoon had been reached. The careful arrangement of the Marian· shrine occupying the north wall. Its golden drapes, flowers, and spotlights had been the loving work of the Misses Irene Murphy , an~ Ella O'Brien, together with Robert Coggeshall. . The no less careful grouping of the chairs and couches to achieve . a relaxed and comfortable at mosphere. And, not to be for gotten, the basic labors of the group that descended· on the room with vacuums" dusters, polish and elbow grease, to pre pare it for its new role. No wonder the Bishop liked it! But at last he went on, and so did we, to explore the rest of the headquarters. The lounge was carpeted, but the rest of the floors· abone with wax, diligently ap plied by. members of the boys' division of ,the CYO. ., Undisturbed Quiet .First 'we went into the snug Uttle 'library, equipped with· atudy desks where girls will be . able to read or do homework in undisturbed quiet. Next to it is ' • sewing room, where· dress... · making courses wiil get under way as soon 'as a sufficient num- '
Stonehill Plans
New/B~ildings.
Construction plans at Stonehill College, conducted by the Holy Cross Fathers at North Easton, include seven new buildings in addition to the $325,000 Student Union Center, for which ground was recently broken. Included in the plans are an other classroom building, n chapel, library, auditorium and dormitories. The Student Union Center is the third new building con structed on the former Ames estate since the establishment of the co-educational college in 1948. Present enrollment is 450 students. voted to questions and answers as to the CYO program planned . AT 1>EDICATION OF GffiLS' CENTER: Chatting for Fall River, and at a final with Bishop Connolly. at opening of Fall River Girls CYO meeting assignments' were made i!l prepantion for the actual Center on Franklin Street, Fall River, are, ieft to right, opening of the headquarters. seated, Miss Janice Hurley and Miss Mary Cronin; standing, One .of the first activities Rev. Walter Sullivan, Fall River CYO Director; Mrs. George plan~d by the new group is a membership dance tomorrow B&itano, Miss Yolande Laliberte. '
night. The event is under the her have signed up for them. to Sunday's guests. The general chairmanship of Miss Catherine Across the hall we found a cozy . clean-up and painting of the Coughlin, who heads the social TV room, already in use by five headquarters were under the su life Committee. youngsters who looked very' pervision of Mrs. George Boitano During the open house and much at home. Its walls shone. of St. Mary's Cathedral Women's throughout this week girls have with new paint and handsome Guild. Also on Mrs. Boitano's had the opportunity of indicating draperies were at its windows. committee were the Misses Mar activities in which they would like to participate under the "You should have seen this garet Tansey,· Eleanor Shea, Mary T. Hurley, Virginia Mar
room a couple of weeks ago," sponsorship of the CYO. De said our guide. "Everything that tin, and Mrs. JQhn Sullivan, Mrs. pending on the number inter no one wanted. was shoved in Leo 'Chippendale, Mrs. Leo A. ested, courses and projects will here, and it must',have been an Martin and Mrs. Lawrence' be offered in the spiritual, cul tural and social fields. They will inch deep in dust!"· But here, Coyle. Another group active in too, elbOW grease and devotion preparations for the open ·house include membership in the had worKed their miracles, and was composed of representatives ' Young Christian Students, dis from the faculty of St. Anne's cussion groups, and a photog the enjoymenCof the room's oc raphy club, as well as activities cupants gave evidence how much Hospital School of Nursing. A committee from Notre Dame in the fields of handcraft, sew they were appreciated. . ing, and athletics. Dances will We went downstairs--but we Parish, including Mrs. Wilfred be regularly scheduled. shouldn't say that so casually. Garand, chairman, Mrs. Leo Dur-ing his ,official visit, Bishop There are a lot of stairs in that' Guerrette, Mrs.. Armand Cayer Connelly imparted his blessing building, and everyone of them and Mrs. Orellna Shannon, dec to the CYO and expressed· his had been scrubbed by volunteer orated. the living room and library. approval· .of the work already workers till it sparkled. "I never done. Father Sullivan noted that That is .the story of the inten do this much at home.'" panted he. was . greatly encouraged by sive 'immediate preparation for one young worker during a pre the cooperation given him thus opening cleaning session. But Sunday's open house, but the her mother would have been whole histoy of the Girls' Cath:::' far by parish guilds, organiza olic Youth Organization began tions, and individuals, and he proud of the job she accom mQre than six months ago, when voiced his confidence that the plished! • Father Sullivan was appointed same cooperation would be ex 100 Girls Register , to head an activity program for tended to his future effocEs in be Downstairs the big gym and the girls of the Fall River area. half of Fall River Catholic youth. auditorium stood ready for ath Wi\h Miss Mary Cronin as lay letics, dances; lectures--any one director of the group, plans were of, a myriad of activities. Next laid ~or organizational meetings to it a corps of .workers, headed of interested women from parisii' by Miss Yolande Laliberte, took guilds throu~hout the city. names of prospective CYOers. Prelimi~rJ' Planning Over 100 girls registered during the open house, Father Sullivan At the first of these meetings, told us, and many more regis Rev. Charles McConnell of the· So. Dartmouth tration cards are distributed Providence diocese CYO gave. throughout the parochial schoobl the Fall. River group the benefit and Hyannis and academies of the city for of his experience in Setting up Dartmouth· the convenience of students a .similar prqgnlm; while at the, there. Registration will continue· second session Miss·Yolande La ,wy 7-9384 throughout Catholic Youth Week ligerte of the guidance staff of at CYO headquarters.. . Hyannis 2921 Durfee High Scho<.>l spoke on the . Under 'the direction· of . the need for guidance and counsel Diocesan Council of Cailiolic during .the ,formative years of Women, led· by Mrs. Frederic youth. A third session was de Tuttle, refreshments were served
.JB
LUMBER CO. SO.
leo T E IS
S_ OM Awotkw.
1'J26 ACUSHNET AVE. NEW BEDFORD
Eledrical Contractors
l
HATHAWAY OIL (0., INC.
o
591 SUMMER ST. New Bedford WY' 3-1346
New Bedford Youth Register at Center The: adult and youth couneDs of the Joseph B. Kennedy Jr.
Youth Community Center held their first joint meeting with the teenage representatives taking • leading part in most of the dis cussions. Attorney Alfred J. Gomes, chairman of the adult council, presided. A jukebox to be installed fa the snackbar area ·was proposed. with the nickels and dimes to be used for expenditures of the ceo. ter. Attorney George Thomas, m-. troduced as one of the adult di& cussion leaders, will complete the organization of the youth council and discuss Federal coo. stitution. The center was opened Sund~ and Monday for boys' registra tion and last night for girl8' registration, with Miss Barbara Patnode and Miss Judith st. Armand, volunteers in charge.
;---------------------,
~ Complete :
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- - THE
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:
For GREATER -, NEW BEDFORD ,
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,:
.
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~AVE
COMPANY MO. ATTLEBORO. M.ASS. MAHUF.4crutfU Of
CRUCIAXeS ... ARTICLES OJ DEVOTION
LAUNDRY
MANILA (NC) - All Philip .citizens have the duty of participating in politics, at least to the extent of voting for caD didates who are best fit for the offices they seek, the Bishops of the Philippines have declared. The Bishops issued a statement warning Catholics that each per son able to vote has a share in ihe responsibility for making the elections honest and conclusive. "If honest men stay away from politics," they wrote, "how are we ever going to rid our politics of dishonest men? Granting that the actual conduct ·of our polit ical affairs leaves much to be desired, do we contribute any thing to its improvement by sim ply condemning and ridiculing it? Such a negative and defeat ist attitude will get us nowhere.-
~ine
MUrffY
O~
YOUR OilHEAT!
~
coIl
~~;;n
. CHARLES F. VARGAS 254 ROCKDALE AVENUE NEW BEDFORD, MASS.
NEW BEDFORD
All Bundles Insured While ' in o.ur Possession
INDUSTRIAL OILS HEATING OILS . ; TIMKEN' OIL BURNERS' DOMINILOG STAFF ORGANIZES: Dominican Acad emy, Fall River" students admire the 1957 yearbook as they aSsume responsibility for produci!ig the ~958 edition. Left ~ .r,ight in front. are Louise Levasseur and Geralqin~ Moss·,· eo-editors, and Rochell~ Olivier, ~8istant editor. Standing' are.Lucille St. Pierre, busineaa mal1ager, and her .a,ssis~t., Geraldine Nunes.
Sales & Service " ~
"
.',
-:,
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JEWELED CROSS
SUMMER· STREET
7
Hierarchy Cites
Duty to Vote
-~_
Gal. 5:13
WYman 5-7555
Thurs., Oct. 31, 1957
: Union and Pleasant Sis. :. North End Branch 1200 'Acushnet Ave. -
..Bf! C1&4ritr/
Electrical Shop
THE ANCHOR
'.
501 COUNTY ST. NEW BEDFORD :'; WY ),~1751 ,,'.
IDrfuic/( deliveryDf
~!~
'HEATING .OIL
.
Ai Our' House
New Bedford Club'
·Meets 'Wednesday ,
"
Babysitting P.roves Trying·
Task for year'ning· Grandpa"
.
Miss Margaret M. Austin,' · chairman of the education com
mittee of the~New Bedford Cath
olic Woman's Club, announces
that tbe program for Wednesday
night's meeting at the clubhouse,
titled' "From Supermarket to
Stockmarke," will be· presented
by Miss Margaret A. Mullaney
and Bernard G. Taradasli.
This meeting is open to all
members of the Catholic Wom
an's-Club and ~ill .be followed
· by ca coffee hour. Assisting Miss
Austin will be MrSl James M.
Anderson, Mrs. W~. A. Burns
Jr., Mr!!. John 'Dias' Jr., Miss
Margaret Goggin, 'Miss Ruth ·C.
Harney, Miss Rose. john, Miss
'Margaret McHugh, Mrs. James
T. Mosher, Miss Mary L. Phelan
and Miss Estelle' Servais'.
By Mary Tinley Daly
all
Like grandparents nowadays, we do a bit of baby
,Bitting now and then. And we love it. Last Saturday
night was our turn • • • .
. Conscientious Lu had the ,four youngsters tucked in .:.....,..
aD sound asleep .L. when we arrived. Dishes 'were wash,.ed, . TV program, favorite magazines and snacks were were laid out - Sitting DeLuxe. We, made a quick. and
:len~:ne'b~~~lnW
I:i~u:~an~:~~~:~;~~e;:::n ~~t::
of the covers· and giving hi,nl a pat.. I j'Bank", Sean mumbled, open lng one blue, grabbing' his
blanket and going back to slee}?,
, "Yep,' they're fine," the Head
of the House tried one last ill concealed, ruse and closed °the
door on the tired trio. . Maura in her downstairs, bedroom was just as dead to ·the
rooms: LuAnne and ' Deirdre.. mug in their red flannel' Dighties, twoyear old Sean resplendent ·in lndianchief pajamas, and . baby M a u r a wearing pink,
~g~~"h :si :h~ liit.,
· Paraplegic Nurse Helps Disabled "
MARTINSBURG (NC)-She's
a paraplegic and confined to a
'wheelchair, but Rosina I. Magee
is:a registered nurse serving on
the staff of the Veterans Admin
istration center here in West Vir
ginia.
Miss Magee's assignment is to
instruct and guide domiciliary
members in health practices and
to develop in them a better un derstanding of their condition so..
they may adapt to planned. group
, JESUIT HONORED BY QUEEN:' A pfiest, Father Edward J. Whelan,S.J., receives a high British honor from Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II at the British Emb~ssy in Washington, for 'his "outstanding .co,ntribution to the ered h.er. "Don't think, we ought cause of Anglo-American friendship and understanding/'_ to-:-uh, change ·her or any . 'Father Whelan, a Jesuit for 52 years, was designated an thing?" honorary officer of the civil division of the Order 9f ~he 'Just ·then the front d.oor British Empire. NC Photo. ' , opened and Johnny'and Lu came
~~~~. e~~nto::r~~:e~o::s,~~~
Illept in her crib. Th e young paren ts hadn't been gone ten minutes before the' Head of .the House began to get lonesome: "Mighty quiet around here without the kids," he commented uneasily. "You don't suppose they;re sick?" Sitting In Sil~nce No, we answered, they're undoubtedly very, well or they
would be restless, and wouldn't , like to see one of the Saturhe day night TV shows? So we watched TV for a while. "Look at that little girl on the screen," the Head of the House chuckled' at one of the dancing darlings. "Looks like Deirdre, doesn~t she:? But not as eute.. Think the volume of this might wake 'em .up?" . We knew that ,he secretly hoped it would, but we turned It down nevertheless. TV doesn't keep us enraptared for. very long so we shut It off and settled' do~n' tei read-' lng, each, of us i~ a separate cor-' Del' • • • .
Anne and Deirdre. They simply
rolled over and sighed as we
pulled blankets into place, Deir dre reaching out,sleepily for her doll. '~Hi-ya, boy?" the Head of the
'.
"Say," the Head of the House munched peanuts· and looked up from his paper, "sure seems funny without the youngsters. Remember how .sometimes they eome on down? Lu Anne especi ally ... Well, I guess she's just tired." He flipped the paper to the sports page, and the sitting eontinued in silence. "Think maybe we'd better meck?" my sitting companion asked. "See if they're covered? That Sean ca'n sure· kick covers. -4\nd Maura what a baby! Didn't we use to get ours up at !light when they were a year old?" . SpOt Check Maybe we did - but these aren't our children, we remind-· ed. 'However, we made the spot meck, the Head of the House ascending the stairs as th~gh It were broad daylight. But not evell he woke the sleeping Lu
o
A . f Y Q'uestIons or .ou to' n~wer
in.
"We' were just seeing that they're warm enough," the Head:
PITTSBURGH (NC)-A Cathof the House cOhfessed sheepish ly. "Everybo'dy's been sound olic pastor here has listed several ,questions designeci as an asleep ever sinc~ you left. We examination' of conscience on' thought that maybe Maura' racial tolerance for the average would' need a bottle or BOrne-' Catholic. thing?" in his weekly bulletin to Lu didn't need a "lueprlnt to parishioners, Msgr. Carl P. Hensknow what was in Grandpa's ler said that "to discriminate mind any more than Maura against the Negro'" '" * and to needed a bottle. deny him full. equality with the "Mind holding her, Jack!" She white man 'in all that makes for asked with a wink, pickirig up decent human living is a violathe baby and handing her over. tion ot fundamental 'justice, and therefore a sin." The Head of the House had ' Pure Myth his frolic with jolly lit~e ~aura: ' . The prelate posed the follow-' Maura had an extra 'bottle ... ing questions as an :examimition And we hope that the small of conscience for the average house on Valley Road wasn't too catholic: . upset by .its baby sitters •. ~ • . ~What would you: do' if a reapectable Negro family bought or . rented the house next 'to ~embers J\ccepted yours? Would you object to By Catholic Club their moving in? A concert by Joh~ Moriarty, . '''Would 'you patronize hotels, pianist, and Jacqueline Bazinet, restaurants, theaters and places. 'soprano, will feature the next of amusement that refused admeeting of the Catholic Wom en's Club of Fall River, sched Bing's' Second ·Wife uled for Tuesday night, Nov. 12, in the clubhouse. Catholic Convert·' Mrs. David W. Boland, presi LAS VEGAS (NC)"':'" Crooner dent, welcomed· new members Bing Crosby; 53, was, married to and presented each with a 'small Hollywood starlet Kathy Grant, religious medal at the annual 23, in St. Anne's Church here. tea and reception Sunday after Miss Grant is the daughter of noon. Mr. and Mrs. 'Emery Grandstaff Instrumental music was 01- of West Columbia,' Texas. She was converted to Catholicism a '. fered by a trio comprising"Con stance Poirier, pianist; Barbara few years ago. Bing's first wife, died Nov. Hall, 'cellist, and Marguerite the former DJxie 1, 1952. She, 400,: was a convert. Venancio, violinist. . ;;he co~ittee 'fo~ the' ilB~ir . He has four SOllB by his first was headed 'by Mrs. John, J'. marriage. Crawford Jr. and Mrs. willl8in
Legion of- Decency
A. Healey.' :.\ The' following tiileS of films. are to, be added in their respec tiv:e classificatio~ to li~. re 'cently published in The-Anchor: Morally Unobjectionable for General Patronage--Hell Ca'nyon' Outlaws, Monolith, Monsters, Stopover Tokyo. Unobjectionable for Adults Green Eyed Blonde, Guns Don't Argue, Hell on Devil's Island, Huncli'back of Notre Dame, Naked in the Sun, Stakeout on Dope Street. 'Objectionable in Part for All: Don't Go Near. the Water, Inva sion of the' Saucer Men, I Was a Teenage Werewolf, Jailhouse Rock.
Lee;
mittance to ~etgoes simply be cause of their CO,lor?
"Would you rather miss Mass on Sun~ay. than gao to a. church the parIShIOners Oi WhICh are colored? "Would you receive Holy Communion from a Negro priest? Would you go to confes- " 'sion' to h i m ? " , Second Class Status Calling,· white' supr~macy "pure myth" from both the reli . gious and scientific viewpoints, Msgr. Hensler said the Negro, in' the North and In the So:uth, has been made the victim of dis .criminatory' treatment "to keep bim in his place." .' '''That place," he added, "whether it be the schools ~e may attend, the housin~ ~e may own or 'rent, and the jobs he may get, is generally an inferior place, a second-class status." .
.
liv~~~
Magee's home is in Du
quesne, Pa. She was· graduated
from Mercy Hospital in Pitts
burgh' and has a Bachelor of
Science Degree in nursing edu cation from Duquesne University
in, Pittsburgh. She is a veteran
of World War II, having served in ,France. She has been with the VA since 1946. She became paralyzed in·1954. No specific reason for the para lysis is known, but doctors said they believed it may have re .suIted from a virus or blood clot.
Dorothy Cox Home made
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CANDIES CHOCOLATeS 1SO Varieties. ROUTE 6 Near
Fairhaven Autp Theatre
FAIRHAVEN, MASS.
New Bedford Women. To, J\ttend Requiem
Mass for deceased members of the New Bedford Catholic Wom , en's Club will be offered at 8 A. M., Baturchiy, Nov. 9, in St. Lawrence Church, Mrs. Leo oJ. Telesman'ick, president, an nounces. Bishop's Night. will be ob served by the club with a pro gram in New Bedford, Hotel Thursday, Nov. 21. Emile J. Le moine, vocal soloist, will enter tain.
J~ffREY
E.
, SUR-LaVAN
FauaerfrtU
lmarne
550 Locust St.
Fall River, Mass.'
OS 2-2391 Rose E. Sullivan
Jeffrey E. Sullivan
D..D. Sullivan & Sons
Michael :C. Austin .Inc.
FUNERAL SERVICE
F ...eral
Dire«!tor..
549 COUNTY ST•.
,U9 Locust St., Fall Rivei'
,NEW BEDFORD, MASS.
OS 2-3381
MICHAEL E. O'ROURKE
.C•. p.
Funeral Home
H~RRINGTON·
FUNERAL HOME
571 Second St. Fall River, Mass. OS 9-6072
986 Plymouth Ave.
Fall River
OS 3-2272
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Just Arrived ,: NEW :.
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Maryknoll Missal :
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FORTY-MILLION TO SEE EXPOSITION: Paul Hey- : mans, Commissioner General for the Vatican Exhibit. at : the Brussels (Belgi'um) International. Exposition" visits' : Jiith JIoward S. Cullman, for the U.S., as Miss Michele'Vah : . -·ldeal Christmas' Gift· :
Campenhout, looks on. Mr. Heymims and Count Yves d,u '. ,
Dep'!ty ,Yati-'T ' .·tan. Exr~blt; 'YIP V~Slt varl.(),us .U.~.elb~~ ·.telh;D~.. O~t~~ .,:. ..EmilJ>: C.Perr)t .: . VatIcan 8 partIcIpatIon. ' 195.8-.1na~lc~" the ~U'8t-~mle.·t~~t;1;' , ~ 8$0 .....wre... Cb-a , ··the Holy See has !as sovereign itate· !>ee~' part of· .. iD~;';· ':: ' .• ,Mew Bedford,·..... .' :. 'aationaLexposition. NG·,Phow. ':.'., .'.</ >",~<o; . ;·,.I>"'f~;,:" ,. . <•. 'i:··' . , ~. . . . ,:'\';i ' . . . . ..,,;,;.:,~., .. ,
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Commis~i?ne~ fo~ t~e
KEAT-I NG'S
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NASON OIL (OMPANY 46 Taunton GreeD
- VA· 2-2282
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Taunton, Mass.
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Asserts, Segregcation Is
THE ANCHOR
Th~rs., Oct. 31, 19'57
Calls Soil Bank' Pla.n tFo@~ ;~~
Mo~a~ '~~$Me NEW YORK (NC) Segregation is a moral ques tion, Jesuit .Father Thurston N. Davis, editor-in-chief of America, national Catholic weekly review, told a college alumnae group here. He redlled the statement of Archbisl10p Joseph F. Rummel of New Or leans that segregation is "im moral and sinful." The priest-editor said it has been asked how it can be im moral and -sinful "to practice segregation today when it was apparently not immoral and sin ful to folIo'" that pattern of life 30, 40 or 60 years ago." Evil Dormant "A social practice such' as segregation may for decades not be recognized for what it is," he explained. "Its evil may lie dor mant. In fact, under certain con ditions of life, it may not wreak great injustices upon the class against whom it is aimed. "But with the passing of time, conditions change," Father Davis said. "What was once a tolerable and psychologically endurable 'thing, becomes by gradual stages more and more bitter and un endurable. "The moment comes when, its evil and basic injustice are sud denly unveiled. Basic Rights "Social institutions themselves bave something to 'do with bringing this about. Ou,t' eco nomic system - changing with growing prosperity and a con stantly higher standard of living, forever opening up, new and en ticing social opportunities-like wise has something to do with this process. Our eyes are opened. "What we once tolerated is seen to be intolerable. What could once be borne now be comes unbearable." Father Davis stated that segregation affects the Negro in bis most basic rights-"familY life, housing, public security, employment, equal opportunity and education;" In some places, 'be added, it also invades his rights as a voting citizen. Vicious Circle "The conditions of modern life and the opening vistas of modern opportunity," said Father Davis, "make segregation 1IO much more of a hardship for the Negro than it once was. These same conditions make it 80 clear that the Negro, in his segregated ghetto,' is caught in • vicious circle. For the more any group of our people gets out off from the mainstream of op portunity, the, more they lose their capacity to benefit by it." 0
Boston Archbgshop Scores Vandalism
o
BOSTON (NC)-Area police officials have praised the Arch bishop of Boston for his appeal for community ·efforts to sup .
· press vandalism. Archbishop Richard J. Cusb : ing called in a statement for "a common front" by property :owners against vandals. He said ·also that efforts should be made ·to search out the 'filCtors funda mental to the growth of "this
hideous social evil." Although the prelate's state ment came several days before
Halloween, he did not mention the celebration, but rather said
bis remarks were prompted by
reports of "disturbing instances"
of vandalism to churches, public
buildings and private property
owners.
The Al'chbishop said..law en
forcement officers need "strong
llnd consistent support from
those in a position to command'
influence."
9.
ADRIAN (NC)-A North Da kota priest maintains the "con tradiction" of reducing arable land by retiring it into the soil bank and at the same time irri gating and reclaiming other land is "foolisq." Father Joseph L. Hylden of Edgeley, N. D., made his com ment at a Michigan State session of the National C,atholic Rura,l Life Conference. The priest told .farmers and rural ~ife experts that "on the one hand we're paying farmers .to reduce th~ir arable acres and thereby cut down the so-called surplusses" and on the other . efforts are made to increase pro ductive land. "John Taxpayer is the 'goat' who pays for this nonsense," Father Hylden remarked. Thinning Out The soil bank program wa one of several topics discussed at a series of regional meetings sponsored in Michigan by the NCRLC. Father Hylden also out lined the problem of the Catholic Church in the rural community. He cited the loss of 17,000 farm families in North Dakota since
PRAY LIVING' ROSARY: A capacity crowd of more than 18,000 persons attended the first indoor Living Rosary at Freedom Hall in the new Kentucky state fairgrounds in 'Louisville. Archbishop John A. Floersh of Louisville led participants in the daily Rosary' pledge, while members of the Sodality of Our Lady formed the crucifix and beads of the Rosary, at center. The Living Rosary has been presented for six years, under auspices of the Archdiocesan Marion Committee, 'composed of Catholic women's groups and Knights.of St. John. NC Photo. 0
'. Reminds UN of Papal Advice UNITED NATIONS (NC) middle and small powers to re The Spanish Under-Sec.l\etary of duce conventional armaments State for Foreign Affairs cited and armed forces. Pope Pius XII's words on the The Marquis also pointed out function of a world body during that the small powers generally the disarmament debate here. do not possess nuclear weapons, The Marquis of Santa Cruz and that, therefore, the suspen warned that disarmament should sion of nuclear weapons alone apply not only to the great na would not be sufficient to insure tions but also to small countries peace. ' capable of waging limited war. Referring to a message o~ the Plan Hungary Salute Pope written in 1944, even be WASHINGTON (NC) - Thir fore the United Nations came into being, the Marquis noted ty colleges and universities throughout the nation have· that the Pope counseled that any agreed to 'hold memorial serv. "body vested with supreme au thority. by .common agreement ices' during foothall games on would be also vested with the ·Nov. 2 in honor of'the Hungarian patriots who a year ago made task of nipping' in the bud any thJ;'eat of isoI.ated or collective - an unsuccessful' attempt to aggression," overthrow their communist over 'The Marquis recalled the lorlis. . The observance was suggest Pope's concept of a collective world body which "may be able ed by The Christianform, which is dedicated to the Christian to eliminate all danger of war from our political and historical form of civilization and has headquarters here. Nicholas T. horizon" .while permitting mem ber states to have "an equal right Nonnenmacher, Christianfonn to relative sovereignty." president, said he wrote letters The Spanish representative to 360 colleges and universities warned that "the problem of dis which have football teams sug armament is not the patrimony gesting the "Salute To Hun of the great powers alone." He gary" and that so far 30 have stressed -that it was important for accepted the idea.
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OUR LADY'S CHAPEL
__ 572 PLEASANT ST.
-
NEW BEDFORD, MASS. 0
NEW ORLEANS (NC) - A campaign to raise five million dollars for three new buildings at Xavier University haB been launched. • Buildings planned include a new science and pharmacy building; a student center, and a women's dormitory, Sister M. Josephina, university president, announced. The university is conducted b,. the Sisters of the Blessed Sacra ment for Indians and Colored people, founded in 1891 by the late Mother Katherine Drexel of Philadelphia. Xavier Univer sity, which before school inte gration was the onJy Catholie university for Negroes in the na tion, was established in 1925.
NEW BEDFORD
All Saints Day - Noy. 1st - Holy Day
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For your convenience Our Lady's Chapel ~
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scheduled Moss~ a,t:
: :
DENNISPORT
The Old Post Offioe
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-: CONFESSION HEARD EVERY DAY FROM 8:30 A.M. to 9 P.M; -- ALL SOULS DAY-SATURDAY-MASSES from 7 A.M. to 12:10. .-_
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,---------------------------------------------- FIRST SATURDAY Devotion 5:10 and '9:00 P.M.'
BUZZARDS BAY
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_ ,1:3Q A.M.-2: 15 A.M.. a n d -_
_ MASS EVERY HALF HOUR FROM 5: 15 A.M. to 12:15 noon _ EVENING MASS. 8:00 P,M., _
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Hand Cut
OpP. B B Theatre
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... 7-9150 WYman
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52 Varieties -
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SHOPS
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:- Incfustrial Oil Burners : -~ Sprinkler Systems -: ~- Piping Contractors :
- : -
MA'S
DONUT
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:- Lyman &Baker Co. : :- . 795 COUNTY STREET : ~
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"My own Diocese of Fargo," he said, "is losing an average of 120 farm families a year-the overall equivalent of one coun try parish. How soon will we be faced with the need of selling -our country churches for their bricks?" ,Father Michael G. Dineen, NCRLC executive secretary, summed up the purpose of the discussions by saying: "We're trying to preserve and expand family living on the farm. We'll have it as long as families find it profitable and possible to stay OD the land. It is important for the Church to preserve it."
College for Neg~oes Planning Expansion
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1929.
per annum'
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11 i:
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Latest dividend on Savings Accounts
,friendly • • •
Super Markets
II..__R_A_N_D_O_LP_H_.....:I
B. M. ·C.. Durfee Trust Company Member Federal Reserve System
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Center New edford Days THE-'BIGGEST- BARGAIN 'EVENT IN SOUTHERN MASSACHUSETTS
O,CTOBER 31, NOVEMBE"R 1st, 2nd ,and 4th' \
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Center New' Bedford Days Stores Open Thursday & Monday Nights '. ' ·Pick Up Free ,Registration Blanks at Any of These Official Stores <> ,
- - - - - - Save at Self-Servce - - - - -
GET YOUR REGISTRATION BLANKS HERE
MANY BUDGET-WISE BUYS - ECONOMIZE, Out 01 Town Shoppers Welc0n:te'
Good News for Out-of-Towners - Compare & Save'
, Men's Dress
BOys and Girls
Women's Loafers
(J
Shoes
Oxfords
Rayon Sh'ortee Ranch
'''$4·37'
DRAPES SOc
GET REGISTRATION BLANKS HERE
,
A fashion favoritel 16· diamond fishtail brid· al ensemble. No Money Down $2 A Week
70 WILLIAM STREET 70
$99
WHERE YOUR DOUMI DOES DOUBLE
36" length .....;, Pinch Pleat Tops - Choice of Multi
eolor Prints Solid -Rayon, Damasks and Lusex
thread trims. Mostly one of a kind, - Ideal for
Doors 01' Window&., VALUES to $1.98
"
No Payments 'til 58
While, Shopping 'Center New Bedford Days take advantage of
.KAY JEWELERS 'NO Purchase St. New Bedford Get Reg.' Blanks 'Here
,
7'75 Purchase st. New Bedford
Specials
AND ASK FOR REGISTRATION BLANKs Get a FREE Pint ' 01 Home Baked Beans
, With purchase of· 1/2 lb~
~ of BAKED HAM. at '
. Another Home-Coming Event .. c.' SWIFT 01; SON - 107 :Jears 01 Men's Qual"" aetblnc
Genuine ;Harris,Tweed TOPCOATS' Not ordhtary tweed but HARRIS TWEED - spun, handwoven and finished In the Outer Hebrides of
Scotland.,
, M. C. SWIFT.& SON 201 Union near Pleasant' St.
,
. ,.
New 'Bedford '
GET REGISTRATION BLANKS HERE'
/-------------------- GET'REGISTRATION BLANKS, HERE ' .
~LAN
TO VISIT ~ US TOO
Girls and,BQYs ' WRIST WATCHES
I
,11 'SUIT CASES 18 EVENING BAGS 15 UMBRELLAS
Plea~:~t St.
~
"
off
CUSHING'S
.
, We have a few of the same ia a 40" x 22", height 15" Cock tail Table, regular price $39.91 at $29.95.
-'
OPP: LmRARY
, ~FINNI-QUEEN"
New Bedford
Near Acushnet Ave. New Bedford
THE KEYSTONE -£~~~~~~!:1
149 UNION ST.,
GET REGISTRATION BLANKS HE:R,E
OUT-Of-TOWN., SHOPPERS WELCOME
Women's 'FELT, SLIPPERS
PARK AVENUE NYL0"lS ~
New Bedford, Mass.
Padded heels and soles, Moccasin Vamp, Fine quality. Sizes 4 - 9 Regularly $1.00
Full fashioned, 51 Gauge, 15 denier,
Luxury sheer for' beauty and long
wear. If perfect would be 8ge pro Stock up at, this special low price.
Fancy PILLOW CASES Colorful stripes, polka dots,' fancy prints First quality, percales and muslin. Reg.
GET REGISTRATION BLANKS HERE .M
, Value $34.95
COLLATERAL LOAN .'CO. .
Nationally Advertised
860 Purchase St.
The manufacturer had 37 of
these beautiful" versatile cock
, tail style lamp tables to dispose
of at a price - - we purchased
the lot and now offer them to
,you at
Blanks Here
O
3.95 1.49
Special
These tables are designed with old fashioned cabinet maker care for detail . . and scaled ta fit into today's homes. All Lime grained with Genuine Melamine Plastic Top - - - "ta make them stain resistant. Top 20" x 20", Height 24".
,
Hat Bags Zippe~ Ring Binders
A SNACK .
,
Special Welcome- Thrifty S!Jopper VALUES - Specials to $6.95 3.29 Leather Handbags Get Reg. /Reg. 4.95
or
D~y
STORES,
·INC.
CLOSE OUT
H4 William st., litew Bedford
, A MEAL
LINCOLN·
A New" Bedford
RAY &-JOE'S Delicatessen
44.95' .
NOW
$"9812 Qu'c,,! Plastic
Waste Baskets SOc
That is Rust proof, Chip-Pr~f ~nd durable WONDER
son fi~lsh will not mar or scratch ..;.. Solid. Colors
01 White, Pink, Yellow, Blue.
, While Shopping for Center , New Bedford Days
NEW BEDFORD
/$55.00 Value
R~g.
UNBREAKABLE POLYETBENE PLASTIC
OREGON'S 1 Hour . CI~anlng Service':: 268 UNION ST.
pre
•
8ge
EA.
•
SHOP, CENT:ER NEW BEDFORD DAYS AND SAVE!
4
&Mi.
•
$8,000.00 In
PRIIES~$9 ,OOO,OOO~OO
in VALUES
You 'May Win a, Plane or A Mink Coat or $2,500.00 in Cash
A $500.00 Diamond 'Ring, a Kelvinator Refrigerator, a, Portable T.V.
. Many Other Prizes - ' 22 In All ,
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Get y ~lir Free Regist;afion Blanks at Any 'of J:hese Offi~i!J I Stores Novel
NO.VICK
'Out-of-Town Shoppers when
Educational
JEWELERS
in the City let's meet at
Toy
Giant-size' 'Satellite Launcher Truck on'ly 3·98 What a wonderful toy! It's
an ideal rocket launcher
that hW;ls satellites right in
to the air. The mechanical
launching device on the
back of the truck tilts 45 degrees, sends colorful poly
ethylene satellites soaring
into space., Radar control
tower that rotates a full 360
degrees, has an elevating
radar screen.
Made of high impact plastic
in bright colors. Is a whop
ping 17" long x 6 3/4" high
x 6 1/2" wide.
Mall Orders Accepted. Send 3lc extra, 'for postage
outside Greater New Bedford. WING'S ••• New Bedford, Mass.
:: Trucks @ ~3.98 each
Please send ._ N arne
_._._.._
Address (
_._
_;
_ .
City .__..__
) Check
,(
) Money Order
_
) Charge
New Bedford
for a cup of
You May . WIN $2,500 or pn Airplane
Good Coffee and, while waiting for the bus
Get Your Free Blanks
make your
at
Let's make that visit to
LORRAINE'S in the Center
M & tc Restaurant for busy shoppers
772 PURCHASE ST.
GET REGISTRATION BLANKS HERE
Pleasant Atmosphere
Good News for Out-of-Towners at-·
CARTER'S
SEE
CARTER for
\
CHILDREN SHOP
DRESS 852 Purchase st. New Bedf~rd
Get Your Registration Blanks At
or
WORK" JACKETS
- , The . RECORD,CE~TER
New Bedford Days Special Your Choice of any $5.00 Van Heusen Shirt FREE wit.h the Purchase of any Suit-Tof:> Coat-O/Coat Family Clothiers Over 50 years
CLOTHING CO. 918 Purchase St.
Charge Accoulits Invited .
SURPLUS STORE
M&·K
Sizes 3 - 8
EMPI RE
NEW BEDFORD
Special Luncheons from SSc
386 ACUSHNET AVE. Between William & Elm New Bedford
FAMOUS IWANTA QUALITY SHIRTS
f-:om
DELICIOUS PASTRY
GOOD FOOD
BOYS. $2.49 PLAID IVY LEAGUE SHIRTS
~Iection
an appetizing display of
N-O-V-I-C-tc-'S
GET FREE BLANKS HERE
ROBERT'S
. ,s ••• Lorra,ne
926 PURCHASE ST. Across from Bus Terminal
New Bedford
Get Free Blanks Here
Over 500 - All Styles to Choose From 4·95
956 PURCHASE ST.
to
39·95
New Bedford Cor. of High st.· .
We have Christmas Records of many Nations on hand NOW
•
LEATHERS • SUEDES
•
ME~TONS
•
NYLONS
CARTER'S
• GABARDINES • T~LLS
SURPLUS STORE NEW BEDFORD
55 WILLIAM STREET
GET REGISTRATION BLANKS HERE
Attention Thrifty Shoppers Everywhere - Here is Value
• • •
MEN'S WINTER SUBURBAN COAT, GIRLS WINTER COATS Ass't. Colors' WOMEN"S & MISSES BANDEAU BRA A-B-C cups 30 -
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Reg. $15.98 /NOW $12·99 R.eg. $14.98 ,NOW $1"97 40
Reg.
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$.66
Open Thurs. - Fri. and Mon. Nights until 9:00 P.M. SATISFACTION GUARANTEED OR MONEY BACK
SHOP CENTER NEW BEDFORD DAYS AND SAVEl
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Frem@01l1f~®
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Adopted
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will
Wor, kshop'
a·
TRAVELER'S'
Service' Station'
AMOCO GAS Tune-ups and Brake Work 807 Ashley Blvd., cor. Tarkiln
Hill Rd.• New Bed,ford Gilbert J. Costa, Prop.
WY
,1".
.1 1
'_ , By Most Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, D.D.
in the present instance a complex done a great deal of research story is outlined' rather than but he does not succeed in ma'k~ n d e q_ u ate l Y i n g Anna Morrison Jackson a evolved., vital being.
Its principal The fact is that Jackson is' the
c h a r a cter is' do I11 inant character here, and by
DISCUSSION LEADER: Piers Hunger far the more interesting. He was Sister Mary Olga, RS.M., ford, younger an almost fabulous eccentric son of a titled, yet a military genius. Mr. Kan~ ~Superior of Mount St. Mary a r i s t 0 c r atic strives to keep the focus on Convent and teacher of English family. Mary, but ,admirable' woman chemistry at Mount St. Mary. In the middle though she' was she cannot sus- . Academy, Fall' River, 1930s he is 19 tain such atten'tion. Whenever direct ' the workshop on. and a1;>out to go 'Jackson appears, he takes the'
up to Oxford. book away, from her",and when "Catholic Philosophy: Es
Scarcely con he is, offstage, it simply plods. 'sential for a Scholarly Mode
cerned with re Jackson was phYlilically awk of Life" at the Sisters of ligion himself, ~e -me:ts a Cat~ward, almost grotesq~e. He 'had Mercy Educational Confer olic girl, Clare Tremame, who IS not been by nature intellectually slightly older than he. They ~re gifted, but by dint of.'heroic ap ence at' Riverside, R 1. to. attracted to each other. DespIte plication' had registered a re morrow.
bel' anguished realization that spec table academic record. In
he is committing mortal sin, she peacetime he mllde a living aS,a ~.
becomes his mistress. , teacher, although in and out of
Their affair reaches a crisis the classroom he became a figure Continued from Page One
while they are on holiday in of fun because of his oddity. Yet of the Francis Parkman School.
Sicily. It is Holy Week, and the his integrity commanded the reBoston. Mr. Treanor ..is ana:"
local observance of the season is spect of the discerning. .. tional authority on the elements·
cOlorful and dramatic. ·It means He was . a deeply (some of good English composition. He little to' Piers., But it vividly thought" fanatically) religious is the author of Treanor's Eng confronts Clare'with the Passion man. He spent long periods daily lish Series and has written nu and death of the Saviour. . 'in prayer. The will of God was merous articles on English com Refuses lProposal' ' his habituai concern. He gave position for educational maga...; Hence, wh~n Piers asks her to one-tenth of his small/income. to. zines. marry him, she refuses. "If I give the Protestant church of whIch The first part of the workshop you 1.!p," she says, "you may he was a member: He opposed dealt with the techniques of come to realize that God is the slavery and orgamzed a Sunday drawing out of the children's ex one' thing necessarY,that sin is school for Negroes. ,periences, ideas, which serve as Infinitely serious' and that the , But .when Virginia went into a basis for the composition, and Church is the Mystical Body of, seceiJsi~n, he was at her ser:vice. then the expression of these ex Christ. .. I only,' know' that' if I ~e fought fiercely, and bril- peri~i1ces through the medium of marry you-if we marry, you liantly.' In most respects proa well developed vocabulary. you will never come into ,the nouncedly different from Robert ' In the second part of the worJ( Church and if f don't if I offer E. Lee, he teamed up perfectly shop Mr. Treanor showed, the God m; sacrifice for o~r' sin, yoU: - ·with ~e,togive the South some teachers some practical ways of may." . notable victories., When he died building simple words into teU. He does, eventually:after'thelr . ~.fore the war's close,of wounds jog phrases, and then into force parting. The beginning of:. ~ ,lnfti~ted by the misdirected fire luI sentences. change in him occurs when ~e is, of ~s own men, ~e was only 3!J. He concluded the workshop • briefly, in, Spain, with the 1.oy : . •Understanding Wife with a 'demonstration of his aUst forces during the Civil War. • 'Mary loved him dearly, and method used in his own experi It continues in France, when he her entire ambition was to be a mental school of,culminating all ' falls in ,with a group of semina helpful, understanding, wife. In this groundwork, in the proper rians on a hike. this she' succeeded. She lived to structure of good ,story telling He becomes not only Ii' Cath the age of 84, dying in 1915. In by the children: whic~ is nothing oUc but a priest. 'At the end he her tater years she became more than English composition. 'and Clare meet again, during striking fig1,lre in her own right. The workshop was sponsor:ed World War II. There is, bitter But those years are dealt with in by the Catholic Teachers Asso 'ness in, her which he seeks to five pages of epilogue. The book ciation of the Diocese. Rev. clear away. proper ends with ,Jackson's Edward J. Go~an, LL.D., M.A., Often this book seems hardly death, and it should, for, despite ,superintendent at Diocesan more than a sketch. Mrs. Fre its title, it is bis. . ' . ,,",hools, presided. ' mantle has neatly plotted what . A legendary atmosphere in she wants her characters to do, forms Fray' Apgelico Chavez's"" charm. But there is nothing 80ft but they appear to be 'doing her From ,an Altar Screen, which is about them, and their comedy bidding rather than working out subtitled ':Tales from New Mexis shrewd and sometimes biting. their. destinies in concrete cir-' ico" (Farrar, Straus and Cudahy. ,They are instinct' with the faitb cumstances under the leadi!1g of $3.75» . .at least the first four and wisdom of simple folk who grace. The book ha-s an elliptical of the seven tales which make are profoundly Catholic. quality' whicll interferes with up' the, book suggests that' the The author tells bis stories cre~ibility and one's enjoyment aut~or is, retelling narratives beautifully. There is no striving of. It. "'''. . .~hICh ar~, a pa~t of the folklore. for. pOetic' effect, i)\1't the poet's S.~~newall and ~ife '. ' of, the ,'AmerIc~n southwest.,' tOuch is, everyw~ere. One reads Stll~ It ~a~ somethmg of t~e. H~wev~r~,,there ~s ?O external with' admiration and delight, elec~nc,~:;.llvmg elementqU1~ e~ld~nce.'.~h~t thIS IS', the fact. relishing:eacb story for its pithi': .IaCklOg_"lfi Harnett T. ~an~,s " Th~.stoq~~,.It appear~, are all 01. nesS eanhiness, luminosity and ,The Gallant Mrs. Sto~ewa~1 .l'rayAn~~~I~'S creation. . '8(~heend;' recognizing hOw' the; ,(Doub~~~a~. $3.9?), WhICh".I111 " _ B~,autif~lI,. Told:fit:,'togetl)er int9a:'whole which styled: a,biOgraphlcal novel.. • They, ,apd the other three Uwitnesses ilotonly·to.the k'll l of Its s~~ject is Anna Morrison, well, are":rich in feeling' and in the attist'seye'andhand ':ut also to the' .sturdy.' ·excellence. of a p,eople. and 'a way' of life. . '; 'rhe" illustrations" 'by Peter Hurd heighten. the effectiveness' of ~iework.
.
oj'
There is never n decrease in vocations; there' Is ~nly n de crease in those who follow vocation. Our Lord never leaves lHlis Church without calling sufficient ministers of Illis Mysteries; but· like the tbree y~ung men in Ithe Gospel pride, the flesh nnd worldliness can wave them away from Christ.
.By Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S. Kennedy In By Grace of Love (Macmillan. $3.50); Anne Freman tIe has written the scenario, of. an unusual, and' at times rather startling, novel. But as it comt=!s to us, it is not a finished, or at any rate, fully developed worl<. Whereas of so much fiction we have to com- th d " if' ' I ' th t ' t ' I th' e secon w e of General' .p am... a I IS P e one, Thomas Jackson, the great repetItIOUS, and long on "Stonewall" of the Confederate word while short on ideas, ,Army. Apparently Mr. KanE;-has
"
Priest-Sons·
6-9276
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SA RED HEARTS, FAIRHAVEN, STAFF: Left to right, art editor Anne/Fi~gerald, business manager Louise Poirier, assistant editor, Margaret Duggan ,and editor Cath__TEDDY;;:M. KALISZ . N . . 'ter' h' . ,. .' _.. -'. ,. -".. '314 ,'Church St., New Bedford erme. orrIS .~en, .., .:t.~ir;;~.~~~nti()n. on. a.... duwmY ,;:.,Raf,t~~" Wy ~2"':WY 3-7342 that l8. '. '" " ' : '....-..•.. ,:~~ '::'~:.,. ,. , " ...~}.,::' ";",f' ':',";~,'",_'..'.-'.__!'_',,'_!~!,",,"". .....'!,",,"!,",," ~ !:. . ~
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Few Catholic families have a son of their own flesh and blood at the altar as Priest and Victim. But God in His Mercy has made it possible for every, family to adopt a priest-son by paying for his seminary training in Mission lands. Today in Africa, Asia and Oceania 17,000 native young men are studying for the priesthood. For a sacI;ifice of $250. a year to pay for his education, a Catholic can lay spiritual claim to a share in the Masses, prayers and conversions of an adopted priest-son. Every Bishop of Africa who visits our office tells us that each year from 50 to 150 young men are'turned away, because means are lacking for their ·suppOrt. Vo cations come only from homes where there is a spirit of sacz:ifice; sacrifices for tbe education of native clergy in mission lands ~me only from Catholics who have th,e spirit of sacrifice. When we ask you to make' dail,. saerifiees, we are really try. Ing to make you happier. Every emptying of self makes room for . the Spirit of Christ. To be full of self is to be empty of Christ; to be empty of self Is to be full of Christ. 'Future priests throughout the missions are spiritual orphans. Will you lead them to the altar of sacrifice through your s~erifiees? Send your sacrifices to the Servant of the Servants of God-The Hob Father, through his Society for ~e Propagation of the Faith. GOD LOVE YOU to H.B. for $5 "My wife gives to missions of ,other lands and I don't see why I can't make this a practice too." .•• to S.U. for $24 "My winnings in the baseball pool -at the office..•• to M.G. for 20 cents "I was going to use one of these two d.imes to buy a yoyo...... to M.S.Z. for $1 "With my birthday only a week away I want someone else on the receiving end." "
Wear the lovely GOD LOVE YOU MEDAL yourself or give it It is the silent symbol of your love of God and souls the world over. The sacrifice-offering that you send for the medal of your choice belps our missionaries to tell all men "God 1.ove.l You". Large 10k gold filled $10
Small 10k' gold filled $ 3
Large sterling 'silver $ 5
'. Small sterling silver $ 2 ~ . . .' Address. your. request to: Society for the Propagation' of the J'lU~ 366 Fifth Avenue, New York or your Diocesan Director. to a friend.
'Cut out this column, pin your sacrifice to· it and mail it to the Most Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, National Director of The Society for . the Propagation of the Faith,3G6 Fitth Avenue, New York 1, N.Y.. or your DIOCESAN DffiEGTOR REV. RAYMOND T. CONSI I>,lNE, ,368, ~orth Main Street, Fall River" M~. 1
WOOD & FRANCIS Dealel's
Distributors
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Puritan Wallpapers
AND
Sri-Mar Paints WYman 2-6592 961 ACUSHNET AVE.
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time •• sfeps •• money
THEANCHOR~
Thurs.; Oct. 31, 1957
Sodality Active
ST. MARY'S HIGH, TAUNTON
13
pictures taken, the staff wID DOW begin work on the dumm". This week the school has befJIl celebrating Catholic Youth Week, which began with gen eral Communion of the studentll on the feast of Christ the King. The students have been remind ed by the Catholic Action Club that the aim of this week is to encourage devotion to the Bless ed Sacrament. Posters have beeD. placed in strategic spots ·in the school, printed with the slogan, 'Healthier, Happier, Holier . Catholic Youth,"
The annual Halloween dance, JESUS MARY ACADEMY "Goblin's Gathering," presented FALL RIVER by the Student -Council, will be MOUNT ST. MARY ACADEMY, SACRED BEA~TS ACADEMY, M. St. Vincent de Paul, prinFALL RIVER FALL RIVER cipal,and M. St. John Berch held tonight at the school. The . C I 'IS prepar i ng R epresen . . ti' li ' home room teach hall, decorated under the direc The J umor ass ng S .H.A. ' s pu b mans, senior for the tenth Junior Prom, the' cations at the Free' Press Meetei-, attended. the Annual Confer tion of. Patricia Cooper and rep BOcial event of the year, which ing sponsored by the Fall River resentatives of the lower classes, will take place tonight at the Lodg"A of' Elks were Shacady ence of . the Adult Education' will take on an eerie. atmos Pocasset Country Club in Ports- News editors Fernanda Carreiro, Council of Fall River. ..,.,. phere, as goblins, gnosts, and mouth, R. I. Dancing will be Catherine Costa, Gail Roberts, Seniors Louise Gamache, Dor-, from 8:30 until 11:30 under the Mary .Lou 'Simcoe, Rita Louise is Dupont; Catherine Gou1let, witches dance on the walls. Eliz direction of Tommy Masso and Souza, and Janice Wojcik; and Rachel1E; Labreche were abeth Tallent is the general his band. Anchorite editors Janice Faria, among the' guests at Salve Re chairman and Frances Corcoran Before going to the Pocasset Barbara Goulet, Joan Sequin; gina College on "High School is in charge of tickets and pro Country Club, the girls and their and Journalism Club's secretary Day." Greta Assali ~57 JMA escorts will assemble at the Eileen Pilling. Guest speak'er graduate, now a freshman at grams. Refreshments will be school ~o meet the faculty, and Superior Court Judge Frank E. Salve Regina, escorted the group served under the direction of ,fRANCiS J. for the ceremony of the crownSmith spoke concerning the her-. of students who visited the cam - Claire T~nry. ing of the Blessed Mother's itage and freedom of 'the press. pus grounds and buildings. The second cake sale Was held Statue. CecUe Perry 'has been ~ In p'reparation for the annual Catherine G;oulet '58 and Ce • Sunday under the direction of .. 222 UNION STR~ET chosen by her classmates for that retreat junior and senior Sodal cile Nadeau '58 participated in i Judith Megan, .Business' Man h onor. ists delivered speeches pointing the National Merit Scholarship TEL. WY. 6-9784 In the school gym the young out to other Sodalists the graces Test. The result will be reported ager of the Yearbook, Corona, NEW BEDFORD, MASS. couples will then dance to "Deep and benefits to be derived fro~' to the principal in late Decem which' will benefit from this sale. Purple" which is the theme of a well-made retreat. The speak- ' ber. The Corona advertising cam the Prom. The gym will be colers .included' Agnes Crombie," Mother St.Anibroise, librari paign was brought to an end last orfully decorated to create the Ann Delaney, Patricia DeNardo, an, assisted at the New Eng week, . 'when the quota was GENERAL
mood of autumn' in accordance Rita Faria, Nancy LaFleur, Viv land Catholic Library Associareached. The photographer for INSURANCE
with the theme. ian Rocha and Mary Lou Simtion Conference at Salve Regina' the yearbook paid his second The junior class received their coe. College.' visit and, with all the informal class rings in a ~mp~ but imThe Shak~pearean p~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ pressive ceremony held in the Taming of the Shrew, 'as por convent chapel. The entire stutrayed by the Catholic Univer ..... , dent body was .present at· the sity players, was enjoyed by II ~~~ ", ; ceremony. Mary Lomax, presigroup of seniors. / dent of the class of 1958, asSister· Stephen Dolores ai sisted by the other senior class tended a meeting of the New officers ...:.. Charlotte Nowak, England Unit of the Catholic Theresa Medeiros and Eleanor Library Association at . Salve Bedard - 'presented the rings Regina College. . to-the ~uniors. . Sister Mary Adrienne and SisThe rmg has the Mercy ShIeld ter Mary Hortense accompanied centered in a red stone. In 'the a group of college-bound stu center of the upper half of the dents to the Massachusetts shield is a ~oss, ~,nder. which Chapter of the Federation of \ , ; is. the wo~d Mercy.. There are Catholic Aalumnae College Day ,,' ~~ nme vertical .bars m the lower held at Regis College. Speakers " ..........
part of the s.Jueld. The four red from Anna Maria College, Arch .... bars symbolIze courage and the bishop Cushing College Em five white bars designate purity. manuel College Our L~dY of The name, ~ount Saint Mary the Elms, New.t~n College of the Academy: enCircles the .stone. Sacred Heart, and Regis told Followmg a.n inspirmg. ad- of the particular advantages of dress ~n the slgnifican~e of the fered by these ~atholic institu class rmg and emphas18 on the tions. Benediction, a .tour of the ideals of loyalty to all it signi- campus and refreshments coil fled, t?e ceremony closed with' eluded 'the program of the day. BenedIction of the Most Blessed F h t d t Sacrament. res men were ra e as op Mount Saint Mary Academy salesmen. at . the close of ~e officially opened-National Youth D~ency 10 Literature Ca~palg~ Week by having Mass celebrated WIth freshmen Paula StaslOwskl i th t hit 8 A M of Room 2, Jayne Stafford of n e conven c ape a . . Room 4, and Maureen D'AnMonday. A Holy Cross priest d f R 2 1 d' th"' . from the Holy Cross Mission r~aul 0 t oom ea mg err House, North Dartmouth, was sc 00 rna es. the celebrant, and gave an enA Senior Communion Break thusiasUc address on the im- fast served as a finale to the an portance of youth being a forcenual retreat given by Father ful influence in all fields of en- Lawrence Poetz, S.V.D. Father deavors. Breakfast was served Poetz also conducted a special to all the students in the acadevening conference which was emy cafeteria.' attended by the seniors. The Liturgical Choir of Mount Three hundred and fifty perSaint Mary Academy, under the sons were served at the mother direction of Sister Mary Verona, and daughter harvest bean sup R.S.M., M.A., will provide the per held by the Succordium Club music for the High Mass which in the Sacred Heart School. Mrs. opens the Forty Hours' Devotion David W. Boland was ,in charge in Saint Thomas More Church, of arrangements. Somerset, next Sunday. Following the supper a parcel Before the singing of the Mass, post sale was conducted wi,th Cum Jubilo, the choir will sing Mrs. George E. Duffy in charge. Rheinberger's exquisite polyArticles will be sold at the phonic Ave Maria. For, their next get-together of the club, Credo, the group will use a comscheduled .for Nov. 15 in the position of Joseph McGrath, toschool. day's foremost composer of -~~~~~~~~~-:-~~sacred music for the Catholic .tarum, will be rendered, At the Church. conclusion of the devotions At the Offertory, ISaak's six Gruber's Jubilate Deo 'will be '. teenth-century gem, 0 Esca Via- heard.
Spotlighting Our Schools
LAWLER
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\, .going thirsty! '/'/
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Ginger Ale, Orange, Grape,
Cola, Root Beer
Full 32 oz.!
You have to' be slim to look your best. Be smart .•. have your figure imd yOID' refreshment too. Clicquot Club Non Fattening, Carbonated Beverages have the sugar removed but DOt the ftav.or. Look fOr this sale at your store.
The part'Y, guest that mix.. best
MAKING PRELIMINARY PLANS:' Staff members of
Jesus-Marie Aeademy, Fall"River, yearbook study' page lay"'; .
-outs as they start plan,ning their publieation:, Left 'to right, ' they are Claudette Caron'; Gertrude Lavoie~"Catherine GoU;;' '.; ,. 'le~
Annette Puent and JeaDM,PiaDte., ' ,'" ".
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Q~estion of Prudence .'
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Vi,g~rCM$ Ch~rity'~',ll1cl'4~ed ,In Mili~@[ffJ~Y 'of Church'
14
THE ANCHIOR Thurs., Oct. 31, 1957
30~OOO ItaliansPlcin To Settle in ,U. S.
NEW YORK· (NC) ~ Nearly 30,000 Italill1)S will leave Italy within' the next. IS: months. to make their,homes in ·the United " States, according to. two. officials of ,the American Committee OIl Italian Migration. Father, Caesar Donanzan,. P.S.S.C., national executive see 'retary, and Judge Juvenal Mar.. chisio, national chairman of the ACIM, disclosed this on their re turn from Rome, where they di& cussed the' problem of' Italian migration with religious and lay leaders.
By Donald McDonald
Davenport Calliolic Messenger
In the light of cprrent disturbances involving a prieSt
ehaplain and the secular university at which he, is stationed, it might be well, I think, to recall some recent statements by the Holy Father and other ,high-ranking prelates with re gard to .Catholics and their covering' love, they will have relations with non-Catholics discovered· God. . . . The world' who may be indifferent, or must see that (the C.hurch's) joy even hostile, to the Catholic is not to triumph over those who
ignore her or who war against religon. '\ her, but to save ,all men in re As Dr! Jerome Kerwin, a po vealing to them the love of·God litical scientist and her love." at' the Univer The cardinal said he ~ "in sity of Chicago, ,j? an atmosphere of true love, the said last week possibility of a confident, effec o NEW YORK (NC) Paul
tiv~nd, of course, pllIUdent Beno, 29, chess champion of
Glt Notre Dame, collaboration with, unbelieyers, Hungary in 1948 and an active
wholesale ac at any time when this is possible participant in the Hungarian
eusations by . in filial fidelity to the Church." Catholics .' that revolution, has arrived in the
United States to establish his
secular schools For Greater Good . permanent home.
are "Commu And the Holy Father, in an ad VISITS POLISH CARDINAL: During a visit to p~ Mr. Benko, came to this coun Illistic, godless, ' dress four years ago on the sub pagan and immoral" may spring try under the auspices of Cath ject of world government and land, Fat)1.er Stanislaus R. Labujewski of Ambridge, Pa., from sincerity '''but they create . religious pluralism, emphasized (-left) obtained an audience with His Eminence Stefan olic Relief Services - National , respect for, neither the Churl:b that Catholics' can and indeed Cardinal Wyszynski, Primate of Poland, .center. Also pic Catholic Welfare Conference.' nor its adherents at the secular must at times collaborate with world-wide relief agency of the tured is 'Archbishop Anthony Baraniak of Poznan. NC U. S. Bishops. He will work and
schools." States that are indifferent if not The question of the relation-, hostile to religion. in order that Photo. reside in Ohio.
ship between a chaplain and the Il greater good may follow. secular university to which he is ,"The duty of repressing moral -attached is primarily a question and religious error cannot,~ he Continued from Page One of prudence; that is to say, it is .said, ''be an.. ultimiate. norm of action. It must be subordinate to Trophy for the winner of the ',a question involving the best higher and more general norms Coyle-Taunton High basketball,_ ways and means of achieving a ONLt: EIGHT WEEKS 'W· Chrislmas. Avoid Ule Cl'OWds and which in some. circumstances series. A 'delegation from the lood end. &he C8!DJ1KlrciaUsm. PUT CHRIST BACK INTO CHRiSTMAS b, ~ permit, and even perhaps seem ~ CYO was present at Sunday'. Give Good Example' ceremonies, on the opening day' In his second address last Oet. to indicate as the' better policy, ~ivi~ 11 "spiritual" rU&. wUh I to delegates at the Second toleration of error in order to of CYO Week. real meaning and lasting eftecis World Congress of the Lay Apos promote a greater good." Highlight of the dedication, -like a gifl &0 the Near' Easl tolate, Pope Pius XII referred If an of these directives and ceremony was the unveiling of Missions in' Ule name of friend several times to what he consid principles seem' to encourage a large bronze plaque commemo or relative,' whellier lai' P{;rnoD ers the ~ "necessary" apostolic timidity it is because the con- rating the good works a~d deeds 01' religious. Our kub beautiful, gifts of "tact and true charity." cept of. "militancy" is not, I of "Jumpin Joe," as he was affec Dell' CHRiSTMAS GiFT' CAJIID At one point he says that Cath think, very well understood. It is tionately. known. Mayor Joseph wID be senl anywhereJoa ,1ISk olics "should distingUish them_ not "militant" to hurl unproved IC.' Chamberlain welcomed all to and PRESSED, If LOW E It S selves . . . ·by the example they accusations at the. character of the' ceremony and' the main . FRO M BETHLEHEM are in. give." At another point, he a person' or an institution with speaker of the occasion was Sen urges Catholics to "give good which one disagrees. It is not ator JQhn F. Parker of Taunton, oloa:ed- The card says: (1) JOU example of a fully blossomed militant to insult or_ridicule a lifelong friend 9f Eli~s. Digni arranged Mass &0 be said In Ihe _ taries from every walk of life Christian life" and says this must others.. SolJ Land for them; OR'12) JOU be done "through,their life and ,When the Church speaks o.f were present to'pay tribute to an enrolled Ihem In Ule rich spiri&. the practice of their profession." "'militancy" . in apostolic terms" outstanding Christian gentleman. aal beneliis oar members en At the same Congress, Arch she is thinking as much' of the Joseph Rogers was general Jo)': OR 18) ID Uleir name bishop Montini of Milan said that 'spirit as the means of militant chairman of the eve~t, assisted , cave a aaered u1Iele &0 adora '. Catholics must be "vigilant" so acti9n. And Unless the spirit 'is by Edwar.d Waldron. Benjamin nWldon chapeL O. that they do not turn "tolerance one of charity, the truths on the Friedman acted as master of et. dissidents" into 11 "justifying lips of.the "militants" will ap ceremonies. The Rev. D'. Sousa of the dissidents' position." But, PROTECT'rOUR RIGHT TO SAY HOW YOUR LIFE'S EARN
pear aour' and' harsh to unbe DeMello, pastor of Our Lady of be said, "we must 'not forget that INGS WILL BE USED. MAKE A WILL NOW. AN INVALIID
lieven. Charity must be at leaSt Lourdes, offered' the prayer. &be fundamental attitude of as ·vigorous as our actions; if it Among the Illany workers on the WILL IS NO WILL, SO GE'I GOOD LEGAL ADVICE. MAO
Catholics who wish to CODven isn't, we may as well forget Eliu Dedication Committee SURE GOD IS INCLUDED.
the world is to·love it... abOut our aPostolic: responsibili were the Rev. Edward A. Oli-' Tact, then, and Cliristian eJ:ud' ties. Tetra, Our 'Lady of Lourdes; .the CHARLES, ELlAZAR, LEONARD, LAWKENCE,
Iiy and good example in o~'. Rev. John J. Griffin, St. Paul'. MANUEL, SAMUEL .
own 'life are the indispensable Church; fonner CYO director; DoD't lei &be nametl fool Tbe,!re all poor Near East 818 elements for the Catholic:: woo and the Rev. Francis B. Connors, . CoDiinued from I'-.re One .. working with and alongside ten from Lebanon, Iraq and India, who beg Jour belp &0 enable thelll .Sacred Heart, present CYO di unbelievers. These- elements do Spaeth. is interested oDly·.iII rector in Taunton. &0 compl. two 7ears training as' a mlsslonarj. 1& takes $150 1\ DOt of themselves indicate the articles that will sQed light OIl ' ,ear for each Clrl while lIbewalDa. AD, ~aJm_1 wW cI& . the use of contemporary arts, most pruderifcourse of actio.n in • given situation. But with· these primarily fine arts and'architec . ' THE HUMAN ELEMENT
elements the probability in-" ture, in the service I;)f religion.. " , The article may ·be textual or 'Although not a flsh~ former Orthodolr bishop,
creases that the action finally YOUNGSTOWN (NC) - This pictorial,. or a combination of taken will, in fact, be prudent. man like ~t. Peter, the
'be rusbed there WitIa Ohio diocese will spend about both,. and maY' be' about .indi-. . bishop In India bad to
11 these 'elements are absent, if, 10 b, ~t when 200 I-'f':lr;;~!r:
great fanfare and begaa . viduals, trends,. organizations or '$25,000 in each of the next. two Instead of tact; we have reck years to ,help finance the educa a new c bur c h to win Jacobltes In Thlruvan.·
lessness; Uin place of' charity new buildings. However;' only tion .of parochial school lay those articles which deal with we have contempt, and if, in.:.. tbem back. Tbe· bl~bop mundur Insisted he ,come
teachers who need additional art or architecture or with the Stead of good example, we give to· receive tbem Into the
wishes to reward their training to. meet new State bad example, then not only will various church furnishings will standards for teachers. ~hurcb. Flood s. bad sincerity bY' giving them be considered., . . .' our actions' tend to De consist washed ouf all the roads. a .chapel. He. needs $2. Knights of c:olumbus State Prizes will ConsiSt of $1,000, ent~y imprudent, they will also Deputy Anthony Bosch of Toledo and $50. The $500, $250, $100 got to their 000 and the land 1$1.000). Whea news be apostolically sterile. said the 'State K. of C. will un publications in which the indi Cannot'lmpose Faith dertake to' provide the ,fundB Let us see what another wise vidual. articles appear will re DRY HIS TEARS needed by the various dioceses ceive' prizes of $500, $250, $125, Churchman' said about this mat In Jerusalem salDUr Fr. Jobn is ;wom oUI and In tears after nine $50 arid $25. ' in the state. ter of. relations between Cath .;rear:: caring dally for some Invalid and mentally III .parishlonen olics and non-Catholics in a re who f1t;~ &0 bls house when their homes were col in the troablea ligiously "m~ed" society. of 1948. He slmpl, mast add rooms on&o bis bouse and 'beg-8y08l' Peter Cardinal Gerlier 'of help. .For each $5 he sends ~n orien&al Madonna. Lyons, France, gave a lecture on this subject a few years ago. NOVEMBER MASSES will be offered almost at once "'Y our poor "We ought to maintain the re priests wbo have po other support. but your Mass offerings. quirements of truth and defend it against all those who attack it. But we are not able to impose LOOKING AHEAD truth. Faith cannot be imposed. The Chol'tlb m,stnlwaJs do l&-speclnll)' &0 "Nor can we forget," said the. provide &omorrow's leaders like CHARLES In cardinal, "that the'incredulity of Ethloplll .and JOHN and THOMAS In India. In many-although in itself it is not fact.sb: )'ears ahead. . Thai's bow long we Iraln justified:""-'is nevertheless ex them for the prieslhood. NOW the seminal')' . plainable in'stich a way that we • needs $100 a )'ear &0 keep eacb boy. ,Their would be unjust to accuse them of sinning knowingly against the pOor parenis can't belp. Can JOU give one 007, truth. Moreover, it is well for us ~ )'earb sam? to, recognize that the efficacy of apologetics is remarkably weak in our day when it restricts itself to .the area of intellectual con troversy." . . FRANCIS CARDIN~L SPELLMAN, President . . And, like Pius XII and' Arch . Mlgr. Peter P. Tuohy, Nat" Sec'y , , ' . . bishop Montini, Cardinal Ger Send all communication. to: TO PUBLISH HOLY. FAMILY YEARBOOK: Obvi
ller comes around to the indis CATHOUC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCiAnON
ously cheerful as they undertake the task of producing the
pensable apostolic virtue-char New Bedford school's publication are left to right, Susan. 480 Lexington Ave. at 46th St. • New York 17, N. Y.· ity. Unbelievers must discover in . Craig, editor; .John, Maguire, business manager;' Roseanne , . ,', .... eur own lives love, and ~'in d~ T~omas and .Mart~ie ~ers,.assistant editorS. .J - ....
Quits Hungary
Taunton
WHY PUT 'IT' OFF?
'0.
Th'e Anchor
,na. '
.'
Diocese to Finance Teacher Educations
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Charity c.Dtlnued from Page One ftWI humility has led to a problem whereby people feel Cbat only an exclusive few can toln the Society, and that it is IM)t meant to be. of service to the .ast majority of Catholics wben lbey are in need. Two-Fold Purpose
We dare to reveal the work,
III the Society here for several reasons. First, so that Catholics taD be justly proud of the work the Church is doing in their midst to alleviate suffering and hardship; second, to inspire young men'to join the Society and give their youth and energy to the service of' others; and finally so that anyone in need of help will know where to turn for both material and spiritual aid. Named after the seventeenth eentury saint who formulated the basic principles for all mod ern charity, a saint who was everything from a Turkish slave to n friend of Louis XIII of France, the Society was organ zed by young Frederick Ozanam, lust over one-hundred years ~ld, it was conceived in the mind of this twenty-year old author, lawyer and professor in'1833, at Paris, France. Some' unbelievers of that day were questioning the good of the Church, doubting its concern for the poor and troubled Frederick Ozanam an lWered their challenge by form· ing the Vincent de Paul Society. He sought to cause the doubting Thomases of that day to change their taunt (show us your good works) to the same exclamation pagans had made many centur.
ies before: See how these Chris
tians love one another! And so with a small group of men he founded the Vincent de Paul
Society. They worked then
along the same lines as they do today; and the movement spread quickly throughout France and then across the world. Place for All The Society has a place for men of all walks of life, whether they be professional men or man ual laborers. The members meet weekly, usually on Monday rlights, beginning their meeting with a prayer and some short iPiritual reading. This empha ~izes the basic idea that they' tlave come together not primarily to render material aid to others, but principalJY to help them -elves become better Catholics through their charity. This idea of personal sanctity Is carried into "their works, where
they seek not only to give
people who are struck with dis
aster the necessities of life but
also through the Communion
Breakfasts, the yearly retreats, and the indulgences which are
available to all the men. What they do, can be adequately and
enthusiastically detailed by those
whom they have helped. All Vincent de Paul aid is given
through, a personal visit by two of its members to those who are
in need, and it covers a variety of fields: food, clothing, fuel, rent, medicine and emergency grants.
Growing Steadily
In a parish the group is called
Conference; and for each area, (for example, the Taunton area) there 'is a Particular Council; and finally for the whole diocese there is a Diocesan Central Council. The program is financed through money received from poor boxes, collections taken up on holy days and during~Lent, gifts, the annual Bishop's Charity Ball, and from the secret collec tions taken up among the mem bers at each meeting. Record Outstanding
Introduced into America at st.
Louis, in 1845, the Society spread across the land. In 1931, Bishop Cassidy urged that each parish in the diocese form a conference. Father William Harrington was the fi'rst Diocesan Director and its steady growth is signified by the fact that there are over one hundred conferences in the dio cese at the present time. Bishop Connolly has encouraged the movement and sought to make it even more effective. In addition to the Vincent de Paul camp' whose facilities were enjoyed by more than four hundred boy. last summer, the Society aids iD aD¥ way that a worthy 1amiq
might need. It also places at the disposal of the priesis of a parish, funds which they can use for charity as they see fit. Vincent de Paul aid is not meant to be a
long-range subsidy, but rather peeted disasters. Recipients who by attempting to inspire peOple mlly need long-term help are ~ to help :themselves and overcome , ferred to ,the Catholic Charities their problems, the Society gives Bureau of the area where they emergency 'aid during unexreside.'
THE ANCHOR
Thurs., Oct. 31, 1957
15
The Society is a bri~ht para graph in Church history.
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Parish Observes Diamond Jubilee
of- Co~o,r
By Joseph A. Breig
0
Immaculate Conception Par ish Fall River, honored its Dio ce~n champion baseball team at the parish diamond jubilee ban quet Sunday night at White's. Bishop Connolly paid tribuu: to the team spirit and mutual faith of the players as he pre sented jackets to them, noting their debt to their parents for the fine qualities of character they had shown. "Rev. Walter A. Sullivan, Fall River CYO director, presented the Diocesan trophy to Rev. Felix S. Childs, pastor, both priests praising the players for their courage and sportsmanship. Rep. John J. Long was toast . master. Rev. Edward J. Mitchell. native of the parish now sta tioned at Sacred Heart Church, Taunton, was principal speaker. Rev. Daniel F. Shalloo, former assistant at the parish, gave the "Salute to Yesteryear," and Rev.
Robert L. Stanton, pres_ent assist
ant, spoke on "Our Champions."
Rev. Paul G. Connolly, CYO
chaplain and an assistant at Immaculate Conception, com posed the tribute to the baseball champions printed in the jubilee observance program.
Cleveland Universe Bulletin
You will be reading this piece on or ar:ound All Sa'ints 'Day. It is an ideal time for me to blow my stack over racial ,injustice. And blow my stack is'.what I.propose to do. In this country there is nothmg, eaSIer or more, cheaply popular than to make ex seeking, leaders, how~g male cuses for denying to Negroes dictions and taunts at h~. ,
16 . ThursTHE ANCIHOR .• Oct. 31, 1957
.
Will we be tested m that way, to:see whether we have the love and courage to take Christ's f G d side and not the maddened o o. .. 1 1 crowd's side? 'And if we fail, It is easy, It IS cheap y ~pu ar, '11 e 'be turned away to Pur and it is hate~ul ;~tor; to learn there to be bet:. to Jesus Chnst, ter men and women? . Whose hone.~~ Certain it is, absolutely cer eyes we WI tain that if we cannot learn to face on Judg llW~our fellowmen on pilgrim ment day. . age with us from cradle to grave If t?ere IS in this life,'we will have to learn one t,hlllg that in the next world before we will C h r 1St ha~be permitted to assoc~ate with ~ered ho~e 10 hammered it them in Heaven. We'shall not WELCOME ABROAD, ADMIRAL: Chester W. Nim Ius teachl,nfgsh - ere driving a see God face to ,fac~ until we itz received a rousing welcome from young voices at Mount home as 1 e w, H'" h 'I 'th H's"'carpenter's have first seen~ 1m m our nelg St. Michael's girls school in Dallas, Texas. He is pictured great nal WI.. , 1 '-bor.' ' hammer-it was that we must, .. with two young students and Mother St. Cl~ment, 87, under , ' 1 ve God" that All Samts Day honors the without evaSIOn, 0 , 11 th . ts f whose direction the home for girls has been developed by f f 1 of God lies in memory of a e sam , 0 the ~roo ~ d,ove ommandments, every color and nationality and the Sisters of Charity of Refuge. It was the Admiral's keepmg t t~ s sec c ond' of God's social condition. He who cannot third visit to ,Mt. St. Michael. NC Photo. and tha ed ts' l'S that we be just to those who are differ great comman m e n . '. If '11 t be . 'hb ourselves. ent from hImse WI no per love our nelg or . , th' 'F~'reign • as . hbor ml·tte d t o,Jom em. We must love our nellF. Say if you please that we C t' d 'f Page One ,Congress reconvenes that the ' 1 If h e ' " even'if he IS a eper, even , have a devilishly difficult prob Wins Papal Honor
on lRue r . United States discontinue its aid Is a rascal, even if he is a J~d~S. lem in this country in the South, . what was supposed to ~ a SClento Marshal Tito.The U. S. State
PITISBURGH (NC)-Bishop We must love him t.hou g e and in the' North. It is true, ti6cp.roject, the. ~~UnChl?g,~f the Department itas announced that John F. Dearden of Pittsburgh wallow in filth, or IS' loathe . Urge if you wish that we satelht: moo~ . Sputmk, and it is "reappraising" itS program , ' , has been named by Pope Pius somely afflIcted, or l'les wou nded move slowly in solving it. I the gUided mlssl1es .and armaof military and economic aid to XII an Assistant at the Pontifical and beaten and gangrenous: so agree. ments race has receIved a tre-, Yugoslavia which already inThrone. Archbishop Amleto that our st.omachs turn at Sight But I part company with you mendous "shot in the arm." volves $1,200,000,000. This, vast Giovanni Cicognani" Apostolie 0If him. the moment you:-begin to 'com 'Red Theor,. sum was given with the explanaDelegate to the United States, To get to the heart of the matpromise the principle; the mo Meanwhile some observers tion that it would help Tito re presented the document to Iler, we must love our neig~bor meri,t you show a reluc,tance to' who, have been sampling this 'main independent of Moscow, Bishop Dearden. even though he be as despised, stand up' and be counted for ~ation's thinking report finding and that this was extremely im as hooted-at, as repellent to the Christian truth and for the'Dec-. less interes~ in ~nternationa~ ~- portant to our foreign policy., vere pressure from Moscow. eye and as shattering to the soul laration of Independence which fairs than m high 4rxes, .r!~mg cis B d T'to There are some who contend that prices and a threat of growing Re , en I. • as Christ himself was when he truly asserts that all- men are unemployment on the national Rep. Kenneth B. Keatmg of we OIJght to cOntinue our aid to , was hung on the cross"his body a created equal and endowed by Tito, ,to ,keep Yugoslavia from a mass of contusions, torn flesh, their, Creator with certain in scene. New Y~rk has already asserted being dragged wholly, behind the blood, dirt and spittle. alienable rights. ' , Yugoslavia's recognition of the that "aid to Ti~ should be East Germany Red regime is stopped immediately." He added, Iron Curtain. On the other hand, The Gospels are' merciful in seen here as part of Moscow's that we should have stopped it is contended that if, despite their description of Christ in that Luke E. Hart Again ,our enormous assistance so far,
longstanding plan to build up such aid last year. ,"For a num moment. Indeed, they do not de Named K of C Head that government and compel a ber of years," he said, "it h~s Moscow is still able to make Tito lCI'ibe him at all. They'. say ST. LOUIS ,(NC)-LukeE. severe if not fatal, blow to the been apparent that we should m 'do its bidding on so important an merely that he was crucified. issue, we have lost our tremen Hart. Supreme Knight of the reunifi'cation of, Germany. Mosno way give aid to those gov and then are silent. dous investment of the past, and Knights of Columbus jlince 1953, cow' undoubtedly expected that, ernments which are pledged to Ordinary Justice to give more would only be was re-elected to that post b,. foilowing Tito's lead, there help those who would destroy The artists also have bP.e1l the organization's board of direc throwing "good money after would be a rush to get on the our way of life." He declared merciful. They know ~hat neither bad." tors at' a meeting here•. band wagon and that other nathat "Marshal Tito and his ca
they nor we could °endure a rep Mr. Hart, 77, is a St. Lou", tions would recognize the East 'horts have sho;.vn repeatedly that a
re~ntlition of the' crucifixion attorney., He has ser,ved in top Germany clique. That may yet they intend to remain faithful to
that even approached the reality. K. of C. posts since 1918 when he develop, as more pressure is'. the tenets of communism and to
They make it e~sy for us; they was named a supreme director. applied in various q~arters, but their eronies in the Kremlin."
leave out almost all the horror. He held that position until 1922 West Germany's break with Observers are inclined to Nevertheless, we are commanded when he became supreme advo OIL COMPANY Yugoslavia, and the support of 'agree that Tito recognized the to be the kind of peopleo who cate. this move by the U. S., Great . , would have loved Christ even on He served as advocate until Britain and France at least East German regIme u!,1der &C the cross.' and even if we knew 1953 when he became head. of halted the trend momentarily. nothing ~bout Him but that He . the Catholic laymen's society, Reappraise Polie,. was alleged to be a criminal and w~ich now includes more'than The Adenauer government a blasphemer. a, million, members. THE ALL NEW CAR said it was acting upon principle We cannot claim to be that in breaking' with Tito. That FOR 1958 South Sea Sts. kind of person if we cannot give African Bound raises the question whether we See and Drive It ordinal:y justice fo a Negro boy METUCHEN (NC) - Brother will. do the same thing in deter Hyannis Tel. HY 81 at or girl who merely wants to go Martin, Provincial of the Broth mining our future relations witl\. to school as ot.her children do, or ers of the Sacred Heart, has sail the Red dictator. The Federal to a Negro family that merely ed from New York' for a two Republic of Germany had said 54-56 Court Street wants a decent home to live in. month visitation of African mis for some time that it would Taunton, Mass. _ Sometimes I wonder whether sion schools staffed by the . break relations' with any couqtry CONTRACTORS tt iJ; possible that on Judgment Brothers. The Sacred Heart that recognized the East German Day we will be confronted first Brothers started teaching Ugan . and regime. Foreign Minister Von with Christ in all the repulsive da high schools in 1931. Since _Brentano said the Bonn govern ness of the crl,ICifixion, with the then they have opened miSSion BUILDERS ment would be abandoning its mob, misled 'by blind and self schools it! the Sudan and Kenya. foreign policy if it took the co., Yugoslavia recognition of East INC. John B.
Germany supinely. ~'"For Your Protedion
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there will be demands when
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tion are, 'left to right, Frances Corcoran, assistant editor; : Made 'Rite' Chips,: Elaine O'Keefe, advertising manager; Kathleen Corrigan, ._-_ : '. A5k For Them ..-- Today ,:: - L . editor,and_J ~,dy "Megan;..busi..e~' manager.
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trogress of Civiliza~Qon. ~a~d for en Sacrifie~
Uy William H. Mooring Taken from a magazIne story called "The Day They we Babies Away", a ,new RKO-Universal release shortly II play the theaters as "All Mine To Give". It is not the nd of show the national critics rave about. It moves lei W'th rely through the wonder I no thOmg muc h 0 f a s t ory, I tal.e 0 f a Sco t sma!! an d "Tammy and the Bachelor" S wIfe. (Cameron MItchell turns out to be one of the year's I,d Glyms Jo~ns) whQ, ba~k biggest teen-age attractions, 1~65 settled m Eureka, WIS ~)ther settlers helped
mostly because of the song which Is tops with the record-playing ~~ b~l1ld a clans. Nobody is more surprised : cabm. In than song writers R~y Evans and I. 0 r t ord~r Jay Livingston who thought they ~y had SIX were grinding out another fair ildren, . little number for a relativeiy un rhey lIved a important Universal- Interna rd, hap p y tional film. '~d' f thaAnkin g It has made them all rich. It ' h D bb' 'J. h b' d , or mer as . glv~n e Ie IS us an , a their fel , , d h th EddIe FIsher, a new steer ta N pIOneers an eac ~o er. . . ,en tragedy struck. Diphtheria wards s'i:'eet musIC. and wllrned VATICAN AT BRUSSELLS EXPOSITION: The Civitas Dei Vatican Exhibit at )k the father. The mother most ~t er pop sl.ngers to go the 1958 Brussels International Exposition was the topic of this conference at the National 'd R bb' th easy With the frantIC beat. Stu , . ,~ d 0 f t yp h 01. 0 Ie, e dio are I' . g d th' CatJ'lOlic Welfare Conference headquarters building, Washington. Left to right are Aux lest was 12. On Christmas s ~ Ippm own e Jun , .. gle beat 10 several new "rock" iliaryBishop Philip M. Hannan of Washington; Paul Heymans, Commissioner General tY he went around fmdmg f'1m f'h f or theV I 8 be ore L ey go t 0 th e cam,.. a t'Ican E x h'b't I I; Count Yves d u Monceau de Bergenda1, Deputy·Commissiorier for od homes and f os t er-paren ts Th " k'" " II' " r. his brothers and sisters, as :a8. d e l ro~l' . IS ro 109, the Vatican Exhibit'; Msgr. Howard J. Carroll, Executive Secretary, NCWC and Francis , mother had told him to do. war sear y 0 IVlon. ' J. McGuire, U.S. director, Travel Department, for the Commissioner General of the Holy The way these hard-working, No LonC'er News See. NC Photo. nd-hearted immigrant settlers This year's Annual Hollywood and the unlimited power to bind dopted" the orphans was typBallyhoo BaU, put on by the and loose granted to St. Peter II of their simple, dutiful way Publicists Association,gives the and the other Apostles and their life'. From many different studio publicity writers some-' Conlinued from Pa~e One successors (Matthew, xvi, 19; untries, they lived In mutual thing to think about. Each year ' of piety and devotion and pray, NOTRE DAME (NC)-Catf' xviii, 18) included everything 1st and respect. They often they've tried to top, the last for -even mentally, for the dead. oJics who visit the Grotto of Q..lr that barred men from heaven, lre comfortless but never com daring costumes. A year ago Three M~ses Lady of Lourdes at the UnivIC' sin and punishment due to sin. lcated. They had' no adoption Mickey Hargitay carried in Jayne The Church allows a priest to So, sin can be forgiven through sity of Notre Dame during 19:.3, .vs but you knew the children, Mansfield. They wore enough ,lI8y three Masses on All Souls 'Confession, punishment can be amusing a bunch as I ever l~pard skin between them to centennial year of the appa, i Day. He mtlst offer one Mass remitted through indulgences. et, were going to be aU right. make one decent pair of shorts. tions at Lourdes, France, willl~ , for the ,souls of all the faithful
Exercised Through Chureh Stringent Laws Needed They' got wild applause and departed, another Mass for the
ceive speeial indulgences. At the HoUywood press pre world:-wide spreads in the news In the early Church indul Intention of the Holy Father, and
Father Philip Schaerf, C,S.i:.. ew I thought of. yesterday'. papers. he is free to say the third Mass gences were granted by Bishops said a plenary indulgence mllY adlines about how Marie Wil This year when Vikki Dougan according to his own intention.
who shortened the severe canon be obtained by members of allY n and her husb~nd Robert made her grand entrance as In this way, however, the Church
ical penances of the tiine at the group. Individuals will receive iedman had had their hearts Lady Godiva and Joan Brad makes sute tl1at no soul in Pur
intercession of the martyrs, who II partial indulgence, said the' out torn out when the natural shaw foUowed as the Queen of gatory ~s forgotten.
director of the Confraternity of I.)ther of a baby they adopted, Sheb~, hardly anyone stopped gave the penitents letters of in An ,indulgence is a remission the Immaculate Conception of d begged it back. The way' dancmg to glance at them, aI ~n whole (plenary indulgence) tercession called "libelli paeis." Our Lady of Lourdes. r lives are ordered these days though they'd gone beyond legal or in part (partial indulgence) of Thus a penitent would seek out l, of course, need stringent limits to create sensation. Greta the temporal punishment due to in prison a person condemned to option laws. No doubt there Thyssen, swathed in gold lame, . forgiven sin. The divine power die for the faith. He would ask ~re many abuses before such head to toe and leading her of the Church to grant indul ws were made. To this extent cheetah, alive and chained, gences may be better understood this martyr-to-be to write to the ciety had progressed and few snatched the first prize from if it is compared with the State's Bishop in his behalf. And at us would put the clock back under the noses of the nudes! custom of pardoning the whole the intercession of the mart;r we could. When even the most blase or part of the punishment, in the Bishop would remit some of Still as this interesting movie Hollywood crowd reveals it is flicted by the civil law upon a the p~nishment. minds us, the progress of civ sick. and ~~e~ ?f disgustingly criminal. The President has the zation has been paid for in stupid exhlbltlomsm, the Holly Thus the doctrine of indul right to grant a complete pardon ' eat sacrifice. Simple human wood publicity writers aoc' New gences was understood and used to any criminal within the con rtues like trust respect good York ad designers must see it is fines of the United States;"the from the early days, of the ith which once' made a' man's past time for a change of' pace Governor to any criminal in his Chu~ch. It is another example ord as good as his bond. have (and face) in the movie ads and of the mercy of God exercised , State. The State also remits part through His Church, the Mysti ,en pushed aside or f~rever J>reSll stories with which they of a criminal's punishment for 9t hope to entice back the missing cal Body of Christ. ,ood behavior while in prison. ~rotect Material Benefits audience. The power of the keys granted to St. Peter and his successors, A "few weeks ago Eddie Fisher as fined $500 by the American SUBIACO (NC) Abbot TAUNTON, MASS. uild of Variety Artists for "en 1 elect Michael Lensing, O.S.B., ELECTRICAL,
:ing" Jerry Lewis to leave his ble at a Las Vegas night club of New Aransas Subiaco Abbey THE BANK ON
CONTRACTORS
will receive his abbatial blessing APPRAISER ld join in Eddie's show on the TAUNTON GREEN
Nov. 21 from Bishop Albert L. Residential - Commercial
age. Eddie threw a 'spotlight REAL ESTATE Industrial
Fletcher of Little Rock. I Jerry. The crowd applauded Member of Federal Deposit
A native of Scranton, Ark., ld before anybody could say 633 Broadway, Fall River Insurance Corporation
INSURANCE Abbot-elect Lensint succeeds
rade unionism" Lewis was up OS 3-1691 the late Abbot Paul M. Nahlen,
WY 3-5762 ,ere doing his stuff. You canO.S.B., who headed the com 136 Cornell St. It stop anybody who likes to munity from 1939 until his death ' New Bedford ltertain people by ruling that last Aug. 31. a member of the union he ay not perform unless COD acted to do for pay. YOUR DOLLAR As we live in this civilized so ety rules may be necessary to 'otect the interests of people ith a living to make, just as THAN. EVER BEFORE ws no doubt are essential to Ie well-being of adopted chil See us for the BEST DEAL in a
I.~en or to meet anyone of a Ford 'Car or Truck
I.Jndred other risks of human licanery or lawlessness. Is it not strange, however, and little sad, that most of the laws FORD DEALERS FOR OVER 38 YEARS '~ought about by the progress , civilized society have to do 1344-86 Purchase St. New Bedford, Mass. ith the protection of our civil ghts and purely material bene ts? Anyone proposing civic rules • statutory laws to protect any Co 1.1e, old or young, from acts or INC. lfluences that are palpably ,~trimental to their spiritual, SCIENCE HALL
ltellectual or moral weU-being, GET ACQUAINTED WITH YOUR COLLEGE
instantly branded a censor, hich is a very dirty name to Visitors Are Alwnys Welcome III anyone these days. HELP YOUR COLLEGE TO GROW Trends Burn Out We see how some dubious -ends in entertainment burn Rev. THOMAS C. DUFFY, C.S.C. lemselves out. Debbie Reyn Director of B1tildi,ng Fund StonehiU Colleg~ lds "Tammy" has given frantic: )Ck 'n roU an awful beating. FRANCIS J. DEVINE ARTHUR J. DOUCET PHONE CEdar 8-2221
ven Elvis has toned down his NORTH EASTON, MASSACHUSmS
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1M Family Clinic
Childish' Curiosity Normal Indication of Growing'U'p ,
IN 1He CA1ILe CAR. • WHEN THEY TOOK GUN LeE FROM THE TMfl\l. We iHOlAGHT, AT AR~, 'THGY we~e AFTCR t.l~.
NATUAAtt.Y, 'UN LeE'~ ~eI714~E 8Y THE: COMMUNlgT GOVERN 'MeNT WIt.1. Se A iE:J:RISlE' f:PI~ITUAl gLOW TO "THE lAND~J:GrwUND AND i~ WHO ~LL ~TOOD FAGT AGAIN~T "THE RED ~LAVEICY. HE WA~ A ~YMgOL.
CU Plans to Award 'Theology Degrees ~
HI~ ~~lZlA~e W11.t. iAKE A GOOD DE"At>.. Of lllc HcART OUT Of MANY G.lMPLS ~0Pl.f:. IF WE-'D GOTTEN HIM TO ,FREeoo~ iT WOIALD'VE BEEN A P~YCI-iOLOGICAL LIFT TO 1HO~E" MIt.IAOtJ{; 8WING THE RED YOKE. Hl~ JlAgT SEING F~£e WOULD'VE KEPT THE/~ ~PIRlT(:: ALive.
Gift Surprises Supreme, Pontiff
yard of the residence to the door ,CASTELGANDOLFO, Italy WASHINGTON (NC):- The, (NC)-A band of enterprising of the papal chambers. Catholic Unive~sity of A~~rica , pilgrims drove a new car up An unforeseen difficulty halted , here has.been glve,n the priVIlege. three flights of' stairs of the the ear, a' "Bianchina," when it 'of grantmg the degree of ~ac~- --papal summer home here and reached the door, leading into By Rev. John L. Thomas, S.J. elor, of Sacr~d.~heology m Its parked it in the ornate recep St. Louis University 'the Hall of the Swiss. The car affihated semmapes. tion Hall of the Swiss.
The privilege was accorded by , , ,
Our three youngsters, aged five, three, and fourteen was too wide to get through the the Sacred Congregation' of SemTh~ sma~l Itahan, car w,as ~ IIIOnths; are teaching my husband and me agreat deal about inaries and Universities at the surprIs~ gift to HIS Holmess doorway.Within only 20 minutes left Pope PlUS XII. The donors were children. ' At times we're not sure of the best way to handle 'Vat· n before the Pope was ,scheduled ~~;r: William J. McDonald, the villagers of. Desio, the birth a situation. What do you do when your five-year old uses to appear, the pilgrims went to really bad words picked up directly. There:s nothing 'to be acting rector of Catholic Univer-, pl~ce o~ Pope PlUS XI. They were woJ:,k. They removed the door 'ty 'd the ,degree of sacred chmaxmg a four-month observ at play? What about some 'gained, and a great deal of harm' ~~e~los;;.. will be awarded only to' ,a~ce of the bir,t~ of their ill~s and door-jamb, drove the car of their games involving sex to be done,.if you appear shocked selected students who meet pre-' trI~U~ fellow c~tIz~n by m,akmg ,in; rehung the doors and com posed themselves for the audi': ideas? Are all children curi~ or start scolding them as if., they scribed standards. aVlsit to the relgmng PontIff. ence. were adults, This can only serve '>US about themselves and others? Attendants said the Pope was to focus their attention oil an When do they learn modesty? surprised to find the car on the ticular, do pick up an amazing area which normally would not You obviously second floor of his home but vocabulary at times, Unfortu interest them for long.' Hence !lIeve three nor not as much' as might be ex nately, they frequently learn it your aim should be to, direct IIUl1 youngsters, pected. , from grown-ups whom they may, their attention along other lines They're setting admire, so that they feel big in It seems the low wide steps to by giving them something more aut to get ac using it. It's best to show neither , the reception hall were built for 91.5 Acushnet .Ave. , ir-teresting to do. twlinted wit h ainusement nor shock when this , dignitaries of long ago who liked themselves and At Weld Square " Fourth, modesty' comes with, occurs. ' Simply, tell your young" to ride their 'horses into the, with the world age. The two- or three-year-olds ster that there are many kinds of audience chamber. The stair ',New Bedford .bou t them, who shed clothes with gross words 'having many different way, each step of which is only a 'Tb.e energy and N_ Bedford's Leading
,abandon in the summertime de-, meanings, that you, and most few inches high and three feet Plumber
speed they dis velop ,a ,keen sense of privacy a grown people know all these deep, leads from the inner court play in their few years later. The same holds -I, words too. This approach tends to learn for their unabashed use of toilet to take' the excitement out of dismay words, bathroom curiosity, and such words, so that he generally • Dd surprise so on. Children do grow up, and stops trying to upset you' with poa. Everything is new to them, you will notice the change as: them. There's not much fun'in: , FOR THE, ret they are" born 'explorers, they gradually 'r,ealioze that -they ,using "shocker!!" ,that, ,don't ' tireless .in asking questions, really shock. IIleking new experience, and are real,' independent per~ns with a private life all their own.
_wing off what they" have You'lI Fall tn Love With Approved by Bis~op Connolly ~ned. Their persistence inay, , A~azing VOcabulary; ,
NORMANo.~S" DONUTS , wear you down and their curi Finally,' growing boys fJ.1'par~..
_ty may become a nuisance,
t.t _they're out to find the _ers, 1418 SOUTH MAIN ST. FALL 'RIVER Must Be. Explained Next to: COrt'igan's Drug StoN ' OS 3-0951 In"handling the puzzling situa~ I6ons' which may, arise at t!te~ MAKES YOUR " early' ages, there are se'veral CAR RUN BETTER: ' . points you should keep in m~tld.' i DONUT First, since sex and other bodily SSHOPS At New Car Dealers functions are normal human -22 KINDS OPEN EVENINGS
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Everywhere " ' nmge of children's curiosity-and New Bedford must be explained accordingly. 11lis means they may make some
interesting discoveries' about
THE LOCAL TRAVEL AGENT their own bodies a~d have some
FOR NEW BEDFORD CAPE COD AREA lIDderstanding of how they dif
£er from the opposite sex. They for the rnay even show curiosity about
older people, When answering
questions, re.member that all Approved by Bishop Connolly facts are pretty much on the
, Approved by
same level for children. Their
and all other 'Catholic Pilgrimages The Most Rev.James L. ConnoDy,
interest will be superficial, tern 'IS ' 'porary, and changeable unless Bish~p of Fall River
some unexpected reaction on your part focuses their attention Spiritually Directed by
all some special area., , Rev. Edward A. Oliveira,
678 PLEASANT ST. Members wm visit Lourdes during NEW BEDFORD Second, do not project your Diocesan Moderator
The Year of Jubilee-proclaimed by co' Legion of -Mary adult feelings, knowledge, and tfle Holy ,Fatfler to commemorate attitudes into their questions or , ' actions. They are children, not tf1e 100tfl Anniversary of Our Lady's appearances to St. Bernadette. 'grown-ups, Their curiosity is" 'Leaving New York May '6, 1958 for Naples, Rome, Nice, Lyons.
" , ',' . INC. ,I ' , that of a child rightfully wishing to know, not that of an adult Paray-Ie-Manial, An, Seville, Lourdes, LisbOll and fatima •• i
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'~'~~"~'~"~;:~~~;UiS~'~;~~,~;'
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THE ANCHOR Thurs., Oct. 31, 1957
Sports Chatter
oyle Warriors Now Ap~~ar Be~t Grod C~ub 6n C~wu~ty
Says ~~~@@~ u~X
Fre~@@ITlfl) ~~~~I.M~6
By Jack Kineavy
Not
Somerset High School Coach
Two years ago dread polio caused the opening of the eeholastic football season in this area .to be deferred a week r two. That same season- saw this section of the country . undated by week-end rains which which served to eom lieate further the playing the Stadium.. The importance of f abbrieviated schedules. this annual clash looms all the greater in view of the undefeated Nineteen Fifty-Five, how ver, can't hold a candle to status of both teams. Each has
~
~®~O@O@M~
LOS ANGELES (NC) James Francis Cardinal Mc Intyre said the attempt to reimpose. taxation on private schools. in California is an issue of freedom, not of religion. The Archbishop of Los An geles charged in an address that "the motive' and the impelling' power behind the initiatiVe are' a. definite attempt to bring about compulsory education of all chil dren under Federal control." Meanwhile, in San Francisco, U. S. Senator William R. Know-'
land, a candidate for the Repub
lican nomination for California
governor, declared that he is
opposed to taxation of private,
n~>n-profit schools.
~ong Struggle '- An initiative measure provid ing for a, vote on a proposed amendment to the California constitution that would forCe private schools to pay property taxes has qualified for the ballot in the 1958 state elections. California was the last of the 48. states to exempt private. schools from taxation. A state law bringing this about waa passed by the legislature in 195L But it was not until December 1956 that the legal struggle over . the law ended. .At that time, the U. S. Su preme CouJ::t refused to accept jurisdiction in an appeal from. decision of the California Su preme Court which held .the ~xemption was constitutionaL
e virus that has debilitated been tied once. In fact, the re sulting patterns of their ball ollege and high school grid games-all low scoring affairs quads throughout the country is fall. Last Saturday there would point toward this being one of the stellar atttactio'ns of ere some 22 scholastic contests ncelled as a result of one or the year. Something' gotta give! Another large school game -Photo by Calvey, Taunton oth teams being stricken by the which will command a good deal u. In this area there were four CHALLENGE AT COYLE: Beautiful yearbooks are of attention is the Durfee-Taun uch cancellations. Only one a tradition at the Taunton school.·It will be maintained br choo!, Dartmouth, was able to ton set-to. The Hilltoppers' cause the '58 staff, which includes, left to right, Terrence Kendall, will be hurt appreciably in the ill in at the last moment. The Taunton, editor-iIi-chief; Peter Sullivan, New Bedford', busi reen hooked on with Howe event that quarterback Stan 'ness manager; Richard Grace, Fall River, and Freder.ick High of Billerica whose original' Kupiec, injured in the Fairhaven McAuley, Attlebor9, aSsociate editors, and Daniel Nerney, game is still on the doctor's list. pponent was to have been The redoubtable Stan, passer and Attleboro, art editor~ ethuen. Coach Joe Betten kicker par excellence, is the boy ourt's charges survived a P.en lty frustrating afternoon to who makes Durfee go. The Her rings, 2,.2 on the season, .are "They look like rough and Street Bridge and the group will ome away with a fine 13-0 vic be welcomed to Fall' River by r y over their' Class C host8.· slated to be at full.strength for ready kids--but they sing like Mayor John F. Kane at. City he win erihances Dartmouth's the Durfee invasion. In other big angels," is the way one listener tatus as a Class D contender, school games: Coyle will· be at described a recent concert by the Hall. Thomas F. Welch, executive nd further star:nps the Green Vocational- Voke will' hardly . Boys Town Choir, which will break into the win column Sat appear in Fall River, Nov. 4, at director of the BOys Club, ,has s the team to beat in Narry cir the Durfee Theater, under the offered the facilities of the club les. Dartmouth meets Somerset. urday; Attleboro goes to Ware lUun-it's apt to be a· long, ·trip Auspices of B,ishop Cassidy. to the visiting youngsters during aturday at Hanson Memorial Council, Knights of Columbus. the afternoon. Field in Narry's game of the day. "for the Jewelers, and North Attleboro plays. host to New Most Rev. James L. Connolly, . The boys who comprise. the Beat Good Club buryport. Bishop of Fali River, has an choir are among the more'thall The afternoon's most convinc NalT7 League nounced he will attend the con 900 wards who have been Ing effort was the 36-0 trouncing ~ Two exceptionally fine con cert. "adopted" by Rt. Rev. Mgr. handed previously unbeaten tests shape up in smaller school A police .rp.otorcycle escort wi.ll Nicholas H. Wegner, director of North Attleboro by the rampag ranks Saturday. The Dartmouth meet the choir· at Brigh!Jnan Boys Town and successor to the ing Coyle Warriors. This was the Somerset clash will have a def late and beloved Father Edward second decisive victory of the · inite bearing on the Narry title. J. Flanagan, who founded this week for Coach Jim Burns' team ·Both are undefeated in league Va~Bcan world-famed home for homeless which on Monday had humbled competitioll . The Raiders have and neglected boys in 1917. New lP~«U\lt ,~e~<e~<es Attleboro, 27-7. Coyle's season downed Dighton and Falmouth The 50 members of the Boys HUNTINGTON (NC)-A thir record now stands 4-0. A closer over which the Green also owns Pope Pius XII dedicated on Town Concert Choir were chosen teen a.nd a half acre plot hall examination of the record re an impressive victory. In. the Sunday new radio transmitters by their able director, Father been purchased as the site of a veals that the stout Warrior de over-all picture, Somerset, off for Vatican City on a plot ten Francis Schmitt, from among. the new plant for Our Sunday Vis fense has yielded but a single a 2 and 2 record, will enter the miles north of Rome. The new more than 200 Boys Town Citi itor, national Catholic weekly touchdown to date. Coach Burns, game in' the underdog's role transmitters will make it pos zens who study vocal music. newspaper published here ill at the outset of the season, was against the undefeated visitors. sible for the papal radio station They are a select group, chosen Indiana. well aware of the defensive pro The Case-Mansfield game at to reach all parts of·the earth for for excellence of voice as well clivities of Turkalo, Yelle and Mansfield should be another the first time on a r.egular re as good citizenship in the Home, Co., but he was genuinely con thriller. Last year the Hornets liable basis. for a concert tour is a goal cerned with his offense. . upended a strong Case eleven, Until now the 38-year-old greatly to be prized. CURTAINS 26-24. This year both clubs have Vatican radio station, designed Apparently the boys were sav Last Fall, the tall young priest by Marconi, inventor of wireless DRAPES Ing themselves fpr actual game lost but one game, coincidentally who directs the choristers took enough, to the same opponent, telegraphy, has been limited competition, however, for they his lively young charge;; on a RUGS largely to Europe. The Russians have racked up 104 points thus 'Oliver Ames. Carrying the co tour which covered nearly eight LINOLEUM incidence n step further, each have jammed it often in the thousand miles, and took the lads far. Diminutive speedster Eddie lost by one touchdown. If that satellite countries. With the new Boyle has been tremendous, but into noted music halls in the 1636 Acushnet Avenue the North Attleboro result is situation doesn't leave the nickel transmitters, better reception of Midwest and East, in addition to New Bedford, Mass. on end, nothing will. Case will news is expected for the Iron more truly reflective of the cali a flying 10-day trip to Cuba., , WY ~3861 be saddled with the handicap of Curtain countries, at least for the bre of tbe Warrior backs. not having played since October time it Will take' for the Rus Against North five boys hit pay 12. A' brace of games on the sians to adjust their jamming dirt: Bob Freccero, Pete Gazzola, Cape finds Provincetown at Fal apparatus.' Pete Bartek, Ed McGoevrn, and ·INS~RANCE,' .. The Vatican radio broadcasts Boyle. The game stamps Coyle mouth and Dighton at Yarmouth. daily in 15 languages and several the best in 'Bristol County. Vic • APPRAISER times a week in 13 other lan tory was not unexpected but the REoALTOR
BIEVERAGfES ,guages. A regular program of size, of the score is certainly a e·
45 minutes a day will be beamed revelation. Not:th is a good high OS 2-2000
"Ws a, whale of a drink", to America every day, probably school football team. AUSTIN (NC) - Archbishop starting before the end of the Whalers on Top 1320 No. Ma.in St. 17 DE!.ICIO'lJS lFlLAVORS Robert E. Lucey of San Antonio year. Present rece'ption' in the The close games predicted in FALL RIVER has been awarded t~e 1957 Hu United States is now of uneven BEST SINCE 1853 Bristol County competition last man Relations Award of the quality. week materialized. A long La B'Nai-B'Rith Anti-Defamation The Italian government has WE. DlEllVEet noue to Bordwick aerial with Electrical League at a banquet attended declared' the two-square' mile CALli.. less than four minutes remaining by Texans of all faiths. plot on which the' transmitters gave Fairhaven a 12-7 decision Contr'actors WY 9-6264 The" award was made in recog are located as extra-territorial, over Durfee in a thriller at nition of the Archbishop's "not subject. to the' Pope and DO and 9-6265 Alumni Field. able contributions in successfully longer to Italy. In New Bedford, a late fourth promoting the American ideal of period tally by Co-Captain Pete .' equality of educational opportu- • Judge gave Attlebor a hard · nity for all Americans." A San fought 18-12 decision over a Antonio lawyer, Sylvan Lang,
valiant Vocational 'eleven. Hope cited the prelate's activities
Truc!t Body Builders
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of the day's third victory by a 944 County St. standard working conditions and
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one-touchdown margin. New . 944 County St.
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NEW BIEDIFO~D New Bedford Bedford preserved its undefeated, award. NEW BEDFORD, MASS.
.
status in this one edging a stub WY 2-6618
·Two significant. moments in born Taunton team, 14-6. The .history, Archbishop Lucey said running of Duncan MacDonald in his acceptance address, were and Tom Eck Jr. spearheaded recorded when a Hebrew scholar the Crimson attack. Johnny wrote that "God said, Let us \ Carvalho was the Taunton work make mankind in our image and Do You Work in a Factory,
horse, ably abetted by Co-Cap likeness" and when the Amer Garage, 'Machine Shop or
tain George Hodgson. ican founding fathers wrote "We Gasoline Station?
In other contests involving hold these truths to be self area teams, Somerset dropped a evident, that all men are created We pick up and deliver. clean 25-19 free scoring, tilt to SCitu equal, tha~ they 'are endowed by and repair overalls. Also. we have ate, and on the Cape, Yarmouth their Creator with certain un a complete line of Coveralls. Pants abut out Bourne, 13-0. The Som-' alienable rights . . .'" . and Shirts for sale. erset defeat wall a costly one in ''The idea of both pronounce that Jim Rockcliffe, speedy , ments is the same-~an is a We reclaim and wash any oily. Raider halfback, sustained a ereat~ oJ, tremendous dignity dirty or greasy rags. .evere ankle sprain late in the and su~g 'destiny.' His Why Buy When We Supply POf!' Comp'eCe first period and will presumably .rights arenot.·from men nor be lost to the team lor at Ieut from governments, but. from the ........... Serriee • couple of week&. Creator," the· Afchbishop _id.' "'Tbere: is DO such creature as a BoUt Undefeated 1668 Pleasant St• Previewing the up-eomillg . man ~ho does Dot posseSs hUmaD rights, even though .ole exercise, weekend, top billing in Bristol OS 9-6497 Fall River t. ROWAim AvE. County competition goes to the of th~' rights is sometimes for ODe 1FT _ WY ...-MJ5, ......_ .. bidden .0 him." :' . . :New Bedtocd-FairbaveA 1ilt _ 4
Boys Town. Choir Here Next Week
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I Regional High School Drive .Opens 路.Wednesdayl /J'
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REGIONAL HIGH SCHOOL BUILDING FUND TOTAL EXCEEDS THREE路QUARTERS OF A MILLION: Thirty-four hunl:lred volunteer workers will make a house-to-house canvass in 30 participating parishes, starting next Wednesday, for the first regional high building fund. More than $gOl,500 has already be'en subscribed and donat~d for the school whiCh will be built in Dartmouth, near the New Bedford line. At left above Very Rev. Hugh A. Gallagher,'pastor of St: James Church, New Bedf,9rd,' who is campaign moderator, addresses.the workers. Rt. Rev. Msgr. John A. Silvia, pastor, of St.'John the Baptist Church of.NewBedford, assistant campaign moderator,,~nd Rt. Rev. James J. Gerrard, V.G., pastor of St. Lawrence Church, New Bedford, are seated 'on the platform. In the right photo, workers and priests watch the new parish totals go up on the 'score颅 board.' Left to right are Rev. Stephen J. Downey, assistant at St.' James, Msgr. Gerrard, Chairman Daniel Dwyer of St. Lawrence parish and John C. Marcin, assistant general chairman,of St. James parish.
PREPARE TO PUSH TOTAL OVER MINIMUM GOAL OF $1,~OO,OOO: The Most Reverend Bishop and the campaign committee directors are shown in the left photo above. They are, left to right, Father Gallagher, Rt. Rev. Msgr. Albert Berube, 'pastor of St. Anthony of Padua parish, New Bedford; Dr. Arthur F. Buckley, general chairman; Joseph P. Duchaine, memorial gifts chairman; Bishop Connolly; Mitchell S. Janiak, Friends Com-' mittee Chairman; John Correia de Mello, 'business, chairman, and Msgr. Gerrard. A small part of the group' of men ,who will visit every' home in the 30 parishes from Westport to Wareham is shown in St. Anthony of Padua parish hall in New Bedford. The workers hope to realize the difference betwe,en the advance gifts, and the mini~um goal of $1,500,000, T4e new school will cost in exces~ of $2,000,000.' .
-c;
( '\
,Frank Bouchard re~ding a report Of 81. Joseph's Parish, ~ew .lJedford
Bishop Connolly , committee memberS '
a~dressing
.A. committee member askinc a questioa