Convent Picture - Gumberg Library Digital Collections

16
WT 1 I t 1> ir 4 : A # 83rd YEAR—No. 47 Founded in .^Vjtev. Michuei O'Connor, First Bishop of Pittsburgh Diocese « Bandits Release Maryknoll Priest ANNIVERSARY MASSES PIT1SBURGH, PA , THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1936 Pontiff's IS <*! i'WO DO I, I. A lis I'KIl VEAU SINGLE COPY FIVE CENTS Father Burns, Captured Last February By Outlaws In China, Reported Safe Ossining. N. Y., Nov. 16 Word CATHOLIC UNIVERSITY nr»»» Anniversary Requiem Masses for two priests of tiie diocesc who die be offt In St. Paul's Cathedral Sol einn Requiem Mass will be sung on Friday morning-, Nov. 27, at , , , , ,, „ , 10:00 o'clock for the repose of | received today at Maryknoll Mis- j 1Jl(> 8tiUl <if the , ale KoV E Refutes Rumors , The annual collection for »he Catholic University of»America all tho oil Son day, Nov. 29, it is announced in a letter issued this week hy I Most Rev. Hugli C. Boyle, Bish- Tn op of Pittsburgij. The text of vo priests of Uie diocesc , ^ J lied on Nov. 26 1935, will Shows Vl & or In Addressing ** <» up in a fercd next week' Priests' Missionary Body: i of ., t , he . dior<s,> ° :y Body; Other Audiences . ITALY LI Vatican City, Nov. 13 sion headquarters here from Rev. J. Clarence Burns, M AI . Ameri- can missionary priest kidnaped Lawrence O'Connell. The célé- brant will be his brother, Rev. .lames A. O'Connell, pastor of by Chinese bandits more than Sebastian's, Bellevernon; nine months ago in Manchukuo,) Rev. Philip i>ugan, pastor of St. indicated that h e was released Joseph's, Mount Pleasant, will after prolonged efforts. Negotiations through the ^ T ni! ed States state department an Japanese authorities have be going on for several m nth members of the mission said hen H. be deacon ; Rev. James A. Gara- imn, assistant at the Cathedral, will be suhdeacon, and Rev. Thomas J. Quigley, assistant at "buoyant, spirits." Pope Pius XI | <he Bishop's letter appears on spoke for a full hour t: 3.000 representatives of t sionary Union of tho C!er vigor quieted rumors of mounting "The Holy Father appeared mneh as he did when I last saw him in 1030," said McGurkin of I !ai one of the Ameri page 4. East End Parish Forty Years Old v. Edward j Anniversary Observance At , Help of Christians Church To Be Held Dec. 7-13 St. Stephen's, Ha/.elwood, will he master of ceremonies. The "His eyes were bright. His voice J I The priest notified his superiors I diocesan priests' choir will sing, was clear. His lace had a good j The 75th anniversary of the here that he was free, unharmed,) Requiem High Mass for the color, without any trace of the* foundation of the Italian Frai and would resume his work to-! late Rev. Alfred L. Henke will morrow at his mission at Tunhua be sung on Saturday, Nov. 28, In East Manchukuo. j at 8:30 o'clock, in St. Vitus' Readies Safety j Church, New Castle. Rev. Nie- Tokyo, Nov. 17 -Rescued from] ola Di Mita, pastor of St. Vitus' bandit kidnappers, Rev. J. Clar-j will ho celebrant. End of Civil War Expected Soon Unless Russia Sends Aid to Communists R me. Nov. IS Italy and Ger- many today formally recognized the government set up in Spain y General Francisco Franco, > th countries breaking off rela- tion s at the same time with the ' mmimist Socialist regime which has been previously reoogniaed. It is expected thai Austria will ake the same course of action. These developments came as ; e n i- r a 1 Franco's in.surgxita, ,%-iiich had met unexpected re- ;.stance in their so.go of Madrid, en«..wed their efforts and made iuvaru\ s into the city from the were buoyan ng. I lis spi-rus1 can Province of the Immaculate! After the formal I conception in the United States' ivjssia lecides t< benediction he was particularly j aiKl t I t> 40th anniversary of . the actively intervene in behalf of the cheerful in greeting those nea-v j establishment of the Parish of radicals, it is believed that the Iron and chatting with them." Our Lady Help of Christians, recognition of the Franco forces rhe Pontiff told his audience, in- Meadow St., East End, will be by Germany and Italy will bring Tvod during the week of Dec. a speedy end to the civil war as vit.li a series of exercises ar-! th e insurgents will now be able to are a mole supplies and am- I clu three C Hi UP ranged by the pastor of the; secure a: church, Rev. Cherubino Viola, O. munition. ence Burns, American priest, andi his Chinese servant arrived today . , j Bishops, at Liutaokou police station, three ( atflOIlC Worker miles southwest of Auntung,| , , J Christians Manchukuo. . Meeting Planned ^ ** tiu -y have , f. m They were reported convalesc- J received from God." ^ j Each evening there will bej r p TiptlPW PI p H w ing from their long captivity in! Vi iced rogr.J that • j services hi the church and a meet- -all l V t l l v « 1 ^«fe^ &e -tare of Japanese and Man-! William 1,1. Callahan, managing j countries the number of priests en-, ir? r ln the parish hall for one of ' A .. l rti L vnöl1 f L v ! m ö ' 'door of th.-« "CathoiiC" WorXcr/a roiled in th8 s :•.»••> union | thf> parish groups, the services l / U l l l U t i t t I I I r lllll» F Now York, will visit Pittsburgh i was "much smaller than needed." consisting of Rosary, sermon and I during the next few days, and anj Penedieüon. The general program >pen meeting, at which all those Health Appears Good follows- last Feb. 5 by Chinese bandits j interestcd in the work of this Vatican City Nov 12 who held him in the mountains in magazine may hcar it discussed,! r «»..,,' southeastern Manchukuo. They wil f be held next Monday eve-' f '^"** L " anv had demanded 5,000,000 Chinese , v _ 23 at 8:00 o'clock. in ¡ n '¿.¡ n y chukuoan troops. Father Burns was kidnaped R< dollars for his release. the basement hall of St. Agnes' f ig in llis 1. The pont' He is the son of Mr. and Mrs• churc h, Fifth Ave. and Robinson mucb troubled with asthma, which Monday evening, Dec. 7 For the fathers of all families in the parish; sermon, "Not on bread alone doth man live." Tuesday, Dec. .8 -For the moth Cincinnati, Nov. 16- Most Rex John T. McNicholas, O.P., Arch- bishop of Cincinnati, as chairman Edward G. Burns, of Toledo, O., and went to Manchukuo in 1934. Other Missionaries Held St. I causes considerable snort Mr. Callahan will explain the', , upon the leas principles which the "Catholic j Therefore* he tn Convent Picture To Be Shown Here Lives of French Nuns Coming Next Month The fact that he has n I far hi.' r ione ìary ae 1 trovo: i ! V Three other Catholic mission- worker" is supporting, Its cam-1 d ,, wn stairs in a kind v ^ s are still being held captive, pa!gn of opposing Communism ctuiir by bandits and Communists. and Fascism with real Christian h0WC Ver h > is vigorous (Continued on Last Page, col. 4, ! ity and the progress that has been . ^ nc .; V( , » ' ! made. Rev. Charles Owen Rice, assist-1 •nt at St. Agnes', will preside md among those acting as spon s r Ts of tho meeting are Rov.j Thomas B. Lapp an, diocesan di- j ] rector of the Society of St. Vin-j 'Cloistered', Based on Actual ' --nt d> Paul: Rev. can P . Hens-, • s ler, of St. Lawrence's Church; Qf BlSllOp Rev. John J. McDonough. of St. Mary Magdalen's. Homestead; (Continued on 1 » Th The remarkable motion pictur« of convent life. "Cloistered," whteh has been highly praised by Oatholic authorities wherever it has been shewn, is to be pn scnted in Pittsburgh, beginning in Christ- was week, at the Art Cinema Theater, Liberty Ave. Originally booked to open this week, the management of the not attend the theater during that j season it was decided to postpone th« opening, fa Boston, New York and other j cities the film was shown ; week after week to crowded houses, interest in it being arous- ^ by the fact that it gives for first time an authentic prosen-1 tation of life in a cloistered com-1 »unity, it is not a motion "pic- j ture" in the ordinary sense, but a film record of exactly what j transpires in the Motherhouso of: the Good Shepherd Order in An-1 t i p-s, France. Special perm- and Mrs. R. A. Bvrne, and Mrs. I Altoona, ti of v er (Continued on Last Page, col. 2) I Guilfovle. Bi Arnold Lunn To Give Lecture in Pittsburgh: c ; place on ru i been decidec •id Lunn, celebrated Eng-1 .•h writer, traveler and lecturer w ill a dd re ss The Crusaders, Sa-j cv i t Heart ; Parish club, on Thürs- j fp iv n : ght . Dec. 3 in the Guild | H all. Cent er Ave. Following in th e tradition of j Cl aesterton and Belloc, Mr. Lunn is the aut: hor of many controver- j si: al books on religion, apologetics, at* id selene e. He has also written a t e rea t length on mountain j cl Imbing, ski-iiig, and different! . J Ç îpccts of travel and geography. I A t preser it. ho is conducting aj i e ci al Ice ture course at the Uni-j Vf•••sity of Notre Dame. There W •n] b,-. a nominal admis- j in f innon, K. i . ' a J as sei v rip Dio- the episcopal committee on mo- il pictures, has just sent to the ids of all the dioceses of the no rv copies of a pledge to be famines in the parish; ] taken on Dec. 13, when the Legion "The tears of a mother! of Decency pledge is to be renew- ; salvation of her chil- ed. At the same time Archbishop -v iw o For nil 1 hns-M McNicholas also released a pam- low to Judge the | Morality of Motion Pictures." This pahiphlet is described as "A popular guide to right standards I in motion pieture entertainment, I authorized by the episcopal com- mittee on motion pictures for the Legion of Decency." llection taken up in the [ n rlfocussing the question of •ch.es of the diocese for De moral significance, the pamphlet Institute for the Deaf says: anted to a, total of $22,350, it "It is generally recognized that announced this week by Rev. | enterfninment is either helpful or of' harmful. A clear distinct ion must ;e- therefore be made between '»(a) Entertainment which id I tends to elevate or to relax men v ' and women physically or men Iv tired with the duties and of every day life, (Continued on Last Page, col. 1) | Op I 11 f * Paul Institute Collection Bette? Dohentv "his rep ri 3 over th lá Y HD Ri: John of E l'i o, . . . i rt of De Pau! m the part ot school, which ta. occupations o an on Nov. 30. H-. íe collection is a v maintenance and ither Doherty star "ib) • Entertainment which tends to lower their ideals and pri andnrds of life, -ieht kind of entertain r is to maintain a normal „,M n M{ on life Tt m n v ¡ro far«-In Cootinned on Page Three, col. 41 •Th f i flian Catholic Action New President Named HOLIDAY Because of the holiday next Tñiírsday, Thanksgiving Day, it will be necessary that all ma- terial for publication in next. «'on "char"» for "the lecture, and week's issue of this pai^.- lu- it will be open to the public. His received a day carhc»- ban will be "Communism in Eu-- usual. Monda;, af.ernoon e.«11 U v 1 the dead line for all except im- :T.or Lam- een named iSian Caih- Ciriaci. ;718.01 ri T T 1 P T H A T l/iibiily : V Ll PP0IN1 S NT Personal Experience to be obtained from Pone Pius Mr. Lunn U.. I ™ Will address the Stu-1 portant news Hems. The eo- ^opermit the making of the pic- dents of Mount (Continued on Last Page, col. 1) I same afternoon. Mercy College the, operai ration i »f all ci will be p will be greatly appreciated. cd next week. Key. Aloysius !-, Zwoìinski of Eversen, rí-eently ord.lined, lias hern named assiislant pa»tor nt Tiansfigurat ion PleiLsant. Church, Mt.

Transcript of Convent Picture - Gumberg Library Digital Collections

WT

1 I t 1>

ir 4 :

A #

83rd YEAR—No. 47

Founded in .^Vj tev. Michuei O'Connor, First Bishop of Pittsburgh Diocese

«

Bandits Release

Maryknoll Priest

ANNIVERSARY

MASSES

PIT1SBURGH, PA , THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1936

Pontiff's

IS <*! i'WO DO I, I. A lis I'KIl VEAU SINGLE COPY FIVE CENTS

Father Burns, Captured Last

February By Outlaws In

China, Reported Safe

Ossining. N. Y., Nov. 16 Word

CATHOLIC UNIVERSITY

n r » » »

Anniversary Requiem Masses for two priests of tiie diocesc who die be offt

In St. Paul's Cathedral Sol einn Requiem Mass will be sung on Friday morning-, Nov. 27, at

, , , , ,, „ , 10:00 o'clock for the repose of | received today at Maryknoll Mis- j 1Jl(> 8 t i U l < i f t h e , a l e K o V E

Refutes Rumors , The annual collection for »he

Catholic University of»America all tho oil Son

day, Nov. 29, it is announced in a letter issued this week hy

I Most Rev. Hugli C. Boyle, Bish-Tn op of Pittsburgij. The text of

vo priests of Uie diocesc , ^ J

lied on Nov. 26 1935, will S h o w s V l&o r I n Addressing ** <» up in a fercd next week' Priests' Missionary Body: i of.,t,he.dior<s,> ° :y Body;

Other Audiences

. I T A L Y

LI

Vatican City, Nov. 13

sion headquarters here from Rev.

J. Clarence Burns, M AI . Ameri-

can missionary priest kidnaped

Lawrence O'Connell. The célé-brant will be his brother, Rev. .lames A . O'Connell, pastor of

by Chinese bandits more than Sebastian's, Bellevernon; nine months ago in Manchukuo,) Rev. Philip i>ugan, pastor of St. indicated that h e was released Joseph's, Mount Pleasant, will after prolonged efforts.

Negotiations through the ^Tni! ed States state department an Japanese authorities have b e going on for several m nth members of the mission said hen

H.

be deacon ; Rev. James A. Gara-imn, assistant at the Cathedral, will be suhdeacon, and Rev. Thomas J . Quigley, assistant a t

"buoyant, spirits." Pope Pius X I | <he Bishop's letter appears on

spoke for a full hour t:

3.000 representatives of t

sionary Union of tho C!er

vigor quieted rumors of mounting

"The Holy Father appeared

mneh as he did when I last saw

him in 1030," said

McGurkin of I !ai

one of the Ameri

page 4.

East End Parish

Forty Years Old

v. Edward j Anniversary Observance At

, Help of Christians Church

To Be Held Dec. 7-13 St. Stephen's, Ha/.elwood, will

he master of ceremonies. The "His eyes were bright. His voice J I The priest notified his superiors I diocesan priests' choir will sing, was clear. His lace had a good j The 75th anniversary of the here that he was free, unharmed,) Requiem High Mass for the color, without any trace of the* foundation of the Italian Frai and would resume his work to-! late Rev. Alfred L. Henke will morrow at his mission at Tunhua be sung on Saturday, Nov. 28,

In East Manchukuo. j at 8:30 o'clock, in St. Vitus' Readies Safety j Church, New Castle. Rev. Nie-

Tokyo, Nov. 17 -Rescued from] ola Di Mita, pastor of St. Vitus'

bandit kidnappers, Rev. J. Clar-j will ho celebrant.

End of Civil War Expected

Soon Unless Russia Sends

Aid to Communists

R me. Nov. IS Italy and Ger-many today formally recognized the government set up in Spain y General Francisco Franco, > th countries breaking off rela-tion s at the same time with the ' mmimist Socialist regime which

has been previously reoogniaed. It is expected thai Austria will ake the same course of action.

These developments came as ; e n i- r a 1 Franco's in.surgxita, ,%-iiich had met unexpected re-;.stance in their so.go of Madrid, en«..wed their efforts and made iuvaru\ s into the city from the

were buoyan

ng. I lis spi-rus1 can Province of the Immaculate! After the formal I conception in the United States' ivjssia lecides t<

benediction he was particularly j a i K l t It> 40th anniversary of . the actively intervene in behalf of the cheerful in greeting those nea-v j establishment of the Parish of radicals, it is believed that the Iron and chatting with them." Our Lady Help of Christians, recognition of the Franco forces

rhe Pontiff told his audience, in- Meadow St., East End, will be by Germany and Italy will bring

Tvod during the week of Dec. a speedy end to the civil war as vit.li a series of exercises ar-! the insurgents will now be able to

are a mole supplies and am-

I clu three C

Hi UP ranged by the pastor of the; secure a:

church, Rev. Cherubino Viola, O. munition.

ence Burns, American priest, andi

his Chinese servant arrived today . , j Bishops,

at Liutaokou police station, three ( a t f l O I l C W o r k e r miles southwest of Auntung,| , , J Christians Manchukuo. . M e e t i n g P l a n n e d ^ * * t i u - y h a v e , f . m

They were reported convalesc- J received from God." ^ j Each evening there will bej r p T i p t l P W P I p H w ing from their long captivity in! Vi iced rogr.J that • j services hi the church and a meet- -a l l l V t l l v « 1 ^ « f e ^

&e -tare of Japanese and Man-! Will iam 1,1. Callahan, managing j countries the number of priests en-, i r ?r l n the parish hall for one of ' A .. l r t i L v n ö l 1 f L v ! m ö

' 'door of th.-« "CathoiiC" WorXcr/a roiled in th8 s :•.»••> union | t h f> parish groups, the services l / U l l l U t i t t I I I r l l l l l »

F Now York, will visit Pittsburgh i w a s "much smaller than needed." consisting of Rosary, sermon and I during the next few days, and anj Penedieüon. The general program

>pen meeting, at which all those Health Appears Good follows-last Feb. 5 by Chinese bandits j i n t e r e s t c d i n the work of this Vatican City Nov 12 who held him in the mountains in m a g a z i n e m a y h c a r i t discussed,! r «»..,,' southeastern Manchukuo. They w i l f b e held next Monday eve-' f '^"** L " anv had demanded 5,000,000 Chinese , v_ 2 3 a t 8 : 0 0 o'clock. in ¡ n '¿.¡n y

chukuoan troops.

Father Burns was kidnaped

R<

dollars for his release. the basement hall of St. Agnes' f i g i n l l i s

1. The pont'

He is the son of Mr. and Mrs• c h u r c h , Fifth Ave. and Robinson m u c b troubled with asthma, which

Monday evening, Dec. 7 For the fathers of all families in the parish; sermon, "Not on bread alone doth man live."

Tuesday, Dec. .8 -For the moth

Cincinnati, Nov. 16- Most Rex John T. McNicholas, O.P., Arch-bishop of Cincinnati, as chairman

Edward G. Burns, of Toledo, O., and went to Manchukuo in 1934.

Other Missionaries Held

St. I causes considerable snort Mr. Callahan will explain the', , upon the leas

principles which the "Catholic j Therefore* he

tn

Convent Picture

To Be Shown Here

Lives of French Nuns

Coming Next Month

The fact that he has n I far hi.' r ione

ìary ae1

trovo: i ! V

Three other Catholic mission- worker " is supporting, Its cam-1 d , , w n s t a i r s i n a kind

v ^ s are still being held captive, p a ! g n o f opposing Communism c t u i i r

by bandits a n d Communists. a n d Fascism with real Christ ian h 0 W CVer h > is vigorous

(Continued on Last Page, col. 4, ! ity and the progress that has been . ^ n c . ;V ( ,

» ' ! made.

Rev. Charles Owen Rice, assist-1

•nt at St. Agnes', will preside

m d among those acting as spon

srTs of tho meeting are Rov.j

Thomas B. Lapp an, diocesan di- j

] rector of the Society of St. Vin-j

'Cloistered', Based on Actual' --nt d> Paul: Rev. c a n P. Hens-, • s

ler, of St. Lawrence's Church; Q f B l S l l O p Rev. John J. McDonough. of St. Mary Magdalen's. Homestead;

(Continued on 1 » Th

The remarkable motion pictur«

of convent l i f e . "Cloistered,"

whteh has been highly praised by

Oatholic authorities wherever it

has been shewn, is to be pn scnted

in Pittsburgh, beginning in Christ-

was week, at the Art Cinema

Theater, Liberty Ave.

Originally booked to open this

week, the management of the

not attend the theater during that j

season it was decided to postpone

th« opening,

fa Boston, New York and other j

cities the film was shown ;

week after week to crowded

houses, interest in it being arous-

^ by the fact that it gives for

first time an authentic prosen-1

tation of life in a cloistered com-1

»unity, it is not a motion "pic- j

ture" in the ordinary sense, but a film record of exactly what j

transpires in the Motherhouso of:

the Good Shepherd Order in An-1 t i

p-s, France. Special perm-

and Mrs. R. A. Bvrne, and Mrs. I Altoona, ti of v er

(Continued on Last Page, col. 2) I Guilfovle. Bi

Arnold Lunn To Give

Lecture in Pittsburgh: c

; place on ru

i been decidec

•id Lunn, celebrated Eng-1 .•h writer, traveler and lecturer

w ill a dd re ss The Crusaders, Sa-j

cv i t Heart ; Parish club, on Thürs- j fp iv n :ght . Dec. 3 in the Guild |

H all. Cent er Ave.

Following in the tradition of j

Cl aesterton and Belloc, Mr. Lunn

is the aut: hor of many controver- j

si: al books on religion, apologetics,

at* id selene e. He has also written

a t e rea t length on mountain j

cl Imbing, ski-iiig, and different!

. J Ç îpccts of travel and geography. I

A t preser it. ho is conducting aj

i e ci al Ice ture course at the Uni-j

Vf •••sity of Notre Dame.

T h e r e W •n] b,-. a nominal admis- j

i n f

innon,

K. i

. ' a J

as sei v rip Dio-

the episcopal committee on mo-

il pictures, has just sent to the

ids of all the dioceses of the

no rv copies of a pledge to be

famines in the parish; ] taken on Dec. 13, when the Legion

"The tears of a mother! of Decency pledge is to be renew-; salvation of her chil- ed.

At the same time Archbishop

-v i w o For n i l 1 hns-M McNicholas also released a pam-low to Judge the

| Morality of Motion Pictures." This pahiphlet is described as "A popular guide to right standards

I in motion pieture entertainment, I authorized by the episcopal com-mittee on motion pictures for the Legion of Decency."

llection taken up in the [ n rlfocussing the question of •ch.es of the diocese for De moral significance, the pamphlet

Institute for the Deaf says: anted to a, total of $22,350, it "It is generally recognized that announced this week by Rev. | enterfninment is either helpful or

of' harmful. A clear distinct ion must ;e- therefore be made between

'»(a) Entertainment which

id I tends to elevate or to relax men v ' and women physically or men

Iv tired with the duties and of every day life,

(Continued on Last Page, col. 1) |

O p I 11 f * Paul Institute Collection Bette?

Dohentv

"his rep ri

3 over th

l á Y

H D Ri:

John Mí

of E l'i o, . . . i

rt of De Pau!

m the part ot

school, which

ta. occupations o

an

on

Nov. 30. H-. íe collection is a v maintenance and ither Doherty star

" i b ) • Entertainment which

tends to lower their ideals and

pri

andnrds of life, -ieht kind of entertainr

is to maintain a normal „,MnM{ on life Tt m n v ¡ro far«-In Cootinned on Page Three, col. 41

•Th f i

flian Catholic Action New President Named

HOLIDAY

Because of the holiday next Tñiírsday, Thanksgiving Day, it will be necessary that all ma-terial for publication in next.

«'on "char"» for "the lecture, and week's issue of this pai^.- lu-i t w i l l be open to the public. His received a day carhc»- ban

will be "Communism in Eu-- usual. Monda;, af.ernoon e.«11 U v • 1 the dead line for all except im-

:T.or Lam-

een named

iSian Caih-

Ciriaci.

;718.01 ri T T1 P T H A T l / i i b i i l y : V Ll

PP0 IN1 S NT

Personal Experience

to be obtained from Pone Pius Mr. Lunn U.. I ™ W i l l address the Stu-1 portant news Hems. The eo-

^opermit the making of the pic- dents of Mount (Continued on Last Page, col. 1) I same afternoon.

Mercy College the, operai ration i »f all ci will be p

will be greatly appreciated. cd next week.

Key. Aloysius !-, Zwoìinski of Eversen, rí-eently ord.lined, lias hern named assiislant pa»tor nt Tiansfigurat ion PleiLsant.

Church, Mt.

' W O T H E P I T T S B U R G H C A T H O L I C THURSDAY, N0V

Communists Not

Pressing Danger

Msgr. Ryan Says Labor Union -

these, the agitation for some form

cf collectivism will probably be-

come insuperable."

"The other important bin less

immediate duty of employes and

employers," Msgr. Ryan said, "is

to bring about a reorganization cf

Free From Their Influence; industry along the lines recom-

Reforms Must Be Made mended by Pope Piu to establish a system of oceupa-

~ tional groups. These would be Toledo, Nov. 14 The injunction d c m o c r a t i c , self-governing bodies

industry of Pope Leo XITI in his Encycli- ^ : c n ü 3 1 g i n o a c h

cal Rerum Novarum that working b o t h l f Vrrs and employes and

men should "have nothing to do e n j o y l n £ f g r e a t raeasure of in-

with men of evil principles" has d u s t r i a l a u t r n ( , m v under the su-

a direct bearing upon the activities p e r v i s k m a n d control of the state,

of Communists in our time in the T h p r P S P n t i b e onlv industrial

United States. Rt. Rev. Msgr a r r a n s i 0 m c n t f o r reducing class

J o h n A. Ryan, direct >r of the De- c n < i i e i g a n d p r o v i d i n s , f o r Co-op-

partment of Social Action, Xa- r r a i J ; , n b e tween .capital and la-

tional Catholic Welfare Confer- b r ••

e n c e , declared in an address here

Sunday at the joint meeting of *

the Diocesan Councils of Catho-

lic Men and Catholic Women

His subject was "Employees

and Employes; Their Mutual

Duties and Rights". C m man is Is,

he said, are th e only "men of

evil principles" from whom work-

ing men and the labor unions ofj Injustice Is Needed But our d^untry have anything to

fear.

Exposes Errors

Of Communism

MS.ST, Sheen Bays War Again-*

[11 justice Is Needed But

Reds' Methods Are Evil

( O F F I C I A L )

Catholic University Suiidav55

L

Alarm Unwarranted

"C ncerning this stfeuat on," h<

added, "there has atfsen in re-

cent months an amount of treni-

dation that has no warrant in net-, n c f private property, the

ual facts. While it is true that I absorption of individuals as tools

Communists have sought to get a , f the stat \ and annihilation of

Nc tre Dame. Tnd .Nov. 16- The

errors in th e philosophy of Com-

munism which result in the do- ;

rehg!" n were explained »V v

Rev. Mssrr: Fui; Sheen, of t;

• foothold in a great 'many 1 cal

unions throughout the country.1

the general condition is that they!

have made no considerable head-] Catholic University, in a series of

way. The Communists do not. lectures delivered last week at the

dominate any national nor any! Universitv of Notre Dame

Reverend and dear Father: j a

The annual collection for The c

Catholic University of America I v

will be taken up in all the church. |

es of the diocese on Sunday, j a

Nov. 29. The prayer for the wel-

fare of the University is to be

said and the following letter to

be read the previous Sunday.

You are requested to give a

brief exhortation on the work

of the University on both Nov.

22 and Nov. 29. The generous co

operation of all the people of

this diocese is requested.

The University is the Catholic

center of scholarship and teach-

er-training for our country. From

it there comes a steady stream

of books, pamphlets, and maga-

zine articles to bring Catholic

scholarship to the service of the

perplexed leaders of our times. (

In this day when men are con-

fused in action, bewildered in

thought, and faltering in belief,

the Catholic University is need-

ed to protect the moral stand-

ards of the home, to enunciate

spiritual values, to challenge the

philosophical and political falla-

cies of our day.

I t is significant that the en-

rollment at he Summer Session

of the University has increased

six hundred per cent in six

vears and thai in four centers

Washing'ton. California, Tex.

Spiritual Renewal R e a l N ' p p i J n t n

Si tv Wi

II V me

n o Ami ;" UP

tmer, The Uni

ols in America

olie. students f

tales and four, j

ud because of

a the Assoc ia-

n Universities. I

ts students de-

bv all acc

.V

Coctrine of Christ

Un

' " va- P a- Nov.

for spiritual renewal h Jn extremely I L

"' 'vhichtheexW

Ì ' "p «Mphâss p- v. Paul H a a l y p ^ T , Araber issue of «The ¿ J

t a

e its Goiueii Jubilee. The j

ity has merely existed on j

>me from the annual col

It is our hope that al

ike a special effort th<

>v years to create a stir

ad "for the expansion o

\V that

with Wi

eners bv m:

Oai

women

v ,

sincerely in Christ. :< H U G H C. BOYLE ,

Bishop of Pittsbur 1 Q3fì

state American labor uni ins. They

exhibit some strength in a few

local unions, but probably the I

number that they control is less

than 25 in the whole United;

States." i

Turning to th, rights of em

ployes as set f >rth in P pe Pius I

XI'5 Encyclical Quadrag°simoj

Anno". Msgr. Ryan made mention;

of the right to a living wage and

that of organization as primarv.

Pope Pius* Encyclical, he said.'

is remarkably up-t -date in that

it covers three changes in the I

worker's status which may be de-!

scribed as constituting industrial ]

democracy.

Reform*. Urgent

- J Speaking on the general subj

f "Apologetics and Communis n discussed pnu

i.-rîl San Dieiro Bishop Noted For Charity

issued here today.

I cf Sociology a t ^

: : 1 f t l w re^ent remarkable '' ' n the Earth" Fas--

• o Cati-.r-icism. "There is seed" s s e n s- " i n tijnes like these, to

' n away these elements of

.ahress, and to return

itv and loyalty to tie so-: £ h t Qf Our Lord, aadof

Such is the nature of

social Catholicism". '

that American Cala

' : ' -ten forgotten ife

• o teachings of Catholkrism

: h, wag?s, labor, asd ^ Father Furfey indicates

a'so that too many Catholics have

rtcd to purely political ac-

Ho cvails for a renewal cf

faith, for personalistic ac-

" i f':r a strong liturgical

mcnt. Catholics, he says,

viors of society, for only

th it which is necessary

defeat the rising tide of Com-

•%r -" 0 and Fascism.

>hy. tactics, personalities and

ostleshin r.f Communism, and

I contrasted them with Catholicism,

i Mis nightly lectures drew crowds

at tax"d the capacity of Wash-

ed n Hall on the Universitv

Msgr. Sheen oenounc M ex-

emos of both Liberalism and

c mm imi? m as too radical. He

»ferd d the .right of private en-

rroifie as well as the inalienable

of individuals to functi n ;th -ut t •'« much dictation by the

ate. He said:

Protests Justified

Joseph. Mo., Nov. 15- Most

Charles Francis Buddy, -19.

of St. J.-soph's Cathedral

who has been named Bis h :p

g newly-created Diocese of j

[ popularity and is partie-;-]

well known for his tireless"!

beha' Ui

.T:

» c

"Through these changes." he

said, "the employe would become

something more than a wage

earner. He would be a wage

earner plus a participant in the

direction of industry, plus a shar-

er in profits, plus a part owner of

the concern in which he is em-

ployed. Without those th ree

changes in the worker's status

cur industrial society probably

cannot be preserved. Without

W E E K L Y

. V A S S C A L E N D A R

(For Use With Missal)

SUNDAY. Nov. 22: 25 th

(Last) Sunday after Pente-

cost: Semidoublc; Green; 2nd

oration, of St. Cecilia.

MONDAY , Nov. 23: St. Cle-

ment; Double; Red; 2nd ora-

tion, of St. Felicitas.

TUESDAY, Nov. 24: St.

John of th e Cross; Double;

White; 2nd oration, of St.

Chrysogonus.

W E D N E S D A Y . Nov. 25: St.

Catherine; Double; Red.

THURSDAY , Nov. 26; St.

Sylvester: Double; White; 2nd

oration, of St. Pet', r of Alex-

andria,

FR IDAY . Nov. 27: Of the

season; Green; Mass of the

preceding Sunday ,is said, with-

out Gloria < r Credo; 2nd or 1-

tion. A cunctis: 3rd, at choice.

SATURDAY . Nov. 28: Vigil

of St. Andrew (anticipated);

Purple; 2nd oration. Concede;

3rd. for the Church or the

Pope.

(The Advent :Se«so-n b f j i n r

S U N D A Y . Nov. 29: First

S u n d a v of A d v e n t .

"Communism is right in Its

* • <• against social injustice,

long hours, overemphasis on

vr perry and 1 ow wages. But

j these protests are not the m on on-

ly of Communism. Leo X I I I

' 0* •> the same protests, but he

was not a Communist. We must

• eî< the essence of Communism

• :'.-1 cl0 of its protests, namely, its

reform, its method.

"Its reform is wrong, because ; it believes not in distribution, but

I in dispossession. Because thero

j 0re rats in rh.- barn Communism

! believes in burning the barn. Wo

• believe in burning the rats. Its

mi thod too is wrong, namely,

vic-lanee, for the proper way to

! establish earthly paradise is not.

j by class hatred and struggle.

¡Catholics believe in violence too.'

I but not to our neighbor as the

Communists, but to our selfish-,

ness; in other words violence

against the o&'c 1 ism which would

make us Communists."

The sneaker quoted often from

the program and constitution 01

the Soviet, and other literature

1, 1930, St. Vincent's i ¡Cafeteria and Men's Shelter for j j the destitute of this city and for! ! transients. This agency provi.'.-led on average of 3.000 meals a ! " ' day to the needy and gave ìodg- rnent ings to some 700 men. In 1934. mrnt

Vincent's C o f e t * " 1 a m i Mrm'a ! Guard

A f fpV.rl

r m i : t i c 3 D a y

v i r e r i e n t tenet n - .

Iiür.ri»

I a Mi OVi

mt si

Gove

ter.

bv

a tra

Conventuals' Superior . : r 5 Canadian Houses 1 otreal. Nov. 13—Making his

• n i ca i visit to Montreal his e lec t ion at Rome as Su-

i r.eral of the F r i a r s Minor. Ve ry Rev. Bede

O.M.C.. was welcomed by

• - of the v a r i ous houses of

I I \ ; accompanied b y Very ' • Mayer, O.M.C.. his

cess r as superior of the to-t > Conception Pro vine?

i States and Canada) and Edick, O.M.C., sec-

ret ; rv and assistant to the super-; .. ,. ricrai.

r M a y e r was born in Syr-

v N , Y . in 1S83. and was

r d line d in 1906.

Organized Health Clinic

a kin g launched by th e Bishop-

Rt. Fo T O'C

and Et. Ri

gì u a program ot hea

the children of the s

eh doctors. Sisters a;

St. Joseph's Bospit

'ed their services.

1.000 Converts

( , !

id nurs

il voi un-

" a d ? ^ r e s i d e n t

O f C o l l e g e A s s o c i a t i o n

' s Arranged For Public School Pupils

r \ M l . N:v. IT -Many of the public high schools

•is and beys here are ex-, , , , ,i>:, \b-.-r anrual re-in rbe s ix teen churches as-

S f r the retreat, Wedaes-•r ••«. ; ¡v. Fr iday and Sat

•• r - V week. The retreat .. j W ; t h Mass and Conn?®'

: S a t u rday morning.

y h-

Buddy

minist:

ritabio, s biological and

, his labors as a mem-

he Commun it v Chest

as a member of the

of health. Bishop-elect

distinguished as an ad-

'. i lo has carried ut

to St. Jos-

V

York nnual

m

Eu:

An

He

Communists u

I f f E0!-1 Brov/der hav

improvemeni

eph's Cathedral. including its

complete rodccoration, since he

became its rector "on March 11.

1926. He also mist cet that the c , iS ; ) inaugurated an in-

,< ^ r r , i ( . r |i1P formation forum, through which

at ed th; witn <1 He ged the students |

to take the offensive in their fight

against this God-less economic

system, and not to be satis fuel

with mere enthusiasm about the

Msrr Shaen declared tha^ our

present day ills in t iv UnU od

States are nut only political and

economic, hut moral and religious

as well. I n continuing he said:

"\\V mu-t trust in prayer and the'

things of the spirit and above all,

in a luve of God from whom our

liberties are derived." J

ûo^ytÂe

^¿kefesHûuô twcuy/iûuf

Traveiiing home you should naiuraily choose Cunsrd Whr.4 Star. The name's a byword, both here an.i in the Efnefa'd Isle . . for comfort, service, spaed. The popular moto?ship; Georqic, Britannic Ivrad the largest K ret. including the Cirinthia, Franconia, Samaria, Scythia, Laconia . . . calling teouiarly it Ccbh, Galway, Belfast. A;k about the Cuiard \/hits Star Deferred Payment Plan.

O N S W e- j.'tp-.s

I- ( ' i : N Î UP; C

W e Examine ^ Prescribe a n d

Fit the Glass«8

'ftrri^r lté

SPECIAL CHR ISTMAS

TO I R E L A N D IN THE S C » »

Vfuv York D r e . U . frrfS

V s / n . i n r f r « ! ^

f . r H o l y M . « ^ ^

C 0 C y o u r l o c a l Irish T r a v e l A9« f l ,<1 ' C O N ARD WHITÉSTA^

\ \ . I M I » W a y . t

T O M B A T NOVBMBKR >9, IM« T E K P I T T S B U R G H C A T H O L I C ÏHJUE&

To Renew Pledge

The Following Pictures Are Objectionable in Part- Children and Adults Should Avoid Them:

( LASS It

Cfcllttn Dang«r»«us D»rwlerll9 of tlx* Larth Devi I Do'l Uin.itr at Eight Dodsworth {¿..«¡vihinx Is Thunder Pint a Girt Forgotten Faces Frsrikle and J o h n n i e Girl From Mamlalay Gu-(î«t-'Km Haines Hell Ship Morgan Hideaway Girl It Had to Happen II « Luve Apam Kin« of Burlesque Klondike Annie

Libeled Lady i.i Kid h I UK Jim Careon

I Lh i ng 1 )oad • Lettura of a Star

¿Jan Vv Im Lived Apun, The

Men in White New Gulliver, The Niglii at Um Opera i Vg of Old Drury l 'm suit of Happiness

I Ilo mem ber- Last Night j Robin Hood of Eldorado, The

Hrcrat Agent Snowed Under Boak the Rich -pendtlirlft Tl.e.-,i Goes Wild Liiinas to Coma

Three Men on a Morso . ».h Against tin; World ..'.ilking Dead, The Walking Death Walpurgis Night (Swedish)

, my moral Lie. As a n i imbir «f I Lm L«gion of D«c*ney, I yi«dg«

O n i n d p p p i i i F i l m « ll,-VMîr t0 r imt i i1 away / U L 11111» th«m. I promit«, further, to «tay

away altogether from piar«« #f arnui«ment which «how tham »• à matter of policy."

he Following Pictures Are CONDEMNED

( I.AS* C Carnival in Plunders iBostasy ¡.rambling With Souls Guilty Parents Higii School Girl 'avn Head Private Life of Henry VIII (Reissue)

(Continued from Page One)

keeping- a nation sound in mind and in heart. The wrong sort of entertainment, on the other hand, iends to lower moral ideals and to give a wh ; 1 ly false concept ion of Iii'e and itsi respons i bilities.

"Motion pictures must be judg-ed not only as entertainment but also as an influence on morals. A W mhinot n, ,« t j r>,. : , , vv asntngton, ¿sov. 1.5 I resident screen drama influences morals tin.» . v. it »....< . , , „ . ., j i\ih>.-e\ .-it yestoruay issued the because it nresents ideals of hn- , i

, 1 , , 1 , 1 0 1 n u annual proclamation appointing man conduct t these be true v , •„: r,,. , " - 1N0V. ¿b as Inanksgiving Day.

,oft1?' w " x , h a v e enter! ainmem The text of the proclamati which ennobles; if they be false, j follows-we have entertainment which de

President Issues Proclamation For Thanksgiving Day

on

The Following Are Objectionable For Children; Catholic Parents l a v « the Obligation of Seoing That Their Children Do Not Attend Them:

CLASS A—Section II

Abtiul, th« Damned Absolute Quiet Accusing Finger Along Came Lore Amateur Gentleman Aathony Adverse April Blossom a April Romance August Week-end Barcarolle Bengal Tiger, The Pr'ige of Sighs, The Built!« or Ballots UtM of the Velvet Claw. Tin CM* Against Mrs Ames, The Champagne Charlie Christopher Bean (French> Coma and Get It Country Doctor, The Craig's Wife Crouching Beast Crime of Dr. Forbes, The Dancing Lady Destra Don't Turn 'Em Loose Dracula's Daughter Dragnet, The East Meets West Final Bi ur, The First B»hy, The Florida Special Fury Garden of Allah General Died at Dawn, Tie-Girl From Maxim's, The

The Following I r e General Patronage:

CLASS A—Section I

Aces and Eights Adventure in Manhattan Alibi For Murder All American Chump, An And So They Were Married And Sudden Death Arizona Raiders As Yuu Like It Avenging Waters Back to Nature WOT the Deadline tig Broadcast of 1937 The fig Game, The

Noise Dig Show, Thy Blackmailers jtohemian Girl, The Border Caballei o The Border Flight Birder ¿Patrolman C»*g Rider of Gun C Boulder Dam Bra/.d of the Outlaw Brides Arc Like That Bride Walks Out, The Ballaog Edition Hunker Bean Cain and Mabel California Mail Captain January Captain's Kid, The Case of the Black Cat. The

Charp. of the Light Brie Charlie Chan at Circus Charlie Chan at the Race '1 China Clipper Cloistered C'de of the Range Counterfeit Country Beyond The Country Gentleman U'Whoy and the Kid, The fSSl'l l'r,n,iy.jp

Crime Patrol, The eroded Trail, The Dancing Pirate. The Oaniel Boone. D»rlt«st Africa

Is a Sissy fe^uadron. The

wja Bosco the Stretch

T1

ß'WB to the Sea

S T n * 0 " ™ « '

ffi^ to Take ^ " » t l n ç Father ¡PJHy Saddles » J of the Trail P«ryman % Law

Saturday Night

p l à u t h * D e l 1 - T 1 " 1 «»Men Lane wrag Hostess

! r " l Landing Your Hear*

Days Wonder » v . Sheriff

Murder Case f:«y Desperado ;;«'|'t«=tnan From , (

Dormitory

Gir] V,'e O^rks. The rl 0 n the Front Page,

Give Me Y >ur Heart < J til de n Arrow, The Great Ziegfeld. The

: Ri otbet • Wife Hollywood Boulevard ' ' '¡man Carjro 1 d Give My Life

| t Married a Doctor ! in Ilia Steps

1 Stand Condemned 1 le of Fury, The G Couldn't Have Happened

K»»g Steps Out, The Ladii s in Love Lady Le Careful Lady Luck Lady of Secrets La Materne!ie ••!*t Journey, The

Law m Her Hands. The ! i o n of Terror

Girl in the World. The Magnificent Brute, Tha .J oi I Marry. The M ni Who Lived Twice. The M o o n ' s Our Horn®. The Moonlight Murder Mr. Deeds Goes to Town

at the Glen At hoi Morder By An Aristocrat Murdot in ! he Ohi I lud P.vn Musa 'Km Up 'lysiit: Mountain One Rainy Afternoon

j Palm Springs

Petticoat Fever Private Number Reckless Roads Reckless Way Road to Glory Roaming Lady Road Gang, Tho Satan Mel a Lady Scandals of Paria Second Wife ' h < n Bravo Men Seven Sinners Shu Devil Island Show Boat Sing, Baby, Sing Sitting' on the Moon Small Town Girl Smartest Girl in Town, The Suzy S worn Enemy There's Always Tomorrow These Three Thirty-Six Hours to Rill Three Cornered Hat, The Three Married Men Times Square Playboy To Mary With Love 1 óider Two Flags Valiant is the Word for Carrie We Who Are About to Di« We re Only Human Without: Orders Witness Chair W i v e s Never Know Woman Rebels, A Women Are Trouble Your« for the Asking

n „ v/U icier ed Unobjectionable For

' • This Night ;ie>.w( Patrol

Hussy ¡rand Jury

"it Impersonation, The it Pastures. The •f and Guitars

Gui-s of tho l-'ecos Half Angel '•''•enter, Tha Hire Comes Carter Heart of the West

carts Divided lb-arts in Bondage ib-ie Cornea Trouble Mfxh Tension

ilg Cassldy's Return M .i Money

on e of Secrets lb , '' of a Thousand Candles I v. i* a i ,'apii vp in Nazi Germany

Lo\e You Alwaya i\e|iy the Socond ' ll.\ of the Secret Service • Ganger

K'iHer a I 1 mi rjfe .on,: of Hockey Kite; of Kings, The King of Kings (Sferiopticon)

of the Royal Mounted Last of die Mohicans

1st of fhe Warrens, The Last Outlaw, The ,e.;: bet necks Have Landed • • f s Sing Again

I .i 'ii's Den. The L i f 11 e Lo rd Fauntleroy Little Miss Nobody . mgesi Night. The ,ove Leging at Twenty .ove on a Bet Lucky Terror Mad Holiday

Way for a Lady i i,i s Beat Friend '.1-n V of Scotland .feci Nero Wo l f e VI ijssage to Garcia I itiauininer Night's Dream

Way, The With the Iron Door, The

lissing Girls L-dei Cinderella ,n.iss loijein Times 1 ummy's Boys lu id er With Pictures !usic (¡.h i Koiind, The I y A|„e. le-o. W't'c is Man Godfrey II Marring» Iv.steries of Notre Di . y Born me i mvs a Queen bodv s Fool

Hi. Susannah >!d Hutch

lev ,.f the Mounted till' Relations

Paro l e I 'ftpper i 1 an to tii Patrol P i c c a d i l l y J i m

in Pa) ad* Polo Joe

Little Rioh Girl i <ppy p..s:»l Inspector i1 ,; i i Smeke Range President's M vslery, The Pi «view Murder Mystery, The

Pride of the Marines Princesa Comes Across. The Prisoner ,,f Shark Island. The Prison Shadows Private Secretary Professional Soldier 'abhe Enemy's Wife i-.eltlK Blood

Ramona Ran gei- Courage ¡¡»•'urn of Jimmy Valentine, Tin .etui ti of Sophie LaiiR. The

Gero It of the Zombios. The kliythm on i)io Range Rido, Ranger. Rida Ridiiig Avenger Pio Grande Romance 'oaring Guns '••true of the Rango

R ijioea Tavern b'o .... . a ri d Juliet Rose Bowl San Francisco 'ea Spoilers

Shadow The ! -do .'own. The

"inuing Cowboy, Tho •'ins of Man, The si;v Parade Son Comas Homo. A Sona of China, The Song and Dance Man Sons of Guns ".pecial Investigator Speed Sta go Struck Stampede Star for a Night Story of Louis Pasteur The Straight Frcnxi the Shoulder Sundown Saunders Superspeed Suiters Gold Swing Time Turzan Escapes Tal Her, The Texas Ranger Thank You. Jeeves They Met in a Taxi Thoroughbred Th ree Cheers for Love Three Mesquiteers». The Three of a Kind l"'hiee on the Trail Three Wise Guys Ticket to Paradise rough Guy

ail of the Lonesome Pine, The frail hi' West flapped by Television Traitor. The Trouble Ahead fu-uble for Two Tugboat Princess Tundra Two in a Crowd Two Fisted Gentleman Under Your Spell Undercover Man Unknown Ranger; The Walking on Air Wedding Present iVellingion Pike Goes West We Went to Col lege White Angel, The White Fang ..' I is of the Wasteland Wolves of the Underworld Woman Trap Yellowstone

BY THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMER ICA

A Proehunal ion I. FRANKLIN I >. ROOSEVELT

President of the United States of America, hereby designate Thurs-day. the twenty-sixth day of No-vember, 1936, as a day of na, tional thanksgiving'

The observance of a day of gen-oral thanksgiving by all the peo-ple is a practice peculiarly our own, hallowed by usage In the

j days before we were a nation and

. rr , , • Ia n 0 p r e n C y f o r sanctioned through succeeding

«rood. If the Miosis be false, the film years | is an evil influence. Obviously, ob- I l i v i n g safely passed through

scone expressions, songs, gestures| troubled waters, it is our right to

! an_ _ a c t ! o n w h ! c h a r e P a r t ( , f express our gratifude that Divine unobjectionable motion pic

Discussing further the influence of motion pictures, the pamphlet says:

"In brief, then, there are two reasons why a motion picture can powerfully influence personal morality; First, because in deal-ing with life and conduct it must inevitably present or imply a mor-al thesis; secondly, because it tends to persuade an audience lo accept that thesis. If the thesis be ! true, the film is

i1 rw

in res ex erf an evil influence."

Purpose of Legion The pamphlet then lei is the aims

of the Legion of Decency, the pur-pose of which is "to see that the motion pictures conform to Ui-e ue cepted and traditional morality upon which the home and civiliza-tion are founded."

I rovidi nee has vouchsafed us wis-dom and courage to overcome ad-versity. Our fre© institutions have been maintained with no abate-ment of our faith in them. In our relations with other peoples we

:id out aloof, but make reso-lute effort to promote Internation-al friendship, and, by the avoid-ance of discord, to furthe r world

Six instances are given where i ' r 'ace . prosperity and happiness, motion pictures might persuade1 Coupled with our grateful ao-eertain peisons to change their' knowledgment. of the blessings it convictions about right and wrong. l u i s ')lM'1! our high privilege to enr

The pamphlet then sums up: J".v- W(> 'nive a deepening sense of

"Traditional moral standards, l )Ui ' solemn responsibility to as-based on the law of God, teach l i r ' ' f<)r ouLsolves and our de,-that certain acts are sinful and seendahts a future more abundant that certain acts are virtuous. i n f a 1 l h a t K i i n security. Many films, however, by their in,-j L<>t 113• therefore, on the day sidious and attractive presentation aPPointed, each in his own way, of false standards, induce their h m together as a whole people, patrons to change their life-long r n a I i ' ' expressio.n of our

convictions and to believe that, oc- • thanksgiving and humbly endeav-casiona!1 v at least, certain sins o r t " follow in the footsteps of are virtues and certain virtues are! Almighty God.

j sins. All ¡his means moral disas I N WTTXESS WHEREOF . I | ter, for when convictions are per- j h a v e kereunfo set my hand and verted, conduct invariably under-1oaup(>( i l h o s o a l o f the United

1 goes a change for the worse," j States of America to he affixed. | An outline of the production Dono at the city of Washington I code, which is described as a "de.- t h i f l twelfth day of November. In ¡tailed and inclusive formula adopt-!'h,> Y f ' n v " f ° " r T-orvl Nineteen led bv the principlal producers of | Uundrerl and Thirty-six, and of | American pictures to regulate the j l h n rtidenr-ndence of the United j morals <>f the movies," is giypn. States of America the one hundred : Tin- Legion of Decencv the a n d sixtv-first.

nnphlet states holds that "far! FRANKL IN D ROOSEVELT. I

more [hau anv other form of popu hi r entertainment, t he mot io pictures have the obligation o not subverting traditional morali I ; by the presentation of films that j are degrading. "When moral evil is port raved in a f i lm." it savs. ! "it should never be pictured as good, admirable, or just i fi able. And conversely, moral good should never be proposed as evtl, foolish or despicable."

Pledge to be Renewed

ri ¿Eitbol"-c Po6t" .rv ( r r o u p

Meets Next Sunday

The regular meeting of the Gat h 1 i c P ißt rv S. ci'd v of Pitts-burgh wll? Pik., place Sunday af-ternofgi, N >v. 22, at 1:00 o'clock in S! .1 »senh'f? îT!t]] M nini Mercy

-H foolish College, with Naomi Lari»-in. a

Preceding Hie revised pled:

quotation from Pope Pius X I Encyclical on motion pictures an a reminder that the Iiishops c the United Slates, at their annua meet ine in 1935 decided that th

Î • m oi r ? i •' unit, ri s sneaker, j Miss T.arkln will discuss briefly, i tim poet Francis Thompson,

uf; M "trie Hockmuth will read and

ion on original m If ted m mbers.

for th,» year will t hiu m iiiif in rr

• h p n

»dg(> be tak

if the Feast of Immaculate r... , Co

Following is the tes •wal pledge:

"In the nam

c. i-ias season, meeting will be nd instead of the At î Ì î S P11 : ' »k t ' Ti £T

a member, will "M;nle*'n Catho-

Ghost A m e n .

e or the

and of th,

ndecont ai and those

North Side Card P. Hi

HI,! card 1 par >rtn

1 c

"T aek- exige m ht const will

ictures that

FOUR T H E P I T T S B U R G H C A T H O L I C XOVEMBfe

IN THE PARISHES C e n i m i P i t t s b u r g h

ST. F A I L ' S C V l i i L D l i A L —

Dai ly : i .oU P-M., foov ¡SOLUS do-

vouons arni mg ut prayers.

S I . A l i X K S A representative

of " I n e Ca ihohc \\«rKei i s tw

York. wiii aci=dress a puonc meei~

ing in the pai isti hal l on Monday

evening.

ST. A N N ' S ( i hat>uorth SI . ) —

Rev. Domin ic Dohänyos, O.F.M. .

of .Holy Fami ly Monastery, Ava-

lon, is conducting a week's mis-

sion in the parish. The exercises

for« « Nupt i a l M a n <.

morning.

IS I On \W:n«sday morn ing John

Jo»»ph O M a i i t y was buriad w. J i i

So lamn Raqu iam Ma»« a ; y.uo o - i

clock and L hr .s toph«r Mu i i an w a i l

buried wi th Solemn Requiem j

Mass at. 10 00 o'clock.

Sunday : 7:30 I ' M . R<

Benediction. I

An old t ime and modern dance j

wil l be held in Bryn Mawr auc

! tor ium under the cha i rmansh ip

H O L Y T R I N I T I Sunday . 7:30- L p o P , K i ng on Tuesday evenir;

clock Mass, Commun ion and i x ov . 24.

T w o E n g A

iish Parishes

THURSDAY, N0V1_

• «evotiftri« ce

t

A W i t h l i n f e o n t r o l ' : . ' ' : t c m ^ Ä ' ^

i ô n s â3<i w t ; ;

H O L Y K O S A R Y Da i ly : S:00

P.M.. n ight prayers. Thursday:

all-day adoration.

I ry and

conference for the Christ ian Moth

ers. Tuesday: 12:20 noon and 3:15.

6:15 and 8:15 P.M., L i t t le Flower

devotions.

A solemn nine-day novena wil l

be conducted in honor of the Lit-

tle Flower from Dec. 6 to 14 in-

clusive.

ST. L A W R E N C E ' S

T <i Ï î ri S si ; social wi l l be

on ruesday even

will be t i

Chr is tmas and

charge promises an exc

Nov. 24. This

last social u n u i ai > n m ~ I * t a a

U ie

ST. H Y A C I N T H S

George Lewandowski .

Dona ld . ,„„j Gil ian Mothers wi l l a*

opened Sunday and wi l l eonemde oî Mr. a

a t noon next Sunday.

Aloysius Le wan

\ Ho ly Hour devotions tomor-

Fr idav) èvenine and receive

c

s r . A t i i l S I USE'S

dowski was baptized on Sunday. K f a s <

ion at

Sunday

7:30 o'clock

sudav :

7:00 o'clock Alas», Commun ion

une Chr ist ian Mothers; 7:30 P .M. , j Tuesday r-v<

Poor Souls devotions and Lene-die- j

tion. Tuesday : 7 :i>0 P.M. . St. An.-

The For ty Hours devotion will Sunday : 5:00 P.M Benedict!

open with H igh Mass at 10:30 o'- ' ' nd clO: or clock on Sunday am

e V

Walter Koczkoden and M i l d red ! ' " '

Marsvä lek wil l bi marr ied before ",

thoiiy and £St. Conrad devotions

and Benediction. Thursday: Sol-

emn H igh Mass of Thanksgiving

and Benediction at 9:00 A .M. ; Holy

Hour conducted by the Senior

Holy Name Society at 7:30 P.M. •

The Frauenbbund wil l meet on

Tuesday and the Cathol ic Fore

ters on Fr iday .

ä a Nupt ia l Mass on Thanksg iv ingL.

ST. M A R Y ' S (4«»th S i . ) — S u i

y: 7:30 o'clock Mass, Coromur

1 for the Christ ian Mothers an

marr ied women of the parish

9 00 o'clock Mass C

society w i n

morn • n ^

St. Michael '

a dance in its hall on Bate«

on Thanksgiv ing.

nun: or

W o r k t v> aisjt

r of

Nov 30

if laying terrazza floors

ind In the front and

I S ' l . R E D E ' S Sunday: Fam i l y

Commun ion day. Monday: M.rae-'

ulcus Medal novena devotions at

7.45 P.M. Fr iday : Holy Hour at

7:45 P .M.

The Women 's Gui ld wil l hold

its annual preSThanksgivlng party i

In the school hall , Edgerton S:..

on Monday evening. Nov. 23. and

the annual parish card party wil l

be held at the Hotel Schenley on

Saturday, Nov. 28. under the

chairmanship of Mrs M. J . Car-

roll.

I MM A I M . ATE C O N C E P T I O N

Sunday: Masses at 6:30 8:00.

9:00. 10:00 and 11:00 o'clock the

last the parochial Mass wi th ser-

mon-; in both Engl ish and I ta l ian :

Vespers. Ou r Lady of Lourdes de-

votions. and Benediction at 7:45

P.M

'Monday : Purgator ia l High Mass

and devoiions at 8:00 A M. Tues-

day: Sr. Anthony devotions after

It ' Mass at 8:00 o'clock and a'

3:30 and 7:45 P.M. Fr iday : expo-

sition and Commun ion at 6:30 A

is for the

a.• boys under 15 years Tuesnay:

St. Ann devotions at 8:30 A.M.

and 7:45 P.M Thanksg iv ing Day :

H igh M a - - ai 8:00 o'clock Fr iday :

Holy Hour at 7:30 P.M.

ST. M A K Y ' S VSST M PTTON

(57th St . ) -Sunday: 8:00 o'clock

Mas«.. Commun ion for the Chris-

tian Mothers; 3:00 P.M , Re ned io-

The Sodal i ty girls wi l l sponsor

an en ( er 1 a in men t f o r the bo^efV

en At V e

ST. B E N E D I C T ' S J\ Hi

'Vi and Mrs. Jus t in Hi

buried on Monday morn in.:

Saturday: 8:00 I' M no\

was

ia

M . H igh Mass, devotio Sacred Heart Al l iance and St. Ann novena prayers at 8:00 A M : Holy

tower, three year old son of Mr * H o u r S r p j t a aR<j L i t t le F lower

devotions, and Benediction a? 7:45

j M \ solemn novena in honor of the

votions in honor of St. Francis x r : r a r l l , o l t R Medal wil l be conduct

,>aration for the Feast

laculate Conception be-

ginn ing Nov. 30. wi th services

dai ly after 8:00 o'clock Mass and

a4 3:30 and 7:45 P.M.

A series of enterta inments is

he'*«2' held in '.he church hal l on

ng-g 8:4o o'clock.

M O T H E R O F G O O D C O U N S E L

Fr iday: 7:45 P.M Sacred Heart

v tiens and B< ne îi et ion Sun-

iv: 8:00 o'clock Mass. Commun-

n for tlie Al tar Society. Tues-

IV: 7:45 P.M., St. Anthony devo-

an,? Rpnor î^ f inn ST i : \ n i \ i

There wil

the scho

•ening. N< 1 .-Î . -. r- 1 V

a ca 3

n Wednes

9 00 o'c!

auspices of the A • V» Vv „ rv f r

Xavier .

A card party wi l l be held under

the auspices of the Ladies Auxi l j

iarv of the Kn ights of S' J o i n

and the Cathol ic For- >te-> f--r th j

benefit of the church on Tuesday

evening. Nov. 24.

i '

ST. P E T E R ' S ( Fernando St.)-

Ties 'av: after S 00 o'clock M.v

and at 3 30. 5:30 and S:00 P.M

A n th

e v C A T H E D R A L ( II A P E L bazaar n ïinnf ,i f.

Thursday: 7:45 I' M. Perpetual ; o n d a v Tuesday and Wedne«

'h Engl ish sermo;

service. Wednes

8 00 p M g, R i ta devotii

Thursday: < 00 P M Holy H

Poor Souls devotions are condì

ed daily at S 00 p m duri

ve m ber

ST. R R H \RïT

Xi

Help novena devotions. Sunday:

7:30 o'clock Mass Commun ion for

the Rosary Society.

At the prel iminary meeting

held to arrange plans for the sil-

ver anniversary celebration of th>

Nov 23. 24 ad 25.

renerai cha irmanship

. Rev Rocco Maturo

IM M A O LATE H E A R T Tue

: JO P.M.. St. Anthony deve. Chapel in Chr istmas week F r ank -v' t j \ , T T tion - Thursday: 7:30 I ' M . H J. Leahy and L i l l ian Lyons were 1

named co-chairmen of arrange- " 0 U I devotions,

ments.

s s P F T F R \ND P A I L 'S

l a y 7 4 5 P M poor Sou'- do.

Our Lady of Perpetual H :«•>

Bens-diction Sunday : 7:45 p

novena devot ions in honor of

>e Litt le F lower

ST I ' H I L O M F X \'S Devo*;o*«c

\r

T 1 J_i I ? T' A rea i me

O R ! M ' \ '. (

ST. .JOAC H I M ' S Verv 11 v

annual ' Mar t in ian Iviajcar. O.F.M. , of Holy E l ' I P H A N Y The

Thanksgiv ing observance w i l l ! F am i l y Monastery, Avalon. com

take place on Sunday wi th a S>1-1 missary of the Slovak Franciscan

emn Mass at 11 00 o'clock. There Priests wil l conduct a week's mis-

wil l be a special Thanksg iv ing i sion in Slovak beginning Sunday,

sermon by the pastor, Rev. Law- ! A three-day bazaar wi l l be held

rence A. O'Connell . and special ¡in the school aud i tor ium on Nov.

o>

••«nedir -non, r ang a rè be

.... * a

iZ lit«.

«sai

24.

»prtv Ä ^ Ä for t o b e s t '

,:.. ^ p ^ h -tAîrmaasîjip of «

i vjvle wat v Neßi« p ^ried r , : requiers Mass

Tues,

. " " r : uo î t h e committer !»

c a r d Party ^ . . i l i s d ay io'.'ons on JVdaw « l a v , y

' 0clock if,* î î n ; rm ^ • the

Dr-??nan and ! • . _ ivid 0'-

e i ec te^ captains at o f ? h e altar bov? ^

t&v aftemoon. Their ^ r e n ( i U R t i l September

)s b r i n- madebw. o. the parish,

" "V1 n o v e n a fconor o' of Immaculate Coa v . : : on Nov. b

evening of the feast

^V* esercSses, which

csch eygjiiiif a

Jucted will be conducted

•' e auspices of the Your.r

^Od.iiitv and will conciò

c-eption of new memore

- orsranizatioD.

Stephen's Players are

" /"<v "Journey's End"

• ntation immediately af-

holiday season.

".'" XLRI RGA'S - Sunday N M . Parochial Mass and

"• for the Sodality: 10:30 'i Mass with sermon;

P M Poor Souls devotion?

••nedictioa Thursday: 7:45

Holy Hour f o r t h e Poor

Benedictfon and veneratici

- of St. Walburga.

usuai social a n d card party

(Continued on Page 51

O S L $ 5 omptet* • teal *rrtee, far *r w : t r i m » . CiUnwt. Ft»ml»itt«l

I n «>.'klT. PK. S. MALUM, 79 & OhU >t V Sunday hf tPHiil-

i • ». ( r. 4118 or CE. 14*1.

TT-

(.,ì hv Ih* I 9. music wil l be près

combined senior and junior choir?

2. 23 and 24.

Poor ouls ari

directed hv John S« Josenh 7:30 P .M. on Wednesdays a

Gruber's? "Jubi lee Mass" wi l l be Fridays and the u m a l devot

sung, with the offertory "O Doc- are held on Sunday evening5

tor Op t ime . " by Mitterer, while the same hour

the surpliced boys' choir, in tli

sanctuary, wi l l sing the process

ional and recessional hvmns.

I f F L I ' O F C H R I S T I A N S

ST. J O H N T H E B A P T I S T ' S —

Fr iday: 7:45 P.M.. devotions oi

the novena of Holy Hours beim;

Sunday: Masses 7 00, 8:00. conduct»

Feast 01 »reparation for tli-

the Nat iv i ty

tend a coi

ist ian Mothers w

'e re nee to be corn

9:00. 10 00 and 11:00 o'clock. tV

one at P 00 o'clock f ir the chil-

dren, the one at 10 00 for the

young people, and the last a Hisrh

Mass. Da i l y Masses at 7 00 and

8:00 o'clock Tuesday: af'e»- Mass- •

eg and at 3:30 and 7:45 P.M . St . !

An thonv devotions Fr iday : 7:45

P . M Stat ions and Sacred Heart

devof Ion«.

a meetinsr of 1 committee of

parishioners to arrans"e for the

40»h anniversary celehrat'on of

the partsh wil l be held tomor- j

row (F r i day ) evening. | and Helen Do by were m a n

after Holy Hour devotions on Fr i .

day evening and wi l l receive Com-

mun ion at the 7:00 o'clock Mass

ST J O S E P H ' S

'clock Mass. C<

— T h e —

SUA D'i S I D E S \ M ! \i;t! M

(i3i)y-ll Marchand Sf FAI 0382

it 1 Marks—Oovr'cht*

!*r>»t/>ft yoor ld*M kj

FRFK (O>«rLT4T10!i

(Tiring your «Uftch*-« b» '1''

P A U L PUBCHARD j H. ei.t»>rf>d Pafnt |

1 ! . K,st.T«-.l rro^Ml«a«l F.»*«« ,mhiw4 H1"?'

;,i.r and Potent Exp^*, , l'AKK BLWi

TO I T M 1 VMIIHFIFLD Atlaattt U"

Bmlf'M fl®"" ( all l.rhlffc î « ^

3 1 n s n t I t ' 5T a a

tm ' 1

i 11 l l T r l i l 1 1 m fur

I M I * I* 1%

H t i n u il m> '

Bri dire

C'A lì!) P.\R Y

500 Old Maid

t Mi

(irill Room, Ivoyst W O O D S T A N D B

FRIDAY, NO' Proceeds to provide a treat

Christmas time.

1 T ^mnoiiijìll Clllb

) P M ' 1 •

ST. KEEK A N ' S

JtCM. ixsmazi

^ m r i i S D A Y , NOVEMBER 19, 1U8G

In The Par¿á*io¿

(Continued from rage F will be a-.it

Thursday evening".

N o r t n S i d e

Sl' . A M B R O S E ' S F r i c l a j

tie Flower devotions aftei

clock Mass uind with Bone

at 7:45 P.M. Sunday: Conn

for the Junior Holy Nam<

at the 9:30 o'clock Mass;

tions and Benediction at 7

U Mrs. Anna McQuade was

in St. Mary's Cemetery,

Ave., following" a Requiem

celebrated on Tuesday mo:

ANNUNCIATION

8:00 o'clock Mass. Conn

for the Blessed Virgin S:u

A Thanksgiving card par

entertainment will be h< Id

parish hall on Tuesday t>\

Nov. 24.

:uu o

St. Anthony and Little Flower I Thanksgiving Day:

-ions from 7:00 to 9:00 o'-, w i U l High Mass and Bene-

o n following immediately. '> : 7:30 P.M., Sacred Heart iions and Benediction.

Si. Ce ci li an Singing Soci-

vill hold a social for its mem-

on Sunday evening at 8:00

ST. PKTER'S—Friday: 7:45 P.

devotions and Benediction.

F I V E

Herman Seminary I To Present Draba

Three performances of the four-

act drama. "Wait ing for the Ver-

dict", will be presented by the

Udells' Literary Society at

Nuptial Mass a t j and religious observance of the

on Thanksgiving1 thirtieth anniversary of the found*.

ing of the parish with an enter-tainment in the auditorium on Wednesday evening, Nov. 20, and a Solemn High Mass at 10:00 o'clock on Thanksgiving Day.

ried before a 9:00 o'clock morning.

Kov. Raymond J Doherty, di-rector of De Paul Institute for the Deaf, spoke at all the Masses last Sunday regarding the work of the institution.

y: 7:30 P.M.,

[»I.V.Y (OF. LI

devotions in

at 8:00 A.M.

VM .. with bles

Benediction.

-Friday: no-

honor of St.

and 4:00 and

ing- and ven-; erat i on of Ute relic after each se

St

St. Fidelis' Seminary, Herman, I S'l. ANTHONY 'S (Millvaie)

Pa., the dates being, Sunday, Anthony Happe was buried with Nov. 22; Thanksgiving Day, Nov. Requiem Mass on Wednesday 26, and Sunday, Nov. 29, at 2:15 morning. o'clock. St. Fidelis', which is five] The play. "Mama's Baby Boy" 1 ai miles from Butler, may bt

ed via Route 8 from Pittsburgh. Club was a fair success and plans ni — j are being made by the group to!

produce "Smilin* Thru" sometime in January.

S I . MAKY S (is« aver Fa l ls )— Sunday evening, devotions for the Poor Souls.

A social meeting will be held by the L.C.B.A. on Tuesday eve-iihs ... and the Richter Club will

reach- just presented by the Dramatic hold a reception on Thanksgiving

ST.

I S I S

! V

nd

:00 net io

A.M.

ST. BONIFACE ' S

nual Thanksgiving card pa

be held on Monday eveninj

A High Mass of Than!

will be celebrated at 8:00

on Thanksgiving morning-

occasion of the tenth amii

of the dedication of the t

ST. CYRIL 'S O F A I

DRIA—Members of the 1

ist Order from Union Ci t j

will conduct a mission in

ish from Dec. 6 to 20.

Monday: novena devot

honor of St. Gabriel b< £

7:30 and after the 8:15

Masses and at 8:00 P.M.

novena devotions in honoi

Sacred Heart at 7:30 P.M.

A Thanksgiving card pa

dance will be held :n the

Tuesday evening, Nov. 21.

Th

Sunday: Masses at 7:30. 9:00 11:00 o'clock ; devot ions and

at 7:45 P.M. Monday: High Mass and Poor

ds devotions Tuesday, the n t h the novena of 13. devotions in

' of the Immaculate Concep-ii and St. Anthony, at the 8:00 lock Mass and at 7:45 P.M.

South Side

S'L ( 'ANICE'S- Sunday: 7:30

.M., devotions and Benediction,

uesday: 7:30 P.M., Perpetual

elp novena devotions. Friday:

•M.. Holy Hour 0 1

T.

CiOi

dt h o h n

J O H N THE E V A N G E L -Friday: 7:45 P.M., Holy j

Hour novena devotions. Sunday: 9:15 o'clock Mass, Communion for children of grades 2, 3 and 4 and! those attending public schools. 1

Plans are being made for a card party to be held for the benefit of | the parish on Thanksgiving eve-1

ST. JOSEPH 'S The annual card party sponsored by the So-dality members for the benefit of the church will be held on Wed-nesday evening- Nov. 25.

ASSUMPTION (Bellevue) — Friday: 8:00 P.M., Sacred Heart devotions. Sunday: 8:00 P.M., de-votions and Benediction.

ST. M A R Y ' S (McKees Rocks) The Forty Hours devotion open-

ed with Solemn High Mass on Sunday morning and closed with solemn ceremonies on Tuesday evening.

ST.

P.M.. JUSTIN 'S Holy Hour

Friday: 7:45 devovtions.

j Charles Devencio and Elizabeth • j Choka were married before a

ST. B R E N D A N ' S (Braddock)— Nuptial Mass this morning. Requiem Mass was celebrated this Sunday: 7:30 o'clock Mass Corn-week for Owen Röderns. Iniunion and conference for the

Sunday: 7:30 o'clock Mass I Christian Mothers.

ST. MARTIN 'S — Sunday: 6:30 o'clock Mass, Communion for the married women.

30

ST. M A R Y ' S O F THE MOUNT

The Forty Hours devotion open-

ed with Solemn High Mass at

9:00 o'clock this morning and will the parish.

8T. FRANCIS XAVI J

Friday: 7:45 P.M.. Holy 1

votions.

It is planned to make

to house collection in thf

on Sunday afternoon. >:

and eliminate the card pa-

ducted heretofore a t Th

lng time.

Howard Stragand and ^

McCarthy were married t

Nuptial Mass on Wednes

ing".

Michael Keefe was buri

Requiem Mass on Thür la

rag and Mrs. Hilda Han:

be buried with Solemn 1

Mass tomorrow morning.

ST. LEO'S — Sunday:

clock Mass, Communis

Christian Mothers.

The Dramatic Club will

the three-act comedy,

Briggs of the Poultry Y

the parish hall at 8:30 o'c

Tuesday evening, Nov. 21.

10," ! TT

DASIMIR'S — The Forty

levotion will open at 9:00

k Friday morning, Nov. 27.

High Mass, of which Rev.

Woshner, pastor of St. Vin,-

Church, Esplen, will be

'ant. The closing ceremonicn

)e held on Sunday evening,

o'clock. Rev. M. J. Urbon-

tor of St. Joseph's Church,

will be celebrant, of the,

t 9:00 o'clock on Saturday | S . e t U ^ . H e l P " Sunday: 9:00 o'

g and the Masses on Sun-

1! he as usual at 8:00 and

Communion for the Christian Mothers; 7:30 P.M., Benediction. Friday: 7:30 P.M., devotions and Benediction. ,

ST. COLMAN 'S (Turtle Creek)

Sunday: 7:30 o'clock Mass, Com-munion for the Sodality of the Immaculate Conception.

Andrew Simeral was buried with

Requiem Mass this morning.

ST. f 'KAN CIS* (Honwstead) —

Sunday: 8:00 o'clock Mass, Com-

munion for the married women of

close with Solemn High Mass at 9:00 o'clock on Saturday morn-ing.

| Friday: 7:45 P.M., novena da-j votions in honor of Our Lady of

o'clock,

en i hg devotions will A each day at 7:30 P.M., with

Ernest Wassel, pastor of SS.

and Paul's Church, Home-

offkdaHng on Friday eve-

Rev. W . A. Sadauskas, pas-

f St. Joseph's, Donora, con-

}g" the services on Saturday

and Rev. John Mi si Us,

Ascension Church,

officiating on Sunday

clock Mass, Communion for the Children of Mary.

Mrs. Eileen McGovem was bur-

be con-1 i e d w i t î î Requiem Mass last Thurs-I da

.•in

:00

nd Sp

:00

•y Rev. Joseph Vaikerviclous, j ' of Marian Hills Seminary.} ¡ale, 111., will preach at the >s and at (he evening devo-on Sunday on "Communism" -The Younger Generation".

afternoon devotions conducted on Friday at

o'clock for the children; on 'day day at 3:00 o'clock for the

Order members, and on iv at 3:00 o'clock for the Name men and all young

e of the parish, ifessions will be heard morn-ad evening during the devo-

lav mommer.

ST. PAUL 'S — A Solemn High Mass will be celebrated at 8:30 o'clock on Saturday morning in honor of the Feast of the Presen-tation.

Sunday: 3:00 PUL, devotions, sermon by Rev. Gilbert Walser, C.P.. meeting of the Archconfr.v ternlty of the Passion, and Bene-diction. Monday: St. Gabriel and St. Paul novena devotions throughout the day. Thanksgiving Dav: Hie-h Mass at 8:30 A.M.

There will be a High Mass cele-brated at 8:30 o'clock on Thanks-giving morning.

Poor Souls devotions are con-ducted on Sunday, Tuesday and Friday evenings and on other days after the 8:00 o'clock Mass.

ST. F R A N C I S D E SALES ' (Mc-Kees Rocks) Dai ly: 7:30 P.M.. night prayers, being combined with St. Anthony devotions on Tuesday evenings and the Holv Hour on Friday evening.

Mrs. Mary Dougherty was bur-

ied with Requiem Ma:

day morning. on Mon

Plans are being made for a card party to be held on Tuesday eve-ning, Nov. 2-1.

ST. M A R Y ' S (Sharpsburg) — Sunday: Communion for the pub-lic school children at the 9:15 o'-clock Mass. Sunday: St. Anthony and Little Flower devotions at 7:45 P.M.

The annual card party wil l be held in the Lyceum on Thanksgiv-ing evening.

ST. M A R Y M A G D A L E N ' S (Homestead) Very Rev. Sigmund Cralz, O.M.Cap., Rev. Regis Krah, O.M.Cap., and Rev. Alan Mad-den. O.M.Cap., of St. Francis' Fri-ary, Brookline, concluded Sunday a successful threes week mission in the parish.

Solemn Requiem Mass was cele-brated on Monday morning for Hugh J. O'Donnell.

ST. PATRICK 'S (Canonsburg) Rev. Francis de Sales Donahoe,

O.M.Cap., of St. Mary 's Monas-tery, Herman, spoke at all Mass-es on Sunday in the interests of the "St. Francis' Journal ."

ST. PETER 'S- Friday: 7:30 P. J

M., Stations of the Cross for thf

Poor Souls and Benediction. Sun-

3:00 and 7:30 P.M.. Perpet-

ual Help novena devotions.

The census of the parish will be

ST. JOSEPH 'S (Braddock) — Albert Pesta and Margaret Trons-berg were married before a Nup-tial Mass on Monday morning.

Tuesday: 7:30 P.M., Little Flowr er devotions. Friday: 7:30 P.M., Holy Hour.

ST. JOSEPH'S (-Sharpsburg i

Friday: 7:45 P.M. novena de-

votions in honor of Our Lady of

Perpetual Help.

I ST. LUKE ' S ( Bent ley ville)

The Sodality will hold the Bentley ville Hicrh Wednesday evenin«". Nov. 25.

Sui

arri •.f

ST. MARY'S — munion for the M

2:30 P.M., closing o in honor of St. Theres tion, and short conference fo Married Ladies Conference.

Rev. John J. Donne!'v, and Rev. Francis P. Conlor M.I., conducted a succe s'°n In the parish from Nov. 15. The exercises closed wi t ! rollment of new member Sodality, the Married Ladies ference and the Holy Name ciety.

The 88th "home coming f val'"will be held in Jho school on Monday and

M.I.

ST. OEORGE 'S - - Memorial

vices for Knights of St. George

Pittsburgh district were

i at 3:00 W i t h R e v .

concluded this week.

Plans for a Communion Break-

fast and reception were made at

a meeting of the Sodality on Sun-

day. The reception will be held on! ST. MARGARET 'S (Greentree)

the Feast of the Immaculate Con-1 -Sunday: 8:30 o'clock Mass, Com-

ception. Dec. 8, at 7:30 P.M.. at munion for the married women.

solemn ceremonies at which the.<

sermon will be preached by a vis- S i . MARK 'S (McKees Rocks) —

t. and the Communion Plans are being" made for a social

SS. PETER A N D PAUL 'S (Beaver) . Beginning Nov. 22. High Mass will be celebrated every Sunday morning at 10:30 o'clock.

Dr. C. F. Lauer, of Pittsburgh, is directing the boys' choir, re-hearsals being held every Friday evening in church.

The Young Ladies Sodality will meet at the home of Margaret McClintock, East End Ave., on Sunday afternoon at 2:00 o'clock.

The local court of the C. D. of A. is conducting a drive for new

i dance in j i Continued on Page Nine, col. 5) School on I

i ting prie

o'clock last S u n d a y ! breakfast, will b< R(->v Deo S¿brin- ' society's Communion

B E L M A R M O V I N G A N D

S T O R A G E CO. OprratpdJ by T.*vi(ln Brow.

Lorn 1 f>nd lion jf Dl^tan^»» Moving SANITARY WORKHOUSE

— Vnn Servire — TU F f r w A v r v r F

Wi ìMnsbnre. Tu ChnrrhHl

hf after the

Mass on

•dor of St. Norbert's Church.| Sunday. Dec. 20.

Special bowling parties will be

at the Social Center on

preaching the sermon inp" at Solemn Bene,-1 featured

ssisfed by Rev.

»rbauer a

Wi l l iam Tuesday and Wednesday evenings.

T.V'i •

a s deacon and Nov. 24 and 25.

Streiff as sub-1 ~

UP 0<1' we

and 24. Proceeds will b>

maintenance of the sc The

NATIVITY devotion will

High Mass at 11:00

Sunday morning and

Tuesday a t 7 :45 p j j

Mrs. Mary MeManus

* l fh Solemn Requiem

9:00 o'clock this mornm«

-The Forty TT

open with So h

close

on

on

Ma¡ 8T- NICHOLAS' p„

at 8:00. 9:30 and 10-

clock, the Children of Mar

Sodality receiving Con

J ? »t the 9:30 o'clock Mnss

£ * . . meeting 0 f the Senior

00

7:00 o'clock Mass,

n for the Sodality.

Stanoe and Marie Cam-

e married before a Nup-

.¡i Wednesday morning,

iin! Thanksgiving card

will be held on Monday and

lay evenings, Nov. 23 and 24.

A R B I A N ANGELS' The

jubilee banquet of the part-

•]'!I be held in Pulaski Hall.

en st . on Thanksgiving Day.

HENRY 'S Friday: 7:30 P.

0]y Hour devotions. Sunday:

' NT. Rosary and Benediction.

Outside City

AL

7:45

J SAINTS'

P.M. IToly

(Etna) Friday:

Hour devotions.

<F. JAMES ' Thursday: 7

VI Holy Hour devotions.

45

ST. ANN'S (Castle Shannon)—

Joseph P. Mutschler and Marg

aret C. Bernarding were marriec

before a Nuptial Mass this pas'

week.

Sunday: 7:45 P.M.. devotion-

and Benediction. Tuesday: T: 1 f

P.M.. St. Ann novena devotions.

ST. ANN'S (Homestead) —Sun-

day: 8:00 o'clock Mass. Cornmuu

ion for the eighth grade pupils.

W e will be p;]ad to have your used DRESSERS,

MJFEOFS and used CARPETS.

Please save your RAGS, CARDBOARD PAPER

and MAGAZINES for us.

Society of St. Vincent De Paul 2035 Fifth Avenue, Pittsburgh. Pa.

Just call Grant 3434- 3435 and truck will come

Treman-Kinç Athletic (ioods To.

! 00 U ! I n o J ^ p j j Society. Tuesday: T-T{

deville show will be pre-

d for the benefit of the par-

7:30 P. j ish on Tuesday evening, Nov, 24.

ANN'S (Millvaie)

30 o'clock Mass, Commun,

pupils of the

ST.

day: 8

ion for the

4th grades.

Anthony Joseph Bennef

Dolores Mary Griffith will hf

and

l ' I A N A V I N T I \T lantle í»8'¿0

and

mar-

I

(IX T H E P I T T S B U R G H C A T H O L I C T H l ' K S D A Y , N O V E » , , ,

The P i t tsburgh Cathol i i ESTABLISHED TN 1841

13V HT. KKV. MICHAEL O'CONNOR, D.D.. FIRST BISHOP OF P1TTSBU-RGH Published S very Thursday by

THE CATHOLIC PUBL ISH ING COMPANY

315 Eitzsimons Building Court UÖÜ2 «31 FOURTH AVHNUE

JOHN B. COI.LINS Editor ELIZABETH DAELINGEK. Associate Editor

TERMS IN ADVANCE O ite copy by mai! poi- yoai Single copy One copy by mail fot six months Foreign subscription» by mall

r—•-

_$2.Qfi _ .05 . l.UU - 3.00

app l i ca t i on urged by Catho l i c spokesmen l ias

not, it is true, been accep ted ; this wou ld be

scarcely possible, cons ider ing the antagon-

istic v iews of some of these spokesmen, such

as Fa t her Cough lin and Msgr. Ryan . I f we

say that Fa the r Cough l i n fastened un iversa l

a t tent ion on Ihe Ca tho l i c pr inc ip les of social

justice, a l t hough the people refused to ex-

net Iv fo l low his leadership in a p p l y i n g t h e m :

if we say that .Msgr. R y a n ' s thirty-year cam-

pa ign for acceptance of these pr inc ip les is ^ j ^ t .

bear ing some fruit ; if we say that the work

of all the other prominent and obscure ad-

vocates of these pr inc ip les showed some re-

su l ts ; if we real ize that the ef forts of every

priest and Sister w h o has been teach ing

TO T H E POINT Discussions of "Catholic leak,-, the time and is

age." the influence of reading mat--j mother." gn i inS wit

ter, etc., are usually couched m a t, "

general terms. The following ae-! m a n v cy e® 8 i n8 picture. m

count of an actual case, gives tin ! k n o w n l o t e S * " 0 " - « I

Authent ic , if rather bizarre, side- a t work ^ C ; • ^'iOK, lanpilao.

Entered as S«oo»d-Clas3 Matter December 16, 1SS7, at the Post Olliee at Pittsburgh, Pa., under the Act of March 3, tS?9. .

Catho l ic doctr ine , and the lives OL a

THE P ITTSBURGH CATHOL IC is the oldest Catho l ic i nd iv idua l s who endeavor to con Catholic paper in Pennsylvania, and has more read-ers than any other religious periodical published ui the western part of the state.

'">»; PUblic « , „„ , ;

, , • • I*; c r a f t / ^ ' r ^ cured employment with a Catho- worker- MI U'reii|ioiis lie family. On her first Sunday ; »h™,t • - combined

A girl of about eighteen, of icals; lack of Eastern European ancestry, se

dit.

na-

T H U R S D A Y , N O V E M B E R 19, 1936 -"""is •»•>

GIVING THANKS

f T p i l l K H K is someth ing reassui ' ing in the

I fact that the pub l ic observance of

Thanksg i v i ng Day has persisted in this

count ry , however much it has been modif ied

f rom its or ig ina l purpose and s ign i f icance. It

is still a l ink w i th the t imes when men know

and acknowledge their dependence upon

their Croator , when it was considered " m e e t

and j u s t " that the people- as a whole should

return t hanks to the Au t ho r ol' all g i f ts for

the m a n y tempora l and sp i r i tua l benefi ts

they had received. Hav i n g suf fered advers-

ity , the early settlers felt a due measure of

g ra t i t ude when this advers i ty was re l ieved;

they real ized the ir own weakness and the !

s t rength of the forces of na ture wi th which

they were c on t end i n g ; they were h umb l e

enough , and honest enough , to respond to the

inst inct ive desire- to pay homage to their

Benefactor . W h o had a ided them in their

st ruggles.

Today arrogance has, to a sad extent , re-

placed the humi l i t y of early Amer ica . Men

today give themselves all credit for the ir phy-

sical prosper i ty . They tend 1 o forget , in the ir

deep concern wi th tempora l matters , that

they are me re creatures, here by the w i 11 of

the Creator and dependent upon l i i m for all

they are and have. Thanksg i v i n g D a y has lost

much of its or ig ina l m e a n i n g ; if has become

a mere ho l iday , wi th pleasure-seeking the

pr inc ipa l interest.

Yet that we still have a day off ic ia l ly set

aside for the g i y in g of t h anks is a mat ter for

r e j o i c i ng ; 1 hat the President of the Uni ted

States proc la ims it. men t i o n i ng speci f ica l ly

the n ame of A l m i g h t y G o d ; that am id its

abuse some vestige of its real mean i ng per- i

sists that it helps to preserve someth ing of

the wholes omen ess of f ami ly l i f e ; that it af-

fords an oppo r t un i t y , for 1 hose who are seri-

ously concerned for the na t i on ' s welfare, to

help put ma la r i a l t h i ngs in the ir proper re-

lat ion t oward the 1 h ings of fhe sp i r i t : all

these are reasons why we should welcome the

return of each Thanksg iv i ng D a w Anil that

duct themselves accord ing to that teat

were reflet ted in some measure in wha tever

gains for the common wel fare the election

brought about , we shall have nearly the cor

re<-f picture.

There were tang ib le gains, ami in thai

sense some encouragement ma y be I elf. But

ne i a m iiy. un ner nrst Sunday about a l e a k a ^ 10 br*S she was asked what church she i n t e r e s t i n g * « * wished to attend. "None,- she ans- j f „ r e n t m i g h t w >1 *°W

we red ; " I 'm supposed to be a f i o n i f ^ ^ ™ 1*®n the ,itaa

Catholic. I guess, but I haven't» the coa r l 1 ^ ! ! . Î 0 . ^ gone to church for years."

"My father and mother were | the w both Catholics,"

a perfectly matter of fact wav "They were married shortly after

.i . they came to this country and a u n 7 I m that ! „ • ; , , . , .Contraten

I M i / b é t

a nearby %

tu{

This occurred in

cese. It is quite certain tfcat, first they went to church every i t r i r ; J f r j l l íy of Christian D0{

Sunday My father got work in ™ W 0"1 ( i h a v e co*e in Con, i wxin it if it hail hp

the mine and they lived in a com if is plain that there is stil l largely l ack ing

that sp i r i tua l mot ive wh ich wou ld ent i t le us ! p : i n y house. Then he started

to claim every advance t oward soeial j us t i ce drinking and things got pretty bad

as a t r i umph of Catho l ic doctr ine . Steps have j at home. I was going to the pub-

been fallen toward secur ing a bet ter dist ri- j lie school. My mother wanted to

learn to read English and I taught

her. I asked a woman in the hut ion of weal th , as jus t ice demands , but

how far is justice the basis for the movement

, • . -in the Pits b rgh Diocese, and it „ fc. with such cases and prevent them from reaching such a

mentable stage that the Conir-

ternity shows its worth.

? ¡neighborhood if she* would give In last Sunday me her old magazines to he In mi and how much of it is due to acquis i t iveness

In so far as ugl iness, bitterness, in to lerance . £ a c h m y m o 1 h e r R h | l g u v e m c

domina te society, we can be sure that < ath c o p i e s o f - ' T r u e stories." Pretty

olic pr inc ip les are not advanc i ng , even s o o n m y mother got so she could

though the cond i t ions of labor are be ing im read them herself. She enjoyed

proved and there are other external s igns of them. After a while she quit eo-

Press'' G. K. Chesterton's "Auio-biography" w a s reviewed by Har iy Hansen, whose comments

« OS cun ent books are a regular svnd

' ' feature of the paper. Of ¿8

particular review the only fitting

a better social order . The great command- ing to church. My father quit, too, I remark to make is that . . . -, / . . . . , -, . , i r i T i , , . , , i l , . . I 1, ' . . \ir ; 4 . I . ,

tt !» ',G lit still stands. " T h o u shal l love the Lord ¡ Then the Jehovah's Witnesses peo-' work of an ass. In a jumble of

Thy Cod . . a nd t h v ne ighbor as t h v s e l f , " I s t f U ' t e d coming around, pass-; wretched g r a m m a r , incoherent ing out their little books. My expressions and mean insinuation mother read them. She spent most Hansen has the impudence to ac-of her time reading them and cuse Chesterton of insincerity, and "True Stories." Later on she m ado

ed ga ins t oward the ob jec t ive of a Chr i s t i an J u s children stop going to church.

a ml unt i l k ind l iness and cons iderat ion , lo v<

of our ne ighbor for Cod s sal-re, become m o n

evident among us. we can record ontv l imit

•let v.

reveals his o w n prejudice agains:

the spiritual banner Chesterton She said religion was all foolish- upheld so splendidly

-W-* 1

T

* # # # # # MUSIC

H E name of St. Ceci l ia , whose feast wi l l I S e c ^ icciir next ¡Sunday, b r ings up inev i tab ly

tbought of music , and it is na tu ra l j that the name of so great a saint of the i Church should be associated with that glori-ous part of the l i t u rgy , that r emarkab le aid I

. - i . . i to devot ion , church music . Bui St. Cecil ia

is the patron , not a lone of l i t u rg i ca l music ,

but of all music , a nd of all music ians . The |

example of her pure and holy l ife is held up

by the Church as an insp i ra t ion for all those

connected w i th wha t shou ld be the pure and

hoiv art of music. Th rough all t ime the niov

! ness. The first five of us children About ha l f the review is writ-were baptized, but the three; ten in the first person ("His eari-

youngest never were. F m glad to i e r books I enjoyed; his later

get work away from home, b works repulsed me," etc.), but the my father is drunk most of latter part, which is still Hansen

: j personal reaction to the work;

— *•» i t h a t " r e p u l s e d " h im , he phrase?

/ \ j / w» r p i t j j i | as if he were speaking for the v i l l i U i 1 110 1 U S l i general public ("one wonders

i whether he was mental ly satisfied by 'the sensational experience of

( sensation' wh i c h he valued so j highly"). B u t Hansen will get few

to join him in his depreciation of Chesterton, Cer ta in ly he ought to

i become b e t t e r acquainted with the Bishop O'Connor confirms class , h i n„. s Chesterton stood for before

of 200 at the Cathedral . . . Fam-

H i s t o r y F r o m t h e F i l e s o f

T H E C A T H O L I C

90 Years Ag<

he make such gross errors as lie

•re are lands t od: i y where such a legal hol i

day would be un th i nkab le , where forces are

in control determined to e l im ina te any pub l i c

profession of loya l ly to the Creator , should

make us even in ore gra te fu l that Ihe t hanks

we should feel and do feel may be given open

expression in t h i s part of t h e wor ld that has

been so h igh ly favored.

WHAT GAIN?

r T p C h N count ry nas just ended a ma j o r

I election campa ign , d u r i n g wh ich , in a

manne r almost un ique among the na-

tions. there has been a crysta l l i zat ion of pol-

it ical and economie 1 bought : social problems,

in their pract ical aspects, have been discuss-

ed and carefu l ly weighed. To an extent nev

er before witnessed. Cat hol ic pr inc ip les were

inc luded in the a rgumen ts placed before the

voters ; Catho l ic pr inc ip les und isgu ised ,

p la in ly labeled, received a respectful hear

ug and up l i f t i n g power of mus ic has been l ine conditions in Ireland gr->vvj t i o C S speaks of G.K.'s anti-ma-

ecogni/ed ; every age has seen deve lopments rapidly worse. terialistic outlook as if it wer"

in the art , changes in the form that appea ls

to the succeeding generat ions , luit if has al-

ways been the case that in usi c has been able

to stir the emotions, elevate men in to a spir-

opposed to his orthodoxy; why? He says that from the first Ches,-75 Years Ago

Archbishop Hughes, of Newl terton's "mind sympathized wi!

York, sails for Europe, stating! the underprivileged (sic) and ft the

i tual mood and arouse 1 hough is i ncapab le of j t lia t his mission was one neithei

expression in words , in a way that no other o f h e a l t h > pleasure, private nor

art succeeded in do ing .

poor, but he admits also a desire

to conserve property in private

ecclesiastical business . . The hands." Does Hansen think there

'•Christian Advocate" quotes Ores,-\}a something contradictory be-

ll is u ndoub t ed l y t rue that we today l ive tes Brownson as saying that only t w e o n ownership of property as«

under the in f luence of music more than has i two of the twelve Catholic p a p e r s Che rights o f the poo r ,

anv other people in h is torv . That is, we hear J in the United States a re loyal j Chesterton's "Autobiography :« ' THE PITTSBURGH CATHOLTC • the l i f e s t o r y o f o n e of the great-

and the "Tablet" of New York. est literary figures of our time?.

! written by himself. The "Prei-

' oertainlv can't justify its p'^";

music, day and n igh t , most of il p roduced by

professionals and broadcast by that modern

marvel , the radio. Somet imes it is music of

ihe highest tvpe, sung bv the finest art is ts

or i > i a v « i

l;iveil bv the gi'eatest orchestras and

ui i fori u lia t el v Ulf d e a l of It is

! 11 '->•

. ],nr j l i r (

of 1 he lowest, trashiest type, emp

techn ique of the art for crude, ig

poses, and do i n g a etna I harm with wha t

should be an agency on 1 y for good. Listen-

ing t o the o u t p ou r i n g of vu lgar , mono tonous

tunes that comes f rom the rad io is bound to

have the effect of debas ing the pub l ic taste

for real music

But it is evident that the rad io , besides

a f f l i c t i ng us with a surfeit of bad music is

m a k i n g us a nat ion of music-listeners instead

of music producers. In this respect there ing. and they were, indeed, advocated by been m a n y nat ions in the past; and there

m a n y wno own no a l legiance to the Church .

W h a t ga in has been aeeompl ished for these

pr inc ip les ? ( 'an wo cla im that in the f ina l

decision rendered by the voters there has

been incorporated someth ing of the ideals of

social jus t ice set forth by Pope Leo and

Pone P ius? .1,

that The answer is ouif e o

been a def in i te advance toward the ae.-opi.

anee of f hese pr incip les. The very term. ' ' so-

cial j u s t i c e " , is alinosi < 'af hoiic, and it has

been proc la imed as an object i ve I own rd wh ich

pol icies and p l a t f o rms , legis lat ion and adm in

ist rat ion shou ld tend. The precise fo rm o f its

m a n y today , more mus ica l than we are. wi th

music a real part of their lives, as it is not

wi th us. And there can be no donisi that fhose

who make mus ic der ive greater benefit ¡han

those who a lways l isten. At one t ime pa risii

choruses dist inct from I t e church choirs

f lour ished even in f lie smal l parishes ; t oday

the-- are few and far bei ween. W o u l d not a

50 Years Ago

St. Peter's Church, Allegheny.

| being used as the pro Cathedra!

j by Bishop I'helan, destroyed oy

Father Clouder. assistant

at St. Philomena's, a san!'e I a!

¡ the altar by an insane man. but

I is able to finish the Mass . . Gen-

eral Booth, of the Salvation Army.

I pays his first visit to Pittsburgh,

i 25 Years Ago

Rev. Peter F. May. pastor of

I St. Joseph's Church, Braddock,

J i lies suddenly . . Rev. John L. S.

Mart in appointed pastor of St.

! Ann's. Waynesburg

I. J. Griffin, church historian, dies

in Philadelphia.

i the presentation to its reader?

i Continued on Page 9, co!. I1

Risln

ai oí i nese euo ra ! g ron t >s

women , y o u n g and elder] b a v i ¡nable, re fu

wh ich men

could talee I

' par ish a e

10 Years Ago

I loba n, or Scranton,

dies of "pneumonia . . Over 2.000

attend Holy Name Society rally j

in theater al McKoespoi't.

5 Years \go

! Most Rev. John Gregory Mur- ;

! ra v. Bishop of Portland. Ore , is;

made Archbishop of St. Paul . t iv i fy . h e l p i ng I o b r i n g m ti si e back as the in-

f luence if should be t oward h igher thoughts . ¡Property purchased for convent

'OiìTV n o m s DEVOTION

N0\EMBEK, 1936

I() Pittsburgh, St- M^'1 *

the »Mount. •>()—Ambridge, Divino Bed^

Ellsworth, St.

Pittsburgh, St. Br'S>

•n-Sovth Side, Nativity.

e} Moneden. St. !

--Emsworth, Sacrd * * . •lyafini" Joseph

. a t Hvafintìi'' j •» j—Pittsburgh, St. '">—North Side. St

2(1 Tarent um, f ^ g |

»7—pirtsburgh. St. ta ;

.«„McKcesport, St.

S-Annandalo, S p A „ |

SO— Pittsburgh, ¡reís'

I Brentwoou. .

S-ReaverFn lK» • ,,

j Reaver

5 IfoineMeJid,

a more sp i r i tua l out look I for Corpus Christi Parish.

T H U R S D A Y , N O V E M B E R li), 1936 T H E P I T T S B U R G H C A T H O L I C SEVEN

The Co-Operative Movement

Cooperation aiJlu al the i)rt,H;iu mumcnt ^

And iyoniiiiumsin . g am ing iiie objective of uictator-

srup of ihe proletariat. Under Communism most of the control wiU operate from the top down,

The question ¿as been asked j and agencies of propaganda will what rtJiiwiou there is henveouj ut under «¡ate control.

Oration anu Communism, j Coopcntt urn holds as an im-is that tliere ;s no re-; portant tenet that democracy

through charily or through de-graded standards of living." (Op. | cit).

Co-operation recognizes nei

, \

! s er coercion, intimidation nor com- ! ?

sion. It is based on voluntary!

Cty-Opei Tüö answer

lation between

S •• I z

and enlightened action of indi-1 ; viduals, not of groups acting un-der an influence from without. Co-operation insists on the "worth of the individual without glorify, ing individualism. It develops in-lividuals in social directions b

(IIURCH MUSIC DIOCESAN ( I:JUíU'B MUSIC COMMISSION

Key. C. A. Sanderbeck, Secretary

L08 N, Dit h ridge St., Pittsburgh

OFF IC IAL j tiered "staecatu", that is each

The pastor of Sacred Heart note is hammered in the most.

Church, Pittsburgh, is disregard- monotonous, tiresome and un-

them. Then: ..-¡mu-s, be emphasized not only" in p l a c i ng ' " r e spon^Wl i t y I nd i v i d-1 i S ^ T ^ Regulations by pleasant way. Again, the rendi-

spectiva philosopmes are m op- the field of politics but in the uals for Weal ends.* Co-ooeratmn| , " o r f e a m s l ; w h o h a s i t l0J1 " f the Quilisma is too often

positipn. Ail analysis Ot the two economic sphere as well. "One is more than an oronomic order ^p-/ , f 1 U ^ l f l i C d f ° r t n e D j 0 c e s 0 o m i t t c d i n singing the responses I t is a society based on brother-1 ' hood." in a Christian dispensation «,„„».. . 7* ~ „ .. .

1 Sunday C Hoir Recitals it wan inevitably recognize rh>j primacy of the Fatherhood of God, and man's brotherhood in

posiupu. ni l u w j »-••„ I vvuuuiun-

systems will show that tuei't isj person, on0 vote regardless of

nothing in common between Ca- j own.cn ship." This democratic prin.

operation and Communism as it j ciple applies to all classes, to all

is understood today and to both sexes. Status of Instituí ions Control

giate Communism believes inj I-low will free institutions fare! His Son. paternalistic protection ol' the under these economic systems, \j •—

•"left", dictatorship of the prole,-e„ the school, church, press? Un-1 O a t h o l i r C o O n P i n n tariat; absolutism; control based der Communism the school and " j r A d i I 1

oa violent seizure of the govern- the press will be instruments in

•»t; conrol held by fores ; own the hands of the totalitarian slat

Next Sunday afternoon, Nov. 22, at 3:00 o'clock, in Synod Hall, 125 North Craig St., a choir re-

al will b0 given by the choirs

e respt of the Preface, at the words "Habemus" and "Dignum".

The correct Church pronuncia->> n of the words of the respons-e's should also be taught the sing-ers. for sometimes it is truly a puzzle t<> understand what they :uv singing. Of most importance

U** • ' V KJF

ment; conrol held by fo-rci ; own- the hands of the totalitarian state, ership and control held by the As for religion, experience shows Truro. N- s • State. Marxism believes in his Lor-thai the Church is to be virtually j T T n i t r d M i n e Workers in Nova ical materialism, called the econ-* repudiated; to be suppressed as! S c r t i a - a t t h e i r convention here amia determination of history, i J serving no purpose in Marxian! unanimously indorsed the co-op-

, _ _ .- . 1 . . I , . . _ f ' r i t i v o m f .l.-i1

of St. Andrew's Church. North

.Side. and SI. Michael's Church, j is the right pronunciation of" the

Praised By Miners • >lt!l side. | vowels 't\ < which in Latin ai Organists, choir directors, choir

S., Nov. 12 Ths j m i mbers and Sisters (particular ? t vi ,ra « y to; se who are in charge

nu sic in their convent chapel md in parish schools) arc •.•spec omic - . , , i- — L — i . .,

that changes in society are thought. On the other hand, Cath,- p r a t i v c movement sponsored by St. I Francis Xavier University of An-i to the public

e., ruled by changes in the instru- olic leaders are in accord in ap ment s of production, and that thus; proving cooperative principles, gradual technical perfection in tin j The ;e principles are in accord production of commodities will be j with religious thought and with the determining factor in influ-1 the social teachings of the Church, e'neing men's present status. It . Co-operation recognizes the

of stress on j Church as free from economic and

tigonish. The resolution said i adoption of the principal features The Responses

t f tho co-operative movement; The responses are of great was an integral part of the IT. M. j value and most significant in the W. in Nova Scotia. services of the Church. During;

ways sounds as "ee" in Bee). and "u". (which always sounds as "oo" in Moon).

Although the organ may be used to accompany the responses ¡except on the days of Holy Week wh -n its use is strictly for-bidden ), it is considered more » ••nirchiy to sing the responses unaccompanied. If the organist wishes to accompany the respons-es with the organ, he should do so

Delegates'' heard three repre-l the first centuries of Christianity softly, without trying to over-Mi tatives of the St. Francis Xav-J the responses at High Mass (as j power the voices. H e should al;

places a minimum - „ „

the human will as freely choosing'state control. "The C a t h o ] i J sentatives of the St. Francis Xav-| the responses at High Mass (as power the voices. H e should als<

the direction human society may Church strongly desires to see the! i c r University extension depart-) well as the Kyrie. Sanctus, Bene- be familiar with the diatonic Gre-

I co-operative movement develop! m e n t : R e v- Dr- M- Coaly, di-j dictus and Agnus Dei) were sung gorian "formula" for the accom-

" irv~ ' " • • •• laniment of the responses.

Oiqanists and sineers should

take. j co-operative movement develop'

Consumers' Co-Operation, on ¡and regards its extension as an I r o c t o r ' D r l>- F- MacDonald and by the whole congregation. Wht

the contrary, believes in political i integral part of its Christian so democracy re-enforced by econ- j cia] order program" says Rev. G. omic democracy. I t believes in! A. McDonald, S.J., editor of the control by all through education "Queen's Work." and democratic means. Fascism j Economic Justice

(in Italy and Germany) sires es State Communism bases society dictatorship of the "right". Com-! on class struggle and class inter-munism demands dictatorship of est. It advocates violent, methods the "left" (as in Rnssia). in the to override the rights of the mid United States, until recently, th dictatorship came from

Dr. A. B. MacDonald.

Cardinal Pacelli :>ar in mind that there are sev-

rightly understood, they are found

imbued with Christian sentiments |

I inspired by Catholic doctrine, j eral arrangements ^ the re-

| When correctly sung, they are j sponse "Deo Gratias" which vary

R o f ( M V O f l R v P o n o f u ! 1 o f m o a n i n K - £ m d p o 3 3 e s s a ; n m u s i c a l setting according to I V V V L I T C U I ' J ^ F ^ ' j dignified charm that is appealing j the different seasons and feasts of

I to the listeners. j the ecclesiastical year. These Vatican City, Nov. 14 Cardi- But it is well known to all con- should b e studied and th? proper

nal Pacelli arrived in Rome this eerned that, in most of our j one sung on the day assigned, wnun evening and was immediately re-j c h u r c h c h< ( i r s< the responses at] Every choir should be ready to into a c c i v e d h y P o p c P i u s ' t o w h o m h e ; High Mass and other liturgical Is inf I the proper "Deo Gratias" to

made a detailed report on his, f l J n c t i 0 n 3 do not receive due con- [the priest's or deacon's "Ite missa journey to America. j sideration and attention. As a | est" or "Benedicamns Domino" as

CO-operaivos only to be used ° n h i s a r r i v a l a t t h c R o m e s t a "| matter of fact, they are often ren-j prescribed by th e Rubrics. Like-Communistic ends. t i o n Cardm.'il Pacelli declared j (jerC(i "inaccurately" and there-! wise it should not be ignored that

h e j himself "highly satisfied" with his } > r . . . i n e f t V l .U v c , y . ; ¡the responses assigned for Mass-

Organists and singers are very' e s of the d -ad and for Ferial

die and upper classes. TI would force the agrarian class

-stem --et up in the interests the urban proletariat. Tt reco»--

ter", ¿those in control of concen trated wealth.

Cq-operaiism also believt s the principle of "one man, on vote, regardless of shares held. This is the esence of eco nun c

mocracy, wherein the people de- ownership to the people on a just clde what shall be their status in bo •<]?. Tt pbices human rights the economic sphere. In insistimvi above property rights. Neverthe-on voluntary participation andj i c s s "Co-operation touches no ownership of the many it coin,-1 man's fortune, seeks no plunder, cides with traditional American causes no disturbance in society, ideals. Using these me a ns it tend I elves no trouble to statesmen, en- Ml an tic and the gri to restore ownership and control ^o-s info no secret associations.! 'ton-for America, w to the determining number of th" j contemplates no violence, sub- j viously. made a ven citizenry. Co-operation Vdn v i j no order, envies no dignity, i sum on him. He sr

furt^e1

Cooperaiism advocates the, •adual and peaceful return of American trip, which was d

just s c r i b e d as "enjoyable and profit- ( ) f t o n r t f a u I t i n s i n j n r t h o r e . ' Masses are in part different from b1e f r o r a a political, social and s p c n s c s b c c a u , p {h(.y h a v„ ] o a r n . , these used on Sundays and festi-

rcligious viewpoint." ed them by "tradition" and trust lie- expressed profound apprec- fco t h ( h . ^ a n d n u m r r v j n ^ J

vals.

As a conclusion we may say

ses are not dii.i-

inj free will and freedom of choice. : n o favor, keens no terms

with the idle, and will break no faith with fhe industrious." fC-. R. Hutchinson, "Seeking a New World Through Co-operatives.")

Method .yf Expansion Communism advocates an ac-

citizenrv. Co-pperatipn beli

of choice. It holds no brief for historical materialism.

Disposing of Wealth How is newly created wealth to

be disposed ? Communism says that the profits of indo • •• •• go to the State which will then at-tempt to distribute this we a 1 th equitably by central control. Con-sumers' Co-oner a i ion savs earn Ings of industry are to go to lb people who own and control the

enterprise, and who create business! growth. Tt is the organization o

through their purchases. In thi

ion for the welcome he re- i n g t h e m V e r y p r o b a b I y t h e y | that the res]

th0 other side "t the n c v e r h a v e g e e n r e s p o n g e s i n cult to learn, but they require the A flan tic and the greatest admira- t , „ , . , . , . ,„ ,'.|tj. ' necessai-y rehearsing. A choir that

hi eh, quite ob-v deep impres-

spoke with real 'nthusiasm about President. R'los-•vclt and the meeting with him it Hyde Park.

The Cardinal refused to say.

however, whether he hopes to s e e I execution 'of them ' " ' ' •

nerican Ambassador accrcd- * ^ ' Dublin, Ireland, Nov. 11 • -Com-laint is being made that English on Catholic business houses are

representatives into Ire C

" it

ir pron _ . i i. nave no conception of the j s i n& s the responses cont-uuy is

••,.;;] value i f the different notes ' already an eilicient choir and

snd :.]' their rhythmical succes-f aeserves recognition as such,

sion. Many choirs go pn year af

ter year with hardly a single re

hearsal of the responses. Henc Made' Crucifixes

Arouse Irish Protests

t . 1 H« FT, .Tir tí L-> Lile l l ' l , O A :\Tpfr nndi t i ,n of the re-

tila 1 and complete revolution. I t i Cardinal Pacelli was met at the ì e in be ob.served l>y e very * ' , , choir. no matter " i ! i " tmnii tv

is to progress "bv the alleged, Naples doclcs. where he arnved |

gres ter eiiìciency. of il s organiza-.; ibis in ornine; a board the Conte de < ¡on. once it is under way, and Savoia, by Cardinal Afic.alesi !,v social savings." ! Archbishop of Naples; Msgr. Tar

of eradual dini. acting Secretary of Stat-

tir

Co-onofíition is KS.

way buying power ;-• built v

consumer groups, and the t expansion of ownership

. • , i recUu a* Ordinary Affairs, who repre- ' cd the Vatican, and a large ; Vatican I-

of ecclesiastical dignitaries. no

bv fi amoxrg the people and eor-renh'a-| ' f^ntrol toward production. | He travel - d to.

stresses education} ¡a!e in the afternoon, and was, hn

tion of wealth Is obviated Thdl democratic principle is further I expressed in the statement that | new wealth is created for thn u ( m "f all rather than for the nr >fo n f

med participation.

Effccts

of their weekly rehearsals t<

ing and reminding the sit

! «

Phe dragging of the responses a, m os I common fault among

Another common

land to sell statues, crucifixes and other religious articles made in

1 Japan. A statement to this effect lias been issued by the secretary

the o f ! h ; . p j hgioiis Goods Wholesale a n " i Traders' Association of Ireland.

It is pointed out that this is the , fi>-«t t ime Japanese firms have

;crs i ¡¡r,.!5 ,,p ¡he production of Catho-lic religion- emblems, and that

been made possible n j through the English importers'

nding samples of various sta-' tues such as the Infant of Prague, to Japan, to be copied in plaster nd metal.

The association appeals to Cath-ilics to refrain from buying pa-

s tan On i p l ^ i p " 7 1 n\ I erly until 1jS oh three Cardinals. the greater part ; ' S 1 1 , ,

nunhni being an economic j of the diplomatic corps accredit- j ' m a r k e d

that exalts materialism, j (d to the. Vatican, and a great! ( 4 0 r ( ? s ( i i n n o b p

thp few, thus making for greater that upholds the doctrines of class ' abundance among the people in ' o-- njid violent revolution, is general. " ' , - therefore, dominate public

s ^ ^ S O r V i P ° opinion, if it should come to pow- T-ol joh S t u d e n t s «rate Communism places the er. In order to bring society under

service of the urban proletariat its control. Propaganda would primary jn its functioning, at take the place of education and , p a v ir. Of tjssimo" throughout. In some' national trade mark, the "Chrv-least in theory. Fascism serve; opportunities for individual ac- 1 n o n n d ( ra-raduatt s of I . " cases they are sung too quickly, s-inthrmnm" design,» or by the the owners or controller« o f ' l i on would be conditioned by the

w^alth-^the middle or upper totalitarian state. Granted that d o n o t i n d i c a t

preference.

A total of 340, over 21 per cent, members of the Presbyterian

—ta l e or unpen classes. Capitalism works for the business and banking interests, j fit system ut

Consumers* Co-operation i

<*er, says that the consume!

that is, ap members of the so- f

cietv should receive the benefit 0r modern methods of produetson in

^portion to their part ieimt ion j >n ownership

Phow Fe l i g ions Bel ief ^ ( f

i-ethf hem. Pa.. Nov. lf> Of tissimo" throughout. — thA l.lGO undergraduates of, I«?" cases they are sung too quickly, hieh TTniversitv there are only 29 while in other cases they are ren-

.:•! le religious objects, which • h tec ted bv the Japanese

'Made in Japan."

evils in the pro,

ider capitalism

ie reaction to these evils serv * v n ' - *• *-• - - — q v p Tîit, 1*1 » »v.1 ~ t. i.ijv- » - -. 1 Tf morrlv 0*0C.S .. . • , T, f I

... no real pmpose. it merei> . h v h_ T h „ following is a 1-st o distort the scale of values and ^ v a r i o U g denominational prefer- f he purpose of life in fhe minds shown in a survey just com- | ' . . .* t l i fì

pieted : imple men groping for th

! truth. r

Co-one rat «on, however, makes ^ for the restoration of economic ' ' j; , . . .. en-vres effort by giv jr,',T pfople a chanco to own an-

M «y^P'i vm

•ïgrJÊtc. ¡ su

Lutherans F van e eli

control and benefit of P^duction and disi n buti« ¡n «trumpflf«,

of Democracy ? Commnnlsni a sv'-'fon o? •• their own commodity stm

Jomlnatfon by a mlnon'tv "TiMin.i v'- "Hv o;-,ani,ing their econ-, ^ ;

Claims to favor democracy as -mlc power as consumers thev

*a u l t 1 l"atP method of "fivci'n Uavo their self respect through a. ^ a n d un i tar ian^ 12 ment- ^ t considers It impractic-1 self-help program rather than. •

iscopalians, 2G7; Cttlr-Mo-. - ^ / - ^ / V ^ ^ f t g o J ^ ' "

157; Me thod i s t s , r , ^ f X f / f

and R , f f ^ t ä ^ ß & m - - f f i è r

93- Hebrews 85; Methodist Epis-; N f ® ^ * ' ¡. .- .L co. ..>-• i f 1; Congr.-eationabsfs, 58. f g j P ' , ^ ' Q U .. Vö(/%1

i*

copal. > miscellaneo

mti«ts. 33; Protes-

tants. 30; Quakers. IS; Morav- ¡

0 0 * "'J>fp-a - p / t r t í ^ / ' H

m e H T T H E P I T T S B U R G H C A T H O L I C X i n i H S D A T , N o v n a * ¡ S I

TO THE POIN ! pi ovos have represented themselv

! os as younger than they really ari

the callous spirit pervading in

— — I'.iustry means thai they couldn't;

(Continued from Page 6) get 01 hold their jobs if their real j

this important book in the hands ages were known- ami now they of so careless and prejudiced a. commentator.

The announcement that a rep-

must toll the truth to Uncle Sam

or deprive themselves of the bene-

Letters From Readers

Proper Christmas Cards

" V t T ; ^ r e n c h Priest NutT

I™ Ä Ä As Academy Mrs. Leo Siaab. Mrs. Harry r . ~~

• -'-im Young. Wa d H a r - L N°V ' Ms« ^ M ^ c r - James H. T r " ^ ° f ^ ^

er Marsraret Sweer - r !:K»<>Us wnri,= - 7 ' P«la

fits to which they are entitled. I You

It is too much to expect that the a?

resentative of the "Catholic j the Social Security Act would im-j ''To t

Worker" is coming to Pittsburgh 1 mediately relieve ail the ills of j on ate at a

to discuss the movement of which our economic and industrial sysr j is trying t

that paper is th e voice, should tem; they have been too long neg- ver Using

deeply interest all Catholics who! ! c c t o ( i ( o 110 healed so readily. It I s t to. I will take many trials, and many c

,, m 'a

Point" JV K h

ve

ev, Wiibert ™ " U S and V a T ?

as well as I Fitzgerald, Marcus Hohenfeld ! !°s ° f i m P 3 r t ^ t C h u r c h , column Herbert Bride. Sarah Graham.' V ! ™ o f Jhe thfte

M,s p t I c ? , d y^rday to v ^ ' i

each store I '

variety of ' 1

x an, Mrs. J P. Kunkel, Mrs f Si»vt nn. Thnniac T)

give any thought to the great is

sue of social justice. A glance I r a n g e s and a great deal of pati-

through any issue of that paper ! e t i c e before legislation gets to the

will show that it is idealistic to ' r o o t c " " ^

m. j nomas I'urceil Mrs. E. J. Kelseh. Fred Lang Al Xander Sim ana k, Robert Thoma

Mrs. Gertrude I

h e Academic

he

ng and Elizabeth the " A c a ^ a T ^ «

Lacretelle. a u t h o r « ^ ? * * a n d Admiral Marie X * *

J - a ^ f c r i B e r M i n i ^

One vacancy st i l l «

; ^ r t y s e f s of the Acadi are chW»

world 1 ' «wwa all over ,1. ncluding the T L Ï

United

Thp ()ther two

an incredible extent, and that it

is practical and definite too. These

headlines from the November

number give some notion of the

stand it takes: "Globe Strikers'

Cause Is Right. Strike Is Wrong ; "

"Mormons Relieve Brothers With-

it of all the trouble, But at leas!

something is being done.

At Mount Mercv

} ou ari

\v wisn >ss Chrî

irging Catho- i Quinn.

tlio h

=e cards if

f which ex-

tents and re-

ly feast the

Alumnae Dance

Gh

Rev. Wilfred Parsons. S. J . J ditor of "America" from 19251

out State Assistance;" "Seamen! „ntil a few months ago. and now Strike in Face of Corrupt Union j professor of European History m| Leadership;" "Communist or Not,! <he graduate school Browder Has R igh t to Bo University will Heard:" "Steel Employs Armed} vi, <vv College <

Thugs Against C. I. O." These j noon. Dee. 4. on the invitation of'; 111

are all on the first page; there! Joseph Grange Smith, instructor a l

ti caros ai

used ? It

pienti!

mi ti

c

amas,

express F u r t h e r arrangements have

Christian ! b e e n m a d o for the dance to be j [.heir outstanding contributions t„

dd at the Hotel Sehenloy on ' t h e advancement of civilization

o by the —-en-

t h e v j Friday evening, Nov.

j j,.. i Divine Providence A c

own

ount

Friday after-

ak

are seven mor e p . 1.. I- filini/

to make o i

Eg political science. His

every reader think and perhaps to! will deal with

make some act.

Every Catholic

serious view of p

ti on s owes it to h

Vatican and the Ev who takes a

wailing condi-

nself to know

mut the "Catholic Se ÎYieî il ill 3,1

Worker."* The presence of Mr.

Callahan at an open meeting at

St. Agnes' next Monday evening

The Mi uni Mercv Athl As-1 lion will hi his even in

a di g at £):ou o'clock i

n Sr. Joseph's Hall, with Ruth j ^

Anderson, public school physical

otters an opportunity to come in j education instructor, as speaker. c r

contact with this important, vital , Committee members "are"; Mary j ^ f c r c e- Jane Vetter. Helen Herrmann,

— i Elizabeth Brown. Katherine Mc-| is said on another

ney w •in,! nf

hof the

hem wa

an an y oí

to force tl

price. T

anxious ab(

in than fo

sentiments

try to si

c, 11 os at

mdivuiuais ¡

t to make i

T am not

lesaler so

and abo Y

i ni m y ? Mu m na«- Association. Mary c.

Marie Cyphers. Marie !

¡ Enz. Rosemary Hauck. Eleanor!

p I Kirchner : Patricia Glenn. Flavio|

e j Taylor, Mildred Grabert, Mar-'

n n s ! garet Casselman. Martha Kerr.

u n - j Florence Kelly and Mrs. Bertha

Tretew Story comprise the com-

Hospital Baaar Tt

an

r un-

truly

tv; ieen w imams, :n eha

reservations, reports

and either many out-of-town alumnae ar

the right returning

d >uble thei

get and so

gan kind be

ie annual bazaar and occam-

;f n

ca ^ c r a P h y sale and exhibit

< f Sx. Francis Hospital, is w

hold this week at St. F W

Hospital Nurses' Home, F 0 r t v . fifth and Colvin Sts. The affa*

i 1 0 wh ich there will be no adrr -

* I sion charge, will open this m-

that n i n g and be continued tomorrow

mcl Saturday evenings, special

r tne occasion. Reser- j attractions being offered for cM-

rN

îomethii i>)

rVlt

?V, Ri ta Stinnor, Veronica Mc-page about the film "Cloistered" n , ~ l e v > Mary V. Whi te Victorine which is to open in Pittsburgh in V a n B a l e n , R i t a McLaughlin, j a few weeks. A- most readers know, THE P ITTSBURGH CATH-OLIC accepts no advertising for movies, and it carefully refrains from "urg ing" anyone to see any picture presented under the usual , commercial conditions. There have , been too many sad cases where Catholics were urged to go and see some "wonderful ' f i lm, onlyi to be affronted with something of- i fensive on the same program.

Rut "Cloistered" seems to b •

something entirely different. It is|

a record of life in a real convent

—not a Hollywood distortion.

Everyone who sees it calls it

touching, impressive, remarkable.

And the house where it is to bo

shown has a reputation of not giv-

ing offense. So it seems proper

and fair to say that when this pic-

ture comes to town. Catholics

should mhke it a point to see it.

even if they have to fori go some

of the run-of-mine "feature f i lms"

in order to do so.

•—o—

sponsor its thirel annual "Th

Hying jamboree" for the benefit j

~f St. Wendelih's Church, Car-

riek. Tuesday evening. Nov. 24.1

Cards will be played in the school)

auditorium: dancing and other en-j

tertainment will be featured in

the gymnasium, and other attrac-

ts ns W i l l be offered in the Ly-

cinnati, defends "the othe r side of j e urn rooms.

the censorship argument " Some; Cards will begin promptly at •

day the newspapers may come to i S: 30 P. M... and dancing will be;

understand that the Legion of Do. conducted from 9:00 to 12:00 P. I

cencv, regarding which Archbishop M.

McNicholas wrote, is not a cen.-1 —

The dauy I a this week

carry a report of an article ap-

pearing in a current magazine in

which Wi l l i am H, Bristow, gen-

eral secretary of the National

Congress of Parents and Teachers,

condemns the "censorship of mo-

tion pictures." Then it adds that

Genevieve Harris, Mary Bell

Frances Schneider. Anno Waters.

Eileen Weber and Martha Mere-

dith.

a airvoy just completed at

Mercy College shows that

per cont of the girls' fa-

Id business positions, sev-

per rent are skilled opora-

urtcen per cent executives,

or cent are enginec rs and

• , y n >• cent are retired. Other

sitiens represented are account-

ants. government employes, phy-

;'cians. laborers, architects, at-

pharmasists, and industrialists.

•n ;thory a re housewives, it was

shown, with three per cent busi-

ness women and two per cent so-

cial workers.

0amck 'Jamboree'

St. Wendelin's Lyceum will

:ure books for Vhy do not Ca ios lay in a •th while Chr

\v w i

and

so cneap tney sen

m >re plentifully. The

o" suitable Christmas

3 f a- children.

lie parish so-j|j

ock of real ,| j

nas greet inp*

itions can b e made by calling dren on Saturday afternoon Hand 5011. j 3:00 o'clock.

K r cards and orrer i nom jo tnei r me m . ¡ |i

boi ; ri. cost orice in their own ! I

it L.V.B.

T ) the Ed i te i

Lately I hi CATHOLIC cr

lis will solve

as has been

Let others try

ic

I

;omplaints about the

.mas cards that abound

V. T agree with you in what

iy of them ] 00 per cent,

eas -n that T am writ ing tc

o this ma' tor is, that real

mas cards ran 1 m mirchnr>-

CARD PARTY

Benefit

Missionsry Confraternity

Auditcrium New S t . Ma ry ' s of Mercy Church

Third Ave and Ferry St.

Tuesday Evening, Nov. 24-8:30 P.M. ADMISSION 35c

"»vi« W iwi 2 mrtn iF.rjzw&cjt am .^a nil Mill IP, »«apj

111

:nvn. r

Salvatoi

Pj Si

fi

nas cards thai can be pro-

anywhere. I f anyone is

îinted with their cards,

Yours truly, J, A. G.

Catholic Forum

.ho regular meeting of ;.. e.ivnm hi.!,l Tunclnir

WAITING FOR THE VERDICT (a fonr-act drama)

wil l be staged in

ST. F IDE LIS AUDITORIUM HERMAN, PA.

SUNDAY, NOV. 22 THURSDAY, NOV. 26-

SUNDAY, NOV. 29

2:15 P.M. Admission 25c

•t g « n «

f i ¡1 1 1 2 y i i

IV Fi Best!" A 4. C*

I 111

arean Scenes Solon Hill College

arc on

at 8:00 Itili (

Y 011

sorship body. Whi le it complains r i r i

to the producers of what it thinks'

is wrong, the producers can dK-•

regard these complaints if they see j

fit. The work of the Legion of D P . j Greamiburg, N 1

cencv in reality corresponds to thei Classic Guild of N

placing nf warning labels on poi-l will present "Great

son; the poison makers are not fi.haki

stopped from bringing out theiri v

product, but they cannot object.I , ?

if those who know it is deadly in-1 t j 1 (

sist on mark ing it so that others

will bo on their guard.

—o—

Many pathetic incidents come to

light as the provisions of the So-

cial Security Act are discussed and

preparations are made for putting

if Info effect. Unforunately hope I soerox to have been raised in the \

minds of some elderly men a nd j

women that (hev are to start nv-

ceiving a pension immediately: j i

they are cruelly disillusioned when i ' '

they find that the federal act wil l ; usual in the

mean nothing to them. Pathetic, | 1'rankstown

too, are the instances where em- James will be hostess.

The

< o i o .nf,. mter-

n that day.

More Heat!

Lasts Longer!

Plan Monthly Party

In North Side Parish

Ca e

;rn "The T;

tiTKi

if the

card

du-'' od

n Rd..

Shrew".

F rankst own Card Party

Cheaper

Per Winter!

dav [>1 the !

P i ' M.

I bo hold as; >

h hall, S100; r,

Mrs Herbert! 7.

_ C o m p * * *

Refill D i v i s i o n - GBa l it Sl l

417 W O O D S T R E E T

ward Fa triti, Harry Buerkle. J r

NOVEMBER 19, 19S6

Msgr. Ready Pays

Tribute to Heroes

Work of W&r Welfare Groups Recalled In Armistice

Day Ceremony

William H. Conti

ha ci served as i

chapt er were among the

Mrs. Connell

m n i

speakers.

ernational "if honor at day at the

11. both of whom

overnors of this

mchoon

the in-

Washington, D. C., Nov. 14 Paying tribute to the memory of America's hero dead at the tomb o f the Unknown Soldier in Arling-ton National Cemetery Wednesday morning, Very Rev. Msgr. Michael J. Ready, assistant general secre-tary of the National Catholic Wel-fare Conference, recalled those "other heroes and heroines, those who pursued in the holy company of our American welfare associa-tions the noble ideals of peace oven in the midst of war" and placed high '"on that headro'l of Amer-ica's patriots" the name of Rt. Rev. Msgr. John J. Burke, C S 1\, late general secretary of the N.C. W.C.

Welfare Groups Represented

Speaking at the exercises, which are held each year at the tomb of the Unknown Sodier under the auspices of the seven national wel-fare organizations authorized by the government during the World War to do welfare work at home and abroad, Msgr. Ready said, "our reverence and respect for thi* un-know American soldier is a mock-ery unless we strive with our full might to see to it that the hero honored in his chastely fashioned monument is America's last un-known soldier." "Our pilgrimage here is futile," he added, "unless we resolve to bring to our courw-try the only real assurance of peace, a love for God and a rec-ognition of our brothers throughr ! out the world as sons of God."

In addition to the National Catholic Welfare Conference, the] other organizations represented at the exercises included the Youn<r Men's Christian Association, the Jewish Welfare Board, the Salva-tion Army, the Young Women's Christian Association, the Wa r Caihp Community Service and the American Library Association.

This year's exercises were in charge of the National Catholic Welfare Conference.

Mser. Ready al«o placed the wreath at the tomb in the name of the seven welfare organizat-ions

president, was guest the tea given on Sun-Barclay Hotel under

the auspices of the the Philadelphia City

The Pittsburghers :mce at the conferenc

Ex-Governor of Iowa Diocese $400,000

p

death

of n embers

Circle,

in attend

e were Sis and Sister Joan

Cathedral School;

and Sister

Hill,

'ei- Francis Regis

of St.. Paul's

Sister Helen Cecilia

Cecilia Claire of Seton

Greensburg; Mrs. John M.

o'-ty, Mrs. Earl Tebbetts. A McCrory, Mrs. John Frey-

vogel, Mrs. Heatherington, Flor-ence Feenev, Ursula Dowling, Gertrude McCaffrey, Mrs. Donald McNeil, Mrs. donnei] and Munhall.

Moines, la., Nov. 17 The here on Nov. 4 of Nathan

K. Kendall, former governor of Iowa, revealed that Mi. Kendall bcfor,, his death had given $415,-000 in municipal bonds to the Catholic Diocese of Des Moines to he used "for the general benefit G f homeless, destitute, and aban-doned children of Iowa."

Mr. Kendall had no church af-Hav-J filiations, but his first wife, Belle Mrs. Wooden Ken dell, who died in

Naples in 1927 while on a world tour with the former

will begin each evening at 8:00 I o'clock.

Monday will be "Men's Ni Tuesday. "Women's Night", Wednesday, "Family Night" proceeds will go toward the

?ht"; and All

sup -

In The Parishes

(Continued from Paye 5)

M rs.

Passionists To Give

Missions and Novenas

governor, was a Catholic. Mr. Kendall married aealn nmi » bäiec

A partial list of novenas and missions to be conducted by mem-

*!bers of the Passionisi Order at-tached to St. Paul's Monast South Side, within the next crai weeks, was announced terday by Very Rev. Wirtz. C. P. Nov. 22r Dec

OVmrnV »

recto 13

ei'v sev yes-1

Benjamin as follows: j

Holy Trinity lurch. Perth Amboy. N. J., I

Sebastian Fialko, C.P. and! Rev. Eugene Kozar, C. P.

Nov. 29 Dec. 8 St. Joseph's Church, Oradell. N. J., Rev. Gilbert Walser, C. P,

Dec 6 - 13 Holy Trinity Church, Perth Amboy, N. J., Rev. Cor-fu a e Flaherty, C

Dec. 6-20 St. C and ria Church.

P

•v.

yril's of Alex-

North Side,

hastian Ochsen re iter.

ecious Blood Order

Founds Mission House

again, and his will, pro Saturday, Nov. 7. provides

that his widow will receive an annuity of $7.500 from the dio-ces0 as well a s half his estate after all deductions have been made.

Mr. Kendall served as a United States representative before he was elected governor, a position which he held for two two-year I terms. He was regarded as the most eloquent orator in Iowa dur-ing his public career. In the last 10 years h e took no active part in politics. He was a Republican.

Pre - Thanksgiving Fete

In East End Parish

port of the church and school.

Berlin Bishop Orders Catechism For Adults

I

Berlin, Nov. 6. Bishop Prey-sing. of Berlin, has just ordered! that cathechism classes for adults be started in each of the 70 par-ishes of the diocese. An hour's in-struction is to be given each week by special catechists who will fol-low a prescribed program.

In a letter ordering the classes the Bishop writes: "The study of the catechism is still the best i means of defending ourselves ! against modern paganism."

Switzerland Outlaws Communist Activity;

members and communicate Boyle,

those Interested may with Mrs. C . F.

SACRED HEART (Emsuorth) Saturday: 7:30 P.M., novena de-votions in honor of Our Lady of Perpetual Help.

NT. SCHOLASTIC W S wall) Sunday: 7:30 P.M. fions and"*Benediction.

Aspin

devo-

Catholic Croats Sweep

Elections in Yugoslavia

Harrisburg. Nov. 10 The So-e'ety of the Precious Blood, American Province, has estab-lished a new mission house at W v ; Cumberland, near Harris-hi * Vfr

Very Rev. Ignatius A. Wagner.

C.PP.S . provincial, has assigned

the following priests from the

mother ho use at Carthagena. O.,

to th(> new foundation: Rev. Leo

i. Vogt, superior; Rev. G o r g e

Kra ft, Rev. Valentine Fleck, en-

stein, Rev. Henry Druffel and

Rev. Alfred Mever.

Zagreb. Yugoslavia, Nov. 10 Municipal elections held yester-day in parts of Bosnia, Herccgo-vina and Dalmatia resulted in overwhelming victories for the Croat Nationalists, under the Catholic leader Vladimir Mat-chek. They polled 111.000 v >»es against only 10 000 for the Serb! Radicals and l.fiOO for the Y Slav Fascists. About 4.000 polled by the Serb Opposif

In Croatia, even areas inhabited by Serbs gav,. a !ty for the Croat Nationalist? The Serb Radical party p ,}], -about 20 per cent less than th. Croats, while the rest of the bal lots were divided anrmfi the Fas ^«t and other dissident groups.

It is doubtful, as a result of tin ^cent municipal elections these various provinces, that

Belgrade Government can coun

°n even on^tenth of the elector ate.

T o Hold Annual Fete In South Side Parish

Next Monday evening. Nov. 23. the Women's Guild of St. Bede's Church. East End. will hold the annual pre-Thanksgiving party in the parish school hall, Edgerton St. Turkeys will form an import-ant attraction at the affair.

Bridge. 500, euchre and old maid will be played and the com-mittee will furnish seasonal en-tertainment. A luncheon will be served. Mr. and Mrs John O'Donncll will be in charge.

Homewood Card Party On Friday evening the weekly

card party will be held for the benefit of Holy Rosary Parish, in the school hall, 7120 Kelly St. The hostesses will be:

Mrs. Wil l iam Lord, chairman. Mrs. Mary Potts. Mrs. Loretta Conrad, Ethel Conrad, Helen Car-ey, Mrs. Richard Liebler, Mrs. John Berschneider, Mrs. Clara Finucan, Mrs. Wnrren Miller, Mrs. L. K. Cross. Mrs. Mary Mellits, Mrs. John Casey, Mrs. Thomas Gribbon, Mrs. Catherine McCann, and Mrs. E. M. Evans.

Geneva, Nov. 6 The Swiss government announced on Tues-day a number of anti-Communist measures, to g o into effect imme-diately. They include a ban on the importation of all news-papers, pamphlets, or other forms of propaganda, which have a Communist, Anarchist, ant ¡ re-ligious or anti-militarist charac-ter.

\ ban is also placed on the

ST. SVIA ESTER'S (Brent wood) Three Masses will be cele-brated Sunday instead of the usual two, opening a two-week mission to be conducted by Rev. Norbert Miller, O.M.Cap.. of St. Francis' Friary, Brookline. These Masses will be at 7:30, 9:00 (for children) and 10:30 o'clock.

ST. THOMAS' The two we ducted in th les Flynn. ( iam Burke Dame. Ind . will be conclud

Sundav

(Braddoek) — k mission bring con-parish by Rev. Char-SC. , and Rev. Will-

C.S.C., of Notre d on

giving of

ist propag

ISO

instruction in anda and tac

Commun-

ies.

Meeting Next Friday Of Lithuanian Priests

The monthly meeting of Lith-uanian Roman Catholic Priests League of the Diocese of Pitts-1 burgh will be held in the rectory I g j of St. Casimir's Parish, S >uth Side, of which Rev. Magnus Ka-zenas is pastor, on Friday after-noon, Nov. 27, at 3:00 o'clock.

Officers will be elected and a program of activities for the win-ter months will be outlined

Chaplain

Cleveland, O . Nov. 10 Rev. Frank J. McManus, assistant at St. Mary's Parish. Lorain, has been appointed a chaplain in the United Stairs navy, it has been announced by the Chancery office here.

n-HT

Mass Thursday For

FOR SALE

u n i ROOM Brick House, near Annunciation Church

and Schools. Can be used for 2 j families, copper plumbing throughout. 2 car garage, 2

| baths, 2 toilets, 2 porches, laun-1 dry, instantaneous hot water I heater, gas, electric, automatic j fired furnace, which keeps uni-

Confraternity Heads {orm temperature night and

J day. Near Stores and Cars. The annual Solemn High Mass | Pavccl Street —Price $6,500—

of Thanksgiving for teachers of j $2,000 down payment. Fairfax the Missionary Confraternity will | 9713—2622 Linwood Ave., N. S. be solemnized in St. Mary's of 1 Pittsburgh. Pa. Mercy Church, Third Ave., and Ferry St., on Thanksgiving morn-ing at 9:00 o'clock, the Mass breakfast will in the auditorium for ni the organization and the

1 go-

were

ition.

largely

m a j

Th° annual Thanksgiving fes-

tival of Holy Cross Parish, South

Side, will be held Thanksgiving

Eve, ¡Wednesday evening. Nov.

25, at the South Side Market

1 House, South 12th St. Many new

j attractions will be offered,

j The following committee is In

; j charge of the affair: Michael

Hanlcy, general chairman; Joseph

R. O. O'Brien, publicity; Albert

Geiger, William Connors, William

M. Barry. Daniel Murphy, Thomas

Gorman, and Mrs. Marie Cross;

Dedicate Wayside Shrine

Squirrel Hill Bazaar Plans are being completed this

week for the "mammoth bazaar" and annual Thanksgiving festival to be held by members of St. Philomena's Parish, Squirrel Hill, on Monday, Tuesday and Wednes-day evenings, Nov. 23, 24 and 25. New games, new features and other new attractions will be on

Free Organ Recital Dr. Caspar Koch w

in the usual free organ Carnegie Hall, North 3:00 o'clock next Sunday noon. Bess Manloveg. v will be the guest solois Ralph Lewando at

t le program for the affair which

CHAS. D. G ILLESPIE Attorney at Law

Itoom »<14 521 Fourth A vomir Telephone 2395 O.i.ts

FOR

EVERYONE

IN THE

F A M I L Y

Dental work HI all its Branches ion crediti. Pay woeltlv what you call sf-iorii. Extractions ar.leeo or Bwake

1

th & PENN

& MARKET

r U"> i pmww w ' » • « A I W W S R O F N

m i the! i 'arrisburi

ev. Ce "g"

:¡ rrisburg,

iti on of

Pittsburghers Attend IP.C.A. State Session

r

U5

Philadephia, Nov 16

*%hteenth

a 1

ir of

of C

at Mt. ;

istriut H

end. Sev

Hie

of

the

annual conferencc ¡ . Pennsylvania Chapt ^ernational Federation one Alumnae was held Joseph's college. Che

J ™ * t he past week cna. s e v n the Pittsburgh association

^represented by delegates

Af*H A c a d ^ y . St. Xavier-Academy. Cathedral High Seho, Mercy Academy

S Seton Hill college.

i >ay

past

Rev

ed

view on

Th.

of

'. F.

the

Pa., Nov. 14 ¡Most • L Leech, Bishop of presided at th e decii-

a wayside shrine in the Sacred Heart of )an ville, on Armistice shrine, a gift of the St. Joseph's Church,

X. Dougherty, is erect-school grounds in full

main

: v'

of traffic on thi

h rough the city

high-

lish For

Bishop Named Manila Congress

vii eh;

and "Col-Academy and

William Munhall * and Mrs,

a.

'¡don, Nov. 13— Mo^t Rev.

Lei McGrath. Bishop of Men-

wiil represent the Hierarchy

of i; -land and Wales at the 34th

International Eucharist ic Con-

gress to be held in Manila, i'hilipr

pine Islands, next February.

FANCY AND ARTISTIC ROLLER BY

r< f r m rr o k a i ING

il

B R I G H T S T A R 76 Yenr-Oid Indian, Champion Pioneer Roller Skater

APPFAKINO AT

Diamond Square Roller Skating Rink Pittsburgh, Pa.

Market Building) Diamond and

( Markcj Sts.

hid Floor Diamond

F r i d a y , N o v Sal urda v

{Benefit O l d St.

Nov . lì : 1:00 I ' M

i 0»'

at r ick '

10:30 p.m. ( Midi

l 'a ri s h )

1:00 P.M. 10:30 I ' M

OTHER ATTILA« H O N S I\< I.I D I M .

THE FLYING DEMONS Representing" A Spectacular Roller Skating Act

RITA McCORMICK—Tap Dancer 011 Roller Skatc,s NELLIE W \LTENBA1 Oi l—Tap Danccr and Singei on Skates SAM FOX—Southern linytInn lap Dancer ER IC STAMFORD Imp: rsonator and master of ceremonies

011 W i i k e n s and Ray Perk ins Vni.m nr Hour .

ADMISSION

Spectators 16 Cents

Skaters, Usual Price

The Dancing on Wheels'

Diamord Square Roller ; A Cho r u s of Ten Y o u n g Lad ies wi l l ) Bu<

>K atim I I Y

Revue —Edd\ A Paul

T H E P I T T S B U R G H C A T H O L I C

= " ) ...... .... r~T7T THI KSDAV, N O V Ö B ^ T J

— ' « n

Diocesan Union of Sodali Rev. Charles Moosmann, Diocesan Director

St. Francis Church, 815 McClure S t„ Homestead l'a.

:rv

P

s

i Here I a n d

11

I

Î T l i

W i t h W o m e n o f N o t e B j Teresa Martin

M.*iî \ I . Norton. Sodalltics Preparing Non

no h; its which will have taken .roo

in your soul ?

Suppose you were asked wis a

a savage should do who wishes t

become civilized, or an jgn »ran

person who wishes 1 o loam

trade. You would answer im

mediately: "Let him go 1 seh •

and learn the lessons of. his ma;

ter; accept his master's eorrec

tions and his directions."

Ah. that is precisely what w

must do to make ourselves bettci

Christ is the true Civilizer, th

great Teacher, the best M » -u •

with - which has Sisters s

In his monthly message to the

Sodalities of the United States,

Rev. Daniel Lord, S.J.. calls

special attention to the rapidly

approaching feast of the Immac-

ulate Conception, and reminds all

that this feast has been designat-

ed by the Church as the patronal

feast of the Catholic Church of

this country.

This fact should be pointed out

not only to the Sodality but to

all the faithful of each parish.

We are all to unite to prav to the i TT . , , . .. , _ , „ ' \, e| And He has entrusted H

Mother of God for the welfare of! , , ,, , , . to the Church, and thi,

cur country. Mary s power in I , , . , . . J . , . . - • formed the Sodality c""«'

combating heresies is historical! . . . •

fact. We are fretful today be-

cause of the many heresies in the

world. We rightly fear for the

welfare of the country as we

look at th e many other countries

under the crushing heels of God-

less men. But we take courage

in remembering that Mary can

overcome all heresies because it

was promised in the Garden of

Eden that a Woman would crush

the serpent's head. A fitting expression of our de-

f l 1 w / I r p ( . I

Father Genadii anu the

of America

î t o »Ä

station^ H é a " Sen,

itt UUe *

o

n IN e

uiocese at

Mrs. i\or-| The

W

. for this purpose.

1910. Pope Pius X rene

rules of the Sodality for

day conditions, and the B

this diocese requests evei

olic girl to join the Sodali

is why you should be a

Social Action Notes

votion and patriotic interest can

o Mary as a be made by flying preparation for her gr the Immaculate Conception, Dec s

(The following notes are sup-

plied by the National Catholic

Welfare Conference, Social Action

Department. 1312 Massachusetts

eat feast of i Ave., Washington, D. C., where

the publications referred to may

be obtained.)

Tridtiuni for the Feast

In very many parishes, a daily

novi na is made to Mary for the

feast ( f the Immaculate Concep-

tion, but where this is not pos-

sible a triduum, three days' devo-

tion. should not b e omitted.

Every year all sodalists of the

United States, and other young

people, are asked to join in form-

ing a huge spiritual bouquet of

prayers. Masses, Holy Commun-

ions and other good works, to be

reported to the National Sodality

Headquarters, 3742 W. Pine Blvd..

St. Louis. Mo., no later than Dec.

15. the grand total to be there-

after presented to our Holy Fa-

ther in Rom e as his Christmas

THE BATTLE GROUND

"There are those who wi.

to drive out, to expel. ti

Church everywhere, but parii •

larly from the fact ry and fr-

the midst of labor just whe

the presence of Christ and t

benefits of the Church a ; o

necessary and urgent." WJ

Catholics Condemn Com m u ism

THE A M E R I C A N OBLIG j

TION "Our power t . inilu -n

world decisions is gre a t e r th:

we dream . Obligati ms are

proportion to capacity." .1 (',>;

olic Program for World P< -'tec .

PARENTS Y O U R O H I L D E E gift from his loving and dutiful j "The schools, bee

young people of thc. United States. | traditional interest

T year we are making spec-

ial efforts to have every Sodality 8

and every soda list of the diocese

participate in this so praiseworthy

act of piety and love. Publicity

must be given at once to sodal-

ists and to parishes to arouse en-

thusiasm and to prepare them to

j j in in.

We request th e pastors, spirit-

ual directors and officers of So-

dalities to kindly consult together

how best to attain this aim in

every •

to present it i > the congregation

in the Sunday announcements and

printed bulletins. Thanks!

! ctemie. are a 1 o pro ìze tin

tal and the physical.

. . the home must and more if the ch ccive an all-round c development." Conct Ch ¡Ida it.

F R E E AND EQU

ive bargaining abou

hours alone implies

lality and parish, so as! i a i n i n £ * I class. But collecti'

! about profit-sharnr

ship-sharing implh

members of the

think of themselves

a subject class but

partner in all ee >?

Toward Social Ju

A P A R I S H ASSET

union

Why be a Sodalist?

I ' is quit., encouraging to hear

how many sodali sts and Sodality

directors are eagerly following!

the series of articles of which this'

is the fourth installment.

Some sodalists inquire: "Rut in

what way will the Sodality help p r i e a t c a n d o m u c ]

me in making myself better 1 a r e £ ' l r d for er

The task is not s

h 'cnjse the old instincts of un-

tamed nature often rise in revolt

against the teachings of the

Church. 11 demands courage.

"The kingdom of heaven suffereth

violence and only the violent bear

it way" , says Jesus.

er'

nsv at first a ! cure temporal ha'

cess, a fair meas

necessary i f there

ual happiness."

i on and tin Paris

But the Sodality helps t< o over- j

LONG. LONG YOUTH "It is

come all difficulties. The trans- j y°uth to live and fi 'o

formation required is only aec mi-1 e n t battle for justice a:

plished with time and persever- than to die in order that

ance, because a savage nature o f rulers and interna:-;,

like ours is not c nyerted int > a I " r s uiav be sati died an

heavenly nature in the space of a i f e r s tin- munition in-

few months, or even a year Yes,1 Vrs filled." Catholic

the accomplishment of the work! Peace.

requires energy and persevei-ance. j

Begin now by joining the Sodf

ity earnestly. Do you not know; Catholic

that the longer you put off the recognize

work the more difficult it be- fact that

j .WORK TOGETHi ¡.p-qn î y rj 11

nd n e e er

pomes, by rea,sc» of the bad hab- i laity c; ie American Ca ìlio'

m best serve in the eau

'peak on Spain Sunday

Communion Breakfast Of

Pittsburgh Council

a î» j ( y city

in W i e and wnen n

r interest c

n Jersey Ci

I

•s of Pittsburgh Council, j St. El

;.f Co lumbus , wil l h o n o r ¡ a n d I n i l

>ry of the council's d<

unbers with a memorii

d Communion at S

II

i , n e w Christ the King eh,

'ft of Mrs. j a m e 8

memory 0f her husband?* , K ' O'Neil, who died S i r * ¡ - d i e t e d early this m o n ^

• • 1 j i-nvate ceremony with u ! 1

Sistci* Jnh n Mark

for Aacd 11 n Mark Gannon r.-0I,

\dorrrs of i ho Precious Blood has };rie Diocese

¡us! been blessed by Most Rev. I officiating,

<

T1/1 '

George L. Leech, Bishop of Har- Tht risburg. The property recently th? purchased by the

remarkable develop* i m . h a s ^ n d e d the Z

tuent work o'

,r î '

Supreme Court Admits Franciscan to Practice!'

ai unity, j Xavier University in New ftrtea^

j a Cathohc university for Z |V-«th is outlined by Mother? Agatha in the

m e errent issae 0' Opportunity", a j0Uraa l ^

Will

a rran;

T T

gro Life. The enrollment of ft, 1! Br ither college has increased from | J

of Holy Name dents in 1925 to 829 this w w a s admitted to and its graduates already "L

. Supreme Court achieved encouraging suec»s3

j ining the many and diversified walks of er about a year Me. The school is conducted br

was Arthur J. O'Rourke, Sisters of the Blessed Sacrament

religious order founded bv ReT

Mother Kathe-lne Drexel, 0f Ph i Dissatisfied and unhappy with| adelphia.

• • «

J a n o Thompson, of the School

Washington. N idelis O . F M

P Oi

d him w York,

ie aban-

ÌS and I o f Nursing of the

n- 'an . ! novitiate at. F

" ( he takes hi.-

; Brothers a;

I sleeps on ai

I r . m. and

ic Up-

turn v

w. enuren

'Of c

versitv of America at WasMn»-ow t o n ' D- C.. has been named "a

nth r ! member of the news staff of "Tb table, j Tower." undergraduate newspaper impie at the university. This is the fir? y-two I ( î r r , p a worn ah has taken part b

a Catholic University undergrad-uate student activity

Miss Thompson, is working for , ' n B. S, in Nursing. She come;

•um time to time. I f r o n i Detroit, Mich., and is a my admission to j member of the recently organized

, Social Club at the university of j which M iHnn Critfcnton, of Ta-

cot m

ry ai

ie does n

i t court

(. ourt was meaning < an honor" li„ said

storiali s T- î c î •liers io Meet

led upon to-onTna Is presided: i

h e privilege unless at some R i t a S1or,ITT1- o f Schenectadv. y. ^ f n i , . , , v . fs vice ^resident, and Sr<W t date the order should be . k

. , , , M Fit/ffcrald. of the Si«-•ed m 1;titration which would; , ,

.. i tors of St. Joseph, is secretary-| treasurer.

MAf. -äö^ißfiä^S

" " P S ' ì m W ^ Ì

WkZg&tSl .^rl&ê-ÉÎ''

' TT/ me com mi

« \ -V

»

S ViMk A

11 voti have turkey j , p.T, roast goose au*>iUo

I L i of onion and ^

ihe crackliag-brownJJP enrklin0' pi? w,tn : cence oi SUCKIHIO F» fflere

î ;tc cars? Ail ».e ^ round its eai» • „„/ÎM?: é i that crown of *

% i •

5 io i"«1 — j fhrtS' '•he century-honored w

vis pie, filled deep mn* mincemeat

with sa !

c;nnmîUous plum p u « -

H

made

ddifll

j A

1 \V

• "Mondi

day m or

ins.;s. 11 il, S.

Network

Columbia

,. ,,-il too, are . i ; ;..„ grand manned;

Mende Old England. ^ ^ Hein, delicate and fesi

o r f ig pudding when »PF

a rp less baronial.

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 19, \UMi T H E P I T T S B U R G H C A T H O L I C

i D A T T T P a n r : o A lit. n i 1 l i o I m S

Reviews, News, Notes, Comments

iiì an

EUcn En inn. Wife of General

Sherman. By Anna MeAJI'-ster.

¡few York: Ben;Igor B • •

1936. Price $.1.50. The w i f e o f G e n e r a l 8h<

was a sp lend id C a t h o l i c w<

victIons aftd w a s n tr..<mon i.•;:

victiens art! w a s trem n d o u

flucnce tor the g d

Church in he r s p b e r

bv no means sma l l . S h e 15

di?d a Catholic, brought up children Ca t ho l i c s a n d h a d

happiness e f see i ng h ••?• s n T

es a priest . S h e led a n a

Iff«, particularly in the vera the Genera l 's farm\ b u I d i d

ref lect her f a m i l y .

The present life of Mrs. ,c

man is a very {ins id ee o f

tcrical writing-. It is r. t f t'lib, smart school , b u t i t is

esting sturdy stuff. Careful arship has g one into t he in i

of the book, a n d it i a in in

early American Catholic hi a c'al information. The really e lent index which the b o o k eo.nl

gives a measure o f t h e a u t l

thc.rougluiess and ability. Pittsburg hers will be intere

in the l i fe o f E l l e n Ew in "\

cause cf the c lose c o h i

the family with historic vllie.- Rev. Charles O

"•>' Semhratovich s brochure :s a splendid introduction. C.

More "Medal S| Em.miisbur.gfi Md.. Nov. 13

Two new volumes in the Rainbow s- of the "Medal Stories" bv

t h e Daughters of Charity hero bay, now made their appearance.

; the -series which has en-1 •'1 0 popular sale in the 10-

Th e new volumes the »'Gold Book" and the

"Violet. Bo k" The "R >se Book" and the "Blufe Book" were the earlier volumes.

The "Medal Slories" are now be, i'}"- published in penny pamphlef form by the Catholic Truth Society in London Each pamphlet contains ' 'he stories, and each pam-

' '"' has a e vver illustrated in colors.

Poetry Contest

P ^ Ä S I Ä

ELEVEN

j k t - 'wm

-4

M « ? ear Bftjftf

-ii i 1 ' ô l l^vP •Mr

í®»»

^ i m « i ß 1 1 -m' SVv Hai

IPt ÉJR

l Ä i K i a

rfSSr:1

ST. VINCENT'S PREP F O O T B \LL , ov- 111 Above is shown the football squiul of St. Vincent's C.S.C.. Preparatory School, I^itrolie. which lias just com

l iterature in j pi clod a seven-||§m© schedule with three wins three i losses and one tie. Wi l l iam Rafferty has In CII head

Cehnnbans, Nebr

Patrick J. P a r

O. J A D

: i on

coach of the football and basketball squads at the Fourth row: Johnson, Kooiîtz, Syhert, McDaniel

lirti Robinson, D'Alessio, IVr^nsnit, Hussov.

I l University || l|fggg ditor of "The Ave Maria", Kath

P.rei'v, not >d writer and l>n'l> s<hool silice his gradimi ion from St. \ iiicent's

Wnrrrmt. president of the' i n 1935. and Toni I-illy, a senior in the eoi

'•»'h- li Poetrv Society, with th

djj r . f "The Fa- Fast", Rev

'atr;ek O'Connor, ar,. ann »lincee

Whaleu. Ifu.'.lock, Dunn, Agosti, Matthews, Catón, mgr.

Thinl row: Bailey, Carbone, Çoyne, De La Ho, lira us, MeMulien, BicGrhth, (»ban, mgr.

The |ue;» team won from All Saints'. Mason town, 25-ti; lost io Duquesne Prep, ti 15!; defeated Penn Township, i)-0; '»¡i n gave way to the Immaculate Conception High School learn ai Conncllsville. 0-1»;

Fellow Catholics

Strangers Within ();n By Rev. Leo I. S> mh Foreword by Most Ex v. J. G'tllaohcr, Bishop of Published by the autln: CI'ppert A I T . , Detroit.

Pi ire S5e.

This in an interesting, and reliable explanatioi talned in a pamphM of -P of these portions < f th e which use rites other t: Latin rite to which m -are accustomed As the e tells us, the thrte es eni being a Catholic are that • f-.'"3 the faith of Christ, cf the seven sacraments, cognize as the- visible Church oh earth t'i-° P Eishrp ef Rome. There less than seventeen E c-lic rites whose menibn these three ss >« n are Catholics, belonging true Church. r-->»r cf rspresented in thG United and three of them in th, tiirgh district.

Something of the Hitery cf these rite? Fatter Serabratovich longs to the rite call ian Greek", l ie tells characteristics of th' languages used f w(. that Latin is the offie of the Church, but. 2 fvery day cf the v. other languages»; tin ® the ecclesiastic; (most of the ' Orient; use the Julian instead gorian calendar am many disthictiena ; n

days and in the nam« tie feasts); the a everyone is familiar 1

usual appearane . of of the Greek rite cl iiurgy and th? litu ments, markedly dii "T-se of the Latin ritt

enfirplv nr- ! t ,. .

m<

lege and center of the varsity team, has been hb assisiiint this season. Rev. Norbert Rtipprccht, () N.B., is athletic director at the prep.

Left, to right, finit row: Coach Rafferty, LaBolitta. ! plav«t! to a scoreless lie w ith St. Mary's of l b • poetry con- Hoffman, Moria, Elliott, O 'Neil, Rodgers, Pugii, Mount. t>ittsburgh; took over Bolivar High School

aed by "The Far East" barrel!, Asst. Coaeli Lally. j >vi l . ,m l l o v ( ,,„. ,jn.,| ,„ st. Veronica's, of Am . published by St. Co- Necond row: Joyce, Mulvibill, Bartek, Cerotti. ' bridge, last Saturday, 7*36. For« ign Mission ^ociety

•re li. S. Sociologists contest is for origins

""n £ ! To Join Academy ship with the missionary

> Church. The awards, American Branch Planned Of $25, h a v e been donated by i

•at

n. i ne ei smg ciaic 01 st is announced in the ssu11 of "The Far East"

International Christian

Organization

•f the Im m aculatt

'. 8 1936.

have assured the supreme of eers of the K. of C. they will n countenance a continuance what the fraternal order's le ade

(^ o h b í í i í Situation

ï îv l í e Imnrovinir

Nov 12 The "Reichs-

have termed as a p ili ti cai p< rs • ;

cution. The K. of C. insurance

license was suspended by O'Mai-; Interview Between Hitler and ley, former member of the K ofi Cardinal Faulhaber Gives C.. after the supreme office hacl R i s 8 t o Optimism refused to permit an examination!

New York, Nov. 18 An Amer 1 "--t: " - ~-- ------ ~ — - - j

I ican branch of the International officials.

Academy of Christian sociologists The knights took this stand b<

is to he established this winter, cause the Connecticut insurance

the editors of "The Christian department had issued a rej it "

ptable in all states other! V:

, zine of social reconstruction, to-1 than Missouri that declared

Paul, Minn., Nov. 17 "The! day announced. "society is in a good, financial

¡c Die est", a new monthly j The academy was founded in | condition, and that its affairs

.1 (iav 111!

'Catholic Digest' Starts . ' S M o n t l i l y Publication Front", Catholic monthly maga- j acceptable in a!

reprinting selected i í'higland one year ago. It in-

ri the world's leadingI eludes among its members such

periodacils made its ap

h a. ve bet n efficiently

manag-eri;''

St. Paul priests are in

I he new magazine, which

in a conV

TT irli Beh col Studenti

ñ

Wm

riti

Ti

Catholic neriodacils made its ap men as Christopher Dawson, noted Catholic historian and sociologist; Bernard Wall. e.Htor of the "Co-losseum"; Maurice Reckitt, editor

l in convenient pack-jof th" English quarterly "Chris-K v Paul Bussard is edi-1 tendom", and other prominent

v. L uis A. Gales manag- Christian sociologists in England I ; 1: d Rev. Edward F. ¡and on the Continent.

business manager. The aim of the Academy is to

itroducini? the publication,! achieve a unity of social thought th,. editors state that "the pur-j among Christian thinkers. The

., 0 f this Digest is to prove Papal Encyclical letters "Rerurn 0.' cur Catholic periodicals do j Novarum." and "Quadragesimo

contain solid reading material; Anno" are accepted by the mem

'hich can he enjoyed." Offices) bers as the norms for a Christian | , of "The Catholic Digest" have' sociology.

rn opened at the Chancery, Norman McKenna, editor a \ve.. St.j -Th«- Christian Front", is th , s f . A

| American representative of the ^ j', > ri, * * John Mc (' \ j Academy, having offices at 167 jvvf st Pith St., New York City

Rome to the effect thai a

random of Michael Cardinal

Fa ul ha her's recent, meeting

, \vith Chancellor Ad -If Hitler at

Berchtesgaden bas been submitted

bv ¡he Cardinal, to Pope Pius, and

that he has also informed the

German Episcopate of the results

of the conversation.

T German Bishops, according

I to the "He

, 1

í >a vr>n

Mark 'Education Week' tu j ( 'ii

In observance of "Education j ^ Week", a program was presen ted . . by the students of St. Mary's the Mount High Seh »»1 last Fn

torium. John Roga chairman, and the I ii re ss c s were g i v e n :

"Religious Educai ... >ert; "The Greí heanor Brady; " K i r . Va ce' . Grace Murray; "The Ca

Ri g-i ni e and

sit nation

rch in G(

of I lu

•ht

it t:

talo

e uisider Catholic

is just as

'f that the

first Le i eh

t r

it ican

Christmas Poetry

renne Ind., Nov,

"\\"e are anxious to con tac . Pauline Whah

•«e coaprcff?tk-n takes a? ant part.

He describes io détail brattea of Mass ace rdis byzantine rite. We h. ar «inerences in the admÏT

the sacraments : i : 1 cenferred by immersi ;n

Confirmaii:n 3g ad?; the priesi im.re i .

%ti3ra; the J i « ; 1 s' «celved by the la a y i; KPscie3; Mat rirnony ini 'nteresting cerernony Cfcivainf rf th» a n , . . , , , , , >

Thpfl» ' '

% material fourni m n iei- Ail Catholics sh n ^methlag about theit ^tholics of the oth

book of Christ ma e Hàppy Christmas Vi '••.* M M ad: leva, C.S.C.. pres-t of ;dt. Mary's College, has

.n. (1 bv the St. A thbny ,1 i=>ress of the Franciscan

;t, I V Pat. ¡-son. N J. it is uuler volume of poems prev-] v linblished in magazines, and

Ma i l t leva's other volume, s,. St. Anthony Guild P"es.s is nublisher of Sister Madeleva's • r i., Kik of poems, "A Question

Christian sociologists in Arner-

ira," Mr. McKenna stated "P

:.; our plan to secure the co-oper-1 I >>y I 1 t >»• .1 3et..1T1)'C

ation of catholics and Prot ?stan in clarifying social thought in A meriea. Several Catholic priests, ¡ind a few college professors have signified their intention of sup-porting the Academy in America, t'he first session in America is

Catholic Pres. Dyer; "Youtl

ship". Pita Phi Peace". Edward

"Catholic Edi Problem", Rol

Mu voi ron entire student of the pn g ra

¡ecl wit! in:- to convene in January, 1937. o f s t Mary's, Fit

-The Christian Front" is the R e a

official organ of the Academy ini ! he United States.

ss C

i

Priests To Give >riio Sermon Series

ivi To Restore K. of C. Insurance

Was s Celebrated At Magna Charta Site

Little Flower Uiub

pn

v. fosti

er riti The fir;

ov. 19,

|5 Nineteen decree 1

cf the Di >- intenden

are planned for the I which f< broadcast over Sta 0 iumbus

here. The addres

01 ed by the Sodality ! peal

s Cathedral,

¡ddress will be given

.uis, Mo Nov. 10 1 . 0

f State Insurance Suoer-t R. Emmet O'Mal ley,

which forbade the Knights of C < iumbus to sell new insurance m the state of Missouri, will be ra-

in. 1, 1937. according to national officers of the K. of C

Both Republican and Derno- nass nas

cratic gubernatorial candidates since the Reformation

Dukes Champs; Beat Tech, 13-0

By Fau ! M. Lackner

Duqucsne's Dukes clinched the

city title last Saturday afternoon

as they whipped the Carnegie

Tech Tartans by a 13-0 score.

The ga l lant Steffeni tes were

beaten by the three "B ' s " : Brum-

baugh. Basrak and the Breaks.

The first B. Mr , Brumbaugh , once

again proved to be a thorn in the

side of the luckless Plaid. Last

year, if you remember, he scored

the Duke's only and winning

touchdown in the crucial Tech

game, and this year he plunged

over for the two scores that

made his team the city champs

for the second successive time.

But besides carrying the pigskin

over the goal line twice, he con-

verted the thirteenth point, threw

most all of the passes, did the

punt ing, and intercepted four of

thg loser's aerial attempts. If the

All-American Board is looking for

a halfback, Mr. Brumbaugh should

more than fill their requirements.

The second " B " was named

Michael Basrak. In Saturday's

game he proved to be a stone wal l

on the defense. Be not only cov-

ered the center station flawlessly,

it also took it upon himself to

? in every play. Never before

did the Duke captain play so well.

As usual, he played the entire

of the

As ob-

and t h e two "B 's" were outshin-

ing among the Dukes.

Saturday Duquesne takes

Marquette at Forbes Field, whi

Carnegie rests up for the Pi

fracas on Thanksgiving. L > ki-

ln to the crystal we see the Duk

pull ing a ma jor upset by takii

the unbeaten, untied Marque 1

team. On Turkey Day the crj

tal says Pitt over Carnegie by

least two touchdowns.

Duquesne University

The annual Homecoming D

of the commit t

Last Came Friday u l m ^ ' u Z ^ 'm™".t™^ Pla» Meeting0uwT \t St, Vincent's!I^!,, ^ 0 f st-y i vi a Gì

no Murr il., ». i

ti irjrare

Virg in •rvitm/ti

and M

Dr

Dr. a

. and

Gustave L

Rev. John F

represent the local a l u ^ J ?

,nd Mrs. B. R. Mary's Seminary of Baltini „>..1 R i , l „ , "wumort. *

J the annual

: ,n„ Mrs J ... „ , „ « ? , ! A a í L 0 C , a t l ™ « « * « .

Bearcats' or, H 1 ><5t '

d M Leo J. C

Mi

W

program wi bo

I1 i CI.

h avi h

c n i

hi K.

ga m (

Wae.«

cause »ne

me simue-h • Duke's second stringi Nov. 21 in t

s there such a per-1 committee

A lumn i Monogram Club of Di

quesne University < n Saturday i

the Hotel Schenhy fol lowing

Duquesne - Marquette i o o t b a j

game at Forbes

200 reservation

ceived by Rev. Louis A. Dieir i

C. S. Sp.. executive secretary-

Rev, Thomas R . J< :

Sp.. instructor of Eng;l

quesne University, has

named faculty ad vis» r <

Masquers. university

organizatif n, it Was

today. The group will

series of theatrical ;

dramas this year

The Women 's Gu i ld

quesne University wilt

for mothers of freshnu

Friday. Nov. 20. in tli

Inn Mrs. Albert A 1

Glenshaw, is chairman.

The Duqu. sne Univer?

Association will hold homecoming dan ce n >

El

C

1). Wells. Mf . i i n Park, on W , '

• Mr and 20. Most Iter. V i c h l e | , .

I t e m c o-no Mr and Archbishop of Balfao« 1

•> ' Mr. : ' n J M i preside a t the kmIom,

. Mr. and Mrs. j £ £ £

• ! 1

Vv

I

íe out F. O 'Hai P \t ( a t n<

al games ! ward K-ret:

st s c o r e rZmudz i n s k i

Mrs Ed- rd. of

ss

Msgr. John L. Bed! rs- ^ ' j Brooklyn, N. Y After t J « '

Mrs. A A Laurent, thorp 4 m ^ ^ ^ »« Mu

McCa.il Mrs. Rose S i s ï ï Th ^ * * * r,-.-. R . v t . n Vnr-J P T h e annual dinner aid

H u x i n- N o r a meeting will follow B King . Catherine M r C >rma-k, j

El izabeth McGott igan. Mir iam

Sullivan and Margaret Swiggard.

gnmen

a a

auve sta?e, Fattier Riggs m ,

J has received the endorsement cf

I | t h e ecclesiastical authorities of

I Fordham University I t h e diocese and prominent (N-

O N P 1 K N P W " R n i l d i n a ' n c c t i c u t C a t h o l i c ^ upens .New jsanamg building wm be close to the

pus.

New York . Nov. 17. Keat ing

Hai l , a new graduate bui lding at

Fo rdham Universi ty , wi l l be for,-

cenier (or n

son ?

The third " B " which brought

the d wnfal l i ! the Daklanders

H<

MM s ri i , Annunc iac i

Reynolds. Ernest. He

cob Rosenberg.

was the "Breaks" . Late in the 4th i G a m m a i:

quarter. L

Downtown«

trt ppd a

nan fumbled on the j quesne Universi ty wil

three yard stripe! nineteenth annual Th

-i -us Tartan threat. I ball Thursday. Nov. 2 3 a

I Te a IU£ .1 f i rom on me Sehen lev. Paul E

and there was much W i l l i am Auih . vie

i whether the throw while the commit

before he threw the ; J ames Fr iday.

the Steffenites found Mi l ton P< ithron. V

m tor complaint and iustlv J ohn Harr is and Jo; t • | because the officials were the

rest seen in the Stad ium for

of his mat

question a

er was do

pass. Agai for-

man y a day They seemed to be

go ing constantly in huddles,

so that the fans wondered who j

was playing the game the play-1

ers <>r the men in white. Fur ther '

the questions of the legality of

ift kept them guess-

K ni irli ts of St. Ceonre

the Duke's si

Th aforementioned was

>nl V tv le several tha Pittsb d r 1

ed br ing Tech's downfal ,

Cmlthmon lrtot

tiers Val ley distr

j last Sunday aï Si. G The Smi thmen lost no umc

scoring in the opening' quarter. South Side, undea

After a punt ing duel which end- Branch 16. The

ed in a 15-yard return of Kopscak's | . , , , _

k ick to the Oaklanders 32. thej ) i e G a ' ' i nn.i „ ühorf ti ' iri

green-jerseyed Dukes needed only a - L P a i a

six plays to score. In a few p l a y s j by the Kn igh ts

Vaire snatched a pass from Brum- Cadets and their

baugh. and reached the 3-yard j Cor.1s un(jcr t]l line. On the second try. Boyd i vr. i,,.

over c»nversi<in at

tempt failed. Dukes 6. Tech 0.

Ma jor Genen

I The servici

M and cot!s

mon and Bí The second and third quarter

< ffered few thrills. In the last

quarter, the plucky Scotch threw

a scare Into the Hil ltoppers when

they began throwing passes ev-

erywhere. Here was the losers* I Branc

golden opportunity. Tech seemed paid

well on Its way. Jerry Matelan

! ssed a pass to Babe Patt out in

the flat; just as Tech's 60-minute

end was about to l>e tackled on

Oi

Bluffi te s 18. ht LOSSC 1/4 the which hay

oval to Lehman who scampered fluence of

toward the pay territory. The ganizat ion.

frantic Dukes hit him viciously ¡ees a r e I

on the 3-yard line, causing him this month

to fumble j he ball which Johnny town, Al to

Karrs. Duke fullback, prompt ly ! where the

recovered Thus ended a nice! districts.

Tech drive. j The nev

The final Duke touchdown came

in the next few minutes. It was

the cl imax of a 55-yard dash.

Karrs, Cassillo, and Brumbaugh

dr iv ing through the blue-jersey ed

losers for big gains. B rumbaugh ! Th

made the final score f rom the one j F ib <

yard mark , and then proceeded to w

...invert Dukes 13. Tech 0

ar n

i ne newiy

tien denari mer

-hip of J N r

srun its act i vit nrrfr-H thní ' ! ì

rech made 6 first downs to the

'hamp's 8 and gained 185 yards

o their rivals' 211 Babe Pat t

mi Nester Henri on scintillated

168

for M

Scotch, while Critchfiekij new branc

?slde Card Party ity, w

diedicafed on Dec. 6 by Car-

Havi s. it was announced

rday. The bui!

$1.000.000. is 1

and of modii

which

d îYhil-

cac-

Father Riggs celebrates Mass

for Yale men daily in St. Mary's

Church and conducts group meet-

ings for Catholic instruction asd

retreats.

os op h y depart m < ari

use of the new bui ld ing By the

fa l l of 1938 it is expected that

)CCUPV"

\v

w o been trans-

Hal l .

Plan Catholic Chapel

For Yale University

Dick's Market Kirhard Matoumki'* Sobs

POULTRY, EGGS AND

SUCKLING PIGS

LIVE AND DRESSESD

—POULTRY—

We Dress Our Own Poultry

Phones

Court 9777 1911-13 Pcnn \tnv

\tlantic 1008-9 Pittsburgh, Ft I I

r Nov IT

Mi

T. Lawras ~n R iggs , for four- j

years spir i tual director and

lain to the Catholic students!

;rsity. announced to-1

for a new chapel and

Jo in ing in the plans!

>0 Catholics in the stu-

Yalf. Cr

lb 111 lU irm-

Burke Bros. HARDWARE

JANITORS' SUPPLIES

FL I MBERS' SI PPLIES

TINNERS' SUPPLIES

HEATING SIPPLIES

433 LIBERTY

I

• o r t '

* n f TJ eneñl

The Shrine of St. Jude the Apostle

REGINA COELI CHURCH 1434 Juniata St., North Side Cedar 3283

NOVENA IN HONOR OF ST. JUDE Patron of Hopeless Cases

Every Friday Th roughou t the Year

R i n s i n g wi th relic of St. Jude after every servico

Take rar No . 19 to corner Reaver Ave. and Juniata St.

Parish, Grade School Leagues

Now Beine: Formed

r U1 W i l :

10 l ic Grade School and Parish B a s k e t b a l l ^

s- a son are now being formed by; the' ^

a r e meed to fill out the entry ^

in forma ¡on e n be obtained by calling G m ^ ^ w R , N a t i o n Director of the B u r ^ f

i n o floors

securing the i two each week

^ h . e ü c officials who have no Hoon a v ^ ; ,

¿o-opeaaTe with them in securing to*

¡I ovms for an evening or

Fntry RIank

( A I HOI H H VSKETRALL LEAt»lTE

Name of Par ish or School

Name of Manager

Vddnss —

Tel. — '

Pi

Send entries to Cathol ic R<^ Welfare

bure h, Pa. ( l i an t S335.

Bureau. B°a< St.

j g lTBSDAY, N O V E M B E R 19, T H E P I T T S B U R G H C A T H O L I C THIRTEEN

Anniversary Noted D*r Pripsfa' Groiinl T h ® c o u r t ' 8 business meeting B y r r i c M ö v j i u u p | w i l l b e h t l d o n T u „ d a y e v e n i n t r

sistod by the officers and many volunteer worker«.

Polish Association Formed 20 Years Ago; Plaque Commemorates Event

Nov. 24, in St. Francis Xavier 8

Court («race

The court will sponsor a mas:

With Rt. Rev. Archabbot Alfred I m e e t h l g b e h e ! d Monday

of St. Vincent ' . , t Paulding in Shi

pose of this meeting- is to

Koch O.S.B., of St. Vincent 's! Ni.v 23. at the K. of (

ArChàbbey, Latrobe, officiating. Sharpsburg. Th e pu,

Solemn Pontifical Mass was coli»

brated in St. Adalbert's Church

South Side, on Wednesday morn ing, marking the 25th anniver

of the founding of the Association

of Polish Priests of the Diocese of

Pittsburgh.

Rev. John L. Pudlo, pastor of

St. Hyacinth's Church, M m essen,

was deacon of the Mass; Rev.

Julian Lachendro. pastor of St

Albert's. Palmer, was subdeacon;

Rev. Otto Wendel. O. S. B„ of St.

Vincent's Archabbey, was master

of ceremonies. Rev. .1 o s e p h

Frania, pastor of St. Adalbert 's

CHARITY SISTER fc i r o i t l i l i 11

Sister Adrian By

tors of Chai i ty, ¡Set ;

burg, was buried ii

at the motherhous<

morning, with So:

Mass ut' which Rev R(

ey, pastor of St. John

f , v « P r o "| Church, was celebrant mote the membership drive being| Alban conducted throughout th.. United n

i . . v Vx l cl Ci:-\SC

iversarv S t a t e s h>' t h e r of A.

i ' or of G

Creensburg, v

lev. James Davin. ass

j\ i coia

adv of

Many noted speakers and en- Johi

tertainers are to attend this meet- and Rev. Oliver D K< . ;,

in» and all Catholic women who ant at H o l v "innoeenLs'

are interested are invited to be Sheradon, was master of <

present. ies. Other priests presen

sanctuary during the M:

Rev. James A. W Roev. Court Consuelo

The social meeting wi l l .be held! d , > n t ( ) i Seton Hil l Co

on Nov. 24, with Mrs. Margaret Sebas lhn Oxen miter, (

Lighthiser as chairman, assisted Michael's, South Side,

by Mrs. LeoniIda Clark. John Hugo of Seton Ii

The date for the reception of! Sister Adrian had sj

was archprlest and Rev. Anthony! new members has been changed j years of her religious

Baron, pastor of St. Mary's, New to Sunday, Dec. 6. The ceremony I teacher in the sehuo! en

Kensington, and Rev. John J. I will take place at the Keystone j the Sisters of Chai

C z a p l 'nski , pastor of St. John Hotel. cese. She was stationed t

Cantius' Church, Sharpsburg, were

3V.

deacons of honor.

Rt. Rev. Msgr. Anthony A,

Klowo. rector of SS. Cyril and

Methodius' Seminary. Orchard

Lake, Mich., and R t Rev. Msgr.

Andrew A. Radecki. of Cleveland,

assisted in the sanctuary.

The sermon was preached by

Rev. John Jaworski. pastor of Sr.

Ladislaus' Church. N a t r o n ;y.

Archabbot Alfred spoke briefly

after the Mass. fo l lowing the un-

veiling and dedication of a bronze

plaque in th e vestibule of the

church, commemorating the event.

Other priests in attendance at

the Mass were: Rev. Joseph Fory-

siak, Cardale; Rev. Wencelaus-I ^ . J ' . "

Women's Union Holds

years at St. Ma ry Mag

Homestead; a t St. .1

Mount Pleasant; at St. A:

District Meeting Here Swissvaie-; at ss. i .hide's. F la ir viile- at

Last M< "id a y evening the Alle- Heat t a Kl at St. John tho Fa

crV en v Coi m! y section oí tti e list's . Pi j t s hi 17 * < * Her last on

Cc it hoi i e W orner l's Union, h. del its sion waf at Hoi T, , ... y inno cents'

gula r mr mthl v meeting f it St. Qkfxr ad en r, n ,. p ] . du led to I J ,

M ary's Pai •ish Auditorium. North retui 11 t hore in Sentón lb.er b 1 f '

Si de. wi th a lar g e attendane e. was not abH' for duty.

Rev. Ci in rie« s iE. Moos mann, Si; Âd f î i n trived 1

sp iritual ad viser \ spoke of t' ie ap- two S1 S t ïi-q l T**"' IVTicha el Darl

Pi oach of th e Christmas s «as m. and •NT.,] lie Byrn e. and bv oi

and ma de an earnest plea that brotl 1er. Patrick P.yrne all of T

we should not "freeze Christ out j Pittsburgh.

of Christmas" and that Catholic,

books be presented to children « „ * 7 . , o y A TP i h i ^ l i o n fit T.tmvic!

dcaliner with the childhood of u ] ' J- iy iMb, , . hrist in place of the modern

Pawelkiewicz. Carnegie; R e v. j n n w n n { h p m a r k e t . During!

Joseph Bialek. Cleveland; Rev. , / , ^ c u s s i n n o n t h ( . e n d i n g of re-

Gregory Rokcsz, O. F. M „ Ben ] s 0 i r l f 3 t m a ; ! c a r d s . It was

Avon; Rev. Francis Poszukanis, j ^ p r t e d t h a t , m e r o p r e s P 1 1>at ive

McKees Rocks; Rev. S. R. Labu- j ^ t n ( l ; , rv i , . , , ,..f a i|| v d ,7 . ,n

Jewski, Ambridge; Rev. Henry j ^ ^ ' f a k P n ' f ( ) r " fifty a d d i t i 0 n a l

Radwanski, Donora; Rev. Francis d ^ ^ indicating; that the t n u

Filip, Elizabeth; Rev. Appolomus

Tyszka, Pittsburgh; Rev. V. V.

Stancelewski, New Castle; Very

Rev. Julius Trzetrzynski, Barnes-

Car dill 3.1 Maurin Die

irit of Christmas can be brought i

t if a little encouragement is t

ven.

"Constructive Charity a Rem-| boro; Rev. Stanislaus Zmi jewsk i ; ! f ; j J . s . . c i a ] pRyils," one of the h o v

South side; Rev. A. A. Pn iak , | resolutions adopted at the nation-1

North Side; Rev. Henry Podow- M c o n v e n t i o n c f the Catholic' 1 .a

ski, Oakmont; Rev. Ladis laus, w , m ( , n - s un ion , was read and ex-1 . n

Lipski, Lucerne Mines: Rev. E. P. i T,i.,jn,-.,| The next district meet-!

Pikilik Canonsburg; Rev. L. R . | j ^ Monday evening,! b. e-i

Kolakowski, Pittsburgh; R e v-1 r>ec 2 1 a i Most Holy Name Par- IS 11

Adalbert Garstka, South Side;i . ^ rov jj-.jj. election of offi-'

Rev. C. J. Rosicki, Bellevue; Rev. l ' o r s f o ? . t h e (., ! rnjnrr y c a r 11 take

Wenceslaus Wisnieski, Connjells- j

ville; Rev. Edward J. Sierocki, j

Pittsburgh; Rev. Mar ion Rosen-,

thai, Glen Campbell; Rev. Joseph! Orphans Present Play S.J, Kulacz, Russelton; Rev. Leo •

B. Buza. New Salem; Rev. An- The school children of St. Paul's |

thony -Wcjciechowski, Everson; j Orphan Asylum celebrated Armis-

Hev. Walter Iwaniski . Natrona; ; tice Day with the production of a j

Rev. Joseph Stankiewicz. recently three-act operetta entitled ''The

ordained; Rev. Ladislaus Alach- Land of Dreams Come True," by

niewicz, C. S. Sp„ Mt . Carmel, | Alan Gray M. Campbell.

Solo parts were taken by Mar-

t Long as Mother Goose

1859. Fit

Bit

place at thi.; meeting.

i "rimait

created

1916. Ti

liticai

im i . 1

seilles.

of all the G;

n Cardina!

fare .. Marie Cassidv as the Old Woman "

íes dinner was *v , 1 ! 1 • tM . . ¡ bavmg t Pitt Hotel, who Lived in the Shoe. Meiced,s| h ^

Rmmflslpv as Contrary Mai y, ¡ .

and R?v. Anthony Muszynski

Carnegie.

Afer the ceremonie

served at the For

with Rev. V. V. Stancelewski^

president of the association, pre

siding and introducing Father i -- » — , . , M „ o t ; „ i ao"ie va-w

Labujewski as toastmaster. Ad- '<";> B(>b- a n d M , l h t l c After hav

dresses were made by Msgr . ' a s P a u ] - „ , , . „_„ . . I j>, v a i — Ti) sisters of Mersey in e n a r g " > " -

Roundsley as

Anna Gertrude Lynch as Belt; cien Oíiice l¡

T , '¡Catholics to tak . Reo-ina Sebo Id as Peggv. John | _ ,

Klowo, Msgr. Radecki, Father

Baron, Father Pniak, Fatner

Pudlo and Father Tyszka.

Catholic Daughters

Court Isabella Frances Maher, state regent of

the Catholic Daughters of Amer-

ica was the guest and principal

speaker at the open meeting held

Tuesday evening, Nov. 10, in

I 81.'Francis Xavier's Hal l . Rev. S.

! J Benson, chaplain of the court, al»o attended the meeting.

District deputies Mrs. Sarah

Pender and Catherine Monahan

of the school, assisted by Mr. and

Mrs. Edward P. Ri hi in the di-

rection of the music, felt that the j he

operetta proved a satisfying ve-1

hiel,. for displaying some of the v*

real talent in many of the chil-

dren at the home. Those who wit-1 Q

nessed the performance express-:

the hope that a much larger and

ence might have the privilege ot i

hearing th e operetta repeated.

I M

l iFhop Matulioms jiu Appointed Chaplain

1877-79. he v

Church of I'll

ureo

Colui For

» TU.

Rev. Magnus Kazenas, pasioi

r f St. Casimir's Church, South

S t a l k s on the m e m b e r s h i p I Side, had received word f rm i

«mpaign being conducted by all i M< st Rev. Theophih U u r t « of the order during the exi!-d Rusian Bishop who mm.

^eks of Nov. 16 and 23. and this country last year, th

«rs. Deborah Woods was hostess lowing a Confirmation tour <

« t h e social Which followed the Arehdmeese of Kaunas, Lithuam

Mary Joyce, cha i rman of

drive, wil l be a.<v

hr has been appointed chaplain

at a convent in Kaunas.

"»er of Four Nuns 'o Be Buried Friday

M arv B Loahv ( nee Grib-

13 grandchildren and 12 great

grandchildren.

Frank M. Kieland

Frank M. Ri eland died Tues-

... .... late Wi l l i am! day in his home, 824 Chislett St.

died Tuesday morn ingI He was born in Pittsburgh 40

home in the Iroquois I years ago.

it the age of 82. She] He leaves his widow, Mrs. Mar-

garet En right Rieiand; a s in,

Francis Rieiand; three brothers.

Rev. Vincent J . Rieiand, assist-

ant pastor of St. Raphael's

f St. Peter's School, i Church; George E. and Joseph A.

and Sister Mary I Rieiand, and two sisters, Sister

Our Lady of Mercy M. Gregory, of St. Joseph's Or-

der, Baden, Pa... and Mrs. Harry

S. Cole, of Pittsburgh.

mother of four Sisters b<

to the Mercy Order, two

n survive her.

a re Sister Mary Sylvester,

Pittsburgh.- The de-

Uu*s were Sister Mary

a and Sister Mary Ethel-

Leahy is also survived by

daughter^ Anna R

thy, and by three sons, Ray-

>nd J., Joseph W. and Frank

a nd by one grandchild, Mary

•ginia Leahy.

e funeral will take plaee to-

' ,*.'. Friday, mora ing. with

quiem Mass in St. Paul's Ca-

bal at 10:00 o'clock.

- ~ <9

Obituary Notes

Margaret O'Shca

' learn Requiem Mass was cel-

8:30 o'clock on Wen

morning in Holv Inno-

' ' Church, Sheraden, for Mar

••alia O'Shea, sister of

.'. ! • 1. o shea. pastor o. Holy

Church, who oiea on

' rn ing at 7 : 15 o'clock,

v. Oliver D. Keefer; assistant

ifoly Innocents', was celebrant

Ma 3, and Rev. Joseph

• f Columbus, O.. ana

eh Schneider, assistant

f i l iat ion Church, Midland,

members of th e par-

on and subdeacon.

ial was in Bedford. Pa.

i a was 1) rn in Bod-

.'.!. had resided with her

H ¡v Innocents' Rec-

ae past 30 years. She

other brother, Wi l l iam

) -'• 1 i. < f Sin vad< n. and one

Mrs. l iun igmulu Krupp

Requiem Mass for Mrs. Kuni-

gunda Krapp, who died Monday

in the home of her daughter, Mrs.

Charles Thaner. 902 Constance

St., North Side, will be sung Fri-

day morning in St. Mary's

Church.

Mrs. Krapp was born in Ger-

many in 1850, and came to Pitts-

burgh 65 years ago. She leaves

two daughters, Mrs. Thaner and

Mrs. C. A. Walter of Dormont; a

son, P. J. Krapp of Verona, and

14 grandchildren.

.John T. Duffy

S ileum Requiem M a s s for John

T. Duffy, lifelong resident of the

Pittsburgh district, who died Fri-

day night at his home, »09 Ed-

mo nd St.. at the age of 53, was

„ sung" Tuesday morning in St. Paul's

ni dcGirr,

Hugh f O'Donnell

da ss \v

norning in St

Cathedral at 10:00 o'clock.

Mr. Duffy was Dorn m Verona

and had been a resident of the

Bloom field East Liberty district

for more than 35 years.

DEATHS OF THE WEEK

ANOKKSO.V, Margaret Moriai ity, Nov. 10.

BAI.WAI F, Ivtwnnl .!.. 2056 Dartmore Ave.. Overbròok, Nov. 12.

B(rKK E, Mary DoVetlia Skolly, 621 Strdiiii St.. Pitcairn, Nov. 15.

Iti li\s, William, 2994 Ruthwood Ave., Nov. 14.

« Alili, Stephen, Nov. 10. (III.WKI.I,, Jan ics Vanne, Nov. 11. CONSTANTIN', Michael J.. 6337

Bunhlleld St., Nov. 11. IMT. Cecetia A.. No. 2 Varena St..

Nnv. 12. IMI NI |{. Cieoi'ge A., 2617 Mt. Troy

Rd., Nov. 9. Requiem Mass was cele-1 DOT'ì i i ikktv, Mar-y a. Kotiv, 212

Amelia St.. McKees Rocks. Nov. 12. it' v, 2 17 Mansion

ori i lo

. IMU l . l N e l l i e i ; 'n's Church , Hnnic- St.. Nov. 13.

l i J O'Donnell who I M 1 1 v- '" ,U I T - in;i Edmond St., Nov. 13,

a meo' ing of the | K K F O K T > Raymond, 2323 Wright's

ool Board on Thürs- Wav, Nov. 11.

Mr. O'Donnell wasj FK\»- H , i z» l" 1 , h ' 75 P i u s s t- N,,v-

•ntum on Nov. 19, ¡FINN, William, N o v . 13 . to Homestead in l'I- XIIKKTV, Elizabelli MeG-ramni,

3 annointed borough í j \Vr-a' v 1 \\ K.f.l

N.v. i:

• in 1893 and was grad-

oni the School of Phar.-

( ini varsity of Pitts-

00, and had conducted

rt iñ the l>orough prac-

ver since.

a director of th e Mo-

Tru vt c mpany for the

; was a member of

of C lu 111 bus. and a

'••olor of the borough,

his wid >w, Mrs. Win-

niictl. 1 wo daughters,

; i nd Catherine, and on"

n O'Donnell . all of Home-

Mts. Elizabeth Feld

ìii ei Mass for Mrs. Eliza-

M ag-'d S9. wh . died Sun-

. e. ai t h e home of- her

Catherin,. Fritz.

St.. will be sung this

in St. Michael's Catholic

(.ISAII AM,

Cf!

Way. N I.I.I V. Av. . N

widow

i rcrmanj

it of th(

lar a. 10 Wo rt worth St., H.T, . 11, 1 ,i.

1 fune, 2619 Fe nu Av. ,

Mich U' •1 s 615 Buhl 11.

S< .phi F. Schwüle, 69 Eh ., No v. 15.

ma T 1 r,

ru m r 2716 Oakley

iza betti Diolil , Nov. 16. ,K10K, M rs. Margaret, vn, l'a Nov . 15. E-it wat (t , No\ i. 9.

s, Ani la M. BOI and. 1617 Cor a] Doti? Nov. 11.

MÍ try K e pu g i 1, 56 Bascom , Iß.

A ama a Cun 11 i ingham. No v.

tal-fía re { M.-v ors, 1S19 Mt. liti st.. Nov. It. Mil ha. i Nov. 10. 'll! risto' Pi ! ( > ! • 5135 Dresden

1 >). op ti a B., 1136 Chelfoti 11.

( .Mara 121 N,4.1.Mown *ar IR'gi1 Fa., , Nov. 12. ÎUJ jf, N v. i:î

ItUK J.. I 'a. 310 East 9th

Nov. 12. 1 ,)! ri J

Ivi ' Mr I ..a ughl in Ron

Rd., BriilgevillCf Nov. It. STKC'KKUT. John, Cecil, Fa., Nov. lo. WIT.sll, Bridget Hullo ran. 507 Arm

St.. North Bra.ld.M-k, Nov. 12.

[WESTERN SAVINGS and * D E P O S I T B A N K

533 Smlthfleld Strict Oliver Bulldlnt: IMH»nur*h, I"»

ter she leaves. —» }

» g*i, ft v 1 v U I ìli A. Crowley 2>

Funeral Director M Äy ilo wer 4569

5 i O Center Avenue

Fl M I H I . DIRECTO US

>> M. SLATER & SONS OFFICES

" i.. Kparlare:« St., Mt. Wn»l)li»eti»n • Broadway Avenue, Beechvlew

¡<0 Y* astdngton Boad, Mt. Lebanon

PHONES Everglade 33-15

Lehigh 2107 Lehigh 2107

THE I FIEL ¡u J Going, therefor«, teach ye ALL nations . .

Franci

Mission S uie

ASSOCIATION OF THE

ilolv Childhood

Rrv. -lo»(i>|ili Rnmrnhai'h, C.S Sp Nafio'ial Dlreitnr

<MS N. Lincoln Ave . N. S., Pittsburgh

Sod So Her Father Coukl

Buy Op i um

self the task of nursing and

teaching at the same t ime and in

a year Pa Iv'eou was strong

again and a Christian.

What happened after that ? Go

to one of the big Catholic orphan-

,m - near Shansi. You will see

there a little Chinese nun with a

sweet face and a merry laugh,

the favorite of all the children.

Missionary Aid

Society

Wry R**. P. C. Dannor, Dlrrrt«

125 N. Craig St.. Pittsburgh

W e gratefu l ly acknowledge r< Sictpr Theodora wil l tell you about . . t , ,, , i c?,bu i i - ceipt of the fo l lowing private con

A small group, fathi mother •

and children, walked slowly along 1

the narrow street of the Chinese '

city toward the North Gate. They j 1

went through and made for one of j

a group of wretched little huts ~

outside the town walls It had

b e t h e home of a widow who

had died ten years earlier.

In the morn ing the passers-by

discovered that the old hut of

Widow Sing was occupied by

strangers. As they stared, the

man , the head of tin household,

came out. H e was tall and wore

ragged clothes: his skin

yellow color of th< opium

Anvone Could s • hs

wretched hut where she

larvit i , about her father and his

óp<>. how she. was saved from all

his and was led to give her life

¡.1 thp service of God.

I El izabeth Trave-rs, Raymona Cur

ning. Li l ian Homich. Kathlee

I Shutt leworth , Louise Kenned.

Cecelia McGrath , Victoria M<

Grath . Mar io McCann, Estlic

Jacob, Be mice Met »rat h, Do-roth

Scheirom and Mary L. Frazier.

Sister Joan and Si si " '

Fidel is, teachers at St

School, New Castle, ai

their services for the n

Brei

Avalrn. hkvp i

v a k Franctaean y Family 3i0Bfl,

', hâve issu^ ^ ¡1 chedule of fo" ' mìssì!

astprv

Alarli

t. an

Propagation of Fhe Faith Society

Rev. T. C. Kll ike, Diocesan Director

]2," N Craig St., Pittsburgh

tr ibut ions: Circle 54, Circle 44, ¡ n work has 1

Rev. P.C D.. D.F.H. . Miss C.C.C., Two nuns f rom

Rev. J .C.F. . A.C.. Circle 15, Mr . ; James ' Church a:

A A G . . A G . , Mrs. K B . . Sister C ' semer and Hi lis v

Circle 19, Circle 39, P i t tsburgh; The parishioners

Rev. T.H.B., Dormont ; Mrs. G .W . j burgh now furhi

M.. Craf ton; Sister F . Baden; Mrs. br ing the teacher

W . F , Mt Lebanon; Rev. E P F . . ' , 0 a n , i return <>a

Beaver Fal ls; Rev. J H . Perrys

ville.

Mcvotir.ro » ¡ B U «4 » vouons to be condm I

. f t h ? ^ orders - weeks: 1 Megt Ho'v v4 ChnrrO, ™ asm»

i - * ess°n; Rev. Air® j P*c, O.F.M. •

j N w 19-25- St. Ana>, Hsw,

! ¡¡TL Rev' Doì* M.

1 0-9'

Pitts-'

** Cas-

elim-

St. John thA ( lst's Church, Portage Oliver Hcrvath

Bas-se. Ret-.

a

on evii tur

the town

Sin° 's

left foi

they 1

dc.ggoi

forced

place

mil let

descrii

destro;

ger and

c< m pa " :

her hu.o

was m i n i

the daugl:

ant and 1

a irood di a umu >-«• and the fi

happy or

children

could say

one was

should be

if

1 an v .

1 them

Chi

S V< K l l " I I E F l i E l UNDER-

S T A N D Often rather start l ing

to- us to f ind Hit calm acceptance,

or la ther , the clear understanding

which people have in other lands

knew h. i a.; dawj (J£ certain elements in our faith,

»hew. 1. . ."g. wit • had | Take, for example, the att i tude of

hansi ten y ara b d . r c . j ¡be Wa-ehagga tribe in Tangan,-

V. hen they '. i v :i : i , m yika Territory. East Africa, to-

ward i,he Sacrifice of the Mass. To

them the conception of sacrifice is

not new. Nor do they consider it

unusual to have Mass offered for

their intent ion, Because sacrifice

has b< eh a part of their lives dur-

ing their whole history.

• r i l l s \ I. I. I M I' O K T A N T

W O R K " Southern Ind ia ; "Here

is our great need, the want of a

well equipped school for catechists.

Wo are at a gr eat disadvantage

•here, because we lack these train-

• 1 catechists. Without them, we

can hardly look forward to mak ing

any real headway in conversion

work ! And for that matter , in con-

dai ion Work, either. I need not

tell you how welcome any funds

would be for this a l l- important

" A mere $200 would

build the school for these cafe-

ehists. On ly $75 would see a cate-

'nisi through his 2-year course of

training. The choice is yours!

POSTSC KII»T! Children as a

topic may or may not interest you.

But we cannot restrain them from

entering this piece of news f rom

China. The other day in the vil lage

of Tiory(se-shan, an old man died,

who had been noted for his devo-

tion to the Church dur ing his life.

And here is their place in our

story. His f ami ly found among his

t hi tigs after his death a small

notebook. To their amazement ,

they read there a day-by-day

record of the dying babies which

h.• had baptized. Unknown to the

mi? onary of Tien-tzq-shan, or

to his friends, he had baptized

little daughter was very pretty m o r o than 1.000 babies!

with her br ight eyes and lovely

;v. 29-

Church

,iv 90.

-Holy Redej

For Western Ca i nula

Reginî

Nov. 3. 193

h at m g a considerarne expense.

But lor IVnU ' iN 20th Anniversary t * I

On Sunday, Sept. 17. .1916. Fa-ther O 'Shea, spoke at both St. ;

Regina , Can. , 1 > i > l o r . s a - l U n . h a n d S t < P a u r s i

Amhridge. Dec. 1—Blessed Virr

Mary Church, Haverstraw. n V.; Rev. Dominic Doharvo' " F.M. •s, 0

zy-De 6—Blèssîd v?

Dear Friend :

Wi l l you pardon me if once

ii re I come to you as a m end; -

•ant? You have been so kind to

I Church in But 1er. relative to o

g a m z m g a center of the Confra-

ternity. A meet ing was held that

evening and a center was formed

w i t h J ohn Ha l lo ran a p r e s i d e n t ;

nar.ty gives me courage to, Kather ine M. Ivil l ian, secretary;

n- ok onc c more at your hospit-l „ n f j t o u ; s o V i r r ; n treasurer For

door. ' ! over a year before the ' organiza-Assuring you. Father of mv , .„

Mary Church Nortw7"' - ttwtaaffiptoj P--i : (Slovak); Rev. ae» Kopac, O.F.M.

•>13 Blessed Virei" u-»,

me and to my priests that your W i l l i a m Ha r tman . vie

Chu > Pn

gratitude for your brotherlv f the Cen

> Mar inaro hi

u-tesy in the past and of a con-j teachers at

ant remembrance of your in ten-! vr r s Hart <

ns in my daily Mass, 1 wish to; a n i ]

'main 11 Butt > .

Yours very sincerely in X to . sgoo of its

(Most Rev.) P. J Monahan ; |,.r Center.

Archbishop of Regina | \t ¡be cl

j there were

ers: 688 ehi

rîev. Vin

d a corn

pi e

Northampton. Pa, h); Rev. Dominic Do-

banyos, O.F.M.

to ¿u -os,. Marxs Church

McKeos Rocks; Rev. Araasd

Kopac. O.F.M.

13-15 St. Elizabeth's,Troop,

Pa.: Rev. Oliver Holatb 0

F.M.

19 St. Patrick's, Can.r..-

Rev.^Oliver Hon-ath. 0 F.M.

Football an<l the (iospel I

Th e eight Saturdays of October missions: to. "

:>i November yield am--- -ximate , C lavtonia . .1.

2,000 sam?s to the 20.000 000 ville Ferri

tball addicts through mt ou

nd. And it is estimated tha Kl

f r these $30.000,000 is paid. Our ,

mattt r-cf-course reaction to that

assist;

ttui fish- j P!'e.seni president of the Bulk

i ; , ¡even i Center. Charles Stock, a fors-

w. Mars I ' president of the Butler Center

Cowan-v ' , l t''ed as ioastmaster. and presta:-

t • •. •, ! ¿1 a resume of the first tes years

n l. The ' ef its work. There were a nook:

( > a 1 of guests from Slippery Rock

p ; inf„., : Clavtonia.

r

d

l i ut mei

seemed to de

1 ;tter for a

craving, th

. - , ) > heart, left fc

for work.

"F ive left'

"and that

could do wit

d he wa

Then tin

and ht

anchuria to looK

is the contrasted $28,228.370 use of its hal l for meetings, but

• eh the 77.338 Catholic mis-1 g ran t i ng five dollars pe r month to

sionaries must find if they are to! support the work ,

have merely a SI a day for their I Last \Y< dnosday t-venins-, in

support. O f how far w e are from piac» oi

supplying tha t ! How gleefully tbe But ler Center an anniversary

the first is eiVen . . . lunch o as ni ' : 1 W ; ! h

tal

ut. Throw her in

Worn out by sorrow and hun-

ger, the m >titer sank beneath the

load, and died when Pa K'eou was

M I S S I O N A R Y

C O N F I î A T E R N I T i O F

Christian Doctrine

I». a . La\v1«;ss, Director

-0i Ferry St., PHtsbhrffh

five

a it could

at once went

rouses of the

one was left

called a

home -but the child and her fa-

ther. A great idea came to him. j

Someone had told h im that his

F O R C E O F THE SEA Almost

mph tely washed away in the

rent disastrous typhoon was the

j sea wall below the Aberdeen Re-

al Seminary in Hong Kong,

terrific was the force of the

that large concrete blocks

e we igh ing several tons were

hair. Two weeks after her mom-

er's death. P a Keou was the prop-

erty of the W a n g family, six miles

away, and her father had enough' j o n

money to last h im for a few g

months. He never needed more ' S(

f< r he smoked opium unti l it kill-f<,( ed him. I c .

Pa K'eou grew up as beautiful o;

to look at as she was gentle and conducted by the Canossian Sis-

kind. but when she was ten she ters. the free school lately opened

grew ill. They sent for the doe j by the Chinese Cathol ic Young

tor who told them tha t her lungs, Men's Society, these also have

were diseased, probably because! been almost utterly destroyed.

of the hard Fife she bad had as a| And wha t ean we do? To wh ich ! pum. Sheep Hi l l , West Pi

r up on th.. shore. Ton, the

Non Casti«* A malversare

guests present. Talks

by Very Rev. P. K. C

Paul 's Church, But ler; Rev. Simon

Knupfer , O.M.Cap. . of St. Fidelis'

Monastery. He rman : Rev. Victor

Majka and Rev, Geor°'e Hm

the Pi t tsburgh Ce:

Rowan , president :v

Gonigle. vice president, and J am e

Lark in , of th.' Pi t tsburgh Center

Cl i fford Mannv . One of the organ,-, . izers and Clarence Hurley, former s u p p l y s u c h literature to toSpu

president and Just in Krebs. the ish families.

of S t

ill Harold

Tnhn Ate-

.Ve.rk Among Spanish Families

The Visitation Sisters: of Si-

Louis, Mo., are interested in fc

work of the Confraternity in tfc

P i t tsburgh Diocese, and one oi

• hem, Sister M. Stanislaus Gss.*

sent b aflets and several hundrei

t. ir.ies of Spanish weekly ®

mon th ly magazines to be disirk

ute .l among "die Spanish families

near Burgetbtown. These wen

- • to Sister M. Aurelia Colirt:

who has broken her files of ¡¡if

•erica! records to enable us toha"-'

this Catholic literature. Rev. Vv

ian; McCashin, pastor at Burge* -

town . has been encouraging &

te-irh'ers to do all they could'

The New Castle Center's 19th

a n n i v e r s a r y , occurs at t h i s t i m t f - -

It was on Sunday, Sept. 30. 1917, |

that the foundat ion was laid, whet h .n s F T Î S Rev. T imothy O'Shea spoke at the >

Masses in St. Mary's Church, New \

Castle, out l in ing the work of the I

Confraterni ty, and cal l ing upon, ; i

the members of the parish to or-i ? (

ganize a missionary center. ¿. A meet ing was held on Sept. 30. ^ ^

1917, and the Center was organ.-, W ~

ized with the fo l lowing officers: ' III

president. J ohn A. Jackson; vice I

president. Peter P. Caputo ; secre-; |

tary. Kather ine F. Gran field:!

n H « •

â ï î /

We Solicit Your and

Ail i i i i 'Lci i an ml Warrington Avenues

K room of flie hospital treasurer. Kather ine M Fiecken-

stein. W i t h i n two weeks teachers

were appointed for the fol lowing

districts: Croton, Chew ton. Eden-

burg Koppel , El l wood City, Hi l ls ,

ville, Carbon Brick Yard . Warn

I

B!

If You Cannot Go to the e!p Those

10 Have Gone pst in tlia Activities o f t h e

R f * * m - Ì S S ! 0 Ì Ì S r

child This was a probaem for

the Wangs because their own

daughter was delicate and they

could not take the risk of leaving

the two girls any longer together

lest their own child should become

ill too. Madame Wang , being

tenderhearted. was wonder ing

what could be d< tie when an old

friend. Mad a me Su, called..

" L i t m i have the child", said

she when she had heard the story.

" I ' l l g lad ly try to nurse hi r back • t „ , . ie , .,„,1 ali-untrth" \l-iil -lnui

to neiiiui ana s i n iigiii . .»iiiu<inie

Su was a Catholic and a cate

be obvious answer is whatever Mahon ingtown, Un ion Townshi

can '

I ¡1

and for St. Michael 's and St. ¡§j Vitus' parishes

of the IB;

Novena at Loretto

Ti

s y n teres ted in lit-

tl(. P a K'eou'.s health but m< m-

At th.' e ml or th.- first yea

there were 99 teachers and fish

I ers; 1.7(50 pupils enrolled; 331 chi!

dren prepared for First Common

i . 18 In honor ion; 134 taken from non-Catholi

I.isieux. a pub- Sunday School. Tli e total expense

made at the $160.29. Classes were being con

• n the Wi l l i am I dueled in 16 places.

Loretto, from The present officers of the Nov

> Monday. Nov.; Castle Center are ; president

Ginocchio,, T O. ; Margaret McGowan ; vice presi

College. Lo- j dent, Hugh Dougherty : secretary

•nduet the novena de-1 Kather ine Newman ; t reasurei

Iiti 1 y at 1 : 0 0 P M and Adelaide Uhi. The folio*

i

I .

i g tsj Igi

I

p o u r i n «

Lcciety for the Propagation T?o4ii, w in ¥-iiro Vr'i a Missionary ^ X rtlt fl W i l l IfeiUvS X U U cl tin Fives of God Even Though You Never Leavo Your Home and Natne T.,rui y c n . Prayers a^d Your Gener-G*i> v Will Enable Tho^e ov the Field

c 'P' ir .uo in Their Laudable Work j

,1cm as a Member and Interest Others

.-joeu>fv for the Propagation of the f ^ o'fll

F-Re

twine1 new

te rested in her soul. She set her- will preach. j teachers have joined the cei

125 North Cr

r Kliinko, Director p, u ' Pittsburghïl

THURSDAY, N O V E M B E R 1», 193« T H E P I T T S B U R G H C A T H O L I C

gui l ty ok n o t g u i l t y of sin? Principles of Morality

By Rev. Thomas li Roche, C.Ss.R T H E TEN t O M M A N DM EN I S

F I F T E E N

SEVENTH A N D T E N T H Í O M M W D U E V I s (Continued)

Theft i stances would nut be unjust iUi

Right, as discussed in (lie pre-

cedine: article, is the moral pow- °

tho owner is unreasonably opposed

th.; taking- oí that sum of mon-

•.y. In case of extreme no e es s

the refusal of tlie ity,

Any unwelcome and h - ! ì 1 , c ì 1 ' i o r U u > car owner's opposi -

interference wi th this c la im t u m w o u l i l b e unreasonable. Like-wise, it would not be stealing to

take something" that would prove! i^'111

harmfu l to the owner. A wife who |

takes her husband's money to pro-1 *

vent its use for drunkenness, is

not gui l ty of stealing. Here againI

his unwillingness is not reason-1

able.

ceeding er to have or to do or to deman i

something as exclusively one's; m c °-r owner can be

own. There is also the corres- imi't-asonable. To take a car f

p o n d i n g obligation or duty on the t h o Pu l 'Pose of escaping from

part of all others to respect this "™rfh3rous madman would not b

claim,

legal 1

or right is an act of injustice.

If the possessor of this claim will-

ingly renounces his r ight, or can

resonably be supposed to do so, no

formal act of injustice is done to

him by infringing on his claim.

It would not be an act of injus-

tice to commandeer use of an au-

tomobile for the purpose of rushing

an injured person to the hospital.

If the owner of the car were un-

willing, he would be unreasonable

and his personal right must yield

to the extreme necessity.

Such Instances, however, are

tue exception, for normal ly no

one can violate a personal right

without injustice. The violation

of the strict right of another

against his reasonable wil l is an

injury or an act of injustice. A n

injustice may be done to a man's j

person, as explained in the treat,- j

»¡arm ;s always

SOLUT ION

libai aielv mii • ¿i, ' * » stani ina- i ,

stolen the money f

it could bo cons id

sin. But in vit w

harm done to the

gui l ty of a mortal

I ¥71 r reach Cardinals

Deplore Atheism

But Despite Irreligion That

lafects Public Lite, They

See Cause For Hope

;; I Whit Others Sa

kind of zeal. A magnificent elite

is forming gradual ly in the vari-

ous branches of thought and ac-

tion.

Catholicism Flourishing

"Thanks to this, we have an in-

tellectual and social Catholicism

which is already attracting world-

wide attention. Our congregations,

of both sexes, continue in our

midst, the finest traditions of re-

ligious life, and spread in profus-

ion temporal and spiritual bene-

' fits.

A Current? Ern

nuv. I I A denunciation

< sent practical atheism

's national life and an

i an moral recovery are

points of a joint pastoral '

he live French Cardin- , ° u r c o m p a r a b l e clergy, by their edifying lives, by

I' a sc

noth;

I t s

U'Shi

QUESTIONS Father Roche linn agreed to an-

swer a*j Qoeationa that may be u k ed regarding matters discussed in this series of artieles provided a »limped, addreaned envelope for the reply ia tent with the luquirjr *ach (aettlon* will not In- answer-ed thraagh this paper, but onl\ hjr mail. Inqoiriea may I)* aent to Fathor lUehe at 2740 Beech-wood Blvd., Pittsburgh. All taqnirieg will be held iu

«trlct confidence.

SOLUTION : The nature of

theft depends, for most part, up-

on the willingness or unwilling-

ness of the owner to grant pos-

session or us e of his property.

Surely the insurance company

would not approve of James'ap-

propriation of that sum of mon-

ey. In view of many unfortunate

experiences, their permission

could not reasonably be presum-

ed. nor is their unwillingness

unreasonable. W e must concludf

that James was gui l ty of theft

Gravity of Theft

P R O B L E M : Eleanor workec

in a large department store. On j .

her counter she found a purse j .

containing three dollars. This j

purse had been thoughtlessly left j r

there by a customer who was in

poor circumstances. Eleanor de- j I

nied all knowledge of the purse j '

and quietly appropriated the j ,

contents.

Is stealing s inful? A venial

or mortal s in? x

I n his first Epistle to the Cor-

nthians 6:10, St. Paul writes

'nor thieves nor covetous . . shall

possess the kingdom of God."

["hese words clearlv indicate that

as "a word of light and hope

'he presen t critical times."

iod, oiliciaiiy shut out of every-

• ag. has become for the masses

Unknown Cod." they write.

"Either France wil l recover her

oral sirength or she will fall in-

the abyss and may perish.

•'The choice for France is one

or death. We must hunt

«•m our schools the revolutiou-

y vii'us which makes of France

• oi the civilized countries in

a devotion recognized etten by our enemies,

by their constant care to keep out-

side political quarrels, remain the

hope, the honor, and the great

moral strength of France."

The pastoral is signed by Louis

Cardinal Man tin, Archbishop of

Lyons. Francois Cardinal Verclier,

Archbishop of Paris; Cardinal Lie-

nart. Bishop of Lil le; Achille Car-

dinal Baudril lart. rector of the

Henry Paris Catholic Institute;

' and Emmanuel Cardinal Suhard world, where the majority of , . , ,

i,, ,, , „ Archbishop of Rheims uno teach manhood are sys-

ily intoxicated with false!

ine.

men th

s imo A

{ onsoling Revival

we hasten to tell you,

>oloved brethren, there re-

o us much to encourage us

us with hope. If certain

Sixtieth Anniversary

Of New York Pastor

I journal

m< M'M c

New York, Nov. 16 Ut. Rev.

Msgr. Cal lus Bruder, pastor of St.

i, led astray by a bad Joseph's Church. East 87th St.,

ti on, cut themselves celebrated yesterday the 60th an-

niversary of his ordination. Car-

dinal Hayes was present in the

sanctuary for the Solemn Mass

celebrated by th,. jubila.ri an. and

the sermon was preached by

Most Rev. Joseph F. Uummel.

Archbishop <-f New Orli I s.

Msgr. Bruder is the oldest act-

ive priest in the New York Arch-

diocese.

oth Cod, it comforts us to

•specially in our cities, a vis-

return to the faith of our

a number of diocese, more

than ever fill the aisles of

• Our youth organiza,-

are giving us thousands and

nds of Christians free of

n respect and full of every

V

«te JHfc W ft' r f ». •SS. K <% JF -.

ST. VINCENT r ^ î «

iji-.-gest OafchoHC Boarding I lit: I« School I'la-.t of Chicago

Address: Headmaster I, \ n iO!5 i* ».

ise on the Fifth Commandnn nl

when considering injuries to a

man's right to life and bodily in-

tegrity. The Eighth Command-1 stealing is gravely sinful, for on

weu i re

can exclude, man from ment forbids injuries to a man's mortal

right, to his good name and rep.-' the k ingdom of Cod. However, the

illation, which r ight is violated; malice of theft can he reduced and

by calumny. The rights above• mit igrated by the quanti ty of in-

mentioned are called personal jury involved in the act of steal-

rights, and the rights to posses-j ing. It is evident that to steal a

sion of property are called "real i penny is not as serious as is the

rights". The latter rights can J theft of a thousand dollars. I t also

j be violated by unjust in jury or! seems evident that there must be

aiatruction of property, or by some point where the damape done 1 ° by an act of stealing would be-

C l A ÏXITZIN ACADEMY HOARDING SCHOOL FOR BOYS

KADEN, P A Address Directress 1

"theft".

PROBLEM: James was the

local agent of an insurance com-

pany, and into his tempor-

ary keeping there frequently

came large sums of money col-

lected from policy holders.

Tempted by the prospect of a

successful business deal which

promised a quick turnover

James appropriated $500 f rom

the company funds. Ready cash

j r

ach

come a serious matter and hence

a mortal sin.

Though the financial condition

of people may admit of a scale in At

est imating the relative damage f. r

from a theft, the welfare of so- sho

ciety in general demands that a :

fixed l imit be placed upon the of- . wh

feet of the injury involved.

If an unlimited sum could be bo

stolen without malice of a mor- \

ime sc

*evues"

ne ni: lì fi Vi !>.' ITI

ini

SAINT XAVIER ACADEMY B O A R D I N G S C H O O L F O R G I R L S

i ernie, Commerc i a l a n d E l e m e n t a r y Conrees

sed to b

X A V I E R H A L L INCOI.If- H I G H W A Y

Boarding School for Boys Between the Ages of H and I < í

LATROPE PA

all

INT MERCY COLLEGE T i 91

was necessary and he intended tal sin, grave danger would threat one, don't, you to restore the money in a few

* days.

Was James guilty of theft?

en the security of property and Manager? And what

this would inflict serious harm to about it in the futur

mank ind in genet al. Since values j Th,< In Ian

an vou do

Theft is the taking of property fluctuate, this sum may vary, but of another against the owner

reasonable will. Theft also em,-

braces the unjust usurpat ion or

of another's property con-j

it is commonly taught that twenty j

dollars is this l imit. This absolute j

amount of injury obtains in all i

I grades of society, and would be j

Catholic Peace $

To Hear f f c P o i JLiiUl velt mry the reasonable wish the

es o f ! the measure of malice in an act

owner, for such use contains

Implied or express Intention of as-

suming ownership. The main point

at issue in considering matters of

¡¡Pf is that the owner is reason-

»«y ""»willing to grant possess ion

Rive

Steal ing a dollar from a wealthy "

corporation would be less harmful] ; ' h

than from a laborer; the damage• o i UJt-ternationa

ik at ti

he Cat h

Liberal Ai (s-Secrelarial Teacher I raining-Home Economies

Science—Art—Musi«-

Conducted by Sisters of Mercy

Fifth Avenue, Líüsburgl i SChenley 411)0

UKSULINE ACADEMY biddle. Coral and Evaline Sts. Pittsburgh Pi

An accredited Hoarding and Day School for Girls Boys accepted in the lower grades

primary- Grammar- Commercial College Preparatory tun Service Telephone, EMersoii OStt't

done to the laborer would be seri-

ous. while of little consequence to

use of his property." I f he is a f lourishing corporation. In this

•Mtag or if his willingness can sense, we speak of a relative sum j

reasonably be presumed, the sin of that would constitute a mortal sin. j

jjeft Is not committed. Bu t when ! Consequently, a smaller sum!

owner is unwil l ing that h is ! would be a grave matter in pro-

p e r t y be taken or used in anv ' portion to the damage or loss in-**V, he retains his full right of flirted upon the owner,

^session and any infringement | Since this damage will depend ^

of Violation of this right const itut-1 upon the living conditions of.

"•JJ* aialfee of stealing. | loser, a hard and fast rule cannot

"^'s unwillingness must be rea he laid down. Many are of the 1 1

£?able- If it is unreasonable.! opinion that the loss of an amou

être coi uete

SETON HILL COLLEGE i Kl i V s j; j |{(. rKNNSVI.V \ NIA

e. ¡, iti,.. 1'rc Law. Toaohor Tríiiniiig-, So<-inl Siirvu • ^ Oi i.nx'ral Arts. Munir llomi' Fcononiìcs "i'tliffíl In Association of American Uni v<sr si ti es

1 r.ildsî National Membership In V-i> iiti'iri of American fnlví-rsit\ fforaen

m 11 foreign foiiiitrips and American Slate

there is no violation of "justice, A ! sufficient for a day's

owes a debt of Si00 of which | of one's se¡í ; ! i " i f a n l i 1 ,

a« nas obstinately delayed

maint

won

pay- ! fi ici g ra v m*nt for a long time. The credit-! stealing such an amount would be

>f what i-* J n "ore need of the money

® we debtor is unwi l l ing t ha t ' ed for a day's support would be

_ money be taken from h im I seriously harmfu l to anyone, and

^"P^Matlon under tho circum-1 unreasonably to cause such gravel

s o l ^ n l l i M v i * Ï « i ^ r n n i » i l l V i l i i v ^ v , i J t ì i Í t j J J l * I <»

i i v sl(*A I. I.I SC IMI , SÍIKNC'K I 'M Í l i . \l. S* li K M l,f)lf \i , ' X l l l i .n I l i t l M M i I* i; Ï I N(,1NI l l t l M . i ! i v ie IU >1 S t;>S Alt.M I M S I'KA I ION

)Ks at w

SIXTEEN T H E P I T T S B U R G H C A T H O L I C THI RtDAT, NOÌ

East End Parish tor; Henry Sodlak, of Homestead, president, and Joseph Vohacek, of

Fnrtv Wars Old 1>it,sbursh- ^^y-i " l • j I V i l l u s \ ' H I Following this »eision th* an-

! nnai meeting of the Fraternity or (Continued from Page One) Slovak Catholic Priests of the who wer» married in Our Lady ] Diocese of Pittsburgh was held at

ho same bote! in the afternoon

"he officers of this organization

j't Rev Clement J Hrtanek,

lastor of St. Ann's Church,

Help of Christians Church; ser

men. "The parents glory in the

riirhteousnnss of (heir eh si"

Thursday, Dec 10 For all wt

wore baptized in the parish as B. Harnyak. pastor of SS. Cyril

"hurch: sermc n. MFidelity and and Methodius' Church. Fair-

devotion to the Church make chance, secretary, and Rev. Mar-

io r the spiritual, social and tin B. Rubicky, pastor of St.

of the par- Joseph's, Clairton. treasurer.

At this meeting the proceeds

School Heads Hold

Annual Conference

Father Campbell Represents

Pittsburgh At Meeting

Held in Capital

Rev. Paul E. Campbell, super*

Homestead, president; Rev. Thorn- j mtendent of Parish Schools, rep-

resented the Diocese of Piti

did

riven to h Pops

'Catholic Action' FormedbEng^

Bishop! Orgwü* ».«

Body To Deal W f a ^

Problem« of the C h ^

materia! pro gre

'or all gradu- fr.mi Slovak Day conducted in j , . l s t Thursday and Friday Fa the

Help ,»f Chris- July were formally presented to j Campbell also attended the an

Assisi Academy, Bellevue. I

ie wav

Friday. Dee 1 1 F

ates of Our Lady

tbins School; sermon. "Higher

Christian education promotes

better living'

for social b

Saturday morning, Dec 1. 9.00

o'clock Requiem High Mass

for all deceased priests of the { vak (

province and all decea

bers of the parish;

•at the annua! meeting' of 11

partment of Superintendents

the National Catholic Educatioi

Association held at Caldwell H

Catholic University of Amern

i rgr n,i

U

rea ni •ie Action

contrar

nual meet ins if the Executive |

• mi '

Franciscan Monastery, at D ( partment of the National Cath-Avalon, and ( h e Vincentiar, o H c Educational Association, of Motherhouse at Perrysville. Ways w h i C h he is vice-president general, and means of conducting t h e ' , l h { , H ( ( e l Mayflower on Friday

I , impaien for funds for the Sic

Bandits Release

Maryknoll Priest

oca y ha?« w , m good j announced by Mm fc, J 5

and H,nsl<-y A * * * , J » ^ ^ i h l y g i g i

p v J. 0 Donovan, o. B. e

' Patent of f ¡ ¡ |

bolle High School in

Cleveland were discussed and a

vigilance commit-tot to check on "The remembrance of those any communistic propaganda ap

who

well

pravo

our t

Sunday. I) So Ioni

ur spiritual

mied by the • ,:i!¡ npp« itf

appc

ec. i;

Mass 11:0(

ifternoon M st R v John Peterson, P.ish-

>p of Manchester, N. H., presid-• ! at the latter session at which

Easter Week, 1337. was decided in Slovak publications l p o n a g t h e t i m e a n d u n, jsv i l le.

Ky . the place for the annual con-

vention of the association.

At the superintendents' mect-

(Continued fi

<9

i i an i and Bro N

! 1935. at the L<

^ g e One)

F. M . ( Ital-

O. F M. (a :cn May. I A e -, - ï,, •* > A.SVium. Mo-1

acting lav group.

***** vr ' T f by PopTpS M as national preside

t h a t t J m e " WM Stated ¿ 1

M f a on£r , h e Unes of ^

Rev. Henry

A M j Redemptorists Conduct

flCf* out ha vini f f1 fTl f» * *

3;0O p. M

by the sei

7:30 1 » ]

S:30 P M

Fürther d.

fiary ohserv;

non nee \ iati

mg;

now

. j i u .

bit-

iven

lers,

¡ver-

án-

Local Novena Devotions!'"» resolutions were adopted j "Guidance Needful in Conduct:

Athletic Programs in Second; >v . i, m c i n

Our Lady of Perpetual

preparation for the

the Immaculate Concep-

Pontiff's Health

Refutes Rumors <

a :

vate

large

to wh

wa s i

Jnuod One i

will be coi lducted in tw<

churches by mem bei S ( f tilt mptorist Or der fr im St

mcna's C hurt :h. Squii •rel Hill hea do a rtc 'rs )f the devot i ui

he Pitt.si urgl l Dioces e. Rev las F Kc it nan. C.Ss.R.

jhing at St. Mary's Church } Side, ar id R ev. Fran eis Ber-C.Ss R . in charge Of exer-

at St. Can ice's. K noxville novenas W'll i open m Nov.

iiti sim ,I i r e xerciscs will be icted bv Rev Franci s Br on-

i

( äs R St. Mary's

same time

Schools" and "Certification of

Teachers According to S t a t e !

Boards of Educa t i on " Reports

\vei> made on the recent coriven *

n of the Confraternity of

¡Christian Doctrine in New York j

(City and the Rural Life Confer !

j once in Fargo. N. Dak

— ]

J American Film Head

Received at Vatican

Vatican City. Nov. 17 Pope

Pius gave a private audience this

morning to Wil l 11 Hays. Ameri- j

can movie coordination, discussing

tli him for about fifty minutes j

th e motion picture situation in the

n a l Catholic Welfare Confer

I ; i n t he United States"*« oe formed.

The national committee of &

T , v bnU>' w i ! 1 comprise, besides .Missionaries or the Sacred Heart., national preset sad & M. of Issondun, was captured in Jan- j t l 0 n a l 'ay president, an «ti«

uarv, 1935, and is being held for, a s { i c a* a s s i s t a n t ( A n ^

s;,0 000 ransom. Downey, cf Liverpool); a g eral

| secretary (Bishop McXulty. 0!

Nottingham); and four Uymea b br' appointed by the four ftpa

a rchbishops. The whole body of

Archbishops and Bishop's cf

| England and Wales, assemblM is

card party will council three times a year, wiii

exit • f the Mis-j f o r m a supervising body and j

ity in the aud- J court of final appeal.

• St Mary's of j his announcement concen-

bird Ave. and! i nS the movement, Archbife ssday evening, Kinsley defined Catholic Actia

ffair is be ing ! a s "the organized apcstoi&;f i

F A He in rich, j the laity in union with the Hie

assisted by a -"chv and under the guidance::

iers of t l i ^ ' o r- ' ^e Hierarchy," and expressed«

preference for the term "Catls®

f , Unity" instead of "Catholic if

Card Party Tuesday

To Aid Confraternity .

Mercy Churc

Ferry St. or

Nov. 24 T

-nacime

R

He

hn M. Frawley C Ss R ' U n i t e d States, with special

v Stone, C Ss R . | o n c o f o t h e activities of Ü: non ol Decency

Vatican C

bo to of St.. I hilomena s. are con-

ducting a two-week mission at

St. Paul's Church. Erie, the exer-

cises opened last Sunday and will

close on Nov. 29.

Turtle Creek Parish To Hold Fete Tuesday

The annual Thanksgiving card

party of St. Colman's Parish J

M)

Hlizalv

Harri soi The Pope conveyed to Mr. Hays orine

his appreciation of th e progress ! Baumgartner

made by the American til m pro- G i r ' ' e !

ducer s and expressed hope that ¡ Fileen Mel

the progress would c mtinue. Mr j Edward Irw

Hay s assured him that it was the lv. Hil l Stati

R

"In every diocese," he stitec

, , r "and as f a r as nece&arriomet

•tsv.i'.e; Vern n parish, mach i ne ry must besetif

Conley, Joseph I to deal f u l l y with the speciii

\Va'.d"on Path-' problems the Church in t h i s «

ard Henrietta I try has fo face- namely with ti(

J o h n m c . | problems of 'leakage,' with a >WT

Schaff) anu r lem of the conversion of s» Catholics, and with that congers

d Martina Reil- ' of problems, 'the social qw

! tion'."

Ci will be held m

"Pe

lid. "Now;

Convent Picture To Be Shown Here

(Cf Pace One)

hi o

ie

vows

Arránceme

ous schools i] v a r

Slovak Federation

In Annual Meetinir

:-day evening", Nov. 24 ( S t .

ftan's Day) , in the Westing-

• Cafeteria. Turtle Creek, the

starting at 8:00 o'clock,

annual event brings former

¡hers of the parish lack for

union with their friends and

s have been made for an u iv

i'y large attendance this year,

general chairmen of the

aiittee in charge are John

aayer and Mrs Frank Mc-

Mendelssohn Choir

The Mendelssohn C h o i r of

•*••.?_ -.»..ii give its first c >n-O' r ' < f the season in Carnegie Mu sip Hall next Tuesday evening, N<«v. 24. Works of Handel. Bach. Har.»Ul E Darke and Howard Hansen will be sung.

s '! is! will be Ezra Rach i i n ' w h ' v ' s I i Pia-V three groups

piano e impositions by Bach,

'nop m. Brahms. Rach m an i no ft

z l V I N N O V E N A IN HONOR OF OUR MOTHER OF PERPETUAL HELP

In preparaSion for the

FEAST OF THE IMMACULATE CONCEPTION eon due tod by

dowsky and Doh-

ocesan Chapt

Catholic Fedi

was held ^ . L'il i«, m

o

Slovak Ca ti

nu Wished ai

of the Siova

ion of A morie

10:00

'Catholic Worker'

Meeting Planned

rs were adopted;

Action," "Anti-j

opaganda," "Pro-

ik National Cui-!

stabüshment of a

Francis-tri .vi ( li

Officer

val

Lhe chapter are:

Rev. M J Faide!, spiritual diree-

Page Oi

the Ca

cain.s especially, are

resent, and t<, bring

and non-Catholic

who should know

>ut this movement.

REV. H E N R Y SIPPEL. C.Ss.R. (Kodoniptorist Missionary from Saratoga Springs. N. Y.)

Begins Monday, Nov. 30—Ends Wednesday, Dec. 9

SERVICES DAILY

After the 8 o'clock Mass 3:00 P. M.

7:00 P. M.

8:00 P. M.

The Shrine Church - St. Philomenas Beech wood Blvd. and Forward A v e .

•Where No I'r.tsei (Joes I 'nanswered'

A »Service for Everybody If unable to < nine ma ko N , . u \ \ a, home. A Noven. bookkt i*'

tur«' and intention « ar i will I r mailed free to an\ address.

l)ir«>« tions: — lake ( ,u No. «0, «8 ur «i!» to Forward Avt\-—4f*n 3 Wocks Bus direct.

irrel 0