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C O U M E R - p m ^ ^ j p ^ A Y , APRG. IX, 1952 • * '

fittiirtloii' Urged As Must Iteadinsr By Father O'Brien

* o ^ l a l a r f f ^ . e f o ? »«nb«w ©* the Rosary Altar Society of- St. Mary's Church, Elmira, the Rev. Bartholomew O'Brien, assistant pastor of St. Peter and Paul's Church, Ehnira, urged his listeners to majffi,daily reading of the Cost soiler,. "The Imitation of Christ", a irmst on their program.

Pointing qut that this fempus bool$ stands next to the Holy Bible in popularity, Father O'Brien stated, "It Is one of the most powerful of all spiritual books, telling the experimental story of a soul in love with Christian perfection. While ad­dressed to all interior souls, it-speaks a language that everyone can take^o heart,-sinners, begin­ners and even unbelieving souls. It is one book that everyone feels was written just for himself alone.

S9-MAIJ1 ST.E.

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WHILE FULL OP thoughts, the book a l s o carries wi th i t a wealth of graces which drives home in a n amazing way the thoughts It presents. As a result, none can read a l ine a n d remain utterly indilletevt. ~ "

' T h i s is not a book for the library; rather, i t should be as handy as t h e newspaper. Every­one should have h i s own personal copy s o that he c a n mark freely the passages that Impress h i m the most.

"The wealth of the material is so great, that to read a page a day i s sufficient. The reading should be done, i f possible, early in t h e day s o that the good im­pressions w i l l carry over into the day and h e l p t o brighten and spiritualize the day's work.

"JUST A S ONE never finishes with a prayerbook, so one never finishes wi th the 'imitation*. It can-fee read iron* page to page, or opened anywhere at anytime, and a-solution or a special grace seems always to be found.

"The greatest threat t o reading this book I s the modern disease known as 1 haven't g o t time.' Through t h i s excuse, the good coming from the book has been sadly crippled In this a g e when its teachings are so necessary. The quetton. of t ime is the ques­tion o f good management. I t is hoped that everyone wi l l so man­age h i s t ime that the daily sched­ule w i l l make room for the read­ing o f T h e Imitation o f Christ.'

Mint. James P. O'Leary, presi­dent announced that t h e annual Communion breakfast would be

[held o n Sunday M a y 4.

Owego Holy Name Men Hear Elmiran %afffffh Academy Alumnae To GfiefJ,952 Class *At Tea

t h e aniRHaf^azareth Academy Alumnae Association Tea and reception ..of the 1952 graduating,; class will lie held Satard»y,ii^rvt&, &\ 3 p.m. at the Chatterbox Club, 23 North

JPRlNCIPAI, BOLES fa St. Fatrlek's H o l y JSame Society Communion Breakfast in A h -w»g» Hotel , Owego, Sunday were taken by t h e above: (from left) S t a n d s McCtovenv presl-dent; J-fEdmond Morton, secretary and break­fast chairman; John B . Mc3Camney, v i c e presi­

dent* Attorney Daniel & Donahue , Recorder of the City of Elmira, guest speaker; t h e Eev . Joseph Hogan, assistant pastor, o f 3U Patrick's and Bfcbard C. Lounsberry, Tioga C o u n t s assistant district attorney,- a guest.* Tubba

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CJoodrnan S t , , . Chafifmandf the affair is Betty U , | . « l%.*—«

Jane Nary. Reservation* may be OCnOldrSniP LXcUllS made by. cm- - - - — ' ~ --ipg J4M, ttw-aid Byrtefe C K a r J ' O t f f 244M5 W i l l i a m :*T,;i By»n,,CJ|:ne*«e 28?3-JJ Naiwy, Burke* tOciiat 3927; or Betty Jane- N*Jr " G L e r i ^ 3280-3 h M e _ . _ ^ w

Serving- on, wmnalttee- are Mr*. Marie-Maas,. Mem.Kiefe^. Setty;

Sansom^orjeiice :KttcMttsy; re­ception; Mr** t JR4§»ard Rcken •Mrs. Earl Hubble, Jirs. Robert: Nary, Mm, £ , ft- EaimefiW^S. William, J. Ryan, Btf*. )EHa Tig^e, Mrs. Clayton Gallagher and the Misses Louise Carcelli; Nancy Burke. Mary Jane Klein, Jane TUaragy, Louise Mwsl and Betty Jane Nary.

,0 r-4—.' '

Attorney Deplores Failure v

Of Penitentiary System Owego—Attorney: Daniel J. Donahue, recorder for the city

of Blmira declared in an address here that the penitentiary system Qf punishment, considered a failure today* exists

McKi

TEVELS-O'CONNOR CO.

OVERHEAD

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He w a s the principal speaker a t the Owego St , Patrick's Holy r?atne ^Society Communioh Break­fast he ld in the Ahwaga Hotel and attended by 115 members.

The members assisted at 8 sum. Mass in St.-Patrick's Church, re­ceived Holy Communion in a body and marched from the church to the hotel.

Attorney Donahue talked <Sn criminal law, tracing the develop­ment of various penal systems from the time of- the Dark Ages t o today.

HE ESTIMATED that about three mill ion persons would pass through our country's houses of detention this year and t h a t many bf them needed treatment that could not be obtained in peni­tentiaries. He stated that the in­determinate , sentence was o n e step forward and was being used more and more. '

Mr. Donahue told of the early European c r u e l punishments when the part of the body which w a s responsible for the crime w a s dismembered. He came down t o the beginning of penitentiaries, the first In the United States be­i n g in Pennsylvania In 1790 which tiscd t h e system of solitary con­finement- N o other states in this country adopted this system but EuropeKdld. • , - /

TH&5 n f f l s W A T T r f s ^ s y s t e m h e called the 'Auburn system where the prisoners are grouped

during the day and put in separ­ate cells a t night

In closing, he stated that the public shows no wish to abandon the (penitentiary) sys tems which he claims have failed.

The Rev. Joseph Hogan wel­comed the group while J. Ed-mond Morton acted as master of ceremonies and introduced the guesjg at t h e head table. At the close of t h e affair, youngster Tommy Crannell sa id the prayer after meals . •

Navy Chaplains To * Get Higher Rank

Washington, D.O. — GRNS}-— Clergymen between the ages o t 34 and 39 who are now eligible for initial appointment to the Chaplains Corps ot the Navy will be appointed in the tank of lieu­tenant senior grade.

Ordinarily, the entering gride for chaplains who have >ad no previous experience hvthe serv­ice Is lieutenant junior grade. However, the older men will be eligible for the higher rank, the Navy armdimced,

A special effort Is being made by the" Navy to GU vacancies in its chaplains corps, with the age limit being raised to 39, and lowered to 19 (for seminary students) in an attempt to recruit a sufficient! number o£ reserve chaplains f o r its needs.-

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10 Hew Books Reported In Elmira Library

Suggestions f o r promotion of St. Christopher's Library i n El­mira and a report on increased circulation, were heard by mem« bers o{ t h e Board of Directors at tije gunrterly meet ing i n t h e Li­brary, April 16.

Miss'Mary Newsome presided, Rev, .Vincent P . Collins, moder­ator? "oi t h e Elmira Deanery of N.CCW., gave the valuable sug­gestions f o r the promotion o f the Ubraryf

Mrs. Edmund Maloney report­ed the Increased circulation dur-. Jng tho p a s t few-months, duevno doubt, to the large n u m b e t f w new- iwoika added to the> ShelveK T h e Library has at present well over SOQ books.

Mrs. Francis-Kennedy, newly appointed •program chairman, told of p lahs for a spring meet­ing an* outlined a suggested pro­gram" for t h e fall.

"ft was voted t o include r e p r o serttatlves from the Elmira Heights and Horsehcads parishes on the Board.

O t h e r chairmen reporting were: Mesdames Charles Wil­liams, Wil l iam Roberts; also Misses Florence Catthan, Rose Kingston, Katherlne O'Connor, and Grace Miller.

Mrs. J a m e s MaUon, president o f - the JBlraira Deanery of N.CCW^. praised the Library as an outstanding work of Catholic Action.

Among the n e w books are; the following: « \ t

What- Catholics Believe b y Jo­s e ! Pleper and Heinz, Easkop, T h e Ejrteamalr of> the Catholio Church b y Msgr. John IP. Sulli­van, revised b y Rev. John C. O'Leary, The Wisdom o r « • Thomas. transcribed from his writings published by the Peter Pauper Press, Hour Glass- by John \V*. Lynch, Yankee Priest by Edward t. Murphyi Personal Mental Hygiene by Dom Thornaa v*erner Moore, M.D., Oh. CSooi Cround b y ^steir Helen Ange la Hurley, ^Adventures to Wvo Worlds b y Dr, A . J. Cronln.

Carved Rations To Be IxhiBited * fit Fcirdiiaiti

A public exhibition of the M stations of the Cross, carved in jwhite oak by Pletxo Montana, is being held in the ""War Memorial Chapel on the eampws of Ford-ham University, beetaning at noon on Saturday. April 12. and extending trhoiigh Easter week. The sculptor will he on Hand to explain his techniques on Satur­day and Easter Sunday from 3 to 6 p. m. ''

The 14 large -panels, 'which took the sculptor five years tor complete, wera^mmSsloneavby Rev. Robert^. Gannon; S*K, the; former president, and Accepted by TtevTLauMnee^'McGinley,

' " ' Sees f&fe Boston—(RlSfS)—A pprge o f

tofi Chinese Communists) to allow Kremlltt-train/sd depMHes to take' ov#r, J* expected iti the |near future by tSeJEtev, Quei tin, B, Olwell, C.P.,*recently *xpe)led after 28 years in China,

At LeMoyne College Scheduled May 3 *

Le Moyne College announces i t s annual Scholarship *xamih& tions wil l be held on Saturday, May 3 , beginning sfeaj i j§-*i i te A l l examinations- wilt b e h e l 4 in ^be Administration Btrapngg, at t h e college, S y r a c u s e / r .:?r-'.yi'

Three scholarships tosvW«1f tuition only will be;avrar4e4,as; ^ipllowst highest rshitf! '•$& «i«;

hually. for four yeaik| second highest rank, $100 imttuallf fo> * iryearsv-^ > ' ',"'" • .'•' •''"''<'

The subject matter o j the; e^ arninajtions will in,cli||e a General Aptitude test and achievement teSts In high school Enjglls|. Ind Mathematics. The ibllowini con­ditions govern the soMRr^Wft examinations: the stMdeiir.must have tile entrance ^e«jjs|renien^ for Le -Moyne ColIejeA vVifcfi £: scholastic average of at i?astS0^ throughout his 'high mc3}0ol arid he must have had no previpiis. college work. • Women asiwelf men are 'eligible for* tf|% inatlon.

Candidates for these examlj tions should at the Regj lege, L/> cuse^ N.Y. ^erms. *rhesey application forms must be returned to the Oftfcerot the Registrar of Le' H6yne Coi

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Their erection completes the renovation of«,tbe ^nivprsity's century-ol4 church, as, a mem-, orlal to the. FordQiain men who Scd m World War IL 1A* Sta­tions are admired ior a, rare com* blnatton ol artistic and ^vo-tionai qualitiei,

- . . . > . . - o — — - • —

Cost-Of-Llvlng Wage Policy Set fdr form

Employer* ancl .employees en­gaged in agrkiflture J«yeJ>eeiJ advised by the Second Regional Wage StabHiaitkm Board ot Ad­option of a new cost-of-living •wage policy whic-h permit* wage adjustment* .to »atek J1** te* crease in the cost of livfflg since January, 1951.

Aruthr J* ^ R * , regionil .jm chairman,—said the policy, .em­bodied in * resolution adopted by the national'WSB by an 8 to * vote with induitry roexnber* dls-«nting, specifies that ,4wage rates of agricultural labor may be in­creased without hoard approval up to and inducting ?a> a 1951 base rate, plus five per cent thereof, or (b) «-19» *sse rate, plus Jilteen per cent thereot" ,

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