WILL LIVE OVER PIONEER DAYS. PRIEST WRITES On

WILL LIVE OVER PIONEER DAYS. PRIEST WRITES On

WILL LIVE OVER PIONEER DAYS. PRIEST WRITES PLANS FOR BIG Contents Copyrighted— PemissioH to Reproduce Given After 12 M. Friday Following Issue FR. HOWLETT COMMUNITY CHEST NEEDS YOUR HELP RALLY BY MEN IS UNABLE TO The annual financial ealnpaicn ef the Community Chest opens DENVERCATHOUC Monday, Oct. 21. We bespeak the whole-hearted co-operation of the ATTEND JUBILEE Catholics of the city in this com­ A N N O U N CED munity enterprise. The Catholic Charities must ask for an increase for the coming yeer^ e» increase Great Demonstration by Holy Name Union Church Indebted to Oldest Living Former that may not be possible unless all of us are willing to do our share To Be Held in Conjunction With REGISTER Rector of Cathedral for His­ in making the campaign a success, j The National Catholic Welfare Conference News Service Supplies The Denver Catholic Register. We Have tory of Diocese Alfred E. Smith, former goT*| Cathedral Jubilee Also the International News Service (Wire and Mail), a Large Special Service, and Seven Smaller Services. ernor of New York, declared at the National Conference of Catholic Plans have been completed for what is expected to be VOL. XXXI. No. 9. DENVER, COLO., THURSDAY, OCT. 17, 1935. $2 PER YEAR Though because of his advanced age and physical con­ Charities, held a few weeks ago in the most magnificent demonstration of faith in the Rocky dition he will be unable to come to Denver for the diamond Peoria, IIl.^ that gorernment relief jubilee celebration of the Cathedral parish, the Rev. Wil­ is “ cold” abd "costly;” that public Mountain region, when the annual rally of the Holy Name Oldest Living Former Rector charity is “ impractical and inade­ societies of Denver will be held on the ffe^st of Christ the liam J. Hewlett, the oldest living former rector of the Ca­ quate.” He also stressed the im­ King, Sunday, Oct. 27. This year’s rally will be held in ^ thedral and now the chaplain at the motherhouse of the portance of pnVate charity as the conjunction with the diamond jubilee celebration of the: Sisters of Loretto at Nerinx, Ky,, will “ really be living over saving, bulwark in our present- so­ the memorable pioneer days with Bishop Machebeuf and cial problems. Cathedral parish and will' be In the form of a gigantic pa-1 rade, which will form at 14th. and Stout streets, and, led all his friends and min^ during the celebration,” the priest , Since many people are confused writes to the Rt. Rev. Msgr. Hugh L. McMenamin, present with the distinetion between pub­ by the Most Rev. Urban J. Vehr, Bishop of Denver, will j on lic and privatedeharities, it is very proceed up 14th street to the Civic center, where the men | ( rector of the Cathedral. important for all to realise that will march around the Greek theater to East.14th avenue,! Probably little of the early history of the Church in private charities, as those coming and then to Lincoln, where they will turn north and cross ’ SFEG nPF LIGF Colorado and-New Mexico would have been handed dpwn under the program of the Com­ munity Chest, supplement the gov­ the capitol grounds to East Colfax to the present generation were it ( ernment’s work, and that it is pri-: Marching east on Colfax, they will not for the gifted pen of Father vate charity that deals with indi­ pass the reviewing stand to be Pediculi flourish in a print shop. Hewlett. His “ Life of Bishop vidual problems, recreational pro­ erected at the Cathedral, Colfax They are not, however, the common Machebeuf,” wTitten after he had SPRIIIGS SISIIII gone to the Loretto motherhouse, grams, child welfare, and con­ and Logan. The march will con­ garden variety of pediculi or­ structive social sei^ice. The work tinue around the block and all the dinarily experienced by social so well depicted the life of the of the government is carried on men will assemble at, or as near workers and the Visiting Nurses’ pioneer Church and its Bishops with the masses, while that of pri­ as possible to, Colfax and Logan. association in. their rounds. The and priests in thia section that it liEIIIIES FilOM pupils in the Cathedral journalism furnished the material for Willa IT vate social agencies deals with the In the reviewing stand will be class will vouch for the nature of individuals whose health, morals, the visiting prelates. Governor Gather's great book, “ Death the insects and tell yom they are and well-being create a high or a Johnson, Mayor Stapleton, other Comes for the Archbishop.” Also distinctly different. low standard for a community. It officials, and representatives of pio­ written by Father Hewlett at Ner­ One individual in the class dis­ is through private welfare agencies neer parishioners of the old Ca­ inx was the history of -the Bards- JOBILFE MISS (C M SFBVIGE covered that the pediculi, more that self-supporting citizens are thedral at 15th and Stout streets. town, Ky., seminary. familiarly knoWn as “ type lice,” Father Hewlett was first ap­ developed; through them that All 15 bells of the Cathedral thrive in a peculiar incunabula needy members of a community chimes will sound during the pa- pointed to the Cathedral as an The Most Rev, Anthony J. Colorado Spring.?.—^^After ,.14 called a stick. He learned, too, Schuler, S.J., Bishop of El Paso, are educa^ted, rebuilt, and stimu­ ratfe, and loudspeakers will carry that water is the favorite breeding assistant in 1877, and, in 1886, years of service at St. Francis’ was named rector. He resigned has accepted the invitation of lated, and through them that hope music from the Cathedral organ hospital, 27 of which were spent place for these insects along with after a yearj but was reappointed Bishop Urban J. Vehr to give the is offered to the dependents, the for the Benediction of the Blessed in the capacity of superintendent. an atmosphere filled with the odor to the position in 1892. Father sermon at the Solemn Pontifical delinquents, the handicapped, the Sacrament. Sister Emerentia retired Sunday of printers’ ink and molten lead. Hewlett was replaced as rector in Mass in the Cathedral on Monday, sick, and the depressed. Details of the parade have been from active service. Coming to What he did not learn was that 1894 by the Rev. Daniel Lyons. Oct. 28, on the occasion pf the dia­ When, it comes for our ifecision arranged by the Rev. Harold V. St. Francis’ hospital in 1893, she the printer’s devil learns all about mond jubilee of the Cathedral to be made as to what'we shall give, Campbell, director of the Diocesan was floor supervisor until 1899. (Turn to Page S — Column^ 6) (Turn to Page — Column Jt) parish. V let us not look for a loophole Holy Name union; the Rt. Rev. She took charge of the oper­ Bishop Schuler was the second through which we can jump and Msgr. Hugh L. McMenamin, rec­ ating room untiT 1909, when she Denver Jesuit named to the post justify a smaller amount than we tor of the Cathedral, and Joseph was appointed superintendent. In of first Bishop of El Paso. The can afford, or no donation at all. J. Walsh, president of the Dioc­ 1925, Sister Emerentia was trans­ Credit Union Buys Very Rev. John J. Brown, presi­ Let ns not. hide behind the time­ esan union and grand marshal. ferred to Gallup, N. Mex., where dent bf Sacred Heart college (now worn excuse that there are certain William J. Eggert will serve as ad- .she was stationed six years. She Regis), Denver, had been precon- (Turn to Page i — Column 1) (TumtoPageS — Column i ) returned to,Colorado Springs and ized as Bishop of El Paso in Janu­ was Superintendent of St. Francis’ 40-Ton Car of Coal ary of 1915, but thi-ough modesty for seven months. She then went had declined the hondrr Father to Denver to take charge of SJ;. Alamosa.— The first co-opera­ The Alamosa district is rich in Schuler, then pastor of Sacred Pueblo Men's Rally Anthony’s hospital, where she re­ tive buying by the Credit union potatoes and lacking in sufficient Heart church, Denver, was named mained until Sept. 11, 1933, at of the Sacred Heart church beans to meet demands, so, led by Bishop of El Paso Junjs 18, 1935. which time she again returned to touched one of the prime necessi­ the pastor, the Rev. E. J. McCar­ In a story carried in the Den- Colorado Springs, in the capacity ties of life here last week, when thy, potatoes are being trucked to ver Catholic Register June 24, Impressive Sight of superintendent. Under Sister Above it a recent photo of the Rev. WtHiBm J. Hovrleti, who is a 40-ton carload of coal was the southeast end of the valley and 1915, the early history of Bishop Emerentia’s capable management, now more than 80 years of age, taken on the grounds of the Loretto bought from indigent miners in exchanged for beans, and any dif­ Schuler is given. He was born motherhouse at Nerinx, Ky. Father Hewlett is the oldest living former Pueblo.iJ-The Most Rev. Urban the porches. Delegations were here St. Francis’ hospital has grown Walsenburg and brought here for ference’ in. the bill on the bean side at St. Mary’s, Pa., Sept. 20, 1869. .7. Vehr, iBishop of Denver, and from Ordway, Las Animas, Colo­ from a comparatively small hos­ rector of the Cathedral, a position he held at the old church on Stout distribution among members of the is met with cash, practically the At the agre of seven he came to stredt in 1886.

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