05.15.75

20
Appeal Total Climbs to $613,461 4,435.00 5,662.00 4,482.00 Taunton Area St. Mary, Taunton 8,248.00 Sacred Heart, Taunton 7,721.50 Holy Family, East Taunton St. J,096ph, Taunton Ho'ly Cross, South Easton * * * PARISH TOTALS PAGE TWO New Bedford Area Mt. Carmel, New Bedford 13,873.11 St. Lawrence, New Bedford 11,890.80 St. James, New Bedford 10,963.25 St. Joseph, Fairhaven 9,432.85 Holy Name, New Bedford 8,995.00 Fall River Area Holy Name, Fall River 24,336.50 Our Lady of Angels, Fall River 14,235.00 Cathedral, Fall River 11,879.45 St. Thomas More, Somerset 11,664.50 St. Patrick, Faill River 8,672.00 FATHER HOYE St. Lawrence Parishes in New Bedford; St. Peter the Apostle Parish, Provincetown; Holy Name Parish, Fall River; and as pastor of Our Lady of Mt. Car- mel Parish, Seekonk, and St. Joseph Parish, Taunton. Father Farland Rev. William E. Farland was born in Fall River on Jan. 11, 1924, the son of Mabel (Phelan) Farland and the late Donat Far- land. He attended St. Patrick Parish School, Fall 'River, and Msgr. Turn to Page Five Fr. Hoye Expert In Canon Law Most Rev. Daniel A. Cronin, S.T.D., Bishop of Fall River, has appointed Rev. Daniel F. Hoye, J.C.L., as the Vice-Officialis of the Diocesan Tribunal. Recently returned from the School of Canon Law of the Catholic University of America, Washington, D.C., Father Hoye .was awarded a Licentiate Degree in Canon Law. Tum to Page Four 9,401.00 7,418.00 7,406.25 $11,014.25 10,723.00 . 10,299.00 9,840.•0 9,186.00 Rev. William E. Farland, pas- tor of St. Joseph's Church in Woods Hole, becomes pastor of St. Jose"h's Church in Taunton. Rev. Joseoh L. Powers, pastor of St. Mark's Church in Attle- boro, becomes pastor of St. J 0- seph's Church in Woods Hole. Rev. Roper L. Gagne, pastor of St. Mathieu Church in Fall River, becomes pastor of St. Mark's Church in Attleboro. Rev. Adrien E. Bernier, assist- ant pastor of St. Anne's Church in New Be-tford, be"omes admin- istrator of S1. Mathieu Church in Fall River.. All aprointments are effective Wednesday, June 11, 1975. Msgr. Munroe Rev. Msgr. He'lry T. Munroe is the son of the late Henry T. and the late Kathryn C. (Burns) Munroe. Born in Fall River on Nov. 21, 1928, he attended St. Joseph Parish School, Msgr. Coyle Hiph School and Provi- dence College. Following preparation at St. John's Seminary in Brighton, he was ordained to the priesthood by Most Rev. James L. Connolly, Fourth Bishop of Fall River, on Nov. 30, 1953. Officialis of the Diocesan Tri- bunal, Msgr. Munroe has served as assistant pastor at Holy Name Parish, New Bedford, for 19 years and as pastor of St. John the Evangelist Parish, Attleboro, since June 1972. Father Murphy The son of the late Michael and the late Mary (Sarsfield) Murphy, Rev. John J. Murphy was born in Fall River on Aug. 26, 1913. He prepared for the at St. Mary's Seminary, Balti- more, after years of study at St. Patrick Parish School and' BMC Durfee High School in Fall River, and St. Charles College in Catonsville, Md. Ordained a priest in June 1939, he has served in Holy Name and Cape & Islands Area St. Francis Xavier, Hyannis . 14,554.00 St. Patrick, Fa:l.mouth 9,556.00 St. Pius X, - South Yarmouth Holy Trinity, West Harwich Assumption, Osterville Attleboro Area st. Mary, North At,Ueboro St. John, Attleboro Mt. Carmel, Seekonk St. Mary, Mansfield St. Mary, Seekonk Bedford; Holy Cross, South Easton. A final report of the 1975 Appeal will be issued five days the closing of the books. Parish chairmen, priest directors and special gift solicitors of the Appeal should make _their re- POI'ts in person at Headquarters beginning Wednesday, May 21 to the closing on Friday noon,' May 23 in order to receive prop- er for this year's Appeal. Leading area parishes are: Most Rev. Daniel A. Cro:1in, S.T.D., Bishop of Fall River, has announced the acceptance of the resignation of Rev. Msgr. Chris- topher L. Broderick from the pas- torate of St. Pius X Church in South Yarmouth. The Bishop also has announced an appointment to the Diocesan Tribunal and six clergy appointments. Rev. Daniel F. Hoye, who has just received his Licentiate in Canon Law from the School of Canon Law of the Catholic Uni- versity of America, has been ap- pointed Vice Officia-lis of the Diooes'an Tribunal. Rev. Msgr. Henry T. Munroe, pastor of St. John the Evangelist Church in Attleboro, succeeds Msgr. Broderick as pastor of St. Pius X Church in South Yar- mouth. He is also Episcopal Vicar for the Vicariate of Cape Cod and the Islands. Rev. John J. Murphy, pastor of St. Joseph's Church in Taun- ton, becomes pastor of Holy Name Church, New Bedford, suc- ceeding the late Rev. Leo T. Sul- livan who. died in January. Adult Confirmation Most Rev. Daniel A. Cronin, S.T.D., Bishop of the Diocese of Fall River, wiU celebrate a Pentecost Mass and administer the Sacrament of Confirma-tio{l to adults in St. Mary's Cathe- dral on Sunday afternoon, May 18 at 3 o'clock in the afternoon. Adult parishioneI's who for some .reason have had to delay their recew:ion of the Sacrament 'are urged to-contact their parJsh priests to make arrangements for the Pentecost cathedral cere- mony. A hrief catechesis should be undertaken between .the adult candidate and the parish priest. Reports of special gift dona- tions and parish contributions have raised the total to $613,461.24 in the 34th annual Charities Appeal. Edward F. Kennedy of Taun- ton, this year's App.eal lay chair- man, ..said: "Many people are re- sponding most genetously. I hope that every special gift and pariSh solicitor will contact every potential donor in all areas of the diocese. Special gift contacts are -stilI outstanding and many parishes have returns .to report." Many parishes are close to surpassing their 1974 final to- Itals-. The present number of par- Ishes enrolled in the 1975 Honor RoB for exceeding last year's final total is 13. They are: St. Mary, North Attleboro; Our Lady of the Isle, Nantucket (the first parish to reaoh Honor Roll status for two years .in a row); St. John, Pocasset; Our Lady of the Angels, St. John the Bap- Hst, St. Ma·thieu, St. Patrick, St. Roeh, Fall River; St. Thomas More, Somerset; St. Louis de France, Swansea; St. Anthony of Padua, St. Boniface, New Clergy Appointments Retiring Parish Center' Saturday Turn to Page Four ChaiIes College in Catonsville, Md. After preparation at St. Mary's Seminary in Baltimore, he was ordained a priest on May 26, 1927 at St. Mary's Cathedral, FaN River, by Most Reverend -Daniel Feehan, Second Bishop of Fall River. During his First Mass, cel- ebrated on May 29th at St. Patrick's Church, Fall River, he was assisted by Rev. James E. Cassidy (later to be the Third Bishop of FaH River) as Arch- priest and Rev. James J. Gerrard (later to be the Auxiliary Bishop of Fall River) as homHist. The Monsignor',s first assign- ment was to Our Lady of Lourdes Parish, Wellfleet, for the summer of 1927. He was then assigned to Immaculate Concep- tion PariS'h, Fall River, where he was to remain as assiSitant pas- tor for 22 years. . During his assignment in Fa-ll River, he temporar-ily helped his brother, Rev. John F. Broderick, pastor of St. Mary Parish, 'So. Dartmouth, during a serious ill- ness that ended in his death in 1941. . In November 1949, he was named administrator of St. Pat- rick Parish, Somerset. Two years later he took up the pas- torate of St. Mary Parish, Nor- ton. tion. In the past three years, over three hundred new families have to the parish rolls, and the great majorJty of them have beer: recently mar- ried. Thus, the need for a facility to accommodate larger congre- gations at some of the Masses and for special occasions was evident. The Center also provides an area for the conduct of the catechetical program, and also it is suitable for dances and so- cial purposes. The building is constructed of Turn to Page Three Broderick Cape Cod Msgr. From After 48 years in the aotive' ministry, Rev. Msgr. Christopher L. Broderick, pastol: of St. Pius X Parish, So. Yarmouth, has made use of the directives of the Second Vatican Coundl and nas requested retirement from the active The Most Reverend Bishop has acceeded ito the wishes of Msgr. Broderick. Born ,in Fall River on October 7, 1899, Monsignor Broderick studied at St. Paltrick Parish School and BMC Durfee High School in Fall River, and St. MONSIGNOR BRODERICK St .. Dominic1s Blessing on Fall River l Mass., Thursday, May 15, 1975 Vol. 19, No. 20 © 1975 The·Anchor An Anchor of the Soul, Sure and Firm-St. Paul The ANCHOR Most Rev. Daniel A. Cronin, S.T.D. will offer Mass at 4 o'clock and 'bless the new St. Dominic's Center, Swansea on Saturday, May 17. Rev.. Daniel E. Carey, pastor of St. Dominic's since January, 1970 .directed the development of the new facility for the Swan- sea parishioners. The new St. Dominic's Center in Swansea is loca,ted to the rear of the Church and Rectory. It was constructed as an all- purpose building to meet the needs of a growing congrega-

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Cape & IslandsArea Vol. 19, No. 20 © 1975 The·Anchor $5.D:~~~E~;~ Mt. Carmel, New Bedford 13,873.11 St. Lawrence, NewBedford 11,890.80 St. James, NewBedford 10,963.25 St. Joseph, Fairhaven 9,432.85 HolyName, NewBedford 8,995.00 St. FrancisXavier, Hyannis .14,554.00 St. Patrick, Fa:l.mouth 9,556.00 St. PiusX, - SouthYarmouth HolyTrinity, WestHarwich Assumption,Osterville * * * PARISHTOTALS PAGE TWO FATHERHOYE MONSIGNOR BRODERICK $11,014.25 10,723.00. 10,299.00 9,840.•0 9,186.00 9,401.00

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: 05.15.75

Appeal Total Climbs to $613,461

4,435.00

5,662.004,482.00

Taunton AreaSt. Mary, Taunton 8,248.00Sacred Heart, Taunton 7,721.50Holy Family,

East TauntonSt. J,096ph, TauntonHo'ly Cross,

South Easton* * *

PARISH TOTALSPAGE TWO

New Bedford AreaMt. Carmel,

New Bedford 13,873.11St. Lawrence,

New Bedford 11,890.80St. James,

New Bedford 10,963.25St. Joseph, Fairhaven 9,432.85Holy Name,

New Bedford 8,995.00

Fall River AreaHoly Name,

Fall River 24,336.50Our Lady of Angels,

Fall River 14,235.00Cathedral, Fall River 11,879.45St. Thomas More,

Somerset 11,664.50St. Patrick, Faill River 8,672.00

FATHER HOYE

St. Lawrence Parishes in NewBedford; St. Peter the ApostleParish, Provincetown; HolyName Parish, Fall River; and aspastor of Our Lady of Mt. Car­mel Parish, Seekonk, and St.Joseph Parish, Taunton.

Father FarlandRev. William E. Farland was

born in Fall River on Jan. 11,1924, the son of Mabel (Phelan)Farland and the late Donat Far­land.

He attended St. Patrick ParishSchool, Fall 'River, and Msgr.

Turn to Page Five

Fr. Hoye ExpertIn Canon Law

Most Rev. Daniel A. Cronin,S.T.D., Bishop of Fall River, hasappointed Rev. Daniel F. Hoye,J.C.L., as the Vice-Officialis ofthe Diocesan Tribunal.

Recently returned from theSchool of Canon Law of theCatholic University of America,Washington, D.C., Father Hoye

. was awarded a Licentiate Degreein Canon Law.

Tum to Page Four

9,401.00

7,418.007,406.25

$11,014.2510,723.00 .10,299.009,840.•09,186.00

Rev. William E. Farland, pas­tor of St. Joseph's Church inWoods Hole, becomes pastor ofSt. Jose"h's Church in Taunton.

Rev. Joseoh L. Powers, pastorof St. Mark's Church in Attle­boro, becomes pastor of St. J0­

seph's Church in Woods Hole.Rev. Roper L. Gagne, pastor

of St. Mathieu Church in FallRiver, becomes pastor of St.Mark's Church in Attleboro.

Rev. Adrien E. Bernier, assist­ant pastor of St. Anne's Churchin New Be-tford, be"omes admin­istrator of S1. Mathieu Church inFall River..

All aprointments are effectiveWednesday, June 11, 1975.

Msgr. MunroeRev. Msgr. He'lry T. Munroe

is the son of the late Henry T.and the late Kathryn C. (Burns)Munroe. Born in Fall River onNov. 21, 1928, he attended St.Joseph Parish School, Msgr.Coyle Hiph School and Provi­dence College.

Following preparation at St.John's Seminary in Brighton, hewas ordained to the priesthoodby Most Rev. James L. Connolly,Fourth Bishop of Fall River, onNov. 30, 1953.

Officialis of the Diocesan Tri­bunal, Msgr. Munroe has servedas assistant pastor at Holy NameParish, New Bedford, for 19years and as pastor of St. Johnthe Evangelist Parish, Attleboro,since June 1972.

Father MurphyThe son of the late Michael

and the late Mary (Sarsfield)Murphy, Rev. John J. Murphywas born in Fall River on Aug.26, 1913.

He prepared for the p~iesthood

at St. Mary's Seminary, Balti­more, after years of study atSt. Patrick Parish School and'BMC Durfee High School in FallRiver, and St. Charles Collegein Catonsville, Md.

Ordained a priest in June 1939,he has served in Holy Name and

Cape & Islands AreaSt. Francis Xavier,

Hyannis . 14,554.00St. Patrick, Fa:l.mouth 9,556.00St. Pius X, -

South YarmouthHoly Trinity,

West HarwichAssumption, Osterville

Attleboro Areast. Mary,

North At,UeboroSt. John, AttleboroMt. Carmel, SeekonkSt. Mary, MansfieldSt. Mary, Seekonk

Bedford; Holy Cross, SouthEaston.

A final report of the 1975Appeal will be issued five daysa~ter the closing of the books.Parish chairmen, priest directorsand special gift solicitors of theAppeal should make _their re­POI'ts in person at Headquartersbeginning Wednesday, May 21to the closing on Friday noon,'May 23 in order to receive prop­er cred~t for this year's Appeal.

Leading area parishes are:

Most Rev. Daniel A. Cro:1in,S.T.D., Bishop of Fall River, hasannounced the acceptance of theresignation of Rev. Msgr. Chris­topher L. Broderick from the pas­torate of St. Pius X Church inSouth Yarmouth. The Bishop alsohas announced an appointmentto the Diocesan Tribunal and sixclergy appointments.

Rev. Daniel F. Hoye, who hasjust received his Licentiate inCanon Law from the School ofCanon Law of the Catholic Uni­versity of America, has been ap­pointed Vice Officia-lis of theDiooes'an Tribunal.

Rev. Msgr. Henry T. Munroe,pastor of St. John the EvangelistChurch in Attleboro, succeedsMsgr. Broderick as pastor of St.Pius X Church in South Yar­mouth. He is also Episcopal Vicarfor the Vicariate of Cape Codand the Islands.

Rev. John J. Murphy, pastorof St. Joseph's Church in Taun­ton, becomes pastor of HolyName Church, New Bedford, suc­ceeding the late Rev. Leo T. Sul­livan who. died in January.

AdultConfirmation

Most Rev. Daniel A. Cronin,S.T.D., Bishop of the Dioceseof Fall River, wiU celebrate aPentecost Mass and administerthe Sacrament of Confirma-tio{lto adults in St. Mary's Cathe­dral on Sunday afternoon, May18 at 3 o'clock in the afternoon.

Adult parishioneI's who forsome .reason have had to delaytheir recew:ion of the Sacrament'are urged to-contact their parJshpriests to make arrangementsfor the Pentecost cathedral cere­mony.

A hrief catechesis should beundertaken between .the adultcandidate and the parish priest.

Reports of special gift dona­tions and parish contributionshave raised the total to$613,461.24 in the 34th annualCharities Appeal.

Edward F. Kennedy of Taun­ton, this year's App.eal lay chair­man, ..said: "Many people are re­sponding most genetously. Ihope that every special gift andpariSh solicitor will contactevery potential donor in allareas of the diocese. Special giftcontacts are -stilI outstandingand many parishes have returns.to report."

Many parishes are close tosurpassing their 1974 final to­Itals-. The present number of par­Ishes enrolled in the 1975 HonorRoB for exceeding last year'sfinal total is 13. They are: St.Mary, North Attleboro; OurLady of the Isle, Nantucket (thefirst parish to reaoh Honor Rollstatus for two years .in a row);St. John, Pocasset; Our Lady ofthe Angels, St. John the Bap­Hst, St. Ma·thieu, St. Patrick,St. Roeh, Fall River; St. ThomasMore, Somerset; St. Louis deFrance, Swansea; St. Anthonyof Padua, St. Boniface, New

Clergy Appointments

RetiringParish

Center'Saturday

Turn to Page Four

ChaiIes College in Catonsville,Md.

After preparation at St.Mary's Seminary in Baltimore,he was ordained a priest on May26, 1927 at St. Mary's Cathedral,FaN River, by Most Reverend-Daniel Feehan, Second Bishopof Fall River.

During his First Mass, cel­ebrated on May 29th at St.Patrick's Church, Fall River, hewas assisted by Rev. James E.Cassidy (later to be the ThirdBishop of FaH River) as Arch­priest and Rev. James J. Gerrard(later to be the Auxiliary Bishopof Fall River) as homHist.

The Monsignor',s first assign­ment was to Our Lady ofLourdes Parish, Wellfleet, forthe summer of 1927. He was thenassigned to Immaculate Concep­tion PariS'h, Fall River, where hewas to remain as assiSitant pas-tor for 22 years. .

During his assignment in Fa-llRiver, he temporar-ily helped hisbrother, Rev. John F. Broderick,pastor of St. Mary Parish, 'So.Dartmouth, during a serious ill­ness that ended in his death in1941. .

In November 1949, he wasnamed administrator of St. Pat­rick Parish, Somerset. Twoyears later he took up the pas­torate of St. Mary Parish, Nor­ton.

tion. In the past three years,over three hundred new familieshave h~~:1 <:\.~dp.d to the parishrolls, and the great majorJty ofthem have beer: recently mar­ried. Thus, the need for a facilityto accommodate larger congre­gations at some of the Massesand for special occasions wasevident. The Center also providesan area for the conduct of thecatechetical program, and alsoit is suitable for dances and so­cial purposes.

The building is constructed ofTurn to Page Three

BroderickCape Cod

Msgr.From

After 48 years in the aotive'ministry, Rev. Msgr. ChristopherL. Broderick, pastol: of St. PiusX Parish, So. Yarmouth, hasmade use of the directives of theSecond Vatican Coundl and nasrequested retirement from theactive minis~ry.

The Most Reverend Bishophas acceeded ito the wishes ofMsgr. Broderick.

Born ,in Fall River on October7, 1899, Monsignor Broderickstudied at St. Paltrick ParishSchool and BMC Durfee HighSchool in Fall River, and St.

MONSIGNOR BRODERICK

St.. Dominic1sBlessing on

Fall Riverl Mass., Thursday, May 15, 1975Vol. 19, No. 20 © 1975 The·Anchor $5.D:~~~E~;~

An Anchor of the Soul, Sure and Firm-St. Paul

TheANCHOR

Most Rev. Daniel A. Cronin,S.T.D. will offer Mass at 4o'clock and 'bless the new St.Dominic's Center, Swansea onSaturday, May 17.

Rev.. Daniel E. Carey, pastorof St. Dominic's since January,1970 .directed the developmentof the new facility for the Swan­sea parishioners.

The new St. Dominic's Centerin Swansea is loca,ted to the rearof the Church and Rectory. Itwas constructed as an all­purpose building to meet theneeds of a growing congrega-

Page 2: 05.15.75

Bishop of Fall River

5,358.50

6,142.00

3,231.00

2,431.004,197.00

7,030.006,204.00

4,435.00

9,432.852,595.501,200.001,842.00

St. JosephSt. MarySacred Hearts

Marion-St. RitaMa'ttapoisett-

St. Anthony .North Dartmouth­

St. JulieSouth oDartmouth-

St. MaryWareham-St. PatrickWestport-

St. George

675-7055

Manuel RogersBe Sons

FUNERAL HOME1521 North Main Street

Fall River, Mass.Raymond R. MachadoArthur R. Machado

Tel. Office 672-3101. Res. 673·3894 c,67;J~0447

Taunton-Holy Family 5,662.00Holy Rosary 2,054.00Immacula'~e Concep. 4,321.00Our Lady of Lourdes 2,831.60Sacred Heart 7,721.50St. Anthony 3,504.10St. James 4,131.00St. Joseph 4,482.00St. Mary 8,248.00

. St. Paul 4,304.00Dighton-St. Peter 1,118.50North Dighton­

St. JosephRaynham-St. AnnSouth Easton

Holy Cross

Taunton Area

COUGHLINFuneral Home Inc.

308 Locust StreetFall River, Mass.

John J. Coughlin

Michael J. Coughlin

2,987.00

2,143.00

3,042.00

5,076.505,519.00

11,664.50

New Bedford Area

Immaculate Concep. 5,554.00Sacred Heart 8,116.50St. Anne 2,827.00St. Anthony of Padua 2,209.70St. E-lizabeth 1,200.00St. John the Baptist 4,123.00St. Joseph I 5,841.50St. -Loui,s 2,888.00St. Mathieu 2,282.00'St. Michael 5,615.00

. St. Patrick 8,672.00SS. Peter and Paul 5,474.00St. Roch 3,131.00St. Stanislaus 5,811.83St. William 5,138.00Santo Christo 1,719.75

Assonet-St. Bernard

Central Village­St. John Baptist

North Westport­Our Lady of Grace 6,710.00

Ocean Grove-St. Michael

Somerset-St. John of GodSt. Patrick'St. Thomas More

S....lansea--Our Lady of Fatima 5,736.00St. Dominic "5,617.00St. Louis Ide France 7,468.00

II) /

740.00

6,482.00

9,556.50

4,442.00

1,602.00

7,418.00

9,401.00

1,788.00

1,238.007,406.254,823.00

2,433.0011,014.255,216.00

10,289.00

Cape & Islands Area

Attleboro AreaAtteboro-

Holy Ghost $7,328.00St. John 10,723.00St. Joseph 3,153.00St. 'Mark 6,157.00St. Mary (Seekonk) 9,186.00St. Stephen , 6,104.00St. Theresa 6,680.00

Mansfield-St. Mary 9,840.10North Attleboro-

Sacred HeartSt. Mary

Norton-St. MarySeekonk-Mt. Carmel

New Bedford'-Holy Name 8,995.00Assumption 592.40Imm.aculate Concep. 4,535.00Mt. Carmel 13-,873.11Our Lady of Fatima 4,486.00O. L. of Perpet. Help 1,928.00Sacred Heart, 3,080.00 ,St. Anne 1,642.50St. Anthony of Padua 4,439.00St. Boniface 555.50St. Casimir 1,370.00St. Francis of Assisi 959.50'St. Hedwig 1,387.00St. Hyacinth 845.25

Fall River- St. James 10,963.25St. Mary's Cathedral'l1,879.45 St. John the Baptist 5,382.50Blessed Sacrament 1,188:00 St. Joseph 3,817.00Espirito Santo 2,535.00 St. Kilian 2,276.00Holy Cross 1,870.50 St. Lawrence 11,890.80Holy Name 24,336.50 St. Mary 7,853.25Notre Dame 6,168.00 St. Theresa 3,585.00Our Lady of Angels 14,235.00 Acushnet-Our Lady of Health 3,150.00, St. Fr,ancis Xavier 2,66~.00

Holy Rosary.,- .' ·,;~295.00';.'Faithtvlfut:L.' ,."r 1.",<" . .'i',

..........--NEW PRIESTS: Bishop Cronin is shown with the five deacons whom he. ordained

priests last Saturday for service in the Fall River Diocese. Left to right, Rev. William L.Boffa, Rev. Kevin J. Harrington, Rev. Arnold R. Medeiros, Bishop Cronin, Rev. Bruce M.Neylon and Rev. Richard M. Roy.

PARISH TOTALS

Brewster-Our Lady of the Cape 3,968.00

Buzzards Bay-'St. Margaret

CenterviHe-Our Lady of Victory 7,040.00

Chatham-Holy Redeemer

Edgartown-St. Elizabeth

Falmou,th-St. Patrick

Hyannis-St. Francis Xavier 14,554.00

Nantucket-Our Lady of the Isle 5,949.00

Oak Bluf~s-

Sacred HeartOsterville-AssumptionPocasset-St. JohnProvincetown-

St. PeterSouth Yarmouth­

St. Pius XVineyard Haven­

St. AugustineWest Harw,ich­

Holy TrinityWoods Hol.e-

St. Joseph 3,655.00

Fall River Area

MAY 25

MAY 23

MAY 24

Necrology

DETROIT (NC) - AuxiliaryBishop Walter Schoenherr ofDetroit testified against thewidespread ownership of gunsat a hearing here by the Michi­gan Commission of CriminalJustice's task force on guncontrol.

"Anyone can obtainday," the bishop said.

Rev. Michael P. Kirby, 1925,St. Mary's, North Attleboro

Rev. James V. Mendes, 1961,Administrator, Our Lady ofAngels, Fall River

Rev. William F. Donahue,1944, Assistant, St. FrancisXavier, Hyannis

2 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thur., May 15, 1975

RETIREMENT

The Most Reverend Bishop has accepted the retirement'of Rev. Christopher L. Brooerick as pastor of St. Pius XParish, South Yarmouth.

Effective date Wednesday, June II, 1975.

APPOINTMENT

Rev. Daniel F. Hoye, J.C .L., as Vice-Officialis of theDiocesan Tribunal.

Effective date Thursday, May 15, 1975.

ASSIGNMENTS

Rev. Msgr. Henry T. Munroe, from pastor of St. John theEvangelist Parish, Attleboro, to St. Pius X Parish, So. Yar­mouth, as pastor. He will also serve as Episcopal Vicar ofthe Vicariate of Cape Coo and the Islands.

Rev. John J. Murphy, from pastor of St. Joseph Parish,Taunton, to Holy Name Parish, New Bedford, as pastor.

Rev. William E. Farland, from pastor of St. Joseph Parish,Woods Hole, to St. Joseph Parish, Taunton, as pastor.

Rev. Joseph L. Powers, from pastor of St. Mark Parish,Attleboro Falls, to St. Joseph Parish, Woods Hole, as pastor.

Rev. George L. Gagne, from administrator of St. MathieuParish, ,Fall River, to St. Mark Parish, Attleboro Falls, aspastor.

Rev. Adrien E. Bernier, from assistant pastor of St. AnneParish, New Bedford, to St. Mathieu Parish, Fall River, asadministrator.

All assignments are effective Wednesday, June 11, 1975.

Bishop Testifies Against Guns

DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER

OFFICIAL

for the preservation of life. Wedon't stop making guns. . . .We don't stop purchasing them.... When will be have enough?"

Most of the speakers andcrowd of more ,than -200 at thehearing were opposed to guncontrol. Some argued that exist­

guns to- ing Michigan legislation would"I stand be sufficient if it were enforced.

Others argued that gun controlwould take weapons out of thehands of honest citizens andleave only the criminals withguns. One person, citing Scrip­ture, argued that owning a gunis part of our "sacred, God-givenright to sel.f-defense."

Of the few pro-control speak­ers, one, a professor in behavior­al sciences, suggested that "any­

Rev. James F. Clark, 1907, one who desires a handgun is' Founder: St. James, New Bedford slightly neurotic .. '. and should

undergo testing before he canreceive a permit to carry or owna handgun."

Another argued from statistics. that handguns bought for pro­

tection are "six times" more like­ly to be used to settle an argu­ment than to be used for theiroriginal purpose. The only solu-

~-'."".""""""""''''''''''''''''~'''''''''''''''''''''.''''''''''''''''''''''••.- tion, he said, is a "total ban" onTHE ANCHOIl handguns.

Second Class Postage Paid at f111 Iliver, Bishop Schoenherr spoke ofMass. Published every ThulSday at 410 the human tragedy when hand­Hlghltnd Avenue, Fall Rliver, Mass. 02722 guns are used. "I have seen myby the Catholic Pren of the Diocese of Fall I d I t k'lI d" h

1 River. Subscription price,by l)1a.U! ._~o.~P~ld pe~p e mugge , IUr, 1 e, ,.e·s OQ per v••r- ' .. , ,.' ~ . _ .. - ' -said. ••..... - .•. .. ,·f'.,· --:,. .-.<. -, ,',..: ·A·.·,·"..· •""4' ~~ ' " .. ,. ~;' (. "'. -'J." A·'" I.'A,. ·"..A'.~A. ' ,.. n

Page 3: 05.15.75

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall Riv::r-Thur., May IS, 1975 3

St. Dominic' of Swansea

A Mill HillFranciscan Sisler Lives a

Bishop to BlessN'ew I( of C HomeIn Fall River

heat and smoke detection sys­tem and it is linked up to thelocal fire Department. The ex­terior of the Center is paintedtan, with broad bands of w~ite.

·Plan' HyannisLupus Chapter

The public is invited to attenda meeting of the newly organ­ized Cape Cod Lupus Chapter,to be held at 7 p.m. SundayMay 18 at VFW Hall, IvanoughRoad, Hyannis.

Affiliated with the Massachu~

sett Lupus Foundation, the or­ganization is open ttl lupus pa­tients, their families and friends.Mrs. Mary E. Cote, president,explains that lupus is a diseaseof unkntlwn origin, affecting con­nective tissues and producingsometimes fatal changes in skin,joints and internal organs: Re­search is attempting to discovercauses and cures of this condi­tion, which primarily attackswomen in the childbearing years

. 'and kills over 5000 Americansannually. The Cape Cod organ­ization has as its goal educationof the public concerning lupus,and further information' is avail­able from Mrs. Cote, telephone617-759-5602.

Most Rev. Daniel A. Cronin,S.T.D., Bishop of the Diocese ofF~l River, will bless the newKnights of Columbus Home ofFall River Council No. 86 at 7o'clock on Thursday night, May29 and then be principal con­celebrant and homilist at Mass.

Grand Knight Raymond R.Cousineau stated that the newhome located at 1492 Columbus'Drive, off -Meridian St., will bethe scene of a large gatheringof civic leaders and knightsfrom nearby councils. '

Rev. Roger L. Gagne, pastorof St. Mathieu's Parish, FallRiver and chaplain to CouncilNo. 86 is in charge of arrange­ments for the Mass and BlessingCeremony. He also announced­that Rev. William G. Campbell,assistant at Holy Name Church,Fall River will direct the musicand choir for the occasion.

A. Roger Lafleur, PGK is ser­ving as chairman of hall arrange­ments, while Roland H. Pelletier,president of the Home Cor'por­ation 'and Ftlrmer District Dep­uty John T. Trainor are incharge of the speaking programand reception committee, respec-

• tively.

• meaningful• faithful• hopeful• prayerful

community Iife-with lasting job satisfaction

Vocation Directress, FMJSFranciscan House

19 South Main Ave.,. Albany, N.Y. 12208

Send forfree brochure:

Continued from Page Onecinder block, fifty feet wide andone hundred and twenty feet inlength. When it is set up forMass, it will accommodate fivehundred. The sanctuary. furnish­ings can be readily stored in thesacristy when not in use. To therear of the sanctuary is a largestorage area for banquet tables,card tables and 'chairs not inuse. Equipped with a portablespeaking system, the acousticsare excellent.

Social Center

Just off the foyer are the restrooms and the kitchen. Thekitchen was furnished throughthe efforts of St. Domi!1ic'sWomen's Guild and it providesall the latest equipment. Theserving windows can be closedwhen the building is used forMass, and ,the kitchen hiddenfrom view. The tile flooringmakes it ideal for dances andother social functions. A newlyformed Men's Club has alreadyarranged several dances, andthey are popularly received bymany of the new couples in theparish.

A combination heating and,air-conditioning unit has beeninstalled in the. rear of the build­ing, and it will provide comfortwhatever the weather may be.The building is protected by a

P'ope Paul ThanksPilgrims for Hymn's

VATICAN CITY (NC) - Withthe simple phrase "thanks, itis beautiful," Pope Paul VIpraised Holy Year pilgrims forthe hymns he bas heard themsinging during their visits to theVatican.

In a Sunday noontime talk,the Pope told about 100,000 peo­ple gathered in St. Peter's.Square that "during' the HolyYear, voices of community pray­er, of church singing, of peoplepraising and supplicating haveoften risen from the square up,to us here and it bas deeplymoved. us."

Standing at the study window,the Pope continued, "We aretaken by the charm of this spon­taneous and unusual exhibition.It makes us think of the Church'srenewed exhortations to com­munal prayer, as well as of thehoped for rebirth of sacred mu­sic. . .. Each voice has its ownaccent-that of a child, of ayouth, of a young girl of anadult, of old person,"

Before reciting the noontimeprayer to Our Lady, the ReginaCoeli, the Pope said simply:"Brothers, thanks, it is ,beauti­ful,"

NEW SWANSEA PARISH CENTER: Bishop Cronin will bless the new St. Dominic'sCenter, Swansea at 4 o'c~ock o,n ,~~turday afternoon, May 17. Top photo: Exterior of ,the,new center., Middlep.hoto:· Sanctuary. Bottom photo;· Kitchen in· parish activities center.

Page 4: 05.15.75

4 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thur., May 15, 1975

®The ANCHOR

Fr. HoyeContinued from Page OneSon of Virginia (Cleary) Hoye

and the late Dr. Charles E. Hoye,Father Hoye was born in Taun­ton and educated at St. MaryParish School and Msgr. CoyleHigh School in that city.

Following studies at St. Thom­as Seminary, Bloomfield, Conn.and St. John's Seminary, Brigh­ton, he was ordained to .thepriesthood on May 13, 1972.-

During his diaconate he servedat St. Patrick Parish, Wareham,and Our Lady of the Rosary Par­ish, Stoughton. Since his ordi­nation to the priesthood, he hasserved at St. ohn the EvangelistParish, Attleboro, and St. MaryParish, Norton. .',

Bishop SpeaksTo Senators

The May meeting of the Sen­ate of Priests of the Diocese ofPall River was held on Friday,May 9, at the Catholic MemorialHome. ..

Most Rev. Daniel A. Cronin,Bishop of Fall River, addressedthe Senate relative to its role in,the diocese. Citing their impor­tance as the only elected bodyof priests who represent all thepriests of the diocese, BishopCronin asked for the Senate'scontinued assistance. In a livelydiscussion that followed manyways of accomplishing this wereexplored.

Rev. Msgr. Thomas Harring­ton, Chancellor of the diocese,presented to the Senate a reporton the priests' pension plan thatis under study by his office.

The minutes of the Aprilmeeting were then accepted andcorrespondence was read rela­tive' to Selection of Bishop'sProcess, Priest's Retreats andcounselling cancer patients andtheir families.

Resolutions

Following the Treasurer's re­port, reports were presentedfrom the Senate's liaisons withNFCP and NECOPS. Plans arebeing made for the Fall RiverSente to host the annual FallConvocation of NECOPS.

Two resolutions were passedrelative to the war in Vietnam:

Be it resolved that the Priest'sSenate of the Fall River Dioceseurges that all the clergy andlaity of the Diocese rememberin a prayerful way those missingin action in Vietnam. It urgesthat meaningful and thoughtfulmeans be taken to secure moreinformation about them andeventually to bring them home.

·Be it resolved that the Priest'sSenate of the Fall River Diocesewelcomes with Christi-an hospi­tality and -compassion those Viet­namese people who are presentlyor will in the future settle in ourdiocese.

A third resolution was passedsupporting the Bishop's recentletter to Senator Edward Ken­nedy deploring the leadershiprole the Senator assumed regard­ing the Bartlett Amendment at­tached to Senate Bill 66, whichwould have prevented the spend­ing of government funds for pay­ment for 'abortions.

Other Senate business centeredaround constitutional and pro­cedural changes. The meeting ad-.journed at 2:42 p.m. The Senatewill meet in an informal sessionat Catholic Memorial Home onFriday, June 13, 1975 at 11 a.m.

Marriage Encounter"How to Make -a Good Mar­

riage Better" will be the topicof it speakers' night to be spon­sored by the Marriage Encountermovement at 8 p.m. Sunday, May18 in Notre Dame Church base­ment, Fall River. Admission andrefreshments will be free andall married couples in the Great­er Fall River area are invited :toattend.•.,; .0'" :: ' ..,

"oIt is obvious that MonsignorBroderick has had a very busyand productive prfesthood. How­ever, his real service to God andthe Church cannot be measured.The quality of his priesthood isreflected in the lives of thou­sands of people who have beenenriched by his dedication andholiness."

Doctor to SpeakOn EmergencyTechniques

The public is invited to attenda lecture on emergency lifesav­ing to be sponsored at 7:45 p.m.Wednesday, May 21 by theMen's Club of St. Stanislausparish, Fall River. To speak inthe parish school hall at 37Rockland St., is Dr. Barry Stein"berg, anesthesiologist at St.Anne's Hospital, Fall River.

The speaker, a Somerset resi­dent, received his medical degreefrom Dalhousie Medical Schoolof the University of Halifax,N.S. He has served as chief ofanesthesia and operating room atthe U.S. Army hospital in Ver­dun, France.

A member of numerous medi­cal societies, Dr: Steinberg isalso active in the MassachusettsHeart Assn. and is an instructorin cardio-pulmonary resuscita­-tion. He was recently heard ona local radio station answeringlisteners' questions with regardto heart problems.

··Many arc called, few follow."

Msgr. Broderick RetiringContinued from Page One

lIn May, 1954, Pope Pius Xwas proclaimed a saint and inhis honor Bishop James L. Con­nolly announced the formationof a new parish - St. Pius XParish, So. Yarmouth. The-founding pastor 'was Rev.Christ-opher L. Broderick.

When Father Broderick ar­rived on the Cape to assumehis new duties, he found a vastamount of territory; a partiallyfinished rectory in So. Yar­mouth; a small Our Lady of theHighway Chapel in Bass River(formerly a mission of St. Fran­cis Xavier Parish, Hyannis); a·new St. Pius X Church underconstruction.

The new pastor's greatest as­set was a group of eager pari­shioners ready to help in anyway. Masses were held in thechapel and in other places until.the new church was' ready foroccupancy.

The dedication of the new St.Pius X Church took place onAug. 18, 1954 and from thatmoment a great growth tookplace in the parish.

In 1958, it was necessary todouble the size of the summerchapel and in 1961 a new rec­tory had to be built near thechurch.

By 1967, it became clear thatthe church could not accommo­date the year-round parishionerswho had gradually moved to theCape. Plans were then set inmotion for a new St. Pius X,erected adjacent to the oldchurch.

On January 19, 1969, the new- St. Pius X Church with a seat­

ing capacity of 1,300 was dedi~

cated, croyvning the years of la­bor and justifiable pride of Fa­ther Broderick.

In October of that same year,Pope Paul VI honored the Capepastor with his elevation to therank of a Domestic Prelate withthe title Monsignor.

The program for the parishtestimonial for Monsignor Brod­erick states:

Rev. John R. Foister.... leuy Press-r." .River

Rev. John P. Driscoll

OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RIVERPublished weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River

410 Highland AvenueFall River Mass. 02722 675-7151

PUBLISHERMost Rev. Daniel A. Cronin, D.O., S.T.D.

GENERAL MANAGER FINANCIAL ADMINISTRATORRev. Msgr. Daniel F. Shalloo, M.A. Rev. Msgr. John J. Regan

ASSISTANT MANAGERS

Charity and EconomyThe American Association of Fund-R-aising Counsel,

Inc. has reported that despite the troubled economy Ameri­cans gave a record amount last year to charitable organiza­tions. A spokesman for the Greater New York United JewishAppeal said, "There's always somebody worse off than us.Unless you're out of work or yo.ur business failed, mostpeople's standard of living has not changed too greatlyand it's not too difficult to make them understand."

A spokesman for Catholic Charities of New York hassuggested that people tended to give more in troubled timesbecause feeling the pinch themselvs they become moreaware than ever of the needs of other people.

It is good that a troubled economy has a bright side.And this seems to be that the more conscious people are ofthe economy, of money, of things, of the material side oflife, the more they grow to realize that while these thingsare important they are not the most important aspects oflife; and while they themselves may begin to feel the stric­tures of the economic times there are other persons whoseneeds are magnified in these times and who still mustdepend on their neighbors for answers to their cries for help.

This is true on a national level.It-is surely true on an area basis as well.This Fall River Diocese is in a region where unemploy­

ment is the highest in the Commonwealth.At the same time, there has been a magnificent tradition

of charity and concern, people for people.This tradition of .caring has made itself felt in many

various ways and among these is the tradition of the AnnualCharities Appeal. For thirty-three years people have beencaring to the degree that they share what they have withthose who have even less.

In this, the thirty-fourth Appeal, the need is great and,given the economy of the area, even more pressing thanusual. This means that the charity of people must, and hope­fully, will expand to meet the needs and to allow for themany more persons needing to be helped and the inflatedcosts of helping them.

It has been shown that difficult economic times do notautomatically mean a lessening of charity but, rather, agreater measure of consciousness on the part of people thatthe needs of charity are greater than ever before.

.And when the need is great, the response of charitymeasures up t!> the need.

Peace and SerenityPeople seek peace and serenity. What they really want

is inner peace and serenity of the spirit: They want thattranquility of soul that comes from inner balance andhappiness. It comes about when a person is at peace withhimself, at peace with his neighbor, and at peace with God.

While a person lives he is necessarily involved withpeople and circumstances and situations around himself.This is the price one pays for being a member of the humanrace. To drop out from these is to drop out of humanity,to shirk the responsibilities that every mature person mustshoulder. ,

But in the midst of all sorts of involvements and strifeand turmoil there can be peace.

Indeed, there must be peace.This is achieved when a person lives a life of integrity

so that he is true to himself, to his inner values.It is achieved, finally and above all, when a person is

at peace with God-when his inner values correspond tothe Will of God, when his love of neighbor is a reflectionof his love of God and God's love of him.

Page 5: 05.15.75

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of fall River-Thur., May 15, 1975 5

_..¥¢'"

MSGR. MUNROE FR. MURPHY FR. POWERS FR. FARLAND FR. GAGNE FR. BERNIER

Bishop Makes Pastoral Assignments

. THE HOLY FATHER'S MISSION AID TO THE ORIENTAL CHURCH

CITY STATE__ ZIP CODE _

co

SURPRISINGLYGODNEEDSYOU

NEAR EASTMISSIONSTERENCE CARDINAL COOKE, PresidentMSGR. JOHN G. NOLAN, National SecretaryWrite: CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE Assoc.1011 First Avenue • New York, N.Y. 10022Telephone: 212/826-1480

.......

- - - - - -.- - - - - ~ - - - - --

Our Holy Father has proclaimed 1975 as a HolyYear. H-e encourages more Pilgrimages to Romeand the Holy Land during this time of reconcilia·tion. In keeping with his wishes, Catholic NearEast is sponsoring two-week tours for just $978per person. Write for information.

.......

o Only $8.50 gives our priests and Sisters inShertallay, south India, enough Dapsone 'mir­acle' tablets for 43 lepers for a year!

o For only $14 a month, $168 a year, you canmake sure that an abandoned baby has food,clothing, a blanket and love. We'll send you aphoto of the baby you 'adopt', tell you some­thing about him (or her), and ask the Sister·in­charge to keep you informed.

This column's happiest readers are the men,women and children who know they're needed.The days we're busiest helping others are thehappiest days of our lives.... Who needs youmost? Surprisingly, God needs you - for in­stance, to help an abandoned orphan becomea God-loving, responsible adult. Lepers needyou (there are still 15-million lepers in theworld), blind children need you, and so do we.... Here in New York we are your agents, telling

'you where the Holy Father says your help isneeded, and channeling your help promptly andsafely to the people in need.... Want to feelgood right now? Do without something you wantbut do not need, and .send the money insteadfor. one of the needs below. You'll feel good,especially if your gift is big enough -to meana sacrifice to you. This is your chance to dosomething meaningful for the world-it's God'sworld-while you're still alive.

BABIESNEED

YOU

LEPERS

SEE THEHOLY LAND

INTHEHOLY YEAR

FOR _

Please NAME _return coupon

with your STREET ~ _offering

DOSOMETHING

MEANINGFULWHILE

YOU'RESTILLALIVE

o Please send me Holy Year tour information

THE CATHOL'IC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION

Dear ENCLOSED PLEASE FIND $Monsignor Nolan:

New Bedford Area$350

American Press, Lithographer$200

Ligue Du Sacre Cour, St. Jo­seph Parish

Enfan-ts De Marie, St. JosephParish

$150Conrad Seguin Body Co.Captain Frank's SeafoodDeBrosse Oil Co.

$100Park Oil CompanySt. Joseph Bingo, New BedfordErnest FloodPotter Funeral. Service

$75Stanley Oil Co., Inc.

$50Coastal FisheriesHarold Cooper Ins. Co.Cyclone Cleaning Co.John Dugan, Bl!ick-PontiacPat McKenna

Turn to Page Six

John's Shoe StoreHathaway Funeral ServiceGeneral Paper & SupplyLetendre & Boule Wholesale

GrocersTom Beedem Co.Pacheco Bros.Fall River Sales & Supply,

Inc.Robert C. Hadley Insurance

AgencyOak Grove PharmacySomerset Lodgeplourde's BakeryJohn Torres _K of C South End Council 295Mother's Club of Bishop Ger-

rard High School

1955, he served as assistant pas­tor at St. Theresa Parish, Attle­boro, for 17 years, and as pastorof St. Mathieu Parish, Fall Riversince November, 1972.

Father BernierRev. Adrien E. Bernier, the

son of the late Oscar and thelate Eva (Boucher) Bernier, wasborn in Fall River on June 26,1919. '

Educated at Blessed SacramentParish School, Fall River; CollegeSt. Alexandre, Canada; St. PhilipNeri Seminary, Boston, and St.John's Seminary, Brighton, hewas ordained a priest on Feb. 2, '1957.

Father Bernier has served atSt. Michael Parish, Ocean Grove;Notre Dame and St. Mathieu Par­ishes in Fall River; Sacred Heartand St. Anne Parishes in NewBedford.

$100Franconia Sportswear, Inc.Harvey Probber, Inc.Dr. & Mrs. George J. SolasPortuguese Vincentian Fa-theJ;sThe Rustic PubAtty. & Mrs. John B. Cum­

mingsFall River Sheet Metal Co.,

Inc.

$30Dr. Richard H. Fitton

$25Dr. David S. GreerDr. Everett RadovskyAlbert G. PierceHarold C. Nagle Insurance

AgencyEsquire Package StoreRegal Floor CoveringWilliston's Auto Electrical

ServiceTextile Workers Union of

AmericaRay's Auto Radiator WorksJoseph Nadeau & SonsGreen's Storage WarehouseDaughters of Isahella, As-

sumption Circle No. 74

SPECIAL GIFTS

$70Beetle PlasticsThe Spectator

$50Almeida Electrical, Inc.Fall River Emblem ClubEngine Service & Supply, Inc.Fall River Knitting Mills, Inc.The Ski HouseDr. & Mrs. John GagliardiFall River Glass Company

$40J. E. Amiot & Sons Co.

$35Mr. & Mrs. Bernard A. G.

Taradash

dence College and St. Mary'sSeminary, Baltimore, he was or­dained a priest on June 15, 1946.

Diocesan Director of the Con­fraternity of Christian Doctrinefor 13 years, he has also servedat St. Patr-ick Parish, FalmoutJh;St. Joseph Parish, Taunton; Bish­op Stang High School, No. Dart­mouth; Bishop Feehan HighSchool, AUleboro; and as pastorof St. Mark Parish, AttleboroFalls.

Father GagneBorn in No. Attleboro on Nov.

3, 1926, Rev. Roger L. Gagne isthe son of Jeannette (Guindon)and the late Arthur Gagne.

He attended Sacred Heart Par­ish School, No. Attleboro; No.Attleboro High School; MaryknollSeminary and St. John's Semi­nary in Brighton.

Ordained a priest on Feb. 2,

$1,500Rev. Msgrs. James J. and

William H. Dolan$300

Rev. Msgr. Thomas F. Walsh$250

Rev. Walter J. Buckley$240

Massachusetts State Council,Knights of Columbus

$200John E. Fuyat, Providence

$100 .Mr. and Mrs. Albert Tocci,

Wareham

Fall River Area$1,500

F; -L. Collins & Sons, Inc.$1,200

White's Family Restaurant$600

Fall River Gas Company$500

Mooney & Co., Inc.Ideal LaundryMr. & Mrs. Henry·J. FeitelbergSociety of St. Vincent de Paul,

Particular Council$400

Dr. & Mrs. Francis M. JamesDuro Finishing Corp.

$300Gerald Zide

$200Jackson Company, Inc.Catholic Women's Club

$189Residents of Highl'and Heights

$120White Spa Caterers

$110D & D Sales & Service

National

Continued from Page OneCoyle High School, Taunton. Heprepared for the priesthood atSt. Mary's Seminary, Baltimore,and St. John's Seminary, Brigh­ton.

Ordained a priest on June 11,1949, he has served at St. MaryParish, Norton; Corpus ChristiParish, Sandwich; St. Lawrenceand St. Kilian Parishes, New Bed­ford; St. Patrick Parish, Fal­mouth; and as pastor of St. AnnParish, Raynham, and St. JosephParish, Woods Hole.

Father PowersRev. Joseph L. Powers, the son

of the late James E. and the lateElizabeth (Halliwell) Powers, wasborn in Providence, R.I. on May21, 1922.

Educated at St. -Patrick ParishSchool, Fall River; Msgr. CoyleHigh School, Taunton; Provi-

Page 6: 05.15.75

6 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River:-Thur., May 15, 1975

SPECIAL GIFTS

Casey-Sexton,Inc.

. •• Cleansers •••94 TREMONT STREET

TAUNTON, MASS.Tel. 822-0621

----~

tial than organized religion were(in order from 7th to 22nd):Newspapers, government bur­eaucracy, industry, lobb\es andpressure groups, financial insti­tutions, state and local govern­ments, magazines, the Democrat­ic Party, radio, the Cabinet, thefamily, educational institutions,minority organizations, advertis­ing agencies, the military, andthe Republican Party.

Organized religion got an avoerage rating of 3.74, only threehundredths of a point ahead oflast-ranked cinema (3.71).

Asked to list 10 most power­ful individuals in the country,the leaders voted President Ger·aId Ford as the leading individ­ual by' a wide margin. He re­ceived 599 first-place votes,while second -Tanked Secretaryof State Henry Kissinger got136.

Attention School GroupsPLAN YOUR PICNIC, OUTING NOWSpecial A'rrangements for School Groups

FOR DETAILS, CALL MANAGER-636-2744 or 999-6984

sions or actions affecting thenation as a whole."

The White House received thehighest average rating, 8. H3.Next were the Supreme Court(7.84), television (7.81), the U.S.Senate (7.59), labor unions(7.57), and the House of Repre­sentatives (7.30).

Also considered more influen-

Trial ConfusesRadio Announcer

WASHINGTON ~NC) - Eccle­siastical names and titles canconfuse even those radio news·announcers who peel off long,complicated names of federalagencies, corporate giants orhigh officials without the slight·est hesitation.

A case in point otcurred dur­ing the church trial here ofEpiscopal Father William Wendt,accused of having disobeyed hisbishop last year when he aJ­lowed a wom:tn priest to cel­ebrate Holy Communion in hischurch, St. Stephen and the In­carnation.

"-On the second day of the trial

an announcer on one of thelocal radio stations referred toFather Wendt as pastor of "St.Stefan and the Incarceration."

WASHINGTON (NC)-Organ·ized religion has little influenceon decisions or actions affectingthe United States, according to1,000 national leaders polled byU.S. News and World Report.

The leaders placed religion23rd of a list of 24 "most pow­erful institutions," just ahead ofcinema and just below the Re­publican Party.

Among 20 individuals the se·lect group considered most in­fluential in American life, onlyone was a religious leader-theRev. Billy Graham, who ranked18th.

The results of the survey werepublished April 21 in U.S. News.For its poll the magazine askedthe opinions of 1,000 leaders ina broad spectrum of professions,including law, politics, hanking,business, labor, education, reli-'gion and communications fields.

It asked the leaders to' rateeach of 24 institutions on a scaleof one to 10 for the degree ofinfluence they exert "on deci-

ALUMNAE HONOR GOLDEN JUBILARIAN: Graduates of Sacred Hearts Academy;Fall River sponsored a testimonial on May 6 in honor of the 50 years given by Sr. JohnElizabeth, SUSC, as a religious. Left to right: Mrs. Katherine Conlon, the. jubilarian's sis­ter; Bishop Gerrard, Auxiliary Bishop of the Diocese and former chaplain at the academy,principal concelebrant of the Mass; Sr. John Elizabeth; Sr. Marilyn Spellman, SUSC,provincial of the Immaculate Heart of Mary Province; Rev. Msgr. Patrick J. O'Neill,D.Ed., Diocesan Director of Education and homilist at the Mass.

Religious Influence Low in America

Names Hong KongMexican Bishops

VATICAN CITY (NC)-PopePaul has named Father JohnBaptist Cheng-chung Wu to thevacant diocese of Hong Kong.

Bishop-designate Wu is pastorof St. Ann's parish in HsinMiaoli, Diocese of Hsinchu, Tai­wan. He studied in Rome andthen visited chancery offices' inthe New York, Boston and Chi·cagQ archdioceses to learn jurid­ical and administrative practicesbefore taking up parish work inTaiwan.

The newly named Hong Kongbishop speaks the Mandarin,Cantonese and Hakka dialectsof Chinese, as well as Engl'ish,:Italian and Latin.

The Pope named Father PedroAranda Diaz Munoz, episcopalvicar for social ministries of

. Leon, Mexico, Bishop of Tulan­cingo, Mexico.

$200Dr. & Mrs. John Lorergan

$150Sacred Heart Conference

$125Conlon & Donnelly Co., Inc.Leach & Gamer Co.

$100Our Lady of Mt. Carmel Con­

ference, SeekonkAutomatic Machine Products,

Inc.8t. Mary Conference, NortonHoly Ghost ConferencePrecision Tool & Machine

Corp.Dr. & Mrs. Richard Shea

$50Stone-E-Lea Golf CourseHome & Commercial Security,

- RehobothK. F. Bassler Co., Inc.MacDonald Moving & Storage

Co.Pelletier's Auto Service Inc.State Line Scrap Co.Foster Metal Products, Inc.

$45Marathon Co.

$40Bliss Bros. Dairy, Inc.

$35Charles Thomae & Son, Inc.

$30Sun Chronicle

$25Elco Co., Inc.Morse Sand & GravelIsrael FranklinFrank M. Miller & SonDr. & Mrs. John ChiarenzaDemers BrothersSears Burner ServiceCounty Store, RehobothDeMattos Market, RehobothBacklund Insurance, RehobothDeer Run Golf Club, Rehoboth.or. James H. Birch, Jr.Don Robinson ,Insurance Agen-

cyImperial Upholstery Co.Castro County Square, Inc.M. A. Vigorito & Son, Inc.

Taunton Area$350

Taunton Cooperative Bank$125

St. Paul Holy Name Society$100

Taunton Savings BankAllan Walker & Co., Inc.Queen's Daughters

$75Bristol Athletic ClubCornelius J. Murphy Insurance

AgencySt. Ann Conference, Raynham

$55Bristol County Savings Bank

$50J & ·B CateringDr. Henry A. AlvesSt. Ann Women's Guild, Rayn·

hamJ. R. Tallman Insurance Co.United National BankWeir Cooperative Bank

$30Teehnodata, Inc.

$25Memorial to Edward & Isabell

MurbyJoseph Keough Fruit & Prod­

uceOctagon Service StationDaniel F. MoNearney Insur­

ance Co.Taunton Chapter Catholic

NursesAtlantic CafeBarboza's Package StoreOur Lady of Lourdes Confer­

enceTaunton Daily Gazette

Attleboro Area$1,000

Mr. & Mrs. Raym'outh Lam­bert, Sr.

Continued from Page Five

Sea View FilletSturtevant & Hook

$25Aerovox IndustriesChamberlain .Mfg. Co.Enos Home Oxygen TherapyH.M.C. CutleryHathaway Machinery Co.Jay Bee Fillet Co.L & S Concrete Co.LaFrance JewelerN.B. Fillet Co., Inc.George P. Ponte Ins.Parisi Seafoods Inc.J. F. St. Aubin Co.Warren Bros. Co.

$500St. Theresa Conference

$400Society of St. Vincent de Paul·

.......Attleboro Particular Council$300

Texas Instruments, Inc.$275

Attleboro Trust Co.,$250

St. Mary Conference, Mans­fiel<l

$100Falmouth DinerSt. Patrick Guild, FalmouthSt. Joseph Conference, Woods

HoleJames F. Pendergast, HyannisSt. Elizabeth Conference, Ed·

gartownSt. Augustine Conference,

Vineyard Haven$75

Stone's Bea'uty & BarberShops, Falmouth

$701hde Winds Motel, Falmouth

$65Wood Lumber Co., Falmouth

$50James H. Antonnelis, Fal­

mouthSt. Elizabeth Guild, EdgartownSt. Augustine Men's Club,

Vineyard HavenSt. Augustine Guild, Vineyard

Haven$35

McDonald's Paint Store, Fal­mouth

$30Ray's Barber Shop, So. Yar-

$25Martin's of FalmouthCape Bus Lines, FalmouthPalmouth Jewelry ShopMello Cleaners, Buzzards BayFalm9uth Coal Co.Danny Kay's, E. FalmouthWalker Motors, FalmouthWilliams Plumbing Co., Fal-

mouthBuzzards Bay GarageOnset Bay PharmacyFruean Electric, Inc., So. Yar·

mouthFinley's Y/D Pkg. Store, W.

DennisSo. Yarmouth Package StoreHallett Funeral Home, So.

YarmouthBass River Savings Bank, So.

YarmouthSt. John Women's Guild, Po­

cassetFirst National ,Bank of Yar­

mouth, YarmouthportCarreiro Florist, Hyannis

Cape & Islands Area$350

St. Patrick Conference, Fal­mouth

Page 7: 05.15.75

You,ng Ga,rdeners N,eed AidIf They ,Are to Persist

Mr. & Mrs. James GliddenMr. & Mrs. John MendoncaMrs. William H. Hays 3rdIn Memory of Mary E. BaileyMr. & Mrs. Richard Mack &

FamilyPaul McNamara

$40Mr. & Mrs. Robert McGrathMrs. Rolf SjolundMr. & Mrs. Daniel MurphyMrs. William ReithMr. &. Mrs. Robert Ruley

$35Mr. & Mrs. Jack Ramos

$30Margaret PopeEdward PollardPatrick Newport

$25Mr. & Mrs.' Francis Santos,

Mr. & Mrs. John Santos, Mr.& Mrs. Jerimiah Towh ill, Mrs.Joseph Swain, Mr. & Mrs.George O'Neil

Mr. & Mrs. Robert Dennis, Mr.& Mrs. Dennis J. Looney, EthelDunham, Josephine Deacon,Richard Congdon,

Mr. & Mrs. Albert Lavoie,Frank Dinsmore, Mrs. Kath,:rineBarr & Mrs. Noreen Shea, Mr. &Mrs. Edward Strojny, Mr. &Mrs. Albert Brock, Mr. & Mrs.Howard Landry, Mr. & Mrs.Charles Flanagan, Mrs. LesterSimmons, Island Motors Inc.,Myles Reis

Mr. & Mrs. Charles E. Flan­agan, Mr. & Mrs.Thomas Mc­Auley, Mrs. Ursula Holdgate,Joe Lennon, Herman Lehman

Mr. & Mrs. Richard L. Coffin,Frank Sylvia Inc., Ryders Mar­ket, Green Coffee Pot, Congdon& Colem~n Inc.

Cape & Island ConstructionCo. Inc.

THE ANCHOR- 7Thurs., May 15, 1975

... in Minutes

$100Grace HenryMr. & Mrs. Robert Haley

$60Commander John Dooley, USN

$50Rev. William T. BabbittIn Memory of Alice C. Decon

Cooking With Gas

Includes These Deluxe Features:• Deluxe Cast Aluminum Grill • Portable Cart

• Porcelain Enameled 'Cast Iron Cooking Racks• Heat Indicator • Potato Rack

• Two Redwood Shelves• 20 lb. L.P. Cylinder and Regulator ... Just

have it filled and you're ready to cook!

BUDGET TERMS AVAILABLE

.Assembled and Ready for Use

PackagedPortable Gas Grill

OUR LADY OF THE ISLE

$300

In Memory of Julia Ayers,Alice Deacon & Helen Hull

Rev. Msgr. Lester L. Hull

Be Ready For The Fun of Outdoor

UlarmDlorning

LrOilm8ster

Nantucket

WOMEN'S LEADER: Mrs. G. Sam Zilly of GrossePointe Farms, Mich., president of the Natiopal Council ofCatholic Women, addresses a meeting in New York city.Speaking in Galveston, Tex., she said that her goal isthe promotion of leadership among women in the Church

. and in the community. NC Photo.

The trees that were baresticks only a week or so ago aredecked in glorious fresh green.Yesterday I picked just enoughrhubarb to manage a very smallpudding but by tomorrow thereshould be enough for a fair-sizedpie.

Another MiracleIt will be so' good to cook

with fresh vegetables again and,to pick them from the garden.My basil is 'almost ready toplant outdoors, as is my cori­ander. Both were started fromseeds under lights in the base­ment and that's another miracleI have a difficuH time gettingused to.

Joe and his dad have alreadyplanted cabbage in the yard and,the strawberry plants look as ifwe might have 'a nice little cropby the end of June. .

We have been buying somevegetables fwm ,the open airmarket in Boston on those week­ends when we have been in thearea, and their quality, varietyand prke really do spoil one.Eggplant, asparagus, mushrooms,avocados, artiohokes and everyother variety of vegetables imag­inable may be found there onFriday and Saturday, but nowthat spring is here I am lookingforward to the picking andcooking of our own.

This is a delicious recipe forartichokes that I made recentlyand three out of our five familymembers approved, so we'll giveit three stars.

Artichokes a la Niceise4 large artichokesY2 lemon-7 Tablespoons butter softened1 Clove garlic, finely minced1 Tablespoon minced parsley1 large shallot, finely diced1 onion slicedsalt and pepperjuice of one lemon2 cups chicken stock (fresh,

canned, or 'a cube)1) Cut off the stems of the

artichokes and with a sharpknife cut off the coarse tips ofthe leaves'. Rub ,immediatelywith the cut side of a lemon.Drop the artichokes into boilingsa'lted water and cook for 10minutes. Drain upside down onpaper towels and as soon asthey are cool enough to handle,gently spread the leav,es apartwith a sman, sharp knife, scoopout the chokes. (This is a smallfurry part, deep in the centerof the vegetable.)

2) In a small mixing bowlcombine 6 tablespoons of butter,garlic, parsley and shaHots. Sea­son with salt and pepper andfill the 'artichokes with the herbbutter.

3) In an oval casserole, largeenough to hold the artichokesupright, close together, melt theremaining bUbler. Add the chick­en stock, onion and artichokes.Cover.

4) The original of this redpecalled for them to simmer on thetop of the stove for 30 minutes.I baked ,them in a 325 0 oven for40 minutes and they were tender.

Resettle RefugeesAGANA (NC)---American Cath­

olics will be asked to help in theresettlement of 'thousands ofVietnamese refugees here onGuam through the services ofthe U.S. Catholic Conference.Frank Pavis, a representative ofthe USCC Migration and Refu­gee Services here, estimated thatnumber could be about 20:000.

By Joseph and Marilyn Roderick

The resurgence, of interest in gardening, especiallyamong young people, is quite heartening. Partially motivat­ed by the economy and the return to some consideration ofecological balance, the young are involving themselves asnever before in planting andmaintaining gardens. Thoseof us who have been arounda little while know thatmany of these enthusiasts willdrop by the wayside, but a smallminority may get through theinitial difficult period and main­tain their interest. A friend ofmine put it very well when hesaid, "The young are great forblooming, but you have to ex­cuse them from the weeding."

Melissa has a section of ourgarden. which she has maintainedvery well. She began last yearand although she has not beenable to grow all the plants ofher choice, she has been pa'tientand kept her plot clean.

General RulesAdvice is easy to give, but a

few simple do's and don'tsmight be worthwhile for younggardeners. These are the generalrules we set for Melissa whichmight be helpful for other be­ginners:

1) Don't plant more than youcan take care of comfortably.Gardens must be weeded, wat­ered and kept free from insects.

2) Spend some time in thegarden every day, even if it isminimal.

3) Visit other gardens andlisten to other people. You willfind them very helpful and will­ing to share ,their ideas as wellas their plants with you.

4) Don't spray or use insec­ticides of any kind until youknow what their limitations andill effects are. ,

5) Study each plant and itscharacteristic while it is in thegarden. You can learn a greatdeal by observ,ing the plant asit grows.

6) And, the most importantdon't, don't anticipa'te morefrom the garden than it canproduce.

And of course, if the kids aregoing to become gardeners, the

. more mature and experiencedamong us are going to have topitch in and encourage them.Great strides have been made invarieties and quality of plantsand great str,ides are yet to bemade, hopefully by the presentgeneration of young people.

. In The KitchenAnyone who wants proof of

God's closeness needs only tosurvive a New England winterand then watch the miracle oflife - spring. The lone pansythat suddenly took root in thecrevice of the flagstone steps',the single tulip bulb that hasmanaged to push its leaves upand blooms in a portion of thegarden long abandoned are mutetestimony to God's work.

Page 8: 05.15.75

8 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thur., May 15, 1975

HOME 'FROM VIETNAM: Sister Kateri Koverman,who was in charge of the Catholic Relief Services adoptionprogram in Vietnam, helps Phan Tan Le, 8, get used toAmerican life. The 32-year-old nun was visiting her familyhome in payton, Ohio, with the boy and his aunt. Shesaid that the notion of adoption is a difficult concept forVietnamese to understand. NC Photo.

I"CONRAD SEGUINBODY COMPANY

Aluminum or Steel944 County Street

NEW BEDFORD, MASS.9Q'l-6618

Asserts EthnicsHave VitaI RoleIn America

PITTSBURGH (NC) - EthnicAmericans will play a vital rolein the future of the Unite,dStates, Dr. Michael Novak toldthe 48th annual convention ofthe Slovak Catholic .Federationhere.

Novak said that the make·upof the cities in the northernUnited States is mainly black'an.d Catholic ethnics, and addedthat it seems to him that " thedestiny of the United States willbe affected and decided by whatour people do in the cities."

Each community, he said,must keep in touch with itsgovernment to assure properrepresentation. He declared thatethnic make-up is rarely a factorin many areas such as institu­tions, universities, media andboards of directors.

He urged people to take anactive role in helping to redesigncurricula in schools throughoutthe country, making them reflectthe values of the home.

Supervise Curricula

"It's crazy to learn values inthe home; different ones inschool and on television. Wecan't go on that way." Novaksaid that 'ethn1c commU!llities,with government support, should"supervise curricula in schoolsin every city."

Novak, executive director ofEthnic Millions Political ActionCommittee (EMPAC), questionedhow "young people can maintaintheir morality, religion or theirown sense of identity unless theyhave a literature, stories, ritualsin the home to act out for themwhat they're feeling inside."Many of the people who "cameover" here from other countriesnever could express these innerfeelings, he said.

"W.e must learn to give voiceto those things we're feeling.Much of what is on televisionand in best sellers doesn't coverhow we feel about things.

"Archie Bunker doesn't repre­sent us. He's the college-educat­ed people's idea of how work·ing people think and act."

Novak said we "do not en­courage the young to write po·etry, or encourage the elderlyto leave memoirs" of their ex­periences and feelings. All ofthose things make up history,he said.

rN~;;i~'H'.'T~ipp~, ,: SHEET METAL :, ,, J. lESER, Prop. ,: RESIDENTIAL :: INDUSTRIAL :: COMMERCIAL:,253 Cedar St., New Bedford', ,, 993-3222 ,,. ,.~,-"----_._---------_.

Schools

Bolivia HardensAnti-Church Stand

LA PAZ (NC)-The militarygovernment of Bolivia has toldChurchauthor·ities that it willnot reconsider the expulsion oftwo Belgian missionaries itcha,rged with subversion, nor itwill allow a Catholic radio sta­tion to operate if it airs state­ments by pro~esting miners.

Radio station Pius XII, run byCanadian Oblate missionaries,was raided by soldiers in Jan­uary and its equipment de­stroyed or confiscated during agovernment clampdown on striK­ing miners at Siglo :xx and Ca­tavi, key tin mine centers ofBQIivia.

toCites AidC.u. Dean Criticizes Court Decisions

Not Based on PrinciplesOINCINNATI (NC) - Courts University of San Francisco,

are making bad decisions be- became the association's newcause they pay too much atten- president, after· serving as vicetion to "ideological pres'sure,," president and president-elect forand not enough to "time-hon- the past year.ored principles," a schol~r sug- _ Dr. FitzGerald, whose chiefgested here. study has been the philosophy of

Dr. Jude P. Dougherty, out- man, commented in a'll interviewgoing president of the American that when members of the asso­Catholic Philosophical Associa- ciation turn their attention totion (ACPA), went on to charge political and social questions, "itthat decisions against aid to turns out most of the time thatnonpublic schools are "bu: an their response relates to the na-example." ture of man."

In his presidential addres::: Cit He expressed the convictionthe association's 49t1h annual that "philosophy is in goodmeeting Dr. Dougherty, who is health" and that "Thomism re­dean of the school of philosophy mains the core of Americanat the' CathoHc University of Catholic philosophy."America in Washington, D.C., The new' ACPA president saidsaid: there is no' question as to the

"It is the interpretatiom of·the courts and not the United "relevance" of philosophy in theStates Constitution itself which lives of people. "Members of our

association," he said, "deal withhave resulted in the religiou~- substantive questions relating to.minded being deprived of equal . law, morality, euthanasia, abor-educational opportunity." tion, and so on."

About 250 members of theACPA took part in the meeting(March 31-April 2), whose themewas "Philosophy and Civil Law."

Highlights of the meeting alsoincluded:

Presentation of the associa­tion's Aquinas Medal to Dr. An­ton Pegis, professor at the In­stitute of Medieval Studies, To­ronto, and a former president ofthe ACPA. -

Election of Sister Mary T.Clark, a Religious of the SacredHeart of Jesus, chairman of tht!philosophy department of Mar.­hattanville College, as vice presi·dent and president-elect of theassociation. Sister Clark is thefirst woman to be named to theposition.

Dr. Desmond J. FitzGerald,professor of philosophy at the

ware Co.Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Figuerido,

Mr. & Mrs. George Pinto, Mr. &.Mrs. Joseph L. Tavares

Youth PowerWAS H I N G TON (NC)­

"Church leadership must recog­nize the energy, sincerity andjoy which are typical of youthand apply these assets to thetask of evangelization," said Ra­quel Gonzalez, a youth leaderfrom Uruguay, in an interviewhere. Her job is to win such rec­ognition, she said.

$45John J. KeIly, Jr.Edward & Lucille Roza

$40Rita M. RoseMr. & Mrs. Joseph Duarte, Jr.

$35Mr. & Mrs. George Dutra, Mr.

& Mrs.. Robert Dutra$25

Mr. & Mrs. Laurence E. Car­dinal, Alfred M. Rose, John &Emilie Doucette, Arthur Silva,Anthony Duart'

Austin 1. Rose, Jr., Mrs. Ar­thur .....S. Joseph, George M.Mooney, Mr. & Mrs. Walter Dou­cette, Ernest & Mildred Silva

John & Ruth Thomas, FloraPeters

WellfleetOUR LADY OF LOURDES

$200Rev. Jude F. Morgan, SS.CC.In memory of Rev. Msgr.

Francis P. Connelly, & (Mr. &Mrs.) George & Loretta Morgan

$150Mr. & Mrs. Albert Rose

$100Ernest F. RoseCharles Frazier, Jr.

$75Mr. & Mrs. Lawrence Rose

$50The Downs Insurance Agency,

Inc.

West HarwichHOLY TRINITY

$125Mr. & Mrs. Bemis Boies'

$100Rev William Davis SSCCRaymond' RiouxMrs. Francis Riordan

$60Mr. & Mrs. Alan O'Farrell

$50Mr. & Mrs. Gerald FlintoftRev. Bernard O'Rourke

$40Mrs. Alice CarmainMr. & Mrs. Cornelius Foley

$35Dr. Mrs. William Falla

$30Hester & Margaret Griffin

$25Patricia Bennett, Mr. & Mrs.

Ronald Carron, Grace Chase,Mrs. Joseph Connell, DorothyCollins

Mr. & Mrs. George Cravenho,Mr. & Mrs. William Doherty Jr.,Mr. & Mrs. Donald Geary, Mar­garet Geohegan, Mr. & Mrs John,Gonsalves Jr.

Mary Kinch & Kay Smith, Mr.& Mrs. Louis LaFlamme, Mrs.Adelaide Messenger, Anna Raf­tery, Mr. & Mrs. Charles Reid

Gel'ltrude Rogers, WillJamSheehy, Mrs. Walter 'Tr,ainer

Mr. & MI'$. James CharlesMr. & Mrs. Arthur FrostMr. & Mrs. John J. Donohue

EdgartownST. ELIZABETH

$250Rev. Paul G. ConnoJ.ly

$100In Mtemory of Manuel, Mar­

garet & Mary I. Madeiros$75

Mrs. Corinne Fournier$50

Mr. & Mrs. EHsworth FisherMarion Higgins .Mr. & Mrs. Jesse MorganMrs.· Margaret O'Neil

$35Mr. & Mrs. Herbert· Mercier

Jr.Mr. & Mrs. George T. Silva

$30Mrs. Tess Brown & Patricia

Brown

ST. PATRICK

$100Mr. & Mrs. William BrennanMr. & Mrs. Paul Harney

$90Paul Champagne

$50 .Dr. & Mrs George W. DeMelloJames 1. Lyons "Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth RebelloMr. & Mrs. John CollinsMr. & Mrs Micha'el F. Sullivan

$30Mr. & Mrs. Manuel P. LopesMr. & Mrs. Stephen BazyckiMr. & Mrs. Richard LopesEileen G. DeLangMrs. Gerald DohertyMr. & Mrs. Edward GodlewskiMr. & Mrs. David Peterson

$25'Mrs. Max CohenMr. & Mrs. John FabryMr. & Mrs. Joseph F. MontieMr. & Mrs. James F. Murphy,

Jr.Mrs. J. Arthur PowersMrs. Katherine J. RobbinsMr. & Mrs. Charles C. Russell.or. & Mrs. Norman StarostaHarold C. Wilson

Falmouth

$25Jean BritcherMr. & Mrs. Laurence MercierMrs. Isaac .NortonMr. & MrS'. Albert K. Sylvia

Jr.Mr. & Mrs. Roland Authier,

Mr. & Mrs. Timothy Baird, Mrs.Donald Berube, Mr. & Mrs AlfredDoyle, Mrs. Anna Flynn

Mr. & Mrs. George Goulart,Mr. & Mrs. G. Albert Kent; InMemory of Capt. Joshua W. Mur­phy Jr., Mrs. Philip J. Norton

ST. ANTHONY

$200Rev. Thomas 1. Rita

$100Rev. George E. AmaralMr. & Mrs. Philip F. Tripp

$50Mr. & Mrs. Patrick W. Lewis

$40Arthur Pimental & Albert

SouzaP. S. Fuel Oil Co.

$30Mr. & Mrs. Frederick E. WardMr. & Mrs. Julio Santos

$25Mr. & Mrs. Manuel P. Rose,

Jr., Mr. & Mrs. Myron C. Me­deiros, Jr., Mr. & Mrs. AntoneB. Couto, Jr., Harold 1. BakerCo., Inc.

Mr. & Mrs. David F. Correllus,Lt. Col. & Mrs. W. Joyce, Mr. &Mrs. Joseph Marshall,. Mr. &Mrs. Antone Carreia, Mr. & Mrs.Patrick Bishop,' Teaticket Hard-

Page 9: 05.15.75

The Parish Parade

9THE ANCHOR-Thurs., May 15, 1975

Approves ThemeOf Congress

VATICAN CITY (NC) - TheVatican has announced that PopePaul VI has approved the theme"The Eucharist and the Hungersof the Human Family," proposedfor next year's Eucharistic Con­gress in Philadelphia.

The 41 st Intern!jtional Eucha­ristic Congress, to be held inPhiladelphia Aug. 1-8, 1976, willbe the first to take place in theUnited States since the ChicagoCongress of 1926.

The Pope had already usedthe phrase, "hungers of the hu­man family," in speaking of thecoming eucharistic congress.

"To all the hungers of thehuman family the EucharisticCongress will offer, with confi­dence and loving faith, the only- the perfect - solution: JesusHimself, who said, 'I am thebread of life. He who comes toMe will never be hungry and hewho believes in Me will neverthirst. ' "

The Pope noted that it is im­possible to regain a true and notillusory internal peace throughone's own moral resources.Chr.ist instituted a sacrament forthis purpose, he said, the sacra­ment of Penance "which cangive peace, interior peace."

Pope Paul told the pilgrims:"Innermost peace is the pr,!­

mary authentic happiness. ithelps one to be strong in the faceof adversity. It preserves the no­biHty and liberty of the humanperson under the worst condi­tions in which men may findthemselves. ,

"Moreover, innermost peaceremains the means of salvation,the hope of regaining one's ownrehabilitation, one's own respectand one's own' moral rebirthwhen desperation threatens toovercome one."

Pope StressesInner Peace

VATICAN CITY (NC)-PopePaul VI stressed the need for"interior peace" during threegeneral audiences for differentlanguage ,groups here recently.A total of more than 25,000

. Holy Year pilgrims and visitorsheard him speak.

In one of the audiences healso greeted several groups ofAmericans.

take Rfe 2 west off 495 to Rte 13luMnbutg,Ma·.

OUR LADY OF MT. CARMEL,SEEKONK

The Women's Guild met lastnight in the church center witha social hour following a busi­ness session. Mrs. Donna Mottawas program chairman and re­freshments were served by Mrs.Emma Macedo and Mrs. AngieStanzione.

Also on Saturday, Kr.ights ofthe Altar participating in FirstCommunion ceremonies willpra,ctice at 12:30 p.m.

Filrst Communicants will re­ceive the sacrament at noonMass Sunday, May 18.

May crowning ceremonies willbe held at 7:30 p.m. Monday,May 19.

ST. JOSEPH,

ATTLEBORO

Members of Boy Scout Troop37 will depart at 6 p.m. tomor­row from the parish yard to at­tend a camporee at MansfieldConservation Area, returning at1 p.m. Sunday.

. The Cubs of Pack 37 will meetat 8:30 a.m. Saturday, May 17to clean the church groundsand participate in a kite flyingcontest.

HOLY NAME,FALL RIVER

Parish children will receiveFirs~ Communion at 9 a.m. MassSaturday, May 17.

Also on May 17, a Spring Fes­tival Dance will take place from8 p.m. to midnight ,in the schoolhall, under sponsorship of theparish school board. Music willbe by the New Corporation.

An evening of Marian devo­tion, followed by a Latin cel­ebration of Benediction will takeplace Sunday, May 25.

District Fire Chief Louis A.Shea, Jr., will address the LeisureGrQup at 2 o'clock on Thursday,May 22 in the schaal auditori­um. His topic will be "Emer­gency Medical Care" and t1}enew type ambulance will be ondisplay and explained by thespeaker.

A coffee hour will concludethe final meeting of the year.

The Parish Parade

NEW SIGN: From left, Holy Union Sisters EvelynBlanchette, Virginia Sampson and Frances Dwyer ofSacred Hearts Academy, Fall River, show new insignia wornby members of their community throughout world. Designedby a Belgian liturgical artist, the simple crosses bear theinscription "Sancta Unio," Latin for Holy Union, chosenbecau~e the universal tongue of Latin is appropriate for aninternational sisterhood. Sisters also have smaller lapelpins of same design. The crosses were conferred on religiousat special prayer services held in each Holy Union convent.

NOTRE DAME,FALL RIVER

New officers of the Councilof Catholic Women will be in­stalled at a communion break­fast ,in Jesus-Mary auditoriumfollowing 9 a.m. Mass Sunday,May 18. They include Mrs. Jo­seph Springer, president; Mrs.Claudebte Richard,' first vice­president; Miss Connie Perry,second vice-president; Mrs. Jo­seph Moquin and Mrs. Joseph,Gagnon, secretaries; and Mrs.Gerard Roussel, treasurer.

Mrs. Gerard Dextraze is chair­man for the breakfast.

ST. FRANCIS XAVIER,HYANNIS

The Children's Choir will pre- .sent a bicentennial family fash­ion show "Fashions 76," at 2p.m. Sunday, May 18 in thePrincess Ballroom of the Sher­aton-Regal Inn on Route 132,Hyannis. Styles for adults, boys,girls and tots will be shown,with many choir members amongthe models. Prizes will includeclothing gift certificates andawards of mirrors, supermarkp.titems and a restaurant dinnerfor two. Commentary will be by

. television personality Julie Dane.Tickets are now available and

proceeds will aid in the purchaseof robes for choir members.

ST. LOUIS DE FRANCE,SWANSEA

Ladies of 'St. Anne will holdMay devotions at 7:30 p.m.Wednesday, May 21 in 'thechurch, followed by installationof new offi.cers, including Mrs.Mary Sawejko, vice-presidentand Mrs. Lor.etta Messier,treasurer. A meeting will thentake place in the church hall,highlighted by a lecture, "The­atrical Pot Pourri," by· John J.McAvoy of Fall River.

ST. THERESA,NEW BEDFORD

A May Basket Whist will beheld in the -church hall at 2693Acushnet Ave. at 7::30 p.m.Wednesday, May 28. Refresh­ments will be served.

Tickets will be available atthe door, announces Gerald A.Despres, chairman.

ST. STANISLAUS,FALL RIVER

A flea market will take placein the schoolyard from noon to6 p.m. Sunday, May 25. Polishand American food will be avail­able. Those having donations of.arts and crafts items, furniture,antiques or other articles maycall Walter Wi9l1iewski, tele­phone 679-6130, to make pick-uparrangements, or may leave con­tributions at the rectory orschool.

The Men's Club will meet at7 p.m. Sunday, May 18 in theschool.

A seminar is planned for 7:30p.m. Wednesday, May 21, alsoin the school. Dr. Barry Stein­berg w.ill dis,cuss emergencylifesaving methods.

The Men's Club will sponsora bicentennial show featuringthe Rays of Sunshine at 8:15p.m. Saturday, June 14. Ticketsare now available.

ST. PAUL,TAUNTON

The annual ,Installation Massfor the Women's Guild tookplaee last night, followed by ,Ldinner in the church hall towhich all women of the parishwere invited. Lorraine Place andRosalie Connors were co-chair­men for the evening.

OUR LADY OF LOURDES,TAUNTON

The parish Holy Ghost Sccietywill celebrate the annual HolvGhost feast Saturday and Su;­day, June 7 and 8, on the churchgrounds on First Street. A "pro­cession of offerings" at 7 p.m.Saturday night will begin theprogram. It will be followed bya Battle of Music between theTaunton City Band and Debe'sOrchestra. Booths and gameswill be open and Portuguese andAmerican refreshments will beserved until 11 p.m.

Sunday's schedule' will beginat 1 p.m. with a procession fromthe church, aftet which an auc­tion and band concert wi!! hefeaturcd until 10 p.m. Proce~(1..

:)f the two-day event will bcr.efitthe parish. Those at'tending maybring lawn chairs, and in caseof rain the feast will be heldin the parish school auditorium.

OUR LADY OF THE ISLE,NANTUCKET

The parish council will hosta farewell reception for Rev.William T. Babbitt 6n Sunday,May 25 at Legion Hall. All pa­rishioners and other friends ofFather Babbitt are invited toattend.

Publicity chairmen of oarish organizationsare asked to submit news items for thiscolumn to The Anchor, P. O. Box 7, FallRiver, 02722. Name of city or town shouldbe included, as well as full dates of all~ctivities. Please send news of future ratherthan past events.

ST. DOMINIC,SWANSEA

The Men's Club will hold aparish dance from 8 to midnightSaturday night, May 31. Portu­guese and American foods willbe available and a "basket ofcheer and cheese" will be raf­fled, with chances available nowfrom any cluo member ur at therectory. Tickets to the danceare also:lVaiJable.

Door priz~s will be awardedin addition to the raffle basketand music will be by the Imports.HOLY REDEEMER,CHATHAM

Rev. Leo P. O'Keefe, S.J., pro­fessor of theology at BostonCollege, will speak at a familycommunion breakfast at theWayside Inn on Main Street,planned by the Association ofthe Sacred Hearts to follow 9:30a.m. Mass Sunday, May 18.

The speaker, a former chap­lain in the U.·S. Air Force, anda retreat master and lecturerwidely known in the New En­gland area, has been on' theBoston College faculty since1960.

Miss Elizabeth I. Norton ischairman for the breakfast.

In other activities, the asso­ciation presented $1000 to HolyRedeemer to mark the parish's20th anniversary. The gift wasmade at t-he annual parish din­ner by Anne Raleigh McCarthy,association president.

OUR LADY OF ANGELS,FALL RIVER

The Council of Catholic Womenis sponsoring a cake sale at allMasses this weekend. A similarsale the weekend of May 31 and

,June 1 will benefit parish altarboys.

Holy Rosary Sodalists willhold a breakfast meeting follow­ing 8 a.m. Mass Sunday, May 25.

The annual blessing of autoswill take place ,at 1 p.m. Sunday,June 1 in the church parking lot.

The feast of Espirito Santowill be celebrated the weekendof June 6.

The summer schedule ofMasses will begin Sunday, June8, continuing through Sunday,Aug. 31. Saturday MaSSes willbe at 4 and 5:15 p.m. and Sun­day Masses will be celebr'atedon .the hour from 7 a.m. throughnoon. There will be no 5 p.m.Sunday Mass.

ST. WILLIAM,FALL RIVER

A card party will take placeat 1:30 p.m. Sunday, May 18 inthe parish center on StaffordRoad. Hostesses will be Mrs.Raymond Dooley and Mrs. Wil­liam O'Neil, and the event willbe sponsored by the Women'sGuild.

The org.anization's installationbanquet will be held .at OakManor at 7 p.m. Monday, June 2.Members may bring guests. Thefeatured speaker will be Anchorcolumnist Mrs. Marilyn Roder­ick. In charge of arrangementsare Mrs. Raymond Gagnon andMrs. John Frain.

ST. JOSEPH,NEW BEDFORD

The Pilgrim Virgin statue willbe at St. Joseph Church throughSaturday, May 17, and specialdevotions are being held eachevening following 7 p.m. Mass.

Page 10: 05.15.75

679-5262

Mr. & Mrs. Edeard J. McGrath,Mr. & Mrs. Edward J. McGrath,Mr. & Mrs. William O'ReiHy,Mary J. Moriarty

Mr. & Mrs. Norbert Parent,Mr. & Mrs. Daniel J. Healy,Mr. & Mrs. George F. Milligan,Mrs. Florence Hatch, RichardMcCormack

Mr. & Mrs. Alpha Lagacy, Mr.& Mrs. Thomas Eaton, MargaretD. Grimes, Mr. & Mrs. RaymondL. McCrane, Mr. & Mrs. EdwardStreile

Mr. & Mrs. John McKenney,Mr. & Mrs. Frederick Robinson,Mrs. Mary Mitchell, Mr. & Mrs.Lawrence McGrath, Mary L.Doppman

Mr. & Mrs. Thomils Hannan,Mr. & Mrs. John Manwar,ing,Mr. & Mrs. William T. Smith,Mr. & Mrs. Richard T. O'Neill,Mr. & Mrs. Cad A. Baker,:

Mary E. McDonough, Mr. &Mrs. William Erisman, Mr. &Mrs. Charles R. Carney, Mr. &Mrs. P.aul V. Traverse, Mr. &Mrs. James L. McGeary,

Mr. & Mrs. James F. Feeney,Mr. & ·Mrs. John J. Carroll, Mr.& Mrs. Arthur J. Gorman, AnnaG. Tighe, Margaret H. Padden

Montie Plumbing &Heating Co.Over 35 Years

of Satisfied ServiceReg. Master Plumber 7023

JOSEPH QAP05A, JR.432 JEFFERSON STREET

Fall River 675-7496

PRINTINGSINCE 1898

MAILINGSINCE 1941

'WEB OFFSETSINCE 1967

$125Mr. & Mrs. Martin GeraghtyMr. & Mrs. Donald Thompson

$100Mr. & Mrs. John G. DohertyMr. & Mrs. David L. HautanenMrs. Malcolm SlayterJoseph TuscherMr. & Mrs. William J. O'BrienMr. & Mrs. Edward F. O'NeilJames W. KellyVirginia B. Mitchell

$75Mr. & Mrs. Raymond LuddEmMr. & Mrs. Francis Conroy

$50Clarence F. KingMr. & Mrs. Arthur BeattyRita Swenson _Mr. & Mrs. Joseph D. EversMrs. Louise LawlerJoseph P. StaniunasMr. & Mrs. Elliott V. MartinPhilip J. Hart

$40Mr. & Mrs. John M. OstermanHarry J. DohertyHenry J. Healy

$35Mr. & Mrs. George WefersMr. & Mrs. Douglas DonovanAlice G. Thorn

$30Mr. & Mrs. Maurice A. LynchMr. & Mrs. Thomas J. WalshThe Lanigan's

$25Helen A. O'Connell, Mr. &

Mrs. Joseph H. Jasper, Mrs.Dorothy Schoonmaker, Mr. &Mrs. Joseph P. Norton, Cather­ine M. Walsh

Mr. & Mrs. Francis P. Tiche,Mr. & Mrs. James B. Coffey, Mr.& Mrs. Vincent Roberts, Mr. &Mrs. Chester Wheeler, John J.Gill

Barbara Sullivan, Mr. & Mrs.John Sullivan, Mr. & Mrs. Wil­Ham Robinson, Mr. & Mrs.Charles H. Knox, Esther M.Turnbull

Mr. & Mrs. Peter McMamara,Mr. & Mrs. Frank Toner, Dr. &Mrs. Wm. Johnson, Mr. & Mrs.Paul St. Onge, Mr. & Mrs. An­thony Martino

Gertrude F. Whelan, Mrs.Lawrence P. Sullivan, Mr. &Mrs. Paul Gregory, Ann Conley,Maj. Ret. Mgt. J, Conley

Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Aanastasia,

Woods' Hol~ST. JOSEPH

$175Dr. & Mrs. Donald Delinks

$100Francis FeworeKenneth Battles

$50Ra1ph HuntDaniel F. O'GradyRev. Joseph F. Wiseman, C.Sc.

$35St. Joseph's Women's Guild

$30Chester Harris Jr.

$25John Valois, Ruth Pyne,

Ralph Pellegrini, Henry Dion,Robert Noonan

Mrs. Robert Leonard, JudithLeonard, Robert Klein

pr. & Mrs. E. Arthur Robinson

$150Mrs. Dean Swift

$50Leonard MartmFrancis A. CoutinhoBeatrice Phillips

$40Mr. & Mrs. Francis Metell Sr,

$35Mr. & Mrs. William Figueiredo

$30Mrs. Laura S. Sherwood

$25Cdr. & Mrs. Daniel F. BurgoMr. & Mrs. Marshall CookMr. & Mrs. Ernest DuarteMr. & Mrs. Francis DuartMrs. James T. HughesMr. & Mrs. Bradford Sylvia

South YarmouthST. PIUS TENTH

$500Rev. Msgr" Christopher L.

Broderick$150

Mr. & Mrs. James S. McGon­agle

AWARDING OF ST. GEORGE MEDAL: Bishop Cronin bestows the St. George Medalof Scouting on Michael Ramos of Our Lady of the Assumption Parish, New Bedfordfollowing the Mass on Friday night in St. John the Baptist Church, New Bedford atwhich the Ordinary of the Diocese was principal concelebrant and homilist.·

Vineyard HavenST. AUGUSTINE

$250Rev. Paul G. Connolly

$200In Memory of deceased relo­

tives, by Ernest Swartz & LauraBunker

Th~ second amendment theCSCC advocated would open allprior collective bargaining con­tracts to decertification proce­dures if this be the desire of theworkers.

Governor Brown, concemed leg­islators and w~th the parties di­rectly involved. Confer,encespokesmen have already testi­fied in support of the .amendedbilL

The Conference pushed fortwo amendments in particular.The first would allow for only·industrial coUective bargainingunits in agrkulture. The Cali­fornia bishops feel that if allfarm workers are to be afforded·the fullest employment oppor­tunities, there should not be anycraft units established on Cali­fornia farms and ranches. Theupward employment mobility ofthe seasonal farm workers mustbe_ protected and encouraged.History has demonstrated thatany type of craft designation ona farm leads to the da'nger ofjob discrimination. The bishopswant that danger eliminated.by adapting the language of thebill to allow for only industrialunits in agriculture. Presumablythis matter has been taken careof. by an appropriate amend­ment to the original bill.

Supports Bishops

The amended Brown bill issimilar to the National LaborRelations Act, modified to re­flect problems unique to agricul­ture. It provides for certificationof a union only through secre.tballot. elections. Petitions forunion certification elections maybe filed only when the employ­ers' work force reflects at least50 per cent of peak seasonal .employment. The bill providesfor a union certification electionwithin 48 hours if a majority ofpetitioning workers are on strike.Otherwise, the election wouldhave to be held within sevendays. It also permits consumerboycotts but restricts the use ofsecondary boycotts in certain re­spects. In addition, it requiresgood faith bargaining by bothmanagement and labor, and pro­hibits unfair labor practices. Theprovisions of the bill would beadministered by a five-memberboard to be appointed by theGovernor.

I think the amendments advo­cated by the CSCC and otherchanges in the orig,inal bill rec­ommended by the United FarmWorkers and the California StateFederation of Labor are entirelyreasonable. For this reason, Istrongly support the positiontaken by the California bishopsin favor of the bill. If adopted,it will not completely satisfyany or all of the parties involvedin the farm labor dispute. In my

'()pinion, however, it representsa constructive step in the rightdirection and one which, as Ron­ald Taylor' emphasizes in hisnew book, is long overdue-ahalf century overdue.

Iy

MSGR.

GEORGE G.

HIGGINS

Reasonable Bill

Two or three years ago, Tay-·lor's advocacy of farm ·laborlegislation might have soundedJike wishful thinking on his part,for at that time there was littleor no reason to believe that theenactment of such legislationwas in the cards. But now it issafe to predict that the Califor­nia legislature will enact a rea­sonably satisfactory bill withina matter of weeks.

Of the several bills pendingbefore the legislature, the onethal Governor Edmund (Jerry)Brown is personally sponsoringand promoting seems to havethe best chance of being adopted.In the original draft of the Gov­ernor's bill there were certainweaknesses and ambiguitieswhich were pointed out by theUnited Farm Workers, the Cali­fornia State Federation of Laborand the CalifoI"nia State Cath­olic Conference (CSCC).

The bill has since beenamended, however, and may besubject to further changes incommittee. Once the dust is set­tled, the _amended Br,own billwill probably carry the day, witha strong assist from the CSCC.Representativ.es of ~he Confer­ence have met recently with

In my April 21 release of this column, I strongly rec­ommended Ronald B. Taylor's new book, "Chaver andthe Farm Workers," as the best available study of theCalifornia farm labor dispute. In doing so, I inadvertentlyjumped the gun. Taylor'sbook (I had read advancegalley proofs some weeksago) was not yet availablefor purchase in bookstores. Butby .the time this column appears,copies will be in circulation. Ifyour local bookstore does not:

10 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thur., May IS, 1975

Farm Workers LegislationIs Half Century Overdue

have it, you may order it fromBeacon Press, 25 Beacon St.,Boston, Mass. 02108. The listprice is $10. Again 1 recommendit as r.equired reading for any­one who is seriously interestedin sorting out the pros and consof the farm labor dispute.

Mr. Taylor, an experienccdCalifornia reporter who has beencovering the farm labor prob­lems for many years, points outat the end of his book that wehave reached a turning point inthe history of .the farm labormovement. He says that the time-has come for aU concerned tomake farm labor legislation theirtop priority. "It is time," he in­sists, "the Liberals in the Stateand federal legislatures stoptalking about migrants as theforgotten people and start pass­ing laws that will truly helpthese seasonal workers .. , With­out law protecting the workers'right to strike and 'boycott, thegrowers will continue to dom­inate the paW-::lr strugg:·~."

Page 11: 05.15.75

"

The Fall Riverlrust brings you

Satul1lay'~ITU[koITU~JWITH A DIFFERENCE

SCOUTING AWARD RECIPIENTS: Recipients of the Pelican Award, Donald Cousi­neau of Immaculate Conception Parish, Fall River and Mrs. Carolyne Corliss of SacredHeart Parish, Taunton admire the St. George Medal bestowed on James Daughters of St.Patrick's Parish, Somerset.

, All TEN bankswill be open

with full service

BrewsterOUR LADY OF THE CAPE

$100John D. Sheehan, M. D.

$75Margaret Rasmusen

$50Annette HailerWilliam Taylor

$35Paul Sullivan

$30Henry A. CallahanMargare!. DickeyMargaret WelchFred WelchRoy Kendal

$25Louis Carrier, Raymond Car­

rier, H. A. Graneli, Hugh Sul­livan, Felix Julian

James R. Julian, Roy Smith Jr.James McNamara, ElizabethCaldwell, Mary Neal, WilliamKenney, Thomas Croke

Edward J. Souza$30

Lillian J" SenteioMr. & Mrs. J. Craig MedeiroS'Dr. &. Mrs. James F. Dunne,

Mrs. Roger E. Brown, Mrs. Flor­ence 1. Lysault, Mr. & Mrs. LouisSantos, Mr. & Mrs. Adolphe O.Richards

Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Gelinas, Mr.& Mrs. Charles A. Coyle, Mr. &Mrs. William F. Mullane, Mr. &Mrs. Theodore Holmes, ArthurPoirier

$25Mr. & Mrs. H. William Geick,

Mrs. Ellen McVay, Mr. & Mrs.Avelino J. Dutra, Mr. & MrsEdward Kelly, Mr. & Mrs. Ru­dolph J. Grenache

Elizabeth Walsh, Cecelia M.Haskins, Mr. & Mrs. Arthur W.Snow, Mr. & Mrs. Bernard Aik­ens, Mr. & Mrs. E. Thomas Mur­phy

Mr. & Mrs. Timothy F. Lin­ehan, Mr. & Mrs. Joseph F.McManus, Joseph Kelly

THE ANCHOR- 11Thurs., May 15, 1975

10 CONVENIENT BANKS LOCATED IN • FALL RIVER. SOMERSET. SWANSEA. WESTPORT. ASSONET

MEMBER. Federal DepOSit Insurance Corporation. Federal Re,l:'rve 'SY~lem

Fall RiverTrust Co.

All TEN bankswill be open

from 9a.m.to 4p.m.

$40& Mrs. Daniel Francisco

$35& Mrs. Thomas C. Mc-

Mr.

Mr.Garry

HyannisST. FRANCIS XAVIER

$100John F.' Vetorino

$50Peggy MoranMr. & Mrs. Edward J. KelleyDr. K. LelandMr. & Mrs. Edward J. Ruther­

ford

Offers AidNEW YORK (NC) - Catholic

Relief Services, the overseas reo!i.ef agency of American Catho­lics, has reconfirmed its offerof assistance to the new govern­ment of South Vietnam. CRS reo,opened negotiations with thatgovernment through the CRS of­fices in Geneva, headed by JeanChenard.

Macoratti, Mr. & Mrs. Lino Mai­olini

Katherine Maley, Rose Maley,Mr. & Mrs. John A. McArdle,Francis B. McConn, Mr. & Mrs.John F:' McHugh

Virginia McLaughlin, Mr. &Mrs. Frank C. Miller, Mr. &Mrs. George Mooney, Mrs. R.Sherman Morgan, Mr. & Mrs.Americo MuIa

Mr. & Mrs. Frank Murphy,Mr. & Mrs. George Murray, Mr.& Mrs. Ronald Nurse, Mr. &Mrs. Francis C. O'Brien, Mrs.Edward O'Brien

Mr. & Mrs. Richard J. O'Brien,Mr. & Mrs. Paul O'Connell, Mr.& Mrs. Samuel O'Gorman, Mr. &Mrs. Arthur Pagani, Mr. & Mrs.Louis Papi

Edward Parent, Jr., Mrs. Wil­liam Parks, Mr. & Mrs. ColumboPasteris, Mr. & Mrs. Robert Pel­letier, Mr. & Mrs. Donafd Phl"l­brick

Leon Pizzotti, Mr. & Mrs. Rob·ert Quinn, Mrs. Chester Rich,Mr. & Mrs. J. Louis Roberti,Mr. & Mrs. Edward Rondelli

Mr. & Mrs. John H. Williams,Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Roque, Mr.& Mrs. John Sawyer, Mrs. JohnScanlon, Mrs. Francis J. Silva

Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Sorenti,Mr. & Mrs. John Sullivan &Jean, Mr. & Mrs. James Sutton,Mr. & Mrs. Tello Tontoni, Mr.& Mrs. Rodney Valentini.

Mr. & Mrs. William Water­house, Mr. & Mrs. Robert D.Wentworth, Mr. & Mrs. MauriceF. White

Mr. & Mrs. Edward A. Eppich,Mr. & Mrs. James P. Harrington,Grace Morrill

Mr. & Mrs. John W. SmRhMr. & Mrs. Gerald A. Tobin

$25Chief & Mrs. Ferdinand AI-.

vezi, Mrs. James R. Barber, Mr.& Mrs. William Bettley, Mrs.Antonio Bianchi, KatherineBizby

Mr. & Mrs. Douglas Bromley,Bryden Insurance Agency, Mr.& Mrs. Robert Oahoon, Mr. &Mrs. Howard J. Carlson, Mr. &Mrs. George S. Cary

Mr. & Mr~. George Chapman,Eleanor H. Cleare, Mr. & Mrs.Francis Conway, David Consoni,Mrs. Sophia Cook

Mr. & Mrs. Robert Corradi,Mr. & Mrs. George V. Cox, Mr.& Mrs. Thomas Cox, Mr. & Mrs.Raymond H. L. Crocker, William& Miriam Crowley

Mr. & Mrs. Pietro Cugno, Mr.& Mrs. Claude DaCosta,' Mr. &Mrs. Angelo Danti, Mr. & Mrs.Richard Donnellan, Mr. & Mrs.Raymond Doucette .

Joseph Dvorski & Mrs. John .Chimes, Mr. & Mrs. William K.Earle, Mr. & Mrs. Robert Fer­rick, Mrs. Lawrence Fitzgerald,Mrs. Earl Flinker

Alexander Forni, Mrs. EdwardFrancis, Mr. & Mrs. Francis Gal­lagher, Mr. & Mrs. Lou Gallerani,Mr. & Mrs. Milton Garvin

Mr. & Mrs. Justin George, Mr.& Mrs. Louis F. Giampietro, Rob­ert Gianferante, Mr. & Mrs. JohnGibbons, Mr. & Mrs. AmedioGonella

Mrs. Albert Govoni, Mrs, RayGranger, Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Gra­zulis, Mr. & Mrs. Charles R.Griffin, Bar-bara Hadley

Mr. & Mrs James Hamlen, Mr.& Mrs. Anthony Harrison.. Mr. &Mrs. Walter Hilliard, Mr. & Mrs.Rudolph Howes, Mr. & Mrs. Da­vid Kann

Mr. & Mrs. Edward Keohan,Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Kudera, Mrs.Marie F. Lastih, Mr. & Mrs. Rich­ard Latimer, Mr. & Mrs. HenryT. Lawrence

Paul E. Lewis, Mrs. John T.Liberty, Mr. & Mrs. A.' JohnMacquade.. Mr. & Mrs. Gino

CORPUS CHRISTI

$400Rev. William F. Morriss

$300Mr. & Mrs. William Shea

$250Mr. & Mrs. E. L. Maleady

$150Mr. & Mrs. John HigbyMr. & Mrs. John JorceMacDonald's Sandwich Hard·

wareDr. & Mrs. Leo Monaghan

'$125Mr. & Mrs. Fred O. E'arlc

$100Rev. Denis Sughrue, C.S.C.Mr. & Mrs. Peter Cooke IIIMr. & Mrs. John ClintonDr. & Mrs. Richard CoteMr. & Mrs. Leo DiotaleviWilliam DoranThe Misses Dorothy & Mary

GallantMr. & Mrs. Dante GalleraniMr. & Mrs. Herbert A. HamlenMr. & Mrs. Leo KellyMr. & Mrs. Walter K. LynchMr. & Mrs. Richard MannionMr. & Mrs. John McDonaldMr. & Mrs. James MilitelloMr. & Mrs. Herbert A. Dam,

Sr.$75

Mr. & Mrs. George CampbellMr. & Mrs. Michael McNamara

$65Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Jacinto

$60Mr. & Mrs. J. F. SullivanHenry Werner

$50Agnes BixbyMr. & Mrs. John BernardMrs. James BazzinottiLt. Col. & Mrs. Charles Brower

IIIWilfred BurbineMr. & Mrs. Edgar CaronMr. & Mrs. Alex ConsoniMr. & Mrs. William CraneMr. & Mrs. Robert CrowleyMr. & Mrs. Walter Fagnant,Mr. & Mrs. George FernandesMr. & Mrs. Frank KohnMrs. James MahoneyCol. & Mrs. Walter McConeMr. & Mrs. Thomas MilroyMr. & Mrs. Mark MooneyMr. & Mrs. Ernest OlsonGeorge & Mary OrtalaniMr. & Mrs. Leonard SaveryFrances SilvaMr. & Mrs. William WardMr. & Mrs. John WilsonMr. & Mrs. John Bulla

_$40Mr. & Mrs. John MendonzaMr. & Mrs. William F. O'NeilMr. & Mrs. Eral RichMr. & Mrs. Harold Shurtleff

$35

Mr. & Mrs. Joseph O. EarleMr. & Mrs. Ralph DeCubellisMr. & Mrs. William F.

O'ConnellMr. & Mrs. Antonio RigazioMrs. Charles Whitmore &

FamilyMr. & Mrs. John RossMr. & Mrs. James P. Walsh

$33James Q. Clemmey

$30 .Mr. & Mrs. Walter AlveziLaurence BalboniMr. & Mrs. Joseph BaltusisMr. & Mrs. Bernard DiPietroRenato FerraioliMr. & Mrs. Frank FlemingMr. & Mrs. William Margan-

ellaMr. & Mrs. James MegleyMr. & Mrs. Joseph MillikenMr. & Mrs. Charles ParksMr. & Mrs. Luigi PasqualeMr. & Mrs. Edward PooreMrs. Charles Russell

Sandwich

Page 12: 05.15.75

12 THE ANCHOR.:..Diocese of Fall River-Thur., May 15, 1975

ProvincetownST. PETER

$400In Memory of Rev. Msgr. Leo

J. Duart$150

Benson & Young Ins. Agency$125

In Memory of Rev. Msgr. LeoJ. Duart .

$100'Blessing of the Fleet

$50James E. BurkeCharles & Elizabeth DeRiggs

$30Mrs. John B. Ferreira

$25Adam's Pharmacy, Cape Cod

Oil Co., Mr. & Mrs. WarrenCosta, Margaret Cunningham

Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Francisin Memory of Selina S. Cross

Mrs. Daniel Hiebert, DorothyLinskey, Margaret Roberts, Mr.& Mrs. Francis Silva, WarrenSilva

Arnold's Inc., Mr. & Mrs. Ed­mund Dalpe, Mr. & Mrs. HowardDays, Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth Ma­cara, Mary Rowe

Mr. & Mrs. Emmanuel Souza

our product ...is our pride!

Food isService

32 Stores in Southeastern Massachusetts

OPEN DAILY 8 a.m.• 9 p.m.

MONDAY thru SATURDAY

PocassetST. JOHN THE EVANGELIST

$50Mr. & Mrs. Robert HurleyMr. & Mrs. Otto P. BeckerMr. & Mrs. Lawrence Perrault

Sr.

There's a lotto like about Fernandes Super Markets

Serviced Fish and Deli, Serviced In. store Bake Shops,

Luncheonettes, Convenient Customer Rest Rooms. Try us ...

You'll like us, too!

$30

Joseph WhalenIn Memory of Francis C. Ma­

honeyMr. & Mrs. Antho~y Fortucci

$25

Grayce R. Felmann, Mr. &Mrs. Joseph Dauphin, Mr. &Mr. ,John Burns, Mrs. MichaelFitzgerald, Lucille T. O'Neil

Mr. & Mrs.' Robert Horsman,Mr. & Mrs. Russell Burns, Vin­cent Weismann, Angelo J. 01­

. Modica, Richard Hopwood

Mrs. William McLaughlin, Mr.& Mrs. Fred Comings, Mr. &Mrs. Robert Kennedy, CharlesB. Henry

Mr. & Mrs G. Stanley JohnsonMr.. & Mrs. George Hendkus

Mr. & Mrs. Stephen Bertrand

Buzzards BayST. MARGARET

$50Mr. & Mrs. Edwin PaytonBetty DohertyMr. & Mrs. Julie Roderick~ertha M. Lawson

$35Mary M. McDevittCatherine E. Morrison

$30Mr. & Mrs. Victor E. Lind­

blomMr. & Mrs. James Lopes _

$28In Memory of James J. Ta·

magini$25

In Memory of Mr. & Mrs. E.DeSanctis, Katherine Degan,Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Labrette, Mr:& Mrs. Gerald F. Hough, Mr. &Mrs. Peter Andrews

Mr. & Mrs. Bernard C. Burns,Mr. & Mrs. Raymond Fitzgerald,Mr. & Mrs. Henry C. Nickerson,Mrs. George H. Gibson, OliverGarneau, George Vogel

Ida Monterio, Margaret F. San­ford,_Mr. & Mrs. William P. Gel­son, Mr. & Mrs. Paul A. M. Hunt,Mr. & Mrs. Charles Loonie

Mr. & Mrs. Tony Vieira, Mr. &Mrs Gordon Landry, Mrs. FrancisV. Lips, Mrs. Mary Matthews,Katherine Fernandes

John J. Bartley, Mr. & Mrs.'Peter Duffy, In Memory of James& Rose 'Chantre

SACRED HEART

$75Mr. & Mrs. William D. Norton

$25Mr. & Mrs. James Rego Jr.Karpet CareMr. & Mrs. Herbert MetellMr. & Mrs. Roonuald MaherMrs. Allart HarrisonDr. & Mrs. William Wilcox

1lllllllUIlIUlIJllltllllllllllltmmmmnlllllllllllllllll1,nlllllllllllllllll1I11111'IIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIII1l

ECUMENICAL PHASE IN AWARDS: Alex Manson, Jr., St. Mark's .Episcopal Church,Foxboro, Pelican Award; Mrs. Bernatd Burns, St. Margaret's, Buzzards Bay, St. AnneAward; Mrs. Rollene Ridlon, St. John the Evangelist, Attleboro, St. George Award; andMrs. Adeline Alves of Our Lady of the Assumption, New Bedford, St. Anne Award,gather following Friday night's ceremonies.

specIal preparation, but whowishes to make a study whichwill give him a grasp of whatthe Bible is and what it contains,should welcome this work. Hewill find it ideal for his purpose.

Oak Bluffs

what you have. It's what youlive by. I don't like it parcelledout and fooled with."

The gross materialism, greed"and cruelty of people who pridethemselves on being cultiva'tedand sensitive are pilloried in thisbook. It can be very funny, butthe single theme does not per­mit of enough variations to holdone's interest (and by .that Idon't mean increment on money.)

" Brother FrancisWhat a relief to turn from such

unpleasantness to the refresh­ment offered by "Brother Fran­cis," edited by Lawrence Cun­ningham (Our Sunday Visitor,Noll . 'Plaza, Huntington, Ind.46750. 223 pages. $1.25 paper­back).

Mr. Cunningham has broughttogether writings by and aboutSt. Francis of Assisi, with a viewto showing Francis' relevance toOUi own times, arid yet he is fre­quently misunderstood.

. Now, for example, he is' re­garded as a kind of forerunerand patron of the hippies. As Mr.Cunningham points out, there aresome resembJ.ances. But ,thereare also radical differences.

Francis' importance for ourage, says Mr. Cunningham, "isto be found in his' seriousness."He was "totally dedicated, un­bending, searching for the ulti­mate meaning of love and ser­vice, a God-haunted man whogave up all to obtain aiL" Mr.Cunningham goes on to estab­!'ish the pertinence of this seri­ousness to the people of our era.

The splendid anthology whichMr. Cunningham has ,assembledis divided into six sections: In­terpretations of St. Francis; St.Francis and Nature; Francis onPoverty and Solitude; Francisand Women; Francis the Mystic;the Prayers of St. Francis.

'fhe Little Flowers of St. Fran­cis ore represented here by many .

. excerpts. There is a selection ofhis letters. The modern writersincluded are, among others,Chesterton, Paul Sabatier, Rob­ert Payne, Nikos Kazantzakis,and Johannes Joergensen.

Refreshment, delight, and val­uable instruction await the read­er who· picks up this fine book.

Three VolumesNow available in paperback

are the three voluesof "Key tothe Bible" by the Irish Dominicanscholar Wilfrid J. Harrington.This edition, published by AlbaBooks, 2187 Victory Blvd.,Staten Iseland, N. Y. 10314. com­prises "Record of Revelation"(186 pages. $1.45), which treatsof the origins, forms, inspiration,and interpretation of the B'ibleand provides a synopsis of the.sacred history presented by theOld and New Testaments; "Rec­ord of the Promise'" (189 pages.$1.65), which deals with the OldTestament, over-all and book 'bybook; and "Record of the Ful­fillment" (206 pages. $1.75), de­voted to the New Testament,over-all and book by book.

The reader who lacks any

'By

RT. REV.

MSGR.

JOHN S.

KENNEDY

There are three principal characters in Tove Jansson'swork of fiction "The Summer Book" (Pantheon Books. 201E. 50th St., New York, N.Y. 10022. 166 pages. $6.95): a childnamed Sophia, her grandmother, and her father. The fatheris mentioned last because, asfar as I recall, he never saysa word. But Sophia and hergrandmother more thanmake up for that.

The scene is an isl,and in theGulf of Finland. The trio cometo it in the spring, stay there

throughout the summer, andleave as the autumn cold arrives.How they spend that interval isthe subject of the book.

The grandmother is 85, andbeginning to feel all of that. Butshe is still a good companion toSophia. She tries to answer thechild's endless questions, toshare her roaming a!1d her fan­tasies, to deal with her moods.Theirs is a loving relationship,but Sophi'a can become impa­tient, and sometimes quarrelswith her grandmother..

The old lady seeks to impartsome of the wisdom she' hac;gleaned in a long life, but th,is13 generally received with doubtand even derision. The chHd willhave to learn for herself throughthe chastening of the years.

Their conversations are bothcomic 'and moving. But a cutesyelement keeps creeping in, espe­cially When religious matters arebeing discussed. Sophia's occa­sional profanity is annoying be­cause it seems to be a deliberatedevice on the author's part.

This reder, at least, had hadmore than enough of the pairbefore reaching -the end of thebook. But what was impressiveand enjoyable was the ,descrip­tion of the island and the way oflife there.

A Small HotelAn entirely different setting

and style of living is found inChristina Stead's novel "The Lit­tle Hotel'; (Holt, Rinehard andWinston, 383 Madison Ave.,New York, N. Y. 10017. 191pages. $6.95.

The setting is Lausanne inSwitzerland. The little hotel ofthe title is the Swiss-Touring, asmall establishment far down onthe luxury scale. Its proprietorsare Roger Bonnard and his wife,'and Mme. Bonnard is the narra­tor. The characters are theguests and the servants.

Most of the guests are foreign,chiefly English. They are peopleof means who spend the off-sea­son at the Swiss-Touring in orderto save money. They are meanwhere money is concerned, and,for the most part, mean in theirdea!'ings with one another.

Their talk is chiefly of money.One of them say~, "Mon~y is

Reviews 'Novels, Bible Key,

'St. Francis Anthology

Page 13: 05.15.75

Visiting Blessed SacramentMight Even Be Relevant

..

-

....24-Hour Burner Service

North AttleboroST. MARY

$250Fl'ances Morse

$150Mr. & Mrs. John Donley

$50Mr. & Mrs. James Rhilinger

"$35Mr. & Mrs. August Funke

$25Mr. & Mrs. Fred Butterworth,Rita DunhamMr. & Mrs. Henry DuprasMr. & Mrs. Thomas FeeneyAnthony Nadeem

$34Edward Duclos

$30Mr. & Mrs. Rodolphe Bruneau_Mr. & Mrs. Joseph CotterMr. & Mrs. Gerald KeaneMr. & Mrs. Ernest MajorRobert WhitakerMr. & Mrs. Elmer Butler

$25Mr. & Mrs. Michael Arata,

Marie Arundel, Mr. & Mrs. Hec­tor Benoit, Marguerite Bilodeau,Mr. & Mrs. John Case

Mr. & Mrs. Robert Coelho,Mr. & Mrs. George Duquette,Mr. & Mrs. Ederito Fachada,Mr. & Mrs. Harold Hanewich,Mr. & Mrs. Donald Harkins

Mr. & Mrs. James Henry, Mr.& Mrs. John Keane & Fomily,Mr. & Mrs. John Kenny, Mr.& Mrs. Richard Lareau, Mrs.Joseph Lunderville

Mr. & Mrs. Leo Lyons, Mr.& Mrs. James Mann, Mr. ,& Mrs.Omer Martel, Mr. & Mrs. Ar­mand Moreau, Mr. & Mrs. Rich­ard Murray

Mr. & Mrs. William O'Brien,Mr. & Mrs. Maurice Poirier, Mrs.Nelson Roy, Mr. & Mrs. CharlesRozak William Standring Jr.

Mr. & Mrs. Rene Therrien,Mr. & Mrs. Raymond Tomlinson,Mr. & Mrs'. Lucien Viens, Mr. &Mrs. Stephen Vincent, Mr. &Mrs. Stephen Wujcik

Mr. & Mrs. Oscar BourgetteMr. & Mrs. Louis DesmaraisMr. & Mrs. Arthur GlodeMr. & Mrs. James LafrancoisMr. & Mrs. Francis O'ConnellMr. & Mrs. Ralph RobergeMr. & Mrs. Aime TurgeonMr. & Mrs. Paul Beausoleil,

Mr. & Mrs. Leo Dery, Mr. & Mrs'Wilfred Goulet, Mr. & Mrs. Fran­cis McInerney,

Mr. & Mrs. George O'Connell,Mr. & Mrs. George Tedino

"Serving the CommunitySince 1873"

(ities Service PetroleumProducts

w. H. RILEY& SON, Inc.

448 BROADWAY, TAUNTON

Attleboro - No. AttleboroTaunton

Gasolene & Diesel Fuels

Fuel Oils

liquified Petroleuln GasStewart-Warner Winkler

Heating & Cooling, Installations

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thur., May 15, 1975 13Barnett, Mr. & Mrs. DanielCreeden, Mr. & Mrs. Alfred Mc­Nally

Mr. & Mrs. Victor Gulino, Mr.& Mrs. Albert Pion, Mr. & Mrs.Joseph Gaynor, Mr. & Mrs. Nor­man Pelletier, Mr & Mrs CharlesGuiUette

Mr. & Mrs. Robert Rohman,Dr. & Mrs. Fred E. Woll

Mr. & Mrs. Leo Cloutier, Mrs.Paul Bellavance, Mr. & Mrs.Robert V. Fredette,' Mr. & Mrs.John B. Harrington, Mr. & Mrs.Peter F. Lynch Jr.

Mr. & Mrs. James Foley, Mrs.Edwin Libby, Mr. & Mrs. Wil­liam F. Goff, Mr. & Mrs. FrankRoca

ST. JOSEPH

$25Mr. & Mrs. Raymond Harrison

Mr. & Mrs. Edward Mellon, Mrs.Edwin Miller, Mr. & Mrs. HenriParadis, Mr. & Mrs. Melvin Smith

ST. MARK

$60Mr. & Mrs. Bernard D. Gam­

ache$50

Mr. & Mrs. Stuart O'Hara Jr.Mr. & Mrs. Charles O'Neill

- Mr. & Mrs. Emilio Gautieri,Jr.

Mr. & Mrs. Paul TausekMae McDonoughJohn C. GaffneyMrs'. Elizabeth Croke

$30Robert SegUinFrederick Paine

$25Edward Maselbas, John Falvey

Charles Mauer, Frederick Con­nolly, John "McCann

John Rioux, Joseph B. FurtadoJames Meegan, WiHiam T. Whe­lan, John C. Grimes

Mr. & Mrs. Russell Carr, Mr.& Mrs. Raymond Coogan, Mr. &Mrs. Daniel DelVecchio, Mr. &Mrs. Richard T. Gariepy, Mr.& Mrs. Robert Guillette

Mr. & Mrs. George Jung

ST. THERESA

$400Rev. Msgr. Gerard J. Chabot'

$250Rev. Roger J. Levesque

$200Mr. & Mrs. Raymond Gravel

$110Mr. & M Phillip Morris &

Family$100

Confraternity of ChristianMothers

Holy Name SocietyMr. & Mrs. Donald BoardmanMr. & Mrs. Dominic BeradiMr.' & Mrs. Raymond Vachon

$75Mr. Q Mrs. Francis Gillan

$55Helen Green

$50So. Attleboro Council No.

5876 Knights of ColumbusKatheri'lle F. Bradley IMr. & Mrs. Joseph IwucMr. & Mrs. Louis LaCivitaMr. & Mrs. Edward McGoranMr. & Mrs. Morris Vieiera &

FamilyLinus C. GignacMr. & Mrs. David GradyMr. & Mrs. George LeBeauMr. & Mrs. George BoydMr. & Mrs. Armand Choiniere

$40Mr. & Mrs. John Plath

$35Mr. & Mrs. Walter DeludeMr. & Mrs Anthony Moskalski

--SR. ELLEN Marie O'CONNELL

$30Mr. & Mrs. Richard Lavallee

$25Mr. & Mrs. Dominic Bramante,

Mr. & Mrs. Manuel Almeida, Mr.& Mrs. Joseph Ambers, Mr. &Mrs. Joseph Lojeck -

ST. JOHN THE EVANGELIST

$375Rev. Msgr. Henry T. 'Munroe

$100Mr. & Mrs. Paul RockettMr. & Mrs. John W. McIntyreMr. & Mrs. Frederick BartekMr. & Mrs. Fred Murphy, Jr.Mrs. Mary G. Foley PetersMr. & Mrs. Rocco Giannitelli

$75Mr. & Mrs~ Robert J. Kenney

$60Mr. & Mrs. Harry Flynn

$50Mr. & Mrs. Gerard LeFrancoisMr. & Mrs. Rona'ld CaponigroMr & Mrs Herbert J. Clegg Jr.Mr. & Mrs. Andrew I. CharronMr. & Mrs. Gilbert Rea

$35'Mr. & Mrs. David J. FoleyMr. & Mrs. Manuel R. VitalEdward Scott

$30Kevin E. PerryMr. & Mrs'. Frederick WoHRuth Nihan & Vincent NihanMr. & Mrs. George E. Fredette

$27Mr. & Mrs. John Spellman

$25Mr. & Mrs. John Braun, Mr.

& Mrs. Paul Silvia, Mrs. James

Nazareth SisterReceives Grant

Sister Ellen Marie O'Connell,RSM, a teacher at Nazareth Hall,Attleboro, has been awarded asupplementary $250 scholarshipby the Order of United Commer­cial Travelers of America. Thegrant is in addition to $480 inscholarship funds which she pre·viously received from the fra­ternal organization.

Sister Ellen Marie Js a grad­uate of Catholic Teachers' Col­lege Providence, and MarywoodCollege, Scranton, Pa. She holdsa master of science degree inspecial education and is current·ly pursuing graduate studies atBoston College to further hertraining in the education of thementaUy retarded.

The United Commercial Trav­elers of America is a fraternalbenefit service society, foundedat Columbus, O. in 1888. Itsmembers provide civic servicethrough programs such as aidto retarded children, safety, can­cer education and youth enrich­ment.

AttleboroHOLY GHOST

$50Mary Sullivan

$40Mr. & Mrs. Stephen Sullivan

$35Mrs; Rosalind Martelli

a guitar mass, or man:hing on apicket line-no matter how nec­essary or worthy or laudablesuch activities may be.

'Old Church'As I have argued in, the last

several- columns, ,there is nopoint in trying to recapture thepast in some sick sentimentalnostalgia. It can't be done.The pertinent question is wheth­er we can learn from the past.If we can't then we're in prettybad shape. Mrs. McCready, whois neither a romantic nor a sen­timentalist, observes that, ".. ,we must take a look :at the waysof the 'old chun:h,' and see ifthere isn't something that wastoo precious to be tossed asidein our efforts to dive into totalcommunal response."

God will not be rediscoveredby fundamentalist enthusiasmany more than he will be foundagain by literalistic nostalgia.We must look respectfully atthe past-not to deny the pres·en,t,but to improve the qualityof our response to the present.Mrs. McCready says it well:

"In a day :when people arepresent or absent from chun:hrather casually, when penanceis a forgotten sacrament, whenfriendships 'are more and moredifficult to sustain, and intimacyalmost impossible, where do wefind the trust, the forgivenes,the transcendency and the com­fort of a sacred place?

Locked Doors"We might find among the.

smell of beeswax and incensesome hints about where weshould be focu~ing our energieswithin the church Our heartsstill cry out with the same needs~to trust, to love, to be for­given, to belong to a .faithfulGod."

Does that mean we should be­gin once again to drop in for afew minutes at church? Well, itmight. But don't try it.

The church doors are locked.

Osterville,OUR LADY OF THE

ASSUMPTION

$200Thomas Powers

$100John ShieldsJohn P. CurranPaul Sny{ier

$60Warren J. Volk.

$50Eugene SullivanJerome Doyle

$25Guy TedescoPauline SheaBenjamin YanchuckThomas O'Donnell, Thomas

Driscoll, Albert Mitchell, RoySmith

Iy

REV.

ANDREW M.

GREELEY

Remember visits to the Blessed Sacraments?They went down the drain with a lot of other things

in the quest for relevance and experience and self-fulfill­ment. How could you be "with it" and "involved" and"honest" and "relating" ifyou were in church praying?"Visits" were a way of "hid­ing behind the altar," a cop­out from the challenge and de­mands of the secular world.

Now in such unexpected placesas the "Village Voice" and Erica

Jong's "Fear of Flying" (an un­disciplined but not uninsightfulnovel), we find that the modernsecular world is looking for anexplanation of the meaning oflife and death. We have a lot ofanswers (most of them super­ficial and potentially harmful) tocomplex social problems, but wecan't seem to remember whatanswer we gave to the questionof what is the meaning of humanlife.

So Long AgoMy colleague Nancy Mc­

Cready, in a poem from a recentissue of "Jesus Lives," remem­bers those "visits" and wondersabout whether we gave them uptoo quickly:Was it so long agoThat a vigil light cost a penny

or twoAnd r would set the churchaglow

With all the copper' coins I'dstolen from Esther's dresser.

(Remember the lady who livedwith us, I loved her so.)

And you, God, and' I would sittogether

And amidst candles' laugh at alittle child's jokes

Which now I know even heldsome wisdom.

We were a secret pair, becausewith you I could shed mycares

What feelings there were insideWho I loved at school and whyAnd how afraid and glad I was

to think of dyingHow I would sigh there, at home

with you.And wish never to be anywhereBut held in the quiet churchA restless child, wondering,

perched in the pewStaring at the mystery, listening,

nurtured,And in the grace of God I grew.

Indeed we cannot grow if wetum our backs on the social andpolitical problems of our day.But neither can we grow or re­spond to social challenge with­out a strong, clear view of themeaning of life and the purposeof the cosmos. Is there, as Mrs.McCready put it, "a kingdom ofmystery, a world of divine prom­Ise"? Is there indeed? It's atough question and requires deepthought, long reflection, andthen intense commitment. Youdon't do any of ,these things byspeaking with tongues, attend­ing a prayer meeting, singing at

Page 14: 05.15.75

DAVID J. RUMNEYTreasurer

AnLEBORO'SLeading Garden Center

CONLON &DONNELLY

South Main & Wall Sts.

ATTLEBORO222-0234

$35Mr. & Mrs. Raymond HarrisonMr. & Mrs. John J. KellyMr. & Mrs. Robert DeweyMr. & Mrs. William C. LegerMr. & Mrs. Gera~d J. DoironEileen MacCarthy

$30Mr. & Mrs. Raymond KnottMr. & Mrs. Chester DewhurstMatthew KuczekMr. & Mrs. Ernest PrairieGertrude McBreenCornelius FieldsMr. & MrS'. Michael StrojnyMr. & ~rs. Francis Souza

$25Mr. & Mrs. Galen Rheaume,

Mr. & Mrs. Bruno Alegi, Mr. &Mrs. Emmett Wellwood, Mr. &Mrs. James Corliss, Phyllis Mc­Clellan

Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Burke,'Richard Johnson, Mr. & Mrs.Francis Andrews, Mr. & Mrs.WilHam J. Campbell, MargueriteCronan

Mr. & Mrs. John Curley, Mr.& Mrs. Edward Cunniff, Mr. &Mrs. John T. Flannery, Anne &Kathleen Flannery, Mr. & Mrs.Robert McClellan

'Dr. & Mrs. Michael McCarty,Mr. & Mrs. Stephen Mazzoleni,Mr. oS!: Mrs. Stanley J. Roberts,Roberta Smith, Edward J. Smith

Margaret M. Slattery, In Mem­ory of Leo E. & Ethel V. VaHett,Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Varden,Mary Nichols, Sarah Nichols

Gladys McIsaac, Helen U.Cronan, The Welch Family, Mr.& Mrs'. Francis Unsworth

Helen F. Murray, Ruth M.Brady, Mrs. Emma Simmons, Mr.& Mrs. Leonel Ventura, Mr. &Mrs. Oscar Maynard, Mrs. MaryBrown, Mary Lou Laine, Mr. &Mrs. Joseph Martin, Mr. & Mrs.Stanley J. Brezinskil, Mr. & Mrs.George White

Mr. & Mrs. James Cooke, Mr.& Mrs. William Murphy Jr. Mr.& Mrs. Richard Andrade, Eliz­abeth Dennen, Eugene Sullivan

Mr. & Mrs. Gilbert Perry, Mr.& Mrs. Joseph Tavares, Mr. &Mrs. Clifton Pierce, Mr. & Mrs.William Andrade, Mr. &--Mrs.Francis Soitos

Mr. & Mrs. Lidoino Severino,Mr. & Mrs. John Vest, Mr. &Mrs. Gerard Pigeo"l

David Ferreira, Mr. & Mrs.Albert Berard, Mr & Mrs RichardFlannery, Elizabeth Doran, Mrs.William Gallagher

Mrs. Irma Cook, Mr. & Mrs.Joseph Quigley, James Kevican,Mrs. Eileen Scully, Mr. & Mrs.Patr.ick Murphy

JOHN R. MITCHELL

WILLIAM H. H. MANCHESTER, JR.President

111 William Street, New Bedford, Massachusetts 02740

Telephone 996-8295

$45Mr. & Mrs. Fred Reams

$40Mr. & Mrs. Edward FeeneyMr. & MrS'. John Mahoney .Joseph MonaghanMr. & Mrs. Raymond FerreiraJohn E. Reilly

..IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllIIIIIi!

SACRED HEART

$300Rev. Walter A. Sullivan

$150Rev. Edward J. Byington

$100Mr. & Mrs. Theodore Belanger

. Katherine McMahonJoseph LaNinfa

$75The Reilly Family

$60Mrs. Mary O'Keefe

$50Helen M. BradyElizabeth A. BradyMrs. John Boudreau & FamilyMary KennedyJohn BradyMr. & Mrs. Coy. FolcikRose O'DonnellRita O'DonnellMr. & Mrs. Edward TrucciMr. & Mrs. Raymond WhalenMr. & Mrs. William P. Mac-

Lean

Mr. & Mrs. Robert ThrasherMr. & Mrs. Walter Fitzgerald

$25Mr. & Mrs. R. ArquinMr. & Mrs. Charles McCarthyMr. & Mrs. Armand MelloMrs. John MeunierMr. & Mrs. SHvio Piesco1m. Con. Bingo1m. Con. Kitchen AccountMr. & Mrs. Arthur Bird, Mr.

& Mrs. Donald Enos, Mr. & Mrs.John Haggerty, Philip Paulson,Mr. & Mrs. Richard Power,Marie Power

of ·the members of the secondgraduating class have been nom­inated to the ranlts of Phi BetaKappa.

FRANCIS E. NASSER

ST. JOSEPH

$60Dr. & Mrs. Thaddeus Figlock

$25Mrs. Rose Costova & John

IMMACULATE CONCEPTION...

$100Mr. & Mrs. Henry Wojtkunski

$75Flangheddy Fa'mily

$50The O'Keefe Family

$40Mr. & Mrs. Charles Colton

$35Mr. & Mrs. Charles Kingsbury

$30Mr. & Mrs Patrick McDermott

Nasser is the son of Mr. andMrs. Francis E. Nasser of 956Robeson St., Fall River. He isalso going to study Dentistrynext year.

MitchelUs the son of Mr. andMrs. John S. Mitchell of 590Dwelly St., Fall River. He willstudy Law.

While at Connol!Y,all three&tudents were outstanding ath-'letes as well as scholars. Mitch­ell played center on the basket­ball team while both Ferreiraand Nasser played baseball.

Father Gibbons and the fac­ulty at Bishop Connolly HighSchool are pleased that three

TauntonHOLY FAMILY

$100Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Raposa

$60Mr. & Mrs. Antonio Gomes &

Son, Manuel$50

Mr. & Mrs. Russell Chamber­land .

Mr. & Mrs. P. Deniz$35

Cynthia CrosbyMr. & Mrs. E. St. YvesMr. & Mrs. E. DavisAntonio Oliveira

$30Mr. & Mrs. Theodore BrassardCharles KenyonMrs. N. Murphy.& FamilyMr. & Mrs. D. Cardoza

$25S. Slavick, M. Galuski, Fran­

.ces Robertson, Mr. & Mrs. RayCooke

Mr. & Mrs. R. Coveney, E.Lecuyer, B. Mozzone

CARL J. FERREIRA

$25Mr. & Mrs. Everett McPhillips,

Mr. & Mrs. John H. Ellis, AngelaMedeiros, Mr. & Mrs. WilfredBlanchette, Mr. & Mrs. StanleyF. Young

Mr. & Mrs. Robel't Kaveny,Mr. & Mrs. Robert Stellmack,Dr. & Mrs. Peter A. Pizzarello

Mr. & Mrs: Joseph MullenMr. & Mrs. Joseph Motta Jr.Mr. &. Mrs. John FurtadoMr. & Mrs. Edward D. O'Con-

nellMr. & Mrs. Paul Micheletti Jr.Mrs. Jeanne A. RoseMr. & Mrs. Maurice HoIlandMr. & Mrs. Paul GivenMr. & Mrs. Philip B. TooleMr. & Mrs. Robert SawyerMrS'. Charles SchultzDr. & Mrs. David Quigley

ST. MARY

$150Mr: & Mrs. George Agestini

'$100Mr. & Mrs. John MarshallMr. & Mrs. John MurphyDr. & Mrs. Raymond Riley

$75Mr. &. Mrs. Edmund Murray

$50Holy Name SocietyMr. & Mrs. James EganMr. & Mrs. Eugene McGovernMr. & Mrs. David PankratzMr. & Mrs. Frank PadykulaAnne 'Schil'ler

$35Mr. & Mrs. Robert Voyer

$30Mr. & Mrs. Henry Young

$25Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth BlissMr. & Mrs. Hector CarufelMr. & Mrs. Joseph W. LandryMrs. Jeanette Maloney.Mr. & Mrs. Manuel MelloMr. & Mrs Stanley Strycharze

Connolly Grads Named to Phi Beta KappaThe College of the Holy Cross

,has announced that hoth CarlJ. Ferreira and Francis E. Nasserhave been incU'ted into Phi BetaKappa, ,the National Honor Soci­ety. They join their former class­mate, John R. Mitchell who wasnamed to Phi Beta Kappa lastspring while in his Junior yearat the University of Massachu-

,setts at Amherst. All three ofthese young men graduated fromBishop Connoly High ~hool inJune 1971.

Ferreira is ,the son of Mr. andMrs. Charles Ferreira of 88 Ev­ergreen Ave., Tiverton. He willstudy Dentistry next year.

MansfieldST. MARY

$100Rev. Philip A. Davignon

$50Mrs. William ShawLillian DionThomas P. Haven Jr.

$45Mr. & Mrs. Edward Kane

$35Mr. & Mrs. John Houghton

$25Mr. & Mrs. Albert Zaffini, Mr.

& Mrs. Joseph Taylor, Mr. &MrS'. John Capra, Clarence Leon­ard, Mr. & Mrs. Edmund Del­tano

Mr. & Mrs. R. Pietrafetta, Mr.& Mrs. P. McPherson, LouiseSoldani, Mr. & Mrs. JosephPhillips, Mi. & Mrs. ThomasGraney

Mr. & Mrs. Alfred Sarro, Mrs.Margaret Jordan, Mr. & Mrs.Bernard O'Malley, Mr. & Mrs.Raymond Cassidy, Fred Mindlen

SeekonkOUR LADY OF MT. CARMEL

$100Mr. & Mrs'. Ralph RoseMr. & Mrs. Augustine Ferreira

$52'In memory of Thomas Tansey

(Mr. & Mrs. Frank Costa). $50

Mr. & Mrs. Louis Dupere$40

Mr. & Mrs. Giacomo Catucci$34

Antonio Ribeiro Jr.

NortonST. MARY

$1600Fernandes Super Markets

$250Mr. & Mrs. Anthony PiresJoseph FernandesMr. & Mrs. Michael MurphyDefiance Bleachery

$100Mr. & Mrs: Cadora Lori

$50Mr. & Mrs'. George MacielMrs. Rosa FernandesMrs. Charles Drain

$36Mr. & Mrs. Francis Gallagher

$30Mr. & Mrs. Charles WicklandMr. &. Mrs. Victor WazMr. & Mrs. John R. NortonMr. & Mrs. James H. PowersMr. & Mrs. Thomas Kelly

$25Mr. & Mrs. Ernest PrecourtMrs. Herbert Schriever & Fam­

ilyMr. & Mrs. William FlahertyMarguerite & Dorothy A. Mon-

dorRoland & Beatrice PaquetteMr. & Mrs. Arthur BrownMr. & Mrs. James CarneyMr. & Mr~. Joseph R. Dacey

Mrs. Vangie Fonseca, Mr. &Mrs. Joseph Murphy, Mary Hy­att, Mr. & Mrs. Robert E. De­scheneau, Samuel Arena

Mr. & Mrs. Charles H. BlomeI',Mr. & Mrs. Charles Oteri

tHE ANCHOR-Thurs., May 15, 1975

North AttleboroSACRED HEART

$100Mrs. Edmond Precourt

$50Mrs. Armand H. Dyon

$25Mrs. Aldea BraisMr. & Mrs. Paul Sauve

Page 15: 05.15.75

AT SPECIAL OLYMPICS: Students from Nazareth Hall, Fall River, display awardsmerited at Massachusetts Special Olympics Swim Meet held at Springfield College. Fromleft, standing, Chris BYIJles, first place in 25 yard backstroke and 50 yard free style;Kathy Leary, third place in 25 yard free style and 25 yard backstroke; Paul Sullivan,second place in 25 yard free style and 25 yard backstroke; Carmel Rosa, second place in50 yard free style and 25 yard backstroke; Sandra Kryla, second place in 50 yard free styleand first place in 25 yard backstroke; Mary Garro, third place in 25 yard free style; PriscillaShea, first place in 25 yard free style and 25 yard backstroke; Christine Jupin, third placein 25 yard free style and first place' in 50 yard free style; Deborah Davis, third place in 25yard free style and second place in 25 yard backstroke. Front, Robert Petrin, first place in25 yard backstroke and second place in 50 yard free style; Linda Carreiro, third place in .25 yard free style' and 25 yard backstroke; Steve Vieira, third place in 25 yard free styleand 50 yard free style; Mike Cadieux, second place in 25 yard backstroke. Not pictured,Jessica Pozzi, first place in 50 yard free style and 25 yard backstroke. Girls' relay teamalso placed third in state competition. fylembers were Linda Carreiro, Carmel Rosa, KathyLeary, Jessica Pozzi. Awards were gold, silver and bronze medals.

15

--. _. .-41 TAUNTON GREEN

TAUNTON823-6501

-1fOOFALLRIVERAVE.ROUTE 6

SEEKONK~66

--21 NORTH MAIN ST.

AITLEBORO222.Q396

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thur., May 15, 1975

put you IN CLOVER

all year longJ ,

r------- 100. 326 II :::.~ c:=~~ , II ::.:::::::...... I\ 5:0:. ii:F:.... -,- II ~...... ..".... II :;;~ll.'~~~~,;:::; ...----

We do it with our jl

IN-CLOVERACCOUNT

PLUSyou get 5%interest to boot!

* Your TOTAL 'COST per year is $0.00

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So. EastonHOLY CROSS

$80Mr. & Mrs. John Smith

$50Mr. & Mrs. Edward Walsh

$25Mr. & Mrs. J. Laurence PhelanFernandes Lumber Co.Matt Welch Electric Co.George Glynn Real Estate

No. DightonST. JOSEPH

$150Henry W'areing

$35Mr. & Mrs. Henry Conaty

$25John Egan, Mr. & Mrs. Bruce

Murphy, Leo Pivirotto, Mrs.Philip·R. Layne

Mr. & Mrs. David P. Schnopp,Mr. & Mrs. Donald Scott, Mr. & "­Mrs. Arthur A. Ennes

$75Lillian White

$50Mr. & Mrs. Raymond F.

WheelerMr. & Mrs. John ConnorsFrank CasellaDominic CasellaMr. & Mrs. Leo A. LerouxMr. & Mrs. Paul A. SilvaMr. & Mrs. Salvatore Spinelli

$35Mr. & Mrs. Thomas GriffinJoseph Giannini

$34F. Vernon Harrica

$30Mr. & Mrs. Raymond Di RestoMr. & Mrs. John BotellioMr. & Mrs. Joseph ReillyMr. & Mrs. Maurice LemieuxMr. & Mrs. Harold OlsonOlivia GianniniMr. & Mrs. Joseph F. Mastro­

marino$25

Mr. & Mrs. Leonard Goslin,Mr. & Mrs. Edward Castle, Mr.& Mrs. John W. Steen, Mr. &Mrs. Albert Nunes, Jr., Mr. &Mrs. Waldo Witherell

Mr. & Mrs. Timothy GaUagher,Mr. & Mrs. Henry Ryan, Mr. &Mrs'. Robert Fielding, Mr. & Mrs.Stuart Place, Mr. & Mrs. JamesRamsay

Mr. & Mrs. Richard Dooley,Jr., Philip Farley, Eileen Henchy,Anna OaseIla, Eva Brunelle

In Memory of John & MaryOrugan, Mrs. Francis J. Tum­mon, Eleanor Dwyer

Mr. & Mrs. Rock Des VergnesMr. & Mrs. Leo Mogan, Mr. &Mrs. Antonio Tosti, Mr. & Mrs.Louis Bartel, Mr. & Mrs. WilliamBoardman

Mr. & Mrs. Richard Silva,Helen Fielding

Mr. & Mrs. John O'Hearne,Mr. & Mrs. Lini Palazesi, Mr. &Mrs. Manny Silvia, Mr. & Mrs.R. Smerdon, Mr. & Mrs, WilliamSmith

Mr. & Mrs. Charles H. Tripp,Morino M. Turinese

Mrs. Ruth E. Eliza, Mrs. Geo.H. Foley, Thomas Grandfield, Dr.& Mrs. Charles Hoye, Mr. &Mrs. John Moore

Worn. Reagan, D.B. Sullivan

ST. PAUL

$800Rev. Msgr. Joseph C. Canty

$150Mr. & Mrs. Joseph McCarthy

$100Mr. & Mrs. Clayton RennieMr. & Mrs. Wesley Grand­

mont

TauntonHOLY ROSARY

$50Mr. & Mrs. Marcellus Lemaire

$35Mr. & Mrs. John Dubena

$30Mr. & Mrs. Russell Woodward

$25Mr. & Mrs. Peter Guresh, Mr.

& Mrs. Theodore Kalacznik, Mr.& Mrs. John Kokoszka & FamHy

Mr. & Mrs. Walter Plonka &Family, Mrs. Anita Maciejowski,Mr. & Mrs. Louis Tokarz

Mr. & Mrs. Richard Januse

ST. ANTHONY

$350Rev. Msgr. Maurice Souza

$100Rev. Joao MartinsMary E. Enos

$50Rev. Americo MoreiraMr. & Mrs. Peter NolanMr. & Mrs. Leonard Rocha

$40Mr. & Mrs'. Andrew Marshall,

Jr.$30

Mr. & Mrs. Anibal AntunesMr. & Mrs. John CoelhoThe Nunes FamilyMr. & Mrs. James Thomas

$25Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Abreau,

Mr. & Mrs. Joseph R. Amaral,Mr. & Mrs. Frederick Barker.Manuel Camara, Mrs. Alexan­drina Correia

Mr. & Mrs. John Correia, Mr.& Mrs. Louis Dansereau, Mr. &Mrs. Antone De Souza, Mr. &Mrs. Joseph Gula, Mr. & Mrs.Jesse Linhares

Mr. & Mrs. Raymond Pata,Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Reis, Mr. &Mrs. Joseph Souza, Mr. & Mrs.Edward Semas

Mr. & Mrs. Wilfred Benoit,Victoria Carew, Mr. & Mrs. An­tone Gomes, Maria Macedo

Mr. & Mrs. Arthur Medeiros,Mr. & Mrs. Alfred Silva, Mr. &Mrs. Joseph Vaz

ST. MARY

$300Rev. James F. Lyons

$100Mary O'Brien

$75Mrs. Matthew McCarthy

$50Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth BakerMr. & Mrs. John KeatingMary E. McNamaraJosephine McNamaraDenis J. SullivanJ.B. Grant

$40W. CliffordW.J. Casey

$30Mr. & Mrs. Joseph ScaranoRuth DiasMr. & Mrs. Joseph E. Flood

& FamHyPatricia McSweeneyMargaret M. MurphyMr. & Mrs. Leonard SousaMr. & Mrs. James Avila

$25Rita I. Baker, Mr. & Mrs.

Joseph Butler, Mrs. R. Drake,Francis Flynn, R,ita Gauthier

William T. Grant, Mrs. FrancisP. McCabe, Mr. & Mrs. JamesMcMorrow, Dennis McSweeneyMr. & Mrs. Emory Malo

Mr. & Mrs. Frederick Mosley,F. Mulholland, James MulhollandJohn MulhoHand, Mary Mulhol­land

Page 16: 05.15.75

MarionST. RITA

, $100,Paul F. Masterson

$60Mr. & Mrs. Ernest Weber

$50Dr. & Mrs. A. Hickey

$25Mr. & Mrs. Fletcher Long, Dr.

& Mrs. Robert Trembly, Mr.· &Mrs. Edward Gallini, MargaretCoakley, Sippican Corp.

MattapoisettST. ANTHONY

$150Atty. & Mrs. M. Downey

$35C. W. Morse

$30F. F. Cooper

$25L. Syadek, Her-bert Goeden.

Sue McGowan, John Gannon,Bernard Talty, Agnes Pelczar

Mr. & Mrs. H. Chaldwick,Miquel Brito, Mr. & Mrs. R.Flood, Kenneth T. Titla, JohnGibbons, P. T. Pimental Jr.

ELECTRICALContractors

~~4!~V~

944 County St.i?t.~ .New Bedford ~.

992-0560

Mr. & Mrs. Ed. J. Anuszczyk,Mr. & Mrs. Paul G. Caron, Mrs

Frank Coleman, Mrs. Joyce A.Dias, Mrs. WHbert Divia

Mr. & Mrs. William J. Kelly,Mr. & Mrs. Raymond E. Lague,Mr. & Mrs. Daniel J. Murphy,Mr. & Mrs. Eugene Rheaume,Alice Sheerin, Mary E. Sheerin

New BedfordST. MARY

$1,000Mr. & Mrs. Paul Duchaine

$300Rev. Bernard H. Unsworth

$200In Loving Memory of Mad­

eline W. NortonMr. & Mrs. John Nicoclaci

, '$100Henry Gurl·Mr. & Mrs. Richard BrownSt. Vincent de Paul Society

$75Mr. & Mrs. John E. Sullivan

$60Mr. & Mrs. Angelo Telesman­

ick$50"

Mr. & Mrs. Rene CarrollMr. & Mrs. Robert PenlerValmore DubrieulMr. & Mrs. Walter ArsenaultMr. & Mrs. Gilbert CostaSt. Mary's Couples ClubMr. & Mrs. John DexterMr. & Mrs. William Camara

$40Dr. & Mrs. David CostaMr. & Mrs. Normand Boutin

I $35Mr. & Mrs. Thomas McKennaMr. & Mrs. Joseph SouzaMr. & Mrs. Arthur Fredette

$34Mr. & Mrs. Rodrigue Lussier

$30Mr. & Mrs. Gilbert MainvilleMr. & Mrs. Marcel LorangerMr. & Mrs. John HughesMr. & Mrs. Thadeus ZiembaMr. & Mrs. Francis Bowen

$25Mrs. & Mrs. Robert Newsham,

Mr. & Mrs. Joseph LeBlanc, Mr.& Mrs. Manuel Larond-a, Mr. &Mrs. Aruthur Hart, Mr. & Mrs.Albert Pepin

Mr. & Mrs. William Whalen,Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Bernier, Mr.& Mrs. Nelson Ostiguy, HenryFortier, Mr. & Mrs. Louis Begin

Mr. & Mrs. Carlos Pacheco,Mr. & Mrs. Whitaker, Alice &Hazel Davis, Mr. & Mrs. HoraceCoupe, Mr. & Mrs. Gaston De­Brosse

Mr. & Mrs. Gabriel Folco, Mr.& Mrs. Charles Mello, Mr. &Mrs. Albert Coucci, Mr. & Mrs.William Bourbo, Mr. & Mrs. Wil­liam Constant

Mr. & Mrs. William Collins,Mr. & Mrs. Ronald WaIsh, Mr.& Mrs. Joseph Walsh, Mr. &Mrs. Joseph Towers EdwardMaClean

Mr. & Mrs. Joseph AllainMr. & Mrs. Leo Pelletier, Mrs.

Mary Rezendes, Mabel RezendesMr. & Mrs. John FreitasMr. & Mrs. Francis SullivanMr. & Mrs. Arthur Caron

$100Mr. & Mrs. 'Owen F. Hackett,'

Jr.Mr. & Mrs. James F. McHughMr. & Mrs. Edwin Brady

$75 'Mary T. LuizMr. & Mrs. Edward Hicks

$50Mr. & Mrs. Neil FitzgeraldMr. & Mrs. Frank' W. MartinMr. & Mrs. Joseph C. DeMelloDr. & Mrs. John DiasMr. & Mrs. Harry O'Neill

$40Margaret & Helen GambleIn Memory of Aborted Babies

$35Mr. & Mrs. James Madigan

$30Olivia M. LuizMr. & Mrs. Walter O'BrienMr. & Mrs. Vincent Hayes·Mr. & Mrs. Francis TraversMr. &: Mrs. Frederick CorbeilMr. & Mrs. Thomas L. Maher

$25Mrs. Luke McCrohan, In Me­

moriam For Hugh J. Carney,Mary Kennly, Mr. & Mrs. Jer­emiah Rearoon, Mr. & Mrs. Jo­seph Sebastiao

Mrs. Francis S. Winsper, Mrs.Isaac Dawson, Mr. & Mrs.Charles Nunes, Mr. & Mrs. Jo­seph G.. Sylvia

So. DartmouthST. MARY

$200Mr. & Mrs. George Saint Au­

bin

$100Rev. John J. Steakem

$80Mary C. HalloranIn Memory of Mrs. Mary F.

MahoneyT. Hudner Kennedy

$50Emmet P. AlmondThomas J. BeedemAtty. & Mrs. Thomas F. BurkeBarbara CoonanMichael Cordeira, Jr.Marion S. FreitasMary & Gertrude GleasonManuel GonsalvesDr. & Mrs. James HaydenRoy MasonJohn T. WardMr. & Mrs. Edward A. EnnisMarion Keane

$40EUen M. GaughanWestgate Family

$35Paul E. LambertLewellyn RobertsDennis Sherman

. $30Winifred F. KeneallyJohn MorrisManuel Nunes

$25- Angelica's House, WilhelminaC. Baptiste, Michael BobrowieckiOharles OaUaghan, RichardCleveland

William Coonan, Roberta K.Dutra, Beatrice B. Freitas, JosephHarding, Edward V. Hill

Mary A. Keneally, Dr. & Mrs.PaulO. LaBelle, Dr. & Mrs.Daniel J. O'Neill, Donald Pitt­man, Ronald Ponte

Albert S. Rose, Albert A. Sil­va, Dr. & Mrs. F. A. Silveira,Mrs. Joseph Tomlinson, RogerTougas ~.

Reginald Williams, Mrs. A. C.Wobecky, Robert Zukowski

Edgar Boyer, John F. Chase,Raymond Paiva, Leonard Stone,Robert J. Sullivan

Mr. & M):~. O. M. Canto,Manuel Morro

$34Cross Ins. Agency

$30Mr. & Mrs.- Miguel CampinhaMr. & Mrs. Philip McEnteeMr. & Mrs. Wrn. NolanMr. & Mrs. Herman E. PradaMr. & Mrs. Robert TassinariMr. & Mrs. James Vicino, Jr.Mr. & Mrs. Manuel Sylvia

$25Mr. & Mrs. George Barrett,

Mrs. Homer Bates, Mr. & Mrs.Joseph Campanella, Mr. & Mrs.Joseph Cardoza, Mr. & Mrs.Antonio Gomes

Mr. & Mrs. Angelo Gregory,Mr. & Mrs. Hulot Haden, Mrs.Edward Keane, j. Friend AFriend

,Mr. & Mrs. Anthony Mon­trond, Mr. & Mrs. Robert A.Parece, Mr. & Mrs. Melvinprada, Mrs. Ethel Rowe, Mr. &Mrs. Adolphe L. Billotte

Mr. & Mrs. 'WiUiam L. Brack­man, Mr. & Mrs. Robert Cahoon,Paul English, Mr. & Mrs. RalphGreene, John Grenda

Margaret Jac~son, Mr. & Mrs.Everett Morgan, Mrs. MedioPederz,ani, Mr. & Mrs. Delmo P.Pezzoli, Mr. & Mrs. ChristopherSempos

Mr. & Mrs. George St. John,Mr. & Mrs. Stephen Yurkos, Jo­seph Yeager, Mr. & Mrs. FilenioCarooza, Mr. & Mrs. AlfredLangdon

Mrs. Clara Stanley Mrs. Tim­othy Walsh

North DartmouthST. JULIE BILLIART

$~OO

Dr. & Mrs. E. Deane Freitas$150

Atty & Mrs. Edward J. Har­rington

Mr. & Mrs. Lawrence A.Weaver

FIRST GIRL: Anna L.Hrycin, senior at BishopGerrard High School, FallRiver, is the first girl fromNew England chosen to at­tend a National· ScienceCamp program to be heldJune 29 to July 21 in

. Charleston, W.Va. Thedaughter of Mr. and Mrs.Frank Hrycin, 488 E. MainSt., Fall River, was selectedafter winning first place anda special trophy in an areascience fair for her workon scientific photographictechniques. She has also wona $2,500 Bausch and LombScholarship to the Universityof Rochester.

A Friend$50

Mr. & Mrs. Wm. LeFavor &Family

Charles McClahan & HelenMcClashan

Geraldine ChapmanMr. & Mrs. John HobbsDiane & Thomas Mitchell

$35Frances Murphy

FairhavenST. JOSE~H

$100Mr. & Mrs. James BuckleyMr. & Mrs. Domenic Nicolaci

$35Mr. & Mrs. Manuel Sylvia

$32Mr. & Mrs. August Gonsalves

$30Mr. & Mrs. Henry FOI"tin

$25Mr. & Mrs. Earl C. Chandler,

Mr. & Mrs. Charles Lubker, Mr.& Mrs. Norman J. Robinson, Mr.& Mrs. Joseph Ste. Marie, Mr.& Mrs. Nicholas F. Tangney

Ernest Gould, Mr. & Mrs. Den­nis Hogan, Mr. & Mrs. CasimirJarosik, Mr. & Mrs. James Lan­agan, Mr. & Mrs. Paul Lopes

Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Marques,Mr. & Mrs. Thomas McGreavyJr., Mr. & Mrs. Augustus Medei­res, Mr. & Mrs. Edwaro Medei­ros, Mr. & Mrs. Albert Moquin

Mr. & Mrs. Paul Murray, MI'.& Mrs. Manuel Olivera, Mr. &Mrs. Alcide Pelletier, Mr. & Mrs.Roger Picard, Beatrice Quinn'

Aurore Silva, Manuel Soares,Mr. & Mrs. Donald Spooner,Ralph Souza, Mrs.· EdwardTucker

WarehamST. PATRICK

$550St. Vincent De Paul Society

$500Rev. Msgr. John E. Boyd

$225Mrs. Mary Stott

$150Alfred PappiMr. & Mrs. Arnold Matheson

$100Francis A. BreagyFr. Callahan K of CMary E. MakelaMr. & Mrs. Frank Krystofol­

skiDr. & Mrs. Joseph MooreEdward V. Sullivan

$75

ST. MARY

$150Mr. & Mrs. Roland Bourgault

$100iDr. & Mrs. Robert Gaudreau

$50Mr. & Mrs. Ernest LaurendeauSt. Mary's Couples Club

$34Nancy AHua & Manuel Alleua

, $25Associatinon of rthe Sacred

Hearts, Mr. & Mrs. Leo R.Grenon, IVir. & Mrs. FrankMarujo

AcushnetST. FRANCIS OF ASSISI

$30Mr. & Mrs. Rene Racine

$25Mr. & Mrs. George H. BlouinLeo, Yvonne & Vi B()UcherMr. & Mrs. Raymond Charpen-

tierMr. & Mrs. Ronald PimentalLionel Tetreault

THE ANCHOR-Thurs., May 15, 1975

RaynhamST. ANN

$350Rev. Gerald T. Shovelton

$100Mrs. Dominic CirinoTheodore Kapala

$75Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Ross

$60Leon Marchand

$50Mr. & Mrs. John R. JohnstoneMrs. Dorothy WalfordRobert GrayMr. & Mrs. Louis SecatoreMr. & Mrs. James MulveyAlmon L. TurnerThomas J. Whaten

$40James J. Hauch, Sr.Paul J. FountainRichard Souza

$30Joseph BettencourtDavid HutchinsonGeorge Dion, Jr.John L. DooleyEdward R. BarryTimothy Taylor

$27Bemire Fountain

$25William Rodgers, Mr. & Mrs.

R'Obert Merrick, John Welch,Elizabeth Larkin, James Mulvi­hill

Theodore Januse, Mr. & Mrs.Elmer R. Sargent, Donald Mor­rison, John Moulais'on, Mrs.Emil Cobb

Mary McGrath, RaymondPa'ine, Arthur D. Howell, 'RobertMcCormack, E. Joseph Laliberte'

Joseph G. Manganaro Sr.,John Trucchi, Mrs. Doris Con­nors,. Mrs. Mary Caswell, AdolphF. Rozenas

Mr. & Mrs J.W. Leroy LatimerMr. & Mrs. Albert RibeiroJosephine KapalaThomas W. Whalen, Mrs.

Kathleen Roberts, Alfred Braga,Barbara O'Brien, J. Spalding &Family, Robert Gilmore

Manuel DeMello, Lynn R. Vi­vica, Mr & Mrs Richard White,Robert Smith

16

Page 17: 05.15.75

3'12 room Apartment4'12 room Apartment

Includes heat, hot water, stove, re­frigerator and maintenance service.

SHAWOMETGARDENS

102 Shawomet AvenueSomenet, Mau.

Tel. 674-4881

dona, Mr. & Mrs. Patrick Con­lan, Mr. & Mrs. Bernardino Cos­ta Mr. Hilda Des Roches, Mr. &Mrs. Robert Doyle

Mr. & Mrs. James Dufficy, InMemory of Adams & WhitmerFamily

OUR LADY OF ASSUMPTION

.....

17

$100Mr. & Mrs. Robert Garrison

. $40'Mr. & Mrs. Joseph M. Ramos

$35Antons S. MonteiroMr. & Mrs. Joseph Rogers

. $25Mr. & Mrs. Thomas LopeS',

Mr. & Mrs. Antonio Gomes, Mr.& Mrs. Aguinel Rose, Mrs. NellieDuarte

St. Martin de Porres GuildOur Lady of Assumption Club

IMMACULATE CONCEPTION

$400Rev. A. Castelo Branco

$100Abel D. Fidalgo

$60Mr. & Mrs. Henry Rodr,iguesMariana Carvalho

. $50Mr. & Mrs. John A. FarroDr. Manuel Camacho

$38Terese & Andre Tanguay

$34William & Dorothy McCarthy

$30Mr. Mrs. Antonio PachecoMr. & Mrs. Euclides CabralThe Batalha FamilyGilber Coelho

$25Mrs. Manuel Freitas', Mr. &'

Mrs. John A. Medeiros, ManueldaSilva, Augustus Rapoza, Mr.& Mrs. Joao Cordeiro

Albertino Barros, Mrs. ManuelBettencourt, Mary M. Pereira,Joaquim S. Mello .

Victor RebelloArtllur CorreiaJoseph M. Cabral

SACRED HEART

$50Mr. & Mrs. Normand SeguinMr. & Mrs. Arthur H. Des-

chenesMr. & Mrs. Gerald LaFranceSt. Vincent de Paul SocietyLadies of St. Anne's Soc,ietyJoseph ScammonsMr. & Mrs. Roger Menard

$40Mr. & Mrs. Omer Tardi

$30Mr. & Mrs. Paul Letourneau

$25Mr. & Mrs J. R. Arthur ForgueCharles BouchardMr. & Mrs. Donald DesautelsMr. & Mrs. John E. Hughes Jr.Mr. & Mrs. Henri DaigleMr. & Mrs. Pierre C. SeguinMr. & Mrs. Paul SoucyMr. & MrS'. Alfred J. DeneaultBertha M. BedardLaurette D. Kutis

THE ANCHOR-Thurs:, May 15, 1975

Mrs. Madeline EstrellaJames PerryMr. & Mrs. Antone B. Santos

$40Mr. & Mrs. Jose Evaristo Melo

$37Mr. & Mrs. Manuel Gregorio

Martins

HOLY NAME

$120Mr. & Mrs. Lucien Beauregard

$100Mr. & Mrs. John GibbonsMr. & Mrs. Joseph MarshallDr. & Mrs. Frank Leary

$75Mr. & Mrs. Guido Coucci

$60George Rogers

$55Mr. & Mrs. Charles A. Gun·

ning$50

Mr. & Mrs. Norris WaleckaMr. & Mrs. Daniel FlanaganMr. & Mrs. Salvatore Giam-

malvo ,Mr. & Mrs. G. Harold MorseMr. & Mrs. Leonard SouzaMr. & Mrs. JameS' Wilson, Jr.

$35Mr. & Mrs. Manuel P. MelloMrs. John O'Neil

$30Mr. & Mrs. John FloodMr. & Mrs. Francis Kennedy

$25Mrs. Thomas Conlan, Gerald

Harrington, Mr. & Mrs. RichardLynch, Mr. & Mrs. E. Sladew­ski, Mr. & Mrs. Clifford Snell

Mr. & Mrs. Emile Caman-

$35Joao P. Amaral, Jr.Carolina GoulartMr. & Mrs. Lauran Silva

$30Mr. & Mrs. Jose Francisco

RosaMr. & Mrs. Edmund J. SylviaMr. & Mrs. Antone· Correia,

Jr.Mr. & Mrs.' Antone Botelho

FalcaoEvelyn HendricksMary HendricksMr. & Mrs. Joao TomasiaMr. & Mrs. Louis G. TorresEdward JosephRose & Hilda MathewsMr. & Mrs. Manuel Rapoza, :fr.Mr. & Mrs. Joseph G. Silveira,

Jr.Mr. & Mrs. Jose dos Reis

Vasconcelos$26

Mr. & Mrs. EHas Costa, Jr.Antone Felix, Jr.

$25Elsie Bettencour.t, Mr. & Mrs.

.Laurenio Moniz Soares, Mr. &Mrs. Kenneth King, Belmira C.Branco, Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Lewis

Mary Aguiar, Mrs. Clara Bris­ta, Mr. & Mrs. John S. Cabral,Mr. & Mrs. Manuel Correia,Rosemary L.Ferro

Isabel Goulart, Aristides Me­deiros. Mr. & Mrc;. Donald Mor·ris, Florinda de Jesus Nunes

Maria Carmelo Vieira Nunes,Mr. & Mrs. Donald Perry, Mr. &Mrs. Joao Rocha, Carma Santos,Mr. & Mrs.' Delfin Sousa .

Mr. & Mrs. Peter Vincent, Mr.& Mrs. Lionel Gonsalves, GeorgeMoniz, Mr. & Mrs. Nicolau Ja­cinto Bolarinho

Mr. & Mrs. Charles Vieira,Emidio Conde, Mr. & Mrs. JoseJulio do Rego, Mr. & Mrs. Ar­mando D. Alves, Mrs. EvelynRaposa

Joseph Branco, Mr. & Mrs.Richard King, Mr. & Mrs. AnibalMedeiros, Mr. & Mrs. ManuelSoares de Melo, John C. Branco

NAMED: Rev. David Con­roy, former family life direc­tor of the Greensburg, Pa.,diocese, has been namedrepresentative for family lifein the Department of Educa­tion of the U.S. CatholicConference. NC Photo.

The Mahoney FamilyJohn G. LevaCatherine Swansey

$34Mr. & Mrs. John Britto

$30Mr. & Mrs. Edward R. SousaJohn QuinnMrs. Evie P€TryDorothy 'BaldwinMr. & Mrs. James CawleyMr. & Mrs. John T. Regan &

family$25

Mr. & Mrs. Francis Baptiste,Henry O'Brien, Mrs. AlexanderWhelan, Mrs. Vincent Shea, Mr.& Mrs. Adam Zych, Mr. & Mrs.John C. Martin, Mr. & Mrs. Ed­ward Connulty, Mary Whelan,Frances Whelan, Mary T. Wins­per

Helen Crowley, Mrs. JamesBolton, Mr. & Mrs. Perry Coho­lan, Mr. & Mrs. Alphone Che­nette, Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Jupin

Mr. & Mrs. Patrick Baker,Mary Marshall, Mr. & Mrs. LeonBellavance, Mr. & Mrs. HermanSaunders, Mr. & Mrs. BenedictHarrison

Clifton M. SouthworthMr. & Mrs. Edward Kenney,

Helen A. Ross, Freq Kelley, Fel­ipe Ramos

ST. JOHN THE BAPTIST

$25Mr. & Mrs. James GaffneyMr. & Mrs. Celestino MacedoMr. & Mrs. Ralph MedeirosMr. & Mrs. Manuel SoaresMrs. Eva L SylviaIn Memory of John Martin

MT. CAlWEL

$500Mr. & Mrs. Vincent Fernandes

$250Mt. Carmel Holy Name Society

$110In memory of William R.

Freitas$100

Mrs. Maria C. Ferro, Mr. &Mrs. Virginio Macedo, Mr. &Mrs. John J. Oliveira

$60Mrs. Beatriz Lopes

$50Mr. Carmel Boy Scouts, Troop

11 and Parents AssociationMr. & Mrs. Mario da Graca

OliveiraMr. & Mrs. Manuel G. Souza,

Jr.Mr. & Mrs. Hemiterio Souza

ST. ANTHONY OF PADUA

$35Chausse-Dumont Funeral Home

$25Mr. & Mrs. Henri LabadieMr. & Mrs. Gerard LaferriereMr. & Mrs. Amedee Lestage

ST. FRANCIS OF ASSISI

$50Mrs. Pasquale Nicolacci

$25Mr. & Mrs. Louis Bono, Rose

M.· Funaro, Emma S. LimaSt. Fnncis of Assisi Men'S'

LeagueSt. Vincent de Paul SocietySt. FranciS' of Assisi Women's

League

ST. JAMES

$500Rev. Thomas F. Daley

$100Rev. Horace J. Travassos

$60Mr. & Mrs. Daniel Dwyer

$50Mr. & Mrs. George YoungMr. & MrS'. Francis Roach

Dr. & Mrs. George RileyDr. & Mrs. William Walsh

$60Mr. & Mrs'. John TierneyMr. & Mrs. John D. KenneyMr. & Mrs. Edward McIntyreMrs. Mary B. Wheaton

$50Mr. & Mrs. Arthur KirkwoodFmncis E. McCarthyMrs. John B. O'RourkeMargaret AustinDr. & Mrs. James BoltonDoherty FamilyMr. & Mrs. James DeeMr. & Mrs. Thomas J. LongMrs. Thomas Mahoney

$40Mr. & Mrs. Paul E. MarshallMrs. William Downey

$35Mr. & Mrs. Walter LoveridgeMr. & Mrs. Robert A. MakinMrs. Mary WintersonMr. & Mrs. Charles Phelan

$34Rita LimerickMr. & Mrs. Joseph Rivet

$30Mrs. Florence BrowerMr. & Mrs. Charles Burl<eMr. & Mrs. Delpha LavalleeMary DowneyMr. & Mrs. John LowneyMr. & Mrs. Alexander Phillips

$25Mr. & Mrs. Leo St. Aubin, Mr.

& Mrs. Harold S. Barney, Mr. &Mrs. James McCahn, HelenMoore, Mr. & Mrs. Francis Smith

Mr. & Mrs. John Whalen, Mr.& Mrs. John Zygiel

Mr. & Mrs. Raymond Bolton,Mr. & Mrs. Theodore J. Calnan,Francis Carney, Mary E. Carroll,Mrs. Edward J. Duffy

Mr. & Mrs. Anthony Ferreira,James H. Gaughan, Mrs. RolandMathieu, Mrs. Hazel McCrohan,Mr. & Mrs. Jack Nobrega

Mr. & Mrs. Elmer Page, Mr. &Mrs. James Pallatroni, AnnaRiley, Madeline Riley, Mr. &Mrs. John Sullivan

Mrs. Edith Thathecr, Mr. &Mrs. Robert Tweedie, Mr. & Mrs..Raymond Weber, Ann Whelan,Mrs. Leonard Whitehead

ST. ANNA

$50St. Vincent de Paul Society,

St. Anne's Conference$35

Mr. & Mrs. Henry Constant$25

Mr. & Mrs. Joseph AlmeidaMr. & Mrs. Aldei LaFrance

ST. LAWRENCE

$200Mr. & Mrs. Edward Living­

stone, Jr.$135

Dr. & Mrs. William Muldoon$125

Mr. & Mrs John Dunn$100

Dr. lk.JYlrs. Rob~rt ,P,u.t:'ant ,

New BedfordST. KILIAN

$100Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Bernardo

$50Mr. & Mrs. Hervey Caron

$30Mr. & Mrs Raymond MahoneyAllen Bentley

$25Mr. & Mrs. Stanley BaronMr. & Mrs. John C. Gobeil Jr:Mr. & Mrs. Edward Lang ,Janet HardmanMr. & Mrs. Norman BerubeCarolyn Pimental

Sr. JOSEPH

$150Mr. & Mrs. Conrad E. Seguin

$125In Memory of Mr. & Mrs. Zoel

H. RoyMr. & Mrs. G. Albert Roy

$100Mr. & Mrs. Paul Matheiu

$60Mr. & Mrs. Leo Fredette & .

Armand$35

Mr. & MrS'. Frank Braga$30

Robert Lafrance$25

Mr. & Mrs'. Paul PelletierMr. & Mrs. Ray St. GelaisMr. & Mrs. Wilbrod DufourMr. & Mrs. Armand GendronMr. & Mrs. Orval Langelier,

Mr. & Mrs. Joseph LeBlanc, Mr.& Mrs. Lionel Marchand, Mr.& Mrs. Theo. Girard, Mr. & Mrs.Henri Desrosiers

Mr. & Mrs. P. Letourneau, Mr.& Mrs. Joseph Masse, Mrs. A.Collard, Louise Seguin, Mr. &Mrs. Gordon Barber

ST. THERESA

$250Rev. Rene G. Gauthier

$100Lemieux' Plumbing & Heating,

Inc.Mr. & Mrs. Eugene Lemiex

$50Mr. & Mrs. Robert CoutuTohad'sMr. & Mrs. Albert CaronMr. & Mrs'. Aldege CoteRoland & Gerald LeComte

$35Mr. & Char-les J. Barton, Jr.Mr. & Mrs. Laurier Marcoux

$30Mr. & Mrs. Henry LeBlancMr. & Mrs. Roland Dumas

$25Mr. & Mrs. Robert Boulet, Mr.

& Mrs. Alfred Lemieux, Mr. &Mrs. Norman Mathieu, Mr. &Mrs. John Fabian, Mr. & Mrs.Louis G. Fleury

Mr. & Mrs. Antonio Lemieux,Mr. & Mrs, Marcel Lareau, Mr.& Mrs. Charles Jodoin, Mrs. LeoLanglois & Paul, Mr. & Mrs.Louis A. Roy, Sr.

Mr. & Mrs. Henri Valois, Mau­rice Bonneau, Mr. & Mrs. Theo­dore Frechette, Mr. & Mrs.George Manny Jr., Mr. & Mrs.Ovila Rock

Mr. & Mrs. Ronald Silv~ira,

Mr. &' Mrs. Raymond Bourassa,Mr. & Mrs. Raymond Guerette

Mr. & Mrs. J. Gerard RichardMr. & Mrs. Paul Fontaine

Page 18: 05.15.75

BACK FROM KOREA: Backers of Maryknoll FatherJames Sinnott hold up signs welcoming him to New Yorkfrom Korea and criticizing conditions which forced himout of that country. On the missionary's knee is his nephew,Greg. NC Photo.

THE ANCHOR-Thurs., May 15, 1975

New BedfordOUR LADY OF FATIMA

$250Rev. Arthur C. Levesque

$100Mr. ~ Mrs. Willliam Belanger

$50Mr. & Mrs. Charles Franklin

Jr.Mr. & Mrs. John Rita

$40 .Mr. & Mrs. Francis FreyMr. & Mrs. Paul Frey

$35'Dr. & Mrs. Arthur MottaMr. & Mrs. Normand ParentMr. & Mrs Raymond Rousseau

$34Mary T. Burns

$25Therese Bonneau, Mr. & Mr:;;,

Alfred Bouchard, Mr. & Mrs.Raymond J. Bourbeau, Mr. &Mrs. Hernado Cabral, Mr. &Mrs. Joseph Charbonnea'<l

Mr. & Mrs. Emile Cormier,Mr. & Mrs. William Corrado,Mr. & Mrs. Raymond DeCosta,Mrs. Eugene Desaulniers, Mr. &Mrs. George ,Desrosiers

Mr. & Mrs. Peter Duff, Mr. &Mrs. Clovis Fecteau, Mrs. Lean& Pauline Forand, Mr. & Mrs.Joseph Fournier, Mr. & Mrs.Edward Geneste

Mr. & Mrs. Gerald Lacroix,Lucille Lequin, Mr. & Mrs. Aus­tin Manning, Mr. & Mrs. RogerOuimet, Mr. & Mrs. ConradPelletier

Mr. & Mrs. Francis RuaneMr. & Mrs. Francis Schellen­

berger

ST~ BONIFACE

$25Mrs. Lillian Corre

WestportST. GEORGE

$150Rev. Rene R. Levesque

$100Thomas J. Wilcock

$60John F. Ward

$50Eveline MagnantSt. George St. Vincent de Paul

$40Mr. & Mrs. David BuckleyMr. & Mrs. Peter Twark Jr.

$35Mr. & Mrs. Joel D. Sunderland

$30Oscar StebenneFriendsMr. & Mrs. Adrien DurandFriendsLeo Romeo Dubreuil

$26Major Wheelock

$25Adelard Bruneau, Mrs. Be­

atrice LaPlante, Friends, Mr. &Mrs. A. Stevenson, Mrs. HerbertSellers, St. George Holy NameSociety

Mrs. Ronald PerrierMr. & Mrs. Stanley Moore,

William Rodgers, Alford Dyson

OUR LADY OF GRACE

$30Mr. & Mrs. Aime Barnaby

$25lcdI' & Mrs. Ranald Arntz,

Mr. & Mrs. Maurice Belanger,Mr. & Mrs. George Carpenter,Couples Club

Mr. & Mrs. Gerald Emond, Mr.& Mrs M.anue). R." Ji:aria, HolyName Socie,ty,' Mt:" "&' \:Mrs.

George Jacques, Mr. & Mrs. Wil­liam King, Mr. & Mrs. EdwardMaurer

Mr. & Mrs. Romeo Maynard,Mr. & Mrs. Albert Mendes, Mar­jorie Mor,in, Mr. & Mrs. FrankMotta, Vin's Motor Sales ,

Mrs. Lena Ouim.et, Mr. & Mrs,Herbert Pearsall, Mr. & Mrs. Ed­ward Quinn, Mr. & Mrs. EdwardRaposo '

SomersetST. JOHN OF GOD

$100Holy Name Society

$30In Memory of Arthur C. Leite

$25Louis Rosa

ST. PATRICK'S

$300Rev James F~ McDermott

$250Dr. & Mrs. Roger E. Cadieux

$200Dr. & Mrs. Roland E. Chabot

$100Mary E. QuirkMrs. Charles E. SevignyHarold J. Regan

$65Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Matthews

$50William F. ReadyMr. & Mrs. David DunneMr. & Mrs. Richard A. MelloCarlton D. Boardman

$45Mrs. Helen McGann

$40Mr., & Mrs. Gordon VanBrunt

$30Fernand C. E. & Robt. Auc-

lairLouise Coleman .Mrs. Vincent R. DorseyEdward' J. LeonardArthur F. CassidyMr. & Mrs. John M. Canto

$25Harold Meehan, Francis J.

Kilgrew, Mr. & Mrs. John T.Smith, In Memory of Francis L.Shea, Maurice A. Quirk

Mrs. Benjamin laForce,Thomas J. Daley, Mr. & Mrs.John Pires, Jr., Mrs. FrankSouza, George Coleman

Mr. & Mrs. James C. Noonan,Mr. & Mrs. William Gilbert, Mr.& Mrs. Edmund F. Bagley, Ther­esa, & Helen Archard, Mr. &Mrs. - Valentino Pallotta

Armand Forand, Mr. & Mrs.H. Leo Creamer,' Mary E. Lynch,Mr. & Mrs. Robert Cox

Mr. & Mrs. William V. Ma­honey Jr., Joseph F. Biastoff,Mr. & Mrs. Sol Streim, Mary E.Judge

ST. THOMAS MORE

$200Rev. Martin L. Buote

$100Mr. & Mrs. William J. Gibney,St. Thomas More Women's

GuildSt. Thomas More Conference,

St. Vincent de Paul Society$50

In Memory of Susan Hall Hig­ginson

The Daley FamilyFrederick J. Wilding

$30Mr. & Mrs. John L. Shea

$25John Clorite Sr.Mrs. John E. ConnollyMr. & Mrs. William J. Holland

Mr. & Mrs. Leonard E. BurgmyerJr., Mr. & Mrs. Victor Robillard,Mary H. Skammels~,~ ,Mrs. .Robert :rrafka, Mr.

& Mrsl'.£rnestl:R<ogers.

SwanseaOUR LADY OF FATIMA

$50Mr. & Mrs. J. David Connell

$35Mr. & Mrs. Gerald Morris

$30 .Mr. & Mrs. Leonard E. Board­

man$25

Mr. & Mrs. Junior C. Erick­son, James' J. McDermott

Charles Chorlton

ST. DOMINIC

$40Mr. & Mrs, Thomas E. Ryan

$30Mr. & Mrs. Albert Rousseau

$25St Dominic's Women's Guild,

Gerald Vaudreui, Mary DoyleMrs. Edward PerreaultIrene Letourneau

ST. LOUIS DE FRANCE

$25Mr. & Mrs. Edward Ward, Mr.

& Mrs. Emile Boiland, Mr. &Mrs. John Romanovitch, Mr. &Mrs. Edward Casper .

Mr. & Mrs. Leo Mathieu,Auguste Dionne & Family

Ocean GroveST. MICHAEL

$100Rev. Joseph A. Martineau

$50Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth Gardiner

$40Mr. & Mrs. John Farias

$30Mr. & Mrs. Ceasar PaivaMr. & Mrs: Alfred Bolduc Jr.

$25Mr. & Mrs'. Edward ConfortiMr. & Mrs. Joseph HargravesMr. & Mrs. John C. Lindo.Mr. & Mrs. J. E. BeauregardMr. & Mrs. John Szuba

AssonetST. BERNARD

$200In Memory of Paul Kleiner

$100St. Vincent de Paul Society

$25Mr. & ..Mrs.. Paul OuimetMrs. Mary Bean

Fall RiverST. MARY'S CATHEDRAL

$500Rev. Msgr. John J. Regan

$100Rev. Barry W. Wall

$60Catherine LynchMr. & Mrs. Joseph Magriby

$50Mr. & Mrs. Laurence A, Coyle

$40Mr. & Mrs. Michael Hay-es,

& Family .$35

Dorothy KirbyAngela WingateJames W'ingate

$30Mary ArrudaMr. & Mrs. Chester Kulpa

$25Robert F. Coggeshall, Kathryn

Dailey, Mary Lee, Mr. & Mrs.George Sutherland, BridgetThornton_

BLESSED SACRAMENT

$30The A & W Root Beer StandMr. & Mrs.. Louis Ste. MarieThe Eugene Roussin Family

$25. The Joseph Levasseur Family,

Mr. & Mrs. Wilfrid Dumont, Mr.& 'Mrs. Richard Hamel, PaulLanglais', Mrs. Rose Tonelli

OUR LADY OF HEALTH

$250A Friend

$150Holy Spirit Society

$50In Memory of Rose FreitasMr. & Mrs. William Sylvia

$35Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Alme~da

$25Joao BorgeS' Jr., In Memory

of Antone Ferreira, Lucille Le­Vasseur, Seraphim Machado,Mr. & Mrs. Jose P. Melo

Mr. & Mrs. Jeremias Rego,Mr. & Mrs. Francisco C. Silvia,Mrs. Deolinda Viera

Named CoordinatorWASHINGTON (N,c) - Do­

minican Sister Maria Riley hasbeen appointed a coordinator forthe bicentennial program beingl!ponsored by the CatholicChurch nationwide

NOTRE DAME

$60Dr. & Mrs. Adelard A. De­

mers, Jr.$25

In Memory of Delia BowersMr. & Mrs. Henri DuretteMr. & MrS'. Roger FournierEugene Hubert .Mr. & Mrs. Roger Richard

ESPIRITO SANTO

$25Mr. & Mrs. John RaposaMr. & Mrs. Eugene Hubert

OUR LADY OF THE

HOLY ROSARY$300

Gerald Zide$40

Mrs. James Patricelli & Fam­ily

$30Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Graci

$25Holy Rosary CYOMr. & Mrs. Thomas MarcucciMr. & Mrs. George Rhoad;;In Memory of Rev. John J.

SullivanMr. & Mrs. Frank StetkiewiczThe Furgiuele Family

IMMACULATE CONCEPTION

$50Henry Lajeunesse

$25Mrs. Adam Brooks, John G.

Burgess, Rosmary Dussault, Mr.& Mrs. David R. Faria, In Mem­ory of Everett Lafleur

Paul Lafrance, Mrs. WilliamMitcheIl, Mrs. Jeannette O'Brien

ST. ANNE

$50Mr. & Mrs. Roland G. BileauMr. & Mrs. Philip R. Thibault

$40Cecile Sutton

$30Mr. & Mrs. Paul HamelThe Nadeau FamilyMr. & Mrs. Andre Plante

$26Mr. & Mrs. Benoit CanuelMr. & Mrs. Ernest Dupre

$25Dr. & Mrs. Alphone Poirier,

Mr. & Mrs. Walter RomanowiczMr. & Mrs. Normand Chapde­

laineThe Misses Dupre

ST. WILLIIAM

$50Mr. & Mrs. Francis Gauthier

SS. PETER & PAUL

$100St. Vincent de Paul Society of

Ss. Peter & Paul ParishWilliam J. Lowney & Helen

Lowney$45

John J. Tyrrell$35

Mr. & Mrs. Michael DuPont& Janet A. Dupont

$25Mr. & Mrs. George' Moniz,

Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Stankiewicz,John C. Mahoney

The Falmouth National BankFALMOUTH. MASS,

By !he Village Green Since 1821

Page 19: 05.15.75

. SACRED HEART

ST. ROCH

$100St. Vincent de Paul

$50Antonio Coutu

ST. STANISLAUS

$275Mr. & Mrs. Eugene Galkowski

$85Mr. & Mrs. Walter Goseimin­

ski

....Bath Tub Ruined ?

~'-

~<

t-IOVl :'>tJWe Can RESURFACE IT!

Like New - Guaranteed - No Remoyaloj" •. ' WHITE· OR· COLOR ..'.,1:.111 ClIllecl.l,£CTROGLAZ 1-385-9-3011

HOLY NAME

$125Dr. & Mrs. John Carvalho

$100Rev Hugh J. MunroAtty. Kenneth L. SulLivanMrs. William ConnellyAlice & Gertrude LynchMr. & Mrs. Gustave Mattos'In Memory of Alice B. NortonRose E. McDonaldAty. & Mrs. Frederic J. TorphyMr. & Mrs. Robert Nagle

$75Mona M. Shea

$50Mr. & Mrs. Nicholas MitchellMr. & Mrs: Pierre PicardElinor & Alice LenaghanMr. & Mrs. Charles FrancoMr. & Mrs. George FlanaganMrs. William A. TorphyKatherine LomaxMrs. Michael ReganDorothy C. SullivanIn Memory of Kathleen & Sis­

ter Cecilia Gillespie, RSMMr. & Mrs. Herve Bernier

$40Mr. & Mrs. Harold J. DusoeMcArdle FamilyMr. & Mrs...- Romeo McCallum

$35Mrs. !Anthony Geary

$30Mr. & Mrs. Armand D. CoteMargaret J. TurnerMr. & Mrs. Raymond McMul-

len & FamilyHelen V. LomaxMr. & Mrs. Vincent MannionMr. & Mrs. John KeatingMr. & Mrs. Charles Leonard

$25Mr. & Mrs. Norman Roy, Mrs.

Anna K. McDowell, Mr. & Mrs.Ronald Banville, In Memory ofKather·ine McNaboe, Mr. & Mrs.John E. Cruger

Mr. & Mrs. William CoIlins,Eleanore Howard, Mr. & Mrs.William F. Patten, Mr. & Mrs.Stephen Nawrocki Jr., Mr. &Mrs. Edward C. Berube

Mr. &. Mrs. Joseph Delaney,Mr. & Mrs. John Hart, Mr. &Mrs. John Walsh Sr., AgnesMurtagh, Mr. & Mrs. Jean LouisBeaupre

Mr. & Mrs. Roland Gagnon,Mr. & Mrs. Stanley Mikolazyk,Mr. & Mrs. Rouel Rapoza, Mr.& Mrs. Francis Harrington, Mr.& Mrs. Vincent Johnson

Mr. & Mrs. William O'Brien,Mr. & Mrs. Fred Czerwonka, Mr.& Mrs. Paul Lyons, Mrs. FrankMcAuley, Mr. & Mrs. William F.Keating Jr.

Marion Kane, Mrs. EdwardMurphy.. Mr. & Mrs. John Me­deiros, Mrs. Eugene R. Ponton,Mr. & Mrs. Arthur J. Donovan

Mr. & Mrs. Raymond Chip­pendale, Nancy L. Nagle, InMemory of Andrew & HelenCreear, Mr. & Mrs. RaymondMonahan, Mary C. Casey

Madeline Casey, Mr. & Mrs.James Considine, Mr. & Mrs.Owen L.· Eagan, Mrs. FrancisReagan

THE ANCHOR- 19Thurs., May 15, 1975

l~~"":.~:"'~"';~:?'~':~~~':~~"":~

~'SICK OF LOUD MUSIC - ROUGH CROWDS:1~ WINDSOR SENIOR DANCE CLUB :~~ Couple, Single, Escorted, Stag, Over 30 ~t~ IT'S BACK - DANCING - LIVE MUSIC ~~ Socialze with Friends :'i~ Nostalgia Atmosphere ~~ Eyery Wed., Sun. - 12:30-5:00 Lincoln Pk. ~t, Spacious Floor • Line - Ballroom Dance ~~ No Intermission - Continuous Music}~ TONY RAPP--ART PERRY ORCHESTRA ~r International· Dances - Music I~ $1.35.Adm. Members & Sr. Citizens-- $1. ~

t..::~,~:::~~""~~/; ;~~~1

ST. JOHN THE BAPTIST

$200Rev. Lucien Jusseaume

$100St. Vincent de Paul Store

$55Edward OueJ.lette

$28Orner Harrison

$25John Farrell, St. Vincent de

Paul Conference

HOLY CROSS

$250·Conventual Franciscan Fathers

$50St. Vincent de Paul Confer­

enceHoly Rosary Sodality

$35,In Memory of John A. Piet­

ruszka$30

Mr. & Mrs. Stanley W. Nowak$25

Mr. & Mrs. Vincent GancarskiMr. & Mrs. Stephen Piro~, Mr.& Mrs. Thaddeus Krupa, Mr. &Mrs. Robert J. Ciosek, Mr. &Mrs. Raymond Canuel

Mr..& Mrs. Bronislaw Kozack,Mrs. Etta Walmsley, Mr. & Mrs'.Walter Witengier

ST. JOSEPH

$150Joseph O'Connell

$100Joseph O'Connell

$60Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Cayton

$50Mrs. Richard LownDaniel O'ConnellMary CullenMr. & Mrs. John Mercer

$35James D. Salvo

$30Mr. & Mrs. William A. Nu­

gentMr. & Mrs. James Perkins.

$25Mrs. Wallace Fairbanks, Mr.

& Mrs. Marcellus Feeney, Mar­garet R. Feeney, Robert Gagnon,Mrs'. Leonard Greenhalgh

Peter Hodnett, Mr. & Mrs.Edward Monarch, Mr. & Mrs.Eugene Morin, Mr. & Mrs. Russ­ell Pichette, Mrs. Charles Ross

Ann G. Doyle, Joseph F. Du­mais, Mrs. John Markland,James McMillan & Son, Nicho­las Rodriques, Mr. & Mrs. Tim­othy ThompsonCharles Wills, Patricia M Leary

ST. ELIZABETH

$175Rev. George Dej. Sousa

$50St. Elizabeth's Ladies GuildSt. Elizabeth's Holy Name

Society$25

Laura NobregaS1. Elizabeth's Children of

MarySt. Elizabeth's' St.' 'Paul Soci­

ety

l'I

REFUGEE ON GUAM: A South Vietnam evacuee car­ries a bandaged statue of Christ while disemb~rking fromthe refugee ship Pioneer Commander at Agana, Guam.More than 40 per cent of the 45,000 evacuees on Guam areCatholic, according to Bishop Feli~berto Flores. NC Photo.

$40Anne Tuttle

$31John Whitty

$30In Memory of Mr. & Mrs.

Michael TobinMrs. James J. WhalonJohn Maher

$25Marion E. Fahey, Anthony &

Mary DeMeo, Andrew Rebello,Agnes Murphy, Mrs. James A.Benson

Daniel Vincent, William O'­Neil, Lawrence Hussey, GertrudeO'Neil, Elsie Cambra, "Margar~tKehoe :.: " .... " ,',.

In Memory of Marion C. TuiteMargaret Morriss

$50Mr. & Mrs. Antone S. Feno Jr.'f.he Grace FamilyFrederick J. HarringtonMildred G. & Gerald I. Har-

ringtonCatherine, Flurence & James

KennedyM. & Mrs. T. Arthur McCannMr. & Mrs. Manuel J. SoaresWalter H. WhiteEdward J. & John E. DelaneyGrace L. MartinMr. & Mrs. James H. Sullivan

Sr.$48

Mr. & Mrs. Robert Nedderman$49

In memory of Horace Hall andMr. & Mrs. Orner Paquin

$35Ann & Elizabetht Downey &

Catp.erifi() FlynnCatherine O'NeillJohn T. O'NeilIn memory of Herman J.

Springer$30

Mr. & Mrs. Charles F. BliffinsCatherine I. Trainor .

$25Mr. & Mrs. Orner Boucher, Mr.

Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Burke, MaryH. Chippendale, Mrs. John P.Fleming, Margaret F. Lenaghan

In Memory of Thomas F. Mc­Cabe, Sr. & Jr., Mr. & Mrs. Ed­ward F. 'McGrady, Mrs. JeanMizak, In Memory of the Mitch­ell Family, Loretta Norton

Mr. & Mrs. Jdhn Shay, InMemory of MIchael F. Sullivan,Sr., M. Doris Sullivan, In Mem­ory of Harold K. Sutcliffe, Mr. &Mrs. Francis J. Waring

J. Joseph Welch, Kathryn V.& Margaret M. Whalen

Mr. & Mrs. Ambrose MaynardArthur BelandMr. & Mrs. Thomas F. Con-

norsManuel S. CrovelloEvelyn & Madeline CurtisMrs. Ruth CuttingHelen F. LearyMr. & Mrs. George McCombMrs. John L. MorganMr. & Mrs. Jobn H. Springer

ST. LOUIS

$250St. Louis Conference, St. Vin­

cent de Paul Society$100

Mr. & Mrs WiHiam Whalen Jr.$50

Margaret DoranRita DoranThoma.:: DoranHeiman F. MelloWilliam LynchIrene ReynoldsHilda MilesIn Memory of Thomas Brit-

land Jr. & Joseph CamaraRobert C. WhiteMary ConnertonElizabeth ConnertonAnne Conner-ton:In Memory of John & F-Iorence

Philbin

$70Mrs. Alice Kret

$56.83St. Stanislaus School Children

$50St. Stanislaus Women's Gu'ildMr. & Mrs. Thomas Pasternak

$35Aniela KruczekMr. & Mrs. Walter Zbabosz &

DavidMr. & Mrs. Stanley Wojnar

$30Mr. & Mrs. Richard ErnstMr. & Mrs. Joseph Cichon

$25Mrs. Frances Winiarski, Joan

Winiarski,' Mr. & Mrs. RobertRioux, Mr. & Mrs. John Zukow­ski, Rita O'Loughlin

Mr. & Mrs. Paul Machado,A Friend, Eleanor Roberts, Mr.& Mrs. Joseph M. Costa,

Felecian' Sisters

Fall RiverST. PATRICK

$100Bread of Life Prayer Com­

munity$50

Mr. & Mrs. Edward DeCiccioJoseph M. MorrisonMr. & Mrs. Charles Veloza

$35Mrs. Eugene LeClair

$30Mr. & Mrs. Edward Haponik

$25'Elizabeth Barlow, Mr. & Mrs.

George Biltcliffe, Mr. & Mrs~Joseph Biszco, Leonard Bolger,Edward Healey

Mr. & Mrs. John Morgan Jr.,Mr. & Mrs. Francis E. Powell,Mr. & Mrs. Clovis Saucier, Mr.& Mrs. Louis Silvia

Mr. & Mrs. Ronald Cabucio,Mrs. James Coyle, Mr. & Mrs.Samuel DelPiano, Mrs. AltonKing, Mr. & Mrs. Michael Ku­szay

Mr. & Mrs. Patrick Leary, Mrs.Edmond Peladeau .

OUR LADY OF THE ANGELS

$100Holy Name Society

$30Gerald Cardelli

$25Jesse Barreira, Pernando Mar­

tins, Alma Macedo, Lionel Rod­rigues, In Memory of Maria Er­nestina Alves

$200- Dr. naniel T. Harrington

$180'Rev. Arthur K. Wingate

$150In Memory of Mary C. Connor

$100In Memory of Mary H. C.

FlynnMr. & Mrs. Quinlan F. LearyMr. & Mrs. Daniel MurphyIn Meinory of H. Frank ReillySacred Heart Women's GuildFrances C. ShaughnesseyMargaret M. SullivanAdelaide C. TrainorElizabeth M. TrainorIn Memory ,of John J., Tuite

Page 20: 05.15.75

New Shipment Just Arrived!No More To Be Had At ThisLow Price When Our PresentSupply Is Gone - Hurry!

These authentic Colonial Bunk Bed Units aremaking Bicentennial history. They literallywalked off our floors the last time they wereadvertised. Ideal for your Summer or Year'Round Home - Hurry for choice selections.

PERSONALIZED BUDGET PAYMENTSNo Banks or Finance Companies To Pay

,)

Colonial Maple ar Pine BunkBeds with big, rugged 5 inchPosts that easily convert into2 Twin Beds if desired. GuardRail and Ladder are includedat this low price.

,asons

"New England's Largest Furniture Showroom"

The Mate's Bunk provides a com­fortable bed with 76 inches ofstorage space. Available in hand­some Maple, Pine or Oak finisheswith authentic Colonial drawerpulls.

t

3 SENSATIONAL BUNK ROOMS

~~ektu

$199

You get 2 Foam Mattresses .•. 2 Box Springs .• ,the Corner Table... 2 Wedge Bolsters ... Fr~me with Casters ... Fitted QuiltedBedspreads. Handsome, practical, Day Or Night Space· PlannerUnits that fit into a minimum space while producing maximumcomfort.

All 9 PiecesComplete

ONLY

$199

t

Twin Bunk Beds with GuardRail. Ladder and IO-DrawerChest is beautifully finished inMaple, Pine or Oak,

r~a;,TWIN SOFAS BY DAY~ TWIN BEDS

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See More, ,', Get More,., Save More!No Warehouse Showroom anywhere has the vast display of Name Brand FurnitureIhal you'll find al Mason's in Fall River. And wilh our everyday low warehouse pricesyou,can selecllhe furnilure of your dreams al savings you never dreamed possIble.

;,17

ALL 4 PI ECES $199

2 SEALY MATTRESSES plus 2 BOX SPRINGS ON LEGS

FAMOUS SEALY HI-RI$ER STUDIOWith Full 39" Twin Size Quilted Mattresses

Versatile, comfortable - it will solve all of your space problems, Use them end toend; side-by-side; use them together for a big, oversize bed or in a corner for aspeciol arrangement, It's the most practical bedding you can buy at a price you can'tignore.

Think of it! This luxurious 4 Piece Sealy Bedding Grouping for less tha'n $50 per ~nit. $199Famous Sealy quality throughout with smooth top mattresses. Deluxe construction;twin sizes only - quantities limited!

Where In I'he World But At Mason', WouldYou Find Such A Selection Of Quality Furn­iture And Bedding At ONE LOW PRICE?

~['."... " I::~·~·'" I ~(l r'·;Lt...LtJ u"" l~· T

..PLYMOUTH AVE. AT RODMAN ST. FALL RIVER