Ardor of Hierarchy Reflects Vitality of Roman Catholic Church in "United States
The iANCHOR
WASHINGTON (NC)-The eyer increasing vitality of th~ Roman .Catholic Church in the United States is prominently reflected in the. annual report -submitted today to the members of the nationai hierarchy at their. annual National Catholic Welfare Cqnference meeting nerein the nation's capitaL Reports toucpingupon almost all·facets of the Church in the United States are con.' ..... . tained in the statement dealing- with the work of the various conference depart-
An Anchor 01 the Soul. Sure and Firm-ST. PAUL
Fall River, Mass.' Thursday, Nov. 19, 1959
v0.1. 3,
No. 47
ments and bureaus. A succession of history making tle.ond Cl...· Mail Pr;yilea-ea events were chronicled thorPRICE 10e Authorlaed at FaU ftlyer. Ma... $4.00 per Year oughly by the NCWC News Service during an epic ..year, Bishop Albert R. Zuroweste of Belleville, In.., episcopal chairman of the Press Department . reported. In headline-like fashion, his report ~ists some,of the top news events--A New' Holy Father, . John XXIII; Passing of Pope Elevates. !:Aid-West Archbishops Pius Xlf; Announcement· of Ecumenical Couricil; 23 New Muench to Rank of Cardinal Cardinals, Two from U. S., Sacred College Enlarged; Concerted ' Bishops' Effort For Latin America, and Cuba, FarReaching, Difficult News. Four new diocesan newspapers were founded during t,he year, the report said, and the combined circulation of U. S. Catholic newspapers and magazines reached a record 24,273,972, a gain of mor.e than a. half millio.n· in a year. NC added 25 Turn to Page Sixteen
1wo More·Americans: ,
To Wear' Red Hats
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.' Pope John Meyer and
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Diocese Planning New Exceptional .Children School CARDINAL MEYER
Tentative plans for estab·lishmentof a sister school to Nazareth Hall, Fall River, to serve exceptional children
. CARDINAL MUENCH
The decision of His Holiness Pope John XXIII to name eight new cardinals-bringing American membership in the Sacred College to a new high of six, and the college itself to 79 members-was seen in Rome as largely guided ... by the needs of th~ coming named, Archbishop • ecumenical council. A Vat- American Aloisius J. Muench, Bishop of ican spokesman said that Fargo, N. n., has· served . as this is demonstrated by the Apostolic. Nuncio to Germany
fact that most of the new cardinals will serve in the Roman ~ Curia. Actually, it is assumed that the only one of the cardinals to *. be created at the consistory on , Dec. 14 will serve outside Rome. Ir,. He is Archbishop Albert G. Meyer of Chicago. The other
of the New Bedford-Cape Cod area' have been announced by His· Excellency, the Most Rev. James L. Connolly. Speaking at the annual Bishop's Night dinner of the Catholic Woman's Club .of New Bedford, the prelate said that a check presented him by members would serve as the' nucleus of a.fund to set up the school. He said that the Sisters of Mercy, who staff Nazareth Hall, nave agreed to serve the new school beginning in the Fall of 1960, if facilities are ready. It will be located either in New Bedford or in the FalmouthHYlilnnis ?rea.·
since 1951. Customarily, papal diplomats go to Rome to serve in the central administration of the Church when elevated to the ran~ of Prince of the, Church. If called to Rome, Archbishop Muench would· be" the only
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Urge FQithful to' Contribu'te D,iscarded 'Usabl"e Clothing',
New Series The Anchor tod'ay begins .the· first in a weekly series of artiCles dealing, with the pres~ ent activities and whereabouts of Diocese-born men and women who are laboritig in' other parts of the country and' the .'worli for the Love' of God.
Thousands of needy men, women and children throughout the world are depending on the thoughtful generosity of American Catholics to provide them with warm clothing, -. shoes and blankets-clean and useful garments presently st6~ed in closets and attics, and having no further value ,.. to their owners. The slight ·effort required to gather the
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items together and bring them to your parish collection center • next week will start them on theirtJway, to those who. need them desperately. The 11 th annual Bishops' Thanksgiving Clothing Collection will be conducted beginning Sunday through the agency' of Catholic Relief Services, National Catholic Welfare Conference. Distribution will be made to all people in need overseas, regardless of race, color or creed; Rev. ,Francis A. McCarthy, pastor of St. Joseph's Church, No.h Dighton, and Diocesan director of the collection, issues a reminder that the 1958 collection total surpassed the previous high by more than 35,000 pounds, adding that the contri• bution of this Diocese was part of more than 1,109,056,960 pounds ,. of relief supplies, comprising . surplus food, clothing, shoes and .~ medicines involved in 1039 ship,./. m(mts to the needy in 51 countries overseas, distributed in the ...., . Turn to Page Twelve
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TWO PARISHES PASS QUOTA: William Flaherty, left, St. Mary's Parish chairman, Norton, and Roland Fregault, center, Sacred Heart Parish chairman, No. Attleboro, indiCate to Father Thomson campaign moderator, their quota breaking totals.
Feehan School Drive Over $850,000 Mark Two parishes in the Attleboro area have announced that their quotas for the Bishop Feehan High School Drive have been met. Sacred Heart Parish, No. Attieboro and St. Mary's Parish, Norton have oversubscribed their quotas by more than $10,000. Ju'dge Edward the new school was announced A. 'Lee, general chairman as $850,691. and his associate in the fund William Flaherty, chairmal\ raising campaign, Henry J. of St. Mary's Parish committee, Proulx, addressed the workers before the meeting on reports was~ conducted by Rev. 'Cornelius J. O'Neill of the Holy Ghost Parish, Attleboro." " The 'grand total of the campaign being conducted in the 12 parishes that will be served by
Churche's Conduct Triduum 9·f··Dev~t."on t~·:Our"~a·dy "
The dedication of the National Shrine of the' Immaculate
Co~ception in Washington tomorrow is,heing' solemnized
throughout the .dioceses of the country by ·aTridj.lum of devotion now going on in honor of Our Lady.' In churchel in every 'one of the 133dio~eses of th.e United States, . '. .... ~ ' We9nesday, Thursday and Friday.o.fthis'week;:tredays
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Native of Fall River, Brother .hrtstopher, Seeks Conversions' a.·s .Teacher· tn Afrtca
of speCIal prayer to Mary as Patroness of the country. In the Diocese of Fall River, services consist of recitation of ROSarY and Litany of.the l3lessed Mother, a sermon on Mary, an Act of Consecration to Mary. and Benediction of the Most Blessed Sacrament. The sermon topic specified by the Bishop for last night .was , Mary, Queen and Mother.' Tonight's sermon theme will be asserts. "Everywhere. Africans The Role of Our· Lady in the are clamoring for an education, History' of the Church in Amerand if it isn't Catholic, it will be ica, and Friday night.'s sermon Mohammedan, for, like the will be on Mary, Our Model, Communists,. the Moslems' are or Mary, .Queen of Peace. working hard to win over. the African.'" _ Most Rev. James L Connolly, The Brothers consider' the D.D" Bishop of the Diocese, and traiIling' of a native clergy. an Most .Rev. James J. Gerrard, important part of tj1eir work in D.D., V.G., Auxiliary Bishop, Africa. "In Gulu, Nyeri and' will be among the 200 members Okaru;" says Brother Christoof the hierarchy attending the pher, "they have cooperated colorful, two-hour dedication with the priests in teaching. ceremony tomorrow. Here in Gulu's Diocese, at least Sun day's announcement8 16 African Fathers were taught throughout the Diocese emphaby three of the Brothers." sized the blessings obtainable by making this' TridwTurn to Page Tw~lve
Bv Patricia McGowan A veteran of the African missions is Brother Christopher .of the Brothers Qf the Sacred Heart. A native 'of' St. Patrick's parish, Fall River, ha is at present serving his third assignment in Africa, teaching at Alokolum, Gula, Uganda. The former D~)Jninic Cox Brother Christopher has two brothers living in Fall River; Patrick, in St. Mary's Cathedral parish and James, "Education had little or no meaning for tribes" whose idea in SS. Peter and Paul. A of an educated boy was one who sister, a member of the could throw a spear accurately. Daughters of the Holy That is' all changed now," he ,
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Brother. Christopher graduated from St. Patrick's grammar school and attended high school as a member of the Sacred Heart community. He was professed in 1923 and pronounced final vows in 1929. Brother C h r i s top her has taught on the high school level in the United States and Canada and, since 1934, has been assigned to the African missions three times. The early days in Africa, says the missionary, were hectic.
BROTHER CtIltISTOPHER
Norton, and Roland Fregault, Sacred Heart Parish chairman. No. Attleboro, gave the quota 'breaking reports' for their respective. paJ;ishes. . Rev. Joseph S.· Larue, pastor of the No. Attleboro Parish, ex. Turn to Page Twelve
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THE ANCHOR-Dioces~ oHall River-Thurs.,Nov. 19, 1959
Sweden Showing Greater Interest
Six Americans Are Now·Ca~dinals , ,
In. Ca th () I-IClsm -
Continued From Page One former rector of that archdio~ American cardinal serving in cese's major ,seminary, St. the curia. Francis, Archbishop Muench b~ STOCKHOLM '(NC)-,...SweThree of the other choices of' came the third Bishop of Fargo, den's increasing ,interest i1I the Pope for the cardinalate-· N. D., on Aug. 12, 1935. . C th l' • b . are also non-Italians, and their On June 4, 1946, he was named a 0 lClsm ecause of reinclusion . as curial cardinals official 'representative to act as cent conversions was the would bring the total of non- liaison between' the Catholic topic of a debate sponsored here Italians in the Curia to eight-':' Church in Germany and military by the Humanities Associatioa a Dumber unprecedented inn' government 'authorities in ·the of Stockholm University. modern times. U. S. occupation zone. As an indication of changed Pope John's non-Italian choices In July of the same year, he Swedish attitudes toward the for the cardinalitial dignity are was named Papal Visitator to . Church, Dr. Hjalmar Sunden, Msgr. William Theodore Heard Germany and. head of the Papal chairman of the debate, noted 75, a native of Edinburgh, Scot~ Relief Mission. In 1949, he was that a public discussion of Cathland, and a graduate of Oxford named regent of the Papal· Nun": olicism would have been unUniversity who became a Cath- ciature in Germany. thinkable in this country 30 oUc after becoming a lawyer, In 1959y the prelate was given, years ago. and now dean of the Sacred . the personal title of .Archbishop '~But today," he said, "conta~ _ Roman Rota; Father Arcadio and,in ~951, at the time of the . with the Catholic Church has in.Larraona, C.M.F., Spanish-born . representation to Germany: he creased my interest in ecurrieni, priest' who has been Secretary'.. :. was . I)a~ed the. papal nUllCIO. ,cal work." He said he believes • of. "the Sacred Congregation of' By . thiS appomtment,' he p~ J' : that "the conversions to Rome f' Religious ,since 1950, and Father .. came dean of the diploma~ic. ".,,:,_,~,,~-.... are perhaps best accounted for · Agostino 'Bea, S.J., German-born, . corps reI,lresented at Bonn. . RECEPTION FOR SISTER: .At· areceptio'n': Our' . by. a~ undernour.ished .ne~d for . Scripture Sch'olar who is consul-" . Archbishop Albert. G.'. ~eyer " L d fA' ' . Ch' . , .,. .' "rehglOus ,expreSSIOn wlth1O' the tor of the 'pontifical C<im~ission' ,'Archbishop' l\ieyer .has b~en' . ~ y. 0 • ssu~ptlOn ?rch, ,New' Bedford, In h'o!,l;6r Of.,c~lUntr:y." •. ',< ;.. for Biblical Studies and' of the' the spiritual leader since 1958 SIster FaIth Pmto AlmeIda,' s~co:nd l¢ft, Fatp.er; Jqhp F.,,·, During 'the ,'past two' year. . litur~ical,seciion of the Sa~red'\; Of the nation's "largest .Catholic Godela,er,SS.CC., pastor introduces Shirley Ramos, .second·'· 183 Sweaish :'adults have'beeA , Congregation of Rites. '. See,' an :archdiocese of 1411 r.ight, "M~ss Personality of 1959", and MissLor~ttaEaston;~':.'.~eceived ~ntothe.. Church:":· , , Thre.e6i" the prelates ¢hosen " ,square m,iles, containing, ~ore '. rIght, ~.'MISS Personality of 1960~'·:to the guest 'of 'h6nor " ,The: day foll()~lng·the debate, aJ:e. '. Italians. They' are Arch- than two million Catholics." . .. . . . . ~.. ArchbI~hop Martm Lucas, S.V.D.. bishop' Paolo 'Marell~;' Apostolic t· 'He' is the tenth Ordinary' of . who was named Apostolic'VisiNuncio to France, whoonee . the 1l5-year-old' Chicago arch. .~a I~e' ta~or to the'Scandinaviancoun'. s~rved at .the Apostolic .Delega- diocese and the third consecuSister F.;1ith Pinto Almeida, a . . '.. ~le.s last Jun~, celebrated hill bon in'Washington; Archbishop tive Chichago archbishop to be native of St. Nicolas, Cape' the Convent of Our:· Lady: of 1m;t Pontifical Mas!! in Stock'Gustavo Testa, Apostolic Nun- named a member of the Sacred Verde Islands, has. arrived at. ~ourdes, Oporto, Portugal. .h~~. at St. Eu.genia's Church, '''cio to Switzerland, who' was a Coll~ge' of Cardinals.' The others Our. Lady· of the ·Assumption., Fluent . in Portuguese . and', t~e,~lrstCatholic chureh ,to be '. professor at the 'Bergamo dioc- were Cardinal Samuel Stritch Convent, New Bedford, staffed. Spanish;,~is~c:lrhas beenas~ignedi" ~~~b»shed. in Sweden~and,-No... ., egan is~~iri.i1ry wlien . tl,J¥'.l;'ope whom Archbishop Meyer suc~' by the( Sisters of the Love 9f ,.' a~a .teacher hE'!re. T~Q, :Spanish'; :w~y after t,!leReformation~ was spIritual director there,"'and ceeded, and Cardinal George God, of which she is a member.. .Sisters ar.e :e;x:pected ear~y,·".next· \ "D', '." ... :.. i .. ' , ." ': .. ,....Msgr: Francesco Morano, 87, sec-", Mundelein; "the first Cardinal' Sister'entere'd the ,Archb.shop ., retai'Y of the.Supreme Tribunal ~,of.the,West." of . the. ord.er.13 year!! age>. 10 ~ewll;lg,mpslc: and art., ". 'Reg'ional ',' ... of 'the 'Apostolic Signature: ' , . Archbishop. Meyer, .56, is. a ,COlmbra. Portugal. Her first . " , . . , . . . . : . . l'., :,::." .': .g .:.At, the~sa:in~:time·?e·;an- .. "Cl~ie~, an~I ~oft,:spok,!,!I}:: man,'assigmnent was as a teacher at, IC"hri$fe.iri Christmas ,... .p~UQUE, (NC)-Archbishop nounced hlS declSlon to name the' .WIdely hailed as' an exceptional '. T h " f" P f ..,,' ".- \~~o~~z;Of Dubuque dedicated " "riew ' 'cardina1s; Pope John 're-. a!iJniIlistrator, and ;il~o .known 'Passion. Plciy Tickets ,. ,e.me _0 '. ann.ng . "d'~~ ~\lildings in the archdiocese vealed his appoiritinent"of·His.'.as.'·a-.frequenl spokEism~n for S Id 0 . 'f . 1960 NEW 'ORLEANS' (:N:C) _i .~lthlO,theiweek.that-were"conO " -"Eminence :t\tnleito Cardinal Ci-' '''C~thoitc '''educationimd',as a ut or " Largtlpr~motion plans are b~ ,. ,s~rul:te~ ,~t, ~... total: CQst·, of .• , ~ognani, '.former Apostolic 'Del:' prelate _ deeply conscious' of MUNICH (NCr -Tickets for" ing outlinecl'in'this citY.iri'wep.. $6,900,000. ".1 ., "..' eg~te to" the United States~ as"''' 'social justice problems;' such as . next year's Oberammergau Pas-' . arl~:tionfor GhrlstIhas tiy'a ;~omHe of£~ciatE\d.at the dedicatiOll ... "Secretary "of 'Sacred' Congrega-': racial, 'discrini.ination~·· . . ,sion Play have beensolsf.6ut, ·.mittee' called ''Keep C1U-I~ -in of the new. $3,400,000 additioa ...'" tion' for: the' Oriental Church. ' '. A native·t)"f Milwaukee Arch- . the Bavarian Economics Minis- Your Christmas." to . Mercy Hospital in Cedar . 'Thir-congregation h~s the Pope . bishQp Meyer's rise to the'Sacred ,try reported. Pictlires of the Blessed Vir-' Rapids and 'at the new $3,500000 as its Prefect, and Cardinal' College of Cardinals .developed . The Passion Play, held every· gin' and' the Infant Jesus ·will. Wahlert High School a ceniral Cicognani steps in to the top through a varied career. " 10 years, will be presented dur- be installed on 72 billb~~i-ds. school, serving 15 ~arishes ia administrative post, v'acated bY'He studied' philosophy and ing the ti!lle the' International Approximately 150000 automo- . the Dubuque area. the resignation of' His Eminence theology at the North American Euch~ristic .Congress is' being bile stickers hav~ been pro'. 'Eugene Cardinal Tisserant, dean . College, Ro~e; later received a held 10 Mumch, July 31-August vided. Business houses and memof the Sacred ·College. degree. in Sacred Scripture from 7~ 1960. bers of the medical prOfession A .. Vatican spokesman said the Pontifical Bible Institute' have received 50,000 envelope FU1~ERAL .that Pope John's choice of two . served as a.curate in ,Waukesha' Mass Ordo enclosures. .' < • ;lmoreAmericans for the College .. ,:W;is.; taught at St. Francis Sem~ FR~DAY-;-St. 'Felix of" Valo!'!,·. jleq'!ests .were mniled':to 1,100: .. .'of Cardiq.als is an indication of' inary, Milwaukee, and became . Confessor. Double. White. doctors to have Nativity,scenes.,·" .".' 469 LOCUST STREET" "l'e(:ognition of the., .. rector, serving' in this post. Mass Proper;' Gl()ria; COmInon ·placed in their offices. P o s t e r s ' FALL "RIVER; MA'SS:' ' [growth. and .progress of Cathol-' ,. ·untilI946. . " .. . . Preface. " . w~ll. be placed inside' and,'out.., . ' , as- 2-3381 ' ~cism in' the United States. It ',. tl1l946, h.e was named'Bi~hop SATuRDAY -Presentation of side buses and 'street cars/Mer..: ··If···· ,i.s also a sign of the Pope's ireat"of the Diocese Superior and in . the IHessed VitginMary. chants have been asked'to pl\lce WI red .C. . James E. for. Ule.. clergy and faith- 1953 was named Archbishop of.. ' , Greater. I?ouble. White. Mass religious displays in'their win:" ",', Driscoll . Sullivan; ·Jr. :ful of Am,erica,.,the spokesman Milwaukee, where he 'served' Proper; Gloria; Creed; Preface 'dows; Some business houses' will"' ,'. ~aid. ". . i.Until. his. transfer' in . 1958 to "of Trinity. " . ,use posta~e slogans 'with: the·, '. . '.','. . ,'" Muench,.' .. Chicago. ' . '. Clement Pope mtI:tae.sm .... alt;'Of. the :prelates" chosen .by ..•. ,.. ,. and' Martyr. D~ub~e,...Red. . _ .. . " ... , " :'1,." ,.:;., . . ' ,,', '.' ,~;. t'he!,Pope' eIther':received part',· Prl~s.t Urg~$,·~~turn . , ~ass Proper;<?"l?ri~;.Sl;!cond fUNERAL HOME cit;lheir eccleshlsticaUraining in' To Fa'mol R t·, ,. Collect St. o,,",p Lib,fc:JrY 'I.: " ' , , ' . . ; . ' ':".' :I;tOIT\e. or have tau'ght, there.- In, ny· ecrea Ion .... Common Preface. . . ..,STOCKHOLM: (NC)""'""kbiblio-"i,: .,:,.986 ,PIY":,.o~th.Ave,nue:.: addition to; having s~rved as", BROOKLYN:(NC)~Apriest"TU~SDAY-'st;. Johlt. of':the" graphy of allboQksand articles Fa",~,v.er,Mass. ,. " Ord!I)aries, diplomats or 'niein-' expert on family life said here Cross' Confessor and Doctor ,of Catholic interest publl'shed in Te': o.s 3·2271 , . . ;they all. have, : that, .fa,mil.Y..,,,:cen.tered recreation o'f the'·'Church. Double. Wh·I·te. S:weden sinee 1900 has been bers •.of the curia,' DANiEl (;., HARRINGTO~ .'. d their. studies in the helps"build'marriages Mass Prop'er'' Gloria', Seco"nd co.mpleted by Stockholm journ-. . "'. .. Uce.nsec. ..Funeral Director. : concen rate . _ that last. lields' tof civil" and canon law . Family _recreation builds a -' Collect St. Chrysogom.ls,Mar- allst, Kajsa Rootzen. . " . , and 'Reglstered Embalm. and.: in Scripture's:' ." . strong. ,bond between, husband tyr; Creed; Common PrefaCe. : ,". . .' . and wife and conditions children , WEDNESDAY-St. Catherine of . . ", ' ,Ttie addition of· the Claretian te>. se~k and find fun in .their_ ,'. Alexandria, Virgin and Mar. I.... ·J·EF.FREY. E.' ," Father Larraona and the Jesuit bomes, said Father Declan .' ·tyr;Double. Red. Mass Proper' .. . . ,.' '''''';hath~\~ea~i~bri~g to :ve1n Bailey, O.F.M., at the' first fam-.··.. ·.Gloria;·'Common Preface.':' '0' '. e 0 num ~ ..o.:~~r. ~a s )ly W.e_ workshop conducted at',' ,,:'fHUR .· S.:Q..A_Y~. S..t.. s.yiv', ~.ste'r;·.'Ab-,' -f ,. '.' ...... '• • ' ""1' ·.f who are members of'rehglOus ,'St:- Francis College here 1 for., .. ', bot. and, Confes.sor.:"Double.·;· '''.''..: ... / ....;. .'. "",';"-, I'u I B ' orders or congregations.' ..• married and tpeir" H4'llen Aubertine'Braugh· '.L' .'.'. Ofne "', Archbishop Aioisios J. ..: wives.' •' Second Collect' St. Peter of and 550 LoeuHMass: S," ":-:.l".. ' 5 Owner • P" Director. ,., "...' ". . Fall·Riv'er. Archbishop 'M.uench, 70, Bish-"~ 1 Father prob-. Alexandria, Bishop' andMar-'·...· paclo. US." .0I'K. irig·.'A',ea,·" .":. .,. f t ~eclan said the . .' 'OS 2~2~91 '." . op .of Fargo, ,NiD:,is tQec·,first.' 'o·efmt'h·oel;·r·eer·ecnagerts. WhOfti~dd mtohst,.· ·tyr;'COmf.non Preface. .' .' , WY.. 2~2957'·. ':'.. ,.... ..': ',. .' Ros'e' E. Sull.l'van ,".','" · native-born citizen of the rea Ion ou Sl e·.. e· United,States to 'Serve as a papal ;.hoi:ne is very easy to avoid,' He' 129.Allen St. . New Bedford ".' .' Jeffrey., E. $ullivan :~', MAILING nuncio, a post he has held in suggested a return· to family" 987 COUNTY STREET Germany since March, 1951. singing at -home,.!o family birth- -, OIROURKE NEW BEDFORD A native of Milwaukee and a day and 'anniversary celebrations and 'to other recreational . Funeral Home .... 'FUNERAL HOME, INC~ activities in which the entire 571 ·Second St. .. a. Marcel Roy - C. Lorraine ~ family can .participate. . Boaer LaFrance ..' FORTY HOURS Fall River, Mass. Legio"n of Decency" DEVOTION FUNERAL DIRECTORS OS 9-6072 234 SECOND' STREET Nov. 22-St. Anne, New BedMICHAel J. McMAHON The following films are to be 15 mVINGTON CT. ford. _ . added to the lists in their reFALL RIVER Licensed Funeral D'irect;;" NEW BEDFORD St. John the Evangelist, spective classifications: Registered Embalmer.' WY 5-7830. Attleboro. PRINTING .Unobjectionable .for general.: . Nov.·25---'-St. Catherine's Conpatronage: Masters of the Congo \ vent, Fall River. . Jungle. Nov.29-0ur Lady of the Im, COME IN - SEE ---and .DRIVE Unobjectionable . for adults: maculate .Conception, ,. Ho.use of Intrigue; 'OperatioD tr New Bedford. ~ ~60 Petticoat.· . .' St. .Margaret,· Buzzards -rile Wortd's .MOst Beautifully' Proportioned Can-'· ; . Objectionable in part for aD: Bay. -;, .. at t.rl Abner (suggestive costUming . Dec. ·~t. Anthony of Padand elements morally unacceptua; Fall River. able for mass entertainment). Commercial • -industrial St. Mary, Fairhaven~ Institutional Condemned: Lovets (the bla~ tant violation of Judaeo-Chri~ TRE ANCHOR Painting .andDecorating , . 8econd-elaJlll' <nail privileges autheriJled tia~ modesty' and decency perat Fall River, Mass. Published everl . FORD DEALERS FOR OVER 38 YEARS meating thiS film is a serioJi 135 Franklin Street, Thursc1a7 at 410 Highland Avenue. Fall River. Mas.ll.. by the Catholic Press of the .threat to public and private 1344-86 Purchase 5t. .New Bedford, MOIL Fall River OSborne 2-1911 Diocese of Fall River. SubscriPtiOll priee ~--_-....J\ morality). !lY maiL postpaid ".00 per ,ea&,
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THE ANCHOR-
-Sees Latin American Chprch, Meeting Present Challenge
Th~rs., 'Nov. 19, 1959
WASHINGTON (NC)-The Church in Latin America
·is in its hour of greatest challenge, but it will measure up because of a newly developed sense of international cooperation. This confident outlook comes from a top Vatican. official on Latin America, of concern ·to all the Americas, Archbishop Antonio Samore. that it demands everyone's ef.' secretary of the Sacred Co~ forts," he said. Ten Years Ago gregation for Extraordinary Archbishop Samore said the Ecclesiastical Affairs and of the Pontifical Commission for Latin first signs of such internationalIsm showed up about 10 years America. ago. "The Bishops asked the The prelate was one of 23 top Holy See for permission to meet Church officials who gathered as a group', This movement prohere to discuss broader collabo- duced in 1955 the Latin American ration to help meet Church dif- Bishops' general conference .in ficulties south of the border. Rio de Janeiro," he said. Richard Cardinal Cushing, ArchThis, in turn, produced in 1956 bishop of Boston, presided at the the Latin' American Bishops' private sessions of representaCouncil, known as CELAM. tives of the Vatican and the U. S. Then the Holy See established Canadian and Latin American its Latin. American Commission hierarchies. Called the Interin 1958. This was' followed by American Episcopal Conference, the meeting here of represen ia'-. it was the first such gathering. tives of the' Bishops of' the ANNUAL MASS: Rt. Rev. Msgr. Albert Berube, pastor , To dynamic, 54-year-old Arch- United States, Canada l!nd Latin bishop Samore, the Church's America.. of St. Anth6hy Church, New Bedford,gree41 G~~rge ~; , .... biggest challenge in Latin Amer- . Bromley, left, chairman, ()~ arrangements, and James 'J: Conceni ,of All ica is a shortage of priests. With , Asked if he any role for Powers following 40th a'rlnual Ma~s for the' Iron Battalion, about a third of the world's the individual Catholic, layman i01st Infaritry, A.E.F.· held inconjUnCt.ion with the annual Catholics, Latin America haS to play in regard to the problems Jess than a seventh of its priests. . pilgrimage, to t~~ grave ot" the late Rt: Rev. Msg~. Osias of the Church in' Latin Amer"All other problems are, in Ii ' ica, the Archbishop replied with 'Boucher, ~haplain of the batt~lionin Wor.ld, Wa~'~. ' certain sense, the consequences emphasis: • . of this," the Archbishop said in "We must continue to develop an interview. "Because there are 'catholic outlook.' Every 80 few priests, communism adCatholic has to be. concerned vances. Because there are so about all that happens to the fe~, the ·Protestant are active; Church' everywhere. ·1 would because there are so few, 'reli- like, therefore, every' Catholic' . , .~ CINCINNATI (NC)":"- Catholics total. 527,643,000 in .ious ignorance prevails.'" . to be interested and concerned. the mid-1959 world population' of 2,886,691,000/ according , The prelate stressed what he aoo'ut every problem~reliidous, ~ the ,natiori~l center' of· the' Catholic ·Students Mission Calls the need to see Latin Amer"; spiritual' anet 'mdral- of. the : Crusade. The new -total for Catholics' throughout the world lea Church" problems not only as ~American Catholic coptinerit..' , its challenge, but also as one , a~ounts to an increase sinc~ ~nly' lOO·per;, ce~t Cat~olic 'na~ Enormous Potential for the entire Americas, i",clud"You Catholics of the Amer.,. mld,:,195~ ~f more than 17. tion·. All of its' 6,000 inhabitants Ing U. S. and Canadian Cathlcas ar~ mo.re than ,210 million: million, said ·the CSMC in its are Catholics. olics. Think what that ·means. ,You 1959 edition of the "World . MidcHe Am~ri~a ~as"reported Your Brothers form almost half of the member": Mi~si~!1 1\1:ap," edited by Dr, a~ having the largest p~rcentage "You of the United Sta'tes' say ship of the. Catholic Church. Harold J. Spaeth of Detroit Uni~ of Catholics in the, break<Iown ~at those in Latin America are The potential' is' enormous., 'So, versity. : . ' by' regions and, contin.ents. The your 'good neighbors.' Indeed, be' COnSCiOUS bf your tesponsi-:- ' , Tile' United S'tates, reported as eight countrii'is 'arid 'thePariama bilities, your' dignity, your abil~ having , 39,505,475'. Catholics, Canal Zone were listE~~ as 94.1 they are your brothers,'" he remarked. , , ity to help each other." , comprising about ,22 per cent of . p-er ,cent Catholic, with 42,375,,A broadening of outlook Gift of Faith the' population" is ranked third 000 memb~rs of ~~e Fai~h there. among the Latins themselves, he "I urge' you," he' stat~.d, . "to in the world in. the absolute . Western ~rid Southern Europe l18id, is the most promising sign bring these assets· to' the' service . was said to be the highest in they will meet their challe~ge. of you~ Latin American brothers numbe~ of ·CatholIcs. .. BraZil was reported .as· first.l~ absohitec TIutribers o( Catholics, "It is realized that what first who.for centuries have had the absolute numbers,. WIth a rewith' a total of 185,091,000, . appears as a problem in Hon- gift of the, Faith." p~rted total of 60,108,776 Cath.,.. amounti'ng to 57.4 per cent of the duras or Bolivia, for example, is "Help them to keep it, H he ollcs.. It was followed by I~alY iotal population. not just a problem there, but one said. with. 48J481,400' then the Umted , ,'. . States, and. then France, with a Canada was. ·11.Sted as havmg Catholic p~pulation of 37,076,,,: 7,776,000 CatholIcs or 44 per 184. , . c,ent' of the' country's population. The Union, of Soviet Socialist Contes~, Republics is reporte.d to have A $100 prize will be pr~sented soon to Janet Saulmer, 10000,000 Catholics, totaling }4, of 173 Query' Street, New Bedford, who h8;8 w~n sixth about 4,8 per 'cent of thepopulaprize in a national scholarship ess~y contest sponsored by tion: The 1958 ma'p also reported .. the Wonderland of Knowledge Corporation. Janet, a Fresh- iO miliionCatholics. ' , Among th~ Soviet satellites; man at Bishop Stang High Janet's' essay Said .i~. pl\rt, Pola'nd is the most heavily CathSchool, wrote the essay last "Religion· today is' becoming· a olic. its' population was, esti. 2~3 CENTRAL AVE. May while s~e was au eig~t~ Sunday 'go' to meeting' affair; mated to be 93 per cent Catholic; gnide student at St. Joseph worn with a certain amount of with 26,807,2~1 persons reported NEW BEDFORD School New Bedford. Announce- fl:llse piety every Sabbath day: . 'as members of the Church. mel~t ~f the prize has been mad~ However, religioCi,' inre'ality, is ~ Andorra, a: small European itate,' retained jts ranking as the' WY '2-6216' to janet and to Sister. Mathilde' one's life. Eve'1ything, we do, every action, every glance, e,very I'r."sh Ens'hr.·n·e Statue joseph of St. Joseph's. spoken word; and every though't _ The essay subject was '~Why must be 'done in relationship to. LIMERICK. (NC) - A statue Ii Catholic Education is Impor- God's plan for us; In order to ·of 'bur Lady of Limerick, treastant to Me." Papers were comprehend . God~s- pUJ:pose ' for ured by the Dominican friats ~udge4 by the.Rev. Dr. Stephel\ .... in.' life, Catholic instruction here for over 300'years, has,been W. Findlay, headmaster, ill.~d i.I invaluable; , . . :, . solemnly enthroned in a new' seven English teachers of: the. chapel. at St. Saviour's DominiDelbarton School in Morristown, "Faith, ,to me, is a ·wonderful can priory. : N. J. Janet's prize is to help in gift al)d, it ha.s saved me m'any furthering her Catholic educa- times.· But how' can a person tion. Her essay was chosen sixth have faith if lie doe,!1n't ~nder best out of 130 finalists from stand his' religion? This under,:,,' all over the United States.. privileged person will succumb Only other Mass,achusetts to despair, and give up the winner was John Luz of St. gleam of hope' still alive for Mary of Annunciation School, those who seek it. Also,)f misCambl'idge. So. Dartmouth fortune falls, the person will blame it unjustly on God. This and. Hyannis is wrong. If a person really understands his religion, he will So. Dartmouth realize that 'God may have WY 7~Y384 wanted this trial to happen as a test of faith, courage, perHyannis 292.1 severance, and love."
saw
Cathol'ic Popu,lation' 'T'ops Half-Billion i'n:: World ',' ,
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Says Commercial Group of Adults Prey on Youth KANSAS CITY (NC)
A "small but noisy and greedy group of adults" is making American youth "a target for their commercial foul play." v Citing the "filthy press and the degrading films so harmful to youth," Bishop James A, McNulty of Paterson, N. J., dedared that it is "little wonder that two million American youths became involved in our courts last year." - Bishop McNulty, episcopal mod~rator of the Natjonal Federation of Catholic College Students, told the' first national cOnvention of the National Conference of Catholics in Youth Serving Agencies that the trend toward immoral c,ommercial exploitation of young people ,,~ growing critical." The New Jer, sey prelate called on the Religi, ous and 'lay delegates to increase their activities on behalf of youth. , "The very needs of our unfortunate youth and the aspirations of our youth more fortunate, present to you your finest hour of. opportunity to serve God and our beloved America," he said. "First and forelJlost,H Bishop McNulty told the youth workers, young people 'look to them as models of "personal holiness. Your 'holiness is the measure of .your helpfulness in their lives," he stressed. , H~wever, "piety is not a substitute for technical skill nor for professional competence," he eon'tinued, just as "skill and competence without religiou. values leave the job but half done."
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,THE ANCHOR~Di~se of Fan River-Thurs., Nov. 19, 1959
Oregon Textbook Law Is Facin'g Test in Court
Says Airi~ng of Differences Is .Healthy Phenome,non
PORTLAND (NC)-Depositions have been takMl from two witnesses· by aa attorney representing the
By Msgr.'George G. Higgins Director NCWC Social Action' Department
A well known Protestant theologian, Dr. William McAfee Brown of Union Theological Seminary in New York City, recently voiced a pl'ea to American Catholics to air their differences in public. "1 venture the guess," he wro~ in a new Sheed and' Ward' This, of' course, is 'his privibook 'entitled American lege-up ~a point. If he dis- \ Catholics: A Protestant- agrees' with ,them ,on' debatable Jewish View' "that half of matters of economic. and social the misunderstandings Protest-. ants have about Catholicism ("thought control', 'brain~ashing', 'totalitarian rule'... ) would be dissipated.if Catholics would let their intramural skirmishes come out into the .open." Dr. Brown's point is well taken. There , probably isn't , enough airing of differences in . the Catholic press on matters not .involving faith and morals. On the other hand, I sometimes wonder if there isn't too much of it---oo matters which do involve faith and morals. Case in Point The lead article by Father Ferdinand Falque of Staples, Minn., in the, Nov. issue of The Homiletic and Pastoral. Review is a typical 'case in point. This· article is an extraordinary sweeping indictment of American Catholic "liberals" not only in the field' of politics, sociology and economics, but also in "'theology, .art, literature,. -.. ascetics and morality." 'We are not told who these dangerGUS "liberals" are, but we are left with the impression that they are very numerous and are asked to believe that what they are espousing "does not bear up under true theological scrutiny." "It is a strange phenomenon •..," Father Falquedogmatidllly , asserts, "that there are many 'Christian' liberals ready to throw out fundamental and vital doctrines of Christianity on assumptions' of materialistic up-' lift." . . Similarly we " are told that· "much of th,e ,Catholic press today" 'assumes that vit.al truths of, the Cathoii~, FaIth must be.. compromised 'in order to pave the way for 'Catholics to espouse the social and political tenets of economic liberalism, 'which "Fr. Falque equates with socialism. . Anonymous Liberals . This ,manifestation of ~ • • Christian decadence," says Fr. Falque, would 'be "beyond possibility of belief were it not evident to us daily ..." Well, it isn't evident to me at 'all, and, frankly, there is absolutely nothing in Father Falque's ar..! tide which makes 'it even re, motely credible. Actually Father Falque cites. ~y three Gr, four articles or news releases to substantiate his horrendous indictment of the anonymous Catholic "liberals" of the United States. All of these articles are subject to a perfectly orthodox interpretation. Old Story Father Falque's displeasure with the so-called Catholic "liberals" is an old story. He has' been vigorously raking~ them over the coals for, many years.
Assumption' Co-liege' To Honor Card'inal
WORCESTER (NC) - Richard Cardinal Cushing, A-rchbishop of Boston, will receive an honorary doctorate of laws from As~umpti~n College on Friday, Nov. 27. '(.. The degree will be given ata speCial afternoon convocation in the auditorium of La Maison Francaise. In tbe morning, Cardinal Cushing will preside at a Solemn Mass of thanksgiving to' be offered by Father Wilfrid J., Dufault, A.A., who is commem.prating, his 25th year .as a priest. ;i Father ,D~fault is Superior General, of .: the Assumptionist Fathers.' .
American Civil Liberties Unioa 'in a suit seeking to prevent 'parochial school pupils from 'using ~extbooks'provided under Oregon law. . They were taken before eil'cuit Judge Ralph' Holman ·of Oregon City by John Mosser, a Portland attorney who has replaced Steven Anderson of Salem as a representative of ,the American Civil Liberties Union. The suit challenges the constitutionality of the so-called Oregon textbook law.
policy, he is perfectly free to' say so. Indeed ,. the "liberals" themselves, would be among the first to admit that the airing of legitimate differences of opinion between themselves and ~he socalled "conservatives" (or whatInterrogates Nun ever they wish to be called) is . -Questioned were Sister MaJ'7 a healthy phenomenon. Edward, principal of St. Joh. There is all the difference in the Apostle School of Orego. the world, however, between City, and Dr. Charles Ditto secthis sort of liberal-conservative CATHOLIC FILM AWARD: Monsignor'Anton Kocha ' retary of an Oregon City s~hool controversy on the one hand presents the Grand P1:ix of the International Catholic Film' district. and reckless heresy-hunting on ' Sister Mary Edward a Benethe other. No one has the right Commissi~n's to Go~thard Dorsche~, director general o~' the' to accuse the so-called "liberal's" ,Centfox-Fllm Inc., III Ger~any, for the 20th Century Fox 'dictine nun, was asked about the oourse of studies at the school, of being theological heretics un-., movie of "The Diary of Anne Frank." NC Photo. the teaching of religion to pupils less he is 'prepared, first of a l l , ' '.,' \ and the distribution of textbooks to define his terms with scrupu- ' to the school by the school dislous accuracy and, secondly, to Class Leaders trict. She said the school meets document his charges with state .standards and that the . chapter and verse. . entire staff bas proper teachin, : . In'my opinion, Father Falque's eertificates. recent article in The Homiletic: and Pastoral Review ,doesn't' COYLE mGH SCHOOL, , ST. MARY'S, . cl' , 'TAUNTON Queries SehOi)) Head . even come ose. to meeting TAUNTON , these, two very reasonable reStudents will present " B r i g a : " , . Dr. Ditto was questioned conquirements. I , doon" ,Monda,y, Nov. 30 and Sodalists will attend a day of:'- cernin~ the district's.budget, the In ,~ummary-let's have more' Tuesday, Dec. 1. A dress· re_ . recolleCtion ,at Sacred HeartS' , allocatIOn of tax money for. the :airing of .differences in 'the 'hears'al for religious'and clergy Academy, F~l River this Sun:':'" purchase of textbooks and'the f;atholic"press on matters which of Taunton and vicinity, is set day, und~rauspices of the Dioc- 'djstrib~tion of books to" the do not involve faitll and morals;" for Sunday, Nov. 29. "". esan Sodality Union. Therne of" .pupils. , 'but, if' we are .going .to write on, Glee Club activities .will jnthe meeting will be the social A deposition is a legal pr~ theological.matters, let's be. ac- clude a performance at the apostolate and ,Rev. Gerard Bois-' , dure, whereby any' party in • curate, .,specific, iogicaUy con- Christmas As!?embly and an vert, sodality' m~derato~ of -; lawsuit may, before the trial, stsient, and, above all,chari- . appearance with the New BedPrevost High School, will be -. call any person who is a witness table. . ford. Symphony Orchesetra in guest speaker. and question hiin on any point "In essential matters unity; in February. , _ ' relating to the case. doubtful /matters liberty; in all Class presidents for the year . Girl s~udents are participating things charity." are John Kable, senior; Kenneth in preparations for the annual Cwikla, junior; Richard Brezin-, parish reunion. Tomorrow' senUNDelegateDis,putes ski, sophomore; Jeffery Mans- ior1l will visit the novitiate of Toy'nbee Statemen.t field, freshman..·President of the the Religious of the Holy Union, varsity band is James Sylvia, Fall River,.' and meet three UNITED NATIONS (NC) ~ Coyle Mothers and Fathers memb'ersof last year's graduatIndia~s delegate to' the United jng class who entered the comhave .renovated the Brothers' Nations, Krishna Menon, has munity in September. disputed British historian Arnold' . reading room and have don~ted ' Toynbee's statement. that world" towards a set of outdoor statIons population 'has gone beyond the of t?«: Cross at, the Holy Cross BEST IN BLADES limits'of economic development, .. NOVItIate, ValatIe, N. Y.. possibilities. Franciscans Observe" Mr. Toynbee, who has been a member of the Commission' of 7S0th Anniversary" th~ Churches on International"'l. ,WASHINGTON (NC)-Sorrie Affairs '(a body ofU{e World', 1,500 persons filed through' the Council 'of Churches cOncerned,.. cloister and viewed an exhibi10,TO 30 ""'ITCHENS with international matters and' tion at the' Franciscans' Holy IN EVERY, BLADE offrie'ndly wood organization), told the United Name College here as the com-. Nations Food and Agricultural' munity celebrated -the 750th Warm and ~ioDable, with Organizational t: 0 n fer e n ce in anniversary of the founding of BlADES your: maDy wor-.k-saviDg c:onv~ienc ... Rome that birth control is the' the Franciscan Order. ... m DeW 'NATURAL FINISH. Favorite Barber Shop only solution hift to cope with A special dispensation from .. ehoiccoC lovely colon. the pressure of population on reSemI coupoafar colorful ~ , sources and production capacity. the Holy See, which arrived just let .bowing DeW modd kitcbeD8., the 11?-dian delegate, who con- . two days before the celebrati<;m sistently supports the birth con- permitted the public inspection t) Mall eo.- 'ocIoy' trol policies' of his government, of the cloister. The visitors were shown through' by clerics' and did not refer to birth coritrol but declared ,that the limits of the. friars attached to the college. The exhibitio~ featured disworld's development capacity" • a .' will never be reached unlesS 'plays depicting the spiritual, in"our, minds, heaJ::ts and capacity 'tellectual, social and'" artistic cOntributions made by the'Franto work" are limited. ciscans to ciVilization, with an Middleboro Road, Rout. 11 on the work done in l'heAnc:horColumnist emphasis FUEL OIL ·AND the United 'States by the com,EAST FREETOWN Cathedral Rector ' " munity. BOILER WATER HARTFORD -(NCY Msgr: TREATMENT John S. Kennedy, editor of the Catholic' Transcript,' Hartford NEW ENGLAND BrokstonChem. Co. archdiocesan ·newspaper, has 37 Silver Road CLAM been appointed rector of St. JoBrockton 19, Mass. ' seph Cathedral by Archbishop "Henry J. 'O'Brien. Msgr. KenEvery Sunday - $2.95 nedy ,was also appointed a diocesan' consultor. including - A Li~e Lobste~ ~An author, book critic and THE radio speaker" Msgr. Kennedy Do You Work in a Factory, has been edit~rof the Transcript CASA ,BLANCA since 1954. He writes weekly for Garage, Machine Shop or (oggshall Bridge, Fairhaven The Anchor. "
Spotlighting Our Schools'
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Lots of ,Crosses, F eWConsolations Abound
THE ANCHOR.;:.. Thurs., Nov. 19. 1959"
s
In Life of V olunteer Catechism Teacher By Russell Coliinge You may have faced a swarm of bloodthirsty natives with only a bent bayonet for defense-you may have stooQ with your ,back to a precipice while the rogue elephant 8wung from the herd and charged right at you-These are but gentle trials compared to that moment when you stand alone, with your back to the blackboard, and, for th~ first ~ime, fac; 2() pai~ .of child- quiet. and then a young fa~ comes from feeling you'Ve failed Ish eyes In 20 chIldIsh faces lights up and a young hand to put over 'One single idea; that and hear yourself say "The waves energetically, and when none of the children knows class will come to order." you say "yes?" a young voice anything and that none of them L a t er on you w ill I 0 ok back tho de I ·th sed tola IS or a WI amu efrance-after you stop shaking. o course. All this assumes that you are, or will be, a part of' the lay teaching staff for catechetical instruction, a field that calis for dedication, a tough skin, lhental agility, and the ability to go on trying in the face of monumental d1scouragement ••• because it ain't easy! Sure you can take the necessary training-and the CCD course will give you basic instruction and provide good, solid, practical methods, 'but no course can or does cover the minor problems that go with "taking a class."
t
RESIGNS: Eugene Cardinal Tisserant, dean of the Sacred College, has resigned as Secretary of the Sacred Congregation for the Oriental Church. "'
Education Head Strong Atheist
I
Firsl Law For instance, the Seating PI A t it b .d B and an. canno s eSI e . B cannot be anywhere ne~r~, LONDON (NC)-Poland's new and C must never be withm Minister of Education, Waclaw ou f D d D S Tulodziecki, is known here as a :;~: : sm~ll~ocket~ha~ ~nd fanatical and militant public insert slips of paper carrying leader of the country's atheists. the names of your' students. His effect-on government p()l..; , And you move these slips icies in regard to the Church is feared by Western observer. around. and change and counter ·change-and come face to face here. with the First Law of ClassHe succeeds Wladyslaw Bien... rooms: "Someone must sit next kowski, who was dismissed 'bT to somebody." the Communist party's first secAnd there is no way to soften retary, Wladislaw Gomulka. the jolt that comes when you've Though a communist, Mr. BieAgiven an inspired and dramatic kowski was considered to be a presentation of some lesson point more moderate and understand-and there, fa a moment of ing official in regard to ChurCh affairs. While he was in oUice. he often advised against. policies' that would mean a major clash over Church education. SEOUL, (NC) Seventy Catholic university students and graduates particiPated in a full dialogue Mass in Latin at the VATICAN CITY (NC) -Pope John XXIll has donated a new Catholic students' eenter here. First of its kind in Korea, the cburch to the Patriarchate of dialogue Mass was celebrated on Venice, over which he ruled lUI a temporary al~ with the priest Cardinal Angelo Giuseppe ROllcalli. The church, which wi.n facing the congregation. Most of the students and gradaerve a parish of 5,000 souls. win be' dedicated to the' first patriuates who attended are members arch of Venice, St. Lawrence of varioua Catholic' action groups. _ Justinian.
Students Participate . In Dialogue Mass
Pope Gives Church
Catholic Leaders Meet' Dec. Sister John Elizabeth, S.U.S.C.• Holy Cross College; and Dr. Riley Huglies of Georgetown principal of the Academy of the Sacred Hearts, Fall River, is University, who will also autocopies of "Frontier among oUicers of the New Eng- graph BIshop," his latest book. land Catholic Educational AsSpeakers of particuIar interest sociation making plans for the to secondary school teachers fifth annual meeting to be held will include Sister M. Josephina, at Boston College, Saturday, SSJ, to discuss gifted students; Dec. 5. and Sister Ann Cyril, SND, Speakers will include Richard Cardinal Cushing; Rev. William- wh'ose topic is public relatioDl A. Donaehy, S.J.. president of as an aspect of the apostolate.
says "Kin I erase the board?" You'll have been warned - but th JO . It· nl If t' l ' ri:g. IS s I e ec Ive y Jar-
And you should prepare yourthoughts you dropped o~ wh~t self for the injured, faintly' acseemed to be barren SOlI Will cusing, "I wasn't here when we unexpectedly burst out when had that" in reply to a question most needed. , from you. Certainly it's not your An~, as I have been told ~y fault that Jbe was absent; and se~~, .If your efforts combmed certainly Joe knew what the Wl h those .of the other teach~rs lesson was about; and certainly mean that Just one or two chllAVOID STRIKES: FAther Joe ought to know the answer- dren understand that God lov~s Leo C. Brown, S.J., head of but the hurt tone of voice, the ~l,Ie'?':"""then all the work IS the Institute of Social Order., ,implication of deliberate unfair- JustifIed. St. Louis, has called for the ness on your part, gets youSo prepare that Lesson Plan, and unless you watch yourself. get out the Charts, rehearse the creation of an independent you may be saying, "Oh, I'm . Presentation, gather your re- economic commission to sorry." ~ serves, tell yourself that this avoid future strikes such aa Boys are better at this gambit is another day, and in a strong, the embittered steel industhan girls. Girls tend to be more clear voice, continue to say aggressively defensive, but the "The class will come to order." try shut-down. NC Photo. " , boys, use the gentle, ppt-upon, ----------~---------------aggrIeved manner of one who knows that any protest in an abusive world is futile but as a . ' , gesture to future history offen y Your Miasal storie. will tell you the GREAT CIVILIZAa small exp!anator st~tement. TION AND CULTURE whiehmarkecl 'he ~e 01 S&. CATHAThey are qUI.te good at It. t ~ 'RINE (Feast: Nov. 15th.) aDel ST. Second Law "~.'b.S "Jj" PETER (Nov. 16th.) In the Near East. This is part of the Second law 'V .go Their fellow cOUDtI'ymeB et oar u... of Classrooms: "Any assignment ~ ~. are proudly rooted ill thia ncil herlfor which you are absent doe. CLI 0 t-&'e. BUT THEY E:AN'T LIVE, IN not exist." Joe knows that Chap~ OR ON THE PAST. They neecI FOO». ter 2 is assigned to follow and IIhelter. IDd FOOD. aDd edueaChapter l~but Joe is absent OIl + Uoa. and FOOD. YOtJlt GIFT ... $11 the day you discuss Chapter Z', or $IS 'or a CBBISTMAS &EFt). and go on to Chapter 3. As far GEB FOOD -PACKAGE will wllet as Joe is concerned, Chapter J their appetites for the other ,m. is wiped from the slate and an,. l« Hrl- Fathtr's MiJtiIJtI Ail tbi~. in lire. TO APPRECIATB THB question or reference to it is to 0rimIaJ rL...L nNE. THINGS THEY MUST FIRST be countered with "I wasn't h~re J'" ~ HAVE. PINJ: FOOD. MONSIGNO& when we had that." RYAN. our represent-Uve III Palestine. WILL HAVE AN ESYou must also brace yourselt PECIALLY JOYOUS CHRISTMAS IF. iD your name, be Cl... for' the shock of learning that cty.. FOOD PACKAGES TO HIS REFUGEES. And h wUI Sister Soandso, who taught the lend you an OLIVE SEED ROSARY 'FROM T'RII HOLY LAND class last year but is now ill ;or each $10 OFFERING. California, had been teachinl "OUR SCHOOL" rank heresy and seemed to have While chUdrea take a momentary delight' In the possesslOll a warped and completely uno..... · 01 any tiling, they have A CONTINUOUS PRIDE IN THE POSthodox understanding of the SESSION OF "OUR· SCHOOL." This Church and, her religion. childlike pride grows through AN ADOThis you find out when you LESCENT FORGETFULNESS to II. MA,raise some point of doctrine and TURE GRATITUDE for the Institution in several pupils backed up by the which their adult personalities took root entire class, tell you that "Sister and showed the first signa of growth, The Soandso said ... " Take Sister youngsters 1D CHEMPANTOTTY ID INDIA B. I had the deepest respect for will very happily say "THEY ARE BUILDSister B who taught and superING OUR SCHOOL" wheD we can send'their pastor $3.000 [If vised in our parish. I considered YOUR NAME. her sure in her faith and sound ANY PERSON YOV NAME in her teaching. A GIFT CABD WITH PRESSED PLOWERS' FROM 'I'1l8 Picture my horror when I was HOLY LAND wiD be seDt .. you-OR ANY PERSON YOU assured by the -class that Sister HAMIl - when yeo send fa 1'our offeriq for B had told them, firmly and CHRISTMAS MASSES - or 1'our CHRISTMAS without question, that if YO. GIFT 01 $50 lor Ma. yeameat.. $25 for a ~ couldn't find a priest to marr,. _ _J?_ ,1:1:. 01' $10 'or an altar stoDe. The .Ble card c you then' you should get a to YOIl. OR TO' OTHERS YOU N'AME. IS memProtestant minister which would ben 01 the CATHOLIC NEAR EAST MISSIONS. be almost the same. IDcUvldaal Annual Membershi)l - Sl. ladividual Should I drop a line to Sister Perpetual Membership-$20. Family AnDual Me_ B's superior? Or had I better benld)l $5. FlUIlib Perpetual Membership $100. wait until next year and find out what I've Deen teaching? 'l'HANKSGIVING DAY WILL BE A. GRATEFUL DAY FOIl Original Thinkers ' YOU AS YOU REMEMBER THE NEAR EAST MISSION IN Again, no course can prepare YOUR WILL. you for the original theology that crops up in class . . . not "SURE. AND YOU'RE ONE OF oua OWN" only as' a side issue that leaWi '~Id the old Irish lady to the priest who leigned concerD that away from that prepared lesson' abe dld Dot treat him with the same delerence u she dld the plan, but as a fascinating exer'I&,Dilled MODsignor. ID I very literal sense JOHN aDd AUGUScise in .mental gymnastics and TINE w1JI be "YOUR OWN" if you CUI send $1" for .aell deduction to find the underlying rear of their sis-year SflmlnaQ coune. facts which have been twisted , to produce some startlinc "THEY WILL DO ANYTHING FOR .tatement. 'l'HE SISTERS." Thl. III the' compliment Did you know that it, fa the \ paid' to so many men and women because truest of the true that if you live of their generous devotion to "THE SIS- -' to be over 70 you go straight to TERS." You can do something MORE Q 'heaven? That took a bit of. FUNDAMENTAL. Your gift of $150 a figuring. fear for two years will make It possible And above all, be prepared for two hopeful girls TO BE SISTER for the discouragement that CELESTINE and SISTER LAURENCE with the Basillan Soarlte Sisters In LEBANON.
THEY CAN1 LIVE ON THE PAST 0" '-
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ATWOOD OIL COMPANY
5 H E·L L PLANS FOR MEETiNG: Sister John Elizabeth, S.U.S.c., RCretary, Sister Rose Concepta, S~S.T., ch~irman, and Sister Marie Martha, S.N.D., delegate, meet at the Sacred Hearts Academy for final arrangementS for the Ne" Eng1aRd. Catholic Educational Auooiatioll meetinc, ,
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cares. Take comfort from others • b . m the same oat, and especIally from the Sisters who can show you that you never know when
HEATING OILS South Hyannis
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Sea Sis. TeL.MY 11
YOUR CBBISTMAS OFFERING te THE LEPER FUND will help our pain-fille4 patieDte lind the TENDERNESS OP 'I'D CHRIST-CHILD through YOUR GlFT·GlVING HANDS.
~'l2ear&stffiissionsJ~rI FRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN, Presld.nt Mser. 'eter'. Tuohy, Nat'l Secoy 'SeftlI all com_llleat'.... let
CAlHOUC NEAl EAST WELFARE ASSOCIAnON
480 lexington Ave. at 46Ih St~
New York 17, N. Y.
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese ofFall
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.19. 1959 ~
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Weekly Calendar Of Feast Days
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Management institlite Report
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TODAY ...., St, Elizabeth of A recent editorial in The Providence Journal on the Hungary, Wi~ow. The'daughter world ·popul~tion peril. said' sbme kind th~ngs .aboilt, the of King Andreas II of Hunga~ Church but there were a 'few statements that need' clarify:. she .was born in 1207 and wheD i~g. and ~orrection. . ' . . .. ' . ; . ' , only four years old was pro... jsed in marriage to Louis, soli .' ". The' editorial writer said "The Church, as the guardian of the Landgrave of ThuringUa;. '~nd trustee' of· ancient 'tradition; moves with deliberate She was married to him in 12Z1. historic slowness; iUs often. said that h~r great~st.gtiarar.te~ Upon his death in 1227, she w.. reduced to p'overty and forced of. stat>jiity and. cOI!sis~ency lies' in the fl.lct ·th~t. sl).e ·.is' a from her home, with her chil· generation. behind her times,. :'Sir ICharles ~arwill; and, Dr. drtm, by ·her brother-in-law, Ai Arnold Toynbee, on the other hand, ~re men of·the.fu~ure, . length she saw her son, HermaD, speculating centuries aheaq of. their·times.~ ...' .reinstated 'in his inheritance. . In the' first place, the Church does'. not move with . She. joined .the Third Order 01 St. Francil!, ,of which she is the "deliberate historic slowness."' That isa statement that Patron Saint. She was noted few people like to make and never s,eekto prove. ~he fact~ are ' her charity and good works, She q'uite to the conti'ary. ' . '.'; , died in 1231 and was canoniz.ed In 1957, the American Institute .of Management pubfour years later by Pope Greg.;. . MY IX, . lished an advance summary of ,a special audit made of the Catholic Church. This audit was made by the In~titute to I TOMORROW -St, Felix of' give an objective business-like appraisal of. the Catholic Valois, Confessor. He was the Church just as an organization, \leaving aside, any spi~itual BOn of the Count of Valois and elaims and ·considerations. 'Phe .Audit gave 'anevaluation' of was born in 1127. He joined the the' Church in its structure, .membership, development proCistercians, lived for a time as a hermit iii. Italy, and upon his g ram, fiscaipolrcies, operafing efficiency and administration. return to France met St. John It discussed these aspects. of the· Church in the .same 'way of Matha, with whom he for'med it, would treat these in an American corp~ration.' t h e Congregation of the HolJ' , This is a quotation fro~ its evaluati~n of the op-era,ting Trinity, dedicat~d to the redemp.. efficiency of the Church: "It 3. s a commonplace saying both tion of Christian slaves held bJ' the Moors of Spain and Nortll among the uninformed and others, that·time is of no 'conAfrica. St. Felix lived to· see '8equence to the church. No~hingcou!d'be further.fr0!D th~ . .. . . . ' c .... ~ 000 'houses of this communit.y truth. Since 1948, the staff ·of th~American Institute opened. He died at Cerf-Froid Management has hadample.opportunity.to·lo1ow this, When. .... , . . . , . . . . '. . ~,', .. " . "... ;. ,., , .' ",'in 12'12. . haste ..is required, momentous decisions:.are','made. almost· . '. ..Ass't Sociolon,Prof.-St"Lolli~.U~iver,litty,. ,. '. " .... ,...., , '. inimediately. The chur~h.devotes the amount of time re0 ' : .. ~J~:er ;J~~nb j.. T~OmtoaS,. S.J; '., ~:.A:~:~:~ir~r:~e~~~iO~e8: quired whEm' .itis required/ No: prOfi~~see~iijg-co~po~atioft ,ur. parIs. 0 ers .u ~an. S' ". ~~op~.r:.. a~.s."Q~~ng . commemorates the :presentatioil has eveniJIipressed us' ·from:the·· stanopOint 'of )iproper .·o~ the DIsney fIlm O? men~truatIon for 9!1f ~th, to .ot)l :grad~ of the Blessed' Virgin Mary ill , t" Ion, o·f t'Ime,'as " '. mue'h······ They .feel our ~1,~uc~Uy I~~truc~ed, .'the Temple at Jerusalem at: tM apprecla as t."h··e· '~Rom' a'·n·. :'Ca'th91I'e-' glrJs. .' ... . ht~le .glrls . needI to, .' .b.~. ''''1 b' ·t":..J· '., Church.'" .~. ';. ,'.in ~lls?c,h, matters at.a've:r;yeary.age.,·.? Jec't:\l I~ V~I~'''age of three by her parentsi ~ , :' This Audit, it must be ;saidi.·wasm·ade·and its findings \ m:alnt~~p~pg. t~u~t ~ot~~r~ how in'''a:group' :study.'pr8'gr;lm.~ ~pac~m and St. Anne. . reported for the benefit of the fifteen thousand rn~mber8 of ,,-shoql~ 'giVe tpe .ne~d~d, In;: . ,SeriCn~~:<l~~iseOn'ce~~ioD.... . 'SUNDAY~t:cecilia: Vir'gl~ t t 'd' . t " . h" t' dm'" ···t··· t' I···· s ,.... 'ht' str!JctIon gradually and that You state'~our ·IlosltI,()n,.",!en.~ ·M·a·rt·yr·.· She· ll'v'e'd' I'n the ·sec·o-.a t 'he I ns t't' I u e 0 e ermme w . ~ .a)lllsr-a Ive esson nug . 'th f'l . I . "Sex Instruction' is nota one-shot· . flU beleaniedfrom the Church,: It was. a 'survey of management . to·· e .. 'Im., tWhasofP.ya?:escap~. ~fair .~ . d :f~c'ts"melin. ·v.e;';"'· century and is one of the ino!!t . '. . . .' t 'd' b" ed . ~ d excuse em rom glvmg any. '..,..... . \ . famous' martyrs of the earl),' pract~ce. Thepresentat,lOn }\'as.l;lnreq~es e.' :un I~S,., >anpe~sorial . instruction; ·.Ani i: little ~nlrss th~Y,~re' g~ared·~, .·ChurCh. The patron saint of uncensured; . ' "'., wrong? I the chl~d~ exp~rl~~c~ .... , '.' 'musichins was of noble Roman . t f th d·t··· I t'h t d' . t' .• ' . . At the same time the study o f . · . h' b . A no th er, pOln 0 eel O!I~ '. a nee.s .c~rrec~Qn I~ .' My first ob- ' t h e ariatomicalme~h;llli~ms in~ birth. She is saId to ave eea the statement· that the Church, In,eff~t, 'looks back"(.ards servation!Clara, volved'is ne'ftherp'ei-ttnen1or '. tortured' and martyred for' her ·and these 'other men look ahead: The fact is that the Church . is that it takes useful at this 'early a'ge, Just 'as Faith in her own mansion, which . t was later converted' into a looks so' far ahead that it gave the answert9 this problem .• , woman ~ the young giri can learn ~ great church. At about the same time . ,', . Ch .h h . I . . catch a woman, deal about food and an. adequate of world urc as. 1a ways . Your letter disd'Ie t WI'th ou t un 'd' ers . t'an d'mg... t'h'e, inl Rome, Valerian and bTiburtius , , population centurIes ' . . ago. The -.. . ., t d t h t mamtamed that the perversIOn of. natural..law IS not the' plays keen inmechariisms' of. ciigestion'~ or' a so were mar yre, u w a · bl (G K ell' t t . ht' t f . . . connection they had with SL solution to the popu IatIon pro em, , . e s er on ·once Slg m 0 eml-' . pouring over a chart of the di:' Cecilia is uncertain.' The relic. said, "The solution to giving every person -in, the world a f~:' ~a~~~~~d ~e~tive tract,. 'she'canbe, ta~gh~ of all three are beneath the high hat is not to cut off heads so that there is a hat for 'each' .. y .. 1, what she needs to know abo~t altar in the Basilica of St. C~ , " . ' . . .. p s y c hoi her sexual development at thiS bead left: ) . " . . .' . '. . .ogy. Most mod.time without going into' ana- cilia in Trastevere. . ;. A mali like Toynbee, has pit upon bIrth control 'as a ernm 0 the r s tomical'details~' . " ., '.': . ' I CIIf modern" ans,,:er-~h~ a:nsw~rof.the future.' As far'as the' . are qUi~e awa.re . bI' t' . to Most cur~ent .• aPIlroaches"to "BO~~N~oAp:_M~;ty,~~m~~:t cenCh h' . d h h be d 'j' '. 'th" d' , . of their ser!ou" 0 Iga IOn the sex' instruction ·of· youth· .. ' ., ' ... '. urc, IS concernde I , sk;e. as .e~'I~afm~.WI t a,n '-. answer-,' instru~t .and guide theirdaugh-; •labOr 'under' several ~rious n}~ .. ~ry 'conve~ he was· the tturd · mg thIS '.'forwar ., 00 mg· proposa. . or.,;cen urles. : > , . ters" but' . whether through'" . . I: .';., ' IIUccessor to St. Pe~er, whoh~ . Indeed, if the :Ch~rch's 'record, on, loOkin~ ahea.d w~re: : shailo~ :i)1;?dery,111ck.ofund~r- ~~~~:~,lO~"I' have :·iJ~gge;(ed, consecrat~him. a Bish,oP, .Hi8 ,examined men would find tliatShe' was aware of the'dangers su,ndin,~, ~r . the selfish desIr~ .they.confuse .knowledge' of 'faCtI famous epIstle. t:> the Cormthlanll .. " . '.. '\". . • ... " . ':','.'. '.•' .,.... , .. , . . . . to escape the bother. of 'gradual " i ' ", .... ' .... ~ " ... , ,restored order In th!! Church ~ of-'-:'for mstanc~N.az..lsnt3n(LCPJllWQnls~. and· cOJ:}dernned ~';'." :'g'. 'they .•:"y. 'to"ha'nd . the' .. ~.I h., education.. !Jut sex..e4l;1c~-. 'Corinth, He govern.ed the Chu'reh, ,. '.' ." bef· "f '.' , '~. th·.,;t:...·· ",. ' .. Nam~n , '. . N. '. . .tlon Involves more than know~ ., . . .... , ~.hese many" ~any !ea,rs ore' .' ,,~rw.~~:-, ~ ~,?"I~·W. men . jhb over .to, U:1e ,schOOl.or to: ~et' .: edge c)f·facts; .li iiiiplies' th~' 'i6:: a~ Pope, ~~r abo.ut. 10 .y~ars :a~ eould more4hanlocalnUlsancegroups•. "if.over.withquickly' .;:, .. .'fac... ···.1 j:'n" died and. mar~ , .see them .. ~as anythIng '. ." " .. ' . " ., .. , . . . . . ' . , . .by showIng.' .... "",rpre'·t·a't" IOn':', 0"'f' 'th'ese I und r asTr !lin' exIle bout'loo 'The Church encourages these ·~~forwaid-looking" men .~ "fil!1)~ •'. ,: . . ,'; of" . terms' . ot'- personaldeveiop;htl~f . '. e - ~J~ a ." .. . ". '. A d h .' . i<i d itt 'h: . . .: : : UnfQr:t~n.a~ely,·~~s .~y~te~ .' and liumail destiny. AI a~'on'se:':' . . .:: . ~ .eatch lup.tohh·er.. 'tnt t f~Y "'!boul .. ·.l~, d~' at' s,. etecan:mth?ve. ,buck-p~SSi!1g' obyiou!l mat~rnal'que'nce" it "micesSarilY iri~lud~' 'rUESDAY-St, John of', the · ~Ulte ear y .m t e maer? pr() ems ~n ~n }clpa ~o era: obligatio.ns.:is call too. freq';l~ptlYgtoWU1: 'in :seU:':k'rl().w iedg~-:aDd" CrosS,COnfess~r.,Doct?r' . '!le ',w~ , ... D1 years and even ·centurles.·· . ". . ."... ' ... ... ' .' . , . ; : .encOuraged ~y: the rea~~n~ss. . self-control," .:. .' '" " . born .ne,r A,:I1a, Sl,lal?, 1~ 154~ . .. " " . with Which outsiders are:wI1hn, . -. ' . ' : " '. , and was ordamed a priest In. the . to take over the job.' '" , : .Und~e, E~~h~~. c', , Carm~lite ,Order in 1567. lnlla,'Nt r c e . · Furth~r, curren,t. ~pproa~hes ~nced by St. Teresa of Avila', ~ . . . '. . a. ~ra ou. tend to treat sexu_al"ph~f\OfJlena' founded the Discalced Carme~ The Thanksgiving Week Clothing Dtive will benefitnot~st.YOUr 'pos,ition and mine out of contex,·Sex·is only"one ites, and his work was formallJ' only the needy of theworld'but those who make the' dQnatiOJi .be Jl).isull(~ers.t90d, .:let .m~ . sa.y . property. in~ the .human person, . a'pproved by Gregory XlII ill of good used clothes. The' giving of· Dad's old suit and at·oncethat tlI.e ~lSney fl~m .. 18 so that. its nature, ·chl!raeterist.ic. .1580. He.uilderwent many trial.. Junior's outgrown tro.users. an. (J. Mary's las .. t-y'.ear's 'w,' ihter excellent, unobJect.lOn~ble. l~ It., m,e¢hanisms, and proper' function was persecuted and imprisoned. .. . . self,.and can serve a.hlghlY ~se-: 'can 'be'.'understood adequately He died in 1605. He was canoneoat mean much to the donors .for-these are personal gifts--,. .'ful purpose. . . . . ' . ~ Conly: in' referEmce 'to the' total ized by Pope Benedict XlII itl part of themselves. It is good for them to know that in a As you remark, "I d?uJ;>t.~e~ person:.- .'",.~ ..' : .. , . 1726, and named a Doctor of tlHt matter 'of months these will Qe:keeping Korean 'boy warm , much ;whether. the ~oy~«; ';WI~, . ·.Cuir~nt .. e~ph~~is not··· o,;\ly., Church by Pope Pius XI in.1926, b" . ·f h' 'k . ' . ' . f . 'R' ' , ' . ' up~t or.conf':lse. my, ,own.. 10. exaggerates the' Importance 01. ~r rmgmg .tears an s to of , about ~- ..10". persona '. ·l't·' WEDN'E'SDAY·-St. Catheri";;; .. 0 ft 't'h' h the.eyes k' d 0 .. a . ong h hKong' . 'year' .old" ' She is aware '. . ' sex I y 'd"ev~·1···· opment'" .f ·re ugee or renewmg al m. uman m ness In t e eart 'all the facts· and comes to: me "but .distorts.., iis relatiorishipto 6t. Alexandria, Virgin-Marty':. of a. poverty-stricken European; .. '" ,:'.' . : . . freely in ail natural. ,:nanner "oth~ihuma-h'drives an;ditnpulses' She was put to death by means The giving, of. clothes.-:::oiie's· own elothe~to ,thoSe ::in as ~ith any otlIer . t~p~ ·.su,bj.ect. of equal; "ii'Dotgreater< sigruf~ of an 'engine fitted with a spiked ' d' t· d·d . '. ·t' " . . . . "h" Go· . I d ". w.hen. spe hears new lOformatIon cance. ,>".: ..... .... -.,'.... wheel, a.bout the year 310' iIt d IS Dee a I Irec an . . r8:D!a.IC ans~er ,to't f e, 'fts'· . spe.a ..mOlll. ' .or Usually misinformation. She ' .;", ..;:a"resu ';··l·t··" t··· .'. ·h'· Alexandrl'a, durl'ng the rel'gn va ~ · to" th th kd" Ell" th r . '. .. .. . . ,n.,..nS ,.curren approaces · t .1On, . C0 e .. ,.e na e ;. a~gIver:o 'gI.. Isa'!o er and. her ~2 bro~hers an'd.sil!teri. :"misconri~ivethe' role: i>f'p~rientB' Maxirriimus Daza, According to Martin of Tour8sh~:ringhiscape with 'one' who..iSshiYering '1ul~e always been ,thai'jiay:,!. '''I... '··tit, trafuirlg"'iheir children.' The: .legend, before her martyrdom and without.·, ' . ,,:. . ,. .. :. ;:', -: ': .'. ,. ':<.! :' ': ~e~ce the :point i!lt ..~Ssu~4s·. ':argume~.t·;is.#,equ·ent1y. advanced me met and vanquished 5e I,
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You state;', '.'1 feel that '-many' . may 'i>e:"true, bu't the' logicai opherS,· . "mothers" sfuiply send'; thei.:: remedy"'shi>Uld then be a 'pro-' daughters.to see;' such 'a'hlovie: gi'am.:emphasizingparentalobli-· our' program& 'to meet· the. , " . '.. '. ' . ~ . .' and feel they. are theilexcused·· ·gationsh.Qgether.withcompetei;lt :needst OFFI~A,.l NEW.SPAPElfOF'THE ESE' FA~L ~ Riv.·ER.' .... from.. giving any, persoiuH' in",: courses"-of: instl'uction for. "par-" IlhQuid : . I t seems to :me, Clara,' yC*' . .. . . , ' llitruction though' their· ~hildren" ents, .... ".i , •.' . . have suggested the fil" Published weekly' by, The Cathoii~·P.ress·~·the ,Oi~ese of F~II Ri~er \. wiirriot be benefited··apO.Y'E!ars . ' ~':~rad~aL:ProceS!l . .... . "~'be shown to the Mothers' Clu~" ,".n 0 Highland Avenue' ""." '-", ,;..' . ofcage by the ·mere viewing of, . ·Group.:\instruCtion programs '1. suspect· the mothers would. Fall River, Mass."" ·,:OSborn·. 5~715f. film,. . .' .can,",:,.a~l>jst'in supply.in~ f~ctS;·. le~rn a great deal more . thaa .. . . '. '., . . "What. "I'm . trying ·'.to ' say is but 'sex,education mu·st· pe gra~:' .their daughters from viewing it,. . , .... PUBLISHER'·. .. . . . ' . Is' sex InS . t rU"lon "t' . must "ua,·rep'e 1 . t't" d t" 'd I . The crux . 0f th e pro blem, ""': ~ . .. . th a t gu Ilve,'gea~e' 0,;\\71 e y" Most Rev. James L,Col:lnollYi D.O.,. PtlO. , ., be given gradually 'from' the' vary,mg ,il~iiv~du'al n'eeds,' and 'Co~rse, is the inal:>ility of mOflt GENERAL MANAGER . ASST; GEN~RAL MANAGER most natural place (the'mother> . presented'i'n"!l'climate of mutual'. womeri to face the facts of:seJl Re~. Oaniel.F. Shalloo. M;A. ' Re~, 'John P.Drisc:oil ' and junior high~ age is quite trust,'. :secutity;."~lnd' affection, , in their own lives, but.a discue:. MANAGING EDITOR. .' early ~nough to. bring in th~ . Only .par,erfts' can:. m.e~t these sion. of that pojnt. will have*Hugh J; Golden' anatomical ,study ·of· why. and requirements. ~~why. no.t lear,. ·be postponed ·untillater.
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THE ANCHOR':""Diocese ~f Fall River-ThlJrs.,Nov, 19, 1959
Lay Apostolate. Help Chaplain At County Ja il
Pope Praises Usefulness of Aged V~TICAN
New Bedford. . . " , .:: .. 'pn the, third S\.l.ll.d~y of 'ealih ptonth a choir of 15 from St. A.p·thony of Padua Church, Fall River, sing the MasS under the direc~ion of Michael, Franco~ choir master and organist. Other Sundays the organ is played by Kevin 'I,'ripp of New Bedford. The Legion of Mary of St. Japles Church, New Bedford', leads the dialogue Mass on the Sunday after the first Friday each month. .. About once a month boys arii! girls of the Sodality of Holy Fami'ly High SChool, New Bedford, accompanied by two sisters from the Holy Family faculty, pa'rticipate in a dialogue Mass; Father Hogan gives guidari~ and counselling to the prisoners and hears confessions Saturday mornings. He distributes copies of The Anchor, rosaries arid missals. An average of 125 men attend the Sacraments weekly,
tinued, "not because I pe~ lilly am involved. Our liv~ count only insofar as we lIN useful to the Lord, and the aged, with their experience, counsel, 'eXample and 'wisdom ' - for one . reaches the sulnmitof Wisdolll ·with old age..,... can 'do muda good, particularly for youth."
CITY, (NC)' - ' Praase of the aged and· their value to society 'was. the .theme· of the address. of Pope John at a general audIence 1?-ere... .'" The Pope, who will be' 78 on Nov. 25, said that the "aged are alwaYlluseful for: something.". "I say this," .the' Pope ,con... .
· .Lay helpers are assisting the Rev. John J.' Hogan .in his' capacity as chaplain' at the House of' Correction iii
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Honor Jubilarian In Taunton' .. ~ ~
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. A&P SUPER. MARKETS
OPEN 'TIL 9P.M. TUES•. , ,AND WED. NEXT WEEKI ..
SPACE AGERS: Marking National Education Week, budding scientis~s at Espirito Santo School, Fall Rhrer, set up a display of rocket arid satellite models. Left to right, Octave Leite, Harold Mosher, John Oliveira.
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President's scheduled visit with Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev in the Spring. "While our sympathies are for world peace," the report stated, "we can.not !iee this worthy goal furthered' by' f~voritism to a church group seeking pC)litical power." : . .. .)
Over 800 parishioners and friends were present·at ceremonies honoring Rev. FranciS McKeon on the occasion of' his 25th' ·anni"'ersary· as pastor of _Sacred Heart Church,Taunton. ';:M:embers of parish' Orgartii8:;': J~bilee' tions for youth which ' theve~' .Pontifical !'4ass, celebrated eran priest had founded in the QY . His Excellency, the MoSt early' 'days of his pastorate Reverend Ja'mes~: Connolly, sponsored the event, highlighte«l' will be the nigh point in the by'presentation 'ot an option ,too golden jubilee' celebration. ,of, bind' in Berkley near a camp; Holy" Name parish, New Bedoperated, by Father McKeon:, ford, Sunday, Dec. 6. and a portrait ot the pastor Following Mass a dinner win which 'will hang in the parish be held in ·the parish hall at school. Studley and County Streets, acAccompanying the pprtrait cording to announcement made was 'a scroll bearing names' of by Walter King, general chairall contributors towards it. It maa. . '" was also announced that the The week following Dee. • former members of the parish ~as been designated Jubilee clubs would reactivate for tile Week and a special program ill purpose of sponsoring an annual planned for Wednesday night, high school scholarship honoring, Dec. 9. A committee ,of paI:ishFather McKeon. Additional presentations 1000' Seek .Host Families . ionel's, headed by Emile Re. and Eric Erickson, is. ren<~vatin.ir, eluded a purse from parishioners the parish' hall in, preparati~ F.~~. ~preig.n. Yo.&i th . and' one' from the' Board ;';of . . '. The mternatIonal high schOol for Qle festiv.ities..,· Trustees, .Bristol County Tuber..: pr<>gram of theNatlbnalCatbClulosis Hospital, of which Father; .CapeHp~ Mt:Keon '-is a member. ;'.... oIiC-'wclfare ci)riferertce 'i8now Walter Welsh .Councll, .Pro~ · 'Taunton ,Senator John' II;' ep;a.~ed in i~s,.ann¥,lI;~~am~aign Parker preserited a' setoU in..1 to locate holrtfamll1es. £01'150 incetownKnights: of·. ColumbUS; fb'r'eigri "studenfit';'ho .will he· in will attend a,communion break.,., ~lhding a prayer composE!4br JUt ." fast Sunday~. Dec. ,13 .as guem., Msgr :Christophei'Griffin, chap-' tl1l:;"'··United8£ateSfl'om.·' 11160 'to' July; i9~'C ",;" '., ,.~: of.- St. Peter· ·~he ·APOstle H~ lliiWof the Senate,' and 'anautO''''' :Fa:~ii~; .i~t·~restecii~ ~haring' Name Society. Pla9s ,'are under, gtii'PheapiCture' of"' CardinalCushing; Spiritual" bouquets· their homes with.a. ij)~year..,old way. for the annual New Year'. . €atnolic boy" oriir(fr91ll. Europe Eve ,party... ' were offered by representatives or Latin America, are asked, to oi 'parish: organizations. . ' . · 'Speakers ,included Msgt.> cQQ'tact' Rt. ,Re~. ~sgr~Josepii .Tames J. Dolan;, pastor of St.' E. Schieder, director of th\!) Mary's Church, Taunton', and' youth department o( the, NCWC, Taunton Mayor Joseph-' 'c.' for further information and apHome made' Chamberlain, . who offered the , plication blank's' at 1312 Mas. CANDIES sachusetts Avenue, N.W., Wash-·· gr.eetirigs of the' city; . . ,." C;:HOCOLATES . The program also included a: Ington 5, D. C. buffet' 'reception arid entertain.. ' Students are carefully selected; 150 Varieties ment.' ,.. .. ~1S Msgr. Schieder. They are gOOd Catholics and good stu..; ROUTE 6 near dents, showing potential of leadP.QHsh Clergy Att~ncf ership in' their' own lands. The,. Fairhaven AlJto. The9tre. : College AnniYers~ry;_' are required to return home at FAIRHAVEN, MAss. . , Polish clergy of the DIOCese the end of' their yeat in the were among 250 New England United States arid may not re-:' graduates of Polish schools at tum fOl' at least two years. Orchard Lake, Mich. who at-. "You' 'would be expected flo tended a' celebration of the in- treat' your student exactly as CATHOLIC ' .. stitution's diamond 'jubilee' ia you 'do or wodld 'treat your own Cranston. . children. This is our basic rule " Parishes represented were .for' host. f~uriilies," say. Msgr. P~OGRAM Our .LadY, of Perpetual Help,' St, 8cl1ieder. " Eucharistic Cons..... , Casimir and St.. Hedwig in New ,>rhe invitation .to harbor a for,.. Bedford; and St. Stanislaus, FaR ·HOiY~. ~~g~student "~s :really sugges-.Ri'ver.· . tion..that .you' might "wish. to . EASTER..:: . Clergy included Rev~' Joseph t.~nk God for . His ble!isiDgs . SUMMER,' F'":' 'Sutula, . and' Rev; ,Casimii'" Kwiatkowski,-St. Casimir's;'Rev: l,i.pon _your 'fa!UilY. \>y I1haring' CifiuSTMAS it ..Tobn S. Czerwonka, St. Stanis- thfIll 'Y l1 a gUest from, abroad," lauS'; Rtl ·Rev.' Msgr. John "& cOf\c!udes, the NCWC dir~ctor.:, Dziok of Cambridge, former ·New. AND ".,. Bedford'resident; and' Rev. Sta- New ~Bedford Guild ,.: nislauS .T. Sypek· of "Emmanuel' Sched. .les. Ce»medy ,. IUSSIA, lI Gollege, also' a' 'former ' New The Catholic Theatre Guild of Bedford resident.· . PILGRIMAGE 'FOIl THE B'edford win present "The ,'1.1. Splid Gold Cadillac" at 8 Mon~ TO LOURDES ,'Therapy Grant ~ay and Tuesday nights, Nov. %3 ST. LOUIS (NC) - A ph,.- a.nd 24 in Keith Junior Big.. 8tcal .therapy teaching grant' School Auditorium. ' 34, H~nter St..New ~' ,,·Dr. Alvin Borges will direct newal has been' awarded by, the TeI.WYinall 3..,1501 Fc'deralgovernment' to thest. and play the part of narrator. CathorlC Travef OWece Louis University School 0( Miss Anna M.' Brady baa the llIursing and Health Service&. . feminine lead. .
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Election, of Catholic as President Concerns Baptists in Alabama MONTGOMERY (NC) - The Alabama' Baptist Convention again has expressed its concern over the possibility of a Catholic becoming . either ,president. or vice presidept of the. Pnited States. . .. The convention asserted this , ct>uld'be harmful to :thena":' ", tion~s' way of life. J The' Baptists' expressed the ;same· sentimen.tS'· in a. report . adopted at last year's convention' in Birmingham,' but that declaration did notspeciflcally mention' Catholics, though·'the,. Were obviously ·the 'targets. , TIle report calls' upon ~ the nation' "to exercise' caution and weigh well" the possible result of electing a Catholic "who Us committed, by religion, to the principle of' state-church and church-state as advocated and suppOrted by the RomAn CaU;t.ol~c hierarchy." The commission's report termed the planned Dec. 6 visit of President Eiserihower to Pope John "more disturbing" than the
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auxiliary"of Sacred' Hearts AcadFali River, ~illsponsor itli '.. :fil-st. Father-Da'ughler Commun-:., '. 'ion' breakfast Suriday mornin;. '. , . Nov;'·' 22, fQnowiJig 9· 0'c1ocll . . :Mass m the a.ca,de":lY. chape~. ,Speaker will be R~v; .GeoI:gtI . Colby, C.S.C. of the Holy Croft :M~Ssion . House,.' No~th.. Dar':' mouth. BQard members form ~ arran~ements committee. Other Sucordium Club plaM include a military whist Monday night,- Jan, 25 at the academy, with Mrs. Manuel Furtado as chairman.; and a Sucola in February, _ als6 ,at . the academ]i. headed by Mrs. David Boland.
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a,tor' to hold magazines. Each ing papering, upholstering, new ~lle basket ca~ hold mon~y • ' e's new Issues of a partIcular magazme.<o.rta p ~ 'T h' e This idea works' in more than piC ures. ' .' th ti . . .. 0 rd' '~new" one ,way; e attrac .ve co~~r6. dQeS n~t mean r.ri~~ ~olor ·to ,the '''asse~b~y new in ihesense·. . me 'I e mdag.at~mes artoe la tn, J . 0 that 'YO~' must one p aC,e an I' S easy. oca e , '. un lor. a nee . to' ;tore them for, reference, I found Junior Daughters of IsabeJ1a' 10, ':e lar some baskets to serve this,pur-' of ,New. Bedford will hold • h ;wge' . pose in' a department store; they dance Friday, Jan, 1, with Mia' • ~ ma ases. of' "' ' 1'2 .b y 15" ' J" oyce Stron g"as c h al'rman , purc'talking. . are . mch es. " M-' ., .~t:s " 'h nges Waritto add a dramatic touch Cafherine . LeTenc;lre has. bee.' 'teha'a Yt 'iri~olve to: your ,.hall~ay;, want to· cu,t named 'adult director· of the· " " , Imagma.... .' ' " B.r.().up;··.. . ' . more , wmter . - fuel ..bllls? Who , . doesnt! tio'n than Ge,t som~~hutter. 9P()rs and.atHOLIDAY DANCE: Mt. St. Mary~s 'Academy alumni' e ft's thethl,ngs yq,u can::-; association, Fall River,' is planning a dance from' orlgmate .that have the appeal, f h' d' h . y ' fit ·s· to' l'2 S t d . h't D' 12' t'H f I'M II . fI. " :8otwhat you-hily in a store. " I •.as ~<.?,Ile a~c way, . ou ~n :. . a ur ~y mg ., :ec. . a 0 e . e en to .bene . tof· a new cIu b' f or voca t"Ion•, among work~ng girls has .beeIi . Look' arotiiidyou arid det~r~<,.. ~.e. ~()~rs In _~ narr<~w-rlb~d, the school expansion .program; Com~ittee members include, " ..... , h t' . h " ed' ~o~dlDg .on. the h!lllway .slde. se 'teOd le'ft' t'0 r' 'ht' Mrs 'M ... t Cle'm' nt' .d' 'M s H 1" announced .by Msgr. William "I• mme ~ a :. your... 0?le ne. s. They not only add a decorative" a ;'. . 19, . a~gare" e an.. r. e en· Furiong, director of the NewSomethlllglarge and mteres~mg , "note to theold":fashioned arCh- ' Viveiros, chairman. Standing Mrs. 'Pierrette Pelletier, ark archdiocesan Apostolate f.oW en the wall oVera aplace de!?k to or hang flre- 'way they: Mrs. M.aIjB. ote~ho,' ' ' . . ~.,.: Vocations. . "i place? Maybe ._.'_ _' add comfort,'. •.•' .. ... .. eoats in the front or back hall? Perhaps a radiator in the living. room is an eyesore?- You can often get what you want for lesl. etrain on the budget than you ' think. ." .
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,·Award for ·Head ,Of Hero:ic. Nuns
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',' ,Like most famUies' in"continuous operatioD for maDJ' rears;' we find ourselveS With various categories of house1t9l<,l gQods. Take blanketS" ~o, instance. There are the really good ones: the electric, tbe.. lush wool ones, 80 soft, light ~q warm. These are car:ed wann eoverings eonceivabqfor like mama's little dar-. could save a life. Moreover, ling. Each early spring they' they could be ,made more ae': are tenderly, washed, air ceptable by just a little eHort.
, " . R~v.Mother Siena; superi~
.. ,' ',:of, the Servants of Relief for Incurable .Cancer, has, beeR' '.i:hilfued 1 Catholi~ Wom~n of
). Achievement for' 1959. She 'teI' . ceived' a Medallion of Honor at the Women's International Exposition, held in New York. . The Servants 'of Relief, also "ied and carefully put away With the Bishops' Thanksgivknown as the Dominican Conwith moth crystals into sealed ing Clothing Dr~ve in mind, we gregation of St. Rose of Lima, cartons to spend set to work. By tearing the thin operate Rose Hawthorne Lathe war m blankets down ·the middle, ' rop Home in Fall River, under weather in the lengthwise, sewing the sUU good the direction of Sister M. DaHONOR BIS OPS: Mrs. Louis L. Dumont, president mian, O.P., local superior. edges together, we,re-established IIttic, M a j 0 r OPeration, putseveral fine, thick-in-the-mid- of New Bedford Catholic Women's Club, chats with Bishop Mother Mary Siena was Ieting them away; die blankets. Connolly, left, and Auxiliary ,Bishop Gerrard at annual lected in recognition of her minor one, get. Then a "fluff bath" for the "o!J,tstanding and heroic work. . Bishops Night sponsored by' th~. club. t(ng the\1l out whole batch-the newlY mended for the sufferers of cancer." She been a member of the there Domiilican community since. 1ft the Class B 1 added half-way through the' i . H~17 and Superior' for 10 yearL. ".Qd: e I s: the wl1shing, those blankets were .0 ~r!iened woolrestOred to a degree of softness TOWSON (NC) - An AmerJ\~vises Women' to Use" tea J that some- . 'fm;; " . . ' that we would not have thought ican community of nuns, who allnost two years of recuperation. i ~ei~ure fo'r: Charity ;.,. body stiffened and shrank:, bl. poSsible some years ago. . used to be charged with being she decided ·to give her life to ,BUCHTEL (NC}-The. Amer,.. putting in too-hot water; "the" Matter of fact, while they "too far ahead of' the times " God.: : .J thin-in-the-middles; the worn were regarded as mere emer~ observed the '100th annivei'sa~y WO'rking:ns a bookkeeper after icaivwoll\8n,.large~y ;fi'eed trom' old Army blanket with US gency ti!ie-overs at· our house,' of the birth of their foundress. her recovery, Mary Cunningham hoUsehold drudgery by modern woven in it, reminiscent of 801- they didn't worth iestorMass was offered at the Towbegan to use her spare hours to conveniences, should use her indiering days for the Head of ing. But as gifts to those in teach religion classes of Catholic creased leisure time to perform -e House,' the a....en ha'If-cotton . countries less' fortunate than son motherhouse and novitiate children who attended public more acts of charity, according -of . the Mission Helpers of the h I that goes under the Christniaa ours, it became a challenge and . Sacred Heart here in Maryland sc 00 s, and to visit the homes' to Father Anthony G. Nickel, ~e.ach. vear,·. the a".ay a-.... . a satisfaction .see the· nan of' her pupils,· many, of whom pastor of Holy Cross Church ill -""" #. _......' ,.. . . " . ... ,., .~, to honoi' Mary Cunningham, the nearl;>y Glouster, Ohio. brown 'utility' onea the childre,', fluff up, building air pockets of Baltimore vomanborn iIi 1859: were Negroes. ased to take to camp; even large' precious warmth. who founded the community ia When in '1890 she'founded the .. Through. the existence of "90 ei'ib blankets still bearing scars' During years prior to this, we .. Mission Helpers, it was prima- many wonderful household apabout their edges from the time had always taken used clothing 1890. rily to teach Negro children- pliances," Father Nickel said, they were dragged insep~ to the rectory where collections The complaint. that the Mis- the youngsters whom she' felt to the American woman has "more We com,panions of toddlers. were made fOr the· Bishops' sion Helpers were "too .far ahead be the most neglected of all. time to assist those less fortu~ These; pius a variety of' haif- Drive.' . of the times" was once leveled Mary 'Cunningham became nate neighbors, as well as to worn ql,lilts, are kept available But; until the night the oil ~cause the community's work 'Mother Demetrius. participate in the work of 01'-, ali year 'round-one on each burne", failed; we didn't realize was - and still' is - geared to In 16 state. ganizations that help make bet' ."""dden resource" modern mis,sionary problems, Th e t urn i ng polO . t f or th e sman ter communities." bed, the rest on a linen closet, we had thlS m Ibelf. . ' whichi it is our privilege to. dowherever they exist. congregation came when a BaltiThe priest called on' those. Duriri g this ~mewhat mild : Jiate-~n Thariksgiying. . The Mission Helpers have more priest discovered .. that tendiilg the meeting to "strive to autum~, we've 'managed. with \ ' " . shown they will climb mountains . Negro children instructed by :the liVe 'up to the high ideals and' the Class B-until last night, Pop~ Says Americ~n as .well as penetrate suburbia. MiSsion Helpers were bet~rln- privileges of being Christian that is, In the middle of the Church Consoling In dioceses throughout' ·the structed, than the wh;itechilcken. AJnerican women." aight, the wind changed or the United States, as, well as in of his parish. . oil burn'er went off, or aomeVATICAN CITY (NC)-At a Puerto Rico-teaching catechism The priest asked them to .take -,ing. . pUbl.ic audience in St. Peters ' to mountain children or taking over instruction of the white Wakened by the cold, I didn't basilica, Pope John.' XXIII a census in a city parish-the children. The Mission Helpers know what bad gone wr9ng, praised'''the: proof whicb mT community has moved with the were then on their way tQward ~ the formation of their overall llimply laybu,ddled up, debat~ American: childi-en . have' given times. HIt " of their fervor.' ., . purpose: to teach the Faith'to all e Hamle~l;:vhet1.ler to h"rathf~' . Th~ Pontiff's remaHal' were Health Fa... outside the CathOlic school 8Y8be ar those ~ we have t an "l'; , . t db' "d Ii . " M C' h f' 'd . to others that. we know not of?~: P~~1Up e' Y many' . a . mma . ary unnmg .am, ~un re~, tem. . '. Get u iIt that coldrOOfn to! ,vls~ts.he h~s receIved, recent.y wa~ the ol~e~ o!. 13 chIldren In, Today. the cOmmunity works drag ouf.more.:(i()veringli? 'No;.;i;:ft'0m:.~:Arnencan b,ishoP~,'.'Ji~Q~, a poo~ falUIIY, WhI~~'tpov~d £f om . . " l.n.1611tatesr~nYv;lshingtQn,),;C., , J CHARLES F~'YARGAS' body I e\ eem~ 19 t'[e'Not f' lfol)n, tol<:Lthe. peopl~ ~"'" ~t.' 'Wa!ihmgton to ~aWmQre 10.1869. . an<J in PUerto. Rico. The special :" 254 ROCKDALE AVEN" lit firs~,s Then (tverYb:~tg~iu~.i; ;'Peterl:s .t?a~ th~ ~erica.n;~ish-'·'",BO;fu, ()Ct~be1'8,~859"sh~ was' ,,~reas ;>ftbe'congregatidn's,;,Vork "', ~ BEDFORD;. MASS. . shivering'·lU1-dcomplaining. The' '::o~s ~d /hmI*a repo~'~~~'~~Y~~',Sl(:kly.,as:ayou~~g'~ll'l. At 26, ~er were :cleatly defined 'when. the Bead of the Bouse, sh'l'\J~ging'\ ' h,~ ~r;ea~ ccmS?latIon. '.. ..' ..healt~ faIled completel~. Durmg 'Holy See: ~aised Jt t9ponti$:al r h' b thr be . 'I f ," . , ' , - .• , ' " ,,' hink in 1949: to tea'eh Chr.istian in:~ c~~de: sli;pe~s~d~h~f~:J' \;Disco,ver',L:Jrireto~ched doctrine;' to .train 'the laityjl to lIleepily downstairs to apply first L;;. . . ' tak~ the parish census. ,:.... ad to the ailing burner. ' F ' ' ~. ereSQ"tn', ·lsleux·· liVeS What sweet music as the fa-, . PARIS"(NC)' B~t~~en'30 tlie' sa'c~b,~tiIie''.Pfesentatio~. R. WILCOX al;~iar, h~ ,began ag~in! and 35 ph~to'gr~phic nega~iY~~,' the saiht;, and some authQrs hl:\ve ' \ ; ""FFICE )FURNITURE ),1 Thll'~~ It s about_:.une.. to g;,~ of- St. .Te~esfl o~"~isieux rave :hrought'o'utph6tdgr-aphs\i,depictY I . . '4 out the, Class.A· blank'~~, been dIscovered m the archJyes;,'iilg;,l).t 'l;ere!la:.i1;t·il more severe i: III ,Sloe~ for ilmmediate DeIiY,~: Markie llsked at breakf~st. ~;~I of the Cat-mel'of Lisieux, i{wa~: ,.way;: Brother:'11'rancois charges ' .•, DESKS ,i ,>. CHAI~S aever ~ant .to go through aJ;l- revealed here.' " , that' 'these, too, are retouched "FILING CABINETS other nIght like that!" ' . . .". '.' . h ·t'· h H' t k' t , . ' The photographs, showmg St. ' P 0 ograp s. IS as IS 0 pre• FIRE FILES • SAfES ., . "'II YoU Have~o Coats •.••- . :.: Teresa either alone or with other sent the true photographs FOLDING T,ABLES None:. of us ~~~ts to--::b.ut. It Carmelites, are for the mos~ part much as a saint's ,autobiography, AND CHAIRS IDve us a new mSlght, led to a in their original state, with no "The Story of a Soul," was re-' blanket survey. that will, l hope, toucliing "up. " stored to St. Teresa's original R A WI LCOX CO bave far-reachmg results. ', Brother. Francois' de Sainte 'version several years ago. The ,..., " .• Why, .in the name of.~l1'th~t,~,,;' Marie; O.e.D., indicated i,.. an origin~l. version .was then trans22 BEDFORD ST.. ':" :. '.;, "st, ..sh~jJld :e have C:las~,: l\. ~.:' article in the Catholic daily, La .lilted mto EnglisQ .by the la~ ' ! . ,~~~L ~IV8'5-7B38;::,:: 1 : and Class B bed covenngw.:-ilt: Croix 'that the photographS will Msgr. Ronald Knox.' .' . \ ' ,'.' " :1.11, ,"1' • warm~'.'house (usuall~)-w~ea be i'\lc~rpoI;ated in a picture ~ook Many of the photographs men, ~en, and, ': chI~~r~IL\in \ .,~~ .:~t.. l'er~l?~ which, is be" ",fpl,lnd", ~n Ale, 'L~~~~", ,archives " . ..... !")h't', _ . oth.er pa ts of the world are sUI- published, The Carmelite i con- .\f.er~ taken by ,St. Teresa's sisfen!'!g f. om cold and exposure.,;I" : veot of" Lisieux has peen,' en-' " ter, Ce1ine wh~I't<lok 'net camwe actu~lly bone cold? ':' ! '~uraged 'by the Holy See to"" ~ra 'and" ~qUipment' 'wiih' her .:SOMERSE1, , MASS. - Ne~'-: ~' . $t~p', &.:'~h~p ',,:. ' .' ' . Those/,extras" hav~ been ~::; <iSsue ,art :;album' depicting! thelj·'.when~:she entered·9armeI,.While _~~lat,jh~ almost ,wlth()ut our .. ,true likeness of the "saint of Celine's ..temperament,: w,as such "' ••• in~ites your parlidpatiori': in/the' ,.' < DOhcm~! smce three-..:of',our chil:. . :.' the 'titiie way," and Brother that she' c6~sidei:ed it· Indiscreet , growth of a new Bdnkinglnstitutiori " eken have married. and estab- Francois qas been charged with to print the,;ne~ativ~s""she did • C;:OMMERCIAL and SAVINGS SE~VICE . lish~d hel,mes ()f thell' own. The: .directing. the research for, the . not destroy them. ..••• t';:: DOn;desc~Ipt, the ragged but still project.· .' ." . .' , • MORTGAGES - AUTO and .. APf'L1ANCE LOANS .; .....ccount~I,lnsured Up To "$10;000 Academy Member federal Deposit Insurance Co. Reunion Program '." mel editedSt; 'Teresa's writiI;lgS ,\".'., ". • Harold J.. Re'gan, Presi~en4 Sacre~ Hearts Academy alumand touched up 'her pictures in.. be association Fall River 'will . such ,a way as to make them Excavating , " t" IPOnsor an ,alumnae-sodalitT swee, er -on the a~su~p t'Ion Contractors leunion :. at 3:30 Sundli,. after- that such a. p~esentatIon w~uld aooo, :qec. I at. the academT, be more edlfymg ~or ,the ~alth9 CROSS ST.,' fAIRHAVEN Prospect Street. "_.. ,- '''.' ,fuL " .. ,.' ",-,. .....-.. , It. ,6al The, Narro~s" ,North Wmpo,t WYm~n"'2~862':"": ." ,.,' ; Former graduate. will parMore Seven Gcipate in a musical program ~n recent years, however, -.' after a chapel ceremony of 1'8- there hall been a ~tion against l' , Where. 'lbe eonsecration to MarT. A Social . Entire I'amilr Basilica: Bell ,. lIour will condude the program, . Can Dine with Auxiliary Bishop Jamea S., DON~T BOISVERT VATICA10J CITY (NC)- Pope Bconomtca11)o Cerrard, former acadeRlT c:Up-: 101m xxnI has given a five-ton INSURANCE AGENCY lain, lUl guest of honor. bell to the Basilica 'of St. PaulAll Kinds Of InSUrance The association also annoilnctw OUtside-the-Walla iIt honor of • e postponement, due to illness, the 19th centenary of St. Paul'• 96 WILLiAM STREET fII. a benefit concert planned fOI' .Epistle to the Romans. The bell NEW REDFORD. MA&L tonight by Cecile Clement .. the largest of, a set .of six For Reiervationl Crobe. The concert will be re- which, with the exception of one, ~IAL WY a-515a I., . .meduled and aftotber date wia are now being replaced. 'They Personell Service Phone OS 5-7185 be announced. date from 1658.
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Pont.eff ',Pe'r'm·.et·5 Georgia Prelate To Resign See
:'10, . Thurs.; THE ANCHQR-:- ' Nov. 19,,1959,
~isl1o'p's See '1919, Social Justice , ' I"~ . • Eff'" P an .n ect .,'
WASHINGTON. (NC)Pope John XXIII has given his consent to the request of Archbishop Gerald·P. O'Hara
q CHICAGO
(NG) ;. The 1919 Bishop's' program of sbcial .reconstructiOn, which generated years ,of heated.
Apostolic Delegate' to Great· Britain, that he be ,permitted to .controversy, over: its "liberal". resign his U. S. po~of Bishop cparacter, will be quie"tIy com-' of Savannah, Ga. . memorated here next Sunday on, . The Pontiff. has transferred the 40th anniversary of the isArchbishop O'Hara, 64, to the suance of the document by the Titular Archbishopric of Pes-' Catholic Council on Working sinus, according to an announceLife on November 22. ment by Archbishop Egidio . The 1919 statement was isVagnozzi, Apostolic Delegate to sued by the four members of the the United States: administrative board of'the NaThe Archbishop, who will retional Catholic War Council,' tain his post in ,Great Britain, forerunner of the present Na-' has been a distinguished memtional Catholic Welfare Conferber of the Holy Sec's diplomatic ence. Published ,during the' trycorps since 1947, serving as ing period' after World .War I, papal representative' in Buch-' the statement· received many . INTER~A.MEJUCAN EPISCOPAL CONFERENCE: Members of the Inter-American' arest, Rumania, and af/ . Papal favorable ,comments, but it' was E" I 'C' f ...H Nuncio to Ireland before receiv- ' . ,alSo widely assailed, especially plscopa on erence, represent~ng the:, ierarchiesof Latin America, Canada and, the ing'his Great Britain assignment • by industrialists, as being, too· United States, m~t at Georgetown University in' Washington to.discuss w'ays and means 'in 1954. ' . liberal. . " of strengthening the church in South America. His Eminence Richard Cardinal Cushing, He is one of two U. S, Ordi,. . The principal statement ,rec-, ,Archbishop of Boston, .. thitd froni left; is' chairmartof the conference.NC Photo . naries . in the Vatican's diplooinmendations were: '., " .., .' . - " • rnatic corps. The Other is AIl) Minfmum wage legislation. . oisius J. Cardinal. Muench, '2) Insurance against' unem" Bishop of Fargo, N.D" who has ployment, sickness, invalidism ' been Papal Nuncio in Germany and old age. . SAN FRANCISCO (NC) - . In the archdiocese are priests own sake-as a hobby, a form of since 1951. _3) A' provision against em-' With 'Swahiliy'ou ,might have'· who speak.. Flemish, Filipino'. recreation. It's mental exercise Archbishop O'Hara had been ployment of children under 16.' troubl~. But if you've a y~o to (Tagalog, the. national lan- that pays off in useful. know1- Bishop of Savannah' . for 24 4) Legal" ~nfor-cemtmt :,of the' hear. some .go09 old ·paganism guages, plus the Paganism and. .edge, he, added. '. '. '·years. 'The diocese consists of. right of labor_ to organize; .. or. Chinook Indian;:"arrange- Visaya'n" dialects), . Ukrainian, . ': '! ,:, - • . ' . ' ,) :: ,,:.36,346 square 'miles with a Cath-' -5) ContiilU'ation of the Nation- ments likely CaD be made;, .. : .: Chinook" Indian, Arabic;'" Sia..;.: .,' ,;;,' ... ~t.l1l .~ei'rni.n'!i,.,,,': ,. . '.,. oiic"poplila·tio'n of' about 26,000.' "'•.1' War . Uabor 'Board 'for pur.' ." mese, . Basque, Maltese, Gaelic' ' "I started i~ the seminary and·. "If'has' 'an'Auxiliary Bishop, Most' , poses,' affecting the relation of IntrIgued? Well ~t ·has de~el- an(i'Lithuanian." "'. .' I'IP .sWI learning," the" Bishop Rev: Thomas' J. -McDonough; : '-"'employersand:'e,mployees.· . ope?, ~Qatth.ear:~h~!ocese doesn~t . . TW t.;·· ht pries'ts 'kn'ow: _ sal~. ~IS score t.o_ date:' 25. He's' '.' B.orn. iii Scrarit..on,'·Pa" on May lack .for Imgulsts. among . the" . .en y elg , f Ie h t "d th d'l ";" ,.6); A-. '.national employment . . . '. . Coatlan, Slovene and SlaVIC. aCI eI.I0ug 0 rca . ~. al y' '4;"~895;:Archbishop:'O'Harawas . ':: lletvic;e':-'J' ,'.', ,':" \ ." c~eJ,'gr·~ The .pnests speak, \read. 'Twenty:'four "'understand" Chi-' GosI?el m, 14.. of ·the~::'Russiari,- 'ofdained on Apr1I '3, i92<i~ He ,.... ,,, . 7LJ:>ubIJc' housing' for'''. the'" ' andw:~tea, total 0~,3:nang:uag~s. nese: either Mlmdarin' or Can-' French, ~1?amsh,. Pollsh,'PQrtu- .. 'became' ':Au'xiliary" Bishop of' . working' claSses: I : . . \ . ; . , . ' . a~4 .d~alec;t5-::c;E.:ngllshiapd: Latlp.,t.o.'nes.e ..· 'o.'r.· . bOth.., O.ne pi',iest ha-s''- . g!J.~se, Itallan, Gerrp.ao; .Slovene, . Phiiadelphia in 1929. Not yet 35' , ,,_ ,8LNo, . '..genera1 , . . . reduction of,. not mcluded . ',' k D t h S" , ." '... , · .' , C ,., '.-",.: 'mlisteredscve'rilC6f 'rridia's"'la'n- - .C roa t'1'c G • ree " ,~c; I. ~ wedIsh; _ years·of'age"lit'the'·Ume, 'he was' ""wartime "wages and:a long range';"'. A"Sufprising .nlJlhl)~r ··could·'~ages.~,Si¥5()n.\"ersei,n;~~s.~i~ri,:. Nor~egu\n a,n~.:,Damsh." ,.~id then to the youngest 'Bishop : ,:, Program,'of i!1~easing':them! not get': 'by' . 'iri"the "Uri'itea. 'N~'iioris. 'f~'ve 'iriJapanEise:' FoUe are ,ex:':: . ;:::Bishop Giiilfoyle usei any' and . hi ',tb'e'Uriited r:states.' . ' , ,~nly for' -the bi;!nefit of labor; 1?Ut',i:; without:"a;,tiarislatbr :..J:"·lhey're':perts ~in 'the':sigii lari'gtJ.agE! :01 ,all,means. to'eas~!'~is • !way:, , " . Q~N ovember' 26, 1935, he was: ·.,.,also to' bring. about that'.general~ .familial' with £iv-eor six' tongues. . deaf.." " : " " ' " . through the intricaciesqf anew ,transferred to the Diocese of' ',' pr,~sperity''',,:hich'; carinot:be-' , . ',', .. " ' . t ? r i g u e : H i s o.wn polyglot die:, Savimnah, which then embraced mai~tained w.it~out a 'widedis-' As JJ.llght. pe ,.expecte? here Linguistic Abilities' t~9nary, begun ·when ·he was -a all of Georgia. He was enthroned . :tribution' 'of purchasing' power. abouts, Spamsh, tops the list." . Sev.eral: factors.: account' for: seminarian.;. tap.e recordings .and, the follo~ing January.. ... ~) Prevention, ot excessive'!here are 136 priests who speak. the liniuistic ·abilities.of the' records; llstemngto foreign-· ' profits and ,incomes through a·. It at least ~nough. to . handle. clergy here-the area's own co·s-· language, broadcasts; conversa- , . . - - - - - - - - - - . . . . ; , -.. regulation of rates which allows confessions. Italian,_German, and, mopolitan· herita'ge;' the large' tions· .with foreign-born parishA~ Deliciou$ ewners of public utilities a fair , Fren,ch, in tha~ order, are' the Dumber of, di&tinct national' ioners. , . '. .,' Treat rate of ret~rn' on their actua1: riext, best known lang1,lages, . "colonies," .and· the many mis. On~y .. ' one', language. . has' iDvestment; and' through pro-' Helen Quinan of the' chancery Biomir.y· priestsstaHoned here .."thrown" ·him-and he's in the. Itressive taxes on inheritance, office staff combed, these facts after· dutyo'verseas. Then, :190,. process of licking it.,now" income arid excess profits. . and more from .files, on the, tl,lere'are' refugee',priests from, . " ~~Hungarian,is rough,"·he, said. ",. ,10)' P,aFticipatio~ of,)ab~r in ·'~~~rgy()tthe~rea.':H~f #hd'ings middle,ahdeastern Europe/owst' "It's. a; Tllrtar ·,lang!lage, ...unrc,::' " managemerit'and a wider' dis- . produced' a nine-page"document.· of wliom'have piCKed tip .three . I.~.te9.~ anyother,in Eill;!lpe e;x-.' tribution'of 'Ownership t'iu'Qugh . listing local priests by"itle lan-' 'fotlr, ilinguagtjs iii' the ~6tirse cept lfi~ish. But. just give me eooperative enteryrises " and guages in which they ~re.: pro":' : of. 'their' 'travels'; , ; ' , " ' . tinie:"~,, '. . ' .:-:, '.', ' . '
A t. H' o.me · 33 Deff ! In: I, erent L ,'. an'guages '
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modern language, ~d 'a'surpris- Spa~i~h; ',and an 'app'reCiaiion, :.:, ing asso'rtment of .~the. lesser by: priests as 'well as:laity, that' ' " ". ." - , , ' known tongues.' .The Africlm in today:s. sprinking~o'~;ld "one :. ,,' ,:CO. '" : an.,d .Po.lynesi,an ,d.l'a.lects . . ar·e'".v,l'r,-_.: ,lan"uage, ls_.not,.~nough; , .'" '., _.. .. , , . ' ~... . ..... ' , . , .. , ... , .., 'hiilti ·hie'onrY·langu:;;-ge·group:';" .. 1;h~~,~,','!!:~~~·the'~,re'as~n:~uxil- ,.': ings nC?t representee!-. . l~ry B~sh.QP.(~.~rlmJ.G~llfoyl.e :"':',' .•... :.. ' ... ':",.' .... .:.
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mstant priest .in a Liverpool ROME (NC) ~'President Eis.B·O·YHA' NEW. BEDFORD . ' :. .Made 'Rit~ .Chips parish, . says that westerns, a enhower's forthcoming' visit 'tOI ..... ,. WYman '2-5534 .: regular feature of British tele- Pope John will be strictly in the ': Ne~~,ury: 'Mass. :' :, '.. . . '" .. " " . Ask For Them Today ure of' a' pnvate call,' presi. C onducted ,lsion". "get lif~ straight" and nat . . by r;"~"~"~~~' " :':~~"~"~"~"~":':"~";"~"~":":':":"~"~"~":~~"::====~======== "even death comes with dignity." dential press secretary James C.: 1807 ·~rothers ofCharity-l?59" . In the we!\ter[}s on television,., H.agerty has said. . '.'. Father Song'h'r' t tat· " Private BOardin.g" School ,,'\",.' ;" ",., . .. . " us. ,s. es, one The informality of Mr. Eisen- . ' '" . can ,see~ t?~,,~ttraC;,~lon,o~, sI?~~e. :howe'rts.visif to Vatican CitYiri:_· . f o " 'l:!,SOYS' Gr4ld~s 5-6~7~8" .' ,_' ",;:> II(;J,.,' .."'., ....' '~:t"'''IL::'~:': f " " /!In~ moblbty, of na~~re . un-:- dicates that-the traditional r o - ' Wrlte>Cali ~om~ for' . -' " , :.. ~a.V~"·',.':~'.'. ~.,,~H,;',.,~' .~.,~,:' .'.,~ , Y.', .... ~?I1~q",,~~ ,p!~,~r-cJ,lt" lssuell' ;~fi ' toeol' ",", obserired '."'durlrig': "falls: , .. """;,,:j~,~ 'lnformation' ," ,:;' '" .... - .. ; " . :. .. " .,.., .r~gh~>_"~lld·" i,.wrong, '; of:': j~stice." ;'honlhelids'bf stlit~' .wiilbe:"cii;-::'o : (';Tel;(:H0r6e'stedd2-4663 ; .. , c:leanJy'!,·done.~~:: ,:~ '. \.' " .""",,:' • p~n:sed".\iVitli altn6s{"eritire('" :''':i . - .".".- ' ', '" .. , ,,' _." , ,," .,' ,. " ,.,"". . ·at: - ,,, ;".' c,· .• "Father Songhur-st tears -that'· - '.: ",: y. ""'",'."" .; " . ' ' ",' ,~ ,' •. '. '_.' the verY:.niuUitude of westerns , .... ," :,". .: :,':,;: '.
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Jlapfists .Say. Church Is Political System" .
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·GE·ORG'E'.M.· MONTL'E .
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CORPUS CHRISTI· (NC)-A OS 3;'1691' resolution asserting that· the Catholic Church is "both a reli-' gion and' an .ambitious . politic~1 system" has been adopted by delegates to the Baptist General Convention of Texas. . . . .. The resolution advised m~~ "·Br9c~u!e~ bers o'f th~, .sest, ~o consid~i:' care..,: fully before v6tingfora C;:~th." " olic candidate for public office. ' The Baptist General Convention of Texas lists 1,600,000 members. i . : .. ! , The resolution said ~!no per." . '.' " ", ,'.: . . ,lion's relig'ious affiliation perse ... O"'.F F'S' E' T . .' , . - LETTERPRESS' should ,rule out his' candidacy." .. ...; .... However, it added,- "there 'is a. . i practical question as to: whether ' ~".' •J~17 ;~9FF1f'l\~YE~!JE; ;. ',''." ... •Phone' WYtnan'f9421 • " •. ' .,' ) . . " . \., . ; .' .,' ",._ .. " ,.':.! ... . •. Catholic, Qffice holder w o u l d ' . ,... . ~ew Bedford, .Mass. :'.' t . ·,· ..·" "'''~. :' " :be"able':t,'0,'::resist.,thoe. :pre.s.slue,.·of, .... ;,. . ... ". . ' . ..<ii' ~_:'>_.'if:j",6'c:.~~~~,.r;!:··;;;i'- . r·.~i.~> ". ",',' ',' . .H'-::,il;~~.,}~,',,:,:,";·:;';':;~l~? . " " ·elerieaLisDi.'!,:",:... \ ...,:;"~ ;:,:' .'..: .~:':.;'~ .&~~W~~~d~~~~~~~~~~a~~Q~~~~~d
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.THE ANCHORThurs., Nov. 19, 1959
Chicago Mayor'
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Proposes Bette'r Says .President
Morals Crusade CHICAGO (NC)..,.;'-A cru'; sade for· better, public imorals and against obscene ·literature, movies featuring blood-
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Serves Nation
shed, and crime programs on television has been'advocated by. Mayor Richard J. Daley of Chicago. ' The Mayor advocated the crusade while reviewing his $715 million public improvement program. He said: "We must give our utmost attention and effort to make sure that the morals and outlook of youth stem from. a strong and healthy civic attitude and moral responsi bility. Crime Production "We are concerned with the influence on our public attitudes, by the widespread distribution of obscene 'literature and. ·types· of advertising promotion and en.,. . tertainment that are. immoral, morbid, and sadistic. .' : "On many stands and .in :many . stores we can see the most,suggestive and obscene types 'of magazines and paperback books. "We see motion picture advertisements invit~ng our .children to 'see' the screen's first bath in color,' and nearly every hour of prime television",time features a cri~e pro~ucti~n; "The. city .hali,.~t~emp~!l<i to deal wIth thIS program AM-ough.,
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As Lobbyist KANSAS CITY (NC) Former President Harry S. Truman has told a Missouri national Catholic youth meeting that a main function of a U. S. president is to be "principal lobbyist" on behalf of 150 million Americans. The president is the only lobbyist in Washington who looks after the interests of the major, ity of citizens who are unable to obtain their own lobbyist, Mr. Truman declared. Mr. Truman described the presidency as "one of the most unusual, most important and least understood constitutional offices in the history of the world." "The president has the most difficult job in history," he declared. The office is not really one, but six jobs, he emphasized, adding: "As a former President .... of the United States, my sympathies are with the man who has to hold down these jobs."
KOreGn B-IS hOpS G f I f A-d
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FAMIL~ LIFE q:lAI~MA,N: Arthur J. Gonley, shown with Mrs. Cqnleyand,t:hei~. .nine cQ.ildren in': tlleir '.'St. Louis h~)Ip.e, is the .new ,national chaiJ,man of the Family LiferQte u, or I.' Cotnmittee of the N:ational Council of Catholic Men. NC Photo. .SEOUL (NC)-Tne Bishops of , ..: . '
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!len, to ,our spiritual' .le~Q.ers" VATICAN CITY~: '(NC)-Pre- . Signor Riccardo ·de Samp~t.who<··'the Philtiff by'lhe'President~ At· olic Welfare Conference, for the and to each and every c~t,i,~en.". parations· for.Preside'tit 'Eisen-,: was jQjned' by Msgr~,C~willo' ::the ·end,ofthe:·speCIalaiidlimcC;.,J assistance his organization has . .•. _ .,.':::" ' .; 'hower's meeting with His Holi..,., Galicia ~orriinionl ~d .q.il,l~~ppe' 'the' HofY: Father .presented" Mr. given to the ,Korean needy:, .' Cathohcs, P,lan:. ,. ·neSs Pope"'John:CXXm· ha,,:e .~i~~~;e, ·,Fri,vate ~h,~be~~ains Wilson with api~ture in m'O~~ic.. ",The bishops decided to dis:' 'JL:. "" ": sti~red:·up' niemo~ie5' ,of . ~~e.SI:-\., p~rtl(;I~a,~Jng • "b;8;!1d ,b.y",.:rd~grs"" . p,f ~Qfi!<m,ast~!plec~.bY <.. GUldo,'::patch the letter ·at ':1' meeting lea ' CnOO· '0" ". deJ1t Woodrow WI1sQn,s VIS~t: to , ;CI~Pgll;~N ap;~ ~~~r,4o, ., s,l,lp.er-::, ".,.R~U1 ~tth~ApostJe St.)?eter.·,c",,, here. CRS~NCWC;the 'W'ol'ldwi.de ".' BOMBA:Y (NC).......India·s· first ...·Pope BeJ;ledi~ XV. 011 .Ja~. 4.,. n~unera~Y.~,:",Iv,~~e.ch~ber~ams..~.'.·~T.he ,Pope'.. a.ccompanied" the"" r~lief agency: "of the' U. S. Catholic medical school will be' ·1919. . "', "', : .' '... '.' . '.. PrIvate Meeting', . .'. Presidenth.alf. way through the: BIShops, has brought more supopened in two years, it has been ..This is the only preVIOUS ?cca- ......AsthePr~sident entered the· p~ivate antechamb,er where they plies into Korea .t~an has any announced' here by' His 'Emi- slon. when a pope ~et wIth II private antechamber the Holy.: bId each 'o,ther farewell. other voluntary rehef agency. nence Valerian Cardinal'Gracias, preSIdent o~ t?e. U~Ited St,ates: Father' came' toward him ~rom. "After thepapaI audience the Archbishop of Bombay. who was st~ll. I~ of~Ice. : . his private ·apartment.and, after President visited Uie Secretary . Elect Assist.ant Site of the school,. which will . One partiCIpant IJ1 the ,19~9 exchanging the' .conventional. of state of His Holiness, Cardinal . PITTSBURGH, (NC) - Motheost about two million dollars,· c~remony was·.a y~)Ung mon- greetings,. the., Pope invited him: (Pietro) 'Gasparri, and when" er Mary Kearns, Provincial Suhas not yet been determined. . SIgnor wh? was m charge. of t~e into h~s o~ice where he remained. tgey parted the President kindly perior:' of .the· Sisters of Divine Cardinal Gracias said he had U. So' secti.o~ of the ConsIstorIal alon'e witlt him· !or about 20. dispensed the Cardinal froin Providence, Allison Park,. has been promised' financial aid for Congrega~lOn.~e was ~sgr. 'm~nutes. . making a rejlirn pr.otocol Visit. been elected assistant to the the school during his recent Eu- Amleto CIcogna,m,:later dlilstmed: "At the end of U,Ie priyate . Cardinal , Gasparr,i,ho:N,ever, mother general of the order. ropean trip by Their. Eminepces '.. tobeco.me Apostoli~ Delegate to . .conversation the POPe instr\lcte'd'" ',. sent hi,S se~retary to th,e,:Amer.<. She will assume her duties soon .Joseph Cardinal Frings, Atch-. the Umted 'S~tes, '.', , " " .:, q.e master of chaml:iers to admit . iean embass~.w~th two c~J?ies or.: . at .the. order's;generalate/ 10bishop of Cologne, and Jo~eph'" .'Old issuE!s of ···L'O~ser.vatoremembersof the President's" thehe vv C~)de 'of Canon La,w for '.. catedat' Villa Mater . Dei in Gardinal Wendel, Archbish~p of" ROIIiano,theVaticanCi~~,,4ailY suite who were 'in~od~ced 'to" th~ Pi~sidei1t.'" . , Rome. . '\,' :Munich and Freising,. He lalso newspaper, show- that Msgr. said the Holy See hali ,pro~~sed Cicognani was one of four ,priests "substantial aid." I ' 'who participated in the visit of , . 'President Wilson. and later/beRenef Agency Helps. came cardinals. f T h Curiously, ttie account made" V ·I~ t"· Ims,o yp o~n. Special note' that President WilNEW YORK (NC) .'-, More son wore an ()vercoat. ['his. ; : than 26,000 'pounds !>fus.ed c~9th,:, seemed to~have' been occasioned ing donated by American ath by the fact tb,at': head~.of 'state: olics have been sent' to " aid calling on' the. Pope' in' those J'apanese victims of Typ.hoon days normatly~,wore . greater Vera by Catholic Relief Services -Nationai Catholic Welfare finery. Conference. Exeerpts The clothing shipment was Following are excerpts from part of a large-scale prograin of the: . Osservatore Romano acareas, outlined by the New York count: aid to the Japanese disaster.' "Today January 4 His Holiness headquarters office of the U.S. Benedict XV received in so~emn !.d .'.. . Bishops' \)Ve,rse,as,relief llg~n.~Y;aiidiebce .M:I:, Wbodr.o.w Wilson, " ., . ': ELEGANT HOOD 'PEACH .MElBA':',: "" ':,,: .DELICIOUS·HOOD SUllANA' ROLl'" CRS-NC,W;C·".dis~lc:>sed i~Jltl:j.J '''?Pi'eside~t' of ';ihe: United' Shttes .' "~'" ~. 'f",:: ""." '.',·:r '. : ' '. "'" ,- " ,.:. -:,: ."1 I .'". L: '. "'~ ~l has alSo' distribu'ted -more than of America. 1~ . oLight ;and ·golden sponge:ea]{e. l~ious ., ..CJarllt, .sauc~;'conles·rig1it With ereamy ..... 100,000 pounds of w~eat flou'jo, "The Presidentar~ived the .:~>,. ~ Hood.Peach Ice' Cream and luxurious 'rasp~ . ,.HC)od .S,ult,ilnaf·Roll. Serve ·the roll topped' l. powdered milk and rice to. '1ijc- ,. Vatican at. 3:20"byautomc>biie~ ~bet~y' t~pping~ :. ! •.• aU lOU li,o isli~!ce:.a.n,d '." jit~, ~!,~f.et .Sauce. Exotic I Yet, Bo'easy serve. '" : , .. , , .: . ::",. ,.,. . tims of the typhoon, along with He' was accompanied 'by Admiral' '.lor you. ' . ;, 15,000 muIW.vitamirdabl(its ar:!i (,G'teyson; Genefai Hart i,and,' I 1,500 pounds' of 'quilts arid .bed- .'Hugh ·Fraser., , . " ! ' . ' : .... , ding. The relief agency has also "On his' :arrival . in the: San made a $4,500 donation to' aid'.' Damaso courtyard,' military the homeless and. injured. . . honors were rendered by Ii com-' OTHER "PARTY PERFECT" pany of the'Palatine Guard of DESSERTS, . ar Ina to resl e Honor... TM'Gendarmes band, At Fatima Pilgrimage. ~i!e~ted I:>y. ~~~str.o ~~isa!lti, HOOD CAKE ROLL • ~ • fluffy ~hocolate cake FATIMA, (NC) _ Giacomo . pl~yedthe ~erIcan.anthe~. ,.,. swirled with creamy Yanilla. ice cream. Cardinal Lercaro,Archbishop of ".. T~e PreSIdent wore an over:. Bologna, will preside over the co~t. '. . . May 12-13 1960 pilgrimage at' .. The proceSSIon, prece<:led .by HOOD SHIMMY· SHERBET ~ •• A delightf~l. eomFatima." six bearers· o~ . the. p~rta\)l~. .bhiatlOn of raBpherry, pineapple and lime \ .... sherbet. " .. . . . . The Cardinal has ..a~cepted· an throne and' Py footmenmov~d, invitation '-from : Bishop '. 'J,oao .' forwar~, flan~ed.. .bY SWISS. () Pereira Venancio of Letria to " Gua~ds. When_ It .arrIv~d on th«;l. ,LUXURIOUS HOOD NUT ROll preside at .next. year's'pjlgJ;im,-'. floor of. the papal apartmentli, HOOD BOUQUET CUPS' ••• Smooth vanilla ice age. This' is the year in which' the P:esId\lnt ; . '. ~as met by th~ ':Bright: J'edeenter of strawberry .puree, cream topped'with rich chocolate sauce, the third secret of: rhtim'~ is. to' ~ope's ~aster·of chambers, Mon-. nestled in' creamy vanilla, then·a layer of decorated. with candy sprinkles. 6' indimaple walnut ice cream. Flavorful! vidual cups per box. ' . be made public., No idate\r~as..·:·' _Drl"y'·.e··-·-o,n Smut' ,' , been anl:lounced for. the ·op'ehiJlli. .'. of the eiwelope containing the MIAMI (NC)-Dade County's' FOR. "p..ARi'Y.PERFECT" ; third secret. ., . .:., . Metro Coinmission has ordered: In 1939, when Sister Lucy was county pOlice into action against HOLIDAY DESSERTS I!'avely ill she received permis- sellers of indecent literature. sion from Our Lady to write out The commission unanimously the third 'l!ecret. It' was placed. adopted a resolution calling on, in an envelope marked: "Not to the county manager to direct all:". .• ' . i'~ . be opened.until .1960." The en- law enfQrce~ent ,. officers ~; ,'yeIope is:.n6w;.in 'the posSeSsion' clamp'do~ on vendorll"of smut'£1( ;,'... £lCITI.. " •• 'n fllSTI -IHIS'IIAI'UYfsok" nE.Y·tiIlJI$~. 7;1:30:'•. .:: ....... - - .... ;::;. -:....:~~----: • ,.-~ :·!:_<·~'-~~.ft.(·\~···:··"",··,.~·~-··.;f~··~:.."!'><>·'l,;~·~j' ',." ~'.,I",· )'< ,,;' - . ,,0£. tbe~~sAo~ot.:~r.~..,.,",., ".".~.,li~~e..-~ ..• -:' " .. : ..;. . :'. ,.<., .~.~-. ~ ...;. ' -r•• -''
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. By Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S. Kennedy . Joan of Arc, like Francis of, Assis~,.is on~: of ,the Jtl0st, written-about. of the' saints. Th~r.e.are alw~y'snewbooks (oriplays) about her.fSome·of tJ1~~ooks ,are huge"affa~" running to hundreds. of, .pag~s. \i\.nd. som!! of the plays' are strange ~ffairs, making her . 'She could neither read nOl" oot to be' the first Protest- write, ant, or suggesting that. the "She came from the obscurity theatre is the holy temple of' of a small, remote ~amlet and in ,
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less than 15 months had crowned democracy, etc. a king, s.et iD,'motion events that It is seldom that a work COR,:" were t6 save her country .from oeming her i s ' . foreign .domination, defeated the as exactly right forces of a. great nation, and A WARD WINNER: :18 'John BeevJoan of Arc changed the history of western Charles H. Ridder, publisher Europe. ( Ha nove r "She was burned to death as Ii 'of the Catholic News of'New, H~. $3.50). heretic. Nearly.500 years later , York has been awarded the' I :. opened it she was canonized 'and beCame Charles carroll 1\ward. ii ~ a sense of ,.. the: patron saint of the 'Co~try pl~ant expec"she·:·sli'ved." As bri$.k and direct recognition of the man best· typifying the. example of taney, JorI re . , as that! .' ~mbel'ed how.. Fascinating Stor,. Charles Carroll for ,his serV~ weUthe same, His terseness does not rob the ice to God and Country. I' author ,did with . , j . stofy of its drama. QUite the St:: Therese' o Storm f. . .,., reverse! Freed of fustian and' S' 'in his of Glorr· He was there concerned. not philosophizing, the events pr~ Continued From Page One lllerely to relate· the events in ceed like quicksilver, fascinatVocations to the Brotherhood _ the life of St. Therese, but. also ing to watch.. And the reader, are not neglected either.. Two • d t instead of plodding wearily to'interpret her, to seize a.n s~ 'through 'a series of stodgy chap-' years ago the Sacred' Heart comout. her essential genius. munity built a house of studiell' • a saint of our o~. ters, feels his heart beat hig~ as d' 't' t h 30 But she IS h 'he follows Joan on her· &Wift an .novi .Ia ,e 'If ere sorn~ . tilnes,. ,about whomt ere, ~." course' from obscuri~y, through young' Africans.. are preparing masses of evidence. Joan, on ~~,. themselves for 'their life's work.· other hand, lived and died 500 one tremendous experience after .' Mission life has held exciting' another, experiences fo.r Brother C~.i8-. years. ago. . ... at Rouen.to 'the fire in \the square However, as I read the ne,." " But Mr.. Beevers is no blind/' topher. In '1939, for instance; OOok, I realized that Mr.~,,~l'S when he was returning to the was .in. top form and was d()tng. partisan, It is common, for ex- United States from Afric~;. he ample, to represent ·Caucbon, was held in Paris as a possible J'ust as well in .it ~ he. bad .in. the Bish,op of Beauvais, who his·.study of St. Therese.. He, sees conducted the infamous inquiry German· spy. . Shunted'" f.rom: Joan, .and her ,·.significance, which led' to Joan's condemna- France to' Italy, he finalll' er , tion, as a monste'r wi,thout a [)lain; and he enables the reached the United .. States bl'~ to do the same. 'dram of humanity. boat, his entire' trip having takea Complex' Situation ' . M .. Beevers,' 'on the contrary,. three months. : .' . " . ;... "On the missions, superstitio.n: . ,'Pc,rime thing, be . has resis~u explains Cauclion's antecedents the' ·temptation to' get bogged and p'redicamEmt,and, instanc- ·leading. to violent death amollg dowrl in the his,toric.al detail in iog' .particulars about ~e trial the natives' is common.' C~oCO which so many books about'the' whicli are somewnat creditable . diles are j~st·· one among' the; Mai<i of Orleans siIlk. . , to -. Ca.·u.chon, 'sayS, _pjiY~ly... animal 'dangersof the,region;':' , h EducatiOn',' however, .!.SJ 'fhe, situation' in: ., which. 'fie that,. this p~rcreat~e~w¥ u n " , ·, '., '~keft . suddenly . apPeared waS 'com- der.a spell of"fe~r and' gr~e~.. '. very seriously, .for ago.od"~h,~ "lex at the time. an.c,t e.ven .mo.re ' Obedien.ce to ..' :God' '.'. . . record is essentialto·future:ptog;:.; ... F . ress in any' profe~ion'~or·.)b!' ance r ' l1ly~tifying to us today. tm After,quickly.,put compellingI7'"· yo.ung.Afr.ic..a . .i,t,: ..'.:", . , '.'... ~.:". .:was· not the- France w~. ow, portraying ljer. ~eath and gi.vini.
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closes. with an .analYsiS of .her.· Continued From Page One holiness-which is the ~pst·im- .• overall C:R.S relief program. .portant thing about her. ' The willingness 9f American "T,h'e sanctity'. of Joan' is '~a" Ciithotics 'fo'·cooperate.lastyeai':; -simple' thing,"· he ' writes~ . "Its· ! producei'! more'than' 13;000.000:' taproot is obedience to' the will i - po'unds of tisable clothing,' va'ltied . of ,God." .Her..whole.. , career. is, at' '$18,000;000. . . ..... : "in cheerful; willing obedience' A Kashmir boYwoi.lld jump' 1o'the'words of God.~ . And, a1- for:joy to"have the 'warm jacket. ; though caught up in .extraordi.." your 14-yeilr-old son: hal;" out..'.', DQ~remy.'. And.~ l>P :'in~""~" nariy pappenings,' :"she never for-:: gr<l'WiJ.:: A Vietnam 1eper'willbe', sla·ckened. before on~, wa~: \yell., one moment neglected' to' prac", forever grateful 'for' the" over;.;'"' iq,t(),·the, .boo~. :.-- ., : '''::'' . ticethe ordinary :duties and vir- -e61it"yo'uhave repliu=edth{s y'e~r, ,:',., ..... In Foreground '.:Y':':·,·' tues of the Christian"life.''.· , :'.;; ndt':quite good'enough for -Y6iir" This mistake has been' avoided '. This is meaningful for, all of, needs but stiil very serviceabl~ is.n't 'quite' so bY ·Mr. Beevers; .The 'po~ticB;l .us today, as are her loyalty, for Ii' fellow who . scene and the three-sidedquar.:. her courage, and her thoroughly.' fussjabout his appearance iil ' French ' " soil,' " h e. __eKO -"""-h" ". . . . . reI.on es Christian high spirits. In an aged public.' ,.. not' only briefly. and defttr."bilt of disloyalty, timorousness, an inankets· trousers dr'esS¢~ in the right plaCe. :.. .... depression,· she has much to' coats sho~~valuele~s to you 'lie 'siips 10 his' eXplanation offer by way· of correction, and now, ~but a veritiible Goaiend to after -We are ihtrOduced to.·'.loa'D.. inspiration. -those'who have none.·~ .. , .... , .... , ...... "ti" Thisi,li, fairlY;'.ilong.·J1eview."of· Gather' tiiem'bti"rigithem :1.0 She is'aiways in the'foregi'OUfi, .a fair1u "hort book' but much "."""",' ······:··sh'·:;· ·'::<'U··'·"·-ti·on"ce!i'ibr brightly light~4;The background . '-,7... ..' .,-- , ..~_.,. . your pan .' c" ec is never permitted to,.overwh~lm mQre, $lould. be s~.jd.jn.. Pf!l!se:·~t. n~*,t' ~e'ek~" Tholightfuine'ssl11i'd':' ., "'" " i. :·the·';;;" •.;'and:','.'.te·la .~ii:\gularly;.f~.CitO#i· 'portrait:a-'iiitU effort oh"y()tlr' p~·ti w'flt' her 'U'et',·.l·t·.··;· . , . , . " . . " .'" DAUGHTERS'·Of'''ST.''P·&ut;.; , . .L' . . ' . . ..~' . ..... ~ '" .' . of'.loan of Are•.;\. ~'t '.?:, . DiaKe'soin:eon~:'Very'ffiippy:' "": '" ligible;.·: ...: . . . . . . ' , . . . . _'" .. :,:.;~~ ,.. ' .:" ... l . " . ' , ',"" 'N" lR._ ,oung gi.... (14-21 ,..;..• Before.·~. the:-.~t . p~~;.; Mr. '0' ·~rist·'··wtt.. wineyard'··. ciIr'A,o' ·.."~ Beevers inserts this summar::y: ' , . 0 " . <., .. -.., '•. " CO:,."., ·~ltions""P..-ess,.aadio....."'oYies"Ciad"'fe6I.. "Thi~.js.th~.. !l«lry:.. Qfa.yl)ung...g!~L,;·E,nrout • . t~ ContinueQ':from Page"One .' .' !_~SiOll,,;";t"'i"'.~;~."c'll"Ct",.:r""" who:died'\Vh~ii;~lie·wa~;·'1~;f~~;,;jX;·W;A~mN9-TQ:J.'{":,(.NPf;T~.,A pressed .to The Arichorreporter ""ssio~..,r,;~i!!f~.,"rin~<;~~. ~~. was' no':peauty and' 110 scnoJlli;.· . :mission'ary-from Wyoming.is enthat~"his parishioners once more . to·: 0.1" "lIor~lelS. a! ra.~, .coIo.~ «;:cr.~. -;~ ... '. ': '., ." ... ' : " ';'.' route:to . Nyed, ".Ke.ny.~, British prove the ./>acrificing spirit that ... iaformo!io_""ribl ..to : " " ,., re :":~ ·'~t. Afri~a;to. l?iri a group of . haS been shown in every p a r - s o ST. PA~/ :~'":~nsg:":· MAsl. ~ ···.mlsslOnaneS;asslgQed ~ the ochial,' DiOceSan and universal: .._";;._ _..;,,,i...;......_ ....... ..:.,;;..._'.;,;.. • .;....;,;,:_'..;..'i.'...~_~~~ ..._.~,~."!'.. apo . .. . . ' '., '~:'" ;':. Consolata:misslonsthere. undertaking in the. Sacred' Heart -' '. ' . , ... ' : "" '" ...... PARIS (~~) =.,Th¢.. ~ple of ...' "Father . William.Po. R~stiy,o, Parish". . . . .(: .... . Fral).ce;. who took, ,"ope Jo~:.'·":I~M.C.,.bas been' ~ssigJ,ied to the . .The campaign modera.tor,. .' -,". XX~Jit-,'to' th.eir J.lea~~ whe.~\..~.. staff. of 'St..Pl1-..\ ll's'$ei?inary for· Rev. William D. Thomson, was was;,Apostobc NuncIO·;to.,F~,;::·.,:natiVe clergy under tDe' 'dfrec- jUbilant at the. $12,540' surplus thronged . tbeir .:!lhiJr(:hes;"·~fOr:: ,iion of Bisho~' €harl'es M. Caval- . pledged b).'ilis own pai-'ishioners., Mass on' the .first "aimive~o.t ..: 'lera> ··I,M:C·,."·Q~··;~Yl:iri;:'·,other Attleboro the .~ope's coron~tiQn... '.. ':. ···~.::;{Americans'wotking:~..t-:tl1e ·.COn' . 'i . . :(Mac·Gregor.\ ,,-rcittdl.., .. '$f70,236' ~~ the same .Bm..el;~O'~!,lgri~:~:~Splat~:· missi6lY:, i6Ch~d~!;':Faiher ~::~~~:~~;S'>" .. 52,364'0 representing"aU' the 'dioCeses' of- Raymond Sullivan;-'orthe'Bo&- HoI,' GhoSt -;'51;16f' . France jour~yed;..to,,·Rom.e,... to",··(ton··Arehdfocese-." . _ 66,580· assist'atthe·aJiDiVersary~ ....·" .. ~, . '." r •. '," .' _ 81: Ther;~'8 , 1,'0 ,,1':' . ,.' .'~~., : ,,' ;'! 11 • , 31;428 'i inthe"'Pope's A.' fl:lna'!' -.- ... Aft"I.Ye~sary St. ~ary s.' " ;., . ,. wtNNING"AYOI: wrtM:'ffS':RA~ 39,520 drive conducted by·.·.the--;Parish;.<, . VENICE .' (NC).:-·..;.Archbishops 81. Stephen'.' Catholic daily, La Croix, en-. and bishops of the Venice a r e a , , ' M a u f i e h l 'IO'I:IAM SO'TAStY '1I sO DOWNlUGHf.1eOoD ',. '.. ' amoo .one poor pri~st 'eacih' in';i letter ~atuiati'ng. Pope' St. M a r y ' s . . : T,5t544 .. ,I :," ': ; diocese·to join ·in the national: John on his first: anniver~ary'a." Nor-Ill AttlebCft :" . pilgrimage' to Rome, which was Pope, stated that "the eonsciOU8 Sacred ,Heart ... .. '81,550 ~ led by Maurice Cardinal Feltin, desire to draw closer to God and St. Mary's. 143,658 JUS1' -. ArchbIshop of Paris. to spiritual realities has beeR North EastoB .. ASK The pilgriniage leaderS' W-- noticeable for time Immaculate Conception 25,000 Mac Gregor , .' . ried a package eoDtaining~.OOO our people." Prior to ~ e)e.,• Norioa .FOIl. . 8'1,540 letter~ .from priests and laymen tion to' the PllPaeY~ Pope John St. Mary', .." BRAND :"." ",\ .t eKpreS!jing pr.ofo~d veneratiOifl w:~s Cavdinal-PatrlarchofVea- •.n C--_1 ~tt~oa of Pope John: . -. ~ ... UR:Io 10.090 A
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B'ish~p Asks LO'·'·:·.-: .ChtiSUbl:e',····ICrbSI.,· ~,Exp'·"tain,;·; J!:eStin·ii:·'·'~Pray:.: erJ.··~·~,:·:.!~~·~~!i'~OR::-:, .... ,~... 1'3 'A-d e t', he , . ' ~. ., . 1:' "',"',' . ;,.Thurs.,N~-.: ..19, 1959. -
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. PITTSBURGH (NC)....:..The·' ;'. ' By Re~. Rolapd Bousquet . .. " :' . ..... . laity can d "th , ... Joseph II Chul'eh, New Bedford • priests an~nSi::~ ~~I~e:h-' The chas~ble' is the last of th'e sacred ~~stments taken by· the celebrant. Tpday two·.n. '. · ing the truths of Cathol- ~orm8 of. the chasuble ~ppear i~ our ~anctuar~es. One style .is square' shaped and consists' .NE'YARK (NC) - New icism both to the young and to In two wIde bands of stIffened sdk whIch fall In front and In back. The upper ·po.rtionof . Jersey s voters have overadults, Bishop John J. Wright the frontal band is narrowed to permit the .celebrant to move' his arms e~sily. The other whelmingly approved antiof Pittsburgh said at a Mass clos- form of the chasuble is more .' ~ . Sunday shopping legislation ing ~he Pennsylvania regional circular in shape. This ample in 12 of the 15 counties where mee.tll~g of the .Confraternity ,of vestment falls to the knees the issue was on the Nov. 3 ChrIstIan Doctrme. ballot. They' a Is 0 approved a More than 1,500 participated and to the upper parts of the in the Mass by reciting prayers arms in gr?cef~l folds. , $66,800,000 bond issue_ to aid in response to the Bishop. They ',Voven SI~k IS the onl~ maexpansion of the state-supported were among some 3,000 people te~Ial used In the confectIon of university, Rutgers and six state who attended the three-day CCD thIS bl.essed garment. Some of colleges. Bond issue opponents regional meeting, the first ever the s~Ictest Orders, ![luch as the included·the State's three Cathheld in Pittsburgh. TrapPIsts may wear woolen chaolic newspapers and the Knight.s . . '. subles at Mass. of Columbus ' ArchbIshop John Mark GanThe beauty of the chasuble Th f' d S d non, Bishop of Erie, was seated lies in the richness of the soft b . e re eren ad on .~t ~y in the sanctuary.' At the end of silk falling in graceful folds nUewslnesst w erelm~let·possl e ·· hY the Mas B' h W' ht .d . , s ate egIS a IOn w h IC . S IS op rIg pal thus envelopmg the celebrant in allows each c01,1nty where the ~rJbute to him for his life-Jong a sober, yet dignified attire. No' issue is placed on the ballot te mterest and encouragement in ornamentation on. the chasuble vote on accepting a: law which all aspects of the work of the .. was kno~n before the thirteenth' prohibits the sale of clothing, Church. c~ntury; Today. modest decora-·. building ~ arid lurriber supplies Evidence of Importance' tions .aI:e: pe~mltte~. Th~y usu- " , . and home and office furnishing. Bishop Wright termed the re- al~y .CO~SISt In two bandIngs Oil, and appliances: llPOPse of the lay people and the front an~ the other on the . E~ective Immediately . Rtlligious to the regional meet-' bac~. The .fr~>ntal band forms· The new,Sunday-closing Ill_ ing "irrefutable evidence" of the·· a .PIll~r Tunnu:lg down lengthgoes into effect on Nov. 15. It ,:'importance of the CC~ program WIse In the. mIddle. Two orphprovides penalties for violain our time.. . rey. form a cross on the back. 'tions, unlike old legisla~ion, "If only we can keep this Mass Vestment .' more than 50 years ago. The law w~ek~nd enthusiasm -and deter-' The young priest first receives . is already being contested' ill mmatIon to make the'Confrater- this 'sacerdotal vestment at hi.· court and on November 13, Sunity of Christian Doctrine pro- ordination; The chasuble is perior Court Judge Everett M. gram a success, then we need worn only for the celebration of Scherer in Trenton will hear have no worry about the future Mass: The celebrant who preachoral argl;lments. of the work of our dioceses," he es at the pulpit· removes it along CatholIc newspapers and the said. with the maniple. But it is worn K. of. C. opposed the college Beginning with the revival at the celebra.tion of marriage ?ond Issue on the grounds that and eJ:!:pansion of the CCD by" when the marriage immediately It . was not necessary becau~e Pope ·St. Pius X, ~ishop Wright· precedes the nuptial Mass.' . prIvate. colleges planned lng traced the role of the laity in . The ancestor of our modern expanSIon pro~rams, and .other teaching religion not only to chasuble was a mantle-like gar, methods of fma~cmg ald. te children and teenagers attending ment called th,e "paenula."· It colleges wer~ avaIlable: . non-Catholic schools, but also ~onsisted in a large circular. It a~so cl~Im~ ~hat It would to one another by' means of dis-' piece' of cloth. A hole in' the put p~Iva~e mshtutI?ns of. ~Igher cussion groups,' seminars and, .center of the garment pel'mit-·. learm~g m an unfaIr posItIon to study programs. ted Jhe wearer to . drape it· on comp~te for students because of Th F 'th .' t be" l' 1 . his . shoulders ·and let it falL· the hIgher fees they would hav~ e al. III 0, ;:lC Ive. y . . ' . . ' . ", to charge since they do not 'have enjoyed. a~d commun.icate,~" by' 1~1~~Y:~~°stut~s~:dTh~.Pthaer~urse to state funds. , . all ChrIstIans, the BIshop con"'" n a, .:.1 .' pp.a e " .' . e, '- . ~inued, .each being. called: ~" fo~th ,'. c~~tury and· was:ql,ute, . th I' A fi '. lipread It accordingly. He ex- popUlar wIth both-. men.a~d "":'0-' . an .. a 0 Ie ,c on plained that the CCD. eXi~ts ~n 9f~e'~~~.!ln~mpI~,.AII_" MeetlngN.ext Ye~r that each person can grow Intbe ... ~ o~t of ~oor~ g~rment~~~ .~a~.. . . ,ME:~nCO CITY: (NC) -;- A lmowle~ge and 'love of the :Faith, e~ec~aJly., appr~cla~ed; . Ill, ,th~ "meeting of Catholic .A:'ctioa by learning more about it· ~Int~r· ,1JWnth~,. A ',s~~l'ar :'I?ie<;e. " l e a d e r s from every SO'ulh Amer- . through teaching and disc~-' '«4 ~l~tl.ung st~ll .. su.r.:VI~es In the . '. country has been ptanned ing it. " w~ath~rproof . cloaks: w~ ,b7' , ' . for November 1960· to establish ...goSpe1 . Inst .e,a ' 'd' h' e ',.. : .plan " for the apotola te.• .., ' the " peasants '..... of the , Tyrol, . '. " wears a b r08 d S't'ff' lene d .b'7' I i" nsel:.it'·mg 'a -th'ICk ' a concrete Stresses 1mportan,ce :" Stri~ly: CleriCal' Ga.rment stol~ 'untU ;:lfter the, cQl1)munion.iihing~betweenthe 'chaSUble' and' The continental meeting ''1!''ill The sacredness Ot the div'in'~' Formerly', the deacon rolled anI!' its. regular: lining. The' 'sides of' be clilled the Inter-American Of Teaching Science ' niysh~ries' quickly .introd"4~e~· iwiste~ thecbasuble"and'placed' 'the ga~merit\vere graduatiycut: W~ek o~ Catijolic Action' and' BALTIMORE (N:G) The .. the custom of usi"ng .8 speCi;il . it on' 'the 'left' should~t and ·f3st-·, away' to:· p~rmft 'the priest to. "!IILbegm on Nov. 20, 196(l, PreCat!t0lic college. must ~ar~, "!paenula" in the' sacred func- eiIed·und~'r:the'·rightarm. .. The iaise·,·hisarm~.Thisgave us ihe-: vious Catholic Action week. agam~t the teachm g " of SCIence c '. tioDs.The cu.t. of this $peeia! .stole' was' adopted when there": o. squar~, 's?aped' -chasq~le ' ",hich:' ~ere held in Chile in 1947, Cuba as a crash program meant to garment remairied similar to the ' 'gular cha~ul:M becamestiffeilecl has .little'resembla,:!ce· to, the. ~ In' 1949, Peru in 1953 and U.rufill a present need, Bish~p Law_ one used in everyday purpoSes.' with'ah,inserted ·lirihlg. . ,primitive chasuble. ",. .'. ,', ,~guay. in 1956.. _ re?ce .1. Shehan of ~rId~eport Spain seems to nave been ~e' ,- The :ttimsition: from: the. soft· . "Thecf;lebra~t ~~ve.loped-.in.Mfiliated., organizatio?1l ",in · ~Id here at thede~Icabon.of" first .country ..to set aside, the' ample chaSUble: to the :stiffened', the' .Chllsuble, U!l remI!1,d~d to IUg~el't ,~bJects to be dISCUssed Doyle Hall, new reSIdence ~all, !'paenula" or.chasuble ~s:'itbe-' garnien(,,!hich'~s9:familiar·to..· accept·th~. yoke o~ p~rlst, The.' durmg the week and a program at the College of Notre Dame. oi came known 'thereaft~r for' the day canbe·.trllced ~ the thir-: cross,which.' he . bears on ·the _ will be published in advance of M~rYla?d., • exclusive use at the: altar. By the" teenthcent.U1:;y:·eustom qf add- chasuble is:s~tn?o,lic 9£ the ~ole. :~he meetin~. Methods of spre~~. DurlOg the pa~t f~,w ye~rs, RveiIth:ce~t~I'y,.the traris~tion: lng. ornamental .stripes.,to the of the PrI~St.,:I?!..OU!" modern- :mg. the ~alth t~rQugh CatholIc B~shop Shehan saId, AmerI~a.n . was complete~.. Men and women . chasuble:iAt. this time the .chas- world. He. IS to present to.. ~he ActI~n WIll. be dIscussed and the -< h~gher eduC~tion has been crltl-:- ha,d given up' ,the chas~b,l~ .as a '9~Je ~!1s'still.p~~ctically.cir-. wor~d the Image,:oft~eCr,ucdled ~eetmg WIll o.ff~'r a comp~~te clzed especIally ,fo... , itll neglect wearing apparei foi' nioreprac- . clllar' ~nd quite. ~~p.ple (I.ike the. ChrIst as'· the only way to eternal. view of the relIgIOUS and,. SOCIal .f the natural sciences. In. vie"li! tical clothing~' The clergyhow~ one i'epreseq~~,d ~?:~the pIcture).' life.. .' . > .. '. ': ' ,. climate.iIl Latin/:A.merica, ~ · o.f th~ events of this period it.i8 'e~er,~did ·not· adoPtOth~;. .ri.~w. " ':.",: .. ~f.~ ~~s~le: '" ~"c(Next'w«k~~·papUstry.>,.,committ.eesaid. ' . wo ~tnamen~,L:stripel wer:--, , ,. DOt ~Ike~y that such n~gl~t WIll' style and the"'eh!1siJ,~h; ~a~e, ' i ., ~ntmue, but the danger Ml that known as a stricti,. 'clerical au':' ~~ 10 the cha!!uble. At tbl, ., .. I . " the approach ,to llCience today ~t.' , " . .... tone' the' chasllble ·wa~ ample' G ~ ' will be. of a purel7' utilitarian ' '-" ,.. "":. . ! ' . ,.a~d fell into, folds about' the .' '. ~. : ~ 'I· ': character." . . ' Fold~ Ch~~':'I~". _ . . "body. The cross, ho.wever, wall' , _ , " ' , Bishop.,Shehan· however '!,'be ,~~~r~~ .}D1D1S,terll ~wore: 'thus hidden in'Uie' creases of·the' , .' ,r'HE A r R.E' " " \", " -.' r ., '.. 'phasized the importarice of liei':':, ~ ~~a~ble...«:I~erent!y ;fr~m: 'garmt!nt;"'I~ "0r.d,;r 'to' ~emed7" ., . :" ' ". . '" , ' . '., enee ai a. part of' all! liberal .~ ~rle~. ,~~,l!u~,:de~co.~II,I:if~:- " thifl·situat~on . ,the'#at~ent "'81" f;" . .~.....~. . education. He'said that 'modern ed the sId~ ~1. tM: cI}1:I~l?le ,~~- " ... " " . <m·'.. ' : .... '~.. ",. '" '.' educators mUlltput at ~ stu-' ,.to.'~he",sho~ld~~ .. ,~.. r~lI~of WII : " ;" ",':..t'" M-=N "17'~ 25'
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· 'tary scientific training without j~~v~nt. the. 4e apon. am~ . .,..p-", S~ie!y of .BrotherS of which' theY would ·lind,·.them;. ,dea~n~ear }(>!ded ,chas,uQ.l~.~.. .,':""'" ... .:'" ,i. : • . '; ~ selves complete~y; 10,:'t in their . I~s:;~se:i~a~f~;' J.:~ f~~~i <?u~. ~a,dy ?f:Pro~~~enc;e. future surroundI!'1gS~ ., ~stead of. the. sides was a!iapte~ ~or:'I1~orlllat'C?,n';Wl'lte toe . wlten ; the chaSUble.: c(l~sed ,to, ;.','. M:r~~R.·M~STER . Catholic Pop'ulcition '. bave sides.' " ',.' , :',.'. '.' :5,t.· Jo~eph,: .. ~e.Work~~ The deacon dUrI~,the pe~i. NOVItIate.-\. " " Largest in Fairbanks '~ ttmtial season~ rep'Ioves the' fold-: ',.".' .WorWick "Neck, R. I. .:FAIRBANKS (NC)-A Cened chasuble befo.re readinf; .the. sus taken here' shows that of 40 religious denominations named by individuals interviewed, the largest number listed memberlhip in the Catholic Church. ,I •Of 10,"~5 people polled in ·"'ASSES:-7; 8,~.:45, 10, 11 q.m., 12:10 Nodn·ond·5:10 p.m• Fairbanks area'· the Catholic' ". EVENING MASS:;·'S:10'p.m. . Church registered 2,069. Popu. . .. lation of the Fairbanks area ST. JUDE DEVOTIONS: 10 a.m~, l2:10'noon, 5:10, 7& 8 p.m; .. polled is estimated at 14,808 persons. CONFESSIONS:E~ery day from"S:ia 'in the morning until Results of the census showed . 9 o'clock in the,'e~ening , that Fairbanks, located 100 miles below the Arctic Circle, has the OUR LADY'S CHAPEL --'franciscan Fathers' largest far-north concentration' 572 PLEASANT STREET; N~ .. BEDFORD; .MASS. of Catholics on the North Ame~t;1,.~Jl ~\ rican continent.
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.THANKSGIVING:: DAY'~'THURSDAY ..
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Ao.MI~S~QN AT' ALL SPECIAL 'TEEN-AGE
'Free, Saturday 'Nig'ht Win Your Thanksgiving Tu.rkey . At The Strand'Theatre- .
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Ambassador Cite Needtop'rotect
THEANCHPR-Diocese of F(JII'River~ThurS.,Nov;-19;;959
SerVe "Pumpkin .Chiffo·n .Pie
UK~tjo~i~Cl_
To Top off Holiday Dinner
U. S. Catho\ic Youth has
By JOan Meadows' . . . . ',~j',Th~hksgiving.Day is 3J" .. typically. 'Airterican as'the·. em-ar..:store Indian; yet thank8~glvirtg" thegivirig',of tha.rtks, . '. . iSZ;'as. old as the human race.' Down throtigil':th~ .. ceilturie~ : : gifktelul :people have. given th~I1k8" to ,God•. ,Wh~ :CalviD: . . . ' C()oIldge "was _president,. he .. li"ke ':all"C<l"'e'atl·v.e pe-r'sons', ,!s"'a"'., ,SU:plmedup in .the cryptic ways on the lookout for new . m'~riner . for, which he was eom6iQ8tions-new ways U; ,preflinious his personalconvic- pare. st~ to add deu~ous .{
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been urged to, remain' faith.. . . fui to the standards o( per-. sonal arid: national .hloralitY which' are the' traditioOlil basis of the· American way of life.' .. . , Th' . .... ha~.,beel). ' . made :. ,by . IS ap'p~~ Irish Ambassador to the U. So John J. Hearne at the Mth bi.. ennial convention' of the' Nation.. 81 ,Couricil of: Catholic Youth, Diocesan Section. More than -. 11,000 young' people from all parts of the country packed the Kansas City· Muriicipal 'Auditorium for the Missouri corivention. Mr. Hearne' told the young people that "there is no more fruitful field of stUdy ·for the
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troris . concerning Thanksgiving ...·savor to the ~~~ey. H~re's a with this message: .' ., .:. new ~nd d~a~!ltIcallY diffe~ent "We have been a mo'st favored taste sensa~lOn for your .hohday p~ople,' We ought to be a most ~~d. Give your stuffing a lemon generous pee . o· .' . ]UI~ ~~atment!' !-ou'll find pIe. We' oug} lemon JUice adds ZI.p an~ tang to';'. be. a mOl that the entire famtly will retKAnkful pee: member with pleasure. pli'," .'. FRESH LEMON STUFFING'
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.' '.2 com 'rOUD bread stuffing (6 cups) o~ try." He declared that the conb'o u n t i f u. , to 8 cups' dry bread crwilbs, . . cept of human dignity has been Th a n ksgivin seasoned. wilh salt, pepper and LONDON (NC) ~ The only wick Airport in ScoUand. Mr. "basic, from the. very beginning tables this equally: cryptic and .• poultry seasoning survivor' of . a Christmas air· Russell escaped with injuries. of your history as a fr:ee nation, aiinost-slangy expression of .G. . 1 J,( cups brot,h or one bouijIoa disaster five years ago, 'a Prot-· All' of the other 28 passengers in. the structure of your constiK. Chesterton ~seelDS; to m.e,· to 1 tcube .-.' ed I peel estant, is planning a free pil- were killed. : tutional democracy and its juris-. . te ' .~. easpoon grat emon . . be Very approprt~ 10 sum~m~ , . S ,tablespoons fresh lemon juice grimage to Rome this Christmas . When he recovered conscious-' prudence,". . up the true meamng of the. day. . S tablespoOns minced parsley for a pianeful of sick and dis- ness a Catholic priest was bendThe Irish Ambassador de_ ."If man were not free,' ,he, - 1 cup chopped celery abled people in thanksgivjng. ing over him giving him condi- - clared that the "Crown" worn· eould never say, "'l'hank you for J,( cup bacon fat, 01' margarine. _ On' ·Dec. 25, 1954,. Harr.:Y J.. ti~?al 3:bsolutio~. ., longest by the nation is "the the' mustard.' " . melted . ' R u s s e l l , 55-year-old head of a .' lowe my own: salvation to fidelity of her people.to the :;Modern cooks .duplicate old-, , .. IC· cu P.chopped II' ;onion . ." .. London charter plane company . that Catholic·priest;"· he told . Faith of their fathers," bme a, mgre d lents stir-. ,. d'I~~~ 'i>..;'Hrig ' omweil; . , from:' the ' . ' c' repo"ter:l!:.'Ithou~h~ , . . Thljlo.k ~gIVln,g. fa~.h.io.ned ;'stuH' tUrkei: shiff" 'pulled himself blazmg I might, pay .He told ..the' .Catholic young WIth much .less fuss and bot~e~ ;'r,llghtly to' allow for ex" 'nsiiHl,,·!!!wreek,,;ofll,.:,:British· ·OveJ1~as ::..: f?rwr life ..b.~ ~~~I,?:g,~'p~ppl~ a" .... peOl?~e that!th,~4' '~ti.deli~y ·W. tb~ than went mto the preparatIon h'l k' Th' i pa h- Airways stratocruiser at Prest- little help WIth their faIth. I am . Faith is the surest guarantee a few years ago_. There ~e ex-;~ ~ w I. ~ coo mg. ,IS s enoug not a religious man ·but I have" wbl~h your coun,~ry possesses cellent stuffing' mixes for 'the:' sWffm~ fOf: ~12 to 14>p'ouq,d Nov.' 26 -:-:b~en forced 'to'· the,'coQcluslon toa.iy' of the stability of its in.. turkey which now comes clean ..turkey. Use half the amount to that something or someone was stitutions and .of the steadiness' . ;.. ' '.'rea d y.. " C'rib" :1,'" stuff aI 4. to5 pound. bird. ' . lookmg .after ,me ·tI~~t morning and enligbt'eriinEmt . , 'of its "lea~ and . oven· ra erry' '. '., .'. ,. ,i• . • • ", .or .<our ar InaI5... sa~Hle. and miIl,~emeat a~e,:Ie~~y Var atlon:,:T1U~eJ' Casserole ,.', VATICAN CITY "(NC) _ at· Prestwick." el1sp.ip of .the free ,world."'" .'. tQ."use, with ,the !,'''!Tillt. of-a,C;~f};;\. . Fo~ ~ld ,left-ov.erturk.ey~· ..' 'Sol .M· f eli I s . Fervor bnpressiv:· I,.".,.', H,!!, '," ... ,', op~ner;aq,d.S9)are,spi~"~Ii,w.e,,. poultry, remove tneatfro~ iM":' '~~~ve'~f~'d:::ri °fh~~b~"::-:;" .':"';'" , '..;. ".-; ,'~'\.,;\ .. ' ·":,:J,Papal·:Vi5it·· :. ' ~aches ThIS lUSCIOUs £nut, ~ bqne. Make.up,tbe,·st~ng' U ' .... "" '" " .. "g.". \. ,.".;He~ld,~,a~.,w~ep!,~e.ac:tu~Q.r, ·R""ME·'.. (N;o)....:..His "Holin'"e"ss .... " . . ','. . '. "t"",,:'"'' givenandarr g ' 10ft teo yearwIll.~celeb~atedNov.26, 'awoke on a streteher;-aftetbe-' Pbep"John»XIU'made:'an v v ...llopular ,garmsh for u,rt"eY"i.'k·. ' . an el~ ,a ..,.,.~a ··:,·three da oefor th beg" . 'g"() ,., ..,. u~· h: it "b ked ~ or roastS: .' layers with. the 'poultry pieceSUl, ',. . . ys . e. e ~~ mg given drugs anc;l a blood c ICROeAn'ST~'TU'R'K' EY 'WIT'R"""'-" • ·\)il.tte·red ·disserble. COvet ~" of'tbe"n~ 'year, 10: the Sistll1e"~risftision by" a' Uriited'States')' expected visit to a former class-.. .c' • 't _' . ,...... casserole and .place in • moe:(.... Cba~ 10, the presence .of the AU" .Force rescue·'team~he waS" 'mate;:: Bishop. ~opso· de "SaneSPICED GARNISH . . . . ' o 'F.)forlhour . ' . pa.pa1 _...... 'Po·pe· T _I.;" . XXIII· " bit .' of Todi who 18' rec'overl'n-. . ".,..PEACH ... '., erateoven,(350 . .'"-VV&', .. ~~" a.annoyed':~find'Father·..... ,.; .. 1',;,rk~r. }2 to 14 ,pound t~ker for flavors to blend-and stuffing Will give the absolution at the Lawrence B~n of Prestwick fron]. heart, tr(lUble. _.at a· Rome. St3ffl~~~rts dry bread to cook and. brown lightiT.- . ~d of th~ ~ass'. _.".. pra~iiigov~r h~. "But I could hOsPitaL· , %; 'te.'\spoon pepper • • .F~ cardin~ls ~ve di~ dur- not help ~mg tmpressed. by his ,1 "cup melted butt« « To top off. th8t big . Holidq ing. the eccleslastical year: Car-· fervor.· ,Smce then I "have been , ,margarine ., \ dinner, serve this luscious dinaI J~ Maria Caro. Rod- brought face to face with, other ~ teas~n poultry _ninl pUmpkin 'Chiffo~ Pie. It's light riguez, Archbishop of, Santiago, examples of faith and what it (optIOnal) . and fluffy-yet still traelitioQal Chile; Cardinal Georges Grente, does to people.~ . 2, teaspoons ~h -the perfect finish to • festive BishoP of Le ~, France, CarHe has set· up a selection sageinstant llI" i1Uiiced' ~ilsion! ' diDBI C' ' Archb'1$h _.. comm~ttee . .mcludmg . '21 teaspoon tablespoons rlSan to' L uqu~,.., two priests, ,."onion, or'~ cup finely'chopped" ,.PUMPKIN . CHIFFON pg ' " op ofBog~~, Colombia,. and Car.. ' orgamzers of Lourdes pilgrim"""' .;' 'raw onion' \ .; , .. ", . -,1, envelope uriflavorecl gelatiDe·, '. dinal FederICo Tedeschmi, Arch.. ·~· ages, and Group ..Captain LeOnCiblet stock or hot watM to ·moistea" .. 3. eggs, separated " . ",."" priest.of St.' Peter's Basilica.'" . ardCheshire', Catholic 'wartime .,'f1;1rk~~: Remove~ypinfe~~h- .1, .tablespoon,. pumpkia pie. spice" . .:~ " , " . ..... " fighter .ace ~~().; ~~ds. his' ~ij~ er:s.'from tut~~y;.u,smgt:wee~en... $ teaspoon saIL ,.... . .' _:,' Eu.char,lstrc.C~ngre55:: w?r~i~. f0t:' Uie a~e~~nd sick;':. or eye of darn 109 needle. 'Smge' ::J,( teaspOOn"cre,am ofWtai, .. ", "~ H'" 'L' 't'h" .. .H' I .,.. . to pick some 70 deserving Cath-' . o'ff"'r'eJ.:.alr1ing···h·'a'irs'and w. aSh.'·iliP. . .J,(' Clip coi-.t 1!'a'ter .... a5.,j U .' eran,,, e. p~,,,,·;-,' ol'I'-c'·, .·o·r'·.'n'.o'n"·-C··at"h'·"oli·c··'.'P'.'eo'''·p.I'e.' 'w"'h''0"" III . ",. tiJpbtow,'o'suglu:' '. , :.,.• "".C\ co1li' 'water, -iil4ide' aild'oilt:"Pat · · ' ~ U N I C H ;'(NC) ''''-'Bavaria'." 'might benefit froiha ' pi~inl2 eli):.: 1% Clips mashed c"oked: .',;:- ,.'" Lutherans'wiU, hell> thIs state'.'" age't6' -QoQ1e: "',The~:; w.ill s'-"""Di(' . '!J. .YSalt .. , .,iWSi.de"··'caVity;""."pl:trr. <., i ,. , . . , '" ,canoed;pumpkin,·,,-, :<";'"",,,q,,;:. C th Ii fi d ' ......,...~, " ...... #.,0<'" < ..... gil;)ei,ts . .to·. s.i,.m)n~r'.in_ hot:'w.al~' i1JA..;.,cup,mil.k.. ""., , ., '.',' , tha 0 csto. n housing for tbe';: .fo''!,r:Q~ f~y~,·daysiher~·a~d hope':' . . ~f" cbver;"witl1 ,) sl~¢ed '-'ijriion;" cd ousands :expected,,"to '·take ' tohaye .':ift atidleri. ' ""'i£b.:Po e': tops: "I)n~'~few' '1'Pr.fg~: of:, .~.,. rb.Ies~l1-8j:~n~t. .f1! lM.~,,; part .;i~'·~unich~s.·,International,,·.. J~~ll:'wi,i,_':,'\""~:~":. Po.' \: ...... , .... _.... :.. ~ ,... ..... parsley, 'addihg:':;llver""1aSt"~ 1$" :.oR 'k~d\l; sugtr"",~en.l:'r.' Euchar,lsbc ,Congress, next yearl:.,,·'· '"'--<., . . . - .... " .', "" . ' , .,"" minlites. . . _ " , < , , , 10::~a;' :.PM'~e:'~«m","·:'R:~",~!":.~::;,l':' ::''/AJi''appear:'foriaSsist~lIii:e'wa',: .. . ....... " i,:3"':Test"fOr'Donenesii ": ' f " . ; !"A'dd' ..I.. .,.... I'. read"iIt·, Lutheran'" :,,<;,j ., : . . . . .... .. "Stuffing: Combine dry stuf.. ' . . geiatin~'to"COld,w~~' .' 'way·of,·t}ialikirtg· Bavarian' fing ,Toss with but-" and' allli?w 'lto fot·the"silIiilar·help: ... . Oil 'BURNERS' .er and suffic.ienfgib~et stock ~" yo lks s. ght,Y.; ad,d. ~own.,s~gar, they gave during"the .natiohal TRY· OUR,SEA·.. fOODPLATE, .'A1so'" eoIDPlete',Boiler-Burner moisten." . Fill ":breast . cavity' . I",lmpkl.n, J?umJ;>krn.- pie .SI>IC~ ljlnd Lutheran conference held here' . . . . . 'FO'R' 9Bc'. , "or Furnace ·UnUs. Efficient' llghtiy .withsiuffingand pin the' sa~t. IX. thoroughly. Gradu~I~Y: earlier this y e a r . " " " " (ow' cost. beating. 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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River--':'Thurs.,Nov. 19, 1959
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SCHOOL OF RELIGION: The ~ime and talents of many ,adults and youngsters combine to. ensure the smooth :running of St. Michaers School of Religion, Fall ·River. Left, Stephen Lopes, .standing, distributes refresh,. menta during break ,in teen-age ~tivitiesto; left to right, Milton Souza;
Pat Correa _and Nancy Dias. At center., Linda Silvestre, first grade cate-, chist, goes over the all-important question," "Who made ybu?" 'with Gwendolyn Duponte,·standing. Right; Gerald H. Silvia, school principal, talks to George Moniz, left, -and William Silvf~ , ,< " •
Aid for farmers ,St. Michael's',iri'''FallRiver Reaches Hundreds ·Rock Chapel'
PJ~:C~sCI!~e~_pope"Of Youngsters" With Weekend 'School
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Nations' Food and AgricultureOrganization as an "immense work of mercy on a world lCale."
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~ohn has praised 'the United'
M.ost ,parish schools are quiet places over' the" weekend; Not St. Michael's in Fall River! foot-long chapel',' cut; into the I'd k d tiL"lV &turday and ,Sunday mornings" it buzzes with as much life as on any schooldaY. The ~~: l~l~nero~:~:~' as : ; reason is St. 1,fichael's newly organized SChool of ,Religion, set up with as much care as an temporary cathedral'of the'Livorthodox five-days-a-week project. 'Saturdaymornings 170 little girls from public gram.;. erpool archdiocese. ' ~o~~ea~llr:t r~:res~~~:~~es P:::: mar schools crowd into St. edge ~f the Catholic faith pos~ how to keep children occupied The straight, broad underobservers from some 80 coun- Michael's, beautiful class- sible and not merely'to prepare with varied activities to hold ground church, which gives all easy view the mainIaltar to tries that he is especially pleased' rooms' for two' ,hours of' them for the sacram.ents of pen':' their interest. th of 1 000 ' the' . t ruc t'Ion. I E uch arist and con.,. There's even recess on the' 'more e, ISbeen with FAO's program for im- IDS ance, H 0 y crypt of an, what waspeop to have P roving the lot of farm workers. "Coming from a rural family," he said, "We have seen with Our own' eyes in Our youth and We have never forgotten how gr eat are the labors and burdens Of those who dedicate them-lves to working the land. To ~ contribute toward lightening
S d . 't' h bo ' firination; to prepare youth to catechetical program. A ten· al un ay mornings 1St e ys take an active part in parish and minute break in mid-morning . the second biggest cathedr turn and 150 first to eighth community' affairs and to as-' gives youthful energy. an outlet after St. Peter's basilica in Rome graders are present. Monday sume leadership therein. and prepares the children for - in the wor~d. It was comnight is reserved for high Scho~l another work session. pleted before Archbishop John students. Some 250 attend youth~is set-up wouldn't be posArrangements for high school C. Heenan of Liverpool decided slanted discussion groups and sible if we didn't have the facil-, , . students are more informal than to modify the costly 'long-term social activities. itie~" said Father Dos Rels, . l' for the little children. Boys and pl,ans of his predec,e,ssor and Who's ~e~Ahl·n.! poin ing out that St. Michae s girls meet at 6:30 Monday nights erect a cheaper cathedral "with..., .. own ,parochial school, only two k' 1 in our 'lifetime." " Who's teaching these young- years old, has room to accom- and brea up Into round t.ab e their burden, ~ give a little sters. For the most part, high modate the public school' chil- groups in St. Michael's auditorThis cathedral, which win more of the good things of life schoolers are handling the .fir~ to dren and separate them into iuln. Each group is led by an cost, an estimated three million to those who make possible the eighth graders. All' are attend- groups by grades. "If we had to adult ad·visor. All are tackling dollars and for whose design the bread of other men-what a hig the' Confraternity of Chris- conduct classes in thec"urch"we ,the same topic at the same t!me.. . Archbishop has opened a comwonderful work of mercy thii tian Doctrine teach er,tr·· .~ ' th e ses- petition.' .among British' arch... , ammg couldn't be thia organized," be· " F ath er R oc h a.'k eeps is, and how worthyof'encour-' courSe currently being 'given at said. ' sions gQing and. also presid~s at . teets,: wilibe erected over the agement and praise!~ St.LOuis chUrch hail, Fall River. The SaturdaY. and $1Jn~ay ses- Ii' question box' period .eacl;! .. existing crypt. Until ,this is done, Uilder'the active' direction.· 01. alions run from 9 to 11. Typical. week, Following tile study time, the crypt will ser·ve as cathedral Crime Increases Rev. Arthur C. dO. Reis,pastor,' of the young teachers hi pretty lIOCial activities are on" the' Britain'. moSt 'Catholic dieLOS ANGELES (NC) - ' The and Rev. AnthOny ·Rocha,' assist- Linda . SilveStre; who ',handles agenda. Youngsters' wiIlpar.tici': 'C.'eile: . ' . '. . ' , eommander of ihe LQs Angeles ,aQt, th~'lay ~techistsare he~d~ . firllt grade girls., Asfi.lQent at pate, in. parish "and, Diocesan .,..'• • • •IIIIiI• • • •IIIIi~1 PoliCe . Department's juvenile eel by Gerald B: Silvia as 'Prbi- ,~ac!~ Beartl! Aca,.demr" Linda' CYO' activities, have occasional bureau told a"U. S. Senate sub-cipal." . . admits she was sCa,r~ th~ first special dances, in addition to. the eommittee on .juvenil~ delin-: 'It's Silvia's;.jpb to ,~r41nate time she 'faced her class, none 'parish dance held~very Frjda~ quency ,that. j'uvenile arrests 'activities and see that> the hun~ 01. whom had any previous train- ' nigl)t, and .al86 .plan to. establish here increased 118 per cent in dreds of boys' and-girls enroll~ ing in religion. hobby' clubs in' fields ·sucl:J. as' 'the last eight years. Capt. B. ~., in 'St. Michael's program .... music and art 'appreciatiort. Glavas said the increase has kept busy, and interested. "But now I love .it. They're ~n all" 570 .public ~choolboY$ " '. ?ery good, and very Smart," she h d b St' been caused by "a breakdown of The sChool's purpOse 18 twosaid. She paid tribute to the Con-' I!nd girls are rea<; e, ' Y. • the moral and' ethical climate of . fold: to': give pupils the most fraternity of Chrfst'ian' Doctrine Michael'sall-inclusi~e prog,ram. , -untry." thoroug'hand -mplete knowl This is in addition to the' 315 the eourse she is t8klD..g,' say:ing that ...................... regularly enrolled in " the' parish .It provides many use~l hints OIl SChOOl. • , , , e ' Parents were contacted by a V FranciscQn Teachers well-plan~ed 'drive, including I II 'ST. BONAVENTURE' (NC) _ correlation of census calls with, :rianci~an teaching sisterhoods inquiries, as to- children in pubhold tbeir annual meeting' lic school and distribution of an Enjoy a wonderful worry,at Sacred'Heart' Academy, Buf'" attractive pamphlet-'. stre's'sing free, ~ar,free CHristmas talo, on Nov. 27 and 28. Theme that "the education of- your child feeling. next year. Here's ,01. the sessions will be "Commu.:. is your responsibility...· The re':', The only Catholic priest ever to serve in' Congr~. was :t:~ther., how! Just.. join Santa's OWN 1. 'IDcations .and ,the Franci~D sponse has proved the need for C\1briel Richard who, in 1823, was elected" to ,repre~nt:_' Kessage.". Christmas Club NOW at the "weekend school." (a) New York? (b) Maryland? (e) Michigan? (d).. ¥assachaTHEOU(RED BANK. . setts? '..'" ".' . Who was the renown~ bishop, 01. Bippo?:-(a) St. Pa~'·., Open Friday' Evenings / 2. (b) St. Augustine? :(c) St. Thomas? (d) St..Philip? , ' , ,: ..' 'til 8! ' , Where did. the Holy Ghost· descend on. the, AposUes? :--'o-(a) .OD. . a. / Mount 'Calvary? (~) In the cenacle?; (c) ,OD,~~t .~inai7,. Save by, mail af .(d) On Mount Olive? '. ,"" '" ,,:' ; . 4. The imprimatur iniprin~-meaninc that a .book .~s permi~iOD. , The to ~ published-is; aligned by:..,..,.(a) The ~ational ~ganiZ;8ti~ for. Decent Literat~e? (~), The eensor? (c) The ~rdinar;r 01. the . diocese? (d) The ,Legion of Decency? . ' " . " . . I I. ,'!'be Feast of the Amiunciation. of the~lessed Virgin is eele- . brated. on:-(a) M;u-ch 25th? (l!) August- 15th? (C:)', Februal'7 • 2nd? (cp December 8th? • ,\,. ; , , . . I.: Triduum Is 'another ;name for:~(a) ~, opinit;r? (b) • three:-~ prayer? (e) A triple candle? (d) The Pope's, triple crown? 'f.: Who was tJwJ first to dillCO'VeI' that the, body 01. .Jesus, was Bussing from the jjepulcher?:-(a) S~. .Joseph oI.Arimat~ea?" ,Fall, River Saving. Bad (b) MlU'7 CleophlUj7 (e) M8l'7 Salome? (d) M~y Magdalene? 141 NO. MAIN ST. L Who was the French .Jesuit priest now remembered as the Patron Saint of Cbristiaa Youth because 01. his good life?:FALL RIVER BREAD (a) St. John Berch:tnans? (b) BleSlled MaJ,'tin de Porres? (e) St. Alo)'Bi. 01. (;onzaga? (d) St. Ignatius ,91 Lo7ola? . Tel. OS 5-7868 I Gift )'Ourself 1G ~ for each correct answer OIl Page 18. ~. __~ 7O-V.,. 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law and !legislation will be pursued, the. l'eportadded.
Education
!Legislation in'SUeh fields as ; BealthProblems ,eclucation ,taxatioD" obsCenity A recommendation that 'Catbandnn.m1gtation,and litigatiGIlolic. beaJ.,thinstitutions reex": ,on a .bread range -Df ,subjects mam.me,plans inconneetiOD with 'V.@'lving the r-e1ationslrip of ,proposed ilegislation proviciling_ IChwc:h :and ;State, w:ere repmeci insurance ior hO!q)ital, ,nursing ';bY the NCWC Legal Department. home an. d . ~surgicals:rvice ,co:as !No measure,'proVdding FE*1er:al toalleli,gible for 'soOlal ,seeunty ald 'for ,education was passed 11;)1' was, made ,in the BlWeauof .:Coilgr.ess,but ffiur.ther -efforts '001 Health~d Hospi~ls' state~~nt. ibehaafof :sueh iegislation ,can SubmItted by BIShop WIlliam ' .lbe expected iDfhefutul'e, acA. ':O~Connorof SpJ1ngfield, Ill., cGrding to the report signed 'by bur~au moderator, the report Bishop EmmetM. WalshCl)f said tJ;t~ ~e?islation, sponsored Y;CI)ungsto~, ,Ohio, episcopal by ReP. 1\ime,:'. For?nd of .AII Grad, A - Broad breasted meaty birds - Guaran!eed ehairman of the ·department. Rhode Island, provoked mteres~ 'The report pointed out ,that 'be~au~e: ,the .health care of~e :F~deral aid to education ,proagmg IS a s~ousproblem which , ., Is 'introduced in the' !last cannot be Ignoreq., and the cost ,::li>n of Con,gress were un- :($1.~ billion for first year'sopprecedentro in that they pro-~atIOn) o~ the ~r0l!;am,seems vided for a permanent progl:aID. somewhat startling. ALL itt has been the traditional 'Cath'T~e report st,ate~ ,that.t~e OVEN olic position to ,oppose aperma- 'NatI~n~1 Fede:.atio~ ,of~ath<!.lic READY . nentaid to education prGgr~, ' PhYS~Cl~Gwlds c.ontIDue~ ,to d this stand wasreiterateci III flOUrIsh and the NatIOnal CounIdeal for SmaD families La statement issued by A:reh- cilofCatholic NiIrsesenjoys, OYen Read, Jhi;ihop Albert ',G. Mey& ,ofOhi- "continuing success." Msgr. Don,cago while Cong1'ess was eon- . aId A. McGowan, :bureau 7-Rib Cut - 'Young, Tender LI j" '0 'ng various proposals, .the \ director, continues as national Jll erl . 1 '. of th h" 'Legal DepartmeI1t -recalled. . cha~ al~ '~p ~slclansorRib End Roast with Chops In the area ofobseenitY,.the gamza~lon. an~ a;dVIsor to the Representatives ,en- nurses counCIl I l l , matters of Of S H C le l U , . po li cy and Iegis . 1a t'Ion. Finast t d biLl.designed ,to str~th- ' 'public La :~ eand streamline PostOffi~ Education Activities Same Low ~"·Service Prices in All Stores in This Vicinity - (We Re_ the Right to limit Qullntitiesl adminlstrativeiProcedures, III The Department ,of Educa,tion's dealing with objectionable ma- activities ranged f~om its ai:\1~ual terial. However, -the measure statistical study, ,of Catholic ,was not acted upon iby \he education to helping ,1J:)ring ,Senate. , .~ ,foreign highschool stl1d~ts A highly 'im,poI'tant deoISlOA into the country for a years :FlNAST - ;Fancy,Medium. Smaft JUMltE·PAC - Small ~ Large ',in the obscenity field'was stay, Archbishop Albert ·G. 1 'handed down ~y the Su.pce.me Meyer of Chicag~, episcopal ' ~ CGUrt, w~chheld ,that a fIlm chairman, reported. \ ANAST --Fancy, Sma1I Siz.' FINAST -' For Light Flaky Crust could, not 'be banned ,~ven His Ileport also noted that a though it ,advocated ,~Idea' department communication in HI -that adulter,- is ,acceptable. The his name was sent, to Congres-. JARS Legal Department., stated -that . sional committees studying ,Fed'or Pumpkin lRICHMOND- Sliaeal OR the basis of this dec~siW1. it eral assistance to education: appears that :any fonn M ~nThis communication, as, was 14V. 01 ON£-PlE CANS ,duct contrary to public moralttr reported at the time, reaffirmed m~y~ .advocated, ,so long as 1t, the department's oppositiontoFINAST _ Fancy, family Size flNAST - Fancy is ,hot obscene ~aer the nalTow permanent ~ederal support of ItG !egal definition of ,that ,te~m. and education,emplulsizing ,that it ' Zl~..~ oz SWEET dees not .directly 'incite to i11egal .shouldbegranted on a tempo""'" action. ' , rary basis for specific' purposes Mixed Pieces in ~ared Syrup ,OREO SANDWICH
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45c 29c 43c 39c
Substantial Savings on Thanksgiving Needs!
Liti,gation:intheChurdb..:Sta.te area'!! of proven need, the ,uea involved Behool bus 'trans-: to r~ort saJd. . p&rtiition; hospitals ,opera'ted, b,. "In addition, the ,report noted 'Religious, '£Fee textbooks. re-that the communication opposed !eased pzvgrams, in public time sehoOls, 'urban'prayers renewal;
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69c .IUBKEY 'BREAD 2 Lolf~ES 33c 69cI Sweet., Rve 2 lO'1~ES 39c, 29c O.tmeal ~UmTrS 2Sc Angel Food, CAKE 39c! Date· Nut CAlE 39c
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semi-prvfessional,qumerly ;pub- r~presented at l'SOcoHegesan4 lication/ to be, called We<il~k:·univ:ersities. Ten national comA Journal of Family Dynamies.misSions ,conducted programs 1a . Efforts toward organizing imal'- 1ihe'irrespeCtWetielda. 'T-mee riage c-ounseling coUrses cia. mu1ti-'l'$oB81 ,e,oiD.jf,e~'e'll,e-e.. , ,~ocesaD aeminarlel '~ SIl4er'Tum 'to Pace CZlc'hteea
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profit sch091s to that !'measure ,- IF " of justice permitted bylaw and : 'Recently Reduced· - New Savings! Social Action ~ suggested by legislative preee'The NCWC :Social Aetion;De-dent." , CAMPBELL'S or HEINZ :partment expanded its. ,eft..orts' Archbishop M,ey:c :r~P6r~ed T o m a t o SoUP ~N~ during the'y~ar in the fields. of that .the International ,HIgh Del Monte - Slicecl . lUll oz SGcial eCIucation .race relations,' School 'Student Program which anti~comriltlDism', laboi~man~ge- ',is carried 'out under the depart• eac, es CAN ment, social legislation and in~ment's diiection brought'96 stu'INSTANT' -Easy :to '!ierw 70z ternational :affairs, ArchbiShop dents to the United States for a re'nch' 5 "otaW PKG ,Patrick A. 'O'lBoyle of Wash· one':'year' visit. 'ington, episcopal ,chairma~ reSeventy-two of the students 'CAIN'S , ported. . ~ame from Europe and 24 from Mayonnaise QU~RT Fath~rJohn F. CroniD" :S.S" Latin AmeriCa. " continued ,the department's work Youth 'Programs CLOVERDALE -Family Style Solid in the anticommunism field Growth in ,the ,scope and e l - M a r g a r i n e ~s doing resear.eh :work, partic4>atlectiveness of. programs carried ,fng inareiirs . of.the ,A:ll~er- out ,by the constituent, organican Con'!erence to Combat izations" of the . NCWC Youth Co~unism and ,the FoundatiQ~<. De~,tment" was~por.ted by for Religious Action in the. Archbishop ,Leo Eim ofDu,;" Social and Civic Order. , buque, .Iowa, the depar.tment'. The department took part in' .episcopal chairman. a number of a~tivities conl'lected ,The Atchbishop',s' r·ep,o r,t wlith the interracial justice 'prob- " ",showed that the National Coun" 9. PKGS aem, including !the first National cil .of Catholic Youth, Diocesan .Conference for lnterr'acial .1us~ Section, now embr:aces 75 affil:tice in' ,Chicago 'ana ,the 'Presi.,. iated dioceses. T,he .cCilunclIsponIII dent'lS ,CommHteeon,Govern': sored '~orkshopson youth work PKGS ment Contracts in W.ashington. for adults and"young people in Family Lift 10 Sees. A i1.2-poiDt iProgramfor ,the It was pointed out that the , coming/year has. been annoWlced presei:Iceof almost 450,000,Cath:by the NCWCFamily Life olic 'students in non-Catholic Bureau.,' colleges and universities :gives Bishop' Christopher J. We:1don I!pecial ,significance to the work of Springfield, Mass. is the of the Na'tipnal Newman ,Club i bureau episcopal moderator" asF~deration. Anchbishop Binz h~- ,I sisted by Msgr. Irving A. ported that the number of fullFI NEST QUALITY: SE,yALESS DeBlanc, director, and Father time Newm;m ,chaplains In this IRegdl"r or Mia'lHne5h Henry V. Sattler, C.SS.R., assistcountry has increased £rom Sllt.ilOllU' I •• '1M BOXES ant director. about 100 tOallnost 150 .:in the '.!. PAIR ';, ,Of %PAIII ' Included' in too past year's last four- years. The Newman :(Softp - .... -.oJ accomplishments are thecGmFederation sponsored four replete revision of: a :premamia'ge gional Newman Clubs Of 'Ca,th.. course, to ,be - ,known ,as olic Thought in the past. year. "Together in Chl"ist," ,and preThe National FederatiOO1 of ~ liminary work on a forthcoming Catholic College Students is now ~-.lI'
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FRUIT CAKE - Light or Dark
$1.29 FRUIT BAR Lighl1.'h laS 79c FRUIT RING DeL~xe 2 LB $1. 39 1 LB
69c
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mE ANCHOR-Diocese of FoR Jti.ver-ltiurs., Nov.. 1'9', 19'59
Holiday Planning
17
The Parish ,Parade ST. HEDWIG'S, ST. JOSEPH'S, NEW BEDFORD FALL RIVER The Holy Name SocIety will The annual turkey whist win eonduct its seventh annual be held tonight in the parish charity ball from 8 to 12 Saturhall under. sponsorship of 'the' day night, Nov. 21 at Woodrow Women's Guild. The public is Wilson Auditorium. Guests of invited. honor will include Mayor and The Women's Guild 'Will hold Mrs. Francis J., Lawler, New a sale Wednesday and Thursday, Bedford, and other state and Dec. 2 and 3. Attractions will incity officials, together with elude homemade pastries, hand-, area announcers of Polish radio crafted articles and a white programs. elephant table. Walter S. Stupalski is general ST. HYACINTH'S, chairman and Thaddeus Szelag NEW BEDFORD is co-chairman. Walter S. Polek A Chrl~tmas party will be is handling tickets. held by St. Anne's Sodality ST. MARY'S OF THE ISLE. Tuesday, Dec. 15. NANTUCKET OUR LADY OF MT. CARMEL. St. Mary's Guild will hold its NEW BEDFORD annual Thanksgiving Eve pie The Women's Club will hold sale, including squash, mince, a harvest mystery ride and dance apple, lemon chiffon and other Saturday night, Nov. 21. 'Cars favorites. . will leave from Bonney and Mrs. Hilda Madieros heads the Katherine StreetS at 6:30. Mrs. organization for the year. OutTheresa Nault is in charge of standing among projects will be arrangements. a money-raising sewing underSACRED HEART, taking. NORTH ATTLEBORO NOTRE. DAME, St. Anne s Sodality has voted FALL RIVER The Women's Guild will hold a donation to Bishop Feehan ,NEW CATHEDRAL: Two ,Cardinals, 15 archbishops and nearly 100 archbish0)M> a Communion breakfast followhigh school. The annual Christ-' ing 8 o'clock Mass Sunday mas party will be held Tuesday, participated in the opening ceremonies opening, a week-long celebration marking the Dec. 15 in the church hall. morning, Nov. 29 in Notre Dame dedication of the new multi~million dollar Cathedral of Mary Our Queen, in BaltimQ:Ee. school hall. Speaker will be Rev. ST. MARY'S, premier See of the United States. NC Photo. Alfred R. Desautels, S,J.,. son NORTH ATTLEBORO of Joseph Desautels and a native The Holy Name Society will of the pariih. hold a Communion breakfast Chairman of the department Jan. 10, with Leonard J. Quinn BALTIMORE (NC)-The new . man, Archbishop of New York, ta that Connecticut diocese, of modern languages at Holy as· arrangements chairman. The Cathedral of Mary Our Queen and James Francis Cardinal Mc- . Bishop Shehan served an Cross College and a holder of a . group will launch a member~hip here stands as a profession oj! Intyre, Archbishop of Los An., Auxiliarll Bishop in BaltimGr.e doctorate of philosophy summa drive directed by James Strigas. the Faith of C~tholics and as. a geles, witnessed the solemn, !r,am 1945 to 1953'. declaration of their hope in, cum laude from the Sorbonne, ST. MARGARF;T'S, opening of the Baltimore arch- '"The· erection of this aaUl«-a world whose future seems un- diocese'~ new mother church. Father Desautels will discuss BUZZARDS BAY 'ebaI, as· solid! in its masonry all religion and religious life in A turJtey whist will be held eel'tain, a group of distinguishedl ,Archbishop Egidio Vagnozziy. the great medieval cathedIfaJa, Chw.eh leaders was told. France. Mrs. Raymond Boulay by 55. Margaret,-Mary Guild ApQ:;tolic. IDelegate to the Unit~d censtuucted to endure £OIr all More than' 100 prelates, in~' ,States, celebrated the first Ma.!!! is chairman of the event. Saturday, Nov. 21 in the kinder_ time, is: for us; a pll'ofessicm of eluding' Francis Call'dinal SpellOUR LADY OF ASSUMPTION, . garten hall. The fourth annual in the cathedral. The service our Faith:, and' a declaratit))1 of OSTERVILLE Communion breakfast is slated ~as telecast by this city's, thllee' oUr hope,'" Bishop Slttehan said. The Women's Guild will bold for Sunday, Dec. 6, following Consecrator TV stations. a sale of home-baked food from 9 o'clock Mass. Husbands and ......,~:;o;=;..,;:;;r~~;:;;r~nr;1 The sermon was delivered lIy 11 to 2 this Saturday, Nov. 21, other gUests may attend. ~. EOSTON (NC)-Bishop-des:Bishop Lawrence J.. Shehan of .Many Follis do natrtn.w w.~ I at the House and Garden Shop. SACRED HEART, -Ignate Tl)omas J., Riley will be ,:BriElgeport. Before his transfer Mrs. Edward E. O'Neill is OAK BLUFFS "have' moveef!' l Our ceRsecrated to serve' as Boston's chairman. Mrs. Alfred Metell is newlythird' auxiliary bishop on Montocat-ion SANTO CHRISTO, elected president of Sacred day, Dec. 21, feast of St. Thomas FALL RIVER Heart Guild. With her will serve in Holy Cross Cathedral here. IS Christm~ plans of the CounMrs. James Rogers, vice ,presiRichard Cardinal Cushing, I Pleasant & tlnion Streett cil of Catholic Women include dent; Mrs. John A. DeBettenArchbishop of Boston. will be a chilpren's party at. 2 Sunday court Jr., secretary; Mrs. Rqger New BeclfCK'd the consecrator, and Auxiliary .ROUTE 6, HltnLESQN' AVE.. afternoon, Dec. 13 in the church Surprenant, treasurer. They will Bishops Eric F. MacKenzie and Near F'airhcwen \ Drive--In basement and a social for inemtake office in January. - Jeremiah F. Minihan of Bost.Jn, bers Sunday, De.c. 20 at HarA ,children's Christmas party .Italian D,inners Our. Specialty the .coconsecrators. Bishop-de'lmony House. Mrs. M,ary Fontes will be held Sunday, Dec. 20 Service On Patio ignate Riley, pastOr of St. Peters t.tEATHER GOODS since 1&7'1': is newly-elected president of under'spon-sorship oJ the youth church in Cambridge was named the group. committee. A ham and bean as Titular Bishop of Regiae and' The CYO will present a G!lY supper is planned for Saturday auxiliary to Cardinal Cushing Nineties minstrel show at ,7:30 night, Nov. 21 in the parish hall by Pope John XXIII. Saturday night, Nov. 22. in the with servings at 5:30 and 6:30. Academy theatre. Proceeds w~ Mrs. James S. Rego Jr. is in G'uild for Blind finance a New York trip for the charge. Fall River Catholic Guild for parish's championship baseball An adult Christmas party will the :Blind will hold its regular team. Antone and Evelyn' Carbe held Monday, Dec. 14, with meeting next Sunday .,in Sacred doza are directing the show. husbands as guests. Gifts will be Heal't School. ST. MARY'S, sent to hospitals or old people's The business and social meetIlANSFIELD homes instead of being exing will be preceded by Rosary The Catholic Women's Club changed among members. Clothan4- Benediction at ,2:15 in the will bold its annual spaghetti ing' drive donations will be church. supper to benefit Rose Haw,:,: packed at the next regular thorne Home Jan. 21,. Members meeting. will contribute canned fruits and ST. PETER APOSTLE, juices for the hospital. PROVINCETOWN i A spring fair is plan~e~ for Officers of Holy Rosary SodalApril 27. Members contributed ity will be installed Sunday $200 towards Bishop Feeha~ afternoon, Dec. 6 ~ the p!lrish -.... Your' Pretedion, High School and were urged to hall. Ceremonies will be fol8uv'.From ' attend a benefit performance of lowed by a silver tea and induc"The Great Caruso" at the Union tion of new m'embers; Mrs. Irene Theatre, Attleboro, for the same Gracie and Mrs. Alice"Cook are purpose. co-chairmen in charge of al'132 Rockdale Ave. ST. THOMAS MORE, . rangements. New BedtOl'd SOMERSET ST: PATRICK'S. A two weeks mission is in, FALL iUVER WY 5-7947 progress, conducted by Rev. ~An irish variety show will be John P. Deevy, S.J. and Rev. J. ,presented in the aUdito~ium ,at_ Dugan, S.J. Men's services are. 8 Saturday night, Dec. 5. Perin session this week. formers, all from 'Ireland, will St. Vincent de Paul members include Grainne McCormack, followed their meeting with a c ham p ion step-dancer and_ spaghetti supper in the rectory Shawn "O'Sheehan, leading balbasement. lad singer. It is announced that ST. ELIZABETH'S, ,1,000 tickets are available. , ,Bowli'ng, & Skating FALL RIVER ST. ANNE'S, G' I The Women's Guild will hold FALL RIVER .MHliooDoUarBallroom, its annual turkey whist at 2 The Social Group will hold a Saturday night, Nov. 21 in the Christmas party Wednesday, ." AVAIl.ABLE church hall. Sodality and guild Dec. 9 at the Pocasset Country Fell' Your ani members will receive corporate Club. Next regular meeting. is . • TESTIMONIAL DINNERS Communion at 8:15 Mass Sunset for 8 Wednesday night, Dec. At RATES THAT WIll SAVE YOU MONEY day morning, Dec. 6. A Christ2 at St. Anne's school. • BANQUEtS Comparisons are convincing! Ceme in .nd g~ the. figures mas party is planned for 6:30 • FASHION SHOWS Sunday night, Dec. 13 at Copicut OUR LADY OF ANGELS, • ANNUAL DANCE PARTY Lodge. FALL RIVER • CHRISTMAS PARTIES IMMACULATE CONCEPTION, The Women's Guild plans, a FALL RIVER turkey whist at 7:30 Saturday FQIt information call. The Women's Guild will attend night, Nov. 21 in the parish hall. Roland Gamache or OF NEW BEDFORD a Mass for deceased members Mrs. Olive Canario is chairman. Frank Collins at 8 Saturday morning, Nov. 21, A Christmas party will be held MAIN' OFFf~E-Unior'l and' Pleosont: Streets instead of Nov. 2S as previously Saturday, Dee. 19, also in the WYman 9-6984 NORHfi END'- l 200. Acushnet 'Avenue announced. parish hall. , ,
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of, Fan Ri,ver-Thurs.,~ov. 19~ 1.95~
easily fit into the social strueture of a territorial parish," they need an international apostolate geared especially to their needs, according to the National CathContinued from Page Sixteen port said that during the fiscal olic Apostleship of the Sea brought together student leaders year some 4~0,000 youths enC(l?nference. , 'for an exchange of ideas. ' . tered the nahon's ~rmed forces. The National Catholic Camp- With 90,000 reenlIstments, anThe conference, in its annual ing Association increased in size overall a~me~ force of 2,500,000 report to the American Bishops, to 424 camp, executive, associate, was ma,mtam~d through the said that "there is no limit" to and student memJers.' Forty annual mduchonformula of the good that can be done for Catholic camps joined the asso- between 500,000 and 520,000 seamen if there is "a good moral, ciation in the past- year. ,yearly. spiritual and social influence in The 1958 'Nationa~ Catholic ,A total of 215 employees w~re every pQrt." ,But, it said that Youth Week 'was celebrated in listed on the NCCS rolls while "the movement is weak if the II t tes the District of Colum- . some 8;500 volunteer wQrkers links of the chain that bind it ~ia sa~d Puerto Rico, as well as per month,do~ated some 870,000 are' weak or too fa!; apart," . t. U S military bases overseas hours of servwe. It was. noted. Auxiliary Bishop L. Abel a ndin 'Canada and Mexico., The that in its progra~ of assls~~~e , Caillouet of New Orleans, episa , k' s observed in 26 arch- to' ch;:rplains 'and mother acb.vIcopal chairman of the Apostlewd·ee wa nd 108 dioceses. It ,.,ties, the NCCS distributed ,more 1" bI' IOceses a . 0 0 ship of the 'Sea Conference, said opened with' the fifth annual t?an 30 ,00 tr e ~glIQUdS ~u Icthathere are now 36 maritime chap\v e of o, bs e r aNational n c , Catholic tlOnsand . \ rna erla s . unng , e Youth Communion Sunday on year., '. 'HAPPY, BIRTHDAY, ,PROFESSOR': Distinguished tains in U. S. ports, a gain of two tffi Fea'st of Christ the K i n g . . Under the NCCS-VA,HosPltals guests pay tribute at Boston College cin' the 70th observance this year. · e '. . . : . service program, serVIces, were Th~re are ~ow seven Catholic, . ImmIgration Dept. , in. operation in 96, archdioceses for Christopher Dawson, Stillman Professor ,of.Roman Cath':' maritime clubs receiving finan+ The work ,of the NCWC De-, imd dioceses' in 171 Veterans .olic Studies at Harvard Divinity School: Left to right, Dr. cial aid from the National pattmeht. of Immigrati~n, ~as Administrati~n hospitals and in Nathan M. Pusey, ,President Harvard 'University; .P~o.:. Catholic 'Welfare' Conference.: been grea'tlyaided by legislation four types of VA institutions., fessor Dawson; Very Rev. Micha;eIP., Walsh, S:J;, Pres,i:' Mobile, New Orleans., Portlar:t", passed in the closing dll:YS ,?,f t~e The report .listed. a t9tal of 57, Ore.:' San 'Frllncisco. San Pedro, 85th Congress, but' has' been NCCS' club operations-47 fn dent of Boston College and' Sir' Alec' Gu~nriess, .Oscar, win:: Calif," Seattle; and Wilmin!cton; hampered' by changes in regu- this country and the others in ~ing ~inema star who wa,s lecture~ at'. the .BostonCoU~~e· Calif.' the" conference rioted 3~ iaiory policies made by the .U'. S. Puerto Rico, Alaska, Moro~co, Humanities Series. NG Photo. b'aptisms, 23 conversions ~nd ,38 , ' t:ommissiimero~ ~mmig~a,t~~n:. Guam, Ho~ Kong, 'the Philip- ' 'marrial!es. Con:(essions. totaled .: '[hese., a,re tqe: c~I1:~luslO.,:,-sm 'pines, Italy and France. has completed work on the Pro- ' agreement ~itti con~l).lsions of a 2578' r.ommunions, 8,939: Exthe annul!l r,eport slgne~ byt,he , 'N" C"( phetic Books, except for textual symposium Sponsored earlier, t;'eni~ U~ctiQn, 107, and buriab de' artmeritis "episcopa~ .chalr-:· . ur~es. ,ounci. .notes. The New Testament transyearby Loyoia' University; . 47 '. " m:n' B£sliop joseph M:Gilm9,re Me~bershlp 10 Jh~, Nahonal lators have 'finished their ver- ,this. <;:hicago, on.' "T,he C~se' (or 'ihe conference,~btai~ed resl:': of Helena; Mont. ;.' " ' . Council of, 'Caootho~IC 10~~~~es sion of, the ,Gospels of St. Governmental Control of Obdential 'facilities for seamen o~ .: The .r~poi-t noted t~at t~e year totaled ov~r 21,2 In 10- 'Matthew and St. Mark, and st scene PUblications.", It said' these 647, occasions,' h.ad a dormitory he wa's no excepti0!1 to fprmer ones c~ses durmg'!J :~st . :eari. PaUl's first and second epistles .conclusion.s .were that:. ,. , attendance, ot' 15,475 at two of .' from' <'the, stan'dpoint of :work Bishop Al~en' '. a co.c 0 to the Corinthians, and epistleS ,.1) ,Since" the U. S.· Suprem~ the,' maritime clubs, and had a l'hed and 'persons aided. Grand RapIds,' Mlch" episcopal t'o' the' Galatians, Ephesians" , accomp IS ' '" 'h' NCWC D t During :the year, th¢ department chairman of.t e. ; . epar Philippians and Colossians. Court has,' held that, ooscene . tot~i attet;ldance' of, 238,960 for hartdled ,43,Q8( cases involving ment. of L~y .0rgam.zatIOns,. re- These New' Testament sections , publications' .are not entitled. t~' ail' seven, cl1,.lbs. __ Visits totaled Ii total Qf 48,906 .persons. The ,ported. ThIS fIgure mcl,uded an are being readied for publica-: the protection of the First 18,112 to ships and 615 to hosin the number of male Hons. The report disclosed that . Amendment, "there is now a' pilals. A total of 11,343 cases of d';ep artment also , helped 3,805 'th ~ncrease b persons . l~ ,'religious, life W,I mem ers. " ' . there are 133 diocesan confra- legal founda'tion on, which to relief in distress were handled, a'nd 1,599 ,libr~ries were, pro-., immigration ' an'd- emigration . The co~ncil contmued a~d ~X-ternity ,directors in. the U.S:.( build a ~ase against them.. .2) Future 'legislation should vided. ',problems assisted 13,599 ·pandedlts. pr9gra~ o~ JU~IOr They are kept informed. of -' . immigrants :and -emigrants· at ,\associat~, member~hlp I~ ,dlOC- national '. CCD, develorim!,!n~' distinguish ~carefully' "between Refugee ChildI::en the sale bf wliat" is· obscen'e for U.,S'. ports. ' -, _ , . . esan ~ur~es' counCIls. ~h~smem- through. a 'bi-monthly newslet· " Since 1946 ·the Catholic" C!lm~ The ',reporf'rloted that durmg 'I:'~rshlp IS for Ca!hohc. stu~ent ter published by the confrai~~ youth and what is permissible · mittee for Refugees-National .. year the ' departm~nt '. has ~urse!l enrolle~m, accredlte~ nity's central office in Washing- for adults, .Catholic Welfare Conference hall . Succeeded in-more than! 98 per schools of nursmf .'[he f~?t~n~II ton, D. C. : 3) Until then" the law will assisted in the resettlement of 'cent'. of the ca~es' it_hi:\l)d~ed, in~ particularly urgE; 1 sa, lla es \ A survey was, conducted of . cover only .~xtreme ,cases, of Ob~ 3 984 'children in' the U. S.' - volying, appeals aga.i,I1st '. the ~ r~ach stud~?t nur~es attend,,: major and minor seminaries ~n scenity; Hence; the mai,or deter'; .' Durinithe past year, 71,5 ctin": morc' important 'official d~cisIOns l!1g non-Cathohc n,ursm g scho,ols. 'the country to' determine their' rent to' obscene, pubiications Such, as 'det><#tatloriorders. It T~e ~oar<~ of ~:hrectors of t~e participation in the CCD pro-_ musf,be an 'aroused public dren' from, 12, countries were helped in finding new homes in handled ~,162 appeals concern- NatIOnal CounCil of Catlwhc gr·am. Of the 139 maj6r semin':' opinion. the U, S.The mai'ol-ity of these109. '2,907Dl'o'c-es'a'n p'eople. ,. Nurses has' recommended, that aries replying, 31 have organ.., 'MI'II'ta'ry Ordl'nariate 533 children"::-came from Italy. Men' " licensed prac,tical nurses be ac' A serious' and cont'inuing They were placed in 354 com-: ' '" ; .' " -'," th cepted as' members. The ques-·ized CCD units, k 'thandt 54 engage .. TheN<J,tl(?~~l_ <?ouncll of C:: a .- 'tion will be discussed' at. the in CCD wor WI ou an organ- shortage of chaplaiIls' to serve mun'ities ,through' 117 agenc~es olic Men repor~ed ,that CWhlle'llt council's next general meeting, ized unit.' There are 2,709 se m- U. S.· m'ilftary' personnel and of Catholic charities- organizaDOW S for A prt'1 28 t'0 M ay... '1 the 139 kseminaries their dependents has 'been tions'in 40 'states: ' · .. ', has ' . 52, M'" DIOcesan '. ff'l' tounClan scheduled . {naria~s . d .'in C'CD . of Cathohc en·as a I la es60 ~ L . 'II K· e!lgage m .wor . stressed by Francis. Cardinal The committee, despite the ~. f '41" ' 'ght years 19, In OUISVI e, y. , mcrease 0 mel ..,-. h t Spellman, .Military Vicar,' who fact it has been s!1ccessful in its'most significant progress iit. • Information Bureau Indecency T rea oversees the welfare ,of CatholicS placing children' from the Far the past year is "to be'found iit. The "busiest year ever!' in the Increased public awareness of . in the' armed. forces. 'a' n'ew mahidty and scope - of history of the' NCWC Bureau of the size and 'seriousness of the , East, yet' has' need for ,families , , ' ' was The ordinariate said U. S. who would adopt Chinese and vision.", ' Information was reported' by indecent literature prob I em " 'byh NCCM's three national radio Bishop Lawrence J. Sheha~ of reported t eN a t'IOna 1 Off'Ice , Cath,olic o·seryicemen. and. their Korean-Negro orphans. Since 1950 the committee has ' dependents total an' estimated P'r'ograms presented nearly one Bridgeport, Conn."assista:nt for 'for Decent Literature. The 0ff Ice , , / th e 1,800,000, in 40, countries. All placed ,over go.refugee teachers encouragement In a ncl' ii' hal~ "ours, a week of "the the Information bureau to the found -'<>" and lay spokesmen '. . . groups '. three' branch.es :of the' armed and' professors. in high schools, chairman of the NCWC Admin- growing number 0f CIVIC · st .clerical be colleges and, .universities of the · t'JOna ble l't forces have, , trying to halt 0 b Jec I. cbaplain shortages. , a'val'lable to' the Churc,h. in istrat.ive Boa.rd. United States.' In addition, it The 'Army, has' an auth'orized . America" the report 'said. It The number of news releases' erature. " quota of 378,:Cat.h.olic 'chaplains: . Servi<;es, 634. refQgee prieSts ill ' tl'ma'ted the combined audience distributed by the bureau rose However it, added, the exceses ., , The actual number at present' is ~is c!>untry~ , at' about 5,5 million. . to 323, an increase of 88 per cent sively, liberal attitude of· many 309. Thirty..,f,l:>ur I: aplains will h ,. As" fo' r "televl'sl'on, NCCM duro0'ver the previ.ous, y.ear. Of these., coutts on the subject of objec. ,. Mission' Receipts left, the service, ,.' tn' g ,the -y'e·a.r· ,p"r'oduced 50 half125 were 'general., news release,s. tionable literature' makes infor- have '. . , by the end The receipts of the American . citizen ' , action more eff~etive of.' the next fiscal year, 'and ". h"o"'ur "television programs in serit to daily newspapers, radIO mal " . applications received Board of" . Catholic Missions clooperati<in with the NBC and • ~nd ,television' networks and in many cases. , , 'from only have '10 belm replaceme~tfl; totaled $2,8;71,176.08, according CBS net.;vorks. 'These p.rograms. comm&ntators, news magazines, . A changing 'attitude has been according to the report of tbe to Archbisli'op" Leo Binz. of won nu~erous awards, including. syndicate51 ~olum'ilists,a,nd Prot-:- noted on the part of sortIe sec- ,Military, Vicar,' who'iS Arch- Dubitque,'the board's treasurer. Ii Sylvllnia award for the ~'Rome estilnt 'and Jewish publications: Hons of the:daily press. The re';..rhe figJ,l're, which exceeded 'Eternal Series" and also earned A total of 198spe<;ial, ~nterest port ,pointed out that a few . bishop o~' New Y()rk: : applaus~ frQ'm' several critics on rileases' ,w~re distributed, t~ newspapers, have run articles There ,ar,e 230 Navy chaplains, last year's income l:iy $112,468.60, Secular ..pub.licatiolls,' including tt:ade' .organs in a numbe.r of 'exposing the traffic in indecent c9mpared with an authorized ·was the largest iIi tlle .historyo( , the American Boara' of Catholic · . , alt.hough most pa'p,e,r.squota Newsweek.Time and Jhe. New. specialized fields. ,1,1,'teratu, r, e, , ' 6f 25L·Navaf officiab .. Missions. :The 'Ar~hbishop re• ' , ,,,. , .. '. .. " ' . . that . ' ,Y.ark. T..i,m, ..es,.,: ;'. '..... . . ' Pub'II'ca't'I·on·s.Work· '. 'either""'f. ignore or continue' t~ estimate , , . there is one " Cath':'. vealed disbursements totaled . '. 'olicchaplain for every 2,717 · . ,Note" NCCW ,Growth" .. '. . 9v~r310,OOO 'copies of the two' Prese!it,"a· solid front of oppo- Catholic sailors and'marines. $2,766,629.46, the highest in the ' '·The National 'Council of Cath.;" statements' issued by. the' U. S. sition'" to antHndecency efforts. The' Air Force has 295 priests board's history. . olic Womenj' now in its 39th\ ~ishoPIl during, their November; Turning to. speci(ic categories on duty as chaplains, as l!gainst. tear; has ·,show:n remarkabl,e '1958, meetin,g"were printed. and of publications, the, NODL rean'a'uthorized quota of 323. growth· in, -the,,·Jast 24' years, distributed duri~g the year by 'potted: " \ ' - The report also showed that according, .to ,Bishop' Allen J. the NCWC Publications Offic~. That since the. adoption of th'e there are 505 Nati~nal duard Babcoc~, of 'Grand Rapids, episOf these, ,250,000 were copies comic code auth'ority five years Reser,ve chaplains, 238' priests copal chairmari of the NCWC 'of the statement on "Discrimi- agQ, the comic book industry serving,in Veterans Administra-' Department of ,Lay Organiza- nation and' the. Christian Con- through self-regulation has elimtiori institiItions, 728 priestsac"t:' JOSEPHM. f, DONAGHY, tiol1 S. . . science,'" while 60,000, were inated offensive publications. ing as, auxiliary, chaplains -to o'wner/mgr. NCCW, a federation of 2,118 copies of "The Teaching Mission, That so-called "men's maga- regular:ly commissioned military 142 Campbell 'St. organizations in' 1935, today uni-. of the CatholiC'-Church." - zines'" make up more than 50 chaplains, and 133 priests servNew Bedford, Mass. ~les and services 11.,51~ organizaThe offiCe reported ~t distrib.., per cent of the magazines liste~ ing as 'chaplains to Civil Air tions: 11,453 loca'l groups, 22 uted almost 45,000 copIes of the as objectionable by the NODI.:· _ Patrol' units. WYman 9-6792 national ,groups, ..five state September 1958, instruction of since January, 1959, and that , . HEADQUAR~ FOR groups and 35 groups in dioceses ~ ,the Sacred Congregation of 'publishers of such magazines are Port Chaplains COLONIAL AND without diocesan federations or' Rites, "on Sacred Music and "deaf to 'any .kindof appeal." Because seamen live. in an TRADITIONAL FURNITURE S d L't " \ , . internation~l 'world and "do not coun~1'I~.Armed ,yorces . acre I.urgy,. . That the The offIce saI~ encyclicals of' ,'~better, and situation worse" is· in ,both the ;::::::..:::..:::_:.::.~============;:::; The task of providing "a home the,late ,P?pe PlUS ?C II , as w.ell pocket-size book field, where ~way froin home" for Catholic as the sO,clal encychca,ls of PlUS both recognized classics and men and women in th~ natio~'s ?,I and J.eo XIII, cont~nueht~ b.~ obje~tionablebooks,written and , armed forces was' carried on In 10 demand. It. ad~e t a l . pubhshed for profIt only are" Fall River - Ne~ Bedford Highway-No. Westp~rt 57 establishments in this country planned to, publish I~ pamphl~t pub 1 ish ~ d . From January . and abroad by· the National· for~ the .fIrst encychcal of "HIS through August, 1959, the NODL Catholic Community, Serv,ice, the ~oliness ~ope. Joh,~ X}(III, said, it listed, as objectionable agency's annual report stated.' Truth, Umty, Peace. for youth the pock.et-size books Submitted to the NCCS board Translation Project' of 219 authors. Currently the of trustees by Msgr. Paul F. Progress on its translation of office reviews .about 88 such With all the, "Fixins· Tanner board secretary, the re- the Old and New Testaments books per month and judges an BRING THE FAMILY ' waS detailed by the Confrater- . average of 36, of these obje'ction:- .. Facts of Faith. nity of Christian poctrine report." able.' ',' ',., ", " For 'Reservatio~s ANSWERS: 1 (c); 2 (b);·3 (b); 'The' editorial' board for" the' The decent literature office '. Phone OSborne 2~9186 : 4 (b); 5' (a);,~ .(b); 7 (~); ,8 t~ translation of th~,?ld'Testament reporr~d, i t ' is iil sUbst~~tial
18
,
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Church Flourishing in United States
of
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the'
BOWEN,'S'
Furniture Store
JEAN'S STEAK HOUSE
THANKSGIVING ,DINNER ...
St~te.
C'lass Champ.ionship Within Reach of Coyle
~-:,,:".
THE ANCHORThurs., Nov. 19, 1959
By
Jack Kineavy , Somerset Higb Scbool Coach &turday marks the annual hiatus in schoolbOyfOo~ ba'ft prior to the climactic Thanksgiving Day contests. In the lone regularly scheduled game of the day Vocational will be at home to Dartmouth at Sargent Field New Bedlord. The Trade authored .. ' the upset of the season b givmg will assure tHe Warriors • y of the coveted 'State title. It deadlockIng (12 - 12) the appears very probable that the powerful Crimson of New Class D diadem will also go to Bedford last time out, while a Bristol County school. UndeDartmouth was absorbing a feated-untied Mansfield took a 28-0 drubbing giant stride toward the chamfrom a strong pionship with a decisive 24-0 win over North Attleboro,' SatA ttl e b 0 r 0 eleven. urday, at Community Field. , The tie with' The Hornets blew the game Vocational may wide open in the final stanza cost New Bedwhen they scored twice. End ford High the Ron Sankey' with two touchClass B title: downs led the offensive parade. The Crimson The victory was the seventh of dropped to third ' ~he season for ,Mansfield and place in the ' only Foxboro now stands in the, ranking's behind' way of the, State crown. Coyle Nat I ck it n,d, arid Mansfield 'will both 00 Melrose - coachea by former odds-on favorites Turkey day-'," Taunton mentor, Joe Hoague. ,but, then so was New Bedford Melrose has two games remain- ·last Saturday.' It may 'be: trite ,," ing,Winchester and Arlington, to say that 'records' can be 'di~' and Natick goes against Framcounted in traditional coritests' ingham OD' Thanksgiving. A' but upsets, occur with sufficient " clean sweep by, Melrose would 'regularity to lend credenc;e' to' mean the' title for the Red the adage. Anything can' happea. Raiders inasmuch' all Arlington ' Case Upset
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19
Protestant HeJp ', .For Catholics -
. DES MOINES (NC)-A help,ing hand from a Des Mo~es Protestant church has enabled Holy Trinity parochial school to solve a pressing classroom ~rtage. ' As a result of a unanimous vote of the board of the First Federated Church, 83 sixth' graders of the Holy Trinity School attend class regularly in the gymnasium of the Protestant church. The Protestant board members took the action when they learned that a delay in completing an addition to the parochial school was going to make it , ,necessary for, the 83 yo~ngsters ..' to, lJe crowded into one regula"" ti~~-siz~ classroom in thE! 'pres, :, ent, school building. . , , "We felt we ,~ere retu,l'nipg a , "long.,standing favor," e;xp~,i,ned LHarolq, l{erlley, chairman of the ,church board. ,,"We felt:, we " Shp\lld cooperate because we are v~ryclose and because it w.Quld be good for the community., In a sense, thei~ problems and ours are the same.'" ,
,New Car G."ft
Center
CI~S:y~"'~::~ndiillr'ti;;:ew;;:.i~C;tu;~{ d<;~:~:rden:' :Tony",A'bral1am of Fall RI·v', er:, ',;o::~~'~~~e~~c~res~~: a 'Sh·'Ines· ." . ,.In, "Be "p. 'p , ' " ,"" a , ".-: IVot' ost' "','i.n'~eplace a52-6'vetdiCto,ver,~urfee.The"
is a
History, was 'made' Saturday" at'Al~mni 'Field, FaU River,' when Coyle WarriorS registered'
Somerset's' lap' Saturday when ..... .' . , " , . red-brocaded 'ultra-new ,black Barnstabli!!',upsetCase, 8-G'-The' automobile with small ,throne loss eliminated "the CardInals' " of'the'backseat. from' cliampionship'contention,,' " " " ' , By)ohn Corrigan _ " ' " , " ' 1 , 1 ' score was the" most one:'sided leaving only' Wareham, with a l " A'lthou h B t C II ,'" 'd d ' '. CORR: & "" in the schools' 2G year rivalry.": shot at" tying Somerset for" ' " g o~ on, .0 e?~ s :re.e~~ o esn t look ~~P ,lm-:,:I ,.' ParticUlarly . ,lm'pressive was'" league 'honors. The Capeway', ,press1v~, a;cIoser exammatIon POll1 ts up the ,fact that ,the, ""," ',. 0 ," "'II Coyle's ,passiJ:lg game.. All-' eleven has a'2-1-1' Conference"'ooly three .defeats have, come ,at the hands .of Eastern NE, STOP Diocesan9ullr.terback Bill H,oye"'orecord, while Somerset . Pittsburgh, and that' of:'" ,,\ C:1NTER 'l' threw ,f()r ,four lt~uchd?wns. a 3-0-1 slate. A Wareham v~c- .these ,the ,last, two could ' ' ,'" ",' .'Television "'. FurnitU...·; Halfback Jack PhIlhpe was OR,:, tory,over'Bourne, coupled WIth ~ 'bI ", . ' " .line. In'the Spring 'of 1957, Ht'l- • , ' the end of two and Mike Fitz-a Somerset ioss to Case would concelva y, have eastlygone ovak offered 'him a post,as ,var- ", )'ppliances • Grocery''''' simmons'imd'Bob Smith grabbed effect a deadlock., \ ' 'the"other way; Mike Holo- sity line coach at the Heights one apiece. A c~uple of area teams closed vak's 1959 Eagles have com- Vin put away the law books . I,M: AJ~~~~ ~~:35~ed'01'd The Durfee secondary double- out success~ul campaigns on bined some talented backfield and unpacked his football shoes, teamed Fitsimmons most of the' Saturday. Dighton staved off men with two strong lines to and became one of the youngest, ' afternoon forcing Hoye to go Bourne to win, 8..6, and bring present a definite threat on any coaches ever to work. at" his to his' other receivers. This he its season record to 6-1. The lone 'given' Sa~urday afternoon. ,Alma Mater. Part of his duties did-but' well. Warrior halfback setback came, at the hands of Little Johnny 'Amabile, for" include conducting prospective Bo~ Fioretti bore _the. major Marshfield by, a 20-14 score. On ,exampl¢, has hit for 66 passes student-athletes on tours of B.:>s- ' brunt of the Coyle ground the Cape, Yarmouth lost its out· of 122 attempts for a .540 ton College with a view to demattack, scoring twice on runs finale, 26-16, to a Falmouth percentage, enough to rank B.C. ,onstrating to them that should of 7 'and, 23 yards. Both teams': team that has come 'on strong third iIi the country. The'passing they be awarded footbal~ (or were well schooled iIi funda-' in its la'st four appearances. The attal;;khas accounteq for almost basketball, or baseball) scholar, NEW BEDFORD mentalil. Coyle's tackling was loss left Yarmouth'with a: 4-2-1. twice. the yardage.that the Mar- sHips, they ought to expect more" especially ferocious. ' showing,' Falmouth, which meets ',' :,'~n ai,td Gold 'have, gain~d on ' , than just play at cQIlege.' ' " Barnstable, on the' holiday ill" ground,~ofar,and A.mabile:'" Name Puzzler , ee Loses ~cbado,' ,,', " , " and" SopQomore quarter:back 'Incidentally, the name i'1;)osA three yard run by Durfee 5,..2-1 on ,the' year. speedster Bob Machado brought, CYO basketball, in Fall ,River, G~orge VanCott have together: . to? College" is something of a: ' ;, ' the Hilltoppers to within 'two' " and New' Bedford is' scheauled" .pa~ed for nine toucpdown~ and, : m,l~nomer because it is actually, i touchdowns 'of Coyle five see- to get, underway this .. week., 1326 yards inseven' games. This a, l,lIliversity, wit~ colleg~$ of" ,I '1.: •.. \' onds before' the end of the first Many high schools,ln thiS' area," ,'l~.. aJ.J:n~st aStPuc;:h as the E~gles' arts and sciences and business half. Machado' was aided by a particularJy ,those, with 'no' foot- ' gained through' theair'laM,s in. administration, schools of '~du-' , key' block on the 'play and went ball ,teams,' commenced:: hoop ,'. ~~1. 1~ ,,,cor~e~t,s in 1958. "",," " cation ~nd nursing, an adult ed-:. into the endzone untouched.:, drills"last Monday. Headmast'ers. , ,<,Anyreallr,' goo~passing, at-, , ucation ceriter downtown,' a Bob sustained an eye injury' ,regulations set Nov. 15 ali ,the" t~~k-anq,:a:C.· has one:-:.de- flourishing graduate school" and making the tacide on the subse- earliest date that practice' ses-,~en~ Jo '~large extent on a' a ~ns~ntlygrowing, cam~us. ': quent 'kickoff and his status ,for sions may get underway in 'the good line. Yo:u 'can't thrQw" very A change in the name might ' :" $01 COUNTY the New' Bedford game iii,: at winter sport. far or very' accurately while' 'not be too far off, but choosing' NEW BEDFORD this time;" undetE~rinined. " And on the track scene, Oliver lying on your back some" 10 or " a new one is a problem. The Captain Ken Brooks was very Ames' ,Ed ,Meehan waltzed 'off 15 yardS behind the line of title "Boston University" has ,wy 3-1751 effective on the fiank for DUr- "with first place,in the New Eng- 'scrimmage. And the protection already been taken-as B. C." ant fee ,8 n4' guards 'Arruda' and land Cross'County championship, that both Amabile and VanCott 'well knows-and officials vv ':===========::~-..: Pavao did a nice job in the mid- , last Saturday at Franklin P~k, have had so far has been ex- , to, keep the initials "B. C." in " r " " dIe of the lin'e.,,'The entire War- , Boston. :M:eeha.n, set, a. ,course ' ,emplary. " t h e name somehow. One sug-, JOB 100 BIG -'. .. rior forward'wal1., was' tr~m:en- ,,,,:~rd 9f U:48 fortije ZIk,mile'; . " "G~Dnan(~braliam ' , g~stion '~as ~n "13,oston 9 Ith-", .. .NO 'r,', dous,exe,rting ~nstan:tpt~~~e ,,~st.~_b:ich~VI)e~~h of the,:fjtst',' ")'h~\two,.l~nes;':or "~ts" as obc." U:mve~slty,". bu\this"has NONE TOO SMAil ,.. 'o\ on, Cl;u~rte,rback' JQh~ SU~hy~n" s~ "flDlsbers: better,: the f9~er '" ,~~af;h ,H~lov~.~ 'fond of. des- ~et WIth little enthUSIasm from who,. neverth.ele~s, 'hIt o~ ,r;ime m~~o~ 12:Q3.,,~~mgton ,Higb ,J~~bi~"",thep1,I).a.ve'a1-~ had'" anyone. ' of eIghteen fpasSes ,attempted. ':. won the, team tItle in the 18 _ !rome fair success opening holes Eye. Crn~en, ' . .. Uniquely, not a -single major,_ school fi~1d., " ," h, ',' 10" ~acks like 'Senior viD Hogan " A .;more 'lII1;lDediate prob~em"': penalty was assessed, in the " • "', ' ", '.' . 'averagmg "'4.7' yards Per cll.rry,fO;r the B.,~. line, and backfIeld' .. , '". entire game. . , .' ! Religious Instruction, and Fullbacks Frank Robotti' and .i :d. coach~g staff as well, i s ' : : PRINTERS ':: ,Class C Leader 'CI' . "D.' . .' ....'Fi'allk Moretti, both Juniors. .e upcommg renew~l of,; t h e , ' ", Coyle strengthened its grip asses, ec;rease \Tony Abraham of Fall River Nstonc, w.lth'o Holy Office .iid P,-:&' ~n the Class C leadership by ,WARSAW (NC)-About 1,500 and 27-year old Terry Glynn of Cross. Reports flltermg dpwn ., lOWell, MASS. ' virtue of the victory over Dur- of Poland's more than 25,000 Dorchester ,are the centers for from Worcester are full of wonfee, a B school, a win over ,intra~ ~hooI;s are ~ow without, relithe two units. Glynn's group' ~er at t~e way the Crusader GL ·1-63IlS aDd GL 7-'NM city rival Taunton on Thanks- glOUS mstruehon classes, as com- 'generally starts each game but lme has Jelled and at the ap-" . pared to only 402 last, June, it Abraham's sees a great de~l of parent magic Doctor Eddie AnPrelate and Diplomat is claim~d i? "Polity~a," a week- action. Tony is a ,1956 graduate derson has. used to. w~rk s~c4ax111a17 "nner ly pubhcahon conSIdered close of Durfee whose coach Luke cessfully without his fll'st two BOSTON· to the Red government. Urban" w~s the captain ~f Bos- quarterbacks. ~.C. has this week at D. To ST. OUIS (NC)-A disti~ In December, 1956, when a ton college's great undefeated . end ~ff, !>ut WIll undoubtedly be OCEANPORT, N. J. guished layman and a prelate Church-state agreement was and untied 1920' eleven under puttIng It to good use to "prep" PAWTUCKET, - R. L will speak at the St. Louis Uni- reached in, this communist-" Malor Frank Cavanaugh ~or the Cross. More on that subversity founders day cIvic 'din- contrOlled, country, it was proMost of the credit for the Jed next week. ner on Monday, Nov. 23.' yided th~t, religious instruction " B.C. line play this year ulti- ~~~A;M~q~~~A~~"-"i.ISl.M~£5:P:53~qM~Wq Retiring Under Secretary 01. IS to be gIven on a non-required ,,' ,ma~ly muSt redound to' Taun- ~ State 'Robert· D. 'Murphy and basis is public schoolS when re- lon's Vin St. Pierre. V~ was a . Richard Cardinal Cushing, Arch- quested byarnajority of the, ,standout guard for the Eagles ' bi~op of BO$tOn, wilt share the students' parents. in' 1953 and 1954 but a back' speakers platform. Mayor Ray- ,But since that time, numerOWl. injury curtailed his active play- ' mond R. Tucker 01. St.' Lout. efforts. have been made to en- ing in senior year, so he volunwill be toastmaster. co~e dropping, r~ligion. The. teered as freshman line cOach, Ministry of Education banned in which capacity he worked members of Religious Orden under IWi former Taunton High Family Union PARIS (MC) - The Interna- from teaching religion in schools. mentor, Wally Boudreau. Alter graduating from Boston tional Union of Family Organi- The govern,ment has aided the College in 1956 Vin entered zations has announced that its "Secular School Society" in next international conference setting up new schools without B. C. Law Sch~ol meanwhile UNION WHARF .FAIRHAVEN, MASS. will be held ill New York in Au- religious classes and given them serving as liile ~ach for St. special privileges. Mary's over in nearby BrooklUSt, 1960.
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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Nov. 19, 1959
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