Top Banner
(HARITIES APPEAL TOTAL NEARS $600,000 MARK 6,251.00 9,713.50 7,851.50 6,643.0;) 10,013.00 Synod Justice Turn to Page Two Father Murphy To Taunton The Chancery Office has an- nounced the assignment of Rev. James E. Murphy as assistant pastor of St. Mary Parish, Taun- ton. Father Murphy has recently returned to the Fall River Dio- cese from five years of service in Latin America as a member of the Missionary Society of St. James the Apostle. While in South America, he served in Santa Cruz and Laguardia, both in Bolivia. Turn to Page Three Attleboro Mt. Carmel, Seekonk $ 9,457.00 St. Mary, No. Attleboro 9365.00 St. John, Attleboro . 8,826.00 St. Mary, Mansfield 8,428.25 St. Mary, Attleboro 7,295.00 Cape & Islands Area st. Francis Xavier, Hyannis St. Pius X, So. Yarmouth St. 'Patrick, Falmouth Assumption, Osterville Holy Trinity, West Harwich of Fatima, St. Hedwig, St. The- resa, New Bedford. There are 114 parishes in the diocese. A final report of the 1971 Appeal will issued five days after the final closing of the books. Msgr. Gomes announced that parish chairmen or priest directors should make their re- ports in person at Headquarters by noon on Friday, May 21, in order to receive proper credit for this year's Appeal. Leading Area Parishes are: Receive New World It puts a clear burden on those Catholics who divorce panel so- thil teachings from papal doc- trinal teachings to stop separat- ing their thinking, stating blunt- ly: . "The synod will have to deal with the scandalous fact that in many sectors the community.of 'the faithful neither know 'nor practice the Christian. .soCial' message." The latest draft pays tribute to the idealism of mode!n youth thirsting to see. injustices corrected in society, says that use of force "might eventually be legitimate" to vindicate grave violations of basic rights after all legal means have failed, strongly links social action with the Gos- pel, endorses active involvement of priests in social issues, and says in effect that ,a person ',can not really consider himself a true Christian if he draws' the line between faith in ,God arid tan- gible support of fellow man. The 235 bishops at the hier- archy's national meeting got into only brief discussion of the 25- Turn to Page Six Bishops Doc·um·ent. on DETROIT (NC)-The Ameri- can bishops recejved fror'nRome at their Spring meeting here a startling new synod document pn world justice that. calls for radical changes in how' individ· uals and nations relate to each other. 3,000 from the '69 figure. The ranks of both Sisters and Brothers have each dropped by more than 16,000. in the last 10 years, according. to the directory, issued today. . Turn to Page Six we look forward to an increase within the next few days. Special gift contacts are still outstand- ing. Many parishes have more returns to report." Many parishes are close to surpassing their 1970 totals. The number of parishes enrolled in the parish Honor Roll for ex- ceeding last year'sfin;ll totals is 16. Since the last reporting, parishes added are: Mt. Carmel, Seekonk; Assumption, Osterville; St. John, Pocasset; St. Mary, Holy Cross, St. Anthony of the Desert, SS. Peter and Paul, St. Roch, St. Stanislaus, Santo Christo, Fall River; Our Lady of Grace, No. Westport; St. Louis de France, Swansea; Our Lady Directory Revea·ls Catholic Population Up Slightly Cathlic Charities Appeal Dioc- esan Director, Rev. Msgr. An- thony M. Gomes, announced to- day that the 1971 Appeal has reached $585,865.47. Special Gift solicitors will complete their re- maining. contacts this. week. Parish solicitors are urged to make final returns by Monday, May 17. Msgr. ,Gomes said: "Final donations from the two phases of the Appeal can be registered until Friday noon, May 21. The books will be closed then for the 1971 final tabulations." Diocesan Lay Chairman of the Appeal, Dr. David Costa Jr. of New Bedford stated: "We are pleased at this new total and .' NEW YORK (NC)-The ber of American Catholics creased slightly last year,.' al- though . the number of priests; Religious' and seminarian;; tinued to decline. According to statistics piled by the 1971 Official Cath-. .olic Directory published here by ·P.J. Kenedy and Sons, the D.'S. ,popuiation stands at' .48,214,729, a .gain· of 342,640 OV$!r the' previous year's statis- tics. . Sisters and seminarians showed the most. drops, wi.th, the number of Religious, womeri . declining more than 7,000 frqm their' 1969 total and the semi- narians declining by more than CATHOLIC TEACHERS CONVENTION: Meeting on opening day at the 16th Annual Convention of the Catholic Teachers of the Diocese, were: Archbishop Humberto S. Me- deiros, of Boston, keynote speaker; Bishop Daniel A. Cronin, Ordinary of Fall River, Who presided at the opening session; Rev. Msgr. Robert L. Stanton, rector of the Cathedral and member of the Dioc'esan School Board. at 2 o'dock on Saturday after- .noon, May 22 in St. Mary's Cathedral, Fall River. Rev. Mr. BeaUlieu of 195 Perry Street, Acushnet was born on April 8, 1946 in New. Bedford, the son of Mrs. Florence E. Gou'. let Beaulieu and the late Octave J. Beaulieu. A graduate of .St. Anthony's High School, New Bedford, he attended Providence College, St. Thomas. Seminary, Bloomfield, .Conn.;. and received his philosophical and theological training in St. John's Semnary; Brighton. .' , Frpm St. John's Semjnary, the Acushnet deaco'n has received a B.A. and B.D. a'nct on the tenth .of June will receive' an °M.Ea. degree from Boston College. His deacon internship has been been served at St. Joseph's Parish, Attleboro during the Summer of 1979 and .during the Turn to Page Three. Thursday, May 13, 1971 PRICE 10¢ $4.00 per year An Anchor of the Soul, Sure and Firm-St. Paul The ANCHOR Rev. Mr. Richard J. Beaulieu School Closings. To Cost State Millions BOSTON' (NC) - Transfer of students from Catholic schools to public schools has already cost Massachusetts taxpayers $100 million and could cost $75 million a year for the next five years, according to a special legislative study commission. The study group, set up in 1969, also said that the declin- ing Catholic school enrollment probably cannot, be halted no matter how much, state aid is provided. But it said the decline can possibly be slowed to a less critical rate. The commission estimated it would cost $426 million to stem the decline in the Catholic school population and suggested that in the short run it would be cheaper for the state to allow Catholic-operated schools to close. But in the "long run" it would be inadvisable, it said. The report suggested that a way to arrest decline would be to "supply sufficient public funds next year and every year thereafter to freeze at present levels, or to reduce, not only tuition charges but also the pro- portion 'of parish and diocesan church revenue required to sup- port the schools." Turn to Page Two Fall River, Mass., Vol. 15, No. 19 © 1971 The Anchor Most Rev. Daniel A. Cronin, S.T.D., ordain Rev. Mr. Rich- ard J. Beaulieu to the Priesthood Priesthood.Ordination ·Set for May 22
20

05.13.71

Mar 24, 2016

Download

Documents

The Anchor

Cape & IslandsArea CATHOLIC TEACHERS CONVENTION:Meetingonopeningdayatthe16thAnnual ConventionoftheCatholicTeachersoftheDiocese, were: Archbishop Humberto S. Me- deiros,ofBoston,keynotespeaker;BishopDaniel A. Cronin,OrdinaryofFallRiver,Who presidedattheopeningsession;Rev.Msgr.Robert L. Stanton,rectoroftheCathedraland memberoftheDioc'esanSchoolBoard. st. Francis Xavier, Hyannis St. Pius X, So. Yarmouth St.'Patrick, Falmouth Assumption, Osterville Holy Trinity, West Harwich Turn to Page Two
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: 05.13.71

(HARITIES APPEAL TOTALNEARS $600,000 MARK

6,251.00

9,713.507,851.506,643.0;)

10,013.00

SynodJustice

Turn to Page Two

Father MurphyTo Taunton

The Chancery Office has an­nounced the assignment of Rev.James E. Murphy as assistantpastor of St. Mary Parish, Taun­ton.

Father Murphy has recentlyreturned to the Fall River Dio­cese from five years of servicein Latin America as a memberof the Missionary Society of St.James the Apostle. While inSouth America, he served inSanta Cruz and Laguardia, bothin Bolivia.

Turn to Page Three

Attleboro A~eaMt. Carmel, Seekonk $ 9,457.00St. Mary, No. Attleboro 9365.00St. John, Attleboro . 8,826.00St. Mary, Mansfield 8,428.25St. Mary, Attleboro 7,295.00

Cape & Islands Areast. Francis Xavier,

HyannisSt. Pius X,

So. YarmouthSt. 'Patrick, FalmouthAssumption, OstervilleHoly Trinity,

West Harwich

of Fatima, St. Hedwig, St. The­resa, New Bedford. There are114 parishes in the diocese.

A final report of the 1971Appeal will b~ issued five daysafter the final closing of thebooks. Msgr. Gomes announcedthat parish chairmen or priestdirectors should make their re­ports in person at Headquartersby noon on Friday, May 21, inorder to receive proper creditfor this year's Appeal.

Leading Area Parishes are:

Receive NewWorld

It puts a clear burden on thoseCatholics who divorce panel so­thil teachings from papal doc­trinal teachings to stop separat­ing their thinking, stating blunt­ly: .

"The synod will have to dealwith the scandalous fact that inmany sectors the community.of'the faithful neither know 'norpractice the Christian. .soCial'message."

The latest draft pays unus~al

tribute to the idealism of mode!nyouth thirsting to see. injusticescorrected in society, says thatuse of force "might eventuallybe legitimate" to vindicate graveviolations of basic rights after alllegal means have failed, stronglylinks social action with the Gos­pel, endorses active involvementof priests in social issues, andsays in effect that ,a person ',cannot really consider himself a trueChristian if he draws' the linebetween faith in ,God arid tan­gible support of fellow man.

The 235 bishops at the hier­archy's national meeting got intoonly brief discussion of the 25­

Turn to Page Six

BishopsDoc·um·ent. on

DETROIT (NC)-The Ameri­can bishops recejved fror'nRomeat their Spring meeting here astartling new synod documentpn world justice that. calls forradical changes in how' individ·uals and nations relate to eachother.

3,000 from the '69 figure.The ranks of both Sisters and

Brothers have each dropped bymore than 16,000. in the last 10years, according. to the directory,issued today.. Turn to Page Six

we look forward to an increasewithin the next few days. Specialgift contacts are still outstand­ing. Many parishes have morereturns to report."

Many parishes are close tosurpassing their 1970 totals. Thenumber of parishes enrolled inthe parish Honor Roll for ex­ceeding last year'sfin;ll totalsis 16. Since the last reporting,parishes added are: Mt. Carmel,Seekonk; Assumption, Osterville;St. John, Pocasset; St. Mary,Holy Cross, St. Anthony of theDesert, SS. Peter and Paul, St.Roch, St. Stanislaus, SantoChristo, Fall River; Our Lady ofGrace, No. Westport; St. Louisde France, Swansea; Our Lady

Directory Revea·ls CatholicPopulation Up Slightly

Cathlic Charities Appeal Dioc­esan Director, Rev. Msgr. An­thony M. Gomes, announced to­day that the 1971 Appeal hasreached $585,865.47. Special Giftsolicitors will complete their re­maining. contacts this. week.Parish solicitors are urged tomake final returns by Monday,May 17.

Msgr. ,Gomes said: "Finaldonations from the two phasesof the Appeal can be registereduntil Friday noon, May 21. Thebooks will be closed then for the1971 final tabulations."

Diocesan Lay Chairman of theAppeal, Dr. David Costa Jr. ofNew Bedford stated: "We arepleased at this new total and

.' NEW YORK (NC)-The num~

ber of American Catholics in~

creased slightly last year,.' al­though .the number of priests;Religious' and seminarian;; coi1~

tinued to decline.According to statistics com~'

piled by the 1971 Official Cath-..olic Directory published here by·P.J. Kenedy and Sons, the D.'S.Ca~h()lic'( ,popuiation stands at'

.48,214,729, a .gain· of 342,640OV$!r the' previous year's statis-tics. .

Sisters and seminarians showedthe most. ~ignificant drops, wi.th,the number of Religious, womeri .declining more than 7,000 frqmtheir' 1969 total and the semi­narians declining by more than

CATHOLIC TEACHERS CONVENTION: Meeting on opening day at the 16th AnnualConvention of the Catholic Teachers of the Diocese, were: Archbishop Humberto S. Me­deiros, of Boston, keynote speaker; Bishop Daniel A. Cronin, Ordinary of Fall River, Whopresided at the opening session; Rev. Msgr. Robert L. Stanton, rector of the Cathedral andmember of the Dioc'esan School Board.

at 2 o'dock on Saturday after­.noon, May 22 in St. Mary'sCathedral, Fall River.

Rev. Mr. BeaUlieu of 195Perry Street, Acushnet was bornon April 8, 1946 in New. Bedford,the son of Mrs. Florence E. Gou'.let Beaulieu and the late OctaveJ. Beaulieu. A graduate of .St.Anthony's High School, NewBedford, he attended ProvidenceCollege, St. Thomas. Seminary,Bloomfield, .Conn.;. and receivedhis philosophical and theologicaltraining in St. John's Semnary;Brighton. .' ,

Frpm St. John's Semjnary, theAcushnet deaco'n has receiveda B.A. and B.D. a'nct on the tenth.of June will receive' an °M.Ea.degree from Boston College.

His deacon internship hasbeen been served at St. Joseph'sParish, Attleboro during theSummer of 1979 and .during the

Turn to Page Three.

Thursday, May 13, 1971PRICE 10¢

$4.00 per year

An Anchor of the Soul, Sure and Firm-St. Paul

TheANCHOR

Rev. Mr. Richard J. Beaulieu

School Closings.To Cost StateMillions

BOSTON' (NC) - Transfer ofstudents from Catholic schoolsto public schools has alreadycost Massachusetts taxpayers$100 million and could cost $75million a year for the next fiveyears, according to a speciallegislative study commission.

The study group, set up in1969, also said that the declin­ing Catholic school enrollmentprobably cannot, be halted nomatter how much, state aid isprovided. But it said the declinecan possibly be slowed to a lesscritical rate.

The commission estimated itwould cost $426 million to stemthe decline in the Catholic schoolpopulation and suggested thatin the short run it would becheaper for the state to allowCatholic-operated schools toclose. But in the "long run" itwould be inadvisable, it said.

The report suggested that away to arrest decline would beto "supply sufficient publicfunds next year and every yearthereafter to freeze at presentlevels, or to reduce, not onlytuition charges but also the pro­portion 'of parish and diocesanchurch revenue required to sup­port the schools."

Turn to Page Two

Fall River, Mass.,Vol. 15, No. 19 © 1971 The Anchor

Most Rev. Daniel A. Cronin,S.T.D., ~ill ordain Rev. Mr. Rich­ard J. Beaulieu to the Priesthood

Priesthood.Ordination·Set for May 22

Page 2: 05.13.71

'.

6,007.00

6,176.50

4,241.00

8,513:50

3,991.00

3,132.50

2,357.002,902.50

7,109.25627:00

12;898J,102,193.00

867.50

672-2391Rose E. Sullivan

Jeffrey E. Sullivan

New B'edford' Area

D. D. .Wilfred C;Sullivan Driscoll

FUNERAL HOME206 WINTER STREETFALL RIVER, MASS.,

672-3381

JEFFREY E. SULLIVANFuneral Home550 Locust Street

Fall River, Mass.

Brewster- . ",Our Lady of the Cape 2,568.00~

Buzzards Bay-St. Margaret 3,312,00

Centerville-,Our Lady of Victory 4,562.95

Chatham-Holy Redeemer 3,380.00

Edgartown-St. Elizabeth . '866.50

Falmouth-St. Patrick' 7,851..50Hyannis-

SL Francis Xavier 10,013.00Nantucket-, Our Lady ~f the Isle 2,557,50

Oak Bluffs-Sacred Heart 1,232.00

Osterville~Assumption 6,643.50 'Pocasset-St. John 3;899.00Provincetown-, St. Peter 1,250.00So. Yarmouth-

St. Pius X 9,713.50Vineyard Haven-'::

St. Augustine 650.00, West Harwich':""

Holy Trinity 6,251.00

3,318.509,365.004,420.759,457.00

2,531.50

3,080.00

. $ 6,849:008,826.002,831.005,972.007,295.005,385.006,802.758,428.25

Taunton Area

Attleboro Area

PAR·ISH TOTALSF~n River Area, '

, \

Funeral ServiteEdward F. Carney549 CO,unty Street

New Bedford 999-6222

Serving the area since 1921

Michael C" Austin', Inc.

Fall'.River-;-,-',. New Bedford-:-St. Mary' . 12,509.00 .". Holy Name'

Blessed Sacrament 1,251.00Espiiito S~n'to 2,28~.00 Assumption

Immaculate Conception

HHOIIY Ncro~s' 221"586051.0000 3,916.85

o y, arne ,: C 2 2'Notre Dame 6,306.85, Mt. armel f 14

3, 1

3.07

O L d f h Our Lady 0 Fatima' ,67 .00ur ay.o teAngels " . 12,994.06 ou; La~y of

Our Lady of Health 3,071.00 erpetual HelpSacred HeartHoly Rosary 3,620.00

Immaculate Conception St. Anne 1,888.50St. Anthony of Padua 2,760.00

4,733.77 St. Boniface 255.00Sacred Heart 7,177.00 CSt. Anne 2872 00 St. asimir 812.50

,. St. Francis of Assisi 900.00St. Anth<;>nY of the

Desert ... .' 1,786.50"' St. Hedwig 1,368.50St. Hyacinth 1,165.00

St. Anthony. of Padua 2,915.25 St. James, Ii, ,607.99St. ,Elizabeth ',' 355.00 .S1:I. John the Baptist 2,271.00 . St.Joh~ the .Baptist' . 5,300.04St. Joseph 5,057.00 St. Joseph ' ' 6,146.25

St L . 233300 St. Kilian • 3,348.00. OlliS , . 'St.Lawrence . 12,257.00

' St. Mathieu ,~ . 2,088.34 ' St. Mary .. '6;356.50St. Michael . 6,723.50'SLPatrick 4,484.00 St. Theresa. 5,245.00SS. Peter and Paul 7,020.50, Acushnet-St. Roch 3,363.00 . St. Francis XavierSt. Stanislaus 4,128.50 Fairhaven-St. William 4,947.00 St. JosephSanto Ch'risto . 3,951.00 St. Mary

Assonet-St. Bernard . 2,053.50 Sacred HeartsCentral Village- Mattapoisett-

St. John Baptist 3,II6.00 St. Anthony .North' Westport- North Dartmouth-

Our Lady of Gr~ce 4,505.00 St. Julie'Ocean Grove~

St. Mchael 1,404.00 SO~~hMDartIl)Outh-Somerset- ., . ary

St. John of God 4,893.00 Wareham-;St. Patrick 5,491.50 st. PatrickSt. Thomas More 9,422.50 Westport-

Swansea- St. GeorgeOur Lady of Fatima 6,875.83St. Dominic, 3,985.00 Cape & Islcu1ds AreaSt. Louis de France 5,608.83

Attleboro­Holy Ghost'St. JohnSt. JosephSt. MarkSt. MarySt: Stephen

, St: TheresaMansfield-St. MaryNorth Attleboro­

Sacred HeartSt. Mary ,

, Norton-St. MarySeekonk-Mt. Carmel

" " ." I

O'ROURKEFuneral Hi;»me

571 Second Street'. . I

Fall River, Mass.679-6072

MICI1AEL J. McMAHONRegistered Emb61mer/'

Licensed Funeral Director

i

School Clo~ings,Continued from P~ge One

At the same time, the Massa­chusetts Council of Churches re­affirmed its' opposition to publicaid to private schools. But, thecouncil Sai9 it woul'ct approvestate aid to a small !nj.1mber ofnonpublic schools. wpich servethe poor. ' '

I

DIREctOJR:Bishop ero­'nin has named E.ev~ WilliamE. Farland, pastor of St.

I

Ann's Parish, Raynham as,spiritual director 6f the St.vincent de Paul Sbciety ofthe Taunton Area.' He suc­ce~ds Rev. Cornelirs J. O'­NeIll who became pastor ofSt. J()hn the Bapti~t Parish,Central Village on March 18.., ., I

LEADING AREAPARISHES, " I

,Continued from Pa,ge One

Fait Rover Area, I

"Holy Name, Fall River 22,561.00Our Lady of the An'gels,. Fall River 12,994.00

St. Mary, Fall River 12,509.00 Taunton-I St. ThomC\s More,' Holy F,amily 3,298.00

Somerset ' 9,422.50 Holy ,Rosary 1,827.00Sacred Heart, I Immaculate Conception

~all River I 7,1 7~.00 Our Lady' of Lourdes ~:i~~:~~New Bedfordi Area Sacred Heart 5,237.15

I St. Anthony 3,733.30

M~e<;r~~ford. II 14,212.07 St. Jacques, 3,852.00St. Joseph. 5,527.00

St. Joseph, Fairhaven:' 12,898.90' St.Mary 5,562.00St. Lawrence,' St. Paul' ' 4,578.00

New Bedford 12,257.00. Dighton...,;",St. Peter 1,692.00St. James, .. North '[)ighton'-

New Bedford 1UJ07:99 " St. Joseph' .St. Mary, ' North Easton-

South Dartmouth II 8,513.50 Immaculate Conception

. Taunton ~reQl 5,555.00I Raynham-St. Ann 4,208.00

I South Easton"":""St. Mary, Taunton . 5,q62.00Immaculate Conceptidn, Holy Cross

N9. Easton 5,555.00, 51. ,Joseph, Taunton i 5,527.00

Sacred Heart, Ta~ntor ,5,237.15Imm,aculate Conception;

Taunton 5,227.50

, .~ ' ..

Bishop of Fall River

Gifts

1Il""'''''''''''"11''''''''U'''.'''''''''''''''''''''';''''""""",,,,,'lIl1"IIIIIIIIUUU"""UUlllIUTHE ANCHOR

Second Class Postage Paid at Fail River.M3ss., Published every Thursday at 410Highland A'lenue. Fall River, Mass. 02722b)' the Catholic Press of the Diocese of FallRiver. SUbscription price bY' mall, postpaid$~ ..OO per year.

Proi. No. M·98Hill vs. Pease

, Ex Capite: ligamenEDICTAL CITATlDN

Insofar' as the whereabouts of MaryEleanor Peas'e, party ,in the case of Hill vs.PE'ase" Protocol Number M-98, are unknown,Wl cIte the said Mary Eleanor Pease to3~'pear before the ,said Tribunal of the­Diocese of Fall River on May 14, 1971, 3t1(1:00 A.M" at 344 Highland' Avenue, FallRiver, Massachusetts, to give testimony toe!tablish:

WHETHER THE MARRIAGE. IN QUESTIONBE NULL?

Pastors and' others' having knowledge ofthe whereabouts of the said Mary Eleanor ,Pease are advised to notify her in regardto this Edictal Citation. '

/s/ Henry T. Munroe. , Officialis

Given from the Seat' of thisT'ribunal, Fall River, Massachusetts,on thiS the 7th' day of May, 1971.hi Roland Bousquet

Notary ,

$31McDonald's Paint Store, Fal-·

mouth$30

McCormack's" Apothecary, ~o.Yarmout,h

$25Jenki~s Funeral Home, W.

FalmouthDanny. Kay's, E. FalmouthF. V. Lawrence, Inc. FalmouthCape Bus Lines, FalmouthR. B. Corcoran Company; Hy­

a:1nisMartin's, Mobile "Homes, ·E.

\Vareham,_ ,oJ..,

Wareham Lodge of Elks No.1!;48 .

Sunnybrook Farms', 'So; 'Yar-mouth

Anonymous, So. YarmouthSo. Yarmouth Package StoreAngelo's Market, So. Yar-

mouthWayside Studio, So. YarmouthWright Oil Co., FalmouthJohn Sheehan Real .Estate,

FalmouthWalsh Realty Cb., Teaticket

lIishop Approves~t~ew Assignment

Most Rev. Daniel A. Cronin,S.T.D., Bishop of the Diocese ofFall River, has approved thenomination of· Rev. WilliamHartmann, SS.CC., provincial ofthe Congregation of the SacredHearts, to' serve as AssistantPastor at 9ur Lady of the As­sumption Parish, New Bedford.

\ .

THE ANCHOR-D1oc~se of. f91,1 Rivf:;r-Thurs. May,~~,.19.7,:L

DIOCESE OF fiALL RIVER

OFFIG1ALASSIGNMENT

Rev. James E. Murphy, having completed' his five-year·voluntary service in Bolivia,' So. America as a member ofthe SoCiety of St.' James" 'has been as~igned as assistant'pasto'r at St. Mary's Church, Tal~nton. ,

Assignment effective ,Wedne.>day, May 5, 1971.

$45Anonymous, Hvannis

. $42 '

Anonymous, Hyannis$32

Anonymous, Falmouth

MAY 17Most Rev. James E. Cassidy,

D.O., 1951, 3rd Bishop of FallRiver, 1934-51.

MAY 19Rev. Ambrose Lamarre, O.P.,

1940, Dominican Priory, FallRiver.

Rev. Thoma's Trainor, 19.41,Pastor, St. Louis, Fall River.

Necrology"MAY 1~

Rev. William McDonald, 5'.5.,1941, St. Patrick, Falmouth.

Rt. Rev. J. Joseph Sullivan,'P.R., 1960, Pastor, Sacred Heart,Fall River.

2

MAY 20Rec. Antonio L. daSilvia, 1952,

,Our Lady of Health, Fall River.

SpecialCape Cod & Islands

$500St. Vincent' De Paul Confer­

ence, St. Patrick FalmouthSt. Vincent De Paul Confer­

cree, St. Fr;lncis Xav.ier, Hyan-,ni~ ,

Bay Colony Federal Savings& Loan Assn., So. Yarmouth

, $100St. Patrick's Guild, FalmouthSalt Winds, FalmouthFalmouth DinerCranberry Highway. Realty

Co., Buzzards BayMid-Cape Motors, HyannisMr. ,& Mrs. L. C.' Antonellis,

FalmouthShoreway Acres, "Falmouth

, .$75

Atty. Joseph J. Reardon, Hy­annis

Wood Lumber Co., Falmouth$50

Trade Winds, FalmouthThe Fal~outh National BankThe Rib House, West DennisClauson's Chevrolet & Olds,

Inc.! Falmouth ' .Bishop Tyler K of C, HyannisSpartan Cleaners. HyannisSuni Sands by the Sea, Cen-

terville .

b 5

Page 3: 05.13.71

~25

Amalgamated Clothing Work-ers of America No. 177

J. T. Hughes

Mrs. Harold S. R. BuffintonCarousel Mfg. Corp.

Joan Fabrics

.Fall River Catholic NursesGuild

Lewis Gray Sons, Co.Dr. David PrialFurniture VillageEsquire Package StoreHathaway Funeral ServiceDixon Burial Vault Co.Fall River Steam & Gas Pipe

Co.Green's Storage WarehouseJoseph Nadeau's Sons, Inc.Mass. Catholic Order of Fores-

tersSullivan's Motor SalesFall River Permanent Firemens

Benefit Assn.Dr. Frank CollinsA' FriendMr. & Mrs. Joseph Griffin

Resolution PassedBy p'riests l Senate

ST. CLOUD (NC)-A resolu­tion recog!,lizing. conscientiousobjection as:a legitimate positionfor Catholics was passed by the12-member diocesan priests' sen­ate here in Minnesota.

The senate also· asked thatsome Catholic institutions in thediocese offer counseling to youngmen making decisions about mil­itary service. Senate spokesmennoted' that the resolution im­plied no criticism of those whochoose to serve in the military.

___,ZIP CODE _

of

Maryknoll Fathers50 Dunster Road

Chestnut Hill, Mass. 02167

l\'AME _

ADDRESS _

CITY

STATE

Dear Fr. Leo Shea:

Please send me your booklet on making awill. I understand there is no obligation.

Mail the couponfor your copy today!

.-.-..~.-~---------------------

THE ANCHOR~Diocese of Fall River-Thu~s. May 13, 1971 3

Special Gifts$350

St. Vincent de Paul ParticularCou!?cil

$200General Cleaning Company

$100Workers UnionTextile

AmericaThomas Walsh Moving Co.A FriendDr. Americo B. Almeida, Inc.Mr. & Mrs. James V. Terrio'Mr. & Mrs. William Sullivan1971 Confirmation Class-St.

John of 'GodAtty. & Mrs. John B. Cum-

mingsWalter A. Furman CompanyPeerless Laundry .Tioga Sportsw.ear Co.Dr. Robert H. MoeMary NoonKatherine A. Harrington

$75Herve LagasseHigh Point Paper Box Corp.Fall River Sheet Metal Co. Inc.

$70Beetle Plastics, Div of Cromp­

to.n & Knowles Corp.$50

Eugene PontiffFall River Emble'm ClubJohn F. Stafford Ins. AgencyKen-Lac Chemical Co., Inc.Simon's Supply, Co., Inc.Flynn's Package Store, Inc.Poole Silver Co., Inc.Holy, Rosary Women's GuildFall River Sheet Metal Co. Inc.Dr. Alan G. Simpson,Dr. William Freeman

. $35Ashton's Funeral Home

$30Dr. Richard H.; Fitton Jr.Clementine Thibault

Sixteen pages, clearly written andcolorfully illustrated, tell why youshould make your will and how to goabout it. Charts on page 3 show whatyour heirs can lose if you die withouta will. Page 5 discusses why you need

, a lawyer's help in drawing up yourwill. Page 6 goes into detail abouthow to start and what to in'clude. Nofather, young or old, should neglecthis will. Maryknoll's booklet will con­vince you!

Every father-even the youngest~should

read Maryknoll's free booklet on wills!

. ',.,

REV. JAMES E. MURPHY

AssignmentsContinued from Page One

Son of the late John J. andthe late Anna Flynn Murphy,Father Murphy was born in NewBedford on May 20, 1935. Afterstudying at Holy.Family Schools,he attended St. Peter College inBaltimore.

After preparing for the Priest­hood at St. Mary's Seminary inBaltimore, he was ordained onMay I I, 1-963 by the Most Rev..James L. Connolly.

While in the Fall River Dio­cese, Father Murphy served asassistant pastor at St. PatrickParish, Fall River, before, doingmissinary ~ork in Latin America.

Society,

A.. Cour-

National$400

Lady's Chapel$200

Msgr. Joseph

Invitation

ST. WILLIAM1SGUILD DANCE

Sat. Eve.,' May 158-12

Our

$125Talbot Tweedy

$100Holy Family Women's GuildNu-Brite Chemical Co.

$50Women's Guild,

Stephenson's, Westport

Jardineers OChestraJTickets at Door ­

$1.50 per pe~so~•••••••• • ••••••+~

Bishop Cronin cordially in­

vites all the clergy, religious and

laity in the Diocese to participate

in the ordination of Rev. Mr.Richard W. Beaulieu in St.

Mary's Cathedral, Fall River on

Saturday afternoon, May 22 at2 o'clock.

Rev.noyer

Rev.Rev.

Fall River$2000

F. L. Collins & Sons, Inc.$1600

B. M. C. Durfee Trust Co.$1500

Fall River Herald News$750

Siades Ferry Trust Co.$614

Residents of Catholic MemorialHome

$500Firestone Foam Products Co.

St. Ann'sRaynham

John Bright Shoe' StoreSociety of St. Vincent De Paul

St. Jacques Conference 'Turin's Market

$35St. Jacque's Women's GuildMt. Hope Machinery Co.

$25Co'mmunity Paint Co.Holy Rosary, Children of Mary

SodalityPolish American Citizens ClubWeir Auto SalesTaunton Stove Co.League of Sacred Heart; St.

Jacques'Octagon Service StationPowers Pontiac, Inc.Atty. Philip J. Assiran

William W. NortonBenoit Galland

$125Rev. Leo M. Curry'

$75G. Fred Swanson, Inc. Provi­

clence$50

In Memory of Maurice. M.Lyons'

Rev. James A. ClarkJoseph V. Tally, Inc. Provi­

dence$25

A. Gross Candle Co., Linden,New Jersey

Rev. Kenneth J. Delano

A Friend

.- Special Gifts""·:New Bedford Taunton

$2000 $200Standard Times Publishing Co. St. Vincent De Paul

$1000 Holy FamilyFirst National Bank

$700

$500Loranger Construction Corp:

I $250Catholic Woman's Club·Harriet Transportation Co.

$227.50Charities Concert Com~ittee

$200Berkshire Hathaway, Inc.

- $150Debrosse Oil Co.

$125Capt: Frank's Fish Market

$100National Bank of FairhavenChamberland Mfg~ Co.Ernest J. Flood

$50A FriendCoastal Fisheries~ea View FilletJ. F. St. Aubin Co.Abramson, Titus & PutnamVermette & Bates Insurance

$40Harry Silverstein

• $30Charles S. Ashley & Sons In-

Ordination

Sl1rance$25

Babbitt Steam Specialty Co.A FriendBrodeur's Machine Co.

.Calvin' Clothing Corp.Dr. Max BlumBradley & HalliwellParagon Tours & TravelNovick - JewelersGreater New Bedford & Cape

Cod Labor Council, AFL-CIOCatholic Pharmacists Guild o(

St.'·James"Dr. H. F. RileyHumphrey, Covil & Coleman,

Inc.Enos Home Oxygen Therapy

Co.Lesco's Wholesale Tobacco &

CandyJay and Bee Fillet Co.New Bedford Fillet Co., Inc.L & S Concrete Co.Mr. & Mrs. Leo St. AubinThe Sippican Corp.Bricklayers, Masons & Plas-

terers, l.N. No. 39 Union

Continued from Page Onepast academic year' served at

. Our Lady of Fatima Parish, Sud-bury. .

Rev. Mr. Be,aulieu served asThe Anchor student reporter ofSt. Anthony's High School.

During the installation ofArchbishop Humberto S. Me­.deiros as Archbishop of Bostonon last Oct. 3, the Acushnet dea­con W1;lS the .representative ofthe student body of St. John'sSeminary.

Father Beaulieu will be prin­cipal celebrant at a concele­brated Mass at 6 Sunday eve­ning, May 23 in St. FrancisXavier Church; Acushnet.

Concelebrants will be: Rev.Walter A. Sullivan, also thehomilist; Rev. Clement Beaulieu,SS,CC., a cousin; Rev. AureleS, Pepin, SS.CC., pastor. of St.Francis Parish; Rev. Joseph D.Maguire, Rev. Thomas L. Rita,Rev. Normand Boulet, Rev.James W. Fahey, Rev. RobertDonovan, Rev. Michael Mer­chant, Rev. Richard Buntel, Rev..Joseph Kane, Rev. Juan Aiel's,Rev. John D'Arcy, and Rev.James Grant.

Page 4: 05.13.71

" .

I -

, SJ~qYINGCONVENTION PROGRAM:. Among the leaders at the Teachers Con-vention at Feehari High School, Attleboro, were: Rev. Michael O'Neill, superintendent ofDiocesan IScho'olsl,.Sppkane, Wash.,' speaker' at two sessions; Sr. Therese Ant.on~, RSM.,principal of Feeh~n l:Jigh, standing; Sr. Mary Urban,. RSM., assistant. superintendent ofSchools in Fall River, seated. . . '

.Spebi~ I,. Gifts' LeaveT)s Man~f~cturing Co: Inc ; MacDonald Moving & Storage

I., Mrs. Leon Pml Co.

'Attlebdro Swift ~ Fisher Co. K. F. Bassler, Inc.'. I $1200 I SwankSMangeville Che.vrolet C.O.

I' I $75 ,Ringuette's Market . n":·"

Krew, nc ' .Hi-Lo Market ' .,' rI . $600 I A Friend .

M &

1.J h J M' . $60 V. H. B.laCkmgton & Co.

r. rs. osep . ICOhl, St d d PI t' C I W D CS I ' an ar as ICS 0., nco ,amsutta rug o. .r." $500, I $50 PI~stic Craft. N~velty

I Beauchaine's, Inc. Mlch I A V t & S IM · & M J : h' J W· ht ' . ae " IgOrI 0 on, ncr. rs. osep . rIg I' t bo 0 L d I L d' .

1$400 I , n er r aun ry, nco 'yons A vertlsmg .

Jeweled Cross cd., Inc. C. Ray Randall Mfg. Co. Inc. N~. Attleboro Plumbmg &, ' $300 I ~ , Benedict Circle No. 61, Daugh- Heatmg

ters of IsabellaSociety .f St. Vincent de Paul Mrs. Herbert Houghton

Particular Council, Attleboro' Mr. & Mrs. ~~~bert Bergh. Attleboro Motor Sales. ~ $250 I ' Portugue~e. American Club.

Attleboro Printing & Embos- A IMr. & M s Fritz Ulmschneider, nthony Plmenta, Seekonk

I

Ising Co.Seekonk ., .r $35 Carl A. Lindberg, Seekonk

. $150 I Re.ad's Dairy., S,eekonkAnson Motors, Inc.St. Vincent de ~aul Socl'ety, EIleen Darlmg s Restl;lura.nt,

I Reynolds & Markman, Inc:Sacred Heart Conference' Se.ekonk

i I$25

$125. Frenchie's Service Station Hendricks Pools, Seekon~

Drs. Ge rge & S:ylvla Lauro Mr. & Mrs. George Glaiel Seekonk Oil CompanyDante, I c. I B.P.O.E.' Attleboro Lodge No. O'Brien's Trailer Sales' Reho-

, $100 I ,1014 both ' ,Conlon Donnelly Co.

~:';'~:~':":"::';L;:,:~~'''~t''''~;~':'~'''':~~effi~iency ih Ireland jth~se days."

A fishe~man, :.delighted withtwo-chambered American lobsterpots, saysj of the lobster, "It'slike he was going intb the kitchenfirst, and hen, as if the kitchenwasn'.t goold enoughl for him, hegoes intolthe parlor. His highsocial notiqns are' thb end of himaltogether.'" I ,

Presidetl Devaler1.whose res­idence is n the Phoenix Park,is referred tQ .as :i'uie man up inthe park." The diffi<:u'lty of run­'ing a SChO/OI with ~ll grades in.one' room s put ,thus: "Can anywoman w~tch eig~t saucepansat a time?'!' I

The Irisl1 distaste for giving aclear, unhJdged answer is illus­trated by ~hat a. taitress saidto People who, after a long de­lay, wantetI to knoW when theymight be' s~ated:"1 rouldn'tsavbut that baybe ye might b~_~hinking of coming'soonnow."

, I

i

RT. REV.

MSGR;

JOHN, ,5:,

KENNEDY

. By

,4 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of 1:911 ~.iv.e~-Thurs. May 13~19!1 ',"

\', -:~

Co.mmends Lucey's B'oakAbout' Irelcindl, th,~,·.' Irish

I ' .', •

, 'Charles Lucey is an' American'pewspaperma.n who was'

once assigned to lreland: and has' for many years roamedover' that 'country for' his own pleasure~ 'His' 'impressions

, 9f .the .land and the people hE~ now sets down in Ireland, "'. '. and, the Irish: :Cathleen Ni ' '

Houlihan,Is Alive' and Well looking .'sa·dness ·a'bout'· ·Dublin, , , which now seems to have lifted. :

· (Dpubleday; 277 far~ Ave., Tnere is marked modernization:New York, N.Y.I0017 $6.95) 'there, but, as y~t, not enpugh to:

That ,subtitle. is a giveaway" ,destroy the l1l1iquecharacte~"of,:..isn'tit?Not froll) Mr. Luceya this capital. The. very. way' in

, . blast of a 'bleat about backward- 'which the people walk, bespeak~ne'ss and bigotry holding Ireland a new attitude.' .in thrall. An affectionate obser'v- Other' parts' of the country,

· erhe is, .out not uncritical. , have their merits extolled 'by the

(::-:::X:':":""" """"":': "'" ':::':::::'::":':':"': -::::,( •author, who is especially, smittenw'ith the 'beauty 'of the, West. His'descriptions of landscape ,and·seascap~ . ate. vi\;,id .and con,vey'the' enchantment'of which' 'Ire:landis capable, And he gives ' ,.brief, 'speaking likenesses. of alltypes·of. people.. . ,

'Speaking of ·speaking,he paysconsiderable, attention 'to' the,question of the Irish language.',He is not oJ.the company which:

. mairita'in's' that clinging tqthcHis 'father was a Kerrytpan: ' native .language is a' mistake.' He'

, and Mr, Lucey' ha~' visited the' thinks that 'there is much meritspot, overlooking Dingle Bay, in its retention and cultivation,where his father spent his early although plailily he is no' fanaticyears. But the house of those, on the subject. .

, .days is gone. And in its place' 'Emigration Reduced,stands a tidy' new one, occupied He points out the'improverhentby Hollanders. That cha'nge says in education, the amount ofsomething of what has hllPpened money which the governmentin and to Ireland. . spends on it, the number of up-

Mr. Lucey remarks on a gen- to-date schools, and the yield'eral change in"ireland, and iIIus- of this effort. The concentrationtrates it, again and 'again in the 'on better. schooling. he is con­course of his book. Your review- vinc~p. 'ispaying off by'ready­er saw this for himself I~st Sum- ing the young for the opportuni- '

· mer ona visit after an interval 'ties which are' opening up in,of 30- years. The bel;luty and Ireland~ .

· charm 'of Ireland were still there, Such opportunities' are seen in ,but the touch of modernity was the' introduction and develop-·

.'almost ·everywhere, afong 'with a ment of 'new industries, and the.degree of 'prosperity which con- overhauling of old 'ones, such as,trasted sh~rply with conditions commercial fishing. Even in thethree decades earlier. West, much ·the poorest part of

Vigorous, Self-Assured the country, and one from whichIn hi,S account of Ireland to- the young have' hurried away,.'

day, Mr. Lucey unobtrusively in; new kinds of work are beingterweaves strands' of history: At'!- created,' an,d,. new jobs. The re-,cient Ireland: Christian Ireland, suit, there in some measure' and'Ireland invaded by Norseme,n more noticeably elsewhere., is'ana' Danes, lI'eland seized by that emigration has been greatly'England, the centuries of subju- reduced.

.gation and religious persecution, Ireland is still a Catholic coun-.the stirrings of rebellions, the nu- try almost par excellence. But'gatory concessions,made piece- Mr. Lucey detects 'a questioningmeal by. Westminster, the bleak mentality which, for Ireland, is,years of landlordism and famine, novel. It has been charged thatthe hemorrhage of .emigration, the Catholic bishops run thethe final, costly securing of inde- r.ountrv, bllt fhi<: i<: .rlp.finip.th; notpendence, /the civil war, which ,the case, and Mr. Lucey cites'followed: evidence that it is not..Nor' are.

These strands are almost en- ,the people priest-ridden, as an­tirely of a dark hue; arid much of other canard', would have it.the history of Ireland. has been. " Many pf the' priests may be'melancholy. ':rhere 'w~re tliose" oastor-ridden," however, since.even in the recent pa~t'who said the average age for becoming athat. tpe gloom would continue parish priest is 60.

-. indefinitely, so pessimistic were Samples ~f Talkthey ,about Ireland's chances in Ecumenism ha~ had signifi-the contemporary world. , cant success in Ireland, accord-:

Mr. Lucey holds strongly. that ing to Mr. l,ucey, 'and even someIreland . should and could be. a in the North, "the .six courities ofmore Im.portant and. effectl~e Ulster. He devotes'a chapter to'presence m the world tha? she IS the situation there, summarizing'?ow. B~t he sees her as vIgorous, the' shameful story of Orange:mcreasmgly 'self-assured and repression of the Catho!" 'able and likely to count for more 'He '-scores - Britain, ~~~houtas a moral force. whos~ huge annual subsidy UI-

Vivid Descriptions. ". ster could not survive, for failure'He accords much space' ·to to insist on civil rights and ,gen­

Dublin, which is understandable. uine equaiity.And he says', of that incompar- No book on Ireland would beable city that today it is' alive' iiI complete without 'samples of the

.a. new way. This is true.' One re~ talk of, the Irish. Of a priestmembers a brooding, backward- very, slow at Mass"so.meoneob-

r'

,.

Page 5: 05.13.71

Noted' _Edu~ator Urges -'Teachers to Develop

Sense of lf/onder in Children

RELIGIOUS EDUCATOR: Dr. Francoise D'Arcy, pro­fessor of religious education at Fordham University" indiocese to address CCD workers and annual Teachers' con­vention, confers with Rev. Ronald A. Tosti, diocesan CCDdirector.

$25

Mr~ & Mrs. ,Raymond Berger­cn, Mr. & Mrs. Norman Gen­dron, Mr. & Mrs. Nelson Girard,Mr. & Mrs. Raymond J. Le­Blanc, Bella LePage _.

Mr. & Mrs. John J. O'Toole,In Memory of Henry Phaneuf,Mr. & Mrs., Bernard Rossi, TheSleight Family, Mr. & Mrs. Ger­ard E. Tardif, Mr. & Mrs. Wil­liam J. Yeary

Mr. & Mrs. Arthur Barrette,Mr. & Mrs. Gerard Charest, Mr.& Mrs. Leo N. Coons, Mr. & MrsMartin McCoy Jr., Mr. & Mrs.Ronald Pimental

Mr. & Mrs. Leo Ricard, Mr. &Mrs. Paul Robert, Mr. & Mrs.Theodore J. Schick

HOPEIS MANYTHINGS •••

CITy STATE__· _ZIP CODE _

Gratefully yours in Christ,

Monsignor Nolan

Dear Friend:

There are a million·and·a·half refugees in theHoly Land, each one the voiceless victim of awar now in its 22nd year. '

Mostly children, they are refugees torn to,shreds by war.

We mend them best by giving them hope.Hope is a pair of shoes, an egg, a clean

blanket, a chance to receive the sacraments.Hope is a handful of practical·action people­

priests, Sisters, and qualified volunteers-wholeave their own homes and become refugees'in the Holy Land for the refugees.

These people, just a handful, are our Pontif·ital Mission for Palestine.

They are people who feed, teach, heal, clothe,mend, fulfilling the love·mission of Jesus Christ.in Bethlehem, Nazareth, -Cairo, Damascus, andwar points in between.

Their mission is love, and peace y.'ith justice.Their strategy is service-the works of mercy,

person·to·person, in the name of Jesus Christ.There is hope' in the heart of the blind child

in the Gaza Strip because he is learning a tradein the Pontifical Mission Center for the Blind.. In Abu·Dis, outside Jerusalem, an elderlyMuslim prays contentedly to Allah becauseSister PatriCk, from Ireland, is at his side.

Six Sisters from India - a, physician, twonurses, three social workers-have arrived inwar-torn Jordan, to work in the camps and liveno better than the refugees.

You give them hope because you care.We ask your prayers, for peace and for the

safety of us all.We beg you to help us keep hope alive. Please

use the coupon below. I'll be writing to, thankyou for your gift.

NEAR EAST1t MISSIONS,

TERENCE CARDINAL COOKE, PresidentMSGR. JOHN G. NOLAN, National SecretaryWrite: CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE Assoc.330 Madison Avenue· New York, N.Y. 10017Telephone: 212/YUkon 6·5840

,r

- ANOPEN

LETTERTO

ALLOUR

READERS

fOR _

Please NAME _return coupon

with your STREET__=-- _offering

~--------------- :::.-C:>.

Dear ENCLOSED PLEASE fiND $Monsignor Nolan:

o THE HOLY FATHER'S MISSION AID T'O THE ORIENTAL CHURCH

THE CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION

THE ANCHOR-Dicces,e of Fall River-Thurs .•May 13, 1971 5

Charities AppealAcushnet

ST. FRANCIS XAVIER

$100Mr. & Mrs. John Santos

$50Mr. & Mrs. Raymond A. BosseMr & Mrs Arthur H. Gronlund

$40Mr. & Mrs. Roland LaBossiereMr. & Mrs. Rene Racine

$35Leo, Violet & Yvonne BoucherDr. & Mrs. Hector Roy

$30Mr. & Mrs. Richard H. BarryMr. & Mrs. James M. HaworthIn Memory of Alfred A. Lan-

glois

• TYPE SET

• PRh1TED BY OFFSET

• MAILED

Discuss Ali~nation'NEW YORK (NC)-More than

30 experts will discuss "Aliena­tion: Plight of Modern Man?" atthe eighth biennial Institute inPastoral Psychology to be heldat Fordham University June21-25.

The ANCHOR

- BY THE -

LEARY PRESSFALL RIVER

urged.. "Live, share and enjoyhis life-then you can shareyour awareness of God as thesource of life."

Faith CommunityTeachers should respect the

rhythm of a chiid's growth, Dr.O'Arcy pointed out. "Why mustwe rush and hurry? Why mustFirst Communion, for instance,be on a certain day of a certainmonth if a child isn't ready. Wehave all our lives for our en­counter with God."

At a question period followingher address, Dr. D'Arcy notedthat a religion class should notbe so much a formal teacher­pupil relationship as "a commu­nity trying to deepen its faith,with the adult sharing his longerexperience of God.

"We used to have all thequestions and answers," shenoted, "but now we're not sureof the meanings we used to an­swer the questions.

"The Church," she concluded,"often hides God instead of re­vealing, Him. We must all try tobecome more transparent toGod." .

have traced for us, without anyquestioning, we are only in asociological religion, and wehave not made faith our own.But," she added, ','faith is ofllypossible if unbelief. is also pos­sible."

Revelation, she' said, "is theconstant action of the spiritawaking us one by one to God.We are not a 'crowd to God."

Today's ChallengeWhat should we do with chil­

dren to make God real to them?'The speaker. said this was thechallenge of religious educationtoday. Such education, shestressed, is not simply the in­stilling of certain patterns of be­havior, but "development ofreadiness for an encounter withGod." Out of such' readiness,she said, should grow the desirefor prayer, celebration and com­rriitment to Christian values.

"If we don't respect stages ofgrowth, we indoctrinate, wedon't educate," she warned.

First should come the awak­ening of a sense of wonder in'the child, said Dr. D'Arcy, thenthe building up of a pedagogicalrelationship between teacher andtaught.

"Wonder is opposed to thetechnological, utilitarian mental­ity," she said. "But we so oftenkill the sense of wonder-,-it's n'otstrange we don't have enoughpoets and artists."

Referring to the commune lifestyle, Dr. D'Arcy said that"wonderful things" were to befound in such groups: "But thetype of society we have builtdoesn't allow them to live withus. They must live against us.We are developing a mechanical,stereotyped sort of person inour schools,"· .

A child's first idea of God willbe in the image of the adults heknows best, said the educator.Thus it is important to developa loving, trusting relationshipwith children. "Don't teach," she

By PATRICIA McGOWAN

Parents and educators of theFall River Diocese had two op­portunities last week to hear anoutstanding figure in the field ofearly childhood religious educa­tion. Dr, Francoise D'Arcy, co­author of the "Come to theFather" series of catecheticaltextbooks, spoke to CCD work­ers at Sacred Hearts Academy,Fall River, and to a generalmeeting of elementary schoolteachers at the annual Teachers'Convention at Bishop FeehanHigh School, Attleboro.

Her topic was "The Awaken­ing of Faith in the Child," whichshe presented in the form ofreflections, first upon the faith,of the teaching adult and thenupon the learning child.

A native of France, Dr.O'Arcy is on the religious educa­tion faculty of Fordham Univer­sity. She has taught in manyparts of the world, and she de­scribed her goals by saying" "Iam trying to be a Christian andan educator, and this is wortha life."

The best teachers should beassigned to' kindergarten andfirst grade classes, she main­tained. "Mistakes made thencan't be undone, but the goodthings are equally lasting."

Crisis to ComeThe time of crisis for human­

ity is just beginning, averred theeducator. "We are hardly aware

"of what is happening to us as ahuman community," she said.

Sociological faith, clung tosimoly as im ethnic or sbcial tra­dition, is' 'dying, Dr.' D'Arcyfeels. She thinks it will be re­placed by "personal faith,"thought out and really acceptedby each individual Christian."Knowledge about God is onething, but faith is another," shedeclared, citing a teenager whosaid of his religion instructors,"They have been telling meabout God for 10 years, but Ido not know God."

"Maybe we have taught toomuch too soon about God andhave not provided our youthwith conditions which wouldawaken faith," said Dr. D'Arcy."We must take the spiritual riskof journeying to the depths' ofour beings if faith is to be alivefor us."

Before 'adults teach religion,she said, they should ask 'them­selves "Is Goq more real thananything for me? If so, Why?How did this happen."

"Each path to God is unique,"she continued. "Each encounterwith God is a secret that we cantotally share with no one, theunique secret of our lives-yetthe core of this experience is thesame for all of us, and it unitesus in the Church."

Revelation Is Now."Revelation is not just' in the

past," said Dr. D'Arcy. "It'swhat happens to me when Godshows Himself to me." Evenchildren brought up as Chris­tians, she said, must one daymake the faith they have beengiven thei;- own, and must de­cide for themselves if they reallywish to accept Christianity.

"At age IS," she related, "Istarted to won.der about God. Ilooked in philosophy and theol­ogy, but did not fin,d Him there.I finally found Him in life andreality-not in books. As long aswe walk on a path that others

J

Page 6: 05.13.71

\

- I

Document on World JusticeI

1

PI~nning 'Gro,upIn New Bedford

779 over t,heprevio,us, year'sreport. . '

Brothers, who now stand at10,156, noted a loss of 1,467, andSisters total 153,645, a decline of7,286.

There are 25,710 seminariansstudying for the priesthood,3,256 fewer than were enrolledwhen the last count was taken,

Catholic students number3,348,421, and .in the last 10years, their ranks have declined'by 951,810.

By comparison, lay. teacherswho numbered 45,506 in 1960,now total 106,844. The, total ofReligious personnel staffingCatholic schools stands at 93,594,

'II ,",, I" "'''~ II"~"W"~"''''"" 11,,*."' ,ml"'~""''''l''''.,,,,I "u'", "I'''''''·' \'.11 ~Io'"'''' ~, .•.. : .

The need to formulate a planas quickly as possible,and thesuggestion that sufficient datahas been accumulated in thatdirection was emphasized byRev. Patrick J. O'Neill, diocesansuperintendent of schools, at ameeting of the Planning Com­mission for Catholic Schools inNew Bedford.

The initial phase of a studybeing conducted by the PlanningCommission is nearly complete,At last week's meeting, sub­committees reported on their ac­tivities to date with final reportsdue to be submitted to a newly­formed Steering Committee byearly June.

Named to this Committee, toanalyze the data accumulatedby the commission, were subcommittee chairmen MichaelCrowley, Joseph Marshall, Ron­ald L'ltalien, Gil Costa, co-chair­man; Rev. Raymond Robillard ofSacred Heart Church;"'New Bed­ford, and Rev. James Morse ofHoly Name Church, New Bed­ford.

Aims at 1972A plan for the New Bedford

Parochial School system is en­visioned by September, 1972.One of th~ main 'concerns of thecommission is to determine theextent of the problems in NewBedford, present or potential;with the current system.

The Facilities Committee, forexample, has advised that, manyschools are in need of improv'e­ment with 'most having been<;onstructed many years ago.

This, coupled with a sharpdecline in available nuns in the:las~ "d¢~?de,~:?~~,~"t~~~t:,,)~!MF~-'ment 'With lay te,ache.rs, presents'the greatest chaUenge to th'ccurrent system, the PlanningCommission said. '

Father Robill~rd" ~f the R~­search Committee said there wasa decline in religioustea~hers

from '141 in September, '1960 to67 in September, ~970, .',', "'Meet' June 2 ; ",

The ,Public' lriformation Com­mitte,e:naving Visited ,the major'­ity. of parishes, advised that itsprogram, to report the commis­s{on's' ftlnctio'ns had been re­ceived with positive reaction by'the' groups contacted,

The second phase 9f~he pro­gram calls for th.e preparationof a plan by the Ste,ering Com­mittee, the approval of thePlanning Commission, and sub­mission to the' constituencies ofthe Diocese of FallRi~er and.parishes, ,

Next Planning Commissionmeeting is June 2 'at St. Mary'sSchool, "off Tarkiln Hill .Roadin New Bedford.

.',"::'

58,161 PriestsLatest statistics r~vealed that

290,695 fewer students were ,en­rolled in Catholic schools duringthe' past year,' and that for thefirst time, .Iay teachers outnum­bered Religious' instructors. Thelaity now represents 53.4 percent of the faculties that staffCatholic schools,

Priests, according to the direc­tory, total 58,161. There are now37,020 or 252 fewer diocesanpriests, and 'Religious priestsnumber 21,141,' a decline of

Populo,tion Up', Continued, fr0f!! Page OneThe total number of prie,sts,

diocesan 'and 'Religious 'wentdown by 1,031 during the lastyear,

In all, Catholics make up "bout23.5 per cent of the total U. S.population.' That's exactly the

,same percentage they recordedin the directory's last annual'survey.

The total Catholic populationreported in the official, directoryis drawn from the number ofCatholics living in the U. S"plus the number, of AmericanCatholics liv'ing overseas on mil­itary bases or in diplomaticprivate houses al.1d private busi­nesses.

gressio) and the Vatican II docu­ment on the Church in' theModern 'World, "insufficientlytaught 'or simply ignored" inCatholic schools and seminaries?

Social TeachingsHow can the Church's 'social

teachings be' made U11de'rstand­able to Catholics so that' theyrealize they have 'obligations?,, How can mankind's r,e'cip,rQ.~al

'obligatiobs in building sochi~y',~~besfintetpreted ill' ord~i:'tci"a'void'''a system' which' knowingly orunknowingly is essentially' selfishand aninstrumenf of injustice?"

Auxiliary Bishop Edward E,Swanstrom of New York, whodirects Catholic Relief Services

,and heads' theU. S. ' CatholicConference's ,international 'affairscommittee, introduced .the' newVatican draft to the bishops.

St Matthew Qospel,25:4.0 '

I,

Nolt;,tO" A liiJrti'mhtJ'I'

did it to me."

.....,.

least brethren," '

I,f'"

... if ~lOU did it tot '

one ~f these,-my

SynodContinued from Page 'One

page document, which was large­ly overshadowed by intensive de­bate on celibacy and the modernpriesthood's deep troubles.

The Vatican's newest schemaon world justice, was not re­leased publicly at the ,D~troitmeeting, Newsmen there were,giv~n ' a ,synopsis of ~n~arlier

draft.The, document says: that tl'j,e

October .. SYnod·-·'of·~-"Btslrops~· inRome will ,have to "pr6pose andstillllilate" concrete .abfj'o~s of

. '. 'I)"': "

solidarity in favor 'of ~ justice inthe -w'orld. It' adci;; that' basiccha'nges of" attitude arid actionwilFhav~ to' be carried out "atevetyle\'el" of the Church: by'persons, 'families, parishes, 'dio­ceses; regions: and the ~niv~rsalChurch," ,, 'The schema, raises 'three ques­tion.s for, the syri'od to answer:, Is social doctrine as stated inScripture, Pope' john's ~ocial en­cyc,licals (Pacem in Terris, andMater et Magistra), Pope Paul'ssocial ~ncyclical (Populorum Pro-

, • I

Boy Scout ShowOpens' May ~15. Edward Ward; president of theMassasoit Council of the BoyScouts of America, which servesthe Greater Fall River area, hasannounced that a committeecomposed of distinguish~d lead:ers and conservation! expertshave planned' a variety of activ­ities in the coming months.

The major activity will be thebi-annual Boy Scout i Showscheduled for Saturday and Sun-

. • I .

day, May 15 and 16 Iin theArmory on Bank Street. ,

The day will open \vith aparade from, Kennedy' Parkstarting on Saturday mo~ning at10:30 and will proceed to theArmory for, the official' bpeningof the show. 1

, I: ,The show will ,be composed

of booths, exhibits, stage !sryows,demonstrations and a variety ofspecial 'opportunities fo!r CubScouts,: Boy Scouts and Explor­ersof the Massasoit Cou~cil.

OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RIVERPublished weekly by The Catholic P~ess of the Diocese of Fall River

,,410 Highland Avenue~a" River, Mass. 02722, 675-7.151'

PUBLISHER 'Most 'Rev. Daniel A: Cronin, D.O., S.T.D.

GENERAL MANAGER ~\SST. GENERAL MM~AGERRev. Msgr. Daniel F. ShalloQ,M.A. Rev. John P. D,riscoll~.~ le'ary Press-fall River '

.@rhe Al~(JHOR

6 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. May 13, 1971

The Older' Citizen', Census reports say that there are now some 20 mil­

lion persons-about 9.9 per cent of the. nation's population-who' are 65 years of age and older in this country. Thisis an increase of more than 4 million persons in a decade.The Northeast area of the United States has the large,stpercentage of elderly, residents, 10.6 per cent. ,~'

It is ,wonderful that more persons are reaching an~

older age. This is a tribute to many things-better healthcare; happiness' in work and life, better safety measuresto protect ,life.

It also means that a community must invest moreof its resources' to the care of its older citizens sincethere are that many more of them.

.' ., . "I

No one should, begrudge thLs. '.

It has· been 'Said that 'a civilization,isJudgedby theway it cares for the old.', . ,~' -,l':)J .'" ' .. ,!',':

But',a f~'~c~n~lu'si~ns' do co~e' frorilJile ~ratist'rc&~' , ''1 ," ."t',' : ; I,.. ' • '. - '-' .

'One tonau:~iion' i'~ ~that' all' se~~'nts of the community-public and private and religibus""":'must cooper(j.te t(), be

,sure, that,the older citizen lives in. a p~ace of'dignity',andwith adequate care Jor his health (j.nd well-being and hap-pine'ss and spiritual. needs.', ' • :, ",. ,

, ....Another' conclusion' is that' '.sped~d notice must, b~

given to talk about "quality' ,of. life." This sounds lik~ awell-meaning phrase but sometimes 'it is a cloak to say'that only those who are healthy and pr0d.~ctiye. citiz~hS

should be allowed to live. It is sometimes another name,for mercy killing.

No one should say that this is a far-out claim. Fewpeople thought a decade ago that abortion would be legal­ized to the extent that 'if'is in i:his nation:- And already,'a few trial ballons have been sent upon mercy-killing.The'discussioJ;l about it will gather momentum in the l)extdecade.

Those who: reverence life and' consider it sacred fromthe very first moment must 'continue to be vigilant inprotecting life and in resisting' all attacks against'it.' Thisis not saying that the dying of em aged person must beprolonged by extraordinary means., But it does say thata person who' is old has the right to live, and tb live in,dignity and respect and with due care. And' the measureof ,concern for him is the measure _of reveren,ce for life.

As The Figures lJfoiJntAs the figures for the Catholic Charities Appeal con­

tinue to mount-; due attention must be given to the realstory behind the figures.·The Appeal is the story not ofmoney, but of sacrifice, of one person caring for another, 'of many persons of varying backgrounds being concernedabqut their neighbors in need~.

The 'goal of the Appeal 'is not simply I?oney. Moneyis a means of caring for those who need care-for theelderly, the sick, the handicapped, the', disturbed, theexceptional, the troubled, the youth in' need of whole-some outlets for ~nergy. '

So the story of the Appeal, is the story of caring, ofChrist-like concern, of persons reaching out to persons.

It is the story of persons willing to make sacrificesin their own lives in order to do the works of Christ.It is the story of persons willing to have a little lessthemselves in order to insure that others have ,a littlemore than they, would ordinarily have.

Page 7: 05.13.71

ORTINSPhoto Supply245 MAIN STREETFALMOUTH - 548·1918 ' j

.. :R~A~~~:N~~:~~

from the Rev. Myron Miller, rep­resenting the Virginia Council ofChurches, for the services offour nuns to operate two day­care centers for the children ofmigrant workers. They wouldoversee the recreation and aidthe education of the children.

HEW ~ojed

Sister Rosalia is director ofthe project here. at the' southern­most tip of the Wilmingt~n,Del.,diocese. Known as Cepter Two,it is one of three health careprojects financed by 'the U. S.Department of Health, Educationand Welfare aimed at aiding mi­grant workers. .

The other centers are locatedin West Palm Beach, for a pro­gram covering Palm Beach Coun~

ty, Fla., and in Orange andUlster Counties; N. Y.

The centers are part of anHEW pilot, project covering 19states along the Atlantic sea-board. 0

Optimistic over the outcomeof the 1971 Summer program inthis Eastern Shore area; SisterRosalia said its success couldserve as a model for other pro­grams like it to aid migrantsthroughout the country.

School SystemLea~ership

ministry, re-establishing the unity'of man.

. The Marquette administratortold Rockford diocesan educationboard members at a meeting thatCatholic education is 'not cur­rently accepting' this challenge.

"The only way the Catholic'school system can survive itspresent crisis is for it to exercisea role of leadership in educa­tion," Hanlon' said.

He added: "At the end of thisdecade, we will have won orlost."

Catholic schools are not fol­lowing through with their ownobjectives but accepting themethodology of public education,Hanlon claimed.

Money woes are not the prob­lem, but a symptom that Catho­lic educators have not been sell­ing their product as essentiallydifferent from and superior topublic education,' he said.

ONANCOCK (NC)-Two nunsjust about have completed thespade work ,in a two-countyEastern Shore area of Virginia,anticipating a bumper crop forhuman betterment ~uring theSummer months.

Their efforts have been di­rected toward improving thehealth and way of life of some6,000 to 7,000 migrant workers,expected to begin arriving hereat strawberry-picking time inMay and continue workingthrough the potato and othercrop harvesting until August inAscomack and NorthamptonCounties.

Sister Rosalia Bauer, a nursecn special assignment froin theFranciscan Sisters' of PupetualAdoration community, laCrosse.Wis., and Sister Maureen Smith,a teacher of the Order of St.Francis, Dubuque, Iowa, havebeen in the 'area since l11stNovember. They live in a rentedhouse near here.

Health ClinicsSister Rosalia has been work­

ing closely with Dr. Belle De­Cormis Feares, Ascomack Coun­ty health officer, toward a bet­ter health program, and im­proved living and sanitationconditions when the peak popu­lation of migrants are here inJuly and August.

Night health clinics, staffed byvolunteer local physicians andworkers are planned. Of thetransient workers about 75 percent are blacks and 22 per centare Latin Americans.

Sister Maureen said 'she hasbeen encouraged by a request

Nuns in Forefront of ProjectsTo 'Assist' Migrant Workers

Urges CatholicExercise Role of

ROCKFORD (NC) - Catholiceducation has the built-in abilityto combine two educational phi­losophies which are splittingpublic education, a MarquetteUniversity administrator saidhere in Illinois.

Dr. James Hanlon, associateliberal arts dean at the Milwau­kee, Wis., university, said onepublic education view sees theteacher as a "trailier," preparingthe student to fill the role soci­ety expects of him.

Hanlon said the other philoso­phy says teachers should helpa student discover for himselfthe insights he needs to develophis personality.

Catholic schools can combine.the two philosophies, he ex­plained, because of the Judaeo­Christian view they hold of manas both animal and person, andof the corresponding view thatthe learning process is a healing

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. May 13, 1971 7

~IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII!IIIIIIIIIIIIIIII1I1111~

~ The Place to Go for Names You Know ~I ED. COUGHLIN, Prop. ii_==_ FACTORY SHOE MART i=_

CAPE COD'S LARGEST SHOE OUTLET== FAMOUS NAME SHOES FOR ENTIRE FAMILY ==

I ~~:~~~~::~~:~:~~~:;:;; If.1I III 111111I 111111I 11I11I III III 11I11I III 11I11I111111I11I111111I111I1111111111I11I11I11I11I 11I11111111I11I1111111111I111111I11111111IIIl1l11ffi

ReligiousTeachers

in the serviceof the Church

Write: Brother Guy, C.F.X.704 Brush Hill Rood

Milton, Massachusetts 02186

XAVER IAN BROTHERS

~

Synagogues FavorSelective ,Objection

NEW YORK (NC) - The Syn­agogue Council' of America haspassed a major policy statementcalling on Congress to extendthe concept of conscientious ob­jection to individuals who object'not only to all wars but to aparticular wl\r:, -The', council's statement, said

its' president, Rabbi Solomon J.Sharfman, is particularly timely ,because a recent U. S. SupremeCourt de<;ision defim;d conscien­tious objection as applying toall wars.

The council, the central coor­dination agency of religiousJewry in the United States, nowis enabled, said the rabbi, "tojoin with the National .Councilof Churches and the NationalConference of Catholic Bishops,who previously adopted similarpositions, together to urge newlegislation that will provide se~

lective conscientious objection:"

Married DeaconsLEEDS (NC)-The first mar­

ried deacons in the history of theCatholic Church in England wereordained recently in St. Anne'scathedral here by Bishop WilliamG. Wheeler of Leeds.

William J. Sullivan, a 'formermember of St. Mary's CathedralParish, Fllii River and now aresident of Washington has beennamed a member of the Boardof Trustees of Stonehill College,No. Easton.

Mr. Sullivan, a member of theclass of 1952 at Stonehill workedfor the CIA in Cuba followinghis graduation and in 1962 ent­ered the Harvard GraduateSchool of Business Administra­tion, where he received a $1000scholastic award and was marsh­all of his class.

At the' present, Mr. Sullivan isDeputy Assistant PostmasterGeneral for Planning in theUnited States Postal Service.

William J. Sullivan

Ston'ehill GradNow Trustee

Planned ParenthoodNOTRE DAME (NC):-A poll

'conducted in Gary, Ind., cameup with an" 'astounding conclu­sion - that Planned Parenthood,which mainly gives women con­traceptive advice, is regardedamong a sizeable number ofpoor white families as an 'organ­ization helping people havemore children.

Seek WithdrawalFrom Indochina

BOSTON (NC~Three hundredBoston priests demanded in anewspaper advertisement herethat the United States end itsinvolvement in Indochina by Dec.31, 1971.

Calling themselves "Concern-'ed Catholic Clergy," the 'priests'declared that "America's in­volvement in the Indochina wargrossly violates just war prin­ciples."

"'The evil of this 'war," theirBoston Globe ad continued, "faroutweighs any stated or hopedfor good. It is destroying notonly the people of Vietnam,Cambodia, and Laos,' it is de­stroying us as well."

Sour Wine

Nor did we live on castor oilalone. When we contracted themeasles but the spots were re­luctant to show themselves, wedrank hot wine. Not the kindwith spices that one sips beforea fire in a ski lodge, I regret tosay, but the sour home-madekind that brought out more thanthe spots.

We have just about removedeverything unpleasant or painfulfor. a child today and I am, thefirst to say, "Thank God." Pain­less dentistry is so much withus that I doubt if any ,childexperiences the raw pain of anold-time drill touching a nerve.Anesthetic sprays abound inmedicine cabinets so even a badscrape hurts only, long enoughto get home to Mom. Flu 'is re­lieved by tasty chewable aspirin;pediatric antibiotics come ,inflavored syrups, arid antacids forkids come in ,all cQlors andtastes. .

I wouldn't wish castor oil' onmy children for anything. Butonce in awhile, just for reasonsof comparison, I wish they knewwhat it tasted like. ,Especiallywhen they complain about candy-flavored vitamin pills.. .

but a good number' of adultsaround today lost their zest fororange juice years ago becauseof its association with castor oil.Other chasers used, as I recall,were sugar cubes, candy andbananas.

One clever friend claimed hedumped his mother's .bottle onceand the next time he was ill, shehad to settle for some otherremedy. So, of course, we triedthat trick. My mother neverbatted an eye. She went to thecupboard and opened', a newbottle. There were things weran out of, but never castor oil. '

By

DOLORES

CURRAN

Catholic, Lutheran'Dialogue in Spain, SALAMANCA' (NC)-Catholic

and Lutheran theologians, meet­ing here for the first time sincethe Reformation, agreed to es­tablish a continuous "frank andprogressive dialogue" betweenthe two churches.

"This, fraternal beginning is aresponse by us to the demandsof the Holy Spirit," the two de­nominations said in a joint state­ment issued after the meeting."May the experience of our en­counter be helpful to the Chris­tian community and may theresults be evident in the life ofour congregations."

It is impossible to describethe taste of castor oil to one whohas never taken it. There isnothing else like it, God bepraised. The consistency ofhoney in Winter, a deceivingopaque white in color, this surecure for, anything from listless­ness to hypertension had a tasteso vile that the mere thought ofit kept many a child from divul­ging a raw throat or headache.

No JellyBut it isn't the taste so much

as the associations connectedwith castor oil that spring tomy memory. One of my sisterstold me recently, "I didn't mindtaking the castor oil so much;it was. the teaspoon of jelly thatfollowed it."· To this day, shecan't eat jelly.

My other sister 'was smarter.She perfected the art of becom­ing visually ill at the' mere men­tion of castor oil so she neverhad to take it. For her mymother bought a bottle of Syrupof Figs and we all' watched inenvy as she was spooned thisdelicacy before our main courseof castor oil. We got, even,though, by lying in the samebedroom on sleepless evenings'and, describing the looks, feeland taste of castor oil so accu­rately, we sent her running fromthe room in haste.

We weren't the only neigh­borhood kids cured by this .evilpotion, and we used t6 comparedifferent chasers used' bymothers to cut the taste. My sis­termay not be able to eat jelly,

Dondy,~Candy Vitamin. Pill,sFor Surpa'ss, Castor Oil

The other day one of my children complained aboutthe taste of his Dandy-Candy orange-flavored chewablevitamin pill. "I'll bet Grandma never made you take an~­

thing that tasted, like this," he grumbled, eyeing me bale­fully. I stared at him, speech­less for once, as memorycatapulted me backward 30years. He was right: Therewere no lovely tasting chewablepills forced upon me by thatlenient grandmother of his. Butthere Was one horrid tastingcure-all forced upon me by thatconscientious mother of mine,and she was on~ and the sameperson,

Page 8: 05.13.71

No. Attleboro, ST.. MARY

$1000John F. Smith .

$220Howard Morse

$125: .Mary & Margaret "Kinton'

$100Rev. Cornelius J. KeliherHenry Beach Jr. ~

James J. Coogan:Louis DonleyMarshall Hammond

$75Edward CooganRev. H~gh J. Munro

$50John Bevilaqua Jr.John BrennanJohn 'DonleyStephen LinfieldFrancis McNallyEva MorawskiJames ReynoldsMarjorie SheaRobert WessmanFrederick WrightArthur St. John .

$40George Morse Jr.

$35Dr. Domenic BasileEdward ConnorAugust' FunkeFrederick Thorpe

\ $31Hugh L. Donnelly

$30,John J. BollingerRobert CarvalhoGertrude CassidyJoseph Kelley'Clement SharonWilliam Woloshyn

$25George Bankert, Robert Bedard

Raymond Blanchard, Fred But,terworth, Roland' Chabo,t

Jphn CC?lIin~, :wmi,an1. Cor~iganJa.~es piamond, Rita .Dunham,Henry Dupras. . .Thomas Feen~y, Joseph Ferland

Richard Forbes,William Flynn.Paul Hinski, Vincent V. Hoye

,Robert Kelley, Joseph LaliberteNellie Lavery, Gertrude' Little­

.field, Louis MeomartinoGerard Michaud, Anthony Na­

deem, David O'Neill, Joseph. Pa­trone, Paul Raftery

Julia Riley, D. Sarazin, Flor­ence Smith, Herbert Snell, Wal­ter Szewczykowski

George Vandal, Edmund WelchClinton Wordell

'changing direction, merely em.phasis, in their 'plan to revert tom~re personal care of patientsthrough the health clinic pro­gram for the poor.

...... : . ._","'::-,

c/:' :/?:;~~~Special School Outings, Group Offer, $4. per StudentOffer.includes: Special Luncheon, Swimming Pool admis­sion and Free Rides All Day, Additional details, Call Mr,Conrad Feria: (401) 737-8000; Collect.

o

ChathamHOLY REDEEMER

John Roy"

$50Rev. James Hipp, SS.CC.John" MartinWilbur W. HartshornTompson OilAlice Dobbyn .Pumphert FamilyGeorge Killen

$35

$31J.ohn SpeightRichard Sullivan.

l $200'·St. Vincent De Paul: SoCiety

$100 ' ..'Rev. Kieran Rush, SS.CC.James GormleyRalph GuidaJoh!1 MohydeAssoc.. of the SacrE\d HeartsJames Bell

$30Lawrence J. Frawley

. James Greer 'Mrs. James GreerRichard GriffinJohn Kane

HONOR STUDENTS: New inductees to the National~panish Honor Society are from left, Nancy Curtis, NoraCabeceiras and Mary·Ellen Powers, all students at SacredHearts Academy, Fall·River.

Franciscan'Sisters Plan Health CareProgram: in Poor Neighborhoods.,

.LOS ANGELES (Nc) - The undertaking a program of healthFranciscan Sisters \of the Sacred care for' the poor through clinicsH~art have sold th~ir' 404-bed' in Negro and Mexican neighbor­Queen of Angeles Hospital here hoods.and announced. that trey ar.e 'The Sisters, who established

the hospital in 1926, sold thehospital to Los Angeles Clinicsan? Ho~pitals Inc.

The board' of directors of thisnew corporation includes mem­bers ofihe Franciscan '~isters,represenJatives of -, the" Los'Angeles archdiocese, physiciansand lay persons:

Sister Timothy Marie, o'.S.F.,fuajor superior of the FranciscanSis'ters, made the announcementof the hospital's sale at a pressconference.

S):1e explained. that the highcost of nursing school, graduateeducation program and: chari­table clinic had made it impos­sible to modernize the 45-year­old hospital which has a payrollof 1,000 employees.

She added that hospitalgrowth and changes in medicalcare had made the relationshipbetween Sisters and patients lesspersonal.

The Sisters, she said, are not

$25Chatham Furniture, 'James

Jackson, James A. Cronin Sr.,'Frank Maloney, Donat Barabe.

Alexander Griffin,' Jam~s An­: drews, Julie, Margaret & Marion

Martin, Sergius Bernard, RalphLally. i

Edward G. Zibart, LawrenceHunter, Chester Eldrige,: PaulCourtnell, Charles. Bladen.

J aseph Ropulewis,' Thomas: Spa~kes, Freeman Philip~ Jr.,. John Patten, Dresser Family.

,Mrs. Mary Rogers, 'ElizabethNorton, Emily Judge,. Anony-mous, Anonymous. :

Vivian 'O'Connell, ,WilliamMaple, George Fleckensteirt, Al­bert Kolodzik, Helen O. Page., Carl 'P. Doelger, Jacques A.

May, Anonymous, Edith Loftus.

witl1 ~ild improbable colors and!:'Itra-sophisticated fabrics. ,

Hot pants are everywhere, butbecause hoth days we were there.it was quite' unseasonably cool,there weren't as many as I ex·:pected and a lot were hiddenunder midi or maxi coats. . .

Coats were quite lovely, espe~

cially the raincoats which in/most cases were well below theknee. Worn with high boots,

. thi:;. is a great. look.Two remarkable outfits that

I saw were not in the stores btltrather on two of the fashionablewomen' enjoying the thrill ofNew York. One was a salmonknit outfit that sported a longerjacket with a· sashed closingand the second was a ~tunning

purple knit ensemble that ap'­peared to consist of a mid-calfdre:;s and a very controlled cir~

cular cape.

.' Sparkling Shoes

I .did view a simiiar outfit ingrey and white 'knit through thewindows of a little' shop in thehotel lobby but unfortunately Ididn't notice it· until Sunday'therefore this definitely fell intothe realm of window shopping.

Shqes sparkled at us fromevery" corner a6d you foundyourself gazing' ~t people's feetinstead of their faces. The laced-

,up leg is in, at lea'st with theCentral Park' set-also the Car­men Miranda wedgie,' in a vari­ety of, shades and materials.:

.The prices of the footwear was .what: really shocked me and Ihad a semi-embarrassing mo­ment: when a pair of 'shoes thatI ,was .begging a clerk to' takeout of a window display turnedout ::0 have a price tag of $,,48.Needless to say said shoes arestill in that Fifth Avenue win­dow. (But they really 'were gre'atlooking.)

All. in all, a stroll down FifthAvenue can put a dent in yourbudg,~t, if' you're susceptible' or'makE' you discontent with yourpresent wardrobe if you're not.

Spanish Bishops AskRelE!ase of. Hitler Aide

BARCELONA (NC) - Twobishops were among 2,000 Span­iards who signed a petition ask­ing that Rudolf Hess, 77, anaide of Adolf Hitler convicted asa war criminal at the end. ofWorld War II, be released fromlife .imprisonment at Spandan,Germany.

The petition, drawn up by a, Barcelona committee, said sign­, ers are not passing judgment on

international justice but simplyacting for humanitarian reasons.

Among the signers were Arch­bishop Pedro Cantero Cuadradoof Zaragoza and Archbishop JosePont y Gol of Tarragona.

Hes:; was tried at Nurembergin' 1946 after being held by theBritish for four years. The NaziNazi official had secretly flowninto Scotland in 1942, allegedlyto make a peace proposal.

'. No Dieting

THEANCHO.R-Dioceseof Fall-River-Thurs. May 13, 1971. ' .

RODERICK

By

. MARILYN

Ne'w York Wee,k,e'nd OffersGlimps,es' of Lalt·elst Styles

8

debate the fact that it haspassed) didn~t take with it thefashionable boots. They are

'everywhere and in every .imag­inable material and color. .,

If yoti- want to feel lumpy, dowdy, and behind thetimes then take a trip to New York and walk along the,ar~a that houses such fashion-conscious stores as Berg­dorf's, Bonwit'S and Saks Fifth Avenue. Here you will comeacross. some of the most fas­cinating costume looks imag­inabie, quite unlike anythingthat you have in your closet;if you're anything like .me.

Hemlines ine below the knee,cxcept in the case of hot pants,of course, and many, many hemsare even lower than that. Bootsare everywhere and it just goesto show that the passing of'

• Winter (even though we WOllld

There are a, great many ex­citing crocheted knits and otherequally slinky styles that makeyou want to run to' your nearest

, sauna and lose about 20 pounds.Why, it's even enough to makeyou want to pass up' some ofthose ,extraordinary' restaurantsthat in):1abi.t what used to' becalled "fun city." (Of course, Icouldn't possibly pass them up, .so I ju'st put off my diet .untilr returned home to, the land ofcottage cheese and carrot sticks.)

We spent last weekend inNew York and that'!> when I

.got an eyeful of'what are sup·posedly "the .fashions of today,because Jf you're not seeiIlgfashion in Fifth Avenue, thenwhere could you possibly see it.There are still' very few chicday"length dresses around butthere are some of the most beau­tiful evening looks. imaginable,

Urg~s Women IncreclseChristian Commitment

RICHMOND (NC) -'MargaretMealey, executive director of theNational Council of CatholicWomen, said here in Virginiashe feels that liberated womenshould not· separate themselvesfrom family, Church, community,career and country, but shoulddeepen those concerns along the'lines of Christian commitment.

"As we become less' rigid, lessblindly conforming, less tradi­tionally subservient; we will be­come more free to. render thereal service that determines howtruly C):1rist-like we are," shesaid.

Speaking at a diocesan Co'un. ,cil of Catholic Women' conven­tion here, Mis's Mealey said "theliberation of Christian women,which will be included in i:hegeneral changing lifestyle ofAmerican women, must be guid-

• cd by their Christian comrrlit­ment."

Page 9: 05.13.71

$100Charles Bachmann

$50Mrs. James Cassidy & Mar-

garet CassidyMrs. Martin KaneLoretta & Mary McKeonAtty. & Mrs. Alfred A. Ma-

honeyDr. & Mrs. John MitchellMr. & Mrs. F. AdamsMrs. Max CQhenMr. & Mrs. John CollinsMr. & Mrs. Melvin E. DolanMrs. John P. Syvia, Jr.Mrs. Bernard O'Hayre

$35Mr. & Mrs. Eugene Higgins

$30 .Mr. & Mrs. Raymond C. Knis­

pel, Anonymous

$25In Memory of Edith Carriuolo,

Mrs. Charlotte Ciummei, Mrs.Alice Creamer, Mr. & Mrs.Thomas Dorsey, Dr. & Mrs. Ed­ward Fitch.

Mr. & Mrs. Anthony G. Glista,Mr. ,& Mrs.. Albert Horman, Dr.& Mrs. John S. Lee, Mary C.McGonagle, Mr. & Mrs. JosephB. Miskell Jr.

John T. O'Meara, Mr. & Mrs.Wallace T. Pierce, Mr. & Mrs.Edward Studley, Mr. & Mrs.Stanley Reeves.

Mr. & Mrs. Robert Dugan, Mr.& Mrs. John Ciummei, Mr. &Mrs. Paul Eagan, Harold McCor­mick

Capt. & Mrs. Paul Johansen,'George Morin, Mrs Bertram Had­don, Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth Re­bello, Mrs. & Mrs. Paul Eident

Mr. & Mrs Chester Frazier,Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Lamont

THE ANCHOR- 9Thurs., May 13, 1971

FalmouthST. 'PATRICK

$200Former Guest of St. Vincent's

Home

~r. & Mrs. Joseph Terry, Dr. &Mrs. Thomas Martone, Mr. &Mrs. John Dean, Dr. Robert J.Doherty.

Mr. & Mrs. Robert Bearse, Mr.& Mrs. Charles Swain, Mrs. K.R. Liston, Mr. & Mrs. Robert L.Childs, Mr. & Mrs: Homer A.Phinney.

Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Murphy,Mr. & Mrs. Charles L. Maher,Mr. & Mrs. Ubaldo Nugnes, Mr.& 'Mrs. Francis Walsh, Mr. &Mrs. Bruce Yakola.

Mr. & Mrs. Albert Scaramelli,Mr. & Mrs. William E. Dacey,Mrs. Jeanette B. McLanathan,Mrs. Arthur Linnell, Mrs. WrayLockwood.

Mr. & Mrs. Richard Haydon,.John Anderson, Mr. & Mrs.Austin O'Blenis, Mr. & Mrs.Bento Correia, Mr. & Mrs. EllisJohnson.

Wayne L. James, Mr. & Mrs.John E. Eckert, Mr. & Mrs. JohnF. Aylmer Jr.

$40Mr. & Mrs. Leonard Clifford

$35'Mr. & Mrs. Paul Bresnahan

$30Mr. & Mrs. John MurphyDr. & Mrs. KarolBernard

ZielinskiMrs. Matthew Finn

$25Ann Fawcett, Mr. & Mrs..

Charles McDermott, Mr. & Mrs.James Duane, Mrs. Harold Bra­gle, .Mrs. William E. Mullins

Mr. & Mrs. William Hetter­man, Mr. & Mrs. Daniel Hatton,Mrs. Robert EIliott, Mr. & Mrs.Stephen O'Brien Sr., Mrs. MaryMaddalena.

Mr. & Mrs. John Donelan, Mr.& Mrs. Robert Cannon, Mrs.Henry J. Schneckloth, Mr. &Mrs. Armand Goulet, Mr. & Mrs.John J. Pendergast Jr.

Mrs. Arminda Keyes, Mr. &Mrs. Edward J. Noonan, Dr. &Mrs. G. Curtis Barry, Dr. Ray­mond V. Martin, Mr. & Mrs.Frank G. Williams.

Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Hersey,

CentervilleOUR LADY OF VICTORY

$150Mr. & Mrs. Philip Buckley

$125Mr. & Mrs. James 'Murphy

$100& Mrs. Robert L. McCaf-Mr.

freyMr. & Mrs. John NortonDr. &' Mrs. William O'TooleDr. & Mrs. Austin O'MalleyDr. & Mrs. John J. CurranMr. & Mrs. Rene L. PoyantMr. & Mrs. Robert J. Dona-

hue$75

Judge & Mrs. Henry MurphyMr. & Mrs. Ray Pendergast

. $50Mrs. John KilcoyneMr. & Mrs. George TerkelsenMrs. Robert BlodgettMr. & Mrs. Edgar LevesqueMargaret FawcettDorothy' FawcettMr. & Mrs. Richard GriffithMr. & Mrs. Joseph CairnsMargaret M. MacphersonMr. & Mrs. Leo Cushing Sr.Dr. Alfred Sheehy . .Mr. & Mrs. John RicciM\~, &. Mrs. J.ames Erwin

WJIAT KIND OF CLOTHES ARE THOSE? YoungGreg Buchanan seems pleased at the academic robes ofhis father, Dr. Paul Gordon' Buchanan, the new presidentof Dunbarton College of Holy Cross, a Liberal Arts Girl'sCollege in Washington, D.C. Dr. Buchanan is the first male,secl;ll~rpresident in the, long history.. of the school. NC'Photo.

Private UniversitiesNeed Public Funds

WASHINGTON (NC) - Unlessstate and federal funds are madeavailable to the riation's privateuniversities, they will close, de­teriorate or go public, declaredthe president of GeorgetownUniversity.

In testimony before the HouseSubcommittee on Education,Jesuit Father Robert J. Henlespoke on behalf of 28 institu­tions which compose the Asso­ciation of Jesuit Colleges andUniversities of the United States:These institutions, he said, facecritical financial problems.

In addition to his presidencyat Georgetown here Father Henleis chairman of the association'sboard of directors.

particularly since the problemwas ... me. I wonder if the chil­dren could give me some lessons.I don't carry-on uncontrollably;I just have a bad case of "foot­in-mouth" disease that's mostvirulent at wakes.

My husband's uncle died. Ofthe survivors I knew only oneof his sons, and none of theother members of his or his latewife's family. I was determined,however, to behave as I expectedmy children to do, and extendsincere condolences to the near­er relatives of the deceased.

In the gathered crowd, it'ssometimes difficult to tell who'are the nearer relatives,' so Idevised my own system. The"all black" custom is fading withour family, and usually just thevery close relatives' are dressedin somber clothing. The key torecognizTng immediate family isto watch for dark suits.

Man in BlackAt the funeral home, just out­

side the chapel door, "a man ina black suit stood ... solemn andsad. ·He had to be a close rela­tive, because I had seen him'at other wakes in that branchof the family. Knowing that hedidn't belong to uncle directly,I immediately concluded he wasa brother-in-law.. He remindedme so. much of uncle's wife thathe nad to be her brother. ' ..

With confidence th~t I wasdoing the right thing,' I startedwith carefully phrased. sinceri­ties.

"It's good to' see you again,but it's unfortunate we get to­gether only, under 'such sadcir­cumstances."

"Yes, it is a shame, but it'sgood to see you, too." .

"I'm sorry. It must be a greatloss for you." ,

"How are you managing?""Oh, very well.""Is there anything I can do to

help?" .,"No, thank you. Everything

has been taken care of." . ."And the grandchildren, how

are they taking it?"He 'paused for a moment, took

my hand, then carefully asked,"Which funeral were you look­ing for?"

I had just offered my condo­lences to the undertaker.

By

MARY

CARSON

Laborers' RightsVAtICAN CITY (NC) - The

struggle of the workingman togain his just reward for toil isstill going on, Pope Paul VI tolda special audience in St. Peter'sBasil ica on May 1, the tradi­tional Labor Day in Europe. Therights of the laborer, the Popesaid, must be the real norm insettling debates between theemployed and the employer. .

A respected friend of mine, a doctor, stopped me theother day. He. was obviously troubled and asked my ad­vice. He wanted to know' the correct thing to do whenattending a' wake. A close neighbor of his had died and hewanted to go and pay hisrespects, but he hesitated,because, although he was inhis late forties, he had neverbeen to a wake. '

His apprehension made meglad we started taking our chil­dren to 'wakes while they wereyoung. Becausfi,. our family .isso large, we have regular' oppor- 'tunities. Knowing it could bedifficult for the children whensomeone close to them died, webegan taking them when it wasa distant relative.

FamilY'Does Well at Wake;Only ·Mom Has Trouble

The children hardly knew oneof my aunts and when shepassed away it was a good timeto teach them why' a familygathers on such' an occasion.Since she had been sick for along time, everyone looked onher death as a blessed reUeffrom her. suffering.' There wasno emotional strain and thechildren. 'aw~pted if well. . Theyeven" 'reserved their questionsuntil we gilt back to the car.

Good ExperienceThe experience triggered con-

. versation covering a wide 'rangeof thoughts. We went from anexplanation of' eternity to spec­ulation as to whether or notshe had shoes on:

It was a wholesome experi­ence for them. They accepted thebelfef of happiness in heaven,learned respect for the dead andrecognized the need for conso­lation and companionship to theclose family.

Having met with success thefirst trip, we had no qualmsabout taking them when Great­grandma died. Although shehadn't ,been sick, no' one wassurprised ... Grandma was 94.This time ther~ was a closer', tiefor the children, but agaIn theydid well. Only one of the boyswas upset by her "early" deathbecause he had been countingon her making 100'. .

There were a few more auntsand uncles, and as the childrenkept improving, I gained' con­fidence in their' having lear.nedthis particular form of etiquette.

After so many good experi­ences, I was somewhat shockedwhen we ran into a problem,

Page 10: 05.13.71

10 THE AN~HOR-Diocese of FCIII River-Thurs. May 13(197-1

VIEW OF THE BISHOP FEEHAN HIGH SCHOOL AUDrrORIUM, AS MORE THAN 1000 TEACHERS' GATHERED FOR 16th CONVENTION

CORREIA &SONSONE STOP

SHOPPING CENTER

• Television • Grocery• Appliances • Furniture

104 Allen St., New Bedford

997-9354

,$25William Griffith, Bernard Mul­

cahy, Lawrence Good, EugeneDeveau, Ronald Murphy.

Edmund Mossey, Eveline Sulli-van, Michael Patkoske, JosephHaddad, George Miiligan.

John McKenney, Mrs. N. F.Burgess, Anonymous, ArthurHurd, Edmund Pelletier.

James King, John Kelly, GraceReilly; Thomas McDonough,James Kelleher. .

Mary MsGuerty, Joan' Baker,Cynthia Baker, Leo Lamont,: Wil- :liam, Erisman. ' .

Lawrence Kenney, James Mc­Keown, Charles Still, JamesConnell, Mrs.. Wendell Hender­son.. '

~alter West, Joseph/Higgins,Benjamin Muse ir., John Carroll,'Gertrude E. Tynan. .

Anonymous, Myles Heffernon,John Spence James Kennedy,"­Joseph Panek.'

Anthony Cammarano; JohnGrimes.

Montie Plumbing &Heating Co.Over 35 Years

of Satisfied ServiceReg. Master Plumbe"r 7023 .

JOSEPH RAPOSA, JR.806 NO. MAIN STREET

Fall River 675-7497

ROUTE 6-between Fall River and New Bedford

One of Southern New England's Finest Facilities

LINCOLN PARK BALLROOM

Now Available lor

BANQUETS, fASHION SHOWS, ETC.....FOR DETAILS CALL MANAGER-636-2744 or 999-6984

So. YarmouthST. PlUS X

$100AnonymousFrancis PattiFrancis HurleyRev. Philip A. Davignon

$50Mrs. Leo MacIver'AnonymousJames L. KeanyThomas HennesseyJoseph Concannon

$35James DooleyJoseph Evers

$31Madelyn Shea

$30John CoyleCharles TourjeeLeroy BakerLanigan Family

Provoncetown 'ST. PETER

$250Rev. Msgr. Leo J. Duart

$100Rev. John A. PerryBlessing of the Fleet

$30Mr.&: Mrs. John B. FerreiraMrs. John C. Snow

$25Catholic Daughters of Ame'r­

ica Court No. '851; Mr. &: Mrs.John F. Cook, Mr. &:. Mrs. War7ren Costa, Mr. &: Mrs. HermanDeSilva.

'Earl MacDonald, Mr. ~ Mrs.John T. Calesa.

The Mahoney Family, Mr. &:Mrs. John F. McHugh, Mr. &:Mrs. John F. Nelson, Mr. &: Mrs.Thomas Dunlavey, Anonymous.

. Mr. &: Mrs. Cornelius Minihan,Mrs. A. M. Cardoza, In Memoryof Ellen, Michael &: William A.McLaughlin.

Osterville!OUR LADY OF A~SUMPTION

$100Mr. &: Mrs. William K. Mone

$60 ,Mr. &: Mrs. Warren J.i .yolk

$50 iMr. &: Mrs. Robert S<;:alleyMargaret Sheehan '

$~I I

Mr. &: Mrs. Howard Rhodin$25 :

Mr. &: Mrs. John Botello• I

Mr. &: Mrs.· Royal GaffneyHoly' Ghost Women's' SocietyMr. &: Mrs. Henry La iButeMr. &: Mrs. Vaughn Lentell'Thomas Lyons :J. O. Niles, M.D.

. $50M:r: &: Mrs. William <;:otterJohn·R. ReyburnMr.'&: Mrs. Harry VarnumMI:. &:. Mrs. E. Thomas Mur-

phy$40

Mr. &: Mrs. Francis Dolan$35

Mr. &: Mrs. Daniel Francisco

ovan

" \Hy~nnisST. FRANCIS XAVIER

$200St:. Francis Xavier· Parish

Guild$100 \

Mr. &: Mrs. Joseph ·MartinMr.. &: Mrs., J. Hobert' - _Doane, Beal &: Ames". Inc.

$75Mr. &: Mrs. William. F. Don-

iPocasset

ST. JOHN$400

Rev. James A. ¥.c~arthyRev. Ambrose E:' Bowen

$160 IAnonymous'

$150Mr.- &: Mrs. John R.' Green-

na'gh I

St. Vincent de Paul 'Society. $125, IMr. &: Mrs. John H. Phaneuf

$120$30 Anonymous

MI'. &: Mrs. J. L. Marchildon $100$30 Mr. &: Mrs.' William Carr

MI'. &: Mrs. Joseph L. Cairn, Mr. &: Mrs. Louis J. Mac-Jr. Arthur i

Margaret Moran $60 iMI'. &: Mrs. J. Medeiros Mr. &: Mrs. John F. McCahill-Mr. &: Mrs. Robert Flinn Mr. &: Mrs. Lawrence PerraultMr. &: Mrs. R. Adams $50

$25 AnonymousMr. -&: Mrs. Robert Ryan, Mrs. Anonymous

G. Gureghian, Mr. &: Mrs. Joseph. Lt. Col. M. V. LawlorlDeLory, Mr. &: Mrs. William' Mr. &: Mrs. Peter BeckerSmith, Mr. &: Mrs. J. Keveney. Mrs. Martin Lawless I

Mr, &: Mrs. N. Karukas, Mr. St. John's Women's Guild&: Mrs. George Soutiere, Mr. &: . $30!Mrs. D. }I. Chase, Mr. &: Mrs. . Mr. &: Mrs. Francis D. jVlacke-T. Keneally, Mrs. Richard Don- donaghue. $25

H.arriet Butler, Mr. & Mrs. D. Mr. &: Mrs. Russell E.IBurns,Constant, Mrs. Margaret Brooks, Mr. &: Mrs. Edgar Beauregard,Atty. .Charles McGrath, Mr. &: Mr. &: Mrs. Raymond CeBrun,Mrs. Cedric Sear. " Mr., &: Mrs. Aaron TobeX, Mrs., Mr. &: Mrs. George Lampert, Manuel Britto.Mr. &: Mrs. M. Field, Mr. '&: Mrs. Mr. &: Mrs. Robert Na~h, Mr.John Sheehan, Mrs. Wayland P. &: Mrs. Fred Dunbury, fVlr. &:Norse, Theodore L. Holmes. ' Mrs. Peter Fernandes Sr., Mr. &:

Mr. &: Mrs. T. Loughlin, Mr. Mrs. Kilmer Joyce, Mr. ~ Mrs.&: Mrs. K. Daly, Mr. &: Mrs. Raymond Lucier. 'Charles Flynn, Mr. &: Mrs. J. F. Martha Hurley, Mr: 8i Mrs.Murray, Mr. &: Mrs. William John F. O'Connor, Mr. ~ Mrs.Mather. . . Joseph Whalen, Mr. &: Mrs, Rich-

. Mr. & Mrs. Milan O'Neil, Ed- ard Hopwood, Charles ·B. :Henry.·ward L. Bennett, Marian, Ben- , Mr. &: Mrs. Robert Kepnedy,nett, Mr. &: Mrs. A. Trocchi, Mr. Mr. &: Mrs. Joseph B. Reynolds,&: Mn:. Gerhard Robichaud. Mr. &: Mrs. Fred Coming~, Mrs.

II,

. Lopes, Mr. &: Mrs. William E,Reagan

Mrs. Doris Robbins, In Mem"ory of Enos L9pes &:' ManuelAndrews, Mr. &: Mrs. RaymondFit2:gerald, Manuel Dias, Mr. &:Mrs. Joseph Andrews

Mr. &: Mrs.' William HaskellJr., E. J. Keleher, Arthur Joia,Mr. &: Mrs. Edwin Payton, Mar­garet Marcellino

Brew~terOUR LADY OF THE CAPE

$50Mr. &: Mrs. Joseph Lynch

$25.Mr. &. ,Mrs. Henry A. CallahanMr. &: Mrs. Arthur G. DickeyMary D. Dunsford -Annette HailerMr. &: Mrs. Robert HayesDr: &: Mrs. Robert E. HunterMr. &:. Mrs. Robert KellyHelen Mullen &: Mary Nolan.Mary NealMr. &: Mrs. Manuel J. 'PackettMr. &: Mrs. Robert E: SnowPaul· Sullivan.Mr. &: Mrs. James White

Buzzards BayST. MARGARET '

$100Mr. &:: Mrs. Eugene LopesSS._Margaret &: Mary Guild ,

$75Mr: - &: Mrs. William Brady

$55Marcella McCoyMr. &: Mrs. William' McCoy

$50David FannonMr. &: Mrs. Columbo CristoforiMother Cabrini Circle, Daugh-

. ters of 'No. 722.Isabella . ' ,Mrs. Bertha LawsonRev: Msgr. Denis Fitzpatrick

$35Mr. &: Mrs. Gordon Oliosi

_$30Mr. &: Mrs. Richard DobbinsMr. &. Mrs. Frank LopesMr. &: Mrs. Tony VieiraMr. &: Mrs. Harry RobbinsMr. &: Mrs. John McManusMr. &: Mrs. William BennettKatherine Fernandes

$25Mrs. William Blake, Mr. &.

Mrs. Robert Stevenson, Mr. lJ'r.Mrs. James Lopes, Mr. &: Mrs.Armand Bedard, Mrs. GeorgeGibson.

Mr. &: Mrs. Ernest Perry, Mr.&: Mrs.' Nicholas Puorro, Mr. &:Mrs. Gordon Landry.

Mr. &: Mrs. Francis R. Samson,Mr. &:- Mrs. Michael DellaFemina,Mr. &: Mrs. Paul Getchell, Mr. &:Mrs. John J. O'Connell; Mr. &:Mrs. John J. O'Neil.

Mr. &: Mrs.' Romeo Verrier,Mr. &: Mrs. Joseph Curley, InMemory of James 1. Tamagini,Mr. &: Mrs. Henry Boracks" Mr.&: Mrs. Ralph Biagiotti

Mr. &: Mrs. Leo Gagnon. Lt'.Col.-M V. E. Lindblom, Cath­erine E. Morrison '&: Mrs. MaryM. McDevitt, Mr. &: Mrs August

Page 11: 05.13.71

..~'

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. May 13, .1971 1,1

BISHOP CRONIN IS PRINCIPAL CONCELEBRANT OF THE MASS OF FERED AT THE OPENING OF THE TEACHERS CONVENTION

at

"Save Witlll Safety'"

,NEW BEDFORD-ACUSHNETCO-OPERATIVE BANK

.115 WILLIAM ST. NEW BEDFORD, MASS.

ST. THERESA$50

Mrs. Joseph LundervilleSo. Attleboro Council No.

5876 K of CMr. & Mrs. George BoydMr. & Mrs., Raymond VachonMr. & Mrs.' Louis McBrideMr. & Mrs. Francis Gillan

$40Mr. & Mrs. Normand Carrier

$35Mr. & Mrs. Rodney Blythe

$25Mr. & Mrs. Donald Harkins,

Mr. & Mrs. James Mann, SarahLanglois, Confraternity of Chris­tian Mothers

Mrs. Leona Beausoleil, -Mr. &Mrs. Michael Arata, Mr. &, Mrs.Thomas Reilly, Mr & Mrs JosephLamoureaux, Mr. & Mrs. JosephChadwick

Mr. & Mrs. Michael OsienskiMr. & Mrs. AI Grenier

, ELECTRICAL~ Contractors

~.~

~'~

944 County St. rNew Bedford •

Edwin Zalesky, Joseph B. Fur­tado, Russell Carr, Mrs. RichardDunn, Mary Regan

Robert'J Healey, Stuart O'HaraGerard Kenton, Liesse Duffany.Laurence Duffany

William Romero, Robert Puhl,James D. Meegan, A-iionymous,J. J. Spadoni Sr.

Harvey Dube, Mrs. David Ful-'ler, Mario Rocque, Paul Briggs,Robert O'Brien

Leona Kerr, Ernest Glode,James Brennan, Ronald Lacasse,James Dever'

Clarice Dwyer, Francis Eise­man, Arthur J. Barry, DonaldDoucette, Theodore Guimond

AttleboroST. MARK

$200Rev. Joseph L. Powers

$175Mrs. William Walton

$150Dr. John Killion

$125Aime Grenier

$100Dr. Harold ThompsonMrs. Frances Ciolfi

$50Bernard D. GamacheJames E. Kelly

$40Manus A. FoleyCharles O'Neill

$35John GaffneyGerald L. DoreyJacob Belt

$30Michael D. NolanAnonymousNorman Legg

$25Mrs. Robert Sharkey, Mrs.

Michael J. Croke, John A. Fuller,Mrs Thomas Schofield, Mrs JohnG. Walsh

Mr. & Mrs. John Mitchell, Mr.& Mrs. Robert Shaw, A Friend,Mr. & Mrs. John Cody, MildredL. Hannon

Mr. & Mrs. Ralph Sarro, Mrs.Agnes Britton, Mr. & Mrs .RolandClement, Mr. & Mrs. JamesBachman, Mr. & Mrs. GeorgeFarnum ..

A Friend, Mr. & Mrs. JohnKing, Joseph Hinchey, Mrs. Mar­garet Jordan, Mary Capone, MrsAnnette Atwell

Mr. & Mrs. John KinsleyMr. & Mrs. William HaynesMr. 8i Mrs. Albert DeceleMr. & Mrs. Ruggero ~aldelli

Rose ServaisMr. & Mrs. Robert Bolton,

Frank Signoriello, Mr. & Mrs.Stanley Murray, Mr. & Mrs. Ed­mund Guillette, A Friend

Mr. & Mrs. Alfred Sarro, Mr.& Mrs. Edward Gonsalves, Mr. &Mrs. William Lawrence, Mr. &Mrs. Victor Narcisso

$30Mr. & Mrs. Robert DavisMr. & Mrs. James MahoneyMr. & Mrs. Clifford TitusA Friend

$25Mr. & Mrs. Amanda Giovino,

Mr. & Mrs. Vincent Porier, Mrs.James Hindman, Mr. & Mrs.Roger Crotty, Mrs. MarjorieEngler

Mr. & Mrs. William Sullivan,Mr. &. Mrs. Dan'iel McCarthy,Mrs. Blanche Radnor, Mr. & Mrs.Gilbert Silva, Mr. & Mrs StephenConroy

Mr. & Mrs. William Murray,A Friend, Mr. & Mrs. Fred Tay­lor, Mr. & Mrs. Merle Griswold,Clarence Leonard

Mr. & Mrs. William Palanza,Mr. & Mrs. Joseph L. Souza Jr.,Mr. & Mrs. Walter White, Mrs.Emma Pascucci, A Friend

A Friend

$50Mr. & Mrs. Orlando D. SouzaMr. & Mrs. William MortonDr. & Mrs. Philip SibiliaA FriendLillian DionDr. & Mrs. Raymond Ockert

$35

mons

MCI~sfieldST. MA-RY

$500Eugene Farre)1

'$i50Atty. & Mrs. Robert Cur!,ivanSt. Vincent de Paul Society

$105

$100Rev. Thomas L. RitaA FriendMargaret Welch

, $60A FriendMr. & Mrs. Edward Fitzsim-

North DartmouthST. JULIE

$250Rev. John F. Hogan

'$200Rev. Thomas J. Harrington

$75Mr & Mrs Lawrence A Weaver

$50Mr. & Mrs. Albert A. Silva

$35Dr. & Mrs. James H. Mahoney

$30Mr. & Mrs. Manuel Nunes

$25Evelyn RobertsMr. & Mrs. John MorrisMr. & Mrs. Robert J. SullivanMr. & Mrs. Thomas BurkeRobertaK. DutraMr. & Mrs. ,Joseph VieiraIn Memory of Frank S. BeatrizMr. & Mrs. Thomas Aiello

A Friend

West HarwichHOLY TRINITY

$150Catherine Lane

$100 ,Mrs. Elizabeth BatsonMr. & Mrs. Chas. McKeanMr. & Mrs. Francis Riordan

$50Mr. & Mrs. Theodore BerghausMr,' & Mrs. Albert EdwardsDr. & Mrs. Arthur J. D'Elia .

,$30 -(Captain' Williams HouseMr. & Mrs. John J. Bowen

$25Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Aldonis,

Mr. & Mrs. Raymond J. Alvey,Mr. & Mrs. John Anderson, Mr.& Mrs:" Frank Ball, Mr. & Mrs.William F. Carmody.

Mr. & Mrs. William J. Carto,Mrs. )oseph Connell, Mr. &Mrs. Albert Davenport; JohnDonlay, Mrs. J. L. Fairclough.

Mr. & Mrs. Russell S. Hamlyn,Mr. &. Mrs: Carl Johnson, Mr.& Mrs. John E. Kelly,Mrs. CoraKerwin, Mr. & Mrs. John Loner­gan.

Mr. & Mrs.. Amos Leyton,Dorothy M. Lyons, Mr. & Mrs.Anthony Marini, The. MernaFamily, Mr. & Mrs. John J. Mul­lins.

Mrs. Ida O'Brien, John O'BrienSr., Dr. John F. McDermott,Charles F. Rahn, Mrs. MargueriteRiley.

Mr. & Mrs. John Roche, Kath­leen Roche, Mr. & Mrs. EdwinRoderick, Mr. & Mrs. . UrbanThomas, Mr. & Mrs. VincentWalsh.

Mr. & Mrs. David Webber,Judge Robert Welsh.

Oak Bluffs

Ocean GroveST. MICHAEL

$250

SACRED HIEART

$125Mr. & Mrs. Henry Corey

$50Holy Ghost Society

$40Mr. & Mrs. Alfred Metell

$75Rev. Maurice E. Parent

$65Mr. & Mrs. Richard Schmoll

$25Charles Drake, Mr. .& Mrs.

Rene Dufresne, Mr. & Mrs. Jo­seph Pineau, Mr. & Mrs. Laurent.Pineau, Mr. & Mrs. John C. lin­do

A Friend

Vineyard HavenST. AUGUSTINE

$50St. Vincent de Paul Society

, $30Mr. & Mrs. Francis Metell

$25Mr. & Mrs. James Boyle'Cdr. & Mrs. Daniel F. BurgoFrancis CoutinhoMr. & Mrs.' Michel FontesMr. & Mrs. Eugene FriehMrs. John T. HughesMrs. Arthur OuelletteArthur PachicoMrs. Elizabeth PachicoBeatrice PhillipsMr & Mrs Theophilus Silvia JI'Mr. & Mrs. Bradford Sylvia

EdgartownST. ELIZABETH

$150Rev. Justin J. Quinn

$50St. Elizabeth's GuildMr. & Mrs. Albert K. Sylvia Jr.Mrl'!. Corinne Fournier

$35Jean' BritcherMr. & Mrs. Ellsworth Fisher

$30AI's Package ~tore

Patricia Brown$25

Anna Flynn Real Estate, Mr.& Mrs. George Goulart, Mrs.Isaac Norton, Mrs. Philip J.Norton.

NantucketOUR LADY OF THE ISLE

$125Rev. James P. Dalzell

$100Memory of Walter F. Glowacki

, $80Rev. Edward J. Sharpe

$50Mrs. Paul F. KlingecpussMr. & Mrs. Richard Mack

$35Mrs, William Reith

$30.Mrs. Rolf Sjolund

$25Mr. & Mrs. W. B. Snow, Mr.

& Mrs. Patrick Harris, Mr. &Mrs. John Santos Sr., Mr. & Mrs.Jeremiah Towhill, Mr. & Mrs.Thomas Devine.

Mr. & Mrs. Thomas McAuley,Mr. & Mrs. Albert Brock, Mr. &Mrs. Charles Annis, Mr. & Mrs.Charles ,'Flanagan, Mr:" &' Mrs.Howard Laundry.

Mr. & Mrs. Charles P. Flana­gan, Thomas Igoe, HermanLehmann,The Hamblin Family,Mrs'. Richard Congdon.

Julia A. Ayers, Mr. & Mrs.Maxwell Deacon,' Mr. & Mrs.Daniel Murphy, Mr. & Mrs. Ken­neth Holdgate Sr., Mr: & Mrs.Edmund Pollard.

Page 12: 05.13.71

CITIES SERVICEDISTRIBUTORS

GasolineFuel and Range

OIL SOIL BURNERS

, For' Prompt Delivery& Day & Night Service

w. H. RILEY,/&' SON, ·Inc.

No. AttleboroSACRED HEART

$50,Mr. & Mrs. John Burke.

$31 .Mr, & Mrs. Arthur ,Ray

, . ' $30 I

Mr. & Mrs.' Roland Fregault$25

Dr. & Mrs. Henry Bedard, Mr.& Mrs. Wilfred Bourgault, AI­dea Brais, Mr. & Mrs: OrnerBriere, Mr. & Mrs, Bertrand Pre"fontaine

Rural Bottled Gas Service

61 COHANNET STTAUNTON ­

Attleboro - No. AttleboroTaunton

G. E.BOI~ER BURNER UNITS

,$40,, Mr. & Mrs, David E: Blake'

John Lynch,Helen Reilly

$35Dr. & Mrs. Eugene GaudetMr. & Mrs. A. L'HeureuxMr. & Mrs. Donald Blake

. .Mr. & Mrs. Eugene Perry$31

Mr, & Mrs. James Finegan'$30

,Armand ContoisMr. & Mrs. Eugene FerlandEdn'a MasgayMr. & Mrs. Jacques Leduc

, $25Mr. & Mrs. Ralph Baumgartel,

Mr. & Mrs. Robert Biron,' AgnesBlake, John Blake, Ri'chaI'dBlake, William Blake

Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth BliSS,Mr.& Mrs'., George Casey, Mr. &Mrs. Gerard Cinq-Mars, Mr. &Mrs. Sterling Dalt9n

Mr. & Mrs. Rocco ,DeFruscio,Mrs. James, Elliott, Mr. & Mrs.Louis Emond Jr., lVIr. & Mrs.,R~ger Ferland, Catherine Fisk.. Marilyn risk, The Fis~ Fam~

iCY.' Mr. & Mrs. William Foley,Mr..& 'Mrs. 'Avila Grenier, Mr.& Mrs. Lewis Jackson

'Mr. & Mrs. G~orge !.:aBelle,Mr. & Mrs. Edmund McCann,Mr. & Mrs.' George McCarthy,Mr. & Mrs. Harold McCormiCk,Mr. & Mrs. Eugene McGovern

Mr. & Mrs. John P, McGuin­n~ss, Mr... & Mrs. William O'Brien'Sr., Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Perry,Mr. & Mrs. Julio 'Pugliese, Mr.& Mrs. Norman 'LeMere'

Mr. & Mrs.' Joseph Ostiguy,.Mr. & Mrs. Peter Pirlocci. Mr.& Mrs. Joseph Sherr.y, Mr. &Mrs. Thomas Toppin, Mr. & Mrs.Leo ,Tracey ,

Richard M. Voccio, Mr. &Mrs. Arthur Wildgoose

Kathryn N: Donahue, ··Mr.',l&Mrs. William Dlinn, Mr. & Mrs.Fred Farrell" Mr. & Mrs. RobertGrenier, Mr. & Mrs, ThomasLynch Jr.. Mr. & Mrs. Leo Marcoux, MrS:-

Arthur Patenaude '

Sea Streets

Tel. 49·81

ATWOODOIL COMPANY

SHELL,HEATING OILSSouth •

Hyannis

Attlebcito'," .

HOLY GHOST$30,

Carol Stanley$25

Mr. & Mrs. Joseph LojeckDr. & Mrs. Richard Brousseau)VII'. & Mrs. John HayesMrs, Margaret Kelly

ST. JOSEPH$100 .

Richard V. Boucher, $85

Doris Levasseur$50 .'

Mr, & Mrs. J\rmand BoucherMr', & Mrs. Mark Mer~ier'

The Misses Boudreau' "Mr, & Mrs. Richard CastroMrs. Yvonne DesVergnes and

Louis DesVergn~s '$30

Mr, & Mrs. Joseph McGeeMr. & Mrs. Rene Dubuc

.$25 "-Mr, & Mrs. Adelard Pelletier,

Mr. & Mrs. Gerard H. Gelinas,Mr. & Mrs. Raymond Harrison,Mr. & Mrs. Louis Boteiho, Mr.&: Mrs. Ralph Zito

Mr & Mrs. Arthur Mullins,Mr; & Mrs. Louis Perry, .Mr. &Mrs., Gaetan Collette, Mr. & Mrs:Henri. Paradis, Mr, & ·Mrs. Johnlogan -

Mr. & Mrs. Orner Gaudreau,Lucien Paul '.

THE ANCHOR"":Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. May 13~,,1971 ,. .~. . , ..

HIGGINS

GEORGE' G.

'By

. MSGR.

12

cover a wide' range' of political,and', socio-economic ,pr<?blems,including, ,for example,. (he farm:labor problem, the plight'of day]aborers selective conscientiousobjectio~, the ~arri~burg case

. (and, J. ,Edgar, Hoover's, w.idelypliblicized pre-tria.! involvement VISITOR: Thfch Nhatin 'that case); Selective Service" Hanh, a Vietna~ese monkt.he war in Vietnam, .an'd . the 1

problem of how to spread:" the and poet, has just :completedcost and burdens of thaL tragic a tour of- the United Statesconflict more '.equitab·lya,n1bng as a peace movement advo­

.all proups of 'dtiz~ns:: in~.. 'our cate and addres~ed a~di-~oCiety. .." ,,' ences in various s:ections of

'Compl~telyOtthodox' the country. NC ~hoto~ •Mr, A.J: M~tt,"::iL editor in . . I

nous) in some of .its implications chief of rhe Wa~derer,' in a LSI a.... p". . h' Sl'gned ed' l'to'.r·l·al 'V·.I·g..o·...r·o·usly con- a a elllle i nansfor. the future, ·of the Chure m

this country. 'In other words, the d~m~s all of ~hese..::r~solutions- : F" Ik FestivbItone of The 'Wanderer's all-out, Without ,excep,tlOn'~J~~lling them 0 . Iblast at NFPC is just too ven- "revolutionary~: (whatever' that Area folk groups are invitedomous for comfort. n1~ans in his' high1y.~o·n~ervative to participate in the [second an-

What's the argu.ment all lexicon) and suggellti'':!g that- they nual Hillside Folk Festiv'al at La,about? Why did the..editors of , were cooked 'l!-P ,by' i,:small and Salette, Attleboro~ d,n Sunday,The -Wanderer feel compelled to t()t~I,ly u!,rep~e~entativ~,group,of May 23. 1 ST. MARYbe so savage, in their.:c,riticism ":mIlitant pnests ... who control Rev. Andre. Patenaude, M.S., $300of NFPC?.. ". "".'. ' . l'i'FPC" ,and hav'e, ch?se~ "to use 'La S~lette Shrine mu~ic director, . Mrs, Pierre Lonshur)!. O'stensibly because they are the organization as a tool for' who is organizing the levent, said $250

terrib.!y disturbed about the fact revolution." , ' . . the festival's goal is Ito provide Rev. Edward C. Duffythat the Federation adopted a Mr. Matt knows, better than an exposition of folk -music used $200 ,resolution in favor of optional to say a thing like 'that. He in liturgicai settings..1 , St. Vincent de,Paul Society.celibacy at its recent convention knows perfectly well that the ' F 1." P 1. d I'd Mr. &: Mrs. Robert Durant. '.. , a lIer a enau e sal . groups 'in Baltimore. That.'sonly p'ar.t of delegates to the NFPC conven· ; . d"d I hi. I' . $150'," 'd b '. orm IVI ua s w 0 specla Ize mthe soory,. however, and, in this tlOn were duly electe . y their . 1" f Ik " " I' .' '1. d Mr. & Mrs. George Agostiniwriter's j·udgme.nt, probably not' locai peers ~nd\~are ,more repre- :re IglO~S. 0 , musIc ~r7' my,1 e . $100 " ,

. 1. t' f th'" 1.'1.' 1.'; ,to part,lclpate In- the fe~tlval:from Mrs. Fred Bartekt.he most signifieant part a.t that. sen a Ive 0 ell' cons I uen s· 1. '6' PM th 1. d L' Mr. &h ' th fA" noon 0 . . . a ay. a .

M.ore about this in a moment. 1. an any 0 er group o· mel - S I 1.1. h 'd' . I. II' Mr. & Mrs, Rober:t Legare. . . d 'bl I' a e e, e sal , IS especla y m-, Meanwhile let it be perfectly Ica. pnests coul POSSI y calm t 1. d' '" I' I '1.' Mr. -& Mrs. John Marshall

h 'h d' f Th' to be.' . er:es e m ongma ,COrpPOSI IOns. Mr. & Mrs. Henry Mess'lerclear 1. at 1. e e Itors 0 e . . ,Wanderer have a. perfect right He al~o knows that 'several of Ecumenical' Proiram Mr. & Mrs. John S. Francisto disagree With NFPC's resolu- these NFPC socio-economic res- 'He noted that the f~stival will $78tion ' on optional celibacy and oilltions are simply moderate be ecumenical, as' se~eral non- pl'. & Mrs. Joh'n Belskymight even be said to have an . r~:;tatemen.ts of parall,elresolu- Catholic groups havel been in. $60.obligation to condemn .it' if that's tiC'n.s prevIOusly adopted by t~e yited to participate. II Mr. & Mrs. B, A. Dzijawhat tneir collective ,conscience N~ltlonai ,Conferenc~ of Catholic Father Patenaude I a folk Dr. & Mrs. Alex. MacIsaactells them to do. ' . BI:;hops , and that all of the i • . d ' . 'h' . $50 ,. ' . musIc composer an smger Im-

On the other hand, it's hicr,hly, others, Without exceptIOn" are i If hr' 1. d'i .' Holy Name Society of St..t likewise completely orthodox se, as par IClpa e : m m~ny Mary's

regre.ttable that, " in ' exerCising ('th h ' h 0 l:ttI 1. ' area folk Masses, prayer servicesthis right and/or. duty, they have, oug. p)erf aps a t~ e ~o tconf ~nd' festivals 'since his assign- St. Mary's Womens Guildfelt 1'1.' necessary to ,I'mpugn the' sel'vatlve rom e pom O' m' 1.' 'I'n S 1. mbe' 1'96'9 Mr. ,& Mrs. Gaetan Brochu '. f C th r " I 1. h' en ep e 1', .,loyalty and ' questl'on' the. ort.ho- View 0 ,'a 0 IC SOCia eac mg, ~ ',' I Mr. & Mrs. James Egan

' Anyone interested in partici-doxy of the delegates to the re- 'Disreputnble l:actic' pating may contact F~ther Pat. Mr. & Mrs. John. Harringtoncent NFPC convention. Surely Mr. Matt and his associates at enaude at La Salette, IAttIeboro Mr. & Mrs. Clement Lesagethere must be a better way than "', ' 03 T 17) I Vincent Lynch

The Wanderer are free to dis- q27 . eI. (6 , 22.2-5410. Marion Mathieuthat for, a Catholic periodical to agree with any or. all of these - , !carryon a dialogue with the resolutions, but they are more "1""""""""""""""""""""''''''''''''''''""""""""",,,,,1,,,:,,,,,,,,,,,,,""""""" Mr. & Mrs. John Murphy"opposition." .. " Mr. & Mrs. Leo Lapierre

, , . than a little naive if they think p'ect' that the, ma.l'ority" of the Mr. & Mrs. Frank Padykula\. So much for the issue of celi- ,.they can 'get away with the elab- A.merican clergy will diSdainfully Mary Cazemiro .,bacy, which, ,as suggested above, h fIb II' 'h Iorate oax 0 a e mg, t em as ignore' The Wanderer's Iimportu- Mr. & Mrs..James, Coog'a~

is only part of the story and "revolutionary" in the pejorative" d hdoesn't by any means Jully ex- nate an somew at pr~s.umptu- -,' Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Dufort &

sense of:that ambiguous, not to ,ous overture and, follow,mg the' Familyplain 'why The Wanderer is de~ say slippery, word. Let me say I d f V' II' h' dtermined to destroy the NFPC ' .. ea 0, atlcan m 1. IS regal' , Andrew Harney (In memory of

it again: 'They know better than . w,'ill opt instead, like th~, mature Paull'ne' A, Harney') ,and all that it stands for. ' 'hto try a thmg like t at. and sensible Christians that they Mr. & Mrs. Edmund Murray"Other' ,Resolutions B 1. t~' , b th' i

U "en, agam, may e ey are, for the utmost freedom of Dr. & Mrs, Raymond RileyClearly aside .from the issue of don't, for the record will show opinion within the' CHurch on Mrs. Leland B. Smith

celibacy, NFPC stands for a unfiJrtunately that this isn't the controversial 'socio - ~conomic $45number of things that' literally first tim~ they have tried to if!l-, matters, , Mr. & Mrs, William J, Sitkomake the editors of The Wan-" pose their own ultra-conservativederer see red. That is to say, the social philosophy on the entire Freedom of Opinihn & Nancy E.other and more imp'ortant part Catholic community by' the dis-, The Council, as you !may re-of The Wanderer-~FPC:story is replltable tactic of shouting call, pointed out in its ~Pastoral

.that the editors of The Wand~er; "heresy" or its equivalent at the Constitution on 'the C~urch inby their own, v'ery' frank admis- opposition. the Modern World that on allsion, are vehemently opposed to This time, however,- they can, matters of this kind "it, i,sneces­all of the Federation's. Baltimore hardly expect 1.6 pull it off suc- sary for people to remember thatresolutions (not merely, the one cessfully, The 'priests of, the no one is allowed ... to appro-

'on celibacy) and have frantically,' United States, whom they have priate the Church's authority for'called upon the clergy of the called <Upon to repudiate all of his opinon. TIley shouldl always"United States to join them in the NFPC socio-economic resolu- try to enlighten. one :another,repudiating said resolutions in- tiom: without exception, are through honest disc:ussi9n, pre-discriminately 'and completely 'much too sophisticated, by and serving mutual charity and car­across the board. large, to be taken in by this fa- ing above all for the ~ommon

Well, let's take a look at these miliarploy, good." :other NFPC resolutions. They In other words. I strongly sus- The Wanderer, please copy.

, I

Rep'lies 'to,Th-E~'Wand~rer's'AII~Out· ,Blast,l, a·t NFPC

The Wanderer, an independent weekly published inSt. Paut' by a group of obviously sincere and dedi~l;\ted ~Catholic laymen, has declared open warfare on ,the NationalFederation of Priests Councils., The April 1 issue of the '

, paper features two editorials, . -:-plus ' a neWs story which

also reads like' an editorial­.. attacking NFPC in .. a V(ay

,that I, for one, find to be 'rather_'distu~bing (I almost said omi-

','-- ";'

Page 13: 05.13.71

~:::~ C=:::: • • • • • • ... • • • • • ! • • • • • • • •

••• + + + + + + + + + + + + • +0 + " + •• + + + + + + + + + + • + +. • + + ••• + •• + +

6%

DERMODYCLEANERS

DRY CLEANINGAND FUR STORAGE

34-44 Cohannet St.,-TauntonWhittenton Branch Store .

334 Bay Street, across fromFire Station Tel. 822-6161

HOLY ROSARY$30

Mr. & Mrs. John DubenaMr. & Mrs. Marcellus LemaireMr. & Mrs. Russell Woodward

$25Mr. & Mrs. Thaddeus StrojnyMr. & Mrs. Louis TokarzHoly Rosary Sodality

ST. PAUL$100

Mr. & Mrs. Clayton Rennie$75

Dr. & Mrs. Willi'am Fountain$50

Mr. & Mrs. Raymond DiResto$25

Mr. & Mrs. William Driscoll.Mr. & Mrs. Paul A. Silva, Mr.& Mrs. Leonard Goslin.

TauntonST. ANTHONY

$300Rev. Msgr. Maurice Souza

$100Rev. George F. AlmeidaRev. Antonio da Silva

$75Manuel Fontinha

$25Antone Arruda, Antone Gomes

Joseph Gula, Norma Silva, JohnSilvia '

THE ANCHOR-- 13Thurs., May 13, 1971

00000000000000oOOOOOOOO

9)e 93,1066 t)ifI;) ({­La. (::-).n~.

Heating Oilsand Burners

1365 NORTH FRONT STREET

, NEW BEDFORD

992·5534

0OOOOOOOOOOOO0000000000

5%%,

"The Bank That Sets The Pace For Progress'

Main Office: 41 Taunton Green, Tounton, Mass .Branch Office: 1400 Fall River Ave., Seekonk, Mass.

One Year Term Two Year Term'Minimum Deposit $1000 Maximum Deposit $30,000

ALL DEPOSITS INSURED IN !FULLMinimum Deposit $100

Maximum Deposit $30,0005~% Dividel1ds Paid Quarterly and Every

Dollar Insured in Full

No Notice Required for Withdrawal

Taunton' Co-Operative Batik Announces'Higher Intered for Savers .

NOW AVAILABLIE - TERM DEPOSIT CERTIFICATES

PAID UP SHARE ACCOUNTS

IN PASSBOOK. FORM

Mr. & Mrs. Henry Wojtkunski

$35Dr. & Mrs. Armand Bolino

Taunton cooperative bank

_ $30Mr. & Mrs. Edmund BrennanMrs. John MeunierMatilda Cutn'erMr. & Mrs. Patirck McDermott

$25Mr. & Mrs. Francis Connors,

Mr. & Mrs. Raymond Corey,Mary Dinneen, Elizabeth Doyle

John Doyle, Mr. & Mrs. JohnP. Flaherty, Mr. & Mrs. WalterJ. Fitzgerald, Mary Foley, EllaGilroy

Mr. & Mrs. Robert Glenn, Mr.l:c Mrs. John Haggerty, Mr. &l\lrs. Thomas Hoye, Mr. & Mrs.Andrew Isaacsen,' Mr. & Mrs.Cornelius Kiley

Mr. & Mrs. James Mahoney,Mr. & Mrs. Edward Mador, Mr.s.:. Mrs. Charles McManus, Mr.& Mrs. Armand Mello, Mr. &Mrs. Richard Paulson'

Philip D. Paulson, Mr. & Mrs.Roger Perreault, Marie Power,May Power. Richard Power

Mr. & Mrs. George Sherry,Mr. & Mrs. Joseph P. Silvia, Jr.,Leo & Mary Walsh

IMMACULATE CONCEPTION$100

.Rev. Barry W. Wall

$75Mr. 8< Mrs. William Desrosiers

$60The Keliher Family

$50Mr. & Mrs. John P. Delane?,The Flangheddy Family

TauntonOUR LADY OF LOURDES

$200Mr. & Mrs. John L. Morris

$150Rev. Manuel M. Resendes

$125Rev. Msgr. E. S. de Mello

$100'Rev. Antonio C. Tavares

$40Mr. & Mrs. James P. Silvia

$30Mr. &. Mrs. John P. BaptisteDr. & Mrs. David F. Gouveia

$25Mr. & Mrs. George Ferreira,

Mr. & Mrs., Joseph C. Silva, Mr.& Mrs. Anthony Martin, Mr. &Mrs. James O'Gara. Mr. & Mrs.August Varella, Mr. & Mrs.Joseph Terra. .

HIGH SCHOOLERS PITCH IN: Students of St. An­thony High School, New Bedford spent their Spring vaca­tion by aiding the old and infirm inhabitants of the No.End area of the city in beautifying their yards, sidewalksand general. surroundings.

Jr., Mr. & Mrs. Eugene Gravelin.Mr. & Mrs. Edward F. Guest,

Mrs. Michael Harkins, Mr. &Mrs. Cornelius J. Harvey, Mar­garet Healy, Mr. & Mrs. Law­rence Kavanaugh.

Mr. & Mrs, Thomas F. Kent,Mr. & -Mrs. George Knapp, Mr.& Mrs. Martyn Lincoln, Mrs.Anna C. Loud, Mr. & Mrs. Wil­liam Lupica.

Mr. & Mrs. J. Joseph Lyons,Mr. & Mrs. William McAndrews,

,Mr. ~ Mrs. Charles McCarthyJr., McCarthy Coal Co., Mr.' &Mrs. William J .. McEntee. .

Mr. & Mrs. 'Leo D. McEvoy,Mr. & Mrs. Robert McLaughlin,Mr. & Mrs. James D. Mullen Sr.,Mr. & Mrs. James D. Mullen Jr.,Mt. &'l·Mrs. Thomas J. MurrayJr.

Mr. & Mrs: William O'Connell,Mr. & Mrs. Michael Petros, Mr.& 'Mrs.. John Reardon, Mr. &Mrs. David Reid,' Mr. & Mrs.Frank J. Reynolds.

Mr. &. Mrs. William SimonsinSr., MrS. Isabelle Somerville,' Mr.& Mrs. Robert Stone, Mr. & Mrs.Paul Sullivan, Mr. & Mrs.' Fre­mont E. Wood.

Mr. & Mrs. Robert Wooster,Mr. & Mrs. Willam Buchtmann,Mr. & Mrs. James Doherty

North EastonIMMACULATE ,CONCEPTION

$100The Buckley, FamilyKathryn HealeyMr. & Mrs. John B. Parkes

'$93Vincent L. Galvin

$60Dr. & Mrs. Vincent P. Wright

$55Mary Buckley

$50Mr. & Mrs. Clement CoughlinHelen Derby ,Mr. & Mrs. Thomas GallagherMr. & Mrs. Albert GiordanoHarvey's MarketJames H. HealeyDr. &' Mrs. James F. McCourtMr. & Mrs. Frederick WildeMr. & Mrs. John Delgado,

Edmund & Mary$40

Norman R. Henderson$31

Mr. & Mrs. Alan Lee Black·well

$30Mr. & Mrs. George A. CarterAlice U. HarveyAnne M. HarveyCatherine J. HarveyGrace F. HarveyMary V. HarveyMr. & Mrs. Lawrence LyonsMr. & Mrs. Alvaro M. Sousa

. Blue Army of Our Lady ofFatima

$26Mr. & Mrs. Francis' X. Ma·

-honey$25

James Abreu, Mr. & Mrs. Vir­gil Andrews, Mr. & Mrs. JamesAntosca, Mr. & Mrs. Lewis Aries,Christopher' Brady.

Marguerite Carter, ElizabethCoughlin,. Mr. & Mrs. John De­Coste, Mrs. Helen Doherty, Mr.& Mrs. John F. Downey.

'Dr. & Mrs. Richard Dugas, AFriend, Mr. & Mrs. Raymond A.Gosselin, Mr, & Mrs. John Graca

Sou th Easton~OLY CROSS

$100Holy Cross FathersMr. & Mrs. Joseph Kairys

$75St. Vincent De Paul SocietyMr. & Mrs. Robert Dray

$65Mr. & Mrs. John Smith

$50Mrs. Jennie OvertonMr. & Mrs. James JonesDr. & Mrs. Earl McLoudDr. & Mrs. A. Hannouche

$40Mr. & Mrs. Frank Ready

$35 -Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Gentile

$30Mr. & Mrs. Hugh O'Brien 'Mr. & Mrs. Paul ColemanMr. & Mrs. William Higgins

$25Mr. & Mrs. Michael Hegarty,

Joseph Gill Jr., Robert Kane. Dr.& Mrs. Walter Judge, Dr. & Mrs.Andrew Nowak.

Dr. & .Mrs. Edward O'BrienDr. & Mrs. Thomas Berry, Mr.& Mrs. Paul Brophy,' MargaretBrophy, Mr. & Mrs. James Aze­vedo.

Mr. & Mrs. David Gomes, Mr.& Mrs. Leo Sullivan, Mrs. MaryCoy, Mr. & Mrs; James Burns,Mr. & Mrs. Seneca Stone.

Mr. & Mrs. Leo Brophy, Mr.& ,Mrs. James Lyons, Mrs. "JohnToomey, Mr. & Mrs. SalvatoreGaziano, Francis Welch, Mrs.Charles Frizado

Mr. & Mrs. Frederick Dolloff,Robert Connors, Mr. & Mrs.Charles Re'

~Howells

....... ~ ... ~..; .. _,,~ ... - .... ~ .. -

RaynhamST. ANN

$200Rev. William E. Farland

$100Richard Ouimet

$50Dr. Maurice Lagace

$25Dr. A. Edward D'Andrea,

Louis Secatore, George Boucher,Edward Hyland, Mary McGrath.

Manuel DeMello,' Thomas J.Whalen, George Powers, JohnDooley, Alfred Fraga.

James Mulvey, Thomas W.Whalen.

SeekonkMT. CARMEL

$150St. Vincent de Paul Parish

Council$100

Mr. & Mrs. Leo William TascaMr. & Mrs. Joseph Smith

$50Holy Name SocietyMr. & Mrs. David PitassiMr. & Mrs. A. QuattrucciSeekonk Council No. 5108,

Knights of ColumbusMr. & Mrs. Edward McCrystalMr. & Mrs. Thomas BradyMr. & Mrs. Richard Young

$31,Mr. & Mrs. Robert CarvalhoMr. & Mrs. G. Gorman

$30Mr. & Mrs. Stephen BurnsMr. & Mrs. Raymond KeoughMr. & Mrs. Arthur Rourke

, $25Mr. & Mrs. Louis Dunere, Mr.

& Mrs. Augustine Ferreira, Mr.& Mrs. Henry Pestana, Mr. &Mrs. Philip B. Toole, Mrs.Charles Schultz.

Mr. & Mrs. Robert Sawyer,Women's Guild, Mr. & Mrs.James E. Wynne, Mr. & Mrs.John W. Korkuc.

M,:. & Mrs. Joseph LyonsMr..& Mrs. Armand LussierMr. & Mrs. Alfred T. Morris JrMr. & Mrs. Samuel MulhollandMr. & Mrs. Edward Chandler

ProcrastinationA men never sees all that his

mother has been to him untilit's too late to let her know howhe sees it.

Norton·ST. MARY

$300Kilburn Glass Industries Inc.

$250Defiance Bleachery

$100St. Vincent de Paul SocietyMrs. Patrick Deylin (91d Col-

0I1Y Nur~!l1g ~ome) .•$50

Mr. & Mrs. Charles Valentine$40

Mr. & Mrs. Robert Devlin$30

Mr. & Mrs. John Norton$25

Mr. & Mrs. Francis Henry,Roland C.' Paquette, BeatricePaquette, Mr. & Mrs. Thomasaryant Sr., Mrs. George Sabou­rin.

Mr. & Mrs. George Desor~

. meaux, Mr. & Mrs. Judson Staf­ford, Mr. & Mrs. James Carney,Mr. & Mrs. Charles Wickland,Mr. & Mrs. Charles Blomer, Mr.& Mrs. Manuel Vital.

Mr. & Mrs. Paul ,Sabourin, Mr.& Mrs..John Ribeiro, John E.Gomes, Mr. & Mrs. Gerald Ber­nier, Mr. & Mrs. William Flah-

, ertyAnonymous, Mr. & Mrs. Felix

Yarusites, . Mrs.' Raymond 'Shea

Page 14: 05.13.71

Open Evenings

1001 Kings Hwy.

NEW BEDFORD

B

See. U.s First

See Us Last

,Norris H. Tripp, SHEET METAL

, J. TESER, Prop.RESIDENTIAL .

INDUSTRIALCOMMERCIAL'

253 Cedar St., New Bedford993-3222

Taunton;;$T.' MARY.

, $250Rev. James, F. Lyons

$200.Dr'.. J. Fenton .

$100'Sara L Maloney & Mary M.

MoriartyDr. Joseph F. Nates

$50Dr. G. Harrington .Dr. Donald E. LaMarcheMcKeon FamilyMisses C. & M. C. Sheerin,

$40J. B. Grant

$35,Ruth V. Dias.D. J. Sullivan

$30C. Caron ,,William J. Casey.James & Nellie CorcoranJ. D. JudgeMrs. F. p. McCabeMiss C. McCarthy,Helen, McCarthyMr. & Mrs. Frederick Mosley

$25Augustine L. :Avila, Mr. & Mrs.

Raymond Chamberland, J. Cole,Mrs., Bernard Cleary, ParriciaCleary ,

Pauline Cleary, R. H. Cormier,Howard Donahue, Daniel J Doyle'Mrs. Ethel M. Doyle

Dr.' Anthony N. Elias, F. Gem­me, Mrs. F. Gemme, F.E. George,W. Grant, Dr. J. J. Gregg, K. Griffin, Wm .J. Hansen, Mr., & Mrs. L. La­France, Gertrude & Ruth Lawlor

E. Lehan, Mrs. A McKenna,Mr. & Mrs. J. McMorrow, D. Mc­Sweeney,' Mr. & Mrs. David H.Martin

J. C. Megan Sr., R. Mendes'&Mrs. N. Whittters, J. J. Mrocka, .Mrs. LaurenceJ. Munise', J.' Mur­phy, F. Norton. ,Fraricis JO'Boy, Dr. T O'~rien

J. Padula, L.Palazesi, Mr. & MrsMaurice Perry, J. Quinn'"

George Sanford, Shaw's Real­tor Service, Wm. H. Sullivan

Edward M..Tokarz, S. Tokarz,Mrs Gertrude Zawacki, P. George

But See Us

GEO. O'HARACHEVROLET

BEFORE YOUBUY -TRY

PARKMOTORS,OLDSMOBILE

Oldsmobile-Peugot-Renault67 Middle Street, Fairhaven

$25Margaret McCarthy, Mary Mc-

·Carthy, Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Burke,Mr. & Mrs. Richard Cayer, Mrs.i:rank ' Brown

Mrs. John Boudreau; Mr. &Mrs. George White, Mr. & Mrs.Robert Ross, Mr. & Mrs. Patrick

· J. JYlurphy, Mr. &' Mrs., Thomas,Cunniff

Mr. & Mrs. Evans' Lava, Ger­trude McBreen, Mr; & Mrs., Wil­liam MacLean,' The Welch :F.am­ily, Helen U & Mary E. Cronan

" Eileen MacCarthy, James Kev'-,ican, Mynette 'Dewhurst, Mr. &Mrs. Manuel Rebello, Sr., Mr. &Mrs.' John Curley", .'. '

William Meehan, Helen Brady,.Elizabeth Brady, Mr. & Mrs.George A Moitoza, Mr. & Mrs.Kenneth Salltos .

Mr. & Mrs. Alpert Scully, Mr. \,& Mrs. Richard Peyton; Mi'. &'., .Mrs; Stanley Roberts, Mr. & Mrs.'John S.' Tripp, . Mr; & Mrs; Ed~

.ward. Feeney , 'Mr. & Mrs., ,Francis Soitos,

Anne MacHaffie, Mr. & Mrs.George J. Wilson, 'Mr. & Mrs.Walter Travers; Mr. & Mrs. Li­doino Severino

Mr. & Mrs. Ralph Barboza,Anna Maguire

Mr. & Mrs. Leo Brady, RuthBrady, Mr. & Mrs. Robert Dewey

. .~oseph Enos, Mr. & Mrs. William', Gallagh~r .

Mr. & Mrs. John Goldrick, Mr.& .Mrs. Raymond Harrison, Ar,,thur Marron, .Helen Murray, Mr.& Mrs. Joseph S. Rose

Robert Simmons, Mr. & Mrs.Joseph. Torres Mr & Mrs Thomas

, Varden. Mr: & Mrs. Bruno AlegiCharles' Goldrick '

Mr. & Mrs. Roland LeBrun,· Mrs. Barbara Peck

11:

'i .' ,PEABODY AWARDS: The 31st annual George Foster

Peab<;>dy Awards, bven for television and· radio programs,were awarded in New York, April 21. Three of the awardswent to, left· to right: Father Michael. Kennelly, S.J., headof Loyola University and WWL-TV in New Orleans' forthe program "rhi~ New Frontier;" Theodor Geisel, or Dr~Seuss, for his work on the CBS-TV programs, adaptedfrom his book; and Flip Wilson for 'the excellence of his. ',I .comedy show.' NC, Photo. . ' ,

,Tci~ntO?/ .ST.JACQU~S

'$250' 'IRev. 'Msgr. Alfred Jj Gendreau

, $100'!· 'Mr. & Mrs. Matthew Bury

Rev. Roland Bousqhet," . IRev. Andre P. Jussaume

: $60 ',: ', Mr. &. ,Mrs: Matiric~ Larocque,

, $~O' i_ .

· Leona pwyer ' 1,$40 I

Jean Paul .Bourdeau$35

Mr. & Mrs. Roland :Auclair,Raymond NolinMr. &,Mrs., Maurice ~iendeauMr. &, Mrs, Wesley ~chondek

$30 1

Claire Hamel' I

-Mr. & Mrs. Henri Perra Jr.. . $25 I

· Bilodeau Fa,mily,~l" & Mrs.'Gerard Bonenfant," Mr1' & . Mrs.Adelar,d 'Carbonneau, 'ifheolinde

. . , I'Champagne, Mr. & Mrs. JosephW.. Donnelly , :

Mr: &' Mrs. Arthur Dpwd, Mr.& Mrs. Rodolphe Duss~ault, Mr.& Mrs. Francis Guay, Dr. & Mr~.

Fernand Hamel, Reginal HebertLauI;a Jarry, Mr. & JYlrs.· Vin­

cent Kelly, 'George Mapor,EvaNolin, 'Edna Riley,' Heqry Vail-llmcourt' , . '

ST. PATRICK, \FALL RIVER SACRED HEAR1

Eugene Connors. president of. .' . ithe St Patrick's School Board . ',' $400 .':

Very Rev. William ,A Galvinof Education, announces that a Ischool 'alumni association is be- . ' , $100 Iing formed, open tq all gradu-, , Mary K. Nicholsates, whether presently' parish- ." $~OO.: , .ioners or not. Alumni· .should: '.' Mary, Kathe.nne & EI1,een Mc-send name: address; telephone, M~hon I

number and year o'f- graduation,. , ' . ' $50. i 'to Sister ',Mary 'Sean 'Hurley;, ~,' The, MIsses ReIlly.. 'sch'ool principal, at '760 Slade" 'Mr. & Mrs. Gerald DoironStreet, Fall River~ 540 1

Mr. & Mrs. Edward TrucchiMr. & Mrs. Francis Andrews

$35" .Mary Kennedy .

$30Rose O'Donnell'Rita O'DonnellMr. & Mr~. Joseph ,COl;reia

, Allan Fitzgerald

Women, Law TextWASHINGTON (NC)---,A, $15,­

000 Carnegie Corporation grant '.will be used by Georgetown'University law center here todevelop a textbook on women,and the law.

ST. MARGARET,BUZZARDS' BAY,' ,

The annual', banquet of SS.Margaret and Mary Guild',willbe held at 7 on Wednesday night,June 9, in the Holland Inn, On­set. Mass _will be offered at 6o'clock by Father Carroll in St.Margaret's Church, Buzzards'Bay, prior to the banquet.

Members of the guiid w~reurged to attend an evening :ofrecollection at Miramar, Dux',bury on June' 29. The' affair isbeing sponsored by the Mother~abrini Circle, Daughters of Isa­bella.

ST. JOHN OF-GOD,SOMERSET' '

, Venus 'de Milo restaurant willbe 'the scene at 7 Wednesdaynight, May',19 fot a dinner .anda fashion show sponsored by theWom'en's Guild with Miss Clo­rinda Ventur'~ as . chairman.Music will be by Dave' Nadienand Miss Maddy Hamel will becommentator. Tickets a'reavail­able from Miss Barbara Costa,telephone 677-9605. Door' 'prizeswill be awarded." ,

ST. ANNE,NEW BEDFORD ' .

- The Ladies of St. Anne' So­dality will sponsor a rummagesale from 10 AM. through A:30P.M. the week of May 17through 22 in St. Anne's schoolhall. The Salisbury Street en­trance should' be used.

THE ANCHOR~Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Mar' 13, 1971,rJ4

Publicity, chairmen of parish or·ganizations :are asked to submitnews items for this column to The

,Anchor, P. 0, Box 7, 'fall River02722. "

ST. ANN,RAYNHAM

The annual ceremonies of the'Crowning of the stafue of theBlessed Virgin Mary and theLiving Rosary will be conducted

, tonight at 7:30.

OUR LADY OF MT. CARMEL,NEW BEDFORD

The regular monthly meetinp,of the parish PTA will be .heldat 7:30 on Sunday night, May 16in the school. Mrs. GeorgianaBarboza and Mrs. Gloria Ferrei­ra will' be in charge or' refresh­ments.

,OUR LADY OF ANGELS,FALL RIVER

The annual blessing of auto- ,mobiles 'will .take place at 1o'clock on Sunday afternoon,May 16 in the church parkinglot '

The Holy Rosary Sodll1ity willreceive Holy Communion' in abody at the 8' o'clock' Mass on'Sunday morning and then will;iroceed to the hall for a meetingand a communion breakfast

There' will be a penny sale at?' on Thursday night, June 24'

, and is open, to all p.arishibners,

HOLY NAME,FALL RIVER

The CYO will sponsor a dancefrom 8 to 11 tomorrow night inthe school hall, with music byFriends, Inc,

ST. MARY, "NEW BEDFORD

A Casual Country Dance isslated for Saturday' night, May22 in the schoof gym 1.!nder spon­sorship of the parish CCD. Lio­nel Ponte's orchestra 'will supoly

.music. "Country and Prairie", styles will be worn and prizes

will be awarded for prettiest andmost authentic costumes, Tick­ets .are' available' from board

'members or may be reserved bycal.1ing 675-9249. '. As a follow-up to weekly

for1.!ms presen~ed' during Lent. by the CCD, a dessert recordparty wilf be. held in the gym

'from 8 to, 10 Wednesday night,May 26.

TheWo'men's Guild will' holdits' annual instaIia~ion.banquet ST. JOSEPH,Monday night, june 14 at Twins AITLEBOROPalace,' .Route6; Westport. Res- Boy Scout Troop No. 37 will.:,evations may be made with Mrs. , hold ,'acamporee .weekend start- .

, :: .~~~~thY .l:Iea~" banqu.~~ch.air- ing 'Fridayaiternoonat Camp. . Norse on, the Cape. Competition '

. :. .A Communion .supper Will be ,; . among the, troops' will, be con-, ,held, in t,he school.. followirig7:30 ducted, in' the area' of scouting

Mass Sunday evening; May 16.Speaker will be Rev:. Ronald in camping, skills.. '

,Tosti, Diocesan CCD Director. ST. STANISLAUS,, Marilyn Pacheco is in charge of ,FALL RIVER '

reservations. " , A' cake' sale' to follow all'OUR' .LADY 'OF PERPETUAL', Masses Saturday and Sunday,

, HELP; NEW'BEDFORD' ", " May-I5, and 16, will benefit th~ : .The R~sarYSociety'Will spon- Men's. Club. Donations may be

,sor a card party at' 2 Sunday' left at the conven~ .or .rectory. ~.•afternoon, ,May 16. in the church A, gener!,!1 meetmg to prepar~hall. "Refreshments will be served. for' the annual parish festivl!-IMrs. A~lia IGalanek chairman wi1l l?e held in the,lower church 'is being aided in a;rangement~. hall followin? evening, 'Massby 'Mrs. Theresa, Cameron, co- ,Wednes~ay mg~t, ~ay 19. Achairman. and her committee. " p~e-festIval auctIOn IS slated for

Holy Name ,Society members Sat~rd~y, June 12 .in the~choolannounce a darice from 8 to mid- audItOrIum. DonatIOns WIll benight Saturday,' May 22 at picked up Saturday, Ma~ 29 an.dMiekiewicz Hall,' 2031 Purchase Saturday" June 5. ChaIrman IS

, _.' Street. Music will be ,by" the Edward K?zenewski, aided. by': Falcon Orchestra of Pawtucket. Joseph WhIpp.

, I

Page 15: 05.13.71

SEND YOUR GIFT TO

THE SOCIETY FOR THE PROPAGATION OF THE FAITH

I

SALVATION AND SERVICE ARE THE WORK OF

-

1SMr. & Mrs. William J. Mc­

Carthy$75

Susan McGowan$60

William Keane

$50Dr. & Mrs. Ronald R. Bilodeau

$45Mr. & Mrs. Timothy J. Manning

$40Dr. & Mrs. Clayton King

$35Anonymous

$31Mr. & Mrs. Paul :E'. Keane Jr.

$30Mr. & Mrs. Ross SteevesMr. & Mrs. Charles Mattos

$25Rita T. McGlynp, 'Mr. & Mrs.

Roy Lynch, Mr. & Mrs. FrankPimental, Mr. & Mrs. Daniel Mc­Quillan, Anonymous

Dr. & Mrs. Stanley Misliwy,Mr. & Mrs. William J. QuillanJr., Mr. & Mrs. Francis O'Dris­coil, Mr. & Mrs. Donald J. Flem­ing, Anonymous

Mr. & Mrs. Mark H. McIntyre,Mr. & Mrs. William F. Hubbard,Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Farley, Mr.& Mrs. Frank Cooper, Mr. &Mrs. Real Breton

Mr. & Mrs. Ralph Sanford Jr.,Alberta Silveira, Mr. & Mrs.Howard Chadwick, Mr. & Mrs.Michael Sylvia, Mrs. Agnes Pel­zar, Mr. & Mrs. George, W. H.Smith Jr.

The Rev. Monsignor Raymond T. ConsidineDiocesan Director368 North Main StreetFall River, Massachusetts 02720

,: I ENCLOSE my contribution of $ to help :I the missionaries serve all who suffer and need II my love. II II Name II II Address II I

: City State .Zip_·__ :L J

THE ANCHOR-:-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. May 13,1971

Central VillageST. JOHN

$30Mrs. Isabelle Sandberg

$25St. Isidore Council, Knights of

ColumbusLillian SekondaMrs. Lawrence DolanMr. & Mrs. Henry Arruda

DightonST. PETER

$200Montfort Fathers

$100Mr. & Mrs. James B. Murphy

$50

Kent, Mr. & Mrs. Norman La­France.

Mr. & Mrs. Bruce Murphy,Leo Pivirotto, Mr. & Mrs. HaroldRoberts, Mr. & Mrs. AntoneRose, Mrs. Raymond Simmons.

Mr. & Mrs. Philbert Torres,Mr. & Mrs. Roger Turner.

MattapoisettST. ANTHONY

$500Anonymous

$300Mr. & Mrs. Charles Mc,Gowan

$100Mr. & Mrs. Frank F. SylviaMr. & Mrs. Clarence VeroiMr. & Mrs Charles A. Crowley

Jr.

OR

North· DightonST. JOSEPH

$500Rev. Msgr. Bernard J. Fenton

$150Henry Wareing

$125Atty. & Mrs. Richard Martin

$100In Memory of James E. Wil­

liams$50

St. Jose'ph's Women's Guild

. $30.Mr.& Mrs. Paul Horton

$25Mr. & Mrs. Levite Carrier, Mr. &

Mrs. Oliver Collard, Mr. & Mrs.William Drumm'ond, Leo Duffy,Mr. & Mrs. Robert -Dutra.

John Egan, Mr. & Mrs. RobertHebert, Mr. & Mrs. WilliamHogan, Mr. & Mrs. Maurice

ST. JOSEPH

$250In Memory of Rev. Msgr. Pat­

rick H. Hurley$30

Mr. & Mrs. Peter ReillyThe Garvin Family

$25Mr. & Mrs. Maurice Desro­

siers, Mr. & Mrs. J. LaPre, Mrs.Estella Margarido, Mr. & Mrs.Joseph McKenna, Mary McNer­ney.

Mr. & Mrs. Gilbert Simmons,Anonymous.

The Rev. Monsignor Edward T. O'MearaNational Director366 Fifth Avenue

New York, New York 10001

please...

,• B'ECAUSE my brother suffers and needs me ...

• BECAUSE some 15 million people are afflict.ed with leprosy.:.

• jlECAUSE my sacrifice helps support missionaries serving leprosypatients too poor to help themselves ...

• BECAUSE siJlphone drugs are needed fortreatment (only $5.00 suppliesapatient with sulphone for over ayear) ...

LEND,A

HELPING·HAND

The'Society lor the Propagation 01 the Faith

TauntonHOLY FAMILY

$500.Rev. Msgr. William H. Dolan

$50Mr. & Mrs. Russell' Chamber­

landMr. & Mrs. Joseph MozzoneMr. & Mrs. Antonio Gomes &

Manuel L. GomesMr. & Mrs. William Powers

$45Mr. & Mrs. Edward Linhares

$35Mr. & Mrs. John Cassidy

$30.Mr. & Mrs. Edward CameronMr. & Mrs. Al Dutra 'Mr. & Mrs. Charles GeerCharles KenyonMr. & Mrs. J. ZeibaDr. &. Mrs.. Charles Souza

$25·Mr. & Mrs. A. Amaral, Mr. &

Mrs. T. Brassard, Mr. & Mrs.Francis Dutra, Mr. & Mrs. Ed­ward F. Leddy, A. Machado.

J. Mendes, Mrs. Peter Murphy& Family, Mr. & Mrs. AntonioOliveira, Mr. & Mrs. F. Perry,J. Perry.

Mary Raposa, Mr. & Mrs.Charles Volkman •

Mr. & Mrs. Leo J. DeslauriersMrs. Sybil Bacon, Dr~ Rose

Borges, Mr. & Mrs. John Pelle­tier, Mr. & Mrs. Clinton' Rose,Mr. & Mrs. Norman K. Smith.

St Vincent de Paul Society

·~l) -',

'Stresses Workers'Right tQ Organ.iz~·

ATLANTA (NC) -'- Workershave have not only a right buta duty to organize, ArchbishopThomas A. Donellan told some

. 200 persons attending' a . brunchafter the .archdiocese's firstMass for Labor at the cathedralhere.

"This God-given right oughtto be respected and used, and wewill be saying this' as loudlyand clearly as we can," he added.

The archbishop said the ... ·littleman" has a small chance ofcoming to decent terms with the"big man" unless he unites withother little men.

Priest ShortageBiggest' ProblemFor Church

FRAMINGHAM (NC) - Cardi­nal John Wright, prefect of theVatican's Congregation for theClergy, said here the shortage ofpriests is "the greatest and mosturgent problem" facing theChurch.

"As a' result, h~ said, "wepriests today must· make surethat we do not die without leav­ing behind us two priests, whomwe have attracted, inspired, re­cruited and financed through theseminary."

Addressing members of theclass of 1946 of St. John's Sem­inary, Cardinal Wright com­mended the 28 priests who werecelebrating their 25th anniver­sary of ordination. He said: .

"There were 28' the day theywere ordained and there are 28now. Nobody has received per­mission to die and' nobody hasasked permission to quit thepriesthood. "

Happy PriestsCardinal Wright told the hun­

dreds attending the celebrationthat he had received permissionfrom Pope Paul to attend thecelebration at St. John's wherehe once taught theology.

"Several months ago, His Holi­ness remarked, 'Why doesn'tsomeone find the means of bring­ing to' the communicationsmedia the stories of the happyRr\ests who remain at their postsand are still preaching joy atthe end of their lives?'" Cardi­nal Wright said.

"These are the men whoselives hav.e' been .uninterrupted,examplt;s"r,o£y;: f,idelity·,,,.to ,,·,theChurch," the cardinal said ofthe class of 1946.. "TheSe, men· exemplify .the joyin their work in the undivided

. love for Christ, amI. a pride intheir priesthood ... their com­pl~tfmess as men .. :"

'Remained Stable'"The priest," he continued

"personifies ChrISt. He is the )j~:ing .channel. .oi, Christ t~.the.worlp arq ~o the .extent that-they. echo· the' teachings of theChurch ._ when theY' speak fromthe altar, they are saying 'I,Christ ..."'.

Speaking of the current stateof ferment in the .stateand the Church, he told the 28priests:

"In the midst of all that, youhave remained stable, you knew

"what your vocation was, youknew who you were, youwouldn't let down because youwouldn't let Je'sus down, yougave the stability of God. in themidst of chaos."

Page 16: 05.13.71

"

SACRE~ HEART$100 '._

Mr. & Mrs. Norman Seguin$35

Mr. & Mrs. 'Pierre Seguin$25

The LeBoeuf Family

New BedfordST. JAMES

$150Dr. DaniCi Harrington

'$100 .Mrs. Jeremiah CoholanMr. & Mrs. Louis Coholan

. $75Mr. & Mrs. Arnold Parsons

$50Mrs. Mark M. DuffMr. & Mrs. James GiblinMrs. Alexander WhelanDr. & Mrs. Edward VogtMr. & Mrs. Francis O. Quinn

, $40John Leva

$35Mr. & Mrs. Francis RoachBrig. 'Gen. & Mrs. Lawrence

MarkeyMrs. James Bolton

$30Mr. & Mrs. Raymond FontaineMrs. Leo M. SullivanDr. William O'C;onnorDorothy M. BaldwinJoseph E. BaldwinFrederick MunroMr. & Mrs. Paul ClarkMr. & Mrs. Daniel, Hayes,

$25Mr. & Mrs. George Sheehan,

Mr. & Mrs. Adam J. Zych, Rob­ert Hayes, Charles B. Clavin,Mr. & Mrs. Richard Manning

Mr. & Mrs. Francis Baptiste,In Memory of Armand A. Lan­gis, Mary Whelan, Frances,Whelan

Mr. & Mrs. Edward O'Rourke,Mr. & .Mrs. George Medeiros,Mrs. Y.incent Shea, Mr.' & Mrs.Daniel Murphy, Mr. &! Mrs.John C. Martin, Mr. &: Mr.~:

Ronald TetraultLoretta Phaneuf, Mary Phii-'

neuf, Mr. & Mrs. William Da-'mos, Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Berry,Mr. & Mrs. Edward Mello, Mr.'&"Mrs7 William" Whelan·~·'.,···'

$30Mr. &' Mrs. Chester Gadomski

. ,

ST. THERESA$125, .

Mr. & Mrs. Ro·nald· Lorang~~$100

AnonymousLemieux Plumbing & Heating

Inc.

ST. HEDWIG$100

,$30 'Mr. & Mrs, RaQul Leblanc

$25Mr. & Mrs. Roland Poirier,

Mr. & Mrs. Maurice ,Bonneau,Mr. & Mrs. Ovila Rock.

A Friend

OUR LADY OFPERPETUAL HELP

$200Conventual Franciscan Fathers

$75Andrew Banas

$40Jankowski Family

$30Stanley SmiechowskiStanley Stankiewicz

$25Eugene Chaberek, Rose Feeley, '

Dr. Francis P. Grenn, In Mem­ory of Frank & Rqsalie Jeglin­ski, Our Lady of Perpetual HelpSociety.

Katarzyna Piko, Czeslaw Pon­'ichtera, Frank Sylvia, WalterSzeliga, Anthony Zerbonne.

New Bedford

$48Mr. & Mrs. James Wilson Jr.

$50Mr. & Mrs. Hugh T. EarleyMr. & Mrs. Salvatore J. Giam­

malvo

ST. ANTHONY OF PADUA$80

The William Beauregard Fam­ily

HOLY NAME$150

Rev: Lucio B. Phillipino$100

In Memory of James F. Har­ding Sr.

- $50'Rev. Clement Dufour

St. Vincent de Paul Society$25

Eva Benoit, Louise Cote, Ros­ette Daigle, Henry Dube, DilVidDuma~ .

Thaddeus Gumienny, NormanHebert, Anna Masse

Mr. & Mrs Robert V. SweeneyMr. & Mrs. John Maloney, D~. &Mrs. Thomas Geagan, St. Pat­rick's Circle, Mrs. Rolpnd Leten-

'dre, Wareham Lodge of ,Elks1548

$46Mr. & Mrs Charles A. Gunning

$35Mrs. Orner Bellenoit

$30Benac FamilyMr. & Mrs. Daniel FlannaganMr. & Mrs. James GleasonMr. & Mrs. Francis Kennedy

$29Mr. & Mr.s. Walter King

$25Mr. & Mrs. William Demsky,

Mr. & Mrs. James Dufficy, ,MaryE. Foley & Joseph Foley; Mr. &Mrs. Michael Griffiths, GeraldHarrington

Mr. & Mrs. Peter Horan, In'. Memory of Julia A. Foley & Ce­

celia Foley Sher, Mr. & Mrs.Manuel Mello

Mr. & Mrs. Thomas MullarkeyMrs'. John O'Neil, Mr. & Mrs.William Powers, Mr. & Mrs.Joseph St. Marie, Mr. & Mrs.George Swansey, Mrs. ,JohnWhitmer '

. ~.

TWO 'GABRIELS' SPREAD THEIR SILVER,WINGS:Rev. Casimir Pugevisius, tight, president of the CatholicBrm~dcasters 'Assobation," presents the organization's 'Ga­briels' to Rev. T.hurston Davis, left and Rev. Tang for "out­standing achievem~nt in the production ot television spotannouncements,: p~oduced for n~tional release". The win-

'ning entry in' thei Gabriel Awards presentation, was. theCampaign for Hu~an Development TeleSPOTS, producedby the Franciscan Communications Center-for the Depart­ment of Communieations, usce NC Photo.

I 'Wareha~ST. PATRICK

$125 IMr. & Mrss. John MacNeil

$100 iRev. Leonard M. Mullaney

$75 . i ', I .

"Mr. & Mrs. Fred KuppensMr. & Mrs. TheodoJe Baptiste

$50' iMr. & Mrs. Frederick MaynardMr. & Mrs. Hulot !Haden

> Mr. & Mrs. Milton King .'.., Mr: &: Mrs. :Fred; M~yn'ard. Mr. & Mrs. AndrewlMcGraw'Mrs. Albert Getchel,1J. A. Clongherty' i'Mr. & Mrs. Richardt Zens" $35,

John English, Jr. IMr. & Mrs. Leo, St. JohnJ. W. Hurley Co. i 'Dr. & Mrs. Robert Johnson

$30 !Mr. & Mrs. Peter J.IOrlik, Jr.Mr. & Mrs. Herman IPradaMr. & Mrs. Colin GQrdonMr. & Mrs. Edigie Monteiro

$28 1,Mr. & Mrs. Miguel Campinha

$25 ' :Mr. & Mrs. Robert: Cahoon,

Mr. & Mrs. Ellsworth: Atwood,Mr. & Mrs. Maurice Veiga; Mr.'& Mrs. Francis McWilliams Jr.,Mr. & Mrs. George Barrett.

Mr. & Mrs. Albert Fellowes,Mr. '& Mrs. Milton' Laytock, Mr.& Mrs. William Dawsoh, Mr. &, IMrs. Antone Gomes, Mr. & Mrs.Fletcher Long. I

Mr. & Mrs. Arthur Cdllins, Jr.,, Mr. & Mrs.•,James Brogioli, Juli­

,us Babbitt, Mr. & Mrs. i NormanSylvester, Mr. & Mrs.lTimothyWalsh' I

Edwin K. Greer qompany,Mrs. F. Edward Kiernan, Mr. &Mrs. Francis' W. Murphy, Mr. &Mrs. Adolphe Billottee, Mr. &Mrs. Robert Tassinari i

Mary Tavares, Mr. :& Mrs.Thomas Connor Mr. & Mrs.Thomas VonMello, Mr.!& Mrs.

, William Henry, Mr. & Mrs. Ken­neth Semedo

Mr. & Mrs. Richard SLillivan,Sr., Mr. &. Mrs. Chester ISkinder

Mr. & Mrs. Dale Hill, Mr. &Mrs. Thomas Moffet, Mr.1 & Mrs.Edward V: O'Neil, Mr. 1,& Mrs.James Vicino Jr., Mr & Mrs John'Callahan" I

ST. JOSEPH

Westpo,rtST. GEORGE

Fairhaven'

North' WestportOUR LADY OF GRACE

$26Mr. & Mrs. Everett J. Barrow

,Mr. & Mrs. Raymond, Barton

$25Mr: & 'Mrs. Edwin, W. AllardMr. & Mrs, Alan BolingMr. & Mrs. Victor BrunetteMr. & Mrs. Earl, C ChandlerMr. & Mrs. Joseph CharadeMr. & Mrs. John Dias Jr.:Mr. & Mrs. Louis DoucetteMr. & Mrs. P'hilip HardingMr. & Mrs: Edward O'GaraMr. & Mrs. Andrew PifkoMr. & Mrs. Frank RezendesMrs. Richard StevensonMr. & Mrs. Rene VezinaMrs. James W. GreenwayMr. & Mrs. Alcide Pelletier

$62Mr. & Mrs. Joseph A. Saladino

$50Mr. & Mrs. Earl Dias

$35Mr. &' Mrs. Joseph BowersMr. & Mrs. Stanley ,Walsh

$30Victor L. BrunetteGrace Gonsalves & Mary Co­

holan. Mr. & 'Mrs. James Murphy

Mr. & Mrs. Riehard NerbonneMr. & Mrs. Eugene Ruell

$27Mr. & Mrs. Paul Lopes.

, $50Rev. Rene R. Levesque 'Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth Smith'Mr. & Mrs. William Wilson

$40Lena St. Pierre

$35Council of Catholic Women ,

$30Mr. & Mrs. Manuel Cordeiro

" $25Mr. &'·Mrs. Manuel R. Faria,

Mr. & Mrs. Vincent Nanni, Mr.& Mrs. Normand Sasseville

Mr. & Mrs. John J. lVlarnik,'Marie Cordeiro & Maria, Mr. &Mrs. Joseph L. Cabral.

ST. MARY$100

Rev. Paul G. Connolly$30

Mr. & Mrs. Sylvester Maloney$25 :

Mr. ,& Mrs. Thomas Hart; Mr.& 'Mrs. Joseph',Winsper, Mr. &Mrs. William Camara, Mr. & MrsWilliam Constant, Mr. &' Mrs.

'Albert CoucciMr. & Mrs. Arthur DesRoches, '

Mr. & Mrs. Joseph' Walsh

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. May 13,'197116South Dartmouth,

ST.' MARY$425

Mr. & M~s. George A. 'D. SaintAubin

$150 ,_Mr. & Mrs. JosephM. F, Don­

aghyMr. & Mrs. Joseph R. Glen-

I '

non Jr.Mr. & Mrs. Fred De'Cristof~ro

$125Rev. John V. Magnani

$100Helen Collopy,Mr. & Mrs. John J. HayesMr. &' Mrs. Ar'mand: F. 'Bro-

\deur

Dr. & Mrs. Louis MiskellMr. & Mrs. Edwin C BradyMr. & Mrs. Owen F. Hackett

Jr.$70

Mr. & Mrs. John H. Smith$60

Mary T. LuizThe Silveira FamilY

, $50:'·Mr. & Mrs. Richard ParsonsMr. & Mrs. John PilvinesA FriendMr. &- Mrs. Angelo DeMelloMr. & Mrs. Eugene CaronMrs. Alvaro RodriguesMr. ~ Mrs. Jame~ BarrettMr. & Mrs. George P. Ponte,Mr. & Mrs. Edward Hicks

$40Dr. & Mrs. Vito Ciminello'Mr. & Mrs. Frederick C: 'Cole

$35Mr. &. Mrs.. Manuel DeMe.lloRosemary Quinn ,

, Dr. & Mrs. John S. Machado$30

Mr. &- Mrs. Carlos AlvesWilliam A. lVIurphy,'Mr. & Mrs. Walter O'BrienMr. & Mrs. George 'Yright IIIMr. & Mrs. Nelson ClevelandJosephine M. FoleyHelen & Margaret GambleMr. & Mrs. Francis O. TraversMr. & Mrs. Frederick Corbeil,

$25 'The Johnson Family, Mr. &

Mrs. p'aul G. Caron, IYI. & Mrs:Armand Borges, Mr. & Mrs.Charles Nunes, Mr. & Mrs.. Jo­seph A. Correia

Mr. §t Mrs. PaulO. F:,erro, .Mr.& Mrs. Herve LaPointe, Mr, &Mrs. Leonard J. Rose, Mr. &Mrs. Antone M. Varao, Mr. &Mrs. Donald Dwyer

Mr. & Mrs. Gerald Murphy,Mr. & Mrs. Antone Gomes Jr.,Olivia M. Luiz, Mr. & Mrs.Frank J. Mello, Judge & Mrs.George Ponte, Shirley Perry, Mary Perry,Mrs. 'Ann DeMello, Dr. & Mrs.Anthony Martin, Mrs. Homer J.Messier '

Mr. & Mrs. Isaac Dawson, Mr.& Mrs. Calistus Sylvia Jr. Mi­chael Costa, Mr. &, Mrs. JohnSaunders, Mr. & Mrs. NormandMenard

Mr. & Mrs. David J. Pimental, $300 'Mrs. Dorothy Horan, Mr. & Mrs. George ConsidineJoseph Singleton, Mr. & Mrs. $50Joseph G. Sylvia; Alice Sheerin, Mr. & Mrs. Thomas J. WilcoxMary Sheerin' " $31 .

Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Ponte Mr. & Mrs. Henry J. PicardMr. & Mrs. John Downey $30Mr..& Mrs. Manuel. H. Silvia Mr. & Mrs. David Buckley Jr.

, Mr. & Mrs. Victor Ladetto Mr. '& Mrs. Leo Romeo Du-Mr. ,& Mrs. Frank' Coleman, breuil

Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Maher, Mr. ' $25& Mrs. George M. O'Hara Jr., Mr. &. Mrs.' Joseph Bono, Mr.Mr. & Mrs. Joseph A. Frasier Jr. ~ Mrs. Frank Cardoza, Mr.' &Mr. & Mrs. Thomas M. Quinn Jr. Mrs. Almedor Houle, Mr. & Mrs.,

. Mr. & Mrs. Thomas M. Quinn Sr.... Oscar Lariviere, Mrs. EvelineJames M. Quinn "'Magnant.

Mr. & Mrs. Raymond ·G. Boyce Mr. & Mrs. Roland P. McGee,Mr. & Mrs. Gerald Morency Mr.' & Mrs. Manuel Souza, West-Judge & Mrs. August Taveira port Package Store.

.'

Page 17: 05.13.71

LA SALETTE JUBILARIANS CONGRATULATED: Very Rev. Emil Truffer, M.S.third from left, congratulates Rev. Edward P. Versailles, M.S., Attleboro who markedhis 50th Anniversary as aLa Salette. Looking on are Rev. Francis P. Allard, M.S., a gold­en jubilarian and Rev. Roland R. Bedard, M.S., a silver jubilarian, both of Attleboro.

.aJ 1111111111 III 11111111 III III 111111 III 111111111111 III111111 III 111111 III III III II 11111111 III III III 1111 1111 III III11111 III 1111 111111 III 1111111 II!!:~ ~.I D & D SALES AND SERVICE, I~ INC. ~= =

FBIGIDAlRJEREFRIGERATION

APPLIANCES== AIR I CONIDITIONING =~ 363 SECOND ST. FALL RIVER, MASS. ~111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111IIl1l1lhi

-~

-

ST. THOMAS MORE

$100St. ThOmas More Conference

SocietySt. Vincent De Paul Society

$50Mr. & Mrs. John' A PowerMcClellan Fuel Co. Inc.

$26Benny Paskavitch

$25Mrs. Gordon Schofield, Mr. &

Mrs. Charles HagueFlorence M. Sullivan, Mr. &

Mrs. Donald P.. Waring, FrancesHarrington, Mr. & Mrs. ArthurMarchand

~~~r:.N~~~Rl3, '1971 .17

ST. PATRICK

$250Rev. James F. McDermottDr. Roger E. Cadieux

$150Dr. Roland E. Chabot

$100Joseph H. Feitelberg

~50

Mr. & Mrs. Leon BrodeurMr. & Mrs. David DunneDr. Thomas G. ClarkCarleton D. 'Boardman.H. Leo' Cre,amerJoseph Matthews

$40Vincent J. Riley

35John DiogenesEugene Murphy

. In Mempry of Angelo E. Flynn

$30Mr. & Mrs. George D. JensenMrs. Vincent. R. DorseyMr. & Mrs. John M. CoutoFernand C. E. AuclairMr. & Mrs. Joseph TinsleyHelen McGann

. John T. SmithJames F. Darcy

$26Mr. & Mrs. Sol Strein

$25Harold W. Meehan, Arthur F.

Cassidy, Raymond A McConnell,Edward. J. Le~nard, Mr. &. Mrs.William Moran .

Mr. & Mrs. Edward Casper,Mr. & Mrs. Peter J. Bartek; Ma'ryE. Lynch, Mr. & Mrs. EdwardJ. Kelly, Armand Forand

Norman M. Simmons, RichardA. Mello, Louise Coleman, Ed-.ward Synan, John J. Ferry

Joseph Caiozzo, Thomas J.Daley, Raymond F. Soares, Mr..& Mrs. James M. Judge, Mau­rice A Quirk

Mrs. Frank Souza, RaymondH. Bibeau, Mrs. Douglas E.Chapman, Mr: & Mrs. James C.Noonan, Josepb F. Biastoff

Edmund F. Bagley, Mary E.Judge,' Mrs. Leonard N. Bilo­deau, Albert A. LevesqueMr. & Mrs. William V. Mahoney,Jr.

Manuel

Noe Ferro

MT. CARMEL$500

Mr. & Mrs. Vincent Fernandes$125

SomersetST. JOHN OF GOD

, $100Holy Rosary Sodality

$50Mr. &, Mrs. Antone S. Feno

$25Mr. & Mrs. Manuel Nogueira,

Mr. & Mrs. John K. Perry, Mr.& Mrs. Manuel· L. Sousa, Mr.& Mrs. Leonard Tessier.

$30Rosemary L. FerroMr. & Mrs. Duarte

Raposo$25

Mount Carmel P.T.A, Mr. &Mrs. Joseph Bettencourt, Mr.' &Mrs. Arthur Caetano, Mr. & Mrs.Joseph da Luz Louro, Mr. & Mrs.Joseph V. Nunes.

Mr. & Mrs. John Silvia Jr.,Mr. & Mrs. Eduardo Teixeira,Mr. & Mrs. Jose R. Vasconcelos.

$50Mr. & Mrs. Jose L. A. FerroMrs. Maria C. FerroMr. & Mrs. Jose Evaristo Melo

$40John E. Ferro

$35Mr. & Mrs. Custodio P. Gon­

salves

famous forQUALITY and

SERVICEl

ST. FRANCIS OF ASSISI$200

Rev. Armando Annunziato$50

Mr. & Mrs. Pasquale Nicolacci$25

A Friend, Mr. & Mrs. LouisBono, Mr. & Mrs. Domenic Ca­talano, Ghilardi Family, Mr. &Mrs. Leo Grande

$25.Mr. & Mrs. James Aylward,

Frances A Burke, A Friend,Dr. & Mrs.. AB. Crowe', HelenDriscoll

Mrs. Anthony S. King, Mrs:William Maley, A Friend, HelenMoore, Margaret E. Sullivan

Anna M.. Brady, Almyra &Dorothea Brennan, Mary ABrimley, Mr. & Mrs. WilsonBonneau, Mr. & Mrs. HaroldCarpenter

Mary L. Downey, James Dur­ant, In Memory of john W. Dur­ant, Timothy Gleason, Mr. &.Mrs. Gordon Goodfellow

Mrs. Michael Harrington, Mr.& Mrs. Milton Healy, Mr. & Mrs.William H. King, Mr. & Mrs.Arthur Kirkwood, Mr. & Mrs.Edward G. McBride,

Mr. & Mrs. James McCann,Frances McCarthy, Mr. '& Mrs.Paul McGowan, Mrs. James Mo­sher,. Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Mun­dorf

Mr. & Mrs. Charles Phelan, AFriend, Mr. &Mrs. Edwin Sil­veira, Edith Thatcher, Mr. &Mrs. John Whalen

ST. LAWRENCE

$175'A Friend

$155Rev. Arthur K. Wingate

$150Mr. & Mrs. Edward J. Harring- .

ton, Jr.$135

Dr. & Mrs. William Muldoon$100

Mr. & Mrs. James H. Ma­honey, Jr.

Dr. Robert E. DurantA ~riend

A Friend. $75

Mrs. Walter Collopy$60

Mr. & Mrs. John 0-. Kenney$50

In Loving Memory of Mar-garet Davis

Mr. & Mrs. Lawrence FinniNeil FitzgeraldDr. & Mrs. John McGonigleRobert OliveiraMrs. John B. O'RourkeMr. & Mrs. Joseph V. SmithMr. '& Mrs. John Tierney

$45Mr. & Mrs. Edward McIntyre

$40 .

Anna DriscollMrs. Clifford MarrMr. & Mrs. John Fletcher

$35Mary & Ann DowneyMr. & Mrs. Willis GoodwinMr. & Mrs. Harry HuntMr. William J. O'BrienMary C. Winterson

$31Mr. & Mrs. Nelsen Dumaine'

$30Mrs. Catherine Haye'sMr. & Mrs. Edward L. RyanMrs. Ambrose Smith & FamilyMrs. William DowneyMrs. Frances A KochMr. & Mrs. Joseph MacFarlaneMr. & Mrs. Frank MahonMr. & Mrs. Alexander PhillipsMr. & Mrs. Thomas W. RossiMr. & Mrs. Myron Tripp

$29Mr. & Mrs. Charles Burke

ST. JOHN THE BAPTIST

$150Rev. Manuel P. Ferreira

$80Rev. John J. Oliveira

$60Mr. & Mrs. Joseph S. Vera

$50Atty. Edmund DinisM. C. SwiftMr. & Mrs~ John Fernandes'A FriendA FriendA FriendA FriendA Friend

. -Rev. Joachim F. DaSilva, C.M.Mr. & Mrs. Joseph SouzaIn Memory of Msgr. John A

Silvia$40

Mr. & Mrs. Joseph FerreiraMr. & Mrs. Walter Oliver

$35Mr. & Mrs. Frank Gracie

. $30Mr. & Mrs. Thomas P. BarryMr. & Mrs. Alfred DeCostaMrs. Joseph MichaudMr. & Mrs. Fernando TavaresMr. & Mrs. William WallaceMr: & Mrs. George AlexanderMr. & Mrs. Joseph S. AvilaMr. & Mrs. Joseph Ferreira Jr.

$25Mr. & Mrs. Ravmond Cabral,

Mr~. Arthur Carreiro, Mr. & Mrs.Ernest Correia, Mr. & Mrs. Vin­cent L. Furtado, Mr. & Mrs.James Gaffney..

Mr. & Mrs. Jerome Grota. Mr.& Mrs. Laurent Guillette, Mr. &Mrs. Rol)ert J. HalL Mr. & )'virs.Manuel Neves, Mr. & Mrs. Rich­ard Perry.

Mr. & Mrs. Americo Ramalho,Milton Richmond, Mr. & Mrs.Manuel S. Silva. Mr. & Mrs.Leonard Souza, Mr.. &. Mrs.George Vas~oncello~. . . .

Mr. & Mrs. Ruy Villela, Mr.& Mrs. Joseoh Amaral, MaryCo<;ta & Family in Memory ofMother, Father & BrotherGeorge, Mr. & Mrs. Charles Du­ponte, Mr. & Mrs. Frank Ed­wards.

Roger & Marlene M. Lanteigne,~

Joseph C. Martin, Mrs. MarySchusner & Family, Mrs. EvaL. Svlvia, Mr. & Mrs. AdolphWalecka.

New Beclford

OUR LADY OF FATIMA$250

Rev. Arthur C. Levesque$150

Rev.; Walter A Sullivan$100

Mr. & Mrs. William Belanger$50 .

Mr. & Mrs. Clement DamiconeMr. & Mrs. Roger Lachapelle

. $40Mr. & Mrs. William Hitchcock

$35Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Charbon­

neau, Mr. & Mrs. NormandParent

$25Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Boldiga,

Therese Bonneau, Mr. & Mrs,William Corrado, Mr. & Mrs.Francis Frey, Mr. &. Mrs. PaulFrey

Mr. & Mrs. Oscar Dagenais Jr.in Memory of Mrs Regina Grave! .Mr. & Mrs. Leo Doyon, Mr. &Mrs. Roland Gaouette Jr., Mr. &Mrs. Edward Geneste, Mr. & MrsGerard Guillotte

Mr. & Mrs. Francis Lawlor,Dr. Augustus McKenna, Corella

/ McKenna, Mr. & Mrs. AustinManning, Mrs. Leopold Menier

Mr. & Mrs. James Penler, Mr.& Mrs. Joseph Pereira, Mr. &Mrs. Jean Sevigny, Mr. & Mrs.Armand Tanguay

Page 18: 05.13.71

'..

;107 Main St., South Yarmouth, Ma. 02664*At Boss River, 2-3 yr. term deposit certificates yie.ld6.18% per yect~ when compounded doily from day-of­deposit. $1,000 minimum deposit.

Fall River.

Aluminum or Steel944 County Street

NEW BEDFORD, MASS.992~6618

ST. ANNE$150

Mr. & Mrs. Edgar Ross'. $25.

The Joseph Gauthier .FamilyAnonymous

CONRAD SEGUINBODY COMPANY

ST. JOSEPH$200

Judge Beatrice H. Mullaney$52

In Memory of William S. &Maud A. Conroy

. $30Mary & Marguerite Shea

$25Anne BordenSt.. Joseph's Mens ClubMary Cullen, John F: Mahoney,

John Medeiros, Joseph ·P. Reilly

ST. ANTHONY OF THE DESERT$100

Dr. & Mrs. James Sabra$30

Fred Slyby & Brenda Slyby$25

. In Memory of Faris Nasiff byMrs. Faris Nasiff, Lt. Col: & Mrs.John Abdallah, Wadih & Nich­OU1S Kaliff.

SANTO CHRISTO

$1250Rev. Arthur C. dos Reis

$259Edward Lopes

$100Rev. Daniel L. Freitas •

$50Manuel & Ann M. Faria

$35Manuel S. Martins

'$25A Friend, John Victor, Jose

Jacintho Carvalho . ":,Edmund & Lenor Silvia, Jo­

seph V. Medeiros, Mr. & Mrs.John Silvia.

ST. ROCH$50

Mr. & Mrs. Alex VezinaMr. & Mrs. Antonio CoutuMr. & Mrs. Paul A: Giroux

$25Anonymous,' Mr. & Mrs. Nor­

mand Levesque

BANK-BY-MAIL (post-paid). WITH

RIVER SA\<INGS .BANK

WE'LL G.UARANTEE YOU

6%.INTEREST:;:

ON YOUR SAVINGSFOR TH IE NEXT 3 YEARS

BASS

ST. STANISLAUS$150

Rev. Robert S. Kaszynski$100

SI:. Vincent de Paul SocietyHoly Rosary SodalitySt:. Stanislaus Women's Guild

$50St. ,Stanislaus. Men's ClubWaIter Pypniowski

$30Mr. & Mrs. Leo Lavoie

Fall Riverss: PETER AND PAUL

$100In MerrlOry of Msgr. Francis

P. Connelly, P.A.St. Vincent De ·Paul SocietyRose E. SullivanSS. Peter and Paul Women's

Club$50

John Tyrell$35.

Anne & Marion O'Hearn$30

Mr. & Mrs. Stephen Guinen$25

Mr. & Mrs. Michael Dupont& Janet Dupont, Mr. & Mrs.Shaun Fitzpatrick, Mrs. ErnestA. Hasprey, In Meinory of Msgr.John J. Hayes, Mr. & Mrs. WiI-

.Ham Lomax.Mr. & Mrs. George Morgan..

Edward Murphy, Mrs. James E.Roge.!:s, James E. Rogers Jr., TheSweeney Family.

Mary Tyrrell, Mr. & Mrs.Nicholas Tyrrell.

Mr. & Mrs. Ralph Craddock,Patricia Carey

60'YEARS'A;PRIEST: Rev. Victor O. Masse, M.S., ofEast Brewster, rigpt, is felicitated on the occasion of his60th anniversary ~n the priesthood. Father Masse, was asecular priest in the Diocese of Fall River until July 12;1960 when he ent~red the La Salette Order at the age of76. On his retirerhent, Father Masse was pastor of St.Anthony of Padua! Parish, New Bedford.

SwanseaOUR LADY OF FATIMA

$100 i.Our Lady of Fatima GuildMr. &. Mrs. J. Edwdrd Lajoie

. $25 IMr. & Mrs. Joseph A 'DeNardo

IJames J. McDermo~t , .Mr. & Mrs. George C.Penrose

, Mr. & Mr:s. Harold ISenayMr & Mrs William S. Shepard

I· .. I .

ST. DOMINIC

$200 IRev. Daniel E. Carey

$100' I.ML& Mrs. Manuel fravers

$75Mr. & Mrs. Norman IAshley

$50 ..Mr. & Mrs. Wilfred iCourvilleMr. & Mrs. Philip Griffin .

- $40 IMr. & Mrs. John Fitzgerald

. $35 II

Mr. & Mrs. Thomas \Ryan. $30 I

Mr. & Mrs. Thomas PaivaMr. & Mrs. Anthony lperryMr. & Mrs. Gerald Morris ..

$25' iMr. & Mrs. Joseph I' Calisto,

Mr. & Mrs. Leo Dube, Mr. &.Mrs. George Ventura,.t Mr.. &Mrs. Robert Evans, Mr.1 & Mr~.Paul Brooks :

, ,

Catherine Golz, ,St. qominic'sWomen's Guild, Mary McLeod,Mr. & Mrs. Donald Soub, Mrs.• . IBarton G. Albert \

The Clement Family, Mr. &Mrs. Albert, Dube, Mr. i& Mrs.

. Eciward Carey, Mr. & ¥rs. Ro­'bert LaChance, Mr. & Mrs. Ar­

tthur Cavanaugh ,.' . I

Evelyn Ryan, Mr. & Mrs. Dan-iel Moniz, Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth

tKelley, Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Mar··. urn, Mary V. Doyle, Mr.l& Mrs.Albert Rousseau I

. :t' 00,.

. ST. LOUIS DE FRANCE$50 ' I'

Mr. & Mrs. Emile CotJ

IDir~ctor Resigill1s

CHICAGO (NC) - Jatnes T.Har:ris has announced hi~ resig­nation as executive director ofthe National Catholic Confer­ence for Interracial Justice. Har­ris resigned because of personalcommitt!pent~ to his family, his

. office announced. '

Into JonlLove l

Easy Divorce BilLTo Become law

TRENTON (NC)-New Jerseywill have' a new divorce lawby midMay, spokesmen for Gov.William T. Cahill said here afterthe state Senate overwhelmingly i

approved changes suggested ·by.the' governor in vetoing the billconditionally. '

The Senate acted two days'after the Assembly had incor­porated those changes ·into. the .measure. Gov. Cahill had asked 'for the changes to make the bill 'acceptable to him..

Passage of' the legislation hadbeen opposed, By the New Jer-

.s~y CatJ:1blic' Conference, agency'of the state's bishops~' whichfeared' that it would turn NewJersey- into .an easy·' divorcestate and, lead to trial marriages.

Media Coverage' Exceilent"Don't be foolish. American

imperialism needs the war tosurvive. Our hard hat racisthawks will not accept 'defeat.We shall keep right on violatinginternational law.. Our leadersare war criminals for not obey­ing the law." ...

.·..But if our legal system. isnot legitimate, why did you goto jail? Couldn't you have goneunderground?" , . . .

"If we went underground wewould not be able to bear wit.ness to the love of Christ atEastertime." I

'''Were you satisfied with themedia coverage of your witnessbearing?" .

"I thought it was' excelle.nt:.We really made clear our mes­sage of. love to everyone."

"Then you do think that you. got through to some people?" .

Eskimos Next"No, of course we didn't. How

can 'you exp~ct us to get throughto such a rich, complacent soci.ety whose people are brain­washed by the propaganda theadministration' serves up on tele- ­vision?"

"But YOu do feel that some.thing was accomplished by yoursacrifice?". .

"That's like asking whetherJesus accomplished anything bydying on the ·cross."

~·Wh.en are you plannin'g yournext jail term?" .

"Propably around' 'the-feast ofthe Immaculate Conception. Weare going jo protest against thegenocide of the Eskimos by im­perialistic American oil com.panies. They must be told aboutlove every bit as much as thefascist pigs who 'are the coun-

. try's leaders.'" ,

THE ANCHOR....:..Oiocese. ~j Fall River-Thurs. May 13,197 i .

By

REV.

'ANDREW M

GREELEY

1"8

Ecumenical 'First'SOUTHBO~O (NC) --.: A joint

confirmation of Catholic andEpiscopal candidates was held inSt. Matthew's Catholic churchhere. The Catholic young people.were confirmed by Bishop Ber­nard J. Flana'gan of Worcester,a' member of the U.S. Catholic.bishops' Committee on ecumeni· .cal and interreligious affairs: Theclass of Episcopal young people .was confirmed by Bishop JohnM. Burgess- of .Massachusetts.. , .

"Do' you think you were suc­cessful in fulfilling your hopes?"

"Successful? Don't be so hungup on succes~; did Jesus worryabout success?"

"But if you weren't really in·'terested in getting through toothers then what was the pointof bearing witness to the loveof .Jesus. for them?"

"We wanted to make it clearto the whole world that therewere still some, Americans whowere capable of feeling guiltyfor· the ugly sins which our so­ciety has committed."

."Oh. I must have misunder­stood; you' were'n't' trying tocommunicate about love toAmericans?" "

"Of course we were; whatother rea<:nri ,.;nuic! there he forgoing to jail? We wanted to uSeour bodies ;as ,s'igns -of ho\y fouI­and :sick. a country the. UnitedStates is; it .puts in jail eventhose who are only trying to'manifest love."

'Politic':'l Prisoners'. "The.n you don't think youought to have heen p·ut. in jailfor throwing that brick throughthe' police station wind~w?'~

·"In. a healthy. society youwouldn't have to throw a brickthrough a window to' tell peoplehow .corrup~ they were."

"But .you do admit that youwere guilty of violating thelaw?".: .

"America is such a' foul placethat its whole legal system is.illegitimate. Black people. are,sent to jail for not committingcrimes. We feel that we should

E'b.erhart Th·rownFor ·.'Manifesting

I recently had the opportunity to talk to my friendEberhart who had. spent the week- after Easter.in jail fast­ing as a protest against the corruption of American society."What did you hope to accomplish. by your 'week in jail,Eberhart?" I ·asked. "It was .our intention'to bear witness bear witness to the illegitimacyto the charity and the iove of the system."

, ,that the' Risen Jesus mani- "Theh in fact you were guiltyof ·no crime at aIi?",

fests to all men." "Certainly not; we were polit-"Whom did you expect to ical prisoners, put in jail during

reach with this message' of Easter week for no other rea­love?" son than that we can no longer

"We hoped :that we would be tolerate murder in Vietnam."able to touch the hardened "Do you think your witness

. hearts of the c9rrupt, immoral .is going to help end the war inracists who make· up our sick Vietnam?~'

society."

-

Page 19: 05.13.71

..THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-::~urs. May 13,1971, 19

~

II

-BISHOP CRONIN WAS THE PRINCIPAL CELEBRANT AT A MASS CONCELEBRATED WITH LA SALETTE JUB.LARIANS

$25Society of St. Vincent de Paul,

Our Lady of Health LadiesGuild, Mr. & Mrs Joseph AlmeidaMr. &' Mrs, Jose B'raga, Mrs.'Mary Ferreira

Caetano Medeiros, Mr: & MrsJeremias Rego, Mr. & Mrs.Francisco Silvia

OUR LADY OF THE ANGELS$50

Manuel Correia$25

Mariano Pimental, CharlesCarvalho Sr., Mrs. Mary, Goulet,Manuel Raymond.

OUR LADY OF HEALTH$50

Our Lady of Health Holy Name.In Memory of Rose Freitas '.Mr. & Mrs, Manuel Mello 'Our Lady, of Health. Holy

Rosary

\

CHAS. F.

~RGASOIL CO., INC.

254 ROCKDALE AVENUENEW BEDFORD, MASS.

993-6592HEATING OILS

COMPLETE

HEATING SYSTEMSINSTALLED

24 HOUR OIL BURNERSERVICE

BUDGET PLANS

The Vargas Oil Co. protectsyour family's heating comfort

all year round.

TRY US FIRST

3-6592

$100,Rev. Edward J. Burns

$50Mr. & Mrs. Raymond Dooley

$30Mr. & Mrs. Roland TalbotMr. & Mrs. John Maitoza

$26Louis Brosseau

$25Genevieve Connelly, Francis

Delahanty, John A. Diskin, Mr.& Mrs. John Donald, ChristopherLake Jr.

Mrs. John Potts, Mr. & Mrs.Franklin Raposa, Helen M. Sul­livan

ST. WILLIAM

$500Rev. Msgr. Raymond T. Con~

sidne

SturteVQnt &HookEst. 1897

Builders Supplies2343 Purchase Street

New Bedforcll996-566]

$35Mr. & Mrs. Robert Phenix

$25Mrs. Irene Letourneau, Le­

vesque's Flower:: Studio, Mr. &Mrs. Armand Raiche, Mrs.Agathe Menard, Octave O. Des­marais.

Mr. & Mrs. Paul Dumais, Mr.& Mrs. Edgar St. Martin, Mrs.Laetitia Petit.

NOTRE DAME$50

OUR LADY OF THE HOLYROSARY

$50Mr. & Mrs. Frank Mazzoni

$30Dr. & Mrs. John GagliardiMr. & Mrs. Frank Stetkiewicz

$27Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Marcucci

$25Mr. & Mrs. Frank J. Barresi,

Mr. & Mrs. Delbert Frank, Mrs.James Patricelli & Family.

Edward Camuso, Troy City'Gas Station, Mr. & Mrs. GeorgeWrightington

A FriendA Friend

BLESSED SACRAMENT$35

Mr. & Mrs. Richard Hamel$30

A & W Rootbeer StandMr. & Mrs. Roger Lauzon

$25Mr. & Mrs. Louis Ste. MarieMr. & Mrs. Edward LanglaisMr. & Mrs. Norbert Mercier

HOLY CROSS, $250

Franciscan Fathers, O.F.M.Conv.

$25Szewczyk Family, Mr. & Mrs.

Robert Ciosek, Mr. & Mrs. Ste­phen Pirog, In honor of St. Jude-N. N., St. Vincent de Paul So­ciety.

Richard J. O'Brien, Mr. & Mrs.Walter Witengier.

ST. P~TRICK

,$250Rev. Msgr. John E. Boyd.

$100Mr. & Mrs. Walter Burns, Jr.

$85Mrs. John A. Cody & Family

$75 "Geraldine Harrington

$50Mr. & Mrs. Manuel SilviaSarah SpellmanMr. & Mrs. John ,BlakeMary SweeneyMr. & Mrs. Daniel ScullyMr. & Mrs. Edward DeCiccio

$40 .Joseph M. Morrison

$30Helen & Mildred SullivanIn Memory or' James E. SheaMary E. Kilro'y

$27 .In Memory of Manuel J.

Rosa, Jr.$25

.Mr. & Mrs. Ronald Banville,In memory of JamesJ. NicolettiIn memory of Timothy & AnnieHolland, Mr. & Mrs. JosephBiszko, Mr. & Mrs. Albert Arsen­ault

Mr. & Mrs. Theodore' Blouin,Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Delzenero,Mr. & Mrs. Henry Moss, Mrs.Mary J. Harrington, EdwardHealey

Mr. & Mrs. John Marshall,Dr. & Mrs. Hiliary White, Mr.& Mrs. William' T. Donnelly,Mr. & Mrs. Michael Kuszay,Mr. & Mrs. Douglas Poissant

Mr. & Mrs. Stanley Sincoski,Mr. & Mrs. Ralph Fletcher, Mr.& Mrs. Patrick Leary, Mr. &Mrs. Samuel W. Del Piano, Mr.& Mrs. Vincent A. Mannion

Leo Callahan & Joan, Mr. &Mrs. Edmund Cahill, Mr. & MrsHenry Urban, Mr. & Mrs. Ray­mond Barrette, Mr. & Mrs.Joseph Murray

Mr. & Mrs. Edward Sweeney,Mr. & Mrs. Ronald Cabucio, Mr.& Mrs. Raymond Halbardier

John O'Brien, Catherine &Elizabeth Carroll, Mr. & Mrs.Raymond Suart, Mr. & Mrs.Henry Buckley, Mr: & Mrs.John Morgan,. Jr.

Abbie I. Kilroy, Mr. & Mrs.Martin Delahanty, Alida Hart,In Memory of Mr. 8< Mrs. Mi­chael J. Foran, Mr. & Mrs. JohnM. Gasior

Mr. & Mrs. Raymond Thibault,Margaret Wimsett, Mr. & Mrs.Robert Regan, Rico DeNadal

Gron-

' ..

$30Manuel RosaJ\,lr. &' Mrs. Jose Arruda

$25. Gilbert & Eva Mello, Irene

Cabeceiras, Mr. & Mrs. John R.Cavanaught Jr., Lydia Goncalves,Mr. & Mrs. Manuel L. Carreiro.

Mr. & Mrs. Joseph De Costa,Manuel Dias, Mr. & Mrs. JamesKing, Alvin S. Rego.

ST. LOUIS$60

The Connerton Family, $50

Mr. & Mrs. Robert White$25

Margaret Kehoe, Hilda Myles,Gertrude O'Neil, James Whalon.

Alice Bailey, Mrs. James Ben­. son, Mr. & Mrs. John Maher,John Whitty

ST. MICHAEL. $300

Rev. Luciano J. Pereira$100

Rev. Jose A. F. dos Santos$50

Atty & Mrs Manuel M. Rezen·des·., ... .

$40Mr. & Mrs. Joseph D. Rocha

.& Daughter

ST.' MARY

$100Margaret Lahey

$50Rose DowlingIn Memory of Mary J.

dinHelenHelen

G. KenneyBurns'

$40Thomas· & Margar.et Kennedy

$35Mr. & Mrs. ,Eugene LeclairMr. & Mrs. Francis FennesseyIn Memory of John & Alice

Moran$30

Mr. & Mrs. James Robinson Jr.Mr. & Mrs. John R. McGinn

$25Robert F. Coggeshall, Mr. &

Mrs. Joseph O'Connell, Mr. &Mrs. Leo Martin & Virginia,Mary Arruda, Sisters of St. Joan

'of Arc'Mr. & 'Mrs. 'Eugene Bertrand'

Mary Maleady" Mrs. RaymondReynolds, Mr. & Mrs. JamesCoy'ne, Th'omas Sullivan

". Mr. & Mrs.' r0anuel Benevides,Kathryn Daily..' Catherine Gau­thier, .' K'at~eI;in~ Kaufman, InMemory of Mary A. Murphy ... . .'

Family

$30

ST. 'MATHIEU$300

Rev. Lucien Jusseaume$100

Rev! Thomas E. MorrisseyDr. & Mrs. Orner Boivin

$60Juliette Belanger.

$35The Paul LapointeEdgar Poisson

$27

A Friend

The Philip Vaillancourt Fam.$25

Mr. & Mrs. John Cabaceiras,Mr. & Mrs. George Cummings,Mrs. Dora Fiola; AlphonseMailloux, The Raymond PoissonFamily, A Friend

Fall RiverIMMACULATE CONCEPTION

$75Mr, & Mrs. John Long

$60Mr. & Mrs. Everett Lafleur'

$40Mary Whitehead

$30In Memory of Daniel & Man­

uel R. Pimental$27.77

Mr, & Mrs. Frank J, Mellen$25

Joseph Francoeur, Mrs. TeresaHetu,' Florench Lynch, EileenMcNally, Fred J. McNally,Charles Ney

Page 20: 05.13.71

.' I

-.

.'

James Kennedy$30

The .Misses Donovan$25

Elizabeth Crowley, M. DorisSullivan, Charles V. Morris,Margaret M. Lowney; DavidCreamer

Margaret M. Sullivan, Mr. &Mrs. James H. Sullivan Jr. &.

,Family, Mr. & Mrs. WilliamMercier, Martin A. Reardon

Mr. & Mrs. George McCoomb,William Black, William C. ~hip.

pendale, Kathryn V. & MargaretM. Whalen

,asons

Living..•ooms

"Hew England's Largest Furniture Showroom"

4 and 5 Piece Groupings

antiqued finish. Available in a wonderful selection of­fabrics and colors with authentic Early American de­tailing a'!d turnings. The luxurious foam cushions arereversible with ZiP-9ft covers. rndivldual, pieces maybe purchased separately'at comparable savings.

$100Dr. Daniel' MooneyGeorge Driscoll '

$75Frances C. Shaughnessey

$50Jane G. BroderickMr. & Mrs. James H. SullivanMr. & Mrs. George E. Sullivan

Jr.White Family

$45Mr. & Mrs. Robert NedderrJ:Ian'

$35Frances M. Cummings

, Mary C. Cummings

,

IOPEN DAIL Y 9 A.M. to 10 P.M. INCLUDING SATURDAY

4 Piiece Grouping

Sofa, Ldve Seat ~nd'Choice of ',4,ny two Ta5les'

PERSONALIZED BUD.GET PAYMENTSNo Banks or Finance Cdtnpanies To Pay

-:. -FREE DELIVERY ANYWHERE !N NEW ENGLAND

.··•.• jf?;l} ""''''''''"."" .....

~u-then:tie 'E.rIy ltimeriean'.' . , I'

'. ·IN. SOLI'O R,O~K. ~IA~LIEII

p. L Y 1M 0 U Tt H: A V E • I • A i :!R 0 D MAN 5 T. :.F ALL i I V E R, l., I

I'

8299: I

I, , . I

5 Pi~e.e Grouping , , _I,Sofa, Louhge Chair, Corktail . I'Table and TWII End Ta'bles . 8299

• • . " • : . I .'

,These ~ustom quality four and five piece living room. , . groupings are low priced because of a carlo.;Jd factory

purchase combined with bur low overhead war~house

operation. Crafted by one of America's foremost Imanu­facturers of Solid Rock Maple with a rich handr:ubbed

, I'

I

& O'Neill Family, Mr.- &. Mrs, 'Lemerise, Mr. & Mrs. JosephFred. Czerwonka, William F.'. Mcpuill, Elinore: K~nnedyKeating Jr" Mr. & Mrs. Daniel Mr. & Mrs. Anthony D'Am-Mahoney brosio, Collette :FOl',tin, John T.

Mr. & Mrs. Wilfred Salois, Mrs Crowley, Edward P. Grace &David Bishop, Mr. & Mrs. Fer- Family, Mr. &-Mrs. !John E. Cru-nand Bonnoyer, Mr. & Mrs. gel' I .Lionel Braz, Mr.' & Mrs. Edward, Mr. & Mrs" George Flanaga,n,.Nicoletti , Mr. & Mrs.' Roland Gagnon, Mr.

• . . I

. Mr. & Mrs. James.Pedder,·Mr:,' & -Mrs. Joseph A. Ryan&.Mrs. Joseph Keefe,' Mr. & \VII's.' . IJames Donnelly, Mr. & Mrs John 'SACRlED HE~RT

B. Cummings Jr., Mr. & Mrs Wi!- $200 'IHam Manning Jr. . 'Dr. J.ohn E. Manning

Ann .Sherry,'Mr. & Mrs. How- - '$110 iard Melker, Mr. & Mrs. Henry J. Quinlan F. Leary (

I

rHE ANCHOR-Thurs:, M~y 13, 1971

20

Fall' RiverHOLY NAME

$250Dr. & M.rs. Thomas Higgins

, $2000'1'. & Mrs.·Andre P. Nasser

$150In Me!llory of· Anne' V. KellyDr. & Mrs. John Delaney

$130-Dr. & Mrs. John Carvalho

$100· Mr. & Mrs: Caesar Fortunato

Dr. Anne Marie HigginsMr. & Mrs. Nicholas W, Mit-

chellMrs. Michael ReganMr. &' Mrs. Harold ClarkinIn Memory of John C. Harding

$75Dorothy C. Sullivan

$60Mr. & Mrs. Thomas F. BurkeMr. & Mrs. Gustave Mattos

$55Mr. & Mrs. Cornelius Lynch

/' $50The Franco FamilyHilda PhillipsMr. & Mrs. Thomas McGuireAtty. and Mrs. Fred TorphyThe. Kenney FamilyMrs. Anthony KeramisMr. & Mrs. Dennis Sullivan

$40Mr. & Mrs. Jo~eph Pinson­

neault$35> "

.Lawrence He!'!ry . ....Mr: & Mrs~ Frea· Zebraskv

· John W:' CUri1ming~' .· Helen .O'Neil '.

Mr. & Mrs. AI' Zervis" Toe Madden Farriily'

Mr..& Mrs. Frank PlichtaMr: & Mrs'. Fred Demetrius .Mr. & Mrs. Gerard 'Fortin.' $30,Mr.. & Mrs. Warre.n 'WoodGrace'Sullivan " . .Mr. & Mrs. Jonn Azlive.do··

$26' , '.Mr...& Mrs. J~mes R. Medeiros

· Grace Hindle',' , .\.,: ','j J;l $25;'

, , lYI,~..<% ·Mrs., John J. Gallagher,( . Mr: & Mrs. 'Rene Beaulieu, Mr.

. , , .& :Mrs.Williani ,Clea're,Mr.' &,~Mrs. James Harrington; Anna L.

. ·.Sullivan , " , ' '. , '. '" Claire Mullin's, Mrs. Jain'es E.

Mullins, Mr. & '. M'rs. " .b~onard .'Phelan, Mr.. & Mrs. 'Thomas P.Walsh, Mr. & Mrs.' Timothy J.Murphy' .

Mr..& Mrs. Edmund Geary,'"Mr. & M.rs. William J. Har­graves, Mr. & Mrs." Edward J.Har;ington, Agnes ,Murtagh, Mr.& ,Mrs. Joseph Cummings

Mr.. & Mrs: Antone Almeida,MI:'. & Mrs. Francis McGrath,Mr. & Mrs. Howard Marcoux,Mrs. Thomas Collins, EileenHiggins '

Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth Reinerio,Ella Deinpsey, Mr. &' Mrs.Thomas A. O'Donnell, Mr. &Mrs. William Hacking, Mr. &Mrs. Thaddeus Golitz

Antone Andrade, Rudolph .r.:.LaVaui.t, Mr.. & Mrs,' James, .,Costa, Mr. & Mrs.,.Matthew Sui:livan, Mr. & 'Mrs. Roland Boulay

Mr. & Mrs. Jan Pietraszek,William F. Murphy, Mrs. JohnWhite, Mary Kelly, GertrudeKelly

Mary Lysaght, Catherine Ly­saght, Mr. & Mrs. Elmer Star-··ford Jr., Mr. & Mrs. John WalshSr" Alice Lenaghan

Elinor Lenaghan, Mr. & Mrs.Nicholas Hurst, Mr. & Mrs.Arthur Messier, Mr. & Mrs. Wil­fred M.orrissette, Mr. & Mrs.John A. Burke

Mrs. Honora SUllivan, Hussey

-

" ,