12.04.58

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:ANCHOR

Rev. Francis A: McCarthy, Diocesan Director of the Bishops' Thanksgiving Clothing Collection,announces that this year's collection tops 1957's by more than 17 thousand pounds. Last year, contributions of for 54,438 pounds of clothing, clothes, shoes and bedding followed by New Bedford where the total was 18,339 pounds. totaled 171,407 pounds or 86 Taunton contributed 26,307 "tons. This year's total is pounds and the Cape Cod area 188,481 pounds, 94" tons, 25,753. In a breakdown of contribu­ Almost identical donations tions by areas, nearly all parts were made by Somerset-Swan­ of the Diocese exceeded last sea and Attleboro, of 11,360 and year's donations. The Fall River­ 11,376 pounds, respectively. Westpqrt district was responsible Turn to Page Sixteen

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

Fall River, Mass. Vol. 2, No. 49·

Thursday, Dec. 4, 1958 Seco.nd Class Mail Privileges

Authorized at Fall River. Mass.

PRICE 10e $4.00 per Year

Rector of C'ollege in Rome "To Ordain Fall River Man \

\

:.lV

I I~

rive Nels 94 Tons

Bishop Celebrates Requiem For Father Philippe Ross

Rev. Mr. John R. FoIster, son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph J.

FoIster, 351 Sunset Hill, Fall River, will be ordained to the

Holy Priesthood on Saturday, Dec. 20, in the Chapel of the Imm.aculate Conception at the' North American College, Rome, by Most Rev. Martin J. O'Connor, Titular Bishop" of Thespia, Rector of the College. Rev. Mr. FoIster has spent the last three years at the North American College which is on the Janiculum Hill next to the Vatican Hill in Rome. The stu­ del1tS at the North American College come from all the Di­ oceses of this country; and take classes at the Gregorian Univer­ sity in Rome. . After his ordination, Rev. Mr: FoIster will complete his scholastic year and return to this country next Spring to receive his assignmenf in the Diocese fror.n Bishop Connolly. . Oldest of 12 Rev. Mr. FoIster is the oldest of 12 children, nine girls and three boys. He received his ele­ mentary schooling in Fall River REV. MR. JOHr- R. FOLSTER Turn to Page Sixteen

A solemn pontifical Mass of Requiem was celebrated this morning by Most Rev. James L. Connolly, D.D., Bishop of Fall River, in the Sacred Heart Church, New Bedford for Rev. Philippe Ross, chaplain at Sacred Heart Home fo; the past fifteen years: IMMACULATE CONCEPTION Assisting the Bishop were l''[onday, Dec. 8, is the Feast Archpriest, Rt. Rev. James of the Immaculate Conception J. Gerrard, V.G.; Deacons of of the Blessed Virgin Mary. It hoilor, Rt. Rev. ·.:'ouis E. r'revost is a Holyday ~f Obligation and and -.; Rev. Hugh A. Gallagher; parishioners are urged to Deacon of the 'fass, Rev. Armand check the' Mass schedule at J. Levasseur; SUb-Deacon, Rev. their parish churches so that John F. Hogan. all will fulfill their serious Eulogist, Rev. F. Anatole Des­ obligation to attend Mass. on marais; Acolytes, Rev." M. Ro­ Monday. land" Boule and Rev. Manuel There is nC' fast or absti­ Rezendes, Censor Bearer, Rev. nence imposed on Dec. '7 be­ Alfred J. Gendreau; Book Bear­ cause this is a Sunday. er, Rev. Bertrand R. Chabot. Candle Bearer, Rev. Rene G. Req.uiem Masses Gauthier; GremialeBearer, Rev. Edward C. Duffy; Mitre Bearer, For Chicago's -." Rev. Justin J. Quinn; Masters of Ceremonies, Rt. Rev. Humberto Fire- Victims l" S. Medeiros and Rev. John H. Chicago's Archbishop AI- Hackett. .Turn to Page Eighteen REV. PHILIPPE ROSS bert G. Meyer has ordered

all the Churches of the Arch-

M a jor . T r a d e Association Heads

Trinitarian Nuns Prepare t o DO"v</'diocese to offer Requiem Masses tomorrow morning for

More Modern ReligiOUS H a b i t \ the victims of the fire at Our Score Store Sales on Sunday

Lady of the Angels' School. It

-Heads of two major retail trade organizations have Not from Paris but from Philadelphia comes fashIOn is his wish that Solemn High news for the Missionary Servants of the Most Blessed Trin- Masses be chanted if it is issued statements urging retailers throughout the nation to remain closed on Sundays. . ' ity. In line with their f~under's edict that their habit should possible. change from time to time in conformity with current styles, .~ll the children of the Arch­ The stand against' Sunday sales has been taken by it's due for a streamlining. rio~ically as Dame Fashion de~lOcese. are to atte~d the Masses George W. Dowdy, president of the Variety Stores Associa­ 't' crees will be nine inches from III theIr own Parishes an!;l to of the National Retail Mer- tion,. which represents 9,000 F Tom the . commum ' . . H 0 1y C ommumon. . p_ . .y . s the floor. PrevIOusly they were receive er ... h variety stores. Their statements rnotherhouse III PhIladelphia five inches They are now de- mission has also been granted Ch ants ASSOCiatIOn, whlC were timed to coincide with the word has been sent to the signed for ~id-calf length. f~r evening Masses in or~er to represents more than 10,400 opening of the Christmas selling Sisters in Attleboro, Hyannis. The material of the Sisters' give. adults an opportumty to department, specialty and chain season. Osterville and Wareham that Turn to Page Twenty' Turn to Page Sevenstores and J. S. Mack, president Mr. Dowdy said: "Most Amer­ the new look will include a icans, churchgoers or not, regard shorter skirt, fitted at the waist Sunday as a traditional day of and gored instead of gathered, a rest and relaxation * * * There is restyled hat, and a radically no need for any retailel to open changed coat. on any Sunday and we strongly Soft Cuffs condemn such a practice." The former stiff white cuffs Transfers are as follows: Rev: James P. Dalzell from St. Mr. Mack warned "that SunTransfer of three assistant will be replaced by soft cuffs of Rev. Clement F. Dufour from Kilian's, New Bedford to St. day selling, now limited to a self material, piped in· white. priests, affecting parishes in St. Michael's, 0cean Grove to St. Francis Xavier, Hyannis. . relatively few sections of the The stiff collar will· be retained, Ocean Grove, New Bedford, Theresa's, New Bedford. The three priests assumed country, will unless checked but will be more rounded and Taunton and Hyannis, have Rev. Andre P. Jussaume from their new duties Tuesday. spread rapidly during the busiest smaller than before. been announc'ed by the C,hancerYj St. Theresa's, New Bedford to, / Father Dalzell, son of Mr. and I season' of the year." Hems, which are changed pe- Office. St. James, Taunton.' .V Turn to Page Eighteen i,'U Turn to Page Twenty ,·t~ V

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Transfer of Th..ee Assistant Priests0( Affects Five Parishes of Diocese

Miami

Ministers

Dawson

Praises

Condemn

Catholic:

School

Retail MIAMI (NC)-DMly news­ papers here have carried full page advertisements spon­ sored by the Greater Miami Ministerial Association urging readers to "Shop Every Day But Sunday." The ads urged readers: "Make Sunday a 'Family Day' in your home. Attend the church of your choice for inspiration and spirit­ ual guidance and use Sunday as a day of rest." . The ads are part of a campaign for proper Sunday observance, begun six months ago by a joint Turn to Page Sixteen

Growth in U.S. BOSTON (NC) - Cathol­ icism.-as it has developed in the United States, is some­ thing unique in the 2,000­ year history of the Church, Prof. Christopher Dawson has re­ marked in a Boston College lecture. The distinguished Catholic historian,- now in the United States as holder of a new chair of Catholic studies at the Har­ vard Divinity School, praised the educational system which Amer­ ican Catholics have built up. "There can be 110 question of Turn to Page Twenty .

Sun~<' Selli~g

REV. CLE1UENT F. DUFOUR

REV. JAMES R. DALZ€ L L

REV. ANDRE P. JUSSAUME

THINKING OF CHRISTMAS .. ~. Give A Subscription to THE ANCHOR Send to Parents, Relatives and Friends-Daughters at School-Boys in the Service Subscription Blank on Page 13 , A Weekly Reminder to loved Ones of Your Thoughtfulness

L_.


Newsm~n's..Reflections I n d i c a t e ' l · 2·

,

-~~ANCHOR 4,1958

Thurs., 'Dec.

;.. Alllerican With Greatest ··In1pact

Big Threat Sees WASHINGTQN .(NC)-Not long a.go a grol.lp of·.n.e.~s- 'T' '. F' W or'Id ' . discussi.ngaq\lestlO~'p.oseIll d ana t lOn- .

,. O· ree papermen here were ally circulateu' questionnaire. The quest~on was: ~ h ~ t ' 'h,:lnd'ifference'

American in history has had the greatest Impact on hfe III . " WINJ\UPEG: (NC)-h>as­

this country? '. SOciologi~ts have developed, ' s i v e : indjfference" on the

The names of George Wash- . many theories. Some say ..tt has" part of Christians POSeS' as

ington, Abraham Lincoln, "tende~ to develop. a matda(Cllal:, '. great a darig'er to' the' free

Franklilll D. Roosevelt ".and rath...r th.an a: ·tnarchal ~oc[ety.

. .' . . kl Thomas A. EdIson ",:,ere ~~tC y proposed. One man, a er a pause, suggeste.d the name o~ the' · man who had mven,ted th~ self­ starter for automobIles. HIS fel­ low' journalists tho~ght he was taking the ~atte~ lIghtly. But, after ~ome dlscus~IOn, all present were m a reflectIve mood. The newsman' argued as fol­ lows.:.. WIthout the se~f-starter, fe~er people would drIve automobIles. Everyone present could"bremem- k ". t ber when men go ro en arm~ tryi~g to crank "horseless carr~ages. • ..

They pomt to the fact that the 'world as the active force of

father is usually absent in; the communism.

city' all day while thr· mother, This war n i n g' has been

using the family car or her own, ' s o u n d e d ' by Davie Fulton, Can-

drives the children to school, to . ada's Federal Minister of Jus­ the dentist to scout meetings tice, in a talk to the Catholie and to mady other places. This Social Life Conference. leads the child.to rely on the He declared that the Christian mother rather than the father,' principle "is under attack not they argue. only acfively from without, by .Reflection forces having their most tangible It was evident that the news­ shape in the. form of godless men had been 'given grounds for communism, but also from with­ refle~tion. Especially when the . L S AN BIBLE Th f' t in, in the shape of a force more . d ou t COMPLETE . NEO-ME E'I . : k' eG Irs I dI'ffI'cult to defI'ne, the force of proponent of Edison pOInte that the inventor made after­ . 'complete Roman Catholic translation of St. Mar s ospe passive indifference." dar' Evi'ng po;;sible on ~ much' into the Neo-Melesian language has been completed by these, "And the danger from passive broader scale, and touched three Divine Word missionaries in New Guinea. Left to indifference," he warned, "is in­

ea~lt~n~e~~~eP:~~~~sb:r:;~;~e':~~~~~s~n~t~=~n~=d:tZ~~~:=

right: Father William J. Saiko, Father Rudolph Jischke and ...

=:~~:s~f:a~~~:o~et~~n~~~s~~~~

fewer, he mSlsted-the automoent that statesmen and soldiers Father John T. Feeley. NC Photo 'J\~\ "The battle of today," Mr. bile industry would not be one are not the only persons--per­ I Fulton continued, "is being of the world's very largest. It haps not even the most impor­ fought not only in terms of a would n~t emp~.y a~ dm~ny tant ones-who affect the lives struggle for possession of men'. people, t e ~ruc;,mg m usry of other people. 'bodies***biIt'it is also being · would not be as vast and the. All)f this is recalled by the fought *** for the defection and .. ~stem of roads would not be as death, in recent dayS, of ·Charles MANCHESTER (NC)-Three dollar building and development alienation even of those who are hIghly developed. . . F (Doe) Kettering, who is cred- trustees .of 81. Anseim College, fun'd, never had an opportunity presently committed:......or think who have pledged a total of to get beyond gramm.ar sc.l).ooI. , they are ..committed ~ to the B ·t Wom~n DrtalV~~Sthan all i.t~d with inventing the first u more Impor . t' I if t t· . '{t.,\. . lnore than'two million dollars to Francis ·P. Murphy Of .Nashua" Christian ·principle." this, he continued,there ~oul~ prac Ica .se -s ar er... i\\' ...,y. the college's new four-minion- j'. who- was .8 barefoi>t"bby by. ., " . ,: be virtually no women drIvers. p,,; . . ;;~ necessity, rose to" become New .~ (0,_.\ ~- . He asked his listeners to t~y to Art Club" Sponsoring' .Ha.mpshire's niost'prominent I '~j ::'J;'(--,:-'. imagine what this would mean.. 'M' . ° E hObOt 'Shoe manufacturer and governor '~~'l!lh ,He suggested. t9at our pattern. .~ewman U arlan rt x I I.S . 'ofthe state. '. .... !"ll~ ·of living and buying would not The Newman Club of the New' . As a finale to the Lourdes Lou ·.Perini' of Framiilgham, have develop'E!d as it has.' He' 'Bedford Institute of Technology· centennial year, prOVidl'!nc.~. Col­ who with hi.s b~o~h..ers, ~harles ,~ said that cities coul'> n,ot have has instituted a Course in Apos­ lege Art Club is sponsormg a and Joseph, IS gIVIng more ,than ".1 'expanded as they haye, that tolics under the direction of its Marian art exhibit, displaying a million dollars to', the' .St. • . . shopping centers would not have chaplain, Rev.. John F. Hogl;ln, religious works by many noted: Anselm fund, heads' one of' the' come into' existence, and. that' Director of the Catholic ",el­ artists. It will be on view in the largest heavy construction firms suburban living, as we knqw it, fare Bureau in New Bedford. rotunda of Harkins Hall' at' the ' in the United States. 'He' is also. would not have developed. Mr. Anthony John is faculty. college until Sunday, Dec. 14. chairman of the MilWaukee The mention of suburban liv­ moderator of the .Club. ~nd' Mr. The work displayed is chiefly Braves baseball team. ing brought up a related line of Richard Bellotti is president. .~ contemporary, but recalls the . Joseph H. Geisel of Manc~esSE E THE. 5 E . thought. Here is a field where Meetings of the Club are 'on p.ast in illustratin~ th~ tradi~i?nal ter,. a oneti~e newsboy, IS a'~TCH M~I' oll Schedules' Friday-from 12:10 to 12:50, and principles of deSIgn m relIgIOUS leadmg busmessman, banker t' Stonehl the Course presented by the art. Included in the exhibit are and veteran member of the New . . ' larship Exams Club is opened to all interested works by Maginnis; Walsh an~ ~ampshire legislature. . KITCHENS.' Scho '" . persons, Catholics I and non- Kennedy" architects; stamed . NORTH EASTON-Competi­ Catholics. glass by Connick. Associates; of .friendly ~ood tive examinations for scholar­ Notion of Theology paintings by Rev. Paul Haas, ships totaling $20,000. will be Father Hogan' presented' the. O.P.; sculpture by Are Bethune; Warm and companionable, with held at Holy Cross Hall, Stone­ first series with. a talk Notion metal sculpture by Graham Car­ my wor.k-saving· convenieneea . hill' College, North Easton, Sat­ of Theology. ey; and works by R~v. Anthony " ... in' newN'ATURAL FlNISH; urday, Dec. 13 at 9:30 A.M.. The Questions are encouraged, and J. Lauck, C.S.C:,. of Notre Dame.. . COMPLETE ;or .choice oflovely colors. " . I scholarships will be awarded to the purpose of the course is to . The exhibit is under the direc­ ,.. Send ~o~pon'fo~ cOlorf~lb~ok-. , LAUNDRY SERVICE qualified high school seniors who give Catholics the contents of· tionof Rev. Lawrence M. Hunt;' .. let showing new, ~el kitc;:hena. receive high marks in the exams their Faith and to enable them a.p. of the art department of 64 HICKS STREET and who are in need of aid· to to understand their religion on Providence College. NEW BEDFORD Moil Coupon Today' . make a college education possi­ an adult level and with an adult WYman 3·4777 ble. A number of scholarships .·mind. Non-Catholics are invited Mass Ordo will be full scholarships of $2060; that they may ·s~~ .the founda- , and others will be half of $1000. tions of the Church and the rea-' FRIDAY-Mass of previous Sun­ 'Only requirement is presence at sonablenesS 'QF',jthe' ;'Church's day. Simple. Violet. Mass L EM I EUX the college on' the 13th. A post' . position. '!' proper; No Gloria or Creed;' PLUMBING & HEATING, INC. card informing the scholarship The other talks in this import­ Second Collect St. Sabbas, Ab­ Middleboro: Road. Route 18

for Domestic committee of intent to take the ant~eries are as follows: bot and Confessor; Third Col­ EAST FREETOWN

! ~ & Industrial' exams would be appreciated. Dec. 5---:Religion arid'Revela­ lect for the Pope; Common i ~~ _ ~ Sales and I plan to build 0 ,e'modei 0 .. Ploase send tr. ." . tioli-Rev. James A. Clark. Preface. Votive Mass in honor booklet whh pldures of now model lIitchena. Oil Burnears Service New Bedford Players Jan. 16":""The Divine Mission of the Sacred Heart of Jesus I Namo _ WY 2-9447 ·of Christ-Rev. John J. Murphy. . permitted. Tomorrow is the PI'an Lourde' S Drama ! 2283 ACUSHNET AVE. First Saturday of the Month. . June 30 - The Christian j NEW BEDFORD I I '~\ The Ca~holic ,Th:ater Guild of Church-Rev"Bertrand ~'. Chab­ SATURDAY-St. Nicholas, Bish­ L__ J .:..JNew Bedforq. W:~ll present a ot. , .. op and Confessor. 'Double. '\.' - radio drama, :"S<;en,lils from. Feb. 13-The Constitution of \ White. Mass Proper; Gloria;' Lourdes." at 7 Sunday ev!,!ning, the Catholic Church - ~ev., Ed­ Second Collect 'of the Sunday; ward C. Duffy. . lIS' . II Dec. 7, on station WNBH:' Third Collect for the Pope;: The play, by El,len M.. Gaug­ Feb. 27-,-The 86lu-ces'9f Rev­ ;Common Prefade. : '. ., .'. . '. . ','j . '. • han, was.' a highligh~ '.pf last eiation' ' Satrect". Scripttlres' and season's Guild radio series and is Traditi~n"":"Rev: ~ Lucien Jus­ SUNDAY-II Sunday of Advent. ~··3 .~ ,:, ':.' Double of rClass. Violet. Mass" .I . : . ec.,~, , being re":broadca~t ·~y',request:,-s~aume.·.. , It relates ·the 'storY-of Lourdes: . Mar. ~l~~:,Th~.·Notifu-Iof'raith . Prop'er; No Gloria'; Second " . . ~.' . and its mimy j;;ilgrini ·visitors. ". :.....,;,Rev. Henry T. MWlfoe. :ji Collect for the Pope; Creed; ". The' cast includes' ten women . Mar. 27-'-The Existen~. land Preface of Trinity. ~ , and four men. Christopher Be~t,. ":Nature of' God-Rev.An~re P. .' . i ',will direct· and Miss Florence ·iusseaume (.\.\:: \ i MONDAY--Immaculate Mel~o willpla!.:~1) :ofga~. acco~: .. "A:Pl':tO:-:-:1h.e':::P¥ti'i~:9f the ception of the Blessed Virgin : . . .. ,'. . . • . . " ,"Inclu'niitic\n' ·"::""Rev;'··Louiil.< G. Double of I Class. White. Mass .v. · •• ' panmient. ~---------...;;.---..,: .'. ,·.'·Mendonca. ... .. '. .,. Proper.;.: Gloria; Second, .." "

. -. '.'."' '. . '.' Th' d CQlC l ' '. , "'.. ': :Apr. 24-The Doctrine of:.the l~ct(jf!t~~;cS~1:1?ay;.Ir 0 ~ . ' . '.• ".-.' JA 1.. fORTY' HOURS Redemption---'Rev. Albert; F. :1ect !"ope, . . . Shovelton. >': 'XI\.. ' ' . ;PFeface of.. c~.le$l) .., ed. VIrgm , ..'f;] DEVOTION ..... " . . .} f/N- ':,Holy Day oLC;>Ql~atIOn. You will Thrill to a Christma.'3.·Wonderhind with-over, Legion of Decen';Y:;":TUEsDAY -:Maii;~f pre~ious ~100,OOO ,colorful Christm~I{L.ights":and,·attracti\ie· Dec. 7-S1. Anthony of Padua,

Fall River. . '.

'The followi~ films are ~ "~. ·Sunday. S~rIl~~~. :Violet. Mass Yuletide DisplaY~. :o.t::.¥ll:::,~l~(j~?<·. :-'.:,~, . added to the Itsts in their>reproper;~,~,:.sH()rla or Creed: " . , . .'., ~ ..~', : .~.' ··'C··.. '.• -:, . ' h" , St.:~Mary, Fa,irhaveri. . spective classifications: : : ' . ,8~cond)~0~:ctdor the Po~" . Ride 5% '~i1es ill.. the Steiim:~H~t~d-:,.c)aCl,!es.:t tu' . Unobjectionable 'for Gen:eral. ,:·'.. ;Com.p'lon-':Br~face. ,Edaville's:Chrjstm~(s 'Yonderlft~.'" 'I;rain~u:'u~, 'Y¢e~~~ys Dec. 14-:'-Oui' Lady of Health, Fall'River. .' '. . Patroriage-Silent Enemy,:rc:»m' 'w~;N~'SbAY-Mass of Previ-' 3·:30 to 10..P.M,·Saturdays& Sundays.l:o.0 to 10 P.M',. S1.' 'Anthony;s Comr,ent,·

FaURiver: .'

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Self-Educated 'Trustees . e.ge

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Two Million Dollars to College

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• ':'.:R'\; -Pope. J:o,h!'l. XXIII. prayed /!fo)' Sunday. :"SImBle..VIOlet. Mass . THE AN-CIiiJii:., ,the'i'ntention of ~tne missionary Proper; No. Glo!la or Creed;

Second-~lass mall ...privileges., ,;\ith..o.r-ize.'d-... , : ~orid~' : in."~ the.:'ffrst" Mass':" he .. Second~CoU~~t. {.S-t. Damascu.s. :" ..., ..'.. ~ . 'li.~' ',' .. • . . f'all River, Ma~s .. Pubha\1~ev,:'ry :"\;~elebr'afeQ'outside Vatican ,City Pope and Confessor; ThIrd , ' , ~ ,. ,'ROUTE '28' -SuuTfI'CARVER .·~ASSo .. rsda) at UO H,gbland Avenue. Fall·,:" " .' .L.'·" .(.. C 11 t f th P . Com" \ . . '. .. . . ' . . . " ) cr. Mass.. by tbe Catholic Pre;;s o{~~ "'Since the beginnJAgof hIS pon.mon 0 ec o~; e ope,' -.: . .z'1'~'OOlc::H~X~x::::I~O~I:;oC\='ooi::')oI'=-c'x'x'~x::::I'OO~::XXXX::l4I r,c'Se of Fall River. ~"'),~r.,.'t:lon· price tificate. . "." . Preface. :::::::Fa::::ll

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Nearly Third of Japanese Consider Entering Church at Some Time, TOKYO (NC)-According to a newly completed survey, 30.1 per cent of the Japanese interviewed said they had considered be­ coming Catholics at one time or , another. . Not one answer to the survey's questions revealed positive iIi will toward the Church, it was - reported. This is the situation close to a' century after the landing of the first ,missionaries of modern times in Japan, where less than one per cent of the nations more than 90 million people are Chri­ sians. According to the latest statis­ tics, Japanese Christians total only about 670,000. These include 332,136 Protestants, 245,114 Cath­ olics-more than double the 1948 total-24,391 Orthodox and an estimated 50,000 members of the so-called No-Church Christiani­ ty, which has wide influence in in tellectual circles. Some of the problems facing missionaries in present day Jap­ an, as well as some of the oppor­ tunities, . were revealed by the nationwide survey,' made by the Committee of the Apostolate, set up by the Japanese Hier­ archy to study methods of evan­ gelizing. Answers to Interview Among those interviewed the Church appeared "forbidding" to 9.9 per cent b~cause of its doc­ trine and to 15.7 per cent be­ cause of its commandments. It was considered primarily a foreign religion by 16 per cent. However, 28.2 per cent of those interviewed since the sur­ vey started in 1956 expressed sincere sympathy for the Church. Church. The report, drawn up by the committee's chairman, Father Joseph Spae, noted that the fol­ lowing answers were given to the question: "Do' you believe in the existence of God?" God exists;33.7 per cent; God does not exist, 15.1 per cent; God perhaps, exists; 27.2 per cent; don't know, 20.3 per cent; not reported 3.7 per cent. Attitude Revealed The attitude of the average Japanese regarding the nature and purpose of religion was also revealed by the survey. Father Spae wrote: "Our inquiry revealed that close to 60 per cent of the Japan­ ese considered religion to be ex­

\ Will Hold Breakfast •

The annual corporate com­ munion of the Fall River Partic­ ular Council, Society of St. Vin­ cent de' Paul, will be held Sun­

day, Dec. 7, with members

attending 9 o'clock Mass at St.

Patrick's Church. Breakfast in

the school basement will follow at 10.

THE ANCHUR­ Thurs., Dec. 4, 1958

v

New Rochelle Gives Building Contract NEW ROCHELLE (NC)-The College of New Rochelle has announced the awardirig of a $1,275,00 contract for a fine arts administration building. This is the second major phase of the college's $2,500;000 devel­ opment plan. An $800,000 resi­ dence hall for 134 students was dedicated last October. New Ro':; chelle has 879 students.

WANTED

COOK For Engli.sh Speaking Rectory Live in

COMING

WED. DEC. 10 EXCLUSIVE SHOWING

1363 Pleasant Street "THIS IS A FILM WHICH

MUST BE SEEN BY

EVERY CATHOLIC'"

The Sign Magazine.

He

1

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.

Dance - Party -Fun! If there is one living synonym for all three of these wordll it is Lester Lanin.

Priest's Funeral ~\,: Mass Saturd(ly .:

Reference,s Required Write Fall River P. O. Box 7 - The Anchor

MOSCOW·BOUND: Father Louis A. Dion A.A., of Assumption CoIIege in Wor­ cester expects togo to Mos­ cow to minister to the needs of American Catholics. replaces Father Georges Bis­ sonnette, A.A., who was ex­ pelled in 1955. The 'Soviet Union has now indicated its willingness to accept a Cath­ olic chaplain for Americans. NC Photo.

Return of Lanin To Ch'arity Ball Popular 'Choice

clusively an anthropocentric practice with only •.• a vague and secondary relationship toa possible, objectively existing, ,superior being.'" I Many felt that religion was a system of ethics beneficial for the harmonious development of 91an, he added. The psychologi­ cal and social need ·of a person­ al religion was expressed by a large number of respondents, the survey found. That is the situation here at the close of the first century of the modern era of Christian history in this country.

A Funeral Mass was celebrated this morning in St. Frances de Sales Church, Indianapolis for, Rev. Dennis W: Harrington, a native of Fall River, who died unexpectedly Tuesday morning, 'while v'esting for Mass. Assigned to St. Francis de Sales Church, Indianapolis, Father Harrington served for a period in the Dio­ cese of Fall River. While serving in the Diocese, he volunteered his service to the Mid-western Archdiocese of In­ dianapolis. Assigned to St. Fran­ ces de Sales Church there, he, remained in that parish until his , ,sudden death Tuesday. ­ His body will be brought to Fall River' and a Funeral Mass will be celebrated at.St. Patrick's Church, Fall River, on Saturday morning at 10 o'clock. Born in Fall River, Jan. 2,1897, Father Ha~rington was ;he son of the late Dennis J. and Emily J. (Dawson) Harrington.' He attended Holy Cross Col­ lege and St. Mary's Seminary, Baltimore., Following his ordina- , ' - tion, Father Harrington served in St. Mary's Parish, Taunton, and St. Mary's Parish, Hebron­ ville. '

The SONG of

BERNADETTE M,•• JENNIFER JONES .

~ Encore Triumph!

PLUS A WONDERFUL

INSPIRING 'CO-HIT'

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3

CHARITY BALL COOPERATION: Rev. John A. Chippendale, pastor of St. Patrick's Parish, Wareham, is shown accepting checks from James E. Conroy, president of the Parish St. Vincent de Paul Society and Mrs. Manuel J. Silvia, Jr. Guild president, for Charity Ball. '

University President Evaluates Physical Education Program ST. LOUIS (NC) - Physical education is an essential part of an education program, Father Paul C. Reinert, S.J., ,president of St. Louis University, told a group of coaches here. But he emphasized that "phy:ical education is not the most important thing, we must teach. It must be evaluated in the light of available funds and facilities, and in proportion to other studies." The Jesuit educator, formerly a coach, noted that athletics could give athletes a false sense of importance, unless care was taken by responsible school officials. "Overemphasis on winning, the neglect of programs for girls as well as boys; excessive pres­ sure on coaches-these extreme methods have been known to destroy the administrative system of a school," he said. Father Reinert said the lack of trained personnel was one major difficulty in the physical e r1 '. - - "

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due to lack of interest among young people in obtaining a physical education degree. Area of Weakne'ss He said St. Louis University once offered a minor in physical education, only to find such a light response tha.t "it would have, been ridiculous to offer a major degree." The priest was moderator of a panel· discussion of Catholic health and education teachers, wher~ the discussion took place. C oac h es pr e sen t agreed th a t ' 1 e d uca t·IOn progr a m s on ph YSlca the whole represented "an area­ of weakness" in private and pub­ lic schools. Lack of finances' and other factors were held respon­ sible.

The stimulus needed to im­

prove the lot of physical educa-,

tion, Father Reinert suggested,

must come from the instructors

themselves. "I have never seen a profes­ sion which got recognition unless •

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. For more than two decade! Lester Lanin has symbolized the ultimate in a dance orchestra. His unusual musical style and wide popularity among all age groups were re'sponsible for'more than 4000 guests taxing the capacity of Lincoln Park's Mil­ lion Dollar Ballroom last Janu­ ary for the <;harity Ball for un­ derprivileged children. And be­ cause of its fabulous success, Lester Lanin and his interna­ tionally, famous orchestra are being brought back by popular demand. Lanin is known throughout the dance' world as the man who gets around and to all the best places. North, South, East and West­ if it's a glittering occasion, Lanin is usually there whether dress calls for white ties or sport jack­ ets. And in this Jet Age, Lanin will possibly show up in New York tonight, Hollywood tomor­ row and Florida the next day. If there is an important SOCIal Event going on its more than likelV that Lester Lanin and 16 of his accomplished musician. will be the main attraction. . In 1957 the famed Tiffany Ball of the Golden Twenties was re­ vived at the equally famous Marble Palace in Newport and Lanin was there. When the Monaco Ball was held midst pomp and protocol to honor Prince Rainier and Princess Grace (Kelly) priceless' jewels and precious sables were rele­ gated to obscurity in the wake of the famous Lanin 'beat', Such is the color, background and poularity that will attract thousands of Lanin followers to the Fourth Annual Charity Ball at Lincoln Park's Million Dollar Ballroom, Wednesday evening, January 7. Dress for .the affair will be formal and tickets may' be ob:­ tained a t all parish rectorfes and from members of the St. Vincent de Paul Society and the Diocesan


~\

'f .4'Thurs., . '- Dec. THE ANCHOR I .4, 1958

'Says Publishers

Solve Problem

Of Obscenity

Jesuit Gives \\\ Conclusions On Bigotry

PITISBURGH (N C ) Increasing responsibility on the part of publishers has brightened hopes for reduc­

CINCINNATI (NC)-OJd

fashioned anti-Catholic big­ ing the flow of obscene litera­ ture. otry, .with its notion of tfle . Msgr. Thomas J. Fitzgerald; Church as "essentially­ executive. secretary for the Na.., wicked," has disappeared into tional Office for Decent Litera­ backwoods America, a Jesuit au-· ture, has declared, "small fly­ thor and retreat master asserted by-nigh.t" publishers are still here. . "flood(ng ttte market with the Father Vincent P. McCorry, kind of slick obscenity that S.J., offered all Xavier University imperils our youth." Forum audience. five conclu­ The principal danger at pres­ sions he has drawn from his ent, he stated, is in the field of " study of anti-Catholic bigotry: so-called "men's magazines," ., \.1. There should be no retal­ some of which constitute "a iation. "Retaliation would dis­ grave threat, especially to unsu­ qualify us as Chris"ans."· pervised youtll." 2.' We, should not behave all Good Test martyrs. Msgr. Fitzgerald praised the' 3. Catholics should not with­ influence of the Comics Code draw from, American societ,y• . Authority in improving the "Don't cultivate a ghetto com­ moral content of 'comic books. WELL KNOWN TO DIO.CESAN'FAITHFUL:· This unusual aerial view of Mt. St. plex." He also said that there are more 4. We ourselves must' 'not Sepulchre Washington, show:s the Franciscan Monast~ry and pilgrimage hall in sub,urb~ . good paperback books available practice discrimination against Brookland. Thousands of pilgrims and sightseers in the nation's capitol city visit the rep­ '. now to the youth of. the country anyone else. licas of the'shrines of the Holy places at the monastery. So inspiring and uplifting are than ever before. .5. The. best answer to aD He said that the U. S: Supreme the sights here that visitors are never satisfied with a solitary visit, but return time charges against the Church ill Court's definition of obscenity "The lives we lead." and time again. NC Photo. is in general a good one. The court tests is "whether to the average person, applying con­ temporary community stand­ These speCific. ~o~on sense ards, the dominant theme of the material . taken as a whole featUi-es are the big reasons why appeals to the prurie~t intere·st." Msgr. Fitzgerald' cautioned, Ford is the best seller: however" that i.t will .be several .. _ .-'C, " ' _ , HERE IN·NEWENGLAND'- .-. years before' it becomes c!l:;ar' I. Six passeng~,s, not just four, ride in comfort. Yes, what the courts' concept(on win. cven the m~n in the middle. Because Ford's be of "cclntemporary community " full-depth s¢i!ts are extra thick all 1M IVtg standard~" in regard to obscen­ across-there!s no hard spot in the center as in ; ,

some cars. "I

Whats hehind ~fth~ big SWItch to FORD?

.~ds ~n Vietnam~ree

Cana~ian Missioner,

HONG'KONG (NC)-A Can-. adian 'priest, expelled by , communist-controlled northern Vietnam' who arrived here by way of Red China, reports the Vietnamese Reds have stepped up their drive against the Church. A second Canadian priest re­ ported expelled from northern Vietnam had not been heard from since his arrest four weeks' earlier. . Father :i>enis Paquette, C.SS.R., 47-year-old missioner from Coaticook in southern Quebec, who has :bee' freed, was arrest­ ed by the communists in. the Red capi'tal at Hanoi and then released ~at the border between Vietnam 'and China. Father:' .Paquette expressed concern ;over the whereabouts . "..;.. of Father'Thomas Cote, C:SS:R., 62-year-did fellow Redemptorist.

at the

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The doors ore'wider for easier entry. Compared with Ford's major competitor, they open wider '. • • and h~ve two-stage front door checks.

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styling is sensibl~. It's clean and simple like the Thunderbird. No useless wings that are easy to dent.

4. Ford's frame is safer. In its field, only Ford has a wide-base fr;tme that seats all passengers within the protectio;) of its husky side rails.

5. Ford's spacious luggage compartment is easier to load and unload. High rear trunk watl on l'ord', ne~rest competitor makes loading difficult .

6. Ford's got the most sound.,ond weoth~r insulation-;...·.

everywhere. No other- low~priced car:conlp;ti·es. , .

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And here's good news

for the economy-tni'nded.·.

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With all these exchlsives~ and with the usual ' optional equipment,' Ford prices are as much as $100 100yer* than the nearest major competitor.

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-never had it So:beautiful so ~risible ~ . yet so Thrifty! _

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OLD RED BANK Enjoy a wonderul worry­ ,; free, carefree Christmas .' f~eling next year. - Here's

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tankful with Ford's standard Six or Thi.lIJQerbI~, . .y~8_engin~s-for. they' thrive on rcg~;lar gas.- . . YOu;!1eed.change oil only, after each 4000 mi!es. The·muffler'is alpininized to last twice as IdillJ as ever. And I'o-;'d;s n,ew Diamond Lustr~ Fiilish. ~ never-ever-:-,nccds waxing. . . ,. ..' .. ~

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7~ Ford is economical Yousave up toa'dbl!ar

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HENRYJ. LEVAUR, 428 Pleasant Street, FALL RIVER . CAPE WAY MOlORS, 725' Main St,reet, HyANNIS MOTOR- SALES CO" 1386 Purchase Street, NEW BEDFORD BURNETT FORD CO.; Winthrop Street, REHOBOTH EDWARDS' MOTORS, 396 Wilbur Avenue, SWANSEA MacADAM MOTORS, 82 Weir Streeet, TAUNTON

/


Men's Counc·il Asks Celebratjon Begin on Christmas Day Itself

I

5

Taunton Vets

BOSTON (NC)-Catholic men of the Boston archdio­ cese will sponsor a detailed program this year to eliminate pre-Christmas celebrations during the penitential season of Advent. . . Instead, the archdiocesfln our homes, we erect our trees, Council of Catholic Men will we sing our carols ar - we con­ conduct a series of public duct our parties in the peniten­ tial"season of Advent." during the observances

Recommendation Church's traditional Christmas One important recommenda­ season, the twelve days betweell the Feast of the Nativity and the tion is that Christmas ,lights should not be set up until Feast of the Epiphany. Christmas eve and then should The present custom of begin­ ning Christmas celebrations in be displayc ~ until the Feast of November and ending them on the Epiphany. The city is co­ Christmas Day follows the operating in this with its tradi­ Christmas season pattern set by tional Crib and display of lights on Boston Common, which will merchants rather than the pat­ tern in the Church's littir.gy, be brought to a close with appro­ Thomas F. Quinn of Plymouth, priate ceremonies on the Feast. president of the council, said in Other area communities are being urged not to put the figure an interview. of the Christ Child in their Crib True Observance displays until Christmas eve. "We know 'hat the commer;. No public activities have been ciaI observance must begin in planned for Christmas Day, to . early November, but we also . ,·,know that our good merchants . encourage families to spend have no intention of substituting these hours at home together. But the following days include th~ir sales period for the true oj;)servance of the birth of Our choral programs, parties for· children, a display of madonnas Divine Lord," he said. in museums and libraries, ·teen­ "Yet there has been a pro­ age and family Holy Hours, visits nounced tendency for all of us­ including good Catholics - to to residents of pu):>lic institutions, distribution of gifts to the poor equate the commercial and spir­ itual Christmas, so that we light and others.

THE ANCHOR Thurs., Dec. 4, 1958

Plan Auxiliary

BLESS CITY HEALTH CENTER: In Jiquilisco, El Salvador, Archbishop Luis ChavezyGonzalez lays the cor­ ner stone for the city's new health center, in the presence of city and government offici.als. Voluntary labor built the center with funds raised by church socials. NC Photo. '

21 Catholic Colleges To:Share in Grants WASHINGTON (NC) - At least 21 Catholic colleges and universities will share in grants awarded by the National Science Foundation for 1959 summer in­ stitutes for high school and col­ lege teachers of science and mathematics. Awards of grants totaling about $21 million ·for the support of the institutes have been announced by Alan T. Waterman, director of the· foundation, Insti­

tutes will be held in all 49 states, Hawaii Puerto Rico and the D' t . ; f C I b' is rIC 0 0 urn lao Of the 350 institutes, about 300 of them will be open only to high school teachers. Theinsti­ tutes offer courses and activitjes specifically designed to meet the subject'matter needs of science and mathematics teachers who have been out of college for a number· of years.

Organization of an auxiliar, and the securing of permanent quarters for a d1eeting pla~c are among plans of Father John P. Washington Post No. 1799, Cath­ olic War Veterans, Taunton. At a business meeting Robert . Joy, newly installed commander, appointed Hugh Mayher chair­ man of a committee to formulate plans for an auxiliary. Cornelius Kelleher heads a group studying prospects for permanent head­ quarters. William Powers, John Basis and Dr. Gene C. Romano form the post finance committee. Ed­ ward Cameron, first vice com­ mander, appointed Rev. Edward Oliveira of Our Lady of Lourdes Church, Taunton, to the Catholic Activities committee. Rem~e Lavoie heads the Amer­ icanism· committee. Named· to represent the post at the Allied Veterans Council are William Brooks, John Coady, Hugh May­ her, Robert Joy and Cornelius Kelleher. . Newspaper publicity will be handled by John Schondek and radio news by John F. McCar­ thy. Next meeting is scheduled for Monday eyening, Dec. 29 at Our Lady of Lourdes Church hall.

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,A Sad' Chti$.tmas Story

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The,!:;N'ational· Tuberculosis Association:~jssue&':~'''jt does ~v~ri'ie~r"'af this time-c--:a Christmas:"Fight,'l\B/' , stamp; ·pr.,oceeds of' the sta,nJ.ps· help': undernou,rished wl;ilt~,>;' . childre-n· 'who, show. signs· of tuberculosis. It was' expected that .the stamps, wou,ld'be sold by the'post offjces and, used in that worthy purpose. This year the committee which selectEiq'the' 'stamp· design settled on'~ religious theme-:-a picture of the Blessed Virgin holdi~g the Child Jesus. As soon as the Calvinist Dutch Reformed Church, saw the stamp the decree went out that this was Roman Catholic propaganda and ,no Protestant must buy or use the stamp. The Tuberculosis Association' is' embarrassed and so is the Protestant majority on the board that selected the design. . These Protestants believe that the central figure of Christmas is not a reindeer 01.' a snowman but, Christ. These men believe' that Christ is God. And so what more fitting picture on a Christmas seal than the figure of Christ? But, as Chesterton once remarked, "Who can separate a baby from its mother?" And ~o the stamp pictured Christ being held by His mother Mary. " There does 'not seem'to be anything particularly sinister about that. But the Reformed Church wishes to do what· Almighty God' would'not do-:-giye ,us Christ without l\!ary, , give us the Child without His r.nother. 'rhe Prqtestant men who chose, the stamp design do not have the gift of Catholic Faith. Presumably they are not interested in 'furthering what might be called "strictly Catholid' ideas. As Protestants they saw nothing-out of place in picturing Christ. with Mary. If, 'this means' that to 'honor Christ .they must honor Mary, why that is part, ,of 'the fact of Christmas, of the Incarnation; of God's plan for ,nian's redemption. And so the opposition to the Madonna stamp on the , part'of some-not alf-,,...in South Africa is a sad story; Ris sad not because itJs anti-Catholic. It is, a ~ad story because . it is illogical. .

, 1

"TODAY-St. Peter Chrysolo.. ,gUs.:· Bishop-Confessor, Doctor. He lived in the fifth century, and served as archbishop of Rav~nna. He took a consider~ble part in ,the controversies of his time'and rend'ered important serives to the Church. His fame, .for eloq­ uenec gained him the name of Chrysologus "golden speech." He , died in 450. ' TOMORROW - St. 'S1ibbas, Abbot. He became one of: the most famous of the Palestinian monks, in whose discipline he established a rig i d reform. He' was renowned for' his austerity of life and' observance of the monastic rule. In various journeys to Constantinople,: he rend,ered great service to the Eastern Church, whiCh then was much troubled by the Eutychian heretics. He died in 532 at' the age of 94. ,SATURDAY - St. Nicholas, Bishop-Confessor. He served as

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and was so ,noted for' his vigilance' over the young that

'also is a Patron Saint of Russia

as 'St. Nicholas of Bari, Italy,' 'By Joseph A. Breig' ' ' where his' relics were trans';' .Jleveland Universe Bulletm ferred 'after his death. I suppose· the troubl~ was that St. ;roseph,being a ' 'SUNDAY:"-St. Ambrose, Bish­ carpenter, and a good one, shuddered at the thought of my op-Doctor. He was one of the . making a shrine in his honor. ',' / . '" . four great poetors of the West­ ,Oh, I have no doubt that he thought kindly of me after ,ern Church. He lived in the , . fourth century. ArIes, Lyon and In the texts" of the Advent Mas'ses is, met again' an'd I broached the idea to him globe-and invited ~~ to guess Treves dispute the ·honor of be­ again the great prophet, 'Isaias, one Of the. most striking through the veil that lies be-' what in' the world it was. ing his birthplace. He early dis­ personalities in Hebrew history. Almighty God eight cen.:. , tween earth and heaven. 'Reli~ of Other Days tinguished himself by his talents . ' , " . and while a young man was turies before the .coming of, Christ spoke of the Messias Probably he remarked to ' I said it m~st have fallen from made Governor of Northern through Isaias: "Now Yahweh will give you a sign':~Behold, Jesus and Mary in one of their a flying saucer or some kind of, Italy. Upon the death of the the virgin will conceive' and bear a son an'd' she, will call his ,family gatherings that I deserved spa'ce craft, 'but finally he let Archpishop of Milan he was the name Emmanuel.", , ' , m e in on the secret-it had been choice of rival factions ,to suc­ some kind of mark on the credit the cover· o'f', o'ne of those bI·g. ceed. He divested himself of his The significance of this p,rophecyof Isaias is impossible side· for good intentions. But arc lamps which used ,to light wealth in favor of the Church to underestimate. The name Emmanuel, meaning "G.od with he seems to have put down his the ~treets in our cities.' and the poor, and applied him­ . us"; the fact that Emmanuel's mother would be a vIrgin; foot against the It had been used in an ex­ self assiduously to his episcopal the statement 'that the virgin-mother would name the child" shrine itself. 'hibition, and then they were duties. He was a champion of After all, it going to throw it away, so he 'religious liberties and manifested a function and privilege reserved to the father,' indicating latched on to it. ' his courage on one occasion by that this child woulo have no earthly fath~r--':""this prophecy is well bruited el.,. in c. 'brought 'it ,into our house about He excluding from Church services of Isaias was inde'ed used by God to give a rich message to because" he and his wife' had Emperor Theodosius the Great, estial circles . ' His ,people. \' . ", ., " ,. . that there is ' said to each other that it wouid who was guilty of a cruel mas­ .look 'dandy 'with one' ,of our sacre. His' writings are volumin­ If there is anything that can h'e learned from contact rio . tell i ng madonna ,statues .inside, and ,ous and a constant reference in with Isaias in the Advent Masses, it is that the Old Testa- I ,what monstro­ 'will em.., .' . imiybe a tiny light for illumma­ matters religious. He was a ment is the henitage, of the"Church'no less, than the New:' sity erge from a meeting, of' ham- tion. '' brother of St: Marcellina. He ,Testament. And' those.who 'would see· Christ' ,in all ·His mer; nails, . sa'¥ and ,Breig.' No ,final conClusion was died on April ,4, 397. ' / dimensi<ms should, be acquainted with' Christ 'i~ prophecy However that may. be,' the reached' 'at the' momerit, 'and ( , through a study of the Old Testament., ,'; , - fact is that the ,years' ~ell'froni " took' i~ that' the','s~'bjeCt-must '\ MONDAY-Feast of the Im­ future to past like, leave.s froIll, have been dropped, at Ie,ast f,or maculate'- Conception. ,On this day in 1854, Pope P,ius~IX sol­ d th. e sh rIne re-, .. the 'time being: ·.a ca1en d ar, an. mained, oilly a pror;nise. '. ' B~t o~e' evening I came in' ' emnly 'declared as an article of AP~tro,n , Faith that Mary, the Mother of I did actually; succeed from giving a talk somewhere, ,God, ,was by singular privilege , C~rqinal~Desigi,late Montini 'of Milan ,used the oCcasio~ in Once of God 'preserved free from all getting a, small statile, glued and sat down to watch a west­ ,of the dediCation'of an all-glass church' to speak some,cogent somehow to a log, under a rose' ,ern on !V' and just' when'the stain of"o~iginal sin. This is the words on art's contribution to religion. " : " "., .• ' ' ' 'trellis 'in the liack yard;, but hero was ,up t9 his ,eyes, in patronal feast of the 'United rains came ,and the winds trouble, Linda (she's Sam's States. The Ca~dinal said: "I am here to open niy arms to' the blew, and you know what hap- ' .wife, and Sam is the neighbor everything new which art gives me. I have 'no prejudice pens to houses built on sand and I've been talkiilgabout) poked TUESDAY - St. .Restitutus, against what is novelty as long 'as jt is not the whim and shrines constructed according her head in and asked could I Bishop-Martyr. Little is known go· over to their house right of this African martyr other than to the formulas of a 'man who fruit of ignorance." , away.' ' that he served as Bishop of Car­ is totally incompetent to do any­ The Cardinal makes a nice distinction between much thing except put words down What the Doctor Ordered thage and that si. Augustine, ,that is called modern art but, which would be bad art in any th , ft . toward the. end of t~e fourth So of course I thoughi soine'­ on paper, one a er ano er.

century, preached a sermon in age;-and modern ingenuity that seeks t.o offer to God some­ Finds Compromise Practical

thing had happened to' one of his 'honor,.;qp" his feast day. thing that is new. , . , thew children,· and I went gal­ rWEDNESDAY - St. Melchi­ Well, sir, I did the,only thing loping next door. I was dIrect­ Art is the fruit of intelligence~theremust he purpose, ed into the basement, and there ades, Pope-Martyr. Also known orde:r\ discipline and design. And modern art, springing from that seemed practicable; I com­ promised by, putting a statue ,were Sam' and my wife, ~nd .as'St. Miltiades}"he succeeded St. such intelligEmce and wedded to new techniques, should be of the woodworker of Nazareth Linda right behind me, and Sam Eusebius as Pope in 311. He was able to produce something new and pleasing and altogether on the 'mantel in the living had cadged a 'huge log when given the honor of martyrdom 8uited to the, worship of God. room, and explaining that 1 the fellows across the street cut because Of the sufferings he The Church must be the patron' of good art in this would try to make it UP' bY' down a tree, and he had fitted underwent in the time of Dio­ writing something now and my statue of St. Joseph on the cletian. His pontificate was short, modern age no less than in the ages past which produced then about the· holiness with log, 'under the glass hemisphere, but he witnessed the triumph which' he embraced the life ·of with 80 many of the ~orld's greatniast~DJieces:' ' concealed light 'shining ,of Constantine over Maxentius sac'rifice to which he. was 'called, on it, and I'm' telling you, it and 'reorganized the government \ and about the' fact that no hus-· of, the Church, which had 'been band and father ever really 'was just what the doctor order- laid desqlate in years of persecu­ grasps the nobility of being a ed. , , tions. He presided over the , father and husband until he has It is in place in 'our back yard Council of Bishops from Italy , ,'". , now, with wires running under­ and Gaul WhI'ch decided in favor thought long and hard up'on: the, ground; mid' all 'we' need.' do is 'example of this perfect' hus- turn a switch, and there is .our of Cecilian as Bishop of Carthage band-father· ., who, physically, illuminated S,t. Joseph shrine, against Donatus. This did not OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE ,OF FALL RIVER was neither, but,spiritually: vias and the rains can,· come, and the hinder the later development of both the Domitist heresy in Africa. sublI'mely' .' " winds blow, 'but 'there is no He died on January 10. 314. Published weekly by TheCatholi~ Press of the Diocese'of:Fall Riv~r That seemed to' be all right; house built on sana, 410 Highland Ave,we ,' it wouid 'do"I told myself. And And Sam is going, to rig an­ Fall River, Moss. OSborne 5-715' Half-Century Mark that' was the way it 'was for .other wire so that our back PUBLISHER another year or two, until. one yard shrine of Joseph's Lady MILWAUKEE (NC)-Ross 1..

r'-" the young husband and will be lighted up,' too; and­ Malone of Roswell, N, M" presi­

Most Rev. James L. Connolly, D.D.~PhD. father next door, who is n'ot a that's the story. Joseph has his dent of the American Bar Asso­

GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MANAGER L."..,iohc but you would boast shrine, and his carpenter's soul ciation, will speak here Dec. 3 Rev. Daniel F. Shalloo. M.A. Rev. John P. Driscoll about him being one jf he were, is at peace with it, which it to mark the 50th anniversary of MANAGING EDITOR came in one day' with a huge could hardly have been if I had the Marquette University Law Hugh J. GoidAD ' Jl1ass globe-or JO.o+""-- halfmuddled the thing througll. SchooL .

Old Testament Heritage

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APOSTOLATE MEETS 'AT WAREHAM: Need of a lay apostolate was stressed by speake~s at the New ~i1gl~nd ~egional Conference of the' Mif;lsionary Cenacle Apostolate, a movement directed .by the Missionary Sel:'vants of the Most Blessed Trinity, at Wareham. In left photo Margaret Healy, Ph.D., General Custodian of the Apostolate, addresses the group. THE ANCHOR- . . Thurs., Dec. 4, 1958

1

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Part of the boys' group that met in the basement auditorium of the Wa.reham Public Library is shown.in second left photo while a section 'of the; girls' group is seen a~ right ~enter. ~peaker in ~'ight photo i~ Miss .ClaudIa York of St. FrancIs XavIer ParIsh, Hyanms, a leader In the Apostol~te movement~

'Refugee 'Probl~'rn . Is Key to Pea~e\ In Middle East ~

7

Monaco Gives Pope . Coronation Gift

f Pal' f . . $ 4 '11' . 'd' Agency or estme Re ugees. had gIVen 3 mI 'lon mal In He added that this number is the first 10 years of exile for the VATICAN CITY (NC)-Prince an increase of 30,000 over the Palestine refugees. Pierre of Monaco, father of total of June, 1957. "The next 12 months will be Prince Rainier, has presented a The prelate, national secre­ critical onest he stated, "and coronation gift to His Holiness 'found for .the plight of close to tary of the Catholic Near East· unless the free world looks upon Pope John XXIII on behalf of one million Palestine refugees. Welfare Association explained 'this tragic problem with com. his son and. Princess Grace of WASHINGTON (NC)

Msgr. Peter P. Tuohy,· presi­ at a U. S. hierarchy. ~eeting that passion and justice, Soviet Rus­ Monaco. Father George T. Boileau; dent of the Pontifical Mission the increase is principally due sia' and the communists will The gift is a pendulum table forPalest~ne has also said that to the natural growth of the make further progress in their S.J;·; is' a rangy Jesuit with a' . there are now 963,958 refugees, refugee population. He noted . active attempts to bring the clock, designed in the papal col­ ors of white and gold. It shows soft voice and 'consuming . victiIns of the Arab-Israeli war that some refugees with meager : entire Middle East behind the , simultaneously the time in many passion ~ a love affilir with a: ,of 1948, on the list of the United resources a few years pa~ are Iron Curtain." parts of the world, thus intend­ stat~ named Alaska. . NatioiIS· 'Relief and Works' now' in need of housing, food, Some of ·the assistance given ing to symbolize-the universality "The possibilities of .Alaska .' clothing and medical care. up to April 1, 1958, by the Pon­ of the Pope's reign. are tremendous," the Jesuit be"The refugees are convinced," tilical Mission, Msgr. Tuohy lieves: "Alaska will have an im­ h ' . I 'd'd th f 11 . Msgr; Tuohy stated, "t at a stated, mc u e e 0 owmg: Contl'nued from' Page One mense effect on the American R. A. WILCOX CO.

. ' . grave injustice has been done to $5,700,000 in gratuitous serv­ economy. It's a wonderful land' express theIr. sympathy In a: them by the United Nations and ices rendered to the refugees by OFFICE FURNITURE

of promise. It offers the chal­ prayerful manner. ., are bitter over the fact that the Palestine Mission staff. . III Stoek for Immediate Dell..~ lenge Of a pioneer country. and A .large group of the v I c t I m s . . f' t 273 social weI are cen ers ~ nothmg has been done to ImpleWI'11 b e'b rtou g ht t 0 th e N,or th... ~ehs t • DESKS • CHAIRS some' of the most gorgeous 'scen- Arm ment the ·U. N. resolution of . clothing, food, medicine and h ery in' the ,world." ory . omorrow were n.L.C - ' • . d·t d· d f' d FILING CABINETS . Busy. Cleric bishop Meyer will celebrate a 1948 that t~ey h~ve a legal ng?t, service-con uc e an mance • FIRE FILES • SAFES A pastor luFairbanlts,Father 'Pontifical Mass of Requiem. to ret~m to theIr old homes. In by the mission. FOLDING TABLES Boileau" has also found . time to -Othex: victims ~ill be brought what IS n?w ,Israel,. or rece:,ve. 34,500' refugee children edu­ take' on a 'niultitude of other individua'ly for the offering of compen~atIon.for·therrlosses. cated· by the mission. AND CHAIRS assignments, which he describesseparat~ M a s s e s . , Ms.~. T~o~y .asserted that !he 343 schools serving the educaas "a few sitleliri' s." Burial will take place in the PontIfIcal MISSIon for Palestme ,tion'al needs of these people. 22 BEDFORD ST. They include being superinten- Holy. lI:\nocents section of the •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• dent of Fairbanks Catholic "Queen'of ·~eavenCemetery if : FAU RIVER 5-7838 schools, executive vice-president .' theh- ·p;lrepts:Wish . . of the Monroe Foundation of This morning at 10:3.0, Arch­ Fairbanks, an educational' foun-l\ .bishop Meyer celebrated a Pon­ INC. dation, chairman of the Alaska .tificai. Mass of Requiem in Our Employment Security. Commis- Lady ~f the Angels. Church for SiOIi' and' advisor to th ~ Ala'ska .the three Sisters ,of Charity .of Vocational Rehabiiitation prO-the '·B.1essed· Virgin Mary who gram.' ;;. i . . died..iQ the ,fire~ But, the diversity ,of his av<;lca-, " _ _~ ~ ...;,_.,

Je· su.·'t Dec·la· res . k· Alaska ,Lac Ing T 'r·.a',.·ned Lead'·E!,rs.

WASHINGTON· (NC) There is absolutely no possi..:. bTt f ' . th M·ddl· II Y or.pea~e In e.I .e East untIl a Just solutIOn IS

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tions,comes· into focus when,·in,' conv;ersat~ol), .he ,makes it clear . that, the present and future ·:y.rel- .:' ....... fare. of Alaska. is the top priority t-l. motive in everything he does. F'ranc'iSc~n Fathers

T.he arrival 'of statehood 5'72 Ple;s~nt St., New Bedford

ser:ved ,to emphasize the "thin­ ness" in the ranks of Alaskari. WY 6-8274 leaders, he said. "It might even have been better' if statehood ,CONFESSIONS

had come five years f~om now,". EVERY DAY

he suggested. "Then we wou,ld ALL DAY

have had time to train our lead­ 1:30 A.M. till 9.00 P.M.

ers." • Sundays till 5 P.M; But this problem, he declared, like many others· £aced by Alaska, is understanda¥e in ..th'e light of· the tremendoq,S expan­ sion· the new state had. been ex­ ., 4' penencmg. • , He CIted Fairbahks as anin­ stance.' In 1928 \he. town had 3,000 inhabitants, in 194? 6,000, and today-37,000, plus a shift­ ing military population 'Qf more than 12,000. . .CHARLES·F. VARGAS· Thirty per cent of the. people ~ 254' ROCKDALE AVENUE of Fairbanks are Catholic, Father. ,NEW BEDFORD, MASS. Boileau declared. "The Church has. a tremendous role to play.)n Alaska and ..we .must ·train lay people to take their pad in . it. They're doing a fine job now~ but there just arenlt .enough of them.", . , This shortage of leaders-only temporary, Father Boileau is convinced-accounts in 1>art for his own active role in Alaskan affairs. .

SAVE MONEY ON

YOUR OIL HEAT!

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RodzinskiRequiem . LAKE PLACID (NC) - He:.. quiem Mass for Arthur Rodzin­ ski, 66, symphony orchestra conductor; was offered in St. Agnes' church here and was fol­ lowed by burial in St. Agnes' Cemetery.

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AIRCOoNDITIONING

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Cqtholic' Pbper . MADRID (NC)-Dueto goV:­ ern men t interference the Any leaks in your household budget? 'weekly newspaper Signa, pubWith striCtb~dgete~rs,.every cent is accounted for, but lished here, was restrained from even in the most rigid there is an item labeled "Mise".' circulating two of its issues iii , Frankly, our own "Misc." covers the totals that don't October. The newspaper is published by add up, bazaar chances we wash your hair, tak~ a bath, get Spain's Catholic Action Youth. took, repairs.in a car some-, ready unless' you've got plenty 'of It sent circular letters to its sub­ body ,else is now driving, hot water?" scribers explaining the' sudden the etc., etc., and ,so forth. So, the hot water heat'er change in its circulation pattern. There' are, ,however, definite chuggs away in the basement The letter said in part; "Never· leaks, and we wonder if they are while la glamour goes on up-' before in the 22 years of unin­ peculiar to ouf\ ' 'stairs. Steam exudes,from cracks terrupted publication of our house, or more' i n the bathroom door as the vel": weekly, did anything like this or-less univer- " vet dress g~ts itsel£steamed, its: happen." sal, we hope?:' owner goes ·through a' tortuous The next issue of Signo tel Books: In 'a beauty routine" ' , reach the streets was that of , Finally; the ho.use is calm. We . CATHOLIC RELIEF IN LEBAN.ON, :, An, emergency' 'Octo~er 18, devoted: entirely to face-saving gessit rea9- irig the over-dlJe library ~e memory of PQpe Pius XII. :

.t ture, we label 'b'oo'k"s' (,mI'g' ' ht' as,'we' II, ,get "our' 'relief program Near;East Welf;,tre" h·t th ' .' . ' spo,risored,by , ' I the Ga,t,holic "C '"'. ' ' ' , N 0 H'In"t 'GO Iven', " lri~ u:r::t horit. money's worth).·.. ' 'th'e ,:Association and Catholic Re ief Services-'-N.WC distributed,.In ,'its circular" le'tter,'Siino estY;be't~een'''Thump-thuinp!'''from "food, parcels to3,~50'pers6nssuff~rin:g,from ' want .arid,: gav~ no hint a8't9 wh~e ,itJ:'an us' an'd our'li-' basement.,,' "priv.ation" in Lebanon the past year.; , :Members' ,of" "La', afoul "of· the censors: But,'itr~ brary, it, mignt ' "Wh,o' .,turned· ,that. thing on Flamme'~, Catholic charitable organization, .aid in the 'dis- c'alled that it had previous "in- , , high" a'gain?" ~ the Head of the ' ', ' . ' ciderit" '. with, th~ govertlni~'rit the at:Katermaya. NC Photo.,., ,: , '' ,","".' its issue of .rune '22, By Mary Tinley. Daly.

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books" with"il codicil: "Books Leak ,No. Three. Hierarchy: ,to ' Promote . Liturgical At-that time jt r,an an editorial that never'didshow up and' had Thus, leak after leak, ,we add "commenting on st;:ltements Gen­ to be paid for." '," 'our .quota of support to iibraries, ' postQ a t e in,' h ite -, • t a t e S · e r a l i s s i m o Francisco Franco, the serviCe ,stations and the gas' Spanish chief of state, had made, In a fi'ne frenzy of literary en- company. We're nat philanthro"WASHINGTON (NC) ~ The- The ,Archbishop said th~t the to Noticias Catolicas, the Span­ th~siasm, we, visit the par~sh pists_we're just blunderful. Bishops of the United States first two projects of 'he commisish-language news service of the and/or the suburban library. have established an Episcopal sion Will be to give the nation's N.C.W:C. Press Department, Th!! Like someone who has had ,no Queen/,s Dqughters '\ l'\\, • • 1, w h'Ich ,called, for "sin­ ., f the L't g' 1 b'~s h ops ' . f t' edltona CommiSSlOn lunch and arrives at a party J'u,'st 0, 1 ur lea In orma IOn on th'e ' ' d ' c.er,e and effective conversations" as the hors d'oeuvres are being Entertain. C hi' ren ,Apostola:te to promote an overachievements of 'liturgical com:~ , Id . 1 t 'n 'between the Spanish people and h l 't passed, we avidly take this-and- , The Queen's Daughters of see missions in other countries and their. ,government, won no ap­ thO t e lt urglca movemen 1 that. Here's a novel everybody is Taunton were entertained by IS co.un ry. to provide them with an authori­ reading, 'a spiritual' book that children of St. Vincent's Home, Archbishop Joseph E. Ritter oftative commentary on the recent plause in government circles. i'\(\

will uplift the soul, one about Fall River; at their December St. Louis has been designated instruction issued by the Sacred ' the' Top , \ '\

the Caribbean we ,hopefully. ~x- Meeting, held at the C.Y.O. Hall chairman of the commission. Congregation of Rites aimed' at BURLINGTON (NC) - This pec1- to visit, a "ho.w to study" on High Street, Taunton,' on .'Archbishop William 0" Brady of bringing the faithful into 'more year's annual appeal of the Ver':' that Ginny really should read if 'Monday, Deceinber 1. :" "", St. Paul is vice chairman and aetive, participation in the Mass. mont Catholic Charities fund hai she's ever going 'to .get pro'per 'tach member and' guest Auxiliary Bishop JamesH. <;;rif'The "liturgicai movement" netted $98,813,29, a record for stiidy habits ... ' , . brought a Christmas Gift 'for a fiths' of New York is secretary. launched· by Pope St. 'Pius ,X in the second consecutive year. The , Tried Anyway , " child at the Home. , ' The o'thermembers are Bishop 1903 seeks a greater participa- appeal surpasssed last· year's by' Well, that's enough. We sti~~ey" ,A catered supper was, s~rved . .tohn F.' Dearden of PittsburgQtion~of'the laity in' the prayers $3;690.70. A thre.e and one-half the four' volumes 'coiied into our by Mrs. ,Chappell; followed by and Bishop Vincent S. Waters of and'rites of Holy Mass and other percent increase was reported crooked left elbow. The eye' singing'and dancil)g bY~l)llie. 'Raleigh,N. C. ' \\' ':, Churchcet:emonies: from 8~ parishes and·51 missions. catche~ an allUJ;ing tit,le:.:'How and Jack Doonan and. children ~I 'M: 'C,' \ 01 to Save on Household Expenses." from~he Home. , . -'.... ew, laml, OU"CI That we should have, as part of ,Chalrla9.Y was~r~. : Francil ': MIAMI (NC)~A Miami Di-:-' ,'GERALD E., our homework. PBoy, and ,Co-Ch,arrlady ,'Mr,s·ocesan· Council Catholic Woo. ,We take the fifth., ' Charles· D.Galligaii,as~iste4bY;Jrienhas been organized as the At p.om·e, we star.~; the noyel; members' of their Committee.: ,107tA" diocesan coundlin the, \ . ' .. 'd . B . \R'\._, , United States. Mrs;H. J. G. Es­ , find that,the involved problems . . .. : :. . of a fictional ·heroine ,are tootU. entsto oYc:O"tt . sex of ,Souui,: Miami,mother of much to take at the end of, a bO' tOo b'l F"lolms" . seven children, has ,been named' Jee I no 'e " . . ',first president by Bishop Cole-, ,long 'c;lay·. of real pro'ble'ms·. ,Le't ' Suzanne <find her own way. SPRINGFIELD (NC)-Catho~' man F. Carroll. ',: .,'-. • . .,1 We decide to do a bit of'spir': 'lie' High School students-,he re in,;

:,. iloal reading before the 1<ite Ohio h:lVe launched a campaign

2666:NORTH,;MAIN S~o, FALL RIVER news broadcast. . . against "indecency and horror",

AiIother day 'or so, another in motion pictures. And, there TELEPHONE OS 5'-7992 dip'into the sph~itiIal &iiciing: Vle' .has 'been a marked ~ecline in find eyelids :'droopingas 'we try.~·' attendance at area mOVIe theaters to mull over 'tM'''rekllift 'we've:' showing 'objectionable films Joseph A. Charpentier received;, r ::',' , since the start ,of the 'campaign. , Reg. Pharm i,

More, evenings go, by-people A study revealed 74 percent

'1902 ACUSHNET' Avi:.

NEW BEDFORD

come in, or we go places. Then of the films shown in area drive­

we take a look at the Caribbean in theaters last year were classi":

TEL, WY 6·0772 book: history, geography.,. we fied by the Legion of Decency • PRESCRIPTIONS begin to wonder if we'll ever be either as objectionable in part (MacGregor ,Brand) able to afford it and decide t'o for all or wholly condemned: postpone the boning-up until the prospect is closer.' --. 'BONNER FLOWERS' "Now here's a book you'll love, WINNING FAVOR WITH ITS flAVOR Ginny." We 'somewhat gushingly Spemaltsts ',,. , . put the volume in front of our Special Floral Arrangem61tU SO LEAN SO TASTY, - SO DOWNRIGHT GOOD 13-year old. " ' ,.F"merals ­ •.,Corsages: "Oh, yeah-'f Ginny yawns,. "I' ,Oil ~ BURNERS " heard you tell Daddy, 'This is • Ho~pital • Weddings ,Also' eomple'e Boiler-Burner something qiriny ought, to' '2082 Robeson St:' or 'Forl1a~e, UnitS. Efficien', 'J,:!ST, at Food Stores ',Ut,. 'rea'do''' ",':' . low. eost heatinl, ,Burner, and OS'5~~8~ ·The,Uo~ght" to" is 'the kiss 'Of,' - Fan'Riv~ .' South: .f:ast~r"'·· ',' foel oil sales and 'serviee. ,: ' ,'ASK , deatp. for any bOQk.:... _ ' Mac Gregor, IT' Massachusetts'd '" ·'The .. oook;;'on household '~'fi.. ' ., ' .. "'.:foR ", ' ... BRAND nances-,-it has ,disappeared"'and' , fiGHt; 'Pleasant" street", we have to pay for' it. '.. ' ' ' " New,::Bedl~r~-'!Y 3;',266'7 ,'"Trinitarian .... . 'Fines for books Merdue-One book to be paid for-Leak No.. One. ;'

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"Gasoline: This' .:item sounds BOYS WANTED' fort~e ,legitimafe.. Priesthood and Brotherhood, 'But: let's take a, look behind ,lack', ,of funds NO impedi­ the scenes; ~ee, why ,"Gasoline" ment., is in, the' Misc." column of, the Write to: " budget. Tran~l;:lt'ed, ·it· means rurmin'g'out of'. gas.: ,: , 'PO., ,Box 5742 , . " Somebody ,take~ the ca,r,not'es .Bal'imore8! ~d. a quarter-tankful 'and goes 'and goes.;-' . lenly, in, the midst ,of nowbere comes the portentious "whung-whung-ghig". Ground~ .T~APPIST CHEESE,

·ed. A .serVice call; Service' charge .:o.:.Leak No. Two:' ." ' . Cave', ripened by the, M~,:,'j(s

,: Hot -WaterHe~t~r:' Th~s,-:t~o;, CH'EESE AND CHEESE, GI~

-~ould take 'its' place proudly in " . , ", SETS , ' " " ' 'anywell-documen;ted· ,i)\idge~.,' and it do,es, up .toa point, FRUIT CAKES 'AND' "

, That ppint is v.'·ten the needle .. JAM GIFT SEtS '

01. the heater 'is ipuslied com­ pletely to the, right". Trappistine Ccindi~ Somebody comes home from school 'or from work, There is 'a HARRY'S' FRUITLAND date in the offing. 471 Union' St.,' New ,Bedfo;d', ~'Well; for heaven's sake! ,You ','o' .. " wy 3-'74"8~ , , : , . ; , can't steam out a velvet dress,

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to~ visit our ~how~oo~ and: ~hoose 'that speCial christ­

mas ,gift for your Church, Pastor, Curate, Sister or.

speCial.lay friend.H;ere yo~ will find, lJ. superior selec­ , tion 9f domestic ,lU1d imported liturgical appointments

,and, religious' articles; including Chalices, Vestments,

Nativity Se.ts, Ceramics, Enamels, Wood Carvings.

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Ac't~e WomenN~;eds"Versi~i1e Dress Requiring Little Care-

Pope John Keeps Coat of Arms

By Ellen Ketter Who's the Woman of the Year? She's the wonderful wife, mother, cook, baker, teacher. laundress, interior decorator, seamstress, nurse, hous~leaner and electrical wizard. She's the woman who mothers a den of cub scouts, who loves outdoor living, who runs a The Direetoire bonnet is charmfamily taxi service. She's as ing in white felt. Furthermore, gracious after five as she is a white fur hat is very elegant. A new white feather wig cheerful every morning and

she loves every minute of her makes a stunning cocktail or after-five hat. White in general day. This clever, versatile Waman is dramatic worn with black. ef 'the Year is always well- Indeed, it will look lovely with' any color you wear. dressed, but too busy doing a dozen jobs in a 12-hour day to ~'Midseason pastels are millinpets right now, too. A fresh worry about clothes that call for pastel-toned hat gives your endelicate care. That's one of the eKcellentreasons 'she':selects one semble .a midseason lift. This ~ .the new cilshmere-soft yeu the pastels are clear rather than pale. A new strong pink, tailored dresses,so, luxurious loOking Yotl'd never SUSpect' 'it's ''Paris Pink," is very ·flattering. made of· one· of· those -vvonder The new blue has a clear, turAbers that macbine:.washes. 'Cl~oige' feeling. GrapefI1tit is a Deeds no ironing, and neve'r' new qat pastel, as is yellow with lle\l'er sags or' wrinlcles. Who is ablnt of green. There's a neW Wis' fabulous Woman Of the apple green, too, that goes with Year? Why, she's you, and yOu many, many colors. Feather Wig New _dyou! After-dark hats are frankly Everything ShiRes Evening and everything dramatic! Indeed, Paris shows hatS with all after-dark clothes. lhines, from the chandeliers to By the way, these new hat styles you, in fabulous flashes of color don't spoil your coiffure; in fact, irom a roomful of p~rty-goers in they're styled to show off your .&Un gowns shaped and polished hair. The new veiled effects are .. glowing perfection. Yes in~ perfectly charming, while the deed, this is the year of the elefeather wig is one of the evegant 'satin gown, preferably in _ ning's'most dramatic fashions. the handsOme Directoire fashion. . The season's elegance extends The season itself is one of ~ 'shoes. Holiday collections are attuned elegance and the new nothing short of fabulous. The t9rmal fashions pace the setting. satin shoe is perfect with chiffon If you'd ~ the belle of the ball dreSlies, while new brocades are ¥~u'd do well to invest in the very; very glamorous. Printed ~uty, the flattery, ofa deep, velvet shoes just glow with color, ~d ivory . slipper . satin gown.. and black crepe is elegant trom Pfeferably the ,bodice should ~ afternoon oli. iently fitt,ed, Qli/.ve a ,high,boat, . Influentially, every colored er cowl neckline, with cal' dress calls for complementary .teeves. A she~tIi skirt should ~ shoes. They can match or make iOng length. . .a brilliant contrast. A red silk Your jewelry should acceat shoe is a holiday favorite. Paris -.e gown's elegance. My first p~ limns the beauty of a new eb.oice would be rich, NOI"Ysatin evening shoe. Furthermore, 'toned mock-pearls, or gleaming white satin shoes can be dyed to euUured pearls; a sitnpleone-' match· any dress color, while • ,.and necklaCe:' with, matchini: colorful print can go with several earrings. :My . seccmd choice dress fashions. .~ould be matching earrings and bracelet (nQ;, necklace) .. The re:...It-simply eMhailtirig! i Many of the season's loveliest eoats are .made of spongy souffle . :.ohair.This light-as-air mohair wool is whipped with a SDft souffle touch into unsurpassed elegance. Lines follow the news from Paris - widened collars, LIl:O R. BERUBE. 1iIgT. folded backs, oblique closings. Paris, and the "eauty of this 951 Slade St. TeL o~ 5-1836 IUpple, exquisite texture, make these the coats for Fall and Winter. NO JOB TOO BIG Faille Glows The silk faille glows through NONE TOO SMAll tile night--begins the. evening at dinner and the theater with its little jacket buttoned demurely, then slips Gut of it for midnight ancing - and a beautifully PRINTERS shaped . dreSs takes the fashion Qotlight! It's versatile indeed in Ibill Oftiee &lUI PIaD& eontinental blac' but rises aDd LOWElL, MASS. ilbines in misty paste~: too-or 'f.elephoBe LoWell 1 0_ , &eeply vibrant. ton~s. . , . . ,> . The fiatte'r'y oflur . " . ' . " .. 0' 01. '~SSI . . . Gt. 7-7. iIbout·· everywhere. t . ~­ AaxiUUy fashion this year is t h . . tOtieIi '~ fUr adding elegance" to the IOSTON ~:w suit,' dre&.llr,or ~oat, and OCEANPORT, N. J. achieving a totafly new effect PAWTUCKET, LI. with emphasis' on flattering femininity. . White mink or silver fox will be seen collaring some of. the JOvely cashmere eveni.{lg sWeaters. Indeed, you'll note those fUrs just about everywhere of fashion importance from DOW through Spring. . How soft, how silken, how ~~utiful the new. lingerie is! An. eJltrancing newcomer illl "silk",. t!:ique," a marvelous fabric that's • :: happy alliance· of .nylon tricot, . 1lI14 pure silk. You'll ;see the' ,.eam and sOftness of silk; dis'" . GOVer all the easy-care ments'O£ . " _~on when you place "silkt.ftCJUe" in your own ~oBe.'·' lJefpite its luxury look Us price .-' thl'ifty. . . . White I . Holidays' : A wq.ite hat has a festive hollfal River 058-5677 clat air. Incidentally, white ~tiB k just about perfect for this time 373 New Boston Road eI. Yeat". Satin,too, is most effectIotie with your new mohair ooat.

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POPE JOHN'S COAT-OF-ARMS: The new coat-of-arms of His Holiness Pope John XXIII shows a tower on a silver and red background, flanked by two silver fleur-de-lis lilies topped by the St. Mark lion holding an open book with the Latin inscription "Pax tibi Marce Evangelista meus""Peace to. you, Mark my EVafigeli8t;~' The papal tiara and crossed keys of St. Peter complete the design. NC Photo.

VATICAN CITY (NC)-His Holiness Pope John XXIII has chosen to retain the same coatof-arms he had as a Cardinal. A pontiff is free to choose Whatever coat-of-arms he wishes when he accedes to the throne of Peter. In this case the Pope decided to keep the same crest he had been assigned when he was named a Cardinal and Patriarch of Venice. The shied bears' the lion of St. Mark, two silver lilies and a tower on alternate fields of red and silver. No Motto ~ing £rom the papal coatOl:"aI'ms, however, is the motto "Obedientia et Pax"-Obedi~.and Peac~arried on the Pat~~h's shield. The papal .-est '.·traditionally bears no nwtto•., :!'he' cardhi.al's hat of the Patflarclils$hield has been l'eplaced· with the papal tiara and crossed behind the crest are two gold and silver keys. The tower is carried on the Pontiff's coat-of-arms because it is a symbol carried on various parts of the shields of the other branches of the Roncalli family in northern Italy. The lilies recall the Pope's service as Nuncio to France and the winged lion is the symbol of the Republic of Venke. For the second time in this century the lion of Venice has been carried on a papal shield. The last pontiff to retain the lion was St. Pius X who was also patriarch of that city before election to the throne of Peter.

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~gJ~~§jI/ A CHILD'S SONG OF SAINT· BERNADETTE

For your children .•• DieoeB, nephewl, grandeblcIren ••• the. ideal Christmas gift I Beautifully writteD. DlU'rated and lhmg, this is a record ~y child will ~r­ iab, and play over and over again.

YOUR Gin IS TWICE BLESSED. Proceeds hom the sale of this record will be donated to support the new underground Basilica of St. Pius X at Lourde•. France, the great House for the Lord that the Immaculate Conception commanded Saint Bernadette to have built. NOT AVAIlABLE AT STORES. This magnificent 45 r.p.m. E P (extended play) recording, manufactured to the highellt standards of the industry, ill being distributed only through Th. American ComIIliUM for Lourdes, IDe., and ClIHmOt be purchased a& retail anywhere.

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BOO'KS THAT ,SPREAD THE CHRISTMAS SPIRIT I

Children's Vule Books Provide ! 10 Thurs.~~~~.~~~~~ Ch · F Books For Those DazzIIng rlstmas east Hard to Please

THE ANCHOR -

Th.urs., Dec. 4, 1958

To Put the Glow Back Into Love

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For some reason Christmas is the time when children get books. Birthdays and other Got some hard-to-please indioccasions never seem to call forth the book- buying instinct in aunts, uncles, parents and viduals on your shopping list? \ Here's a selection of special friends as does the Yuletide season, as any bookstore owner will bear witness. In consequence, publishers put forth th eir best efforts on children's books for the books for special people: T. H. White's "The Once and Christmas trade, and this Also from Bruce for children Future King" (Putnam, $4.95) is year is no exception. For all 8 to 10 is "Peter and Anna and a big, gorgeous book as. full of ages a dazzling feast is the Little Angel" by C.E. Schulz plums as a pudding. It's a retelling of the legend - Of King ($2.) Into the story of an ancient spread. Pre-School

Pre-school

youngsters

hilVe many picture books from which to choose. Outstanding ate "I Want to Whistle". (Abebird-Schuman, $2.50), by Anne Alexander and illustrator Abner Graboff and "Sleepy Book" (Lothrop, $2.75) by Charlotte Zolotow and Vladimir Bobori. Sheed & Ward has done a beautiful job with "More Stories from the Old Testament" ($3) by Piet Worm. Gold is used lavishly in the numerous iilustrations because, says the Dutch author, "I understood the necessity to use gold, because the language is like gold." Just out of the picture book stage is "Before Jesus Came" (Bruce, .50) by Sister M. Clara. In easy-to- read language it tells the story of the world from the Creation until the birth of Christ. The author, a Sister of Mercy, and a New Englander, has taught in parochial elementary schools for many years. Ages 8 to 15 Robb and Catherine Beebe, responsible for writing and illustrating more than 20 books for children have produced a study of the lives of the Apostles, "The Apostles of the Lord" (Bruce, $2.50). It is a simple re-telling of the New Testament account of what hap-

CATHOLIC HISTORY: Jacket design of "Priest On Horseback" by Eva K. Betz, Fall River author. It's for 10 to 14 year oIds. pened to the Apostles before and after the death of Christ. Several CathoYc publishers have' produced series based on the Landmark Books. P. J. Kenedy's is "American Background Books" for ages 11) to 15. Based on lives of Catholics who influenced American history, the latest are "Mere Ma.rie of New France" by Mary Fabyan Windeatt and "Black Robe Peacemaker: Pierre De Smet" by J.G.E. Hopkins. Each is $2.50.

carved angel is woven much information about feasts kept in the Austrian alps. "Mere Marie" portrays Marie of the Incarnation, an Ursuline nun considered one of Camida's founders. Pierre De Smet was a Jesuit instrumental in negotiations between the United States and many Indian tribes. His story, well told by Hopkins, is made to order for young fans of TV Westerns. A new addition to Farrar, Straus and Cudahy's Vision Books is "Catholic Campuses" by Rosemarian Staudacher ($1.95). It tells the stories of 10 Catholic colleges and should interest youngsters deciding on a future alma mater. Another Vision' Book, done in Louis de Wohl's usual competent style, is "St. Helena and the True Cross" ($1.95). Little Flower Why another book about St. Therese? Rosemary Haughton's answer is that she looked for a book about the saint to give a 15 year old friend and could find nothing suitable. So she wrote and illustrated "Therese Martin" (Newman, $2.50) for teen-agers in order to tell them of a girl who "wanted God with all her heart and soul and strength, and' went all out to get what she wanted."

Christmas Suggestions for Priests and Sisters Cover Devotional and Reference Works You can always be sure that priests and Sisters will appreciate books as Christmas gifts, but the next question .is: what books? Here are some good answers to the question.

Topstb~~st

A parish soeiety '~eking an extra-special rememi:S~ance for its moderator, or the r~lative of a priest or seminarian'neeQ look no further than "Tl;1eSunday Sermons of the Great Fathers" for a lavish Christmas gift. Published ·by Regneryand available in two formats",~t $4.50 and $7.50 apiece, two' volumes of the sermons are now available. Two more, completing the liturgicl;ll year, are yet to. be published. They form a mme,; of sermon material and will be used foreve~ after by the priests lucky enough to receive them. Three newly published reference books will likewise be welcomed by priests. They are "Biblical Subject Index" (Newman, $4.50), edited by William J. Kiefer, S.M., a handy digest of a full-size concordance; "A Dictionary of Saints" (Kenedy, $4.50), compiled by Donald Attwater and based on Butler's Lives of the Saints; and "Contemporary M 0 r a 1 Theology"

The Visitor "Christmas Day is only one of His visiting days. Time after time He speeds to us from heaven in the Consecration of the Mass. We welcome Him; 'Blessed is He who has come in the name of the Lord.' Each morning He waits, to be welcomed into our ready bodies and souis if only we ,will accept Him in Holy Communion. He would make our hearts His cradle; He would steep our spirits, like Mary's, in wondering love; the- Word made--flesh· w.ould make" us welcome."

From "The--G1'a~~i, ehdstmas" by Bernard -Wuellner,. S.J. ('B'l'ucej.4i3}.':, ".,,,. ,- ,.,..•..•

(Newman, $4.50), by ReV'. John C~ Ford, S.J. and Rev. Gerald Kelly, S.J., which discusses questions in fundamental moral theology and is the;first volume in a projected seFies on the subject. For general reading tWQ books in particular are suggested. One is "The Apocalypse of St. John" by H. M. Feret, O.P; .(Newman, $4). It presents an interpretation of the puzzling last book of the Bible based on years of t>rayer, study and meditation. "Portrait of a Parish Priest" by Lancelot C. Sheppard (Newman $3.50) is a new life of the Cure of Ars, the patron of Diocesan clergy. For Sisters A natural choice for Sisters of Mercy, is ,"A Way of Mercy" (Vant~e, $3.i5),.by Sister- Mary Beata, R.S.M. The book relates the contribution of Catherine McAuley,foundress of the Sis-

ters of Mercy, to the profession of nursing. Books on Our Lady, exemplar of all Sisters, are a happy choice. Two, new and good, are "My Lady Miriam (Newman, $3.75) by Melanie Marnas, and ,"Our Lady in the Gospels" (Newman, $4.50) by Joseph Patsch. Both give valuable background material on political and social conditions during Mary's lifetime.

Arthur and in the course of its 677 pages manages to convey information about falconry; me'dieval food, the .etiquette of knighthood, how castles were built, how people hunted, and lots more. Anyone who likes history, blood and battles, or just a jolly good story will love this best seller. Knox and Cox The late Monsignor Ronald Knox and Ronald Cox, C.M., an Australian priest, collaborated on "The Gospel Story" (Sheed & Ward, $4.50) ideal for people who are always meaning to read the Bible but never quite do. The Knox translation of the New Testament faces a running commentary and explanation by Father Cox, altogether as streamlined a method of Bible study as is likely to come along. Happy Lucile Hasley is up to her gay tricks again in "Saints and Snapdragons" (Sheed & Ward, $3) . Aspects of mQdern life from "Togetherness" to real estate advertising come under her sharp scrutiny and will never be the same again. Two solemn books for serious people are "Freedom of Choice in Education" ')y Virgil C. Blum, S.J. (Macmillan, $3.95) and "Christianity and American FreemasoI1ry" by William J. Whalen (Bruce, $3.75). Both are what their titles indicate and both fill long-empty spaces on the' reference shelf. A sophisticated account of the monasteries of Europe is given in travelogue form by Tudor Edwards in "Worlds Apart" (Cowatd McMann, $4.50). Many photo'graphs illustrate the text. Admirers of modern literature ~iIl enjoy "And Did He stop and, Speak to You," Ii collection of reminiscences of contemporary authors by G. B. Stern (Regnery', $3.75). Especially notewdrthy is, the chapter on Ronald ,Knox; ,

New Fiction Tells Young Minister's Book Is True Of Erin, England Contribution to Racial Peace "Stride Toward Freedom"

With no pretence at a complete survey of current fiction offerings, here are three that will appeal to particular audiences. Most of mankind is married Among Catholics Irish novels or hopes to be, yet the experi- ' always find eager readers. Two ence approached with so much new ones are good ones: "The glowing anticipation all too often Poor Hater" (Regnery, $4.50) by peters out into prosaic routine. William Ready; and "The Choice" Here are two books suitable (Macmillan, $3.75) by Michael for· young and. old marrieds as McLaverty. One tells the story well as those yet to take the of an Irishman who fled Ireland, plunge. 'Read thoughtfully and the other of an Irishman who prayerfully they should do much fled his family. Both have the to put matrimony in its true special Irish lilt of style and light as most people's means· of turn of phrase. sanctity and road to heaven. "Rabbits in the Hay" by Jane ·.','The Enemies of Love" (KenLane (Newman, $3.50) is for the edyl" $3,) by Dom Aelred Wat- many who enjoy novels based kin'discusses the perils of maron English history. It deals with riage and "shows love on the a 16th century conspIracy against human level as a preparation for the life of Queen Elizabeth I and pattern of love of God." and abounds with information In "The Catholic Concept of about the period. Love and Marriage" (Lippincott, $3~95) Ralph L. Woods has assembled 124 selections by authors "Why I Became a Missioner" as diverse as St. John Chrysos- edited by Rev. George L. Kane tom and Phyllis McGinley. Di(Newman, $3.25). Twenty misvided into four sections, Love sioners tell why they chose their and Marriage, Husband and vocations. Contributors include Wife, Parents and Children, and priests, Sisters, Brothers, layThe Family, the book presents men and a bishop. the best of ancient and modern "The World to Come" by R. thought on these important W. Gleason, S.J. (Sheed & Ward, subjects. $3). The four last things are given a clear, hard look by a young American theologian. "More Blessed than Kings" by Vincent B. McCorry, S.J. There's something about saints (Newman, $1.50). Paperback named Francis that seems to atedition of a book very popular tract writers. As if to support in hard cover form. Minor charthe thesis, Christmas brings us acters in the four Gospels are four books, two about St. Franscrutinized for the lessons they cis of Assisi, two on St. Francis teach contemporary Christians. de Sales. "The Protestant Churches of Louis de Wohl and Helen C. America" by John A. Hardon, White have chosen St. Francis of Assisi as subject of their his- S.J. (Newman, $1.75). A handtorical novels. De Wohl's "The book containing information on the beliefs of 22 major and Joyful Beggar" (Lippincott, $3.95), clings less closely to fact minor Protestant denominations, together with statistics on memthan Miss White's "Bird of Fire" (Macmillan, $3.95), but each will bership, schools and church givappeal to the author's already ing.

Briefly Noted

Four Books Describe Two Favorite Saints

JACKET DESIGN: Stylized Christmas tree decorates dust jacket of "The Graces of Christmas l ' by Bernard Wuellner, S.J., just released by Bruce $3) . The book is a series o-f meditations on the Christmas gifts of God:to;man., '"

SONG'·FOR THE "WEEK.. AfTER THANKSGIVING

In every nook and corner of the good old U. S. A!.' Arises in a million minds a 'single tho~bt today'i--f ThanksgiviNg's gone and done ,witJh"n()'Wwe must:'get ahopping And play the annua.l quiz game"that~s known as-Christmas shopping. " (<:', ,Oh, what te:get for Cousin Sue? Who knows w4~t size she wears? Of particular interest are sev.~ral books by natives of the Diocese. Shall I give gloves to Mary Ann who's got a dozen pairs? "New Horizons in Latin America" is the latest book What shall I buy for Uncle Fred, a man with everything? What do you choose forbabies besides a teething ring? from the prolific pen of John J. Considine, M.M. A native To all these vexIng nroblems we've .got the answer-look! of New Bedford, Father . ~ Considine has two brothers "Priest on Horse?ack" (Sh~ed Buy everyone upon your 'list'a WeU-8elected Book! & Ward, $~) and' The A~azmg:;:. Consider the advantages-a reader must]>e quietpriests in the Fall River John Tabb (Bruce, $2.) PrieBt(, Ch'ld d' . t bo k 't t' . . t Diocese, Father Raymond on Horseback" tells the sto~_ I. re~ eep I~ s ,ory . 0 s aren' . s lrrmg up a rIO. Considine Diocesan Director Father Farmer, 18th 'cent'lU"Y' -B,ables lIke to bite em, grown-ups. lIke to chew of the Propagation of the Faith; New Jersey priest, and the FathOli intellectual contents, an~.they're flattered too ,( and Father' Arthur Considine, er Tabb book relates the life That you remembered. they had: brains and gave them pastor of St. Mary's Church, o~ ~ohn Bannister Tab?,. famous mental fare. South Dartmouth. CivIl War poet, mUSICian a n d . , d . d His new book gives a com- teacher. Beloved by his students, The plan s to your a vantage, too. It saves you wear an plete picture of missionary ac- he dedicated an English gramtear. tivities in Central and South mar "To my pupils-active and; You do your shopping easily and packing's just a breeze. America, together with a study passive, perfect and im-?,er~ect, No awkward angles interfere with your wrapping ease. of Protestant efforts. Illustrated past, present, and future. Books don't snill or squash or crack, they never, never break. by excellent photographs it's The postman's fond of reading, too--books have a special published by Dodd, Mead at $5. Another Considine, also a relrate.' ative, has a strictly Christmas For all the reasons we have named-to please your budget, item. "Bob Considine's Christtoo-maS Stocking" (Hawthorn, $2.95) Make this a book-filled ChristJllas-and a merry one to you 1

Diocesan Authors Offer Studies Of Missions, Christmas, History

is tall and thin, looking as much like a stocking as a book could. Inside it's gaily decorated and contains a selection of the noted columnist's best Christmas stories. Busy Lady Eva K. Betz, who started her literary career at age 9 with the sale of a story to the Fall River Globe, has written three books this year, six previously. Two of the three deal with priests prominent in American 'history' and' are ,suitab<le, Jor chHtilen fr4ID' 10 ,up. They,:. . .

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established audiences. l'atron of Writers St. Fancis de Sales, patron of Catholic writers, is treated bY John E. Beahn and Katherine Br,egy. . Beahn's book, "A Man of Good Ze~r'(Newman, .$3.75-); is ficHQnaljzed biog~aphy. Toll;! in the first person if by St. Francis as secr,e,tary, it attains a warmly human quality. In "St. Francis ?,~;Sa~,es" Ca5uce,$2.95), Katherme Bregy hilS written a short, straightforward biography. With her usual cljirity she sums up the highlights of the saint's life and writings.

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"Christmas was a great occasion. Days before, Monsieur Martin chose the great log which would burl! in the open fireplace, and Therese anxiously supervised his choice and watched him .,bring It in. On the brick hearth were placed thechildren's shoes for th~ Holy Child to fill with presents, which were unwrapped'when the family got home after Midnight Mass. "There was the Christmas crib to admire, the big grand one in the church as well as the little one at home, and, in the evening, nuts and apples to roast on the fire, and stories to listen to, the old Christmas legends from Brittany that Monsieur Martin told so well." From "Therese Martin" (The Little Flower) by Rosemary Haughton (Newman, $2.50).

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For a Gift of theTrue Spirit'€f t* ]o)ous Christmas Season - CrleJ Rosaries and Medals

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"There aren't many mangers floating through the mails these days, nor infants, nor Marys, nor Josephs, nor Magi, nor oxen, nor Bethlehem stars, nor shepherds, nor heavenly hosts. "Call me Scrooge, but I can't quite experience the haunting tingle of bygone Christmases by resting the' eye upon a colored picture of the Eiffel Tower. The sleighbells don't ring in my ear when I open a card which is a phtograph of a family staring fixedly at me.;' ' From "Bob Considine's Christmas stocking" (Hawthorn, $2.95).

Children HELEN C. WHrrE

· b:" ,Hc. o Iy- NIgUT "Some saY'\,that ever 'gainst that season etlmes Wherein our Saviour's birth,is celebrateq • •. No fairy takes nor witch h~th . Power to charm So.hai!oweii and so gracioUllJe the t i t i l e . " · .

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"Because He was a little Child, we remember today to be specially kind to children. They are the latest copies of the new life of Christ. Whatever we do to one of these little children we do to Him. We owe it to Christ to make our children happy at <;:hristmas and to bring them close to the Christ who gave them. Christmas." From "The. Graces' of ChrIstmas'" by Bea-nard :Wuellner, s.J.

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MARTIN LUTHER KING. JIt. must not be our people who com_ mit it." The story of Mongomery's achievement would be worth reading no matter how told; it is an added excellence that Dr. King writes beautifUlly, with easy ~rudition and philosophical back_ ground. It is a matter of keen regret that a few weeks ago, at the outset of a lecture tour deSIgned to promote this book, Dr. King was attacked by an apparently deranged Negro woman and as a result is hospitalized. His book, however, is reaching where he cannot go. It is a gift suitable for all who share his anxiety for an end to segregation; the anxiety, too, of the Catholic Bishops of the United States, who have just called upon "responsible and soberminded Americans of all religious faiths to seize the mantle of leadership from the agitator and racist." "My best wishes for your merry Christmases and your happy New Years, your long lives and your true prosperities." From "Doctor Marigold's Prescriptions" by Charl~s Dickens.

~\~h't' ~~~~)~ flS mas

Christmas Cards

CArOL'; I sing of a maiden ; th8t is matchless; King of all kings, 10 .ber son she chose. He came all so still there his mother WllS, As dew in April . that falleth on the grass. He came all gg still to his mother;s bower, As dew in April.' ~t;;fa.lteth !'n the flower. He came ail so stlll.itbire. his mother lay, As dew in Apr.i1 ~t~t1e~;9Jithespray'. Mother and maiden iwisneVe;ll.one but she;

Christmas for Theres

by Martin Luther King, :Jr., (Harper, $2.95.) In the strict sense, this is not a book about Christmas; but in the very truest sense, it is a book about nothing else. From every page it breathes the Christmas message of peace on earth to men of good will. It is the story, told by its chief protagonist, a young Baptist minister, of the long struggle of Negroes in Montgomery~ Alabama for the right to ride unsegregated busses. The fact that the struggle was won may seem a smail matter in face of the many areas -in the South where segregation is still rigidly enforced. But the gifted pen of Dr. King depicts the struggle for -what it_ really was-an epic of courage and non-violent resistance. , . In other hands than those of Dr. King and his co-workers the bus dispute might have been marked by bloodshed and violence. On the part of many white men it was, but throughout its months of ordeal 'the Negro community of Montgomery consistently turned the other cheek to its oppressors. House Bombed Dr. King did not preach mere theory to his people. He lived his doctrine of non-violence. In the course of the dispute his own home, housing his wife and infant daughter, was bombed. An angry crowd of Negroes gathered about the house, ready to wreak vengeance on the white community. At this explosive moment Dr. King stepped to his porch and quieted his adherents, quoting the Gospel words, "Love your enemies; do good to them that hate you." When the right to ride busses was finally enforced by the Supreme Court, there was no arrogant triumph. Negroes received and abided by a list of suggestions designed to make integration as smooth as possible.' "If there is violence in word deed," they wer'e told, "it

Brilliant firsts by Creed, rosaries and medals interpreted in the contemporary manner, each trade marked (CREED STERLING) for your assurance of the finest expression of thoughtful giving. If you are unable to find that special Creed item of your choice, -ask your religious store to or~er it for you.


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1;;:'d~IiCoriscience Results . ~ 1~ ThU":=.~·il

Come to Cast Fire

Godlove You

From Frequent Stretching

By Most Rev. Fulton J. Sheen. D.D.

By Father John L. Thomas, S.J.

The world today has three kinds of missionaries, tIIat ill, __ who are on fire with an idea, either true or fid. .

Assistant Professor of Sociology St. Louis University

The MoslelllB are miai8uries. The 400 million of them iD the world accept DIlly one rule of life and are almost impervius to every spiritual infiuence of Cllrisitianity. Consider Africa! In twenty years the number of faithful increased by ten million and during the same period the number of Moslems increased by 36 million. Every Moslem merchant is a missionary. Nasser invites all black Africa to unite itself under the leadership of the MoSlems.

Why dQ priests always keep narping on bad books and movies? My sisters say I shouldn't kick because they have to listen to constant warnings on modesty besides. Experience shows that the first time you see or hear something a little raw, you get bothered; ure in sexual (venereal) pleasbut after awhile you get ure. used to it and it doesn't This implies that you avoid all bother you. Young people unnecessary stimulation, since might just as well get used to living in the modern world. They can't avoid it. I think priests should remember this fact. You've raised a big question, / Tom,though I'm Dot sure you've put yourfiDger on the real 80urce of the difficulty. I agree with you that p r i est s shouldn't keep "harping" 0 n bad books and movies, and I can understand why your sisters may get a little fed up with endless talks on modesty. Your letter suggests however that somewhere along the lin~ in your trainiag, somebody has failed to relate basic moral prineiples to the facts of life. Failure to do this makes Catholic teaching on chastity and modesty appear to be nothing more than • series of warning "doQ'ts." Use Is Social Stated in' briefeSt outline, Tom, the pertinent facts are as follows. As a normal young man, you possess a gradulilly maturing reproductive system. It is an essential part of y(jur nature as

a man. In it you carry, almost as a :middleman for the human race, the important JP,asculine coprinciple of life, containing the accumulated biological heritage you have received from your ancestors. In its use you are privileged to cooperate with God .... the production of new life. Hence it is a power of .which you should be justly proud; yet by its very nature, its use i1t. social, designed to perpetuat~ the human species, not to ser~ your personal pleasure. :.~". --"'"

Use Common Sense Further, because it is a complex physico-psychological system, your reproductive faculty is stimulated and prepared to act by a wide variety of physical and psychological factors. Men ill particular react readiily to what they see and what.goes on in their imagination. . . , There is no mystery about this s;mple stimulus-reaction procIt is the way the system is designed to act. If the stimulus '," present, it should produce the , . ieaction, provided, of coUrse, ene is normal. ' It follows, Tom,. that in all IUch simple stimulus-reaction processes. col'ttrol" is acbte'Ved' , Iiot primarily by: building up re':: • tance to the stim\llus, but by avoiding it in the first place: . In matters of sex, this bt flot always wholly possible, of course; but one mustitse common sense in avoiding unnecellsary sources of stimulation. Need Grace This brings ns to the point of bad books, movies, and so forth. As you well know, the moral law fOrbids ut:lmarried persons deyperat.ely to seek or take pleas-

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once the normal reaction occurs in your system, there is serious danger that you will consent to the pleasure accompanying it. Living up to this law is no. ealiy task; in fact, it is normally impossible without grace. . Now, since our"imagination is SUch a common source 'of sexual stimulation, carelessness in wnat we see; read, or lis:ten to may not only cauSe difficulties at the time, but will be stored in the mind, only to return .later to plague us through the working of our imagination. In other words, one who is careless about what enters his mind in this regard is asking for trouble and only has himself to blame if he finds the moral law difficult to fulfill. ' Reason for 'Harping' You say, Tom, that we get used to things after a time. This is only partly true. Common usage and custom does modify the way we interpret things and consequently the way they affect us. This principle holds for long range cultural trends, but in the individual's life, frequent expos~ ure to what is considered stimu-' lating seldom lessens the' reaction; it merely makes us accustomed to it, so it ceases to bother' our consciences. . Remember, a broad conscience in this matter is generally only a relaxed conscience which has lost its moral tone through' too frequent stretching. Finally, if priests seem to "harp" on this subject, it is probably because they realize better than you that modern society tolerates or openly pro':' motes about every form of "sextease" and stimulatiC>n known to man. Under these circumstances, the Christian moral code becomes impossible unless youth use common sense in avoiding the sources of danger. You can't play it both ways, Tom. If you want to be chaste you must make use of the prop~ mean8---Qtherwise, you're merely trying to kid yourself.

In brief, Communism is centering its attention on Asia; Moslemism oni Africa. The future of the world centers about these two continents.

MISSING PRELATE: Mary.. knoll Bishop James E.Walsh 67, last American· missioner in Red China has failed to appear in his Shanghai office since Oct. 19, leading to the belief he has been arrested. Bishop Walsh is a Cumberland (Md.) native. NC Photo.

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Have we Catholics said, to Christ: "Come down froJP, that CroSS and we will 'believe"? Has! organizatioitsuppl~nte4'sai;rifice? Wbr should Communists and Moslems be on fite while so many of tiS barely flicker? At the altar-table we receive the glorified Christ into our souls while at the dinner table we rarely if ever, mention His Name or seek to win a soul to His Sacred Heart. Our Lord said: "lam come to cast fire apoD the eariIi. ana what will I but that it be kindled!" (Luke 12/49) Fires we shall have, but the Lord wants us have them here, not in Bell. It is fire that makes martyrs brave, priests zealous, bishops saintly and the Church Missionary. Our Lord did not come to' deliver • message but to save the world. .

to

Illegal Schools Help Mexico .

MEXICO CITY (NC)-~xi­ co's 1,900 Catholic schools educate between -'0,000 and 300,000 students despite the fact that they exist iUegaUy. Operation of the. schools occursbec.ause most of the laws restricting Catholic activities are npt enforced and because this nation has great need for school$. This need was emphasized by outgoing President Adolfo Ruiz Cor~ines. lie told the cOlintry that, although there are about four million school' chndren in Mexico, three million children of ~ool age are being deprived of e«ucation.

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Are we on fire? We talk about lighting candles, when it is holocousts like Africa and Asia we· should be enkindling' with our sacrifices. The Seventh Day Adventists average $33. per capita to bring their Adventist Gospel to missions; last year we gave SOc per capita. In the Name of Him Who btought fire to the earth, 'and the Hoi)" Spirit who guides tiS, make a' daily' sacrifice, a tiny orie, to prove that you love all people;' Send it to His Holiness Pope Johri XXIII, for the spread of the Gospel ChriSt,t!irough: his SoCiety for. the Propagation of the Faith. .' . . . .

of

z GOD LOVE YOU TO: YOU who read 08l' appeals and .. oftea answer them. Will you help us? We can re8e~1 yo~ ~Id &'old, diamonds, .precious pearls and geins. sterling siiver PiecetJ.. 1.'Jle money we receive from the resale of your. 014 ijflweiry. ~ te" Mission lands in the form of food, medici11.c, ,",;(iOol .... Jaundbac SIlpplies. Don't leave tboSe old jewels ina f.rCoUen ~x~ 'them to us ami perhaps the)" wii} de more gooel.than when braDd new. Be like the Wise Men aDd give Dim a.&Ift eI Gold at Christmas time-gold becalise He isQur King! .

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The Communists aremisSionarie~. Every ~ember oj the Yo~ Communists League is bound'to talk'Communism evrery conv~", sation. The Communist leaders hav~ stolen Pentecostal fires, but instead of burning upward to 'light 'a' World; they. burn downwar.4 as the fires of hell burning to destruction. Cut out this column, pin your sacrifice to it and mail it to the Most Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, National Director of The Society for the Propagation of the Faith, ,366 Fifth Avenue, New York 1, N. Y., or your DIOCESAN DIRECTOR REV. RAYMOND T. CONSIDINE, 368 North Main Street, Fall River, Mass.

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';Decency :'Report .Ref,lee'ts: :Classifications" 'Ch~r"ges ,.

ANCHOR -; '.'

I" Th\)rs~,.Dec. 4, 1958

Father Cronin Blasts Drew Pearson Story WASHINGTON (NC)- A so­ cial' action official has denied a newspaper columnist's report he obtained Vatican advice on the controversial so-called right-t6­ work laws. ' ' Father John F. Cronin, S.S., assistant director of the Social. Action Department, National Catholic Welfare Conference, scored a "garbled version of Church history" in an "Election­ 'eve" column by Washington writer Drew Pearson. 'six states voted on right-to­ work proposals. Voters in five states defeated them. Mr. Pear­ son said shortly before his death Pope Pius XII indicated that an oft-quoted passage in his 1952 Christmas message did not favor right-to-work laws in the United States, as had been claimed by some persons. "I never wrote ·to the Vatican about this 01' any other papal with:Bishop ConrioliYat.:=::~e,,,:Father Cronin' de­

. By 'William H. MoorIng We are"urged by Bishop William A. Scully of Albany

to give positive support at the ,box-office and so help to promote the .production and ~xhibitio~ of good fil.ms. . . This does not mean we are to walt for a good, rehgIOus, Catholic movie to come The writing is on the wall. th n t y to book There have been improvements I d ~ ong an ~ . r

but movies generally can stand . It for our parIsh halls, or or­ more. If and when we put up ganize theater parties and our money for good films, we sell cut-rate tickets to swell shall not have to put up with as Church funds. Such an idea is 'many bad ones. Ads and Freedom good idea if we "

wish to show the

United Artists gets a Holly-. good in rare .in,;,

wood Code seal for "Anna LU-' ·casta." The National Legion of sfances where a

movie? happens

Decency approves the film for to appeal pri­ adults. The film industry's Ad­ marily 1.0 Cath­ vertising Code okays certain ad olics. It is not a

displays but throws out others. movie mak~rs .

In these,. United 'Artists choose ,that when we ./ . : to feature .Eartha Kitt:· and demand good, clea.n entertam:-. SaPlmy 'Davis' Jr,'so' as to make ment, we mean bUSmess and no~ the' most _ and the 'worst _ of bonuses. '\ . what. a Holly'wood trade paper . GOLllE:N.,.jUBILEE: :Sho~n Completing his five-year ter~. calls. the film's "shock" exploi­ .,.; as .chairman of the Episcopaltation values. . .. the, Golden Jubilee celebratIon of St.· Hedwig Church, New Committee for Motion Pictures, Some responsible metropolitan Bedford, are Rev. Emil Tokarz; O.F.M.Conv.; left, pastor of : Radio and Television, Bishop newspapers--notably in Ch~cago St. Hedwig;s, and VerY' Rev. Norbert Zonca! O.F.M.Gonv., : : Scully who is now succeeded by -refuse to run "Lucasta" ads right, pastor'of Our Lady of Perpetual Help Church, New : CO. : Bishop James A. McNulty of they consider to be in bad taste. .Bedford. '. '¥ ,,-.. , : . . ..... . ' :" : P.aterson, N. J., ~id before the Immediately United Artists of­ bishops the annual Legion of ficials, raisirig the battle-cry of Decency report. . "Censorship," seek to plant other Fewer "B" Films ads publicly protesting an al:' As foreseen in this column two leged affront to freedom. Ag~in weeks ago, this showed 'fewer the newspapers refuse to run Parishioners of St. Hedwig sinski, O.F.M. Conv., and Rev. :.365 NORTH FRONT STREET: Hollywood films on the "B" list. them. Church, New Bedford, celebrated Innocent Kurkowski, O.F.M. , ' . , From November 1957 to October Actually all: that United the' Golden Jubilee of the found- Cony. . ' NEW BEDFORD ,, 1958, only about one in seven of Artists seeks to do is draw spe­ iiig .of the parish with a Solemn The Most Reverend Bishop: WYman 2-5534 ": the American movies rated by cial public attention to, a few Mas's .of Thanksgiving celebrated presided at the Mass'and brought ' ~ the Legion incurred moral objec­ unsavory aspects of the "Lu­ by'Very Rev. George Roskwital-:- greetings to' St.· Hedwig's not tions as compared with one in .casta" story. They wish to do . ski, O.F.M; Conv., Minister Pro- only from all th other parishes ever~ three films, the yea~., this withoutr~gard for good vihcial of the Franciscan Fathers in. the Diocese but from the Holy before. taste. of St. Anthony of Padua. Prov,- Father through the Apostolic' This sharp decrease was large­ Offensive to Readers ince. 'Delegate. ly a ref1ection of recent changes Newspaper publishers and A!1s isting Father Roskwitalski The Bishop. praised the' Polish in the Legion's classifications editors have it right, even 'a 'were two' forme•. assista~ts of people for their pistory of dE.wo-' "For Your Protection system, but I thi~k even under. moral duty, to' refuse ads which the Church, Rev. SebastianSle­ tion to the Faith. The Bishop Buy From the old system a considerable they consider o.ffensive to their ,..If d' I prayed .for new enthusiasm for improvement might have l5een rea ders. Newspaper readers have \JQ S the parishioners 'of St. Hedwig'll apparent. . . ' a right and a moral duty to keep.. I W k in 'planning a)new church and in Since the category "for aduts out of their homes newspapers' in G G·f 132 Rockdale Ave. I 5 fostering vocations to the priest­ and adolescents" was set up and 'which offensive.ads appear.. New Bedtord" a new list for "adults" more United Artists have no right .BOWLING GREEN (NC)-Work hood In the parish. : is· one of the .greatest of God's· A banquet was held in the aft­ clearly separated f.ilms that are to teiu out of context and distort ',WY 5-7947 the Dean of. the Uni~er.sity ernoon, attended by. several hun­ unsuitable lor ~oungsters, ,many by emph~s.is,:a. few .particular, gifts, of Detroit Law School said m a· dred parishioners' and friends. .)0 .... .;..._._._. _ movies that ,might have had .to sensational sex si,tuations in their talk at' Bowling Green State go on the "objectionable in ,?art" film. For this, n"otonly can of­ list w~nt i~to this "adult" cate­ fend against g90 d taste but can University: gory ins(ead. . misrepresent to the public, the , "God doesn't want a five-tal­ This applied to such pictures content and nature of the film ent person working on a three­ talent basis," Father David C. as" "Desire' Under the Elms", as a whole. ' .. Bayne, S.J., declared. A major "Peyton Place", "Bonjour Tris­ Plainly the difference of opin­ tesse", "The Key", "Raw Wind in ion rests between freedom and benefit of work, Father Bayne Eden", "The Long, 'Hot Summer" license. It will be interesting to said, is that it hinders tempta­ and more ·.recently, "Anna Lu­ see'whether responsible metro,. tion." ·"Get your life so filled' with work that the devil has to 'casta", a few of which were politan newspaper publishers in­ com.mercially successful. sist upon applying their own g~t an appointment with you to 'Citizen's Savings Bank Building . Fall River, MasS. Others, including those most ·moral and esthetical standards as do any good, first-class tempt­ ing. open to' criticism on moral to fiim ads they feel free to ac­ grounds, were ~ox-office d~sal?- cept, or whether they grant pointments. ThiS seems to mdl­ United Artists (and. eventually A Delicious cate that good morals and good a few other dissid:mt, Hollywood Treat business coiQcide. ·The secular movie companies) free license . critics were lyrical about "The to run their ne~spapers for Key" but it failed to open the them. INCORPORATED 1937 big cashbox!' Tyrone Power Sensational Advertising I first met Tyrone Power on at Bishop Scully, citing Holly­ lunch date when he was filming wood's recourse to' film subjects "Lloyds of London." After that, "more properly suited for re": until he left Hollywood more ~r stricted audiences,", deplored less permanently, I occasionally. sex-sensational exploitation' in talked withhi.m on. the sets or.' advertising and th~ dupliCity around town;' He was always the .'JAMES COLLINS, Pres. of some movie companies in; the, same; gentle',. )l:ln~iiy,"a'stran~~' . handling of fi~s CO?dew.Ded: by : sadness often sM:wing, thr()ug~, . '.. . Regi$tere~ CiviI and: S~~~tutal i Engin~r ' . the Legion and' havmg no. FIlm. his'smile. ."., ".' .. ' ' : , ' .' ..".-Member ,National SOciety 'Professional Engmeer. Code Seal., . J:, ~, . He :was, on4t felt, Qft~n \00' :FRA~CiS ~ COLLINS,' JR.; Only a fe~ H911Y~~d eOD;l"eas~iy l~~" ,The' :~orld dealt· hi~ I" • panies push this'ldnd. of "enter.,' disillusionment and sorrow all. THOMAS K. COLUNS,' Sec'y. . , tainment." The 'more regponsi- well.'as sOme ~~Ji deserved sue., ble ones' recognize the 'commer.,. cess: During ·.o~r first meetin~, FALL RiVER, MASS.. . ACADEMY' BUILDING cial advantages Of cautious treat- Tyrone, refer'ring. to SOnj.a ment and honest,de'cent,ildver- Henie, then the studio's great tising. especially 'where morbid ,skating discovery,. said: "It must or morally complex screenplays be wonderful, no matter what are involved. one does in life, to' be the best Ask For Them ,Today . One major Hollywood com-,. in the world.". pany (20th Century-Fox, I pre' . ,' . . . : •••••••••• sume), although un-named in • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • .. . III Bishop Scully's report, was .com- • . III . mended because "of 48 fi~s it . : III .

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• the "?orro~, ~,seud?-scle?tiflc: P. O.BO~ '1 - FALL JtIVER, MASS. • and CrIme fIlms which Blsholl . . ' .., L ' 'PI d f r one year tG •. Scully warned paren~~ "can have : Endosed 1S$4:SUlft:M;dptl0l\7. ease sen . 0 , •• " dangerous, cumulatIve ~ffteclt . : .....:_:..._ ." .' '. ' ,: ,._._ ;. ' . _.:' ::.•; ; __.:_.;._ -. upon the moral health an d' In e.- -• "Na-e' . 01,. ' ...... .._ .. • __ ~- ..; . , '. , ' .

lectual. development of . theIr _ Address··.·,·,'. .. ._._;'.._._' ; _ _ _ _ __.,. : children'" • . '. ;......._...,-.-.._-.-.', i ' ",: . " .' Fortu~ateIY. intelligentteeil- ., Post. OfflC~ _._-_._.-:-;'..- -_~ _..,- ---,..~ ~ _ ers appear to steer clear of th~ - City or Town ----:'~;..._ ..,._;.. :..;; _..;..~.._.:..-.-- --. iii

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MTFAL·ST AC.·ADEMY.· ,.' . · :R'MAJVERR T~U,NT9N mGH, . ' .':'.:. OU i

L ." .. , G D:~_.. . . Basketball season openS t;oday . . : To.morrow .Seniors will eleft ... ~~v t.

.. B y M!3gr. George .u-ss.....,. when Mount Players meet the' a .representatIve to take part 10,-" . <.. '

. Director. NCWC Social Ac~OD Department Durfee team at the Durfee ·gym·GOodG·overnment Day at the:; " . • f '

~':"The Nov ~ 28 issue of The Commonweal features a super­ Miss ,Marjode ~unes is coach, state. House Boston. . •.' .• The fourth In a senes 0

lativ~lygood article on the' economics of the housing and Sister Mary Julian is mOder- '. studei).ts' are assisting with',;"Caila Conferences for mar­ industry entitled "Badlands of Free Enterprise." The ator. for the teadm, 't d d' decoratipns 'and novelty prii~so ried couples will be held . . , '1 d 1 h" C ., DlOcesan mo era ors an .1­ ~or th~ annual alumni re'union, Thursday' evening, Dec. 11, author, Den~ls ~lark" of PhI a e.p la s ommlSSlon on ~rectors of the Sod~lity Union scheduled for Monday and Tuesunder the sponsorship of the Huma~ RelatIOns IS a young live prograf!'1. than the construc-"~""'ij1eet~is·.afternoon m the acad­ day, Dec. 8 and 9. , Somerset Catholic Women's Cathohc.·layman. who shows -lion induStry. ·~.\emy hbrary, , Thre~ faculty members WIll Club at 7:30. This is so. he said, for ·three>~ Sister Mary C!lga and SlSter. represent St. Mary's on Saturday . .. , g reat.promise in the field of · ". . l' . 1 . (1) Th" \II Mary Carmela WIll attend meet­ at thJ annual meeting of the' The senes IS gIven b~ prle~turban planmng and redeve pnnClpa reasons. IS . IS· . E 1 d A . 'Ne'w' England un'l't o'f the Natl'onmembers of the.. FaJ~llly Life ·... '. . an industry in which labor and mgs of the New ng an .sso­ ~ opmeQt.,-.;: .' 'managem~nt' are close to each ciation of Colleges and Sec.ond­ at Catholic Educational Associa:' Bureau of the DlOcese. ~cCOrdlng to ~r. Clark,. ~he other on a day.to day basis and . ary Schools, a~d the Na~lO?al t i o ' n . : · .. , . ~ This fourt~ in the serie.s deals primary. problem 10 the housmg. . ustomed to working Cat~olic EducatlOnal ASSOCIation . Beginning tomorrow senior!!.. wi~h the U?lty in marrIage., a industFY.is the lack of adequate . ?r~ tla~. the'solution of im... tomorrow and Saturday. ~They 'will have classes in oral expres- .. unlty of mmd and heart from Jom y. m .. . (2) FQI: .' . B'os t on . an d C am b'd both natural and supernatural · t'~on. " ~rgan~~ mediate ~ork problems. are 10', rl ge sl'on' unde'r the 'dl'rec'tl'on o'f' Davl"d' "

The IQd.~s~fY' a longtime" there has been: ~'. respectI,,:ely. , Connell, Stonehill Coll~ge. standpoints.

he s~~s,.;: has marked degree of sucoessful coF, M~mbers of the. Latm Club The Rosary Club meets every Rev. Ar:thony. M. Go~es of ~en de~7ll.trallective bargaining in the limit":· recelve~ members~lP. cards for Wednesday in sf Mary's Church Santo Chr~sto Church and Rev.. ~ed, 41~?;gan;-. ed field of .-wages;. hoUrs. and:', the Nat.lO.nal ASSOCIation for t~e to recite the rosary. Anne Hayes Johil P. Dnscoll ?f SS. Pet~r and ~ed ~pd" nqt ' working conditions.: (3) Labor,' PromotlOn of St~dY of Latm. ,is president and Doris Begnoche .Paul Church ~lll ~onduct the mfreq~e}l.tlY,. . and management in the constrliSister Mary Rose IS club mo$ler­ is vice president. :i%er~n.c~u:~~~~ ':~d coa~~~~ demor~1!-~ed_ .. ; ction industry have' already. ator. ' . ('It) ilj)~ot a-oO made a few tentative starts in:. Margaret Griffin and Kathryn Development Drive per~od and a social .hour. ~\\ ribY represe~tedt tcheltschih?Ohl rtati°t~al~.".:col?kSthe. direction of a new type of NOTRE DAME (NC) - St. W· d d A di l ruc l(~P-:.' . ~ e labor-management cooperation in a debate agams 0 g Mary's College h,as begim a twoe. nes oy u e. ce the aut~~otive. be d th li 'ted fi ld of.·- ch 01. mIllion dollar national developVATICAN CITY (NC) ~ The . d try' or the yon e ml e ~' ft· f th 1 M tr d' In.lus :d·:" I'ts" wages, hours and working con-'.. COYLE HIGH SCHOOL, ment drive. The goal for the 0 Ice 0 e papa aes I l ragr orow~;.t...s"r'.'.' has'.". " ' : . ' di.tions. ':.' . '..' . TAUNTON. . . Indiana business community Camera has announced that be­ . d t tt t d in a drive which will start in Januginning December 10 His 'Holi­ been a.:irt6ry of economic: mIS-Under the latter headmg, l'4r.. I Stu et~- s Pfa }FC~P? e, R' lU'y.··.'is $500,000. The. families' ness Pope John XXIII will grant . II ......: d f·tful 'adaptation." 'O'Connell cited by way of eX:.··· produc lOn o. Iman s am­ ce any . a.n : . ". ..;. b 1 c Iu b sang f or drive," now in progress, experts. a general audience every Wed­ :,-. .1 :. _.. ample, the creatlOn of the Nat::' ow.." an d th e. gee "'\ ::~elf-OrgaDlzatlon ,.' . ional Joint Board .for the SetUe:'·.: the annual dmner of the North .to net' $50,000. nesday 'at noon. ;1\ The;P:tpper organization of·the ment of JuriSd~ctional. Disputes':;IAttlebor,? .Serra Club.' . " y housinJt.i.ndustr , Mr, Clark-con-, in the. Construction Industry ai},dF":§'.'\" Fr:shmen have taken the. Cal- . . . . . ." . eludes, :';<;i~nnot be effected, ,by the establishment by the D~paIi7U'lforma 1. Q .. tests... ..' goverrijhetit officials or by an~,'. :ment ot LabO'r.a few years ago' : ~.. . III . cqnnechon wIth. pubhclty , '. ." other ;gr,(}V ps . of peop~~'out~id¢: 'Of a -Collstructi~>n Industry Ad~'~: ~V;~il a N e~ J ~rsey high sch?ol $2,500 Will build a chapel to' ow. Lady of .Rescue, in Ule li&Ue . the ini;!pst!'y Itself...: ' . ' visOry' Committee; . ' / . : - ' : : whIch. has Just start~d .awa~dlng :. ill . f Abb d in Lebanon. The mountain villagers are barely "Oniy<the day by ·.day mein- 'M:r.' ClarK'S'-; 'article . in The;.. letters ~()r scholashca~hleve- . v ~e 0 oU able to eke out their: daily living. Willingly do bers M·/the housing. ,industry Commonwea!-?~n.d::l\{r.O'Cog;,.<ment, Coyle ~tudents pomt. out . they give of their manual labor. Here is a. won­ . derful opportunity to' plant an evergreen cedar themselveS" he says•. "c.aIl cl~~r: 'nell's addiess.·..to:· tbe KeystoQ~:\< th~~·, the" .school has recogmzed the wa.'.Y.:;;.~.~r, ca.t.ch~ng.. · ;up ".w.ith' .1.3 ui~ding c<int~.~ct?r . s ASSOCi~+.:·.~l~.6~a.~s w.}~h monogra!Ds for the. . of faitb and of spiritual remeinbrance ona . the her'cwean taskl' of shelter:-tion are among"the.'best thinglil<' ast t~~.nty year~, .' I holy eastern. mountain. You or your beloved ing a ».~;,':~red and' seven~~~~f~V~'I::~avt;ever~fea:ii,?n.the,,·econ~:,.,~T.··ANTHONY'S, • dead will never be forgoUen. May Our Lady, million.,p.~ople," '. : .. . ' . mlCS of the. b1;llldmg and con; '.. . NEW BEDFORD rescue these, good' Chrisiians and give' them

ThiS': i~'.indeed a' coinpelli~ stiuction indllstry. :::'.. . The school 'paper, "ES;lla," hils a tit&i~ place of worship. The Holy Father will be very !ralefuL

chal1ehge~to labor andm~h,~l:te.:',':.;~t .iJ.S~opethat they win: .earned the "All ~lltholic" rating WHAT YOU' PUT -IN THE HAND OF THB HOLY FATHER YOU

ment in. what Mr. Clark a.ccl;l- . 'be given ,a .. v:~ry sympathetic\h.,from the CatJhQhc .School Press rately 'refers to as "ah extrem~ly . hearing by the.members of the1\!)Ask>ciatio·il. Barbara Johnson is . . PUT IN THE' HAND OF CHRIST.

strate~j.~":segmentof the AIDed..;..' ·indU~rY~litb:i:~tors, worke~;~:~dito~~n chief.. .' can eco~omy." supphers, finanCIers, et al-w!lQ~ Students ~~te~amed at par,.. CHRISTMAS CLUBS It is"iriteresting to note that alone, to re~at the words .~. ent-t~achers mght and Re~. -An old-age serene and bright. shaD lead &bee ·to th7 grave.- .; . a simiiar::challeng¢ was. recet;lt- . Mr. Glar/t, "can clear: the way..", HenrI Charest spoke on Catho~l:. SUcb is -&he objective of' our' DOLLAR-A-MONTH MISSION CLUB ly pr~§'~nted to both groups by for catching tip with t~e her-c.~. edu"a~ion. A tour of classrooms called PALACE OF GOLD, which helpS lIS to support our homes for .&he aged. We, too. shall grow old someday aDd our blessings tJnder::Se~'reta~yofLabor~ James culean. ~~k.0i.'. shelt~~lng o~r~.s conducted. T, O'Connell,1O an'address--de- "hundr~d and· ~e.v~nty-fiv~ ml~,,:.:. ..._ ~...._ _~ _ wilI..!lome baeJ~ a hundr~fold. T~e old,.folks also ·look· forward te .

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ABBOUD OF I.HE·· M'·O.UNTA·. I"N'

lion~ple.;.;.(:""'.· , ... :.,. ' . . .' " \M~':: ~ \\ . ..": .

_livered.·..ft:the Dinner 'of:-the 2()t.h·Anm.verSary Keystone(p~n.n- .'.. .' '.. :.

SYlvari.~~>BUi1illngCOn:t:r~ctorsBO$ton :Jesults Hon .'~'; ASSO~i,~~??' " " CardinaISpeliman.,.··'

LE.ARY·'.'. .P.RE,S·S.·

The'~fope .0.f:~r-...oC:C?Il~e!1 s,BOTON,(NC)-His. EJ;I1ipEmce /

addre$s: . . ~asat:.:once :no.!"e,ex- 'Fxancis' Cardinal "~;Spe1lmaii',c, ..•..p., RI,~·,. tensiv~~~f.ic;I mOf~·r.~str,l5,t.e,<!t~an ·.vArchbishop..of'':New:.-Yor1C".wi1i.'.~·. Mr,ClilJ;k's. Mrr-"Qlark confmed: '.. . "c· ~.' .... :-.",,\ "'t'<' . d·····'·· ..... f."'. receIve .an. honorary., ..doctorate.,;,.. himself:" a a IscussIQn'.Q ,fQ~e':'" f"'I" J '" ·"f':B' t .. C· 1'1' ''''t''~'::. f segme'~F~~ the 'cons~ruci1oit''1'n~'. ~ SP~~~1 t:'~6~=t~o~ DOec~g8~ :f:"/'~'! dustryhi!i,,~elY. hQu,smg, ~~ereCardinal ·.·Spellman was .:.:.~:{ If as Mr',lf.·ltlConnell 'talked ,aqout . hb f"ili'" J' , .t( F th·':'·';;'~·' , , the eii~{fk, iripus~y. ~jf ~:~os~:n °C~lle~e ~~~:n 1:32 ~m:'i: On .tp:~.:..other.hapd.Mr.O.Cop.1939 when ll'iierved" as AuxIU;';::-;' nell confj,ned himself w;a'.dls'B'sh ·f. "B t d ,:,.';..,: . . .;v.· , t ary 0 .'. os on an cussion' ,.' --of labor-managemen 't f SI op d"H"·' . t h h Npas-.,., . ":. 'J. 0 ,. ·• ..7 Cl k or 0 acre ... ear c urc, e~:-,....\. relatlO.nl:!.>..-; wher~ Mr. ar t<~m, only a fe,w miles \from~~\;, 'about~'yr,n!1~P,.~.l~.e.r~ra~~~. ?t.:-. col'lege.,eamp\.ls,J.: .,., ~oO' . . Terrifi~ proble·ms,;.whlcIvcannot· be ade. . ., ". ~. ,", . quately 'niet' i1nless "'and :JIifil" " .. " ., ;'" ' ..

Cb~aL

,.

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ARRAN9E NOW FOR GREGORIAN MASS~ Ari:ER PEATIL,

-. ASK ABOUT THE. SUSPENSE CARD.

T.ING' 'and'

'.

ORPHAN~S BREAD

.~e cry of Infant hunger pierces deep th~ human ,breast,o'We have a family of over 50'7,OOO.underfed childreD( Out of'love for the · . . · . h Babe of Bethlehem could you give',;. em' a o - .... .. CHRISTMAS D~NER?$10'wiD 'buy a . FOOD P.~CKA?E. Monslgnor .Rfiyan, MO,ur.; ovefrseas--rei p- ". '.' . ' . resentatlve 0 f the Ponti ~a.1 Iss l 9n or,' p a es· .' '. .f :.' ·~e.WiD ~e ,o~ ·b.an,d,.~::~pervise) t~e 'distribu- '~~t'F'r tiOIl. To show our appreCIation, we lWdl,send yon ~FREE OLIVEWOOD ROSARY ft:om, the ·Holy Land. m a ke 80me p 00 r child'. happv 'J . Piease. " •.: • . , S~CRIFI.~E :FOR CHRIST. MORE NOW ..T llAN EVER· BEFORE!

MA'I LI.NG

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23;.' Secen'd S"t. F,a-,'.'RIver

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~:d~ndustry is properly. organ-

.

'BROOKLAWN :

This differetlce .aside•. 'how­ FUNERAL HOME, .INC. ever, there' is enough of a par­ . R. Marcel RoF - C. Lorraine 1loF allel between ,Mr.- Clark's· ap­ . " Ro2er LaFranee 'proach and that of Mr. O'Connell to warrant our discussing their FUNeRAL DIRECTORS respective'·papers in one and the 15 IlRVINOTON CT. same column. '.. . NEW. BEDFO'RD Prog}i;;,m of 'Cooperation wY 5-7830 Like Mr';· ",Clark, Secretary O'Connell is deeply conc~ned about the lack.£of adequaie or­ ganizatiqn in the construction industry.. With a view to cor­ rectIng this 'situation, he stfung- . ly urged' labor and management •. . ". Helen A~bertirut Braugh' in the industry: to develop' a ." .OWner and DirectOr' .. program of cooperation .which Spac;i~us.:Parki."g 'Ar~~ goes beyond the· question . of wages, hours' and working' Con­ ditions-:"one in Which, bC!,th .. 129'AlleiI St..·New'Bedford sides sif'down to consider cUr':' rent broi:ld'{itcibleirts .and future . over-all prospects and then de-' .,..-....- - - -.....- ....,,;,;.'-'...-~•• cide on some ways and means-of'·" tackling .them." . . :....' -.' "".' -- .. The two parties, 'he .said, have a joint qbligation~ to -the nati9n while pursuing their individual " aims. He ·.views' this obligation1' as "one requiring.sincer.e m.utUal. . .'. BUR.N.ER .SALES.:';", respect, .seriou.sc9nsideration of the welfare ··of the nation. and a. -'.' '. true spirit of cooperation/'·,' .,'- . . . Rea~ons J!'or 'Optimism '.. 21 Wilbur Taunton Accordmg .tQ Mr. O'Connell < .•. . , there is no: industry in the' VAndvk~ 2-0582 United States better suited to .

undertake this type of coopera- . : - - , - - - - - . - - _ ..:.

Traff"·.oc Problems .•.••

BUILD A CRIB . Medical Kit $'75 Statue or Icon 30 Picture 15 One of these could be Give thanks for God's

.

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'-!.A·'IJ.~R'E'A:U

OIl. 'SERVICE, 'Inc~ ,~

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-.&··SERMICE:;· sf.. Iphone'

_

CHRISTMAS.GIVING

The birthday of Christ is a spiritual. feasi! WhY not manifest .this fact by spiritual' giving? What greater gift' 't~ the gift of Holy Mass? We have artistically colored ~SS .CARDS for ..the living and t1le dead. Or give the gift Qf supernat­ ural life through MEMBERSHIP. Individual $1, .family $5, for one year; and Individual $20; Family $lOO.Per­ petual. Or' ·give'· someCilDe an enrollment in one of our DOLLAR-A-MONTH MISSION CLUBS; a STRING­ LESS,GiFT; or a DESIGNATED GIFT. With the beau­ tiful GIFT CARD. we~ enclose presSed .dowers. from :. ·Bethlehem; " . . .' ."

"liBERTINE FuneralHo,,-e . ·WV· 2-2957'

Confessional· $50 Cmcifill: $!5 Censer, Boa& ... '.20 ·Can·es; .Yr's SuP. 'ZO Albr StaDe'. '19 Sancluaq Bell . 5 made m Christmas Gift for Ule Bouse of God. . many blessings. Remember a loved one.

For longweall'ing rugs . or Wall' to walt :MORENCY/S , .. . .. PRICES . '. .: Are Lowest of All I .,

~.....

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.

.

NEW ,.u;OLY . FATHER·.FOR HIS NEAR EAST MISSIONS•

~.

'MORENCY'S

Ca~petDng , ,.

4,. STRINGLESS GIFT IS YOUR' GtFT CERTIFICATE TO. THE

.,'

.

.

1440 PURCHASIE· ST.· NEW BEDFORD

CARPET WITH EASE at MORE-Ney/S

MY SPIRITUAL CHILD

'.. Do you really want to give a worthwhile. ChrIstmas. gift r..... ,one

that will never tarnisb? Then why not consid,er ed~cating,:a poor.boy

for the Priesthood or. an-,i.ildi~e6t girl for the SisterhoOci't MYRON

, 'and PETE~.·;cof.. ~~e~ontifi~'ar:·Ruthenian Co.lIege each needs $600. , . POOR CL~!lE,'>§I1?T~R':~PVI~ES:ANDREW;:. and'.S4N9TA 'need $300 each.··.~Na~1Jrally~; convenient ~stallments over 'a' SIll: or two year period;.,Will'yqu.make'·the,m beam at the Cpristmas .scen~,'!

. ~~ra.stOlissioJis~

~

FRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN, 'President . t

..

.

: . ·Msgr. Peter P. Tuohy, Nat" Secly' . Send all communications'to:'

. ....

CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION

48~~ington

Ave. at 46th St.

New York 17, N. Y.


I

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THE ANCHOR­ Thurs., ~e.c.,~, 1,958

, Christmas Lights At La Salette Sunday aftetnoon will mark the opening of the annual Christmas illumination at the shrine of Our Lady of La Salette, Attleboro. The occasion will be marked by ceremonies in the shrine chapel, including a sermon by Rev. Rene Sauve, M.S. The service will start at 4:30. Following the chapel' ceremonies a candlelight procession will march to the nativity scene on the shrin~ grounds. The semin-

Sup'rern~ Court

Considers Ban

Of Movie Film

WASHINGTON (NC) ­ The U. S. Supreme'Court has' agreed to study the constitu­ tionality of banning a film for moral reasons other than outright obscenity. The court said it will hear arguments on the Constitution­ ality of a ban placed on the film "Lady Chatterley's Lover" in New York State. The Kingsley International Pictures Corporation, film dis­ tributors, contended that the ban of immoral (as distinguished from obscene) motion pictures suppresses opinion unconstitu­ tionally. Regents Reject Film The Company charges the film was banned' "because the ideas it presented were thought evil, not because of the manner in which the ideas were presented. The film was banned because it presented adultery under the circumstances 'portrayed as ac­ ceptable behavior ..." The film was presented as re­ quired by New York law to the motion picture division of the New York Board of Education in May 1956. The division refused to license it for exhibition. The 'distributing company appealed to the state Board of Regents which upheld the ban, Freedom of Speech The Appellate Division of the New York Supreme Court re­ versed this decision but the State Court of Appeals upheld the ban, Kingsley Corporation then appealed to the Supreme Court. ' In a 1952 ruling on the film "The Miracle" the Supreme Court held that movies are en­ titled to constitutional guaran­ tees of freedom of speech and the press. It also held that the term "sac­ rilegious" was too broad and indefinite to be a valid standard for censoring films. The court is now being asked to put all norms except outright obscenity in the same category as "sacri­ legious." .

Trappists Establis~\'\ Abbey in Argentina SPENCER (NC)-Nine Trap­ pist monks from St.. Joseph's Abbeyhav~ left for Argentina where they will, establish the first foundation of their Order.. The Argentiri~:monasterywil~ be in 'Azul, and, will be named ' Our Llady of the Angels. Mem­ bers ot the commu'nity wiil -live in small, p_ ~fabricated houses until permanent, buildings are constructed. , One of the Order's ,Brothers, who supervised"';'construction of monastery buildings here and at St. Benedict's Monastery in Snowmass, Colo" will leave later this month to direct building operations in Azul, which is about midway between Buenos Aires and Bahia Blanca.

Super-Right-No

AT BISHOPS' MEETING: Bishop Connolly is shown ,with Most Rev. Joseph F. Rummell, Archbishop of New Orleans, at recently-held meeting of the hierarchy of the country in Washington. , ; 'I' .,

Pediatrician Says Rucsia Behind .Especially in Care of Children CHICAGO (NC)-Russia is "40 years behind the times" in med­ icine. The Soviets particularly are backward when it comes to care of infants and' children, a past president of the American -Acad­ emy of Pediatrics said on his return from a tour of hospitals in five Russian ·cities. Dr. Harry Bakwin, New York pediatrician, reported: "When we asked in Moscow about heart operatio~s for young­ sten with congenital heart de­ fects, they said th~y sent all their cases to Leningrad. When we asked the same question there, Leningrad said they sent all theirs to Moscow." . There has not been a single ,new children's hospital in Rus­ sia since before the revolution and those in use today are "very primitive," Dr. Bakwin said.

"There are better hospitals in Siam, India, South Africa or almost any place else you'd want to name," he said. ~ Equipment Not Used Hospital equipment on display at a permanent exhibit in Mos­ ,cow is "beautiful,'" but it is not used in their hospitals, Dr., Bakwin declared. , "Evidently the exhibit is made up of ·show' pieces. What the hospi'tals have is definitely an­ tiquated. Everything in the ex'­ hibit has Russian labels, but I suspect they 'tq,ok American' ,equipinent imd put their own labels on them for p,urposes of display," he 's.tated. The doctor declared it is al:' most impossible to get accurate information as to Soviet medical success in copin'g with children's diseases, since until recently all vital statistic(l have been a state , I' secret. ,Even today, only vague, generalized statistics are avail­ Famed able, he added. . VATICAN CITY (NC)-Rus­ Dr. Bakwin, said apparently sian-born composer Igor Stra­ Russia does not believe so much vinsky was received here in pri­ in 'treating ,the sick 'child, sal'­ vate audience by His Holiness vaging those born, prematurely Pope John,XXIII. ' or helping thpse born' with bod­ Mr. Stravinsky came here fol.,.' ily defects,as 'in keeping healthy youngster" from falling ill. Con­ lowing a visit to Venice, his fa­ sequently, their practice of pedi­ vorite vacation spot, where he had met the :E>ope several times . atric medicine is concentrated when the Holy Father was on combating. infections, be addeq. '. Patriarch of Venice.

Compos~~

'. liS' , , ave,

W'·.th,',

~ f·''e~y ",;:, Ula

arychoir will sing Christmas"", hymns as the figure of 'the Christ ' Child is laid in the manger. ,The illumination will'include 30,000 colored bulbs, forming various designs, according to Father Sauve, shrine director. it will c::ontinue ni~htly from 5 to 10 until Jan. 11. Enlarged park~ ing facilities will accommodak pilgrims, Regular shrine devo­ tions will continue throughout the Christmas season.

Short Ribs

~liRc;lIBded

RIB

ROAST

c lB63 7-INCH SHORT CUT

[SIRLOIN TIP 1st 2 RIBS

,Super-Right, Heavy Western Steer Beef

CHUCK

ROAST c 49 BONE IN, BLOCK STYLE

.lB.

New' 'Bedford & Acushnet

Co-operative Banks

115 WILLIAM ST.

NEW BEDFORD, MASS.

BLUE RIB~.O}i

WEBB' OIL (0.

LAUNDRY

TEXACO -FUEL OILS It HEAVY DUTY OIL BURNERS Sales -' Sel'vice -- Installation'

DOMESTIC

273 CENTRAL AVE. NEW BEDFORD

MAIN OfFICE -1'0 DURFEE ST., FA,LL RIVER

OS~-7 484.

Phone

WY 2-6216 . ,

,~

Check These Banking Services • • • • •

Real Estate Loans Savings Bank Life Insurance Christmas and Vacation Clubs Savings' Accounts 5 Convenient Locations

ALL YOU DO IS THIS -.:. Send on. dollar and labels frOM

·3 cans of White House Milk, with your name and addre..

to: COOKIE KIT, P. O. BOX 375, NEW YORK 46, N. Y. Thit offe, ii, void in aRy Iial•• lerritory. 01 municipality when prohibited. tolled Of olhe,.I...... rrided. lhlt efl., .0)' be withdraw" without notice.

WhiteHouse 6TALL79C I There·s NO:le Better CAW , Eyap. M·lk Prices shown In this ad guarantHd thirD $d., Dec. 6 & ,ffeetlYe In this communllJ & vlcinltl.

NEW BEDFORD

INSTITUTION for SAVINGS

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St. Monka

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ReligD@~ Comp~ete Answer

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To' 'D~~~Emq.u~ncy Problem

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16

Crc~$w@rds

By lHIenry MIichael------..J

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THE ANCHOR

Thurs., Dec. 4, 1958

Ordinat~on Continued from Page One at the Dominican Academy, St. Anne's and Blessed Sacrament Schools. He attended Mt St. Charles Aca'demy in Woonsocket and· Our Lady of Providence' Seminary for high school. . He took his Philosophy studies at St. Mary's Seminary. Paca 'Street, Baltimore, and speht a year. of 'Theology at St. Mary's Seminary, Roland Park, Balti­ more before the Most Reverend Bishop sent him to Rome to complete his Theology course. The ordinandus writes to The Anchor that the last few months have been filled with pageantry, history, mourning and joy. He was one of the group from the College who stood guard around 'the body of Pope Pius XII' at Castelgondolfo on the day the' Pope died.'. H'e aIso valked, in :tl:J,e procession that carried the Pope's, body from the Cathedral of St.' John Lateran to St. Peter's Basilica. . Present' at Coronation /Rev. Mr. FoIster watched the crowds before St. Peter's as they awaited word that the C.onclave had elected a new Pope, The North American College over­ 100ks'St. Peter's and there is a perfect view from ~he Infirmary windows of the College of the Vatican Palace. He was present at Pope John's Coronation Mass and was privi­ leged to be near the Papal Altar for the Mass.

By Donald' McDonald Davenp,9rt Catholic Messenger

Just .about the saRest thing rIve read on the subject of "juvenile delinquency" was Nick Lamberto's fine report in a recent issue of the Des Moines Register. Lamberto re~ ported a talk given to a group of county attorneys and sheriffs in Des Moines' by preaching and editorializing and Judge Philip B. Gilliam of crusading with positive suggest­ the Denver, Colo., juvenile ions and positive works to strike

· at the root of this evil. And I think religious sociolo­ Judge Gilliam said that in 18 gists like Father Joseph Fichter, years, about 20,000 juvenile de­ S.J., and Father John L. Thomas, linquents have appeared before S.J., and Dr. John Kane of bim and that he is .getting "dis­ Notre Dame are indisputably couraged about correct when they ·insist that a 'what has been large-scale problem, like youth­ happening the. ful crime, must be met with last ten years." equally large-scale reformation He. said that and improvement of social in­ the "test of our stitutions, societal structures and civilization will customs and mores. be the kind of It isn~t sufficient to preach to c:h i I d r e n we a boy, or lecture to a girl 'about turn out. I pre­ their personal ethical and moral di~t that delin­ obligations. if you ,force them quency. iri to live in a society· which' is, 4CROSS a:.... ~p . 1I8 Repused ~1 WorshlpM' America will go 1 Household 19 AnCIent ('eFalan 81, Bar. 38 Starcby fo04 constantly pulling them away: up 50 to 100 lUll mal. 50 (,Iant' 88 H....rlriJr orc.. n. 39 Bnrrowl ...

and distracting them from what per cent,in the I Head 01 a wom· ,;1 ~Ian'a _ 0 OOWN .. ~im..l.

• on·. reli/rloo. 5Z Tool. 10 Klnel of

is never an easy obligation for JIIext 10 years." community 53 Cllerool 1 Pruvide fuod ' carrisCfJ U· SH~; \V AS 54 Chemical .om. Z Tolerate II SRE HAD A wounded man-a life of purity Some other Gilliam quotes: THE ........ OJ!' $6 VOlle. S tlrtiele ul bellel .... OF RICH and honesty' and, temperance. "Crime is not funny or en'ter­ 4UGUSTINE 57 SHE 10'(11,• Ha.lag·more· 'SON . 11 "'Clr on I,OWKU' HEB eonot"lI:ltion.':I: Worn a .....' &aining, as, depicted on televis­ 'Crime' Is .Harsher U SHE UVED . SON Tlt' ........ I SHI!: W4S

IS Und....I'Foaa4 ion. It is a hard and vicious' bus­ . IN TnII': '..._. lIlI One wbo ads FltOM ......

conduits Certainly,_'moralizing when it . <lENT URY 59 Dre..... IJ City In Idabo &II Wlkh811 Iness and it costs us' thousands is only unrelieved negativism is ... Fo'no a thoolrbt 1;0 ""PpM pia'" , Bat IIcbtly 46 IUncl,. of dollars. We are constantly SO Woman·s 61 1 ...lat. . I Uoit 01 eRerlr,. 4ll Klad 01 _ unrealistic., Byt , the. danger nlcknamo ' " ,'. 6& ae.ilMld • Saint, femlalao, (pl.) . , glorifying th~ skunk 'and gilding II ralae . '1 ' StAt.._ (abbr.' (abbr.' ~ Ualt 01 1 1 ­ focusing one's criticism 'in this· the hoodlum," , .. . repre."ntatlve' 81 Wo"d,. 10 Wither ",_aFe (pi" area is that the critic, ~ithout,. II 4 ••""iatlo.. 11 (;rlneli". ' III 1II0nUoas .' "For a long time we were . . IUv.... '" .. UaworilaJ' maehinea 16 Ripped . knowing quite' how he came to Genoa",. p"raoa U 111 Come fold tl1ere is no such thing as a such a positi.on, develops a con~. II Practlti__ 1I,8RI!: 11 4 be ·.... 61 Balle. bad boy. ACtually: most of them · viction that the evils denouncecl . .(......,) BROUQHT·II 1II•• h 01 . &0 Mark". '. . !Ilek__ AlfGllSTINB ,I.~...-.l 61 E.lI are mean as heck. It's like a ContiDaect from Page ODe ,by the moralists are unreal. also. n 4q_t ,B&«:& ".Olll, 1,- M. .leal 63 CFa,rC7 . . . doctor saying there's no such "W a. over "lfatll ' 4 WAYWARD .,olll ldoll 64 Gambola committee of the Greater Miami Perh~ps that is why the wore! .. notten . " ....

I' 0 1111:0 " DI _ ~ing as a sick person." Ministerial ASsociation and the II 'fldl... . 81 V.......

BI it 66 W ·._ "delinquency" was So ';quickl,. "The experts say never spank P' "0III1Ul'. nil_ 61 Faaa-tM • IT Wants oIf Greater .Miami COuncil of adopted in our vocabulary - it s& Klnll olea' 13 Before ' _U,... iii R.....o. . . • ~ild when you're angry. Can Churches. II Per... na1 .74 Croa&eCI 10 SRII: W48 . stel"tal _ _ doesn't sound quite as harsh~« ~ou imagine spanking a kid 'The campaign has won the bard as "sin" or "crime." . ~: ~~ JI ~~r.. . ~ ~~so;-:. . when you aren't angry - just '. support of businesses, Chambers II r..,ampl. " T,"aan" D fol1tvelr 11 Bow.... The dangers are very real; eoing around slapping him with . . ·S I... baa... .. T "rlac W' _171,1. 11:....... M Commerce and' labor unions O M 1' _ '" laJ....

"711..d .... . a big smile on your face!" they are growing. And attempts in the greater Miami area. A G R .."...,t II Pries., ......011 . . 11 Cia" til Breatlto 81 soer... t o _ a , ' 'II Tree tnaJt to turn back the evil are con­ Fathers Who Drmk . Chamber of, Commerce spokes­ . , U......lI 1& EraI.... ' 18 Co,erIa. BO,Be.e.-.­ fused, sporadic, and frustrated a P..,Ule lslac' 1I6 Walk"" . _ar~" of • -.ltB! llIo"crei man has estimated' that only Most- juvenile delinquents because, among other things, the five per cent of the merchants Solutioa OlD Page 'Eighteen '10 \ come from "lousy homes with moral end religious .norms and ,in Dade County wish to remain , I U1\ " fathers who drink and mothers resources, which 'once were a /I open on ,Sunday. who fight." :~~:{;) genuine common denominator! A Sunday 'observance has also ,"The only complete answer is been organized in neighboring a rE;1igious concept-that God ~f, this nation, ?ave ~een~tea­ , I ' Ily abal1doned by mcreasi 11' Broward County under the spon­ walks with you always. ,An . Going into their thirteenth BOSTON (NC)-Boston Col~ sorship of the West Hollywood atheist is a vagrant, a man with~ year are the teenage dances lege has received a. grant of Ministerial Association. out visible means of support. ~nsored by St. Kilian's Church, $4?,900; from . the National, God is not a celestial bellboy N . B df d 'Bob Cl t ScIence, Foundahon to help pay - - - - - - - - - - - - -... that you dng for only when you e or... ay ~n, for a six-week institute for high Continued' from Page ODe '. .....ew are jn troubie." , . Boston teleVISIon personality, school science' teachers next North Attleboro parishes gave "Fifteen. years ago, about 10 6,424 pounds ,and Norton-Mans,- : w,as.. gue~t disc jockey. at an ,summer. Lecture and laboratory 10 12 unwed mothers each month anmv:ersary dance markmg. the courses will be designed to give sUrrencled'theif babies.. Now it's field Catholics contributed ,4 494 occaSiOn, highschool 'physics arid chem­ pounds. . " &0 to 70 a month. I've listened The dances began in 1946 and, istry' teachers a deeper know­ ~ethod of Distri~utioa 10 8,000 girls cry in my court. were the first teenage socials ledge of their subjects. She may have been a girl from Clothing collected was pro­ held in New Bedford.'They w e r e ' .

a little town in Iowa or the girl cessed by volunteer workers. in begun with the idea of providing ,---~-----------.

· each parish, being divided into next door." young p~ople with"supervised ,., " h'eavy and light articles and amusement. Since their inception 'American Tra~ed,. J~' ~Iectricat shoes. It is. trucked to New York there has ·been no serious juven'­ ~4 Contractors This was not a priest 01" a headquarters of the National ile delinquency in the parish. MILLION DOllAR

minister or an editor or a PTA­ . o/,Ai~ Catholic Welfare Conference president with outraged protest. Until his transfer to Hy~nnia ~. where it is baled for overseas BAllROOM

It was a ~udge who for 18 years the wekly dances were directed ':.JJI shipment. 'bas been 'sitting on the bench by 'Rev: J!lmes P. Dalzell. They ...,.~~ . Once arrived at distrib'utiQn Available for watching the. unfolding of what are 'now supervised by Mr. and V'~i points, the' clothing and shoes bas come to be The American Mrs. Hebert Lloyd of St. Kiiian's " Banq~ts,Testimonials. Be. are given to .the needy' thr.ough parish in cooperation with Rev. -; Tragedy. Caritas organizations, similar to For Full Information .Contact Let an editor voice' alarm at EdwardL. Killigrew, pastor. 944 County St. '~ St. Vincent de Paul Societies in burgeoniJig 'lawlessness, and he .ROLAND GAMACHE Novelty, birthday and special • . is dismissed with the shrug, · the United States. holiday dances are held in addi­ New' Bedford WYman 9-6984 It costs NCWConly haIfa tion t~' the weekly Friday night, "we've heard it all before.... cent per dollar contributed to socials.. The teenagers attending Let a parent meet with other distribute the material Father have been seen on several tele­ parents to compare' their anxie­ ties and grope for remedies and McCarthy noted. Oih~r relief vision shows featuring such , organizatiorls, without the al­

be runs the risk of being label­ dances. ready functioning facilities of

ed a "snooping vigilante." the Church in needy areas, spend

The fact is that youthful 1aw-­ ( lessness is increasing at a rate' up to 14 cents per dollar simply

to distribute clothing and bed­

faster than the population is in­ ding.

creasing. And the fact is that , ELECTRICAL The Thanksgiving drive' ran

a veteran judge who has wit-. , CONTRACTORS from Nov. 23, to, ~9 in' all par­

nessed the 'endless . parade of \ young lawbreakers is today "dis- . ishes .of the D.iocese. It issug."

Residential - ·Commerclal

NEW BEDFORD, MASS. 545 Mill ST gested that 'Diocesan Cathoiics

couraged" and predicts at 50 to Industrial

keep 1959's oollection in m'ind

100 per cent increase ~f youthful 633 BroCldwciY. FaD 'throughout the year and la,. crime in then,ext ten years. aside .usa ble clothing . to i con­ It is all very well to shake OS 3-1691 tribute next November. one's'head wearily' ~ild to'say that the moralists in oui-midst , , ;0", are Johnny-one-notes with their: incessant homiletics on crime , and immorality. But the point is : . 'that crime and immorality are," Y in fact, flourishing and there is ~ Have hardly a major city in the United States that has enough police- ;. OWA~' men to adequately protect its • I~ • citizens. ~ Need Positive Suggestions " , I'm willing to grant that the: 54 PLEASANT STREET : moralists may have teen en':': .NORTH AnLE80RO' .: tirely too negative in their ap- D ' , ftAlHVnlE proach to this problem, that they: Tel. MYr1te 9-823', :. Jd.. '06& 152 have not matched their nega~v:e" , ~ ".

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Parish Teenagen Hold Anniversary .,

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50n s Deathbed Conversion Brings Peace to Father

BE$TBtlY$ of the

.By Most Rl2v. Robert J. Dwyer, D.D. Bishop of Reno

"We were just beginning to be friends ..." It was a father writing of the death of his son, as countless fathers have written, and in the same vein of anguished regret. Thomas Hart Benton on that day was no longer the lion of

the United States Senate, extraordinary' attentiveness. the "Old Bullion" of popular 'Yes', he said, 'the· Lord surely

legend; he was only a sends what is best for us.'

"Without further ado' 1 ran broken-hearted old man. For

he had never really known his , son Randolph; there had been too many things to do, too many battles to fight. Now it was too late. At least, the man reflected, the boy had had his wish ful­ filled. Tomor­ row they would sing his Re­ quiem in the'

Roman Catholic Cathedral of St.

Leuis, and Archbishop Kenrich would' give the absolution. All this was something he could not wholly understand or . bring himself to accept, but not for anything would he have op­ posed his dying son's request. He had sent for the priest and he was glad of it.

Father Pierre Jean De Smet bad come, and the light he had seen in Randolph's eyes when the sturdy Jesuit had poured the water of Baptism was the only glint of happiness lighting his own heart now:'

WEEK!

over the essential points' of re­ ligion, which he accepted with every sign of faith and piety. All this while the 'Senator stood by, ·deeply moved by, his son's Chris­ tian spirit. "Taking me gently by the hand he led me a little. space from the bed and said to me, 'Truly, this' is consoling; even if they break my heart, my boy's words' fill me with joy. If di~ he must, he dies a Christian.' And burst­ ing into tears he rushed into an adjoining room to hide his grief.

Receives Sacrament

"I returned' ~o the ,bedside.

There Randolph told me of his

determina tion ':l die a' Catholic.

'I want Baptism with all my heart. It is a great favor peaven is' granting me, and I have no least doubt my father will con­

sent. "I went into the, other room

to talk ~o him; readily he agree~,

and the young man joyously pre­

pared himself for the Sacrament.

While 1 was' baptising him he

cross.ed.his arms on hIs breast,­

raised his eyes to heaven, prayed

most fervently, thanking God

for s6 ;great a grace." . While De Smet "ent for the Viaticum, ']~ent6n and his sOl) had their last 'words together, the "yOU!1g 'mail telling' his father of his long desire to embrace the Faith, and Benton assuring him of his own happiness in the comfort that had come to him. To the priest he sent word, "In bringing peace to my son you have brought it to me no less." At sunset that day, March 17, 1852, Randolph Benton went to God. During the six years that re­ mained of Thomas Hart Benton's life it was De Smet's brave hope that the father might imitate the. son. It was not to be, but in the secret places of a ·father's heart only God can read the whole story.

Equal to' Tradition Cholera they called it, the killer. Only a week, before the young man hardly 22, had de:" livered the civic oration .for Kossuth, the Hungarian hero, and the father's pride had known ·no bounds. If old Tom Benton could hold them spellbound on the Senate floor, here was assurance that 7. the son was equal to the tradi": tion, and worthy, too, of the name of his old friend. Randolph of Roanoke, that master of the high art of invective. A few more years in the Uni­ versity here in St. Louis, where the Jesuits would form him and polish him, and th~ name of Benton would live on in the an­ nals of American politics., Whatever else' might be said of him (and' was), Thomas Hart Benton had never swerved from his concept of po nor and had never 'let himself. be panicked by bigotry, ~e might have cap­ italized in the la:>t election by an appeal ~'~.' the 'p'~ssions arous'ed, by the :~now-Nothings, as so many of his Senate colleagues had done, Qut there was a vein of iron in his' makeup that re­ fused to bend to that inqecency. He had known Catholics most of his life; here in St. Louis they were among his closest friends and warmest supporters, and he could not stoop to their betrayal. Nevertheless, the decision to send his son to a Jesuit univers- ' ity in 1852 took courage. It could' cost him his career. Had he known that his .sQn~ had already made up'his min«to become a Catholic? There' is no evidence to show for it, and on his own admission ~ was just beginning to know the youth.' Then it was,utterly witho,ut warning, that the fever struck.

C~adjutor Succeeds

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·THE FIGHING· CHAPLAIN

WliATEVER 'lOU ~Y, , LIEUTENANT. WE'D ~"RE UKE 10 f.PRIN6

IN tElW/ON, COHHtlNI>T FOR(!€> HArE f;f1Z€O {,f.g. CHAPlAIN TIM AHEAKN. Of<DElUI FORce ANDY 70 CONTINUB CO/tffACTINta TRll5AL LEADE/i!. . El. KM"HA'fS MEN BUT ICIHEN A/III!tIFOI?MER. 7CU.~' HIM CHAPl.AIN TIM WIl.L Be HEl.D . AT A CE~TAINSPOT, ANDY GATH{if(G!. A . ' . f;ROtlP OF HI!] MIiN A~D mE ce:weORDIA. AND NOW..... ·

THE CHAPLAIN.

sur

. ONE THING, g/R I IF YO\.( DON'T MIND MY A~ING. '

rr The Parish Parade

HAve YOW~ TOL.D COMMANDER' HODeS' ABOl4T

18

YOUR PLAN

LEARNED? .

;"'THE ANCHOR Thurs., pee. 4, 1958

r mmml~n81lUUmm~H

III1IIIII1III

1

J

lege dance to band 'willfor accompany the the club play dancing Wednesday, supervision' Dec. of 10 Mrs:under Ad_r!en ~ following the musicllle. . Piette, confraternity p~eside~ L I F E S BOA T S The program will include ST. PATRICK'S, B 0 semi-classical, classical, and pop": FALL RIVER _ 0 ular numbers. The glee club The women's guild will hold was last heard in Attleboro two its annual Christmas ~arty at ~ . • years ago. 6:30 Sunday night at· Stone :.-.-. E CONCE TION Bridge Inn. A buffet S\'lper and IMMACULAT P , mus. ical entertainment will be In~ NORTH EASTON features of the evening. A dance MILWAUKEE (NC)-Ameri­ A Cliristmas party for chil~ will be held at 7:30 Friday night can freemasonry, although not as dren will be held Saturday af­ fo'r high schoof students. violently anti-cleriCal as its ternoon, Dec. 20, from 2.to 4 in counterpart in most European Frothingham Memorial Hall. The ST. JOSEPH'S, countries, constitutes a religious Christmas banquet of the Wo'­ FALL RIV~R .' ,sect opposed to the revealEpl men's Guild - will be held in The ,Chn~tmas sale of the truths of Christianity. "ChristiNorth Attleboro.' . Wome~ s GUlI~ starte~ yester~ay anity and Freemasonry," by Wil­ Miss Ann Harrey arid Miss and Will contmue thIS evemng. liam J. Whalen is said to be . Patricia Buckley head the cake from 2 to 9. Christm~s trees wi!l he 'first, complete stu<;ly of the {sale committee for this:mqnth. be sold by the Men s Club Fn-",\ subject by an American Cath­ 'S . 'day and Saturday, Dec. 12 and\, oh,'c in a half centur,y. The a,u­ , ' ST. BER N ARD , " , 13 f 6 t 10 d 1 t 10 " ASSONET ,;" ,r.om 0 an. 0 re- '­ thor says, that he secured his ~ The Women's Guild 'christmas spectrvely. facts .from basic masonic sources, party will be held Monday, night, ST. ANNE'S, and that the accuracy of his ac­ Dec. 15, in the Legion Hail atS. FALL RIVER count of masonic teachings .and Members will· sponsor a chil-. New members will be received rituals has been checked by ac­ dren's party at 3:30 Wednesday into the Children of Mary sodal­ knowledged authorities on the afternoon, Dec: 10. About 150 ity Sunday night, ·Dec. 7. subject, ,among them three for~children are expected. Enter­ _ HOLY NAME, er Masons who .are now active tainment will include a tree, FALL RIVER Catholic laymen. Santa Claus, refreshments and Knights ,of the Altar, altar gifts. ,boys' society, will hold installa­ SACRED HEART, tionservicesat 2 Sunday after­ NORTH ATTLEBORO . noon. The:' Holy'Name Society ') The annual school exhibit is will hold its~ommunion break­ scheduled for Sunday, Dec. 14. fast Sunday, Dec.' 14: Office:jrs Plumbing -Heating Parents will visit classrooms and wiil be installed and new'mem­ bers received.". I Over 35 Years 'confer with' their childrelfs of Sa'tisfied Service teachers. . t ' . ~ OUR LADY OF FATIMA~ 0 IS 806 NO; MAIN STREET i 'SWANSEA . ,,)i~\ Fall River OS 5-7497 A full January schedule for The Secondary School Depart.., the Women's, Guild includes a ' ment of the National Cath:olic performance of "Song of Berna­ Educational Association will, be ' dette" Bla~kfriars Players, he!d on Saturday' at .Matignon : Inc•. '\ <rhursday, Jan. 15 at the Brown High School, Cambridge.. ' M 0 V E R'S ,,~chool, Swansea; and an Old Sister John Elizabeth, S.U.S.C. " SERVING­ · 'Fashioned Dance,. co-sponsored' principal of the' Sacred·- Hearts: Fal'l .Ri~er, New'Bedford with the Holy Name Society, Academy, Fall River, will serve' Saturday, Jan. 10 at the Knights as secretary of ·this fourth annual' Cape Cod .Area of Columbus Hall,' Swansea. A ,meeting., " , Agent: ' . potluck supper is planned for . His Eminence Richard Cardi­ AERO MAYFLOWER ~nday,' Jan. 5. ,. nal Cushing ·will extend the TRANSIT CO. ,INC. ' S'll'. JOSEPH'S, : . greetings of the Archdiocese of NORTH DIGHTON Boston to 'all the delegates and Nation-wide Moven . I I f b Bishop John J. Wright of Wor. WY~an'3':0904 ' A basketba I eague or oys. - :. cester will deliver' the.' keynote 304 !tenipton St. N~w Bedford 8-12 is under organization. Whist parties are' held each address.~., · ..Monday. r "....- - - -....-----~." \\. ST. jOSEP'II'S, .,~ .ATTLEBORO . . The Ladies of· St. Anne will' ·.' . ~ "meet Tuesday' evening, Dec. 9 for ~. "a religious program at 7:30. At . ' J 6SEPH M:> F. ''bONAGHY \.." .social hour under the directiOn of . . owner/'R1gr.. Mrs..Origene Lallier will follow. 142 . Campbell, St. for WO~K' . Dec. 21 will be the group's Mass:­ communion Sunday. SPORT /

ew Book Discusses U.. S

F'reemasonry .. ' .

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Tra,.sfer Three \J Priests Requiem Continued from Page One . Mrs. Patrick Dalzell, was born .May 12, ,1919 in Roxbury. 'He attended St. Francis Xavier High School, Ishuld ,Creek, Mass., and St. Mary's Seminary, Techny', Ill. Father Dalzell served at St. Kilian's from July 8, 1955 until his present' appointment. Son of Mr. and Mrs. Clement E. Dufour, Father Dufour was born June 12, 1929. He attended Assumption College and St. John's Seminary, Brighton. Or­ dained Feb. I, 1958, his first assignment was to St. Michael's. Father Jussaume has served at Notre Dame, Fall River, and St. Theresa's. Born in New Bed­ ford Apr. 16, 1927, he is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph E. Jus­ saume. He completed his sem­ i'nary training, 'at St. Mary's Baltimore. , , ' ( ;. '\ ~~ ~

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Complete, Harmony CHICAGO (NC) - Religious training given children in Cath­ olic schools is ."in complete har­ mony with the American way' of life," Archbishop Albert G. Mey­ er of Chicago has declared.

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FIRST FEDE'RA,L

Unit Secretary

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ST. JEAN BAPTISTE, . '~FALL RIVER . ~'" - 1I'he annlial Christmas party , of ·the women's guild was' held "~t!lj"

Continued from Page One Burial was in Notr~ Dame Cemetery, Fall River. The Office of the Dead was chanted yesterday afternoon in the Sacred Heart Church, New Bedford. The canters were: first lesson, Rev. William E. Collard; second lesson, Rev. John J. Hayes; third lesson, th.e Most Reverend Bishop. The Priests' Choir was under the direction of Rev. James F. McDermott. Father Ross was born in Riviere Blanche, P . .Q., Canada, in 1890, the son of the late For­ tunat and the late Ezeline (pion) Ross. . He attended Assumption Col­ lege, Worcester, St. Mary's Sem.- -;::: inary, Baltimore, and Sulpician Seminary, Washington. Father Ross 'vas ordained on May 19, 1919, in St. Mary's Cathedral, Fall River, by Most Rev. Daniel F.· Feehan, Bishop of Fall River.. He served in parishes in Fall River, Taunton, No. Attleboro, and New Bedford

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<, By' Jack~ Kinu~avy . Somerset High School Coach The 'scholastic grid season 'of '58 is now history.-In retrospect it. was a good year. The achievements of South­ eastern Mass. teams' reflected creditably on the calibre' of ball played in this area. Somerset posted an 8~O-O record . under the guidance of Coach - ' Carlin Lynch to annex the the two great rivals, Holy Cross . '. . . and Boston College, meet in the C~ass D tItle, the fIrst In the annual Jesuit classic. The game hIstory of the school. Coyle, will be the first in the long series 6-1-1 on the season, retained the to be staged in Boston College's Bristol County c row n and new stadium. As late as a couple finished 5th in of weeks ago, it was felt that Class C rankthe winner would be a sure-fire ings. 'bowl candidate. However, Penn D u r fee State and Clemson rudely showed a comdispelled such notions on consecplete reversal utive Saturdays. of form from It may be inopportune to menits disastrous' tion the 1959 season at this point, '57 campaign but Coach Mike Holovak will which' brought undoubtedly have a few sleepless but a single vicnights after sitting in on the tory - to comArmy-Navy clash last week. The pile an excelEagles· play the Service schools lent 6-1-0 mark, placing 11th in on ~oiisecutive Saturi:l.ays at the' Class B. New Bedford, embark- outset. of, the '59 ca~Ilaign; and ing on a challenging independent if ,that isn't a large order., I.' schedule, finished off the season don't know what is. Mike was at an even .500 pace, winniRg very impressed with the play of four of eight games played. Oli- Navy halfback Joe Bellino, Win­ v~r Ames of North Easton, de- .chester's gift to the' Academy. i '.

fending D titlist, had another Also in action for the Middies CYO BAS "'-" gooi year on the gridiron to.rank "wa's Attieboro's Dick Pariseau. . KETBALL: First games of the season at 5th in, its class. , " . ,the Ke!lnedy Com~unity Center, New Bedf<;>rd, were' in­ Final Games Close' "Notes Moral Facter. aug~l~at~?o"bY, l~ft t? right, Ernest Charbonneau, captain of .,.

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BROOKLYN (NC) 'Nick Pietrosante of Notrel)ame University and Jim He~ly of Holy Cross College were se.. lected for top honors on the Cathoiic college'· All-American football team announced by a Catholic newspaper here. The team was chosen for the Tablet, Brooklyn diocesan week­ ly; by coaches of the nation's 24 major Catholic college football teams. Pietrosante was named the best college backfield man and Healy was voted lineman of the year. Dr. Eddie Anderson of Holy Cross College was chosen as coach of f'e year. Others selected for the team are: Monty Stickles, end, and AI Ecuyer, guard, Notre Dame Uni­ versity; Don Allard, back, and Cliff Poirier, center, Boston Col­ lege; Bruce Maher, back, and John Dingens, tackle, University of Detroit; Tom Greene, back, Holy Cross College; Gene O'Pel­ la, end, Villanova University, and Emil Karas, tackle, Univer­ sity of Dayton. '

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Praises Statement ATLANTA (NC) - A stare­ ment 'by Protestant ministe~ and Jewish rabbis recominend­ ing steps toward a solution: '.of the racial integration crisi h~i-e has been praised by the Ca.U!olie Bishop of Atl;Inta. .

\

. Judging from the scores of the In City Planning· \\\ St. ,Hyacl.~th,.refereeJoeBarck~tt, and Thomas Zych of'St. Thanksgiving Day games, the BALTIMORE (NC)..,.... The James.' ," . traditional rivalries must have problem of changing neighbor" produced a fair share of th'rillinghoods,'since it involves human five M. i.llion Pg!grims moments. In six of .the eight b' COME IN - SEE - and DRIVE em g s," canno t b e d'Ivorce d f rom 'fI"lIoos=t',Lou"'des ,Shr.one contests, the margin of victory religion and morality.". v. • was a touchdown or less. The . Gerilrd E. Sherry, managing LOURDES' (NC)-Nearly Jive exception to this closely con- editor of the Catholic Review million pilgrims,. including one tested pattern was the Somerset- Baltimore diocesan weekly. told who b~cal1)e the spiritual lead~r "The World's Most Beautifully Proportioned Cars" at I Case tilt which the Raiders took the Baltimore Metropolitan Of C!IrIstendom" came here thIS going away, 32-0. Oliver Ames Area Neighborhood Improve- ~ ?,ear to attend ceremonies mark­ had a two touchdown bulge ment Associations: mg the'100th anniversary of'the over Randolph, 18-6, in the only "Religious truth and moral Blessed Virgin's apparitions. other game which saw the vic- virtue must illumine our invesStatistics released by the tor leave the fiell with a com- tigation and inspire our efforts Lourdes centenary committee in­ fortable winning margin.. a~ solutions to the problem of dicate. that 25 cardinals, 809 FORD DEALERS FOR OVER 38 YEARS The Coyle-Taunton .final tally revamping our nation's cities." archbIshops aI?d 'bishops, and 1344-86 Purchase St. New Bedford, Mass., was almost an exact replica of He said, that· urban renewal thousands of prIests, led 4,900,000 the '57 affair in which the War- involves not only buildings but pilgrims to the Marian shrine riors had a 13-7 bulge. Again, human persons. ',The .religious si.nce the opening of the centen­ as in the previous year, Coach truth of the basic unity of the mal yea.r last February. . Burns' team came up with a human race must therefore .be .Prom~nent among these was fourth period score to edge their made operative in this delicqte HIS HolIness Pope John XXIII­ Rt. 6 at The intra-city rivals; thL time by a area he added ' at the time Angelo Cardinal Ron­ 14-6 count. At Alumni Field, Fall 1'A truth u~lived is a truth calli, Patriarch of Venic_who River, a capacity throng, estidenied," Mr. Sherry said, "and flew by special jet airliner from Where The mated at 10,000, saw thr Hill- unless we really live this truth Rome on March 23 to inaugurate topppers come to life in the ,sec- of the unity of the human family, . the n~w underground Basilica of Entire Family Can DIne ond half to upstage the Crimson we are denying it' and' we should St. PlUS X . . . of New Bedford, 18-12.' logically' look to some' Hitler Another vIsItor of note was His EconomIcally In Attleboro, another fourth type of demagogue for guidance Eminence Eugene Cardinal Tis­ period counter gave Coach Bill and thus at least escape our serant, Dea~ of the Sacred Col­ Mad~lfu,n's Jeweler eleven a 6-0 hYPOCriSY.".. :\\ lege of Cardll1als, who came here win, ver rival North in a game' \~, on September 15 as Papal Legate that s.•• '-sawed betwee.n 30 yard. Deli'llw. ~Use of Mails . to the Marian-Mariological Con­ lines. own Wareham way, an Y ') . Ie gress held as part of the centen­ For Reservations underdog Bourne squad threw a Pe\ddlers nial celebrations. Phone OS 5-7185 man-sized:'::scare into the homeWASHINGTON (NC) - Two

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CARDINAL/PRAISES LATIN AMERICANS: Five-year old Eduardo, ;left, son of Nica~aguan Ambassador Don Guillermo Servilla-Sacasa pre­ sents a bouquet of roses to Amleto Cardinal Cicognani after the 49th annual IPali American Thanksgiving Day ma~s in the nation's capital. Chief Justice and Mrs. Earl Warren and Secretary of State and Mrs. John IFoster Dulles, right, were among the top diplomatic and government

. .~Schoo·1 Growth.

~Iection

officials at the pontifical mass. The Cardinal Iauaed the Latin American nations forgiving a good example to the world: The new Cardinal ieaves next week for Rome t9· attend the approaching consistory at which he will be invested along with Richard Cardinal Cushing of Boston and john. Cardinal O'J:Iara of Philadelphia. They are among 23 named to the' Sacred College, increasing the. Church .Senate to 75 for'the.first time in400ye·ars•. .

.

of Catholic President Alarms Baptists

. ~:RMINGHAM (NC) - The, \~ " ~ . ~on~inued. f!,~Jfi Page One Alabama State' Baptist Conven­ .the solId a.chievement of Amer­ ican Cath'olicism during the last tion has expressed alarm over the possibility' of the election 'Cen~ury/ he said. "It has been as president of the United States a. new creation." 'of· a man "whose religion Lacks· Parallel teaches that his church should Despite diverse national back­ .. be supported by the state.". . grou·nds and lack of assistance The convention said that such from the state, U. S. Cathohcs in a situation 'would violate the. this century have produced the doctrine of separation of Church educational machinery to. oring and State which it espouses. It their children· from kindergarten said the matter is of "serious through grade and. high school religious concern" and urged to college and university, he ob­ that it be given' attention by served. This accomplishment has no parallel in history, he said. At the same time, he warned that the "Catholic' intellectuals' --.,;- task" still has great "magnitude." That task, he said, is the harness­ GARRISON (NC)-The one-' ing of American Catholicism's week Chair of Unity Octave, educational system· to the pro­ 'starting Jan. 18, is founded on duction of a genuine American devotion to the papacy. Catholic c'ulture. _ Father Titus Cranny, S:A., of A sign that. such a culture is the Franciscan Friars of the· already being produced, he said, Atonement, recalls Father Paul is the distinctively American. Francis Watson, founder of the Catholic church architecture be-. Society of the Atonement and of ginning to dot the landscape.. the octave, was sometimes criti­ Cultura:I Secularism cizedby. non-Catholics for, what Prof. Dawson declined to p.re.­ they called "the papal basis" of the movement. ' dic: what the future of Amer.iC:m Catholicism should be,' but, re­ But he declared that "no reli"': gious unity is possible apart from marked that it shouldb"e hemi­ spheric rather than nationalistic, the Chair of Peter, which is the in scope, including the French syp,lbol and expression of the and English Catholics of Canada threefold unity of the Church­ as well as the Spanish and Por­ oneness of faith, of worship and tuguese of South America. of government." . Chief obstacle to healthy de­ "When we use the term Chair velopment of Catholic culture in of Un'ity," Father Cranny said,' America, I'rof. Dawson'said, lies "we mean to emphasize the pri­ macy and the infallibility of the ~ mainly in cultural secularism, Holy 'Father, for in him Christ ~hich he described as a graver threat to the Church than .rules .His Church, and through communism. him He guides the faithful to­ Ignore Tensions ward eternal life." . Principal defense against this "The faithful should consider threat would be not political, but the Chair of Unity Octave as a cultural, he predicted-particu­ worldwide spiritual crusade for 1arly through the proper use of the reunion of all men in the the Catholic educational ·system. one Church,'; he said.· , Speaking of Protestant-Catho­ lic tensions, he remarked that Haoti "the time has come to leave them WOll'k of Massnoll'fts behind," and added that they UNITED NATIONS (NC) seem to be already "in the grave." . Haiti's Ambassador to the United Nations, Max ·H. Dorsinville, is a career diplomat - with a first­ Religiou~ hand knowledge of Africa. Continued from Page One Mr. Dorsihville has the high­ habit, already reflecting the ) est regard for the work of reli­ .1 modern trend" will not be gious missions. He has made it· j l " changed. It is a dacron wool a point, wpen iI1 an African ter~ I mixture, made in two weights, ritory, to visit as many missions heavy for Winter wear, and light as possible in order to show his for Summer. interest. . _. The Sisters' coats, formerly I?" . Ii r5l fO)'lU ~ belted, will be loose fitting and 160[}l>Y «l>1f lI'\.(Q]ll'e· lQ)OIOlUe~ feature raglan sleeves. Tailored lFCll./llTild.oll'ft AIl'(/'jJelTiltl'DITil(!D . in style, they are the same black :IIA as the dress and hat. BUENOS ~mES. ~NC)Fifteen Missionary Servants copy of the flrst edibon of one of the world's rarest books, the stationed in the Fall River Di­ ocese are affected by the changes Ferrara Bible, has turned up in a second-hand bookshop ·here. and will be wearing the new Experts examined the volume habits within a few weeks. Will and declared it to be a genuine <:l: people notice the difference? copy of an edition' of the Bible "No," says 'one of the Sisters. "When people look at us, all printed in Ferrara, Italy, in 1553. Previously, only .five they see is black!" She could be wrong. copies had .been·known to exist.

Chaa", of Unity ~\ Octave, Jan. ·18.

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'. in national polttical. . contained in the report of the. leadership." I c o,'n v en t ion's Commission· Th~ express.ion of alarm wason Christian Life. The original report. specifically referred to the possibility that a Catholic . might be elected president. The reference to Catholicism was deleted in the· version of the . VATICAN CITY (NC) -His Holiness Pope .John XXIII" repo~t adopted by the convention. ~~\ praised .the Primate of Poland here, saying that his past suf.:­ ferings have won him.- a ."title of honor and glory in the eyes of his people and of the whole Church of God." ST. CATHARINES (NC) His Eminence Stefan Cardinal Some 300 priests and laymen at­ Wyszynski and a party of Polish tended ceremonies here in which laymen and priests were re­ the Most Rev. Thomas .J. McCar­ ceived here by the Pope in a thy has been enthroned as 'the special audience. first Bishop of the newly created The Pope thanked the Cardinal Diocese of St. .Catharines here for his promise,. made shortly in Ontario, Canada. after the' Pope's election, that Bishop McCarthy comes to his Mass would be offered daily at new See from Nelson, B. C., the Polish Shrine of Our Lady where he was named bishop in. of Czest· 'lOwa "for 0\11' inten­ 1955. Born at Goderich, Ont., he tions, which are for the salva­ .was ordained in 1929. He was tion, peace. and,prosperity of. all vice rector of St. Peter's Semin­ nations." ary in London, Ont., before The Pontiff' also paid homage going to Nelson. to the Madonna of Jasna Gora. He said he is donating a' mon- . strance to the shrine with "filial devotion" and added ,that he' hoped it would stand "as a'sym­ bol of the constant spiritual presence of the Pope in ,.your midst." \"''''\

Pontiff Pro ises Polish Cardinal'

Enthrone Ordinary At; St. Catharines

Three French Priests Recording Artists PARIS (NC) - France now has three singing priests, all of them phonograph recording art­ ists whose records have quickly become popular. They are Jes·uit Father Aime Duval, the first to become known throughout Eu­ rope; a Dominican priest, whose professional name is Father Co­ cagnac, and now. a new one, Franciscan Father Bernard de Brienne.

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Continued from Page One.

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