High School Fund
Passes Minimum
Goal By $100,000
The ANCHOR An Anchor of the Soul, S1tre amd Firm-ST.
Fall River, Mass.
Vol. 1, No. 35
PAUL
Thursday, Dec. 5, 1957 Second Closs Moil Privilegee Authorized ot Foil River, Moss.
The $1,500,000 goal of the· Catholic Memorial High School building fund campaign was over subscribed when the latest total reported by the volunteer solicitors reached $1,600,000. Nearly 1,400
PRICE lOe $4.00 per Year
Pope Pius Says Firm 'No' Only Answer for Reds
RELIGIOUS STAMP: Re ligious freedom in America VATICAN CITY (NC) and the 300th anniversary of the Flushing Remonstrance Liberty can be retained in will be' commemorated Dec. free Europe and regained in 27 with issuance of a new the Red satellites only' if postage stamp, The stamp statesmen give a decisive "no" to the powers threatening free'will have a Bible for its cen dom. . '. tral subject; signifying ever Pope Pius XII mad~ this state lasting truth; a hat, symboli~ ' ment·to President Theodor Heuss of the people and the times, of Germany during his official and a quill, ,the mark of state visit to the Holy See. Spiritual Need man'·s, determination to The Holy Father also warned speak the truth through the that European freedom and cul written word. 'NC Photo. ture can only be preserved by
Dogma Declares Mary Conceived Without Sin By Rev. John P. Cronin
St. Patrick's Parish
Fall River
Satan' had been victorious over Eve in the ,Garden of Eden, yet hardly had the first sin been committed by FIRST CHRISTMAS HOME IN 14 YEARS: Rev. John Breen, M.M" of Fall River, (left) is welcomed upon his arrival in the See City by Rev. Raymond T. Considine, Diocesan Director of the Propagation of the Faith Society. Father Considine has a brother who is also a Maryknoller.
,Maryknoller Home on Visit From Guatemalan Mission By Patricia McGowan Father Breen looked thoughtfully at our chubby little girl, who was industriously filling his lap with every doll and stuffed animal in her extensive collection. "If she were one of my Indian babies in Guatemala," he said, "she'd be pitifully thin-except for her takes two days by horse to reach stomach. That would be the nearest road usable by a swollen and worm-infested. jeep. Father John Breen of Mary And malnutrition would have
given her a yellowish complex . knoll, son of Mr. and Mrs. Mi ion instead of those rosy cheeks." chael Breen, 71 Renwood Street, We shuddered. Never had we 'Fall River, and a graduate of heard the problems of a mission the 1941 class of Durfee High ary translated into such concrete School, has been a missionary terms. Yet here in our living to Guatemala for six and a half years, nearly all of that time room, in a city enjoying all the spent alone, in the- starting of eomforts of the twentieth cen tury, sat a priest who only days new parishes in various 'parts of before had been alone in a parish the department of ·Huehueten ango, an ,area corresponding to a of 14,000 souls in the interior of Turn to Page Nine Guatemala, country so wild it
Debt-free Church Greatest Joy of Jubilaria-n Pasto'r Growing old is not easy. Growing old in, the priesthood is not an easy thing either. As a priest approaches his fiftieth anniversary in the priesthood; he feels 'a sense of uselessness, a feeling of being ill the way and of not being wanted, Gone are his days of an
active,priesthood, tho~e days
of preaching, catechetical
elasses, visits to the-sick, 'of of
fice work. All this is now of. the
past. There are but two things
left for him, the Mass and his
br.eviary. ,
Yet is this not the most impor
tant .reaso~ of his priesthood?
"For every high priest," accord
ing to the epistle of the Hebrews,
"taken from among men is or
dained for men in the things
that appertain to God, that he
may offer up gifts and sacrifices
for sins." ,
so, regardless of age or activ
ity, as long as he offers the Sac
rifice of the Mass, the reason and
being of his priesthood are there
with all its meaning. So it is
Turn to Page Twent7
REV. ADRIEN A. GAUTHIER
man when God promised ulti mate victory of the woman and her offspring over the. would-be conqueror. To Satan He de clared: "I will put enmity be tween you and the woman, be tween your seed and her seed; He shall crush your head, and . you shall lie in wait for his heel." It was the offspring of Mary, Jesus Christ, God and Man, Who fulfilled .this prophecy, freeing Trun to Page Ten
Power of Youth
For ,Good Shown
At Convention
By Rev. Leo T. Sullivan
Diocesan Director
Catholic Youth Organization
"Self - disciplined Youth: America's Strength" was the theme of the~National Cath olic Youth Convention held in Philadelphia last week. There was recognition of the wave of juvenile delinquency in the Uni ted States. There always is where youth is concerned. The emphasis· of, the convention, however, was on the~sitive side. It was, concernea chiefly with the good that youth c:onti-i butes to the Country and to its own Community. The strength of self-disciplined youth was Turn to. Page Ten '
R~veal 'Buildirtg·
Progra~~ P~an At Sto~.~":il,1
.
: The' Survey Committee of Stonehill College Development Fund . today announced the sources' from which. it will s<t~k the $5,000,000 necessary for con struction and furnishing of, sev eral buildings needed' at the College, Rev, ThOmas C. Duffy, C.S.S.~ ~director .of development, is now surveying 'community at titudes. . The survey committee broke down the development goal of $5,000,000 this way. It will seek corporate gifts in the amount of $1,500,000; memorial tributes, $1,500,000; foundations, $1,000, community campaigns, 000; $400,000; Easton campaign, $100, clubs, societies, labor 000; groups, $50,000;,Stonehill alumni, parents, faculty and'staff, $32li.,' 000. ' . , , Turn, to Page Twenty . ;
Continued onPage Twenty
Vigil Obligations Saturday, December 7, the vigil of ~he feast of the Immac ulate Conception, is a day of fast and abstinence. Catholics over 7 years of 'age may not eat meat on that day. Those betwe~n the ages of 21 and 59 are further restricted to but one full meal and no eating between meals. While'the Mass of .the Immac ulate Conception is to be offered on Monday, Dec. 9, there is no obligation tQ attend Mass on Monday.
men filled St. Joseph's hall to make their reports, and cheered as the $10,310 turned in by t~e host parish pushed the campaign over the goal. Most Rev. James L. Connolly, Bishop of Fall River, thanked the men for the sacrifice of their time and means, and for the ex cellent example they have given not only to others in greater New Bedford, but throughout the entire diocese. His Excel lency announced that when the new high school is ready for oce\lpancy in September of 1959, 500 children, comprising the freshman and sophomore classes, will be in attendance. Four more parishes exceeded their minimum goals at the meeting They are: St. John the Baptist, Sacred Heart, Our Lady of Purgatory, and St. Mary (South Dartmouth). Compli menting these parishes and urg ing all to continue their hard work for the final week of the campaign .were Rev. Hugh A. Gallagher, moderator, general chairman, ,Arthur' F. Buckley, M.D., and memorial gifts chair man, Joseph P. Duchaine. Fa ther Gallagher announced that all 30 parish committees met for the final time last night in St. Joseph's hall. . Mitchell '8. Janiak and John C. DeMello have announced that the friends and business com Turn to Page Two '
Bishop'5 Statement Our New Bedford Reg'ional High School Build ing Fund Campaign is p1'oving successful. We have . exceeded the minim1£m goal. We a1'e hea1'tened by the evidence of inC1'eased sympathy and S~£1)port that will, please God, assure us of a debt-f1'ee school. For myself and f01' the whole Diocese I write a c01'dial word of thanks to all, cZe1'gy and laity, who have so admirably shoulde1'ed the' B,ishop's burden, They have p1'oven beyond shadow of doubt their dete1'mina.tion to p1'ovide the best they can for OU1' Catholic boys and gi1'ls., May Our L01'd and Our Lady rewa1'd them for their g1'eat zeal and their spirit of sac1'ifice. May their splendid example be not alone praised, but imitated. MM'e and mM'e, it seems that the needs of the, . future are to be resolved by the st1'ength of our High Schools, Technologists tell us that any P1'O gramme for scientific advancement is only as good as the foundation laid in our seconda1'y schools, Not man?! rockets will be built of rock and roll. It would be fooli,~h to expect great things of young men and women who have neither enthusiasm nor the will to try. . If we a1'e to have a better tomM'row, we must have means to make it so. And these a1'e chiefly matte1'S of, moral and spiritual value. The·generous d1'eam's,the impulse to get the most out of life, must find expression in more than self-g1'q,tifica . tion, The will· to succeed must, not .be· limited to tlroughtsof pl31'sorial appea1'ance and material gain. There has been too much of th:at al1'eady, And men rich in everything but what' might :make them better d1',e at ci, loss what to dQ in times" of c1'isis such as ?ill;' face .today. : : " '.. Our young people;: on the High School level are (Lt (t tU1'ning point in life, The choices they make, for better :or worse, will affect not alone themselv.es, 'b1ti,'the future of the commun~ty and the natwn, We cannot be too conscientious in pro viding them' 'U{ith every assurance of making (t right choice. We must not fail to give them balance, ,pe1'spective, a sense of values, and a sense of service that will give us better men and women for a better day.. These m'e among the reasons why we wish to make Faith function in the course of education. This is why we attach such great imp01'tance to our Regional High School Prog1'amme. This is why we feel so deep a sense of gratitude to those who have done so ·well in the Greater New Bedford area.
\
School Ca~paign
Legion of MarY Holds Reunion
Continued from Page One mitt~es which have been' organ ized under their direction, have
Active members of the Legion of Mary, Fall. River Diocese solidtation of friends and busi Curia, their families and friends ness es.tablishments in the area. held their fou'rth annual general Results of this solicitation were reunion at St. Mathieu's Church included last night. hall Sunday. ,
Individual parish totals to date The program opened
with· Legion, of Mary are: prayers' and rosary fol . St.· Anne $ 33,564 lowed by a short talk 84,644 St. John the Baptist given by Rev" Fr. Ed 51,118 ·Immaculate Conception wai'd Oliveira, Diocesan St. Mary (New Bedford) 50,12'7 Moderator of the Legion 52,812 Mt, Carmel of Mary. 40,412 Sacred Heart James E. Lenaghan, 63,566 St. Anthony of Padua president of the Cur;ia was mas25,5]6 St. Francis Xavier . ter of ceremonies for the follow 22,314 St. Hyacinth ing acts presented by the mem 129,918 St. Joseph (N. B.) bers of the various praesidia in 33,]30 St. Kilian the diocese. 60,003 St. Mary (So. Dart.) 29,263 St. Patrick "Supplication of a Legionary 45,952 St. Theresa to 'Our Lady of Lourdes", with 92,763 Holy Name musical backgr;.ound: Our Lady Our Lady of
of Lourdes Praesidium, Notre , Perpetual Help 26,213 Dame parish, Fall River.
4,853 "Comedy Skit" Albert· ClcVICTORY SMILES: Regional High School campaign leaders express gratification Assumption 13,648 St. Francis of Assisi ment, narrator; Our Lady of the " . . ' Rosary praesidium, St. Anne's when minimum goal is oversubscribed by $100,000. Left to right, Joseph Duchaine, St. George 49,278 parish, Fall River. memorial gifts chairman; Bishop Connolly; .Very Rev. Hugh A~ Gallagher, campaign St. Casimir 5,168 '5,440 St. Boniface '''Sending Johnny off to school" director; Dr. J\rthur Buckley~ 'g~neral chairman. Holy Rosary 11,395 monologue by Gabrielle Lajoie; fI . Oiu' Lady of Purgatory 15,071 Queen of the World praesidium; 10,018 St. Hedwig St. Anne's parish, Fall River. _ . FRIDAY -St. Nicholas, Bishop 170,836 St. James and Confessor. Double. White, St. Joseph (F. H.) "Pantomine" Our Lady Refuge 67,166 of Sinners praesidium, Espirito MasS Proper; Gloria; Seeond 48,526 Santo parish, Fall River. BOSTON (NC)~A contestant to tbe same family as blood , Collect of the Sunday, Third St. Anthony (Matt.) 204,381 St. Lawrence brothers." "Steel Guitar selections" Ed- on a recent "The $64,000' Ques , Collect for Rain; Common Pre 7,8'76 St. Mary (F. H.) Meantime, in New York City, mund 'Landos, Morning Star tion" television program showed face. First Friday. 9,042 Sacred Hearts where the program originates, praesidium; Taunton. ' his knowledge of Sacred Scrip Votive Mass in honor" of the General Fund 118,895 , ." "You are there at the first ture, but a question asked of Steve Carlin"eJ{ecutive producer, Sac~d Heart of Jesus per of Enterprise Production, Inc., Christmas" Skit by'Our Lady of him was based on false mitted. Tomorrow is the First POLl'>al 'the Angels junior praesidium; St. premise, accordiRg to a Catholic which produces the show, said Saturday of the month. it was thought that the question Mary's parish, Taunton. .: Biblical scholar. . CASTELGANDOLFO, Italy SATURDAY St. Ambrose, "Casey at the ~at". Our Lady Adepoju Aderonmu, a 30-year · was ."perfectly normal." (NC) - His Holiness Pope Pius . Bishop, Confessor and Doctor Word Proves Nothing Comforter Of the Afflicted prae- old Nigerian studying medicine XII received anestimat~ 450, of the Church. Double. White. sidium, St. Mary's parish, Taun- at the University of Chicago, . The producers "never took in 000 persons in general and spe
. Mass Proper; Gloria; Second to . account" the fact that the ton. .. ' w'as asked a question 'ori the Nov. cial audiences during hii' five Collect of the Sunday; Third , . "Musical Selections", Grace 26 program about Christ's "bro ,question might· have several in month stay at his summer resi Collect for Rain; Creed; Com terpretations, he saId. He added Parenteau, with Fr. Lebrun at thers." dence here.' , mon Preface. the piano. Queen of All Saints One of five questions Mr. that the query was prepared by SUNDAY - Second Sunday of praesidium, St. Mathieu parish, Aderonmu' answered to win Dr. Bergan Evans, professor of Advent. Double of I' Class. Fall River. . .$64,000 'was: "Jesus grew. up in English at Northwestern. Uni versity, who prepares all the Violet,. Mass Proper; No Glo "The Four Joy's", Comedy a family of five brothers, includ ria; Creed, Preface of Trinity.
singing act, Cause of Our Joy ing himself, identified in the show's ,questions. Many Catholic reference vol 'Masses of the' Feast of the IJ:ll
praesidium, Our Lady of Lourdes 13th chapter of St.. Matthew and maculate Conception of the
'parish, Taunton. the 6th chapter of. St. Mark. umes deal with the question of Blessed Virgin Mary may be
"Art Demonstration", Edmund .Name all four of Jesus' bro · Christ's "brothers." One pub-. lished by the Paulist Press and said on this day.. .
St. Laurent, Queen of All Saints thers." entitled "The Miniature Ques MONDAY-Immaculate Concep
praesidium, St. Mathieu's parish, Mr. Ad e ron m u _ans~ered: tion Box"_has this .to say: tion of .the'. Blessed Virgin.
Fall River. "James, Joseph, Simon and JuMary. Double of I' Class.
"The, word 'brother' in itself "Musical Selections", Alice das." _ The Baptist minister, the White. Mass as on December 8
Brotherson, Our Lady of Purga- Rev. Dr. George Carpenter, who " proves nothing, for it had a very in the Missal; Gloria; Second
tory " praesidi!-1 m , St.. " James converted the Nigerian 'at the ,wide meaning among, the. Jews. ,pa,isl), New Bedford. f 0 . h . .Collect of the Sunday; Creed;
,'It ,is'-lsed in the Old Testllment After the recitation of the age 0 1 was Wit hIm 'as- a Preface pf Blessed Virgin.:.
. "counselor" when' he' answered , ~or relatives in general, nephews, concluding Legion prayers and the question. . , ". . ,c;listilpt cousins and ,first cousins. TUESDAY -,Mass of previous
the' biessing of all the Spiritual '. ,'Besid~s; there was no word Sunday. Simple. Violet., Mass·.
Dir~~tors pr~se!1t" refreshments Msgt. Matthew' P:' 'St'apiet-;'n, in' Hebrew 'or .Aramaic for cous Proper; No Gloria or Creed; wer,e: . ser'ied and community professor of Sacred Scripture at )n, .so·. that' the .Old Testament . ,. ~~cond Col1~ct;St. M,eJchia~es, singing led by Fr. Lebrun was '. s1:. John's Seminary here and a 'writers were forced 'to .use the ~ope and Martyr; Third Col enj6ye.d by the gathering. ' former. president of the Catho ". word 'brother' to describe differ lect for Rain; 'Common Pre lic Biblical·Association of Amer · ent degrees' ot kindred." '. face. ,~··S' e,O.RnO' ica, eiptessek admirati~n'for Mr. , , It adds that, in' the' Aramaic ' WEDNESDAY-Mass' of the pre- l , U II Aderonmu's .knowledge of .the tongue,' cousins and other rela vious Sunday. Simple.' Violet. ~glish..!e;(f .of th,e.Bible. '. 'Uves' "muSt" needs be called" Mass Proper; No Gloria" or
_.. . •. .' -" But Msgr. Stapleton said -'in · br~thren:·· .
Creed;' . SeGond.. Collect St. . . :eishop ,Connolly ci:mfer~ an interview that the question Darmisus, 'Pope and Corifessor; major an'd minor orders in St. was' based '0'11 a misinterpreta '':I'hird 'ColleCt for Rain; C()m Mary's 'Cathedral Saturday tion. ' DAVENPORT(NC) ....,... Since . Jhon Preface. '. morning oil' three groups' of stu"When the'word~ "brother'''or THURSDAY-Mass' of ,previous· its. organization in 194~, the St, dents' from LaSalette Semmary 'sister' occur in the Bible, th'ey ,Ambrose College Placement Sunday. simple, Violet. Mass in Attleboro." are not always to be taken. in Bureau' has found over' 7,000 Prop~r; No Gloria or Creed; Receiving the major order of the sense in which they are part-~ime jobs for students and. .SecQnd Collect for Rain; Third subdiaconate were Rev. Mr. Rob- popularly: used today," he said. nearly 400 full-time pc)sitions for Collect' for Peace; Common ert Campbell, Rev. Mr. Guy Ger ,graduates.. Pref~c~.. . 0 vais Rev. Mr. Armand Giroux . Catholic Teaching
and 'Rev. Mr.~aymond Hubert. ~ "The faCt is that, as the Gatho . First tonsure and the first two . lie Church has always tati~t, ,
minor. orders of porter and lector" Our LQrd, had· no brothers or,
were conferred by the Bishop' sisters.' Mary, His 'mother, re-'
ma.ined a virgin." _ on Albert Bard, Rene Bisaillon, . , / Edmond Bourque, Danile Cha,., ' It'c-ah be noted, 'he added, that.
rette, Adrien Francouer and' "never do'-we find reference in,
. Joi,,' Roger Mqquin.: the New 'TeStament to children:
.. BishopConrloly confe'rred sec~ .; of the .Blessed Virgin, ej{cePt,"of( " " course', Out Lord, n'or' 'to chilond minor orders of exorcist and .- d f aCC)lyte on Gera,ld Baril, Richard :'; ren 0, S~... Joseph." ..
Delisle,. 'Alphonse ;.•Larochelle "The moth~r.. of James and
Enjoy a wonderful, worry Laurier Morin,. Ma~Hce 'prol.i~ Joseph," ' he. continued, "was. a·
and ,Reai Ri<;h:lr~.. ·. certain Mary,' 'who- \vas "related . free, carefree Christmas feel'': I=;';;"=::::;:=::::::::=~:::==:::=' to Our' Lady, and who is di!s .ing. Join Santa's own Christ , ,. . .", ':>,':. :'.' ' cribed . iii John' 19:25 as 'M'ary ,mas Club now at THE O.LP .FORTYHOURS of Cleophas,' ,mos~ ·.probably, . :~ ther,efore, wife .of Cleopnas. ' RED·B~K and spre"!d more cbe~ next year;
·~'·"",.:bEVC)TIO~>. "SO~~ sc4~1;;~ th~k 'that thi~':' , . :. ... .. "':' ...... ", Cleophas.. ~is the same"'as' Alphells~ :.
. Dec~~.~~t; ~n~o?y~f'lPadua, . who is referred' to in Matthew
. . .,- . Fall River . ..10:3· as, the' f-ather of James.';
St:'Mary. Fairhaven', Aet~lly, we, do- D9t know.',
';; Dec. 15-;-Qur Lady of HealU1,' whether ,tnese.:four, James. Jo- " ,>" .. ' HOLY CROSS'HALL'
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Bishop Attends Official Opening The dawn of Monday, Dec. 2, brought a joyful event for the children of St. Michael's School, , Fall River, on the occasion of the .official opening of the new paro chial school with individual classroom blessings bestowed by Most'Rev. James L. Cont10llY. Attending mass at 8:30 which waS. celebrated by the 'pastor, .Rev'. Arthur C. dos Reis, the stu dent body of approximately 400 pupils marched from the church to the school to the accompan of the Gregorian Chant and met in the corridor before a Statue of Our Lady of Fatima, where a decade of the Rosary was recited in thanksgiving. St. Michael's Parochial School, founded by the late Pastor Rt. Rev. Msgr. John F. Ferraz, started with three grades in 1931, when the Fulton Street School was purchased from the City of Fall River. With the school pro gressing from year to year and in ol'der to accommodate the class enrollment for higher grades a second 'building known 8S t.he Lindsey Street School was taken over in 1934 by Monsignor Ferraz from the municipal gov ernment. Both buildings were used for the past 25 years The new red brick structure, modern in every sense of the word, provides classrooms for pre-primary and eight grades. . Sister Jane Chantal, S.U.S.C., heads the faculty staff as princi pal. .
THE ANCHOR Thurs., Dec. 5,. 1957
I
3
Sister Retegyes First Donat~on Diaper washing will be less of a problem in Dschang from now on if an Anchor reader in New Bedford has
anytl).ing to say about it. The anonymous Ne~ Bedfordite read in last week's Anchor of 'Sister Helen William, S.U.S.C" and the 200 African orphans for whom she cares. Almost 100 of the orphans are babies in diapers and the article mentioned that the Sisters had no washing ma chine to handle their enormous laundry. "This is to help towards the washing machine," said the note . received by Sister Helen William the day after Thanksgiving at St. Helena's Convent, Rock St., Fall River. Enclosed was a crisp new $20 bill. The Sisters at St. .Helena's deduce from the flow ered stationery used that the un known sender of the money is a woman, but they have no other clue to her identity. However, , Photo by Calvey of Tannton lack of that knowledge will be . ~IC:HTING THE ADVENT WREATH IN A'TAUNTON HOME: Wreaths were no bar to their grateful prayers lIghted In many hom~s of the diocese in a spiritual preparation for Christmas. Mrs: Hugli . in her behalf. The 'Fall River Mission Club Mayher and ~~r famIly of 5 Benefit St., Taunton,gather around their own wreath. First is another group that was im row, left .to right: Kevin, Mrs. Mayher and Virginia. Second row, left to right: Hugh, pressed by' Sister's account of mission life in Mrica. She will Ann LOUIse and Mary Frances. Mr. Mayher was working when this photo was made. be interviewed for the club's Sunday night program on WS Paralysis Strikes AR. Fall River" and the tape recorded interview with her will .Bishop1s Accuser . . be aired in the near future. PRATO, Italy (NC) Mauro Sisters of Mercy
St. Patrick's Parish, Wareham, ment founded by the late Rev. Bellandi, a young communist O'ne Millionth was host to 250 members. and Thomas Augustine .. Judge, Plan New School
worker whose recent civil mar ALBANY, (NC) - The one friends of the Missionary Cen M,S.SS.T" conducted along quiet ALBANY (NC)-A secretarial riage to a Catholic girl led to millionth free rosary distributed high school will be constructed acle Apostolate at the 10th New and spiritual lines that good may a libel suit against Bishop Pietro by the Family Rosary Crusade, be done for the Church and for here next year by the Sisters of England regional l')1eeting of the Firodelli of Prato, has been founded and directed by Father souls. Mercy to prepare young women organizaJion. stricken with paralysis of the' Patrick Peyton, C.S.C., has left Missionary reports were given The general pUrpose of the face. for all types of secretarial work. headquarters in a shipme~t to. by associates Ifrom Hyannis and Missionary Cenacle Apostolate Mother Mary Borromeo, supe The incident has attracted na Vel Freris, editor of the Catholic Dedham, who summed up yearly is to give honor and glory to the rior of the Sisters of Mercy in tionwide attention because Bel newspaper in Athens, Greece. the Albany diocese, said the new' reclamation work and preventive Triune God: first, in the sanc-· landi. was stricken after taking It was a request for 50,000 activities following the address tification of the associates by; the Bishop to court for publicly rosaries by Mr. Freris, a Catholic building will be'a modern, one means of the practice~ and devo sto'ry brick and glass structure. of welcome by Rev. John, A. journalist, eleven years ago, denouncing his civil marriage. pastor. Laurel tions of the Missionary Cenacle, It will have 10 classrooms, a .Chippendale, which prompted Father Peyton o In a letter to the girl's parish, and secondly, that the ardent library, science laboratory, study Cooper of Attleboro presided. to establish the rosary distribu the Bishop named Bellandi and Dr. Margaret Healey, general Catholicity so cultivated will hall and offices. tion' program for the missions. his wife and condemned civil manife~t itself in an intensely Later a cafeteria, auditorium, custodian, reported on the Cath marriages of Catholics as "pub olic Action <;onference held re apostolic spirit. gymnasium, music and art rooms lic concubinage," "scandal" and The special purpose of the "sin." will be added to the structure. cently in Rome. Members' were . urged by Father Edward, Missionary Cenacle Apostolate is It is hoped that the Mercy Secre Suit was brought against "What is anli man tarial high school will be ready .M.S.SS.T., to heed the}>lea' .of the Preservation of the Faith to Bishop Fiordelli and in a pre living bllt a for 'the September, 1958, school the Holy Father ·to· be fa:ithful be effected under the direction of trial proceeding the judge de and zealolls Catholics Actionists. the Missionary Servants of the . breath that year. clared that the charge would Most Holy' and Most Blessed The school will have a curri-' '. The Mission.ary Cenacle ·Apos . pas8es?" have to be carried into court. Tr.inity in conjunction with their eulum designed to ,prepare girls tolat~ 'is a lay missionary move Ps. 38: e apostolic activities.. on the secondary education level for clerical office work and for Je..omeKerwin Heads' . The Missionary Serva'nts of the Most Blessed Trinity have specialized stenography in med five missions in the Fall Ri~er ical, legal, executive, and junior Religious .Association JEWelED CROSS COMPAN'r court reporting careers. CHICAGO (NC) - Jerome Diocese: Holy' Ghost Parish in ...0 ",rrlUOIO. "'ASS.. Aim of the new school, which Kerwin, University of Chicago Attleboro; Holy Name in Fall "'ANUfACruIUS Of CRUCIFIXES 'NO ARTICLES'" DEVOTION will be brougQt under' the. Re political. science professor has Riyer; ~t.Patrh:k's, Wareham;, gents o{ the State of New York, . been. elected' president of the 'Our Lady. of ,the Assumption is to give complete secretarial Religious Education ·Associatio·n. Osterville, and St. Franci~ training and thereby eliminate· He succeeds George N; Shizster, Xavier, ·Hyannis. ~ 273 CENTRAL AVE. ~ : Tuning, Repairing ~ Young men Qr women wishing, an additional two years matricu president of Hunter· College, _ ' & Rebuilding _ lation at business colleges. NEW BEDFORD 'New York. Both are Catholic to devote 'part of their' leisure time to .the Lay Apostolic work . Program t.o Train . .laymen. WY·2"6216 : : 'CLASSIC ORGAN ~ Rev. Dr. F. Ernest Johnson of in the' Church ca'n assist in any : of these parishes. . the Protestant National Council _. . Social Workers
NEW YORK (NC)-Fordham of Churches was elected a vice : Designers & Builders : University's School of Social president to represent Protes CORREIA SONS of , _ tants; Father. Thurston Davis, Service has inaugurated a pro o S.J., editor of America maga.,. : : PIPE ORc;ANS gram to alleviate the shortage NO J.OB TOO BIG . ONE 'STOP of social workers in areas lack-. zine; was made a vice-president NONE TOO SMALL to (epr,esent Catholics and Rabbi : P. O. Box 347 New Bedford: SHOPPING, CENTER ing social service schools. '0 James W. Fogarty,. deim of the Joseph LOQkstein of Congrega : WYman 3-8683 : .t ion Kehilath Jeshurun, New • Television .•' Furniture school, announced that the pro York, was nam~d· a vice-presi gram calls for students living • Appliances • Grocery dent representing Jews... within 200 miles of New York, to 104 Allen St.• New Bedford attend classes at Fordham's mid WYman '7-9354 town Manhattan campus two Barre and Family Service in Main Office and Plant days each week and to spend the Lackawanna Cou'nty, Scr:anton. LOWELL, MASS. remaining time doing field work A modification of this plan h~is in their home towns and cities. been formulated for the Albany Till_hone Lowell ST. JUDE NOVENA
Mr. Fogarty explained that the . Troy 'area and.will be introduced .. EVER:Y THURSDAY'. AT
GL 8-6333 and GL 7-7500 program is now in effe'ct in, the ,next September. This plan' ~ill ' 110 A.M. - 12:10 P.M. - 5:10P.M.
Scranton and Wilkes-Barre,Pa., operate with. students selected '7 P.M. - 8 P.M. Auxiliary Plants area. Like those full-time stu-, from among employees of local . Broadcast WSAR-8:45 P.M. ' , dents living in New York, three social agPrnCies. ' Also,these stu DAILY MASSES BOSTON students from Pennsylvania will dents 'will be permitted to' take '7 A.M. - 8 A.M. - 10 A.M. . OCEANPORT, N. J. be eligible for masters' degrees their degrees in three rather '. '. 12:10 P.M. I PAWTUCKET" R. I. in social service after two aca than two years. ICONFrSSIONS - DAILY-; demic years. Current plans call for Miss 8:30 A.M. to 9 P.M. These students ar~ attending Dermody to make at .least three jST. ANTHONY NOVENAI five courSeS on Wednesdays' and trips annually to the local agen Every Tuesday at Thursdays, thuS only one over cies to check on the performance 10 A.M. - 12:10 P.M. - !l P.M.. YpUR DOLLAR BU,YS night stay' per week is needed. of the commuting students. , ,):10, P.M. - 8 P.M. . Because the student does l)is .1 !Broadcast Tues.- WNBH 1~ field work,in his home town, Mr. ~ ~ALE '7:30 P.M; I " DONAT BOISVERT · ·'"A.¥. F.ogarty points out, the chances Wed.~WSAR '7 P.M. I . ,THAN 'EYE~ 8EFORE are. increas~d: that h~. will ·FOr.: Further Information." I INSURANCE· AGENCY,··.·
, .' maIn -ther~:'after graduation ,to : , See uS,for the BEST DEAL in a,. pursue his career. • .. .' · - an~ NovenCll,' &<>oklets . J ,.~. , . . t=ord Car or Truck . To Expand Program. All Kinds Of Insurance'"
· , . Please Write to: :; The new program....was'WorkM . 96 WILLIAM STREE~: ':.
,,9~~'.L~.cI,YI~ C out in a series of conferences :,. ..' , SALE~ .,' bet,¥e~!l.Mr. Fogarty and.. Miss NEW BEDFORD, MASS:;", .:. :.FRANCISCAN FATHERS';
FORD DEALERS FOR .OYER 38 YEARS '" Helen Dermody, head of the field' DIAL WY 8-5153 .572 . PLEASANT STREET ';
work department, and executives 'I~ Personal Service. . ". N'EW' BEDFORD, MASS. . . . . ,;,', . :>.... . ~" (? 8f Catholic Charities ';"in Wilkes. .. , '.,< ,,-'......;.;.;..;';.....;.._'_ .......,;..'.:.••:...;....:.'''_~:i....;:;,•..;.•w....',;,;.;''..i.,'.-.,_._ . ..:..:. ......- ...r.,~ ,_- ~,;"/,,,....-~"t.. .,. if" ~ ~"'1l~• •~ ......~.~
Cenacle AOpostolate Members Hold' Regional Meeting at Wareham
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;- BLUE RIBBON :':'- LAUNDRY';---
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Commercial Masquerades'
Brands !Religious :Movies'·.
Tasteless Monstrosities
By Don'ald· McDonald
Davenport Catholic Messenger
I was somewhat disappointed this week to find a
Catholic lay~edited magazine, dedicated to the improvement
~f movies, television and radio programs, single out certain
motion pictures as a kind ,of ideal to be strived for and
supported by Catholics. so long'as he d'oes ~ot betray, the.
The "Catholic Preview of religious meaning of Christianity
Entertainment" cites. such or debase its religious values.
. current and recent filrris as To ·me there is something "The Ten Commandments," "Quo-
almost automatically suspect about a '''religious film" that .that "religion must cater to the prurient boobs (has) an enorwho go to any ~ovie that prom mous audience ises, in its advertisinr or on its potential.'~ marquee; that sexua~ seduction "For years," will play an essential part in the says the. maga. movie.
zine, "the exact Obviously, incidents of seduc formula for a twn are related in the Bible.
financially, sucBut is that the central. mea'ning
HONOR FOUNDER OF SULPICIANS: Observing the 300th anniversary of the cessful 'movie of the Christian religion? It death· of Fathe~ Je~n Jacques Oiier, founder of the Sulpician Fathers are fr:om left, Most eluded. Hollyseems to be the central meaning, wood produc. or at least the central "hook" Rev. Umberto Mozzoni, Apostolic Nuncio to Bolivia; Archbishop Patrick A. O'Boyle of ers." Now, aparound which Hollywood's reli- Washington; Archbishop Amleto Giovanni Cicognani, Apostolic· Delegate. to the U. S.' and parently. .t h e gious productions are fabricated. Very Rev. Lloyd P. McDonald, 8.8., Provincial of the U. 8. 8ulpicians. The ceremony at H 0 II Y woo d Let Hollywood try its hand at conducted by the Sulpicians, crowd (who are admfttedly more scripting·a novel by Bernanos or Theological College, Catholic University of America, concerned with commerCially Mauriac; let ·it try to capture and was one· of the concluding' anniversary observances throughout the nation.' NC Photo. l successful "formulas" than they then project the meaning of·a'St. are with 'genuine creativity in John of the Cross or a Cure de . motion pictures) have hit on a Ars. Let Hollywood, in short, nismfrom its sources and learn nate the universe, with the sub BOSTON (NC)-People were guaranteed box-office succesS, suspend, for a· moment its ··com ing the methods and techniques jection of the United States as concerned about the dog in the the "religious movie." mercial instinct which sees the thereof from former communists an immediate. objective toward Cash' registers are tinkling. gold in the accidental grandiosi Sput~ik II, Archbishop Richard or those who have been sub that goal," he said. The producers are happy. And ties of the Old, Testament. epi J. Cushing of Boston told a high jected to commtmist' brainwash school audience here, but "the 'it seems that "Catholic Preview!' sodes, and adventure into the Teach as Evil· ipg an·d other forms of propa is' happy. more risky, but more spiritually dumb animals to be pitied in this He told students at Archbishop. ganda," he said. scientific age are we, the people," I just· want to cast what may rewarding, area of Christian Cushing Central High School in .The reason for pity is that "we , be a minority vote. Such movies sa.nc::tity. South Boston that to combat the , 'The one man in this country think we can live· in our usual who, in my experience, is teach as "The Robe," "Quo Vadis," etc., . Non-Support Campaign communist tl}reat, there should carefree, prosperous way while ing similar courses is Louis leave me unhappy: ·Such films '''Catholic Preview" remarks be better distribution of ..infor the communists aspire to domi-. mation on .commtinism, particu,.. Budenz, . former editor of the are 'not good religion. And that a "film does not have to be 'Daily Worker.' If his weekly
they're not even good entertainbig and Biblical to ,entice fam- . larly through careful teaching .column could reach every Amer
ment. . iliesaway from their television· on the subject in school.s. ican genuinely interested in the Cheapen Religion sets," and cites such recent items "I believe * * * that com ·security of, our countr,y and j~ , Basically what is wrong with as "Heaven Knows, Mr. Allison," munism should be taugpt in o,ur· traditions, we would alrea~y VATICAN CITY (NC)-Presi-' educational system. But it should "Quo Vadis" and all the rest of "God Is My Partner" and "Sea have driven every communist dent Theodor Reuss of Germany, these epic spectaculars is that wife," to make its point. be taught as an evil, taught from the land and every.commu through his "deep respect for the they cheapen and vulgarize reliBut the burden of Catholic therefore with a moral directive nist delegate from, the United Faith and religious virtue," is a gion.. They lack two vitaleh~- Preview's article is to encourage in the same way that treason is Nations." worthy representative 'of the taught as an evil," he said. ments of a genuine religious film more of the "big and Biblical" new Ge·rman. republic, L'Osser ~the spirit of reverence and an type of movie. 0 "For years I have been saying , vatore Romano, Vatican City understanding of the' Christian There is one ray of hope in the tliat the ,foreign missionary is religion.· article. "It is well to remember," daily' said here. inevitably 'and 'inescapably on Commenting on President 'The "extravagance" of the says the article, "that Hollywood one of the front lines,of the fight HARDWARE Gospel lies in its spiritual mean- 'will not produce . (religious Heuss' visit to the Holy See and against communism," Archbishop ing. The extravagance of a Cecil movies) unless audiences sup his audience with His Holiness Cushing' said. "This beingsc)', Ole SNOW SHOVELS B. DeMille production lies in its port them ... Catholics can in": Pope Pius XII, the Vatican City missionary should, by his traiil':' gaudy material enormity ("cast sure the continued production'·of newspaper said: . :ing, -be' s·pecially equipped for "No one could better personify of thousands"). Hollywood has 'such excelJent film farecby their the· job." . '; .. ". the: 'historical and political con not yet c.omprehended the mean-enthusiastic'support 0:( movies of· '766 COUNTY STRE·ET ,,' Informed 'Stay' Abreast sideration (of such a visit) than ing of th~,Gospel. The parable of ,8 similar ca:Iiber." N~ BE[)FORD -, ., "The'Cohimban Fathers in the the mustard_ seed, the hidden, the I am considering the :possibii: 'TheodorHeuss. Through' his Far 'East· spend a full week, ,WY 34497. contemplative and the materially ity of starting· an enthusiastic ., personal preStige, his mind open periodically, studyin!" corilmu to ihe most· human· understa'nd-' impoverished realities of Chris- ·campaign of' non-support of tianity have not been absorbed these tastele~s, de-spiritualized 'ing· his' deep respect 'for the by Hollywood. And' they have ·monstrosities that. gush forth Faith arid· religious virh,le, he' IS ~/FTS.·9fLEA yet to be -transl,ated into .any . :from Hollywood and Vine under 'a most' worthy representative of Inc. the new Germany." ,. ~formula" for bOx~office success. 'the, false pretense of "religious , .. ARE··ALWAYS APPRECIATED MQVERS In their ·place, Hollywood has '.movies." There wili be no or SERVING , Come in .and look 'o'round" given -us a cunning ·combination ganization, no, dues,·, no commit· at least will nat offend religious of religious trappings, and.. sex tees. or, meetings ·in connection sensibilities of Ghr~stia·ns· who you will Jine:! ,Gifts G~I<?~~.Fall River, New Bedford :(see their shrewd advertising" in wi·th.this .campaign, Just a rather know that the· Cross was m~de of , C1nd friendly folks ·to "eJp. Cape Cod Area' , which female Biblical characters easily,-kept resolution to stay wood, not weightless. plastic and you. ,. Agent: are draped in negligees ~that away from the stuff. . that Chrst was reviled and, ac - . Leather Good. Since ·1877 AERO MAYFLOWER would make a hardened nightHollywood ."will not .produce cused of many things, but never club performer blush); they them," if this campaign gains of flamboyance. TRANSIT ~O. INC.
label 'these wares "religious momentum: Hollywood produc- • ;:::;;;;:;;;;=:;;;;:;;;;=:;;;;;;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;~ Nation-wide Movers
movies" and we Catholics, like ers will look for a different "for 586 Stree_tII WYman 3-0904
A WONDERFUL all the rest, run to the box-office mula" which mayor may not be New Bedford 304 Kempton St. New Bedford and even organize parochial-· good at the Box-office, but which, -SELECTION OF school "field trips" to the local theat~~ that has the latest ver . ,", . sion of the Hollywood producers' '. .- '.. ... . FETEIRA; Fayal; A:~ores (NC) formula-for-cash. UNUSUAL . SO SPECIAL -Father Manoel Moniz Mad '~'. ·Limited, Authentieit,. ruga, who died a day before / his l02nd birthday, was buried 'I -don't doubr the literal au tli·entldty, the, archeological ac the lof curacy· of these religious films. 'J. He .'was, . Portugal'.s oli:lest" . _ . . But neither do I doubt that this ., 1 ~9 WILLIAM STREET authenticity is limited to such· priest. Despite blindness he· was ! accidentals as costumery, design active in the adm'inistration and NEW BEPFIRD~ MASS.· I affairs of his parish. of .Roman spears and helmets Busin~ss- Breakfasts, Parties i and the like. . Available for SocialOrganiations I don't like to see-Catholics, of all people, won over so easily to 6-8221 such cheap commerCialism mas "BeCtI.lI,e We Kno•., Our Btf,ll,iness querading as "religious motion' pictures." I don'tobjec't to a Hollywood producer making a ,million dollars on' a religous film, For You to Know Us"
~ V:i.dis," and "The Robe" as proof
Better Worry About Your~elf Before It's too Late
Newspaper Prai.se's German' President
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.' ·05· 5..7497
8ishop Sheen Urges Youth Serve As Lay Apostles in P,agan World
THE AN"': .'"t .. ;'
Says Parents Fail To Religion
Catholic Camping Needs Top ,Leaders
of
J. F. ST. AUBIN co.
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James F. O'Neill APPRAISER REAL ESTATE
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PAINTERS AND
De~: 5, 1957
5
Rel~gious
Films Need Support
" • PHILADELPHIA-Auxiliary Bishop Fulton J. Sheen ·of New Yorkurged more.than 10,00'0 youths here to be lay apostles in a pagan environment. ,Bishop Sheen was the keynote speaker at the fourth annual convention of the "Every civilization that begins , National Council of Catholic to go to pieces does so through Youth, Diocesan Section. carnality," he said. "If Catholic About 12,000 persons heard ,"outh keeps the virtue of purity, , the Bishop's address in Conven- it will be less tempted to give up tion Hall. Archbishop Henry J. the Faith." O'Brien of Hartford presided al The Bishop, who is mitiomll the session. director of the Society for the Bishop Sheen advised the del- Propagation of 'the' Faith, said egates to be "catechists or lay that Catholic young people can apostles to offset the threat of a live in a "bigger world" by sac secularized culture. . . rificing for ,he. foreign missions. "There are only 2,8 conver-, He suggested they should giye up sions per priest per year in the not orily luxuries, but also rieces United States," he declared, "and sities to aid the missions.
only 130,000 persons coming into
Rise in Delinqueney the Church annually. In his address at the closing, "We must not grow through the clergy alone~ he stated. "We banquet of the Youth Work Con ference, Los Angeles Chief of will grow by passing the burden on to you.' You can contact Police William Parker said '~The young people we cannot reach." country is experiencing an ab normal rise in juvenile delin The Bishop assigned the quency." He explained that sta
youths two other duties: to af tistical data shows that "juvenile firm the virtue of purity. and to realize that they "live in a bigger, arrests during 1956 increased 17 per cent over 1955." world than America." "The most startling statistic," Chief Parker said, "is that, of the total arrests for major crim Te~ch inal offenses, 46 per cent in ROCHESTER (NC) - Since volved children under 18; and of parents fail to teach the Our that group, 40 per 'cent had not Father to 70 per cent of the yet reac.hed their 15th birthday." children entering parochial He advocated stern treatment , school first grades, canr,they be of juveniles who' were "serious teaching them God's command first offenders.' ,But for a more ments? permanent solution to juvenile This question was posed here delinqenc)"l he said, "we must by Msgr. Irving A. DeBlanc, di continue to attempt, to inculcate rector of the Famliy Life Bureau within our young a 'deep sense of the National Catl10lic Welfare of moral justice, coupled with a Conference, Washington, D. C" greater realization of 'the 'true The Monsignor spoke at a destiny of man." meeting during the 58th annual gathering of the New York State Welfare Conference. A Protes tant' clergyman and a rabbi shared the speaker's platform to discuss "Family Life Education PHILADELPHIA (NC)as Church and Synagogue View Camping makes an immense contribution in furthering the It." Msgr. DeBlanc said the statis work of the Church and should tic on the percentage of children not be entrusted to second-rate knowi,ng the Our Father came laymen, a camp' administrator from' a su'rvey which also showed said here. that only 50 per cent of the chil , The statement was made by dren entering' first grade knew Dr.' Joseph Link Jr., admin,istra the Sign the ,Cross. tor of Fort Scott summer camps "And yet,' he said, "a primary in the Cincinnat iarchdiocese: , ,role of the parents is to teach.. He adgresseda luncheon meetiitg If they do not early' assume the at the fourth convention of -the role of God's representative, National' Catholic Camping As later when 'the youngster is an sociaHon. adolescent, alld, his father com '~The Catholic American 'sum mands, fittillgIy, the youngster mer camp has' become 'a most' can inquire, 'and where'did you important 'part of our educational come from?'" . system," Dr. Link said. "We have Turning to the Church's lit~ a real job ,to do and we: need urgy-its public prayers-Msgr. some real All-American Catholic DeBlanc said 'that. "liturgical laymen' to' do it. They must be ' cere'monies in Church are only leaders and we must' recruit episodes if not carried into the them, train' ihem and pay them home." professioflal salaries." In the home, he continued, the He declared that for the fu liturgy should "not be' an acces tur:e of the Catholic, camping BOl'y to Christian living, but at the heart of the Faith. There is program "we ~ust do two not a something whicn' takes place at Church and anoiher which takes place in our home. The family liturgy is an exten aion of the liiurgy of the Church. "For instance', 'if children do not understand that marriage. is ' • sacrameni or sufficiently'un-, derstand the Mass, they' will soon, ' dissociate themselves from it," he said.
Thurs.,
CHAPLAIN BLESSES NEW KNIGHTS OF COLUM BUS QUARTERS: Rev: Joseph K. Welsh, pastor of St. Thomas More Parish, Somerset, and Chapl~in of the Bishop Cassidy CO!1ncil, is assisted by Raymond Bachard and Wil liam Benoit as he blesses the new home. The building is located on Milford Rd., Swansea, and will be opened to the public next Sunday, Dec. 8:
Totally Without Merit "At a time ~hen our country needs to encourage educational institutions to provide us with the best possible 'brains, it is ridiculous to place burdens in the path of education." Foes of' the present tax exemptiOIl status of the school have succeeded in getting on 'the '1958 ballot an initiative repeal meas ure. It would amend the Cali fornia, constitution to pro';'ide for taxation of these schools. U. S. Sen. William R. Know land" candidate for the Repub lican nomination for governor is among many who have voiced their opposition to the tax meas ure. California was the last of the 48 states to exempt private, non profit schools from property tax. The legislature passed a law to that effect in 1951.
LOS ANGELES, (NC)-Congressman Patrick Hillings of California has voiced vigorous opposition to the attempt to reimpose property tax on private, non-profit elementary, and secondary schools in California. The scheme, he said, is "totally without merit," and citizens should stand firm against "this insidious proposal."
Bishops Hope to Halt Mexican Emigration MEXICO CITY (NC)-A move to stop emigration to the United States by Mexican 1TIigrant workers and to repatriate those already working in the U. S. has been initiated by the Social Secretariate of the Mexican 'Bi shops. Since 1942, about 2,500,000 "braceros," as the workers' are called, have entere.d the United States under legal contract. Four out of every ten 'have not re turned to their homes and fami lies in Mexico. things: organize and propagan-'· dize." He said regional organizations should be built up and the camp ing program must be "glamor ized" so that it, attracts a high calibre of Catholic laymen. 0 "Then" w~ must remember that camping is the means," he concluded. "Our end is Catholic education, ,thought and action."
CARMEL (NC) - Catholics, by supporting good movies, have a "profoundly important role" to playas a force for the moral im provement of film entertainment. The Catholic Preview of En tertainment said in an article en titled "Is Religion' Good. Box Office?" that this role is par ticularly important in regard to the so-called religious films, An article in the December is,sue sai<' that "for years the exact formula' for a financially successful movie eluded Holly wood producers." It was thought first to be a musical extravaganza, then the historical epic then the "quality western," but "in 1953, said Pre view, the film, "The Robe," proved "that religion had an enormous audience potential." Citing, the success of "The Ten Commandments'~ and "Quo Vadis." the magazine said, how
ever, that "a film does not have to be big and Biblical to entice families away from their tele vision sets." It mentions the suc cess of "Heayen Knows, Mr. Alli son," "God Is My Partner" and "Seawife." "But in the light of this appar ent trend toward more re,igious movies, it is well to remember that Hollywood will not produce them unless audiences support them," the magazine stated. Catholics can insure the con: tinued production of such excel lent film fare by their enthusias tic support of movies of similar calibre." .
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SPECIAL Excursion ,to PONTA DELGADA direct on the fast and popular 21,OOO-ton yessel
QUEEN FREDERICA
'from New York, April 16 from' Boston April 17
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OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF TI:IE DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER .. Published Weekly by The Catholic Press of the Dio~ese,ot Fall River · 410 Highland Avenue Fall River, Mass. OSborne. 5-7151 • PUBLISHER . Most Rev.JJames L. Connolly, D.O., Ph.D. ASST. GENERAL MANAGER _ GENERAL MANAGER Rev. Daniel F. Shalloo, 'M.A. Rev. John P. Driscoll MANAGING EDITOR A!torney Hugh' J. Golden
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TODAY - st. Sabbas, Abbot. He became one of' the most fa· mous of the Palestinian monks, in whose discipline he esta~ Jished a rigid reform. He was re· nowned for his austerity of life and observance of the monastic rule. In various journeys to Con· ' stantinople, he rendered great service' to the Eastern Church, I, which then was much troubled by the Eutychian heretics. He .. died in 532 at the age of 94.
TOMORROW -...: St. Nicholas, ( . Bishop-Confessor. He served as • • c'" Archbishop of .Myra in Asia; . . M i n o rin the fourth century ami viras so 'noted' for his vigilance On Sunday all Catholics of the Dioc~se ~ill be asked over the young that he became a
to take the.Legionof· Decency pledge. This is a solemn Patron of Children. The familiar
and an increasingly important matter. By this pledge term Santa Claus is a corruption
. of his name. He also is a Patron grownups and .young people alike 'promise to keep away Saint of Russia and is known as ' from indecent and immoral forms of entertainment and St. Nicholas Myra, where he those that are dangero\ls to faith or morals. They 'promise served, as well as St. Nicholas of to keep away from moving pictur~s that glorify crime and Bari, Italy, where his reli"cs were sin. They promise not to patronize those places of "amusetransferred after his death. rhent" that show such films and entertainments as a matter Sag'~ and Sand . SATURDAY -'- St. ' Ambrose, of p o l i c y . ' Bishop-Doctor. He was one of'
ff:. the four great Doctors of the
Only a fool would deny the close tie-up between crime, Western Church. He lived in the
especially among the young, and bad books and films. fourth century. ArIes, Lyon and
,Minds are formed by what persons read and especially see Treves dispute the honor of
· in the movies, for here they are caught up in another 'being his birthplace. He' early . B R b distinguished himself by his · world, their 'eyes and ears ~re assailed by suggestive or y Most Rev. 0 ert J. Dwyer,. D.D. .' talents and while a young man · downright indecent ideas, their imaginations are catered . " Bishop of Reno was made Governor of Northern to with all the skill' and technical advantages that HollyOn a wintry afternoon in Philadelphia, Thursday, Jan- Italy. Upon the death of the wood has to offer, and, these are considerable. . uary' 5, 1860, the black-clad figure of a man staggered across Archbishop of Milan, he was the ' . f Vine Street near 13th, gained the narrow sidewalk, crumpled choice of rival factions to sucTh e most' important single fact. acing all our police ceed. He divested himself of hi .. ' crIme . _. · th e rlsmg· department s IS ra t e among' young pe6pI'e. ·~.and ·fell. Two passersby rushed to his. aid and carried him wealth in favor of the Church~ ' · I t has,been going up at a steadily increasing rate. Poor into the nearest house. His American bishop willing to'sponand the poor, and applied him home influence, lack of discipline ,must take part of the clothing told them he was sor him as a niiss!onary were self assiduously to, his' episcopal
blame, but the film industry cannot shake off its r~sponsi-' ~ cleric;' ~ gold..cross dang- long unavailing. Only after a duties.' He was.a champion of
bility in the matter; The Amedcan Bishops realistically hng from ItS chams~ggested . steerage passage to New York religious liberties and manifested
'. .' . ' , .,"'. . . , .... : ' . .:.• ' .. '. . "". that he was a 'bishop.', But long did he finda' welcome fro.m aging hili! l;ourag~. on one occasion by. recogmzmg thIS years ago, formed ~he,Lelp~m of D~ency ' .. before a priest. ·could'.besum;' Bishop Dubois, whc;> 'ordained . ~:xcluding from Church services to evaluate" for, parents and young people themselves, the':. moned' to administer ihe Unction him.a priest on June 25; 1836.· Emperor Theodosius the Great, ". moral tone of movies. The Legion aims'not,only at warn:..' the soul of' John Neumann, Four years.as.an itinerant miswho w~s guilty of a cruel mas ing again'st positive'dangers to faith ahd' morals, but at'· fourth Bishop'. of - Philadelphia,'" siona?, .among. the . German- .sacre. His writings are volumin encouraging those movies that are deemed educatihnal' or . had taken, fl,ight}o God> spe~~mgCatp.?hcsof,~este!J1 . -,ous and a constant reference in ' . . .,... ' '. .' ......'... 4 few' weeks ago a .large num- New York, ..m and around . matters religious.' He w'as' a
help~ul recreatIOnally" fQ~ varIOUS classes of people. :. . : . her of the Bishops Of America, .. Rochester. and,' Buffalo, were brother 'of St. Marcellina. He
The Legion: 'has 'as' its· chief concern the, moral and 'meeting. iil"Washington~or the .enough to temper the expect- !lied 'on April 4, 39.7.'
'religious wholesomeness of Catholics and' those-other' men annual' .session of; !~e ·National .. ancy~ He .was lonely an~ pr,oSUNDAY-Feast of the Im
of good will \vho ·supp.ort its work. It is as'm)ich'a "censor" Catholic, Welfare' Con:Ierence.. f\?undly dIstrustful of hlmse~.. " ma'culate Conception. On' this
.8s the pub.lie.. healthde.partment is censor. :ofdis.eas. signed a petition to, the ·Holy See ~hat he had. come to know, of, . day in '1854 Pope Pius IX sol . , , .., . . . ." for 'the beatification· of 'Serv-, the I{~<lem~~o.rists, th~nrecel1tly ~mnly decl;red as an article. of : vaccines: are censors' . '. .:...... ' : arit of Goa, .iheVe~er~ble J6h'~ ,esta~hshed I~·the U!Il~ed Stat~s.. >' Faith' that Mary, the Mother of' seems that .the .only· way a stop ,can· be'" put b> the' ." Neumilnn; Itis 'afleast .possible ,con.v~nced hIm .that,lt' was m ·'Gixi, was by singular privilege of production ofun'wholesoine films is to 'hit ·'the producers: . that the centennial. of. his: death . t~ell,.,company that. he coul4 fi.nd . 'God' preserved free from all stain , where. it hurts, in the pocketbook. ~ Catli.Olics and others, by . ,:Willwitn~ss :his '~I~ya.~iol1 to. tl:'e :h~:mself.and ~o hIS· best work.. of original sin. This is· the pa:' ·' .' ' t .' .. ' f'l'" , .' .' "h ., 'altar As his successor in·the See .B1Sh0l>. -!ohn . Hughes gave. a 'tronql feast of the 'United States. .ref usuigto pafon'ize.un~o!'thy;· I ~s'i~.r~showi~~) ep.~ 'ofPh'i1adelphia;:Ar¢h~fsh~poJohn , grumbhI).g a,ssent, and Neumann ' "', ..... ducer· that theIr moral· taste IS h.lghe~,l~pan.hls .msultmg ~,F. O'Hara; C;S.C,;remarked,·such .. ,became a Redemptorisinovice, ' MONDAY-M:ass and Office of judgement of it: They. are dndicating ·that,·theY;are· a:s' con- . ,a, happy .consummation ",would ~. ,.. Winning ·Hearts.. . ' ..,. ~ .. ttl e feast of ~ge I'!1I?!iculate Con;- , cer.ned for their' souls' well-being as they are 'over-the: bod1. . not· only redound to th:e, glory' :.It ~asastrange;stt,en,uous'00- '·,ce~tion.Generally,this ~.ate is . "·'go on ·recor ","d as ".,. . . .any . formsof so-ca . ~ll d' " ~. of .the Church l'n··Amerl·ca ··but·· vI'tl'a'te spent· for ·the most "part o· the feast of St. Restltutus, · Th . ey opposmg e enter,: . , >.....' ..". . ~ . .' '. . ' , .'. ' " . . ._ . ,'. ..' . would bea' SIgnal- msplratlOn for ,as a·.,mlsslonary m the.-panshes ". BIshop Mar~yr. Llttl~ IS know~ tam~e.n~· tha~ :~o~!~ brea~ d9 wn .the. mor-al,.,re~tr;1~nts th~ Bishop~.Neumann's·Cie~h' 'com':' . "coiifided'to theCongregatioD' in :of this .Africanmart.yro.tper -than ar~' s.o;neces~ary ,for. p~bhc good order and persoJlal: hoh- ,:'patriots who..Iinowtooay:,the dire Ohio Pennsylvania and; Mary,:.'. ,that h~ served .a.s BIshop of Car,,:, :' .. ness; '. They' are pro'te'sting against any encouragement of ., meanfng of persecution' for', the -land:' Professed in ,1842; 'he was .. thage a~d. ~at St.. Augustin,e, . , .' I 'crime and evil t'E!n~encies"in' impres~ionable'young people:' :'Faith," .... :.:"C .', ,.' .,i.. " . :.. at· once plunged .iilto· endless . tow~rd. th~ end; 'of . the ~our~h _.. '. The t,eiio~ of Decency 'p'ledge is bot a rilehj'·f()rmality··.·, . :·.Pract,ic81 }WYstie . '. ~ work in a .s4ccessionof ?arishes, : .c~ntury, prea/;;!ted . ~ s~rmon·. 'm. . . , ..'. " ,., , I, '. .. "It· Id b 'd t h' d" th 'for, the new 'foundatIon . was' hIS honC?r on hIS feast .day. It has been potent enough'Ill other",Years "to .brmg abOut " ..c9\l . e .sal ""'~,-, ~s .ea . ' ,. . j .... " : ' .-" •• , ' .. , • . , . , . . .' :"';"": ,'. • ,.' • . .'1' .... . , . ' , . " . ... . ' " . wastpe sole dramatlc:.·mcldent strugglIng. to achIeve stabIlIty' ,'TUESDAY - St:· Melch13des, ~ ra!lIC:a ch.ang~.m·the ton~ of movles.wheJ?-,Hollywood felt '. in the·biography.of··JolmNeu,:,·· and·,.wastoril by.·those.internal .·}>ope-Martyr. Alsokrtown as St,;' · Its effec~s. It should contIllue to be a ratmg system that· marin';'.'The rest is the story ,of dissensic;>ns which ,were biter to Miltiades, he succeeded St. Euse · will keep the movie producers aware of. the ideals that we a:simple man who, not' only be-. '. cause difficulties for anoth~r're-: bius as POPe' iIi' 31". He Was ~ . cherish as. Catholics and as.'citizens of a Christian country, .~ieved in humility b~t practiced .cruit,.the conve~t Isaac He~ker, given the hollor of .martyrdom "Jdeals that we wiil not allow' a' handful of people to sriatch It, who det.ested not~1Og so much Yet Neu~a~m s .love for ~e because o.f the su~ermgs he un · .' ' , . .as the pomp and circumstance of .. ·Redemptonst.ldeal, the austenty . derwent m the tIme of Diocle from us under the gUIse of entertamment. . office whose whole desire was to and.abnegation of St. Alphonsus,' tian. His 'pontificate was short, re!Oai'n an unknown religious of hidden beneath rococo. rhetoric, but he witnessed the triumph of ·the Redemptorist Congregation. was a deady flame, He hardly Constantine over Maxentius and ,! Yet the reverse of the picture had ~he makings of a successful reorganized the government of Christ loved the symbol of thE!' seed. "What is the. is the record of i singularly" Redemptorist preacher in a day the Church, which had been laid
kingdom of God like, and' to what 'shall I '·liken it? Itis. fruitful apostolAte as 'a' mission- . when the, order set great store dysolate in years of persecu
like a grain' of mustard seed." ",The'seed is the"Word of 1 ary priest and as a bisho·p. For by pulpit thunderings, but he tions. He presided ove,r~e
the eight years of 'Neumann's had the art of winning the hearts Council of Bishops fr:om Italy God." "Unless the grain of wheat fall int<r the ·ground. administration of the Diocese of of his brethren and of, bringing and Gaul which decided in favor
· and die, it re~ains alone. . But.if it. dIe, , it ',briJlgs forth Philadelphia were marked by an peace to unquiet houses. , . of Cecilian as Bishop of Carth~ge
much fruit." " .. immense' growth matched by It was as rector of. the Re-, -against Donatus. This did not
'Advent has been called the season of the seed." Christ,' courageous and far-sighted di- d~mptorist parish in Philadel- hinder the later development of
~ the seed of the world's life, was hidden in. ,Our Lady. during rection. The paradox of Chris- phia that Neumann attracted the the Donatist . heresy in Africa.
tianity had found another and attention of that learned and He died on January 10, 314.
the first Advent. The 9lory:of God was hidden in her· exceedingly apt illustration: the isolated man, Bishop Francis WEDNESDAY-'-St D . I,
· darkness and Divine Love grew in silence. Mary had" B' h f h . h h Pt' k K . k Th' B' h . amasus · nothing to gIve God but .herself and He asked for nothing: d his more brilliant' and .talented holiness of. the prie~t, and when . Ll~be o. _,:,me.a,n a ' en e else. . . , ' . " ". 1 enus m eXl l e. H e succeedOPde e · compeers Everybody had known he was translated to Baltlmore, P L'b' H ' , .d Th a, t t 00, is the meanmg of this and every Advent as' him as ~ saint; 'few had sus- in' October 1851, Neumann was S~p~ 1 erl~s: e CO';~lss~n: the Church relives with her, Divine Spouse, Christ, the 'pected that he was (in Lord his candidate for the succession.. t . t e~o~,e .;; lcor~ec, t e as·lt.n · mysteries of His life. Onc.e more it isa·qu·estion of' Christ's Rosebery's phrase) an extra- By sheer power of will he forced ;x 0 : y CrIforur~savmg .. · desiring to grow WIthin' .oui- -lives whe.reve'r we rtia'y be':- ordinarlypr.actical mystic . the on his colleague am asuds anlSd bamout,sf' . R ome
" , res t ore eau lle d 10 , . appointment . '. , at home, in'school, at -work, at ·recreation.. Too ·often do' Jams Redemptorists . and ~n the relucta~t vlct~,m. the tombs of the martyrs. iIe
people have a formalistic V. iew, pf 'l"eligioii, thinking of Go.d.. . He wa~ born ,:,f peasant stock . Quietly. and Unnoticed died in 384 at the age of 80. . . ~ m the mountam' country of ShorUy before the blow fell . , . ' .' · only in terms pf church. Th~y compartmentalize'religion,· Bohemia, March 28,1811. He had Neumann had 'said to a, lay' making, it an, affair of prayer :a.rid· the sacraments, and a happY'l1ome and an adequate brother, "How good it is to be in ary problems, of constant jour. leavin'g' it out of their everyday's: .activity. ' . . : early school~'ng, enough to equip the Congregation and to live in . neyings and laborious preaching. Advent gives us the sacramental view of life.. U makes him' for the seminary when he.. America, Here we can tr:uly love' Humbly but 'firmly he wore the us realize.. that religion' is a matter of growing'in Christ. went off to Budweiss in his God, work much and ~uffera lot mitre, almost . imperceptibly ' . . . . 'teens..A picture that surviyes of. for Him, and we qo all' thIS molding the .Diocese into spir I t is a matter of letting Christ be formed in us. ·And that him as' a bOy'shows him round-' 'quietly I ' and unnoticed by the." itual maturity. The round face is a process that goes on with our every thought and wo~d ... faced, wide-eyed, full of a grave world." It was the swan-song 'of • grew furrowed the wide eyes and action. . The actual .intentio:ns .formed in our prayers e~pectancy. ~ut life 'closed in on his joy, .. . lost .their luste;, but the expe'ct and in the reception of' the' sacraments overfiow into hIm 'soon enough,for Neumann, . Eight years'a Bishop and dead ancy never waverep. The be'nt, the other activities of the day. And Christ, in another .:~ though passable as a.student, was just short 'of forty-nine!. Eight ' haggard man who die'd of a heiJrt • . . not accepted by his hojne Dio- 'years of toil and endless worry. attac,k. on a wil)ter ',afternoon Advent, grows within, us.:·,: ! :'. cese, . and h'IS e ff orts to find an of financial stress and disciplin- '. found heaven on the cobbles. .
Decency· Pledge'
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Glee Clubs Engaged
Spotlighting Our Schools
7.
1957
were offered by Barbara No brega and Mary Elizabeth Boland.
SACRED HEART ACADEMY, Nathalie, M. St. Laurent, 'and M. ST. MARY'S HIGH, St. John Berchmans will attend FAIRHAVEN the National' Catholic Educa TAUNTON The annual Christmas enter tainment will take place in the tional Association 'of the Second The New England unit of the ary School Department of Boston academy auditorium at 2:30 Sun NCEA will meet Saturday, with day afternoon, Dec. 8, and again College Saturday. the faculty of St. Mary's High A religious program will be on Sunday, Dec. 15. in attendance, ReoresenHn,! the sponsore~ by sodalists tomorrow On Dec. 8, the kindergarten school will be Sister Michael and grammar school pupils will in honor of the Feast of the Joseph Sister Therese Ann ::'!s The participate in the program, while Immaculate Conception. ter Mary Berchmans, Sister Mary Day open with the 8 on Dec. 15, most of the perform Stanislaus Joseph. Sister John ers will be high school students. o'clock . Mass at Notre Dame . Mathilda and Sister Stella James. On both days; the Christmas Church followed by a Commun Elise Cayer and Patricia ion' breakfast in the school cafe Story, illustrated with film Cooper will be busy collecting strips, will be narrated and sung. teria. The entire student body stamps, cards, and other useful Narrators are Joan Ellison, Mary will assist at· a religious enter supplies for the Marist Mission tainment in the auditorium. Joan Fernandes, Magdalena aries tomorrow. This is the third Schubert's "Ave' Maria" will Ferro, and Janet Pauline. Joanne time this school year S. M. H. Craig will render a vocal solo, be sung by Rachelle Labreche '58 girls have donated articles for accompanied at the piano by accompanied, by Louise Char use in the missionary lands. Jacqueline Caron '58. Doris bonneau and Sandra Mandeville. Election Day for the represent A Christmas playlet, entitled Mathieu, a leader of the Blessed ative to be sent to Boston for Virgin unit, will take part in a "A Child Shall Lead Them," Student Government· Day will will be presented on Dec. 15. theme entitled Mary in Our Life, take place tomorrow. The delethe flowering virtues of Our The cast is composed of Elaine CEREMONY AT MOUNT ST. MARY: Mary Margaret • gate whd is chosen will go to Daniels, junior, who plays the Lady as exemplified in a tee~ Boston March 14 and serve in a part of the em~ittered Mr. Sears ager's life. The Living Rosary Lomax, senior. class president,'lights the first candle on the 'direct personal role in our iegis will be conducted by groups of Sr., with Gardenia Wojtuszewski, Advent Wreath. Responses to the appropriate liturgical lature that day. Petitions such Susan Pepler and Louise' Dionne, sodalists. The Tribute to Mary prayers are made by Virginia E. Howarth, Mary T. Butl~r as a proposal to lower the voting freshmen, as his wife, daughter, Imm.aculate by Jeannine'Babin and Nancy Cordeiro. . age from 21 to 18, an act pro and granddaughter, respectively. '58 will be followed by an infor viding a penalty for failure to mal talk by Rev. Roger Poirier Jeanne Gingras and Janet SACRED H~ARTS ACADEMY, Monahan, Betty DeFusco,. Lynne vote at state elections, and an Blanchette, freshmen, have the on the Ideal' of·. a Sodalist. }'ALL RIVER Collins, Pauline Dumas, Cath act regulating outdoor advertis roles of John Sears Jr. and his Twenty-eight aspirants will en In a ceremony on Sunday, Dec. erine Costa, Leslie Salvo, Bar ing along parks and limited ac ter the Sodality in the convent wife. Joanne Gracia and Martha 8, seniors will offer lilies to the bara Levesque,. Marcella Har cess highways will be discussed. chapel. Flood, eighth graders, play the Blessed Virgin in the traditional rington, Fernanda Carreiro, An~ With the start of the new ,·Rev. Gerald Seguin, S.J.,. of ceremony, while the aspirants to nette Williams, Joan Morris, and part of their children. Church year, Advent wreaths The Glee Club will contribute Ogdensburg, N. Y., addressed the the Sodality will renew their Mary CastJ;"o. have been made in each class. various selections, including student body on the significance temporary Act of Consecration.
"Silhouettes", the dance spon The solemn and symbolic pray of the sodality. Father pointed "Minuit Chretiens," arranged by Rev. Humoerto Medeiros will SOred by the Seventeeners~.Com.,. Sister Mary Vincent, SS.CC.; and out that the sodality is not a club preside over the ceremony and 'mittee . was attended by 115 ',ers will.be said by the presidents of each class for t"~ four suc "White Christmas,"arranged by . or an l!ctivity but an organiza deliver the sermon.
. , couples. The chaperones at this c,essi,ve .weeks of this peqitential 'tion with a specific goal, a pro Edmund Desrosiers. ' To raise funds for the shipping first successful dance of the year season. gram, a model and a dedication HOLY FAl\ULY WGH, to a Way of Life. It is interesting of food to the Southern Missions, included mothers of the stUdents. the Sodality will raffle off baked . The Regional Meeting of the ,NEW BEDF,ORD . to. know that 75 per cent of· the goodi~s as 'a part· of their Acivent National Catholic Education As..:.' " _, .. _" ...: __ .. . , ,. In the annual 'survey evn '. sodalists in the Diocese of' Og project. ! sociation, of which Sister John ., . : : ducted by the. Catholic School densburg are public school tcen Promising teen-age poets h;lve Elizabeth is secretary" will .be ;:' C()IJ1plete' : ·Press Association at Marquette agers. Father .seguin is Director .University, College of Journal of. Our Lady of Fatima Sodality · b.een found among the gOpqo 'at~~';lded .next Saturday, Dec1",7, . : .. by members of the faculty. , , , ". ism, Holy. Family's Yearbook, in Ogdensburg and"has been an mores and senior'll.. Making prac . .' ' tical . the iesSons learned . in Five'students participated in' , . , The. Maria, . received the· rating . active organizer or' parish sodali rhyth~ and ~hyme, the ~tudents of ALL CATHOLIC. The editor ties for ten years. ' the Living Pictures program"':. set about seeking inspiration sponsored by. the Holy Name , of the 1957 yearbook 'was Miss MOUNT ST. MARY, : from the,: master .Poets whose Margaret A. Moore, now a stu FALL .RIVER Women's Guild held: last Tues- : I , works 'have been' previously · dent at St. ':Elizabeth's S'chool Advent,. ·the begirining' of. the . GREATER : of N\lrsing:: 'ne'1.v liturgical 'year, is a season · studie'd in class. · Deserv~ng' poems. we're sent to appeared as a sponsor' for con-'" i NEWBEDFORD : According to the Schedule '.of ofprepanitioii for: the coming of the' . Narragansett' Debatfug . 'the Savior:' The observance of the National Poetry Associat~on firmation, and Louisa Carey en- : THE ' where a committee will select . acte;d a Holy Union nun. Solos : . . : League, Holy Family' will meet this :age-old' custom gives .to all Durfee's debaters this week a'nd a' true spiritual' anticipation 'of the best entries for pOssible in ·clusion in an anthology. of high Mount St. Ma'iy's club will Come ; Christmas. the Birth" of Christ. 'toNe~ Bedf9,r(;i'~',wee~. "of 'The entIre family' should take ,school .poetrY t~ 'be pUbiis4ed ..,' . ..,. . Dec.· 15. . . ' . . part in settiM' ,up 'an :Advent ,this spring...· ." . : of New Bedford, Mass. : " ,At the bi-mohthly,meeUng of 'wreath:' The 'wreath's"Circu · Mary McGuire,' Mary. J,oou' · the ,Science Club, .rohn 'BasJar &Oape: represents the cycle '. Knight, Ann'Marie PeNadal, ,. . ,. MQin Ofticle , .'. toni gave a very informal talk on of, years from. Adam ·.to.·Christ, Paulette Dion,Nancy ·McNerney l08Q Acushnet Ave. : " Union a.nd Pfeasa;~ S~. : .,Outer .,Space·. Nelis .. Bohr:'was '., during' which' ~e ·world· has and' Judith Hunt 'comprise. the . NEW BEDFORD ", " Donald ·Benjamin's.-choiCe and, 'awaited·.and.is.awaiting·His sec · sophomores who,have submitted North End Branch ,, ". George Thomas discUssed· man- ." ood and' final Coming in glory. entries.' :~.~~tRIPTld~S~ ,"\ ',: " 1200 Acu~~net Awe,' : made diamonds. .. Signifying the Sundays of.Ad., · The following seniors:' are ·a.so Member Federal De~ , .•0 Sister, M: Anastasia, R.S:M.••'; Yent: ate the. four.' candles (three ·...participating . in . the'. contest: .. SURGICAL SUPPORTS :. Wur.Dee ()orporaUoa::' : ,i ; and Sister.· ·M:·, Charles-'Francis, .' purpleand.~ne rose).·; The rose Viyian Lebrun, Anne·' Marie -,~"-"------,.~~-~--, '0/ R,S.M.,' wiH' ,attend a sciel\ce candle 'is lighted.,.'onthe .third meeting to ;be held at Wentworth .,; Sunday.of Advent; known i as .. ~n$titute on Saturday. . ..... Gaudete'Sunday, theJoyfuISun-, ,' . '.
., . 'Sister·M. Virginia; R.S.M., and day of Advent. Sister M. Carmelita, RS,.M., '",,;m '. The penitential' spi1"it of. the.
ait~nd the' m~ting of"th~ high 'season· is represente~" by the
· school division.of the .New tngpurple ribbons, placed between la'nd unit of the' NCEA which every two candles. 'The' Holy Anthracite & Bituminous', will be' held at Boston Colleg·e. Water Bottle is' used for the WI-IAT Sa~urdaY. ,. blesSing of' the wreath by the STATE OF mE JESUS MARY ,ACADEMY, Father or the Head of the,House UNION IS" . · FALL RIVER hold. -
will
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I.IN·COLN
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Mother Ste. Therese of the In- 1 " - - " " ' - " " ' ' ' ' - ' ' ' - ' ' ' . fant Jesus, Superior, Mother st. , . . , · Vincent de Paul, principal of the ; high school department, M. St. •
Victoire, principal of the ele-.·: mentary division with members , . , . ,
of the teaching staff, M. St. Am-, "finest sinee 18'1'1" ,
broise, M. Marie-Rene, M. Marie , , : Same day service :
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LaSalette
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CHRISTMAS ILLUMINATION December 8' to January 12 5.to 10 P.M.
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Montana is known as the HStubToe" State. It admitted to the union November 8, 1889.
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AnLEBORO, MASS.
Daily Masses:
6:30. '1. 8 A.M.
Confessions Dally:
6:30 A. M. to 9:00 P. M. SUNDAY DEVOTIONS at 3 P. M. Perpetual Novena to Our Lady of LaSalette every evening: at '1:30 P. M.
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FALL RIVER
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'", ·'i '.;: '~:.t;lrges'·, "~Cath;olics".~ .. :;. ;"~', '. F<)"l!fr: :G9n~ert <·&t~~. )0:" Entertain~
Mixe:d ·:,:·a.s' ,:.F~·mi:IY' :",D~yel<?p .Lea~e·~s". .: ·:'>,f~n;:"~i~er.:Cath()li~'··Worrian;s .CI~b, ·
'T0 Mee,\;1.'·D·,L (NC)~IfC:athohes a\;e. '. . LQ~IS dev~l~p.le,ade!s,m ·of·~a~i.RI:v-;r"wi.ll ~e .ent«:rtain~d ,ST,
··:.The ..Catholic Woman's Club' mittee for 'the' event and :will. pres.,. '. .be' assisted by the following club .'. .: ..,,:: . '. " ' . ;ent-day .actIvltIes, they ve got to... lit its'. Pecember .mee'ting: . next members: Miss Anna P. Malon.e, . . . .By Mary Tinley ·Da]y . . _ '.'~' .. "'stqpbemg e~barrassed"by the' ~ ruesday .eveniIig "In 'the' sacred . Miss Helen ~irig, Mrs, Edwa.rd . The gi'~~n' fr9nt door 'from the outsjde w()'rld)ntoour ,. dntel1ec,~ual hfe... . . ".. J:ieart"Schoo( Al,1ditoriumby 8 B. Downs, Mfss Hazel M. Conaty, " 'hallisnotexactly a receiving one, but for many: yearsjt has T~at IS the hopm~onRoli~ ~oth«;rf f~~~'7star.c?n.c~t?f:atu~in~ J~llus' . Mrs. Alexander E. Rostler, Miss ., . ',' ',.. ." . ,.... , I .' "d'" I ..Mane Kernag an, a e glOUS 0 . Silva Latm-Amencan claSSIcal • been admIttmg boys and gIrls-groups, coup es, an smg es, . ,'the Sacred Heart who isa for-·· 't" . 't.' h . ..' . k' h' f' t·· Claire R. McAndrew; Miss Mau . . ' ' . .. '. . '.' ., . ". gUl arlS w 0 IS rna lng. IS Irs Cl M' F C 'many of th~m dates. ~er. national· secretary ,of the . tour .of'the United"Stateii and' reen eare, ISS rances or ·. And .the dates .have been . A. minor knock-c>ufbiow .~ad ,<:;atholic' Co~mission for. Inte\- : Canada; Ma:rienka Michna, Slov-. . coran, Mrs.' Paul J. Reagan, and nonchalantly b··t k t '.' h" . " '. A'-' lectual·.and CulturalAffaIrs, ak-American . pianist· . Lorraine' .MrAs. COJOffheen hPo'urMwCAl'lnldfroelwlO'W the taken' quite. ' 'een ·s ruc a our. ouse.... ~ . M ther Kernaghan now p'ro ' . . .,..' .. · Th t' h i ' t . 'k' . . . hed TV"th ".", ; 0 . . . . .' ."" Marie. Moreau. lyric soprano . " " , as wy,as wee, we... she watc . , ,.m . rsenll-.,fes~~rofphysiCS at Maryville ."aridMichael Bru'rietti. lyri~ -concert under the direction of were 1;!l.ken· aback. whe~' dar~ne:ss, Mar~le took off the . College, is convinced that Cath-. tenor.·... . . .'. . Mrs. Joseph T. Canniff.' 'Markle told us that she wanted earrmgs, ..then: ~~e.;nec.klace. ."~" :olics on the whole:, have" been"! . ",I,' e ' • . ' , . , , ' Members are also ·urged. by · u&--eV:ery. one' of us-.,.-to be home' ,,"Well,".sh~ saldfmally, :·~u~~... somewhaf abashed. by .the· very :.,J~~~s,~l,l~a i8;a'gra~\l~te, of ,club pres~dent, ~rs. David , Friday evenirig_, ..:;.:.,. ' .111 turn m:.',:Than~s a ,nul~I!>~, ": idea of .'an -intellectual vocation;;> ~~~ .. JIf~tI?~al.. C?n~~rv!ltQry of . 'Boland, to contrIbute at tI~U1
" to . meet' 'her ~i::;W'" .~~c~ .of;~s .g~~ a ,.r~soundlDg .. ·. . "F()ralong tiIne C~tholics. '::M:e?,:lC~ Clt~ ~!l!1d.~s !l pr9~eg~ an~·· :' :~eetin~ to the Ghristmas. C~!~ .
. 'date George: .': W _:lI:ISS .~n!i:J~ '~lght, ~Ug::;~~ .:; ..' . ':' ,have had 'an .inferioritycomplex·" ;:P~J?l~~.~~:tb.~ ,:"orJdc,fa~o\ls A~,-. . coll~c~lOn of. the. Commum~y,
':. ; .~". ·.·.Ih~!sah older "~' K.lndly.Ofle~; .:":" '. !::eoncerning . anything:•."intellec-, " ~-;s.·Se~qV1a. "H~, h!lll' a~~ared ' " Service ..Department to. ai.d~e .
, .', ..; .m~n,":sbe·;'-sai(n: ,,~~o?OOy;~ b~e~: .~e~t "~h~ar~, ·:;'fual,'.' she 'declared-:- "They think'! : .In.. c~nc.~rts a~l,;'oveF ~exIC:!>"'8J!d . 'departni~nt in its work .for' t,he ~, r!l v, ~.l-.y:.~her.· ,m~nt~on~. the ~la.sco... th~ ne][~· ·-.,-that the intellectua1'life is.sOme~.': I~urol>!~' ,~. ~:~., ~: Rose ..~aw~or~e ~th~p~. ~!l~ . , \'.'i ::'..: e"y ~'s'c~~~ing d;ay lind life ~~n~ on .I~ ~e.e~s-" ,thing~!ltrangean<l'far t09 :difficult,_;· :?.:~!-;.~~n~~.'Ml~hna,was '~rn·1O .' eex:.. ~om~ ..- . ',,,' ,. ,'. ': ..:. '. , . eacp of ours i.n: t~.m~, ~~,turdaY, .. ~att~r~,. .... : ,;. ~~r them ,to; attain. So .they.,give·,' ; ':rorr:u~g,!o~!.', ~o~.,~. ~~C1re, s~e,. '. '. ' . '.' .', , . - ",Grocery sh~p;l>mg ,~~~.·.rel~-.· "up' 'and"''don't:e'ven' try to· train', :.~~s .~~u:catea:.:bY·~~e; Siste~s'~f '. .cathoh~: Studen~s " . . " '., . :turn:' ··.. He's;.:.~·. . ". ,',' . lawyer imd ai-; .. g~t~~~;~t!·ev~~~g:/~hen:~::'·th.Jihn~llects.'! :·:,':·: ... ·.. ;:·~ . -;,~er~f.:~~,~r~r-~,;She.was::?'?ly··12; .. ,"p'.'}'. ,...... : . . ': ".·:;··most.24::':·.·;:. :!', ' . ,~ent',t~ ,~he~tore mC()".l~?r!Bb~e;:' 'i'·', .. Seholarly.'Learni..- ,~ '" . ' i8lie ·W8.S 0 app,()mted ~~lCl~l- :or..;I.' . ~nnlJ;tg . anc~... .' " .' ' :,' . '. :"Ail'of ihat?;~~ , _,~ouse. ~ ·.slr~'·'and. ia': ~s~ir~': ~ild;-''': i.Miis' ·$iid. Mdther' Kerna~ail . ·:;:gani~t.;'for" 'tile, ·"~acr~d. ~~Heart:·: ",: 'Ca'tholic Stud~nt8' Coun~ilOf . Head the;,:~ '.. : .i\Ve~te~:· Jhat.'·~a9 :t~~·'. ,lJettt!i",·;:ii; l();s both:to' the:natiokand:~:·'''··Ch·ur:chi(n.:h~rjnativ.e"chY;: Sh.~' :'·Fal(:Ri~er· win 'sPonSor 8 W'inter ' J "." :. .' " \:. . ""~ou~ as~ed a!l.i!1i'it .. "d~;ysi ;>,U,riy,ing- up; to" ~tl~·. '~o.u~, .:: th~ i~d~vid~Ql.SiriCe-theinteilec7~ '!D~~~ ::~er.;.·;~~cital''d~but '. a~' ,t~~' : ·'\Vhm.' dan~' saiurday . night :at .
. '.' '\' -: :tlIilrkie's" blue· ,>'~"".' . ; ;)V~ l!0I} ke 4; the: ·:~ign~qor .. ~ometual me 'is"'an ap'ostOlate."Even· :·,Town '·H~Il.m,New':Yo.rkCltY::m Catholic· Community. .Center,.
" ? eyes carrie ,to Jiim,,:/'W~ll,.;w~·nl :::;.l.l,nd ~l.o~d/' .. '~·l!ports.~~r behi~d ': :jf ·:it were: not 'an apostola-W/· I' .1947..... ~.e.; I'ecently.·,app~ared :~Il' ··Franklin. Street,>~ith music sUp- ' ·,.try to· act oura~e;.; Want me.~ .. !,~opp~.d.aI!da . yo:un~ :.".'~~~ask~ " . ~ould still feel in favor of trllin:: - SOI9lSt·:" W,lth )he ·sYD:1.pho~y''''or-" '.' "plied. by a Beco-matic: .: .. put onD:1Y 'eV'em,,:,:g .~loth~s?)!· .. ' ,'. tt ;?~,W.lg~t helP.. ".: .., . ;' ':' ~ . ."log the intellect," she' a:dded,:'sim-·;" C<~«ls~r~ .. un~~r,·,.the. dl.r~c~lOn.of ." ,The:fo11owing council" mem:" '. , .> '~<;>hi DaddY!:~'l\.1:.arkie,~rinne~, :. .I~ -yo~A·be. so. kmd ~\~.l~ft. pI): ~l,!ca.useit is ~ 'GOd,;.given' ,Leo~~ld.:St~kO":S~l.: ,.: ~, .. .'~. ~ .. , bers' will. sery~' on th~ variou. . ... , · "But· -I do ,WIsh you, wouldn-.t .' .ou,t ~,~~,s~t'\IVO, .~a~ka?~l!.. "Yie ..' faculty .~', " : . , " : ' . . . . . , LorraIne :MarIe Morl;!au,: lyrIC ' committees: · wear two sport.;;hirts-especially. '. ::~~. 'I;'~~. :~I:rIIIY t !l~.l b,e ',out .. ;'. ·Mar)'· parents urge'their chil-' , sopranonrnative':of'Spr~n~(ie~d; .. Eiairie MaJtais Slyvia Oliveira when, one's. stpp~d. ~f1d th~ ot.hTh' d,~r:~., Ii' ..dren: to cho.ose o~ly t,hosecolle~e.· Ma~."·~as ·educ~tec:l ~! ·the SlS- B.ob· Hargraves Ann Coyle John' 'er's checked. 1 want, hIm to '. . e, ~a .. ~ .. '. .' quse;-m . ~ur~es th~t. w..1l1 'be ~re.f~l. In _. te~s .o~,the .Holy~r~ss. She was . Kruger. '. '. , .' . ')mow how.swell you are-how striped plus che.cke<lsport.shlrt:-:- "earmng ~ livmg, she mamtamed;' awarded "scholarshIps to the' . " .. " '. .. .well y·ou all' are!." " and the young, ma~ :l~gged . I n , "Such' a pragmatic' attitude . is "Springfield and" Hartford Con'. ~a.tr~cla Golden, ClaIre Ro~, · ·That had u s . . . packa~es, past Gmny lymg prone ,killing scholarly' learning ana' ser'vator,ies .of Music' and was William Connelly" Carole Matti: · .Come' Friday; we were' pr~ .. ,w:atchmg a w.estern on TV. Mar-. the intellectiIai· life," she said. .aCtive in thfa 'Oper.a: Workshop. at . ·more,Georgette CamJ.)bel.l. · pared for George. There was. an . ,kl~ in rubber ~oots, wa.s ·on the "W~ must, '\IVork' against it, and . ColUJribi~ -Uriiverity. : Mary ~acDonald, Plerrette, early. dinner-fish, of cours~ .:. ~lve~ay washmg h.er l~tUe 10r- replace it with a real interest in . Michael Brunetti lyric tenor, ., ~vesque, .. John Harty,' Dale and· dishes.hustled. away without.' elgn car.. . .._ '.' .,' . : and respt;ct for. 'le~rning am<?n_ .was bo~n. iii New York". City' 'of" Sllv~, ~orls Dupont.. ': a grumble.. The gIrls t()ok ~pon' Bo~ncmg I~. the back door, 'our Catholic You~h." Italian parents. He .. studied lit ,Dl~ne Levesque,. Rita Faria. themselves the task of stralght- Markle burst Into her own pecuSt· . :8' '. . t ',' S '; ., SylVIa Houle, Rachelle Labreche ening ·:the living room' while' 'liar chuckle as she made' the' D'· g h ~~aven. u~e s S ~~l~arYd- Maureen McGough. .. Markie dressed ."The Head or' introductibns:','This is George!" IglOUS to ·.s~r~e t'",Wl '"11 repafrathorYC.tc oOf' 'Nan . 'Diane Caron Pauline Galland' " "I J'ust· rt!membered" sh F oun" . d'lng . A nnlversary' .. ue C 0 ege 0 elY 0 ew 1.0' .' Le' .', ' ·the House took off the second ....,'. e York "He. served in World War .ulse .vasseur, . WIlham h k d·, laughed, pushmg. red· bangs 'out .'. , . '. . . - ' . .,' ' . . ..; Reilly .Marti D ff M' I . h' t th t IPOr .s. I! ec ~c e one-.. . .. . . .. WASHINGTON' (NC)' _ The. II and thetl resumed hIS stl.!<!lt~S .. ,. . n 1,1 y, . urle and shIvered all In the good of her eyes wIth. a cold, wet ..' .' . '. ,,' ".' .. , . . .. ~outm, . , ,. hand.' ·.'The party's tonigh.t-not ReligIOUS of· Per.petual'Adora- . B.t Co.lu~bla Umverslty ahd the. .' Cl·· R '11 F" . Lat ' . eause . . . " . .. N ,y k'C 11 . f M" H" alre el y, ranCIS essa, . .last night! .Ber~a:dy in five ~in- tl~nof :the· Blessed Sacrame~t hew .ege (). ~Sl~t Patrick. 'Hurley, Mary Lomax, Pera ~11.. a.... ,. . Claire Sinotte and Paul Gosselin. Most Sophistieatecll utes. :Want-: tq go : il1 and' get .WIll . <;el~brat~ ~he .1~thanm7 . sas.tapPlear~ .In °G d Hmm-mm, "Smells fishy" we acquainted with, the,'folks?" ',." versary of theIr lDstitutlon startW,l ze~ and· an ermany. '. '. . lIliffed,coming "d()wnstairs com'- · I t was more thail five minutes' .. ipg Dec. 12, . . :.. , . MisS.:Virginia McAndrew 'anli, , t .;. ., plete in our most 'sophisticated of course, beiore:·theerstwhil~ The-Sisters, established in Bel.; Miss Ca~heiine A.·Boylan are.co~ ~..' ~ . black; sheathe, fo»r-inch heels car washer emerged in black vel'- ,.,gium in '1857 byth~wealthy 'chairmen of th!! hospitality .coin"", . , and pearl earrings. Bringing out vet" the disheveled .i-ed: hair daughter ofa bank president,' ..... '.. ~ , : the air freshener,we paraded brushed into a shining cap. . have ~een,'~ the United States'" "T"""' - . . . , ..' .... -.-.- ' - . t H' '., through the' room with a back'- . In' the meantime,. we became since 1,900.; Twelve Sisters; in " ,/S...........·~.·. . ' ! O U ave'.: and.;forth, 'up-al,ld-down waving . acquainted with George, " : their. Wash~ngton convent spend' of ·th~ .b,ottl~, ·its. wick, e~ten.ded· And George became acquai'nied~ their lives in .prayer-before··the I Sh . : to the. utmost.' : ' . ' .. , with 'us-as is! '.' " BlessedSacrament.al)d in 'mak';" .ectrlco 0lf "Hey, what you trying to d<??" , ': ing vestments 'provided to 1726 ACUSHNET AVE.~' Insurance Agency ~ .i 8.. r.e to
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L.egion. of' Decency the ].' 'NEW BEDFORD ,:" .$'4 'PLEASANT ST'REEl The.,following 'films are to 'be' . . . • lng at High Mass."· . . . . . work two. years after "she was ' . NORTH ATTLEBORO to the list in their respec-.;· graduated . . from a . ' convent . Elect,·,ca'I Contractors • •~• '''Fl'sh,'', we com',m'en'ted su'c- a.dded . ' Paris • " . tive classifications:' . . . . . . . • • -inctly',' :waving' the bottle.' . . J 'andwas' instructed--':along ." WYman .~, ,.' TEL. MYrtle 9-8.231 ~ UnobjeCtionable for general . with '" '5-7555 . ;..__ . _.' • •~ "George, Can't let Markie down. pa t ronagE!-'Enemy . . . . Below. . others in her graduating' class- ~~~~~~~~;;;~~~~~~~",,~ ........ ~~~~~~ .. .. .. ..~~~~~~ .... ... .. .. ..~ ..;..~~~~ .. .. .. .. ~..~~J .... Smell better?'~ Unobjectionable'.for adwts and to do good works, especially in ••••••••••, ~ . .. . ca~iri'g for their -I2arish .churches, · "Smelled all right before," .he : a.do.les.cents -Paths ,o.f .,·Glory,. ... A , " . . nna s'vocation wa's .confirmed' grumbled: ,'''And for the life, of . Wink of an Eye. " " me 1 can't see why a man .can't "Unobjechonabie' for adults.,- when a priest called at her home , . find the evening paper." Cabiria, Gervaise. . 'to sol~cit ..funds Jor .his church,
"Put away' in the interest of " Objectionable in part fora11~left.·pract.ically desolate by the
orderliness," we said', giving oIie Love Slaves of the Amazon. : ~ French Revolution. . .' last wave of the air freshener. Condemned _ And God ~ HMeanwhile you might look at ated Woman. ., ..' , Created Woman TV?" . , " "Daddy, not that, nota west '~DDIES ~ : ern!" Markie came into the room Il< '~ dressed in her new black velvet. : ~ III: ~ IV ~. HWhen George comes, you ought· Window Company , IIIl;; n.~lI;, to be reading something kinda ..' , ,
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.~ EasfTaunton/s ~ .;,,' A half hour went by. Ginny in '.-,. Ornamental.Iron crisp green Girl S<;out uniform Chain Link, Fences . ,,' . F"o'o''d:' S·hop'p·'.,n'g' .; waited. .'. ("If Mom 'doesn't • . absolutel. the best In , 1533 Acushnet A v e . ' . :FoOd. sen.lce and Atrnosphe_ ' drive me there pretty.. soon the:' New Bedford WY 4-133% , meeting will be over.") Pat and ~ . ~ Mary also' waited~as did their .. Home Tel. WY9-6505 ; . .~ , .dates. Finally, they left. t.. ..: :. .,.' At 10 o'clock, Markie brought '~nd' 9o~c;::~tail Lounge out the second-the ~hecked- sport shirt.' and silently '.. put . it FUNERAL. HOME, INC•. around the shoulders of the Head .Sale~· Meetl n gs , of the House. R. Marcel Roy - C. Lorraine Roy Roger LaFranee '._ "Warm up, Daddy;" she said' • Birthdays' softly. "Let's turn on 'the fights." FUNERAL DI.RECTORS The three of us sat. in silence, • Club Lunchepns
,, 15n(VING;T9N CT. pretending to be. interested in. , ..
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1Thurs., THE ANCHOR Dec. 5, 1957
on .Visit
Continued from Palre oDe' nique, Father has more male state in this country. His present communicants and churchgoers pastorate is that of San Antonio than female, a situation unusual Huista, comprising a central anywhere! c~urch and Ihanyoutly~g mis. ·B~sY. "Vacation". ~Ions, where Mass is sald once Every six. months Father visits 10 the course of a month. the area mission house in the Walk Miles to Mass , city· of Huehuetenango, a~d Although the Catholic popula-' about once a month he makes tion' of' ~he parish numbers' the four hour trip by horseback 14,000, Fatl~r Breen explains to the Maryknoll missioner.-near tbat the )l1ajority are merely est him. Home trips to the nominal Catholics. So' many United... States can come either pagan prac~ices are mingl~d with every three years for three ,their observance of Catholic cus months or every si.x years for toms that they stand in as much six )l1onths, and he has chosen' need of instruction as the un"; the former. But he is by no baptized. means.' planning a completely However, an average of '3,000 do:-nothing vacation. It's a Cominunioi1S a month testifies Maryknoll tradition to visit' to the deVotion of the instructed' parenis of other missionaries in Catholics. "Mluiy Indians can. orie's'home area, and Father has attend Mass only once' a month. scheduled a trip to the Worces-' when' I visit their remote 'vil-' tel' home of. the prieSt who is lages," said Father Breen, "and' substituting for him at San An they must get up at twoor"'three· tonio' Huista. . in the morning and walk many '.His great dream, however, is miles in' order to do that Until to 'return to Guatemala with the the new fasting regulations came· pro'~iSe of Sisters to aid in the fnto effect they walked this dis work there. "What the Sisters tance without food or drink; and clm' accomplish is tremendous!" even now many'refuSe to break: he ·exclaimed enthusiastically. their'fast. They'understandthat . He 'has only' had· their aid once, they may do so; but they wish' when some Maryknoll 'Sisters in this way to offer God a token' gave up part of their' vacation of their love." .' to work at his mission, arid he For the first.six months of his says that their achievements in stay in Guatemala, .Fatller Breen a six week period were amazing. studied Spanish from morning. "If Superiors would only spare till night. But when he reached two o~ three Sisters to the mis his mission assignment he found. sions, no matter how hard they that in addition 'to Spanish, may: fe.el the sacrifice would be," sPOken by many, the Indians' he says earnestly, "it is certain also used' five separate dialects, that God would bless them with having no relation to each other, new vocations. For everyone or to SpanIsh. So' far lie has they sent to the missions, they mastered two of the five. would reap :it least two at home. Father Plays Dentist Go<!. ~on't be outdone in gener An extremely important part ositY.... . . First In U Years of his mission work, says Father Breen, is' the medical care he Cer~ainly the Maryknoll Fa gives the Indians. Severa,l mom thers are doing their part ,to fngs a week he conducts a clinic, foster· vocations in the mission at which the 'major activity is field· itself. In Guatemala alone tooth":pulling. 'Fillings are un": they are financing the education 'heard of - - if a tOo'th hurts, it's of;!2 seminarians who will re pulled. Visiting dentists trained turn as the nucleus of a native Fat~r Breen and the 'othei clergy., "We're one organization Marykriollers in the area in thiS that exists to put itself out of. gentle art, and sinCe they are business," emphasizes Father the orily tooth-pullers for hun . Breen. "Maryknoll wants dreds of miles, their services ing· more than to train' native much in demand. clergy in mission countries, tum . On One clinic day, Fa~ I'e oy~ the administration of the., eells, he pulled 8% teeth! . Other GhW'ch to them, then move on clinic activities include giving to. the next area designated by penicillin injections for infee the Holy See." tions, treatment of snake' bites, ,Father will be in Fall River and always the distribution of for three months', celebrating his yitamlns. "Our' main Problem first Christmas at home for 14 Is malnutritiC:IR," Father says. If years. It'll· be a happy one lor a case is serious enough to roe the Breens! quire host)italization, the patient 'Genius of Creator' must be transported by litter to the nearest road' and driven ,Humbl~ Obstetrician from there to the city. .Although WASHINGTON (NC) - ''The a man on horseback can cover Obstetrician is humbled by the the distance in two days, litter genius of the Creator," one of bearers require four; and conSe the world's best known obstetri quently mortality rates are high cians said here. among the severely ill. He is Dr. Grantly Dick-Read, Male Catechists 67-year-old English physician As the only priest in his area, Father Breen's daiiy schedule who is credited with perfecting is staggering. For three weeks a method known as natural of each month he'is traveling on childbirth. "The Creator did not intend horseback from village to vil that childbirth be a totally pain lage of th.e 16 in his parish, stay ful aud frightening _experience," ing overnight, hearing confes Dr. Dick-Read, now retired, told sions, and saying Mass at each, in additiop to administering the . an audience of more than 500 at
other sacraments, instructing in George Washington University.
doctrine, and training catechists. The physician is on a U. S: and
Canada tour.
Of his catechists, Father speaks . Dr. Dick-Read's method of .ery highly. He has a corps of 135 men 'natu,ral childbirth, sometimes called' painless childbirth," aims eeattered throughout his terri at assisting' women in childbirth tory ~ho are capable of prepal;' to work with nature by overcom ing converts for baptism, mar ing fears and anxieties. It in riage and first communion. volves prenatal instruction and says that the psychological value physical exerCises, and, ideally, of having men instead of women does not call for the use at for these jobs is enormous:' In anesthetics during birth. South and Central America, The physician, who is not a gion has become largely a mat Catholic, was mentioned in a tel' for· wOlnen. "If women go to church," Father explains. "the' January, 1956, address in which men don't follow them, whereas the Pope gave moral approval if the men go, the women gladly to the new natural childbirth method. ' come." As a result of his tech
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Cincinnati Mother . Wins' Recognition For Far East. &ok Distribution' CINCINNATI (NC) - While the Soviet government churns out millions· of copies of com munist publications' for dissem ination in nations of the free world,' public and private agen cies in the United States wage a counter-offensive. Conspicuous as ·a one-woman ~rps in this battle is Mrs. Al bert F~ Hester, Cincinnati house wife, who has 'collected and mailed nearly 4,000 volumes to the Far EaSt. ..
Academy Superiors T o Attend Meeting .Sister Mary Olga, R.S.M., Superior of Mount St. Mary Con vent, and' Sister- Mary Carmela, R.s.M., . Principal of the Acad emy, will attencS the 72nd annual meeting Of the New England Association of Colleges and Sec ondary Schools tomorrow at the Hotel, Statler, Boston. Mount St. Mary Academy has beeIi accredited . by this Association since 1951. On Saturday, delegates from' the Mount, who will atte~d the New England Regional Unit of the National Catholic Education~ al Association at Boston College include Sister Olga, Sis~er' Car-' mela, Sister Mary Dionysia and Sis~r Mary Denisita, R.S.M.
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Her unique role in the area of do-it-yourself diplomacy' was underscored recently in a report issued by the National Book Comm.ttee on free distribution of books abroad. The report honored Mrs. Hes ter's individual effort among the work of such largeorgan.izations as the American Friend.> of Viet nam, the Asia Folindation, the World Literacy and Christian Literature division of the Na tional Council of Churches, and the C~RE plan. Standing alone· among these large organizations, this wife.of an insurance agent and mother of five children seemed a small figure. But the report made it clear· that her contribution was a sub 'stantial one, and worth calling to the attention of other groups and individuals as an example. .
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.. FRESHMAN OFFICEItS: :Chosen by theirclassrnates at St. Mary's }Jigh School,. Taunton, were, left' to right, Pre~ident Mary Morris, Treasurer Carol Sullivan, Secretary' Mary Fl~h~rty and Vice-preside!lt Jaqueline' Mezzoleni., .
Did you know that one of History'fl most farhous ship wrecks, occurred, on .Cbristmas Eve? . Christopher Columbus' flag ship, the Santa Maria was wrecked off the island of His . paniola (now Haiti) on Christ mas Eve, 1492. A novel interpretation of the memorable events of that famous occasion will be dramatically presented by the Catholic Thea tie' Guild in a radio play to be broadcast at 7 p. m, next Sunday over radio st'ation WNBH. "CI1~i~tmas Shipwreck'" paints a different picture of the sterl ing',;:haracter of the white-haired praying .Admiral Christopher Columbus." ' .. Tliepl.ay asks and' 'answerlJ some fascinating 'historical ques twns. - Who was responsible for the fantastic .blunder which Wrecked the Santa Maria? What ~as . the real purpose behind Columbus' voyage? ... The dis., covery of America was reallf a byproduct, not the real reason why the King of Spain finan~d Columbus' 'journey.) C In the end, how did God's Mercy turn Columbus' threat ened disgrace into a blessing? ,"Christmas Shipwreck" is an original ,radio play, written by Guild member Manuel Almada. Christopher Best will direct the premiere .presentation of tWa play on the air.
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Power ·of YOaRth
Continued from Page One Ii) n_ L a ~ M LC!!S) L Continued from Page One men from the snares of Satan. l\.em«:!lITl;'\b.Cl~8~g;;,Xaml?m~Olf 1rU'@lP trilec demonstrated not only in words In fact, so complete was this vicPHILADELPHIA (NC)-PopePius Xl's encyclical "On but particularly by the young tory of the woman and her seed Atheistic Communism" was characterized as "one of the people themselves present at the over the' fallen angel that God most remarkable examples of historical prophecy" by Vice convention. never permitted the soul of the The need of self-discipline in new Eve to fall under the slightPresident Richard M. Nixon in an address here. our youth was masterfully ex est taint of the work of the In ,capacity-packed Philapounded by the various speakers; Tempter; Mary was even condelphia Convention Hall, the Civic leaders such as Mayor Dill ceived without original sin. . Vice President spoke at the worth of Philadelphia and GovDown through the centuries' ernor Leader of Pennsylvania the· followers of Jesus Christ had closing dinner of the fourth along with the Hon. John A. professe'd' by their devotion a annual National Council of CathMatthews noted the spiritual · belief in the complete sinlessolic Youth convention. foundations upon which. our ness of the Mother of God, even Mr. Nixon told the you~h gath. American liberty was founded to the extent of eliminating from 'ering .that Pope Pius Xl's encyand called attention to the her the graceless state that has clical was the more remarkable shrines of liberty in the city been the lot of every "lan" at because it was written 20 years of Philadelphia. the time of his conception 'since ago at a time when the Soviet It will be a long time before the sin of Adam and Eve. Never, Uni~n was looked llpon generally the adults and the youth at' the on the other hand, had this conas a weak'ineffectual tyranny. convention will have the oppor viction of the sinless or immac, ~'But this"great religious leader tunity to; listen to such ·inspiring · ulate conception of Mary been REV. JOHN P" CRONIN spoke out in resounding terms and eloquent sermons as they declared a truth 'to be .held by redemption was not· 'to ,be the of communism as a threat to the. heard in the few days of ·the . all members of the Church un- work of Satan's' shives. rebelling,. security and peace of the world," conference. At the opening der pain of sin. ~gainst; him; . it . w~( 'to. be the':. Mr. Nixon. continued. "Indeed, Mass, on the Feast of the PreRevealed by God '., .. ' wOrk of.'God'sfriendS: conquer-' • much as th~. world has changed sentation. of the Blessed yirgin, .Then·,'· on Dec. 8, 18M; Pope . iJl'g for Hini.·F~ttipg ltwas, then, . -.in the interval, the.re is little in Bishop' Wright beautifully dePius' IX, in order to settle any' 'that.Mary should have 'b~en his y;ritings that could not be picted'.the Youth of Mary on her doubts and to inspire' Marian: Conceived: free, froJIl origiri~l sini ~ .\:,sed· to "describe' the communist Presentation in the Temple and devotion', .solemnly defined~it as". 'living always ai(a frte~(rof pod;' .•menac~·today." . ,the different persons in her life· a ·truth·of the Catholic .Faith. '.:. 'Since 1854'we need n'ei 'longer . ~ay Heed .., . VICE-PRESIDEN',r NIXON, who disposed her· to submit her "We declare, proclaim, and de- rely merely "on the' fittingness '.:. The' V-ice President asserted message of hatred. To the l'eli- 'will so complete~y to ~he Will fine that .o. 'f' M' ary " s Immacu .. , 1" a t e Concep,. . gl'ous p'er'son every'. ma'n .I'S ,of·' .God. With usual mag . this'dogma is revealed' b . th a t th e mam'fest 0 rec entl'~ I's1 B' h'his Sh 11 d by God and therefore ~ e· tion to aid our convicti~ns. We sued in Moscow by the Commu-. sacred, becau;e' all were created netic appea, IS op een ca e firmly, ,and s~eadfastly ?~he~d. need 'not even'argl,le tliat Sctipnist parties of 64 nations "lays . by a loving, God. To the com- '~;o;;~~\~~ toth: w~~~st~:s e by all.t~, faithful, name y, . e.' ture 'seems' to .imply it!· nor the down a blunt· challenge, the Free Inunist, his -fellow man. ·is but
dogma wh~ch.holds th~t themo~t 'Fathers. of the early'" Church: World cannot and will flot ig-:a tool to be used in the effort to Christ in His Church at home·
Bless.ed Vlrgm Mary, from .the. instead we' now know with in':', . nore," and. that it would be fool~ seek total power. We seek peac~;' and abroad. , Preaching at the,
first. mo.ment of, her concept~o~" fallible•. ce'rtainty "that she' "e'n':' . hardy to "br,us,h it as.ide on t h e ' ,. ·closing· Mass, Archbishop Cush,. :
by a smgular .grace and pnvI.' . ' . ". " th t 't t' th" 1 they prepar.e·to conquer. ing forcefully presented to the,
·' f ' hty. G 0 d an d m ' · .tered groundd d'a tI t con ams e usua, "America counts foremo,st "on young people an, apprecI·atl'on. of
I ege roml a mig i ' thiS. 'f :world . bfull l' fof grace, th l' ·" . . . VillW 'of· the merits of .Jesus ,:r~tYhm~t' or · Gourd' H~ ~e Ifon . e le~ an IS ~r I~n:h' "f t t~e unshakaqle'faith of our peo.- the relation between Freedom . t th S ' f th h au ony 0 f '. 0 , Imse.,:, s a resu 0 e mam es 0,. pie" Mr; Nixon said and withd V· t Ch . n s e aVlOur,O e uman, " ,'.. . . . . "." '. .' Mr Nixon said it can'be ex-' '." . , " an Ir ue. . race,' was kept free· ·from· every. . . Pope .PlUS :~X.,fUl:~her I~~rms. . '" ,,', . , out It.: wealth: and technblogy '.' Perhaps the most en.couraging .. ,itain of origi'nal sin.'~ . ..' ~ :tl~at;.Mary f? speCial· pnyl1e~e " pected. tha~ the dictators ..of would be.. nothmg." He added:'. ~'i>hase '9£' the Convention· was ,. Singular Privilege . ' : 'IS not,.mdependent, of tpe re-' Mo~0w. .wdl .sharply. step. up "The' quiet .' determination of. that of the Youth .. Every meet':' 'Perhaps 'itshould- .be·noted-...dernp~io~:'.. :Jl1stead, just~s,. by . t~elr econ?mIC, 'ti' p.St~ChOllol glCal ) .. bumble faith ·is 'the r.eal secret .of···ing session panel' was conducted .... . .' . Ch . ·t's men··ts'·'·f and subverSive ac viles .. . ' ..thls.' . . by 'the young . ' people .. themselve~;
whattheImmaculate·Conceptlon. ,ps , .we . ar.e.. r~,:d'f' .. ,ro ,~, !,...... , a 'over. ... 'Ar.nerlcanstrength. With is not. It does ·not: refer to ,the '.: ~'~~': ~a.~y: ,~y;>ilI?t~~IPatI~n of ~ ~,t;I.~ ~?r~d, '. w~ll . re~mphas~ze. faith; 'the dark, clouds .of the' It mu!?t be' said to their credIt ~
, fact't11at 'Milrymii:a~ulouslyCoi.i-, : : C~rISt :~. t .m~nts. wal!' p~e.se,rved.: '. . ,tile p~J?ular front ta~tIcs 'Yhl~hmo~entwill indeed b~ the dar.lt-. ;, :~at tQey' carried ~>l"t the}r tasks .
. • eeived' Jesus., Christ, the sinless' ~r?-~tsl,n:Jt.~~s.1)yy~rt~~.. 'O!,. }~oledS? m~ny ~ell-~~eD:tlOIl~d, :Jless,bef()re.th~dawn,. thedawn.. ·W'ith deco;rum.and:·with a true'
:Saviour 'of mankind. R~ther" ··.H,I~.I'}~~I~~.~~e~l~:~a~. s~e.w.~tl::. pe,opl~.'I~}I~es'I>~~t,,:a~d~I~1 . ,o~ ,a·new~\,ltu.re·"o; p~a()~;~ Qf .•. ·senseof~'J;es·p.qnsib'ility. . . .',
.it.referl;'to~hesirigular.l?rivm~g~,' cQ~~e~-vC;:~'~,~J!,l~c!l~!1~e·an~'~a.~·:.,.,~x~r~ls~;r~.t~l~~, c0:1?t~~~,~n~. '. h,unia~brlJt~~~ho,od' .and ~fr~-. :.~ NeVer'. to "l?~ f<miotten by thf(
'., - ;wheI;eby.. Mary herself beg,an: to. ;uI~lma~el~. :~y.~~; ,,; ..,.T,h~!!, .. ~~e...: :dqJ~ll,na.tsh~~. ;odf :.c~m~~.~~~,g?y.:., ~~pect for th.e dlgmty. of, all· mefl:'~ ~'m~re:"th~n .;1.5,0.90 .!OUtho presen~ · existiri. the w.o~b of her, J1.1pther, "~" \I~~ ..··':l~f' .:~as .~vt;d.. .~ ;:~~m,!1en.. ~n., ~~~\l,m;s~p~~ . , . . '-.: .. ' c " : . . . : ' ; \ •. : : ' . ,~. ~e... ~o).e~n Pont\.fica~ Ma§,... Sain.t.- ~nne,~ without. allY trace ;~hns~s .d~~ttI ~~: ~~;cr~, ..... ttest;y~~ywher~: . . . . " . <:athollc . PhysIcians.'" '.,which ,~as ,ceJebra~~d n~· the. of orIgmal ·sm·on·her s()lJl.. ." C1h~rch . Fo~e~lg~t . ;. . ... . c... .. • ...' 'Convenholl Hall.: Prachcally ,". Eve beg~n ~e~'Hfe i~ .paradi~ ,. ~ .~.u~.;e, .... Q.t.~ Op,.. ·7bey, .have ,re~~lrm.~d t!iell' Att.end Presldent~ '. :~veryci~e l'rese~t receiv(;)d ~91y :.. in the state.of·gr~ce, iii cOlllple~e f,·.. th f"P ... ' , . ~lhmate goal o~ ~orld d,?!,nn~;- ""WASHINGTON" NC _ Dr. Co~munio~.". ," · frien~ship, wit~ God', and so· sne.":O~",\ '. 0 .. I~ ... ap~.rs_ ,:. ~on. by non-mI1I~r·r·.m:ea?s_~. "FranCis' M. "Forsi~r, (deal of the.' '.. :. Th~dosingbanq~et '.Yhich~ol rem~med un?l, she ate. of· th~. ,.;..; ,~EW. Y~~~. <'~C)--:-,F.9rd~a~ . posslb.le, by ~~r .. If~ec~~sary, :. Georgetown Universit -Medical' }owed th~ fl4a~ was. another. Im:- • forb!dden fr~lt.~rom th~tfl,lt~J'.·":lJJ!ly~rs.lty,,wIIL~ p~~t·De~., ~3. t,he .V~<:.~ .p'resl~ent. ~l~ •. :.In ~~-. ScbOoI; was'one ofse~eral conJ , . pressive. event. It was attended; m~me~t inhlstory~ no ~hil~ ,l,i~~.".tp·· !l.n;, all~day . ~}l,lrt;, S~e~ve .. spon~m~ t~ .thls ne:w.. c?allenge: 'sultin . "h siCians: to Presid~nt . by more t~.al?;.~500 1?ersons, m~st ever com~en~ed It:s ;h~e . ~n "S?"I ;,!or.~S~()P o,? '::re~s~~?~r p~s~~~ "~ dramab~al~y 'un~er~lIl:c:d' ~y" E'isen:-o~e: di.il-i~ 'his recent ill- of' ~em .ypun.g pe~ple, 'It was 1 -exalted a state of'dlVme fflend:7'~':~nd Mal,teyp:!. '~!>r:.p~p~t.:s ,affl1~- . :the t~o.~putmks"we,m,ust~yold." ness:' . . . . g , ' . -'< . ' , • h~re th~t they received the finaL 'ship;. all bore the effect'of ,the:· a~ed;:with the eatholic:;PresS~A~, extreni,es.of panic and.:.compla- ' . . . . '. ·t· "', .. , ' .. " .... : . . .words"cif ,inspiration' and, hope .. ain of~heir .first parents: ;·:;,:::t:r}lOdation,·~~~as~h'n~iinc~d'~er~:.. ~~rcy:",~,~'.'.. " ~:':;. '., :-.'. ': .. Dr...~orste~. apd a~}~~sto~e,. 1r.?m~', Ga~di~al .Spellman· and God" m HIS mercy had prom-:h,,:;:: Th~ 'workshop WIll'.. be ,·,.oon~' ... , ...Ref(!rrl~g to therehg~ous traother. ,<::~.th.ohc... phys~c!~1I1" ~r-~g .... Vice-President Nixon: . . ised.. redemption to fallen iPa~:·{.;,~iicted.bY·Edii:I\.i~dC;·Ari).old'~: d~tionsof:the Catholic .Church, }~en.,.Thomas Yf:~.attingly:,~r~.'::". The Fall River: Diocese mad~' througb:.. the s¢ed ofa wom~.n;.:.".t~~ :~¢igentha1EiI: ~iii.:9tYpe ,<;ioi, . ~e Y~ce' p,resideilt said: . ,... ., . .. a!D0ng. ~he specHlhstsatt~pdW~:. its 'c;o'ntl'ibution'w this most suc- . and in' His infinite wisdom de-':'.> who is·' author ~:of .-~:FunctionaL .. ' "You, have been., unalterably,.: .t~e }?resI4ent.· Dr, Forsteqs.c.u~:,.. cessful of all" Catholic, Youth terminedtnat tl)is:s.ee<i, this. off": , . Newspaper Desigtio"', GIl'arles '~pposed ~o ~omni~ism from its· .rently;presidlmtoftheA~c,'!rica.n "Conventi,ons in.-the person of. spring; would ·benone other than. Felten, m';inager of ."The Messen-: v,ery .begmnmg. Long before the .Acad,~my of N~u~()lo~3' a~d. d~-., F.ather William J. McMahon, Di- . the Second' Person of, the Blessed- . ger of the' Sacred'Heart",and ." Soviet Union was founded, the .rector .of the <i.eIlartment o~ .neu,. rector of Cathedral Camp. He. Trinity become man. . author of' "Layout by Felten ~ . ·leaders of' your 'Church made rology at Geor~etownUmve~- . is treasurer. of the·. National , What· sin-blemished creature will be cqiiirman:' . <., . : ' . ..eiear ~ts,.total opposition to Karl sity M~dicap)Chool. ·Catholic Camping', Association: ',~ld ,ever.:be 1\ ,worthy mother. Besides·sessions "011 ... page' :MarJ!: and the principles he pro.. Dr. Mattingly, ,.a heart,spec~al-' and was chosen as·a ,speaker at· . ,- for so ,exalted a Child? It was makeup, :selectioJ1' aJ1~~~: ~s'e' of·poun:~ed..'~,. . .... 'ist, is medi<;aJ' qepartme"!t .chi¢,. one .Qf·.the.sessions on waterfron~. only fi~tin~, then, that a woman headlines; body types and.photo,-" ' ·.D.ig~ib 01 Man· at Walter' Reed. ,Hospi(al' i~', safety., .His selection. is a recog-,
sho~lld be'specially'prepared for .' graphs;,Mrf·Arnold win.bold.·8 <.. .~ .,After paying t~i~ute to; the Washington.·.· In addition, he is nition of. his able adniinistratio~.
· ~is ~uplime office. from the t>t:criti9ue ·of....participating' news- ,.;prophetic ~n<iyclic~lo~Pope Pius clini~~l; associate profess~~ . of " and at.·the. same time a, tribute gmnmg,of ,her eXistence. So It . papers.-' imd' . a question-and-, ·.XI, the· .vlce,PreSld~nt declared: . medlcl~e at Georgetown Umver-. to. Cathedral Camp, whlcb 00 .w;:\s:thatinselecti~g.Ml,l~y .from· answer··sesSion,::~· '. <; .. ' .; '..; .,'... ,'.'1 do.. not. see "'ow any believer .. sity. Medical School. He is . one . ,cllUse~' of it's location and· ilie. " all 'eternity to. be the Mother cit ..., ,. ::'~., . ,', :.···.~·in God and in.the, dignity of man' of the phyiiici~lns who a'tteI\ded" facil,ities it offers, ,ranks among' · the. God-Man, God.>also decreed' ,·-.S·U can falter i~the struggle tqat the Presidentfollowing. his)le~rt' Ute bes.t: .~amps' throughout the: that she sh~uldnever.fall under' '. " ..... ,. " " . . . ' . ' , ' .·.,'faces'us; Comml.!nism is·'totally . attack in Denver in 1955. . e~untry. · the sway: of Sl,lta~;. eyen, to. the ..; ,I\j'OTRE.:D~~~ (:t'l~)-;-,;~e~~~Il' opposed to 'allthat',We ·believe··. " ': . . -,. extent of bearing. fo~, an· i~stant '. Ii~ll .. ane~}lmverslty.o! 'lIJotre and cherish.' We believe in the' the e~ect· of his .-first/victory,,' J:)am,e cI:?r~ltor~,·~!<~.o~mo~,atiiIg,. spirit of· man; they treat man as over man. She wa~ cOl1ceived . 300 st,!d~nts,.h~~b~en.~ed~c~ted..~amachine. We believe in justice , immaculate, without Clriginal sin. by .BI~h!>p.. ~~r~,s<''f·;<!4n~.. ~ ....:l'ind;the morallaw,.tbeYhelieve , . Shares in Redemption -. ,Rqc~9r,c;l.i..~·,:..~.;t~~, .."l1eW:.' resij:l.~n~.;; <l~ force alone.' w~· preach-love Bes~des being' the:. Mother or hall ~s'Weg,lft:~~:~!,Jand Mrs." and" forgiveness; theits' is a . .. Our Saviour, 'Mary was also to' .James·F·; 'Keenan of Fort Wayne,,·,· .. , ' . , . •be a sharer in Hissa:Ving work.. '. given....:ill .m·e~ory ·'Qf,.their son' · Eve had cooperated 'with Satan Jam~~~F>Keenan'Jri'~ho died···· ~ especially in the qownfall of man; Mary in 19~~.. ", ..: '.' . >.: ~~'.:' : . . .~.; .' ;",:: ': '; ·inust ' cooperate' with Christ in .. .:: . ., . aulted tor t~. the' redemption' of· man. Eve .':~ .: GUARANTEED~' ,,'.,;..4 .. freely sinned; Mary would freely .
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THI:: ANCHOi( Thurs., Dec. 5, 1957
Catholic Peace Association Needs Members and Funds
lisb@Irn C@[f@]rf?u;1lI W(fJU'[lB~ A~«B~~st
By Msgr. George G. Higgins Director NCWC Socia' Action Dept.
The recent 30th Annual Conference of the Catholic Association for International Peace se'rved to highlight the important work which this small but articulate and in fluential organization performs as it strives to make Christ ian principles effective in the Christian teaching in the inter field of international' rela national field .more widely tions. known and respected. The conference, centered This need of CAIP for more on the 'theme of "Current Gains in Latin America," was held in Wa s hi n g ton early in No vember and drew a group of about 125 CAIP me m be r s, as well as observ ers from' the Pan American Union, several Latin American e mba s s i e s, agencies of the U. S. govern ment, and other national organizations. Compared to the attendance at national meetings of other associations engaged in 'similar work, the number of delegates at the CAIP meeting may seem
members is closely linked with an equally pressing need for funds. Operating and printing costs have, as everyone knows; skyrocketed during recent years, and the r~sulting financial pres .sure has become a serious handi cap to the organization, which. relies almost entirely on mem bership dues and voluntary <;on tributions·for its expenses. (Un-: li~e many g~O\1PS working in the. field of' international peace CAIP does not have any endow men:t or foundation support.) At the ~me time, the necessity for more frequent pamphlet studies and policy statements has become increasingly acute. Both within and outside the Church, more and more people are anx ious .. to know ·the teachings of the Church concerning the rela-. tions between nations and..
11 ,
Mod~8"n ~~O~S LISBON (NC)-This is an age in which "man wishes to occupy the throne of God, declaring it to be empty," t/
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LIFETIME WITH CHILDREN: Sister Jesuina prays at Mass celebrating her .golden jubilee as a nun with the Sacred Heart Orqer. When asked to reflect on her years i~ the service of the Church, she said, "Working with chil d,ren is my life.. I love children and they love me." NC Photo.
D~plores
Lack of· Leadership
considerable improvement can . CHAMPAIGN (NCh-Lack of be made." .sincere Ciltholic leadersh'ip in Only when this happens will some scholarly occupations and that question repeated over a pr-ofessions is a primary cause century and a half cease to be ' of religious tensions in the asked, "Can one be a 'good Cath unimpressive. However, as United States, Dr. John J. Kane CAIP President Harry W. Flan peoples., iold the Newman Foundation at olic and a good American?" Dr: nery pointed out during the Regional Meetings " Kane said.. business session of the confer CAIP members have indicated the University of Illi,:!ois. ence, few organizations have that they wollldlike to see the. :'This is the great challenge . Porh.guese Bishops
5U<;h a large percentage of their organization sponsor more fre-' facing the Catholic laity today,
members at their conventions. . quent regional meetings in some he declared, and until now they VATICAN CITY (NC) - His'
The total membership' of CAW of the'larger cities,' so that mem-:' have not assumed their respon- Holiness' Pope Pius XII has sent
encouragement to is slightly more than 500, an'd. in bers a'nd other' l'nterested per- !;ibility. in numbers proportionate a'message"of h' .. sons, who cannot make the long. .to the. Catholic oopulation. t ,e first Bishops' conference of ;~~;er~~ct:\~:::~c~u:;eri2: trip to Washington f~r th~ an-' Dr. Kane, head of the sociolo~y ~~~ica~o~ttigllc!se' ~oloriies i~ borders on the phenomenal. It is nual conference', may .ha.ve an, departmen.t at: the University ,or;. .J'., '" ,. certainiy a tribute to' the high opportunity for, .discussion·;and ';, ~otreDame, ·has studied exten-' , . The, ,Bishops. are meeting at degree of personal reSponsibility special'studY':91)..'eurrent ,,"-orId' , si~e,ly' the social el~ments of Lo~rell,co Marques,. capital of and active interest which are developments.~'Here again'.' the inter-religious difficulties: .\ . MOzambique, on'· Africa'so east outstanding qualities of the As need for o'peratirig experise~ and, .,. American' Ca'thQlicsare over-· coast. Bishops of, the colonies'· sociation's members. . the' desirability of.' setting .up a .whelniingly an immigrant peo of" Angola and P~rtuiuese Needs More Members fund for speakers ilre important pIe, and most of their, ancestor!; Guinea on the west coast are co~siderations.' , . . ,,: , were Hliterllte a\ld poor; he said., also part~cipatin:g in· this' epis Nevertheless, it cannot be de it w~s heartening 'to observe. 'According to Dr, Kane; this is a copal conf~rence. . nied that the membership total . at the recent confer¢ncethat the primary '·reason ..for the smail falls far short of what it should organization's members were ,'number: of Catholics in certain' be. Since its' establishment in neither ~is~eartene:d' nor-.dis-· import~nt endeavors. . , 1926-27, the Catholic Association disma.Yed by t~'ese Ser,iOl;ls pxob-' ',"Some 'of the' 'preJ'~dice' and . -. '. for International Peace has de I g th h f 11 f voted its efforts to the promotion' ems.......a .. er t ey wex:e u'., 0 ' . bigotry, toward Catholics which PI..mbing - Heating of Christian' principles of justicep~actIcal, sen.sible.' ,s~ggest~o~s . has existed throughou~ ·the ~is and <:parity in the internatiori~1 alm~4}:l,t ~u~~ount:In~. the dlffl-, ~ory of· American society has· 712, Acushnet Ave. field. It has done. this through' "cu~t1e~. .It wa~ 9~VI0,'lS, too, ~lt~t,: n~ve,r been entiI;ely "dissipated the publication of .pamphlets, . ~ey w~re c!>nvince~~p.he: l;>.~~l,c; .'. aiJd, n(wer:will be," Dr. Kane de .. New Bedford policy statements, and a monthly) Imp.ortall;ce of CAIP.~ mlssl?n ~ elared.,' "But· I sincerely believe . Bus~Ph. WY 2-3089 bulletin, and through national help' e~tablish,":r)l~ Peace. ,O[ tha~: with' the development ,of C~mst In t,he .Reign of Ctmst. extensi;ve Catholic lay leadership Res. ,Ph. WY 4-8770 and regional conferences. It hils' 'Membership applications and re. publicized and emphasized 'the quests'for additional information' ;:==.,::::::' pronouncements of the Popes abo'ut the A!;sociation may be ad'- ' and of the American Bishops on dressed' to Miss Eleanor Waters, " international peace, and· hasCathoiic Association' for Inter made' particular efforts to 'en.. national Peace, 131~' Massaclhi·;. courli'ge college students to make setts' Ave., N.W., Washington' 5, a serious study of Christian prin- D. C. ' . LUMB~R·CQ., ciples and their· application: to '. world' problemS.' .HallM·illion Loan So. Dartmouth During the 30 years of CAIP's ,DE'I;'ROIT (NC) - ~Mary-: and Hyannis existence, international' affairs grove College has 'been granted .' ' have become in.creasingly impor- a $565,000 loan from the Com. So. Dartmouth tant and complex, and today almunity' Facilities. Administra most anything that happens on tion of the Federal Housing and WY 7-9384 the world scene has, some effect, Home Finance Agency to build direct or 'ndirect, on the lives of a H2-bed dormitory. Hyanni.s 2921 ·all of us. Yet there Has not been ~~~~~~~.~~=_====~~~~::;;;;~::;;;;~:;;;;:;:;;;;:;:;;;;:;:;;;;:;:;;;;:;=: a c(l'rresponding -growth in the'" : number 011 Catholic Americans whq: are willing to join actively in the work of a Catholic organi zatipn-the only one of its kind in the United States::""which is woddng, with t~e approval of' ,': ,rch· Property the ;<\merican Hierar'c?y!to make
···LANGIS
the Cardinal-Patriarch of Lisbon has declared. . Manoel Cardinal Goncalves Cerejeira said however that "the weight of the absolute is too much for a creature to bear." Holding that there is "a crisis of faith in' the contemporary im patience which accuses the Church of not keeping pace with modern. progress," the Cardinal also said that the current dis illusion even extends to priests. "We are priests and victims, and this must be realized all our _lives long. It does not end at the knee of the ordaining bishop..• It is a life lived in communion with Christ, a life animated by the Holy Spirit in the maternal bosom of the Church." The 69-year-old Patriarch then referred to the sacrament of Matrimony, recalling St. Paul's allusion to it as an image of the union between Christ and His Church. He told his priests to profit by the example of the married-the perpetual sacrifice of one to the 'other and the per 'Oh\l atll JO uo!unwwo:> I-enlad
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·:Pope·",Pius.Says"·" . World· Nearing . ..,. :'. Cross .Roads .
S~o Sl .Louis ~niversitT ,. -. " ; . .' .•.. has' me worried. Last week' I:' found, Signs.
By
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My husband. ." ... of lipstick on his haiid.kercbief and we'had an awfulquar~t.. . ~OME (N~)-Nabons ~re. Now be 'ClaIms. that hed.i~ 'this only to ~ake me angry; I .qUIckl~ commg to thepomt don"t iike to he·suspicio,us,.but I'm terribly upset. We' have a~ whiCh ~hey mustch~, two young children and I'm .. . ·.0··. eIther the. path of materml-, ~
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God·· Love You
Re~"Fuiton'I:Sheen; ..
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.l)ut of 6,000 foreign'rllissioi\aries in China six "ears 'ago, there are left today only seven priests and eleven. Sist.~rs.. The" rest·
~~=~~~vep:::;:::~::d~::ri:.::~::;t~~:~ '~~:'::e~td~:'~
Our Lord drove' oot of the possessed. ThoSe devilS said: "We know who you are, Ule'H~1¥' One of God." The Communists know too! . . .; .. '
You are wondermg whether ism or the path of the spirit,
he still I\?ves you, Of eourse;'[ . Pope 'Pius XII has warned.: The Communists too have, paid an in
can't answer that, but if. experiIt is for this reason said the· direct tribute to the living Christ in two' of
en:ee rea£hes anythiM.about such . Pope i~ a special radi~ message' their wicked deeds. One, they drove nails
connected .with marital love that cases,' I ,v.:0u~d wager that h,e . to the people 011 Milan, that be '. into .the head. of· a priest ~ ~e shape of
I.can well. understand .wh" you d~~,: As a~ife, you m?lY ~dlt. eonsiders. their "(ireat :Mission" " a crown of thorns; two, they told the Catholic
are ,wo l' r i e -1..' . dlfflcul.~ 't() .un~ta..Pd,·.~o~ he .anaCt of the 'Providence of God. people and, the' bishops and priests that they
One of the, can love you and ~ . pla:r The ~ope's'l!ldio talk concluded would. not' be persecuted if they denied the
c ha rac~ristics. around.' Well, some munature tbemajor mission exercises ear- Holy Father and accepted a National church..
of jovebetweeI!h.usbands. .apparenUy can for ,a riEit out under Archbishop Glo- In the !~t ins,tance, th8y recognize~ iii their
man'and woman time untII.they: find theJ.D5elves.. v3mU.Battista Montini of Milan:' hate Christ the. Saviour Who was crowned
is its exclusive- . ~Oil were in love when you marwithtborns; in the s~cond' they' proclaimed'
ness WheD a rled,. and now you' have ·the .J.teeent Events ... 0 the value of. the primacy. of Peier in 'assum ~le are' in· . ad.ded bond of chi~.c·~e.your; "Human events of· the . past . iog .that ehureh ~!thp·~ta·.~~ad"is like love' two is a . best self and yOll will continue to- severaL D)onth". rapidly .foUowa,body without ahead. .
ero .'d and three' hold·his love. '. .' ' . iog ~e ·after another, ..warn us ." .... . ,,,: -"-.'-'. . , . '.. ' . .
bec:n~ one too .. 'Fin1l11y', do notneglec:t prayer - that ,nations· are quickly ccpming. I . NoW' i( .&.be ~iiuonS 01. SataO iDdirectlyadmit that ·Christ many: Themar-' . a~d the ·:sacraments.· Let"reli'-' c~o:;;er:to th~ ~~ossroads ?f salv.aHis v~ciu- a~e the., heari of re~ioD., ,'theD' shall we Dot rall7: to rUge contract g - draw. you A~geU:ler'. an. li ·- ~on. M' ~nlln, p,ope ,Pius ,sal~.· Ch~ by ~iDt confor~ed ~ His Crass and to His. Viear' by·aiilin&' sanctions . this strengthen ~ou :. ~B. ';t'. coupl~:. .H.u!llamty. ~as reached -' the. his' 1150000. 'missionaries in. the world!" Our ~ Christ has beeD e ic:"c I usiven~ ' . .. ' . Wh~t. God, :~asJomed 'tog.'Cth~r,. pomt where It must choose be,., cnlcified.therd.o~ewe must be mortified; Oar Viear is attacked. fot--'it prohibits not only adw.~ery· 0 no man can pu,~ ~der~if :you. t~~ tot! :guaran.tees .of salv,aUleref4Jre we ~ust .ai~ Prove ;your faith by some application of bUt misp.I.aced atIectioJi'.foc·a stay close to God.. ' bon an<i.. pro~p~.rl~yoffered 'by lIle Cross.to FOur life. '. Ea,ch w-;ek send the sacrifices to the Bol7 third party. . ".' . .." pure.1y .m.aten~hstic ~eans" or. Fa~r through his S~iety for &he Propagation of the ,Faith which When'; some' .modern cOUples ~ sure guarante:es, .more: ~ ~eaAIs for the purpose. of, aiding all t.h~ missions. elaim·that·they don't careWo to.Pola~d· w~thr.of m~~, offered by ~ :e~: much about what their partner ne,!,-,~supr.emac~ of the spInto . GOD LOVE YOU to M.B. "Enclosed please find $4, long overdue ~es when he is away from them., DETROIT (NC)-A prayerf\41" Praising the faithful of ,Milan but .not.forgotten" . " . to M.M.. "I recently sold my bowling ball as they are merely indicating that "thank ybu" in' Polish for Amer- for bav.ing .indicated which road I' had no further use for it. The Missions need the $10 more than they don't care very much JOlt. ican .aid·given 1G Poland was tbey...wish. to take, the ~ontifL I dO-:-in fact I think they. could· use $20 so' here it is." . . . to Anon eaclJ. other in. the first p.la.Qe. . ,. expressed here by the personal' told them they should now build for ,$3.000. sent with no niessage, but' we' know out of love of God I have called attention to ,this representative of His EminenCe a "City of God" with "the SIl~ and the missions .... to L.K. ·"It·is only $2, but you 'can do more with point .becauses~me· malT~ed .. ~tefa~.Gardin~~~)'~~ki,Pri- .. "IU:ep1acy.o~:ptespiri~ ~ guaranit than I can." people' try'to ji.iStifi,th~triacti~S.-:~a~ o_i ~o!a~4.; > .>:.... " tee ~fo:r., #lee futurej' and ,union Ity saxing ',that-strict' iid~1ity:·.Js·::.::' Auxilia.ryBishop Karol P~la: . wit1l.Chril?~:aS ~esource of life." Old gold· and discarded jewelry in 'your home is just a step ldd-fashlo.ned. They,p~teftlf.to:,' ,:01. Tarnow paid uibute to Amer-' ~BlueprintsiorConstructi()n·>of away, £Com aiding our missionaries in the five continents of the be oppos.ed tOi adultery but cbilll '.' "lean generosity in a sermon he this ·.··9ity ~f.God"· wo~lcl . ~world. Take that step; liend us' stray earrings and cufflinks, old eye tltey see nothing Vming·m·up.aypreached to' 1,800 persons sist of. what,' Milan'B. People glass frames. rings and bracelets you no longer wear. We will resell iDg around'i~a-bit" :'1 ........ " . jammed into St: . Florian's. learned fram ~e mission preach.- your ueasures in order to lay up treasure for you in heaven-it will " :'Shall~ 'AUUu~' Church, Hamtramck. The Mass ers and whaL~~eir.pastcirs"indi- mean- the spread of>the Faith. aID;0t;Ig the pagans of world. I d .: 't',lul'" ~ .tell' h .was offered by' ~atber Ed~ard cate to them as','the,' teae.pirigof ..&. lion, th·'- ~e't't·t d ,~ou Y ow M. Obuchowski, assistant at ,St.' the Church, he sam... . Cut out this eohlmn. piD 70ur saeriliee te it anel mail it te Ute _a ow, IS a I u e IS. our FMria~n' . Th P 'd th't th'" "" " . .' Is ' f ...- --t· of ... ",obletn'.iS h(".;,:~ deal with it. .~. . . . . ' , e ope:W:1 ~:. ~CIlOO:ll.Issions. The address' The Society or ""' nvpap 1811 ' .....,
We may' as-' well berealistie. The Bishop SlUd thefaltbful1ft mg of the spIrItual pat!t does·D()t FaUh, .366 Filth Avenue, New YOrk 1,. N. Y.,er· your DIOCESAN
Your'liusba'rtd.'ii!n0t fool enough 'Poland are free ,to at~d Mass.. mean· ~at cme m~ ren!>,~ml:le D,IBECTOR ·REV. RAYMOND. T. CONSIDINE, 161 Nortll Mala
.. put .lipstick on his handkecB~t. he added.: "Qurl"O~e is still . PfOsperlty en' te<:h~lc~1 progress. Street, Y:an ~iver, M..... .
ehlefs'merely to make you aRgI'T.. !llfflCUlt becaus~ tJH;re 15 a eon-.. • • • . .
Tou cap safely presume it got stant str~g~le betwee~·the.~irit ' • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • !'••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• tltere·.:in . the normal' wq. It '. of ~~tel'ialism 8lld the spant of . . . ' . . ,
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worrle? about t~e futu~.o.~ yo.u thmk he' stIll l~v~s .me :.' Fidelity. is ~o ,inthTI~tely
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Pr'elate' Is' Grateful' For. 'Aid .
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the
=~;ht:e=t~~:..e::: ·~~~~~~areft()regu~religiOus Do
lII.ore M·."less of an '"affair." What radiO pro.prams. There IS no freecan you:do about it! Well, ~ clom of the press, as the term is are seyeral points tell eonsi~. underst~ i~. this country.' First, your husband may be Chllrch. authOrIties are allowed amattire,. Some men Pow up to pUbhs~ some n.ewspapers~" IIltwl,."::"if at all. 'naeir "play!he BIshop .closed·hisserrilon 1101''' attitude is really an attempt WIth the words "Bog Zaplac'" to feel 'important and appeal' a (God .repay you), and said that _n of; the world. Modern soas members of "the mystical c:iety 'ofiers)hem many opportubody.of Christ ~~; are one wit. Dities, imd they use them. . you and we CheTlllh your .love SecOIid;your husband may as- for us." .
sociate with a loose crowd that - - - - - - - - - - - - sometimes· involve him in sitlia~
tions which he 'would ordinarily
~ avoid....He means well but plays
along with the .gang. : AUTO & fURNITURE :
Third, .he may be. carrying on : UPHOLSTERING : with a definite third party. She , 0 fl k . " may be using him, "making a : A ·inds 'uphoJstering " play for him," or merely having' , fABRICS ~ some entertainmen.t at his ·ex :., 1"3 o. E.Purclut.., NER80NNE, PlIOp. " pense. St.. New 8edf«'d : , ' . U Center St., B7._ia, .~ Wife's PositioD StroB&' What can you do? First,' it ~"---~,--~-,-_._'--~---,
won't help much to show you
suspect all his actions. He knows that you know and violently dis CONTRACTQRS approve. Second, don't "throw it up to him" constantly. Men hate and to be nagged even when, or:espe cially ,when, they are guilty. '8UILDERS Third, try to .increase your. feel.., ing oCj:iartnership by keeping him interested in the children. John 'It Go out together 'as often as you can manage. 'Be careful· about "our appearanc.e and your moods when you are with him. In a sense, yo~ may feel that you are and Sons, inC: competing with outsiders.·This may betrue,bilt YOLI ate playmg ... OSTERVILLE from .a· strong 'position providiRg you dori'fw.eaken it by becoming hard to)~v.e·'with.
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lHE ANCI:IOR
-13 .
Thurs., Dec. ~, 1957
·Christmas Events Continue
The Parish Para.4e
i
Teachers Attend Drawing Classes
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Medeiro's and' Mrs. .Se" ST. MARY'S. raph'un NEW BEDFORD Teyes.... ' A shorthand course in draw Members of the church 'choir MOUNT ST. MARY, ing techniques and printing is will entertain at the next FALL RIVER .' . being given at Holy Trinity monthly gathedng of the WomMiss Maureen H.Chippendale,· Church, West Harwich, for Con en's Guild scheduled for Mon- B, .Mus" an ac'ademy alum'na, 'fraternity of Christian Doctrine day, Dec. 9, in si. ~ean Baptiste will be guest .director of' the" teachers by Mr. Russell Collinge, Hall. President Mrs.· Owen P.. Glee Ciub whiCh' will entertain" publicity chairman of the parish Devlin will preside. . the·'st. Patrick's Women's Guild CCD executive board. A chicken andhain dinner fol.,. at 8 o'clock, next Sunday nigllt Mr. Collings attended the Art lowed by dancing will feature in St:Patrick's School AUditoti- '. Students' 'League of 'New York the Christmas party on Saturday, um~ . .. and was tutored by John R. Under; tlui direction of Sister' Neill, ~llustrator of the Oz Books. Dec. 14. Mrs. Gera'rd J;)emanche will be hostess. . ' M a r y ' Veronaj·R.S.M:,··M.:A:.;'the Missionary Servants of the ST. PATRI~K'\~, .' Aca~einY. ~r.che~~a: will render'. : . '. . . . Most Blessed Trinity of St. Fran-' , FALL ItlV~R ... ,. . : Ch~l~tmas ~elecbons:.'at ..th~ en-:- ":":' .,.FIRST :I;NS'l,'~l!CTIO~: "Mr. RUSSE:ll Colhhge' super- .. cis' Xavier Cfmac1e, Hyannis, and · A catered ba~qUet and a· eo~-, ~erta~,:,ment~~r ...r~lat~ve~·~le~~. . vise~t initial effodof. Miss'· Claudia York of Hyannis.' at. Our Lady .of. ViCtory Missionary rt' b ill At nt St and·the·general·pubhctO:·.1)e'heId .. I '. '.. ' '. .... .. ';'. . , . . . . . '. . " • . Sisters of the West Harwich con- . · ~ary'~'~c~de~Y Gj~ ~i':1b"~iti "'a(~ ·?ht.:.Th~rS~~Y;~D,et::·?~;· 'i~<:",~ ~~~~.m.?~~~l~~t~h,m~ues a~d ·p~mt~~g .at. W~st HaJ=Wlch. vent are also attending' the 8CS feat\lre. the Christmas party of ...tlw! aC~.4emy ~udltOt;i~m"l '.,'nia~'.'f.sT. -.JOHN· .OF GOp, .: ..:. I . also 'spoke' briefly congratulating sio.ns. . . . , . . be' I'd". r samemght··Th(:Mal'ymounfers"·····!·C,O·M·ERSE'"' ' . . , ....• , .... '. . ..' . ......~.-'-,.--,,--_.:....-......,..-.. -.-....-.;.,'---:-. . ·the '~ol;l'1en s Gu~l~ ~o ....~ ·a.:-.. II"·· '·b·'·'·f th'" 'D' '. ·ti·' '.t /~ " . . ;.... f . '.' ,...... ":>. " .. U1e members on the' success Of' in the ·parish.'hall. .·George Pi .. SO 'tS d 'ghtl'nthe a memers··o. e.· ramaf,l··.,.. ·. '. . th·C t·.. C . . .' .v:.. n~x un .ay,·ro '.... .:'." 'CluD .·will'.. resent': "@ne:::'R ......;. ,.:ye{'y Re,v. Humbert~ :S.'~edel- .' .. e.. 9~ra e .. · ~m?,umon. '. . ,J:ne!1ta~.wl1o w<~ appOm~ed .chair- '.' .' IIChool.·ttalt 'l'he.'palltQr·.an~:t~e '1\' ',,:'t· ~ •., ··d···.,.'·t· . . ~.' ·'ros.,;Chancellol':·':o/. 'the ..··Dlocese' .. ·:,S~ph(ln L.: SilVIa was pre- man .announces , that fifty-~t '.pat\/lh assistants. will ~ guests",:. d' ~.te.' ...• ,Oh,,!f,lh:l~~.>!ta~~t·tl~ .pro';· . guest.'. speak.er ihe ..Com~· : ~~te4 .. past·pre~ident's phi' by giftS will ~ ·exchanged.· " . . . . 1M.... k·I . •. uc lon.w IC ..01as IS .se mg·sn' .. '. t·'!·.· '" ., . . ' P r 'd' t W'II' . R:'" ..' .' .... ' ... ' .'''<Miss . He en,-. ;' DUC .ey: a~Q '. the¢h'i:istma s se~on;" with S~:'::: :lJlc\ln.I~~ brea.~llst.fC?r~~!,ly N~r.n~· . eSl ~n. .1 . lam . al?osa·.. . . ' .The ,fiv~ n~w cO\,lples w~Q wen
.: Mi~Anne,~. :Hughes,..c()T~ha~17"','. tel' .Mar-YO :Mericy i:Ii.StY: ;'B'.E(L·.. ::.~~ict~·~e~ ~nd.:·thelf,;f~qlllu~s '.ST.:.JOHJ:f TilE BAPTIfilT, ... ' ." " ~c~Pted into, ~e!J.lbe.rshlp. du.r , ~n, are J,'espons~b.e. ~or . t~':dii~cti~g.'.. ,. " ; .;: 4:.}.. .~:tOUO~If~~ . th~ . 7 o'cl~k'; Ma!lS' NEW BEDFO~D ," . . , ' , i~g a cl!l~ gathering a~e: ':th.
arrangemenUj....., ' Dianne .. Turcofte,.·; .. l58 ''':and ~~n~a~: , ':. '. . . ' Children of ';members of the, a.nd ~~' .. GeoJl{e FMrtad.o, ~r. ST. .JOSEPH.. . '.. '. ~ There~ :.Medeiros;· ,15.8,. w.ul,~play., .. :..~Father;':Med~iros, g~ve ' -8. bri~~ . Couples CHub will be entertained, and Mrs.. ~thony Ca~d(:)Za, ~~. WOOI)S "'OLE..... '.:"" .... : the leading> toles.' • The <l'emain';', '. history, ...of '. Portugal and ex-·. at' a Christmas party to be held. and. Mrs. G:J1bert ~razll, M~. and · P~ans, are. under "I'a~<~or. I!: ;. ii),g cas~ includ,es'~.t;niors, Sylr~ll : ,plained: ~o", constant devotion to from 6 to 8, Saturday night, Dec. Mrs: Edwa.rd DUarteancl :M.r. · ChrIstmas ~azaar and a Silver t~a.. Houle Eleanor Brack and. Patri- 'the Blessed ·Mother through the' 211 tho h h h' 11' . 'th th ...and Mrs. V. Manuel Camara: ...' .. . ... ... .. ' . . . '. . . .. n e c u,rc a , .WI . .e
' to be conducted..Saturday Dec i ·th··· .. h h' ll'M" R ' cla·-Kearns;Sophomores•.··Kath- .. Rosary ... brought / pea.ce ..to the President Manuel Alexander as IMMACULATE CONCEP'flON, a 14, n e· ~rl~ h rS' t~y 'leen Frain, Ann·.Mis; :Joan Mac- . Catholic, .Church in that country general chairman. NORT.H EASTON A. Berg WI I . e os. ess a . e omber,' Nancy.· .Cord~iro . and . during troubled years: . . Preceded by a pot-luck supper A turkey whist will be held at t~a to. be served in .the afternoon Valerie· Polka; .Fr~shme'n, ..MarY'· . He urged..devotion to Mary as . served by' the men at. 6 the - 8 next Tuesday,. Dec. 10 in the an~ m ~harge of the. ba~aar, Galvin, Shirley.Heywood,':Patri,;, .. a means· to peace in the world. members' Christmas social will Frothingham Memorial Hall by whIch w~ll take place at mghot, cia Antaya and. Margaret Leahey. Selectman Francis J. Carreiro take place on Saturday, Dec. 22 members of the Women's Guild.' are ~resldent Mrs. Norman . A special performance will be" BenOit as general chairman sup- given thiS afternoon at 3:45 'for ported by Mrs~ Georg~ W. West the Sisters." ., and Mrs. Bernard F. Cavanaugh. Tom'orrow afternoon at 3 P.M . Ml'.s. West will ~irect the en in the academy, Mary Butler,'59 tertamment committee for the and Margaret Griffin '60 will Christmas party scheduled to debate with St. Rapha~l's Acad take pl~ce on Dec. 1,9 durhlg .the emy of Pawtucket, R. I. . SUPER-~IGHT, next monthly gathering. Members of the basketball ST. PAUL'S, tea~s played their first game of TAUNTON. the season last Tuesday after Ladies of the parish guild will noon with' Dom~nican Academy: conduct a Christmas party, fea The second game will be played' turing a "potluck supper" and a at 3 P: M. this' a£ternoo'n in .. "Yankee swap" slated for 6:30 Swansea with Case High. Senior Thursday night, Dec. 12, in the . class members participated Tues church hall. Mrs. Thomas J. day afternoon in the "Betty Murray and Mrs. Remil;tgton Crocker Scholarship Test." Moody are the eo-chairmen in SACRED HEART charge. OAK BLUFFS ' Assisting the chairmen a~e Coming activities of, the Holy Mrs. George H.Wood, Mrs, Ulnc Name',Society which were'out- . Lepage, Mrs. John H. Schondek lined by President Alfred Metell . Jr., Mrs. Peter McClellan, Mrs. are Corporate Communion next . . , . . . Wilfred FoucaUlt,. Mrs. .Leo Sunday, Dec. 8, under the direc Kennedy, Mrs. Richard SIlva, tion of Marshals Charles Downs M~s. Bar~ara ~oni~~i, and the and George Lane, and a bridge. Misses Ohvia GlanmOl and Flor and whist scheduled for Tuesday, ence McClellan. Dec. 10, in the parish halI. with '. Juicy, Flavorful: I,~ ST. PETER'S, Thomas Demont as chairman. DIGHTON . . and priced to please! The Holy Name Society will. sponsor il "St. Peter style sup , per" f!om 5:30 to 8 Saturday, Dec. 14, in the rectory hall. Appointed to head the affair are , .' Co-chairmen Joseph W. Fleck and Clinton E. Rose, assisted by LB William Flemming, Sr., Edgar "it's a whale of.a drink Standring, William Keating and Manuel Pavao. 17 DIELICIOUS FLAVORS The Women's Guild.Christmas party will be held on Tuesday, BEST SINCE 1853 Dec. 17 in White's Restaurant. Committee members include WE DELIVER Mrs. George Miguel, Mrs. Antone CALL'
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Ba~ancing
the Books .
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THE ANCHOR
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Thurs., Dec. 5,·.195~
Pattee Book on Portugal
Is....JudiciousPresentatiori
. By Rt. Rev~ Msgr. John S. Kennedy .'
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Partition of Ireland
Based on Prejudice
PITTSBURGH, (NC)-Parti tion of Ireland and a relatively · high· .ratE:!of emigration were : called the biggest handicaps of the Irish nation by one of the "first ladies" of Irish letters, · Miss Alice Curtayne. Addressing the Gaelic Liter ary Society here, Miss Curtayne said the republic had made great accomplishments in music, lit erature and achitecture since the republic was established. She ad 'mitted, however, that. the eco nomic picture was not as bright. ·This is caused, Miss Curtagne said, by what she called' the "un · natural" partitioning' of the coun try and the emigration problem. Partition she said, "bites deep into the 'souls of the Irish,. who feel it.is· an unnatural thing with no moral justification.'" " There is no great cleavage of ideas bet't"een the north and south, according to Miss Cur tagne, but partitioning has been "incited by false propaganda based on religious prejudices." National programs dealing with electricity supply, fisheries and railways are helping to ease the problem, she said,. but "settle ment is' a long way off."
Portugal is one of the smallest countries in the world: 340 miles long, 75 to 135 miles wide. .But its. place in history is 'all out 'of all proportion to its mere physical size. A present indication of this is the Portuguese world over ~eas, closely linked with ~he question of Church and State little 'strip of land ·frontmg (they are separate, and the latter the Atlantic: In that world pays nothing for the support of the Azores and Madeira, the former) and of Goa (a much
are islands in the Atlantic;' thelCape'
more involved matter than the Verde Islands off the. west newspaper l'eader may suspect, coast of Africa
and very fairly analyzed here).. G u i n e a Sao
Nor is Fatima ignored, the late~t J 0 a 0 B~tista,
instance of Por~uga~'s ~Ilipact,.on An g 0 1 a, and'
a world of WhICh. It IS so tmy A'DDRESSES SODALISTS: Rev. GeraldJ. Seguin, Mozambique on
a part. . · the A f ric a n
I would pot rate this book the director of Our Lady of Fatima Sodality Federation, Diocese mainland;' Ti equa~ .of MThr: PlattSee'~ albl-btU~t of Ogdensburg, N. Y. is shown with officers of th~ Sodality m r in Indone defimtIve IS s pam, u 1 of Our Lady of the Rosary at Dominican Academy, Fall . o. Mac'ao on is very good indeed, an informed" Sla, . d'ICIOUS . 'th ~hina coast· gel).era11Y JU prese n t a t'Ion. . River.. Left to. rigl)t, seate'd, are Claire Sinotte, prefect,. rii:~Da mao: In Land 'Of Stones and Saints and Claire Reilly, vice-prefect.. Standing, Hannah Sullivan, and Goa on the' (Dou.ble<:lay. $4.9~),: Fran~es . secretary, and Betty Menard, treasurer.. rd' ubconti'- . Parkmson Keyes gIves us brIef n~n~~ s bio~raphies of Queen Isabella of the~m. $3) "a collection of con-' nolly illustrated by Lili Rethi, . These repre'-' Spal11 the great St. Teresa and templatives." That designation and 'Columbus and the New Sent what ·is left of. the great St. ~ohn of the.Cross,Venerable is obviously warranted; for the' World, by August Derleth, illus empire which resulted from the ~arla Vela, and St. Peter Bau volume comprises selections from trated by Dirk Gringhuis. The tremendous' feats of discovery tI~ta. They all ~r: conn~ted the writings of celebrated con former is about St. Philip Neri, and colonization performed by WIth ~e Old ~ast~llIan prov:,nce templatives. However, it'scarcely and .the. latter-no need to ~<lV. tite Portuguese in earlier times. of AvIla, which. IS .call~d the does' the book full ,justice, be Both put the fruit of careful The exceptional thing about·the land .of stones and sal11ts. . cause Mrs. Shrady has really laid' . study ina form that is appeaimg. Th.ese are remar~able PC?ple,. out a sort of anatomy of con elements of overseas-Portugal is th t they are integrally incor unmistakably Spamsh, gemuses . templation. . po~aied into the Portuguese na each in his her own field. M.rs. By this I mean that her choice' lion, 'and every inhabitant of Keyes has·h~gh regard for them .' and' arrangement, of excerp,ts each is as much a citizen of Por and has ass~duously. run d?wn 'serve to explain ChristiaIl; con IN· TIlli· MOUN'J'AINS OF SOlJ'J:uUtN INUIA 'l'HJ!;UE AUK tugil1 as is'any native. resident of ?ata <:oncer~mg them: She lIved . te11lplation almost in step-by-, MANY SOULS WAITING TO'BERECEIVED INTO THE CHURCH. LiSbon. . In ~~lla while pre.parmg for and 'step fashion. The reader is not HOWEVER. WE' MUST HAVE MISSION Authoritative Work
wntmg the book. • simply confronted with outpour-: ,,' CHAPELS FOR DIVINE SERVICES. AN· :: Portugal, then, has unique im Yet, in the main, th~r escflpe ings of the contemplatives; but: NAPARA, IN THE DIOCESE OF ERNA. :portance, both historical. and her; Of .!,act~ ~oncernmg tli~m also' instructed .in the .nature of KULAM, .HAS A CATHOLIC POPULA· cOntemporary. Hence an authori she has a COpIOUS supply, and 'contemplation; the reasons for it,' TION OF,-2,000, AND MANY PAGANS tiltive book on the subject is of thes~ .s~e c.oherent~y mar~hals:, tht(.... s~M~s,~~d, .• m~nneJ;<o of it,' ASKING TO BE RECEIVED INTO.. THE 8~~fnai interest; 'Such isPoi"tilgal' "'But'''mslght Into the several per~ made to see that he, in his de-: CHURCH. UP, UNTIL NOW THIS VII. and The Portuguese World sons she does not command. ~he gree, might well be capable of it; '1'«"<'" . LAGE DID NOT EVEN HAVE. A PRIEST. · (:Bruce. $7.50), written by Rich.:bellt .par~~, of.he~ pook ~re..U"e with the grace of God, and:: ;:.,,, '." NOW WE HA VE ·.THE. PRIEST BUT NO rad Pattee who has both studied openmg'· ~~d clOSing sectIOns, awakened to a sense of personal, CHAPEL. THE ARCHBISHOP WRITES: 'lind lectured at the University of those. treatmg Isabella and. St. need of it. . . . Coimbra and seems, judging by Peter, but":even these ha,:e bttle"'Prec'isely' thaCI 'th,irik," Mrs. the footnotes": and :,'the bibliog- de'?..t.h .·· T~e . three mystics are. Shrady has succeeded' in" ~oing;' . Tbt.!lo/) Fa/h(r~ ~iJJWrt Aid. LIVING BY DAY. TO DAY LABOR: A ill hy' to have read jUst about qUlte:beyond h e r . . .. So that anyone taking 'up her, ' . ' CH~PEL.. IN THIS LO~ALlTY IS AN .'. ~v~'ry' significant book, in any. . . This is a· pretentiou~ bo~k, ~nd book.,will: be. not just impressed URqENT. NECESSI.TY." $3.000 WILL DO IT! WE PRAY THAT OUR language, about Po.rtugal. '...•. a ·~~ssy. one, where bm~Id s~-. but attracted and, in effective . BENE,FAc,'OR,S W,ILL HELP US FIND THE FUNDS TO BUILD :' Mr. Pattee's 'primary' concern. . pliClty IS :?et;d~d; .It begInS.WIt? '.' measuI;~;instru~ted: At the .vei-£ .' TWS HOUSE OF GOD~ CAN YOU ,GIVE A LITTLE GlFT.IN HON. IS W:ith Portugal today. 'But, in-' a prologUE; WhlCh,IS all about the least, .lie is bound to feel the in-: .~ .9R,QF THECHriIS~.CHILr).W,HO.WASBORN IN A STABLE ON ~vitably, he must at least sketch author, and r~peatedly the au::",. a<lequacy,of .hili .present, p.rayer.. THE FIRST' CHRISTMAS MORN? ," " 'in the past. This he does adroitly, thor obtrudes. m ~he body.~f t~e ,.: . Two commendllb.lE; ~ser~el!...of: differentiat~ng fact from persis":'.. .work... ~~~ IS be~ayed .1(1 fault,. Catholic .b:o,oks for y()ungsters''ir( .' .. :.~AKE. YoU R W~L1.. H~S WILL. PLEASE R~MEMBER THE GOOD tent myth. The" emergence' of in focus which the ~nadequacyofthe10-15 years range have fresh' ,,.,alt!? .AND...HIS. NE"R. J;AST MISSIONS ~N YOUR LAST WILL. ~ortugal, as distinct from Spain, ~~e' t..~at".l~nt C?nfIrms.· addition.s. ..' ":""" . .:. 'lie styies "the:.outstanding event. ....HavI.ng ~~pded a ,n~~per .. 9t..'r"·, Amerlc~n Ba~grou.':ld BQolcs, ,~ .;~:J:'" ~ the twelfth cebtUiy.... ·~\;·. eollt~ct.~01l.l1 of:conJe~~!"ary.. con~',. (Kenedy; $2.50) .offer The 'Friar
.....,.,."CJarls'mas ,ft~,,1IlJ wltll all .too waoy,oeeds. eapedall, 1UD00r tit. A,f9Slem domination, which lasted verts' a~n~,of tI1e~. ~in"... ,,,",~~,,,~~,,e'J,~!:1.~~~,~,..,, t;.Y'~I" ,'!~~i
relugees 01 tile Rob' LltDd .~ .... a HUIe. orph'an. people UDder. tent.. .6ve....centilries· 1ri·~Port'ugaf'··as",·to·the·Chu.rch,·Father John A. Stz:ousse, WIth IllustratIons by. alck lamIHes. Thea &Itere those :clolstered Carmels. whom we tty against ~ight in Spain, left marks. O'.Brirn h;Is ~?w.w.ritte~ ab~; William Wnson,_a.I}Q;.Adven~ur~:: to Jtelp. Tile varlebaDd Uledecree o~ ou~ oeedslII'&'e, _ to·IeD :roa . · evident to the present.' . GIants· Qf the F~uth (~a"lOver ous Lady bY·'DQtotbY·<fremont,-· "i'i: The story of Port\l~aI'.s 4~v~1-:,; . ~~se... ,~.:J.~) which:.deJ;Hcts. the Grant, ,w.iU~·' ;i~~~~t1;"a.ti()Illlblf tIlat ,IO'skfnclesa &'Ift .. ~17 PIllclous.to ARRANGt.. NOW .),'ba.,,:GREGORIAN MASSES. At!'ER.' DEAtH. f,pment at .!lome and' expansion lives. of .~l[ ,famo~eon~erts ~glas~ Grant, .T.lie J~r.s~ cieals.: . ebr~ad .is ,sum~ar.ized" .~an!i. a : ,:~ostly of.~ges.past: ...,.. ,j' : ' :Wlthth~ C9~qu~~!.i~fJt1~XICOand i ".: 'ASkfABOUT THE SUSPENSE CARD." ,', dramatic .story it IS:" Not the least He ~gl~ WIth St.Paul .1ft the centers m Co~~~.a11l;l Padre Bar..,. , YOU! at 'lbo' 'hotable feature is the colonial Aposto!w~ra, g~s' on tQ ·St. A~:- . '., tolome de Olmedo; the second . ' '.• .·':m '01 Betlllehem wtiJ be ollered b)' die' Ai'ehbisbc.p 01 jerusa~eril_ for ~l theti'eiltS of Margaret Brent·and ber:, · ~a' in" Brazfi,;· a country: Which, gustine ~iri . tb'e ·Period.' oar Near East benefactol"s. while "&eD J other MasseS '\YUI' be eIIert!4 ~ough j!~wQn."its,;jndependence .. ~~ r~~l.!.er~· '?f"Jtt.~.~l!~!:ch,. It,ll1P$.·,to '", spirited,:..ro!e,,, in" .the...'Maryland:' for~'Nme blteatloD at the Crib dume CbrlStm8lI'Da~ ..~ the nineteenth century still ~e D1net~nth cemury .for C~-:- .. ~'o~y, B?t~.p~ at a gallop.., ; " . .,,".. . . . •.. , , ~as close ties'withPoi'tugal: ·Ati-'· dmal Newman,. Orestes Brown.. · "ilii(narrative'!Pace and' portray other is the series of 'crises and ... ,~; and·"Father, Isaac Hecker, important phases of American' k!evolutions which came to an. and ~ncludes one man born· in' life and" achievem'ent on ',titiS end some 30 years .ago, . when the. nme~enth century who died continent. ., . SalaZar undertoOk the recon-" a lIttle over 20 y.ears ago, G. K. . . Vision. Books. (Farrar straus ~truction -of.. a nation distraught Chesterton. . - and .cudahy. $1.95 each) have lind aU but bankrupt. .He se~ out the <:areer of eac~; .brought, out St. Philip of the :, The Salazar era is examined ~~th. c~Ief emphaSIS on the reli .Joyous Heart by Francis X. Con tlosely, if 'not so cdtically. as glO~~ hIstory, the. process of con-, . ilome would wish: Mr. Pattee is verSIOn, and the subsequent c:onvinced that the Salazar sys l~b~rs..for the Faith. The task is tern is not totalitarian, repre acc~n;tplished ,,:,ith the ~uth~r's ~ents "Catholic sociology,'" has .famIlIar .proficlen:y,. whlc.B .m '!an admirable bill of right." A sures easy and edifymg readmg. MAKES YOUR ~ommon charge agaiqst it is that ~rowns~m ~nd .Hec~er made par .CAR· RUN BETTER Per c.apita income and the stand .tlcular .. contrlbu~lons . to. the. ard of living are'among the low- . Ch~rch In the Uruted States, an.d At New' .Car Dealers est in the western wodd. But th':lr relevancy to our own era·IS
Mr: Pattee cites "basic economic POl11ted out.
and Service Stations facts of life" which explain this; . M. L. Shrady calls ~er imthol-
._ Every~here f.or examp.le, the absence of ';in ..:.o=g~y~C~o~m=e~,~So2U~th~:::W~1D~d~:2(~p~a~~~-=.~:=;::::;::::;::::;;:::;::::;:=:::::::::;:~:::;::::;:=; dispensable raw materials for: in r dustry.: On the other h~nd, he points out that salazar has -ef- . ~ected .gE:!nui~e econo.mic stabili YOUR CHRISTMAS GIFT TO THE LORD zationand advance despite' stag Wh, Dot remember a 'deceased love one at Christmas. Our m'" geri,11g difficulties.' . INCORPORATED 1937 aloDaries and Ulelr'laltbliIl will pray lor them daiiy. i 1;here are solid chapters on, th~ Mass Kit ." .. $100 .' Chalice $40 Vestments ..... $50 Altar. '''; ..·•.• i -15 ,. Ciborium 40 'Mass Book ••• t •• 25 Tabernacle .'~,.' 85 . Monstrance •••. 40 Stations. . . .• .. 25 Sanctu',· Lamp' 15: . Censer. boat .,. 20 Altar Linens Ii
0:
THE HARVEST IS WHITE
Af .•. ·«~i.. '~. .
. ;~~;~~~F~~~:" ::~tEOU~R.~H:~~
,:,.. :.... .Ol1'8 NEEDIEST': CASES' '.'
are
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as., ,".
GRATiTUD~'TO
or
Tbe'~cl~I"~I~lght' ~a~ ~
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.',:
c:r..
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BAItDAHL
.',f.L (OLLINS:·.&.. ·SONS.
GENERAL ·(ONTRAO.ORS 'andENGINEfRs
GIVE' TO SAVE' THE WORLD FOR CHRIST.
~'l1ear FastOliS$ionS~
:JAMES. H., COLLlNS,C.E.; Pres•. ., Registered Civil and StructuralErigi~eer . Member National Society Professional Engineers o'
-
.. .
FRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN, President
.'
,
fRA~CIS L COLLINS, JR., Treas. ,
,
BOWLING -SKATING Special Arrangements For
BANQUETS
TH()MAS K.. COUINS, Sec'y.
ACADEMY BuiLDING
:FAu RIVER, MASS.
Magr. Pete, P. Tuohy, Nat'l sec'y
Send all communications to:
~
.
CATHOUC NEAR EAST WE~ARE ASSOCIAnON j,~480 .Lexington Ave. at .46th St. New York 17, N. Y.
-----J-.
Clothing Drive Total Exceeds 85 Tons
Taunton - 27,799 pou~ds. Cape Cod - 21,670 pounds. Attle.boro ..:..- 14,087 pounds. Somerset - Swansea - 13,950 pounds. North Attleboro ...... 4,438 pounds.
Thanksgiving Clothing Collec tion for the needy of the world, Contributions' in the' variouS' areas of the diocese were as fol lows: Fall River - 45,000 pounds. New Bedford - 43,538 pounds.
A total of 85'%, tons of clothing was contributed in the Diocese of Fall River to.the annuai
REAL SA VI'N GS are CASH SAVINGS! ·THAT'S THE FIRST NATIONAL WAY
Left to right: Ernest Arruda, Marcel Dumont and Rev. Justin J. Quinn shown during loading 'of clothing collected during drive l'lupervised by Fr. Quinn of St. Lawrence Church, New Bedford. Picture was shot at Hemingway Brothers Interstate Trucking Company garage. The firm is donating its trucking service.
WASHINGTON (NC)-A top work, Msgr. O'Grady stated. "We :harities official. says the frewere greatly impre/lsed," he quent picture of old age as a added "with the very great time of isolation, dependence number of them, 30 to 40 per and want has been shown as not cent, who had hospital group in entirely accurate. surance and other forms of group Msgr. John J. O'Grady, secre- insurance." tary of the National Conference In the survey, a conviction is of Catholic Charities, said this expressed in the summary that ,was made clear in a survey of "it is not wise to attempt to deal elderly persons in western New 'with the older aged group as a York State. group apart." Various Sources "Attempts should, be made," "There is abundant evidence the survey says, "to keep them in the study of the efforts on the in .a. larger societ,Y, rath~r than part of the respondents to main- abldmg and abettmg theIr sepa tain themselves, both physically rateness." and financially, as independent . members ,within their families ui s or onverts,.· and neighborhoods," Msgr. Plan to Aff'iliate" O'Grady said. ' "This stands in ,.contrast to LEXINGTON, (NC)"':"National the more frequently. presented officers of the Guil(Js of St. ·Paul picture of old age," ,he said. have set up a constitution for "If you were to ask, what are more th'an 50 convert guilds the things that sta~d out more 'which they say itltend to affiliate prominently in th~l;le' studie!!," with the' 'Lexington' headquarMsgr. O'Grady as~erted, "we ters. .,. would, say first, it is the idea of . Purpose of a Guild of St. Paul self-support. In our figures, over in a parish is: to follow-:upadult 90 per cent of the aging were· converts after t,heyhave been pretty well able to take care of ' received into the Church, to help thmselves. Of course, our aging , them receive sactaments and group constitutes a 'part of the 'bee:ome" .intc~grated ' into· parish approximately seven . million societies. :' • ''',:,:' '" ", who receive Social Security but this is only one source Qf their < ' support. Home-owJ1ership' tuns . " , over 70 per cent." '
Medical Benefits '
Another "impressive result" of the Buffalo study, h.e said,' was "the great cohesion' of the family life of the aging.."'" He' stated . BVRNE,R ,SALES ., "there' wete' independent mem bers of families and. there was & SERVICE no great tendency 'to look to" children for support, but every t·· .. \. .•. : where there was strong family 21 Wilbur St., Ta~nton • r feeling." "Very strong opposition" to re Phone VAndyke 2.;()S82 , .... ceiving any form of relief was shown in the study results, as was a strong desire of the aging 1-' ---'-to continue in some' form of ! DURING THE CENTENNIAL YEAR - AN :
:EXPERIENCE YOU WILL TREASURE fORMR
C"
CHUCK ROAST
Choice Grade -
Buffalo Survey Again Indicates Indep~ndence of Folks Over 60
G' Id f
Savings are deCidedly Imporlant 10 all of us, and, espeCially where lood shopping is concerned, nothing actually lakes the place 01 hard cash, At First Nalional iI's fun 10 watch your savings mount qUickly, item by ilem; inlo substantial amounls 01 real money, And real cash, in ,hand savings are more welcome than ever in these expensive days
For Oven or Pot Roast
Heavy corn-fed Western steer beef. This week-end serve a savory Pot Roast with
all your familie's favorite. vegetables.
Smoked
,A. BR~E'A U',
~.
f
OIL ,SERVICE"Inc.,.
_>_
.5houlders Corned Beel
ipllq'Rlmaqes
970 ASHLEY BLVD.
NEW BEDFORD
Main Office & Factory
QUINCY, MASS.
Open Everyday WY 6-5556 JOHN RICCIUTI & SONS. Inc.
tOUR~€S·ROm€
LB
Mildly Cured Lean Ends
LB
"
Specials
White. Golden, Chocolate s,;ice. Orllng~
, Chef
Pillsbury, .' 2, 1~~G~Z' 59c Ravioli Dazzle Bleach:gT ,17c .: Spaghetti ?-.oft , _aked, Beans '2.', ~UZ, 53c' 'GingerSnaps :l~ ,49c, -.Dinty, Moore ~lNOZ' 39cSuper 'Statler 35~~~~e ,29c GAL. .JUG sic
. 'Is GAL. JUG 32c
,
Chet and Meat Ba'la
Homemak~r,P8II, Yellow·~ye. Red Kidney,
Beet Stew
"
'
Bathroom Ti..ue '
'
I
...
1'.1.......' ...... 1"'_................__ • ' ..........' · ... -....-~_""II!.III""'In:nlUmlwtltHlll""
'. . . _IUI' NiWWDfUI:IIIIP'"""'
.. Frozen. FOOd, Vcilues ! . , ,FINAST ~ ,100,-. ALL HADDOCK
il
,,'
'FISHStICKS<2?~G5,~,65'c::~; 5 3c'" Finast ,chi~ken .Pies,' Beef or Turkey
, - - - - - - - - - - -....----III_""'!"!""'i>~nl ..
Baker, . Values! " EACH
EAOt
to
2 ~G$ 49c "' " "----L .,,' Produce: Specials! ~lJn.1 IJIlu...... _.........
...;'..•...........
1
Florida Babiiuice -- Natural Color
ORANGES 5 3'9 c Pineapple Variet~
.~
BALBG
Firm Red Ripe - Salad Favorite
TOMATOES CelLO ,PKG
23c
VIsiting places ot Catholic interest in (urope SponsOred by members of the Catholic Hierarchy
. ~ ..*"*' .
plan now to attenO the
. If...
c€nt€nm~l ,/
at
6 oz JAR
Sa,vings Bank Service
tOURO€S
and
" -,',
Low Cost
~;:
Life Insurance
Departing March through October by ship and air
catholIC tRavelleaCjue '
Fall River Five (Sc) Cents Savings
For complete information wrjte or call . FALL RIVER TRAVEL BUREAU I '
INC. aenry J. Feitetber g.• Treas. Established 1906
[
29 North "Main St. Fall River. Mass.
'tel. Fall River OS 5-7408
.II J
Tel, Provide"..
UN I-GIG8 '
Inquire Here Regasallfilmg All Pilgrimag~
_ I_ _
89c 35c 2 oz JAR'
All travel arrangements by
AT
7 ' :- . " , , \
~ "*" .,&
-·t,!,
*
CHmnMAfCANOIS
C€l€BR~tlon
COMPLETE
79 NO. MAIN ST., cor. Bank Next to F. R. Ele~ric Co.
35c
59c
IllIIIDZIIUIImWWl'UUlDbUI..nPU"UIlIJIUlnUlllnnUlnnlll~'IIIH:WIIIIlllIIJlmlllll""'MlllUmI"'"hNnll . .amt""NUQIUlltnllll""lIum ....""._ _.... liWilliIiii1i1IIlnUlID2. . .,IUIIIIUWIIJlttlDl:lDll:l
FrenchTeaCake ~CH :~9c, Banana Bar Cake 29c HecirthRye'Br,ead lt~~F' '19c Pineapple Pie 49c I White B~ead 2 ~~At~s 33c
HANCOCKQ MONUMENT CO.
59c
LB
Lean Tasty Economical
,
the
Bone
less
Rockwood EACH' 1 9c Bag O'Goid Hard & ttard Mix Candies . Filled c:~~ 29c ~: 25c' Candy Canes 7:K~' 19c Big Jim Stick
;r~*" "'-Jt ~ ... , ' '1' i" 'f "... '
Same'Low Self,Service Price; in All Stores in This Vicinity - We Reserve the Right t~ Limit Quantities
"
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...,;
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./
,)H~ny~ood illl' Focus : ;"
.,
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16 1
St. ...~1fi#.das· jl;\........ ;.>" ~e,
-~Pat.
Boo.ne Appeals Equa.lly To Youngsters and Adults
Saint's In'Crosswords
THE ANCHOR .Thurs., Dec. 5, 1957
By Henry Michael
. 'By William H. Mooring . . '. Youthful readers tell me that Pat Boone and ElvIS Presl~y have the "same following". If this is true we. c~n
discount the silly notion that American youths who spm
records, watch TV, fill the.drive-ins and account for a large
])art of today's theatr~ re- except his wife,' Pat married his.
ceipts, have one-track mmds. high-school sweetheart, Shirley
. Elvis still .relies heavilv Foley (daughter of Red Foley,
. t' t' star on ABC-TV "Ozark Jubiupon pelVIC gymnas ICS 0 lee") when 'Ie was 19. They now
I.•
. I
IS
16 2ll
10
put ~ver ~hat could be a most· have three little girls and expect>
pleasIng vOIce. Pat Boone puts all a fourth baby soon. They live'in
his bets on tal· New Jersey arid Pat commutes
ent; a "sweet East and West to meet his vari voice, uncom, ous film TV and recording com plicated youthmitments. His sense of humor is
ful cha.rm.. 01 'best Hlustrated by this little personality .anc known story.
no freakish techniques Up in Smoke
Having reach~d
Pat Boone.wished for his own CARDINAL DIES: His the top among TV program in ·the worst way.
Eminence Adeodato Cardinal record sellen
A cigarette sponsor came up. "I 91. Elvis has no higher to go. Can Piazza,' Secretary of the guess if people ·like .to smoke, . lae stay where he is? . If sO, for they like to smoke,"· said Pat, Sacred Consistorial Congre how long? "but 1 do not:~ 1 couldn't very gation, failed to rally from IOJ Pat Boone recently jumped well pretend to smoke on the bronchial pneumonia. Cardi from 20th to 9th place on the commercial. About all I. could 101 nal Piazza, 73, was named to Honor Roll of Hit R~cords in a say would be: 'if you like to the' Cardinalate in 1937 by single week, With his Dot album, TO S~;K THt: O...,lie lei 1,0eatloB smoke,· folks, I gue~ this cigar ACRUSS ---01>' THt: 106 Bell'laa .1ger U italian eolaa "April Love," he jumped again ette is as good as any ·other'."· Pope Pius XI. He was a Car NAil,S OF 101 Da)'ligM n Shriek"
,~ ~L~·h;ar.L to fourth and but. for Debbie THE ·CROSS Savial' Time I. 80w"
The deal went up i~ smoke! SISTt;K ·OR melite. NC Photo . 52 Jllbed ( a b b r . ) . 6 Soar 8KOTH~;R Reynolds and her "Tammy" Then came a beer sponsor.. "I. 56 Towa I. 1011 Waleh ., Sheller. 9 Gulp would have made third. Even Franee ' _retl)' .9 Repre"ealall". IS Tub do not drink beer" said Pat, "and 58 M I lOll Sail''' lSI Freneh ruler 18 Rabbil / ltefoi-e this gets into print he A as • II . 110 Commanl.... 53 Colleellon .f I sure wouldn't be inviting any 11 Whel"to... ~ wnhi:: 7...... animal" may be "fighting it out" with 18 Mound other young .people to .do· ~ . 6S Pique DOWN M Falrl ... 19 Com palla Elvis for first place, if he has 6& }~ul'nactt 51 C;oloura either." He pr·eferred to wait. It· point .ERIE (NC)-The basic~ docu /11 Sen.lbl. mot already taken it. . ; EO Cit)' I" Okla· 66 Jllemben' of a 1 tUoreboa"... . was not long before Chevy came mentation of a plea by the U. $. le..l.h brotll· I HI' Iii IU;N. ·/19 Slair homa' e.hood TIONED IN lIZ lapa,ne"" ...... BI 'l·urpofle8 'April Love' Excellent along and his ABC-TV program . bishops for the mass cononiza_ 68 Ili"do..... THE _ _ OF 64 Man. ,name 22 I,amb'. ptla was off to a good start. 10· Alway. THE MASS 61 Ilrlnk .Iowl{ tion of 116 missionary martyrs Dame Pat Boone's first film, "Berna zs (l ....k leUer ;~ ~~d~\~ By times Pat Boone has asof the United States has been S Oet ~p ~~ ::~:r.,k drln "" M Adminl"lered cline," no great shakes as a story, ',pired to become a teacher ')r a 16 I.elle. of • Mak" I'ood ,. Ra!t1e nall". published by. Archbishop John m"diclo" did a land office business at the, .:1 alpbabel /I Anlele ' 16 Hf, WAS - preacher. ~round Denton,/r..;xas, Mark Gannon, Bishop of Erie. l!6 ~:i~~~f::n 16 Woman'" aame 6 Habll D11)YJlIU8 theaters. ':AprilLove," now where he used to live, 'he has 19 Ilesserl" . . , HE IS CAI,I.£D11 Vel'elllble" . It presents the final report of ZI H~; WAS 81 SIaik THill: AP08'l'LE18, CarptlnttlT'" .WITH starting the rounds· is much bet':' som~times taken to the pulpit. a commission 'of historians which· 83 Yellowi8hOF - gro....e CHRIST AT ter. An excellent new. musicar As a teacher it.appears he may red dyo.lalr " II Snul'rle 110 Roeks' Till<; TOMB the Erie prelate headed for the 86 Amounl" · 9 Pronoun 82 HE WAS 0)<'·-.--. version of "Home in Ipdiana," have quite a few lessons to teach American hierarchy. It includes 88 Commone"" 10 Ilelermlnatloa A -SO· (Jibes which made Jeaane Crain a.star: the Hollywood movie people. 92 (lonerou. 11 Work by Homerll4 I':xehaal''' S2 An emelle carefully checked accounts of M I,eller 1% Vltreou. coat· 115 Fenlle pi...... H Sbike oat' in the early 40's, this 'pres~nts, One is thafsu'ggestlve action and the lives and deaths of all the 96 Kiad .f a"b Ing 81 Shop Sli Masculine . Pat as a youth who, through bad· sensatiOnal sex interest are not 91 To"" IS Anlfled 89 A..aken S1 Kind of known martyrs with. the excep 98 On Ih" ..atow 14 Sh.ewd 90 Arranged. Jack.... cOmllany, has made a big miswhat some HollywoOd producers Iii Irrltattla ma"ieall,. tion ot- St.' Isaac Joques and II lilly of Boman 100 Pan of Ill.. face Z6 Dial')' 91 Ileaweal,. take.. On his uncle's farm, he believe them to be. American'. moath thre.e 'oiher Jesuits canonized 102 Kiad of 1,,11 'n Jl:xeeed bodies . . I.ayer dtanges from bad to good comyouth has better sense as well lOS Cump..... . ZI E"traalto 9S lum,_ sever,.l years· ago.
fSPo,,1 poIal 11 SI.lke "harpl, ~ \'lxi.lea.,.
pany and shows us that one mis:'. as better taste than it has been 16 !'Iappre"" Archbishop Gannon has pub":; 1M S"alor S1I .Ieal 1M" I ndellnlle til J)\al<trt04 step need not be the beginning given credit for. . mem....r • Sla" aalDber , • .,a. . lished, along with the accounts of a delinquent life. It is more 101 .E"er ..... aU.' oe HK 'WAlI/TED 1011 ScotU,,1t . -sa P_ polal of the martyrs, a series of re-. fun too to meet his new ·comLight on the Subject lated'documents on the bishops', SolutioD on Pa/:,e Eighteen panions than his old ones! 'What the U. S. bishops said, committee and on ·its labors' to aU .the Bishops and to aU the I I think most people will enjoy' recently on. the subject of "CenII< t' ~hich culminated in the 'submis- . -April Love," the songs from sorship"· should ·bring .light·~ . IS·' ·diocesan directors of the Society sion of the full report to the .. for the Propagation of the 'Faithr which, according to Dot -Record .the creative personnel ofth~ film·: ~ews Sacred Congregation of Rites irt as well as to the newspapers' Rome. ules,. are set to make sensational and TV studios: ' . .l· • new records in the record busiIn a 2,400 word statement, the To Father G. Frederick Heinz which subscribe to it. ness in record time!.Even before bishops noted that " 'censorship' mann M. M" it's not an un~ual Fides has its correspondents the film was out, "April LOve" is today'a provocative and something to be an American mis in, all the mission areas of the in the Dot album had given Pat times misleading word" and that sionary work,ing in the heart of world. Normally. these are mis Boone his ninth million-record.. ~'few approach, the p.roblems of" Rome. sionaries,. whoar.e named by seller. His delightful' voice;' censorship without, emotion:" ' . A 'Maryknoll' priest from Un'ion' their local .Ordinary. Their healthy good looks and easy style. They .follow".. with a complete, City, N. J.; Father Heinzmann ·stories of news happenings are' as an actol' may ver) well make logical, vigorous and entirely. edits mission news .for EngIlsh sent to· the Rome. office. . bim the first of the new "teen" unemotional examination of language papers all over the Here the news. is .edited for favorites to appeal equally to State powers and, the rights and wodd. He is editor of the En-J each ·language section by the youths and adults. This should· ·responsibilities of those engaged glish sectio~ of Fides mission various editors, If the news has a not only put him on . top but in the ·communication arts and news service founded in 1927 by certain international importance, keep him thel'e longer. / · c r a f t s . t h e Pontifical Association for . all 'may use it; ·but some may "Because freedom of the'press the Propagation of the Faith to South • ·Sea Sts.
lengthen the account if the story Really Modest (which according to a Supreme serve as a liaison between the is of particular value to their Hyannis Tel: HY 81
Many young .readers have Court ruling implies equal free~' Catholic missions and the world. subscribers; others may reduce asked me whether Pat,Boone is dom for the screen) is a basic Ordained ~t Maryknoll in 1933, it if the interest or value is less. II'elllly the modest, self-effacing right to be respected and safeFather Heinzmann has been with
young man the· fan magazines guarded, it must," say" the· tlteFides Service since'1946; he.
describe. I think he is. After bishops, "be understood and"de- ·is also procurator general. and'
making "Bernadine" he·' was fended.not as license but as true ,supervisor of· the Maryknoll
shown the first script of "April, ration~l freedom. .The 'kind of . Fathers in Rome.
·Love!' He told 20th CenturY-uncritical claims'for and defense ' Asked for the low'-down '00
lP'ox he'd like them to take -out: of libE!rty. which so often have .how Fides : operate,;;, the M~ry-.· 880 ·SOUTH MA.lN ST.. .,... FAll. RIVER me of the "smooch~ng" scenes." been· made in ·our day aCtually· ,knoller explained ·that there is : ':with Shirley Jones. They ,did so. pla~s that liber!y in jeoPardy!! .... pries.t-edit9r· for' eac~ .of th~· Then when he saw that his .am:' . "I. wish the bishops'· statement, .. languages .Fides use,~... .,' . . . . . '. .. tude might be exploited for pub';· in pamphlet· form,· were ooeyeri, ·'In the United States,the ,Eng~.·· ·lidty purposes,' while still re Hollywood'desk.' lishedition' of· Fides is mailed fusing ardent love scenes,·' he O9fllpromised by agreeing to· 'i lighter ·stuff. . Telephone OSborne '8·5236 , The· rellultsare much·mm-e _vincing ina stol-y· ·of ·this kind, Pat Boone'much prefers to make', this 'his argument 'ev~ ~ough, as a ·member of a Protes- . _ _ ...8 .•.· . 'D,oaES.ToATEs. 6-8'246 ·tant sect called t~e Church of -21 BedfordSt.. Do ..You' Work in a' Factory, Cbrist, . his ·insistence· resulted ;"-ornhis belief that· be skould .' Garage,: "'achine Shop or CitiKen's Scivings ·Bcink . BUilding Falli......, ~. ·...ye intimate·touch.witb.no-GRe . :. - ' . .... ,:' .. ~ ~.. .
Urges Canonization 'Of Mission Martyrs
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M II Ed' ary no er Mission
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To Inter Remains Of Nun in Africa DUBLIN - After a Requiem Mass here, the remains of an Irish-born nun, foundress of two congregations of women who work in the Church's African missions, were flown to Uganda, where they will be buried in the midst of the people she worked with for 50 years. After repeated requests from
vent at .-the time of' her death be returned for burial in their and had already counted 60 years midst. in religious life. FoundS Congregation Born in Arklow, Ireland, In 1920, Mother Kevina re Mother Kevin traveled to ceived the medal "Pro Ecclesia Uganda with six companions of et Pontifice" for, her work and her newly-formed congregation that of her congregation and, more than 50 years ago. She three years later,. she founded soon became known to the na the African Little Sisters of St. ·tives of the mission area as . Francis, a native congregation "Mama Kevina", and it was in of women which now has 34 this way that they referred to convents in Uganda, Kenya and her when asking that her body Rhodesia.
native chiefs and other Catholics of Uganda, it was decided that the body of Mother Kevin, foundress of the Franciscan Mis sionary Sisters of Africa and the African Little Sisters of St. Francis, should be returned to Uganda for burial. , Mother Kevin died in Boston last month, at the convent of the Franciscan Missionary Sisters, of Africa, at the age of 82. She was superior of the Boston con
After her death, Mother' Kevin's body was flown to Ire land, where a Requiem Mass was presided at by Archbishop Al berto Levame, Apostolic Nuncio to Ireland. Accompanying the body to Uganda are Mother M. Alcan tara superior general of the Franciscan Missionary Sisters 01 Africa and Sister Loretta, a De troit-born member of -the con gregation. .
FALL RIVER TRUST CHR~STMAS CLUB
SETS ALL-TIME SAVINeS RECORD
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More Than a' HALF-MILLION DOLLARS Mailed
To 7,108 Members Throughout Greater Fall River
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The OfficerS and. Directors" of 'the Fall ,River
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. seven thousand depositors' have rec~ntly re
, ceived $579,891.00 in Fall River Trust Christ-,
,mas Club Checks for the year 195? 'The disburSement of, this tremeil'do,us sum sets an ~n-time record 'for' Christmas Club Savings in Greater Fall River.' It not oniy i)OItrays the '1 prudent management and foresight of. the people of our comJl.luriity but also reflects 'the unbounded faith'of our-~lientele in the stability and integrity of the Fall River Trust. '
Join Our Christmas Club
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The di~tdbution of such a huge 'sum 'during this gift-giving season serVes many pW'poses~ First. it enables thousands of families to enjoy a tra ditional ,Yuletide Season. Secondly, lt 'con trib~tes . to the economy of our commuJ.lity through increased purchasing power and ·the creation of additional jobs. Finally, it helps to keep families out of debt and eliminates burden .. some after-Christmas bills. Congratulations to all of you and our sincere thanks 'for the faith you have bestowed in usl
"OW For alerry Chrislmasin' 1958
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,to 'RAVE THE AlArnDR.lT/Ef:. gTOP MAL LEe WOULD ESE TO VIOLATE;, HE~ TRlAgT AND TO PERHAP~ '
WI-lATEVER lJ.lE GIRL'S PLAN IT {;EE~ ' TO BE AlMOgT NOTWING ~OORT 01=' (N1PO~~IBlE
pgEVENT H~ ACCOj\fPL.l~HIN6 SQMHHING ONLY (ZHE CAN ACCOMPUgH ,,~THE RE{;CUE
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HER FA1l-lE"R.
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SpotlIghting" Our Schools' Alumnae Party
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THE ANCHO~ Thurs., Dec.,5, 1957
Cross Word Solution,
, ~ 'Drive N'ets More Indecent Cards, PHILADELPHIA, (NC) - A citywide drive against display 'and sale of ,indecent Christmas ;cards has been launched with' the .arrest of a proprietor of a mid-city magazine and greeting card shop. The proprietor, Morris Roseri thaI, 39,_was charged with viola tion of Pennsylvania' obscenity statutes. District Attorney Victor H. Blanc ordered a citywide survey' to determine the extent of the obscene card market. "As many men'as are needed to do the job are ~nspecting card outlets," he said. "I want th'is desecration of Christmas wiped out. Hundreds of cards described as "definitely blasphemous in character" and 1,000 lewd maga zines' were confiscated at the l'tosenthal shop. Blasphemous,drawings and in scriptions on the cards were cen siJ.red by Assistant District, At torney Marvin Halbert who said: "These cards constitu'te the foul est desecration of the feast of Christmas, I have ever, ~n
The obscene Christmas cards ,are reportedly produced by a manufacturer who also markets a line of risque and suggestive cards on themes other than Christmas. The cards bear soph isticated drawings' and "smart" sayings which, "although not legally obscene are nevertheless in very low taste," the .District Attorney said. '
Maureen,Cleare, teacher in Som' S .., I G JESUS-MARY ACADEMY,' seA R T W I N V A fI ARE fI 0 N B H I L E FALL RIVER erset High; Patricia Sullivan and' D S E L I A E T A The Alumnae will hold their Gertrude O~Neil, teachers in Fall
U S A ~T A L U II "DE L E l' E' annual Christmas party next River 'schools. Debate Club
Aff E E T o N I D B S Monday at 7:30 P. M. in the president Elaine Maltais was
, II R D S T I F L E P R I • T L E N D E D Convent auditorium. ' chairman; David de Thomas of
S S P A R S Y E A R I, Y Plans'for the event, which will Coyle and Catherine Perry were
S T S T 0 V E S V E R 0 S S S feature the exchanging of gifts, timekeepers,
P 0 o L E S S A L The Glee Club will present the
entertainment, and a buffet S T E M C 0 A P I E S A R T S A S 0 0 lunch, were made at a speCial cantata, "Chimes of the Holy
T N 0 T B T R 0 I A L VATICAN CITY (NC) meeting of the officers and com Night," Wednesday' night, Dec.
T U N A A SEA N 0 S B L 0 !J L'Osservatore della Domenica, E R S Y S E R A N mittee. 11, in the school auditorium.
B Spy D S T Vatican City weekly, has claimed S EE R R E D S Mrs. Rita Raiche was named ST. ANTHONY HIGH; that an anticlerical tone is en 'chairman and Mrs. Bernadette NEW 'BEDFORD tering into campaigning for the Rev. Henri Charest, 'director not engage actively in both a Raymond co-chairman. 1958 Italian nati~nal elections. Reservations should be made 'of the high school, was guest studious and a social life at the speaker at ~he annual parent- same time, ,and expect to be a with anyone of the followirig - -teacher ,.meeting. His speech success'in both. committee members: Mrs. Vivi anne Mulrooney, Mrs. Lucienne touched upon three important A splendid program of song, .sONNER FLOWERS Dumais, Mrs. Cecile Beauchesne, points. 'First" he mentioned that and music was then presented by Specialists in \ Miss Adrierme Michaud. since' 1940, St. Anthony parish- the High School Glee Club. This Special Floral Arrangements Mrs. Colette Hebert, Mrs. ioners have answered the need weli-trained singing ensemble, .Jeannette Saulnier Mrs. Lucille, for higher 'Catholic educ,ation by, which, has received much prl\iSe • Funerals • Corsages SOuza, Mrs. 'Germ~ine Goyette, the organization of a high school for its presentations, gaVe a • Weddings • Hospital Mrs. - Gertrude· Chouinard, ' Mrs. opened, ,to 'Franco-Americans 'beautiful interpretation ~f many 20,82 Robeson St. " Mariette Robbins, Mrs. Jeanne from all parishes 'cif Greater New classics and of, some popular' : Fall River OS 5-7804 COulombe, Mrs. ~ouise Boulay. Bedford. 'Then" because of an numbe!'s~,'The fine performance, Mrs. Germaine Boulay, Miss . ever-increasing enrollment in' of 'the glee club was due l~rgely ~cr05s." ',' " Pauline Gamache, Miss 'Cecile high school, he stressed the need to ',the' wonderfil1 work' of its Gendre,au, Miss Therese Cadrin, for cooperating 'iri building~ the' director, Sr. M. of, St. Romeo: , Miss Therese Rheaume, Miss Lil 'new Catholic Memorial' High ,Slster has beeri at the head of the lian Morissette and Miss Claire 'School. Secondly; he praised the· glee: club:' for a few years and' Morissette.. ,", work ,of the, competent and de- <deserv~s Ii great deal. of praise DOMINICAN ACADEMY, .. , ': Voted Sisters of Holy 'Cross: ',iIe' "forJier outstanding work. o FALL RIVER ' stated that tneir coinpetence'and' _' -'-_ _---'_ Speriali%ing in ,, , At ,the, invitl'ltion of' Rhode devotion ;""ere the' pillars 'on' "',~~~~~~~~~~~~ Island College of Education, Sis 'whi~hrested the high standards ,I
ter M. Benedict and Sister M'. of the' school.' .He' also .'expressed,,:
Thomas attended the open' house warm thanks for the work the
and lecture' session for teachers Sisters have'done;' His third and
as: ~dv~rti~e'din leading Ne'wspapers' & Mag~n:ines of high school science' an'd math,. final point touched it' national' . ALSO AIR, STEAMSHIP CRUISES AND TOURS Ii ematics. " practice among high School stu i' ,For' Free Foiders Write or Call ' . The academy's first· debate', a dents, the practice ot "going
JayvtOe encounter,with Coyle, re steady." He explained that this'
sulted in a tie decision. Juniors.' fad was frowned upon by' the ,
,Jacqueline Oliveira and Una Church because of:the undue fa- ' , ~ YOU'LL ,Raymo,?d met Coyle's Geol'ge mHiarity it breeds. Students can"" . ~ BE Costa and David McMorrow in 'DA auditorium. Judges were TICKLED!, SORRY! No He'rring or Lobster"Stew' ~ . BUT you're sure to free d~livery-Call ' Fall in' Love with
~~~~ p~ y, ~ ~''R
Italiar.. Elections .
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Ta'llIton Travel Bureau,
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',VAndyke -4-9691 ,'Taunton Inn (Lobby) "~,
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LOURDES ,CENTENNIAL 'PILGRIMAGE
'Approved by The Most Rev. James L. ~onno"y, Bishop ofFal! River
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Spi,itually Directed by Rev. Edward A. Oliveira" Qiocesan Moderator Legion' of Mary
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Sports Chatter
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THE ANCHOR
Thurs., Dec. 5, 1957
Transition Period Brief As -Basketball Moves In . By Jack Kineavy Somerset High ScflooI Coaeb
The 1957 seholastic football season is now history. It was a rather strange season in retrospect. Schedqle dis ruptions due to i1Ine.~ weJI'e unprecedented. On a couple of
occasions weather made further inroad~ and, while this was to be expected, it was 'other ~es . throughout the ironic that with the whole region, Dartmouth finished off area needing rain so badly., Dighton, 21-0, to share the Narry what little did fall came on League championship with Case,
19J Heavyweight Champion
Negro Vocations Gain Steadily In Louisiana LAFAYETIE (NC)-Tbe '15,000 NegroCatholies eon stitute 22 per eent of the 330,000 total Catholic Jl4>pU latiOJll in the Lafayette (La.) Diocese•. The 13'-county dioeese has a tlotal population 01 553,000: Negro Catholics make up 48 'per cent of the 152.,594 Negroes in Ute
Pot~erson
Wins Bout Without Landing Blow
PHILADELPHIA (NC) -The heavyweight champion of the WOricll WCID one of his toughest fights IIae witholllLlI. Eandin« a blow PT~Ydl Patterson. ucomJl3ll'ed by his ~ Sa:ndra. lliried to :liP
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mto COlIlvention BaD, wileR be
was scheduled to make a ~u.est appea~ance a~ a ~outh c.otllhon held! m conJunctIon WIth the fourth eonvention of the Na tional Council of Catholie You.h. . The champion, a convert to Catholicism, entered through a backstage dOQr and was llUJ' rounded immediately by auto gFapfI hounds, teen-agerst pries1.l.' an~ U1linvited kibitzers. sepa rated from his wife. Patterson backpedalled to the' corner of an o!fstage, room, only to be hit br a hard question: . "Floyd, some people say box lngOs a brutal sport and shoulc be abolished. What's your an swer?" , "I don't think there is a greatE,r sport than boxing," said Patterson, who speaks slowly and seriously. "It's my profes sion. It's not brutal. It's a sk..ill ful and scientific sport. But 1 wouldn't encourage any youth w enter it, unless he has the I!lhysique and the ability:" ,.A Good Mateh~' With flashbulbs popping and autograph seekers tugging at bi~ <elbow. Patterson retained hi:: c(i)mposure but scarcely bad tizmt to set up a defense for the m:ext 6luestion. "lfl Marciano hadn't retired. do you think you could have beaten· him'.!" I "Ii wouldn't say I would wpn," the <thamp replied, "but it .would llIe a very interesting fight. WPten you put a boxe.. lil{e myseU against a slugger, it alway~ makes a good match."
Catholic 'arents Receive Custody WASHINGTON (NC} A middle-aged Lutheran eouple from Baltimore lost their U. S. Supreme' Court rEght to adopt a t~year-old Catllolic boy. llJm a \bll'iet Ol'del' the court de ~futed to' review a ruling made iby t!lte Baltimore Circuit Court and upheld by the Maryland Court. Gl Appeals, which awarded custody of the child to a Catholic couple. • 8~ed Paper 0 Mr. and!. Mrs~ Frank H. Flran fium were denifl!!ll the right to adopt lBwrton Stevens after the Baltimore City Welfare Depart ment had awarded custody of the child to Navy Lt. and Mrs. Ken neth Adams. Mr. Frantum, ·53, and his. wife, 46, were originally aHowed to sell'Ve as foster' parents for the Stevens li:hild aile!' they had signed a welfare agency depart ment agreement that "they would not petition the court to adopt the child permanently." Welfare officials said their policy was to allow older couples tl!l' serve as flll5ter parents until youngell' couples could !!Ie found .for adoptions., ~fother's Request 'F?Ie Frantums were given lit tle Burton in December 1955 La.ter they applied for adoptio~ but were turned down because of their age, and because the child's mother requested he be o brought up a Catholic. 'Last August.- Circuit Court Judge. Anselm Sodaro signed papers givimg Burton to Lt. Adams, 32, and his wife, 39. The Adams have one other adopted. child, a girL
the weekends. and Mansfield completely out With brief snow flurries on classed Foxboro 52-0. . area. Wednesday, and the weather pat And so the '57 season is con Diocesan Priests tern uncertain, there was genu signed to the record books. Coyle JPirom the diocese have eome ine concern about the conditions annexed the mythical Bristol 12 Negro priests, in tIl:te Society of that would attend .the annual County title and Dartmouth and the Divine Word and two others holiday games. These fears Case have been designated Co in the diocesan priesthood. The proved totally unfounded as champions of tlie Narry League. fiiJrst Negro priest of the diocese, Thanksgiving dawned bright and AU that remains is the selection clear and the mercury scored of the various All-Scholastic Father Louis Ledoux, is now an Air Foree cbaplain. There are far above the seasonal norm. teams regarding which we hope now 10 Negro priests serving ill!> The only discordant note in to have particular news shortly. the· dioce~igbt Divine Word an otherwise ideal setting was The transition period from the high wind which ~ised football to basketball is only as . missionaries, one Holy Ghost "ned" with punters and passers. long as the hoHday week-end. Father and one diocesan priest. There are two Negro parishes Quite a contrast to the condi On the collegiate scene it's even -St. Paul's and· Immaculate tions under which the Arrny- shorter. Boston College. com Heart of Mary-with a t&tal Navy and Boston College-Holy pleted its. grid schedule only last population' of 10,000 Negro Cath Cross games were played on Saturday but the Eagles' basket Saturday. ball squad was in action against . olles. Ill' Opelousas 32 miles min here, there are 9,000 Negro It seems too bad that such im Rhode Island State on Monday. Catholics in Holy' Ghost parish, portant eontests couldn't have S~arting for State by the way, which 'has been call~d' the largest been postponed, but I suppose is Tom Harrington, 6' 3" forward, Negro Catholic parish- in the that would put a tremendous . who learned his basketbaU at South. burden .on the admissions de Somerset High under Bill 26 Parochial Sehools p3l'tment, what with refunds, . Kearns. . Stonehm College also The Lafayette diocese ranks etc. Dr. Eddie Anderson,· Holy was scheduled tl> swing into ac fu'st in the country in the num Cross head coach, suggested that tion Monday at Babson Institute, ber of Negro- vocations to the the game toe held over till Sun Wellesley. The Chieftains, Divine Word miSsionaries~ There day but Mike Holovak had his coached by Bob Daly, former also have been Negro vocations players dressed and on the field B. U. luminary,' will playa 21 to the HOly Ghost and Jesuit.Fa and he thought .it advisable to game ~ate. thers and to th,e CIllristian Bro go through with it. I A number of former Narry thers. Normally', Fitton Field dra~ns League stars figure prominent The diocese ranks second to . well, but Saturday it was a' ly in Coach· Daly's rebuilding the ·.Archdiocese of New Orleans veritable quagmire. Adding to plans. Leo Denault (Holy Fam Din the number of vocations to the the confusion was the traffic jam ily) and "Minty" Menard (Pre Holy Family Sisters, an all Negro which took J.ll!ace just off Exit vost) are among the returning sisterhood founded in New Or 10 of the new Trans-Massachu lettermen who ilnclude Captain leans. . setts turnpike. Many people Bob Hegarty, Joe Walsh ·Jack OJ! the 33 parishes for Negroes ICE driving up from Boston never Markey and Jim. Lanag~. in tl!te diocese, 26 have parochial even got to the field but had to In the freshman group relDol1t seltloo!s~ There are 20 other par . 1l,EO ·H. BIERUBE. Mgr. 1De content to hear the game ing are Al Roy and Al Turgeon, ishes with sizeaMe Negro parish 951 Slade St. Tel. OS 5-7836, via radio. At least they didm't IDoth all-scholastic at Prevost last ioners~ . - _'I get wet. . yeaE. Paul Quinlan and Tony Shades of Dick Harlow! tliat Cardoza of New Bed1!Ol:d are Navy line looped Saturday! squad members who are expect An members of Catholic War During the Harlow regine at ed help out of a great deal during Vetell'ans, Father .Tohn P. Wash Harvard, the looping line be ·the course of the season. ington Post 1799, are urged by came a usual thing. From the . On Basketball! : Adjut,ant J'l)hn H. ScPlo~dek. to stands, it a.ppears that the de :rece~ve Ho!y Communion ..in fensive linemen aren't quite sure their'. parish churches l:?uriday, where they're supposed to be, ~~e F.east Qf the. Finmltculate first moving here, then there. Population of the U.S. 153,000,000' . _Co~cepti()n, since Our L~dy is Those over 65 41,000,000 Actually, however all this mov :JP'atroness of. the: organization.. Route. S8 ~ So.' GarVer~ Mass. ing about is carefully arranged "Left to do the work 112 0000 000 :rhose under 21 54:000:000 to pll;lce the greatest str~gth in . .\LeJrt to do,U;te, work .: 58,000,000 6i ·. R. "A." W.ILCOX CO. .. the spots where it is aSlticipated ··ond"is ,.~ Government employed 25,000,000 the opponent will hit.. . . . .. famous. dog . . . 0fffCE. fURNITURE Left to do the w.ork 133,000,QOO A wrong gue~s by the de In StocR for Immcdiat. Deliyf"1'J' In ,~he .armed forces 10,000,000 : Will be here Saturday, Dec. 7th, fro.m 3 P.M. to' fensive strategist resl,llts in dis 23,000,Qoo • DESKS ., • CHAIRS aster but the Navy .course was . Left to .do the work In .state .01' city work 19,000,QOO 7 P.M. and win help SAN,TA ClAUS pass out·· RUNG CA&lNEJS charted perfectly oIl saturday, Left to d"o the work 4,000,000· ", , limiting the Army's Bob Ander • fiRE RIES • SAFES Gen., mental hospitals 3,800,000 ronyP~ps and picture p~t ftmds to the Kidd~ son to but 18 yards in 12 carr~es. fOlDING TABlES 200,000 The gyrating Navy forward wall Left to do the work AND CHAIRS BUIlls who won't work 175.000 Ride 5'h mires- through G at times numbered eight men, Left to do the work 25,000 CHRISTMAS completely stymying the, vaunt In penS and in jails 24,9.98 .. . ed Cadet offense. WONDERLAND .\Left to do the work 2 22 BEDFORD ST. Getting back to the scholastic You and I - BOy. am I tired! of over 100,000 Lights. FAll RIVER 5-7838 front and the results of the -Vermont Catholic TribUne. Thanksgiving rivalries, g~es
Tr,!lins start at 3:30 Daily and rated as toss-ups were close:
New B~ord ~~ed Duriee7-0;
nm until 9:00 P.M... SAT. and Case came with a rush to deci SUN. 1:00 P.M. until 9:30 P.M. sion Somerset' 21-19~ :NoEth At I~~ . tleboro proved a touchdown better than Attleboro. 12-6, and -. , Barnstable registered a 13-6 win , f· over Falmouth. : . . , 'r The area's two un.defeited-un ,r tied teams preserved their lI'e<;- I ords unblemished;- Wareham , sCQred in every period to roll ~ ,,~ f over Bourne, 25~0, but Coyle ,. had :to cOmefi'om behind in the i f ' , . .~ONDI,TI9NING second half to de,feat an aroused I , , f Taunton eleven, l:3J'6. In the
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THE ANCHOR Thurs., Dec. 5, 1957 ,
'Answer for Reds
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,Continued froni Pa.ge O~e , relying on spiritual and moral forces and praised Germany's re covery from World War II. The Pope said: "Germany, and Europe still have serious problems to solve. U true freedom is to be 'insured and that culture saved to which Europe owes its greatness, one must turn not only or mainly to ,material values, but above all to those sprirtual and moral forces that are essentially inherent in that culture." " The powers that threaten EUl'opean ' culture and freedom, the 'Pope continued, ·"also have , an ideology, an intellectual base, and the liberty, of, that part of , Europe which is still fr~e and tl;1e liberation of that part which has lost its freedom depend on those 'men who reject this other ideol ogy wi~h' a decisive 'no'. , Praises Leaders uW~ say this because we should' become gravely appre hensiv~ should Europe sink com pletely into materialism and: be cause we' feel certain that our words, Mister President, are echoed by your own convic tions." The Holy Father recalled the ruins left in Germany by the war and the serious economic and political problems that followed. Added to Free Germany's own 'problems, he noted, is the neces- ' sity of receiving millions of refu gees from communist-held east o ern Germany. " , ne praised Germany for its solution of these problems and gave much of the credit for it to those' "masters of politics and economics whose names are worthy of full respect." He particularly expressed his pleasure at seeing Germa'ny's entry as a full and responsible member"of the community. of 'Euro'pean nations. He is also happy he said, that good rela- tions and mutual willingness to collaborate have been estab lished between Germany and France and that "through. the sincere and loyal wil. of respon- ' sible statesmen on both sides there has now been formed the nucleus and backbone of a united Europe." "We feel," ,the Pontiff con cluded, "that history and present facts allow us to state that Cath olic doctrine, understood as an idea and action, can bring a con tribution of precious values where it is a matter of preserv ing the spiritual and moral basis of the' real and better European c~lture, a basis without which the fight for freedom against an opponent, such as, that ideology ,which has become a power of a completely different kind,-i0uld be lost from the 11tart."
F.,S. Brightman Co. The Largest Display of REL!GIOUS CHRISTMAS CARDS " in New Bedford
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Father 'Gauthier
Stonehill College
,COntinued f('om Page One ',with us in this parish; regardless of ·;what activities Father Gau thier. is able to put in, he still is , .very" important to his people in the worl-, that he does daily in offering sacrifices for sins. Father Gauthier was born in Cohoes, N. Y., on March 3, 1882. A few, years after his birth, his father and mother migrated to Fall River and settled in Notre Dame, de Lourdes Parish in the Flint Village. There it was that 'he grew up, receiving his first lessons in reading and writing. His desire to become a priest was made known in his early life, and he was sent to the "petit semiriaire" in Joliette, Quebec, in order to study the classics'.
Continued From Page One Funds will be.used for the construction, furnishing and equipment of three dormitory buildings at a total cost of $2,000,000; an auditorium~gym nasiurn costing' $1,125,000; li brary, $1,000,000; student center and cafeteria, $325,000; Ground for the student center to be do nated by alumni, parents, faculty and staff of Stonehill, was broken in October. The building will be completed by next sum mer. An allotment of $475,000 is in cluded in the campaign for ex pansion of the scholarship pro gram, student aid, and an in crease in faculty. In addition, some $75,000 is to be allocated for rehabilitation of existing fa cilities 'and new road construc tion.
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He was then sent by Bishop Stang to complete his theological studies in the "grand Seminaire" of Montreal under the Sulpician Fathers. Father Gauthier is fond of recalling that he, was 'in the first' group of' seminarians sent to the'seminary' and accepted for the diocese of FalL River by the newly named Bishop.Stang. o
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After completing his course' in FIFTY YEARS IN PRIESTHOOD: Rev:, Reginald theology, Father 'Gauthier was Or,dail1e!i ,~' the priesthood' by M. Barrette (right) congratulates his pastor, Rev.AdrieIi",!,\. " Bishop Feehan in:Notre Dame Gauthier of St. Rock's Church,Fall River, upon the latter's Church; his own parish on Dec. golden jubilee of his ordination~ 1 ' ' 22; 1907. He was the~ named assistant to ,St. Hyacinth's Church in New Bedford. In 1913 he was tr1!nsferred to St. Roch's , WASHINGTON, CNC) ~ The situated, to take a positive"view , Church', and· served in this capac
example of men who profess of soci,ety and open up opportun .. ity until'l918. He was then. sent
their faith ,publicly and apply ities for developme,nt to those ·.to New Bedfor~. once again to religious principles' in business 'who are in the lower strata." S.te. Anne's parish., and professional life will make _ Such resporisibil.ity, he said, In, 1922 he was promoted to a even stronger the unity of the entails working for a living wage pastorate, to 'that o~ the Holy American nations, Msgr. James for all workers, universal'educa Rosary in New Bedford. A few ·A. Magner said at the 48th an- ,tional facilities and the teach years later he was serit to St. nual Pan American Mass., ing of religion to all classes., Hyacinth Church.. It was in 1933 The procurator of the Cath9lic Society Betterment th~t Bishop Cassidy assigned him. University of America declared: In order to create a unity' of pa'stor, of St. Roch's Church, Fall "The organization of Ameri- strength and' purpose, Msgr: River. He has been here in that' can States is no longer a dream. Magner said, "We of the Amer- .. capacity ever 'sin<;e. It is a living reality, based upon icas need the example of the For 24 years Father Gauthier the principle of the r~cognizE;d . statesman, the politician, the labored. 'without reserve. The essential equality of all th~ Am..; educator, the scientist, the man erican republics. It is held to- of industry and commerce who 'parish was laden with a heavy gether, not by the rattling of is proud to profess and practice debt. The depressio~ 'was ,at its sabres or the threat of atom, his religious faith in public and worst. Poverty was obvious all over the parish. His 'courage and bombs, but by mutual good faith with his family, and to make his and a general spirit of coopera- religion work for the better-- work gave the people a security,
and yvith his help 8t. Roch's was
tion and solidarity." ment of the whole of society." po - - _ . Most ThankfiII This is an excellent opportuniThis' unity of purpose is a ty to tha?k -God :'for the tremen thing for which all the American 'dous. gams whIch we of the states can be most",:thankful Amencas have made together. , Msgr. Magner said. At the sam~ Ma~ it also serve. as .an· .oppor.,. time however '~we cannot 'rest tumty and noble msplrabon ,for
cont~Qt with -' prQgress on, the us to renew a dynamic faith. in ,
international level,'~ he added, G<?d ,and t~ pledge our energIes
'~but ,our, strength and sincerity to HIS serVIce, f~,r the betterment.
as,a family of nations must come of. all peoples" Msgr. Magner from the' internal strength, and saId. ' spirit and solidarity of our 'peo-, India C-o.ntribution pie, . ," , _' . BOMBAY (NC)-A 'specially
Underlining the diverse eco nomic and social conditions ex \ filmed movie' showing Catholic
~ife in India will be part of, the
isting throughout the 'American contribution sent 'by the Cath
nations, Msgr. Magn~r called for a recognition of responsibility by , olics of this country to the Vati
can exhibit at the Brussels Inter
"those elements in a free society who are more' advantageous~y 'national Exposition next year.
Strong Faith to ~Increase 'Unity
able to pay its debt and repair its buildings. His dream and prayer have finally come through: to live without the worry of debt and insecurity. ,May God preserve him in his vineyard for many mo~e years. Ad multos annos!
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