Can you scan/post that to this site? Would be very intersting to see. Thx in advance.
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You're welcome, Pax Vobis.
Yes, I found it when going through old papers about 40 years later. It was amazing. It had the rubber stamp of my parish with its address, made with an old ink pad. I found it after I had re-discovered the TLM.
Fortunately, I had not gone through those papers before that time because I would have just thrown it away since I wasn't interested in such things until later.
But unfortunately, I don't remember where I put it. I've had to re-organize and move things for various reasons, so stuff gets mixed up, especially when you get "help" from others.
If I ever do find it, I'll scan it and post an image for you. Don't hold your breath!
It measured about 4" wide and 6" tall, folded into a zigzag pattern so its 8 or 10 sides all collapsed accordion style.
Black and white, no fancy graphics, but done with typesetting, not on a typewriter.
The pastor must have had a printer make these up which he disseminated for the whole parish.
It could have come from the diocese though, since the parish name and address were stamped on, not printed in.
If it was a diocese brochure, that would be the diocese of Riverside, California. Perhaps a copy is in archives somewhere.
BTW that's where the famous Mission Inn is, in Riverside.
They give tours of the Mission Inn and ask early in the tour if there are any Roman Catholics in the group.
They say it's so they can include special exhibits that are really meaningful for Catholics.
That's a lie.
They ask for Catholics because only when there are NO CATHOLICS will they take the tour through the blood drenched altar exhibit.
It's an authentic old altar from Mexico where priests were αssαssιnαtҽd in front of it during the Calles Freemasonic genocide.
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