07.02.59

20
.. Soldier . Our problem then is with the difficulty. and certainly the impossibility; of serving Mam-. mon and, God at one arid the sam'e time, when every human weakness draws us in the diree- . tion of material values, and little is done to 'the service' 'and reverence due the lord, not' on Sundays. We must then stir up our own convictions, give full expression to our religious life, in the first place. W. should rec.ogn'ize .that the tumult of the mar- ket-place should, not find expression at G'" time when in good conscience and with honest ,. hearts we ought to give the Good God His due. Religion has a right to be in the market-' place, guiding the morality, and upholding the standards of those that honor the Day of the .. lord. It should be articulate in the Church. in the community. Unless it finds publiC assertion a'nd steady expression it can readily be lost. And when religion 'is .lost, God is lost. And when God is lost, all is lost. This is no matter of dictation to another. It is rather a problem of safeguarding what has. been' and ought to be a sacred institution. It should not be summed up in the phrase let them do this to. you"-but, rather "don't do such a serious harm to yourselves." 'let us aH stand for what we reverence and the lord's Day holy. But; there are those•. and their number i. growing,' wl1b set on Qffront,ing our con- victions -and our Christian traditions, in the name of individual liberty the. chance to 'make a hasty•. profit ;by ·reason of neglect or seeming ,indif,ference on our part. . It would be a shame to let. them get away with it. It would' be . weak'ness _in faith and weariness. in conviction for any of us to fail to act in the knowledge that we too are free. and that we have a right to trade where we please. Becomes • _Seminarian I think it is high time say. a' war,d, about Sunday and th,egrowing tende_ncy to-slight it liy making Sunday day' ""'.. . , , Weare Christian people. We ho've .grown up in the: belief that religion leads up: to: know- ledge,lov.e and service of God. We 'em);. to of Sunday as the lord's'Ody there .should l:ie none but necessarylaboi to which we are bound by the demands of charity and consideration for a neighbor's unexpected want. Traditionally, and through conviction. we have joined with one another acts of · public worship. But,' more than that, we have' tried to keep holy the entire day, keeping it. in the consciousness that it is good for man to take time off, not merely for. rest and relax- · Qtion, but to' adjust his ideals 'and habi'ts so as 'to keep right with God and his The late John Foster Dulles, a man of deep and' active faith, regretted that' in' his. latter not the time to throw off the den of responsibility and anxiety and to con- sider':-"contemplate," was the word he used- 'the problems and the opportunities that he met · with, and, put them in p'roper relationship,' not W:ith edch other, but with a view to their Du'lles was a, church:goer. He reCog- nized his obligations to God. To him as to.oll true Christians, Sunday was a day to be set apart for paying heed and giving thankful recognition to the lord and Master of the uni- But he cherishished also the chance to keep his spiritual house in order and think of the higher and' nobler things' of life. Far . '!Iany the observance of Sunday is limited to a respeCtful nod and an air of. re·spectability. Others, and I'wish they :.ver. a majori,ty, carryon in the best traditic:m, seeing Sunday.-as it was meant to be and as it he;:'s been until recently-a day to kept holy. without servile work,· and not marred by "bus- iness as usual" signs. Cardinal Hits Court Sunday Ruling ._ BOSTON· (NC)-A Federal court decision which holds the Massachusetts Sunday closing law is unconstitutional has been criticized by .His Eminence Richard Cardinal Cushing, Archbishop of Boston. The 2-to-1 court decision deals with the Crown Kosher Market of Springfield. The market which closed on Saturdays, the Jewish Sabbath, had been convict.ed of ·vio- However, the Federal court "I th'ink we all, have been lating . the ,state law regulating has reversed the decision, charg- shocked to learn that, in the Sunday closing,. Both the convic- I ing that compulsory Sunday minds of' many modern states- tilin and constitutfonality of the closing laws violate the Federal men and jurists, Sunday has Sunday law were upheld by the Constitution. lost its religious significance and Supreme Judicial Court of'Mas- Cardinal Cushing, taking note has thus lost the right to pro- sachusetts last November. 'of the ,court's decision, said: Turn to Page Eighteen RELIGION IN' THE MA-RKET PLACE? © 1959 The Anchor The Most Reverend Bishop has called mon the faithful of the Diocese and others of similar traditions "to stand for what we reverence and keep the'Lord's Day holy," in a statement published below. The Bishop said that "it is high time to say a word about Sunday observance and the growing tendency to slight it by making Sunday 'Just an- other day.''' The Bishop states that this, is no matter of dictating to others .what they .should dQ, but rather, a "problem of safe-guarding what has been and ought to be a sacred institution.", There has been strong pres- The Bishop's statement calls And he points out 'that it would sure in recent weeks to over- ',for religion to be articulate and be a shame, to' allow those who ·throw the Sunday laws regard- to find public assertion as it does seek' a hasty and -surreptitious ing sales and to weaken them to when Sunday is kept with .due profit by selling on Sunday to a point where there will be "bus- Unless this is done, get away with it. To those people iness as usual." Men and women he, says, religion is lost and God the Bishop' says, 'ilt would' be '.' of all faiths have seen this as is lost and all, is; lost. weakness in faith arid in con-' another sign of the infiltration J victions for any of us to fail of ,materialism into society and' The Bishop asks ·that God be - given His due and that the mar- to act in the knowledge that have insisted that the Lord's ket-place be not allowed to in- we too are free; and that we Day be kep . holy according to terfere th,e service of God. have. a right to trade where we their. convictions and the tradi- . please.'" tions of 'country and state. ' The Bishop's Statement: Our New Pope The' Second Instt:dll!'ent bIography of Pope' XXIII Is on Page Seven "'155'S'S:" Sigtssss:::.:,:,:::::::: is SSSSgSi'SS':: is):::: %%.%%P New High· School :Is Ultra Modern .. .. , . 'l'HERE IS NONE BETTER: Bishop Connolly (second from left) and, Auxiliary Bishop Gerrard (extreme right) greet incoming Class' of the new Bishop Stang High School in Dartmouth at the Kennedy Youth Center , . , New Bedford. Father Edward J. G6rman, diocesan school superintendent, (left) and . Sister Anne Depise,' principal, also addressed the prospective first year student body. The facilities at Bishop Stang are the best in modern secondary educa,tion in the East., The ANCHOR An Anchor of the Soul, Surs and fi"irm-ST. PAUL Fall River, Mass. Thursday, July 2, VI -3 .... '27 ,lIeeoa" .Ct... M.i1 PRICE 10e o. , .-..0.' .... thorluol .t '.11' Ri9ft. M.... $4.00 '"' ,_ , Members 'of the pioneer freshman Class .of' Bishop Stang North were greeted· by !\fost Reverend James L. Connolly, Bishop of 'Fall River; Rev. James J. Gerrard, Auxiliary Bishop ;and Rev. Edward J. Gorman, Dioces- " He,..explained that tne' campus an Sup e,r i n ten den t of comprises five buildings. A con- Schools, at an assembly at·, vent, four stories high;' will Kennedy Center, New Bed- accommodate 36 Sisters; a chapel ford. will . serve' both Sisters and students. . The future students also met The academic building is three their principal, Sister Anne Den- stories, including 24 classrooms. ise of the Sisters· of Notre Dame Four science laboratories for . de Nam.ur; Sister general sciences, biology, physics MarguerIte, . regIonal supervisor <:> and chemistry, are', completely of for the Notre Dame equipped. There are three com- commumty. mercial rooms, and art and Father Gorman described the ,homemaking studios. Offices in- plant of the high school to the clude a principal's office, coun- students. "Wait until you see selor's room and chaplain's your new school," he said. office. . "You'll be proud that you are A sep\lrate ,administration entering." , Turn to Page Five " " , ...

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vers~. But he cherishished also the chance to 'l'HEREISNONEBETTER:BishopConnolly(second fromleft) and,AuxiliaryBishop Gerrard (extremeright) greet t~e incoming Fr~shman Class'ofthenewBishopStang HighSchoolinDartmouth at theKennedyYouthCenter , Members 'of the pioneer freshman Class .of'Bishop Stang High~chool, North Dartm~uth, were greeted·by !\fost Reverend James L. Connolly, Bishop of'Fall River; Mo~t Rev. James J. Gerrard, Auxiliary Bishop;and Rev. Edward J. Gorman, Dioces- " %%.%%P . . ,

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: 07.02.59

..

Soldier

. Our problem then is with the difficulty.and certainly the impossibility; of serving Mam-.mon and, God at one arid the sam'e time, whenevery human weakness draws us in the diree-

. tion of material values, and little is done tosafegua~d 'the service' 'and reverence due thelord, not' e~en on Sundays. We must then stirup our own convictions, give full expressionto our religious life, in the first place. W.should rec.ogn'ize .that the tumult of the mar­ket-place should, not find expression at G'"

time when in good conscience and with honest ,.hearts we ought to give the Good God His due.

Religion has a right to be in the market-'place, guiding the morality, and upholding thestandards of those that honor the Day of the..lord. It should be articulate in the Church.a~d in the community. Unless it finds publiCassertion a'nd steady expression it can readilybe lost. And when religion 'is .lost, God is lost.And when God is lost, all is lost.

This is no matter of dictation to another.It is rather a problem of safeguarding whathas. been' and ought to be a sacred institution.It should not be summed up in the phrase"don~t let them do this to. you"-but, rather"don't do such a serious harm to yourselves."

'let us aH stand for what we reverence andkee~ the lord's Day holy.

But; there are those•. and their number i.growing,' wl1b se~m set on Qffront,ing our con­victions -and our Christian traditions, in thename of individual liberty ci~d the. chance to'make a hasty•. surreptitio~~ profit ;by ·reasonof neglect or seeming ,indif,ference on our part.

. It would be a shame to let. them get awaywith it. It would' be . weak'ness _in faith and

weariness. in conviction for any of us to failto act in the knowledge that we too are free.and that we have a right to trade where weplease.

Becomes•• _Seminarian

I think it is high time t~ say. a' war,d, aboutSunday observa~ce and th,egrowing tende_ncyto-slight it liy making Sunday .~'j~.t ano~her

day'""'.. ., ,

Weare Christian people. We ho've .grown upin the: belief that religion leads up: to: know­ledge,lov.e and service of God. We 'em);. ~sedto thinki~g of Sunday as the lord's'Ody ";'h~n'

there .should l:ie none but necessarylaboi towhich we are bound by the demands of charityand consideration for a neighbor's unexpectedwant. Traditionally, and through conviction.we have joined with one another i~ acts of

· public worship. But,' more than that, we have'tried to keep holy the entire day, keeping it.in the consciousness that it is good for man totake time off, not merely for. rest and relax-

· Qtion, but to' adjust his ideals 'and habi'ts so as'to keep right with God and his fellow-men~

The late John Foster Dulles, a man of deepand' active faith, regretted that' in' his. latterd~ys he'h~d not the time to throw off the bu~­den of responsibility and anxiety and to con­sider':-"contemplate," was the word he used­'the problems and the opportunities that he met

· with, and, put them in p'roper relationship,' not~ione W:ith edch other, but with a view to their

'i~port. Du'lles was a, church:goer. He reCog­nized his obligations to God. To him as to.olltrue Christians, Sunday was a day to be setapart for paying heed and giving thankfulrecognition to the lord and Master of the uni­vers~. But he cherishished also the chance tokeep his spiritual house in order and think ofthe higher and' nobler things' of life.

Far . '!Iany now6days~ the observance ofSunday is limited to a respeCtful nod and an airof. re·spectability. Others, and I'wish they :.ver.a majori,ty, carryon in the best traditic:m, seeingSunday.-as it was meant to be and as it he;:'sbeen until recently-a day to ~ kept holy.without servile work,· and not marred by "bus­iness as usual" signs.

Cardinal Hits Court Sunday Ruling._ BOSTON· (NC)-A Federal court decision which holds the Massachusetts Sunday

closing law is unconstitutional has been criticized by .His Eminence Richard CardinalCushing, Archbishop of Boston. The 2-to-1 court decision deals with the Crown KosherMarket of Springfield. The market which closed on Saturdays, the Jewish Sabbath,had been convict.ed of ·vio- However, the Federal court "I th'ink we all, have beenlating .the ,state law regulating has reversed the decision, charg- shocked to learn that, in theSunday closing,. Both the convic- I ing that compulsory Sunday minds of' many modern states­tilin and constitutfonality of the closing laws violate the Federal men and jurists, Sunday hasSunday law were upheld by the Constitution. lost its religious significance andSupreme Judicial Court of 'Mas- Cardinal Cushing, taking note has thus lost the right to pro-sachusetts last November. 'of the ,court's decision, said: Turn to Page Eighteen

RELIGION IN' THE MA-RKET PLACE?© 1959 The Anchor

The Most Reverend Bishop has called mon the faithful of the Diocese and others ofsimilar traditions "to stand for what we reverence and keep the'Lord's Day holy," in astatement published below. The Bishop said that "it is high time to say a word aboutSunday observance and the growing tendency to slight it by making Sunday 'Just an­other day.''' The Bishop states that this, is no matter of dictating to others .what they

. should dQ, but rather, a "problem of safe-guarding what has been and ought to be a sacredinstitution.", There has been strong pres- The Bishop's statement callsAnd he points out 'that it would sure in recent weeks to over- ',for religion to be articulate andbe a shame, to' allow those who ·throw the Sunday laws regard- to find public assertion as it doesseek' a hasty and -surreptitious ing sales and to weaken them to when Sunday is kept with .dueprofit by selling on Sunday to a point where there will be "bus- r~verence. Unless this is done,get away with it. To those people iness as usual." Men and women he, says, religion is lost and Godthe Bishop' says, 'ilt would' be '.' of all faiths have seen this as is lost and all, is; lost.weakness in faith arid in con-' another sign of the infiltration J

victions for any of us to fail of ,materialism into society and' The Bishop asks ·that God be- given His due and that the mar-

to act in the knowledge that have insisted that the Lord's ket-place be not allowed to in-we too are free; and that we Day be kep . holy according to terfere ~ith th,e service of God.have. a right to trade where we their. convictions and the tradi-

. please.'" tions of th~ 'country and state. ' The Bishop's Statement:

Our New PopeThe' Second Instt:dll!'ent o~ th~ bIography of Pope' Joh~' XXIII Is on Page Seven

"'155'S'S:" Sigtssss:::.:,:,:::::::: is SSSSgSi'SS':: is):::: %%.%%P

New High· School:Is Ultra Modern.. .. , .

'l'HERE IS NONE BETTER: Bishop Connolly (secondfrom left) and, Auxiliary Bishop Gerrard (extreme right)greet t~e incoming Fr~shman Class' of the new Bishop StangHigh School in Dartmouth at the Kennedy Youth Center, . ,New Bedford. Father Edward J. G6rman, diocesan schoolsuperintendent, (left) and .Sister Anne Depise,' principal,also addressed the prospective first year student body. Thefacilities at Bishop Stang are the best in modern secondaryeduca,tion in the East.,

TheANCHORAn Anchor of the Soul, Surs and fi"irm-ST. PAUL

Fall River, Mass. Thursday, July 2, 195~

V I -3 .... '27 ,lIeeoa" .Ct... M.i1 Prjyil~.. PRICE 10eo. , .-..0.' ....thorluol .t '.11' Ri9ft. M.... $4.00 '"' ,_

, Members 'of the pioneer freshman Class .of' BishopStang High~chool, North Dartm~uth, were greeted· by!\fost Reverend James L. Connolly, Bishop of 'Fall River;Mo~t Rev. James J. Gerrard, Auxiliary Bishop ;and Rev.Edward J. Gorman, Dioces- "

He,..explained that tne' campusan Sup e,r i n ten den t of comprises five buildings. A con­Schools, at an assembly at·, vent, four stories high;' willKennedy Center, New Bed- accommodate 36 Sisters; a chapelford. will . serve' both Sisters and

students. .The future students also met The academic building is three

their principal, Sister Anne Den- stories, including 24 classrooms.ise of the Sisters· of Notre Dame Four science laboratories for

. de Nam.ur; an~ Sister A~nes general sciences, biology, physicsMarguerIte, . regIonal supervisor <:> and chemistry, are', completelyof schoo~s for the Notre Dame equipped. There are three com­commumty. mercial rooms, and art and

Father Gorman described the ,homemaking studios. Offices in­plant of the high school to the clude a principal's office, coun­students. "Wait until you see selor's room and chaplain'syour new school," he said. office. ."You'll be proud that you are A sep\lrate ,administrationentering." , Turn to Page Five

"",

...

Page 2: 07.02.59

I

.' I',' ~

EAST FREETOWN, .

c.· ,2" Thurs;,~J~~ ~~~~~:DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER. MASS.

Mass Ordo:'FRIDAY-St;. Leo n; Pope'and

Confessor. Shnple. - 'White."·Mass Proper; Gloria; Commc;lIs

Preface. Votive MaSs in honor,. of the Sacred .Heart of 'JeS\18

'.' permitted. Tomorrow ,is theFirst Saturday of the Month.'

.' SATURDAY- Mass 0(: theBlessed Virgin for Saturday.Simple. White. Mass Proper;Gloria; Preface of BlessedVirgin.

SUNDAY - VII Sunday AfterPentecost. Double. Green.,Mass Proper; Gloria; SecondCollect St. Anthony MaryZaccaria, Confessor; Creed.;Preface of Trinity.

MONDAY-Mass of the previousSunday. Simple Green. Mass

.Proper; No Gloria; CommODPreface.

TUESDAY-SS. Cyril and Me-' ,. thodius, Bishop!.' and ·Con­

fessors. Double, 'W·hite. MassProper; Gloria; CommODPreface.

WEDNESD1Y - St. Elizabeth,Queen and Widow. Simple.White. Mass Proper; Gloria;

, Common Preface.THURSDAY--'-Mass of the pre­

viou~ Sunday. Simple. Green.'MaSs ,Proper; No Gloria; Com­mon Preface.

DONNELLY..PAINTING'

','0'.::, 'SE,I,tVIGE" '::':.:

,. 135 Franklin Street''Fall Riv~r' , '" 9Sb'o~.:.e2'~1911

',' Commercial. Industrial",Institutional' "

';" . ,," Painting and 'Decorating

, 'JJi'iddieboro RoOd. Rovte Ie

.E.W.GOODHUE, Lumber Co. In~

oINCORPORATED 1937

F. L. COLLINS & 'SONS'.

'GENERAL (ONTRAaORS,and' ENGINEERS~AMES H. C.()LLlNS, ·C.E., Pres.

Registered civil and" StruCtural Engi~eerMember ~ational Society Professional Engineers

FRANCIS L COLLINS, JR., Treas.THOMAS K. COLLINS, Sec'y.

ACADEMY BUILDING FALL RIVER; MASS.

1St: "SPECIAl- 1St:WAUEY SIZE PICTURES

Laminated (S~ ~' -Plastic)15c eo. 2 for 25c p.p.

24 HOUR SERVICE

SEALAST, Box' 574NEW ,BEDFORD, ~ASS.

FORTY HOURSDEVOTION

July 5-St. Francis Xavier,Hyannis. .

,Holy Trinity, West Har-~

wjch. .-July·12-St. Joan of .Arc,

, Orleans.Our Lady of the 1\ssump­

tion, Osterville. -July 19-:-'-St. HyaCinth, New

Bedford."·St. ¥ary, South Dart-

. mouth. .July 26-5t. Stephen, Dodge­

ville., 'St.' Francis of,Assisi, ' New. Bedford.St. Pius X, South Yat­mOl,lth.

, ',' :rHE ANCHORSeCond-Class maiJ privileges authorized

"t Fall River,' Mass. Published'everyrhursda~ at 410 Highland Avenue. FallRiver. Mass,. oy the Catholic Press of theOioecsfI ,of Fall River. 'Subs(!riPtioD priee.. -)y mail, postpaid U.oo per year. .

,B'est. ~ar.t of Pic~ics'

All That Good Food!. Weary' personnel of Lin'coIn

Park, North Dartmouth, .pickedthemselves up after last week's'

,onslaughi of 17,000 yomlgstersat' ·the howlingly successful, Di-: 'oc~san School Picnic and shak­ing unbe~ievin~ heads, producedthe 'following statistics:

Enough' hot dogs were eatento make adouble row extending ,from St. Mary's School, Fall Riv- A G A h 'b It h"~er, to St. Mal'Y's Home, New Bed- HOSPITAL . WARD: Dr•. eorge rc a~ au ,c I,eJ.'ford;, 'via Route 6.·'" of ph!lrmacy serVIce, U. S. PublIc Health SerVIce, presents- .,Two toils of french 'fries disap:, ," award for outstanding contrib.ut!~~,to hospital. p.!'Iarrmicy

: 'Pea~e~ •. ~own youthful' :g,ullets, ,i to Sister Mary Bernice,oS.S.M., director. of. hospitalphar­.'. an~'. S.lX ~md a hal:f::co~s '~et:e .' .macY'service ,St. Mary's. Group of •Hospitals St.' Louis.\S~C~I~lcedi to pro.YI~e Pl1rp.,?~rg":'NC·Ph t' -" ,i. erd)eef for the ,pICnIckers. ," , " ,0 o~ ," " '.'" , ,'" I,.,'<.When'it came to sqdaj'Lin~~ln,})~~k)av~ up6ria!l·7eXacf'fig:,· Americari:·PriestsFirst to Offer_,i!.re , "En~ugh to .flp·at:a::lj~ttle- M-·'" ", .' ....i" 'G '. M • ..stt'ip;", was as cl6se:as.~Q~,staff asses on' I~ew ulnea'. ountaln,~~ould ket; ',' f' ','-' ',,;',' ALEXISHAFEN (NC)....:.. Two '., Father: Wiltgen is peFliaps",.the: :::J'l'o ' st~tistics,:'~Y~Ual?le" 'ori 'lfulerica'n priests have'reiul'ried : first·: person ever to sefout'On\pJ:.ie~~s, ~isters '. andf;..'~~tl1ers-")" liere, after" cele'B'rating Ma!ls'on "foot from the coast' to Climb'Mt.,Aor: ,qn how"lJla~y·,ioungs.ters: 'the top, .of '15;400::£00t Mt. W:il- . Wilhelm., He left on'; his esti-,'are counting days~till'nextyear's . ' ,'~'ffail":- , .. . '" he.Lm, highest, tt;lou!ltain in the " mated 220-mile walk from Alex-• , I." Territory of Papua an~ New isha:fen, near Madang,' on May 22.~iturgy pg'rticipation', Guinea. ,-:', At Wararuk Mission he was:\, .' The ,M~sses (on June 5) were joined by F::ther Johnson, who 'JRe.qui~es P:repcuatlon the first ever to be celebrated on organized the rest of the expedi-, MILWAUKEE (NO);-;'-, Full top of Mt. Wilhelm. tion, ·and by his' brother, James

'participation in. the .lit~rgy ~e.,. The priests are Divine Word Johnson, 22, a lay missionary in,quil'es a change of mentality in missionaries of the Alexishafen' charge of the vicariate' ware-'

'. both prieSts arid, people, accord- Vicariate, Father Bernard John- house at Alexishafen. James ac-ing to the president of the' son, 'head of Wararuk Miss~on, companied the expedition part""

, American ILiturgical Conference. /who is from Milwa.ukee, a~d way.Father I Shawn Slieehan of. ,.Father Raphael M, WIltgen, hIS- . ,....

,l~rightol),,!spoke ;at,¥l;lr,.uet¥ ." t?rian o~ ,the vi~arhite, who is .;"',',L~gion of De~el'i¢.y,. University, duri!1ga five.-d~y in,,: ,from C,hlCago. . ,. ." ", ' , ,l'he,followillg films ;ire to, be

stitute on religious' education The expedition was Star::ted' by' 'd'd" d to'" h' l' '.. "h" ',. , ,. , . . a e. ,t e. Ist~ In J.ell·, re- ··.·SEI THESE:';: 'sp'onsored, by the university's ,Father Wiltgen, who~anted to "spe~bv~, c~as~lficahons:. '. . . ' .1. theology departmeti..i arid Mary,. 'se~ fir::sthaQcl' the rQut~ iii"tc? the UilobjecHonable" for. ,general~'C'HEN'M~'

grove College, Detroit. , densely populate4 highlands dis- ,patronage: ~orse Soldiers; M,ira-, " , . ., .He reminded the group of'50 covered by pioneer Divine Word '. cle of the.HIlls., ': '.. ' , .. _ .' , " ,

Catholic Muca'tors and pUbHs~;; missionaries in 193~ and 1933. " ' Unobjectionable for adults and .." 'TeHeN., f:.,.ers that: i?telligen,t. participation F' G' "S' II·' d 1 ts S tin the,liturgy presumes a unity r. eorge u Ivan .. a 0 e~en: capegoa. "of-:-'friendly wo04

,of mind ~~d spirit in the cOIIgre-ls VFW Chaplain Unobjectionable for adults:, ' , , .. gatl'on and'. cannot be .fo,rced. ' ,Day of the Outlaw. .' WanD and companionable" wid! 'Rev:. George E..Sullivan, pastor

Catholics must .learn to see the of St. Dominic's Church, Swan- . many work-saving' ronveoiencealiturgy ks participation in 'sea,' and Fall River area director ... in DeW NATURAL FINISH.·Christ's 'wbrship of the Heavenly of the CathollcGuild for ~ GEDR.OE M. MONTLE .. cboice ofloYdy eolon.~ather, the integral worship of Blind~ has added the chaplain- Send coupon £os- colorl'ul~the Mystical Body which is not cy of the. Massachusetts Depart- Plumbing'.- Heat,ing' let Ibowing DeW model ki~..limited t;c). rubrics an prayers, ment of the Veterans of ]foreignhe explairted. Wars to his duties. Over 35 Year.. Catholicl.schools can prepare, Father Sullivan was .elected of Satisfied Service

students for life':'long 'participa- by popular acclaim. Organiza- I'

tion' in the liturgy by -teaching tion members said that th4:!Y did 806 NO. MAIN STREETthe basic idoctrines of worship. not ,recall a simila~ honoJ;com- Fall River , qs 5~74CPa~d relati!l~ them. to the rites, ? big to a state-level ~ffi~ial pre- , ,Father Sh~han stUd. viously. ' ,

,The S~ansea priest's WorldWar II record includes servicein the - European' .arid 'Pacifictheaters.· He was the first priestto be sent from Europe to theFar East. -He left., the servicewith the rank of major. .

AID NAZARETH' HALL:. Grand IKnight Albert L.. Champoux', right, preSentsia check fiomFall River Council86, Knights of Columbus, .tC?.Bishop. Coimolly. The contri­bution will be used for the work .of. Nazareth Hall for Ex­ceptional Chi.ldl-en. At left is Joseph F. Grondin.;

Pope .U,rg~~"F~ithf~J ,,~verywh~~e,

To' ,Assist. ,Re,fugees ".~f. .WQrldNEW YORK (!'fC)~Catholics _.' 'j••• : 'I.

e'verywhere have' been urged by of discoutagement and despairh k - "WPat' kindhearted man could

Pope John XXI!I to eh~, rna e remain indi.fferent to that sight?a succes~ of" the World,,~efugeeYear. . . -- ~o, WallY men, w9qten.~np.,exell

In a radio broadcast· to 'the children,' are 'deprived, without,world the Holy 'Father said- .he "any fatilt of their owri;'ofsomegives 'his wholehear,ted, support : of the most, fundamental rights

.and encouragement to the under_-'"of.:the,·human person.' .taking' and recalled 'earlierpap- "Families are divided in.spite

,of their 'own wiShes. Husbandsal efforts to relIeve the plight of ~re separated from their wi-vesrefugees. He declared in, part.: 'and children are" kept' a'way

- "With deep' satisfaction. YVe from their parents. What a sor­have learned of the institution, rowful anomal~- in rroctern so­under the auspices 01 the Unitedciety,,'so_ prou•. of its technicalNations Organization, of theWorld-Refugee Year from JUIle, and social' progress!' Everybody

has the duty to, take this matter· 1959, to June, 1960, and We to he~rt 'and to do whatever iswholeheartedly give the' m()raJ,' in. his p¢wer in' .order to' bringsupport of Our encouragement; this sad' situation to an end.to. this noblp undertaking:

"The lot of those who live inexile far away from their home..:lands has always evoked in ,avery sp.ecial manner the mother­ly solicitude of the, CatholicChurch, vrhich could not forgetthe words of Christ, its DivineFounder; 'I was a stranger andyou took me in; naked and you,~overed me . . , in prison andyou came to me' (Matt. xxv, 35).

Thousands of Viciims ' . ?

. "Today; as everybody· .mustknow, there are hundr.eds oftllousands of refugees" victimsin divers ways ot" the' upheavals

;of fe~ent:yel}rs, who' are, stil(, held in camps or lodged in huts,. Qumlliated in their dignity _as,',human· beings, ana, /ioDletiwell

,exposed to ,the ,,¥or!jttemptatipns

"'Say Medi~ 'Co'ntribute

'To Morals Dedin~". J,' ~:. ~',; '. ' . ", '. '. '.

, NEW ,YORK(NC)~Religi()\-1s

leaders of the major; faiths herehave ,issued ,a report. citing news-

· papers, magaziJ;1.e,s.."radio,aJ;ld tel­,. evision 'with, contributing to a

deciine in the city's ntorals,,The report, which reflected

the views of a committee, of104 priests, ministers and rabbis,offered recommendations to the

, city, and to the media for im­.proving the moral climate.· It urged that ni!wspapers ban, lurid advertisements for motion

pictures, . that maga~ines bag"salacicms articles and pictures"

" and' that' television' reduce em­phasis on:' crime and '·violertce." ~'The.-' mass 'media _ industry,once conscious of this parasiti­cal presepce in i,ts' mid.s~, ' mustitself assume a responsibilityfor eliminatin:: th,ese debaslpgand degrading practices," the re-port added. ' " .

Students . to Attend

Apostolate 'MeetingTwelve students will attend

the Boston College Lay Aposto­late convention from Aug. 31 toSept. 5. They include KevinTripp" Dioce~n Sodality Unionpresident; Edward Corr\eira,Holy Family Sodality prefect;Elizabeth Murphy, vice prefect;Michael Dow, treasurer; Kath­erine Kelleher, secretary; Leon­ard Clarkson and Agnes Costa,eonsultors. ::!,ive others are stillto be Selected. .

f/

Page 3: 07.02.59

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Dedication RiteCeremony Brings,Catholic,Protest

'wASHINGTQN (NC) ­Inclusion of .,Masonic ritesin the cetemonies for layingthe cornerstone of the ex­tended east fro fit of the U. s.Capitol here on July 4 has beenprotested by The Catholic Stand­ard.

The newspaper' of the Arch­diocese of'Washington said suchceremonies "are certain to beoffensive not only to Catholiccitizens,out to citizens of otherfaiths as' Well.,f

"Questions arise in our mindsimm( iiately, If, as Americans

,generally believe, the Masonsare'solely a fraterna) organiza­tion, why' has one such societybeen accordea ,the exclusiveprivilege of conducting the dedi­cation of a building which be­longs to each and every Amer­ican?

"If, on the other hand, Masonry, is a form of religion (and this isnearer the truth), why shouldthis one religious groJlP begranted the right to dedicate apublic building?

"Masonic rites were used whenGeorge Washington laid the •or­nerstone of thl.; Capitol's originalsection, and when Millard Fill­more dedicated the House andSenate wingl>, 'The same pre8.1account stales that 'since Mr.Eisenhower Is riot a Mason, hisparticipation will be apart froma c~remOIlY' to be COnducted bT'the • • .' Masons.', "We suggest that this is the

oppoi-iune timp to omit cere­,monies which should never have'been used in the first place, andwhichal'e certain to be offensivenot ,only to Catholic citizens, butto citizens of other faiths' aa

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Union to MeetHARRISBURG (N)C - The

Catholic Total Abstinence Unionof America' will hold its 87thannual conven~ion here Aug. 10to 12. The convention will in­clude both religious services andbusiness meetings, The CatholicTotai Abstinence Union, found­ed in 1872, has a membershipof about 70,000 persons.

Vocation CenterBOGOTA (NC)-The Bishops

and religious superiors of CO"­lombia have established a cen~

ter to coordinate efforts to fosterreligious vocations. Organizersof the center noted that in Co-,lombia there are only about3,700 priests, while there ou'ghtto be 14,000 to attain the pro­portion of one, priest to eacB_1,000 CatholicS.

Pope 'John' Says Altar", Canopy Supported by.g~a~i~';::;cc Suggests R9yalty ,!f Christ,:. VATICA~ CITY '(NC)-In .. ' By Rev. ,Roland Bousquet:reference to'the inconclusive for- St..Joseph's Church, New Bedfordeign ministers" meeting at, Gen-. . " The llJessage of the, Gospel is pr~ached' t'o .the ~~rld not only in terms of sermons,e~a, Pope Jo~hn XXIII said at a, ,lectures and books. It is also crystalized insto,ne and masonry ,and'glasl:\., Thus our,general audience that the source 'ch'urche~.are real catechisms, oh, not printe'd in ink, but chisled and hewn and paintedof tlarmohy and peace~is char- until they ' express the Faith' of the generat ion that built them. We caIi but think ,ofi,tYspeaking to more than 20,oooc, 'th~ Cathedral of Chartres, .people in St. Peter's basilica, the St. Peter's Basilica iIi Rome.~Pope said the law of Chri~t Our own ,national shrineis charity, thL sour'ce of har,- dedicated to the Immaculate

,mony and peace, that peace Conception will be the monu­which eve'n the highest repre-

ment of our' special devotion tosentatives of the world have ,Our Blessed Mother. In the samedifficulty in achieving with sim-

'fashion, every' 'parish' churchply human means, f f . I

Unfortunately, he continued, expresses the aitho Its peop e;emphasizing on'e aspect or an­

this is part of the nature of, other of. the living Catholicfallen humanity, but Christ with Faith. ,his law of charity and by virtue Today, 'we will attempt to ex,of his immola':ion on the cross plain the ciborium, orcivory asalways triumphs ultim,ately.

it is also called, which suggests"Peoples of the world were' the royalty of Christ, the High

created to love one another, but, Priest, A civory' is an enframing.unfortunately, the story of Cain structure of wood. or stone 01

and Abel is the story of the metal supported .by foui: ~r monworld whel. Christian love is columns. The altar stands be,wanting," the Pope s~id.

neath the canopy arid ,betweenAs an example of this lack the columns 0

of, love, the Pope referred to the The roof of the ciborium may 1

hundreds of priests killed' in take various shapes; it may. b<the Spanish Civil War "in a mo- square, rectangular' or oblongment of collective folly." (An It is large enough, however, t..estimated 6,000 priests were cover the entire altar and th',killed in the Spanish Civil War, platform on which it stands.which began in 1936 and ended The main altar and the altar ain 1939.) . which the Blessed Sacrament is'

First Encyclical reserved is always covered withThe Pope als~ spoke of, the a canopy of some sort. The Ci,­

general l!,ck of respect for God's borium which we are' describinglaws. saying that it is, enough is but' one type of canopy ,foundto open the daily paper to real,. in churches.ize that serious trangressi~ns 'of , The baldachin is another kin,the Ten', Corr.mandments are which consists in' a roof struc­c:ommitted everywhere., ture "\ade, of wood {>r, richly

In" his discouse. the Pontiff ,brocaded, draperies' suspendedreferred'to the imminentpubli- above the altar or bracketed to'cation of his first, e'ncyCIical, the wa,ll.A silk hanging usuallyl!'ta'ting that the w~rld, soon , forins the'"backdrop foi-the 81-

,- ..~9uld kn.ow the teachIng Q.f the tar wh'en .the" ~anopy' is' attached -",-;~ope l,ls .th" , successor ot ,St. '__ to the wall,

I ~et,~r:., " ,,' Protective COVeriDI'He also ~entioned the forth,. The m'ore ancient, of these' two

,c:o~ing Rom~ syno4 an~ e~u~;-: types" of :iltar-canopies is thf'encl~1 .CO'lOClt He .sa~d It 18' c'iborium'.' The earliest examplef 'hoped· the synod w.lll be h~ld of the :.ch';ory' may 'be' !oundip.'before the. end of,th~s year, ~~~ Rome and, Ravenna. By. ,the

,.~ha.t the ecum~nclal councIl 'fouith century, mosf:altars were"~11l s~~ak to. our, g~od brot~ers " covere'd by' a canopysupportec,who bellev,e' m Christ" parbcu- by columns.. The use ol'the cJ",larly, to those Brothers of. the ,barium was suggested': by thEEast." _protective arches 'pla:ced 'over.. 'I the graves' of the most renowned,

~ 'U rges ' Catho ics -, martyrs.

R ff e F ,e h These early churches,as,weecil rm aIt have seen, were often construct~

NEW' YORK (NC)-His Emi-' I ed on -the site of the saint'~ BALDACHINnence Francis' Cardinal Spell- tomb so that the altar stood di- . Immaculate C~nceptio~"":",Failman has called on Spimish- . rectly above the martyr's body, artistic necessity. The altar wasspeaki,ng Catholics here to "seal Later it became customary 'to often simplicity itself in these'and reaffirm your faith, in order ,place the saint's relics' in the early days of the Church. Itthat no one· be able to destroy or, hollow of the altar itself. Thus' often took the form of a simplepluck ,it out from your soul and the idea of a protective cover- .' table. Or agair a single blockfrom your fpmily," ing for the relics and the altar 0'£ wood or marble constituted

"To be Catholic is to be suggested itself. the altar.cemented to a granite rock of Symbolic Splendor Insignificant in size and in or-absolute truth, and is to oppose Moreover, the Church was per- namentation compared to thf

. with courage and strength, the fedin!; her cerem~mial at this vast, edifice of a richly decor­current of immorality," the period. The Church was enjoy- 'ated church, the altar could notArchbi~hop of New York de- ing freedom for' the first time' 'd'raw the attention of he faith­clared. after many years of persecution. ful to itself. 'As many churches

Cardinal Spellman spoke at During the Roman persecutions were modelled on the plan ofa Mass offered at the start, of, her' ceremonial was rather re- the emporer-throne's room, it'the seventh' annual San Juan strained. The pope ~hd'th~ bish- became natura! to adopt theFiesta,' for Spanish-speaking" 'ops set about the task oJ perfect- .eanopy' in which stood the irn-Catholics. sponsored by the"New: ing her Liturgy.' , ' .. perial throne. ,Yor~, ..a~chdiocese·' T~e .£i~~ta, . Constantine, the, first Chris- 'The altar, enframed by the,ci":honoring St. John the Baptist, tian emporer , lavished manyim- 'Jioriitih, appeared in all its sym-patron sC!int oJ Puerto Rico, was ~rjaJ honors' on the pope and '.' ... . /;-held on Randalls Island here. tile' clerg~'. Many of these were

In. preparation for, the . <;el.,. i\ltroduced in cerempnies of theebnitioil a' nine-'week' nmtena church,. It then became quite na­and a three-day triduum were tural to adapt certain items fromconducted at all Catholic the emporer's court in the con­churches in the archdiocese at struction of these early churches.which services for the Spanish- , Beside,S, the ciborium, was anspeaking are held.

Cardinal Spellman urgedSpanish-speaking Catholics of.the archdiocese to be "legitimatechannels of the Christianity of,your forefathers,"

He called on mothers to "edu­cate religiously your children,"and asked fathers to "give theexample of 'a manly -religiousspirit" to their families.

Page 4: 07.02.59

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Charity of PublicTo Support NewCancer f:lospitai

CLEVELAND (NC) - Ahospital for incurable can-,eer patients which will bedependent on "the· hourly'mercy of the public" to meetcosts has been dedicated by Aux­iliary Bishop Floyd L. Begin of.Cleveland.

The Dominican Sisters of St.Rose' of Lima, establish~d in,New York in 1896. will conductthe institution completely de-'pendent on the charity of thegeneral public, as they were in­strocted to be by the commun­ity's iounder, Rose HawthorneLathrop, convert daughter of au­thor ,Nathaniel Hawthorne:

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GRADUATION DAY: Gerald A. Arata, confined to hishome with a fractured leg, .receives his Sacr~d Heart School,No. Attleboro,,,diploma from Rev. Joseph S, Larue, pastor.Sister Superior ·Marie Gemma looks on.

~

.Attleboro' Serrans Elect "'Brenna~'Russell E Bre'nnan will serve

as president of Attleboro DistrictSerra Club for the co~ing year.He succeeds Eugene Farrell ofMansfield.

Serving with him will be Ed-

chllfches where, each year, thefaithful' ga'ther in pilgrimage tospend the :night in vigil, fasting,and doing ,penance, cont.essingtheir sins i and receiving Holy

,Communion. ' •

There i~ rich tradition here;essentially I unmarred by super­stition., The "Pardon" is taken,wit h, absolute seriousness.Through aIr" the various fortunesof Breton Catholicity, the riseand decline of the monastic

~ movement,' the weakehing, offervor during the phases of Re­naissance ': and Ji:nlightenment;

- the bitter; trial. of the FrenchRevoluti~n~ and the mockery of19th century liberalism, Britanyremained faithful to its "Par-don~~ i _

Today ~ith the upsurge of arenewed spiritual life, they at­tract still larger numbers intentupon the work of prayer andpenance. TIle presence of curiouson-lookers,1 tourists who haveheard that Breton "Pardons" arefascinating things to observe, hasno interest ,for those who regardthem as' a normal and integralexpression lof their faith. '

- 20,~OO PilgrimsSo it Jas' that on Trinity

Sunday. this year,' the date of'the annual Pard,on of RumengoJ.,your' scribe and his' companionmade their

lpilgrimage of grace

to the little hamlet in the hillsbeyon_d Quim~r.

Arriving I for Mass 'we weregreeted witP magnificent court­

.esy by the, Bishop of Quimper,Msgr. Andr,e Fauvel, and givenplaces of honor in the open sanc­tuary built Ifer the great "Massof the Pardbn". '

By conservative estimatethere were close to 20,009 peoplepresent, many of whom hadcome on fdot long distances toassist at the exercises of thevigil the preceeding night andto take patt in the torch-light,'proCession :and' the Midnight·Mass. - I' '

That afteinoon, nothi~g woulddo but that the American Bishopfrom "the Fh West; should pre­side at the tlosinlt'ceremi:)nies ofVespers, Procession,' and SolemnBenedictioni of the Blessed Sac::'rament. I ,\. '. ,,'

'Eloquent ,Voice,1_ '

It was an experience, of ,theglorious unity of th~ Faith' andof the fraternity of' the priest~

hood. It gave eloquen,t\voice tothe miracle hf divine pardon un­der- whate.v~r local manifesta-tion. I

King Gradlon is a memory andmaybe only a legend, but themeaniqgof; Rw:neniol, with itsthousands of praying pilgrims, isa reality riloted' in the stongCatholic re~lism of the Br'etonpeopie.' i

For those lof us who have our,traditions y4;lt to bu,ild" it wasa ,lesson in the strength.and quaI-,ity of- the faith needed 'to out­last the centL.cles. We came awayfrom Rumert,;ol edified, yes, butdeeply humbled. We'had touchedsomething of the bedrock of thefaith. I,

I

REAl>POIN'I'S PRELATE: Governor Abraham Ribi­coff swears in Rt. Rev. 'Msgr, Joseph F.I Donnelly, whom'he rerrppointed chairman of the Connecticut State Boardof Mediation and Arbitration. NC Photo. '

Bretons' Cathoiic Realism'-Gives Ru'mengol Meaning

By Most Rev. Robert J. Dwy:er,' D.R" Bishop of Reno

Gradlon,'King of Ys, as the old Br~ton legend tells us,had built his city on the Bay of Quibero~, and had walled itround, with a mighty sea-gate to keep out the rising tides.Here he thought to ru1E~ ,with ben-evolen't sway, faithfui'tohis old Dr~idgods. But hisdaughter, bewitched by thespirit of evil, conspired toopen the sea-=-gate at the darkof the moon. Warned -only justin time, Gradlon made his es­cape, as the sea roared overthe city.

Even today,the fishermenavow, one cansee -the buriedcity of Ys, itstowers glintingbeneath thewaves of thebay, and onecan hear thetolling of 'itsbells, five fath""oms deep. It isa legend that has haunted thememory of France, and poets andcomposers have echoed its trag­edy.•1t takes its place with thatCamelot of the Arthurian legend,for it was the same dreamy'Cel­tic imagination which conceivedthem both.' ,

Weary and dispirited, KingGradlon wandered through thew~t woods of' Landevennec,meditating upon the treasonthat had befallen his ·house, ·andhow his' gods had abandopedhim in his most need.

, Here' he chanced to meet asaintly hermit, who 'instructedhim in the faith 'of Jesus Christ,baptized hi~, an:d ga~e himcourage to found a new Christiancity and Kingdom, and to be­come that "good King Gradlon"whom the Bretons recall withpious reverence.

Promise::; l\lonasteryOne night, as the King par­

leyed with the hermit, they saw,far off in the forest, the gleamof a Druid bonfire. It was theEve of St, John's when the furyof, the ancient incantations roseto full height. Fearlessly, Grad­Ion strode into the center of theDruid camp, extinguished thesacred flames and overturnedthe altar of human sacrifice....

And there, in that place calledRumengol, he vowed to set up a,Christian altar and found a mon­astery for the monks who would,"gather around the hermit, St.: ..Aubert. ', So 'it fell out, and Rumengolbecame one of the first Chris­tiancenters in all the wild Bret­on' peninsula. Endowed by theKing and his sucCessors,' peopled ­by the Irish monks who came tocomplete the work of conversion,it was s0011 a place of pilgrim­age where the Mass supplantedthe pagan sacrifice and the par­don of Christ at~med for theblood of the human victims of- 'fered in hatJ.:ed/to' the van­quished spirits of the forest:,

Certainly it is no legenq thatthere are traces of 'a' monasticfou!1dation here dating baektothe ~7th'century, and the ,traditionof the Beeton "Pardon": of' Ru­mEmgol is one of the very oldestin all the land.

Faithful te 'PardoDB'

.There are ~nY' "Pardons" 1ftBrittany. These are ancient

Page 5: 07.02.59

IT WON'T BE LONG: Advance preparations for the oPening of BishopStang ~igh School, ,North Dartmouth, are engaging both the Sisters ofNotre Dame de Namur, who will ~taff it, and pr.ospective students. In leftpicture, left to right, Sister Alice Gertrude, president of Emmanuel College,Boston,; Sister Anne Denise, who will be principal of Bishop Stang; andSister Magdalen Joseph, music supervisor for this province of the commu­nity; study blueprints for the school's chemistry laboratory. Sister Anne

Denise and Sister Magdalen Joseph are sisters as well as Sisters. In center,Sister Anne Denise checks report cards of, left to right, Sharon Gendronand Leona Blais, who will enter Bishop Stang from St. Kilian's School,Ne.w Bedford. At right, Sister Agnes Marguerite, supervisor of schools forthe Sisters, examines a prospectus for the high school with, left to right,Aim Swain, New Bedford; Nancy Sylvia, Mattapoisett; Billy Rhodes,Wareham; and David Chomard, Fan River.

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faculty of at least five Sistersof Notre Dame fo{ the first year 'of the new schooi" during whichonly freshman students will beadmitted.

Franciscan WinsTheology Award

BUFFALO (NC);""- FatherJuniper Carol, O.F.M:, foUnderarid fi~st president of the Mario­logical Society of America, hasbeen named recipient of the 1959Cardinal Spellman Award forachie,vement in theology.

The award is given yearly bythe Catholic Theological Societyof Arn.,erica. Father Carol's se­lection was announced'·at. the s0­

ciety's 14th annual conventionhere.

The 48-year-old Franciscanpriest 'founded the Mariol~gical

Society in 1949 to pr.omote theo-. logical studies relating to- theBlessed Virgin. Author of nu­merous books and articles onMarian theology, Father Carol isno'w stationed at 51. Bonaven-

, ture's "Seminary, Paterson, N. J.Elected president of t]:1e theo­

logicai society at the close of itsmeeting was Msgr Lawrence J.Riley, secretary to His EminenceRichard Cardinal Cushing, Arch­bishop of Boston. -

Amer,icans to -StaffLibrary in London

LONDON (NC) - His Emin­ence Williarr. Cardinal Godfrey,Archbis!lOp of Westminster, hasinvited Franciscan Friars of theAtonement ' from Graymoor,

.N. Y., to take over the:' Catholic.. Central Library in London, at

one time threatened with clos­ure.

First members ()f the com­munity, two priests and. twoBrothers, will a,z:riveat the endof June to take up residence inthe library building in the cen-

• ter of London. ,This library, which has the

biggest collection 9f, Catholicbooks and documents in thiscountry, is open to anybody, butis primarily intended for stu­dents and others seeking special­ized knowledge. on Cathoiic sub­jects. An appeal was made lastyear to prevent its .closingthrough lack of support.

The Graymoor Friars, origin­ally an Anglican community,were received corporately intothe Church 50 years ago. Theystarted the Church Unity Oc­tave now observed by bothCalholics and Anglicans. DuringWorld War II some members ofthe community worked at a way­side chapel at Timberbottom,KaDt. l.a t:he Southwark diocese.

Bishop Stang Pupils Meetof New School

Pope John CautionsBergamo Missioners

VATICAN CITY (NC)-PopeJohn XXIII has cautioned agroup of missionaries from hisnative diocese. of Bergamoagainst the temptation to over­value newly found material aidsto their alJostolate.

The Pope asserted that realgood is never found in fleetingflashes of audaeity but in me­

,thodical, constant and humblework.

He congratulated the mission­aries on the -many good reportshe had heard of them and theirwork, from various bishops.

The missionaries were led inaudience by B,ishop GiuseppePiazzi of Bergamo.

Ultra Modern

PrincipalFuture students of Bishop Stang High School, North

Dartmouth, became acquainted with their principal, Sister'Anne Denise of the SisterS of Notre Dame de Namur, atthe assembly held at Kennedy Memorial Center. She brings

'a varied background to hernew assignmen~. For thepast three years she hastaught Latin at Notre DameHigh School, Bridgeport, a reg­ional high school similar toBishop Stang,

Previously she served for nineyears as principal at St. Theresa'sHigh School,' Providence. Agraduate of F.mmanuel College,Boston, 'she received a Master'sdegree in Reiigious Guidancefrom Providence College in1958. '

The principal's assignment atBishop Stang' will be solely ad­ministrative. She will head' a

"""ntinued from Page OnebL ~g includes the businessoffice, a reception room, healthroom, audio-visual laboratory,and library. The latter will ac­commodate 50 students in itsreading are~ and also has stocKand work rOdms. '

Giant AuditoriumAuditorium, gymnasium and

cafeteria are housed in the fifthbuilding, said Father Gorman.The auditorium, capable of

, lIeating 1100, has a stage threeItor.ies high and deep enough toproduce a Broadway 'type show.

The gymnasium is a standardhigh school basketball - court,.with· a large automatic curtainwhich makes it possible to divideit into separate practice courtsfor boys and girls. Bleachers arerecessed. When drawn, they willseat 720. Additional stage bleach­ers will accommodate an addi-'tional 200. "

The lower gymnasium floorIncludes lockers, showers andvisiting team facilities for boys.Similar girls' equipment is pro­vided on the upper floor.

The cafeteria, also on the lowergymnasium floor" has a seatingcapacity of 500 and is equippedto serve all kinds of meals.

Off the auditorium is a largeband room for use of lChoolIAWlic units.

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6' . ~THE ~NCHQI .. 'Thurs., July 2; 19.59

': DIQCESE J~.ff .FALL RIVi!:", MAflS..

TOnAY - Visitation'· of theBlessed Virgin.. This feast. was·

, established by Pope "Urban . ,VI .arid extended to the' Univ.erSalChurch in the 14th century byPope Bo~iface IX in memory otthe 'visit ,ot' the Blessed'Virgin

··to her cOusin, St. Elizabeth.

· TUESDAY - SS. Cyril aridMethodi,us, 'Bishops ~ Confessors.

:Venerated as' "the Apostles ofthe Slavs," they were brother•who were born ir. Greece andeducated . in Constantfnople.They began their work as mie- .sionaries to the Bulgarians and,on coming to Rome, were eonse-.crated Bishops by Pope .5t.Hadrian II.' St. Cyril, who died .in Rome ir. 869, labored iaMoravia, Dalmatia and· southetllRussia. St. Methodius, who diedin 885 in M~ravia, labored inMoravia, Bohemia, Poland andneighboring countries. Their rel­ics are venerated in the Churchof San Clemente, Rome.

Weekly Calendar·'~,6f':Feast .Days .;:to:'.,..

. .'

, . TOMORROW - St. Leo ~: Pope-.Confessor;' ~e was a', Sicil~ .

ian.. Eminent"for' poetry .and·.". skmed .in languages: who suc~.·.• 'ceeded PopeSi. Agathein ·681:,'",._, .. He reformed the Gregorian chant, t',..,·~nd. composed. several .1V-I,H:gj,cal. .. f.

· bymns: He ·was·.k:nowniJas. "T~e· ,Father of, the.,P.oor.", He dIed 1.· 68:1. ' . ., "

, .~

. . '

~.~

0' .. '

'.j' .

·QIJESTIONS_d

ANSWERS

'. "

',' .

The" "Law 'of- ···God. '. ,- ," . \ "'~ . ",':'

•. * *

.'

• .'. . . p;., ... I" ., .' ":;.~, -to" " • ·......1 . ~ ..••

.Rem'ember that ,thou keep holy the sab- .bathdQY. Six, days shalt'thou Icibor1"andshalt do '011 thy works';,:But on the seventh.dqyisthesabbath ot.;the lord thy"God:thou shalt do no· work .on it, thou nor thyson, nor, thy. daught~rl.northynlans~t:­-vant, nor thy maids~rycmt, nor: thy beast,'not the .. stranger' that.J~ wjthin thy. gate·s.F"r in six'days the lord·madeheaven· and ..

.. !art,~i. .and :t~~, sea, «(rj~~al' 'MngS.Jhafeii~J".. mothem,l anarested'!3~ the .seventh day.,Therefore:':th~{'lord'"BIl!ssed, ' the'·s~verith~day, 'and sa'ncttfied ih<;]: . . .. " . ,.

SATURDAY-SS. Osee anc!"Aggeus,' ·P,rophets. St. 'Osee,' ~iso'· called Hosea, lived in the eighthcentury' B. C" and prophesied

·the'destruction of the Kingdom··'of Samaria. St. Aggeus, 'alsocalled. Haggi, lived in the sixthcentury B. C.:His prophesy cali~on King Darius of Persia to f~r­

ward the rebuilding of the Tern- 'pie of Jerusalem;

SUNDAY-St. Anthony MarYZaccaria, Confessor. A native ofCremona, It~ly, he sb.ldied medi­

... cine but· abandoned this profes- .By Rev. James A. McCarthy sion for the priesthood. In 1530

. " ", '. . .he .found~d the Congregation 01.. Holy Name Church-Fall River Clerks Regular of St:· Paul,

What is a flabella!' . The APSE is the sanctJiary called the Barnabites, and •

Fl b 11 . th·'·· 1 l' f the end of the church building.' This. women's Congregation called the.a e a IS e p ura 0 '; . 1..'·Latin word FLABELLUM. The term,l,s more sp.eclfkally app IC- Arigelic Virgins. He died in 1l?3t.

. . ". able to those of Romanesque or and was canonized in 1897' btflabellum IS a fan of ostnch. or G thO "h·t t . . II .peacock feathers, with a. long th·o . IC .. ar~ lei'C utre; ..orgt~na Yf" Pop~ .~o XIII. . ,h dl " d ,'th 'd o'f' e seml-CIrCU ar ermma IOn 0, . .

an e, carne on el er..51 e 'th' h" h "b t I' t th'h .MONDAY-"-St. Thomas More,1 h · h" t'h P .e c urc, u a er e s ape ,the papa c air w en e ope .b . . d . d' t· th Martyr; Born i,. London in 1478,

1;. borne I'n' proces'sl·on. .ecll;me van.e accor mg .0. eg he studied at Oxford and became

Use of ~e flabellum is appar- . general ~~I)\g~ ~.f the b,!.ll.1<hng. one .of 'Eng1and's outstandingently a carryover frqm the'days .. I!1 a baSilica, It. IS ~hat r~unded, lawyers. He was, married an.d

. 'when insect-control had not or. vaulted sectlOl) m which are deeply devoted to his family. H.ereached' the advanced stage ~f placed the, biShop's thr~ne and became the first layman to hold ..

. development of our, age. Those seats ~or the clergy., and m front the office of Chancellor of Eng­who have visited Rome in .the of whlc~ the altar stands.. land. Faithful to his conscience,summer months .will be con- Th~ TRANSEPT is the croSll he declined .. t6 . support Kingvinced that it still has the very arm of a' cruciform (or cross- Henry VIII's divorce and refusedpraciical pu'rpose of cooling the shaped) church, extending to to sign the oath of supremacy ofHoly Father: both sides of the nav~. ;Another the King~ He was imprisoned,

. * * * less frequently used, termdesig- . arid after 15 months was .be­nating this same area is ...:.... the

How 'far may a Catholic cQIifes.sional. ., headed_ on ,Tower Hill on July.,.. businessm~n' go in contributing 1535.. He was canonized by P~pe

to Protestant organizations and .' The NAVE in cruciform. Pius XI in 1935. .ehurches!' churches is that portion of the

. . . . building in which the laity sit,A Catholic businessman could kneel and stand and assist at

contri~ute for business' rea~ons.. Mass, from the transept to thea.lone to .a. Protestant organJza- 'narthex~ ',1'0 ge~ a~.clearer picturebon. Gertamly tl{e:e. are none so of 'this, if we were to have anarr?w as to cons~der wor.~s of bird's-eYe. view of the buildingchanty the exclUSIve. domam of from above the long portion ofCatholics alone. For ~xample, a the cross w~uld be the nave and

. Catholic ·,~ould. contnbute even the cross-arm would be theto a non-Catholic orphanage pro- transeptvided: that scandal is removed' . . '. ".and there is no danger of draw-' In a~clent baSIlicas, t~e NAR-'ing Catholic children into error. _THEX IS that space leadmg .from

In response to a question re- the outer doors to th~ .mnergarding contributions to prot- doo~s. In other words~ It IS the:estant church building projects, ~esbbule.of the church. A chur~hthe Sacred Penitentiary in 1822 1~ o~e of thos~ v.ery few ~Iassl-answered: Yes it is permitted, but flcabons of bUlldmgs where ~ou

only if such assistance will free enter.. th~ front door to fmdCatholics from the·iriconvenience·yourself 10 the re~r of the struc­ahd scandal of conducting Cath- ture; the .nar.thex must be !he . WEDNESDAX - St. Elizabeth,olic services along with Prot- sp~ce provIded for contemplatmg of Portugal, Queen-Widow. Sheestant rites. It would seem that thIS proble.m before one .enters was born in 1271, the daughterthe speCific instance in this case contemplat1Og God. of King Peter III of Aragon andhad to do with a project to. build, 0 . was married at the age of 12 to

.* * *a Protestant church in an area.. \ _ King Denis .of Portugal. She dis-where formerly both Protestant What does IHS sta.nd for on tinguished herself as a peace-and Catholic worship had been the back of the vestments used 'maker betweer~ the rulers' ofconducted in a common build- at Mass? I Aragon, . Castile and Portugal.

'ing. Some theologians have in- I . After her husband's death sneterpreted this to ~indicate that, IHS is. the monogram for the took the habi. of the Third Ordersuch aid is not essentially Holy Name of Jesus; the first of St. Francis, She died in 1336wrong, but is permitted) for a . three letters of the Holy Name and was canonized by Pope

from' a latinized form of the U b VIII' 16very serious reason. r an . 10 25.In general-a Catholic is not Greek letters. Another pious in- , .

allowed 10 contribute'directly to' terpretation is that these repre- Duque'sne Un.OYers.°ty'sent the iniialletters in the Latinthe spread of' a false religion.

The story is told of the com- phrase "Iesus Hominum' Salva- President Resigns- f' tor" - "Jesus Savior of Mari-mittee 0 Protestants approach- 'kind". PITTSBURGH (NC )-Father

ing a prominen. Catholic in the Vernon .F. Gallagher, C.S.SP...community seeking aid in razing' H has announced his resignation astheir old church and construct;- '. onor Patron Saints president of Duquesne Univer-ing a new. church on the same . ROME "(NC ).2.Seven- Cardin- sity here. .site. When the.man. gave his als and the Italiar; Minister of Father Gallagher, who is alSodonation he told them that' he Foreign: Affairs joined' in . the Superior of - the Holy' Ghost.

. wished to make it cle'ar that this 20th anniversary of the .procla- Fathers in America, will coD­money was not to be used to mation of St. Francis of Assisi '. tinue' as cha'irman of the univer-'build a, new church, bu't to tear and. St:Catherine .ofSiena as. sity's board of directors. .,down the old church. Is there a "copatrons of Italy. -In a solemn At ·the same time Father Gal-moral theologian in the house? convocation at the Pontifical· lagher announced the appoint-

{\ngelictim College in. Rome, ment of Father Henry J. Me-. Would you. pleaSe explain Foreign Minister Giuseppe Pella Ahulty; C.S.Sp., as acting, pr'eSl-

, the"location" of theSe' partS· of· . delivered the commemorative . dent until .the board meeu' ia.< the. church-the apse, the nave; ... speech honoring the F.ranciscan ; October. to. name a 'pej;maneui

, :' I, " Ule,.I1llr.,t.hex aDd.. t~e tr~~ep~ c and·Dominican, saints. :...,'. aUCCe.wlOr•

A" Worthy..·· Step'

@rhe'A~fjHOROFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIO.CESE OF FALL RIVERPublished weekly by The Catholic Press ~f th~ Diocese of Fall Rive~

410 Highland Avenue'Fall River, Mass. OSbo~n~ 5-71'51

PUBLlSH,ER ;Most Rev. James L. Connolly, D.O., PhD:

I '.G~NERAL MANAGER A,SST. G~NERAL MANAGER

Rev. Daniel f.Shalioo, M.A. .Rev. ~ohn P.DrisColl ..> 'MANAGING EDITOR I..., . .

.Ho.ghJ; Golden'

. . The Strand. Theater in Fall River is 'to be, congratu­.. ,'lated for its pUl>licly announced policy to show only those· picture's that aregrade~ in t1i.e A-I and" A-II category by

the'Legion. of. Decency. In this \\'ay parents and children'.' will have no fear 'of seeing what might:OO morally danger­

ous or offensive' and insulting to their taste.Many times ·the Church is accused of taking a· com­

pletely negativeattittide toward. the :field' ofentedain.:.. '·ment-..:.q'uick to point . out.and . condEmln .. what' is wrong,.

. not so quick toc()mmend . attempts. to !lift the tone. Partof'· the Church's . 'Work is; of course; ,negative"';";"towarn

. againsteviI.And the Church is not supposed to be a ;I>ub­licity agel)t for any interest. B'utwhen

rthere are. s~ J!l.anr

recent challenges '.to morality. in the. m~ving;picture indus.,.trY,then churchi:rien are ,more willing no.t only to point' outwhat is evil but to commend and encourage what is good..". This local step to keep the moral;IJvel of movies highis certainly worthy, of praise and Emcotiragement••

And if there are those 'who coinpla;in that they are notthe recipients of equal praise, then the answer is easy­Go thou and flo likewise--an'd the praise shall be yours too.

Refugee' Year,. _. 'f .. i .'

, Very little has been made'of the World Refugee Yearthat began Sunday. The purpose of the y'ear is to focus theattention of all men and nations on the terrible plight ·ofthe millions of homeless throughout the world. 'Vhe situation

. is especially trying in Hong Kong, amoni the Arab refugees'from Palestine, and with the group from behind the IronC

. . I .urtam. '. " (J i' .

The most difficult thing in the world is to get people• to be interested in their neighbor's business.:-not their

nextdoorneighbor-quite the contrarY+but their neighborwhoTTI they. do not see, whom they dOl' not know. It is amatter of becoming catholic':minded-with a small "c"­and that ,means taking the-sorrows o~ all as a personalconcern.

No·: Business" on:SUndaY.·:~;·, . '.:'.>~". I

..•. , . The"Ailchor'iepeats 'jt objections to 'c'urrentattempts,to make Sunday a' "business as usual" day. . ,

. <The .civ.illaw·of MassachusettS recognizes -that Sunday ,.• " i~ ..aday .of .,worsh·ipa;J.1p)·~~~."lJl~8: ia~'.Va.sfir.~t.~nacted ,

. three ·centuries ago: 'bY;Pr.ot~stant'for¢~fathers,>¢oncern~d·with reverence due' to .God ·and· anxi'ous .. that the LOrd~s.eommand .to :keep. l:toly :ais daY'be observed. .· ,There are reasoJ:lable exemptions :.fJ;om ; the .·Sumlaylaw to the extent that works of charityianrlneces'sity maybe performed. on' that day. But·there 'is la continuing move-

· men't to widen #l.e·:exemptions. and-now"':-to opendhe' way·to full-scale busiJ1ess as' usual., .•. . .:.:..• -- The law stands as 'abarrier..to open commercjiilism. I:

The law shqull;l: not be. changed.. ~ i . .', .....··.e: The fac(·remains that this nation -is based on: God. As'a natibn· and.asindividuals, AriIericanfl"l;>elieve in God.·This:

· belief mustno.t.'b¢ 'Iip'serv'ic'e'but 'l31'lould-show itselfilt"act;' 'The ' Sundair :"ia~:sho~s )~ihe r~~e;~hc~ of;iiidl~'idual~'"

• -' .. .., or' .. . " .. , • , ' ." l-' • • i I -. . ;". . . .•.. . :.~: .

and .the.Stat~!,fW:j.tb.e.Gr.~at.or. . " ..;, '','.....~ .. i " ' ,',. " The,objectors to the Sunday law. c.it~the loss: of money .th"at'they.suffet: That- proves 'onething~thatworship of,,·'God. exacts a I>ri'ce; How 'much wouid' it;'be worth if'if:cost .

, nothing in effort· or sacrifice? " .'. ....', .-: ' .. .'The 'income in ev~ry busine8~.is iimited and ~on(litioned,' ,;

,by many ~actors",Those doing bulYness,:.in:resort area~

especially know..that their income' is dependent: in' large:-measure on the weather. When the weather .isJ)OOr, theirinco~e falls and ·th.eY take this philosophically. as' the hand'of Goa. Let' theriirealize' that their income is .also de~

·pendent on the 'hand of God as expressed in His co~mand- .ment to keep holy His day. They kno~ when they set upa bUsiness. that they must take the we4ther'into consider­ation. They mus~ kno\y, too, that they should take theSunday la~s and what. they sta~d for i1to cl?nsideratj~n.." Certamly some merchants could' make more 'monElY IfSunday were turned into a commercial day.· And theycould make' more money If they .werea:Ilowed to·.'rob Qr to.get together, and fix piices' or to .'capt~re the"market 0!1~milk or 'other staples.' That is' where the law steps in toregulate for the common good and for! the sake' of right.'

, Doesn't if c'ome' down' tothis-":'the desire to makemoney at the expense of honor to God 1; BO't there are still

· " -enough' people left who ·insist that God must come first.And thesewiJ] oppOse any attempt to'ridicule' as' "blue" andto' change the Sunday laws into alloWing "business as 'usual:'. on the Lord~s day. ..

....

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I,D'EAt, LA,U'ND,R:Y:Fall) River 05: 8~56nr

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.3~3~, New 805.., Road

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." ~ "::"',"

P:EA,IlLlAUN:DRY'

COMPLETE'.. LAUNDRY SER.VICE

64. HICKs., SIREO'.NEW' BEDfORD

W1'ma...~ ..

, ".;; .<,,'

C.··_ ..'.• ' ,'"." e,' :'." 'B"" " ".,' S.··· ···I'..]'!"'··'~JP.marlan ~omes·,,· 0 U1.ler

Ji'llotheltRoncaIlHnet Potle Pius X,'. in' the' haiIs' of. the Vatican.· The

"': Pope,. wno', later was' canonized," . k\-idJ his' h'an'ds: ()n\ his' head; and" admonishedlliimJ to, live' up to, the

, g,;~at.'v.ocatwa that; he' had, un-der.taken. .

First. Solemn. MassHe returned to Satto' il' Monte

to> celebrate his, first SOI~DM-ass' in the church: in which' h.was, baptized. AU the' familywer.e there' on Aug; ,15" 1904-, the

.·feast of the ,Assumption. Hi.sermpn. was' on' the theologicalsignificance of. the' Assumption.

, It was: no' easy 'task. for thougb'aLwa~s held. and. accepted with,.

; out question·,;thulo. belief beCame,,;an/ a1'1iic1e' of'- 'faith, only in, 1958

when: it. was dogmatically pt:Oo­~ed; bY? Phis X1I.,.. '.Nf~r· tIre sum:mer' Fatb.eJ: Ron­c!aiiv 'return' i to. ROtne to take.hiS: doctorate in~ theologYj and' to.~egin\ w.onk. alb 3' doct.orate-. ia~1l0~ laW'. , ,

While' R'oncalli was: studFfng. in, Rome;, Pope· Pius X appointedMsgr. RadinL Tedeschi . to> beBishop; of .Bergamo,. This; ev;entchanged' Ronca:llifs, life' entirely•'l?he~ new' Bishop) was, soom too beiii need~ on a secreta~.

Pltrt in' Consecratioll'l?he' new' Bishop was o~' an

aristocratic family', He' was; well,knQw!J! in,.Italy fur' his 15 yean

't of. -\lerving'.the' HolySee' ~s 3' sortSEMINARIAN:. Angelo ROIl£alli,,' (;centen) ~ and, wo "of "A:mbassadQ1"" t'o Italy; con-

fellow students: at the: SemimliFY in Bergamol' . standT in conta(:t wiUr opposinc" l. . ~ .," ". '. '·parties, with' organizations and,19~? tJ:1trfir:a: of mallJ' qist01l!:'7algrOUps' of' all' kinds;stll?ies;~ttDlbutab~etcl'.t~ pen,:;-:. ~l11ong'those'whowere tb-takeat AngjllOl ROncalll. . . .part in' the, consecration of' the

. When Pope Pi.us: XI 3;PPOlDt~d': n;;~:' Bhin~pj Radini" TedeschiFather': .Roncalli a.. BlS~ep. In·.. piCked'out t'wo"Bergamo prfes~1925\. he. ~~oki as; .lliS .eplsc~paJ: . Angelo R'oncalli and GugJjelmomott~l,th~tof,?alldInalBa~o~o---: . Carozzi, now Archpriest. paStol­ObedleIrl:i:a: eiJ Pax: (Obellience of Seriate near Bergamo.

··and! ·Peace}... Bef?re:' he entel1~d .. ·· .:The' con~ecra:tionwas Pius X'.the' concla~ whi.eh: ele~tedl ~m first'sihce his etection as, Pope.Fope;, G:ar.dmal Ron~alLi: wenli.~. 'The importance of' Bishop Ra­the tomb, of Cardinal Baromo d"' T d h'" tU lif' and de. . . In/ e esc I In lie e· -and,.kinelt, In pray;er,for an hour. vela ment of the future PopeJ;)urmg; the' saIne' tlllJ,e he· also. . P rr.i 't ted' hi' b' t b g 'g; to John can hardly be exagoerated.ml.a s. su Jee. 'fi om. I d d fr' d'S" 'Ot ".) ....'·1·· a. h: . head '.The c oseness,an eep le'1-

N. '"' eeL'S anu: eanln,,> IS, U;,' f' th 'w ' b t lion the ,foot. 'oil the' statue of St. 1>~TIIL~" .e t 0 IS, es, ~xe~p .-P.eter, . repeating .the' mot~;. fl~e~ 10 b~~e lo~g•. d~:-a~le~, ~ndObedience and, Peace. ovmg, , lOgrap Y .w l~. a. er" .'~' .. ,.. ': '''" . Ronca-lll wrote after hIS frIend

Voluni'eers' rorlnflmtr:J, and mentor died in fiis-arms.,··",,\rn,l'foy:eW:b~, I~Ol, at th~ ag~, ,lnit, .~~ recalla two things. ofof 20ROncalli yolunteej:ed' f9r . the morning of the conse.cration.Iriiiifary'dervice. ':trnrverkii;y's'tli-' "Orie'was 'that'it was he who nelddent's c.; incl'uding Seininatilms,'·4. the' Book:'of the Gospels, agafnst

'were 'permitted' to', sliorten. their"· ' ;the' neck ·of the new. Bishop, sig­.cOmPuij;ocy-, military ser.vice, ,to', .. ni~¥ing., that-.. the . Bishap .mUBI()ne, y~ar, if: 'U1e:l v.orunt~~.r~~. f;' ~eii! .th~ yo!':e 'Of <;hr.ist.Ang.e.lo.,R!1ncall~ 'p'~CK:ed the i~,,: ., ~isf!.oDrS\,Secretary. ...f"a'nt"ry'" '.. I, ,. ' " ',;:-: The- second, waSl tn'at. the- Pope., ASsigned totli'e 73rd' Infantry :'embracecL the 'new:' B'ishop. "a£ter

:'RegiineJ:l,t or'the·Lombardy, bri,.· .the: 'ci:msenramoh and whisperedgalie" he. "served one· y,ear;, an,d . 'jOt'hisl ear' that after he· died"he.received· ,his_hoI).orab~e·cl;ischarg~. , would l!ome immediately to take

. with the rank. of sergeant. He . the Bishop, with, him and thatw:as in, no way, different. :£rom 'fiis .' "they' would be togetlier for' eter­

'fellow: reclluits: On, the con.tJ7ary nit}?;· It was. not. until, much laterlie 100kedl like a t.~pical ·Italian.. that, the: Bishop: understood' theSGldie.r.. ,.M.ilitaJ:y training. was'. meaning; ot these words. But itnot, difficult. for him. He had is; a" fact that Rius ~ die<L ongreat. ph.y;sical' strength and com-· Aug;. 20~ 1914" and: Radini. T&­mon,. sense' plus, an,. aptitude for <leschi died! two) dayS; later..comradeship. Later he' was:. to Shortly after the new;- bishopseItve. ilh the; axmy; itg;Jn. ., took~ possession: of his; episcopal

. M'eetn; PillS: :lIl: see' f)f Bergamo, he' \)egan: look-• • . • .. :. _,:,1~""_ ing: fur al secret'aIry:. He' remeJn-

E'inished1 W'lt;h1 L"l$. L.IOLL:ll ......."', IieredJ E'athers: €anoZ'lli, ami' Ron-tlTai~g: lJe.re~n~d to, Rome- to calUi w.no. hanl assisted!, at', hraconlliIrue his: studies. ~11>, .TulY.!' consecrat'fum €aro~~.whom) the1903" Pbpe- Leo:~ di~d, His, Bishop' tallted to, firSt<,. repHed~CesS011'wa:r.Cardmal G~useppe- Uiat. Roncalli was, the: properS8r.1:oj who: like. the fufuIre: PlJ,pe . man: for the> post; The: BiidiOfrohn. was, .Patrlarch 0.£ Vemce took: .the' advice,before. commg: to: the, tlirone: (Next: week-. A. y,ear' after the electioru of A Pastorate Is: Long'. Delayed')Pius X" Angelo, Roncalli was, __' ..ordained" The' date wag; August10,. 1904, and the' ceremon.y, tookplace in the church of SantaMaria' in; Monte SantO; The fol­lowing day he celebr.ated Massin one' of the grottos. of'. St.Reter's. at!, the' altar which, ac­co.rding to tradition is next, totire' tomb, 'of: St. Peter;

Bclore, he returned to: his' vil­lage: .tli~ day! after hiS' OJIdination,

geogJ:aphy: pny's{cs,,' chemistry,,Italian.. and, world lite~atw;e.·

, .Wins' .Seminary . Scholal1ship .

By thiS' tune yoUng, Roricaliihad. found hiS wa~ and, was abrilliant student. He won' a

.'ScllOlallShip. 'to. Rome's,' greatSeminario, Romail(), His: pellSOn­alit)" was: wellbalariced, ahd hisinterests . proportionatetJli welldivided with a deCisive inclin­ation' for history. Ffe was ahealthy" yo!Ung' man liked equal­ly by professol7S' and fellow stu-dents.. ·· 0

'Normally priests' contmue.tnei'r education in diocesan sem­inarIes. Only' those 'With'excep­tional qualities' are sent to studyat the gl1eat Raman· tinfv:ei'sities.Mgelo,.·Rol!leaIU·was·. one· ,ofthese. HfS;. futmre, educa.tliOIl! waspaid' for out of the CerasolafQundation estab~i'shed' for B'er-

: gamosemiii~rians .• by a. 17thc;eni~ry,.can9.?o~St. Petet::;~: .

Obedience and Peace, While at' the 'RomariSerrtinaifY,

. RoncalIi encountered· one of·1lhe,great: influen~es"of his life. Thiswas the' . wri'tings and life' ofthe' 16th; century' Cardinal ·<I:!e-

'. sare Baronie, a' disciple of' St.Philip Nett : .,,:

His'influence on: the yourigman was: m~r.lted and constant.In '1907 .F'ather RoncalIi, thena Bergarrio' seminary professorand secretary to Bishop RadIniTedeschi, delivered the com­memorative iecture on Ba.t:onio'sworks and life during the thirdcentennial celebrations at B'er­gamo, This 'Wal> published in

. ,HOME VILLAGE OF ANGELO RONCALW:: lfn 1892, th'e lil-year: old Angelo 1'eftGotto il Monte to enter the Seminary at: Bergamo.:'fivemilea a.wa.y. '.'

':.,,:, -:OU~.' rNew'~Pope:",' -:. ;; ..~~ ;:' ~ ~i ,'.",. ~ ..

. ,.,PAR'J1' Dr· ,The '. day 'he"set" ~ff on a':f"we-tn,ife journey. f)rom' JUShome of Sotto il Monte to the'seminary in 'Bergamo,Angefol

'~Roriealli had in his pocket a gift o:n'ova The year' was, ]892'""and' he' was Uyears~'Q1d<.' ' ..,, The morning before ,hIs action. But it waif: not un1li1i

h . after his ordination that Ron...departure, . is mother, Marla ealli was to come· into' close con,.'Anna Roncalli, left the 'tact with the man who. was one'houSe early. When she'.re- of tlie' gJ:eat bridges. that ledturned .she put two lire' on the young. man to oocup¥ the

b .throne of P'eter..the table and roke" into . Though far from a ol'itlianttears. studeJ:lt in his early. studi~s~An,., "Two lire was' not an insiltni- gelo, in the seminary, encount,..ficant sum in the 90's .'1'0 'col- ,ered subjects which interested,lectit she, had ~adethe,!Olin4s :him. History ingen~~al.,an4l.thatof the relatives' in the vilTage "of the: Church accountedl. w·.

"imd nearby areas. Norie·' of' them \IDuch'of'bis'readiIig: .;.'were any bettet off ..tlrart An;- tJnlike A~hille' Ratti~ lateii"'·geiG's"father. . ',. ""'.,..... I Pope Pius XI,. who, ,was 3' gen-'

But they gave what they :ius at absorbing: georog,. math:-,,\could, ,not from' surplus"£ilnds ,ematics,. poetry and.~' ~Y'.,.but .from ,money whieb .,was Roneallii's'chancter' was not:,needed at home. S\le knewtllis "disposed to study 'for its own

..and she was grateful andl proud. sake~ Yet. from-. the' beginning".,Although the seminary would he was a, good rese31'cher. 'pay for .her boy's educati9n, his Predominant Intelfest.food and, board, she did not He did not have a definite, in-,want her son, Angelo, to arrive clin.ation to be a p~oressioriarat the 'seminary. Pel?l1iTess; Her scholar. His-scholastic life in the.tearswere those of joy. sem~.naiy is without SUrprising,

Sees Dream' Fulfilled acbievementls. .But as a semi,.,.. AngelG, all. through his .life narian ·he··showed qualities; that

,shared his parents' view on later made' him known, aSI 3'

'money. It was to be used to'pro-warmhearted, amiabre and wisevide' for the necessitieS of life peIl'son.. He co·fub'ined!a-. p'rofotind

,and some legitimate diversions. knowledge of history with,the­J;Jut ,regardless of how, little'one ology and with. it, ptedominant'liad, generosity' was the only interest in his fellow man..'way of life.' . He was witty in conver~tion

ACcordingly, when he 'could, 'and haa many 'good~ ~iends. His'iinaUY;do'it, RoncaHi built little' contacts 'wit!) his native village,'by li.ttle a' 'place for" tile care thou~ .'on a ',new baSiS; neverof small children 'in fiis"'horrie- "cha'riged ,. and he spent' iill' fiistown. He sent the money 'to 'a vacations there, 'even when hisehit~hood friend, Pierino Doni- travels 'took hiin -to Bulgaria,zetti" then, mayor of the town, Tui"key~ Greece and France. 'He~sking ,that. the source be kept 'Vvas 'always 'Qaturar with e-9-ery-

~~cr,et.. . . .. ,'.. . body in his daily con,tacts.:'" . The first s\lbstantial .sum ar- . "Ampng the 'strong, influencesri~ed from Istanbul. in 1943 on hini 'as a young man in Bet-

'while' he was Apostolic Dele- gamo were the writirigs ofAles­gate in ·Turkey. With it came 'san'~r'o Manzoni, the gteat Ital­a'letter in whicb.he wrote:: '''You ian atithor"whose 'works probed'know' that the greatest. desire of . the meaning' and practice of'my, life would be to· build" in Christian rove.·Sotto iI Monte 'this infants' home LOves Music.

., but' as .yo,u know,' r 'am no~ a .Bergamo's. musical life' was'capiialist." It 'was not untit he co'mpletely diiferent. frGm thl1tbecame' Patriarch of Venice that of glamorous Milan. Here Gae-}1~~~'~s dream)ulfiped~:,. tano Donize1lte. rathertliilh. Ver-

. Social ProiPam '", ", ·di;"'commanded attention.. ,'J'ohnThe city Gf Bergamo, where ·;'XXIII ,remains a'lover 'of.·the

..'the diocesan'seminary waS:loL ,musio';of ,00nizettiJ•. Ponclrlelli.cated;' .was one of" the most im- ,Mozart l , Bach and the,pre-Bach

· ·portant centers of Italian Cath- ·Italians.. "'" ... . . ",',oHcism in . the ~O's;· Much'.. ,of" ,!Jjhe ·milestones in 'the· life."of·~ltaly"was, in"a turmoil ,of bitter ,ca' "seminarian:are.. those.. which

an:ti_cleJ:'icalism and anti"papal 'mark" ,his, approach to·, priest­feeling ran: hi~ But. '.Bergamo, ·;hood. In. 1~95,·AJlgelo;.. ;Roncalli

·was pr.ofoundly ,Catholic, and, its "at. the,· age of 14: recei,ved hisBishop. a'nd Catholic lay.J'eaders ·first·tonsure,...~'the. outward lmdhad developed and put into' prac- visible sign of the clerical. .state,

"tice ,a..·constructive social pro- sYJIlbo.Iizing Christ's crown ofgram. tho'rr)S:" Two 'years later, at 16,..~t the seminary young Ron- 'he 'became prefect of'the dorm-

· calli. ,became acquainted with itOry of his class, a: distinctionthe. thought of the leadell's of given to' students of s.chol'asticCatholic social action. The then- merit.Bishop of Bergamo Antonio . 'In 1898, he received minorGuiandani dedicated his entire orders and. by 1900 hig; pre-uni­life to the diocese and' the cit¥; versity training was completed.

The Bishop's successor, Bishop The curricuhim had includedRadini Tedeschi, was a natiOn,.· Latin, Greek, Italian and worldall)' known leader in. Catholic historYr J!lathematics, geometry,

Page 8: 07.02.59

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8 -THE ANCHOrtThurs'., July 2, 1959

"DIOCESE OF 'FALL RIVER. 'MASS,

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Says Capacity to LoveAsset to Leadership

ST. LOUIS (NC)~The capaci­ty to love is' an asset to theability t.o lead, Father Cyril F.Meyer, C.M., national moderator,told the 14tb national conven­tion of Kappa Gamma' Pi, honorand activity society for womenof Catholic Colleges.

Speaking to representatives atthe 9000-member organiiation,Father Meyer cited the qualities'of love stresserl. by theJate PopePius XII. He ~aid that this love

·of other's sh"uk be supernatural,disinterested and indicate a will­ingnes~ tot:ickledifficult taskL·

Nurses Council'0:. ,ISsues BookIe.f'." WASHINGTON (NC) "-. A

";" booklet containing special medi-tations for nurses on t1:le Statipris

..' of the' Cross has been published·here by .the National Council. of.

· Catholic Nurses."A Nurse's Stations of the

:Cross'" 'was' 'written by Msgr.··DavidJ.. Boyle, .pastor of st.'Mary's Church in E'argo, N., D.For each station there is' a 'medi­tation relating the station to anurse's career.

Tne introduction to the book-.let points out: .

"Like Our Lady, 'Simon ofCYr~ne, Veronica and the weep­ingwomen of .Jerusalem, .thf!nurse wouIe' ease the sufferingsof our" Saviour, 'But Christ'ssufferings are over. She. mustturn, then, to minister '""ith lov­ing care to thE ~hrist she find.-in her patient.," . .

;1 •

!', .~.

arid' political levels, Father,Weber' suggested the crux ofthese problems could be foundon the family level.

Sound Living·.The task of home economics

is to radiate the Christian homeinto the changiIig world, FatherWeber pointed out.

"The family, home living; car'!.restore What a sick human race'has called for. . Sound, funda­mental basic living of the familywithin the hom", is pr.obably theanswer to the peace table, the ~delinquency progr'am, 'sound 80-' . rcialliving and statistical tellies,"he. said. , '.

Father Weber characterized,home 'economics as day by. dayduties arid responsibilities. When'these ar'e combined. with pa­tience and kindness, as well 'asthe virtues to be used in hecticdaily ;living,' Father We.ber said, 'the' family will have a greatereffect upon the changing world.

Home EconomicsFamily life

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CONVAI"ESCING: Prayers of friends of five-year-oldCheryl ])arra!, of Aubur? N.Y., ~ere 'answere? follo,,:ingopen-heart surgery. She IS shown In St., JOi'1eph s HospItal,Syracuse, after the operat~on. The child:s heart had st?ppedfor 10 minutes. NG Photo.

'Goocl,-''.

. MILWAUKEE (NC)~ Morethan 200 Religious and lay·teachers of home economics inCatholic high schools and col­leges were tole. of the vital roletheir subject plays in the fornfa­tion of ~~ristianhomes.

Father Donald Weber, assis~­

ant ,director of the Family Lifeprogram ()f the Milwaukee arch­diocese, said: "On'e of the chiefagencies in, the world. of stabiliz- .ing a quivering present, and

. lmticipating a' secure future, iI·the Christian' home. ':

He told the 12th annual con­,vention of the National CatholicHome Economics Council:"Yours is a vita. subject, a livingchallenge . . '. your dedicated 'charge is and will 'be to restoreall things in Christ throughtheho~e." .

Noting that.peacemakers havesought a solution for modernproblems at summit, scientific

Curtains' ~ide' Window/Fault,s"Create Beautiful Effect~' '.' \

'By Alice Bough Cahill ,What" would a ]lome be like wi~hout windowl\? Just

drive along a new' development and, ,most houses· are prac­tically ·all-windows '<>n 'all sid,es-veritable fish bowls. Butsuppose you don't'livein a new ~odelhome; perh~ps youevehhave .~ .hom~ with old,. . wall, leaving the windows clear'fashioned windows.. They for light. At night time you canaren't hoPeless, .so . take' close t~em a~d .the unbro~.en·heart, and resort to some of sweep .of fabriC gIves' the effect,th' . k th t have turned such of a wm,dow ",,~ll.. ',. : '~ trlC S • a, . . Then there's the.other type of

wmdows .mto eye-catchers of ld f h:' ed . d . th bbeauty: 0 't-h as ~bontwlnh~wh~t e kay

On fthe niceties of the Gay w~ a, ase. 00. Ig 0 ~a ee 0 ~ a natural wmdow. seat. With a

Ninetiell wil~ to . valance 'across the windows andhave, a stain~d-' pan·els. c)~ each side, you can,1' ass toppmg create a! charming grouping byon' a large. win- 'placing' :a' sofa. or love seat ind ow . Y.o u r front of. the bay with plants onproblem if you the window base making a pleas--have such a ing background for your furni-house, is ho~ ture.' .to treat thiS , Curved 'Windowsoutmoded ele-,ancy. Instead Now.ard again' one comes UP':'of replacing on a .curved window' and thethe color e d question: of how to treat it maypanes with one be solv~d' by using a va'lancelarge glass window -: which to "square off" its top. Placewould be costly~try a drapery the valahce high enough to beeoverup. Always bear in mind .invisible: from the. outside, butthat to make any wIndow appear ~allow the'lower edge to followless conspicuous, 'choose mater- the curve' of the window.ial to match your walls. Then, Just .like all details of house­'le) further the illusion of today's keeping, [you must, be certainbig-window l()Ok, hang draper- to have ¥ood grooming for youries to cover the wall at the draperies, for they must hangaides' of the window. well to look their best. Of course

If you top such a window with one muSt start with' rods and• wood cornice it will give it . hooks in the right place. Be se­the new "width".' You'll need. 'lective about hooks, for differ-.to use two pairs of draperies. ent types do different jobs. BeYou should hang a stationary' s~re tpe; cu~tain rod is fastenedPair to the floor at each side of· firmly, so It won't sag unde.rthe' window. If you have ,a ra- drapery [weight. .diator 'directly under' the' win- If your window has a wooddow, however,' there's. another frame, hide it by attachingproblem, which can be solved brackets' to' top corners. If it'sby having the' draperies that . plaster; 'it's advisable to usedraw across the window on tra- toggle bOlts for anchoring rods.Yerse rods cut off short, to clear' 'Now' 'measure from: top . ofIt; 'Y~u might add a finishing bracket to the hole where youtouch by boxing 'in the radiator . plan to put your fir'st hook, afterwith plywood, and gold grill- which measure the drape towork. ." ·make.su~ethat, the heading will, Disguising Draperies 'hide r?d land window frame: It's .

The, Ilicest'thing about dr~per,., very, Important to be. accurate',Ie! is that they can disguise the if you want draperies to hangmost impossible architectural straight. I

lines. If you have"a, room with Next; you should check drap­an odd and unattractive window ery length after hanging. -If it isarrangemel).t, hang your cQr-' wrong, measure and mark bot­tains from the ceiling on a tra"' tom herhs and alter' as' you:verse track and continue into an would an uneven dress hem..Weawkward jog section. ',l'his will l\dvise that you keep, any" extramake' the room' look much coz- length itt the material ·at .theier. . . . bottom df the drape,because if

For a room with two narrow' drape~ie~, do ~hrink,,: youi"Willwindows separated by a wall find it. easier to, adjust the, bot,.space, considyr ¥eati,n~ them as tom. hem' than .the top ,heading.one bylising three panels to You C!~m ,keep, the o~tsidecover. the entire ·wall. Have your edges of drapes straight by ho~k­eenterpanel stay put, then hang ing them; to the .window fra·me.your side panels far out on the Sew a ring to the top of hem'• : 0 ' • and slip it over a 'cup 'hook'· . Honors Foundress screwed into the baseboard be-

MONTREAL (NC)~The.City; low the window.'You'·can make. of Montreal is erecting a com- the hem hang evenly by weight-,

o memorative plaque .at the main ing. it:St;itch"weights to the top'entrance of the .mot1:lerhouse of (not the :'botto~) of'the' hem atthe 'Grey Nuns :here in' honor of' . each cOrner. If' lightweight.Blessea Mother d'Youville, their draperies' tend' to hike up, sew,foundress, 'who, was beatified j~' a weighted taPe all iaCrosa the'!""a'y' : .. ,. :' .....;... ':,. top 'of' the' hem. ;./ .- ','.' , ',,;' I'

MASKS AND MISSIONS: At the Irecent vocations ex~

.liibit in Manchester,' ~ngland, a Holy IGhost Father tries­• ceremonial native mask on a yourigvisitor, wnile hisfriend stands by armed to deal with e~entualities.The mi.,,,,sionS:!-ries have' a,large co\l~ti~n'of.~~k8,and this ,par'ticu:' .1aI' one is a' caricature of ·a. magillwate. l\lC Photo.• - -. .• ~ .•• - .• - ... r_

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Page 9: 07.02.59

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Mute .Mer'V"'rizesEntire Catechism

Mrs: Sam Pak, 76, just wasn'tgoing to be left out of thisyear's Confirmation Class inSeoul, Korea, that's alf, therewas to it! What if she was deaf;she could still read. couldn't she?What, if she was dump. andcouldn't speak'; she c~uld stillwrite, couldn't she? .

So the old lady· presented her­.self to Father Francis Mannion,Colllmban pastor,of St. Patrick'sparish, armed ..with pencils, pen­cil .sharpener .ana a supply ofpaper, .ready for the pre-Con­firmation examination .. She wastold that in her case it wouldn'tbe. necessary.'However, she insisted on herrights and was told to go ahead.After a. day and a half of ah:noststeady writing, Mrs. Pak hadcorrectly written from memorythe complet€< Korean Catechism-more than 200 questions andanswers in numerical order!

Air Force 8as~ Women,Elect Club Officers

Mrs. Manford B. McClanahanwill . head . the Otis' Air ForceBase Catholic Women's Club· forthe next six months. Servingwith her will be Mrs. EdwardCorcoran, vice president; andWAF Staff Sergeant MarthaKoury, secretary-treasurer.

Elected head of committeesWere Miss Martha Hurley, so­cial; Mrs. Donald Lacombe,Spiritual; Mrs. Francis Levangie,altaI:; Mrs. Joseph Trochta andMrs. Paul Harden, catechetics,Mrs. Jack Sewall,publicitY;··Mrs.Leo Marcus, refreshment!!.. :

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that men and women are identi­cal and hence. sho\lld receiveidentical ,treatment."

The NCCW gives.. "frank rec­ognition" to the fact that "al­though '. men and women areequal in their personaldfgnitythey are nevertheless different,"and the council says respectshould be had for "the character­istic which nature has giveneach." .

Organizations opposing theamendment 'saY,it would wipeout a~arge number of legisla­tive gains· tediously won bywomen over a long period oftime, and would substitute not.h­ing of value in their stead.

The NCCW,is fully in favor oflegislation calli~g for women to .receive equal pay for equalwork, that is, receive the samesalary .:as men if they do thesame· work men do.' The coun­cil. .has adoptee.:. resolutions onthis specific matter a numberof times ·in the last decade or so.

But . the "Equ·al Rights"amendment, the' NCCW says,would not even insure equalpay for equal work. ...

Catholic ,Women Say. Equal RightsAmendment Is False: Solution., .

FIRST BLESSING: Rev. Owen E. Finnegan, S.J., giveshis priestly blessing to his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Owen F.Finnegan,' 124 Cottage Street, Fall River, ·following cele­bration of his First Solemn Mass at St. Mary's Cathedral.

WASHINGTON' (NC) ~ Itwould seem t6 be time, oncemore· ·to ·get _. fixed straight inone's'minQ· wha't is meant by thes6-called E'qual Rights alTIend­ment proposed for the U. S. Con-stitution.·· . .

The· Judiciary Committee ofthe· ·Senate has reported favor­ably. aproi>ose~ amendment tothe Constitution saying; "Equal­ity .of rights under the law shallnot be denied or abridged by theUnited States or by any state onaccount of sex....

, On the face of it, this wouldseem to be wholly acceptablelegislation: It is certainly calcu­lated to win a lot of popular,seniimentalsupport.

, 'B~tit h~s been ·opposed, vig­orously. and cons~stently,.by ,theNational· Council of .Catholic

.W~meri _':md ilnumQ~r of .otherorganizations for more than 30years because the proposedlegisl~tion is not what it seemsto be.

Only in recent days, ,theNCCW told the Senate Judi­ciary Committee that "underthe guise of equality the pro­posed amendment would wipeout legal safeguards protectingwoman's position in the homeand in society." At other times,the NCCW has called such "blan­ket;' legislation "a false solutionof the problems of discriminat~on

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·Not Firew:o'r'ks, but: Highways

Are Fourth of July Danger.By Mary Tinley Daly

A "Safe and Sane Fourth" was the slogan years ago-­probably before many ·rea<;lers: of this column were born.At that' time, .it had a, definite significance. The ·idea wasto outlaw dangerous ·fireworks which took their toll everyFourth of July. Fingers, to border, take off in high­toes, ears, eyes;· evert lives powered cars .~o "celebrate." .of children were sacrificed Beaches will be packed, moun­to the cause Of so~called pa- taio' resorts will have. stalldingtriotism. room only. Highways will be, There were 'yard-long, double filled with cars bumper-to-rows of fire- bumper.

That's fine. People want tocrackers t hat, -lebrate and reiax.o n c e ignited, '-'''Jumped around A, The same thing happened just

,.. five weeks ago. Th~ up-comingin uncontroll- rr weekend is a replica of Memorialab 1e manner; k

Day weekend.giant crackers Macabre statistics came in thethat· zoo 111 e d 40·into bIas" with following Monday - nearly 0

Americans killed in highway·spine - chilling.· accidents. That terrific toll was·detonations and

taken in commemoration of thedisastrous con- nation's dead. -·s e que n c e s.

The r e were What Price Freedom?"bomb torpe- On the Fourth of July, thedoes" which under a tin can- .price to be paid, as inevitable ascaused many a youthful face. to the rising and setting of the sunbe scarred for life. Other VIC- on that glorious day, will be intims were maimed. or blinded by tribute to the Inc;lependence ofthe gunpowder that could be our country, won at great sacri­bought for a child's w~ekly. 111,- fice.iowance. .. Independence and freedom we

Such menaces nowadays hav~ haVe today. Bu; i.s it ~he sort ourbeen outlawed almost every- Founding Fathers 'envisioned forwhere, thanks to the "Safe and us?, We . are independent ofSane' Fourth" crusade. . . tyrariny· from without, thank

During the early days of ·that God. We're free to think, .speak,erusade I remember, as. a child, act,according to our own con-_my father's custom of· goihg,.t0 science. . . . . .Mass each Fourth of July, urgmg ,When so many of us take lit­his family to join him in praying erally 'the words of the popular"for all those who wiU ~ b~ song and apply it·to ourselves,tempted this day by a sen~ ..of .'.'Highas the flag on the Fourthfalse· patriotism to endanger life of July"-ana then venture forthand limb." onto· crowded highways· . ;

- Dad then ga¥e each of us 50 that's carrying the spirit of free­cents--and a half dollar was!l dom too far.lot of inoney in those.gays-to '. Though the· '~Safe ,and Sanebuy our fireworks. We were Fourth" crusade, as such, is atempted, no doubt about that, to thing of the past; perhaps it hasinvest in the zoom-zooms bought even more significance today.by our fellow customers. ' ., That prayer "for all those who

Back into mind came that will be tempted this day by aprayer of Dad's and we pur- sense of false patriotism· to en­chased Roman candles,.,.skyrock-. danger life and limb," utteredets-which only Dad was allowed long ·ago in a small' church in· ato handle-pin wheels, in~QcuouS small midwestern town, is even"snakes, in the 'grass," sparklers more meaningful on this July 4,and the like. 1959. . ,

Today's Weapons . '.' ,.

Today, in the space and jet _Six Volunteers Offage, the Fourth has a connota- To Home Missionstion never dreamed of by Dad INDANAPOLIS (NC) _ Six.. his contemporaries.- Marian College students have

Results· of firecrackers, even vol'imteered to give religious in­liant ones, and ;'bomb. torpe; struction in Arizona and Ala­does" pale into insigmficanc~ bama 'missions, their travel costscompared with .the wh.olesale paid by the school's unit of ·theslaughter of today's Americans Catholic Students Mission Cru­that takes place as they celebrate sade (CSMC).the ~ndependence of 'their coun- Four will serve six weeks attry. 'St. Michael's Indian Mission,

Those jumbo crackers of long' Chinle, Arizona, instructing Nav_ago took finger~ and toes-even ajo children and two others willeyes and ears. Hor~ible. , aid Trinitarians in Gadsen, Ala.

~oday's Fourth takes the Marian College, a woman's insti­whole man - body, and' some- Y tution, was founded in 1937 byiilries, perhaps;· soul... : . , .; . the:$isters of St. Francis:

In g~la mood; Amer~cans·~om " . ''!. . •

Atllintic to Pacific..frombord~":'··:·i:;AUBERTINEMaryknoll Non·''.:... ,,,of

Visits Family '. :.. . ". ,F"neral HomeBURLINGTON (NC) - Mary­

knoll Sister Mary Pa'ula· is 'en- \Joying all the comforts of ho~eduring a visit, with her family

· here after thi·ee.years, of ,regor- :OWl mission . life in. Bolivia's ..

, .teaming jungle. ., ..Sister Paula·, who with anoth~

· ., Maryknoll nun has been op­erating a small clinic in the·jungle, said rats used "to "play.tag" around the edges of herbed until she put a stop to itby securing the servicelJ of a catand dog. . .'

Plentifully prevale~t at hermission station Sister Paula: said,'are batS, lizards and large' blacklPiders. :'-. Sister Paula said medicines at

.·tbe clinic are kept irt orange··­crate shelves. The medical sup­plies used to be flown in by airfreight, she said, but that provedtoo expensive. The supplies noware received by river boat ·andare months in reaching the clin­ic, she added.

Sister Paula is an aunt 01.Sister John Bosco, also ao. M.a~y..knoll nun, stationed 'bi Kandy,Ceyloa."

Page 10: 07.02.59

501 .COUNTY ST.NEW BEDFORD. 'NY 3-1751

HATHAWAYOIL (O.rJ.N(~: .

NEW BEDFORD, MASS.

10 ' -THE ANCHOR. 'Thurs., July 2, 19~9

DIOCESE OF 'FALL RIVER, MASS.

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Protesta'nts Join\C;~u$adeAgainstSmut Literature·• MIAMI (NC)-Protestant"

lead.ers hi. Greater'· Miami'have pledged complete sup­port of Postmaster GeneralArthur Summerfield's campaign'to rid the U. S. mails of indecentI .literature. .

Rev. Mr. B: F'. Schumacher,Lutheran minister who twoyears' ago waged a successfulcampaign to rid newsstands inNorth Dade County of objection­able material, is chairman of··theGreat Miami Mimsterial Asso­ciation . committee on indecentliterature. . He serves on theAdvisory Committee on IndecentLiterature for Dade Countywhich surveys reports of v'iola­trons of Florida laW concerningliterature.

. 'All Must Help"The churches' will surely,

offer'their support, to the PostOffice'sc'amp'aign to clean uP.the' mail," pr..R, B. Culbreth, aBaptist minister·who is chairmanof 'the' civic tighteousnesscom-:·mittee for the Ministerial Asso­ciation; declared. "It ties r.ight­in with the moraland"spiritual­-WO'rkdfmY:.committee. and' "is a'maUer' 'affecting, the morals .·Of·the' young people ofthe country.­· .Last' . year, ·Dr,Culbreth,· re-.

ceived::an .advertisement froniLos' Angeles concerning a seriesof' nude films. He reported itpromptly .to postal' authoritiell~nd the se"nder ·was put out ofbusiness.· Eugene. Dunlap. acting pos~

master at 'Miami, said all com­munities across the nation mustc~operate in reporting the re­ceipt of indecent literature totheir local postmasters.

WY 7-9486

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Confirms ChildrenMONTREAL (NC) - Forty

· handicapped- children were'con-. firmed at the. Basilica of Queen ­

of the·World here by' Paul EmileCardinal Leger, Archbishop of

· Montreal. This is 'an annualCer~IPOny over which CardinalLeger· presides. .

Dio·ceso·n·. Serrans AttendInternati~nal\C~nvention

Nine from the Fall River Diocese attended the 17thannual 'Serra Internatiorlal convention in Pittsburgh. Theyincluded Rev. James F. McCarthy, St. John the Evangelist,Church, Attleboro ; Rev. John F. Hogan, New Bedford areadirector of Catholic Chari- tion's' grow numerous," Bishopties; and, as official gele- Wright said.gates, Russeli· Brennan, At,.. :In a pre-convention address, totleboro ; Dr. Arthur K Buck- the govel1nors of Set.:ra Interna­ley, New Bedford; and H~nry ticinal,-Bishop Nicholas T. ElkoDesmond, Fall River.: . of Pittsbl.p;gh Byzantine Diocese

Also present were JohriGra-. asked Seiran~to be alert to theirham and Cornelius Lyons, At- "~o!y respor,.,ibility."Ueboro; and Dr: Raymond Costa "The Church needs, personsand Quinlan Leary; Fall River. who will' stand firmly on two

With more than 3;500 other . feet and profess· their faith imdconvention attendants, including will . defend it, not with mere.1,700 registered delegates, they words, but with generous· sacri-·heard a call to ·Se.rrans to "spyak fice and personal sanctification,"

· up" for' the diocesan priesthood he' declar~d.by Bishop John J. Wright of . Bishop Elko advised SerransPittsburgh in his keynote ad- that "when conferring with po-d·ress. tential vocations, never minimiZe

"Spiritual Snobbery" the sacrifice required."The Bishop spoofed any i'spii"_ . "Never· let them believe that

itual snobbery" which represents the' priesthood is ail' ordinaryiiie "poor parish priests"as assignment,"· he·continued. "In..,.·,somehow infei:ior 'to th.e"great stead, tell: them howdemariding; .rt!ii,giousorders.':Bishop ~i"ight how exacting and how challeng­declared that this' notion 'was not big it is to wear a priest's gar-. 'OFF TO CAMP! With, happy grins,. these Fall Rivershared by priests, "but often was . mentS or anun's garb." , . boys' are off for Catholic Boys'. Day. Camp, .Westpor~.· Toby their aunts." . ,,' l'iarent's ,Rep.ori . . . 8th 'ff

He reminded' - his .audience I.' run daily from 8 :30 to 4 :30 until August 2, e camp 0 . ersthat the founder of the diocesan .In his report.as president J. . swimming, sports, handcrafts artd the oPI>orttinity to ·attend ..

' .. p'rie'sth·ood. ~as Jesus Chris.tRay. J0.rd;'m, Houston, isaid thaC d'l M L ft t . ht R nd St Law' ence Henry,~ Ser:ra I.nterriat~<?llal ha~. e.X;pan.d:-.". .aI, y. ass. ~ : 0 :Is:! are, 3;y~o... r , ...., , ..

Hit!iself,. an,d·! thaLthe di?t-:esan . ed'~to'anorgariization" of;l1Jriost' Mercer, Paul M:-edelros al1d. MIchael ..Bates. .e,.., . .' '''-PJ;lestsexisttQ.:doin.e,,~ry,ilaQd. 9,000 metrlbersin 133'Hiibs1in'the;:-i!' """':,,' : .....:;:' :',':"'''. ,., '.," .. ' ;.' i' .. r",',.", •• '",."

~~. work, ,,,,"ieh J~sus.,;ca'me: 19. U~~ted, S.t.ates,. c.a.~a.da., .Ptier~. ··'··:5.·.·0··O...'y.'O·.. ":·u·n····.·g,:... ··s·te'·5'" tO~"E'n' )·O·y·..·.,:'. ' >,. R~~Q,',:~~~lCO, P~ru, ·~,ngl~J;1~r~lJ~d;<·· .. . . . .: .' .' "..", : .. -. . '.. ',' ..

"As Serrans 'we must develop. If 1 . I " .

:ii~~:·~~'r:~··'7t~e~:.V:nd~~~:~~: e:E~~~~nc~h:.:~~r.~h:~:S:~~~..~... S<t•. V.i~c~rit d,e' P.q.ul· C~tri.P--.love' for,.'.f.am,iliarity· with.' a.n.d' St V t de Pa I Camp In 'South Westport has.. he noted: ,There a're new clubs in , . mcen' . u '. . . ',' . ,'.

· insight cinto' 'thL- work arid the 40 states. . '.. '.' .... \ "·,.. opel1,ed for the .sea.<;on...Th.e,. Camp,ma,intained by the Cat.h..·problems of our priests.'?' 'i:he I'Bjshop continl,led. "Then, will The Serra"n who traveled' farth:" . olic Charities Appeal and the Bishop's Charity Ball, will'come a full appreciation 'of the est fori the conventi6n",8S' provid~ free .. vacations for .over 500 youngsters from aI-

rb' . t Father LOigi' Ferrari of Genoa, ..' .. ' '. . . , ...... '.. .,' .:extraordinary'dignity and. eau y Italy.': .Thl·rty-five .bishop"s· were most, eve.ry CIty, and ...to.w,n ,Camp' has .been exparided withof the diocesan priesthood." D I Id t '

iil '·attendance,· including several of the' IOcese:· n ac I lOn, the Department's Order of the.In our own:homes and putilic- h dfrom South and Central Amer- the Camp is ost to ay Cross and Arrow continuing only in our communities, we must . , . .

be on guard against those moral,. 'ica. .' campers from the Fall River a larger scale as the theme ofpolitical, sociai and educational /., ,I and :tiJew Bedford areas. These the entire C,am~. .forces which have undermined Asserts -Private will add from ioo to '150 more" The s'port~ ,progra,m III evenChristian values and vocati.9ns i campers a week. The age is from more diversified .wlth weekl.yto the priesthood. elsewhere. Schools Needed' 6 to 12 years old. baseball games With Ca~hedral. "We must seek to encourage . :. " Director of the. Camp is Rev. Camp, plus regular penods ofand promote those constructi've HANWELLA (NC)-The need John E. Boyd and Chaplain is baseba~l and ?a.s~etball.

for private· schools is identical S e I A t t t th C mf'orc'es whi'ch pro'duc'e the moral I Rev. Donald E:.Belanger.. Mass . p .cia c iVlies a .. e. a p.. with the need for religion; says . II I d tit h band intellectual climate in which is celebrated every day in the ~I ~nc 1;1. e .a en s o~s, ., ox-

Bishop /E~mund Peiris, ' .. O.M,I." eamp Chapel, and is attended by i~g, field days, mpt~ry ndes; ~a­~ami1ies.· grp.~;s.tro'ng al'!d~\ voca.-. 'of Chilaw, condemning the cur-:, both the boarders ll'rid day camp- riety shows, .camp-~ires,·mOVies.·F 'h 'P'" "'D . ii ~ent campaign, for iJationaliza-( ers:' 'Twelve :semfnariahs ·of the Every camper. willpadicipate 'in:

o•

•. ater ., .eyton .:ra1VS.: t,~on of'.!llllpr!xat~schqol~liD :Cey-:' DioceSe serve -'on:the'staff ~of ,these events. '.. ,'" :. ','.~ity's,Larges,t Crowd: Ion whic~ has the backing of;' counsellors of: the, Call1;p. .: '. . Area' Canipers" .! ROULERS:(NC) '.- Ail esti-:: some gov~rnmenbleaders... , In," addition,. tm,administering :'AboutlOO youngsters"'froni tht'mated 800ao persons .crowded· . Cath.olic~ctivity to meet the~ the: camp program;. thc.',semipa.., Fall. River 'area'are" 'at· Campinto this' to~n~~35~OOO;:ih the:: situation iincItlded the'.<:observ-i· rians,,,giv~ ,a short.>instruCtion tht;se two weeks, Their'visitin:gFlemishY 'se2tio'n: 'of'Belgium to,l· anee".of il' day.,,' of' prayer· for;- each-day.inthe ..Chapel' on some, .day wiIl~'next SiJn'daY"~Th'eheai."'the iFamily,IRosaryCrusade'; church scl;lOols. . . point 'of,. religion,ge~red·, to···th~ campers' from the. :J'aunt/?n-'.preached ·by Father Patrick' Pey_'J '. Bishop": Peiris said' that 'tlM{ age of' the campers.. Twice a Attleboro .district:· wUl' 'enter

, _ton, C.S,C. fam~ religious fervour . of As- Week the campers attend infor- .Carrit;> on July 12 and'theirvisif-:-Police said the crowd was the i~!l~. ,~p~l.c:Lbe lit: ..l!. ,~isc;ou.p::L *, mal 'catechism'''aiscllSSioilS; :'. ,,; ing 'day ~ill be' July" 19, . the

largest inthis:~ity'S history. . the!, we~E1. to:.gO .i.n. f.or an edu,.. ., .;. ::":' :"~;;?',::.;,: .• ';,-;. ','; Fea'st 'of St. Vincent de PlniI:·· .. Earli·er. s··i:m''i"I'a'I' record:'break- cahon.,wlt1hout.religlon..." """.;, "., E"pand Ac~~vlheli'" '. New Bedford and' the' surroi:itia.:.

There has been' much expan- . .ing crowds had gathered in other The Bishop laid the blame ·for . 'f '. t· 't' th" mg towns will send Its campers

I slon 0 camp ac iVi ies. is year. on J I 26 ·th.·'· 't'" dcities of the Bruges diocese to progress qf materialism and re- The Nature Shop 'has beet\ reno- AugU 2Y 'Thw~C' ViSiCln

dg ayt·.pn

hear the Irish-born priest. Fath- ligi6lis' inc;lifference in.' the ·W.est. . d 'th .. 1 " e ape 0 con In-. f vatewi many more amma s gent '11' t C . A" '9er Peyton told his Ilstenershete: ,at the dopr of a conceptIon fl . 1 . C t' d WI en er amp on ug:

. "d' f l' on disp ay. onserva iO~ an with v· T' d A 16"The Pro Ecclesia et Pontifice ~uca~lOn l iV~,rced rom re ig- fire prevention are.being stressed ',. lSI ~ng ayon ug. .

giants bow before it, giants of 10US mflu,ence. Men, and ~o-:- with 'Smokey the Bear serving .intelligence, giants of sanctity - Dlen. hav~, grown u~ ~here ~It~- as the theme of this .activity.that couldn't be fooled by the out1!ny ide.a of religlOus prillcI- .' I The. already well:-established'Rosary for one' second if they pies;' he siHd., and mor.alit~'hall ,Art<Shop. has introduc~d. newh d . . . d . '" . become 'for them nothmg' more'd .- 1 k f tha not recogmze its povLr and h"'" 011" t' " .' '.", 1 eas ill paster,. w6r .' or e.greatness and worthiness . " t ..~.l1c,pu I c prop~ry;. . \'" 'younger boys and rosary makingThe Rosary is most worthy of 'Bishop' ·Peiris contrasted· this for the older. .' ",":;-husband, .wife' and child~en to. situ·ati9n.. ·~ith the 'position' .in .At th~. camp's private be~ch attrust, ·to love,· and' to grasp \,Vith--- or~ental," c,ounti'ies, saying tll~i Westport Harbor{;:trained Redtheir hearts, as. well ali 'with religion is: the core of the Easfs Cross Lifeguardil.' are on'duty.their hands:" culture. . Two 1 seminarians "have received

'their certificat~s~ in this from· the': course sponsored by the· National Catholic Camp'iug As­sociation at Cathedral Camp.

The Indiar' Department of the

NEW ENGLANDCLA MB,A' K,E

Every 'Sunday-' $2.95 NEW ENGLAN'D'including .- A Live Lobster ~

FAMILY DAY held by Serra Clu~ of New Bedford THE . .at Cathedral Camp shows J. Clinton', Rimrner, chairman, CASA BLANCA OVERALL &SUPPLY (0.

. .eft;, dispensing hot d()gs and .hampurgers:·£o Mrs.. Joseph' ." '. .,.' ' '." z," Howard Av.e.• New .·edford. .. J' . ,toggsha"Bridge~ Fairh~ver:!

~.,.,' ,~~lleverand her twos()!1~..Jol:m,14. aQd', ~seph Jr.•.l~•...,. /:I~'''~'~'~,~~~~.~.~.,~.~.. ~.~~ .. f.._.iIiIllIII"Pbo1NI' WE '.6~2'·_WY·9~~5i.IIi'IIIi·_lIIII!lIII!iiJ

Page 11: 07.02.59

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Legislators ActOn Two Sunday

.Closing BillsCOLUMBUS (NC) ·-Two

bills; both attempting tosettle Ohio's Sunday closinglaw controversy, were votedout of legislative committee.here. .

The Senate commerce and\abor <;ommittee by a 4-to-2 vote.recommended for passage a billwhich would repeal the contro­versial law outright.

Meanwhile the House judi­ciary committee recommendedby a 15-to-3 vote a substitutebill for four others, which werebefore the committee, to elim­inate some of the archaic prohi­bitions of the law, Many of thebans date back to territoriallaw, before Ohio became a state.The proposed law would keepthe" ban against common laborand transaction' of business ODStinday. '

Under the House measure, e~­ceptions are allowed fo~ works'of necessity and charity. It also,exempts "per-sons who"conScien-'

,'tiously observe the seventh 'dayof the' week as theSab~ath'; andabstain thereon from doingthingsprohibited·on Sunday,"

ITHE ANCHOR-, , 11Thurs., July 2, 1959'DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER .. MASS.

'.'

:' ~ ,

,;,:-,: .'

: ... "'t: I

,'COOK

·WANTED

References required ..

"Your Daily Bread .....

"". ,':,

,,, .... ,,, ,3 PRIESTS." FALL-RIVER RECTORY

''''.;:, :R~p'ly: The ANCHqR"~P;o 0;: Box·7;,Fall·River,'Moss;- ,

'd.r;';'Sir w~rd~f.aioud. "'v~rtisirig; .'1DOlltni :balterj .... buiit and. italfed' by' the mOnI<~

'hemselves so meet ,t~ growiog demand.. '

What Started as a small-scal.j>r.nduq baked by hand' io the kitchen of •Trap!>ist monastery bas blossomed inco' a hig),'qualiry 'loof produced with ,he accu,IlCJ" ofmOdern scientific methods.

The .Trappist Order requires ~ its. me~bers vows of obedience and poverty. This

l<ads to a life of simpliciry, hard work. andtranquiliry. Perpctual silence is observed. n..nlAnks never (OQverse .with each other. When',i.t ,i~ a\>solurely oe.:,essary to discuss some~of their work, they use a sign langua8e inventedby Cisrercians a thousaoq years ago. AI'hOui!hTrappisrsspend mucb o( their' day in ,prayer~d c~n~~mpl.l:ti~n, ~ch monk ",earns his d~j)):

br~ by wor)<inS for the whole community,An" individual JP.onk owns nothin8; even thehabir'he wears belongs '0 rhe community..Hardworle. is one of his chief Penances. The Trappistprogram, is neatly summed up in their motto:';To work IS to pray."

The Monks' mC'3ls consist 'of Monks' B.c.d(aJways in plen,tiful supply C:ICrpt during lhr ~$OO ,ofsrccial fasts), soup, ...cgMa.blcs, milk. and cherx, 1hc,sJrep (or seven hours each night on a bed o( planh wilhonly. straw pallet (or mattreu. At 2:00 A: M, ,~~gin lhe ncw da, by singing,psalms and ()(Mt di...iocpfaiscs in thrir c:oir slalls. .-

When You placc rbis lolli o( lall, slffldtr s!kes(JI) you. table, you arc sharing the mODlcs' bread with dac:m.

; ~ ." :

" .,'.,;' ..

A foo( o( Monks' Bread is _ onough innutritive value to be a meal.in iuelf.... 1t rutsto· be, for the Trappist monks who devel­oped this delicious loaf rat no' meat, fi~h,

or eW. Bread i. rhe backbone o( ,heir simplediet. Only the finest ingredients are used:u,nbleached flour for the white bread. vegetableshonening; vitamin enrichment. rich' milkaolids. sugar, and. salt. Trappists have hem'famous lor their ,home-made bread (or rhre<bundred years.

Real Nut[l'itlonIn a LoaU

In 1961 a small pioneer band o( Trappi"Cistercian monks of the Strict Observance fromthe ,Morher Abbey o( Gethsemane in KenlUcky,f"'lnded ~ new monasrery in rhe'Genesee,

, Vallef. Tilling rhe fields and raising new build·. Jags with their own hands, these hald-workin"gmonks, are rurning theit' land into a modelfarm. When the monastery was raised to anabbey - which meant that i' would be com­pletely seH.supporting - bread was chosen tobe rhe chief source o( income. The smallkitchen stoVe, originally used to ....ke Monks·Bread bad to be replaced wirh a reslllurant Stays tlalIII"ally fresh' longeroven. But vi~itors spread reports of tbis de- ENRICHED BREADS:licious loaf so rapidly ,bat wirbin twO J.... while' whO! W.... .. 1ft '.Monks' Bread ..... being sold by mail .. fill , _', .". • , , • R e W ....--i .. Rawa.it As the loa(;s_r~puia,iOn Spr~ '. .AT YouR GROCER'.' ",

Anti-Smut DrivesBring .' Results ','DENVER (NC) - Postmaster'

General Arthur -E. Summerfield·said here the Post-Office Depart­Irtent's campaign to rid the mails'of obscene literature is produc-ing' r.esults. ". The' number of cases of alleged

violations of anti-obscenity laws" 'turned' over to district'attorneys'has' more than' doubled· in ,thepast' 60 days, Mr.' Summerfield FIRST ~NNUAL COMMUNION BREAKFAST of thedecl.a.red... ,,\, . ,', ,~: , •. ,', ,C,atholic Young Adult Organization '-o,f Kennedy Center;uJ:et~~st::~~e~i~~~id:lc~;:;~.~.;1N~~ B~qfor4",h~l~atM_~;K ~~~~~~r~pt:s GasVg'ht cRQQ~,;,to a law enacted ,last year bJ followed, Mass at St. James Chur~h.Martha'Daprato,centeJ;,:Congress wllict, pJrmits distrib-, . ,jlanning. committee chai'rnian,confers,· with' 'ReviLeo '. rf: 'utors oj bbjectional rriatetial to "Sullivan, 'moderator and main speaker;'and EU'gene R'. Mon~be. pr~se.c':lte~ in. the place to lou', l?resi<ient, right. ' ,which ,It IS mailed. .,,' , '" .. ,.':"',,.' ',,, ' "

Pre~iously, ,'they could be '5't' J' - " hi' C 11 .",' 'E'" t "hi·' h ..prosecuted only in .. theplacc " '.,' osep s, 0 eg~"."s,als .esfrom which it had 'b~en mailed. New Radiation 'Laboratory

,Mr. Summerfield sald'southern ,.' , , " ' ' . ..1, ' " :

California and southern New. . VVEST .HARTF,ORD. (NC) - o.f. isotopes.Yo~k' State are the -principal fhe firs't radiation l<lbor:itory at ..Tbe p~ogram operates undercenters 'for, distribution of ,por- a 'Coh'necticut college for women the" "direction 'Of Sister Marianography. He' blamed this situ- is nearing completion here at ~E:!nJgna" p~ofessor o~ biolQgy,ation on "extremely liberal" St. Joseph's College, conducted and" bio-chemistry, who' hascourt interpretations of obscen- by the Sisters of 'Mer~y. worke? with radio-active iso­ity in those areas. 'Equipment now being installed ,topes m a progra~ o.f adv?nced

in. two existing science labora:.. ~e~earch at the Marme BlOlog­tories was financed by a $3500 lcal Laboratory, Woods Hole.grant from the Atomic En~rgyCommissron.Completed- facili t'ieswill include an air-conditioned·"hot, lab"· where' radioactive ma-.teria~s are. handled, and a spe",:cially" lightec.. . "counting", 'orrpeasbring, lab for 4eterminingthe amount ,of, radiation. 'given,off by', substance!l.". Starting with:the'fall se!Jlestel'iten St.' Joseph" senior sciencemajors' will' use ,'the new.'instal~

lation: 'to' 'condlictexperimentsin' radiatior. biology', and', gainpractice ,in the use anq. handling,

STROLL IN VATICAN GARDENS: Pope John XXIIIand four Italian cardinals stroll through the Vatican Gar­dens. From left to right are: Giovanni Cardinal·Montinj,Giuseppe Cardinal Siri, Pope John, Giaco~o.·Cardinal Ler-caro; Alfonso Carqinal CaStaido.. NC Photo. I _.-; ,

:Confirms, Prisoners !'

LONDON (NC) - ArchbishopGerald p'. O'Hara, .Bishop ofSavannah,- and Apostolic Dele­gate to Great Britain, adminis­tered the sacrament of Confirm-,ation ,to, 14 prisoners during avisit to Wormwood Scrubs, bigLondon jail. The Archbishop wasalso celebrant of a DialogueMass in which'the men partici-'pated, and he preached and gaveBenediction.

Americans Join'Scotch Pilgrims',

DUNFERMLINE' (NC) - Aparty of 80" Scots-born emi;-,grants returned here from, the,U. S. to join 16,000 pilgrims for;the annual Scottish. national·pil-:grjmageinhonor of St..¥arg~f~,i, 'q,ueen al1d,.p!ltron·E!~S.., .... ~.....' The "pilg.r.ims \Vere me.m}:>~};~

~f' -the l Guil,d Qf, St.·, 'M~J;g,~J;"

et ,of Scotland which has" its ilk,ternational headquarters in, ~ewYork. They ,were, led by Fa,the,r,Austin lCittredge. of the .Franc,i~-:can Friars of the AtOilem,ent,Graymoor, N. Y. , " .. ,.",,,Carrying :their own banner they.joined the procession, which es~

,corted .: a re,lic of. the saintthrough the town's streets, 'alter­nately reciting the Rosary' ifor­the conversion of Scotland and,singing hymns to the music ofbagpipes.'

At an altar set up in ,a publicpark, the pilgrims attended a Red Press HammersMass offered by ArchbishopGordon Joseph Gray .of St. An- At German Faithfuldrews and Edinburgh. This was BERLIN (NC) - Communistfollowed by the tra.ditiol1al pro- publications are constantly try­cession of priests and prelates.. ing to undermine the faith of

The' .pilgrimage ended with C.atholic publishers here.veneration of, St. Margaret's,- ,Father Erich Klausener, edi-.relic in the' n'eatby'St': MargaI', tor of. ,the ,Petrusblatt, Berlin di..iet's Church. Most of the Scottis~' ocesan newspaper, said ,the .RedBishops,!' hundreds ·of ,.p,riests; publication!l",sla.nde,~. tI:1e Churchmonks and nuns took part. 'Q)[; s.~a~ipg ,it ,has ,'po;wer •!>!'lly

St, Marga'ret 'was an nth-cen': Q~a.use~ ,.:of "p'eollll;l~.s igJ1l)ranc~.tury Queen of Scotland. She is I~l;l, ,alidress.ed pl,lbFsh~J;s ~~omburied in a 'church 'in Dunferm~ 10.·,EurQP~an' co:untries anp t~~line which she and her husband U,.,~... '. ;,:_, "" , ' ", ..King Malcolrii;: built. 'She was ,Tp.e publ.ishers were ",;elcomedcanonized' in 1250 and named, to. the 'J.l\eeti\1g,by lIis.·',Eminencepatro'ness ·Of. Scotland in·1673. Jqlius, Cardinal)oepf,ner, ,Bisb,-;

op, of aerlin. lie tol9 th~m,t~atreqloyal .. of. Berl.in from. theWestern world would mean thesiart, of economic and' political.collaps'e for the city. He stated,that there must be' no compro­mise on, this point, althoughsome agreement must be reaclfedwith the Soviets.

"Help us wherever you canwith insight anddecisiori, forwe' need .the· help of ,the freeworld." the Cardina'l urged thepublishers.

Pope Says Catholic Press'­Important on4' Necesso'ry

VATICAN CITY (NC)-His Holiness Pope John XXII(, called the Catholic press not only important but necessaryto the Church as he bestowed "bountiful blessings" on theCatholic press in the United States. The blessings weregiv:en to all members ,of tpe tiut necessary. Its activities in&4lff' of the NCWCNews theU.S~ are vast and vital.· ItService, its Rome bureau works very hard, but I must· say,and aU me~bers of the Cath~ 'lavora, lavora, hlvora' (work,oliC; ,Press Association of the work, work), for the ChurchU.S. needs all the devoted things you

The Holy, Father was eager to do."be told about the various activi- ' During the audience the Popeties of the JIl'ational Catholic followed closely a brief outlineWelfare Conference and as~ed of the N.C.W.C.'s organizationquestions' about it through his and development and closed byinterpreter, -Msgr. Odone Tacoli. extending his "bountiful bless­In the course of the aud'ience the ings" to the Arrierican CatholicPope said he cordially bll:!ssed press.the N.C.W.C. itself and ail of itscpllaborators.

"Ah; the Catholic press, andwhat it does for the Church!"th,e Pontiff exclaimed.' "It is a'York that is not only important

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,

Where .\IbetEntire. IF~,,''iCan;l)in~ ." ..:

",~al:1r.... '.

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.... ~ . ,·.·,ART-HUR J. :DOUm. , '.. ...:. ,~- .•.' (

'IFA!LiL iRIViE:R .MASS.., .. . " . ..1. ,'. , .

" ....

--'-

i,IRvi.. "oung '.gi'" ,('14-23110 ,labor 'lit'

,Christ's vast vineyard cii 00 Apostle of theEditions: ,press, ,Radio, Movies ,ciAdrele­,viaiOft. Witttth_ ,mode.. _aas,. th...llIIissionary 'Sisters 'bring Clori....Ooctrl.,Ie crtl. 'reganlless of ,race. cOlor .• ·CIMO. I'for inf.rtn1di_ 'write .to:

"REV MOTMEI ,SUPERIOR.. st. ,PAUL'S ·Aft. 'IOSTON :.,MASS:.

i" DAUGHTERS OF ST, ,PAUL

,Fami'y, ,ResiftJurtJ:nt ",',,It. 6 at The~rrowsi..,.iNol'thW:~port " '.' "i. "

,. • ~ I

.. ,'.

.;.~. ......:..

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··,~··,·, ...·"j·FRI··11':'(1'.'G···IDi·:,;'···'·m·!·'E"".' ' .!" ftl . \ 1 '.... - '.'

iR:E!F!R!IGERAT!IO'NAiPiPiLIAiHCES.

AiIIRCO:ND!ITIONil,NG

- . .,

;D ,&. D"';Sales~ ';and,~rvicet"IINC.

lIilor ,~he 'love 0.1 Our Lady' and tlte missions, order a··~'Love ¥ou ,medal il~w in anyone' of,foursty1es

'$ '2 small sterling silver$ 3 small 10 k. gold fined.$ '5lar~ sterling silv~r

$10 larg~,~Ok g~la filled

'Cut ~ut this column, pin your saCrifice to it· and mail 'if~ theMost Re~. 'Fulton J. Sheen, National. Director of The SOciety' 'forthe 'Propagation of the 'Faith, '366. Fifth Avenue, New York 'L iN Y.,or your!(J)IOCESANDIRECTOR,REV.RAYMOND T. 'CONSIDINE,368 Nortih 'Main str~e,t" F;allR,iv~r.Mass.

'!But with aU tbeSadness as iki~d of '.a :setting for a rich jewel,He rejoiced ·only .once-4nd ,that was in the . shadow of 'theCr6ss as the', Disciples c8lmebackand repor.t-

'edon their ,ministry. .. ,.

. A:llthese -emotions touch tbe Directors"~;iof the Holy 'Father's' Society . forthePr~-ff,pagation of the Faith, as Jlews ·eomesin IFfrom missionaries throughout the world. We""'?

are :saddened at the ,sight of priests, Brothers and :Sisters iii labor~mps in ,China; w(dovethey~uitg'men' and women ·of the Legionof Mary in China wboendureaperS.ecution rather than deny",theirfaith;w,e marvel at the .zealof priests in making converts inKenya and. Vietnam; we are troubled af our tDabiliiy tostiI" upgreat :~ffectionfor the poor of the world; but we rejoice too, andmost of all, when you resolve to 'do penance for your sins, namelyby sending a sacrifice to the Holy Father ,for .the 135,000 mission- ,.aries .thr~ugli!out ·the world. .', '. , •

.. ": ' .

Cause for, Reioidng'

God, !LoveYo'u... " :By 'Most 'Rey~ fgltonJCSiheen'. D.lD.' "',",:' ,:.~' I

. Being man as well ~ God, oUr Blessed 'LOrd '~hC)we1l allhnman 'emotions when face to face with a Sinful world.·ReI;"­ing' on Scripture, we learn that '()ur .Lord wept three times: '"

• •. once in the Garden;" ." ~ •. once' o\f~r' th~"ttlnib of LazaruS, , .. d,

.. ,". ~ •. 'once over Jerusalem,. . .. .,Four times He is .sald to have loved in a partlcnl~r ~aTi

• : . the rich youngman,•.. Martha and :Mary.

.... \ .••. His Disciples,,:: •.. Jomi ' ;.. , ,

·'Tw.iee Be marv~led: '. '." ." . I '

• •• once for the .faith of the RomanCenturiaD.· /- ••• once at the unbelief of ~is ..Countrymen

'Gil' One cK:ea~ion, BisSoul is .said 1ohave'bee~ 1l'oublec1:· .. in the Garden 'of Gethse..rnane

·Once He was .movedby compassionas--He :Saw' the· hungry· rnultitude;onceHewas angry iii the .synagogue at ·Capharnaum.Only once did He sing, ,and ,that was ,tbe

·,oight'.He went out w His' Death. "

GOD LOVE YOU to Mrs..W,G,'C. for ~$74. ,IOn ..June18th'"Y.was seventy-four .years old. Last year I sent you .seventy-threedollars ·for. the missions. This y.e'ar ['am making it $74." ... toM ..L.B. .for :$10. "This is the first Dioney ·that [have saved from .not .smoking for th~ 'past :few 'nionths.~' : .. to N.M. for $("[

. promised ,this dollar in the hope that !l 'would pass my·exairig::..l.and I .did!" .•.. to Mrs. J.D.L. for $5. ".This was given to nieua birthday' present. I'm sending it for the poor who need 'fo04

. and shelter." ... to M.D.H. for :$1. "Hel'e is that dollar' withwhich iI ,can ,buy so little and' with whiCh Our Floly Father canbuy sO much;" .' --- _.- -

~ , ' '.

, 2 -THE ANCHOR .Thurs., July 2, 11959 i

DIOCESE 'OF FAUL .RIVER. MASS

FEAST DAY JULY 6: St.Thomas More, Chancellor ·of!England, ,refused to supportKing H~nry VIII's divorce.unprisonedand beheaded' he ­was canonized in 1935 byPope. Pius XI.' NC Photo:

\

iLabor· MoYem~ntFinances StudiesUTRECHT(l~C~L.The theo­

logical studies of 1,348 Dutch stu­dents in 1958 were either whollyor pa.rtiallY financed by theNetherlands Catholic Labor

It was d'isclosed :here that thenetherlands. Catholic LaborMovement contributed about$480,000 'toward financing thesestudies. .

The movement, which has some40,000 members, does notgive priority ,to "its economic.,program, but to the complete!\.piritual, moral and cultural de­velopment of ..the. working class.

In 1935 the' organization es­tablished the Canon van Scha'ikFund for the education of priests.In 1958 the number' of studentpriests supported '.by the Neth­erlands Labor Movement,andcoming from its ranks; exceeded.toe 1957 to18fby ~OO.

Lutherans' to Await v

Specific ,I nvitationSAN 'FRANCISCO (NC)

The Lutheran Church-Missouri..synod "will await an invit'a.tion"before it .decides. whetner it willhave representatives in Romeduring tpe Ecumenical congress'ann<~unce(l by Pope 'John XXIII.

Dr. Oswald Hoffmann of NewYork, said his, churcQ has en­,gaged in DO ."off~cial discussion~'

,regarding the Holy Father's ac­ition. He added that he does note:Iqlect "any reaction whatso-'ever" until and unless'Luther­ans are invited to the congre88;

He said his chur'ch is "riot'averse" to receiving' an invita­tion :to the Rome meeting but~ouldparticipateonly if its re­presentatives could "discuss doc­trine on the basis of Scripture."He 'did not rule out ·the possibH­i't,yof sending,u[u)fficia16bilerl­ers.

Doctrinal' discussions, Dr:'Hoffmann said, would '''h'ave tosfar;t with Martin Luther becausethat's where our differenceswith Rome begHi:'" ',' :", . .c.

'BONNER FLOWERS .SpBC'laltsu tift ..' i

S,peci.a.lFl'Or.at Arrangem6ft~ I. !

• _Funerals .... Corsages,;• Weddings • Hospital· i

12082 ,Robeson St. '.IFein River 'O$5~7804 For,ReservatioM ,.

....._.,._.:.,'_;;;_.. ,_.,_."_""'_'._.'_'_.<_'--.,;~.I , .. _.i",_.f'ttD_:_n...;··..~·;O~'S_·'..;",if~;:i.1;,,;,;18S;;.;.'.:.:.;,".~';.Ii;,';'.ii;;;''~;.;,;'~~

_ .\~; 1.. ;'· i ,"Ii, ~""". It ..•• , •..~._ " .•: : \:~ ' .•"'l. :!.L-l:.'

6800 Take MarriagePrepara tionCourses

MONTREAL, (NC) - 'Some6,800 persons took' ',pat-t in:' the1;600 pnipaiation' for marriagecourses given .·in .. 60 parishes of .the Archdiocese of Montreal las.t

. y~~r:,. it \y~s rep~f.te(f by PaulEmile Cardinal -Leger. Arch-bishop of .MontreaL.- ' .

Assisting the 6,800 i~th~ircourses were 125 marrIedcouple's, .60 doctors' and nurses50 ndtaries, 264' other leaders and150 ,priests.

... :

St~aiy °Dat,ing .. ,U'n!justified"Among .Yt;)u"ger,~roups

,By 'Father 'John L. 'Thomas, sJ.Assistant J>rOfess~rofSociology

Saint', Louis UniverSit~

VVould you kindly rest~te your po~iti0nGnsteadY'dat-r'~g? My wife and '1 read y'cffit:colUIn:n but don't Alway.s,:,.'iraw t.he ~a:me pracUca,l,~onclusi(ms from. it. A.!e....parents

daing right to let their 14+-,-(going·on. lQ) year-old daug-biterfro steady with ahtd ,of 1,6'? theIDselv~. ,Hence there mustThese' .kids go 'exclusiv~ly be ,oIJPortucities foryoungpeo­with each 'other and are t@- pIe to meet each other 'and together bvo 'or three times establish ifriendships leadillgtOa week. They're good kids _ courtship' land marria,ge.daily corn:municants _ what ,cioo The custom' of. dating stemS1

0Uthinl,'! irem this~eed.OriginaEy it in-

.' As you' have. v<llved onay ·youngpeople· mOl'e'-d' J ..~ ,or less rekdy for· marriage; but .u. lcated; oe,' .j've' written" on" recently it has been adopted las.eady dating a normal form of entei-t3inmentSeveral times. also .by·young adolescents wboSin c e'steady . have'no s~ous thought of mar-

. Iria.ge .in rrtind. 'dating mea n sdifferent things Since tllesesocially inimaturern' different but sexually developed younger

. ciontexts, I've adolescents' are quite capable ,mtried to' pte- emotional inv.olvemerits'and 'sex-sent the basic ual activities, 'it .should ,be 'ob-.,0 d .essential vious that :this, practice not 'onlyfa'c t s t'h a t directsthbir energies and In-shauld be kept in ~mihd when terests away from formal prepa­reaching a decision about 'speci- ration iorl Hie but also ,entailsfic cases. It should 'be. ,'noted serious moral problems. "-that a rational decision in :the Mall:es Distfuetionpractical order .always repre-The practice ·of steady datingsents the 199ical .application of· .mllstQe. vfewed in the contextmoral princ}ples-'or ,premiSes 'of" of these pertinent..-facts. Henceval~es to a~et of pertinJilt it is permi~sible for socially ma­socIal facts. ·Hence we -must ture YOUllg:people seriously c::on­understand both the 'pruiCiples temp~aUngI marriage. There isand the facts in reaching a prac- -no justification for the praCticetical decision.· ' .among younger age groups'.

:Whatare thepertinent,facts? However; a distinction con-Let's start with what we know cerning the mea~ing of steadyabout· the human agents mvolv- .dating is pertinent here. To the00.' The miljority of boys 'and'" extent. that: modem parents 'ap­giils in' in\r . culture ·reacl). ,pU-" pear either, unwilling to supplyberty roughly .betw~en ,the .ages. sufficient : entertainment . fo]"of .Hand -14 or '15. ' . '.... ,.,) teen agers jwithin the extended

.. Puberty' represents :the initial' family circle' of r~latives ,and.. step in the final stage ,of sexual' friends, vat,ious. forms m ,group

development. During this period, activity sponsored either by the -'Mrmal adolescents 'become cap- schO<lI, chu~ch,'-or other organi­able of sexual arousal and the zations hav~ been developed.reproductive act, together with There need belittle objectionthat special form of emotional ,to such fo~.msof group ,enter­Involvement char.acteristic of 18inment provided. reasonableIov.,e between men and women. attention is; paid to'supervision,

Frequently in thep~st, 'and in time, place land frequency.• me countries even today, :mar-riage followed immediately. In Some Ignore FactsaU': times and places,moreover, .' 'Now if t~e term "steady I!at.;th~ period is characterized by' mg" means i,no more than thatthe beginning of considerable a boy and girl can. safely' 'relylICxual activity either alone or on each ·other for dates on 'suchwith others. 0 occasions; there can be' no' 'ob- '.'- - jec~ion to the practice. Indeed, it

Preparation tor Life represents" merely ,a normalc.onsequentiy, . if for vario~s co·nvenient,· ['often unexpressed

reaso~s the gapbet'Ween the agr~t:nt t~at they will'attendcompletion of 'ptiberty and 'mar- group affairs together. '.lIiage is lengthened, 'some ',PN)- ' - Tli:is' fortIl of steady dating¥is~on milst he made for .il'egu- differs markedly from the cur­fating sexual activity. Among a rent fad in ~hich immature teen

. few relatively prinuitive ,groups, aget:sape ~e exclusive, int1­this. period is regarded as a time mate,affectionate association ,Offqr youthful sexual experiment engaged coO-pIes. This latter'

. _ Uldfreedom. form can ha~e no justification.Among civilized .natiolUl 'at Well, .Joe,!I think youkoow

least until the· present ~ial ,lTlY answer to the case you pre-I ~'", custom and family (sup~iv1SiOn. sented. Parents who tolerate

earefully regulated ,the relatien- such an affait simply ignore thenbips 'between the unmartieairl 'fa~ ,of mb. I presume" ,oforder .to'p~event ,untimely ,emo-. course., that Ithe young couPle~t:l:al involveme.nt and to keep are normal. If tb;ey're'))Dt, theirllexual activity at :a minimum',.,. parents .have Iother problema .to

Since OUT tecliiialogica#y 'ad':' wcJr+y-aoout.I'vanced socic.ty·,ean'eIidure ,only ..', .,' ," " .if an increasing .proportion·of ,~ri~sts...~akePJeaJ'oung people_\1JIlflergO,. -long ,., .Jrears of iormaltraining .and ed- For'fight; on S'muttllCation, the gap between' pu- ''''''NEW YORy"(NC)':-A letterberty and .'marriage nmstremain, r~!1esting.p~re,nts'eoopera:tionconsiderable" Whi1J.e···:'.;morality (" with postal d.ff.iciais .iiI riddingand .common sense dictate that . the mails of lobscene literature~e ,energies .'and interestsbf' waS read fr6rir the pulpits ,of ,allyouth, nltist, m~anw!iile be. di- chur.ches in .t~ ;\rchdioeese~fr'ected toward' formaI-.· prepar- New York.' .'. , <

alion. for li:!'e rather than towar..~... .', The letter. was sent :to aU par- .emotio~a~.:ln:volvement and ,sex- ishes by MsgrioThbtnas A. Don-u.al.actIvIty. : nellan;', Chancellor of "the arch1'

Entai:sMoral Problemsdiocese:~Iturged parents to .saveA further fact ,to Iconsider -is any _objectibmible material

ttiat our. society ,pJ.a~ 'major mailed to th.eU;. children bypOc­responsibility for the' selection .nography dIstnbutorsand .turn·of Ii' mate' upon'· :young 'peoplE!" "'it, over; totheit localpos'tmaster,

" :. \, !. , . "" . .• "either in .person or b~ mai'!. .Catholics Distribute.' "This vicious morement loun-

L " fl' • "R' .' -.'., dfilrmine the morality of oW: na-eo etslD, uSS1a.n tion, partic1,llatIy our youth,has"LONDON. '(NC}7-The, Sword· so increased these past few years

of the 'Sr>irit, British' :Catholic' as to present a problem of 'im~i?tern~F9.~~al,ll:f,.f!l,jf,~" orga.l1jzJl;.:ro.Mi.!lt~ ,and. 19rave...concern;"tion, revealed here that itsmem- the letter said.bel'S ?istribute.,. 20,000 leaflets' in", Pr.eviously cpnfined itO stores

:', RUSSIan at. the 'Br.lisse~s· World' .and: newsstands 'a vast. amount~a.ir last :yeai> "':, :, .' :'.' " ':o( thi8,'le'\Ycitriaterial;'as well

It was .~tated 'at the lorgar\iza-', .as .. samples.;.~olicitiilg ·s.ales oftion's anntla!,: me~tin.~ h¢:e:that .,even. 1l10re ,"iibt~.ctional:ilepic­120,~g:;;'CQ~I~S: .. of,.~p:ublicati()ns: : ...:t\.ir.(!S;. s'lidesiln'~"fibris are beingdealmg WIth' world -problems sent to -children urider 'cover ·of.~lCe issu.,d la.;t year. first class maiL"

Page 13: 07.02.59

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DOZEN

Ham or Turkey

2 1 LB 4SCCANS

1 LB PRINT 6SC

, .

by Vice Presiaent ~ichard l\I.Nixon in Washington.

Mr. Crim, who was cited formore than a million and a halfmiles of driving without aDaccident, said "St. Christopheris my' constan~ companion. Iattribute my safety record andthe winning of this award t.him . and to the power 01prayer." ,

10 MKE, BROIL OR ~y '"

Center. Slices LB 89C

HANDY FOR ANY OCCASION

Whole Hams LII 53c

",eluding Choice Center Slieet

.Butt Half

6 to 18 LbsU, S.· Gov'.Inspected.Grade A

Turkeys41~

Shank Half Include.Choice Center Slice•

Shank Half

* * * * * *. ,* * * *

011

Bun Portion. i&'49c

Fully Cooked

HAMS.SUPER-RIGHT, Tender, lean and mellow'flavored for delicious holiday feastingl

c

Shank Port·ion

lB39c

.* * * *. * *. * * * *READY-TO-CQOK, PLUMP, TENDER

1'r.... _"'_._-.. ...... ".. .. Joolra ........M .. IIlIo~ ..........

OCEAN SPRAY Delicious with

Cranberry .Sauce.:Juicy and Flaky-cru'sted - Regularly 49c

.' Apple. Pie Jape P~r~~L~;ge8" EA 39C

JaheParker':StOck'up for the holiday

.'White' Bread', .$.;~ED l6'~~ 17c

3tb· bag 1.53

~~S3C'Mild and Mellow

'Eight O'Clock CoHee. Assorted Fruit Flavors·

-la-Rex Syrups :, PINT JUG

Sunn~, Strictly Freah' Grade A

, "-:.; ~arge ~ggs" Silverb~ook' Fre6h~.amery'

Butter,. '

A&P Super M.rlc.... ·CIosedAII Day, Sat., July 4

OPEN WED., -THURS. &FRIDAYJULY 1,2 &3·'TIL,9-'P.M.

I.. '

'/

- ..

Power of Prayer Aids TruckerOKMULGEE (NC) - Twenty­

six years of accident-free truck­driving were attributed by the"1959 Driver of the Year" to the"power of prayer."

Ca,rl C. Crim, a recent convertto Catholicism, now a member

.'. of St. Anthony's parish in this, Oklahoma town, recently·, was

:. presented the American Truck­ing Association's national award

West WarehamST. ANTHONY

Masses: Sunday-8:30, 9:30,.10:30 A.K.Confessions: Saturday-~:30P..M..

Wellfleet" OlJR. LADY OF LOUllDBI

Masses: Sunday-7, 8, 9,10; 11A.l\l.,Daily-7:30 A.M.

'Devotions: Sunday-7:30 P;M~, '

. ,Tru'ro- SACRED HEART

lIasses: Sunda,y"--8, 10 A.M.First FridaY,-8 A.M,

. North 'Truro '.'OUR LADY OF PERPETUAL ....

lIasBes: Sunday:......7, 9, 11 A.M. . ., First Friday: Devotions-7:3O P .•

West Harw:i~hHOLY TRINITY

lIasses: Sunday---'6:30, 8, 9,.10, n ·A D __" Da~ly~7 A.M. ....~nfessions: Saturday-4-5:3(), T:30-IP,M.

Dennisport "UPPER COUNTY ROAD

OUR LADY OF ANNUNCIATlOIfMa~s: Sum'!ay-7, 8,9,10, 11 'A.M.

Daily-8 A.M.. Confessions: Saturday-4-5:30, 7:30-1 P.l\l.

Woods HoleST. JOSEPH

Kassel: Sunday-7, 8:30;9:30, 11 AXDaily-7 A.M. -

Boeary:and Benediction: Sunday-T:IO P.II.·

. Mega l1sett '..IMMACULATE CONCEPTION'

1Iuies: 'Sunday-'i', :8, 9;:10~·11 ..A.K.. '12.... . .. ' "...Daily~,'A.M.' . ,. '~ ",., ",' !','.'

SantuitST. JUDE

Masses: Sunday-8, 10 A.M:Confessions: Saturday-7:30-8:15 P.M.

West Barnstabl~ROUTE 6A .

", '. OUR LADY OF HOPEMassesSunday-9:30, 10:30 A~M ..Confessions,-Before Sunday Masse.;

provincetownST. PE'fER TIlE APOSTLE

Masses: Sunday-'-6, 8,.9,10, 11 A.Nt:.·Daily-7 A.M.

Devotions: Sund~y-7:30P.M. a-Confessions: Saturday, eve of Holy Dais and eon

. of First Friday"""':'4:30-6, 7:30-8:30 P.lII.

,South Dartmouth, ST. MARY'S

Masses: Sunday-7, 8, 9; 10. 11 AM.

SandwichCORPUS CHRISTI

Masses: Sunday-8, 9, 10.Daily-8 A.M.P.M.

SagamoreST. THERESA'S

Masses: Sunday-6:aO, 9, 10, 11 AM.Confessions:-;-4-5, 7:30 P.M. .

·PocassetST. JOliN'S

Masses: Sunday-6:15, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11 A.~Confessions:-4-5, 7:30 P.M,

PopponessetCOMMUNITY CENTRE

Masses:. Sunday-8, 9, 10 AM.Confessions:-Saturday-4-5 P.M., on17

\ 'South Yarmouth.ST. PIUS TENTH

Masses: Sunday~7, 8,9,10,11 AM.Daily-7 AM.

Bass River. OUR LADY OF 'l'HE HIGHWAY

Masses: Sunday--':'7:30, 8:30, 9:30, 10:30; 11:38 A.M.Daily-:-8 A.M. .

I EQst Den'nis'WORDEN ({ALL STATION'

Masses: Suriday-8:30, 10:30 AM. '

Vin~yard -HavenST. AUGUSTINE'S

Masses: Sunday-6:30, 8, 10, 11 A.M;Daily-7:30'A.M.

Benediction: Sundays & First Friday_T:3«I P.•Confessions: Satul:day-Children-fO:3G A.M.

Adults: 4-5, 7:30-8::30 ·P.M.Eve of First Fridays-4-5, 7:30-8:30 P. II.

Wareham. . ST. PATRICK

Masses: Sunday-7, 8, 9, 10, 11 A.M.Daily-7 A.M. '

Devotions: SUI}day-7:30 P.M.'Miraculous Medal Novena: Monday-T:30 P:lLConfessions-4 and 7 o'clock P.M.

" . Marion" .'. - ST. RITA

. Masses: SU~day-7,8:30, 10 A.M.Confessions: Saturday-6:30 P.M.

'-

Summer. "Sea'Sf)"Osterville

OUR LADY OF THE ASsuMPTIONMasses: Sunday-7, 8, 9, 10,11 A.M.

Daily-7:00 AM.ConfessioQs: Saturday-4-.5:30,· 7:30~8:30 P.M..

and'J:30

forSchedule

North EasthamCHURCH. OF· THE VISITATIOW

Ma...: Sunda)"-8, 1,·lo.n A.II&. .

- 'EdgartownST. ELIZABETH

Masses: Sunday-6:45, 9:00 A.M.Daily-7:30 A.M.

Benediction:'Sunday-7:30 Poll

OrleansST. JOAN OF ARC

Masses: Sunday-7, 8, 9,.10, 11 A.l\l. .Daily-7:30 A.M. .'

Boaary and Benediction: Sun<laY-'J:IOP.II.

East BrewsterIMMAClJ~ATE 90NCE.n'IOJI

1Ianett: Sunday-'J, 8, 9,10,11 A.I\(.

. Oak BluffsOUR LADY STAR OF THE u:A

Masses: Sunday-6:30, 8, 9, 10:30A.IlLDaily-,-7:30 :A,M.

Benediction: Sunday-'J:30·P.M.

. ,Mattapoisett

ST. ANTHONY'SMasses: Sunday-6, 7, 8, 9,10,11 A.M.

Daily-7:30 AM. .First Friday-6:30, 9:00 A.M.Tuesday-St.. Anthony Novena Ilftd Novena. '. to Queen of Peac_7:30 P.JL

Conf~aiOlll:Saturday-4-5, 7:30-8:30;,

Nant'ucket"" ,OUR LADY OF THEISLII

Masses: Sunday- 6; 7" 8; 9,-10,1:1 A.M;Daily-7, 7:30 A.M.

Services: Sunday-7:30 P.M.

SconsetMau: Sunday..;..,-tJ A.M. '

YarmouthportSACRED HEART

Masses: Sunday-8:00, 10:00 A.M.

Falmouth HeightsST. TIIOMAS

Masses: Sunday-6:15, 8, 9, 10,11 A.M.Daily-7:30 A.M.

Benediction: Sund'ay-8:00 P.M.

HyannisST. FRANCIS XAVIER

Masses: Sunday-G, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11 A.M., 12 NomaDail'y-7, 8 A.M.

Confessions: Saturday-4:00-5:30, 'J:30-8:30 P.II.

East FreetownCATHEDRAL CAMP 0

OUR LADY OF THE ASSUMPTION CHAPELMasses: Sunday-7, 8, 9, 10 A.M.Benediction: Sunday~5P.M.Confessions: Saturdays-7:00 o'clock. ..<

FalmouthST. PATRICK

Masses: Sunday-7, 8,9, 10, 11 A.M.Daily-7 A.M.

Novena: Monday-Miraculous Medal,Benediction: Sunqay-7:30 P;M.

East FalmouthST. ANTHONY

Masses: Sunday-7, 8, 9, 10, 11 A.M.Daily-8 A.M. (Others unscheduled)

Rosary and Benediction: Sunday-7 P.M.

Central VillageST. JOHN THE BAPTIST

Masses: Sunday-7:30 AM.Daily-7:30 A.M. •

. ST. JOHN THE BAPTIST HALLMasses:. Sunday-8:30, 9:30, 10:30 A.M.

CentervilleOUR LADY OF VICTORY

Masses: Sunday-7, 8, 9; 10, 11 AM.Daily-7:00 A.M. .

Confessions: Saturdays, eve of Holy Days, eve of .First'Fridays-4-5:30, 7:30-8:30 P.M.

OnsetST. MARY'S

Masses: Sunday-7:30, 8:30, 9:30, 10:3«1, 11:30 A.M­. Daily-8 A.M.

Confessions: Saturday-4-5:15, 7-8 P.l\l.

AssonetST. BERNARD'S

Masses: Sunday-7, 8:30,10 A.M.. First Friday-Evening Mass 5:30 P.M.

Boly.day9-8:30 A.M., 7:30.P.M.

Buzzards Bay." ST. MARGARETMasses: Sunday-6:30, 8, 9; 10, n A.M., 12 NooJi.

Daily-7:30 A.M. .Confessions: Saturday-4-5:30, 7-8:30.

ChathamHOLY REDEEMER

c Masses: Sunday-6:30, 8, 9, 10,11, NoOJlDaily-7:30 A.M.

Devotions: Sunday-7:30 P.M.Confessions: Saturdays, eve of Holy Days

Thursday before First Fridayr4:30-6,-9 P.M.

Exposition on First Friday

Page 14: 07.02.59

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",~B;y BRIAN' CRONJlI(! . .-.' " '"

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"'SISTER DANIEL and SISTER GEORGINIA' liavelong de-dred to become Sisters of the Vlsitation in Indfa. We gave them .,

. permission to enter the .novitla&e on iub' 2.'the Feast of the Visitation 01 Ute BlessedMother. We' have DO sponsors for them ..yet, but we know that Our Blessed Mother.will find • sponsor for: each girl, wbo will.be willlnr to pay her, necessal'J' expenses of$150 • year for. the two years of novUlsietralnill&'. It may be you who will step' for­

owardl------

'BEFORE YOU PICK ,UP THAT MEMBERSHIP AT THEBEACH CLUB ... THE GOLF, CLUB ... WOULD YOU HAVEA FEW EXTRA DOLLARS TO JOIN THE CATHOLIC NEAR

, EAST MISSIONS. THE DUES ARE $1 A YEAR EOR. INDI­VIDUALS OR $20 FOR LIFE. THE ADVANTAGES OF'JOIN­ING CANNOT BE MEASURED SINCE YOU SHARE IN ',hmMASSES AND WORKS OF MISSIONARIES ALL OVER THB. . . '.' N,EAR EAST. ....

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GIVE TO WlN.THl!: WORL,DFOB C!ilUST•.

,'.fii.~rfast(UissionsJitJI - FRANClS CARDINAL SPELLMAN, PrMldent.i .-. Msgt.,'e""'. Tuohy, Nat' Sec'y ~ ~

, . . ,:.!' Send an _unlcatlofta '!M. ,.." ;~TH()LICIN~lt~ST•.vt~lF~Ri, AS~O(IAno.M

,,"'.' .480 .Le~~ngton ~V••. ~46f~ ~"''''~,Y~!'7~ N.Y.

Joseph ,A. CharpentierReg. Pharm

,J:EL. WY.6-0772PRESCRIPTIONS

1902 ACtiSHNETAVE.,NEW BEDFORD

AIME PEllETIER, 'ELECTRICALCONTRACTORS

Residential - Commerillalindustrial

6U Broadway. Fall River..OS 3-1691

BROOKLAWNPHARMACY

.; • .' " • .,: :'.' -'0

:~:'!;Irt;·,High,.Malls" th:e: ;G~spel is:-(a) :Omitted! ,(b) Said ,Aloud?',;~'>'(i:)ISaid SilentlY?".(d) Su'ng?r ." , , ' .zt '~:~th-e'Church 'c~l~b~~tes 'O~Y three" birthd~ys'iIi its lltu.ri{ic3I6;";.cafen'dar- Our Lord~s;' Our LadY~s, and:;"(a), St., Joseph's?r",,'(b) SLPeter's? (c) St. John t~e Baptist's?, «0 St. Patrick's,3:. ThelIoly places in the Holy Land have ,traditionally ,beeo;',r';Under :the care Of'. th~:,--~a) Franciscans?' .(b) .,Dominicans?,'X;;,<,,(c}Tr,appists? Cd) Cannelites? '. ",' .:: , ' .' '. ";j('J;:Wha(does the ,word '.'cr~ed" niean?:-(a) Ri'ayei'? (b) Belief?';i:C:' '(~)':.fIyiiiQ? (d)'Prophecy? ' '., " , >;5~",~~ThoSe-,bOdks ' f~l~ely. claimed to be" divinely ·'inspired . partS ··of

\ ,;:}':::tfitr. Bibl~!' 'are',;:;' termea:;"'(a) Didactic?"(b) 'ApOCryphal?•.~ .. t .. , . '.. '. ". '.::.;.:':;Cc): Pr:OPlletical?' (d·) Canonical?.:' '"". r··· . ,

'.. .. :. ,; .7:, .," '" ';'" ",."" ,,' . ';' " ... :", .,' .',,' , ' .. "C', ,-, ••,,0,' ''-,' . . ' :&\:~';ID> ec~r~$i'listica.r- ~'r~mk~;~oVi;hiclr"'Of .the ,,;, following: , orderg,;·,is.l::: HONOR;OUTSTANDING' LAY~AN:Arc~bish~j)EgfHJ? v.aiH9zz:1':'~ie:,so.~d:,;1~~t,;,Ap-' ~:;'i1':~io:l'n':~,~\~):';:'.~.ic.~oi~'i~1/ ~b)': '1\col;Yte? .. ec) 'Deacon?~tolic Delegate to the United States, pr.esen ts . Notre' :Dame: Uili\:et~itY'}L1959.;Laetare c~~''''(d) ~ubde~co~U '. ':.' .>c>., ,." ..,." ,c"" ; !:' .,: ",,' ,-:C'

~~dal to'Depil'ty Under Secretary.:,of:State; RobertD: Murphy.- At left i8'F~th~r,.Theodore 'T.,; To 'whom did Oti{L~dy;~ppear with a miraculous medalahd aSk~" Hesburgh,:, C.~.C., ..Notre Dame, ,president, and at right is pro Charles Malik, presi- "', that it:be'made·and'·,w,6rn::bythe'faHhtfii?::.:....'(a)"'Bernadette-Sou-dent""Of the lJriitedNaHons General KssernbtY:';N(rPhoto~' ...' '0"'." "~"', ,w • . ':::; :bif9~ (b) ,Cilther'ine 'Latioure? '(c) 'Mariette Bileo '(~) 'St. Maria, ' . '. i· ..· , ' :, ~oretti? ' , ' .. ,. ,',". '" .,'.,. " "

LdUdS'< I'nte~r'n:ationa I [dbor., :Tr~d~:\~:~io~.i~ts .., ~~o~i1~e, ~~~~O~l::!:~ :o~;~:fi>l~i:~;~~:r,(~f\~~:~~~:

0::1 • 0 I' . C J I '4 .... Aquinas? (d). St. Aloysius Gonzaga? '. \ .' ,

,'.," '·9"o'.n"·.-·Zot·.~o·n' ..,s·",:"" ,b'rJ-ee·t.-YeS "NoE~WnYy.e.onRKe ('NCU)_YT, ~e' 'A_ Give yourself 10 marks for each correct answer au' page 18;

.. . &J\ ~ j,j.- ~"Ratiiig':'.a~Excelien.t;:7~Vely Good; 6~d; 50-Fair;1' By Msgr. George G. I:Ijggins .sociation of Catholic Trade un- ', ..... ' . -:',,' t·· , . . . ~ '. '•.~' ~.' . - .-' " ,

'Director NCWC Social Actlo~iDepartmen& ionists."<~CTU)will hold its 13th. .' . . """1 ,,' national conference at ihe .Tudor

," Defegates particjpating iO,-the·, 19,59 Conference of' the. ArII¥ 'Hotel, Cleveland, July. 4I!t,ternational. Labor Organization in i-Gen~va," Switzerland and 5,. national 'direc'tor Frank ';'·T·'A'K E: T'rH'E 'B' U' S~k time out in the early 'stage 'of, th,is important meeting Andolina·'announced here.' ., I ..'. " ..... • , • • •

• ~I ,~H~pq a..M.:~~~ ..,co~'P.~,n,:tpra..- tin,g: ~~e1' }Q.t!t:,a~niy~,~s~.g"~!, . , .traTchte~dassn'aOCtl"oian.tw~ol~d'"e'WahttieChn'tl~o,an:s faOt-r

~d~~adv~_the dril~ing ~ ~hs." Sis lise~~rlalble adlssvicleand ~e Zwe~th ILO Th h f ',''''. '"l"~'" .Mlpass " "on,. MI ;'.,. e a vaMl n m onary· a. ar••:. ~ e preac, er ~r within' .*b.e --International Labor .its fight,. against exploitation of .. (Trapsjorclan). This devoted mlssioa-th~ ,Occa~lOn was the Most', 'Organ'tz'ktiori"ih' its recent his~ ~Negroes anfl,Pu~rto Ricans;lwill ·al'J' wrote that his mission chapel on ,.Rev. Francois', Charriere, torY' ViAs'the"adoption in 1957 meet· under' the theme: "Prob- .:', ..'. the outskh1s 01 the tO~n wall almost$h~hop ,of Fribo.u~g, the di(h,= Of. a c~nv'lentio.n. to outlaw f.orced. lems of Industrial Harmony': . ",,,,,, 'as .large as the 'main Ch~ch..As •.ocese in which Ge'neva is located.'" labor":m the'world. .., 'Strikes Today~ndTom·~rtow."· . "," . fe~~lt he, was,force,cit,o 'dlvl~eDlUc~

, !:iA: summary of::Bishop Char':"" ,Work: on, such a convention '.' The' 'ASSoCiation;which; was 9f.,hIs tiJile.,between'tbe ,cbapel andri~re's sermon began i~. 1947 when the Amer-. founded in 1937 .here, has as its uie main pa-rish' Church: The dIS-~~ alre'ady. apC: ';;ican,Fe~edtion .of L~bo~.as~~d'purpose 'to progagate Imd: im- f' knce is about five"mii~I' and 'ili bad~ared in. the·, ;;;,~~e."V.m~~d;.NatIon.s, to mves~l-plemt;nt U;te:~o'cial·'teachings .of ~weather Uie:'~~i~c Is, rat,~erontliediocesan press. gate forfed labor 10 the SOVIet the Church in the field of'llibor- ; '.'" "rougb side. Taxi fare would eat up~nder"';the NC, Union al\d communist-dominated management r:elations, Mr. Ando- most of the' revenue .... 'til :walk :ihe'Ify-iine; It will ' counb:ie~; ...", , !ina ·said.' . distance would require 10 'Igueh fun. ,'t;herefore sUf~ Serious, Mistake . ACTU spokesmen hav~ ap- Tbt'HdyFaIhtr'sMiIsioR Aid 'Uiat he;' 'wouid' requIre aIi . aSsIStant .flee to: recall Discruh.ination in employment peared numerous times, before .". " "1~ tht OrimtalChuirh ".prieSi ~'; ~ So' he' wrote and' asked wi· , . " . th" h' h h b ,." .'., " to appeal for $500 .- buy a "jeep."titat the Bishop ~,a~o. 1r"Is,~~e 'Y; IC as een Congressional". committees in MI

enthusiastically stIrr10g wIth10 the ILO for the Washington,testifying on various We were about tf; suggest the b1lS-"'but ,there:is no'· bus serv·',, ' t 1 A d ft . Ice here between the refugee settlement and the town; Can'p'.' '1' a i sed the pas .seve,r.a,.. years, . .ra.. co.n- rna tters such. as labor racket- ,, ". "oil' help' this ·goOd p'ril~st 'to 'buy a "jeep" 50 he can "multiply"1'1'0 l' k:'-of the' . ventIOn,alllled at eradlcatIn.g, dls- 'eering ahd, mostreceritly, rais:.. . ,

y1te"rn'a' t YO n a I. criminati9A,', aga,iI)s.t .. emp10yees ing of the, minimum w.ag'e: fro'" .bll presence and' be Intbetown 'and with 'the. 'refugees 'at ...Ul , - moSt'the Saine 'time?" . .~bor: Organi- b~cause ~f. race, c.ol?r, sex, .reli- $1·to$1.25. . "" •,:,~,tiQ nan d ,,,' gIOn, ~olrt!<:~l; OP,~}:llon, national I . , • . SUMI!4.J!;R CAMr,~:.ARE Q:NKNOWl')I,~, ,PU~ ·R~.fUGEE,urged--Catholicsto help achieve or f CIal"?rl~~~ w~s adopted at ~qrdinal'Cicogn~niQ .. ". ,CHILD~EN ... ,.J\,L.MOST.AS Ul'fl(NQWN 4~-AFULL,~~ALitS: aims.' the Int~rnatIonal'Labor Con- I 11I..1 R P' " '..: •....;. WE. CA!'l~O'g~s~~~ ,.THEM TO CAMP BUT WE M.UST')Bishop Charriere.~s words 01. ference I~ June, 1958.. n l""IIleJ! t!mE!Qst'j" ,.,I'~ED..,'f.HEM·,'..:: $~O.WII,.L ~,E,l'lJ) A, 1'.09,D PACU~1!;1p,~aise~cho whaitp.~ Church has .In recE1~t'Ye.ars·thin~O, not- , V:ATIC~N ~IJ'Y (NC~~---';f. Hisbk;en sayingo'f ILO·these many w~thstan4mg'lts ·many. accom- Em~nenceiAml~to Cardmldi Ci- JOSEPH arid HiKMAT"Wi,1 enter .·'seliiinari'iD JerUsalem"..i~ars ,of rjts·existence;:.::~he-..Jate",.. ,p.h~h..l}'\~.l}~ll,!'l, t}}~,:f,iel,<l"9f.~.oc~al",,, ~Qg9l;lj1j,_,fqpp.. ~I;.A,!lc;>stolic ·.Dele- .:, ,'Jon;iJub', 1-, 'the 'Feast'of '·the Most 'Precious 'BlOod;· 'Both boyaI. ..1 f h b d d dl " were "SO'anxious'to'startoil', the road to the·.... ',. ,-Pdne PiusXII,.for.' e~3:ml?l~;a.':"-;',i~.:,feg,~II;t,,·.,!.~~ ,een. a e.cI e y gate, to t.h,e l~,nited St.atel1,", has

ri'" tr I b t th b' ' ':",,·.nar "that we: could not' refuse ·them·..pel""clressi,ng .J ,the ; I~P',s;,HQ{[~~!P}~~, ,.c~,~.o~e,r:~ll~:" <:..~u Jec ".ID:.. ~" een, named" a ,"!ember of, the 1" 'mission --'even 'though :1&, was .·'C". gamble.B6dY. at CastelgandqJ~g,m 1957, u:~uted Stiltes..,Some of Its crltI~s l?acred Congreg~tIon of the Holy

P'.birit~d'·ourthat "T..:tt~.,.,Chr~stia.":,,.haye., goi;1~.. ,~o: ,.f.ar .as. to suggest '.0,ffi,c¢,.. ;,....,..'... '" ,. " . '.,' Usually":we make,' these'" boys 'waU,' untilth t th U S tho f . ''''''':, we have a spOll8or.. 'for·eacli who Is willing

-novements., : . have'· given th~lr., 3" ,.e .~.' . "•.. WI raw· rom. ' "HIS appomtment bY-His.:Holi-,;.,,,,,~,pQ .. the necessary;expenses of,~:$100" af!,l'ii supporqo:'the'lnt~t~~.tion'al"··theorg~nlza.tlO~. . "." .' ness fp~~,,J;~/:ln.,;x.:?,IIrbrin~sto . ,,:,,<-ci7ear ior thl'slx year.'eourse. However;;weLabor'- :Orgailizat~on, ..l;l~9 ;,con-:.',;~,I~;;~~.~~.~'Tlt~I,'!! opl,Dlon-:-;-whlch 10 the nU.,.m.,~~.r:.ofca.. rdm.alswhoSl'''.der I·t "an ..,h..onor. to" ta'ke ·.,part h.as. bee.nl,st.ate.d.,\ more than once are' 'rlu~ti'ibers"'ol" tHe' congre,ga- .'." '.. are, confident tbaLsince they ,will ,begln.on·,

.. • FeaSi which recalls Ou~,Lord's' sacrifiee. .~:itS work." ° , i,:C:'~:'" .J.' ,"m:The,:t~rdstIc~ and,t!?-r:0l:lg~ tig,?,,,,,tl).e. y':~tica.n,.,~~partment' lor us .•• it will not be too difficult to find someone wbo wlIl';:. '.' 40"Succ;ssfl1r"Year!l"'~"" ",'. ,oth:r.me~ha-thls would be a concerne.d with faith and mprals. make. sacrifice for' Himl .l.'Organized, at·' the' dose of . s~nou.s m,Is~k,e. The,~qpe :~imself is .. the Prefect,

World War I and since '1946 a :1£ the United ~ates were to of the agency, whi~~ i~. the .· eciltiized ,.ag'ency as.sociated~lt~d~a~l!r0n:' any of the ~pe-smallest'ofthe'12'congregatIOns.

&p. h th U't d N tions the clahzed agenCIes of the -Umted or perma!1ent commissions of~b 'in : w~:l~ ';"he~e in~rna-' Nati~~s .~ry whic.h it ho!ds mem- cardinais, handling the business .· 'I' th del' of the bershlp, ItS foreign polIcy would of the Church.

tiona CrIses are e or be h" I ed b "ts .. . If ·s'" .d

" '. t'nuing the job it· has . a~per y I own. se - Hi~e his recall from Washing-ay, IS con I . exclusIOn' to 1 t D be to . th'bEien .doing for 40 years-,-the im- . " n as ecem r .recelve. e

provement of man's working 'and Particularly is this true of mRed Hcat :andc sedr~e IlnC~e"Ro-niIi~ing conditions. . the Internlttional Labor Organi- ' an urla,ar ma Icogna.

· Wh'le the measure of accom- zation. 'Yith )ts 79 member has been named a.member of SIXplish~ent of the United Nati.ons states entipedto, represe~tations of the 12 sa"cred. congrega.tions.artd its '~pecialized . agencies' in, . not ..only py representatives of .. Pope J~h.n alsq m~d.e hll~ athe political sphere re~~iins de-' ,gov~rnme~t but also byspoke~- m~~ber of the Pontifical. Com­batable', 'international organiza- ment for lfb~r and for the bus~- miSSion ~or the' Authentic In-_lions like .the ILO have unqu~s- ness.comm,umty, the·ILOmay.be ·terpretatIon of the C;:~d.e of Can­tiOnably. had a real measure of 'consld,eredl ~he' most effective o~ L.aw and the P()nhflcal C~m­success in economic and social sou,ndmg ~oard of any of the .m.lssIOn for the State of VatlcaBn\atters. And' succ:Ss' iIi these ~mted:Nations specialized agen- City.matters .. cannot fail to 'remove. cles., . I r-..;..---.....~.....--..;,;,--_s6me '6f'the threats to 'peac.e· for In' a,'major foreign policy ad­which we all so earnestly pray. dress on ~anuary 18, 1958, the; It may be that' in these spe.: late Secret~ry of State John Fos-

, . eialized agencies, dealing with tel' Dulles 1""arned:&bcial an(l economic matters on . "Unless we wl!.-ge successfullyan international' scale, com-, ,.·the politidl-economic war thatmitted to the view that improve- is now beitJg fought; communistment in.th~ "have not" countries impeI'iallsrri cab. win' _without~ .beneficilil also, to the~ "have!' 'ever' a gun Ifired. It is vital thateoiIntiies, and placing. the the, newt~ jndependent and"h:aves" and "have nots" in part:" newly developing COl1ntriesn'~rship to accomplish .these' should' fiild! in freedom the wayC01Jlmon objectives, we have, to .1~f~ ,up ,t~eir own people." .­found the ke" to creating closer There seems little doubt thata~d friendlie~ contacts between. onel;>f the tealavemies throughnations.".. ',' ".:': .o/hicb 'the' -qnited ~tates'can help'In this 'way ·the International to :wage such a struggle is in the

Labor Organization can be ex-" world "forulIi" readily'availabletremely .beneficial in the devel~ within the! International Laboropment . of American) foreign Organizatiota. Surely it is anpolicy. . effective mean.; at our disposal

Probably one of the most sig- to persuade: the world's ~eoplelI.ificant and certainly an im- of the honeSt merit of OW' formmensely impot:~ant d~ve!(>pmellt. of organiz~ socie~7.

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Page 15: 07.02.59

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Brother was transferred to CoyleHigh School' in 1955, where hehas served as viCe-principal anddirector, of studies,

Archdiocese Issues'Pray~r for Decency'

NEWARK (NC).,..- The Officeof Communication' and Enter­tainment of the Archdioc;ese, ofNewark has issued a prayer, for,dec~ncy in the communication.,Inedia. ', The prayer asks God ,to, grant

that all will'reject what is op:"posed to His divin'e· will, "iil ino-'

:tion pictures, on' the 'stage, on theair waTes, and in print." ,

Some 25,000 copies 'of the, prayer have been distributed to''studentS in all of the' Catholic,high schools of the 'Newarkarchdiocese.

Famous Painter Says Only GreatArt Is Good, Enough for God

CINCINNATI (NC)-Mediocre And it is not tru'e t.hat congrega­art is "an, abomination," and tions are Slfandalized by ,art thatbad art is "immoral" Jean Char- 'is good." 1lot, professor of art 'at the Uni- ' The 61-year-91d artist addedversity of Hawaii and interna- "that "all my . life I, have triedtionally know'n' painter,' said in to make liturgical art a syno-:­an informal talk at Our Lady of nym for ',great art"Cincinnati College here. , "Bad art," he said,"is im-

Decorator of ma,:\y churches moral, as all bad ,things are im­an~ painter of the' mural be- moral. And 'perhaps- the worsthind the main altar.in St. Leon- thing of 'all is mediocre art,ud's 'Semina1'y Chailel, Center- which is like the 'lukewarm'ville, Ohio, Mr. Cha.r!ot declared: , ,person mentioned in the Gospel.

"Only great art is good enough Mediocre art is an abomination,lor God.'" and should not exist in the tem-

Addressing a small group of pIe of God.".rtists, art teachers and studentsin a lively, outdoor question­and-answer session, the French­born artist, who is ari Americancitizen, brought ,up the "often­heard accusation that congrega­tions worl't stand for' good artin churches.;'

"There is no ground for such• statement," Mr. Charlot de';'elared. "People like, good' art."

Ch1irc~ Home of 'God "But the'''heart of the matter,"

when it comes to liturgicaL art,is that "the church is the homeof God." ,.

'''God is satisfied:" said Mr.Charlot, "only with the bestyou can .give Him. It -is not prop­er to ~ive Him less than the best.

FIRST OF 57: First member of his ordination clasSto kneel before Bishop John W. Comber, M.M., SuperiorGeneral of Maryknoll, is 'senior'deacon Leo; A. Decman ofJoliet, m.,A combat infantryman in 'world War II" Father'Decman will leave for the missiona of Korea. NC Photo.

A'ssig'ns "Brother'Chr,isticin',To,' School in East' Africa' '. ':'

'. Brother Christian Stinnett,C.S.C~, assistant principal, of Msgr. Jame8Coyle High. School, has been assigned to anew'missionary ·secondaryschool.to"opeii ,soon'in Uganda,East Africa.' The appointment was made by the Provincialof the Easterh'Province of 'the arothers,' Brother Eph­rem O'Dwyer, G.S.C. BrotherChristian wi!l lE~ave for Af­rica with two' other -Holy CroSllBrother:s, s,ome tIme in Septem­ber. This is the"second 's~hool

opening in Africa :under the'Congregation of.Holy:Cross, TheMid-West Provirice of Brotnerioperates a second~ry,schooi in '

,SekondLGhana,. W~,st 'Africa;' 'Brother' Christian received, bis

" academic,degrees a,t ;Notre DameUniversfty, his ba:chelor's' aridmaster's degree 'b6t~, being in.lICience. '. '

His graduate work at Fordham,.nd Catholit' ,Univ~rsity:"have'kept Brother Christian in con­tact witt the latest informationin his fieF, of teaching- and,.dministration, BROTHER CHRISTIAN, C.S.C.

He was thc first principal atCatholic Central High School in'Monroe, Michigan, and alsoserved as principal at VincentianInstitute in Albany, New York.

Page 16: 07.02.59

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116 . .-THE ANCHOR

. 'I ',' Th_u:..,r_s_.i__JU_I_:Y_,_2_,_1_'9_5_

9..J_DIOCESE OF' FALL. ~IVER. MASS,

Announce PI.ansFor ReligiQusTV Series

NEW YORK (NC) ...,..-Com­prehensive plans for "gen­uinely - creative" religiousprogramming on the NBCtelevision network for 1959-60and' beyond were announced hereat ameeting for key TV execu­tives of tb<: nation's three majorreligious faiths. ,

Edward Stanley, NBC directorof public affairs" who presided atthe a~mbly, said the network'spartnership with the three majorfaith groups-Prote~tant, Cath­olic and Jewish-has resulted in"more 'experimental and pio­neering programs of a high orderthari any other' place in tele­vision."

TV chiefs of the NationalCouncil of Churches (Protestantand Ea~tert:l Orthodox), the Na­tional Council of Catholic Men,and the Jewish Theological Sem­inary of America-principal 01'­

~nizations cooperating withNBC in production of its regularSunda~TV religious programing-attended th~ assembly.

The groups join with NBC inproduction of '.'Frontiers ofFaith," "Th~ Catholic Hour,"and "The Eternal Light," re­spectively, as well as of occa-sional' specials. .

Productions on the agenda of"'llhe Catholic Hour" for 1959~60

'and beyond, as announced at theassembly by MaI'tin H. Work,executive director of the Na­tional Council of Catholic Men,indude' three programs' dealingwith the recent Vatican decreebr'iJaging about changes in thelitorgy' of the Mass for October,1959', and a series of four or fivepl.'ogL'ams de'signed as an "intro­duction" to the Bible, for Janu­ary, 1960.

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Henry S. GIllet, Jr., has beennamed winner of the Holy NameSociety 'Scholarship for the sec­ond consecatiive yeli'lT.. He willcontinue to atitend Coyle HighSchool', Tauntol.; Gillet is activein the' paris;- Bo-y SCOtlt troop'and serves a& ar: aItacr boy. JamesW. Pell'etier is secretary of thescholarship' committee' which: ....warded the honor to the C()1'lestudent.

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Twenty-eight grammar schoolgraduates attended exerdses,followed by a party sponsoredby ,their mothers. FrancineGirard, with an average of 93%,is recipient of'a four year. highschool sch.olarship.. Other awards

'were made in academic subjects,cond'uct,' politeness and applica-tion. '

HOLY ROSARY,FALL R,VER

Miss Rose M. FargiilIele, mem­ber of the Women's Guild, washonored by receiving the Dr. N.Kenneth Shand Award' for Dis-'tinguished' Teaclling a,t gradua­tion ceremonies at Henry LordJunior Htg~' 8chool, Fall River.She' has taught in Fall River

. public schools for 37 years andis/active in the pa'rish guild andthe Catlw~ic:Women;sClub..

The Parish Parade,,' . .'.OUR: LADY OF HEAJiJJi'R,FALL RIVER

The 'Women's GuHd· will servea potluck supper at 6::3Q Mondayevening, JtliLy 2~ in the cl!:lUrchhall, A theater party to BClstonis also tentativelly planned forthe summer ,months.

Thur:'er' W'rites Informall'yOf,Assocmation With Ross'

I .

By Rt. Rev. Msgr.. John'S. KennedyJames ThlJlll'ber was associated· wi'th Harold" W~ Ross'

GD ']["he New Yorker for '24 years irom 1927 until Ross'sdeath in 1951.. Ross, of course, Wa.<;, the fOWlder and firsteditor O:E that.·vell'y worI'dily magazin~. Thurber~ informaillybut inds,ively reviews the . t' I th t· \' ~. tu·'al . t" t':. . 'Dh' Y SIS .mg1a ev..ery Lac . pom

.a.ssOCla l(l)n .HII :L eears be checked for accuracy.With Ross (Atlantic-Little. This'is the hardest feature ofB'rown. $5). This is not a ed.ttorild work" the easiest tofull d'ress.,biograpny, but a· series evade as beneath the dignity ofof essays, without chronological the editor-in-chief. It demandsseq1!1ence,' and a huge IexpenditUre. of time, canwit h s 0 me be 'crueHy boring, but is, indis~

ovedaJllP.ing, in . 'petllSabte to sec1JIi1"e and preserve',t 11 e subd'e<!:t quality',.matter. Jlru eaG:h Ross :may have been ~avalierchapter the au- in~ his treatment"'of some of histhor r i :Ii fIe s . assi'stants and contributors andthrough a set could be picayune' about book-of: g1impses or keeping detaHs (although a],ways-impressiOlJs of at war willi" the business office).ROss and' by '.'the

b .k' Gt But Thurber makes it clear

hoo s, e~ld' that he! was general'Y generous'

one as a VIVI , t" at t l'kif' ketcIa,y p'ic'- 0 ~rIters. and mos 1 e. a

. S ...e'. mother Ihen in his personal con-ture "':. alii ex- cern for their' weHare.traord'mary character. . . , \ . .' I

RegulaiJr readers oil The New The bpok abounds m anecdo~es ACROSSY'orl~er will naturally be. inter- about :Ross (s?mesalted W1th SUpre..... head ofested in seeing its maker at close profane l and .eve~ blasphemous the Catholic' Church,

ran," .... Bu't wi]'] the book appeal speech) Jand In vlg.nettes of pe.r- 5, First man af Creation..... t d th th 6 Official, language of

to' oth'ers;? JikCl:i:dedly ye!t. What- Sl?ns cOl1nec ~ WI. e ma.ga-: the- Catholic OIurch.ever Thurber writes commands Zlne (e,~,,(acld, as m the case of 8 "The Cho";n Twelve"•. wide audience" and' most of Ale.xan~er Woollcott; favCl~ble, followe... of Cliri'stwtiat he writes; is cr:€ a high order as In t~e case of E. B. White). 11 Belonging 10 CanaM1: excelTence. . It touches· on "Ross's private 13 U. S. Chari..., Si....,.'

A . R eccentric Fife sorrie aspects of which were, ffounders: Mather •••gaJour os.~ was an. '. ..' ',1...., . 1,t. Command$ r ............-

oolorIul,,' and oddly fascmabng scarcel~,edlfymg,.Ross; who. was... 17 Famed structuralhuman fueiaag, more i~probable th"ee' .umes marrIed, appears to> ' feature of St.and emteriiaJiimingthan most char- have hald I10 religion, although , "eter's Itomeaerters in fiction. Still again, we ''G'od bl~ss you" was on his lips 1'8 Title given Il'enedictine,taaiVe heJre something of. the in- as often as other expressions Carthu.;an, ·Cisterci_

~ side story of the production of. which ~ill not, be quoted. here. man~s (P1'lThe New Yorker. The~a~ollint of the baptIsm of ..... .

H Di't· " 8t I ,his daughter seems to imply that r-------------~-------------lIS s me Ive ye Catholic I Baptism can be pro- Summet" Plans

The 1ast is of moment to ev- eured fot an infant at wbiIn andelTYone who has any concern without 'assurance that the re­~h WJiilti'mg and pUbli~hin~. cipient ~ill be brought· up asmce The New Yorker, llke 1t Catholic. .011' not, rong ago evolved its own ...... b: h t 11 t'·... . . . . d xuur er, woe· s us prac 1-dlSbnctllVe style has mamtame II ' h b t h' If. . '.. . ' ca y as Imuc a ou Imse asit wnh astol1lshmg C'Onslstency. bot R ".' til ' I hand. has: 1'1'eM to an exceptional a u o~s, gIves e person ~ 0

lev 1 f l 't d recI'sl'on never saw Ross a sense of havmge 0 1 erary an p , . I.oombim:ed with: 'Ul1Cl:OmmOn sup':-- known ,lim:!.. and ~ person ~ho

It.. d . g' offhand knows the magazme some 1deapu::nesS' a.n: seemm - f h 't t th 'tedness. - 0 ow II go . a way.

'The soplhistiG:aation and sheen Gruesome It IIIof' the magazine would, one ..: 'm'ight suppose, indicate that the Munel: S,?ar~ s ~ovel Memen-

. geniuS' belnllind it was a me~ro- to Mon (LI,Ppmcott. $3,95)politan, OC!lTn and' bni'd il) New come~. to! us high,ly"not to sayY'ork, Ross: was in fact a native eftuslVel:lj, recommended by0~1' ColGl.'ado" had been a reporter Graham! Greene. .and Evelynin places, fali' from New York in Waugh, both. of wh0n:'.are usy­both dIstance'arid atmosphere, any carefUl. m handlmg wo~ds.and prooabl'y reached the peaTe Mr. Creep IS quoted, as saymgoil hiS' plle-New Yorker career as' that it 'ihas. delighted me aseditor of Stars and Stripes in much as-.;any novel that I haveWorld War :E. read ~ince the war." .

He was awkward of frame. and He dO~s' not indicate whichmanner and nad a face which war or how I)'lany novels he. hasmight. have b-eem that of a, coun- 'read in t~e interval. Mr;. Waughtry storekee-pe1" or' an' Oxford' rings a bit of a change with "adon. He was. disorderly and 'ex- brilliant ,and singul?rly grue­pl'osive, excruciatingly shy, in wme achievement." As the au­sOme ITespects naive, in many re- thor of. Tpe Loved One, he canspects. ignorant, and by no means' be expectF' to know somethinga great reade,l.'. All in all" the about gr~esomenes,s, and alsovery reverse of what, from a something- about brilliance.scrutiny oj! the magazine. one The gruiesomeness is found inwould expect. . the unsparing 'exploration of the

. A; Thtlrber tells Us .lifern The ills, weakhesses, abenan'cies ofNew Yoriter offfee' w;s asuccess'- extreme oid age, of the physicalion of c1'ises, if not. a' single con- disord~rs land. psych,ological; oftinuous cllisis like a thunderstorm the gnsly IP,e~slstence o.f greedy,.which refmses to gp, away; Ross . lecherous" spiteful habIts. ,was' forever flingh1,g aociut and In on)y Jne or two 'of the char":

. yelling;. People· were hired' and acters is there an'y degree of the·fired p:redJllttately and without wisdom, serenity; :anef mellow:discClmihle rea1?on. dignityofl advanced years; the ,

But either because or In spite rest are stewing in the inordin­of the ta:n1frl1ms and! the tension" 'ate appeti'tes, the rancors and'the sudden cBiscoverieSll and the follies of Jarlier days.eq~al:Dy su:lll'C!fen departur.es, there Miss Sp1arks is undoubtedlycontitlued to be turned out a original.' She is also astutely ob­magazime peculiarly glassy, servant anld can I>e witty. 'Butblrisk, articulate,. and' as smooth her book i~ a tour de force rath..l-if no1l as' olallId-as' cream. er than a novel, and one which

Ross Meticulous fr~uelltly[limps, falls into rep':'One I1easom'. fOO!' this was Ross', ebtlOp, and collapses :rather ~an

Ondoubted critfeal' wizardry. rounds off.! .., .Tburberdescribes, hilariously I·but s!h.'l'e.wdDy, Ross: inspecting ~XX:)oClod,~-=ec>~~=-c:::>c~

the submissitms of artists, for J1.J B'covers or cantoons. ·He would,brood crver these. fuss over them;make apparently irrelevant re- 'LU'M'BER CO ~ I

marks" trren' reel! off a. de:f'mitive .•.critique amI' suggestions starUng- I :l¥ to tile point. . So. :Dartmouth

Another' was Ross's meticu- ~ \ an~, Hyannis~sness. :Ere edited, strenuously 'j

and' relentlessly, himself endur- SiD ......lng the tedium of going inching- 0·1 ar'tmouTn1r 'and suspiciously 'through "fi 7;'93.84.manuscripts, testing them lirie tivannis 2921b,. line. word for word, and in-

-

Page 17: 07.02.59

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13 TV StationsLose Code Seals

WASHINGTON (NC) - TheNational Association of Broad­casters said here that televisioJ~

code "seals of good practice"have \been taken away from 1:';stations because of advertisiobpolicies.

This brin~s to 21 the numbercf seals revuked because of tll:'televising of hemorrhoidal rem­edy advertising. In addition, saie:the NAB, 17 stations resigned a; .subscribers to the voluntar:'code. The association did nc:identify the stations.

Donald H McGannon, presi­dent of the Westinghouse'Broadcasting Company andchairman .of the Television CodeReview Boa,rd, said' that at onc'time 84 code subscribers were

, carryIng the, advertising of per­sonal products.

Of this number, 45 cancele(:the ads, 17 resigned from thecode, 21 seals were revoked am:·one .station has' been cited fo:'continuing to carry the ads, hehe said. Code .subscribers nov.­total 270.

ITHE ANCHOR- 17 \. Thurs., July 2, 1959.. DIOCESE OF. F~ RIVER, MASS. i

Phone WY9..632S·

NEW BEDFORD

WY2-6216

. 273 CENTRAL AVE.

BLUE RIBBON

LAUNDRY

Fathers, Stigmatinesarid Fran­ciscans.

Corpus Christi, Sandwich andHoly Trinity. West Harwich, lead,in the number of additional.priestsrequired. Each has sevenon Sundays in addition to thepriests of the parish. CorpusChristi invites two priests fromLa Salette, three Jesuits, oneStigmatine and one HQly CrossFather. Holy Trinity, a SacredHearts Fathers parish, enl.ists theaid of seven additional priestsfrom the. same congregation.

In all, Jesuits service six Cape 'Cod parishes, Sacred· HeartsFathers nine. Holy Cross Fath­ers attend three, and La Salettesfive. Stigmatines and Francis­cans are at one parish each.

-In addition to Holy Trinity,other parishesex;per'iencing alarge gain !in Summer popula­tion include ·Corpus' Christi,Sandwich, from .six Masses to 1,6;St. JQseph's, Woods Hole, four to10; St. Pius X, South Yarmouth,itlwee to 12; Our Lady ofLourdes, Wellfleet, four to 10.

Also St. Margaret's, BuzzardsBa,y, .six to 11; Holy Redeemer,'Chatham,. three to nine or 10;St. Patrick's and St. ThomasChapel, 1m Fabn0u:lihand Fal­mouth Heights, from :four to" 10;St. Joan of Are, Orleans, four to14; Our Lady of the Assumption,Osterville, five to 10.

Many QrdersCooperateTo care for. the needs of the

'Summer population 42 extrapriests are r.eeded on the Capeeach ,,'Sunday.;they 'inc1udeJesuits, Sacred Hearts Fathers./Holy Cross Fathers, La Salette

Name Cftanc~lIorBROOKLYN' ('NC) - Bishop

'Brian iI. McEntergart 'has namedMsgr. John 3. Heneghan as Chan­cellor of the diocese of Brooklyn.'Msgr. Heneghan had served 'as avice-chancellor, and succeeds to·the post lIast Ihe'ld by Bishop<John Z. Carberry ,of Lafayette,Ind. 0

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il/mprison' P-:iestVIENNA (NG)-A Czech

court ·hassentenced.Father Jar­oslav 'ryrner' to five years inprison for' antistate adivities.accordIng to a report receivedhere.

MISSIONS .MEETJNG:: Discussing plans for the 10th annual meeting of Americanmission societies to be held in ,Washington are, left to right, Sister M. Angelica, S.C.M.M.;Brother Paschal Breau, S.A.; Rev. Frederick A. McGuire, C.M., executive secretary; Rev.Gilbert Hay, M.S.SS.T., and Miss Irene J. Simone, representing Lay Apostolate~NC Photo

~..,;::o._.-="-

....

Cape Parishes Prepare for Gre~ IncreaseIn Catholic Population D~rin~ Summer

As the Summer season begins, parishes in ,the Cape Cod area are prepared for theirannual influx of visitors. Up and down the peninsula, churches will increase their Massesand ,other ·devo.tion:s.in order to accommodat e Summer residents. The parishioners, too,shaI'e in heightened activity. Churches tha t may have three Masses during the Winterplan a Summer schedule of15 per Sunday. Throughoutthe area 168 Masses are said .eaC'h Summer Sunday incoiJ.­trast. with· 84 during the Winter.Ushers, ·organists, cl10ir members,custodians and other laypeopleconcerned with ,the work of ,theparish musta~so .step up theirprograms.

Holy' Trinity Church, WestHarwich, is a parish jumping.from a ,thl'ee Mass Winter sched:­ule to 15 in the S'ummer. A mis­sion at Dennisport is also ac­tivated.

Where the normal Winterpopulation of Cape Cod is ap­proximately 18,000. in the Sum­

·mer it jumps to about 40,000, anever-changing 40,000, of course,as vacationers come and go.

For the traveler's convenience,a schedule of SummertimeMasses on the Cape Is publishedin this issue of The Anchor, andwill be repeated later illtbeseason.

Pope CongratuJo.tesCardinal Stepinac .

VATICAN 'CITY (NC)~His

Holiness Pope John XXIII hassent a letter. to His EminenceAlojzije Cardinal Stepinac,.A,rch­bishop of Zagreb, congratulatinghim on the 25th anniversary ofhis consecration as a bishop.

L'Osservatore Romano, Vat­can C;ity Dally,repor·ted herethat the letter had been sent, butdid not reveal Itl!I conten~.

Cardinal Stepinac, wbo WlUl

consecrated a bishop OIl .Jrune24, 1934, ha;, been living·in' hillnative village of Krasic, Yugo­slavia, ,sinee. his release ikomprison bT. tl\e communists ill1951.

VOsservatofe said be -devoteshis days "in his 'enfureed resi­denceto prayer, medi·tatl0ll onHoly SCI'i;pture and translating.a8Cetical WOl'ks, leading the au­.tere life be has always loved."

Says PublishersTurn AttentionTo P~rversion

PEORIA (NC)-Ptiblish­ers of objectional paperhackbooks have switched f!rom"textbooks onerime" toworks promoting sexual pecver­sion, the direetor of the NationalOffice for .Decent Literature saidhere.

Msgr. Thomas F'itzgerald ofChicago declared that "gang typebooks where the hero is brutal­ized" are published less fre­quently today as a result of pro­tests.

Hpwever, the change is not .•cause' for unQualified rejoicing,he said, sincE: certain paperbac.kpublishers "are getting more andmore into the field of perver­sion."

He said about five pocketbookpublishers dominate the monthlyNODL list of publications dIs­proved for youth. On the otherhand, he said, some of the bestin literature is being publishedin paperbacl editions, and thepublishers of these works shouldbe encouraged.

Men's MagazinesMsgr. Fitzgerald also discusse I

the rapid growth in the numb« rof so-called "men's magazines."which exploit sex "It~s allowedbecause we are a liberally thinR­ing people," he said. "We are in­fluenced by newspapers, andnewspapers are opposed to anyform of censorship."

Today. he declarel!, morenewspapers are coming to "admitthe problem of' obscene litera­ture. "But they have no solu­ti<m," he added.

Msgr. Fitzgerald pointed outthat publisher Bennet Cerf con­ceded in a recent television in­terview that some paperbackbooks are not fit for generalconsumption.

"He agreed that it was wrong,but he defended their right tobe published" the speaker said.The American 'Civil LibediesUnion has a similar attitude, hedeclared, adding: "They say ifthey must choose between com­plete freedom and censorship,they will take .freedom."

GOY. Meyner. SignsSunday-Closing Law,

TBENro. (NC}-Gov. RobertB. Meyner h1l3 signed into lawa Sunday-clO£ing measure whichstipulates that it will be 'effect­ive only in those counties wherevoters accept ;it in a referendum.

The law prohibits the sale ,offurnishings, furniture, buildingmaterials, clothing and ,house­hold or office appliances onSunday. Before residents in anyof state's 21 counties can casttheir ballots on the law, a peti­tion containing the signatures ofat least 2,500 v-oters requestinga referendum must be submittedto local officials.

When he signed the measureGov. Meyner said it had no re-'ligious aspects. He pointed to astate supreme court ruling whichbeld that the o'bject of Sunday­closing legislation is ·to provide• day of rest and not necessarilytime for worship'.

Page 18: 07.02.59

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liT A!l' t:flAPLAIN TIM- ~tANe.c~ OUTTilE CABIN WINDOW~...... . .'.

Apostolic .Delegat~ Receives La.tinTranslation o~ Get.tysburg Address. WASHINGTON. (NC) -"That translation was given the Dele­~pening phrase, "Fourscore. 'and gate by the Lincoln Sesquicen­seven years ago," is familiar to' tennial Commission in a cere­all Americans,. but scholars in mony at the Apostolic Delega­Rome soon can .read the Gettys- tion..burg addI;ess with .this openi~g:. . S"en. 'Joh~ S. Cooper of Ken­

"Octoginta et septem' abhinc·· t,ucky, . chairman of the. com-"jam annos . : . ,. . mission, presented the' transla-

A translation. into classical tion illuminated and written ill'Latin .of ·Abraharr...Lincoln's im-.' . l~rg~'letters .. before an audiencemorhll two-minute address'was of, diplomatic. corps .in~inberspresented to Archbishop Egidio' from 12 nations and' officiala 01.Vagnozzi, Apostolic. D~legatelio' '. the· Lincoln' commission.·the U.. S.,. to be sent to the -Vat- . . .. '....... .ican Libritry.· .." Inspired by 'the 150th anniver­

Sary of the birth of Lincoln, the

"P~blic HClS Influe"ceTo·StopS....ut.Trade ....'GHICAGO(NC) '~Chicago,p'ostmaster Carl .A.; Sc.hr6edersaid. herE;. th~t" ,the Americanpublic can put 'an end to maildistribution of' obscene litera-'ture if it wahts .to.

~We can ciean up the mails in ,Chieagoand thenatioil if enoughcitizens', become aware. ;of theseriousness 'of this problem anduse their influence to do so. W.emust do. so to protect our homes;curb juvenile delinquency andprevent the poisoning of theminds of our children,". he said.

Mr. Schroeder stated that 'theappropriate action for a citizenwho has been sent obscene ma­terial is to turn it oVer to. hislocal postmaster so that postalofficials may take act~on againstits distributor. . ,

i·I

POPEADAK

.·LA.TIN·APOSTLES

CAN.(S··SETOIl·AWES·,··DOMEDOMS~···LORDELUS··REGIS·. CnTCTlJRE

*CAROL···ROME...E\'lEll.

18, .' ~THE ANCHOiThurs., .July 2, 1959·.

DIOCESE OF 'FALL RIVER: ",A,SS.

Cross Word Solution

cj~. . " ICE CREAM

LEO H. BERUBE, Mg~.

951 Slade St. Tel, Of, 5-'1836

Smu~ CrackdownINDIANAPOLIS (NC)-Nine-

,~een person's werearrestrd here111 a crackdown ordered by Sher­iff Robert O'Neal against theosale of what he alleged was ob­scene litera ture.. The. arrests""ere criticized by Retail Drug­gists Association and the localbranch of the American Civil

- Liberties Union.

YEg ! AND AT 7H1~'HOUR 1 poN'T. .LIKE IT.· .

.I'I

CardinQI Criticizes Ruling

BISHOP - CHRISTIAN BROTHER': At a ceremony inRome's North American College, of ~hi~h he is rector,Bishop Martin J. O'Connor is received a!s an affiliate mem­ber" of the Christian Brothers. Brothet E. Victor, F.S.C.(left) Assistant. for A,merica and Brother NicetJoseph,F.S.C., Superior General, offiCiated. NC Photo.. . . .

Leads PilgrimageNEW YORK (NC)-Auxiliary.

Bishop Walter W. Curtis ofNewark will lead a pilgrimagethis autumn to shrines of theHoly Land, western .Europe and

· Ireland..While in Rome fromOct. 9-1{ Bishop Curtis 'expectsIio be. received. in an .audience

· J»y His' Holiness Pope John:.XXIIi.

"THE ,FIGH!tING'CHAPLAIN.. ~TEg THE TKA/NINc. DEArHOFA F/lIEND, ;ICE: '"PI/..OT BIt./.. EL.U~ 'CAN'T OR: WCW'T 7i'V<E" A PlANE· .­

. UP. ASaWD THE.t:/ANT C4R~/ER, CflAPVVN TIM 1{1A~ED TO TRY 7D ~E'ACH THE YOUTH.~"DDliNLY,IN mE DECP OF N!Q1TCIfAPtAIN TIM' Ai/EARN'

. WAl<E~' I~. H/~048IN ...... :..~

, .

teetion from profanation which Russia,1 the' Cardinal said "we· bas up to no\\ .been accorded to are headed in that direction onceIt by law.", . .' 'Sund~~ is dissociated. 'fromthe

'. Ignore Thinking' I remmi'lt of religious .. signifi:'. The Cardina" spoke out earlier' .:cance."j

OIl the Sunday obseryance,. but.., Sacred to GOd .. , .'· said· the court's decision "brings . "For' '.Catholics,". .Cardinalthis matter once 'more to our at- .Cushing said,"Sunday is neitherlention and indicates its serious-. a, day Ifor 'business as usual'"DeSS in relation to the functioning nor a c,ivic holiday, to be. givenof the Church in the .direction of over. in its entirety· to recrea-....r daily livE;s toward ·God." tion and amusement., He' called the ver.dict"com- "Only by keeping the da,

,:pletely, at variance with ·t~e tra-. sacred Ito GOd/': h'e' concluded;'.:,>.•. '! ditions of the past al1d lI)col;'-. ,"can ,we assure for future 'gen-,'

.,wistent··,with ·he purposes-o( he eration~ the beneffts which· have .Sunday observance as they have been gained in the past through.

· been' implied ill ..o~r . previous the' assoeiation ~fprayer anclliegislation.'~. ':'.1'" .. '. :'.::, rest/"

· Cardinal Cushing urged ."thatWe..bring· our actual' obserya~ce~'Non-C

1

ath.olicsP.·r.a. iseof..Sunday back into conformity' . n Fac;:.ts,~f .Faith.with the' thinking froin which Welfare Executive

. " . h'''''' <. .,. ANSW·ERS:1(d·)·,2(c)·,3(a)··,"ear existing legislation .. as .pro:: .' NEWj "ORK , (NC)' -'-High.eeeded." . ". praise and deep regret were ex-. 4(b); 5 (b); !I, (c); 7 '(b); 8(c)..

". '. Like Soviet Russia 'pressediinmessages sent by of- . .'. The lawswtiic~ prohibit man,. ficials .of Protestant, and' non:' Red.s' Capitalize"~rins of a~tivity which are' 1n- sectariatI voluntary· relief agen:"

.' .. ·consistent with. the' religious ob- cies on 'the retirement of Msgr. On ...·at.ion.alismllervance of Sunday should not Aloysius J. Wycislo as assistant· I~

." bespoken of wi.th contempt" theexecutiJ,e director' of c;atholie MANILA (NC) - Douglas· Cardinal said. '. '. . . Relief Services~NationaJ'Cath- Hyde, former communist editor,· "Do 'we .want: Sunday to be- olic Welfare Conference,:tO ac-' warned here that the Reds arecome the kine. 'of day it 'is in ". cept 'a' p~storaL. in Chicago. ' . capitalizing ort .the, wave of. na­Soviet Russia?'~. the Cardinal .The agencies .included,' Church tionaIism in this 'country to in­asked ... Pointing out ·that days of World" Service, ,the American filtrate various organizations..rest are appointed. by govern- Jewish Joint Distributiol1' Com,. Mr, H'y.de, who n~~ writes forment.al decree, and religious a~-·mittee, t'he Lutheran WorId Re- the Catholic 'Herald, Britishtivities o,fficially excluded in lief, United HiasServi'ce, the weekly, told Army officers at

Americah Council for Nationali- Camp Murp"ly that the Redsties Ser~ice and the Technical have always considered national­Assistal~<;e Information Clearing ist movements as ideal grol!-ndHouse. for their purposes.,

Msgr. Wycislo was' associated "As 'of now, the communists'with CRS--:NCWC since its in- have already' abandoned theirception 16 years ago in various military designs 'in AsHl and are

. capacitie~ bot~ here and abroad. now' engaged in an infiltrationHe has been appointed pastor of ' drive in' this area,'~ 'he said..the Iml11~culate Heart of Mary . I .parish in! Chicago,. where he was He ad.ded that when the com-born and! educated. '.munists find it inexpedient to!' use force' openly, they go under-

ground .and "emp~oy parliamen-'tary. struggle or .subversion."

Jesus Varga,former secretaryof defense, said. .that' written in­struetionsseized' from membersof the loc~l communist party ad­vocated the use of nationalism topromote a "hate' America" cam-paign. ..,

,..: ,

Page 19: 07.02.59

ACTION AT PINE VALLEY: The Country Club in South Rehobothwas the setting"for the first annual Diocesan CYO.golf tournament, whencontestants in four age groups vied for low gross and blind bogey awards.Left to right, the all-Fall River group in left photo includes Edward Phil­lips, St. Louis Parish;. Richard ~oy, St.' Mathieu, ana Bob Placido, St.Patrick. Tauntonians in second left' photo are Dennis McGrath and

Barry Bird, St.' Joseph, and Bob Martin, Sac,red Heart. SeGon9: :right in­cludes JarQes Connor, St.. Joseph's, FaIL River,and Gene 'Mazzone, SacredHeart, Taunton. At far right are James Cunniff, St: Joseph's, Taunton;:Ray Gagnon, Notre Dame, Fall River, and Bob' Yelle, Immaculate Con~

ception, Taunton. T~phies,will be presented August 3 at ,the: Fall RiverCountry Club. . . .

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, The match was' the highlight ofthe first annual Diocesan CYO'tournament,..sponsored! ih~s yea.'by Monsignor Coyle Clluneil'

.r<' ()£ C; of Tauntol1. - , ;

. MCGrath also· won the Ie.· "gItOS!, trophy ,for 'the 18-19 age'ueup. Thomas Unsw0rth· o£,.St.Paul's, Taunton, won ,the ·blind

· bogey trophy.> Placido won. ·the:.Jow"gross trophy and Leo Leary0f 51. Mary~'s;: Fail River., woo-the'·.blind' bogey' . trophy in, tile16-t17 ·'age. grou~. ." ,. Winners ill 'the 14-15 age' group

"were Jam'es Cunnift; St. Joseph's,· Taunton, low gross, and" EugeneMazz.one, Sacred Heart, Taunton,­blind bogey.

In the 12-13 age gro'up RichardBrodeur, Notre Dame, Fall River,had low gros~ arid' Ja!'nes C6n~'

Ilor, St. Joseph's, Fall River, woathe blind bogey.

Trophies will be presentedai,?K. ~f. C Golf Nig'ht to 1?e. held:l,\'io~4ai, Ayg. 3, at F~ll )li!el'C;oul?'try Club. . .

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'Pontiff.,· Pre$ides: ..Over,. Meetin,g '.:"

.,. VATICAN' CI-1'Y(NC) , .:..:.... 'HIS'

Holiness 'Pope 'Johrt 'XXIII :is·taking a' dose' personal ''inte'r~st

in prep;p-ations for Rome!s di­.ocesan synod.

He recently presided at a plen­ary session of the synod's pre­paratory commission ~md sub­commissions. At this session heindicated in detail what must beaccomplished before. the synodcan meet. .

,,' The Pope~x~c,ts tne .Ro,~an

sYnod to .be .amoQ.el for .diocesan.,s~~ods. througho,u,t th,e w~;id..

McGrath Victory H'iQt.liqhts, firstDioces~n CYO Golf ,Tournament, Dennis McGrath of St.. Joseph's

Parish, Taunton, gained first l~g.

(til. the~arty Hig~~ Mell\,QrialTrop.hy by,.defea~ingBot> I:'lacidoof St. Patrick's, Fall Rive~,n~ a,playoff after both had tied 'for.10\111 grosS with'~c'otes of 8P at, 'Pirie Valley Country Club; South'Reh,obOth: . . .. . . ,

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Doherty ,~oach,.

At Xavier U /:C)NCINNATI (NC)-~d~ard

A. Doherty rated' ,as a highlyima'grnative " .coach' . of offensefootpall, haS: sigr~d -a' .three-Yearcontract as head'coach'at Xavier

·University' here. .Head 'coach at the University'

of Ar,izona f0r'th~ ~ast two sea-.son~, . the 41-year-old Doh¢rtysuc~eedsHarry.(J.yi:ick) Connj:Jlly,who resigned' suddenly ov~r' adifference with' university' of­ficials on athle'tic -policy, afterfour years as Xavier's head

'coach.

Doherty and' Connolly wereteammates on Boston Collegeteams in the 1940s Doherty wasbackfield coach at Xavier underConnoHyin 1955. Doherty wasthe personal choice of FatherPaul L. O'Connor, S.J., univer­sity president and whenthe newsof his appointment was: "an­nounced, said: "It's like cominghome." '!", ,,' ;','"

': ., Resul1)es ,Dutiies,· .. DENvER (NC) ""-' Msgr. Mat­thew 'J. Smith, ··'editor..in-ehiefof the Register System·of.. News­papers, who was" injured: in an.automobile ,accident, .has re-

· sumed some. of· his editorialduties; including. his weeklycolumn, "Listening In," .ii· wuannounced' here.

Fall, River CYO'to SponsorBasebal'l, .School for 'Giants,

By' Jack Kineavy. Somerset High School Coach-

Tuesday, July 2f, is': a date all you, young baseb'allaspirants' throughout"t,h(Diocese of Fall RiveJ;' wi)l'w~~t .to reserve. For on tluitday the San Francisco .Giants willconduct abaseball school'in Fall River under the ausJlices ofthe' FalI:~iver . C'YO~ . -'!he PhiladelphiliAthletfcs.'This re­camp' wIll under·the· dlre- iteration should provide' sOlace'ction QfGiant scou~ Frank. and' comfort f~~' Red'Sllx adher­Seyboth', - who' was'.', instru- eqts. ~ho~e,'lie~oes' are"~~w,mental.in ~ignIng j,;>urfee's 10m. ".f.F~ti?g." with ~he, cellar, ,by, aArruda a coliple 'of ,years ago. ~~ttEJrof .percent,age POlHtS,

This i~ defin- .... :But t~en c·ons,id~i:. the. pl,ightitely a red let- of the guy. whose teaJP IS .cur-ter date in the rently lead,.ing. ,the' lea~ue.. Per-annals of CYO haps you read earlier: this weekathletics. To what'Clevel~d's vitrioIicG, M.this a 'g en t' s Frank Lane called his field

. knowledge, it manager, . Joe Gordon. Up-is an unprece- on r~flechon, Lane was closerdented move. to the truth.,than his derogatoryMost schools appellation would iJldicate.

. of ... this type' 'Gordon is ~ se~i-promanager.are sponsored . Look' 'at hiS middle' strengtheither directly, 'which is' the' barometer :cif" aby a professionat..elup or. _by a balh:lub., At shOl"tsh'op is' Woodylarge daily 'newspaper in coop- Held who failed 'to'make 'it '":itheration with the major 'league ,.New .Yor.k, and Kansas·,Clty.

, organization. It is'a large un- Granny Hamner; cut, adrift· bydertaking but Father Walter Sul- . the .last place Phils ·and waived

, livan director Fall River CYO . out .of the National· League, ,isand Father P~ul McCarrick, hi~ the pivotman.,/ - .assistant, are already making Out of' Reiirementplans to. expand the school to Tito Fran~~ria" 'e~'-Baltimori-• three-day aHair next ~ear an is doing th~' bulk' .of the

. should the response wan:ant It. ce~ter-fieldingwithan' 'occasion-The tryout will mark the only al assist 'from Jirri PiersaU.. Fran­

fonnal appearance of the Giants' coria, iilcidentally.. ·is the onlyscouting organization in.. the Di- .300 hitter on the club. Behindocese this year. There will be no the plate is Russ ,Nixon (,154)conflict with similar schools un- backed up b~' Ed Fitzgerald.der different auspices since the (.213). George Strickland camelast of these will be. Ule Kansas out of retirement to play thirdCity camp, July 9,;,1:1, at HOpe- base.well Park, Ta~too. U it doesn't constitute a semi-

Great oPportun~ pro alignment, I don't know whatE1i«ibility FeqioUEeinents are does. Perhaps. L.ane w~s, ~king

the' same as those uSUally set just for' publication. Perhaps he..down. 'for a tryout' camp.· Candi- . has advised bis hirelings ,to takedates must be Uftiformed, have no umbrage at his public utter­their own glQves and spikes and i'ngs, they ~ being sorel~ fer boxAmerican Legion-" players. must effice. This could. be. But in thehave the written permi'ssicm of event Trader Frank is' serious,their team' manager to partici- we wond~rwhat he'd have to saypate. It's a great opportunity were he general, manage!' of thefor youths of the Diocese ~ the Bosox.school is non-sectarian - to re- The name Williams, a famil­eeive professional instruction in iar f'txture in the Big Ten. bat­the game. ting statistics for nearly a gen-

Another of the popular innova- eration, is stiL there. But it's:tions of the Fall River CYO, the Dick of Kansas City, not Ted ofAlumni League is about to con- Boston. The big fellow has ex­clude 'first . h~lf play. Latest perienced such trouble gettingword on the standings has the ""over the' .200 niark that observ­strong St. Thomas More team 8£' ers are prone to agree that this.Somerset in first place, with may be his last year. Ditto StanSacred Hearts,. St, Anthony of Musial, his National LeaguePadua and Immaculate Con- counterpart, who is hoveringeeption in clos'e pursujt. The cir-, around .260. Age inexorablycuit has attracted top flight tal- takes its toll.ent from the Greater' Fall River Patronage Increasesarea and interest continues, -to The closeness of the Americanirow. . League race-the emergence of

Comfort tor Sox Fans Cleveland as pennant· contenderWith the holiday weekend an the bac~sliding of New York

coming up welre sure to read -reflects an increased patronageagain of the fabulous exploits of over half a million to date.of the 1914 Braves who came Only Detroit and Boston havefrom last place on July 4 to thus far failed to come up to the­capture the ,National League 1958 mark. More serious .is thepennant and then the' World Ser- Boston situation where a droplea in itraight iets ov~ the of 94,000 is in evidence.

Page 20: 07.02.59

, THEY MAKE MARRIAGE WO~K:Scores of devoted priests and. Paul,F. McCarri~k,. S.t.' Mary's Catpedral, addresses a typical gatheriI!g•.laymen of the Diocese are active in pre-Cana and Cana Conference ;work .In the course of ayear'tliis scene is' enacted from Provincetown to Attle- 'under the direction of the Family Life Bureau, headed' by ,Fathef 'Ray~ ,boro. At right Father McCafthy, Fimlily 'Life d.ireetor, plans conference ~mond McCarthy.. In the piCture .a1yleft, Rev. John P:Ui'isl:;oll, 'SS. Pe~er:.' schedule for the 1959-1960 ·season. Couples .who have' attended the sea- rand' Pa~l, Fall RIver, who has. gIven many talks tQ engaged and ,marrIed sions· say unapimou'sly, "When the conferences" ate held in your: parish;

,cOliples througlwut the Diocese, advises a young pair.. iff ce~ter, Rev: or city, 'd9n't"niiss .thepl!'" ,., '

"

Fall River, Mass.

IS'TI:!E PlACE 1'0GET A PRESCRIPTION

. FILLED!

IT,~5 ALL RIGHT :TOSHOP AROUND FOR.

SOME 'tHINGS, BUT

TOUHEY'S'PHARMACY

, . 202;.206 Rock Street'Fall River

/.

FRANK S~ FEITELBERG__R_E_A_L_E_ST_A_T_E_,1: D•.al OINSSU6R_ASN2C4E6?'

21 Bedford S!.Citizen's Savings Bank BuildinG'

CatholicChild"enCo.ntribute Much'

PARIS (NC) - Catholic chil­dren from 26 countries .contrib­uted more than lour million dol­lars in,1958 to assist children inmissio~arr',are~s.

This was announced here at·the ann'uai meeting of the Pon-'tifical A,sliOciation of the HolyChildhood' )' by Msgr.· AdrianeBressoie~,: president . of the or-'garii~atio,ri: :,.' ,

~.,. AC~c.hl)ishRoP '-Asks> Ma~lr.iag-~s· A,_,re M,'tide in Heaven',:Sa:ys·,Prwst,. 'TBaptizdes 'vY~U~g,Itlze~~,. esp~c:t ;:; . '...()~na 0 Ichm'

'.. $.u.~day··...Law,s.·;, .~~·~;<But/·, Need ..Hard Work'· ,Oil.' Earth,.' .....' .. 'MIAM~(NC)~The,m~st: crit-.

B P·t :'. ' M' G' . ically injured 'casualty .of·a·.tor-·

CLEVELAND (NC) y a rlCta cowan",'" j • .. " .' •• , .•, '. -'- , .,'" '. i·;' J- " .... ." "',' .:: ·,"..··r··'. ,.. . " \ nado whIch, roared " througlac.

" ' .:Archbi~hop ~dward. F. HO- ,,';, ,'. ·~arrjages ,-ma~ 1>e .,made in ;heaven,,'~l;l't~.it t~~el'!' a :g~d,~~e,al ,<?f:,earthly hard' wl?r~" Miami's "~ortheast 'secti6n"'wu,'~an" Bishop: of Cleyel~nd,,· to ~~,eP'lthem,<x:~nI)i'Qg,. ;A-"prie~t. wh9"1l ~g{~ ..e ,~:~,~ol,~liear~ed}y._'Y.itli ~:,t.h~t· sta.tement. ,i~ '. baptized a. Catholic '~h.ile und~r;}has;called on 'all.citizens.to, ,Rev..:Ray,It!ondW., McCarthy,plrect9f of,t~~..DI?~e:s~u~F:a~·Uly L,I.fe,Eu~e~l,I. By means of :.' going surgery .in, -North. Sh()~;'

, , ,_respect ,~ild oi?ey the O~io, Sun- '.3~ p~~-qa'QaC<?nf.erenc,~s_~nd ?5 ,Ca,na Confe.ren~~~ ~"ye~t! :.ne has nelp~<Jh.undredsof area ,Hospita!. ,,"': .. :~"

day closlOg,law. , couples to get off to'a good f ,.,. h . 22"" hope,they.,'l'l ..go'·o··ut and be mar-' ,: Msgr. JafIles F.·Enright; ~... :, h' t I . ',con erenc~s,' ,t ere· ·are . .m.ar- ' .' .. '"_ ,,'I;hc:A~chbls, op, m a pas ora <matrimonial' start· 6tinject ' riedcouples and 16. doctors w~o.' ried saints!" , tor of§t. Rose of LifI1~ Ch~~~~::lett,er· read 111,all churches,- de- . ':" .. ··..t··l·t·' ; "t' .,.", '''''t'''b':'· " I 'Th 'll'f I "·r... · " . ',' , Miami.· Shores and Dlocese·:of:nounced 'lmnecessary ·Sul)day .. ~ew,. VI ,~ .1 y, In 0., an e~ .,a, -. appear on pane s. eya 0 - " ,.1\0.. !te.r. Cana. What!" . '.. , . Miami' .. V1car' for Religio.u";;,'

, I h d 'low a general lecture plan· as ...bU,siness'. ane. called on'C.hristians IS e unIOn. . ,Post~Can.a 'activities,. about,· g'arbed 'in hospital cap andgown,',~outlined by' the Chicago head- .to use "eveI:Y lawful means ·to N~arli a Decade quarters of Cana Conference 'which 'many couples 'inquire '., administereclthe sac·rament. 01.,';-oppose. the desecration of the wor~, b'ut presentatl'on .var.ies might include membership i~ Baptism to young Frank Vassa~·"L d' D y" He has Iheld his position since. . ' , I 1 tt' d 11 h'l f' . h 'or sa.... ., , with each individual. All sti'ive pa~ish "Mr, and Mrs:' cubs, of 0 I, age' ,w I e OUl: p ySI-". d t h t th 1951, wHen Bishop COlmolly h' h 'h '1 t' . tt d d h" .He pointe ou t!l e con- for ~ positive rather than nega- w IC t ere are severa ac Ive clans a en elm. on,an oper-,;

atittitionalityof Ohio's Sunday 'first orgapized the Family ,Life tive approach to marriage and. in the .Diocese; activity in the ating table. .closing la'w has been repeatedly Bureau. IBeginning. with pre- its complexities. Christian Family Movement; or, The 'bOY'- who was baptized' atupheld by higher. courts and he Cana work in Taunton and Cana ' for wives, membership in ,.th~ 'the ,request 'of' his' parents, Mr•.said it "promotes the best inter- Conferenc1es in New Bedford and How They Operate Family and Parent Education and Mrs; F. J. Vass'aiotti ,wno';est of society." Fall Rivet, he has steadily. ex- Pre-Cana and 'Cana Confer- Committee of their, Dio.cesa'n are visiting here -from. 'Hunts":"

Archbishop Hoban noted 'that tended buteau activities until itsences, operate, ,on a different. 'CouilCiI of Catholic Women a~- ville, A.la.;rema"ined·in critical,the law makes exceptions for _ facilities are available to every schedule, said Father McCarthy. filiat~.. condition 'from injudes';reccivEid-:those who observe. the' Sabbath parish in the Diocese and a staff Whereas pre-Cana is given Also recommended by Father, .when he wa.- hvrled i!lti> the airon'the seventh day, and pointed of 21 prie

lsts is' required to fill, within one week,' Canas are McCarthy 'is a magazine spe-, during th,e tornad~.

out that both Christian and all requests 'for 'speakers. spread over an 18 month' to two. 'cially for Catholic families.Jewish teachings oppose the sev-' '. In add'iti~n t6 lectures for en- year period.' In both series the Called "Marriage," it offe~s 'aen, day work-week. gaged andlmarried 'couples, the requirement is made that three-month free trial sUbscrip-

Some individuals the Arch- Family Life 'Bureau has. for the, couples must' attend every ses- tion. to couples, obtainable bybishop 'said, ~'f.lagr~ntly ignore past two J..enten ~easons SPOl.l- sioil. There's no· shopping. around wiiting",MarI:iage Magazine, St.

'and violate the total law,", on sored PreI/arationfor Pfe lec- for one particula~.meeting' that· . Meinrad, ,Ind.the pretext that "some of the ture series l for teen-agrrs. .Held mig~tbe of ,special inter~st. . , lias Father~McCarthya.watch,,;language of the law is. archaic, at· the Catholic Community- ;rre-Canas begin with a lec- word for his .Cana "graduates"! ,and some of·its pr'ovisions obso,- Center' in :Fali River and" Ken-ture, on social 'and: c~nonical. "Marhage is.a life that must be,

, lete." .This situation" the Arc~- nedy Center: New ~edford, ;they . preparati~n' for ,m~rriage. "We '\led--<-you cim't '" reduce it to a 'billhop felt; was "most regret... have drawn capacity 'etowds "at try to ed.ucate couples as to the . slogan,',' 'he declares. "But St.table," '. everysessi:on. ' . '. , solemnity of the sacrament they: Benedict's' words, 'Work and

He .called the day'-'of rest a Another ~impo~ant activity is will receivc:' !laid Father 'Mc- Pray', 'express its requirements.""human necessity" which pro- close coope'ration with-the Fam- CJlrthy:... " . .motes :family harmony and com- 'ily and Parent Education Com- The 1mhal sessIOn .IS followed~ilnity social well-being. mittee of the Diocesan Council by. talks fr~~ marrIed ~oup~es

"'" ,__ At-the present time, two Sun- of Catholic Women. 'Program on th~ rea~lhes of famIly !Ifeday observance bills are pending suggestions Iare provided to par- and dIscussIons. on the phYSlC~lin the Ohio legislature.. One ish' guilds' and other Council a.spects o~. ~atrlmony by quall­would' repeal all laws and open affiliates; aitd it has been largely fled phYSICIans,the, way .. to full commercializa- through the cooperation of these The Cana series for m~rriedtion of Sunda·y. The other would two agenci~s that there has'been couples includes four lectures:change the present law, repeal- increased Jmphasis thrbJgh<llit . husband-wife ielations~ip;',par­ing sections which prohibit the Dioces~:' on family' cti~toms' ent-young child' re~aFonship;",ports and entertainments. such as use 0.. the Adven(Wreath' parent-:-adolescent; ~nd' a' ,.'final ;

,~ ;, . " and celebdtion of sa~lii,!\' days discussion' of' spirituality i.n tti~

,Rhod~ IslandNa,tive, and baptisrr,al anni~.ersa·~les in married state, . . '.. ''Heads Ne.... 'School addition to birthdays. :'. "The first Can'a' is. :aneye- '

'f"t' ; , " ' • I • opener to many,", ,said 'the Farn/. WARWicK. (NC) '_BrotherQuestionS They Ask ily Life Bureau head. "They are

Fra'1cois Guilbault, C.S.C., a Thei-~ are no· standard' ques-' delighted to .realize that the. ,Rhode Island native, has been tions that ,pdp up at all.marriage'clergyunderstands and appre­

named principa: of the new Bish- for,ums, .said Father McCarthy, ciates the' problems ,of the"mar­op Thomas F. Hendricken High but' there a~e certain topics ,freE. ried."·School here which will open in quently dis~ussed from one. or There's a psychological reasonSeptember, 1959, with the ninth another angle. Pre-Cana couples for the' time lag between theand tenth grades. often' have i queries about the ""Cana Conferences. "We invigo-

The announcement was made advisability;of the wife's work- rate them at 'the first meeting,by Brother ·Ephrem O'Dwyer, ing, relationships with in::-l.ilws, and by, the secorid they're readye.s,c., provincial of the Eastern handling of I.money and .choice for a re-fueling. By the' timeProvince of the Brothers of the, of living quarters. they":ve completed the series, we·Holy Cross. Cana Conference . problems

For the past two years, Broth- vary· with 16cality.Cape audi- •er Francois has been adminis- ence's,' for e~ample, have' many,trator and' assistant principal a't .and anxiou~ questions aboutVincentian Institute, Albany,' Catholic edutation for their chil­·N. Y., wl)ere he has been teach- dren, In . areas . where' ,.there is'ing since 1952.: Previously. h~. ,male. u~e,mPfqyment, 'the~~ ar'eheld teaching ,as,signments: at . proble~s a~ 'I :to working' ,wi~e.s I

Cathedral High School Indianap- : ;and the 'share of housework hus~' .'olis, Ind.,. and at 'Monsignor • band,s should', assume'; .

. Ii' "James Coyle High School, Taun- Recreation; finances, commontory. . c prayer and dther religl>us cus-

To· date, 369 students have toms:' 'all arJ' of importance tobeen accepted· for admittance at. establishE!d,f~mily,groups. NORTON .... c. PLAINVILL!

" the new :Providence' diocesan '. In ',addition to the 21 <priests ~oute ·1-23 Jet. 106'& 152·'~~~~~b~~,~.;~ . w~ :~e,~~~~~.~re~~~,~__~_~_~~~~_~_~_~~~.~._~~__~ ~ ~__,~,~.~_~