
Member of Audit Bureau of CireulaHanB Contents Copyrighted by the Catholic Press Society, Inc., 1948— Perrnission to Reproduce, Except on | Articles Otherwise Marked, Given After 12 M. Friday Following Issue. Open Days at Carmel May 28-30 DENVER CATHOUC Officials Meet to Aid DPs Littleton Monastery REGISTER Will Observe Strict The National Catholic Welfare Conference News Service Supplies The Denver Catholic Register. We Have Also the Witemational News Service (Wire and Mail), a Large Special Service, Seven Smaller Enclosure Thereafter Services, NCWC and Religious News Photos. Price of paper 3 cents a copy. _______ Open days for the inspection of the new Carmel of the VOL. XLII. No, 38. DENVER, COLO., THURSDAY, MAY 13, 1948. $1 PER YEAR. Holy Spirit at hittleton will be held Friday, Saturday, and Sunday, May 28, 29, and 30. Friday will be for the priests and Saturday and Sunday will be visiting day for the reli­ gious and laity. The visiting hours are from 9 to 11 in the Hunt for Fundamentals Led morning and 2:30 to 5 in the afternoon. Following May 30 the law of closure will be observed in the Carmel. After that date the nuns may not leave the limits of the monastery grounds, Chinese Couple Into Church nor may an outsider enter the en­ closed part of the monastery with­ By Rev. John B. Ebel out the special permission of the F r . Leyden David (Sing Hon) Louie and his charming young wife, Eleanor, had three university Ordinary. degrees, between them, but they scarcely seemed enough. The public chapel, however, “ In my field of engineering,” says Mr. Louie, who has a Doctor’s degree in science AT A MEETING of officials of the Na­ a member of the Register editorial staff and who will be open to outsiders for Mass To Add ress and a Master’s degree in engineer- tional Catholic Resettlement council moves was assistant two years in Blessed Sacrament par­ on week days at 6:30, and Bene­ ing from the Massachusetts Insti­ to aid displaced persons were discussed, especially ish, Denver; Monsignor Edward Swanstrom, direc­ diction will be given at 4 p.m. ev­ A C C W Rally tute of Technology, “ we are legislation pending in Congress. Shown above at the tor of NCWC War Relief Services; Archbishop John ery Sunday afternoon or on other Dr. Kurt von Schuschnigg, trained to go to the fundamentals.’’ parley in Cincinnati, 0., arc, left to right, Ed O’Con­ T. McNicholas, O.P., of Cincinnati; and Monsignor pedal devotions The 22nd annual convention of ft was this training, carried over nor, technical adviser to the council; Monsignor John R. Mulroy, director of Catholic Charities, Den­ of Carmel, particularly those con­ the Archdiocesan Council of Cath­ into the field of religion, that led Clarence G. Issenmann, Vicar General and Chancel­ ver, and of DPs resettlement work for the arch­ cerned with the Mother of God, olic Women will be held in the Ex-Chancellor of Austria, him finally into the Catholic lor of the Cincinnati archdiocese, who formerly was diocese. to whom the order is principally Albany hotel Thursday, May 20, Church. dedicated, will be conducted fre­ with the sessions highlighted by Will Be Heights Speaker Baptized as a Presbyterian when + + + + + + quently in the chapel. an address of th? Rev. Edward A. a lad of grade school age, David In November, 1947, three Car­ Leyden, archdiocesan superintend­ Dr. Kurt von Schuschnigg, for­ and, in a plot that had its origin was,^ student at M.I.T. when he melite nuns under Mother 'Therese ent of schools, on “ Federal Legis­ mer Chancellor of Austria, will be in (jermany, Dollfuss was assassi­ decided to attend one of a series Regional■ Parley May 24 in Denver of Jesus came from the Carmel lation and Our Schools.” the principal speaker at the Lo- nated in 1934. of informal talks for Chinese stu­ of Our Lady of Guadalupe, Grand More than 300 reservations have retto Heights college commence­ Fought Against Heavy Oddi dents of the surrounding area that Rapids, Mich., to take over the already been made, according to ment in Denver May 30, according By this coup the Nazis attempted a missionary Bishop from China recently acquired Wyldemere farm officials of the organization, with to the president of the college. to seize control of the Austrian was giving in Boston. “ I was not Will Discuss Problems of DPs near Littleton. The center consists the Greeley and Fort Collins dele­ Sister Frances Marie. invited,” he relates, “ but I am just of a substantial building suitable gates still to be heard from. Be­ Dr. Schuschnigg, a staunch op­ one of those curious men who like regional conference to dis­ To impress his audience with izens and take them back forcibly for the needs of a growing com­ tween 350 and 450 women are ex­ ponent of Hitler and Nazism, dis­ to learn things.” cuss the problems of displaced the immediacy of the problem, he to their native lands. A shakeup in munity for some years, together pected to attend. appeared from the European scene That was the real beginning of persons will be held in Denver May pointed out that there are now the high command was necessary with 11 acres of farm land which will guarantee the necessary pri­ In addition to the address of in 1938 when the Germans for­ the Journey that ended in the Cath­ 24, it was announced this week some 1,000,000 DPs in 520-odd to put a stop to this breach of Father Leyden, Archbishop Urban cibly annexed Austria. For years, olic Church when he was baptized by the Rt. Rev. Monsigrnor John camps. Many are living in old faith. “ The French and British vacy required by their rule of life J. Vehr of Denver also will speak his fate was shrouded in mystery at the Denver Cathedral shortly R. Mulroy, member of Gov. Lee slave-labor camps that havg been would not tolerate such inhuman and enable the nuns to secure suit­ to the women, and a report will practices,” he said. able recreation in the open and and many throughout the world before Easter. But he had been Knous’ committee on DPs and standing and deteriorating for as be delivered on the recent board who had adpiired his courageous looking for the true Church for archdiocesan chairman of the Na­ much as 10 years. “ Besides these “ The DPs in Europe now com­ tend the garden.^. meeting of the National Council On Dec. 5, 1947, the first Mass stand feared that Schuschnigg was some time before that—seeking tional Catholic Resettlement coun­ hovels,” he said, “ the barracks you prise 22 national groups and sub of Catholic Women held in Wash­ dead. In 1945, however, American the foundation of things. cil. Meetings will be held in the veterans lived in were palaces.” divisions. Some DPs have been was celebrated in an improvised ington, D. C. troops liberated him from his im­ Catholic Charities annex with' a /* • * away from home for more than chapel on the second floor of the The complete program follows; One summer, when in the South, luncheon in the Brown Palace 10 years; others have fled their building by the Most Rev. Urban prisonment, which had lasted seven he mentioned to his landlady that AT THE END of the war there 8:30 a.m.— Ma.ss at Holy Ghost hotel. Delegates are expected from were 9,000,000 slave laborers in homes only yesterday. In the past J. "Vehr, Archbishop of Denver. years and had taken him through he was going to the Presbyterian churen; celebrant, the Rev. New Mexico, Utah, Wyoming, German-dominated Europe. Three- two months 20,000 Czechs have In the meantime the neces.sary such notorious prison camps as church for services. “ Which one?" Elmer Kolka, associate director Montana, Nebraska, Kansas, and fourths of them went home; the made their way to DP camps.” alterations were in progress in Dachau, Flossenburg, and Sach- she asked. “ I found there were two of Catholic Charities. senhausen. Last year. Dr. Schusch­ Colorado. rest stayed. It does very little good, (TumtoPage2 — Column S) (Turn to Page 2 — Colum n i) 10 a.m.— Business meeting, Al­ branches,” tells Mr. Louie, "the Monsignor Mulroy, just back nigg, with his wife and daughter, Northern and the Southern. The he said, for us to pour money into bany hotel; .Mrs. L. A. Higgins, came to this country; and they Southern Presbyterian Church from a conference of national of­ relief supplies for them if we are president of the Archdiocesan have made their home in New York ficers of the council in Cincinnati, going to stop at half a Job. The Council of Catholic Women, pre­ doesn’t talk to the Northern Pres­ 0., stressed the need for passing Father Mertz to Observe since that time. byterian Church, and vice versa. pressing need is for rehabili­ siding. legislation at this Congress au­ tation. The coming visit of Dr. Schusch­ That started me thinking.” Invocation a n d welcome, the thorizing the admittance of dis­ nigg to Denver will recall mem­ About this time also he came in “ These DPs are a black spot on Rev. Roy Figlino, pastor of St. placed persons to the United States. 25th Jubilee on May 27 ories of the stirring history of contact with a Dr. Noon, his physi­ our reputation abroad,” he said. Augustine’s parish, Brighton. Such legislation has been favorably which, a few years ago, he was a cian and a Catholic, who directed “ It is to our credit that we do not Father Louis J.
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