Pope Joh-n Names Two Americans To Sacred College of Cardinals ,
The
ANCHOR
VATICAN .CITY (NC)-His Holiness Pope John XXIII has ~amed 23 prelates to the Sacred College of Cardinals, increasing the strength of the senate of the Church from 70 to 75 for the first time in nearly 400 years. Those selected include two of the most prominent churchmen in the United States,. Archbishops Richard J. Cushing of Boston and John F. O'Hara, C.S.C., of Phila delphia.
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, An Anchor of the Soul. Sure and Firm-ST. PAUL
Fall River, Mass. Vol. 2, No. 47
Thursday, Nov. 20, 1958 Second Cia.. Mail Pri..i1e~ea Authorized a' Fall Kinr. Ma...
PRICE lOe $4.00 pe' Yea'
Bishops Cite Right· To Teach Morals WASHINGTON (NC)-The Church's right to' teach extends to moral questions as well as dogmatic truths, the Bishops of the United States have declared. "As in matters of faith she has the right and power 110 teach truth and to dis in the confusion of modern plur tinguish it from heresy, so alism" ' the ' traditionaf' right "of in the fields of morals she the Church to teach. ' has the right to, define "It- is an' enduring tribute to 'Yirtue and to distinguish it from 'the wisdom of the· men who sin," 'they said. framed American freedom that they placed no hindrance in ·the The Bishops have emphasized this point in a statem~nt on "The"'" way -of the Church as teacher," they said.. "Fidelity to 'their're Teaching Mission of the Catholic Church," issued in their behalf ' straint is a proof of our national greatness." , ,by tOe Administrative Board of the National Catholic Welfare Citing 'the "~e~vy' inroa<if Conference. mad..~ on "the offICIal and popu lar thinking of men and nations" The Bishops said the statement 'Turn to Page Si~teen has been issued to "reaffirm * * *
New Bedford Parish Plans Thariksgiyi'ng Jubilee Mass His Excellency, the Most Reverend Bishop, will preside at a Solemn High ~ass of Thanksgiving marking the golden jubilee of St. Hedwig's parish, New Bedford~ .To take place Thanksgiving morning, the Mass will be followed by a' parish jubilee banquet Friars Minor Conventual. Priests at Woodro.w Wilson auditor from Our Lady of Perpetual ium, Rodney French Boule Help, New Bedford;' Holy Cross, vard.' Very Rev. Father George Ros kwitalski, O.F,M, Conv., S.T.D., provincial of St. Anthony's Prov ince of the Friars Minor Conven tual, will celebrate the Mass which will be attended by rep resentatives of the diocesan and, religious clergy in addition to parishioners. . St. Hedwig's is among four Diocesan parishes staffed by the
Fall River; and Our Lady of the Holy Rosary, Taunton, will be among guests of honor at the Mass' and banquet. ' Mission Church St. Hedwig's was originally a 'mission of Our Lady of Perpetual Help Church.' The latter served all the Polish people' in New Bedford. In 1908 the mission be came a parish in its 0"Yn right, Turn to Page Sixteen
'CARDJ;NAL' O'HARA,
In addition, His Excellency Archbishop Amleto Giovanni Cicognani, who has just marked his 25t~ anniversary as Apostolic Delegate to the United States, is among those who will be given the Red Hat. The consistory at which the 13 Italian and 10 non-Italian pre lates are to be raised to the car"" dinalitial dignity is scheduled for December 15. It will be the first such consistory in nearly five years, . Widely-Known Among the best known of the men who are to be named Cardi . nals are Archbishop Giovanni Battista Montini' of Milan and Msgr. Domenico Tardini, who' as veteran collaborators of Pope Pius XII in the Vatican Secre tariat of State both declined the Red Hat offered them by Pope Pius in 1!152. in revealing that he was nam ing Msgr. Tardini to the. Sacred College, :Pope' John also, made him SecretaJ,'y of State. One of
the first acts of his pontificate ., ' Turn to Page Seventeen
A'me'rican H'ierarc'hY ,Condem'ns"
. . Enforced Racial Segregation ••. '
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WASHINGTON (NC)-Eriforced segregation' cannot "responsible and sober-min be reconciled with the Christian :view Of our fellow man, the ded Americans of· all relig' Bishops of the United States have declared. ious "faiths" to i'seize the In a statement issued here 'the ,U. S. -Bishops called on mantle of leadership frona
Bishop ,Connolly, Hails', Selection, 'Of Boston' ',Archbishop Cushing' Bishop Connolly issued the following statement concerning the elevation of Archbishop Cushlng to' the r:ank of Car, dinal: ,
The' spirit of Christmas is already present in the great glff conferred upon us by our Holy Father. We all rejoice in the eminent distinction shown
Cardinal Cushing. We join with' all brother-bishops and all 'Boston' neighabors and friends in congratulating him on the accolade that crowns a career of exceptional devotion in sen~,i~of G~d and his fel low-men., We pray for 'him health and happiness and con tinued blessings in the 'years
that lie ahead.
Connolly- for his devotion and service to the underprivileged children of the Diocese. Turn to Page Twelve ~,., •••••••
Legion of Decency Film, Listings
On Page.15
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The heart of the race questioa is ".moral and' religious," the Bishops said, declaring that "it is vitill that we act now and act decisively." They added: "If'our attitude is governed by the great Christian law of love of ne~ghbor and respect for hit! . rights, then' we can work out harmoniously the techniques for making legal, educational, eco nomic and social adjustments. "But if our hearts are poisoned by hatred, or even by indiffer ence toward the welfare and rights of our fellow men, then our nation faces a grave internal crisis." Turn to Page Eighteen
Catholics throughout the Diocese will be asked on Sunday to contribute to the support of the Catholic Uni
With Bishop Connolly heading a long list of distin guished guests, the fourth aimual Charity Ball for under privileged of the Diocese will herald the arrival of,the 1959 social season throughout this area. Sponsored by the Society immeasurably to the fabuloUs ef St. Vincent de Paul and success of last year's affair when the Diocesan Council of more than 4,000 guests thronged Cat hoI i c Women, Bishop Lincoln Park to hOlwr Bishop
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the agitator and the rac,ist."
Ordinary Urges Cha r~ty in Plea For CU Funds
Interest in A~riual Charity Ball Seen in First Stage of- Co~t.~cts
Connolly's Charity Ball will feature the triumphant return of Lester Lanin and his inter nationally famous dance band. It will take place at, Lincoln Park, Wednesday Evening,"J'an:. uary T. 4,000 Present
Recognized as the Social Reg
Ister's favorite orahestra, the Lanin aggregation of 16 accom plished musicians contributed
CARDINAL CUSHING,
P ARISIl STARTS CLOTHING DRIVE: Members of ·St. Mary's P~rish,. North A~tleboro, contribute to the BIshops' Thanksgiving Glothing Drive. Mrs. Ralph Myette arid daughter Rosalind donate warm clothing, to collector, Mrs. Adrien Piette.
versity of America, Washington. In a letter which will be read af all Masses, the Most Reverend Bishop stresses the contributioa of Catholic University to Catho lic education 0 n a II leveh throughout the count'ry. "When we give, we assure our whole educational system' rich benefits that come in the person of te~ching Sisters and priests by the .thousands who have gotteri, their training at Catholic University," stated the prelate. The' special university collec tion will be taken up at all Masses Sunday, Nov. 30, the week following the reading of His Excellency's letter.
THINKING OF CHRISTMAS. ,Give A Subscription to THE ANCHOR Send to Parents, Relatives and Friends-Daug,hters ,a t School-Boys in the Service , A Weekly Reminder to Loved Ones of Your Thoughtfulness ' Subscription Blank on "Page 13
'. 2' DIOCESE 'OF FALL RIVER
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THE ANCHOR Thurs.,. Nov. 20, 1958
FALL RIVER. MASSAUHus],;·!·rs
Pope John Vis't., HisCatheOdro'l ' On Sunday
BISHOP'S OFFICB
November 19, 1958 Beloved in Christ:
On Sunday next; your offering in support of
higher learning and; the Catholic UrihjersitY·. of America will be accepted. We urge your continued generosity... ' .. , "\" ... The University has no endowment, beyond what "moneys are contributed by the faithfuL Incom'e from student sources fails by far' to·, meet' mountiJlg expenses. So it is important that we lend aid to keep our school in the forefront of American universities, whe~e it is. When we give, we a~sure our whole edu cational system rich benefits that come in the person of teaching sisters and priests by the thousands who have gotten their training at Catholic University. " Graduates from the schools of Theology and Canon Law' serve each diocese in responsible positions. 'More and more members of the laity are' being equipped to take important roles as leaders in the world of science, business, government and' the' professions. , We have many reasons .to take pride in. this institution. It represents sacrifice. It is a monument of our own devotion' to Catholic education. It' is 'a precious gift to our, land,' dedicated to uphold and '.... assert, the moral courage and religious conviction-so necessary to 'our times.' To meet the problems of an atomic age,we need men an(I women of gfeat knowledge and high prin Ciple.Please· God;' their 'number will incr~ase.' Arid ',may all of us share in bringing this growth to pass at the Catholic University. '. ,', . Believe 'me;" with, 'eyery 'devoted good wish and a l:tearty thanks for. what you do for the cause of Catholic education" , . .! ; .Faithfully yours in Christ,
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VATICAN' CITY (NC) ,The Prefect of Papal Cere monies, Msgr. Enrico Dante, , has announced details of the visit to be madtl by His Holiness Pope John XXIII to the Basilica; .. of St. John Lateran to take of ficial possession of his cathednll church on Sunday. :. The Pope will leave the Vat't can Sunday morning in a- motor:' cade of about 10 cars and will drive through Rome past guards of honor to the Lateran Palace which ajoins the basilica. From there he will be carried in procession, 'preceded by the Papal Court and the cardinals, _ through the square in front of American the . basilica and into the great Cicognani, church which is his cathedral service in as Bishop of Rome.
SILVER JUBILEE" GIFT: More than 150 Bishops honored the Apostolic Delegate, Amleto with a chalice on the occasion of his 25 years that· post and of· his episcopal consecration. Pope"John named the Delegate a Cardinal Sunday. With the Delegate are, left to right,'Archbishop Francis'P. Keough Bal timore, the Delegate,. James Francis Cardinal McIntyre of Los Angeles, Francis Cardinal Spellman of New York. NC Photo.
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.Bishops .Ho'norAppsto~ic Delegate: On ··Occasionof 25 Years Service'
. WASHINGToN. (NC) '- The' Bishops of' the' United '-States paid tribute to His Excellency- Archbishop Amleto , Giovannja Cicognani as a man who in his 25 years as' APos tolic Delegate to the United:States has won both resp~t and affection." , . ,." . , . . ".' election, the Pontiff had spoken In a oanquet III Washmg- to him of his "esteem" and "grat ton's She rat 0 n - Carlton itude"to "our Apostolic Dele . Hotel, more than 150 Amer- gate for all he has ·done." f
ican bishops honored him for Cardinal Spellman read a mes his quarter-century of service sage :sent in the' name' of' Po~e of Fall RIver. " , t,o the Church ,in this country. J?h.n, by, Msgr, Domenico Tar The Bishops had .just finished dml, Vatican Pro-Secretary of .' their annual twO-day meetiilg at Stat~. . the Catholic University of AmerHI~ Emmence James Francis ica here. Cardmal McIntyre, Archbishop Highlight of the occasion was of Los Angeles,. also spoke at the presentation of a solid gold the ba~q.u~t. He decla~ed that St. Anthony's Little Theatre event, and Rev. Lourenco Avila; jewel-studded chalice and paten- the P?sl~~on of Apos~ohc Dele Groupe of . unton; will' pre co-chairman,-as one of. many to Archbishop Cicognani. The gate IS o,f greater lI;npo~tance sent its first' major produc activities planned for the youth chalice was handmade in Milan and magmtud~ than ItS made tion, The .Who~e 'l:own's ...Talk of the parish:Italy, ,by a firn:t ~ which special; , ~uat~ ,?ehSignatiO~,,, for it~ ~older ing, . a comedy in thre,e ~cts, on The Little Theatre Groupe is izes in sacred vessels. IS a s eph~rd to the ,BishOps Saturday,)'{ov::'22, ai-..!I'.i'!~M., in composed of teenagers from '. . . ' '." . . of the country. , St. ,:Anthopy'~',SchooI:' ,~uditor Taunton High 'School, Coyle Of umque. deSign;, It took ..four , Archbishop Cicognani, si;leak ium. ' ',' .... .. ':. '~:' High School,. and St. 'Mary's' months to execut~. Deplc~ed ing, in reply,. promised: "Using ,The. Pt9gra!T1'; '~hich ,is~ dedi School. -The Gro'upe is directed ?round t~e cup CJf the chahce this chalice, I'shall continue my eated --'by 'tfte:players to;, their by' Joanna F. Roche, teacher of I? bas~rehe~·.are scenes f~om th.e humble prayers' and mementos pastor, the Right Reverend: Mon French and English at Taunton. ~Ife?f Chrl~t., ~r~und It~ base for you, your dear priests signor ManuElI J. 'f~xeira, has High S~bool, organist and choir 10·' high r ehef . IS'~ ~ephca', of people, and' shall ask ferlenily been approv~d~by t~e pastor'an4 director at Sacred'Heart'Church, Leonardo Da VmcI's "Last' illatthis·tourttry, uhder the 'Wise his assistants, Rey.. Joseph, ,Oli a~d .a member-of St. A!1 th ony's Supper." leadership of its bishops; r~main veira,. ", general chairman for th~ . ·Parish. The chalice bears the inscripalways eve!1 with regard tO'the ":' . d' L t '. '. -. .. tion: "To our beloved Archbish-: 'Chtirch;'the hmd' of the"f:oee ec ure ,The action of the play takes' op Cicognani from the hierarchy arid home' of the brave.';' .,.', S.econ' On Pare,nts,' ,:Children ,.,,:pla'ce in'the living' foom. of the of the United States." ' "The' Apostolic DeIE~gate'de , Simmons. home in. SanduS,kY, The chalice was presented to cul'red 'himself""sin'cerely"g'rate 'The second~i~cii.trli in the Ohio, in the summer, sometime the ~postolic Del,egate by' His fU.I, highly honored, a.nd at ·,th.e Cana Conference' sei'i'es will be, in the 1920's. Eminence' Francis C a I.' din a I same time embarrassed and con": presented at"7:30 P.M.. Sunday Except for Peter Cabana,-who Spellman, Archbishop of New fused that you should think, of -t,Opr Lady of Perpetual Help is\ a member of St., Jacques York. Cardinal Spellman ,de- me in this g~nerous w·ay." Church, New Bedford,' . Ch urc h ,and ,IC R"'h ar d'S'" Immons clared himself "con.fident in Say"Both gift and' donors," he :The 'sessie d'i's~usses relation (understudy), a member. of St. ing that in no country of the added, "are most dear to me." ships between parents and young Joseph's Church,-illl students' ,world are the hierarchy, clergy . children and includes' a question ' in" the cast are parishioners of ,and faithful more closely united Lourdes Pilgrimage and· answer period and· social St. Anthony's. with the' re'presimtative 'of the WORCESTER-,-The Most Rev. hour.. '. Holy Father than are we' with JohnJ. Wright, b.D., Bishop of Cana Conferences are con-, Pont.".ff Create's New' Archbishop Cicognani." , Wor<;ester, will, personally ,lead dlicted' by' the Family Life Bu-! The Cardinal said that in an a national pilgrimage'to Lourdes reau of the Dio<;ese with priests Prelature in 'Bolivia audience with His Holiness Pope for the closing of the Centennial, as' lecturers. Catholic and nonh Catholic married' couples are in-. VATICAN CITY (NC)-,-Pope - Jo nXXIII after his recent Jubilee, Year, Feb. 11. vited to attend: ' John XXIiI has created the new . Pre'lilture Nullius of Coroico in Legion of Decency Bqlivia, 'and entrusted ,it to the ,'. ' ~. Franciscan '1:'ro.vince of the Holy The followmg films are to be .. Name in New York.
added to the lists 'in their re-' "Th' . I t' .. d 'f
. , e new pre a u~e IS rna e 0 . I 'f' t' spec t Ive c assl Ica lO~S. territory taken from the 'Arch Unobjectio~ab~e ~for Adultsdiocese of L8 Paz and will be I Want to Live. (This classifica": one of its suffragans. It has ti0r,t is ~pplica~ll7 .~nly to pr~nts 120,000 inhabitants in 22 parishes. shown m the contmental Umted .' ,I . States.) , Objectionable in Part for All FORTY HOURS
-,-Party Girl: Suggestive cos tuming and, Ijilncing; r.eflects, t~e DEVOTiON'
acceptability' of divorce and re- ' marriage; excessive brutality.., ' ~ov, 23~St. Sia~islaus, Fall' '~,Perfect Furlough: Suggestive Riv.er. , . sltuations and':dtalogue. ' St. Arnie; New Bedford. ·Class A, Section 2 - 'ferror.... Nov~ .2f!-St. .Catlleiineis Con Fr.om· the Year 'sOOO;'TwoC:Headed": . vent, Fall'River. StiY. '" , Nov.'3O-0ur Lady .of. ·,·the '<;:la88 -A,":SettiorC3 ' - 'Horse's " • Immac\11ate Con<;eption, Mouth; Monster on the. C~mpus. . New:. Bedford. . , ' sf. Margaret, Buzzards THE ANCHOR Bay. ~ond-cla88 mail privileges ft\1thorized Dec. 7-'-St. Anthony of Padua, .t ~'all River,' Mass. Published everY , 'Fall Rivet. ',. .:,' rliursday '!'t .u9~·Highland A,venue, Ifall Ri,,~r, Mass., 'bY the Catholic .Press of the ' . ~ .~; ~t. :~i.;.~air~~y.,~~~" ~, ' DiOl:eRc 'or Fan·.River) Runscri.,...t.f.l1n'~"'QriCer l
Taunton Parish to Present Play
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FRIDAY"":"'Presentation of t~ Blessed Virgin Mary. Greatel' Double. White. Mass Proper; Gloria; Creed; Second Collect for the Pope; Preface ol Blessed Virgin. . SATURDAY-St. Cecilia, Virgill and ' Martyr. Double. Red. Mass Proper; Gloria; Second Collect for the Pope; CommOil .preface. SUNDAY"":"XXVr and Last'Su~ day After Pentecost, Double. · Green'. MasS Prop~r; Gloria; · Second ColleCt St.' Clement' I, Pope and Martyr; Third Col;' , lect'for the 'p~pe; Creed; Pref ace of·Trinity. '. ' MONDAY- St. John of,' the Cross, confessor and Doctor-of 'the' Church:. Double. Whit.e, Mass Proper; Gloria; Second Coli e c t St. Chrysogonus Martyr; Third Collect for th~ Pope; 'Greed; Common Pref~ ace. TUESDAY - St. Catherine 01. Aleximdria, Virgin and Mar.,. tyro Double. Red. Mass Prope.r; Gloria; Second Collect for' the . Pope; Co~mon Preface. ' :W~:t)NESi:>.AY':'-' s'i.. Sylv~ster. Abbot a~<;l Confessor. Doubl~. White. Ma6S Proper;- Gloria; Second Collect St. Peter· of :,' AleXandria, Bisl1-opa·nd. Mar,,,: · tyr; . Thir~: Coll~ct for, ,the Pope; Common ·Preface. \ ..... , THURSDAy-M~. of previous. Sunday..Simple. Green. Masa Proper; No Gloria or 'Creed; Second Collect for, the Pope; · Comon Preface. 0,
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American Catholic Relief Totals $723.Million to Overseas Needy
THE ANCHOR Thurs., Nov. 20, 1958
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WASHINGTON (NC)-Relief supplies valued at well Se~s over $723 million have been sent to the needy overseas by the U.S. Catholic Bishops' worldwide relief agency since it was established 15 years ago. . This has been disclosed by tained a foreign relief program Archbishop Francis P. Kevalue of $140,907,794.90. The ,naming of 23 new' ough of ·Baltimore at the Clothing Drive Cardinals by Pope John annual Bishops' meeting. Archbisho'p Keough indicated brought the number in the The Archbishop, chairman of the that a great deal of credit for Sacred Col1ege to 75 - the. board of trustees of Catholic Rethe tremendous increase in the < first time it has gone over the lief Services _ National Catholic volume. of ,the agency's relief customary 10 since Pope Sixtus Welfare Conference, said that . supplies during the past five V settled on this number in 1586. since its founding the agency has years must be given to the United The United States once more sent to foreign countries food, States Department of Agricul has four Cardinals-the number clothing, medicinals and other ture and the International Co it has had these several years supplies valued at $723,442,487:08, operation Administration, .which have made it possible for Amer before the deaths of Cardinal and having a gross weight of ican voluntary foreign relief orStritch and Cardinal Mooney. 2,139,434 tons. ' ganizations to distribute surplus Cardinal Glennon, made a Car Aid 51 Countriees food to the needy in all areas of dinal in 1946, died less than a Archbishop Keough stated the world. Last year CRS-NCWC month later. CRS-NCWC has shipped, for the shipped mor~ than one billion
second consecutive year, more pounds of surplus milk, cheese, With the elevation of Cardinal
ST. HEDWIG JUBILEE: Parishioners of St. Hedwig than one billion pounds of relief wheat, flour COrn, corn meal and Cushing, Boston and New En\{
supplies, valued in excess of one 'rice valued at over $86 million. Parish, New Bedford, will observe the Golden Jubilee of land receive their second Cardi
million dollars, to the overseas 'The food shipments were made nal. The first was William Car
th~ Parish. Mak~ng plans are Rev. Emil Tokarz, O.F.M. needy. to '38 different countries. dinal O'Connell who received
Conv., assistant. .:' The 1,109,056,960 pounds of reThe successful 1957 Thanksthe red hat from Pope St. Pius X lief goods that were involved in giving week clothing collection in 1911. Cardinal O'Connell died 1,039 shipments forwarded to 51 made it possible for CRS-NCWC in 1944.. I countries during the 1958 proto ship 12,460,125 pounds of Francis Cardinal Spellman is' gram year were valued at $107,-" clothing, bedding and shoes to a native of New England, born various areas of need. These 931,600.10, the Archbishop stated. CHICAGO (NC)-Priests and United States and recently ap in the town of Whitman, near. As a result the Bishops maincommodities had a vlue of $17, laity alike are called upon to pointed Cardinal. Archbishop Brockton. He was made a Car 832,629.75. Archbishop Keough sanctify the. world, the Most Meyer offered a Pontifical Mass dinal in 1946 after he went to said the interest evidenced in Reverend Albert G. Meyer said and preached the sermon. New York as Archbishop. the 1958 Thanksgiving clottting here at his enthronement as the · Archbishop IyIeyer paid trib collection 'indicates that this' fifth Archbishop of Chicago. Philadelphia has received its· ute first· to the late Pope Pius yellr's ,appeal will be just as second Cardinal with the eleva-; ROME (NC)-A new spoecial XII and then to Cardinal Sam Some 100'members of the U. S. successful as those of previous tion of John Cardinal O'Hara. : tsts' school for confessors and years. uel Stritch. He extended his hierarchy attended the en moral theologians has been filial devotion to Pope John Program Expands thronement . ceremony in Holy Baltimore has had one Car-' opened here by the Redemptor XXIII; and expressed his grati dinal, Boston two, Chicago has Name Cathedral here. Officiat 'The greatest expansion of the ist Fathers. tude' to'<Arch1,lishop Cicognani had two, Detroit has had one ing was His Excellency Arch relief and welfare programs dur The dedication ceremonies for presiding at the ceremony. Los Angeles one, New York' bishop Amleto Giovanni Cicog ing the' past' 12-month period were .presided over by His •.Em He said that both Pius XII and four, Philadelphia two, and St. nani, Apostolic Delegate to the took place in South America and inence Valerio Cardinal Valeri, Cardinal Stritch call out to us Louis one. Africa. prefect of the Sacred Congrega today from beyond the grave, During the period covered by tion of Religious, in thfi: pres Am,leto Cardinal Clcognani, Convert Addresses telling us that nothing is more· the 1957-58 annual report, CRS ence of the first 40 students enthe Apostolic Delegate to the important in life ,than the doing NCWC assisted 14,638 persons in rolled in the school. . Providence Alumni United States, is the sixth Dele of God's holy will." He added emigrating to' various countries. . . The school' is called the Al gate to this <;ountry. All his' ·that "the most eloquent sermon " Sir Arnold Lunn; convert, au This total included 3,461 per phonsium after St. Alphonsus predecessors were also' created thor and debater, was principal preached by both of them was in sons in resettling in the United Liguri, the founder of the Re Cardinals ~ Cardinals Satolli States. The total number helped speaker at the annual alumni ·their personal example for com demptorists. It will specialize in Martinelli, Falconio, Bonzann~ communion breakfast at Prov plete submission to this holy the scientific and practical study by G.RS-NCWC to find homes and Fumasoni-Biondi. idence College. will." in the United States under the of moral and pastoral theology. various emergency laws passed
Modern Problems A former professor of apolo since 1945 is now 212,007. In all,. getics at Notre Dame University, The two-year course, open to the Bishops' agency aided well the speaker pointed out that his diocesan priests as well as mem over 300,000 persons displaced in approach. to fighting Commun bers of other religtl:>us congre Europe' before 'and after the war gations, aims at meeting many to find 'p new home and a new: ism was participation in a de bate with noted nori-Catholics, of theological problems which . life in a country of immigration. preferably at a secular college the progress of the modern world . J' , , ' presents to the Catholic con Assumption ,College or university. science. Fall River alumni who attend The courses include a survey Offers Free Courses WORCESTER (NC)-Assump-' ed were Hilliard Nagle, Williarri. of the problems connected with B., Norton, Edward B. Downs, tion College has announced plans medicine, psychology and psy for a tuition-free program of .Edward .-J. Harrington, Francis chiatry. studies for talented· high school .J. Devine·and William F. Coady, The faculty is drawn from .Jr. . students. . various Redemptorist provinces • UNION WHARF FAIRHAVEN, MASS. • ~.~ ~ College credits will be offered throughout the world. in the program, which will com Awarded an honorary degree .prise three college-level. courses. .. " in absentia at the opening cere Classes will be held Saturday monies was Father Francis J. .• ,,",~jr 1iIf • Connell, C.SS.R. formerly of the' mornings for 15 weeks. The • ~ _.=-• courses include Russian lan Catholic· University of America guage and culture, an 'introduc and now on the faculty of St. Franciscan Fathers tion to literary culture, and a. John's University in Brooklyn. 5'lZPleasan~ st.• New Bedford seminar .in creative writing.' , , WY 6-82'74 , The program is planned in. con':' junction with Assumption's ef CONFESSIONS fort to encourage bright students . EVERY DAY to high intellectual' attainments.
Eight U. S. Have Received Cardinals
. Archbish()p Meyer at: Enthronement .Calls on All to Sanctify World
Start New School For Confessors
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Closed All Day Th.a~ksgiving : : Eat More : : Fi.sh on : .:• • F ·day
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OUR 'LADY'S
CHAPEL'
ALL DAY
High'Schoolers Aim To. Teach at Home
8:30 A.M. till 9.00 P oM. , . Sundays till 5 P.M.
NEW ORLEANS (NC)-Pro visions have been made here for religious instruction to be given handicapped Catholic children in their homes by high school girls and boys trained in Con fraternity of Christian Doctrine Methods. Many high school pupils have taken the teacher training course and are equipped to teach chil dren.. Recently general classes for handicapped children were opened in S1. Louis cathedral parish an!! a parish in another part of the city, under experi:.. enced adults.
TRAPPIST CHEESE Cave ripened by the Monks.
CHEESE AND CHEESE GIFT SETS FRUIT CAKES AND
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Trappistine Candies
HARRY'S FRUITLAND 471 Union St.• New Bedford \yY 3-'7448
1 Check These. Banking ·Services G1Fl':
BISHOPS' This solid gold jewel-studded chal ice, handmade in Milan and bearing scenes from the life' of Christ and a replica of DaVinci's Last Supper, was presented to th!,! Apostolic Delegate by the Bishops of the country. NC Photo.
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. Sag~:and Sand
. - THE 'ANCHOR Thurs., Nov. 20, 1958
Says Subject of Sanctity
Is .Bad,ly Misrepresented
By Most Rev. Robert J. Dwyer.
.Asserts Family Is Vital Unit Of Society
D~D.
Bishop of Reno
"The generality of friends puts us out of conceit with friendship, and the generality ofreliglous people Ruts us out- of conceit with religion." Francois, Duc de Roche foucauld, courtier of the Sun King, Louis XIV, smiled. a bleak little smile as he h' f It is useless for us to set up · h d h' po." I IS e IS . apOl'ISm or . . arbl'trar-y s t an d -.rd s 0 f h 0 l'mess . h IS celebrated Maxlmes. He a'nd then complain if no one I
LONDON (NC) - The only way.to check juvenile .. delinquency is to "build up the family as the vital unit
. '
o{ society," a prominent British jurist and former Cabinet Min
ister said here.
Sir Hartley Shawcross, Don-, Catholic member of Parliament and Attorney General of Eng land, told a meeting of the Pub lic Morality Council that one third of all crimes committed in Great Britain last year were by teenagers tinde-r 17. Sir Hartley, who served at
chief British, prosecutor at the,
Nuremberg war crime trials,
stated that one of the main rea-·
sons for this was environment.
."Children of the poorer class
es are often brought up in an
atmosphere where money is' all
important and not enough at-'
. tention is paid to the spiritual and the i-eaUy important things of life," he said. "A child needs an outlet for his
energies and emotions. If he
lacks the feeling of being cared
for ~hat outlet could quite easily 0 "be crJme."
He stresSed the need to keep
children occupied and declared
that although. youth' clubs and
similar organizations are doing,
v~y .good· work, parents· still
have a great 'responsibility to
ward their children.
While acknowledging the wOrk
of" the British welfare state or
ganization, he said that "spoon
feeding by the state leads par
ents to think that they need no
longer care for their children
themselves."
I
meant it to hurt, and it still does, th.ree. ce,nturies after.' The 11"0 n I c
lives up to Lem, Saints are never,prefabricated. Got" the supreme artist of hu .~uk~ ,wro~e ~n man 'souls, works With-infinite ,<" a diSillUSIOned
variety and with. a splendid , . . ~ " age for a. select
catholicity of materials even the r -. _. .. . c!rcle.of disillu most unpromising. ' . " .., slOned .readers,
It may well be an absOrbing VOCATIONAL' TRAINING CLUB: M.embers consult men and women
fascination, of heaveri for saints who h~d ceased
to compare notes on how they Sister Mary Louise Ida, principal of St. Anthony High to believe yery
'got there "in spite of themselves School, New Bedford, seeking career ·ideas. With Sister, st~ongly in any
in spite of b~d temper, obtuse~ left to right, Muriel Flor:ent, Jacqueline Martel, Diane Bou 'faIth. or to en ness, and the occasional flair for. cher and .Denis~ Schwartz. In background 'may be seen tertam any con the deliberately' fan'tastic statue of Pius X, Patron of the school. victions calling .. Many Never CanODlzed · . h' h f or 'Ig cour . In these modern times .we are age 'or enthusiasm," . ., much more demanding on tM Dedicat!on to Mary Wh~t could frIendship mean. at subject of saints than were our Versailles, where the. gr~at m more remote ancestors. Doubt door sp.orht w,as tea:.:,n ? dowdn less the ChiJrch has her re;sohll for straitening the gate, but her y:our nelg b or.s, reput.. t 1011,. al} what could religIOn where reluctance t 0 procIaIm ' h erOiC' . MT, ST. MARY'S ACADEMY. Mrs. Rene G, Cadrin, Mrs. Ro . d mean, d b " FALL RIVER samts were regal'. e as ore,s. virtue and. public cult has noth.., land' Desmarais and Mrs. Ed Before the junior prom, held at It ~a~ a,n age which, for all Its ing to do with her holy optimism ,round Martinville. artifiCiality, ~ears ra.ther remark concernfng the generality who I the Hotel Viking, Newport, stu able compar-son With our own. are never canonized. dents and their escorts met at' DOMINICAN ACADEMY,' the academy auditorium to par FALL' RIVER Suffers From Friends Undtmiable it is that religious . ticipate in ,a ·ceremonY dedicat The aphorism is only a half peaple do harm to religion. They ing the prom to 'Our Lady: Mary's Students participated in. Com truth, of course, but that moc;li do it, however, , lot because they statile was crowned by Marilyn munion Week, with each girl try cum is .more than enough to are religious but because' they Wrobleski.·· , _ ing attencl Mass 'and receive upset our complacency. For it is are people.· Aphorists like La Ninety candidate~ for ,Sodality Holy Communion daily. Jour'" grimly undeniable' that religion Rochefoucauid and skeptics like. membership heard a panel dis nalism students are examining does suffer as ]Tluch from ii;! Gibbon have a field day when it cussion on' "What the Sodality current.. fads in an attempt to 'see friends as from its avowed comes to detecting the short how much teen-agel's are influ enemies. .comings of the pious, for piety it! . Is and Does," led by Judith enced by. them. . ;Those who make profession ~f the most .vulnerableof profes-' McKnight, pref.eet. Sister Mary Verona and Sister Geraldine Rua is basketban being religious are often enoughsions. Mary Mer'cy represented the fac manager for' the season and an the very 'ones who drive others Those saints who 'keep insist ulty at a workshop on' the in Dounces Dominican's first game into insane antagonism to reli ing, in the face of ~very shred of terpretation of, the National- will be December 4 at Dart gion itself, and this, be it under evidence; that they are the great Merit Scholarship Qualifying mouth. The first home game win stood, without prejudice to their ,est of sinners, are only .trying to Test. be. December 11 against New llincerity or genuine piety. escape from the dilemma and to OUR LADY OF THE ANGELS, Bedford Vocational. It is not a question her~ of exonerate religion of their 'per and
}'ALL RIVER 'Debate season opened yester Tartuffe and his hypocrisy, but sonal oddities. St; Philip Neri The annual penny sale spon day with a home debate against of people who are honestly try could conceive nothing. more sored by the Children of Mary Rogers of Newport. Una Ray ing to be good, e'ven fo be saints. ridiculous than himself as a for the benefit of the parish will mond and Anne Marie Caron For saints, be it conIe'ss~d, can saint; be held tomorrow'night at the represented DA. be' and sometimes are exasper Aware of Shortcomings parish hall: on Tuttle Street. and Sons, Inc. ating'in the extreme. It is dif The "grandeur a9 d the misery'" . ST. MARY'S HIGH SCHOOL,
ST. ANNE'S, _ ' ficult to imagine any of them, of our human conditions are no OSTERVILLE 'TAUNTON . 0
FALL RIVER not excluding such gentle figures where more eloquently demon GArden 8-6509 Sophamore Joyce Harnois· will , The Holy Name Society will as the Poor 1•.:an of Assisi or the shated than in the saints. They •• _ a_a_o_a_ot_n_ft Little Flower, who would not have caught the vision, but how .serve a ham and bean supper' represent area Girl Scouts in a have been uncomfortab'le' and k t h ey awm;e 0 f h ow between 5:30 and 7:30 J;',M. this trip to Colorado. ·eenI yare Saturday.in the school cafeteria. angular to live with or with far short of it they fall. Seniors have scheduled a day whom. violent .disagreement at the Holy Union novitiate, Fall They trail their bodies· after' . Proceeds will benefit parish un would not have been inevitable, dertakings. Bernard H. Paquette· _River, during which they will sooner or l a t e r . ' them, bumping into people, observe· religious life in action. knocking down pretensions, up- . ' heads the arrangements com mittee. . Thill project correlates with a It is not merely: that they are setting well-laid plans for the religion. unit on choice of vOca. Such determined indiv,idualists, betterment. of the temporal So. Dartmouth NOTRE DAME,
tions. '. but that their very sanctity is status of the Church, until it is FALL RIVEJl
and Hyannis' a standing reproach to the rest small wonder they are de . November's assembly featu~ed The Women's Gl.!ild will hold . us. Who would care to be the nounced as a menace to rel4gion. an open meeting at Jesus-Mary' a motior picture. on bicycle So. Dartmouth
novice-mader or the superior of . Religious, people do harm to safety, and discussion included Academy Monday, Nov. 24 at a saint? WY 7-9384
religion; the more harm they do, aspects of. safety to be 'observed 8 P~M. Entertainment will fe~ the more religion flourishes. by pedestrians and driven as Intolerant of Holiness ture Cecile Clement Grobe, 'con Hyannis 2921 That is the aspect of the mat-· well bicY'clists. cert pianist. Miss Medora Dupuis The injustice of the maxim, fo".--·--~~-·';'--~·~·_~tel' that escaped the gimlet eye and Mrs. George Poirier are co ~leqrly, lies in the (act that it of the aphorist. If he had seen chairmen.' n:lrrows the field down to friend it he might have torn up hili ship and religion. In fairness it Members will attend a com should have been written as an _Maxiines' and written a bGOkon munion breakfast in Notre Dame the love of God. Imagine La inclusive commentary on human Hall, Sunday, Nov. 30 follow·iog ~ ,'chefoucauld a saint! Perhaps nature. ' a A: M, Mass. only God could do that without Friends are disappointing, but. smiling a little. The Rose Hawthorne sewing 5 no more so than artists and phy group meets Tuesday at 1:45 sicians and iawyers. And reli P. M. in the parochial committee Warns 'Ziou, people are actually no headquarters. Members and MANILA (NC)'~ Deuglas more annoying than non-reli friends are requested to donate Hyde, noted English convert 545 Mill ST. gious people, or than soldiers or NEW BEDFORD, MASS. white material for making sur fr!)m communism. is in the Phil sci~ntists or politicians. gical dressings. ~ppines . making 'special . studies Human nature being what it On the. ticket· committee for of the communist Huk organi~is, perfection is neither to be the B,ishop's Charity' Ball are tion. ., ' . _ sought for nor expected here During - his stay, Mr. Hyde below, not even in saints. But· ~ei.ei.~ gave a series of lectures in all whereas we are tolerant of most the leading colleges and uni foi'bles we are singularly intol verSities in the Manila area. erant when it com~s to holiness. ELECTRI.CAL
He told students that they have If saints show .$igns 'of ap become the prime target for CONTRACTORS
proaching perfection they arouse our immediate resentment;' if communism in the Philippines. Residential - ' Commercial
they fail in any degree' they Industrial
awaken our contempt. Our criti R.. A. WI~COX CO. 633 Broadway, Fall River cism is never mor'e', razor-sharp t,han when it is directed "against' OFFICE FURNITI)RE OS 3-1691 o •• I:::lCiI:::l~-.::.-.::::n=.>::::l the man who is trying to follow • I. Stnco::k '01' Immetliat. O...iv • ..., Christ. • .DESKS • CHAIRS .' i Fighting· Good Fight FILING CABINETS', . : rhe wty>le subject of sanctity' • fiRE FILES -. SAFES is: badly. misunderstood, an~, FOLDINGTABLES ' - what is worse, badly misrepre-· AND CHAIRS sented. All Saints' Day, which ushered in this month of Novem ber, was never intended to com':' 'Reg. $1.25 lb. BREA'D memorate the legions 'of the per 22 BEDFORD 51 fect, ·but simply tho'se who died FALL, RIVER 5-7838 . .'. Chapel fighting the good fight. ~
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Spotlighting Our Schools
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Honywood in Focus
I
'IHE ANCHOR~hurs.,
Asserts Producers ·R,ea.lize Importace of Go~dTaste
Casb Clean-up . . . ThiS seems to indicate cautfous treatment of morally controvel'sial matter, at least in many instances, "Peyton Place" and "Cat On a Hot Tin Roof" being typical. Moral clean-up led to. a cash "clean-up" at the theaters. Rosalind Russell's Broadway success, "Auntie Marne," is filmed by Warners, steps up the innately fine qualities of the character without discarding the flamboyance, or even aU of the profanity, which marked the original. As a ~esult those who know by. experience that aunts can some~ times be more helpful and sympathetic with children than their own mothers-and others who merely suspect it-may well warm to the underlying morals and good intentions of "Auntie Marne," rather than merely giggle or tut-tut indig nantly about her superficial be havior. This is not to review "Auntie Mame," but merely, on the basis of an early preview, acknowl edge my surp.rise that so much has been attempted to bring a bawdy play into acceptabl'e line. There are still some 'rough spots, but the picture indicates to me- as did "Peyton Place" and "Cat"-that Hollywood produc ers who couple stark or daring realism with "big" movie policy, at last realize that some regard for good taste is a prerequisite to good business results. Film to Remember Those who saw the Titanic disaster dnimatized on TV a year or so ago, should make a point of seeing "A Night To Re membel'," filmed in Great Brit ain 'by the Rank organization and'. shortly for release in thia eountry~
The story now has been filmecl three times and televised twice. It had never done half aa well as Rank now does it. For one thing, previous ef forts, one way or another, at ~pted to go into causes and 110 fix blame for the catastro phy. The giant British liner Ti tanic, with many Americans 00 board, struck 'an iceberg on her maiden Atlantic voyage and on April 12, 1912, took down with bel' 1,500 of her 2,207 passengers and crew. She had been pubU c.ized as unsinkable!
German director. This wu the world's first be-lingual talkie' and had separate German and English speaking casts. The shipping line protested the film so the title was changed to "At lantic." In 1953, 20th Century-Fox re filmed the story with Clifton Webb in one· of the key roles. The picture was good although various romantic and tragic vignetl~s used to point up the human interest tended to ob scure the shatte~ing scope of the drama as a whole. Rank's "A Night to Remem ber" with Kenneth More" Lau renee Naismith and a great nUffi ber of other wonderful actors, integrates a host of individual incidents in an awe-inspiring, almost documentary account of a catastrophy caused more by over-confidence than sheer official carelessness~ .0 Yet while you see the giant vessel sinking, you feel an up surge of spirituality through the pall of d.read, and fear. . "A'Night tot Remember" . t t l ' .uI de~~ly pOlgnan ,ye s range y,mSPIring.
The Jobn Farrows John .and Maureen (O'SulU van) Farrow, last week set for those of us who know them a.n inspiring example of Catholic . courage an d res\'''nation '" . . With six of their children they were
in Britain where John has be"ln editing a~d scoring his latest film "John Paul Jones," shot mosltY in Spain. Nineteen-year-old Michael, their first-born, was in Holly wood at school and to prepare for military service. He, witb two others, died instantly when a private plane in which he \Vas to take flight instruction, col tided with. another: .. John and Maur~en, with their second son Patrick, flew back to Hollwood for the Rosary and Requ.iem Mass. Fril~nds .power less to assuage their grIef, re ceived . words of comfort from them. As we pray for the soul of Michael Farrow we renew
our thanks to Almi~hty God for the Faith so beautIfully exem-, plified by .parents ,whose sorrow was not Without hope.
Pope John has departed from two customs in elevat in~ 23 t? the Sacred College of' Cardmals. .
"....
Canadian Bishop Limits Pastors To One Collection' at Masses 6
'LONDON. (NC)-Only one collection for parish sup port will be taken up at Masses on Sundays and Holy Days in this Canadian diocese by order of Bishop John C. Cody. Seat offerings, made at the door or in church, have been abolished. . number of our separated breth Bishop Cody wrote in a ren who in their. hunger for Pastoral letter to the faithtruth now frequent our churches ful that his "knowledge of on Sunday." your spirit of faith and generosity convinces me that under the new system there will. be an increase rather than a decrease .in rev enue." The new law, decreed by the diocesan synod, goes into effect on January 1, 1959. The Bishop said that "too many collection;;, and especially a seat
offering, tend to keep God's chosen people, the poor, from regular and joyful attendance at church. Under the new system, all seats being gratis, rich and poor, without 'embarrassment, may take any seat they find vacant when they arrive at church." Bishop Cody also wrote that too many collections have 'an ad verse effect on "the increasing 6--
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'''There is an obvious danger," he maintained, "of their being disedified by too many 'collec tions, particularly when anti Catholic critics are fond" of rep resenting the Catholic Church as not· 'the' pillar and ground of truth,' but as a gigantic financial corporation." Furthermore, the Bishop said, "the repeated clinking of coins and the making of change" has often been distracting to the congregation at Mass.
~
The second custom that has been broken is that it is unusual for brothers to be Cardinals. The Apostolic Delegate, Amleto Car dinal Cicognani, has a brother who was made a Cardinal in 1953-Gaetano Cardinal Cicog nani, Prefect of the Sacred Con gregation of Rite.s. Cardinal Gaetano Cicognani is 77 years old; the Delegat.e is 75.
Conscience Stricken WORCESTER (NC)-The larg est "conscience payment" in the history of W.orcester has been received by the city treasurer. .It was in the amount of $520 "for materials and work not done good." The donor did not sigl' his name.
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SAIGON (NC)-A 250-bed hospital built for Vietnam r~fu gees by the American Bishops' overseas charities agency and staffed by Religious and laymen from three continents has been inaugurated in nearby Ho ·Nai.
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For the first time in 400 years the number of Cardinals has ex ceeded 70. This number waa settled upon by Pope Sixtus V in 1586. This custom is not bind ing upon the Holy Father. The expansion 0 f the C h u r c h throughout the world and the need for more Cardinals in the Roman Curia to carryon the '."t.~- administrative work of ~he • Church undoubtedly influenced ,. the Pope in his departing from c...:"._...",,,,":'.:Ithis custom.
NORTH. ATTLE,BORO CANA CONFERENCE: Pictured with Father Booth, pastor of St. Mary's Church, are left to right; ,Mr. and Mrs. Edmond Chabot and Mrs. Adrien Picette
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·5
Pontiff Breaks Two Customs Of' College
By William H. Mool'lng
The outstanding movie trend of the year has been
"fewer and bigger"films. Some have been "bigger" only in the sense of money spent or manpower employed. A f~w at three to five million dollars apiece, have been "big" enough to provide at the theaters, Change Title entertainment bigger and I was at . Britain's , E1stree better than anything we,can studios in 1930 when B.I.P. first . . filmed the Titanic story under get at hom~ on our TV ~e~. the direction of E.A.Dupont, a
Hollywood s search for orlgmamy and diversity has led to m 0 r e probing in t 0 obscure circumstance~ and eccentnc characterizations. Often t?e non-conformist --o'r, if you w ish , . the "screwball" character-has been hero-ized so that by contrast, more normal, or di n a r y characters hay e .eemed to become nincompoops. Some of you may even have felt that among the "big" films, more objectionable matter than ever before has been coming along. Actually, as I think the Legion of Decency's annual report will show, fewer films have found their way on to the "B" list. Most of the Hollywood producers remain on the lookout.for lIensational novels or stageplays. but their trick in filming the~ is to play up eccentricities of character, make the most of unusual situations, delve into a variety of human problems but still not stray far from circumstance or characterization with which the movie-going public ean identify itself.
Nov. 20, 1958
ii
93 SUMMER SUEET • BOSTON 10. MASS. Display Room -Fourll> Floor TelEPHONE. HA 6-233J-HA 6-2830
Cardinal Cushing
,Thanks-Giving
The faithful of the 'Dioceseof Fall River rejoice that' the Holy Father has honored its Metropolitan, the Arch bishop of Boston, by elevating him to the Sacred College of Cardinals. ' " Cardinal Cushing is ~ Cardinal of the Holy Roman Church. As the Church is universal in its mission and interests, the new' Cardinal of Boston reflects such univer sality in his nature. He' is 'noted for the breadth of his interest in his fellow men, in his desire that all may know God. . The Cardinal's motto is. "That they may know Thee, the One True God and Jesus Christ Whom Thou hast sent." His efforts for all classes and manner of men, within and outside the household of the Faith, have been guided' by that desire. It is no wonder that Catholics of New England and those not of our Faith are happy that the Holy Father has made him a Prince of the Church. In the words of Bishop Connolly: "We pray for him .health and happiness and continued blessings in the years that lie ahead."
-THE ANCHOR Thurs., Nov. 20, 1958
Weekly Calendar Of Feast Days
The He!lrt of the Qu~stion
TODAY-St. Felix of Valois, Confessor. He was the son of the Count of Valois and was born in 1127. He joined the Cister cians, lived for a time as a her mit in Italy, and upo'o his return to France met St. John of Martha, with whom he formed the Con gregation of the Holy Trinity, dedicated to the redemption of Christian slaves held by the Moors of Spain and North Africa. St. Felix lived 0 see 600 houses of this community opened. He died at Cer!-Froid in 1212, TOMORROW-Presentation of the Blessed ,Virgin. This feast commemorates the presentation of the Blessed Virgin Mary in the Temple at Jerusalem at the age of three by her parents, Sl Joachim and St. Anne, SATURDAY-St. Cecilia, Vir gin-Martyr. She lived in the second century and is one of the most famous martyrs of the,early Church. The Patron Saint of musicians was of noble Roman Lirth. She' is said to have been tortured and martyred for her Faith her own mansion,into which later inwas converted a Church. At about the same time
The Statement of the Catholic Bishops of the country reaffirming their support for racial equality and school intEigration is in a sense unnecessary. The Church's teaching on the equality of men because of the Fatherhood of God ,has always been clear. The Statement of the Bishops ' presents nothing new nor will it introduce any new pattern of thinking or acting into Catholic teaching. , ' , But for the sake of those who in time of crisis look for a formal presentation of the principles' involved, the qStat~ The Family Clinic ment is well-timed and welcome. A similar stand has been taken both by the Protestant Episcopal Bishops 'and the Council of Bishops of the Meth odist Church-a heartening sign that all men of good will ean detect and condemn a common enemy. B F h J h L' connection ,they had with St. Th'e Catholic Bishops' Statement does not try to over Cecilia is uncertain. The relics " , . " y at er 0 n • Thomas, S.J. ' Assistant Professor of Sociology' of all three are beneath the high' '\ simplify the complex situation that exists prin~ipally but altar'in the Basilica of St. Cecilia St. Louis University not exclusively: in the South. It rl;lcognizes that the' crisis How do you handle jealous wife? Mine watches me in Trastevere.
isa multi-faced one. "There are many facets to the proQlems SUNDAY-St. Clement Iof
raised by the quest for racial justice '... There are issues of like a hawl~: When I 'get home 'at' night she has to' know 'where I've been, what I've done, with whom I've talked etc Rome, Pope-Martyr. A 'first •law, of history, 'of eCoTiomicsand sociology ... Their import century convert, he was the: ance we do not deny." This is 'a realistic appraisal of the ~tc. T don't know What's ,started her on this approach but rather suspect' it's a friend .. " , third successor to St. Peter, who ' ' " , ,problem. ",.,." , ' h Th had consecrated him a' Bishop. ' c arge.s . e ,suspected partner, His famous epistle to the COr:hl:' , But the 'Bishops, while ,ta~ing,cogn~zance of, all th~t , of hers who's 'always been t8 involved, point· out that the issue' is a,bove all else a moral ,a troublemaker and has ;;:~~us~~t at the root of the . thinians restored order in the made. a mess of her own ,Cllurch in Corinth. He governed. , one; "But the. time has come, in our consideration and ' Why d 0 peop Ie become jeal the Church' as Pope for about ten marrIage. How an I get my wife ous? Well, AI, 'you have named prayerful judgement, to cut through the maze of secondary to see how Si~ly she's acting? your wife's friend as a possible years ,and died as an exile and . or less essential issues and to, come to the' heart, of the . If your SUSpIcause in your Case., However, I martyr under Trajan about 100. problerri. r:I:he heart of the, race question i is moral and I cion about the don't think this it the whole ,- MONDAY - si. John of the religious." , , ' influence of story. Troublemakers are' sucCross, Confessor-Doctor. He was 'The, Bishops" with further' realism; cautioned that you r ~ if e' I eessful only' when they have born near Avila, Spain, in 1542 some basis upon which to build. and was ordained a priest in, the justice can be attained in this'matteronly' by the use of friend IS cor If your wife has ,become jealous,' Carmeli~e Order in 1567. ,In prudence and charity. But'lest the'irwords'be taken for rect, AI, you there m,ust ,be de,eper reasons. Duenced by 8t. Teresa of Avila, ~mpromise, they warn that there must be 'positive striving ,?ave, a tough
Job cut out, for
What might they be? ' 'hefounde'd the Discalced Carfor raCial justice and that prudence must not be a label , you. Troubl~Suspect Motives 'melites, and his work was foi-..sed to cover inaction. " , makers of thIS
In g'.e n era I; AI,. jealousy mally approved by Pope Greg the Bishops, type ;,tre mas , Thi~, the Eighteenth. Annual Statement ~rings from a feeling, of per-, ' Qry XIII in '1580. He underwent will take its pl~ce alongsid~' t"e others as a significant tefl'S at .the art .anal insecurity. Its victims are' many ~ria1s,. was persecute~ and not sure of themselves, or ,Qf imprisoned. He died in 1605. He eontributiontO our country's t~il1king anQ guid~' for o. ~rousmg sus plCIon and we' was canonized byf'ope Benedict action. , 'st" d" . t ,'their standing in relation to xiII in 1726. ,mu a, m r, , others.
ther~ are genera~ly m.or~ th.allThis prorilp~ them to be over TUESDAY-,-St. Catherine of enough k.nown ~ases of IOfldehty sensitive to the way they are Ale~and~ia, Virgin-Martyr. ' She
o.nce more' the smear technique has been aimed against' in ,the commumty to lend so~e treated; to .suspect other's mo ' was put to ,death by means of
the Federal Bureau of ,Investigation' and its· distinguished ,'se",lblan~e of support, to their, tives, to seek excessive guaran an engine .fitted with' a 'spi~ed,
Director, J. ,Edgar Hoover. ' , ,inslIluabons. tees that they are loved and so' wheel about ,the, year 310 in
Once more the' evil charge has been made, that the . In ,a sense, ~ccessful mar forth. If they feel 'sorr:eone is 'Alexandria, during the reign of
nages are parbcula~ly vulner threatening their friendship with' Maximunus Daza. According to
Bureau is destroying the liberties, of the American people. . able to such attaCKS because another, they frequently react legen~, before her martyrdom
The former editor of the comrilUnist Daily Worker has they are based on complete by tryiilg to, ruin the reputatiorr' she 'met and vanquished '50 pa
even made the audacious statement that the party in this mutua~ trust. Happy husbands. of this third party. Trouble gans ill arguments on philosopJ:1y
eountry is a harmless relic composed of a handful of older ahnd ;:l1ves don't'hfeelththe need to makers find such' persons e~sy and for this reason is considered
people from whom the country has nothing to fear. c ec up on eac 0 er. ' " the patroness of philosophers. WEDNESDAY-St. Sylvester, They habitually allow a rela pr:h h ld . The aim of these charges is to throw up it smoke screen, tively free display of, friendliness . y s ou . your Wife feel Abbot. He founded the Silves to lull AmericaJ'ls, to distract them from the real enemy and \ towards, others, suspecting no ms:cure after all ,these years of trine Congregation of Benedic tines, sacrificing a brilliant to turn them against their own defenders. ulterior moti"es at least on ,lovmg trust? You 11 have to try What a tragedy it would be if the big smear harmed .their spouse's pa;t. This is as it to answer that one yourself, AI. ecclesiastic career to do so. He "t d f 1 k . However, I can offer the fol ,overcame many difficulties in should be among normal mature th In I S won er u '·",or or Impugned the proven '10 . g g ge ~ t Ion . • e B ureau . ' . ", partners. ,WIn s u s . S ome esta,blishing his institute, and w omen b mtegrIty of its Director '. ' th ecom e Insecure as ey died at the age of 90 in ]267. This country, has' enough checks so that no agency of Jealousy Grows,
approach the epd of their repro g-overnment can endanger the freedoms of. its peoples. -However, once suspicion is ductive span. Their family is is wearing, and are proud to be The communist wish is for Americans to lose faith in aroused, this very habit of trust with her socially. growing more independent; they th . t . f 'ing freedom supplies the con feel less needed; and the accom Second, since you have givell e In egrlty 0 the democratic way of life and from fear dition's -for jealousy's rapid panying physical ch~nges may her no grounds for suspicion, put. ' a stop to this non~ense at once. ~ turn on the Bur~au and to neglect the "Red peril" that growth. All former associations, be bothersome. They may unconsciously re Stand on your past record. Show m the open or underground is still the real enemy of the actions,and words are now eountry. ' . viewed with a critical eye. sent their husband's carefree her that she's been misled by a The Bureau and Mr. 'Hoover :must be supported and Everything the partner does is attitude and. independenCe, troubiemaker and that you have' must be kept where they h,ave always been-in the very', subject to suspicion. Why did he while seeking added assurance no intention of playing along f t k f th get home so late last night? Was that they are loved and appre with that kind of game. , ron ran s 0.' e 'defenders of democracy. , ' that really 'a business trip he ciated for themselves' rather Don't make the mista.ke of took a week ago?' Must he al than for what they do or have further tolerating her suspicion ways stop 'and chat, with' Mrs. done. ' by , answering 'endless accusa_ Likewise, some wives become tions. This is one time' you had Smith ,next door?
insecure when ,they realize that best be very firm. Your 'past Why must he try to be s~ch a ladies' man at every party they, preoccupation' .with household happiness has been. built ,Oil' attend? Isn't it silly for a" man tasks has gradually tended 'to m~tual trust. It must pro,ceed on his age 'to notice every young ,limit' their interests and cut that basis' or your life will be- ,: . OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FAll RIVER' girl that passes? ' them off from wider contacts. come a nightmare. Frequently, these qtiestfons They may feel, ,the'y have ''.too ~"blished weekly'by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River , ,are insiriuated 'rather than asked ~ew shared ,interests with their Film ':~, ',' , \ ' ,410 Highland Avenue : dll'ectlY. Jealousy' h~s' it~' own ·husband....:....he seems to be living :VATICAN CITy (NC)- Hi. : fall River" Moss. '. 'OSb~rrie S"HS1 bag. ,Of;'!lubtle tricl!:s, ':ranging : most of his life in a world apart. ,Holiness 'Pope John XXIII" '. PUBLISHER ,,' , . ,from the pose 6f, inj!lred' illno-' Suggests Firmness ' viewed the film o{his coronation' . , Most Rev. James L.Connolly,'D.D., PhD. 'cence to the carefully planned ' What ca,n you do? First, ,,~ , in 'the Hall of, the Consistory Ciestruction of 'another's reputa- little added attention to your ASST. GENERAL 'MANAGER , .GENERAL MANAGER, ~ere: The black-and-white :film tion. ' , wife will help. ,Don't lE!t her f~l was' ron off by the Italian TV' Rev:. Daniel F. Shalloo. M.A. ' Rev. J~h'n P. Driscoll Because the spirit of mutual that she is being taken for a~d Radione,twork which pho*O-" , " MANAGING EDITOR trust has been undermined it granted. Let' her see that you graphed 'the entih~ papal' Maa. Hugh J. Golden helps little,to answer individUal stID admire her,-notice what she an'd":coroll~tion ceremony~ " , ..... .. .... ).;,:..- ....... ,
Mutual Tru' st' F.·rm Ba' s.·s· For, Successful Marriage
~~s~O::;eV%e:::y~:;'d;;~~u~t~~~
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ANCHOR.
, Pope,Sees
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~ 'ANCHOIt-
Thurs., Nov. 20, 1958
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Fifteen '. Citizens' ·Of Country Cardinals The first Americans to be made Cardinals were 'John Cardinal McCloskey, Arch bishop of New York, in 1875, and .Tames Cardinal Gibbons, Archbishop of Baltimore, in 1886. Both were elevated to the Sacred· College by Pope Pius IX. . In 1911 Pope 51. Pius X cre ated eighteen Cardinals. In this number were the Archbishop of Boston, William Cardinal O'Con nell, the Archbishop of New York, John Cardinal Farley, and the Apostolic Delegate to the United States, Diomede Cardinal Falconio, who was Italian-born but a citizen for many years of the United States. In 1921 Dennis Cardinal Dougherty of Philadelphia was raised to the College of Cardinals by Pope Benedict XV. In 1.924 Pope Pius XI gave the red hat to Patrick Cardinal Hayes, Archbishop of New York, and George. Cardinal Mundelein, Archbishop' of Chicago. Pope Pius XII created four American Cardinals in· 1946. These were Francis Cardinal Spellman of New York, 'Samuel Cardinal Stritch of Chicago, Ed ward Cardinal Mooney of De troit, and John Cardinal Glen non of St. Louis. Cardfual Glen non died on his way home from receiving the red hat in Rome.. ... In 1953 Pope Pius ':XII created James Francis Cardinal Mcln... tyre, ,Archbishop of Los Angeles.. a Cardinal. , With the. elevation· of. Cardi nals Cushing and . O'Hara, then,. fifteen American citizens have" been made Cardinals. Fourteen of the~e were Archbishops of American Dioce~s. The fif teenth, Cardinal .Falconio,. was Apostolic Delegate to the coun try and up(;m his elevation· took up, new posts in the Roman ·Curia.
K of C Deputy SeQts
Fa,lmouth· Officers
N~wly elected officers o~ Fal mouth Council Number 1HS, Knights of. Columbus, .W.oods.. Hole, Mass., were installed by Distrrot Deputy-, Alban . A.. Duch~nseau and his su~te at, tb~ .. Cq~nc,il H.ome. .' . . ..'. 'the"foJlowing '",ere instl:illed :
Gt;a.nd.~night L~nardE. ~ai';':
tin; r>eputy Grand K:night, Man:..: uet S. White, Jr.; "Cha'nce'116r, .~ John C. Roderick; Financial Se9~etary, Bento· 'Correia; Re-· corder, Edwin Medeiros. Warden, Milton R. Steele; Treasurer, Lt. Robert A. Frank lin; Lecturer, Frank Tavares;. Advocate, George Denmark; In side Guard, Scoba Rhodes; Out side Guards, Loaquim Tavares, Robert Costa. Trustees, John P. Doyle, Joseph Grace, Lawrence F. Palmer. District Deputy Duchenseau congratulated the new officers and stressed the fact that full cooperation from each member is needed for a successful Coun ciL
St. Michael's College To Build New Dorm WINSOOKI PARK (NC)-St. Michael's College expects to start· work on its third postwar dormitory before the end of this school year. Father Gerald E. Dupong, college president" has announced $685,000 . had been allocated for . a 2OO-man dormitory by' the Community Facilities Administration of the Housing and Home Finance Agency, Washington. Father . Dupont announced earlier that architects were working on plans for a com bined student union building aDd' dining ball for 1,000· StU: dents. "This is a plickage deal," he s'tated. "We hope to 'start work OIl both projects silnuitaneously .. soon as both allotments are made ·avallable." The college, with 86'1 students, has' its greatest enrollinent smce tJIe voslwaI' rusb of 1a5O.' ..
And thriftt1, yours, as wei. Check your holiday needs below. They're an at First National in quality and vanety , . ' to insure deliCIOUS eahng. FOr the Thanksgiving feast - or any other time - you'll find First National is your budget's besl fnend.
So M~ch Depends on the, , mey- Make Sure it's First Nationars
TURKEYS L839c All Grade A. 10 to 14 LaS
THANKSGIVING WEEK o..M SHOPPING HOURS .Open Tfie.~ W.... & Fri. 'til "GO P...
""'eta
Best Produce Values!
CRANBERRIES 2.3 C CELERY L~w 2.5 C GRAPES Fresh - New Crop Cape
Northern, Broad Breasted, Meaty 16 to 11 L8S ALL OVEN READY
Crisp, Tender, Pascal-
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in
Calories - Non-Fattening
Red Emperor - Ravorful Plump Juicy - For Desserts or Snacks
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LB CELLO
8UNOi -
19c
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Here is Your Men~ Guide and Your Guide to Savings! OCEANSPRAY - STRAINB> OR WHOLE
OR PUMPKIN - FOR QUICK EASY ,PIE MAKING
* 'CranberrySauc:, 2~ 39c: * One-Pie Squash 2 l~~c; 25c:
FlNAST - STRAINED
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'FiNAST - FOR LIGHT FLAKY· CRUST
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'1ft,'Cran'berrySauc:e'2c~~s ,37~ .,-Ie Pi,~',Crust
2 :K~~' 2Sc .. FINAST '*"(orn: Whole Kernel· " 4···c~~s ·59c "*'Firiast .Flour·' ~~ ··37( F.HAST...;' ':':'JUMILE-PAC -:* Onions Boiled-Wh~le 2 J~~' 49c. * Stuffed Olives .1~~ 49c
FINAST '4ge ·*:Reynolds ··Foll··' ,:, :s· SSe * Mixed Nuts' sliE '* ·Fan,e.y Shr.iOlP :,o~ _.,.~;~ 4ge ~ ~~r~k~es Sunshine c:~~ 2Se GOLDEN
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SMAll SiZE
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FOR ',All BAKING NEEDS
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FOR: EASIER· BAKING AND COOKING
FANCY SALTED
6'.4 oz CAN
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. M.EDIUM
-.GUlF .PACK .
CHOCOLATE NUGGETS, 'MALLO PUFFS, LAD)' JOA~
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. ,:'*..~peciall,
Priceclfor Extra· Savings! ' ::,APP'ETI,ZERS " " TURKEY FIXINGS·· . FRUITS··& NUTS <A"ppleCick!r ,NeF7.::~ 'i"~ 7fc;" Tllrke,.reads~~~~ 2. '~A~' 33c'Wcil~uts f.nc......o.. ~u ~o 49c Ocean Spray_1u~::~r.;;', 8O~lf :lSi·i ··••II'·s·Pouitry Seaso~ing -2' ~f:;-: '2.7c Mixed NutsAm··F:'n8eo~ ~~:: 59c V-8 Cocktail :1~~C:,,~l:,0' 39c ,'. Onion Flakes. ,~~"'I c::' 13c Almonds L~:S~~' '~~o 7'c ,:'~reani:~heeSep~;I:~:l'pjlla.'~G:37c . 'Sage F~"GrOuft~ c;:. 15c .Brazil Nuts "me:~~.~=~ ~~' .'59c Cream Chees~ ac;;d... ·i···~ l~.c.~" .lto!JI:tryS~u,Hin~fs~c:.:;;'1:9~! 31c . Filberts· F·O,~~QtI . ~~, ··49c 'P,6ta~o. Chips .rwe;:;~·,108~~' 59c IreadCrumbs ·Fi....... ~~'·19·c"·Pecclns .p.::'n~ ~~069c . Victor.-Shrimp ~~~.::. '~O2 79c·' . DESSERT,S ... ; I)~~es . ::~:: ~G 13c ; R~pe Olives ~.:;s~::' .~:~ 35c' . . R & R Plum Pudding·' ~., 49,c . Dates . Dt~"~t., ~oG 15c MAIN COURSE C&IPlumPudding ~ 53c La,erFigs ~;~: ~~ 49c FruitCocktaii . :~:~ ,1L~z.0' 39c Mince Meat Fi.... :m' 13c Raisins ~:. '~T: 33c Pears 8"":;;':"v.. I~O' 39c Mince MeatG,.ndmoth..·• '~.J~49c, Raisins s=~ 'b;: 37c PfeiHer's,'Chef Dressing ~o~ 33( Mince Meat o••,PIe '~O. 2.9c BAKING NEEDS Finast Maronnaise ~J'k 39c Pumpkin c:.:",: l~:"" 2.3c Shortening 1l1~~~29c ~ 77c ""","G•.".". 'tl 120. 33c· Q Pr... utolocl 70. 53 Brooksl-delutter Solid'. a. 68c Corn Whol. K....' Golden .. CANS WIP WhIP C.... CAN C . String I.eans :::. 2. ~t:. 49, -Ice Cream :;'0= 2. ~s 49c, Margarine Clo~.~... 1 ~ 37c Finast Peas Sma~.. 2. ~,;.;' 43c Thin Mints - c."" ~~ 65c Vanilla Extract ,~,,:, ~nlf 35c 'YamsSouthem '0s=,- 1~8A~0, 19c· Gruyere Cheese 6a.;:..~:. t.c~ 33c Flour AII-h:::::.:F....... ;:~ 75c Sweet Pickles C~O~sb l~~. 19c Bleu Cheese ~:a." 83c Evangeline OVl:::... 6 1~~N5 79c Strawberry M~~~ ~ 39cChedclar Cheese ~:': a. 69c Jiffy Jems' Cot:.::,=ngo '::G' 10<:
Bakery Specials! Belty Alden -. Bread
·Old Fashioned
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LOAf
21c
Joan Caro'
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59 ': ,'-
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2 ~ 59c 2.;:C~ 2.9c 2 1402 59
LerrionPie Joan. Carol
Saine'l~';' ~·Ser~ Prices'ln AJlSIOres' In Thil vicinity -We Reserve the Right to limit Quantitie, -. . ",. .. . .•.. .. ;:.. .. :. . . . _ ,'-:.,.. c:" '~:'.
FIRST· .
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Blueiteny ol(·~? Ie . ams" Farms. PlCG5 . ~. . ' •. • ", .•.. Raspheny 4 . Wild Cranberry Zest .:;~ .:.c~ 3~c; .. ~oHee RI~g ,
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NATIONAL
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49c 35c
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· VOLUNTEER AIDES IN ACTION:,Sev.en members'of Holy Names Women's Guild, Fall River, provide capable assistance for the Carmelite 'Sisters' the Bishop Cassidy wing for chronically-ill at Catholic Mell'iorial Home. In left photo, Mrs, Timothy· Murp}:l.~ '(left) .and Mrs. H~rbert / . McMahon apply skillful hands to bed~making whil~ Mrs. Luke Urban' .
at
task
in left center photo serves ·tray to Miss Rosella Wells'. 'Mrs. James Clarkin adjusts chair for Mrs. Cath~riri.e Leach in second right photo. At· extreme right Mrs.·Urban, Mrs. Murphy and Mrs. William .King arrange' blankets and ·linens . in linen' closet. The volunteer.s supplement the work of the Sisters and nurses.· . ..,
Fall River Holy Name G",ilti Men1:bers· Help Aged at Bisl10p Cassidy Wifl;g:-.· ..
At Our House
Contribute to <;:lothingDrive Fo'r Real . Thanks.,giv"..i.·.ng·. ,.5. p·ir.··.i.t, 1.·.'........But. "When thou wast ,young thou ~j~st girc;l thyself and didstwalk where thou>vouldst. when thou shalt be old thou shalt stretch forth thy hands and another. shall gird By Mary Tinley .Daly . .' 'Thanksgiving win be a 'week ~~ay 'When' this
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thee and .lead thee." . .. .' . . . .., ,. Those words. are among the most poig nant in ScrJptuie. They are' brought,to··.the
prj,t:J..te<:I... .;," ,': ,' . . '. :', . , , '..... ; .' ini'ul~f the visitor to the' members ha~e' undert~~en.. , Un-'· 'ev~ry morning and 'af,teq-\(~on,.~ _.1 ~ou p'ro~a,~ly ~ave mV.lt~. dmner ~uest~, ~nd !1re now Bishop 'Cassidy wing' of 'the del' the leadership of Mrs. James- the week, so; there ,are still daYS. '" e.heckm g on ,table lInens, ,sIlver and. chma, fIllIng In those . "C th"'I" " M'" '. ,', '1 . 'H' , Clarkin; president, they're cheer- : when Sister Mary Ann would'.be. ,t'. , ..' . a 0" IC. . .emorla i · · · · · .. ... ' a t gasses· es· b ro k en ,. A ' d ui . "t. be " on' '. ' . . orne, , ' . fu' lly ready for w h a t" ever ~omes. . gr'l t e f u 1 f or h e pe'rS; I . ' . . an d p I during th,e·)ear,. If you, ex: .1I."·gai:." Squ:.ez~~.'nto· ; '~~ith~;:;:::' Fall R,iver., There, 6;3 chroni.c.along. ';' Nor is the'ilvitation lirriited'to .' be 'some th'109 . as sImp . l'e one p~rson.p·'e-r sesci~.'n .. As. man:;'." . It may II · 'I'W'I', •• t ,overnight guests, you ;pi.votal" ~oat' button. po·pp·ed?"aIIy '",I".m~.n !in d .. w0:R,Ien: are '-'~. Y;o<" . . . . ' . 'g b' f' d" I' un'd . help'er's ··as could ~:conle, to .the' are t.aking. inv.entory s toThe~e. is a :man ove.·rseasw,hO. "U.•'nder.. t~e exqui.sit.ec.,.are:.of .~h~ .as passm a. ox 0 .can ya 0 ' . . d t h h' . C , f o r a 'chair-bound patie'nt,' but Home: could' ,be u~ed, even' for · sh'eets :andpillowcases, blankets, .- oesn~. ~vet at same e?lpall~' . ,armelite Sisters. fortne ,Aged that would be only one item on a less than' fuU ,morning' or after';' , and the little. comforts that con- l!lg waIst. hne.. ~'. . ,. '., .. and. Infirm, with ,Sister. Mary day's agenda. A morning's work noon. ~. :. , .. .Ann i~ charg~.( . may find' a volunteer transpOrtVolunteers' from other; guilds'.. ... tribute". to' your: ". S~ou~de,r PadII. reputatiOn a s ' O n . · · o u r ' 'side of the clothe. .. " TheIr needs are met, and well fig wheelchair patients 'to: one of !ire· asked.t~~,colltac~:M;rs, Hugh.. , ::lIiper-hostess; , t:loset:. ''a 'coat that we "might . met, but tJ1ree Sisters and' their the wing's pleaSant sunparlors to ,..-. Golc,len, 148)dadi$on Street, ..Fall ' .y Q ~ . k noW wa'nt to .wea'r to the grocery store nursing. staff can't be ~verywh~re .' :watch "TV, . to Hie'· completely':' River,..OSbo~ne2-6!l34, .for sug-.' "'how bIg a tur-' sometifu~." TVhen have we worn . at ,once, . Sometimes a patieilt~uipped beauty' parlor; or. to·, . gestions as, to times :;·they . are... :,key . to 'o~4er, ·i~? .. Two 'y~ars ":,ago.., Two ',eold: must:w'alt for ~ sma~ll extra serv~e physic~l··the·r·ap·y room.~· ;~. \ ..'·~o~t n~eded.~.. /; ~'... , ~. ",:. ".. and ~re prepar.w,ihters' have passed. and sOme"~. Patientil who .~arinot. feed" Lirien must be . separated;' .' . 'rhe pioneer ·group includes,)• . '. mg . that long wtjman' in Asia Europe or el8e-' ·'hemselves must be serve~ one'task· made easier; : incidenta,lly, . addition to Mrs.' Golde~ a.nd Mrs. _ 'Ust of "To Do's-" where:"has 'shi~ered 'while tha't.~ a time . by :the,.busyhurses, because each floor' hils its 'own" . ClarklQ, Mrs.- Luke 'UJ,'ban, Mrs; ahd . "To. Get's" coat i 'has' hung unu'sed iIl··a andeveryorie~an't be first in color'scheme. Towels and blan-' 'William .King, '~rs, Herbert M~ .. which;' once a~.. heated Closet-at our h6u~i . " line. '. ' .. \ . . . . . kets for the first floor are green, , - Mahon,' Mrs: rimothy M\lrl?h~~ eomphshed, WIll With . shamed" p'eremptO.... ; There is muchrO<!m for volun- for the second. blue,' a~d for the Mrs. Mic~ael.Connefy.~ and Mr~ make o~the day haste we toss it into the' carta"r:. teer assistance at the Home; and third tan. ' . Ulric Lamoureux.. ' :',' . :r~::~~' .not an. I);:;'::. And 'suits-:-outmoded-restYling:a~.exc~llentbeginning at proDinner and supper hours are ,Lik~.- them, . ne.w,: . v.o}unteerl "l th stl"ll a too expenSIve .The carton was vldmg It has been made by seven the b.usiest, say the women. ~Il~ dlscoyer the l:I~p,pll1eS5 of " Now·.whI e ere are, .' .. ' . 1" W ,.. glvmg help where It s needed , t'l Th k giving filling. As .we replaced buttons' members' of Ho y Name omen 5 Trays must be taken to each. . . ..". few days ,un I an s .'. '.' ' G 'ld F 11 R' ' F . o v a ' t" t' and removed when the and apprecIated. They, WIll ~ -. how about thinking of another folded. those suits llnd felt their .U1 h't a hIveI'. k or er pa len . th'"1 d ' th 1 Th k g'ving to once-in-vogue shoulder pads we mont hey ave ta en t urns re- meal is over, The volunteers among ose . pnvI ege ',10 . ,e :
:~~~tessa o~~:rs w~6~ ~ou will were reminded (' a little. story por.tingto Sister M~ry ~nn.~ work from' about 9:45 A, M. to words- of SCrIpture, to glrd.and :
'd f Heaven? in "Monthly Messa'ge of the. Na- aSSIst, under her· dIrectIon, 10 12:30 P, M, and a similar afterlead the old, the old ~ho are ",
th IS Sl e o , never . ' Council of . . , . f ee d'~ng an d 0 t h ' carmg ' for noon period ca,lculated' ' · see " t " in a far tional Catholic erWllle to .cover' so" close to . God , They are your gues s , w" 'patients. .the supper time rush, greater sense, , . om.en,.. . . ..' · ' 1 "Th' k C· th n w "I made 16 beds my fIrst day All Invited I speak of course of 'the annua an you, a 0 ~ omen I" .• SAVE FOR IT NOW I d' 'n l'tS tenth of, America" . the letterrea~ . up there.. reported one member. Although Holy Name Guild . h ~lot 109 rlve, now I '. . . . re';' . •..I 'rea 11y. f.e It I. was . h i'" .' d t h e h OSPI'ta 1 proJec, 't r-the Than.ksgiv'ing c.olle . .c"Y,our clothing is gratefu~ly e pmg. plOneere yea k women'from any .parish are in 'tion of clothing that you and celved.here, .. 1t \eepS'_swarm Aid ~tMealti~es. vited to join the work. Seven
your family-ancl; we .and· 0';lrs. and well dressed. w~. take the. Sister Mary. Ann shares the volunteers' ca~'t possibly ~over ..
: I, -will no longer wear but whIch shoulder pads out and·plece·them .feeling; She is especially grate ean prove real life-savers for the together. Sewed carefully, they ful, she says, for ,mealtime help thousands of, needy throughout make. wonde,:fully .soft, ~a~, given by the women. With their' the wor'ld, blankets ~or our babIes. Besld~s, assistance, meals for. patients 0' '59, Your parish and ours, and added ~hls unknown correspon- . who 'must be fed are not delayed., 16,000 other-parishes' throughout· de~t WIth ~. sen~~ of humor, an~ Blit feeding patients' is only CHRISTMAS " ," . 'the United States have for the of I.?roportIon, we. understand one '. part of the' duties Guild 't" . rs sent· generous that unpadded shoulde~s are.now . . pas ,mne yea . in fashion l " CLUB. supphes of· wearable used cloth- ., , .ing; blankets, 'and bedding suP-. S~for a r.eal Tha$sgivin,-+ " - l. CH~CK., plies; shoes and the like, " pack up those duds! . . : ; i ,It. is hard for us to env~slon i ,I .. fro~....the' the need in those other countries, . '0 for God has blessed America,.
. OLD RED' BANK ' However the need is very ·real
and imm~diate. 'Only our ima~
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'mation and charity can bridge Have enol/gh to spread COMPLETE . the gap between o,ur plus' and more cheer, next year. Join & SERVICE
their minus in the matter of this LA'UNDRY SERVICE Santa/s~ O,WN' Christmas . SURLING SILVER ·world's goods. <2lub NOW at' THE OLD 64 HICKS STREET Wilbur St., Taunton
, Well since this is the way it is, REO BANK, Christmas Club' NEW· BEDFORD Initial Bookmarks and this is. the' one wee~ when·
savings be'gin at SOc Phone VAndyke 2-0582 WYman 3-4777
most of us collect that used
· Prayer book ·or b i bJ e . weekly. •••__ clothing-let us be abo,ut. our
bookmark .. , 3 sterling Father's business., (Matter o.f
letters joined by double. faced satin I' 1 b bon In fact, this is the one time that we The · red,. bla'ck, pur pie or don't have to pack the. thingll ·white·, . , attached to personally;and pay. the postage,) , !' . . SUCCESSORS TO, .! sterling cr;oss. ' ' Let's give those closets a good airiQg-leave gaps of God's g~od air, filled with the spirit of char ity... Here is a pair of trousers the Anthracite 8t~Bitumj'nous COAL · ~ ~~ Head of the' House Qas kept. for AUTOMATIC COAL 'S,:bKERS - BAG WOOD -COAL AND painting, . another pair for·. gar~ JEWELER '. ,.CHARCOAl. ;"-.:..- HEA~ING OILS . Fall 'River Samngs8au dening. Can't the paint-hespat tered ones do for digging, as well • 163 PURCHASE STREET
141 NO. MAIN ST. as for painting? One pair of NEW BEDFORD
trousers into the cardboard car FALL RIVER 640 Pleasant :Street - New Bedford - WYman 7-0781 WY 3-1137
tonI'
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PEARL
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LAU,NDRY .
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21
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Glen Coal & Oil Co.,··lnc. Da~id~ f)uff;&/Son DADSON OIL BURNERS
~~.~::~
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RED *
.BANK
THE ANCHOR Thurs., Nov. 20, 1958
Today's Fashions
Sty~es, ,:f~r"'~,m.~~l·:WOmafl:,l-Iol·d '
Center'
9
Ou'r lodyo~' Victory Court Seats Officers
of, Fashion :Sfage
. Past Deputy Louise Hoye, New Bedford, installed officers of Our Lady of Victory Court, Massa chusetts Catholic Order of For esters at a banquet held at Stone Bridge Inn. Mrs. Catherine Hol land was marshal. Installed were Mrs. Rose Fin
neran, Chief Ranger; Miss Mau reen McCloskey, Vice Chief Ranger; Mrs. Helen Donnelly, Recording Secretary; Mrs. Mil dred Ryan, Financial ,Secretary. '. Mrs. Ella Carberry, Treasurer; Miss Nora Sullivan and Miss
Rita Denehy, Sentinels; Miss Helen Goff and Miss Mary Hur
ley, Conductors. ' Mrlfl, A. Beatrloe Holland, toastmistress, introduced Rt. Rev. Msgr. EdmunC: J. Ward, chaplain of the organization and speaker of the evening. IOther speakers included Mrs.
Mary Almond,J president of the Diocesan Council of Catholic Women; Miss Kathryn McCar thy, president of the New Bed 'ford district of the Diocesan Council; and represen'tatives of ' the High Standing Committee of the Foresters, all from Boston.
By Ellen Kelley Today's, lovely fashions sing a "Chanson Pour La Petite Femme".' (I hope Elizabeth, who's studying "Conversational French;" reads this!) Yes indeed, this season's fashions, like songs, can be written to the smaller woman. Never, have lines been so height-giving, line is "Empire" - heightened, SO slenderizing, as right softened and younger with full,
now. The "Empire", the soft but modulated skirts. Here and drapable new fabrics, the there, by way 'of contrast, a
touch of American dressmaking shape angles widely, or plum genius-all are just about per- mets straight to a pair of hip fect for "La Petite." line. pockets. This wonderful By the )N'ay, what goes into new fashion-mantling is treated the making"'6f "An American to the fabrics it deserves
Original Fashion?" Just native tweeds, souffle wools, ,mohair originality. . An approach, to' loops and theatre-surfaced satins
dressmaking that's like no other in a scope of vibrant colors from In the world, a feeling for beauty, light to dark tones. new design, appropriateness, that Little Black Dress looks subtly casual-but isn't. Key to basic fashion is the It's the sort of fashion detailing wonderful "little black crepe." that 'seems easy imd is dupliThis season, chic fashion crated nowhere' else. launches it with cheers for its
"Come Rain, or Come Shine" fluid flattery, its wonderful -it's always fair weather, when wearability by the' fashion you're lucky enough to be weardiscerning on so' many nine-to Ing one of the' new and colorful nine' occasio'ns. It's the perfect all-purpose coats. What makes f il for :your, treasured little furs a rainY, day sunny? It's wearing and jewelry, and may be dressed one of the new (we repeat) allup or down, as you, and the mo weather coats. When it rains, ment indicate. Incidentally, I these coats shine. bought one of these good ,little Daughters of Isabella There's a delightful new look black crepe dresses las.t' week for Make Christmas Plans tlo them, too-they're not just under fifteen dollars. ' You may Discussion of December plans conventional cover-up utility be certain that it will b'e a ward highlighted the business meet coats-they appear in gayplaids, robe favorite (being ageless in ing of Hyacinth Circle No. 71, reversible tap '~~y prints, silkenstyle 'and" fabric), for' several Daughters of Isabella, New Bed smoot~., wash-and-we~r,dacronyears, at least. fi CA1'I:IOLIC NURSES: Armando Penha, former FBI ford. Activities include the an cottoDll arid shaggy, orlon:'lined' • The'leather'coat emerges anew counter3PY' and ,'parishioner oi St. Mary'~ Parish, Fair nual Christmas sale and ham and cotton 'poplins. Many are beaiJ,..' as; a' ,:leading casual, fashion- 'h ,'" k' h h I N favorite. Pull one on when the aVEm, was inainspeae:r: at t, e at 0 ic u,rses of ,Greater bean supper; scheduled for Sat tifully reversible, and, hav~~ knit New,Be(Iford C" ommumon ". 'Brea kfas t h eld aenney tK d Cen t er., urday, Dec. (l, at Moose Hall from trir.~.Each i'nde,ed'!s:a:fabul,oui;" weather gets snappy. Asi~e froll,l . . its'" big' it 'wlnd':'resistance,' the • Mrs. M~f.v, 'Sigtiore,lIa," R.. N., p"residellt6f. 'the Guild, listens' 1 to 8 P. M. "rain or shine fashion'," and will Mrs. Katherine -Hesford and find 'its' unerring 'waY' into the 'leather-coat, or jacket holds great" 'attelltively to' communist'statistics quoted by the'speaker. Mrs. LUlilin' Guthrie 'are' 'co smartest of today's feminine'" new "fashion; ideas, ~inside, aud ",', '" " ': c' " ' .: " ",' " ,,", " ' " . :, out'. The: ..leather' cardigan c()at I",,," ,',: .. ' chairIIien for the' annual 'Christ. . , wardi"obes-Youts. . , l\as Italian knit sleeves. ' 'Mansfield Catholic Club ",R,. u.,mm,..,.a,g.e S.ale mas party for the children ofSt. C~n&empOrar,.Cl)at-DreSs . , . The white leather trenchcoat 'Plans Christtnas Sale Ep,ll,~,l()ii' ~~ppa '~~gma Sorority Mary's Home. The glee club will T~ay's c,Gat-dress goes "direc- is noijlJqg, sh.~r~ of, fabulous. rhe 'sponsor' 9: soci,al ,Tuesday, Dec. lorie" and makes current fllshion ,hooded ,:wrap, leather. coat is A two-day Christmas s~le 'composed: o~ Catholic girls who 16. history. Strictly, contemporary" lined with French civet cat. And be held by ,the Mansfield Catholic ' 'attend, B. M.' C.' Durfee. High The' next general meeting will ita 'e~se-of-si.1houette, its city- there's a ,wonderfully chic (as .. W()m~n's Club, starting Friday,' School will conduct a rurnmage be held Tuesday, Dec. 9, at 8:15 ' going elegance charin~ll. welLas warm) leather coat in ,Dec. 5,. and ending with a ham ',sale from 9 A. M. to5 P. M. P. M. at the clubhouse, Mra. Da~zling white mink is a "fur tan or • ,biack that features a . and bean,supper Saturday night, Saturday in a store at Linden Catherine LeTendre, regent, an spectacular" this season. It's .out- curly Jamb ),Ining. Prices, ~<!r s9. 'Dec. 6. and ..Locust Streets, Fall River. nounced. rageously flattering, whethe~ much; .high .fashion and cold Members attended a turkey you're a' charming 20 ,or a lovely " weather comfort are surprisingly, , ': ,Whist last night at St. Mary's ,. . t 80. You'll. wearitwtth jacket,. mod~st." , ..' "HalL, At the November meeting Role' or 'scarf, and It "f!ppears Girls, su1;l-teel1el's and. junior" they heard. Miss Bertha Hughes, briefly" on elegant .e-<ening cheer tl)e.. light",but-cozy sh<!dgerOl,tologist from Boston, speak sweaters as well.·Furthermore', ".qoat '(nothing hugs th~, skirt ~et- (In tq~,pl'p,blems '9f aging. ,Miss"" •.. you'll admire its' staccato., b~a'uty ter, lQQ~s So rig~t for, big gar;nes.). ,Hughe.s Q/l'ered advice On attain-, when'.i~enhancess,uits a.nd coats. There are wool fleeces in rah! fng t9. a,h,ealtl}y, and ~ppy old Close contenders fO,rfashion- ,,:rah! ~ed.',.o~ 'ho~ey. blond tOfJeS" '~ge. ' ,Nuf..SWeet and Tender : prefe):"epce are l'for'wegr~n blue" and pl~nty: o~ teenage srorties in. .. -, In,oth,er business,member~ For thanksgiving Eating" fox, imd satiny black lam m 9 i l'e loopy mohairs and . Stroock voted ,donation!;, to charitable ~rocessed black Persian lamb): fleecE!s. .(Prices are definitely and 'y'o'l,lth,', societies. The club Something' tremendously imlow, 'too!)" , . '" will .be listed among patrons of , fairhaven portant is happening - all thc ' '," ., ," the Bis!:lop's Cha~ity; Ball, sched Mall. late suit news is here. You'll 'Stonellill' Fund - Drive . uled. for January 7 at Lincoln Hr. Rte. ,6 WY 2-6473 note ,with pleasure the' easy li We ...' ,',. Park'. ' , suit silhouettes, curvesome shap- 'Nears Completion . ings; a longer length of jacket. ReV. James V. Lowery, C.S,C., You'll' admire poli'shed twe'eds, director' of 'the $5 million Stone , bubbly mohairs, smooth anQ texhill College 'development pro tured wools. You'll love the new, gram, has re'ported $186,000 of Continentally-smart black suits, a $225,000 goal for the' Family Joseph A. Charpentier and,suits in brilliant color. FurDivision has been raised. Reg, Pharm,
thermore, values are absolutely The money is to be ap'plied to 1902 ACUSHNET AVE.
wonderful. the $325,000 studen( center and NEW. BEDFORD
Stroller Suits 'cafeteria, scheduled for DecemTEL Wy 6-0772 The new and flattering "strolber completion. 'The balance of PRESC'RIPTIONS ler suits" (featuring % length $100,000 p.eeded for' the con jackets that are really toppers) struction has been assigned to appear in outsized plaidings. the community of ~aston. They are virtually steeped 'in .~"";" ~"' ., "J • • , color. They're handso,me young suits with an extra measure of jacketing, that stops just short . .. of a: full-length 'coat. ,' I repeat, they're available boldly handSome' plaid wools;' : .::. . . A SERVICE: FOR 'EVERY'N'EED illuminated with "stained glass" colors. They can be h3'd in just 273 CENTRAL AVE:-·. • SAVINGS ACCOUNTS CHARLES F. VARGAS about every size range imagin • REGULAR CHECKING ACCOUNTS 254 ROCKDALE AVENUE able - from petite and junior • SPECIAL CHECKING ACCOUNTS ...EW BEDFORD, MASS. ,NEW BEDFORD sizes to misses, ~,'in-between" arid • 'BUSINESS LOANS • PERSONAL LOANS women's sizes. Furthermol"e, • AUTOMOBILE LOANS prices are scheduled to please 2-6216 • APPLIANCE LOANS . the budget. . • HOME REPAIR LOANS Learn to co-exist with Win • COMPLETE TRUST DEPARTMENT SERVICES ter! Nippy nights will be a th!rig ., SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES of the past when you're beauti fully bundled' in warm, brushed rayon, or cotton challis, chill DRIVE-IN WINDOW SERVICE chasing "Granny Gowns:'! In prints or solid' colors, they're, OIL ; Sert';lIg Tbe Co""lItlllity Sillce 1825 voluminously wide, perfect to 'cuddle into, arid priced: under , fALL' RIVER four dollars. Plan to buy two and .presto! You'll enjoy tropical 1'{ational warmth-'way up here in the . ~ BANK: chilly North! "o~nJrd J,fJ') ( :.. Wonderful for wear in town or South • . Sea Sts; country' are Fall'. new coats. 55 NORTH MAIN ST. There's a great trend that now Look for this sign for modern banking ".rvloe Hyannis Tel. HY 81 holds 9way on both sides of the " Mantic. In fashion essence,
'c
will
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Stre~ses Neecf of?Poslti:ve ,:
Image 'ofCathol~>c'Ch,urch'" . . By Donald McDonald". " -. .
,
" Dave~port' Catholic M~:sse~g~r' '"
... " - THE ANCHOI . Thurs., Nov. 20, 1958
Clergy Meeting ,'. \bisc:~sses Role Of 'Faithful
. .'
Hugh Scott of Pennsylvania, on~,of the few Republican
All priests Of the Diocese -.- except those "Ju~eded tG cover. hospitals and oth~r es- ' sential, services - are meet
~enatorial candidates who :s'urvived- the Democratic on
slaught in the recent elections, was asked by U. S. News & WO,rlO Report for his comments on those elections. :"The Republican Party , say 'universal.' Nothing is more, needs to pave its face wash ~or~ign to the true disciples of ed, and I mean by that the Christ than the concept· of caste, isolation aJ1d withdrawal into visage that it has often pre
jng today with the Most Rever end Bishop for the Annual Fall . Conference of the Clergy. The meeting is taking place at the
auditorium of Jesus-Mary Acad emy.
This meetillg affords' the Most
Reverend Bishop the opportun
itY. of discussing Diocesan affair.
with the priests. Active Participation
An important topic of the Con
ference is the recent .Instruc
tion ot'the Holy See callirig for
m.ore ;aCt~ve participation by the
faithful in offering the H'oly Sac · rifice' the Mass. This par'tici
pation is to show itself. in ' the ,_ answering . of the prayers M.
the Mass by those attending
· Mass.' ' . . The first step toward more
active partiCipation-already be gun in most parishes and chapels of the Diocese-is for all at Mass to answer the easier responses- Amen, and Et cum spiritu tuo throughout the Mass; Gloria tibi, Domine and Laus tibi, Christe before and after the Gos pel; the responses immediately before the Preface, and' Sed li bera' nos a malo at the conclus ion of.'the Pater Noster. Further steps will see the faith fu~ answering all the responses now said' by the altar' boy and . then saying certain, of the pra¥- ' ers with the celebrant.
oneself." '.,
' sentedto the public is too often He : called "narrow_,minded_ ,grim ,and too often represents a.· ness" In every sphere of life an ' failure to com "obstacle" that we must remove
municate and. . :'with' every means!" get through to
the people," he
said., Greatest Force, No, this isn't . The Church's mission in the
going to be a ,:world is a. redemptive and sal "polit,ical" col-., " vific Obviously ,there' isa
Umn, "But· Mr, , ~eg?t:vefunction inv'olved'·here.
Scott's shrewd _ :Sin .is a fact and it must be op obser,vation, and.' ," posed, Evil must be restricted:'
his candid ex..,· """Error must be corr.ected" Hu press,ion, can be. ' man aberration of any kind can~ appli~.d, i.n. a ::,~,.qot be countenanced.'· . .
way"" to, the ,,,,,', Bu~ is this all that canbe said
C h u rc h ,i n Of the'Church's· mission? 'The Affler'ica, fa~t is that much moreca'n be
Certainly the Church isn't said, but so few seem to be say "running for election," and I ing it. wouldn't use the "face-washing" For 2,000 years the Church has figure of Mr, Scott, but the point been the greatest cultural and about what kind of an "image" . civilizing force in the history of the public sees wh~n it looks at man, At one point, she' alone any institution or organization, kept the lamp of learning from . . . , . is a very important one. being extinguished, . IJOLY NAME CYO GIRLS: Hardworking girls of the ToO often, I think,when the' She "has not had a-spotless, non-Catholic public tries to focu's' 'unwrinkled record, as' Father' Holy Name CYO, New Bedford, have completed theirpledge' on,the'imageof the Church, what 'Gustave Weigel reminded,Cath of a science table for the Catholic Memorial I:I:igh School, t' "~e .is either very negative . ol,ic historians a week or two , now under construction at Da'rtplOuth. Rt. Rev. Msgr. Tim or at least blurred. ' . ' ,- ago, but, taking the canvas' as a othy P. Sweeney, pastor of Holy. Name, accepts final pay , . i, . whole, the picture ·she pt:esents' ".. ,. Pressure Group ~ , • to 'tlfeworld is without parallel ment of the two-year $360 pledge which the girls paid' 'off .in, one year from .Ann Morrissey, president of the CYO Ea'i'lier this year Father John' 'so far .as libe~ation and exalta ' ,and Patricia Scotti, treasurer. F. X~' Sweene)', S.J" ou'igoirig "tion of the human spirit is con president of the AmeritanCath- . \ 'cerned, HONG KONG (NC) The first olic Theological Society, said in: . " The modern Pontiffs, from news of the persecuted Church bis Presidential address to 'the' " Leo' ,XIII to the present, day, -in. Red China to reach here in theologians: "The Catholic have been faithful to the posi sev:eralmonths brings word Of 'Church in America is not kno\vn tive, progressive tradition of the VATICAN CITY (NC) ....:... A the problems of the Church in. further illicit consecrations and for what it is, nor for what it Catholic Church. .The irony is elections of "patriotic bishops." knowledge of both the good and Latin America and deeply feels offer- for the well:"being, the that the Pontiffs" who are sup News sources ·from communist the responsibility for its more. unity and the spiritua:l transforposed to represent the "conserv - bad aspects of the 'situation of China report the consecration the Church in Latin America is than 160 milliori Catholics. mation of "ur country." ative" element in the Church of two schismatic bishops and needed 1:'~f:>re the problems fac- '. ,Speaking iii. Italian, he noted Too many perso~s, said Father have been far in advance of the ing it can be solved, His Holiness that these faithful make up. the election of one more last Sweeney, "see not the Church of people. July. . Pope John XXIII stated here. a~out a third of the total CathChrist that Catholics behold, but - It has also been learned· here Inter~atioDal C0r.nmunity The Holy Father was address- . olic population of the world a huge monolithic structure, a t.hat a number of public prayers . Bishop' Wright. remarked to' i ing par'tic~pants in the third an- ,.' He then pointed out som~ of kind. of vast presstire gr:oup. American Catholic ,sociologists .. J1ual ~eehn~ of the ~atin A~eri-' the..~avorable aspects of' Latin. ' have been ordered, suppressed." "{J,ntil . our ecclesiology suc in Catholic churches in commun last : y~ar,that "many, devout -.; ea'! BIshops. Cou~cI1 .<,CEr.A,M), American Catholicism. He said eeeds in substituting the true ist ¢,hilia. . . it isa land of the Faith,a iand .Cath()l1cs"pne fears,' would h~si- ..' boemg ?eld m Rome. I.n connecpicture of the Church . ofChdst tate to utter the kindqf en';;". t~on With the celebratIon of ·the rich' in . Eucharistic manifesta':: f"r the ridiculous and insulting dorsem~nt :Pop~' PiusXIl,gave '.. ~OOth anniversary o.f ~the foun?- 'tions' and a land whose lay apos image of it lodged in :so ma'ny the Umt~d NatIons, lest they be' 109 of the PoqhflCal, Latm tolate is very promising. American minds, our theological s~speeted of 'pinkiness' or ;'fel-,:, 4merican Colleg~ there. .. ." ,....~."'\'""_~_~ task' is unfinished." '. lowtravelingness' and general ,; Charity' Program F~the.r Sw~en~y,on behal( ~f patriotic degeneration. "D ;.. h 't' h ' ','\ . ." i yrmg.t e meemg'.\,t. f7 pre , the theologians, shoulders a gen',. . ,,' Ou~ clergy and lal~y~ be l~tes'decided,tp,setup"'cl'!~rity· INSURANCE AGENCY . erOlis share of the, burden for 'OIL' BURNERS this; false image'of the Chur.ch: ~ald;: hav~ laggedbehl:~d the ·J?rograms· in every Latin"Amer:.. Also complete Boiler-Burner fcan country and to 'de~'elopal:" ." All Kinds Of Insurance' The!responsibility' rests not only, lIol~ ~ee In understandmg the or ,Furnace, Units. Efficient ~eal1ty ~nd the nat~re oof the teadyexisting org;mizations~:'i~.'· or e;Ven principally, on the theo low cost heating. Burner and 96 WILLIAM STREET " , 'logiims. To the 'extent that the' mternahonal ~ommum.ty, as well .; their nations: fuel sales and service. . NEW BEDFORD. MASS. as the necessity for Its w o r l d . • image is, in faN; a distorted one, wide organizations.". In ,hiS talk to the delegates all of us share the guilt. . DIAL' WY 8.5153 , , Pope' ,John' said he shares the
t80 Mt. Pleasant Street There are, of course, some . interest of:'the late Pius XII in
AsBishop 'Vright of Worcester Personal Service New Bedford WY 3-2667 more' appealing aspects to the ' once said, we Catholics are not general image of the Church in _ _._. ......_ t I o "in" the Church, we' "are" the Church and. the Church is . this c·ountry. The nuns in our. juqg'ed and evaluated by non-' hospitals and schools, through ONE ,STOP
their quiet competence and de Catholics on the basis of .our votedness to. children and the actions' SHOPPING Ct:NTER
. , and attitudes: sick and the poor, present the . ' -: ,: : .~ ':-...
! B!ames Catholic Press,· • Television" :'. Furniture Church: a.s she is. at I ;thi:~k the Cathoiic presS '.in • Ap~lianc~~ '. GrOCery Th~ "late Hl!ly Father,' Pius thisl co'untry is responsible to a XII, presented th,e Church as· she gre~t ~xtent for the distortion of is-interested in all that affects Allen St.. New Bed:~~,l the';image of Christ's Church, tqe human race, consurrted witlt' .:-~_._.~~!:.!!,5!...
~,
the, good.' of, all .
~Sg~. Francis L~'ily,edltor Of an anxiety' for ". the 1Boston archdiocesan paper, men. The', Pilot, last summer said some' 115 '7'~ And there is a handful of men NEW' BEDFORD, MASS. pretty, strong 'things about the in this. country, a few priests PLUMBING & HEATING, INC:·
failure of both "press and pulpit" and a few laymen, whose c h a r i t y : for' Domestic to present the Church as she and courtesy are matched by. ~ : : . ' .: & Indus,trial really:is. _ . ability in their various. profes-." ! . _ •.•..:..:.:-.... Sales 'and U, we have a.press that is con sions and disciplines. . Oil Burnears Service stantly "denouncing" and ~'con But we need many more of thf? WY 2-9447
demnihg" a!1d "attacking;" then~ above. At best, the image of the . .~ You' Wo.rk .in a Factory, Church .in the. United States if! 2283· ACUSHNET. AVE.
the .image that. the non-Catholic Garage, Macl,ine Shop or badly' blurred.. '
NEW' .BEDFORD
form' of the Church is' one ·Gasoline Station? of ~itter negative ness.
We pick up and deliver.' c1ea'n Ii ~e have a' press that turns
,ondr~pair' overalls. ~Iso. ,#e have.' the ~ uriiversalism of the Church
o cO'rlplete Ii"e of Coveralls. Pants into a 'simple sectarianism (sall) of and Shirts .for.,sale,· . ,~ ,pIe:' headlines): "No Catholics Kilied; in Oklahoma Storm," or . . We ',reclaim and wash any oily,' JOSEPH M. F.,DONAGHy "Ei~e!1hower Will Not Stop in , dirty or, greasy :r091.: .' , owner/mgr. P.ome ·on Way to Geneva" ,then ~hy 8~Y. Wh.en We Supply the: irrtage of the Church is one' for' WORK 142 Ca",pbell St:.~ . of :apparentmonumental disre New Bedford. Mass. gard .and unconcern for, any or SPORT WYman 9-6792 world proble.ms that do not yield . . ' from a "Catholic angle." " . .' .' HE~DQUARTERS FOR' . We ·haveit on no less an au-,. ',' ,COLONIAL AND .thority than that of .the late Pius. ' '. " '.,.,:. ..< . ,.:" .' , ...., Z"','Roward Ave•• New Bed;ord I :·'TRADITIO.NAL ·FU.RNITURE ;: ; __". ..:' .r •... -;. XII: tbat !'to say 'Cathl?li.c' 4. to ~,.' _ _~_...,'..' ~......-~ . ._ . .- . ._r.b~',wY'-:M~.'-"',W1r'8-GU -'
one.
of
':Pope Stresses Gooc;l an.d. Bqd Aspects Of Latin American Catholicism .
Illicit Consecrations
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Kep;o';t Ion.: 'fil~s:, V ~iy:-)'Encour~gi"g; '.: But Dangerous Trends Present ; ~ ,
THE ANCH()R -, -, .. T!:IufS., N~v. 20,. 1958 .
College 'Numbers Flive In World
WASHINGTON' (NC)-There objecti~nable for general patron was a substantial decrease in the age; A-i2 films'are morallY,\uiOb number of .'B" films in .the past jection,able for adults arid idol Sev~n,ty~ year, the Bishops of the United, escent&;· 'and A-3 films are mor States were told at, their a'nnual ally unobjectionable for adults., meeting 'here. • ',' " Bishop Scully, who served' as ,The Colleg~ of Carrl inals In a '~eport at the meeting;" chairman of the Episcopal Com will now include 75 members. Bishop ,William A. Scully of'; mittee :" 'for' Motion Pictures, Europe will h~lVe 55 Car Albany' said the' decline in ,'B" " Radio',and' 'Television, E!l'npha-' films, ; thos~ "morally obj ection- . size" the encouraging achie~e dinals, with Italy having the, able in part for all," was 'due in ments of the motion picture in greatest number, 29, Many of large measure to the inauguradustry during the past year, but t.hese have responsible positions ti<'::1 the past December of' a new \ underscored tlie serious problems in the Curia, the central admin film classification by the Legion that this medium poses to public , ist.ratjon body of the Church in of Decency. and private morality. Vatican City.
Under the classification, films Praises Company
One Cardina'l is' in each of 'these countries: Belgium. Ire designated A-I are morally' un- . The' commendable achieve land, Hungary, P,oland, Yugo .' ment of one major film company, NEW DRAMATIC CLUB: Officers of the newly formed 'slavia, Armenia, Syria, Austria which"released 48 pictures and dramatic club at Kennedy Youth Center discuss plans for a'nd England. received an approved classificaPortug'al has two Cardinals, Sund~y tion froin the Legion of Decency, the first production with Mrs. Gerald Morrissey and James Spain has four, France has eight, . The Catholic Theater Guild of for 44"of them,' was specifically :.- J. Gleeson, co-chairmen of the sponsoring cultural commit 'Germaqy has th.(ee. . New Bedford will' present the " noted i~Y·. Bi'sh?p SCUll!. . '; tee.Left to right, officers are Isad()ra" Abreu, first vice fifth' a series of religiou·s.;' . In ke,::plng WIth (he dlrec~lves ,president; Sheila Harding, president, andBeatri~e Bouley, , , 'There'is one ,Cardinal in India, ' one in Chirta and one in Aust.ra- . radio",drlimas Sunday at 7 R,M..'. 'o,f th~,. Holy .See, the Blsh.op second vice-president. 'lia. over 'New Bedford ,station urge~ ~athohcs. ~o patronIze , The' United States has four WNBlI; , .. ' , ' , ' .' ,~o~a!lr: a~d a~tIstIcally .worthCardinals and Canada has two. ' Tit~ed ,"PilgrilTh ' S~eep." i~" , ~!tl'1e tn?tIon plctt,;res, Such P,os Latin America' now has eleven " Peace," t1)e play, by Miss Eller- ',ltIve support. at ,the ~ox off,Ice" 'Cardinals' with Mexico arid Uru Gaughan, depicts' a modern. ~,e noted" w111 contnbute I~-, guay having Cardinals for the. Amer~can boy, who, 'passes" measura!,l?,. to the pro.duct.lOn WASHINGTON (NC) - Op the old and, the new laws will first "time. ,Brazil has three, through a Pilgrim cemetery and and exhibition of good films. position to the National Office undoubtedly be tested in the 'Chile, Mexico, Colombia, Uru for Decent Literature has not sees in' a dream sequence the Bishop Scully, however, de courts. guay, Ecuador and Cuba each hardships of 1620. The narration 'cried certain morally dan~erous disappeared during the past year, -NODL's evaluating activities have one Cardinal, Argentina but it has become "more reason describes how the Pilgrims set trends and developments m the are confined only to publications has two. able," the NODI. report to the aside a ,day of thanksgiving cinema industry. In particular, which are likely to reach young which is still observed, he deplqred the introduction of, arinual U. S. Bishops' meeting people--comic books, magazines declare~. ' Musical background will be' subject qJ.atters which are more and paperback books. provided by Florenc~ Mello and p,r:?erly suited for restr~cted The NQDL attributed this im -The Comics Code Authority the broadcast will be directed ,audiences, the sex-sensational provement to the Bishops' state- . continues "to exert a salutary NASHVILLE (NC)-A 10Cla by Christopher A. Best. 'exploi~ait.i~q in advertising, a~d ment on "Censorship" issued influence in ,the comic book television station has cancelled Guild .radio programs have ,the dl;lphclty. of sOll?e compan.les las~ November. This statement, field," No comic book was found the showing of the film "WomaD utilized to date the talents of 31 in the handhng of those foreign the report said, "clearly enunci violating the NODL code dur of Rome" which has been con persons in addition to radio stafilms' 'which ,have .been con ated NODL's aiqls anp purposes" ing the past pear.' demned by the National Legioa tion personnel and three Guild, demned by the LegIOn of De and "clarified many misconcep of Dece'ncy as immoral. -Inexpensive reprints of good members who write, and donate cency '11rd do not !'ear t~e seal tions about it," ' literature, continues to appear, Although advertised as the scripts., . ' , of apprpvfll, o~ the,r own organ evening feature on the "Million While 'opposition to its work giving, American youth "every The Guild's purpose is "to ,of self-:rj:lg,ulabon. persists, the Office said that "now' opportunity to develop literary Dollar, Movie" show, another bring the knowledge of Al film was substituted and an an disagreement is based on prin tastes." mighty God to the people nouncement was made that due ciple and opposing views are in -However, a few publishers through the medium of dra-,. to th~ nature and content of" telligently discussed," still "flood"': the market' with matics," JERusALEM (NC) - Five Other highlights of the NODL publications that violate the ,"Woman of Rome'" the movie was being canceled in keeping report: NODL code for youth reading. Latin Rite priests in this country wit.h the standards of good pro " are now celebrating the first part "':'Evidence exists of "an Those interested in the welfare graming of the station.
of the Mass in Hebrew with the of. youth must remain alert to awakening public opinion." Or PEORIA (NC)-A two-milspecial permission of the Holy the program "so ,that they can ganizations are being formed throughout, the country, not only work toward a sane and legal A Delicious lion-dollar home for the aged, See. d b th which went into operation here The faculties grante y, e to combat indecent literature, solution at the'community level." Treat Holy See pr6vide for use of bult t<1 promote good reading as yesterday, is designed so resiHebrew, Israel's vernacul~r lan ~ '-ts won't have to ascend or guage, for the Mass of the Cate- , well. '-Existing laws are being ,en descend any ,steps. chumens-the part of the Mass The "stepless design Of St. forced more widely against those Joseph',s Home for' the, Aged is .,exte~~ir~g from the beginning up who distribute objectionable lit , ' ,until the Offertory. only one of its several ultra-', , The 'p'riE:sts are using a Heb,rew " erature, In some areas, new legis mode~n'·features. The home 'is' "trans'ia'tion prepared by 11 team, lation has been enacted. Both so constructed, especially in its of pde~ts 'an'Q laymen and ~iven residential section, that an insti" the i,IT,mriI;natyr of Latin Rite tutional atmosphere has been Patriarch Albert Gori of, Jeru virtually eliminated. salem.' , Not one step up or down need The translation has beenissi.!ed be :taken by any resident in here in 'mimeographed form for MILLION DOLLAR going from his or her room to use of the faithful, and includes 'J the; outside, to the chapel, the not only' the' Mass of the' Cate:": BALLROOM dining room or various recrea ,chumens, but the Communipn tion areas. And residents will, ,: prayers '3Ild' the Last GospeL" A 'Available for have to Use an elevator only in ' 'finat ,sectiQn, provides a Heprew going to the recreational therapy'.' 'translation' of the 'Divine Praises Bariquets, Testimonials, Etc. area on the lower floor of the' and the Angelus, 'and also the For Full Information Contact building's central section, variations of the Latin Rite Mass The home ha_ 'rooms for 2 0 0, ' peculiar to the Dominican,Order. ROLAND GAMACHE residents, 15 Sisters of St. Fran, Ask For 'Them Todav WYman 9-6984 cis of the Immaculate Concep-. tion, who operate the institution, and about 30 lay workers; It also has an infirma!'y wing that can care for 24 reside':!ts;. , il !;
Religious Drama On Radio of
More Reasonable Att'i'tude, Exists ,Towards Office,' .for Literatur,e '
TV Station Cancels Showing of Movie
Priests Say Portion Of Mass in Hebrew
.....ew· .Home for Age'd Has Stepless Design
Made Rite Chips
Support for Press
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":LOW',.BANK.,RATE. FOR NE"rCARS
WASHINGTON (NC) - The' Ar~bishops and Bishops of the Un~ted States salutedthe'Catho- :, lie press of this country and in"; v0k;ed God's blessing on i~,i.i1 a, , resolution adopted 'at theIr all-' , nmil general meeting just held here. The prelates noted that the Catholic press in this country, "growing steadily and on firm foundations, has recorded some of its finest achievements in the, • last year."
B'ishops Thank 'Media. WASHINGTON (NC) --: The Ca~holic ar~hbishol?s a,n,ll' b~sh:: " ops of the United" States have ex~ressed "the, d~ep , gratitude of our'Catholic peop'le, and' our' own lively thanks",for"the gen~ , erous understanding, manner". in whi.ch the press, radio and tele vision "recently have d~alt with , a Series of news e~ents' of par:" ticular importance to Gatholics." , The gratitude was expressed by the Administrative J;Joard of the N.C.W.C. on bel),alf of the Catholic Bishops of, the ,United, State!!, ,who just ,complete1i ,thei.r • annual meeting llere.,
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Balancing the Books
G,reene~s -·Man;· ·in ~"Hava-na'
. s·lipshod·Entert~inment.'~'
Thu,,:-
~~:. ~~~~~=I 'l~~~'it:~~· You
, .
' , ' By Most Rev. ,.Fulton J.
~y Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S.· KennedY' .' , On the basis of past-performance, one expects 'Graham . Greene to produce novelsw~i~h. are taut and'tightly constructed. His books·are as exactly detailed and their part~ as neatly interrelated as the works of a watch. A second reading has' always ...• and sketchy. Worwold is sim disclosed that every stroke ,ply incredible. On the one hand, is planned, shrewdly placed, he is ineffectual, almost inartic and plays an essential role ulate; on the other, he can ~rite .
S~.een,
D.D.
,There are 70,000,000 '~Untouchables" in India. Last year a mi~lion of these outcasts whom GJiandi called the "children of God" ~onverted to Buddhism for this "conversion" meant a change in their social' status. Entrarice into the' Catholic ChurcJt is dependent upon faith, instruction, moral worth and long preparation, thus only a few embrace the Faith and become indeed "children of God".
-
, A Bishop who was in our office recently,
told us that he has '7,000,000 "Untouchables"
in his diocese and .only 3'7,000 Catholics
from among 'aU classes. More astounding
still, he sorrowfully told that 80% of the
people in his area d.9 not av~rage one meal
a day.
in the shaping and operation of a letter precisely in the style of the whole.. But this cannot be Graham Greene. . . .s aid 0 f his
This is a tired, limp rework 1 ate s t effort.
ing of a familia'r formula and of Our Man in Ha familiar tricks which, at times, The priests of 'his aiocese receive a salary
vana (Viking.
might .seem a parody of the of $10 a month;. his catechists, who instruct
$3.50).
author. It is. a disappointing converts, live on' $7 a month.· He receives
To be sure,
excursion, not into the Greene LESTER LANIN fro", the Holy Father about $13,000 a year
what 'we have
w90d, but into the dry. on which to run his diocese, build churches
here is not a
and schools, and feed the hungry. '
Greene novel Christian Year _ but a Greene Father Francis X. Wei~r. is Contin.ued fa:om Page One Why .does not the Holy Father give him more? Because he .. e n (. e r favorably known to Amerl'can Whj'!n L amn . 'was ask e d ,to P Iay cannot! The' Holy Father hlLll to support 694 other dioceses in tainment," the .readers for his books .on Christ for this year's affair he quickly Africa and A~ia 'besides caring ·for 6.000 hospita:ls 'and 55.000 distinction ap mal;, Easter and' holy days.' He accepted' and compared,' last schools. ~ecause the. Catholics of the United States iast year gave parently; being has' drawn 01]. all ~f these, and year's ball 'with the finest he has: the Holy Father, through his, S,oC)~ety fqr tb~ ;Propagation .of. the that the :former .,:.' 'added much new :material 'toever attended. "I marveled at Faith; only 30c each, the hands of the Supreme Pontiff are too has theological 0 v er ton es,.· ,produce the ne~ Handbook of the sociability of the people readily emptied. . . ;, , ' , '. ' whereas', the latter is' simply a'-" Christian Feasts and' Customs "as well as the charm and warm sUspense' story. But no previous (Harcourt, Brace. $.95), which, -nesl! o.f your Bishop," Lanin "entertainment" has been even he ~ys, "is primarily intended stated. "I rate Bishop Connolly's Now th~t the Holy Spirit h~~ given u's'a ne~'Holy Father would '"remotely as slipshod, sprawling, as Ii' historical explanation of' Charity Ball with the finest en , it not be. well fo~ us to give him, .for his, missions, a' Coronation and unthrilling as this. general interest and :as a source gagements I have everplay'ed Gift! ;What a joy it would,be: to His Holiness if by the First ·of the Its central figure is a typical of information." , 'and that covers a' lot of terd-' year ~e could send him a' sacrifice from ev~I-y student and ,every Creene character, a seedy, mel It certainly should be' of gen tory and includes a lot of people," . adult in the' United States. ~y giving 'to him we prove:' . ancholy middle-aged man with ~eral interest. For. it ·takes us Lanin concluded. a) 'our faith in the Vicar of ChriSt a limp.. James Woimold is an ,through' the. Christian year, . . Stiiish' Musi~ b)' our· obedience to him in fQl:!owinghis, Englishman living iil Havana showing itsuity and "ariety, jts Lanin's' ' repertoire ., Includes ' 'plea that,'he 'is to'be :"first .and and :having indifferent 'success\liturgical consistency unfolding, the Monte Carlo Ball. in'horior' 'principaUyaided", , '. ill ~elling vac~uJ1]. cleaners; De,;, and wealth of particulars. The of ptin~e Rainier"and PrincesS ".' . "', . > c) our sense of equality, for. V!'ho better -.erted by his wife, he .idolizes , ma.ior feasts, .the se,veral sel!-sons, ':Grace' imd his' nlU~ic~l arrange- ," , . ' .. than:the Vicar of 'Christ, k119ws~nd.. his pert: 'and beautiful 16.,.year- the cycle are: all Jnforniativelyment$.' as endless as the list' ' . , serves' at! the missions of.the wor~d.? .. old daughter '.MillY who, linlike explored. The history of each is of notable' families' assemblies' "Seildyour-sacrifice' to Most IRev.. "uUon, J. Sheen. National
him, is.a,·Catl\olic;,.;. . . , >, recounted,as are ,the,d~velop- land . clubs 'for wh~m he has .....: 'Dlreetor'of the'Soelety'forthe PropagatJon.of the....alth, 366 Fifth
His sO~e ambition 'is to make' : merit of its obserVance' lmdthe 'play~d.. '.",::.' , ' " ,Avenue, New Y~rk' 1, 'N. Y.'We"wlllfo,:wa'rd.,1t t.o ,~he.former
enough money toena.i>le him. to- po~ular customs attaching to it. : DreSs for' affair' will be '. National DireC10r of the 'S'ocietJ" for the Propagation of the Faith
atisf.y h~r expensive:tllsteli'al1d. :;, 'the' book; r.ep'rese'nt~:' a v'ast" 'formallmdtickets may 'be' ob..'c . in Italy; His Holin'esS 'PoJ)e John'XXDL' '" :". , .. '.' . '
f h f t I , .. : " ~ :,'tained at all parish reetories ,as proVId e /,or er u qr~." ' . accUmula.tioiI ',of 'learniilg. But . '. - ."" ' . ".' . : .. it t9. , the 'well as from members of the'" Cut' out this cohimh, pin your"sacrifice .to .it and .mall Well Paid Work, . there fa nothing pei:lariH~ about DioceSan 'Council of'Catholic . Most .Rev:F'ulton "J::~ Sheen, National Dire~ior'of The SOciety fo* .. This Inakes 'him vuIIi.era'ble the presentation. Fa:ther',Weis ,Women. imd·the'S[Vincent de the Propagation of 'the Faith,'366 Fifth AV~l}l.le, New.York,l,,,N.Y~ when a <masterfUl smooth-talker's manner is easy; his way of Pau~ Society. or yo~' DIOCESAN DIRECTOR REV. RAYMOND' T: C9~SIDINE, ing agent of the British Secret putting things Is succinct and 368 North Main Street~ Fall Ri~er; Mass., • . . '" . _t .; Service insists that Wormold":be .colorful a'nd not witbo.ut humor. tile service's r~presentative."''in·"- ,In the course of ~. fe~ pages, , A Memorial Service open to" ~"DAU,GHTER$' OF"ST. PAUl' ,Havana.'; ,' _ . for e~a~pl~;' one'; learns that" members only will I>eheldSun-' "" In'{ite y';ung','girls" (14~231 to kobor'iII He is to gather information.'OIl - although' ,t~~ :~~st~~ Churches ·day evening at ~:3Q by Bishop' . ',Ch!i.st's ....st vineyard as an Apostl. Of the· enemy;agents and, in particular; , do not have a hturglcal season James E.' Cassidy Colincil,' , ,Edifications' Press. Radio, Movies and 'e'" ;isio~': 'with' tftese' :inodem mealls, theSe • OR a my;sterious installation. in, of Advent, .they d9 observe a Knights .. of Columbus.' The'" 'Mis"sicinary Sisters bring Christ's Doctrine oriente Province. Because, the, fast ofAO ~ays prior to Christ':' monthly iiocialnieeting is'sched';';' -io·'ari. regardle;s' "of 'race; '~olor Of' "eed. work is: .well paid, Wormold mas; that in the countries of uled for 8 Monday' night at the ; ...~ '-I'oi', mf-ormation . write to, •.. ,' "" . agrees.' central ,Europe there is a custom ':Courlcil Home'" 'Swahsea.· ": "EV.• ·,MOTH,ER. SUI'ERIOR,.= " . He does no actual spying; en-. ofa. "joy~ul fast': on' th~ vigil ~f. '.. . .. ,," ",-., .. ", , ,4@1l1il:50.st. PAUl'S A~•.B.OSTO~ ,~, 'IlV'SS. Dats ,no .assistants; but inven'ts;" Chrlstm~s" m~aI]m~ strlC.t abstl~ bOth sub-agents and informat~on, 'nence from ,meat"but latItude .as and. when drawings of the sup to the.amount,~f'.f.<?od.eaten;and posed installation are required, t?atthe puzzh~g,~o~m~mora. sends 'drawings of, vacuum'" bon. of St.. Anasta~la III the deaner parts. The nioney comes: s~~ond Mass of. :ehr~s~mas de rolling in. . . rIves. from an. ancient custom .' . whereby the Pope' p.resided at a , ". ut . t?~re ;re ~o??,§hcatIonsi service in the RoimiD church thee ISlm: er 1" ap t al~' ~g~r:, ~" named for the·.martyr. oca :po Ice, w o wan. s._ <?'. So it is with"the whole book, marry MIlly, becomes aware of. ".: which is.overflowin With ·.fas th~ strange .game that Wormold " cinating: data. g - /
IRELAND. ENGLAND is Illvolved m. .
FR,ANCE • GERMANY Christmas Vel'lle ; People bearing the names which Wormold has used to designate his non-existent sub Phyllis McGinley is deserved TSBNEW YORK agents, are killed or shot at. ly'acclaimed as one of the finest MAR.'9 • ~AY'. From U)ndon come two expel'ts " contemporary makers of light oIULV 30 • AUG: 24 to assist him in his purportedly verse. Year: after year she has SEPT.'9. OCT.'. elaborate operations. ~ turning C?ut crisp, gay, Much. of the. fantasy that sometimes mocking rhymed Wormold has iriventedbegins to ". commentary on ,th~'fc.9ibles of aome true, and his life is.in con oUr time. In someo!, her work stant daQger. Can he survive the -there is 'an'unmistakable Chris lion note. . , deadly ;·game? That is Mr: In the course of almost a Greene~'. secret, which the re quarter of a century o'f such pro : newer must not communicate to .ductfon, she has'created ·anum:.. . the re~der. '. . AZ;0RES • P,ORTUGAL '.)' her . of •pi~ces "dealing "with ITALY. ·SICII•. Y , AJJsence of Decision Christmas. These a're now' gath- . ; Some of the book 'Is funny in GREECE. ISRAELered in a book, (along with a a macabre way. There ·are pas wry ,essay on New Year resolu~ TBB OLV.MPIA sages of ,effective' satire. St'and tions). under the :title Merry:' newelt, fait... from Bolton aM Greene touches "are in evi Christmas, .Happy New Year, dence: e.g., the inevitable scene -with decorations by Ilonka Kar MAR." • ,~AY 7 in 'a lavatory, the conversation oIULY 25 • AUG. asz (Viking. $2.50). in which the participants talk at Se~T. 23 • OCT~21 Some of' the verses catch the cross-purposes, the' preoccupa. gleam and giow'of the secular tion . Vl(ith crude, sordid sexu:" ChristmasmQod. Others ;com ality. , ment 'slyly 'on the ordeais of As with almost every place he . .' Christmas sboppirig, on Christ ehc;>oses as a setting for his fic Get an. .mas cards, on the, office party, tion, Mr. Greene concentrates on . ' ." . ~ ", " on ·startdard-·gffts;:.'etc;'TheY are . . . . ,At RAUS'THAT WILL S'AVE YOU MONEY the worst features of Havana; SaH/oKS 'rom New York day:alletJd c.lt;,veJ;,~.'!ie!!1;1.eqHy..:.:~~~·i~~,~ci, and <;Gmparisons are convincing! Come 'in a~d g~t the figures when he is through' with-:a place, alwayslllgemously' minted. '... the reader has no desire 1;'0 visit .. :The~eai-e 'stiii '~Ui~rs 't~J~hed Sel Your Travel Agent or It. with' : :Pr.9fuil~itY':and\ ::<:oming The major 'flaw 'is the absence closer -to theohearf:oi·Chi'istm~s"
of deCision 'as' to just what the Of th'ese' the'm(J~'1n;p~essiYe is
'book is. meant to be.' It veers Of NEW BEDFORD drunkenly be.tween the ¢ynicaHy· . "Th~ Ball?d of<B~f~na," ~hich is
, quite perfect of its ,kind, "How amusing and· t.he· menacing, MAIN OFfiCE-Union and pteal<Jnt, Street. Dever focussing, neyer, bllll-ling. the ~east 'Keep'Christmas;'" ~~d NORTH END-1200 Acush,net Avenue Besides 'the.chara~tt:n.,a;cdim "~elIoly City,":, ' " '
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THE ANCHOR Thurs., Nov. 20, 1958
13
CRIBS For Christmas
Cenacle Groups Plan Meeting In Warenam
Priced from $2.50 to $300
The New England Re gional Meeting of the Mis sionary Cenac1e Apostolate will be held in Saint Pat
F. A. Forest
206 So. Main St., Fall River, Mass.
rick's ~arish Hall, Wareham on Sunday afternoon, November 30th at 2:30 P.M. Dr. Margaret Healy, Ph. D i of Brooklyn, N. Y., Custodian Gen eral of the Missionary Cenacle Apostoliate will preside. Rev. John A. Chippendale, pastor of St. Patrick's, will welcome the delegates, Members of the Mis sionary Cenacle Apostolate will come from Attleboro, c:::ambridge, Dedham, Hyannis, Norwood and Wareham. The Missionary Cenacle Apos tolate, a group of laity, founded by the late Reverend Thomas A. Judge fl'om South Boston in 1909 work in conjunction with the Missionary Servants of the Most Holy Trinity, (Priests and Brothers)' and Missionary Serv ants of the Most Blessed Trinity, (Sisters). The latter have Mis sionary Cenacles in Attleboro, Hyannis, Osterville, Wareham, and, in the Archdiocese of Bos ton, Cambridge and'Norwood. Fifty Years This apostolate has been in op eration for nearly fifty years, and during this time ~housands ' of children have come under its proteGtlon, and' their life' has been safeguarded by keeping them under the influence of the , Sacraments and the Holy Sacri-' fice. Many indifferent adults have been reclaimed from· sin and neglect of their religious duties. The Missionary group, who are trained 'tl> work spiritually, quiet ly, and without offense, have· as their motto-Be good, do good, ' help 'others do good 'and try to effect that every Catholic should be an apostle.
For Your Holiday Shopping Convenience
NEXT .WEEK:
WORCESTER (NC)-The Di-; ocese of Worcester has petitioned the Sacred Congregation of Rites in Vatican City that St. Louise de Marlllac be declared patron ess of social workers. St. Louise lived from 1591 to 1660 in France. She founded the Sisters of Charity and was closely associated with St. Vin cent de Paul in his apostolate to the sick poor. The petition was signed by Bishop John J. Wright of Worcester. Attention was called to the fact that "although the expression itself was not used in the 17th Century, S1. Vincent de Paul created, a true 'social service' in which St. Louise de Marlllac played a capital role."
Superior to. Preside At Retreat· in Cuba
Serve's' Two, ·S..ees.
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SACRED HEART, ' ST. ANTHONY'S, NORTH ATTLEBORO TAUNTON Ste. Anne Sodality honored "~alk of the 'J;'own," a variety Rev. Edmund Dickinson on the show,. will be presented for the 15th anniversary of his ordinaseconfil, time this Saturday. Other tion with a surprise party. and parish.activities include frequent· cake.. Mrs. Paul,· Laramee was teen':'age dances, whlSt -parties arrangements chairm·an. every Wednesday, and a Christ , In other. business;. ,plans were mas 'P.arty planned for Decem concluded for the annual Chris,tber.·· .. .'''.. mas sale. .' The discussion ,group, head!,!d : , "The Mariettes/'. a club for.,· by ~rs. He.nrietta Ca~valho, has te~n-agegirllli. ~as ju,lIt been . comrrienced its second season; formed. 'Members seek to be of ST. JOSEPH;S,' service to others... Their first I, TAU'NTON . project was ". the making of , .J Holy'·.Nam~ members madere Thanksgiving favors. for hospital sponses ,and. receiv.ed:c9rpor~te patients. Anita ,Lecours is presi- .' co!Umunion at a parish Mass, dent· and 'Anne Dufault is vice" marking.the first congregational' president. .'., , . Mass participation in the city of . Four school societieF received Taunton. 122 members' at ':church' cere.. '. At· breakfast.. .following. Mass' .' monies followed by Benediction: new' ..officers were· introduced... ; . The groups in~lude tbe So<;ie~t·_· They. are Roland' Ducharme, .: of the Infant .. Jesus for first president; Michael J. Welch, -.. 'grade; CadeVi· of .. the. ,Sacred first vice presideI)t;.~anue(.· Hea~t, ·fifth-, g,ade, ~ys; Holy: 'MellO; second vice. ,president.•. : Angels S.ociety" fifth grade.girls; Roiand Chase,' third .' vice ' Children· of' Mary, seventh and president; Fr;lncis A,' McManus, eighth grade gi/."ls.: . t~easurer; M':llvin W. Lewis; sec- . SACRED HEART, retary; Rob.ert A. Martin, finan NORTH ATTLEBORO c:i,al secretary. The annua.1.Christmas sale will ST. MARY'S CATHEDRAL. be held today.'.Lunch, will' btf FALL RIVER served by the Ladies of St. Anne '. The Women's Guild will hold Sodality from 11:30 to 1:30. Mrs. its annual Christmas'sale tomor Arthur Cloutier is general chair row in St. Mary's School. Aprons, man. fancywork, .domestics, cakes,. The Junior League of the candy, dolls, white elephants Sacred Heart will serve a bean and novelties will be on sale supper' in the parish hall Satur from 2 till 9 P. M. RefreshmentS·, day, Dec. 6, with Charles Du will be served beginning at noon. fault in charge. Mrs. Lawrence A. Coyle is Mrs. Ralph Patunoff was general chairman of the event, named representative of . the assisted by Mrs. James A. Ladies of St. Anne Sodality on O'Brien Sr. and Mrs:' Frank S. the North Attleboro' Girl Scout , Moriarty. Council. Mrs. Leo Meunier was selected to attend 'coming Girl ST. THERESA'S; 'SOUTH ATTLE~ORO Scout study sessi<;ms in Boston. Newly electedCYO officers in . The annual turkey whist. wa. 'clude Charles Dufault, president; held last nightwi.th Leo .Robi Robert Ringuette, vice president; .chaud a's general chairman. Par-' Jeann.e LeCompte, sec~etary; .ishioners 'attended CanaCon-· Simonne Dubuc; :treasuter. 'ference' . 3 held at St. Mary;. SCllool haIl, North Attleboro. .
r®iii~··ANCiioR·i •
Wed. Nights
, DISCU;;SION GROUPS MEET: Left to right, Mrs. Thomas Williamson, Blessed Sacrament parish; Mrs. Flor ence Pedro, St. Louis; and Mrs. Irene Turgeon, Immaculate Conception, examine discussion club books at an open meet ing held by District One, Diocesan Council of Catholic Women.
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OUR LADY OF THE ISLE,NANTUCKET . NEW ULM' (NC)-:-The Cath The anrlual Tha'nksgiving' pie. olic Bulletin; newspaper of the •. sale will be held, Wednesday,.
Archdiocese of St.' Paul, has also' .Nov. 26. 'The Women's Guild
been ,named newspaper, of the. meeting on Nov: 25 will be ·de
Diocese of New DIm by. Bishop "'voted to padmaking for the Rose .
Alphonse J. Schlaqweiler,of New Hawthorne Home.
Ulm who announced the .affilia.,. -The Guild and Knights of
tion and the support" of all .Columbus will co-sponsor a pub";'
parishioners for the paper, which lic supper and pen'ny sale Thurswill now serve ·two dioceses.' day, Dec. 4. CORPUS CHRISTL :SANDWICH . , .' .. Plans for Christmas sale are .being· made by the Women's .Guild. A whist party is held . 'every two weeks, and members are currently co-operating in \the 'Thanksgiving Clothing Drive. P. O. BOX 7 - FALL R.IVER, MASS. : ·ST. THERESA'S, :SOUTH ATTLEBORO Enclosed in $4 Subscription. PleaSe send for one year to • :: The~ Confraterriity of Chris :~ian 'Mothers and' the Children . N • :of Mary;iie co-sponsor of a". 'Christmas bazaar to be held in :the parish hall W'ednesday and :Thursday, Dec. 3 and 4 from :2 C't T '.: • 'to 10·P.M...... - _ ... ". ' .. Almost 100 CYO members at Address ,~. : tended Mass and received cor porate communion last Sunday• "
Super Markets
Tu~s. &
Closed All Day Thanksgiving Day Usual Store' Hours All Other Days
NEW YORK (N'C) - Rev. Brother' Nicet-Joseph, F.S.C., Superior General of the Chris tian Brothers, will arrive in New York next Tuesday enroute to Cuba to preside at a retreat for all major su'periors of the community in N~rth ~qd South America. ' The Superior General has vis ited the United States once be fore. As a young man he spent two years studying at the Broth ers' scholasticate in L~s Vegas and at De La Salle Normal' School in Covington, lla.
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" 14" '; _. THE AN~HOR
"",,'"
. Thurs., Nov. 20, 1958
U,rges Study ot"~'Goldberg·$ ·Plan for.Top-Level Talks
Hierarchy' Warn Unions.. Against "Abuse' of Power
. ',' .,By Msgr. G.eorge G. Higgins" . DuectoJNCWC Social Action" 'Department . ' , . . ..... . The NCWC Social Action Department, in its 1958 LabQr Day Statement, stressed the' importance' ,of .labor managemen't cooperation be,yond' the scope. of traditional coll.ective b:p-gaining as a means of combating the current 'economic recession. To this' eumstances in which they' would end, the statement recom have no alternative but to talk: mended that representative and when they are through talk national leaders of labor and ing, they should talk some
BIRMINGHAM (NC) _. The Bishops of England and Wales have lauded automa tion as raising living stand . ards and have, warned organized labor not to use its new power _ unjustly. In a statement released con demning slackness at work and excessive labor union pressure, Bishop John' A.' Murphy of Shrewsbury, stressed that in Catholic ,social teaching the "person" must always have the first consideration. In achieving good· relations between man agers, workers and customers "the cornerstone is the recog nition of ·the dignity' of the human, individual personality," it stated. "Whether you coerce. workman or manger, you coerce a man. Some new method should be found, particularly in the larger . nationalized industries, which would allow more responsibility to the individual employee 9G that he is not just a tool but a human being with a mind which finds self-expression in work that is/ humanly satisfying. .
management come together 'as more." soon as possible in a series of The proceedings of the Assem ex p lor at ory
bly would be off-the-record, and meetings~ .
there would be no pUblic state '"{'he meetings, 'ments unless they were unani it .was stated, mously agreed upon.. should discuss, "Primarily, if the Labor-Man -among 0 the r agement Assen:bly' is to be suc things, the hotly cesSful," Mr. Goldberg explains, debated ques . "it must be a place to discuss lion as to whe and. think about important issues ther or n01 . in the . labor-management area wages. are cur on 'a broader basis than is pos ren~ly, exceed sible in collective bargaining, 1 n g .p,roductiv not to fight and bicker over the ity and are words of a contract or a resolu CATHOLIC .WAR VETERANS. WORKSHOP: 'Ste. thus, as is some tion." . Maire parish hall; Manchester N.R.. was the scene as officers times alleged, contribuUng to in In my opinion, Mr. Goldberg~s learn their duties and discuss mutual problems. :beaders flation. They should also dis speech was one of the most im alss p,rices and profit levels and portant of its kind in recent are pictured above. Seated are 'John Basic, Raynham;. Mass. industry's ability to pay. years. The foregoing swnniary and Maurice Labrie, New Hampshire Department Coin Similar ,Proposal . is very inadequate, but it will mander. Stariding, john Coady, Taunton, Mass; Cornelius This proposal-for which Uie " :lave served its purpose.' if it Kelleher, Taunton, Mass. ; and Lucien Archambault, Nashua, Social Action Department, inci .. prompts the readers of this col umn to secure a copy of the com- ~ workshop chairman. NC Photoo dentally, makes no claim to orig . inality~was .endorsed with va plete text "of, the speech and to rying'degrees of enthusiasm by a study it very carefully.. , • Single copies can be obtained Of T . . t ' .. V" t" n '.. number'of,Catholic periodicals. fr of ch . b ·ti d' . " ~n !! ~. > • To the 1;>est of our knowledge; ..,; ee arge y Wrl ng i- . The .second annual installation . '.'." . '. . d . . · . . ..... " ' however ·it went completely un... · rectly,. to" Mr.. qoldberg "at ,the of officers of the ,Filther John' .. 'nottced i~ the ranks of labor and··fon()Y{1nga?drl'!~:~091~o.n~e!=-... P .. Wasp,ington P9st No.. 1799.' These words were 1i3nU7i1ttered' In the great square 'of St. management.; ," ". .', ~icl1t A.venue, ~C?:rtl}:-v.est, !Vli,sh,: Catholic War Veterans will be.,,,Pete~'swllenthe~ were, ecboiq In &he "hearts of the faithful taci not'recalrthat it men";'" mgto~ 6:~. C. ,.C:' held, at. 8 P.M., Saturday .in QUI:' throiigbo~ ~e wo,rl~, ,~e firSi r!lacU~nwas, ~~e of 'great Joy that ·tio·n'eJ "editorially, either pro" or . , Lady : of., L,ourc!es Hall;, Fit;~., ,God ha,cJ... ~le§~ H~ . (;,-urcb with an~thl'rgrea.t le~d~r, and~hen eon,. in any. of ~l official publf- . . Street Taunton. Past. Comman- .each one realized tb,e. great burdens" !tnd . , r:esponslblUties whicb eatiopS'of 'Iabor or'managem'Emt der Hugh Mayher ;.ww' presepi' werffat th,at.very moment .rest.lnl:",o.n. &be hila" of Pope John
or i>{any:represent'ative sPokes~' WINONA (NC'):"'-The Cathoiic th g vel to Commander-elect XXIII. ~e ,had been chosen in 'solemn. Conclave. where. the Cardl-
man for., either .group. Library Association has estab- R ~;' E 'JOY" ,,', ' . ,:' nals of the Cb.urch had gathe!ed to be g~d!l!l'by the HOly,.Splrit. o . :. ..". .,' He had been chosen" !lnder &be gUidance of the Hilly Spirit and now lt is ':gnitifying to be' able to 'llshedthe'Regina Award to be Invitations' committee chair- , that same Spirit must. guide 'and strengthen him in the dan report, ,h9wever, that, a strik giv.en anp!,iil1ly.. to' anindivi!Iual man. William Powers announces ahead. We will· pray for our Hoi, Father. we' will pray for' him ingly similar: ·proposai was' re·.' whose lifetime contribution to . that Maurice Labrie, New Hamp- . and by our sacrifices, help to ease' the ,many demands made on his· 'cently 'made by Arthur 'Gold the' field of children's' literature' shire Department Commander,.: strength and his material resources.' His Holiness lias worked In berg, General Counselo~ the has' been outstanding. . .'. :. will be installing: officer. The the N'ear East. He knows' the' Problems 'at "firSt hand. He will United :'Steelworkers of America' Sister Mary Eone; association New Hampshire installation team . make maily"calls on the' Catholic Near' East Welfare since we are and Special Counsel of the AFL": presideht, said ,it. qas hee ll estab and color gtiard'will perform the' his' Mission Aid for Ute Near East. May he 'always find us ready and CIO. ,Mr'. Goldberg.is at once', a }jshed "to 'single .put for recog ceremonies~ Colors' of both ·the ,. able to fulfil) the work 'he gives us,., brilliarit theorist and a very, 1lUC nition. an.d eniulati~ns those, • •• CatIiolic' War'Vet'cbrans and Uie"; . -'.' '. . . . " .
cessful ;practitioner,n th~fieid- .who have given unstintiilgiY of Ladies' AUXiliary wlll'be posted." MASS OFFE~INGS A~E A TWO-EDGED ~~ORD,. . . . G!lACE
their· creative : ~enius:. ,to ,~hilof labor-management·relations. . ,.'" .:' '. . ",.,' . ' N' tic .' AND STRENGTH FOJ;l, YOUR iNTENTIONS .. ' . NECESSARY
In a ~eech·deiiyered.oh Nov.' drt'!n's lit~rature; finding in that A large· delegation from as:- .', SUPPORT FOR YOUR MISSIONARIES.••• REMEMBER THEM.
. ", . , ' "TODAY."',,:. .', ,.' . .
5 at the'University of Wisconsin ,fieid' a challenge Wortby of th~ir ::~:~:~ E~t~~'t:i;:JJ;~t~';'~i;;~.... entitled!' c~Th~' State -of Labor- ··"tal~ilts'·' and demanding ..always low' the' lnstalIa'tion, :with John .... THE 'FEAST . OF' 'THE PRES . EN',I'ATION.. 0'" THE BLESSED Ma, nage:nent Relati9!lSr,,:,~~.58-, their very l;>e!it.~'., ..... , McCarthy as master' ·-of ce!e- . MOTHER (Nov. 21),.is.,a clay 6f .. beaotY...and. calm reflection.' ..We 1959", Mr. Goldberg noted, with The first award will be pr:e monies. Invitations have been " "are" reminded. of "<Mar,'s:. Ute devoted to the sincere'regret, that labor-mansented, at a Chicago conference sent to city officials, and l o c a l . . . , : . ',service of.. God ·and."Dis··Son. SISTER ELIZ-' a~ment attitudes appear to be during next, Easter week. The veterans' and fratermil organiza-' ABETH and"SISTER .TERESA JOAN wish to ha:l-dening' rather than maturing' nam~. of the'recip~ent will be an-·'. tio~s.,".·:· ',,, ',: . " .',,' offer themselv~ on'the' Feast of &be Presimta.... · tionr to:the.·servtce,of"the poor.and dl,e sicll: at::the present time. nounced January 1, next. '. ' ae said that "opportunities for E members '0; the Mystl~al Body. Each Is' readY eonversation,'for a sensibleiI;eal-' . ~u,erto, ~~co, ! It 'and waitiog fortl1e'word that we .have' Be- ' istic exchange of views between cured/a benefactor"who .will pay $150 a year" th~,leaders of labor and the busi UC ' for, each during two year period 'of rio'viti- .. . mis~ commun;ty are becoming SAN Jl::JAN:(NC)-"'-.The' juve-" BRUSSELS, (NC);o.~ Some 15 J - : : - . ate training'. '''WoUld y'ou care .to adopt one, fewer and fewer." nile .delinquency' . problem' . in. . million: :perf?9!'1S \lVere: '~st~rhat~d . . of these Sisters as' a gift to Ute Blessed' , Fair to Management Puerto" -Rico is more .than i4 . 'to ·have,v.isited '.the:·Vatican ~a. Mother on Her' teasi, d;ay? It is usually only at the bar times greater:th~~it·Was a d~ vilion, Civitas!?ei, d~rmg. 'the gaining table, Mt. Goldberg said, ade ago~~ .' - ' . ' : ., World ,exhibition here. that the two sides ever come' Police records disclose that More than 2,800 Masses were together and while :"the bar-' last year there were 8,167 crimes .' celebrated . in· tlie pavilion'S gaining-' table, of course, plays ' committed. by rouths while 10 Church of the Risen Christ, more an indispensable and: essential years ago there were 553 such than half by visiting bishops and role in our iabor-managemE!llt .crimes. While Puerto Rico ill priests. About 101,000 Holy scene . .: it 'has never been . known as a Catholic country, Communions were distributed kii~wn as ; place where one there is no religious instruction and more than 20,000 confessiona could think out 10ud about basic in the·public sc~ools. were heard. problems. Every word counts r--....._~.- - - - - - ,;.._., too much." Mr. Goldberg, in trying to de termine why labor relations are h~rdelhng instead of maturing at the present time, leans over 670 COUNTY STREET, NEW BEDFORD , WE WILl. SEND OUR BEAUTIFUL: GIIT CARD WITH PRESSED backwards' to be completely fair . E' d FLOWERS FROM THE ROLY' LAND ANYWHERE IN THE to management as well as labor. qUlppe to e,a.re for ·pos~_:Operatrves, Co,,!val W.ORLD TO TELL OF YOUR GENEROSITY TO THE MISSIONS His approach 0 the problem ill escents the Aged. in a MO,DERN.:HOME: IN THE NAME OFA FRIEND. WHY NOT DONATE AN ARTICLE characteristically ·positive. anl;i IN THE NAME OF A' DEAR ON~. OR HAVE MASSES constructive. He. is interested,. J In ancitmosphere':of FRIENDLINESS and . . ' OFFERED?' s~lelY in finding'. honoral* .' , " WARMTH. _ :: ! ' . " ' ~ ~ THE., ROAD. TO THE ALTAR IS LONG m'ethods of bridgiug "thephilo'7. \ /": .... :, au'd' it .is also lonely: if you wonder if there .. sdphicchasm" which currently" ARTHU~ To NOONAN, Ow~~r"WY,,4-.2400-. aD)'one··:to' help )'00' pa)' the necessaJ')' expenses. d~vides labor and manageineQ,C , Felix and"John 'are"waiting patiently to' ent'er in'His the United States. -." ., a se~inal1- in"'lndia.' Each 'One' .watches ·the own thirlking,' he says,"r let.ds him to recoinrri'end'. the ~~ r,. ~ .. , . ~:.~: ~ .~ mail e~ei'y da)'to 'see whether we have 'found him • benefactor 'who~will PQ,100 • Fear oB e~tablishment oFaLabor''''Man,;.·,-COME .:IN - SEE-and DRIVE t:::~~:==.;j.~ialsbeiaa1f for .~he ~ )'ear-ciOurS~ 'Per:Jl"s ag~mentAssemblymodeledafter" " LI,:' 10 . ,)'ou.re the"aJJSWe~. ~.. ~ pra)'~r,l . Ute U.N. General Assembly.·, It,·..· .. n .c4Uld be sponsored by, but "'The World's MOst· Beautif"lIy 'Proportioned ears-. sb'ouldnot be controlled by. the at '0;.. ' ..' G6vernment. :The Labor-Management As sembly, as conceived by Mr. G,oldber-g, would bring together. ..', FRANCIS CARDINAL' SPELlMAN,' President . MSgr.Petiii:P. Tuohy,'Natnec',' .. , top-level 'representatives and ; , stciff consultalitsfrom labor and " ' FORD' oeALBS' FOR OVER -38 YEARS . . . Send aD com~u~icGti~ to: . , nlariagement 'once or twice a CATHOliC NEAR -EAST-· WElfARE.. ASSOCIAnON , 7~ar for a· period ~ long as two 1344-16 Pwc'hcue St" New Bedford, Mass. 480..exingtoaA';e~:aI:46th 51....... NewYodt 17, N. Yo
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Joy New Commander a,un
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Check Titles of ,Films Here' :':
Before Going to Movies
THE ANCHOR
Bay 'State Priest Receives Awa rd From CQrdinal
A-l- MoraJly Unobjectionable for General Patronage Apache Territory. Around the World in 80 Days Andy Hardy Comes Home A"ock of The Puppet People IIorborian & The Geisha Bengal Brigade Big Country Buchanon Rides Alone Captain from Koepenick Cinerama South Seas Adventure Cole Younger, Gunfighter Cowboy Country Music Boy Dangerous Exile Davy Desert Hell Dive Bomber . Dunkirk Flaming Frontier Fort Massacre From Hell to Texas • From the Earth ta The Moon Ghost of the China Sea
Giant From The Unknown Gideon of Scotland Yard Handle: With Cor. Hell's Five Hours High Flight Hong Kong Affair I Married a Monster from Outer Space In Between Age International Counterfeiters It, The Terror from Beyond Space Last of the First Gam. Let'" Rocl< Ligh't in The Forest Lone Ranger and Th. Lost City of Gold Lourdes and Its Miracles Manhunt in the Jungle Matchmaker . Money, Women and Guns Night ~o Remember Octet Old Man of the Sea Paris Holiday Pother Panchali (Indio)
Proud Rebel •
Quantrill's Raide...
Rock-a-bye-Baby
Rooney
Run Silent, Run Deep
Sago of Hemp Brown
Secret Conclave
Sheepman
Space Children
St. Louis Blues
Hell squad Hot Angel Houseboat How to Make A Monster Hunters I Married a Woman
Imitation General Joy Ride Kill Her Gently Kings Go Forth Lost Hurrah. The Law a~d Jake Wade Legion of the Doomed Lisa ' Maca~re
Man or Gun Man Who Died Twic. Naked and The Dead Naked Hills, The New Orleans After Dark Nice Little Bank That Should Be Robbed Once ppon, A Horse Party ,Crashers Premier May Relucttint Debutante Return of Dracula
Smiley Gets A Gun
Snowfire
Spy in the Sky
Street of Darkne..
Tale of Two Cities
Tank Force
Tarzan's Fight for Lif.
Ten Commandments
Thundering Jets
Torpedo Run Trial at the Vatican White Wilderness Wild Heritage Windjammer Wolf Dog
Young Land
Revenge of Frankenst";n
Ride A C~o';ked Mile
Robbery Under Arms
She Demons
Showdown at Boothill
Snorkel
Space Master X-7
Suicide Bollolion
Tall Stranger
Tarawa Beachhead
Teenage Caveman
Terror of A Texas Town
Thing That Couldn't Di.
Thunder Rood
Time to Love and A TIme
to Die
Vertigo
Viking Women and The
Sea Serpent
Villa
Voice in the Mirror
War of the Colo..al IIeaet
War of the Sotellites
When He.1I Broke Loo..
Whole Truth
Windom's Way
Your Past is Show""
A-3 - Morally 'Unobjectionable for Adults Ag. of Infidelity Anno Lucasta Anoth.r Tim'., Another Place As Young As We ....r. ' lIadlanders 11"11, Book and Candl. Cot on a Hot Tin Roof Certain Smile China Doll Cool and The Crazy Crime & Punishment Cry Terror Damn Yankee D.cks Ron Red D.fiant Ones ' FIend Without A Face Frankenstein-1970 Frau.lin Gigi Gunman's Walk. '
n-
Gun Runn.rs Harry Black and Th. Tig.r Haunted Strangl.r Hell's Highway High School Hellcats Horror of Dracula Hot Spell Indiscreet In' love and Wor I Wont To Uv. Kathy-O Key life ~egins, at 17 Man Inside Maracaibo, Me and the Colonel . ~urder by Contrad Naked Earth N.v.r La"e A Stranger Notorious Mr. Manka
Of Life and love
Pagans
Raw Wind in Eden
Roots of Heaven
Rouge Et Nair
RX Murd'er
Senechal, The Magnificent
She Gods of Shark ReJ
South Pacific
Strange Case of Dr.
Manning •
Ten North Frederick
This Happy Feeling
Too Much, Too' So-
Touch of Evil
Twilight for the Gada
Unwed Mother .
Vikings
Wolf Larsen
Young' Lions
Morally Objectionable in Part for AD
A"ack of the 50 Foot Woman II100d of Dracula .Iood of The Vampire Evc....iv. brutality; sadism. IIonnie Parker Story IIride Is Much Too Beauti(ul Confessions of Felix Krull Dragstrip Riot Fiend Who Walked The West (Sodistic sequences; excessive brutality) Forbidden Island Gong War Girl in the Bikini Girls on the Loose God's Lillie Acre High Hell High School Confidential Home Before Dark (Trends to arouse by strong emotional appeal the acceptance of divorce and
justification ef remarriage.) Hot Car Girl I Was a Teenag. Frankenst.in Juvenile Jungl. King i Creole Live Fast. Die Young Machine Gun Kelly Mam'zelle Pigalle Man' of the West Highly moral nature :of this story is substanially marred by exce..ive brutality and unneccessary suggestivene... I Night of the Blood Beast (Suicide presented as oct of heroism.) No ,Sun in Venice (Suggestive sequences) Onionhead Panic in the Parlor Party Girl I Suggestive costume ,ond dancing;, reflects
~ Adorable Creot"r. And God Created Woman lied of Grau Flesh Is Weak French Lin. liaRe, Jungle ~odde.. ' (This flm seriously offends Christian and traditional standards of decency by reason of grail suggestivene.. in costuming) Ught Across the Street
.
. WASHINGTON (NC) Francis Cardinal Spellman, Archbishop of New York, has presented a theoiogy
Sierra Baron
A-2 - Morally Unobjectionable for Adults and Adolescents Accursed Appointment with A Shadow Astounding She Monster Allila Black Tide Blob Blood Arrow Bravados Bullwhip Case Against Brooklyn Camp on Blood Island City of Fear Colossus of New York Cosmic Monster' Crawling Eye Cry Baby Killer Curse of The Faceleu Man Dangerous Youth Dote with Disaster Dateline Tokyo Enchanted Island Fearmakers Flame Barrier Fly Frontier Gun Gunsmoke in T"es....
acceptability of cIi_ .. and rema~riage;
excessive ....utality
Perfect Furlough
Suggestive situatioa and dialogue
Perisienne .
Poor But Beautiful
Portrait of an Unkno_ Woman Queen of Outer Space Suggestive costuming. Reform School Girl Sorority Girl This :Angry Age Three Faces of Eve Tunnel of Love (The treatment of the subject ,moiler in this film exceeds the bounds of propriety and moral acceptability).' Young. and Wild Wind Across Th. Everglades ' (Low moral tone; suggeotiv. costuming)
HONOR BAY ,STATE PRIEST: Msgr. Joseph C. Fenton of SpriJ).gfield, theology professor at Catholic University of America and editor of The American Ecclesiastical Review, receives the annual Cardinal Spellman Medal for outstand ing work in sacred theology. He is shown with the Cardinal at presentation ceremonies. N.C. Photo.
Fordham Honors Nobel Winner Still Active, in Research NEW YORK (NC)-Dr. Vic tor F. Hess, winner in 1936 of the Nobel Prize for.his pioneer ing studies of cosmic rays, was awarded the Insignis Medal of Fordham University here. He has been a member of the Fordham faculty since 1938. Now, as a professor emeritus, he is engaged in research work at the university. Interviewed at his Mount Ver non, N,y., home Dr. Hess re vealed an energy which belied his 75 years. He is little inciined to talk about past glories, when the present offers' so' much that is interesting. Writes Papers "I still write papers' for the scientific journals whenever' something captures my imagina tion," Dr. Hess said, his voice warmed by a lingering Austrian accent. At the moinent he i. busy Rudying the latest advances iii.
his field and conducting one of the nation's four laboratories for the testing of persons exposed to radioactivity. "Companies using radioactive material in their work send ~e jars filled with their ,employes breath,'~ Dr. Hess explained. "By testing 'the person's breath, I can' specify the amount of radiation to which be has been exposed."
award named in his honor to Msgr. Joseph C. Fenton, editor of the American Ecclesiastical Re view. Cardinal Spellman praised Msgr. Fenton, professor of the ology at the Catholic University of 'America, as "one of the na • tion's foremost scholars and teachers," Msgr. Fenton, who in 1957 be came the' first United Sta tes p~iest to be named a member of the Pontifical Roman Acad emy, praised Cardinal Spellman for the encouragem'ent he has given the theological society since its foundin£{ 14 years ago. Bishop Christopher J. Weldon of Springfield (Mass.), the dio cese. to which Msgr. Fenton ~ affiliated, was also present. Msgr. Fenton, a graduate of Holy Cross College, completed his studies for the priesthood at the Angelicunl in Rome, a Do minican university. He joined the faculty at Catholic Univer sity in 1938 and served as dean of the School of Sacred Theology from 1943 to 1945. He was named a papal chamberlain in 1951, with the title of Very Reverend Monsignor, and a domestic pre late with the title of Right Rev erend Mo'nsignor in 1954. In that . year als,o, he was honored b~ Pope Pius XII with the cro. ,"Pro Ecc1esia et Pontifice,", (For Church and Pope). , Msgr., Fenton is the author '" numerous works' on theoloQ.
you get automatic top burner 'control -, on todoy's GAS ran'ges! ,
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- Condemned
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Madamoiselle Striptea.. Stella Mai,d in Paria Smiles of A Summer Miliou Night (This film, in the staryThe Bed it tells, seriously (Th. extremely offends Christian and sensuous atmosphere traditional standards in which, the theme Of of morality and this film i. develo~d decency by reason of is accentuated by an' 9'OSI suggeativeness unmitigated emphasis in . situation., costum•• 0'; suggestive costumi"il and dialogue) and situations. Passionate Sum~ Excellive brutality)
Separa~e
,1 5
Thurs., Nov. 20, 1958
Classification
Adam and Eev. (Senscitional exploitation in odvertising tends to negette the spirltual motivation of th'e film maker and ritstrids the viewing ta a special audience.) Cose of Dr. Laurent (Obesrvation: This film presents the case for the psychopro phylastic m.thod of childbirth, which it more popularly known as "natural' childbirth". This medicql It,em.. whic/l it handled with, discretion and good taste, con have significant 'educational value _for odults and for older odol .~cents. However, the subied maHer itseK ta too sacr~, private ,;,nd personal
for indiscriminat'e' showing" in en.tertainment motion 'picture theater,.).
Clip. This' List and' Save,·,It:J
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FALL RIVER .. -.:
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GAS COMPANY
Bishops Cite Right tOfTeach .M~rals
Continued from Page One'
by materialism and secularism, 'the Bishops said that there is~'
"genuine urgency" for analyzing the right of the Church to teach. Materialism' and secularism, they contend, "have seized upon ·the democratic principle of pop alar. suffnige an'd have distorted its meaning into a denial of all rights save those which derive from majority opinion, or the aoCial and political realities of our temporal condition. Inheres in Nature "B u t man . ' s s pI'rl'tu~1 nature, ~ his supeCilatural origin· and im_ mortal destiny, are not annihi lated by being ingJlored; nor ill the fact of man's redemption by the Blood of Christ . obliterated by being denied." __ The Bishops said the Church regards. herself as "the teacher of men and nations" because she is . "divinely commissioned by .J.:esus Christ," , . They added: "She can'1ot ad mit, therefore, that .any earthly power cali deprive her of her, right to teach, That right inheres in her very nature as an autono ~ous society, one whose consti mtion is altogether independent of the state. Constitutional Right
"If the Church we~e not al .0
h ~he would be 10w ed t 0 t eac, bereft of one of her basic func lions' she would be condemned, . t totall'tar;~n' as un'd er communIS ~ j:'_' t d to. ' a twilight exist ...... 0 ay, . e.l:lce, and, by every human au gury to gradua~ ex~inction. The right of the church to exist im plies and demands her fl,lll coin':: petence Ito teach." . 'The right of 'the Church to teach "has its roots in man's freedom" the Bishops said, add iDg: "If 'man is truly lree,~he is irec to accept the revelation of our' Lord and to embrace the IIOciety He established. It is this freedom, essentially, which a attacked and denied by modem sec·ularism." Huwever they pointed out, the United St~tes has historically not been committed to· the secu laristicview of man's nature ~nd human society. The Fo~nd:lIlg Fathers and the Constltu.tlOn, they said, guaranteed the rl?hts of lile, liberty and the ~U.rSUlt of happines~ not only to Cltlz:n~ as tndividua~s, bU.~ to "the rehglO~ aocieties to whIch they. belong. Fre~dom Essential The Bishops continued: "But life 'for the Church is depend:nt upon her freedom to teach; hb erty for her must be broad .lough to e:.compass her unfet-· tered competence to proclaim the truth of her mission; and hap piness, which ·for her is the ful fillment oCGod's will to redeem mankind, is no 'more than, a mockery unless she' is free to work for that end." The Bishops declared that the right of the Church to teach is shown by history to involve all .£). other rights of individuals and, institutions. "Under wlratever form' of tyranny," . they . said, "from Caesarism to Sovietism,}!le sub vel'sion of human fr.eedom has almost . invariably. begun with uie ,restr"iction or denial of the right of the Church to teach. p~imary Right" ':-., "The record extends from the imperi~lism of Rome to our con temporary examples of state so_ cialism with wearisome repeti tion. Once the Church has been muzzled then other freedolWl fall ready prey to ..those power•. which would darken the .mind . and control the will of man. The irony, indeed, of many of the modern regimes' which have passed as liberal is that they have vitiated their claim, 'only too 'often by a radical-intolerance in regard to the Church u teacher." 'The Church's right to teach. ,they said, is "deeply rooted in man's primary right W,know the truths 'necessary for salvation. There is no right anterior to this in' value . or importance,' and there is no consideration which could justify the slightest in fringement of it." Moral Teaching The Bishops declared that it .. "significant of the temper of our times" that undisguised attempts are rarely made to atta~k. the
Church's -right to teach .dogma. Instead, they pointed out, "the. debate more closely • centers aroun~ her freedom to assert ~er ':noraI teaching in a world whIch 'has increasingly tended to ac ;knowledge no objective .stand ard. "It is questione~, thus, whe ther she has the. nght to pr,each her ~w~ con.c~pt of th,e hoh?ess and InVIOlabIlIty of the marrIage bond in a soCiety which has le .galized divorce and has advanced .very far toward. accepting it. as a normal mantal . fsoluhonfor ki d problems o' a~y. n ...
Monopohshe ~tatasm
"Again, there is vehement op pOsition raised when she states her principles on contraception. In aoother field it is contended that the Cnurch- is not justified. in adopting measures to protect the faith of her children in a' mixed society where established principles are at a discount. Her position on the moral necessity of Christian education is de nounced as divisive, or, more properly, as running coun~er to the interests of a monopolistie statism." It is the Church's position that freedom is fundamental to con science, the Bishops said: "But freedom," they added, "does not mean intellect,ual or moral an h It" ,·t 1 power of acc y. IS a SP1~1 ua . (. man's v~ry soul, I?herent m ~lS personalIty,. by whIch he can ,. nse ill to the fulfIllment of God s w . h' d" 10 IS regar . '.. La Apply DIVIDe W Freedom, they stated, has "ita deepest realization" in "the vol nntary. acceptance of truth in obedience to God's law." An~ when the Church "legislates for conscience," they. said, she' is simply applying "the imperatives of the divine law" to "the moral governance of mankind." '. The Bishops added that in her teaching mission the Churchill "not a debating society, but a divinely founded organization committed to a definite body of teachings and proclaiming a positive' way o.f salvation." C'hurch Confident They concluded by pointing out that the teaching Church has reason to be "grateful" ,for mod 'ern "astonishing developments in the field of communication." 'These developments, the 'BishBPS said, "render it possible for her voice to be heard .and her truth to be pondered by far greater numbers than. ever b~ ... fore in her long history. She lS confident that her truth, fully known, will bring for.th it. fruits in the hearts of men." Sudanese Protest Governor's Order, KHARTOUM (NC) - Fifteen southeJ;:n Sudanese deputies-in cluding two Cabinet ministers have sent a protest against a g«;)Vernor's order that· native mis sionaries must replace :foreigners in the Sudan. " The protest, sent to the Sudan ese premier, said it is not any of the state's business to interfere , in ;religious affairs. . The protests followed the ae tion: of Gov. Ali Baldo of Equa toria Province, the countrY'lI southern,.most province, in telling .two Catholic Ordinaries that Sudanese clergy should replace, foreigners.' He gave the word to· the heads of the Verona Fathera mission after' he ordered the
Pari,sh .Jub'ilee
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78 F'ragraa& wo04 38 Imlt.. t... 8ll Telloriolll
79 lag...&o4 $I. A flower 67 CN!ietYral.llka
81 Studio SlI Delli.... b
83 Gra" wUh ..... 37 Eacoarage 8ll C;law
70 ladi.aprlll_
M Regard 18 Acqalr" fervently S9 Ferm.."ted. 73 Harv..ot
85 Roofer. wat..r and 74 J'ortlco
86 In.ects hoa..y drink 76 Secluded "all..,.
87 Old plural·~ 40 H'K WAil TOR- 77 Eartb pea TURKO WITH 80 Be"..rag. . 88 No&orl.. tr: .l.N Il% 1I1eadow
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Warns .Against Turning Schools Into. Factories for Scientists QUEBEC (NC)'- The world needs the tempering and 'mod~ ating influence of the human ities today, Canada's Prime Minister John Diefe!1baker h~ declared: . He warned that "the te'mpta tions will be great to turn our universities and schools' . into mere factories' for the' mass ,pro duction .of scientists, engineers and operators of th~ vast para phernalia of automation:" . "The great lesson of history, i1 I read it right, is that the nations and peoples who decline and fall are those which become so enamored with material prog ress that they neglect the inner principles," declared Mr. Diefen baker who added "man is still faced 'with the moral and inte.l lectual problems which 'have troubled him from the beginning of time. .
"We have no reason tor believe that. these problems can be solved by the physical sciences alone," the Prime Minister continued. "In fact all the evidence at .hand indicates that without the tem pering and moderating influ ence of the humanities they will almost certainly lead' us to destruction. ~It is for this, as well 'as other reasons, that I for one am glad that we Canadians will have the iraditions of Laval to keep us on the' right path."
I f ' t· Bu -r eo u norma Ion WASHINGTON. (NC) .~The "work of the Bureau of Information of' the National Catholic Welfare' Conference was praised by the Archbishops and Bishops of the United States at their an . I .•
PRE-SEASON Train, & Accessory
Con&inued from Page One having Reverend Father Mar4 'as its first pastor. St: Hedwig's second pastor, Rev. Stanley Basinski, served the parish until 1912 at which time he returned to Poland where he celebrated his golden jubilee in the priesthood this year. -Rev. Francis A. Mrozinski. third pastor. of St. Hedwig's, served from 1912 until, his death in' 1951. He acquired property with the objective of erecting a new church, a project for which parishioners are now raising funds. After Father Mrozinski's death Father Norbert Zonca, O.F.M. Conv., pastor of Our Lady of Perpetual Help Church, was ap pointed temporary administrator of St. Hedwig's. In September, 1951, the Most Reverend Bishop invited the community to staff the parish on a permanent basis. Rev. Stanley Kozikowski, O.F.M. Conv., and Rev. Sebastian Slesinski, O.F.M. Conv., were appointed pastor and lfss~s~a~t pastor. Fl!ther KozikowskI 101 tiated alterations and redecora tion of church and rectory, also plirchasing a new church organ.. Present Pastor Following Father Kozikowski's death in 1956 Father Edwin Agonis was ,named temporary administrator, assisted by Father Innocent Kurkowski. On the feast of the Assumption, 1957, Rev. Emil Tokarz,' O.F.M. Conv.. was apPOInted pastor. Father· Camillus Blaszckak, O.F.M. Com;. is his present assistant. Parish organizations in-clude the Holy Name, Rosary, S1. Hed wig and Sacred Heart Societies. All cooperated in a Jubilee ~all held last Saturday to commemo rate the parish's 50th 'anniver sary. Belgians
Hono~
Hunters' Saint BRUSSELS (NC)-The feast day of St. Hubert of Liege, pa tron saint of hunters, was cele brated at a chapel in a nearby forest where he died in the year 727. ' S~me churches marked the day by blessing hunting dogs. According to tradition, every' Catholic family in Belgium on this day takes a bit of S1. Hu bert's bread as a preventive against rabies. It is also given to dogs and cattle. Pope and Poland WARSAW (NC) Reporla from Rome that His .Holiness Pope .John XXIII has requested special prayers in his behalf in Poland were received here as an indication that Catholic Po land has a special place in the new Pope's he~r1.
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. priests.
Women Offer Pains AsPeac:;e Prayers AKRON (NC)-A few women in a small parish near -here have launched a movement' to get the utm!,st-spiritually from their suffering and pain. ., They have starte.d the . "Plaques for Peace", offering "pains as a prayer for peace." They plan to install in hospi tals-principally in labor and delivery rooms of 'IIUlternity wards-plaques that will encour age mothers to offer their labor pains for pea.ce. .'. .. Th'e program was started by women in Holy Family parish is suburban Stow, and has been taken up by the Akron. Deanery of Catholic Women Council..
November 30 to December 8 at.' Our, Lady's Shrine. Isabella St., Boston; MalS.
NOVENA TO
OUR .LADY>ofoLOURDES
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._._._._._....._ _._._._._._._._.__
P1ease send me LOURDES W~TER
Dear . Father: kindly add . to Our .Lady's Novena (acce"ted durin,S n0.vena)
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health
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di~d from the 'MIRACULOUS SPRING. .
Th... Lo~rd..s· Bur_ . This Bur....u is au...o.iE.... by .... MARIST FATHERS Bishop of Lou.d..s to distribute . 27 laab..Ua St., Bo~_ 16, 'MaN. Lav.d..s Water in America.
"';ucce':s 01 studies neoce of mind
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Lourde. Waw io NOT FOR SALE. Enclosed off"ting is to cover· shi ing and handlin
_. _ _...•••.._ ..
Luth~ran
Scores Religion Lack In Education
Perpetual 'Help Parish Hold~ Cana Talk
CINCINNATI (NCh--The Protestant head of a secular ' university h.as given warn ing that "leaving r~ligion out of so much of our educa tion" is a sure way toward "out right Marxism." Dr. Walter C. Langsam, Lu theran president of the l)niver sity of Cincinnati, told a Relig ious Emphasis Week audience that "by misinterpreting the sen sible theory of separation of Church and State to mean· the divorcement of religion from ed cation, we have actually as a nation been favoring the anti religious and even atheistis ele ments of our population:" As a result of this misinter pretation in many American schoo';, he said, "our nation has virtually become a fosterer of non-religiousness." Lop-Sided Education
Our Lady of Perpetual. Help Parish in New Bedford' 'will sponsor the Second in a series of Cana Conferences
The speakers will be mem bers of the Family Life Bureau
-
of the·Diocese.
o
Plan December Consistory. to Invest 23 Cardinals dained from St. John's ,Sem inary in 1921; served briefly in parishes and then Director of the Propagation of the Faith for more '~an 20 years; consecrated auxiliary Bishop' of Boston in 1939; appointed Archbishop .of BO~Qn in 1944; one of best known prelates in the country; has fostered numerous charitable and educational ~ndeavors; noted for scholarly yet warm' speeches on Christian social order; vig oro s champion of lay apostolate and missio~ interes~. Amleto Cardinal Cicol'oani Born in Italy in 1883; ordained in 1905; brillianr student and
A. D. McMULLEN
Will ot Minorit)'
for married couples in the Church Hall on Sunday evening. Nov. 23. This Second talk stresses the relationship between parents and their children, especially during the pre-school and elementary school stage. The talk will include a ques tion and answer period, and will cotlclude with a social period.
F ACU~T~ RECEPTION: A tribute to Very Rev. Richard H. Sullivan, esc, presi dent of Stoneh.l11 College, was attended by m ore than 1200 persons. In the r~cei.ving line were, left to rIght; Prof. Henry M. Crui~sha nk, head of the business administration de partment; Prof. Brassil Fitzgerald, head of t he English 'Department; Father Sullivan and Rev. James V. Lowery, CSC, vice-president in charge of development. '
Continued from Page One had been to name Msgr. Tardini "Furthermore," he explained Pro-Secretary of State., "by leaving religion out of so Thus Italy gets ·13 new Cardi much of our education, we have nals, raising its total to 29. little left other than economics France and the United States get to give meaning to learning. In two more Cardinals each, mak place of love of and confidence ing a total of four American in God, we have been putting Cardinals 'and eight'for the "eld economic security or, if you will, est daughter 'of the Church." the fear of man. Mexico, Uruguay, England, "I can think of no surer way Spain, Austria and Germany.re than this to outright Marxism,"· live one each. be emphasized. Many of the' Cardinals-to-be Dr. Langsam said education without reference to· religion is are, Ordinaries of aichbishoprics which have traditionally had a "lop-sided," and he warned that Cardinal. These include Milan, there is too much 'emphllsis on Venice, W!!stminster, Naples, "t.he material or economic value Se"iUe and Vienna. of education." The increase in the strength-· Wronl' Theor)' of the Sacred College to 75 mem bers wiU be the firsl time the The one-sided emphasis be college has exceeded 70 since ~an with "men such as John th~ time of Pope Gregory XIII Dewey," he continued and the --who reigned from 1572 to 1585 ,~'pragmatic or material influ --when it re'ached 76. But the ence" of theorist like Dewey "has successor of Gregory .XIII, become ·very evident in, many Pope Sixtus V, limited the num of our school and college curric ber to 70 in his Apostolic Con ula. In most colleges today, God stitution Postquam Versus, of Himself has become an elective December 3, 1586. That rule re subject," Dr. :~angsam stated. mained in 'force until the present "Our grim age has relentlessly publication. of the list for the been steerIng our boys .and girls coming December consistory. into courses which will help There are, however, 75 ancient them get better jobs instead of churches in Rome which have courses which will teach them been traditionally disposable as how to live." titular churches for the three Dr. Langsam declared that orders of Cardinals -- Bishops,' "one of the reasons for our na Priests and Deacons. There are tional strength today i~ the sys first of all the seve'n suburbica tem of education introduced yes rian Sees of Rome reserved for terday by our forefathers-a the six Cardinal-Bishops -- the system which was directly and Dean' of the Sacred College tra unequivocally founded upon the ditionljlly retaining his previous wonderful words '" • • of S1. See on assuming the senior one Matthew: 'Man shall not live on of Ostia. The. Annuario Pontifico, bread alone, .but every word the Vatican' yearbook, also lists that pr'oceedeth out of the mouth 53 Rome churches for the- Cardi I • God." On this sound basis most ·nalitial Order of Priest and HI of the colleges in the United churches for' the Cardinalitia1 ~tates were founded.", . Order of Deacon. "And yet today," he went on, As long as the eoilege was "because we have meekly fol limited to 70 members, the orders lowed others in losing sight' of were divided thus: 6 Bishops, 50 these words, it is estimated that' Priests and 14 Deacons. Actually, there are 27 million unchurched allCardiI13ls are at least Priests, boys and girls in the United and most are Bishops. States. By giving instructions Richard Cardinal CushiftC in how to get bread in many of Born in Boston 1895; attended our schools, we ourselves are publie schools, Boston College undermir:dng our whole Western eivilization. And we ,are doing .High and ,,130ston College; 01'this, I think, partly 'out of in difference, partly becaUse we are all too busy with other inter Inc.
esting things, and partly out of MOVERS.
a mistaken notion of democracy," Instead of carefully and prop erly protecting the rights of the minority", he declared, "we are slowly but surely changing our way of life so as to make it con form to the will of the minority. W.e are compromising our faith and the faith of our children so as not to hurt the fellings or pride of those who profess a dif ferent faith or no faith at all." Admitting' that "the proper kind of education obviously must teach one how to earn a living," he insisted that' "at the same time it must give to' youth cer tain stable qualities that will remain with him even in times of stress and confusion." And the type of edllcation best fitted to produce these qualities, Dr. Langsam said, is "education that helps one establish a proper relation to God."
17
THE ANCHOR Thurs., Nov. 20, 1958
SERVING
Fall River, New Bedford
Cape Cod Area
CARDINAL CICOGNANI
Poetry Society Medal For A. M. Sullivan
schola::-; marking this year the Silver Jubilee of his episcoPal consecration and his appointment as Apostolic Delegate to the United States; widely-travelled throughout the country;conse crator of more than 50 American bishops. John Cardinal O'Hara Born in Ann Arbor, Michigan, in 1888; attended Notre Dame U· mverSl'ty and b ecame mem beI' of the Co:' _Tega'tion of Holy Cross; ordained in 1916 and as signed to teach at Notre Dame; president of Notre Dame from 1934 to 1939 when named Mili tary Delegate; consecrated Bishop in 1940; Bishop of Buffalo in 1945;.Archbishop of Philadel phia in 1952; educator and scholar and newspaperman; noted for strong stand agaiflst segregation and for numerous statements on education.
NEW YORK ·(NC)--A. M. Sul livan, author of "The Three Dimensional Man," has received the annual Medal Award of the Catholic Poetry Society of America. Society President, Clifford J. Laube hailed Mr. Sullivan as his own "three dimensional man- t.hree dimensional in several com:epts: his past, present and future; in matter, space and time; in animality, humanit.y and spirituality; in faith, hope and love." . "We salute you," Mr. Laub4t ~tated, "for your ringing asseJ' lion of the spirit's primacy ove!' matter '" • • because you ha". given us a shining example of the poet whose faith shines i. his work and whose work' .. vitalized by his faith." ,
Study Group Program To Fight Communism
GEORGE M. MQNTlE
ST. LOlJIS(NC)--The Cardi nal 'Mindszenty Foundation, all educational organization estab lished to combat communism, . s launched a progr'am of study groups. The program consists of a series of 10 meetings based 011 10 government documents care fully chosen for their intrinsic interest and for their coverage of the war that communism is waging against the Church and the United States. Persons interested in joining . study group may obtain fur ther information by writing the foundation at 7510 Delmar Bou levard. Sf. Louis.
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"Bishops Cond~mnSegregation, Continued from Page One ',' The: Bish,ops' views, on segre IlJ,tion were contained in a state ment on "Discdmination and the Chr'istian Conscience," adopted' 'during their, annual, meetil)g at the Catholic University of Amer ie8 here. . " , , The statement was. issued in their name, by , the Admil)jstra live Board of the National Cath olic ,Welfare Conference. , The Bishops listed two reasons why enforced segregation cannot be reconciled with the Christian view of man: '1) "Legal segregation, or any form of compulsory segregation, 'in itself and by its very nature imposes a stigmp of inferiority upon the segregated people." 2) "It is a matter of' historical f:lct that. segregation in, our country has led to oppressive conditions and the denial of basic human rights' for' the Negro." In elaborating the first point, the Bishops asserted that; even bad the "separate but equal" doctrine been carried out in practice, the existence of segre gation would still have remained a violation of "the Christian Yiew of man's nature and rights..'~ The "oppressive conditions" , created for the American Negro' Iii segregation are evident in education, ~ " opportunity and 'bousing, they Said.
will deny them this opportunity." The Bishops conceded that "passions and misunderstand ings" wi Ii make it "difficult, to reach a soiution to the problems , which result from racial discrim ination ' , Working for a, solution, they said, "will take courage." But quiet and persevering courage has always been the mark of.a '~r'le follower of Christ." , "The problems we' inherit to day," they added, "are rooted in 'decades, even centuries, of cus tom and cultural. patterns. Changes in deep-rooted attitudes are not made overnight." The Bishops condemned both "a gradualism that' is merely a cloak for inaction" and '''rash impetuosity that would sa'crifice the achievements of decades in ill-timed and ill-consider~d ven hires." Men of, good will, they sajd, "must act quietly, courageously and prayerfully, pefore it is toolate!' . Note Erosion The Bishops noted 'that in 1943 they issued a statement urging racial justice. They said that in the intervening 15' years the "barriers of prejudice and dis crimination" have "eroded'~ to some degree. In recent' years, the Bishops .said, the issues'involved in. the race question "haverbecome con"; fused and the march toward jus,,: tice and eq uali ty has' been slowed' if not halted in some ar'eas." " The time has come, they de dared, to "cut through the ma~e of secondary, or less essential issues and to ,come to the heart of -the problem." The essence of the race question, they 'em phasized, i's' "the transcendent moral issues,"
Train 01 Evils , "Flowi~g from these areas.'of neglect and discrimination," they added, "are problems, of health and the sordid train of evils so often associated with the conse quent slum oonditions." The Bishops continued: "One of the tragedies of racial oppres sion is that the evils we have cited are being used as excuses
to contin'ue the very conditions rlat ' so strongly fostered such
evils, "Today we are told the 'Ne DURHAM (NC) - Churches: groes, Indians and .also Borne are neglecting today's college Spanish-speaking Americans dif student by failure to provide fer too much in culture and adequate religious guidance, ' achievements to be assimilated', Dr, Edward D. Eddy Jr., vice in our schools, factories' and president and provost of the neighborhoods. University of New Hampshire "Some decades back the same Interfaith Conference, told a charge was made against the im conference sponsored jointly by, migrant, Irish, 'Jewish" Italian, the New, Hampshire Council of Polish, Hungarian, German, Rus Churches, the Catholic Rural sian. In both instances differ Life Conference, Jewish Con ences were used by some as a gregations and the university's basis for discrimination and even Extension Service: for bigoted ill-treatment." "The organized church is not , ,The immigrant has a<:hieved making' adequate provision for his 'righ tful place in' American religious guidance, particularly ~iety, the Bishops' said, but in the publicly-supported insti Negroes'still seek' the same optutions which do not employ; .portuni ties, their own chaplains., Stigma of Inferiority , "At the University: of New -rhey wish, an education that Hampshire. 3,600, students are does not carry with it any stigma served by· the equivalent of two, of inferiority," the Bishops said. full-time men ..:..- of whom one:
"They wish economic ,advance must spend a large aml;lUnt of
ment based on merit and skill. his time raising funds - for his
They wish their civil rights as , salary 'and his program. Be
American citizens. They wish cause religion is sometimes nl>t
acceptance based upon proved fashi9nable on the campus, it' ability and achievement. No one should represent not a barrier;· who truly loves God's childCell , but a challenge."
Says Students Lack
Religious Guidance
.'
18
.- THE ANCHOR Thurs., Nov. 20, 1958
Cross Word Solution l
D E N S E
E A T S T S S G
o U
~~
R G E
MAR o A H 0 A A N T
C A A S T S A 18 H 0 P ? I T E P T A E R A A R E$ il!IIIN G E A P r: D D E D B I T E S BIN R B R A N D E T .. A S t; R 3 D 0 " R N PR S P A Y R E A TEN E A D ORE R P S A ~J;;
C A 0 A C i(
IiTf*
~'I~-~ ~t
CAS T E M M A ,~ TJo T0 KE LU RES
.,
WA 0 R M A ~ E N AT'
IfH1
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61~
.P
ONE P G R S P R o M G T R A -R E E N D I, I D A T L TIL iR. , ".9 ,L A IT. D
Album in Polish ORCHARD LAKE (NC)-The schola cahtorum' of. SS, Cyril and Methodius Seminary here has recorded a new album titled "Christmas in Poland" ,for Cap ital Records, Inc, The dominant selections of the album consist of Polish Christmas folk' songs and ancierit Church carols. The' choir is directed by Father Henry A. Waraksa, professor of Greg or-ian chant and sacred' music at. th~. c:::nrn~"!lrv.
Prelate Urged Thanksgiving Time As Period of·. National Prayer ians. 'These 'writers ' say that· clergymen of various creeds whose ;ways were not Puritan ways were disposed to pay scant attention to it. President Lincoln began the' custom of issuing a yearly proc·
.. , lamation, but the fact that the '1:his is recalled by President, Civil War ~as- engaging the Eisenhower's inspiring procla nation's, attention prevented a mation of' Novejllber 27 as wholehearted response. ,In fact, Thanksgiving Day this year. it has ,been said that the strife Although·' the roots ot this and passions of the time caused observance are held to anted~te at l«;ast some people to greet the the nation itself, it has been less , proclamation with antipathy. 0 than a century since it began to But 'on "November 14, 1881, have anything like the national Cardinal James Gibbons of Bal. recognition it has today. timore, then an archbishop, President Eisenhower noted in whose See embraced the City of his proclamation' th~t the Pil Washington. issued an appeal to grims" after gathering their first his priests' and people. It has harvest in the New World, set been called a model which other • aside a special day for rendering Catholic Bishops have since fol. thanks to God. The Puritan ori lowed, and ,it has been credited gin of ,the c;:omm'emoration was with giving great impetus to the one reason why',the practice did. holiday and. starting it toward' not ,grow as rapidly as it, might the really national celebration h,,~·n ' n""nrrHn,! to some historit has tn"~" " WASHINGTON (NC),.- A Catliolic prelate,' - ' an Arch bishop, in' fad-had a great 'deal to, do with making the observ:' ance of Thanksgiving as wide sp~ead as it is in this country
todaY, ,
•
Sports Chattet
THE AN,"HOR Thurs., Nov. 20, 1958
Schoolboys Enjp'y Respite Before Tradition~1 Games
Russia ns \Query Track Team About War,
By JaekKineavy
Somerset '8lgh School COach
New Bedford VoCational' and Dartmouth at Memorial Stadium, Dartmouth, have the local scholastic grid stage all to themselves Saturday. T~e game will' conclude' what has been a disappointing season for both clubs. Vocational, winless in seven starts and Tom Greene' to show to advan coming off a crushing 48-0' tage against State; coupled with defeat at the hands of rival his previous sub' par showing New Bedford, can't take sol- against Pitt, probably ,wrote ace in the fact that they'll be stepping down a class against the G r e en, which has an unimpressive but deceiving season's record. Dartmouth's d ef en se was heroic in both the Durfee and Somerset losses, each of which came via a one touch down margin. Evidence that the Green's offense has begun t,o jell stems from the 54-0 lacing ad-, ministered Barnstable a couple of weeks ago in Memorial Stad ium. Dartmouth defeated Voca tional 33-12 last year. For a number of schools in the area, the 1958 footoallseason is now history.. For most, ·how ever, Saturday is but ,a brief respite before the tradition'al Thanksgiving Day games, the outcome of ,which more often than not brands the 'season a' success or failure. But more Of that next week. ' Bowl Hopes at B: C.. It'll be like old times when Clemson goes against' Boston College. The rivalry between these grid powers dates back to 1939 when Frank Leahy's Boston College team lost a 6-3 decision to the Frank, Howard-coached Tigers in the Cotton Bowl at Dallas. Once again there's a' bowl in the picture. A possible 'Gator·
Bowl bid is said to await Mike Holovak's, team if it I can tip Clemson, the newly_crowned A t I ant i c 'Coast cOnference champions from South Carolina~ Boston College's 6-2 record is not overly - impressive, but when it is considered that both losses were sustained in the ab sence of quarterback'. Don Al lard, an extenuati1ig element is introduced. Since Allard's return, the Eagles have noticeably been a sharper, tougher ou~it, This is n,:>t surprising. They had .potent Syracuse in the bag before the nimble Don was put out of ac tion with a severe knee injury that subsequently kept him out of action over a month. Allard's'Injury Costly Talking with an enthusiastic Syracuse supporter at the B.U. game a couple of weeks ago; we inquired how Boston College had impressed him in its early
season apearance at' Archbold
Stadium.
His reply inferred that had
not Allard been injured, Syra
cuse would not have gone unde
feated down to the Holy Cross
. (21-20) reve,rsal. The Crusaders had a mighty
unpleasant afternoon Saturday
as guests of Penn. St~te ,in Uni
versity Park, Pennsylvania. Not
only did the Cross suffer ,a hu'
miliating 32-0 defeat-"':'which'
undoubtedly put a blight, on
whatever bowl prospects the Crusaders had-but then, due to weather conditions" the' team was unable to fly' h9.me. ~ai1 road acc~mm,odatiQ~ .!.or !Itt many weren't, possiDle at lIUcb short notice so' Holy I Cross oH~ cials finally cl1artere~ a bus. The Worcester E.T.A..was 4:30 Mon day morning.: • The defeat marked, the second, set-back this season for the Cru saders in the Quaker State.' (No wonder!) Powerful Pitt shut out the Cross 17-0 in an early season affair. The inability of quarterbaek
NEW' YORK (NC)' "Does .the United State. want war?" This was a question;most often asked by Russians when an American track and field team visited Moscow the past summer to compete in the first dual meet ever held between this country and Russia. George' T. Eastment, head track coach at Manhattan Col lege who coached the men'. team on the Moscow trip, re ported his impressions in aD address before the college fac ulty. '. Other questions asked often by the Russians, Mr. Eastment said, were the following: How much education 'do you receive? How is the food situation in America?
Are all your 'cities like Little
Rock?
_ Mr. Eastmerit referred io Rus sia as, a . country of contrasts where conformity to 'the party line is necessary for survival. He said he was startled by the
lack of individual freedom OD
all levels of life.
On the ecOliomic level, ,be
stated, "the' plight of the people is not" entirely pleasing: HouS ing is poor and food is in shon supply. Salaries are totally 1~ ailequate as' far 'as purchasiilg power is concerned. One prom inent teacher in Moscow told' in. it would cost him a year's s~Hal'7 to ,buy a refrigerator."
finis to the All-American aspir ations of the talented Purple pilot. All-Diocesan Soon Talking about selections, tht! process of determining the per sonnel that will comprise the All-Diocesan Team is already underway: Area' coaches and officials will be consulted and the final results should be ready for publication by the first or second issue in :Qecember. The meteoric rise in Coyle's football fortunes reached its apex last Saturday wh,ElD' the Warriors nudged Durfee out of the unbeaten-untied class in a spine-tingling 28-20 enc5lunter at Hopewell Park, Taunton. ': The winning touc'hdown, a 19~ yard pass play from Bill Hoye to Mike FitzSimmons, came with oIiI y 20 seconds rema'ining in the game. The victory elevated Coyle into the first place"tie with Durfee for County laurels. Down in Fairhaven, a' fired':up Blue eleven staved off favored Taunton until the dying mo ments of the game in the Stad ium. Jack Cullen.' Taunton pilot, capped a sustained march with a quarterback sneak from the6-inch line with only '23 sec onds showing on the clock. The Herrings elected' to send _Jack Carvalho on a straight dive for the winning points but the exhausted Taunton co-captam was stopped well short ,of the end zone. .
SANTO CHRISTO CHAMPS: CYO Diocesan Champs were feted with a banquet and awards. Shown, left to right, are Rev. AnthonyM. Gomes, CYO,Direetor of Santo Christo Parish,Frank Malzone, Red Sox star and main speaker at the affair, Tony Avilla, captain of the winn;ng team, and Rev. Francisco C.Bettencourt, pastor. of Santo, Christo Parish.
Former Prisoner of Chinese Reds To' Preach' Mission for Con'victs TRENTON (NC)-A Francis-' can priest who spent six years behind bars in 'a Chinese communist prison will be the preacher during a· mission for Catholic inm~tes,of the New Jersey State ~rison here be~inning Nov. 16, it has been announced. by Father Joseph L. Remias, Catholic' chaplain at the prison. The preacher ·will be Father Fulgence Gross, O.F.M., 'a native of Omaha, Neb:, who was 'arrested "by the communists. in
Narrative'Tells Story of Christ NEW YORK (NC)-The story of Christ as told in the four Gospels. arranged in a continu ous narrative with an explana tory commentary directly oppo site the part of the text referred to has been published here. '
Fete Santo Christos Durfee's defeat leaves Somer
'The arrangement of the Bibli set the 'sole remaining,area.team
c.;al ,ext and the, comme!1tary are in'the select unbeaten-untied
the work of Fat.her Ronald Cox, class: The Raiders, 'who' 'came on
professor of Sacred ScriptUre at' strong in the" fourth period, ran'
ttie' ~egio~al se~inary' of .New
away from" Tabor Academy, Zealand whicl1 is located, at
posting a,40-2 decision. Mosgiel. The' translation of the
Only traditional iival Case Gospels uSed is that of the late stands in the way of a Somerset Msgr. Ronald Knox, which has
clean sweep which would bring won praise for its accuracy and
with it the cov'e~ed Class. D literary style.
title. Coach Carlin Lyrich 'has Father Cox's commentary
'. turned in a superb' job in his gives the histori.cal backgrO'lnd
first year at the Somerset helm. of the Gospel story and explains
And to conclude with a ba~~ the customs and ways of thought ball ,note, Santo 'Christos, Di6c 'of the times.
"esan CYO champions, were feted "The Gospel Story" is pub
handsomely Sunday night at a lished by Sheed and Ward.
banquet at White's Restaurant, Fall River. Some 550 persons attended the affair to pay tribute to the team that brought the parish its first Diocesan crown. The piayers received jackets, rings and tro . phies and were lauded by the many dignitar'ies present, froin Church and state:
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'PRAYER BOOK
AND MISSAL
John: 6:35
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Chi~a 00 March 29, 1951, and imprisoned until March 28, '1957,
when he. was expelled from the
country.
The, 55-year-old Franciscan was ordllined in June 1930 and after a. year's studY' in Rome went to China as a missioner in late 1932. He· taught at "a' minor seminary in 'Han-kai-wuo, Shan tung province,' until 1940 when hewas called back to·theUnited States by the serioiJs' illness of his mother who subsequently died. World' War II prevented his return to China until Decem ber, 1946, when ~e landed' at Shanghai. . When first arrested by the Reds, he was sentenced to death
as an American "spy," but in 1955, following an agreement reached with the Chinese Reds at Geneva concerning Americans held in China, his sentence was reduced to six years in prison . retroactive to the time of his arrest. '
. ~arbin~l ~t})t)[man:s
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MOTHERHOUSE' AND NOVITIATE': The variety of activities at Ithe Motherhouse of the Sisters of St. Joseph in Fall River gave The ~nchor photographer a wide choice of ,subj!,!cts, At left Sister Marie ~manuel is instructing Novices. In secolla. left photo Sister Mary Just~ne (~enter) makes .French ,lace while "Sister Marie Cecile (left) and Sister Francis of Assisi (right) are embroidering. Recreation time finds a group xC}! :
'
, S<JYs Good Home Best Preventive F"or "~~I·nque· ncy c'
Sisters, of St. ;Joseph ,Conduct Eigh,tDioceson', Parish Schools
,.Dominican Wins , Nobel Award ,
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,OSLO (NC)-A Belgian priest
By Patricia McGowan, whose world,. famed efforts to . WASHINGTON (NC)~A If Mother, Provincial Jeanne Therese 0 f the Si~ters of St. Joseph wasn't quite' so .. provide homes for refugees of ~od home en~ironment is 'surprised as usual on her feastday this ye a'r it cim be blamed on The AnchOJ;". In arrang,.. , all nationalities and religions . ing;for the 'photographs to accompany thisarticle'she same upon her novlcess and postul~ was insPoired by an American the best means to' ptev~nt' ants making costumes' for a ,play to be presented 'in her honor. Costume-making, how..,' army.offlcer, has been'~warded juve.nile del!ilql,l~n~y,tti~,po:-'ever, is a minor "activity a t ' '., , .h, " , , the 19~~ NO,beJ I;-~ace PrIZe. , " th S' ' t ' .'. l'h That's nothing much;" 'she said, . :r .e 10,vely, g.r,ounds of the pr,o-, " He,.is Dominican ,Father Do~, .. nee .commissioner of New York e IS ers prOvmCIa ouse, explainingthatian intricate piece vmcu{l house 10clude many flow- ,' .., ," "',' ' . .' ...City' has' told 800 Catholi'c. sem'2501 Sou th M' t F a 11, of lace can reqliire up to 100 erbeds, .an• apple orchard' imd : lDIC am Sttee, ," Plre . " ' . ' , :' " tn~rhins.. River. Not only does it house bobbins. ' grape vines:' They provide altal!" .:' T!Ie 48.-yea~-old pr~z~ w1Oner", "
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of Novices ,and Postulants enjoying roller skat'irig. Left to:right are Simone Rodrigues, Sister Lucille Marie, Marguerite Carrier, Sister St, Anne and Madeline Pellerin. At extreme right Mother Jeanne Theresa (left) and Sister Marie Celine enjoy the view of Mount Hope Bay from the picture wind<;>w, in the convent's community room. '
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Il!mportanceof parental ex:" , ' their novitiate; but it is the home Prisoners . ~o.uquets, pies ,and. jellieS:-and' . -,-~h~ ~l)l~ PrI~st ,~o ~m the ho~ .nlple' .was stressed' by: police" ~(retire.d Si!!ters'and thOse siiiffPassing the. chapel we noticed lots of, .weedi~g e~ercise. ,',' " :, o!'6~1OC: It 'wr' fIrst aw~rd~d In elimmissiol-ufr, Stephen Kennedy . 109 Blessed SiiCrament School. a small room directly'by its door.' As well as Blessed Sacrament ,.~9 '.•. ,' al'l,~~. e,cted by t~e, :N:obeL ., .f, a clerical conference of ' t h e ' The DIOceses . ' ' of Fall River " It's occupied by a Sister inth e S·IS t ers .0 f St ; J'osep h sta f"f, " Prize' Comm~tte~ .' 'c and ' g" ' 'S't' 't'" - H of the "'1'1 .Norwe" .' '. Catholic Students Mission ru-· Lafayette,La: are the' Sisters' capaCitated with multiple 'scle- St: John.the Baptist; St. Matthew' t~8:n .. /or I,ng., ~. ,WI t:ecbelve... _de, conducted at C,l'ltholic l,Tnionly location' in this country. rosis,explained ,Mother Jeanne' and' St. Roch Schools' .in Fall $4~ o~~Izi am~? lI! g a o~ ~rsity of America. ,Thereare 110 .here and 10 in .. Therese. A priSQner of illriess, . 'River; in Ne~ Bedford, ~t.:. N" '. ' , . roDm, In g ,av ~L .M..; Kenn'edy stated' that '-"no Lafayette. Originally the comshe is consoled by her nearness Joseph's and St. Theresa's; in,' ,prw~r I~ . ~cem b e,r., , , ai~gle, cause ca~exi>laindelin": munity came from France, whe're to'the Prisoner of Love. ' 'Swansea, St. Louis' of France; .' F;lt!J,er . ~Ir~ has,. p'rovid~ quency," but, added,' "If I ,w,ere, it was founded in 1650. " We peeked into tte library at in Ocean Grove, St., Michael's. ho~~s}~r thpusand.s of hom"l~ss to' emphasize onegeneral'char- " Sisters busy 'with the nev:er-end'Young women under 30 are' ~P s from comm,:,n~s~ opp,resslOn 'acteristic of' juvenile cases" I Picture Windows ing task of 'correcting papers and 1:' 1 " I n east,ern Europe, 10 four Eu wQuldimineciiately' point out tne' The'South Main Street, house, ,wereirnpressed by the beautiful elglb eto ~nte~, !lnd,for further ropaYillages locafed in Ailcheft, bome,'environment, because most 'is' ,uniqu~ in being partly' 100 '-penmanship of 'the.. ,Blessed Sacinformation,mar address Sister!! and Augsburge in Germany, Ber et. the diff:culty originates there.'~ and partly only six years old. rament fifth graders -whose work of St. Joseph, 2501 South Main genz in Austria. and BerchemPlans call for the old part to be was,being check~d, . Street, Fall River. Ste Agathe in Belgium. Wr;'!ht from Wrong replaced by wings e'xtending
. . . from the new. Meanwhile ·the
"The home is truly the basic amalgam m'akes for interesting
anit of society;o' he said. "Here • child learns to obey 'or dis- ' co'ntrasts within the building. '
obey; he learns' right from wrong. The' community roon'i in the
He is either responsive to train new hO,use, for instance, boasts
ing or' grows rebellious to aii one of the most beautifui views
authority, whether it be tbat of in the city of Mt. Hope Bay.
parent, pn1ise, or even priest.:', ' Immense picture windows take
Mr. Kennedy pointed out that , full advantage of it, and a sew ing machine before one of them
when parents succumb to mater ialistiC influences their children' tempts even a non-sewer to try
her hand for the sake of enjoy- ' will' invariably suffer:
'ng the sc;enery. "The result of constant tension The library, on the other hand, pressure' and anxiety upon large ,nestles in the center of the old ",i .. masses of -citizens is apathy." house. Its venerable surround he declared, "Screaming head ings beget a studious mood and lines, one world crisis after an seem exactly suited to books and other, wild. and erotic music, 'learning: and ,excessive drinking have
Roller Skaters
dulled the sensibilities of people to the poi,nt where they are no 'The novices and' postulants.... longer shocked by brutality nor are a merry lot. "One of the repelled' by grave offenses nicest groups we've had," said against, moral law.': Sister St. George, novice mis tress. Their favorite recreation "This indifference to decency," is roller skating aiId they en:'
he continued, "has 'serious reper thusiastically demonstrated their
eussions in the lives of children. ability. It's the first time we've
~arents who ,lie, cheat and scan had to jump out of the way' of
dalize their children should not a 'nun. Even while' jumping,
be shocked when their young though,' we reflected that' if sters imitate them. Most children ,l who are arrested were never ·more girls ;;:ealized how much Because Hood u~es heavy whipping cream in Coronet
fun is minglbd with the upward properly trained or disciplined striving of the religious life,
'/ in, the home. They come from Because Hood uses natural flavors in Coronet there'd be more vocations.' unhappy, homes wher~ the par , Because' Hood 'carefully freezes Coronet to luxurious;s'moothness
ents' disregard the lliws of,moral , Two members of the commun ity, giving bad examples and. ity who do realize it are Sister
\ . purveying cheap ideas on 'life, to St. Robert and Sister Mary Fran ,When Coronet melts in your mouth, something their offspring." . 'cis of,St: Joseph's 'School;'New fabulous happens. And no ordinary ice cream will 'Bedford, They are co,:,sponsors Community Problem ever satisfy you again; . of. it teenag~ club,which,meets in Coronet'is sO.much better because it's the,one:ice Mr. Kennedy explained 'that an .ex-classroom attractively, cream, with old-fashioned freezer flavor. It costs a "ttie police 'deal mainly with the' decorated as a lounge. Its' goal little m'ore to recapture the old-fashioried flavor of final proctuct: the boy or girl, " is the fostering of religious voca Coronet. But it's worth it. ' , who results from' training r~ tions 'and other worthwhile eeived in the home, the churc'h S~ what it feels like to have an 'old-fashioned ice careers. There girls chat, meet and the school and"unfortunatecream melt in your mouth ••• try Coronet by Hood.
friends and enjoy a home 'away lv, the street." '
from home.
But "the' problem 'of, crime . 'Parting from the novices, we
..."., and delinquency," he empha met an older member ,of the
sized, "is not one for the police community, Sister Marie ,Jus-'
alone, but. one which must be tine. ,She was making French
shared by all other responsible lace, working with 38 bobbins at
persons in t,he community~" incredible speed. "Thirty-eigW WAlCH ". . . . . E-VIR S'UDAf 7-7:38 NI,
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,WHEN
CORONET MELTS 'IN,
YOUR MOUT·H
SOMETHING FABULO.US, HAPPENS'
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