--THE PROGRESS FrTday,'Sept. 24, 1%5
Brother P. B. Pastone of Christian Brothers of Ireland helps Ray, II, seated, and Jim,
10, with their homework as school gets underway at Brlscoe Memorial School, one of
77 United Good Neighbor agencies. Brlscoe is receiving an allocation of $33,043
from UGH, now in the second week of its 1965 campaign for $5,598,083. Brlscoe
provides homes for some IS0 dependent boys with emotional, social and educational
problems in need of group living. (UGH Photo by .Jack Fleming.)
Aberdeen's St. Mary's Parish Altar Society plans a new kind of fall social Monday,
Sept. 27, at 8 pm in the school auditorium. Plans are made by, from left, Mrs.
Florence Feuersfein, Mrs. Frank Yuskoff, chairman, Robert Friese and Mrs. Robert
Plat for the event. "Flake to Fashion," a mother.daughter style show, will be fea-
tured. Friends of the parish are invited with a special invitation for girls of the
7fh grade and up.
St. Thomas
parish Sets
Mission
'ATHER FRANCIS TONER SJ
RIVERTON-St. Thomas Par-
ish announces a Mission to be
conducted by Father Francis
Toner S,/ will open Sunday,
Sept. 26. at 7:45 p.m. in the
church.
Continuing through Saturday,
Oct. 2. with evening devotions
'.at 7:45, Mission weekday Mass-
,as will be 6, 7 and 9 a.m.
, A nursery for small children
lwill be provided during the eve-
,, ning services.
Father Anthony Palmasani,
ipastor, invites interested per-
, sons.
To Attend WEA Leadership Meet
OLMPIA -- Mrs. Walter T.
Brophy, r e c e n t 1 y appointed
Dean of Women and Director
of Primary Education at St.
Martin's College, will attend a
two-day "Leadership Roundup"
of the Washington Education
Association at Central Washing-
ton State College Ellensburg,
September 18 and 19.
Mrs. Brophy will represent
the executive board of the
Washington State Branch of the
Association for Higher Educa-
tion of the National Education
Association. She is .the only
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 25 woman member of the eight:
6:.e.7:00 am, The Hour of t0he Cruel-
fled, KTLN, Olympia, 2 OI1 the member board.
Jlal, and KITI, Cenfralla-Chehalts,
1420 on the dial.
10:00 pm, Soared Heart Program.
"Greater Than Justice, Only For
Love."
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 26
6:30.7:00 am, The Hour of the Cruci-
fied, KVI, Seattle, 570 on radio dlal.
7:30 am, The Catholic Hour, KING-
Radio.
7:45 am, Hour of St. Francls, KXA.
ll:o0 am, The Hour of the Crucified,
KBKW, Aberdeen, 1450 on radio dial.
10:30 am, The Catholic Hour, KOMO-
TV -- End of series, "How Can We
Help?" KOMO-TV--"Hap- /
6:00 pm, Challenge,
plness."
NIGHTLY
6:30 pro, The Scriptural Rosary, KBLE,
radio. I
11:30-12:00 pro, The Rosary, KTVW-TV, I
Channel 13. I
Sign-off broadcast, a decade of the
Rosary In beautlfu picture and sound.
SUNDAY
9:30.10:00 pro. The Rosary, KTVW.TV,
Channel 13.
Sign-off broadcast, a decade of the
Rosary In beautiful picture and sound.
Inquiry ClassTo Begin At St. Joseph's
states Father Reidy. "We hope
many will attend this new se-
ries of classes."
" ",,stian Brothers, Nape,California
FATHER FREDERICK
REIDY SJ
St. Joseph's Parish ECD will
sponsor an inquiry class for
all interested in Catholic doc-
"trine and history from Mon-
day, Sept. 27, to Monday, Dee.
20, at 7:30 pm in the parish
hall, 732 18th East.
Father Frederick Reidy SJ
will speak at the weekly classes
after which round table dis-
cussion will be led by lay men
and women CCD members.
Father Reidy will answer ques-
tions and open discussions
will be held.
Personal and written invita-
tions have been extended to
many in St. Joseph's Parish
area to attend the classes.
"Mutual understanding us-
ually starts with an inquiry,"
bthings go
eNth
Co00:e
TRAOE.MARK)
PACIFIC COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO., SEATTLE-TACOMA
Dr. Landberg, Religion,
Mental Health Speaker
Dr. Harry M. Land-
berg, Seattle psychiatrist,
will speak on "The Con-
fused Adolescent in a Con-
fused World" at the September
28 meeting of The Greater Se-
attle Chapter of The Academy
of Religion and Mental Health.
Father John A. Fitterer, S J,
president of Seattle University,
and Rabbi Raphael H. Levine,
DD, senior rabbi of the Temple
De Hirsch, will be on the dis-
cussion panel. The meeting will
begin at 7:45 pm, in room D209,
in the Health Science Build-
ing adjacent to the University
of Washington Hospital.
Father James E. Royce, S J,
head of the Psychology Depart-
ment of Seattle University, was
a founder of the Greater Seat-
tle Chapter of The Academy of
Religion and Mental Health.
The Academy is a national or-
ganization composed of relig-
ious leaders and professional
represenatives of the medical,
psychological and b e h a v i o r
sciences who meet together 1o
further and deepen the ex-
change of knowledge and in-
sight in the service to human
need. All those in the above
fields are welcome.
Dr. Landberg is a graduate
of the Schools of Medicine of
Northwestern and Loyola Uni-
versities and interned at the
St. Louis City Hospital. For his
residency in medicine and sur-
gery he was affiliated with
Methodist Hospital of Central
Illinois. As a Commander in
World War II, he served five
years as Psychiatric Flight
Surgeon. He took post graduate
work at Philadelphia N e u r o
Psychiatric Institute, Illinois
Neuro Psychiatric Institute and
the San Francisco Psychoan-
alytical Institute.
Dial-A-Movie Service
Begun Here, Tacoma
' Dial - A - Movie," na-
tionally popular p h o n e
service, has come to Se-
attle and Tacoma. By dialing
AT 2-8144 in Seattle and FU
3-4548 in Tacoma residents will
receive a rating on every mo-
tion picture showing at down-
town, neighborhood and drive-
in theaters.
A 24 hours a day, every day
service, "Dial-A-Movie" trans-
mits information from a re-
cording. Clergymen serve as
narrators.
The findings of twelve nation-
al agencies make up the classi-
fications of films used on the
service. These advisory organi-
zations include, among others,
the National Legion of Decency,
the Protestant Motion Picture
Council, the American Jewish
Committee, the National Par-
ent- Teachers' Association and
the American Library Associa-
tion.
"Films suitable for the en-
tire family" make up one
classification; "motion pie-
tures suitable for teenagers"
are grouped into another cate
gory; and "movies of an
adult nature" compose still
another division.
This unique information aid
has the approval of Catholic,
Protestant and Jewish educa-
tional organizations. In Seattle
the King County Funeral Direc-
torg' Association in coopera-
tion with Seattle clergy is spon-
soring the operation in the
community interest.
In Tacoma the Mountain
View Funeral Home and the
Mountain View Memorial Park
in cooperation with the Tacoma
clergy are sponsors.
The idea of "Dial-A-Movie"
was born in New Orleans in
1961. In the first twelve months
it handled more than 100,000
calls. Installations have since
been made in other major cit-
ies i n c I u d i n g Philadelphia,
Miami, Chicago, Indianapolis,
the Twin Cities and Dallas,
Texas.
Seattle and Tacoma "DiM-A-
Movie" phone numbers will be
listed in the n e x t telephone
directories.
Jesuit Priests Mark
Golden Days Together
FATHER REIDY
Veteran p r i e s t educators,
Father Daniel J. Reidy SJ and
Father Raymond Nichols SJ
will observed their 50th anniver-
saries in the Society of Jesus
Sunday, Oct. 3.
Masses of thanksgiving will
be offered and the priests .will
be honored at a reception from
2 to 4 pm at Seattle Univer-
sity's Bellarmine Hall.
Besides the golden jubilee
Father Reidy and Father Nic-
hols also have in common 35
consecutive years at the Uni-
versity including many years
it was Seattle College.
Father Reidy, a professor of
philosophy during his years at
SU, was named Professor
Emeritus in June of this year
and is semi-retired from teach-
ing. As faculty advisor to the
Music Department he acquired
an extensive musical library
for the school and served as
moderator of Mu Sigma, student
music honorary.
A native of Ireland, Father
Reidy joined the Society in 1901
and was ordained in 1915. He
was Dean of Men and taught at
Gonzaga University in Spokane
from 1916 to 1927 and was presi-
dent of that university from
1927 to 1930.
Father Nichols who was born
in DePere, Wis., joined the So-
ciety in Spokane in 1915 and
was ordained in 1927. A profes-
sor of history at Seattle College
Sacred Heart,
Enumclaw, Sets
Turkey Dinner
ENUMCLAW-- Sacred Heart
Parish will serve a turkey din-
ner Sunday, Sept. 26, from 11:30
am to 6 pm in the parish hall.
Mrs. Basil McHugh, chair-
man, announces that "all the
trimmings" will include a va-
riety of delicious food prepared
by her committee.
Tickets, adults, $1.50, and
children under 12 years, .50
cents, may be purchased at the
door.
FATHER NICHOLS
and University since 1945, he
became buildings and grounds
supervisor three years ago. He
has been responsible for the
landscaping of the grounds sur-
rounding the many new build-
ings being erected as part of
the university's expansion pro-
gram.
J You won't want to
miss "POP"!
Watch Your PROGRESS
pagesl
Illiteracy
Rate Dawn
CARACAS, Venezuela (NC)--
The government announced
that the illiteracy rate at the
start of 1965 was 12,2%, as
against 38.4% a decade ago.
LAkeview 4-0666
Seattle
IT TAKES
A PECK OF ,.oou=
PEDIGREED
PEANUTS
TO MAKE
A POUND OF
SUNNY JIM..
ATTENTION -
Fund-Raising Fun for All
Women's Clubs, Parish Organizations, Etc.
e
OCTOBER 1
-p
comes to SEATTLE
1965
Exclusively In
HERE ARE THE SIMPLE FACTS:
The PROGRESS -- in recognition of the selected firms who
agree to tell our readers regularly, about the quality, value,
goodness and features of their products, through the pages of
this great newspaperset aside a generous percentage of the
advertising income to the paper, as a "POP" Fund which YOUR
Parish Organization, or Women's Club can earn.
The "POP" FUNd, which totals many thousands of dollars
per year, is divided each Spring and Fall among the organiza-
tions who keep these "POP" Advertisers on their loyalty list--
and show their interest in and readership of The PROGRESS
by Purchasing "POP" Products and by saving (collecting) the
Proofs Of Purchase.
YOUR ORGANIZATION WILL SHARE IN THIS "POP"
FUNd according to the number of "POP"ular Products' Labels,
Stamps or other identifications YOU have accumulated during
each &month "POP" Game!
Look What "POP"
Has Done In Chicago,
Where It All Started
In 21/2 years since "POP" Total Marketing
was started, 90 Chicago New World advertised
"POP" Marketers from the mainstream of the
advertising industry have been exposed to the loyal
"POP" Shopping of 625,000 fund.raislng families,
who purchased $$8 million worth of better value
"POP" Products and saved 72 million "POP" Labels
for the charitable works and projects of 6S0 regis-
tered non-profit organizations, who then redeemed
the labels for $74 thousand which The Chicago New
World paid out of income from 11/4 million lines of
"POP" Advertising the newspaper did not carry
before and could not have carried without "POP"
Total Marketing.
REGISTER YOUR
GROUP NOW!
Fill in and Mail €o
The PROGRESS, 907 Terry Ave.
EVERYONE WINS! Even if YOUR GROUP
;s small and/or new to the "POP" Game
and YOUR collection 9f "POP" Proofs
Of Purchase seems small--YOU WILL
STILL SHARE IN THE CASH ("POP"
Profits) DISTRIBUTION!
m REGISTRATION CARD
i l
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I
I It is IMPORTANT that we reeive the Information requested here PROMPTLY. ]
I Please fill In, sign and return this card at once. I
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| Name of Organization ' .....
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m Name of President .......................................... Phone ......... !
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m President's Addreu .......................................................... I
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m Name of Parish Will your orgcmiation enter
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The PROGRESS'S "POP" Grocery Label Game? ................................. I
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I Horn many active members do you have? ...................................... I
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I Your Name ............................................ Title ......... I
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Your Address ................. ........................................ I I
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................................................. Phone I
The Progress is Proud to bring to Seattle