08.28.58

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Church Labor Day Message Asks Union-Management Talks To' Halt Recession Mass Honors All Workers ., In Diocese

Fall River, Mass. Thursda~y, August 28, 1958 ,PRICE 10e ' 35 Authoriz~d Second Cla8.11 Mnil I 2, ....• V'0. ."1110. at Fan Riv~r. Ma... $4.00 per Year

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h!nded Fitchburg State Teach­ ers College before entering the Holy Union Novitiate. She is a graduate of St. John's Univer­ sity, New York, and of the S<:hool of Theology of Providence College. After several years teaching in

been Supervisor and Principal su(:cessively of Immaculate Conception School, Astoria, N. Y., and Immaculate I Conception School, Taunton. At the tirile of her new ap­ pointment she was Superior of Turn to Page Fourte.en

ByCongress WASHINGTON (NC)-A series of summit conferences between labor and manage­ ment as a means of combat­

lency, the Most Reverend Bish­ op, at 9 A.M. Labor Day in St. Mary's Cathedral, Fall River. They belong to member un­ ions of the United Labor ~oun­ cil of Greater Fall River, spon­ sor of the Labor Day religious observance. Planned as an an­ ilUal affair, the observance will include a Protestant religious service, memorial tributes to Turn to Pag'e Sixteen

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Mothers in Iowa Object to Movie' Newspaper Ads

Two Towns Lose Funds for Free School Busses

with the film inClustry, to "the type of advertisements n()w being used extensively by the major screen studios in the pro­ motion of films!' "In numerous cases, the pic­ tures being advertised are good," the letter said. However, it noted that because of offensive adver­ tising many parents refuse to allow their children to see the Turn to Page Four

Rev. Mother Mary William Giblin, S.U.S.C., has been appointed Provincial Superior of the Immaculate Heart Province of the Holy Union, succe,eding Rev. Mother Gabriel Clare whose six-year term of office has just expired.' Rev. Mother Mary William St. Edward's School, Baltimore, • native of Fall River, was ShE: was appointed Superior and graduated from the Sacred Principal of St. Francis'de Sales Hearts Academy and at­ School, Patchogue, ,L. I., and has

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Twenty thousand workers will be represented at the Solemn High Mass to be presided over by His Excel­

DUBUQUE (NC)- The ,Catholic Mothers Study Clubs bf Dubuque have filed a formal l~tter o~ protest,

Mother Mary William New Provincial of H~ly Union

Urge~ Quick Hearlng~ End

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Holy Union Nuns Are Appointed To New Posts Fifteen transfers of ~is­ ters of the Holy Union of the Sacred Hearts to or from convents' in the Fall River' Diocese have been an­ nounced by Mother Gabriel Clare, S.U.S.C., Mother Provincial. , They are as follows: Sister Stephen Helen from St. Francis de Sales, New York, to Academy of the Sacred Hearts, Fall River. ' Sister Henry Marie from St. Mary, Taunton, to Sacred Heart, Taunton. Turn to Page Nineteen

ing the current economic reces­ The fuU text of the Labor Day statement of ·the NCWC Social Action Department will be found on Page Sixteen.

---------------_ .... _.­ sion is suggested in the 1958 Labor Day Statement issued to­ day by the Social Action Depart­ ment of the National Catholic Turn to Page Fourteen

FATHER FOX

Priests' Retreat ,U nde'r Di rection Of Father Fox Rev. Thomas A. Fox, C.S.P. of the Paulist Fathers Mis­ sion Band in New York City, will be retreat master for· the annual retreat to be held for priests of the Diocese at Cathedral Camp, Sept. 1-6 and 8-13.

Father Fox has spent all of hIs 25 years in the priesthood as a parish missioner, preaching re- , treats, novenas and missions throughout the United States and Torn to Page Three

Archbishop Asks -Catholic Support Of Mission Day VATICAN CITY (NC)­ A high ranking official of The Sacred Congregation for the Propagation of the Faith has appealed to Catholics' throughout the world for full support of Mission Day, Sunday, Oct. 19. Archbishop Pietro Sigismondi, the congregation's secretary and president of the Pontifical Mis­ sionary Works, says this year'. Torn to Page Ten

HARTFORD (NC)-State funds cannot be used to pro­ vide transportation for pri­ vate school children in Conn­ ecticut Attorney General John J. Bracken af Connecticut hu

ruled.

Fairfield County's two towns.

Brookfield and Newtown, have already voted to provide free bus rides for parochial school 'students. Mr. Bracken's ruling meallll the two towns will not be re­ imbursed by the State for the eost of bus tnmsportation fOl.' Turn to Page Ten

Asserts, America Must Ta~e Lead In Mission Field NOTRE DAME (NC) ­ Just as the United States is accepting "the challenge of leadership in the community of nations," the Catholic Church in America has "an inescapable vocation to the world aposto­ late," While countless victims of war and oppression appeal to this young and growing natioJ:l for food and other aid, Bishop Leo A. Pursley of Fort Wayne said, millions of spiritually starved souls in many lands look "to the young and growing branch of the True Vine .which Turn to Page Five

Bishop Hits Junk Flooding Mails Additional, Faciliti~s to Highlight WORCESTER (NC) - Plastie Roman Congregatiolll Handles 'Work religious objects flooding' into Reopening of Diocesan Schools, the Worcester area from a Mi­ Dealing With Political Field In all parts of the Diocese, expanded facilities await ami dealer have been labeled by

VATICAN CITY (NC)-The Sacred Congregation for Extraordinary Ecclesiastical Affairs is the Church's highest office dealing with Church problems that touch the p0l­ itical field. This congregation has a juJrisdiction within their borders. But even in those' cases the double existence. It is .~me of ·Tura to Page Eighteea the 12 Roman congregations through which Pope Pius XII governs the Church. It also functions-minus the 12 Cardi­ i I> Ral members-as the first seet lion of the Vatican Secretariat of State, the Pope's equivalent . . ~ .t the U. S. State Department. '~ Normally the Church nomin­ Q I ates bisll:ops, erects and divides • dioceses without consulting civil governments since such acts per­ tein strictly to the religious administration of the Church. However, historY-both past and , pr-esent-often makes extraordi­ ~ .....,. demands on the Church : . ,:: ."•.d thus provides this congrega'" tIooII. with its full quota of work. " --', Retains AuthorU:r , Because of the historical de­ . ,"lopment in some eountries, ~ch as France, Germany, Spain ~d several in Latin America, , ,;c-"''We Church consults with some governments on the ap­ ~int:nients of bishoPs and ......, . . ill the eecleaialtical'

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the thousands of youngsters returning to school next week. The additional grades for 1958 will amount to a 20% increase iii the elementary schools and a 12% expansion on the high school level- for the maculate Conception School, past ten year period. New Bedford, which opens 'iUl Heading the list. 1m- doors for the first time this year.

Servants Relief, Dedicate Lives to Core of Incurable, By Patricia McGowan ,

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Bishop John J. Wright of Wor­ eester as "sheer junk." Bishop Wright advised that these unsolicited crucifixes and statues be given ,back to the mailman or thrown in the neal'­ . . ash barrel.

Not an,the beautiful girls in the West have movie ambitions. Sister Mary Louise, who grew up in Montebello, California, did n't: Instead, she found her calling in. a Ca~h­ olic Digest article ()f some years ago. It described the work of the Servants of Rellef for incurable Cancer, and it spoke to her h'eart. Today Sister Mary Louise is one of 12 Sisters at the Rose Ha..... Fateful ~ be among them. Home a~ 1600 Bay St.reet was The Bolle Hawthorne ,Lathrop. opened In 1932 and smce that tl lorne L a th rop H orne ..In F a n ' time has cared for hundreds of River. Her' dazzling: lmlile , ,,'F'A patients. Need is the only requi;. may never flash from a ~" "'4,. site for admission, and once movie screen, but it 'has lighted ~''''''O., ~ within its walls a patient enters the lam days of many a suffet'U ',4 anew aimension of charity. in,g man and woman: She belori. " , 'THI Its attributes were laid down

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plltients, officiallJ' eonsi<iered iI1Icurable. Although filler, bishop ill the ietnd would 1Mlcome ita aerv~ fewness 04. ita members limitII CongregatiOti ~ acti'rity ia

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iD the Congregation's very be,innings by its founqress, known in religion as Mother Alphonsa, Dut to the world as Rose Hawthorne I".athrop, convert daughh!r of famed author ,Nathaniel Hawthorne. , They are·described by, Kad.' l"agCl 'Twe-u.

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Two hundred and eighty-five children are registered for pre­ primary, first, second, and third grade classes in the new school Sisters, of the Holy Names of Jesus and Mary, a community new to the Diocese, will staff the school, which will be dedicated on Sunday by His Excellency, the Most Reverend Bishop. A new classroom has been added to St. Joan of Arc School, Orleans. It will, make possible the opening of a 7th grade. Al­ ready known - for' its uilUsually broad curriculum, St. Joan of Arc will offer home economica to 7th grade girls this year~ Next year; when plans call for the ,a~dition of an 8th grade, Rev. ,James E. Lynch, pastor, will add a woodworking course for boy students. St, Joan of Are: is staffed by the Sisters of Divine Providence and has 196 students registered for the coming year. Three Taunton schools are adding grades. They are St. An­ Tura .. Page' Three


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