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Member of Audit Bureau of Cireulatione Contents Copyright by the Catholic Press Society, Inc„ 1862 — Permission to Reproduce, Except' N ovitiate,Provincial H oOn Articles u Otherwise Marked, s Given After U U. e Friday Following Issue _ Cost Slated at $ t, 5 0 0 , 0 0 0 P ^ « ^

Construction will begin \ Estate in southwest Denver. the structure which provides fa- of the Sisters of Loretto com- combination gymnasium and' on a novitiate and provin­ It will lace southwest on what, cilities for 100 postulants and ing to Denver, auditorium. cial residence of the Sisters will be the new extension of | novices and approximately 50 This wing will house IhC; of Loretto in early Septem­ Wadsworth avenue. The projp-j professed Sisters, IN ADDITION to living quar- kitchen facilities for the entire |_____ ters for those preparing to be- institution as well as the ber, Mother Eileen Marie, erty is bounded on the south byj completion Is planned for the LVi. No, 40, THURSDAY, MAY 17, 1962 DENVER, COLORADO provincial of the Sacred West Quincy and on the east by! sufficient come Sisters, the north wing will ‘he Sisters living in |^ »»- Pierce. ! time to have the building ready provide a library, several large , . , u i Heart Province, has announced. The central part of the build­ The $1,500,000 structure will Mother Eileen Marie said that for the first class of postulants classrooms, a language lab. art the Mellwin Construction com­ in September of that year, which and craft rooms, science labs, ing will house the provincial res­ be located on a 100-acre, site on idence and offices. Extending! part of what was the Carl Prior pany has been engaged to bui'.d will mark the 100th anniversary music practice rooms and a east from this central section,: forming a separate wing, willi 226 Seniors Ready be the chapel. 140 feet by 52 feet, with a capacity of more than 300. Outside, opposite the chapel entrance will ^ erected a 90-foot campanile. At Regis, Heights The south wing wiM provide quarters for the aged Sisters. This section will have facilities, 116 Ragis Grads 110 at Heighlf for gue.sts Frank A. Kemp, president of the Great i Archbishop Urban J, Vehr will confer Plans for the institution were Western Sugar Company, Denver, will de-'degrees upon 110 graduates at the 41st started last fall after the prop­ liver the commencement address at Regis I commencement day exercises at Loretto erty had been purchased on college’s 1962 commencement exercises I Heights college at 5 p.m. May 31. Sept. 15. This construction is May 28. Degrees will be awarded to 116| Henryenry Viscardi,Viscai Jr., founder andipi presl- part of a congregation-wide ef­ senior students at the college’s dent of Abilities Inc. of New fort by the Sisters of i.«retto 73rd annual commencement. York, will give the commence­ to provide adequate quarters | Archbishop Urban J. Vehr will ment address. for the .voung Sisters and pi-ejjjdg gj {hg graduation exer- Precommencement acttvitlei the aged Sisters. ’rises, to be held in the college for the seniors begin with a pro­ In conjunction with the Loretto Geldhouse at 10:30 a.m. gram May 21 sponsored by the Sisters' expansion in the United A native of Nebraska, Mr. junior class. States, the congregation, in this Kemp has been associated with the year of their sesquicenten- The seniors and their parents the Great Western Sugar Com­ mal, has announced the open­ pany since 1923 when he en­ will be guests of the college at Proposed Novitiate and Provincial House ing of two new missions in tered the firm’s legal depart­ I a banquet May 20. Following the South America, one at Tacna, ment. The new $1,500,000 novitiate and provincial residence of from behind this center section Is the chapel. The section at Peru, and the other at .Santiago, banquet, Mary Night ceremon­ the far left will contain the novitiate, classrooms, and sleeping He received a law degree in ies will be held in the college, the Sisters of Loretto to be built in southwest Denver is seen Chile. 1913 from the University of Colo­ in this architect’s sketch. On the right is Bethany hall for re­ quarters for 100 novices and postulants. In this wing will he a In the Denver archdiocese the rado and practiced the ensuing chapel. Father Bernard Byrne, tired nuns. In the center section, to the left of the entrance, library, laboratories, and food service, and other facilities. The Sisters of Loretto conduct Lo­ 10 years in Colorado. Mr. Kemp M.M., will speak. is the provincial headquarters, on the first floor. The second auditorium is the portion of the structure visible at about the retto Heights college, St. Mary’s was elected general manager to the Hierarchy and clergy in tion of CCD diplomas a n d of Victory, who, in addition to grees. The phenomenal success the archdiocese. awards May 11 in St. Francis teaching thousands of children To Assist Opening event of Regis’ com- of the Confraternity of That was the message of the de Sales’ church, Denver. in CCD classes, have played the mencemenf will be the pres! Christian Doctrine in the Rt. Rev. Monsignor Gregory major part in training teachers dent’s reception May 26 for 767 Will Be Graduated archdiocese, now reaching Smith, V.G., P.A., archdioce­ A RECORD TOTAL of 86 for catecheUcal instruction all L. America graduates, their parents, and more than 28,000 Catholic san director of the confratern­ persons received awards and over the archdiocese. ! Regis faculty members in the boys and girls in public schools, ity, to the nearly 300 persons teachers’ certificates in the Monsignor Smith presided at By Paul H. Hallett S.tudent Center from 4 to 5:30 from High Schools June 3 p.m. ceremonies. Forty-four men and the ceremonies and presented ’’.’he tide is turning for Ca­ The baccalaureate Mass will women were awarded diplomas the diplomas and awards. The tholicity in Latin America, but (Graduaiet Listed oo Page U> Regis, St. Francis de Sales’, and be celebrated May 27 at 4 p.m. for completion of methods and guest speaker was Father Rob­ much remains to be done by lay­ Archbishop Urban J.Vehr Sf. Joseph’s. in the college fieldhouse. Father 5 Million Cubans Starving, doctrine courses to qualify as ert Kekeisen, pastor of St. An­ men from the U.S. will present diplomas to a Three other high schools in CCD teachers, 11 in the ele­ thony of Padua’s parish, Den­ Richard Ryan, S.J., president at the Denver area, Marycrest, St Father John J. Considine Regis, will be celebrant. Father total of 767 graduates from mentary school section, 27 in ver. nine Denver high schools in Mary’s academy, and St. Mary Ex-Castro Follower Says the secondary school section, Just back from the national stressed this observation in a Harry R. Klocker, SJ., head of Register interview. joint commencement cere­ Eupbrasia’s, wiUi a total of 84 and six for special work with (Tdrn to Page 9) the division of philosophy and graduates, wiU hold private theology at Regis, will deliver monies to be held at 3 p.m. By Robkrt R am sey was always a Communist. When retarded children. The famed Maryknoll mission- commencement exercises. “Castro is, at this moment, he was with the bearded dic­ promoter, who practically rev­ the baccalaureate sermon. Sunday, June 3, in the City Awards went to two 10-year Auditorium arena. The total of 851 students who starving 5,000,000 people in tator shorUy after the over­ Clergy Retreat olutionized mission publicity will receive diplomas from the throw of the Batista regime, teachers in the CCD program, Cuba. Hie really poor people through his Fides News Serv­ Graduates from all 16 Catho­ 12 Catholic high schools In the have deserted Castro because Castro (old him: “Don’t worry to 25 five-year teachers, and to The annual clergy retreat ice, and through his eight books lic high schools in the archdi­ Denver metropolitan area alio they are worse off than before about it. If the Reds try to in­ Total of $104 ' the 15 winners of the first ca­ for priests of the Archdiocese calling attention to mission ocese this year number a rec­ (under Batista). The fanners filtrate (the government), with­ sets a new record. The previous techetical contest in the arch­ of Denver will be held at SI. needs, spoke in Denver May 9.: ord-breaking 993. won’t work. They have gone to in 24 hours I will turn them Added to Burse high was in 1960, when 832 gen- diocese for pupils in grades Thomas’ seminary from Mon­ "There has been a marv­ PARTICIPATING IN the joint, iors were graduated, the mountains to fight against out.” four through eight. day evening. July 9, to Fri­ elous general resurgence in Cath-i the man who promised to lead This week’s donors to the St. graduation ceremonies will be; Two high schools in the metro- Castro appointed a few Com­ day morning, July 13. Father olic life in Latin America since burse added $104, rais- the senior classes of Cathedral, polltdn area, Machebeuf, and them to a better life.” munists to government positions, He paid particular tribute to Joseph Scannell, C.SS.R., the Eucharistic Congress of * These are the pointed words : Ing the fund for the education Annunciation, Holy Family, Marycrest, will have their first LichU asserted, thinking he the leadership provided t h e from Pittsburgh, Pa., will be 1955,” Father Considine explain of Luis Lichtl, a 26-year-old of priesthood students for the Machebeuf, Mt. Carmel, Mullen,] (Turn to Page 2) (Turn to Page 5) CCD in the archdiocese bv the the retreatmaster. ed. "There is a greater sense j Cuban refugee who, at one time, of alertness to religious needs, ’54. served as a captain in Fidel particularly among the young­ Castro’s rebel army. er clergy and many of the laity., _ Contributors „ „ included Mrs. Now living in Denver, young „r. ^ , . IB.B., Denver, $10, in thanks- For every Catholic lay work. I ^ j, LichU predicts further tragedy for Cuba within two or three er outside Latin America who Denver, $20; C.E.O., Denver, $5; months. Elaborating on the crit­ Bethlehem Fathers comes there to work, there are E.S., ical shortage of food, he said: half-dozen laymen In La«|| | Denver, $2; P.M., Monument, $5; "Castro will go before the TV •America who are inspired M.E.B., Denver, $5; Mr, and cameras and radios and shout his action. Mrs. R.L.M., Security 'Village ‘The Yankees are coming’!” "That points up the vital im- $5; S.J.R., Aurora, $3; J.B. The Cuban people, LichU con­ Buy 13 Lots, House portance of such organizations Denver, $2; Mrs. J.W.C., Den- tinued, believing the U.S. has as the Papal Volunteers. Latin yer, $5; M.S.D., Denver, $5; come to liberate them, will rush America will after all be de- P.A.M., Colorado Springs, $5; A second major expansion Denver, for their new headquar- two floors with a total of more out into the streets to support veloped by its own Catholics." Mrs. L.E.M., Denver, $5; M.A., move within a year was under­ ters in the U. S. than 7,000 square feet, and an their liberators and Castro will Denver, $20, in thanksgiving; shoot them down because there taken by the Bethlehem Fa­ The new property on E. 17th Attic. There is a separate wing thers who are purchasing LAYING GRE.AT stress on and V.P.M., Los Angeles, Calif., is no food to feed them. avenue and Holly street includes for a housekeeper. The total the importance of Catholic lay $5. property that has been valued a residence that will provide 10 ’ heated area is 7,408 square feet. Luis does not believe Castro , . . , „ . workers coming to Latin Amer- In addition, Mr. and Mrs. at $60,000 at 5630 E. 17th avenue. rooms for priests, several rooms Over the garage is a modern ica to teach and engage in other R.W.L, Denver donated $7 50 S e f V T u Z “ H- social-religious works. Father to the memorial'burse in honor and space for guild meetings, mg room, kitchen, bedr^m , and .Considine pointed to the Pon- of the late Monsignor Mktthew The property contains 13 lots oath. H ere is a spnnkler sys- tifical Commission for Latin magnificently shrubbed and en­ Smith. tern in the yard. | America, which makes the laity Donations to the seminary closed by a brick wall for pri-' ^ay, 1961, the Verv Rev. one of the cornerstones of ILs: burse should be sent to the Most Jerry Droll Jack Cattilini lAnton J. Borer, S.M.B., U.S. program. Rev. Urban J. Vehr, Chancery Francis de Sales Cathedral High School The residence contains a tin- Provincial, announced that thei About the Communists in l>at-1 Office, 1536 Logan Street, Den-| High School ished and unfinished basement, (Turn to Page 2) Master of Ceremonies (Turn to Page 5) ver 3, Colo. I Valedictorian Six Archdiocesan Priests Noting 25th Anniversaries Six priests of the .Archdi­ The five who were ordained Charities; and the Rev. Charles Family church. In the afternoon Denver, he enrolled at St. Thom­ Catholic University of AmericB ocese of Denver are mark­ on the same day are the Rt. P. Sanger, pastor of Our Lady St 4 o’clock a parish recep­ as’ seminary in 1930 and re­ and received a bachelor of can* ing their 25th anniversary Rev. Monsignor Forrest H. Al­ of the Mountains parish, Estes tion will be held. mained there until his ordina­ on law degree in 1948. of ordination. Five were or­ len. pastor of Holy Family par­ Park. Bom in Blanca. Colo., Dec. tion. He was named pastor of St. dained in the Cathedral of ish, Denver; the Rt. Rev. Mon­ Plans for the Masses of 10, 1911, the son of Mr. and He served as an assistant at Anne’s, Arvada, in 1948, and th« the Immaculate Conception, signor Bernard J. Cullen, pas­ Thanksgiving and the receptions Mrs. Val D. Allen, and orphaned St. Catherine’s,] Denver, 1937-40; same year he opened the parish Denver, by Archbishop Urban tor of St. lyOuis’ parish, Engle­ are included in the short bio­ while a young boy, he ^cam e administrator at St. Michael’s, and mission of Holy Trinity, wood; J. Vehr May 22, 1937. graphies that follow. S Catholic after moving to Pu- Delta, 1940-41, and at St, Paul’s, Westminster. The sixth, the Very Rev. Mon­ The Rev. John J. Doherty, Sblo to live with his older sis­ Idaho Springs, 1941-43; and as In 1951 be was named pastor signor Richard C. Hiester. pastor of St Bernadette’s par­ Monsignor Allen ter and her husband. a chaplain in the Air Force of Holy Family and in 1959 was .archdiocesan director of music, ish. Lakewood: the Very Rev. On Sunday, May 20, Monsi­ Following grade school and 1943-46. appointed a Domestic Prelate. [was ordained in Rome July 25, Monsignor William J. Monahan gnor Allen will offer a Mass of high school studies, in Pueblo Following military service, In his pastorate he has built a 11937. associate director of Catholic- Thanksgiving at 11 a.m. in Holy- and one year at Regis college. Monsigpor Allen studied at the (Turn to Page 2)

New Headlquarfers This view of the $60,000 property being purchased by the Bethlehem Fathers shows a part of the large residence, which will provide 10 rooms for priests, several rooms for offices, a community room, and space for guild meetings. The 13-lot, magnificently shrubbed property, at 5630 E. 17th avenue, Den­ ver, will house the U.S. headquarters of the Bethlehem Fa­ thers. The Very Rev. Anton Borer, S.M.B., is the society’s U.S. Rt. Rev. Msgr. Forrest H. Allen Rt. Rev. Msgr. Very Rev. Msgr. Very Rev. Msgr. Provincial. Rev. Charles P. Sanger Rev. John J. Doherty Bernard J. CuUen Richard C. Hiester W ilii^ J. Monahan PAGE TWO THE DENVER CATHOLIC REGISTER TkH ri4ay, Moy 17, 19S2 Superior General Visits in Roggen Six Priests Noting 25th Jubilees

Mother Mary Lea Corradi, su­ (Continued From Page 1) ed Morey junior high school. no special celebration of his and later became pastor oi St- perior goieral from Rome of new high school and convent, Cathedral high. Regia college, jubilee. Mary’s, Aspon, and Holy Fam­ the Sisters Adorers of the Most enlarged the grade and high and the Lament School of Mu­ Bora Nov. 4, 1908, in Nor­ ily. Keencsburg. Archbishop Predous Blood, visited Colora­ schools, and enlarged and re­ sic. He entered S t Thomas’ walk, 0., he studied at St. O ro- Vehr termed the parish accom­ do’s one convent of her order decorated the church. seminary in 1933 and took his dry’s Preparatory seminaiy in plishments of Roggen, which May 9 at Sacred Heart church, theology course at the N o r t h Cincinnati before being accepts later became the (nrish scat Roggen. M em sIgM r CwIIm Archbishop Vehr will preside American coUege in Rome, for the then Diocese of Denver with Keenesburg as a mission, She and her companion. Moth­ at a Solemn Mass of 'Thanks­ vdiere he was ordained to the as a candidate for the prM - “the miracle of the archdio­ er M. Louise Utar from Ruma, giving to be offered by Mon­ priesthood in 1937. He was choir­ hood. cese." DL, were met by Sister M. Caro- signor Cullen Thursday, May 24, master of the college choir and After studies at St. Thomas’ In 1961 FaJhe- Sanger wag letta. Sister M. Redempta, and at 10:30 a.m. in St. Louis’ studied vocal music under the seminary and ordinatioo, he was Ramed first parizr of Our Lady director of the famed Slstlne Sister M. Clarice from Sacred church. Auxiliary Bisbi^ David assigned as assistant at St. Vin« Of the Mountiips in Estes Park^ Heart convent, and by the Rev. Maloney will preach. Choir at the Vatican. Cent de Paul’s parish. Denver, formerly tended from l^veland. L A. Abercrombie, pastor. Following the Mass there will Taking up postgradute stud­ be a dinner for the clergy. A ies at the Appolinare univer The purpose of this visit was sity, he was forced by the war to establish and maintain per­ reception in the jubilariaa’s hon­ or is scheduled Sunday, May to r ^ r n to the U.S. in 1941 and sonal contact between members continued his studies at the GIFT SUGGESTIONS ef the order and their Superior 20, from 7 to J9 p.m. in the school cafeteria. (^thoUc University of America, General at the mother house in where be received a licentiate Rome. Bora in Pueblo Sept. 13, 1909, Monsignor ( ^ e n ytudied at St. In canon law in 1941. For Patrick’s grade simooi and Pu­ Following service as assistant eblo Catholic high school and at Blessed Sacrament parish, he entered Regis college in 1929. entered the Army u a chaplain StniM rStboollM The following year he began in 1943 and served two tours of duty. After his discharge in Ma Trsval. . . ttvdy ki hone*. Holy, Spain, N w nf l 0 V0 It To o l studies for the priesthood at the AmMo, Wait Gomony, Sviliariand, SL ’Ibomas’ seminary and was nila, he became director of the lolgiaai, (nglond. Throa houn aodlt Ready for a bayride are these Sisters, who March 13 iaciuded softball, volleyball, boat­ ordained seven years later. Cathedral ^oir. In Swvoy of Europaon Atl and ArcM- Between nis two tours of duty were among the 180 from the Denver area ing, horse and buggy rides, and a tour of bte Assigned as assistant pastor loclura. Total soit indodai IvHlon, air who attended the annual Sisters’ Day at Mul­ school plant The program ended with Bene­ be was chaplain of St. Joseph's VovoC Boab, uccooiwidatloni, and of St. Francis de Sales’ parish len high school. Fort Logan, in honw of St. diction offered hy Father William G. VoUmer mother house of the Franciscan Graduate lida Mpa $ l4 S a Uara >Oilooee following his ordination, he was Sisters in Denver. He was nam­ Jana 23, rahm Aosoil 31, John de La SaRe, patron of all teaehers and of S t Louis’ parish, Eariewood. The school is later in the year assign^ as ed archdiocesan director of mu­ Aba earifi for foH Iona In student teachers. Activtties at the event. conducted by the Christian Brothers. assistant at Annunciation par­ sic in 1954, and in that poet has ish, Leadville. • Bibles Itjsli Uilnnlly conducted a number of musical RuaiCutir In September, 1938, he was as­ events. He was named a Papal • Proyer Books signed in Denver as assistant Chamberlain in 19S0. Study erodvata and «edargradecrte Bethlehem Fathers Purchase House, at Blessed Sacrament In 1943, M oeslpier lAeeehew • Missals pregrasi In ortt, hnioanlHaib |on- Monsignor Cullen went to the Monsignor Monahan will of­ Daily and Sunday gwagoi, during hlilorle Ecooiaalcai Catholic University of America CeundL 24-30 houn cradH for Ml fer a Mass of Thanksgiving ocadoiilc yoor. Total cedi $l,VVi In- To Serve as Headquarters in U.S. and in 1944 received a licentiate • Rosaries in canon law. Thursday, June 7, at 10 a.m. in dudoi trom-Allantic and over­ Holy Ghost church in the pres­ (Continued From Page 1) thers located at the site. The It was at the invitation of On his return to Denver, be • Medals and Chains land travel, meob, occemmodaHeM ence of Archbishop Vehr. A din­ In inedam bvOdlngi, and tide Mpt. Bethlriiera Fathers planned to complete project is expected to Archbishop Urban J. Vehr that became Assistant Chancellor and ner for the clergy will be held One temetler, $ t^OO. For cempMe erect a high school for boys on a cost more than two million dol- the Bethlehem Fathers set up in 1954 was named Vice Chan­ • Imported Statuary in the afternoon at the Brown detoli oonlach 1200,000, 200-acre site acquired larf. their U. S. home in the Denver cellor, a post he held until ap- Hand Carved MrKtit il Fwilii SluOn Archdiocese in 1950 in CHieyenne pointed pastor of St. Louis’ in palace hotel and a reception and Ceramic by tte Fathers «nrt of Broom­ will honor the jubilarian at 7:30 field Heights. - ARRANGEMENTS for the Wells and in Denver in 1935. 1958. He was named a Papal unou uiivEisin Chamberlain in 1949 and a Do­ p.m. at the Brown Palace. • Auto Sets 130 N. MdOgen A< Future plans call for a semi­ purchase of the property, being Born April 11, 1908, in Den­ u CMMse,anoi>/WM 44)100 Father Borer directs and mestic Prelate in 1959. nary and the U. S. mother conduct^ by Blair i . KMtte- ver, the son of Mr. and Mrs. • Crucifixes ' administers the efforts of the Among his achievements at Frank Monahan, Sr., Monsignor house of the Be^dhem Fa- son, reritor, ,for the Bethlehem society in raising funds for mis- St. Louis’ are a new 3135,(XX) Monahan attended St. Dominic’s Fathers and Bums Reidty for rions in Formosa, Japan, Af­ convent, a major addition to the and Sacred Heart schools and rica, and South America. The church, and other improvements L b i B 2V1A 3M, T & B o GKHORST O C o. the sriler, wfn be concluded by was graduated from North high F O R T H E Bethlehem Fathers have about and additions to the parish the end of June. Several Hems school. An alumnus of the Uni­ 170 priests and 30 Brothers serv­ plant Land has been purchas­ and fixed improvements are in­ versity of Denver school of com­ ing in tiiese missions. ed for a future addition to the B R ID E ^ cluded in file purdiase i»ice of merce. he was for a time em­ school. m t m u u A l H U the house. ployed by the Colorado A South­ THE MISSIONARY priests of Approval for" the purchase of Father Doherty ern Railroad. • Madonnas this congretation have endured In 1930, he enrolled at St. 1897 the property was given by the One th o u a ^ persons attend many tortures at the hands of Thomas’ seminary and was or­ • Pictures ^ j 1 1 Superior General of the Bethle­ ed a reception in Father Doh­ dained seven years later. He hem Fathers, Father Max the Communists in C9iina. The erty’s honor April 15, when he first served as assistant at St. • Crucifixes Bloediliger, S.M.B., in liurnen- society’s first mission field was was presented ,a sterling silver see, Switzerland. Manchuria, where it began work service. Patrick’s, Crested Butte, and later at St. Mary’s, WaUpn- * Bibles The present U. 8. headquar­ in 1928 among 1,000 Catholics. Father Doherty was born in burg. In 1939 he was appointed ters of the Bethlehem Fathers, When the Reds expelled the County Kerry, Ireland, March assistant at Holy Ghost and as­ • Statuary at 3682 E. 26th avenue, Denver, priests, there were 25,000 Cath 1, 1912. Coming to Denver in sistant to the director of Cath­ ta toe small and inadequate for olics. 1929 to enter S t Thomas’ semi­ olic CSiarities. • Plaques the Fathers. The sale of this nary, Denver, he took all his i ^ U i \ There are seven Bethlehem In 1943 be became a military property is being handled by Xeminary courses at St. Tbem- Fathers serving in the Denver chaplain and upon his discharge Blair Realty. This building has as’. archdiocese. ’Three other Bethle- studied at the Catholic Univer- accommodations for only three His first assignment after or Mty of America, where he re­ priests and is sitaated on only h m Fathers are serving in the dination was as assistant at Moil t Phone Orders Given Prompt Attention 922 GAS A ELECTRIC BLDG. ceived a master of social work TAbor 5«M1 five lots. Eastern part of the U. S. Annunciation parish, Deu degree in 1948. In the same and in 1939 he was named sistant at St. Anthony’s, year he returned to Denver to ling. resume his duties at the Oiar- Clarke's Church Goods House ities office' and Holy Ghost Appointed administrator of church. He later became asso­ parishes iii Victor and Cri] TAbor 5-3789 ciate director of Catholic Char­ 1633 Tremont Place Creek in 1944, he served in ities. capacity until named foumtng He served as first vice presi­ Charge Accounts Invited pastor of St. Bernadette’s; in dent of the Catholic Hospital 1947. The parish has grownj to association 1960-61, is executive 1,100 families, The church, Rec­ secretary of the Colorado Con­ tory, convent, and school hive ference of Catholic Hospitals, been built in his pastorate. and is a member of the board Moiuigner Hiesler of directors of Big Brothers, Monsignor Hiester will oHer a the Mayor’s Commission on Hu­ Mass of Thanksgiving in jUia man Relations, the Colorado Cathedral at 10 a.m. ‘ruesdjBy, State Hospital council, which June 5. Archbislmp Vehr yill makes recommendations on the F r e e ! preside. distribution of Hill-Burton con­ The interparochial g r a |d e struction funds. And of the school choir and arcbdioceuan Academy of Certified Social Genuine Leather nuns will sing at the Mass. The Workers. Ha was named a Pa­ jubilarian will be presentei) a pal Chamberlain in 1959. spiritual bouquet by the sct^ool Ffrther Seeger BILLFOLD When Death Occurs Away From Home children. j j I Because of the busy tourist Born in Denver March ; 24, season and a summer schoool 1911, Monsignor Hiester attend-1 of religion, Father Sanger plans Your InRIilt ki goM DIM'S and mtmtn't stflse I attrscHss esters 767 Will Graduated sum sluRikwm moMf tm r i From High Schools

(Continued From Page $ cis de Sales’ high school with graduation clasaes this yearj; 131, followed by Holy Family, The program of the joint dm - 107; Cathedral, 106; Regis, 104; mencement exercises will | in­ Machebeuf, 76; Mt. (Carmel, 67; SPEER AT SHERMAN clude the posting of colorsi. by Annunciation, 64; St. Joseph’s, the . (^lorado Air Natiqnal 61; and Mullen, 51. Guard, and a welcome addness Forty-two girls will receive by Jack Uattalini of Cathe4ral diplomas from St. M>Ty'* acad­ high school, master of ceremon­ emy; 29 from Marycrest, and 13 ies for the exercises. from St. Mary Euphrasia. There will be a valedictjory Outside the Denver area four address by Jerry Droll of St. Catholic high schools in the Francis de Sales’ high schpol, archdiocese will graduate 154 followed by the conferring! of seniors. The biggest class Is at Yours when you awards for the Archbishop's!es­ St. Mary’s high school, Colorado say competition, the presenta­ Springs, with 78 graduates. , ■ Opon m SMvInga Aeeownt tion of diplomas, and an lad- Mt. St. Gertrude’s, Boulder, M Opwn m CAocAJng A te o m it E. COLFAX AT MAGNOLIA dress by Archbishop Vehr. j will graduate 31; St. Anthony’s, . ENGLEWOOD m Aunt a Mafa DaaoaH Ban (2775 So. Broadway) Two choruses will sing dur­ Sterling, 24; and St. Joseph’s ing the exercises, the elemen­ Convent high school, Colorado tary interparochial chorus un­ Springs, 9. o r . . .if you'roalready using thase tarw der the direction of Leo Frafier Of the graduates of Otholic Icaa, you may ractiva a fraa billfold by and the mixed interparoc|iial high schools in the archdiocese, introducing a friend who opens an ac­ more than half —- 54 per cent high school chorus directed by count. — have been accepted by col Telephone your local mortuary immediately, and let them make all of the necessary ar­ Mrs. Jo Noakes Lasham of St Francis de Sales’ high school. leges for next September, ac­ After you receive your free billfold, wa rangements for you in the place where death occurred. Music for the procession of cording to the Very Rev. Mon­ will credit your account in the amount graduates and the recessional signor William Jones, archdioce­ of $1.00 for each additional account march will be provided by the san superintendent of schools. you Introduce! This procedure will save you concern, time and needless expense, because you are re­ St. Francis de Sales’ band, di Statistics for the grad­ V uating classes show that 31 per reeled by S. L. Bowen. This offer is for s limlled tints only. Got taining the services of only one hnortuary. cent studied pbysia in high y o u rs n ow ! THE LARGEST number’ of school, 47 per cent studied Olingers are especially qualified to serve families under these circumstances, since we graduates comes from St. Fran- chemistry, 20 per cent took four years of mathematics, 17 per are Denver's only member of the Notional Selected Morticians, an international organization cent took four years of Latin; and 39 per cent studied either limited to the leading mortuary tn each city. Forty Hours' AMERICAN French or Spanish for at least two years. Olingers also belong to the Order of the Golden Rule, the Notional Funeral Directors WEEK OF MAY 20, 1962 i xxxxwntirXwniwiiszvinniXinntihfxo NATIONAL IV Sunday After Easter Association, the Colorado Funeral Directors Association, and the Denver Morticians The Dtnvar Catholic Denver, St. Elizabeth's Re­ Register Association. treat BANK •Grover, St. Mary’s Published Weeklv by thej I Catholic Press Society, Inc.,j 17th and Stout / CHerry 4-6911 j988 Bannock Street, Dmver.j GL. 5-3663 N.B. Missions marked with an asterisk (*) may have 13 j Subscription: $4-00 Per Year.; ■tasii KsisM strisii isissssss ssirsisttie !Entered aa Second Class! Hours Of Exposition of the [Matter at the Post Office! Serving Denver’s Families Since 1890 Blessed Sacrament instead Denver, (^lo. 40 Hours.

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Tliurtdoy, May 17, 1M1 THE DENVER CATHOLIC REGISTER PAGE THREE

M a rfin '^ ^orr»s* MesscHp* ffo Mankind Kind of Saint World Needs

Vatican City — When the troit. New Orleans, Los Ange­ mutual compassion and love. are on record of miracles Church adds a new name to les, St. Louis, and Washington, Bom in a house at 535 Calle wrought through him. the roil of those formally pro­ D.C. del Espititn (Holy Ghost Street), He had the power of biloca­ claimed to be among the chosen Represented also was Chi­ Lima, Dec. 9, 1579, Bless^ tion, which helped him to heed In heaven — the long and cago’s Friendship House, whose Martin wa» so strongly Negro the petitions of suppliants in costly process known as canon­ group was led by Monsignor in appearance that his father such far-off countries as Alger­ ization — it very often does sp Daniel Cantwell. There were 40 disowned him until tales began ia, Mexico, China, Japan and-' for reasons of special timeli­ members of the Blessed Martin to reach him of the endless acts France. ness. Society of the same city's St. of charity for which his son, This is notably true in tbe Anthony parish, led by Father even as a child, had become Maryknoil Priest case of Blessed Martin de For­ Edward Hughes, O.P. known throughout tbe city. res, the 17th century Dominican Father Daniel Miller, pastor To Work In Peru lay Brother of Lima, Peru, who of a large Negro parish in Cam­ AS A SOCIAL pioneer. Broth­ Father Bernard P. Bymo, on May 6 became the New den, N.J., remarked: “Many er Martin remains an eminent M.M., regional superior of the World’s first canonized Negro Negroes think that St. Martin figure in the western world. Maryknoil Fathers in the Rocky saint. is a saint just for them. I tell One of his social Innovations Mountain area, who will leave Blessed Martin, as he has them that tliis is discrimination. was to give poor married cou­ in June for tbe Maryknoil mis­ heeii kaowii since 1817, has St. MartiB is a saint for all.” ples a good start in life through sions in Peru, will be honored been described by newspaper­ «Among the procession of gift- brides’ dowries. Aided by dona man Eddie Doherty, one of his bearers to the Pope at the Of­ tions from the rich, he bought at a reception for tbe public in devotees and biographers, as fertory of the canonization Mass tracts of land to teach farm St. John the Evangelist's gym­ n h e first lay social worker in were two young Negro students cultivation to wayward boys nasium, Denver, May 39 from At Blessed Sacrament Parish 50th Jubilee the New Worid, the flrst lay for the priesthood of St. Mar­ and thus saved them from ca­ 4 to 7 p.m. apostle of Catholic Action in the tin’s own order, the Dominicans. The Maryknoller Is noted for The officers of the Solemn Mass that marked the SOth an­ celebrant; and the Rev. Harley Schrnitt, pastor of All Saints' reers of crime. western hemisphere.” They carried traditional gold He founded weii-equipped hos giving many missions and re­ niversary of the fonndlng of Blessed Sacrament parish, Denver, parish and former assistant to Monsigiior Campbell, subdeacoa. cages containing doves. treats in parishes and schools on May II are, left to right, the Rev. Adam Ritter, chap­ The church was filled for the Mass with Monsignorl, priests, pitals; provided shelter, aid and WONDER-WORKER, social Throughout the Pontifical comfort for the infirm and throughout Colorado. lain of the Muilea Home for the Aged and a former assistant nuns, and laity. Hundreds attended a reception in the evening organizer, physician and found­ Mass, Catholics from at least aged. He was responsible also Father Byrne’s duties in South at the parish, who was deacon; Auxiliary Bishop David M. honoring Monsignor Campbell in marking his 2Sth anniversary er of successful welfare inst'tu- 30 countries answered tbe Latin America will take him to what Naloaey; Archbishop Urban J. Vehr, who presided in the for establishing the still flour­ as pastor of the parish. < tions, St. Martin was actually responses of the Mass of St. is popularly described as the Mass; the Rt. Rev. Moasignor Harold V. Campbell, pastor. ishing school and orphanage of half Negro, half White — the Martin. the Holy Cross in Lima for un­ “Priestless Andes.” son of Don Juan de Porres, a derprivileged children. Here the great disproportion Spanish grandee, and Ana Ve­ THE SECRET of St. Martin Throughout his 45 years ' in between the numbers M peo­ lasquez, a freed Negro slave is that, although he lived in a the religious life, Martin, who ple and the number of priests Setott School of Hursing Knights of Altar Goal who was a cabaret entertain time that might seem remote died in 1639, was not only an has given rise to the challenge er in Panama. and alien, be has remained, extraordinarily holy man, but in South America of both sav­ An illegitimate, unwanted through the alchemy of bis sanc­ enjoyed many signs of God’s ing and re-establishing the faith Graduates Given Diplomas Stressed by Fr. Gartland child, Martin received no edu tity and the all-encompassing favor. among thousands. cation in his early years. Nev­ range of his social and char­ He had an insight into the­ The reception is being spon­ The first class of students Members of the graduating B y D a v e M i l l o n is to instill in Mass servers i ertheless, he was destined to itable activities, a living chal­ ology that caused the regent of sored by St. John’s PTA, Altar from the reactivated Penrose class are Mary Sue Allen, Den­ sense of responsibility, appreci­ become one of the most illus lenge and inspiration to mod­ studies in the convent to declare society, and the parish Legion hospital Seton School of Nurs­ ver; Marilyn ^ th e ry n Beamon, “The first seminary is the ation for the liturgy, proficiency trious standard bearers of so­ em men in search of a better him possessed of “the science of Mary. ing, Colorado Springs, received group of Mass servers.’’ St. Joseph, Mo.; Margaret Jane in Latin, and good grooming cial and interracial justice of world built on foundations of their diplomas from Archbishop Father Frank Gartland, of the saints.” Many testimonies Fixott, USAF Academy; Jessica habits. the Church. Urban J. Vehr May 8. Jill Gough, Colorado Springs; C.S.C., national director of the In addition to bis work wita Buffalo Creek Mass Mass will be offered at 10 The Seton school of nursing Virginia L. Jackson, Colorado Knights of the Altar and editor the Knights of the Altar, Fa­ FORTY THOUSAND persons, Case May Be Important a.m. Sunday, May 20, in St. traces its origin back to 1903, Springs; Helen Marie Kilpat­ of the Catholic Boy magazine, ther Gartland is also promoter including the Pope and 38 Cardi­ Elizabeth’s church, Buffalo when it was known as tbe rick, Boulder; Richard 0. Mar­ quoted these words of Pope Pius for the Young Christian Stu­ Glockner training school. nals, knelt in St. Peter’s Basil­ Creek, and at the u m e time tin, 7625th USAF Academy; dent movement. The YCS is an In Area of Civil Rights In 1932 the three schools of ica to pay reverence to the mu­ each Sunday throughout the Carla Lee Miller, Durango; Ca­ organization for upper elemen­ latto lay Brother when he was nursing in Colorado, conducted rol Jean Moreland, Colorado A decision of far-reaching im­ summer. tary pupils, which aims at train­ formally declared to be St. Mar­ If the case Is reviewed by tbe by the Sisters of Charity of Cin­ Springs; Laura Jean Rostvit, portance for civil rights may U. S. Supreme Coart, and ing batholic youths for the lay tin de Porres. cinnati, namely Mt. San Rafael, Colorado Springs, and Donna be gained if the U.S. Supreme promptly decided, the dedsimi apostolate. Numbers of American groups Trinidad; St. Mary's, Pueblo; Louise Schoenfeld, Grainfield, Court decides to review the pe­ GAIL STUDIOS Father Francis Syrianey, pas­ interested la interracial rela­ will pat at rest the question of and Glockner, Colorado Springs, Kans. tition of Marlon D. Green, a 4t1l CLAYTON AL. S4SSI tor of St. Pius X parish in Au tions were present at the can­ whether there Is Immediate WBODINO PHOTOS were combined and the name Negro airline pilot, who con­ need for Congress to pass rora is tbe leader of the Young onization. Among them were 50 CHILOaSN'S PHOTOS changed to the Seton school of tends he has been denied em­ federal fair employment pmc Christian Student movement in members of Catholic Interra -4x5 f Q O O nursing, Colorado Springs. 'Register' Editor ployment because of his race. tices act. the Archdiocese of Denver. cial Councils from Akron, De -8x10...... In 1959, owing to the need of Attends Convention Twenty states have anti-dis­ nurses and coincident with the GREEN, a CATHOLIC, was crimination commissions uphold All CHrfy tnO Nun SHlIna* completion of the new and mod­ ing equal employment opportnn SI No Cs«l The Rt. Rev. Monsignor John granted an employment inter­ ern Penrose hospital, the Sisters Teacher Aides Contribute view in Denver in June, 1957, ity for all citizens regardless of of Charity decided to reactivate B. Cavanagh, editor and busi­ race. s Ph>.qa AL S-SSS1 s the dUploma school and on May ness manager of the “Reg­ by Continental Air Lines, at Record Hours of Service which time he was found quali­ 8 graduated tbe first class from ister,’’ is attending sessions of this reactivated program. fied but not hired. the 52nd annual convention of Carmencita explained to tbe Tbe present Seton school of A record of more than 123,300 In August, Green filed a com­ the Catholic Press association aides their role as lay apostles nursing has full accreditation hours of service in classrooms, plaint with the Colorado Anti- SnCUS-LRUJLOR May 15-18 in . engaged in real Catholic Ac­ from the State Board of Nurs­ Discrimination C 0 m m i ssion, Leading Catholic editors and school offices, and play ^u n d s tion. I54t LARIM ER ST. • 830 H rn S T . ing Examiners was compiled by the 100 teacher which on Dec, 19 found that he journalists throughout the coun­ A complete survey of all aides bad not been hired as a pilot aides in archdiocesan schools involved in the program, she Cuban ixilas try are examining the indispens­ who attended an evaluation because of his race, even though able role of 506 Catholic news­ said, might show a total of serv­ he “was better qualified for the meeting on the program held ice hoars almost doable that AWARD To Alfond Maiu papers and periodicals pub­ Rev. Frank Gartland, C.S.C. position of co-pilot tban any ap­ Cuban exiles in the Denver May 9 in St. John the Evan­ compiled by those attending the lished in tbe U. S. with a circu­ gelist’s school, Denver. plicant interviewed.” area will attend Mass together lation of more than 27,500,000. X n’s encyclical Mediator Dei meeting. The Colorado Supreme Court, at 10 a.m. May 38 to commemo­ Floyd Anderson, managing edi­ to emphasize an important by­ A survey taken at the meet­ In the past year, there were however, ruled that Continen­ PLAQUES rate the 60th anniversary of the tor of the “Register’’ and a vice product of the world-wide or- ing showed that those attending 25 schools in the archdiocese tal Air Lines was not subject to Cuban republic as an independ­ president of the CPA, is tpking ganizatipn for altar boys. —about one-half of some 300 that mqde use of teacher aides. the jurisdiction of tbe Colorado ent nation in the Cathedral, Den­ part in convention sessions. Although' fostering vocations volunteer aides serving in the Mrs. Thelma Kramer of St. Anti-Discrimination Commission BflONZlE TABL’ETS ver. archdiocese — spent a total of The “Register," National Edi­ is not the primary aim of the Mary’s parish, Littleton, is the The refugees from the Castro 3,303 hours in actual teaching teacher aide chairman for the regime invite all friends of their tion, founded by the late Rt. organization, the good effects and 9,000 hours in office work Catholic Parent-Teacher league, country to attend the Mass and Rev. Monsignor Matthew Smith of the Knights in terms of vo and playground supervision, ac­ to pray with them for tbe return jn Denver in 1927, is read cations is startling, Father Gart­ cording to Sister M. Carmencita, WORK DONE by volunteers of freedom to the homeland. throughout the world and is rec land said in a visit to the Reg­ archdiocesan elementary curric­ in the classroom. Sister Carm­ There are 258 Cuban refugees re­ ognized as outstanding in Catho­ ister the past week. ulum consultant. encita reported, included spe­ settled ip the Archdiocese of lic journalism. Monsignor Cava­ But the primary aim of the Praising the dedication and cialized instruction and remedial Denver. nagh was named editor in 1960. Knights, Father Gartland said, zeal of the volunteers. Sister work with individuals and small groups, teaching in such special Church Owes Deep Appreciatien areas as reading laboratories, speech, foreign languages, art, and music, and handling regular classes while the home - room Archbishop Eulogizes Joseph Craven teacher drilled smaller groups. Office workers. Sister Carm­ “Mr. Craven had the particu- The text of the ArchWshc^’s His judgments were objective, in (Colorado owes him deep ap­ encita said, besides serving as lariy informed and sensitive sermon foHows: unbiased and matured by broad preciation and gratitude for his receptionists, answering the conscience of a Catholic layman phone, and keeping school rec­ A SEhlSE (d deep respect and knowledge and experience. He quiet, sustaining and enlarging educated m the mind of the ords, performed such services appreciation prompts these few was particularly sensitive to the inflnence in every concern of Church and ably capable of in­ as typing, mimeographing, and words of tribute today at the good name of the Church and its the Church in onr area. terpreting it in popular terms correcting tests; recording final prayerful obsequies of a interests in every instance, often I know I voice the matured and legal strategy,” Archbiriiop grades, and supervising play tried and true friend, a devoted when it meant sustaining per­ and considered judgment of ev­ Urban J. Vehr Denver said grounds and lundirooms. counsdlor and legal guardian of sonal loss or disregarding per­ ery informed priest and layman, at the Requiem Mass for Joseph the interests of the church in our sonal preference. even remotely familiar with ad­ A. Craven, May 12 in St. James’ area, these many past years. His wide professional experi­ ministration and its problems, churdi, Dienver. It is dlfficuH to recount ade, ence in the-varied and multiplied that the Church of Colorado has “The Church in Colorado,” quately tiie scope of technical legal administrative problems suffered in his deafii an irrepa­ the Archbishop noted, “owes advice, the many and varied of the Church of Colorado has rable loss. him deep appreciation and grat­ consultations over the years on made his name an honored itude for 1^ quiet, sustaining, such a variety of topics of great guardian with our institutions WE HAVE grown to value bis Where Your Money and enlarging influence hi every or lesser import, that comprises over the years. inherent worth, his upright concern of the Church in our the experiences of church ad­ His talents and background Catholic life, his matured and area.” ministration. were nationally res{wcted and informed legal judgment, his Mr. Craven had been attorney These demand mature and ac­ highly regarded in the droles of unstinted devotion to his faith for tbe archdiocese since 1931. solutions from the stand­ our Church and beyond the con­ and bis Church. The Requiem Mass in St. James’ point of civil law and public pol­ fines of our state. As an official token of recogni­ Earns '/ % was offered by the Rt. Rev. icy. Errors in fact or in judg­ tion, the Holy Father conferred 4 2 He had personally inaugurated upon him the Papal honor of Monsignor WUttam V. Powers, ment may have far reaching and and directed to a successful con­ lUright Commander of St. Greg Currant Dividande pastor. Archbishop Vehr gave long range dlects of serious clusion several state wide move­ ory several years ago. the absolution in the (hurch and consequences. ments within my memory that preached. May the good Lord reward have had a most important and FACTS ABOUT SAVINGS TIMES WITHOUT number him in eternity. In the name of Three other members of the far reaching effect on our tax during the ’ past 30 years, we the priests and the laity of the Hierarchy at the funeral were structure, the juridical rights of consulted together on matters of Archdiocese, I express to Mrs. Bishop Charles A. Bnswell of the Church, and the general wel­ 1. Money invested by the 10th of the month earns from the 1st. official business. I have learned Craven, his devoted and loving Pueblo, Bishop Hubert M. fare of the Church and allied to appreciate Mr. Craven’s com­ family, our sincere and prayer­ Newell of Cheyenne, and'Aaxll- institutions. prehensive knowledge of law, ful sympathy. 2. Dividends compounded semi-annually. iary Bishop David M. Maloney his familiarity through per­ Mr. Craven bad the particu­ of Denver. If I might interpret his mind sonal contact with practically larly informed and sensitive and his Catholic sense, I think A number of Monsignori, 3. Use your money during dividend periods without losing every phase of official Church conscience of a Catholic lay­ he would ask us today to forget priests, and nuns, and many of work, and his delicate sense of man educated in the mind of for the moment the laudatory your dividends . . . Ask us how. the laity were also present for propriety and interest and devo­ the Church and ably capable of comments, which are his due, the funeral. Interment was in tion to the Church and its af­ interpreting it in popular terms and remember his soul in our 4. Your Savings always readily available. Mt. OliveL fairs. and legal strategy. The Church prayers. Everyone imbued with a fun­ damental religious conviction, 5. Deposits accepted from $5.00 to $20,000. knows that we live here our few years of life in preparation for 6. Accuracy assured by NCR bookkeeping methods. RELIGIOUS ARTICLES eternity. What an empty exist­ ence life would be without the • STATUES • ROSARIES • MEDALS soothing message of the Risen Christ, “I am the resurrection • PiaURES • PRAYER BOOKS and the life. He that believeth in Me shall not taste death for­ • PENDANTS • BOOKS • PLAQUES The ever.” The Archdiocese of Denver Complete Line of Religious Articles for Church ond Home and the Church of this area ex­ presses to his bereaved family our deep sympathy and con­ HOME SAVINOS A. P. WAGNER & CO. dolence. We shall remember him in our prayers, our Masses and Holy Communions, that Al­ and Loan CHURCH GOODS mighty God will quickly grant Association him eternal rest and everlasting IN DENVER Years Without Missing a Dividend 606 14th St., Between California & Welton bliss with the blessed in heaven. IN BOULDER May bis soul and the souls 1510 Glnnorm — MA 3-5269 1913 Broadway — HI 2-1560 TA. 5-8331 > of the faithful departed rest in peace. May God bless all of us. •*' JL.\.-UKPtMt * Thuriday, May 17, 1962 THE DENVER CATHOLIC MGISTiR PAGE FOUR REGISTER O p i H t m REGISTORIflLS Life Begins at 80 For Pope, Cardinal Catholics in Civil Rights

B y R. G. P e rn s By Paul H. Hallet and religious aspects of legal THE GREEN CASE is ah o p e JOHN XXIII continues to amaze and inspire h e m o n th of the can- issues. His work on the im­ example of a civil rights cause P the world with his pnxrf that age is no barrier . onizatlon of Blessed portant Green case is one con­ which if successful would im­ to new ideas and forceful programs. But what sur­ T Martin de Porres happened crete to refutation of the asser­ mediately bring beneflt to the fall at a time when agitation tion sometimes made that nation and to the principle of prises me is .the fact that Pope John has seemingly Catholics do not interest them­ equality. The same thing could D^n able to pass on to others of the same age the for Negro rights was at a spe­ cial pitch of interest. The en­ selves in civU rights where not be said of many causes vitality and progressive­ they are not direcUy involved. that go by the name of civil ness teat are his. I have rollment of this Negro in the canon of the saints offers a Green happens to be a Cath­ rights which dre sometimes in mind especially Cardi­ espoused for petty ends by bi­ good starting point to review a olic, but a decision up­ Behind nal Augustin Bea, tee Ger­ development in the civil rights goted people. holding the jndgment of the man * bom Jesuit of 81, field where a Catholic was Just this week a magnifi­ Colorado Anti-Discrimination whom Pope John was wise the prime mover. cent editorial in Catholic Ac­ the Commission in his favor will enough to name as head tion of the South by Millard Just a week before the can­ of course be of the greatest Everett, formerly an associate of the Vatican’s Secretar­ Headlines onization, the U. S. Supreme practical benefit to Negroes editor of this paper, brought iat for Promoting Chris­ Court was asked to review the everywhere, and indeed to the out the fact that the very man tian Unity, case of Marlon D. Green, a nation as a whole. Green is who claims to have originated Negro pilot of Michigan who now at a mechanical job, sev­ the ‘Treedom Bus" rides, THE HISTORY of the Church in this area is not when he came to Denver in eral notches below bis real whereby ignorant Negroes are one teat would advise the use of an old man in such 1957 was denied employment ability, a tragic example of transported North without any a post. Ever since the Reformation, conditions have as a pilot by Continental Air the stupidity of race prejudice. preparation as a sort of sar­ Lines, although, according to At the time he made applica­ donic joke, was also the one been such that the Church was hardly what you the findings of the Colorado would describe as highly active in its approach to tion he was 28 years old, and who brought suit in 1951 to .Anti-Discrimination Commis­ Continental’s maximum em­ remove from public property Protestants. sion of that year, he “was ployment age was 80 years. in New Orleans a statue of As Pope John has pointed out again and again, better qualifl^ for the po­ He is therefore now overage St. Frances Xavier Cabrinl this is no time to determine who is responsible for sition of co-pilot than any ap­ for a pilot, and in five years, and in the same year asked what in the sad sto^ of religious tensiqns. But those plicant Interviewed." when he could be learning and a legal ban on the released- tensions on both sides have been such that there adjusting in the demanding time program for religious in­ simply was none of this charitable approach among THE GREEN CASE has profession of an airline pilot, struction in the public schools tee various churches. For even the Protestant been quietly handled by a not­ his talents have gone to waste of Baton Rouge, La. These ed Catholic lawyer of Denver, — all, apparently, because of causes of an archsegregation­ Churches to talk with charity among themselves is who has been eminent in Cath­ something quite new. After all, their own World his race, which could not even ist are typical of those spon­ olic chariUes in this city, and be observed by the passen­ sored by many doctrinaire Council of Churches is only 14 years old. in throwing light on the moral gers who rode with him! civil rightists. As for tee Catholic approach to others, who would think of denying that it is a new breath of air Pope John has brought to tee Vatican and is attempting to breathe into the Church around the world.

YOU WOULD not ordinarily expect a church­ A Sinless Literature man whose lifetime has been spent in such an atmos­ “nPH E R E’S NO SUCH THING as phere to be tee choice to promote the new. At best with the Bible, has ever shrunk vou would expect him to be the figurehead for a a dirty book," Erskine Caldwell from telling fabout any phase of life, battle to be waged by younger men. was recently reported as saying. however repellent; but it is the But it was typical that only a couple of weeks “Literature covers all phases of glory of true literature that in} ago Cardinal Bea held the first fuU-fledged press con­ life. It can’t shrink from telling studying the phase it does not lose ference ever staged by a Cardinal in Rome. Not only A mild reminder that seme am eng us have iergatten^r tome to about any phase of life. Otherwise sight of life itself. did he speak to SO newsmen from 34 countries about Ignore-a resent vow to support the Church In all her many, many it’s not art.’’ the Council and Christian unity, but he took them needs. on. in a free-for-all questioning period that would have This is a piece of sophistry that IT IS PARTICULARLY IM­ caused many a younger churchman to hesitate. is often used against any sort of re­ PORTANT, in this connection, to' striction on pornography. It con­ warn against the abuse that has A YEAR AND ONE HALF ago it was Cardinal Dissertation on Burned Toast been made of a certain passage of Bea who ventured to publish a couple of articles in sists in confusing two things: Sin in Newman in his Idea of a University. Civilta CattoUca, articles that tread a touchy area by By J ames M. Shea wake up rather slowly, it that she did indeed—“last life and sinfulness in its'presenta­ night.” It should be obvious, though it does insisting that baptized non-Cathoiics are definitely rOTHlNG GENERATES seems to me. At any rate, they’re much more reserved Finally there are enough tion. The presentation of life is art. not seem to be, that when Newman members of tee Mystical Body. N' more profound apprecia­ It was only last November that Cardinal Bea at breakfast than at the eve­ socks, belts, sweaters, and Since life is often sinful, sin will said “it is a contradiction in terms tion of a mother’s job thdn ning meal. The mysterious hats to go around, and every­ often appear in literature, but never ive a talk in Zurich attended by almost the entire her absence. condition of sleep from which one seems reasonably fit for to attempt a sinless literature of rotestant theological faculty of Zurich University. as a natural fixture of life, always Calling the school children they have just come doesn’t the day’s demands. sinful man,” he meant merely a And last fall it was tee Cardinal’s Secretariat that without waking the baby, entirely relinquish its hold on MEANWHILE, back in the as a defect. Sin must never be of­ literature in which sin appeared. named the Church’s first official observers to tee kitchen, the coffee toward bringing in the milk without AAAfVXAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA. fered as something normal to life, He did not mean that literature assembly of the non • Catholic World Council of awakening the neighborhood, which you were pointing hope-; even if it is inevitable. The purpose Churches.. working out a breakfast menu fully has boiled away into a could treat of sin in any manner. without leaving kitchen and On state of concentrated caffeine, of life is moral; to present it with­ The very context shows that ADD TO THIS the fact of Cardinal Bea’s many refrigerator in complete chaos which you nevertheless gulp out that purpose is to distort it. As Newman had in mind a classical lit­ —these are no little things. gratefully just in time to be­ Pius XII remarked, “art” and “im­ other talks, his meeting with each of the top non-Cath- The Home gin coping with the pre-school­ erature that would fight “the multi­ olic ecclesiastics who have visited the Pope, and his er. He tears into breakfast moral” are two words in crying con­ tudinous blasphemy of his day.” energetic preparations for the Council itself and you COWARD that you are, you settle on cold cereal as the Scene with some zeal, creating a no- tradiction. The subject of every art He meant that, though there is no have a man who proves Pope John is-not the only piece de resistance for the wvwwwwvwwvwwwwvww man’s-land of crumbs. Jelly, is man, whose conscious acts can- one who seems to feel life begins at 80. morning meal, since you don’t butter, spilled milk, and sog­ “sinless” literature, there is and can them as soon as they get out gy cereal. But just as the cu­ ' not escape moral evaluation. be a sinning literature. In that all have to measure or'cook any­ of bed. thing. The fact that enthusi­ mulative effort of the break­ No true literature, beginning Catholic tradition supports him. asm for cold- cereal ranges After breakfast there is a fast cycle seems about to from moderate downward certain amount of confusion crack your composure, he doesn’t stay you in your ap­ occasioned by misplaced arti­ smiles sweetly at you and Two Great Pbpes: pointed rounds. cles of clothing, notes to b e . says, with infinite affection, written about absences, re­ Oranges must be cut up, “Hi, Dad!” Majority Has Rights Too toast prepared, and a pot of ports to be signed, lunch coffee brewed for the cook money to be distributed, and Still, you are most sincere ILLIAM J. WHALEN’S Arma­ Study in Contrast general appearance checked. Witness-gained decisions against li­ himself. But before the perco­ when you visit the children’s geddon Around the Corner (N.Y., censes for book selling and the distri­ lator is even warm, smoke be­ W By Joseph P. Kiefe» late Pontiff’s 22 volumes of mother in the hospital that John Day) reveals how a minuscule bution of religious handbills certainly gins t6 curl above the toaster. “DID YOU (joMB your discourses and radio mes­ night and tell her that every­ but aggressive sect can have a legal N AN ADDRESS reccnUy It haa>'been a year since the hair?” you ask a^young girl, could benefit Catholics and other con­ sages are only beginning to and she assures yfeu fervently body mi.sses her. influence out of proportion to its num­ delivered to the Foreign finished product emerged au­ servatives as well as the lunatic fringe reap the abundant harvest that i PressI Club in Rome, Cardinal tomatically, and it takes an i bers. A publication of the American Bar in religion. is sure to come. His teach­ A u^stin Bea, S.J., president experienced breakfast - getter Association is quoted as saying of the ings, concluded the Cardinal, i„nr I'liii.tlMiiHlii' '“:i: of tm Vatican Secretariat for to guess the toast’s progress Jehovah Witnesses, the subject of this BUT, AFTER ALL is said for tee “have become the spiritual air Promoting Christian Unity, while pouring cream from the book, that their incidental contributions value of protecting the rights of tee we breathe without even be­ was asked to give his evalu­ top of a bottle, measuring cof­ ing aware of i t " ; AND THEN to constitutional law through their num­ minority and the man wite the “un­ ation of Pope Pius XII. He fee, and appraising the rela­ erous test cases have been “tremen­ popular” cause, it remains that reli­ had been a personal friend of tive cleanliness of hands and A thought for the hour: The IN CONTRAST, Pope John, live expression. In the U.S. dously significant.” gious freedom cannot be secured just the late Pontiff for more than faces as they are presented difference between co-exist- it is called golf. within a very short time, has by trying to protect tee religious peri­ 35 years, and so he was well for inspection. ence and extinction is merely In candor, we must admit that the won the sympathy and the phery. . The majority can be so con­ qualified to give an adequate a matter of time, 4 ' f 4 Witnesses have won decisions that are hearts of sJl by his "simpli­ cerned wite seeking equality for the answer. PRAYERS and morning of­ equally of benefit to the more settled city and spontaneity.” fering are followed by a rath­ And then there were the two minority teat it hobbles its own inher­ At the same time, it was a 4 ♦ It has been my privilege to er quiet meal, in which the bookies who were coming out denominations and we should not deny difficult question, since the ent religious rights. be present at several general substitule-for-mother hardiy In .Africa native tribes beat of the church after Mass. One Cardinal had also been the them due credit. The Jehovahites, for This can happen If ^unday closing audiences of both Popes, to has a chance to join. More the ground wtth cli’'-." and ut­ turned to the other. instance, won a decision that clarified Pope’s confessor for fome 15 “The word is ‘Alleluia,’ stu­ laws are abrogated in the name of free­ be relatively close to the altar toast, more oranges, more ce­ ter bloodcurdling yells. An­ the right of a religious propagandist to years. He had to be mast as each offered Mass, and to real, more milk. Children thropologists call this primi- pid, not Hialeah!” dom for Sabbatarians, and it is iiap- careful not to bring into his speak to each personally in a call on householders who might or pening all the time today when, by discussion any knowledge of special audience. The contrast ♦ ♦ ♦ might not want to be bothered. That virtue of a decision made for a tiny the inner life of Pope Pius that \AAAAAA^^i\AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA/ made things easier for the Legion of minority, the public schools are forbid­ had been gained through the Radar has been adapted to Mary and parish census takers, who den even to voluntary religious instruc­ confessional. OkeVAL-DE-QCACE many uses, but perhaps the CHURCH IH PWhS WAS; by no means always find the welcome Profiles most unusual is the use of ra­ tion. It is time the majority instituted Cardinal Bea intimated that BUILT By Q u a H AMHE mat before the door. some test cases of its own. the life of Pius X n was al­ or AUSTRIA WTHAUKS- dar in the barnyard to deter­ GlVMG RXt THE BIRTH 0/ most paradoxical. Although he mine the thickness of fat on a ' and ASON.ATTIRMytARS hog. was one of tl^ greatest and OFCHllPLRS MARRIAGE. most famous of Popes in all Perspectives 4 > 4 history, although he represent­ You Can't Teach That! ed the highest symbol of peace ae Naturally, because there are sense of devotion to h is're­ ticular temperament, his lead­ oMe v in e PLActs dependence, or our national knit for that. You’ll find that It is well to recall that Karl sponsibilities. He was also soli­ ership, and, above all, his per­ wnau STfUIKICK more men drivers than there Motto, or the Constitution, you, can get no recommenda­ Marx seemed to know more tary in the austerity of his sonal holiness. sruoieo not Hit are women drivers. This docs hafpen to be scholastic and tion from the previous school, about our democratic system person and of his life” 1 KittKM TO irtLAMO not lake into consideration Christian. even though you’re the best than most of our educators! back scat drivers though. We may need many years, history teacher in the busi­ He attributed it to the belief > ness. Then, it follows, you can of Christianity in the immor­ even centuries, to appreciate Rt. Rev. .Matthew J. 4 4 4 DON’T START TRYING to fully the gigantic work of this l>mith, Ph.D. teach that stuff or you'll be in get no post in any second tality of the soul'and the con­ Pope and his influence upon Founding Editor, Register 7 Good wishes' .May bad luck serious trouble. A host of law­ school. sequent value of the individ­ both the Church and human­ System of Catholic follow you the rest of your yers will scream out about ual. You can't teach that, ity in the centuries ahead, he Newspapers, life. . . and never catch up the separation of Church and OUR COURTS are currently either; even though some 1(X) commented. The impact of the 1917-1960 Strange But True with vou. State. You’ll have the Ameri­ clufiered up with cases that million Americans believe it. n«rsaay, Moy 17, 1962 THE DENVER CATHOLIC REGISTER PAGE FIVE Public School Officials U.S. Laity Urged to Aid L America (Continued From Page 1) (or for Catholic lay mission la Latin America, where Ibera Puf Tribute to Teacher In America, the Maryknoller workers, noted that the first are 6,160 Catholics for every said that when Castro first came formal announcement of the priest, an tatetligent and xeal- to power, in the beginning of Papal Volunteers Program was A number of public school of­ of special services. Mr. Reiva ous laity is essential. To help 1959, he had from IS to 40 per ficials attended the Requiem was priacipal of Morey inalor made two years ago at Regis In their formation, there are 112 cent of Latin Americans on his college, Denver. High Mats May 12 in S t John school from UM to ItM. Papal Volunteers from the U.S. the Evangelist’s church, Den­ In 19W be became the first side! Now, he said, only the Placing the burden of his talk la eight Latin American coun­ ver. for James T. Reiva, long­ principal of the new Thomas Jef­ hard-core radicals and Commu­ on the importance of laymen tries, and the number is grow­ ing. Many more are needed. time Denver puUic school teach­ ferson junior and senior high nists are C^stroistas. in the Church, Father Consi- er and principat school, until he retired. dine told of the convent-bred Father Considine stressed the After Father Considlne’s talk Dr. Kenneth Oberholtzer, sup-! Mr. Reiva, who lived at 655 daughter of a rich Colombian, importance of the lay vocation to Loretto students, rather erintendent of the Denver pub- Ogden street, was bom in Cen­ who went to Moscow for train­ for works of mercy and for the F ra id s Syrianey, who has been tral City. May 8, 1967. He at­ ing because the Communists elevation or redemption of ter­ jappoiated Archdiocesaa coasni- tended elementary schools in held promise of a service that restrial realities, d which he Central City and also in Denver. she could not find in Catholic said was “authentically super­ quarters. natural.” MANY STUDENTS of Thomas The Peace Ckirps, although it She sought in Communism Jefferson high school and for­ cannot engage in works of re­ what Catholic lay workers mer students attended the Re­ ligion, offered a fine field for should have given her. quiem High Mass, which was the Catholic who wishes to per­ celebrated by F atto John An­ form works of mercy, he con-t THE UNFINISHED TASK of derson pastor of Mother of God eluded. church. Father Anderson also creating a Christian climate, delivered the eulogy. said Father Considine, roust be Monslgnor Wiliiam'ilones, sup­ Cholr Hmhmarsms for Rocerrfing the direct responsibility of the erintendent of the Arcb(fiocesan laity. It is not sometfong that school system was in attend­ The Denver Cathedral’s Men’s and Boys’ rangement of organ and harp accompani­ would be “rather nice’’ to do; ance in the sanctuary during the choir under the directioa of the Very Mon­ ments were made by Allan Bobb^ Max Brooks it is an essential task. is chairman of the gold record diviston and Mass. signor Ridard Hiester, is shown rehearsing The Church is not the priests Mrs. Robert Knecht of th^ Catholic Parent Mr. Reiva was a member of for a recording that will be released in June. Teacher League is chairman in charge of dis­ alone; It includes laymen. Many more than 30 professional and A special feature of the disc, which will bene­ tribution. A major record firm pressed the things only the laity can do. He civic organizations. He was pres­ fit Camp E t Malo, will be several selections recor^ng, titled “Camp S t Malo Sings,” last pointed to an investigation in ident of the Colorado Associa­ snag by TV and recording star Dennis Day. week in Los Angeles. Central Brazil, which revealed tion of School Administrators, who is accompanied by the choir. Special ar­ abysmal moral ignorance and and a member of the National rampant anticlericaiism among JOE BARRY Education association, the Colo­ Dennis Day Soloist rado Educational association, the workers. A properly instruct­ REALTY James T. Reiva ed laity, he said, could melt this the American association of 777-OT82 hostility. lie school system, and two pub­ School Administrators, the Den 'Camp Sf. Malo Sings' New Record Rev. John J. Considlne, M.M. lic school p ^ d p a ls were among ver School Master’s guild, and radio singer, as soloist. The camp was established in the pallbearers at the fiti -'raL the Colorado Congress of Par­ A new RCA Victor recording The disc, to be available in 1916 by the late Rt. Rev. Mon- Mr. Reiva’s last appoiaiiimnt ents an4 Educators. that will go on sale in the Den­ both stereophonic and mono­ signor Joseph J. Bosetti. It is Doadliii*! was principal of Thomas Jef­ He is survived by his wife, ver area sometime in the early phonic processes, is to be called located on 165 acres 75 miles ferson high school, Denver. He Mary Ann Reiva; one son, two part of June will feature the The deadline for stories and “Camp St. Malo Sings,” and northwest of Denver between Al- retired in March of this year daughters, two sisters. Inter­ Denver Cathedral Men’s and pictures to be published in will be distributed nationally as lenspark and Estes Park on the owing to ill health. He d i^ in ment Mt. Olivet. Boulevard mor­ Boys’ Choir, with Dennis Day, “The Denver Catholic Regis­ Sou^ St. Vrain CanyoU road. a local hospital May 0 at the tuaries. well-known recording, TV, and part of a plan to raise funds ter” is Monday at 5 p.m. of for the Denver archdiocese’s RELIGIOUS ARTICLES age of 55. All correspondence concerning the week of publication. All Hr. Reiva, ^ graduate of West boys’ camp situated near Estes the camp should be addressed correspondents are urged to Park. have their stories at “The CHURCH SUPPLIES high school in Denver, took his to Monsignor Richard Hiester, Son of Denver Couple Register” no later than Mon­ master’s degree from the Teach­ The Very Rev. Monsignor Complete Selection of Richard Hiester, director of the 1501 Pennsylvania street, Den­ day to assure their publica­ ers’ College, Columbia univer­ First Communion and Graduation sity, in 1835. He joined the Den­ camp, returned this week from ver 3, (Jolo. tion that week. ver public schools first as a Will Be Ordained Los Angeles, where he discussed Cords & Gifts teacher at Horace Mann junior The sacrament of Holy Ord­ parish, Denver, will offer his the recording with Day and St. Francis’ Nun R^calves Fullowsh^p high school and later as boys’ ers will be conferred on the Rev. first Solemn Mass in his home A. E. Hindle of the RCA'cus­ STORE HOURS advisor. Malachy R. McBride, O.F.M. church on June 17. He is a tom recording department, and Sister Harriet Joseph Newton, i Sister Harriet Joseph has 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Monday thru Friday, He became principal of Rose- Cap., June 9 in St. Joseph’s former employe of the Register. witnessed the actual recording a science teacher at St Francis |>een at St. Francis de Sales’ churdi. Hays, Kans. Bishop 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturdays dale and Milton elementary The ordinand attended St. Ig­ session with Day. de Sales’ high school, Denver, high school since 1959. She is a Frederick W. Freking of Sa- schoob In m l and of Emerson natius Loyola’s school, Denver, was awarded a fellowship for kradnate of Fontbonne college lina, Kans., will be the ordain­ and Wyman Khoois in IMS. In and St Francis seminary in CAMP ST. MALO Improve­ summer study in science and and received a graduate degree ing prelate. 1956, while serving as priacipal Victoria, Kans., bdore receiv ments was formed last month mathematics by the Shell Ck>m- from Notre Dame university. 1120 Broadway K E . 4-8233 pames foundation. + of Wyman, he also became as- The son of Mr. and Mrs. Char­ ing his bachelor’s degree in as a means to aid the camp. It sistaat In the school department les R. McBride of St. James' is a non-profit organization with She is among 100 outstanding donations being tax deductible. high school science and mathe­ Monsignor Hiester is president. matics teachers from the U. S. Mrs. Jeanne lacino is generai and Canada named to attend the 5 Million Cubans Starving, chairman, and Anthony Zarlen- 1962 graduate-level seminars at go is {he legal adviser. Cornell and Stanford Universi­ ONLY3 DAYS477F/J ties. Ex-Castro Follower Says The recording is one of the I Both schools made their selec­ organization’s first projects. (Continued From Page 1) most of the arms, includ- tions on the basis of merit and Mrs. lacino, Denver social lead­ could control them. But the op­ Mig fighter plimes. He demonstrated leadership quali­ er, spent more than four months L O W PRICE posite was true and as Fidel b^ id Cuba has subterranean air­ ties from approximately 1,000 arranging distribution of the came more and more dominated ports and that it has missile am>licants. record All persons involved in by Red influence, Luis, and sites under construction, some thousands Uke him, witnessed of which may be already com­ the project have donated their GEHERAL ELECTRIC (Castro’s betrayal of them—and time. Schools Aid *154“ pleted. Cuba. But for Luis Lichtl the life of All fees, charges, and royal terror be knew in Cuba is over ties have been waived by the Polio Clinics With QualifM Trada THOROUGHLY DISOXU- and a new life of hope has be­ American Federation of Musi­ Eight Catholic schools are do­ SIONED, Luis and six of his gun for him in America and in cians. Denver Musicians locai nating their facilities for the REFRIGERATOR friends finally joined the exodus Denver. He has been reunited 20 provided the orchestral Stop Polio campaign being of Chibans who were fleeing the with his family — wife, two music. The organization is seek­ staged Sundays, May 20 and country any way they could. daughters, and three-montlHdd ing $15,000 minimum for total May 27. For the Ll^htl party this son who was bOm in the States. improvements at the camp. The Catholic Parent-Teacher meant escape in a rowboat league will furnish workers to -Luis summed up what this Moasignor Hiester expects the Luis descrit^ this escape as new life means to him when he help in the effort to immunize “realty rougfai” After a short Rev. Malachy R. McBride, sale of the recording to help in 1,000,000 residents with ’Type I looked down at his youngest the camp Improvements. At while only he and one other fel baby and proudly said: “My O.F.M. Cap. oral polio vaccine. Some 117 present a rifle range is being re­ low were able to row. And they son is an American.” clinics have been established in built and other improvements rowed steadily for 62 hours wi^ philrsophy from S t Fedelis’ col­ the Denver area. npthing but waves big as moun­ lege in Herman, Pa. He studied are nnder way in anticipation of Catholic schools offering their the camp’s opening on June 24. tains to keep them company. theology at the Capuchin college facilities are Cure d’Ars, St. ■ ;0 At last the seven refugees were in Washington, D.C., and is at This will be the camp’s 42nd Eiizabeth’s, Blessed Sacrament, picked up by a U.S. submarine present working on a master’s season and it will mn from St. James’, Presentation, Loy­ and taken safely to the U.S degree in religious education. June 24 to Ang. 18. Seminarians, ola, All Saints’, and Precious one for every eight boys, serve Luis joined the U.S. Marines He received the orders of sub­ Blood. t and helped train many of his deacon Oct. 1, 1961, and deacon as connselors. countrymen for what proved to Feb. 9, 1962, from Auxiliary (hirrent improvements on the be the Ill-fated Cuban invasion Bishop Phillip M. Hannon of rifle and archery range allow of 196L Later wben Castro was Washington, D.C., in the Na for twice the previous number A willing to trade tractors for Cu tional Shrine of the Immaculate of youths to participate in the ban prisoners, Luis declared (inception in the nation’s cap­ sports. The rifle range is op­ N E ^ y ^ Adjustable that no one in Cuba, not even ital. erated under the rules of the Refrigerator the prisoners themselves, want­ National Rifle association, with He has five sisters: Sister Shell ed any part of this “deal” Maria in Eimhurst, HI.; Pau­ a trained NRA instructor in Since coming to America, Luis line, in Milwaukee, Wis., Marj( charge. CHEHOLET has supplied the government Jane, a student at Hschebeuf Camp fee is $40 per week, to with much military information high school, and Kathleen and be paid in advance or upon ar­ f o r concerning Cuba. He said that Madeleine, pupils at St. James’ r iv e The fee includes lodg the country has more weapons school; ing, meals, activity instruction t h e “than an the other South Amer­ Four brothers, Patrick, a stu­ local mountain trips, complete ican countries put together.” dent at St. Francis’ seminary, accident and health insurance, Lichtl added that Russia, Cze- Victoria, Kans., and James, and the free use of all camp Michael, and Timothy, all pupils facilities, including riflery and BHOilATE cho-SlovaUa, and Yugoslavia Luis Uchtl are supplying Castro with the at St. James’ school. horseback riding. *

Register System of Catholic Newspapers FIRST COMMUNION President______Most Rev. Archbishop Urban J. Vehr, DJ>. '. John B. Cavanagh, PbJ).Editor and Business M gr.___ Msgr. '. John B. Cavanagh, PbJ).Editor SETS MODEL Executive Editor______Msgr. John B. Ebel, H.A. LittD. COMPARE-GENERAL M ana^g Editor ______Floyd Anderson, K.S.G. $ 4 0 0 TA 212W Aisodate Bosineaa Manager . . Rev. Daniel J. Flaherty, MA. ELECTRIC OFFERS MORE M up I 1 J C«Mc Ft Associate Editors Linus M. Riindan, PhJ).; Paul H. Hallett, Net VohnMi FEATURES THAN ANY OTHER LittD. Only 28 IwbeaWMa. Advertising Director______John J. Murphy FIRST COMMUNION giant BRAND IN THIS PRICE RANGE Denver Catholic Register VEILS 6-foot $ 4 0 0 BUNNY Published Weekly by a up COLOR SPKIAL (or a bear) THE CATHOUC PRESS SOCIETY, (Inc.) Confirmation and First 938 Bannock Street, Denver 1, Colo. Communion Gifts For for the NO EXTRA CHARGE FOR GE MIX OR Telephone, KEystone 4-4205 P.O. Box 1620 Boys and Girls Undergraduate

CATHEDRAL MATCH COLORS INCLUDING COPPER Subscription: HOO per year Canada, fSJSO a year per subscription. DAILY MISSAL ..$ 4 .9 5 up CORVEHE Foreign countries, Inclnding Philippines, $7D0 a year. ST. JOSEPH DAILY & CORVAIR CONTINUOUS MISSALS . . .$3.75 up Thursday, May 17, 1962 >42 IMPALA MARIAN DAILY MISSAL . . $2.75 up BEL AIR OFnCIAL: ARCHDIOCESE OF DENVER BISCAYNE at...... The Denver Catholic Register merits our cordial GRADUATION CARDS, approvaL We con&m it as the official publication of the archdiocese. Whatever appears in its columns over FATHER’S DAY CARDS, AND ! T H E B i a // PIANOS-ORCANS the signature of the Ordinary or those of the Officials .m R » fV E R Nothing But APPLIANCES - TV - Ki-FI.? of our Curia is hereby declared official FIRST COMMUNION CARDS ; the Finest Open We hope The Register will be read in every home Mton. a Fri. „ jOavAdson Since 1900 Night of the archdiocese. NEVER A PARKING PROBLEM AT We urge pastors, parents, and teachers to cultivate W * # ; - \ y ailSSpr a taste in the children of the archdiocese for the reading Free Parking at Lincoln of The Register. JOHN ERGER CHURCH GOODS 2555 So. Colorado Bivd. « URBAN J. VEHR SK6-8336 d Feast of St Francis de Sales Archbishop of Denver 4436 W. 29th Ave. GR. 7-7961 JOE 1332 BROADWAY/ CH. 4-4556 JOE JR. Jan. 28, 1960. PAGE SIX THE DENVER CATHOLIC REGISTER Thursday, Moy 17, 1M2

Name Winners in Women's Press Club Contest Winners in the annual writing second prize for her article contest for members of the C(d- Miss May E. Gillis won second orado Catholic Women's Press prize for her poem, and Mrs. club were announced at a din­ Eileen Prentiss was awarded ner meeting in the Argonaut ho­ sec officers, who president; Mrs. William Moriarity, recording secretary; Mrs. Ehrman, recording secretary; the Memorial hospital, Cheyenne, Wyo. No visitors are allowed at present. will be installed at the animal CPTL tea May 17 la SL Mary’s Geoirge Lntz, corresponding secretwy; Mrs. Anthony Richter, L & S SUMMER Mrs. NeUie K. Moffitt, corres­ academy. Cherry Hills. From left are Mrs. Jack Hannon, fint fiaancial secretary; Mrs. Joseph McSbane, treasurer; Mrs. DAY CAMP ponding secretary; Miss Mag­ vice president; Mrs. Joseph Tarrantino, fourth vice present; John Scordo, historian; and Mrs. John Hiaterreitert auditor. dalene Hughes, treasurer; Mrs. Cathedral Sodality Mrs. Frank Gold, second vice president; and Mrs. Stanley lOUCATtON-lflUlATION Max Hummel, historian; -and U N C I ItS I Miss Grace Kenehan, parliamen­ Schedules Retreat Club GIBIM OT8 ACdD I Oura IS tarian. The Cathedral sodality, Den­ Directors for the coming year ver, has reserved El Pomar re­ Activities j CPTL Sets Jubilee Officer Installation include Miss Pearl Grace, Mrs. treat house, Colorado Springs, Ldmlted Registration Ing excellence in all five cate-i Honored guests will include tropolitan received recognition., Paul V. Hodges, Mrs. George V. for its annual week end retreat Gold Star Parents A highlight of the amiiual June 11 thru Aug. 31 Hughes, Mrs. Grace N. Remke, May 25-27. CPTL tea May 17 at St. gories. Icity and county health officials, Superior awards were pre­ and Mrs. Justa T. Sanchez. Miss Betty Roberts (AL 5- The 14th annual Memorial Mary’s academy. Cherry Other PTAs to merit awards doctors, school nurses, and the sented to Christ the King, Pre­ FEATURES Father Robert Meaner, as­ 5002) is accepting reservations Mass for men and women who Hills, is the installationi of were St. Dominic's, St. Berna­ chairmen and co-chairmen of sentation, St. Francis’ grade dette’s, St. Patrick’s, Presenta­ the 50 PTA units affliated with sistant at Cure d'Ars parish, from fellow-s^alists, most of died in the armed forces of the the 25th jubilee officers for school, St. James’, St. Vincent / litfrNtIra ill Denver, was a guest at the din­ tion, St. Mary’s, Littleton; Sts. the CPTL in metropolitan Den­ de Paul, St. John the Evan­ whom are young business U.S. will be attended by the the coming year with Mrs. twiaaiig, Mf, ner, for which Miss Katherine women. Peter and Paul’s, Wheatridge; ver, and 300 women who assist gelist’s and St. Therese’t, Au­ Catholic Gold Star parents George McCaddon receiv­ M ttI tlb)MtS, Kenehan was hostess. The retreatmaster will be the ing Uie president’s gawel Machebeuf high. Cathedral as volunteers in the schools. rora. Draaa, Inrllag, high, Christ the King, St. Louis, Special Guests at the lunch­ Rev. William Cantwell, C.S.P., May 20 at lO.a.m. in the Ca­ from the retiring president, Excellent awards went to St. Trawpenao, Art from Layton, Utah. thedral, Denver. A breakfast Englewood; All Saints’, St. eon include Monsignor Jones, Louis', Englewood, Cathedral Housdceepers’ Group Mrs. Robert Knecht. Mary’s Academy, St. Mary Mrs. Robert Knecht, CPTL AativHlas aad Sparta The Housekeepers’ Auxiliary will follow In the Argonaut grade school, and St, Patrick’s, The week end at the El Pomar The Very Rev. Monsignor Magdalene’s, St. Therese’s, president; Dr. Ruth J. Raata- of the Archdiocese of Denver Satisfactory certificates were^ / •rsapad kyAgaaadStx Retreat house begins at 6 p.m. hotel. Reservations are being William H. Jones, archdiocasan Aurora, and Annunciation, ma, director of maternal and win meet at the home of the merited by St. Catherine’s, ML, / Jaaa tp Saptaiibar dinner on Friday and closes taken by Mrs. Hughes, AL. 5- scl|ool superintendent, will ad­ St. Francis High, Holy Rosary, child health sendee; Dr. Mar­ Maryknoll Fathers, 2101 E. Sunday after Benediction at Carmel high. Mount Cafinel 7486, or Mrs. Read. AC. 2- minister the oath of office to St. Philomena’s, St. Joseph garet LaTourette, assistant di­ / Twaiva Fall Waakt Seventh avenue. May 20. at 6:1S 4:15 p.m. grade, St. Pius X, Aurora,! St. p.m. 4484. the officers. C.S.S.R., St. Vincent de Paul, rector of maternal and child Mary’s, Littleton, Sts. Peter and I y Na Extra Casts Holy Family, Bl. Sacrament, health service; Miss Louise Miriam Kaller Paul’s, Wheatridge, St. Anne’s Transportation to and Social Club S P t C I A L ACHIVEMENT St. James, St. Francis Grade Zetzche, maternal and child Arvada, and Assumption. school, St. Mary’s, Leadville, health nursfaig consultant; Miss To Bo Morriod awards to be presented this Participation awards went to from Camp Daily in D istinctive The Paramount Social club St. Peter’s, Greeley, St. Joseph Margaret Lewis, director of the Mr. and Mrs. Charles D. Kel­ year for the first time \4ere Holy Rosary, St. Ignatius Loyo-. Metropolitan Area will hold a dance in Townsend Fort Collins, St. Mary’s, Colora­ visiting nurse service; Mrs. ler announced the engagement la’s, St. Rose of Lima’s, Sa-| P o r t r a i t s Hall, Denver, May 22. Dancing merited by 30 PTA units. The do Springs. Eileen Wilcots, assistant con­ tefhNr New «ad Astare of their daughter, Miriam, to cred Heart, and Blessed Sacra-* You ar* cordially tn- to the music of the Speechley awards were based on partici­ sultant in maternal and child [.Year CklM a Paa-flIM George J. Fabry, son of Mr. and The health committee of the ment. | Titad to *•« OUT Por; Trio will begin at 8:30 p.m. An pation in five categories as health service; Dr. Louis Hall, ar af Ifca U w aw Caw. traitor* In Black and Mrs. Joseph W. Fabry of Ar­ invitation is extended to all sin­ recommended by the CPTL CPTL, under the chairmanship Hostesses lor the tea were* Wbttc, OUa and Direct consulting physician for pa­ vada. Sister Jean Patrice, principal! I Color gle Catholics over 35 to attend. namely, membership, program, of J. B. McCloskey, assisted by rochial schools.; Dr. William GALL EA. 2-4783 The bride-elect was graduated The cost is only 75 cents per cooperation with league, oom' Mrs. Joseph Godi^-Austen will at St. Mary’s academy; Mrii from St. Francis de Sales’ high Haynes, medical director, Tri Rutherford Phillips, and Mrs.* or PL 3^506 person. mittee, and publications. be hostesses at an appreciation county district health depart­ Faingold Studios school and attended Colorado Mt. Carmel and St. John! the luncheon May 22 in the Con­ William Hughes, recording! sec^* State university where she was ment; Mrs. Eula P. Rogers, ■ad laava yaar haaw plwaa Aid Society Evangelist’s PTAs, Denver,; re­ tinental Baking Co. at 12:15 retail of the CPTL. Musical se­ HiHon Holol a member of the Kappa Delta nursing division, tri-county diS' lections by students at SL Htriaf wM Ifta saciarwy The Queen of Heaven Aid so­ ceived gold awards for acblev p.m. ' trict health department; Dr. Ph*n*l*t-mt sorority. Mary's provided the entertain­ Mr. Fabry was graduated from ciety, Denver, will sponsor a John Blissman, medical direc­ ment. ' Holy Family high school and at­ membership tea and open St. Anthony Hospital Auxiliary tor, Jefferson County; Miss ’’lilUIUM IM M UUUBUM UM U tended Regis college. house May 20 from 2 to 4 p.m. Catherine Carey, director of ’The wedding will be on Sat­ at Queen of Heaven orphanage. To Hold 'Le Chapeau Bridge' nursing, Jefferson county, and ATTEN'nON urday, July 7. A program will be presented Mmes. Alice Kops, Carol James, BRIDES TO BE " T ! OLIVER'S' will "Sriu »■" Hit C keA by the girls. Members of the St. Anthony Hospital Auxiliary will hold “Le Chapeau and Ann Young, all nursing su w m t h r y*w w tU h i Ikn eat society and friends of the or­ Bridge’’ and a luncheon May 23 at 12:30 p.m. at the nurses’ resi­ pervisors of the tricounty dis­ tl WHMf'i Wkilt Abli CIlHi RMi- MARION phanage. A program will be ttrt, mM Stwe Ihi ililt ftr Hie M eat M orket dence auditorium. Denver. trict. and Mr. Joseph Pendleton, IrlM Ptity It wtik n , IrM.Ikt FLASH presented by Ihe girls. .Mem­ Tickets at 31.50 may be obtained by calling Mrs. Charles Red Cross director of first aid Peer t» tka aUar. . | bers of the society and friends H. Pigg, GE. 3-2155. Profits will help furnish the maternity floors and water safety. Wt the iwtlili SiStwtUi CtMtitt Serving Denver Since J92S Willi Quality Meats" | TAILORS of the orphanage are invited. Wt tilt CM M ki I Meet rent*- in the new wing. Prizes will be awarded for the most outstanding THE SAFETY COMMITTEE ill tf yitf Millri wt*llii| Cut M thtiiiiritk ncwti. ORDER hats. under the CPTL chairmanship CHOICE STEAKS - ROASTS To TUXEDO Navy Mothers’ Club The women hope to purchase a painting by Roy Kerswill, an Avtiicbl* only thrvufh y«ur of Mrs. William Moriarty, par­ own leeti florltl at re non. Fresh Poultry Fish for PROMS A REDDINGS The Rocky Mountain Navy English-born painter, now residing in Denver, for the obstetrical •ble eott. t Profanlonal M**t C atiirt to S*rv* You Mothers’ club 462 will meet at department. The general chairman for the event is Mrs. L. M. ticipated in the Metropolitan ISih & Welton KE. 4-6252 CARL A. WAGNER Phon* Pi. M*» lJU •- Av*. 1 p.m. May 21 in the DAV hall. Perlmutter; ticket chairman, Mrs. Charles H. Pigg; and dec- Safety Council’s safety program MFG. CO„ INC. Frof r.irkhii;, an> Purkrile Lot w — ■■■■■■■■■■■■■■A Benver. ! orations, Mrs. Edward T. Kennedy, and Mrs. W. E. Mogan. and 23 parochial schools in me­

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K - Thursday, May 17, 1962 THE DENVER CATHOLIC REGISTER PAGE SEVEN

To Hold Bridge By Narth District Council Tournament Goals for Commiflees Announced Single Catholic college grad­ uates and registered nurses are ; At the final meeting of the sick, handicapped, and aged lie by way of the secular press, invited to attend the activities year of the North District Coun­ were made; 119 volunteered radio, or television, so that of the Catholic Alumni Club, cil the goal for the following their services to help new moth­ more people may be properly Denver. Committees were announced, ers, new families, the needy, informed as to the work of the The first annual bridge tour­ I Mrs. John Fry of St. Anne’s and those whose lives were Oiurch in the parishes, and nament is scheduled May 25 in' Arvada, is the first vice presi­ touched by tragedy or sorrow. community. Christ the King parish hall, Den­ dent. Some 971 hours were spent ; Father James Rasby, spirit- f — — aaaaaaaaaaaaa; ver, at 8 p.m. Reservations at in sewbig for thq needy. Other SpaciahtH In Party Patirlat $2 per pair can be made with al moderator, encouraged the acts of charity too numerous Roger NitUer, RA 2-0707. omen to read and keep in- to mention are also teing per­ MARY ANNE The monthly corporate recep­ trmed of the Ecumenical Ck>un- formed in parishes daily. (fil and be personal ambassa- BAKERIES tion and Communion is sched­ SOME 108 women also con­ brs in carrying Its message to All Butter uled for June 10 in the 9 a.m. tributed volunteer services to rpl. ithers. CAKES Mass in the Cathedral. Break­ community and cathecbetical [The North Denver District for fast will follow. Reservations centers, orphanages, hospitals, jlommittee in cooperation with Wtddingi may be made by caling Bob the Mullen Home for the Aged, and (UtkoUc Charities, Mrs. Cle- Eldredge. FI S-5334. Infant of Prague Nursery, Ave PaHlat ifient Hackethal, S tr ic t chair­ Maria Clinic, the Society for Call man, has enconraged personal W *flding Pfonned Delegate Crippled Children, and Adults, 4U I. Iraa4wty - Pi. 3 4 m J acts of charity and assistance PTA L«aderf to Installed I the Craig Rehabilitation Center, 33 W. «iiai4, l »altwt»4. SU 1-IOM Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Callahan Connie Lou Smith, daughter to Catholic institations and U Ina4wty - IP. 7-7411 Mrs. Gerald TeBockhorst, outgoing PTA seph Minogue, historian; and Mrs. E. J. of Mr. and Mrs. Vincent A. totaling 3,984 hours. announce the forthcoming mar­ Agencies and civic drives, as Some 703 women contributed president at Christ the King parish, Denver, Stechschulte, corresponding secretary; and, riage of their daughter, Kath Smith of Blessed Sacrament their goal for IMl and 1962. is pletnred with the new officers for the standing, Mrs. Anthony Karpisek, recording parish, Denver, is spending volunteer services Jto the Uhited leen Joyce, to As a result, 262 visits to the Fund, polio, cancer, the Easter year 1N2-03, who will be installed at the last secretary, Mrs. James Burch, treasurer; Mrs. James L. this week in Detroit, Mich., as Will meeting of the year. May 21, at 8 pjn. Left Herbert Flannery, Jr., first vice president; delegate at large from Colo­ Announces Candidacy Seal, Red Cross, and veterans la Brisnehan in groups totaling over 500 hours. CARPETS to rlghL seated, are Mrs. TeBockhorst, Mrs. Mrs. Martin Kelly, auditor; and Mrs. Wil­ Holy Family rado to the American Nurses’ WiH W. H. Hadley, incoming president; Mrs. Jo­ liam Pankovich, second vice president. association’s national conven­ For Colorado House Mrs. Charles Saavedra, chair­ church June 9. M. Gladys Brooks, Denver Room Size D l l tion. man, spoke of the need of ac ’The bride- housewife, announced her inten­ and Smaller IV w V lv Miss Smith, who is on the curate information of Catholic to-be is a tion to seek one of the 17 Den- Largatl Mlactlom In lha City. By Archbifhop’s Guild ‘ school of nursing faculty at activities submitted to the pub- graduate of vter seats in the Colorado House Penrose hospital, Colorado Furniture M u 'S ? ” Holy Family otf Representatives. HUNT CLIANBIIS high school Springs, received her degree Ona M n in ta4 Wt4aM4if Irnlafi Outing Planned for Orphanage Grads from Loretto Heights college Mrs. Brooks is an active mem­ Compltl* Laundry A nil 1)30 PJI. and is an em­ ber of the local American So Alttrallen tarvica in June of 1955. She was (Archbishop’s Guild, Denver) Mary Ellen Johnson will be Queen of Heaven circle May 23. ploye of the dety of Women Accountants, We Specialize in elected to “Who’s Who in E.M.W. The graduation class at the hostesf May 22 for St. Shirley Barlow will have a de­ Colorado Na- ctUih.n aind served as chairman of its Quality Tailoring American Colleges and Uni­ where cash talki Queen of Heaven orphanage Bridget’s circle. sert bridge for this group May tional bank. Mr. Brisnehan, son m 1.17th Ava.-il2U 1. Calfax versities," in recognition of legislative committee. She has 2111 So. Broadway will be hjonored at a special St. Thomas Moore’s circle 17. of Mr. and Mrs. Charles F. AC. 1-3U5 AC. 1 tMI her outstanding academic served on the Denver citizens 7N1 I . Ilh Ava. Sllcrman 6r27S4 outing May 26. Barbara Ma­ will meet May 25 in the home St. James’ circle will meet Brisnehan, is also a graduate of budget committee; and is a for F L. s-m * achievements and leadership honey, chairman of the “big of Mary Beier. May 23 in the home of Doro­ Holy Family high school and mer member of the Colorado qualities. The selection is sister" group of the guild, has Thelma Elliott will be the thy Roy. attended Regis college. He is Press Association. made plans for the girls to hostess May 21 for St. Jude’s Santa Maria circle will have now attending Colorado State made by the student body and faculty. Mrs. Brooks received her for­ spend the afternoon at Elitch’s circle. a brunch May 20 at Mount college, Greeley. mal education at Mt. St. Scho- Gardens and attend a dinner. Blessed Sacrament circle will Vernon. Margaret Walsh is at Engagement Told l^stica, in Canon Cily, and took Bemieta Hauptman, chair­ meet May 24 in the home of tending the fair in Seattle, and Engogamenl special business training in Den- Call man of St. Clare’s group, an­ Mary, Frances, and Catherine Josephine Adams and her hus Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Boettcher vier. She lives with her husband nounced her members enter­ Nadroff. band are leaving this week for Mr. and Mrs. John L. Connolly, of Columbus, Neb., announced dt 963 Logan street. A married tained their “little sisters’’ at Joanne Barton will entertain San Francisco and Seattle. Sioux City, la., announce the en­ the engagement of their daugh­ snn is a teacher at the Univer­ a picnic May 6. gagement of their daughter, ter, Nancy Boettcher of Den­ sity of Arizona. TA 5-2291 Mary, to Charles N. Eby, son St. John’s circlb will meet ver, to Frank of Mrs. Dallis Eby and Mr. Da­ May 20 in the home of Helen E E. Zook, son M iKhabauf ToiMlier Couple at St. Francis' vid H. Eby, all of Denver. for Peak. of Mr. and Mrs. Harry T. To Bo Wad in Juna Polly Evans will entertain Miss Connolly will be grad­ Zook of Den­ ' Mr. and Mrs, Clarence J. FREE Estimate ()ueen of Angels circle May 23 To Note 50th Jubilee uated front Loretto Heights col lege at the end of May. Mr. Eby ver. 3eitz, now of Salt Lake City, in the home of Jane Kuwait. Hr. and Mrs. Adolph C. Hil­ Ky., Feb. 16, 1891. She came to announce the engagement of in your home RaaBUBBESSS=SES= attended Regis high school and The bride- Denver as a child: Regis college, as well as the their daughter, Clare Ann, toi ler will renew their vows elect attended Richard E. Tischer, son of Mr. hr Their eight children are Mrs. University of Colorado. He is at by Mr. Pisano DRY CLEANING at a Mass in St. Francis de Mt. St. Scho- and Mrs. Albert Tischer of Day- Emma Renaud, Mrs. Cecilia present associated with Majerus astica’s col­ AND LAUNDRY Sales’ diurch Saturday, May tbn, O. 4 Ross, Mrs. Frances Koehler, Duplicating company of Denver lege, Atchison, with CmH 19, to mark their 50th wedding Mrs. Helen Fletcher, Miss Jose­ Miss Seitz attended Cathedral The wedding will take place Nanev Boettcher graduated high school, was graduated anniversary. The couple were phine Miller, and Leonard, Al­ CASCADE in Sioux City, la. on Aug. 4. from Duchesne college of the fi;om St. Mary college, Xavier, no obligation bert, and William Miller. All T A b erS M n married in St. Elizabeth’s Sacred Heart, Omaha, Neb. She Kans., and received her M.A but Miss Miller, who moved to church, Denver, May 15, 1912. taught one year in St. John at the University of Illinois. She Martin Pitono Santa Monica, Calif., live in the Engagement The Mass will be celebrated the Evangelist’s school, Denver, ife currently on the faculty at Denver area, t Announced and is now teaching in public by their nephew, the Rev. Vin­ Machebeuf high school. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Genara schools. Mr. Zook attended St. Mr. Tischer received his un­ cent Langfield, C.SS.R.,. of Glen­ IT COSTS NO MORE of Denver announced the en­ Francis de Sales’ high school, dergraduate degree at the Uni­ view, ni. Set Annual Mass, gagement of their daughter, Denver, and was graduated versity of Dayton and will be The couple’s eight children— Communion for Gloria, to Art Cordova, son of from St. Benedict’s college, awarded a PH.D. in chemical to give Your FURS five glris and three boys—23 Mr. and Mrs. Jake Cordova. Atchison, Kans. engineering this spring from •6 grandchildren, and three great­ Junior C. D. of A. The bride- They plan to be married in the University of Illinois. grandchildren will honor them at elect IS a St. Bonaventure’s church, Col­ After their wedding, June 23, • The finest Cold Storage Protection umbus, Neb., July 21. Oluti MaoM. Mr. ______:~TIair'm d -xroup graduate o f : i(). St. Philomena’s, the couple and Mrs. Miller have spent their r6*ceptlon of Communion for the ;Foaa|>ti'a • will reside tn Corning, N. Y., • Custejm Fur Restyling Junior Catholic Daughters of high school entire married life in Denver. Loig J. Tarantino Where he will do research (or America and Juniorettes will be and Mr. Cor­ They now reside at 350 S. Em­ Mr. and Mrs. Anthony J. Tar- (|orning Glass. Miss Seitz is a in St. Mary’s church. Littleton, dova attend­ • Metitulous Repairing erson street. antino an­ ifiember of Kappa Gamma Pi May 26 at 8 a.ni. Father Fred­ ed Adams and Delta Epsilon Sigma, na A reception for friends will be nounced the erick McCallin, cha;riain, will be State college. lonal Catholic honor societies from 2 to 4 p.m. at Wolhurst. engagement of • The Finest in Cleaning the celebrant. They will be | their daugh­ Mr. Miller, a native of Denver, married in bom Nov. 14, 1890, was a cab­ The procession of roses and ter, Lois Jean,' All Saints’ to Joseph L. a t I inet maker. He retired in 1856 consecration to Sacred Heart church. Den­ (tiorta Genara Tho Mott Imortonl will precede the Mass. Brunetti, son from the Rio Grande railroad ver. June 9. after 21 years of employment. Father Barry Wogan, pastor of Mr. and Mrs. Mike Mrs. Miller, the former Emma at St. Rose of Lima’s parish. Brunetti. Miss STUDIO CAKE Flaig, was born in Newport Denver, will present 25 Marian In your lift for fht awards to the juniors. Other Fleming Men Tarantino is a graduate of PORTRAIT most Important occasion awards will be given to 55 Jun­ WFURS iorettes, and two St. Ann awards Mt. Carmel Lois Tarantino Wedding Cakes |, Dr. Jomes P. Groy Discuss ihigh school, PHOTOGRAPHY by 714 East Colfax A Specialty to two adult members of the junior council. i Mr. Brunetti has just returned EDWASO A. DE CROCE OPTOMETRIST I from the Navy, having served All members of the council Remodeling 46S6 E. COLFAX * Summer Rotes Now Available on ALL Work * and mothers of juniors and Jun­ for four and a half years. niEMONT 74601 Eyes Examined iorettes are invited to attend the (St. Peter’s Parish, Fleming) •August 12 has been set for DENVER 20. COLO, - their wedding day. Visual Care Mass and breakfast that will At the Holy Name society’.s follow in the parish school Hall. meeting, with Father James Pur- 213 Colo. Bldg. At the state convention of (he field, pastor, and 22 members Phone RA 2-2859 1615 Calif. Catholic Daughters of America present, the main discussion Homo of Finn Postiios in Colorado Springs, announce­ was on the remodeling of the 4 STORii TO SIRVi YOU For Appoinlment Call: ment was made that Teresa Ann church to be started this fall. 66 So. Bioodway 735 So. Univoditv TA. 5 8883 Marine was the winner in (he The music recital by Sister IS50 Colo. Blvd. 3410 E. 3rd Av» state poetry contest. ; Anselm’s pupils and choir was I a success, with 150 pupils in at­ tendance. On the committee was Mmes. Jack Kobnen, Lawrence Brehel, Will Cogan, Frank q p j » y r Scheafer, and Joe Wernsman. On May 18 (he children who will start school next fall are to go to school for a day. They are Jerry Wernsman, Nora Lou Burenheide, Karen Koduen, Bruce Brekll, and Johnny Born- I hoft. i May devotions are held each i Saturday at 7:30 p.m. The May I crowning will be held on May 26 and be followed by a dance sponsored by the youth. The school picnic will be on Kleenex 4 1 I May 24 with a basket dinner at noon and ball games in the Fociol Tissue. White, Pink, Yellow, Aqua. afternoon. The children are entering the 4-H talent contest to be held in Sterling May 19. They will pre­ sent a musical skit. EVERY LOCATION A COMPLETE DRY CLEANING PLANT YOU WILL FIND YOUR PARISH ONE HOUR MARTINIZING LISTED BELOW Rib Roast Denver Students Make USDA Choice Beef. Aged for tenderness. Cut from the first Seattle U. Honor Roll ST. ANNE'S Two Seattle university stu­ CATHEDRAL HOLY TRINin PRESENTATION CATHEDRAL dents from the Archdiocese of North aata Shopping (ARVADA) NOTRE DAME - 5 ribs only; chine bone removed. 226 E. 13TI1 AVE. Ctntar 518 E. Colfax ST. ANTHONY and Denver have qualified for the 7130 No. Ftdtrol winter quarter honor roll. They (Ntxt to Foodland ARVADA SQUARE ST. ROSE OF LIMA Ted Lothamer,.Mgr. Sugar Mrkl.) Gfrtrd Ichmidt, Mgr. are Sharon L. Doyle, daughter (6 doorg So. of Furr SHOPPING CENTER Irving A W. Alamtdi M«mb«r of of Mr. and Mrs. James D. Doyle. Harold Claavas, Mgr. Food Mkt.) Rex Paullui, Mgr. Sarnia Finnarty, Jr., Mgc Melh«r of Ood Ptrlsh 3042 S. Josephine, Denver; and -4? Randolph R. Lumpp, son of Mr. Bananas 3 ib. 39° and Mrs. John H. Lumpp, ANNUNCIATION HOLY FAMILY OUR LADY MOST ST. LOUIS, ST. BERNADEHE Golden ripe, top quality. Wheatridge. “Randy” Lumpp, 20, a junior, LOYOLA OF FATIMA 38th & ^ n to n PRECIOUS BLOOD ENGLEWOOD AND ST. MARY Colo. Blvd. has been named editor-in-chief 34lh & Downing John Lin d r it I«tm 5t15 to. Univonity MAGDALENE ! of the Spectator, campus bi- 1490 Carr Ownor Celfox of Piorco We give Gold Bond Stamps Anthony Pocrnich, RUSSELL WALKER, Hoiea Washington, Mgr. Bill Flynn, Mgr. Horry Cotlonton, Btrntrd (Rod) i weekly newspaper, for the 1962- l^r. JR., Mgr. FInnorty, Mgr. 63 year. Mgr. ST. MARY’S, Litlleton, ALL SiOULS, Englewood 73 E. BELLEVIEW Elected at Marquette Ray Belair, Mgr. Mi-is Terry Fraser, dauchter COLORADO SPRINGS 1 SAFEWAY of .Mr. and Mrs. C. Glynn Fras­ O ' ( er of Lakewood, has been elccl- j ed to the sophomore co-ed 2320 E. PLAHE AVE. Prices good in Denver and Suburb's Thurs. thru Sat., May 17-19, 1962 I board at Marquette University. 317 SO. NEVADA GOLF ACRES VENHIAN VILLAGE I .Milwaukee. She is a graduate Food Bank Shopping Center SHOPPING CENTER We reserve right to limit quantities. None sold to dealers. Dewey Johnson, .Mgr. I of St. .Mary's academv, Cherrv Leonard Guzman, Mgr. Al Weppner 8100 North Hancock C Copyright 1962, Safeway Stores, Incorporated I Hills.

7 > y PAGE EIGHT THE DENVER CATHOLIC REGISTER Thursday, May 17, 1 GIs Get to See Netw$rk ^V Production Ho Easy Job, 'Literature and Shakespeare' Ice Follies Show To Be 'Regis Presents' Topic Service men of Artillery Bat­ tery Bl-121 of Fort Lewis, But HBCs Doris Ann Fits the Role i On Television KVX)R (Colo. Springs) — Sundays A discussion on “The Nature Hamlet and The Tempest ta I 10:10 a.m. show that “literature, like the­ Wash., were guests of the man­ DENVER KBOL (Boulder) — Mon-Set.. 0:13 of Literature as Shakespeare agement of the Ice Follies of By C. J'. ZecHA NBC - TV religious department part series on the “Catholic KOA-TV Chamiel 4. 1 a.m. Sees It” by the Rev. Robert R. ology, deals With mystery be­ KTV'R. Chauncl 2. KOLR (Sterltngl — Saturdays. 0:43 yond the grasp of the human in­ IMl during the show’s run in looks for letters not only of ap­ Hour” called “Rome Eltemal,” KLZ-TV. Channel 7. Those who watch the Catholic a.m. Boyle, S.J., will be featured on Seattle last week. preciation, “but letters that tell which was highly praise TTiere Is a Sacred Sacrifice” in and the University Theater, fea­ Standard Gas t Oils ‘’But,’’ she asserts, "we need fective point; “That even in the a.m.. and Sunday at 7:1S a.^ the quality programming the KMOR (Denver) — Sundayii 7:30 the first of a new series, "Mean­ tures Jan Rinker, Roger Lang •111 A Corona SA ^4867 more, response from oiir view­ show offers. heart of atheism, there are those a.m. I ing of Sacrifice.” ford, and Marissba Wattasek. ing audience.” She said the still doing God’s work,” the ci Sword .When she took on her present tation states. job, she moved her camera Par Mia lislaiiar Room crew each week into a church The network’s partnership with the three major faith Featuring delldoui entrees c|nd to televise a devotional serv­ tnony other exotic diihei, but pur ice. Except for special pro­ groups has resulted in what WALSH, 6 IU & SMITH critics generally have hailed as 22 Songs menu also includes your fovodlte grams at Christmas, Palm Sun- lor Children in Top Album dishes . . . carefully prepared pnd genuinely creative program­ temptingly served. |; ming. It used noted actors, too, Although the market is f ille d children’s chorus with music ar­ ual best. especiaUy on Uit slow bal­ lads. "Star Dust," which features Otir Evening Buffet like Charlton Heston, Judith with juvenile recordings, the ranged and conducted by Nor­ lbs trombone ol Lawrence Brown, Est. 1864 Anderson, Cedric Hardwick, problem of finding the rigi t re­ man Paris. Each song is intro­ is exceptional. a specialty Theodore Bikel, Sam Jaffe duced and then sung. The spon­ cord for the right youngslier is WALK ON WILD SIDE (Choreo Peter J. Walsh, Managing Partner Ruby Dee and Raymond Mas­ taneous chatter between Miss Asm: Composer Elmer Bernstein sey. Among its many “first,” somewhat of a problem. But a Rice and the children adds to lends distUtcUon to his conducting of his own composition written for a 1010 GUARANTY the program offered the first new release on the Harmony its attractiveness. rather undlstln^shed motion pic­ dramatization anywhere of The label, a subsidiary of Colujmbia ture. There are some stralfhtfo^ BANK BLDG. DENVER MA 3-7245 ward and pleasant themes tn the Diary of Anne Frank, before it records, is highly recommended MISS RICE’S zestful personal­ jszx Idiom here. A lew of the selec­ became a stage play or a and one of the most enteftain- ity is captured on the disc. She tions art somewhat hackneyed and movie, and the first demonstra­ are of UtUe interest apart from serv­ ing to come along in some ^ime. and the children are very en­ ing as a movie background end, at tion in English of the Catholic “Hey Kids, Let’s Sing! ’’ gaging in the musical numbers, a result, seem t* hang loose. But Mass. the orchestra and sound are vigor­ ...... — title oif this fun-filled alb which are handled deftly by ous. children’s songs. It feat Paris. Just for kicks we recent­ MISS ANN, born in Newark, talented young singer, Ros ly tried this album out on two- JAZZ MESSENGERS (Epic 1<023): N.J., now lives in East Orange, Art Blakey's group featuns Barney YOUR W ISH':ii Rice, who is backeci up year-old Peter Kleine of Color­ WUen on the stzo|Stone. These Ire N.J. She joined NBC in 1944 ado Springs. The youngster lis­ Uiemes by J. M any featured In a South Fodfla and has b ^ n a producer since tened attentively to one complete French fUm "Dangerous Friend­ in tho 1651. Her full name is Doris ships." The recording offers UtUe In side of this 12-lnch disc. Al­ the way of modern ja n music. £ H ..0 y i o m TWJE....4 Ann Scharfenberg. She dropped though the disc is aimed to ap- Two numbers, "Prelude In Blue." her last name on the job be­ M o v i e s and a LaUn-type arrangement scor­ ed lor solo plino that is unusual for cause. ds she once explained, its tonal tricks, are very good, but “the switchboard girls couldn’t hardly worth the price of the album. manage it.” Following are nimi to appeXr on Doris Ann Denver and Colorado S p r in t tele. vlalon thl( week. These are _ i rat- day. and Easter, she has aban­ "1945 to Today" Set togs of (he Legtoa of Decency *Waeu< MILtetit^A 4I WiMMleeilmm »> T. P. TV & RADIO SERVICE W t / " aiTCH'S Uie nims were first released, klew- TV RenUls doned that format. She feels that ers should consult loeal pt,,-,.,,. TV has something else to offer On Catholic Hour TV lisUngs regarding time and itlUno. New & Used TV’s For Sale OPENS viewers that can add appreci­ Ratings have been checked (ft . Drive-in Car Radio Repair “1945 to Today,” the second llsUjigs found in "TV Guide” SERVICE CALLS DAY er NIGHT ably to their understanding and zinc. Day Phone U3-3371 Night Phone FL 3-11N SAT., experience of religion. part of “America and Com­ Uth A LIpen munism” on the Catholic Hour MAY 11-23 “It must do what it can do —— ------, ------will be televised Sunday, May A-1: For the Family > MAY19 best,” Miss Ann says. “It must Tom. Sawyer Texas Ladyj t'*^'^'^*vmMfvirwwwwwvwwwwwvvwu vv exploit its own potential — in 20, on KOA-TV, Channel 4, Young Tom Melody Trau Danct in Edison Young Stratoer drama, dance, debate, discus­ Denver, at 9;30 a.m. Hidden Cold TRAVELING MEN the TROC to Ttus chronological report on nonir or w 9 ttr p err tttmi sion, dramatic reading, music, Stoeherazade Cowhoya I p6ftl to tli08o>4ip to MIX- OP I toKfiA a -gf ^ ^ qiOriiiai— i iB la aa^aMia n and other fields, in the great the development of the cold Montana Jungle Glrli years old, this is an Indication | ARGON a UT H u T E L SHEP humane tradition of mankind.” war traces the Communist take­ Welcome Stranger Late Georg^ that it is attracUve to the very * I IIVI kla over in Eastern Europe, China, Father la Afdey A Prince Adventures (of young. POR SPKCIAL R fSIR VA TIO N I FOR VIEWERS should not look for Tibet, and Cuba since the end Moby Dick Gallant B ^ ■RID«I P A R T lit, D A N C il AND Frontier Hidin' on Clifford Snyder, the producer, FIELDS preaching or moralizing in any of World War II. OINN6R6 aidthittUdf Badmen Rainbow . has used sound effects to good amme nnrTHM wcMni of her productions. “Any les­ Taped excerpts of statements Days of Tarzan's N^w PHONE MAIN 3-3101 son we have to impart is woven by former President Truman, Jesse James York Adventure advantage. Included are round Baautiful Ballrooms Privato Dining Rooms President Kennedy, Gromyko, Young songs, "10 Little Indians," "Fre- into the fabric of the whole Mr. Lincoln tAAAAAAAAAAAPk AAAAAA AA AAA AAAAAAAAA AA AAAA: show,” she says. “We want the Gen. George Marshall, Gen. re Jacques,” "Alouette,” and audience to have a complete Lucius B. Clay, Premier Khru­ A-2: For Adults. Adolescents the more recent “This Old Man.’ shchev, and others will be pre­ Passage West Naked StreM ‘takeaway.’ We don’t stc^ amj Death of a Murder in Green There are 22 songs. Best of all, say; ‘Now, listen, We’re com­ sented. Scoundrel wich Vllliige it’s a real bargain for $1.98! ing to the message. This is it'.” The script was written by Garden of Evil Singing Guiis Roaring 20s On the Ave*ue Some other recordings of in­ Stop The network’s relipous pro­ Edward Rice, editor of Jubilee Blue Dahlia One for thei Book terest on the adult level are; gram units are making more magazine, and William Jenkins. Man From (formerlyi'Voice Colorado of the Tutee') ELLA SWINGS BRIGHTLY (Verve trips afield in search of fresh It is co-produced by the Na­ South of Suez Sergeant Madden 4034): WlUi Nelson Riddle and his television fare. In 1957 there tional Broadcasting Company DevU's Pipeline God Is M]T orchestra. EUa FtUgerald lends her and the National Council of The Way Out Co-PUot ( warm v(kce to 12 songs, some by Men's Dress was a visit to Rome for a four- KlUer la Loose You Can’t llave Jerome Kern, Dietz and Schwartz. Catholic Men. Lloyds of London Everythlite Rodgers and Hammersteln. Duke El- Kid Galahad TaUc of Tojra Ungton, and Fred Waring. Here is a Strange Intruder The Big Bus perfect blend of words and music. Rose of Wash­ Looking foij It doesn't seem possible, but as each Ed Smith to Appeor ington Square Trouble • ritzgerald recording comes along it Caribbean Sudden Fegr sounds like her best. This new one They Live Here Comds Mr is no exception. Those who watch On "House of Lord" By Night Jordan their labels closely will ■ detect an Postmark for So EvU. error. Kern's "Pick Yourself Up" is SHOES Danger So Young] credited to Dietz and Schwartz, while MOVIES "How Can We Live Our Suez Kern Is listed as the composer ol With Faith?” will be the topic of dis­ I "Alone Together." Should be the legion of Derentr cussion on the “House of the B; ParUy ObJecUosahle for[ AU other way round. With all due credit. Navy Blues Kansas City Uils is a first-rate musical treat. Ratings Lord” television program Sun­ Postman Always Confidential day, May 20, on KLZ-TV, Chan­ Rings Twice The Black [Whip JOHNNY HODGES (Verve 8452): .99 Men in Her Diary Gang Bustkra The alto-saioi*onlit U represented nel 7, Denver, at 9;S0 a.m. Ed­ TallzpiR Laughing; Anne In bright style with .the Billy Stray- Below are Legion ol Decency rat- ward Smith horn orchestra. Hodges is at his us- 6 Pr. Ingi of moUon pictures currenUy stowing in first run Denver ttoaters. a member of the Denver A-1, unafelectkiaable ftr general Op«ii Daily 9 to 9 patraugc: A-i, moblecllonable for Catholic Reg Arts Council Established Get an adnIeMeata and adults; A-S, nnaii]ec- ister editori tloomMe ftr adults; B, tblectlMable tn part for aU; C, condemned. staff, will rep­ Electric Dishwasher ^Head For The HilU” "SAop Both Stores” ‘Recommended resent th e To Aid Young Artists • JUDGMENT AT NUREMBERG. Catholic faith. pany, KFML AM-FM radio sta­ Rough, red hands got you down? Then let A-1 Also on the The Fine Arts Council, An or­ MOON PILOT. A-1 tion, which feels that radio 7 WONDERS OF WORLD, A-1 panel will be ganization which will coordin­ Reddy Kilowatt do your dishes for you with should do more to help young STATE FAIR, A-2 r e p resenta- ate the efforts of groups inter­ GERONIMO. A-2 musicians to obtain a start. a new, automatic electric dishwasher. HORIZONTAL UEUTENANT. A-2 tives of the ested in furthering the arts in • COUNTERFEIT TRAITOR, A-3 this area, has been established. KFML AM-FM is giving a schol­ IJ WEST STREET. A-2 Jewish and Ed Smith arship to one of America’s fine THE HELLIONS, A-2 The first two members (>f this PUBLIC BERVICi COMPANY Protestant faiths. music schools, as well as set­ ROCCO k HIS BROTHERS, A-3 new organization are .Allied THE VIKINGS. A-3 The Bible as a book of rules ting aside time on the air to AN INVeSTOR-OWNBD UTILITY-ON THE MOVE TRAPEZE, B for conduct, an age without Arts, Inc., and the Fine Arts • WEST SIDE STORY. A-3 broadcast performances by out­ LES LIAISONS DANGEREUSES, C standards, and ingredients of Scholarships Foundation. .Allied Arts is a long-established Denver standing Colorado musicians. THE MARK. Separately Classified decision will be subjects brought Both groups are dedicated to ob­ philanthropical institution,, well- STAGE GUIDE to the attention of the panel on taining funds and scholarships 39Hi cuid Tennyson 1842 S. Broadway CONNECTICUT YANKEE. Excellent this half-hour show. I known in the Denver ar

M i Tkuriaoy, May 17, 1962 THE DENVER CATHOLIC REGISTER RAGE NINE Cathedral, Mullen to Clash Juttior Parochial League In Battle for First Place Concludes Bowling Season The Junior Parochiii League dren participating. This is an ac­ tivity which children who do not The Tirtoal three-way tie for place. Annunciation, with only a 16 hits, including a home run wound up its bowling season at take part in other sports can first place In the Parochial win over Regis in Hve starts, by Jim Haberkom. Celebrity Sports Center with participate in easily and bene­ League Is due for a change this will tackle S t Joseph’s. The Mullen exploded for seven presentation of tpumament Sunday as two of the leaders, Bulldogs have only a forfeit win runs in the fifth inning to send awards by Father James Moyni­ ficially, especially the girts. I Mullen and Cathedral, meet in over Machebeuf in six tries. Annunciation down to its fifth han, president of the league and am pleased with the cooperation of the bowling lanes and with the opening game at 1 o’clock In the second game fifth place loss. The Cardinals opened the pastor of Our L ^ y of Grace the result so far. The‘program at the Fifth and Federal field. Regis winds up its season scoring in the top half of that parish. will be greatly expanded next Holy Family, the third team against sixth place Mt. Carmel. frame with its only run. At this Team trophies were presented enrrently claiming a share of the Both teams need a win to stay point Mustang catcher Bob Kin- to the scfamis winning division year,” top spot, takes on fourth place in contention for a place in the kel relieved A1 Moody on the honors. Individual trophies St. Francis’ in the second game first division. bill and put out the fire. were presented to all members ’Then the Mustangs exploded of the winning teams and abo Head Machebeuf at that field. Winless Machebeuf is idle this with five hits and three walks, to the boys and girb high Bowling League The Bengal’s have another Sunday. game before the Sunday encoun­ which, combined with two Car­ scorers. Cathedral upped its mark to dinal errors, led to the big seven Hie Junior division was won Officers of the Machebetif high ter with the Grems, how­ b-1 on the season, and MuBen school association bowling ever. They play Mt. Carmel runs. by tho St. Francis team of John and Holy Family remained a Holy Family battered Mache­ Bowling Winners league, which meets each this afternoon. May 17, at 4 Reichert, George Abell, Donna half game behind with 4-1 majiu beuf hurlers ^or 11 hits and Monday at 6 p.m. at the Dahlia o’clock at the City Park field. Above are ishown the winners of the Junior Father Moynihan, president of the league, and McKelvey, and Janet Miller. as all three won their tests Sun­ waltzed to an 11-S win over the Lanes are Dr. Fred Mahoney, A win will advance their record Division team champions of St. Francis, left Mrs. Elizabeth DeKoven, the group sponsor, The Bantam divbion was won day. Buffs. Tom O’Brien slugged president; Mrs. Ted Schroeder, to M, identical to Cathedral’s. to right, John Reichert. Donna McKelvey, Janet shown as they receive their awards at Cdebrity by the Mt. Carmel team o i Ron a homer, double and single to vice president; Francis Brown, Mullen eurrentlyfls 4-1. Cathedral had the hardest Miller, and George Abell. With the four are ^ Sports Center. nie Pareco, Charles Saulino, and lead the attack. treasurer, and Joe (Campbell, ■ The Eagles, vrith a i- i record, time of It. The Bluejays had to Tamara Keith. Mt. Carmel had the easiest secretary. will not be favored to upset the put together four singles in the High scorers winners were time. The Eagles scored nine Tigers, but Dave Suer of Mt. bottom of the seventh for the Joe Stecksdiulte of Christ the winnii^ run. Joe Bielak, ace runs against St. Joseph in the King parish with a score of 176, Carmel is doing some fine hurl­ Rrst inning and the contest was Great Success of CCD in Archdiocese Told ing for the Eagles, and he could Bluejay hurler, came on in re­ and Chrbtine Gifford of All lief to take the win. He also called after five with a final Saints with a score of 165. make things tough for Gerry score 16-1. i (Continued From Page 1) CCD "is thriving throughout the [^f Holy Family parish, Denver; drove in the winning run, al­ Father Moynihan said during Hoffman’s crew. Annunciation and Machebeuf | conference of diocesan CCD di country.” Rita C^rlino, St. Patrick’s, Den­ though be played with a the presentation, “’ITie main The opener at City Park Sun­ were to play their game, which | rectors in Washington, D.C.. ver, and Gloda Tolaro and Pat sprained ankle. 'The Cathedral purpose of the Junior Parochial day will have two also rans had been postponed April 29. I Monsignor Smith reported the FATHER KEKEISEN praised Stainbrook, St. Mary’s, Little­ nine blasted Raider hurlers for League is to get ail the chll slugging it out for seventh workers in the CCD for their ton. role in “the great teaching tra­ dition of the .” AWARDED ELEMENTARY Oscars' Award WILUAH/IS RAMBURr INC “The history of the Church is diplomas on the completion of a history of teaching.” he de­ a 50-hour course in methods To Highlight clared. “You are the select and a 50-hour course in doc Authorized Rambler and Nash Salee & Service apostles now carrying on this trine were: CPTL Brunch Expert Mechanical Work — All Makes grand tradition, a tradition All Saints’ parish, Marie founded on Christ, who, 2,600 Bryam, Margaret Lally, and The awarding of “Academic years ago, taught the same Ruth Martin; Holy Family par­ Oscars” to the top senior in Op«n ish, Martha Holton, Helen Pis­ each of the 16 Catholic h i^ 2030 S. UnivereUy •vsiiMes SH. 4*2781 truths in Palestine that you teach in modern Colorado.” tole, and Mary Joyce Pistole; schools in the archdiocese will Sister M. Anthony, a member Holy Ghost, Denver, Elaine highligh the annual awards of the Missionary Sisters of Our Lung; Notre Dame, I^la Gra- brunch of the Catholic Parent- GOLF Lady' of Victory and CCD super­ vina and Geraldine Maiide; Pre­ Teacher league to be held May visor for the archdiocese, called sentation, Frank Barry; and St. 31 in Mt. Carmel high school, DRIVING RANGE attention to the progresss of the Vincent de Paul’s, Denver, Denver. on a New Professional Instructions By program in the Denver metr^^ Mrs. Roy Johnson. The yearly event will open with a High Mass to be sung JOHN ZIBNACK politan area. 1962 FORD CCD classes in 40 Denver AWARDED SECONDARY at 10 a.m. in Mt. Carmel church. 18 HOLE MINIATURE The choir from the Little Flower at Johnnia HirpirFord! area parishes, Sister Anthony idiplomas for completion of a Community center will provide GOLF COURSE said, have this year an enroll­ |26-hour course in methods and music in the-Mass. 5 0 c ment of 8,621 boys and girls. ;a 20-hour course in doctrine The graduate, himself, 'were: They are taught by 263 lay OTHER HIGHUGHTS wiU be can continue the monthly SANTA FE GOLF teachers and 35 Sisters, includ­ All Saints’ parish, Eugene A awards for the winners of sci­ 475S So. Santa Fp ing the four Missionary Sisters Kowalski, William H. Miller ence, mathematics, history, and payments...IS little it Mrs. Robert McCabe, William OPEN 10 AM. TO 10 P.M. who staff Holy Ghost youth cen- Spanish tournaments in the Air force Cc^ntosf Winnmr ler and, in addition, conduct a F. O’Brien, Mrs. Vera Schnabel, archdiocese: honors for the top large number of teacher-train­ Jennie Shune, Francis C. Shyne, speech student and teacher in Looking at the “ether” side of television is Anne Morrissey, ing courses in the area. and Mrs. Charles L. Twining; each high school; and the pre­ r St. Francis de Sales’, Albert t 17-year-old Cathedral high school senior, Denver, who won the Honored with the St. Pius X sentation of two, CPjTL high k annual Armed Forces Day essay contest on “Why I Would award for 10 years of outstand iG. Nadon and L. Paul Wea school schblarships to pupils Like to Be in the Air Force.” First Lieutenant Frederick C. ing service to the CCD were Idick; Nativity, Edward A. Het graduating from the eighth tenbach. David Machmuller, k Anderson of the Lowry department of electronic principles, Mrs. Cecil Flebbe of St. Jo grade. k is showing her the operation of one of the base’s closed-circuit seph's parish. Golden, a n d Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Shafer, and The scholarships this year will k TV c s ^ ra s . Her father, T. G. Morrissey, was one of the con- Robert V. Speier; go to pupils in Holy Rosary k Mable Parker of St. Rose’s resi k strucHen contractors for that facility. dence, Denver. St, Anthony’s, Mr. and Mrs. school, Denver, and Sacred k Donald Petersen; Notre Dame, I^art, Boulder. k James Nolan; Our Lady of GIVE THAT k THE FOLLOWING were re Speakers at the brunch will k Coth^rd High Students cipients of,awards for five years Lourdes, Denver, Wilfred Buelt, include Father Alphonse M. GRADUATE A or teaching in the confraternity Thomas Cantar, James Mur­ Matucci, O.S.M., paxtor of ML HEADmRTON ray, and Glen Peacock; Carmel, and Earl Reum, direc­ HIS NEW LIFE... at k } Win Essay Co.o n t e s T Kt. Anthony of Padua’s par­ k k ish, Hazel Brandi, Kay Craw­ Presentation, Mr. . and Mrs. tor of special services in the k 2 (Cathedral High School, erick; ley, Virginia Folladori, Rose Epifanio Valdez; St. Pius X’s Denver public schools. k Music will be provided by the k t Denver) Senior senators, Cheryl Val- Gallegos, Margaret Martinac, parish. Aurora, Ignatius Tra­ d o h t w h k k| Students at Cathedral high ko, Ming Scma, Ed Ingram, Lena Padilla; pani; and St. Vincent de Paul’s, year’s archdiocesan music com­ k school, Denver, made a clean Joan Werner, Kathy Madden, Holy Family parish, Denver, |Mrs. Gordon Hampton a n d petition. \ ( * sweep in Lowry Air Force base’s and Dave Kelty; Marion Heddon; Blessed Sacra­ 'George D. Learned. Attending the brunch will be V a / y m *■' k: annual Armed Forces day essay Junior senators, Linda Smith, ment, Denver, Helen Cole; Ca­ principals and their Sister-corn k : Fifteen of the teachers who panions from high schools in k contest on “Why I Would Like! Barbara Valko, Tom Cain, Paul- thedral parish, Brigida Beier; received secondary diplomas k kjTo Be in the Air Force.” ine Clonnors Mary Ann Mercer.! st. Catherine’s, Derby, Sam- the archdiocese and the officers k were instructed by William and chairmen of tlie CPTL. A 3100 WADSWOKTH, WHEAT IIDOl k J1 The contest, judged by Don- and J ^ n McIntosh; „ , |uel Chevarria, Wynona Couch, Schrader, St. Mary’s, Littleton k aid Boucher, English instructor Sophomore senators. Bill Ert- and Lucille Sauer; St, Joseph’s, special invitation was extended Optn Evtnlngn (U) 9 k WHY WORRY to pastors of the high schools. k and librarian at Opportunity mer. Peter Parker; Susan Jay, Golden, (Tiarlotte Elliott; St. Fiflecn winner! of the first ircfi k school, was open to all high Sliocesan CCD ralech«llc«l contest who k Dominic’s. Denver, Kenneth received prizes In the ceremonies k school students in the Denver Byers; Holy Cross, Thornton, were: k area. Fourth grade, Margaret Montana, .St k Mrs. Theresa Pasley; ABOUT PARKING? Anne Morrissey, a senior at Anthony’s, first: Rhonda Fonay. Na­ ONE pickup for DIRECT service- k Sts. Peter and Paul’s, Wheat- tivity of Our Lord. Broomfield, second: k Cathedral, was the winner. Her ridge, Henrietta Dowd and Ann and Tony Tesla. Presentation. Uilrd; k entry ehmed for her an es­ FlfUi grade. Sherry Petersen, SI. An­ k Haberkom: Presentation par­ thony's. first: Krli Imheirs. Notre k Drive right' up to a Rocky Mountain Bonk corted tour of the base and a ish, Denver. Katherine McKin­ Dame parish. Denver, second; and to both k ride in an Air Force jet. ney and Frank Barry; St. Mark Ruby, AH Saints. Denver, third: k Teller's Window for service without delay. Sixth grade, Bede Kopp, Holy Trin­ k Second and third place and Rose's residence. Rose de Her­ ity. Westmlater. first; Mark Unton. k two honorable mentions in the rera; Nativity, second; and P alrtdi Bahl, coasts np k You don't hove to leave your automobile to kj contest were captured by Cathc- SI AnUiony's, third; St, Isidore’s, Hudson, Mrs. Seventh grade. Donald Hartley. Holy k Jjdral high coeds. Charlaine Bi- k Augusta Boilers and Mrs. Syl­ Trinity, first: David C. Miller St. An- conduct your banking business. klcanich, a senior, was the run- “ ony’s. second: and Kathy Campion, k via Pettinger; Our Lady of Sor­ k j!ner-up, and another senior, Ann Isotre Dame, third: DENVER CHICAGO TRUCKING CO, INC. k rows, East Lake, Alice Bram- Eighth grade. Robert Brandi. St An­ JjHoltus. thony's. first: Margaret Brennan. Holy k ming and Marie Stonehoeker: 4 5 th it Jackson • Denver • Phone Dudley 8^567 For all your banking needs k| Mary Anne Madison and Lois iFamlly. second: and James Kasenga. k Noire Dame, third. k k Heimermanj both of Cathedral St. Mary’s, Colorado Springs, k You can “Bank on Service” at the Mrs. Florence Campbell. k ' high, received honorable men­ k tion. The boy winner was Frank Special tribute also was paid k Dixon a Cathedral student, who in the ceremonies to Roger Mar­ k tinez, St. Catherine’s, Derby, k received an honorable mention. who conducted the first course Announcing the OPENING! Rocky Mountain Bank High school students were In the archdiocese on methods k chosen as school leaders for the for teaching the mentally re­ k coming year as follows: k Member FDIC tarded. The members of the k Governor, Tom Wilmot; lieu­ Pam Towier ! class, who received diplomas TED HART’S I 1415 Carr Straat Lakewood, Colo. tenant governor, Margaret Mar­ Junior-Senior Pram Queen and special mention for their Of k tinez; citizenship chairman, Dan k James Barry, Rose .Mary efforts, were Martha Holton, k BEImont 7-1351 Curillo; interschool representa- Ann Scheetz, Eleanor Rogers, k *1 live, Mary Ann Scheil; secre- Knapp, and .Ann Witmot. k New’officers will be the guests and Mary Louise Hammond, allj k ; tary of the treasury, Jim Chase; secretary of state, Monica Brod-:°^ honor at the annual inaugural DENVER GOLF SHOP k i - - ,. _ — ; ball to be held in Oscar Malo hall May 25 at 7:30 p.m. Institute for Parents i CHEERLEADERS were cho-j Of Deaf, Blind Set isen as follows: Roberta Black-i SWH!»r-| 1550 Court Place iford, Maureen Monahan. Nancy The Colorado School for the ISuvada, Roberta Northam, GayeiDeaf and the Blind in Colorado COMPLETE SELECTION Rodriguez, and Carolyn Wil-'Springs and cooperating state CONCOURSE LEVEL SWIM OF EQUIPMENT & AHIRE jliams. !agencies are arranging a sum- ' NEW LEADERS in various' parents of deaf OF HILTON HOTEL school clubs are: or blind children who have At REGIS COLLEGE I : Pep Club, Nan Horan, Rita ischool I i Small, and Carmen Radcliff; dates are June Hit '«m at thi Hilton West 50th and Loweii Blvd. itional Honor society. Lelani Lee. 4-9. Pat Collins, Allida Sanche^, and “The institute is not designed featuring DENVER'S ONLY Margaret Straw: to train parents to become INDOOR SWIMMING POOL Sodality council, Elizabeth Ta- teachers of deaf or blind chil­ ifoya. Judy Anderson and .^Mlida dren.” according to Roy M. INDOOR fSanchez; senior sodality. Eliza­ Stelle, superintendent of the Colorado School for the Deaf OPEN TO THE PUBLIC beth Tafoya. .Allida Sanchez, Ar­ lene Villejos, and Kathy Mad- and the Blind. “It is our atm !den; junior sodality. Judy ,/^n- RANGE JUNE 1st THROUGH AUGUST 18th iderson, Pat Kluck, shirley P'^®P®.*^® [Turner, and .Monica Broderick; children for entrance into MONDAY thru SATURDAY 1 p.m. to 5 p.m.— 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. : and sophomore sodality, .Mary *^® schools they must OPEN P4JLY 9 TO 9 CLOSED SUNDAYS Kay Woodman. Kathv Harpole, I Eugenia Wikon. and Linda Cha- ^'^e program will be open tO| SWIMMING LESSONS AVAILABLE , vez. either or both parents, who must | For Outdoor Practice . . I Spring was officially welcom- accompanied by their deaf! Single Admissions______.50 I ed at the high school concert blind children. They will be VISIT Children under 6 ______.25 ! May 16 by the voices of the housed at the Colorado Springs 'Cathedral chorus school without charge The only GOLFLAND Family Memberships (season) ______$35.00 I The program combined folkC'st to Ihe i»articipatmg faniil i songs and moving spirituals les will be transportation, DRIVING RANGE Single Memberships (season)______$20.00 along with .several well known .\pplications for admission 50th at Federal Broadway meiodiev should he sent to the sppenn- FOR ADDITIONAL DETAILS ■SMor Gertrude ( I'cile ilirect icndent of the Coloiado .School Open 9 a.m. to 11 p.m. doily CALL REGIS ATHLETIC OFFICE — GE 3-6565, EXT. 61 OR 62 l!|: ed [he choni'es, «i!h the ac- for the Deaf ami the Blind In- compamment of M,ii\ \nn Sen- slilule at Kiowa street', Coloi GOLF LESSONS * i, lel and John Scheiierini: ado Spring',

H ’H PAGE TEN THE DENVER CATHOLIC REGISTER Thursday, May 17, 1962

^kqjukiawi m. P o o l YOUR

■ M R U . aaala atreet. Be la aarvlved by bla atreet. Raquieni High Maas celebrated MARTINEZ HEARIKG jfU M ito (Uhb*) bi«mu. m. n n wife; liWrtniHIa; aad Me lather. A. J. May 14 m Sacred Heart church. Inter­ Juan F. Martinex. 7S. MM N. Down­ QUeSTION: Will a htarlng aid 4 Vlas iCMt. Tborntsa. ^8b« ta arrlTed Cfaarna. Raqalam High MMaaa an caMcaiabrat- nt- ment Mt. Olivet. ing street. He it survived by three ! U s ad May M l« Roly GboM choreh. la- sou. tour daughters. 17 grandchildren, hurl my ramoining h»oring7 l« . oat m . tm Uxtan. ooen graad- and li great-grandchildren. Requiem child, aad « m n l Macao mti tcnnant Fort Logan. Moare mortuary. KAOOW naabawa. George R. Kadow. 7t. 28M S. Ban- High Mass celebrated May U in Sa­ ANSWER: A preminent etoleqlit ■aoDlaB High Maao celabratadIMay May 1( ted Heart church. Interment Mt Oh i la it. Daolalc'i Da------church. ^ - ^ ■lolarawat Ml CLYNCKE aock street. He la survived by his kei Mpludkd Niii myth. H t leyt: Catherine Gertruda ayackc of Boul­ wife. Eva: one daughter, and taro vet. Trevino mortuary. Ohaat. Iiailayhnl aantuailea. "A (tw httritg lid uitn end i der. She la aarvlved I9 her huaband. brothers. Requiem High Mass edebratr MARTINEZ CASTRO OUver F.; one aon. one daughter, one ed May U in 8t. Louis’ church. In­ contidtrtbU numbar t ( the herd Jarry Cutro. U44 W. 44th avenue. brother, five alatera. and four grand­ terment Mt. Olivet. Frank Martinei. U, 1725 Hooker Um at the Aagalf ralatn lad May children. Requtem High M au eele- street. He is survived by his wife, ef hetring have tha Idta that tha M In Oar Udy at Gnadalnpe church' bratad May U In Sacred Heart of KERSEY (^iterla: 12 danghlers. three sou. one uta of an aid U Intarmert ML OUval.'. Trevino mortu- Mary chmcb. Boulder, interment In Charles H. Kersey. Jr.. 12« Fairfax brother, one sister. 48 grandchildren, ary, Boulder. street. He Is survived by his wife. and OM great-grandchild. Requiem apt to make them Gertrude F. Requiem High Masts is High Matt celebrated May 12 in Vlst- more deaf. I meat CBAHBON 1 HORTON bclag celebrated May 17 at > a.m. tatkn church. Interment Ht. Olivet. FahUn J. Charron. M. 41S Fennayl ■ Margaret M. Horton, Jltl York in ttrlat the King church. Howard mortuaries. thii falia idea fra- ! REILLY quaatly in htadling Av« Maria Clinic Votoran Mary Jean Reilly. 28. 388 S. Logan caits in my prae- Street. She Is survived by her per- tica. (I lents. Ur. end Mrs. Joseph Reilly, and I two brothers. Requiem High Mats cd- further from tha ] ebrated May 12 in St. Francis de truth. An aid will Requiem Said for Dr, William Swigert ' Sales' cburcb. Interment Mt. Olivet. keep central per­ TRECKMAN ception acuto and Dr, WlUiam B. Swigert, clinic, and who was per­ piUl with the Third Armored H tnon T. Trecknuo. >1. 847 Gilpin will improve inter- BUMkLL C Denver physician, who was sonal physician to many sem Division in World War II. ftru l. She is survived by ooe son. Bvil■KLB------one daughter, ooe sister, four grand- pratatian." Manaarr one of Uie o r l^ a l doctors inarians, clergy, and religous Dr. Swigert was a member ebUdren. seven great-grandchildren. of the Denver, Colorado, and two nieces, and one nepbew. Requiem i Early aotioa wkan a kaaring lott on the staff of Ave Maria in the Denver area, died May High Mass celebrated Hay 18 in .St ' 12 in his home. He was 53. Juin______theEvangelist's Evangellst'a ______church. Inter ; ii luipaetad it moit affaotiva. ment Ht. Olivet. Boulevard mortuaries New Officers in WfieafrMge Sanotona'i FREE audiomatrlc tait Bom June 37, 1908, in Den­ and analyiii takai only a few VALDEZ New officers of the Key and Sword so­ Moneypenny, president of the Altar and Ro­ ver, Dr. Swigert attended Re­ ciety for 1962-63 at St. Peter and Paul’s par­ minutai and will reveal tha true Rostta Valdez. 88. 3MS W Alaska sary society; John Coyne, president of the condition of your hotring. Call ar gia high school, and received place. She is survived by five sons, ish, Wheatridge, are, from left to right, Tom his B.S. from the University of fourour daughters, two sisters, one broth­ Key and Sword society; Mrs. Vernon Tomp- wrHa today for an appolntmanf Lohaus, president of the Men’s club; Mrs. without obligation . . . California at Los Angeles. He er. 41 grandchildren, and 23 great- pert, treasurer; and Robert Merkl, recording graUdchildren. Requiem High Mass cel­ John Pietro, president of the PTA; Mrs. Glenn secretary. was graduated from the Uni­ ebrated May 14 in St. Anthony of Pa­ SONOTONE dua’s cburcb. Ipterment Mt. Olivet. versity of Colorado Medical Saitt lOOi MetropoUton Bldg. school in 1934. He married Ruth Trevino mortuary. Communion Dtnvtr 2, Colorado E'. Anderson in New York City WEST , in 1935. Mayme West, 73. 3420 Fillmore street. Set for Women PTA Elects Officer Slate She Is the aunt of Geneva J. Smith, TA bor 5-1486 Dr. Swigert was a colonel in Requiem High Mass celebrated Hay IS in St. Ignatius of Loyola church In Wheatridge ..... FREE lOOKLn the IStth Hospital Reserve Unit. InUrment Ml. Olivet. Ollnger morlu At St. Rose of Lima Parish ailes. (Sts. Peter and Pant’s Parish, Sonotona, 100 MetrapaUtaa Mdf., Wheatridge) Daavar I, Celt. He also served in the field bos- (St. Rose of Lima’s Parish, WURTZ REGISTRATION for reli- flaoia ttad wHtaat ahllfatlaa • (raa Mrs. Jules DeSalvo is general Denver) Edward H. Wurti. 73, 602 E. llUi gjous instruction classes to be­ aapy at "Year Haoriag aM Year avenue. He Is survived by one daugh­ chairman of the women’s and Mr. and Mrs. Jack Major HaoM." ter, ooe grandchUd. and three great­ gin next September for chil­ girls’ annual corporate recep­ were re-elected as president of JERRY BREEN grandchildren. Requlenl High Maas dren, first through the 12th celebrated May 14 in the Cathedral. tion of Communion to be held the PTA May 7. May 20 in the 4:30 p.m. Mass. grades, attending public school Florist Interment Mt OUvet. Olinger mor­ Other officers are Mr. and AUOran tuaries. A Buffet dinner will be held in will be held May 20 and May 1004 15Ui S t Mrs. Len Vidmar, vice presi­ CilipCaatty < EMMA G. (BALL! KRAEMER the parish hail. 27 after all the Masses. MAin S-S279 dent; Mr. and Mrs. Amos Stock, Funeral services were held Hay 15 Mrs. Matt Green, reservation secretary; Mr. and Mrs. Ken at the Moore mortuary tor Emma G. chairman, said that more than Olsen re-elected treasurer; Mr. Kraemer. 71. of 1871 S. Logan street, 500 reservations have been Dr. William B. Swigert who (Ued in her home May 12. The and Mrs. Harry Schraeder, Rt. Rev. Monsignor Delisie A. Lemieuz. made. The speaker for the flay CIRBO CONSTRUCTION CO. historian; and Mr. and Mrs. American Medical societies, the pastor of St. Catherine’s church, recit­ will be Sister Mary CecUa, SW IGERT BROS. ed prayers at the serviees. Moses Martinez, auditor. American Proctological society, Marycrest high school, Denver, 1 ^ / p a a Mri. Kraemer was bom lu Anthony. Mrs. Russell McGilvery is the Nocturnal Adoration society N. Hex. on Nov. 21, ISM, and arai who teaches a course at Regis. OPTOMETRISTS chairman with Mrs. George educated in Telluiide. Colo. She moved last^meeting of the school and the Denver Athletic club. to D. of 4500 Short in the vestibule of the church. plice. He died Utj[ 11 In St. An­ The annual parish bazaar is 1550 Gslifomia St. KE. 4-5819 gert, both of Denver, and four The circle repairs and makes thony's hospital followlns a long ill­ to be held on the parish grounds | gandchiWren. Interment Mt. Ol­ ness. .rosaries ______and____ sends them to the NORTH DENVER ivet. Boulevard mortuaries. Mr. CoUins was bom May 5. H13, | fo ro isn m in io n s on June IS, 16, and 17. Mrs.l in Burdick. Ind.. and educated at Som-| missions Earle Cochran, ia chairman of erset high school in Indiana. He came- — — — to Denver from ^m erset In 1631. the dinner to be served on June Mr. Collins was manlod to Lucy 17 with Mrs. Lonise Cook as MERCHANTS Mothers Feted Stefano in Denver on Doc. 8. IMl. Party, luncheon He was employed as a pressman with co-chairman. In Brighton SmIUi Brooks PrinOng Co, lor the Scheduled May 3! Volunteers are needed to work past 12 years. on the dinner. Those interested (S t Augustine’s Parish, He Is survived by his wile. Lucy: oho sou, one daughtar, Uiree brothers, By Cure d'Ars Unit in helping, may contact Mrs. FirmicB Conaier Tops Brighton) C o c h m o , S P T-01956. t t ^ th e m im i and numerous nieces and nephews. In­ (C u re d’Ars Parirtr-Denver) Miss Margaret Sullivan, past terment ML Olivet. Boulevard mor­ of the parish to rea lW n r net Vlny?yT!nSlSirt Mooring I The annual card party and president of the ACCW, spoke to tuaries. profit of $10,000 from this year’s; luncheon sponsored by the Altar 350 mothers and daughters at NORBERT SCHMITT bazaar. LINOLEUM AND TILE the annual breakfast May 13. Requiem High Hass was celebrated and Rosary society will be held May 14 in Cure d’ Ars church lor May 31 at 12:30 p.m. A lunch­ The Knights of Columbus spon­ Norbect Schmitt. 24, of 3030 Dahlia Machebenf Club SERVia INC. OPTICAL street. Ho died May 10 in a local eon will be served and more sored the breakfast and gave FrM EitliTMtM—OutraniMd prizes to the outstanding mother hospital following a brief Illness. than 40 prizes will be presented. To Hold Dinner Dispensing Opticians Mr, Schmitt came to Denver from Inxtdldlon in the group. Gennany last year. He was a medi­ Tickets may be obtained from (Machebenf High School, DeWAYNE INGRAM The district meeting for the cal tech^ogist at Rose Memorial hos- Mrs. George McNamara, DE Denver) 3500 Llpan Street GL 5-7827 yonng peoples’ officers of Platte- pital. 3-3053, or Mrs. John Harper, The Athletic Booster’s club 4022 Tonnyson Street Born Feb. 3. 1838 in Guden. Ger­ John K. LxGuardlt many, he attended schools in Cologne, FL 5-0542. ville, Brighton, Roggen, Fori will serve its second annual GRand 7-5759 Lupton, Keenesburg, Frederick, Germany. He was a member of Cure The Boy Scout Troop of the “Contental” dinner May 19 in M*mb«r Mt. Carmil FarWi d’ Ars parish. and Hudson wUI be held May He is survived by his parents. Mr. parish is sponsoring a sraorgas the Blessed Sacrament school 20 in the school building at St. and Mrs. Nikolaus Schmitt. Frankfort. bord dinner May 26 at 6 p.m. cafeteria at 7 p.m. Gennany: ooe brother in Fort Worth. WHERE COST HAS BEEN Angnstine’s at 6 p.m. Tex.: and two brothers and (our sis­ Tickets are $1.50 for adults and Machebeuf students will pro­ NORTH DENVER LIQUOR STORE May 21-27 will be the last ters, all of Germany. Interment Mt 75 cents for children. vide entertainment of singing, Domestic and Imported week of classes in religion. OUvet. Boulevard mortuaries. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Krosky dancing, and comedy. The din SECONDARY TO SERVia FOR During that week Maryknoll MARY E. ROARTY and their committee prepared ner is $3.50 per person. WINE AND LIQUORS Requtem High Mass was celebrated Cold Beer — Mixes — Pop Sisters will show three movies. May 12 in Holy Family church lor the dinner for the Athletic ban MORE THAN HAlf A CENTURY OF TTie high school party in honor Mary E. Roarty, S3, of 5143 Tennyson quet sponsored by the Men’s of Father Roy Figilno frill be street. She died May 9 in a local nurs­ Craig C YC GL 5-4723 ing home foUowing a brief lUnass. club in the school cafeteria. given on May 21 ip the school Boro in Hannibal, Mo.’, on OcL 29, The Civics club at the schijol Edith and Carmine Lombardi, Prop auditorium. The theme this year 1878, She was the dau^ter of Owen is sponsoring a carnival May 24. Names Officers 3007 W. 44lh Ave at Federal Clatk. a pioneer railroad engineer Gn Fet'eral ol West 44th Ave. on the Corner is “A Southern Plantation.” with the Rio Grande railroad. The last St. John Vianney so (St. Michael’s Parish, Craig) CaJtJL eutd. ConMdiUiatim,. . . NEXT TG SHANNON’S BARBER SHOP Committees of adults are work­ She w u married to James £. Roarty ciety meeting of the year will be At the meeting of the CYC in ing on the decorations. The sen­ on SepL 17. 1908. in St. Louis. Mo Sm faigim Sdndon, SK.-TrNt., A W«nb«r of Stx. r«t6 W -S- W HITE & SON OE 3-642S AC 2-1851 can give a few hours a day to Benediction followed the type as a member of staff aides crowning. 'Hie Rev. Leo M. GL. 5-4438 4423 W. 43rd Ava. are the current recruitment Blach of Rangeiy gave the ser­ Comploto Dtptndablo P i u n b i l i g Sorvleo Lleonttd A Aendod needs. mon.

1 Tliurtdoy, May 17, 1962 THE DENVER CATHOLIC REGISTER PAGE ELEV EN ^

NEVIN HOMES f i A £ M n J A JPuL (p/ULdldimiiaL <£im. SUNDAY, MAY 20th ALAMEDA & SOUTH TROY AURORA, COLORADO

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# !■ -I'; ■ : i . % 1 „ V , PAGE TWELVE THE DENVER CATHOLIC REGISTER Thuridoy, May 17. 1962

High Scfceel Graduates Listed Cherry Hills Senior, Dance Planned May 19 Scholarship Winner I Donna Haraway, a senior at I St. Mary’s Academy, Cherry By All Saints' Society 30th Annual Commencement June 3 Hills is one of 41 Boettcher dent chairman of the com- rtcU ^rlcU Coebat John Gra Michael Lamlrato, Anthony Peier l-4ro-1 ■#,kQi« wirinera iriven to,out- —(See story on page 1)— S.J., rector , ham. VIcU Gand. S ham Gray, Donna tooda. Geoisa Haaone. David Lee w innO T given lo oui (All SabiU’ Parish. Dearer) seventh and eighth grades will DENVER CATHOLIC Rev. James R. Eatongh, S.J., mencement exercises Gruber, Rsw m uy Guadagmit. Cant Moauro. Jotaph Uoatoya. Robert An- Standing graduates of Colorado The blossom time ball, spon­ be held May 20 from 12:30 to 4 HIGH SCHOOLS principal ELEMENTARY INTERPARO- Harrlnitoo, John Hein. Kathy Hein, thony Nash, DciMld D. Nicholas. Frank high schools. Ulchael Heaaeuy. Gwen JoifeDsen. Joha NIcbals. Edward R. O'Rell. Den­ sored b; the Altar and Rosary p.m. in the school. 30th Annual CHIAL CHORUS - Steal Anne Karr. I^rry KtUy. Jaraea Kern. tils Pals. Michael Thomas Pompoalo. Donna will re­ society, will be held May 19 Joint Commencement MUiIl e N HIGH SCHOOL Away, Arrangement by Leo Kathleen n i t . Ourics Kliaetl, Cheryl Richard D. Raacb, PhUUp J. Rossi. ceive full tui­ City Auditorium Arena Kltto. Kathy Kooing. Roseann Krlxman. Carl Rotola. WUliam Sasebat. Kingsley from 8:30 p.m. to 12:30 a.m. BECAUSE of the Memorial Brother Denys, F.S.C., principal Frazier; Surrey With the Steve Krtzman, Patricia Lauby. Law­ Scott SchUUns. Robert Arnad v Sholdt, tion, an allow- Steve Kady's orchestra will day holiday, the monthly meet­ June 3 at 3 p.m. Fringe On the Top, Rogers rence Lehnen. Kathy Lodge, Lori Loh- David A. Sknl. Anthony M. Stano. Bar­ a n c e for play. The ^nation is |2 per ing of the Altar and Rosary so­ and Hammerstein; Holiday man, David Lucan. Donna Madrid. The­ ry Richard Stevens. Frank Joseph ADMINISTRATION ANNUNCIATION HIGH resa Maguire, Uoyd Malsam, Linda Veaaa, WlUlam Dean Zlmraenrua: e q u i pment, ciety will be held May 23. It Maitinei: couple. Most Reverend Urban J. Vehr, SCHOOL Song, William Schumann; Leo Mary Frances Barth. Joann CecUla and a stipend Repstration for the school will be preceded at 7:45 p.m. Frazier, director Carol Mauser. David McDermott. D.D., Archbishop of Denver Rt. Rev. Monsignor Thomas Barger. Barbara Ana CampanaUa, of $000 per ------sr------by the Living Rosary presented Most Reverend David M. Ma­ Michael McGinnis, Gary McKenzie. Kathleen Ann CaplUupo, Barbara Jean year to a col­ Barry, pastor VALEDICTORY ADDRESS - Karlyne McLellan. Eileen McNemey. Chojnowskl. Barbara Jo Claaclo, Rosa- by the students and followed by loney, D.D., Auxiliary Bishop “Years of Decision” , Jerry Karen Menchm. Joan Mendocna. Pa­ ann L. Clnocco, Bevertv Ann Oto, Don­ lege in Color­ Breakfast Set Benediction. of Denver Sister Ann de Sales, principal tricia Mergen, Bemadine Monahan. Jo na Costa. Carman Celeste DaUa, Dor­ ado. She has Droll, St. Francis de Sales’ EUen Moore. Mary Prances Moore. othy Ann Dardano. Judith Ann Ebert. The guest speaker at the meet­ Very Rev. MonsIgnor William high school Claudia Nardin. Loretta O'Conndl. Louise Mary FUlppone. Evelya CossuMo been a straight At St. Pius X ing will be Rev. Robert Dore, Mary Alice O'Comor. Frances Ogro- Garcia. Marlene Ann GentUe. Judith H. Jones, archdiocesan super­ HOLY FAMILY HIGH SCHOOL A C T OF CONSECRA'nON— A student at St. Mary!a «i*>ce assistant pastor, St. Catherine’s dowskl, Barbara O la ^ Tim Partsch. Ann Hoffman, Bonaie Kay Isaac. Lynn intendent of schools Rt. Rev. Monsignor The graduates Patricia Petry. Eileen Phillips. Kath­ Kathleen LeHeal. Meta Ltlna. Adri- her freshman year. She ish Na­ (St. Pins Tenth Parish, Aurora) church, Denver, .who will dis Sister M. Carmencita, elemen­ Forrest H. AQen, pastor leen Poehlmann. Beverly Pool. Rich­ anna D. LaahlnaU. Lorralna Lombardi. tional Merit finalist and saluta- The annual Communion cuss vocations. MIXED INTERP.AROCHIAL ard Pope, Mary

See Story On Page 1 \ J \ r

Powerhouse for CCD Checking last-minute detail for the an­ From left are Sister Anthony, a member of nual Confraternity of Christian Doctrine pre­ the Missionary Sisters of Our Lady of Vic­ sentation of diplomas and awards May 11 in tory and CCD supervisor In the archdiocese; Welcome to Teachers St. Francis de Sales' church, Denver, are four Genevieve Keuster, secretary of the board; Greeting tliree badly needed new elementary teachers for their teachers’ diplomas May 11 in St. Francis de Sales’ members of the archdiocesan CCD board who Jay Tolaro, treasurer; and John Yeienick, the Confraternity of Christian Doctrine program in the arch- church, Denver, are Marte Byram, Margaret Lally, and Ruth spent several weeks planning the ceremonies. archdiocesan CCD president. diocese is the Rt. Rev. Monsignor Gregory Smith, V.G., P.A., Martin, members of .\ll Saints’ parish, Den>er. archdiocesan director of the CCD. The women, who received

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CCD Brings Smiles Pleased at the progress shown by the Confra­ director of the CCD and host for the graduation ternity of Christian Doctrine In the Archdiocese of exercises; Father Robert Kekeisen, pastor of SL Denver are three members of the clergy who took Anthony of Padua’s parish, Denver, and guest speak­ part in the annual presentation of CCD diplomas and er at the graduation; and Father George Wetbel, awards the past week. From left are the Rt. Rev. pastor of Nativity of Our Lord parish, Broomfield, *Whiz Kids’ Monsignor Gregory Smith. V.G^ P.A., archdiocesan who gave Benediction at the exercises. First place winners in the first catechetical con­ ish, Westminster, sixth grade; Sherry Peterson, St. test held among CCD pupils in the Archdiocese Anthony’s, fifth grade: and Margaret Montana, also of Denver hold the prizes awarded for their victory. of St. Anthony’s, fourth grade. The award for first In the back is Robert Brandi of St. Anthony of place in the seventh grade went to Donald Hartley Padua’s parish, Denver, winner in the eighth grade of Holy Trinity, Westminster. contest. The girls are Bede Kopp, Holy Trinity par-

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h> Five Years in CCD Proud of their awards for five years of devoted graduation ceremonies the past week, are Mn. service to the Confraternity of Christian Doctrine Augusta Boilers and Mrs. Sylvia Pettinger, both of m are these four teachers from outside the Denver St. Isidore’s mission, Hudson; Marie Stonehocker, Metropolitan area. The women, who were among Our Lady of Sorrows, East Lake; and Mrs. Florence 2.'i lay teachers receiving five-year awards at CCD Diplomas for Doctors Campbell, St. Mary’s parish, Colorado Springs. i Two new CCD teachers, both doctors in their Jewish hospital. Denver and James .Murray. Ph.D., own fields, are congratulated hy William Schrader, a member of Our Lady of I>ourdes parish. Denver, right, of St. Mary’s parish, Littleton, on receiving is an economist on the iacultv of the Lniversity ol their diplomas in CX’D graduation exercises the past Denver. .Mr. Schrader instructed 1.5 of the 27 grad­ week. Dr. Ignatius Trapani, left, a member of St. uates who received diplomas as secondary school Pius X’s parish, Aurora, is assistant chief of the teachers in the eerenionies. department of experimental immunology. National

Banner-Bearer Carrying the banner of the Confraternity of Christian Doctrine is Mark Ruby, a fifth grade pupil in the CCD classes at .-Vll Saints’ parish, Denver. The winner of Ihirtk. I place in his grade in tl)fs?^l year's archdiocesan catech«4.;.^^l ical contest, Mark led the p ro -^ ^ cession into St. Francis de Sales’ church, Denver, for the annual presentation of CCD diplomas and awards on May 11. DEUS r Reward for Devotion Happy Graduates Devoted lay apostles in spreading sented in ceremonies May 11 in St. Delighted over their diplomas as know what the ( ( I) is, hut she is happy the teachings of Christ are the two Francis de Sales’ church, Denver, are, high school teachers in the Confratern­ because her parents are happy. XIr. winners of the St. Pius X award for 10 from left, .Mable Parker of St. Rose's ity of Christian Doctrine are Mr. and Shvne is a teacher in Kanum high years of outstanding work in the Con- residence, Denver, and Mrs. Cecil Mrs. Francis Shyne of All Saints' par­ school. Westminster. The couple re fraternity of Christian Doctrine in the Flebhe of St. Joseph’s parish. Golden, ish, Denver. Their baby, Patricia Mi­ ceived their diplomas in the CCD archdiocese. Holding the awards, pre- chelle. in Mr. Shvne’s arms, mav not graduation ceremony May II m

PAGE FOURTEEN THE DENVER CATHOLIC REGISTER INSURANCE STATEMENTS Among imufance companies licensed to transact business in Colo rado by the State Insurance Department are these printed below. “The publication of synopses of Rnancial Statements for the year ended December 31, 1961, Is required by low."

Uibimm, TeBocMiorst & Co. PETER J. WALSH PETER T. GRAY National Farmars Insurance Since 1997 > Union Proparly ' 922 Gas and Electric Bldgr. TA. 5-4)241 WALSH, GILL & SMITH And Casualty Co. insurers insurers SM West ISth SL South Herbert W. leibmon Gerard R. TeBockhorst 1010 Guaranty Bank Bldg. Est. 1864 MAin 3-7245 Salt Lake City, Utah Gerald J. Henonann Raymond I. Otslel

8TATI o r COU>BADO STATE OF COLORADO STATE OP COLORADO STATE OF COLORADO STATE OF COLORADO STATE OP COLORADO liw rieM OtparUMai lasarance DepartaMm luartBCC DepGrtBMSt Insurance Depertmeat iBsurance Department fanuraMe DeperUeeal Synopsis of Statement for INI as ■ m opdr ot StetMWDt for IMl u Synopsis of Statement for INI as Synopais of Statement for IMl as Synopala of Statement for IM l aa Synopdi of SUtement for IMl * to tbo CoisbUmIoov of readmed to the Commissioner of rendered to the CommUBdooer of rmderad to tba Commissloocr of Insurance rendered to the Commissloaer of rendered to the Cormnisslooer of lasonnca Insurance Insurance Inauranco Hartford Accident and Indamnlty Inwirm e . CMnpwiy MUars NsHsnal Insurance Company Seeboerd Surety Company NiHenel Famwrt Union Proporty n o M a w tr t Avmiw. n Nertti Wsehar Drtvs Company Hartford Fire Insurence Company A Caauelty Co. 6N Asylum Avenue 6f6 Asylum Avenue 100 William Street 5M Woat IJth South BuffM* 2, Mm* Y*rk C h t c ^ 6, Illinois Hartford 15, Cennacticut Hertford 15, Connecticut New York 36, New York AamU 1JS1.36183 SeH Lake City, Utah ______^ UM1A18.17 A s s e ts ...... IfMASSANJS Assets ______: __ »743,M7A30.70 ASSETS ______537,702,020.41 LUbUitlM U a b iU tla s______i W ^ 4 ^ - 2 S CwlUl - Panqanant P ond____| LUbUlUes______$2a,185A02.26 UABnjTIES ...... 16An,lS8,42 Slirplu* C a p ita l______f 10,000m00 CaplUl ______5 53,471,180.00 CAPITAL...... 2AOOAOO.OO C a p iU l------S0O.OM.00 Surplus ...... WeAMON-OS S u rp lu s ______$467A91A«44 SURPLUS ...... 1SA74A88.00 S n rp lu a ------1 2,208,S06J6 (C«nr *1 CMinett* tl AiOwiM (Cm t If Cariifleala af Aathsrity) ?: (Cany af CenUeala af Aathaflty) (Copy ef Certificate ef Authority) (C an af Certiflcaia af Anthertty) DjEPAXTMENr OP 1N8UKAN% DEPARTMENT OP IN8URAN(X DI^ARTBfENT OF INSURANT D^ARTHENT OF INSURANCE (Copy ef CertUeate af Anibartty) CerOflcaia tl A idittttr Certtlleata af Auterlty DEPARTMENT OF IN8URAN(H DEPARTMENT OP OfSURANCS ■6: • Csrtifkale af Aalhorlty Certificate af Authority ' Certificate af Aetherlly CerUDeate ef Amherhy T» Wbom It Hay Conemii: Te Whom It May (hmeern: To Whom It May (hncam: To Whom It May Concern: To Whom It May Concern: To Whom It May Concern: DpmiPicaiM i^M P la n O p m n H o v m This la to eaiiUr that tba Buffalo TUs la to certify that the MUlats This la to certify that the Hartford Iniaranca Compaiqr organlud BBdar National Insurance Company oi^ This la to certify that the Hartford This Is to certify that the Seaboard _ ThU b to certify that the NaUoaal Accident and Indemnity Company Fire Insurance Company organized Ftrmen Union Proporty and Caa- tba laara of tba Stata of Now Yoifc (■ abed under the laws of DUnols organised under the laws of Con­ Surety. Company organized under Marian Renii and Sitiw Mary Paul discuss plans to r open purauaat to Ita appUeatlon tberafor pursuant to Its appUeatlon therefor under the laws of Connecticut pur­ the laws of New York pursuant to ualty Co. orginbed under the lawa and la coatidaniuon of Iti com- necticut pursuant to Ita appUeatlon suant to Its application therefor and its appUeatlon therefor and In con- of Utah puranant to lb appl^Uon house at the Corpus Christi'oonvent, Denver, May 19 from 11 and In conslderaUon of its com- therefor and In contideratlon of Ita In conslderetion of Its compUance pUanca with the lawa of Colorado, pUance with the laws of Colorado, compliance with tba laws of (^k>- sMerauon of its compUance with the therefor and id conaideration of lb a-m. to 5 pjn. There will be a '^ p la y of the girls’ work In the la haraby Ucanied to tranaact boi^ la hereby licensed to transact busi- with the laws of Colorado, Is hereby lawa of Colorado, la hereby licensed compUanco with 4bo Uwa of Colo- rado, is heirby Ucensed to transact Ucensed to transact business ss a n d o , b hereby Uconaod to tranaact past year, pictures, PMters, an A slides, and a tour qf tbe con­ naaa at a Multiple Use Insurance nesi as a Multiple Une Insurance business ss s Multiple Line Insur­ to transact business as a Multiple Campany until the last day of Feb­ Company until the last day of Feb­ Multiple Line Insurance Company Une Insurance Company ui)tU the buainaaa ae a MulUpb Une tnaur- ance Company until the last day of until the last day of February next ance Company until the leat day of vent and the grounds. Lunch wIU be served at noon by the ruary next tuccaedlnc the date ruary next succeeding the date February next succeeding the date lest diy of February next succe^- hereof unless this license shall be hereof unless, this Ucensa shall be succeeding the date hereof unless Ing tbe date h e r ^ unless this February next succeeding the date Domlnlcanettes, and registration of new girls will be at 4 p.m. sooner reroksd. hereof nnleas this license shaU be this Ucensc shaU be looner revoked. Ucense shall be sooner revoked. hereof unless th b Ucense shaU he sooner revoked. sooner revoked. sooner revoked. All high school girls are invited. IK WITNESS WHEREOF, 1 hare IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have IN WITNESS WHEREOF. 1 have IN WITNESS WHEREOF. I have harannto set my hand aod caused hereunto set my hand and caused hereunto set my band and caused m WITNESS WHEREOF. 1 have bereunto set my hand and caused hereunto set my band and caused hereunto set my hand ai^ c a tb ^ the otBdal seal af my offlea to be Uie official seal of my office to be the official seal of my office to be the official seal of my office to be the official seal of my office to be afOaed at the City and County of affixed at the City and County of affixed at the a ty tod County of the official seal of my office to be affixed at the City ,aod County of affixed at the a ty and County of affixed at Uie CHy and County of Teens Aid Sisters Dwnrar, this first day of March, DeuTCT. this first day td March. Denver, this first day of March, Denver, this first day of March, Denver, this first day of March. 1961 A.D. 1962. A.D. 1962. Denver, this first day of March A.D. 1961 A.D. 1962. , A.D. 1962. (SEAL) 8am N. b e e r y (SEAL) SAM N. BEERY (SEAL) SAM N. BEERY (SEAL) SAM N. BEERY (SEAL) SAM N. BEERY ______Conunlsatooer af Insurance Cammlsskner of Insurance (SEAL) SAM N. BEERY Commlsslaoer of Insurance Commlasloner of Insurance Commissioner of Insurance ______Commisaloner of Insurance Dom/n/coneffes Play'

MUTUAL VAN SCHAACK & COMPANY American Buyers J. J. CELLA Vital Role for Sick Poor PROTEaiVE INSURANCE DEPARTMENT Life Insurance Co. INSURANCE Working with the Dominican The work ef the DomhilcaB INSURANCE CO. Sisters of the Sick Poor are Sisters and their young assist- W. R..,Ktrstan, CPCU-Manag«r P.O. Box 30 AGENCY bright-eyed and attractive girls ants is fiaanced each year by in their teens who devote a po^ aa amtaal appeal drive. Every-, Paul McGrady-Asiistant Managtr 3860 Leavenworth St. 1120 Security Bldg. Phoenix, Arizona tion of their time each week to one in the city li asked te give Omaha, Nebraska KE. 4-2833 nursing and aiding the sick what their raeaas peraalt, for ASSOCIATES poor. the needs of the sick poor are These girls are Just as in­ many. In the past year, the Domini­ Wes ScbMhel Emil Schmidt STATE OF COLORADO STATE OF COLORADO STATE OF COLORADO terested in dates, dances, and lasurtnce Department Insurance Depertmeat (nsuranee Oepariment the weekly football games as canettes made 625 visits to the John Stoddart Ed. Nellis Synopsb of SUUment for 1961 as Synopsb of Statement for 1961 as Synopsb ot SUtement for IMl as any other American girt. But homes of the sick poor. They rendend to b e Commissioner ol rendered to the Commissioner ot rendered to the Commlastoaor of spent 1,500 hours in nursing John Walltco ^ Ted Patterson Insurance Insurance Insurance they have not forgotten that American Buyers Life Insurance Mutual Protective Insurence Rtpublie Inauranee Company Denver has an ample group of duties. They gave out Catholic Company Company DetR Torus Walter Keenan P. 0. Box 30 2727 Turtle Creek Bouleverd literature, rosaries. Sacred Heart 3640 Leavenworth Street Dallat, Texes unhappy citizens ^ o are not Phoenix 1, Arizona only desperately poor but ill be­ badges, scapulars, and prayer- Walter Retiseh Dan May Asaeb ______$2446,824.73 Omaha, Ntbraska ------L-..,$56423,088.08 L b b lllU e t______$ 800,651.24 Assets - ,______$2,175,482.62 ------1------«6.4064$7.42 sides. books. CapiUI ...... S 803,353.01 Liabilities'...... $1,739,857.85 310 fotterson Bldg. Insurer MA 3-9333 Surplus - _ $ 742420.48 CaplUl ______$ Surplui ______(Cepy ef Certificate of Autborilyl Surplus ______- S 435424.77 Contingency Reaerre THE NUMBER of Domini- AN OPEN HOUSE planned DEPARTMENT OF INSURANCE (Copy of Certifleale of Auberlty) Certificate of Authority) canettes is skyrocketing. Their May 19 from 11 ami. t to 5 p.m. CertIfleaU ol Authority DEPARTMENT OF INSURANCE ITATB 6P COLORADO ■TATE OP (XILORADO STATE OF COLORADO DEPARTMENT OF INSURANCE services are becoming more All h i^ school girls are invH«d. lasarsaee Depertmeat lOMUVMt. DtpUttMBt To Whom It May (toncern: Certifleale ol Authority . Cettificete ot Aubortty .. .. lasnnaee Depertmeat To Whom It May Cageorn: and more important. These girls Lunch will be served by the Synopib of Statement for IM l as Omoptia of SUtament for IMl as Thb b to certify that be Ameri­ To Whom U May Concern; rindored to tbo Commlaatoaer ef nadertd to bo Onnmissloner of . of SUtement for IMl ex can Buyers Life Inaurance Company Thb b to certify that b e Mutual Thb b to certify that the Repub­ are learning early to fulfill the Dominicanettes and they will Insurance lasuianco rendered to b a Commlntoner of organized under b e Uws of Arizona lic Inaurance Company organb^ Insurance Protective Insurance Company or­ under toe Uwa of the lUta of Texes American tradition of service show slides and film strips of American Inuttabb Amursnea Ptcific NatiaiMl Fire Inourance pursuant to lU appUeatlon therefor ganized under the lawa of Nobraaka Company Atlas A stunnea Company, Ltd. and In consideration of lU compU- punuant to ib ajnUoatton therefor to the community and helping their work in the homes. Company of Naw York anoe wib be laws of Colorado, b pursuant to Ito appUeatlon therefor and In consideration of lb compU 92 Williams Street 423 Callfemb Straet 55 Fifth Avenue and In conslderaUon of iU compU­ Naw York 3, New York hereby Ucensed to transact buslnoss "«:«,^wnh too Uwa of (tolorado, b those less fortunate than them There will be a general dis­ New York 36, Naw York San Francbco 4, CaUfomia ance wlb the laws of Colorado, b hereby Ucensed to tranaact builnaas A s s e U ______118,778491.87 as a Life Lnsurance Company untU hereby Ucensed to transact busbess selves. play setup in the convent, 2501 AaaaU ______189445,962.70 Aaaata ------173,79240248 be laat day of February next suc­ “ a HulUplo Line Inauranco Com- U tb m U e a ______^,91943449 UabUlties ______6 9,134,443.32 as a Casualty Insurance Company They fill thrir idle hours do­ Gariord street. The Sisters will UabUMlM ------SUtutory Deposit____t SM,0M.M ceeding b e date hereof unless thb until b e last day of February next P»hnury C a p l U l ______^„_r24M460.M C a p U M ------l_iri4MjOOa.M Ucense shall be sooner revoked. next aucc^lng the Ate heroof nn ing useful things with tbe satis­ be on band to greet the guests. Sarplui ... ______|2,»M B -> 1 Surplus ------6 7,144448.55 IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have succeeding tbe deU hereof nnlesi leaf— J ^ _ Ucense ihellbe lOoner ro- S w phb ------Z 3 il8 ,0 M 4 1 9 .8 8 this Ucense shaU be sooner revoked. voked. faction of knowing that they Registration for new Domini­ rOofY af Certlilcate af A a U a ^ ) . (Copy of Ceitiflcab of Aaborlty) ((bpy ef Certlflcate of AuUmtly) hereunto set my hand and caused IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have DEPARTMENT OP INSURANCE DWARTMENT OF INSURANCE DEPARTMENT OF INSURANCE tbe official seal of my office to be hereunto set my hand and caused IN WITNESS WHERAo F, I have are needed and wanted. The canettes will be at 4 p.m. Par­ CtitiOeau af Aalkaitly CortHIcato ef Authority Certificato of Auberlty affixed at b e a ty and (tounty of b e official seal of my office to be nereumo set my hand and causto Dominican Sisters of the Sick ents of all (ri the high school Denver, b is first day of March. affixed at toe City and County of the official seal of my ofilc# to be Te Whom It Hay Cooctni: To Whom It May Concera; To Whom It May Concern: AD. 1962. Denver, this first day of March. affixed It b e City and County ol Poor count them among their girls are Invited to accompany Thb b te certify that ilM Amasl- TUa b to certify that Uie Pacific T hb b to certify that b e AUaa (SEAL) SAM N, BEERY A D 1962 first day of Mkrch, blessings. The ^ I s ’ greatest can EquiUble Aaauranca Qnnpaiiy National Flra Insurance Company or- Commissioner of Insurance their daughters to the open sanbed under b a Uws of CaUfomb Assurance Company, Ltd. organized (SEAL) ' SAM N. BEERY of New York orgenlaed n ad ir the under bo Uwa of Great Britain pur­ Commissioner of Insurance (SEAL) SAM N. BEERY contribution to the community house. Uwti of Naw York pnrsuant to pm siiaat to tta appUcaUon b erefo r suant to lU appUeatlon berefor end ______Commlialoner ot Insurance is their youth and its vitality, lb apeUeattaa tharelor ead la can- and b eonatderation of lU com- in eonaideraUon of lb complbnce atdeisnoa of lb oompttanco with the plianeo wlb the bwi of Colorado, wlb b e laws of Colorado, b hereby Security Benefit energy, enthusiasm, and eager­ Banquet Planned laws of (Mlwado, b haraby tteanetd boreby Ucanied to traniaet buiL Ucensed to transact bualneaa as a ness to learn. to tganiact boalness aa a HaWela noai aa a Multiple Line Insurance Multiple Une Insurance Company GUARANTEE FEDERAL LIFE Une DMUiance Company oMtl Iha Company until be laat day of Fab-Feb­ until the laat day of February next Life Insurance Dominlcaaettes number about At Holy Family bat day of Fabruary naxt sueeaad- ruary next lucceedlng the date succeeding the daU hereof unless b f tba data bartof anbaa thb hcreof unless thb Ucensa sheU be INSURANCE 35. They attend home nursing sooner revoked. b b Ucense sbaU be aooner revoked. AND CASUALTY (Holy Family Padih, Denver) Ueanta abaU ba loonar ravokad. Company classes and learn how to make The PTA will honor the lenlor IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have IN WITNESS WHEREOF. I have patients comfortable, and how hartnato sat my hand and cauaod hereunto eat my band m d cauied hereunto aet my hand and caused COMPANY COMPANY high school class at the annual tba ofOdal saal of my oOlco to he b a otBcUl seal of my office to ba b e official aoai of my office to be to meet home emergencies. In banquet May 34 at 6:15 p.m. ■find at b t aty and County of affixed at b e a ty aod County of affixed at b e a ty and County of 700 Harrison St. Denver, thb first day of March, 1671 Wilshire Blvd. their blue and white striped in the cafeteria. Mrs. J. C. Deavar. thb first day of March, Denver, thb Bret day of March, Wolverine-Federal Tower A.D. IISI. A.D. 1963. Topeka, Kansas uniforms, Dpminicanettes who Hawkins, chairman ol the ^(°'b AL) ' SAM N. BEER Y (SEAL) SAM N. BEERY (SEAL) SAM N. BEERY Los Angeles, California have completed IM hours of Corafflbatoaar af Insorinct Commiatiimer of Insurance (tommlsslooer of .Inauranct Battle Creek, Michigan event, will be assiated by tbe case work display the Domini senior room motheri. STATE OP COLORADO STATE OP COLORADO STATE OF COLORADO can Shield. iBianaee Depoitmeal iBsunnee DeparUnenl The priests, sisters, and lay Synopsb of SUtement for INI u Ininrancc Department . STATE OF COLORADO They learn how to make beds, Sytiopsb of SUtement for IMl ss Synopsis of Statement for 1961 as STATE OF COLORADO rendered to b e Commlsslaoer of Insurance Department take temperatures, check teailiers are invited as honored tedteed b b t Cctnmlatinesr of Insurance rendered to the (tommissloner of iBsuraaet Department ^ Insnrsoce 1 Insurance Synapsis of SUtement for 1961 as guests. North British A Mereantlb INSURANCE rendered to the Commisaloner of Synopsb of SUtement for IMl as pulses, how to brush a help­ Xetidea A Lsncoshlie Insunneo Insurance Company Sacuiity Banefit Life Insurance Insurance rendered to b t CcMnmiastooer of less patients teeth, how to bathe Mrs. Steve Daniel has an­ Csmpsny Ltd. (U, P. Brsnch) One Perk Avenue Company Suarantee Insurance Company Insurance nounced that a letter will be IN John Street Naw York 16, New York 700 Harrison Street 1471 Wilshiro Blvd. Fadtral Life ond Casualty Company and feed a patient in bed, move New YeriL New York sent home with the students ex­ A a a e U ______SS2405456-45 Topeka, Kenus Los Angeles, California Wolvarino-Fodoral Tewtr them out of bed, help them to LtohtUUea______$17401463.25 STATEMENTS Asseb ...... $72,461496 19 Battb Crtok, Michigan plaining the various committees uSmtiiT^!!!! |i»; fb pitei LlablllUei ______$63,585,567.00 Assets ______$12461412.31 crutch walk, and! countless oth­ ____ I 500400.00 LlabUltles ...... $ 7,927488.33 ------$204«0,125.U of the PTA. CspIUl ------:----- —4 i , S a r p lib ______—41440340340 $ :------CapiUl ______$ l^blU tlea ...... 817479483.17 er detatis centering around the S u r^ u f ______- ^ - 4 Surplus ______$ 8,876,028.54 Capital ______$ 1400,000.00 (Otpy af OrtUlcale at Antherlty) Surplus ______$ 3,433,425.98 C a p ita l___ -$ 1,000,000.00 care of the sick. kCaay af Certmeato af Asthority) ^ (Copy of Cartlflcata of Authority) Surplus * 2.000,lOLM DBPARTBfENT OF INSURANCE Among Insuranc* com­ (Copy of Certifleale of Aubortty) Sometimes they are needed PVARTMENT OP INSURANCE DEPARTMENT OF INSURANCE (Cep ot Certifleale el Aubortty) St. Vincent’s School ; CmtifIcaU of Aaberity CertIfleaU af Authority panies licensed to transact ...... CertillcaU of Authority ...... DEPARTMENT OF INSURANCE DEPARTMENT OF INSURANCE as baby sitters, and many times Te|Whom It Hay Cooemn: To Whom It May Concern: To Whom It May Concern: Certificate of Authority Certlflcate ol AoUmlly their services are required in Placement Tests Set Thb b to certify bat be Norb business in Colorado by Thb b to certify that the Security Thb to to certify that the London Brltbta A HereantUe Inaurance Com­ Benefit Life Inaurance Company or­ To Whom It May Concern; To Whom It May Cooctni: cleaning homes, preparing (St Vincent de Paul’s Parish, AI Lancashire Insuieace Oonpany pany organUed under the towa of ganized unUer the lawa of Kansas Thb b to certify that toe Guar­ Tto b to certify that too Fed­ meals, and washing dishes. Ltd., U. 8. Branch otnudstd under The Kingdom of Great Britain pur­ the State Insurance Depart­ pursuant to IU appUeatlon therefor antee Insurance Company organized eral Life and Casualty Company or­ Denver) U>4 towa of Tbe K lnunn of Groat suant to lb application therefor and and In constderatlon of iU compli­ under the laws of California pur­ ganized under tbo Uwa of Mtcblgan To (Acer the lonesome and itiltaiii poieuant to ib appUeatlon In eonatderation of ib compUance ment are these printed on ance with toe laws of Colorado, b suant to Us application therefor pursuant to lb appUeatlon therefor chronically ill and the aged Placement tests for the chil­ baiefor and tn consideration of lU wib b e bws of Colorado, b hereby hereby licensed to transact business and In consideration of lb compU­ and In conaideration of lb compU- dren entering the first grade compllueo wlb be laws of Colo- Uceneed to tranaact bualnets as a this page. as a Life Insurance Company untU ance with the bws of Colorado, b uce with toe Uwa of Colorado, b the Dominicanettes stop in for is io , b boreby Uconaed to transact MnltipU Une Insurance Company the last day of February next suc­ hereby licensed to transact buxlnets hereby Ucensed to tranaact bualneaa a friendly visit bringing in chat­ next year will be given May 19 buidaoet aa a MulUpU U na Insiir- until b e last day of February next ceeding the date hereof unlpss thb as a Casualty Insurance Company M a Ufa and Accident A Health at 10:45 a.m. in the school. All soea Company untU b a Ust day of succeeding be date hereof unless Ucense shall be sooner revoked. until the last day of February next Inauranco Company untU the last ter and news from the outside Pabruary next succeeding b e (Ute b b Ucense shaU be aooner revoked. “The publication of synop­ IN WITNESS WHEREOF, 1 have succeeding the date hereof unless day of February next succeeding toe world. They also plan birthday children who have registered for h e ^ f unless b b Ucense shaU ba IN WITNESS WHEREOF. 1 have hereunto set my hand and caused thb Uceiue shaU be sooner revoked. date hereof unleaa th b Ueenao shall the first grade must take this sopner revoked. htreunto set my hand and caused ses of Financial Statements b e official seal of my office to be IN WITNESS WHEREOF. I have be sooner revoked. parties for our senior citizens, m WITNESS WHEREOF. 1 have b e offlcbl seal ef my office to be affixed at b e City and Countv of hereunto set my band and caused IN WITNESS WHEREOF. I have Christmas parties, and anni test. ktrtunto set my hand and caused affixed at the City and County of Denver, bis first dav of March, the official seal of my office to be hereunto set my band and caused be offlcbl aeal of my office to be Denver, b b first day of March, for the year ended Decem­ AD 1962. affbed at the a ty and County of b e official seal of my office to bt versary celebrations. They have May 17 will be “Ladies Night’’ affixed St fim Qty and County of A.D. 1962. -• (SEAL) SAM N. BEERY Denver, this first day of March. affixed at b e CUy and County ol an annual picnic to the moun for the Pinochle club. Playing ber 31, 1961, is required Daaver. thb first day of March, (SEAL) SAM N. BEERY Commissioner of Insurance A.D. 1962. Denver, thb first day of .March. will begin at 8:15 .p.m. Every­ AD. IM . Commitaloaer of Inaurance (SEAL) SAM N. BEERY A.D. 1962. tains for the children of the (SEAL) SAM N. BEERY by law." Commissioner of Insurance (SEAL) SAM N. BEERY sick poor. one is invited. < OoramMooer of Insurancs Commissioner of Insurance THE AMERICAN LIFE MID-CONTINENT LIFE INSURANCE CITIZENS INSURANCE COMBINED INSURANCE VANGUARD INSURANCE COMPANY OF COMPANY COMPANY OF NEW YORK INSURANCE COMPANY OF NEW YORK UNDERWRITERS 1400 Classen Drive NEW JERSEY AMERICA 111 John Street COMPANY New York 38, N. Y. INSURANCE P. 0. Box 1516 5050 North Broadway 690 Asylum Ave. (Home Office; 100 Broadway, COMPANY Oklahoma City, Oklahoma 2727 Turtle Creek Boulevard New York, N. Y.) Hartford 15, Connecticut Chkaio 40, Uioois Dallas, Texas 690 Asylum Ave. STATE OP COLORADO STATE OF COLORADO insuranct Dopartmont Hartford 15, Connecticut STATE OF COLORADO STATE OF COLOHADO Synopais of SUtement for 1961 as Insurance Department lawraaee Deparbseat rendered to b e (tommbsloner of Synopsis of Statement for 1961 as losuriDce Departmeot STATE OF COLORADO Sypopeb of SUtement for IMl as rendered to the Commissioner of Inauranco STATE OF COLORADO Synopsis of Statement for 1961 as laxuraocc DopartSMot laiwerad to b a Commbstooer ol Insurance rendered to the Commissioner of loaoraoce The American Life Insurance InsurancG Dapartment Mid-Continent Life Insuranct Synopais of Statement for 1981 aa Company of New York Syoopals .of Statement for 1961 as Insurance rendered to the Commlaatoaer of Combined Insurance Company Company 111 John Stroet, Now York 3$, N. Y. rendered to tbe Commisstooer of 1400 Ciasson Drive Citizens Insurance Company Insurance ot America Insurance 1656 North Breedwey (Homo Offlea: 160 Broadway, F.O. Box 1SU of New Jersey Vanguard Insurance Company New York) Naw York Undarwritars Insuranca Oklahoma City, Oklahoma 490 Asylum Avenue 2717 Turtle Creek Boulevard Chbepo 40, tlllnob Company Now York, New York Assets ...... 127,550.468.96 Hertford 15, Cennacticut Otllas, Texas A eeeu______-____$33,478,445.01 «t0 Asylum Avanua Asaets ...... $10,006,379.51 UabUltico ------AsieU ______$3437,019.09 Hartford 15g Connecticut LlabiUtles ...... $25,012,542.23 Aaseti ------•10410470.72 U ab lU U ea______$1,472,759.45 C a p ita l___L...... $ 502,920.00 UablUUef ______$ 2,198.295.30 LUbUUlee ------II4JO.710.01 c a p t u i ------A s s e ts ...... |28.883,56l.»3 Capital ______$ 2,000,000.00 S n r p ta f ------CaplUl ______$1,100400.00 U abU lties______I 9,018,789-30 Surplus _____ . . . _ $ 2,035,006.73 CepiUi ------Z i 3400400.00 S u r p lu i______$ 7044M.64 Surplus ______$ 5308,084,21 (Omy el CerilfleaU et Aaberity) Capital ...... I 2,000,000.00 (Copy of Certificate of Authority) S u r p lu i------— 3,300,760.24 (Copy of Certificate of Anthorlty) Contlnsency Reserve __ 11048347 0^A B T M E N T OF IN8UBAN(H (Copy of Certifleale ef Aaborlty) Surplus ______.•.J i 7364,772.83 DEPARTMENT OF INSURANCE Certmeau el Aaberity DI^ARTMENT OF INSURANfX

I « PLACE RENT1NG*H!RING OF V'.ILIONS "W ANT AT) S BUYING-SELLING & i Phone KE. 4^206 Todav to Place Your CTassifled Ad in the Register -- Ask for the aaasified Department ^

ll«w CnowdfiMd Ad Deadlin* . « . NOW - Tuesday at 5 p.m. Only Want Ads neelved by phone or msil before 8 PJd Tnesday can be psUbbed In the cnnent week's pepw

HELP WANTED FEMALE HOME TO SHARE 19A REAL ESTATE FOR SALE 33 REAL ESTATE WANTED 3S Tyiditi, ttoioi, dieUphone opn., Congenial lady to share home. Sub­ St. Bernadette—-S3 amded tor temponrr aulfnmtnU. urban area, nice yard. Widow A Z1 No feet. You work tor A *ro paid yr. old daughter both employed. BEDROOMS directly by uf. CaU betsreen 3 4 7 pjn. IN M143 $2,000 DOWN MANPOWER, INC. HOME FOR AGED 19C You’ll love this spacious home, ISM adllomlt St KX 4-7»S W/fuU bamt. 4 3 baths. Close to BeautUuL largo aaml-prtvate room public 4 parochial schools In een- 8A wltli bath. Home care 4 beat food ral Lakewood. Vk acre site, has big SPARE TIME MONEY Reasonable rates, itear Our Lady of trees. Irrigation water, dbL garage, Lourdee Church. RA S-13M room for pom. A uum e « MAKE MONEY IN YOUR YOUR CHJUjCE OP A UTETIMni SPARE TIME ROOMS FOR RENT FURN. 20 SUM W. IMh Ava. TO S IL L YOUR HOME CALL DONALD PAR50N5 14M Hog Sell oU nd auto tuppUes; three Rooms for Girls. Catholic Daughters n l 74137 or tvM. BE 7411 CASTLE REALTY CO. automatic vending machines In fac­ of America. 70S Penn. Also rooms tory or office parking lota, motels REALTOR available for weddings or raoeptlons. SL Junes—33 1470 So. Federal WE. 6-33I8 and other locations. SSOO will get TA. 54597 you started In easy, regular Income 370 So. Sheridan BE. 7-3751 Charm and Comfort 4M7 So. Broadway 7814134 oporotlon. Get details from MU­ Catholic family offara S Urga at- In 4 bdrm.. 3 bath boma. EtocLtle TUAL SUPPLY CO., 4970 JACKSON tractlva ileoping rooma to working kitchen, TV room 4 patio. Conven­ ST DU 84S38. women. AU new beds, k it privUegea, ient to achoola 4 ahopping. m CASH prlvato entrance. Vicinity 13th 4 appt call EA 2-7788 or avea. Ed- for your equity, any loeatton. Poetry Contest Winners In Sterling PennaylTinla. Phone AL MSSl g l ^ n CH 44801 _ _ 534-7273 MR. AHORNEY areutaman-Bradloy, Realtor HOUSE FOR RENT PIANOS, MUSICAL Poetry wianen in a eontcst keld at St. Anthony’s school, Driel and Matt Drietz, all from the hifh school; and, seated; For public notlcM u m Tba SL Mtry (Uttleton)—S3 Sterilnx, were, standinf, left to risht, Janet G iarto, Linda grade school winners, Patty Van Nostrand, Linda Armstrong Donver CatboUc Rtglitor. UNFURN. 24 INSTRUMENTS 3 r . and Kathy Chattier. (“Jonmai-Advocate" ^oto) Rogular lofal tatM , n p ld , aeeu- 3 or 3 bdrm., ISS per mo. Near aU NEW LISTING — $19,950 Chattier, Mary Ellen Chenoweth, Maryaret Dixon, Clara Van r«te Mrvieo on affldwrltt. Caifa for uaad apInaU, oroo* or" aehooli, AT 7-5Sn, Holy Croat. Full fin. bamt, making a total of I Baby Grand Plaoot. Repair and Ra- MaO Your Legal Notices to Thornton. AvaUable around June bdrma, 2 bathi, game room w/3nd ttnlahlng. la t flrtplaee. Complete with dbL gang* DENVER CATHOLIC 4 many aatna. Should taU fait CaU WALKER PIANOS Officers of Parents' Club Dean PY 44540 _ 11U 5m Broadway 5F 7-734r* REGISTER FURNISHED APTS. 25 RiaatlNO RIALTY CO. 1449 Llttlalon Rlvd. PY 4.3471 Attractive m robm fnrnlahed apt SEWING MACHINES 4G P.O. Box 1620 Complete kitchen, large cloeeta, utU- Install^^ at Mullen High Itlca. Suitable for 3, near Waahlngton SL Mary Magdalene—S3 PFAFF CONSOLE - No atUchmenU Park, 3 bua liner. to buy. Sg-Zags, buttonholes 8r (Mnlien High School, the Little Banquet in West­ SP 74163 efter S p.m. family home. Large Uving room, makaa fancy stiienM. Assuraa our huge dbhig room, largo kitchen, last 4 pmta. of 15.01 or 514.00 cash. F t Logon) minster, Joh^le Dee, guest 2321 W. 24TH A V I. ieparate bkfet nook, 4 bdrma. f.f- CaU 4334400. No equity required. speaker, stre^d the import­ LEGAL NOTICES Large Uving room 4 bdnn., beantl- bamt with extra bdrm, 4 94 bath. Mrs. Robert Knect, CPTL ful kltehen w/dishwaahar. In SL Double garage. 1 block to park SINGER DIAL%A-SrrrcH - 2Jg-Zags, president, presided at the in­ ance of “leadership off the ath­ IN T H I COUNTY COURT Dominic Pariah. Vary nice fuiyiltura bua Una. Evaa. HA 44016 buttonhotos 4 makes dacorsUva de­ letic field as well as on.” In and far the City end County of 8100.00. Anderson, Caretakar #7 GRANDVIEW RIALTY, INC.___ signs. Buy no attachmants. Taka over stallation of officers for the Denver and State of Colorada 7710 Raitton Road HA 4.7711 F pm ts. of 95.15 or 111.00 oaah. 433- Parents’ club May 10. Awards were presented in var­ No. P-24S78 Spadoua furnished apt 4 rooma 1451 ious categories to recipients bath, raaaonable. Employed older Sti. Peter ft PrhI—33 The new officers are: Presi­ NOTICI OF FItINO OF FITITION women preferred. 4001 Federal Blvd. who merited themi. FOR DITIRMINATION OF MISC. FOR SALE 44 dent, Mrs. John Hinterreiter; HIIRIHIF OL 5-3398 Owner; 3 Bedroom vice president, Mrs. Dennis IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE In Copper Harbor Walking dlitance Beautiful Iris clumps, 2Se aa, 187 UNFURN. APT. FOR RENT 26 W. Byers. PE 34015. O’Neil; second vice president, Communipn Ivpnt OF Mary Patera, a/k/a Mary U to Church. Sep. dining, Ig- living 4 Petera. a/k/a Maty Loretta Patari Beautiful spadoua 1 bdrm., ceramic FP. 1 car gaiaga w/elec. door. Aa- Car top earritr. Umbrella tent. Mrs. Ed Egloff; recording sec­ (Deceaaed). , __ bath, air conditioned, range, refrig­ tume 5% loan. A real famUy home X ir table for making drapes. 30" Slated M ay 30 THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF erator, near church, shopping, trans­ HA 44039. retary, Mrs. Carl Van Land- COLORADO: boy's bike. 2 wheel traUer. OR 7-1415 (St. Catherine’s Parish, Denver) portation, parking. 175 so. Snar EARLY AMERICAN DOUBLE ingham; trensurer, Mrs. J. M. To aU persona Interested, GREET­ The annual father and son 480 Washington - 3Vk rooma, utU. | 358144 AUtoon Get Rid of Unnoedobleo Musso; corresponding secre­ ING: Open 1 - 6 Dally Communion sponsored by the TAKE NOTICE that there hai been S70.00 with care of walks. PE S-0 through a REGISTER CLASSIFIED tary, Mrs. Herbert Wagner; flled In the above-named estate a or PE 54951 1 bdnn., early American double, AD. That la where folks look whan Holy Name society will be held fuU bamta., double geraga, Hw they need things. PHONE KE. 44305. auditor, Mrs. S. J. Johns; and petition asking for a judicial ascer- heat, fuUy plaitored, ceramic Ule May 20 in the 7:30 ajn. Mass. iaiiiment and determination of the historian, Mrs. H. M, Lockard. heln of such decedent, and setting WANT ROOM A BOARD 26A 4 Htbog. cablneti. Thli beautiful APPLIANCES 45 Men’s club officers are: preS' A Breakfast will be served at forth that the namaa, addreaaet and double toeatod near acbool, bua 4 Want room, board, laundry, with ■hopping. Inquire about our other 7 book! of Plonaer, Grean or Fron- ident, S. J. Johns; vice presi' Lpby’s cafeteria. Tickets at relaUonshlpt to decedent of aU per­ CatboUe family, by elderly lady, ittei. Dramofisfs of Work sons who are or claim to be heirs oantraUy located. Write Mn. B. A. Uer stamps, gets you a portable GE dent, George Steck; recording fl.25 each may be obtained by of said decedent, so far as known LEE KINNIE CO„ BUILDERS Ironer or a portable typewriter. WE to the petitioner, are ta foUows, Smith, 7430 Derby, Co^. V1311. secretary, Herb Wagner; treas­ calling Pat Coursey, GE 3-2774. Members of the Drama club at S t Joseph’s Ugh school, Need a tapea See Lea’a to-wlt: REAL ESTATE FOR SAL& 33 Ofc. HA 2-1411 Dayt HA 4-1441 urer, Sam Chavez; and audi' Denver, took part in the presentation of “Our Hearts Were Mary Elizabeth Petera, 1113 W. Otb BUILDING MATERIALS 46A NEW OFFICERS of the Moth­ St., Apt. D, Los Angeles, CeUfornla, Ever. HA 24yo tor, G. Costello. Young and Gay” staged May 4 and 6. Members of the cast in­ daughter. Blessed Sacrament—33 ers’ auxiliary for 1902-63 were The aannal card party spon cluded, left to right, Virginia Martinos, Edward Treas, Victor Dorotto Johnson, 4338 Vraln St, SL Vincent de Psal—33 NEW AND USED installed: Denver 12, Colorado, danghter. WANTED sored by the Christian Broth­ Avila, Michele O’Connor, and Patricia Lucero. Louis J. Petera, Jr.. 4ri9 Green Ruth Jarvis, president; Paul­ 5 - I - or 10 chUdrtn to share this SUNSET TERRACE BUILDING MATERIALS ers’ Cbidiel society will be held Ct., Denver 11, Colorado, ton large 5 bedim, home with mom 4 ine Sebamberger, vice pres­ Jane F. Tate. 4534 Bryant St, Den­ Owner tranafem d; 4899 E. BaUt PL t PLUMBINO • STEEL .*• May If in the Ugh sekoU gym ver 21, Colorado, daughter. pop. 3 baths, 5 fireplaces, largs den, Choice 8E locaUon, 4 blocki ao. of • WINDOWS t DOORI ident; Ellen Litzua, secretary; closets galore; near E. 33rd Ave. EUla alamantary. 3-bdim. ManavlUa at t p.m. St. Joseph's Pupils Get You are hereby notified to appear WaUtlng dlitanca to Btesaed Sacra­ KERDY WRECKING At the annual awards ban Ellen Drahnak, treasurer; and and answer the petition mthin aiding home, exceUent condition. Ex­ twenty days after aervlca bf this ment or public achoola. Oarnar tra bdrm. and bath In partly fin- Contractors quet sponsored by Mullen high Mary Huck, historian and pub­ notice on you (If served by pubilea- transferred 4 must stcrlflce at lihed bamt Eating apaca In alec, lion, within twenty days after the 50% loan avaUable. AC 1- kitchen, large Uving room with aep- 2119 West Nh Ava. TA. 54011 school, Fort Logan, May 13 at licity. Proficiency Certificates last pubUcaUon of this notice) and arate dining area, paUo, fenced yard. In default of an answer or sppear- WERNER LIVINOSTON, REALTY SK. 8-7600. (St. Joseph’s High School, rector, assisted by Victor Avila, snee the Court wiU proceed to re­ 1731 CLIRMONT FURNITURE FOR SALE 4f- D e n v e r ) student director. ceive end hear proofs concerning Owner transferred. Must aaU, the heirs of such decedent and enter bdrm. brick. ExcaUent condition. AnUque China Cablntt, curved The Drama club sta|ed a decree determining who are the Large Uving room, fireplace, fnll SEE THIS ONE glass, 5 shelf, perfect eond. 965.09. Our Hearts Were Young and THE FOCLOWING received heirs of such deceased person. dining room, kitchen w/eatlng apace, GE 3-3706 Colorado Springs Dated at Denver, Colorado, this fuU Dsmt, 3 car garage, 2Vk lots Closing Estate Gay, a three-act comedy by their proficiency certificates for 19th day of AprU, 1982. CERAMIC TILE, decoraUve 4 regu-r ...... Extras, close to public 4 parochial 5 room brick bungalow, flnlahcd Ur, aU sliet: 80c a foot 4 . up^ Jean Kerr, May 4 and May. 6 perfect scores in the annual VICTOR B. GRANDY schools. DU 54734 bamt, 2 flrcplacea, 1 car garage, FEDERAL TILE in the church hall. Clerk of the County Court 14 block from St Vincent de 1930 N. Fadaral Blvd. 4B6-27M: k NOMA spelling and arithmetic By Frances D. Dolan 3219 CLIRMONT Paul, a o a e to car Une. Open k Sister Mary Daniel was the di- Deputy Clerk QI Loan - no down payment • cloalng house S at 4 Sun. 3 to 4 p.m. I tests in the Continental Denver eoft only. FHA 8IW.OO down. 4 bdrm., WE'RE MOVING k I J. CONWAlONWAY, AttorneyJOHN 1222 So. Columbine. SK. 8-3582 or k May 2: Judy Krois, Edna Yri- 1854 California St- or 3 4 TV room^lua bamt. bdrm. HA 4-4513 For sale: blond dining set, 2 leaves, k The Murray Drug Co. k bia, Juanita Cardenas, Margaret CH ; 4-1391 Living room w/FP, formal dining server, 65040; 3 blond and Ublaa;- k room, paneled k it, BW heet, fuU glasi tops, 63.00 ea.; matching cof-- k Prescriptions Accurately Filled k Atencio, Karen Coquoz, Ronald O^blished In The Denver Catholic k k HNS Slates Register) cement front driveway, garage, Not Listed by Perish fee UbU, 35.00: Roper gas rangw- k k Avila, Marcella Gonzales, Judy First Publication; April 38. 1983 Open Sun. I;30 to 5:30. For appt call 375.00; praeUcally new brown 4 ’ Main Store—118 E. Pikes Peak ME. 2-1593 Chav^ Judy Lynch, Janice U st Publication; Hay 17. 1962 owner. EA 2-8246 or DU 84244 ex t St. Mary’s (LUtlaton) white drapes, 9U.00: large gold d ra t' I 270 5972 to. Crtatviaw Ava. ries, floor to celelUng, 375.»1.00. r t ”' North Store—832 Te]on " ME. 44861 k Dance at Martinez, Mary Schneider, Mike IN THE COUNTY COURT 3 bdrm. brick, fuU bsmt.. Immediate 156 i k Johnson, Gloria Miller, Anthony In and for tha City and County of Cnie d’Ars—33 posteaalon. K k k Oanvar and State of Colorado FOR SALE OR TRADE SOA;' k PROFifSKMiAL PHARMACY Roybal, Bill Blakely, Norma No.1 P-23134 3573 NIAGARA St. Anthtny k 3 bdrm. brick, large Uteben w/eat- k k St. Dominic NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT 3161 W. Ford PL Cabin alto In upper Bear Creek 501 North Tejon ^ ME. 4-5541 Austin, Margaret Berg, and Ing area, dining room, fin. bamt w' Pmts. only 871.00 PITI, ssume 01 file Hollywood bed, 930.00. GR 71 ' L., Estate of WILLIAM HENRY BAH- bdrm. 4 bath, covered petto. B loan. 2 bdrm. fran u In A-1 condlUon. (St. Dominic’s Parish, Denver) Pauline Gonzales. RET, JR., also known aa WM. H. OWNER FR 74287 4283 The Holy Name society is Guests of honor were Sistet BAHRET, JR., WILLIAM H. BAH- Our Lady of Lourdoa TRUCKS 60 sponsoring a parish dance for RET, JR., and at W. H. BAHRET, BY OWNER—LEAVING TOWN 2020 So. Shorman Mary Mercy and Sister Mary JR. 2-bdrm. with 3rd bdrm. and apt. In Ideal 8 bdrm. famUy home. Large NOLAN FUNERAL HOME adults in the church auditorium Notice Is hereby given that I have bamt, beautiful yard and patio, car­ double garage, Elcar fence. Germaine. Lieut. Gov. Robert fUed my final report in the County peting and drapea. Very nice atul Our Preient Slock — SINCXRX PERSONAL SERVICE rROM May 26 from 9 p.m. to mid­ very reas. Near airport ^ 54150. All Souls night. L. Knous spoke to the students Court of the City and County of New 3 bdrm. brick, fuU bsm t, dou THE NOLAN FAMILY Denver, Colorado, and that any per­ Our Lady of Lourdeg—33 ble garaie. ______24NE1lin962GMC MEMBESS NATIONAL CATHOLIC Tickets at $5 per couple in­ and teachers on “The Success son desiring to object to the same FUNEUL OISECOKS GUILD clude a dance band, food and shall fUe written objection with the 3 bdrm. 194 bathi, fimUy room, St. Louis ful Student’s Chance for Sue said court on or before July 3rd, attached garage, 414 hike, to Our Only 89400. 3 bdnn., 14 bsmt., ga­ TRUCKS refreshments. Reservations can ME. 2-4742 1982. Lady of Lourdei. Assume FHA loan. rage, close' to #3 bua. including, Hydromitic, be made with Jim Bennett cess in Government Employ­ ANDREW WYSOWATCKY, CaU SP 74141 - 2656 So. a ir iu o n Administrator C. T. A. WILSON ft WILSON REALTY 4x4, Suburban, etc. (GL 5-0130) or Gerald Smith ment.’’ John B. C a m b e r and Presentatioii—33 2896 So. Broadway SU 14671 Anytime Also 20 used pick-ups (GE 34441.) Thomas P. 03rien ft trucks i t Attorneys for the estate 434 VRAIN Members of SL Louis Parish J f DRIVE IN Registration for pupils in the 741 Equitable Bldg., Denver 2, Colo- Newer 2 bdrm. brick. 2 extra bdrma.. parish catering the school for LEGAL NOTICES AM. 6-0861. In fuU bam t large ktteben with eat­ REAL ESTATE WANTED 35 CLEMES MOTOR CO. LOETSCHER'S ing space, 18x16 Uving room. MOTEL the first time will take place NOTICI OF FINAL SITTLRMINT (Published In The Denver Catholic HOFSITZ REALTY WE 44659 W a apedilallia In Nortbwast Danvar. 5555 W. Colfax Ave. J May 27 from f a.m. until noon. EaUte of AGNES CIZEK (Deceaaed). Register) Arvada, Lakawnnd, and Whaatridga No. P-34379. First PubUcaUon; May 17, 1962 Tha films listed hart daaarva 21 yrs. at the same SUPER MARKET stay with “Jay” Last Publication; June 7, 1962 real aatato. Prompt, eonitoon*, aalai Parents are to briag a baptis Notice la hereby given that 1 have to be remembered when you art senrtea. Your loM realtor 'for SO location. 820 N. N ev ^ fUed my final report In the Coimty yea re. mal certificate for each child Court of the (Uty and County of IN THE COUNTY COURT dlstributlne yeur patronaga In Franchised GMC detier entered, unless the child w u In and tor tha City and County of 5TACKHOU5E RIALTY m m uiATs Denver, Colorado,'and that any per­ Danvar and Stata of Colorade tha diftorant lines of buaintat. 3535 W. 38th Ava. OR 7-1678 baptised at St. Dombde’s. son desiring to objsct to the same No. P-24651 g n w D s c f shsU fUe written objection with the NOTICE TO CREDITORS The Third Order of St. Dom­ •aid court on or before June 19, EsUte of ALICE L McCABE, a/k/a Dr. John A. Ordohl inic will hold a day of recol­ 1982. AUce Irene McCabe (Deceased). No. NoHonally Advertised JAMES W. CREAMIR P-26851. SERVICE DIRECTORY OPTOMiTRIST lection May 27 in St. CHara’s or­ Executor All persons having claims against Brands of Groceries phanage. Reservations must be 434 MajesUc Bldg., the above named estate are required KE. 4-4205 133 NOaTH TIJON STRIfT made by May 23, with Florence Denver 2, Colorado to fUe them for aUowance in the 524 W. Colorado Ave. M I.34M 1 (Publishad 4n The Denver Catholic County Court of the City and Coun­ COLORADO SPaiNOS, COLO. Morahan (GR 7-3734) after 6:34 Register) ty of Denver, Colorado, on. or be­ p.m. First Publication: May 17, 1962 fore the 23rd day of October, 1962. ASH HAULING DECORATING LINEN SERVICE Last Pnblicatlon; June 7, 1962 or saldi claims shaU be forever barred. Miller Trash Service Papering, painting, itoamlng, textur­ WESTERN THE FIRST HASS of the sum­ NOTICE TO CREDITORS David J. Clarke Pickup Anytime AL. 5-1982 ing. plaatcr patcli. AU work gua^ DISPOSAL SERVICE Estate of BEATRICE MITCHELL, also Administrator antaed. Free eaUmata. CaU KE 44030 TOWEL SUPPLY CO. Electrical mer will be said in Nederland known as BEATRICE D. MITCHELL, (Published In The Denver Catholic SHAFFER’S RUBBISH or SP. 7-0378. 1730 So. B roedw iy______735550t_ • COMPANY chapel on June 3 at 8 a.m. (Ward) No. P-16206 Register) REMOVAL Construction Co. AU persona having claims against First PubUcaUon: April 26, 1962 PLUMBING GARBAGE-ASHES-TRASH the shove nsmed estate are required Last PubUcaUon: May 17, 1962 COMMERCIAL AND • btlinatw • Svrvk. C lli "A dirty butinan oparatad In a AU aisee, giaaa-Uned automatle water to file them for allowance In the RESIDENTIAL 3965. INSURED. o ModMiNutiOfl • RmmiuM* eiMn eourtaout mannar." tail Light Warning County Court of the City and County IN THE COUNTY COURT heaters. W-85. We InataU. Eoonomy • Kmvirtnt o Yard Llghtlfif Ftatwiai lb. um MaMaw lyitMi. of Denver, Colorado, on or before In and tor tha City and County of REASONABLE RA’p S Plnmblng, 764 Santo F 4 0 r. AC 34691 Drivers, are you sure your Danvar and State of Colorado 1035S. T«|en ML 94SM the 24tb day of Septraber, 1962, or AL. 33310 ELEaR IC WIRING MiS-1$33 tail lights and stop lights are said clalmi shaU be forever b am d . No. P-24I70 ALAMEDA PLUMBING CO. working? Check them, suggests ESTHER M. MITCHELL NOTICE TO CREDITORS BRICK 320 volts, remodeling, repairs. CaU Repairing, new work, sewers and p m B IR O N I Const rvatrix anytime. EM. 54108. ElUte of Mary Petera, a/k/a Mary Repair sink llnaa cltaned. Our srork la the state patrol, the next time THOMAS L. FORD, Attornay L. Peters, a/k/a Mary LoretU Petera Brick Work, Plannars, piM n itu r i s t o r i Pointing. Eatlmatea BE. 3-U7L Jim Dwyer Electric guarantoetL VTaa Eatlmatoa. S^dsiL fihaJunajc^, you use your car. It will take 1700 E. SIh Ava., (Deceued). No. P-28870. m B. Alameda SH 44300 o r a o m u i N c only a moment. Make sure Dmivar 16, Colo., 377-1922 AU pertons having claims against ll-OrMLnEIINC ANS PRESaiPTION DRUGGIST (Published In The Denver CatboUc the above named estate are requited BUILDER ft CARPENTER Gim ERS QUILTERS SErAUINO your car is seen by the driver Register) to fUe them for aUowance In the 802 No. Weber nim Publication: Hay 3, 1962 County Court of the City and Coun­ 15a Cm n aad Sraawin behind you at night. Last PubUcaUon; May 24, 1962 Alaska Quilt Shop — AU kinds of Mad. t. Ordw ty of Denver, Colorado, on or be­ quUtIng, remodel down and wot^ ME. 3-2069 fore the 1st day of November, 1962, Guttarf, Spouts comforters reconditioned. PiUowT^ Tvraltw. Mto. I . Ordw or said cUims shaU be forever I 34.13 So. Watiaatch AU. 1-S4SI I Cala. Sprint* Wa apectallM In Outtar and and rebind bltnkeU. Also sheet and barred. comfort combination. Patented U-.. Dorothy Johnson Spout Replacemsnt. Administratrix BUILDINO and CONTRACTINO Gutters Cleaned and censad Mfg. 1510 Gaylord. DU 53603.. ONE DOLUR SPECIAL JOHN J. CONWAY, Attorney for U»e For Any RamodalinE In Your Repaired. estate Homa — Insida «r Out — REPAIR SERVICE Please Patronize 1654 CaUfornU SL Thoroughly Experienced, Your REGISTER To Introdnce Yon to the Register (Hasgified Section CH. 4-1391 CALL JACK REIS Dependable, Guaranteed. Expert sewing machine repair serv­ Denver, Colo. ice. Alao convcnlona to portable or tS*l AC. 2-1459 cabinet SaUafacUon guaranteed. Advertisers and FOR $1.00 YOU GET 20 WORDS OR LESS (Published in The Denver Catholic Miwtw at Prsseatatica Farisb American Roofing CaU Joe R. Malpclde, WE 64611 •>< Raglator) Mention TO BUY, SEU OR SWAP First PubUcaUon; AprU 35, 1962 Shoot Motnl Co. ROOFING ^ Last PubUcattom May 17. 1963 CARPETS THE REGISTER CH 4-8464 2159 Downing New roofi, roof repadt painting COLORADO EFRINat • AURORA nil IN COUPON 1 WORD PER BOX IN THR COUNTY COURT After 6 pjiL eu. 1-103$ lie . Insured. AU srork 'gnaranuad, . In and tor tha City and County of Completa carpet service, including Oanvar and State of Colorado binding, cutting, laying. aUppUttg Member of AU Souls' Parish Terms, free aeUlmatoa. TA 54605 No. P-2Xr2t stain and shampooing. In jronr homa Member of ' J. D. CROUCH Our Lady of Grace Flariah NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT or our ibop. C. D. O’BRIEN EaUto of SHADY R. JONES (De­ Call Elliott— The Rug Man HEATING TRASH HAULING M AY REALTY ceaaed). No. P-22728. BB 34559 Notice Is hereby given that I have 'TRASH HAULING ' ...' flled my final report in the County Any Place in MetropoUton Denver ' Court of the City and County of CURTAIN CLEANERS REALTOR' Denver, Colorado, and that any per­ Day or Night CaUa son derirlng to object to the same FRANCIS LACE CURTAIN CLEAN- FOLEY HEATING EA. 34558 " shall file written objection with the ERS. CURTAINS, CHROCHETED 3430 High StreM INSURANCE-LOANS same court on or before June 12, TABLECLOTHS, DRAPERIES, 1962. BIJINKETS. SPREADS. LINENS UPHOLSTERERS Andrew Wysowateky CLEANED BY LATEST METHODS. 725 N. Tajon St. Administrator C.T.A. HAND PRESSED ONLY. 1259 KALA- W E REPAIR Re-Upbolator by a rallabla firm. JAMES D. DOYLE, Attorney for the MATH. TA. 53527. 35 years expariance — terma. Colorado Springs, Colo. Quality Apparel CLIP $1.00 TO IT AND AAAIL TO estate NATIONAL UPHOLSTERY First NaUonal Bank Bldg. CHIMNEYS 3145 Court PL Afc 5137^; IN COLORADO SPRINGS , Cloisified Advertising, The Rcgitler MA. 34378 Tha turns llstad here deserve 3 -7 7 3 1 SINCE 1872 Denver, Colo. to be remembered when you are WALLPAPER, PAINTS ME. Box 1620, Denver 1, Colo., or Phone H in to KE. 4^205 (PubUshed In The Denver CatboUc FIREPLACES Kiowa and Tejon Streets Register) distributing yeer patronage In Papar banging and painting. 913.00 - First PubUcaUon: AmM 26, 1962 tha different llnet of business. a room and up. Ko^e Paint KE. - Last PubUcaUon; Hay 17, 1962 TA 5-5107 44639. j 4. « \

■ i i i PAGE SOCTEtH THE DENVER CATHOLIC REGISTER Thursday, May 17. 1962 State Chairman Named Registration Set At Presentation For Save Sunday Group (Presentation Parish, Denver) Carl C. Dincler, independent will merely kpread six day sell­ Registration for all first grad­ ers and new families will be Hay lat)ric store owner, was named ing volume over seven selling 17 and May 18 from 3:39 to 5 state chairman of the Save Our days. Sunday movement to curtail Sun­ “It won’t add to the sales to­ p.m. in the seventh grade room. day retail selling in Colorado. tal, but it will add substantially All first graders and new stu­ Harlan Houtchens of Greeley, to the cost of operation.” dents must register at this time. an independent clothing mer­ Ibe Save Our Sunday bill is Plans are being made for the chant, was named vice chair­ not a religions biO, he em­ St. Anne cirde’s annual card man, snd Robert F. Downing, phasized. “The U.S. Supreme party and baby shower for the executive director of the Denver Court has upheld the right of Pope’s storeroom to be held in Retail merchant’s association, the individual states to legislate one of the church buildings in was named secretary. a uniform day of rest.” June. Mr. Dincler was named to Old gold, such as old wedding head the state movement at a 3oth Division i ^ s , glass frames, gold or fil­ luncheon in Pueblo attended by lings, etc., are needed by the members of other local commit­ Plans Dinner Altar and Rosary society. These tees who will form the nucleus The 35th Division Association things may be turned in at the of the state-wide committee. members of Ctriorado will hold credit union office. The groap plans to present a their annual dinner and get- bill to the 1M3 Colorado Gen­ together in the VFW Stewart eral Assembly to limit Sunday Post hall, Denver, Hay 19 at 7 Dinner Held rHail selling to essential items p.m. $3,000 Chuck connected with the tourist indos- Keynote speaker is Maj. Gen. For Mothers The past president of SL Mary’s PTA, LitUetoo, Mrs. A1 tty, food for on-premise con­ Ralph E. Truman (Ret) chair­ (Most Precious Blood Parish, Singer, is presenting Father Frederick McCallin, pastor, wHh sumption, pharmaceuticals and man of (he Historical Com- Luncheon Club Promoters Denver) a $3,909 check. This money was raised by the projects spon­ service stations. miHee for the former President Members of Explorer Scout sored by PTA throughont the past school year. The K. of C. Friday Luncheon Clnb pro­ Daugherty, rotating Friday chairman; and, Hr. Dincler said neither mer­ Harry S. Truman library at In­ Post 250 honored their mothers moters honored at their annual workers’ bottom row, left to right, Ben Wright, general chants nor their employes like dependence, Ho. a dinner May 15 at 6:30 p.m. subscription banquet May 11 in the Wolhurst chairman, Connell 539, Denver, George Swee­ the prospect of working on Sun­ Arrangements were in the Reservations may be made Country dub, are, left to right, top row, My­ ney, grand knight, and toastmaster for the Woman Heads Archdiocesan day. charge of Doug Phares. with A1 A, Yarrow, (MA 3-4901), ron G. McGLaley, Ed Hart, and Leonard J. banquet, George Canny. "Can you imagine what Col­ Paul Henderson of Post 250 orado would be like if all re­ Lino Lopez Gets Post has been chosen one of three tail stores were open on'Sunday? Rugis Graduate delegates from the South Dis­ Teacher Aide Program In National Council Littleton Holy Name (St. Mary’s Parish, Littleton) Most emNoyes have families Tells Candidacy trict to the first national con­ ther and son cook out at Prog­ and most other members of the Lino Lopez, a member of the vention in Ann Arbor, Mich., ress park. Eleven fathers and Joe , R. Albi, a graduate of To Heor Investigator Mrs. Thelma Kramer, chair­ families have Sundays off. When Human Rdations Commission in Aug. 20-31. The post has Harry sons attended this outing. Regis Ugh school and Regis col­ man for the parish teacher aide would they ever have an oppor­ Denver and a consultant to the William Maraggos will address Fletcher and Joe Manfred as lege, jannounced his candidacy program last year, will continue tunity to do things together?” Denver public schools, was its advisers. for a (member of the Colorado the S t Mary’s Holy Name Men’s named a regional vice president Officers elected at the Holy in that capacity this coming club, Littleton, on “My Years FROM THE ECONOUnC of the Northwestern region of House* of Representatives from Name society meeting are Vin­ year. Mrs. Kramer also will as­ Denvejr. in Criminal Investigation in cent CotUson, president; Aigie standpoinf. H r. Dincler said, the National Catholic Ckmncil for sume chairmanship of the arch­ universal i Sunday retail selling the Spanish Speaking at the Mr. Albi, in his announcement Arapahoe County.” The meeting Knoff; first vice president; Dr. diocesan teadier aide program. group’s 11th conference, held in letter, calls for a stiffer penal will be held in the school hall Robert McDermott, second vice Milwaukee. code "to make our streets safe” at 8:15 p.m. May 21. president; John DeGrood, treas­ The teacher aide program be­ TRY and for judicial reform. He urer; and John Francis, secre­ Mr. Maraggos has been chief gun at the school this past year pledges aid in increasing the tary. had 27 volunteer workers. These Retired Officers Plan amount of workmen's compen­ investigator for the AVapahoe County Sheriff’s office for 11 Mass hours for the evenings Included office help, certified J ' o l b u L Program at Lowry sation to deserving workers. on holy days now are at 5:15 teachers, and trained teachers President of the Cascade years. Previously be was a and 6 p.m. ^RRST "Gardening Tips” is the pro­ member of the Colorado State for the SRA program. gram slated for Hay 28 by the Laundry and Dry (leaning Com­ May 20 is family group Com­ Fiesta Dishes - Open Stock panies of Denver and Westmin­ Patrol and an instructor at the Under the SRA program, Rocky Mountain Society of Re­ munion Sunday. Gifts - Hardware > Paint ster, Mr. Albi also is president Boulder Crime School for five teachers put into effect a read­ Glass • Toys ^ tired officers at Lowry Air of (Cascade Investment Co., and years. ing program. These teachers Pipe Threading Force base officers’ mess at 8 One of the select few peace Mother-Daughter Fete taught 56 pupils approximately p.m. a partner in the S. L. Sutton Window Shades - Key Co., investment brokers. officers th attend the FBI Na­ Set at Notre Dame two hours a day. Every pupil Duplicating Elmer Rothman, assistant ex­ A captain in the U.S. Air tional Academy at Washington, (Notre Dame Parish, Denver) increased his reading ability tension agent for Denver, {will Open Friday k Monday Eves. Force Reserves, Mr. Albi re­ D.C., he was graduated in 1956. The annual mother-daughter two grade levels. be the principal speaker. AU| re­ L32 Broadway PE. S-2940 ceived a commission in 1956 K . of C. SpoNikor In 1958 Mr. Maraggos breakfast will, be 'held The teacher aide program will tired officers are invited. founded the Arapahoe (^unty after Mass and group reception continue with the same activi­ when he was named one of the Paul Murray will address 10 outstanding enlisted person­ Police academy. This academy of Communion May 20. The ties as last year at St. Mary’s. nel in the 10th Air Force. the Friday Luncheon Club in graduates 75 to 80 peace officers Mass will be at 8:30 a.m. The program is working on For the K. of C. hall., 1575 Grant annually. Enrollment is com­ Breakfast will be at 10 a.m. plans to put into effect art, I He lives with his wife, Joan, and young eon and daughter at Street, Denver, May 18, on prised of experienced law en­ at the Continental Denver hotel. music, and physical recreation * Insurance H forcement officers from a five Tickets are $1.95 for adults and programs and to secure compet­ omemaker’s 5525 E. Bayaud avenue. He has "Working for Christ.” $1.25 for children under 14. Res­ lived in Denver all of his life. state area. ent teachers to instruct the * Surety Bonds Departmtint Mr. Murray is past presi­ ervations are being taken by teacher aide. Retreats Scheduled dent of Denver Serra club, ELECTION OF officers for the Evelyn Gagliardi, WE 4-9483; Clib Scout Pack 263 had a fa Potroniza Theta Reliable and Friendly Firms past president of First Friday Holy Name Men’s club will take Jean Kopek, WE 5-7303; or Pat CALL For Laymeii at Abbey Greenwalt, WE 4-1040. club, past district governor of place after the program. Pres­ Duodlinu! Forthcoming laymen’s re­ ident Dennis O’Neill said all men Poui T. McGrady the Serra Club, and a former The deadline for stories and treats to be conducted by Fa­ of the parish are invited to the May Crowning Set pictures to be published in VAN SCHAACK & Ca. J a n i t o r i a l s u p p l ie s ther Malachy Sullivan, O.S.B., chairman of ^Denver County meeting. from St. Benedict’s Abbey, chapter of the National Polio In St. James* Parish "The Denver Catholic Regis­ (St. James’ Parish, Denver) 310 Patterson Bldg. Building & Grounds Maintenance Atchison, Kans., are sched­ The parish blood bank, spon ter” is Monday at 5 p.m, of foundation. The luncheon sored by the Holy Name club, The May crowning for the the week of pabllcation. All AAAIn 3-9333 M a t t * Equipment - Commercial Vacirams - uled for June 8-9-10 and June 15-16-17 at Holy Cross abbey, starts at 12 noon. All Catho­ needs donors. Persons mny con children of the first four ar»d> Polishing and Scrubbing Machines will be held May 18 at 10 a.m. have their stories at "The Canon City, Colo. lic men of Denver are invited. tact Bob Zarati, PY 4-2478. SALES CO . KE. 4-5141 Denver 1736-44 Blake St. Mary Lou Windey has been se­ Register” no later than Mon­ Th* fllnu llitod hart dMtrva to b* rMiMinb«r*g whan yev ir * le ct^ to crown the Blessed day to assure their pubUca- dlttilbutlng your iM reiiigt In At Brighten Stadium May 20 Mother’s statue. Her attendants tion that week. riM dlffortnf lints of buslntss. are Ketha Atkinson, Julia (^Ive, Marilyn Knoll, and Julia 0 ’- glass SATRIANO Dea. ^ FOR CO. Knights Will Sponsor Living Rosary Some of the principals in the Dr. Joseph N. Longfellow BROTHERS crowning for the upper four Sister Dolores Ann. The organ­ & .“ m ir r o r s The second annual Living Ro­ bus. The narrator will be James grades on May 20 at 4 p.m. JANITOR sary will be held in the Brigh­ Erger, past grand knight of the ist will be Mrs. John Beals. •in r Clwyennt Plice TA S-5151 The ceremony will be climax­ are: Queen, Linda Schmitt; at­ Dr. Wm. P. Trewartha ° (Celfex at Broadway) SERVICE ton high school football stadium Brighton council. tendants, Marjorie Foehl, Mary May 20 at 7 p.m. Music will be provided by the ed at Benediction, given by Fa­ * Rug and Upholtitry ther James Overman, assistant Margaret Mintkin, and Nancy ANNOUNCE THEIR ASSOCIATION girls’ choir at St. Augustine’s Doherty; and crown bearer, Shampooing This event is sponsored by parish, under the direction of at St. Augustine’s. St. Augustine’s council, Knights Catherine Bums. FOR THE PRAaiCE OF PODIATRY Bocon & Schramm * Complete House of Columbus. All surrounding The Men’s Club will meet G>mpoti(ion Roofing Cleaning councils will take part in the Vecofion Day May 24. All men of the parish FOOT DISORDERS Tile Roofing * Floor Waxing and ceremony. are to be contacted to join the Af Marycresf 752 Metropolitoi) Bldg. Alpine 5-4744 Roof Repairing Polishing An honor guard will be formed clnb in order to assure contin­ * Walls and Windows by the Fourth Degree Knights A vocation day program will ued support of the school’s ath­ 4020 Brighton Blvd. be presented at Marycrest Con­ letic program. CH. 4-6568 Washed from the various assemblies in Expert • Dependable the area. vent, Denver, from 1:30 to 4:30 The firms llstad hart datarva Insured p.m. Sunday, May 20. The pub­ Bill A’Hern Agency Father Robert V. Nevans, pas­ lic is invited. Communicants' to ba ramambarad whan you ara Call Us for Praa Istlmatas tor of St. Peter’s, Greeley, and *101 University Blvd. distributing your patrenaga In OL. S-57S4 and OL. 5-t2St A presentation of slides with ZSM W. 44th Ava. chaplain of the Greeley knights, Retreat Set • Life • Automobile * Rre tha diffarant Unas of businass. will be the principal speaker. tape recordings that tell of reli­ gious life, a tour of the grounds, (St. Anthony of Padua’s Parish, * Group * Bonds At the May crowning cere­ and the opportunity to talk with Denver) mony, Miss Carolyn Garcia, a Sisters and members of the no­ The First Communion class *A ls o Complete Package GOLD CROSS PRODUaS, INC. senior in the St. Augustine’s vitiate will be offered. will have a one-day retreat May high school of religion, will Plans “Accredited Purveyors to the (Catholic Clergy” Guests may wish to take part 18 from 9 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. crown the statue of the Blessed One hundred and ninety eight JANnORIAL & SANITARY SUPPLIES in the annual May crowning ce­ Zts. HA 46181 Mother. Her attendant will be remonies, in which Marycrest children will receive First Com­ Don't Trust to luck 1421 • 16th Street — CH 4-8775 or CH 4-2598 Fred Paiz. Other seniors will munion May 20 in the 7:30 a.m. DU. (4244 It Surt - Insurt DiNVIR X COLORADO high school students, their fami­ n be in the coronation group. Mass. lies, and the Sisters participate. REPRESENTING THE TRAVELERS INS. CO MITROPOVn^ ARU The Living Rosary will be New officers of the Holy fllVfUU -THI formed by the Knights of Colum Name society are A1 Huter, LENNIE LENNOX Regis Student Attends president; John Yedo, first vice San Diego Convention president; Michael Herrick, sec Edwin J. Feulner, Jr., Regis ond vice presdlent; Frank DU ScheforsMp Ue, secretary; Dick Bergin, college junior from Elmhurst, THE BEER THAT 111., and president of the student treasurer; Anthony Barba, mar Stephanie Purfurst, a sen­ shal; and James Sherlock and senate at Regis, attended ses­ ior at Machebeuf high school, sions of the Pacific Students Joseph Lonergan, delegates. MADE MILWAUKEE Denver, was awarded a four- Men and women are needed Presidents’ association conven­ year $1,000 scholarship at Rtf . tion at San Diego State college to help in the booths for the ba FAMOUS Marymount College, Sallna, zaar July 13-15. rn u u n S May 8-12. Kans. She is the daughter of DAY and He attended the convention as Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Pur­ NIGHT an observer from the college, furst, 2500 Albion street. Canducting Interview studying the possibility of Re­ OUARANTEED A superior student at Mache­ MURRAY BROS. DISTRIBUTING CO. 5 SERVICE ON gis becoming a (member of the Far Peace Carps Jabs ■ A L L M AKES association. i beuf, Stephanie has had four m KaEimR.SBiniiA years of high school science and ■■■■■■ Rofcert M,—Paul-V. —M, T. Murray m B a m E MHOURSonnci Hot Water for Twice ------j------Two senior Peace Corps rep­ four years of Latin. She plans to resentatives are in Denver D IA L SU 1-4494 The Job! LOOKING / T J X major in biology and languages Wednesday through Saturday, at Marymount. Stephanie is one May 16-19, to meet with potential VISIT YOUR Day & Night FOR of 10 new students from Denver Peace Corps volunteers, accord­ who plan to enroll at Mary ing to William Moyers, asso­ FIANK WAT»S, SrniSnt PIANO \r < j ) mount next September. ciate director. SALES ENGINEERING Conducting the informational CATHOLIC LIBRARY IIVO S. JASON Si/f VALUE? session in Denver wiU be Harry Water Police Will Sponsor Kranz, special assistant to the Electrical Contracting & Repairing LESTER— associate director, and Richard Patrol Boys' Night Bowman, assistant chief, divi­ ALL PARISHES VVELCOME.... Heoters sion of agriculture. Office of BETSY ROSS The Denver Police Depart­ ruttproof—last for Public Affairs. yam ment and the Denver Bears wiU OPENll AiA.T03PiA. STROHMINGER Tha sa ^ lla n modal Quahlii Mr. Moyers said telephone dots a 4*-gallon sponsor the 15th annual Safety calls to the Peace Corps, Den |obl CLOSED MONDAYS AND FRIDAYS Electric €o» Authorized Dealer Patrol Appreciation night at ver Hilton hotel, wiU establish 8:15 p.m. Friday, May 25, at interview appointment times. In- OPEN SUNDAY 10 A.M. TO 2 P.M. terviews ^tbont appointment Licensed and Bonded Bears stadium. SLAHERY About 2,000 members of will be held between 6 and 11 Member National Electrical Contractors Ass'n safety patrols in Denver area p.m.. May 18. Free Brdwsing: Projects going into training 11^8 Stout St. AC. 2-5733 parochial schools will be among Membership Fee $1 Per Year . . . & COMPANY the 8,000 guests entitled to a free this summer provide immediate ticket for the game between the opportunities for “perhaps hun­ Plumbing and Heating MUSIC CO. I Bears and Oklahoma City, ac­ dreds of Denver citizens who Access to thousands of dollars FltKE PAKKI.Ni; J cording to Officer Joe Hale of would want to serve.” ELDER CONSTRUCTION COMPANY Contractors 1321 i.lNL()l..\ the police safety education unit. Needed are teachers, farm­ Refreshments for the boys, ers, nurses, carpenters, welders Of Catholic Literature GUY M. ELDER & SONS 181 VALLEJO ST. 1332 Broadway (iffieCr Hale said, will be do­ —craftsmen of nearly all skills. SII. 4-3181 Industrial and Commercial Building CH. 4-4556 nated by four dairy firms, Seal- Many liberal arts graduates and 625 19th 51. Next to Holy Ghost Church JOHN J. CONNOR, Prtsidtnf test, Meadow Gold, Borden, and others with only general experi­ 175 Vallejo St. PEarl 3-8930 Robert F. Connor, Vice President OPEN MON. and FRI. EVES. Carnation. ence can qualify.

M iraiiaiiai THE REGISTER I

S c ira o f A U Lmgml The Clergy Colombia Raps Reports Of Ripley Road Science, Religion London — The row-on-row Of U S. Aid Restrictioas workers’ town of Seven Kings was planned 50 yean ago by a Bogota, Colombia.— The various departments with joint group of men who expressed tha ’ Colombian government (tolombia and U.S. funds. predominant religious feeling of took sharp issue with a ‘No schools will be built with Aid One Another the area and times vben they newsstory in the U.S. that U.S. funds in the mission terri­ Washington—The National Catholic Welfare Con­ put a non-denomlnaUonal cha­ said “Colombia has agreed tories, the area in which the ference’s top legal authority rejected a claim that pel at the end of a short street^ Church has a special position to write nondiacrimlnatory re­ thurch-related schools should be denied federal aid be­ called, believe it or .not, Ripley'^ in education.” (NCWC Wire) ligious clauses into all future Road. cause they integrate religion with subjects such as sci­ Non-Catholics and non-con- ^ Alliance for Progress loan ence. formists who predominantly- agreements for education.” William R. Consedine, direc­ tional Defense Education Act populated the area mantged_ The story had declared that tor of the NCWC’s Legal De­ to parochial schools for the various attitudes ranging b e Z I \ such a “policy” was disclosed partment, said a suggestion that acquisition of minor equipment tween askew and ukance when ^ ~ by Agency for International for science, mathematics and “textbooks be the criterion for their regard lighted upon the Development officials in the determining t h e constitu­ foreign languages instruction are real non-conformiats of tha U.S. and was the result of tionality of government aid to unconstitutional because these neighborhood—more yet less “U.S. Protestant pressure.' Church-related schools betrays subjects are not “secular” in popularly known as—the Raman A statement issued here by a lack both of education and of Catlrolic schools. Catholics. t h e Colombian government’s constitutionaFlaw. Consedine said integration of Opposition notwithstanding,. Office of Information and Press He also said that if textbooks religion does not make the the ironic road of Ripley within said; “The Government of Co­ must be without any religious NDEA assistance unconstitution ten years produced four prieati' lombia wishes to state that it content to make their purchase al. including Archbishop John C. does not beiieve this is the with public funds constitutional, "As a matter of fact.” he Heenan of Liverpool and the re- ' stand of the Government of the then “every school district in said, “the NDEA bears out our cently appointed Bishop-elect of United States. the nation has long been violat contention that the government Lancaster, the Most Rev. Brlail " I t will not accept such type ing the constitution.” can aid private nonprofit schools Foley. The Archbishop’s broth­ of clauses as a condition for He was responding to a claim because these schools render er, Father Francis Heenan, outside aid and for credit that in a 100-page report by a Yale public service to the community Sominoiy lor Dolayoil Vocoffons and Father Alfred Bull further could be obtained in behalf of graduate student, George R. La In these schools, the students The proposed S t Pius National Seminary kind in the U.S., it will train men of middle “ditgraced” Seven Kings’ un­ Colombia in fulfillment of the None. 'The report was made for learn mathematics and science for Delayed Vocations will be built under age aod older, who have discovered late in favorable tradition by also Join­ agreements made at Punta del the Department of Religious Lib­ which is what Congress obvious the sponsorship of Cardinal , life that they would like to study for tho ing the ranks of the Cattohe Este,” (Uruguay, in August, erty of the National Council of ly desires through this legisla Archbishop of Boston, at Weston, Mass., be­ priesthood. The college will have a 175-seat clergy. 1961). Churches, the nation’s biggest tion. ginning in the fall of 1963. The new seminary, chapel, 111 single rooms, an Infirmary, con­ “This statement of the (Prot- federation of Protestant and If isfofic Firtf “That a religious, purpose is accommodating 129 students, wlU be modeM ference rooms, four classrooms, and n library . estaat) religioas groups” (ia the Orthodox denominations. Catechists Will Get Seventeen-year-old .Mary also achieved does not nullify after the Roman Fonttflcal Beda college for for 36,166 volumes. .Bowsstory), the Colombian gov La None told the NCWC News God’s Special Reward Ann Eiagery of Saginaw, the public service rendered.” belated vocatiOBs. The only seminary of its emment’s comrauaitine said, Hich., beams as she reads a Service at the Council’s head­ Newark, N.J.—God h u a spe­ “it not ia agreement with the letter from U.S. Atty. Gen. quarters in New York that he F in I cial reward for the cateohlat. support that the American gov Robert F. Kennedy congratu­ had surveyed 90 Catholic school Consedine turned to the First Ex-Dioceson Priests Archbishop Thomas A. Boland erameat hat generousiy granted lating her on being named to textbooks. Amendment to the Constitution told trchdioceHn officials of the to E n tr ie s of all religions, in receive the Young American He said that at least 75 of which prohibits Congress from To Get Mission Duty Confraternity of Christian Dcic^ eluding Boa-Christian ones, /or Medal for Service from Presi­ the Catholic textbooks contain­ making laws respecting the es trine. Maryknoll, N. Y. — Two dio­ their deveiopmeat and defense. dent John F. Kennedy. She is ed “religious indoctrination” in tablishment of a religion and “Christ livu in the catechist It was reported that Prot­ the first girl to win the medal subjects such as mathematics, which prohibits it from stopping cesan priests — Fathers Jaroea who makes Him known to those science, and foreign languages. estant groups and individuals since its anthoriution in 1966, the free exercise of reii^on. P. Noonan of Burlington, Vt., who otherwise would not know The NCWC’s Consedine said have requested a “policy state­ and the first candidate hon­ The fint part of the amend­ and Thomas C. WeiMe of Los Him,” the Archbishop said. ment” for Alliance for Prog­ ored since 1953. Mary Ann is in a statement that it is no se­ ment — the so-called “No Es­ Angeles — who joined the Mary ress offices. A, letter was sent a senior at Sts. Peter and cret that Catholic schools inte grate religion with other sub­ tablishment Clause” — imposes YOaTIONS-MEN to all who sent in inquiries. It Paul’s High school, where she “definite restrictions on purpose­ knoll Fathers to serve in the said in part: “We are further has been outstanding in her ject matter.” missions — will receive assign “We do not deny this. We take ful governmental support of re­ assured that non-Catholics may scholastic work and In serv­ ligion as such,” he said. ments in June, the former to BROTHERS OF CHARITY ice to the community. pride in it. Otherwise, our Cath­ attend schools being build in Yet, he continued, the second the Philippines, the latter to TtKbifi • loclil Wtrktn - CriftonM olic schools would lose* a vital A MMl c*ntr(f«tion with reason for existence,” he said. part — the so-called “free ex­ Molhmr ImttHhs letter of the law and the spirit Peru. ovtr ISa yMix ol tr*dltl«n. La Noue charged that the ercise clause” — also imposes that inspires the Sunday ob­ Since its inception, Maryknoll CoaUet th« VocitSon Director Convent, Nursery School, Dispensary loans extended in the 1958 Na- “definite restrictions on the ex On *DM§lv0n0$s’ servance.” has accepted diocesan prieiti SrellMr Steehn AnMtnu, S.C. Mrs. Morton Henley, a mother The pickets appeared on the CwSiul CmUm *ci4fir Di»>. a elusion of otherwise qualified wishing to work in the mUaions. N«l Hmkory, MMiKkimtn These three institutions srill be of untold value in the vil­ individuals or institutions from of 11 children, told a state com­ opening day of Sunday Ob­ One of the first such priests was lage of PALAYAM ia INDIA. The faith of the yonng wiU be nonreligious public programs mission in Providence, R.I., that servance Week, a period set Father Patrick J. Byrne of safe-guarded by Catechetical In­ the charge of “divisiveness” aside to center attention on structions begun in Nursery School merely because they are also Washington, D.C., who joined Church-related.” against Catholic schools is really Sunday as a day of rest, wor­ QHAIiLBNGE and carried on through grammar Maryknoll In 1615, three years to MEN U le IT ' school years; the faith of many of In order to maintain neutral a blow to America’s pluralism. ship, and family unity. after Its founding and became a li Chrht efforint A the elderly and others, it is hoped, ity toward all, he said, “the Ml's. Henley represented the Bishop. chAlltiiH to your Citizens for Educational Free­ Writ# now for a tr«at will be re-bom through the sei^ce government may make non-re PR Mass Thirty-five years later, he died pomphlot iww you of the Dispensary. The buildings will dom before a commission study­ * ligious benefits available to all, New York — A first an con lorvo Him M k not win souls for Christ—this will ing a request for state finan­ a hero’s death ai a prisoner of •ROTHIR OS HOLT regardless of their religious af nual Public Relations Mass caoti. T be accomplished by the devoted Sis­ cial aid for secular textbooks the Reds in the forced march filiation or lack of it.” commemorating the feast day of to the Yalu river in the Korean Sr*. ImirO, t.S.C. w Sn. Iwttl. CSA ters who will live in the Convent and equipment in parochial and laa-A DeMi Hell It. lOotrO'i UeH. I- * and staff both the School and Dis­ “Moreover, such a gov­ other private schools. St. Bernardine of Siena will be War. Metre Deere, M . Anetle, Teue pensary. ernment policy has the addition­ The latest objection to pri­ offered Sunday, May 20, in St. PALAYAM is sHnated in a hilly al merits of fostering parental vate schools, she said, is divi­ Francis of Assisi’s church. The and academic freedom as well JmfAtOrimidCtmA and remote region of INDIA. For siveness. “Ia it not divisive to Mass is sponsored by the St. as true religious liberty.” ATMOUC MIM 2 0 to 4 8 many long years it has' been isolated from well-developed have economic differences, that Bernardine Public Relations Catholic centers. FATHER SEBA8TUN POTTANANY, the Consedine said the argument Committee of New York, a lay­ newly appointed pastor of SAINT MICHAEL’S, the pariah is, for one family to live in a DOES GOD WANT YOU to spend the remainder of your that all reference to religion plush apartment and another to men’s group that is seeking to establish St. Bernardine as pa life serving Him a s a diocesan Brothar? (Serving tha ■WBSarswi***—o r 'M moLmmtr o * L x - __ ^ uUmipAtod from edu­ Uv« in A dinay Hat? Is not a It Bishop and hia priests in the capacity best suited to your to do somemlnx about It ne cation getting public support two-party system divisive? Is it tron for public relations in this leads to “absurd consequences.” SISTERS to open a Nursery School and Dispensary. Part of not divisive to attend different country. skills) DO YOU WANT to lead a aemi-monaatic life and his letter rea^: “Hoping in Providence and draining ail our “Taxpayers must surely see churches? experience the Happiness you have been searching for? resources we have begun the work of construction in earnest. to it, under this argument, that A plot of four acres of land was purchased and the founda­ Mrs. Henley was one of 11 In Foster Homes Write...... no more copies of Shakespeare tions ^ the buildings are nearly completed. The estimated cost witnesses before the commis Newark, N.J. — Seven Cuban THI VIANNIY M O TH M f of the three buildings is |8,000. The practicing Catholics of the are purchased with their funds, sion. Six supported aid to pri­ refugee children have been plac­ parish, aware of the loss of faith in so many of their neighbors, Aldmd hy Sain# since there are few more pow­ vate schools and the others op­ ed in five foster homes here > Teurlinga Drive Lafayette, La. pooled their life’s savings and gave me 91,500 to start the Antonio Perei Cabrera, 11, erful teachers of religion,” he posed it at the commission’s less than a month after their work. Means for the cement, iron, roofing and masonry are a resident of the Canary Is­ said. third public hearing. arrival from Miami. The seven, wanting. ^,500 is needed for these things and if this sum can lands, attended the canoniza­ “It could certainly be proved aged 9 to 14, were the first of be obtained the buildings can be completed.” tion of Blessed Martin de that every school that uses Egiiicalor Chid«i 24 Cubans who arrived in this The depth of faith of the good people who surrendered their Porres in S t Peter’s, Vatican archdiocese Apijl 11 to be plac­ life’s savings in order to save the faith of others is edifying Dante, Chaucer, or Shakes­ Insulatoal Pl«ty City. The youngster Antonio ed in foster homes. and inspirational. We don’t want to crush their hopes of re­ peare inevitably educates chil­ THE NARROW, insulated, had figured in one of two re­ dren in a religious interpreta­ kindling the faith in many of their neighbors and strengthen­ personal piety of many Cath­ coveries accepted by the tion of life, some aspects of re- ing tte faith in their children. Can you help us gather the olics is one of the great TURN ‘•ST.JUDl necessary money to send them? A donation in any amount will Church as miraculous and at- ligous dogma, and the moral problems that the Church Social Woriiars he grat^ully received. Itor those who might be able to send toibuted to the new saint, a and life values that Christianity faces among her members, Dioettan ogtncy with txpand- a lai^e amount: 11,500 will complete one of the buildings. 16th century Peruvian mu­ maintains in a culture. asserted Monslgnor James P- ing fomiiy ond chiidrtn't strvUtB. latto who spent his life in the Good tuporvition, piychhitrlc con* St. Jude Solemn Novena Even if religion were totally Shannon, president of the Dominican order working sultotion, lound porsonnol policitt SERVICE OF THE QUEEN kept out of education, he said, College of St. Thomas in St. BY THE VOWS of poverty, chastity, and obedience, THE among the poor and the sick. this would not solve the prob­ Paul, Minn. ond solorios, roHromont, lociol JUNE 16, through 24, 1962 socurity. GroduoU thidy oppor* LIFE OF A NUN is one spent in the very special SERVICE Antonio recovered from gan­ lem because education would “This type of Catholic,” he Aik St. Jude, ' The Soim of the Impoi- tu n itio i. libl*'" for help. Send your petition! OF MARY QUEEN OF THE UNIVERSE. In far away India, grene after his foot was badly then fall into another category told a convention of the St. crushed in 1956. Physicians to the National Shrine of St, Jude today. also part of Mary’s realm, there are four girls whose love for called secular humanism. Cloud Diocesan Council of Suporvisor Mary and her Son has led them to the Novitiate of the POOR said the foot had to be ampu­ “And the Supreme Court said Catholic Men, “is very faith­ A GIFT WILL BE SENT TO CLARE SISTERS. They are: SISTER FULGENCIA, SISTER M.S.W . rtquirod ptui coto work tated to save his life, but the last year . . . that secular Hu­ ful in performing his personal THOSE TAKING PART IN THE CARITAS, SISTER EMMANUEL, SISTER VICTIMA. It will boy’s parents prayed to the •xptrionco. Dotail quolificotient. cost $300 to train each of these Sisters. Could you pay for the manism is a religion within the acts of devotion, but he gives SOLEMN NOYENA Pemvian friar and the child CASE WORKERS: M.S.W . proftr- training of one of them? The entire amount does not have to meaning of the First Amend­ no consideration to the re­ be paid all at once—y o u ^ u ld send |1S0 over a period of a recovered. The second cure ment,” he said. sponsibility of giving himself tneo, or port groduoto work with MARK PETITIONS, FILL IN, CLIP AND MAIL ; accepted by the Church was txporlonco. year. If this would be beyond your means perhaps you could Consedine declared that "the to the rest of mankind.” DEAR FATHER ROiERTf FLCAIE PLACE MY PCTITIOMI OEfORC ! send one dollar a month to be deposited in MARY’S BANK— that of Dorotea Caballero Es­ problem of the proper relation­ Apply: Catholic Charititi. 1665 THE HATIONAL SHRINE OF ST. JUDE IN THE COMING NOVENAl a Mission Club established to help pay for the training of calante, 70, of Asuncion, Para­ Grant Stroet, Donvtr 3, C o lo ra d o ships between parents, govern­ Bithop lauds □ em p lo y m en t □ HAPPY m a r r ia g e □ t h a NKSOIVINO ' Novices. guay, who recovered from ment, religious groups and edu­ an intestinal obstruction and Sunday PIskais □ p e a c e OF MIND □CONVERSION OF RUSSIA□ * cation is one of the gravest con­ Bishop John J. Wright of OF SPECIAL CONCERN heart attack after she prayed stitutional problems confronting □ FINANCIAL HELP □W O RLD PEACE Q RETURN TO lACRAMENTfc to the newly proclaimed saint. Pittsburgh praised pickets who PERSONAL at all times are the PALESTINE REFUGEES—the unfortunate our nation. demonstrated outside large area I ENCLOSE « THE CLARCTIAN SEMINARY * people who lost their houMs and livelihood at the time of the “We believe that the only so­ stores which are remaining We will pay you $106 each week BUILDING FUND. ARAB-I8RAELI War in 1948 and are stUl living in exile in lution consistent with our con­ for as long ai one year when GAZA, JORDAN, LEBANON and SYRIA. During the month of open on Sundays. In his weekly Name ...... stitutional heritage is one which you are in the hospital for Sick­ May each year we appeal especially for funds to carry on our Classified Ads radio broadcast on station will leave the government free ness or Accident. People up to relief program for these poor people. Their dependence on us CUstlfled adi run throug^h all Reg­ KDKA, May'6, the prelate said AJJrtti-- ister editions. The rate u 85c per to provide the same assistance that the pickets were “bearing 80 years of age are eligible. No cannot be ignored and any donation that yon can send enables Agent Will CaU. For FREE de us to continae this great humanitarian work—the CARE OF word per Issue. Minimum 12 words, to education in both public and a witness to a tradition deep City. .Zone ..^...StWeM if four 4>r more consecutive issues private nonprofit schools and tails of this offer write Crown PALESHNE r e f u g e e s . For 910 we can buy enough food to are used, the rate Is 80c per word in the moral and ethical herit­ Life, 203 No. Wabash Ave., MAIL TO; NATIONAL SHRINE OF ST. JUDE feed a family for an entire month or provide complete care for per issue. Payment must accompany which will also respect the ac­ age of our people,” and that all orders. Ads received on Monday Chicago 1, HI., Dept. 219. 221 Wost Madison Stroot, Soc. 99 Chicago 6, lllinoii an orphan for a month. wUl appear In the Issue printed the ademic freedom of both systems the large area stores which per­ following week. of education,” he maintained. sist in remaining open on Sun­ HAVE YOU ARRANGED TO HAVE MASS OFFERED FOR M18CELLANIOUS (NCWC Wire) day do so “in violation of the THE LOVED ONE YOU WILL BE REMEMBERING! ON AMERICA’S FORGOTTEN CHIL­ MEMORIAL DAY? DREN are out on the wlndiwept pUlni of the OgleU Sioux Reierva- Help Students to Become Priests tlon. You can help them by sending clothing, trading stamps, greeting $7.00 WILL MAINTAIN A STUDENT FOR ONE WEEK cards, canceUed stamps (except the 1^12earBstQlis$ioti$j^ L 2, 3, and presidential series) to; Father Edwards, Holy Rosary Mis­ WILL YOU HELP HIM ALONG? FRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLAAAN, President sion, Pine Ridge, S. Dak. DO IT M$gr. JoHph T. Ryan, Naei Sac'y RIGHT NOW SO YOU WONT FOR­ GET. TELL YOUR FRIENDS! Sand all communleallent to: P.S. LEGAL TENDER HELPS ALSO! CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION ST. JOHN’S. CRYSTAL SPRINGS, In our Divine W ord Seminaries in Indio, Philippines needs donations. 781 square mUea, 480 Lexington Ave. at 46th St. New York 17, N. Y. 30,000 population. 150 Catholics. Fa­ and Japan, we hove a number of students preparing ther Tormey, Crystal Springs, Hlsals- slppl. for the priesthood. AAANY ARE VERY POOR and need THE 7S MEMBERS of St. Mary’s, Batesville, need church. Please help finandal help to continue their studies. THE REGISTER us. Rev. James Carroll, BatesvlUe, Mlaataalppt. Published every week by The Catholic Press Society, Inc., •TIAI OFF' 934-950 Bannock Street, Denver 1, Colo. Post Office Box 1620 SONOWaiTERS Mambar Audit Buraau of Circulations SONGPOEMS WANTED! CoUaborate with profeaaional songwrltera on Door Fothori equal basla. Share royaltiea. Song Prealdant------Mott Rav. ArclUUsbop Urban J. Vebr, DJ)., Oanvar writers Contact Co., 1619-0 Broad­ Endoaod find Editor and Bualneat Manager...Rt Rev. John B. Cavanagb, H.A., Pb.D. way, New York O ty 19, N. Y. for ^Mflsorfam • Mudont KxecuUve E ditor..-^...... Msgr. John B. Ebel, U ttD „ HlstD. POEMS WANTED for musical set­ to the priesthood for , W H ki. R Hanaglns Editor ------, ...... n o y d Anderson. K.S.G. ting and recording. Send poems. Symbol o f Sraadam In Vfot Nam Associate Business Manager______Rev. Daniel J. Fiaberty, MJt. Free examination. Crown Music, 49- AaaocUte Editors ...Linus M. Rlordan, Pb.D.; Paul H. HaUett, UttJ). WT West 32nd St., New York 1. A bell that used to ring from the steeple of old St. Pancra- NAMKphMeptaiL. tius church in Chicago now rings out in Qui Nhon, South Viet STAMPS APMFM...... Tblrty-flve arcbdioceset and dioceses have ediUons of this news- STAMPS; 75 different KK with ap­ Nam, as a symbol of peace, freedom, and inspiration for God paper as official organs as follows; Archdioceses of CincinnaU, Santa and country. When the new St. Pancratius church was conse­ I*’ . Kansas, and Denver; Dioceses of Grand Island, provals 24 up. Stampede, Box—285. CITY-. -ZONE----- STAIt- Great Falls, Helena, Reno, Lincoln, Wheeling, Peoria, Altoona-Johns- Berwick, Pennsylvania. crated, the Rev. Robert Niece gave the two-ton bell to John Nuhvlll*. Salt Lake City, Sallna, Tucson, DAILY MISSAL Wichita, Des Moines, Spokane, Pueblo, Steubenville, Cheyenne, Lafa- Grozdiak, who raised the necessary 91,000 to ship the bell to Viet yette. Alexandria, Natchex.Jackson, Evans^le,c, uivvnGreen oajt,Bay, xxiiMi.Boise, CelEl NEW AMERICAN DAILY mSSAL. Nam. When the bell was dedicated (see picture above) by MAIL TO Paso, Joliet, and Austin. The Diocese of Dodgege City uses the Wichita GIFT bargain. Free Literature. Com Bishop Peter P. Pham Ngc Chic, Bishop of Qui Nhon, more than edlUon. the Diocese of SanS*" Angelo uses tiuthe West Texas edition, fort. Box A, Mentcle, Penna. •nd the Cincinnati Archdiocese afao publishes a Dayton edition. 2,000 guests, including 35 clergymen and numerous U.S. offi­ TYPEWRITERS cers, were present. Mr, Grozdiak of 3104 N. Kolmar avenue, REV. FATHER RALPH, n a t i . dir. Second-Class Postage Paid at Denver, Colorado Typewriters; Recent Underwood Grey Deluxe Standard, all latest fea Chicago, is carrying on his one-man campaign and has many lures, new price 9255.00, only 579.50. thousands of religious articles in a Chicago warehouse ready to S.V.D. Catholic Universities »42 Each guaranteed. Shipped duty free HELP HIM TO REACH HIS GOAL Crown Eoulpment. 1011 Bleury, be shipped to Viet Nam as soon as he can raise the money 316 N. MICHIGAN CHICAGO 1 , Que. to cover the cost sending the items by freighter. R m I s Wait in Wings Political Peace Provides Dominicon Bishops Launch Good News From Colombia Education, Vocation Drives By F loyd A ndeuon ^New York — The Churchithan 8W,000, has 3< parishes Juan de la Maguana, U the pre­ Denver—(Special)—There was good news from iii the Dominican Republic' served by 23 diocesan priests late who suffered the most di­ is carrying out its spirit­ and 97 religious rect persecution by the Trujillo Latin America during the last few days, with the elec­ It operates the Patronage of regime. He is now reviving tion of GuiUermo Leon Valencia as president of Co­ ual mission, increasing it^ efforts on behalf of the Our Lady of Altagracia, direct Church efforts in his see, which lombia. This is a continuation of the agreement between ed by Father Angel Sans, has a population of 439,961, 16 the liberal and conservative parties', which runs to poor, and encouraging the CJP.M„ whose aim la to estab­ diocesan priests and 33 religious. 1974, and under whicb they take people to hope for better lish Catholic schools in districts days.^’ Like the rest of the Domini­ turns governing the country un­ terial has an Oriental touch to Inhabited by the poor. can Hierarchy, Bishop Reilly is der a bipartisan arrangement it — much comes from Rqfl That is the way Bishop Juan Boston-bom Bishop Thomas faced with the problem of a Colombia is another country China, more so than from the Pepen y Soliman of Nuestra Reilly, C.SS.R., Ordinary of tht severe priest shortage. Recent­ which was held under a dicta­ steppes of Russia. Senora de la Altagracia en Hi- independent I^ la tu re of San ly 63 persons from the town torship, this one by Rojas Pi- Hie Colombians remember guey summed up what the Hier­ of Pedemales, which has a pop­ nilla. In 19S8 the ^ctator was the dictator very well. When archy of the Dominican Repub­ ulation of 5,000, sent him a pe­ overthrown; and the bi-partisan he was overthrown, he was in lic is doing in the present crit­ tition ksking Mm to send "to agreement began, since neither the process of building a tre­ ical period of their naUon’s his­ our parish a priest and two or political party was able to gain mendous monument to himself. tory, according to Manuel Mira, three Sisters for the good of office. It is on one of the principal assistant editor of Noticias Cat- the souls of this community, And in Cotombia, as in so highways, and stin stands alicas, who made a first-hand which has been abandoned for many other Latin American there, gauntly unfinished. One lurvey of conditions in the Do­ a long time.” coontries, the Conunnnists are of my Colombian friends told minican Republic. The great hope of the Church always waitiag la the wings, me as we drove past, “We de­ In the past, the Bishops — who in the Dominican Republic hat ready and willing to step into cided to let it stand rather than suffered along with the people in the Seminary of St. Tbomat' powCT whenever there is an op­ to tear it dawn. This way we under the tyranny of )^e late Aquinas in the Santo DomlnitD portunity for them to do so. have a constant reminder of the dictator Rafael Tnijillo — val­ archdiocese, the new seminary The visitor to Bogota, the cap- dictatorship — and let us hope iantly denounced the oppression soon to be opened in Santiago, 'ita l city, for instance, quickly we will remember not to let it and demanded justice. and those which are to be built ! learns the influence and the happen again.” Lbokiiig AiiMd in other sees. (NCWC Wire) ’ zealous work of the Communists. Twrrarind by ■aiMiiH As you walk down the main Though the political situation Today the Dominican Bishops - avenues, you see several book- seems to be relatively smooth do not like to recall the past. VOCATIONS-WOMBi . stalls propped up against the in Colombia, “la violencia” still They prefer to try to solve the walls of buildings or along difficult problems of the present disturbs many parts of the OPPORTUNITIES fences. These, my friends told more isolated areas. This is in and make plans for the future, FOR WOMEN 16-35 . me during my visit there, are effect a civil war which has while encouraging good Catho­ run by Communists, by well- lics to take part in public life. been raging in some areas, with Pvtttxor Prlxo Stivp God by serving Othtrs trained Communists. The books hundreds of thousands of per They have two basic aims: on sale are well printed, on a sons killed, often brutally and Provi^ng the people with Chris- A Catholic author, Edwin spar •f the CorngregaUenlUO B of Marf great variety of topics. And, I wantonly. I was told in Bogota tian education and Increasing O’Connor, has been named, to receive the 1962 Pulitzer Prize was told, the Colombian who that there were parts of the vocations to the priesthood. a PrPvktini Hofflt for Poor wants a book from the Commu­ for the best work of fiction. •nd NtgiKlod a NuriMj country where the highest gov In the Altagracia diocese, nist book stall will get it — even Mr. O’Connor, a former jour­ a Socltl Workon a Caft- eming officials would not dare where only 10 priests work in chiiti a Ptrtoh W orktnl nalist and graduate of the Uni­ a S K rtta riM a H( iif he does not have the full to go without “permission” of eight parishes serving 220,591 versity of Notre Dame, was makart a Conducting Rw ; pri(;e. Hie Communists are more the bandits, who in effect rule Idtncti for Builnau Glrli Catholics, Bishop Pepen is pim­ chosen for his book, ‘*The , interested in indoctrination than and terrorize the area. One must Wriloi Vocation Dlractraw ping to set up an organization Edge of Sadness,” the story of ' in dollars. understand the up-and-down to­ to train teachers. I 4S W ttf 14tk I f n t f the spiritual rehabilitation of Naw Tart I I , N T . pography of Colombia, the rela­ Tat. CM S-SSM I m I y iWf l o M d a “I believe that if we improve a priMt who had been a vic­ At Radio Sutatenza, the mag­ tively few roads, and the diffi­ schools,” he said, "the country tim of alcohol. He is the an- nificent radio station built and culties of tr^portation to real­ wiU also improve in the tbor of a former best •seller, conducted by the famed Mon­ ize how thia can happen. long rim. Since the end of the ‘“The Last Hurrah.” The signor Jose Joaquin Salcedo, This was graphically illus­ last century, public education award marked the second one we were shown a huge table trated by a friend of mine in Bo­ has been secular. There is no in recent months to be given half covered with Communist gota, He was out in the country Keep Your Eye on fho Birdie Catholic university. Hie intellec­ an American Catholic novel­ publications. I counted 150 of on an inspection trip and met a tual classes who backed TrujiUo is t The National Book award them before I stopped — and former employe,- now working Bui Bo Carelwl Whom You Stand! were ‘liberals’ from the secular for fktiot went to Walker . l a . . " • our hosts told us they could for a Colombian bank. He was university.” Percy, a convert from Pres- have multiplied the number visiting a farm in the area for The Santo Domingo archdio­ byteriaaiam in 1947, for his many times over. These again his bqnk. They had breakfast to­ cese, with population of more novel ‘“The Moviegoer.” were well printed, colorful pub- gether and agreed to meet for Ucations — and one would be dinner. My friend appeared — surprised if they did not appeal but the otter man did not. The to the Colombians. bandits had come down from an d Le a m An interesting aspect of the the hills and chopped the ‘farm P. 0 . Box 1620, Denver, Colorado Communist effort in Latin family and the bank employe America is that much of the ma­ to death with their machetes. Rev. Father Ralph Obligation of age to pneumonia.' What ohli- necessary matter (D. 791 and gatlons have we to prolong our 858). The words of the institu­ S. V. D. Catholic Unlv.rsltlf^ Prolonging Lllo child’s Ufe? tion of the Eucharist (John vi) We are the parents of a In the matter of prolonging must be understood in the 316 N. Michigan congenital idiot who cannot life, two principles must be proper and not the metaphori­ Chicago 1, III. even walk, let alone take care borne in mind: 1) Ordinary cal sense (D. 874). Hie words oi of himself otherwise. We have means must be taken to pre­ John XX, 23, convey with M o tl R w v m tm m I F v H m i J . S h ««ii heard theologians say that it serve life; 2) extraordinary tainty the fact that is morally sound to withhold means need not be taken when stowed on the Church the power! certain medications from hope­ there is scant hope of recovery. to remit and retain sins (D, There are three levels in lessly ill people when expenses By “ordinary” means of pre­ 894). James v, 14: “Is anyone the house of the soul: the would be unbearable or for serving life are meant those among you sick? . . .” contains first floor is filled with de­ other good reasons. We have which, according to circum­ the promulgation of the sacra­ sires for Self; the second also been told that a doctor stances of persons, places, ment of Extreme Unction (D. floor is full of interests for has withheld penicillin from times, and culture, do not in­ 908). such children as ours. Without other persons; the third volve any grave burden for one­ The Vatican Council defined penicillin these children would floor is concerned only self or another. Relative to med­ that in Matt, xvi, 16, Christ probably succumb at an early promised to Peter the primacy with the glory of God, the ical practice, ordinary m e^s of jurisdiction over the whole performance of His Will include operations, procedures, RUPTURED treatments, and medications Church, and in fact conferred it and the spread of the which do not involve a grave on the shore of Lake Tiberias, Kingdom of God on earth. BE |iREE FROM TRUSS SLAVERY as John xxi, 15, recounts (D. Surely you want to THROW burden for the patient or his Everyone prays on the A W A Y TRUSSES FOREVER and be family and which offer a reason­ 1822). level of his own holiness. rid of Rupture Worries. Then why put up with wearing a griping, chaf­ able hope of success. According to the Council of The more spiritual we are, ing, unsanitary truss. If either of these conditions Trent, the words of Our Lord the less personal are our There Is now a New Modem NON- is not fulfilled in a particular in the Last Supper, “Do this in Cardinals Propam far Council SURGICAL treatm ent designed to case the means are judged to prayers; the less holy we permanently correct Rupture. These remembrance of Me” (Luke Cardinal Joseph Ritter, Archbishop of S t Louis, and Cardi­ are, the more egotistic are treatments are so dependable that be extraordinary. Prolonged xxii, 19; I Cor. xi, 24), refer to a Lifetime Certificate of Assurance hospitalization, expense, exces­ nal Laurian Rngambwa, Bishop of Bukoba, Tanganyika, are our novenas and petitions. is given. the institution of the priesthood shown as they attended a meeting of the Central Prepara­ Write today for our New FREE sive pain, and inconvenience are The texts declaring that all BOOK that gives facts that may among the factors that could tory Commission for the Second Vatican Council. The role Save You painful, expensive sur­ men are sinners have been de­ of the Bishops in the modem world was the topic of discus­ ' Ask any person what he gery. Tells HOW and explains WHY represent a serious burden for fined as meaning literally that most often prays for, and NON-SURGICAL Methods of Treat­ the patient or his family, and sion at the session. ing Rupture are so successful today. no one escapes at least venial you have the measure of his Act Now. There is no obligation. which therefore excuse one sin. moral condition. A young woman is called a "gold digger" EXCELSIOR MEDICAL CLINIC (Kenny, Principles of Medical Pius VI, in ^ the Brief Divina Dept. H41M Excelsior Springs, Mo. Ethics, 117-8) from the obliga­ Mobile Unit if she uses a young man merely to get sorhething for her­ Christl Dominf Voce of Sept. 20, ARTHRITIS PAST 40 tion of prolonging life. self; another young woman may be more interested in a 1779, condemned the opinion of Being Tested Please writi for lay frei iaformatioi Troubled with GETTING UF NH9HTS To us, the practice of the Isenbiehl concerning the proph­ mutual exchange of favors; and a third may not want any Mr xAM >• nud MeCor Pains in BACK, HiPS, LEGS doctor in withholding penicillin ecy of Isaias vii, 14, that it had u d 1 ua an utlirlUc. 1 u i favors at all, but merely the opportunity for love and de­ For Classroom only too ItmlUor wldi Um FLORENTINE from such children is hardly no reference to the coming of phyiical misocy tad tmo- Tkedness, LOSS OF VIGOR votion. In fact, the more one loves, the less one wants gifts, distinguishable from euthanasia. tiontl dMptir at my coia- If you bora fbaao aymptomo. Hi a Messias in any sense, literal Chicago — Monsignor William gltinL I triod to many your troublaa may ba tmoad to Qlaa- and the more one seeks to make self the gift. ART DESIGN Penicillin is an ordinary means or typical. i E. McManus, superintendent of thinit. Then oat day a duiar Tnfl.mm.rinn ■ oonotltutfoaol of preserving life. We must dis­ friend in phanntcal dtclce diaaoaa. Madidnaa that fiva tamponry Although the direct definitions archdiocesan schools, said that •old me ebout a woodtilHl raliaf will not m oeva tfaa Canaan of In the light of this: tinguish, moreover, between of Scriptural passages are few. a mobile classroom is being in­ medicine for bounJoni ro- your troubloo. Niglact of thooo dia- lief in eaiint the minor paini tad iorenaat orderi oftao. laadt to pnmatnrt old the mental and the physical all interpretations of Holy Writ stalled to test its feasibility as of arthrltit, rboumatlara, aowalfit, ntuiL 1) Do you ever pray for the persecuted Christ in lit, lumhtzo or buttitla aga and incurabla oooditiaaa. condition of idiots. Their mental must conform to the analogy of a solution for overcrowded class­ Tha Excelaior Madkal CUnic hat a China or Northern Vietnam? 1 am ao tralefol 1 want to tea erery- New FREE BOOK that taUl bow thoD- condition is hopeless, but they faith, that is, they must not rooms in archdiocesan schools. one my whole rtmatkabla txperience and may recover from physical ail­ bow Uloaiaodi at otben art ao» praia- atnda of man hava btmi auooanrfuUy 2) Hove you ever fasted from a soft drink or a des­ clash with any dogma or teach­ The trailer classroom will be lag Norkoo, taw Plaaaa willa for full la- tnatad htra at Exotltiot SpringO n ments like pneumonia. There­ piuvmi NON-SURGICAL METHODO. sert or a cigarette that the merits of your self-denial might ing of the Church, or with the installed on a playground at St. formaiioo. It ooatt aotUiii tad yoo aiay fore they should be given the win ao mndt No obligatioo wfaataoovac, Writa Today. No obUgalioo. unanimous teaching of the Fa­ Simeon school in suburban Jutt. lead your nama aid addrata to: Excaltlor Madical Clinic be applied to the conversion of a soul in India or Nigeria? same treatments prescribed for thers. Bell wood. Peel MtCey, *pf 11 W « W., R.T. J* Dtpf. BPS]*. Excaliier Sprtnga, Mo. 3) Have you ever taken upon yourself the burdens of normal children in the same The third-grade class of 40 circumstances. others by reducing your bodily satisfaction, even in a tiny Grants to Assist pupils will use the trailer for way, and by sending the mohey saved to the Holy Fa­ We advise you to consult a the rest of the school term, ALBANIA priest of your acquaintance Foreign Students ther for the Propagation of the Faith in mission lands? Monsignor McManus said. The BULGARIA who may be better able to de­ Chicago — Two grants of $1, trailer is being loaned for the We pray and sacrifice according to our spiritual state. termine ordinary and extraordi­ 500 each will further the foreign demonstration by Divco-Wayne BYELORUSSIA May those of you who read this column be found on the nary means in relation to your student program of the Founda­ Corp., Richmond, Ind. Mon­ particular situation. tion for International Coopera­ signor McManus said St. Simeon COSSAKIA third floor of living for the glory of God and the spread of tion, which is sponsored by the was chosen for the test because the Church throughout the world! Whatever you send to The F e w Bible Texts Christian Family Movement. it is centrally located and be­ a E C H O - Society for the Propagation of the Faith will be forwarded Defined by Church They were announced by Chi­ cause 921 of its 1,767 students SLOVAKIA directly to the Holy Father, and he sends it to the poor of the cago attorney Patrick Crowley, are on the double shift. Pastors world. Which texts of the Bible have secretary of the national coordi­ from other areas will be invited GS ESTONIA Project your St. Joseph been infallibly interpreted by nating committee of the CFM to view the mobile classroom GEORGIA GOD LOVE YOU to Anonymous for $5 “May God Daily or Continuous Sunday the Church, and where were and chairman of the founda­ in action. Missal with a quality lined they so interpreted? tion’s 25-member advisory coun­ of the bless you through Jesus, Mary and Joseph.” . . . to Mrs. The trailers will cost between HUNGARY Cover of Rich Florentine The number of Scriptural cil on job placement for foreign $9,000 and $11,000, but no pur­ C.E.B. for $30 “In thanksgiving for a favor received Art Design. Identification texts directly defined by the students. Only 10 per cent of chase will be made until the emm LATVIA through the intercession of Our Lady and the Infant of Card. Church as meaning this and not the 60,000 foreign students in the reaction to the test unit has Prague. May it help some of the poor of the Missions to something else are very few. U S. receive government grants, | NATIONS LITHUANIA know, love and serve God” . . . to Mrs. R.M.H. for $5 “ I $ 1.00 Father Alfred Difrand, in Dic- he noted, and “some get so up-' promised we would make an offering in honor of the Sa­ Colors: Antique White, Red, tionnaire Apologetique, article set by financial problems that IT ISIIIT I. Illin POLAND cred Heart if we found our lost puppy. Taffy was returned Black EXEGESE, col. 1838, remarks thev fail academically.” Shrinks Hemorrhoids ROAAANIA the day following this promise." . . . to A.J.L. for $5 that they do not exceed a dozen. Catholic Bookshop, Inc. “This is for favors I have not received, although I have Father Sisto Cartechini, S.J.. UKRAINE P. 0. Box 2000 SORRY, Without Surgery been asking for two years. I know that I will receive Wichita 1, Kans. c .o .D . in DairOpinione al Dnmma Smoke for Relief — them." (Rome, 1953), enumerates five! Stops Itch—Relieves Pain Fac^s on CAPTIVE NATIONS Enclosed find S for passages of the .New Testament j ASTHMA-HATFEVER which send Florentine .-\rt WORLDMISSION, a quarterly magazine of missionary which the Council of Trent de try them FREE For the first time science has found Can Be Yours. Write to: Design .Missal Cover in col­ dared should be interpreted as a new healing substance with the activities edited by Most Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, is the ideal ors checked. Sufferers from Aithino ond the dis­ astonishing ability to shrink hem­ follows; comforts of excessive secrefloni in the orrhoids and to relieve pain—with­ gift for priests, nuns, seminarians or laymen. Send $5 for a nasal pcksoges ossocioted with Hoy Robert E. Ramsey — Antique White — Red Fever hove, for over 60 yeors, found out surgery. In case after case, whUe one-year subscription to WORLDMISSION, 366 Fifth Avenue, Romans v, 12: "Therefore as Qu ck, temoorary rei.ef by smoking gently relieving pain, actual reduc­ P.O. Box 3772 — Black through one man sin entered the , PAGE'S .SHALEPS. PleosonI, Inez-, tion (shrinkage) took place. Most New York 1, New York. pensive. A l drug stores, amazing of all—results were so thor­ Chaffee Station world ..." refers to original or order d.rect from ough that sufferers made astonlsb- Name ...... sin (D. 791). The words of John fodory. lug statements like “pUes have Denver 21, G>lo. Cut out this column, pin your sacrifice to it and mail it iii, 5: ‘‘Unless a man be born For freo wrflo ceased to be a problem!" ‘Tbe secret Address ______- ___ CenioMiscet C».. is In a new healing substance (Bio- to Most Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, National Director of the Society again . . signify the absolute 83r> BChorryStagCraRdltopidi 6,Micbl9«i Dyne®), discovery of a worid-famoiu 25 CENTS EACH OR 5 FOR $1 for the Propagation of the Faith, 366 Fifth Avenue, New necessity of Baptism and they reaearch institute in suppository or BULK RATES CAN BE ARRANGED City...... Zn.-_ State----- SEND rOK FREI SAMPLES ointment form called rreparitlon York lx , N. Y., or your Dioceson Director. mean that natural water is its H®. At aU drag connters.

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‘"'-'iTiiii] " V ‘r|- iiTf -‘ f -A ^ 1 Dangers to Faith in Secular College PAGEANT

t a ^HAT d a m a g e is done to the faith ^ 0.1By P Danaaul UH. HU.tivMallitt ^ of the Catholic student who at­ tends secular colleges? The proposal of this question is liable to arouse strong Sociological Study of the 'Witnesses' and even bitter feelings, both on the Armageddoa Around the Comer, by Wil­ U.S. Supreme Court, they have won most. liam J. Whalen (3M Madison Ave., N.Y., John They are of value to the religious sociologist side of the patron of Caftolic universitiw \ l . and (even more) on that of the Catholic Day, 14.75). in showing the influence advertising can have J in advancing an inherently absurd sect. '■^1 Like sex, Satan, or weight-reducing, the x t student or professor in a secular institu­ Jehovah Witnesses are inherently interesting, tion, who believes his Catholic loyalties are thereby but here we have a book about them by an being attacked , author who in addition to being bright and Of the fact that many Catholic students do lapse facile has rare talents as a compiler of so­ from their religion as a result of attendance at sec­ ciological facts. He possesses plenty of humor Theological Text ular universities there can be no doubt. All studies but is never unkind or unfair. He dwells on that have been made on the subject, covering the Witnesses’ undoubted zeal, energy, and both Catholic and non-Catholic students, report a talents as well as on their ability to make Clear, Up-to-Date d^ine in church attendance from the precoilege themselves disliked. He is able to dive be­ level of from one-fifth to one-third. All denomlna- neath the bizaare to get at, the socially sig­ The following theological text is published fions lose many and gain few supporters among un- nificant. by Notre Dame Press, Notre Dame, Ind. w rgndnates. Father Hugh Halton, O.P., formerly A sect whose theology may seem illogical Redemptive lacanatioB, by Rev. Albert director of the Aquinas Foundation at Princeton tempts us to conclude that we can disregard Schlitzer, C.S.C. (|4), is deslipied primarily University, estimates that, since 1880, 57 per cent it. Some indications point to the contrary. for college students at the upper-class level. of the Catholic students at the institution lapsed The Witnesses are the fastest growing sect in It it noteworthy in that it takes account of from the faith. the world. They have claimed such converts all recent theological developments. Copious as President Eisenhower’s mother. They have quotations from the Fathers and Scripture spread rapidly in Latin America. Yet one has are given, rather than textual references. JJfum bqj^ fjDk, i h s L the feeling from this book that the sect will Latin is sparingly used. The explanations are not become a major religion. clear and readable. The treatment compels But this fact must be held in perspective. Ed­ Beginning with the strange careers of Rus­ the student to participate in the reasoning. ucational researchers also indicate that, though the sell and Rutherford, Whalen examines the secular ndlege too often provides the freedom that fantastic Witness theology, the more respect­ allows the student to drop religioas practice, the able Witness organization and missionary urge to do so has been implanted in him before he methods, and present-day beliefs and disci­ maMculates. plines Those who lapse from religion in the army, the Hie Jebovahites have left their mark on factory, or the business office after leaving high legal history by establishing the right to Khool, or even after leaving college, are not so preach religion in public places and door to closely counted as are students in a secular univer­ door. Of 50 cases they have carried to the sity, but they are legion. The influences of the secu­ la r college are, many of them, adverse, but so also are those of associations with a pagan environment outside college, which no one can well escape. Infinite Horixen of Ctrfholit fdweafien Hence, relatively speaking, attendance at the secu­ Catholic education does not simply train a educated to use the goods of this world as a Christian Art lar college is not sp disastrous as it may seem. person to be a good citizen, or to make a means to reach bis eternal destiny, the vi­ Spiritual Obstacles Many successful career, or to utilize his talents. sion of God. Secular education, which pre­ It does all of these, of course, but does not pares men only for this world, does not ful­ Follows Dogma All this, of course, can in no way minimize the stop here. God Himself is the ultimate goal fill man’s aspiration or prepare him for his Early Christian Art, by Eduard Syndicus, spiritual obstacles that the Catholic student must set in the sights of Catholic education. Man high destiny. translated by J. R. Foster (N.Y. 11, 70 Fifth confront in a state or other secular imiversity. The can live his life properly only when he is following observations of a Catholic student in a Ave., Hawthorn, 83.50). state university are only too characteristic. The historical and apologetic value of this . “IMosophy is taught, not as a unified subject book, which outlines the history at Christian leading to a knowledge of truth; different philMo- art from its beginning through the first six pUes are considered without concern for objective centuries of its development, will make its truth . . . in the freshman psychology class the pro­ Catholics at Secular Colleges appeal even to those who have no particular fessor bluntly stated that bis students should tinxtw interest in ecclesiastical art as such. off any notions they had about man’s free will.” The history of Christian art foUoigs pretty Often professors or textbooks will insist that a deli­ closely the history of dogma. For example, cate moral topic be treated “unemotionally,” a word Offered Haven in Newman Club Joseph is usually absent from the oldest pic­ that generally means “without reference to fixed tures because in the theological disputes of Standards or to religion.” The common, error is r\E S P IT E DANGERS to the faith that National Newman Club Federation with headquar­ the time it was necessary to show Christ as made of confusing moral Judgments with emotional­ ters in Washington, D.C. the son of the. eternal Father. After the “What Is the Church?” by Andre de Bovis Council of Ephesus (431), not only Mary’s (Twentieth Century Encyclopedia of Cathol­ ism. ^ are involved, hundreds of thousands In granting permission for attendance at secular motherhood but also Joseph’s position of icism, Hawthorn Books, Inc., New York, In a controversy recently had with » young Caith- of Catholic students, for various reasons, colleges some Bishops insist on Newman Club mem­ 13.58) treats the Church in its aspects both at Olic instructor in a state university, who became |in- bership or its equivalent; other Ordinaries presume honor as head of ^he family begins to ap­ will continue to hnroll in secular colleges a visible phenomenon and nn Invisible and tlignant when critleized about certain influences in that a loyal Cattolic will seek to affiliate with the pear. supernatural reality. “The mystery of the secular schools, the following defense was given: or universities. Otherwise, for most of only authorized Catholic student organization on his . The author presents a detailed discussion Church,” says the author, “consists in the “As a college teacher, I simply do sot consider them, there would be no higher educa­ campus. Unfortunately only about one out of five of the basilica, compares the various forms interdependence, within her walls, of history ‘ibe ‘maturity’ of my stadents when I , enter the tion. Catholic stadents Join the Newman Clubs. at early Christian architecture, through By­ Hclassroom. Let us say that I am teaching Atheistic zantine times, and concludes with a discus­ and the eternity of God, of man and of God, «s Some Newman chaplains report that fewer Cath­ sion of Carolingian art. Drawings abound. of the visible a ^ invisible.” To preserve the faith of these stu­ olic high ^school graduates Join the Newman Club U J I . R m m i I dents, and promote its growth, Newman clubs are than their! public high school colleagues. Tliere seem There are more Catholic institutions of higher established on almost every secular campus in the to be tw(i reasons (or this. First, many of these - learning in. the Ufi. than in all the other countries U.8. The Bishops of p>e U.S. have designated the Cathcdlc sjtinol graduates think they, have had of the wnrid put together. The Church is educating Newman club as the ofiiclal Catholic stndmt or­ enough rerao o in parochial grade schools and have more students In (he Uil. today than it has in gny ganization, at secular institutions. no more t|> loam. SeoMid, other Catholic high school Builders of Our Land sther country In Idstofy. Father John A. O'Brlra, research professor of products jfeel they have been blaek-Usted by their ^^rWN^WVWWWWWWWWWWWWWWVWWWVWWWW theology at Notre Dame u^versity and a pioneer former h i|h school te a f^ rs for enrolling in a secu­ Naturalism. As a teacher, I feel that I am under a In the Newman club movement, says that by 1I7( lar colle^ and mistakenly imagine they may be Convert-Artist Brought moral obligation to deliver the tenets of Aiheistic “tiiree out of every four CathoUc students will be treated as| nominal or lax (Catholics by the Newman Naturalism truly (which is not at all the same thing getting an education in a secular college,” and that chaplains.- iu teaching in class that they are true). by 1880 “probably 81 per cent of our Catholic stu­ Sense of Beauty to U.S. “If 1 had time, I may point out how the tenets dents will be in those institutions.” Remaijkable Expansion By Msca. J ohn B. Ebel of Atheistic Naturalism differ from those of what Father O’Brien says that there are now about Before World War U most Newman Clubs even at 1 usually refer to in class ak ‘traditional Christian­ 540,000 Catholics attending secular institutions of when the joined the Catholic becanie a tutor in a wealthy higher learning in the U.S. the largetl state universities were little more than h e la e t a r e m edal, ity’—But I do not consider this as an obligation in Communion breakfast societies. At that time the Church. She was undoubtedly family of Natchez, Miss., and the teaching process. My only Job is to get them T award by the Univer­ Beginnings in 1893 number of Catholics on secular campuses was far sity of Notre Dame for dis­ influenced in her association finally settled in Chicago, Bl., to understand and know Athelkic Naturalism. V ^ t smaller tiian at present. with Bishops Francis Patrick in 1 ^ as one of its first they do with it is their business.” tinguished accomplishment for Beginning with the first Newman Qub at the Since me end of the war the Newman movement Church or count^ by a Cath­ Kenrick of Philadelphia (later teachers of art and the first to Indifferent to Souls University of Pennsylvania in 1883 more than 750 has witneissed a remarkable expansion. Millions of olic layman whose life is a Archbishop of Baltimore) and instruct her pupils from na­ clubs have been established on as many cam­ dollars haive been spent on chapels and educational model o i Christian morality John Bernard Fitzpatrick of ture and casts. This man is a Catholic. Yet he has claimed the puses. For their patron they chose Cardinal New­ plants, which may include libraries, recreation and good citizenship, has the Boston. Raw and lusty Chicago, right to be completely indifferent to the souls of his man, the English convert who had proposed a sim­ rooms, kitchens, offices, study rooms, theaters, and longest history of all the an­ Perhaps the greatest per­ meat packer and wheat gran­ students. This is not good teaching, much less tol­ ilar idea for Catholic students at Oxford. classrooms. More than 140 priests now devote all nual Catholic honorary awards sonal factor in her conver­ ary to tbe world, would have erable Christianity. Granted, the claims of Atheistic All state universities and most state colleges in their efforts to the Newman apostolate and hun­ in the U.S., and is probably sion, however, was her cousin. seemed a poor prospect for Naturalism should be fairly stated, but how can this addition to many private and Protestant-related dreds more are serving as part-time chaplains. the most treasured. Awarded art. Through her own efforts, system be understood unless the student knows schools recognize the Newman Club as the student Almost all the larger state and private univer­ annually on Laetare Sunday, however, and with the help of wherein it fails? In too many cases he is incapable religious foundation for Catholic students. Many sities provide Newman Club facilities for (^tholic the medal was first presented Bishop Kenrick, with whom of easily finding this out for himself. clubs now enjoy the services of one or more full­ students. Some are staffed by diocesan priests, in 1883. she kept up a long correspond­ So much for the pitfalls of education in the secu­ time chaplains, although most of them continue to some by Paulists, Dominicans, Franciscans, Bene­ Eliza Alien Starr, cited as ence, Bishop James Duggan of lar college. This does not alter the fact Uiat-two- operate with the advice and counsel of a part-time dictines, and other religious order priests. Obvious­ an “art promoter,” was the Chicago, and such pioneer pa­ thirds of the Catholic college students of America chaplain. ly not all follow the same pattern; every campus third person and the first wom­ trons of art in Chicago u attend secular institutions, and will oon^ue to at­ Perhaps the name “Newman Club” will not be poses special 'situations and requires distinctive ap­ an to receive the Laetare William Butler Ogden, Walter tend (hem in growing numbers, unless they are to used at a particular school. Sometimes “foundation” proaches. Medal, in 1885. Loomis Newberry, Jonathan forego higher education altogether. or “center” is used instead of “club.” At North­ Practically all the larger clubs and foundations DeBcendant of Young Scammon, and Lean- Thus there are dangers in the secular college western the Catholic^ student organization is known offer a program of courses in such subjects as der James McCiormick, she that are useless to explain away. Just as there are as the Shell Qub and that at the University of Christian marriage, Church history, theology, Marx­ Early Puritans successfully introduced cul­ dangers in any field of life today. That is why, Chicago is called the Calvert Club. At Harvard and ism, Scripture, ethics, the life of Christ, Great A convert to Catholicism, ture to the city. wherever and whenever possible, the Catholic stu­ M.I.T. it is simply “The Catholic Qub.” Regard­ Books, sodal principles, comparative religion, the Eliza Starr was a child of In addition to private teach­ dent, and his parents, should make all sacrifices less of local nomenclature, however, most of &e Reformation, and Papal encyclicals. parents who traced their des­ ing, Miss Stgrr for a score of to attend a Catholic college or university. larger and active clubs belong to the co-ordinating In this practice the Newman apostolate follows cent to early Puritan colon­ years gave an annual series the admonition of St. Pius X, who decreed in 1905; ists. She received the impetus of lectures on painting, archi­ “Where there are public academies, colleges, and to become a Catholic, more­ tecture, and the great artists universities, let schools of religion be established over, from a sermon deliv­ of the Renaissance which con­ The Catechism lllMStrated for the purpose of t^ching the truths of our Faith, ered by the Rev. Theodore tributed to the cultural life of Q. WHY IS THE CHURCH SO CONCERNED ABOUT EDUCATION? and the precepts of Christian morality, to youthk Parker, a Unitarian minister the first families of tee city. A. Education is one of the chief functions of the Church, which received its office of who attend such public institutions wherein no men­ who followed Ralph Waldo After her studio burned in the teachm- from Jesus Christ Himself, The Church realizes that through education people tion whatsoever is made of religion.” Emerson’s religious ideas. great fire of 1871, she spent a are formed and molded for (heir entire life. It is the purpose of the Church to educate Priests and parents who express an nnderstand- While he was gradually with­ few years at St. Mary's Acad­ for eternity as well as for this life. able concern over the possible loss of faith among drawing from firm theologi­ emy (later College), South Catholic students at state schools should also ex­ cal concepts in favor of an George Allen, a na­ Bend, Ind., where, under Moth­ amine the reverse side of the coin. Almost all chap­ intuitive religious experience, tive whose father, Heman Al­ er Angela, she organized an lains devote many hours of their day giving class he helped move Mist Starr len, was a member of Con­ art department. She became and private instruction to inquirers and prospective toward the Catholic Church. gress. In his youth George widely known as a lecturer in converts. Several thousand college students find 'The second of four children bad been sent to Canada to Catholic circles and acbools their way to the Church each year; some chaplains of Oliver and Lovina (Allen) study French in the household and as a writer of poems and instruct as many as 100 inquirers a year most of Starr, Eliza was bom Aug. 39, of Father Consigny. He took popular essays in the Catholic whom eventually ask for Baptism. 1824,‘ in a rangy old house at up a career as professor erf World, Ave Maria, New York Deerfield, Mass. On both sides classical languages, but turn­ Freeman's Jonmal, London Religion Credit Courses her parents traced descent ed to religion and was ordain­ Monthly, and other magazines. from early English emigrants ed an Episcopalian minister, A growing number of state universities authorize In 1875 she traveled exten­ to the Bay Col­ Returning to teaching, he was credit courses in religion taught by priests, minis­ sively in Europe, the buis for ony, and they were proud of named to the chair of Latin ters, rabbis, listed in the official catalogue, con­ her Pilgrims and Shrines, pub­ their long residence in Deer­ and Greek at tbe University ducted in university classrooms, and applicable lished in 1885. Other books, al­ field. Her father, a dyer, was of Pennsylvania in 1845. |n to degree requirements, A pioneer in this ar­ ways devotional, and usually a descendant of Dr. Comfort 1847 he became a Catholic, in­ rangement is the State University of Iowa whose illustrated by herself, included Starr, who emigrated from fluenced by the secession of a School of Religion has offered such courses for Patron Saints, Songs of a Kent, England, to Boston in number of the Oxford group more than 30 years even to the extent of major to Join the Church, by his de­ Life-Hnae, laabella of Castile, 1S35. Csrietiaa Art la Onf Own Age, programs and graduate degrees in religion. ’Though uneducated them­ fense of a friend, Mr. Hoyt, Tbe Seven Dolers of tbe Bless­ Another pioneer is the University of Illinois, selves, the Starrs had the who had taken the step tee where a plan for teaching religion courses was ap­ preceeding year, and by bis ed Vlrgla Mary, Tbe Three New England amireciation of Archangels and the Gnardlaa proved in 1919, Five courses in Catholicism are now learning, and encouraged Eli­ experiences in the household Angels In Art, and Three Keys being offered. za to go beyond the district of Father Consigny. to the Camera Della Segaa- At the University of North Dakota the priest school and even the local acad­ Faith Central Fact tnre of tbe Vatican. The many students who through force of The Catholic philosophy of education is in teaching these credit courses may, not wear his emy, to Boston, where she circumstances must attend secular colleges accordance with the nature of man. Unless a Roman collar In class but gets along nicely in color­ took lessons in art and paint­ In Dedicated Life In addition to the Laetare and universities find there a helping hand in man is imbued with Christian principles and ed shirts. Established programs of similar nature ing from the wife of Richard Eliza Starr’s conversion was Medal, she received a medal­ the Newman Club and its chaplain. On prac- values he can fall prey to the many er­ can be elected at Michigan State, Illinois, New Hildreth, the historian. the central fact in a life ded­ lion from Pope Leo XHI and ticitily every secular campus in the nation, rors that stalk the land, not least of which is York University, Bradley, Youngstown, Indiana, It was about 1845 that her icated to painting, poetry, and a gold medal at the World’s Newman Club facilities and at least a part- atheistic Communism. Catholicism is recog­ and elsewhere. Unitarian beliefs were upset writing where religion provid­ Columbian Exposition of 1893 time chaplain are available (or Catholic stu­ nized as Communism’s foremost enemy, and And so, for those Catholics who cannot attend In some way by a sermon of ed the motif. Leaving Boston at Chicago for her work as a dents. There they can find answers to the through the principles of Catholic education a Catholic college or university, a word of advice: Dr. Parker, and her religious because of the climate, she teacher. She died Sept 7,1901, many questions that arise in higher education the nation is strengthened against the assaults Join the Newman Club at the secular institution yearnings were not satisfied taught art in private schools and was buried from the Cath­ in a secular institution, as well as social con­ of Communism. Catholic colleges and univer­ that you attend. Enroll in the religion or theology until nine years later, in 1854, in Brooklyn and Philadelphia, edral in Chicago. tact with others of their own faith. All Catho­ sities bring to education the principles that course if it is given. At any rate. Join in the activi­ lic students should become acquainted with have made this nation great, and which must ties sponsored by the Newman Club. It is tbe the Newman Club as soon as they enroll. be preserved at all costs. guardian of your faith and your future. T H E REGISTER

8’ ♦ • PAGE TWENTY THE DENVER CATHOLIC REGISTER Thuriday, May 17, 1962 1,050 Children Attend Classes at St. Anne's (S t Anne’s Parish, Arvada) Father James Rasby, pastor, has expressed his thanks to all the women and men who have M ped t ^ year in teaching cate­ chism classes each Saturday. Some 1,0S0 children were instruct­ ed. (^techism classes end May 19 for all children except those making their First Communion May 30. The first communicants will have their last class May 26. Women who wish to make reservations for the Altar and Rosary society's annual breakfast following Mass and corporate reception of Communion may call Dorothy Porkovny, HA 4- S',: 7857, or C!onnie Iden, HA 4-1938. Transportation may be ar­ ranged. The breakfast is May 20 at 10:30 a.m. after Mass at 9 a.m. Men of the parish will hold their retreat at the Sacred Heart retreat house, Sedalia, June 8-11. Information may be obtained from Dan Dufresne, HA 4-8412, or Paul Scully, HA 2-3731. Baseball to Aid Burse (Mother of God Parish, Denver) ed president of the Altar and Tickets are available for the Rosary society May 9. Denver Bears' doubl^beader Other officers are Mrs. Clif­ Prom Royalty in Colorado Springs May 20 in the reserved section ford Welch, first vice president; of Bears Stadium. Proceeds from Mrs. Ralph Burg, second vice Janice Elliott, center, haa been chosen Mary Winters, seated at right A reception for the ticket sale will be used for presidoit; Mrs. James Mooney, qneen for the Jnnior-senlor prom to be held the girls, their parents, and the faculty of the parish seminary burse. third vice president; Mrs. Ruth In the Broadmoor betel’s ballroom, Colorado St. Mary’s high school will begin at 1 pan. in ‘Fashions’ Havo Changod Tickets at $1.65 for adults and Weadick, corresponding secre Springs, May 20. Her two senior princesses the convent of the Sisters o i Loretto May 20. 90 cents for children under 17 tary; Mrs. Mildred Elliott, re­ Fashions in aubomobiles have changed with Pat McMahon at the wheel. The carn­ ' are P effy Lomas, left, standing, and Anne James Kelly, president of the men’s club, and may be purchased from the cording secretary; Mrs. James but the old models attract considerable atten­ ival will be held In the school gymnasium Megniar, r i ^ standing. Two ]nnlor princes­ Mrs. KeUy, will be honored gnests. ushers, any member of the Holy Price, treasurer; and Mrs. P. tion. Preparing to take off for a cruise around May 26 from S to 9 p.m. Mrs. John Hinter- ses are Kathy Anderson, seated left, and Name Society, or at the rectory. R. Martin, historian. SL John the Evangelist’s parish, Denver, to reiter and Mrs. Harry Zirselbach are chair­ Mrs. J. J. Carabello was elect- After the meeting, the mem advertise the annual carnival, are Eugene O’­ men for the affair. Mary Undaiftaiicb bers were the guests of Mrs. Meara (manning the crank) and his children, Cathedral Society Stpehen L. R. McNichols for tea Plans Party May 26 and a tour of the Governor’s May Crowning - Colo. Springs Style mansion. (Cathedral Parish, Denver) Queen of Heaven circle will ed Mother’s Day!” commented ter Anne Thomas made their HSN Dance May 18 at St. John's (St. Mary’s Parish, The Altar and Rosary so­ meet for a bridge Inncheon Wed Colorado Springs) an elderly palrshioner. First Communion. The parish was represented ciety will hold its annual card nesday, May 23, at noon in the (St. John the Evangelist’s , THE YOUNG LADIES’ sodal­ Karr, freshman attendant. At the May crowning in the At the crowning, Paul Gard­ in the World Aponolate pro­ party and luncheon May 26 at home of Mrs. LMnard A. Tang- Parish, Denver) ity will hold its May devotions New officers of the sodaiity church May 0, the sodaiity pre­ ner, sodality prefect, was the 12:36 p.m. in the Knights of gram May 8 at the ACCW ney. The school gymnasium has May 20 at 2 p.m. in the church. will be installed. The freshman fect, Georgenia Rowland, escort of' the Queen. In the Columbus hall, 1575 Grant The Holy Name society’s last Diane Stewart, prefect, wiil probates will be received as so- convention in the Broadmoor’s been “transformed” into one of placed a crown of flowers on Court were Evelyn Tresvan, International Center by Father street. meeting of the season will be crown the statue of Our Blessed dalists. the head of Our Lady's statue. Kathy Moss, Sharon Rodgers, John Jepson. Prizes will be awarded. An May 21 in the church basement. the beautiful Hawaiian Islands Lady. Members of the CYO will tour Later, during the singing of Theresa Abell, Lynne McCann, In his address, titled “Hospi­ invitation is extended to all A Rosary will be recited in the for the annual parish dance to Loretto O’Connell will be sen­ the Air Force academy May II. the hymns, the crown felt off and Carol Spellman. Escorts tality to Foreign Students,” he members in other parishes. church at 8 p.m., followed by be sponsored by the Holy Name ior attendant; Betty Warwick, The hus will leave S t John’s noisily. Thra, to the even great­ were Mike M ^abe, Joe Trujil­ suggested that “with our char­ Tickets can be bought at the a business meeting in the base­ society May 18. Tickets are $2 junior attendant; lUy Taylor, at I B.m. and return around er regret of Sister Marie Noel, lo, Mike McCarthy, John Fran­ ity we don’t just join commit­ door. ment. per person. sophomore attendant, and Jane 4:36 p.m. her pictures of the crowning co, David Adamson, and Tim­ tees, but . . . respect each court did not include the Bless­ othy Stelzner. person as our equal, and let ed Mother! On May 6 in the 8 a.m. Mass, charity be always on the per­ "Bnt every day is the Bless­ 40 youngsters prepared by Sis­ sonal level with our love.” CENTRAL CAN PUT YOU ON

WHEELS-BEAUTIFUL WHEELSl-AS Blessed Sacrament Parish QUICKLY AS YOU CAN SAY "CHECK WITH CENTRAL". AND LOOK AT THE ADVANTAGES YOU ENJOY WHEN YOU FINANCE YOUR NEW CAR THE CENTRAL WAY... BORROW AT LOW RATES- Plans Children's Carnival ESTABLISH SOUND BANK CREDIT, SELECT YOUR OWN CAR INSURANCE, GET THAT FAMOUS, FRIENDLY, (Blessed Sacrament Parish, of trading stamps, a large ar­ the school gymnasium from PERSONALIZED CENTRAL SERVICE, AND GET THAT QUICK, QUICK ACTION ON YOUR AUTOMOBILE LOAN. Denver) ray of gifts has been acquired 10:30 a.m. until 3 p.m. Lunch Through the generosity of the for the annual eighth grade car­ will be served during that per­ mothers of the grade school pu­ nival May 23. iod. This is no admission fee. pils, who contributed 600 books The carnival will be held in All of the children of/ the

school will participate, a spec­ •6 ^ ial invitation is extended to adults for whom special attrac­ 11 Pupils in Roggen tions have been arranged. More than 400 gifts will be LIVE BETTER THRU CENTRAL given away, inclu^g a great Receive 1st Communion variety of titdienware, electri­ (Sacred Heart Parish, Roggen) ers of Sacred Heart parish aqd cal appliances, living room fur­ First Communion was beid its missions. niture, lamps, clocks, patio fur­ May 6 for 11 second graders: James Linnebur, grand knight, niture, blankets, etc. CSiarles and Oari Dyess, Wil­ For the children, footballs, liam Erker, Mark Gettman, Da­ basketballs, baseballs, baseball vid linnebur, Jeffrey Luna, gloves, water skis, watches, cro­ Mary Frances Buchholz, Mary quet sets, dolls, stuffed ani­ Ann Linnebur, Mary Agnes mals, and other items will be Blick, Anita Kiausner, and given. Helen Clordcs. All were enrolled in the Scapular of Our Lady of OFFICERS ELECTED at the ML Carmel. May 11 meeting of the Altar^and A closed retreat for those in Rosary society were: Presi­ grades six, seven, and eight was dent, Mrs. Henry J. Newyahr, conducted by the Rev. William (re-elected); first vice presi­ E. Sievers,, chaplain at St. Jo­ dent, Mrs. P. A. Archambault; seph’s hospital, Denver, on Second vice president, Mrs. May 10-11. George K. Anderson; secretary, The Archdiocesan Council of Jdrs. Ed. Curran; historian, Catholic Women’s convention in Mrs. J. J. McCabe (re-elected); Colorado Springs drew several and treasurer, Mrs. H. J. Leib- altar society members frinn man, reappointed. ' both Roggen and Keenesburg. Mrs. T. J. Morrissey, Easter Mrs. Magdalene Shoeneman, Monday ball chairman, reported national vice chairman for the that $2,000 will be realizied on rural life committee, prepared the affair. an attractive display for the A spiritual bouquet and $25 convention showing various ac Mrs. Magdalene Schoeneman were presented from the society tivitles of her committee. She to the Rt. Rev. Monsignor Har­ served as recorder for discus­ welcpmed the women and intro old V. Campbell, pastor, in com­ sion groups May 7-8 and talked duced their speaker, Bernard memoration of his 25 year pas­ Carraher, an attorney and past on the role of the farmer In torate at Blessed Sacrament. God’s plan. state deputy from Denver Coun­ cil 539. Mr. Carraher’s talk was The Athletic Boosters’ club of TWENTY-NINE MOTHERS a tribute to mothers. Machebeuf high school is spon­ accepted the invitation of K . oi The knights also honored soring ,a dinner in the school C. council 3115 to its special members of the eighth grade gymnasium May 19 at 7 p.m. at breakfast May 13, which is pre­ graduation class of Sacijed Heart $3.56 per person. pared every year for the moth­ school at the breakfast. St. Philomena's Altar Society Elects Officers (St Phllomena’s Parish, Denver) Mrs. Herman McLellan was elected president of the Attar and Rosary society for the com­ Go with a Central Auto Loan ing year. Other ofiicers are Mrs. Omar Nichpls, first vice president; 5 AT TH£ Mrs. Gerald Filloon, second vice Stop in soon at Central’s president; Mrs. George Fillis, recording secretary; Eva Walsh, Instalment Loan Department to arrange corresponding secretary; Mrs. Geoilge Lutz, treasurer; Mrs. financing for your car purchase. Bruqe Mollison, historian; and Frank Rohrer, auditor. The Holy Name society is sponsoring an Aunt Jemima pan­ cake breakfast May 26 to raise funds for furnishing the new school addition. Central INTEREST Breakfast will be served in the school hall after the Masses May 20. The price will be 75 Pays on Savings cents for adults and 50 cents for on depodt 12 montbi. children. The event is open to Money on deposit less thin 12 months earns Marian Day at Ml. Carmol the public. dtUy interest. ML Carmel high school, Denver, will observe its annual Committee chairmen are Jim Marian Day May 20. Barbara Chojnowski (above), prefect of Layden, chef; Ted Sevier, serv­ the Sodality of the Blessed Virgin, will crown the ice; Frank Jennings, kitchen; statue of Our Blessed Mother. The day wiH begin with Mass Joe Barry, cashier; Joe Gib­ O A N K at 8 a.m. in Mt. Carmel church, after which a breakfast will bons, transportation; Arch Rose, be served in the grade school gym. Father Martin Jenco, publicity; and Andy Anderson, O.S.M., will speak on the “Lay Apostolate.” At 7 p.m. a Living general chairman. A N D UP OO. Rosary wiU Im held, followed by the procession into church. Charles Hyde will be at school Ei^ty-four sodallsts will consecrate themselves to Our Lady. on May 28 at 8 a.m. to collect u t M t v b rroEiuL CEtosrr insvrance corfoiwtion • n a v M . itrsuive system CGNTRAU PARK...1Sth and ARAPAHOE ST. DENVER 17. COUORAOO The ceremony will close with Solemn Benediction. all sport equipment.