10.05.61

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Funeral Services Monday In Saint Pau~ Cathedral' For' Archbishop Brady.

The ANCHOR An Anokot" of Che Soul, Sure /7htd Fif'm-==ST. PAm.

Fall River, Mass., Thursdayu October 5, 1961 Vol. 5, No. 41

PRICE lOe $4.00 por Voar Socond Class Mail Privilegos Authorizod at Fall Rivor. Mass.

Pontifical Requiem Today For Fr. Joseph E. Sutula . The Most Reverend Bishop sang a Pontifical Requiem Mass this morning at 10 in Our Lady of Perpetual Help Church, New Bedford, for Rev. Joeeph F. Sutula, pastor of St. Casimir's Church, New Bedford, who died Monday ........... ,...._-~., after an illness of several weeks. Father Sutula, 74 • years of age, had served in St. Casimir's since 1932. He has been recentJy engaged in supervising the construction of a new church for the parish.' Father Sutula was born in Olszanka, Poland, the son of the late John and Fnincisca Wolicki Sutula. He studied in St. Mary's Seminary in Orchard Lake, Michigan, and was ordained to the priesthood on' June 8, 1924, in the Cathedral of SS. Peter and Paul, Detroit, by Most Rev. Michael J. Gallagher. Upon ordination, Father Sutula served as assistant in Our Lady of Perpetual Help Parish, New Bedford, for two years. He was' administrator of St. Stanislaus Church, Fall River, from 1926 until Oct. 7, 1932, when he beTurn to Page Twelve

Diocesan Prelates to Speak At Regional CeD Congress Bishop Connolly, Auxiliary Bishop Gerrard and Rev. Joseph L. Powers, diocesan director of the Confraternity of Christian Doctrine, will be among leading .participants in the 15th annual New England regional congress of the CCD, to be held Friday, Oct. 13 Oct. 15 will participate in the through Monday, Oct. 16 in congress. The others are Bishop Bernard Portland, Me. Bishop Connolly will preside at a session Vincent J. Hines, Norwich; BishSaturday morning, Oct. 14, for lay teachers in parish high schools of religion. Bishop Gerrard will head a concurrent session for discussion club leaders. Father Powers is scheduled to be discussion moderator at the opening session of the congress. Seven other members of the hierarchy including Cardinal Cushing, who will preach at a solemn pontifical Mass Sunday,

op Robert F. Joyce, Burlington; Bishop Daniel J. Feeney, Portland; Bishop Eric F. McKenzie and Bishop Jeremiah F:Minihan,. Auxiliaries of Boston. Miss Margaret M. Lahey, active in the Diocesan Council of Catholic Women, will speak at a session dealing with the problems of exceptional children. Her topic will be "Methods of In,;, structing the· Mentally Retard.ed."

National Leaders Welcome Catholic Youth Week WASHINGTON (NC) - President Kennedy and other national leaders have welcomed this year's National Catholic Youth Week. The President urged "that our American youth, whether they are students or workers, consider the theme carefully." The theme ' of this year's observance is Exhibitor Scores "Youth - Unity - Truth.'" National Catholic You t h U oVles Week, sponsored by the Youth Department of the National Catholic Welfare Conference, begins Oct. 29. President Kennedy, Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson, former President Harry S. Truman and others sent their comments to the NCWC Youth Department. President Kennedy declared in his message: "Young people who generously and courageously serve the truth are the architects not only of our living national unity, but also of that world unity of free men which can be the greatest prize of our times." He added: "1 want to extend to the seven million young peoTurn to Page Eighteen

Ad It M · For Children

HOLLYWOOD (NC) - A movie exhibitor has protested a policy which he says forces adult pictures to be shown at kiddie matinees, according to the Hollywood Reporter. ';l'he trade daily said controversy may have "far-reaching reverberations." . The dispute is between Marshall H. Fine, president.of Allied States Association of Motion Picture Exhibitors and Charles Boasberg, Warner Bros. sales head. Mr. Fine vigorously protested TUli'n to Page EigbteeJ'l

the

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The Most Reverend Bishop will be one of the five Bishops·giving absolu.tions Monday morning in the St. Paul Cathedral over the body of Most Rev. William O. Brady, D.D., Archbishop' of the Minnesota Archdiocese, who died last Sunday in Rome. The Archbishop, Bishop Connolly and Rt. Rev. Francis J. Gilligan were all natives of Fall River and seminarians for the Diocese who volunteered to go to St. Paul after ordination to

© 1961 The Anchor

FATHER SUTULA

..

.MOST REV. WILLIAM: O. BRADY

CHANCERY OFFICE 362

HIGHLAND

AVENUE

PALL RIVER, MASSACHUSETl"S

The Diocese of Fan River mourns the passing from this Hfe of her most distinguished son, Archbishop William O. Brady of Saint Paul, Minnesota. The manner of his death illustrates his whole life's work. Long accustomed to giving time and talents unstintingly to all those that made demands on him, he spent the best years of his life serving his neighbor, his Church, and his Divine Master. Altho~gh

but five brief years Archbishop of Saint Paul he has added tremendously to the growth and splendor of his See. But he wHl be most remembered as the pattern of the good shepherd giving his life, willingly and joyfully, to the service of God and his fellow-man. We are all much poorer for his passing from us; but he has left us a magnificent heritage. May God in His Infinite Goodness reward him.

C)_, _ ~~~ O i S h OP of Fall River

-a----

teach in the newly-formed St. Paul Archdiocesan Seminary. The Archbishop and Bishop Connolly both became rectors of the Seminary before their elevation to the episcopacy. Monsignor Gilligan is pastor of St. Mark's Church in St. Paul. Archbishop Brady, who was also Treasurer of the Administrative BO;lrd of the National Catholic Welfare Conference, suffered a heart attack Sept. 23 while flying to Rome to take part in a meeting of the Preparatory Commission for Bishops and the Government of Dioceses of which he was a consultor. This group is one of several making plans for the forthcoming Ecumenical Council. The Archbishop was hospitalized immediately in Salvator Mundi International Hospital in Rome where he suffered several subsequent attacks and died. Sister William The Archbishop's sister, Sister Mary 'William, C.S.J., assigned to the Motherhouse of the Sisters of St. Joseph of Carondelet in Rome, was with her brother during his hospitalization and at his death. Monsignor Gilligan flew to Rome on hearing of the prelate's sickness along with Dr. Charles E. Rea, K.S.G., a physician of the University of Minnesota and a devoted friend of the St. Paul Ordinary. On hearing of the Archbishop's death, the Holy Father sent his secretary to invite Sister William, Monsignor Gilligan and Dr. Rea to the Vatican where he received them in a special private audience and expressed his condolences and the assurance of his prayers for the Archbishop and his bereaved relatives. . The Pope said that he had intended to visit Archbishop Brady but was waiting until the doctors gave the word that he was feeling better. Mass in Rome Monsignor Gilligan offered m Requiem Mass yesterday morning in the Church of Santa Susanna in Romeo-the American Church staffed by the Paulist Fathers and the Titular Church of Cardinal Cushing. The absolution was given by Most Rev. John J. Krol, D.D., Archbishop of Philadelphia. The Mass was attended by Amleto Cardinal'Cicognani, Giuseppe Cardinal Pizzardo, Paolo Cardinal Marella and Aloisius Cardinal Muench, all attached to the Vatican Curia, and by Most Rev. Martin J. O'Connor of the North American College in Rome, Most Rev. Ernest J. Primeau of Manchester, Most Rev. John P. Cody, Coadjutor Archbishop of New Orleans, Turn to Page Three

Diocesan Faithful Join Natio!nwide Tribute to Pope Diocesan Catholics will join Sunday in a nationwide outpouring of love and devotion to Pope John XXIII, who will mark his 80th birthday Saturday, Nov. 4. They will return to their parishes pledge cards indicating participation in a spiritual bou quet which will be presented to His Holiness on behalf of American Catholics by -Most Reva erend Egidio Vagnozzi, Apostolic Delegate to the United States. The cards were distributed in parishes last Sunday and WE're also given out in schools. throughout the Diocese. Q

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