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An Anchor of the SoUl, Sure and Firm-ST. PAUL The :ANCHOR .,. Love of God Religious Open First American Convent In New Bedford Sunday A Spanish religious community formally opens its first United States convent next Sunday in the parish of Qur Lady of the Assumption, New Bed- ford. Its members thus join the 24 other religious communities already active in the Fall River Diocese. ,Two will open the new house. ' The Religious of the Love of God, with their 'Mother- house i!1 Zamora, Spain, number some 1,500 members Fall River, Mass. Thursday, June,S, 1958 in Europe, Africa, and the Amer- Second Cia.. Mail Privilell'ee' PRICE JOe icas. At the invitation 'of the 2, No. 23 Authorized at Fan River. Maa&. $4.00 per Year Most Reverend Bishop, they will " undertake teaching, catechetical, and soCial work in the New Bed- to Ordain ford parish of which Rev. John Godelaer, S8.CC., is pastor and ,Rev. Raphael, flammia, SS.CC.. is assistant. / They are, in this country . Rev; Mr. Raymond, H. Kelley of Mansfield will be' . largely through the efforts. of a priest of the Catholic Foreign Mission Society Rev. Edmund Francis, 5S.CC., of A-merica on Saturday, June 14, at the Maryknoll Major until last week assistant pastor Mansfield ,Ma.n en June 14 of Our Lady of the Assumption, in Maryknpll, New York. but now pastor at St. Mary's, The new p'riest, who is. Fairhaven. He learned of the Itle son of Mr. and Mrs. J. work of the Religious of the Spe'ncer Kelley of 25 Bella Love of God during a visit to the \." Vista A venue, Mansfield, Cape Verde Islands three years Turn to Page Seventeen '- wilt take part in Maryknoll's 41st-annual Departure Ceremony the following day, Sunday, when Chicago Mourns he will officially be assigned to the missions of Formosa. At Cardinal's His Eminence Francis Cardi- til ,Spellman of New York will Last Rites ESTABLISH NEW DIOCESAN COMMUNITY: Rev. t.e the ordaining prelate for this When Cardinal Stritch left Mother General Cruz Roderiques, R.A.D., (left) and Mother Tear's class of 48 deacons.' ,Chicago a little over a m9nth Mercedes Ferreras Nicolas, R.A.D., are in New Bedford to First Solemn Mass ago to take up his new duties establish their first community in the United States. Mother Father Kelley will celebrate in Rome as Pro-Prefect of the Nicolas will head the New Bedford convent. Mother General bis first Solemn High Mass at Sacred Congregation for the 11:30 Sunday morning, June 22, Propagation of the Faith, he Roderiques wil! shortly return to her headquarters in Spain. in St. Mary's Church, Mansfield. told the throng at' the railroad 'Father Edward Paquette of St. station that he would return Mary's Church will be the as,.. some day to Chfcago, and. he Eleven Clergy to Observe lIistant priest. hoped that some would come Other officers of the Mass will down to welcome him back. 25 Years in Priesth'ood be: Father William Jordan of St. Thousands were at the air- .John's Church, Central Village, port when the Cardinal's body Ten Diocesan priests and a Fall River Sulpician Father REV. Turn to Page '\. Twenty , arrived back from Rome last will celebrate Silver Jubilees next week, marking 25 years Friday. , of service in God's priesthood. The Funeral Mass was cele- Taunton' Girl Elected President brated Tuesday morning with All but Rev. Laureano C. dos Reis were ordained June by late Of New Diocesan Youth Council Turn to Page Seven 10, 1933 the Most tions in Diocesan institutions. Rev. James E. Cassidy, D.D., Now the rector of St. Mary'. Ma;y Trond of Holy Rosary Parish, Taunton, was elected Lag in Vocations Bishop of Fall River, the Cathedral, Rev. Arthur W. Tan- president of the ... ecently organized Fall River Diocesan sey served at St. Joseph's, Woods ceremony biking place in St. Youth Council at a meeting of regional officers in the Ken- Causes Serious Hole; St. Peter's, Provincetown; Mary's Cathedral. Father dos nedy Youth Community ,Center, New Bedford. St. Paul's, Taunton; Holy Name, .Reis was ordpined June 11, 1933 Church Crisis Fall River; St. Mary's, Taunton; Others chosen as the first in the Aiores. tary, and Michael O'Hearne, St. John's, Attleboro; 'St. officers of the council are treasurer. BROOKLYN (NC) - The The activities of the Jubila- Joseph's, North Dighton; Sacred rians have included service in Church in the United States Vice-president Robert Blan- Fall River - Howard Taft, .Heart, Oak Bluffs, and St. James, parishes ,throughout the Diocese, , president; Anne Marie Ouellette, and its possessions of Alaska New Bedford. He was also a ehette, St. Boniface Parish, terms as Army and Navy chap- vice-president; Elaine Dempsey, New Bedford; Secretary Michael 'and Hawaii is in the midst lains, and administrative posi- Turn &0 Page Five secretary, and Terrance Lomax, O'Hearne, Immaculate Concep- of an increasing vocation short- treasurer. tion, and Treasurer age which is nothing less than William Orsi, St. Mary's, Taun- Cape - Regina Bohlin, presi- a crisis. , College Awards Degrees ton. dent; Joyce Griffin, vice-presi-' ·In the past decade, the num- Nominated as committee chair- dent; Judith Kiernan, secretary, ber of priests, Brothers and Sis- To 27 Students From Diocese , men were Rita LeBlanc, Sj)lf- and Robert Chase,treasurer. ters in this country, Alaska and Twenty-seven from the Fall River Diocese are itual; Anne Marie Ouellette, cul- New Bedford-Rober Roberts, the Hawaiian Islands has in- among June graduates of Stonehill College in North Easton. tural; Robert Roberts, social,' president; Rita LeBlanc, vice"'; creased less than half as fast as "The dynamic'ideal of the Sermon on the Mount is-more IlI1d Howard Taft, recreational. president; Robert Blanchette, ,the number of Catholics they urgently needed today than training for engineering or tech- Two names were chosen from secretary, and Michale Calla- must serve. among the regional officers pres- ghan, treasurer. Population Ga,n nical careers," the graduates Msgr. Franc,is J. Lally, editor of ent as candidates for each coun- Plans, are being, made for the , According to P. J. Kenedy and were told by Massachusetts The Pilot, Boston's Archdiocesan cil office and voted upon by the four Diocesan officers to attend Sons, publisher of the "Official, newspaper, and Dewey David Governor. Foster, Furcolo, delegates. the New England Youth 'Council Catholic Directory," there were Stone, Brockton industrialist and Regional officers elected earlier meeting at Beimirigton, Vt., i90,165 priests and Religious Commencement speaker. philanthropist, were recipieng their own areas are as follows: June 21 and 22. , ,Turn to Page Seventeen Governor Furcolo,' Very Rev. of honorary degrees. Taunton-Willam Orsi, presi- 'From the Towns y... dent; Patricia WL,·te·' S,·ste.r's' ot Do •• 'Nurser •• The graduating from Ma"nning, vice- seniors .1fresident; Mary Trond, secre- •• :'1:'1 this, Diocese are: from Nortb Sheila Maloney, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. RollilUl Sisters of Mercy Return Love of Little T9ts V. ).VIaloney, 18 James Street, k J" Plan Building , By Patricia Bachelor of Arts. From Somer- set, Richard J. Kaegael, son of tv D I t When we visited the Bishop Stang pay Nursery at 217 Third "Street, Fall River, we , Mrs.-Pauline G. Kaegael, 71 Rip- ;. . eve opmen took along a very young reporter. Reporters are supposed to be objective, but she wasn't. Turn &0 Page Eighteen i'- Mother Mary Catherine,: When she got home and poured out her morning's adventures to her daddy and grandma, '"", it.S.M., Mother Provincial of there was no mistaking her enthusiasm for the Nursery and everything connected with it. Points Out People the Sisters of Mercy of the In an jumble she Sisters dOrL t keep open house be the key to the Nursery's suc- Province of Providence, has told of the children she'd seven days a week instead of ce'ss. The childrn, rushing busily Are Responsible announced the launching of a played with, the white-clad a mere five. about on tricycles, or swooping ForWorld Evil building expansion program in ,Sisters who cared for them, Happiness, indeed, seems, to up 'and down on see-saws,' are four institutions of the Province. the beautiful blue rosary Mother obviously happy. So are the Sis- CLEVELAND (NC) ,Because of the increasing Yves de St. Jean had given her, 'C ters, and the motherly 'lady who When we complain that the number of Postulants and Nov- l f:A prepares the meals. So too must ic:es, it has become necessary to and, best of all, the red lollipop ' , ,''1 A _, be the parents who, for one rea- world is "corrupt, evil, god. enlarge the Novitiate Building that had been slipped into '£7'/ son or another, have confided less and empty," we are at Mt. St. Rita in Cumberland. hand as she reluctantly took her () SUPPORT <"'..L ones to the Nursery's branding our generation," own It is planned to add a wing to the departure. THE care. says ,Bishop John King Mussio present building which will con- Her experience wasn·t unique. 1- CATHOLIC PRESS -t Since 1910 the Bishop Stang of Steubenville, tRin a chapel, classrooms, and a Sister Charles Levi and Sister has been in the busi- It is "monstrously silly" to IYrnnasium. Albert de Ste. Anne, the smiling .. BUY FROM THE t ness of caring for two to five condemn the world as "incurably The program calls for a new guardian angels of the 'tots, told. ADVERTISERS IN ." year olds, and has' been under evil," Bishop Mussio declared, building for Mercymo\lnt Coun- us story after story of children· '" CATHOLIC r the ,supervision, of the Daugh- adding people should recognize try Day School in Cumberland. who are brokenhearted when '? ters of the Holy Ghost, better that they themselves are » From its inauguration ,ten years sniffles keep' them' from the (:' known to Fall Riverites as the blame for evil in the world. -.0, classes at Mercymount.' 'Nursery. And a good many small P l\:. \' «, White Sisters. In that time 'Qishop Mussio made the state- &0 Page EleveD citizens see no reason why the-, , f" ' Turn, &0 Page , Turn &0 Page Seve. l
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Hole; St. Peter's, Provincetown; Mary's Cathedral. Father dos nedy Youth Community ,Center, New Bedford. St. Paul's, Taunton; Holy Name, .Reis was ordpined June 11, 1933 It is planned to add a wing to the departure. THE care. says ,Bishop John King Mussio present building which will con- Her experience wasn·t unique. Lag in Vocations Bishop of Fall River, the Cathedral, Rev. Arthur W. Tan­ '- wilt take part in Maryknoll's y... dent; Patricia 1- CATHOLIC PRESS -t 'C ~ () SUPPORT ,~O l '? , t
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Page 1: 06.05.58

An Anchor of the SoUl, Sure and Firm-ST. PAUL

The :ANCHOR

.,.

Love of God Religious Open First American Convent In New Bedford Sunday

A Spanish religious community formally opens its first United States convent next Sunday in the parish of Qur Lady of the Assumption, New Bed­ford. Its members thus join the 24 other religious communities already active in the Fall River Diocese. ,Two Si~ters will open the new house. '

The Religious of the Love of God, with their 'Mother­house i!1 Zamora, Spain, number some 1,500 membersFall River, Mass. Thursday, June,S, 1958 in Europe, Africa, and the Amer­

Second Cia.. Mail Privilell'ee' PRICE JOe icas. At the invitation 'of theV~I~ 2, No. 23 Authorized at Fan River. Maa&. $4.00 per Year Most Reverend Bishop, they will

" undertake teaching, catechetical, and soCial work in the New Bed­

'~ardinCiI Sp~llmcin to Ordain ford parish of which Rev. John Godelaer, S8.CC., is pastor and ,Rev. Raphael, flammia, SS.CC.. is assistant.

/ They are, in this country . Rev; Mr. Raymond, H. Kelley of Mansfield will be' . largely through the efforts. of

~ained a priest of the Catholic Foreign Mission Society Rev. Edmund Francis, 5S.CC., of A-merica on Saturday, June 14, at the Maryknoll Major until last week assistant pastor

Mansfield ,Ma.n en June 14

of Our Lady of the Assumption,~minary in Maryknpll, New York.

but now pastor at St. Mary's,The new p'riest, who is. Fairhaven. He learned of the

Itle son of Mr. and Mrs. J. work of the Religious of the Spe'ncer Kelley of 25 Bella Love of God during a visit to the

\."Vista A venue, Mansfield, Cape Verde Islands three years

Turn to Page Seventeen'- wilt take part in Maryknoll's 41st-annual Departure Ceremony the following day, Sunday, when Chicago Mourns he will officially be assigned to the missions of Formosa. At Cardinal's

His Eminence Francis Cardi­til ,Spellman of New York will Last Rites ESTABLISH NEW DIOCESAN COMMUNITY: Rev. t.e the ordaining prelate for this When Cardinal Stritch left Mother General Cruz Roderiques, R.A.D., (left) and Mother Tear's class of 48 deacons.' ,Chicago a little over a m9nth Mercedes Ferreras Nicolas, R.A.D., are in New Bedford to

First Solemn Mass ago to take up his new duties establish their first community in the United States. MotherFather Kelley will celebrate in Rome as Pro-Prefect of the Nicolas will head the New Bedford convent. Mother Generalbis first Solemn High Mass at Sacred Congregation for the

11:30 Sunday morning, June 22, Propagation of the Faith, he Roderiques wil! shortly return to her headquarters in Spain.in St. Mary's Church, Mansfield. told the throng at' the railroad'Father Edward Paquette of St. station that he would return Mary's Church will be the as,.. some day to Chfcago, and. he Eleven Clergy to Observe lIistant priest. hoped that some would come

Other officers of the Mass will down to welcome him back. 25 Years in Priesth'ood be: Father William Jordan of St. Thousands were at the air ­.John's Church, Central Village, port when the Cardinal's body Ten Diocesan priests and a Fall River Sulpician Father

REV. ~R.Turn to Page'\.

Twenty , ~ELLEY arrived back from Rome last will celebrate Silver Jubilees next week, marking 25 yearsFriday. , of service in God's priesthood.The Funeral Mass was cele­Taunton' Girl Elected President brated Tuesday morning with All but Rev. Laureano C. dos Reis were ordained June

by lateOf New Diocesan Youth Council Turn to Page Seven 10, 1933 the Most tions in Diocesan institutions. Rev. James E. Cassidy, D.D., Now the rector of St. Mary'.Ma;y Trond of Holy Rosary Parish, Taunton, was elected Lag in Vocations Bishop of Fall River, the Cathedral, Rev. Arthur W. Tan­president of the ... ecently organized Fall River Diocesan sey served at St. Joseph's, Woodsceremony biking place in St.Youth Council at a meeting of regional officers in the Ken­ Causes Serious Hole; St. Peter's, Provincetown;Mary's Cathedral. Father dos

nedy Youth Community ,Center, New Bedford. St. Paul's, Taunton; Holy Name,.Reis was ordpined June 11, 1933 Church Crisis Fall River; St. Mary's, Taunton;Others chosen as the first in the Aiores.tary, and Michael O'Hearne, St. John's, Attleboro; 'St. officers of the council are treasurer. BROOKLYN (NC) - The The activities of the Jubila­ Joseph's, North Dighton; Sacredrians have included service inChurch in the United StatesVice-president Robert Blan­ Fall River - Howard Taft, .Heart, Oak Bluffs, and St. James,parishes ,throughout the Diocese, , president; Anne Marie Ouellette, and its possessions of Alaska New Bedford. He was also aehette, St. Boniface Parish, terms as Army and Navy chap­vice-president; Elaine Dempsey,New Bedford; Secretary Michael 'and Hawaii is in the midst lains, and administrative posi- Turn &0 Page Fivesecretary, and Terrance Lomax,O'Hearne, Immaculate Concep­ of an increasing vocation short­

treasurer.tion, Ta~nton, and Treasurer age which is nothing less than William Orsi, St. Mary's, Taun­ Cape - Regina Bohlin, presi­ a crisis. , Sto~ehill,College Awards Degrees ton. dent; Joyce Griffin, vice-presi-' ·In the past decade, the num­

Nominated as committee chair- dent; Judith Kiernan, secretary, ber of priests, Brothers and Sis­ To 27 Students From Diocese , men were Rita LeBlanc, Sj)lf ­ and Robert Chase,treasurer. ters in this country, Alaska and Twenty-seven stude~ts from the Fall River Diocese are itual; Anne Marie Ouellette, cul­ New Bedford-Rober Roberts, the Hawaiian Islands has in­ among June graduates of Stonehill College in North Easton. tural; Robert Roberts, social,' president; Rita LeBlanc, vice"'; creased less than half as fast as "The dynamic'ideal of the Sermon on the Mount is-moreIlI1d Howard Taft, recreational. president; Robert Blanchette, ,the number of Catholics they

urgently needed today than training for engineering or tech­Two names were chosen from secretary, and Michale Calla­ must serve. among the regional officers pres­ ghan, treasurer. Population Ga,n nical careers," the graduates Msgr. Franc,is J. Lally, editor of ent as candidates for each coun­ Plans, are being, made for the , According to P. J. Kenedy and were told by Massachusetts The Pilot, Boston's Archdiocesan cil office and voted upon by the four Diocesan officers to attend Sons, publisher of the "Official, newspaper, and Dewey DavidGovernor. Foster, Furcolo,delegates. the New England Youth 'Council Catholic Directory," there were Stone, Brockton industrialist and

Regional officers elected earlier meeting at Beimirigton, Vt., i90,165 priests and Religious Commencement speaker. philanthropist, were recipieng• their own areas are as follows: June 21 and 22. , ,Turn to Page Seventeen Governor Furcolo,' Very Rev. of honorary degrees.

Taunton-Willam Orsi, presi- 'From the Towns y... dent; Patricia WL,·te·'S,·ste.r's' ot Do•• 'Nurser•• The graduating fromMa"nning, vice- seniors .~ .1fresident; Mary Trond, secre- •• :'1:'1 this, Diocese are: from Nortb

Attl~boro, Sheila Maloney, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. RollilUl ~.,~.l Sisters of Mercy Return Love of Little T9ts V. ).VIaloney, 18 James Street,k J" Plan Building , By Patricia McGo~an Bachelor of Arts. From Somer­set, Richard J. Kaegael, son oftv D I t When we visited the Bishop Stang pay Nursery at 217 Third "Street, Fall River, we , Mrs.-Pauline G. Kaegael, 71 Rip­;. . eve opmen took along a very young reporter. Reporters are supposed to be objective, but she wasn't. Turn &0 Page Eighteen

i'- Mother Mary Catherine,: When she got home and poured out her morning's adventures to her daddy and grandma, '"", it.S.M., Mother Provincial of there was no mistaking her enthusiasm for the Nursery and everything connected with it. Points Out People~,; the Sisters of Mercy of the In an excit~d jumble she Sisters dOrLt keep open house be the key to the Nursery's suc­

Province of Providence, has told of the children she'd seven days a week instead of ce'ss. The childrn, rushing busily Are Responsible announced the launching of a played with, the white-clad a mere five. about on tricycles, or swooping ForWorld Evilbuilding expansion program in ,Sisters who cared for them, Happiness, indeed, seems, to up 'and down on see-saws,' are four institutions of the Province. the beautiful blue rosary Mother obviously happy. So are the Sis- CLEVELAND (NC)

,Because of the increasing Yves de St. Jean had given her, 'C ters, and the motherly 'lady who When we complain that thenumber of Postulants and Nov- ,~Ol f:A prepares the meals. So too must ic:es, it has become necessary to and, best of all, the red lollipop ~ ~ ' , ,''1A _, be the parents who, for one rea- world is "corrupt, evil, god. enlarge the Novitiate Building that had been slipped into her~" '£7'/ son or another, have confided less and empty," we are at Mt. St. Rita in Cumberland. hand as she reluctantly took her () SUPPORT <"'..L ~heirlittle ones to the Nursery's branding our generation,"own It is planned to add a wing to the departure. THE care. says ,Bishop John King Mussio present building which will con- Her experience wasn·t unique. 1- CATHOLIC PRESS -t Since 1910 the Bishop Stang of Steubenville, tRin a chapel, classrooms, and a Sister Charles Levi and Sister N~rsery has been in the busi- It is "monstrously silly" to IYrnnasium. Albert de Ste. Anne, the smiling .. BUY FROM THE t ness of caring for two to five condemn the world as "incurably

The program calls for a new guardian angels of the 'tots, told. ADVERTISERS IN ." year olds, and has' been under evil," Bishop Mussio declared, building for Mercymo\lnt Coun- us story after story of children· '" CATHOLIC r the ,supervision, of the Daugh- adding people should recognize try Day School in Cumberland. who are brokenhearted when ~ '? ters of the Holy Ghost, better that they themselves are » From its inauguration ,ten years sniffles keep' them' from the (:' P~PERS ~ known to Fall Riverites as the blame for evil in the world. -.0, classes at Mercymount.' 'Nursery. And a good many small -..:.:c~S P l\:. \' «, White Sisters. In that time 'Qishop Mussio made the state­~ &0 Page EleveD citizens see no reason why the-, , f" ' Turn, &0 Page Twen~,. , Turn &0 Page Seve.

l

Page 2: 06.05.58

2 "':'THE ANCHOR'· Thurs., June :),1958

Catholic CollegesI, ,

Offer Courses· In Leadership

. 'WASHINGTON (NC)-Sum­mer 'leadership courses wiJl'be sptmsore~ at five" U. S. Catholic ,colleges by th~ mlHonal ~nter of the Confi'aternity' ~.f Chris­tian Doctrine.

Listing the colleges where the courses will be offered,Father' William McCoey, assistant na­tional director of the CCD, called attention 'to the suc~ss of the program.

"More than 1,000 priests, Relig- . ious and laity have talken the courses in the 10 years they have

. been conducted," he said. "They are now applying -the methods and techniques of the confratern:­ity in foreign and home mission fields. As a result of the courses, many U". C:;. Sees have been pro­vided with highly trained lay apostles.. These, together:. with CCD 'diocesan'rlireCtors, have made' tb confraternity' a major force' ;'1 strengthening ·the Faith both in this country and abroad.!'

Spanish" Course , The leadership course will be offered at Catholic Univ(:rsity of America, Washington, June' 30-August '8. ." , . , ..Father'McCoey said a .special feature' of this year's program is the addition ,of a leadership course that' will be conducted in the . Span,ish' language Jor 15 South American priests. This Course will be offered at Incar-' nate' Word College, San Antonio. The priests wilf attend on schol.,­arshi'ps provided by tQe epis­copal committee. of 'CCI). The scholarships were institut.ed un- ' der the guidance of' Archbishop :Robert E. Lucey of San Antonio.

Mass Ordo lrRIDAY - St. Norbert, Bishop

and Confessor. Double. White. Mass Proper; Gloria; Second Collect for Peace; No Creed;. Common Preface. Votive Mass in honor of the Sacred Heart of Jesus permitted. Tomorrow is the First Saturday ·Df. the Month.

IIATURDAY ~ Mass oj: the Blessed Virgin for Saturday.

, .simple.. White. Mass Proper; "Gloria;' Secon!! Collect for Peace; No Creed; Preface of

, the Blessed· Virgin. ..•.. ... SUNDAY---,-Second Sunday After

Pentecost. Double..·· Green: . Mass proper; Gloria; Creed;

Preface of Trinity. ,:IIlONDAY - Mass of Prt~vious

: "Si.mday. Simple. 'Green. Mass. Proper; No Gloria 'or Creed; Second Collect SS, Primus and Felician, Martyrs; Third Col­lect for Peace. Common Pref­. \

ace. :rU'ESDAY-'::St. Margaret, Queen/

and Widow. Simple. White. Mass Proper; Gloria; Second

, Collect for Peace; No Creed; Common Preface.

'WEDNESDAY - St. Barnabas, Apostle. Double. ·Red. Mass Proper; Gloria; Second Collect for Peace; Creed; Prefac:e of Apostles. . .

THURSDAY-St. John of San :Facundo, Confessor. Double. White. Mass Proper; Gloria; :Second Collect SS. Basilides and Companions,' Martyrs;

.

Third Collect for Peace; No· Creed; Common Preface.:

FORTY HOURS DEVOTION

June 8-8t. Mary, New B(:d­ford .

Corpus Christi, Sandw:ich June 15-8acred Heart, North

Attleboro Blessed Sacrament, Fail

River June 22-8t. Elizabeth;' Fall'

. River St... Mary, Norton

Jtme 29-Jc.0ur Lady~of Purga,· tory, New B~df()rd . , ., .

St. Mary, North' Attleboro" ".:/ " . - . ",'" . ,'~ ," '..... .

. . !)' THE ANCHOR ..

Seeoad-e11l88 mail privileges autbo:rilled ..t E'all River, Mass.. Published .1V<i..,,'. /l'j1UJ'Sday at 410 Higbland .Avenue,. Fall Ri)Ter. Mass.. 'by the CathOlic, Pres;' oi" tbe~· ..i ptoe,..e of Fall River. SubllCriptioa I~riae

... mwl, PO&tpaki ".00 pU year. ...• -'

, . . \. . ':"-Photo by Cal'vey STATUE DED.ICA,TH)N: An irriported marble stattle

. of the patron of the Sacred Heart Church, Taunton; is shown after the blessing by Rev. Francis McKeon, pastor of the parish. Pictur~d with Father McKeon a:re Mr. and Mrs. Alfred S. O'Keefe .who ·gave-the statue in memory of his parents,Siinon L. and MargaretT. O'Keefe, lifelong parjs~:.. ioners of the ,TauntOll Ghutch.

St.·,Anthonyof· Padua Pa,rish To .Honor Patron June '14~ 15 I

. Parishioners of St. An~hony of. Padua, Fall River, will' 'observe the annual celebration in ho~or of their patron saint on Satur­day and Sunday, June 14 and 15.

. Festivities' will commence at 6 P. M. Saturday with the bless- . ing of bread, commemorating the 'distribution of bread and food by St. Anthony. to the ,poor people of Padua apd Italy. ,.'

At 7 o'clock, sermon'and Bene­diction of the Biessed Sacrament .·wI'11 pre'c'ede a c'an'dlefilght "p'ro­cessl'on 'l'n whl'ch': the '1m'agOe' an'"d Venerable: Relic of St. Anthony' Vlill be carried, followed.by ven­eration of the Holy·Relic.· 't

Parish .societies ;"ho wiil "par­ticipate in the procession' in.,.

Rev. Laureano C. dos Reis, ad­minis'trator; Rev. Johh C. Mar­tins;' assistant ~astor; Manuel Domingos, chairman, and Ralph Benevides, ·publicity. : .

Legion of Decency The following films are to be.

added to the lists in their re­.spective 'classifications: ,', '., . .. Unobjectionable for General

p'atron~ge-,-SpaceChildren.. '. . . . . . '.

." Unopjectionable for Aduits "and Adolescents .-: Colossus of. ,New',York, I Married a Woman, . S,:orkel.

Objectionable in Part for All ­Bonnie!'arker Story. '"

'Separate Classification-Adam clude Holy N,aJtle, ,Council of \ .and Eve':· " , 'higher d.e~ree. I

Catholic Women, Junior Holy . Observation:· This fibn~,based - AI Name, Our Lady,of Fatima , So- on the Biblical 'account of the umni Invited dality, 'and Ladies of the Holy origin of man in ,the Boo~ of The Alumnae of Jesus Mary Rosary. . . Genesis, is reverently and' reli- Academy is 'invited to the hcad-

Also altar boys,. First Com- giou~IY presented in order to emy's graduation Mass at Notre \ munion Class,' Boy Scouts, Girl.' teach and inspire. However, the Dame Church at' 8 A. M. next Scouts, Tiofo Braga 'Club, Ward sem;~t.ional .exploitation in ad- Sunday. -Eight Club and the Young Na- verbsmg· tends to' negate the tional Athletic Club. spiritual motivation of the film JOHN E. COX CQ.

A band concert and auction' maker a~d rest~icts tpe viewing 'nc.will conclude Saturday's pro- .to a speCIal audIence. - .'

gram' '" A Separate Classification is. Fabricators of . . . ' given to certain films which, 011 Sund~y mornmg. "at 10:30 w.hile not morally' offensive, re­ .

a Solemn ~lgh Mas~ WIll be cel­e?r~ted WIth ser~on .and Bene-d1Cb~m. A contmuahon of the, auctIOn a?d ban~ concert at 7 ~'clock WIll tennmate the two­day festivities.

In charge of the program are

New Novitiate TORONTO (NC)-:"'A new St.

Basil's Novitiate is being b~i'lt in Pontiac, Mich., Father Robert J. Scollard, C.S.B., secretary general of the Basiliim Fathers, has announced. It will replace the one opened in temporary· quarters at Aquinas Institute, Rochester, N. Y., during the war years...

:~~,~,..-,"" ~. 0- ( ··.ICE CR~M

'" .. '" ''''''' , ..LEO·iL,isERUBE.· Mgr. .

'911 s~;;~~ ;::~;I. O~i~7836 :

qui,re someanalysis'andexplana­ Structural Steel tion as a protection to the un­ andinformed against wrong inter­pretations and false conclusions.' Miscellaneous Iron

HATHAWAY .Oll"'CO~; - IN(~

NEW BEDFORD

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HEATING OILS

TIMKEN

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Radio'f.ree .Europe Beams News To Iron Curtain Countries

MVNICH (NC)-Suppose, for one' fearful instant, that you lived behind the Iror Curtain.

You would have access to news, of course. But news that had been' tailored to fit the com­munist line. Your newspapers and radio' broadcasts would 'all carry only what the communist

-chiefs wanted you to know." . Fortunately for these people

• behind the 'Iron, Curtain-and "for the free world, too-there

are ways for them to learn the true news of the world.' One of these methods is by listening to the, ;Radio Free -Europe broad­casts.

American. Citizens Radio Free Europe' (RFE) is

, a division of the Free Europe Committee, Inc.; which was set up by American citizens in 1949.' Its aim basically is "to work for the'. freedom of the Soviet-ruled peoples behind the Iron> Curtain so that they may be able to estab­lish democratic institutions' of.. their own choosing and to join with the other peoples of Europe in building 'a peaceful and, co­operative EurdPean community;"proadcasts:. ' ". As with any other radio. net- . work 'RFE's' broadcasts include a va;iety' of programs-music of all kinds dramatic offerings and commen~ries.But news is' the .key to, its efforts-to get into

-. the "target countries" the sig-. .nificant news of the days as

, quickly as possible. -.' The ~ 'ropean headquarters of

RFE are here in Munich, w,here some 1 300 empl<wes' from 32 na­

" dons ~ork together in harmony .-surprising harmony,~nsi<ler-ing the fact that some .~f .their homelands have been traditional enemies. . '.

. News Service ." . RFE sUbscribes to major U. S.

and British news :SerVices, :and ,'the principal n~wspapers of the world. But much of its news comes from its own sources­from monitoring or listening to the broadcasts from.commuilist stations. Then, it has an exten.­sive newS service of its' oWt:l, with' news and information bu­reaus ranging from Sfock\1olm

Chi·' U· .at 0 IC nlversltyPlans' .New Prog;ra..-

WASHINGTON (NC)-A new program,in mission studies,· de-' signed' .especially' .. to ,give· ml's­

'sionary priests fuller preparationf~r' *eir apos(ola~e, will ~e: in­

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in the northern part of Europe to Athens in the south. 'These RFE correspondents

cover .the news in their area. They .make special attempts to interview refugees from Soviet­controlled lands; they talk to travelers, entertainers and othen who have· visited these commu­nist countries. Their informa­tion is sent back to Munich, where the chiefs on the different language desks· study it, corre­late· it. with the other informa­tion they have, and· decide whether and how it may b!t used.

Do the RFE programs get through? Do they have 8DF effect?

Counteract Jamming , -The.re ar.e several ways of

\ che~kmg ~hlS. One method .RFE has used IS the number of times, and the manner, in whi~h it ill ·attacked bY,the. commumst gov­ernments. ,

These governments ?lso have spent and are spendmg. large

.slllTIs of money to "jam" the RFE.­

. RF~ tnes to co~nte~act th.e _Jammmg by changmg Its wave bands b~ck and forth. They.feel

,/

that theIr programs are receIved "fair to good" 87 per cent of the time. .' .

'l,'hey ~~so. use a. "s.aturatjo~ ,broadcast -from. mldmght until .. 1:40 a.m. Allav~llable transmit­. ters· broadcast .1~ one ..language ,C?n: different frequen~i~s. ,

.RFJ!: <llso. gets letters from li!lteners inside the Iron Curtai• -strange as that may seem. RFE ~oes not eRCOUrage, peo.ple to·~nte;.often they.may subJect themselves to~anger by d()ing so.·

Wages Warfare ; What RFE is doing through it.

·broadcasts is waging psycholoc­ical warfare on communism. It is'tr.ying to break the monopoly Red, regimes have over com­munications; that is, over the ideas, the information, the news that reaches their pepole.

RFE is also trying to discour,{ age the people in these countries from helping the communist re­gimes-but in such a way that the· people ~ill not harm them­selves in 'so doing. If a worker in Czechoslovakia, for instance, knows ·that··a similar wor,ker in a free. country e'arns much more

·than- he does for the same work, ·and can buy much more with it, ·this' creates a' sen'se of dissatis­faction' with communism.

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Page 3: 06.05.58

THE ANCHOR....,· . 3'Representatives "Discuss Program Thurs., June 5, 1958 At Fall River Area CYO Meeting , Parish-sponsored retreats and days of recollection for Expect CCO Aid

teenagers, inter-parish girls' volley1?all and basketball tour­ To Help Churchnaments, grade school alumnae associations - these were suggestions made by Greater Fall River teenagers at a In So. America recent Catholic Youth 01'- Blessed Sacrament, Our Lady ~f BOGOTA (NC)-Despiteganization meeting' I where Health, St. Mary's Cathedral, St. efforts to improve cateche- . .ways in which parishes Thomas More, Sacred Heart, and tical training in Latin Amer­eould participate in the CYO Hoiy Name. . ' ica, religious instruction still program were explored. Name Panel Members .

suffers from a lack of organiza­Other ideas brought out in Priests in attendance, in addi:" tion among the clergy and of

panel discussions covering the' tion to Fathers Sullivan and collaboration by the faithful.four areas of CYO activity in- McCarrick, included Rev. 'An­ These are 'the conclusions of acluded parish glee clubs, discus- thony'Gomes, Rev. John Cronin, survey conducted by the Latinsion groups, public speaking Rev. Reginald Barrette, ,Rev. American Bishops' Council. courses and arts and crafts pro- Patrick 0'Neil, Rev. M. Roland U. ,S. Maryknoll Father James grams. Boule and Rev. Maurice Souza. McNiff, director of the Confra­

:Area officers elected are How- Panel members were, for B0­ ternity of Christian Doctrine forard Taft, Santo Christo parish, cial life: Elaine Audet, Mary Latin America, compiled thepresident; Anne Marie Ouellette, Carreiro, Patricia Robb, Ann survey results which show' theBlessed Sacrament, vice-presi- Bagley, Michael Walker, Robert continent suffers from a severedent; 'Terence Lomax, St. Mary's Sullivan, Al Lopes, Anne Marie shortage of trained catechists.Cathedral, treasurer; and Elaine Ouellette and Geraldine Cahill. Boston-born' Father McNiff,Dempsey, St. Louis, secretary. ,For athletics: Ann DeNadel, nameq to head the operations of

Appoints Chairmen Carol \dam, Florence soares, the Confraternity of Christian Committee chairmen appointed Roger Beauchesne, Robert lsa~ Doctrine in Latin America at the

by Taft for the four activity dore, Terence Lomax, Rita Cas­ .request of the bishops of those areas included Thomas Costa, tanho and Fred Bartek. countries, is directing a plan in­Our Lady of Health, cultural ac- For cultural activities: Elaine augurated for the publication ofFIRST' BLESSING: Franciscan Father George Marcil tivities; Michel Methot, Blessed Dempsey, Edward Pereira, newly revised catechisms and Sacrament, spiritual activities; Thomas Buba, Albert Beau­ gives his first prIestly blessing to his parents, Mr'-'and Mrs. special catechatical training for Michael Walker, St. Louis, ath- 'chesn~" ,Claudette ,Morrissette, HenryW,Marcil, 53 Orne St.,. North Attleboro, following teachers and seminarians. letics; and Rita Castanho, Santo.' 'Frances Whitty" Thomas, Costa his First Solemn Mass in, Sacred Heart Church, North Attle­ Affects VocationsChristo, social life. . and William Gustull. ' .' ,,' boro, Sunday. The'shortage of catechists has

Rev. Walter Sullivan, area. . For spiritual life: Jacqueline a direct influence on the acuteCYO director, explained that the Costa, Madeleine Levesque, Ce" lack of p~iests.central CYO headquarters in cileCharett, Bernard Flynn" House, Passes Anti-Smut Bill The survey also underlinedFall River offers facilities to' Howard Taft, Paul Cabral, Eliz" WASHINGTON (NC) - A bill penalty of $5,000 fine or five the' neeq for "a basic study 011parishes for. their recreational.' a,beth Baioc.~i and Michael designed to damp down on years' imprisonment for the first the part of the clergy as to the programs. He moderated the· Methot. mailing, of obscene matter 'by use offense, but would double these practical means of organizingpanel discussions and introduced of stronge'r enforc'ement proce- ' penalties for second offenses. and' training the faithful" forthe adult advisors who acted 'as Teacher Day duresand increased penalties Rep. Emanuel Celler of New this type of activity.their chairmen. They were Miss has been passed by the House . York is the sponsor 'of the bill. Noting that priests must real­Catherine Coughlin, St. Joseph~s, Lauds' Nuns and sent to the Senate. ize that, far from increasingsocial life; Miss Mary Cabrol, bill Consistory Considers, Five Bernadine Sil?ters of Our The would (H.R.6239) their labor, catechetic;ll trainingSanto Christo, cultural activities; 'Lady of Perpetual Help Sch'ool make possible the prosecution of Two Canonizations of the faithful will supply themMrs. Owen McGowan, St. in New Bedford were honored mailers of obscene material .at with valuable collaborators, theJ:oseph's, spiritual' li~e, and Rev. VATICAN CITY (NC) -The

Sunday during the Eighth An­ the point at which the tilaterial o statement added:Paul McCarrick, St. Mary's. first public consistory called by'

nual Catholic Nun-Teacher Day. is delivered, as well as at its "The task of increasing theCathedral, athletics. His Holiness Pope Pius XII inmailing point. Similar provisions vitality of the catechetical apos-:.Very Rev. Norbert Zonca,Parishes represented at 'the four year:- will be held June 9 as would apply to shipment of such tolate must be recognized as oneO.F.M. Conv., pastor of Our Ladymeeting by teen-age participants material otherwise'than by mail. the final preliminary step to­

of the main tasks of the Church.of Perpetual Help Church,were St. Patrick's, St. Louis, The bill contiI).ues the present ward the canonization of two which * * * interests not onlypraised the nuns at all Masses Religious.Santo Christo, St. Roch's, the clergy but also teachers, layand expressed the gratitude of The meeting of cardinals, arch,Cardinal to Display leaders and the faithful."tpe, parish and parishioners for'Quick Buck' Pictures bishops and bishops will also

their activities. Catholic Nun­ Philat~lic ,Exhibit hear a public announcement 'ofHarm Film Industry' Teacher Day was proclaimed by NEW YORK (NC) - Francis the official acts of the ChurchKasimir '. Kozakiewicz; national'LOS ANGELES (NC)-Motion Cardinal Spellman's philatelic that have been issued since thepresident of the Polish Roman LEARY PRESSpicture exhibitor's have been exhibit "America, the Beautiful" consistory of May 20, 1954, 'heldCatholic Union, and similar ob­warned to "nix quick buck pix" will be on ,disph1y in the court prior, to the canonization of St. servances were' held throughout.. by the president of Theater Pius X.of honor at the Ispex Philatelicthe country. ' Owners of America, it was re­ Exhibitiop to be held here, The June 9 meeting will vote PRINTING andA committee of combined so­ported here by Daily Variety, starting June 15. on the 'final 'disposition, of thecieties of the parish sponsored'trade publication. _Sponsored by the Society of canonization causes of Blessed MAILINGa supper and program in 'theThe newspaper declared that Israel Philatelists, the exhibi­ Charles of Sezze, an Italianchurch hall at which the nunsErnest G. Stellings, TOA presi-' tion will be' held in the New Franciscan ,Friar, and Blessedwere guests of honor. More thandent, had said the "quick buck" York Trade Show Building. The Gioacchina de Vedruna y Mas, 231 S~coaj St.. FaliRiver 300 parishioners and guests 'at ­earned from these films "might artistic designs' on thep~ges of a Spanish Religious. These two'tended the' supper which wasdo irreparable damage to the , the cardinal's exhibit were made : causes were virtually concludedfollowed by a card ·party for ·themotion picture theater in maIn­ by Sister M. Louisella of .Regis recently when the' Sacred Con­benefit of the sisters.taining its position as a recrea­ 'College, Weston. gregation of Rites approved the SAVE MONEY ONPersonal gifts and decorated , ''tional centel for community, validity of the miracles attrib­cakes were presented to the nunsparticularly for child. attend­ Expect Reds to Free uted to their intercession.whose Order has taught at Ourance." Lady of, Perpetual Help School Priests Next MonthVariety reported that Mr. for 31 years. Sister l\fary Jus­ HONG KONG (NC) - Two R. A. WILCOX CO.Stellings urged exhibitors to tine, ,superior and principal of American priests are scheduledtake a firm stand against such OFFICE FUR~ITUREthe school, expressed the appre­ to be released next month frompictures in order to insure their

I. Sto~k for Immediatf' Deliveryciation of the sisters for the Chinese Red imprisonment aftertheater's long range "standing" support and cooperation given serving five-year sentences for • DESKS • CHAiRSin the community, He said that them by parents and parish­ "espionage and sabotage."local reactions to sensational FILING CABINETS ioners. Fathers Cyril Wagner, O.F.M.,films is "ballooned" by news­ • FIRE FilES' • SAFESMembers of the committee' of Pittsburgh, and Joseph Mc­papers "to the point that they FOLDING TABLESwere Father Zonca, Mrs. Joseph Cormack, 'M.M., of Ossining,quickly have an effect on the AND CHAIRS ' Roszkiewicz, Mrs. Edward Pon­ New York, are the only Ameri­industry nationally." ichtera, Stanley J. Wybraniec, can missionaries, remaining inThe theater owners' executive R. A. WILCOX CO. , Mrs. Homer J. Mandeville, Thad­ jail in China. They were arrestedclaimed that the industry's Pro­

22 BEDFORD Sfdeus Ziewacz, and Mmes. Joseph and imprisoned by the Chineseduction Code Seal was a guaran­Bubrowieck;i, Valeria Chmielew­ Reds on June 15, 1953. tee of the playability of a film. ski, Alexander Golas, Wlawdys­

. lawa "Rolak, Andrew ,Bargiel,

. Mary Dudek, John ,Regula, Anna Jasinski, Stanley Smith ·and Michael -Pielech.

Double Observance EMMITSBURG (NC) - The

year-long sesquicentennial ob­servance of St. Joseph College and the founding of the North

I American community of the Daughters of Charity of St. Vin­cent de Paul will begin March 14, 1959, Sister Hilda Gleason, college president annou~ces.

FIRST AMERICAN: Very Rev. Gilbert G. Fini, C.P.S., M the first American elected

, to the post of Superior Gen­eral of the Stigmatine ,F~- , ~er8 Congregation. He is a Ilative of West Springfield, ~~,,,.; NC ,Pl:l(~t~.!. " ,

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Page 4: 06.05.58

__

Balancing the Books , . Editor_Warns ,Catliolic Educators Author Describes Victory Against Complacent Attitude

PHILADELPHIA (NC)-C~th- Father McCluskey declared olics should make sure their that the basic issue, "is notOver Physic~1 Handicaps schools, are, in good order in- whether the public schools are

, By Rt. Re,i. Msgr. John S. Kennedy stead of adopting a pharisaical 'godless' or whether they teach Robert Smithdas, now in his middle thirties, has been complacency toward public the right kind of moral, and

schools a Jesuit priest-editor spiritual values, but whetherblind and deaf since he was five years old. The loss of sight empha~ized at the National the public schools, as they are

and hearing resulted from cerebral spinal meningitis. But Catholic Educational Association presently, constituted, can teach Mr. Sinithdas was graduated from college with honors, won convention. what many millions of parents

Father Neil G. McCluskey, believe in conscience should bea master's degree, does the mothers four fathers a~d 'a S.J., associate editor of America taught their children." ,cooking and other chores in priest "~eflects ma'n's,'constant, magazine stressed the obligation - He said that when Catholicsthe apartment where he' necessary and pr:eponderant pre­ Catholic schools have of educat- insist on a "complete education"

lives alone, and gives some occupatio?" wit~ . the'. world ing "in the full and CaUiolic for their children, they "are ex­235 talks a year. He tells' his around him and mSI.de him, b1,lt sense of the w·ord.". . ercising a right rooted in a God­own story in Life at My :ringer- . under dtheG sdt~~ng light of the !"Some critics allege," Father given obligation," But he added' t'l (D' ble- revea1eo. _ McCluskey stated, "that poor that "this greater freedom tod P s$4) ou As the title indicates, the book discipline, lack of character educate does not give us Catho­ay. . , is about family's growth to­

training and the' chilly secular lics a right to look down our . There is n?th:' gether,the relationships of par-. climate in the schools have bred noses at the public schools." mg lu~ubnous ents and children', and how the' a generation of delin9-uents who ,"In these institutions," he con­about It. Self;- former help the latter progress

pity is lacking in many' ways. are on their ,merry way to 'rock, tinued "are many deeply dedi­rolland ruin." cated '~en and women, teachersin this man As the editor declares; it fur­

who conquered nishes "the reader valuable in- UrgeS Self Check and administrators. Catholic ,Observing that these critic-' and non-Catholic, who are doingtwo severe han- Sights into: preschool habit for­

isms have peen directed mainly a magnificent work for Amer­dicaps. His par- mation the artistic 'sense re- limits of the' thirteen origin- ' agains~, state-supported public ica's youth. It is hardly their:e?ts .s~stained spect for age, the' natur.al' vir ­ al United States. NC Photo. education, he added:"Before we fault that their hands are pretty:hls splnts w~en tues, the social conscience, the breathe the prayer of the Phar- well bound in what concerns,he' was first introduction to musiC the spir- Suspends Priest isee ~nd thank the Almighty that the moral aspect of education.":stricken. And itual 'awakening, the' liturgical we are' not like the public .... ' he had the good ,. development, and the apostolic schools - sinners _ we should CatholIc OblIgatIonl[ortune to attend school~ whICh formation." J.ail Sentence make certain that our' own Father McClusk~y said Cath­l~elped him overcome hIS ]I'lhys- Quite a lot there! But all of it WARSAW (NC) '- The first schools are in good' order." olics are -.thankful that theirileal afflictions and m~ke the impo'rtant in one or. anotber de­ -priest ~tried in a Pol\sh criminal "If we, Catholic educators," schools "can provide th,~ propermost of. his gifts of mmd ~nd gree. And all knowledgeably court since Po~and's, partial he 'continued "have any temp- atmosphere and training and do

l~ersona'hty. , discussed by thoughtful and ex- breakaway from Russian domi­ tation to complacency because not qualify for the 'BlackboardHis college work was done at 'perienced people. Nothing in nation in October 1956, has .peen our parochial and private schoolll Jungle' categoryo~ school," butSt. JohrI's, Brooklyn,. whel'e he these pages is mere theorizing. convicted of charges of incJting have not been deeply invaded he, warned that thIS fact shouldnot merely k~pt up With the r~st Everything stems from, what the a riot at a communist mayor's by. sedous juvenile 'crime, we n~t lull them into tqink~~g Ca~h­of the class m an array .>1 dJf-' several authors have done them": funeral. might humbly remind ourselves olIc schools are superiorj'icult subjects, but always man- selves or observed at firsthand. Father Jozef Czarniecki, vicar' of the great advantages .our aca'demic institutions."Ilged to :Je in the top llO per Catholic parents ,should find the of the parish church in Zuromin; schools possess here in contrast "Next time someone raisesl:ent. His graduate .degr~e he book a_ joy, both in its sterling' a small towriabout 100 miles with public schools." the question 'Where are ouro100k at New York pmverslty. common sense 'and, in its wealth no'rth of Warsaw, was ,given a Catholic scholars?' he might, And now he travels all ~ver of excellent suggestions.

1he country, having by tenacIOus • \~uspe?ded sentence of 18 months . Platters Visit Pope well ask ,his question, 'not of'j •

industry, managed to become an . Pithy ~otes, . the colleges, but 'of the highm I~n~~~~ending Fathe~ Czar- _ V~TICAN CI~Y (NC) - HisE'xpert public speake,r. able to rho' 'as Merton's Thoughts m schools" ;.' k" t e Judge StanI's- HolIness Pope PIUS XII grantednlec 1 S sen enc , -.. A'IIdapt himself to any kind of SolItude (Far~er, Straus and

law' Binkiswicz cited "numer- a speclakl, ~udillen~e ~o ant methrl­ "If there' is a Catholic rightroom' or auditorium and any Cudahy. $3) IS a small book

QUS extenuating circumstances." can roc n ro smgmg· earn, ~ 'to educate," he declared, "thenldnd of audience. comprising notes "written in . Maximum 'penalty ,possible Platters, who are on.8 tour of, surely there is an obligation."

That this accoupt of extJ'aor- '1953 and 1954 when the author, would have been.15,years in jail. ~urope.. . "We insist upon the right," hedinary achievement is both awe- by the gr.ace of ~od 'and the Of 11 other defendants on trial The PontIff told the. group, concluded, "because we are

il~spiring and heart-lifting, goes' }avo~ ~f hIS Su?enors, was ~~le 'with the' priest, 'three women comPOsed~f t four mIen 8n~ one obliged to raise' up our children,,,,,ithout saying. The one puz- to enJ.oy special o~po.rtu~/tIes were acquitted and, the ,rest- w' oman, h a popu ar'b.sl~ntge~ to establish - schools in whichzling feature is the question for solItude and medItatIOn. htWf:' men and six women-were ave ~ eavy responsl. I 1 Y "' they can be taught to 'thinkmark as to the author's religion. The "notes" are concise, tell-" giv~n suspended senteikes rang- 'set an exami>le, especI~lly for rightly ,and to live rightly.'"'

THE ANCHOR­ . Thurs., June 5, 1958

PIONEER PRIEST: Fath­er Stephen T.Baden was the first priest to be ordained -May 25, 1793-within the

His ,pare~ts, from what. he i~g cOJl).me~ts on' the" spiri~ual ing from six months. to a year in youth, because of their "eryB:)YS; were Catholics. He makes life. There IS hard~y a s~ntence' large following. , , r,eferences 'to God' and pmyer, that cannot be profitably dwelt ja~~e decisioJl,'follow"ed.a'two-' The five 'Negro members cd,.to philosophical discussions of on for' some ~ime: .For each pre"- , week trial in which. the accused the group who heard the Pope.,]'l~ligion with faculty members sents much In lIttle. The style speak include Herbert' Reed ofwere charged with inciting ana't St. John's. But one is left is terse; superfluous words are anti-communist' riot at Zuromin Kansas City,' Mo., Paul Robe ofwondering whether- he 'has .my dispensed with, an~,what is put' on Feb: 16 during 'the funeral of Oklahoma City, Miss Zola Tay­religious affiliations. , dow'1,'~n the page !..S all meat, Stanislaw Nikiel;' communist lor of Los Angeles, Tony Wil: ­' . .. The range of subjec,tl! is eon­ liams, of Elizabeth, N. J., and,High, Not HlfalutI,n siderable, and'on all of them the' to~,n mayor. David Lynch, of St. Louis:

Father Leo J. Trese is among au'thor has something fresh and The Platters were led W, thethe most popular of wr\ters on pithy to say. He makes ciear Hospital Conclave

spiritual subjects, and among the what the' spi'-iitual life is and audience by their conductor, ,oMary Benedict Young of Phila­

'ST. LOUIS (NC) - Mother Ruppert Branker, of New YOl'k.most effective. His style is un- how it is, to be 'lived. ,He dis­

piretentious, indeed collaquial. cusses the purpose and practice delphia, head of the Amercian Big words and theological t(~ch- of prayer. He acutely analyzes 'province of the -Medical Missfon nicalities he' avoids.' His, exam- man's gratitude, tepidity, the Sisters, will speak at the· 43rd ples are .dra:-v.ri .from everyday secret of the saints, and espe­ annual convention. of the, Cath-~

lilEe. The' reader ,cannot help cially solitude-its ,nature, con": olic Hospital Association of the feeling, "He is talking nott'-nly ditions, yield. ' , United States and Canada in At­to me, but also about m~." To my "lind, the Merton books la,ntic City on June 22. More I

This does not. mean that have grown better as they be­ than 5,ood persons are expected Father Trese's d'octrine is pedes'- come shorter' arid less wordy. W attend. trian or a dilution. It is on a 'This ine· belongs at the top of vl,ry high level, aithough there the list. Crisis "Needs is nothing hifalutin about its , About Freud SAN GABRIEL, (NC) - The

duty of the, Catholic .broadcastereil:pression. The author 'brings The latest of "the. Woodstock today is "to offer the listener10Ity, sometimel? complex truths, Papers is Freud and Religion ,by' words that' a' nation needs inwithin the reach of the ordmary Gregory Zilboorg (Newman. 95 iime of crisis," ,according' w'J)E,rson:, And tpat is no paltry cents). It seeks to establish, on Claretian Father Michael Mon­accomplishment., the basis of the disclosures in the toya, presid,entof the ,CatholicThe latest example of his, monumental biography ot'Freud Broadcasters Association. Th4!notable skill is afforded by ,~ore by Ernest Jones, that "Freud as CBA convention, opens in Chi­~han Many Sparrows, (F Ides. " a person is not the same thing as cagoJune 19.$2.95). Some of the chapter the psychoanalysis which he

headings might suggest that we created'" 'that "Freud atheism is. r""------,----------~have here another entry among not a' co'nditio sine qua non for

th,e "positive thinking", pseud~- the practice of 'good psychoanal­ - ­: 'Protect : I

spiritual self-help kits. One IS ysis"·that it is of personal origin "The Power Within You," and and ~ot'one of the pillars of his - , .­

~ 'another "The Good You Do." theories. ... .: What You Have .: But, Father Tres~ is writing For this view an impressive about the supernatural life, the ,case is made.

the :- =- -:. ~'McGOW AN~,life of grace, life of divine charity, ~nd doing' so without thl! least t::ompromise. ,

Yet he inspires more confi­dence than the professional '~confidence" men. When he t()}ls us of God's special love of each of us what love of God is and how it can be lived, what love of one another is and how it ean be lived, how to deal with root vices and cultivate key virtues, he is giving us somethini: of genuine and rich substance.

'This a ra ther short book and , a 'very simple-seeming one. But if touc,hes the heights of spir­ituality and the depths of th~ h~man j1eart, and is immensely practical.

Eugene S. Giessler, editor of Gre,ving Up Together (Fides., $3.!l5), explains that this set of papers on' family life by uix

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REV. L. C. dos KEIB REV. F. R. CONNERTONREV. W. E. COLLARD'KEV. G. J. CHABOT· REV. J.E. BOYD

REV. J. J. GALVIN

-Photo by CalveJl REV. J. T. HIGGINS

UV. W. JL JORDAK

KEV. A. G. DUPUIS

Observe 'Silver Jubilees Continued from Page One tion, Osterville; Immaculate

Navy'chaplain for two years. In Conception, Fall River, and St. 1950 he was assigned as assistant Mary's, Man,'dield. \' at St. Mary's Calhednll, and in Rev. Howard A. Waldron is 1956 .was named Rector: ' administration at Our Lady of

Diocesan Positions </. Victory, Centerville. His other Rev. John E. Boyd is Diocesan assignmehts 'have included St.

Director of Catholic Charities' .Francis Xavier, Hyannis; Sacred and resident chaplain of St. Vin­ Heart,' Taunton; St. James, New cent's Home, Fall River.' Pre­ Bedford; St. Thomas More, Som­vious to his 1949 appointment to erset; and St.Mary's, North

, these positions he served at Our Attleboro. 1. Lady <if the Isle, Nantucket; St. Father Galvin was graduated , . Patrick's Falmouth, and St. Pat­ from Durfee High School, Fall

rick's, Fall River. River, and studied for the priest- ' ,Since 1954, Rev. Gerard J. hood at St. Charles College, Bal­

Chabot has' been administrator timore; and th'eBasselin Founda­at St. Theresa's, South Attleboro. tion at the Sulpician Seminary, Before that he~served at St. John Washington, D. C. He pursued the Baptist, Fall River; St. An­ graduate studies at the Catholic thony's, New Bedford, and 'St. University of Louvain, Belgiu~.

River. phy, a member of the class or­Three Administrators dained in Fall River iri 1933,

R~y. John T.. Higgins served served the Diocese of Wimlip~g. at Sacred Heart, Oak Bluffs; St.' Manitoba·, in western Canada. Mary's, Nantucket'; St. James, Son of the late George and the New Bedford, and St. Mary's, late Emma (Trainor) Murpby, Immaculate Conception, and Father Murphy studied at Hnly Holy Family, all in Taunton. He Cross College and 'St. Mary's lY'as an Army chaplain for four Seminary.' He was assistant at years, serving in the Burma the Cathedral of Winnipeg for 14 theater of war, and he is now years before his appointment as ' administrator at St. Augustine's, pastor, of St. Patrick's Parish in Vineyard Haven. that city.

Now administrator at St. John He died on Jan. 3, 1951. A the Baptist, Central Village, Rev:" Solemn Pontifical Mass was of­William R. Jordan has been as­ fered in his -home parish church, signed to Sacred Heart, ' Oak' .Sacred Heart in Fall River, by Bluffs; Our Lady of the Assump- the Most Rev. James L. Connolly.

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Joseph's, Attleboro. _Father Galvin taught at St. Rev. William E. Collard is pas­ Joseph's College, Mountain

tor at St. Theresa's, New Bed­ View, C:;al.;' St. Edward's Sem­ford, and has also served at' inary, Kenmore, Wash., and St. Notre Dame, Fall River; St., Mary's Seminary, Baltimore. Roch's, Fall River; and Holy He served at St. Mary's, Taull ­Rosary, New B,eqford. Father ton, before he was appointed to Collard was a member of the his present post, administrator of U,.S. Army Chaplain Corps from St. Peter's, South Dighton:1941 to 1943.

Teaches SeminariansHere 20 Years ~ Serving as a priel'jt in the Rev. Francis Connerton,' 8.8.,

was born in Fall River and wasAzores for five years, Rev. Lau­graduated from B. M. C. Durfeereano C. dos Reis came to the

Fall River Diocese in 1938. He High School. He was educated for the p~iesthood at St. Charlesserved at St. Michael's, Fall College, Catonsville, Md., and St.River, and Our Lady of Mount Mary's Seminary in Baltimore.Carmel, New Bedford, before

being . appointed administrator A member of the Society of St. Sulpice (Sulpician Fathers),of St. Anthony of Padua; Fall

River. ' " he has taught at St. Mary's' and Chaplain of St. Joseph's 'Or­ , at St., Edward's Seminary, Ken-,

more, ,Wash., and is presentlyphanage, Fall River, and assist ­ant director of cemeteries for the vice-rector of St. John's Provin-' Diocese, Rev. Arthur Dupuis has' cial ,Se:ninary, Detroit, Mich. also- served at St. Josep~'s, At­ Dece'ased Priest tlebOl:o, and Notre Dame, Fall ',The late Rev. Thomas A. Mur­

REV. A. W. TANSEY

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During the first 10 postwar years of Red domination, OPPOS!­tion from the communist author­ities made it difficult to rebuild the churches destroyed during the war.

But ·the more liberal attitude adopted by the Polish regime after the 1956 change in govern­ment has now made possible program of construction, espe­cially in the country, to meet the demands of a growing popula­tion.

An example of this increase in church building is the town Bielsko which, until a short time

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Page 6: 06.05.58

_. . . ..", ,~ .

/ .

'. Sacred Heart Month ',;":,Weekly :Caleridar­,··....)fF:':k . :' .,'."

The National' Association for Better' Radio and Tele­ ,Of· Feast DaysvisIon is worried 3:bout the crime wave on TV. And perhaps with.very g~od' rea~on. . • roDAY - Corpus Christt,

which falls on the ThursdayIn a single week in May, an 'Association survey found after Tr,inity Sunday, commemo­em early' evening programs from seven TV stati~ns this rates the institution of the Holy

frightening .litany : one hundred and sixtY,-one murder~, / Eucharist. Generally this date is the feast of St. Boniface,sixty "justifiable" homicides, two suicides, one hundred and Bishop'-Martyr. He was born in

ninety-two att~mpted murders, eighty-three robberies, fif­ Devonshire in 680 and lived for teen kidnappings, seven attempted lynchings, six dynamit-' some years as a Benedictine ings, ·two cases of.arson, two cases of torture. monk before embarking on a

missionary career, Pope St.In anyone's book, that is quite a dose of violence for Gregory II consecrated him a

-young minds to absorb. And there seems n~ question about' Bishop and sent him to Ger­it--since these were early evening shows, a good percentage many, where he is venerated as of viewers would be impressionable children and, young , the Apostle of the nation. He

,chose Mainz as his See andadults in their teens. At an age when jthese yo~ng people ar~ brought about the conversion of

feeling the pull of .emotions, are chafing under aUthority, thousands. With 52 companions, are searching for their own answers to dIfficulties, a TV diet he was martyred in Friesland' in

755. ~is' remains are hi theoverbalanced with niUlrder and violence is. not ca~culated to Abbey of Fulda, Germany.

.~ contribute to the reasonable life. . .~ TOMORROW - St. Norbert,Not that we advocate "The Five Little Peppers' and Bishop-Confessf;>r. He was born

How They Grew" as the cultural and entertainm~ntlevel of in Lorraine in'~ 1080 of a noble all those under twenty-one years of age. Murder and vio­ family and led an early life of

dissipation at the court of Em­lence are a part of life - but a lesser part, are theY,not? peror Henry IV. He repentedThe adult mind is able to -take all this as entertainment, . and established the Canons Reg­

ill able to make the proper qualifications, is able to look with ular, known as the Premonstra­amusement at the unrealistic tactics and the pat solutions tensians. Later he became Arch­

bishop of Magdeburg, revivedand the .impossible maneuvers. The adult mind can see this the popular devotion to thedisplay' of violence as a magnified portion of life, distorted Sacred Hear.t of the Altar and

out of its true role. The adult mind is able to see the fallacy strenuously resisted heresiesSage and .. Sand·of the violent answer to every problem.. The adult mind is impugning the doctrine of the Real Presence. He died in 1134.able to recognize thl~ lack of balance in this parade of '.America, Needs Courageou·s. SATp~DAY - St. Robert of'murder and' violence. ' ' Newininster, Abbot. He was aBut children and young people are not adults. They Yorkshire priest who took the

must be protected against the 'publicising of the. rule' of Catholi'c Political Leader Benedictine habit. He obtained . violence. Yet 'how many parents care what their. children By Most Rev. Robert J. Dwyer, D.O. permission to join- a group of are looking ~t as 'long as they are quiet?' . Bishop .of Reno. ' . monks at York, who were striv­

ing to live according to a newA recent ad in an English paper gave eloquent, com­ Who sban find him for us; that not impossible' he, the interpretation of the Benedictine mentaryon this. It wa.s an ad for a private school and -as Catholic political leader witl:Jout fear and without reproach? Rule at Fountains Abbey in 1132, proof th.at i~s children came from bett~r families it stated­ It is a perennial question, raised more pointedly· now with which soon became Cistercian. that these were the kind of families where children were 'persistent rumors of asp'inints to the. presidential nomina- Newminster Abbey was founded

from it in 1137 and St. Robertnot allowed to turn on the television set at will. tion who are known to make leadership have followed no. pat- became its first Abbot. He died If thai seems amusing, call for a cessation of TV watch­ the sign of the Cross. . tern of rel~gi~us ascendency. \ in 1159.

. . . Make PrlDe~ples Acceptableing in' the home for one evening and see what state of It IS easy enough for us to Dom Aelred Graham in his SUN:!:lAY-St. Maximinus of rebellion erupt:;;. . . resent hotly the slurs on our recent volume of essay;.. Ch!is- Aix, Bishop-Confessor. He lived

It is about time that parents knew what their children citizenship which are eXPlicit in' tian Thought and Action, makes in the first century. Tradition slanders of the some arresting comments on the earliestwere watching and took a hand in the selection of programs. the the bigots, dating from Christian

'Blanshards and role of the Catholic in modern times avers that he .was a Pales-There is nothing wrong in letting children know that some the A I' C hers political life. Central to his tinian and a disciple of Our Lord things are all right for children and some things for adults who· are the theme is the thesis that Catholic. who accompanied SS. Martha

heirs of the' education should not only pro- and Mary Magdalen and theirand it is up to the parents to call the shots. And the sooner Burchards and vide the political philosophy brother, Lazarus, to the south ofthey begin doing it, the b~tter. the Marshalls which is essential for a right France. He is venerated as the of earlier gene- understanding of citizenship, but first Bishop of Aix in Provence.

Another First rations, But it should apply the spur for the Another tradition add:; that he is only realism acceptance of political respon- was the man born blind to whom

. Americans like to.think of this country as being a land to face up to. sibility. . Christ' ga~ sight, mentioned in

If we are the the 'fact that He is aware of a certaIn "cler- Chapter IX of the Gospel of 8t.of "first,s.'" can claim that our endeavors the professional ical" approach to politics (not to John. Ibiggest and the best ai'ld, above all, the first, then we feel' bigots are not· be confused with political cleric- MONDAY - SS. Primus and

a great sense Ofsatisfaction.-' ' the only ones alism of the Continental va- Felician, Martyrs. They were ." ',' We have racked up another first over the Memorial Day who look ask- riety), w:"icp .is entirely too re-· aged ,brothers who lived in.

Ance at the' Catholic candidate. 'mote from the realities of the, Rome about' 297 and were'ar­week-end but it is not one to be proud ot' ...• '. . The plain truth 'is that the ~situation to offer any useful rested, because of their Faith,

Aga,insta Natio~al Safety· Council estimate 'of three American Catholic political'rec- avenue for action. . . during the Diocletian and Maxi­hundred and fifty deathB over thethiee-day week-end;the orc has been' altogether too mea- He does not suggest by any '. mian, persecutions: They were final figures showed', that' a record three hundred and gel' and too spotted. The. Cath- means that the Christian in thrown to the lions in the Am­

. olic body, for,.its size an'd poten- politics should· compromise his phitheatre but the animal.8eve~ty-one lost" their ljyesin :traffic .accidents alo~e.. This tial, has produced too few public ' principles; the problem .is how would not harm' them. ,Later

. is anew nationalreco.rd for the· holiday.· . 'men u' .0uts~ndiAg ability' and ·to make those pririciples,accept- they were beheaded outside the . '.' ; "What is:it that changes 'mimandtwomen:when they.sit integrity: to create an impression able in aso~iety whicl:l is t,rad~- walis of Rome. ... ,

behind the wheel of an overPowered steel monsterabl~to· of solid ·confidence. tionally suspicious of the "Ro- ': TUESDAY ~.St. Margaret.of

spring outQf control at the slip .of a finger-tip and ready . It has sUff~~ed f~~~ the p~om- ·man.menace.."", ." Scotland, Queen-Widow. 'She .intince of too many whose mem- It IS an aSSignment which calls 'was the Queen of Malcolm III,to ·~xaggerate in a very :few feet at Ii very· high speed the . ory we would cheerfully· forget. for the. exerci~e; of .enli.ghtened and used her influence for the

alightestmiscalculation or smallest inattention? Those with a penchant for his-' prudence, sensItive Justice, ,un- good. of religion and justice. Motivation research authorities tell us thEft at the wheel tory can 'extract a mode~t satis- f;o~mon fortitude, and· the un- .She was especiaily devoted to.

,faction 'out of the enumeration , fal1mgbalance of temperance. the poor and worked to preventof a car a man's desire for power' and control is able; as no of Catho'lics who have hon~tably .' To Make Nation 8~ronger.. their oppression. Through herwhere else, toassert itself.' '. ,

. distinguished themselves in pub- The: .unfortunate . ImpreSSIOn good offices, a number' of ' It is true also thatimmaturity plays its partin seeking . lie life, the Taneys and Whites ~revalls that. Catholics are on.ly churches and monasteries were

ear-thrills, in love bfspefJd. '.' . ' . and 'Butlers of the Court· the mterested' m· those matters built. She spared no pains in the

Lack 9f court~ISY surely must bear ~h'eblame for many Murrays and Walshes and' Mc-' which touch the interests of the ed.u~ation of her children. Sh~ is ' Carrans of the Senate, together C~urch. hS an institution. C~r- said to have foretold the day ofof the chances that people take behind the wheel of the with, a scattering of" cabinet ~m~y we areconcerne~ wlth her death, November 16, 1093•

. latest Belchfiie Rocket. ..' - -

members, representatives, state JustIce to..our scho?ls: With the By Papal decree ,her feast is~ . . ~, .' .

_ And then.tl;1e,re is alwaYs·t~e lack of realization about· governors, and . lesser 'lights. ~res~rvatlOn.of Ch~lstIan mor~l- celebrated on this day in Scot­But truthfully a certain judi-' ItY, m ~meflcan life, ~~d, With land, but oil. June 10 in otherthe consequences~ Who ever believes when he leaves the

, - cious padding is required' to the freedom of. relIgIOn' as countries.driveway' or curbing of his home that he will contribute to make the list full-bodied and against. the secula.r:ist attempts WEDNESDAY-St. :J3arnabas,the traffic accident statistics? .\ save for a: few isolated n'ames. to fetter it. Apostle. He was one of the 72

One thing is 'sure -- no matter what the causes' Oldy it is not a census of first-raters: But ~t is absolutely false to disciples of Our Lord and was , a,· , , . suppose, that Catholic .political a native of Cyprus. He is men­one person can chanlfe the facts .,-- you, the driver. Tr.eason·-by· Default philosophy. is. confined to the

There are abundant reasons relatively. narrow purview of tioned repeatedly in the Acts of . . the Apostle's and' worked with

@ for this, of course. We have re- ecclesiastical welfare. The Cath­hearsec;l these reasons solicitously olic in 'public service is bound 8t. Paul at Antioch, Selencia,

Paphos and other places.. He i.' .' . for a 1ong time "now, grouping in conscience to render justIce,.d;,..... .e ' CU"0'R',. them under economic, social, and to all men, not as a puppet of said to have been stoned to death , . ' p~liticalh~adings, I with occa~ some priestly caste but as .the . at Cyprus because of his suc­

sional references to .such factors fUlflllm,ent of his primary obli- cess' in preachi~g the Gospel.Th AN. , as unvarnished prejUdice and gations to God and country.

OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER IOFTH'E D'IOCESE OF FALL RIVER, . racial or religious intolerance.'. The Catholic politician is not value to give to America which­' hed W 'kl b "Th' ,.. th I" P " t h' D' ' t fiR' . But while they explaiJl, some ou,t to make America Catholic',Publ,S ee y y e ",0' 0 IC ress 0 t e loc.ese 0, al iver the .nation sorely needs,' and

. ' 410 Highland Avenue '. part of !he situation they do not he is'out to make her a· better, which is not being supplied by fall Rive'r, Mass. OSborne' 5-7.1 51 wholly satisfy the 'inquiry: They str0llger, more Christian I'\ation. the empty secularism which has

do not go very far toward clari- If he 'has the advantage of a corne to be the accepted teach­'UBLISHER fying, for example, the failure clear, positive, experienced po-' ing of so many of our universi ­

. , Most ,Rev, JamE'S 'L. ~onnolly, 0 •.0.,' Ph.D. of those areas of' th~ country litical' philosophy to' guide him; .. 'ties. ... . '. .... .' . which are strongly or even pre- it is not designed for' purely' But unless he is willing to die­

. GENERAL' MAN.(GER· :. ASST. GENERAL MA~AGER dominantly Catholic· 'to brini· sectarian uses, in the sense de- play his wares in the market­~e,,; Dari.iel f.·Shailoo,M.A. " Rev.. John P. DrIScoll forth political leadership of un- fined above, or for giving up to place, unless he has the courage . '. ,.,.... . doubted' quality. Actually 'ac- party what was meant for man­ to hawk their value, they are

" " ;MANAGING EDITOR . .... rordingto the record, the' betrt· kind. altogether' likely to remain .am­Attorne)' ·tiugh J.Golden.,xamp1e.lJ .. : Catholic politicaJ. Be has' IOmething of unique 8Old. .

Page 7: 06.05.58

I,THE ANCI-fOR­ 7:' ,Thurs., June 5, 1958

Blames People Continued from Page One

me~t in an addreSs to graduates ·of Notre Dame College here.

Moral Cowardice Today, the Bishop said, many

people make "the world" • scapegoat for their own sinS. Such a scapegoat, he charged, 'is "conceived in a people's moral cowardice and taking flesh from their unwillingness to face their own shortcomings."

"When we no longer see God in the world about us," he con­tinued "then the flesh uses it as an' allure; the devil trans­fonns it into a rendezvous with all that is exciting, desirable, and luxurious; concupiscence colors it with a lusting after things that to us are morally indigestible. "

"To cry out, however, that the world is incurably evil, that we cannot be held responsible for succumbing to its influence, is something monstrously silly. What we really need is a good dose of frankness. It is time to recognize that moral evil comes from us. What we see of evil in the world is nothing but the moral transgressions of the people in it."

Such Nice Names Today's "new moralitY," Bishop

Mussio observed, "calls good anything that makes you f~l good. Each man becomes .bis own norm of morality, his own judge-yes, even his own police­man." '

On the national and -mterna­tional level, he remarked, such • situation is decried as anarchy, communism and social disorder. "But when it gets down to the

.personal level," he added, "it doesn't seem so horrifying, be­cause we have such nice names for it-'smart,' 'modern,' 'lib­eral. H

Bishqp Mussi~ said, that to­day's brand of thinking "makes sin a virtue .. .. .. moves people

then to expect the reward -of virtue for their wantonness."

Fi&'hting Mad

"You have to see this picture elearly an'" honestly," the Bishop pointed out, "if you are ever to

'understand the attitude of the people who move about in it.

"The purveyors of printed and pictorial rot, the moguls of vice

· and corruption, the' betrayers of their nation's secrets, 'the leaders

• who are blind, the rulers who are cheats, the of:ficia:ls ~ho tire

· thieves, the women who .are ribald, the men who are animals

· +-an are surprised by our iridig­nation -t their condlIet."·" ,

Christian principles have "re­eeded so far" from the lives of

such' people, Bishop Mussio said, that "the.v are fighting mad at

bystanders too long, -watching. the good life die ::. slow death. We have allowed' much of our Christian' civilization to be gut­.ted' by those who flattered our eenses and starved ou:r souls."

Just Foolishness Bishop- Mussio urged Chris­

tians who "want the world to reflect the glory of God" to "get into the picture yourselves • • • •.bat you or anyone else will ever see in the . world is just exactly what you put of yourself. ta.to that picture." . .

"To blame God or His world 6,1' evils thatare .the result of tauman pride and. stubbornness is to compound foolishness," he

,declared. "Christ. can save us only when we are honest enough lose ourselves. for wh.at we tr~ly are. This 'is' the humility' that ennobles man. It is 'this'

.. ennobling ot'man tliatC;haDg9, .. the face of the world." .. '

'$t..,,,,J.'-'CY· :' . -i. "'. '.' .' :,J' '\ '...I

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on Page Eighteea

to do whatever they like and' --------------------------'---- ­

Mourn at Cardina'l's 'Last Rites Continued from Page One

.the' Apostolic ,Delegate to .tlie

,.Uni,ted States! Most Rev. Amleto ,Giovanni Cocagnani, as, cele­brant. .Present was the largest outpouring of Church dignitaries seen in Chicago· since the. 28th International Eucharistic·,Con­gress in 1926. Secretary of Labor .James P ..Mitchell attended as

,... the.· representative of President Eisenhower. .

Spellman of New York, Cardinal Mooney of Detroit, and Cardinal McIntyre of Los Angeles.,In his eulogy of ,the Cardinal, Bishop' 'Y'/illiam:' E. Cousins':o{ Peoria spoke 0'£' the Cardinal's zeal as a leader and, of those qualities cif priestliness that

"made hiin a person ot exalted office who .still' appeare'd 'and :'

was always' a man of simplicityand litiinility. . .

The rites were attended by.

:

our being fighting mad. To them:,

M U R. P H Y ,:

this is their living.. They look' , , upon themselves as good serv- : APPRAISER I :

. ._"", ~

'ants to people who seek what .: REAL ESTATE ",:.

they supply. '.:" GENERAL Q g.' : Bystanders Too Long :. INSURANCE :

"10 the secularist lingo, they", , are giviQg the public what it .~ , . WY 3-3888 ,,: ' wants, even if it wants to be : : SEE THE 5 E damned." . , 144 Clifford St. New ~edford , " .

ates that Christiahs "have beenBishop Mussio told the gradu- , ~-·--D--A--V.-,-ID----,D--U-F-F--~-~ ~~ITCH'TCEHNE"NMS~

'Occupying thrones in the sanc- ~' more than 110' bishops and arch­'thary were the remaining"thtee :', 'bishops and over 1000 membcl"lI American Cardinals, Cardinal .·oftheclergy.

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Prelate Blesses:'Novitate Site~' "NARRAGANSETT (NC)­Bishop Russ~l1 J: McVinney of Providence' has bless~d' the site of the new novitiate of the Christian Brothers at ~ grbund­breaking ceremony. . . Rhode Island's Governor Den­nis J. ·Roberts, U. S. Sen. John' O. Pastore of Rhode Island, and Mayor Walter H. Reynolds of Providence, attended the cere­mony. Bishop McVinney in a brief address pointed up the significance of the new estab­

lisbment for his diocese. Gov. RobertS also spoke briefly.

The new novitiate will pro­vide basic training for 60 nov­ices and postulants of the Chris­tian Brothers. After 15 months here, the novices will go to the Catholic University of America at Washington for four years.

The New England-Long Island prov:ince of the Christian Broth­ers staffs 10 schools on the East Coast with an enrollment Of

. 6,995 boys.

.

7-INCH

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Chuck' Roast BONE 11'4,' BLOCK STYLE 4'9c Super-Right Heavy Steer Beef LB.

V'eal Cutlets CUT FROM YOUNG,

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JUNE IS DAIRY MONTH • •• ALL OVER AMERICAI

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.Muenster Cheese Cheddar Cheese

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Page 8: 06.05.58

, . .

At Our House ' "'. ,::': '"<

Late Ameri'can C~'mfo~l:~'\Vir1s ~ Over Willi~msburg ~T raditiorl'

"" By Mary Tinley Daly "Decorating finished?" friends who read this column

ask. "How does it look?" Well, it looks far better than it did before. Mr. Brooks,

the artistic young interior decorator who took us on, un­doubtedly has reservations, give us more space for the books and I'm sure we are off the ~ we like to have around us. The reservation in many respects fireplace, stripped of its paint,

is rugged and more fun thanas far as he is concerned. ever to use. The new furnitureMatter of fact, Mr. Brooks and is comfortable-though at thisourselves have had differences point we resemble a, ju'nk shopof opinion ­ with all the old ones on the-side many of them. porch awaiting possible' pur':'

The first and chasers. . . m 0 s t violent

Now, the new furniture, pluscleavage came the kept old ones, are 'makingshortly aft e r a tour of, the pseudo-Early , we met our Mr.

American room 'until we findBrooks. He had . wh'ere they suit us best.decided that the Within 'a couple of weeks, the"woodwork whole thing should be completeshould become and we hope that our friendsEarly Amer;­ will 'drop' in. After weeks of.icanized. upheaval, they will find a place

."Scrape all to sit.' ,that old paint The room .is about' as Early, off," he directed ,American as foam rubber andsoftly but firmly with the wave

spring-down, electric lights andof a slender hand as he stood in TV can make it.' .. After striv­the middle of ·the room. "Be rid ing for the 'early, we're glad we

of it!" settled for the late AmericanHe went on en.thusiastically and its comfort. .telling us how it could then be

Though thJs 01' house has per­stained to simulate the old wood, haps been Mr. Brooks' severestof early days':-'-"lovely, soft and

. headache, we are thankful to him.waxed." Mr. Brooks" voice be­He shook 'IS out of our lethargycame hushed at the very thought. -and I'm sure we "shook" him!

Through Mr. Brooks' eyes we eQuId envision 0 stretches of $acred 'Heart Guild glowingly warm,. natural wood around windows and doors, Marks Anniversary baseboards rugged as fresh­ Women's Guild. of Sacred hewn beams. Even knotholes. Heart Paris,h,' Fall River, ob­appeared before the eyes of our served its 10th anniversa,ry at an imagination-though we had no . installation .banquet at' Stone way of knowing whether or not Bridge Inn...

-the oft-painted wood· even had Mrs. Rose E. Sullivan, first .ny knotholes since we'd never president, reviewed the organi- ~

.een it ~npainted. zation's activities and introduced the pine presidents who have

Ab, Williamsburg served, each lighting a candle on In fancy, we looked forward the anniversary cake as her

to living soon in the Wiltiams­ name· was called. burg tradition, walking to the Brief talks were given by Rt. .pothecary for aspirin' tablets Rev. ·Msgr. Joseph Sullivan, pas­(necessary after all the worlt), tor; Rev. John G. Carroll, mod­lighting oil lamps, probably erator; Rev. Raymond W~ Mc­even writing this column with Carthy and Rev. John J. Regan,• quill pen. . .. . assistants.

So, with ,"Be -Rid of It!" as our Special recognition' was. given motto, we started on the wood­ Miss Mary"Daley for' her'assist':' work. Armed with the strong-, ance to presidents and boards est kind of paint remover, steel of directors. wool, all the ragged undershirts New officers are Mrs.' Peter in the house and a determination Gibney,· president; Mrs. Daniel to go Early American if it killed' Duffy, " vice-president; Mrs. us, the whole family spent an Henry Boulds, secretary;' Mrs. evening· concentrating on a door. Charles Mitchell, treasurer.

With six people working, at the end of four hours we had Msgr. Casey to Direct amassed newspapersful of sod- . den pain.t-the green; gray, blue, Chicago Archdiocese. white and original tan that the . 'CHICAGO (NC) - Msgr. door had held over the course of George J. Casey, Vicar General iis life in this 01' house. We had of the Chicago archdiocese' since listened to the news eight times, ,1943, has been chosen Adminis­the acrid smell of paint remover ti'ator of the See by the arch~

had us half sick and t.e!npers diocesan board of consultors. were growing short. Still, that The 54-year-old Chicago-born' one door was not ·finished. ... priest wUl administer the affairs

"Look here,'" the Head ·of the of the largest archdiocese in the, House thundered slamminl(, Ul1ited.States until a success6r is down his putty knife, ripping off' appointed .tothe late Samuel rubber gloves, "we of the older.' Cardinal Stritch.

'gen'eration would'1't live· to 'setl' ". Msgr; Casey previously Served . this project through and, the rest as vice-chancellor of the arch.,. .'of ~ou w,ould be wasting your diocese. youth. We're not taking, off any F'I' f I I

" more paint-'-M.r. Brooks or lio , I mg 0 P.ea De ays M.r. Brooks'" " Sunday Sales Ban ,

The next evening we spent INDIANAPOLIS (NC) _ En-' ­with dear friends, Mr. and Mrs. f t f I d' ' S .

,Eugene .Kormandy, recognized> orcemen. oa, ~ lana upreme artists' both of them. A look at '. Court rU.lmg· agamst. the sale of· '. . automobIles on Sundays has

our scarred fmgers made us ex- b did b th fT f 0 1,,;'1 the previous evening's ee,n ,e aye .y e I mg o. a

rehearmg plea m a case pendmgtask. befol'e' the high court. ."Oh, please!" charming Elisa­ -;I'he plea charges the ban onbeth Kormandy said, "'don't do car selling on Sundays' is "dis­it. We - Eugene and I - have

criminatory.;~ Had the appealworked with woods for yearB. not been filed, the SupremeYou'll come to a spot where Court ruling would have gone .there 'was too much linseed oil into effect last ·Sunday.in the paint, and there will b,~

a dark stain. It's too much work, Warn.s of Dang'ers too little reward."

Mr. Brooks, our laziness is Of Neutral Zone vindicated: .. So, the woodwork THE HAGUE (NC)-"Deadly.

-'tHE ANCHOil Il '

Thurs., June 5, 1958 'I 8 , , ~

Sisters of Mercy To Hold Festival

On Saturday, June 7, the Sis­ters of Mercy of the Diocese will conduct a Summer Festival at Mount St. Mary's Convent, 755 Second Street, Fall River, for the benefit of the building fund.

Saturday's bazaar will offer many attractions and the feature will be the many valuable items offered at the Penny Sale Booth. The Country Store, Household Articles, 'Parcel Post, Feminine Attractions and Fancy Work will be ofir terest to all the ladies.

Boys and girls will find enjoy­ment in skill games, toys and grabs, dolls, Bozo the Clown, the Fish Pond, and the Milk Bottle Roll-Away. Refreshments Will, be served.

"The Sisters of Mercy invite all , PROUD WINNER: Mary Hayes, si'x-year-old Syr&-. their friendS to joi.n them on Sat- .~

urday, from 10' in' t~e morning to '.cuse parochial school pupil 'lo,pk's at· a,·copy of her poster 8 o'clock'in the evening.. Sister, .which won top honors in the primary age 'group' of the from' all the convents will serve'.

American Automobile' Association's 14th' annual National at the various booths. ' .: School Traffic Safety, Poster' Conte~t. ' NC Photo~

Negro Conver'{ Tops, Pope,Asks Americans Set Example Trinity Graduates

WASHINGTON (NC )-Sylvi.By Good Christian Living J .. Washington, 21-year-old Ne­VATICAN CITY (NC)-Mem­

bel'S of the Ladies Guild of Santa Suzanna, the church used by Americans living in Rome, have been received with their fam­ilies in special' audience by His Holiness Pope Pius XII.

The, Pontiff congratulated the women 'of the guild for work they had done for the restoration of their 'ancient church edifice. He concluded his 10-minute dis­course, delivered in English, by urging them not only to set an example for oUiers in Rome' by their restoration work, but also by giving good eX;lmple through their Christian lives.

Quotes St. Peter In the course of his address

the Pope said: "Last year, on a somewhat more solemn occasion (in an address to the Second World Congress of the Lay Apostolate) we declar~d:

.. "It would be' a misunder­standing of the real nature of the Church' and her social char­acter to distinguish in her a

,purely active element-ecclesias-' tical authorities~and a purely passive element-the laity. All members of the Church * * * are called on 'to cooperate in build­ing and perfecting the Mystical Body of <;:hrist.' . .

"Yes, Christ's~ call to 'personal sanctity and to an apostolate for the spread of His kingdom on

.,A

'IDEAL LAUNDRY ,Fall River OS 8-5677,, 373 New Boston Road

ear-th reaches, also to you, be­ gro girl, hJls been graduated with "loved sons and daughters." top honors from Washington'.

Quoting St. Peter, the Pope Trinity College.said, "And again: 'Your life A cpnvert to the Faith, Mis.s amidst the gentiles must ,be be­ Washington is the third member yond reproach, so that if they of her race to be graduated from: speak against you as eviL doers Trinity, operated by the Sisters' they. ~ay. frpm your honorable of Notre Dame de Namur.

. behavIOr' come to understand Miss Washington, who majored ' you and give glory to God on . in 'French with minors in Latin. the day of visitation.' (I Peter, and Greek, has been awarded a :­2-12) In that lesson given 'by St. Fulbright'scholarship to study Peter you s.ee aescribed the. first at the University of Bordeaux,' step in your apostolate. France. She also won a Wood-~"

Grateful Love row Wilson fellowship which, "It is to understand your faith; will entitle her to further study,'

and then by your conduct to when she returns from abroad. ' make c~ear wQat its teachings should cmean to every loyal D 'ofl Entertainment member of the Church.", Junior Circle No. 71, Daugh- :"

The Pontiff. said that the. "sec- tel's of Isabella, will preSent •..• ond step will be pointed out by variety show "Memory Lane" at , your grateful love for the Divine· 7:30 Friday evening, June 6, at

. Redeemer, who has given you the the Kennedy Youtl1 Center in' priceless gift· of- faith. It· wiU-. New Bedford. The program wiil' stir the embers of' your. zeal to include songs of the past fifty" a burning desire to brighten.. the· . years, The large cast will per-', lives of ,those in sorrow and dis- form under the direction of Mrs: tress, until their courage is re- William ,Rogers: Miss Kathleen.' ' stored and they' begin to feel Morrissey will be pianist and'" again, the gentle hands of their Miss Janet Dufficy will be nar": Saviour." rator, .

I....II!~ ••E.E·/K·IT Send~' 'his ca:~::al;:on .,a"in" an­• FR llIall fa'"'' ." .

. Insured • .~co"n'. - • by U. S, • •

Gov't : .$IGN.D- •

Savings .' •,Agenc7 • ". • NO. :...- .c- :

V; ctl -' fIO£RAl SAVINGS ,.' i

fIRSt .. of fo" liver .•. '. . 'Anclloon A$~Ods~lole\. OS '4-4&&1 ••• '

No.. 1 No, MO'~ •••••••••.•• '" •.•••••••~.. WE' PAY POSTAGE!

, free po~t-paid, addreued envelopes, -ready to mail' , ~ ~ . '

Your nearest mail box is ';1 First J'ederal'''branch o(fi,c'e" that's open 24 hours a day to make saving easy for you. No traff!e, no parking, no weather problems. Withdrawals are just as simpie 8S savings payments. . ' ...~ ...•, -··f fREt ~a"e·by·.

SI'STERS OF'MERCY

',BAZAAR Sponsored by t~e Friends of:the Sisters of' Mercy

SATU'RDAY,.JO,NE 7, 1958 lO Q. m. to 8 p. m:1

got the same treatment as the dangers" would be involved in walls:-a coat of yell()w paint establishing a European neutrai Mount SaintMary's~ 7'55 Second Street Fall River administered in eight .. hours. zone" a priest in lhe Dutch Sen­We're not Williamsburgy' but ate believes. ,Father Leo J. C. Benefit of the BUILDING FUND we're comfortable. Beaufort" of the Catholic People's'

~ Late American Party has declared that such a The bookcases have been' ex- step. would leave West ,Germany; OPE'N, T01H'E,PUBLIC

'tended to the ceiling-a la Mr. now "in. the free world· camp, .. Br~ks-and they not only add open 'to the intriiue. ol. tbe 'So-;.. ValuableP,izes! :Refreshments!;' C,,'ildren's'.Attrcictions!

. .. .. - . "

',.•• f' te' the ....t~e· of the room~ they.,' "let'UniOD.· " ,.,' ..", '. .

o

Page 9: 06.05.58

9

l

loday's Fashions

Wash 'n' Wear Fabrics, Require Minimum Amount: of Care

By Ellen Kelley For town or travel spend the Summer in a smart wash

tn'wear wardrobe. You'll look crisply fresh at all times with a minimum amount of clothes' care if you invest in some of the current wash 'n' wear fabrics that wash and drip-dry, save ironing time, give you ' Lettuce-crisp and cucumber­all the leisure time you want cool are the new and lovely - fabrics that, veritably "Summer Suits," They're re­"wear like iron!" freshing dressing for these Sum-'

Included in this magic-like mer days in town and are avail ­group are orlon, nylon, dacron, able in a wonderful array of fabulous cotton blends and . a fabrics and wonder-fabrics, such wond'rous new cotton, a "New 'as cotton silk, cotton-orlon,cot­England Wonder" _ a straight ton-nylon, drip':.dry cottons and cotton, no. blend; it washes and many, many other equally' fabu': dries quickly, requires no iron- lous fabrics. ing! They come in a pleasing. va-

So collect a wardrobe of smart riety. of plaids, checks, stripes, dresses, a suit or two, some sepa- dots, prints and solid-colors and rete skirts, a jumper-dress or" you' may choose from sleek tail ­two, a party dress, plus a Sum- oreds or ,definitely dressy ,styles! mer-white or Summer-pastel Furthermore, despite their high orIon' coat or jacket that you can styling, wonder-fabrics .their toss into the washer (no iron'- prices . are, 'acfually, a boon to

• Ing!) and be admired as the gal the budget! ' who always looks crisp as· a Imported Acctl5!iories cracker the Summer long! It's 'fun to swim in cotton, so

A double delight on today's get in the 'swim now in cotton, fashion agenda is the jacketed oC course! Wonderful cotton, cotton! Suavely citified this slen- pride (the Southland, boasts del' dress with its fitted jacket four major qualities you desire will be your favorite dawn-to- in a fabric: comfort, economy, dark' costume anywhere in the ,appearance and dependability! U.S.A. or, for that ma.tter, the, Catalina has taken this pre­Whole wide wor\d! cious "white gold" and given it

Perhaps it's. a smooth cotton, . faihion-supremacy in an awe­printed with a brushstroke plaid inSI)iringswim suit collection or print, the jacket gently fitted thiltis lovelier' and newer in with cuffed, three-quarter, design than' ever before! sleeves; the short-sleeved dress Delightful American fashions with a portrait-pretty neckline; this Summer take on accessorie~ the slim skirt pleated in back with' an exotic import flavor! tor getting around. There are .big basket' bags from

Black Silk Froeks Florence, completely handmade, ror a misty Summer evening even to their hardware; jewelry

when veil-l e fog drifts in from made from, pebbles collected the bay on an evening when you along the shores of Sardinia, would be one with the night and' handmade slik flowers from music,· you'll choose an ltalian- France, delicate lace blouses inspired party frock, a real en- from Switzerland; leathers with' ehantress black silk organza, the fine handcraft of Germany; drifting from lin 'airy fichu, a fabulo'us Austrian, rhinestones beautifully tucked bOdice that .made in the 'manner of diahiond deScends to a cascade' of skirt, jewelry! Here indeed, are fash­terraced in lace. ' . ion accents to pick up a color,

Right about now is the time or play upa costume, for the to sing the praises of the versa-,· one wonderful accessory that tile short coat to wear now-into- makes a fashion look y:our own! Fall! Morning, noon or night Eyelet· Dr~sses " . it's your perfect cover-up! Made Rorrtantic 'as' a moonlit May' exclusivel,' for the gal who leads garden are today's eye~catching an active social life it emerges eyelet dresses with frankly. in fine, ligtfweight, fleck':'tex- feminine airs, destined to make tured wool, with swishy rayon you memorable on any Summr's faille lining, For tailOl;ing, for eve. Frosty white eyelets fashion, for versatility, you shadow,-cool black eyelets, eye­won't find its equal anywhere! lets in misty pastel tones, and

Can't see the dress, for the deep,. vibrant shades. They'll flowers? That's the. social add dash to your chic easy-care aplomb of the' new Summer Summer wardrobe and aIle, deC­shirt-dress, It's simple, beauti- initely, budget-minded! . fully detailed lines are classic : For a new, new look, buy enough to' wear the prettiest 'pro- some of the fascinating new ver­fusion of flowering cotton. Very tical'ear-rings-a twist of crys­dramatic, when accompanied by tal rope! beading, a straw-p()t a black Milan straw cartwheel hat, with gloves to match, and a of a hat and black gloves, shoes big, lightweight handbag with and handbag. matching shoes! Voila! You'll

Fashion Newcomer emerge as the loveliest gal in Summer's linen sheath is your vicinity and just about the

easilY"on of the loveliest ,new- best-dressed, too! ' , eomers on the fashion scene. It's The sligtltly . underd~J:le a perfect way of Summer .dress- . "broiled lobster look" is appear.-' log wHhin the circumference of ing here aha there Qn the hori.":, one smart definition. This long-'zon .with attendaJ;lt pain, sleep-', Hned I sheath is,' primarily, 'pure: ,lessneus, time' '16st at .,·boon,ess linen; preferably' blllck, newly arid days away from tflebea~I1.\. stated for daytime;.' with' liilk· ..~.,,!ise! When you go down to', organza panel and a shaded brim the' sea' carry along suiltan' 10- " or slated for the chic, after-five tions,' an' un,brella, and a terry

.look with newly popular, always coat or cape to' cover-up, be­flattering high neckline and glit- tween swims and kiss suburn tel' jewelry. goodbye!

Asserts, Communists Stepping Up Chinese Cathol ic Persecutions

HONOLULU (NC)-The Chi­ The Nationalist Chinese of­.ese communist regime has ficial declared that all adult stepped up its campaign to form Chinese Catholics now are re­so-called 'patriotic' associations quired to undergo six hours of of. Chinese Catholics. "brainwashing" daily under the

,direction of the 'patriotic' asso­Wei-Ping-Tsai, Chinese Consul ciations. _

~eneral in Hawaii, made the ('Meanwhile," he added, "thestatement in an address to the C9mmunist regime launched an­Chinese Catholic Club of Hono­ other drive to nationalize UV!lulu. Catholic churches; with the JlJ-

Mr. Tsai told his hearers that . tention to rePlace all bishops Itte Reds' renewed drive to estab- considered by them as 'agents lish the 'patriotic' associations of imperialism.' " " followed the arrest in Feoruary However, Mr. Tsai said, "the of Bishop Dominic Tang, Apos- communist regime in China has tollc Admini!jtrator, of the Can-., not won the hearts and minds of ' "»l an:hdiocese. :.; , .~. the people.'" ;J, •

.'-: ... ~ ..

THE ANCHOR­Thurs., June 5, 1958

Graduating Class Pledges $32,000

ST. LEO, (NC)-The 48 boys in the graduating class of St. Leo prep school here in Florida have pledged to contribute $32,000 as a token of appreciation for what the sch . has done "in our de­velopment as Christian men."

No time limit was put on the payment of the individual pledges,' which were made with the "full understanding that it is a personal obligation to be pai'd according to the senior's own means" in the future.

The idea was suggested byFROM OUT OF THE SKIES: Coming from all parts Michael. O. Plunkett, class vice­

of the country, 36 airline stewardesses attended the fourth president, when the seniors were considering a "going away" pres­annual retreat at the Cenacle Retreat House in Wayzata, ent lor the Benedictine school.Minn. Registering them is Shirley' Linburgh, Seattle, It was decided to raise the fund .(seated) Nor,thwest Orient Airlines. Standing, left· to as part of the abbey's 20-year

'right, Jonina Peterson, Winnipeg, Northwest Orient Air­ building program.., Each member lines; Pe.ggy Jennings, S,t. Paul, Northwest Airlines; Jea~ of the class made a personal

pledge to be met out of future'·Des ·Marais, Kansas, City, Braniff Airlines. Mother Rose income. Accompanying theMary Reid, of the 'Cenacle looks on. NCPhoto. pledges was a "dedication whicb stated:

Cathol i<.:: Women Urge Integration "We offer this gift with the' most sincere hope that its value

In~Virginia Public Schools may not be measured on a material ,scale, but rather inROANOKE (NC)-A: call for tinued operation of those public dedication to the ideal for whichan end to racial discrimination schools in the State which face S1. Leo stands. We offer it inhas been made by delegates to Federal court orders ,to begin the hope that others, recognizingthe annual convention of the racial integration in the Fall, but these same ideals which we holdRichmond Diocesan Council of will be forced by state laws to today, may in years to 'come con­Catholic Women. close if they are integrated. tinue the practice which weThe women also urged' con- Th d ltd ~ e e ega es urge In a reso­ begin here."

lution that "strongly determinedReds Sti II Hold and concerted efforts" be made to promote "a true understand­ Federation Mass

War Prisoners . ing of the .social doctrine of

ROME (NC)-A group of Christ and His Church with re­ At Fall River' spect to persons of all races andwives and mothers of Italian For the second year, Sacred nationalities." Hearts Academy Alumnae willwar prisoners have' pre­

Regarding public schools, the be hostess for the First Saturdaysented evidence to the Pon­women passed a resolution say­ Mass sponsored by the Massa­

tifical Relief Organization that ing "It is our belief that the chusetts Chapter InternationalItalian soldiers are still' Russian democratic form of government Federation of Catholic Alumnae,prisoners of war, despite Rus­ is dependent on arl' informed to be held in the Convent Chapelsian claims to the contrary. and educated electorate thereby on Prospect 'Street at 9:30 Satur­

The wives and mothers visited necessitating the maintenance of day.. Miss Hazel Conaty, Re­Msgr. Ferdinandoo Baldelli, a sound public scb.ool system. gional Governor of the Chapter,president of the pontifical The Richmond Diocesan Council is in charge of arrangements.ageri'cy... t~ show him reports of of Cathol~c Women hereby re-, Local Alumnae Associations ofpeople who recently returned affirms its previously expressed all Catholic Colleges and higkfrom the' Soviet' Union saying. desire that the public schools of schools have been invited to sendthat a certain number of Italian Virginia be kept open." , representatives' to this Mass.soldiers are still in camps 'and

Since the Marian Year 1954 themines there. , Gets Life Sentence chapter has fulfilled the promiseOffer Proof made at that time to' sponsor a

These reports indicated that . Fo'r Cathedral Fire First Saturday Mass to be said some Italian prisoners are being TRENTON (NC) - Elber C. at some one of the member' held in central Asia in Uzbekis­ Lucas has been sentenced to life schools. tan. Other reports have asserted imprisonment for starting the Following the Mass, breakfastthat there are Italian prisoners March 1956 fire that: destroyed will be served in the school naIl.in the Stalihgrad, Trubchevsk, St. Mary's Cathedral and Alumnae Chapters in the cityVyazma, Ostrov, Cherepovets claimed tbe lives of three per- have been requested to send atand Tula areas, sons. ' last four delegates. to this MassOne woman showed Msgr. in.honor of Our Lady.Baldelli a' document from the Judge Bernard W. Vogel of

. Soviet postal' administration the State Superior Court. im­which proved. the delivery of po~ed the sentence on Lucas, one of her letters to.her son, who who was l:onvicted of first de­ ALUMINUM is in Russia. gree'murder. Msgr. Richard T.

,Red Denial Crean, rector of St. Mary's, and HALF-SCREENS ,The Russian government has . two housekeepers perishep when Measured

recently ..eclared that there are the blaze destroyed the combina­ and $4·50ilo more Italian ,prisoners in tion cathedral, rectory and Installed

~hancery.Russia, and that the members of up to 3h3Z the _ Italian armed forces re­ For a year after his arrest,ported missing on the 1talo­ Lucas was· under treatment in a TRU-SEALSoviet front must now be con­ mental, hospital. His defense at ­ Alum.inum ,Window Co. ~sidered . dead as the result of torneys: sought unsuccessfully to military action",":,;::, 328 Durfee Street, Fall Riv8f'prove he was insane. They plan' '

The Russian foreign office has to ,appeal :the' conviction. 9S8-80ZZPommoutb 84also called' on '·the 'Italian' gov:" ernment to cooperate in the preparation and publication of a bilatei'al communique 'on' the question of, Italians reported missing 'in 'Russian territory. The commuilique,' however, will SAIL'FROM BOSTONstate only that there' are no Italian pr,isoners of war in Rus­sia and Ithat the question is TOclosed, the Russian foreign office stipulated.

EIRE, FRANCE, ENGLAND, GERMANY , (First and Tourist Class)

AUGUST 6 - SEPTEMBER 3

Consult Your Local Travel Agent or TOOTElL

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Page 10: 06.05.58

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Ch'oplains Worr,y AbQut:Trend To .Psychiatlrize 'Religion ' · . SAN FRANCISCO (NC) :....:-". hospital, a Federal ins,mutton In Catholic chaplains at mentafhos-';' Washington, D.C., said: pitals are worried.', 'Thny see a, "Catholic and Rrotestant chap­trend developing to "psychia..: 'lains'differ on whether a mental trize" ,religion; They contend,; hospital constitutes a unique they, are ,spiritual ministers to .,form ,of parish. We hold that it the mentally ill, .notpsychiatrists is, that our 'parishioners' are' (religious welfare bt;anch). Catholics. who happen to be · Protestant chaplains, many, of mentally ill, and that, our job is

them. at least, disagree. In their 'to prlWide them with the same view chaplains are quite defi- spiritual services -and counseling nitely members of the '~thera- available in any parish. peutic team" along with doctors "The counseling may be of a and psychologists.. Some. wquld special nature, for which we are relegate religion to ,the. :role of specially trained, but, we're "tranquillizer" in the rehabiljta- priests, not therapists. . If reli ­tion process. ' . gion contributes to the patients' · This wide difference of opin- mental recovery, well and good.

i,on emerged from meetings of If it does not, it 'will assure their the Association of Mental Hos-. spiritual welfare." , pital 'Chaplains held herE! in con- Father di Nardo ~said many junction with the Amerkan PS)7:" protestant' chaplains feel their chiatric Association convention. work is more directly and, inti ­

"This trend is serious," saidmately related to the therapeutic Father John F. GradY",chaplain process, and that they are deal­of the state hospital in Cohim:- :. ing with patients; not "parish­bus, ,.'Ohio.. ,"What's we're, up' ioners.''. '\ '

~ga~~st~~~: ~~~i:\th~~y~~H:t~~:'" "Position Supported tool,,·.3,· "specific remedy,'! to be ,,' "Vete~ans Administration hos­

' ital~",support 'the Catholic posi-'Pused as part'of the: overall ~her-''''t1'on, he noted. "They hav,e ma,d,e , , ,apy in treating the mentally ilL"·" . , · He said. some psychiatrists fol-.low the' Freudian theory that'

. ., ;"religion is good if effective '-.whether or not they believe it

is true. ' In that .framewor),c, reli ­gion becomes nl? more. than 'chaplainism,' the Ohio' priest'

decl~ed. ,:,," Unique' Parish

, Fat,ber. Ramon A.! D! Nardo" . I' 't f d St EI' 'b th'ellap a,l.n a ,arne .: lUI e s'

.19'58, C.ha riti'es' . ~ppeal' 'Gifts' I NEW BEDFORD t: $100.00

Nl B, Defe~se Products. · I. $25.00' • ','

, Uhiqn Liquors Co" N. B. 'Pul,>-' lie *arket. ' , .. :.

i .$10.00 , Electrical Workers Local '224,

Sidney's Dept. Store Inc., Steam­fitters & Helpers Uni(ln Local 1644,. D, Lumiansky & Co:

ATTLEBORO $50.00,

Sadler Bros. Inc., Stephen H. Foley.•

$30;00 H~rry J.' ..Bo~rdman. \ i" $25.00

Demers Bros.,,, The Attleboro Sun; Reardon &'.Lynch, Leav~n' Mfg. Co., Portuguese American Clu~.

$10.00 John C. Bourque, Cottage

Bakery, Artcraft . Co. l'nc:~ Knobby Crafters, S. M. Stone Jr., The ;M. F.. Ashley Co. '

FALL RIVER $50.00

Enterprise Stores Inc.: Everett~ Motors.

. $40.00 O'Neil's Fisk Tire Service.

$35.00 " M. Joseph Madowsky.

$25.00 Allen's Cut Rjlte, Mr. and Mrs..

John' F. Eane, Thomas,Kidd COIl­. tract-or, Connors Travel & Inll. Agency, Riveredge Printers, lue. '

$20.00 Atty. Aaron Dashoff.

. . $15,.00 Esther's Beauty Shoppe.

$10.00 Thomas J. Ashton & Son, An-·

drew's Super Market, Frank Allen Lumber Co., Winward Trucking Co., Franco Americaln Womenls Club, Inc.

J. N. Gendreau, Inc., Textile Shippers & Clerks Local 2149:3.

ST. BONIFACE-New Bedford $25.00

St. Vincent de Paul Society.

ST. PATRICK-Wareham $50.00

Alfred Nanfeld.

SACRED HEART-New Bedford $10.00 .\

Dr. and Mrs. Ubalde Paquin. '

ST. MARGARET-Buz,;ards Bay $10.00

Mplers Jewelry Store, Damon HatSh.

ST. ;rHOMAS MORE-Somerset $10.00

Mr. and Mrs. James Nicoletti.

l't clear that money appropriated for' chaplains is for religious ministry to the patients,'not reli ­gious therapy.~' . : Do the·'sacraments assist the

mentally' ill? . \ , ' ; "Not in the sense that a speci­

fic drug' or treatment can some­. times produce a cure," the Wash­. ington priest said. "But the dy:-' iiamics of supernatural grace',,"

. are often wonderful' to bepold in 'their effects.. God's help can,

'and dqes; co-:operate with med-:,

,i~~n~e~a~.~.':e n t.i 0 n address

brought out the: :langer to psy­chiatrists from "transference" of mental problemS frompatiel\t

'to doct'or," , " .'co,'

"I have seen it happen;" Fath-"" er Grady decl~red. ,,"Ws a, ,vet;y " , ' real.reason why. chaplains can­not afford <to enter into mental therapy."

Chaplaincy training is the' great need in their field, both priests contended, with some states demanding more rigid quaiifications of clergy assigned to serve at mental hospitals. Familiarity with basic and clin­

,ical psychology, as well as coun­seling ability, is exp!,!cted, they

, declared. , . , ,:'

Warns'·Trode: 'Unions AgqinstExploitation : NEW YORK (NC)-The New

York- Chapter of the Association 'of Catholic Trade Unionists has been urged to' pre~ its fight for .the protection 'of Puerto Rican workers from labor "ex-, ploitation."

. H~rry 'Ian Arsdale ,Jr., presi­dent of the Central Trades and' Labor Council, made the' piea at the 21st annual ACTU Com­munion, breakfast.

The 1958 Council Quad~ege­simo .Anno award was presented to George Meany, AFL-CIO president. ,The citation praised Mr, Meany's career from plumber to union president, and said he "emerged as a towering figure in the fight for social' and'

. econ.omic justice at. home' and abroad."

Mr. Van Arsciale laund~d the ,ACTU for opposing exploitation' ,of Puerto Ricans on the labor market. He called this the "worst kind of exploitation of hU,'!1an be~ngs." He ,emphasized that newly arrived migrants are frequently "exploited by em­p' -rs, exploited by bad unions, neglected by good unions 0 and

_exploited by other Puerto Ricans."

CONTRACTORS and

BUILDERS

John B.

LEBEL

_

GENERALS ADDRESS MILITARY CO UNCIL RALLY : More than 400 qelegates 'at.-: tended the third annual Rally of the Military Council of Catholic Men in Germany. Theme: of the rally was "Blessed Be Mary's Holy and Immaculate Conception." Left to right are' Chaplain (Lt. Col.) Francis Sampson, priest of the Diocese of Des, Moines, Chaplain~ (Major) Cyprian, M. Lauletta, O.F,M., whq celebrated the ,Mass; Lt. General Francis

Farrell, Maj. General Edward O'Neill and 'Chaplain (LL Col.) Charles J. Murphy, Diocese" of Norwich, Conn. NC Photo.' ."', . :

Church 'Plight in RedL,q'nds'Our Greatest Tragedy VATICAN CITY· (NC)-L'Os-

Rservatore. omano has referred to the phrase the "Church of Silence" as "probably the great­est tragedy of our,times because it applies to one-sixth of man­kind" behind the, Iron Curtain.

The, Tatican City daily said that the "world disregards and forg'ets this great reality desp'Ite the 'fact that·it is right' under its eyes." Saying that "these

,eyes do not'always w.ant to" see,". the· editorlal 'pointed out that 'sometimes "deliberateiy created misleading 'appearances' are ail

encouraY"1ent to indiffereryce ," , "Words attributed to Chris-,

,tians, who are rio longer ft;ee to speak in Christ and for" 'Christ, . ,give many, t,h.e:impr~ssiqn.tba~­this Church is not enchained and is not' 'silerit'and that it acts and' spe,aks." ,. '

'The world, the editorial con-'­tillued, gives no "further thought to the matter and turns its eyes elsewhere. to casual problems which seem of greater impor­tance.", ' ",

And "it so happens," L'Osser­'vatore declared, '''that a great declaration' of belief in God and in the,dignity of the human per­son is ,misundet;stood, if not compietely 'ignored, although it represents the purest expression of the most splendid reality of our times."" .' . ,

M~~':~~!E~~~·~;,I.i=~ank' Luther Mott,' dean ::emeritus'6f the University' 0'£ 'Missouri School of Jolirn;itlisin, will r'e­ceive an honorary degree at .the Marquette University com­!pencement June' 8. Dr. '.Mott. received. the Pulitzer prize in American history in 1939 for; his second and third volumes" of "History of American Maga' ­zines." , . ·r.-o-o-o-o----~-_I!..

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• WEDDING INVITATIONS

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Reynolds~DeWalt Union Printers ~5"

The editorial was written in The book is a resume of the",

", , ".conjunction with the recent pub- 'v;lrious documents which the'. ', .lication' of a book entitled "Pius Pope has addressed to countries

' XII Speaks to' the Church of now behind the Iron Curtain. A' Silence," written by IVIsgr; Al-" copy of the book has been pre­berto Giovannetti, an official of sented to the Pope by MsgL' the Vatican Secretariat of State. Giovannetti.'.

ORPHANS WIT'HOUT,'A HOME!'". ,', t In The Superior of Uie Little Flower Con­

, ,.L.~~~S, ~IJ..:. I'regation in India ,writes as foIlows-"W. :V ..... are running two orphanages and bllth .,•

'~ '. ~. in' need of providing ~ore accommod• OJ 0 tionli. One orphanage. has at the present .­~ ~ . : time over one" hundred boys and Ui. " ' flo building cannot.conveniently accommodate "t +:,more than' 60. $3,000 is needed to expand

the building to' carry OD this work of 'Christian ehar!ty.", In ,the Dame of Ui. Lord 'we pray, that our benefactors wID help: us fulfill. the, wish of this noble11It Holy Falm's Mi.lSion Aid priest. The Christ Child wlll ,bless you for ,for thi Orimlai Churrh yo'ur eharity to these youngsters..

Your STRINGLESS GIFTS help, the Holy Father to aid emergen~ eles in the mission 'field immediately. Have you made a practice of &ending him your STRINGLESS GIFT to ease his many worries and burdens?' .' '

FASTING-PRAYER-~A.(;RIFICE June'10 is the feast day of Queen Margaret, the saintly queen of

Scotland who spent her entire life In prayer, ,fasting and helplD' the sick and the hungry. SISTER ODETTE AND SISTER VICTORIA of the Rosary Sisters in the H~ly Land are desirous of following in ttiesaint· ly queen's footsteps - 'bilt they need 'a kindly benefac.tor to help ,them with the $150 needed yearly for their two years ,training. For the sum

. of $300 ($150 yearly) you can'.give a Missionary Sister to God. What greater good could you do for the missionary work of the' Church?

'OUR MI~SIONARIES RELY ON YOUR MASS OFFERINGS FOR SUprORT. MASSES ARE'SAID ALMOST AT ONCE.

,YOUTH SPEAKS And begs .for a helping hand:' JOSEPH and ALEXANDER have'

just 'begun their six years training' for' the priesthood, These two . lads have been acc~pted in St. Joseph's Seminary in India. but their

families cannot help with the' expenses. We pray that· we may find 'sponsors' for these fut.ure priests, Eac'h boy needs $1 QO a year for .his education. Six years training ($600 in aIll. Can you help? You

..-; can send the money in any. installments.

CHAPEL NEEDS Your sacrifices can bring great joy to our missionaries. They dll'

Dot ask for themselves. Their only concern is for the House of the Lord. Why not give an article to help furnish their sim­ple mission chapels; You can'do this in your own name or in memory of a dear departed relative , .. or in the name of a special friend..Our beautiful G1FT CARD will, tell of this kindness~done for the intention of an­

, other. We will send a GIFT CARD and enclose PRESSED FLOWERS OF .THE HOLY LAND whir.h have 'been

. blessed on the Holy Sepulcher. Mass bell '.... .$ 5 Monstrance ' .. / .. $40 Altar Stone .... $10 Crucifix ..• :..... 25 Picture ' , '. . . . . .. 15 Statue . . . . . • • .. 30 Altar .'.. • . . . . .. 75 CanUies , 20 Chalice , . . . . . .. .,

BE GOOD TO GOD AND GOD WILL BE GOOD TO YOU.

ENROLL A RELATIVE OR A FRIEND for $1 a year or $20 per­petually. FAMILY ENROLLMENT is $5 a year or $100 perpetually. These gi.f~ are precious to our Holy Father to meet mission ap­peals. LIVIDg and 'deceased may be enrolled and share in 15.000 Masses yearly and In the prayers and good works of thousands 01 Near East priests and sisters..

. GOD REWARDS THE CHEERFUL GIVF.:R 933.000 refugees in the Holy Land! These unfortunate souls look

to our Holy Father in' all their miseries Many are pleading for food. $10 will buy a FOOD PACKAGE which will be distributed by our HOLY FATHER'S RELIEF MISSIO~ FOR PALESTINE REFU­~& . "

GIVE TO, SAV'E TaE WORLD FOR CHRIST.

/~~arOtst(llissions~ FRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN, President

Msgr. Peter P. Tuohy, Nat'l Sec', Send all communications to:

'CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION' 480,Le?Cington Ave. ~t ~6th St. ' New York 17, N. ,Y.

....

Page 11: 06.05.58

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Pr~late Urges 'Catholic Emphasis,

On Justice to Prevent Wa r '

ARLINGTON (NC)-Catholic now when we Catholics number emphasis on international jus­ some 40 million as when we tice and American democracy were counted by a few hundred can do much to prevent another thousands." major war, Rt. Rev. Msgr. Irving Msgr. DeBlance listed four A. DeBlanc, director of the Fam­ major enemIes of American de­ily Life Bureau, National Cath­ mocracy:olic Welfare Conference, told at ­ 1) "The racist, who talks oftendants at the 20th annual Field 'white' detpocracr.Mass celebrated here under the

'2) The laissez-faire capital ­sponsorship of the ,Washington ists, who sings 'My Country tisGeneral Assembly of Fourth of me.'Degree Knights of Columbus.

Stating that "social justice is 3) The imperialist nationalist, not limited by national boun-' who talks of God as his omnipo­daries," he added that "the prin­ tent servant. cpiles and practice of interna­ , 4) The communist, who says, tional justice and of democrati ­ • "Religion is still the opium of zation' could be the two greatest the people.''' , contributions of Catholics to our "Religion in us must be' so country." strong," he stated, "that it will

In a l!trong plea for assistance outbalance any false, worldlyto underdeveloped countries, he opp,osition tPat exists today. We noted that this country, "with

~offi'l . uf, hear~s here with ournine'percent of the world popu­

I

severed war greats while our lation, enjoys 43.6 per cent of sQuls 'keep an eternal vigil, and the world revenue," whereas, pray that no future holocausts "Asia, wit1l 52 per cent of the , will be n~cessary;-andthey will,population, has only 10.5 per not be if we succeed in extend­cent of the world revenue." ing iriterriliti'6hal justice and the

"Can we in justice remain , principles· of eqmility that have cozy?" he asked. made' . Catholics such great

Wealthy Nations Must Aid Americans." "Our own country's wealth is

greatly due to the immigrants Pupils Leave Classes we borrowed from the mother country'and the technical aid we To 'Attend Retreat received," he continued. "But the underdeveloped countries of'the 'BLQOMFIELD (NC)-About JUSHOP CASSlDY COUNCIL:, Knights of Coiumbus world cannot do like England "150 eatholic studentS walked' out of Somerset and Swansea honor the state officers of their and lower their standard of liv_ of afternoon classes at Bloom­ organization. Seated, left to right, District Deputy James B. ing any more than it already is. field 'and neighboring, Glen Murphy Of Swailseaand Thomas t:;. Feenan,' state deputyImmigration today is not in it-:R:id,g'e",pu,b,'I,i,C high ~,c,hools to at ­self an answer. Communism, of, eieCt,; standing, left to right, Dominic Restaino, executive course,is no answer at all. The t~nd~" f:¢trea~ at Sacred He~rt 'secretary elect, and Grand Knight Michael A. Driscoll of . help of ;wealthy nations is abso-', C,hu,rci)."p!,!re., Somerset.. lutely-rieoessary. The aid'may be, ,""~ The students and their parentS ' direct, indired, or' both." :', had. said,,'they:.would. 1<l!te ". the S· t f M E d

He stated, that obligations to'- ,step,when ,the Boards,of Educa- 'IS ers,"o, • er~y xpan ing' ward the people of this .countr,y ,,,tion, in ': oBlooqlfield: and,,: Glen ' come fiI'st,'but:the impoverished' ",;Ridge refused, to grant'permiso:' (:ontinuedfrom'Page One on the project will begin In the of other'I' nation's cannot be'sion, f()rthe,.~b!l,e!1ces. ',,', ",:\~ CouO:iry Day School have been, ' spring, of ,1959. neglected." " 'In "previous years, the, t~o held in frame buildings, formerly' Work has aiready begun on a

··People abroad may 'hate us 'boards' 'had, released Catholic new wing for St. CatherI'ne'sresidences. These will, be re­because they need us," he as- senior students to attend the re- Convent in Belize, British Hon­serted, "but that again is part of treat. But last year, the Glen placed by a modern fire-proof duras, a foreign mission for the their growing pains. It should Ridge Board 'refused. It took the' structure. Province of Providence. A new not dissuade us, Nor are dollars same position this year and the' Mount St. Mary Academy, Fall elementary building is also a cure-"ll. Education, teChnical Bloomfield board followed suit. River, Massachusetts; a high planned for St. Catherine's. assistance, even political reform . Priests of eight area, parishes school for girls i.s to have a wing

l .:••G-O_~.-.o~_o_o__~.

may be n~eded." had advised the parents of stu- containing additional classrooms, ~bser,:i?g that "~h~ other -dents to get them to leave before an auditorium, and a gymnasium.

ba,SIC qual~.ty of .a pa.tnotI? .Cath.,. the last class period to attend The architectural firm of Ma­ o I ,PERFECTION i olIc Ame'ilcan IS hIS abIlItYlo., the, ,J;etreat.,; , ,', ginnis aod Walsh an~KennedYof make the 'United States truly .,'.. ' . I ' , '. ,I Id i··... M' 'D BI' " ',-- PublIc 'sl!hoolofflClals saId the' Boston has been en rusted WIth OIL , ~~o~r~t~\ th S~~h : ~ ~n«i, Ca.tholic:studerits·will receive 'no . ' th'e p'reparation of the plans arid I "For Your Protection IaI e. h dah e u~c l~s, 'credits, 'for 'the classes 'they'" specifications for these buildings.f ouns e ere as a maJor reI- . d'" It' .. i d th'!' t I k Buv From IIgion fol'. years and it has never mlsse." IS expec e ,a ac ua wor raised a serious difficulty, ex­ I PERFECTION" cept in the imagination of some ! 132 Rockdale. Ave. Imen." ",.

"Our American democratic in­stitutions," he said, "are as sound L_~~~~lNehru: Lauds Church . Work in 'East India

NEW DELHI (NC),- Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru has asked physicians and.other pub­lic health service workers to cultivate in themselves the dedi­cated spirit of the Christian mis­sionaries.

Addresssing a government­sponsored health' service sem­inar, Mr. Nehru urged medical workers to follow the example of the' brave missionaries who have worked amonlib the fierce tribal peoples in remote areas of India~s 'eastern hill areas.

The kind, of work Christian missionaries have done among such peoples as the Nagas in Assam is without ostentation or thought of reward, he said, and is much deeper and more ad­mirable than some sudden act NEW, of heroism. He added: ~'A man scaling mountains is no doubt ORadventurous, but there is no par­ticular virtue in sitting on a precipice." USED Chaplains Group Wheth~r it's a NEWPlans 'Convention

NEW YORK (NC) - 'l"he or USED CAR you can 'American Catholic Correctional t;;haplains' Association will hold Get an AUTO LOAN fts convention in Detroit from

At RATES THAT WILL SAVE YOU MONEY September 7 to 12. Comparisons ate convincing! Come ,in and get the figuresFather William F. Wilkins,

secretary'-treasurer, has an- . nounced the chaplains will dis-FIRS·T SAFE DEPOSIT

cuss various chapters of a book, NATIONA'L BANK"An Approach to the Catholic Philisophy of Correction," which is being prepared under asso- OF NEW BEDFORD eiation, auspices .for, ~ventual . 'MAIN OFFICE-Union ~nd Plea~ant Streets P\1blication. ,He sai~: t~e ,1;x>olc " ' . ,~N6RTH ' END"'-1200 Acushnet Avenue <~iJl:~,the first ~or~,:oq~ kind. . ~w"""~"""~~WMWI~~~"",,_w_"""~"""MM'l""M4_~

THEANCHOR-ll Thurs., June 5, 1958 .

Chinese 'Patriots'

'Elect' Bishop

HONG KONG (NC) - Cath· olic sources here have confirmed reports from Peking that two more priests were recently, 'elected' bishops by the so-called Patriotic Association of Chinese Catholics.

At one meeting in Paoting,' capital of the HopeI province, it 'was learned here, clergy and laymen "elected'" Father Wang Shou-chien as Bishop of Yung­nien, suffragan See of Peking. Yungnien, while still in Hopeh province, is about 150 miles south of Paoting, Father Wang was at one time Vicar General of· the Yungnien diocese, and at the same meeting, a Father Chou Chin-yung was "elected" to suc­ceed him as vicar General.

The other n~w "bishop" is named Shen Chu-ming, who was "elected" Bishop of Soochow. ' Soochow, erected as a diocese in 1949 has never had its own bishop, but· Bishop Ignatius Kung of Shanghai, who has been in jail for several years, is res­ponsible for it in his capacity of Apostolic Administrator of' the diocese. .

Meanwhile, it was learned here that efforts of the Chinese Reds to undermine Catholics life in the Canton archdiocese have­been successful to the point of forcing all the priests except' two to give their names as mem-' bers of the so-called Patriotic:' Society of Chinese Ca~holics; .

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JUNE 29 - AUGUST 10

Page 12: 06.05.58

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...;.THE ANCHOR I•. . S~;iaLSeason Finales .., / '. Thurs., June 5; 195812

,1t;~~tr~~-;eayOuTh'eearish; Parade n. JOHN'S, .School were awarded special " By Most Rev. FuH,on J. Sheen, D.O. )JEW ·BEDFORD - -certificates 'of proficiency for

,. :There are two way~ of losing your head. One is the way of. JohnInvited guests at the bowli"ng three years of wo~k. the Baptist who lostnis for' condemning divorce. The otber IS the,

league banquet. included the Rt. ST. MARY'S, way of Herod ~ho lost his through too m.u,c~ wine and dan~iog.andRev. Msgr. John A. Silvia, the NEW BE'DFORD promised to slay John, the Baptist. The bu~mess of salvation IS to Rev. Mapuel M. Rezendes and Tne new slate of officers will aid people to keep their heads and save the.1r souls. the ~ev. George E. Amaral. be presented by the nominating Msgr. Silvia served as toastmas- committee at the final meeting In the missions of Formosa, there haster for the fete and p.resented of the season of the Woman's

been much trouble with head-hunters. As rartrophies 'to the bowlers. Guild. to be held. next Monday back as 230 A;D. there was a report of theserhe Georgetown t,~am won the night in St. Jean ,Baptiste Hall. wild men who today number about one hun­league ch~mpionship by defeat-. Mrs. Owen P. Devlin will pre- ~ dred thousand (100,000). The Japanese tried'ing firs.t r01,1nd winner Holy side.'

Cross,in the playoffs, Members to isol~te them during the last war by putting of the Georgeto}Vn t,~am, George an electrically charged wire around a certain

area. But the head-hunters dug under the .Joseph 'tebello,. Charles Du­Martin, Capt. Manu.el Cardoza,. Par.ish ,Honors,

wire and thousands of Japanese soldiers lost ponte, Man'!el Rapo~:il and John their heads'. .Father Higg.insRapoza were presented trophies.

Parishioners of St. Augustine's Then the missionaries arrived. In Jan­Individual award,s went to WINS AWARD: At theparish; Vineyard Haven, honored. uary 1953 there were two priests. Today thereGeorge Martin, hil~h average first annual Business Skills their pastor, Rev. John T. Hig­ are 55 Chapels, 71 Churches, 6 hospitals anr106-58; Albert Williams, high gins, on the occasion of his 25 .Meet held at Johnson and 500,000 Catholics.tl'iple 373; and. Manuel .Rapoza, years in the priesthood. Wales Business School/inIligh sipgle 148. E~c:11 bowler in The. Silver Jubilee' program,

the, league, 'received a ~all' Providence, Miss Rita Simon- ~. 'We wish weeould I"et ;Joil' to' lose ;Jour bead ;Or the sake 01held in, Association Hall, wasbowlillg trophy as a souvenir. in of the class of 1958, Mt. St. the missions. U in .. few years the Missionaries can do so mucb forjointiy sponsored by the Holy

Following the presentations, head-bunters, think of wbat;tbe,. can do for you ~ca~e you lost'Name Society and St. Augustine's Mary Academy,' Fall River; aew..officers were installed for your head, bunted througb 'tbe vault and sent tbe Holy Fat~er.Guild;, Manuel Borges, president was awarded thi~ p~ize in"the coming· season: Arthur Car- . tbrough :bis Soeietyfor the Propa~ation of tbe-Faith a sacrificeof the Holy Name Society, and the shorthand division. Stu-'aero, president; Vic:tor Giam­ that makes' you one with' <;:brist'Who saves.Mrs: Louis Paiva, president ofmal~o, vi~e-president, and Au­ dents from 25 high schoolsthe Guild, greeted the parishion­IUstine Mortagua, secretary-, ersand the many guests who at­ participated; . Wor~y not about what will happen to you if you cut into yourtl'easurer. tended. The stage was decorated capital or send us some of· your .. stock. If you lose your head tha~Dancing followed t!llc~ installa­ with maroon and white stream­ 'Union Magazine way for the Lord you will kee~ ~art in His Sacred Heart.tIOn of officers. ers and a large white cross em­IMMACULATE CONCEPTION, bl~zoned. on a field of maroon. )JORTH EASTON . Salutes Catholic ,GOD LOVE YOU·to .alittle.boy and a little girl for 30c "Sent

the work of Petronio Ortiz and NEW YORK (NC)-A Cath-' with much love." : . to 'MM. for. $1 "Here is one dollar .until theThe monthly meeting of the Mrs. Joseph Fragoza. next time" . . . to Mrs. M;M. for ,$1 "Here is one dollar until theolic leader in the interracial " Women's Guild was held in A two-tiered 'anniversary cake movement has been praised as a ,maybe this will give someone·in the missions a ':break." '... ·to E.Z.

Frothingham Hall and plans made by Manuel Duarte was pre­"missionary of better human re- President and members of a Newman Club for $80.97 "Our check

were outlined for a'family out­ sente'd . t Father JIiggins and lations" by a union publication. represents the total proceeds ofa dance held specifically, for theIng to 'be conducted on Saturda)/ '. then served to all by Mrs. Fran­ An editorial' in The Black. purpose o! raising money for 'Society for the Pr9pagation of the,June 21, under the chairmanship. cis Metell and Mrs, Louis Paiva.' 'Worker,. official publication of . Faith. We really worked on the dance to make it a success-it was!" ., of Mrs. C;,\rl Hansen. . Dui'ingthe program, whiCh

the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car " , The Oliver Ames High School was filmed by Kenneth Hearn Clee Club, under the direction of and Trahan, the Silver Jubila­ Porters, -lescrioed' George. K. Your old g~ld and discarded jewelry is just a step away from Mrs. Ruth Ashley, entertained ria'n w'as presented a gift from· . Hl\IIton, secretary of the Cath-, , ; aiiJing our missionaries in the five continents of the world. Take after 1he meeting. Refreshments . the two sponsoring organizations. olic InterraCial Council of 'New . that s~ep; send us stray earrings and cuff links, old !:,old eyeglass were se'rved by Mrs. Warren York-as "a man of high idealism frames, rings arid bracelets you 'no longer ·wear. We will resell Hopgood and her committee. and 'Unquestionable, dedication your treasures in .order to layup'·treasure for you in Heaven-it... , By~antine Rite Opens

The weekly Monday evel~iHg to the great human, cause, the. ,will inean the spread of the' Faith among' the pagans of the world. Reu'nion Institute cause of the brotherhood' of ..ke ~ale: held' after 'Novena

.ervices, \\'ill be under the direc­ PITTSBURGH (NC) - Bishop man." 'Cut out this ,column, pin your sa~ifice to it and mail it to the tion of Mrs. William i~lynn, and Nicholas T. Elko of the Pitts­ Mr. Hunton is a' national di- Most Rev. Fulton J. 'Sheen, National Director' of The Society for Mrs. Robert Rinn. burgh Byzantine Rite diocese '. rector of the National Associa-' the Propagation of the Faith, 366 Fifth Av,enue, New York 1, N. Y..

tion for the Ad\l'lmcement· 'of .has dedicated a reunion institute,lIT. BERNARD'S. Colored, People (NAACP) and or Y'ourDIOCESANDIRECTOR REV. RAYMOND T. CONSIDINE,designed to' assist Catholics. in 368ASSONET editor of Interracial Review, the" r_• _'N__o_r..th_M_al_·_n_S.tr_e.e,;"t.;.,.F..a_.~_l_R_.•iv_e..;r_._M~a_ss_.--;...--------athe work of conversion.Mrs. Mary Rezendes and John interracial councii's 'publication;' ,Known as the' SS. Cyril, a"dL. Brown are co-chairmen of the .,The editorial saluted Mr. Hun-'Methodius Reunion Institute, thelarge committee' plannin'g the • ton for ."the· gr~at ,!,oik he isinstitute will be the' Byzaniine.tiservance of Rev. john E. doing in cooperation with 'one:' ofdiocesan center of information,Boyd's 25th anniversary of ordi­ out nation's.great spirits, scholar,abOut the saints, Qriental rites,..-tion. humanitarian and. religiousliterature and doctrine. 'It willFather Boyd will offer a High leader, Father' John: LaFarge,be used by both Byzantine andMass at 8:30 A. M. Sunday for S.J." Father LaFarge, long a , Latiti rite Catholics to increasemembers of tile-parish. The com­ leader in the interracial move­their knowledge of the Faith for-mittee has requested parishion­ ment, is an associate editor ofthe purpose of converting dissi ­.-sto receive Holy Communion' America, a weekly magazine,dents and· other. non-Cathoiics.at the Mass for his intention. published by, the Jesuit Fathers.It is to serve as a distributionAll parishioners and friends center, for literature on theItave been asked to attend Bene­ New RectorChu'rch, with emphasis on thetlictlon of the Most Blessed Sac­ COLUMBUS (rolC) - Msgr.

at Father problems of Christians separated George T. 48,has' beenrament which Boyd WoI:i:,from' the Holy See. Auxiliarywill be celebrant at 7::JO' P. M. named rector of St.. Charles Bor­

.Bishop Stephen J. Kocisko of.ext Tuesday in the church. romeo Seminary by Bishop Clar­- the Pittsburgh Byzantine Rite ence G. lssenmann of Coluplbus,.

lIT. MICHAEL'S, diocese is the ,institute's admin­ A native of Columbus; Msgr;OCEAN GROVE istrator. ' Wolz has been acting rect16r'

Mrs. Bernard B.Dion and Mrs. since April, 1957. Charles L. Viens are co-chalr-COnvert to Conduct Iller of whist party to be. held . Men'tal Health CIi.nic i"""",..: .... ,"""""'_ .June 25 in the school hall. ' - F h ' D' _'

A bowling league is being ST, LOUIS (NC)-A mental : . at er s . ay :' . plann~d for the Fall.' . ,health institute in the religious _

The June' meeting to. be held life will be conducted at St.: GIFT of _. .luoe25;· will be followed' by· 'a Lo~is University starting June, 9 : • :: I IIOciliI:'.., by))r. Karl Stern, Mont.real PSY-': LEATHER :!

The anri~a(Comirilinion ljreak~ chiatrist and author.,. .' _ _ i •

• st' 'was "held St:tnd~y'with'30" Dr. Stern, a convert from Ju- - _' ::' members preslmt.'" . C .' ., d~ism, has devoted himself to : Visit our NEW LOWER 'LEVEl,: ~ ~ . Tentative plaos are being' .Catholic thought and 1 its 'rela-' -" _ .

made for the annual outing and tiori to concepts of .psychiatry' ; C US H IN.G' S ::,' ~ lIlystery rIde .. Aug. 20~ Mrs." and; psychoanalysis: Attached to • J:dmund Courchaine, chairman~ St~. Mary's ~ Hospital, Montreal,: 586 Pleasant Street :

. will be assisted' by Mrs. Bernard he'js director of its psychiatric .: New Bedford. _: H . D ' clinic. / " ---- .. -- -- , .Jon.

~ACRED HEART, ;--------~-~------------------_ .. _~ .. _------_ .. _~--, )lORTH ATTLEBORO·

Mrs. Peter Tatarian and Mrs. : JONES : Roland Riendeau were chosen as chairman and co-chairman - ­respectively of the annual grad- : * s~~p .A~ R.,K . L· E * :

- uation party. The mothers of the other graduates will serve on - ­the committee preparing the ~ ·FI~OORWAX ~ party to be held in the parish hall immediately folloW-in!: t~rad­ : . SELF POLISHING· - SLIP RESISTANT :

. - I , _.'llation exercises in church. June 6 h~s been:set as.a dead­ : WATE,R ,R,EPELLENT .:

line for r'.aklng reservation:l and - , ­plans be olltlined : TESTED AND APPROVED BY • : will further at a m:::':::jn~ scheduled for 7:30 :, RUBBER MANUFACTUItERS ASSOC., INC._ : . p.m., June 9 in th~ parish hall. : an'd _ All mnthcrs of the graduating

: UNDERWRITERS LABORATORIES, INC. :.elass· al'~ urged to attend this meeting. . - ,-

To stimulate' interest. in the ::'JONES PRODUCTS COMPANY:. 8tudy ;oL religion' aiJ,d· to :instili - .1406 Massachusetts Ave. Arlington, 'Mass: _. an il;J.c:6ntive to better.livin rt ·t"P. ..ad~ai·es .'of' "the' S'li'cred' Heart. :. .. _-_ ....... __ .. __ ......_.. __ .. ..-. '.''" -:-;~:~--_ .... __ .._--:~--:--:-.-w:~-J _

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i

Page 13: 06.05.58

The Yardstick

Decries Political Attempts To Tax Fund for Republic

By Msgr. George G. Higgins Director NCWC Social Action Department

The Fund for the Republic, a non-profit educational organization established to promote the principles of indi­vidual liberty expressed in the Declaration of Independence, is currently under serious attack and in danger of losing its tax-exempt status.

such political interference' withA number of people, includ­ the freedom and .autonomy of

ing at least one influential these institutions and would un­member of the United States doubtedly be the first to con­

demn it as subversive.Congress, have charged that the They would be perfectly right,Fund is engaged in propaganda

of course, but. the importantrat her than education. Oth­ thing for them and for all of us ers have ac­ to bear in mincLis that the free­

dom and autonomy of Catholiccused it of colleges and universities is' no.being a subver­

sive organiza­ more sacred than that of other voluntary educational' institu­tion.

Both groups 'tions and foundations. . are demanding Congressmen, like other citi':'. that the Fund zem of the .United States, have be required to a perf~ct right to disagree with·. pay taxes and the policies of the Fund for the

,a r e exerting Republic and other tax-exempt pressures on educational institutions, includ­the I n t ern a I ing those which are operated Revenue Bureau to this end. under religious auspices.

I hope that the Internal Rev­ On the other hand, they have enue Bureau will steadfastly re­ no right whatsoever to tell. them sist these pressures. To give into what to teach or on what kinds them for reasons of political ex­ of educational projects they 'may pediency would not only be an expend their funds. To concede inj ustice to the Fund for the them tttis right would make a Republic but a serious threat to farce out of the whole idea of the cause of freedom in the tax exemption for voluntary United States. ' educational institutions and

If a Congressman or group of would be a dangerous· step Congressmen were to be given in the direction of government the power to veto the policies thought-control. of this organization, what would Church-State Seminars prevent them from demanding I must confess that I have a the same power of veto over any personal reason for defending other tax-exempt foundation or the Fund for the Republic at this educational institution with particular time. During the week which they happen to disagree? of May 4 I participated in two

This is not a mere rhetorical important seminars sponsored. question, for a year or two ago . by the Fund - one on Church­the Rockefeller Foundation, for State ~elations, the other on the one, was subjected to the same dole of labor 'in a free society. sort of attack by Congressional I can honestly say .that these (and other) critics that is now were two of the best meetings being levelled so fiercely against of their kind I' have ever..at ­the Fund for the Republic. tended. 1'0 be sure, they didn~t.

Dangerous Implications solve many problems. As a mat-It might be said here that if ter of fact, they' really dirln't

there are any Catholics in the sOlve any problems. at all, not" United States who do not see the were they intended'to.. dangerous implications of these. These seminars did provide attempts to control the Fund an excellent forum, however, for for the Rep4bl~cand the Rocke- , the seriom; and dispassionate feller Foundation by means of discussion of important problems political pressure, they ought to in an atmosphere of complete ask themselves how they would intellectual freedom. Critics of react if the shoe were on the the Fund to the contrary not­Catholic foot. withstanding, they were not

What would they do if Ford­ propaganda sessions. ham University and Notre Dame, On the. contrary, they were for example, were in danger of highly educational in the best losing their tax-exempt status sense of the word. I congratulate because a particular Congress­ the Fund on its initiative in man or group of Congressmen s'ponsoring these meetings, and disagreed with their educational I look forwarc' with pleasure. to policies? ' attending similar seminars under.

The answer is obvious. They the same 'auspices if I am lucky would instinctively. rebel against' enough to be invited. . .

College President Scores Panic Over Nation's Educational System

BURLINGTON (NC) - There shortcomings, but we' must not is too much panic today over the forget these facts. country's educational system, ac­ "1) Never has a: nation been so cording to Father Francis E. literate. ' Moriarty, president of Vermont's "2) The iritelligimce' quotient51. Michael's College conducted has steadily 'increased during theby the Society of St. Edmund. past 10 years.' . ' . .. ,

Father Moriarty declared: "3) Our educational facilities "The pendulum, I fear, has have continued to improve. .

lWung too far. They are hanging "4) Never before have our John Dewey all over the coun­ teachers ,been. so well trained," try, but this country ought to Father Moriarty said even face up b all the factors. I do . Catholic schools, which were not not mean to say there are no subject to the extlemes which

Dewey disciples foisted on theSeek to Ban Sunday' schoois, have been breast-beat­

Sale of Groceries ing. "It's time to stop breast-beat­

COLUMBIA (NC)-The legal­ ing," he. asserted, "and look at ity of Sunday grocery store the leaders that we have been sales will be tested in a Missouri sending out for generations." municipal court June 19.

The city attorney has filed ..charges' against the owner and against the manager of the only BLUE RIBBON grocery store to ret;nain open on Sunday since ,April 5. The charges were based on com­ LAUNDRY plaints that the owner and the manager each sold items not of immediate necessity on Sundays '273 CENTRAL AVE. in April.

NEW BEDFORDThe sales allegedly violate atate and city laws that forbid the ,ale of provisions, ex.cep~ .. '.: '::\Y,Y2~216 medicines and ()ther, art.iclel Qt.immediaw DeC:e_~~, . .

""

NEWLY ORDAINED HOLY CROSS FATHERS: Membersot"this year'S ordination: Class of Holy CrosB Fathers who received their pre-theological training at Stonehill College in North Easton are, left toright, Rev. Richard P. Desharnais, C.S.C.; of Jamaica Plain; Rev. James F. Murphy, C.S.C., of South Boston; Rev. Henry J. Donaghy, C.S.C., of New York Gity, Rev. Burton E. Smith, C.S.C., of Syracuse and Rev. Gerald M. Scully, C.S.C. of East Milton, Mass. . .

Boston Bishop Says True Liberty Comes From God WORCESTER (NC)-"True lib­ "But true law, ordained justly which was offered by Msgr. JOD erty can flourish only under law. and wisely to promote the public' F. Gannon, Vicar General-Chan­And true law can exist only welfare, is another matter in­ ~ellor of the diocese. when it derives from principles deed. It flows not from private that are sacred, inviolate and ambition ant. private greed, but derived from the will of the all ­ only from the deliberations and wise Creator." decisions of men dedicated to TOUHEY·S

truth and justice and the com­iliary Bishop Eric F. MacKenzie

This was the message of Aux­mon weal.

of Boston at the annual Red Mass "It is built upon an objective, PHARMACY sponsored by Worcester diocese factual recognition of the dignity civil and canon lawyers. Gov. of each human being," he con­ ·75th YearFoster Furcolo of Masssachu­ tinued. "It is designed to pro~ect

.setts was a.mong those in attend­ that dignity from exploitation by ance. either civil society or other indi­

Humbly Generous vIduals. It is' therefore not· proudly overbearing, but hum­

Bishop MacKenzie'" noted: bly generous." "A(;y dictator and his subser­

. Democratic Societyvi.ent parliament or council can issue decrees.'. Selfish. pressure Bishop MacKenzie observed

, .grqupsand indiv.iduals skilled·in that "devoted study and obse~­log-rolling can secure unfair and vation of law is the surest guar­unjust enactments, even in our' antee of a democratic society"

. own Congress, State Legislatures and . he . urged the l~gislatorS; . l

judges, lawyers and court of­fdals to "see yourselves, your' lives, your legal practice as an

and city councils.

, ",College ~f C'ardinals , opportunity to serve your God !Has 15 VacanCies and 'your' neighbor."

Bishop John -J: Wright 01ROME (NC)-The death of Worcester presided' at. the Mass,':Samuel Cardinal Stritch, Arch­

:bishop of Chicago and PrO-' Meet Your NEW:','Prefec~ of the Sacred Congrega..;· OLDSMOBILEtion for the Propagation of the

Chosen "Best Buy"Faith, reduces the Sacred Col­ ELECTRONIC lege of Cardinals to 55 members. SIMCA

, The Cardinal's death leaves 18 SECRETAR,yPicked No. 1 Import Buy~Italian cardinals and' 37 non.., Backed by Reputable Service Italian members in the college-. three of them Americans. The That AnswersPa i'k Motors traditional full complement of 67 Middle Stieet, Fairhaven' the college is 70, leaving 15 Your Calls WhenWYman 9-6479

.vacancies. The Drug Store Is Closed Touhey's Phannacy aelebratee lila "llith Anniversary by brlngin« .. Fall. River another FIRST - tile DeW: , EI~tronle .Secretary ....... serves. you when the Drng 8f_ a. clos~ (between 10 P.M..... I A.M. dally and Sunda,. ..

< '1­ tween 1 P.M. and G P.M.) per annum

i PHONE OS 5-7829

Latest dividend on Savings Accounts AND FOLLOW THESE SIMPLE INSTRlfcTIONS

"Fall River', School Saving's Bank"./ Give your name, address ftt.­

give your order or prescription. " State whether your ordcr Is to be

called for or delivered and &II

soon as the store is re·opened your order will be promptly car. ried out without causing you any delay or inconvenience.

B.. M·. ·C.-Durfee Trust Company TOUHEY'S

..Prescription Specialist,Member Federal Member Federal Deposit Since 1883" Rese~ve Syst,em Insurance Corp.

SURGICAL APPLIANCES 80 North Main Street, Fall River, Massachusetts HEARING AIDS •

Arthur J. Shea, Prop. 202 Rock St.,' Fall Hi"., " . ' . .: til';::~, ,,". '.:.'01" '.; .

..... I. i

Page 14: 06.05.58

••

Yearbooks IDistributed

S~ot~glllting~"9ur "Schools 'MOUNT ST; MARY ACADEMY, ST. ANTHONY'S HIGH' : FALL RIVER NEW BEDFORD

Students paid tribute to the' The student body of st:- An- '

.:;,1,)',(1'" ",.I·j"t ~'!". '~. --; ;ti "II; >1.:;1':: I :"" ,:j";'!!.,:~'i' ..... ,.,;,.~ o' '.~ I •. : •..~,'" .: •

"n "'Oblates':to"'Serve . New Mission . P:A:SS' 'CHRISTIAN' OW)"' -- named superior of'a mission the

F1l'tliet' Johh' E:' Tayl.or, O.M:T.; ~Oblates o~ Mary. have accepted superior of Our Lady'of "'the .. iIi' "Scandinavia/The, area eril ­

'Snows scholasticate at Pine Hills braces Denmark, Faeross Islands here in Mississippi, has been and Greenland.

------'----- ­

~~~~€§¥~~ g~I~~~~~§r"~-·~~·'~~ McKnight, sodality prefect, crowned the statue. Maureen Sheahan, vice-prefect, led the Act of Consecration. · . The entire student body sang hymns and recited various pray­

, ers honoring Our Lady. Father McCarrick spoke on the' serious­ness of our devotion to .the Blessed Mother in his' spiritual

1zE. 'h~~~:d~~~:~Ud~.::::

ing of the statue of the Blessed Virgin, and two addresses.

Rt. Rev. Albert Berube, pas-' tor, spoke on th«;! feast of Our

. Lady ~f Lourdes and Father Maurice Duchaine, ordained re­cently, spoke on vocations and

,

the role of 'Mary tn allvocations...... Miss' Simone Poulin crowned ,

the 'statue with' the. 'assistance

~!~f~:::~:::~L;: ,.• ~~l~~~f~~;~;:~:{~~~', ;~;t~::i~nr~a~~:~~~~~j~~~~~d~~S '-I,

• ~:l~~~~~~,':~~l~t)r ~~~;~::~ ? Teresa Silva, sodality treasl:1r.er;

E~:~::~:rii.::~~~:~~~ Next Monday, the orchestra

will 'present an hour program at the Vet'~rans' Hospital"Pr()vi­dence, for the patients and per­

· 8Onnel. This program is schec;!, uled to be televi!i~d. It is spon,..BOred by the Italian-·American Auxiliary of Fall River. . "

The sodality will entertain the ienior sodalists at' a farewell

::'~:m::,T:::: :::~:: will sponsor the Junior Frolic, -an annual social for the mem­

::' ::h:~ a':::=~i:'::'~':;

_~~~~E:I:::RTS ACADEMY, Th' t' b f the

~:i~:d1}:~?:~;1~~",~ United States. They include: -

Liberal Arts Colleges Annhurst, Lois Souza; Boston

College, Fernanda Carreiro; Bos­ton '. University, Kathleen Ste­vens; Cedar Crest, 'Gale Martin;

. Emmanuel,' Anne Marie ,Maona­han, Lynn Collins; Merrima.ck, Fernanda Carreiro; New Ro­chelle, Sheila Cronan; New Eng­

~:~a~;~~llE:' p:m:~ rillo, Patricia Denardo; Salve Regina, Mary Castro, Marie Rob-­

~~.Car:,;rns~~:.:':'·~";:":.tt

..~ister M. Olga; ~.S.M., ' •. ~q;.,. 'Superior of Mount St. Mary Con­·vent.· . . ..: . " . . .' . Rita .Simonin,· Class of '10«.3,

~.J' was' awarded thl'rd prize' in stEm­'ography contest li'eld rE~cently "t Providence. .

'u,yr::;; .JESUS-MARY A CADE '''' , FALL RIVER

Senior Catherine Goulet and junior Claire Delisle. were

· awarded certificates of. award' for having' participated with merit of distinction in the aru:tual United Nations ·Examination

.Contest on March 3. The' com­;'petitive examination was spon­sored by the UN'Association,of

,;America. Doris Mathie.u '58 and Claire

Delisle '59 were inducted in the · National Madonna Society and ,Diane Duquette '59 was .chosen 'as prospectiv.e candidate at a

· . special assembly on May' .26.:· The newly elected officers of

the Sodality for the s(:holastie :rear 1958-59 were yoteo1 as fol­.lows: Prefect, Jacquelim~ Plante '59; Vice-Prefect, Doris Desfor­ges '59; Secretary, Georgette Nunes; Treasurer: Yvette Mer­cier. .,

Mistress _of Ceremoni~~s, Gail · Cloutier; Unite leaders, Annette · Cousineau, Eileen Grillo"Claire · Durand, Pauline' Roy.­

· .' The following sodalists pro­nounced Uleir' temporary coil.se­cration at a special" r,~ligious

. :'. t:eremony conducte<l" in th~' con­veiltchapel: Jeanine Babinj'Lor­.. raine . Blanchette. Georgette

· 'Campbell, Annette Jussealime, .: Gertrude Lavoie, Mary Ann Le­

;, ;"vescll1e, .: 'Maureen . O'Connor, · Claire Picard, 'Jeanne' Phinte,'

Claire Roy, Lorraine :it. Geox:ges.

doza; Burbank, 'Margaret Pow-. ers.

Business .Colleges. Kathetin'e Gibbs,"Barbar:a .r.e:::'

'. vesque, Ann Petrillo, .Leslie' . . .'Salvo, Annette Williams; Bryant, Judith. Dolan;. Johnson and W 1 J"N -'.. ',,­a es, ean· g."F h C It d C' '1' .

rene u ure an IVllza­tion~'. is' the topic ' of 'areseiuch p~per:being completed by,Sister Albina" Marie's French Two Class.v...The research·· covers phases'" of 'French government,' industry, and family life, the paper' written' 'in French,. of ' cours.e..

Sister Oliva .from. sf,' Mar­garet's.. Hospital, . Dorchestet, Mass.;'g~ve a talk to the student·· body.·on the work of her order, . the Daughters of Charity of St. Vincent de Paul.· Following" the:. talk she showed the film "The Story of the Miraculous Medal" and distributed to each .student a .Green' Scapular and a' Miraeu-' lous 1\1:- jal.

Freshmen and sophomores en­joyed an 'afternoon picnic as guests· of the.Holy Union Jtiliior­ate at, Nanaquaket, . Games of.

STILL TIME TO START ing'to Bishop Emanuel Ma:-, F.:..".;.:.:.l.:.:\.l.;.:

bathoana, a.M.1. The I1ative- • 4 MORE WEEKS! THOUSANDS MOREPR.IZES!~:~iSh::d ist;e~it~:it~1 ~.

. States. Basutoland, a British protectorate, is' surrounded

. by the Union of South Africa NO Photo.

New 8edford C.ouncil '. To Exemplify .Degree

Grand..Knight Edmond Allain of McMahon Council No. 151,

&, .. ..~n1r~~~~~:;:i~::::~:~!~:.'.r.:.:'.·.l.:'.+.~.r.,::h.:t:~;: 0 &. &. &.10'. £1 .:.:.;...:.~~.,,:.:.,.:I!::::

:::.~ & £ -­.next Sunday night at 8 o'clock In Our Lady of Assumption hall,

-C~~Y~:::~,~i~i~l ~~l~'::; Com­;v~~::l~~:L~:'~·~~ ~~;'hEf:::~~~;'::~~~::!' ~e;:'~}~~1~u~ ~~1 Ei::~:;=::h::~:::: ~~l~;:S~i~~l;~ :::::nta:"~:::w:: er~1~f~~;J~~f§; J~:i~]:::~:::~:-~ ~~;tE.:i~;!~'~~ ,~~~r~{;~:~~i ~fii~f~!~~~~ '~~~~g~:~~!;~f.:,~ition, assisted bi ass,ociate. 'edi­

· 'tor Carolyn Lenaghan, 'l\nrie St. 'Anne's, Agnes Crombi~ from ffoly" Family. Speaker 'at, .. . Denise Jeunesse, Mary Beth the .graduation .will be Fa..t.her::.·

'Marie Poisson and Sylvia; H.oule., .. . .. ., Traino~, Hilda Perry, Annette ',' ',(Major) Thomas J .. Daley,' a: .Sister Mary Irene, R.S.l\t.,. A.M.. Williams; Union, .Frances Booth, ..meinber of the 1924 .ciass 'and an i,' 'iN~' " .~was faculty advisor.. .. . ," ',. ' . ,lif'. Denise Jeunesse, Elizabeth Men- An y. Chaplal'n statl'oned a.t .,th.e-'." ~. Z. ,. 'T"his 'annual was d'edicate<i' "to~il: .IAberdeen. Provirig. GroundS, '.

'M'aryla'n:'" There will beS1 grad- ,:

" uates in this year's class. . , '

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'.".'.'..:,' f.f.:.:f...a~ .... t: ~~dc::d:::;I:~~bleAinc'::~ I~f :::~y~;:..:s~~;:~~e::~· . I'~ will be posted in ell stores. .

; \ I":' '" . "Cross-Out" is limited 'to adults only. "First Nationel Store· :' ~ . -:1 . employees a"d their immediate families ar,·ineligible.to pla1lo ...... ;~..:~.:., e-do &u.S~'.'e .. 'end''''':'' u.s. ''"7. 1954. 1955..'956.1951" '9SI. eo ,"'­

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I. ~lf any,S of th~ numbers appearing in the new,opaper -geme ~; " ·.100 .ep-pe.ar on your card...:.. and if they' are arranged in '. :'"

I:+~ straight row - down, acro.., or diagonelly - you have a ~ h.} .,.. .'. winning card.·. Tum .card over to. see what you ave ,\,on and K mail card as directed. You will reCeive your prr.e within 15 0.,. . days. ..t* '.' ~ . f 3 illA b •[.:.:.Sit""'< ... . new game .0 0 num en WI IIp.pear ,n our newopeper«.i'B" .ads each.week for It weeks. Play all of your. cards againstW: ell of these ads"";' but in order to have' a winning card.1i~ numbers must be taken from a single' advertisement. Num-l:tJR, -be;s from different.newsp,aper .ads can no.t -be combined to r:t:aii

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'gamenum ers appearing ,n t e irst ahona a vertiseme"t

Page 15: 06.05.58

"~-

from 15 nations and their fam-' Sponsored, by Maurice Cardi­ It wIll be the larg~st singleMen F.,om 15'Natioris THE ANCHOR- 15 Hies will attend a ,three-day in­ nal Feltin, Archbishop of Paris, group to VlS,H ......... __ ,.) ...d ..l.S. ~.u.... u \..u1', Thurs., June 5, 1958To Attend Pilgrimage ternational military pilgrimage the pilgr' .lage is an annual' Msgr', (Maj. Gen.) Patrick J.

HEIDELBERG (NC) - More to Lourdes, FrancEl, starting event organized, by .the Catholic Ryan, U. S. Army Chierof Chap.,. than 35,000 Catholic servicemen June 14. chaplains of ·the French army. lains, will lead U. S. delegation, Church Rejects.

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t ••.•

Force Tt1eory VATICAN CITY (NC) -The

Church rejects the theory that force is thl;l only basis of rela­tionship between nations, Hill Holiness Pope Pius XII hal stated here. .

In an address on the subject of war given to a group of Italian women, the Pontiff de':' elared:

"The Church does not accept the doctrine of those who be­lieve that humanity is governed by one law of 'bellum omnium contra omnes' (the war of ali against all). It also rejects the theory which considers force all the basis of relationship be:­tween states.

"In the eyes of the Church," he added, "war is not 'the parti ­san of manly virtues' and still less 'a stimulant to fruitful en­terpris'es.' "

Defense Necessary The Pope went on to say that

,)Var contributes in no way to the progress of civilization, except perhaps for development. achieved in the fields of science and tech!lique, and that war b juridically unlawful "in any hypothesis."

Noting that Christianity con­siders 'mankind' as one family and thus must be steadfastly opposed to war and aggression, the Pontiff then stated:

"But although the Church re­fuses to accept any doctrine which claims that war is a nec­essary effect of cosmic, physi­cal, biological or economie forces, it is equally adverse W admitting that war is alway. censurable.

"Since human freedom· i:I capable of unleashing an 'unjust conflict, to the damage of • nation, it is certain that such • damaged nation can, under de­termined conditions, rise in arm. and defend itself."

Must Be Alert The Pope then proceeded te

recount the history of war, be­ginning with Cain's crime of fratricide against Abel, and con­tinuing through the battles ol primitive men and feudal lor~s.

"But," he noted, today a con­flict is not 'limited to battle. between armed groups. It ha. now grown to being a combat between people whose whole physicalanil moral forces are

'mobilized with all their eco­nomic and' industrial resource..

···The • battlefield is no longer restricted; a nation's entire ter­ritory, is the battlefield and the weapons, ready for use are fIl unimaginable power.

"Thus the problem of national · defense assumes an ever in­creasing importance, its protJ­

'lems are as complex as they ant difficult to solve. "This is why," the Pope continued, "no natioll which wishes to provide for the security of its frontiers, as b

,its right anL. absolute duty, call be without an army proportion:" ate to its needs; supplied with all indispensable material; ready and alert for the defense of the homeland should it be unjustly threatened or attacked."

At this point of hi~ speech the Pontiff defended the wisdom of readiness against unjust aggres­sion. For, he sail':, although all peoples without distinction long

,for peace, "those who govern their destiny can today, as yes­

· terday, fall victim to uncon­trollec' and insant: passions, and once again,.God forbid it-set off cruel and widespread con­flicts."

English Jesuit Wins 1958 Campion Award

NEW YORK (NC)-An Eng­lish Jesuit historian' and biog­

· rapher has been presented the · Catholic Book Club's 1958 cam­pion Award for long and distin­guished contribution to Catholic l~tters. The recipient is Father .James If- Brodrick, S.J., of Lon­

-don. Previous recipient of the

award, made annually since 1955, were philosopher Jacques Mari­tain; Helen C. White, professor of English, Univpr!,Hv of Wiscon­sin, and Paul Horian, novelist .....d histol'!<W.

Page 16: 06.05.58

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••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

"~,I

.........:

. h th t they among the 45 graduates receiv-' law of nature bindiilc' on all fore He slew him also." . 'each other thlS sows a ing degrees from Salve R"egina .. regard each other as objectsor·mankind." "If a couple makes Father Kelly said that Dr.

The Family C:lon,ic . ,

Says:, Showdow·n Necessary With 'Too Critical' Husban'd

By Rev. John.L.Thomas, S.J. , Assistant Professor of Sociology

St. Louis University "',

Shouldn't a man·showresp~ct ~or his w,ife? My husband eriticizes me in Jront of our children and even in the p:t:esence

. , \.

'of outsiders. He never~misses a chance to pick me up on a mistake, so that sometinles I thihk he's just waiting,forme to pull a boner. Lately, 'h~'s Some girls pose as mental been making disparaging re- lightweigHts during courtship marks about my' family.' v and early marriage. because this When I protest he pretends'. seems to flatter ,a' certain type

. ' - of husband. When they' start "'e's only teasmg. 'What makes • ";Ian act that .way? . I m not sure,Louise; maybe be's developed an i, ulcer! In all seriousness, though, you do face a distress­in g ,problem. Your letter su~-gests that: hlS .

,critical attl~ude is somet h 1 n g

tit' new or, ~eneas~ has t; th turn or et This may pro­worse at pres~n . . , , .

. I t ·ts origin thouglt~lde a ~ ue OInt knowiedge ofwith my prese, ' .' bl I can only suggestthe. pro em, .everal possibilities.

T Love Basis rue eri'

, As you know fr~ml eXP'ag~ ence'; loss of respect m marr~t' .' . g when I ISffeauses real su erm k

True love' is always founded t When respectI

on mUkt~a rets~e~e' m'IY remain Is lac mg, e < emotional. sensual,. or sexual at ­

. d htraction, bu f; not love, an suc . h' Ulilly. indicates

relatIOns lp usexploitation.'The reason is that true love

involves a relatiollship between persons, and the human p~rs9.n demands respect beca,use I~ IS the highes't value in creatiOn.

,Wh~t makes a man act that way? Let's survey. some of the possi­bilities. First, have you made. him feel that- you're competing with him? Sometimes husbands think that their wives are trying

· to outshine them and use this indirect way to cut the!!1 down to size. 'Wives may do this un­consciously, afld if their hus-, bands are insecure, they may react in this immature [email protected]. '

Second, are you at, odds with, your husband in-some o~her area of marit"al' or family relation­ships? 'Again, this may be your husband's indirect way of show­,ing resentment' over an unwill ­

, ing co:'cession or defeat in !lome · other area. This is typical strat ­egy in marital disagreements:

ThreateJ) Superiority' Third, is your .tongue sharper

and more critical than you real­ize? Some people lack emp!lt~y

--th'e ability to put them!;elves in the other fellow's shoes so as

· to see how he thinks and feels. Hence the) may remain quite

unconscious of how their words · and actions' affect, others, though · tlhey are highi'y s~nsitive to what is done to themselves. We all

'know people who "can't ta,ke a · joke," yet delight in. pulling them on others.

Fou: "1, maybe you're just · 1I'0wing up, that is, assuming a 'mature role in marriage lifter ',pOsing as a more or less fli~fh,ty,

· care-free school 'girl, and :'OUl'

: husband 'can't adjust to the

"

'~.....

acting maturely their husbands may resent it as'a threat,to their

'1" 't .­mascu Ine superIOr!?,­

: Que'en of Home These are' some of the pOsSi­

bilities, 'Louise. LookthelJl over ­carefully for any light 'they .may' throw on your problem. What else can ypu do? ."I: _

You will be on ,safe ground if you, try 'to bolster up your hus-­band's self-confidence and sense

'. ' of security as head of the fam­ily. Don't hesitate to ..compli­ment and praise whenever pos­

'sible. This should be' mutualI f ­

among normal coup es, 0 course, but you will be wise to start it' . yourself. " . .

More directly, ~f your husband stubbornly Perslsts, you best have a showdc)wn. Doli't let him pas~, his, criticism 'off as mere teasing Ask /him why' he' feels" ,. , I

manifested in critical rhema~l'Sing to even' up what he hopes to . ttempts to uml 1- "

and obVIOUS ,a ., t, gain by hurting you. These·t er More slgmfican ' . '. . ' h , ate t e pal n . '., questions may open hIS eyes.it may indicate a loss of love.

so ins.. ure what score he's try­

,. .. . Aboved,all, .don t let hIS· cnh."

Clsm, un ermme your own sense of security ,and self-confidence. AS'f d moth " reWI e athn 'h er'A; Ytouthqueen 0 f e ome c e , . h'ld' tit,part, and your c I ren, a, eas will never doubt it'" S 'I R . B .

a ve eglna estows 'Forty-:five Deg rees . Eleven young ladies from the

If so-called lovers do not respect 'Diocese of Fall River were

things, .hence the likelihood of College, Newport, this week. , ·exploitation. . . Participating. in the Com.:. · Lest this bit of philosophy mencement Exercises were'Most

. eludes you, LoUise, just remem- Rev.. Russell J. McVinney, bel' that there is no true love . Bis!t<>p of Providence, who con~ without respect; and conversely, ferred. the degrees and the Most

'where Uiere is no, respect, there Rev:, Matthew F..~rady,- 0,0." ean be no true lov,e. Bi,stIOp" of Manchester, N. R,

If young men and women r~- 'who delivered the principal' ad,. 'membered this on' dates;?-they dress. Rt. Rev. James J. Ger~ ·would be less likely to, mistake rard; Vicar General of. Fall -affectionate exploitation for true Ri,ver, was seated with the. digni'-. love. When "lover-boy" flaYS or taries on the platforJ!l.

.. Implies; "If you really loved me, Receiving Bachelor of Arts' .you would do this," he's not Degrees from the diocese were: :taiking about true love~' "Fall River--::-qertnide F. Amaral,

. May Show Resentment MaureenA. Connelly, Mary E. , Now to your. problem, Louise. Daley;' Patricia A. Milrphy' and

Barbara C, Phelan; New Bedford -Shirley .A. Perry (cuin laude),

A I P k 1and me 1~!"1' oczate ;Att e­

. bor07Patncla W. Crecca; North' Attleboro - Paula F. Cooper; Somerset-Ann V. Melvin; South Dartmouth-,-Mary C. B;1rros.

'Straight"A~ Student. Graduates at Loyola

NEW ORLEANS (NC)-Loy­ola University ,gradualed the fifth "straight A" student to complete a four-year coiIrse at '.

. the 46-year-old Jesuit institu-: tion. "

She is Loretta Lorgan who' was awarded her degree in med­ical technology,' summa' ~l:lm laude. She also received the Father'Percy A,. Roy award for' scpolastic achievement. '

. , DIOCESAN LEADERS: Recently elected leaders of ihe Diocesan CYO are, left to ,right, Robert Blanchette,_Vic~ President', Michael O'Hearn, Secretary. Mary Trond, Presi­dent, and Wilia~ Orsi, Treasurer. Both Natural and, Divine' LawB' A ·f· . Ian . rtl ICla Birth Control

. /' ,WASHINGTON-The practice ',I unto, them, Be fruitful.and mul-,

f tT' 1 b' th t I' . 1 d l' h th th .r' ~r I lCla II' con 1'0 IS ' .- tap y, an rep ems e ear , 'agamst both the natural 'and, , and"'subdue it,' Dr. FagleY'would

the divine law, is ,opposed to' ' healthy family life and the well-, diyide and subtract, not multi ­'being of the nation," Father ply. His statement indicates' that, John "E. Kelly, director of the '. he favors that the earth subdue

'," Bureau' of Information, Natiori"al " ',plan, not TJlan the earth," . Catholic' Welfare Conference, In the same book of the Bible, .

emphasized, here. in chapter 38, Father Kelly said, At ~he same time:, Redemptor- can be found the story of Onan,

ist Father Henry. V. Sattler, who practiced artificial birth assistant director of the NCWC control. He reminded that the Family Life Bureau, stressed Bi~le relates "the thing which he . that contraception violates "a did displeased the Lord:.where­

sex an end in· itself, without Fagley's position is "exactly con­meaning and objectives outside trary to,the teachings of Christ ­the mutual satisfaction of the ian theologians from the days of partners," he said, '-'then all tra- St: Augustine,"· He said 'it "is ditional morality falls,"- regrettable that a Protestant

The statements of the two" leader saw fit to use the forum . NCWC.officials were a rejoinder" pf a ~orld Council of Churches

to an asserti'on made by Dr: . tmeetmg . to ,criticize Catholic Rlch~rd' M. Fagley at .8 World teachings and PFactice," Council of Churches meeting in

Fall River eyO Girls to Have Parents Night

The Girls C,Y.O. of Fall River, will conduct its first Parents Night at 7:30 on Tuesday evening, June 10th, in the Catholic Com­munity Center, Franklin Street, ,

, Fall River. A program and ex­hibit of the year's activities and accomplishments will be pre­sented.

The exhibits will consist of photography class projects, cer­amic ware, complete meals as prepared in the home econom­

. ics division, and sketches and drawings of the free hand draw­ing class.

The sewing group girls will exhibit and model the clothes they made during the year, the first aid group will-receive Red Cross certificates apd athletic awards will be made to the mem­bers of the basketball team.

The spiritual adv~ntages of this organization will be demon­strated by a model meeting. while the dramatic department will present a comedy skit.

The public is invited to attend the inauguration of Parents Night in a wide range program of development of the Girll C.Y.O.

R~ds 'Try to Close Vietnam Seminary

ROME (NC)-The communist ,government of northern Vietnam

. is Continuing its efforts to force . the Closing of a minor seminary in Trung Linh.

During February, according to reports, a team of Red "inspec­tors" investigated the seminary and' later called it a "counter­revolutionary nest," The Reds also tried to implicate the sem­inary's director" Father Luonh Huy Han, as well.' as Father Joseph Ph~m Nang Tinh, Vicar Delegate of .the Apostolic Vica­riate of Buichu, whose Ordinary, Bishop Pierre Pham Ngoc Chi, is in free southern Vietnam.

The February "inspection" was the latest in a long series of harassments. Authorities in Nam Dinh province were long ago told by the communist regime to force the seminary's closing by . any means' short of open vio:.' lence, it said.

Among the 'means used was the sending of representatives to parents of seminary' students to threaten reprisals if their sons were not 'withdrawn from tlte school. •.

, Hyannis. 2921, .;( •. __ •__o~_o-_~•••

~ '.D &. D Sales and, Service; ! _ . . mn .1 Cafeteria - s.o~>n to be opened

GET ACQUAINTED WITH YOUR .cOLLEGE FRIGII?A,IRE' I V1..·~ttors Are Always W elcom~

REFRIGERATION • ' HELP' YOUR COLLEGE TO GROW . APPL-IANCES

Rev. THOMAS C.DUFFY, C.S.C. AiR, CONDITIONIN~ D..rectoT of Blltldlftll li'tltUt StOftehiU COlt6~

FRANCIS J. DMIIIE ARTHUR J. DOUCET . PHONE CEd~r 1-2221, . . .

NORTH EASTON, MASSACHUSEnS;363·SECOND ST. .. FALL RIVER, MASS. ' .................................~.•.•...........

Buck Hill Falls, Pa" that Cath­olic teachings on artificial birth control 8':,e i'theo~,)gically wrong FRANK S. FEITELBERG'

. , I .and 'ethically w'eak," "'. Father Kelly contended it, is

just the opposite-that Dr Fag- REAL ~. ESTATE' ley's position is "theoiogica~ly wrong and ethically weak:" '

Bible Speaks .21 Bedford St. _Dlol OS 6-8246 The NCWC official said: "He Citizen's Savings Bank Buil.~ing Fall River, Mass.must be aware of what the Bible

says in Genesis 1,28, King James Version, 'And God .blessed them (Adam and Eve), and God said

STONEHILL ,COLLEGE ~~'~JBI The Only Catholtc College ~n theQJ,ocese of Fall Rwer

" . ! ',LlJMBER CO~ .I.

SO•. Dartmouth ! ~

, and H~ann~ I So. Dartmouth

WY 7-938'" I

,

Page 17: 06.05.58

THE ANCHOR­ 17 Thurs., June 5, 1958

Clergy I Relagious Provide Service Worth Millions

NEW YORK (NC) The estimated value of "contributed services" of clergy and Religious staffing U.S. Catholic colleges and universities during 1956 and '57 totaled $25,586,407, according to a survey released' here.

Nine Colleges Nine Cat hoi i c universities

were among the 37 major private universities listed by the survey as having received more than $3 million in voluntary support during 1956-57.

Gifts and grants from volun­tary sources in 1957 to 91~

reporting institutions totaled nearly $833 million; in 1935, 728

New Community Continued from Pa«e One

) 8 g0, and was instrumental In arranging their coming to the

: United States.

More Nuns Coming At present, Rev. Mother Cruz

Roderiques, R.A.D., Superior General of the congregation, and Mother Mercedes Ferreras Nico­las, R.A.D., who will head the New Bedford house, are the only representatives of the commu­

\. nity in the United States. Other Sisters are /Scheduled to arrive from Cuba, Portugal and Spain as soon as immigration require­ments have been met. The per­manent community will then, number five members, one of whom is a native of Cape Verde. Two are school teachers, one a nurse, and one a music teacher and organist, of those still to arrive here.

The Sisters' primary work will be in Our Lady of the Assump­ CONVENT OF NEW RELIGIOUS COM MUNITY: The lO-room building above at 54 institutions reported $336. mil­tion parish, numbering 4,000 South Sixth Street, New Bedford, will accom odate the first American community of the iTon.members and the only Cape Ver­dean parish in the United States; Religious of the Love of God. The permanent ~ommunity will comprise five nuns. Mother A comparison of just 553 of

the institutions which took partbut they will also serve Pue,rto Mercedes Ferreras Nicolas, R.A.D. has been n.amed first superior of the New Bedford in bot.h the 1957 and 1955 surveyllRicans in the area. According to convent. indicates a 62 per cent increaseFather Francis, their activities in giving over the past two years.will include training in $ewing

and embroidery for girls of the Sees Integration As 'Probl em, for Northern States 0 This figure excludes the large gifts from the 'Ford Foundationparish: the organization of a BRUSSELS (NC)-An Amer- gra leaders have not be.en reti- many Negroes, as they move to to private institutions.ehildren's choir, teaching of ican .priest believes it win be cent in praising the Church for the North and to big cities away

c:atechism and visiting the sick. The nine Catholic institutionsmore difficult to eliminate racial what it has done for them; and from the unlettered evangelism list.ed as having receive4 giftllClasses at Convent discrimination in' the northern of the South, are looking for a totaling more than $3 millionVocations LagClasses will be held in the 10­ states than racial segregation in more satisfying expHmation of during 1956 and '57 are: room convent at 54 South Sixth the South. Continued from Page One their relationship to God. G e 0 r get 0 w n , Washington,Street, Ne~ Bedford, now being Msgr. Vincent W. Jeffers, di- serving 26,075,697 Catholics in ' "Moreover" I am supremely $4,870,805; Marquette, Milwau­readied for occupancy by the rector of New York's arch- the United States, Alaska and confident that in God's good time kee, $4,745,591; St. Louis, $4,368,­Sisteh. Parishioners are c:on­ diocesan 'Poniifical Society for Hawaii in 1948. There are now we '"ill be able to demonstrate 734; Loyola, Chicago, $3,892,185;trit>uting much of the equipment the Propagation of the Faith, 36,023,977 Catholics, an ,increase ,to our American non-Catholic Fordham, NewYork City,,$3,799,­

and furniture needed and will said in an address: of 38.1 per cent in 10 years, but friends that Catholicism is ut ­ 781; Boston College, $3,439,329;bring their gifts to an open house "Ttlis discrimi~ation is not only 225,082 priests,' Brothers terly congenial to the principles Catholic University; Washington,to be held from 2 to 5 on Sunday. legal, but it can be practiced in and Sisters, which i~ a mera 18.4 of the A~erican Republic. Th~re $3,269;350; Notre' Dame, $3,233,­Plans call for one of the con­ subtle and devious ways. How- per cent jump. . ,are tensIOns between Cathoh,cs 369, and Creighton, Omaha,vent's large front rooms to be ever, a very encouraging sign A closer analysis of the statis- and Protestants due to the .pre~­ $3,080,504.converted into a classroom and is the enactment in the northern tics exposes the seriousness of ence of a Church of authOrIty 10 Jesuits Leadanother into a chapel. In the states of laws which forbid dis- the problem. Ten ]ears ago a democratic society. AU except two of the ninemeantime Rev. Mother Cruz and crimination against Negroes in 'there were 41,747. priests, one for "These tensions will disappear institutions are conducted by theMother Mercedes are guests of empolyment." each 620 laymen. There has since as a more apostolic and enlight-· .Jesuit Fathers. The exceptionsthe Sisters of St. Dorothy at Our The priest then declared: been an increas eof 9,066 priests ened laity fill our Am~rican are the Catholic University ofLady of Mount Carmel Convent, , . . . ' . and 9,913,363 'laymen. That is milieu with the right frUits of America, a national' PontificalNew Bedford. "Inevi~bly,dlSCrI~llnatiOnand equal to one more ,priest for each Catholic culture in art, science university, and Notre Dame,

In 14 Count'ries segregation. must disappear,. for 1,093 additional laymen. aJMl literature as well as in the conducted By the Holy CroMThe Religious of the Love of th~~ are ahen to ~he Amencan Figures' Distressing science of the saints. Fathers.SIHrlt and c there IS a progres- f h t th . . God were founded in the diocese sive awakening of public opinion Despite the. act t a e num- Spiritual Hunger Yale ,University, New Haven,

of Zamora in 1864, Rev. Mother ber of seminarians has steadily "A . '11 t b Conn., led the list of institutioDIICruz explained. Their founder, againSt them." increased during the past decade, menca WI 'no e con-

He continued' verted tomorrow or the day after with gifts of $23,465,347 durin..Jeronimo Usera y Alarcon, was _ "Y t I ' . t' . t' f th the Percentage of additional tomorrow, but there is a religious the two year per:iod. Harvard a Cistercian monk, ,driven from e Tham 'op 1mIS IC . orind.e prie'sts has continued to decline inspiration in the whole Amer­ . University, Cambridge, Mass.,hbis monastery during the Span­ future. ere are grap IC 1- each year since the high water ican way. of life-as well as a, was second with $22,558,855.ish revolution of 1835. In exile, cations that large pumbers of mark of 1955.' The 3.25 per cent h f th "t I''" ' be k'" f r unger or e spin ua .Nbe became a missionary to egroes WI•. soon as 10.. 0 growth of that year became 2.85 .. . t th Ch h N _Africa, then worked 'in Puerto admiSSion lD 0 e urc. e per cent in 1956, 2.77 the follow-

Rico and Cuba. ing year .!nd' 2.14 this year, ac-During ihis time he conceived Deplores Mediocrity cording to the 1958 "Official

the idea of an order dedicated In Sacred\Music Catholic Directory."to education of needy chiidren; While, the number of priestsPITTSBURGH (NC)-No jus­returning to Spain he laid the bas increased only 21.7 per centtification exists for "mediocrity"foundation for such a commu­ in' the past decade, the statistics nity. The Congregation is now in sacred 'music, Auxiliary

for the nuns are even mor dis-,Bishop Coleman F. Carroil ofactive in 14 countries and has a tressing. Their slow growth fromPittsburgh told. 3,000 delegates tospecial inter~st in work witb 141,083 in 1948 to 164,575 todaythe national convention of theNegroes and in Latin America, represents an increase of only

reflecting the missionary predi­ National Catholic Music Educa­ 16.7 'per cent. lections of it::: founder. It teache. tors AsSociation. , One Bright Spot all grades from kindergarten "How can we honestly speak Only the Brothers were close upward and is also active in in one 'breath, of the Church as to the 38.1 per cent pace of the social wor-k, in Portugal" alone the ,mother of the arts, the pa­ laity, going from' 7,335 to 9,694 operating 17 houses. . troness of music," he asked, "and in a decade, a 32.2 per cent jump.

Distinctive Habit not be disturbed at so much that But they represent less than five The Sisters wear a distinctive is peri>etrat~ under her aus­ per cent of the priests and Reli ­

blue habit, with white guimpe pices?" gious in the' United' States, and black veil. A gold ring i. "If music is an integral part Alaska and .Hawaii. I

worn on the right hand, and a of the educational curriculum of The most dismal part of the lIilver crucifix about the neck, the Catholic school today," 1958 statistics is the realization engraved with the words "Cari­ Bishop Carroll observed, "it is that the priesthood, Brotherhood tas Christi Urget Nos" - "The not there for artificial or super­ and Sisterhood, both individu­Charity of Christ Impels Us." ficial reasons. It holds that hon­ ally and collectively, were not

Plans for future expansion in ored place today, as it has for Ollly far behind the growth of the the United States will depend centuries, because of its genuine laity but also far behind their upon the success of the 'pioneer educational importance and own 1957 increases, both numer­foundation in New Bedford, ac­ valUe." ically and proportionately. cording to Rev. Mother Cruz. "Not because it is nice-to make She will return to the c:ongrega­ music and pleasant to hear it, do lion's Motherhouse in Spain we favor it 'and further it," he after the new convent has been said, "but rather because of its opened. essentially cultural influence

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Page 18: 06.05.58

. , -THE ANCHORStoneh:al 'Awards "b.egree$·~

Thurs., June 5, 1958 Continued frollIl Page One an'd Mrs. Peter Braga; 27 Heatley

Miss Rose E. Gillin, (summaley Street,. Bachelor of ACts, Street, (cum laude) i Armand

c:umlaude) and valedictorian of (cum laude). Gagne, 30 May' Street, son of

her class, daughter of Mr. and'Mr. and Mrs. Armand Gagne;From South Easton, Robert P. Mrs. Francis O. Gillih, New Bed­

son of and and' Armand. R. Gendreau, son'Hegarty, Mr. Mrs. ford, won dual. awards as theof Mr. and Mrs. Armand Gen­Michael J. Hegarty, 95 'Belmont senior with the highest scholasticdreau, 35 Murray' Street, (cumStreet, Bachelor of Science in. average for four years and thelaude). " Business Administration. From senior with t~e highest averageReceiving Bachelor of ScienceFairhave~, James B .. Lanagan for four years in science.in Business Adlll:inistr.ation de­

of Mr. and Mrs. JamesJr., son grees, were the following from Edward Roster (magna cumB. Lanagan, 88 Washington Fall River: Jean .(\. 'Guilmette, laude), son of Mr,s. Joseph C. Street, Bachelor o:E Arts. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. AI­ Roster, Taunton, also was a dual

'phonse Guilmette, 1618 Slade award winner as the senior witbTaunton Area' , Street, (cum laude); Matthew the highest average for four:.\ Taunton graduates who earned J. Sheahal}, son of Mr. and Mrs. . years in liberal arts an9. the stu­Bachelor of Arts degrees lare Matthew Sheahan, 137' Winter dent who has done the most dis­Robert V.' Byrne, son of Mrs. Street, and Everett J. Sm.ith, :50n PRIZE WINNERS: These four members of the Stone­ tinguished work in debating.Irene E. Byrne, 59 Cedar Street; , of Alexander Smith, 534 Locust hill Coliege graduating class-all from the Diocese-were

'Paul D. :ayer, son of Mr. and Street.' ~ . Miss Jean A. Guilmette (cumaward' winners at the Commencement Sunday. They are, Mrs. EdrrlOnC: H. Cayer, 443 WeSt laude), daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Britannia Street (cum laude); New Bedford left to right, Edward Roster, Jean :Guilmette, Carol Braga Alphonse Guilmette, Fall River,

. Edward, A. Roster, son of Mrs. New Bedford graduates ,in­ and 'Rose Gillin. won the award for the senior Joseph C. Roster, 168 Tremont Cardoza, son with the highest average for fourclude ·Antone ofStreet, (magna cum laude); John' gree summa cum laude is Rose. North Easton . years in busines administration.

Mrs. Patricia Cardoza, 33 Georget, Sullivan, son of Mrs. John. E:­ ,E. Gillin, daughter of Mr. and ·Four students represent North . Carol A. Braga (cum laude), S~llivan, 26 Briggs Street (cum Street, and Edward J. Tynan, Mrs. Francis O. Gillin, '218 Sum­ Easton. Thomas L. Higgins Jr.; daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Peter laude). . son of Mr: and 'Mrs, Edward F. mer .Street, ~ew Bedford; son, of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas L. Braga; 27 Heatley Street, Fall

. Bachelor of Science in Busi­ Higgins, .54 Pond Street, andTynan; 42' County 'Street, both River, won the 'award for the ness Administration degrees Robert J. Wooster, 16 Sheridan. student who has done distin­were awarded to the following recipients of B~chelor of Arts ,Cross-Word Solution. Street (cum laude), ,received guished work in speech-arts.degrees.. ' ... ", . '.

, Bachelor of Artsdegrees.~Bach;'from Taunton: Amalia E. An­ " Winning,' the general excel,..Ne'w • :Bedf~rd' r.ecipients :of elorof .Science in Business Ad- '··nunziato;79 Kilmer Avenue, sOn lence award' for' the sophomore, of' Mrs. ".ngeliila Annunziato; Science'in Business Administra­ ministr~tio;'; degrees were earned

. year was Miss. Theresa C. Tbeo­'J!>seph A .. ~n tion'degrees are Jqho' T Curry," byP,eter A. Tracy, son of Mn. Mr: and Mrs. Joseph C. Betten- .

Bettencourt,' 'of d.ore, daughter of Mr, and Mrs.SOn of Mr. and MJ:'s.John T. 'EdwardJ. Tracy, 91 Main Street,..

court, 20 Presbrey' Avenue; a'nd John G. Theodore, 29 H~rtfordCurry,.2i ,S. Emerson Street; and Louis G. Silva, 18 Spooner Strf;!et,. Dartmouth.Thomas J. son John A. Markey, 'son 'of Mr. '~treet, soil of Mr. and Mrs· John,

and Mrs. Stephen A. Markey, 28Whalen, of' Mr.

The Rev. James J. Shee~an, Bullock .Street; and' Bernard T.

. a. Silva..~d Mrs. Thomas W. Whalen, 8 Nine Commencement Awards C.S.C., Award to a deserving

.Swansey, son of Mr..and Mrs. General Cobb Street.

~ere given: for scholastic excel- freshman working his 'tIayGreater Fall River' George, E. Swansey, 53 Vine through college wel)t to Arman. lenec and distinguished work

o : Fall River students earning . Street· (C,um laude). J: Yelle, son of Mr. and Mrs. Bachelor of Arts degrees include Graduating as valedictorian

during college years. The fol­lowing diocesan students re­ Armand' J. Yelle, 82 Scho~l

Carol A. Braga, daul~hterof Mr. wJth a Bachelor of Science de-' ceived awards: . Street, Taunton. .. . . . . - .. I ,

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Page 19: 06.05.58

.

.;}. .;.

r THE ANCHOR­Sports Chdtter .'.. '.. 19Thurs., June 5, 1958

'Annual Schoolboy' Tourney BQch to DirectGets Under Way Today Fordham Sports

By Jack Kineavy NEW YORK (NC) - John W. Bach, 34 Fordham's successfulThe annual Eastern Massachusets Schoolbqy Baseball basketball coach, has been ap­Tournament is scheduled to get under way this afternoon" pointed university athletic di­

though at this writing the official .pairi~gs .have ~ot been rector. released. The latest word from Ernest Dalton, Boston Globe He succeeds Jack Coffey, whe

held 'the post 32 years and wi)}schoolboy sports editor and Home, Fall River. Greek-Ameri­retire June 30.one of the tourney coordin- cans of Brockton and Young Na­

Bach will continue as basket­ators,. indicated that Bristol tionals of Fall River will meet ball coach, a post he has heltlCounty would again be in the companion attraction. since ::'950. . matched against the Bay State Bill . Russell, Boston Celtics'

A native of Brooklyn and aentries,' fabulous pivotrnan, will be the former Fordham "most valuablefeatu'red speaker Sunday night

Durfee, defending state and at the testimonial for Santo player" basketball star,. Bach Class A champion, will go against Christos' basketball squad, Fall served with the Navy in the the winner of River CYO champions. Rev. Pacific and Mediterranean dur­AWARDS HIGHLIGHT BOWLING SEASON: Men of the No~ood- Francisco C. Bettencourt, pastor, ing World War II. After gradll ­

St. ;John 'the Baptist·paris~ in New Bedford have just con­Nat i c k til t will deliver the invocation. ation, he played with the Boston cluded'a most successful parish bowling season. Here Presi­ Celtics in the National Basket­which was to Frank Milliken, program chair­

h a v e bee n man, will present Rev. Anthony dent George Pimerital(second from left) presents trophies ball A~sociation.

played on Tues- M. Gomes, curate. at Santo to .(left to right) ·Albert .WiIliams, 'high triple; George Mar..,. During his eight seasons at day to resolve Christo, who ,will be master ,of Fordham, Bach's teams havetin, high avedl.ge and Manuel Rapoza, high single. Bay S tat e' s cere·monies. Mayor Arruda, will won '135 and lost 72. Two of his

1,.1 : • ..,. " ieamsplayed in NCAA tourna::"run n e r - u p extend the city's greetings. ",' En- .'

f~stivals; while his squads also deadlock. Bisbop Hunt 'Guest Attractive Soccer Twin Feature ments, two in ECAC Holiday'r ~g~ie c t:0 ~~e, '.". lJishop Duane G. Hunt of Salt

Lake City was the honored guest To Benefit St. Vincent's Home have' been in the National Inv.i"'; tation 'Tournament. .. ,Durfee defeated" at the 50th ,anniversary: spqrts .A soccer t~ih bill for, the b~ne-:- ways be depended upon to pro:"

' both schools, Natick succumb- reunion at Waverly High school fiLof St. Vincent's Home,iit,FaIi 'Vide stiff opposition for any'op­;.' ing 3-2, in the qualifying round last week. Members.Q~ ,the '08, 'River~;u~qay, at Fall Riyer Sta.., ponent. Germany Decorates . . and Norwood going down, 10.-5 '09. 'and '10 atbletic teams at- dium,.'f.ill'climax the highly suc- The tournament final between Conference Official in the quarter finals. tended the gathering. Bjshop cessful . invitation jun~or soccer Portuguese Sports and Ludlow t

WASHINGTON (NC)"":' Sylo­Coyle, meanwhile, will take Hunt, a convert to the Faith,. tournament sponsored 'by,' the Boys Club rates as one of the vester P. Theisen,' director pr~on Framingham, possessor of taught at the school during ~hose Soutq.ernNew England "CYO finest junior attractions of the tern of the Foreign Visitors Ol­a ·12-4 slate. Dartmouth, Narry years and coached the. teams. Soccer· League.' season. fice, National Catholic Welfaretitlist, will likely be paired off During the three.,.year period, . ,.in .',the curtain-raiser," Sched!.. Sponsors of the tournament Conference, has been decoratdagainst Old Colony's No.2 te.am, Bishop· Hunt's . baseball team J.i¢4"atl, thePortuguese.i~i>ortj; are hoping for' a large turnout with the' Officer's' Cross of thewhile Case, the loop's second lost··only one game. Basketball of New Bedford and the Ltidlo~ of: fans for .the benefit program O"der .of Merit of the Federalplace team on June I, the tour- and' football were just starting Bois Cltfb will meeUn' the'tOur~ Sunday. Manuel Freitas of Fall

ney deadline, will take on cham- as.school.sports at the time. nament flnal. 'The ,nightcap ';df River, acting president of the nepl\P~ic of ,Germany at the German 'Embassy here.pion Wareham. We hasten to .add A track item from~coni<l, 'the benefit' program 'will pit the CYO' League and tournament

The presentation was made ~that these are probable pairings N. H. has Lou Kirouac, 18-year- Greek-Americans of Brockton director, points out that in addi­Wilhelm' Grewe, German Am­in that at the time we conferredgld senior at Bishop. Brac:iley '. ,against the, Young Nationals ·of tio!' to .·seeing two good soccer. basSador to the United States­with Mr. Dalton, the selection High School, in Manchester, set- Fall River in a non-league en­ games, fans attending the bene­who cited Mr. Theisen's servicCicommittee had not yet consid- ting a new state ,record for the counter. fit program Sunday will also be in promoting the student ex­ered the Class B entries. . ., javelin with a 193' 4%" toss. No In their first season in organ- doing a good deed because the change program between theFavors Wareham, Durfee . less than five records fell by the ized soccer, the ,arocktonites entire' proceeds will be turned United States and Germany, andwayside in the recent Bristol have been raising havoC with over to St. Vincent's Home. in strengthening the friendshipHowever, inasmuch as the County Meet, won by New Bed- veteran elevens of the Boston Soccer officials have once and understanding between ~ .... committee does, as a rule, adhere ford: New marks were set in the and District Soccer League in the again repeated their most ardent two nations. .to a regular pattern, and since 100-yard dash, 440, relay, high State Cup competition conducted desire that the parents of· the

Narry and Old Colony have been d h t t II b C h b th H b' ·t The il,lternational high schoOl matched at thE; outset for' the jump an s 0 pu" a y oac y e u CIrcUl. Young Na- players attend the games to give

exchange program, partly ad­Boucher's charges. ftionals are members of the Inter- the youngsters the encourage­ministered by Mr. Theisen, madepast two years, it is logical to Sylvia Sets Record State Soccer League. and can al- ment they so well -deserve.

assume that the same arrange- Ed Sylvia ran' the 100 in 10.1 it possible for some 400 Germaa

ment will be continued. Off eclipsing the old mark of 10.2 C· t· t J ·t C II young people of grade, high what we have seen of the com- held jointly by Walter Janiak" onnec ICU eSUI, 0 ege Plans school and college levels, te

visit the' United States for apeting teams, Wareham has to Voke, 1931 and Buddy Andrew,. T B ·Id L G · m be adjudged the area favorite in Durfee 1957.' John Silveira, o· UI . arge, ymnaslu year, and to stay with America. B competition and Durfee again again the. meet's. outsta'ilding FAIRFIELD (NC)-Construc- phase of Fairfield University's families or at.American colleges.

Under the program, similar ar.gets the nod in Class A. cOmpetitor,,had things all his tioil of 'one of the largest gyin- development program, whicb rangements were made in G~For Coach Clem Spillane's own .~ay in the 440, touring the nasiumsin Connecticut will began in 1956. A classroom­many for U. S. youth. ..Capeway nine it'll be their third distance, in 50:3 seconds. The ' ·begiQ.soonat Fairfield Univer- library building and a dormi­

successive venture in post sea- Crim~on: relay team-Gerry For- sity.' '~i>ry, to meet the university'!! son play. On each of the. pre-," tier,.Sylvia, Bob Girard and Sil- ' Fath'er James E. ~itzGerald, increasing. enrollIhent' opened A. D. McMULLEN'vious two occasion!! Wareham", .veiri-,-set: a' record i:32.8 pace ··the Jesuit university's president, last September. was eliminated in the qualifying ..bre~king the former 1:34.1' clock- sa'id. the gym will. have more Inc. round. Prevost turned the tric~ . "ing>of Attleboro in 1955. '. than 35,000 square feet of floor More Vocations MOVERS in '56 and Somerset in '57. 'OrC '. :Big Lee Baptiste put the shot ·space. It will be 62 feet wide and FORT WAYNE (NC)-Bishop SERVING .both occasions, pitcher ,:rom .EC;- 50'4" to set aside -the' former 212 feet long, and will cost ap- Leo A. Pursley of Fort Wayne. Fcall ,River, New Bedford~cleston absorbed the loss. '.fom, ,mark held by John Collins "Voke, ·proximately one million dollars. has. ordered a prayer to· be said however, a fast-balling right- .1955. In the high jum~, the It is expected' to be opened by at all daily Masses for an in­ Ccape Cod Area hander whose exploits th~, ..Crimson's Arnie Isa~sen soared .next Christmas. ' " ' crease in religioJ,ls vocations' in .: Agent: Spring have again ,attracted a 5'10%", almost two full inches . The building; is the ~n~, ' the diocese. He appointed two AERO MAYFLOWERlegion of scouts, is apt t? pr~ve .bigher than the previous high ' additional' priests to work with

TRANSIT CO. INC. too tough for Case thiS tIme beld' jointly by Dick Monjeau Ten Million Goal ,the diocesan vocations program around. and Jim Nightengale,New Bed- for a .more extensive imd sys­ Nation·wide Movers

t h d 1956' Th . d"d 1 GARY (NC)-A challenge . ­6 WYman 3-0904 pion, is a perennial tourney, en-· performances highlighted t:he double its membership has been vocationll. .

Durfee, BristoI Coun y c am- ..or, " ese In IVI ua .... tematic promotion of religious 304 Kempton St. New Bedford

try. Once again, Coach Luk~ Crimson's runaway victory. .issued to Indiana State Knights Urban has put together a well- Taunton finished second 3;J of Columbus by Supreme Knight r···..•••••·••••·••..••••••·•••· • balanced club. The Hilltoppers points in arrears. Luke E. Hart. . He p~oposed a • YES WE HAVE •••who were undefeated last Spring goal of 50,000 Knights in the and who dropped only one de- Produces Results' next five years. This would be Extra 1ge. KINGcision this campaign, 12-3, to WNDON (NC)-The Catholic in line with the supreme coun-New Bedford, have mound depth, cil's goal of two million members SIZE King SizeInquiry Bureau, started four . 10 batti'ng and defensive strength. 1 ' In years.years ago to spread the Faith Tom Arruda, battery mate Russ through advertisements. in the Gibson, and infielder Topper Ur- popular press, has received its ban were' the only main cogs 100,000th request for informa­to be graduated, so that it's fair tion. .ATWOOD to say that Durfee has experi­ence down the line. You've got to OIL' COMPANY go with the champ!

Soccer Sunday SHELL On the soccer front, Portu­

guese Sports of New Bedford and HEATING OILS Ludlow Boys Club will meet Sunday at Fall River Stadium

South • Sea Sts. at" 1 o'clock in the final of the Southern New England CYO Soc­ Hyannis Tel. HY 81 cer League's Junior Invitation Tournament. The Sports gained the finals by dint of a 3-2 vic­tory over Espirito Santos, CYO

Tunin~. Repairinc .League champions, last Sunday & Rebuildin« ,in the Stadium; In the other

semi-final, Ludlow whitewashed the Tiverton. Orioles, 3-0. CLASSIC ORGAN

:.:~Waldemar de Oliveira, Sporia' .. \ , . Co.··· i ......,\. .i'..,oalie, put on a kemendous ell ­

hibition to hold Espirito Santo Designers & 'Build~ .. to two goals. The deciding mark­ of er came late in the game _bell PIPE ORC:;A~, Octavio 8enra drilled· bome a Penalty shot past goalie TavareL P. O. Box 347 New Bedford .'1'he ehampionship final Sunda)' WYman 3·8683will be the opener of a twin bill

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Page 20: 06.05.58

, WHITE' S.lSTERS DOING EXCELLENT JOB FOR DIOCESE: Medeiros and Edward Murphy. In the center, Sist~r Albert plays peg board ,The, best in care and attention for' children of pre-school age is provided with Billy Murphy. At the right, children say grace before meal with Sister. by the Daughters of the Holy' Ghost. Parents who find it necessary to They are, left to right, Donna Mello, R:ose Marie Martin, Sister Charles work are assured. their children 'receive the finest in spiritual and physical Levi and Raymond Desrochers.' The' Nu'rsery has been in operation eare during'their work-day. Here, at the left, are DonaIdDupuis~ Donna S~nce .1910, '

" Return Love of, Little Tots Families Adopt,' Ordain Mansfield Man June 14 iodine medicine and educatingContinued from :Puge, One place at table and waited until Continued from Page OneParent-Youth ,the people in the cause and curethousands of' children have everyone was seated. Then, at.a deacon; Rev. Mr. Thomas Kirch- , of goiter. Many of the Mary­spent happy days and ye~rs sigmil from Sister, they made the Code Rules ,. myer; Maryknoll seminarian,' knollers are veterans of the '.~

under' the guidan~e of the SlS- Sign of the Cross with a preci- , MONTPE'LIER, vt. (NC)-The sub-deacon; and Mr. William China missions who were ex­sion to put many. grown'-ups to 'Keiley, brother of the ordinand,ters, h '0. ., d" h t' g Montpelier Parent-Youth Code" . pelled by the Communists. Ini A Nursery day begins as early s arne, an, Jome mean In a Society of the Divine Word

addition Maryknoll has a num­as 7:45, when workmg paren s . tion with the' Recreation Depart- ber of parishes in the city of

. t grace adopted by parents in coopera- semi,narian, 'will be master 'of

· tart droppi,ng their children at Dinner ~usic, Too ,ceremonies. Father Edward L.8 ment, has been signed by, more, Miaoli among them Hakaka the big brick building with its Dinner, a hot meal, consisted than 50 families which have O'B):ien, pastor of St. Mary's, speaking people.distinc',-ve blue and white rep- of mashed potatoes, spinach, teen-age children, it has been ,will deliver the sermon. World-Wide Mission tesentations of th~ Infant Jesus. meatballs with gravy, ,milk and announced. Parish Reception Most Rev. Thomas A. Boland,Lollipops all around. start things dessert'.\ The menu,' of course, About 1,000 copies of the code A reception for the newly or- Archbishop of Newark, will de­eff. Then the ~hil!l:ren scatter varies daily, with great consid- have been distributed through- ·,dained priest will be held in the liver the principal address at to the 'outdoor playground in eration given to the children's out Vermont's capital city with ,parish hall from 3 to 5 followed ,the Jl,lne 15 departure ceremony.good weather, or to an indoor tastes. Watermelon, for instance, the hope that all parents of teen- by Benediction in the Church at Maryknoll is the popular name playroom on rainy da)'s, is a great summertime favor~te agers will sign up and follow the 5:15. for the Cahtolic Foreign Mission , 'Excellent Deportment and so is corn on the cob, with' ,five-p'oint code, it was stated. 'After graduating from Mans- Society of America, founded in

f th even the ,smallest children in- The code provides: field High School in 1949 Father 1911. Today it is a world-wide · It was towards the end 0 e Sl'sting on having theirs "on the ' Kelley entered St. Charles Sem­, l' 0. h we 1. Importance of parents being mission group of over 1,600morning p ay peno )N en cob," so they can eat it as t h h 1 inary in Baltimore. The follow­ members, including priests,arrived. Children were romping grown-ups do. a orne w en you,ng peop e en­, h b t' r 'an'other tertain', limit the number to ing year he joined Maryknoll to Brothe'rs imd stfidents with mis­everyw ere; u one 0 Soft musl'c accompanl'ed din- b . t 0.' f th f' ,· - '. t S'ster J'ust guests who can easily be accom-' egm s u les or e orelgn mlS- sion areas in the Far East,kept runmng up 0 1 ' nero It calms the cl:iildren sion priesthood. At' MaryknollA , h t '1 into her modated; bar party crashers; Africa, Middle and South Amer­long enoug 0 sml e up and it aids digestion, explained he earned a Bachelor of Arts .... , , . I hug and establish definite hours appro- ica and Islands of the Pacific.face or receive a qUlc C Mother ~ a practl'cal tip w.e 0. M t f R 1" Ed'0. ' priate to age group. an a as er 0 e IglOUS u­pat on e ea. stored in memory for future use. cation Degree.th h

h 2. Suggested. hours for ter- New· Officers - Suddenly Sister clapped er .A two-hour rest period follows mination '6f:social activities and Father Kelley has fIve broth- NEW YORK, (NC) - Msgr.hands, Instantly the chlidren dinner, .then the children are f h 1 ers and two sisters.~ They are' .gen~rill dating outside 0 sc 00 James M. Lowry of Scranton has came running from every corner served milk or fruit juice and supervision, 11 P. lYI. for senior Mrs. Leo Schliecher and Miss been elected president of the''m. the playground. Wi.th uribe- cookies. S~metimes the after- - high school students, with one Jane Kelley of Mansfield, ahd Eastern Conference of the Canondlievable speed they quiete noon includes a brief kinder'- J. Spencer, Paul, Robert, Wil­hour to get home, and 10 P. M. Law Society of America. Heddown; formed intQ lines, an garten period -when simple for' junior high school students'; liam ,and Gerard Kelley, -all of succeeds Msgr~ Vincent J. Hines marched into the ~uilding to hymns and' catechism lessons parents should insist upon phone Mansfield. ' "of Hartford. ,Other new officers wash hands and faces fOI" lunch. are taught, and a visit to the call if plans are changed. . Before leaving for the Mary­ are Holy Ghost Father Charles

As they passed us, we blinked Sisters' chapel may be made; , 3.' Proper dress for occasions; knoll missions of Formosa, P. Connors of Norwalk, vice­with surprise. The tricyclescthat otherwise there's another play parents, and children should ,Father Kelley 'will have a short president, 'and, Father James R. had been scattered verywhere session, or/a 'suitablemovil< may have an understanding as to vacation at· home ,with his film.., Searson of New York, secretary­were now drawn up with military be ·shown.. where and with whom time is to' ily. /" treasurer. precision against a wall. Moth- . By three o~clock most of the be spent; girls and parents. On Formosa, the'Maryknoil ers who fight a losinl~ battle children are ready for a farewell should agree'on definite time for 'Fathers have charge of the Pre::' Well Done against toys left outdoors all lollipop and the trip home; how- return home. fecture of Taichung.. located' in WASHINGTON (NC) -Edith night every night should see ever, the Nursery is officially 4. Teen-agers entrusted with ,the center {If the island and' care H. . Jarboe, assistant, business that, we thought! open until five and they may automobiles must not touch al- for half of the entire Catholic manager o:':°the National Catholic · When,' 'e followed the chil- stay until then. coholic. b,everages; parents and ·population of Formosa. One fac~ Welfare Conference, has retired «ken indoors, 'our amazement Fees Moderate teen-age driver should have tor contriquting to the growth of aft~r 3;) ~'ears with the ~CWC. grew at the deportment of these Many of the tots are chiidren some understanding on main- -the Church in the area was the ti~y tots. They -formed in line of' working parents, explained tenance, use and wear of car; contact work and charity of the .0 get washed, then each took his Mother Yves de St. Jean. Other teen-agers not to drive without first' post-war missioner' and .... : - . families find the Nursery a so-' legal right and avoid reckle/3s- .their successful battle wagedLawyers Must elite lution to the problem of child ness and "verloading. Mainst goiter which was en­· urce of' RI', ghts' care when 'the mother is ill. And 5. Parent- 'should make deci- demic to the region. .So we thought ,too that parents of sion regarding use of alcoholic Mobile clinics were ·sent about "PITTSBURGH.(NC)-"-Catho~ic only children migJit be happy to beverages by their own children the countryside distributing lawyers -have a duty to call at- know of the Nursery as a place' in the' home; Vermont state law tention to the fact ·that rights where their' youngsters' could prohibits sale of liquor to minors

'come from God, not. from. the' find companionship with other and'" serving them', liquor in state: ' children and learn'the art, of ,c' p.ubl~c.

Even the state's right to make get'ting along with them.' . , " ·'Sunday. Salesiaws RedemptoristFather Fran- , Fees are 'moderate, $1'a day, ~is 'j. Connell told the St. or $5 a week per child. A child ,SHREVEPORT,(NC)~A reso­

lution' to discourage Sunday,Thomas. More Guild of Catholic may' cOIl'\e as little as one day shopping and encourage properlawyers, ,is God-given. ' a week, add he pays only for

:' It therefore follows that the 'days he is present. This means observance of the day has been ,passed by the Louisiana Coun­dvil authority cannot pass law's' that if he's -sick and must be

contrary to the natural law, part absent; no charge is made. The cil of the Knights of Columbus. of the eternal law of 'God which $1 covers dinner and the after­llPplies to human beings, th(~ for~ noon snack. \ mer dean of the School of Sacred Parents interested in entering Theology at the Catholic Uni- their children' in the Nursery voersity of America, declared..' may contact Mother Yves de St.

Father Connell stressed that Jean' at th~ Sisters' Convent, 194 a'lawyer may not assist a client Second Street, or telephoQe her who sues with false claims at OSborne""'2-4472. At present backed by perjury. He also said: there are a few vacancies avail ­"Some'so-called criminal law- able, and the Nursery 'operates' yers are actuaily criminals them- throughout the summer. selves because they are str.iving Possibly'the best· comment on,

'to obtain the release of persons the quality of' the care the little tllE;y know will be a menace to ones receive was mad by Chris­society by their career of crime." sie, ou":" junior reporter, on the

morning after her visit. "Chris-, sie loves Sister," sh~ suddenlyBigger ~nd More remarked. She paused thought­

OTTAWA (N¢)-Canadaneeds fully, then added; "And Sister bigger homes with more children loves Chrissie." in them, non-Cathoiic Senator Sister does love all' the ·little Ross Macdona~d, Liberty' party Chrissies-and it's easy to see leader in the .Ca,nadia~ Senate, that they know it,. and love her ~ ~lared. in return.

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. The Capuchin Brothers are working for "a hundredfold' and life everla'sting". Find ·happiness serving God here and in foreign missions as sacristan, cate­chist, inffrmarian, office worker, gar­dener, chef; tailor, dporkeeper, carpen­ter, electrician, maintenance man; etc, Young men between· 18 and 35 inter­ested in joining the. Capuchin Brothers to' work for Christ write to:

, REV. FR. EYMARD, O.F.M. Cap.

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,Milton 86, Massachuset~s