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11-7-1963 The Advocate - Nov. 7, 1963

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VATICAN CITY (RNS) plea by warning that while phere both at home and in solemn pontifical service in "there must necessarily be in A strong reminder that all modem civilization "has the schools.” St. Peter's Basilica com- the elect Catholics have a particular suitabil- The a duty to help spread in the midst of Chris- Pope Paul said that al- the Advocate memorating Trentine de- ity, not only of fa- spiritual and voca- tian the love and promote encourage people greed though few Christians are cree Instituting acminarics. culties that is. of intclli- tions to the priesthood was for the of goods this world, it called to the priesthood and He did so in talk thous- Publication of tha Arcbdioccs* ot Newark, N. and Dloceie of N. J. a to gcnce and free will —but J.. Paterson, aounded by Pope Paul VI in has chilled In many souls the to the of ands religious state life, of seminarians during a also of the psychic and bodily an Apostolic Letter issued to appreciation of supernatural "all, however, have the ob- Vol. No. 46 Pontifical Mas* celebrated by faculties. 12, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1963 PRICE: 10 CENTS commemorate the institution and eternal goods.” live ligation to and reason ac- Giuseppe Cardinal Pizzardo, of diocesan seminaries by the cording to the spirit of a su- of the Sacred Congre- "IT IS, 400 "HOW, he THEREFORE, un- yeara THEN," aaked, pernatural faith and therefore gation of Seminaries and Uni- thinkable "can there that God calls to th* ago. be numerous and to show the highest esteem versities. priesthood children or young true priestly vocationsdn fam- and vencratioh toward those In his letter, the Pope dwelt men who, "HOW IS It poaiible not to ily and school insufficiently gifted surroundings persons who wholly con- on the nature of the priestly in mind and heart or with see,” he said, "that the priest- where held to esteem are secrate up their lives to their vocation, stressing above ail seri- ly vocation, from it* first be- values and benefits psychopathic feelings or pertaining own sanctification, the spir- its divine which he to Its full origin, ous organic defects, would not ginning develop- to worldly professions,. For itual interests of said mankind, was clearly indicated by be in the position to fulfill ment, though being prin- this reason, so that there and the of God.” may glory Christ when he exhorted the their various offices and cipally a gift from God, yet bud and develop in the hearts Aj»o*tles to pray to the Master honor the duties required of require! the generous colla- of children a Jove and holy POPE PAUL'S Apostolie of the harvest that he *end them in the ecclesiastical boration of many, both enthusiasm for the Utter priestly entitled Sumi Dei laborers into the field state." and laity.” it is to life, necessary create Verbum was released aft- the div- The The Pontiff underscored hi* "Corresponding to Pope said "the moat a suitable spiritual atmos- er he had announced it at Ine a call,” he continued. (Continued on Pag* 2) Council Acts on Liturgy, Diaconate, Bishops’ Role VATICAN CITY (NC)-The FIRST of North donated at centers VATICAN - RETURNS - Piles clothing are being throughout ecumenical council voted CITY Fathere Jersey this week as Catholics to the annual American of the respond appeal of the Bishops overwhelmingly Oct. 30 to Second Vatican Coun- usable for clothes, shoes and bedding for the destitute overseas. In cil this week a scene typical give Bishops a larger role in completed vot- the Mrs. Nicholas Mt. ing on the schema throughout area, DiPrender pf Carmel, Montclair, accepts some governing the Church and to liturgy when of the first donations mode there by Mr. and Mrs. Pat Caggiano and their children, restore the order of . they parsed its two final chapters on sacred music Pot Jr. and Margaret Mary. Watching with approval is the parish director of the col- APPROVAL of the eolle- and sacred art lection, Rev. F. X. Cevetello. this by over- Joseph The drive continues through week. of and the di- glatity Bishop* whelming margins. aconate came as the Fathers The liturgy schema thus be- voted on five question*. The came the second after th# vote was to For Two Subjects taken guide the one on communications media, passed at the council's Other Council News And Comment S*o also on First Vati- Pages 2. 3. 6. 7 Story Maywood Board Studies can Council Pogo 9 council Theological Commis- sion in the chapter revising first sr»», >n !a»t year to dealing with the hierarchy tn be successfully concluded. the schema the Church. Shared-Time on There remained only its ap- Request The five questions proval were: by pjpe Paul and its • Whether episcopal coo*e for it to become MAYWOOD A study is ucation At first a general aytvania. where coopera- creation' is the highest grade law Many of iU parts, how- now made the being by proposal was made, but then tioe between a Catholic high of the Sacrament of Or- Holy ever will then have to be ap- Board of Education of this it was to narrowed down the school and a technical 34 public ders >e*. 2.123. no. proved by national hierarchies Bergen County borough which two subjects for seventh and school has nation received • Whether every Bishop, USEFUL AID for local use might lead to the first pro- eighth graders wide - Got hared around the tope recording machine which helped bring Arch- publicity: Quietly, it who is in union with all the gram of shared time between "We felt that we could save ha* been bishop Boland's to the FINAL in force m many Bishop* and the Pope, belongs message annual vesper service of the Newark Archdiocesan ACTION on the and schools public parochial small towns for 20 or to the Bish- chapters Involved years body or College of Council Catholic Men Nov. 3 at Sacred Heart Cathedral are, left of to right. Msgr. James some re- In New Jersey. nitre ops, yes, 2.04* no. 104 numbering What had been At the of Fred For More F. Looney, vicar geneal; Msgr. James A. Hughes, ; Daniel McCormick, instigation News ond Views There seems to be no con- • Whether the College «f chapter seven on sacred Brandt, chairman of the May- stitutional to president of the NAACM; Msgr. Henry G.J. Bace of Immaculate Conception Seminary, music On Education objection the Bishop* succeeds tbe College was redesignated wood Board and fa- who gave the sermon, and Msgr. Thomas G.Mulvaney, moderator of the Archdio- Planning plan in New Jersey, though of Apostles and. together with chapter six The chapters for- of two Cesan of Catholic Men. (See ther children who at- See there has a story, page 2) Pages 6, 20, never been test the Pope, has full and su- merly entitled six ami eight tend Queen of Peace case here wrrr preme power of the whole grouped together at School, the teachers and New state pu- Jersey (aw Church yes. 1 *OB, no. 338 Criticized chapter seven the final one pils' committee of the board the board of education a great limits only tbe use of public • Whether the Collrce of in the schema since both has been the job of de- deal of work by the education given limiting for higher educa- B.shops, m union with the were concerned with " sacred whether H is feasible request tn ’his Rmndt ti-m under ciding way the control of a re- Pope, has this power by di- art for seventh and said. eighth grade ligious denoretnatioa. tn the vine right ' ye*. l.tlT; no: All six amendments to the school students to parochial Everson bus the use of 408 Council case, Discussion chapter on music were passed taks science and SHARED TIME is at Opens physical pres- public money for transporta- o Whether the diaconate by th# council. The amend- education at the ent being used In several nearby tion of children to religious should be restored as a dis- ments other Maywood Ave. public school. states, including Penn- schools was tinct ami approved permanent rank in • Change the original text the sacred BRANDT. HIMSELF ministry, yes. I.* On the of the schema to emphasize a pro- Role 588 no. 523 that chant duct of public school educa- At Kssex Catholic of Bishops is an integral part said that he had been of the liturgy tion, AT THE AMERICAN Bish VATICAN CITY - Debate contains • the interested for some time in gregatioas tnd three ers on th* schema Modify original teat ops' pres* panel following the tins pew sai began week on anew parts James to indicate that solemn the question of shared time meeting. Rev Gregory Baum, Francis Cardinal Mc- serv- »* irma “On Bishops and ices with but that it was an article In Plan of Intyre of Ids Angeles, addres- ministers and the Discussions OS.A, Toronto, a council the Government of " PART I trrats last June that of solid and sing the council for the active participa: n of the Sign brought expert. noted that the vole in first at Fathers of the Second firm faculties to be faithful tbe issue into focus delegated t:me since it is a more noble ex- sharper favor of the five point* was reconvened V aticaa Council dis- to the the for him. and completed Riftupi by The Cardinal pression of the liturgy. ' an ine*f.mab> aid *.,p- warned that cussion on all the available instead of being On Race oT the reserved to proposal* to decentralize • Recommend Brand: consulted with au- Problem port position of the au- the organ- chapters of the schema on the th* Holy See and administered ization thorities at Queen of Peace moderators ' He said that the tlority in the Church con- of h .her institutes of Church tile Eccletn) bv the Roman NEWARK—Tbe first in successful congregations stitute a "radical sacred music. School and also appealed to a tations are extended use of this proced- change" being to That schema has Part 11 series of discussions on fac- ural device would occupied xoacems the prac- which "endanger other parents to form a com- the archdiocevan and district enable mod- might the un- • Recommend that, the Fathers unce the second tice* of the Roman par- tors involved in erators us congrega- ity of the Church." mittee which could present interracial race relation* committees of the future to dis- ticularly in mission session of :h» areas, will be held at council opened tions ui relations with the case to the board of problems Es- the cover the majority feeling of Bishops local ed- Archdiocesan Councils of Uct It. The traditional music be se* Catholic High School here Catholic tbe council Fathers schemas new in which the congregations act MX OTHER Men and Women on a par- SPEAKERS used with the liturgy. Nov. 14 at S:IS pm ticular chapter on Our it bow In the name of the and The second subject without the I-ady Pope took a different view discussion has The> ac- • v mat being prepared and wtU be air established to the pipe organa Announcement of the senes been need for hearing an ta- *er*e all cused the Roman tentatively scheduled for intermi- Cuna of tam- should be considered Deadline was made by Rev. nable ken up at a later date world's Bishops and *. the tra- Early Aloysius group of speakers pering with the schema, ditional J. coordinator It Part lit liturgical instrument Welsh, of inter- Rr> Bernard Haring, appeared post.ble that concerns the pro- against council regulations. racial for music in the Latin Rite. Next Issue justice programs in the Other Stories S CSS R amendments to posal to have Page . another council ex- the schema Bishops repre- They demanded the Cuna be Newark Archdiocese. • Remind that those Comment, Page 6 pert. forecast that ' the tacti- on the Church could be pre- senting national hierarchies internationalized and that ail who Monday, Nov. 11. Is Vet- Church cal results of this vote” sented named by the a* mem- compose music must would and passed on before Pope power needed to erans Day. a legal TOPIC OF the first discus- govern dio- be filled holiday, make themselves the end of ber* or ronsultors of the Ro- with the Christian sion wiU be probably the second session cries be relumed to and The Advocate will be "Discnmination Dec 4 Bishop* and Wednesday, Two fac- felt much more in the forth- Dec 4. man congregations. The spirit must cultivate the closed that and the Civil law-Federal speakers Included Achille day. ulty members from Immacu- coming debate of the schema ideals of sacred music. and State.” The This final point might be the Cardinal Lienart of Lille, Paul Because of the discussion late Conception "On COUNCIL FATHERS holiday, leader Seminary, Bishops and Government moved lection in which will be de- Cardinal Richaud of THi: will be Thomas 11. Rev " Bordeaux, MKANS by which ac- material intended for Edward Ciuba. professor of Dioceses on publi- Gassrrt, He explained to the schema on Bishops bated the ami Valerian Cardinal cation in associate archdio- of Scripture, and Rev. already proposed Gracias tion was tak«n on the chapter the issue of Nov. An- that m the coming debate while the on Our cesan chapter Lady Idea of the constitution at a of counsel Bombay. on sacred art was tn itself 14 must be submitted thony Padovano. professor of there ia a of the l* one *7 There will be question re- being readied. The first universal senate of the Church Cardinal Richaud no charge for theology, will lead the discus- lations was one of more sign of the growing pow- 4 p.m. on Friday, Nov. 8. of episcopal confer- chapter of the new schema to the to which aaaist the in the several program the pub- sion on "Tha Pope gov- speakers who er of the four council moder- Theology of ences with the Universal deals with relttiont at strongly lic Is invited. Particular invi- the ernment of the Church defended idea •tori Race.” Church the of national to expedite the coun- ■ Bi*hope with the Roman coo- One of the firat speak- (Continued on Page 2) (Continued on Pag* 2) Seven Paterson Priests Elevated in Rank by Pope Paul PATERSON Seven priests counted members of the MSGR. papal HAAG was born m forane, 1.*., of Sussex named of the Diocese of Paterson of Holy to Newton household and their appoint- Clifton and attended St. Bene- Spirit, ment In 1960. After service at St. Virgil's, to 1957. In have received County. Pequannock. In 1950. where 1957 he was named papal honors, ment la for life. They carry the dict's he He has also served as mod- Morris Plains, St. Prep and St Peter's Msgr. Brestel and served until Josephs, director of the new DePaul three being named domestic title of Right Reverend Mon- Msgr. his appointment erator of the Priests' Confer- and College He was ordained after Passaic, St. Stephen's. School Gallo were also named con- to St. High and in 1959 was prelates and four papal cham* George's In 1944. ence* in the diocr*e signor. Papal chamberlains studies at Immaculate Con- suitors and as a Paterson, he was appointed appointed director bertalns, according to word of the diocese in July. of vocation* are whose duties lie ception in member of the board of ex- pastor of St. Thomas in Seminary 1938. After The former was born in Pal- 1954. for the diocese. received this week from In MSGR. GALLO la a or about the Pope's apart- 10 at native aminers of the junior members year* St. Vincent's. Madi- Born in Bishop James G. Navagh in erson and attended St. Peter's of Madison and atUoded Brooklyn, Msgr. ments. At an son, he was Madi- of the clergy. MSGR. MrIIUGII honorary ap- named administra- and 1* a na- Puma attended . Prep Seton Hall Univer- son High School Immaculate pointment. it is made for the and Setnn Bom in Elyria, tive tor of St. Monica'a and Ohio, Msgr. of Ireland, where he at- then sity. He was a classmate of Hall He Conception Seminary end was All of the new domestic life of the current University. received Durka attended school* in Wil- tended prel- Pope hut appointed pastor. Summerhill College in ordained in 1951. He la renewed Msgr. Haag at the seminary hia theological training at Im- Del, was an ates were formerly papal normally by his In of mington. and took his County Sligo. He was July this year, Msgr. and waa also ordained to the maculate ordained assistant at Sacred chamberlains. They are successor —and carries the Conception Seminary theological at SS there Heart, Msgr, Haag was a coun- training Cyril in 1945 amt came to this appointed priesthood In 1931. and was Clifton, and St. Mary's, Pat- Christian D. Ilaag, pastor of title of Very Reverend Mon- selor ordained in 1948 He and Methodius Or- tha of the diocese and in After 12 at St. John'a Seminary, country following year, erson. and served St. signor.) years was at St. Michael'*. chard Mich. as a re- Monica’s, Sussex, and dean September was named vicar Paterson, Lake, He was or- serving at Our Lady of gional CYO Cathedral. Msgr. Brestel waa from 1948 until hts moderator, before of Sussex County; Msgr. Jo- appoint- dained in 1939 in Paterson. Lourdes, Paterson, from hia 1948 appointment as admlnls- seph R. Brestel, pastor of St. trator of Queen of the Most George's, Paterson, and Msgr, Holy Rotary Mission for the Joseph J. Gallo, pastor of St. Spanish Speaking in Dover. Joseph's, Newton. This past year he wai ap- THOSE ELEVATED to the pointed director of the Spanish A postulate for the rank of papal chamberlain diocese. are Msgr. Stanislaus J. Durka, MSGR. ROUIMER, bom In pastor of St. Thomas, Ogdens- Rockaway, alio attended Im- burg; Msgr. John P. McHugh, maculate Conception Seminary diocesan director of vocations and was ordained iA 1951. He and director of De Paul High received hit degree of Doctor School. Vincent Wayne; Msgr. at Law from Catholle E. Puma, director of the Span- University in 1954. That tame ish Apostolate, and Msgr. he year was named an as> Frank J. assistant Rodimer, alatent chancellor of the dio- chancellor and secretary to the cese end an assistant pastor Bishop. at St. Brendan's, CUfton. Tha investiture will be held In June of this year, he wee Dec. 15 at St. John’s Cathedral, appointed secretary to Bishop the Patersoa Chancery Office Navagh and U presently In announced. Rome at the Vatican Council with the He ha* been (Domestic prelates art ae- MSGR. HAAG MSGR. BRESTEL Bishop. MSGR. GALLO MSGR. DURKA Patersoa representative lor MSGR. McHUGH MSGR. RODIMER The Advocate ainca MU. THE 2 ADVOCATE November 7, 1961 How the Council Has Advanced Movement No Downgrading REV. Unity By GUSTAVE WEIGEL, S.J. entailed in accepting an in- •tantly the on lips of the Blsh- were formed Competent scholars believe vitation to by many prelates. Hit council itself will detl Of menkal movement, frater- conversations, ops. In consequence tho Intended ecu- Reluctance ttut the most took a haa disappeared. with Mary significant nal negative stand on Cath- the nature of the ecu- dialogue between the menical Usk ol the Church Christian event in modern his- olic participation In inter- menical effort and churches, was suspect al- waa not only but probably tory in the ecumenical church recognized THE SECRETARIAT for broad move- though there were Individuals meeting!. emphasized. lay down principles of ment la bit Christian al- now a more than who entered However, the ecumenical Promoting Unity, practical policy; Diocesan Council Vote 50 whole-heartedly The aftermath of the first By old. though founded to years Today most Into the movement was evolving and •cssion • primarily ecumenical institute* and Christian dialogue. manifested the genuln- assist tho thinkers consider the Instruction of the council, could be commlssiona look forward Th ' o,lou More cautious Catholics felt Holy Of- of the to '*t comment on U,l ity Bishops' ecumen- week', role on the manner the division of the fice giveo a more permanent func- the in l churches that in 1950, Ecctesia Catho- conciliar directives. In which to treat the the mere acceptance of a ical eubfeet th, • scandal commitment. Few dio- tion. Such of Mary at Vatican Conn- and a sin. The Gos- program of lics., declared that a step would have the meantime ecumenical dia- dialogue between explicitly ceses kept aloof from the TtP r Th * Adlo ‘“» the chancellor the to be taken by the be- t To b anhtant ecumenical Interest In- Pope logue will be carried on all the l° In one of Pater,on Dtocete. He dialogue. city after an- cause It deals it in Rome creasing among non-Catho- with a central over the world as Catholics a, tecretary to Bithop tbe aims of the other, meeting* were publicly administrative Vatican Council is to tbe uc Christiana was the organ but It it begtn to learn the and oh 4 of foster fruit of held. Ecumenical institutes art movement which not an By MSGR. FRANK J. seeks Christian reunion. This background the inspiration of the Holy Improbable move. technique. RODIMER Pkrca was Ghost. Rules prepared for Tbe Advocate by a Jesuit professor were laid down Last week the Fathers of there is no separate schema on of theology u bo bos been in tbe for Catholic ecumenical action the council forefront »f tbe movement. voted on the place bul Christ. Why one on Mary? To while the tone waa —the In not Council right place their think- see in totally Mary proper perspec- negative It atill was re- . . . ing—for Mary to be considered make Opens tive, It would be out of order pels it quite clear that in the churches was a dcnisi of the atrictive. council. (Continued from 1) to form a schema her Christ commanded that those Page were asked to be brief and to the Fathers' on Catholic dogma whereby she indicating pleas- The choice was between who would follow THE ELECTION of the It dis- alone. Him in faith and she alone John point. was decided that, ure wit) was the Church, episcopal conferences and ar- * e position adopted cussing Our Lady, a Another be one. XXIII in 1958 gave Catholic gued since 20 speakers had reserved subject reason is a pastoral with the corollary that there that the document should by the moderators. Discussion close to the heart of all Catho- ecumenical endeavor time for the continued discus- one. Many countriea do not do were other anew go even further then continued the no churches. For in freeing on chapter lics, either under the schema Mary jusUce in the IN OUR vitality. From the be- a limit sense that AGE this truth has her to hold very Bishops from undue sion, of eight instead of the schema on the Church dialogue with interfer- treatment of the Church, as the put her come home ginning the manifested of 10 minutes would people on a par to the vast ma- other Pope ence from the Roman be put on entitled "Call to Holiness in churches would be a Curia. was originally planned, or as with her Divine Son. A Chilean jority of those who great desire for Christian uni- them. profess al- contradiction in terms. the Church.” a separate schema, independ- Bishop said there are countries legiance ty. Then on Jan. THE WINDUP of debate to Christ’s name. 25, 1959, on Council Fathers, further- ent of the BISHOP LSIDOR Emanuel of one on the Church, a in South America where there There John announced he would con- previous saw some Is, therefore, "a trend to TIME WENT on and chapter more. were advised that mod- drawn the voke plan up this past sum- la "a religion of Jesus, and reverse the tendency of the fruits of the a general council and •peedup tactics adopted by erators would be Speyer, Germany, suggested ecumenical move- exacting in mer. one indicated that Christian Julius that "our liturgical books of Mary.” past which led the ment were unity Cardinal Doepfner of Insistence on of churches seen to be good. observance the of the 18th and 19th was to be one of its Munich, the presiding modera- established should take care to mention Still another reason: Th* centuries Catholics investigated the preoccu- norms. It happened THE MAJORITY vote by a state to into pations. tor of the day. who noted the the precise of life in separate schema on Mary is split ever smaller com- matter more deeply. The In fact later on at this meet- very narrow margin was tor On June 5. many which the reached sanc- considered by many a poor munities. Today we see con- Eastern Orthodox churches 1900, the Pope complaints about the ing that several Fathers who the inclusion of Mary under created the 10 council's tity. Gathering goodly numbers one. It doe* not adequately stantly increasing mergers of had entered into the preparatory pace. were speaking were called to the schema on the Church. World use and Church’s the commissions for the Those who had invoked the order for of saints under such negative Did thu Scripture the churches, reducing total Council of Churches, and they council, being repetitious. downgrade Mary? number. and two to continue headings as 'non-Bishops' and What early tradition. Even theolo- held a view about their secretariats, one of privilege speaking Applause followed Cardinal motivated the Fathers to which on 'non virgins' does suf- gically, the schema ha, been In America church which-is wis the Secretariat for chapter six of the schema Doepfner’* hardly make the choice they did? we have seen parallel to general remarks. Promoting Christian ficient honor to the walks of challenged as presuming doc- the different Methodist the Catholic view about their Unity The vote did not downgrade which life which sanctified.” He trines not yet fully developed. churches church which is was to be the liaison they Our Lady. No desire to dimin- become the single parallel to for the organ between the council and suggested example, that ish great Methodist Church; the Catholic view of herself. Mary's place in the Church MOST IMPORTANTLY. Mary other Churches. Freedom “mother of a would The Christian family” caused the vote Congregationalists. Christian World Council, centrally Complete against a belongs in the treatment on b-i more significant than non- concerned Augustine Cardinal Bea. a separate schema oo her. the Churches, and the Evangelical about holding dia- Church because she be- German, was made virgin” in the liturgical books. and Reformed have become logue, did not demand of the president Just as surety, the Fathers longs m th* Church. Like all and Paul Cardinal I-eger of the United Church partners that Msgr. Jan G M. Wille- would not contemplate such Christians she received hir of Christ. they recognize Seen for Mootreal said: "There a There each other brands, a Hollander, execu- Action can be for the sake of gift* from God. She is a movement to at churches in ths Lay thing pleasing practiced tive no real spiritual life of the fullest sense secretary. Voting and non Catholics. so well the merge all American churches of the word Dia- ROME (NC) The Any such thing same faith, humil- ecumen- encouraged to further the work lait) without an increase in the logue entailed consulting members were would antagonize the Orthc ity, to the divine deriving from English origins. no denial on the ical council’* draft declaration conformity appointed in of the lay apostolate tn number of educated of September. 1960. every laymen, dox as well as the Protestants will that w« to The most any church of ele- on the struggle prsc- impressive result any Since lay apostolate encour- even the field the sacred ment then the secretariat way. and the laity itself is in of who are in tice. of its own faith. well versed Catho- of the new ages a spirit of " tendency is the h*i complete co- to exercise within reasoo sciences Catholic extraordinarily ac- a lic teaching. World ecumenists were Mary belongs in the Church Council of Churches the in operation between the Bish- complete freedom ” FERNANDO certain now that the preparing projects for Cardinal Cento, and is the perfect type of the which is an organized fel- Church the ops and the laity, according must council and establishing Cousins said that Grand Penitentiary, said that THE EXPERTS of th* coun- Church, the of of enter into the ecu- to Virgin Virgins, lowship 207 distinct ecclesi- contacts with other Archbishop William F.. cil have menical Christian certain Church organizations the council should pass a reso- given several reatens our in a life astical communities. dialogue and they Cousins of Milwaukee. example living churches. lution for the vote For one themselves did such but "involve strict supervision be asking the Sacred Con- thing. dedicated to God. work, The spirit needed, he said. >« was unofficial cause of the very nature of gregation of Rites to beatify AT FIRST THE Is one to which ’ the is the Catholic COUNCIL-8 first see- laity their ’’ What was ectivity But he said and canonise more laymen to needed was an of- not fearful Church was suspicious of s»on had t of undue interfer- Home this ficial blessing pronounced edu- there are many other fields encourage the laity to strive Delegates’ for ecumenical ence and does not movement. The ideal of Chris- menical tone. In the tend to feel "in which the harder encounter. The Pope's ” laity would en- for sanctity tian was . very first suppressed unity as dear to her exhortation. Oct. a freedom Martalium Animoa of Pius 11, joy complete of ac- Archbishop William Conway as it was to 1962, the Archbishop Cousins Is a any other Chris- Xl in ecumenical hope of tion. accepting from the Bish- of Armagh. said that tian 1928. when the nature the member of the Ireland, body. However, the char- council was council’s lay his la Clientele of the held explicitly op encouragement, support general the text was good, Multilingual acteristic feature dialogue the pout- stressed Apostolate Commission. He of the ecu- that During the meetings and helpful suggestions but he that "it bility compromise was . . complained th word • cu menie*l spoke about the schema lo ao *_ was coo- The right thinking layman is has a basic defect in that it mien lew with the Dtvioe Council Newsmaker going to recognize the sphere say* nothing cm prayer, its World new* service At Hotel Castello of authority and mil not seek necessity and tit methods, es- to invade “IT LS THE HOPE of the those areas tn which pecially as regards the laity ROME (NC) If you drop the Harvard School. the constituted most Divinity council Commission on the authority has . This is a important In at the Hotel " Castello. Then there are the ’ just I-ay he the final place point when too repre- Apostolate." said. today many a few blocks from the Vati- • sentatives of the Coptic German that the will accept Actually, he "there would make s Dynamic laity is people bonnes can. you be said, may welcomed Church of Egypt, the Ortho- the invitation to become consist is activity .** part only one apostolate. tn which with a "boo jour," or "gruess dox Church of Ethiopia, th* of the life of the Church with religious and Manuel Cardinal Goocahes Bishop, priest, Gott." or "bueoot dlas," or a Syrian Orthodox Church of In- an One of the enthusiasm and initiative layman each have a definite Ccrexira of Lisbon observed men selected similar greeting m almost dia, the by council since iu that Apostolic Armenian Pop# Piul to incepuoo. t knapsack on his might previously have to he that "the identification of sanc- RIOT# th# IfC* oack, using responsibility discharged every language of the world. Church a despite hi* ” With them is dele- ond relatively youthful the been lacking He added that with the religious state is Vatican Council at stamina according to the rapacity and tity Next to the ecumenical a *ge. developed in coun- gate of the Old Catholic at the same time are artion still far too brisker pace is no over ’ Bishops sphere of of each one.” widespread. . cil. thu U one most stronger He served mountain-climbing the of the Church. as a member years 1: would add to the increase to the prob- of international spots in the the Central of lem of Preparatory In Wuerzburg he also be- sanctity, be said, "if all Eternal AT ANOTHER tabic get- Commission before the City. you coun- gan his close Christians were made more ting things cil got collaboration Here the Secretariat for may see Rev. Gustave Wetgel, underway and since with the done Protestants and was keenly aware of possibility, SJ of Woodstock —and then ac- Asks Christian I'nity has accom- , College, has been associated with tive in Archbishop done the German and even the obligation, of well the Bishops' modated 27 of its 65 noo-Cath- Maryland, engaged in an- Secretariat for Extraordi- for in a refugee program. striving sanrtity m the imated conversation with hurry. the olic observers and guests, nary Affairs, Coordinating ” He is Julius living of their daily lives representing 16 Christian Bishop Fred Pierce Corson of Commission and the Tech- HE WAS Cardins! transferred to Personal Renewal Jaime Cardinal de Barros president of the nical-Organizations Commis- communities. Philadelphia, another divided C» nigra Doepfner of diocese m of Rio de Janeiro and World Methodist Council, and sion NEWARK 1957 when he became .Archbishop part of the Church of Christ, Munich —a Bishop Bishop Franjo Frame of Spilt, AT SOON and at night the Dr. William George Baker, . Julius Doepfner was born of Berlin Boland asked members of the that must proclaim the they Yugoslavia, stressed the sanc- Bishop st 35. In Characteristically, Newark hotel dining room busies with Edinburgh. Scotland of th* 1913 in Hausen. Germany, he chose to become Archdiocesan Council "Meaged truth that Our Lord of a Cardinal enthroned tity poverty Others spoke conversations World Convention of Chtrrchea the fourth of Catholic Men to the polyglot Near child of a humble in St Sebastian's match founded one visible Church, st 45, and Church of the special nature of sanc- —a the window is the table re- of Christ (Disciples). farm family. His father held church in renewal of the Church with governed by the now, s vig- the Soviet sector College of tity in martyrdom, the mis- served for other jobs, the three Russian Father Weigel acts as Inter- orous 30 serving each sum- His sermon a personal renewal of their Bishop* with the at years old, one of stressed the n*rd Pope the sionary life and the contem- mer as a at tn to the " delegates. Vitaly preter for all the English- four moderators —with Car- porter a nearby for interfaith_ own a message an- center life. health cpUaboraDon in plative Horovoy and lakov Ulich of and dinals resort s united front nual Vesper service held Nov. speaking observers Lercaro. Suenens ard against com lh« Orthodox After at Patriarchate of guests at the council sesv Agagianian —of the completing grade and muntsrn S Sacred Heart Cathedral ns, council. Moscow, and Nikolai An- and often dines with them. This week, high school, he began study- Soon the Reds here presiding at a began to ing for the in The Vocations phtnogrnov. layman who ts priesthood . council session, he rose to the keep the new from TOO men gathered for . . Rome Bishop en secretary of the Russian Or- task. at the Germanicum, a the then heard Msgr. (Continued from He observed that terms East Berlin It was an service Pag* l) severance on the part of those New Retreat Center many house of thodox delegation to th* studies for German again, G J. of , complaints had been lodged on off again campaign Henry Beck, professor characteristic and indlspen already ordained to the priest- priests, World Council of Churches in ST BENEDICT. La. NC) on the and the Gregorian which Church at slow pace of the coun- never succeeded in history Imma- •abio sign of the true voca- hood. saying: and He "Docility Geoev*. A $300,000 retreat center will cil's deliberations. He University. was ordained curbing his culate Conception tion. .Is the the call re- in denunciations of Seminary, . right intention, fidelity to of God are b« built Rome Oct. 29. 1939. and re- Across from them sre the at St. Joseph Bene- marked that it was Red persecution aummartze the first weeks of that Is. the clear to Important and decisive indispensable all who will dictine here to mained there until IMI. the second Vat- will Anglicans, the Presbyterians Abbey safeguard freedom of Bishop Doepfner was creat- session of the to .consecrate oneself en cooperate more closely with and the speech in the but that ed a Cardinal John ican Council and ask for their to the service of Jesus Christ in the salvation Congregationaluts council, FATHER DOEPFNER by Pope Urely the It was was tn sharing a table, among them also essential that the 1958 and. three acceptance of the changes, in- rhal existence of the of souls and the • parish years later, divine assuring for work priest unUl ltMg, was ” Bishop John Moorman of Rip- of the assembly should notified of his transfer to cluding the liturgy in the vocation themselves of a brighter when he was CLEARANCE appointed assis- Munich. on. England, and Dr. Douglas move more quickly. The Pontiff noted vernacular, which seem cer- "Such certitude, indispensa- crown of glory tn eternity." tant of the Wuerzburg of Even that the Cardinal had tain to ble for admission Horton, Randolph. NIL, r»hli.Wf uJt: I*o Dmctac* M in the use of the asked to come to Holy Or- » right seminary. Two later In hu talk to the semina- Um Mtew CYO years remain former moderator of the In- 1M pvm to in the in Berlin, but said be ders, is to the speak name of sev- Pope Pius XII named him joined defini- rians m St. Peter’s, the Pope i»i pum at. s«»u» •ral must make the THE ARCHBISHOP'S mes- tive ternational Congregational others after cloture has of sacrifice of judgment regarding the told them that Bishop Wuerzburg. sage was recorded with the a vocation Council, and former dean of been invoked to close moving to Munich. sign of a vocation on the debate, His See was between part meant "renunciation, unpopu be split assistance of Set on Hall sta- said, the ol the one who ordains, which council cannot free lanty, sacrifice. It means Germany and the Soviet EVEN RECEPTION tion WSOU-FM After' thank- pref lose sight of the clear will of but OF the the Bishop has the duty of for zone, his of moun- Red erence the inner life over the hobby Hat faded- ta. keep Car- ing the AOCM for dedicat- before majority which has voted tain pronouncing ordination, outer Another climbing helped him to dinal the the life It means the Value! In favor of Doepfner from his fa- ing service to the success thus rrndermg authentic and Cleaning stopping discus- keep in touch with hi* choice of an austere and sion. people. vorite avocation. of the council, the con Archbishop operative before the Chureh a The communists would not In slant perfection, compared 1959. he set a record said "we must show in our him divine call which has been permit to take sn auto- which with a comfortable and insig THE HEAD may stand for a good conduct what it '* OF one of the mobile personal slowly maturing.” " into their territory for mficant mediocrity *- world’s most many years when he became mtlni to be a member of the ** populous arch- pastoral visits. Pope Psul went on to deal The Bishop the first Cardinal it means, he added, dioceses, Cardinal to scale 15.- Mystical Body of Christ. We in greater detail Also, Doepfncr outwitted the Reds wslk- with the bas by Ooafoot Mont the must “understanding the hard but played a key role in the Blanc, high- experience a personal preparation of the future from parish to with Jing parish est peak in Western renewal to stupendous mission of the Europe match the renewal priest at the from ascet- Church which more ol the inner spirit of the ical. liturgical, intellectual today Church than ever is engaged in teach- which Is the purpose and pastoral points of view. ing man his true being . . Schema ol the council.” . Liturgy . . . THE POPE concluded with and disclosing the immense, Msgr. Beck noted that the a strong invitation (Continued from to sanctity ineffable riches of Christ's 1*382? Page 1) • Care should major work of the council to be taken in may be made. and an exhortation to to faithful minds." eil’a work. the date has been the of per- charity construction of churches He said study the Th* day’s Ju- that It is possible Church moderator. that the edifices be suitsble itself, the first time lius that within the next of Cardinal Doepfner of for the couple this has happened in 2.000 celebration of litur- weeks the full Munich and Freising. Ger- liturgical docu- "And this is done gical functions and the active ment will be years. being many, in the completely fin- with observers name of the participation the faithful. of other faiths other qf ished, taking into account the moderators, simply on hand at each sug- • Anew article confirms reservations daily session gested to the council Fathers the expressed on all of the council. Men of reli- practice of setting the various c that their up amendments, and beliefs they express ap- Images for gious different than veneration in that the full document could proval of the text as a whole our own have churches, but warns that they then come to see without the go to a public session of whst Catholics voting on seven should be moderate in the mean by tho 44 council individual num- where the Bishops amendments since, ber. reflect order and Church,” be said. / be proper would complete the said, the text contains no be formality He urged the men re- doctrinally sound. of the final to controversial public vote and member points. • Provides that the article that in their contacts A Pope would the vote was taken approve with non-Catholics must according- dealing with the establish- schema. they ly and the be amendments ment of conscious that they are commissions for sa- ONE DAY passed with only nine dissent- cred art on various levels be CONFIDENCE SERVICE ing votes out of the 1,941 which deleted, since It was included were cast. in u •( M tatrt (kirn. Chapter I, which Is already 99 —in auurance In this manner full when do it UUrt L»vn4#ru»f almost a approved. you yourself day’s work was saved. It thaf comes with • Schools of sacred art seemed probable that similar service ■hould be established for the rendered actions would expedite council training of artists and on and STORES SERVE YOU THERE'S ONE NEAR YOU action in the future. moving efficiently artisans In different places, day NMlnwt • During their It ia to conscientiously. P*r FOLLOWING 18 the seminary liable be A«. Kwta sub- expensive ... in terms of time and stance yeara, candidates for the of the seven amend- and priesthood be energy, quite in O.My Ax. should Instruct- probably damago and break- s'vrr. . Pkiunl Ax. ments: Ko„l, ed In the history, age. and •rUppWV • Chapters VI and VIII of development Packing moving properly require Mill. Mm*, cte and of Ax. the schema principles stored art. liturgy are to be skill and training. For expert service,call Kl«*f combined into ooe chapter, REV. FREDERICK lie- Ay.. which will become Magus of Chapter the Cathode Univer- Oxn». Aye. VII. EL »Uy of America pointed out 4-7800 In the > M • encouragement of after the meeting that in the •acred should M CATERING ait, Bishops balloting council Fathera •rm •eek rather voted SERVICE beauty than mere In favor of the chapter Engel Brothers, Inc. r*t>*U dilution •/ Mamin L» Horn costliness in veatmenta with reservations. he Ay*. 'ktUL* art, These, » YEARS OF "KNOW and church a CATERING HOW* general furnish- •aid, are to be examined and name to trust since 1885 West New WhM Orange, Jersey REdwood MJOC r.x Ax. •light alterations in the teat Aw. November 7, IMS THB ADVOCATE 3

COUNCIL session of the Vatican Coun- MASS - Each day's Moss to the the proper congregation. In this picture, Mass the of the Romanian Uniat# Church cil opens with a Mass said the in founding (Uniate truction of the Church civil authorities in Red-ruled facing congregation is being offered by Bishop Basil Cristea. Apostolic Visitor by St. Peter's Basilica. The churches ore Eastern Rile churches in union with Rome). Romania. The council Fathers the of for Romonions commentator can be seen in the center. At ting parts in Exile, on the 265th anniversary of The Moss also marked the 15th of the anniversary des- far left is the basilica's famed statue of St. Peter. Council News Notes The Holy Father's Week in the News Statement oil Liberty Predicted People ‘By on Are...Saints' The least that Baptism, the Vatican Father revealed Res. Anton Weber. Murray ian Giacomo Cardinal Ler- H.A.C., by Cardinal Mclntyre. Council will do in the matter that a chapter on religious caro, Julius Cardinal general treawirer of the Pal- President VATICAN CITY (NC» Deopf Kennedy wiQ re- He *aid in a message to Rev. that he witnessed 20 years of religious freedom will be to freedom has been written into ner and Leo Cardinal lottine Fathers, has received Cfive Top* Paul VI stressed the Patrick Sucn- t f S#rv ♦ ea Peyton. C S C the earlier in bomb-scarred Rome “reaffirm ~ the doctrine of the schema on ecumenism He Grand Cross for istencr of in the live* ens were received in audt- Germany's Ice Award of the grace of crusade s founder All Souls' Jonni Proteslant and direc- at he spoke on Day Pope encyclical. said that what much of the Achievement for his aid to Catholic* at eocr by Pope Paul VI last Count'd of New York City hi* weekly gen tor "We are pleased to note at the basilica of St. Law- Pacem in Terris.” in the persecuted Jews op- world awaits from the coun- week, heightening during World Nov. » rral audience here that in the Outside the inion of Rev. John speculation past 2t year* the rence Walls. Courtney cil is a clear War 11. he statement re- that steps would be taken to W«gr. Cosgrove "By your Baptism" told F armly Crusade Henry of the Rosary' has He was referring to dra- Murray. S J., an American a garding religious liberty. speed progress l-eslle Kirkley, non Catholic Brooklyn Diocese those present "you are already carried the of council has been message family matic visit by Pope Pius XU, expert. • • director a* the of the Oxford Com- prome’ed to 11« early Christians used to the p-it of qualifi prayer people* of 32 m which he was This, he said, In the to * a participant, would be a opinion of Valerian Translations will he provid- mittee for Famine Relief, a catoe at the »*y * That it countries, Sacred'Congrega- bringing together ap- to the bombed neighborhood two-fold statement that a Car nal Gracia* of ed at the British dedicated to Bombay. council, all right, voluntary agency, has tion of t e Office, blessed. God and proximately 2d Holy where million persona. near St Basilica man has the to in right worship India, one of the things that hut it won't be the simultan- been given the title of Knight he hat sfnee member* of the Church And "To achieve the served I#5T., lofty a,ims July. IM3 God according to the demands is needed is a of Commander of the Order we ethort to theology lay eous translation* most of Kdward l. you be aware of of the crusade, every- gi Kedders. you and your "Those of an upright conscience and Neither clencs nor St th* See. yoiir Chn*tian tremendous hours." activity. one was hoping for Archbish- Sylvester by Holy * M-. Ordinary of the inde- dignity and to talented collaborators have that this and other human laymen, be told council Fa- John it he said, "were marked by the op J Krol of Philadel Aailliar* Bishop designate prnlent prelature of preserve by Using always in used the mas* Juh, media of com- blood rights limit the of the thers. know “where the Mate of grace tears, and sacrifice of powers exactly Phi*, one of the council's five John J. Ward of Los Angeles Peru, aim* munication* l»T. has been effectively, and known state. the limits of the active func- can be persons and unknown. undersecretaries told a will be consecrated Dec. 12 named a "Nothing higher than the 15 films press Bishop by Pope Paul. and radio series Yet there tions of the layman in th* conference that the grate, the divine of was great, nameless prob- principle that tell the story of the 15 Church he,” he said lem supernatural hfe dedication offered for the well- In St. Louis of securing trained Nothing can the per- mysteries of Rotary are "This not of the society to which ka known,” he sonnel was the mam obstacle promote our spiritual growth being Communist indeed worthy of praise .’* Threat we for the added “because the theolo- at to more than faithfulness to the belonged, defense of present simultaneous • the Parish Work gians themselves do not know translations state of grace. We pray that city of which we were it" He that Recall* llonibine members and alliens." proposed the What will be provided wtU you may always have a Ufe on the of grace VATICAN CITY chapter laity include a be translations in six langu- Scored and use every oc- (NC) Pope Paul spoke at the first For Deacons formula "whereby the layman ages of those testa provided by Bishops casion to increase your tanuty Pope Paul VI recalled tha of two public Masses he offer- could be given canonical four and perfect holme** •'tears, blood and sacrifice'* ed on All Souls' by - your pro- speakers day* m ad- ROME (NC) The Bishops theory of atheistic communism Day. tection Use to "For thi* ST LOUIS (NO Joseph against priest and vance allow time for trans- of Italy have urged the Italian has purpose you must been repeatedly coo and the have a Cardinal Ritter has directed Bishop; Bishop and lation people to rrwaken their deroned Uvcly moral tense, a in solemn pontifical the priest canonical protection The text which to love of and con fourth-year theologians in St. is he read, Christian conscience ami to documents prayer great ” against the ftdence in God'* Loui* diocesan seminaries to Layman however, wont be thetr goodness,'* the shsrpen understanding of “Such theory 1« totally Ir- • same as the talk brmg • ‘•get out into the field'' for de- the threat of communism reconcliable with the Christian KRESGE - NEWARK Nicrt F S C.. livered broader Joseph if the speaker has al- They said in a Faith pastoral experience. Joint message It is opposed m the Rotary Vetwigr superior general o t th# The direction after tered his talk to Italian priests that from came parish It - 32 Christian Brothers, has pnnclptes which stems, Vatican city ( nc Pope been • atheistic the young men were ordained as communism. in the ideas it supports, n tae PauT named a Y 1 has praised the Family deacons. council expert, mak- Taking advantage at the All "gravest and most insidious" They will be or- methods it advocates It brings Crusade for it* ing him the first head Rosary wide of a Sainlv -ess, menace to religion and !o dained to the next * group of 12 the rum on-souls and civtl priesthood u- spread influence its congregation of Brothers to U S since, Bishops went to Jeru- civil order, is "in basic " spring. The 32 have been given op- clety founding in IW2. have official council status salem to weekend assignments. visit the HMy position to the rights of the parish • Places a human They will teach, preach, bap- tn pilgrimage or- person The four council moderators ganised tire and help distribute Com- by Franciscan Fa- Gergono Cardinal Agagian- thers. THE BISHOP* appealed for munion at Sunday Masses. the understanding of every Creation of a permanent body diaconate was approved by Those who fear and fight the Fathers • at the Second Va- Ceremonies Honor atheistic communism should tican Council Oct. 30 in . ♦ areas also understand us.” the mes- ; * where local Bishops feel it sage said "But very often This necessary. is the first they —with their neo-pagan /A time deacons have been used Blessed Leonardo and materialistic concept of In the St. Louis archdiocese life, with their cries oriented 7/ for these purposes. VATICAN CITY toward economic and social (NC) life to the education of work- The is welcomed Blessed Leonardo Murialdo skeptical and corrosive crit- program ing class youths icism succeed by here who are get- exemplified the Church's con- Present only m un in the basilica were ting an added “assistant" for cern for the still unsatisfied demining confidence in the 4V> members of the Pious So- a few but its and urgent needs of moral resistance and months, primary our so- ciety of St Joseph of Turin. spiritual purpose is to give the future ciety." Paul VI declared rehirth of our people i Pope Italy, which was founded by "So priests greater for st the beattficst»n we feel obliged to preparation ceremony Blessed Leonardo to on say carry a sincere their role, according to Rev. in St. Peter s for the Church's hu work word, so that nobody Turin's mayor had a can accuse Oscar Miller, C.M , of Kenrick newest Blessed The 19th cen- the shepherds of place of honor at the cere- Seminary. tury Italian priest devoted souls of remaining mute \ his mony. . , , "Here it it then The Italian REFERRING to Blessed Bishops remind you that the Leonardo's work with young Work who had of Laymen boys to support them selves and their families at very early ages, the Pope said the Blessed's efforts should Cited Cardinal be "viewed by against the his- toric background of the 19th ROME (NC>—Ernesto Car- make the full effect of Chris- century, which applies in our dinal Ruffini of Palermo, tian teaching fell. century, since it shows us once SALE... more Italy, has stressed the neces- Laymen are vitally needed the social charity of the sity of the work of the in the entire field of Church. lay- labor, be GROUND’ BREAKIN man in five main fields: po- ssid. “With the development of the modem litics, press, education, la- Industry and the con- bor and entertainment. "THE WORKERS are get- lull 40 sequent formation-of a work- inches long from us," "he said. ' handkerchiefs The 73-year-old Cardinal ting away ing and proletarian “We class, the told a can ring our church hell $ press conference here: Church did not issue clamor- l,OOO and hold ceremonies, but ous manifestoes (as did the . “THERE IS NO need to where are the workers? It is of to Irish linen talk of Marxists) promote a sub- pure the legitimacy of the up to laymen to go into fac- That sounds like e lot of money to spend versive emancipation of the lay apostolate. It is more and commercial use- tories, shops and on a snovel. Frankly, it's a very economical ful to its industrial needy suffering workers.” ' discuss necessity. and complexes to price when consider it is Solid instead, the you Sterling "Catholics must have the reach where the clergy can- Pope said, the Silver. Church Yet, it has even greater import be- holy ambition to arrive at a not go, he said. immediately, in the cause it is convincing proof that the "Un- 3- - point where they can help As for entertainment, the person of men such as Blessed 3.00 6 5.50 usual is usual at make laws. Catholics must Cardinal noted that "tele- Leonardo, extended "her lov- always Marsh's." take part in vision is the ing. and political life, not > school of the positive disinterested Whether you seek a Sterling Silver Shovel to conquer by violence but to family," and the need for aid to the sons of the people. to glamorise a ground She breaking ceremony, an legitimately Christian convinced laymen in the surrounded them with bring un- unusual item for Ideal Chrl»tma» Personalized with name your table service, a rare gift*! principles to bear. whole field of the arts is derstanding, affection, educa- gem, or anything different, In he Save for bills—- the place to come or education, said, "the great. tion and love, and the paved monogram In white on white or your is Marsh s. There's another school is sometimes more im- The Cardinal closed the way for their social unusual thing the con- prog about of portant than the Church. Ene- res«." join our 1964 Marsh a .our unusually low pricesl choice color on white. All finest feience by outlining a five- quality mies of the Church begin hy point program as g basis for Pope Paul said the Ohurch Irish attacking the Christinas imported linen. Order now. schools, leaving an effective “speaks Club now! layman's apos- to us of the still un- the churches until later. Mis- tolate: first and liv- satisfied and sionaries foremost, urgent needs of open schools before one’s Faith W*on» or moll orders filled on 3.01 ing morally and on. society. She still exhorts or more building churches." 3 as an example: real and ser- us to give to and Allow to 3 weeks for delivery He ssid man, partic- JCWCLSAS AND SILVERSMITHS SINCC ISOS Catholics should im- ious study of FIDELITY Christian teach- ularly to the man who does itate tiie communists and UNION try ings; profound conviction of manual TMUIT COMPANY n *wa*k Handkerchief!, Street lon labor, paramount con- miusurn floor. Alto ot Orange & Summit to fill chajrs of the philosophy, truth of one's religion; sideration in the and complex pat- ISS-91 Market Street J4J.67 physics medicine in state action rather than *■•**« rp«tl DpMH IMWMM MiUburn Avenue passive tern of economic CwputlM MArkel *nd production J-J770 D8...1 4.7100 private universities to criticism; and lastly love. and social progress." 4 THE AD V 0 C AT E November 7, 1963 Seminarians Drafted Poles Freed NEW Polish After Bishops Denounce Polish Reds Riots CARS WARSAW Attempt (RNS) - Police 9 have released ten of the 60 persons arrested in a re- FINANCED Reds Anti-Church Moves To Starve Out Church cent anti-government demon- stration in southern BERLIN Przcmysl, (NC) - Poland’s THE MESSAGE was drawn where would stop harassing the cate- BLOOMING DALE, Ohio Catholic Prea* Agency, which Poland, a crowd of Per communist regime is continu- at Czestochowa and dated Polish about up chetical centers, and that, (NC)—A priest with a specializes in news of Poland, 3,000 gathered to protest ing its war against the Church the Aug. 28. But it was not dis- perhaps, black- source of information in his also forced closing of an or- YEAR its summonses, reported government ef- despite claim that religious tributed a local to individual priests mail and seizure of personal homeland said Poland's com- forts in various psrts of Po- Catholic monastery. freedom exists in that coun- until October. munist A property would come to an regime is trying to land to destroy religious life. trial of those still under Per try, the Polish Bishops have It that arrest will began by noting Pope end." stamp out religious life by The agency quoted Stefan be held soon. charged In a Joint message to John XXIII's humanitarian ap- “These starvation in some sections. Cardinal The disturbances st *4 $lOO hopes were Wyszynski, their priests. ground- peals for peace and reconcilia- Rev. Marion S. MazgaJ, who of Prtemyal, to new less," the Bishops' message Poland, as saying some according According to reports re- tion to among men persuaded declared. came the U.S. in 1957 and Religious communities have data reaching here, lasted ceived here, the Bishops de- Poland's Red leaders is to mod- now on the at St. been expelled from their three days. UP TO 36 MONTHS TO PAY clared that the Red their John govern- ify fanatically hostile at- THE BISIIOPB added that Vianney Seminary here, homes, including the Capu- It is reported that students ment's anti-Church weapons titude toward the said in the Auto Holy Sec. they did not want to reveal to village of Nowo chins in Nowe Mlasto where demolished some classrooms. (Your Insurance May Be Included) are still Intact and being This situation, they said, the Mtasto all stores were forbid- Uio novitiate News of the students' used. masses of Polish Catholics was destroyed. pro- They accused the com- den created hope among Poland's all the and in- by state authorities to sell The agency also said Church test soon the town's munists of abuses, wrongs reached trying to divide Catholics that would food to a of Fran- citizens “people stances of discrimination, "so community buildings were seized in Czes- and a crowd gathered Bishops from priests, of clos- not be fired ciscan Brothers from their Jobs as not to cause In an effort to tochowa. in the streets to prevent ing minor a wave of in- police seminaries and con- for force them to going to church, that the dignation and anger toward leave. from entering the college and vents. new restrictions placing regime would allow pilgrim- the representatives of the THERE were reports in monastery. on gov- Catholic publications and ages and the construction of “PRACTICALLY ail food Police ernment." Berlin thst the Polish govern- had to use tear using taxes in their (tores belong to the state. And effort to churches and buildings for ment had drafted students of gas to the crowd. They declared: In localities disperse destroy the Church. catechetical that many the fuel of- four instruction, “During the seminaries into the arm- But, the Bishops declared, children in recent days fices have been forbidden to (government-op- last minor ed forces. the government is dis- seminaries in Po- allocate coal to monasteriea moving erated) summer camps would Cardinal BUY and land for boys who in the fu- and he said. Wyszynski, in creetly anonymously in not be forbidden to to Mass churches." order go ture would want to consecrate Father Rome for the Vatican Coun- • Your to prevent an outbreak that MizgaJ said he ... officials of the (gov- Of themselves to the priesthood learned cil, denounced attempts to *nger among the people. ernment) Office of government inspectors Next Worship have been turn the clergy into quietly liquidated." had broken Into a Fcliclan Sis- "chap- Used Cars Also Financed At lains of the of Car Low Rates The buildings of those ters convent, mistreated and party or a cer- tain orientation " schools, they said, have been Insulted the nuns, even invad- political He from advised his become taken over by the govern- ing the privacy of their bed- priests to HUDSON COUNTY NATIONAL BANK martyrs rather than serve tv ment. They also said that rooms. Ine Sisters were told po- BENNER litical ends that conflict with JERSEY CITY there la a threat that buildings if they wanted to continue to Catholicism. RAMBLER of major seminaries will be work and make a living, they SAUf BAYONNE • ll«VIC( WEEHAWKEN seized. must discard their Another report said the mu- Theological studies, religious “*omo (oration oliiro IMT* nicipal authorities . HOBOKEN NORTH BERGEN they said, are being disorgan- garments ami leave the con- in Cracow Hutmua It. ■. IttktfHrt he refused 0« MHI ized by inducting seminarians vent. said. to grant a residence UNION CITY GUTTENBERG BEFORE to On (,'nton Avo, 1 klork ot into the permit a parish priest wort army. •oraon Auto nlf Rout# IN NEW YORK, the Inter- there. IT. Sisters are being deprived AND of work and the means of sup- port they said, adding that AFTER only in very few hospitals have nuns been allowed to re- main. MASTER FLOOR TILE CO. DESPITE TIIE officially voiced claim that freedom of ROUTE 4 (On* religious practice exists in Po- Block East of St. Anna's Church) FAIR urn. land. the Bishops said, “every- LAWN body knows of the formal and unmistakable interdictions and Do you hove a diamond of the threats of all kinds of sanctions directed brooch or eecklace or disciplinary at officers of the regular cocfctoil ring that* o cherished army, at the Citizens' Militia heirloom but outmoded r ud a completely and related services and at eacock in Let ut show how style? you we members of some political or- con transform your old treasure into ganizations. forbidding them Mounting* a to contract Catholic magnificent new engagement ring. mar- We offer riages. baptise their children, a tremendous range of many from go to church or attend relF 20°° as styles, well os expert guidance gious ceremonies. to help you choose the right to the mounting. "Who can count all the chil- many In addition have our you guarantee dren who already at the age of of 10 hundreds complete satisfaction...the highest must pay with sacrifices for quality...thelowest prices. confessing their faith, who when they go to First Holy OPEN A MARCUS ACCOUNT Communion must hide In a distant town, most often with their grandparents, so as not to expose their parents to grave chargee, admonitions or loss No Extra even of work? These are ahcuA facta universally known and Charge for numerous." JEWELERS The message stated that in Creditl all of Poland only five Catho- M f AIK AVt e WUSTit 9 00T9 lic schools remain. Free Gift ■ UlHdrOlO • NJ. It added that the teaching of "S5. ■US Wrappingl !H ST ,«l r HOCtwOOO AVI. catechism to children takes nusiaid run | ciiiiat vsm NACUXSACK • Xjl UOCIWIJOO . AX place In conditions which art Free Delivery! also Nisnttio extremely difficult Children • a i. 8 who attend the catechism v >v\ v v; classes under to off are surveillance, QJI are questioned and their name* filed. ► • ?■? THE MESSAGE complained that Catholics have no acceaa to the radio, television, film or $ theater The Bishops noted that there are strict limita- ion tions placed on the Catholie press v s: Pastoral letters have almost ;v no chance of being printed. The Acts of the Holy Seo—of- S ficial Vatican publication—ar- 1/ rive cut by the censor's scis- sors. -> • The Bishops said they do not question in the least the prin- ciple of taxing the clergy But they stated that the arbitrary Above Acrilan* A Magee'* Harbor View and taxes absurdly high being iHvmw. $lO 95 *q yd. 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• OPBH MON. Till • LINOLEUM • RUGS The National Bank Pork Right At The Door Edgewater THRU PRI. 'TIL ♦ IDGEWATER, N. J PJR. ROUTE 4 & 17th WH 3-0110 SAT. *TIL t STREET, FAIR LAWN - SW 7-5414 OPEN « DAILY A.M. TO 3 P.M. - MONDAY EVENINOS « TO I P.M. CLOUD SUNDAY UM*r M. AmiT Court*) Mawbar radical Papoatt laauyaitci Corp.-radaral Baaarva lyaUm • M yaaxa at UntaUmipCad Pragma aat earvtai UN Action Reflects November 7, 196S THE AD V O C ATE 5 Race Bias Concern Warns of Violence

ALBA ZIZZAMIA By ernments are called upon to In Racial take Problem necessary legislative a- UNITED NATIONS, NY. tion to or to combat prohibit MINNEAPOLIS _ (NC)—The importance of get- (NC) A he were white "has lo*t hit racial prejudice and the UN rid of all racial discrimi- Negro priest aaid here that the sense of ting and dignity," Father Riv- specialized agencies are to nation is intensely and urgent- key problem in the racial ers said. Segregation has de- do "all in their power" to pro- crisis is this: "Can we answer ferred ly felt on an international his dreams for too long mote energetic action. enough needs of the level. This was clearly brought Negro a time, he added. out in the UN General As- soon enbugh to prevent wide- GETTING 111 NATIONS to He said the facts of segre- spread violence?" •embly’s Social Committee, on how best gation have filled agree to achieve "Violence some No- during the long debate which the la very piobably aim of the declaration groes with hatred, and they the next step, and wo must preceded its adoption of the throughout the world seemed seek expression in groups like work as fast as Declaration on the Elimination at possible to the Black times something of an inter- Muslims, *‘a small of Discrimination. remove the fuse before the national headache. but significant and frightening The declaration has bomb goes off," laid Rev. to go U.S. candor in describing its movement.” Clarence Rivers in a talk at the before a plenary session of the racial problems and the meas- Other Negroes are apathetic, for final Minneapolis Catholic Youth Assembly approval. ures being taken to solve them he said, and, "while DEMONSTRATE Center. A native of they seem FOR JUSTICE - Selma, was highly how- RACIAL An unprecedented to offer no to DISCUSSION appreciated, Here a group of and are Ala danger the coun- OF the docu- demonstration priests laymen shown singing . Father Rivers has served e'er. Several delegates paid by Catholics protesting racial discrimin- try, their peace is ment also reflected a hymns before the Civil Courts at two parishes in Cincinnati deceptive,” general tribute to U.S. ation in St. Louis attended city’s Building. The paper for governmental was by tome 500 they are a "drag on tha confidence on the part of UN persons, in- cups held by most were used to shield candles and is now doing graduate policies in contrast to those of 50 and 50 used dur- vitality of the nation." cluding priests nuns representing seven orders. work delegates in the moral force a ing a four-block processions. at the Catholic Univer- South Africa. The hope of the UN statement has in achieving sity of America in Washington, nation, The South African delegation Father Rivers lies respect for a moral principle. and DC. said, with did not participate in the dis- Race another Differing concepts of free- Religion group, those "who art cussion on the ground that the "THE as determined to dom and specific language NEGRO, any man. rebuild our bro- text was being drafted with Is a dreamer,' 1 he stated, "and ken society with love.” Tha variations with respect to one "one two or specific in- he hopes for success. Rut if Student Nonviolent provision in the declaration, Are Coordinat- stances" in mind and could be Divisions a man's dreams however, accounted for Negro-White are deferred ing Committee, the Congress 17 ab- used Widening? too as a political can die: stentions in the 89-6 weapon long, hope and of Racial Kquality and the vote. ROCHESTER. N. Y - A against certain countries other ployment discrimination was when a man to public confession that no longer hopes, Southern Christian Leadership The declaration condemns than South Vfrica six-point summation of a re- felt to be we as well. a matter of indivi- Catholic March have sinned In the anything can happen" Conference are some outward •11 discrimination based on ligion and race conference dual pride of action rather than com- race." The Negro who has arrived of this color ethnic THE held here reflected expressions group, ha race, or CONTROVERSIAL - origin as ar- a growing pany policy. ST. LOUIS (NC) More at the stage where he wishes said. * an offense against human dig- ticle in the declaration deals pessimism over the effective- than SCO Catholics whites • Realtors called for more nity, a denial of the principles with propaganda and organiza- ness to far of the civil and Han rights communication between their Negroes, priests, religious Scftreftation of the UN violation tions based on theories of ra- struggle. Charter, a members and and laymrri took part in a clergymen. One RICHMOND. Va. (NC) - A Catholic Interracial of the Universal Declaration of cial superiority. Differences of The summary referred to civil march Meet member of toe housing panel, candlelight rights federal court has ruled 3-2 that Human arose over Rights, and an obsta- opinion the provi- an "admission of failure" on here stressing that it waa his own private hospitals seeking fed- cle to friendly relations. sion that those organizations the part of clergymen in The demonstrators, each To Feature opinion, said the non eral construction 24 The freedom "which promote racial discri- white funds must Workshops from racial reaching their parishioners on carrying a lighted candle, bias mination housing situation had grown desegregate their facilities. in civil rights, housing, or incite, to or use the subject, and said that marched the three blocks from WASHINGTON, DC. (RNS) ties; Dennis Clark, Phila- worse recently. The U. S. employment, public violence for the purpose of Negro-white divisions St John the Church Court of Appeals Twenty-four workshops and Council for Commun- facilities, are get- Apostle to for delphia discrimination • Law enforcement the Fourth Circuit hekl at education, civil sendee, public ..." should be ting wider- panel- the Civil Courts building sing- that clinics will be featured the ity Advancement; Dwight ist* saw the need a and prosecuted and or outlawed. for con- "separate but equal" annual convention of the Na- Macdonald. office, religion is outlined Tlie conference was pat- ing hymns and praying the Ro- provi- New Yorker mag- In II articles. The tinuous contacts between law sion of the Hill-Burton hospital tional Catholie Conference for and Eli importance The U.S and most Western terned after the national con- sary atine; Ginzberg, econ- of and information nations ference enforcement agencies and construction act violates tlie Interracial Justice to be held omist .of Columbia teaching in object to the phrase on religion and race It was the first specifically University. minority groups to promote equal protection here Nov. 14-17. combating racial prejudice "promote racial discrimina- held this year in Chicago. Catholic civil rights demon- provisions of Several sessions will be held and understanding of the the ith and T4th Amendments with the the protection of minori- tion" m this article They purposes stration here and the Theme of the convention is Episcopal Society for THE of the agencies to the ties are also written maintain SUMMATION made Constitution. Race and Cultural and Racial into the it opens the door to first time priests and nuns "Poverty, Religion: Unity, document. reference is if these points at the conclusion • The social agencies The Catholic Com- meeting Special repression freedom •of panel had taken part in a local rights case involved two pri- Challenge to a simultaneously at tha made need of a day long detected International Inn to the to eliminate speech and assembly. workshop pro- a feeling of resent- demonstration vate hospitals in Greensboro, munity." gram: ment The National apartheid (the absolute segre- among who be- At the courts N C. It was Catholic Con- Mrs Jane Warner Dick of building the brought by a THE FIVE main gationism • The clergy in general line whites speakers ference for as promoted by the the US. that seeking to help marcher* recited St Francis* group of Negroes aided by the Interracial Justice explained it is are: Rev. Tee should mske a public admis- them treat Wyatt Walker, serves 43 member Republic of South Africa.). not possible under U S. Negroes as "spe- prayer for peace anti heard National Association for councils law to " the executive director, Southern States sion of fsilure to direct their cial cases It across the Tha may not “encourage, was frit this a law at St Louis Advancement of Colored country. con- prosecute persons or groups professor Peo- Christian advocate lend congregations towards the artificial Leadership Confer- ference served as or ... support, for “patronizing" atti- L'tmrrsity deliver a statement The Justice the or- their opinions, but only for ple Department in- "right attitude on rencr; M*gr Raymond J Gal- ganizer for through police action or other- the racial tude would disappear as race "as the National Con- their acts. British Common- on their behalf Catholics tervened in the case on behalf issue " laghrr, secretary. National wise. to relations are normaiued ference on Religion and Raca any discrimination.” wealth countries and whose consciences call them of the Negroes. several • Conference of Catholic the declaration affirms. Gov- The civie life panel Cbari: held in Chicago last January. others had similar constitu- sensed that "the gap (between tional difficulties, while one of the white and non-white com- the Arab delegations held that munities) is getting wider and Priest the phrase was to Negro open mis- that lines " chievous are hardening The political interpreta- Negro community was report- Shop Compare.. Prove it to tion and exploitation Yourself ed to feel "great dissatisfac- Bias The distinction Charges was either tion" with the rate of PLUS not progress understood or not SAN accepted in improving relations between FRANCISCO - A Ne- by most of the Africans and the races. gro priest said this week that Asians. to According some del- • A trend toward a segregated "Negro Catholic increased egates. the promotion of racial of Church" exists in the hiring qualified non whites, today prejudice is as punishable by with specific orders "from South in which Negroes are law the union, as the RICES distribution of top" in BheStamps por- some cases for segregated by parish or by calling nographic literature—both poi- of i SUPERMARKETS] pews. hiring Negroes, was seen •oo the mind. the He said that members of his by industry panel Em- race are treated as "second class Catholics” and that he. Mix or Match 'em! Your a Negro priest, is regarded as Favorite a "second class Christ." the place SAVE MORE with THE ALLEGATIONS were these made in a symposium on “The ARE Low and the for year ’round vacations Everyday Prices! Negro White Con- I science" in the November is- HERE of sue Ramparts magazine. AGAIN! The symposium was strongly FLOUR 5 i, 41« critical of the attitudes of both 8 Protestant and Catholic Day-7 Night SHORTENING 3t77' churches towards the national crisis in Tours race relations. Package PEANUTS*” 3- ’l" The Negro priest. Rev. August Thompson of Ferriday, Available PANCAKE FLOUR * 37'. La . gave these examples of >lOO XPFlesauce 3 s ehurch segregation: Pineapple] 4 £ l°° OOROX —36' • His sister "had to leave PLAN IT the NOW! fc'OCKTAIL JUICE SLICED South” for her nursing 3 £*loo PEAMrI ■ALVTS 4 u£ studies *ioo CHICKEN SOUP 6'-99* because "no Catholic Thinking about going to Ber- in hospital the South wquld muda? Then by alt means fktllT DRINKS 3 £4OO $ ” get take her for a free Sardine's s^r PEACHES 3 “*-87' training copy of “A Key to 4 l°° • He is "rarely invited” to Bermuda.’* ED CHICKEN WHO LX do anything with white 3»w$100 PRUNE priests. MShrooms SLICED 4iwsloo JUICE a 39* This colorful and uvun • Negro Catholics are gen- informative lolder erally expected to attend "Ne- contains an excellent COFFEE “ of the 65' gro Churches." In some dio- map Islands, and over- ceses flows if a Negro misses Sun- with helpful hints on Mass —IN 2 i *l** day in the Negro Church clothing, shopping, customs, SOUPTvS"6^I®O JES s COjTEE he then "is , 8 £ l°° under no obliga- duty, transportation, thingsto tion PEAS & FACIAL TISSUE 2r5.49' to attend Mass if that see and do. CARROTS Sauerkraut Uni means going into a white 61 AMT We’ll ehurch." gladly send you one of r* CUT WAX $ M HANKIES 3.-t.23' these useful folders or, if BEANS 'SSS 6^ 1 d6°g • When Negroes can attend you food prefer, 8 £*i°° • "white’' Catholic stop in, pick one up, table NAPKINS 2 a 27* church, and J M have let us plan your Spaghetti they to ait in a special help you “ssssk" 6 I §uce¥beets ml back trip. 8 *ioo section and can only ap- Sandwich Bags 25t,39' proach the Communion rail Awwitw, your "Nay" A x lhulk after all the whites have PLUMP FRESH DRE! re- ,a H today. J* TOILErriSSUE 4-39* turned to their seats. 'JA 25 SPLIT "There are Catholic J°S- M. BYRNE QUARTERED CO- SCOTTISSUE 4 - ehurcbes WHOLE 45* and church activities Travel Service CUT-UP where I am not allowed now Broad All al One PAPER TOWELS .where 828 St Market Low Price 2*33' . . I 3-1740 Newark 2, cannot say a N. J. CHICKENS scheduled Maas," he said. Serving the Since 29 Public _ 188S” rAJfCT MEDIUM SCOTTOWELS WHITE SHRIMP STEAKS SLICEDBACON *ss' WAXED PAPER 2*49* enco rest SEAMLESS M* STEM AA. mnuu ALUMINUM SIDING V BEEF LIVER „49' 69 LOD»)UO(im^QH criscooil l-36' SUKDMEATS 3~-‘l MAZOLAOIL . a 63' mrsj THE CHICKEN PARTS SKINLESSFRANKS .55' SALAD OIL *69* flounderrmn „69c l LOOK SAUSAGE ua c c .69' SALADDRESSING ss4* LITTLE NECKS THAT 2_B9‘ :45 -i55 UVERWURST *SF .49' MAYONNAISE s IPi c k-of-1he~('rop Proriuce!} 67' LASTS... COLDCN RIPC TOMATO Catsup 2* 35*

u M mm? ■** ~ «~m» CORN 6?a'l ... C„!” "“fjsjuj* lit BANANAS 2-25' I GREEN BEANS 2-29' P ' *' p** T# h . l ,r’ “"« •» « p-.iH.. Iq.li rti.t 1..t,| PEAS_ 5 £97' v " whh a.v xm *"** c M LETTUCE c TOMATO JUICE 4£*1 >10 IciTRUS SALADS? s59 lwAl.mrrS THT X49‘ IMMEDIATE INSTALLATION KETCHUP 2*45' 20x30x1 AVERAGE HOME DAIRY FIATURISI FROZIH FUTURES! DRYMILK 7 565 Nancy Lynn Baked Goods! s-*F YEARS FINANCING AVAILABLE nuiumu *37 CREAM PEANUT Aluminum - PIES BUTTER —39* Siding Roofing - mun maxb 3:*‘l* PIE Dura-Colo, Siding - Storm Window. IAPPLE BABY GOUDA *4s' STRAWBERRIES *4s' PEANUT BUTTER £67* UPRIGHT REMODELERS ss UEDERKRANZ HAWAIIAN PUNCH 3*49' MU GRAPE JELLY “■.-39' A will call *39* at no coil or obllßolion . , . BABY LIMAS 6*9S C RAISIN BREAD -25' ROMANOCHEESE WIU4IAT STRAWBERRY69* 24 Hour Phon. *43* | Strvlc. Phont Collpct TU 7-0145 CREAMSPINACH *29' CMTEECAKE .39* MARGARINE 2it PORpSALUT WEDGE *37* 49* 70 T.OY HJU >O. PIZZA PIE WHIPPANY NO. DAY —s9' GOLDLAYER ST.. OfIANQE . 0. «7T .69* »* **■ i ■ H DISINFECTANT -79* of Tti. Chomtw of CommwM of Th. Otang.i T II E T E 6 AD VTTiTA November 7, 1963 The Future Catholic And He Did! Question Box Image Is Church There is no doubt about it the laity in worship, Communion under two Against II Vatican Ecumenical Council, especially spocies, were brushed aside. in its second session now in progress, is It is evident that from the pontifi- drastically altering the Catholic Church’s Co-Education? cates of Pius XII and John XXIII anew world image. A writer in a recent issue has dawned. Without in R»v. I*o of “Time” era, any way Parity, S.T.D., and Rev. Robert-Hunt, S.T.D.. has gone so far as to assert of compromising our Catholic loyalty, we Immaculate Conception Seminary, that we do Darlington, Ramiey, N.J today not even belong to the now editort , view non-Catholic Christians not as are of The Question Box. Questions may be addressed same Church that was headed by Pius mere heretics or to them there schismatics, but rather for answert in this column, or to Question Boss Xll. That is patently absurd, of course, as Editor, The Advocate, 31 Clinton "separated brethren.” We now are St., Newark 2, N.J. yet it covers an underlying truth: the convinced of the even advantage, the Q. My question has to under the do tivities available to Church, leadership of the Pope of in with modern necessity, joining dialogue with fel- the separation of the youth? and Bishops, is swiftly and surely "up- low-Christians. (exes in the high schools re- dating” itself. cently contracted under the THE ARCHDIOCESE of THE DAY-BY-DAY news dispatches Archdiocesan Development Newark and the Diocese of FOR FOUR CENTURIES Catholics from Vatican City reveal an admirable de- Fund. Why docs the Church Paterson boast of more than have been in the insist upon separate schools 20 co-oducational schools living post-Tridentine sire among the council Fathers to de-em- high era. The 16th or separate * clear indication that century Council of Trent phasize differences to buildings or sep- th« among Christians, Church's succeeded in the erate classrooms for bovs and attitude in this mat- bringing Reformation underline all that we have in common. girls ter is not movement to of high school age? Docs Intransgient. On the a halt; it reformed, re-or- Such an other approach is essential in an age she really believe that meas- hand, the recent erec- ganized and consolidated the Church tion when atheism and materialism arc the ures such as this will prevent of three co-institutional from within. Catholics high schools this were effectively enemies of us all. steady-dating and other re- involves an lated separate instruction gathered into impregnable fortress, While it is too to problems? Actually, but the yet early attempt uk at which doesn't such an arrangement 1 different times of com- protected them from the further to assess the achievements of the present mon facilities, such Infiltration of those only aggravate the problem as the who were bent on council, there is little doubt that it prom- by hindering a boy or girl in cafeteria, the library. th« destroying the unity of Christ’s Church. ises to usher in an entirely new era in establishing a sound social re- gymnasium, etc indicates Trent’s influence also had its Ihe a genuine effort to nega- Church’s history-. The new post-Vati- lationship nth members of provide a side. Ic?s isolated tive and the opposite sex? I would ap- climate for Individuality originality had can II era well be an boys may age which will and at times to be preciate an answer as there girls while si the same sacrificed in the interests see strong foundations of Christian re- time of Is much discussion about the minimizing the opportun- uniformity. Ideas proposed by the union laid. It will certainly accomplish a matter. ities for mutual distraction Protestant as Reformers, such a vernacu- new and spirit of charity and understanding A The question of co-edu- temptation Which brings lar liturgy, closer participation of the us to the second throughout all Christendom. cation at the secondary school question Does the Chureh level it as complex as it is really be- lieve that separate schools or controversial Its complexity Death by stems in part from the fact co-institutional schools will prevent steady-dating and Drugs that it is not merely a moral issue, other related problems We The incredible in but a pedagogical one growth drug addic- can appreciate the comment of Commis- will understand "other related a > well Some educators who tion throughout this area as evidenced sioner problems" to mean not mere- Anslinger of the Federal Narcotics entertain absolutely no moral by moral difficulties newspaper surveys and police reports Bureau: “If 1 had the whole about ro-educatjonal ly but ped- army, navy scruples should agogical difficulties as well. prod thinking citizens into action. high schools, none the less and air force at my disposition 24-hours The answer to this question, Public a strenuously oppose them on • apathy regarding this prob- day, I could not dam the tide of of is dope the grounds tha* conflict course, no At present, lem stems from failure to realize that into they the flowing this the best that can be hoped country.” with sound teaching prin- narcotics business costs the citizens mil- for Is that these ciples This u a point worth youngsters lions and WHY DOES the drug loom will be half that illegal gambling consti- problem keeping in mind given a chance so tutes menacingly all of a sudden in our older until such time as and a source of money to the parents supply WHY DOES THE itself heads of the cities? Possibly broken homes, wretched Church society assume their full dope trade. The public fails Insist slums upon the separation of responsibilities in the matter. to realize that the addict contribute; then members of minor- will do any- the sexes in high school? The ity groups, whose lives are IN THE FINAL analysis, thing for tho price of a “f|x" The circumscribed antwer is simply that she One Valid the burden by Position of seems still unbelievable fact discrimination, frustration, Only docs not insist. As best proof is that the cost of a emptiness we to rest with the proponents at ‘ are Into so at can determine, the fix” varies from or $l5 pressured drugs that, least official $lO a day to co-education to of the Church is Whether due a sometimes, they can get from it position as $l2O day for heroin users! away all. difficulties inherent in the W On follows Whereser and when- hat can be done about un- these Equal system itself, or to ex- An experienced judge observed: “If Rights Question eser Catholic coeducational merely fortunates’ trinsic factors such as the they take pills or high schools arc deemed nec- marijuana, sooner or By REV. ANDREW M. GREEI.EY general Narcotics is a profit business; take school administrators breakdown at parent- later are to a essary, - they going try cap of hero- al and social to- the profit out of and the It doe* not teem at are to exercise responsibility in.” And once dope pusher will possible vantages of racist support ht« followers proportionate- “hooked,” the fear of sud- !y) might turn ward our co-edu- this tuge of our nation's his- ly greater in youth. > disappear. Possibly making drugs avail- then he must run the nak of vigilance safe- den death from a “hot bag” —ashot the government and cauonai high schools, we feel, of tory that race could become the able to certified addicts will solve bving tarred with the racist the election guarding morals of uncut heroin the system tn a fash have yet to demonstrate their doesn’t deter the addict a major issue in a presidential brush. the students problem and a ion that Would not remove menace from the hate been superiority over separate or from muggings and murder. One election Yet religion was a W> will victim streets. A choice • Thu* without either side poitibie if thrsr feelings presume that the of hospital treatment in major issue in the last rise- had co-institutional ones summed it all well: “Once vou not has sufficient up start, particularly wishing it, the bom stirred by an emo-, good Co-education lieu of a term will tioo. and there it undoubtedly prison remove the every rea- rare wii| and to you’re through You either die of question would be out in Uonally intelligence see disease! son ie think charged campaign bases itself upon a more stigma of "criminal" and offer the that the race the her® something op- a or hope open as a major issue in The way to more than a get shot by cop. die of an overdose' wiU be a only avoid this timistic view of the of of eventual question latent issue the election "remnant of Victorian abibty ” rehabilitation would be for both punts There’s nothing else Certainly par- in the next oar national adolescents adequately to n.*m *nd " ents should the U a with parties and all to prudtshnrss Ji appreciate dangers of At this point, however, it candidate Implicit candidates cope with the dangers and That’s an individual used to be to picture mul- racist were to an make it clear that no matter quite "posh'' distractions drugs and exercise extreme over does not that it support win inherent in a con- vigilance appear likely dismiss the Church’s tiply it several thousand times and their could affect election, « would be the end •ho wms the election there altitude tinuing association of the you teenagers. the outcome in toward <»< all *>ll be a strong, sex as "medieval" or any but the southern states. moderate leadership nationally en- sexes However, in terms of forced to to A of among the Negroes Even civil rights "sm-centered"; susenbe summer racial trouble a program. today's sex conscious society, ctoae contest Conservatism this caricature to Father Ciszek’s Ordeal hat not lowered the »<*4d seriously it surely a today is where youngsters have notably leg- no threaten the itimate write oneself down presidenUal level position of the politieal posture ;n as an ass. more of their popularity the V understanding Negro moderate*. S But on equal Me, “They didn’t.even bend me!” These At that time word outside of the south. rights in turn, will evidence sexuality than they have of came through that he foe all Americans, words a Race does not to there can our good will by not Einstein's spoken by priest are the words was teem be ON THE branding thrones. and in Siberia a OTHER if be serving 25-year gentence hand, neither a < onsets alive those In favor of a modem so salient m the minds of curb noc of co-education where parental authority and Magnificat. They are a for a candidate were to be a liberal espionage. most position, but an ai schools northerners as to be the only high as naive or control hat been reduced to proclamation not of human daetstvely beaten (as tt Lke- American strength but From decisive one worse that moment on. those who re- factor la determining yet. simply uncon- pure permissiveness one of the may power and endurance of the their vote cerned about the moral grace membered hitp wondered what time and Thus, race is qn- prob- legitimately question whether of God. Tho first Magnificat sang of likely to be so crucial at to The Press Box lems of adolescents the circumstance had done to crush optimism Is well founded him. to the election might of God and of the great He swing one w»y or Intelligent exponent* of The continued construction things brutalize him. to him. No destroy one soother except in an elec- either of had wrought in a humble viewpoint separate separate or co-institutional woman. This aware of the deviltries of as seen tion which was tyrants already close school* schools is nothing than second Magnificat reaffirms the vs co education—have more contin- in the of bectuse of ether reasons The Antidote breaking Cardinal Mindzentv enough of this question translated into uing might of God and the understanding greatness still could adolescent brick mortar. have hoped that thia priest would WHILE THE psychology to ap and achieved in mankind. race question preserve his and his prre ate the fact that spirit faith, and the may not be decisive m the they idealism that had election, it could To grip a two-edged sword. Those FATHER CISZEK is the latest sent him into the priest- nevertheless con- m of introduce sn Prejudice charge irparate schools of hood so before. clement of ugh- firmation the power of God to animate many years JOSEPH for nevs in the rampatgn which By R. THOMAS example. xre generally Tix.AdvMoate men to to The fear and the concern greatness, nobility, to unbe- were could do grave harm to Amer- Managing Editor well i*ire of the problem* in- erased with the Official Publication lieveable perseverance. It took simple words, “They did ican society All of herent m thr isolation of the of ths courage tu. white ltd Negro, you You’re here and in 1937. not even bend me.” No candidate for there * sexes during these formstive Archdiocese of Newark and of for Walter Ciszek to major na- w *r* somewhat nervous volunteer about nothing they can do about it the Diocese tional office could afford to it years. of Paterson. for the Eastern Rite and for at first. We whites who had live priestly work THIS except with It, but Pvßiiamd Adiwala SIMPLE sentence Is encour- run on a racist Ucket It is they As the questioner in- «***!> hj TW accepted imitation* to mu in tjte forgotten and perilous lands won t hxve anything to do with torparito. Mnrt Km. of obviouv that of the dicate*. it l* important that A 0 agement for the none men HoUw*. ST . I-Tim—l downhearted. It Is con- Negro familie* m their home* eastern you socially. Kl R*< 14 The of the Priest- Who are sound social M- Jinvi * lluln. PX. Europe. grace fidence for the doubtful: being discussed as didn't know to relationship* be JCI>. Vice It is hope for what expect. Some few will welcome VC. Pravdmi. IU Km. hood of Jesus Christ you established between adoles- **«ft Jim l Umi. PJV. VIS. within him sent the prrsidenUst candidates are We were worried that dispairing. It means that an individual we will defend right*, **'<•**■». m K». Mur Pul Hus racists your will cent* of hint to follow men into the Nonetheless, a can- weuld to be opposite >ex. It is, pr*. PA . Twit* II Otatm SC. dangerland of can stand the appear patron- accept you and Smart against power of the State. didate might find it dif- socially m to- moreover, partly the J. S J MlrXrt sent. communism much that very ise While *e had respun Wrmter al as same grace It means that the ficult been tality. lt> i *um* Pr»»a la* dark of the to avnid being sibtlity of educator* to see nauaa and um taiaraatMeal t «4 sent the first dampness captured aaked beforehand to be frank mac priests, the l»a IlIMt Prru Si.h-'r-.htf la Apostles, Lubenka cannot corrode by the raciat feelings which Bl'T that these sC W S—S Vok* individual in- In our discussion* of inter- WklT, there U an en- relationship* I and Rtluwae throughout hostile pagan lands. lie just beneath the surface of are established. S,-«» s*»»tra tegrity. It means that from racial problems —and couraging word, a of Kd siviil Ik ird *|» Mama isolation hu- American to ray light, Rtv W’ithin three he had society after » sti-hi, sir*. PSD.. Mm Km. years, vanished. man resources atick to that we all Those few are in- docs not a man of topic were The crux of the matter is Soda J STL. SAD: KL In seven deprive It is clear enough that tvwjsntt. years, he was presumed dead the apprehensive lest we offend. creasing faster than manv Slur Wi*!i»m C. Hauaborai strength that comes from God alone. whether, in fact, separate Ki ■ny Republican candidate of ua H», M..| by his and the realize. The ranks of the Rt family by Society of Jesus It means that the whose stand THE NEGRO school* are incompatible with Hr- M>*i Hot* > I'iuwmmom. God of the Magnificat oo chril right* families. I'm hateti MR. Im Mi. M. to which he are thinning, dim- lu> TBamaa belonged. Then there was wa* as this goal. Simply to answer in IWardiM. Ll. B Vt«i Km Macr. Wo- can still transform stropf »* that of the sure, suffered the same inished humanity into some- by their own vehe- Bam N fVld. MLS . Rat William J. silence for another administration would doubts the negative is to ignore the eight years until 1955. sublime. have no After Bob and Vera mence and Part*. STL. Kn Juki W, OTMUi thing bigoted preaching* K.t W ,nt K.'-.f. . appeal in the south. Lambdin and I know many opportunities for social AM sT Ll got to Their outbursts and blatant K»> ruiwi 1 Hooctium. STL If intercourse and collaboration a candidate could equivo- Polly Walton and her husband. tlirdm Dtrartw Hi fm. M,(T. disregarded for decency are Mia J Kilct between the sexes outside cate on the civil right* John, she confided' of P*t.t»«i ques- to us that stirring the indifferent out Vary Km. of Mir tion (and at Uu* writing thero ahe worried whether school time Need we list hi , ■.» 3 H "i-n-Mt to sene their M.naeinc Mu* R Ttwmac. is definite complacency. the a no sign that any drinks or not She and John innumerable community, Mrnitaa l*nr« *4 SO >*atly Our candidate If the mast of whites could church, Smaad Ilia mun paid at NnuX Lord fact, do sc- will, in didn’t want to do school-sponsored «"<*« Continues anything that come to art « Mat ». IST* thia) know the Negroes to such an extent that be might construed m any way the south would be people like the Waltons and persuaded a reflection as on their race. the others who that he was a real opened their alternative she “But," said, "when wc homes to white U> the present administration, visitors if To have company wc make Work a could Ulk Our Parish Miracles he would probably also find they lo them, see drink or two for those who how these substantial in the people live, how support want them. So we derided to they are north especially among attempting to raise By FRANK J. SHEED be ourselves and'trVat like their those members of the white you race, how and why they With Capharnaum Hla lower •company' so you would feel are determined to take aa asked. middle class who art their at Our Lord commentators puzzle ns, too. home." place in headquarters, apent Our Lord le frightened by the Negro pro- society now, how their the nine ssys: "Where Their concern is with the months or ao that your faith?" Then- test movement. In truth, we felt "at home" determination has been remained of IIU having property rights God was In- within five minutes hardened purely Gali- first rebuked «be Twelve for of ar- by the tragedy of lean fringing. One has even seen IK THIS course were to ministry. be riving. And we felt more "at Birmingham, then in want of trust "He rebuked calculations progress of the value of followed, the administration home race What matters the - ’ when it came time to relations would be most to us in wind and said to the in surely sea, 2,000 pigs that time and would certainly attempt to leave three hours speeded. The thia period Is the miracle- Peace, be And it later after Negro would be stll}." was place, showing how cut its tosses by able the teaching, and the •till. gross suggesting a friendly visit. to see the end of the road working, was the injustice done that the was to the opponent running he is now effect Our Lord produced traveling. owners. on a race hatred ticket. It THERE WAS only one dis- friends and they LANDED on ' the Knowledge is the best anti- upon enemies. God's would side of act, of course, be argued that if a can- couraging moment And 1 dote the lake, where they needy sup- lo fear and prejudice no Ho had didate were to the ad- pose Boh and Vera and I VERY Boas after the Ser- were met by a demoniac. defending: created enjoy that kind of that all knew it knowledge Our lx>rd thingi out of nothing in- coming. It came comes with mon on the we find ordered the de- personal contact Mount, both when Walton mons out eluding the pigs and their I'olly aaked us And when Him raising a young man of the man, and they with conversation owners blank: "How went. —and might do what For Vocations point do white are to from death to life, because But they made a most you made feel "like com- He willed with His folks hereabouts, in the North, He was moved with to- curious request that own. This, Members pany," color loses its Hallo- mercy of the Aposto- feel about ua?" wards lie should not send them back obscurely at least, the owners really ween face and bis mother, a widow of late for Vocations can gain reveals the "into the felt whet, the herdsmen told Momentarily there was the heroic Naim, a small abyss," but should true character of a place eight them a plenary under temptation to be peo- miles from send them into herd what had happened. overly en- ple. Nazareth. Six a of pigs the ordinary conditions on: There no talk couraging; to say the months later on a was of prosecu- hopeful He raised to life feeding slope near by. It Nov. 9, Dedication of the word that tion. He was reassures the alck the daughter of JairuS. Just looks as though the demons simply asked He Archbasilica of Our Sav- for instance. before the found would please go away. man, But we had second of these anything preferable to ior been November The whole town feared He asked to be frank. And Intentions miracles three others going home to hell —a re- And occur do once a week, for re- the Waltons The minder that might it again « or some- obviously wanted Holy Father’! we must hell is aU hatred. general upon which pause. citing dally, with piety, any us be thing even worse to frank, not so inlention for November is: perhaps. for they He was crossing the Lake of OUR Lord Theirs is prayer vocations ap- could stoke the fires of bit- That let them do the only fully com- the degrees of the Galilee, dead in what proved by-the ecclesiastical terness but tired, asleep they asked. They entered prehensible reaction in the so they could know council may be • willingly the boat. A of hurricane into authority. the gale the pigs who hurtled down whole affair. Lot the divine problems they, their chil- observed by clergy »nd blew A partial Indulgence of force down from the the aa dren and their race slope one pig, and were power be exhibited. Indeed, 300 must laity. and the days may be gained mountains, Apostles drowned in the lake. So brief but at someone overcome. The mission rec- else's ex- Intention would for each act of char- So told were convinced the ship a reprieve did the demons ob- pense. wc them: Many ommended to the Apostle- sink. Since the ity or piety performed whites hate storm iUelf did tain. They had to go home, The you because they ship of Prayer by the Pope principal problem re- for the intention of foster- not wake Our Lord, they woke after all. fear you They don't want to Is mains not Our Lord's right ing vocations to the Him themselves. "Don't The priest- work with When The of the you demons puzzle us. The to do what you. you spread Gospel He did, but Ilia hood. In care if we all drown?" Some of move In, they'll move out. Oceania. they pigi puzzle us. the reason for doing it. Many others simply tolerate "I think teacher is stuck again." God LoveYou November 7, 1963 TBI A DT- O C ATI 7 Letters to the Editor Your World and Mine Two Classes Ths neme end eddrest the of writer must be Included in p Ullef intended for publication, but tbey will be withheld if requeued. Odd Words , Big Stories Of Bishops at 31 Clinton U. S. St., Newark, ’ By BISHOP FULTON J. SHEEN From the Vatican Council Policy compared with the ultra-mod- Msgr. Higgins ROME ern, multimillion dollar class- As one alts in the driven the are now by Spirit By GARY MacEOIN council and looks out In Vietnam room and dormitory buildings Critic over the to help carry the burden of Explains 2,500 rising on all of the state col- Bishops, one sees many the Christ in the . ROME Readers don't like cr divided them into Editor: Editor: Mystical ordinary lessly, and not be blocked in and state ways in which they bo Church. words that slow them down In and the lege university cam- To may extraordinary, latter his proper use of it. Cardinal Cushing once said the long list of distinc- divided color, their puses. by by race, What a great Church we will daily dash through the being special gifts needed by something to the effect that to tions that Msgr. George G. nation, The practical problem, of We read a few days ago of by liut if one views be in the future through this news. And the Vatican Coun- the infant Church but super- claims for course, is to fight communism was a sure the Higgins our secular them through the cil has fluous distinguish a legal action against St. prism of sharing with the poor! You produced many such: once it was esta- true charism way of getting hurt—to be ef- labor unions he now adds that poverty from self-delu- Mary's schools in Rutherford in the world, they fall can this collegiality, sacra- blished. Such would be the fective they have been with practice new spirit mystery, sion. The problem is indeed in the fight was a equated into two classes: because their lack of area the Bishops now mentality, hermeneutics, ecu- personal each play by helping these poor infallibility because automa- guarantee of being hurt badly. Christian and Catholic unions, who have 'drives" practical, no obliged them to use the public and the Bishops who hold out empty menism. apostle is believed to have en- tic The Cardinal was to by Pope John himself. The way is known. Modern referring streets, allegedly in violation Bishops who are "beggars." hands at the council. But a hundred expressions joyed. and the inspiration the situation in the U.S. proof of that statement he daily practice has been to solva Ap- The first are to of state law. group, when it wants Send your sacrifices to the So- today common-place that granted Scripture authors. parently this is true wherever finds in Mater et Magistra. the difficulty, first by soft- We to build a $3 million few had heard IJ.S. know why Catholic par- cathedral, ciety for the Propagation of even twenty But gradually Catholics come the influence is strong, e.g., And because his interpretation pedaling entire subject, ents are the sets the machinery of a drive years ago, from fission and to think of charisms as some- "pounding on has been he cites the Faith, then the char- Vietnam. . . by subjecting doors" questioned, in motion and the fall-out to sound for admission of their goal is over- barrier, thing historical, with no rele- ism to the Onr fiduciary relationship as proof. "Some Reflections on GOD LOVE YOU C G. for previous judgment children to parish subscribed. to space capsule and weightless- vance today. with the Diem schools, but Materiel written of the Church authorities, so government Magistra.” The $500: "I have sold ness. So It looks it is not because our parish other Bishops, from mis- Just my like we’ll that action provided the means to allow by a German Jesuit. Father requires sdvsnca sion house without the aid of have to add charism MANY COUNCIL Fathers schools are lands, are the a to our us to equal materially "beggars." approval. pull off the unseating Nell-Breuning. don't agree. The discussion of to the public schools .., They are "the episco- recltor, so I can send this vocabulary, because the news and assassination of Such an tin-cup The emphasis now is to the gov- encyclical interpre- out the section on the people of The tremendous benefit that pate" who are driven by amount to the poor of the of Rome right now is that broaden ernment leaders in tation would seem un- pov- the field once mor# Vietnam. most it's God in the schema on the can come to the individual eity to beg from those world To Mrs L.H.M. for one of the biggest stories who and to insist that even tha American ideals have a likely. Church suggests that (and to have overcome $10: "Half nl this is from what of the council. most the Church, which Is poverty with Church authorities can strange way of evidencing Every previous Pope who Fathers, on the judge Christs a drive. the men called a ‘cuss contrary, body) from Catholic pot' only on results. themselves under the New wrote on labor unions in- CHARISM COMES from a agree If, as seems from that charisms are very schooling is not a reason why poker games while on a likely, this view is Frontier. sisted upon their overwhelm- THE HOLY SPIRIT Greek word meaning, literal- much alive and must formally we should not welcome criti- of love fishing trip The rest is my play a J. A. ing need of religion to be has ly. a gift of love As used critical the approved by the council, tha Parfitt, cism that posi- its own s.veet way of draw- own .” To 1I N.II for by part in renewal of may make us dis- As late it describes practical consequences will ba Dover. tively approved as ing both together. $lO i theologians, a the Church which the coun- satisfied with less than the ' won a pool on the enormous, IM9 Pius XII declared. There special talent freely bestowed cil is seeking increasing freedom best will be anew spirit World Senes; enclosed in our Catholic school "Trade is a of action for clergy and ‘ ’ unions arose as a spon- in the Church of the U S by the Holy Spirit on an in- Cardinal Suencns of Bel- laity Liked system. after share for the missions." alike, Look taneous and conse- dividual for the gium told his reserving mterferenca necessary this council We from the land beprfit fellow Fathers Edward Dunphy, Cut out this column, pin of others of officialdom for abuses quence of capitalism, estab- of drives rather than for his that wo must recognize Jaily look on our today Rutherford. sacrifice to it and ad- clearly established sus- School lished as an economic system. ynur personal benefit. Charisma go the existence of by brothers in Christ who have charisms for a Story dress it tained repetition. As such the Church gave them to Bishop Fulton J. to Bishop and layman, edu- balanced view of •Look" and nothing the Church, magaiine its her Sheen, National Director, So- cated and ignorant, and senior editor Jack Race Editorial approbation always on con- The saint seeing them not as accidental Star, who council is laying on us dition. that based on ciety for the Propagation of sinner, even to non-members additions prepared the article however, the burden but as part of its Broadcast Set “Trouble ‘ of the African the Faith, 366 Fifth Ave . New of ’ the laws of Christ, as on an the Church, possibly to nature His point was 'hat Ahead for the Catholic world, the of VATICAN CITY Nauseating unshakeable cross Asia, the York, or Bishop Martin W. creatures other than human. each (NC) Schools" Oet. foundation, they member of the Church Pope Paul \I will published 22, poverty of I.atin America, the 31 broadcast Editor: would work for the promotion Stanton, Mulberry St, St. Paul often refers to must he alert to the voice of should be commended for this hunger of hundreds a message in Italian in of a Christian order of millions. Newark, or Msgr. William F. and all pre- Your editorial of Oct 24 oo among the charisms. agree that the Spirit, recognue a talent paration for important, timely and -We. who can sympa- workers." That of course our satisfy our Louis. 24 DeGrasse Pater- were common the Thanksgiving the subject of interracial mar- St., they in conferred on him for the thetic review of the Day over Vatican Radio Nov. Catholic not wants so readily with drives. sen. secular unions do even pre- early Church. Theologians Ist- benefit of others, use it fear- school dilemma. riage was nauseating, to say 9 the least. tend to do. To say there are no Catholic In the name of racial justice, school problems beyond those BIT I.ET t'B see what sup whites are expected to support faced the port Father by public schools and Nell-Breuning Negroes their pressure to and colleges, as your editorial gives .Msgr. Higgins' sur- "Parents groups as they destroy neigh- prising contention He remarks Pounding on Our borhood school systems, dic- Doors" that the term "Christian" or 7 implies, is to or ignore tate to employers and unions, bely the fact. "Catholic" union does not oc- and threaten and state city cur in Mater et Magistr. The There are not class- enough governments with the sword of trade unions there given rooms only or schools, and insuffi- "civil disobedience" MORE MEAT FOR LESS AT SHOP.RITE! whenever positive are those de- cient approval professionally trained their demands not met. are scribed as "guided by Chris- teachers to staff them. The Mutt the white Catholic now tian principles . ." If then remedy for both deficiencies also advocate miscegenation as Matrr lies et Magistra gives our in convincing enough of well? trade unions positive approval, our fellow citirens of the Just- In the early stages of the In- it must be because those un- ness of our case: A reasonable tegration we north- PORK movement, ions are "-mided by Christian LOINS share of the tax public monies ern whites derided southern principles allocated ", for education, as tui- whites when they protected Are tbey in fact? Young & Tender tion certificates to students that integration would lead to The answer to that question who attend Catholic and other intermarriage Negro leaders is not one of interpretation of non tax schools. supported assured us that the Negro the text of the encyclical The LOIN Young & If the writer of the editorial wanted to be our brother, not matter at Issue is the practical ffi HALF 49' does not know that Catholic our brother-in-law To equate application of the encyclical schools and colleges are labor- integration with intermarriage (written for the whole world), under CENTER ing serious handicaps—- seemed laughable to the American scene CUT often resulting in substandard I. for one, have Here there is no reason to 77' stopped tS&Sa CHOPS * school plants, equipment and laughing. think the German Jesuit an SMOe-tITI Imp* m»o lon, lUond unfortunately Lisufficient too cieg It is indeed unfortunate if the expert And he is much of teachers or less rapab'e scholar to claim ones Negro cannot find a any such NOW OPEN because of equality lack of money to He contents 39: without forcing his foot m the expert knowledge. Spareribs tT Pork salaries Chops E331 Cutlets r49v pay comparable to white man's door. himself with a surmise for his SMOP-fciTf •( those I should HICKSVI4II in the public schools—- still less informed A NU tui hope that Negroes prefer to countrymen then he should get up from his that our American unions be MOADWAT Cube “steaks o. 99* associate with and to Roast a 99* editorial marry HKKIVTU.I Newport chair and look other said to be "guided by Christian LI. NT. Cos «o O I* ■» m »n—l Negroes, even though I SHRIMP around! Shoulder a 89' sometimes principles" Explaining his Steaks get the JUMBO Pot Roast a 69* He impression LARGE won't have to go far that surmise, be remarks that they neither like nor re- 14-JO COUNT Ta*» 6 Mum Seton Hall's "Trade 41-JO COUNT University Col- sepect their kind, union conventions in SHOP-RITE Ground Chuck a 59* own . . Calif. Pot Roast S9* lege. for America * instance, is housed in Joseph H. open with solemn re- 89;::‘4” Kressman. Jr, ligious 69;:; *3” an antiquated office building services (for Catholics Cottage Butts Livingston. AMERICAN I'iA Cut B^rShort Ribs a 49* often with a pontifical Mass and a Flounder sermon by a member of Rib Steakr Fillet *. 59* BeefCubes a 69* the hierarchy) every formal CHEESE* act of state in America opens with a .*’! prayer . A . Good Father c CHUCK STEAKSI RIB WE WHO ROAST daily have the 49 I American labor scene before our eyes nred no proof that Should Be... Father Net) * Breuning's notion 59*‘ 79 of the "Christian principles" 39* 1 49‘ that guide our nations is ex- 2.69 aggerated, to By JOSEPH A. BREIG put it mildly . Spread STEP IMO SHOP-RITE'S GARDES ROOM! Msgr. Higgins may point with There is certainly a pride to the detailed priest- be persuaded to be what fa- ' very SNOW WHITE hood of fatherhood AFL-CIO QUALITY LEAN SHOP-RITE thers ought to Ethical Practices Mushrooms be. within a *39* Indeed, a father who is net Code." but the Code omits all generation or two we could a priest toward his children reference to most close almost all the the flagrant is prisons on SLICED FANCY SEEDLESS failing them. He owes it to earth union abuses the strike and Grapefruit them that shall line ------10,49* be able conduct. they A father picket . should be honest . to see in him, and even to ieel The Paulist. Rev James BACON with the kind of honesty that in him. the divine goodness declines Gitlis (called by Cardinal Brussel to indulge even in Sprouts SKA 19* showing through *mall Cushing one of the greatest p intellectual or social It is part of a father's priests the Archdiocese of Bos- »<»•<»«■ |ob dishonesties; an that Cauliflower £,l9* ««<»,«. ..m be honesty ton has Turnips to a religious man— s looks produced > is of course t5. squarely at what and man is, who is religious in a stands incomparably better informed ™ «<•" unflinchingly for what Spinach ’ll9* manly and virile on American labor union Armour Cucumbers '"Sff" way, so that ought to be. prin- Star 4|j| VX 3 „ 19< the than youngsters, and especislly A father ciples is Father Nell- El ERYTIIISG'S PRICED RIGHT AT SHOP-RITE! should be courage- the will not to Breuning. And Father Gillis Sausage Meatl.29 boys, come ous in think adversity and illness, has said, ". that is . . religion effemin- not a whiner professional or a quitter A 1-abor which hat 61 4< OFF ate. father should quite gen- CHASE SANBORN be a happy com- erally come to violate COFFEE EHLEPS panion, justice THIS MEANS much more to that the fa- given and right, does to in the YOUR praise than name SCHICKHAUS ther not only is a prayerful to blame, and of CHOKE above all philanthropy, humanity, and BEECHNUT person, and not at sll never a nagger. religion." SALE |N« K.tWuCool ashamed of being so, but also A Msgr. claim of BOLOGNA FATHER SHOULD be Higgins' posi- that he is a man of tive principle loyal to his wife and encyclical approval for S,rd and of morals. children with our unions remains without ' to . almost a fierce Chicken «> I do not think it Is too much If he loyalty. proof. Onto, $ is that, he will almost •12 to say that if all fathers could UPTON SOUP MIXI 4 1 inevitably receive in return (By the way. Father Nell- the warmest hit I>M to* and most confi- Breumng began dis- 44-01. dent $ loyalty. cussion of Mater et Magistra GRAPEFRUIT A father with the lest JUICE 3 1 Forty Honrs owes it to his fam- warning "ideas ily to be be drawn from it which kind; magnanimous; are generous not there but which ',B9* not so much with really the Peases3 MIXED SHOP-RITE Newark but reader himself VEGETABLES money with love and a previously read N#» I. HU kind of reverence for into It." This tendency he ■t Paul'a. m Wyrlinti Ava.. R»m»ty the my- DICED SHOP-RITE SLICED or finds CARROTS Hav. It, steriousness of particularly the BIRDS EYE _ ltu human person- "among PEAS or Taranty Itilrd Im4i, Altar Piulkhl ality. liberals and socialists.") SHOP-RITE K " U IM R * • Oat- SHOP-RITE SWEET PEAS *‘ *> John E. The result of this kind of Coogan, S. J., M Mapta PEAS & Av#., Harkaa- fatherly West Baden College, SHOP-RITE example is young peo- CREAM STYLE CORN Ow Ladvol Victor «17 Boalavard. West Baden tea. ple who are Springs, Ind. Jcraay City happy, who are *••"! M Mary. CARROTS PACK SHOP-RITE *SS“W& #7 lalaad serene, who feel secure in VAC- CORN Kd . M.hnah the fortress Heart. U Ttrrac* Ava. Rorhalla of the father's fcacrjd virtue; SHOP-RITE and touch God CORN IN BRINE Hav. by touching 11. IMI the Mass Calendar $ ■atoa Hall •■i.varvay. -mu father. Urania WHOLE BEETS SHOP-RITE SLICED or . H#a. 11. ItU t Altar Xir V laaday Paalacasl WHEN YOU KU ARE reared Not. M -s £■ l^ t’.* **. **'»"• Na»aril by -jdajF. sire Honda) ai,„ M SHOP-RITE 11l E. Part La# ltd. that kind of g— 1»S «*•*• Or»Mt Cl Cr. CUT GREEN BEANS 81 father, it is tJowpA*. easy Prrt at Trimly. to in God and ®roo*t ®e*it Caacaptloa Kamkiary, Dar- believe to have Not. II - »•*£-*. Hands*. K. Mull*, auk confidence in Him; to know ™ •- SHOP-RITE *6ud£S.,?**"**'"■ that He is good and merciful Broccoli A 35T'l MI Waatalda Ava.. Jaraay YfUOW and lovable, no matter how * P * U 01 ■CLING Hilwi n Cnm ,M >'»»««* PEACHESI ikw { °T.. appearances he. 4- *1«. - sometimes •an 1 Ava.. Jaraay City might ****• "°* P the Not. U - " b '“ k •rgue contrary. WiSiiilw St framraa SHOP-RlTlgbr MORTON ‘''••Wl"*- VlffU lre Claaa. wSST •C Ism Solid Pock Mary's, in CaMral Ava., Rah*ay glad the ecumenical “■ 1 c U cLiSH W U “ council included STAR-KIST TUNA White eons fci*d £?' among its con- the *.UyMlct, aal' i . IMI Waal «.. Uaton cerns thought of having *=•* lay people, and Paterson especially fa- thers, administer some of the MAYONNAISE . ... Nav. It. IMI _ sacramentals. CMOCCXATI HIOrOiiT AN UMON ■EHD3M *"»r PsAlacaal ■ANAKA tIIAWMMr COCOMUT » CVrll and Mathodlus. «3 Ackar- It is important to make Not. It - "“a Ava.. ClUtoa fa- Saturday SI (iartrudr. Vlrfia. lid ClkOT. Whit# 01. Caanmaa •• M» Halartoa Ava.. Prospect thers feel their priestliness; to KRAFT realize that stand h they in the Not. - or ‘‘ “ UW - *•*"< IT Sunday S4LS Sunday altar ■MMeEj place of God. and that God has given It into their hands to make their wives and AnUiooy a< Padua. M Myrlla Ava. chil- dren feel keenly Hia goodness. *There' s a Sliop-Rite Near You Call ESsex 5-7300 8 THE ADVOCATE November 7, 1963 Plan Franciscan Films Radio Television Win Praise, Christmas Show SUNDAY, NOV. It PATERSON - "The Fran- r i« •- Mow 1 M. rnadM. ciscan Christmas Spirit” is the “Tb* TorriblA OKI,” title of a Ads Draw Blame - CVINooNt. 'Urtrf program being pre- CM Th» Powrr (V YmHn." pared by the Homo and School > ««• J«> “ Talk About Got Miry- NEW YORK SUNDAY, NOV. » B0|) |||||m Association of St. (NC) - A N«- product Bonventure’s . . . your advertis- • WNNJ • PaulM Inform tional of am. Hour ta Crutartad. */»■ allon parish. Performances be Legion Decency ing." ,£**«• lUv. Jamri B. Lloyd. CS.P. will told movie exhibi- »:*» Am. (i> - Look U» nul IJvt, Dec. 12 and 13 at g in ■pokesman Msgr. Little read some ob- D*wm. p m . by 1. T. Powort. School tor* tho public is jectionable No. 5 criticizing phrases and des- SATURDAY' NOV. IS the S - Grade ami industry today not for its cribed questionable art »m. (111 Chrlttnphrr >. T«Ach high acool girl work Wit C»« " f to ho TaosM product but for its advertis- used to advertise what ha said L*. WHOM Par rad Hr art. choriaters will be featured, ? * m - WPAT - Sarrad llaart. •nd the first Franciscan £g. were "Important films from '.to A-m. WMCA - A?a Marla Hour. Thomas F. "The Crib Greccio" Msgr. Little, ex- two of American • to Drama creche, at our major am. _ Ata Marla How. ecutive ejSfHL Ratings will be secretary of the Cath- companies." presented in tableau. */• "tof r tot aaa ta Broad- olio which Liues mor- He ?*? » pla?t b? Rev. Roland O.F.M, agency to the theater WCR * - Ita <»l. jourmr firm lha Fregault, suggested . -AndlL- Paul Utatoa ta Dame? ta tha Newark Arch- al evaluations of owners is directing the movies, that "your first step program. the PAMILY Proceeds praised general quality of in building a uni- will he used for a bridge to AMhont Aims. *— on Oil tar! versal ’• Orartlmo new car for the Sisters. respect In the com- •a.«, Bsst--i Iba Lovaa Ma Speaking to tho convention of munity and to to U - Uma^Mar? rnalnSabta Moll? attracting _ the Theater WKMA (rM? rta^bllbr Brown Owners of Ameri- your theaters the huge audi- ADULTS “ Office he said WrWA ,n " - **'*•• Open Decency ca here, the legion ences which habitually shun Ttal” | VMai Batond Trines Olsaa Manarana Rnaadoon How to aurcaod SAN JUAN. last IS naan, wruv Maaa Irani P R. (NC) year Judged more than you la to do about (FMI Csmital' w Huaiorta something lUua CbApta. . 80% of all films OlUr't Chatod Mar?. Mar? An office for moral evahiatioo reviewed as » _ your advertising." «««■ wniA irm rnae«, Daar Ma lha Sk? Nan? im Ltao of motion morally unobjectionable for tor Shut isa Mar? Product lorn la Palliae pictures and tele- ,r,,A rl< ~ Etaar vision some Lanatons Madam niom programs has been es- segment of the au- “itaK>J ' ' fataatatrfcs Totartcfe tablished - here the San dience. Film Reviews *— rlta I r-r Typlta and Tier? by Esarctaa Juan Archdiocese. HR SAID it would be "an By WILLIAM H. MOORING *N"C Tba l* »" - Catholic Hour. inexcusable distortion *•». »Ma of the Take She’s Mine onmiiM. oa e. Her, » •to Ml HA - Mar? Pradw. WE general factual situation" to (Good; adults) Avery good of the "sinful «>Mk about ex- CHALLENGE comedy family life, PAVEMENT ’•tradition" of movies. artist executes his works cept for a biased PAINTER - A young Belgian on the sidewalks of attitude T But he said he is Rome for the of few p m wruv inn - Oaarraiatta Uta YOU con- which favors youth and depicts appreciation passersby — and a coins. Here he completes portrait varan? ran*. vinced that the general of PAL WWNL _ Kan Mar? Hanr. public parents as old-fashioned Paul on a trafficked sidewalk. J TO FIND Pope heavily utoam wruv mu -nuun harbors "widespread crit- • Cry of Battle (Fair; objec- ■"tato Ctabolta Mr Ita St AmarV. icism” of the industry. I to bAS W»sx - No.aaa BETTER in part) A • tionable patchy, un- p m brrvv trMi _ PWdharn Lac he "Ironically." said, "the savory melodrama of World Films on TV •nraJMrwn TVa Nan Madia and lha FOOD reason is to be largely found War II in the Philippines in- •.ML WTVV IfMv Utarriral Maaar in n II _ the instrument Plays in Brief raUtata* a IMS w ruass as TV pm WIN* -Tta Worlds ta ANYWHERE! very upon volving a coarse brute, a sen- Sat S-U Ttara Sri ba Huaraa In Nor maa J. Of onnor. which to self aa;for C Jobs you rely your sitive youth, and a aarna daa Is can TV aaa. but ata or OaaaaL girl. the MruttßAl •wwrtlly l+g*m mt Dm- hSOMOAV. NOV. II Gun Hawk rwary Hire i m*y bm u (Fair; objec- JOAN •»* Wn-V im> - Sarrad Raarl By T. NOURSE «an«d De tionable in part) A Western rrxrißi Maio's Musical Comedy FAMILY ? ® IS W»VI _ Nstads. outlaw with a streak ■ alar LaafAMf raaa>. aOaa laark- I good AatlßfiMM rifkl PAL tnv irMi - -O Rama raUk” ISetc b* u barb Jr- •» lad Una ta Nana RESTAURANT & SUPPER Playt ramat) a s hviioai CLUB seems bent on a Ansi I* (dts an Hu TUStOAV. NOV II reforming lha topnaaua is dateriMaad la Cirri* «l deal ' At St. Michael's tUativr Ult ta Cald - lk * 4 prova Si naan aa aa ataor CT* Heart. UtllM ~MM WtCUITT- younger gunman, but the Ballad of the Sad Cafe Diary erf arm* ® WWH con- Marnaur Mwttiar 1 »*• ifMl - Sarrad Htari Iff. mm. Prt. N etaraal tabbars - Pankrttta. aaU- Irak » wruv irMi ****** TMtimeelaN trived Macabre M? Lark? SUr is - Wars sn ■ ■ luwD Ce—flick. Iff. >M »-to Iw. 1-11 UNION —The musical com- suicide-murder seems Albee Southern dra- artad MarSlrlaia’ drsma about Edah Dtieeul Hamaa. rr«M« Nat? »J, Mr, J rraaSlut kntaa. SJ. I Bt—tr Pwtlet hardly consonant with his ma about Mara. Iba bull,aw Jama* <—>rrt ata TSatr lw«| rrt. Wt. »J 1M edy "Bells Are Ringing" will in- a mis ms led couple Os l?n a WIONIIOAV. NOV tl barsiaa a (armabu aad died la a {Avet lumber lAr Tbnn MMMIM to Ml tamer E«kttr HI tea • - I Ml be tention. and a dwarf who form ter- bail • pm. Wnv iI'M? Sarrad llaart the Parish a caairaarr aura nap (I aaal? htfcw erf Itrii* •■SUM bad T presented by ■ pm IM - Ata Maria CaataMHSi _ WMmaarai rsMsdty. nibw Mai rible » PAL »W« - Players of St. Michael's. Nov. Twilight of Honor triangle of thwarted PrfltMl MR J lnil Or-taopAm rrnanj Maivir. m aaaa i—a Sarr* aal VarS TtS pm bpv I Vat M«rt II fw Mm I*4 ana wiirwun. ■. j. 21-22 at Union School. Lots loves. )«ni iiMi iMr laaitai ■ mara My •naans? TO (Good; paapn - High adults) of shock * ara tarts ?■■ _ rarma Curtain will be at 8:30 realism in this Chrnm CMrUr WJVV ifUt and pm. film which Streets New Maraa Mw> and Ltasa - of York—Highly Laaa - UrijbUal »WCir **“"• *" c J- toitaer, GUrr M Rare I'tHtajr .lor both which TV's ssaclcal la abacs arlaa daaanmaat performances, transposes Dr. Kildare musi- a T agreeable off-Broadway aaora Santa Ita mat aad. areal fan THE Will benefit -Hi a* a Thai TWUaSOAV. NOV 14 WEDGWOOD INN the fund. Into lotto ST Canals |„ parish (Richard abapOraJ cut. r-JAX? _ Chamberlain) cal version of a 19th-century I ara Alter TbaadnSnla • ASS. wnv (nil Sarrad Naan. John Whelan is director. the role of a young melodrama of lova and Maai M laccaad w am-ail M.itwwl (mum her* C—- 117 South Street crusading greed SllAr Trylac Cvr.ar. llttoKl 4 Its. VrcSSyTU: I-mcheoai ■ Cocktails - Dinner* Leading roles will be ■in m Winmii * »•« a Ortaata szsin surrounded In tha wicked ■•Aral bar k played lawyer apMAi In . by corrup- big, city. ctaartaC? Ita l??a Ux HtHtef MiM Huto* Pirtlei Wedding Reception* by Robert Drew, Ann *ta rlaaa (a Ita MA br «IMnil|ll I? Ur tteva M saiOAv. Pinney, tion with a kind of Dr. aov is Morristown, New legal M»?tnr all Ita atnlaa Nfftfeii • Jersey OPIN IVHYOAY Mai bm anv .nr, _ cnm Hanv Stanley, Charles Sim- a ?»— Tm* Biwiml toe War • Gillespie. (Claude Rains) at T as ■rraaalar v»-» >« Lara - TV.. M ADULTS. am WRNX - Nitnaa JF. 8-4411 Mill (AST OP TOWN to Farm Lea. ADOLESCENTS GtflN mons and Ann i*a Marta* lam. aaUalaard Dntwl ——ta? abacs Kling. his side. M AW alias 111aad Mita? SATVaOAV. NOV. 14 taton mealna. bseud aaaa aamia ■Maanaac Madntta Teitscheid i arms If? la irl than btalta Itr Jen? M? ' wrvr, Ralph is musical aua-aea coma but la rtsmas. maran? Sana, b »m ni__ kart ad Ranrt Cool atraytno talapr-t atasty aan. «iK Mart jatl fto FREE PARKING Johnny (Weak; ob- Ml Rasa pm weou IPMI - Mam ta director: Warren Aiwa ruse Drawn a«a Zaa scar, Aar aan M laaa ultra ta-a.f • car? aar- Clidal ball ernrfwd. Norbcrg. ac- T-- bn at Mae -Rtaaaad Am Tba? Tsar jectionable in part) Skip this taf teal atari ptara b? KCaaH ■mat? * MW XrSai AM CONDITION* White It WRJnas ww Ir" companist, Betty Char- Albao harshly moral ta Ataartrea nud- *M Vibrant Oaata ad tbiwta Ml sickening Mar? Mania a*to bm WOR ta Ittai Tkauar. conglomerate of bru- dtorti-a taaadarda. e ears Uaal saa uliSiaii sexuality, whose eduM story centers WwfcJ. UaM lill <7 Ital the tartar la, at T ettaataa Snrtatn W S In Ravioli Cavatelli . IMaimalU car Had? JrS.J taUaumal prutaMA aC a—tyunta J -sr ItraaA Mat on a deported Sicilian-born •a Sbaatiha Water Sal mils aact? ■Asm Oi. taaaa to nets- * am aa wy wMCterth. tac Ma.sc tarn la Mraara Waataa Manicotti gangster who sends a Oaor (artra am* MAI raaC. trigger Mac b? waaaclciac t»as Ataaa AS U I Its Ata AataMa Tin— man Inae Aa Piaa TAa aAary i*l Liar to Las Vegas bent on •Aar?, asar? _ » wn,« «« tar. *m? aetata laaAaMa aC naariat aC com Iftta Ta Karla ask a d? b? J-r- tar ■ -tab tr-c-1 ls*U 3 PRIVATE BANQUET vengeance. ma| IbWtokwr. UcSaAaa a Lata «*? aaaaa /nwrbtat Make Your ■■C aatta aC SUlNiaart ■ *StK binary »• a . ROOMS Under the Yarn Mar? M P>4 rvamaaa K -w la | M •« M Yum Tree Si Caban>l Bonnes Taa Wrv *a Laai faaadi iMn Wrntaar w Sanaa baan tach Saannm Sanaa • pair anatom? (Fair; adults) The screwball wail? WASAurrMd iiwrun Made dr. ■at.* aw— Reservations MMUI4 421 odaro rTRR-fja.fi> ftaiaii an sis. S Mi ita ta aa urUj tab. 925-31 We*t Sid* Av*. that a Mr racial Wt OBJECTION\RIE theory collect pair AOaaUra AaaS Ailya aa4 AMraaa mams faaarai nafam warn ara naaOly oa lai bar ml.. to* KM ta platonlcally share an apart- Dad Pans Oad. aw Odd wj- tad? a? L*ta - M Mam ta VsM *?•*' Caaa lawintaH larra. an •. • ttat NOW aamaaa <«ia| ita M PfTMI ment ass lata tar • HVfNTO to test their com- VMI drama Assad illliMtl aa isa — ihom M |n« Ijia a ■rrutadi ET Uaua patibility Panto aWL Xaw?or kara ar- HI Mt4s provides occasion «•»*• mra AurAal iffici aa "aarmaJ~ Maa av la, ad Jersey CHy. Mu bwn and ST st? for for aad rtaara M .o»aarl p-SalM, k-SSrnSa suggestive talk and obses- liatilaaMj CSnai M ■*•9 tike UkM a*—a a M«al t—as * (vwt*..’) «e mt Uw sion with illicit sex adventures. *wmm * Ik* tvimt mSuaT ■rasa Caapa wan taanmaas fa an .—n- •Mti Communion _ a to-saa, tatataa. Breakfasts, Sunning Man adults) tomb Far m -sks air cii'TL 'KINGSTON RESTAURANT" (Good; aaaaa wan **• M Ma tbada Kawai tan ■Man rasa rarraau I*4 Samara Sana. -a. r» 3. Sometimes rlaaa atm Mta exciting, more tacASSa Atari. UM a M.|M taa tHNINO Wan? up* I* IN TNI unist TRADITION luncheons •r-as farra c*rt r’-- a taa tad awwta IS Antal tzzurtr Parties, often Mtaaaa lmplausit suspense CaarM aC Jmhtt b? a taarutrwrfc fMaas j. M t» _rvta Van »U*irt ban two «■«**»! to—gn melodrama about a Tta Fn-aaa Car am Tta and other couple who *—saa —aa, i ’tovtaaTto Man ■ra -la- -v UNixciuio aaiar Ma aaiaalia aan ba. Mounts roe planned security via fradulent eani taa MS? aac mm i- i—• » b-a-l WROMWOI lAMOUITI insurance benefits to meet Mai an? taa ata ta m««w ta Ata Powers Story on TV - COMMUNION MBAKPASTS *»roup Affairs only oTSSVarn? m nhaca'k Nte RteuS ••* 1 tad ba Sanaa? laraa laaatt? la Sara 1111 MORRIS UNION tragic retribution after much aaaaAar brhw». ■ ataanal Caantat prana nailr NEW YORK AVI, MU 6-25T7 ran aa« »aL * drimsUc utarnknaH. Sal atid M ■barb marrtad •aaal? running away. rudtud atari. a rata ami, N—h N— e* Ih. Wad. Set. ma Man nab aa aa aiaMniratad t»i reeding of J. F. Powers’ short Kf« Them. W. —4 l MW? AtaC? aMCab tanard Mr and Special tarn. story. "Dann.” will be presented on the Look JOHN 1 MUSPHY. Hmi •ta La-aa Mai bMASr c>? Up end taarrata abnac ita rntaian at taa Live TV As Tots'llUh program Sunday, MOVIES ■man ta? rtarba ata .a amabra 'els Nor. 10 BANQUET tssjn •arb atarr laapniii bit atara bad 10. at 10 e m . ch 2 THE •tartar aad [aa —ta la It. I aaw BRASS HORN Character actor Frank Mc- It For Mata briar ■ bis ptimtrl ?-•< Room* Available for one b taa In danrriTnar a rnrSawa t Hugh wUI be featured. NOW OPEN Morally Unobjectionable for Every aa Banquet W aian aadaaaMtaara ROOM sawn All • ***** Op« ■■ 1 A*Ua $ms <* Occasion* Open Daily ■7 ■ Ug NMr »Ma Aa Want _ i nata M Oat C»nXia«a« >■■'■«« Mart. on YoorPleasure An aatcmaL laabnr lawraar -«4 o—nr BW. Or—d In Mb.toMh.NJ »taAanni. bad ita rbarartara Ibatn "y* 1 * ***** « <£S» *"!£** ara ata FOR Facilities •alt-a ,«? laaarairna it I li’ »• InXM “£>- a*LU-. - tar-n* ttm C«w Mtaa rirb Aanarbaan M I‘ar'i a.'Vi FAMOUS FOR ITS KXX «£*-« »* „ Iba mbs "r—- HOW-^i •ra—AJ c—tr, Di- Arta'i Air aid at Vrnala Waatr? eg et Mod.-of Price * Adultt wrw M I tta lanes ada bnrrara aa Unobjectionable for , Adolescents an aananiaand pitas sad Ma ams LUNCHEONS All taa* Wry Horn* - tarbtat? aarA tatar M Iba ?rnastaa . Etectra Ur* X n,— .. - knr VmaJxr w ran rrsws itts. [the west] FULL C« COURSI Jnr. u.. RESTAURANTS RESTAURANT ‘Theatre Iwaswonl of Absurd' m Lake gyssr esa* ft*-.**. *■— nTi Mohawk DINNERS M*dmA* Kim d \»jQ|trt l’*r TICMHICOLDBU-J LONG ISLAND t,wk ViQrin fin if y * Pw»«.-x * iww, ■U HfKI N. J. COCKTAIL LOUNOI Dwlg2T“•« "r" H’TT* v2ST at NFCCS Meet Nil MM Sparta, Tnim Aitbu l&Km Vku Topic MM 141-57 Northern BN. «a-»ra TO ITt American • German • Swiss Cuisirw CONVENT STATION uvnumt tr Mm. c* nmi avw the mom. *inn(” • m, t«. thestre depsrtremt of VU- *£? »r “t* Cel New Ter Retenrotiont INdcpendence 1-97 IS BwiwfcX /•* IU» ftrtto ladovs Unlvertity, wiii m x,w speik Rhone. Pertwa, * 9974 Roosevelt Field ‘cSSsTT Wr‘ sse r%- •t the fall Bork-hop of th* eoamrackr Mai* National of Cath- Center _ _. - . Crrrk haznra h>it«M Federation Shopping 1 — »••«■ X Hoar* ai?!?*" • Um a aartulam V i t-7 ****** HrM'rs olic College Studenta’ Carden City Oak Mrtlar Literary Ha* m, (mtt 1 to In Phone: , *r«ai Arm X Law Commission Nov. at St. %tW<*3r Recommended “Coe' Pioneer 7-7566 For Elisabeth's College here Adults (With «OM« CONTININTAt CUISINI Reservations ) Duprey will discuss the TZeboltu NEW JERSEY m UOIIIO UVI MAINI IOISTftI DAILY "Theatre of the Absurd" and 3T-— ttire. m aOSCD SUNDAYS A MONDAYS Garden State Plaza m contemporary piaywnghu. Far Reservation* Call MU 7-0707 Paramus Morally Objectionable in Part Everyone Al The n— PetoH. IMtoe. NJ - Oord— State PVwwr hit 1M Phone: Diamond 3-3633 for WHEN YOU FINISH read- ing The Advocate, why not Ask (or the Menaitr. He will be SSSvT %r=-~ fiarasft GOLDEN LANTERN * it friend to provide complete gwa 0 £r *•&,"- 3£y£* P*as along to a or a Rom for At pleased details. Sftiq| VAr Hoad 1 j«. I. * D“*" local hospital’ RESTAURANT AND COCKTAIL LOUNGE nr. RriT* For' Ur. ft2£7*M*r 'i *A m Mam*, W«4 X bar. SARLY AMIIICAN ATMOSPMII* "The PiAlie A BkOj Otd Enroft m TV /Tear* _ Appreciates *I»H A Of HUbtwnJ Cetwtae i# Weddle* iKttUtu lutwle Quality" _ Uatfl B«n«* Cammtf 7-J777 Peru— to Lunch— LUNCMIONS ANO OINNBRI SIIVIO DAILY Condemned For Ptriont Ov#r 21 U

DANCING For LUNCHEON & DINNER Orst ro*M Diming M •—

Mark*! If, if Hi* l*vl*vard, For l«M Ntana*. N. L PMtwrme SAT. A lUN. Re*crv*tions CLOISTER GIFT SHOP PRIME RIBS OF BEEF A u ais • Dl Faofurlng AlUrnaHng P.rtr Ac*emm—ittoe* • 2-1299 Restaurant o—n irerr O.y ORCHISTRAI C.r Inn A P.ntty «*.. HACKSNSACK and Dlr«iia«i; Cocktail Driving South an Oardan Lounge Get Your Shell at the A art »*o*a Parkway, (alt IM. Driving Out of ojifvshop of retiyious 411 MT. North Gar MOSMCT NIWARK an dan Slat* Parkway, AVI., ] %ouyhtfu(

(On# Mlnut* w QnxtU Srook tram althar (ah) Private Banquet Facilities With the * delightful change ol pace for impress FLORIDA RESERVATIONS ACCEPTED HUmboldt 2-5019 of Beauty aU „„ mcmtlv,4 (o DINNER end COCKTAILS Catering to Fartlee A Banquets ATLANTIC in MIAMI CITY ATLANTIC CITY American-ContinentalCuisine

BEACH IT Your Host: Mt NerthtUld Av*. ft "Cbet" Grabowskl WIST ORANGE, N. J. * _ Rldw—d MH] PILGRIMAGE _ »«•**» Chb sad Amerle— Kxrrte Credit Card* Act—ted •* Dominican * ncallant month to com* to tha soslda. Our the Th* Monastery of Lady of Rosary long Thanksgiving wsakand ottan unlimiUd rut and THE TALK OP NEW JERSEY THE NEW play. Spatial turkey day dinnar. Dane**, moviai. artaih ' wndKki l. Town & Restaurant 543 Avenue Solaria.Solaria, Icarlnk,icerink, muslcalat.muslcalas. Ask' about Campus SprinaficU AMAMtCA'M MOAT Inclusiwplan. Phona 60M4W2U, or la N. Y.. MU 2-4W9. TMn bads Diner and Motor FUNdma,vl with bath from SliSO Mod. Am., 58.50 Euro- Lodge paan, sacs Summit,TyfeW A.SW to 5 ftlM. parson. a Newark Mato Teechara Cottoea M Jersey- Open p AVL and GREEN • *O4 atr-eondHlonad i MORRIS LANE. UNION. N. J. »3 iwlmmln* pool* fll&rlborougklßlenbcmi cm Bi n Mu Hr. Roe U TWM UM I Room PaUo Lunch— Mthportdng lor 800 i mmmt • mwi «ani i am. in. ss’aSS iIRmI It PHONE Ml-44M 'Welcome Sisters, You Askedfor It'

RUGGED RIDE - Two Sitters perch pre- cariously on raft to cross river. The Apolo group includes two Patersonians, Sitter Monica, a nurse. Sitter Valerie, and Fidelis Sitter who taught at St. Jo- seph's, West New York. They hove al- received Bolivian ready one girl at a a in their congregation.

CONVENT IN BOLIVIA - Washing well behind their convent ot dishes as the Apolo, OFF TO CATECHISM Bolivia are Missionary Sisters of St. Francis: Sister Marita Therese and Mother M. Gabriel, Louis Mary, a native of Pequan. CLASS - Sister a native of nock and Sister Morita West New York, set out on horseback for Therese, formerly of St. School, West New York. o three-day jaunt to a remote mission station Joseph's There where are five members of the they'll give Peekskill-based at religious instruction, perhaps arriving roin-soaked after congregation Apolo, living in primitive con- spending a ditions among the Quechua when Tk/Vdvocate night without shelter. At Apolo teach 125 children who Indians; they barefoot they arrived three years ago the Franeiscon trudge many miles to school each Fathers greeted them with a "Welcome day. board there to learn sign, Peekskiil Sisters, You Asked for It." 9 Twenty boys gardening and animal November 7, 196.7 husbandry in addition to reading and writing.

Vatican II Is Not So New Jesuit rites parallels with Vatican I in major nark of Church history By JEBRY COSTELLO American whose prelate* council roles namei in The New Yorker magazine. SHRUB OAK. were active. N Y. An ecumenical Another— the most perhaps ' You might call him the Xavier Rvnne council in Vatican active was City . . . Archbishop Peter Richard of the First Vatican Council." Father A gradual division Kenrick of Lxiuis Hen- of council Father* St, a leading spokesman hesey agreed, "but 1 think he tended to Into liberal and conservative for the right* of camp* . . , Bishop* too rely much on the reports of one or An early •‘revolt,’’ led The moil influential by Bishop* U S Bishop im- two people who weren t always too re- front northern mediately to Europe, against council the council was Arch- liable themselves ” schemata said to reflecting only the think- bishop Martin Spalding of Baltimore Once Secular press coverage of the second ing of Romr in Rome, however, hi* . . . middle of the road Vatican Council has improved vastly over The publication (under name) approach to the a pen of infallibility question cost that of the first council Father letters him Hennesey from Vatican City, describing in his unofficial leadership role No sin- out detail pointed Communication difficulty* supposedly secret council deliber- gle leader" assumed hn title. American* forced some American editor* to insent ac- . on ations . . both tides of the infallibility question counts of Vatican I proceeding* let several fellow Bishop* speak for them. The Catholic A\ I'P-TO-TllK minute report from press as well is far dif- added for Rome? Not at all It took place nearly RIMIOP JtMI.S ferent today, he "Tho*e were days Roosevelt Rayley of 100 of highly personal Father years ago. and it i* skillfully recounted Newark seem* to have reporting." Hen- spent an unhappy Rev. James S nesey iiid • Someone like James by J, Hennesey, J., in a time at the council McMas- In a sene* of letter* ter* new book ‘ The First Council of to of the F’reerran * Journal, a Catholie the Re*, tlater Bishop. Michael Corrigan, cl Vatican: The American “ It paper published in New York, could tell Experience he lament* the slow council'* pace and is a major contribution to American the Bishop* that it would he a good idea Home » winter weather "The council it Church ” for them to go to Ftome and learn a les- history, and its author, who teach- very tedious he wrote one in letter, "and " tor. in faith es Church history at Isiyola Seminary will kill off a great man) Bishop* hefora who worthwhile here —and will become the first tt will ” be over BINCF YIIF FlRwy Vatican Council American Jesuit to teach that subject In the spring, however, he canceled was interrupted so abruptly —with so at the Gregorian University in Rome plans for an early trip home he so would much unfinished bu»in*«* why was there seems destined to * assume a leading roi* be present for the discussion of 'the great (uch * king intersal between councils' among historians of the Church. Father ’• HISTORIAN - Jersey City-born question'. There ‘‘The his 1 t tw single reason 1 suppose," parallels between the fir»t coun- Hennesey. in room ot Jesuit Another sem- council Father with North Jer- Fa liver cil and the Hennevey replied "There wer* one going on now are amis- at Shrub Oak, tie* vs a* inary pages through his sey Bishop Bernard McQuaid of some to the Father attempts reconvene council ing.” Henncsey conceded, "but cer- new book. First former "The Council of the Kochevter. a president of Seton shortly alter its interruption, but they tainly not complete The American Bish- Vaticon: Hail lollege The American Experience." He lamented the emergent* came to nothing Then there emerged th>* ops, for one Lhuig. were the first Bishops of the It week infallibility It thai was published this Herder question i seem* idea that a* king a* infallibility had been from the New World to attend by an ecumeni- the Jesuit* have been at th* bottom and Herder. ot proclaimed so definitively, the cal council. The contribution made to perhaps they tt and glumiy predicted that I "having need for ecumenical councils no longer the council was far from insignificant, the extreme views a* of God question forced mm searched upon us . . , will b* a txisted. but It was inevitable that they should at for the right path out grea’ calamity for the Church.” of the Counter re And m the intervening there first seem to be year* next inexperienced, perhaps formation Father The twin dogmas of llrnnesey hat performed papal primary teemed to be no one particular time whith year naive. the rare trick of and infallibility were capturing the feeling of proclaimed by Fop* was esactly right for anew council Con- ‘‘And while it’* a temptation to think that world with both Fiu* IX on l». scholarly precision July ItTO, with only two trol of the Church came to be more and of those who faiored a definition of infal- and an narrative negative votes —one of engaging style them cast by more rentered in Rome, where it wa* conservative* and who only libility a* those op- Edward Bishop Fitigerald of Little Rock. natural that the convoking of anew coun- too TIIF. OV I It posed it as liberals, it's much of a RIDING is»ue of t he time, Most of the unrelenting Galilean* and in- cil —with the change* it would probably simplification. I try to refer to them ot course, was that of simply papal infaUihihty opportunist* chose to absent themselves bring would have been to torn* as the majority and minority. In the same even though it was not at first listed uppoved as from the council rather than ” OPEN vote on th* « a degree • vein, you hear people referring to the in- council topic The socalied ultramontan* question Kranrk Archbishop and Bishop a* a ‘conservative vic- the fallibility group majority favored an ex- were WIHT WFRF: tome of the main re- MrQuaid both absent, at were two tory.’ They forget that this statement plicit declaration of infallibility-, while th* other spokesmen Archbishop John B. sult* of Yatir*n I' cleared the for the liberal of minority were way approach opposed. Purcell of Cincinnati For on* the and Bishop Augustin ' thing world **w an It cleared the for Leo XIII, Shades of today. way a opinion were wide ranging \erot of \avannah of Twenty-fit* America:.* image *n autocratic Church," the au- and led to Some, it all the necessary prerequisites including England s Archbishop a total of id U S, had thor answered Even A i Bishops attended ' though the discus- ” for someone like John Manning, held that the Dope was Pope infallible the council! were present to sot* nans ui the council might have been not yet They vig- only in spiritual matters but tem- in included Archbishop oroui and open, the fact A NATIVE OF Jersey City and a .Spalding. Bishop that papal m- grad- poral affair* a* well. and the Bayley, youngest Bishop at th* fallibility wav accepted bv neul.y uate of St. Peter * Prep. Father llennesey r\ri\. The opposition was of hardly a single council James th* future on* once it had been defined 19*3 and Gibbon*, Car- made more of entered the Society of Jesus in mind The Galileans the opposed question dinal who was then an impression the at Bishop of North Caro- on world. was ordained Fordhara in 1957 Since ui prinnple, holding that infallibility rrsted lina "Th* loss of then he has studied in Dublin and Rome , temporal papal power CHRISTMAS with the hierarchy Others felt simply that created * exhaustive The council was then sympathy for p tu * IX he con- in addition to performing the the time for such declaration recessed and a was in- tinued later suspended never to "This combined with the council research for the book an outgrowth of opportune the b* resumed ’ inopportunisU," as they declaration the his doctoral thesis. His rrsearch took him •fler Italian troop* the of gave world anew psycho- came to be known because occupied city of concern Rome. logical Idea of to the Florence, Rome, the I’ope. The Holy F'ather Vatican. Naples, over tta effect on the non Catholic world. and hi* Munich, Budapest, Prague. Vienna, Brus- successors came to have a greater ONE OF F ATFIFiR Louvain, Paris, Ixxtdon MANY HI.nIIoPs from Hennesey’* major personal and spiritual impact on the mas*, CLUB sels. Versailles, the U S. be- service* u hi* extensive use of the cor- •s. and Dublin. He also consulted more than came to be known—because of concern between Lord respondent Acton, a liberal "That bring* us to the most 50 offices in the U S fleeting their essentially pastoral outlook. important leader among Kngluh Catholic*, and Rev. result of the council it "Quite a bit ot work.” he quipped, “I feared." wrote Bishop Michael that firmly es- Johann Ignat Dollmgrr. the chief anti- tablished don't Domenrc of the position of the Fops- After ‘‘when you consider that the Jesuits Fittsburgh, "that many of our papal voice in Germany \ too brethren make Dollinger't publi- alican I, no one could challenge the come off well in the book.’’ dissenting would use of this prim- cation of th* “Quinnus Letter*” definition to chiefly acy r t.ic infallibility of the Father Hcnnesey's prime concern is oppose the Catholic Church; i Fop« through information provided by Acton and "Tit* the American role at the council, but that many who were council, in a sense, put the pap- favorably disposed other Roman contact* stirred a mild on in exploring it, he takes in much more towards the Catholic Church might acy a pedestal. It prepared the way change it* their »en*ation with accounts of council ac- for John and Faul all ground. The world of the First Vatican views. . Fope Fope —and a* Ttacuif tivity*. much have the "I-etter* From the things that are Council is a fascinating one. marked by Domenrc happening in Rome Bishop was one of many Vatican City" Xavier by Rvnne (a pen today."

Catholics for Latin America For the Poor, the ‘Apostolate of Being There'

WHITE PLAINS. N Y. - kingdom of God. .’’ Within THE . DEPARTURE had Lo* and then The talk Andes, to other the poor in Latin America, in the comfortable Ute first year enough contri- been preceded by months of Latin American countries. more than any e-dc crmined living room* here was of butions had to p come in meet thought and player over th* course of action based on • people who Uve in sharks, total I-AST MARCH past expenditurea of $lOO,OOO. deciaion, planning to insure a the first I-atin Reservations experience or training, de- gripped by hunger, sickness Recently Rev John J Con- normal life and education for American >e.ame a CFLA termines the work of CFLA • and despair. The was head of their Gonzeto speaker sidine, M.M.. the Latin children in and volunteer. Guzman re- Tickets Chile, in any specific ares,” Restivo a visiting from American Rureau aiprrd his Sant Trappist of NCWC, even a visit to to ago ban'., p.nt Santiago explains. • Santiago, Chile. Some uf the wrote to CFLA: "You and is now , ami all make sure they wer* wanted working in CFLA * Planning “The friends who listened to thoae who work with can and trade and critical needs of Latin began you needed. Tney recclvcl a training, social, cul- wonder be America arc the if they could help more very proud of the sub- welcome from then Archbish- tural and information center. many; op- */ portunities to are directly than by simply giving atantial contribution have now On help count- you op. Cardinal, Raul Silva many, projects in made the Church less. money. already to in Hcnriqucz, S D B. l-atui Ameri-.** the organiza- Latin America." Willingness to do Separately, and unknown to Meanwhile, William Heitlvo tion coordinates its activities ’ anything 03% that be done each with the - van when con other, several couples On Nov, 10 Catholics for quit his job to coordinate the Peace Corps and K Latin other U fronted with the basic needs approached the priest for America will begin a movement’* activities and S. and local agencies, BE «)••'' of the poor is the a,’ll It both government primary mo- guidance. was the beginning weekly radio program, "Build keek financial aupport for th* and private. tivation that members of two of a a Bridge," 7:30 to In the Brazilian years ago movement Sundays. departing famil r . Friends or- seaport of CFLA carry with them into now called Catholics for Latin * pm., on WKUV-FM, Ford- giinizcd committees I’aranagua. Indiana elec- and se- Latin America” ham tronic* Restivo con- ■AVK MV MAIL UHOAHWAY America, through which mar- University's radio station. cured promises of engineer Richard Stouf- ... HANK monthly tinued. ried couples and The first will fr iu ii. PAYS POM TAG L BOTH WAY* single people program feature contributions from people In- t wife an i ve from half Mr la •‘This is the a doren states have and Mrs. Joseph Dwyer, terested In the work. Bestivo children) planning an elec- Apostolate of to' lrcr. es trade Being There, Trained travel gone Chile, Peru. Argentina, who with their six children, Is now CFLA director. achoc In Loja, letting the people expert* will BROADWAY BAN] Ecuador and to left thetr home here Msrcn Ecuador, Mr. ond Mrs. Bruc* of Latin America know not make your next Brazil help the I, Very quietly other families trip an aaay poor. 1962. to go to Santiago, Van Yasacl o New Ho hrlle only that we want to work and relaxing experience. & Trust Chile, volunteered and were Company tu pre- are w.ln them but “Build a Bridge" between establishing a also that by WHEN THE pared to go to Santiago The nursery 61 B.jodwuy, PaterMon, New FIRST themtelvei * hool being there w# Jersey couple and the poor. They firat from ,or .omelets- children want to bo from White Plains family outside New r«iml.m AM PMmI Kwh. went to as their friends.” 240 CENTRAL Ihlm were the tirat mentbera of York from they approach their second AVENUE Chile, the had wgs W Imington, FRKK PARKING group a $lOO what was then called wi riding anniversary. Said Father "Un- EAST ORANGE Hu 4-8620 bank Catholica Del. There followed otheri Considme; U Oku Lou Ob W«.t account and devotion to for der Bro*dw»,, W*l( BUwk I'm B.nk Chile, They were foil J Meanwhile, in the home of- God, here are the • A»d Al from Florida, begin- Cwmi Droßdwsy A St. Christ’s words. ‘’Do not be Massachusetts, f' Mulbmy 10 daya later by Mr. and Mra. : Tre, seven full-’ime vot- nings of a lay effort which 4*4 CENTRAL AVENUE •nxiou* What Illinois, and Indiana. They saying shall we Jack Falls of Scaford unU 'rs work without err, rally, tremendous NEWARK Hu 44830 *•*- but N.Y., branched >ut into two other salary. apostolic . . seek first the and their five daughter*. zeal, both hero and in Latin Chilean cities, Concepcion and "THE CIRCUMSTANCES ol America." 10 THR ADVOCATE November 7, 1963 Church in 'As You ’re the U.S. Provides Variety of Services If WASHINGTON (NC)-Pro- Only Bishopa presi panel for the relations, federal aid to educa- Jecta large volume of engaging the intcreat of assistance of American background fill its quota of 451. the accular tion, aid to Latin America, and material the Catholic Church in th# U.S. on Second Vatl- The National Catholic Com* newspapermen covering the the feeding and of In tha last have been list- clothing Pan Council. year, proceeding!. In munity Service, one of th* Priest in the ed In the peoples underprivileged Some 5,000 priests, Brothers World’ annual The USO federation of six department Department of Social areas. agencies, and Sisters will have reports of the National Catho- Action drew gone reported that more than four miles attention to the from “Fifty north Is the in- lic Welfare Conference. the U.S. by 1970 to aid million utilized NCCS* involvement of religion in ra- REPORTING 51,770 persons ternational frontier. persons the Church in Latin Forty The , cial relation issuea and laid America, operated facilities during the helped through 46,490 cases miles south is a town and port. Society for the and the Latin America Bureau NCCS Propagation education, study applica- Inauguration of Interfaith handled In the tha NCWC year. also continued its From the town to the fron- pro year, said. It added that 1,000 of the tion of the Church'a social grama for racial aocial action of short- program of Catholic volunteer tier that’s the East- Faith Department Immigration term volunteers parish. teachings, broad international U lay will also services in 170 Veterans Ad- wards miles Archdiocese of Newark: widespread. said Poland seems to Hava have 20 or so, again relief, gone in the same assistance to the Church An eased Its restrictions period. ministration hospitals. a frontier. Westward Most Rev. Martin W. lncreaaingly “sympa- on pass- 15 to 20 Stanton, B.T.D. in Latin aid to thetic” The Foreign Viaitora Office The of the America, regu- attitude among legal ports and exit visaa, pointing report National miles, is the river. A lot of Very Rev. Msgr. John F. Davis said it is currently working to Catholic gees and foreign mlteionary scholar# and tha general out that 13 Polish-born Apoitleship of the square miles; forest, jungles, 31 Mulberry St., Newark 2, N.J. pub- priests strengthen diocesan Phone 823-8308 work were some of the matters lic toward coordina- Sea Conference said 72 little Hours: including church- and two Polish seminarians priest# mountains and a winding Dally, I a.m. to S tion among Catholic p.m.; Saturday, 8 a.m. to 12. touched related schools agencies are working as * ribbon of upon. in federal aid were among its clients. road from north to The NCWC assisting foreign studenU and maritime Diocese of Paterson: it a voluntary to education waa teen by the The Press Department called among personnel in south with jungle paths visitors. agency through which tha U.S. Legal Department. tha last "the 70 ports in the U.S. branching off in here and there Rl. Rev. Msgr. William F. Louis year most impor- Bishopa deal with matter* 24 DeGrasse of tant" sines establishment of THE to the villages. St.. Paterson 1. N.J. Phone 4-8488 THE AMERICAN Board of THE NATIONAL Office for ARmory common interest on a national NATIONAL Council of the NCWC News Service Honrs: 8 a.m. to 5 in Catholic which Decent Literature said th# "You walk the paths, five Dally, p.m.; Saturday, t a.m. to 12. level. Catholic Men added Missions, dis- four new 1920. It noted that the service tributes funds has hours, six hours, * under the to missions In public been active legally Dotations to the diocesan councils in tha sent stories Society for the the year, out 509 on the first the U.S and its on the level gloom of the forest. You Propagation of ARCHBISHOP Patrick A. bringing tha total dependencies, community Feilb lex to 66. It re- session of the Second Vatican don’t think in ere income deductible. reported that it received against objectionable literature hours, really; O'Boyle of Washington report- ported that aoma 7,000 men Council in one 13-week period. $3,329,845.27 available the you march until ed ai chairman during the fiscal to young. just along you of tha NCWC took its leadership training Th# Youth reach Department re- year ending July 31, 1963. somewhere. You drive Admlniitrative Roard and told course. that It to reach all of the work. So such ported has affiliated the road north and south in as "many people came." of two projects Initiated In The National Council The NCWC Business Office ST. JOSEPH S VILLA organize all of more than 500 Newman Clubs a you helpers over Things are said Its • UUMDIN. PBAPACK, N. i. six-year-old Volkswagen. described as holy Rome for the Second Vatican Catholic Women, with 13.862 with total publications section the parish who keep the wheels In a membership of has You know that wherever there Shona, but there Is no word Council. These are the NCWC affiliated t 95 papal documents Retreat Hovm organizations within 50,000; that diocesan affilia- Is turning even when you are not that can be Artistic French Chateau a/ breath- a path there's a village at used to call a per- office for the assistance of Its diocesan councils, among the 307 titles It now with them. And work from reported tions to tha National Catholic taking beaut? la the Somerset HUU. the end of it. The you son holy. In this case American stocks. Hire HcaltMnJ village is it was prelates taking part active interest In the role of Youth modern facilities one center where can al- Organisation Federation rtimate Excellent meals Open jrour business. All the forest you necessary to Invent anew In the and The year council the U.S. woman In today's race Ordinariate re- round Convalescents, Vacationists ways be reached, and try to world, increased by five to 60, with Military to villages. All the in the w-ord. "musanti," almost ported and Permanent Guests camps a 22 other archdioceses that the three main run the organization you've and dio- Retreats from September to June rubber plantations and the oil straight transliteration from branches of the U.S. built ceses associated, and that the Armed eseept the Than*n#»\tnf. Christmas All of the up at peak efficiency. the Latin "sanctui " forces and Ne» Wars Weekends Days plantations. scattered are in urgent need of "The call 'the membership of the National sad Evenings of Recollection. homesteads of the settlers. people you When it comes to "1 the Mt. Catholic am Carmel the Utters at Jehn Guild mote Directed by St. the def- Federation of Catholic , with Perhaps 8,000 Father,' always using vine and College the The Berttsf Plapock MIM - MBS. people and you are the Army alone lacking 141 to inite article Club# maintained a more coming in all the time. as though you branches," the difficulty lies steady were the in the rate. All your business! only priest in the fact the word for world You’re the one The Department of Educa- "You can’t possibly hope to only "branch" is different in each Schedules know. tion reviewed ALBERT H. cover all the they You are always dialect. Here Appeal technical devel- HOPPER. Inc. ground alone, or the expedient of there and at related to their service. showing the alternatives in opment! eduestlon MONUMENTS • MAUSOLEUMS WY 1-2266-47 NEWARK Msgr Joseph “It takes hsrd work but tt They are business. It is brackets and encouraged s wider use of your will be adopted A. director of the (Oppowt. Maty Cf..O Na. AHtaftaa hard but I love ." Dooling. Mt. also takes money to operate educational television. work, it . Thus far the BUY Gospel of St. Carmel Guild, has announced the DIRECT FROM THE MANUFACTURER Mission A many services offered by Missionary Luke has proved to be most Appeal that the annual archdiocesan the THE NCWC difficult for guild," Msgr. Dooling said. OFFICE for accurate transla- appeal, with the of E. approval "Services like Americaniza- United Nations Affairs said SAVE UP TO In African Continent tion. This is probably due to 30% Orange Archbishop Roland, srill be tion programs, special educa- that the human rights field the remarkable precision and hMM tWI M. made Nov. IT. tion »hy M«pp«r it tka b'yaat One-Third Christian for th# physically and had taken on a "new look" 4 Msgr. John F. Davis will superlative •—"'♦actur.r •* Greek in which it Maaaarbta k Niw mentally handicapped and since the issuance of hrwr make an on behalf Africa has a total is written IN A LETTER to Pope • appeal population paatori, " W» H" •* ** *vr iut(*mtn • Y lb* atamarbl Physical relief John XXlll's Pa- ■ aw a*« Intpart of the Society the of about 258 million 109 The cost of the Catholic encyclical. ai op t* JON Prop- Msgr. Dooling reviewed the ••-'"t by Hllinf ba»a aa warb Msgr Dooling also said that eem In Terris pKffataai. agation of the Faith on Nov. million Moslems. 83 million Shona Bible *s work of the 4i'ti ta tka project is guild, which was the partkatar. guild helps all people, re- The • AH nA Am* l*«*l 10 at Holy Name. East Or- Animists, 26 million Catholic timalrd at 830.000 Youth called a "model Catholic Ac- NCWC Bureau of Infor- A by >•*««- * Wa ha.a al or- gardless of their awr plant ■ brf* rellgloUl af- mation said it nttn A kata ange, Rev.. Thomas H. (plus 3 million catechumens >, ganizations in West Germany tion" movement by Pope Pius sent out 313 tarwara al aaf »**,,m If Jeney Moderate you work in an office, why children. 1 HUNT FUNERAL HOMI ORonge 4-7554 UNIon 7-0373 fb>» mMt to < nan itn— urtf not Him. collect a quarter each Th# will leave 1601 PALISADE AVE. Wnt* lot Mmiatton to family tn mid- MURPHY MEMORIAL HOMI OIRECTOR week for the of the WILLIAM SCHLIMM, INC. OR RITRRATt poor November for Valdivia, ChU#. FORT HE. N. J. Ovmo 1 ftoci RMIUI Hm 102 FLEMING AVENUE world? Then, at the end of the 2200 HUDSON BLVD. *» l»ri ARRIt. Ntwton. N J. wh#r# Dr Rov# will open a 20 VslUy RomJ JAMES A. HUNT month send it to the Holy clinic NEWARK. N. J. UNION N. J. aasociated with a mit- Director CITY. Father through his Society for Til. LA 5-7677 Cliftom, N. MArket 3-0514 non established latt year by J. Windsor 4-1202 WILLIAM SC HI EMM, the Propagation of the Faith. th# American pro vine# of th# JOHN F. MURPHY MANAGER THOMAS J. DtPFUY As Society of th# Preciout Blood 480 SANFORD AVENUR UNIon 7-1000 Long 'With His Mouth He will be the only 41 AMES AVENUE phy- Iran: Where Esther, Symbol of NEWARK, N. J. aictan at work m the sprawling Mary Lived James a. McLaughlin In His Nose...' RUTHERFORD. N J. EStex 1 *“ t,m» *f M..ea 3-6053 As You Live poor tection of the city. Hit I»«»«-»»» Lather I*4 Mu.m.H •( UI4 WEbtter 9 0098 591 JERSEY AVENUE (in* Ur* beneath Speaking in the Shona lan- wife, a iHlißfni *■ Mkll mmU registered nurte, will u Ham*. JOHN J. QUINN JERSEY CITY. N. J. rtfim a guage used people of Cen- a»»ut o*a la HENNESSEY by him Iraa. Ta lk« Ji«, ta ta , lf &«!)!rST)\Bt.K a a 4 FUNERAL HOME Oldfield 3-2266 coon tral missionaries find Purlat fratlval. IM.OME Africa, »h* rrpctMiu fraa- FUNERAL HOME r«i av« 323 329 PARK AVENUE ynar ea it difficult to Biblical -om ,r »" la parallel *PK*iol**; far Catholic* 232 KIPP AVENUE WILUAM fata «ar Class for Parents <* ORANGE. N. J. SCHLIMM. INC Rvr> xnmtty concepts In the story of the aka t* tk» of naM Mary. ika HASBROUCK J. BERGEN AVE. plan. rich it TEANECK HEIGHTS. N 339 young man is impos- A cli»» for lUrur4 Mother At Teheran aot ORonge 3-6348 alia akara . . . Yea la the Allot 1-1 362 JERSEY CITY. N. J. sible to find a literal expectant parent* will tao far mall r<‘l a era M the Vivina parallel begin away * Armenian KIERNAN FUNERAL HOMC and hop ta ederatta* for "He went N«;v l# £ JOHN J. CARTY, J away sorrowful." n Holy Nam# Ho# Calboll* pariah la trying bravely U IRINKA FUNERAL SERVICE pneate and Brethren lor m 101 UNION piUl ♦ AVENUE the Mlaenaa. The phrase finally adopted and rootmur through hallo a mode*! arkaal The MANAGER f pattor. MAYWOOD - BOGOTA • Certain tea adaantaaea makes use of colorful simile I)rr 1«. Monti* G. BELLEVILLE. N. J. a Registration will b# nor P. A pear, and kla HErderton 4-0411 • A LaMaaa Memorial aad LITTLE FERRY of the hrki Nov is remrmhran. r« ta Shona at 7 U m w bar* 9-3503 many language "He p m partakionrra hem able la Plymouth Mama ae and pnjrra Marian Hall HUbbord 7-3050 EARL F. BOS WORTH went away with his mouth in rommodale the IllUa chlldrra of Ike WRITE FOR FREE INFORMATION " FRANK McOEI his nose ftrrt * r * 4 **- To enroll 311 WILLOW Tka - ■■ ■ Ike total of VOLK FUNERAL HOMES AVENUE Mai. at 525 SOCIETY OF '»>*"- >ker need SUMMER AVENUE Likewise, there Is no com- iJ! a l.r.er HOBOKEN, N. J. /*», lie OormW TEANECK: TE 6 0202 THE mon Chart* building and lIJM U NEWARK. N. J. DIVINE WORD Shona word for “crowd." romlrurt It—- BOGOTA: Oldfield 9-1455 laak Ikat HU 9 2202 All such references Life • arema beyond their financial ability U Ihla HUmboldt Annuli) Dept. (.IRAKI). PA.I must be Family rounlry 2-2222 Oldfield 9-1456 •f Iran, Moh jmmrdanlaan it dealt with by using a clause the predaenlnant re lie .an Thk* JOHN J. FEENEY 8 SONS Und fabled can* coMsaeincts la the Arabian M|bU territory. Perbapa MURRAY tome food 232 FRANKLIN AVENUE BUNNELL FUNERAL HOME (aalo among oar reader* or I* It »ner*. Mr. • genii? > will kelp them Bnlah FUNERAL SERVICE , 41 Ave. *rtmr .*}. si rnli WIT. »•- II np wIU her Director STONY LODGE o Chorlet A. HOSPITAL on, i e iiiutM rtmj. Stevent, SOTtulatr OORMLIY 206 a rm R., UeOmi* FUNERAL HOME BELLEVILLE AVENUE NfH» Artweu.. «M, « tree- r*m Manager MARYLAND Mr R Thomaa of 333 UNION STREET aemtwan,. s »«. a** r.w Ralttmoro. MaryUnd tend* BLOOMFIELD. NJ. OSSININO-ON-HUDSON, NIW YORK * wfctlM DElawore 3-6446 ua »2 on behalf of hla dau(hter ollh th# A <«« !-»,*«. SI aarUMamM's >UB following note - Keren HACKENSACK. N.J. PI 3-2327 Has. reeeUed thia money for Ujr SeuttoaUt I t m Jaw her fifth birthday and the HUbbord A Private Psychiatric IsWsrm hrr»e!f de- 7-1010 Hospital, cided the would like t*> MURPHY FUNERAL HOMI completely *•*-. help poor children who d.dn _ Sanaa*. H t bait the IVnar, O |. a MORRIS COUNTY Ou—» IN Half comfort! the hat Thanki Karen, CLIFFORD H. PEINICKE equipped for and Treatment ••NO ne hate ao mam bo>a and DIRECTORS Diagnosis la. Sraani Mmmlm. IN. . . girle. aoma tick. *«ma needy, aome 1321 TEANECK *•*■• aaajww even blind nho iook to ua ROAD GRACE MURPHY of Mental and ranarMa Nervous Conditions. Aaaumtoae Valaa t* Ufa for aid. Y'our be 1 money ahall uaed to good purpoae WEST N. J. SCANLAN *» Aa. Jamaa J MaMaa* ENGLEWOOD WILLIAM T. NEELY ailcana MatMt and SaoaaiaaH AaaHaMa roe VMS twosoto FRANCIS X. FAHEY. 301 FUNERAL HOMES HOLY SOI LS ROSEVILLE AVENUE Catherine Monoger 781 Newark Leo J. Palmer, M.D. of (tolorna once wrote: NEWARK, N. J. Pompton Tpk. - Baas Palaiaaa. ft. Laa a fcjj, "When I wtah to anro of TE 7-2332 N. J. bo gotuni • favor. HUmboldt 3 2600 Pompton Plaint, Charles A. has Bright, M.D. Auocistt Dirt.ion IS l>a. Ia. Il.iakain. Imnan rtsSr I have rrconrae in theae lufferla* aoult TE 5-4156 Aas gKeme. Maurice J. 14 oa. 1 | a. i. that they may Interred# fae OORNY 8 OORNY O'Connor, M.D. uaa l|, ’ me with aur • SH 2-6433 «#•«»•• nr isasi common Palber end 14 - PaataN. nanally I feel that I MORTUARY ft Mat? i HaaeuaL SSStX COUNTY

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ORDERS IN NOWI Nilioa wido IIM I pad taillty IiNUIII la Writiaf *ll Saaeytu *•» Ault Inti Ar a Culunlrtp hptioa-wldo l7**»iatl roil hatirdt —1.t., blowout*. tibric brtpki. cut* or 'IPI'HO Writ#, phono •Itt»l A ouMlurp*. limtod to ommil o«-tr tor nun* ko> •( aiaatht >prt,i»a : Atiinit my dtl.ctl in workmo*. com# In |N'» im notarial without limit today for nlo Hint or mnr«|r • Coodioot tiro dtolirt V 10 lha U aid Cinti will mplt miuiunrnt allow- full information ONCO o« at* tiro autJ on o> | -n trod Orpin itmtinmi md WHEN SNOW •• SAYS N0... (UMAAI o*mr>,,,i Peine BARTON'S CANDY 60 GO LISS* GOODYEAR M Journal Square Jonty City LAKE’S IKC. HE 5-1004.7611 Communipow Ave., Jersey City DE 3-6300 THE 12 ADVOCATE November 7, 1963 North Jersey Date Book

Information mail b» rrreuby 10 Mother’s Guild, Newark Christ." a m. on Monday n< lha nrrii of nub- of Father Fahey Is a llralton It br II la to lik-limM In lha Meeting. 8:30, cafeteria; Wil- member of the Catholic Homi- Data Rank llatini ualraa lhara la aa •*rly Ham dtadllnn. All not Man atoms ha Lamb, speaker; know letic Society of America, mallad. your state, topic. racial l-uhlicity rhalrmra aro imiiod to justice panel. makn uaa nf thla aorvtro Wa will newt Our Lady of Mt. Carmrl Catholic Women's tha nama aI lha apnahar (If any) and College topic, and lha nama of tha chairman. Rosary Altar, Ridgewood Club Meeting, 8 p.m., East Luncheon. 1 p.m.. meeting Orange Women's Alfred THURSDAY. NOV. 7 Club; room; Mrs. Joseph Domas, Simon, Edith Stein St. Andrew's Mothers Auxilia- Guild, speaker. speaker; Margaret ry, Clifton Fashion show. Purcell, Sacred Heart Rosary Altar, chairman. 7:30, Clifton Casino; proceeds Jersey City Meeting, 8:15, FRIDAY, NOV. IS to building fund; Mrs. Vito hsll; Mildred Kcllet, chair- Our of Spinella, Mrs. l-ady Victories George Terry, man. chairmen. Rossry. Harrington Park - of the Marylawn Oranges St. Nicholes Nov. TEACHERS INSTITUTE - Brother Court Grantwood ( DA, Cliff- Fair, 15-16, Bartholomew. C.F.X., is thown the 10th annual Mothers and Fathers Mrs. during aide Park Fashion Club*, hall; John Russo. Mrs. Teachers Institute at Immaculate Heart show- South Academy, Washington Township. Seated left to Orange Meeting. 8:30, Robert Doyle, Mrs. Patrick Sister card party. Sauter's Restau- right are M. Louise, C.S.J., institute chairman; Mother Marian auditorium; Lt. Thomas Muel- James, C.S.J., pro- rant. Fairview; Mrs. A. McDonough, chairmen. vincial; Mother M. ler. Essex County Sheriff* Of- Patricia, C.S.J., superior general, and Sister M. C.S.J., direc- chairman Sacred Heart Rosary Altar, Alocoque, Mauro, tress of studies. fice Narcotic Squad, speaker; Newark White St. John Kantv Rosary Altar, elephant sal* narcotics addiction, Clifton Meeting cakeless topic. •bridge. 7<30, auditorium; Mrs. SL Paul'* Rosary, Jersey Catherine chairman. cake sale, 8 p m., auditorium; lllggin*. City Card 8 St. Nurses Mrs. John Feeler, chairman. party, pin., Raphael's Rosary, Uy- 10th Want social Mrs. J. Institute Held hall; Kamien- Ingston Minstrel show Nov. Bayley-Seton League. South Mrs. sky. P. Pinzoni. chair- 15-16. 8;30. Mountain Lincoln Oranßc Ward bingo psrty. men. auditorium; Mrs Patrick East Orange Veterans Hospi- Definition St. Joseph’s Columblettes, Mrs. Elmer tal; Mrs. John Reichert, chair- Alexander. Cla- For Oradell Meeting. 8 30; radio, chairmen. man. Josephites Mary Bidder, speaker; Mrs. SL Columba's FRIDAY. NOV. 8 Rotary. Ne- Status David Henwood, chairman wark Card Of St. party, 8 p.m WASHINGTON TOWNSHIP class" Joseph's Rotary Altar. , English St. Thomas the Mr*. Peter Coro- The Sisters of Si. ATI-ANTIC - Apostle auditorium; - LIGHTS, ACTION, CURTAIN On Nov. 10 and 11 at 8 East Orange Card 8 Joseph Sister M CITY Th« party. Rosary Madeleine, presi- at Confraternity. Bloom- lan, Mrs. James Mayen chair- of Newark held their New p.m. Caldwell College auditorium, Caldwell, the curtain p.m . auditorium; Mrs. Ros- 10th an dent of Archangel College, Jersey State Nurses' As- field U N. 8 will alie chairman. * trip, after am. men. nual Teachers' Institute at sociation has asked Gov. go up on "I Know My Love." Sue Russo, Mass; Englewood Cliffs, traced the Murphy, Bayonne, Mrs. Emma Donnelly, SATURDAY, NOV. If Immaculate Heart end Victoria Pile, Guardian Angel Rosary Academy origin and development of the Richard J Hughes to create Westfield, members of the Genesian chairman. St. l-eo'i East here Allendale Rosary, Pat- Nov. 1. a State Commission Gujld, are shown June Altar, Dessert college and pointed out its on the during a rehearsal, is the THURSDAY, NOV. It erson 9 Dwyer 8 Square dance. p m„ Mother M Patricia, su- significance Status of Women directress. bridge. pm.. Brooksido Essex Newark in the Sister For- District auditorium; Mrs Terry Nol- general, School cafeteria; Mrs. Sylves- N'ACCW perior spoke on the mation movement A resolution passed Nov. 2 Meeting, 7:45. St. ler. Mrs. institute ter Collyer. chairman Josephine Sidor, theme of the ’'Cath- Sister a! the NJS.W convention here Patrick's Newark, school hall; chairmen. M Alacoque of St Was SATURDAY. NOV. olic Education Strengthens urged the Governor to 9. Joseph's Juniorate, Saddle form I Thinking... Court Mt. SL Vincent Alumnae. America Mother Patricia Short Hills CDA - River, the tommiss.on to study the made the closing re- Washington, D C. New Jersey Chapter Meet said Catholic parents consider social, and Tour, leavo Maryknoll marks and introduced Sister political, legal 7:30 a m return 8 30 ing-tea book review, t 30, no sacrifice too great to send economic , pm. M Redemptj. who recently problems of women Films Nina home of Mrs Frank their children Catholic reservations Laßonca. to Dunn, Statistics arrived for a visit from her today. Exemplify SL Marie Woodcliff Heights: Wil- schools because GoretU Circle Msgr they realize The resolution of mission in stated that a liam Field, Seton Hall Malaybalay. Bukid- St. Joseph'* Guild, East Or- MARYKNOLL. N Y. (NCj- Librar- that in them the “whole man’’ study is non. Philippines. Sister Re- group needed f-r the A ian. speaker; review of "Tho is taught ange Bazaar. East Orange survey shows that Mary- body, intellect depta commented life purpose of exploring problems Glass Blowers," and on in Culture, Fun Women'* Club; Mr*. Margaret knoll Sisters come from 146 soul. the islands. of women at the state level I Bowden, Mrs. Ann Pirkey, S archdioceses and di> Mt. Carmel Guild Newark It would correspond to Presi- “TUB END AND aim of RUTH W. chairmen. cescs, 46 stale* and 13 —Communion dent Kennedy's Committee By REILLY foreign luncheon, 10 a m. Catholic on countries education.'* Mother Retreat for SL Joseph'* Guild for Boys Mass, Sacred Heart Cathe- the Status of Women. This as Patricia sa;d. “is afternoon, a reward gives us pictures like the forma- this we and Girls, Rockleigh Din- The missionary community, dral. luncheon Military Park The association offered tn for good report cards. 1 took should tion of the child tn the image Non-Catholics make an effort to see ner dance, founded two of Tammybrook Coun- tn 1912. now totals al- Hotel; Mr* W' F Place, chair- assist the Governor in esta- the children to see them. of Jesus Christ Young people try Club, most J. 700 WAYZATA. Mmn of three criticize and night DeMaio’s the center of our teaching, 10 Rev. punish that Supper (Tub; America In 1563, Anthony J two generations of they opened Orange, benefit of St Paul's Wilhelm. year term as first sice- a single family which u -’en the storms of life rage is objectionable. It is a cocktail hour, I dinner, •even CSP. of the from pm; new missions. Abby. Mrs. Mary Rutledge, Minneapolis, will prrudent of the 6,000-member during era 1839 to method 7 about them, they will call to we use on our chil- pm; Mrs Fred conduct the retreat. Meeker, chairman association 1889. Him and He will come dren in the home and we chairman is made live should bring November Selection SL Ann's llemr for the \ged Brother History to and it into play in NOV. Bartholomew, MONDAY, tl Senior and Jnnior G-ulds. Jer- breathe on the the wider C F X screen The aspects of our lives Our Lady of ENGLEWOOD The No- . actaj provincial su- Assumption sey City Communion break- boys thoroughly enjoy ed it. I too. Mother* Guild. Morristown vember selection for the perior of the Congregation of fa»t. * » M»*s. was impressed with the Conference* chapel, break- Meeting. 8 30. Rev. Month Club is Francis Xavier and commun- WHILE school; s' Hi Hat Hub. RFv muddy stream that was the ON the of “Smile’ Raynnnr. subject Vincent Puma, speaker: Span- You Too Can Bea ity supervisor of schools, dis- beginning of the Erie movies. I think the Wrllmont Saint'* Stephen Lynch, Seton Hall cussed the Canal, ish speaking in by Rev Gerald Vann. expansion of Theatre people diocese, dean of men. Mr« the black horror of a herd of in Montclair deserves OP speaker; topic. . and "Spiritual Vision” knowledge, growth in tech- a Charles Hoffman. Mrs John stampeding buffalo, the terri- vote of thanks for its eight St. Janies by Rev. Brrthokl and the Hospital Auxili- Fahrv. O. L Botti. chairmen nology diminishing ble reality of the Civil War week film festival now in ary, Newark Bridge, Carm sue of the modern world He and the On Bpm, S4. Brendan's Mathers basic similarity of progress succeeding Tues- Terraco Room. 1030 Broad Aua- stressed the St ; The tale Father Vann wrote necessity of people and problems from days they are presenting Mrs. Biary, Clifton Christmas Patrick Martooe, chair- over two dozen books, \carhtng students the “how generation to The Series'* one of sale Nov 17 1* generation. ‘ Heritage includ- man. basement; at-d his best known is "Tho the why” _ not merely ing such as Pain Mrs. Peter Jr pictures “Julius Our Garafaao. . Mrs. the HERE Lady of Csrstorhowa of Christ " "what'’ of a subject. IS A movie that will Caesar." "Kim." "A John Galetta, chairmen Tale of Mothers' Guiid. Harmon give a lift as it teaches Methods for you Two Cities." “Pride and Pre- improving and enrichos Meeting. 7:30. hall It will whet judice.'* and others reading development through children's Bayley-Seton league. South echoed sod the your interest in Besides being fine entertain- high value of Orange Day of Recollection, history and at the same time testing wrre demonstrated by ment. these films are based * a m.. Immaculate give them an idea of Conception the on the kind of books with representatives from Science breadth Chapel. Seton Hall campus; and beauty of our which we would like Research Associates. - our chil- land. Mrs. Georg* G. Cotter, chair- dren to be acquainted. High Broth its Stanley, C F X , When the movie man Industry school students should have and Sylvere, C F X , of St Jo- an I'uiao-Ellabeth District added interest in them seph's Regional High School. seeing NCCWf Card party fashion. as most of the titles Montv ale. di'ussed Set appear on * p m.. Stouffer's Restaurant, vocation Conference their Rev James required reading list. Short Hills; St James Rosary, programs F. NEW YORK Johnson St s. North- CITY - The Springfield, hosts Anthony ON Bethany Conference will hold SATURDAYS during the vale. talked on teaching mar TUESDAY, NOV. 12 festival there is a series of nage and ideals a two-session informal discus- St. Ann's faintly to and Rosary Altar, New- sion Nov. 12 and N»v. 19 at operas operettas Among high school students these ark Meeting. 7 30. Lyceum Our Saviour Church here. have been "The Student The room; Prince." "Madame Butter- meeting display of SISTER M. FRANCIS sessions on the role of the sin- children's dresses fly'* and '* made for The re sc of Jmmaculatc gle woman in today's world “Rrigadoon with “Rose Puerto Rican Mission Heart declared that ( Marie'* and "Aida'* Academy will last from IS to I pm. St. Man’s Hospital Anxill- leather it still to come Seeing these every an English Registration is C •ry. Orange Lunch films is an meeting, teacher because "by their own enjoyable experi- 12 15 m . nurses ence for and old alike, p building use of the language, they young Rose St. College Alumnae. strengthen or as well as an introduction to weaken what LADIES' CATHOLIC New Jersey Chapter Meet- this field of music often the student has learned in HAIL TO THE ing. 1:30, home of Mrs. Ron- QUEEN - Goil Demko, Irvington, was BENEVOLENT sniffed at by those who have crowned ald Ryer. Oakland. Queen of the Dance Nov. 2 had no personal exposure to University at Arch- ASSOCIATION Our of Grace Mothers' bishop Walsh it Lady Gymnasium, Seton Hall campus. South For Guild. Hoboken Meetirg, DEADLINE Orange Suzanne and Janet A 1«qoI !•»•'*• froNmol many years we have Ryon, Nework, Knef, Union, 7 30. auditorium. tried to the were Chosen runnerupt at the first dance lif* ln*wfon<« Soo«ty encourage family News representing to follow the Essex Cathode High School for the woman's Seton Hall's three legion of Decen- campuses. Newark. Paterson and South FOR THE WHOLE FAMILY page must be tn by Fri- cy-movie list. We keep the Orange campuses each entered day. Nov. I. for the Nov. four representatives. (itottllihed in 1190 current list on our kitchen Reunion in Lodi Gail, a junior of the Newark bulletin 14 issue division, wants to work with board for the conveni- Opportunity in Tnrenty-eiflit mentally retarded children. ence of all. LODI—A MONEY FOR COUIGI Occasionally one three-year reunion CAIDWELL - Sister Marguerite, Slotei end Conode ft: of the older of children will see the Felician Sisters Euro- O.P., of provident Caldwell College for Women, accepts a movie and check later. “It pean Summer Seminar will a for FULL TIME and check $2.500 from Edward A. RESIDENCE ’’ wasn't bo Weber, past presi- so hot, how is it held Nov. 10 at Immacu- dent of the PART TIME Friends of Caldwell College. The presentation Ideal rated?” late Conception High School FOR WOMEN "Jhe Gift was made Nov. 1 here. at tho first general meeting of the They usually find the Slides and films of tho year %> and marks the Field list first the silver tu *»* I«m VicXpw agrees with their reaction. tours will bo shown. contribution during jubilee ta. c.n Saint Joseph of the ****•« • kH While this is not commendable The Felician Sister* are year college. The contribution will be added to Mnw»* «'•■*•* in itself, it has made oim+* » nu Representatives them planning another tour for July the college's fund. aware that the 8 ' movie list is Aug. 3. 1964. With a Visit io Catholic Bl*| t Simplified Applicant* 4 not men wanton so much a restraint, as a Spain added. An audience with land may portonal toiumo tot genuine service and help. the Holy Father will again b# We should tt't//r >////{{ Mrs. Dorothy Latkoy become part of included. Students, their fam- / (_ fa/ Supremo Recorder a two-way campaign for bet- ilies and friends and Bible alumnae ter films SOS Welt lie* Street by making an effort are welcome. If interested, to see the better Irie, Peoaiyhrenia ones, even contact the high school prin- ta-ru bf as we avoid the poorer ones. cipal. w *•«. JOHN RE-UPHOLSTER and - f. STIMUUILLU, STD, SStfL RESTYLE TO Mlf TOO

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MAIL ORDERS FILLED ITALIAN PROVINCIAL SOFA M „ ••ouliful Italian Provincial iota at a budget price. 14" long, choice of fruitwoad. Antique White 4 Cold or Mahogany DIRECT frame foam finlihetr rubber cuihleni, tailored meticulouily . plain * n * ,km ** FACTORY• er tufted bock, choice of oxpemive fabric!. ' 1710 |#|c JOSIPH PAZZARI, Pret TO•YOU Tenae Arranged ROMA 9-11 HOILANO ST. (OH* 441 42 ORANGE ST SPRINOffEID AVI., NWK.) SAVINGS II I 1640-tree FURNITURE FACTORY NEWARK N J Perking In nlte till PI * leer-Open every Turn, end let. Hit «! 57 HALSEY ST., NEWARK FREE! CLEAR PLASTIC COVERS for eoch job Phono Mitchell 3*2260 Have You November 7, 1963 THE ADTOCAT* 13 Read ... ? Have You Counted Your Tints’ Lately? The questions art following SUSAN DINER By you to a major league ball an altar boy may make the be prayer. A praygr to God to bated on articles which appear bn game. boy exceptionally good in his help you, to watch you, to this issue of The Advocate. There's nothing quite like a at Mass and knowl- guide first I THERE response* you. Prayer that you The answers are printed at the ARE other more church. edge of God and His will do God’a will and be a bottom of the column with Young advocates, have you Important firsts such as your If a boy is unable to be an credit to Him and to stopped to count how many first Holy Communion. And yourself. the page on which the altar the desire find answer. times boy, may you experienced a first? there are smaller firsts the MANY TIMES won’t * m S article can. he found. him learning the Latin re- you You could count at least one first day of school, the first realise these sponses on his own and be- feelings are 1. An addition to CYO every day because each day day of the new and the present. timea many year ing extremely attentive at Many they la the first time you’re living first time took aren’t programs In parishes in the you a picture. Mass and other services. Just for a first but over that day. You’ve been and Newark Archdiocese this experiencing There must be love. Love over. Sometimes you'd There are other firsts too. year will be firsta since the day were rather not through with you of what you are about to do go There’s the. first time you bom and will continue to what you’re (a) Hockey and love to make you con- supposed to be- rode a two-wheeler the bike, throughout the rest of cause it would be easier (b) YCS your tinue when you'd rather stop. not first time your mother bought life. to. If afraid (c) Bingo And don't forget, there must yop're to start heel shoes or the you high There are tome firsts often find t- What New town is you something, you may Jersey first time your father took don't recall because out that it they wasn't as bad as investigating a plan whereby either didn’t make a lasting you thought it would be. parochial school pupils may Civics Clubs impression or because you when attend classes in Peristence, continuing public Four Youths were unaware of the event rather schools? you'd not, pays off. It taking place. makes a better you! (a) Our Lady Queen of Get Charters Peace, Maywood Receive WHEN YOU were very (b) Our Lady of Visitation, young your firsts were learn- The official charter from the Boxes, Boxes Paramus ing to walk then run, starting Commission on American Cit- (c) Our Hal- Lady of Lourdes, Award school, going out on izenship, Washington. D.C., Addie and her helpers are Paterson Eagle loween alone, taking a train formally recognizing the af- working to all I. ride alone and getting your filiation of local units with the feverishly open Pope Paul said this week Four Boy Scouts from the the entries from the Fall flrat card. national at Cath- Art that art Newark Archdiocese report organization religious vocations received Contest. About one-third of all As you get older there will olic University of America has the concern of the Eagle Scout Award In re- the been entries received came to cent be many more firsts first received by St. Joseph’s (a) Bishops ceremonies. The highest The Advocate office the last football as a School, Lodi, and St. Philip'* Priests honor was game, possibly (b) scouting presented week of the contest. Boxes and to Dennis player, first time behind the School, Clifton. (c) All Catholics Kohler, Steven envelopes have overflowed the wheel qf a car after you get The of the civic* l The school Pacbolek and Kenneth Perslch purpose Advocate to receive an first first club* Ls to Young contest room of Teaneck and Joeeph Am. your license, job, develop Informed, award from the American and are taking space in the Newark. day in service and first child responsible young citizens. berg. lunch room. Addie Legion for the best safety of This theme is "Guard says she Kohler. Pacbolek end Per- your own. year's patrol in the Memorial " hopes you'll be because Day Each first will have to be the Freedoms They Won patient BEST PATROL slch of St. Anastasia's Troop the was - Donald judges are going to have a parade Pieri. petrol chief of St. School, it shown received award faced squarely and firmly The students of St. Joseph’* (a) St. Anthony's Passaic, ac- 33 their from hard time the Anthony's, Passalo cepting a plaque from Commander Giordano despite what have elected Linda Penaec, selecting win- Joseph of American Post 200. William district execu- your feeling* (b) St. Legion Clark, ners. Anthony's, Paterson Also In tho be. With Other officers are picture are Officer John director of might each first goes president. Machugo, school safwty patrol, Troop- tive at the Boy Scouts. (c) St. Agnes, Paterson a amount Fannie Glen Marches* er Alfred Livington of the state and Sitter Daniel This was the first triple award certain of uncer- Pepe, police, Mary, S.S.N.D., advisor ■'Th* onl, BactauraM In Pataraan page for the faculty tainty because don't end Michael Rlfel. IJ. 4-(a>, petrol. The award was mode Oct. 25 for the best of in the history of the troop. you rttomm.ndid br Duncan Hlnaa patrol parochial schools in know what'* In for Newly elected of l) page S-(c), 1; page 2-(a), the Passaic Memorial St. Mayor Matthew Feldman itore you. presidents Doy parade. which wot Anthony's patrol, formed three A about to for the Junior Jets Civics Club at page ASSVERSi watered years praised the boys and their girl baby-sit 14) L(b>, the parade this for the first time. year the first time be uncer- St. are Rosin* work and said they are a may Philip's Hena, tain that she'll be able to get room 70; John Morone, room credit to the troop the com- the children to 71, and Diana Books for Youths munity and their parents eat all their Danoto, room lunch 73. Other officers ere: room Addie Each of the boys also hold a/JM at There'* also bit 70; Denis Maureen Helps Exhibit, the Ad Altare Dei award a of healthy Tarakjian. to fear make you try a little Chapman. Patricia Barkowski RESTAURANT Am berg is a member of St. Souls harder to do an extra good and Theodore Zakutnry; room Oraan music ntaMty Aloystus' Troop 103. The pre- br Barra Kina Missionary Reaps job such as the the 71 John McKiernan, Kenneth Learns "Opan 7 Da boy taking ra a Weak* sentation was made by Mayor lead Lunchnnn aaraad 11-1 FATHER KINO, PRIEST TO s short Decorating In the Christmas Calise, Belli and Mark very time, Tips play. Gregory enraged Hugh J Addonizio. Amberg re- Cackialla aur aaacialty THE Ratlee, room 72 Kathleen PIMAS, by Ami Nolan the Indians and lost hit life. ceived letters of congratula- A STRONG desire to do Brian Clark. Farrar, Straits; Burns Once Father Kino returned to Brune. Angila Giant*. 20 For tions from President Kennedy well Is also essential If Hamilton St. • MU 4-4198 Schools, Churches you're Kenefirk and Carl Cast ano and Oates. ITS pages. SS.2S. the mission's helm the In- and Gov. Richard J. Hughes. to succeed. The desire to be A can wish for dians became bay many placid again NEWARK last week Ad- ice cream and other foods Eusebio Fran- "Father Priest to the things. Young Kino, die decided to visit the Sussex that are served in elso Kino wanted to travel to Plmas,’’ is a story of the your lunch Ave Armory here. The oc- room the Orient and work In the great work of a dedicated, re- casion for her adventure was mission fields with the Society sourceful man of God —a BERNARD M. cnrr@rjtt Italian life help those two day*. Oto Mfwwl KiLm. (llta. «t. Tyrol, knew that diocesan with roefidpnr* to follow and become of purchasing agency, She wants to would not Mexico, pert remind you that be easy in Studios 14 the Mats. The book has been and Jim Tracey, general chair- SI MAIN ST.. WRST ORAMiK I)A I ISM WoUiiAftvn St., (ait but ho devoted himself com- your parents are interested in man of the iw.nni u*riv«. %tx\yr I m <*rtr* !V.», AouU planned to give children an exhibit, who took what you and other ct tott pletely to the Pima Indians Young Ad- rf Inmi ft u. ad Miflma her on t guided tour _»Mr4 there. early understanding and ap- vocates are doing as Dn the she learned young preciation of the Mass. tour apostles This about the desks and chairs in ANN NOLAN CLARK paints Read-With Me Hook for Catholic children your classroom, the black- a vivid background for a true is illustrated Plan New two boards and many other story set in the late 1500s. in ways—*t ahowa the things Paper the such as the beautiful colors of WIIJdLNGTON. DEL. (NC) You can follow the efforts of priest say mg Mess and in tile —The v»me paint, and drapes used to Wilmington Diocese win Father Kino through the words places it shows the make your chlki's The classroom attrac- begin publication of a of his osrn diary. pert Illustrations weekly have tive The men in of newspaper next The Father Kino established such excellent detail that charge year. dio- the nine these booths showed her the cese has also announced the es- mission after mission by him- squares of the corpo- ral the altar amount of work that goes Into tablishment of a bureau of self. Then in the twilight of on can be seen. in- buying the school furniture formation. life, saw it nearly destroyed THE ILLUSTRATIONS for Since Addie likes by an over anxious new as- music she the Creed show the priest found the demonstrations of sistant The young priest in standing at the altar, the hand of God organs and pianos much to her APPAREL FOR the Father coming out liking and wished you were of a cloud. God the Son look- with her. THE CLERGY St. ing much the same as He must i * Joseph's ha\e looked when He was uo YOUNG ADVOCATES, you earth and on the the Cross, should have seen the priests Gets TV Sets Holy Spirit in the form of a vestments in ail their color «mm>i * hm> dove and twro families looking **•. m and beauty. Votive candles of DEMAREST St. Joseph'* up towrard heaven. many colors and aues were School her* hit received tele- Such pictures provide and many also displayed, some of which Duffy Quinn vision seta from the Parent*' fine opportunities for parents Addle Net* had never seen before Our New Addr*u Guild (or the first and second and Young Advocates to Like « l help you, Addie enjoys eat- 11 it. M. Y. n MY. grade*. pre-school children and first MU ilUi ing and was very interested tn The guild run* book lairs, graders to a better apprecia- •KTOtY JUVIC! IMVITID cake sales munching samples of hot dogs. and other projects tion of God and the Mass. and has contributed appros- Susan Diner imately 270 film strips, visual aids, tape recorders and other GOD'S CHILD by Esther MASS in honor of up-to-date equipment in the Wilkin. Guild Press. 2* pages. past three years. Sister Fulginette. principal, This delightful Read With Me ST. FRANCIS XAVIER CABRINI said the guild "deserves a lot Book begins by telling you that of credit" lor modern- are helping you God's child and then celebrated Will bo on Nov. at 10 A.M. ize the school. flashes back to the moment 17, The film when God first knew The strips on modern you. In tb# of author chapel math. Sister said, arc shown to writes ol God’s good- ness, found the children during the day in the shape ol a St. ANTHONY'S and on Tuesday evenings are leaf or in a child's eyes. ORPHANAGE shown to can You will be reminded that parents so they *72 Pottaic Av. , Knmy, NJ. learn how to guide their chil- you are made in God’s image, dren. and that of all tha children in the world thife isn’t another like Your Neighborhood you. You’ll learn o 1 God’s plan for you and your Pharmacist parents’ part in this plan. Make The Most of Your MONEY!

GOD’S SPECIAL protection o( is also you described as are SAVE WITH the many things you can be when you grow up. SAFETY AT Ksch page is beautifully Il- ... BARTON! lustrated and will delight tha V youngest o 1 the Young Advo- YOU HE'S THE MAN YOUR GET; cates. Although the book is DOCTOR for SECURITY m the Insur- DEPENDS UPON mesnt children up to 7, cl *0" Smwt m CM ■ older children will enjoy read- ance your savings train! n* ..hie, M km lm «* ing it to brothers up to SIO.OOO by *»,. Hwfmnciu mt mu kli younger and W—Hi—l Hr Ytm. sisters. Agancy of US. Gov- ' ” The amount of ernment, NEWARK reading mat- ter isn’t too much •** * Iwro Martarana. mo, to b* tackl- PROFIT Irom 15'£* LIU PIUIMKY ed and the illustrations while enUbluhnd TRA dividend ortr Jo |N(I days. Haalalarad Ftarmactala enhancing the story, also tell Money deposited on The r™* Dalirary Opao Ctwt O.j little stories of their LONG HAIRED own. or VIRTUOSO _f ro ™ » am. to t! p m before the 15th >** “I. rriottl tow Susan Diner car earns dividends from Monklill Aviitua rtfDovid from his HU H7W fi£ar*. t. brother bird, the musician »■ the Ist i Jazz th® torts hair variety Dnf#«t the ■nlln/4 sW!k •» «• -sew?aatßafsjMw JERSEY CITY A Wedding Reception PROFIT from the highi VAIRNTI't PHARMACY ett rtuoso gotthatwayafter hours of dividend rate. ;/ practice foregoing pleasures of childhood. 1 JOIIPH VALINTI, Ran. Phar. i- '— ot tho • ounds and PraacrlpOooa - Bab)! *585 2?BS* Naada too KSKTSTiiSS Photo Dai*. - Praa Datlirarj CONVENIENCE, . m Waal Ma A*a, an Fair, law Save by mail. W« pay Jar»a» City. N. i. PLAZA HOTIL - gWOW«t 0« VWM 0 postage both ways. a a? toiler., jirHv City. N. 4. 1 about reporting and editorials, ha relaxes with WESTFIELD bndi'o"hirtfs' oomlcsad and snaeiaMta!!?! privldtii Has ona of more than 400,000 DIVIOINO MA ANNUM families reading the CINTRAL PHARMACY NEWS?*" • Dlontttot tonouot Memo laat i. Cam* la, Ra«. Pilar. COMPOUNDCD QUANTIRIV 01 PraaertpUona Carrlullt to Ml • tunerler Cultlne

. Orvf Panama* - Cnamatlra • Mum Prim EVOHHQ AND SUNDAY • Coretul -gift*™ jetffig1 H«f» Attention to tlotollo Mot IIMII Consultant BART NUTLEY BAY DRUOf CO. SAVINGS . AND LOAN ASSOCIATION Jama* Rtaaia. r**. Phar. OLdfield 3-0100 Newark News gahy Naada Amnio Parkin. Imco 1164 Praaertpituna Promntl. nltad RAYMOND UVD., NEWARK • MAr Cut It at* Dru(a and CoamaOc* Air Centltlone* %lda Mm' Praakta Av*. . NOrth MHt SAP IROAD ST., IQTH A/mp ■•tlmoloo cheerfully elreo NEWARK • OPEN WED. TO BP. M. THE 14 ADVOCATE November 7, 1963 CYONames Couple In Youths' Comer Pro Hands Reaching for World's Pulse Deo ED Winners By WOODWARD "Do we really have our portant, he can feci that he able to reach such a committ- NEWARK The do hand to the pulse of the ha* Newark to that for which they were something to give, Father ment. Archdiocesan CYO'* world?” asked Rev. 1963 Pro ordained, the sanctification of Thomas Kleissler pointed out. Deo et Juvrntute Medal A. who was was the world. That is why the .Kleissler, recent- As part of Father IN RELATED areas, them awarded YCS, Jointly to Mr. and role of the ly appointed director of a are to make laity has become Kleissler hopes to begin a plans high school Mrs. Gilbert Wagner of Gales leadership training so important. There is mis- program series of weekend seminars students aware of opportuni- Kails, Conn., Nov. 3 at the for the Newark ties for sionary work to be done with- Archdiocesan "to develop a sense of char- apostolatic work duo 15th annual convention of the in CYO. ing the two doors of every rectory ity and mission.” They would summer in this area, Archdiocesan Young Adult in the He and many other be in the south United States. You persons run like a with and in South Council the believe that family at Hotel Robert don’t have to the answer is an America. There will go to Africa or talks, exchange of ideas, re- be a co- Treat. M.gr, John J. emphatic "No," but Klley, Asia to find it." they creation all ordination of information, en- CYO leading up to director, made the pres- aren't planning to sit Idly by those interested reaching a point of a com- abling to entation. RICHARD SKELLY of St. Ce- and let that condition know persist. mittment to Christ by each where help Is needed The medal Is cilia's was elected given annually (Kearny) WORKING most and who can give that WITH the co- participant, t to a Catholic layman for out- chairman- of the Adult Young operation of the The help. work Council. Others CYO, the new committment to Christ standing in behalf of chosen were Is On the college program will institute a num- the important not level, there youth. This was the first Barbara Spencer of St. Te- part, only Joint ber of activities aimed of the will be increased emphasis on presentation of the resa's (Summit), vice at seminars, but of the award, the chair- more to promoting a greater interest entire YCS program, Father giving depth hospital- title of which means “for man; and Ronald Roa of Visi- God in the Kleissler ity shown to foreign stu- and tation lay apostolate among feels. He believes youth.” (Paramua), correspond- the dents for youth of the archdiocese. that a student is Opportunities apos- The Wagners ing secretary. profiting recently mov- Perhaps the from YCS tolic work in Mexico and ed of the Cross biggest portion when he or she is to Connecticut from St. Eagle medals of the South America will also be program will be con- re- John's (I,eonla) where were awarded to three mem- they cerned with establishing Young ported. were active in bers of the Council for their youth work dur- Christian There will service. Students movements. Priest's Addition be a newspaper ing the past decade. Mr. Wag- Recipient* were Jo- There are a few of these units run by students with their ner was cited for seph Lavin of Bogota. Robert promoting in the archdiocese, bul the spiritual ideas and actjvitiea the spiritual goals of Kltimpp of Jersey and scouting City number will swell Gives ands for while Valerie Gfeller of Hillside. if teenagers Dividends newspaper priesta a cuhmaster and scout- take as much interest as have and and modera- - religious lay master at Rev. William P. Divine TORONTO fNC) A priest St. John's and for of several priests as a result of tors. his work in the Scouter De- Help of Christiana (East Or- recalled he added six and six, Archdiocesan CYO tecent meetings to outline and An attempt is also HONOREDCOUPLD -Msgr. JohnJ.Kiley, Newark director, presents ange), Council wel- got a correct answer of 3 planned velopment Program. moderator, YCS. duplicate Pro Deo et Juventute medals for outstanding service to youth to Mr. and Mrs. comed the . million. to encourage development of participants. An introduction of MRS. WAGNER was by Rev. "When apostolic work in parishioners St. John's (Leonia). at the honored people heard me say grammar Gilbert Wagner of Conncticut,former Young for her Dennis J. Geaney, 0.5.A.. of schools. Sisters extensive work in the that with six boys and six interested m AdultCouncil ConventionNov. 3at theHotelTreat, Newark. Itwas thefirst Rockford. in handbook to Bergen County CYO HI., a girls we such a program will be of- more than one He worked day camp would conquer the time the annual awardeas made person. in souting and on YCS program and CYO Sacred tells much about this fered information and in Heart world, assis- Bergen CYO cultural they said that we were she was associated with County day comps. activities. She also movement. He says: tance in such activi- was active foolish. Yet today the Young starting in Girl ties. Scouting and PTA "TIIK YOI’NG Christian Christian Workers exists in 94 work. Students offer countries of the a laboratory for world, with EXPLAINING Jeremiah J. Test three a point with ' O'Callaghan. Facing teenagers to come to million members.” said grips a ficticious Father Jersey City who "Joe." attorney. _ with the reality of being a Msgr Joseph Cardijin. YCW Geaney says: "Joe would like gave the principal Christian. founder, at address, No lectures are giv- a rally here. told to do a few things himself. the delegates' “There is en The In CYO emphasis is on small He would like have THE to an missionary work to be done Loop in which ORGANIZATION grew op- groups everyone ts portunity to make decisions. THAT SMILE within two door, of "because we had faith in th; OF an every rec- given to RAYONNK Sacred Heart opportunity ex- Joe must be shown that tory in the UJS. There's young girls and boys You there a idle thii press himself is " (JC). past weekend, ” something that he can do. shocker for you "The must have that same faith can clinch a tie for its first meetings are designed He must be challenged to culminate “We must be more and Speaking on the theme of Hudson CYO in actions that County Football "Is school or home to National Catholic students more convinced that if we going Youth Week. League Nov. can perform The championship 10 don’t be a place one “The Young Catholic in meeting Is somewhat like give the world a Chris- merely toler- the when the meet a SECURITY Knights un- to ates* Is he to let hit and tian solution its going PROFIT Lay A he told the football huddle leave problems, postulate." defeated St. They Aioysma m the the huddle there will be communistic and pals drift from Christ and young people they were ex- with definite as- second game of a tnpleheader the Church* Is he to do pected to share the faith signments and a materialistic solutions.” he going they at team spirit. Ctfy Park Stadium here warned anything about these had received with other*. Kacb must carry out bis part things?” Coach Jack Bridges' team is the Joes The Young Christian Student "Every leader in the YCW Only and Janes ran “IP YOU WERE able to li»- undefeated and unscored answer those upon Movement Is built oo the prin- has an international questions And, ten to responsi- a sermon a of in eight games and will be here is an couple ciple that Christian leaders bility and the most important opportunity to learn hundred years to make how ago," he .aid, looking it 10 triumphs or. more specifically, student part of the international “you would hear the before the season ends priest apostles, are formed through movement is the local section say 'Keep the to Command- action " International ACADEMY OF ROB GARHIK leads can do nothing ments and the six precepts of the SAINT Sacred Heart offense that al- 'Groups of about six to eight without the local section All EUZABETH the Church and keep your teenagers meet leaders must be made MCOMOAIV SCHOOL SOI mouth shut so features the running of John regularly with aware OIRL» and you'll get to r»uatf»"i IMO fully Arrr*dJt*4 and Bill a different person the of this It is with little sacri- heaven A. Paroeky McGimptie leading SIITIIt of ’ a result of the so- CHARITY ami the meeting each time helping fices that we will save the called passing arm of Tom Sf» j rri»T Reformation, the laity to world." Berman. M Aloysms, provide leaders, which is he said J Effect were looked a. I with a on 9-1600 upoo sheep one of two basic goals Stressing the importance of have to 30-3 record, counts on of yet see a sheep argue quarter- YCS back Art Caveili workers. Msgr. Cardijin said INSURED with the shepherd. and backs Bob Ostrtsdorf Problems that "they are not animals, ; “That may have been need- and Ralph Ter mostly person- al. not machines, OPPORTUNITIES ttoooo •«• Ol J.JTOO nity of a person. Each mem- Siitera of Christ over Reparation Holy Rosary That was ber of the VtCiAt iatin (tami it* btio**d “Priests group can feel im of the of today are so bur- the highest offensive output wtl«ll Congregation Mary IRVING dened . *riildMl M.m. t.r p Mr am SAVINGS \A with administrative rrt«n4l«fi every registered by a Mt Car • r% Wnt 1ffh linn. n. Y. 11, H Y bination —with touch- JERSEY _ protection CITY - A study Tiuamm chiihi him Selecting Stars downs and added two extra day for selected high school account* into rad to of BUI $lO,OOO by ogancy JERSEY CITY - points Chludiinski Sacred scored armor*. their teacher*. parents U S, Heart the other two Mounts* and tha Oovarnmant plot (JC) coach Jack Bndg- TPs priests will be conducted profitable with 1-ataci es. who will coach the South- Tony hurling three by thr Young Catholic Lead- CALDWELL COLLEGE FOR WOMEN dividend* thot hove been with- paid ern touchdown aerials. Division All-Stars m the er*' Institute at St ' Aloysiu* out first annual Hudson CALOWEU. NEW JERSEY interruption tince date of County With Rill Harris scoring High School, Nov. 17. CYO Football league All Star three touchdown. St Paul's Thr (tudrnt*. who represent CONDUCTED BY THE SISTERS Of ST. DOMINIC L founding. $1 tfarti your account, game Dec t at bad mo*t of thr school* in thr Bayonne City- an time in high Accredited - A easy topping folly Offering B. ond B S. Degrees I" or Park Stadium, has Star of Archdiocese of Newark and ,A. perton by mail; we announced the Sea There was one y the selection Diocese of eight members upset, however, as St An- of Paterson. all at- ' \ pay pottage. / of hu 25-man roster. drews tended a summer training edged Queen of Peace pro- founded in 1899 He named by the SiUert of Chority five Our Lady of (North Arlingtoni, 7-0 gram at St Paula Abbey, (JC) players W IT Newton, in August Victory Rob WiH H*«ft 7 t • Gannon. Vince * "Young Adults Meet Their of Bellucci. Den- **?«•• 4 • 1 Saint Elizabeth W College la4j VtrMrtn I | I Elder*" the theme for HIGHEST RATE nis Gibney, Joe Gerotumo and ta thr * 1 Art Certlssimo ami three t*Ml« « ) *tudy day which will attempt Convent Station, New 14 3)4 Jersey IN PATERSON from Mt Mt l*/M to investigate thr arras Carmel—Dennis I-a- 2 4 4 of con- *■*’ * **» *•• flict and picski. Bill Chludiinski and agreement between 1 • • M students Grady Marcum. Pml WI im « * | and thr adult world SAVE BY Uw" U « SYMBOL... j j Thr purpose of the dialogue "OF THE NEW MAN YOU THE 15th 0 i» to better future program- ming for the nerds of today's CAN STRIVE TO BECOME" EARN /0 students. FROM Keynote speaker will be per James Ronaync. a trained l»t FRANCISCAN THE stabiliser from the National x: Headquarters of the YCW in PRIESTS & wow rot wow as Chicago. BROTHERS yap r*oM thi i puipit Si CoM-nut work it«r|«d by St College Preview ol An li (no c-« it«r re'-ied l« ow it"* '•»'> b«ci4i of lick of fwndt.) Offered Students WMt fof informotioA:

m BUFFALO (NC) - A pre- DIRECTOR ot VOCATIONS view of college is bbing offered Function Fitttirt, Boi ITT to top students in the senior •I Bi'H'dini’i ML Momitiry, Hollldiytburg, Finnlytvtnil r classes of Buffalo NEWIY EFMH area high UIHT schools D'Youville MStPH~ by -- - College. nr tu. I REVISED PATRONMTtna Of tHt UNIVIRSAI CHURCH You *ri invited enroll They are able to sit in on reg- to younett or i loved oat I* accordinca with ular SAINT freshman classes and get the most nctnt JOSEPH DAILY MISSAL Iht college credits for their work. ol Ih* Sa- Truly finest. most-Ufrtodate Daily Missel. ,4 Sister Marie cred Congregation i |r * ,mplihtd * rT * nttnwt. Ofti Christine, pres- Cop /*. ident V ol Riles ,n V* ,, '°" full co,or of the girls' said > ru.k «« iL* ‘ f il " ***p»"»** Catholic pi u. $3.85 college conferences FRANCISCAN MISSIONARY UNIOI Cloth, Luther, gen, gold edges $B.OO for high school seniors are 135 WEST Jilt STREET, NEW YORK 1, NEW YORK SAINT JOSEPH planned at St. Peter's College. SUNDAY MISSAL LOnjicre 3-0077. It no envwr, cell PL 8-2241 Most Seton Hall Prep and Benjamin beautiful "regular” Sunday Missal with utra Franklin Junior School large type, calenders. Rosary In full color. High VING SAVINGS Latin-English in Ridgewood this weekend Ordinary. Confraternity Version. PRIESTS “*k“ * Cloth,Ig #2.75 ,J ■ The St. Peter's AND LOAN A3SOCIATIOI leather, gen. gold edges $4.50 session Nov. JESUIT BROTHERS 8 126 MARKET STREET at 7:30 p.ni. will be for stu- (near Main) PATERSON, N. J. • AR 4-420 SAINT JOSEPH dents from POCKET MISSAL Union, Essex. Ber- S sat 9-3; Eve*. 6-8. Free at lane Daily, Fri, Parking Maiden lot, cor. Hamilton & Union Strea New complete Missal for and gen. Hudson and Director of Sundays Holydays Middlesex Vocations, 39 E. 83rd St., Now York 28 N Y • • with over 100 SERVICES: JavU*t AccoeaN V«aii«i Clvb Club • » beautiful, full color illustrations counties. The Cbrtaaa* Mwlt.fl Uwu M«m |- r riTnni other two, both (Phono 212 RE 4-1146) • IMNI 0«. * lUclric tilt T.nv.hit' CKa.ki • O!*>• Confraternity Version. Nov. Pay*. Mil • M.n. r “Iff* ***£f®<‘?4$2.50 planned 10, are for stu- □ P,PrtmU*** u Cloth, Leather, gen. gold edges $4.50 dents Q OruUwri SAFI OIPOSIT ROXES FOR SAFEKEEPING OF YOUR VAIUARUS in the area. The Seton Ntm* . — Hall program will be held at VVHIRfVIR CATHOUC Addr*«i BOOKS ,IR. s O (0 2 p m. and the one iq Ridge- wood at 7 p.m. November St. Luke's Awaits Showdown Clashes in 7, 1963 THE ADVOCATE 15 Big Eight RON TIMPANARO HOHOKUS Although It EUard. DePaul will be facing scoring one. backs, held by Immaculata Our Lady of the which hasn't been overwhelming Saddle Brook Nov. 9 and Mor- Lake, Conception. would like better anyone, St. Luke'* ris Catholic nothing than High will be at home IMMACULATE Conception School has been build- Bayley-Ellard took a 214 to have Its first varsity foot- quietly to Our Lady of the Lake Nov. (4-1) had Its undefeated-sea- loss llackattstown ball success the lng a record which has from, Nov. against Cru- finally 10 in non-conference clashes. son plans smashed. 28-13, by thrust It into 2. leaving the Golden saders. the spotlight in St. Luke's (5-1) boosted its Verona and the Lions should Bishops still in search of their However, it would be a ma- the Big Eight Conference foot- streak five be first winning to games, mighty tough on for the Lakers ball chase. 3-0 in the victory. St. Mary's fell. 13-0, jor upset to conference, with a as they seek revenge. A spot to Essex Catholic, but they win since they have scored Now, the Lucans have reach- 19-7 triumph against Morris atop the standings could also have one Big Eight just one touchdown in losing ed first and the Catholic Nov. 3. it triumph place show- As has in await Immaculate Conception their first four down in three tries and they could games. stage in their hopes for other Lucan wins, defense was if the Lucans can't stop Val- tie Morris Catholic for fifth THI STANOINOI league honors. They will en- just as vital as offense with ley. place with a triumph. w l pa pa tertain Our Lady of the'Val- end Bob Profitko and tackle Uki'i Oratory continued to make bl s s as is ImmsrulaU t ley, which suffered its first Joe Delßuono turning in es- i as x headlines it would rather not WITH back-to-back victories Dsfasl S 1 SS SI conference loss last strong efforts. O. L. Vail,, 1 1 71 >4 week, in pecially have. The Summit a school after streak-breaking loss to Morris CsuwUs S S 7S 4* the top contest on a three- Our Lady of the Valley bowed to Mater Dei. 15-12, for Immaculate Conception, De- M Man's I 1 St ST Cl.rd I I M game Big Eight slate Nov. (4-2) dropped from the top its 25th consecutive setback. Paul M may be launching an- Or Moo t 4 11 IST 10. perch in the Big Eight as it With only Immaculate Con- other win string and it figures IsMvMval SwrMe suffered a 21-0 defeat at the ception and to Bayley-Ellard left add Saddle Brook (2-3-1) to VO PAVPts IN TIIE OTHER two games. hands of DePaul KosKisp. DtPsul (4-1). Valley on the Orators’ schedule its list of victims. ISM Immaculate will they quarts. tmmarulMa S e SS Conception also features a stubborn de- don't Kauai. t. appear destined to snap Stepping out of league play O Valla, 4 a M entertain and St. fense Janalaaa. Marrta Cats 4 S *4 Oratory which should make Its that skein In The for will be 1963 paro- a week. Morris Catholic CuaMMlam. O L Valla, , « ts Mary's host to Bayley- game with St. Luke's a low- KaaVatt. SI l.uSa'a Ia IS chial record is 33 set- (33) will run into straight a neighbor, Prtmavara. Morris Call Ia IS sports spot In Two Meets A Swingin' Play Harriers Approaching Homestretch ed by woodward By ED GRANT meets being apparently certain meet). for Essex Catholic, interest When a football coach goes lines for Jordan to go un- ELIZABETH - The home- RYAN LS NOW pretty will center on individual con- firmly to a football so touched to game—as they the end tone. stretch lies established as the NJCTC's now ahead for tests with Greg Ryan of the top often do—it is more than just "WE WORKED New Jersey Catholic Track Bob of man after his victory in the a busman's holiday. He is on it about Eagles. Kennedy Our five minutes Conference cross-country Lady of the Valley and John Turkey Trot Nov. 2 at sometimes on a each day in scouting mis- prac- teams with the Warinanco Park. He de- tice, but it never went smooth- Seton Hall Eager of Christian Brothers again sion or perhaps just trying to feated Spike Shoe meet Nov. 9 and as Eager in this race, ly because the boys on de- Academy the conference's absorb new ideas which can fense the NJSIAA hands while Kennedy was running knew what was com- championships strongest against some be put into use for his own Nov. 16. both at Warinanco determined second to Ed Myers of Bishop team. ing." the coach explained. opposition from Park, the only dates Eustace in the "B" division. "We really didn't know how it major left other parochial schools, as wett Such an outing have Myers one of may was to on the schedule. as the state's is two runners going work in the public schools been the decisive factor in ” Team from Catholic schools game honors In the two (in the case of the Seton Hall outbids bringing St. Cecilia's its third the conference who As Bergen Catholic discov- will be Tri-County Catholic Confer- strong contenders for the ered. it worked to perfection. ence grid crown this year. Among NJSIAA title. The other After the Crusaders had driv- Independents is In Greg Mi com of St Bonaven- T-CCC COACH RALPH Cavalucci en for a big touchdown ■ fol- the lure, third in the state race recently went to a George lowing opening kickoff. St. Cecilia last year, who last Saturday Washington University game s may have been Wave, Bees Bid for Honors the Passaic at a won County title to see Steve Lapko, a former psychological disadvan- m a upset over Ed Saints tage if it hadn't used major Continue Saints' who is and Grid star, a member NEWARK The Tradition hassle for The Green Wave has 213 points of Passaic of the succeeded with the Schopperth Valley, squad. play. unofficial honors North in ENGLEWOOD among seven games. Momatown one of s Winning will bring s three game shut- W Ryan two conquerors four games and are 0 2 In th# Although Cavalucci arrived ithout a “huddle, St Ce- Jersey Catholic School has broken the schoolboy even tn six this season. Tri-County Catholic Con out victory streak into Us cilia's lined for in- circuit. too late to see George Wash- up the play, griddera could narrow down to thus far ferenee football games championshp dependent meeting with Essex W t e* ea caught Catholic V. ington Kore on the opening Bergen com- a pair of Benedictine schools. Ralph Lilore extended his IN THE SETON Hall meet has become tradition at St Catholic (3-2) in final y le. 4 S S3 is prepara- 1 play of the ing out of its defensive huddle Delbartoo and St Renedict'r the achool Cecilia's School 1 1 IS IS game. Lapko ex- scoring rampage with IS public entry will tn High ami the tion for a drive to ‘*“•*7 « p,m• ii as and cashed closing cap- is plained the maneuver—which in on the vital ele- Prep, with St Michael for dude Essex 1961 Saints l.’* ‘ • is a only s point.* St Benedict s as the County public proved themselves ture second tn l-SS ment of place the con- Pltw S 3 4 47 was unusual—to his former surprise as Jordan (CC) rating any chance to out- setool no eaception to that Gray Bees ran their record tn champ Reggie Henry of rule. ference The ly -Avll kK^f dashed 52 Qoeensmen have coach. Cavalucci liked it and yards to tie the distance that duo East Orange. Ed TO SAT Pt, 41 with their third straight Shattuck of In its last three looked impressive in score. tries. St. their re- V laciusV is • s> decided to use it. probably for Central Cecilia's *• u »■ Delbarton. which became the victory. l*-7. against East Side Regional and Steve At- bss won the cent games, in a ii as title especially K- This Week Only k*«n* i Wat Hina. Caa ) al Iruught his total to 44 23rd. U Calimat * nxx.n 'EARLY 11. CMltri points. TTie top runner Cgy»>g SEASON IB), • pm Boystown was later declared for the Royal Wlaa« tad DISCOUNTS »'■ a The leaders Cfcaj« liauwi Huai Baaßltra Bra « fcutli «Ma are; In MICiAi aacnitiii On forfeit the freshman Knights was Russ who rot Man Mali. and Mod.l, winner, its rsce, Va- Dorn, MIVATI bringing R BnxSni PAtTIt ft "Saa" 14 4 m dim Schaldcnko placed llth. JTWe* record to 3-2. Jor4aa. M Cwlllt'i II paced the ACCOMMOOATIM* l| H H s M Pirates In the HUNIINO UCINSfS ItIUID ImmKulm II t M In 10th freshman Mar- n* ItMft Am. at tuft it. Norwalk. Conn., which is Ki-*hUp, Ixl’.u! § place with race, “O_L. VaUar M It. Lt/kp-s S S4 ist NEW 4-2, can u P. te«mmite Richie waa again he YORK CITY hia Cimh M ronttaa Pr.» he Boystown Myers right runner-up. Route 46 by win- UuMTtor*. Dpltertcw OA Maaatel M M. fan Bra* » i u behind him. bind its city 7-3030 ning its two OiMMlwr. Drlbirum Dave Faherty. rival, Bayonne Denville, N. J O. L Ltk. at Marrla remaining games, S t M CalkaCa R. U>e former one Ijarkrtt. Lukr'i f t SS Bergen Catholic Op** Oo4 r la 0 PM. Nov. 10 and a second R 4 , # M»»SST,. MKh».l'| I 1 2 Nov. 13. Jtantaga starru Cklh. star, took fourth YOU CAN LOOK t t it place to help YOUNGER IN MINUTES WITH W««»n. Dallwtnn A S t M lona to the team title. Custom Mods Undoctoctoblo Results Lost Week Hairpioco *•>'"*•* 1 k *•*•* "»»" H »Nld atcompl.th Mbaita M. Blair T •mi ka« widely aitepfad. I'd Ke.e Sen, i« - paßaaTlJ. o. U VaU.. * og o V *« «• HW boldnetl Witt, . "S*e nr PR * v THISWINTER PAUL'S baltp.,*, denned ♦», personally before you MOTORS M - u HI^M * - - ~ Viilh. Yiilto ll< ill buy ear. I Sa;il> r any will five you Goltli Rd H. A\ il .i\ Laloyitli A»c ** ~ * - ~***“ ■* KgHHL. i mawtmornc «Urss! the deal (hat can’t be beat!” * * YOU GET ALL THE ! JOSEPH R. fey? 14” HA 7-2530 MESSINA, Pros. Hair Rosoarch * 17" Inst. Ltd. Varana as. Immarulau Mm 1J following for only ,'l » 'JIMI | MON., .ITSL !lr ~r > WED., SAT. - MArk.t 14141 TROPHY PONTIAC Firti litri, •nd Of by appointment \ • • R5O Brood Hal Charkowakl Safety Check Winterisation & Anti- '57 St., Nowork, N.J. PASSENGER CARS . CHEVROLET • mn4 Freese Motor • ** •**' •" •** balrpiacai Tune-up Lubrication 2 Door, 210 »eriei Mollu r'lI** 1 • & Oil VB, Auto. Otden tilted > M Sta. MS-8533 EAST W»8.w!h **.* "! im., Wag., WMI UNO ORANGE HU i p.m. CUmB IrH Suburban, white-roof « COMMIT! (VOCATION AND i*t i*ie Royal blue *OOIUfT body, R fc H w w Auto., V 8 ’ $695 16 THE ADVOCATE November 7, IMS

Weekly Calendar Pray for Them

Rev. »»lc, where she Rationed Ignatius Ryan w» Cahirciveen, Ireland, who from 1923 help- NOV. 8 SI. Michael’s until her transfer to ed thousands of Allied THURSDAY, Fraternity, UNION CITY - Rev. Igna- prison- St. Anne Villa thia year. to from Confraternity of Christian Third Order of St. Francis, tius Ryan, C.P., 84, former ers escape nazl-occu* Surviving are two siiteri, Doctrine, St. Thomas the Newark LV’im -;-i -i professor of homiletics at St. pied Rome, died in Ireland Michael's Mrs. Margaret G. Ludcman Oct. 31. Apostle, Bloomfield “Ac- fast, Robert Treat Hotel, fol- Monastery died Oct. 29 St. and Ruth Hartford, both of Dr. W. quaintance Tea” for parents lowing 9 a.m. Mass, St. Mi- at Francis Hospital, Edgar Weigel of Conn. Brooklyn. of children enrolled in CCD chael's Hospital chapel. Rev, Hartford. A Solemn Re- Plainfield, a surgeon at SL quiem Mass was Elizabeth's and classes, 3:30 p.m. Herbert Gallagher 0.F.M., offered Nov. Alexian 2 at Sinter Grace superior of St. Mon- St. Michael's Monastery. Irene Brothers Hospitals, Elizabeth, Jesuit and Mission Anthony's Seminary Father was native died Nov. astery, Butler, speaker. Ryan a CONVENT - Slater Grace 2. Bureau 21st annual Jesuit of Philadelphia and was pro- Irene Kendrick of the Slaters Name In your also Mission benefit dinner, Wal- Holy Society, Holy fessed a Passionist in 1917 of prayers remem* Charity of St. Elizabeth, dorf-Astoria Hotel, 7 Rev. Rosary, Passaic Commun- and ordained in her these, your deceased p.m. 1924. He died Oct. 31 at St. Thurston ion breakfast and installation Anne Villa N. Davis, S.J., edi- served as a in priests : professor sev- after a long illness. A Solemn tor of Rev. of officers, church auditorium, eral Passionist America, speaker. monasteries was Requiem Mass offered Aletcark ... Robert 1. following 8 a.m. Mass. and was also Gannon, S.J., toast- a noted mission- Nov. 4 Rev. A M. Nov. master. ary, preaching in over 250 A Kammer, 11, Union of Adult Sodalities native of Watcrbury, parishes the 1912 at along eastern Sister FRIDA Y, NOV. 8 Quarterly meeting Mt, Conn., Grace Irene Rev. |,eonard coast. He had been at St. A. Viccaro, Nov. Carmel Bayonne, 3 p.m. Pro- taught at three New Jersey Gregory Club of New Michael's since 1957. 12. 1946 Jqj- gram features commemora- high schools St. aey, Upper ALL SOULS' William F. Survivors include Peter's, Rev. John F. Nov. Montclair—Apolo- tion of 400th of MASS - Msgr. Louis, chancellor, celebrated the annual All Souls' his moth- New Keenahan, anniversary Mrs Brunswick, St. Cecilia's, 1925 getics meeting, Commonwealth Mass at St. Brendan's, Clifton, Nov. 2. The Moss was scheduled for er. Elizabeth Ryan, a 13, the founding of the Sodality of Calvary Cemetery, of Englewood, and St. Club. Rev. l'homas E. which sister. Mrs. John Michael's, Rev Martin Mager, Davis, Our Msgr. Louis is director, but had to be transferred due to Masters, and OSB, Lady. the poor weather con- Jersey City before her re- Immaculate Conception a brother. Leo A. Ryan, all of Nov. 13. 1933 ditions. At left is Richard Colvin, a seminarian. tirement to St. Anne Villa in Church, Montclair, speaker. 9 Our Lady of the Highway Seaside Heights, and another Rt Rev. Msgr. Emery A. Council, Little IEHI. p.m. Mr. and Mrs. George Falls Memo- brother. Francis A. Ryan of Haitingrr. Nov. 13, 1959 rial Surviving are two Degnan chairmen. Mass. De Paul High Carinci Longo. Fla. sisters, Rev. John F. Boylan. Nov 14, Archbishop Sister Rose School. 8:30 am., followed by Austin of St. 1927 Star of the Sea Fourth De- Communion breakfast. Rev. Sr. Stella Bertrand Francis, Ridgefield Park, and Rt Rev. Msgr. Sigismund gree Assembly, K. of C., Bav- Sister Kendrick Joseph Ducas, pastor of An- of the Grey Nov. tt, 1928 - Swjder. oune—Military Ball, K. of C. CONVENT Sister Stella nunciation, At 101 He's the Oldest Nuns of Montreal, stationed Wayne, speaker. , Bertrand Hartford of the Rev Julian A. Rosrkowski, building. 9 p.m. William Rich- Bishop Sis- at Lexington, Mass. ters of Nov. It. 1944 ardson chairman. TUESDAY, NOV. 1! Charity of St. Elizabeth died Oct St. Thomas 31 at St. Anne Villa Rev Nicholaa Grogan, SATURDAY, NOV. 9 More Council, Other here after a Deaths . . . M S SS T. Nov. K. of C., Westwood Memo- But He Still Mass long Illness. A 14, 1960 Immaculate Heart of Says Solemn Requiem Mass was of- Viocent A. Giles of Hacken- Rev. Mary rial service for deceased Daily George M. Bloem, Nov. Parish, Maplewood fered Nov. « at the brother Eighth members, Old Hook By REV. PLACID JORDAN, O.S.B. chapel sack, in law of Rev. 15. 1903 annual Harvest Inn, Em- said, "and he always enjoys here. Moon Ball, 8:30 Gerard W Walsh of St erson. p m. a hearty meal. For his Mary's. Rev John S Kiernan. Nov 15, church hall, sponsored ROME (NC) The Cstholic me Mass birth- Born in New Siatrr by permission to say York. Nutlev. died Oct 31. 1908 Name and Church's oldest day party this year we will Stella Bertrand Holy Rosary Altar WEDNESDAY, NOV. 13 Bishop, who sitting down." entered tha Archbishop Francis Beck- Societies. have a few distant relatives Rev. Michael A. William Wavra and as secretary of the Sacred Sisters of 1911. She McManus, Srrra Club of Bloomfield slrs. Mans Antonetll, the Chanty m mann, C M . of Panama City, Mrs. Fred of Rites and friends come in Of his taught Nov. 16, 1909 Pugliese co-chair- I -idles night. Glen C C. Congregation for 30 Archbishop's niece, elementary grades at died Oct. 30 in Rome where he Ridge keeps own the last men. Mrs. years was responsible for 62 people, one. a several North was Paterson T.J. Innes, New house for him Jersey schools, attending the Vatican . . . Jersey cousin 91 died Horn*-Sc bool director and some 200 years old. last including St. s. Mor- Council. Association, of the There ” Margaret Rev. nans, "He sleeps rather well." »he year John D. Salamon. Nov. St. Paterson , will mark his ristown. and St Pas- M«gr. Bonaventure speaker. Nicholas. Hugh O'Flaberty. 85. of 10. 1945 101st Nov. Harvest-time dance, parish birthday 9 hall, 1:30 Archbishop Alfonso Carmel, p.m. RoUr 1 42c line 4 mi«rt>OA| now retired, showed Czechs Relent proudly 40t Fathers Club, St. Benedict's p#f I Minima ] |.n«i a photostat of his baptismal Otodli«#i 4 Prep, Newark Homecoming Mof'doy P.M. certificate to prove he is "get- Wnf« Tfco buffet St. On Christmas to Ad*o K. of C., Westwood Memo- have full small chapel in his apartment. CHEVROIETS a holiday leave at FEMALE STENO MOHAWK FACTORY OUTLET CUFTON rial Mass for deceased r. m stmniß SMYTME RAMBLER. INC. mem- Christmas. to THOUGH Irata According a re- HE uses a cane TYPIST ,r * • !•»** irt»ny» « tit». hutmi ALBERT A. bers, Our Lady of Victories port received here. Dec. 24. 25. AS IMUa - DruUnb, Mml A«l«u*4 RAM*' in DhM STIER, Inc, and speaks with a halting SECRETARY I tit. Snul 111 MOM REALTORS Church, Harrington 9 and 26 will be vacation l lAijai . uebvitk run Park, voice Cannct & s [>r days Archbishop is MALE - SALES *•!«• iliyx am. this FLORISTS year. alert. He remembers t «4 («( Siv* its mentally CHEVROLET ’ ENGINEERS Phon# PRescott 9-4546 St. Antontnns, The communist government the many well known saints he ■ovr »m*nin JONES THE Newark CR*ttvi«w 3-4200 ’FLORIST.” INC. * W Manv currox AMY OTHHU~ . i«m MV *RM ».« . %. J C*a ti was taken Tor T»w ntttl Nitdl erick J. Hegarty, MM. Mary- being "at the mg- nity of the altar: Mother ELIZABETH PONTIAC • TEMPEST NOrth gestion of the unions ’’ CHEVROLET 7-1022 knoll missionary in Santiago. This is Cabnni, Don Bosco, Maria BURNS COR V IlMt ml CrMnhoua* taken as an indication of Goretti. AIR CORVCTTR rambler V. J GAMBINO AGENCY Chile, parish auditorium. 9 the Pius X. the Jesuit !■ tit. Niittot N. i • ■»*! Eatata itrrngth of public pressure to North EMPLOYMENT KONNER CHEVROLET MROZEK AUTO 4 term m. William Martyrs of America. AGENCY SALES • p Yancheck chair- • MICHAELS FLORIST *»atals • I-*:*** return former •'•a-1 * Mai AM ma »Ti« Mti usv k~k dial Watcbmg Council, K. of C.— CTI D*««/v«i4 Atm am. Mnm *4 » ■ ’ NATHAN Christmas ■-OI • fxmm '—l DEMARTINI CHEVROLET RAMBLER ■MIMMttt tit RUSSELL. INC. on Eve Their holi- heroes and martyrs of the m (j m rr4 lt> M A Nos V U /t*«H fT SVC KaUb.ihte 14*0 •*I«M >ito»w* Itara on Christmas Faith he l KnM »« n HARDWARE - day - It Day had to helped canonize in ■> , PAINTS _**■»»• M> TATI INS! MSCI SUNDAY, NOV. CKoiutn vn be made - utm a 4-di*.vo-l An Gian Imlji. N I. up the following a large album on his WOIF RAMBLER INC. living Housewives, $69-85 iiR _ Immaculate Heart of Mary corv ctMivrm: THOMPSONS PI 3-5600 Saturday. rtyom table to show to visi- *•••'» “ *■»!"■. IM •wi w*>v*. r«u in«i Presidium. Wl Lmm m r—l Vm* Cm* Legion of Mary, V» hardware rrou tors •«» *»* M » CmmA IMmaa bit llt«n Mi V«rl KEARNY Passaic—Bible • Cm* * Pau • hiuburt Palnla Vigil and Bene- CO PAYS FEE" Chatham * * ban • lualn “Of the Blrsseds • rt-YHooM . vauavt NOrih 7 2233 *•*•' * H>r<3*»r« diction whose lives riM i for members Bracero Extension BCTIBUC Afri I!* >.,) KwlAl rt»«i ri & auxiliary TOWNE M lute|M X BORGOS BORGOS I had to investigate." he S« V«r% MOTORS INC. tit Hut, ) bUii bn 3 St. Nicholas said, ni ■ml estatt p.m., Church. m parr n cppui mowtclair ix au. m rMAiua • only a few are in this hook. • Fm«r» [»*Uf u 4 ArruiAAij Social hour to follow with color Voted House RAMBLER by Since there are at least 200 HOUSEKEEPER fuii l>niM INSURANCE Phon« WYman 1-4344 movie on the Mass. l»' Un M> •*« Jim » Kaaraj WASHINGTON of them. I’d need much U»t lUaray (NC) - The a _A»« big- ' fc'vtv Communications RKort# HUnter 1400 ELM VIVIAN POOASKI Jersey House of Representatives has ger book for all of them. Be- 6 AUTO SALES KINNEION It « Omm Anchor Club, Branch An. » ■—im N I •ala* iuvki r»»rr» AGENCY S3. Kear- approved a one year sides, some causes 1 was only e\len»ion Klwrlnx hie Mm« 8 Han Church. a m.. followed under which tiremint four •*»n a litm in m ■ LT. - Tiaa STONYBROOK by Mexican workers years ago. *"W (<«] lin M m l Inrai. t NTttt’M VWBTT t uub . * 4 M . n< Communion Mothet AM ul nK>«»4 kd t breakfast. Robert tbracero* are to Seton and Bishop Nru- n, > imported ■4OT (*~*«A (im kn rw ykiemhikst Phon* : 2651783 ». AANaaaAa. . rt«» Muua HIGHLANDS Treat Hotel. mann itmma a. Rev Richard M. work on U S farms. Catholic of Philadelphia were 11 inm, n. t. one C ■ *«• n fnwi A«twu*4 J DILLON INC. Ktj nr, r»ian CMjni : " «a McGuinness, coordinator of and other religious have wmong these groups ASST COOK-KITCHEN HELPE® •aim . ucavmt _ rt*r« MONUMENTS • • special imm nun t;i i pr > •» services for the Mt. strongly assailed the l niuii Um, * rv. r program ASKED WHETHER he • | m 4 Cm Bl !■! M*M P»*t. re- • *’«» MaAamM W mi m« “in tonne rmr« *| Carmel Guild, and William AM AArAr. ba+mtn. Mi Qi—i J *1 J. The House Mlj»f a 4>(A m-M MU 4 4400 FARRELL'S l-*» Pt. approved the one- mem be red the First Vatican HaAm CttMtm tut t Ittruxi Flanagan. N'-*w nMr bw lAt t* p«v ap*r« Uartw* I * »• Turn- »*»»! «n «iU hrr*t*r». M Jersey year extension 173-158, amid Council, (186HB70) Am»4>ii l»t tutu u . ftIUM MOM E Archbishop An TV, CA 6620 MENT WORKS pike Mi. II OaMa 6 I .a- Authority indications A4mM4. R. • buMiu Mil director, speak- that the Carinci said '»•«. * . program i mm • ers. EDWARDS FORD ta Wmtfltn A««. iuMi bwiw S*rtni . Manna Barry J. Dugan chair- not may win further exten- “Yes indeed, although at man. COOK A«Vr-.iwt HIM A «ttl k ( 4-4045 sions. that time MUlb«rry -hrSrr-r VA I was only a little PtMat rii«r» cam a hum wMOW M*l IM,. ,«M Ary P W» war fall TtM«to HUT Who •maa. IXA Mr r *uom . VOLKSWAGEN l Totowa boy. would have thought lA. Mfc., H Mot,,, Cam, lUAMSU or. m»fncAL Aircooled ■ante A<«. M r •>« (tea 1U He TE Automotive Corp. Kiteate Kara ( said he attends the coun- 5 3200 t* J«a»j Otr lM AS Ma4a mmtj. K J. NURSES 'Emi TOmtaal I IHt cil's mcmaia: Tm »ovr. j. (iuo'i cmm tvtitr* c«a meetings, on v mine bjuahvik "except fee 1M Vllki roa for ■»Mn»«y I’AkHrs if n Mate OIUII GALLAGHER on day* when I feel too tired. *+T9Rju*mws tmcimut. HocrnAL Ij«I» ' VOLKSWAGEN TANARUS«tarai awd M JAMES E. MARSTON ern secular attitude views the Moftßumms. n I. M km > •»- Physician's Guild here ministrative staff who also fcwc l'M|« to Wf' v« jdiitm itti • tavlor motor um me. RmNsts ■ !i«nn physical lKlwtl«4 lleale- aspects of sex in mar- Msgr. John C. Knott said lives in this takes > a.t..» MARK E. DALY & SON INum the building me UMCOLN ■ MVJIItMY |Y>Mrr ll Cmtt f *»« Lm* roi riage as "the only the mis aery it r MOVING - STORAGE good." secular person "sees the in his car.” COOK - run uua • invici . LLAAISO • PARTt phys. Lnr «J and I UuUrm director of the NCWC AR 12700 iff MORRIS PLAINS Family leal aspects of sex not «• !«kt UMf tai rwa wo *<* QWtrnSfKD VAN USD only as THE PHone 489 • 1300 ARCHBISHOP said he M> t tmi UW. ruiin CaU Dm MM something good." but to "goes has never «M » Fhhh ■ . Mo .—4 (>«•. I MUi. rw the been really sick. WANTED other extreme of seeing it SITUATION emet-s cot vrv A*% *. J Rsrcß. MUM iviit. m Christian Party "About MM M Wi " a year ago I had a FLETCHER inoWM. W» as the good TM UIM only tOt*NO MW lYaCmem MU r*»/WAe AUTO at the Im- U\cnt-Y . MVKO RY COUP SERVICE A REPAIRS HENRY P. TOWNSEND checkup hospital. Mlir* aiUM »t-.k Man mull am-. • *4’ t (MIIMUI . MOVING _ _ PAt "THIS IN agine iMtffln) j*«i mnimt u (tin Matron . C mkh STORACE KINO NEWARK In Puerto Rico PART explains my surprise when Pope G. At rtaans Sar-nna > erteajawAent. T*>rr4«M M. Trontmluion Service Yaw the John XXIII nrAer On. MW 4 **nw« tremendous came to visit me! PrVUM in) Dunum ml •in-lux Part* 4 InMMW Can naa h nn emphasis in rtrmoaiA. rare. IfcflfrtJtt. (wa. um* roreville unvw i >*>■• rw iv* SAN trtfrra ««» lup akacanal VDn W« Buy lm4 Can ■•MM. C*4Ul*<. CH 5-2483 • JUAN. PR. (NC) - marriage texts on the 4 >*> mil tut*. MU 8-4465 MV «1 DM. HUB Pm HV HMI physical •"RUM M/a tuOIM Miu The Puerto Mnam K»mj « rKAMUJN pl H MMTT. n. j t**uu * rakutll truiMWa*. «u *wr I X rn ■ M til IwHat ■ Rico Legislature's aspects of sex," he continued Father Bttistello IWn W. The Aitvwele. It OaMaai fa.. tatMd • Mtb I traa •••<•* PL 5-1881 • AD 2-4464 Newark. N 1 rm. ca electoral law committee has "They discuss In such detail CR 7-0940 •e* . Int l <«. i:< A< i wwt* Arm m waana*. N J. In Florida MAP k, Nniit far Mm «*0 RIDGEWOOD proposed amendments to the techniques, the Post FOR SALE MeW. k M. ' pre- stresses A • r m MATT A S sent law which and ELIZABETH Vat The Ht.t Deal la probably will strains, and the angles in- Rev. Domi- BRIDAL SHOPS MOVING * STORAGE ’ GUSENAN A COMPANY LOCAL permit the Christian Action volved that the logical conclu- nic Rattistello. S D H , former S OIDSMOBUE * LONG PITTANCE “04H RErUTATTO* IS VOIR BARNEY WAREHOUSE Wrj.HRE * NOCKING aaa Jove'S OLmMnBIIJt ovarantee or tATur^rnaN- farty to be on the ballot in sion is the two paster of St emily-kay bridal salon happiest people Anthony's i« i u» rvM 064. in LIQUIDATES OUTFITS • Authorttod Sale# 4 Borneo Dial MA 4-1597 marriage should be Church here, has been assign- BRIDAL OtTPTTB ProfmtM Is l«|M CasM> two • teed a It KINNEV NEWARK " Cwptito Hiwmi t 4 rtM Guaranteed Can rORMAL IAIWSt . ATOM ll* K »T. Jl» E An Cl »-MM The engineers ed to party, which grew out Mary Help of Christians QUALITY n ism u AMI ready made QUVM Aim Am ( MAI«A TESTA * SONS PATLRSON. N. J. df the 1960 Msgr. Knott contrasted this School, Tampa, Fla. W Um I* ni«wl PI 4-7500 OP DIPTINCTIOM Rinorwoon * vkintty dispute here be- I Harm* • |v* V»*n, 4ft «w Oem TV*, e r» E>aa aim. ‘ me conou: on or iiwmu tween outlook with that Father If! r.len Ridae An. Maoulalr LI. NURSING HOME the Catholic Church of the aver- Battistello, who waa ove* M MILTtrLK URYTNC* American BARNEY'S Dial ft 9 8826 BTHEN* UAL ESTATE 61 MM* and the administration and age Catholic who, he replaced as pastor of St. An- SUPERMARKET la run. manor —a cnrcrao OPEN t DAY* AND CYBfINOt finds - which pledged itself to said, it difficult to "ac- thony's by Rev. PLYMOUTH VALIANT l» Am IXimol A. Joseph DISCOUNT FURNITURE BUILDING MATERIAL HOME tar •Matty mao and *awn. An. cept claaa defense of Christian sex not only as IxHiis, was maattaa and eara. rataa raaaaa prin- naturally, 5.D.8., superior at FULLER MOTOR CO. Mai ELatvaad A-4UE. f. Boa THE Ml KRAY AGENCY. WAREHOUSE a O 1M ' ciples. failed in 1960 to something good, but also to- the Tampa school from to VIOLA BROS. INC MtUI Vallay Now York. O Norm Rrsstf R meet 1944 Auibortiad Oaalar Ml rmiailanaa A.» n» ouw imi preaent tally, as more than 1948. He Mini A I —tu Mart requirements to be- something will now serve as con- OH Amite a. NEWAAK PLY Mol TH 4 Y AUANT COMPUTTr USE UP Ml itDI.SO PLUMBING A HEATING come physical." Oj»» Mm , Wad*. fit an island-wide political fessor there. Ml ■AI KS A HUIICI MATERIAUI A M. PPUEB RUTHERFORD Perk Premleee **• Hudan Par Pram*4 group. Msgr. Knott also said the ee mar Slid. L’aloa Cay. N. J. DaLm? CaA NO MONEY DOWN. Paterson NOrlh 7-7000 Mtlla 1 Ul tORCHINI BROA FRED KURGAN The overemphasis on the i.mvr. in outlet yaara cay P. new law would ease phyilcal UNion 6-6300 Naaark U I at* PtamOaM PL MMS Population *1 Auer ■ I At from Main An of Report SaUar. N. 4. fc#alloc - U't Kargu Ml •*. tWepaa numerical acta sex and its "divorce Mon THiiia requirements for TOKYO Of— . A In XU 41 At«M« Ilfartifl from procreation” have (NC) The num- PLYMOUTH MICHAEL T RACDEKMANN led - ELECTRICIAN official recognition. AUTO - CHRYSLER Ul WIIXIAM ST . NEWARK 1. N. I. ber of Cstholics In Japan has DIALERS NEW CARS The teenagers to use sex "strictly VALIANT smvk’Rk. MARKET V1«0n SHORT HIUS Protestant Evangelical . IMPERIAL ADomoM. altolatto.-.* for recreational gone up by two-third* in the Council of Puerto Rico purposes.” KaL Unm 3MI TRAVEL AGENCIES turned CADILLAC MURPHY UK OS. MoroH (ALES HAJCAtK MU HASH AL CONTRACTORS He cited past 10 years, according to BRA court tUMMAM down a bid recent increases in tmmrvm. H. J. MALTY to join the party. KALES •ALEB 4 SERVICE COKu 1-OM the annual survey of the Na- * ACM VICK JOS. M. BYRNE It pregnancies out of wedlock, Ouannaad total electric heat CO. unanimously adopted a res- tional Uaad Can IpiadMU mM VwtsMs this Catholic Committee of CENTRAL CADILLAC INC. TRAVEL SERVICE SHORT HILL* AVE SNORT MILLS olution against formation of stating indicates that the I , a Japan. Elizabeth 5-5600 FUEL OIL- OIL BURNERS Bartini tha PubUa Rtnca 1M REALTORS OR EX EL AMM traditional of sex, rtM Selection e< L aed Cere ttaamahi* a Alt specifically "Christian" party, concepts MS N. Broad BL BZiiahalli. N. J. Raaaraattaaw He also was the one who MO Cealrel Ave. Twn Crutaaa Haaamoaa Trlpa •aying It love, marriage and even the gave Newark at Vaar* rmnww SPARTA preferred that Chris- SM Broad EL. _JU LINO tiana value of the child under Phon* QUACKENBUSH Nawark_ work within the frame- are AAA 4-2255 TOPPETA MOTORS INC. work of "serious pressure.” A (ONI IV COSTEUO Traval Service Inc. existing parties. VALIANTS . PLY'MOUTHS n«x ml automatic > AMkortasd limit Air a Baa • Ball H. Browne CHRYSLERS . IMPERIALS DtUVtMIM E. C. ANDERSON. Realtor* Joseph BROGAN CADILLAC-OLDS Guar arrived Uaad Can Oft** KM. tl ftwta ■ »4Ul»rn FAMILY MOMUMRMTS New MICHAEL J. Jeraer a Lereeet CediUee PARTS HARRIS • SERVICE • BOOV SHOP SUMMIT John r. a. McGovern Dtatrlbutor INC. HU 2-6262 ELMORA TRAVEL Authorued CADILLAC . OLDS Dial 3-0015 Dial Oliver SERVICE Company EDMONDSON ft FI SHE*. ItulWl MEMORIALS “Per V« rwuun' SALKS a SKA VICK OB BlonmOeld KU M«#*» A>l rMr u Travelllaf tUHMiftiUI HIGH LEVEL Ave. Ntaail cruises • Tocm nun RaaMaatlal. Cimii AUTHORIZED TM . _ Ifo4 Paeeelc Are. CUdoa. N. 1 ftnlti Summit. Maw nunwril SiA VMMI M 471 OlUwir* Mill Institutional Air - rtod bom* tar MOORE CHEVROLET Tor Immadiala Daiivary M*Ur«d DaUtmK* M Hour A. rot* I jau CONSTRUCTION Dlali REAL «• Will TU* Yaw Hanaa U Trafta BEST DEAL IN STATE Ml 2-2727 ESTATK KmebUahed Sima HOLMES AGENCY K>« CHURCHES. SCHOOLS Cleaning Supplies ita IM IM Adim» (| N«»trk. NJ. SALES - SERVICE - PARTS MAXON ESSEX COUNTY Raahar - Kal IftM N#. AND INSTITUTIONS PONTIAC OIL s***l ' y Arlington Aro* • ASH • OR KLITZNER CO., INC. Ml Mama A«a. taM C* >MN CANS MATS • SOAP USED CARS ISTT N. Broad TO SEU SPICIALISTS IN SL RlUalda YOUR HOME FAST • POLISH HARRY J. • BROOMS • BRUSHES MOBIL RADIO STEVENS, INC. UNION • Dial EL . DUU-ATCHKD U»lit UMIM It With Residential • WAX 4-3700 Phon«i WA 3-6900 U*«U REALTORS on • SPONGES • PAHS Hl—« CmikiWm Roofing M MS N. Breed St Etuebrnb Yeare *1 HaM Location la Union Count* ft aurrauadtaa • • TOIIIT PARER _ im. Leaders TBS^tS^SSjSLSSi **!•• • Appraleala * MhiimiiH aalact A Gutters t-a< ua Kal* jog la a kwa M • Newark • MOPPINO EQUIPMENT PONTIAC Phone, • Irvington a The Orauea Jour comfort and hnaolaaaa 353-3378 Men. * Wed. PAPER • PAPER TOWEIS • CHEVROLET _Oee» Era* Our aapartanca u jaw trataatli Siding - aa CUPS Na» Car Balaa • Service Parta m «. >. «» C antral Aire.. Newark HA IS « kujr ar aall. cal) aa fiiiM'Hf 410 EL Guaranteed Uaad * Mala SI . Ora 3-1700 278 Street SARGENT MOTORS Cara LANCIA OIL CO. nee OR IUT4 Ht ftkllkvlHo Plko. Arlington Wayne INC. rtaaal JOHN P. McMAHON MS NSW POINT Body Work A Bopalr Samoa ROAD * ATLANTIC HEATING OIL WYman 1-4822 BLOOMFIELD Uftft Manta ftaa.. IMn mu ftftOft lUZAUTH. N.J. Jersey N. J. Authorises TROPHY PONTIAC WM—§l* • Ml(l City, M HOUR SERVICE Op— Wo«kon4* by Appointment TOE 1H a or HEAL ESTATE Ver' WAYNE ESTABLISHED 1919 SALES * SERVICE MM Cor. OU Hlnd.fwn 1-M7B B*way. 4SUi SL Bayonna. NJ. Burnw kIM A RAPID REUABLE RESULTS call JOHN Dial AR R. - WEIM CO* HaaUar •S Ridse Ad. WY 140001 N. 8-1020 MARASHLIAN & CO. Rdaltor' Arllneton HE 7-4900 Uftl Patorooa Wajrao. m B. lUUwAjr Aw. fmrni *w Breed Tftfca. K. BMimOiIS. HI. PI Min Hamburg Court Takes Smut Cases Michigan Bishops Newark Parish November ?, IWS TWE ABTOCATI 17 TRENTON The New The third finds the Appoint Laymen Celebrates Jer- appeal IN THE SELECT WEST-ESSEX AREA «ey State Court has Passaic Supreme County prosecutor's LANSING, Mich. (NC) before it three cases involving office asking for the reinstate- The Michigan Catholic Confer- All obscenity. are on appeal ment of the conviction of a unit of the ence, coordinating ■ from the Division Diamond >1 Appellate of Paterson news dealer who sold Bishops of the stale for pub- Jubilee Nov. 10 Court. vm Superior allegedly obscene magazines lic affairs, has named three to The NEWARK Rev. Arthur In one, the Hudson County teenagers. news dealer, laymen to its board. It houses the first three Fcffer, won N. of St News Cos. of North Bergen is Irving a reversal Archbishop John F. Dearden Hcimbold, pastor grades and also has a cafe- of his conviction in the Ann’s will celebrate appealing its conviction of dis- Ap- of Detroit, board Church, teria. St. Ann's School pres- chairman, Solemn Thanks- %-/m tributing five allegedly ob- pellate Division on the aaid: a Mass of ently has about 600 students. Nov. mark- ‘,yi scene magazines. In grounds that the magazines giving to at noon, Father Hesa celebrated the another, ‘‘The Bishops believe that NORTH CAIOWfU the 75th anniversary of the same were not obscene. if ing silver of his ordina- company challenges the Church is to play a part jubilee the the foundation of the parish. while constitutionality of anew in helping to solve the various tion at St. Ann's in Msgr. James A. Hughes, vi- at state law requiring distributors THE ADVOCATE la one of social problems of our time, 1958. He had that time to take within car general, will represent over 20 of his back 48 hours New Jersev's fastest growing then it is essential that lay- spent years which Archbishop Boland at the St. Ann's, hav- copies of magazines re- result producing advertising men be more directly involved priesthood at and will a tailers do not want. mediums. In the work of the Church." ceremony convey ing served as an assistant for personal message from the 15 years before becoming pas- Archbishop. He will also an- tor. nounce the Apostolic Blessing of Pope Paul VI. ON ASSUMING the reins of 1960, Father llcimboM under- THE FIRST Mass for St. took a program of inoderniza- Ann's parish was celebrated tion, the first result of which CUSTOM-CRAFTED HOMES Sept. 23, 1888, in a store at was the renovation of the or- FOR DISCERNING BUYERS We 91 16th Ave. Oct. 21, the 7 ROOM HOUSE By iginal school building cornerstone of the church- Father Heimhold • 3 bedroomi • ?V| balht • living room school combination was laid Assisting Mee at the Mass Nov, 10 will be *34,900 • room • kitchen with birch cabman and, by Christmas, Mass was dining Hev. Theodore A. Hauer and Cpootlti Future Act'* Como Cburcli t J'tiool and G. E. celebrated evrn though the rang*, refrigerator, dnhwather Rev. Robert J. windows had not Rischmann, arrived and Ol*t< ItOAS «Mt • room with woll-ta-wall brick fire- o*l fomily the assistant pastors. Father B'oonrtnld the openings had to ba FATHER HELMBOLD ».* to plot*, walnut pontling, dimmer -controlled Hess will be the Control Aw . Citdrroil COMPA covered with canvas. preacher. Til CA I ITU but loro turn fit** Oalco 3-ton* radian) The celebration will r*c*tt*d ceiling Irghtt • Rev. A M Kammer was the parish on Control Art ond iltl. Cl R-717J UNDER MSGR. or wood Heimbuch. conclude with a dinner-dance opp'cr. tvo miloi heating through Slant fin bdteboordt • built- first pastor of St. Ann's and to Cornon OR 7*1114 VAL property was acquired for the Combrideo at Thomm'i Restaurant Nov. 10 in ftudd vacuum • Howreuent valanc* hut i mb the school was built in 1890 church r*LrCi» two years earlier Madhya Pradesh state legisla- The second pastor. Rev. Jo- Father Hess took over the ture has overwhelmingly de- seph Gruber, also served for CLUB MEMBERSHIP parish expansion program feated a bill introduced several 10 years, during which school when he succeeded Msgr. months ago to check conver- enrollment grew to 450 and a • Clubhoute privilege! • two tend beachtt W the Dexi rigand and the new school sions by "foreign missionaries new convent and rectory were • children • • " » ploygreundi iwimmmg toil- annex was completed in 1954 and other institutions built Under his successor. ing • year round tchedule ol ioctal octivitiei Rev Theodore Peters, the lio< Quite...Bui We D&He parish debts were cleared and were made for a pu"rM iwntrtifiZ&if plans ' EXCLUSIVE COMMUNITY new church. IN UNION! :.rt. NOW PackonocV v-~ Villog* it a modern, thoroughly HOWEVER, the coming of Beautiful New "TOTAL ELECTRIC" ntobl'ihed community with new itreeti, new HAPDFh World War 1 and the tU health n^joe of Father Peters posponed the ichoolt, comple’e mwn*ipol ier>ke and pro- Gi. MootgOf « Financing lot erection of the new church 2-FAMILY grttwe aliment government. The villoge h HOMES Hyon until the pastorate of Rev. '>«■». turn in Woyne. the lotteit developing town in ta • i,mn w>ir W btMiiT) n • Michael Mcchler M I»lia >«MH of ■B (1924 38) , an All uim Bdftnondnj) New Je'iey First a lacluOla# Inn ti«v-4 naim ant i ■tan >'<«>• i l-.’.l CoouTnootlooi Loam lot 6u t Lyceum Building, was con H-rrwa ■•>'m«>m *m iti< »»wf !«« iumm lul > r u to? tuM •.•») i true led in 1925, then the h tte t.„ -w T>»~i— nrr*L n.»T«k gold IVraitUJOS MDIICI . ' •4 vtvd»»« tmuixi u 4 Tvul Bvttr* Till* tnwoonc* H cornerstone of the new church IrVc*— V X3 was laid in 1932 The church FULL was dedicated by Archbishop ‘29,500 Walsh 193 PRICE on May 14. rot root DopondoPto Sprite* Rev Louis Remmele, a for- Como Straight to l 1 (f[ What's mer student at St. Ann's PERDAN HOMES it worth? If you’ve wer comparabV hc-mm In ram- School and assistant pastor

parable communities. we think your reelutic eitimatr would be m ti n : r from 1917 to 1931. was Avonu* (Off Lourol Av« ) Union k rieh-mdol 145.000 named >»'lV not our m com to succeed Father nWtrTKASA NEW AMR A ’mum 1. lUnmi A* ‘Vipk GARDEN But that's neighborhood. Thu Hum Cutt Home US 'OO end we be Mechler. STATE ,ne M> A« « tv Lvvrvt IVm but be died 193. An . n4*« IV An Mft u m-*»: ton that will not find let tn cm# year •’"A W J/.A Acm V " i you ■ home to equal it at it* ptm. alone a home in an ruluuve Club An t» r.-rwi An f. »*-■»• r»» t*-» »»*•« TITLE INSURANCE CO. after taking the post mm is, m tv t—m An . tvn u r*»r» An mi a mvM tvmv Community that offer* year 'round lakeside resort recreation M H& ceover Hurts Coitfi re SOOBlMafKld The next three pastors are Agont Atie . MaatcUv K I PI 6 2600 •re priced from a ccmjervarn SJ. 1,000. See thu celebrated —and the r community rev H .’H all still at OPtN serving other par- COLONIAL REAL ESTATE CO • UNION • MU 6-0651 HONDA r CVf NINOS 7 TO 9 Cuitom Home* that hav* mvde it famtas DIRECTIONS Routt *t> I ~n to Routt J n ets ishes in the archdiocese. Routt JJ to Peckanack Lake Shopping Center. turn nghf and proceed to eaif tide at Lane. Msgr William C. Heimbuch <1939 431 at St Genevieves. Elizabeth. Msgr John P LIGHT FOR BROOKWOOD DRIVE. PACKANACK LAKE W'eigand 11942 801 at St Jo seph't. West New York, and NEWARK’S NEWEST LUXURY > Rev Albert J Hess (1953 60) LIVING HOME at SS Peter and PauL Ho TANARUS) bokrn Father Heimbok! suc- ceeded Father Hess at St. > Featuring controlled lighting Anns 3 datlgnad by Public Service HURTZ Electric & Gat Cos. H 10* Court to Rule Creative lighting enhance* the a z of beauty furnishing*, add* a dro- tnatic flair, and increases the On Custody m value. home's z TRENTON The New Jer- MT. A Within PROSPECT Magnificent Walking Distance "To Concept of sey Supreme Court has re- H Immaculate Heart of Church JOHN J HURTZ fc SON INC A V E N U Mary served decu.oa on a custody EJ & Grammar School 346 Franklin N. Ave./ Wyckoft, J 691 4540 sat. involving a 7-year old Modem in the E Elegance W > Clifloa boy whose father is a ARK Cathode and whose mother ts O a convert to the Jehovah'a Wit- Exclusive Forest Hill Section nesses. □ The married Here is the couple was in ultimate in a prestige apartment residence 195. by a Protestant minister situated in Newark's fashionable Forest Hill Section an m Elk tan. Md The wife, at ... area whose traditionsof m To enter that t.me, was a Protestant time-honored gracious living have The been boy, bore tn 1956. was maintained down through the years to the present 0) baptized a Catholic In 1958. the moved (0 couple to Here, too, is unmatchedconvenience. Only minutes away Floi .da and there the w ife are schools... houses of worship of all faiths... yarned the Jehovah's Wit- stores andtfowntown nesses They returned to Chf neighborhood Newark’s major shopping too in 1961 and the husband facilities. Beautiful Branch Brook Park is only 4 blocks sought custody of the child, away... and New York is 35 minutes Pastaic City only away by A WALK County Superior Court FROM is to leave the bus or train. world gave the couple youit custody express St Pitor The The * child was to spend Apostil Church weekday evenings and week- STUDIO APARTMENTS from 5135 of . . . ends with the And School! father, attending ONE-BEDROOM APARTMENTS . 5195 commonplace... . . trom church services "if he so de- TWO-BEDROOM, TWO-BATH APARTMENTS . . . from 5270 sires” Both parents are now Rents Include Heat, Hot Water, Cos, Electricity & Air Conditioning treking full custody in the suit before the Supreme Court. ng rei forc d cooc t8 * “"Pietely fireproof construction • Central air °! ? ? I Tf conditioning with.individual controls • apartment Many apartments w,th spacious outdoor terraces • All CCD • nd hlve windows Teacherh' , fitted with Venetian blinds • Colored ceramic tile bath- rooms With built-in clothes and double hamper sliding door medicine cabinet; larger apartments have a Manual second Revised bathroom with enclosed stall shower and • vanitory Ultra-modern Kitchens have built-inwall oven, Kehnnator 12 cu. ft. BATERSON "A Course counter-top range, refrigerator-freezer, Kelvinator dishwasher (except instudio for apartments), natural finish Training Religion Teach- hardwood cabinets, vinyl asbestos tile floors • Three conveniently located floor • ers." an experimental revision incinerator rooms on each Solid oak block • rrr flooring throughout of the Master TV text of the same title antenna connection in each apartment • Modem laundry room with automatic m wturr umfmtmi previously issued, has been washers and dryers • Three high-speed elevators • Lavishly "T* >««» *nm published by St, designed mSuIJfST Anthony's and elegantly furnished entrance lobby • Richly carpeted public Guild, at the direction of the “Trior* • Solid masonry partitions between apartments; all walls National Center, Confraternity for a finished in plaster • Three-level, ramp garage with new of Christian Doctrine. Wash- ample parking for all tenants,easily accessible from rear lobbies y ington. For use in leadership coursea. It presents catecheti- 555 cal procedures in the CCD MLProspect Avn, approx. 6 blocks elementary school of religion (Me mile) north of Bloomfield Ave. The objective of the present In the Forest Hill Section. course is to train teachers how A to apply the latest religion OPEN FOR INSPECTION teaching techniques to doctrine DAILY A WEEK ENDS as envisioned by the kyreg- *«•"» matic renewal. On Prtmitvt wwi «f um -kw mi... tm II AM. •• 6 p.M. frrnr W«k kwtm ... UM ntll ,1 UutT «"» •“» »'<• katraa tiaaaUa. Ja» Ji. AND . »„w U (amMi• RMini 4 ManagmfAfmt: MWi|! of 0 •H Day Prayer For Teachers JRSM nr NEWARK - A day of recol- MANAGEMENT CORP. lection for lay teachers of the x m Ml Broad St. Ntwark m 1 of ukutmmu um iun»»> Confraternity Christian Doc- MArM 4 8000 ta «l * Me* iMOmfe*. nutria. trine . l !* mn um elementary schools of re- » ht* M f»mM fm ■>, •**«•»m. ftm.m».*. tittdm ligion will be held Nov. *—■ Can...«ftaia

A Cbtrrnson-CarroU Release Knoll Rd. off 46 Rt. here. Sales Farmstead with 14 purchasers reached the halfway mark in choosing this model. Second PARSIPPANY-TROY HILLS two weeks. in popularity has been the Co- Drums (PFS) Colonial • inspired According to builder Ramon lonial two-story model with borne styling Tuhliti coupled with of the Codarcroft De- eight buyers. heavily wooded sites have re- velopment Corp., the unique Coincident with the sales an- called the post war home sales 80 foot • "ranch-and-a-half* nouncement, Tublitz also boom at Farmstead, the 48- model, sii- priced from *26,790, has nounced that home rising construction is community on been the leading seller at under way on the first 40 homes which will comprise Sections I and II OPENING at the com- munity. Deliveries on these homes are expected to be made in TITLE SERVICE the early spring. All the residences here will be constructed THHULOUOI T \ K\V JKKSBY on minimum 100 x 150 ft landscaped sites with full city utilities includ- ing water and sewers, and FAMILY Oaks, the 83-home with financing terms of 10% ROOM - Toll community rising at Alps and French Hill Rds, in down payment for all. mort-‘ Wayne, features handcrafted, interiors such this rates low 5 luxury as family room in Yc» Hill, gage as as 1/2%, Kdrnbro'.k proudly announce, the o( it, brand and the Sycamore Colonial model. level opening new com- no Ranch, split And W,rwl, k mortgage placement •• Colonial ; ■ v wit«Wc MAMMOUTH SPECTACLE fees. models are priced from $28.990. Sitrr^SAM L Amidst 1 • a regal panorama of natural beauty aland 3 All elegant excitingly the model homes have and spaclrtuly constructed model,, featuring the Arlington a been designed by architects niwget priced home New in containing many feature, usually found in home, costing Maslow and Miller Newark mticn more. Each Apartments of the homes are employing it, situated on oun landscaped acre the "uniform interior plot and i, pian" absolutely chock full of modem features to add with all A Km Uk Rrlroie dtxir terraces, feature living to your eom- laundry-mud rooms tort and Convenience The community i, fully established with excellent rooms up lo 24 feet m ler-'\ adjoining the kitchens, all rear achoo all House, New NKWARK (PFS) Renting of Worship, complete shopping facilitie, and JerseyRealty and side entrances master bedrooms to 17 feet, every en- having di- of suites at 555 )o>able recreation Mt Prospect plus . . Greenwood Lake and Foresti rect access to the mud ultra nodem aik-thr. a Just . Sterling are room, Ave.. Newark's newest minute, from your doorstep and all luxury kitchens, and walk-in closets. TITLE lIVSI’RAME family rooms planned apartment CO. for residence, begins Studm THE privacy and convenience apartments start ARUNGTON this wrekead. it has been an- from with access to the kitchen and $135 per month; one- NEWARK nounced by the J I Kisiak or- foyers. heili ooin units, from tl» ami ganization. the management two TRENTON • two-bedroom, bath suites, HACKENSACK agent for the project. from *270 Rentals include SUPPORT THE ADVOCATE Tbe FREEHOLD 16-story, centrally air- hot conditioned heat, water, gas. electri- subscription crusade when building wiH ac- city, and air-conditioning ’12,900 school children call on you commodate 19j families. There are 'wo Three elevators professional W»n*v« high speed suites will t 6 • serve e project ,\ ROOMS 3 BEDROOMS The new project is located three level ramp garage plus in the tATM SPACIOUS Forest Hill section of • KITCHIN OH onsite car facilities will pro- i ACM UNOKAMD the city, near Branch Rrnok PLOT vide parking for all tenants Park and minutes from ma- Tbe suites, many with out- jor shopping facilities **** uB ®* Rnncp «aith Ci'Mff# *rt4 f Pibrrjrlat it- njf • H»th- Mapfe' KtUfe*« Hurtz & Son Is New Firm ei# t Abifma m AljUMfttMft • rmmma i Imp* • BMpotat Appii- MfM • Q«fMW A Forco KrU*lt nark Lake PI*•Hl» Hksta A R *d—ty < **’i*u. T. T<*t> A SAo*»*w Ar«*a John J Hum has been in WH’KOI'K IPFS>—A k nr w the on struct ?m field for 3t fin northern N'"» Jtfwy miomlano M>«4 »uJt 5B \>«r Barrmt; build,ng ****** mad years Prior to the formation KnaHa • laolßlid Md ft* firm, John J Hum a ~ s>:i, * u Vn»4 Kiamtaum EiUfrva rvm Inc ha* of I e r.rw company. he was •it* TS been WniSer organized with ****** SO M; ' r.*T« !*rf» < president of .t+u • Birrhenough A fir*** headquarter* at Franklin T>wrm*: A 'Mm*• fr*« frem* Prove and liurta. Inc., the of CcNkdtntrt** • 4 Aero A\e . here developer la*a4trA{wd P>oU • Many. the Mr I'arkanick Lade >lmppin( Ma*» Piuai Officer* of the corporation eciter ant the builder of ate Hurta, • Harry president, many Packanack Villag# AMAZINGLY LOW DOWN PAYMENTS Way Corn and John J Hum »ecretary. hon.es promise' If you would like a AWARD lutunou* home in - Tory ipecialiar item LOW, LOW CARRYING CHARGES prestige telUng .hade tree* Tm« hug, . . . roiling, ni.t.r building ami BCOf OVD . . terraua developing m a full 4 WINNER! ... acre u»en tettle for four North plot -~ . . . why let*? Upper Salem Jervey c© nt.n Ai featured in I IKK man- Ridge it estate-living, on custom tired plot*, Pa»»a»c. Bn-gen. Morn* and w.th huge tree* on *i®* —one of 11 hornet S.'*»ca Thr in every bonietiie Tour home company s» an Landscaping will he Came First the entire surrounded by impressive country to receive appro* ed builder at Urban FREE home* in the mid thirties the K to mid forties and higher. Com# •4 Kjyton Jfr/ca«r merton Living Kf fecit tee iariri. Fran n » j Edenbrook l« Salem Rills mnf that Award. Ipper weekend . Ridge . . you'll w*nt to com# back a pnm* developer of Packa- WASHINGTON TOWNSHIP RIPBKIRATOR ... to IFFSi AT ttay - I An unusual custom WARWICK, NEW YORK STOVf A OV|« MOM TV Alt WASHING MACHIWR feature, somewhat like m«WIT>>N» s.. rv,v»f r«« IMMEDIATE put- \-, la • ... ORYIR IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY - 61 FT OCCUPANCY! a, RANCI ting the rart ’•*"’*» OAftBACI Di I*OSA before the horse, L, “• "****** «’• - L AWARD oiT '"’"■Cat*-TT. («rt *t t*r ay Mffw( ’ MIRIR A TOAST • A . VMHf j i |». > 1 has been HO*»t * M ***: ? 1 11 »sia auccessfuly accom Z.. M- * «EWC RfH Ti: Sew I nno.i 'tii-I* - **”*:? MUs Onr 4ft BIU T' »**fßr«* \«* "'***'“*• T MW f i* *• t-*4 is R«u*« I teal pta* ate BUILDER'S phshed at the 96 house Tr U I? «• tTA-Itt U» A ••wsrft Trf»Tir PLUS Upper *» * nf*« mm «*** *** <*•* m*m*T 1 WE OFFER Salem eowia THIS HOME AT A SPECIAL PRICE! Ridge community off uaa mow* a T*i • «*W «4c caaoiN Mota Van "ID MOOILI OR OKPLAY Kmburth Ave east of u«i a , seaoe Our CLOSEOUT! Rt 17 here lady o( (,ood Counsel A l' 1 2 acre plot Tll <<*v**u at ix\ tx bav a Church & School, and f was completely landscaped be Immae- * r*** ni,,*A -*1 BUB*. IkM H> _ for# nlate Heart lI.S. for *—« |~*»» mimmi coo struct son of the home Academy WM’WS IIUATt. rm rw was started girl* nearby. .75&?<£&£ •»*»« »»«M IBM*. *■ "Tbe buyer wanted a com Af»n» MB WASHINGTON r«*r Miry. | pletesl lawn TOWNSHIP ■bß Imf M«i« when he moved GABRIEI-JOHNSON r tow. , " "■ v W s. Du* “««« '>uM 3* lB explains Hugh Johnaon of IN WAYNE!! REALTY Ks S.r»l kn. si: na fMM. rib* ',*/!• cWhi tbe '***•* l«f «•<*«. »»J* Gabriel Johnson O-'Mt.W J. 4 H. XlU\* i: *** Inn* Realty 334 Rt. #ll*4* lit I » ir 17, Paromut *• >*» Uallse «i v>rt* * it n ««• »'•» IBMIHf IM u*M B.a Cr»

"We realized that fill is a ‘29,900! better time for custom land scaping." he continues, "and tit it Tmi *:i mo 4T therefore, it was decided u> CHESTNUT do the landscaping before starting on the house Asa re suit the lawn RIDGE is already up at LOT OWNERS »e are completing construe Let the ACRES tion " i Parwood Homes of -- - -- ■ *•# l| Maa'.ita M i Paramus r««n THINA *«. M BMU I l which is a*** Nan* developing the tnct If- M Baal, |J la »'•/»••* W*A is another Martin Homes YOU'RE M n t»n coin IN LUCK! la of I.Ait ID (GrtiM the v<»* .*■ v»< aif first Beauty munity. had to Twi an locate the Mtft Ufurf w j Rmß house and the Bel-Aires Ninth Annual Bl|Nt m lIMM driveway on the SensationalFall Festival B»*r. M tar «uW i. |ar- Vml and M Ikwn# plot then established final A#a*» 1 elevations and A C«. t*« grade* to begin NMit-tM • m, *g »i m the custom *»■>*»» I H*r kmil lx landscaping bef .re TREES building GRAM) OPENING tell you...

IN a SALE! WAYNE ... E«ch THIS IS THE BIST OF WAYNE! Horn* Include*...n Full B#**m#nt n American Standard Not Tree*. is lond fully worthy of the finest Fmture* ; Solid Oak only i„ W.vne, hut In th, homes Caloric Color Coordinated Kitchen* moat convenient part of trees. lt««il No! o low scattered available American Standard Heat r. Fu» in - bar s®®!? m*uia- Wayne-close to * Wayne none! No aatf1 * hopping, public and here and there. The land TALI e^ n Weather Stripped Window, n hiding Door Med So AIR-CONDITIONING what? Well, to tree lovers this is AT NO EXTRA COST! rea- Every home, of course. Includes hot son enough to buy a home. To everyone woter baseboard heat ( 2 or 3 •I zones), Cheek these signifies prestige. Most important it outstanding city water, city sewers, ond feature*_frt>nt and rear entrle* craftsman- formal dining ship of incomparable excellence! room*, picture windowed living room*! large kitchen with refrigerator freeicr, and ** FROM oven range r|M JWE Ulcd bath*, walk in closet*. 100% m parking, protected play area*, beautifully SEE IT landscaped THIS WEEK! ni-

sei 4 THE $1,030,000 RESEARCH HOMESI both ond anti 5 ROOMS freezer refrigerator, large re- Features asked for from you Better ception room with guest closet and lov- Homes. Good Housekeeping ond McCalls • World's first THE CARIBE atory gas double-oven | all in Tall Oaks homes. and lets MONTH FROM range you bake and broil Immediate 4 bedrooms on one level • Master bed- ot financing arranged □ Over 100 the same timel Indoor-outdoor Models □ Your Plan, or Our. living rooms with walk-in closet, private full and dining. , *125 both, and dressing room • "Mud-Room" TALL OAKS SPLIT (shown above) includes and off the laundry kitchen plus sep- 18' with breokfost INCLUDING AIR CONDITIONING! kitchen area and 42 grote broom closet, for ft. BEL-AIRE pantry, space FUTURE RECREATION ROOMI $33,990 $ CUSTOM HOMES MANCHESTER 3 MODELS FROM 28,990

Please rush a FREE copy ol colorful your illustrated booklet of BEL AIRE homes. T Nun*. VILLAGE )L, I .V* ■

Address , RATZER ROAD, WAYNE, N.J. . City __

I own a lot (where). t)l H Rout. M ALPS ROAD AND to W.iwPnrt.to MR FRENC hXTIO.NIf: <„ M HILL ROAD, WAYNE, N. J. Tori» Dttoouut (tWMU follow ITMItoM. OIRECTIONSt onto Hlk.tvWM *Drno Route 4t> west to CA . It . I *"d Wayne- then left to '« V *'**J- "<*<«. rn* »nd temporary road and Mtekir: National Attic, it cuot.ru. «, V.U., Hd R^l! Proakncss Exit (turn-off Hint letltfert IW Ml to just before to M«nih..t»i Villa#* oiuulmrnli models...Oß...Rt. 46 to Rt. 23, north i ... OR Hi M to Ht 2 turn LJ Ol .«th on Guys), right Preakness R|. a .M-o. « m.l„ „ following on Rt. 23 to Rd M *"* * Alps Rd.; turn right and H»M to NuchMcr UU °“ signs onto Riverview Drive and follow VUIM* dp.rtm.nl. proceed 500 to French approx. ft. past Elementary Hill Rd.j bear left onto Schooli then left on temporary road French Hill Rd.; turn on PIIONE: CM ZCM right Alps Rd. to inodels. or MU 7 OMO . AGENT) ANTHONY J. P. CONTI AR 1-0477 * MODEL PHONE: OX 4 %37 November 7, 1963 SUNRISE BEACH THE ADVOCATE 19 Monmouth and Ocean Counties: a ON BARNEGAT BAY PRESENTS Wonderful Place to Live...Year 'Round A REMARKABLE NEW HOME Deliveries to Start Pass ’63 Sales Goal At Hills Hollywood At South A KayI on Releaia Holiday four-bedroom split-ranch mod- el shown in A SOT Rtlaata cations WEST END (PFS) Initial an exterior of In a given market.” brick veneer trim and wood TOMS RIVER Hovnanian deliveries are planned for this (PFS)—Sales explained. facade. It features a 50-foot at South this With the start of the multi- winter at the 76-house Holly- Holiday week ex- rear raised terrace and has ceeded their location wood Hills community at the 1963 quota of $1 building operation in more than 2,000 feet of million Monmouth site of the former Hollywood square according to Kevork S. and Ocean Coun- living area. Hovnanian, ties, Hovanian the firm Hotel where 11 sales are now preaident of the says Hovnanian has been able establish reported. Corp., builders. to and Hovnanian In its The recently-opened tract, attributes this keep operation own Shade strong sales plant, efficient where sales were started only Maple picture “to the using highly FOR vslue modern last month, is being developed we are able to offer mechanized methods through our of of construction. Here all the • year round or rstlramant living by David Shane and Marvin policy multi- your Sales at 12 location building within the materials are Stoloff of Lincroft and con- precision-cut • a vacation hideaway lot market area.” waste, and *7,995 struction is well under way to avoiding assem- A SOI the Rtltau A builder can't be all blies are built with extra ri- • summer long meet delivery schedule. thing* family enjoyment WITH GARAGE to all gidity In scientific 58550 The builders are offering TOMS RIVEn (PFS)—Jer- persons at a single lo- methods three housing plans at cation, he obrerved. But with that cut production time to a Discover thie beautiful new Holly- ry Kokcs. builder of Toms community —with Its own wood Hills and homes a multi-location operation he minimum. are River's newest private beach within fost of community. commuting metropolitan priced from $23,900. In addi- can cover a broader aection Regardless of location, all centers. It offers Maple Shade on Suburban Dr., a priceless combination of to the of the market “Thua homes bay-shore tion four-bedroom split- reports 12 sales in October. quality erected by the Hov- breezes and and pine-scented in a ranch on display now. Shane goes up prices come down nsnian Corporation are countryside boating, Maple Shade Is showing engi- fishing, and Stoloff when the builder his neered swimming paradise. , will show a second three bi level expands and assembled by the models and a and an operation to two or more lo- same split-ranch expansible ranch model The bi-levels crews. NEW RANCH ranch at the tract Wood- DESIGN on art priced from $13,990 and with gate Ave. off Cedar Ave.. three spacious living room, 2 bedroom, bath, completely the ranch is from $14,700. blocks from the ocean and equipped kitchen, Kokcs saki the bi level patio underneath carport serves as a beach. was multi-purpose room for children's the favorite of younger fami- reloxing, socializing or The activities. developers are placing lies. while the ranch attracted IMPROVED BUILDING SITES the homes on fully-landscaped older folks. He said that low plots L. left, Additional designs available in 2 A 3 bedroom homes approximately 100 by taxes make his UNIQUE AT SHORE - Herbert SeegAl. presides, 123 feet community of New TERMS and larger in an area Bamberger's Jersey, is shown with Herbert L. appealing to persons living on Shells which has and all Shapiro, and builder of with all utilities from $5,295 - city sewers fixed co-developer Beach Haven Wes, 75-ft. wide pro- a income FOR BUILDERS • tected OWNERS waterfront lots and improvemrnti. The property they inspect on artist's, of the lagoon large woodland lots Tile wooded lots give the as rendering proposed com- W oodland-Lagoon-Ba $l5O $l5 being developed is in the es- munity for that y down, monthly. community the look of building vacation and retirement com- tate section of Monmouth munity, to be custom homes by avoiding completed during the spring of 1964. A Gordon Star* County and overlooks Takana- Plwf. to Forked liter (til No. 74. turn the monotonous regimented model of one of the furnished houses J9*3 MODEL CLOSEOUTS DIRECTIONSleft end Lake. it now being con- ot of exit and ga J m.let traffic see OMLT ta l.gM o> It. *, turn left appearance of strueted the 4 LETT-NO MONEY DOWN *' *• many develop- on seventh floor of Newark and ■* * OS from Tom, Sou* On is a furnished Bamberger's on display ments, he out. • ALPINE-4 B/H.M • It. 9. 9 m*U« pointed be on exhibition from SURFSIDB-I B/RM go -i to Svruit* Op«n 9 *hl Dork. will Nov. 14. • GLENBHOOK-S B/RM Rf. P.O. Box Forked 9, • 171, River, N.J. MY 3-3921 • SUSSEX S B/RM FINAL SECTION UNDER CONSTRUCTION! Bonuses to Buyers, YOU MUST t. RANCHES AND Bl LEVELS SEE A Plus FOB FREE BROCHURE Harfield AMD INFORMATION

A SOT Rrlfstt •&V BRIGADOON a models: ranch, a Cape Cod • ANCanauhca \ WRITE TO and a bi level Each model of. • l»OOUtDI JACKSON (PKS) Harfwld. Mm Bu r.i.t frrs several • aornmat. bill variations of floor m r*«u u. * 200 home two community plan and exterior • WALL TWf. miW* styling Thus north of Lakewood, • K SOUTH the overall appearance of the HL-wnrics Jmm Bltm. K. 1. opcni it* seeood and • ■Atvn.L* final community is lIMHI ‘return varied, and the of 100 botnn here this buyer getv a borne rrm- MIDDLETOWN, N. J. week designed • Land DfrUion of \ to / meet hi* particular needs Builder* Abe Fern berg and Harfield homes are GLEN Robert priced BOCK LUMBER Kogove announced a from $15,490 to $19,000 * sumv CO.IHC. un i. of bnnu* feature* Thirty, ,£* afuii Custom-Built group offer- 1-. tw* Homes fiveyear is avail to tan M Ton. I ed to financing \Vy>- l/* early buyer* tn thu new able Barneqat Ranch with as little as $475 *13,790 section T**' In* down and no -—i —OW *-000 • Mini: lltVICf The closing costs around Priced From complete RC\ Whirlpool All IrOH-.tWMKO • IOWIir Year home, at the Our $23,900 inclusive POSSfUI ,h©re. home, are be- monthly pay. kitchen package of aoton » tween mayor ap- mrnts start at wquumud ohmo a iwwn fuiui.i $4,000. and $5,000. le., than home, built iu.f stu pliance* including range, 20 minute, north of oven, here. You need not FEATURING plan an e.pen- refrigerator and duhwather, five lummer vocation for you will be clothe* washer living year around • and dryer, ex- in the center Four ond Five • of all the Eo.t Bedroom* 2Vi Both* hau»t fan m hood Coa.f. beautiful re.ort*. and water Sea.ide Hgt»„ A.bury Park and Atlontic heater, in choice of color, will City to mention • Two-Zone Boteboord a few. The builder Hot Woter Heat continue to be included it the Sale. Agent. Come down and in all di.cutt the threw mode!* at llarfteld only to love • way money before your home to-Acre Landscaped Lot* I. built. To the buyer* of the bi- !e*el model bonu*e* • Many Other Feature* extra are Some of the feature* offered A offered are: color coordinated breakfast nook valued 1300 City Ga. at Fully land.caped will be tnchaded free to the water 20 DIFFERENT City Hardwick Hi-low Burner. CUSTOM DESIGNED HOMES flr*t a buyer*, and the build- Curb. er* »ay they will continue to Hardwick automatic oven TO CHOOSE include Perm* Stone front* Sidewalk* FROM on RCA all bl Dryer level model* at no extra RCA wa.hing machine charge • l-Shaped Ranche* Bi level Ronche* In spite of rising cost* Ketn- IDEAL FOR RETIRING 1 PEOPLE bent say a he intend* to con- Side To Side Split* • Two Stories tinue thu bonus feature pol- icy foe »e*er a I week* to per- BARNEGAT mit those who have been UIUU ns IV. ISO • con* stdermg a Harfieid home time Cuttom Built Hornet to take . advantage of the bo HAVEN ESTATES . . Reolittically Priced! bus policy. MtnTWM Owen r«*»u Fisher Blvd. to R«r*wi tiijiu Lu tut llarftekl feature* Toms N. J. not m m Meetto-i. three basic River, n to «w, new n r-» w-n .... Mena'* itnn are (iMtoa> to Dana Rn 4 to. Take Go-daa Slot* Pork .ay to l«,t 17 Tax,, M.ND (illT toil subscription* THE DARWIN 81-LEVEL H9U. an lavta J7, 4 avlai titKar la Itrd. loti tar t of The Advocate,to friend* on Model. special occasion*. *uch as * Open Daily DEVON BUILDERS, - 67M760 INC. wedding* ordination*, turth- Phone Dl 1-0439 dayt. anniversaries. Christ- mat, etc.

IN TOMS RIVER pacious ... Catholic of all Families ages Full enjoy Parish facilities at ••and ST. JOSEPH’S R. C. CHURCH • the complete price is only *13^470 * INCLUDING CATHOIIC ELEMENTAL SCHOOL • CATHOLIC HIGH SCHOOL >l2O Down—No The Popular $ Only Closing Costs 81-LEVEL , . . 13,990 entiling about thu bi-level i. walk school • m generous 3 Th* - Charmer $14,800 to . . . just one block proportion*—the The-luxury $13,200 bedroom- the kitrben the .lining area—living room are all A *-U»»l (•» roomy mt r 3 MODELS FROM —pill, all the wonderful e.tra spare on the lower level provide, for load, of living fun. It’, hard to believe—but—true—that this big roomy home i. ao .No priced low! . . . wonder it is Tom. River’s $15,400 home- and *’fa.te.t .riling ... in nobody all Tom. River offer, you a prettier Ihe artting. rolling terrain—full grown trees—the .afely deigned no throughtraffic .tree!.—will quickly win tool r t~~ your fancy, **a Drive through $19,000 Holiday South today. See our Model*, the attractive THI HAUfltlO H»ftl Ml* 11 model area, the lu.h lawn., entire .ite then Only at inspect . . , you’ll know Mople Shade can you find 3 «•«« mmm. lr» ONLY 9475 entirely different DOWN list Bi level model* to • to*

• RAISED ary Witor . *ll4 city RANCH AND CAPE COD n,4r Ptitvre Cetart Ntlwil Om • Ch*k* M Km he* Ha- Mortgage F+fmnat t:,r • mon Me- FIIA and wt. « Pav*e ImM. tor* 4 Ft**r C atari Conventional Available- ■>*• .t .it * vfaraaf Mortgagee ***3l ••kl m 4 CerO* • riKMA tTOHI I,Mil! IM Unl MwM Ont> i

EXTRA! BONUS FEATURE SUBURBAN 7 RCA Whirlpool Appliance* DRIVE NO IXTRA m* COST. TO MS RIVtR • HU *1 MVtl • MtNII NEW JERSEY EASY COMMUTINO ■*““ HOLIDAY, M miaiMaa Hon N. V. f. OmtCTIMli T«U •ir Rent* |t* AWrlch R4., (,pp, 0 . a mi |tt coadHloMd aipraa* nnaMtr -muohn and bay avl •top at ud TJoVSAMTTJv mnur HM pm la -i i. . Yocß rSvaKei-J-r In urn thtu &? a*£ r~m/ni TOMS lIVIR, N. ■rS 1 JRRIRV MALTY AOIMCV J. sis.' uTtlsw;.*? scsftjs! Me* AeaaW -v- a **•«« «*> *«<«• *1 Phaaai U«IU* *r UMIM Wl VZS I t l' mxWa u» ".'I *.. 1 ? t>rlv», I urn ruh( «U “iT! i Medals EBSawg* nuu • «« SK SwteSft*** Open Every Day m> ***** - -«» jm* ” *e—t» - tw. MU 74b* .CiM *"• '*** - h * •»* 11 A.M. to Dusk . Telephotts 244-1 111 J 20 THE ADVOCATE November 7, IMS College Aid Bill Out of Conference

WASHINGTON (NCj-Sen- to block any federal assistance ate-House conferees have ap- to a church-related college. $1,195 proved a billion college All aid would have been block- aid bill that would permit ed while the case was in the church-related achools to par- court,. ticipate on an equal footing with other institutions. THE CONFERENCE bill also broadened In approving a compromise Senate-imposed measure the conferees dropped restrictions on the categories a provision, included in the on the building, for whose con- Senate bill, that would have struction aid could be given. allowed a taxpayer to file suit The Senate version would

have allowed aid for con- PATERSON SCHOOL - struction Above is the architect's' for the school of science, engineer* plan new to serve St. Mits Gerard Mission in Articles inr. and library buildings only. Majella parish Paterson. A one-day fund drive to raise the $150,000 Tho compromise bill would for school will be held Nov. 10. St. Gerard's is mission of St. a Michael's parish, In Magazines • Iso include facilities for Msgr. Carlo Clonci The architect is Peter math- paster. F. Terrafranca of River Edge. ematics and foreign language CLEVELAND (NC) - Ohio instruction Also. although Citizens for Educational Free- Break Ground dom building, would have to he has challenged two na- constructed for these specific tional magazine articles that Fund Drive Planned purposes, they could be put to At O. L. claimed that parochial achools Mercy other uses once completed are obsolete JERSEY The House was to CITY - Msgr. CEF expected president Paul C. James A. act first on the Hughes, vicar gen- said here compromise For Paterson School Mecklenborg that bill and eral, broke ground for the whatever supporters voiced con- BLESSING - Brother Anthony, F.S.C., of St. difficulties these fidence that new Our Lady of PAPAI Joseph's High School, West New school, it would pas, Mercy PATERSON A $150,000 committee York. receives have come from "one School is Joseph Girest, a framed papal on the there. But in the Greenville lec- blessing occasion of the 50th anniversary of more difficulty was campaign for the new school assisted his in the thing and one thing only tion Nov. 4. by Anthony Spaned* membership Brother, of the Christian School, anticipated in the Senate a! St Gerard from Brother John F.C.S., injustice." Mission here da. provincial. At Mark The established Dooley, a of the parish, last will be held Nov. 10, it was left is Rev. nephew jubilation who celebrated the Mecklenborg disputed the THE MEASURE would jubilee and au- June, two 30- Mass, at right, Msgr. John P. of conclusions plans a story, announced thu week by Msgr. THE NEW SCHOOL will be Weigand, pastor St. Joseph's. of the two article, thorize $1,195 billion in grants classroom school and cafe-, Carlo Cianci, pastor. a one-story with in Look and the Saturday and loans for construction building eight pur- teria which will also serve as Evening Post —and said: Approximately 100 men of classrooms, principal's office, pose* over Die next three a church The temporary the parish will visit all of the teacher', room and "Give u, what is ours and In the utility First years case of grant,, school is to School will expected open families after the final Mass rooms. In the will be on we show the lobby a Report Post, Look the state* or the schools must next fall, with the Sister, of Survey on Sunday. Msgr. Cianci has freestanding statue of the and anyone else what pa- teach- put up two thirds of the cost of St Joseph, Chestnut Hill, a* ing really I, The miracle a-ked atl parishioners io re- tron saint ia the facilities In the case of trachera. t main at home until The that we have been able to they are exterior of the building sur- loan,, they must provide one- Shows Some Following the groundbreak- visited wib Criticism at be face brick on vive all." fourth -of the cost pumice ing. reception, were held Unjust tor A final meeting of the cam- block Windows will be He said the solution to prob- The Senate had enacted its the CHICAGO (NC)—The direc- Sisters ami for the visiting •paign committet was held quency of receiving the sac- lem* aluminum with the extenor and active participators In the of independent school, is version of tors of • the legislation Oct. clergy N‘-v. 4 study of the ‘'ef- raments) there will " with Msgr. Walter H doors of hollow metal. Plans be con- Catholic community to give them a fair share of 21 after fects" of Catholic education siderable only accepting the A temporary rectory will Hill, rector of St John's and differences between public funds for specification, are nearing has-e designated controversial Judical review he next at *8 written that they do not the two groups. IN THE SAME article, the opened week Cathedral, a* speaker. The and will be rduration. amendment, completion ready expect to find much difference two 45-33. Ferncliffe Rd. chairman "There will be little differ- report on a survey on the of the campaign for bidding Nov. 25. in several area, between Cath- ence between the two groups percentage of Catholic chil- olics who attended In: dren public participation in the civic in Catholic school, schools and those who went to community; contact with The center found that about Church schools. members of 43' of Catholic other groups; oc- school age Rev. Andrew Greeley and cupational success; and social children are m Catholic Peter H. Rossi, both of Chi- attitudes. schools. cago, make this comment in "The HE OLE graduates of Catholic "The a FASHIONED more money family ABOUT an article to in the De- school, appear will score much higher has. the more likely it 1, to cember issue of the Critic, a on indicators of religious have its children in parochial —=—- Catholic bi monthly. and knowledge somewhat schools , The educa- The . . more priest is heading a higher than graduates study of pub- tion the head of family ha, i 1 1 launched by the National Opin- lic schools on judgments about the r more likely his children ion Research Center of the the morality of certain critical are ffim to be in Catholic school, University of Chicago under a actions. (andi finally, those who come m grant from the Carnegie Cor- "The graduates of Catholic from large families are more poration. New York. Rossi is ichool, will be considerably to he in head likely Catholic of the research center. more to likely be integrated schools." they wrote. IN THE FIRST of a series gj 9 % of articles, the two say they expect the survey's results Colleges Reveal will show "that at least some of the criticism leveled in re- We believe cent year, at Catholic schools it must be and trimmed! is without " aged foundation Expansion Plans ‘‘We are under no illusion * *** that the future NEWARK The five Cath- 'Kvrs '«"*•••• •'*«*&»• uTiar a tender. juicy-. of Catholic ed- ments of ' I T//VI higher education la ' 4111) I/.)-it.Hi STEAK smothered olic or Rf).4>T in onions end mushrooms ran da to man's ucation colleges and unnrrsitie, Uie , , . a hang, in the balance." state { it. hnmmmg which are purrs .. . Satisfying perfection in n rr V detioous fc.l* !KISGS BLUE RIBBOS they also wrote. “The commit- members of the l -'t TyY ir'rirZiT* * 1 “ New TIIF “•■O*** 7«»'"V from choic* steers mart tlote end ment of the American Church Jersey College Fund As- MEMBER schools erf ‘V; ’V' f fj lop corn-fed laXY+fted naturally ...not for .1 or 4 bu« IH to ZS trimmed the NJCFA .. for days .. . mnd ju.tright .. . tor m IC* and to its schools is so clear and sociation have building plans represent 30', of b*rf flatond luuiotuneu lip-smaeking tenderness the total Old Fashioned Soring i f TASTES HITTER FXCaVSB IT hi definite that it is most unlike- totaling $3O million according college population m BETTER I ly to be changed.” to a survey of all 12 members New Jersey TTey have 16 224 CHOCK O' imes lUlt HUM BUiIfTT • ‘\UTUIt~ KEF I full FULL NUTS duici&ui • '■ They write: made by the organisation time students and 27.210 cridc". juicy fended. Dr. Theodore full ami "M*lt in Your Mouth" Deliciouinets A. Rath, part time students COFFEE “ON MATTERS of essential president of the and expect a erf ZteaJcL (loaiU association growth 44.1% c 11 religious practice (eg Sun- and also by 1970 to , president of Bloom- 23 full time stu- -66 day church attendance) there field College, said that the dent, and 38.435 total enroll- will be little difference be- ment This Campbell's survey was made on the rec- compare, to a tween Catholic school gradu- ommendation growth of 69 n of several New 4". in the last su TOMATO SOUP chuck steak *49c California roast 55c ates and public school grad- Jersey business ami indus- years. uates. trial leaders who The also showed “On were inter- survey that 10-99* «- matters of the less es- ested the California steak 59c chuck roast 65c in having the facts colleges expect a total sential religious on in- practices (fre- the future crease in need, of all ,eg- expenditures of $l7 Pineapple Grapefruit million chuck fillet rtfiltfttylt tb in seven years. DEL MONTE DRINK 69c rib roast 65c Catholic college, indicated Seton Hall to Give the figure* c Decree following for plant 4 *x ioo rib steak M>a 9 nxpansion Seton Hall. S!T ..*79c round roast 85c mdlmn: St Peter’s. $5 4 mil- Kraft To Fr. Fire of lion. St steak 9 Belgium Elisabeth's, $2 IS mil- MIRACLE WHIP flank 89c round roast 85c lion; Caldwell. $700,000, and top SOUTH ORANGE Rev. Georgian $4 7 K placed person, camps led to Court, million round steak 9 l>ominique Plry, O P., ' reci- his efforts to aid those 49 top *99c cross rib roast 85c peo pient of the Nobel Peace , Prire pie. coarmtHTAi rooo in GREEN PEAS 1958, will be awarded an Under GIANT 9 Father Pire's guid- Shorn top sirloin steak >99c sirloin roast 85c honorary degree as a doctor ance more than 22.000 ni i )top spon- S ».v 99* Al of humane letters by Seton sor, were organized to mn " ,< Hall help cubed 2 9 CmaCwat M'l steak University at an aca- the wMM 99c roast 95c refugees. He established rump demic convocation Dec. 4. four homes NIBIFTS CORN 2—• 39C for aged persons Father Pire, who will be nkwark Green Giant UMa and seven Sliced !%'*•• as 9 European villages. MU 4-77 M minute steak ‘99c 99 making hit first visit to the GREEN BEANS 2—41 C eye round roast c U. S., received the Nobel Grant Giant l« „ on , ~'"’ 9 award for his work butter 9 on behalf CREAM STYLE CORN 2 *• 39 C steaks 99c rotisserie roast 99 c of . refugees and displaced per- KINGS Haw C " A * sona. In 1960. he founded the a latter rale chicken ,iM,, , , nrra 9 of Peace” STRICTLY FRESH PULLET EGGS 999c ™Lr",‘T ;"',“ ''delmonico roast 99 c "University at J lender n || Vcliciouily Juicy Tihange. Belgium, where 300 ( 111 from o*d participant! 40 nations SAFETY 3^9 london broil 99c ‘99c under him and newport roast study an in- ternational team of 09 pro- HMsUuCUINt 2 29C del 9 lessors. steaks silvertip roast 99 c Charitable Cl#ut Aseltad a farm fresh work has en- mewH PROFIT COTTAGE CHEESE gaged Father Pire's efforts •lmost from the time of hit ordination Birdseye /00% Jean over 25 year* ago. CRINKLE CUTS «r FRENCH fludyet He FRIES established two move- fleet ments in Belgium in 1934 to 8 100 fyieiltly Q'umauL &UetdieM ■id needy families and poor children Sneer Cram c From VDp^ ORANGE SAMOA ft 1940 to 1945, he served \>| ground beef 49c short ribs of beef tb 490 ■a a chaplain to the Resis- 8 100 tance, four decora- chuck lb 65c & receiving C ground flanken for braising 59 o tion!. In 1949, a tour of dis- Hew t "lifftr Qumliif ft Too if *•» Sorvo round \ 0 ground 89c beef for stew e> 650 Ifl KINGS WAFFLES This is NEW 10 1°" WE'RE OLD FASHIONED ABOUT "SERVICE" TOO I V' In NEWARK NOW! EVER WONDER WHERE THE GOOD "OLD FASHIONED" BUTCHER WENT ? YOU’LL FIND HIM I READY AT KINGS . OI «H* »««**••• . . TO SERVE YOUR EVERY NEED A SPECIAL CUT A RECIPE ...... AN ORDER WRAPPED FOR YOUR FREEZER MEATS CUSTOM CUT THE OLD FASHIONED WAY 11 0* ... t\W ORDCR Every room newty decorated and re- NS® s t\\ YOUR furnithed. TV and air hnt at Tha Seaton I conditioning * \* Delicious toa And R coets no more to OV W o enjoy MSS f Swet ‘n the belt at Newark'e (meet hotel. Juicy Snow White ffl®* pVA> ,OV' THAHKSGNIH6 POV* .i c«» p TURKEY EXTRA LARGE FRESH jIMt&rvySLl o'*° * I M Nrt PWee Mem*. H. L TANGERINES MUSHROOMS I Hucav«noMa< ma veoeo NOW Mw im>Mbo>.am rt p..Ne.y M tCAy ' o '' POUND _ AT 10 49* 39*

l*»*m t eater. . a.ailafcla at liit.rf (la., Su.tf Markati, Woduatday INSURED N«.«t«ba» 4th tluu Soivrdo,. Oth. ‘•3. W. inane *l» & *• t , awaaMut. Nat Ktauilhla l.r tr|»|i*ph.ial attan. Borgos Borgos , o* WWTOfWCI *«**>-. , N COUPON 1* mm 200 of all hinds EFFECTIVE ixtui Li IN ADDITION TO TMI STAMPS YOU ALWAYS CIT WITH 893 KIARNY AVENUB AT LISTED YOUR PURCHASIS SAVINGS and Loan KINO KORN KEARNY, N. J. Association BONUS STAMPS KINGS Will* Till Coum u 4 Tha PukKim at OIOtOI J. iOROOS 40 Commerce Street, Newark 2, N. J. Mitchell 3 0260 auirt h. ilazi SUPER $lO or MORE 9 MARKETS WIUIAM Doily, to 4, Wednesdays !o 8 p Markets J. OUCCUM m CliintUi ud Milk Pro«u note that two laymen are included in the corporation. It is a reminder that the members of the parish have an important role in the business of the churrh It is one way of telling the parishioners the church belongs to all. that it u truly “common property.”

Unsung heroes in every parish are those who give time, money and effort to the work of the Church. Few make the headlines. But without ushers and altar boys, sarcristans Who's Who and choir members, organists and altar so-

cieties - no churchwould be a proix?r place for the wor- ship of God.

ALTAR BOY ORCANIST Dutiws: Arm? for Mm. light early candles; Duties: Attend and play at Masses, high in- Duties: Care of vestments and sacred res preparr altar; answer responses, aerie Mata, eluding weekday Masses; play at least once sell a used for ceremonies; general care of altar. Benediction week, in the evening, for choir practice May he combined with custodial duties which would include and church Must mwnoritr I.atin response* opening locking Training: Training: Kxtensise. must know organ completely; learn proper ceremonial loe low playing: music suitable for church, what is pro- Training: On the job training from pastor Mats, Solemn Mass. Benediction, weddings, moted and what is forbidden; ceremonial jI or assistant. Must know Week and feast liturgical calendar, funerals. Holy special days. Maas and other services. whil vestments are worn on what days; proper colors for altar etc. USHER CHOIR MEMBERS ALTAR ROSARY SOCIETY

Dutins: Arrive church for Duriev. Attend and sing at High early: prepare Sunday Duties: In some parishes, care and upkeep Masses, others when services; turn on light'; take up coUrction; requested, all special cere- of altar, placement of fresh flowers, and linens. monies. Easter. keep order, show parishioners to pews ami if Christmas, etc. In other parishes the work of the society raUes necessary expel people who do not keep the funds for altar furnishings and fixtures. proper decorum. Training: Given by organist or choir direc- tor at practices; learn score ami language suit- On the job from those who have able Training: Training: On the job. Learning by doing. for hymns ami responses Must devote at gone before. least one evening a week to practice.

r*f>rrl«M ClarMr rrtm 2 THE NECESSARY THING The Altar May Be Portable

which ia shared Fixed or portable, aa altar itagr by all Christiana. TOPIC is necessary for the celebra- tion of Mass Thus they were able lo The fixed altar is made of celebrate Masa anywhere

stone and consists of a table they could find a suitable flat awl suppqrts consecrated as a surface. rather than mu whole relebrating Masa because Advocate The portable altar is a solid they could not find a free at piece of natural stone, large tar or obtain a small portable enough to hold the Sacred one. The Host and the base of the chalice. H has five crosses rut into A Church Has J. the It and a cavity containing N. relics of two martyr saints, Jewish Traces sealed with a cemented stone

lid "Spiritually we are Sem The flat tombs of tKe topped lies." said Pope Pius XII Newark, catacombs made convenient pointing to the Jewish her altars during the |wr seda- itage of all Christians tions This let! to the custom Evidence ts nowhere The sick who receive added more strength from Infants who receive the first sacrament of a small of placing portion striking than in thr consecra- 1963, the Sacrament of the of the Anointing Sick... at the Baptismal foot... the remains from a earthly tion of a church Here, at one The must pastor who care for souls and Children who attend the school .canonized martyr saint in the 7, parochial part of the ceremony, the somehow out red... keep the parish of the or receive religious instructions from the priests. altar Greek awl l-atin alphabets The assistant priests who lighten the bur- Sisters or trained lay In the Greek Church the so people... arr traces) in a cross from one den of the pastor... The young man and woman who pledge called "Grn-k t'orporal" is end of the church to the A place where the greatest sacrifice in their fidelity to each other in the Sacrament of usesl as a portable altar It other The Greek represents the world is offered daily.. November Matrimony... D a consecrated altar cloth the Jews, the Latin the Gem A place where the parishioner finds a The young men awl women who dedicate of silk nr linen much like a tile* brighter world in a dark confessional box... their lives to God that there might be more corporal The Greek Is written first to The place of the final Requiem... parishes... 'When a rhurrb is con emphasirr thr fact that the of cloth secratesl. a piece Jews were called first to the large enough to form several Christian Faith Greek is on Corporals placed The church ton. Is cere* In the the altar moatally washed with a mu Very Beginning... The himself coosec lure Bishop of watrr. salt ashes awl rates awl it. pouring wine Wine St Gre am) prescribed by Cemeteries Kings Victor Emmanuel There are it times, though, holy chrism on and stiffen gory I lor all church run II awl Humbert I Another an- Rome, famous for Us mag- particularly during Lent, when me it with a mixture of relies secrations reminiscent of cient church of Rome is St. find nificent churches, is also the you'll pilgrims who have and wax or fragrant gum It the ceremonial Lawrence washtngt of of - Outside the Walls come thousands birthplace the Christian of miles to is then divided into pieces and the Jews which cemetery. The Chris- stands in the cemitery make the of early Way the Cross distributed as the occasion This sprinkling Is rrcallrs) of St Ciriaco tians buried their dead under- It wjs built St Francis of Assisi did it. ‘ so requires in the asperges" or wash during Constantine's reign did the ground in catacombs long be- founder of the Little Because of the great num me” that Next to ceremony precedes fore churches erect- St Peter's it was the Brothers of any were the Poor, the her of priests and prelates in High Mast ed The first catacombs most frequented sanctuary in Frenchman. Charles were de Fou Rome for the first session of In both rites the words built Rome at the end of the fourth cauld near the tombs of promi- They went there to the Vatican Council. Pope of Psalm » are hearsl V-u nent century- walk street Romans who had become the Christ walked John gave the everybody pns- shall wash me and 1 shall be Christians. on the way to execution These included the His dege of the Greek Cisrpor- ** Stations * made whiter than snow ratacomb of Domitilla, niece It is often of the Emperor Domitian. and a surprise to the average man a member of the Flavian fam- that the Stations of the Cross do ily located on the Via Ar- really exist, d< alina. lie's familiar with the fact that his Catholic In. the IMh century the typ- friends have "Stations" ical cemetery was located in their churches—- the next to the church and acted replicas of journey Christ made to as a constant reminder of his execution. But he diath to parishioners who is astounded, just the to walked the cemetery same, see in Jerusalem the You through v»»* ...” to church Via Dolorosa the sorrow may hif services. road He sees Today. Urge diocesan ceme- the 14 spots id teries are located in central

areas and death is now an oc- casional rather than not need a daily reminder.

Archbishop Ireland once said cl cemeteries: "Next lo the church, the tabernacle of the all these living God. is the cemetery, the earthly home of the de-

parted—God’s Acre ... it is the most sacred of places.'' n Churches banking The church, like Christ, Ar < sprang from a humble begin- Jerusalem, each marked with In ning. the days following a cross, said to he the places Christ's de tth. the where Jesus Naxarcth. the services... Apostles of and Iheir followers often held God Man. trudged, fell, met services in-private homes. his mother, was helped by a St. I'aul writes of his visit to visitor named Simon, had his Corinth that he was denied cloak ripped from him. was the use of synagogues by the nailed to a wooden cross and but • • it’» nice to know they're Jewrs and used the house of set up in the afternoon sun to available Titus Justus for his preach- dir. at your bank when ing. It's a narrow street, like you need them! Over the |taxt 151 One of the oldest church many in Middle Eastern cities. years National Slate has become buildings in Rome is St Ma- You’ll find, too, outdoor stalls ria a full service bank, with ad Martyres, built as a along the w-ay selling souve- every Tfu*! home in 25 B.C. by Marcus nirs. magazines, candies Oft- banking facility to meet the Agrippa. It contains the tombs en. too. see distracted you'll changing and grouing demands of o( Raphael. Cardinal Consalvi travelers walking hurriedly by. growing buaiiuswea, homes and induatrien. Make National State bank your ... and enjoy the • IMI MODERN AM CONDITIONW convenience of doing businem with a full-service bank. - • robert treat a KNOTT HOTEL MM Ch«k R Invites your reservations • COMMUNION RRf AKFASTS • ORDINAIION DINNERS lh<' ni.invHio iiii , • WIOOINO RECEPTIONS • CONVINIIONS, SEMINARS and NATIONAL STATE BANK SALES MIITINO OF NEWARK

• U Function Roomi in On* IJSO • Top Capacity Room Irvington Orange Millhurn-ShortHills * West STANLEY j. AKUS Manager AttIRI W SUNDER. Protidon KMex-Caldwell 50 PARK NEWARK Federal Dr pot it Iniurance PLACE, - MARKET 2-1000 Corporation WHAT IS IT CALLED? WHAT IS IT USED FOR? 3 1 PULPIT Historically, first erected ,s « p | acP fru „, which one could address those the The in church There arc no regulations on construction <<( the pulpit from the liturfic.il standpoint Advocate 2 CHAIR or BENCH for priest during High Moss Hie celebrant of the Mass sits there several times during the course of TOPIC the Mass His vest- ments are draped carefully the over back h> an altar In bo> a cathedral, a cathe- dra t throne or chair of the Bishop), is used during the aolenin ceremonies November 3 FLAGS, U Sand Papal 7, permitted in chut rhea by decree of Sacred I'ungrega- lion of Hites (tart) ticeree 1963, states when the insig- nia or flags do not lie long to societies openly hostile to the Catholic relijnm or to a so- Newark, whose cle!) statutes are in themselses objectionable or N. whose insignia or flags bear J. emblems forbidden and con- demned by their very nature, they mi) be admitted into church Flags should be blessed according to the form- ula the in Homan Httual. ed outside a sacred place but several statue* with at least or dead did not begin until the gold the interior of the <- U p of neser without an altar or at onr the person for whom the nth nest century Before that He must be gold The 4 SACRISTY n-..ra least plated rep an altar stone The first church wax named wa* usually represented to the main altar where as is anointed with holy chtism the stone altars were made of Christ the from aacred vessels books and vest- King reigning by a Bishop must • CREDENCE TABLE To Tolas-, an attar be made the cross ments are stored Here the the of the altar small of at-ine in order to be con right a 16 PATEN A small, his priest puts on vestment* table or shelf holds serrated ami al two cruets 14 TABERNACLE - The Altar table round plate, made of the s -ine lor sari-is church service* the tar two e**ential or flasks containing wu.e eavit) are compartment, usually placed material as the chalice If Sacrist) must base cructti* a of the The ami water to be used in the parts ftsed altar *he tn middle of the altar, in made of silver th«- -ide hanging above the upper vesting table Mas* together with shal- must be smooth sod a which the Ble**ed Sacram- nt must be On it table and gidd plate-1 a container with low dish and large enough fur the a clean towel for u tabernacle* the pnesta kept Early rests bread or I) »*t to be water for the hand*. of priest t to washing fingers by the cr!o of conveniently celebrate the were in the form doves consecrated into the Body of Maas The i* brant The cruet* should be which 5 SANCTUARY LAMP A altar cavity a hung from the roof of Christ it too ts anointed with small made of glass that the square chamber in the so the con oc a special tower hanging glass tn which canopy holy chrism by a Bishop vessel tent* of each be bmis of the altar which hoo*e* can clearly Tbe*e were by an a burning w. a fluats It u replaced the relics of martyrs nen octagon shaped tow.-r placed 17 CANDLES During found in front of the mama I on the side of Mas, lightest candle, must tar and be with Gospel the altar must fed nlive 9 SIDE ALTAR - Usually 7 STATUES History of burn on the altar Candies ml of The earlier stone or w s*| or beeswax In case two at each side of the mam statur. bark L> th- first must be made of beeswax. gors tabernacle* wore generally wes'essily atvsthcr ml or eve.i altar They may stand against centuries Persecuted Chris- made of During funerals ami on Good an electric light may- be tub the wall need precious metal Tlie and only one tians brightened gloomy cav- Friday, yellow unbleached stituted It burns day ami night 'trp foot present form of tabernarie Our pace) They ace erns with painting* of candles are used For I-w to honor the Sacra date* from the end of the itith Blruol used for the of Ivord * life and miracle* I-a celebrati*) Masses two candles are used; ment century. Ma»' when there are several ‘ter they took abandoned tem- High Mass at least four; priests av adahle do nM 6 Table on »t. h of They - Mtien ALTAR ples paganism ami Chris- 15 CHALICE R< alls-he Solemn Mass, six the sene as image brackets or sacrifice of the Ma<* l» of tianned them with statues same type of cup used by Bishop celebrates a Pontifical shrines Since the Blessed fere«i Mas* mi) be celrbrat Today most churches hive Christ at the Last Supper tor Mass (except a Keqtnein Sacrament t* usually reserved the wine to be consecrated in- Mass) a seventh caudle n on the main altar, it is not to His BLmml It is made >f lighted behind the altar cruci- necessary to have a taberna- gold or silver If not made of fix cle at the side altar.

10 ALTAR RAIL - Guard* the sanctuary amt separates it from the rest of the church Sometimes called a Commu- nion rail as persons kneel at it while receiving Holy Com- munion It i* made of carved wood, metal, or marble ami l* usually about two feet, six and inches high on the upper part from mi to nine inches OUR NEW wide

11 SANCTUARY - Space in church for the high altar and clergy In early day* it to-k loAto&tmcib the foim ot a era** The raised sanctuary, as we know it today became popular with Gothic style churches This al low* A CONFESSIONAL - Fn- C. VIGIL LIGHTS - Men an unobstructed view of is tile high closure where confession is or- called votive candle- I'aually altar dtnattl) heard The not blessed candle* Common 12 - Tlie Mi ta seated in center and peni- l> placed in large number* MISSAL In l»ook whoch contains all that tents kneel tn aide alcoves fit- a candle holder of special OPEN i* read or ted with door* or curtains form, before a statue or shrine, tnetted in the offer- ami ing of the Mas*, The partition* ha**’ opening* lighted by people who give and complete rubrics or directions with gratmga or screens sep- a donation for the privilege lo for the arating the penitent from the help pay (or the expense of the proper reading of each Mas, Book t* written in Latin and These be closet! candles It is a sign of honor priest may U *< »** contains full texts of all the So. by sliding shuttera. to the saint before whose linage the candle is lighted Masses approved by the and Church In the ltith centui afeSusSStw^-club* »" Ur * t« b a symbol of one * prayer y. lh* , C hci«tn»> B WINDOWS - Almost al - U|Mm recommendation >v< l' fV#r (or his intercession with liod of the If «OU , _ ways a rectangle that usually Council «-»* in heaven. of Trent, the Missal JUSi has rounded part a lop Tup wa* produced substantially in the window D PEW Seat* and kneel- of i* tiequeutly its present form Po|>e St decorated with some ornamen- ers in church Usually of fixed Pius V wa* the principal re NATIONAL BANK tation Window* in church rows of undivided benches visor of the Missal. Ol MISAK COUNI y architecture developed early. with backs, as opposed to of chairs rows Wes- - fcNlMMkl lit*** Tlie temperament of the peo A purely 13. CRUCIFIX A cros* on ■u.-f-nl* *•(*:« pie of the Hast amt the Soutit tern arrangement, it is com- which the figure of Our Lord •M'** NMKMWM WN.WI )»ww»c MMMIWUI where the first churches were monly found in northern Eur- i* painted or carved A cruci- R ftU'MJMI built favored much light ami the U.S. fix is »*.« 4 in ope Originally now neon on altar* of all '*• MHI»l MMIII (•MIAMI lIIMIIIIII their buildings. Windows arc each pew was designated for churches The use of Ihe cruci- usually united in groups of two a particular family of the fix wa* not general before tlie to or three This dates back parish. The earliest churchc* «lh century and the represen- •arty Christian architecture. had no pews. talion of Our Lord auffertug 4 The Lost Churches TOPIC churches arc ever lost Fewin the V S. Not so in other countries. New rulers have often meant changes for churches as well as for their people. Advocate Two of most the famous lost

churches are Westminster Ab- The bey in England and St. Sophia Basilica in Istanbul (former- ly Constantinople) Turkey. J. Today St. Sophia is a mosque N. and a museum. Built by the Roman Emperor Justinian in the sixth century, it is a fa- mous example of Byzantine Newark, architecture. It is still on the tourist route today. If you visit Istanbul, the guides will point to St Sophia (the name re- 1963, mained even though the church was lost) and may 7, show e\en you the door through which Mohammed drove his horse in 14.53 when he con- quered the city and captured November the church. w estminster Abbey in Eng- land is still a church -an An- glican one. You may have seen it on TV in May. 1960, when I’rin cess Margaret was married to Anthony Arm strong-Jones there. Most of England's kings and queens were crowned there, as was the now-reign ing Queen Elizabeth. Join In the Westminster tombs the English Catholic finds not } only the burial places of his rulers but his saints as well The Abbey contains the tomb of St Edward the Confessor, First the English who founded National’s king it, and Queen Elizabeth 1 who gave it the Anglican dean and chapter which it retains today

S ome been churches have 1964 lost and then regained. This calls for a special ceremony of reconciliation. The famous Notre Dame Ca-

thedral of Paris was the scene of a pagan "Festival of Rea- Christmas Club son” during the French Revo- lution in the late 1700s An- other Catholic church. St Hu- stachc's, became a Paris cab- aret: music, dancing and drinking. Today Mass Is offered in both. But Mass was offered in neither until they had been reconciled. Church law calls for recon- ciliation of sacred objects when they have been desecrat- ed by improper, unlawful use After reconciliation, usually done by the Bishop of the area, the church may once more be used for its original purpose: the honor and glory of God. It’s so easy to save on a regular schedule...and almost like having Raw and the Law your Christmas gift bills “pre-pakT! Become a Christmas Club Did young John Raw. a 19- member a few minutes at ... your neighborhood First National year old fleeing from the po-

lice know the Code of Canon office is all the time it takes. Ift aatf Ovfce* 0• ••• t• i Law? Raw sought sanctuary earlier this year in a church in Darlington, England. Years ago he would have been quite safe if he ssbs could have come within a Ul* C*ll,lM|| 1..1. mile of Westminster Abbey for sanctuary extended that far in the days of Catholic England. CHRISTMAS Under sanetuary laws, and STAMPS according to the Code of , "Churches enjoy the right of refuge, so that a criminal who has fled into them may not. except in ur- gent necessity, be taken out THE ST without the permission of the Ordinary, or at least the rec- FMRST I I NATIONAL tor of the church.” HI.VK found Raw, however, sanc- L OF JERSEY CITY tuary to be a dead letter. Once inside the he * church, Otpont lniuU»t» Cer»oi»l on • Frtt'tl ItHm S„t,. was pursued and tackled by the assistant, Rev. John Tim- and promptly turned over ney Main Office: One Exchange Place, Jersey City f to the police. and ten other Father Timney, who prob- ... convenient offices in did know his Canon Law. ably Jersey City, Hoboken, West New York, Harrison and realized that the protection of Kearny sanctuary no longer exists. 5 Tales, laws, Catholic ronlng building anew church. The earlier example of a concen He fire, is permits, electrical In- population 32*T Catholic but trated government campaign spections they are as much only one of the town's 11 against the Church. a part of the pastor's life as churches is Catholic Zoning laws affect every- The

of the average home owner’s. In Poland a campaign to one Thus, advice to Catholics tax Often the pastor has a school, the church out of to take part in public life is Must convent and auditorium as existence succeeded in closing practical as well as charita well as a cljurch and rectory a number of schools and sem ble to Advocate maintain according to var- inaries. Only the parishioners of ious civil codes The Popery I.aws by which a church can be sure the A zoning in Mt. English rulers attempted to church will retain its freedom Know I-ebanon. a suburb of Pitts- destroy Catholicism in Ireland in carrying the mcs'age of burgh, blocked the of erection during the 18th century’ arc an Christ to the community. TOPIC The Law November 7. 1963, DO-IT-YOURSELF? Newaik. N. A ’doit .i nelf y church*" for heroir vie has relief angels * J. Imposvitdr on the intKle walls In age* past activity Professional contractors did »*» fomiim t'lr limaui heavy roncrete pouring, put in French C !h« •! \<*tt ttre! structures and installed I'tmf o( l’tr > < ' jijirr and electrical future' Rhr mt all b lit were by the How good a yrb did the par- hands of the pat.-' ,nrrs All ishioners do* St Patrick’s was took more than .4> to the years awarded gold medal in the build largest national competition In (UliSomi City st Pat- for church architecture in the rick s Church toA or.iy i year country. It u not a medieval cathedral Itet. Patrick O Honnell, the but spirit that built it it the chairman of the competition, tame More than VK> men and praised St Patrick t for iU to women members of the “completely new concept in community del the work church design Every evening and all day The church, inclosed In the Saturday pamhioecrt transparent walls in a glass painted, laid stone flooring, core is surrounded by a wide ma-te pews did woodwork, court and the altar faces the landscaped and made mold* people

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R.M.S. Queen Elizabeth: $3,673 tons ...is bordered on three sides by water! prjl fleet pift \im (lie »hlc>( m-lotion of J Uavr Nett V'll the to Europe on wt u kit crossings New is almost an It has I huif'i and Jersey island. water on Lujjrtt Illicit. n th n Mary, or 'all aUuol tl»c s t'.i:..ida It M Ny/tunu From i tlfM'tcr- three sides the ... Hudson River and the Atlantic and the liu|H t rum •*'»io Carmama or ipa . oo in Tourist Claw numerous (llatetihghtlt higher in 1064 ) craft, marinas, fishing, swimming and hat round cruise with Cunard alv> a tear program luturv beautiful scenic views. The waterways of New Illicit tailing to the Wi vt Indies, Medileu aiican, Noith C.ijw oi arotuwl the tvorkl. Jersey are an important part of the / a/cnl Cunard I 2? Tel Fit ihtalli iff Inn • or in* Pn«i./uuy t/.mr state’s BOukng (.’reels 'J..VW). HI Fark .Air (Tel FI Mia 5-f J 00). N V.. N. r. economy and give substance to m

its claim of a JOS. M. BYRNE CO. l>eing major “Gateway For Curard Line to the World”. Reservations or In- 828 Broad St. Newark, N.J. formation Call MA 31740 PUBLIC SERVICE AND GAS . . . 0 ELECTRIC COMPANY Write or See : Taxpaying Servant of a Great Slat* Great-Grandpa Would Wonder: 6 The Bells Are Ringing... Am I in the Place? W Right MAT does a church bell do’ TOPIC great grandfather could ioners? The qualified CCD more form the nucleus at a It nnga. But what else? In the with which surely prayers teacher who instructs a church bell Ifreturn to his parish church public dynamic parish. U blessed. God Is asked to do more than give it school students in In the field of social a melodious for just one Sunday, he would religion; justice sound. the Legion of Mary worker the church has a "Whenever the he amazed at the many great oppor- it rings.” one of the prayers says, "may who attempts to restore to changes. One glance at the tunity take an active part spirit of evil depart, may the Christian p«*>plr practice their to lapsed Catholics the Church in community life. In faith, Satan’s parish bulletin would be Syra- may power over them be stricken sml may they tries ami to make new con- cuse. Catholics be strengthened Advocate to baffle him "CCD.- joined with in as . enough the lx>rd they worship together . verts; the society which aids other denominations in seek- "When CYO. CKM. f-egion of Mary the peal of this bell penrtratea the clouds, may the the needy of the parish; the ing help for minority races. angelic ” Is this the right place?” legion guard the congress of The CFM Catholic worshippers he mi*t wonder. or Family Ac- This has meant finding ade- “At its sound," says another prayer. "let evil spirit* fly tion couple who seek to re- quate housing for Negroes dis- Yes. it’s the right place in terror, let thunder and lightning hail ami storm be banivhed, J. store family life to Christ placed by urban renewal proj- The difference? New organ- let the power of hand crush the the air that and Thy powers of through prayer, study ac- ects Catholic ami non Cath- izations, new problems, new hearing the sounding bell vanish at the N. tion; the who advise they may tremble and awareness of the couple olic workers rang doorbells the community sign of crows engraved there." the engages! at Pre-Cana con- asking landlords and Jhe work of parishioners white to ac- ferences These ami many in the community. cept Negroes as tenants. Rev John R Sheerin. Paul- Newark, ist editor, sums it this up For Irish Interna- JOS. M, BYRNE CO. way: “The local church must ex- tional Airlines Res- 828 Broad St. Newark, NJ. ercise impact on the Sister 1963, a strong says ervations or Infor- community that surrounds it. 4SX 3-1740 7, mation. Call. Write If it fails to do so. it betrays its trust If it remains noth- "Use the Manhioll or See ing more than a place of rest and quiet devotion, it means ” that the ordinary man of the Missal. November world will think of the church as a place that has no relev- hectic ance to his life in the work a day world.”

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Rv«“n t He Pope hat hit on parnh _ but lla not SL Prter'a The Basilica! SAINTS BE PRAISED! The inscription oTrr thr rrv- trance papal altar uhirh fare* the people and ha* behind it an scops 1 thrunr November rpi The Tope or other presiding 7, prrtatr inatrad of tilting at the altar the aide’Of at in rno*t i FREE cathedral* rrmamt tested 1963, behind thr altar Thu* he ia AT NEW JERSEY BANK faring both thr altar and thr *3 Beautiful people beyond Charrywood Imported j

A wealthy Oatholn Newark, who willa time* a Bi'hop may let thr a large turn of money for thr pastor deride N. erect;cm of anew churrh ha* Archbishop Roland hat made little chance that it will he a symbolic rotary of new J. in Saltn named hi* honor Study churches in Bergen County halt* aehool buildings, parnh during the patt decade J’ar- hall* yet Churches no l»hes have been named for muit be aftrr They named the mysteries of the rosary taint* or tome sacred myitrry Annunciation Visitation. Na of the Catholic Faith I‘resentation. Mills li'ity. Atcention Ctualty the Ruhop •electa Cardinal Spellman New Pepper of the name for the York fvit « ihaf parish has adopted the practice through of IM 5< s’ *•€'*• in tome cate*, parish naming a parish after each *ooera ha«r gotten together of the new saints •*t IV Ihi! («• ranonirrd by amt requested a name the fr«!» I'K’lli’Ol fa* Some Church IV el IV lit* *>UH iiotf ►» Ik* at IV *R*r )'the" BRIDE'S SHOPPE when you

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t*C«T« f l tKJit.tul pit (« »<*n, mod"* d*t |* Mil «and 1 ►»CO»r iM>n m fat thttry- •wd • Bi » odcftrvnt mtiota. *<» to t«* bvitd tor PER ANNUM MW art urouot iiom it to i» wtnar - Mtj to n*« Ml avt monti 100 n*«d tor o kcwi! fat uvatmit n*.t poor! And ooty NJB PAID QlJAirratLY l, raised the level of AIR-COOLED The is the symbol of Ihe Holy Spirit. At the Parish croups in St Louis SunJay collections, calls the backed an Information Forum pastor weekly to check if any What a difference some cool Baptism of Christ, the Holy Spirit descended for lapsed Catholics and in- repairs are needed, organised air can make Msgr James J. J. creased attendance from 7 to family discussion group*, Owens, pastor of St him in the visible a dove. Mary's, upon sign of The 300 re- staged successful drives to Nutley. can testify to this. N. Parishioners Aidan's emit and hold competent CICU is Hie early Christians’ of St. Hr found a 25", increase In In Williston Park, L. I. have teachers. I Ijn daily Mats attendance and avof j|€ vaSWS f emblem of Jesus started a procram to inform "Street wardens" in Bristol. nearly 300 additional persons Catholic and non Catholic England make personal coo attending Sunday Mass after Christ. The Greek word for fish, khthus, com- neighbors about their Newark, parish tact with Catholic families, installing an air conditioning bines the initial letters of the Greek words school through block-by-block visit the elderly and the sick. system in the church. 1963, for Jesus Christ, Son of God. Savior. The 7, PELICAN

feeding its young with Hs November own is a symbol of Our lord shed- ding his blood for our salvation. The DRAGON SKI sin. usually shown as conquered NOW )y the power of good, symbolized by St. Michael, the Archangel. The SERPENT ENROLLMENT FOR -Satan, often seen SENIOR CITIZENS beneath the feet of the Blessed Virgin, in her role as Immaculate Conception, symboliz- REOPENED ing the Genesis prophecy, "The seed of the woman shall crush his head." Shafts of WHEAT- ’ll1 kfW November bunches of GRAPES 1-November 30 enrollment Is the entire month signify the Holy Eucharist which we see as reopened during of N'oveml«er for bread and wine. A persona 65 and over who want the expanded benefit* of New Jersey Blue Crofts anil Mine Shields “Senior Citizen** hotlth cate pro^nnu.

These offer TRIANGLE programs a realistic answer to the financial problems thnt often with an eye in the center represents the so accompany illnc** of elderly people. Applications will be accepted until November 30 for Holy Trinity aand God's all-seeing eye. The coverage commencing January 196d- Vo health statement is ami there 1. required is a u nit n

mathematical figure, without New Jersey residents aged 65 and over who already have Blue Cross and Blue Shield O or en

Pilate ordered hung on Christ's cross. It con- Camden NEWARK Trenton sists of the Latin initials; which use I in Y ° ur Fmm"yi ce of J, and R for Rex, Latin for A King. n. jSmt -MhA » LAMB BLUE CROSS BLUE SHIELD KK P. 0. Box 420 • Newark 1, New Jersey ferred to in the new □ Please send details and for stament as "The Lamb of God." The lamb application “Senior Citizen" programs. sometimes bears a cross or a banner on which a cross is inscribed. Sometimes the Name lamb is pictured slain on a book bearing seven seals as described In the Apocalypse of St. John.