12.11.58

20
·H,""I< t. '""fll" 11, The ANCHOR An Anchor of the Soul, Sure and fi'irm-ST. PAUL ( r '0 ( , .. , ) , '\ ' .Y Fall River, Mass. Dec. 11, 1958 Seeond CIa.. Mail Priviletre. PRICE lOe Vol. 2, No. 50 $4.00 per Yea. Authorized at Fall River. Ma••. Industry Protests Film Advertising , The moving picture industry is growing more concerned over sensational and salacious advertising coming mostly frOm foreign and independent film companies. . The trade newspaper, Motion Picture Daily, discusses this problem i,n its Dec. 1 The Motion Picture Associa- issue. tion itself has an Advertising All the more disturbing is Code and asks that movie ad- the fact that this advertising vertising be submitted to it for eopy is being printed not only approval and the granting of in 'tabloids but in family news- papers. Turn to Page Sixteen .Diocesan Legion of Mary' Work., Is Most Effective , Priests throughout the Diocese spoke on the Legion of Mary at Sunday's Masses, explaining its history and pur- pose and urging cooperation of parishioners in the organ- ization's work. Founded in Dublin, the children in catechism, visits to Legion has spread through- homes, and the encouragement out the world. Its members of lapsed Catholics in . '. to the sacraments, rectIfymg work under the dIrectIOn of marriages and having children pastors in promoting spiritual baptized. ' may The Legion of Mary was intro- hospital VIsItation, mstructIon of Turn to Pega Eighteen Paterson Prelate Sees Increased Support for Legion of Decency .PATERSON (NC)'-:"'Piedicition 'the National LegIOn of classification for adults only will earn the orgamzatIon Increased support from Catholic 'edu- ' cators has been made here. Bishop James A. McNulty of Paterson, new chairman fi the U. S. Bishops' Com- mittee for Motion Pictures, Radio and Television, said the legion's experience "warrants an Optimistic outlook for future 3upport of its objectives by this :large and influential section of 1he Catholic community." , The prelate made the observa- as the date approached when Catholics will be asked to renew their support of the'movement. Annually since 1938, on the Sun- day after the Feast of the Im- maculate Conception, the legion Turn to Pega Eighteen Missionary Sees Revival of Faith In So. America NEW YORK (NC)- There are indications of 'a great Catholic revival b'egin- ll!ling :to sweep through Latin '&n;Ierica where Protestant mis- &JllOitS have had their strongest gll'owth in recent years, accord- fung to one of America's leading mlllthorities on missions: Maryknoll Father John' J. of New Bedford, in ;:iiS book "New Horizons in Latin America," tells of the work of North American mission priests Ilnd laymen who are cooperating with the local clergy to revital- Turn to Page Eighteen ._,) A REAL SOLID REMINDER: For the fifth consecu- tive year McMahon Assembly, Fourth Degree Knights of is sponsoring a "Keep Christ in Christmas" theme in the Greater New Bedford area. The Hathaway Advertising Company has donated the facilities of its poster ,panels. Left to right, are Past Faithful Navigator Paul R. Curry, Franklin S. Seymour, company manager and Faithful Navigator Everett F. Sowle. ' Movies Still Serious Danger· to Morality . Catholics will renew the Legion of Decency Pledge at Masses in all churches of the DIOcese next Sunday, repeating their promi se to keep away from forms of entertainment classified as indecent or dangerous to faith or morals. ' The Legion of Decency tone of entertainment. Its effectiveness has been, evi- dent in the radical changes in this aspect of motion pic- tures since producers first be- gan to feel its potency, In his recent report to the Bishops of the country on the moral status of entertairiment motion pictures, the Most Rev. William A, Scuily; D.D" Bishop of Albany and Chairman of the Episcopal Committee for Motion , Pictures, Radio and Television, emphasized the encouraging achievements of this industry during the past year but also Turn to Page Sixteen ' Renew Decency Pledge Sunday The following Legion of De- cency Pledge will be renewed by Catholics of the Diocese on Sun- day: In the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost. Amen . I condemn indecent and im- moral motion pictures and those which glorify crime or criminals. I promise to do all that I can to strengthen public opinion against the production of inde- cent and immoral films, and to unite with all who protest against them. I acknowledge my obligation to form a right conscience about pictures that are dangerous to my moral life, As a member of the Legion of Decency, I pledge myself to remain away from them. I promise, further, to stay away altogether from places of amusement which show them as a matter of policy. Legion of Decency ,Movie ,'Ratings , On Page Four' was formed by the American Bishops to evaluate the moral .' CHARITY IS LOVE: The heart of Nazareth Hall, FaD River, is pictured by this cheerful and tender scene of Bishop of the s,ch09l's The Bishop's Annual Ball has this ,schOOl as one of Diocesan Women Organize For Cha-rity' B'all' Success . Mrs. Mary E. Almond, Presid-ent of the DiOCesan COUll- cit ()f Ca,tholic Women reports fun committee representatioll from all Catholic Women!s groups throughout the Diocese for the forthcoming Bishop's Charity Ball' for underprivi- lege9 childi"en. ning,January 7. Conducted "Weare, better organized the of , , DIocesan CouncIL of Cathohe than ever and all of our Women' and the Society of St. affiliates are looking for- 'Vincent de Paul, the affair will ward to the most fabulous social again feature Lester Lanin and event in the history of the Dio- his internationally famous Or .. celie," Mrs: Almond said. chestra. The fourth annual Bishop's Districi Affiliates and their Charity Ball will be_ held at presidents follow: Buzzards Bay Lincoln' Park's Million DOllar -Mrs. James Risser, St. Mar- Ballroom on Wednesday eve- 'Turn'to Page Thirteen C.ons:istory of Cardinals on Monday 'Recalls Facts on-Sa'cred College Here are some facts on the past and present membeJ.\oo ship of the $acred College of which gain particular interest as Pope John XXIII convenes his first Consistory (Monday) to fill vacancies in what has been termed Senate, of the 'riguez of Santiago, Chili, died Church." just last week. 'The last of 'cardi- ,Twenty-:seven ' countries - are '1 " represented in the new Sacred na s on J,an. 12, 1953 by College of Cardinals-53 of the Pope PIUS XII. Cardinals reside in Europe. The present number of Card- The College of Cardinals tra- inals is 51-16 Italian and 35 ditionally con.sisted of 70 mem- non-Italian. bers, six Cardinal Bishops, 50 The 'new College of Cardinals Cardinal Priests' and 14 Cardi- will be 74-29 Italians and 45 nal Deacons. non-Italian. Cardinal Caro Rod- Turn to Page Eighteen THINKING OF CHRiSTMAS .... A Subscription to THE ANCHOR Send to and at in the Service A 'Weekly Reminder to Loved 'Ones of Your Thoughtfulness Subscription Blank on Page" f:!J

description

, , DIocesan CouncIL of Cathohe All the more disturbing is Code and asks that movie ad­ the fact that this advertising vertising be submitted to it for . Mrs. Mary E. Almond, Presid-ent of the DiOCesan COUll­ cit ()f Ca,tholic Women reports fun committee representatioll from all Catholic Women!s groups throughout the Diocese for the forthcoming Bishop&#39;s Charity Ball&#39; for underprivi­ lege9 childi"en. na s w~s on J,an. 12, 1953 by College of Cardinals-53 of the this problem i,n its Dec. 1 .Y

Transcript of 12.11.58

Page 1: 12.11.58

·H,""I< t. '""fll" 11,

The ANCHOR An Anchor of the Soul, Sure and fi'irm-ST. PAUL

( r '0 (

,.. , ),

'\ '

.Y

Fall River, Mass. T~ursdaYI Dec. 11, 1958 Seeond CIa.. Mail Priviletre. PRICE lOeVol. 2, No. 50 $4.00 per Yea.Authorized at Fall River. Ma••.

Industry Protests Film Advertising

, The moving picture industry is growing more concerned over sensational and salacious advertising coming mostly frOm foreign and independent film companies.

. The trade newspaper, Motion Picture Daily, discusses this problem i,n its Dec. 1

The Motion Picture Associa­issue. tion itself has an Advertising

All the more disturbing is Code and asks that movie ad­the fact that this advertising vertising be submitted to it for eopy is being printed not only approval and the granting ofin 'tabloids but in family news­

papers. Turn to Page Sixteen

.Diocesan Legion of Mary' Work., Is Most Effective

, Priests throughout the Diocese spoke on the Legion of Mary at Sunday's Masses, explaining its history and pur­pose and urging cooperation of parishioners in the organ­ization's work.

Founded in Dublin, the children in catechism, visits to Legion has spread through- homes, and the encouragement out the world. Its members of lapsed Catholics in ret~rn~ng

. '. to the sacraments, rectIfymgwork under the dIrectIOn of marriages and having children pastors in promoting spiritual baptized. ' welf~re. ~~tiv~ties. may i~clude The Legion of Mary was intro­hospital VIsItation, mstructIon of Turn to Pega Eighteen

Paterson Prelate Sees Increased Support for Legion of Decency

.PATERSON (NC)'-:"'Piedicition th~t 'the National LegIOn of Dece.ncy~s n~w classification for adults only will earn the orgamzatIon Increased support from Catholic 'edu­

'cators has been made here. Bishop James A. McNulty

of Paterson, new chairman fi the U. S. Bishops' Com­mittee for Motion Pictures, Radio and Television, said the legion's experience "warrants an Optimistic outlook for future 3upport of its objectives by this :large and influential section of 1he Catholic community." ,

The prelate made the observa­~ion as the date approached when Catholics will be asked to renew their support of the'movement. Annually since 1938, on the Sun­day after the Feast of the Im­maculate Conception, the legion

Turn to Pega Eighteen

Missionary Sees Revival of Faith In So. America

NEW YORK (NC)­There are indications of 'a great Catholic revival b'egin­ll!ling :to sweep through Latin '&n;Ierica where Protestant mis­&JllOitS have had their strongest gll'owth in recent years, accord­fung to one of America's leading mlllthorities on missions:

Maryknoll Father John' J. ~onsidine, of New Bedford, in ;:iiS book "New Horizons in Latin America," tells of the work of North American mission priests Ilnd laymen who are cooperating with the local clergy to revital-

Turn to Page Eighteen

._,)

A REAL SOLID REMINDER: For the fifth consecu­tive year McMahon Assembly, Fourth Degree Knights of Col~mbus is sponsoring a "Keep Christ in Christmas" theme in the Greater New Bedford area. The Hathaway Advertising Company has donated the facilities of its poster ,panels. Left to right, are Past Faithful Navigator Paul R. Curry, Franklin S. Seymour, company manager and Faithful Navigator Everett F. Sowle. '

Movies Still Serious Danger· to Morality

. Catholics will renew the Legion of Decency Pledge at Masses in all churches of the DIOcese next Sunday, repeating their promi se to keep away from forms of entertainment classified as indecent or dangerous to faith or morals. '

The Legion of Decency tone of entertainment. Its effectiveness has been, evi­dent in the radical changes in this aspect of motion pic­tures since producers first be­gan to feel its potency,

In his recent report to the Bishops of the country on the moral status of entertairiment motion pictures, the Most Rev. William A, Scuily; D.D" Bishop of Albany and Chairman of the Episcopal Committee for Motion

, Pictures, Radio and Television, emphasized the encouraging achievements of this industry during the past year but also

Turn to Page Sixteen '

Renew Decency Pledge Sunday

The following Legion of De­cency Pledge will be renewed by Catholics of the Diocese on Sun­day:

In the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost. Amen.

I condemn indecent and im­moral motion pictures and those which glorify crime or criminals.

I promise to do all that I can to strengthen public opinion against the production of inde­cent and immoral films, and to unite with all who protest against them.

I acknowledge my obligation to form a right conscience about pictures that are dangerous to my moral life, As a member of the Legion of Decency, I pledge myself to remain away from them. I promise, further, to stay away altogether from places of amusement which show them as a matter of policy.

Legion of Decency ,Movie ,'Ratings , On Page Four'

was formed by the American Bishops to evaluate the moral . '

CHARITY IS LOVE: The heart of Nazareth Hall, FaD River, is pictured by this cheerful and tender scene of Bishop C~nnolly:,and'OIii~ ofthe s,ch09l's pupiJ~. The Bishop's Annual C~arity Ball has this ,schOOl as one of i~ proj~t8.

Diocesan Women Organize For Cha-rity' B'all' Success

. Mrs. Mary E. Almond, Presid-ent of the DiOCesan COUll­cit ()f Ca,tholic Women reports fun committee representatioll from all Catholic Women!s groups throughout the Diocese for the forthcoming Bishop's Charity Ball' for underprivi­lege9 childi"en. ning,January 7. Conducted

"Weare, better organized u~der the co-spo~nsorship of ,t~e , , DIocesan CouncIL of Cathohe

than ever and all of our Women' and the Society of St. affiliates are looking for- 'Vincent de Paul, the affair will ward to the most fabulous social again feature Lester Lanin and event in the history of the Dio- his internationally famous Or.. celie," Mrs: Almond said. chestra.

The fourth annual Bishop's Districi Affiliates and their Charity Ball will be_ held at presidents follow: Buzzards Bay Lincoln' Park's Million DOllar -Mrs. James Risser, St. Mar-Ballroom on Wednesday eve- 'Turn'to Page Thirteen

C.ons:istory of Cardinals on Monday 'Recalls Facts on -Sa'cred College

Here are some facts on the past and present membeJ.\oo ship of the $acred College of Cardinals~facts which gain particular interest as Pope John XXIII convenes his first Consistory (Monday) to fill vacancies in what has been termed '~the Senate, of the 'riguez of Santiago, Chili, died Church." just last week.

'The last cr~ation of 'cardi- ,Twenty-:seven ' countries - are '1 " represented in the new Sacred

na s w~s on J,an. 12, 1953 by College of Cardinals-53 of the Pope PIUS XII. Cardinals reside in Europe. The present number of Card- The College of Cardinals tra­

inals is 51-16 Italian and 35 ditionally con.sisted of 70 mem­non-Italian. bers, six Cardinal Bishops, 50

The 'new College of Cardinals Cardinal Priests' and 14 Cardi­will be 74-29 Italians and 45 nal Deacons. non-Italian. Cardinal Caro Rod- Turn to Page Eighteen

THINKING OF CHRiSTMAS.... Giy~ A Subscription to THE ANCHOR

Send to Parent~,. :R~latives and ,~~ie,nds-Daughtersat School~Boys in the Service A 'Weekly Reminder to Loved 'Ones of Your Thoughtfulness Subscription Blank on 1·~.~·

Page" f:!J

Page 2: 12.11.58

2 '- THE ANCHOR Jewish Priest, Native 'of 5srael. Thurs., Dec. 11', 1958

Hans Return to Holy l,@[[i)dH ..JJ f SA. t NAZARETH (NC) - Father

ea(QJ~ 0 liO. e Jose'ph Shmueloff,. the first Jew- has cordial relations with his family in Jerusalem and witJaTo Prre$ent ish native of the Holy Land to JeWish friends througnout thebe ordained a priest in the State country, visiting them periodi­BirettaS of Israel, sees the return of' the cally in the long black soutane a!lJews to the Holy· Land as the a Melkite priest.VATICAN CITY (NC) - prelude to their entry into the

Not all of the 23 cardinal's Church.' Father Shmueloff speaks ~

to be created by Pope John Father Shmueloff was or- languages arid has a working knowledge of three .others. He'XXIII will be present to re- dained in the Byzantine Rite last

. June by Bishop George Hakim has composed. a number 0{( ceive their red birettas during of the Diocese of Acre of the. Christian prayers in Hebrew. His the semi-public consistory here Melkites. His parents' are of present assigninent is teaching on'next Wednesday. . Persian-Jewish origin. He him- languages at the Greek Catholie

Italy will receive his from Pres~ of the Daughters of Charity, head 'of the Qutp?tient de'p'art- last June, and he is now a secu- . recorder for the Secondary De­ident Giovanni Gronchi. ' ment of St. Vincent's Hospital, Indian.apolis, kneels to re- . lar priest under Bisnop Hakim,' partment session.

The presentation of the red ceive the blessing of her foster father, R,ev.Umberto .Olivieri, .' wGahlol'leiSe.~nown as the "Bishop of Theme of the conference Wall ... biretta.. is only the second. step . H "Critical p'roblemsin the Teach­

··in ;the ceremonies that lead to': :..whowas'ordained in Rome last June. at the age of 74. e . Israeli Citizen ing Apostolate". The keynote

Heads of state of three nations -Spain, Portugal and Italy-':'" will exercise an: ancient priv­ilege iii presenting the red bir­etta on the Pope's' behalf to the new cardinals who were resi­dents l'n their countries at the time they were named.

Normally this privil.ege ex­· tends only to the case of papal

" nuncios serving in these. nations at the time of their nomination for the red hat. By additional 'concession the chief of state in Spain may also exercise the privilege in regard to archbishops. elevated to the Sacred College.

Archbishop Jose Bueno y Mon­real of Seville' will receive his biretta from Generalissimo Fran­'cisco Franco. The'red biretta' of Archbishop Fernando Cento,

· Apostolic Nuncio to' Portugal, will be given to him by Presi~ dent Americo Thomaz. Archbish­

-op, Giuseppe Fietta,' Nuncio to "

· the elevation of a prelate to the College of Cardinals. The three

.. ,steps take .place during three consistories-secret, semi-public

,.a~dpublic. At the secret consist ­

""~~~ cOa~d~Z~~~~si~~~tenaa~:sa~~ nounced by the Pope and ap­proved by the College of Cardin­als; at the semi-public cQnsist­ory on We~nesday the red' bir­ettas are given; at the _public oo~~~~~~~~~~ on the head of each of the new cardinals.

Pick Convertto Head E"glish Dominicans

EONDON (NC)-Father Henry St. John, O.P~; convert to Cath­olicism and' an internationally

.known student of the ecumenical :: movement, has been elected Do­

minican Provincial for Great Britain. .

He is believed to be the first ·convert to hold the post, and' the first Cambridge Unive'rsity grad­

·uate in the office since the 16th :century. . ..' · Father St. .John, 65, enter~d 'ReCipi~nt~'~nbe'ScienceFac­the Catholic Church in 1917, four ulty Fellowships were selected yeats after becoming an A1?-gli- from among· L069 applicants, can clergyman, as his father was. the science foundation said~' The He joined the Dominicans 'in awards carry stipends approx­1919, after serving in U~e ~r~tish imately equal to· the regular Army.' _ . salaries of recipients.. _ .

i'!--. . . , ': • '. ,._.. ' . , •

Knights Give Record , Mass,Ordc,::': Amount to Program FRIDAY~Ma~~~f previous Sun':'

LAFAYETTE (Nt) -.Louisi- day. Simple.· Violet, Mass ana Knights of Columbus' have 'Proper; No Gloria~ Or Creed; contributed. a· record high of Second Collect for. the :pope; more than: $49,000 to' their 1958 Common Preface.'

. youth expans,ion program. . SATURDAY-'St. Lucy; Virgin The sum, raised -through a per and Martyr. Double.> Red. Mass

capita donation' by individual Proper;' Gioria; Second Collect members in the 122 councils, il! of the Sunday; .Third Collect distributed in' varying amounts for the Pope; no Creed; Com­for assistance to·Catholic student ". mon Preface. centers a!. eight.st.ate-supported SUNDAY-G'audet~ Sunday, III colleges 111 L?UlSlan~" fqr _ the.._' 'Sunday of .Advent. Double of K. of C, youth camps. at Alexan-.·· '. . '.'

. d' C "t for thedna an OVlng on,-'Columbian Squires program: a.nd, th . th' ..

elr you camp.

FORTY HOURS

DEVOTION

Dec. 14-0ur Lady of Health, Fall -River..

St. 'Anthony's Convent, Fall River. .

Dec. 21-St. Louis, Fall·River. St. Helena's Convent.

Fall River. Dec. 28-St, Bernard, Assori~t.

St. Mary's Home,' New Bedford.·'

~:::::::::::::::=:.~..::.,~.,:..~,~;:.::::~ THE ·ANCHOR '. ". ·THURSDAY~.Mass. of previous

Second-class mail privilege~ ,,\.tborized -: Suiiday. Simpie. Violet. 'Mass ,t Fall River, ·Mass. P"bhsbed evef)" . "p., . N Gl' "Cr' . d' •rhursday at 410 Highland' Avenue..··F'all ." .. roper, 0 ona or ee, River. Mass,. by the Catbolic Press of 'the Second Collect· for the Pope;Oioces" of Fall .River. Subseripti<)n priee Common Preface lllY mall, postpaId $4.00 per year. . ... ~._._ . ....

. I Class.. Rose or ViOlet. ·Mass '. , " .N' Gl . . S d C 1 .. Proper; 0 ona, econ 0 ­

lect for the Pope; Creed; Pref­ace of Trinity.

MONDAY - Mass 'of previous Su·nday. Simple, Violet, ,'Mass _' Proper; No Gloria or Cr:eed·; Second CoHect for the Pope;Common Preface. . .' -.

TUESDAY-Mass 'of previous"­Sunday. Simple.' Violet. Mass" Proper; No Gloria ·o~ Creed; Second Collect St. Eusebius, BishOp and Martyr; Third':Col~'

lect for the Pope; Co~mol1'

Preface. . ..... :J

WEDNESDAY-Mass _of Emp~r.. Wednesday in Advent.. Simple.." Violet. Mass Proper; No,Glor.ia. or Creed; ~econd Coll.ect;foi'· the' Pope; .Common .Prefac~.

adopted, Sister .follo\ying an earthquake disaster in 1915.. An Israeli.citizen,· Father speaker was Rev. David R. Dun­. Father visited the nun enroute to California where he has Shmueloff's passport lis·ts.hiin as igan, S.J., Director of'Student three grandchildren. NC Photo. '.' being·oI. Jewish nationality. He Personnel, Holy Cross College.

'. . . Tea'c hers Rece.ivelC'lC'lC'telC'!lI!t«Il!IP.Ii!~lC'!«I«l«!«~~l«-lgI«tCIC~lIlgl((lg!llIt~~~l«~~

Science 'Awards, :'.p'.,~ A"': T'r''a"c~y' f'_ C''0'':m'p'a' n'Y" In·c.·' w . •. '. . '. • ~ • U '.' g

WASHINGTON (NC)-Twen­ty-oneteachers in-Catholic Col- . '274 WASHINGTON STREET, PROVIPENCE lege's and universities areamong. ./ 302 recipients of Nation;}1 Sci­~reF~n~ti~~~~F~~y Fellowships for 1959, the science'

. foundation announced. The fellowships are offered as

a means of improving the teach­ing of science, mathematics and

. engineering in American col­leges. ;They are awarded to sci­ence teachers who wish to pur­s~e further study or research.· . One scientist' in a Catholic school was awarded one of the 82 Senior' Postdoctoral Fellow­ships' given for 1959 by the' sci­ence· foundation, which has headquarters here'.' They are awarded to scientist/1 of proven ability for resea·rch·p·rograms.

self was born.in JerusaleJl.l and educated there. During World War .. II-when Palestine was under British mandate _ he served in Libya as a ni~dical orderly in a Jewish unit. SUb­

-sequently - taken prisoner in Greece, he found himself in a po'W camp in Yugoslavia.

First Contact

Father Shmueloff, recalled his first serious contact with the

,New Testament came about while he was a prisoner in nazi­

. occupied Yugoslavia: He traded seven cigarettes for· a copy.. . Freed by ,American' forces· in 1945, he made his 'way to Eng­land and arranged to be baptized

. at -the first Catholic Church he 'could find. . .

In the. same year Joseph Shmueloff was back' in Palestine

'. . with a budding.vocation. It came HER FOSTE'R FATHER'S BLESSING: Sister Josephine to fruition with his ordination

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Seminary here in Nazareth. . \ .Sisters' of Mercy Ho~d C@l1tlfelr<ence

Sl'ster Mary Carmela R S M , .. .. principal of Mt. St. Mary's Acad­emy, Fall River, was co-chair­man for the College and Second­ary Schools Meeting held in con­nection with the annual educa­tional conference of the Sisters of Mercy, Providence PrOVince, at ~t. Mary Academy, Riverside, R. I.

.Other Sisters from this Diocese ·participating in the conference included Sister Mary Olga, so­perior of Mt. St. Mar/'s convent, Fall River; and Sister Mary Mercy of Mt. St, Mary's Acad­e~y. Both were discussion lead­ers.

Sister Mary Julian, also fr9_ Mt. St. Mary's Academy, was a

, (

(

Page 3: 12.11.58

,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,. ,,,,.,,,,,,, .' ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,.. .

"

BEST BUY

Penny for

Penny

Food

Your

...., .....

his visjtation of armed forces 11n Suttdays in a public school a, group from four Protestantpersonnel on Dec. 23. He will churches' here announced it will

return to the United States about Jan. 2, 1959.

press for a permanent injunc-,

Elect Priest to Post tion. "

The suit was instituted against

With Educational TV school the Duval County board of

trustees on the ground

Consistory to Lower Average Age Of Cardinals in Sacred College

VATICAN CITY (NC)-The average age of members of the Sacred College of Cardinals will go down from 72.3 to 70.9 with the forthcoming consistory Dec. 15.

The Sacred College, reinforced by the 23 prelates named to become Princes of the Church by His Holiness Pope

'. John .XXIII, wIll have the followmg age groups: only one, Bishop Julius Doepfner of Berlin, is under 50; 10 between the ages of 51 and 60; 25 be­tween 61 and' 70; 27 between 71 and 80 and 11 of the Card­fnals are over 80

T.he youngest ~embers of the college will be: Bishop Doepf­ner, 45; Giuseppe Cardinal Siri, Archbishop of Genoa, 52; Arch­bishop Franziskus Koenig' ,of. Vienna, 53; Paul Emile Cardi­nal Leger, Archbishop of Mon­treal, and Archbishop Jose Bueno y Monreal of Seville, Spain, 54. .

Joseph Cardinal Wendel, Arch-, bishop of ,Munich, Germany and Stefan Cardinal Wyszypski, Archbishop of Warsaw, 57; Fer­nando Cardinal Quiroga y Pal,": acios, Archbishop of Santiago de Compostela, Spain; Valerian Cardinal Gracias, Archbishop of Bombay, India, and, Arch­bishop Giovanni Urba~i,' Pa­triarch of Venice. who are 58.

Entertain Americans The oldest Princes of the

Chl:lrch will be Elia Cardinal dalla Costa, Archbishop of

Cardinal To See U. S. Servicemen

NEW YORK (NC)-Francis Cardinal Spellman will. spend his eighth Christmas, overseas this year, visiting U. S. service­men in Germany, Iceland, New­foundland, Greenland and Goose BaY,Labrador. . ,

The Archbishop of New York, . who is Military Vicar of Catho­lics in the U. S. Arined Forces, is scheduled to celebrate, his Christmas midnight Mass at Hainerberg Chapel, Wiesbaden, Germany, Air Force Base. This will be the first in his annual ,.To which. Court Chamberlain visits among U. S: troops in " Court Turns Down' Usami,aI).swer~d: "His true that the European theatre. Injunction Petition many of the Shoda... family are

The Cardinal departs from JACKSONVILLE (NC) ~ Re-' Christians. '13ut, .although Miss New York's Idlewild Airport , Shoda graduated from a Catho­

buffed 'in an attempt to obtain a . ,li!= Schoo"'", she did not receive . 'tomorrow. He will attend the 'temporary injunction against ' , baptism. The public has no cause holding Catholic Church services for alarm."

consisto:-ary" in Vatican City Dec. 15 to 18, and then start

. Florence,. Ital!, P.ietro Cardinal Fumasom BIOndI" Prefect of the Sacred Congregation for the Propagation of the Faith and Georges Cardinal Grente, Bis­hop of Le Mans, France, who are 86. /

A week-long program of din­ners and ~ receptions in Rome will celebrate the elevation of two American. Archbishops, John F. O'Hara, C.S.C., of Phil ­adelphia and Richard J. Cush­ing of Boston.

Sports Night In Swansea

Our Lady' of "'atima Parish 'Swansea, will conduct a Sport~ Night on Wednesday in the par­ish hall. The doors will opEm at 5:30 in the evening for the in­spection' of sporting equipment and fashions. .'

The show 'will start at 7 o'clock sharp.:it will consist of a demonstration of various sports by 'experts in their fields. Golf, archery, deep sea fisll.ing. and casting, will 'be exhibited: Fash­ions, connected with sports will also be displayed. . .. Following .the demonstration, a sports movie will be shown

. and footballs autographed by ,the Boston College and Holy 'Cro~ football teams and an au­tographed baseball will be given away.

The evening will close with a Christmas party for all school children of the parish, and the ilwarding of door prizes and 12

'different types of games. 'Albert H. Brosnihanand Leo

R. Laflamme; co-chairmen, have anno'unced that this is a closed meeting.,-only parishioners may attend. All school children of .the parish are urged to attend ' but they, must be, accompanied by • parent. . ,

', ,

--

PHILI~P~NE LEPROSARIUM: Sister M. Benigna cares "for, a leper who has suffered for 20 years and lost nearly all toes 'and fingers.

Japanese Reaction Favors Catholic Si.deof Marriage

TOKYO (NC) - Public and press reaction has been in favor of the Catholic Church in the dis,!=ussion of' the' betrothal of Crown Prince Akihito to Miss Michiko Shoda, who was edu-'

. cated in a Catholic school. Only the Communist press has

been critical, charging "Ameri-' 'can imperialistic pressure."

In reviewing the betrothal the press has upbraided high offic­ials for being slow in sanctioning it. '

At the'Imperial Household Meeting, preceding the official announcement of the engage­men~, Prime Minister Kishi had ask,ed several questioqs; among them: "I have heard that the S~oda family. is Christian. The religion, of the Imperial House is S~into. How a,bout this mat­ter?·' . ".

Cont'roversy The press criticized the Prime

Minister for his "antiquated and biased question," and the Cham­berlain for his "lack of under­standing of historical realities."

K of C Communion Rev. Regis Kwaitkowski, 8.S.

C.C. was, guest speaker at the first annual communion break­fast of Bishop Cassidy General Assembly, Fourth Degree Knights· of Columbus, in St. Therese's Church, !l!'ew Bedford.

Among the 125 persons present were Grand Knights John Mur­ley ofSt. Isadore Council, West- . port-Dartmouth; Vito Morra, Bishop Stang Council, New Bed­ford, and ThomaE Sullivan. Father Damiel Council, Fairhav­en. Fainilies of sir knights ,also attended.

Guests of h'onor' were Judge Thomas R. Spring, master of the Eastern District, and his secretary, Michael Ring. ' '

The committee, headed by Fra~k' S. Folger, comprised Sir

,Knights John Figueiredo, J. L. ,Roger. Pelletier, Edward' Smith, Clarence Yates and Joseph Mc-Kon ... -:n. bark in f!- •• _~"'" ,.. 1_ -- .............."' ............... '"'1

THE ANC~O~­Thurs., Dec. 11, 1958

Christmas Drive Aids Victcms Of Leprosy

For the seventh year, the Propagation of the Faith Office of the Diocese has quietly but successfully con­ducted a mail campaign for aid to the victims of one of the world's scourges.

Leprosy is still one of the most widespread diseases. Count Fol­

, lereau estimates that' there are 10,000,000 lepers in the world. They are more numerous than the victims of tuberculosis and cancer. Another specialist, Dr. Blanc, in the Cameroons, speaks of a percentage of three to five lepers for every thousand people in the world. In some regions the number of lepers is 50 to 90 per thousand.

Only about 100,000 of the lepers are 'vell taken care of­most of them in missionary clin­ics. The Catholic Church main­tains 291 leprodaria in m'issio!) countries where 80,000 lepers are treated. 'In the last hundred years, 64 priests, six brothers and 36 religious have contracted leprosy. .

. Sister Marie Suzanne, a Fre~cb Marist-who gave a lecture to Catholic nurses and doctors in Fall River a few years ago-:­studied leprosy for many years and prior to her recent death found' a serum which is widely used to counteract the disease.

One day's treatment can be supplied for,25 cents. Sunday to Sunday treatments cost two dol­lars, while five dollars will care for a leper for 20 days.

Columbian Squires Bishop Feehan' Circle Colum­

bian Squires sponsored' by Fall River Council, Knights of Co­lumbus finished fifth in the best circle contest· conducted in the State during October.

In making the report at the council meeting this week, Chief Counsellor Daniel B. Foster council youth activities chair~ man, said it" was a drop of' one position, but that, "it . is only temporary;" adding: "We'll be

DURHAM (NC) - Father Gregory Kelleher, O.S.B., of St. Anselhm's College, Manchester, has been elected vice president of the New Hampshire Educa­tional Broadcasting Council.

The council will advice and assist in the 'operation of educa­tional television Station WENH

that, the arrangement 'violated' the so-called policy of separation.' of, church and state. A Duval County court turned down the

'petition for the' temporary in­junction, then the Protestant group disclosed it will press for'

'a permanent' injunction at a fuller hearing in the same court. A date for the permanent in­here ~hen it goes on the air early, . jUnction. hearing has not beennext year. sCheduled as yet.-

Father James F. Gloekler was assigned by Archbishop Joseph P. Hurley, Bishop of St. Augus­tine, to found a new parish at

'Southside Estates in territory 'apportioned from two existing

parishes. Father Gloekler made arrange­

ments with the county's public school trustees to have Sunday Masses at 8:30 and 11 :30 A. M. in the Southside Estates' public ele­mentary school. He' informed

YOUTH OF YEAR: Al­bert J. Maggioli,' Niagara University senior, has been selected as the outstanding

. Catholic youth of the year and will receive the annual

the trustees that the diocese had obtained land for a church site about a half mile from the school and that building plans were in readiness..

Oregon K of C Begins Drive Against Smut

ROSEBURG (NC)-Raymond J. Martin, chairman of Oregon decent literature committee of the Knights of Columbus, has anilOunced that Oregon district attorneys a're being asked to support a program to rid maga­zine racks of indecent literature.

Mr. Martin has also called on all state K of C Councils to put active committees to work onaward of the National Coun­the project. He said such a pro­

\,::il of Catholic Youth for gram could bring about a' majorJutstandingleadership. (NC change in' the types of magazinp" Photo). handled by dealeci;,

Page 4: 12.11.58

Gideon of Scotland Yard Rock-a.bye-Baby Handle With Care Rooney . Hell's Five Hours Run Silent, Run Deep High Flight Saga of Hemp Brown Hong Kong Affair Secret Conclave I Married a Monster Sheepman

from Outer Space Silent Enemy In Between' Age Space Children Inn of the Sixth Happiness St. louis Blues

Check Tifr~es of Fi~m$) Here B®~ore G@Dng to. Mcw~~s

.A·l- Morally Unobjectionable for General Patronage Apa,che Territary Araund ihe Warld in 80

Days 'Andy Hardy Com'es Home Attack ·of The Puppet

People Barbarian & The Geisha Bengol Brigade Big Country Buccaneer Buchanon Rides Alone Coptain from Koepenick Cineroma South Seas.

Adventure Cole Younger, Gunfighter Cowboy Country Music Boy Dangerous Exile Davy Desert Hell Dive Bomber Dunkirk Flamin!,: hontier Fort Massacre . From Hell to Texas From the Earth to

The Moon Ghost of the China Sea

International Counterfeiters

It, The Terror from Beyond Space

last of the First Game le:'s Rock Light in The Forest lone Ranger and The

lost City of· Gold Lourdes and Its Miracles Manhunt in the Jungle Matchmaker Money, Women and Guns Night to Remember Octet Old Man of the Sea Paris··Holiday Pather Panchali (Indio) Proud Rebel

Attack of the 50 Foot Hot Car Girl Woman I 'Was a Teenage

Blood of Dracula Frankenstein .Blood of The Vampire Juvenile Jungle • : Evcessive brutality; King Creole

sadism. Live Fast, Die Young Bonnie Parker Story Machine Gun Kelly Bride Is ·Much Too Mam'zelle Pigalle

Beautiful Man of the West 'Confessions of Felix Krull Highly moral nature Dragstrip Riot of this story is Fiend Who . Valked The substanially marred

West by excessive brutality (Sadistic' sequence~; and unneccessary' excessive brutality) suggestiveness.

Forbidden '1 s!and Night of the Blood Beast Gang War (Suicide presented aa Girl in 'the Bikini act of heroism.) Girls on the loose No Sun' in Venice God's lillie Acre (Suggestive sequences)

... High Hell Onionhead High School Confidential Home Before Dark

(Trends to arouse by strong emotional appeal the acceptance. of divorce and' justification of remarriage.)

Adorabie Creature .. And God Created. Woman

.. Bed of Gra ss . Flesh Is Weak French Line

Panic in the Parlor Party Girl

Suggestive costume and dancing; reflects

GREE'rS AFIUCAN MiSSiONARY: Pope John chats ­with an AfL'ican seminarian during his visit to the Urban College for the Propagation of the Faith, the Church's major missionary college in Rome. Wearing skullcap at ·Ieft .is Pietro Cardinal Fumasoni Biondi Prefect of the Propagation Congregation, and Pierre Cardinal Agagianian, Pro-Prefect of the Congregation,is in the ,center. NC Photo. , -.' . ~.

MaryknoU- Missio~'er Writes Music

Sierra Baron ~miley Gets A Gun Snowfire Spy in the Sky Street of 'Darkness Tale of Two Cities Tank Force Tarzan's Fight for Life. Ten Commandments Ten Days to' Tulara Thundering Jets Tom Thumb Torpedo Run Trial at the Vatican White Wilderness Wild Heritage Windjammer Wolf Dog Young Land

Giant From The Unknown Quantrill'; Raiders "

A-2- Morally Unobjectionable for Adults and AdolescentS

Perfect Furlough Suggestive situati_ and'dialogue

Perisienne Poor But Beautiful Portrait of an Unknow",

Woman Queen of Outer Spaat

Suggestive costuming. Reform School Girl Sorority Girl ' This Angry Age Three ,Faces of Eve Tunnel of Love'

(The treatment of the subject matler in this film exceeds the bounds of propriety and moral

'. acceptability). Young and Wild What .Price Murder

(Suggestive ,,;stuming and situations.)

Wind Across The _ ~ Everglades

acc,:ptability of divorc".. . (Low moral tone; and remarriage; '. suggestive Co~tuming) ·e~·ie~sive brutality

C ...!... Cond,emned Liane, -Jungle Goddess Passionate Summer Light Across the Street Stella Madamoiselle Striptease Smiles of A Summer Maid in Paril Night Mitsou The Bed

Separate Classific'ation ..

Adam and Eeve (Sensational exploitatoon in advertising tepd, to nJgate.the spiritual t motivation of the film maker and restricts the viewing to a spedal oudie_nce~), Case of Dr. laurent (Obesrvation: This film presents the case for the .·psychopro­

phyla,tic method of childbirth, which is more popularly known as "natural .\ childbirth". This medical theme, which is handled with discretio,:, and good tktaste, can have significant educational value for adults and for older adol­

.-. --escents. However, the subject mailer itself to too sacred, private and personal for indiscriminate showing in entertainment mo'tion picture theaters.)

Clip This lost an.d Save It! ...

,For Mass on Chinese -Vernacular TAICHUNG (NC)-An Amer­

the Chinese vernacular of Tai­;ican missionary' with a music wan used by some seven milliondegree f,rom the Catholic Uni­Formosans, will enable Catho­versity iIi Washington has writ ­lics to sing in their own lang­ten: the music for, the Mass in

the vernacular here in Formosa. Father James A. Collignon,

M.M., of San .Francisco, began his Mass when the Holy See granted permission to the pre-­fecfure Apostolic of Taichung for the singing of High Mass in the native tongue.

The Mass, which is written in

Pubfishers Ask 'For New' "Trials . ,

CONCORD (NC)-A, New York publishing company and. its 'president have reque,sted a. new trial following .conviction on obscenity charges in Fed­eral court.

The firm, Flying Eagle Pub­lications, Inc., and its president, Michael St. John', were found guilty by Federal Judge A. J. Conner of sending a magazine containing obscene material through the mails. .'

Judge Conner .. ruled. obscene an illustration in the April 1957, issue of Manhunt' magazine, which the firm publishes.

The issue of the mag~zine had been removed from' newsstands across' the country by police departments acting under local obscenity statutes. C0!TIplaints_ led to investigation by postal

. inspectors, who found that 190,797 copies of it 'had been mailed from here.

The publishing company was fined $3,000 by Judge Conner. Michael St. John was fined $1,000, given a six-month sus­

. pended sentence and placed on probation for two' years.

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. uage instead of Latin. . Basing his composition on the Gregorian 8th Mass and 3rd Credo, Father Collignon simpli­fied the melody, thim,;by over­coming the previous difficulty of TaIwanese Catholics singing the Mass in Latin because of the dissimilarity of sounds b'etween'the two languages.

The 32-year-old Maryknoller earned a ~'[asters Degree in Music at the Catholic University' of America before his assignment to the missions of Formosa in

'i956. With the inception of the Tai­

wanese Mass, Msgr. Willam Kup­fer; M.M., Prefect Ap~stofic of Taichu'ng, has also granted per':' mission for translation 'of the Mass'into Hakka and aboriginal dialects.' .

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Spa~B~lIrds /Enact New C@~~e~{tgve

~@((@@B!ilDD'\1~ Il@w WASHINGTON (NC) " ­

Spain's new collective bar­gaining lllw' is "a very. im­portant step forward in the evolution of the labor move­ment."

This statement has been made by Dr. Fermin Simz Orrro, Spain's Minister of Labor, dur­ing a visit to the National Cath­olic Welfare Conference head­quarters here in the nation's capital.

The new. law provides gov­ernment review of the agree­ment made by lab.or and man­agement if the latter requests a fise in prices to meet the agreement's terms.

Outlaw Strikes "This is done," he said, ''to

assure the government control over its inflationary spirals in over inflationary spirals· in economy."

·Dr. Sanz' Orrio said that strikes are outlawed in Spain,

Accursed Appointment with A

Shado'w Astou~ding Sh~ Monster Attila Black Tide Blob Blood Arrow' Brain Eaters Bravados Bullwl)ip C;ase Against Brookly!, Camp on Blood Island City of Fear Colossus of New York Cosmic Monster Crawling Eye Cry Baby Killer Curse of The Faceless Man Dangerous Youth Dah~ with Disaster Dateline Tokyo Enchanted Island Fearmakers Flame Barrier Fly. Frontier Gun Geisha Boy Gunsmoke in Tucson

Hell Squad. Hot Angel Houseboat ­J

How to Make A Monster Hunters I Married a Woman Imitation Generl'l Joy Aide Kill Her Gently Kings Go Forth Last Blitzkrieg ~ast Hurrah, The Law and Jake Wode legion of the· Doom'ed Lisa Macabre Man or Gun Man Who 'Died Twice Mardi Gras Naked and The Dead ; Naked Hills, The New Orleans After. Dark Nice Little Bank That

Should Be Robbed Once Upon A Horse Party Crashers P;emier May . Reluctant Debutante' Return of Dracula

-Revenge of' Frankenstein Ride A Crooked Mile Robbery- Under Arms Senior Prom . She Demons Showdo;"ri at BoothiH Snorkel Space MC;lSter X-7 Suicide Battalion Tall Stranger Tarawa Bea~hheod

Teenage Caveman Terror of A Texas Town Thing That Could,!'t Die

.. Thunder Ro.ad Time to Love and A Time

to Die -Vertigo. Viking Women and The

Sea Serpent Villa Voice in the Mirror War of the Colossal Beast War of the Satellites When Hell Broke Loose Whole Truth 'Windom's W~y Your "'';st is Showing

A·3 - Morally Unobjectionable for Adults Age of Infidelity An"lo Lucasta Another Time, Another

Place As Young As We Ar. Auniie Mame' Badlanders Bell, Book and· Candle Cat on a Hot Tin Roof Certain Smile Cliina Doll .Cool and The Crazy Crime & Punishment try Terror .Damn Yankee .Decks Ran' Red Defiant, Ones Fiend Without A Face Frankenstein-'1970 "Frauelin . Gigi "G\lnman's Walk

Gun Runners H~rry Black" and The Tise< Haunt ,d Strangler Hell's Highway High School Hellcats Horror of Dracula Hot Spell Indiscreet _ In' Love and War I Want To live Kathy-O Key Life Begins at 17 Man Inside Maracaibo Me and the Colonel Murder by Contract Naked Earth Never Love A Stranger Notorious Mr. Monka Of Life and love Pagans

Raw Wind in Eden Remarkable Mr. Penn)"-,

packer Roots of Heaven

Rouge Et Noir RX Murder Senechal, The Magnificent Separate Tables . She Gods of Sha,k Reef South Pacific Strdnge Case of Dr.

Manning Ten North Frederick This Happy Feeling. Too Much, Too Soon Touch of Evil • Twilight for the Gods Unwed'Mother Vikings ,. Wolf Larsen Young Lions

B - Morally Objectionable in Part for All

'. but that arbitration procedures have been established 'by the government.

Noting that before the Span­ish parliament passed the law working conditions and salaries were set by the government, Dr. Sanz Orrio said the new s·tep will permit employers"and em­ployees to determine such mat­ters. . .

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Balancing the Books •Priest Gives Last Rites In Korean 7~mple (::HEJU (NC) - A Columban that she had been taken by her A convert of only a year, tileWhalen Work Authoritative missionary priest administered family, all Buddhists, to die in a girl was overjoyed to see a priest

the last sacraments in a Buddhist Buddhist temple. again. She received the last sac­temp~e here in Korea. The priest finally located her raments as she lay dying at a

Father Edward Quinn, S.S.C., and got permission from the statue of Buddha, vigil lightsBy Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S. Kennedy of Omaha, Neb., had previously Buddhist monk to speak to her burning all around.

attended a 15-year-old Catholic alone. He found her family had

Appraised of Freemasonry' Are all the Freemasons anti-Catholic? Why does the Although Father Quinn was

girl, stricken with lung disease, taken her to the temple on theCatholic Church impose severe penalties on any of her not permitted to see the girlin her home. When he returned pretense they were taking her again, he learned she remainedmembers ,who join a Masonic organization? These are a few, days lat.er, he was told to a hospital. steadfast in her Faith.

questions to which all of us should have clear-cut answers. For Masonry numbers many millions of adherents in the United States. One of every 12 American men is a mason. And our next door neighbor may be both a Mason and as friendly, kindly, fair a ' man as one could meet. The an s w e r s are pro v ide d in Christianity and American Free­m,a son r y by Williah J. Whalen (Bruce. $3.75).

To take the second question' first, Mr; Whalen shows amply and conclusively why the Church forbids Ca tholics to become Ma­sons. The principal reason is that Masonry is a religion itself.

A leading Masonic authority on the subject has unequivoca:Ily written, "The truth is that Ma­sonry is undoubtedly a religious institution." This same man de­clares that Masonry has its own creed. It has its own religious ritual. It also has its own code of morality.

Ignores Christ The Masonic religion is one of

naturalism. It ignores Christ. In­deed it is forbidden for Masons to "mention the name of Christ aloud among their brethren." But this by-passing of Christ is obviously incompatible with the commitment to Christ which is the essence of Catholicism.

Mr. Whalen also examines at length the Masonic rites of ini­tiation, with particular attention to the oaths that are sworn. These are exceedingly solemn.

If, seriously meant, they are objectionable because in the name of God they bind the taker to submit to frightful enormities for the sake of trivia. If not seri­ously meant, they are quite as objectionable because theycoii­stitute insincere oath-taking.

As for the question of Masonic opposition to the Church, dis­tinctions must be made. The non­American Grand Orient lodges are manifestly anti-Catholic. On the American scene, the local lodges do not have such a char­acter at all. But the Southern .Jurisdiction of the Scottish rite is extremely, vocapy, and active­ly anti-Catholic.

Mr. Whalen analyzes six con­secutive issues of the organiza­tion's montnly publication, the New Age, and finds that the chief c,oncern of this magazine (received by members in 33 states) is dissemination of anti­Catholic propaganda and fomen­tation of anti-Catholic animus.

Gives Practical Information He says, "The rite also claims

a large share of the credit for the founding of Protestants and Other Americans United for Sep­aration of Church and State, or simply POAU. It furnishes part of the annual budget of POAU which warns .Americans of the Roman menace to free institu­tions and traditions."

He points out that the rite'. Grand Inspector General in Cali­fornia was the leading figure in opposition to tax exemption for parochial schools in that state.

There is much more to the boQk than the supplying of an-, lIwers to the two questions cited at the outset of this review.

Thus, the history of Masonry is rec'apitulated, its pretensions to ancient origin are exposed as baseless', its various degrees are explained, its ancillary and rival organizations a're described, with special note of the Shrine and its most curious use of the Koran and its oath to protect ,the Mo­hammedan faith.

This is a dispassionate, author­ltative, probing look at Freema­sonry, offering plenty of. prac­tical informatio'n in concise·form.

Apostolates, The name of A,bbe Pierre.

ern world., When France was go­ing through a particularly bitter winter, he undertook to do some­thing for the hungering and homeless thousands in Paris whose existence was made far worse by, the brutal cold. He publicized the:' plight and ap­pealed to his fellow countrymen to help him feed, clothe, and shelter these, unfortunates. There was a tremendous response..

Two or three books have de­scri~d his work at that time and later. One might draw from them the conclusion that his sole concern has' been meeting a temporary emergency. But that impression is dissipated by Man Is Your Brother (Newman. $2.50), 'a collection of Abbe Pierre's television talks and ser­mons.

The talks, which take up more than half the book, discuss very bluntly, wha't the speaker sees, on the basis of statistical evi­dence, as a relatively permanent crisis, a bad situation to which the free world must seriously, perhaps heroically, address itselL

Thus, he shows that about half of all mankind is going hungry, not because of some passing catastrophe, 'but because of a failure to plan the world's food pl'Oduction and distribution in­telligently. So it is with housing, and so with work.

Moving Discourses To meet these grave disloca­

tions, some pl'Opose drastic pop­ulation control by birth preven­tion. But this, as Abbe Pierre says is against nature and in­trinsically wrong.

He styles it a counsel of des­pair, and calls for the spread of information about the problem, general discussion of it, common, sustained effort to solve it. All must become aware of what he calls "the law of laws": namely, ;'that there can be no real secur­ity or happiness for'anyone un­less there is a minimum of hap­piness and a fair share foil' everyone."

The second part of the book comprises moving discourses on spiritual themes, which touch on t~ motives for a Christian ap­proach to life arid our suffering fellows, and indicate the super­natural means for sustaining the' work of justice and charity.

This volume demonstrates how far-reaching, deep-reaching is Abbe Pierre's vision, how pro­found his thinking, and how strong his powers to convince and persuade.

st. Philip Neri A priest of another era and

with a diferent apostolate is the I

subject of Fat.her Louis Bouyer's The Roman Socrates (Newman. $1.50). This, provides a sketch of St. Philip Neri (1515:'1595), lil

Flarentine by birth, but re­Downed for his marvelous work with the gilded youth of Rome.

At a ,time when 'the Church was plagued by the Reformation from without and disorder and corruption within, this extraor­dinary man began a work "de­pending for its effect on personal influence alone, on a simple friendship in which a soul's whole life may be transformed." How effective was this informal and easy-going approach, Father Bouyer amply indicates.,

He gives us a most attractive account of the personality and work of St. Philip, and without directly saying so, suggests that the saint's techniques, might be peculiarly effective in our own day.

Council 86 Social Members of Fall River Coun­

,~il, Knights of Columbus, wives and .friends will welcome in the New Year at a social, Dec. 31 at a Westport restaurant.

Outside Guard Albert Riley is general chairman. Trustee .John Mello, reported at this week's council session that all

,',"bcated ,thr.oughout"the, w~ ,.,:ti~kets,.,-w~...e" sold. ' ,,' ,'.

as

" s

Gilbert Mason Arthur Ross Napoleon Ross Norman Ross Joseph Carroll Frank Cash Ludger J. Gibeault Charles H. Gregory Napoleon J. Lamarre Wilfred Lamothe Albert J. Lavoie David W. Nitsche George Rapoza Antone Souza John L. Souza Robert E. Stinton John H. Vickery Robert A. Caisse Arthur V. King, Jr. Raymond ,L. Petit Robert D. Viana Andrew Hreczuk Irving P. Lake Antone Moniz George D. Salisbu17 Patrick F. Smith Louis M. Soares Joseph T. Correira J. Edwin Jones Alice M. Perry Lionel Polycarpo Edmund L. Ramsbottom. Rosaline M. Sharples Helen Teixeira William Medeiros Anthony Anselmo Robert Siegel Maurice Bender Raphael S. Davidson David J. Hanlon John- A. McGreavy Donald E. White .James E. Ryan

-

Henry Mason Michael F. MitcheU Jack Myers

. Roland T. Potvin Edmund M. Rezendes Alexander Robbins Martha Saxe Esther Silk -Henry E. Theberge Gerard L. Tremblay Jeannine Whitehead Eugene Cabral James P. Finglas Joseph Harrison Edward T. Howard Joseph E. Hindle Ernest P. Knight Thomas Larkin George Pelletier Thomas E. Perrotti John P. Raposa Robert J. Ryan Daniel J. Sheahan James C. Thomas Charles A. Tyson James Allcock Paul A. Berube 'Arthur P. Camara Vincent A. Campbell William Douglas Robert Howarth George Ferreira Donald Latinville Robert L. LeD,uc George J. Loughman Frederick E. McGrady Joseph N. Mercier, Jr. Daniel C. Millerick John Pysz Albert J. Dugas Andrew P. Harney 'Norman E. Moss Armand Piche,

-"

From All of Us To All of: You Herman Mason George' A:Jg~:st

Elaine Bishop Ann E. B\lyer Claudette A. Brouillard Doris M. Deschenes Patricia: .Estrella Mildred Entwistle Ann P. Glynn Helena M. Haggerty Louise M. Iadtcola Michael P. Kaegael Helen Klek Marion E. Larkin Michael P. Meagher Nancy Moniz Dykes Constance A. Morrisette Evelyn Murray Walsh Dorot.hy E. Negus Loretta L. O'Connor Paul R. Theroux Albini Desrosiers Joseph,C. Almeida Harold ,Ayre John Bates Wilfrid A. Belisle Roland J.' Bouchard Gerard W. Brodeur Roger J. Canuel Theresa M. Carreira Frank S. Carreiro Gerard Comeau Paul Costa Manuel S. Crov'ello George K. Drew John W. Gassman

, John W. Grant Antonio Joaquin Phillippe L. J. LeClair Francis J. MacDonald John H. Maher Jack A. Mason Joseph R. Mello

1:,

.~ "'­., l;

\. l

~~

Fall River - New Bedford

Merry Christm

Page 6: 12.11.58

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No: Hedgln.'g :On,', Decency,;, ,. '~,> -,:,~ ':' :,' On Sunday the Legion Of Decency pledge'.is' renewed,

in all churcheS. Catholics are asked not to do anything ~ew ',,' but simply to reaffirm i~ a public ',way their basic, belie~ that morality does count and any flouting of it ,should be rejected with promptness and disgust. , ,..<" " '

The Pledge could not come"'--would that it w,ere n~t 13o! -at a more opportune time.

In an interview that was given prominence recently, , one producer of moving pictures said that the pictur~in-' ,dustry is on fire and is fighting for survival. The compeMtion

from television and stereo and other forms of entertainment is great. And then' this producer was quoted, as saying: "When your house is on fire you will ~se anything at hand to put out the fire." And he went on to say that Hollywood ill going to use anything to protect its industry-and the anything meant pictures that feature sex, sensationalism and sadism.

The whole tone of the producer's remarks was, one of the adolescent boy smirking behind the 'barn and smacking lecherous lips over the first dirty pictures that he has ever seen. His immature mind' and undisciplined' emotions glut themselves with the raw sewage that he is trying to disguise' as sophisticated, adult, worldly. ,

It is bad enough that a' producer could boldly proclaim that the movie industry-with such a potential for good as entertainment-is going to see just how far it can go in peddling the sensational and the degenerate and the sex­ridden. It ~~t bad enough that the motive for this is openly given as money-anything to pick up a fast buck. But it is nauseating that decent citizens are supposed to approve those remarks or at best ignore the whole issue under penalty of being called "censors" ~r some other expression that is simply an adult version of the child's cry of "chicken" at anyone who opposes him. ' ' ,

Decent 'men and women and boys and girls-Catholic, Protestant and Jew-unite at this point and cry out: ,In the Name of God, STOP! Perhaps the movie industry is fighting for survival. But so ar.e decency and mor~lity and wholesomeness. The battleline is drawn between money and morality.. Anyone, who pretends to morals and goodness in his private life must oppose the spread of movies'in the public'life of a community. that woulq. tear' down moral standards and corrupt young and old. The makers, the dis­tributors, the theatre owners, the advertising men, the newspapers-no one can' try to sluff off responsibility. Each and all must stand up for decency--or he proclaims himself to be opposed to wholesomeness or-and this is perhaps the common vice of most, he is lukewarm_to the whole propo­sition, and the lukewarm, Christ has promised to spew out of His mouth.

Apparently the ,only thing that will cause actors and producers to change the tone of their movies is the protest at the box-office. On a local level, theater owners should be told just what decent men and women want, what they will patronize, what they will stay away from. Those responsible on newspapers should see to it that the standards of morality are not thrown to the winds in the advertising that is sent to them. Each one involved has an obligation to take a stand on this serious matter of morality. The occasion of

, the Legion of Decency pledge should remind them of this. . Th'e Legion of Decency, remember: advocates but one

thing-Decency. Can ,there, be hedging' on that?, .. ,

'.Hopeful St~tistics- ' There are hopeful 'statistics to allay thefearsof,those

who see, this cotiritry's younger citizens turning into illit­erates because"of their ,ittachment to television and other passive forms",of recreation., '

, ' The number of juvenile books 'sold in the country in 1947 was 54,000,000: The number of similar books sold last year, just ten years later and during the rise 'of television, has risen to an impressive 270,000,000.

It has been said that 'figures don't lie but liars can figure. And so it· would not do to distort those statistics into any forced thesis. But the great number of juvenile books sold last year surely points not only to more children butmore children reading in the country. .

The colleges are also saying-in quiet voices as if not quite sure that th~ condition will last-that the incorriing freshmen are showing a greater ability to read than was true of their predecessors of ten years ago.'

The picture for literacy is not all' black, then. So here's to more younger readers who do not lose themselves com­plete1y to a twenty-one inch television tube but reach eagerly for more and better books. '.',

®rheANCHOR

Sage and Sand

'Church's Life With Christ 'Begins Again in Advent,

By Most Rev.Robert J. Dwyer, D.D. Bishop of Reno ­

"In my end is my beginning." It was the motto embroidered on the' chair of state' of

, Mary, Queen of Scots. Once, while she was a, "guest" of the Earl ,of Shrewsbury, before being transferred to the grim silence of Fotheringay (whence her only' deliver­ance would be the block), it attracted the attention of a certain Mr. Nicholas White, one I of Cecil's informers. He wrote to his master, "In looking upon her cloth of es- . tate, I noticed t his sentence emmbroidered. En rna fin est mon commence­ment:, In my end is my be­ginning: which is a ridddle I,

embroidered: not."·

P 0 0 r M r. White was at least ·honest in his

. ignorance. And how could he foresee or understand the way history would so complete'i,y re­

.verse its verdict upon the two queens involved in the tragedY.

Mary's end was indeed her be­ginning, the prelude to the un­dying fascination her story has exercised over all men, even her enemies who would blacken her name; while for Elizabeth it was the exact opposite, a beginning that would destroy her reputa.:. tion forever.'

With far deeper meaning than was ever attached to it ,by poor Mary Stuart the motto. belongs to the Church as she comes to the end of another liturgical year and begins over again the cycle of her lif0 with Christ. In each year's end is contained the germ of her fresh beginning, the renewal of her covenant with her, Divine Spouse.

And even more, as each year is a' mirrot of the whole span of.' time from Creation to the end of the· world, so for. the Church the anticipated end of time is only the commencement of that life of all living which is prom­ised her ir the eternity of heaven. '

So it is that with a penetra­tion of liturgical insight which' ill sheer 'unconscious genius. on the last Sunday after Pentecost

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Thurs., DElc. 11, 1958Lest, ItTe Forget. .... .

',Weekly Calendar Of Feast Days

TODAY-St. Damasus I, Pope­Confessor. He was a native of Rome and attended Pope Liber­ius in exile. He succeeded Pope Liberius. He commissioned St. Jerome to correct the Latin text of' the Holy Scriptures. St. Damasus is famous for having restored and beautified in Rome the tombs .of the martyrs. He died in 384 at the age of 80.

TOMORROW - Our Lady of Guadalupe. This feast com­memorates the apparition of the Blessed Mother to the humble Indian, Juan' Diego, in 1531 on

, Tepeyac hill near Mexico City.

have 'men, more well-intentioned than wise; attempted to foist their pitiable calculations upon the Church an'd to make her say, at last, that the end is at hand.

Theological mathematicians have figured out to the hour and moment the inevitable deadline, only to rescramble their, arith­metic when the sun comes up as usual the following morning.

We are inclined to smile' pa­tronizingly on the Middle Ages for their periodic preparations. for' the Day of, Wrath, that Dreadful Day, but common hon­esty compels us to admit that the phenomenon is as character­

'istic of our times as of the naive

past. 'Under the cloak of a scientism

.as remarkable for its jargon as for its humorless self-satisfaction' we read books and magazine articles that say the same thing. The late Judge Rutherford has many imitators. ' . The temptation to -identify the "signs of the times'! as forewarn­ings of the end is actually stronger now than in the past. We have outlived the Age of Enlightenment with its dogma that this was the best of all pos­sible worlds, needing only more enlighte'nment and less religious superstition to insure its lasting forever. - ' ,

We have even outlived the crude, materialisin of the 19th century with its solemn affirma­tion of the eternity of matter and the nonentity' of spirit. But we emerge into our atomic age like chIldren groping in' the semi­darkness of an unfamiliar house.

AIallost anything we touch may explode in our faces. Ghouls apd goblins, the unsolved problems of our society and our philosophy,' lurk in the corners ready to pounce on us.

We are told that we hold the key to the kingdom of man in our fingers, but it may open in­stead the trapdoor of the abyss.

Small wonder that' the impulse to read the signs as portents of the approaching end is shared

The great Basilica of Our Lady of Guadalupe now stands on the spot of the apparition. Pope Benedict XV Jecreed Our Lady of Guadalupe as Patroness of Mexico.

SATURDAY - St. Lucy of Syracuse, Virgin - Martyr. She was a Sicilian and one of the most famous of the martyrs put to death under Diocletian about 304. She is commemorated daily in the Canon of the Mass. Whiie Christians were being sought out, she distributed her wealth to the poor and was denounced by a young noble to whom her mother wished to give her In marriage. She endured tortures '

_at Syracuse 'and was put to death by a sword driven through her throat. '

SUNDAY-St. Nicasius and Companions, Martyrs. St. Nica­sius was Bishop of Rheims. 'With his. sister, ,St. Eutropia,' and -a ­number of the clergy and faith­ful, he was put to death for the . Faith by barbarians who invaded ' Gaul about 407. .

MONDAY-St. Irenaeus and Companions, Martyrs. They 'were ' a group of 22 martyrs who were ' put to death for the Faith about 258 in the Valerian persecution. ' Included in, the numbers were'

. SS. Anthony, Theodore,' Saturn- . ius and Victor.

TUESDAY - S. Eusebius, Bishop-Martyr. He was the scion of a noble family of Sardinia. He was taken to ROIT\e by his mother, where he was ordained. ' He served the Church at Vercelli a'nd was the choice ot' clergy .and laity when the Episcopal chair became vacant. He fought cour- ' ageously a:g'ainst the Arian here- : tics, who'had returned to Vercelli : under the reign of Juhan ana died in 270. He is revered as a martyr because of the hardships' he' suffered. . '

, WEDNESDAY - St. Lazarus, Bishop,-'confessor.. He_' was . the ~

disciple' and friend 'of Christ,' who was raised from the dead by , Our Lord. It is believed that. with his sisters, Mary and Martha he journeyed into Gaul, and was the first Apostle of Southern France, becoming BISh-. op of Marseilles. He is the Patron Saint of that city. '

, say, in expectation of that final explosion which will unhinge the universe and send it flying, atomized, into chaos.

But the Church holds her peace. She neither' knows nor' presumes to know. She does not

:even guarantee ",Zero 1960",. though' some of her children would exalt it from private rev~"

elation to official dogma. Her Divine Lord has kept ,the.

secret. of the day and the hour. to Himself alone, and she is con­tent to abide the question. She: only knows and is· sure in her. knowledge that in her end is her, be~inning.

,Art Director the Church dwells on the theme by many today, serious and PORTLAND (NC) - FatherOFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER ,of the Judgment and repeats the 'sober men of judgment as well John Domin has been appo'inted

Published weekly byThe Catholic Press_of the Diocese of F~II River prophecy on, the first Sunday of'" as charlat~ms' peering into the by ArchbIshop Edward D. How-' Advent: What for the world is a crystal ball. ,. ~ , .ard of, Portland, Ore" as director

, '410 Highland 'Avenue, riddle it' understands not' i~ for - ,There, 'are tho~e who' bleakly of a newly-formed' Commis~ion Fall River, Mass: OSborne 5-7151 her the answer'to ihe 'question despair of any 'salvation for the of Sacred Art for the. Archdio­

PUBLISHER ,whi,chHes at, the roof o~all ,of nations, for our civilization and cese of Portland. Father' Domin; Most Rev. James L. Connolly, 0.0,: PhD. God's dealings with His creation. culture. There are those' who for several years national vice

,j From ,,:the ,first Pentecost the are overwhelmed with horror at 'president of the Catholic ArtGENERAL MANAGER' ' ASST; GENERAL' MANAGER ., Christian 'mind has been preoc- the revelation of human deprav­ Association, is engaged in work­Rev. Daniel F. Shalloo. M.A. Re~..John P. Dris!=oll cup:ed' with the problem of the ity, the "beatniks" of another . ing with Salve Regina Confer­

MANAGING 'EDITOR fulfillment 'of the prophecy. Ho-W lost generation. ence of Art Ed,ucators, a national ,Hugh J. G.olden often in' the course:of her history . Better fold your hands, they organization. ~ , " '

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7 Migrant· Families' CreateProblem For Prelate

WASHINGTON (Ne) "It's a trying problem and it may take years to solve sat­isfactory, but we'll "do it."

There was a note of determin­ation in the voice of Bishop Francis P. Leipzing of Baker (Ore.) as he discussed the prob­lem of bringing the sacraments and ministering to the' spiritual welfare of some 16,000 men, women and children, who for five months of each year almost double the Catholic population of his diocese.

The 16,000 are the families of migrant workers, American citi ­zens from Arizona, New Mexico and other southwest states who make an annual trek northward harvesting crops. '

Bishop Leipzig has no over­abundance of priests in his dio­cese ~ there are 41 diocesan priests and nine from religious communities - but as a step toward solution of the problem he has sent two of his ~lergy to Mexico City to study Spanish, and acquaint themselves with the practices and customs of the Spanish-speaking. '

The Bishop said that normally· there are about 18,000 Catholics in his 68,000-square-mile dio-' cese, which parses out to about one Catholic for every four square miles. The .parishes are widespreaq - "the . furthest is about 427 miles from me," Bishop Leip~ig ex~lained. .

,Terminal Mural, Honors Priest

DETROIT '(NC)-A huge mosaic mural depicting the life and work of a pioneer priest will be unveiled next Monday in Detroit's new Greyhound Bus Terminal. The mural, 10 feet high and 15 feet wide, shows scenes from the life of Father Gabriel 'Richard.

Father Richard first came to Detroit in 1798. In 1817 he es­tablished the Uhiversity of Michigan and served as its first vice president and professor in six of its 13 departments.

In 1823 he was elected a dele­gate from' the Michigan Terri ­tory to the 18th U. S. Congress. The following year he secured passage by Congress of a bill authorizing construction of the first road from Detroit to Chi­cago. . ,

Father . Richard set up the first printing press 'in the Mich­igan Territory, other than those used for legal forms, and edited its first newspaper. He died of cholera on Sept. 13, 1832, while nursing persons suffering from the disease during an epidemic here.

The new bus terminal is located on the site of Father Richard's former home and lehoo!.

LAY APOSTOLATE: Jaime Fonseca, editor of. Noticias Catolicas, Latin American edition of NCWC News·Ser;. vice, is 'at the microphone during· one of the Inter-. American Seminars in Lima. He made a month's tour for the People-to-People. in Ac­tion program. NC Photo.

SHRJ[NE'S ORGAN MEMORIAL TO WAR· DEAD: ,Francis Cardinal Spellman. (insert) Archbishop of New York and Military Vicar of the U.S. Armed Forces, has an­nounced that the great organ to be installed in the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception~ on the campus of th~ Catholic University, in Washington; will be in memory of the deceased Catholic chaplains arid military personnel of both World Wars and Korea. The $250,000 organ will contain. 10,000 pipes from one-half inch long to over three stories high. This is the latest progress photo of the Shrine. The scaffolding pictured will be removed within, the next few weeks. N C Photo.

Plan Orgqn as Catholic Veterans Memorial at Nationai Shrine

NEW YORK (,NC)-Francis Cardinal Spellman an­nounced today that the organ at the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception will be in memory of the de­ceased Ca~holic chaplains and military personnel of both World -Wars and Korea. largestchurches when completed.

Catholic' chaplains Of the The music played on the Veterans Memorial organ willU.S. Armed Forces have

been accepting contributions to establish 'an organ' fund. To date $117,000 has' been collected. Cardinal Spellman has suggested that a most fitting memorial would be the magnificent organ to which a plaque will be at ­tached:

This organ has been donated by the Catholic Chaplains and . Catholic· military personnel in honor of the deceased chaplains and members of the Armed Forces. It is the voice of the military to· remind all who hea1' it of the heroic .sacrifices of 102 Catholic priests and untold thou­sands or: war dead and to recall to the living the tremendous price of· peace.

'10,000 Pipes

To insu,re .the installation of the finest ,organ, a eontract has been signed .to purchase one for $250;000. It is hoped that before the organ is actually installed, more funds for thil' war memorial will be ·contributed.

The National Shrine of the 'Inimaculate Conception in Wash­.ngton will be one of the world'!

originate from . nearly 10,000 pipes. The smallest of these will be less than one-half inch long and no larger Uian a pencil. The

. largest will be well over three stories in height.

The 10 major divisions of the organ will occupy two general locations. The gallery organ, high in' the nave of the Shrine, for processions and congrega.. tional singing, will be placed in two great chambers connected across the rear of the church. The chancel organ, to support the voices of the choir, will be di­vided and placed above galleries on either side of the chancel.

\

Papal Trumpet , The entire instrument will be played from either of two con­

. soles incorporating the latest features. of organ design. ·.One of these will be located.in the ele­vated choir g~lle.rY; the other, in the chancel adjacent to .the sanc­tliary· . . .

To crown the magnificence of the organ's ·sonarity, the papal trumpet, a glistening ring of pipes, will project its brilliant

Here's OneCatholic Who Doesn't Duck

ST. LOUIS (NC)-When non­Catholics ask' questions about the Church, too many Catholics just sit back' and dodge the issues, a woman' author"publisher-Iec­turer declared here. '

Maisie Ward, who also is Mrs: . Frank Sheed, in .a lecture at Maryville College of th'e Sacred Heart, observed: "If we would only help them, many more would come into the Church~"

She said Catholics should bone up on their Faith and be pre:' pared to answer questions. "If you don't know enough about your Faith to answer questions about it, for God's sake learn," she said. "But if you're asked a question you can't answer, admit it. Tell your friend you'll find the answer and do so."

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. ­

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THE ANCHO~ '-Thurs., Dec. 11, 1958

Church Figures In Air Force Reach High

W~SHINGTON (Ne) Chapel attendance -of Air Force. ~rsonnel and their families for the fifth consec­utive year pai'i;ed th~ 11 million mark during the 1958 fiscal year, it was announced here by Msgr. ('VIaj. Gen.) Terence P. Finne­gan, Chief of Chaplains, U. S. Air Force.

The year's attendance figures included 9,908,444 at services conducted by Air Force chap­lains and 1,635,996 at services conducted in . ir Force chapels by civilian clergymen serving as auxiliary chaplains.

Activity reports submitted by the chaplains in 1958 fiscal year showed the following other sta­tistics:

Missions Protestant preaching missions

conducted by guest clergymen at Air Force 'nstallations both in the United States and overseas

. btaled 1,512, with 113,932 at ­tending. Catholic preaching mis­sions, led by ,civ;!ian priests in the United States and conducted overseas by two Air Force chap­lains, numbered 2,601, with 227,­179 in attendance. There were 138 Jewish Torah ConvocatioWl held, with 3,922 present.

Marriages performed by chap­laiI:s number~d 6,575, just 418 less than the previous fiscal year. Funerals conducted by chaplains totaled 2,164, slightly le~ than in '1957 fiscal year.. More than 17,488 baptisms were recorded the past fiscal year.

Only Portion "These figures," Msgr. Finne­

gan noted in making the report, "represent only a portion of the religious life of our personnel and their families. 'They cover only those services and pro­grams monitored by Air Force chaplains, and do not include the

. spiritual obligations carried out by our people in churches in the local communities surrounding our bases."

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Page 8: 12.11.58

.At Our.' Hot;se .

But It Wo'uld Be Worse to Do No Chris'tmas· Shopping' At An'

. By'Mary Tinley Daly Christmas shopping-it's upon us. , The thorough.ly organized have finished with all that

business: gifts are wrapped, lists checked, Christmas cards addressed and stamped, ready to be dropped in the box. '

For years -w,e hoped to join those who, before Thanksgiving, have their presents bought and/or made. Even, some year, we look,ed forward to ' emUlating Hildegarde Mallet - Prevost whose exquis­ite taste can spot the perfect Christmas ent as she goes antiquing in January, Feb­ruary, June and July! .

Same old story with us. Here It is mid-. December 1958 and we"re about to commence' shoppin~, In crowded stores with depleted' stoc;:ks . . .We're no better this year than ,we were in December 1948,' or December 1938. ' . .

'Some people never learn! '. , A' Better Answer

On the threshold of organiza­tion, however, we' did make a list of people. And then we tried, via the newspaper ads and the plethora' of Christmas booklets that have been arriving, to seek out THE perfect gift for each one. , We're surprised to find in­numerable perfects "For the Man who Has Everything" and "For the Woman Who Has Every­thing". 'Why, we wonder, all t1,le concentrated concern for Mr. and Mrs. Satiate? And all the little

,"Have Everythings"? Wouldn't a mere "Merry Christmas" do for them? '

Evidently not. We're advised. that we can purchase a· mink­covered bottle o'pener, a jewel­crliSted' pill box, "Do not- Dis­turb" signs in ten languages and

. big game heads' of ,lions, tigers and le6pards to 'hang',Qn the walls of the Satiate den. .

That's ducky!. For'the few on our list who

"Have Everything" we find' a far better answer-it's in some

-of the' other Christmas mail:. those spiritual bouquet cards; promising Masses, and remem­brances in far-off missions,' and

··some missions and convents in our own couhtry:

The· Religious, striving to do God's work are very generous with their prayers, and goodness knows they can use a small stipend we might send them in our friend's name. And our friend, no matter how well fixed

UNITY OCTAVE: Mother Luran~ :M:ary Francis,.Frart­ciscan nun, who died in'1~35, was foundress of the Sisters

·th this world's goods, does not have everything when it comes to spiritual favors. ,

We scan our list again and find people we'd like to remember handsomely. 'The Christmas. booklets give. the perfect an­swer over and over again. There are the, mother-daug"ter dress­f', that would look so cute on Lu and her three-Lu Anne, Deirdre and Maura-ahd even a matching suit for Sean. We index-finger over to the' right hand side of the page .

What a darling doll But is Ginny too old for another doll? Would she rather have the red shoes with the small heels she has been hinting about so broadly?

Typewriter for the' Head. of the House? Goodness knows he needs one-but could he bear to part with that beat-up old thing that has batte~ out so many stor­ies, even though no self-respect­ing junk dealer would have it in his'shop?

As for Eileen and Tony! Would they r~ther. have something for their new home OJ: personal

.items? " These decisions! What's the

matter with us that we can't we just go down the list, order by mail the way other people do? If something costs too much, order something less expensive without worrying a'Jout it.

Closing the books, we write opposite. certain names: Spiritual Bouquets; opposite ,others: fruit cakes.

~'lat's where we always are at this stage of December. Next step: a trip downtown in all the crush. Actually 'seeing items 'for' our loved ones is, to lis, more. satisfactory-,-and we find it a

· little' easier to go beyond the . budget than when we cooly and · calmly contemplate the purchase : at home;. .

The' annual Christmas sPirit·~ "taking over.! ' ,

Real Joyous Occasion For Oblate Prelate'

VANCOUVER (NC) - Four­teen years ago a girl imprisoned in an internment camp in.' the Philippines became a' Convert to Catholicism; .

The girl, now 20 years old, · has been married here in' Canada. And the Oblate missionary who officiated at theinarriage was

\ the same priest who baptized' her in the internment camp.

The' new.lywed is Eleanor Duff of Vancouver, whose mar-' riage to William C. Watson took place in the presence of Bishop Gerard Mongeau, Prelate Nullius of Cotabato, in the southern Philippines: .

Eleanor was' only three years old when she was' interned. She and her parents' were among 4,000 Allied pJ:isoners held in. Santo TomaS Internment'· Camp, in Manila from i942 to 1945: Among' the 'internes were ' lZ. Oblate .missionaries. 'Their su- : perioi was' Father Gerard Mon­geau~ , .

Prayer and Sacrifice Persecution Weapons

YOUNGSTOWN (NC)-Cere­m'onies' marking 10 years of re­ligious persecution in,. Romania have been held here. , Auxiliary. Bishop Joseph M. SchmondiiIk of, the Byzantine Rite Exarchy of Philadelphia warned against the danger., of becoming' complacent, he stated: "The entire progralp of'perse­cution. in Europe.' is obviously

'a 'well thought out ·,plan. VigjI- "­ance is necessary not only to

0, f the, Atonement, ,'.' Gray':, , expose· the diabolical intentions

,of the persecutors,' but' also 'to' more. She" suggested the .. prevent the continuation of the name Chair of Unity· Oct~ve terrors, injustices and inhumani­for the program .ofpraYer', ,ties perpetrated .by th'e avowed

, . enemies of religion.'" ,for religious unity' annually. : ,- "The one all-powerful' w~a~ " observed'by the Church. NC 'on," he'added, "is the combina;' Photo. Uon of prayer ·and sacrifice....

'

COMPLETE BLESSED MARTiN STATUE: This statue of Blessed Martin de ,Porres, a.p., was carved by Father Thomas 'McGlynn, a.p., in his studio, Pietrasanta, Italy. It will be placed in the Church of St. Dominic in London. The work was completed in the six months since the dedication of the Monument of the Immaculate Heart of Mary, by Father McGlynn at Fatima last- May. NC Photo..

Cardinal Consecrates Cathedral MANILA (NC)-His Emi- ' iar to the Far Eastern territories..

nence' Gregoire Pierre XV Card- Pro-Prefect of the Sacred - inal Agagianian has consecrated _Congregation for the Propaga-' : Manila's rebuilt Cathedral.of the tion of jhe Faith,-,the Cardinal

- Immaculate Conception here. . was here ·as· Legate to the Bish,;, The consecration preCeded the' op;s m'eeting of His H9liness

'opening of a conference 9f some, ,Pope. JOhn, XXIII. ,He:was ac.. , . 60 Asian Bishops wpe> met under,' companied by ,550th~r~ ~n t~ .

Cardinal Agagianian's" leader- flight fr~m Ro~e., for the two, ship to discuss. problem~ pecul'; . events;.

, ~..-, THf ANCHOR . Jhurs:, Dec. 11, J95,S'

. Poor Clare Nuns Form' Fe-deration

EVANSVILLE (NC)-Repre-.· sentatives of 11 monasteries of the Franciscan 'Poor Clare nuns in the United States and west­ern .Canada have voted to form a federation of their commun­ities. '

The federation is planned to promote exchange of ideas on the .observance of their rule, promoting vocations, composing and editing works on their shared ritual, promoting the Sis­ter' Formation program and c0­

operating' in all other fields where the interests of the vari ­ous monasteries coincide:

Retain Autonomy Under ~he federation plan, in­

dividual monasteries will retain their autonomy. The federation will not affect the jurisdiction of local ordinaries. There will be no common novitiate.

! The his tor i c meeting of mother abbesses and elected chapter deleglltes marked the first time that members of the Poor Clares in North America have been· permitted outside their cloisters. The unusual per­mission was granted specially by the Holy See in order that they migh~ attend the meeting. The Holy See has in the past ex­pressed a desire that communi­ties of contemplative Religioul

'who share the same rule form. voluntary federations:

HomHectic Society NEW YORK'(NC)-The first

convention of the newly organ­ized Catholic Homiletic Society will open here Dec. 28. The so­ciety seeks to promote more ef­fective preaching.

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Page 9: 12.11.58

Today'~ Fas~ions , THE ANCHOR­ 9 Lourdes Volunteer and LecturerThurs., Dec. 11 ~ 1-958

Budget Styles. 'rruly Lux~ri9us, To Receive Marian Award DAYTON (NC) - A womanCatholic Youth tumor described by Doctors as

who attributes her recovery ofGiddy Bags Are 'Just for Fun "inoperable and inaccessible."health to the waters at Lourdes,Sings'Amahl' However, as she has emphasized

By Ellen Kel[ey and who has since spent her life in her lectures, her cure cannotworking at the French shrineImagine! You can buy wash-and-wear orIon (bulky) be proved to be miraculous be­of Our Lady, will receive the cause no tissue of the malig­sweaters with lacy flowers and seed pearls in sizes 34 to 44 University, of Dayton's 1958 nancy was examined before thefor a budget-wonderful $8. These versatile dress up sweaters Marianist Award. tumor's disappearance and con­

Mrs. Winifred A. Feely, whoteam wonderfully with "after-five" skirts in varying lengths sequently ther..: is no medicalhas lectured extensively in this way to prove it existed.and do an excellent job of Indoor-Outdoor Bootee." It has country on Lourdes and who Father Andrew L. Seebold,"'window 'dressing" when its own built-in' elasticized cot­ serves as' a volunteer at the Med­ S.M., university president, sa~dused as topping for daytime ton sock and is available'in sand ical Bureau of the shrine, will Mrs. Feely, the first woman todresses and skirts as well. suede with black sock, black be given the ninth annual receive the award since it was'Wondrous arnel jersey shapes with red, red with green or award at ceremonies at the uni­ established in 1950, will come• hostess coat (in sizes for misses 'multicolor plaid-has a warm versity on December 10. to Dayton from France to acceptand women) ... causes it to look rubber sole. It's available in full Mrs. Feely, a widow, believes the plaque, given each year forfearfully expensive, yet the sizes--for girls, juniors,petites, ­ she was cured in 1950 of a chest . "outstanding service in Ameri­price is a startlingly low $8,98 misses and women, and is fea­

ca to the Mother of God."(proving once again that smart tured at a budget-pleasing $4.95. fashion can be budgeted). This Dodge office chills in a "Quilt Lecture by Nun Bo~n of British parents in

China, Mrs. Feely was educated ('Ol' robe, if you will) is floor waistcoat-type j a c k e t, wool­lovely, flattering hostess coat Cover-Up". H's' a char~ing Sets Precedent and married there. Her husband, length, has' almost-to-the-elbow filled and warm. It is indeed, a " an Irish businessman, died after

WOODSTOCK (NC)-A nun several years in a Japanese con­sleeves, a pretty vee neckline. handsome chill-dodger, features who lectured at Woodsock Col­ centration camp. She was inIt's available in just about every braided gold trim on black ace­ lege, Jesuit School of Theology, France when World War II brokecolor of the 'raipbow, and has tate taffeta. It's not the least · was the first woman to do so in out, escaped to England anda deep front inset of contrasting bulky, may be worn 'neath a the college's 90-year history. worked with civilian defenseeolor in' pastel tones. coat. It's' available in round or Sister Mary Emil, executive groups there during the war.Delightful bits of fashion non- vee neckline style, keeps you secretary of the Sister Forma­ In 1950, she was seriously illsense on the Fall horizon are deliciously warm-and elegantly tion Conference, addressed fac­ 'and went to Lourdes to "pre­"Lightning Bags". They are accoutered, into the bargain. ulty and students on the aims pare for a good and holy death.".night -lighting" hand - glittered It's December, and the. whis­ · and achievements of the confer­ While in the baths at that shrine,giddies that you've often admired pering of silks is heard through ence, which sl}e described as an she says, she' was' cured. Sinceat fabulous prices. (Right ·now. the land, <.Is they bloom in a effort by the Sisters of the coun­ that time she has been associ­you can get them nearly every- Northern scene, or fly Southward try to solve their own intellec­ ated with the Medical Bureauwhee for about $5.00). These to the sun. They gleam in a gar­ tual and spiritual formation as a general 'assistant and inter­charming "Lightning Bags" are den of prints, in colorful colon­ problems. . preter, working at the shrine"de rigeur" for grand 'holiday nades-both shy and bold. Silks The school system the nuns during the pilgrimage seasonaffairs, and for every social shape up with great subtlety. have helped to build in this and lecturing around the world,butterfly on your Christmas list. These are slim, yet ever-so-softly country has no equal in the particularly. in the United States,One charmer that I particu- full. Yes, fall fashion whispers world, she said, adding it can during the "off-season.""Silks"; if you would be ele­become an even more valuablelarly admired is a sequin chain gantly dressed for just about After receiving the Marian­pounch framed in gilt. It comes contribution to ' the Church ist Award - the university'severy occasion. through improved formation ofin black, red, sapphire, white. Have you a cruise in view? highest religious honor-to bethe Sisters who have such apink, pale blue and green. An- . Then you'll be interested in a given at a student convocationother chic little "Lightning Bag" large part in maintaining it. on the campus, Mrs. Feely willsoft, white wool flannel outfit,

.is a clutch type, covered com- embroidered with a color garden. embark on' another lecture tour pletely with bugle beads in pale It will earn a' fashionable pas­ St. Louis to Exhibit which will take her to Cleveland,blue, pink or white. So be on the sage a-ship or-ashore! It's a re­ St. Louis and .Denver and otherlatin American Artlookout for one of these popular freshing idea, too, for holiday cities.handbags to augment your new- lld season, after-five fashions. hostesses, with casual pu own

VICTORIA (NC) - Kirk ST. LOUIS (NC)-A collec­ The Marianist A ward was es­Jordan, a seventh-grader at tion of original Mexican and tablished to commemorate theThe soft wool suit-dress' crosses top and 'slimmed .skirt that's

fully linetl. It's also available in St. Joseph's ~chool in Texas other Latin American art objects triple centenary of the comingeity lines beautifully. It's first pastel tones, and deep, vibrant will be established at the Pope of the Society of Mary (Marian­will star for the third yearchoice for town or' travel, flaunts shades. Its' pi;ice is slightly over Pius XII Memorial Library at ists) to the United States; theon nationwide television in theplenty of buttons, gathers plenty thirty doUars. St. Louis University. death of the society!s founder,of compliments for' you. Tonie. \ . ;.' . title role of the opera "Amahl The .col~ection, of pre-Colum- Father William Joseph Chamin­. and the'Night Visitors."tltis scheduled-for-great-popu- M.othe~. C,oelho En·Ioys.: . · bian,.colonial and modern Latin ade, and the founding of thelarity, suit-dress is at its most The opera, which has a Christ ­ American art, will be exhibited University Of. Dayton by tbebeautiful ill one of, t!le basic . Birthday at Villa Fatim~ mas theme, is the work of com­ at the Pius.XII ,Library in con- Marianists.eolors--gray, beige, black, navy A founding member of the poser Gian Carlo Menotti: It · junction with the world's largest .. green.' Sisters' of' St. l)orothyJ~ the will be"telecast by NBC tele­ collection. of source material on

Choose it in a sleekly fitted, United "'slates, Mother Oliyia' vision ,on December 14 at 5 Church history in Latin Amer­P. M. (EST): .ckessy sty'h~"or in a slim taiiieur COelh'o" de Carvalho,' celebrated ica and, especially._Mexico..

01. classic simplicity; dres'it up or her 80th ··'birthday at Villa . Young' Kirk was first chosen down with accessories, as your Fatima, the Taunton novitiate of to sing the role of' Amahl . in mood or the moment suggests. the community. 1956, when he won a competi ­~he price? Wonderfully enough Born in Portugal, Mother tion to fin( a boy to take the -just under fifteen dollars.) Coelho entered religious life in part. This may be his last year ~ Brilliant brocade lights your that country, but the 1910 revo­ in the role, if his voice begins to night life with a softly shimmer- lution forced her community. to change before next Christmas. ing gleam of color. Oftentimelj, ... flee.,Of those who came to the He is the f of Mr. and Mrs. this beauty is a slim sheath of a' United States she and one other John Jordan of Victoria. Mr. dres!}, the hemline short (but sister "are '.the only survivors. ~ Jor<;lan is an etectrician for the long enough to be in good taste, The \ridi'i;uperior of the Taun­ Southern Pacific Railroad. which means the right length. for ton' novitjate, Mother Coelho is According to his teachers, the you, according to your height still very: active. Before her as­ Brothers of Mary who conduct and width). The waistline is high, signment to Villa Fatima, she St: Joseph's, Kirk has been and in this case, is emphasized was superior and teacher .in maintaining a 95% average in with a strategically placed waist- Rhode Island 'schools of the school this -·ear. He sings in the bow. There's a high, jewel neck- community. school choir and is also an altar line, a slim-line skirt. Colors are Marking her' birthday, the boy at Our Lady of Lourdes eiel blue, champagne beige or Helpers of Villa Fatima, a group . Chlirch here. misty mauve. Sizes are forji,m- of laywomen; .provided a turkey Prior to 'appearing on tele­iol's only, and the price is a gen- dinner for the community and vision in "Amahl," Kirk will .me budget-wonder!prelle~tedMotherCoelho with ' sin~ the role in. productions of

If you would be the belle 9.t 'many, gif~s., the opera throughout the Mid­tile ball, you'll be interest~d in. .' , .,'" " west during Deceinbj.r. the elegant sweep of pale .blue> :: Mass,achusetts College silk satin. that I a~mired just this"{.'AClds'20 Scholarships week. ThIS b~auhful g,own woul'<l' PAXTbN (NC)-Anna Maria' have been rIght. at· h,orne at the C 11 . 'h" . , . , ed thOat . ·t· . t Ii ' h' . 0 ege:· as. announc 1 C?urt of .Josephm.e.. I '. as a .1- will offer 20. scholarships for therISe bodice, a WIdely bouffant, . . _ '. . floor-1eng s Ir a.· e sou . . .' , · th k' t 'th t b' 11 t year 1959. ThlS wlll be done m ill the back to give a delightful commemoration of ,the. Lourd~s

. h' 1 k Centenary Year. These are In pm-cus lOny 00 • . . th I b Available in misses' sizes, and addItIOn to . e regu ar num er

a definite entrance-maker, this is of scholarships, the Massachu­a gown that ~ill dance across a· setts college reports. ballroom floor with plenty of Supreme Protectorverve-make you the envy of PITTSBURGH (NC) - Popeyour contemporaries, and cause John XXIII has assumea the YOy "to stagger the stagline"! title carried by Pope Pius XII 'of,

You must have noted, admired, Supreme Protector of the Pon­and possibly bought some of the

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• swathe in the Fall' fashion world. They're fluffy little caps .' of French angora,.made'by hand, DO less.

They're available in every oolor and shading of a Wipter rainbow. To me, they're loveliest .ill. snowy white. Incidentally, tiler do an excellent w~-uP' job-are definite chill-cha~n.

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Page 10: 12.11.58

lO -THE ANCHORThe Yardstick Thurs.~ Dec, 11, 1958

Stab'iliz'atio~ df; E~~"~my Nuclear Tests Needs Definit'e' Planrting Hurt Missions

By Msgr.":GeOl'ge 'G. Higgins, :In Paci'fic' " . Director NCWC Social Action· Department'

ROCHESTER-ContinuedIn 1952, during a nation-Wide sj;r.ik~· of 'the:basic steel testing of . 'nuclear weapons

·',iridustry, Max Ascoli, editor ~f The lteport~r, 'advocated a 'in the Pacific area is having

, system' of· "loose corporatisin~~ as a s61udon to' the labor-. an·' ill' effect on missionary

management probleJjl in the major iridustries of the VniteQ work, among ~h,e.Japanese,..-. States. With specific ref-, ,baC~gr~undS and;froin: as many. nun who worked!. in Japan :foio erence to the steel disp'lite occupations and' professions 'as . - the last decade reportEid here.

, and' similar 'national emer,;, ·,pos~ible. '.. - Sister 'Mary - Vincent of the .' Daughters of St,:Patil, back home"gencies, he argued that "we '. canadiail'PropoSa( .'

·in Rochester ona vacation; said"need the cooperative effort ·of : ." '" ." . '. ' " , . '. In the meantime, ,while, we are . \ that as a result of, the nuclearali the. parties conc.erned-gov- waiting 'for' The Reporter (or tests many of. the fish become ernment, capi- some other national journal" of radio active. She reminded thattal,. and labor- opinion) to launch a full-dress fish not'only are as importantthrough new debate on the pros and cons of" part of the Japanese diet· but r e'g u 1 a tor y a "loose system o.f corporatism", 'also one of the. chief sources of age n c i e s, at it is interesting to note that the their livelihood. . least for the in- Canadian and Catholic Confed:" "The, Japanese believe thatdefinite future," eration of. Labor recently made thousands have died. as a resultVINCENTIANS COMMUNION BREAKFAST: Fol­Nothing ever . a recommendation which seems of these tests," Sister Mary Vin- ' ~me of Mr. to parallel Mr. Ascoli's proposal lowing Mass at St. Patric0s Church, Fall River, pri~cipals cent said: "And this' has reacted

"Ascoli's pro,;, rather closely. of the area's St. Vincent de Paul Society are shown before "against the missionaries. Whenpo.sal, and, to the best of .my In a memorandum submitted the corporate Communion Breakfast.. Left to right: Rt. Rev. · we aproachthe' Japanese to

"recollection, he on' Nov. 21 to the Royal (Canad-' Edmund J. Ward, pastor; of St. Patrick's Church;' Bishop · teach: them Christianity, they say · 'iaJi) Commission holding it pub- ,to ·us:· ··.~you ·call yourseivell

.b,iinself !'iidn't . 'lic' hearing 0.'hl,be prices offbod - Connolly,- main speaker; H.F:ra~k Reilly, area president; .Chi:istiiuis, '-but -look what 'you'Say any' more Vincent Mannion, president of St. Patrick's council.. ....:'aboutit until .Nov. '27 of'. til.is commodities, .the CCCL·recom· did and are doing. to us.' It makes · . " f' th t . mended. that the Dominion, and . . '. . '.,' . " the barrier facing the .mission.;, :·~~r;·hinb~~~h~~f~:e~ga~nata 'ProviIlci~1 goverpmentsof,Cari., Congre~sm~n.Demands Red Chi.,.ese , ,arie~ much greater to overcome." .

":~h'lI11enge to the "liberills"who ,', ada',.esiablish'price~ arbitration '. '.' ....,' ." . , ,... , '..,' .' .. "It. is now most difficult *­"o~ercome ·thepromises made bF'~tll" be: ii,lco~tror,of~th~ next .;.r;~~~~i~~li~~:o;t~uld ·serve· a ;. Ex.plciin,·pisappea,~p~c;e ..of Bi.s~~p,.,;, ,t~~.'~olIllllunists. They' are' not

Congr~s~.. ,.', ,.,;, . . '. (a)"to' jUdge.thegri>iJ~dll on '. WASHINGTON (N'C)-A U. S. .congressman ·ha;s asked ·.condu$ltiilg . Dl,lC~lear tests in· ·the ". ., '" , ,~eed PlaDlpnlt".-' . ",., ',~ wllfch. ,primary:,': producers. aOO'.. ·the State Department to demand ·from· the 'Peiping govern- ,Pacific' like ;we 'a·re· and the~

':!Liberalis~ ; ' .../~. h-:,~r~te!... I distributorsofess~ntial.products ':"ment' '~n' explanation of the'c,csudden disappearance'"Of '.make, the,'ifiost Qf this," Sister Mary Vincent said.."will .....have.; to, !a~e : ex.a~tmg .' and ser:vi~es' support theiz: re- . Maryknol.l-. Bishop .Jam.es E.W.·alsh;' 6'!,th.e. i~st Am.tiicaJi

ta'sks' in the commg,·~ears.;·To· quest for-- price increases and - She··reminded that the Japan­···''-me.ntion only:,on~:.,the':·fIght':··(·.b·) t' ,.. ' :' : . "t' " ..11 .missionary. iIi Red .China. . Bishop Walsh is a'veteran 'of 'ese are a very patriotic people

.'. . fl t' d ds insti 0 I n.q u Ire In o·a , (D h d" d f . .i1lg~InSt III a IOn emaIJ' -. spheres 6f economic life in order Rep. ThomasJ. Lane - t r~e· eca es ~o, servIce In 'a'nd naturally' have reacted tre' ­

· ..tu~lOnal reforms d,;slgned· to ,.,to discover abuses in the price' ': '.. .;.' . Chma, 'but he has been severely 'mendously' . agains.t AmericaJlll -;,-brIng together the 'powers of . 'f' Id d' t . . th' t th Mass.) Galled attentIOn to a limited in his activities fot'the be'cause of the tests. . . ' f" Ie an 0 expose em 0 e ..' .

government, of .buSIness, 0 .agn-. bI' .' '.' ". ' Nov. 29 story in The' Pilot, past severa~ years, although he Sister Mary Vincent said that "'culture' and of labor, if ways are pu IC. . ~ iI.·~w.sP~p: e~ of the Boston arch- had never been pl~ced tinder It is much easier to conduct con­

to"be' fo'und to steady the value, These ,.proposed boards would t . vert work among ·the Japa'nese. h' h . . h W 1 h arres.of the dollar. ,.,' . ' only have the power to carry out dIOcese W IC. saId Bls op as. The Bishop has been in failing women than men. She explained: It· not be steadied without investi~ations and .makerecom- : '''failed to come to his office in ,health in recent years, and has "The Japanese women have nO

. ~aIl. t. d mendatIons, In other words, they Shanghai for the past week" and been subJ'ected to repeated at- social standing, so they are more8ustaIned, concerted' effoF s, an· Id t b . th . d t . such efforts demand planning, . wou t~o.. ~'a~, onze' 0 I~'" that his house boy had not seen tacks in the communist press. In eager to listen since Christianity

thnot superstitious reliance - on pose elr. e~ls~on.s .eI er. y h~m for a week. It noted further .- 1955, it was rumored that he was affords them an increased social chance. It is the task of liberals ,law or by admInIstrative rulIng. . that reports received by officials. planning to leave Chi'1a, but he position. For this reason and also to' see to it that planning is de- They wo.uld. be composed of. in' Hong Kong indicate the vised' and' executed by defining ,representatives of producers, la... Bishop has not been available the specific responsibilities' of . ?or organizations, cooperatives, to visitors since Oct. 19. independent and 'correlated Industry, and th~ government. Rep; Lane said in his letter to sources of authority." .T~ese .representat~veswould·be Secretary of State Dulles that if·'

"I '. 'd'ff' 'It'' t' . :d 't' rm" 'ne . appointed by the government on . Bishop' Wals.h "is 'alive, as. wet IS . I ICU . 0 eel . '. '. .' ~

'fr'. . M'· 'A' .:1"" t ." d·'to·r· ·.als" thoe recommendation· of, the - hop'e' ·and.' pr,ay for, the Redsom r. sco IS wo, e I I .... ,· .... : '.. '.' ­· of:June 1952:arii{November .•1~58 : abov,~,men~lO~e~ .0rgamz.atlOns," should verify tl).at fa~t in or!i~r . ., .' ,.. ,. , ,.,,{. .,. b'o. al!d,' could ·be replaced m the 'to delay the' widespread fears for,precl~el~ what }~e .,.Jll.~an,s_y.. a:., same'manner ,j . . ..·.hl·s.safe·t·y·.'.th·at have' .b·een· c"aus'ed'syStem of. ~,~loose .·co~poratJsm" :'.... or, precisely wha(kind of "insti- .': . ,.' Deser.ves Hearin~. 'bY' his·siJdden 'disapp~arance."

.. . .tutional ,reforms" he:' ,. has., ii!" .1 am not' arguhig.for or against '. .~If,he h;s bl'!~n arr.ested,,, Rep; ...mind. ii. is hoped" therefore,,that . : this recommendation of the Can- . Lane's letter continued, "we

.withinthe·,·near. future·:h(s. pro- ?adian and Catholic Confedera_hav,e"a' right :'t~_ ~rioW~ha~ ..Msa!. ,will bespei~ed-" ~ji.t .~~. tion of'.Labor,.1t is cited' here, trumped-Up charges have been

· gr~ate~ .. detail· in ii': seri~!!,of' merely for"purposes of' discus-' preferred against"liim and where feature articles. sion, as. one of several' possible he' is imprisoned. The' Chinese

The Repor;ter, it'see!TIs tc) 'me, . ways .of implementihg the 'gen- authorities must bec'iearly and wQu!d ··be an:.' ideal forum in . eralprinciple' expounded by Mr. firmly 'informed that all Ameri­which' to '~'hiuncli a' ,systematic '. . . ,. cans held as political prisoners. .., ,. . Ascoli. ' , ... " ..

··discUssion Qf the pros' ar,ld .cons '... 'by the' Red!! _Il'lUst ,be released " of:democraflc economIC planning ~.:. .7'he J:11erits 'of the proposal are before there can pe any "lessen:' ·.th~ough the .-medium· of ':'new . obviously: open. to discussion, ing .of .·t~nllion,between the' regulatory agencies"··made upo~. particu.larly in view .of- the fact Uriited States and Eed China."

. . ... . I' ,... - , . ·',.t.h.at U:iiinits itlle.·lf to the field ofrepresentatIves 'of ' a~r,·-'man.:.'· - "I' speCifically re.q~esi,". R.ep. . " . "l't ~ , 'd 't'h . jiriCesa..nd..make.s no provisiona~errient, agfIcu ure· an : e Lane asserted,. "that the U. S. Government. fO'r the public review of 'pro-' official who is conferring with

, ~. '. :Posed wage increases. . :. Th.is· d.iscus!?ion~as, be"e!1l~girig "'. .. . . .... .. , an, agent of. the Red Chinese on 'intermittentlYin the'Catholic . NeyeJ:'theless It deserves. ;a government at ,Warsaw. concern­pr~ss for:a J\urriber·o(ye~rs,an.d,,':.' Sympatheti~ . hearing-,amuch ingthe release of other ;Ameri';'

.:do 'a lesser extent, in:certain:s.eg:", . inore '!lYrnpa,thetic .hellring; in:- cans be. instructed to demand :~jn~n.ts .pf, :t1ie·~iab.?t ,:~ress::' Th~ rc.~<I.~nti:illYr t~ail :was giv~n.; ~O:a. fuil" and accllfllte ' information .:"tirile,has. come, however,to in'- .' SImIlar pr;Qp.osal:..rnade .!n,thls, concerning' the .health . and

.. ': . '.. '1"i~61ve more peopie··ln:the discus- -,,'. co.u_ntry .p~ ttle. Unib~d'. A'u!~l)lo~.~ .. whereab6uts 6£ Bi'shop" -Walsh> . sion-peopJe of various r:eligious. bile' Workers' several ~onths W¢ must, nev~r compromise on

. .~ ,.' - ago.. " .. , . our sworn" ':duty .tQ. protect the

'. ,~.. .V~'tk~~Sta",'p$~H'~I,d . ~i::: ~:~i~~Si~h:ig~~mO~o~~j~= C~II,ct~rs' interest .... ta~.'~ative of Cumbe~ia~d, Md.,\

Stamp collecto;s a're: invited · to attend meetings oft.be. Vatican Urg~s Catholics Se~

: Philatelic SoCiety,"a: group spec­-ializing in stamps~ and ,covers New, Movie~,e.lease

· issued by ,ti1e v..atic~n City post ,.. .oif.ice., ,. . ,,', '. " ..-:: '. .. NEIW tYORtKh (NNCt~-Inl Lan ~n­~~.:. ·.Next'meetinir:6rcthe:Eastern usuaac IOn,e ;IlOna eglOn . ,Mass~lI:hi.i'se'tt's 'chapter willb'e . of Decency' lias announced it has 'heid ~t Sf. )VI~rY of the Angels, placed ".The Inn of Sixth Happi­

'. ,R~ctory! .?7.7' Walnut":Avenue,. ness;" A-I chissification (mora\ly ·Roxbury, according to William unobjectionable fQr generai pat­P. Quinn, president~,It -is sched- ronage) and recommends it.' ·uled for' Palm Sunday' evening, highly ~'to the Catholic patronage .

. March 22, 1959 at 6:30. of the entire' family." . . 'At the last meeting, members "This film's dramatic,. artistic

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aries." ..

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ENTERS ,NOVITIATE:' saw: a demonstration' of- silk· and entertainment values are . r-.;,;.----....;,~-------'" -, Jerome ·F.'. Lowney, 'spn-,-of screen printing,o!album pages superior and its moving story of . N,0,·.rrisftT.ri.·p·.p

· Mrs. Irene; Lowney' of:2.91·.. · for.t~e. Cardina~ Spel~~an sta~p the heroic spirit and··tremendous . , ", .', . collectIOn.' Each receIved a title courage of the missionary por- SHEET METAL:' ~~)Ut?· s,t.:. S~me~~~t .an~the ,page for a Vati~'ari stamp album 'trayed in the picture, will be a :' J.' JESER; Pr~p." " late . ~I1ham. Lowlll:ly,.,h~s 'and.··instructions:,:~ere·.given on rewarding experience foralCwho RES./DENTlAL.· .. ,.. . ... entered· the ·Novitiateof.;theasserriblirig.such. a. book.' . see .it," the Legion stated... HolyCross ...Bro~hers/ vaJ.. ".:I:~Ild.ilh.lstr~ted~,anel~ of r~~ .. ',';Because. this film is an in-. ' :':. INDUSTRIAL . ·t·'· NY' H'" , '1''9'57'" d" .. lJglO.us .. stamps. from. Cardinal spiring production of such.extra':. .,. .::.·COMMERC/ALa Ie,' '.' .' e IS a· .,gra - ... '.' .... " ,...... : ... ' "'. . . ,. , ., ,. " . ".

. 't"'f'C' . I': H';"h" :S' 'h" I': .•.. Sp!!~lm~n 5: coll~ctJOJ:l were'. on. ordinary merIt the Legion ,high., ~ 253 .~ar St: 'Ne~ ~dford lla. ~ O......o.y.e, ,~g .. ; ... c..()o,.. display, and, Vatfcanstamps' aM ';'ly recommends it·to the ,Catholic '.. WY 3~3222""''''

."•. ". ' .. l'auntOlJ.:.'; ".> "r'~~ :~,~,. ';, '_ .. ~:,cQvers we~~'~uctioried.', . patroriage.'-of the. entire family.... "(~~,''-.......~' ~._ ........~-....!""!'I..• .. '!"."!'!"!".,;,."'!'

Page 11: 12.11.58

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ITH~ AN\';ttOR­The Family Clinic 11Thurs., Dec•. 11,1958

Urges Couple Find FU,lIness StonehiU Sen~ors Of Unity in Golden Years In 'Who's Who'

.Four Stonehill College sen­By Father John :L. Thomas, S.J. iors from the Fall River DioceseAssistant Professor of Sociology. are included among nominees to

St. Louis Vni:versity "Who's Who in A!Jlerican Uni­It is possible for· couples'i to grow apart rather 'than versities ~nd Colleges," national

together during marriage? Out' last child marrfeda few' listing of outstanding students. They are John D. Connell,months ago; and' now, not only our home but our lives

130 Martha Street, Fall River,seem terribly empty. I guess 'we were so busy with,the:' president of the D.ebate Societychildren we': didn't have and Spe·ech-Arts. Society; AnnThey are growing, but separate- .. much time for each other. ly, not together. V. Guilmette, 1618 Slade Street,

Fall River, business editor' ofJoe has worked very hard, They may not ·discover· this "The Summit," secretary of thebut most of, his Interests are . until they have launched their. Business Society and calJtain ofhis own. We just don't know last child and turn to survey the cheerleaders.how to enjoy things together any- ,their empty nest-and them-

Also Denise S. Murphy, 238more. What can selves. Then they may discover, Main Street, North Easton, co­we do? 'as you have, Rose, that time director of the Confraternity ofYour problem ' .' and unshared experience stand Christian Doctrine and secre­is not as un- between them, tary of the Debate Society; anell

common as you evitabie. What can you do? . " In some measure this' is in-

Frances N. Papazoni, 1 Kilmer may think, Avenue, Taunton.Rose. To some . First, don't make the mistake

of some who find their own mar­ Their selection by facultyextent, it Is a me'rhbers was judged on thenew problem. 'i"iage now so erp.pty that they

basis of scholarship, participa­Owing to the seek something to do by trying . HIGH SCHOOL PRE CANA CONFERENCE: Mem­tion in campus' activities, citi ­earlier age at to run their children's marriages. bers of Our Lady of Grace Parish, Westport, discuss topics

. zenship, .service, and promise. Your children should· remain ' h J C F Mmarriage,sma11- >d'ear to you,a constant source of to be tr.eated. Left to rig t: udy ampbell, ranees onast, . of .future .usefulness. _ er families, and lov~'. and ha'ppiness, but they' Walter DePaola and Rev. Anthojly M. Gomes, conference :. The stude:i:its will receive increased aver- must be allowed 'to . face "their ' .. leader. ,. . , ce~tificates .of· recognition, and age length' of wiJI be' included in the 1959life, the avetage couple'matry- own problems and lead, their

edition of "Who's Who."The~ .:iog in 1950 coUld expect to have ,own lives., - Spa.nish Diplomat Sa'ys 'Cold War wiJI also be entitled to use'. 01 ...,about 41 years of' married life Second, recognize t.he. fact that, together" 'in a .s~I!se,. you a,nd yourhus- . R~"g'io'"s C'~nflict inEss~i1c'e . · the student placement sen,iee

rese'nt' ' band are' starting. a ,new, stage provided by the "Who's Wno'" Under P .': childbeari.ng ':in life, You' ·are now together '. NEW YORK (NG)~The ~p,~Jli~h, .,A.,rp.1:?a;ssador to ·the organization. .

"patterns, . this means: that:'they again.. as the. original. twosome ' United States says the real issue. in the cold wads "a.fightwould· have 14' years together . of the first stage in your family Oklaho·';'·a Cath.olic between religi(;)us belief as the 'fundamental of· society, and. . after their 'last' child' had left .':riycle. Then you were happy and home and married: 'conte'nted with each other's coIri.::. . .. :College Expandingatheism."

'Change' in CY~le ...panionsbip;.you can,.be·so again Ambassador Jose Maria de values." The communist philos­ .TULSA (NC) - Plans have This repres~nts:a remarkable ;if you make the effort.. . ophy, 'he observed, is based on · been announced for the con­Areilza has called on the na­

~haIige in the 't~aditional fa,y;i,IY Discover New Traits .. the belief that there is no God struction of two buildings cost­. tions of the West to realizecycle. For example, couples mar- " What shouid you do? Above and "therefore no moral law, no ·ing an estimated $2,600,000 at rying in 1890 could expect only , all, . start doing things together. that the heart of the strug­ code of conduct, no moral re­ Benedictine Heights College. about 31 yea,rs of joint survival, ~e\;>uild. Youl;' social life as .. a gle between communism and the sponsibility for the individual." Operating with a faculty anti and there wasa fifty-fifty chance couple-there are others facing administrative 'staff of 40, Bene­free world is a conflict between The Spanish Ambassador as­that one of the partners would the. same needs as yourselves. religious ideologies. serted that in the practical dictine Heights is the only c0­die at least two years before their If your finances permit, take Addressing the St. Paul Guild, . educational, four-year collegesphere the chief c:hallenge facing youngest. c:hild haQ married. trips together on your· vacations. . Mr. de Areilza stated that Chris­

These figures suggest that your This can' be so' helpful because tianity is historically the "main problem may become an import- 'you learn to plan and share new ingredient" of western civiliza­ant one for many couples. How experiences together, thus ,re­ tion. He added that "to the does it happen? capturing the couple-feeling .of we.stern mind man is a creature

Well, Rose, I think you point- earlY' marriage. . of.God and his soul has eternal ed out the common source of the ,- No doubt, you feel you know difficulty. The average family, each other perfectly. Y~t as you" . 'Papal Physician'

. cycle places beavy demands for go through the experIence of" . ,\ adaptability upon the .couple. adapting your lives to this new' VATICAN .CITY (NC):- D~. The start life together. in the stage 'of 'unity, you will discover, Fi~ippO' ,Roc~h.i· has be.en·· ap­narrow circle of a loving .two- or rediscover, many traits ana·- .. pOtnted ph~SICIan to Pope ~o~n, some. qualities il1 each other of. which A.member .. ofa.~oman\fa~lly

Once childrel1 arrive,. father. you .are ri'Ot.now aware. ' . With a. l~ng..medl~al tr~dlh?n, devotes in·creasing. energy and 'Rose, ·these are· the golden . Dr, Rocchi, f?8, :'ece~ve,d hiS med­interest to his job because he .. years in which you aile given' the 'ical degree ·from the· University now has added moti,:,~s, to sl1C.-' ..opport,4nity...tQ. 'draw closer to ; of Roine in 1922 and joined the cecd, while mother is ~ully. ab- ". eadi' oth~r and' -to 'God .by ex- '. staff of physicians who serve'the sorbed in the thousand ·and. one perieneing the' fullness' .of. that 'Vatican ,three .years later... details related to bearing, .ie~~- . unity'which:'you" initia'ted at the ing, and launching her brood 'in'" 'altar.' "i.' .. .....~:." .•

life. It is meant. to be a' period of Husband and .wife are busy growth in unity, riot loneliness' .

in separate activities; perh~ps· -in' waiting for the end. 'Remem­too busy or too fully absorbed' ber,' when we start. living in the to pay much ~ttention to each. past, '~e've'stoPPed living in the.· other. present and we no longer have

Grow Separately a future. ·Of course they'love each other.

and cooperate unselfishly in '~J1e . Papal'Farm Gets' task of raising their fl),mily, hut they tend to take their ow'n com­ Herd of Cattle panionship for granted, as if it DENISON ·(NC)-In 'fulfill-' remained as it was at inarriage. ment of. a request by the' late .

But whether they know it or Pope Pius XII, a herd of pure­not, they themselves. are' chang­ bred Aberdeen' - Angus cattle ing. Extending interests and ex' ­ have been sent from Iowa to be. perience are, matuJing theine shipped to the papal farm in .

Italy. The herd consists of 11 heif­

~rs and one bull, donated by a stockman. It 'will be used to start . a 'breeding program' . re.:. quested' by--the'late Pope:-As the' herd, grows the offspring will be given to poor farmers in southern' Europe, C

Father Leo J. Gannon of Har­lan, Iowa, !ed the campai'gnrfor the herd', which, has been graz­ing .on the' Dori Houston· farm near here. M·l-. Houston' accoril ­panied the' herd to New :York City. when it .was. driven from here by truck. "

.Sociologists Meet NOTRE DAME' (NC)-Two

hundred' teachers and" scholars are expected to attend the '20th

BROADCASTER: A full-"' :annual convention of the Ameri,;, blooded Nav&ho, Inqian,· "Sis-, can ,Catholic SociologJ.<;al So­

ciety at the University of· Notre ter Marie, Goretti, S.B.S.,· Dame and nearby St.' Mary's' broadcasts in her native lan- College' from D.eceinb~r.28 to 30. guage every Sunday over the . Ne~rly 40 papers dealing with Catholic Hour program.. in such varied sUbje<:ts as school New Mexico to the 85,'000 ,. des~gregation,'Puerto Rican mf­

·,-gration·and··changes--in--family· " Navaho~ i'n. tne~.Diocese' :of... st.ructure 'will .be presented' at ., Gallop, N.M. NC Photo. the.sessiOns.. ,.

. NICKERSON , FUNERAL and .' MONUMENT

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lltld Surrounding Communiti..

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------ .... " ..Rose -~ .. Sullivan,

. Jeffr~ ,E, .Sullhra~

the western democracies is to for Catholics in Oklahoma. One­resist internal communist sub­ third of its 295 student body •

. version. non-Catholic.

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'571 Second St. Fall River, Mass.

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.~ ~hrislmas For aG.ltt.~OliCof the True Spirit'li't joyous Christmas Seasoll - 'Cr etl Rosaries alld Medals

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Page 12: 12.11.58

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;;~:ii;~;in;;n(;~;ssi:~i~()~Ji'>:\~C.;.,:H","",;:,,-:l-,-~I'J~,..,.,.Th,..-U"_S.;~,.....;~I~:-:-~C_~....,..~l...;..~C.....,.,l~_~_:1:1 ;~:dd L:~;ifY.OU , I.:.' ... .-_.~

BOlLY FAMIlLY HIGH SCHOOL, ~'MT. ST.' MARY'S AC.o\DEMY, NEW BE"lFORD FALL RIVER By Most Rev. 'Ful~on J. Sheen, D.Do

Nine,seniC",:s and four juniors New officers of the Curie are' represented in an, essay an­ There appeared recently in England a book bya 'soIdierrwho

€helT\o-Physicists Science Club thology published by the Nation­ had been in a Nazi prison. One beautiful description is that of- the, are Joseph Duggan, pr~sident; al Essay Association. sacrifice made by a fellow prisoner: . !:... , David Riley, vice president; 'Sodality Union plans include Captain P. died of inalnutrition in the infirmary. Eighteen Diane Judd, secretary; ·Jeanne a mass meeting to acquaint.sodal­ months ago, a few days, before he was captured by 'the Germans Guillotte, treasurer. Members ists with new directives ,for lay in France, he had bought three bars of' will concentrate 'on the tech- ,participation in Mass, a Closed chocolate for his children. aiques of photography during the refreat,.and a tentative schedule The three chocolate bars followed him cwming year. - for two additional general meet­ into deportation and hunger. He kept them

Rt. Rev. Msgr. J;:tmes J. Ger- ings during the school year. all the time in the shreds of his. mattress, l'ard installed student council of- SACRED R~~RTS 'ACADEMY, taking them outto look at once in a while Hcers and,spoke on their privil- FALL RIVER and thinking of his children's joy. eges and responsibilities. Justin Debaters were victorious over ~ , He died of malnutrition, clutching the Kelleher is student council pres- Attleboro High at ,theseason's chocolate bars i,n his' hand. ident. first debate, Winifred Welch and

Robert A: Lawler will repre- Mary Jane Collins upheld the af­ If it were thirst he died of he would sent Holy Family' at Student firmative. not have touched' a cup, of water destined Government Day in' March. Carol Regan, prefect, was. for his children. Our Lord refused meat

chosen Sodalist' of the Month. when He was tired at Jacob's well, because.DOMINICAN ACADEMY. S TIL L MISSllNG: No Janice' DeMello was Journalist He was more hungry to do the will of His

JrALL RIVER word has been heard of theof the Month. Father which to Him was meat and drink.

The glee club will present a COYLE HIGH SCHOOL; whereabouts of Fat her Such self-denial by the Son, of -Go,d inspired .this sOldier' to die of Christmas cantata at 8 Monday TAUNTON Denis Cote, C.SS.R.,' Cana- malnutrition while clutching nutrit~on. His three children never aight, Dec. 15 in the auditoriurt:\. John./' A. Zawacki, Taunton, . dian missioner, e x p ell e d received tliose chocolate. bars, but the world has received t,he ex-

The basketball team's first will represent the' school on Stu­ ample of devoted self-sacrifice., ' ,. , .from North Vietnam on Oct. hort:\e game is today, against dent Government Day at the 16, by the Reds;New Bedford Voke. Jeannine Boston State House, March 13: Ouellette and Joan Panek are Begging as we do for the Holy Father Pope Joho xXIII weSeniors are hearing talks from ' eo-captains of the varsity; representatives of area colleges.. ,Ca~ouflagePlan. constantly meet the'moral descendants of this soldier;' For ex­Claudette Charest' heads the ample: last week our devoted' workers posted a sign in the officeDirectors of admissions from Jayvees'. The annual homecom­ , Stonehill, Boston College, Provi­ Sea res Abortion asking every~ne at the' Propagation of the Faith office to forgo ing gam'e against alumnae is, sending Christmas cards to their associates in this Mission work.dence College, New Bedford In­ 'NEW, YORK (NC)-The ques­~lteduled' for 8 Tuesday night, . All' agreed to send the' money instead'to our' own office at 366stitute of Technology, Worcester Dec. 30.' " , Polytechnic and Bentley have tion whether, therapeutic abor­ lFifth Avenue .for' the Propagation of the Faith. So far there has

School president Una Raymond been realized over $65. IIi. a certain sense, ,The National Office oftion should be liberalized hassent speakers thus far. 'been termed a "double-barreledwill represent DA, a1' Student , A football banquet is sched,.. the Society for the' Propagation of, the Faith has no employees; Government Day. , one" a~ the first annual confer-'uled for Tuesday night, Dec. 16 we have 'only missionaries, men and women who Sacrifice what­

ence of the Society for the Scien­The debate team will be heard at '7 in the school cafeteria. It ever they can for the Holy Fathe'r and his ~issions. tific'Study of Sex.1m. WSAR from 7:05 to 7:30 Sun­ will honor the Coyle' team for

Principal figures in the con­day eve'ning, Dec. 21. They will winning the Bristol County present, a program of Advent League Championship for' the troversy over therapeutic abor­ We read often of men in the desert who died of thirst a mile hymns. tion were Dr. Samuel A. Cos­ from an oasis, but here is a soldier who died of starvation withsecond season and also for. tak­ grove, professor of obstetrics and chocolates In his' hand, because he 'loved his children more thaning the city championship and

permanent possession of the gynecology. at the college of his own life, even the memory of his children. My dear CatholicRei ief Di'reetor' medicine of Seton Hall Univer­ people, those three bars of chocolate probably cost the equivalentfourth Lions Club trophy. sity, South Orange and Dr. Alan' of what every Catholic gave to the Holy Father last year to aid hisHighest hon'ors for the lastLauds Approval' F. Guttmacher, director of the 300 MIssion Societies, namely, 30 cents. It rea11y should be $30marking period went to Senior department of obstetrics andUNITED NATIONS (NC)~ each per year we give instead of 30 cents. The \Adventists give,Thomas Mikulis, Junior Walter gynecology at Mount Sinai Hos­United Nations approval for a Arabasz, Sophomore Michael $33. each year to their Missions. Make, a sacrifice each day and pital here.World'Refligee Year to start in at the end of the month sene! it to the Holy Father Pope JohnStefanik and Freshman Geoffrey Dr. Cosgrove said estimatesJune 1959, has been praised by Kane. ' ,XXIII t~rough his Society for the Propagation of the Faith.'.

'showed there were up to onethe president of the Internation­million abortions performed in

al Catholic Migration Council Cooperation of Faiths the United States each year and, , ",~ GOD LOVE·YOU"to'M'.S. ·for' $5 "I submitted a ,question to

«[CMC) , James Norris. -AOd S' hell 'that most ,of these were illegal.' our 10Cal'newspaper to' be asked of 'the man in the. street' andMr. Nor who also is Eufo_ :; I S tone I "'l,'lie ostensibly laudable pur- "', ,woo this money" '; ~ • to ,~.K; for' $5 "I" 'ain .enclosing $5. I gotpean director of Catholic Relief' "~oo~eratio?.~f people, of' ~"' pose of red4cing, illegitimate, it for caring" for, a neighbor's dog wheo they were 00 vacation.Services _ National Catholic', faiths IS an I~portan~ fllctor In, abortion is one barrel. But it ,is . I am 12 years old" ; . ~ to'Mr:and Mrs.' J.B~ for $lOO."This amount isWelfare Conference, recalled', the gr~wth of Stonehill ,College,; merely-camouflage for the other.. 'a portion of the money'wer'eceived a~w~ddhlg"gifts. We re­that Msgr. Edward F. Swan"': acc<!rdmg' t~ a. statement ~~de barrel, which is, ,the 'desire of "'eeived 90 many things that we want 'the poor to-share-them withatrom CRS-NCWC executive di- ',by, Rev. R~chard H. Sulhvall, assemblies such ~- this to ext~nd Us." • ,', ' . ." , . ,

-- ' CRS NCWC'' " t'·,· C.S.C., preSIdent. __ urn, - execu Ive 'H 'd th t 1 . he th~ inqlcations for ' allegedly ... ··t.. di t h 'd d - "'1 e sal a vo unteers In t

rec or, a ma e a simi ar , ,town of, Easton engaged in a legitimate abortion far beyond,' propo~al at .t~e 1957"ICMC. con- $IOo;OOQ drive for the college are medical ones: This objective is If you are wondering about Chdstmas gi~ts whrnot sacrifi~e' gress m ASSIS1, Italy,. :Prot'estant, Catholic and JewIsh. -- demonstrably sparked by the something for the Missions, order a statue 'of, Our Lady of Television' '

psychiatrists and-'-God help us'Early, this year'the idea' of 'a The three faiths are repre'sented and send'it to a friend: You'will be happy because your 'shopping World Refu~ee Year was given, "in the student body, faculty; and is done, your friend wiU' be happy because a meaningful gift has-by non-medical ,social work­

ers." ,impetus by a group of British nonc.teaching staff of the college. been received and the Missions ,will ,be happy because 'yc;>ursacri­Dr. Guttmacher, argued thatparliamentarians and was later "Stonehill College plans ex­ fice-offering of $3 for the' statue' helps the miss.ic;maries to bring

law was "man::made" ,and "notendorsed by the executive com- periditure of $5 million in new the paglms the good tidings of the greatest Christmas' gift of all ­immutable." He said that sincelIlitteeof the UN Refugee Fund., faciiities in addition to -$1 mil-, The Gift of Christ Himself. Send us' your offering along with yourother laws o~ the Church hadTen nations joined', in, sponsor-" lion in buildings already com­ r-equest arid 'we will send the statue" to you~ :been modified ,by time the sameIng the resolution before the UN pleted. I take this me,ans of in­might apply to some restrictions&ene'ral 'Assembly: Argentina, viting ,the people .of Easton to against abortion. 'He did not Cut out this Column; pin' your sacrifice 'to it and mail it ioilieAustria the Dominican Repub- visit their college campus at specify the Church laws to whichlic, Fra~ce, Iran, Italy, tlie'Neth- anY' time," said'Father~ullivan. Most Rev;' Fulton J, 'Sheen, National Director of The Society for he referred': the Propagation of the-Faith, 366 Finh Aven~.e. New York 1, N, Y.,erlands, Norway, arid ,United ,Abrah!im Br~oks is ch~irman,

or your DIOCESANiDIRECTOR REV.RAYMONDT: CONSIDINji:,Kingdom and the United States. of the commumty campaIgn. The General Assembly's en- .. '. ~.

Ohio' Hospital Plans 368 North MainStreetj'·FaU Rlv.er;. Mass:

dorsement of the proposal was Priests on, Illinois Technicians School ~ a defeat for"the communist Traffic Safe",' Board YOUNGSTOWN (NC) '- A DAUGHTERS, OF st. PAUL bloc, whose eight members cast ,SPRINGFIELD (NC) ..:- Two school of cytotechnology to train' Iftvite youn~' girls (14-231 to ~bor ill the only votes against it. priests were among eight church- technicians in "smear" diagnosis Christ's vast vineyard as aft Apostle of th~

Since 1945 more than 40 mil- men named by Illinois Gov. Wil­ tests f~r early detection of can­ Edificatians; Press, Radio, Movies' and Tele. lion p,ersons, most of them vic- liam G. ~tratton ,to a Religious cer will be opened at St. ·Eliza-' vision. 'With'theie modem' means;' these

tims of communist agressIon in Leaders Traffic Safety Advisory beth's Hospital here Jan. 2. Dr. rt.'Ii~si~ary, Sisters bring' Christ's DOctrine to aU" ,regardless, 'of race, colo,' ..or creed.',Eastern Europe, China, Korea Board. They will assist in devel­ Bernard Taylor, director of lab­ F~"info~ination'\writo to: ' .,' :and Vietnam, have fled their oping an education campaign oratories said the school will' , ' ,', .. REV. MOTHER SUPERIOR,

homes, and bec.ome. refugees., aimed :a:t emphasizing the moral be the fourth of its kind in, Ohio 50 ST. PAUL'S AV~~ '80STON3O,: MASS. Their need has called for an un- ,aspects of 'safe driving. , and the 30th in the United States. paralleled humani"taria'n effort', The priests 'named on the board on the'part of governments and are M.sgr., Thomas F. Fitzgerald ,!:,~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~t'~"~'~~'~'~r voluntary agencieS'ln' the free 'of ChIcago and Father Raymond ' ~'I

P·r, . , :~ . ' world. ,.,O'Connor of Springfield.

'Now Is The Time' to 'visit our shOwroom, and choose that special Christ ­

,mas gift for your Church, Pastor, Curate, Sister or special lay friend. Here you will find a superior seiec­tion of domestic and imported liturgical appointments' and reHgio~ articles;.)ncluding Chalices, Vestments, Nativity Sets; CeramicS, Enamels, Wood Carvings.

AS long time specialists' in Chur~h memorial ,gifts, our staff is available to advise and aid you

. ••••• in selecting stained glass, bronze and woodwork in tmthentic ecclesiastical designs.

~ -. .. - . c;;-et4TSa Of .LITURGICAl ART!!,

G:id~El',NEW I{OREAN"DELEGATE: Newly conse"·' crated'Maryknoll Bishop James V. Pardy of Brooklyn, Vicar. ' Apostolic of Chong Ju, Korea, is greeted ~at, Seoul AirpQJ;1;' ' LiNa/AIi Sa/iii~ ;lltcJit.. J., by Msgr. Egano ,Lambertini. Apostolic Delegate to Kor~a'o ' , . '3' S"MME' 'SliEEr' • i O'STON 10, MASS.' ~t to. right: Father Joseph, W. Connors, Maryknoll su':; " . ,.....,. __-w I'1acw"'"' • poerIor III Korea; Msgr. George Carroll NCWC-CRS rep;.;" 1IIttwMON.. IIA '.UU-H" '.HM. .res~ntative in Seoul; Bishop Pardy and Msgro. Lambertini. .• NC Photo. ' : ~.~_.;;.;.;.~.;;.;;,;,;;.;.;.;;.;.~.;,.~.;,;,;.,;.;.;.~,,~,~,~.;.;.;,,;.;.; .. .. .. ...... •• .•;~;,;.•;~;,;.;;.;,.;.;.;.;.;.;,;.;,~,; ;,;,.;,;,;,;,;,;.;,;,;;,;,;.;,;.;.;,;.;.;,,;,;.;.;.~.;.;.;.;,;,;,,;~.£

; .. •. ~_A .~ ',...-".- ._-,. ;. .'

Page 13: 12.11.58

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i ,. n ..

Women Unite Behind Chari.fy·;BaU' Continued from Page One

garet-Mary Guild; Chatham -Mrs. Ralph R. Lally, Association of the Sacred Heart; East Fal­mouth-Mrs. Edward T. Mello, St. Anthony's League; Falmouth -Mrs. Frederick A. English, St. Patrick's Guild, Mrs. Matthew R. Souza, Falmouth Circle Daugh­tel'S of Isabella.

Hyannis - Lillian Shea, Fr. McSwiney Circle Daughters of Isabella and Ursula Wing, St. Francis Xavier Guild; Osterville -Mrs. Donald James, Our Lady of Assumption Guild; Province­town - Mrs. Josephine -Enos, Catholic Dal,lghters of America and Mrs. Mildred Bent, Holy Rosary Sodality.

Sagamore - Mrs. Mary Boles, Mother Cabrini Circle; Sand­wich-Mrs. Martin F; Lawless, Corpus Christi Guild; South Yarmouth - Mrs. Thomas Con," way, St. Pius X Guild;· West Harwich-Mrs. Joseph Galizio, Association of the Sacred Heart.

Woods Hole-Mrs. Thomas D. Lawrence St. Joseph's Guild' Wellfleet":"'-Mrs. Ida Tenney OU; Lady of Lourdes Guild; Nan­tucket-Mrs. Charles Flanagan St. Mary's Guild;' Oak Bluff~ Mrs. Alfred MateH Sacred Heart Guild. '

Representatives from the Fall River District are:

Mrs. James B. Clarkin, Wo­men's ,Guild of Holy Name Church; Mrs. Albert Roy, Holy Rosary Parish' Women's' Guild; Mrs. William F. Bennett, Im­maculate Conception Women's Guild and Council' Miss Helen Chace Catholic Wo:Uen o'f Notre Dame 'Parish; Mrs. Marie Aguiar, Our Lady of Health Council.

Mrs Peter Gibney Sacred Heart 'Parish Council; Rev. Henri Laporte, O.P., St. Anne's Coun­cil of Catholic Women; Mrs. John Silvia St Anthony of Padua Cathoiic Women's Council; Miss Rose Machado, 51. Elizabeth's Guild; Mrs. Arthur Silvia, Cath­olic Women's Organization of Our Lady of the Angels;'"

" '. Mrs. EImer .AItken, 51. LoUIS

ParIsh Coun~il; Mrs. .'~homas Tache, Council of C,atholI~ ~O-, men, ~t. Jean the Baptiste Church; Mrs. Bra~ley. McDe~-, mott, St. Josephs Women~ Guild; Mrs. Lawrence A. Coyle, )0'

51. Mary's Cathedral Parish'Unit;The affiliate chairmen in the, Mrs. Raymond'Possion, St. Math:- Attleboro area, are Mrs';,Adrien ieu Cou~cil of Catholic w'0men; Piette, ConfraternitY' of' Chris­Rev. Arthur..C, dos Reis, 51. thin Mothers' Mrs. Alfred McNal:" Michael's .Parish Council, .' .ly, Daughte;s of Is'abella; Mrs.

.cle Bien Etre . (inter-parochial); Mrs. Merilda Munro,e, Dames:de St. Anne.

Mrs. Catherine A. LeTendre, Daughters of Isabella-Hyacinth' Circle; Mrs. Benvinda Roderick, Immaculate Conception Parish Council; Mrs. Elizabeth Ronan, Ladies Auxiliary of Ancient 01' ­del' of Hiberniqns; Mrs. Antonio

. Lemieux, Ladies of St. Anne­St. Theresa's Parish; Mrs. Mary Rego, Mount Carmel Women's Club.

Mrs. Wanda Hemingway, Our Lady of Perpetual Help Parish Council; Mrs. Rodolph Faradis, Patronesses of Sacred Heart Home; Miss Laurette 1. Beaure~

gard, Society of' Children of Mar~-St. Anthony Parishi Mrs., Fiavien Cournoyer, Sodality of St. Anne-St. Anne's Parish; Mrs., Fred~rick . Murray, St., Anne s ,SocIety --'- Sacred HeaJ;'t Church.

Mrs. Rose Dufficy, St. Eulalia Court-Mass. Catholic Order of Foresters; Mrs. Stanley J. Szu­lik,' St. Hedwig Holy Rosary Society; Miss Lucille Benjamin, St. Hyacinth Council of Catholic Women; Mrs. Olive Avila,St. John the Baptist Parish Council;' Mrs. Maurice Couture, St. Kil ­ian's Guild-St. ,Kilian's Church.

Mrs. Agnes Gallagher,St. Law­rence Parish Council; Mrs. Ann Ryan, St. James Parish Council; Mrs. Antoinette Bertalotto, St. Mary's Guild - St. Mary's C:hurch; Mrs. Marjorie Hen­riques, Sacred Hearts' Academy Alumnae Association; Fair­haven, Mass.

Mrs. Mary C. Leonardo, As­sociation of the Sacred Heart, St. Mary's Church, Fairhaven; Mrs. Joseph Rezendes, The Sacred, Heart's Associa~ion, St. Joseph s, Chu~ch, FaIrhaven; Mrs. ~ertha SmIth, RO,sary Altar Sodality, St. Anthony s Church;, Mrs. Fannie. R. Gagt;0.n, League of St. FranCIS of ASSISI.

Mrs; Gert~ude Kruger, Sa,cred Heart s So.cIety of St. Bomface Church; MIS~ Bertha Johnson, 51. Mary's Guild of St. Mary's

'Church, So. Dartmouth;, Mrs. Cornelius Harrington, St. Rita's Altar Guild, Mission of St. Pat­trick's Church,' Wareham; Mrs., .:rane Blondin, 51. Patrick Parish Council of Catholic Women of, Wareham '

Mrs. ,RICO. DeNadal, Cat~ol~c Women s GUild of St. Patrick s Church; Miss Maureen McClo~-key, St. Peter & Paul Women s Club;. ~rs. Hector .E. Barret~e, Sodalities of St. Anne & ChIl­dren of Mary, St. Roch's Parish; Mrs. Edward Shaw, St. William's Guild; Mrs. Victor Aguiar, San­to Christo Parish Council.

Mrs. George Turgee, Assump­tion Circle No. 74, Daughters of Isabella; Miss Catherine Hogan, Catholic Wome~'s Club; Mrs. George E. Sullivan, Jr., ,Fall Ri.ver Diocesan Coun~il.of Cath­ohc Nurses; Mrs. Wilham <?as­tanh.o, Mother McCauley GUild.

MiSS Susan Whalon, Mt. St. Mary Acad~my Alumnae; Mrs. Raymond DiOnne, Sacred Heart. Alumnae ~ssociation; ,Mrs." Rachel Pelletier, Blessed Sacra,. ment Church Women's Guild. Assone~Mrs. Raymond Do,.

herty, St. Bernard's ,Women's Guild; Central Village - Mrs. John J. Holland, St. John the Baptist Ladies· Guild; North Westport- Mrs. Jules Robin, Our Lady of Grace Women's Guild; Somerset-Miss Catherine Furze, Altar & Rosary Societies of St. Thomas More Church; Mrs. Leo Lacroix, Franco­American Women's Club, Inc., Mrs. Carton D. Boardman, Somerset Catholic Women's Club; Mrs. Gilbert Lowney, St. Patrick's Circle No. 334, Daugh­,tel's of Isabella; Swansea-Miss Jane Borden, 51. Dominic's Wo­men's Guild; Mrs. Joseph Bilo­deau, S9dalities of St. Anne .& Children of Mary, St. ,Louis de France;' Mrs. James Griffin, St. Michael's Parish Women's Club; Mrs. Russell B. Cochrane, Our Lady of ,Fatima Guild. " '

The New Bedford alfiliatel are:

Miss Anna M. Harrington, ~

cient Order. .of,Hibernians; Mra. Zoe Reckords,·Cathollc Women'.' Club; Mrs. F10l'& Dearo8iera, 0.-

Edward Galligan, 51. John's Mothers Club' Mrs. Vincent Mc­Hugh, Holy dhost Mothers Club.

Also Mrs. ,Jean Fortin, ',51. Ann's Sodality; Mrs. Albert Mousseau Jeanne d'Arc Council' Miss Lillian Audette' Attlebor~ Catholic Women's Cl~b' '

From No. Attleboro 'the Mrs. John M. Powers. 51. Ann's So­datity; Mrs., Thomas Mullen, Catholic Women's Club' Mrs. Thomas Charron Daughters Of Isabella; Mrs. Le~ Piette, Ladies of 51. Ann's Sodality" Mrs. George Whalen, St. Mary'~ Guild.

Mrs. Cyril K.. Brennan, St.. Mary's Guild, No. Seekonk; Mrs. Charles Halbirig Mansfield Cath- ' . otic Women's, <h,Ui>; ~t:s. HarrY, Borden; NortOn Catholic: Wo-' men's Club.

Franei5eaa Fathen

OUR'LADY'S CHAPEL

CONFESSIONS EVERY DAY

ALLDAY 8:30 A.M. ti119.00 P.M.

. Slindays till 5 P.M.

571 Pleasant St., New Bedford WY 6-8%'74

. Wrtte toe • ~ -.... > ".

P. O. Box 5742 .Baltimore'; ,M4L .,

Trinitarian Fathers

eovs WANTED for the Priesthood and Brotherhood. lock of funda NO bnpedi­ment.

THE ANCHOR ­ 13 Thurs., Dec. 11, 1958

New School Law In Court Test

TRIVANDRUM (NC) - The controversial school take-over

. bill, which allows the communist

ATTLEBORO'S AREA PLANS: Myles Daley, presi­dent of the Attleboro District of the St. Vi,ncent de Paul Society and Mrs. George Bauza arrange the Box and Patron lists for the Bishop's Annual Charity Ball with Rev. Edmond L. Dickinson.

Archbishop Urges, Men to Promote More Active Participation in Mass

CINCINNATI (NC) - Arch­, bishop Karl J. Alter of Cincin­nati has called on Catholic imen to take the lead in supporting' programs aimed at more active congregational participation in

, the Mass. He cited as an encouragement

and a guide the instruction froni. the Sacred Congregation of Rites

which gave directives for more active participation.

Addressing the archdiocesan Council of CaU:olic Men, he urged the members to make at­tainment of. a "first stage" of such participation one of their chief projects during the coming year.

,~ Archbishop Alter reminded the men that "the Mass is to

• • •

soFmaethexetrents;adyial~ong,Ueob.e;.een: •

Serves'on Board WASHINGTON (NC)-Father ,

Robert J: Slavin, O.P., president • of Providence College, has been • named to a 14-member nation3i,.. advisory committee of the u.s.

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the celebrant and the congrega­tion. We are not supposed to sit

,there busy about our own devo­tions."

"Everyone in the congregation 'should be ready to answer the priest," he "declared, "not just a few piping voices."

' ••••~

government of Kerala to take over some private schools-­those which the state considers to be poorly managed-may face some new tests by the courts.

A court test is predicted by Catholic members of the legisla­ture because of a vague provi­sion in the bill that exempts from state seizure institutions called "minority schools."

The newly-passed -bill was a revision of a measure enacted last year, which touched off vio­lent demonstrations within the state's Christian communities. The original measure was not given the 'needed presidential approval because of an advisory opinion from the Indian Su­preme Court that certain of it. provisions were unconstitu­

, tiona!.

Blessed Mother MIAMI (NC)-Bishop Cole­

man F. Carroll of Miami has an­nounced that this New Floridian diocese has been placed under the protection of Our Lady's Im­maculate Conception.

..

.•t ,FOR YOUR LUNCH TREAT • ' '.. Stuffed Quahogs .' 2 for 29c • . . '. i

39c

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Office of Education. = . = The advisory committee will ,• . •

"conduct research iDto the use • • 'of new educational' media, in"- • • c:luding television,radio, motion ,. = pictures ~nd tape recordings,' . • •

•• ~

•• ~

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••• -.• and we will ma.ke provisions to care •• : for your needs.' :

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Page 14: 12.11.58

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'. ~ "'.,

Children's Parties"

The' Parish' Parade-NOTRE DAME, ST. MARY'S,' FALL RIVER NEW.BEDFORD

A cake sale will be ~eld after all Masses Sunday, Dec. 14. Cakes will be received in the lower church at 7:30 the previous night. Mrs. Eugene Poitras is chairman for the' sale.

The annual Christmas party, sponsored by officers of the Wo­men's Guild will be held 'in urn at 7:'45 "Monday evening, Jesus Mary Academy auditori ­

. Dec. 15. SACRED .HEART, FALL RIVER

The al'lnual Christmas party of the Women's Guild featured entertainment by A. E~mund Furguieleand Miss Nancy Teyes. The .audi~qce joiI:ied in Ghrist ­mas carol.s,. and gifts were' pre­sented to:the parish clergy. Ar­rangemeniS .were made by past presidentS .,of the guild. ; ST. JOSEPH'S, WOODS HOLE "

The Women's Guild is spon­soring a Christmas ·Sale. Sunday,

, Dec.. 14. :'1\: Christmas party 'for parish children is'scheduled for Sunday, ·Dec. 20. HOLY REDEEMER, /

_~ CHATHAM .. ' A Christmas Sale will be held

today, fro'ro,10 to 3 in the after­noon. A ,Children's Christmas party is"·planned for Sunday, Dec. 21,. under the sponsorship' . S emen ~o of the Confraternity of Christian ~i~A~E:FORD' V~TICAN CITY (NC) __ H!s Doctrine;'.., . M b ", f.. M' '. N .ao~mess Pope John X?CIII has

_ elI\ ers a. '. onslgnor. oon 'sent the late Pope PIUS XII'sST PATRICK'S C' I 'h ld th . , I Chr'st '. " .• " . ' IrC e e .~~~ an~~a I - : 'famed white typewriter to Ar'ch-FALMOlJTlI '. mas party la~t~ghtmthelower . 'bishop Giovanni Montini of

The a~'llllal ?~rIsh Chrii>tJI:ias church.. MonSIgnor" Gallagher" . Milan 'as a personal memento of party . fo~; chIldren. attendmg .. pastor, openedthe.:pt~tingwith .~ .the late Pontiff.' .' catechlsm::classes Will be .held prayer . .... , ,.'. 0 t'h" t" . 't p" P'

d:'··: "D 17 "'h" W ... '. , .. : '... .' n IS ypeWrI er ope IUSWed nes .~y!, ec, . ·~e. om-:. EntertammenY~was'furnished '.' .: t'f h' . h d en's GUIld' sponsored· a .Cana . b . Mr M " Vi 'Fl' d ., .... '!/'Iro e ma!1y 0 IS speec es an

. ,:' . . .. y '. s. ary ...' >•• 00 , MIss ..:: .discourses. It was sent to Ar'ch­Conference.:last week.... Bermce Fagon ·Mlss Mary Ann' '. b' . h M t··· t .. " , . , ".. '.: "' . '., IS op on Inl as a memen 0 OUR L~nY OF VICTO.~!, CENTERyILLE '.

Members of Our Lady of VIC­tory Guild exchanged Christmas presents at'their December meet­ing. A children's Christmas party is planne.d'.for Sunday, Dec. 14. The MeIi'S Club will meet Thursday; Dec. 18. ST. JOHN THE BAPTiST, CENTRAL '. VILLAGE _

Chri'stm'as' plans for the parish CYO unit· include Ii· hayride caroling party and the making of Christmas wreaths and other. decoration~ .for the church. All members ':0.1 the parish .<:ooper­ated in a'· bazaar sponsored by the yout!l' group.

. ST. ANTJ{ONY',S, .MATTAPOISETT

The R9S~ry-Altar society met last nigtifiii: the chl'rch' hall and new members were 'enrolled. A demonStration\ of Christmas greens arrangements. was given. 'OUR LADY. OF THE ASSUMPTION, OSTERVILLE

The iiririual Christmas sale featured': ,gift suggestions . and decorati6I1s:~ The newly organ­ized CYO..group ·.\Va·s in. charge

..... of a smick bar:iirid· buffet supper was served by Women's Guild members.. Mrs. Jerome Bowes was general ~hairman for the sale and s·upper. Kathy Nese was in charge of U~e ~e~nagers' snack bar. '

JUBILARIAN'::' Father Francis J., Connell; C.SS.R., . has observed the5.Qth anni­versary .of his: .religious.pr~

. fession. . The . ':70-y~ar~old

~priest is, dean of religious cornrnunitles"'a'ffhe .·Cathollc' UniversitY"of America.' NC Photo.

A parent tetmager p.anel dis- , cussion followed the December meeting of the Parish CYO. Con­troversial' subjects on the mod­em generation were given con­sideration by both sid·es.

AdultSservi'ng on the panel 'were Mrs. John Pisarczyk, Mrs. Alexander Krowchim, Henry Hesford;and John Kinney. . Teenage ·panelmembers.· in-,

'. chided 13everlyBoteIho, Michael Callahan, Blanche Bettencourt, and Joseph Costa. Father Clark served as the moderator.

Cheerleaders for .St. ,.Mary's CYO team ate Beverly Botelho, Phylli~ Oliv~ra,.Diahe Jeffrey, Theresa Oagnier;\Joanne LeBeau and Karen Rothmy'er. : .. ST. GEORGE'S, WESTPORT

The newly eleCted officers of the Holy' Name Society were in­

.. stalled by Rev. Lorenzo Morais, : pastor. They:are Andrew Moran, pres~dent;. Joseph Bollea, vice . Jr., center, arid James A. Keeley, right, oldest altar boys' at president;.' Leonard Yergeau,'" ..' secretary; Nor man Proulx, - Holy Narne Church,'Fall RIver, are congratulated by Father treasurer.. .'. . . ' / Donald A. Couza, assistant pastor, f~llowing their reception

The relIgIOus, course for the . ..' 'h Al .'. t' db . parish will be held at 7 in the . mto the Kmghts of t e tar, an orgamza IOn sponsore . ! ~vening, December 14. One sec- '. the Serra Club of Fall· River•. tionof the filmstrip, The Apos- .... '"

. tIes' Creed, will be the subject, :'.·Typewriter Goes matter. . , A M - /I. .

Rlmr,nerand ~1;;S.'M~rIe Hamp- .. becaus.e he had 'workedclosell ~on, COI:!lrnumty smgmg and the' . with the late Pontiff. exchanging .of gifts followed. . Miss Mary Foley and Mrs.

Florence' Foster were co-chair­men for the affair.

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053·1691 Mass Kit •••••. $100 (:hallce .•• ~ • , ... $40 Vescments ••••• :$58 Altar .. • •• • • • . 75 Clborlum ..••• • •. 40 Mass Book .•• , •. 25 '.Tabern~clfl ..•.. 25 Monstrance •• ~ •.. ' 40 Stations . . . • • • •• ZSTRUE - SEAL 8anctuaryLa~p. IS Pys ..•..•.••••• 15 Altar Linens.... 11

~.' Aluminum' Window OUR POOR MISSIONARIES WILL BE VERY HAPPY TO OFFER(:0: HO~Y MAss FOR YOUR iN~ENTIONS. ARTISTIC CARDS.

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FALL .:RlvER, LEPER COLONY in India. This place is not popUlar; yet, self-saOo' OS:8:~022 '. rificingPriests. Sisters and .Nurses see Christ in these Ulcera~

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~'. "<.,14 . ,,-THE ANCHOR . , Thurs., Dec. 11, 1958 .

..Cardinal Hails New Advances

MILAN (NC),;-,-!fhe first . all-glass chu.r~hto 'be built

I .

in Italy has been praised by Cardinal DesignaleGiovan­ni Montini of Milan as a remind­

_er of what the house of the Lord should be,

The Archbishop' called the ul­tra-modern edifice a reminder that the church '''is a place of assembly where men raise their thoughts to God and find them­selves brothers."

In blessing the church at .Bar­anzate, on the outskirts of Milan, the Archbishop declared that living religion "not only does not exclude wha't is new, but deSires, demands. and .seeks it and knows how to find it' in the souL"

. Archbishop Monti~i also noted that the use of glass was appro­'priate because its quality to dif­fuse light reminds .all 'of the light of God and the warmth of divine ·love.

The walls of the church are of opaque glass and' the ceiling is of a prefabricated material made from Compressed glass.

\ .. .

A·B·HA TEeLE· HAIMAIOT Abba' means .father,. and poor Father Balmanot way off In Eritrea

must really be a father to all the children In his far-flung parish . at Hebo; He must provide them with' food and

shelter, besides ·teaching them the catechism. At present, he is In the direst need of a sitnple structure which will serve as school, dormitory, and dining room. There, he will be able to feed

~tl\!(Ji1 not only their little emaciated bodies, but espe­cially their soUls. $2,000 will build this monu­ment .to. the livlng.·or ,the· dead•.Will you mem­

""""='--"U oria:I~Il':loved' one and extend God'skingdc)m? .

. . " .' . CHRISTMAS SHOPPING

Let our ;zealous missionaries do your ChristlQas shopping. We have a very attractive ,GIFT CARD with pressed' flowers from Bethlehem.. Spiritualize your giving. Have a MASS' offered; give an

FAIR-SHARE .WHAT GOD HAS SHARED WITH YOU.

ESCAPE THE TOMB· ooWe do Bot wholly die, what's best In lU escapes the. tomb'" Row

wonderfUl to live OD eveD after death through the eternal priest ­hood of an adopted SOD. Seminarians MAT- . THEW and THOMAS In India beg $600. each for six years' training. ADORATION NOVICE-' SISTERS LUCILA and IN1FANTA require. $300 each for two ye;rrs' preparation. . They patiently, hopefully await your generosib•. ~ou

can !PRJ', ,as you like.

.' . \. .

MAKE YOUR WILL HIS WILL. PLEASE REMEMBER THE GOOD LORD AND HIS NEAR EAST MISSIONS IN YOUR LAST WILL.

. NOT TOYS BUT BREAD We all love the land of onr birth. We all cherish the scenes of OUl'

ehlldhood. Don'. yOU think that Our Blessed' Lord, too· must have Ii soft' spot hi His Reart for Bethlehem ana Nazareth? The PONTIFICAL MISSION FOa PALESTIN.E Is strivmg to t:lke eare of the homeland of.Christ and HI'I Blessed Mothel'. Please give a TEN DOLlLAR FOOD PACKAGB to some pOor child In· the Holy' Land. MON­

. SIGNOR RYAN NEEDS YOU! To show OUI'

~ratitude, we will send you a beautlfulHOLY LAND ROSARY.' .

~

. WHY, NOT DO GOOD NOWWHILE.YOUARE STILL ALIVE?

~'l2e3rtistOlissions~ ., ... FRANQS CARDINAL SPELLMAN, Preside...

. J. Mlgr;,P.t.,P. Vuohy,Nat:1 Sec', ;' Send all Communications tOI

CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOOAnON 48.0 Lexington Ave.

, at 46th St.' New Yorf< 17, N. . Y.

. I

I

Page 15: 12.11.58

THE 'AN-CHOR'- 15 Thurs., Dec. 11, 1958

Communes Take Privacy Away

MILWAUKEE (NC)-;--A fourth of the human race lost title to any property it could call its own when China's populatfon was 'organized into large com­munes this fall, a Jesuit mission­ary said.

Father Charles McCarthy, S.J., former prisoner of the Chinese communists, spoke here of changes in mainland China so far-reaching that "thoughtful Catholic laity with warm, hon­est hearts should pause and look at them a little longer."

The huge segment of human­ity in China may forget there is another, human, way of life, be­cause of the brutal force used to organize communes, extreme forms of Soviet collectivization in which nothing, economIc or familial, is left' to the' privacy of the individual.

No Family Life Loss of property has been ac­

complished by loss of family life long cherished by the Chinese people, Father McCarthy report­ed, and the story behind the ,loss is one of terrorism, executions and arrests.

The Jesuit Father who sent news report~ from Peking and Shanghai from 1947 to 1949 for the N.C.W.C. News Service, es­timated that there were at least 2,500,000 executions in six terror campaigns conducted between 1949, when the communists took over, and 19:;i5. More than eleven million persons were sentenced to slave labor camps or "re­education" in prisons, he as­serted. .

To all our friends and many patrons 0.0.

We wish the very'best during the coming year!

\

FALL RIVER -GAS COMPANY 155 NORTH MAl N STREET

KNIGHTS OF THE ALTAR: Father Joseph Cabral, pastor of Our Lady of Angels Church, Fall River, receives altar boys into Serra Club-sponsored organization. Servers are Manuel Raposa, left, and Ronald Correia.

Americ'an Franciscan Heads Brazilian See VATICAN CITY-An Ameri- priests and five Brothers who

can Franciscan mIssionary has went to the Brazilian interior .in 1943 to found missions entrustedbeen named a Bishop and first to the Holy Name Province of

head of a new See in Brazil. the Franciscan Order which hal He is Father James A. Schuck, its headquarters in New York.

O.F.M., a native of Pennsylvania, The Prelature Nullius of Cris­nominated Titular Bishop of talandia comprises a rural area Avissa and Prelate of the Pre­ larger than New York and New lature Nullius of Cristalandia, in Jersey combined, with an Indian the central Brazilian state of and· white population of about Goias. '65,000. There were no resident

Bishop-elect Schuck is a mem­ priests in the territory until the ber of the original group of nine friars arrived in March 1957.

Urges Active School' 'Program 'Laity· , ST. LOUIS (NC)-A great par­ -We know that our schools are

ticipation by l' ~ lay teachers in made better by the participa­the operation and policy making

ti~n of different groups with dif­. of Catholic high schools has been

fewent view points," he observed.urged by Archbishop Joseph E. Ritter of st. Louis. . "They (the lay teachers) must

The Archbishop, praising the become an integral part of our "fipe contribution" lay teachers schools - in the planning for have made, encouraged priests them, and in the formulation ofand nuns to bring lay teachers

all policies and practices in allinto their counsels on school af­fairs. our schools."

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Page 16: 12.11.58

- THE ANCHOR IDanger to M«;)rality Sit. Gertrude l 16 Thurs., Dec. 11, 195~. Continued from Page One pictures, of which 280 were

scored the serious problems domestically mace and 43 were $aiiiislnCrosswords Russia ns Allow which this medium currently from abroad. .....---..._.....- By ~enry. Michael--.....---..Mposes to public and private mor­ Of domestic' products 97 or

ality. 34.64% . were .{\.1; 79, or 28.22% American Priest 'S' Films Decrease were A2; 65 or 23.21 % were A3;

·He cited the substantikl de­ 39 or 13.93% were B. There were To Enter Moscow crease in the number of "B" no condemned domestic films. _ WASHINGTON (NC) ­films (Morally Objectionable in Of the foreign product nine or

The Soviet Union has clearedPart for All) since the inaugura­ 20.93% were AI; seven or 16,28% tion of the Legion's new system were A2; eight or 18.60% were the way for an American of classification last December, A3; 12 or 27.91%.were:8; five'or: priest to minister to the AI, A2, A3. '11.63% condemned; two films or needs 'of American Catholics

The commendable achievement 4.65% were separately classified. in Moscow after a delay of moreof'one maj or company of whose Widening their remarks to in­ than' three years.43 pictures released, 44 received' Clude also the media of Radio Father Loui~ A. Dion, A.A., of an approved classification, was and" Television. the .Committee Assumption College in Wor­

. specifically noted by His Excel- encouraged Catholic universities cester is ex'pected to go to the lency. anti colleges to 'give' additional Soviet capital to replace Fath-'

In keeping with the directives - emphasis to the professional er George Bissonnette, A.A..f. · of the Holy See he urged Catho- ,formation of qualified persons who was suddenly expelled with­· lics. to give the support of their for the important mass commun­ out explanation in March 1955.

patronage to morally and artis­ ications media. . Cite 1933 Agreementtically worthwhile motion pic­

tures. This 'positive support at The State Department dis­Brita in Reports' closed· that the Soviet Union's

contribute immeasurably to the the box office: he noted, will

willingness to accept a MoscowCathol ic Growth .chaplain for American Catho­'. LONDON (NC)'- Britain's

production and. exhibition of lics was made known in a com­

'Catholic population has pasSedgood films.

munication to the U. S. Embassy the five million mark. .

'At the same time His Ex­\ in the Red capital.

.The Catholic population hascellency decried certain morally

Department spokesman Lin­been incr:easing by an average

dangerous trends and develop­coln White told a news confer­

of 1,500 persons each month ments in this industry:-in par­

ence of the Soviet-. willingness since the end of World War II.

ticular, the introduction into this mass medium of subject matters to accept a chaplain. He said

"'CROSS 54 Seot var. of oae DOWN 41 Bolst..rou. plarwhich are more properly suited The main reasons for the growth 1 Coatainers 1I6 SeparatioD 1 Travel;' by cab 43 Re...,hel .bore that "we note with satisfaction

is larger families, conversions 44 I.awfulfor restricted audiences; the sex­ I: 8~w':.~~dlrle g: ~~~~'iate : ~HIK\\'A'S 4lI Seer that the Soviet government ap­

sensational exploitation in ad:.. and immigration from· Ireland 16 City In Italy . 60 Pain .. A ........ 46 SHE W.&8 pears ready to fulfill its respon­and central Europe. 18 Kind "f Ante- liZ MAn'. name ,« State. ...N ........vertising; the ,duplicity of some 48 Individual sibilities under the Roosevelt ­

companies in the handling of Meanwhile, the Catholic .In­ -11 w:.~I. ~: :::fh' "'me~- . II J:;r.,':,d-fro 51 I';uropeao a ...... Litvinov agreement."18 SHE I_IV ED caa eam..1 8 Amo·uot d .... . 5% Runners

those foreign films. which have quiry' Center reports a new IN . . .. 66.. Lost blood T By way of This agreement, reached in weekly record of 800 people III III-tempered . 68 Arlroable 8 Withdraw. ~ ~:r:~:vc~:r... 1955 between President Frank­been condemned by the Legion . ~er.on. 1;9 Follow 9 Sehedul... . 59 Makes I...,e

and do not bear the seal of ap­ throughout the country had been 81 German ........rt J'n D. Roosevelt and Soviet .10 ...~~.C}W~ED ~~ ~f;:dl.Dali 10 ~~~E~~~ A

proval of th~ir own organ of persuaded to tak~ preliminary 6$ VerlOed Foreign Minister Maxim Litvin-VISION 77 Point 11 Joaraey . 67 Uistended

· self-regulation. instruction ·in Catholicism by its 81 Sfled eoverlac 79 Runnered U A••i.tant 68 I\laan..r _ov, pledged that an American Z% Personal v..hiele 13 Part of the 70 Hawo lroddeaIn a special address to parents, advertisements in the national beoeOt 1IG WomaD'. body (pI.) '72 Woman'. Dame

clegyman would be allowed to the Bishops of the Committee press. " Blow. name ... (lompa•• pola' 74 SHE WBOT& reside in Moscow for the bene­

116 Make (.UIBI) 81 Cook. m..... III Analyze THE ..........counseled them on their obliga­ This response brings the num­ 87 Sba..8fIp....r...... 85 War Irod grammatt_lIy OF GOI)'S fit of Americans. It has no re­tion to direct their children to ber of people' .who have an­ Ogure 87 Biblical 18 Soar - . . I_OVING ciprocity clause.

'Z9Sa!~ teultery!S An aatrlnlreDt KINDNESS"attend only those films which swered' "ads" since they Were 30 D""rea.in, 88 SHE WAS DB- 211 Rodeat 75 I<;n'·.baped Separate Matters are suitable for their age groups; started four 'and a half years ago 32 Mu~mDred VOTED TO 88 M..ntal faenlt7 78 Domesticated

34 I)rlv•• down THE'SACRIlJD 31 Brl.tle 78 Educat.. Father Dion was refused a visa those films which are classified to 108,000. Of these, 4,000 have 38 Kind of chee.e 32 Oar 81 Beveralre by the Russians in 1955 without

(0 German bord ..r 89 Wi;:'lred ' 33 Collectio.. 82 Uncommoaas A3 are intended not for teen­ been receive" into the Church­ 83 SonS' explanation. Apparently it was agers but exclusively for adults. including' 1,000 during ,the past t8 ~.:':!:~;;..a :~ ~l':~·:':.lDd.. sa :'~~'l:':; 84 Wild plum in retaliation against the U. S.« Burll:lArl"ed 94 Pin.. cia....... 38 SHE IS FA· 88 Bm'Parents were also warned of six months-while another 5,000 n C"a8r 95 Corn..r ' MOllS.FOR A 87 S ....wfled" refusal to permit Archbishopthe dangerous cumulative effect after studying the 'elementary 49 Festival 96 St..p Cl'lRT...IN ........ 88 Head euveri III: Boris of the Russian Orthodox110 M...."nlter trip. 97 Woman'. a ....... S'J Salty 90 Conjunctionwhich 'h'orror, pseudo-science ,outline. of the Catholic Faith of­ U Wand"r811 118' P",rn.e 39 Hannts 92 Like (IDlBI) Church to stay longer than 60 and crime films can have upon fered in the advertisements, are day in this country.Solution 011 Page Eighteenthe moral health and intellectual now receiving further instruc­ State Department sources in­development of their children. tions from priests in all. parts of dicated that officials had reached

In its report to the Committee Britain. an understanding with the Redl]Knights to CoJlect Toys for Totsthe Legion of Decency ind!cated Catholics in Army that the of that since December of 1957 it Leg:'il disabilities against Cath­ Final collections in the annual ing its own program in the par­bad reviewed and classified 323 olics still exist. No Catholic can Toys for Tots project, sponsored ish hall on Brightman Street.

by law:become Lord Chancellor, by Fall River Council Knights where the youngsters meet Wed­of Columbus will be made on ·nesday nights to prepare toysFilm A'dvertising' Speaker of the House of Lords Saturday.Continued from Page One and chief legal authority in the

country. No Catholic is likely to National Guardsmen, directed Production' Code Seal. Eighty become Prime Minister, who by Sgts. John Getchell' and Leo per cent of the offensfve adver- among other things has to' ap-. Lecomte, ·will make their last Using coines from an ·irrespon-. point the bishops of the_ State pickup of toys left at Fall River's sible segment of the motion pic- Church. fire stations. Work of recondi­ture industry-mostly foreign Neither the Roya:I Navy nor tioning. toys for distribution at film companies and independ- the Royal Air Force has many Christmas goes on at Santa's ents, which by-passes the indus- top ranking' 'Catholic . officers headquar~ers, 136 Pocasset

· try'!: own Advertising Code Ad- though the' Army does better, Street. ministration and neither seeks, perhaps because the Irish make The program ma~e 1100 chil ­nor carries the Code Seal. such good soldiers. The Chief of dren oC needy families happy

Sherwin Kane, writing in 'the the Imperial General Staff, GeR. last Christmas and Chairman Motion Picture Daily, quotes Sir :'rancis Festing, is a notable 'Dominick Maxwell feels the need both Arthur Mayer, well-known convert. ' is just as great this year. in distribution of films both Industry has no outstanding . Teenage groups are aiding in American and foreign, and Bos- Catholics. In the State corpora­ the work. The Tri-R Club of ley Crowther, film critic of the lions the only one is sfr Edwi'n St. Joseph's Church is. conduct-New York Times. Both men Plowden; chairman of the spoke at a luncheon of the As- 'At9mic Energy Authority. Four ..--------------------- ­socia ted Motion Picture Adver- Catholics are among the 35 mem-: Modernistic :' tisers luncheon in New York. bers of the General Council of :., :

Stupid and Dirty th'e Trades Union Congress, rul-: . Shoppe : Mayer noted that much of the ers of the British trade unions,' ~ ~

advertising . of foreign films the most' prominent being Mr. :'. LADIES : "turns out to be stupid when it Bill Carron, engineers' leader. ~ WEARBNG APPAREL ~ essays the salacious,' and. suc- -. ~ , ~ . ceeds merely being dirty Lourdes Remains : :in 1875 Acushnet Avenue when it tries to be daring." "We : New Bedfo'rdPilgrim. Magnet. who are fighting censorship," ~_. Mayer said, "may well have to p'ay for the fast buck follies of LOURDE~(NC) - Lourdes, 1958." long. afteJ;' the radiant summer,

Crowther, speaking about the is still a magnet for pilgrims. so-called art films of Europe, No large pilgrimages have come told the group that the state of .hexe since the end .of October, imported films has deteriorated. but every day there .are new He said, "It is too bad that the arrivals of groups and individ-, terms 'art.' and 'filthy' .have .be- uals. . . come synonymous. The audience The whole year, especially that was ,created (for the early this centenary year, is one 100ig film exports) wants the voice season of grace in this' sanct­of Europe, not the vice of Eu- uary of Mary Immaculate. rope. .Holy Communions received

The public's displeasure at of- this year in the· Lourdes saric­fensive advertising of motion tuaries numbered 3,800,000, 'as

· pictures Rrompts Mr. Kane to agai~st '1,740,000 in 1957: Masses urge, "-For their own good', as celebrated were 153,000' as well as for the' good naineand against· 63,000 in 1957. Sick pil ­repute of motion' pictures, it is grims . bathed _amounted to

· time that film importers estab- 49,500 as against 33,10Q in 1951.· :lished and enforced .their own . Visitirig doctors' who registered principles of' self-regulation." ·in the Medical Bureau number' ­

Mr.. Kane points out that ed 2,961, as against 1,433 in '1957. while offending films and ads Of the cures claimed .during are not limited to imported the year, the Medical Bureau 'products,these do comprise the has taken 32 for 'examination substantial. part of what has ·andstudy.NopronoUllcemen~ drawn so much' public censure ·will be made' on these for at

'".' -1'" '-, Qf"cthe 'current 'Cinematic.' scene:.: '.'-,·leaSt~two·:)'eara.;·",.-,·"'-;;.h. ,c:. '.:"~(':'''.:

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Page 17: 12.11.58

••

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'lowing Public Spi.rited

Individuals. and Busi­

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Gerald E. McNally Contractor

George M. Montie, Plumber

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-' Hi ..

n 1~;.:::::::rf:::!llt hristmas comes But

iI&~Once a Year-and with· it, Our Sincere

Christm.as Wish .for Lots of Good· C·heer!

Merry .C~ristmas

From All of Us To All of You

Page 18: 12.11.58

THE F;GH'i!ING CHAPLAIN IIi LEEMON, tXJMMt-fNi~TFO!!.CE~ HAVE 5:E!ZED )()UNB CHAPLAIN 7114 AHCMN. ORDER{; FORCE ANDY 70 CONTINUE CONTACTING TRIBAL tEADE~ S. ~~A'£ AMN, FOILING THE ~EO ~ PU,ePOf?E IN HOlDIN8 CHAPLAIN 77M. NOW fi:AFFIA HAlt£. ANDY ffi:OM A LVO~WAY MD_,,_

'WHAT GAIN ,; THAT FOR Me:if IF I HAVE: NOT TOl.D 7HE TRL-iTH YOI4 NeED NOT KeEP

YOIAR END OF THE SA~GAlN. VOlA HAVEN'T PAID Me

••~AN'/ MONEY.

"'): Catholic and Lutheran ~ishops, . Protest Action of.' German ,Reds

· BERqN (NC)-Bishop Julius Doepfner of Berlin has severely criticized the "robbery 'of lib­erty" by communist-I uled .East

,Germany. ' . At the same time, the Lutheran

Bishop Otto Dibelius, presiding' · bishop .of the Evangelical Church bit communism as a prison in which, people are supposed to

· abandon their own beliefs and accept those handed' down by the ·men 'in power.

Bishop Doepfner protested especially. against -the' increasing arrests. of priests, ·nuns arid lay­men in 'East Berlin' and' East

charges had been' made agamst . those arrested, and said that re·;;..., 'peated' efforts to discover the reasons for the arrests 'had been' made in vain. He a!iserted:

"Legal security for the indi­vidual is the basis 'of a well ­ordered human society. It ~s with anxiety th~t we must ask if legality is protected here. and we demand prompt c,larification

. of the situation.'" , ' "i must again express the sor-'

'row and deep disturbance of Catholics over these inc'ompre':' hensible' arrests and over. , this

. robbery of liberty that has con­Ger!!'llny.. He noted that :notinued. for four months;" he. said.

• . I -; •

· t . S· . d C" 1'1 ,Fac s on ,.~cr,e 0 ege' .ConUlluedfrom Page One ( 1522~23)" ,last non-Italhin Pop'e', The number' of cardinals Alfonso of Portugal, a youth of

lIDder Pope Pius IV (1559-65) 17; and the Generals 'of three rose to '76. It was Pope Sixtus Religious Orders; .also the Con-V :who, in' 1586, set' a maximum ,

sistory of May .12, 1879, when · of 70 members composing. 'the . .!,.eo XIII. named as cardinals,College.' . " ,

Number Created Some Popes have created no

cardinals. Alexander' IV, (1254­: ei), did :r1Ot exercise his right,

during the seven years of his pontificate. On the other hand" Leo X (1513-21) created 42' cardinals in his pontificite of

· eight years -Largest 'single creation, of

cardinals w'as made by. Pope Leo X, when he named. 31 to the Sacred College in the Con­sistory of July 1, 1517. '.

Other famous creations were . by Benedict· XIV, when he'

_~:" named 27 cardinals in, 1743; Pius , XI, who'died in December, 1935

created: 20 'new cardinals (in­clUding two who had previously

, been named in petto); Pius X, who in November, 1911, created and published 18, reserving another in petto. '

. ' Among the famous consis­tories is that of July 1, 1517, when Pope Leo X named, among I»thers, Adrian of Utrecht, who later became Pope Adrian VI

More Support Continued from Page One

pledge is read at all Masses in U. S. churches and congregation are requested to indicate agree­ment with it. The pledge will be read on Dec. 14 this year.

He emphasized that the legion has, been an effective agency of the Catholic Church in the United States in' crystallizing

. public opinion in the field of :, motion picture morality, and the .' annual pledge has been "a force'­ful instrument" in the cause.

"The pledge is expressed in general terms and actually does . nothing more than to recall. the .. specific obligation that Catholics,'

. and indeed all men, have with ?,\,regard to motion pictures even

~if there were no Legion of De­cency. This is th' obligation not ~ attend motion pictures which. are·harmful to themselves 'or to ~he~...t,t~i~hbprs., :""';c ."

the priest John Henry Newmail., .. 'great 'apologist' of the Church; Zigliara, restorer of Thomistic

. doctrine; Alimonda, most effec­tive orator of his time; Hergen­rother, famous Church historian.

Famous Firsts"

First Englishman admitted: to the Sacred College of Ca~dinals was Cardinal Ulric, named by Pope Paschal II in 1107.

First Scotsman. named Cardi­nal was Cardinal Beaton; by Paul III, in 1538. .

First Irishman to receive the Red' Hat was Cardinal Cullen by Pius IX in 1867.

First American in the Sacred College' \\T.as Cardinal McClos-' key. nominated by Pius IX in 1875.

First Cana'dia~ named to th~ Semite of the Church was Card­inal Taschereau, by Leo XIII in 1886.

First South American repre­sentative in the Sacred College was Cardinal Arcoverde, by Pius X in 1905. .

Cardinal Tedeschini, of the present College of Cardinals was named Cardinal in petto by Pius XI at the Consistory of March 13, 1933. but was not proclaimed Cardinal until the Consistory of December 16, 1935.

One cardinal-Cardinal Caro has died during the reign of the present Pope, The pontificate. of Pius XII 'saw the deaths of 62 cardinals. and two more died, during the interregnum prior' to . the election of Pope John XXIII, Cardinal Mooney and Cardinal Celso Constantini, ChanceHot of the H~ly Roman Church. .

, , . Cardinals-Designate' 'Richard

J'. Cushing of Boston, John':'F. O'Hara of Philadelphia, and Am­

·leto G. CiCognani, Apostolic'Del­egate to tl}e United States, left

,',for t,he J::onsist()ryby plane from Logan Airport"Boston, yesterday'

'afbernoon:

-THE ANCHOR Dio'cesan Legion' d'f Mary.Thurs., Dec. 11,1958 'ontinued from Page One ficult to contact on regular cen­

sus visits. Weekly visits to over.Cross'Word Solution '. <lured into ,the'Fall River Diocese'

.~miim

'Fr.' Considi~e

500 patients in some 15 institu,;. 'by Bishop Connolly in 1952. It tions and ho'spitals; weekly visitsis now, establ,ished in 13'parishes, .

, - Continued from Page One izethe faith of ,the traditionally Cat40lic continent.

Father' Considine; however, I finds the 'greatest hope for the:

Church in those countries 'comes.. ,ftom the asp,irations of 'the Utin

' . Americans ,themselves.

Better Plan The priest's book notes that a

'. better coordinated, more ably dfrectE;d plan, is needed 'to '.

A, CAll TO MERCY'

: Ha... ' you ·.~~~d it? Christ is calling' you to I the opostol':'te of

. 'achieve, clpser cooperation. be..;. tween U. S.' Catholics and their co-religionISts in Latin America. , "Catholics fn the Uriited States are lamentably ignorant' regard- . ing the' religious' traditions of' the' Latins, adoptin~ all too fre­quently a "holier than thou' at ­titude toward th'eir needs," he writes.

Father Gonsidine writes that during this century Protestant

missions have made greater head­way in' South American nations

, than anywhere else i~ the world.

Papal. Assu!l'al:'l~e VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope

John~ has assured the Shah of Iran that the Church will dedi­cate herself to works, of culture and charitr in, +he Shah's nation;

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six in Fall River, four in New :Bedford, and three in Taunton, with a ,total,.of 18 praesidia or local. upits, .

Rev. Edward A Oliveira is Diocesan Moderator of the Le­gion.. He has released a report'of, its, accomplishments. in the Dioces,e, term.ing them, "very gratifYin~." , .

The.' 'rEiport lists "an, average of 10· man'iages rectified each year; 50·, to 100) adult confirma­tionsyearly; 20 'to, 30 over-age bap~isms; 50,to,75 first commun­ions of ~lder children; an aver-' age of 150.returns to the sacra- . ments ,Yearly;·o:v:er 1,000 census, visits,especially. of, families dif-

I meicyas ,ciBRO!HER OF MERCY, .to', nurse the sick, in' hospitals, in­firmari.. and,' pri..ate homes or 'practic~ a 't;ade" of. 'other do':'esti; work necessary for the, well·being of a Community. The Brothers are en'gaged in works of mercy in the U.S.A., Germany, Holland and the' mission fields of Africa. "Blessed are the merciful; for they sholl ob­~i" mercy." Save your soul the

:mercy way. For'. information write:

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to the house of correction." ,These and many other spirit ­

ual works .make other spirit ­, tremendous asset to the individ­ual parish:andthe Diocese, stated Father Oliveira.' .

'The Taui-.ton· priest, assistant at Our Lady {)f ;Lourdes Church, has established"a junior Legion of Mary group in addition to the adult unfts." All Legionaries throughout 'the Diocese 'meet yearly at St.'Mafy'S Cathedral' Individua'ls' not aple to' partici ­pate in· the' active work of the organization may become aux'il ­iaries by redting. prescribed prayers daily.

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Page 19: 12.11.58

19 Sports Chatter

Amabile"s ·Quarterbacking Impresses TV Viewer

By Jack Kineavy Somerset High School Coach

Thoughts. of a televiewer on the Boston College-Holy Cross game last Saturday: The quarterbacking of Eagle sophomore John Amabile was just what the doctor didn't order (Anderson, that i~). The lad from New Jersey showed the poise and imagil).ation of a veteran directing his team to a 26-8 victory over the visitors from Worcester.

The most electrifying play of the game saw-Amabile tour his own right end for the firs t score, aft e I' faking magni­ficently to fu11­b a c k Duggan' who was smothered b y the whole left side of th'e Holy Cross line. Shades of Ted Williams . (B.C.'s Ted,. who' scored on a similar play in 1940 to beat Holy Cross, 13-7). - • .., ,"0

"Gets Maximum Mileage Then there was the basketball

pass Amabile to Flanagan for the second B. C. touchdown, a play that appeared to be impro­vised but yet none-the-less well ­

, executed. For the "rest of ·the day, ,Ama­

bile concentrated 'on' getting maximum mileage from his two human battering rams, Duggan and Miller,. who. rode up and over the,' Holy Cross frontier, aided and abetted ·by the Ben~

nett brot.hers, Steve and Leon. Duggan bore the brunt of the

B. C. offensive in the first half, MilleI' ,taking over in the second. The latter, off his sterling· per­

, ,fQrmance, was. awarded ..the ·O'Mealia Trophy, annually given by vote. of the sportswriters to the game's most outstanding individual.

Credit Harvard's Jack Fadden for devising a special shoulder brace to protect Miller's injured shoulder. . John Flanagan, who played a

tremendous game at right end for Boston College-scored once and tackled Tom Greene iii the end zone for a safety-had to be talked into playing football in high school.

A neighborhood pal, Jim Cot­ter, did the persuading. He and Flanagan were teammates at Boston College High and again at the Heights.

Greene to Stecchi For Holy Cross and especially

quarterback Tom Greene, it was a frustrating afternoon. An alert B. C. secondary picked off three of Greene's first four aerials, all of which were long toSSes.

The successful pass was a,35­yard shot to el).d ·Dave Stecchi who waded through a host of Maroon defenders to s cor e standing up. Thereupon Coach Mike Holovak promptly re­moved his second unit.

Another. Greene completion actually lost 16 yards. B. C. shifted to a rushi.ng pass defense in the second half, forcing the Crusader quarterback to fade deep.

It was on one of these occa­sions that he flipped to Buzniski for the above mentioned loss; another time he was smothered behind' the the goal line by the entire right side of the Eagle line, Flanagan leading the way.

The long punt formation is again becoming an interesting play, mainly due to the inability of the T-conditioned center to

, get the ball back there with ,speed and consistency.

B. C.'s Robinson made a catch that would have been a credit to

) Jim Piersall of lust such' an errant pass. We;ve. seen numer­ous instances this year of phan­

) tom snap-backs on punts: ',. Rumors of Change'

It would only be noticed by . \ another official but Jim Kelle­

her's line crew served head . ) linesman Walter Coffey in

their usual inimitable fashion. Two of the game officials are well known SPOrts personalities in Boston environs, Adolph Sam­borski, '. dire~tor of intramur;i~ >' lit Harvard and· HaITy !IclI'meI;'

••••••••••• , Jack Kineavy will announce

his second annual Catholic all star footbalI team of highschool players in the diocese in next week's edition of The Anchor.

track coach at Medford High. Despite the victory over the

Crusaders, rumors persist that a coaching change may be in the offing at the Heights. Personally, we'd hate to see it come about.

Mike Holovak has done a fine job at Boston College. His over­all record reads 44-25-3; against Holy Cross, he's 5-3. We'd like to see Mike have a .shot at the big' time schedule that the Eagles ,will undertake next Autumn. n includes Army,·Navy and Pitt.

.Colorful Jim Goes Shifting to baseball's tra<l.ing

mart, the departure of Jim Pier- . sall from Boston will take a good deill of color from the Fenway scene. Whatever his weakness at the plate, Jim was a real pro in the hustle department.

He'll fit rightinto the Indians' picture between, Minoso and Colavito. That trio should give Cleveland the best' defensive outer cordon in the majOl~s.

Talking about trades and Col­avitoreminds us'that Cleveland was willing to give Rocky' and pitcher. C,al McLishto Washiri'g­ton a year ago for, Jim Lemon, Pedro Ramos and Eddie Yost.' . The Senators balked at the deal, whereupon Colavito had a terrific season with the Indians and McLish became their lead­ing pitcher. No~ Yost goes' to Detroit and Bertoia and a couple of minor leaguers come w Washington..

Wertz Definite Asset All of which tends to bear out

trader Frarik Lane's theory of doing business: "'It's better to trade a year too soon than ayear too la'te." .. ~Ev~dently, Lane must"be of

the opinion that pitchers Ray Narleski and Don Mossi al'e on the downgrade. He recently gave both' to' Detroit to bring Billy Martiri to Cleveland. Martin presumably 'will play ,second base for the Indians. '

Only' time will tell how the various trades turn o~t but Boston's acquisition .':ot' vic Wel'tz should prove a" definite asset.

And now a final note 011

hockey. The Providence College Friars, , who have a 1. I' e a d y launched their '58-'59 season . have a true veteran first line i~ every sense of the word. Com­prising the unit are the Labbe twins, Bob and Ray, and Gil Dominique, all of Lewiston, Me.

'The trio played four years to­gether at St. Dom's and this will be their '. fourth year at Provi­d~nce College. No surprise moves there.

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COACH ~F CHAMPIONS: Brother G. Luke, F.S.C., English literature teacher and stellar track coach at W.est Philadelphia Catholic High displays some trophies his teams and individual stars have amassed in competition. His team placed second in the 1958 National Inter-scholastic Track and Field Championship. Brother Luke's new book "C9aching Hi~h School Track and Field," is a Coaches' Book Club Se­lection. NC Photo.' .

Bishop Carroll Notes Cot.fusion In Modern Secular Education ' PITTSBURGH (NC)-The "es­

Bishop Carroll said this is "notsential spiritual and morai' ob­jectives" of Catholic education, so with Catholic education." 'He wl1ich .hav~ "primacy over ,all acknowledged that in the "pre­ot,her aspe'~ts'~ must be. 'given greater stress hi theory and practice.

Addressing more than 3,000 Pennsylvania' educators Bishop Howard J. Carroll of Altoona­Johnstown has declared' "In the short space of a lifetime one theory has gained favor after another in secular education cir­cles." Some policies and prac­tices once accepted generally and enthusiastically now have

'been scrappoo and secular edu­cators are facing the question­What is education and. what is its purpose?"

"The supreme test of secular education," Bishop Carroll said, "appears to be in its usefulness as a stepping stone to eminence in the busineils ill1d industrial world or in social life or as a catalyst of democracy. Education as commonly regarded rests,' in­deed, upon the shifting sands of time." .

A Delicious Treat

vailing atmosphere" there· is a "restlessness that some speak of as almost panicky." The Bishop declared. that in the pursuit of the "essential· spiritual and moral objectives" of Catholic education "we must not be di­verted by current confusion and 'controversy" and that "we are in a better position than ever before to do our work well." .

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THE ANCHOR­Thurs., Dec. 11, 1958

Chap~@~n Ul!'~es Right Att~tude Oil'll ~~rrVgCe

ST. LOUIS (NC) - "Go into military service as a Catholic man, not because you have to," an Air Force chaplain advised an ~udience of teenagers' here.

"The attitude a student has toward future military' service is most i.JTlportant," Father George M. Klaric, a chaplain at Edwards Air Force Base, Calif., declared.

He spoke at a symposium on military service sponsored by the St. Louis Review, archdiocesan weekly newspaper.

He told the boys: "You have te make up your mind that as iI

Catholic man you want to con­tribute your bit to the nation'. security and freedom."

Frame of Mind A teenager's frame of mind is

important when he first enters the service and afterwards, too, the chaplain-a priest of the St, Louis archdiocese--pointed out., . "Don't go in 'because you have

to,'" he advised. "Avoid that~ philosophy which tries to Jget'"

. everything possible out of the service for purely selfish reasons.

. And don't simply "exist' for your time in the service-doing 'n9th­ing, participating in no'th·i.n& barely exerting enough energy to stay out of trouble. ' .

"From the' beginning make up your mind to spend your ti,me well. A 'wild time' in th'c' serv­i~e-drinking parties, late ho'ilrs, 'freedom' from parents, 'chG.rcb and work-these things' 'can wreck you, not only in' the setv­ice but for years, maybe even for life." . '

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Page 20: 12.11.58

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SERVE CHILDREN AND THE SICK: The White Sisters divide their Right center photo shows Sister Louis' Gabriel and Sister )1arguerite : time between their busy day nursery and care of the homebound sick. preparing equipment for home nursing calls. On the right four members ,At left Sister Albert gives the daily ration of lollipops to three of her of the New Benford convent enjoy a game of whist. Left to right are eharges. In second left photo Mother Yves de St. Jean, superior o-i the Sister Jeanne, ~otherElisa Theresa, Sister Regina of Jesus and Sister

4.*Fall River convent, supervises the picking ~p of bl,ocks after a day's play. - Imelda of Mary. " . . .... )

:Asserts Exampl'e -Most Impressive ':Way to Teach

~ PITTSBURGH (NC)-The importance of good examIlle 'has been emphasized by 'Msgr. PatrickJ. Ryan, re­tired Chief of Army Chaplains, in an address at the 38th an­'Dual Pennsylvania Catholic Ed­'acational Association convention.

Msgr. Ryan, now vice presi­dent of the Catholic Digest mag­azine, told, the 3,000 Catholic ed­ucators from all parts of the state that there are two Catho­lic attitudes which prevail in the modern world.

Ollposite Theories He characterized one as "sa­

eristy mentality," which he de­IICribed as a"tendency "to with­draw .from, the world to the i1acristy and' close the door, in _der to 'escape, froin the errors' and the confused, alarms" of struggle and fight, which occur eonstantly outside."

"The other ·theory. is exactly eontrary;" the Monsignor said. "It' would, have one go out into the world and mix with all so,rts .r persons, Protestants, Jews and unbelievers, in. order to exert an influence."

Practical Lessons Msgr. :R,yar: said that his ex­

perience in the field of education "has taught me some practical lessons."

"Education is the process of a ~·'"l:I!iifetime," he'said. "We all teach

kt one way or another as we Impress and lead those about us. This influence· of example ehanges our associates for better ~ ,worse." .

Ed',lcation Sacrifices , "We have an obligation, 'not

only to our own people, but also 10 our non-Catholic neighbors, be they Protestant or Jews We may be, criticized at times, but so what! Wasn't the gentle Christ Illritici'zed. for talking with sin­ners and dining with Publicans?",

The success of the Catholic school system in the United States was attributed to the "un­stinting sacrifices of the Catho­lic people who insist their chil ­.drenbe educated spiritually as ",ell as intellectually," Father Thomas Reidy, C.S.F.S., presi­dent of the association, told th,e 8(uiven tion.

Lead Public Schools He ,said that there now are

more than 4,000 teachers in Cath­~lic schools in Pennsylvania; that a total of 750,000 students attend Catholic' elementary and second- ' arey schools, and that 25,000 stu­dents are in Catholic colleges and universities in the state.

~'~athe'r Reidy said that the C~th­'olic school population in the Diocese of Pittsburgh exceeds

.. the number in the public school .,stem.

. .

White Sisters Serve Two Cities Coring· for Sick in, Homes,

By Patricia McGowan Have you a car and some spare time? The White Sisters, both in New Bedford and

Fall River, would love to know you! Worki ng in the two cities are six Sisters who go out daily on hgmenursingcalls. Each makes a bout 12 visits a day; traveling by bus and on foot.

"Sometimes we get a ride," says Sister Marguerite de l'Eucharistie of the Fall

River house, and we're' 'al ­ways so grateful. It means time to visit an extra patient."

The Sisters refuse no calls be­tween the city limits of Fall 'River and New Bedford, but if a .patient is not on a bus line they. must walk from the nearest stop to his house. Thus'an hour is often expended on a call that would take five minutes with a car.

Bus drivers' are cooperative,. however; They lmowthe Sisters. and will wait if they ,see them' dolls inust be picked, up, and the With it are ;Worn a black leather

, approaching a, bus. Nevert~e-' less, a few automobile rides would enable the Sisters to' do even more than they accomplish for the sick of the two cities.

Operate Day Nursery The White Sisters, more prop­

erly known as the Daughters of the Holy Ghost, have been in' the Fall" River Diocese since' 1903. They have done nursing

Isince that time and in 1910 also undertook operation of the Bishop Stang Day Nursery in Fall River.

They have been responsible for many conversions and re­turns to the 'sacraments among their patients. Most of them are .unable to pay for the Sisters' services, but no one is ever re­fused care for that reason. Some cases have been on the visiting list for as long as 15 years, and there is one patient who.will be 100 next March.

Without the' assistance of the Queen's Daughters, the White Sisters' Auxiliary group, much of the work would be impossi­ble. The auxiliary members pre­pare surgical dressings for the Sisters and plan many fund­,raising events for their benefit.

In New Bedford the Sisters do only home nursing, but two members of the Fall River house

.are assigned to ·the day nursery.

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'. There, may be time for a few' the Holy GhQst is worn about games, however. In Fall River the neck. The initials "F.S.E." the Sisters enjoyparchesi. In- following members'na'messtand stead of trying 'to reach "home" for, filles ,'{: Sain.t-Esprit,' ,the they call the' goal "heaven" and Frencli name of 'thecommunity~. Sister Marguerite's the best at . Candidates should be between getting th!'lre. in New Bedford 16, and ·25, .'in... :good' health and ,whist is a favorite.' There Sister able to 'peifonn one or more Regina of Jesus is the champion. .'of,. the, types 'of work· 'under~

Occasionally Sisters froin the ,tak~n I;iy_the Sisters, They may two houses are able, to get to- , 'obtain:ftirtner iriformation frcim 'gether, but it's', a hurried affair~ Reverend. Mother, Provincial, since the nurses are busy five ::8:01y CHiost Provihcial House, '72 and a half days a week and :Churcl~ St~~t, Putnam, Conn. . emergency calls may come 'at any' time.

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' Like most childish haunts it's mon to nuns. Their white coifs currently invaded by hula hoops, frame happy, unhurried faces. They hang everywhere and Sis- ' Their Congregation was foun­ter Arthur Elizabeth proudly· ded in France in 1706 and now told tis 'of the Nursery champion, numbers some 3,500 members' in a five-year-old who can twirl Canada', Africa and the United her hoop 300 times. States. Its primary purposes are

When they're not.hooping, the education of youth and care of children enjoy brightly colored ' the sick. It conducts hospitals, 'shoe tying racks, a new ad.dition homes for aged, orphanages, to -Nursery equipment-and no 'nurseries and businesswomen's one misses the lollipop line that residences. forms at the end of each day. Modern Habits

Daily Activities The Congregation's habit was - When the Nursery day is over altered in 1954 to a style suited and the nurses have come home, to the active lives of the Sisters. activities aren't over for the It's made of orion and wool,' an Sisters.' Blocks, tricycles· and . up-to":the-minute combination,

·Note Slackening 'mn Sunday Sales , MIAMI (NC) - Spokesmen for the Greater Miami Council of Churches have reported 90 per cent cooperation among merchants in the council's cam­paign to end unnecessary Sun­'day sales.

Dr. R. B. Culbreth, a Baptist minister and chairman of the council's Sunday observance committee, said the response has been "excellent" from food stores. car lots, furniture stores and liquor dealers in the Miami area.

Late Pope Performed Nocturnal Adoration

TUCSON (NC)-The late Pope Pius XII performed nocturnal

. ~doration for nearly 45 years, . A letter sent by Msgr. Beni­amino Nardone, president of the Archconfraternity (in Rome). for the Nocturnal-Adoration of the Blessed Sacrament to Andrew A. 'Grondona, founder' of the Noc­

.turnal Adoration Society of the Knights of Columbus in .Tucson, said:

"As far back as 1914, the then Msgr. Eugenio Pacelli added his name as,a member of the i\fch~ confraternity f Nocturnal Ad­oration in Rome. After his elec­tion .as Pope, he repeatedly recommended night adoration ,and referred to it as 'an inex­haustible fountain of light 'ahd of strength for its observ!'lrs, a sublime means for drawing upon humanity the divine mercies.'"