Ordain . Fall River Man for Diocese In Rome Sunday
The ANCHOR
Rev. Mr. Joseph P. Delaney, son of Mr. 'and Mrs. Joseph R. Delaney of Sacred Heart parish, Fall River, will be ordained this Sunday in the Chapel of the Immaculate Conception, North American College, Rome. Ordaining prelate :will be His Excel' lency, the Most Reverend Martin J. O'Connor, D.D., , titular' archbishop of Lao-
H art'urd Prof
An Anchor of the Soul. Sure and Firm-ST. PAUL
dicea and Rector of the North American College. Present at the ceremony will be the ordinand's parents and youngest brother, Thomas, a student at Coyle High School. Another brother; Edmund, is in his third year of theology at St. John's seminary, Brighton. He will be ordained in 1962.
Fat! River, Mass., Thursday, Dec. 15, 1960 PRICE 10c $4.00 per Year Second Class Moil Privileges Authorized at Fall River, Mass.
Vol. 4, No. 50
© 1960 The Anchor
I
Attacks'Reds'", , L OW M oralet l Y ' WASHINGTON (NC)-A Harvard University political scientist said here that there can be no morality in inter-
national communism because it denies free choice to the indiA sister, Sister Joseph Thom- vidual. William Y. Elliott, who is also REV. MR. JOSEPH P. DELANEY , as, is a member of the Religious of the Holy Union of the Sacred a State Department consultant, Hearts. Another brother, Dansa,id an action is moral when it iel, is a teacher at B.M,C, Durfee "results from conscious choice" ,High School, Fall River. and reflects values "rooted in the Rev. Mr. Delaney attended character of a,person who feels Sl\~red Heart elementary school, a 'sense oj! personal'responsibilCoyle High School and Cardinal ity." ' O'Conl).eJl' Seminary, . ]3oston., ,Thus freedom is the "prerequi-oFi:om 195~ to 1957,he was.at the" site" of rrior~l action, and where :Very 'Rev. William j. Don'- ' :, '-turn to,: Page Eigh~en' . '. ~urn, tq Page Eighteen,
Taunton Total Now Exceeds
I
I
$633,280·
"
aghy; S: J., dii-ector of the" Anqover Retreat House" will deliver the sermon at" the
'the solerim opening of the third . phase' of 'the new Taunton re. gional high school fund raising campaign'.' " The native New Bedford Jes:" uit, who is a former president of Holy Cross College in Worcester, • Will address the solicitors atSt.. 'Ma'ry's Church, Taunton, at 8 Tuesday night, Jan. 17. This was announced today by Rev. Ja'mes F. Lyons, priestdirector of the girls' regional Turn to Page Seven
EUCHARISTIC CRUSADERS: Students of St. Michael's School, Ocean Grove, receive medals from Rev. Maurice Parent as they join the Eucharistic Crusade, organization promoting frequent communion for youth.
Await High Court Decision On Sunday C~osing Laws
WASHINGTON (NC) - Defenders and opponents of Sunday closing laws clashed for two days before the U. S. Supreme Court in a conflict whose outcome will have an impact wherever such laws are on the books. Supporters of the Sunday laws argued procedure now will be to take that they are necessary them under advisement and hand social measures designed to down a decision, probably some_ guarantee workers a weekly time in the next few months. day of rest and to protect the community against the evils of seven-day-a-week business. But, opponents contended that the laws' real purpose is reli, gious and that they violate the 11. S; Constitution by protecting Christian day of worship in preference to that of other reU": ,ions. 'The high court heard argu':' '1Ilents pro and con in four' ~ases ' from three state~Ma~achu ~tts, Pennsyl~ania ,and Mary~ land. In the Massachusetts case and One of two cases from Pennsyl.ailia, Sunday laws 'were challenged by Jewish merchants on ~ounds of religious discrimination. The second Pennsylvania ease and the one from Maryland were I>ro,ught before the c'ourt by east coast ,discount, chain which seeks to do business on
the
an.
~unday.
Having heard the oral arguments in the cases, the court's
Turn to Page Eighteen
Working Mothers Face Problems Says Pontiff
Invest· Two Clmplains A,s Domestic :Pr~lates . "This eleventh day of D,ecember with all its joys is far different .from the sam~ day ,in the year 1941." With these words Most Rev. James It Griffiths, D.D., Auxiliary Bishop 9f New ,York ana former Chancellor of the Military Ordi. nariate described vividly the of their new rank were even ts of World Wat II as ments blessed and presented to them he preached at the" inves- by Bishop Connolly. titure ceremony in St. Mary's Monsignor Fenton holds the Cathedral last Sunday of Rt. Rev. Bernard J. Fenton and Rt. Rev. Henri A. Hamel. Both are service chaplains who volunteered in February, 1942,-and who were raised to the rank of Domestic Prelate by Pope John. The gar-
rank of Colonel in the Army and is Chief of Personnel in the office of the Chief of Chaplains in the Pentagon. Monsignor Hamel is a Colonel in the Air Force and is Inspector General Turn to Page Three
VATICAN CITY (NC) Mothers who take jobs outside the home run into trouble in fulfilling their
Secr~tariate
basic duties even though they gain economic advantages, His Holiness Pope John XXIU told Italian women. ~'The family is a gift of God and it implies a vocation which comes from on high," he told representatives of Italian women's centers in an audience in St; Peter's basilica. He spoke of their organization's conference theme for this year: Problems of Women in the Family and on the Job. Turn to Page Two
WASHINGTON (NC)-A national secretariat to coordinate U.S. participation in the Holy See's program of papal 'Volunteers for Latin America has b'een established in Chicago and will begin operations Sunday, Jan. 1. The secretariat will gu~de reFather Considine also discruitment of the' lay volun- closed new details concerning teers, help screen applicants, the training of the papal volunand enlist s p 0 n S 0 r i n g teers.
to Coordinate Papal Volunteers Program
groups, according to Father John J. Considine, M.M., director of the Latin America Bureau, National Catholic Welfare Conference.
Kineovy Picks The :A...chor
Diocesan ;111.Star "Gridiron Team
He said they will undergo a fo\}r-month training period at all institute which will soon be established. The course will include training in Spanish or Portuguese, Latin American cultural orielitation, and leadership guidance. Father Considine said that the training, program will be under the direction of Msgr. Ivan Illicb, . former vice rector of the Cath- ' TU~~ 'to Page Twelve
, . '.~Y, J~ck K~neav,Yi ::,' " ' ; switched them back to their The Anchor's J960 All-Diocesan team has all the physical , more' familiar roles on the All, requisites of a truly 'outstanding eleven. Selected 'with the , Diocesan team. : The ,'Un~ despite better tha~ wa~ 'ontrQct" invaluable assistari~e o~, coaches' and' officials' in the area, , average size has good speed and t it is, composed of the fInest Catholic footbal~ players in the .' m?bility. The offensive, striking' ~~. ~ry, Fall River DiOCese. M:on..:' fiej~ a,nd Somerset. T~e t~,a~ hall ,power must be conceded lethal' y" when the' running abilities of 0.', signor Coyle High Class" C' g~pd size.' The, .; , , ' " , 11 n eaverages : Jim Gravel, and 'G~ntili and Rev. Chri~topher L: BrOdState ChamplOns for ,the. 192 'pounds' the : Lyonnais are, compounded with erick, pastor. of. St. Pius 'X second" consecutive ,ye'. a'." 'r , backfi'eld' 170.' x« ' the passing acumen of Gerrry. • Cunniff.-' , Parish inc South Yarmouth, placed three young men on, the There' are two '" team. The Crimson of New Bed- ;, repeaters on the' " The 1960 season was another and Our' Lady 9f the Hig'Q:-
A'
de' 'F ' : R ec 'At'S' a rmou th'
0'
'>
.~
fOrd with ,two nominees, is the club, Bob Lyon-' , '~ trem~ndous year for Southeast.:. way MissiOll'Chapel,Bass River, only other school among the : riais' 'and :Ron , ern 'Mass. football what with 'has announc~d the ~warding' of eight represented to gain mul";, , Gentili: Bot h ' , Yarmouth annexing the D 'title, the contract for the construction tipIe berths. Also' accorded were 'halfbacks Coyle repeating in C and Dlidee for the n'ew Rectory at South recognition are Attleboro 'and ,'las1.' year. out posting an amazing 7-1 record Yarmouth:, , Durfee, Bristol County eo-cham- ' were converted after a disastrous '59 campaign. The new residence will' be piohs, Wareham, Tri-County', to 'quarterbacks As a result, the competition' for next to the 'Church on Station Turn to Page Nineteen ,Turn to Page Eighteen titlist, North Attleboro, Mans- .this Fall, By poetic license we've
THINKING OF CHRISTMAS ...
e
Give A Subscription'to THE ANCHOR Send to !Parents; Relatives and Friends-Daughters at School-Boys in the 'A Weekly Reminder to' Loved Ones of Your Thoughtfulne$s
Suliscrip~ion
Se~ice
Blank on Page 5
2
'Cat'h~!ic (:ollegn Receo'V'e Grants:
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Dec. 15, 1960
"Ito'ly
B~trn$'
'I ndecceJlfi}t A@$
,Despcte 'R~d
WASHINGTON (NC) - ThWo teen Catholic colleges and um.. versities have received $978,100 of the $22.7 million granted bl7 the National Science Foundatiolll to 260 institutions which will conduct SUn1n1er institutes fcI' teachers. An estimated ,20,000 higil school and college teachers cf science, mathen1atics and ell\gineering will attend the inst'~ tutes, according to the goverll:>mental agency. ' The teachers' tuition and fees are paid for them by the foundation, as are the expenses" mz the college which, conducts th~ institute. In addition, each teacher enrolled gets a $75 [l week stipend, travel allowances and allotments for dependents up, to four in nUn1b'er. Studento are selected by the college C()D;o ducting the institute'. ' Am 0 n g Catholic collegrcs which will hold institutes, anc1 the amount of their grants, aJ'e Catholic University of Americo, Washington, $92,900;.and Bosto:l College, $81,800.
O[p)fP)@~ot~@1rn
ROME (NC)-The Italian Senate has overridderi communist and other leftwing opposition to 'pass into a 'law a bill banning indecent ads. The law forbids posters, advertisements or other public displays that offend modesty, particularly of the young. shows they attend, but they canIt also outlaws any public not protect them from morally display depicting acts of vio- 'offensive posters or advertiselence that offend morality. ments. Offenders ',are ' liable to jail' tern1s of three n10nths to three years and fines up to $130. , The ~ew la~ was 'previously approved by the lower house of the legislature, the' Chan1ber of Deptities. Left Wing ,Passage in the Senate was marked by lengthy debate and strong opposition fron1 communist and extreme leftwing socialists. Debate followed a monthlong argun1ent over a general ' tightening of censorship of n10Vies and plays in Italy. The censorship was designed to c~eck an upsurge of portrayals of violence and sexual ab!:,orn1al-
itY.
'The' new' law' is 'aimed prin1arily at n10vie posters and newspap'er advertisements. In early 1958 Pope Pius XII made a special point of lamenting the disfiguration 'of the city, of ROn1e by scandalous posters and morally offensive advertising. Text of Law The text of the new law reters to "any, organization which introduces, affixes or displays in public places or places' open to the public, d~ signs, images,' photographs or figurative objects meant in any way for publicity which offend modesty or public decency, with special r~gard to the sensitivity of minors under 18 years of age and, the 'requiren1ents of their moral education." The law n1akes clear that it applies also to displays that "represent acts of violence which offend morality'and normal order." , ",
'During Senate debat,e over the new ,law, Christian Den1ocr'atic leaders pointed' out, to leftwing opponents that the left had not opposed the bill during debate in the lower house. ' Leftwingers replied that the situation had changed since .the bill was debated in the Chamber of Deputies this SUn1mer. Police have been stopping the exhibition of movies until offending' NEW YORK (NC) ,- Masterscenes have been cut, they said. pieces of world art win be used Offensive Posters to illustrate the life of Christon The Christian Democrats ar- a nationwide television program gued that parents have some Dec. 21. control over what publication Featured will be works by their youngsters read and what such masters as Bellini, Botticelli, Michelangelo, Caravaggio, MCIIS$ ©rrdl<~ EI Greco, Raphael, Titian, VelFRIDAY-Mass of Ember Friday asquez and others. The art works will be seen on of Advent. Sin1ple. Violet. ,Mass Proper; No Gloria; Sec- "The Coming Of Chris~," a speond ColleCt St. Eusebius, cial Christmas season presentaBishop and Martyr; Commqn tion of the "Project 20" program. Preface. A production team photoSATURDAY - Mass of Ember graphed the masterpieces in Saturday in Advent. Simple. Italy, Gern1any, France, Ireland, Violet. Mass Proper; No Glo- Austria, Belgiun1, Holland, Spain ria; Common Preface. and the United States, where SUNDAY-IV Sunday of Advent. ihey are loca,ted in museums, liDouble of I Class" Violet. 'Mass braries, churches ,and private Proper; No Gloria; Creed; collections.. I • Preface of Trinity. .' The full-color program will be MONDAY - Mass of previous telecast from 8:30 to 9 P.M. , Sunday. Simple. Violet. Mass (EST) over the National Broad-, Proper; ,No Gloria; Common , casting Company television netPreface. , work. ' ,," ", TUESDA y - Mass of previous , Sunday. Simple. V,iolet. Mass Proper; No Gloria; Common Legu@n cflOe«:elTil~Y Preface. The following films are to be WEDNESDAY - St. Tho n1 a s, added to the lists in their reApostle. Double of II Class. spect-ive 'classifications: Red. :Mass Proper; Gloria; Unobjectionable for adults and Second ,Collect of Sunday; adolescents: Goliath and the Creed; Preface of Apostles. THURSDAY-St. Frances Xavier Dragon. Unobjectionable for' general Cabrinf, Virgin. Double of II Class:, White: Mass Proper; patronage: Cimarron; Serengeti Shall Not Die. Gloria; Second Collect of the S':lnciay; COn1mon Preface..., Unobjectionable for ,adults: Exodus; Heroes Die Youhg; Grass Is Greener;, Facts of Life; ,.:;Necrolo9Y~ " ,. , ~Tim ~NCHOR listS' the ail- The You'ng On,e.'" Objeeti~nab1Ez)n part for, a,ll: ,; niver,sary. dates of priests wh'o "setved the '!Fall Rive- Diocese ' Esther and The King (anY,Bibli... 'cal values ·are.nuUified 1:Iy ex':' "s~nc!l' its formation in 1904 ;cessive .sensuali~y ,in',qllncing, ',with the intention ,that the ,costumes arid' situations): .' ,' " faiii-ful will give them a , Objectionable' 'in part for 'all:' ',prayerful' remembrance. -' " The Entertainer (although theme IDEC. 20 is seriously inten'ded; there are Rev. Manuel S. Travassos, suggestive elements that are ~953, Pastor, Espirito Santo, Fall objectionable) •., ' Ri.ver.
Aid Ulnlnecessary For S<&:lhools
TV ,to feature ,Art Pieces
1l@tY!Ii'$:
lFO~'ii'Y Il=il©ll»~$
101EV'1Ol'il'~ON
'
Dec. lS-:-St. Bernard, Assonet. St. Mary's Home, New Bedford. Dec. 25-c-St. Helena's' Con, vent, Fall River. St. Anthony's Convent, Fall River. ' Jan. l-C at he,d r a 1 of St. St. Mary of the Assump': tion; Fall River. THE ANCHOR Second-class mail privileges ..utborlsed 0& Fall River. Mass. Published eve.., Thursday a& 410 Highland Avenue. FaD River. MaS8., by the Catholic Press of the Dioeese of Fall River. Subscription price ~,~~ ppstpa.1d $4.0!l. ~,~ , ' .."
A$o<OJ
BRUSSELS (NC)' - :Father Dominique Pire, O.P., who won the 1958 Nobel ,Peace Prize for his assistance to European refugees, has left here to make an , inspection 'toUr 'of refugee camps in Asia. He will visit Jordan, the U-Hed'J\l'ab Republic, Pakistan, India and 'Japan at the invitation of their governments.
Holy Constable
'
LUANDA (NC)-Two weeks of ceren10nies are being held here in Portuguese West Africa , to mark the sixth centenary of the birth of Blessed Nuno Alves Pereira, Holy Constable of Portugal, who' drove the Spanish , out of his country and later became Ii earmelite ,Brother., .,' : _ - , •.... ~.,
···c"~.
BLESS MADONNA TOWER: Following the Blessing of the 38 foot high Madonna Tower at the Creed Rosary Co., of No. Attleboro, Bishop Connolly addresses the empl,oyees in the, presence of John Creed, who erected the 'tower as a token of gratitude to the Mother of God.
~@p®' Cofre$
M@th<eIfSD
Continued lFrom Page One Pope, John said: "It is necessary to face up to the reality' of facts that shbw 'there will be' an ever larger mOVen1Emt of women towards jobs and employment ... which can make then1 economically independeftt and free of need. ' "But if the economic independence of women has advan;" tages, how n1any problems arise to confront wOn1an's basic mis'Sion" which is the molding of new creatures!" The Pope declared that despite advantages offered by economic security, a WOn1an must not neglect "fulfiing these religious duties which alone rended fruitful the education,al role of a mother." He stressed woman's role as· wife, and the need for ,her in the home when' the husband returns fron1 "long hours of, absen~e" _seeking' "recompense ,'for the barren.ness a'nd monotony' 'surrounding hin1." " Women' have 'a, "voice 'in the, "house to _which ,all' listen when it makes i,~Ed;f heardand~~ways resp~cted," the Pope continued.' "It is the watchful and pr,udeQt voice of the woman, wife an4 mother ...Oh, only God knows the good brought about, by this voice andtlle usefulness it has had 'for the Church 'arid human
:Il=!l@~y [l=lI@MIi'
The December Holy, Hour, sponsored by Serra Club 'of New: Bedford, will be held, Sunday: afternoon at Our Lady of AssUn1ption Church, So. Sixth Strelilt, New ~edford, at 3 0' clock:
TRI..CITY
OFFICE, EQUIP. BUSINESS AND DUPLICATING MACHINES Second and Morgan SIs.
FALL RIVER WY 2-0682' OS 9-6712 E. ~: McGINN, Prop.
lProlb~®mrt1s
society!"' "WOn1an is called," he stated, "to a greater task than man, ,if 'one 'considers under several aspects her natural fragility and the fact that more is asked of her. It is she who in every age and in all circumstances must know how to find resources to confront with serene wisdom the, duties of mother and wife, 'how to n1~ke her house a place· of. welcon1e and tranquility after the fatigues of daily labor. She must not abdicate (her position) in the face of the responsibilities which the rearing of children entails."
K of C Party
Msgr. Coyle Council, Taunton Knights of Columbus, will hold its annual Christmas party at 8 Saturday night, Dec. 17 at Mt. .Hope Hall, North Dighton. -Damon Magazu and John Correia 'are 'co-'chajrn1en.
CLAREMONT (NC) Tin. growth of nonpublic schools W8'lll cited here in California as evt.dence that Federal ~id to education is not necessary. Roger A. Freeman, author antll lecturer on school financing who is widely known for his opposidon to Federal aid, said the growth shows what local and private initiative can do. "Private schools," Mr. Freeman said in an interview, "have expanded at three tin1es ~ rate of public schools." Pub I i c school enrollment climbed,42 per cent in the past 20 years and private and pal<'ochial school enrollment went IlP 147 per cent, he said. Court Rulings As' for Federal aid to nonpuhlic schools, Mr. Freeman main.tained that "it is quite clear that under present Supreme Coui't rulings, private schools cann~ get either teachers': pay or ~ struction funds.", For this reason, he charg~ the campaign for Federal aid hlll.ll been geared, to these two fielda. In the past session of Congress, an effort was made to ,adopt legislation which would lend money, with interest, to private and parochial schools for con-:. struction purposes. The propos&! was voted down in the Senato and ruled as out of order in tt:e House. '
DONNELLY PAINTING SERVICE
-
Commercial • Industrial Institutional Paintl,ng and Decorating,
] 35 Franklin Street'
Fall ~iver .
,OSborne 2-19V~
iN NEW BEDFORD ,DGAn., 3-1<!i31
IN IFAIl.A. CUVIER , - DUAL 2- i 322 or 5-7620
CRIB, IN EVERY HOME" ~A
EVERYONE CAN AFFOIItD A CRIB FROM
F. A. Forest Co. ,206 SO. MAIN ST. FAll RIVER, MAss.
rtmzwmmmn:mrrrcrrrmzrzrrnwvttosc tin. . . . . .
·CamelotU Owes Some Credit To Loras
_.. _.1 .".,
'010 ..- ' "
.".
vo, ..........
i 5, 1y6Q
3
,n U B U QUE (NC) '"Camelot," a musical of the days when knighthood was in flower, opened on New
York's famed Broadway to the raves of critics and predictions of a long run. .. The first night audience "ohed" and "ah-ed" over the breathtaking costumes, especially the armor, shields, swords and other trappings of the knights. . But folks liere at Loras College can attest that old truc:k springs,. saucer-like children's sleds, even a.: discarded brass bed, went into' the making of the armor, swords, daggers and other props. It all came about when Father Karl Schroeder, head of the Loras College drama department, visited New York last Summer. He dropped in at the studio. of Helene Pons, who had been retained to make the costumes for "Camelot." She had turned out the costumes for several Loras shows and she told Father Schroeder she was having difficulty getting authentic adornments for the production. "Why we've made armor for our own Shakespearean play," the priest replied. "We'll be glad to help." Back home Father Shroeder onlisted the aid of Bob Bahl, college senior from Jessup, Iowa, who had served as technician for Loras productions, and Father Kenneth Dowling, Latin and Greek teacher, as technical advisers. Together they fashioned the blades for swords and daggers out of old truck springs. Young Bahl transformed the saucer-like sleds into shields, covered with caribou skin or horsehide. The discarded brass bed went for making decorations for the armor, shields and other trappings.
Clothing Drive Goes Over Top BRONX (NC) - More than :[our million pounds of clothing and bedding donated by U. S. Catholics have been received here at the warehouse of National Catholic Relief ServicesNational Catholic Welfare Conference. Tom Caffrey, warehouse superintendent, said that 900,000 pounds of clothing, shoes, blankets and bedding were received here recently. He said that 3,250,000 pounds had been received previously. The clothing and other supplies were donated by U. S. Catholics to the U. S. Bishops
INVESTITURE CEREMONY: At solemn ceremony of , Msgr. Henri A. Hamel, U.S.A.F., Bishop Connolly, Bishop investiture newly,..created monsignori-both service chap- James H. Griffiths, Auxiliary Bishop of New York, and lains-stand with presiding bishops. Left to right, Rt. Rev. Rt. Rev. Msgr. Bernard J. Fenton, U.S.A.
Bishop Griffiths Praises Newly Invested Prelates . Continued from' Page One Chaplain of the Air Force Command and Staff Chaplain at Scott Air Force Base in Illinois. Priests-Chaplains Bishop Griffiths described eloquently the tragic events of the war which saw a total of 11,000,000 American men and women in the armed services with their spiritual needs attended to by 3,048 Catholic priests-chaplains and another 2,100 priests as auxiliary chaplains. Of this numbel', 67 were killed in action. As the Bishop said, "The Macedonian cry, 'Come over and help us!' was heard in S1. Paul's rectory in Taunton and in St. Anthony's parish in New Bedford, by two young priests of the Fall River Diocese even .be'fore, the first great draft of February, 1942. The Call came at a time when the fortunes of this country were at their lowest; when daily disasters made up the headlines; when defeat and retreat momentarily muted the Thanksgiving Clothing Collection. The total amount of clothing collected may exceed last year's total of almost 15 miliion pounds. 1960
Select Emmanuel College Senior As Outstanding Catholic Youth WASHINGTON (NC) - Anita Louise Giardullo of Boston, vice president of the National Couneil of Catholic Youth, is the Outstanding Catholic Youth of the Year. An honor student at Emmanuel College, Boston, Miss Giardullo has been active in Catholic organizations both in and out of school. . Msgr. Schieder said Miss
Giardullo "exemplifies many th.ousands of Catholic youth across the, country who live their daily lives honoring God and practicing loyalty to their, country." Presentation of the youth award will be made in Boston next February.
OIROURKE Funeral Home 571 Second St. Fall River, MassOS 9-6072 MICHAEL J. McMAHON Licensed Funeral Director -Registered Embalmer
Flo'wers
D.O. SULLIVAN &SONS FUNERAL HOME
Henry Teixeira Johnny Lemos Florist Hyannis
Sp. 5-2336
c. P. H£~RI~~GIOt~· FUNERAL HOME
986 I'lymouth Avenue Fall ,River. Mass.
"We rejoice because we have seen two of our friends singled out for special honors by the Vicar of Christ at the recommendation of their bishop. Whether we have known Msgr. Fenton or Msgr. Hamel a short or a long period of time-and I have known them both long years-we have with Christian intuition found them to be generous, frank, dutiful, honorable, wholesome and loyal. On this splendid natural foundation, God has reared a stalwart, sacerdotal edifice. They have led men and the priests whom they supervise -not merely by words but more effectively by example. They have radiated deep, simple, abiding faith. Their tender but manly
prayerfulness; their piety, not the gloomy, round-shouldered type, . but the cheerful, hopeful kind, have marked them as men of God." Attending the investiture ceremony were many monsignori and priests of the Diocese, chaplains from both the Army and Air Force, and many of the faithful. There were large groups from both St. Anthony of Padua parish in New Bedford, where Msgr. Hamel served before entering the service, and Corpus Christi parish, Sandwich, and St. Paul's parish, Taunton, where Msgr. Fenton formerly servecL
AUB~RTINE
Funeral Home
Movie Award PARIS (NC)-A movie about Carmelite nuns who were executed during the French Revolution won the 1960 grand prize of the International Catholic Film Bureau. The movie, "A Nun's Sacrifice," was based on the novel "The Song from the Scaffold" by Gertud von Le Fort.
H~lert
Aubertine Braugh
Owner and Director
Spacious Parking Area
WY 2-2957 129 Allen St.
. New Bedford
What About You?
BROOKLAWN FUNERAL HOME, INC. R. Marcel Roy - C. Lorraine R07 ROller LaFranee
FUNERAL DIRECTORS 15 IRVINGTON CT.
Miss Giardullo is majoring In music at Emmanuel College, where she is studying on a partial scholarship. She is president of the senior class and a member of the dean's list.
by
lOSS G1ARDULLO
American eagle; when beleaguered Corregidor caused brave men and wise to wonder. Bernard Fenton and Henri Hamel, together with other priests of their diocese, left the security and conveniences of their parochial assignments in this Commonwealth which had witnessed the first battle for the freedom and independence of this nation to stand beside, to strengthen thousands of men not merely from the Bay State but from every State' and dependency which made up this miracle which is America. If their men had to go, their priests would go with them-even into the Valley of Death. Legions of Priests "Bernard Fenton and Henri Hamel were symbols of the legions of priests who answered the call of God and country. And when the document of surrender was signed in Tokyo Bay in 1945, they continued on ... They knew that there still would be a vast priestly task to do ... In the nearly 19 years of their priesthood which they have given to their apostolate, they have literally girdled the globe and criss-crossed the world in their priestly peregrinations in a manner which might make that tireless, travelling missionerPaul of Tarsus-just a trifle envious if there be such a thing as holy envy in heaven.
469 LOCUST STREET FALL RIVER. MASS. OS - 2-3381 Wilfred C. James E. Driscoll Sullivan, Jr.
JEff~fEY
E.
SUllBVAN lFaafJQaEfI"CIlJG Rome
Tel. OS 3-2271
550 Locust St. Fall River Mass.'
DANIEL C HARRINGTON Ucense<. Funeral Director and Registered Embalmer
Rose E. Sullivan Jeffrey E. Sullivan
OS 2-2391
WY 7-7830 NEW BEDFORD
R. A. WILCOX CO. OFFICE FURNITURE la Sleell fer I..",ediate Delln.,
• DESKS . • CHAIRS FILING CABINETS • FIRE FILES • SAFES FOLDING TABLES AND CHAIRS
R. A. WILCOX CO. 22 BEDFORD ST. FALL RIVER 5-7838
... a Franciscan Sister!
Girl. sixteen-a~d-over are needed
to serve God a' Nurses. laborator,
and X-ra, Technicians, Accountanll, Dietitians, S~amst~elSes, Cooks. and in other hospital departments. Mother Mar, Elizabeth at St. Mar, of the Angels Convent. Rock Island. lIIinoi.. will send you more information on this happy life.
Special consideration is given to "late" 'vocations.
• HELP WANTED. FEMALE WHAT DO YOU WANT FOR CHRiSTMAS? You can have it and more. No need to do without! Let us show you H.OW The AVON Way - ~honQ NEW BEDFORD AREA - WY 7-7089 CAPE AREA - Hyannis, Spring 5:-9306 FALL RIVER AREA - OS 8-5265
4
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs.,
Vincentians Plan Charity' Schoo~
Dec.15,19~O
laud~. A@[(cn Ab~n'$ Study" O~ Cai'~@~8·~ SO(:D~~ A(tQO~ By Msgr. 'George G. Higgins Director, NCWC Social Action Department
As a general rule, I try not to encroach upon the 'territory of regular book reviewers by reviewing current books in this column, but whenever I come across a particularly noteworthy volume in the specialized field of Catholic social action or Catholic things considered, this was the social teaching I feel justi- necessary and the proper thing . fied in making an exception to do. Other Problems to this rule. This happened last week with the publication of a new book by Aaron I. Abell entitled American Catholicism and Social Action (Hanover House, New York, $4.95). I should like to recommend Professor Abell's "c 0 m pre hen sive study of the Catholic social m 0 v e ment in the United States from 1865 to 1950." To the best of my kno~l edge, it is the only book '~f, its kind on the market, ,and it s a very good book indeed. Double Problem During the period 1865~195?, Profesor Abell points out ill hiS preface, the Church in the United States was presented with a double problem: "how, on the one hand, to champion the cause of the poor without endangering the public interest or the common good, and, on the other how to oppose socialism with~ut negating or ignoring the claims of social reform." Profesor Abell concludes that the record of the Church in meeting this two-edge(i' challenge has been impressive. "In recent years, particularly since 1933," he says, "Catholic social action has been extensive and richly varied, a ..response chiefly to the irresistable demands of the people in an era of depression and war for a greater measure of economic security, social justice and democratic rights, Impressive Record "Yet from its formative years American Catholicism had participated in reform movements: in the humanitarian crusade for urban welfare following the Civil War, in the labor crisis of the 1880's and 1890's, in the socialist-social reform battles of the Progressive era, and in the organized social service of the World War I period. "In affiliation with these movements, Catholic social action was prepared for its culmination in the impressive record of the last two decades." In view of the fact that Professor Abell attaches special importance to the work of the NCWC Social Action Department I am reluctant to comment on his optimistic assessment or evaluation of the past accomplishments of the American Catholic social movement. . I would prefer to raise a few questions about the future of Catholic social action in this country-questions which came to my mind as I was reading the professor's book. The first and perhaps the most important question is whether or not American Catholics, now that they have begun to climb up the economic ladder and are moving into the so-called "better" suburbs in ever-increasing numbers, will be as interested in social reform as at least a significant minority 'of their immigrant forebears were. A second question is whether or not the social action programs and techniques of the past are adequate for the present and the future. During the period covered by , Professor Abell's book, and particularly during the latter half of that period" the American Catholic social action movement concentrated for the most part on the labor p~oblem and CD, social welf~ leglslation..AIl'
It is just possible, however, that in the years that lie 'ahead the Catholic social action movement, while' continuing to take an active interest in the abovementioned problems, wilL have to give "equal time" to a number of 'other problems which were not ioo acute even 25 years ago but are now clamoring for immediate attention.
If Professfor Abell's recent book, in addition to 'providing us with an accurate survey of our past accomplishments in the field of Catholic social. action, also serves as a stimulus to creative thought and_ effective action in these new problem areas, it will be well worth the enormous amount of time and energy which must have gone into its preparation. W-($lLi'*
e·,
)
t
g:g·=JM· J 6,,';:\9"
GlROUNDBlREAKJING: Chor:Bishop Joseph Eid takes a shovel to frosty ground at ceremonies marking the start of construction of a parish center for St. Anthony of the Desert Church, Fall River. *,,"1..
"Based on
8
ALL-THE-WAY NEW TO SAVE IN 4 BIG WAYS! L America's lowest-priced* pickup-as much as $260 below conventional %-tonners! 2. Up to 30 mpg! In certified tests, the Econoline delivered 30 miles per gallon ••• you can save as much as 40% on gas. 3. Less dead weight! 1050 pounds less chassis weight to haul, yet carries over %-ton payloads. 4.. Bigger loadspace! 7-foot box-up to 23% more room but 3 feet less truck to handle.
+is'''''
5
LOS ANGELES (NC)-The St. Vincent de Paul Society will open the Ozanam School of Charity here in January. Through a course of nine night . classes for men it will review principles of charity and train new members of the St. Vincent de Paul Society. Auxiliary Bishop Tim 0 t h',. Manning of Los Angeles told the society's annual meeting that this school could be one of the biggest steps forward in the past 25 years in the field of charity. Carefully selected and trained Vincentians will form the school's staff. Parallels CCD Bishop Manning pointed to II parallel in the training given by the Confraternity of Christian Doctrine, which now conducts a two-year course here for catechists. It has an enrollment of 2,600 adults. Bishop Manning' encouraged Vincentians to attract the young men of their parishes to attend the school and receive the training and stimulation for the work of charity. Superior Court Judge J. Howard Ziemann was re-elected society president at the meeting.
•
!!Mi·w;;:m ¢r;
comparison of latest available manufacturers' suggested retail delivered pricer.
And ... on 8,11'1961 Ford Trucks, each part, except tires and tubes, is now warranted by your dealer against defects in material and workmanship for 12 months or 12,000' miles, whichever occurs first. The warranty does not apply, of course, to normal maintenance service or to the replacement in normal maintenance of parts such as filters, spark· plugs, condensers and ignition points.
FORD TRUCKS COST LESS , Your Dealer's "Certified Economy Book H , . Proves It For Sure!
rr--""'-------------r-----...,.....--------l NEW ECONOLINE STATION BUS
There's room to spare for eight. Converts to load hauling ·in just a few minutes. Best yet, it's priced· below even compact station wagons!
N.E.F.D.A.
NEW ECONOLINE VAN
Cargo space, is up to 57 cubic feet bigger! Big double doors at both the rear - and curb side! And, it's priced· up to $433 below conventional ~ -ton panels!
&...-.----=--_ _- - - - L . - -
SEE YOUR LOCAL FORD DEALER
J
Work to Begin On Serra Brief WASHINGTON (NC)-Work will begin next summer on the formal brief to the Holy See proposing the beatification cause of Fat her Junipero serra, O.F.M., famed California misaioner. . This was reported here by Father Noel F. Moholy, O.F.M., vice postulator for the cause of the Franciscan who established a string of 21 missions in Spanish California. He died in 1784. Documents Ten thousand pages of historical documents have been put together as a result of 20 years of investigation, said Father Moholy, who rece.ntly returned from Rome. CIA historian who will work .on . the formal brief to be presented to the Sacred Congregation of Rites will go to Rome by the end of next Summer," he said. Venerable If the brief is approved by the Vatican, Father Serra may well be declared Venerable, he said. Father Serra, who is one of California's two representatives in the National Statuary Hall in the U. S. Capital, is also the patron of the Serra International organization of business and professional men devoted to encouraging religious vocations.
Liberties U~5@1Tll Hats 'Sunday Sa~e~ laws WASHINGTON (NC) - The American Civil Liberties Union has challenged the constitutionality of Sunday sales laws in two states in briefs submitted to the U.S. Supreme Court. The ACLU, speaking through amicus curiae (friend of the court) briefs, assailed the validity of laws banning unnecessary Sunday business activity in Massachusetts and Pensylvania. The civil liberties g r 0 u p claims the laws violate the constitutional guarantees of religious freedom and freedom from state interference with individual liberties.
Seminarian's lF~t~er Takes First Vows WESTMONT (NC) - A 44year-old man whose son is studying for the priesthood made his first profession of vows as a Franciscan Brother. The former Frank A. Tinney, Sr., of Spring Grove, Ill., took the name in religion of Brother Gale, O.F.M., in the ceremony at St. Paschal's Friary here. He was formerly an employee of the Chicago fire department. Mr. Tinney's wife died 20 years ago, and he raised their two children by himself. His daughter is married and his son, Frank, Jr., is studying for the priesthood at the Salvatorian Fathers' seminary in St. Nazianz, Wis.
FQrmer 'Fall River Teacher Writes Histories Of Notre Dame de Namur Foundresses
released recently by the Bruce Publishing Company. Together, the books tell the exciting story of the early years of the Notre Dame community, which "rode out the storm of the French Revolution and the oppression of William of Orange." Blessed Julie was of humble origin, and fell prey to crippling illness early in life, but was miraculously restored to health and thereafter worked diligenUy in the foundation of her community. Working with her and sharing her devotion was Mother St. Joseph, a woman of noble birth who consecrated her fortune to the work of the Sisters of Notre Dame. She succeeded Blessed Julie as superior-general of the congregation, serving in that capacity for 22 years until her death in 1838. Throughout World The Sisters of Notre Dame now staff schools throughout the world. The community numbers some 5,000 members in about 500 houses. The Sisters came to the Fall River Diocese in 1959 with the opening of Bishop Stang High School in North Dartmouth.
Sister Mary Fidelishas chosen the romanticized biography form
ROME (NC) - His Holiness Pope John XXIII may not know it, but there is a plot to dig a tunnel under the Vatican's walls as part of a surprise visit. Details of the plot were uncovered during a contest among Rome's grade school children who were asked to write on the subject "How I See the Pope." Surprise for Pope One youngster, whose name has been withheld, took the contest theme literally and a.nnounced he intended to see the Pope by digging a passage from
his home to the Pope's private study. The idea was, he said, to surprise the Pope. Other pupils, while lacking the scope and daring of the tunnel approach, showed originality and the' poetrY of the childish soul. Six-year-old Patrizia Prioreschi said she loved the Pope but had never seen him and therefore "I do not know whether he is in good health or bad." Most of the children shared the vision of the Pope as ex-
Amii'y Assocnation Honors Bishops, Pries~s
as Benefactors of Japan
TOKYO (NC) - Two bishops and two priests are among 298 Americans honored here as benefactors of Japan. They are Bishop Raymond A. Lane, M.M., of Lawrence, Mass.; the late Bishop Patrick J. Byrne, M.M., of Washington, D.C.; and Fathers Leopold H. Tibesar, M.M.; of Quincy, Ill., and Leo J. Steinbach, M.M., of Chariton, Iowa. The benefactors were honored for their contributions to the progress of Japan during the past century by the Japan-U.S. Amity and Trade Centennial Association. Among those commended were Commodore Matthew Perry, who opened Japan to trade with the West in 1853, and Gen. Douglas MacArthur, who commanded Allied occupation forces in Japan after World War II. Aids Repatriation Bishop Lane, former superior g e n era 1 of the Maryknoll Fathers and former Vicar Apostolic of Fushun, Manchuria, was praised for sending a delegation to Tokyo after World War II that opened the way for the repatriation of a million Japanese nationals from Manchuria. That area, now a part of China, was controlled by Japan before the war.
SLADEuS
OTTAWA (NC) - The Canadian Hierarchy will build, staff and maintain an interdiocesan major seminary at Tegucigalpa, Honduras. Four Canadian priests are there inaugurating the work: Msgr. Gerard Cambron, former head of the Sherbrooke mission in Brazil, who will be rector of the seminary; Father Armand LeBlanc of the Moncton diocese, Father Laurent Gagnon of the St. Anne de la Pocatiere diocese and Father Real Villemure of the Three Rivers diocese. Construction of the seminary will begin in February. Plans call for classes to begin in February, 1962, according to Father Francis T. O'Grady, S.F.M., director of the Canadian Catholic Office for Latin America. "This initiative of the Canadian Hierarachy is the first of its kind for Canada and is of great importance," the priest said. "It indicates a new awareness of a diocesan obligation toward the needs of the Universal Church. For the first time our Hierarchy, directly and as a whole, undertakes not only the construction, but the staffing and maintenance of a project of major importance in a desperately needy area."
instances the details were made to concur with truth or inevitability." Both biographies should have wide readership among students of Notre Dame schools and all others appreciative of the struggles a community cradled in war and persecution endured to survive and become great.
SlISTlER lFIlIJilElLlIS, S.N.lIJi.
Bishop Byrne, a missionary in Japan from 1934 until he was appointed Apostr"-:: Delegate to Korea in 1947, was cited for his contributions to the moderation of U.S. occupation policy in postwar Japan and for helping to promote social welfare work in prewar Japan. Father Steinbach, now working in the Kyoto diocese, was comme'nded for his efforts to obtain food and clothing from the U. S. and other countries for needy Japanese. Father Tibesar, also stationed in Kyoto, was praised for his w 0 r k for Japanese nations placed in relocation camps in the U.S. during the war, and for nis postwar social work in' Japan.
I;;ister, editor of the "Notre .Dame Quarterly" of the Massachusetts Province of the Sisters of Notre Dame, recalls that Father Bradley was rector of St. Mary's Cathedral when she taught at Durfee High School in the early 1920's. Rev. Francis McKeon, now pastor of Sacred Heart Church, Taunton, was a curate at the Cathedral. Father McKeon was then in charge of Cathedral Camp, while Sister Fidelis was director of Notre Dame Camp at Bristol. She also remembers that Father Donovan was in charge of St. Vincent's Home and the future Bishop Cassidy was pastor of St. Patrick's Church. A graduate of Boston Acadmey of Notre Dame and Boston University, Sister is now at Notre Dame Academy, Roxbury.
Christlfi11l«!lS MQl$$ VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope John will offer Christmas Midnight Mass in the Pauline chapel at the Vatican for diplomats accredited to the Holy See. .
pressed in an esasy that said "T.... Pope is always happy and simple. He does not want people r~==--~~~=~~=l to go to Hell, but to Paradise." ~ Some Annoyance ~ Paolino Righi, however, I .1 showed some annoyance. The youngster complained that the Swiss Guards stopped the Pope I I from visiting his school play in I . i which he was the star. L _ Q
in to day's I smartest
ROUTE 6 near Fairhaven Auto Theatre FAIRHAVEN, MASS.
FIE~~YTRUST
CO.
SOMIERSIE1I', .MASS. -Next to Stop & Shop ••• invites your participation in the growth of a new Banking Institution
•
COMMERCIAL and SAVINGS SERVICE
•
MORTGAGES - AUTO and APPLIANCE LOANS Accounts Insured Up To ~ 10,000 Member Federal Deposit Insurance Co•. Harold J. Regan, President
I
hom e s . . .
Another child, whose father is in prison, wrote: "I see the Pope --,----,.-·111 comforting my father. I know that one day he visited the prisj .oners. I see the Pope full of love like Jesus. I am disobedient, but yesterday I was good, this is why I am also happy."
_--4----,-
~~~~~~~
BARBERO'S
PIlZA•PIJlO
ROUTE 6, HUTTLESON AVE. Near Fairhaven Drive-In
you'll find
1/1.
ti!lJilel/a!l
KIT C HEN S
·America's· most envied kitchens·
Italian Dinners Our Specialty
E.W.GOODHUE Lumber Co. I.,c.
Service On Patio
·BLUE RIBBON
Middleboro Road. Route 18 EAST FREETOWN
LAUNDRY 273 CENTRAL AVE.
Dorothy Cox
150 Varieties
I
i
o o
NEW BEDFORD Home made CANDIES CHOCOLATES
5
Canadian Bishops Plan Seminary In Honduras
A sister of Notre Dame de Namur who taught English and Latin at Durfee High School, Fall River, before her entrance in religion has. become the chronicler of the foundresses of her congregation. Sister Mary Fidelis, S.N.D., the former Maude E. McManama, published "As Gold in the Furnace," the biography of Blessed Julie Billiart in 1956. "Treasure in a ' for her books, but she notes that Field," the life of Venerable they are "entirely factual save Mother St. Joseph, co-founwhere readability or artistic dress of the community, was effect demanded details: In such
"YOUR BANK" PAPAL HONORS: Jefferson Caffery, a retired U.S. ambasador and convert to the Catholic Church, has become the first U.S. citizen in the reign of Pope John to receive the papal decoration of the Grand Cross of the Order of Pius. NC Photo.
THe ANCHOR-
Thurs., Dec. 15, 1960
WY 2-6216 .
1·········... m•• a ••
Please send literature Have salesman call at nO obligation.
Name
; ..
Address
..
City
_
E ••• ~ ••••••••••••
~. ®The ANCHOR i
~ IlllI ~ f!I
P. O. BOX 7 -
FALL RIVER, MASS. Enclosed is $4 Subscription. Please send for one year to
•B Name
;
II ~ IIilI ~
~ Ilil ~ !'II
•m III
C
Address : Post Office
EI
:......................................................
m t:i
: City or Town ~....................................................................................................... : : Parish to be credited : Donated by
•• Address •
;
:.............................................. : _ •
•
:
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • g • • ~~~~~~• • • i
','
. ,, ,
i
.'
6
'fheCenstis .,':' ..
"',
Weekly Calendar
:0,.. -Feast D~ys
.:Smartly TaiIored~C~os's:" . . .' .A jewelry store ad in bmi.of the St,mday newspapers'
ft'.
, TODAY---St. Ireriaeus ;II ,Companions, Ma~yrs. They we.. featured'. several- types of ,"Cross of Dhlll).onds." -One. type a group' of 22 martyrs who weN offered'for sal~ was described ('14 full cut diamonds ,put to 'death for the Faith abotli smartly, tailored'cross.'-' -' " ,2~ in the Valerian persecutioa. , "The-in~v'itable thought followed the, reading of .the ad . 'lJicluded in ,th~numbers were ,SS. Ant1}.ony, Theodore, Satu~ -.that the's'e words can'be'taken out ,of context and applIed nius and' Victor. : , ' -'quite . 'appropriately, :to tlie area: 'of, human values 'arid TOMORROW - St. Eusebi~ , activity.' ' . -, , _ 'Bishop-Martyr. He 'was the scion The idea o( a cross :..:-, any kind of sacrifice or mortifi, of a rioble family of Sardinia. He : cation' or struggl~has become repi.tgnant~to a modern was taken to Rome by his "mother, where- he was ordained. society and - sadly --: to this American culture which was 'He served the <:::hurch at VercelH born in revolution but now waxes fat with the world's and was the choice 'of clergy and highest standard of lIving. And what has all this luxury laity when the episcopal chahbrought about? " became vacant. He fought courageously against the- Arian her~ Soldiers in,]{orea are confused about the reasons for etics, who' had him banished to , a police action and betray thefr own ~omrades. A 'survey of 'Syria,where he ,underwent many physical, fitness is made in several countries, arid Amer-i~an 'hardships. He returned to Ver, youths rate In the last place for physical strength and celli under the reign of Julian in endurance. Parents give their children all that money can 370.', He is revered as a martyr because of the hardships be buy and the country's delinquency rate rises alarmingly suffered. , every year. Successful busines's men beat a path from their SATURDAY - St. Lazarus, : offices and board rooms to the, psychiatrist's couch. The Bishop-Confessor. He was the greatest inducement for self-denial is, a dietary one- get disciple and friend of Christ, - thin and 'win ~ spouse" live longer to enjoy the, good th~~is and was raised from the dead by ,of life. '. Our Lord. It is believed that with his sisters, Mary and The very idea of a cross is looked upon as a medieval Martha, he journeyed into Gaili anachronism - a religious fossil. And so the cross is and was the first Apostle of reduced to the status of a decoration - but a glamorous southern France, becoming Bisb, decoration, one that is attractive and appealing. ,op of Marseilles. He is the patroD saint of that city. , ' _Those sincere persons who appreciate that there must 1 be some sort of cross in life' can also find that, they are SUNDAY-Fourth Sunday in, Advent. Generally this date is looking for a "smartly tailored cross," one tailored ·to the By Most Rev. Robert J. Dwyer, D.D. the feast of SS. Rufus and Zosidimensions of ,self-will and self-choice... The spirit on any Bishop of Reno mus, Martyrs. They were mal',age can even invade the souls' of \hose who are trying ~ Someone, manifestly a low and suspicious character, , tyJ;'s, of the early Church, suIfer~ , live lives of dedication to God. has described football as an. athletic contest played by ,ing about 109 at Philippi in - So men and women who are trying to do God's Will by twenty-two men, after which 50,000 spectators troop out Macedo'nia. Their martyrdom is "living out the duties of their 'state in life must frequently of one side of the stadium shouting "We won!" America, mentioned by St. Polycarp in his Epistle to the Philippians. - check' on their acceptance of trials and crosses - must now slowly recuperating group which would not hesitate MONDAY-St. Timothy, Deamake sure that they are accepting what comes froJ1l, the from its quadrennial politi- to embarrass the main body by con-Martyr. Little is known of Hand of God as a cross, rather than tailoring one to their cal football game, has the claiming the spoils on Inaugura- him except that he lived in own specifications and asking God to approve this as their comfort of knowing that tion Day. , Morocco, Africa, and that in de;there were at least 50,001 rooters Useless to pretend that such a' fense of his Faith was burned cross and His Will. ' Indeed, there has been a complete about-face in the for' the winning team as against group does not exist. But as a 'to death at the stake. a paltry 49,999 matter of practical judgment TUESDAY-SS. Liberatus and field of, psychology regarding trials and tensions and for 'the' vanmost American Catholics with a Bajulus, Martyrs. Little is cercrosses. Once these were considered ~he enemy of the quished. ~ u t grain of common sense realize tain of the dates when they lived clearly that in many ways a or where they suffered martyrhuman spirit and all efforts were expanded to remove them aside from the Catholic President must of dom, although it is believed completely from life. Then it was discovered that without astonishing mathematics of the necessity bend over backwards that they suffered in the East. difficulties the human person turns into a vegetable with to reassure his critics that he is Their relics are venerated in case, the comnothing to serve as a spur for endeavor and an incentive for mentators ' are not a Vatican pawn. Rome. Actually, in some areas of true human activity. It was then decided that even on a well occupied WEDNESDAY - St. Thomas, .in extracting concern, notably that of justice of Galilee was a fisherman and human level, man needs some opposition. cautionary lesfor our Catholic educational Apostle. He was one of those 'Yes, the cross must stay-and as a cross, as something. sons from the system, it is arguable that a called by Our Lord to be one hard and uncomfortable and uncompromising. The human campaign and Catholic as President is a handi- of His Apostles. After the Resits harvest of cap rat~r than a benefit. . spirit requires it. And salvation demands it. urrection he would not believe fresh precedents in American Sees Warning the report that Christ had arisen. history. But the real question goes At the actual sight of the piercea This seems like' a harmless deeper. Writing in, Christianity hands, feet and side and the A beatnik story has two characters passing a local church and seeing the by-now familiar sign, "Put Christ enough pastime, and ,for the and Crisis, a clear-thinking and' gentle rebuke of the Saviour, he most part it is.' A Catholic as hard-hittil1g liberal Protestant uttered the joyous words: "M~ back into Christmas." And one of the individuals'comments Pr~-' ~_ent is bound to furnish .journal, Professor Roger - L. Lord and My God." After the to his friend, "Look at that. They are trying to put religion almost unlimited, cop y for ' Shinn of Union Theological Ascension, he preached in Parjournalists who specialize in Seminary 'makes a point which thia and it is generally accepted into everything these days." It is strangEl how even the very word "Christmas" has, details of protocol and domestic should shock us into awareness. tradition that he preachedib intimacy. We shall certainly ''The campaign of 1960"; he India, where he suffered martyrby its very repitition, lost- so much of its significance, even . hear much of where the Ken- remarks, "may well mark a dom. its derivation. It is the old story of familiarity breeding nedy family worshipped last· step in the transition of Ameriresi.. not contempt but lack of awareness. A whole host of con- Sunday, what the First Lady can Catholicism into the status alleged a certain min' due of persecution, sufficient, at notations has built up around the idea of Christmas, most wore, how the children behaved, of one more denomination. and how much was dropped into Contrasting the Catholic dog- least, to lend a sociological and of them promoted by commercial interests. Speak of the collection plate. matic claim to infallibility in political coloring to a Catholie Christmas and people think of presents, cards, red-suited This is all part of the penalty faith and morals with its socio- distinctiveness i n American and bell-ringing Santa Clauses multiplying themselves on paid by those who seek office logical and political acceptance pluralism. Now that distinctiveness, forevery street corner, tinsel and trees, tired feet and, or have it thrust upon them. of pluralism, he questions whedemanding children, pretty cribs and artistic Holy Family America has an enormous and ther these propositions are not mally, is no longer valid. The insatiable appetite for prying "culturally and p~y:'l"-.fogically sole distinctiveness, left is our grouns. into the private lives of those irreconcilable in the American theological belief in the uniqueThere has been a growing and successful attempt in it exalts. future." , ness of the Church, the One True Effect on Segments Tender Spot Church existing in this ')lural recent years to emphasize the religious aspect of Christmas, Of considerably greater imNow neither Dr. Shinn nor society on terms of eq'iJality to feature the crib over the reindeer, and Bethlehem over portance is the effect a Catholic ourselves can speak with confi- with other religious gro1.!O)S, toyland. But so much of that can be external and visual. in the White House will have dence in regard to the cultural Danger of Compromise The real change must be effected in the hearts of men, in on the two major religious seg- and psychological future of The temptation, doubtless una deeper awareness that this is Christ's daY,the day of ments of the nation, the Prot- America. But let us be honest conscious but none the less the Prince of Peace, the Redeemer of mankind, the light estant majority and the Catholic enough to admit that he has put real, for American Catholics to \ his finger on a very tender spot. settle for compromise with plurand splendor of the Father, the ICing whose name is eternal. minority. Some time ago, while the There is danger, perhaps the alism even in this remaining A new appreciation of Christmas, a deeper awareness campaign was in progress, we gravest we have experienced as area is somehow heightened bF of the fact, even fresh language in speaking of it - all used the word "trauma" to American Catholics, of accept- this election of 1960. these are needed to really put not Christ back into describe a fairly, widespread ing for ourselves a merely deFor one thing, it has forced. Protestant reaction to the im- nominational status. It may not popularization of a "theology of Christmas but to put men back into tHe Christmas scene. pending loss of. its paramount' be altogether, fair to cite Mr. pluralism" before the theolonational symbol, the PresidencY-Kennedy's campaign "theologiz- gians themselves (let alone the as its own exclusive birthright ing"as evidence of a'trend ,in Catholic laity) have fully E~lI..... ,and, preserve. , this direction, but it is a point plored its possibilities and pi~ And while the - immediate ,'well,taken that his emphasis on falls.' ' For another, it has induced • aftermath is a tribute to the religion' as a purely personal sound judgment and restraint of' matter,' without public interest, readiness to consign religion to Americans, it is - could lead to some strange, con- _an ,exclusively private realm OFF.ICIAl ..NEWSPAPER ,OF ..THE DIOCESE OF FALL, RIVER, responsible hardly conceivable that good· clusions~' where it can only be stifled. It Published weekly by The Catholic Press ,of the Diocese of Fall River luck should hold to the extent Lose Distinction •' need not suggest regret for' what 410 Highland Av'enue ' of' keeping anger and prejudice Pluralism'is a' fact with which has happened if we say that the under wraps during the, whole we' have to liv'e, and for which price may be heavier than ... Fall River, Mass., OSborne' 5-7151 . time ahead. - , I we are, striving to formulate a'·· had reckoned. , PUBLISHER theology consistent with the eliThe need is urgent throughout Catholic ReaeUoD Most Rev. James L Connollx, D.O., PhD. , Our interest here, however, is sential current of historic Cath- the Catholic' body for a c1E~8I' GENERAL MANAGER ' ASST..GENERAl MANAGER reaction of the Catholie olic thought. But so long as it 'definition and a sound undeFsegment. We are not thinking so eould be said,that the American" standintt'o£ the uniqueness 01. Rev. Daniel F. Shalloo,M.A. ,Rev. J,ohn P. DriscoH much of ,the. Catholic lunatic: . Catholic was still disbarred, e~- " the Church in this existential MANAGING EDITOR fringe, that foolish but some- fectively, fr<,>m the highest ~- 'pluralism. For this timely war-DHugh J.Golden time. exceedingly vociferoua fice in the land, there could be ing we thank you, Dr. ShinD-
as
in
Urges SQund Understanding Of Church's Uniqueness
Lack of .A.wareness
~
. W fhe..·ANCHOR
the
Tuiti~.n<:P~y~,nt\;'
Question Reaches , S.. p[(e·~eCqurt.. "
Leading Expert ;8", Children's Books; Visits')' ,,' F II R,~9·:·:.:
T 'll' "'f"H' . C ,...,';_... ,. lVer":~~",,,~: . .~. ,/!~ :".. e~,\ o~'~erswn"
~,~CHOR-
Tt;tE
,.Thurs., ,Dec. 15,
I"
:.'
7
,
1.960.~
Coth'olie"Press: "Plens
MONTPELIER (NC). " '., :" . '; By Pat~Jel~ ~cGowalill ': ' . Student$' The legal argument wh~th;' , C!ne .~(t~.~ .~,hHted Stat~s:.1ea~in~ au~~,?r.$~ie~.'. on '~~·i.':drenPs ~ite~t~re, Miss '~arg~ret. PO$ier COIrili'~~fi' a "town without a "public;: ~ MartIg,?-,om" W~8, ~ ~re~ent ~ISl~r ~Q" F~ll )}~~~:r.f~~:~f~,~tur.ed sp~aker at. a bo?~ faIr s~onhign: schqQf c{)Jl pay tuitiQI\~.; sored ~r.: ~9r.~On-, ,~~mor HI?~;,.§c~~<>p~;:·~hm 'anl,~?,~~,~s~o~.:en, MI~s M~rt!?n?m I~ ,the ,~dltor NEW YORK (NC) -.:.. The' ' for,shldents Who, choose ~o .,at- .. of many~ a~~h~!og;le~: .?f chdetry~~ ,:l~~e~atur.~, ·:a,H~~f.~.}"f-; an authorItatIve artIcle on the second<annual students' postend a Catholic high sohool hali." subject f6;G~oiie~.. ~neycih- ;r," '".' /. "',:;"".': ,":,.:t, ter . contest, for Catholic reached the Vermont Suprem~ ed" d ' " t." ,t Press Month will be held illl Cou·rt. , p la, an IS' a . presen connection with the February. The court 'is being asked by working on a 10 volume set 1961 observance, the Catholic tlle South Burlington school of children's ',' classics which Press ,Association announced t ••,
I
bo~rd to
upset a decision by 'will appear n~xt Fall. Chittenden County Chancellor But she brushes aside her W~l~am C. Hill.' who h~ld. the achievements as nothing in tuition payments unconstituhon-' comparison to the "wonderful Q1.' " gift of the'l!'aith" which she reSouth Burlington, like several 'ceived nearly three years ago other areas, has no public sec-' when she entered the Catholic ondary school.' Students' travel Church. to nearby B~rling~on, with. a "It's the most precious thing number attendmg Rice MemOrial in life to me" she' declared exHigh School and Mount St. . pressing w~ndepnent·at ' the Mary Academy. casual way in which many born A decision from the Suprem~' Catholics regard their memCourt is expected during' its bership in the Church. .January tern:'" Formerly" in 'public library ~Ites Law . work: and a children's book ~1"istopher Webber, a school editor for the Knopf publishing boar~ a.ttorn.ey, defended. ~he company, Miss Ml\rtignoni acconstitutionalIty. of the twtIon cepted a position in the. librar, ~ments..He said they are proscience d~partment of Catholic Yld~ for In a Vermont law that University' soon after her' conRCI~lres each town to furnish version. RCOndary .education, and if a Bus,. Schedule town has no high school, to proThe only specialist in chilyide this education' at a school selected by the parents or guard- dren's books on the university faculty,. Miss Martignoni is kept ianS of the student. Arguing against this were F. extremely busy filling requests Rat Keyser, governor-elect of for book lists and information Vermont, and Stephen B. Rich- in her field. One recent request ardson, who said proper Church- for Ii list of character-building State relations are violated by books for young people came the use of public funds to pay from Vice President Nixon. Miss Martignoni is also much ~tion at parochial schools. . in demand as a speaker in the Common Benefit Mr. Webber, and another school Washington' area and farther afield. She says that she receives board .attorney, Frederick J Fayette, said the Vermont law an especially large number of requests to address groups interand. the tuition payments give ested in forming parish libraries, the Catholic high school pupil a and she is very pleased to note benefit common ,to all pupils. "The statute is not in support the interest in Catholic books . of religon, but to aid the parents indicated by this. In Fall River she spoke to an of all children in a similar situation, who are under compulsion ,audience of students and parof the law to send their children ·ents on the importance of famto school." Mr. Fayette told the ily reading sessions, suggesting several titles that would hold the court. interest of all members of the Any benefits receiVed by the family. She concluded her adCatJ;tolic school, the attorneys. dress by telling "The Legend of said. are incidental, since tuition the Christmas Rose" by Selma payments may not exceed the Lagerlof. ~ls per pupil costs. Mr. Keyser, opposing the payments, called them "a direct fiD8Ilcing of a religious group, and insofar as the sectarian schools CHICAGO (NC) - A contest take the place of public school for the best short story by a secondary education, it is a student attending a Catholic blending of secular and sectarian college is, being sponsored education." jointly by the Thomas More As"This is prohibited by the First sociation of Chicago and the Amendment, to the U. S. Consti- McGeary Foundation of Miami, tution," he said.. Fla. The winner will receive a $1,000 cash award and the college in which he is enrolled will Continued from Page One be awarded· the McGeary Founhigh school campaign. The Imdation Gold Medal, designed by maculate Conception parish curate also announced a general. sculptor Ivan Mestrovic. Stories entered must be the training session for all workers original, not previously pubin the l3-parish drive at the lished works of undergraduate Park Theater, Taunton, at 8 students currently enrolled in a Tuesday night, Jan. 10. The special and memorial gifts Catholic college or university in the U.S. All manuscripts must total $633,280, Fr. Lyons reported be typed and received on or betoday. "Although meetings for the special and memorial gifts fore April 1, 1961, by Short Story Contest Editor, The Thomas . volunteers have ended, neverMore Association, 210. West theless the door is still open for anyone wishing to contribute Madison Street, Chicago 6, Ill. All manuscripts should be acunder either of these categories," companied by a self-a~idressed. Fr. Lyons emphasized. Fr. Lyons revealed the follow- stamped return envelope. ing parish totals today for the llPecial and memorial phasea of OP~fl11 Hoste~ the. campaign: LONDON (NC)-The English North Dighton Jesuits have opened II hostel· Q. Joseph $29,84~ for Catholics from mission areas Dig~tolil who come here to get acquainted 6,780 St., Peter with'England. Most of the guests .Raynham. are expected to come from misSt. Ann. 5,600 . sions conducted by the White' ... T~~n~ Fathers in Africa. HQIy Family ", 33,64Q, I " Holy Rosary . 25,200 ,,' . .': Jnup.aculate ,~onception 46,420 O~'LadY I;lf t.QUrdes 38,200;., ~~p~ed Heart, , . 45,690", ">. S~ Anthon~;,r 'I:' I 58,4,?6 $,. ,J41cques. 30,1~ ,;. " &.: ;Jo,seph, I " ; 53,49lD" " , ,BOYS WANTED for the Sltt-.. Mary. " I ,'.1 , , ' , 153,292 ", PrieSthob~ and Brotherhood. Si. Paul 42,920 , Lack of fund6 NO' Impedi-
Contest for Students Of Catholic Colleges
Taunton Drive
."::Trinitarian.'"
"'Fathers ~
"Membership Up ,
ROME OiC).~Italy's CathoHe~ ,
~ti<)D . QriIani,~ation
~s
~,.:
~~~d that ,i~.~em'bersblp'". fnel:ellsed by 30,934 during the pa£t'.Y.t:ar, to .a,t~W of.3,303~:;
ment;
:: ...... ·Write lot '.: .
~; P.. '0: Box ,51:42 Baltimore. 8, Md.
..
here.' The 1961 contest will havo three divisions, compared with only, two last year, according teD James A. Doyle, CPA executivo secretary. An' elementai-y-junior high school division has been added to the contest, Mr. Doyle said. for Catholic students of the 7th., 8th and 9th grades. The contest will also have the high school and the' college divisions as in 1960. Cash . Prizes Cash prizes will be awarded to winning students in each of the divisions. Duplicate prizes will be awarded to the teachers of the winning students. In addition, winning posters will be offered to publication members of the catholic Press Association for reproduction. Each participating school wiD hold its own local Catholic Pre9ll Month contest-and then wiD submit the winning poster to the national contest, Mr. Doyle said. Winners will be selected by a three-man judging committee of professional artists worlrring in the Catholic press.
LITERATURE EXPERT: Miss Margaret Martignoni, children's literature expert, autographs book for Sandra Saleeba, St. Joseph's parish, and Alan Amaral, Holy Name parish, both Fall River.
Urge American Sisterhoods to Aid 'In Education, of Fo~eign Nuns .
,Students Become .Whale-Watchers
WASHINGTQN (NC) - All education and living needs is U. S.. sisterhoods that conduct borne by 'the U. S. community, colleges have been invited to she said. join in ~ pioneer project wh!ch Under the plan as begun by PALOS VERDES (NC)-FirSt ~ay brmg ~undreds of forelg,n the Mercy Sisters, Sisters from it was goldfish with collegians" Sisters to thiS country for thelI" several communities in Kerala now it's whales. No swallowing college education. have been' brought to these ,this time, of course. Actually. The purpose is to enable young schools: St. Xavier College, Chi- thingS have become a bit morEl Sisters from needy areas to re- . cago; Mt. St. Agnes, Baltimore; scientific. turn homEi' equipped with special Salve Regina College, Newport, The "Whale Watching Society'" skills to help their communities R. I.; Our Lady of Cincinnati of Marymount College-a nonand the lay 'people they serve. College; and Mount Mercy Col- profit, unincorporated and care'. .' 1 ,lege, Cedar Rapids, Iowa. F?urteen S~sters .from Ker.a a, In addition, St. Mary's College, free organization, has beeD India, a~tendlllg SIX accredl:ed Notre Dame, Ind., conducted by formed to observe the migratiora college.s III the U. S., are t?e pIlot the Holy Cross Sisters, has en- of California gray whales to southern waters. group In th~ pro~ram which was . rolled two Indian Sisters. launched last· year by the U. S. communities' of' the Sisters Of ·Need Is Known A Delicious, Mercy'" . , "The great need for collegeMore' are expected, including trained Sisters ha~. been known Treat some from Africa and Latin to U. S. commumtIes, but few' America. Expansion of the pro-' could spare the personnel to go gram was urged by the Sister to. thes~ areas ~o teach, so we Formation Conference a move- are trymg to brmg the students ment among U. S. sis~rhoods to here," Sister Annette said. better the spiritual, academic The program, she said, will and technical training of young train the nuns to be technicians, nuns. ' teachers, musicians, artists, medUrged to .Join ical technologists, nurses, social Sister Annette 'Walters, execu- workers, home economists and tive secretary of the conference, scientists. which has heaquarters here, said , . . . - - - - - - - - - - - - -.. a committee headed by Sister REAL 'ESTATE' Mary' Josetta, president of St. Xavier College, has asked communities conducting accredited colleges to join the project.
POWERS
,
Insurance Agency
"We can't say at this early time how many foreign Sisters will be involved, but it could be hundreds," said Sister Annette, a member of the Sisters of' St. Joseph of Caroridelet, Mo.
43 PURCHASE ST.
Made Rite Chsp$
fAILL RIVER
Ask fer Them Today
t(I~t(It(It(I~!,~I3:""'~':i:~l:l:~~~~~"7'~""'crt(ItUt:roP:l~t:It::l
The cost of bringing each Sister here and providing for her
H~H''2'!J
the Sq)lutiolTP. Shopping Pl"oblems 0
CORREiA & SONS
0
¥ o lit 11' Chrris£mOls
..
A heartwarming record album the .whole family will enjoy. When you hear it, YOU'll love It!
ONE STOP SHOPPING <:t:NTm • Television
~G
'PATTERNS IN SONG
• Fumltull'fl
9
~ Appliances. ~ GroeelliY
Biwt66ft I6lecti0n8 sung by the. Novice. and Postulant8of the
104 Allen St•• New Bedford WYman '1-9354
Religious 01
;' <!1"S",~~~o,,:,,':.: ,""'" ;~
. I,G
". . ~;"
".~
:.J'
" ": ;,.••' 'I"
. "
,.~
.
...
.
".
',...
,.,.
A
4
,.' .~a. ~lDg;.: 'I'hl;~ Ey~~'
. o~joybd;shiglitg avail: In ~~~~d J;II.F! LlP.
"TOO WODlnD Iri ft>O SIl<i<I,'.' "Lll& "Tho Hoi'" , ..;;-..;---.----, CLIP OOUPON ANll!l MA.JL .TO. "" .. --~-~~--
Li,~ D~
: tlli!61NA ReCORD, 89UHUH3 'RGd.
,.
Dear S~· ",;
',,'
•
Hlfamvil~, M~ '. :.'"
<J • • •
.. 00: Mt. 'Pleasant· Street ' New BedfM'd;· 'wy 3-266't
GIld:~ more:.. 'l.' .'
>'::
.
: {, : l.:
Please seR~ IlliO •••••••• cop" nes' of your 12 Ia. LP. reeordl I album. "Pa~ ,I!'! .Sang.", firIclosed b 0 3',95 HI-R : t, PJ-. prlnta .,,',. . ' ..,~' . ',0' 4.95 S~reG,' : I "NAME: ·••••. ~ ~·: ·..e-.;,..· ~ o • • • • • ,oo • • • • • ~ : ' , . ," " , , ' f ' , " . · .. , . STATE TA'I I STUD: •••••••••• ~ ••••• CITY: •••••••••• : ••••••
Stanley Oil·Co., Inc.
. . .- - - _ , - - - - - _ - -. .
.abki,
"'F '.:-':' t ,.;' ,.-_·. .TIIii u;;pp' wiwlo:rer"
Also complete BoUer-Surner" '" Oi' Furnace ,Units. Efficient low cqs' beating. Bomer apd ruel.,....i oil sales~..aDd/. servi~ :J ,
~d old alike.
'. HoUrs
'1.
Oil BURNERS"
and Mary.
'l'he perfect gift fw youmg
• .
,'. ~';;
'
""";".;,'"
JB8U8
.
••••
~~-9-~-e-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-lj-~-~-~-~'~' ~'-~-~~-~.~.-~-~-~-ii-~-Iil'ita:lill- ij--ii-ij-~-ii-"-ii-iii-~-aad
__
.~
'o..-Ao.~
•
..;....&,
..'C..".;h;;;P·... ·...-,;:'4
Vi,neyard Haven · Early Christmas
8
SpiritlL9~~ Gifts
A're ~est Choice For ,You Give Self with ~Them .
Christmas came early thisyed for Mr. and Mrs. Manuel Kins •. of St. Augustine's parish, Vine· yard Haven. Their daugh~ , Sister Dominic Marian, O.Carm. visited them for the first time Ia seven years, following her pee, petuai profession as a Carmelite '. Sister for the Aged and Infirm. ~'It was a continual opea hOllse," said. Sister Dominic hap. 'pill'. She held reunions wHli many of. her 10 brothers aDd ·.sisters, "including her twin, Mn. · Joseph F. Duarte, and heI' · ,b rot her William, Viney_ - Haven chief of police. A graduate of Tisbury Higla · School' and New York Institute : of Dietetics, Sister Dominic ill chief dietitian at the Mt. Carmel · Home for the Aged in New Yora City. · FollowIng the perpetual profession ceremony in German,.. town, N. Y., Sister Dominic' returned to Vineyard Haven wittl her parents, but the trip was · not without delay. Bad weather kept them in. Falmouth ovellnight before they returned bir boat·to the Vineyard. Sister entered the' Carmelite community in 1953 and took her .' first vows in 1954. The commu" ity .operates the Catholic Mem,.. · orial\Home, Fall River, and Our Lady,s Haven, Fairhaven, i~ tbilI · DioceSe:' , . v'
By Alice Bough Cahill , Christmas is a time of joy-:-a time Of celebration, a ~ . time when you, should let ·your home reflect both the quiet , '. peace, and the gaiety 9f Gpristmas. You can brighten your , home with Christmas radiance by simple decorations that · even a child can' make, or longer and longer, but topping · youeans~nd many dollars the list for all of us should ·be · buying elegant and profes- some spiritual gifts. Even simple 'gifts can express· sional commercially' made adornments. . One mother I know set her ehildren to the task of making table favors for the family Christmas dinner. The chil· dren deelded to make an g·e Is · and this is how :'to do it. Cut a 'halfeircle of, stiff gold paper. Punch holes for "erms and then ·'1bread a pip e . eleaner into one hole, thro~gh end Of small bauble, (WhICh 8erves .as' head) out other hole. Now faste~. papElr bito co~e shape, inserting triang~e wings ·of gold paper in se!U~~ ~h,ap'e one end of a pipe. cleaner l.nto a halo and slide the otl).~r el!.4 down, .the ange1'" s nec k" . . A wreath on your front door, fashioned after the Della Robbia wreath, will win many admirers. · For something different, make · your wreath of magnolia leaves and attach. to it clusters of sh~l· lacked fruit. If you have a whIte door and want something distincti.ve, make a wreath o..f magDalia leaves and cranber:nes. . To make such a wreath, stick '. rosy berries to a car~boa.rd cir'ele and surround thIS. WIth the 'leaves. A merrily decorated door · is a welcome to all comerli. Let a, get:luine ¥adOJ;lna. add · dignity' to your hall table as · "another welcome' to ,all guests .'who ·enter your· home. Arrange III Madonna figure in a low. bowl · :Md, frame it' with holly sprigs . . "and' candles. Or you might prefer small creche on .a hall ~ buffei ., t1able~.· ., .
a
'.
.
~
SWantD« ..yet· Simple . " .. .
a'
This i. stunning, yet siD)p1e • rangement ~. appropriate fM any room in-youi' hoUSe. If y~lI have 'a large 'rotmd fish. bowl, :rill it with" varicolored glass balls. Stick two tall ted candleS (one taller than the other) in the bowl. Encircle it with a greell • tin ribbon, .tied in a large boW, using greens at the base of the bowl for freshcontra.st. The eandles, when 'lighted, will be · reflected in the lovel, colors at the balls. For the big dinner with ever so many guests, you might like to decorate a long table with spray'S of evergreen. Stick greens in ~ needlepoint holder for added height. Then' hang . ornaments, in clusters near the center' of each arrangement. Maybe you'd prefer ,to use plastic foam, which will work just as well, cut in • long piece. Christmas is gift-giving season -that delightful remembering time when you package surprises for your loved ones and friends. As you make out your list it gets
No. Attleboro isabell~ To Carol for Shut-Ins
your best wishes. It's up to you to select carefully, wrap smartly, and give graciously. When you give your family or friends a spiritual gift with a part of your time and service for Christmas, 'you are giving them a .bit of yourself. That is often one of the most appreciated, most thoughtful ways of saying, "Mer_ ry Christmas." It might-be a bedridden friend, who needs few gifts,-oi!. .a gay card make yoUr gift a certain 'number of afternoons when Y9U will come and J'ead to him;' . Gifts that Grow Gifts that grow are appreciated too. Inexpensive, but sure to · please, are a half-dozen bulbs of fi..agrant paperwhite·· .narcissus, , sent with· bowl 'and potting soiL · (This is an accep~ble' gift to send a convalescent.) Often one 'is stumped to know what to send a man 'on one's list.. Did you ever think how well a husky plant suits a man's study?, I A fiddleleaved rubber tree plant doesn't require much light and, like the large-leaved philodendrons, arranged totem-polefasbion, fits well in a study.
az~e~~i~~~~t~~:~t;~~~~:al~:::' . Nation's Cathol ic Mother of 1944
IN' Gra"ndmother of SO . , . .
gestions to· "Keep Christ in Christmas" suggests that people S OW . ,. breakaway from the habit of WASHINGTON (NC) - The gift swapping and ends with the nation's Catholic Mother of 1944 suggestion, "Get down on. your is now a grandmother for the knees and thank God you are 50th time. : , ' · living in a land· so blessed with. Mrs. Augustine B. Kelley of· riches that it is"possible for you this city, widow of a ,U.. S. rep· to be OR the ·giving instead ~ ,resentative from Pennsylvan~a, the'receiving end.~ bad to move'fast to attend,t~
.vited to tea on the same day. The bowl game between' too University of Minnesota and the University of Washington will be televised on schedule, but the benefit tea for the Cenacle Retreat 'House here has beaB .moved up to Dec. 26.
. baptisms of her 49th and 50th grandchildren. The 49th, Sheila Marie, daugh'ter of Mr. and Mrs. A. Regis : Kelley of Bethesda, Md., was . Christmas Program . bOrn at Providence Hospital here :. The annual Christmas tadllllt 'a few weeks ago, two days before "broadcast of the Catholic Th~" ··the 50th grandchild, 'G!:'egory .'ter Guild of New Bedford WiD. · .' .. , . . . . .. ' . :' ," ' ..•..f' ".' .'", •.. " '.: ' . . Brown'; sixth son of Mr. a.nd Mrs.. feature as guest artists, the St. Leads~: N,ur~··.~~enr~ B. Brown, J.r"of ~pri1'!g.." jameS . Catholic' Church c,h~lII' ' , " . . . . . . . .... '. :.... ' . .' ." .', .1...... " , '. .1Ield,.Md.. was born, at ~e ~e'under the direction of F-atbar .~hOl;pitat· . . '. . ..., ." . ·:'Aib~rt,Shovelton. ' .. . .. .... ..' .' " . ,,,,, ': ".' '. ,- ..'.. Dr. George Ellis 01. thehos-· . The . program wiU presedli .PLAINF'IELD ,(~>-Feeling . Now:. her- :da)',\~gi~ .~i~~;·pital staff has deliv~i'e'd 25'01. '''Christmas Songs and' Theil' · .-estless thesed!lYs?' '. '. M~ss~olloWed..bY:~han~ing ~ ... Mrs~ Kelley's grandchildren..'·., .. Meaning," with F!lther SboYd:--. .. Barbara CoggiJis.had.tbe the Offlce.in ;.... 49th'" _.,,;.;. " .. ton serving'as Narrator. .. .' ., .". .. . .' same' ., 'th Divine th 1 . 1 (!9mpany t the grand c h'ld 1 was uaPfeeling leveralyears ago. Her .WI. 0 er a)' peop e ~.. 'ti· ed' 4- "St J ' ... F' " de· . GueSt organist will bO:MIiJI to .beCome II iay 'mission, which also mahltains... .' ,?,-..a~ ,.. ' ., ane. rance.~ . '.' Florence,"E. Mello.' " . Solution, : . . ' .. " 'N -'m" b . lev apostolate training ·schooL·· ;. ~hantal,ehuI:ch: .~ ·su~,urb~l\' mll~S1onary.,~w .' e s so us,. i7.. .' . ..' ' • • Bethesda and. the 50th at Little ~-~-~-~tl;1.ere's .DO ti.me. tlo··~ restlesL Then .follows break,fa8t . ~~, ··Flower··· church . iti .liuburban'·· Are You Wearing A .: . '. " . .. S the day's work of caring tot ..,' .... '.' '. . .'... ...... . , """t"b~"a nu~atth..e ~ patients.in the infirmarY;·'~i~~,S.prU:~gfle~4~Mr~.: Kelley h~d.to.. . Pretty:aat?' lose MIssion a scorched·sec' 'to th"e ou't-pa "'t'len 'ts"a",,'d .hurry It's . . ." is. . .... . ' .._ is t erlng '.. " ....." from one ch.urch . 'to .,the. ' · tion of. the Texas Panhandle'~\1~_. ".,~. 't'. ~ ·t~·", ,...... ··'t·h·..... " "h" 'e's'" .other to be present for the: cere. " f d' Th' . h' 'k" ·".Sllng 0 uers.... elr om... ,.' " ~ '11.1• .-. ' IideHere or., ere. s e~!>.r ,!, .' .' . ,"', : ,. :,." '.'. . :1"::'" momes. . . . '. ,..~_ aD:'~?\g Mexic~n ·.migr~~~ .'1!r,ol.'ke,r...... : l1t" ~~.~ , c~p!, i9ur f.!l?l.l, ~~~~. '.' Mrs. Kelley has six soris .and families .~lving ~ ,.:,!'1"e~c~e~ .}~ach.w.~~~)IP-~. se..ve~ cl;1,l1dr~n, ~hree . daughters, . al~ ·ma.rried.· . Southern New England!o barrac~s 1,luilt dur~ng.. World . !,?ar~ a smgle barrack. v.:~~. Mrs.Kelley was the youngest in &argest Millinery Fashion SIoM War 1.1 to house. ltal~~ 'pr~ .8t·hm~le. 'COdJd-Woll,tethr . ,faucet !:!~. a family of eight and her hus134 SOUTH MAIN STREET , of '. elr' nee s. u ouses are ....... . . . . .... ers . war. .: . ~nly a,ttempt at' sanitation. band was the eldest In a fami1¥ FALL RIVER The mission is loeated ~. ~ . Pneumonia, diarrhea, measles of eight. center of a labM camP .where ·.and chicken pox are. c0l.'Ylm(;m. r----.;....-......-...;.----------...,...--...;.---:-...., '1000 people Hve ill cramped as is malnutrit~on, especiall.y M~re ~yer arpund Christmas', ~nd. E,ster · ~ squalidliUrroundinga. .. .' when . w~rk in the fields falls Care 01. Souls off. Pinto beans and tOl'tillas'lU'e the ord1Dary diEit. '. ,: ~ . , Barbara's. domain since 1955 bali been .• one-sto:ry, "12-room Dire Nee. .infirmarY. She considers herself . There IS always a di~ n~d : , "greatly privileged" because she has been given ''the opportunity for drugs' and medical supplies. The dispensary relies for it. to share' with the bishop' and. supplies on gifts of samples ,fro~ OPEN 'EV~.RY EVENING priests in the ~ of souls." doctors . an«;l pharmaceutical NOW Th'rough Thursday, January 5th An Arm,. nUrse during the firms aild OU:' occasion sm~ll · war; she work~.in KingSbridge donations. ROUTE C~rver, Mass. Road Veterans Horn>ital in, ~ The ~ission has a resident : Bronx after. her discharge. But doctor 'as w~ll .a~. :'other lar 'she had the feeling she. ,was workers; And· Barbara explains being called elsewhere,' and she that the \votk "is the' teamwork knew where when .she read a of many people-food is given magazine article about· a nurse by some, medicine by others, in the lay apostolat~ and good, ~ample !?yall; But Est~ 192~ When she heard about the behind everybody is the loving . "Come Where the Sisters shop'" need for a nurse at San Jose hand of God, watching out for His neglected qhildren," Mission she volunteered. , r , .'HfAfi}.@[JJ)AIR?1IERS
· Restless Fee". ing.
A:rtfl\{.:·..
,T.··o Mission Work ,Among:' Migront$
Benedict Circle, North AttIe.,. boro Daughters of Isabella, will sing Christmas carols for shut-in members,' Their caroling .tours will begin tonight. Annual party. foz: members' children be held from 2 to 4 , this Sunday afternoon in St." Mary's School hall. ,Children from one to 12 are invited to attend. Mrs. Eileen Taylor is in charge of arrangements. The annual 'bridge to benefit the Rose Hawthorne Home is set for Tuesday, Jan: 24 at Hptel Hixon.' Mrs. Gertrude Staonton and Mrs.' Theresa Biazic are in charge of the affair. Mrs. Marjorie Feeney ·is chail:- ' , man for the regular January meeting and Miss Catherine McNally is assigned for Februaq.
will-
TWO OF 50': Mrs. Augustine Keiley of Kenwood, Md., · Women Figure FootbaO holds her 49th and 50th grandchildren recently baptized at Too Great Little Flower Church in the Washington, D.C. archdiocese. . Competition WAYZATA (NC) -The ROSfll Mrs. Kelley, whose grandchildren are all under 15 years of Bowl football game on Jan. 2 W age, was named Catholic Mother of the Year in 1944. NC · ,too much competition for 6,()()()) Minnesota women who were iJF Photo.
was
.r--.-...... ...
.
.. A ' . . .
.
I •.
I
...
•
' _ o _ o _ a _ a _ a _ ~
~
SEE Beautiful Titan' I. EDAVIL,LE.. ·RAILROAD,':· "CHRISTMAS'DISPLAY,: ACltristmas .Wonderland 58 - South
'~..
fOR' .'
.....
qrrmill}001l1!CID1m@}00 7~9J~c.?~ Bottled by
.,.~.ANCiAYTA~ ~©YlrlO~G C@oq
·n,Ne.
, Jose Mendes & Sons 252-262 COGGESHAll STREET, NEW BEDfORD~ 'MASS.
~nF"jf~,-"f?©1R?
SDSrlE~$
Str~tch ,night" slippers
__
. $U~@
Attache bag exclusive with us ,.,.:.1.95 Leather Pullman 'Slippers in case: :.: ... ~~95 Stretch Nylon"'Hose : __ ~ .45,;,'2:50 Con~ent gradEt'hosiery ~.35. _ _ ~ pr 4,00 'Regulation Rain Capes _ U.9S> ~8 ~lLVAAMIE~ ~'iF~[EIE'ii', ~11'd1 1r~@@1i'
~(Q)~'liON ] 0, MASS•.IHIA 6-] 614 • U 2 ~aU
and Telephone Orders Fil~ . Open all da.y Salurdat Send for free aift list
a
9S46
'1 :''-·.THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fait Rlver....f1oturs., Dec. 15,1960
r-·-; <
h
I'
i. I
l I
ClHIRISTMAs PARTIES: Yuletide festivities are enjoyed by members of Catholic Guild for Blind in Fall River, and Guild for Deaf in New Bedford. Left, in Fall River, Santa Claus (Maurice St. Germain), greets, left to right, Rosella Hart, Mrs. Clara Harrington and Aime Barnaby. At
If You Knew Bishop McN.amara You Loved Him as Father
right, Mr. and Mrs. Frank .Rogers, St. Louis parish, Fall River and Mrs. Stella Bouchard, St. James, New Bed:f;ord, carry ona conversation in sign language with Rev. James A. McCarthy, moderator. Rev: George E. Sulli. van of St.. Dominic's, Swansea, is diocesan director of Guilds for the Blind..
Nuns to· Receive Reiigious Records
Womsil Term It DirtYIT Not Sexy, Literature
ENGLEWOOD (NC). - Eng- instruction" to all convents, lish speaking nuns. throughout "whether they are on university the world will. be able to receive grounds or the edge of a de·sert." monthly religious instructions' . .. . . fro m . outstanding churchmen He SaId the recordmgs :WIll under a new recording program. feature messages from Vatican " leaders anq from noted churchThe Conference - a - Month men of the United States Ire-~lub," sponsore~ by ~e Carmel- land, England, Scotland, A~stra Ite Fathers GUild,. will send a lia New Zealand and Canada. 12-inch, long playmg record t o ' , subscribing convents each month "Each speaker will present the starting in January; one message he considers essenFat her Ronald P'. Gray, tial f?r pr~gress in holine~ ami a.Carro., director of the Carmel_ happmess, Father GrQy said. ite Fathers Guild at 55 Demarest He said convents may sign lIP Avenue here, said the Confer- for either 12 or 24 conferences. ence-a-Month· Club will make The records will form a libraq llvailable "the best of religious of conferences, be said.
HALIFAX (NC)-The Catholic Women's League of Canada By Mary Tiniey Daly . has recommended that the word We never knew him when hecwas "Father McNamara." "di"rty," instead of sexy or salaSomehow, though, Bishop John M. McNamara, elevated to cious, be used to describe offenthe episcopacy in 1927, always retained the fatherliness of sive reading matter. the parish priest for the thousands who knew and loved The league, representing 146,000 Catholic women, submitted him. You couldn't know ity was ever-present inspira- a brief to the Royal Commission Bishop McNamara without tion .to the Bi~ho~ an~ com- on Publications in which it said . . mumcated thiS msplrabon to "f . lovmg him. We are not of everyone who knew him. the word "sex 0 ten IS wronghis parish, nor are we in With in-the-family frankness, fully applied. the higher echelon of the Arch- Bishop McNamara would speak "Sex itself is a gift from God diocese which he served. to me about this column, never and therefore good ...," the brief Yet for us, a with a sign of dictation, but wise stated. "If instead of using the etmple family. comments as to its strengths and word 'salacious' to describe cerhe was guide its weaknesses.' tain types of reading matter, we and mentor as We would taik 01. world and would use the stronger Anglobe was for so local events, of hiB problems and Saxon word 'dirty,' then these lllanY' others. In ours, and· upon leaving, tb~ (objectionable) magazines'would joys and sorBishop atways had presents for immediately lose some of theill.' NWS, in probthe children. . appeal."
an
h:
lem~ and fr~~
When our Mary·was confined BI,'nd G· Ul'ld trattons,. .w e ~ bed with a back ailment a turned mstmc. .. .. Bi h ·M New Bedford Catholic GuM tively to Bishop couple of years ago, s oP.. c-. '&';'1'. the B·ll'nd WI'U ho·l·d 'I'ts annual· . Namara was· one of her first .LV M cNlamara ":~dd··I~~·,,,visitors:""":;dirhb'ina. our· steep., Christmas party tonight. at 1< .. b e a ways· a ~,~.§t" f ' t t· '. .: .te'., of his heart of· . C Ha II.. Merp.~~.s ml!f. ~ing·· . time." Lookil}g .•.•.. r~~'t~ el?s 1';1. SPI .. .. ' . , . ,guests ~nd t.he ·program; WJ,1f in." back,· we· wOJ;lder. ,how:. in tho n ,1 I.on. '.. . .<. ~ ... ' .. 'years '" ': ' . . ·1 d 0' h . d o/!}' c~~ e,..a '.4-\[Olce,.. ~. OIr,',I,:\l.1l er.,. 82 h h . e was .. '" .·.world he made. such ~e f.01' .Alth : . , oug· .L: . D G d ette leisurely, ,relaxed:cQllCern Wlth. a.g~.th~;.de~tl~.. o~ :el~h~p Mc-, ·:~:~~:t7~~0~nffe~~~~r~:,1llJ: d~d~~ : ~.~~ ~ml~ came as ~~~oontie~~ a dlM.mct shock··· ..... .....'. 9,,,. - ...• .. ,. ,,: · ~ gs~ ~ ~ V ~ ~ . Namara our petty d om ~ . .. . .' .' .;, .. . ... 90.
General as·AuxiUary Bishop of • larg/·Arcndiocese, as p~stor of a big parlsh the multiplicity : of his duties were beyond our CDmprehension. . - For months sometimes years, we would see 'Bishop McNamara only at formal occasions: ordinations ceremonies when nuns mad~ their vows, confirmations,· graduations. At each of these, Ute Bishop had the knack of saying the right thing. Tall, thin. ·"'Cardinal Gibbonisn," his slender fingers would touch the pectoral cross as· he spoke. Always without a text, the words were sincere, appropriate to the occasion and heartfelt, with a touch 01. gentle, humble humor. We would' meet Bishop M~ Kamara at other times: in the hospital rooma of friends, for be never neglected a friend; walkIng with his boxer dog "Buff" on the grounds around his rectory; visiting Emmitsburg where . hi~ venerated Mother seton is buried. Often we would visit him just because we wanted to be in his quiet presence, stopping by during Christmas or Easter holidays. Bishop McNamara, with Buff at bis heels, welcomed us as though we were part 01. his family. At bls invitation, we would settle down for "a good old talk," Buff eurled at hia feet, getting lUI. occasional pat. The Bishop and tile Head of the House would IIeminisce about the old days ia Maryland and we'd have a cup .. tea and a piece of cake. CoulclD't Know Inevitably would come up the .use of Mother Seton and each time Bishop McNamara would tell us more about that remark~le woman, founder of the Daughters of Charity in this ~tI')', Her. exUeJne spiritual.-
9thers.. '; , . ..: "·.Wh.oever was 'fiJi ,.charge of·· wrilJlg~me'~lts P.1us~. have known Bishop McNamara well. For, in· . addi~io!1 tq rt.h~. pomp and cere-·· mony accompanying the funeral· of a Bishop of the c:atholic Churc~, ~e ordinary ~ople had the priVilege of. kneelmg close to his open coffin! not tw~ feet away from our frIend, saymg !l prayer for him. And we remember when, not too long ago, he told a group of children: 'lIt is not your praise ][ want. I want your prayers." , ., Those you will always have, Bishop McNamam.
,C'. . '.
c .'. ,. UNION .:WHARf.. .
;',
.
, FAIRHAVEN, ·MAss'
;f '.
;;~.,
.;-;..
..,.,.: ,;; .
;i
·n
:"... .
" . 1 "
:.,.,
:.,~
,
:
,'j
..
,.
'
::,'
.,:
'1. ~ "9WoI·
AUlPTA
.
·the:~':;F'am;,y.' Favorite'
-"
PILGRIM·:
. .~
"
,
'.
REAL ESTATE
.
"
Af. :·School.· 01:,
,"
at Home·
Sales & Rentals West Harwich ROUTE 28 Harwich 4-14 HarwicIIJ 3-67
OS 8-5286 New England'ss Playground
Plan Your Dance Party fashion Shows and Banquets at Lincoln Park's MILLION-DOLLAR BAllROOM
and DAIRY PRODUCTS Penny For Pen" Your Best food Buy
Call ROLANDl GAMACHE ~n:t~ ~-6984
.,'
,'
,' . •
~
Cq~rt, ,Approves"
~
,',
Released Time
"
SALEM (NC)-Private homet will be classrooms and lay persons will be teachers in a pilot program of released-time religious education for Catholic children in three public schooa in Oregon.
'
The Salem project 'is an ou~ growth of a 4-3 decision last June by the Oregon Supreme Court. The tribunal held that a state law permitting the program is constitutional. No starting date has been set for the local program, worked out by Father Joseph E. Vanderbeck, pastor of St. Joseph's church, and Charles D. Schmidt, superintendent of the local school district. 43 Schools In the next school year, however, the program will be e:l'tended to the remainder of Salem's 43 elementary, juniOl' and sel!ior high schools.
I: "
·i.
Dr. Felix Dilger, a Salem dentist ,who initiated the I:OUJ'l ,action that brought about the Supreme, Court's .decision, said he, ,is' pi~ased .iheprogram i. underway.
';,'1.
But he said it will not"affed his' children, because they- now attend St:' JoSeph's p,arochi~ , school·, " "IHI.
i , i '
I, ,
.
i'
May the holy, happy spirit of the first Christmas abun-' dantly bless y~u and yours,
'Mozzone, Bros. IN C O'RP 0 RAT ED
TAUNTON
VA, 4.784~ '- VA, 2-4051
WHEN' 510<N.E5$ STRIKE~ IT'!. 'I"'p'oRT~T TO SEE
YOUR.: OOCTO«., AND WHEN
HE'S GiVEN '(oi] A P~ESCf'I PlIOH'~ 'ITS 1M POATAHT'1O GET
IT' FILLED ·:1tZ
TOU,HEY'S'
Seek$ to O~$t Bishop' Of Dissident"ChLiich !"
, ERNAKULAM(NCh..':'A mein-. 001'0£ the Mar Thoiriite dissident Church has asked, civil court h~re in' India,)o".exl;:omml,lnil;:ate the church's bishop ;and si:)me of his followers' because 'they 'pray for-the ,dead.. ,.: ' : , K. N. Dani~.l has'brou~ht ;'his suit against: Metropolitan Mar Thoma before a court· COrhposed of twei non'-'Christians, Justices M. S. Menon and M. Madhavan Nair. " , The Mar Thomite church split from the dissident Malabar .Jacobite Church early in the iast century under the influence of Protestant missioners. It does not believe in prayers for the dead.
. PHARMACY
a
'II' i'
I'
! i
European Bishops Discuss Marriage AACHEN (NC)-Thirty European bishops. and a group of priests n:tet~ here in C;;ermany, ,to . discuss the. pr-o.blems' of modern marriage, with participants from Germany, Austria,Holland; Bel.,. gium;. Luxerrbu;rg; .$,wjtzer)aq4 and Fran~e. . ~. ~".i ;.~ .,:!, (: :,:.' " Dr. P:'An~ta:uxrif :Malin~s,: Belgium, stress.t!d. jn,pis. opening address t~~t·ri:>ut~·shou~d b'e ed-; . ucated. in, ·purity.asa .fuildamenial preparation :inarriage·. . . Delegates :sttessed the great' .. problem that purity: poses' 'for' '. youth. ';I'hey reminded that education for purity' must begin a't home and can only,. be supplemented by the confessional.
202 ROCK STREEl FALL, RIVi:R,
Public Relations ROME (NC)-Pope .John has ordered the establishment of Ii special news information office for the 'coming ecumenical council.
for
'..
"Mac" says-:, Be Thrifty - Be Wise , Ask your Meatman for a DAV!DSON'S (MacGregor Brand)
',·SWE~tNIC •
.;"BISAILLON'S,
, .... \
"
"Everything for the Office" TY~EWRITERS, .FURNITURE ADDING MACHINES 19 Weir St. Taunton, Mass.Tel. VA 4·4076
':.'.; :1, .,~
.
t.~·
""
: "~l
';.
GARAGE.' " <.;.. :" '>',: ;".r ,,'; .. '
.'
.
~
"
i
<
,
I
"i~
"
I
•
•
" ••
DAVIDSON'S:" t;:
:'. 6sa;' W~~hi~gton:'street;' :Fairh~ven ·WYma" 4-5058
.Bake in the' Bag-No Basting : RealScotch,Ham FlavorN ''-WINNING FAVOR WITH 'ITS fLA VOR~
, !
":. ·2:4~Hour W reeker' Ser·yiee ....., '. '.,
MAS~
..'
'~.'
Mac Gregor' BRAND
..
,
, I
'~
-jib (il(! .: ,
,JUST at All l4ilading ,ASK FOR Food Stores sw~EiNICS in Massachusetts
I· ,;,
'11
THE ANCHORThurs., Dec.' 15, 1960
Expla'ins PQrish· Duty to Aged CLEVELAND (NC) - Parish programs to visit and help aged persons are highly important, according to the national coordinator of Catholic participation in the White House Conference on Aging. Msgr. Raymond J. Gallagher, assistant director of Cleveland diocesan Catholic Charities, said such programs will give the aging person, or couple, "a renewed sense of belonging to the community." In a handbook he prepared for Catholics who will attend the White House Conference Jan. 9 to 12, Msgr. Gallagher wrote: Ranks Third "It should be possible for ooe person to volunteer to see that an elderly worn",n living alone gets to Sunday Mass. Another woman could supply a casserole of food once in a while. Another could spend an hour: a week cleaning the house or writing . leiters. '~If it were s'n elderly rna. Jiving 9y ·himself,. a young· hu~ band could volunteer.. Tw~ -. young persons Could call on _ elderly couple." . ' , . The pa~ish's responsi·bility. the aged, he maintains in the handbook, ranks third, behind the individual himself, ,then the individual's family.
*'
SAVE MONEY ON
Colloquies such as this have been. carried on for a number of years at seve'ral European Bene. dictine abbeys. Unib' Candle <?cciJpying a conspicuous place during the discussions was a Church unity candle. For several years a Church unIty candle has been used at the Benedictine Abbey in Niederaltaich, Germany. It is lighted every Thursday as a reminder to pray for Church unity. The 'can!ile .burned. during the theological discussions here as a symbol'of the'fact' that human' efforts',alone will never by them. 'selves a~hieir'e ' , ... religious ·unity. .
I;)ruggists Open
YOUR'OIL HEAT! Sit coD
~~;;
CHARLES F. VARGAS 254 ROCKDALE A VENUE NEW BEDfORD. MASS.
I
~
fflr quick "livery -' .
DONAT' BOISVERT
~~~...
INSURANCE AGENCY .AU 'I(in'ds Of Insurance . -,
HEATING OIL
'96. WILLiAM STREET . ,NEWREDFOltD. MASS. .
."
. ,. : DIAL WY 8-5153 Persona.1 s...~ice
...
'['
HATHAWAY OIL (0., I~(.
GRACIA BROS. Excavating ,. Confractors·
-
'NEW B~FORD
9. CROSS ST., - FAIRHAVEN.
INDUSTRIAL OILS
WYman' 2-4862
HEATING OILS
;.
TIMKEN
IIHome of Flowers
OIL BURNERS
BARDAHL
ll
Sales & Service
MAKES YOUR CAR RUN BEnER
26 Broadway TAUNTON
501 COUNTY ST.
At New Car Dealers ..et Service Statio... Everywhere .
VA 2-0431
NEW BED.FORD WY 3·1751
,-
~
WH..IT.E·· SP.A :; '1 '. ,.
.' i
,J
~" ~'.
'.~.I ..
PROFESSED: 'Sister Mart,;
Rc>sarie; 'O.Carm, : ,daughter. ; .of . ·Mr;" "and 'Mrs'. .Ernest Rogers of St: Michael's Parish, .Fall River, was professed as a Carmelite Sister for the Aged and the .Infirm at the },iotherhouile ill Germantown, N.Y.
I
'
".~
..
'.'
.
-'.
CA TfRERS ,".
,'.,
"
'
..
.
/,'
"I'
t
.
'I
.
.
.,
.• ···8ANQUEl:S .'. WEDDINGS' • PARTIES .' .·COMMUN'ION.· 8REA~FASTS : 1343 PLEASANT ST; OSboj.~e 3-7780
!:ALl RIVER
~
~
~~
D & D Sales 'and Service, . . ·. (FRIG·lDAmE· .
. . .
,INC.
'
\
REFRIGERATION A:PPLIANCES AIR CONDiTIONING FRANCIS J. DEVINE;
·363 SECOND ST.
ARTHUR J. DOUCET
FALL RIVER, MASS.
.:.".. :...!!'1!..:2=-
T:_i_~t:_A_N_C_H_O_~_·,~_Dio_c_e;_e_o..;.f_F_o_II_R_i_ve_·r_-_Th_u_rs_.,_·D_ec:_~'1_5_;_1_9_60 _
Love of the Sacred Heatt'"
'Fe'minine Attractiveness Involves Entire Person' ,:'
·God Love You ( BYM08tReV. Fulton J. Sheen, D.O.
By Father .Iohn L. Thomas, S.J.
To whom does' humanity belong? Is there a" common"bond between races and people 'sO diverse in mannen andlio"div'ided ill interests? . .
AsS't Sociology. Prof.-St. LonisUniversity
. I'm Iii heartbroken te(mage girl" (17) with a problem. 'I've almost given up ever getting married. I'm the plainest" "... of. five girls and am extremely fhin "and:wear glasses. I pray to forget my bitterness~ buLsonletimes I have to face the facts. I don't keep comYou say' you wear glasses. pany with .my friends very ·.Well, so do a good marly other much be'cause I do not like people,both young and old; and -the crowd, that much. Can linight add, a good many others
The answer to this· is' to be found hi the Encyclical letter' of . Pope Leo X1D,Maj Z6, 1899,'in which he consectaied the entire human race to the Sacred Heari. But, you · ask. how could this be'! The Moslems do not believe in the Divinity of Christ; the Hindus refuse· to admit that among' the millions of gods one is Sacred: the pagan colts based on fear never think of religion as having a 1)eart.
.' should be wearing them. . you help me!"· HONORED: Croatian-born It seems to me; Betty, you've Now I know glasses can be a .Diven up your inalienable right bit of a nuisance at times, parsculptor Ivan M.estrovic was 'the answer ·Is: mankind does not e ticularly during games and elected 'to the American,' actually belong. to. the Sacred Heart, but ts "life, liberty, sports, but let's face/ it. If the snd the pursuit" potentially it does. Although not every Academy of Arts and 'Lettype of glasses. you wear are one accepted the Redemption of Our !Lord, before you ever' suitably chosen, ·most. people tel's. The 77-year-old sculpreached fhe age that Redemption is available to everyone. around you don't really notice. tor, 'qne of the country's to ,use it. Why; .them.·· The waters of life are' more abundant than best known Catholic artists, · the cups that are brought to the. yvell. but. :', lIlOt give ·your-. Glasses No Obstacle is a member of the fac'ulty its refreshment is npeJi to ·aIL. is elf h a 1.£ a Young people are sometimes cllance? I know. 'at the University of Notre that some girls so sensitive ab'out wearing This is the basis of our lo~e of· the Mis~ioDS. We ~hou.~.,not glasses because they fear to be Dame. NC Photo.. ·think of non-Christians. as "pagans"; rath!lr they are antiin our society. different, but at 17 you should Christians; that is, they are like caterpillars who can, by a full . feel quite .mabe growing out of this insecure @h,/lInlU'~e[f'S respon~ to grace,' become butterflies. ture at 1~-in stage .of utter dependence on fact, about one others. . ' Continued from Page One out of every Glasses will mean no more or olic University at Ponce, P. R. 'Pope Leo XIII said of his act of consecrating all mankind to seven getting' David O'Shea, executive secthe Sacr~d Heart: "It is the greatest aCt of my pontifica~e and it Jess ·than what you make them 'F.!/ married, are this age-but you .retary of the Chicago'Archdiocwill hasten the arrival of those mercies for the world which we · f mean. People react to you, not · still face some 60 more years 0 esan Catholic Action Federations to your glasses, and it is only aU await." f life. Aren't you pulling out 0 and former U. S. national secre. because you lack confidence in ;the competition rather early 10 y,ourseI£, that yqu. s~ yO,ur taryof the ,,Young .Christian. . Readers! Po 'not .allow your outlook on the world to be defined ,. the race? as by the newspaper:s. Most. ne~s tod~y concerns the breaking of one glasses or your figure as ob- Workers, will also serve . ; You say' you have to face the stacles to popularity. national secr'etary' of'· the papal . or the other of the Ten' Commandments. The world of the ·future tIlds. All right, let's face them. Remember, it is )"!lU, 'the volunteers secretariat, he said. can .be peaceful and beautiful, for it is not determined by politics, At present you're considered the entire you as a person, your The national secretariat .has but by God. Christ is the Lord of history, not· Marx. For ten years plainest' of five.' How do 'you whole personality, that must be been established in Chicago with we have been urging in this column a greater spirit of sacrifice to . know? Well, your sisters are attractive. Individual items take the permission of Albert Carbring' the Sacred Heart to the potential Catholics of Asia and . always being told how attractive their meaning from the . total, dinal Meyer, Archbishop of ChiAfrica. And all the Vicar of Christ gets froin us Catholics in the · ....ey are. cago. Cardinal Meyer has given. United States is 27c per year-the price of one package of cigarettes! unique self t h a t 'you are.. , I realize that this must be Giving Comes First, the secretariat free office space bard to ·take, but what does it This .brings up a final point- in the headquarters of the ChiBeally! Do yoa think we can' bring the love of the Sacred ftally mean? Perhaps· your si8- to be,loved, you must be lovable. cago Catholic Action Federationa. Heart to the world thrOugh' our missionaries for Z1c a year? Now! :ters are older than ·you or have You say you don't keep company To Tra.in Natives What are you going to do'! For the love of thc Sacred Heart or' developed physically more rap- with friends very much because The papal volunteers' program. His Vicar oil earth can you consider one of these possibilities: . Idly.' you' don't like the crowd that· was announced in August by 1. Be one of • thousand who haSenongh of Both boys and girls show a much. But if you don't make an the Holy See. According to the' the world's goods to jpve to Africa 01' Asia, Ill. wide span of age..;differences at effort to like them, how'can you plan, teams of three to 10 laymen honor of the Sacred Heart, a chapel costing a which they start to "blossom expect them to like you? will be recruited both ·in. Latis minimum of $2500. Only let tbeHol,.· Father . • ut."· Of course it's rough to be We become lovable only 'b7' America and elsewhere, gives' ·determine the siie. «»nsidered the "plain one" but. loving, because love is not a one_ - waining and sent' to areas of Z. Be one of.a million who will i'ivelOc • i' l'emember this is a temporary, way street, 'but a mutual g'iving Latin America at tile invitatiOil day for one month fa h~or 01' the Sacred HearL .passing matter. and, receiving-and the giving of lOcal' groups to traili potential Sead your sacrifices to the Boly ,Father through his Socie~ for eo~es.first. An important part of native lay leaders. .' . the ·Propag·aUon of the I'a.ith. 366 Fifth Avenue, New York I, Thoughtless Comments Father Considine said .last ~ew York. ' . , It is also a temporary matter growing up ~s to overcome the "1 Chat you now f~l in competitioll childish expe~tancy to receive,' September that th'e first U. S. ·ste t l' t and learn to give - - " "c';· teams"of papal"volunteers' 'may . .! wi th your -S! rs- or, 8' eas ~:;:,~...., '. ' . \' _ .,. -be"in "the -field bY':Oetober i961. I- , . 'GOD LOVE' YOU to R:M. for-.'16. "An~ther ':Y~ai ';Wd ,ag8in I ·.onstantly compare yourself" ,,:-When you're; .with ·.ot!l.ers; try.'·· . ,. have'· received my Christmas Club check. Before'! do' iUiY~pJ~ ~else . . I. with' ,them:'., When" ;you reach ,..:··to·see, w h a t you ·can·~give;: and:' . . He einphasized thoen' that the . with it"I want to share a:'littl~l!9f i~, with the p~r .l)f.~~e .""orld." 'I: .:, "'~.·turity· :;.y.ou'·wilrbe.· acceptect··what,·.. you; can contribute' 't;o the 'volun'te'ers will :notgo 'to'Latiii •. ·\to· K.K,,''!· fOOlid:'thi's" dol1jlr .on the. s~~.I?L ~roundsi w~i;le I -'. ., ., h' f th .:'" .. " America;aS "outsiders to tell the ~~:~hatYo1,l:aJ·ln,i)YQurse~ . . :., applMss,o 0 .era. ':; .. LatIn's howto·.do"':tRe-ir WOrk.'" was playing.·I promised,ifj~ di~ ~ot ~elong.,toany<?ne:l,WI?~~d.give , ?;Jt'$~';what yo~ have made of:,·;· i""·' Others·Need'Support:.· ' It to the Missions."·::',.fo~;S.K~,~9r$IQ9 ".l pro~ised.:t~Js ~9;YoU y().l:irsl!llf' \tlj~t :wilh:Qu,rit, so don't" ,. 'Inpractice this ftleans tliat'you . . Assist Leaders.. . for the Missions·ill.the .event that I would find a no-f~ job..I<did, ~li into\:tne·;;illY,:habit 9£ always.- ,,"·take an' active interest:iil: otpers, ·:-."Weare.resp·ondirtgto the cal\: 'arid*,~Uid like sQlIl.eori~'·l~,the Missions to have. a'haP'PY Chris~mas ". ,.} ..... :, ~~Pilrl;~g"y6Yrse.1f: ,with your' tn· their feelibgs,'·:·pr6biems,~. of intelligent, people who. are . tQo." .., '.', .. '. ". "" . -;.:' .....:..., . . . . . , : , . . ...;.: .~ ...;... ~ ' . . .. , .: ',.;' .: . '.: ~ ;.- :' . '. si~ters, "partic;iJi~rly.>when, : the' views, and concerns." Y6ti"learn. anxiolis for. o;OUf .. cQoperation...· :,,' :. croiilparisoi1,m~y :be!based Ollthe to listen to observe reactions. ,he said. ~'Nqrth America.nr;; will· ';~ ~ id~~.f~~.C~r.~~,irita.~:~iv~·~:~~?~qitpj~ss.i~~ ~9S;ARY. ~p~~h~l~fts.coip.m¢'htS';of others..:'''·and··iO g~'Uge'feeli~g!l:' ..; .:; not aSsume ditect leadership is.' This is.1f> gift· that conve)'ll' the. SPIrl~.. o~ g09~ wi." tba~IB, th~. ~ue .!. :But I'rit,soexlremely thin! ,Are Soon:.You'discoveri\hat others .. Latin " America/ but' will assist joy. :of' . the Christmas .season~..:.:E~h ·deca·~~ . , Of -.thls ...llosarl is , ['. you' really;' or; is this'hist in Com':' are very much like yourse If.' the great bOdy' of .po'tehtial .color~ci to, correSpon~ to. ·oneo(:.the five· ml~sio'n~r:f"~9Iltln·el1ts. parillqn:, ~i.th 'YO~:'S!llters? Most Th"ey .need . slipport~'affection; . Latin AnHiricaiiieader5-'-many As you. pray•. your spiritual intentions are offered for the sick g~rls your 'age are starting to run encouragement, and understand_ of whom are highly ·capable-:-by QJld poor and homeless throughout the world. Give a WORLDbito tl1\'l opposite problem:'-too . ing. They have their doubts, cooperation' in the "techniques mSSION ROSARY this Christmas. To re<:elve one send your many pounds, or too many ill the their fears,' their human inse- that they will be" employling illl , request along with an offering of $2. wrong places! curities, b'ut also their hopes, strengthening the Church." " .However, if you,happen to be desires, and, aspirations. In fact, In announcing establishment Cut out this column, pin your sacrifice to it and mail it to the .. '. .. ~nusually thin, you might check they're very much like yourself. of' the national' secretariat;. your diet. Some young people Seek to give when you're with Father Considine said Feb. Ii Most Rev. FultonJ. Sheen, Natiorial Director of the Society for acquire strange eating habits. your friends and you'll like them, has been set as a target date for ' the Propagation of the Faith, 366 'Fifth Avenue, New York 1, N·. Y., i Following their imagination you'll 'receive -'and "you'll be.! .. I'e<:ruitmellt '. 9f.. ~olunteers' b. or your .Diocesan Dkector;' RT.'<REV. RAYMOND ·T., CONSIDINE, rather than their normal app~ attractive!" :.f·' ...: ..: . ..,. '. .begin.. ... ..,... , . 368 'North Main Street; Fall River, Mass.. .:1, ", . ," . ." -,' , : ',t' ' :.. . • 1" ' •. ' : lite, they insist there's a Whole '" . , ." . :. . ,After lan. 1,.',1)e said, inq1,liries.· .oategory of foods they don't like :'A~cepts l~vitation 'concerning .the "papal.volunteer ST:;'~UJ ,,_ .... "just.can't eat." T G· I'" . program. should ~ sent to. the· , Diet, Exercise., "'olve . nvocation secr~tariat, ]20 ,N.orth . Rush ' .:.!II"•. ~ ..... 04-111, .. ; .. Ch~........~a~ .. _ ~, .. , Much of this'issheer iri.fa~ti1e'-' BOSTON (NC)-Richard Car... ~ Stre~t.CQicago, g,,Ill..... ' . Edition: Pr"', lladio, MoYiee , .... !! tancy. Stick to'a well-balanced dinal ,Cushing, ArchbishoP at Hes.aJd....~he .·N.CiW.C, ·LaUa diet-if you're in doubt about' Boston~ said here he bas accepted America Bur.eau wI.·ll chann~l to. w""siet"= ~ . I wh'at foods are needed check an invitation to give·, the invbcathe . ~cretarl~t.r o~~e the Invl.. aI 'ceIw . ' . with your home ec~nomiC8 tionat the inaugtirateion of Sen. tations for U. S.' VOlunteer teanY Per w.r-tio. write... . teacher or counselor: .If you're John F. Kennedy as President OIl that ·it . r~ei~esfrom .L~tin lEV. MOTHII IUPHtOI the kind, that skips breakfast Friday, Jan. 20. America~. blSho~s .and religlOI.W SO N. PAUL'S AVI. ·toSTON •• MAn. regularly, change the habit right The invocation for President commumtIes., BOW, and give your growing Eisenhower's first inauguration Urges Cooperation ...stem a break. in 1953 was given by Archbishop Plans c~ll for. the vol~nteeN Also, get plenty of exercise Patrick A. O'B-oyle of Washing- to serve .. 1ft ~atIn Amenca .£01' and at least eight hours of sleep. ton. The Archbishop gave the fro~, two to fl~e. y~ars, wIth the .Of course, if you really are just benediction at President Tru~ option of remamlllg longer. Both "skin and bones" you should man's' inauguration in 1949. The single men.a!1d women and mar'oonsult a-docto~ since your late Edward Cardinal Mooney, ried couples w~ll. be el~gi1:'le. growing body may require addi-' then Archbishop of Detroit, gave Father Consldme. sald In SepWIty Buy tional vitamins or changes in the benediction at President temberthat the "key" to the sueFour usual diet. Eisenhower's inauguration OIl cess of the program lies in the COMPlEft Jan. 21,1957. cooperation of Catholic orgaRRENTAl WORt( UNIfORMS The benediction at President izations and institutions - incFrank D. Roosevelt's second and cluding colleges and universities fourth inaugurations was de- -which ·will sponsor the volunGLENALLEN (NC) - Some -livered by the late Msgr. John A. teers. The sponsors are to P81' Aho Reclaim IndUltriat Glov_ Ryan, director of the Social the training and travel expensee' 118tive boys of Kenya. British East Africa, apparently are look_ Action Department, National of volunteers, while in most jog for a change of climate. Catholic Welfare Conference. cases Catholic agencies in LaUD. ., Fourteen requests for schol- Bishop Michael J. Ready of America will be expected to Pfll1 ..ships have come from that Columbus, who died in '1957, their living costs in the field. equatorial territory to the Cop- gave the benediction at Presi~ The volunteers are to b'2 Successor 10 per Valley SchOOl here in the dent Roosevelt's third inaugura- drawn primarily from the 21-45 ..... EngIandOveraJl & Supply Co. interior of Alaska. The school has tion in 1941. The Bishop 'was age bracket, .with possible ex10 Bowar41 A.ve., New Bedford na .Eskirt:lo, Indian and white., then.general secretary of tbe eeptions on the recommendatioD Pb~~ WY 1~O'i8'J ~: lVY .'1-0~$8 '.!'. .:: '~~i~' . . . NCWC. 01. .local sponsorinC ~~~ :,
V
,
ii·
.
'':'~.
" DAUGHTERS. OF
~t:'
.
.:=-~~.::
~ ATTENTION
t
·INDUSTRIAI.c~?r':.~f SERVICE We Supply
Kenya Students Seek Change of Climate
SHOP TOWELS
COYNE
~NDUSTRIAL
LAUNDRY
" New Year Plans.,
~,
.
.
, , ' 1l'fE ANCHOR-,., ThuV'S., Dec. 15, 1960
'\
~.
The, Parish Parade ST. MARY'S CATBEDRAI.. FALL RIVER The Women's Guild will hold its 'next meeting Feb. 6. Entertainment will be offered by the Sunshine Group of the Golden ,Age Club. Mrs. Charles Cavanagh will be in charge of arrangements. Sewing sessions will be re-' sumed after the holidays. New members are welcome to join the committee. HOLY ROSARY, FALL RIVER . Mrs. Gino DiNucci and Mrs. Charles Santos wj1l be in charge of altar arrangements for the month of January as representatives of the Women's Guild. ST. LAWRENCE. NEW BEDFORD The Couples' Club will hold • men's supper in January. The Christmas meeting featured a panel show and motion pictures. OUR LADY OF ANGELS" FALL RIVER The Women's Guild will bold a pilgrimage to La Salette shrine, a variety show and a pie and cookie sale during January. A silver tea is planned for February. ST. MARGARET'S, BUZZARDS BAY , The 55. Margaret-Mary Guild will hold a turkey. whist at 8 tonight in the new addition to the church. Mrs. John McManus will be in charge. S ANTO CHRISTO. FALL RIVER Th e CYO WI'11 h 0 Id a d ance tomorrow night and a Christmas party Thursday, Dec. 22. Members will receive corporate Communion the third Sunday of each month.
..
13
C@lfdinal Advises Pwess Support
ViSITATION GmLD, EASTHAM The Guild will bold a Christmas dinner and party at 6:30 Monday night, pee. 19 in TowD Center Restaurant, North Eastham. . A business meeting is planned fQr 8 Thursday night. Dec. 29 at the home of Mrs. Fred G. LaPiana Sr., NausetRoad North Eastham.
MILAN (NC)-Giovanni C~ dinal Montini, Archbishop of Milan, has told Catholics of hill diocese that they have a dutf to support the Catholic press. The Cardinal said in a pastoral letter issued on Catholic Press Day that "the cause of the Catholic press is a cause striving for the spreading of the word of truth and of salvation." Catholics have "the honor at defending it, the obligation of propagating it and the requirement to make it live in theIne> selves and in the world." Catholics also must avoid bad literature or forbidden newspapers and books, he said. . "These are the e.xponents of ideas which offend Christiall principles," he stated. "They are vehicles of infection and 0« moral and spiritual poisoning. They are not suitable in the " hands of Catholics, who by having them, give bad example an~ create a mentality harmful 1lr2I moral resistance and order." ..
ST. ELIZABETH, FALL RIVER The Women's Guild will hold • penny sale Saturday, Jan. 21, with Mrs.' Manuel Ferreira as chairman, aided by Miss Amelia Oliveira. The annual malacade supper will be held Saturday, Feb. 11, with Mrs. Gilbert Amaral in charge.
ST. JOHN'S, ATTLEBORO Mrs. Joanne Moore and Mrs. Catherine Gorman of the Mothers' Club will be co-chairmen of a Cana Conference planned for early 1961. Mrs. Elaine Thompson will chairman a Mardi Grac and buf:" fet planned for Feb. 14' in the school auditoril,1m.
: . ·MISSIONER'S PORTRAIT: Mrs. John'Flynn, Taunton, . with oil painting of Rev~ James L. M~rtin, C.S.C., who BLESSED SA()R.AMENT, . , died last March in East Paki~tan. Painting will hang in FALL RIVER " .. . The Women's Guild will hold - Notre Dame College in East Pakistan, of which Father a calendar party Wednesday., . Martin was president.
Juvenile Crime Increase Small
Rat~
'
WASHINGTON (NC)-JuveQoo , He delinquency court cases increased by two per cent in 19~Q, the Children's Bureau of the De. partment of Health, Educatim and Welfare reported. . This was the smallest increase reported during the past decade" the Federal agency said. The re.port is based on a sampling ct1 U. S. juvenile courts. Sin.ce 1948, it said, juvenile arrests and court cases 'have more than doubled, although the population of youngsters, between 10 and 17 years of age hall risen by less than 50 per cent.
Feb. 15. ST. ANNE'S, FALL RIVER The Social Group will hold a meat pie supper Satur!iay, Jan... A well-known Taunton artist, ton, D. C. Ordained in 1948, be 21. A parcel post booth will Mrs. Flynn has done many por- was assigned to East Pakistan in also be operated. Next' regular traits, mcluding . one of Blessed 1949, and was named president meeting is set for Wednesday. Edmund Campion for Campion of Notr~ Dame College in 1954. Jan. 4. . Hall School of Education at Bos. ' ST. MARY'S, 'ton College, of Very Rev. Joseph' A 'portraIt of Rev. James L. NEW BEDFORD R.-N. Maxwell, S.J., former pres- MartIn,. C.S.C., Taunton nl!tive The CYO will hold a Christ- ident of Boston College and of who dle~ very sUdd~nly last mas party, Mo~dl,ly Dec. 19 in Dr. Clement Maxwell, ~resident March, WIll soon be on iq; way ST. JAMES, K of C Hall, Acushnet Avenue. of Bridgewater State College as to Notre Dame College, Dacca, NEW BEDFORD \ Members and g'uests are wel- well as several for prIvate i~di- East .Pakistan, of .which Father Monsignor Noon Circle win Martm was d t th come and Miss Kathy Hughes Ie viduals in the area. ' . .. preSI en ,at e conduct its annual Christmas . ' . . tIme of hIS death, to be on perParty Tuesday evening iii 'the' in charge of arra·ngements. _' She also has done commercial manent exhibition -there ' Church Hall at 7:45. A Christmas Christmas caroling will be. art for advertising agencies, . .' • Play entitled "One Red Rose" held b.eginnil!g,a~, 7 ,.'I,'h.urs.daY' given private art instruction. and The oil pllinting, executed by will be presented by: the Catb-' night, pee,. 22:. :Mem~l'lI. will , has· exhibited locally. ' . ' a Taunton artist, Mrs. John olic Women's Club in, co-opera.,. ,meet t the cpu,r~lt· ." ".: . . Born in Taunton, hi ,191'1, ~lynn of 133 Hart Streetw88 tion with the Catholic Theatre, A mid- Win~r. o9 a gt;e ,is set . Father Martin' attended Coyle . commissioned by Father'MarGuild. Mrs. Frank W. Mahon will ~o,:, v:"ednes,~~r;.I?~.:.~~,~~.Ga~ High School, Holy CroSS'Sem- tm's family in his memory, and direct. c;l~t~.;s~avI~lon,,~nm~,Medei~ ,inary' in North Easton, Holy was done from photographs 01. Member. of, the Circle wiR J'QS IS ch,~lr~~' and ·Wayne Cross Novitiate, North' Dart- the, Holy CrOss missioner. e~change gifts and refreshments Bailey will be dl~ j~c~e7.. . mQuth, the University of Notre' . Flynn, the,former Elizabeth Anll will be served by the Hospitality Da~, and Holy Cross, Washiilg- . Jones, is a,graduate of·St. MarY'. Committee. All" members ST. ROCH." ,High School, and received her FALL 'IlIVEIL ' 'bach,elor of arts degree from the bring a guest. Mrs. ,Romeo Cba,rest heads POpe ,Cong~atulcit. Co~lege of New Rochelle, New ST. MATB~U'&. Women's Guild offiCers, to'be' . Rochelle, N. Y.. wher.. FALL RIVER installed at a banquet iari,. ' 9 . , major~ ill art. . The Women's Guild wiD hold She will be sUpported by Mrs. VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope
Father Martin's Portrait to Hang In Notre Dame College, Dacca
a.
Mrs.
may
Canadian Missioners'
me'
~president;
'·B·A·&R·_B·FAM'_·Q·"L~·H·~· ~•.EK.A;.NS • •"j~, ' ...
a ChrIstm'as at 'the Giroux.: : vice John has Ch~istian congratulated, Canada ball followingsale Masses this'parish SUfi- ' Paul' Mrs. Ernest' Gagnon;tr.easurer; ,~the. ,:vitality. it' day. 'Proceeds will ijenefit the Mrs. Pierre ,GagnoJ!j' secre~ry. sh~ws il?- its ~ission!lry activity. s c h 0 0 1 building, fUnd.' Mrs. 'Mrs. Girou;J!:1S, iii charge 8l'Pope John praised Canada'. Thomas L'Heureux is chairman. '1'QJlgements for the b~~qU:et:. ' 'numerous inissionary vocations, " In ~ television message released
of
WY '7-9:''l6
English W~men'sSuffrage' Leader Becomes Convert in .Austra'li'a .
in C a n a d a . ' The Pope's telecast Inaugurated a new television series portraying Canada's Catholic SYDNEY (NC) - Mrs. Adela "In Dundee we. wen't On.. missioners in' their farflung aoConstantia Mary 'Pankhurst bunger strike and seven 'or'eight 'tivities. . . . . Walsh, one of England's three of us were released' because of -. The' p.roducer I.mc:H 6rigine~l? Pankhurst sisters who led ·the our health. The Scots doctor struggle for women's suffrage said my heart couldn't stand it" of the series, Jean Pellerin Cl:1 there, has been received into the The suffragettes began their _Montreal, .and i~ ,,_i\!u:raWlr; Catholic Church. campaign for. women'lJ x:Ight 't& Father Loull~.~"§J'Jg-:itegis, O:p.. . "After all these years, I haw vote in May of 1905. During the ,oil .~nb."e1il, toured CanadIan come home at last," she said~ ~lection campaign, t~~-fflis~lons throughout the world Mrs. Walsh, 71, is the widow'oathe premier, C~.R'lpbell Bannellb d.urmg the past summer to take Tom Walsh, lelaad~e:;r~o~f~~~~!lll~a~;::;;h'.:;u, ,films for the telecost. trslian Sellman.! non durIne In Novembel?'of 1918, the very Mu--st=ug~ gor li'ecognition i.6l ~onth the World War, ended, '" fu<e 1920'0. Parliament passed a bill allow~ ing ,women to become members, ~ Mel? mother; Mrs. EmmelinQ of the House of Commons. Pankhurst, and her sisters, Dame Christabel and Sylvia, Nun Aids beaded the campaign of harassAdela Pankhurst came to Ausment that eventually brought tralia alone, with, assets of only Englishwomen the right to vote 20 pounds sterling (then worth and the right to enter Parlia- about $100). She married Tom ment. Walsh, who had been born into a Catholic family but quit the Her father, Richard Marsden church when 'J'k' entered union,. Pankhurst, was a politician and affairs. .. an agnostic. Walsh was regarded as a I JH[ungell' Strike socialist extremist bY many con_ ' Of her days as a sUffrag~ite, servativ~, Australians, and, the, Mrs.. Walsh says: "I was the governrriei.lt. tried to'deport him second person to go to prison in 1925. The'present c~ief justice for inciting public demonsttil- of New South W~res, Dr. H. V. tions and I went to prison on two Evatt, was his defense lawyer. more occasions. Mrs. Walsh carried on an extensive ' 'correspondence about religion with a Dominican nun, ~!?l@lfillkDfi'ilg ~frDelk Sister Assumpta. The nun put SOUTH ORANGE (NC)-Ed- her in touch with a Sydney" . , . 'Ucators are expressing interest in priest, Father J. Bird, and she 944 County St. an exhibit at the Seton Hall UnI- was received into the Church a New' Bedford versity Museum that features aD few weeks ago by Father V.m-. lid-fashioned 8,P8Ilktng at1ck. cent F. Folkes of Asquith.
.
ROS,ELAW"-D, 1"\1
lP"imQ Aged
.
FARMS
Special I?ouhry DishI<l1l .-('r IaANQUm
W bi S . as ngton t., "&li..~ Just o~--1wute ,Wat~h fOR' Signa Whil' ,e out fora Driw Stop m~ this Delightful Spot
1
0:
WEDDO~~~ ~~[(l)
IN fRIVATE ROOMS Mayfair 4-9888, 4~9979 91 CRANDALL RD.
7
-
."
~~a(l'co~ i!lroiled S~eOl1w ': Roast Beef - Sl!la~ooo1
TIVERTON, R. I•. '.
••••••• ~
~"''''''''H'''
, - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -...
COME IN - SEE-.. and DRIVE , ,
THE';'61 FORDS, ,,
...."
Ufb. World'. Most Beautifully Proportioned Ca...• ..
at
FORD MOTOR SALES'COMPANY FOR' 6VE~ 38 YEARS 1344-86 Purchase St.' lNIew Bedford, Mass. FORD DEALERS
SHE~l "Pren:iium.4~ /Famous Reading HARD COAL NEW' ENGLAND COKE :.' DADSON OIL BURNERS
,[H]@@\l'ing Oi~'s ~'-'-"
""/~
~.~~) C~~
.
-~t1 ~= ~i'? RM~[],[], ~~. . 2.lUU "='
24-H'our 0i1 Burner Service. " ~ ~
""'~ ~\IU @ l!ffG ~ ~~~ "~'~~,~ ~/";h~ ,,'-, ~ ,
'Charcoal Briq'uets Bag Coal -
Charcoal
.',/'I.:.l;~':·:~~ _ ' . i.~ ,~ . ,,~:.
,
•
640 Pleasant Street
•••
".ir',
'
' '0'
Ii) t
'
.'
..
,!<."'.
, Tel. WY 6-8271
~.
New Bedfotcl
":I'~"''''FIiN'.;~.\):'~~p',,:;-Jle,~t:::(;',
14'~ THE ANCHOR-Di~'of FaILRiver~1~~~~;,-~:ec.J:~~J~69"~;i:
The Caiho~s~ Slnl A~~tica"
." , :~
. Priest. Solon'
C~ftia~rnnif!)P~@v~.fU[j'~{d~;~'
-':,
1:
ANCHORAGE' '(NC) .".. .. 'l'he, first Catholic 'prie~t,elected \q\, AI~k;i's ,state legislature,· cijdn';t eveu"know he was' a ca;n"dida'te ',\..' .;,. I until"'shorUy'-'betore" the!1 elet.j;·,~·l) ~;~ ~ tionS~ . ,.~. l I"",l '~")i,6r"'111Ir'('\'··~'llI('I.'~· 0,1': ····By Rev.' Pete'r J.' ntihill, Ph]O.··'> . " J~ .',..\-t, ":1;;'- :,' . '''. Father Segundo .Lloli'entetS.J;,: : .'," the· Knights of "cohimbus 'aro~'~ed'\''the' it~ of':Tlle ).. .,,\~~, ¥~ .. ,"",<,,",.., . • who-has·served Alaska~s.Bering , ~. sea· and Arctic parishes for·' a .' M~nace :in"appropriating:'$50,OOO to investigate prejudice \""'''''1.,,, I,.. • quarter of a century, will be the in <the'United States.' A spurious";'#tl\"ihr.mtite'd··:'tQth~t '. State Representative in'-:Juneau organization; apparently used forf.the.first·tiine aga~sta.~" for the 3,000 Alaskans in eleo-· , tion district 24. member in a Pennsylvania' C ". 't'" f th~' G' d ·S·h··:·h··'·d .. . . 1 I' .. onven 0 e 00 ep. er A 'write-in' winner, the Jesuit co~gresslOnaeectlOn, wa~ . in Cleveland to search the prempriest polled more votes than the I . frequently spread across the '. ises'.. , combined total of his twooppon.. front page. Much like the" The ~other Superior teleents, including the incumbent. falSe "Instructions to Catholics" phoned BIShop Joseph Schrembs Write-Io fabricated by' the A.P.A., K of C, for instructions; the.Bishop reShortlY' before' the eleCtions,-' m'e m b e rs' sponded,bycoming immediately were alleged to cOnduct the tour himself. RepFather Llorente was tol~ that the predominantly Eskimo vj1iages to swear that resenta~ive Hawkins was so the y would impressed that he at once had on the Yukon river delta would , write. his name on the ballot . butcher those the bill ki~ed in commi~.. . ill o:t of the . Meanwhile, as one wnterhas· . ' ATOMIC. ENERGY: . Present· and representing the· whether he· accepted or not. Faith. When. . . joc~arly ,expresSed; "the ~usi- Holy See at AtQmic 'Energy Conference in Vienna' were "I just sat tight.in my rectory~" the bog u S. tan18' had been S1:"nk. b7 .Frank M~ Folsom and Theodore M. Hesburgh, C.S.C.,. the priest said, "without making Ct a.t.h was GeI'D.lan U-boat, haVlng. no dlSt f N D NC Ph one single speech 01: in any way published in cover~ble connection with the P.reSI'deno otre arne. oto.. . advertising myself for the job. a' national . Pope. The .people did it themselves." Catholic . "The most avid sensationalists The priest, who is a strong newspaper were satiated :With the war advocate of' the Eskimo people, . The Menac~ news. Subscriptions .to 'The . said: "Perhaps .my greatest joy smeared the character of a West Menace but I I . . is to marry couples that I bap~itginia priest, who was awatd- .P~k~s. ~:.ursions to .. ~. SANTIAGO . (NC)-The presl-' Iladto provide extra Masses to tized as babies and then to baPed' $1,500 for libel. It was the City dlV~S grew more !Jl:- 'dent of Chile summoned'FathU accommodate the crowds flocktize their babies." attorney for The Menace who pensive w~th the. !.I.C.L. (Hl~ PatrlckPeyton, . C$.C.. to' Jiis' 1ng to church. cIeclared that the newspaper was Cost of Living), the phr~ of ~nere to thank him for hia the day IS-month Family Rosary Cna• notorious that its 'charges . . . . . E' ·ti-~'sh';'.11- , .. , lIIidein this coun~-. moUld be believed by no one! . Menac~ ~ ....... ""', ow;r '. . . The heavlly msured plant of President - Jorge Anesandrt , Pr~flts Attract Files . . the newspaper went .up in said Father Peyton has "done wbo refused &0 accept &lie Cbureh'. cond.emna~ 01 UIe 1'estimony. during the trial~ . flames as a sort .of Christmas a great good fur Chile" by bring.lDPot NedoriuS, separated $he_Ives .from Rome In' tile " u wealed that. during the first six present to Catholics in late ing . the family Rosary into. a . st .fh ·500;·tbeF an kDowIl - Nestoriaas. JI\~Q.ths of :\914 this. "scandal December, 1919. A skeptical inmillion homes.. ~'b-. "~,'More thana tboUSllD4 ,.ean passed sheet" earned $500 on each $100 . surance company refused to pay . Father Peyton's crusade in "'dO before llIlF of these. ChristIana began ,; ~. seeking reUDi~1L In the year 1551 tbe share of stock. The ho'ney of off in cash and· forc'ed Parker Chile took him the length of such profits 'attracted fiu.merous to rebuild.' the country, from the tropics ell ~ filrstgl'oup came book to tile Chruda ravenous flies. Sixty rivals Hammer and nails could not to the sUbantarctic. He started ~ ''A IIlIId ~ tbeD tbeF ha.. been 1'0+ .. lluming slow17; those who have re.bloomedforth, seeking to make restore the address plates of sub- his crusade in August, 1959. jected the Nestorian hereSJ' aad re. stings against the Church in \ scribers and The Menace started More than a million people atumited themselves with the See or their newspapers the loadstone down the isolate road to extended ihe 23 rallies he held Peter are called CbaldellD& In 01U' to riches. . tinction. But its fame--or in- In all the. important cities of day more and more Nestoriall8 .... A retired Congregational minfamy - was not extinguished . ·Chile. ' .7!t HoI, FaIbtri Mirsirm Ait/ becominJ disposed to return to won ister, Dr. Theodore C. (DaddY) . immediately. 'A c'c 0 r din g to Lauds People '- tht OrimttJ Clnmh with the Pope. 10 the village of Walker contmued as theological . Frank Peters in the Springfield The Irish-born priest who ber' . IK:HANlKin SYRIA there are a few advisor of the town's "best (Mo.) News & Leader, a younggins 'his next crusade in Mexico hundred Chaldeans and a' few hUndred NestoriaD&' Neither llmown production." The more . ster in a White House receiving in 'February, paid tribute to the group has a Church although there Is D Protestant Chon:h there ~portant financial con t r 0 1 line blurted out: '~Mr. President,. Chilean people in a farewell with a small membership. After years air prayer for more vocapassed from. Phelps to Billy . I'm 'from 'the home of The Menmessage. .. tions the Chaldean Bishop now has a priest available for assign. Parker, erstwhile organizer of ace." Warren Gamaliel Harding "Torrential downpours 0 f ment to KRANIK. His ExcellenCJ' has high hope that with • =cal miners. . ' needed. no amplification; "Oh rain, strong winds, cold, intense resident priest in the village 'all the Nestorians will be won back. Wine had no attracbon for : yes, Aurora, Missouri." heat, the difficulty- of communiIt will take $4,000 to erect a suitable ChmdL.Could "011 bell' !Ilandsome Billy, but women and Though the last gasp did not cations did not lessen the enflnanee' the building of itT so'ng soon were consuming most come' until after his death thusiasm and the attendance at of t he unaudited billo~s of Cardinal Gibbons' judgment the rallies,which in' total has . -A 'CHRISTMAS GIFT TO' YOlJRSELFp:eenbacks' which surged into . 1914' was vindicated. The Arch- been over a million," he said. GREGORlANMASSES CELEBRATED AFTER YOUll DBA'lB Aurora. Highways, or rather bisbopof Baltimore then ad"CHile has been the first -ARRANGE FOR 'TIIBM NOW. aioss-sta~ roads, were little: vised a,gainst Catholics endeav-,. country' in Latin America to Ulraveled in those days, but the . oring . to have The Menace' execute literally and effectively . oi~es of box cars, in ad.dition t,o barr~ from the mails. Freedom the Family Rosary Crusade ·CHRlSTMAS GD'T .SUGGESTIONS - ODe 01' more 01 t1Ie - '- t!h e. multitudinous numb.ers; of the press was more itnPorl- plan. Chile has lighted a fire . 'o~owi.ng ,SlIcred ArUc1elI, Deeded ·for Chapels IIDd CbIll'Clha ibore. the persistent exhortatiOn: a!lt to him than hastening Ill' that .is spreading. beyond its In Mission L ~ given in the name of a relative 01' fdeD4: MA.). 'l.:~E MENACE. collapse which he foresaw was 'borders. Already, archbishops " Mus lOt..•. ,$100 Ciboriam .••••. $fO Picture ,{)o::ilvemt--~cu certain to come.. . and bishop~ of other.: ~untries IUtar ..• ' . • • • • 75 StaYJe .. ,.. • •• SO SaDc',. Lamp ••• IS .. Vestm~ts .•. 50 fa!Nll1lacle· .••• , 25· Aliai' LiDeas ••• 11 -'Unlike 19th ce~t\lJ'Y forerunBefore the corpse of The.' in this continent have promised. ponteu.ioDai • ,50' Crii~ Pyx , ~ Ii ners, this journal did· tiot urge Menace was buried in the to· execute .t'le Family Rosary Monstranee .• 40 Stations . • •• •. 25 Altar Stone •••• '1. : . its' readers to t&r and leather ~rav~yard of anti-Catholic pub-. Crusade plan." . ~alice.... .. '40 eeDser' .: •..•• '20 Sane'y BdI ..•• I Catholics or to burn their bcahons, al,mol)t· ami 11 ion During most rallies ~ govoua CHRISTMAS GIFT CARDS are very beautiful. If yO. t:hurches. But wasn't so mueb American Catholics had helped ernor of each province and· the wish to give 11 Sacred Article as a ChrisUnas remembrance _ p~ure bound ·to produce SlD~ ..bri~ .World "!ar I to a vic- mayor of. each city recites .a· will send the -:eeipient one of our Gift Canis telling him or qu-uption? . tm.:I~~S concluslpn. . Mystery of. the Rosary, together bel' of FOUl' generous thougbtfulness. iBlatantly proclaimed to 113 A.i~e.r. pre.s~ntmg long bst~ of with their families. In addition ~ased on '.'facts" from' The paclflSt,mInlsters of varIOUS to the rallies;' 15 films on the MANY PRIESTS will be getting new Cassocks for Christmas. Menace a rash of "convent indertominatiun~ a compiler statMysteries ,of the Rosary were Would you care to give II Missionary priest Ii Cassock as a spectio~" bills were introduced ed: "I" am infofffiW~ ,there were shown. in ~~e"poor districts of ChrJstmllll present? The cost is $25. in:. state legislatures' from'Ver- one or two Catholic' prie,sts who each city vl~lted by Father Peymont to Arkansas and from were pacifists during tli'e-·war. ton. Florida' to South Dakota. .out I have been unable to :finct-·--. Before Father Peyton left SISTEI!t lINFAN'll' MARY Ia n noviee of tile CARMELITE . Inevitably Missouri had one, them." C~1rlw:.(J,~stributed150,000 res- . SISTERS iE INDIA.. The name aSister Infant" sounds strange presented in the House by John The' same, aut.hor, Ray H. aries throuih-1r~..a~~.cy: of thG I to O\1lli' earn but Sister hoo taken her re- r--=-::;::""."..""r7'~';;; H.·Lehr, from a county near Abrams, declared that theN bishops. .These rosar~~ . llDgiem lIumMl iI!I benor of the Infant of BethAurora. In . effect it was tabled was not one case of a Catholic given to hiro by friends in tho~ ~ h e llIlaDlell 'IrlB(l[JR'ilJPA,¥lIlL =d VIA.by the House Judiciary Commit-·. soldier being_ unsettled in hio U.S., Ca~ada and Ireland. !l)AmE'll'~ are also strange t>0 O!l te:e, but a companion measure in belief in God. Again America One bishop described the Fambue n>mLlIn> 1I ~ IPlBl the state senate afforded an had seen that Catholics wero Dy Rosary Crusade as "an ex'. 'lTA.lIl&I~lJ!:'IrllilA.lLAl!{AL ar4l two Catho opportunity for a member to the best of citizens! plosio~ of faith." Bishop Manuel ,!boYD seucb1na for the ~riesthooa at SMN'll' launch a stream of slurs at the Next Week: Hatred inflamed Larra~ Errazuriz of. Talca said JJOSJEJPlBl'S Slli.:lWlIN,(lltYl im [N][JI1IA.. 'Could Church and her members. . by the Ku Klux Klan.t~at ~~ce the. crusade came to roo.' figuratively speahilllg, take one .ofthese. '. lI. o L .Having endured aU' he could, "'""nn",8 'Woo",,,,,,,,, lRI@llM"",his.cpocesemanyp astory; havEl I:l strange ll!lIld into your home this Christmas S~n!ltor Mike Casey warned that' ",'W~.ll ~'I><I • • ;'illI IP VY"1lI ' ..y a.oP. g" ollle of them? You can. "adopt" one of them by, one, more ·jnsinuation would Ard'ldic4:~se 'C<rose 6nancm.g his OI!' heu- ed1llcati0B--$30l) for SisteJr Want, ~600 for bring personal action by him- ., _WASHINGTON (NC). _ The . ' . either Philip Oll' Joseph.. ' . Poe's description of 'rhe U.S. Supreme Court has refused •. ,.. -~--. a.v.~n applied to the reviler: a. request by the Los Ang'eles, ......h • ..' '/lll h' . '.' . THE' BABE OF BETHiI..EHlEM " OCNothing further then he ut;. . .~. ~~ ..• ~nlO~,' fieg. P "a.rm. , WtIi.· .b.lesa 'y.ou.. '. f.or .rememberl.·ng th'ose people who' were b--- ,. tered.". , . arc~dioc~se that it compel the 'IDIABETOC AND . SICK R.OOM:, . "'.u :',', . '. .'.' ,Cahf()rma State"'Supreme"COUri. . and who grew:up in lila own land but who are now exiled f~om ;;.., Has Bill Killed . ,; ., ,; to,hear.its appeal in a zoning d~: .' SUPPLIES 'it. .$~O.~ wil1·~~~p.l;is.~~s,ome,measure'of happiness 'this .. ' .J\jbit later in Ohio Represent- pute. ..204 ASHlEY BOULEVARD Christmas to the Palestitiial1 REifugees•. Will you.helpus with a '. a~ive Richard R. Hawkins intra-' The appeal had been made bt·., r;:""' 'N«!~:'8Etdford">':":::-':: ::t:;- dO~.~~.QIl.?" ..,:.,:.," .' ,,'...", . . .. dfu~d similar legiS1l1tiOn.Bd~-'-,th.e·:ar,chd,iocese on behalf of 58;: .~~(~wy. 3-8045 ' "':'.':. '.... ''';'';.tr>i:i\.. .... " .... , .. ' .'. ,.,,'''' .' q~e a vote was taken: he ma, ¢.-(; ~_Fe)i'cjtas .. (and~ ·,Perpetua churcli".,' \:: ~".: --. " ., : : 1...-:~E· RIEMIUWBER '~'GOJD) ~D 'HIS MISSiONS· IN ~OU1t f~<' ~:;~nauthorized dero:an~ on', the:. :In.S~.n,N;lf;lripa,.~alif. The dispu~:" " LAST WILL AND 'l'ESTAMfbNT . . t " '. , ."
c;n'li'n~~UB~ BITU' ~W@[f·~cdJ· 'W@[f '~,. . ~.~
0
"., :ro..'-? ,/ >
"",
Rev.
declin~d,
~iUy
Pli'esident····Praises ·Father ,Peyton's Fam,e•.Y Rosary Crusade en Chele .. .
PIRSIAN&~ lAST· SYRIAN
CHlUSTIANS
.te'"
of
'- -
,IS
'......is·
« ....
'~r~del'l3'infrom
JAN£ON'S"
:'If.'
.~
'
PharI1l1Gcy " .
------
t
:'~::::~Goodl Ne8~~b@1f' . ·.r'.~~~~~~~~~~r~h:tlptit::own~:-:.fqr ~~;u;~~i:~S c:~;:~ '\~,:MJ:BI~G~ J~!YI~G,XI'~~.:.:'.·,·. ;:·:~\~ .~.;.A,·,,·. ,: ~~. t~'.< M..~'·,·.~~~~.~~. '"'~. -.'.:"."'.-.".,'.';' ~~l> ~ ~~;tlJ&J~l>\Y'tl&8)
\
~
'was .'
::;:~,l;:~=;~,:.t::~e~SOh::~::" ··)UcndioCeSe's':app·eal·:iil:ul~.'ca,,:' ~~~t:~~~~p~~:e~~e;:;'
iIII. lil.$emlll~ryft, ,'~ .'~'
'4
:.:!:.',;,::. .
:DETROIT (NC) - S a,c re(4 ;,.q,u..ellbw: !J.se a a'· Hea~t Minor Seminary here, parking lot and playgroun'ci: The.. iJi~t. . 36·'·:Y.ea~s.ago,. but· today,: ,:~ity, held that lhiswould ·:viOlate· an d mg .In the midst of a. zonmg laws. . '., "<\hl,lpgi'ng' ri.eithborhood," held":' 'The:. City : officials" ,action an'open ho~ for its new neigh- upheld by lower courts, and ~., I
. '.
" ,.:, .
.. ,:' ,
.'~
.
1\
.
I''.,.'
Oil ~:::
i
.1.: ..; . .
.. '.-,f)'Q.
I.
A>
.
IN"!!,,,
foI' DomesU:e
&··IndUiltricl:.f
Burners
.. :Salea .• ant.l." Serv!ee .
.
l,
:.... .,
. ,.,
.';
., ...... ' .
,F.!!~N.~~ . . ~. ·.. .. .W e rCAaQ.INAL~·SPE.L~AN"Prellid~, . Peror P. Tuohy, Nat~1 ~'lI. ..
....
....
. , ' " . Sond GIl com~unic¢iOftll, to:
,"
•
., ..
~.~N'.~SUBSE:HDNE1'F· o'RDAft ,~ , ,~:: •.,.. ~~:~~'~7'~~~·.:~:~(!.,:.,. st.,.New,·Yodc~17.,.N. Y. ,;-:,'1~
,..
~
"".
~', .. ::.' ~ .:;%~;~:~-..: \';~'.;":""-:.',;._
~.,-_; :~~;
:....:;~.·,..,.~.,.,,;.;..,:;.:::<;-S~
,.:,'
.,
.
WY;5.~1631' ~; .',';:'" _ ' . CAri:lOUC NEAR EAST.WELFME A$SOCIAffON II:lI'l
.'
.;,"j.
".1:",
.,.
.
..';, . :'.",
.. ,·~:;Jl,,·::t'·:-.
1,
<
Cardinal· Propose Paid Laymen As· Soluti~n
BOSTON (NC)'---: A· paid eorps of .. laity to combat eommunism by teaching' Catholicism .will·be proposed
Glenmary Father Outlines "No·Priest" Problem :~~rs~N;~~Rl~. 1960 1$ To HQly Name Society, Somerset Stat~ Legislature To Study Youth Delinquency
, . ; o y Marion Unsworth . '''The Church has'a mission problem right in this country," Glenmarymissioner Rev. ' ~ill~ Robert Healey told the Holy Name Society of St. Thomas More Church, Somerset, at its monthly. meeting.. "There are 700 counties which have no priest at all,. and 800 counties. 'LANSING (NC) _ Eighthat have 'no priest i~ the rural areas. These people have no contact with the Church ,teen bills aimed at curbing juvenile delinquency in Michwhatsoever." "Father H e a - ' ley, whose order, the Glenigan will come before the mary Home Missioners, was ~egislature when it convenes ilil founded and dedicated to January.
at the ecumenical council by His Eminence Richard Cardinal Cushing. "I can find no other practical way we can reach the multitudes," said the Archbishop of Boston. He said there are not help establish the Catholic church in rural communities in enough priests to do the job. "The day when the laity was the United States, added "You outside the church, looking in don't find the situation much . . . is over," he said in a ser- here in the North, where there mon at a Mass marking the 50th , are many cities, and particularly anniversary of Our Lady of the many educational opportunities." A young order, the Glenmary Presentation parish, in suburban Fathers were founded in:l~37 by Brighton. Cardinal Cushing, who rec- Very Rev. W.' Howard Bishop, ently toured several Latin who realized the need for such American countries, said this a grou~ when he disc~vered that area· is the Church's biggest one-thIrd of the Umted States was unserved by priests. Coinproblem. "The whole place is a hotbed of communism," he said. ing the phrase "No-Priest Land, One reason for this, he said, U.S.A.," Father Bishop estabis "the abysmal ignorance of Jished headquarters at Glendale, 90 per cent of the South Ameri- 0., and set to work to fill the Today there are 55 Glencan Catholics about their Faith." gaps. mary priests laboring around the country as well as Glenmary Brothers and Sisters to assist them. Be Kind GREENHILLS (NC) - Nearly Father Healey told his audi500 citizens of this Ohio com- ence that, in dealing with nonmunity turned to voice their Catholics, they should "be kind, support of the public school be kind, be kind. When someone board's policy permittting teach- asks a question, be very patient ers to 'offer "non-sectarian" and be sure that you answer it. prayers in class. One unanswered question might At a public meeting called by mean years before they ask anthe board, parents of public other one, perhaps forever. school pupils took sharp issue ,"In small towns, people are with efforts of a small group to friendly," he continued. "There is persuade the board 'to withdraw some prejudice, but, if you let HOME MIS$IONER: Rev. Robert Healey of the its permission for classroom Old them know you, you have no Glenmary Home Missioners (left) with Rev. Patrick J. Testament readings and saying idea how many people's prejugrace in kindergarten. O'Neill, Holy Name Society moderator of St. Thomas More dice can be changed. We can't Adopted two years ago and reblame them. They don't hate the parish, Somerset. Father Healey addressed members on affirmed last Spring, the policy Church, but what they think the needs of America's "no-priest land." statement declares: "The board Church is. of education will permit opening "A priest in some of these With most of the "No-Priest" Father Healey added, "because of school with a brief reading southern towns is an ecclesias- areas in the South, the Glenmary of television, radio, more educafrom the Old Testament of the tical politician. One of the hard- priests have concentrated on tion in general, and the number Bible or recitation of the Lord's est things he has to do is walk that area. The first contact in lil of people moving around the prayer or in kindergarten a non- into.town on Saturday afternoon. new area is usually made by country, but in the strongholds, sectarian prayer before taking People will respond to friendliGlenmary tent preachers, who anti-Catholicism is still solid, food. ness. There are always one or come into a town, set up a tent, and regularly there are meetings, "This is left to the discretion two who are looking for some- and hold a week of sermons, especially around Reformation of teachers and no teacher shall thing, and you can answer their singing and talks on the Bible. Sunday, called solely for opporbe compelled by order of an em- questions. Don't ever be ashamed "Later, two priests will arrive tunity to attack the Church. ployee of the school system to to answer. You kRow more about and settle there, usually in the Whenever you hear an attack," lead any religious activities.", your religion than all these he advised, "just ask the persparsely populated hills. The people put together. people fear and suspect the son who founded his sect. it will '''Fhe last war did more than priests ,at first, but ev~' , stop them every time." anything else to spread knowl- become used to them. edge of the Church. With lack of "Our job is where there are To the liturgically-minded, the education the hardest thing we Christian Life Calendar issued have to cope with, a lot of boys no Catholics," Father explained. yearly by the Bruce Publishing got out of these small towns for "We start from - scratch, and Company is almost a necessity. the first time. They met Catholic build what we need as we can. This year's calendar was delayed boys and saw how they lived. The Sisters can get in and do because of extensive revisions "One boy who served during things we can't do. The poor are 'necessitated by recent papal the war, came home interested very proud, and somehow the changes in the rubrics of Mass in the Church, but it took hini Sisters know how to help them and the breviary, and up and four years to rid himself of long_ in a way that doesn't embarrass down the country daily Mass- seated feelings about Catholics. them. Their work is especially goers have been in a liturgical Now he is the only, Catholic effective in the hospitals." ' fog. within 25 miles, and he is going start to Woark Now, however, the calendar to make more converts than any As soon as they arrive, the has appeared, together with a priest could hope to, because note apologizing for its lateness, people will not be afraid to ask priests start to work, helping anyone they can in whatever and all is serene. him questions." way they can, whether it be The Christian Life Calendar, No Chance building a house, furnishing unique in its field, begins with Father Healey, who has served the first Sunday of Advent and nine years in Russelville, Ky., clothes or food to needy families, carries through the liturgical and five years in Franklin, N. C., or just passing the time of day, "The situation is improved," year. added, "1 think people are getSaint, vestments to be worn, ting gypped, because they have Mass to be said, and instructions no chance to know about reliThe KEYSTONE for recitation of the breviary are gion. The greatest asset we have given for each day, together with is the radio, through which we Warehouse Salesroom a pithy 10-second homily, deNew and Used can talk to people who would signed to lift the reader's mind never approach us directly. OFFICE EQUIPMENT and heart from things of earth We show a large assortment of used "The only way to, reach more to things of heaven. and new desks, chairs, filing cab· people is to get more priests Once you have it, you'll woninets. tables, etc., in wood and steel. down there," the missioner, who Also metal storage cabinets, safes, der how you managed without has been speaking about the shelving lockers, ete. it. order around the eastern area IOSJames for the past year, added. "But Deaf Union there is one thing everyone can, -, : NewBedforc do; learn to pray for the misWY3·2783 sions and for non-Catholics. You BURBANK (NC)-Four thouhave something they don't." sand pilgrims climbed Mount Raphael here to pray at' the shrine built on its crest by St. Frances Xavier Cabrini in 191'1. FOR SEE "MANNY" SOUZA The pilgrims are members of the Italian Catholic Federation', • PlYMOUTH Msgr. Robert E. Brennan, their • CHRYSLER chaplain, led them in the 15 mysteries of the Rosary as they, • VALIANT climbed the rain-softened traiL MEW CARS and a Fine line of Reconditioned Used Con The intention of their pilgrimCOMPLETE MODERN SERVICE ALL MA~ES Of CARS age was "the reunion of all· Christians under the Holy Father," Benediction before the shrine of. Our, Lady Help 01. U latch Street cor. WasWngtoII FAIRHAVEN Christians eoncl.uded the pllgrimage.
Parents Support Prayer Policy
New·Calendar Gives Liturgical Changes
QJ
4,000 Pilgrims Visit Shrine Built by Saint
•
•
oN
FAIRHAVEN MOTORS
The bills, formulated by a specia1 House committee, were drafted after hearings with police officials, judges, educators, clergy, social workers and par.. ents. Committee members also inspected pilot programs in various parts of the state. High on the . list of recommendations is one for establishment of camps for wayward youngi?ters at local, county and state levels. One includes setting up a Michigan Civilian Conservation Corps at the Michigan National Guard 'training ground at Camp Grayling. It would train about 900 young men the first year. Permanent Center Another bill would set up a:. permanent juvenile study center .' at the Michigan State University police administration school. ' Another measure would provide for punishment up, to $200 fi'ne and three months in jail for any parent who violates a probate court order for control of child on probation, and allow the court to confine a child who violates probation. Most of the other measures in_ volve police and social agency responsibilities to young offend_ ers. Study leading to formulation of the bills took three years.
a
FAIRHAVEN LUMBER COMPANY
Complete Line BuildDf1Ig Materials 8 SPRING ST.• FAIRHAVEN WYman 3-2611
(
-
.
~::-~
.,
,J...
.t 6
T.
. i jO~-Diocese of Fall River-ihurs;,·Dec;·lS,.1960·,
IS mMlJ Peddlers' Is Analysis
Of Pornography and Law·' By Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S. Kennedy
*~*~*~P*~~*~~*~~*~*~~~~*~~~
F{JtI:-rN~ to" YOWl ~ ..~ ..... ~ ~mrt.«gf
ItJ.
The title of James Jackson Kilpatrick's' book, 'The Peddlers' (Doubleday. $4.50), might lead ,one.to .suppose that the work dealt only with the ponography and .obscenity and the censorship of motion pictures, as well as a series of proposals as to deluged with tricky circulars .what might be done to pro- which come to him in plain enject legitimate freedom of velopes. One million children a -expression and at the same year are so solicited, according to
J~mut
time safeguard the interests of 'the community. Mr. Kilpatrick, editor of the Richmond News Leader, say s tha t last year he and others ·fu his office became interested in questions of free speech and due process involved in legislation which the postmaster g e n era 1 requested to facilitate the proper policing of the, m ail s . They wondered whether the _,. heated complaints about an obscenity racket had any justification. To find out they answered advertisements offering books, pamphlets, still photos, mo.tion pictures. What they receIved amazed them. In short order, they were cqnvinced that the peddling of pornography through the mails is "a big 'business, a cynical business, a dirty business." Mr. Kilpatrick went on to become something of an expert on the subject, and his indignation mounted as bis resear.ches progressed. Stuff Is Vile At some length (and often in excessive detail), Mr. Kilpatrick 'describes and quotes from the materials which he investigated. His citations roundly prove that the stuff is vile beyond belief. .But they will also pose a serious problem for certain readers: that is, passages here reproduced, as well as particulars about· the pornographic filth, may be much more than some people can be safely exposed to. At any rate, here is ample evidence of the depravity and corruption which is being circulated at the taxpayers' expense and to the aggrandizement of profiteers in perversity. . The scope of this obnoxious operation is vast indeed. "The obscenity racket now operates in every state in the Union, through sYndicates, wholesalers, and distributors as efficiently organized as any reputable manufacturing firm. Postmaster General Arthur E. Summerfield estimates their gross mail-order revenues at $500 million a year." ~ Obscene films, also sold by mail, bring their peddlers at least $200 million a year.' Preys on Young , All this is horrifying enough. But much more horrifying is the fact that the racket makes a specialty of preying on the young, that it solicits business from mere children. A el,1ild who innocently 'answers em advertisement for a knife or some gadget, may easily '--~ Qnd quite unwillingly have his name p~aceq on a mailing list to which mat.'li or most of the dealers in defilement have access. Thereafter the child will be ,
j rt
I \
~~q;,Hru!filO!fil® ;11@(l [L@U'®
~~lJ'il'ilO!fil«llli'Y
V @~@U'6«mS
BOSTON (NC) - A national seminary specifically for men with delayed vocations, the firs.t of its kind in the United States, will be built in the Boston Archdiocese next year. Richard Cardinal Cushing, Archbishop of Boston, said the seminary is now in the "planning stage" and construction will probably begin next Summer. Men who began careers in the secular world before entering -r·the seminary bring special quali. ties to their· vocation, Cardinal Cushing said. He predicted. that graduates of the new seminary would "bring to the priesthood maturity, experience, leadership, DeW ideas and new methods."
the estimate of Post Office people. And no effective relief seems possible. There are those who maintain that no real harm is done. The question of personal -spiritual and moral harm is not even raised. But others see a causeand-effect connection between young people's introduction to this sewage and the increased incidence of sex crime and violence, delinquency, and various other disorders. Parents ask in anguish why the racket cannot be effectively stopped once for all, why it cannot be summarily and finally stamped out. . Historical Review This leads Mr. Kilpatrick into a wide'-ranging inquiry. Primarily the inquiry is addressed. to the law as to obscenity and pornography. But it does not stop there. There is an historical review of the law regarding ob. scenity, from the Comstock Act of 1873 down to the Supreme Court decision in the Roth and Albert Cases of 1957, and to changing social attitudes arid codes. The law has never protected obscenity in print, nor does freedom of expression as guaranteed in the Bill of Rights throw a mantle of immunity about its purveyors. This principle has never been overturned by the courts. But it is not the easiest thing in the world to define what obscenity is, and in different generations different views of this have been held. _
Court Decision The Supreme Court decision of 1957 laid it down that, to be judged obscene, the matter must appeal to prl,lrien~ inteJ;est, must be considered as a whole, must be offensive by contemporary standards and of deleterious effect on the average adult reader. Mr. Kilpatrick goes almost minutely into the background of these' two cases, their advance through the courts, and the several opinions by. members of the Supreme Court. This is a protracted treatment of a rather specialized subject, but the analysis familiarizes the reader with aspects of the subject which he may not have thought of before. Somewhat less detailed is Mr. Kilpatrick's review of the ques. tion of motion picture censorship, its operation in various forms and places, and its curtailment in the last decade by the Supreme Court. On Side of Freedom The author is ~trongly on the side of freedom; he wants no interference with the' right to express oneself without hindrance. But he is not an advocate of completely unconditional license. He rebuts the liberal·literati's contention that a black night of unreasonable suppression and puritan dictatorship has descended on the country. The reverse is true. He chides them for ignoring the fact that obscene materials cause social damage. ."1 am persuaded that' prolonged subjection to obscene materials can have a profound influence on sexual attitudes and social behavior not only of ado-. lescents but of adults also, a'nd not only of especially susceptible adults but of tolerably normal adults too. "What is involved, or so it seems to me, is a slow rotting of the social fabric, and I believe the. states and the localities, moving with the utmost care under due process 9f l~w, have every right to protect their society from this 'sort ··of· slow corruption."
Timely Pre-Holiday Meat Buys!
Chuck 'Roast 43C All Cut from Heavy Corn Fed Steer B~ef - Ideal for Pot Roast.
,
..
lo.nne -
LB
.
.ncy:,:~Py~u.p~" rthe~nt:;:nL:. e:: ' LB LI45c
I
m.
I
Ill!!
Iiillil'i.<&··
16 to 22 LB Ayt
0
49«
.
Choice - Lean Beef - Tender, Appetizing
\ ~
S~;~d~~ _~:~~e~Qi BNQD EID&~@~
S9~
LB
£rn!&::J@lIDoo u2) $V&ffi
LB
DANISH IMPORTED
OO~[?~~& OO~~
LB
CAN
- ~ame Low Sell-Service Proces In All Stores on This Vicinity " ' , (We Reserve.the Righ.t to Limit Quantities)
~~~"'.:-.'
. . . ,,*_."".~~:;,:".,~
- California 'OD£MGIS Sunkist Navel 4 - Babijuice 5' ORANGES Florida Firm GRAPEFRUIT Ind~e::li;= .5 ..: u. s. No. 1 ·5 APPLIES Cortland 2%" and up PASCAL CELERY Crisp
Tinnely
LB BAG
'B~G lB BAG
8CH
BUY8!
BROOKSIDE
I~ ;
,;
ICECAIAM
\~
~ [:-~~-~---
~R- ..ocery
69c 49c 39c 49c 23c
LB BAG
1/2 GAL eTN
Our Excellent Quality Ice Cream is 200/0 Richer than Minimum U.S. Govt, Stds. - All Popular Flavors
6·9 .
C
-
MARSHMALLOW FLUFF - All Cleaned VICYOR SHRIMP JUMBO 5c off Sale SWEET MIXID PICKLES 5TU~~ID OLIVES large or Smafl SHELF BRAND ImIKID ~~TS- NUT Fancy Assortment JUMBLE~PAC
S~t!JJ£5H
@II'
~&»~PMDII
f!!~WOO@~~~ ~OlfL'
HOMEMAKER BRAND Economy Size 75 Ft ROLL
79c
7'/t 02 JAR 4'110%
CAN QUARl JAR.
100% . JAR 140%
CAN
140z
CAN HvyDuty 25 Ft ROLL
21c 59c 33c 49c 69c 10c 59c
NEW IMPROV;:D ~LAVOR !
C Pl.-IV COFFEE FAST GROWING TO BE OUR ·6 oz BEST SELLING INSTANT COFFEE JAR Save 10c on Every Jar
l·
..
,
.
""
79c .~
.
..
:
j
Urge Increased Social Servi~@ To FamU~e$ NEW YORK (NC) - Increased social services are need~d to preserve the American family, findings by. 24 business and labor leaders indicate. They concluded that family breakdowns have serious economic and social consequences and that the worker with trouble at hotDe is not only less efficient but a danger to his fellow workers. "Family breakdown is a major human problem in America today," Thomas J. Watson, Jr., president of the International Business Machine Corporation, noted. He said he spoke not only of "actually broken" families, but those experiencing "deteriorating family relationship" and the "absence of healthy family life." Conditions such as these undermine "a substantial number of our population," Mr. Watson said. He stressed that "'business and industry have a big stake in the community's effort to maintain strong families." Community Problems "Yesterday's family problems are today's community problems-delinquency, irresponsible parenthood, weak citizenship, mental illness, alcoholism, emotional distress and the inevitable costs of these and other problems to the voluntary contributor and to the taxpayer," he said. George Meany, president of the AFL-CIO, and other spokesmen expressed firm support for the work of social agencies engaged in family counseling. R. H. Collacott, public relations director for the Standard Oil Company of Ohio, said modern business and industry have brought with them a host of social problems in whose solution they must now assist. He said social services have become as characteristic of modern industrial society as banking, legal and judicial services. For its own good the corporation should help support and make social services available to its employes, Mr. Collacott said. The findings of the business and labor leaders were set forth in a special 50th anniversary issue of Family Service High. lights, publication of the Family Service Association 'of America.
~~@1
hTj
Dli'owe
If~D~~
l~t9=YM«Jn~Q1
BERLIN (NC) - The Soviet Press in Lithuania has virtually admitted that a year of intensified antireligious propaganda in t hat predominantly Catholic country has failed. n was learned that the communist press in Lithuania is now blaming the government's paid propagandists of atheism and teachers in Lithuania for the fact that Lithuanians are still practicing their religion. The Red press, the only press in Lithuania since the nation was 'seized by the Soviet Union and annexed in World War II, has printed articles almost daily for the past year castigating the clergy and religious practices of the people. Prison Terms Paid propagators of atheism outnumber priests by four to one. Priests are stricuy forbidden to teach religion to children or youth. Earlier this year, several laymen and women were sentenced to prison terms of four years or more for teaching religion to children privately. It is believed here that the current attack in the press on the atheistic propagandists and the teachers stem in part from manifestations of religious fervor last September at the Lithuanian Marian Shrine at Siluva.
New Chaplain PARIS (NC)-Father Francois Russo, S.J., has been named ecclesiastical advisor to the International Catholic Center for Coordination with the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization.
"'
J
"Bel.ls· of St•. Mary's" Cheer Fami.lies Of Padanaram., South Dartmouth
THE ANCHORhurs., Dec. 15, 1960
17
POi1)\to~~ ~~"r?@Otrlts . AU~D~D@ll)f ~;$hOpS
By Avis Roberts Hymns of praise to Mary peal forth eac h Summer night through the charming village of Padanaram in South Dartmouth, lightening gardeners' chores and cheering families FOlt C@[]l)@cdJ@ Sees VATICAN CITY (NC)gathered together in their yards for the la st hour before sundown. Muted music is enjoyed by householders during the colder months. The hymns are played electrically on Pope J oh'n has named three . new Canadian bishops. the 25 bells installed in the new St. Mary's Church in Msgr. Paul Emile Chal"o bonneau, 38, was appointed Ti.. December 1956. The first tular Bishop of Tapso and Aux,. new Catholic church in iliary Bishop of Ottawa. South Dartmouth, St. Mary'od first Solemn High Mass was celebrated May 10, 1956, with Bishop Connolly presiding. It was celebrated by Rev. John S. Considine, M.M., of Maryknoll, N.Y., brother of Rev. Arthur G. Considine, pastor of St. Mary's since Oct. 24, 1954. Another brother, Rt. Rev. Msgr. Raymond T. Considine, pastor of St. William's Church, Fall River, was a chaplain to the Bishop. Beautiful Landmark Set on a three-acre tract of land, St. Mary's is a beautiful landmark in this small New England village~ Its design is traditional New England in keeping with the decor of many old homes in Padanaram. The towering white spire has pink stained glass windows. The interior of the church is a far cry from the somber Gothic structure of most churches in the Diocese. Woodwork, like the outside clapboarding, is white. Pews are natural birch and white and walls are 'f Williamsburg blue. Parishioners showing their beautiful church to strangers persist' in calling the wall paint "Blessed Virgin blue." The gold and white stations of the cross were a gift of the Rt. Rev. Msgr. Henry J. Noon, long-time pastor of St. James ST. MARY'S CHURCH, Church, New Bedford, to the former church in 1923. They . a church fund to 'purchase items were redecorated for the new for the church. The Guild church by a South Dartmouth bought the altar linens, gold parishioner. vases and paint whic;l was used The interior /light and airiness by men of the parish to refurof the church is achieved by bish the church and rectory. transparent windows dot ted The first administrator of the with bright bits of stained glass. old church was the late Rev. Under c'onstruction since July 1955, St. Mary's has a seating Francis J. Duffy, who had been a curate at St. James. He served capacity for 550 persons. There at St. Mary's from 1930 to 1935. is a blacktopped area for more He was followed by the Rev. than 100 autos and more blacktopping is planned by Father James B. Downey, May 1935 to Considine to accommodate in- February 1938; the Rev. John F. creased traffic from nearby Broderick, from 1938 until his death in December 1940. Summer residents. A statue of Our Lady of Father Broderick's brother, Grace, presented by the children the Rev. Christopher L. Brodof the parish, is centered on erick of Fall River, filled in at the church lawn at Dartmouth St. Mary's for about six months and Middle Streets. The appeal during his brother's illness. The of the grounds is enhanced in Rev. Patrick Hurley was at St. Summer by showy borders of Mary's for the next five months petunias and in the Fall by gay and he was followed by the Rev. beddings of chrysanthemums. Leonard J. Daley, 1941 to 1947, The former church, on Elm and the Rev. David A. O'Brien, Street, Padanaram, was erected 1947 to 1954. in 1834 and used as a vestry for The Women's Guild was exthe Padanaram Congregational panded by Father O'Brien in Church. In 1923 it became the 1948 and the old Guild was first Catholic church in Dart- changed to a "club." When the mouth. At that time it 'Vas a new church was built the origichapel of St. James Catholic nal women's guild members Church, New Bedford, but in contributed a pew and a win1930 it was made a separate dow. church and named St. Mary's. Most of the equipment for the Russian Patriarch first tiny church (it held less than 200 persons) came from St. James and as gifts of New At Catholic Mass BEIRUT (NC) Patriarch Bedford residents. Alexei of Moscow, head of the First Guild Russian Orthodox Church atIn 1935 a group of 18 women tended Mass in a Catholic church working on money -' making in Alexandria during his visit to projects for the parish organized Egypt, "it was learned here. its first Women's Guild. They The Russian Patriarch flew to met once a week at each others' Alexandria from Moscow and homes to play cards. Each was the guest of Orthodox woman contributed 25 cents for Patriarch Christoforos II of Alexandria for his four-day stay. Women Volunteer He attended Mass in the Maronite Rite Catholic church in For Young Patients NEW ORLEANS (NC)-Fifty Alexandria. members . of the Metropolitan Women's Club who are rearing families of their own' are giving time to the "Tender Loving Care" project at Hotel Dieu here, hospital conducted by the Sisters LUM~IER of Charity of St. Vincent de Paul. "Tender loving care" is what So. Dartmouth pediatricians write on the charts and Hyannis of their young patients, and the women have volunteered to fol$0. Dartmouth low through on it. One step in the project has been to decorate WY 7-9384 the walls and drapes of the chilHyannis 2921 dren's playroom with circus scenes and other bright pictures.
SOUT~
DARTMOUTH
The old church on Elm Street now is St. Peter's Episcopal Church. The former rectory on Elm Street was sold and a new rectory was acquired diagonally across from the church. Father Considine acquired land across the street from the new church and has blacktopped it for basketball and other sports. In addition to the guild other activities at the church are the men's choir, Holy Name Society, Girl Scouts and High School Girls' Club. Catechism classes are conducted four days each week by lay teachers and Sisters of Mercy of St. John's parish, New Bedford. The Rev. John V. Magnani was appointed an assistant at the church last summer.
Father Joseph R. Windle, 43,was named Titular Bishop of Uzita and Auxiliary Bishop of Ottawa. Father Jean Marie Fortier, 40, was made Titular Bishop of Poma:ia and Auxiliary Bishop of Samte Anne de la Pocatiere. Msgr. Charbonneau, born in Sainte Therese de Blainville Que., on May 4, 1922 wa~ ordained in 1947. He serv~d as a seminary teacher and rector, and later as a parish pastor. He was n:t ade a monsignor in 1956. Father Windle was born IIll Calabogie, Ont. on Aug. 28, 1917. He stUdied at Ironside College•. the Montreal seminary and the Lateran University in Rome. Ordained in 1943, he has been serving as pastor of St. John the Evangelist parish in Campbell's Bay, Que. Father Fortier was born illl Quebec on Aug. 1, 1920. He studied at the Quebec ~eminary, Laval University in Quebec and the Gregorian University in Rome. He was ordained in 1944 and in 1946 was appointed professor of Church history at the Quebec major seminary. He was named the seminary's spiritual director in 1955. He has also worked as vice-postuiator of the beatification cause of Bishop Francois Laval, Canada's fir~ bishop.
Ston®huDI Election The Stonehill College student body has elected several new members to its newly organized House of Representatives, a stlP. dent government body. Included in th~ group are F. Richard Gendreau of Fall River.e and Margaret Duggan, New Bed,.. ford.
.GEORG~ ~.MONTLE FhJJm~ill'il\SJ -
Hll!a~Bl1'!lg
Over 35 Years of Satisfied Service 806 NO>. MA~N SiRlE1ET Fall RiveD' OS 5-7497
'c=cc=cc=c=c===-
JB
CO.
Servillg The Commtmity Shue 1825
FALL
IP:(~VER
* 7\Tational * ~ BANK ..J
55 NORTH MAIN ST. Look for ttll. elgn for modern banking aervloe
t
)
,'-,
.'
'18
Rabbis Hit Alleged Jteligion in Schools
TI;;: ANCHO;::Thurs., Dec. 15, 1960
, Continued from Page One freedom is lacking there is no , morality, he told a session of the ~fth annual conference of the District of Columbia Political Science Association. The meeting was held at the Catholic' University of America. ., Denies Morals . Mr. Elliott pointed out that the international communist con.: spiracy "denies all morals, in, our sense of the word" and in- . deed "forbids" the basic condition for morality~free individwil ch~ice-by refusing to grant. any "protected area" of individ-· ual freedom safe from state CONFERENCE MEETING: St. Vincent de Paul domination. at Mt. Carmel church auditorium. Left to right: conference : No regime :Which does not protect free choice is. "acting within Dr. David Costa, Jr., President New Bedford Particular Ii moral framework," he deCouncil, Msgr. Vieira, Moderator of Mt. Carmel conference, clared. and Conrad Andrade, Pres. Mt. Carmel Conference. Foreign Affairs In a discussion after Mr. EI11ott's address, Charles' BurtOn Marshall, a ~esearch, associate state supreme court has held the Continued from Page One with the Washington Center of law to be an attempt "to secure Only in Massachusetts was the Foreign Policy Research, said respect and reverence for the Sunday closing law struck down there exists today a false moralLord's day." by a lower' court. The laws inity in the ,field of foreign affairs. Forces Closoing volved in the Maryland and Mr. Ehrmann complained that . , : Mr. Marshall" a former mem- , Pennsylvania cases have been such a law compels his Orthodox ber of the State Department upheld so far. Jewish client to close his store Policy Planning Staff, 'said this' Massachusetts Case both on Sunday and on Saturday, false morality manifests itself in Leading off the two-day verbecause' that is the Jewish Sabappeals for independence in bal battle was the Massachusetts bath. The Massachusetts law speareas of the world that are not, case in which the state is seekready for independence, in' ex- ing a reversal of a May, 1959, cified: however, that kosher meat cessive devotion ,to the principle Federal court ruling· which could' be sold from 6 to 10 A.M. of neutrality, and in, an unveri- struck down its law on grounds on Sundays. fied faith that international ne;- of religious discrimination. Mr. Ehrmann said that .under gotiations are good things in, the law Orthodox Jewish merAssistant State Attorney Genthemselves. eral Joseph H. Elcock conceded chants in Massachusetts had either to close their stores two , George Pettee, of the Opera- that the law may originally have been enacted for religious rea-' days a week or submit to an tions' Research Office, Johns "economic compulsion to make Hopkins University, deplored the sons. But he said the purpose of people abandon their own reliarrogance of scientists who think the law in modern times has gion." they are qualified to comment on been to preserve 'Sunday as a foreign affairs because they are day of "rest. and recreation." . When the Massachusetts law Mr. Elcock argued that states. was ruled unconstitutional .in good scientists.' ' have the power to set minimum May, 1959, Richard Cardinal wages. In providing for a day of' Cushing" Archbishop o~ Boston, rest, he said, 'it is best for a state described the ruling as "com: Continued from Page ODe to choose a day .which is already pletely at variance with the traTheological College of the Cath-' observed by most people. dltions of the past and inconsis'oJic University of America and Mr. Elcock was asked by the tent with' the purposes of the from 1957 to the present has, court at one point whether com- , Sunday observance as they have attended the North American, pulsory Sunday closing places';' been' implied in our previous an economic burden on theprac-' legislation." College. 'He holds A.B. and M.A. 'de-' tice of the religion by those who, 'Father Robert Drinan, S.J., conScientiously believe the'y grees from Catholic University dean of the Boston College,law must not 'work on some other' and a Bachelor of Sacred Theolsehool, said' the ruling was the day as well. ogy degree from Gregorian Unifirst in this co'untry to assert that, He replied that this situation compulsory Sunday closing laws versity, Rome. He will celebrate his first Mass at the Generalate does not differ at bottom from violate the Constitution by placof the Sisters of the Holy Union , that in which parents send their ing ,an unreasonable burden on childr~Ii to parochial schools' 'asof the Sacred' Hearts in Rome those who worship on another and will be assisted by Rev. a matter of conscience while the' day of the week. Gerald Lachance of the White state refrains from ,giving them: Fathers, a native of St. Anne's economic assistarice to do so. , ,Herbert B. Ehrmann, counsel par'ish, Fall River. LA PAZ (NC.) - Ireneo Rev. Mr. Delaney will return ' for the Crown Kosher' SuperPimentel, leftist 'labor leader, market of Springfield, Mass.,' to the FaIr Riv'er Diocese in has urged Bolivian President argued that the Sunday law's June at the completion of his Victor Paz Estenssoro to expel purpose is still ~ssentially relistudies. " all foreign priests, from the gious. His parents and brother will country and threatened "enerHe' said that as late as 1923 'the getic reaction by the working visit relatives and friends' in classes'; if' the demand is not England and Ireland before reDanish turning to' the home at 424 Linmet. COPENHAGEN (NC) A ........d en Street, Fall River. . well-known Danish doctor - a In all, 50 young men will be convert to Catholicism-has anordained to the priesthood and nounced plans .'to become' a NO JOB TOO BIG . represent 44 dioceses in 23 Benedictine' ,monk. states. About 275' parents, relaNONE TOO SMALl. He is Dr. Paul Reiter, a 66J tives and friends of those to be year-old speciil1ist in psychiatry. ./ ordained will be present. Forty- A student of medical, thological nine of the students, will be and philosophical problems, his ordained by Archbishop O'Conwritings include a study 011 nor; the fiftieth, Thomas S. 'Martin Luther. PRINTERS, ' Maloney, will be ordained the !Wahl Offiee alld PIaa& same day by his brother, Most Rev. Charles G. Maloney, Auxi~ ,lOWELL, MASS. NEW ENGLAND liary Bishop of Louisville.
HILLSIDE (NC)-':t'he RatJ- character are most appropriately binical Council of New Jersey observed wi'thin the home or has decri~4 what it calls' "the amidst a proper religious envip.. growing number of ,religious ob- 'onment." servances being held in public The resolution did not refer to ,. schools throughout the state." any . specific celebrations, but The Jewish Orthodox group, in, stated: "We trust school authora resolution adopted at a meeting' ities' will take notice of such here call,ed for a halt to such sentiment and view programs "sectarian practices." Their resbased on religious symbolism as olution asserted that "celebra- inappropriate because they astions or symbolism of a religious sume a sectarian character."
Await Closing Laws Decision
Super-Right Quality, Ready-ta-Cook
Turkeys UP ,TO 14 lIS 16 TO 14 LIS
49~ 45~ .~
Ord i'nation
SUPER-RIGHT QUALITY, CUT FROM TENDER, YOUNG. PORKERS
'Pork··Loins c L835SSC 4S 7-118
POITION
LOIN ,PORTION LB RIB PORK HALF LOIN LB
Urges, Expulsion
New Rectc)'ry' ' Continued from Page One Avenue,' South Yarmouth. Anderson Bros-Strom Inc. of Hyannis are the general contrac';' tors. The sub-contractors are: electrical, Fuller Electric Co., Hyannis; plumbing and heating, William Wahtola, Hyannis; , painting, Edward Halloran, West Yarmouth. Gaffney Associates of Hyannis are' the architects.
'Ce~tury of Sell'vi<ee, 'NEW NORCIAL (NC)Spain has given its Benemeritu8 award to two Spaniards who ~have .served as missionaries here to Australian aborigines for more than 50 years each. They are Father Rosendo' Sosa, O.S.B., and Brother Luis Arrufat, 'O.S.B.
'B AK E
CASA BLANCA CoggshaJl Bridge" Fairha,ven
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
,
,
Leg Qtrl. '
',1
C
I
A....rlc.·. f.vorite~ ov.r two-third. fruit. ..... n....
JANE PARKER LIGHT
FRUIT CAKE 1V2 LB
3 LB
1.49 2.89
Amr:1ItaIT PIaDClI
BOSTON OCEANPORT, N. J. PAWTUCKET, I. L
THE' .
II
i
C
-
inclu'dil1g - A Live Lobster
, I
Breast Qtrs. ,
'l'elepbone ,Lowell
Every Sunday - $2.95
49C
Chicken [839 L835
... ......... ,--
tt-AM
LOIN PORK HALF LOIN LB WHOILE OF LOIN PORK Ib
Super-Right Quality, U.S. Gov't Insp.
Convert
SULLIVAN BROS.
c 4S c,
Music Through" Thf? Years
ll
HOLY UNiON SISTERS ORCHESTRA AND CHORAL ,GROUP
)
lLPJt - $4.98'
Holy Union Records 466 PROSPECT, ST.
·FALL RIVER, MASS.
CORONeT -
MFG'S SUGGESTED ,RETAIL 10.95
ONLY
,Ele,ctric POP-Up Toaster 6.95 WORTHMORE
Gum Drops-
120Z PKG
WINTER HILL
Ap.ple ~~ice
1 QT 14 OZ jU.W
REGULAR SIZE
C~g@r~ttes
PRICED'POR MASS.
Prices shown in this ad guaranteed thru Sat., Dec. 17 and effective 01 ALL A&P Super Markets 10 Ihlt commy.fly & vicinity.
19c
20et
Attleboro A1?eci
THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fa(River-Thurs., Dec. 'i'5, 1960
eyo OU'g(u'Jh~es Hoop league
Competition in the newly formed Attleboro Area CYO basketball league will begin on Wednesday, Jan. 4, Rev. Bernard F. Sullivan, director, announces. All games will be played at St. John's gymnasium in Attleboro. Parish teams will include St. Marys, Norton; St. Mary's, Mansfield; St. Joseph's and Holy Ghost, Attleboro; Sacred Heart, North Attleboro; Our Lady Ol! Mount Carmel, Seekonk, and St. Theresa's, South Attleboro. Attleboro Area CYO is also planning a glee club, with Father Roger LeDuc, assistant at Sacred Heart, North Attleboro, as director. Candidates are being given individual auditions. Father LeDuc hopes to present a concert in the Spring. The Attleboro group w.ill present a drama, "The Christmas Story," over WARA, Attleboro, from 2 to 3 P.M. next Sunday. Broadcast primarily for the aged and shut-ins, the play is expected to have appeal for ell listeners. Christmas Party St. Mary's CYO, Norton, wltl sponsor a Christmas party for grammar school children of the parish next Saturday at Norton High School. Refresli¥Dents will be served, and gifts will be presented to each child by the pastor, Rev. William D. Thomson. Santa Claus will appear and Salty Brine and Jeff will stop by to greet the youngsters. The Norton group is forming a girls' basketball league. An all-star team will compete with girls' teams of other parishell and other area teams. Other Norton activities include formation of a boys' basketball team in the junior age group to compete with other parish tearns in the same age group.
Marquette Drr~ps FootbcU, Trc~k MILWAUKEE (NC) - Marquette University is dropping its intercollegiate football and 'track programs and cutting down on other athletes. Father' Edward J. O'Donnell, S.J., university president, told n news conference the programs will be dropped 'at the end of this year to enable the university to concentrate on a "decade O'll academic explosion." The university recently announced m la-year building program costing $30 million. Marquette began football in 1892 and has played a major intercollegiate schedule since 1902. The university's football teams were natfonal powers in the 1930s, but fared badly in in recent years. The team won three games and lost six last season. Father O'Do'nnell said the deficit from last season may reach $50,000.
All-Diocesan Continued from 'Page One starting berths was keener than ever. B,rief thumbnail sketches of the All-Star9 follow, , Ends Dick Breziriski, Coyle: 5'-is5 •.. All-State Class C .•• outstanding pass .receiver . . . runs like a halfback ... went 71 yards vs. Taunton .... solid defensively . . . second year of varsity football • . . also a starter' in basketball ..• college prep junior .• likes Boston University. .vohn lFitzimmons,' Somerset:· 13'-170 ••• Raider co-captain ..• led by example ... a tremendous two-way operative ... devastating blocker ... works at conditioning year round ••. adept at turning plays in • . • succeeds namseake Mike, ez-Coyle, on Diocesan eleven. Tackles Stan Tenters, New Bedford: 8'2"-190 ••• big, fast and agile 0
Second Miracle
VATICAN CITY (NC) - The Sacred CongregatioD of Rites has approved a second miracle attributed to the intercession of an Italian Capuchin friar, Father Innocent of Berzio, whose beat!ficatiOll eawJe Ja DeiDi stuc:UecI heI'e. ...~~ ..
<.
'a converted. fullback dropped back to do the punting for the Crimson ... a weightman on the track. squad·'.\ . college course senior' .. ~ undecided between Boston University and So. Conn; .' o.
lEd Walsh, Coyle: 6'2"-200 .• bulwark of a fine Warrior frontier . • . second year of varsity ball .•• hails from. Mattapoisett' • • • stands high in the estimation of his coaches and teammates ... classical course seniol!' eo. Boston College bound. Guards T0D7 Arruda, Durfee: 5'7"180 • • • Hilltoppers' fire plug up front • • • actually a tackle .' . . blocking his forte ••. quiet but workmanlike • All-Bristol County •.• weightman in track • • • victory over New Bedford Iftatest thrilL Bob Guthrie, North Attleboilo 1'10"-220 .•. great field leader .•• 0
0
•
aoc:hored North's B',lpe!'latlve ~
ward wall: •. devastati~g block5'8"-160 ~ •. a repeat All-Diocer pulverized safety-man O!l e~an ~election . '. . operated from winning TD vs. Mansfield .•. the QB slot this year . . . refourth" year 'of varsHy ball'. • • turned to halfback 'by poetic' college course senior. Univ. license • . • ran 'pitchout option: effectively . . . always a threat of New Hampshire.· . to the outside ••. college course. .Center llloR Roach, Wareham: 5'11"- senior. " Ron Gentili, Mansfield: 6'2"222 ... the team's big man •• good play .: .. diagnostician ••• 185 .... the other junior on the All-Diocesan for the likes physical. contact ... 4 year team • man on Capeway eleven ••• second successive year . . . also converted to quarterback this accurate snapper-back ... ber of basketball squad, also ..• year ••. a genuine triple threat hopes to pursue physical eduClr • • • J scored an even 100 points this Fall . . . a four letterman tiOD studies at So. Conn. and a great competitor in each Quarterbaek sport. Gerr7 Cunniff. Coyle: 5'8"Fallback -' 160 ••• inherited Hoey's mantle .Jim Gravel, Attleboro: 5'10":'with grace and aplomb •.. All- 175 ..• captained Jewelers •• State Class C • • . captain-elect . the area's most explosive back of basketball . • • All-Scholastic '. . . • an aggressive clutch perllecond baseman • • . a versatile former ••• good speed and timathlete with lots CJf heart •• ing • • • innate running instinct leans toward' Boston College. o co-captain elect of basketball '. Halfbacks o • • a college prep senior. . ,BOf) ..l4onaai1lo·,New :BecifoN: ··-'·'Ancl' noW 'for the beI1cll. Theae 0
•
0
0
•
mem-
0
0
0
•
are the boys who were give!ll serious consideration for firSl team berths on the basis of thei.. fine showing on' the gridironO of the .area this past Fall. The Bench lEnds: Roger Duarte, Dighto~ Don Carey, Durfee; Paul GiusU. Dartmouth; Gerry CarpenteZ" Case. Tackles: Mike Morin, Attls-:. borb; Norm Benoit, Falmout~ Ed Fitzgerald, Oliver Ame~ Ralph DePillo, Mansfield; Reg Barrows, Wareham. . Guards: Ron Therriault, nu.fee; Tony Rego Fairhaven; Tom. Martin, Yarmouth; Dick Souzo. Coyle. Centers: Jim McQuade, Co~ Harry St. Jean, Durfee. Backs: 'John Sullivan, .JUa McMahon, Durfee; Don Boisve~ .... N. B. Vocational; Len Lopel\. Wareham; Ed Carvalho, Taunton; Rick Lippard, Yarmou~ Kevin Blake and Neil Poil"~
North
A~Uebol'Q.
'
,.
. ~',
"~
.,SACRED HEART WOMEN'S GUILD :'. Unusu~r projectsare.enjoy·ed.· Center,Ann 'Ma~y,.' recii>ieh~ of ,first embF~id~red:baptismal· robe' given: to· nieri~hers.' of Sacred'Heart. Ohurch!s Women's 'G.uild,Fail ;RiveJ,Left; .: . babies.of I>aris~,.'wi tIl :pareilts; ;¥rtaild.¥t:s.:Daniel'Jlelaney:-Right; Miss Mabel Smith-,in <;harg;e'Of)·~eWly40P,ened.p~~is.hli.~rapr,Ais~ri~tin:gbOok~• Rev. John G. Carroll, mode~ator, with Mrs. John J.. ' Sullivan,' president.'
.by
Succ~eds.
Prelate: ~s College Hea~
.'Small New Christians ~f'Sacred Heri'rfParisn ··:j·od,'. ~eninanship--' . R'e'ce:;ve,'H'a'n'"d-E" .b··'roo':de'"r''e'd'" B"ap't··:s····m:· a'Z'.'R'" be'' s' '. E~~~I~R~:t~s~~~r~~~ , ,~., ,.,:11 '.' . ,', ' , ' , <penman~hip'istantamC?uitt ~", '0'"
m'
EMMITSBURG (NC)-Father: . .11 '. ' II".., '.' Robert R. Kline has been named ' . By Patricia M~Gowan . ' " :bad.ma~ners;' " to succ~ed Msgr. John L. Sheri, Lucky ,the child who's' born in Sa~redH~art~arish, Fall River: Thanks to 'theWomen's"" "I'thinlt ,it c?mes d~wn . ~o, ~ , dan as :.presidentof Mount St. 'ld h: receIves . . '. th eo. "ff'ICI~ . t" mg ~>rIe~. .. t" a' 't th e~·t·' matter of pohteness Father Mary's ..college . and Seminary GUl.; 'a. "b .. ~p t')sma'I garmen·t;'·f . rom lme 0 f 'h'. . IS : Joseph F.. Downey, 'arts'and here in' Maryland. ' chrIstemng. A leaflet given the parents WIth the garment, whIch IS embrol(~ered '~Ith "science dean at John Carroll . He wiil assume. duties as the the Greek chi rho monogram, itncient liturgical syn1bol for Christ, explains: "Th~ white . University, ·Cleveland,· told a 18th pf(~sident of the nation's linen cloth which your c h i l d ' . . '' . 'm~eting of d~ans .o~ Jesuit col.-. second. oldest Catholic college ~.' 'd d . 'th' "B t' Members of the committee, head;' tirday afternoons, arid after each leges and umverSltles here. at the' June, 1961 corporation receIve urmg e . ap . "It b 01'1 S d own to w h eth er the ' ,IS' ed by Mrs.. Henry E. Boulds,' 'Mass on. Sunda.y. . meeting of the colleg~ council. mal c~r~mony IS. a symbol of embroi~er the child's name an!! Catholic Interest 'writer has a feeling for neatness Msgr. Sheridan has been presthe punty of hIS soul after baptismal date on the garment, Books and magazines are of an4 a genupine respect for ident for 25 years. He resigned it has been cleansed of the stain which is returned to the parents specific Catholic interest, notes others," the priest stated. Bad the office, but 'will continue at of original sin by the Sacrament within two weeks. Miss Smith. There's no children's ,penmanship is a difficult probMount St. Mary's as president of Baptism. Appropriately, the first Sacred section as yet, but it's hoped to lem to cope with on the college emeritus, ' When the cloth or Baptismal Heart baby to receive a garment add one in the future. Parish- ; level, he said, "consequently, Father Kline is a native of Garment is given to the newly' was the new child of Mr.' and iOITers are' not charged for the colleges have learned to live Williamsport, Pa. He graduated baptized baby the priest says Mrs. Daniel Delaney, 424 Linli'brary service but some' donawith bad penmal1ship by simply from Mount St. Mary's college, theSe words: "Receive this white den Street. The baby's uncle, tions have been received, which giving objective tests and reand received master and doctor garment and see that you carry Rev. Mr. Joseph P. Delaney, will will be used to add new titles. quiring papers to be typewritdegrees in philosophy from it unstained before the judg- be ordained in Rome this SunBooks on hand include many ten." , Georgetown University, Washment seat of Our Lord Jesus day. Another uncle is a sembiographies, novels, stories, of ington, D.C. He has been on the Christ, so as to' attain eternal ,inarian. missionaries and anthologies. Over 33 Years Experience Mount St. Mary's faculty since life," The providing of baptismal Soon to be on the Guild agenda 1946, and is a priest of the "The Sacred Heart Women's garments is not the only unusual is yet another project-the coScranton diocese. Guild has provided this Bap- activity of the Sacred Heart operation with pastor and priests tismal Garment so that you may Guild, headed by Mrs. John IJ. in the introduction of sung BOTTLED AND BULK GAS Alaska COMll't Studies keep it for your child as a Sullivan of 369 June Street. An- Masses for congregational par., GAS APPLIANCES memento of his rebirth in Christ other committee has opened a ticipation, in accordance with Case of Bus Rides 4 Show Rooms to serve yOU' parish library under direction of recent papal directives. FAIRBANKS (NC)-A deci- through Holy Baptism." Hyannis Falmouth Madonna Committee Miss Mabel Smith. Non-Catholics are as welcome sion in a case involving public E. Main St. 696 E, Main St. Attached to the lei:lflet is a Starting with a nucleus of 125 as Catholics in the Guild, emb' ; transportation for parochial SP 5-0686 KI 8-1560' coupon which parents detach books, the library has added new phasizes Mrs. Sullivan. Special school students is not expeCted Orleans Provincetown and return to the Madonna Com- borrowers each weetk, Hours are invitations went out at (the beto be given by the Alaska SuRoute 6 !l5 Commercial St. ginning of the club year to nonpreme Court for about three mittee of the Guild, together to suit the convenience of par585 858 with the baptismal garment. ishioners, from 3 to 4:30 on SatCatholic mothers of children atmonths. Harwich - 1494 t.ending Sacred Heart School. The case came before this state's high court on an appeal from an injunction granted by the Superior Court, which preBuilding Contractor vented the Alaska Board of EduLOS TEQUES (NC) - Vene- the social . doctrine of the cation from withholding 'public zuela's Bishops have called for Church, .basec;l: on justice, ,char,'S~ore Masonry transportation to 12-year-old a social order' that does not fty and respect' for the human ~udY Kay Quinton, a pupil a~ . JOSEPHM: F. DONAGHY limit well-being 'to a minority. . person." ~, . ,. .', . Immacuiate .Conception Catholic . '. owner/mgr. .' . . . The Bishops spoke in a joint . Consequently, they said, they School here, The injunction' was statement issued after ,their "aspire toward. .and suppoJ,"t .a : 14~ ,Campb~IIS'~, . " granted last February. .' meeting her~. . '., . ' 'social !>rder i,n which well-be.ing Bedford, , Atty' Gen. Ralph Moody o~ They . also warned' against is not limited to a minprity, but .. . :WVmciri 9-6792 Alaska argued before' the Su- communist infiltration-"among' ',one in which'well' being imiy'he' , .. preme .. Court ,that. such. ·trails;- Venezuelals ,youth and .studentS: aftained' DY' all Venezuelans." .' . . ,:H'EADQUARTERS', FOR· '. 7 JEANmE STREET 'portation is':, against the state : "The faithful must ,always .re~ ' , " ' . . ' ' ", " -'" " .' ."tdi.ONIAL . ,AND , . y. • . FAiRHAV~N ," 4-7321 :constitution. because ft consti- JIlain on,guardagainstUie·tricks .. 'T\ie,~lsliops then wa~n.ed '~o! . TRADITIONAl::FURNiniRE . "; ,tute's direct aid, to. a religious' .ofcommunism which' canmli , the' ,co,nstant attemi:?ts 9 f . «om;' , r..::. '. .' ~ ,~ :.. ;. 'Sect ' . 'give ~ail real ~ell:being;'"they munism ~to. 'infi!trate ...am.o!!g , ',~'. ~. ~ :," .." ' ~ young' students as, well 'as .th~ . 'said. , : : Young': Vin.cen~t.ians· ;T!:ie'Bishops" meeting " dealt ~ess. f;avo:t:e:I' .clas~~s, . Ei1fpl~iting . DUBUQUE- (NC) _The St. ' 'mainlywith '. hiternaI-. Church ~!' .t~e .former tliel~ .n,oble feel." 'Vincent, de Paul Sciciety should, matter!!.. ~n .this cou.ntrY. Bu(.mg!l~?f. comPl:l~~on.f!?r s~f~e;iilg, 'eniist,more 'young 'men in its 'their 's~ilte~ent. po~nted()ui, _ .apc;l.m .th,e laH~~t):l~ ~t~alte~e~. i.elief.. 'efforts, Dudley Balter" they' also disculised the' "prob:' .e~()n.o~~c. ~ond,~tlQns: ~n vv h1Cli , executive ,secretary' of the ·Sod'- '}ems of1l I:eligiou:;; and' 11l()ral the~ !iI:e.llvi llg.. • ty!s·supreme council, said·here.. ,natur.e grow~ng out. of tpe soci;a~. \--~--",;,--~-~~~~, : ·~~So far' in }his ,country, the ',;and econom!c situatjoI! of th~ na'A... 'D.~; M, C, MULLEN,', . 'Yincentians.have ,shown ,only.. ~ ,ti~n.u:., . .t \ ",' ,Inc; .', ,sporadic interest in a youth' .: In' recentnionths the \ mition M'OVE'RS' movel,llent," he stated.· h'as, been shaken by ~ul.attempt on the life of. its President, Rom" SERVING ulo Betancourt.: At the . same , China Study. Fall River, NewB'edford time agents'of the Cuban regime SOUTH ORANGE· (NC) Cape Cod, Ar~ci : " ' 'Seton Hall University's Institute 'of Premier Fidel Castro, which . . Agent:. 'is under strong Red influence, of Far Eastern StUdies' .here has ~oi1on: No. Easton E.Bridgewater 'are sowing unrest here. This is AERO. MAYFLOW'ER ' Y 'been granted $31,600 by the National Science. Foundation for' a 'taking place ~gainst' a back'~ai1dolph Plainville TRANSIT CO.INC. study on "The Utilization' and 'ground of economic' re'cession and the Brockton ,East Shopping Plaza ' . Nation-wide Movers . ,Employment of' Cci~munist and social ferment. " , . WYman 3-0904. , ., A~S9 VISIT OUR NEW STORE IN NEW BEDFORD The Bishops declared in' their ~hina's Scientists and Engi304 Kempton St. New Be~!ord neers: 1959.:60:" . statement that they ."reaffir·m.
sJ.,
SUBURBAN GAS CORP.
Vene%ue!anBishops Issue Warning Against Communist In.filtration '
BOWEN1S
Fu.rn;i,ture
'VICTOR
New'.
Mci...
,·F.LEU·R·ENT.
-
-Ny
.' _,'"
'.
•
-J
;;.' • f
: ••
:--, ."- ,"'"
•
':
." ..
I
•
*" * * new
* *