f h ic a n d L e a rn P. 0 . Box 1620. Denver, Colorado Power to Forgive Sins Q. Since the Eastern Orthodox Churches have a valid priesthood and Episcopacy, do not their priests have the same authority to forgive sins as do priests of the Byzantine Rite in union with ? In order to forgive sins validly, a priest must have not only valid Orders but jurisdiction from the proper Bishop. Normally, this fact invalidates Con­ Spiritual Fatherhood fessions made to any priest under censure or not in union with Rome, except when one is in danger of death, in which case Confession may be lawfully and validly made to any priest. But the fact that a convert from Eastern Ortho­ Mark of Priesthood doxy is not obliged to make a general confession of NE OF the very commonest objec­ A priest is “father;” the Pope is the sins of his past life implies that the absolutions tions Protestants make against given by Orthodox priests to their own people are O “Holy Father,” in exactly the same valid. Catholic practice opposes the priestly sense as Moses was “God” to Pharaoh This argues that, by a tacit permission of the title of “father.” Rare is the Catholic (Ex. vii, 1). That is, they spiritually , the Orthodox Churches retain a real juris­ who has not heard in attempted refuta­ stand in the place of God the Father by diction, so that their acts of binding and loosing are tion these words of Christ to the Phari­ doing what God the Father has willed valid for their own members (Dictionnaire de Theal. sees: Cath., Tome XIV, 1 col. 1309) to do through them — bringing others Catholics, of course, may not licitly receive from “You are not to claim the title of to spiritual birth through Baptism, Orthodox priests the sacraments implying jurisdic­ Rabbi; you have but one Master, and guiding and caring for their spiritual tion, except in the case mentioned. you are all brethren alike. Nor are you children. to call any man on earth your father; Baptism Presumed Valid These titles and offices are not an in­ you have but one father, and He is in Q. In the group of Christians with whom I associate we heaven. Nor are you to be called teach­ vitation to pride: The contrary is true. have no formal clergy but we baptize by immersion in the ers; you have one teacher, Christ. Because they receive their mission and name of Father, Son, and Holy Ghost. The rite is performed power entirely from God, and because by a non-ordained preacher for the remission of sins. Would Among you, the greatest of all is to be you recognize this as valid? the servant of all; the man who exalts the deposit of faith bequeathed to their It is presumably valid, because it seems to an­ himself will be humbled, and the man care never changes, the priests and swer all the conditions for a valid Baptism: An un­ derstanding of the significance of the rite, the in­ who humbles himself will be exalted” prelates of the can never confuse their offices with them­ tention by the minister to do what Christians tra­ (Matt, xxiii, 8-12). ditionally do, the proper remote and proximate mat­ selves, nor would the faithful follow Anyone considering this passage for ter (water that moves on the head), and the proper the first time could easily see from the them if they went beyond their office. Cleansing of the Temple words, or form. context that Our Lord is rebuking those The Gospel accoimt of Jesus’ driving the law^. On this occasion Our Lord prophesied Since there is only one Baptism, all properly per­ who think t)ieir merits or dignities re­ BY THE NATURE of the case, as merchants and moneychangers from the the crucifixion and Resurrection when He formed Baptisms are really Catholic and aggregate the one baptized to the true Church, until he holds side in themselves instead of in God. well as by divine grace, the Pope is re­ temple gives a vivid example of how gentle­ told the Jews: “Destroy this temple and in stricted in his teaching to what he has ness and meekness can include firmness and three days I will raise it up again.’’ He was doctrines or follows disciplines lhat put him out of God is the archetype of every office as just anger toward those who both naively referring to His own body, of course. the right relations to the Church. He is the source of every virtue. received, and in his government of the and at times maliciously offend God and His Church to the^ law imposed from the Need at Exersism IN THE SAME SPIRIT, Christ said first. Q. Years ago, a priest who observed and talked with me to the man who addressed Him as He can introduce no new principle, daily was convinced that I needed exorcism, but my family “Good Master:” “Why do you call Me would not allow it. Now, ironically, my family favors it but or change or reject no principle, hith­ Vocation to Marriage my Bishop will not allow it. How can I get this help I am con­ good? No one is good but God only” erto recognized and acted upon. vinced I need? (Mark x, 17). Exorcism is a sacramental consisting in an ad­ Obviously, Christ meant by this that The law for the Catholic conscience Is Call From Heaven juration in which the devil is either commanded to goodness, like being, belongs only to is not that we shall believe and do depart from a possessed person or forbidden to harm whatever the Pope commands us, but By Rev. Joseph A. Hughes some phases of married life, bored before the natural de­ someone. God by nature. All others have good­ even the most intimate mo­ mands and human defeats in that we shall believe and do whatever WHEN A MAN and a wo­ Public exorcisms may be performed only by a ness by participation from Him. (Of man, drawn to each other by ments of giving and receiv­ marriage. priest who has the special and express permission of course, Christ Himself was God, but He God commands us through the Pope. an elevating natural love, ing, can be occasions of grace, the proper Bishop (Can. 1151, par. 1). of deepening in human souls SECOND, God establishes stand in a sanctuary before an The difficult problem of determining whether a was speaking as a man among men. The fatherhood of our spiritual su­ ordained representative of the supernatural capacity to marriage as a permanent way His divine nature being unknown to His periors is only, a channel by which the God and give themselves to enjoy the ecstasy of eternal of life by means ' of a person is really possessed by one of the evil spirits needs much prudence. On account of the importance question). Fatherhood of God comes down to us. each other until the end of beatitude. contract. The man and the time, their mutual natural Marriage ha$ been es- \)^num make a mutual pub­ of this exercise of the sacred ministry, the Church love is supematuralized. tabliahgd by God as a perma­ lic, solemn, unbreakable does not permit the priest to act on his own authority, Their love is touched by tlje nent state of life and a way agreement to give themselves but each case must be referred to the proper Ordin­ cross of Christ and enriched of spiritual perfection. This exclusively to each other until ary of the priest who encounters a case that seems to by the love of God and given a plan of the divine is achieved death. have no other explanation than the influence of some Scapulars Bring Cloister divine fruitfulness. This fruit­ in three stages. The purpose of the contract evil spirit. fulness makes it possible for is not just to provide to each, The fact that the Bishop refuses to give permis­ all the joys and pains of mar­ FIRST, God establishes emotional and economic se­ ried life to be means of eter­ marriage as a way of spiritual. curity but to fix into an earth­ sion for exorcism in your case would indicate that he Closer to Life of Laymen nal merit. ly and eternal pattern both thinks that yours is not a true case of possession or It is not necessary, usually, the temporal and spiritual obsession. Sometimes persons only suffering from a h e sc a pu l a r is a sacramental som, the Most Precious Blood, the Pas­ to tell young people that mar­ concern each should have nervous disease think they are obsessed. Tthat brings the layman closer to the sion (black), Mary Help of the Sick, the riage is a thrilling and promis­ The for the other. Private exorcism, that is, the private adjuring of religious life! It is in essence an ab­ Immaculate Heart of Mary, St. Michael ing life. They are inclined to Third, God establishes mar­ the devil from harming someone, may be performed the Archangel, St. Benedict, Our Lady this opinion by nature, by the riage as a permanent life by by any priest, and even by a lay person—or oneself— breviated religious garb, consisting of very exuberance of their Spiritual way of a sacrament. The two pieces of cloth connected by cords, of Good Counsel, St. Joseph, the Sacred for example, by the use of the sacramentals or by in­ young and hopeful love. visible sign is the consent of voking the name of Jesus. It you are truly harassed to be worn over the shoulders. Heart of Jesus, the Sacred Hearts of Life each will expressed external­ by demons, you may be sure that God will drive them Jesus and Mary, St. Boniface, and the IT MAY be necessary to re­ ly in the presence of a priest In the middle ages lay persons were mind couples who have been and two witnesses, to give and out in response to such prayers and adjurations. permitted to wear this garb as asso­ Holy Face. married, let us say, for a growth and fruitfulness by accept the gift of a whole ciates of religious orders, in whose de­ decade or' more that married way of vocation. life. Sponsor at Confirmation THE MOST WIDELY used and most love is a source of great rich­ The couple confers on each votions and spiritual benefits they Husbands and wives receive Q. Can a person be confirmed without a sponsor? famous of these scapulars is the Brown es. For among those who a call from heaven as surely other tt# sacrament. The sa­ The obligation of having a sponsor at Confirma­ shared. Later smaller scapulars were have tasted of the usual run as do the young men and crament increases sanctifying Scapular of Our Lady of Mount Carmel, of burdens and vexations and grace in the souls of the tion is grave, and cannot be omitted unless there is made for the laity to wear under their young women who go oft to none to be had (Canon 793). which originated in the 13th century frustrations of marriage there seminaries and convents. The married, gives them the spe­ clothing. The sponsor should stand for one or two only, al­ with St. Simon Stpek, an English Car­ may be at least the faint call to the married life has, in cific sacramental grace of Today lay associates of the religious aura of boredom and regret. its ultimate meaning, the matrimony, and confers on though the minister may for a good reason allow melite. Formerly only Carmelites could communities wear scapulars of various The onset of married dull­ same purpose that is em­ the couple the right to actual him to stand for more. No candidate for Confirma­ invest in this scapular; now priests ness and personal resentment bedded in the call to service graces they will need from tion can have more than one sponsor. sizes made of woolen cloth and dec­ having ordinary faculties may give it. between a married couple are in the religious life. The Vo­ time to time through the ebb The sponsor for Confirmation should not be the orated with religious pictures or em­ the results often of overlook­ cation to the works and sac­ and flow of married fortune. same person who acted as sponsor in Baptism, unless It is piously believed that the ing the full nature and power blems. rifices and rewards of mar­ for a reasonable cause the minister of the sacrament Blessed Virgin promised two privileges of supernatural love. ried life is a high and holy IT IS CLEAR from these It is common practice, even calling. And only the person considerations that the spirit­ allows an exception to this rule. ALL c a th o lic s, even ^ infants, to wearers of this scapular: 1. Those for high-minded married cou­ who forgets the total meaning ual fruits and rewards of The requisites for valid sponsorship are practi­ may be invested in the scapular. It who die wearing it will gain salvation. ples, to forget that marriage of life can become completely marriage surpass in power cally the same as for Baptism. If the candidate, or must be worn so that one part hangs 2. Those who wear it and also practice is part of a divine and eternal and extent the natural privi­ those who have responsibility for him, does not desig­ romance, a rich source of leges and joys which come to nate a sponsor, one will be appointed by the pastor. on the breast, the other on the back, certain good works (notably the recita­ grace, an almost endless those who really love. The with a cord over each .shoulder. Only tion of the Little Office, or, if that is means of supernatural perfec­ full preparation for marriage one investiture is necessary for each impossible, abstinence on Wednesdays tion, should provide a time of re­ treat and reflection and The Catechism Illustrated scapular. Worn-out scapulars are sim­ and Saturdays, and the observance of THROUGH MARRIAGE and prayer so that none of the ply replaced by new ones, and the bless­ impossible, abstinence on Wednesdays the full gamut of married life ^ FULL AS BOOKS eternal promise of marriage Q. What is religion? ing continues. They should be worn con­ chastity according to their state) will a man an^ a woman can be will be lost. A. Religion is the virtue by which men give to God the drawn year by year in the In educating the young it is Each year or so after mar­ honor and service owed to Him alone as the Supretpe Being. stantly. have the special protection of Mary natural order, closer to each not sufficient that religious in­ riage a couple should spend The Church approves 18 scapulars. after death, especially on Saturdays, other, their lives and hopes struction be given to them at some time reorienting their and joys more deeply inter­ marriage in the light of its They are the brown scapular of Our and that she will bring them to heaven fixed times; it is necessary twined with the fortunes of also that every other subject supernatural privileges. Lady of Mount Carmel, the red Scapu­ sooner than would otherwise happen. each other. But whatever else that is taught to them be per­ For only a marriage that is lar of the Passion, the black scapular ‘ Those who wear the brown scapular happens to the hopes and meated with Christian piety. made and kept deep in the promises of a married couple, heart of God will adequately 1 of the Seven Dolors, the blue Scapular share in the good works of the Carmel­ If this is wanting, little good their life together can bring can be expected from any fulfill the high hopes of the i of the Immaculate Conception, the ites and of all Catholics. After death them closer to God, and fill kind of learning. — Leo XIH: youths who come with their white Scapular of the Most Blessed they benefit from the prayers and them with a life and love that Militantis Ecclesiae (1897). young love to a priest on their completely transcend the re­ wedding day for the blessing Trinity, bearing a red and blue cross; weekly Masses offered by Carmelite wards and promises of earth. of the Church and the graces The scapulars of Our Lady of Ran- priests. All of the normal and whole­ ^ of a great sacrament.

8th Century ^Egghead' Honored as Great Saint Hl'l

By Edward Smith that St. John probably never that was then afflicting the who ruled in Damascus had tions in a vision that his dis­ MODERN intellectuals can would have attained.his rank Eastern church. other ideas. St. John had ciple was to be allowed to complain all they want over as a theologian except for the Leading the iconoclasts was spent the first part of his life write all the books and poetry the distrust with which they fact that he was living in a the Christian Emperor in Con­ as the chief of the revenue that he desired. are treated in today’s so­ Moslem land. stantinople. And the Emperor department in the Caliph’s ciety. But there'is nothing new A great part of his writing had some highly un-Christian government, and the two were l i m IT MAY VERY well be true, Our Lord said: "Blessed Some people spend their in the suspicion that brains was devoted to denouncing ways of squelching those who fast Iriends. as St. John Damascene him­ are they who hear the word lives in the vain pursuit of are somehow subversive. the heresy of iconoclasm, the disagreed with him. Besides the Caliph was on self probably realized, that in­ of God and keep it” (Luke riches, honors, and pleasures St. John Damascene ran-into battle against the use of im­ somewhat strained terms with tellectuals can do more harm xi, 28). To practice properly with the belief that the more the same problem in eighth ages of Christ and the saints. BUT THE MO.SLEM Caliph the Constantinople govern­ than good. .After all, the Em­ the virtue of religion we must of these things they acquire century Syria. Destined to be ment, and it may well have peror had some “eggheads” not only believe every word of the happier they will he. Tliis come the highest authority on delighted his soul to have a on his side in the iconoclast God, but also wc must carry is- false. Man can find happi­ Christian theology among Christian in his territory who controversy. out in our lives His command­ ness of soul only when he Eastern Christians, St. John was able to arouse the Em­ But what St. John realized ments and wishes. Our knowl­ realizes that God is the source was regarded as a near mad­ peror to such fury. better than his fellow monks edge of God must be applied of all happiness and that man by the monks with whom St. John received some high­ was the fact that actions, good to the service of God. Reli­ man’s chief purpose in life is and bad, have their source in he made his home. er help than even that of the gion includes both the intel­ the practice of religiod in the It was bad enough, the Caliph to overcome the prej­ ideas. And the side of the lect and the will and it is not manner God has prescribed monks thought, that he wrote udices of his fellow monks. good, he knew, could never simply a matter of feeling. through revelation. books. But what was even St. John’s “master,” who at prevail unless its champions worse-, he wrote poetry too. the time had the saint out were men and women who de­ cleaning up the monastery rived their power from the The Denver Catholic Register Sec. 2, Page ?; THE STRANGEST part of im ita te - grounds as a penance for his St. John Damascene inexhaustible fuel of Christian the whole affair was the fact latest song, received instruc- Feast March 27 truth. Mother Seton Becomes Blessed Elizabeth Scholars Rap CD . Decision Barring Priests 2 First U.S. Native Beatified Washington — The Catholla Commission on Intellectual anj Vatican City — .\n .-Vmerican ton March 17 in St. Peter's silica be^an rinKins and a The group led by Cardinal Cultural Affairs entered the con­ mother who found the Catholic Basilica, great organ boomed the Te: Spellman included 500 Sisters troversy over the exclusion oI faith and then started a great She is the first native-born. Deum. traditional hymn of!of the six congregations of the four prominent theologians fnJtjj U.S. citizen to be so honored, thanksgiving. ’Daughters of Charity which taking part in a campus lectur* family of women religious was In the semidarkness of the. ''C'l fell from above the claim Mother Seton as their series at the Catholic UniveiJ’- beatified in the presence of great Basilica, a loag account Rolden altar of the chair, which spiritual mother, sity of .America. ; more than 500 of her spirituapof her life and works was read. ff^e top of the crossj ,\fter the Latin document pro­ Its statement charged that the daughters. With the words commanding framed by the Basilica's floor.claiming Mother Seton blessed decision implies a question|Q| .-\ woman of pioneer .America, that 5iother Seton "be adorned h'an, uncovering a portrait oflwas read, a Pontifical Mass of the right of the theologiaM who to past generations and with the title of blessed, " the Seton, .\t the samelwas offei*ed by Cardinal Paolo to be heard and added tQS probably to future generations basilica grew alive with light ^ veil was removed fronVMarella, archpriest of St. Pe­ "advocacy of conflicting opto* as well is simply Mother Seton, - bright, and for the moment, mother portrait over the Ba- i.-r's Basilica ions, and study and criticism 31 became Blessed Elizabeth Se-ihlinding. The bells of the B a - ‘‘‘‘ma ■',nfain entrance for those In the afternoon Pope John opposing doctrine, when thQt - gathered in St. Peter's square. X.Xill attended ceremonies in Some 3.000 U. S. pilgrims methods and aims are infornwd the Vatican Basilica to pay by prudence and the charity of f;i w here for the ceremonies. homage to the new blessed and .\mong them were groups leo Christ, must always be '. . .welt to receive the gold reliquary springs of the Church's . intel­ by Cardinals Spellman and Rit containing relics of Mother Se­ ter, and Archbishops Lawrence lectual life and of all develop­ ton. The reliquary, which was ment of its doctrine.” in •I. Shehan of Baltimore, Pat­ designed in the form of an Ijjs t M M rick ,\, O'Boyle of Wa.shington, Ostensorium, had a map of the D.C., and John P. Cody, Apos­ U.S. Nuns Afiend Beofilicafien United States on its base. It At Bishops’ Receptioa tolic .-Administrator of New Or­ was presented to Pope John oy leans. Kampala, Uganda — Ugan­ More than 3.50 U.S. Sisters of Charity, U.S. citizen to be beatified -by the Church. (Continued) (the postulator for Mother Se- Born Elizabeth .Vnn Bavley in .New York da’s Acting Prime Minister founded by Mother Elizabeth Seton in 1809, Among those present ton's Beatification, Father Lu- city .Vug. 28, 1771., she became the mother decades the whole face of the earth has been charged tragic- ^\nn .Theresa O'Neill 15 George B. .Magezi and Leonard left New 'York’s airport to attend the heatifi- °^ligi Bisoglio, C..M., and the vice- cation of their foundress In St. Peter's Ba­ of five children, foundress of a religious com­ ally. Millions have been slaughtered in the world's bloodiest Baltimore, who was cured Basudde, acting chief minist^t I . ,1 *’*^:postulator. Father John P. .Mc- silica,' Vatican City, March 17. .Members of munity, and respansihle for establishing the war in history; millions of others were uprooted from their of Buganda siate, attended-_a ancestral lands and left homeless: and a new colossus — Red )-.ugp^ja througT*^ MotheT*^Se^'^""^"’ " ^ the group shown above are from Colorado, first free Catholic school in the U.S. Sh^ died seminary, Philadelphia. reception given by the country's New Mexico, Ohio, Michigan, and New York. Jan. 1, 1821. and was declared Venerable in Communisp’ -- now stands astride the earth, enslaving more (on's intercession 11 years ago Catholic Bishops at the Bishop?’ The following day the Pope Blessed Elizabeth Seton is the first native December. 1959, by Pope John XXIII than one-third of the world’s population and threatening the yiiss O’Neill and her mother regular meeting here. eest. , had flown to Rome on the granted a special audience to (he Mothers General of the six The defeat of World War I, followed by the suffering of same plane with Cardinal Spell- Enjoy Nature’s ENERGY Driii'k the Great Depression, left many embittered people in Ger-jnian and a group of nuns, congregations connected with many among whom his opposition "hate’’ party won its great­ Mother Seton, the postulators, L Report Recommends Islam est followin". Yet it is significant that Hitler never did win _ and some of those present for JESUIT TEA : a majority vote of the German people to put him into power. Great-Grandson beatification, in the even- 200 yta n •|0 Jtsuit etio niitrt Sovth I I I M^ss of a triduum AmtncA cultivattd an amaiin« hirbal ktf After Lhe elections of 1932, the Nazi could secure only three at dtiicioua flavar and htalth pmniatinf seats of 11 in the coalition cabinet which took office Jan. 30. O r M other Seton^" honor of the new blessed prapartiat. Miliiont naw drink this ''JalUft Be Favored in Malaysia . ' was offered by Cardinal Ritter la a ," batter knawn as Yarba, Mata—ia ild t 1933, but Hitler, through behind thej scenes maneuvering, got anargy, saathas natvas, aids dipastien. By Father Patrick O’Connor, report published as a British come into being Aug. 31. It will the chancellorship for himself. A working majority did not Last DeSCGndont ^ I'h'Jfch of Sts. John and creates a faaling at physical and mental Hnntin.,, / ’l*aul, the tttular church of well-bainf. U. i. Presidents and physkians comprise the states of .Malaya. exist in the Reichstag, and Hitler’s first move was to persuade V ^ r- s.s.c. government White Paper. Huntington, N.A. - Ferdin-e^,.d,nal Spellman. averywhara have racemmandad "Nature's London — "Islam should be This is the first official dec­ Singapore, Sarawak, Brunei, his colleagues to call new elections. and 1. R. Jevons, a great-grand miracle tend." Sand for "The Wonderful On Tuesday, pilgrims who Story of South America Mata" — F M f. the religion of the Federation laration of the British-Malayan and North Borneo. On the night o*' Feb. 27, 1933, the Reichstag building was son of .Mother Seton, who was! Or enclose )1 and racaiva also a lanorous of Malaysia,” asserts an inter­ policy on religion for the pro- About 43 per cent of the nearly burned by a .Nazi gang, and the deed was charged to the beatified in Rome March 17, had come to Rome were guests lupply of tea bags. governmental committee in a j posed federation, which is to 10,000,000 inhabitants of the pro­ Communists, who had obtained nearly 6,000,000 votes in lives quietly in retirement here at a reception at the North TURET IMPORTERS- posed federation are Muslims. the previous elections. Hitler hoped thus to terrorize the voters among mementoes of his dis­ American coilege. The second tinguished ancestors. Oepl. It-Zl r. 0. Box 4S7. THE I.NTER-GOVERNMENT- into supporting hi-', party. Pontifical Mass of the triduum wed Chexler, Pi. .\L committee added three rec­ Yet, the Nazi received only 43.9 per cent of the vote on Jevons, 87, is a non-Catholic was offered by Cardinal .Am- ommendations designed to reas­ March 6, and it was only through coalition with the small and the last living descendant Isto Cicognani, Papal Secretary sure the non-Muslim majority; splinter Nationalist party (8 per cent) that they obtained a of Mother Elizabeth Seton, foun­ of State and one of the most RUPTURED 1. "There should be no state working majority. dress of the Sisters of Charity loyal supporters of Mother Se- religion in the Borneo states.” Hitler’s next step was to secure passage ol an enabling in the United States! Jevons, on’s cause. BE FREE FROM TRUSS SLAVERY Most Reverend Fulton J. Sheen 2. "There should be constitu- act giving him the power to issue decrees independently of the w'ho traces his genealogy back The final Mass of the tri­ Surely you want to THROW to- Mary, Queen of Scots, lives duum on Wednesday was of AWAY TRUSSES FOREVER tiqnal guarantees for religious Reichstag. F'or this he needed a two-thirds majority. To get and be rid of Rupture Worries. in a 10-room mansion overlook­ fered by Cardinal Arcadio Lar- Youth is a problem today because adults are a prob­ freedom.” it he had the 81 Communist deputies either arrested or excluded, Then why put up with wearing 3. "When federal law provides won over two smaller parties by threats and promises, and the ing Huntington Harbor, Long Is­ raona, C.M.F., of the a griping, chafing, unsanitary lem. Their so-called rebellion is against a previous genera­ for special financial aid for Mus­ opposition was outvoted 441 to 94. land. Sacred Congregation of Rites truss’' tion for not having transmitted to them the precious heritage lim institutions of Muslim re­ There is now a Modern NON- of a purpose in life. They are like a powerful automobile ligious education, proportional AT FIRST THE NEW REGIME expressed friendliness to­ SURGICAL treatment designed without steering wheel, clutch or brake. They have atomic to correct Rupture. These treat­ amounts should be made avail­ ward religion, and many fears were quelled. .As soon as his ments are so dependable that energy, but it is unguided (no steering wheel), cannot disen­ able for social welfare purposes position was solidified. Hitler showed his true face. Italian Voters Asked a Lifetime Certificate of As­ gage its power in danger­ in the Borneo states.” 1.1 1935 the Nazi government revealed its twofold aim: Com­ surance is given. ous spots (no clutch) and Observers pointed out, how­ plete elimination of the Jews, and union of all Christian denom­ Write today for our New ever, that, even with these guar­ inations in one national Church. In the meantime the party’s FREE BOOK that gives facts has never been taught to To Defend Moral Values that may Save You painful, deny itself (no brake). antees the non-Muslim majority propaganda machine expounded the most debased paganism. expensive surgery. Jells HOW could be treated inequitably if Monasteries were confiscated, and 20,000 Catholic i Rome — ’s National Bish-1 Democrats fear will ultimately and explains WHY NON-SUR- federal money and federal favor schools containing more than 3,000,000 pupils were closed. Re- ,ops' Conference has called on I play into the hands of the left- GICAL Methods of Treating. Any force which is ^evoid;go to Islam ligion was barred from public education. Congregations of ; Catholic voters to defend and ist parties, including the Corn- Rupture are so successful to­ day. .Act Now. There is no ob­ of purpose is necessarily! religious were dispersed, and support cut off from the foreign | affirm moral values "without munists. missiiins. ligation. revolutionary. A boiler with­ w hich all progress is incomplete I The .statement said that the FIND OUT Still clergy and people stood fast, and now began the .fiend­ and unstable, and liberty itself EXCELSIOR MEDICAL CLINl'C out obedience to its pres­ Bishops "call to the attention of ishly contrived “morality” trials of priests and religious. No and true democracy cannot be Catholics the tact that their Dept HIIU. ExcelilM- Spriigi. Mo. sure-limit explodes; a train HOW longer could the Pope remain quiet. The encyclical of Pius guaranteed or promised.” unity in public life, always use­ in revolt against the "con­ OUR LADY Xll Mitt Brennendcr Sorge, attacking Nazism and its battle The conference urged Catho­ ful and fortunate, is truly neces­ servative” who laid the on religion, burst as an explosion on the world, which had lics to take part in the national sary in the current circum­ 10 WAYS LAXATIVES CAN OF been reading only a Nazi-censored press. trades runs wild; the young and municipal elections .April stances of our country, where without a Mission perish. VICTORY •Attack followed attack. When Cardinal Von Galen, “the 28 and to cast ballots with there exist even now dangers to PUNISH YOUR SYSTEM Lion of Muenster,” spoke out against government-imposed This want of Mission affects CAN “Christian awareness.” religious and civil liberty, and "mercy-killing” of the aged and insane, and against sterili­ each person must acc-ept the Winner of doctors' lataiito all young people, even The Bishops’ statement took HELP zation of "undesirables,” an aide to Propaganda Minister Goeb- necessary sacrifices for the good tests outmodes old-fashionsd -< though they have a meas­ note of Italy’s recent economic bels suggested that he be hanged. But Goebbels turned down of all.” (NC) cathartics ure of Faith; it leaves peo­ advances. YOU the suggestion, knowing well that the Cardinal's people would Did you know that frequent use of ple of all ages bored, full of In stressing,the need for unity As She Has Helped rise up against such a deed. I “ antacid" laxatives may over-alkif- ennui and 'disgusted with Other clergy who spoke out received harsh treatment. Of among Catholic voters, the Bish-1 Shrinks Hemorrhoids jlize you . . . that harmless-looking life. But given a Mission, a Others. the 20,000 priests in Germany, Hitler’s minions killed, impris­ ops in effect urged them to re­ ' laxatives may contain chemical drugs goal, a purpose, they quick­ Send this Coupon, with your oned, exiled, or otherwise silenced or hampered 14,364. Of 310 main loyal to the Christian Dem­ Without Surgery |. . . that others may dry out the j bowel to cause “rebound constipatioiT’ ly become happy. name and address for a priests sent to concentration camps, 65 died of ill-treatment ocratic party. Many segments of party membership have been at' Stops Itch — Relieves Pain ! or inflammation? “' and 56 were executed. Prison terms were received by 644 and These and other laxative risks ere FREE BOOKLET 790 were placed in "protective custody." Of 2,569 members odds with the leadership o v e r ! for the first tirre science has found e new described in circular in Dr. Edward*’ Three years ago g young man was brought to us by of religious orders drafted into the German army, 570 were the new working a r r a n g e m e n t ! substance with the astonishing Olive Tablets, winner of 6-month his father, who was saddened by his son’s loss of Faith and killed and 411 reiiorted "missing." with the socialists, which some I**” ''''’ and to re- trat of 7 leading laxatives on ^61 consequent cantankerous nature. A few months later the boy A'et Germany was to suffer even more as a result of Hitler’s more conservative Christian I p;''"-*'"’''''' c« e after ednstipstion ’’sufferers. I t tells how ______tease, while gently relieving pain, actual re- •madpess. .Millions died in the war — both soldiers on the front this herbsl prepsrstion won by 71% ran away, returning the next year still as stubborn and duction (shrinkage) took place. Most amaz- on combined scores of gentlenast, anti-religious as ever. We recommended sending the lad and civilians at home. Dresden alone, with a population of TOOTHACHE j ing of all-results ^ere so thorough that timing, consistency of results. For to a school outside the United States. After a year the youth 408,000, lost 250,000 men, women, and children in three nights Don't suffer needlessly. Get speedy re* sutf.erers made astonishing statements like complete detsils write Dr. Edwards' 01 air bombardment. lief from throbbing pain of toothache j "piles have ceased to be a probleml" The Olive Tablets, Dept. Q-62, Memphis returned to ask our support for a plan to teach poor chil­ with fast acting ORA-JEL. Pain secret is in a new healing substance (Bio> 1, Tenn. Or—for an immediate trial, dren, build a clinic and construct a small church for the im­ Thousands more died of Red bestiality in Russia’s invasion goes in seconds. Guaranteed of Germany — nuns, women, girls, and priests and men whoj or money back. Ail drug stores. DynetJi), discovery of a world-famous re­ ask your druggist (or Dr. Edwai^’ poverished of a certain missionary land. At college he had tried to protect them. search institute in suppository or ointment Olive Tablets today. Get relief yDu met some boys who had done such work, who in turn in­ form called Preparation At all drug want without cramps or digestive Some l.j to 16 million Germans were driven from their counters. ui'.'dt—or money back. * spired him with a Mission. homes in Eastern Germany, and cast upon their devastated, truncated homeland. .Almost one of three died by the way of The burden of the Church in the United States is to give hardship or brutality. T its adt ertisement appears as a matter oj record only. our oeoole a sense of Mission, something to do either for Few German prisoners-of-war ever returned from Russia NEW ISSUE: alive, and those who did were in pitiful state. When Russia an­ their , the poor in the city, prisoners or the hungry nounced in 1950 that its prisoner return was complete, 1.-500- souls in mission lands. Our people are sheep— but not sheep 000 German soldiers were still missing-. $2,000,000 to be sheared only. Their purpose is not j^ust to "support the THIS ACCOU.N’T is by no means intended to minimize THE SISTERS OF PROVIDENCE OF Church." The Church must support them, give them purpose, the even greater sufferings of other nationalities and r^ccs make them disciples, summon them to carry the crosses of from Nazism — particularly the Jews and Poland. ST. MARY’S-OF-THE-WOODS other peoples. But it is a little told story of resi.stance to the man who was Saint Mary-of-the-Woods, Indiana to terrorize the world, and who first terrorized liis own people. It is likewise a dramatic picture of the evil in a nation In order to get this idea across, we have written a spe­ or world fashioned by the Godless — whether brown-shirted DIRECT OBLIGATION SERIAL NOTES cial March-April issue of MISSION, which is entitled "A Nazi or red-«hirted Communist. Series A — -Msgr. John B. Kbel Message to the Catholics of the United States." If you don't CRADLE have it, write and we will send it to you. In gratitude, say a Unconditionally Guaranteed by prayer for the Holy Father that next ^ear the people of the MEDAL SAINT MARY-OF-THE-WOODS COLLEGE United States will give him more than an average per capita {An Indiana Non-Profit Corporation of Roman Catholic Sisters) contribution of 27 cents to evangelize, educate and heal $ 1.00 Siiot Mary-of-the-Woods, Indiana over 2 billion pagans! Maturity Amount Coupen GOD LOVE YOU to H.A.M. for'SlO "I am offering this Mar. 1,1964 to Sipt 1,196S 1 63,000 100 up for the poor of the world, so I won’t be one of them Mar.U966toMar.1.1967 19,000 A'/i% 100 Sept 1.1967 to Sept 1,1968 14,000 AV*% 100 next month if my husband gef^ laid off his job." . . . to Mar. 1.1969 to Sept. 1.1969 59.000 5% 101 J.D. for $1 "In gratitude for my most precious possession, Mar. 1,1970 to Mar. 1,1971 95,000 5% 100.1 the gift of Faith." . . . to E.B. for $6 "I have tried to make SepL 1.1971 to Mar. 1. 1973 138.000 5% 100 SepU,1973toMar.t.1963 1.U2.000 5'/^% 101 small acts of denial each day throughout Lent to send the Missions the financial equivalent. Please hove the Holy PRICE: Accrued Interest to be Added Father use my offering os he sees fit. ' . . . to M.V. for S25 Sketch oJ S ew Mother Theodore Guerin Hi^h School Sates are in denominations of "By having an accountant figure out my income tax, I was Rdrer Grove (Chicago), Illinois t m , ilOOO, tfOOO, $10,000 and t t f ,000 able to save the above amount. I wont the Missions to usej Dated M arch 1, 1963 my savings to further THEIR saving. ' Attractive medal for baby s crib. Gift boxed and carded Copies of Prospectus may he obtained from the undersigned, only in states in which the Underwriter We want not only your sacrifices but also your prayers. with Guardian Angel picture is qualified to act as a dealer in securities, and in which the Prospectus may legally he distrihuled. Send your request and a $2 sacrifice-offering for the WORLD- and prayer. Medal is, in an­ tique silver finish. Pink for MISSION ROSARY, and we will send you these multicolored girls, blue for boys. B. C. ZIEGLER AND COMPANY beads blessed by Bishop Sheen. Each time you soy the Security Building Telephone FEderal 4-5521 W est Bend, WIs. WORLDMISSION ROSARY, you will remember to put aside! CATHOLIC BOOKSHOP, INC. BRANCH OFFICES. a daily sacrifice for the Holy Father. 'P. O. BOX 2000 Sorry, Layman, 98, Honored Wichita 1, Kansas No New York—135 East 42nd St. Memphis—420 Dermon Bldg. C.O 0. .An nid and otten-hnnon-d Cathidic lavinan is giu-n a criui- Phone: A'Ukon 6-3178 Phone: JAckson 5-6826 Enclosed find $ for fix blessed by I’ope John XXIIl. The eruss is presented to Wil­ Cut out this column, pin yocir sacrifice to it and mail I La Jolla, Calif.—7825 Ivanhoe Ave. Minneapolis—607 Marquette Are. Pink Cradle Medal liam .1. Derinody, 98. at Ogden, I’lali, by Bishop J. Lennox l ed Phone: GL. 4-4711 Phone: FEderal 9-5841 it to Most Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, National Director of thei Blue Cradle Medal eral of Salt L ake City, .Mr. D erm ody will be 99 In A pril. A Chicago—135 S. La Salle St., Suite 635 St. Louis—4 1 1 N. 7th St. Society tor the Propagation of the Faith, 366 Fifth Avenue, lelegrapher .'or 6(1 years, he retired in 1936. .Among oilier Phone: Financial 6-7493 Phone: MAin 1-5323 Nam e New York lx , N Y. or your Diocesan Director. lioi-.'irs he bar reeeixed are llie Kniglilliood of Hie Order of SI. M ilwaukee— 735 N orth W ater St. Toledo—6620 Lincoln Pkwr. A d d re ss (.re g o ry . Hie Fighesl honor bestow ed on a Ia.\ C atbolie In (he Phone: BKoadw-ay 3-6110 Phone: TLrner 2-2i98 Dubuque— 1003 American Trust Bldg., Phone: 588-1342 City State I’ope, an ' ll'e SI. (leorge Aledal, a special award for sersiee to ■ Page 2, Sec. 2 The Register i c ★ Boy Scouts. Lectures to Be Broadcast on Closed-Circuit TV ■ Cardinal Bea to Take Part in Harvard Interfaith Talks Cambridge, Mass. Cardinal broadcast them by radio, and to G. Ernest Wright, Harvard and “The Second Vatican Coun­ open to the public, on March “It is for this reason that only Augustin' Bea, S.J., will speak show them later over local TV professor of divinity and chair­ cil and Non-Catholic Christians’ 30. scholars have been invited to three times at a major con­ station WGHB. Evaluation and Prognosis.” The closed seminar discus­ man of the assembly, described attend the seminars and to par­ frontation between Catholic and Cardinal Bea is visiting the In addition to the Cardinal’s sions will begin March 28. The Protestant theologians at Har­ it as “the first time, as far as ticipate in their discussions. U.S. at the invitation of Cardi­ address, public talks will be de­ invited scholars and special stu­ vard university March 27-30. we are aware, that such a large dents will divide into four These meetings will be closed nal Richard Cushing, Archbish­ livered by James M. Robinson The Cardinal, president of op of Boston. Cardinal Bea also confrontatoin of Catholic and groups. Each seminar will con­ to the general public in order the Secretariat for Promoting will speak in several other East­ Protestant scholars have met of the Southern California tinue for three mornings, led that complete freedom of discus­ Christian Unity and a major ern cities. together to discuss theological School of Theology at Clare­ by one Catholic and one Prot­ sion can be permitted along with figure in the' Second Vatican mont, a Protestant scholar on estant. Leading American Catholic issues.” frankness and candor in the ex­ Council, will lecture each even­ and Protestant scholars will join the New Testament, and Father Assembly chairman Wright Cardinal Bea’s topics will be pression of individual views.” ing on March 27, 28, and 29. Cardinal Bea at the Harvard Gregory Baum, O.S.A., of St. explained: “The aim of the The assembly is being sup­ In anticipation of large assembly. More than 150 theo­ ‘The Academic Pursuits and Michael’s College, University of conference is exploration in ported by the income of the crowds, the university has ar­ logians and students have been Christian Unity,” “The Second Toronto. areas of common interest and Charles Chauncey Stillman ranged to broadcast the lectures Invited to attend the four days Vatican Council and Non-Catho­ A panel drawn from the two concern, not with any ulterior Chair of Roman Catholic Theo­ Bishop Dios on closed-circuit television to ad­ of seminars, lectures, and con­ lic Christians: Preparation and faiths will offer a discussion of purpose in mind other than logical Studies at the Harvard ditional campus lecture halls, to certs. the Work in the First Period,” “conscience and introspection,” mutual understanding. divinity school. •Auxiliary Bishop Lawrence founder Dios F. Schott (above) of Harris­ Father John L. Sigsteln, 88, burg, Pa., died March 11 in the founder of Our Lady of Geisinger Memorial hospital, Council Surprised Persons House Committee Head Victory Missionary Sisters, Danville, Pa., after a long ill­ died March 13 in the commu­ ness from a rare blood di­ nity’s mother house, Hunting- sease. Bishop George L. Leech Has New College Aid Bill ton, Ind. Bishop Leo A- Purs- of Harrisburg offered a Sol­ Fearing Absolutist Approach Washington — A key figure The bill was drawn to curb ley of Fort Wayne-South Bend emn Pontiflcal Requiem Mass Boston — The Second Vati­ in; pluralistic societies, and Eu­ in educational matters in the controversy over the constitu­ offered the Pontifical Re­ in St. Patrick’s Cathedral. can Council surprised those who ropean Bishops were apprehen­ House of Representatives tionality of extending federal quiem Mass for Father Sig- Archbishop John J. Krol of feared it would be conducted sive that .Americans would not launched an all-out effort for assistance to Church-related col­ stein. Founded in Santa Fe, Philadelphia gave the final along absolutist lines, said Fa­ share their basic attitudes. adoption of a federal college leges. The powerful National N. Mex., in 1922, Our Lady assistance bill. absolution. ther Hans Kueng, dean of the Education association and other of Victory Missionary Sisters After all these preliminary Rep. Edith Green of Oregon 'A native of Phlladeipbia, theological faculty at the Uni­ professional public school are now active in 36 sees in anxieties. Father Kueng assert­ dropped the Kennedy admini­ Bishop Schott, 55, attended versity of Tuebingen, Germany. groups oppose such assistance. 21 states. ed, the council turned out to be stration’s omnibus bill and in­ St. Vincent’s college and sem- an agreeable surprise. He said Mary, Latrobe, Pa. Ordained ' Before the opening of the troduced a separate measure that at the council it was ob­ in 1935 and consecrated Bish­ council many Catholics inter­ calling for college construction served that Bishops who had op in 1956, he continued to ested in Christian unity feared aid and student assistahee. firs t it would have “a bad effect on practically no Protestants or Mrs. Green is edairman of the .aerve as pastor of Our Lady Orthodox in their countries of Mt. Carmel parish, Mt. the ecumenical movement,” and House subcommittee consider­ shared the concern of Pope John '(larmel. Pa., after his conse- that the council might issue ing higher education proposals for Christian unity, that dog­ things etatlon. dogmatic definitions that would and was sponsor last ydar of matic definitions which would During his career. Bishop be misunderstood by non-Cath- the unsuccessful bill to assist have “closed doors” were avoid­ •Schott had served as assist- olics. colleges. That measure died in ed, that the European Bishops firs t At Assumption College, It's besiei ?iht diocesan director for the the House, largely because of discovered that their American the naturel science or math mejor ecquires a Society for the Propagation of EXPERTS FROM countries controversy over the constitu­ counterparts shared their “pas­ hroad cultural background before he begins to the Faith, diocesan director that have large non-Catholic tionality of its equal treatment toral intentions,” and that an speclelize. During his first two years of college, of Boy Scouts, principal of a elements in their population, he of public and private colleges. air of freedom permeated the he widens his horizons and gains a balanced knowl­ high school, moderator of continued, were concerned that The new Green bill (H. R. edge In several different areas-theology, philos­ Catholic student centers, and Bishops from predominantly discussions and the voting. 4797) would provide $1,150,000,- . -ffl 000 in grants and 600 mUlion ophy, languages, history. chairman of the diocesan com­ Catholic countries would not un­ A PARTICULARLY impres­ dollars in loans over five years mission on vocations. derstand the viewpoints formed Armed with a greater understanding of the world sive result of the council accord­ for college construction. and of his Christian heritage, he is ready by his ing to Father Kueng, was the AccreiLtJd publie and non­ junior year for fuller concentration in preqnedicine, profit — including Church-re­ INDIA: AN UNFINISHED TALE general consensus reached dur­ pre-dentistry, or mathematics. Thus, he is prepared ing the discussions. lated — universities, colleges, YOUR GENEROSITY in response to our weekly appeal is for his professional role in life with a deep insight “If we had voted before dis­ and technical institutes would always a source of wonder to us. Yet it sometimes happens that be eligible to seek assistance. into the minds and hearts of men. the contributions received in our of­ cussion,” he stated, “the votes would have shown considerable Chrisi Child Winner ASSUMPTION, the collect lor youitc nNt wht fice for a particular project are not Marriage, Funeral enjoy the Chrlstlin way of llft-w ho think lor disagreement. But during the themselves-end who consider Ihrinc to be an quite enough to complete it . . . Such Sandy-haired, blue-eyed Stephen Gerard Barrett, nine discussions, opinions changed.” Masses in Afternoon experience ts rich end wide ae the world itu lf. is the work of the POOR CLARES in months, was named the official Christ Child winner of the And when the votes were tallied Lafayette, La. — Permission 1963 nationally famous contest sponsored by the St. Kevin a Directed by the Aseomptlonist Fathers, Assumptlot PALAYAM in the diocese of Palai in has been received from the Holy it was found that there was al­ theater, Dorchester, Mass. He will preside over the Bethlehem Collece Is a Catholic liberal arts colleie for men oUarlni 1 ^ Southern India. When we first told See for afternoon wedding and majors in: Economics, Enillsh, Foralin Affairs, French, most total unanimity. scene of the New England Passion Play, “The Christus,” being ” I ^ you their story, the Sisters were en­ funeral Masses in the Lafayette History, Natural Sciences (Includini pre-medical and pre- couraged to begin building the con­ “On most questions,” Father staged in the John Hancock ball, Boston, March 21-24. The dental), Modam Mathematics. Philosophy. Small classes, added, “there were only 50 or diocese. sports. 96 acres. Write Admissions Offict far catllei. vent, nursery and dispensary so much winner is one of seven children of Mr. and Mrs. William J. 60 dissenting votes (out of some Bishop Maurice Schexnayder needed by the poor people of this Barrett, members of St. Mark’s parish, Dorchester Mass. 2,000). In one case there were said the permission should not isolated place . . . But we were un­ a little over 100.” (NC) do away with, the practice of ASSUMPTION '•^OkHifyFMliiriMisoM/Ud able to send enough to see the proj­ morning Masses for marriages " /ir dn Orieital Chimk ect through to completion. Father and funerals, which should be COLLEGE Pottapany, their pastor, has written Music Educators preferred. The diocese was (Member of New England Association of Collages & Secondary Schools) several times telling of their difficult progress and asking con­ Cleveland — The National Keepit'g. l*|> granted permission several 514 Salisbury Street, Worcester 9, Massachusetts tinued help . . . Plastering, flooring and furniture will cost about Catholic Music Educators’ asso­ years ago for other daily and $3,900 more. Can we come through for them again—this time ciation will hold its 1963 con­ Sunday evening Masses. vention here April 23 to 27. (With Attractive Blue Florentine De Luxe Bookmark) all the way? YOCATIONS-MEN (Comment by Paul H. Hallett, Lltt.D.) BOOK SAVER MISSAL COVER ANGELIC MESSEN(5ER PERPETUAL NOVENA Holy Cross Brothers rjt was no ordinary messenger who brought to Mary the news to ST. JUDE Unfair Textbooks in Public Schools _ Serve Cod in that she was to, have a Child. On March 25 we remember the • Teaching • Missions $1.00 Postpaid $1.00 THE ANTI-DEFAMATION league has rendered a signal serv­ visit of that heavenly legate, the ANGEL “Patron of Hopeless • Social Work • Guidance or Difficult Cases” ice to education by its investigation of textbooks that leave • Trades • Accounting GABRIEL...In mission lands many young wrong impressions in the child’s mind about the creed or char­ For information and men like GEORGE SARGI and MICHAEL EVERY literature write: WEDNESDAY acter of other groups. ,§AAD, seminarians, in the holy land, and Bro. Eymard, C.S.S. or Bro. Bartel, C.S.C. EVENING AT The current ADL Bulletin reviews a study made by Dr. 108 DujarFe Hall St. Edward's Univ. B*6 young women like SISTER MARY ANGELA 5:30 P.M. and 8 P.M. Judah J. Harris, a New York educator, who has compiled a Notre Dame, Ind. Austin, Texas and SISTER MARY JOSETA, novices with book called The Treatment of Religion in Elementary School the Sacred Heart Sisters in India, are called EVERY SUNDAY Social Studies Textbooks. This study was made after an examin­ BE ATEACHING BROTHER to the religious life to become other mes­ AFTERNOON AT 3:00 P.M. ation of 120 leading social studies textbooks used in elementary Grade Schools & High Schools sengers, announcing to countless thousands Under the Direction of the schools. In Our Community Write Today: »tiie glad tidings of Christ’s birth. By helping them through their Claretian Fathers Dr. Harris notes that the Reformation is generally described Vocational Director seminary or novitiate training, you can aid in this angelic work BROTHERS OF THE HOLY from the point of view of the Protestant Reformers, the Catholic ROSARY . They need benefactors to give $100 a year for six years for National Shrine of St. Jude Clfhrch being often depicted as evU, cruel, and arbitrary. 101 loyaton Lini Aene, Nevada ^ e seminarians; $150 a year for two years will cover the cost 3200 East 91st Street irf the two year novitiate for the novices. You may make the Chicago, Illinois “MARTIN LUTHER is treated in a wholly favorable light .payments to suit your own convenience. as a champion of freedom and enlightenment; no hint is given VOCATIONS-MEN One block east of South Chicago "IC" of what he advocated and practiced toward those whom he NO STRINGS ATTACHED station; two blocks west of U.S. 41 considered heretics. Nor is much space given to such movements Original Wrap Around Button Clasp Type as the Counter-Reformation; the fact that the religious intol­ Super Quality CItar Vinyl Plastic Stitched lor Extra Slrangth. EVERY SO OFTEN, in opening the mail, we find a check or erance of the 17th and 18th centuries was by no means a Cath­ Being offered for five of the most popular Dally Missals now in money order with these three little words: “No strings attached.” ust. The cItar vinyl shows your Missal In its original rich binding olic monopoly is virtually ignored.” SORRY! —and It protects it. With each cover we send you a Blut Floren­ Our benefactor is saying in effect “Use this donation wherever tine De Luxe Missal Book Mark with Our Lady of Grace illustra­ >it’s needed most, wherever it will do the most good.” We thank Classified Ads After noting other distortions of the Reformation period. Dr. tion. God that people are so generous. Usually these stringless gifts Harris examines a passage on Jesus and His death, which both Classified ads run through all Reg­ ...just don’t tiave I ■ ■ ■ ■ ■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■! come just in time to do something special for which we have ister editions. The rate la 85c per Jews and Catholics would find objectionable: Catholic Bookshop, Inc. -no funds. word per Issue. Minimum 12 words. die room here If four or more consectlve issues “Jesus began traveling about in Palestine . . . He talked P. O. Box 2000 Wichita 1, Kansas are used, the rate is 80c per word to the people who gathered about Him. He talked to them abouf MISSION NEEDS per Issue. Payment must accompany Sorry No C.O.D. all orders. Ads received on Monday being good neighbors. He told them all men are brothers. He HOW we " Our work covers 18 Near East and Far East countries. Mission will appear In the Issue printed the asked them to believe in a just and loving God who was their Enclosed find $...... for which send Missal Covers as following week. ______checked below @ $1.00 each. ineeds are many. An Easter gift would be appreciated. Some Father in Heaven. SALVATORIAN suggestions: AT HOLV ROSARY MISSION, Pine “The teachings of Jesus stirred up hate for him among some ...... 602AJ St. Joseph Daily or Continuous Sunday SACRED ARTICLE FOR A CHAPEL. Give it in your Kldge, South' Dakota, we take In BROTHERS Missal more than 500 Sioux Indian boys of the Jewish leaders. They feared that the words of Jesus .670 Maryknoll Daily Missal ;; name or in someone else’s. We’ll send a Gift Card with and girls-each year, educate them SERVE GOD .. a card of pressed flowers from the Holy Land. from first grade through high would make trouble and that the Roman rulers would blame P .660 St. Pius X Daily Missal “ Vestments ($50); Monstrance ($40); Chalice ($40); school. We desperately need your them for it. They urged the Roman governor to do away with .604 St. Andrew Large or New Roman Missal help. Anything you can send . . . Jesus. At last the Roman governor allowed Jesus to be put to but a card or note containing your Ciborium ($40); Tabernacle ($25); Crucifix ($25); clothing, trading stamps, money address and age will bring our color­ '■ Stations of the Cross ($25); Censer ($20); Sanctuary wUl help these needy and deserv­ death on a cross.” Name . ;; Lamp ($15); Altar Linens ($15); Sanctuary Bell ($5). ing little chUdren of the prairies. ful booklet and personal letter from; Please help us. Father Edwards, S.J. MEMBERSHIP IN OUR ASSOCIATION, Single person. THIS anemic text might, as Dr. Harris points out, easily Address •; $1 a year; Family membership $5. You share in the BROTHER pRUS,S.D.S..Rooni6 Terribly distressed flnanclaUy. Mine lead the child to the conclusion that the teaching of the brother­ .> jrac es of the Masses of 15,000 priests. Is a poor parish In India, Please, 1735 Hi AAount Boulevard City .... Please help me. Rev. Fr. G. Paul hood of man and the fatherhood of God were the reasons why Milwaukee 8, WiKonsin Zn. State '• S'lRINftLESS GIFT. We’ll use it where most needed. Avertban, St. Xavier's Mission. Kun- ” ERECT A MISSION CHAPEL. Cost $2,000 to $6,000. dambhagam, VUappll Trivandrum 6, some of the Jewish leaders feared Jesus, whereas the real rea­ ■ ■ FIRST COMMUNION: $10 will outfit a child for this India. son was His claim to be the Messias, the Son of God. " great event. SEND YOUR USED CHRISTMAS This text well illustrates that when we try to make sacred CARDS AND OTHER GREETING CARDS TO Rev. L. M. Lorenzl, S.J., history acceptable to everybody we actually distort it and make klNDLY REMEMBER US IN YOUR WILL. OUR OFFICIAL St. Vincent's Charitable Instltutiom it unfair. The passage cited would completely agree with the FOR MY INVESTMENT TITLE IS: THE CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSO P. B. No. 41, Calicut, Kerala, India. The cards will be recondlUoned and theology of only a few, like the Unitarians. :tU T IO N . sold for the benefit of the missions Catholic magazines and books are The Catholic and the conservative Protestant must, of course, also needed. hold that Christ was far more than a do-gooder. His life and ST. JOHN’S, CRYSTAL SPRINGS the course of the religion He founded are inexplicable unless we From n o w on,.,an Annuity called MISSISSIPPI, needs donations. 781 bring in His divine and Messianic claims. square mUes, 30,000 population, 152 Catholics. Father Ed. FRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN, President SAINT FOR OUR TIMES: St. Martin THEN, IN ORDER to appear impartial, a public school text Mtgr. Joitph T. Ryan, Nal'l $«c'y de Porres, O.P. Send for Novena would have to say that Jesus believed He was divine, that His MISSION CONTNACT Sand all communlcatloni lo: Literature. Dominican Fathers, P.O. Apostles believed He rose from the dead. This would sow the CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION Box 12038, New Orleans 24, La. Will some kind benefactor provide seeds of doubt in the Christian child’s mind. 480 Lexington Ave. at 46th St. New York 17, N. Y. financial assistance to a missionary Undoubtedly public school history and social science text­ b eca u se in India to help pay catechist’s salary and other necessary ex- books can cut down offensiveness to various groups, but let us penses? Send gifts to Department face it: The influence of religion on history cannot be ex­ 1. It pays me high interest as long as I live. JMB, The Register, P.O. Box 1620, THE REGISTER Denver 1, Colo. plained with detachment. We either believe or deny. Because of 2. Interest continues to my wife or a relative after my death. f inancial assistance needed for So­ this, history cannot be taught in its fullness in a public school. Published every week by The Catholic Press Society, Inc., cial Action group In South India 3. Many spiritual benefits now and later. which Is providing work for unem­ TAKE MY ADVICE- 934-950 Bannock Street, Denver 1, Colo. Post Office Box 1620. ployed by establishing small soap Mtmbar Audit Burttu of Circulation and Ink-making industry. Send do you will never 4. My money educates boys to the Priesthood. nations to; St. Paul Poor Society, Minerva Chemicals Buildings Bol Preildent______Moat Rev. Archbishop Urban J. Vehr, D.D., Denver ghatty P.D., Ernakulam 1, Kerala regret it! 5. Gives me peace of mind and no stock worries. Editor and Bualneti Manager..Rt. Rev. John B. Cavanagh, M.A., Ph.D. State, South India. Video Series on Church Managing Editor ...... John Heher, Lltt.D. Parishioners of St. Mary’s, Bates- Aaaoclato Business Manager------Rev. Daniel J. Flaherty, M.A. vUle, need church. Please help. Fa- Associate E ditors____ Linus M. Rtordan, Ph.D.; Paul Hallett, Lltt.D. ther Carroll, Batesvllle, Mississippi. Dedicated to Pope John Editorial W riter...... — ...... Very Rev. John B. Ebel, Lltt.D. r REV. FATHER RALPH, N a ll Dir. ' SONGWRITERS Wasliington — A special tele­ sion” and it will be shown on FOR S.V.D. Catholic Universities, 316 N. Michigan, Chicago 1, III. Thirty-five archdioceses and dioceses have editions of this news­ SONGWRITERS WANTED! Collabor­ vision series entitled “I Am the NBC-TV network from 1:30 paper as official organs as follows: Archdioceses of Cincinnati, Santa ate with professional songwriters With You,” scheduled for the Fe, Kansas City in Kansas, and Denver; Dioceses of Grand Island, equally. Share royalties. Songwriter to 2 p.m. It was filmed over a DETAILS L Send me details about your Annuity. My age '« ■ R Great Falls, Helena, Reno, Lincoln, Wheeling, Peoria, Altoona-Johns- Contact Co., 1619-0 Broadway, New Catholic Hour program during town, AmarUlo, Duluth, Nashville, Salt Lake City, Sallna, Tucson, York 19, N.Y. the Sundays in May, will be 10-wcek period in 16 cities in Wichita, Des Moines, Spokane, Pueblo, Steubenville, Cheyenne, Lafa­ yette, Alexandria, Natcnez-Jackson, EvansvDle, Green Bay, Boise, El POEMS WANTED for musical set dedicated to John XXIII. eight coDhtrics of the Middle WRITE NAME fpleiie print)...... Paso, Joliet, and Austin. The Diocese of Dodge City uses the Wichita ting and recording. Send poems Free Examination. Crown Music. 49 Martin H. Work, executive di­ East and,'Europe. edition. The Diocese of San Angelo uses the West Texas edition, I ADDRESS ...... and the Cincinnati Archdiocese also publishes a Dayton edition. WT West 32nd St., New York 1. of the National Council of Work said that the .senes will TODAY TEACHERS WANTED Catholic Men, which produced present for the first time on TV CITY. .Zone...... STATE, Second-Class Postage Paid at Denver, Colorado the program, said that the four- SEEKING A CATHOLIC COLLEGF the. nearly 2.nfl0-year history I OR HIGH SCHOOL TEACHING PO part series “is the most exten­ and development of the Catholic 42 SITION? WRITE: NATIONAL GATH OUC PLACEMENT SERVICE. 412 sive religious-historical doc- church and its 21 General Coun­ Melcher Avenue, Elkhart, Indiana. mentary ever filmed for televi- cils. Public School Pupils Great Monte Cassino Abbey Get Parish Hospitality Fitchburg, Mass. — One hundred twenty-two public school pupils, displaced by a fire that roared through Mary C. Mark­ Rises From Ruins of War ham school, are back in classes thanks to the hospitality of It took nine years to rebuild AMONG PROJECTS sUll to St. Joseph's parish. By James C. O’Neill Monte Cassino, Italy — The the structural part of the mon­ be completed are four side cha­ The public school boys and girls are being taught in ele­ astery, a project that was made pels of the Abbey church nod mentary girls’ school. Father Arthur A. Brodeur, pastor of St. great Abbey of Monte Cassino has risen phoenix-like from a possible by using a complete the frescoes that once covered Joseph’s parish, suggested the arrangement, and his offer was pile of rubble left by bombs plan of the buildings made be­ the vaulting of the church. gratefully accepted by the Fitchburg school committee. and mortar shells in World War fore the war by a monk-engi­ The blazing inferno was set off by a 13-year-old former The intricate marble mosaics II to serve again as a living neer and by using hundreds of pupil in the public school, who said she “hated” a science that cover the walls of the cha­ center of learning and work. drawings, designs, and sketches teacher at the school. pels each require the work of The gleaming white walls of in the monastery library. six artists for seven months. The fire gutted the section of the school building used by the monastery, which w a s But the redecoration of the en­ the fourth, fifth, and sixth grade pupils. The section that housed The problem of reproducing the founded by St. Benedict him­ tire complex of buildings is still the lower three grades escaped major damage. frescoes la one of finding an self in about 529 A.D., again incomplete 19 years after the IN HIS LETTER to the school committee. Father Brodeur artist canable of doing the work house not only a community of Allied bom bi'' and shelling — and of finding money to pay expressed the eagerness of Bishop Bernard J. Flanagan of monks but an excellent prep that phlverized the monastery Worchester, Mass., to “cooperate with the Fitchburg school school, two seminaries, and a in February, 1944. And the end! . .... , committee in solving the problem arising from the unfortunate famous library. is not yet in sight. , .Another jigsaw puzzle facmg loss.” I the monks is the task of re- The committee settled upon a rental fee of $5,000 a year I assembling the splintered pieces A U $ fib* Bllmf for the use of the facilities until a new public school could be ■of walnut that once were the Dr. James R.Oliver (above), built. i beautifully carved heads of dean of the graduate school The 1,100 pupils in the St. Joseph girls’ and boys’ schools I cherubs and tangles of carved at the University of South­ received a two-day holiday until the walls of the fire-gutted ! ^’•iiit that decorated “le stalls in western Louisiana, has been public school were knocked down. The public school adjoins the ap.se of the church, aiding the blind for more than the parochial school, and both schools were recessed until the i Already in operation is tha five years by making it pos­ danger of falling walls had been removed. !nren school that now has an sible for them to hear techni­ The Fitchburg Sentinai commented editorially: “Fitchburg enrollment of 40 boarding stu­ cal articles by means of tape is lucky inasmuch as the parochial school authorities are Good Friday Play Protests Play dents and will ultimately ac­ recorders. A member of the graciously offering the city temporary use of facilities in the London —The Lord Chamb­ Wiesbaden, Germany — The commodate 140 students. Catholic Tape Recorders’ In­ same neighborhood for the pupils who attended the burned erlain has given permission Society for Judaeo-Christian col­ ternational, he began taping school.” for two performances of Henri laboration has protested against SIXTY YOUNG MEN are articles from “America,” na­ The paper also lauded the parochial school authorities and Gheon’s The Way of the Cross further showings of “Der Stel- studying for the diocesan priest­ tional Catholic weekly maga­ the public school committee for a “prompt working arrange­ on Good Friday. It is the first Ivertrcter” (The Vicar), which hood to staff the Abbey Nullius zine, for three blind persons, ment being achieved with edifying good grace and smoothness.” time since the Lord Chamber- depicts Pius Xll as having abet­ of Monte Cassino. The jurisdic­ •ne in Michigan, New York, Benerficfine Abbey Rises lain was entrusted with cen­ ted the Nazi slaughter of six tion. which is the equivalent of sorship of plays 120 years ago and Pennsylvania. For the third time, the great Benedictine Abbey of Monte million Jews by keeping silent a diocese with the Abbot as Or­ Council Urged to Grant Cassino has risen from the ashes of its destruction. Founded that a London theatrical per­ about it. The society called the dinary, at present h only 60 Church Province in 529 by St. Benedict, it was destroyed a second time by the formance has been permitted drama, now playing in Berlin, priests to serve its 67 parishes. Allied shellings of 1944, when the German troops made it a on Good Friday. a “historically erroneous play of Enrolled in the other semi­ Newly Erected Marriage Special Status fortress. It has been restored and Includes a prep school, two low quality.” nary at the monastery are 30 In Philippines Prato, Italy — The Bishop of seminaries, a monastery, and a famous library. In top photo, Kenya Seminary “I consider it right,” he con­ To Pray Stations students for the Benedictine or­ Vatican City — Pope John Prato, who risked public em­ tinued, “that a special place be the great white walls of the abbey tower above the fertile Nairobi, Kenya — The Sacred der. XXIII has erected a new eccle­ barrassment five years ago to given to the Christian' family in plain below. In lower photo, the ancient abbey well stands be­ Congregation of Rites has issued Bonn — Catholic youths In The monastery library, which East and West Germany, di­ siastical province, called Lin- defend Christian marriage, the structure of the Mystical fore the stairs to the Bramante cloister. Although the structure decrees erecting a regional sem­ escaped destruction because it asked that the status of the vided by the Iron Curtain and gayen-Dagupan, about 100 miles Body of Christ since the Chris of the abbey has been rebuilt, the redecoration, in its 18th inary for Kenya and naming Fa­ was sent to the Vatican during Christian family be given a the Berlin Wall, will pray the northeast of Manila in the Phil­ tian family constitutes a special year, has not been completed. ther Philip Fabian Mulhern, the war, today contains 90,000 special place in the council’s ippines. ‘supernatural’ state, indeed O.P., its rector. Father Mulhern, Stations of the Cross simul­ volumes. 1,000 ancient codices, project on the “Nature of the taneously on Friday of Pas­ The Lingayen-Dagupan prov­ a ‘sacramental’ state in the 53, is a former professor of Sa­ and more than 32,000 parch­ Church.” Church.” cred Scripture at Cushing col­ sion Week. ince will consist of the arch­ BISHOP PIETRO Fiordelli ment manuscripts dating from diocese of the same name and Supreme Court to Rule lege, Boston. The St. Thomas the ninth to 13th centuries. was involved in a widely pub­ THE BISHOP objected to the Aquinas Regional seminary, was Sisters in India two new dioceses in Central licized law suit for a dramatic The tomb of St. Benedict and Luzon, Cabanatuan and Tarlac. usual classification of the struc­ formerly opened on the feast of Calcutta, India—One hundred defense of Christian marriage. ture of the Church — Pope and St. Thomas, with 20 students and twenty-five Sisters from his sister, St. Scholastica, es­ The head of the province is On Obscene Film Case caped damage in the war. des­ A couple whom he had publicly Bishops, clergy and religious, Its quarters, not yet complete, Calcutta and four neighboring Archbishop Mariano Madriaga, charged with “public concu­ pite the fact that everything 60, who became Bishop of Lin- and laymen — as “not corre­ Washington — The U.S. Su­ Jacobellis is seeking reversal are about five miles from Nai­ dioceses n et here to form a binage” sued him for defama­ preme Court has tentatively of his conviction on the grounds above them was reduced jo gayen at the age of 36. sponding to Christian truth.” robi. special unit of the Conference tion of character in July, 1957. The Bishop noted that married scheduled for the week of that it violates the First Amend­ of Religious of India. The unit ruins. (NC) The first Bishop-elect of Ca­ He was convicted by a Florence couples are lay people, but he March 25 oral arguments in a ment’s guarantee of freedom of Reds Ambush Priest was inaugurated at Loretto banatuan is Mariano court in March 1958, but the believes that marriage has the major new test of anti-obscenity communication. Saigon, Vietnam — Father House here by Coadjutor Arch­ Retreat House Gaviola, secretary general of verdict was reversed the follow­ same status as the priestly legislation and movie censor­ Jacobellis was found guilty of Peter Tran Due Sam, Vietnam bishop Angelo Fernandes of Del­ the Catholic Welfare Organiza­ ing October by the Florence ship. Begins 25th Year state and the religious state and violating the Ohio anti-obscenity ese priest was taken prisoner hi. The conference was founded tion, the secretariat of the Phil­ Coprt of Appeals. that “the usual presentation of The high court has set aside ippine Episcopate. The first statute by the Cuyahoga county, by Viet Cong Communists in in 1960 to promote greater union Auriesville, N.Y. — The Sar “I would consider it excel­ the Church is incorrect.” one hour for hearing arguments Ohio, Court of Common Pleas Bishop-elect of Tarlac is Mon­ Central Vietnam after they had among religious congregations cred Hear*. Retreat house for lent,” the Bishop said, “if it Bishop Fiordelli added that in the appeal of Nico Jacobellis, June 8, 1960, and was sen­ signor Jesus J. Sison, Chancel­ raked his jeep with gunfire in in India. priests will begin its 25th year please the Fathers that the his is not a new vision of the who as manager of the Heights tenced to pay a $500 fine for April 21 with a series of 32 lor of the Diocese of Lingayen- Ecumenical Council give a spe­ a highway ambush. The Com 80,000 Copies Church, but that it can be found Arts Theater in Cleveland was possessing an obscene film and weekly retreats. Father Edwai;d Dagupan. cial place to Christian couples munists also ambushed a civil' Utrecht, The Netherlands — in the encyclical. Mystic Cor­ fined $2,500 for possessing and a $2,000 fine for exhibiting it. A. Ryan, S.J., retreat house di­ in outlining the structure of the ian jeep following the priest’s Some 1,750 Catholic and Prot­ poris Chrlsti, by Pope Pius XII. exhibiting the French film The His conviction was upheld by Church.” car, fatally wounding one young rector, has announced. (NC Radio and Wire) Lovers. the Cuyahoga county Court of estant youths distributed 80,- man. All ambush victims ex- 000 copies of a booklet, en­ In the past year, 537 diocesan Appeals June 21, 1961, and by cept the priest were later re and religious priests participat­ the Ohio Supreme Court Jan. titled “Why the Bible?” in leased. one night here. ed in 29 five-day retreats. The 17, 1962. The U.S. Supreme clerics represented 72 sees arid French Catholics Backing Court agreed to consider his Thaw in Spain John XXIII Seminary included five members of the case last Oct. 8. Seville, Spain — A further in­ Detroit, Mich. — Pope John Hierarchy, scores of Monsignori, Jacobellis’ attorney is Eph­ dication of the “thaw” in Cath- XXIII will bless the cornerstone pastors, professors and chap­ raim London, a New York law­ olic-Protestant relations in Spain for a seminary to be erected lains, and hundreds of assistant African Self-Help Plans yer who has been active in a was seen in the announcement on the site of his ancestral pastors. Seventy-three retreat- number of previous landmark that Brother Roger Schutz, pri­ home in Sotto II Monte, Italy. ants represented 27 religious Paris — Two donkeys and a ambitious plans of FAO and pie’s enthusiasm more than cases involving film control or of the Protestant community The structure to be called the communities. New retreatanj? plow, the gift of a French vil­ UNESCO,” said Monsignor Jean drives raising large sums of laws. of Taize in France, will take John XXIII seminary, belongs numbered 182;. all others had lage to an African farmer, Rodhain, secretary general of money that disappear without Representing the state in the part in a “Week of Contempor­ to the Pontifical Institute for made at least one previous re­ sparked a minor agricultural Secours Catholique. being heard from again. case is Cuyahoga County Prose­ revolution in the West African “But their particular merit is ary Thought,” to be held here Foreign Missions (PIME). treat at Auriesville. Two priests, an American and cutor John T. Corrigan. at the Catholic church of the town of Ouahigouya. that they are small,” he added. a Frenchman, are responsible “It is possible for a school, a The Ohio and American Civil Divine Redeemer. The gift was the beginning of for the projects. The original Liberties Unions have entered French Catholics’ major contri­ parish, or even half a dozen idea came from Monsignor Lu­ Vassar Professor Says people to sponsor one.” the case in an amicus curiae Counselors’ Meet bution to the worldwide Free­ igi Ligutti, the Holy See’s per­ (friend of the court) capacity dom From Hunger Campaign of Monsignor Rodhain also said Boston — The National Cath­ manent observer at FAO and and have submitted a brief at olic Guidance conference will the United Nations Food and the small projects arouse peo- international representative of Aid Denial 'Short-Sighted' tacking anti-obscenity laws and conduct its annual national pro Agriculture Organization. the U.S. National Catholic Rural urging reversal of Jacobellis’ gram April 6-7 in Boston col­ Poughkeepsie, N.Y. — A Vas­ forthcoming college-level Amer­ The result has been 2,068 Life Conference. The man who Castro Claims conviction. lege, Chestnut Hill, Mass., in sar college history professor ican history textbook. He idem Rev. Finn Lynge, O.M.I. small-scale projects which Se- took Monsignor Ligutti’s idea tifies himself as a non-CathoUc conjunction with the meeting of says the nation would be short­ cours Catholique, France’s Cath­ Church Accord and organized it on a national Ask Court to Lift sighted to deny federal educa­ in his article. olic Charities organization, has scale in France is Monsignor the American Personnel and tion aid to church-related and The professor says that in­ Guidance association here. More Greenland sponsored in the French-speak­ Kingston, Jamaica — Cuban Rodhain. School Prayer Ban other private schools. clusion of church-related schools than 700 counselors in Catholic ing countires of Africa. Prime Minister Castro says he “1 was giving a talk on Africa Carl N. Degler says that pri­ in federal aid proposals appears New York — Fifteen mothers schools are expected to attend has just about patched up his in a small parish hall,” Mon­ vate schools are permanently a to him as “constitutionally pos­ Native to of public school children in the the sessions. DESIGNED to fit the pocket- differences with the Church. signor Rodhain said. “I spoke Queens section of New York part of American education, sible” because the assistanm book of the average French pa­ “Conflicts between the revo­ to a plan for relief. Silence. 1 have asked a federal court to Aid Workers Abroad and denial of federal help will would “only incidentally aid re­ Be Ordained rochial or diocesan organization, lution and the Catholic Church described the FAO. Silence. I permit the recitation Of the two force them to give a second- ligion while pursuing a large [each project provides capital in­ have begun to disappear,” Cas­ said that in Ouagadougou they Muenster, Germany — Muen- class education to millions of social purpose.” Pass Christian, Miss. — The prayers they say have been ster’s Young Christian Workers vestment for a self-help pro­ tro said in a radio speech heard needed a donkey to carry veg banned in an elementary school. citizens. ordination of the Rev. Finn earned $3,000 tor aid to work­ NOTING the sacrifices that gram in an African village or here. “In the first months of etables to market . . . What The prayers are: “Thank you This result, he says, would Lynge, O.M.I., on March 30 will er^ in Africa and Latin America Catholics have made to estab­ region — donkeys to plow fields the revolution there was talk of kind of donkey? How much for the world so sweet. Thank be a “high social price” to pay mark a milestone for the Church by selling flowers. The past lish and maintain their school in Ouahigouya, a tractor and counter-revolutionary cases in would one cost? . . . After an you for the food we eat. Thank for “adamant refusal to grant in Greenland. Catholics in cultivator for an agricultural co­ year, the group collected $20,000 some government support to de­ systems, Degler writes that “a the Church, but now such'talk arid silence, came the rain of you for the birds that sing. Greenland, where the population operative in the Malagasy Re­ for the same purpose by col­ nominational schools.” sympathetic understanding of is seldom heard.” questions. My audience had been Thank you, God for every­ is about 31,000, number less than public, a well for a Saharan lecting scrap. the burdens which a Catholic’s Castro blamed “reaction­ won.” (NC) thing.” one per cent. oasis, or a school lunch pro­ DEGLER, who expresses his conscience imposes upon him aries” for the differences that And: “God is great. God is The ordinand will be ordained gram for 6,000 children in Ban­ Off to Missions views in the Vassar alumnae is a far better way to insure led the Church to excommuni good. And we thank Him for in St. Paul’s church by Auxil­ Can Use Two Rites St. Columbans, Neb. — Forty magazine, is the author of Out social amity than the continued gui. cate him. our food.” iary Bishop Joseph B. Brunini. “These little projects are noth­ (In January, 1962, Archbishop St. Meinrad, Ind. — Four three young Columban mission­ of Our Past, a book that studied assertion by non-Catholics that A convert to Catholicism, he en­ ing compared to the gigantic Dino Staffa, adviser on canon priests of the St. Meinrad Ben­ aries have received mission as the forces that shaped modern the Catholic sacrifice is beyond tered the Ohlate congregation factories of Katanga, the huge law to the Papal Secretariat of edictine community here have With 2 Notre Dames signments, according to the America, and is coauthor of a social mitigation.” in France and is completing his dam foreseen for Aswan, or the State, told newsmen in Vati­ been granted permission to of­ Notre Dame, Ind. — The title Very Rev. Daniel Boland, direC' theological studies at Our Lady can City that Premier Castro fer the Sacred Liturgy in the of honorary alumnus of Notre tor of the society in the U.S of the Snows scholasticate here. was automatically excommuni Byzantine Rite. Permission was Dame college of Cotabato, the Fifteen were assigned to the Lutheranism predominates in cated for restricting the work of given by the Holy See through Philippines, was conferred here Philippines, nine to Korea, five Greenland, although Catholicism Press Leader Bishops and priests in Cuba an indult of biritualism issued upon Father Theodore M. Hes- to Japan, three to South Amer­ was introduced there in the 10th The Holy See has kept its Nun­ by the Sacred Congregation of burgh, C.S.C., president of the ica, one to Burma, and ten to century. The Oblates of Mary To Address ciature in Havana open.) the Oriental church. University of Notre Dame. postgraduate studies here and Immaculate have undertaken abroad. the difficult Denmar.k-Greenland mission, which has evoked the Newsmen Africa Meeting praise and blessing of the late Lagos, Nigeria — The student Pius xn. New York — Archbishop Jo­ section of Pax Romana, inter seph T. McGucken of Sah Fran­ national movement of (iatholic cisco will give the keynote ad­ intellectuals, will hold a region Excommunication al meeting for West Africa in dress at the 53rd annual con­ Nigeria April 4-14. Pax Romana Lifted From vention of the Catholic Press is planning to open an African association, set April 30-May 3. regional office in the Congo Former Dictator The California prelate, new soon. Madrid — The ban of excom­ Episcopal chairman of the munication has been lifted from NCWC Press Department, will ‘Fullest Ceeperalleii’ the former Argentine dictator, speak on May 1 at the conven Valletta, Malta — Malta’s ex-president Juan Peron by tion in Miami, Fla. It will be Prime Minister Giorgio Borg Bishop Leopoldo Eijo y Garay his first major address before Olivier said that his government of Madrin after Peron asked to a Catholic press audience. has enjoyed the “ fullest coopera­ be readmitted to the sacra­ Archbishop McGucken was tion with the Church” and that ments. named Archbishop of San Fran he hopes this cooperation will Earlier in March a spokes­ cisco in February, 1962. Before continue throughout his admin­ man for the Papal Secretariat that, he served from 1941 until istration. of State said at the Vatican 1955 as Auxiliary Bishop of Los that Peron no longer had to ap­ Angeles, from 1955 to 1957 as Church Problems ply to the Holy See for the lift­ Coadjutor Bishop of Sacramen Milwaukee — .\ new doctoral ing of the excommunication; to, and as Bishop of Sacra­ program in religious studies, since Peron is no longer a chief mento from 1957 until named aimed at specifically American of state the ban could be lifted to San Francisco. needs and problems, will begin privately by a priest. at Marquette university in Sep­ The Sacred Consistoriai Con­ tember. It will be open to lay gregation had declared in 1955 Latin America Aid as well as religious students. that all those who used violence Rome — The Italian Bishops' Noted Indian Artist against Church authorities in conference has organized a spe­ Nun Is Elected A new of religious painting, using the triangle to Argentina were automatically cial cdmmission for Latin Amer­ I.OS Angeles — Sister Jane represent the Holy Trinity, Is demonstrated by Angela Trinidade excommunicated and could be ica to aid the Church in that Flames Destroy Historic Church Frances, administrator of St. noted Indian artist, who will join the faculty of Villa Duchesne freed only by the Holy See. priest-short area under the Flames eat into the roof of St. Joseph’s est Slovak Catholic church in the Western Jude’s hospital, Fullerton, high .school, SI. Louis, next September. Miss Trinidade is the The decree came after Aux­ chairmanship of Bishop Placido Slovak church in Hazeltown, Pa., as an early hemisphere. It was built originally around Calif., will be installed as daughter of the late AntonioXavier Trinidade, a brilliant Indian iliary Bishop Manuel Tato of Cambiaghi, C.R.S.P., of Crema. morning fire destroyed the historic church the turn of the century. Plans are already president-elect of the Hospital painter, known as the “Rembrandt of the East.” The artist’s Buenos Aires and Monsignor Italy’s Bishops have already set causing $750,000 damage. Recently the Penn­ being made to restore the structure. Monsignor Council of Southern California. paintings are mostly based on Christ and the Madonna. Ramon Pablo Novoa where re­ up the Seminary of Our Lady sylvania House of Representatives had Joseph J. Gavenda, pastor, said efforts will be The council represents 167 moved from their posts at the of Guadalupe in Verona to train passed a resolution to place a marker in made to rebuild the new church as closely as major Southern . California order of Peron and his cabinet. priests for Latin America. front of the church designating it as the old­ possible on a model of the old structure. hospitals. 4 ^ The Register I J V ■5

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From fho Htgh Schools Young Sterling Principal Resigns New-Found Job (St. Anthony's High School, The cour.se was conducted i Sterling) every Friday evening in the March 14 found St. .Anthony’s high school building. ; high school under a new admin­ istration. Sister Mary Dennis re­ Bask to Rome linquished her duties as princi­ At Mt. Carmel pal to senior John Joseph Imme who received this “privilege” (Mt. Carmel High School, as a result of winning a cour­ Denver) / tesy campaign held at school. During the week of March 18- i \ He was assisted by junior. 22, the Latin club is sponsoring | Peek Into Invisible World Richard Luceky, runner-up in a round of fun-filled activities! It may look like some new version of a exhibit, which can be used to demonstrate the contest. Other officials were in its first Latin Week. Robert Van Nostrand, dean of pin-ball game, but .Margaret Straw’s, project the electron structure of every chemical .A Latin atmosphere was set for the archdiocesan science fair, held the atom known to science, won Margaret, a stu­ ! students: Alex Sewald, dean of on Monday with Latin posters S p e llin g W hixxes admissions; Ronald Schneider, past week end at .Alullen high school, is a dent at Cathedral high school, the second and cartoons. On Tuesday, reproduction of a world that no human eye place prize in the chemistry exhibits. dean of men; Jim Kloberdanz. there was an exhibition of proj­ These top six spellers in archdiocesan my, St. Vincent de Paul's, Denver; Mike public relations; Norma Unrein, has ever seen — the world of the atom. The schools, selected in an elimination contest Healey, Sts. Peter and Paul's, Wheatridge; ects made by members of each private secretary; and Mary class. March 17 in St. Vincent dc Paul's school, and Kathy Powers, Blessed Sacrament Westhoff, dean of women. Denver, are trying to get a firm grip on the school, Denver. Behind them stand their Mr. Immel requested that cer­ Olympic games were held in trophy that will be awarded at the Colorado- proud teachers and principals. Sister M. Pat­ tain rules be observed, among the noon hour and after school Chess, Pigeon, Dog 'Affairs' Wyoming Catholic spelling contest March 31 rick, Cure d'.\rs; Sister Margretta, principal, them the stipulation that girls on Wednesday. Each day, in Pueblo. The students are, from left. Chris St. Philomena's; Sister M. Siena, principal. wear bows in their hair and "slaves” are being auctioned Wycliffe, Cure d’Ars, Denver; Susan Thelen, Presentation; Richard .Vrcher, Sts. Peter and that the boys wear ties. before school. St. Philomena’s, Denver; Marsha Miller, Paul's; and Sister M. Lawrence, principal, Win Firsts in Science Fair Presentation school, Denver; Linda Posako- St. Vincent de Paul's. j AT REGISTRATION, the first THURSDAY will climax the order of the day, students in­ (week with a banquet served by Exhibits ranging from an "un­ held .March 16-17 at Mullen high activity, learning ability, and In Elimination Contest cluded an accurate estimation of ithe “slaves” and attended by beatable” electrical chess play­ school. memory of the rodents. he faculty and members of the The invulnerable chess player I their head size on the registra- er to authentic plastic reproduc­ OTHER PRIZES in physics unior Classical league. Enter­ was the work of Jim Wilson, Ition blank. .At an assembly held tions of the interior of a dog’s were awarded to William Lake, 14 Spelling Whizzes Prove Word Mastery I later in the day, all-day suckers tainment will be provided with a student at Mullen high, who Jr., with a study of solar radi­ a play in Latin directed by lungs, from studies of amino took-first place in the mathe­ jwere awarded to possessors of acids in the diet of pigeons and ation from sun spots; Paul Van Fourteen young spelling ex­ len, Marsha Miller, Mike Hea- ^ Redeemer school, Colorado the largest and smallest heads. Carla Joy. matics section. Wpensel of Cathedral with a perts proved themselves mas­ ley, Linda Posakomy, and Kathy j Springs, won the trophy the past Each day of the week news of tranquilized rats to a compli­ The amino acid experiment 1 The faculty suffered through cated teaching device on atomic project on microphotography, ters of some of the most difficult Powers will compete in the con-1 year. isome disruptions of class, a few and weather are being broad­ won a first place in chemistry and John Kotowski and Larry words in the English language test March 31 that will match A total of 400 pupils entered cast by Weatherman Mary El­ structures, won prizes at the for Janice Kwit, a Marycrest instances of “student-teaching,” annual archdiocesan science fair Denning of Mullen, with exhibits in the archdiocesan spelling the skills of the top spellers in the contest the past Sunday. 200 and general administrative de­ len Newton. Special activities, high girl; and the reproduction on spectroscopes and cycloid elimination contest held March the archdiocese of Denver and from the seventh and eighth clarations. centered around Roman life and of a dog’s lungs took the top curves respectively. 17 in St. Vincent de Paul's the dioceses of Pueblo and Chey­ grade group and another 200 The main bulletin board was heroes, history and mythology Sodality Rites prize in biology for Patricia Ni­ In addition to Janice Kwit and school, Denver. enne. The contest will be held from the fifth and sixth grades. bespeckled with posters, peti­ are a part of each of the three Set at Loretto cholas, a senior at Cathedral Margaret Straw, the chemistry Thirteen of the students were in Pueblo. The top 25 in each group were tions, and decrees, typifying the Latin classes. high. winners were Reinhard Leinz of named as eligible to represent The winner of the Colorado-i selected in a written test and high spirits of the student body. Nineteen Loretto Heights stu­ Other first place winners in Mt. Carmel, Richard Vahren- the schools of the archdiocese Wyoming finals will take pos-{competed in the oral finals. .At the end of the day. Prin­ MODERATOR of the Latin dents will be received into the the annual fair included Dan kamp of Cathedral, and Sue Blue in the Rocky Mountain spelling session for a year of a 24-ineh|Each of the 25 finalists in each cipal John called an assembly club is Sister Marv Florence. Sodality of Our Lady March 24, Stewart of Cathedral, who coii- of Marycrest. contest, April 20, and the topi trophy, John Gregor of Divine; group received a small trophy. and presented Sister Mary Den­ following the 9:45 a.m. Mass. structed three different types of General science winners, be­ six in the group will compete!------— ------• nis with a bouquet of carnations, Essay Winners The Rev. Dominic Brady. O.P., spectroscopes for the physics sides .Miss Sopka, were Susan in the Colorado-Wyoming Cath-j willingly returned the guiding moderator of the group, will con­ award, and a study of surface Bobalek of Cathedral, and Pam olic spelling finals March 31 I reins to her. Following the as­ Named at Regis duct the reception ceremony. tension in bubbles made by Beth SerVoss and Richard Horvat, The 14th pupil, Rita Thomas of| K ' sembly and dismissal, a private Being received are Mary Jo Sopka of Mt. St. Gertrude’s both of Mt. Carmel. Divine Redeemer school, Colo-' k tea was held for the faculty and academy, Boulder, in the gen­ Regis college winners in the Barry, Ann Bechtel, Jan Bor­ Second place in biology went rado Springs, gained the trophy' temporary officials. eral science classification. to Hank Wheeler, third to Pa­ annual Jesuit Collegiate Essay man, Margie Cabral, Anne as the best speller among the I Campbell, Patricia Casey, Mary HUNDREDS of parents and tricia Palmer, and fourth to fifth and sixth grade pupils in; THE JUNIOR CLASS will contest were announced by the Dondelinger, Mary Nelle Gage, friends toured the sometimes be- Lynn Sunnahara, all of Cathe- the elimination contest. present a three act comedy. The Rev. Robert R. Boyle, S.J Graciela Garcia, Glenda Gor wildering display of scientific l*^*^®*' ^l*ke Sonner s tranquilized Little Dog Laughed, at 8 p.m. chairman of the English depart­ man. Sue Haugh, Carol Sue Mc­ know-how by 115 students from PICKED BY THE judges from March 31. ment at Regis. Donald, Sue Melton, Joy Mock- 10 Catholic high schools in the | Nicholas, who extracted among the seventh and eighth Laurie Huntington, a student Entries of the three Regis win­ elman, Karen Poma. Bernadette archdiocese lungs of a dead grade contestants to represent of psychology, arrives home for ners have been forwarded to St. Romero, Carol Saccamenno The prizes were awarded af- their counties in the Rocky 2S Y iiix n s plastic to get her reproduction the summer to turn the house­ Louis for judging in competition, Jean Schattenberg, and Jo Za ter a grueling day-long consid­ A hold upside-down with her Soni- of the organ, is a repeat winner Mountain regional contest were with entries from other Jesuit rate. eration by 14 scientists, furnish­ browski Ink Blot test. Wally, her the following; colleges and universities. ed for the fair by Dow Chemi­ from the past year. Her pre­ brother, is a typical, teen-ager, vious winning exhibit was the Arapahoe county, Maxine cal company. Shell Chemical content with the world. The M o th e r’s Circle reconstructed skeieton of a dog. Landford and Laura Locke, both THE WINNERS at Regis are: company, and Gates Rubber comedy is a delightful mixture Sets Dinner Meet of St. Therese’ school, Aurora; First, an article entitled company. AMONG THE OTHER winners Adams county, Carroll Neddeau, of romance, drama, and hu­ “Morte d’Urban” by James Cur- (Cathedral High School, who repeated victories of a year Assumption school, Welby; mor. tan in which he compares d’Ur­ Miss Sopka was the first girl Denver) from Mt. St. Gertrude’s acade­ ago were Janice Kwit, and Sue The cast includes Joan Leni- ban with St. Paul. Blue, the first and fifth place Jefferson county, Mike Hea­ The Senior Mother’s circle of my ever to win an award in the han, Robert Van Nostrand, In­ Second, a treatment of Gold­ winners in Chemistry, who both ley, Sts. Peter and Paul's the PTA, will have its meeting annual fair. Another school scor­ grid Dixon, Alex Sewald, Bar­ ing’s “Lord of P’lies” by Ralph entered prize winning biology school, Wheatridge; El Paso and a dinner at the Piushhorse, ing a first in this year’s events bara .Aragon, Patricia Breiner, St. Louis, Wheat Ridge, in which exhibits in the 1962 fair. county, Barbara Freeh, Divine 5100 S. Santa Fe drive, at 6:45 was St. Joseph’s Convent school Ronald .Macke, Judy Weingardt, Golding is pictured suffering in The- abundance of excellent Redeemer school, and Monte. in Colorado Springs, from which Richard Luckey, Robert Rizzalo: the hell of h'is own making. p.m. Thursday, March 21. exhibits in the chemistry sec­ Fryt, Sacred Heart school, both two girls, Mary Kane and Jac­ Serenade lor CPTL Patricia B”einer, Str'la Hoch- Third, to Tim McCue, of St. Parents who have not re­ tion this year led the Judges in Colorado Springs: queline LeMare, tied for second nadel, Mary .Ann Monroe. Con­ Paul, Minn., who denounces ceived linen shower envelopes to name two students for honor­ Denver, Susan Thelen, ,St. Preparing to help the Calholic Parent-Teacher league cele­ place in the mathematics exhi­ nie Schneider, Gerald Weingard “Morte d’Urban” as the most may use a plain envelope and able mention; Arthur Riegert of Philomena's; Marsha Miller, j bits. brate ils 25th birthday .March 25 are Leo H. Frazier, right, di­ and Mary Westhoff. potentially dangerous work of send their donation with the Mullen high and Betsy Kaiser of Presentation; Kathy Powers, | The teaching device on atomic B'essed Sacrament; Linda Posa-j rector of the Interparochial Grade School choir, and three of The play is under the direc­ our age. student by Friday, March 11. Marycrest. tion of Jim Simpson, assisted by structure, which contains some komy, St. Vincent de Paul's: the young choir members, from left, Gary Tomich, St. James’ Serving as judges for this Dick Smith, both of Northeast­ 3,000 feet of wiring and can be and Chris Wycliff and Desiree school; .Anne Taylor, St. John the Evangelist’s school; and She­ year’s fair were Carl E. Plock, ern Junior college. Publicity used to demonstrate the Bohr F. J. .Miner, Edward Ryan, Al­ Thalley, both from Cure d’Ars ila McCaddon, Christ the King school, all in Denver. The choir, manager is Dick Degenhart, and theory of the atom and the school. which is just one year old, will sing in the Solemn Pontifical vin H.; Voight. Jr., Alan K, Wil­ stage manager is Dale Koehler. quantum theory, won second liams, Richard Beno, and Del­ Mass to be celebrated at 10 a.m. March 25 in the Cathedral. CYO Programs place in chemistry for Margaret CHRIS WYCLIFF, Susan The- The Mass will mark the 25th year of the founding of the CPTI.. bert L. Ralphs, all of Dow Che­ Girl Scientists Straw of Cathedral. She plans to m ical; At Mery crest The mock trial, originally scheduled to be presented March donate the device to the school. II. L. Ott, John Ferentchak, May Drop Role 21 by University of Denver law students at a meeting of St. The tranquilized rats were the Dewey C. Augensten, C. Messer, In Naming Bishops I (Marycrest High School, Dominicils CYO, Denver, has been temporarily postponed. The project of Mike Sonner of Cath­ D. G. Miller, and L. W. Delin, Denver) new date for the program will be announced next week m the edral, who studied the effect ol Caracas, Venezuela — Vene­ all of Shell Chemical; and Har­ CYO activities column. the drug Chloropromazine on the ry Tramutt of Gates. zuela, one of the three former "From Superstition to Sci­ Spanish colonies in Latin Amer­ ence” was the theme of the sec­ ica that retains the ancient ond annual Marycrest science Spanish governmental voice in fair, held March 13 in the school the appointment of Bishops, laboratory. Students exhibited may soon drop tiie privilege. chemistry experiments and bi­ President Romulo Betancourt ology studies. is expected to submit a measure First place in the chemistry- to the Venezuelan congress division was awarded to Janice shortly that will bring about the Kwit, junior, who prepared an change. amino acid synthetically, and separated two amino acids by paper chromatography. Jan­ ice’s project also won first place in the archdiocesan sci­ ence fair at Mullen high school .March lfi-17.

A COMPARISON of the eyes ' h i h of crayfish, frogs, fish, and a human won the first place in biology for .Marcia Lindeman, Judges awarded the second place in chemistry to Betsy Kai­ ser and third place, Mo Susan Blue, who also won a prize in the archdiocesan fair. Mary Lou Whelan placed sec­ ond in the biology division; and Jamye Scarafiotti placed third.

SPECIAL .AWARDS were pre­ sented to Marcia McGinley and Mary Jo Kremp. Completing the 20 lessons of the Confraternity of Christian Doctrine teacher training course on March 8, thirteen Marycrest high school students received Young Orator ceritficates for instructing ele­ mentary level catechism class­ j Larry Groeger, a seventh es. i grade pupil at St. Mary’s Sister Marie Helen. Our Lady ■ school, Littleton, talked ' his I of Victory Mis.sionary Sisters, f way to first place prize March instructor, presented a program i 14 in the Junior Optimist Ora- of two movies for the com Aden's First Annual Communion Program ; torical contest in the Littleton mencement. The Rt. Rev. Mon- area. Larry’s original oration signor Gregory Smith, archdio­ Firefighters on parade 32 years ago are pictured marching on "Youth Approach Toward guard were Chief John K. Healy (right) and Deputy Chief Founders of Tradition cesan CCD director, awarded from Holy Ghost church, Den\er, to Boggio’s restaurant for the World Forces, " also won him Frank Spillane. In the third row , dressed in the formal clerical the certificates. first annual corporate Communion breakfast in Colorado on I the right to take part in the attire of the day. were Bishop Urban J. Yehr and the Very Rev. Taken in the old basement church of' llidy (,host parish, Dec. 6, 1931. It was from this beginning that the outstanding I zone competition to he held Monsignor John Mulrny. Others who can he identified in the Denver, this historic photograph shows some of the 127 fire­ THOSE COMPLETING the men’s public demonstration of faitb in Denver originated. This April 19 in Boulder. His picture are Arnold Gurtler, William Roach, grand knight; M’il- men and civic leaders who took part in the men’s first annual I course were Pauline Campbell. year more than 1,100 men, including civic leaders and church­ speech teacher is Sister John liain (Billy) McNichols. city ; Fred Warner, William E. Brett Croker, Frances Dal corporate Communion and breakfast in Colorado on Dec. fl, Loretto of St. Mary’s school. men and representatixes of tbe police force, the firemen, etc., Gunther, Burt Clark, chief of police; Frank F'armcr, Carl S. larosa. Kathy Kagan. Marie will attend Mass at 8 a.m. in the Cathedral .Sunday. March 21, 1II31. The men, shown here leaving the church alter Mass, John won the award competing Milliken, manager of safety: George 1). Begole. mayor: T. Joe I’ichette, Mary Fagan. Marv and then march to the Den\er Hilton hotel for their annual launched a tradition that this year will bring more than I,ton with students from the seventh Cahill. Holly Blayney, .Andrew .Mahon, assistant fire chief, and Thi-resr Frank. Colleen O'Brien. men to the Cathedral to pa.\ tribute to their Eucharistic Lord. through the lllh grades. breakfast. I'he first breakfast in Boggio's was attended by 127 Patrick Boyne, also an assistant fire chief. The group had just Marv Keillv. Linda St Louis. firemen and ci\ic leaders. Walking in the color guard ahovi- crossed 19th street on Broadway when the piclure was taken. Bartiara Serro. .lacquelyn l.ii were tielt to right) t.eorge Cassid>, .lames I.. Cain, Clarence (See story on page I.) Thursday, March 21, 1963 T l i u Denver Catholic Registoi Sec. 2, Page 5 I'rro. ,ind .loanne Kai.sei'. Jensen, and .Icdin 1, McDermott. Immediately behind the color Church Growth in Mexico OJiwcfis «t C lttiiiffA H sttd fflT PAVLA Aide Misses Brazil 4. Education was generously 2. Bishop Zanrtnaraga sus provided by both Church and stained Juan Diego in his aC' State. But, on the contrary, the After Return Visit to U.S. count of an apparition of training of the natives of Mex­ Onr Lady of Guadalupe Dec. ico for the clergy was discour­ Kansas City, Mo. — A 10- na of St. Louis university, was Miss Nenninger found Joao. He 9. This vision, which some aged, on the grounds that they year-old Brazilian backwoods the first Papal Volunteer from has been burned nearly fatally Spaniards at first scorned, would lack both prestige and boy is heading home, his body Missouri and is the only one when a pot of boiling beans fell was later gratefully accept stability. Latin America would repaired from near fatal burns from the Springfield-Cape Gir­ off a stove in his home and ed by the bidtans and ^ long regret this policy. and hik bead full of newly ac­ ardeau diocese. scalded him. came an important factor in quired English words. She was assigned with some The U. S. volunteers party Mexico’s rapid conversion With him is Ann Nenningir, 20 of the Kansas PAVLA corps moved the boy to Belem, but a Cape Girardeau, Mo., nurse, of volunteers to work in public the treatment available there who admits she is homesick for health and sanitation as well as was not sufficient. Then Father the backwoods country of Bra­ catechetical instruction and Vincent Lovett, director of zil. She has been the chaperone home visitations for miles PAVLA in the Kansas City-St. of Joao Ribiero all during his around Belem, Brazil. Joseph diocese, came on the nine-month stay in Missouri for scene. He arranged for skin medical treatment. ON A HOME visitation tour grafting surgery here, and so Miss Nenninger, 24, an alum­ about 100 miles from Belem, Joao and Miss Nenninger came by plane last July. 13,000 Loudspeakers, Reds BETWEEN OPERATIONS and while recuperating in St. Mary’s hospital here, Joao tack­ Boast Proudly - and Loudly led English, Said nurse Nennin­ ger: “He knows how to read Saigon, Vietnam — The Red 13,000 loudspeakers blaring, this and write, and he speaks Eng­ rulers of North Vietnam are in is hard to envision, but others lish perfectly, but he’s not very a unique position to broadcast have verified the fact that the good in Portuguese, his native 3. Evangelization fol­ the progress they have made to city looks as if it is decaying. language.” lowed with great speed. improve the capital city of “The shops in Hanoi are noth­ While the boy was recupera­ By the middle of the 15th Hanoi. ing like the shops in Saigon,” ting, Miss Nenninger took addi­ century there were some The regime now has 13,000 one traveler commented. “The tional missionary training and 1. Hie organization of the Church 400 missionaries financed loudspeakers scattered through­ state stores look like country formation courses at a Grail in Mexico (New Spain) properly by the crown. A cam­ out the city, ‘‘55 times as many stores going out of business, center in Cahfomia. began in 1527 when Friar Juan de paign for destruction of as in 1954,” when the Commu­ they have so little on their Before leaving for Brazil the Znmmaraga was named first Bish. idols began in earnest in nists gained control. shelves.” nurse admitted she is more op of Mexico City by the emperor. 1535 while baptisms mul­ The party uses the speakers Thousands of Catholics are homesick for Belem and her Papal confirmation was not forth­ tiplied: A million are re­ to bombard the people with par­ living in Hanoi, and as could work there than she was for the coming until September, 1530. ported by 1531. ty propaganda. be expected they lead a ham­ United States when she first Hanoi was described by one pered and harassed existence. went to Brazil as a Papal Vol­ visitor as a “dead city." With (NO unteer. Writes on Sports- W e Are All Cultivators, In English Too Pope Says “Demonstrates the practical steps WALTER “RED” SMITH is a man who believes that it is Vatican City — “We are all possible to write about sports without committing mayhem on the cultivators, directly or indirect­ by which Christian couples can perfect English language. And millions of readers, even sports enthu ly, of one thing or another, and we all must, in the first place, siasts, seem to agree with him. He is the nation’s most widely cultivate our own selves so as their marital union...” syndicated sports columnist to form our characters in the principles of Christian doctrine,” For “Red” Smith does more than respect i ^ Profile Pope John XXIII declared at I the decencies of grammar and spelling. His From the Foreword by His Enlinenoe If) humorous, colorful columns have won him a his midweek general audience. . ,, "reputation as a master of literary style. Attending the audience were A c t i o n Among his devoted readers he numbers pro several thousand Romans and FRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN pilgrims. The latter included lessors of literature, some of them men who A r^ iih o p of New Yoric otherwise v/ould not know a home run from a touchdown. groups of farm workers, sol­ diers and priests from various countries to whom the Pope BORN IN GREEN BAY, Wis., Smith was graduated from addressed himself separately. Notre Dame University in 1927. He began copy-desk work with the Milwaukee Sentinel. A year later he moved to the St. Louis He told the farmers that “to SUr. cultivate the earth is the great task that was given by the Lord In 1936 he moved to the Philadelphia Record and nine years to all mankind in the person of later was lured to the New York Herald Tribune. His column in Adam, after the original sin.’ that paper, “Views of Sport,” is syndicated in about 100 papers, Turning to the soldiers, the reaching from four to five million readers. Pontiff said the military life “is THE Catholic a true school of life for the When Grahtlahd Sice died in 1954, “Red” Smith became young man, who knows ho.w to number one sportswriter in the country in terms of statistical face up to his duties as a Chris­ syndication. tian, conscientiously and with the help of God.” HIS COLUMNS are considered so literate and articulate they Spealdng at length to the have been used as textual standards in journalism and English priests and religious. Pope John courses at Columbia university. ■ . I' reminded them that they were His columns, usually deal­ “par excellence, cultivators of Marriage Manual ing with football, baseball, souls, after the example of horse racing, or boxing, have (Christ.” been republished in the form of The Pope also had a word for two books. His first book. Out parents. He said they have “to The first complete guide to marital relations written specifically for the Catholic home. of the Red, and his second cultivate their children, that is, Views of Sport, captured his to bring them up properly.” By Very Rev. Msgr. George A, Kelly with a Foreword and Imprimatur by Francis Cardinal Spellman best work. Finally, he added, “each one of us is bound to cultivate his “Red” Smith uses the cas­ own surroundings by means of e r e is the took that Catholic families nancy, childbirth, impotence; read the Church well as the teachings of the Church. You’ll find, ual approach and his style pre­ an apostolate according to what Hhave asked for time and again—approved attitude on abortion and mixed marriages. practical, realistic advice on in-law troubles, fers the verb to the noun and is possible and according to An entire chapter is devoted to birth control money questions, problems of parenthood—all the noun to the adjective. His one’s responsibilities.” guidance on the many spiritual, physical, and writing is filled with the con­ emotional problems of marriage. The Catholic and the rhythm method. This method is ex­ the daily human difficulties of modern marriage. viction that sports should be Protestant Youths Marmge Manual will bring you serenity and plained in detail, with the complete facts about Valuable chapters on the menopause and tech­ essentially fun. When inter­ happiness, and it will help you fulfill the ideals Dr. John Ryan’s improved thermal method of niques of preserving marital happiness in the viewing, he listens for “that Aid Priest’s Co-Op of the holy Sacrament of Matrimony. This prac­ cycle determination. later years make The Catholic Marriage Manual key line” on which to build his Lima, Peru — A group of column. tical, frank, readable book will set your mind at as useful to older couples as it is to newlyweds Congregationalist teen-agers in Covers Every Aspect of Marriage Easton, Conn., raised $21 by ease by giving you new and revealing insights and brides-to-be. HE MAINTAINS that tak­ making candy and sent the into the spiritual beauty and the everyday prob­ Every aspect of marriage is covered-the spirit­ Father Kelly’s wise counsel can help you find ing notes in an interview hamp­ money to Maryknoll Father the joy that comes only to couples secure in their ers the flow of conversation. Daniel McLellan to aid a hous lems of married life. As you will see in the ual and emotional as well as the physical. The His columns are composed, he ing cooperative he organized partial Table of Contents here, the most intimate author. Monsignor George A. Kelly, is the Di­ knowledge, confident in their actions, and true says, of “little drops of blood,” Walter “Red” Smith here. subjects are dealt with in an adult, forthright rector of the New York Archdiocese’s Family to their faith. A book of this kind—combining and he has been known to in a letter to Father McLel­ Life Bureau. His guidance is based on his broad the practical advice of doctors and family coun­ dwell for half an hour on the exact'connotation of one word. lan, Norman Kennedy, the or manner. You’ll find valuable medical advice on ganization’s president, said the such topics as conjugal relations, frigidity, preg­ knowledge/of everyday family experiences as selors with the accepted doctrines of the Church “Red” Smith is versatile. Newsweek named him the sole group planned other work days —has long been needed. exception to the unimaginative reporting of the 1956 Democratic to raise additional funds for the nomination convention. Smith proved that a crack reporter can priest’s co-op. The co-op, known PARTIAL TABLE OF CONTENTS Examine It 10 Days Without Charge turn out good copy on any subject. Commenting on one particu­ as “El Pueblo,” the past year MARRIAGE IS A SACRED VOCATION. DANGER SIGNS. Symptoms of trouble mother...How can a child be spoiled? Because the publishers feel that this book be­ larly windy speaker, the redhead said, “The Democratic party realized a goal of “a home a Meining of your call by God . . . P ar­ ...Inability to agree on "little things” . . . A warning to mothers of daugh­ smote the Republicans with the jawbone of an ass.” day” for 365 families in Lima. enthood is primary purpose of mar­ .. . Nagging wife ... Neglect of reli­ ters. longs in every Catholic home, arrangements riage. Why your marriage must be gious duties . . . When yon find it RELIGION IN THE HOME. Setting an have been made to offer copies for ten days’ free a permanent union . . . How the sac­ more difficult to talk to your m ate. . . example for your child. "Keeping rament can purify your love toward Importance of personal appearance Christ in Christmas” . . . Celebrating examination. You may obtain one merely by each other. . . . Why sex relations should improve baptismal and saints’ days . . . Influ­ sending the coupon; no money is required. A KEYS TO MUTUAL LOVE. How to un­ with age. ence of newspapers, magazines, books, derstand your mate . . . Qualities de­ HOW TO DISAGREE WITH YOUR MATE. movies, TV. ’The Christian Family copy will be sent to you in a plain wrapper. manded of the successful husband and Rules of disagreeing . . . How to get Movement. After ten days, if you decide not to keep it for F^thGIt TltW5 BtJMAdySmeA wife . . . Individual differences impor­ grievances out of your system . . . APPENDIX. The Mass on the Day of tant . . . Learning to accept your role How to keep discussions within bounds Marriage . . . Blessing of an Expec­ any reason, simply return it and owe nothing. in marriage. . . . Importance of giving in on little tant Mother... Blessing of a Mother Otherwise send $4.95 plus postage and handling 0. CM2m. (1881-1942) things. after Childbirth ... Prayers for One’a A CATHOLIC DOCTOR LOOKS AT MAR­ costs as payment in full. Mail the coupon today. RIAGE. (By Bernard J. Pisani, M.D., MONEY VALUES IN MARRIAGE. Modern Family . . . Prayers for Vocations to Director, Department of Obstetrics overemphasis on money . . . Material­ the Priuthood and Religious Life . . . RANDOM HOUSE. Dept. Rl-53, 239 Great lliig Dutch Carmelite and Gynecology, St. Vincent’s Hos­ ism fosters contraception . . . Danger A Decalogue for Parents . . . Family Neck Road, Great Neck, N. Y. priest, martyred (or his writ­ pital, New York.) Sex is God’s crea­ of the "meal-ticket” husband . . . Prayer Card. tion; not "vulgar” . . . Why you should Danger of the working wife . . , Who ings against Nazi tyranny, avoid puritanical views of sex . . . Should handle the money? may, if canonized, be a sec­ RANDOM HOUSE, Dipt. Rl-S] Physical aspects . . . How husbands THE IN-LAW PROBLEM. Rules to keep ond patron of the Catholic and wives approach marital act dif­ the in-law situation from getting ont- 2)4 Oiwat Ntck Rm E, OrMrt N«ck, N. Y. Press. An educator, ecume­ ferently . . . Characteristic physical of-hand . . . Three principles that nist, and journalist, in 1935 he and emotional responses of men and avoid friction . . . Caring for aged Pleas* send, for 10-Day FREE Examination, the women . . . What wife needs . . . What parents. book(s) by Father Kelly I have checked below. If I was made adviser to the As­ husband needs . . . Partners’ “rights” THE PROBLEM OF ALCOHOLISM. Old decide not to keep book(s) I may return them within *en sociation of Catholic Journal­ . . . Causes of frigidity in women. beliefs disproved . . . How to handle days and owe nothing. Otherwise, I will remit cost of ists in Holland. Five years How it can be treated. Causes, treat­ an alcoholic mate or relative. book(s) plus a few .cents postage and handling costs. later, when Dutch neutrality ments for male impotence. MENOPAUSE AND OLD AGE. Critical (H ye« Mclete pmymtmt In full WITH thb cevpM, Wl PAY was broken by the German BIRTH CONTROL AND THE RHYTHM all patloe* ond handling. Inm* 10-doy rofond priviloge.) METHOD. Church teaching on artifi­ period . . . Starting life anew . . . army. Father Titus’ prolific Spiritual life helps adjustments of cial contraception . . . Sterilization □ THE CATHOUC MARRIAOl AUMUAU-regular edi­ articles and his rallying of middle age . . . Changes in women ...... Rhythm method based on natural tion ( R l ) ...... |4.gg Dutch Catholic editors to pre­ law. Calendar method of predicting ’Treatments for problems at the meno­ sent a united front against fertility. . . Body temperature method pause ... Problems of the middle-aged □ THE CATHOU^ MARRIAGE MANUAL-Spezlal De Nazism brought his arrest by , . . Who may practice the rhythm man...Happily growing old together. luxe GIN Edition (R2). Bound in white Fabrikoid the Gestapo in 1940. At Da­ method?... Disadvantages of rhythm "UNTIL DEATH DO YOU PART.” Divorce stamped in blue and genuine gold, boxed. Hand­ method. evil. . . When Catholic marriages are some addition to your library or a beautiful gift. chau Father Titus died under invalid . . . The Pauline Privilege . .. THE MIRACLE Of BIRTH. How your Nazi brutality and his body Costs of annulments ... Two kinds of $«.9S child is conceived, developed . . . Tests □ THE C A T I ^ C F ^ i r HANDBOOK (R4). Com­ was cremated for pregnancy. . . Your baby’s growth separation possible. . . Conditions un­ der which Catholics may start civil plete, practical guidance on family life and rear­ July 26, 1942. His in womb. . . Delivery-room procedures cause as confes­ . . . Caesarian sections and "EH ba­ divorce actions. ing children. Covers moral training, sex education, sor and martyr bies” . . . Breast-feeding. Baptism. IF YOUR MATE IS NOT A CATHOLIC. the "exceptional” child, problems of working Why the Church opposes mixed mar­ mothers, the broken home, career planning, dat­ is being studied Miscarriage; causes, preventive treat­ ments. riages . . . How to encourage non- ing, marriage preparation, etc. Foreword and in Rome. Catholic mates to take more active HELP FOR THE CHILDLESS COUPLE. Imprimatur by Cardinal Spellman...... $4.9S interest in Church. Causes and treatments for wife’s or husband’s infertility . . . Most favor­ PARENTHOOD. Advantages o f large family . . . What your child needs Name...... able conditions for conception . . . (rilAU MINI riJU.NlY) Moral questions involved. . . Why the from you . . . Schooling and sex edu­ Church opposes artificial insemina­ cation for your child . . . Five marks Address ...... tion . . . Adopting children. of a good father . . . Your role as ...... Zone.... State......

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