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The AdvocateOfficial Publication of the Archdiocese of Newark, N. J., and Diocese of Paterson, N. J.

Vol. 11, No. 49 THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1962 PRICE: 10 CENTS

Appointment of 2 New Bishops HailedBy ED GRANT

NEWARK One year afterthe installation of AuxiliaryBishop Walter W. Curtis ofNewark as second Bishop of

Bridgeport, the Archdiocese of

Newark was doubly honoredNov. 21 with the announce-

ment that Msgr. John J.Dougherty and Msgr. Joseph

A. Costello had been named

Auxiliary Bishops to Arch-

bishop Boland by Pope John.The news came as the Bish-

ops-elect were preparing to

pay final respects to a priestboth had known from their

days as seminarians, the late

Msgr. Thomas H. Powers.

THE NEWS was greetedwith great rejoicing in thearchdiocese. In Rome, Arch-

bishop Boland called the ap-pointments "a great tribute tothe accomplishments ol

Msgrs. Dougherty and Cos-tello.”

Also in Rome, Bishop Mc-Nulty said he rejoiced withthe archdiocese “on the ele-vation of two distinguishedprelates to the episcopacy.”Bishop Stanton said "The ele-vation of Msgrs. Doughertyand Costello gave joy to mdand many Bishops who ad-mire their sterling qualities.”

No date has been set forthe double consecration, thesecond for the archdiocese. Itwas in October, 1957, that

Bishop Curtis and BishopMartin W. Stanton were

consecrated at Sacred HeartCathedral. Archbishop Bolandsaid only that the con-

secrations will be held in

January.. 1

MSGR. DOUGHERTY willbe tho fifth president of Se-ton Hall University to beraised to the episcopate. Or-dained in 1933, he has spenthis priestly life as an educat-

or, first as scriptural profes-sor at Immaculate Conception

for 22 years and then as pres-ident of Seton Hall since 1959.

Msgr. Costello has alsoserved in his present post asvice-chancellor of the arch-diocese since 1959. He was or-

dained in 1941 and was an aa-

sistant at St. Bridget’s, Jer-

sey City, for 15 years. Hebecame an assistant chancel-lor in 1956.

ON THE MORNING of Nov.

21, Msgr. Costello was sched-uled to offer Mass in the

chapel 6t the cloistered Do-

minican Nuns in Newark. (Helias been visitator general forthe religious communities ofthe archdiocese since 1957).

“Before the Mass,” he saidIn a statement this week, “Imade known to the Sisters andto my mother, who was pres-ent in the chapel, the news of

my appointment. I asked themto join my intentions in offer-

ing the Holy Sacrifice of theMass and to pray that Al-

mighty God would make one,so unworthy, a fit instrument

of service for Holy Mother

Church In the Archdiocese ofNewark.”

Msgr. Dougherty said Massthat morning at the universityand then joined his colleaguesfor breakfast before leavingfor Msgr. Powers’ RequiemMass. "My first reaction," hesaid, “was humility. I feelvery grateful to the Holy Fa-ther for the recognition and

am especially grateful for thehonor conferred upon SetonHall University.”

THE BIOGRAPHIES of the

two Bishops-elect reveal manysimilarities even though their

careers have followed differ-ent courses. Both were boraof big-city Irish families,Msgr, Dougherty in JerseyCity and Msgr. Costello inNewark.

Both also attended their

parish school, St. Aloysius in

Msgr. Dougherty’s case, StMichael’s in Msgr. Costello's,and then went on to order-

run prep schools.

In a letter congratulating

Othar Stories, Pictures,.Pages 3, 4 and 5

Msgr. Dougherty reeds letter of appointment at his desk Msgr. Costello with his mother after his appointment

2nd Council Session

Off Until SeptemberVATICAN CITY The sec-

ond session of the Second Vat-ican Council, scheduled to be-

gin next May 12, will start

Sept. 8 instead. Announcementof the change was made Tues-day at the 28th general meet-

ing of the council at the di-rection of Pope John.

The first session will endDec. 8. It had previously been

announced that the second ses-

sion would be held from May12 until June 29. No new clos-

ing date for the second ses-

sion was given in the latest

announcement.The postponement was re-

portedly requested by mis-

sionary Bishops.

DEBATE ON Christian uni-

ty, one of the great centralthemes of the council, beganafter the 27th general congre-gation completed discussion of

a project on communications

media and sent it to a com-

mission for any amendmentswhich might be considered

necessary.

Earlier, Pope John named a

special commission to prepareanew constitution on the

sources of revelation. Prelim-

inary debates on the firstdocument evoked such oppos-ing views that the Pontiff

stepped in to halt whatthreatened to be a long anddifficult debate.

THE NEW UNITY project,introduced by Amleto Gio-vanni Cardinal Cicognani, Pa-

pal Secretary of State and

president of the Commissionfor the Oriental Churches,was entitled, “Ut Unum Sint”(That They Be One), wordsused by Christ at the Last

Supper.It was concerned solely with

the Eastern Orthodox Church-

es, which have fewer doctri-nal differences with RomanCatholics than do the Protes-tant Churches.

Cardinal Cicognani said thenew project contained “anexpression of the solicitude ofthe Catholic Church for re-

storing union with separatebrothers of the East.”

“We are united in faith,” he

said, “but we disagree on a

few truths such as unity inPeter.”

He said the purpose of the

project was to “emphasizethe doctrine of the CatholicChurch in such a way thatthe Council may prepare a

document which might openthe way of unity in the char-

ity of Christ."

A VATICAN Radio broad-cast said the first part of the

project explains “the theolog-ical unity of the Church,which is based on the unityof the government based uponPeter and his successors. Ac-count was taken of the diffi-culty which the separated Or-iental brothers have in accept-ing this truth, yet it was madeclear that the Church neithercan nor wishes to accomplishunity to the detriment of anytruth, however small.”

The station said the second

part considers the means

which should be adopted in

reaching conciliation.Vatican Radio said the third

Catholic UniversityCollection Ordered

NEWARK The annual col-lection for the Catholic Uni-

versity of America will be tak-

en up at all Masses in theArehdiocese of Newark onDee. 2.

In a letter IK3 in thechurches of the archdiocese on

Nov. 2S, Msgr. James A.

Hughes, vicar general, pointedout that Catholic Universityhad been established by the

Holy See about 75 years agoat the request of the Ameri-

can Bishops to further grad-

uate study.

' THIS TRADITIONAL em-

phasis on advanced study is

being maintained in widerfields to meet today's needs,which require holders of ad-vanced degrees for posts of ad-ministration." Msgr. Hughes:said.

*‘By tHis we show com-

petence and enjoy the respectof other agencies doing simi-lar work. At the commence-ment exercises at the universi-

ty, more than two-thirds of thedegrees awarded are grad-uate ' and professional de-

grees,” he pointed out.

Msgr. Hughes' letter con-

tinued:

“The proximity of the uni-

versity at Washington, D. C.,enables our Catholic peopleto seek with less difficultyde-

grees that cannot be securedelsewhere under Catholic aus-

pices."There has been a close as

sociation between the CatholicUniversity and the Archdio-

cese of Newark for more than

20 years by reason of the af-filiation of our seminary tothe university. Through thisaffiliation the archdiocese hasbenefited greatly.”

Bishop McNulty Offers

Requiem Mass for MotherMONTCLAIR "She was

everything a mother shouldbe and then some,” said a

personal friend of Mrs. MaryM. Bellew McNulty, 97, moth-

er of Bishop McNulty of Pat-

erson, who died at her Mont-

clair home Nov. 25.

Bishop McNulty immediate-

ly flew home from the ecu-

menical council in Rome andoffered a. Pontifical Requiem

Mass Nov. 27 at Immaculate

Conception Church, Montclair,his mother's parish for 65

years.

Mrs. McNulty's long life wasmarked by moments of greatjoy and deep sadness. She

was pictured by friends as a

“very retiring lady,” but alsoa very practical individual,"one who kept up with all thonews of the day, reading pa-

pers from beginning to enduntil her health failed a few

years ago.”

HER HUSBAND, WilliamMcNulty, died in 1939, and shealso lost two of her six chil-

dren, a daughter, Mrs. Anne

Tuite, who died in 1953, and

one of her two priest-sons,Msgr. John L. McNulty, presi-dent of Seton Hall Universityat the time of his death in

1959.

“She never really got over

the loss of Msgr. McNulty,”the friend said. “Whatever thesubject of conversation mightbe at a family gathering alt-er that, she would eventuallyspeak about 'Johnnie.' ”

After her daughter’s death,two grandchildren, Michaeland John Tuite, joined theMcNulty household at 60 Har-rison Ave. here, which alreadyincluded Mrs. McNulty, herson Michael and her daughterMary.

The young Michael is a soph-omore at Seton Hall University,and John at Oratory, Summit.Another son, William J. Mc-

Nulty Jr., lives in Sparta. Inaddition to the Tuite boys,Mrs. McNulty leaves fourother grandchildren and ono

great-grandchild.

BORN IN COUNTY Meagh,Ireland, Mrs. McNulty came

to Montclair in 1898. She was

to return to Ireland only once,in 1947, and while riding a

train there, read in a paperthat her son James had beenraised to the episcopacy. Nottoo many years later there

was the appointment of Msgr.McNulty as president of Seton

Hall and then, in 1953, BishopMcNulty’s appointment as

Paterson Ordinary.

WITH HER BOYS - Mrs. Mary McNulty of Montclair, whodied Nov. 25, is shown with two of her four ions. BishopJames A. McNulty of Paterson, left, and the late Msgr.John L. McNulty, former president of Seton Hall University.

Msgr. Dougherty

A Scholar’s

Role His Lot

By ANNE MAE BUCKLEYSOUTH ORANGE Already

in the early morning thesounds of the construction

crew rang out across the

Seton Hall University campusas Msgr. John J. Doughertyleft the chapel after celebrat-

ing 8 a.m. Mass on Nov. 21.The construction men were atwork on the rapidly-rising Stu-dent Union Building, part of a

$2.5 million building programundertaken during Msgr.

Dougherty’s three-year tenureas president.

A half-dozen faculty priests

were at breakfast in the din-ing room .when the presidententered. They had heard ru-

mors, they said ...anew

Auxiliary Bishop . . . did heknow anything about it?

Dark-browed, silver-maned

Msgr. Dougherty said yes, it

was indeed true, Newark had

two new Auxiliary Bishops.“They are Msgr. Joseph A.

Costello.” he said, ", . . andJohn Dougherty."

THE CONGRATULATIONS

of faculty members of the 103-

year-old university whichMsgr. Dougherty, a well-known scholar, has headed

since 1959 were the first of

many he was to receive thatday. Seated in his walnut-

paneled office that afternoonhe fingered a thick pile of tel

grams and mused:

"There is something verywonderful in the warmth ofpeople. A joy shared by peo-

ple is a wonderful thing.” Hesaid he was heartened by mes-

sages from "the community,"which he said indicated that“the honor conferred on theuniversity” through his eleva-

tion to the episcopacy "is an

even bigger thing.”There were, too, the more

intimate greetings from mem-

bers of his family, three sis-ters, Elizabeth and Katherine

Dougherty and Mrs. Robert C.Phelan, and a brother, Wil-liam. The dignified 55-year ol Iprelate curled one foot under

Mother Learns

News at MassNEWARK—Mrs. Dennis

Costello did a double-take

when her sun handed her

an official-looking letterfrom Washington last Wed-

nesday morning. He said

something to her in his soft

gentle way but she didn’t

quite catch it.

"What docs it mean?"

she asked the Sister who

stood beside her in the mon-

astery where her son, Msgr.

Joseph A. Costello, had

brought her to hear his

Mass.

"It means he is a Bish-

op," the Sister said hap-

pily.

“Oh,” gasped Delia Cos-

tello. “Sure I thought it was

something saying hecouldn't celebrate Mass to-

day."

A Man Named John"There was a man sent from God

whose name was John ...he was not

himself the light but was to bear witnessto the light.”

THESE WORDS were written almost1900 years ago to characterize the ApostleJohn, the Beloved of Christ. How well

may they Be-

applied to another John,Bishop-elect Dougherty! It is more thancoincidental that the titular See of thissecond John lies .within the Province elthe first in long-ago Ephesus, in distant

Asia MJnor.The Gospel of the first John is an

especial evocation of wisdom gendered bysanctity, by intimacy with Christ. It is im-possible to doubt that this contemporarysearcher of the Scriptures has drunk deep-ly of the wisdom and sanctity of his apos-tolic predecessor.

That he may share these apostolicgifts with the faithful of the Archdioceseof Newark is the heartfelt wish of his as-

-Boei*e» on The Advocate staff. .

. AdMtlltos Annos.

'Happy the Priest...'Paul’s precis of a Bishop, a "high

priest taken from among men,” has ac-

quired new dimension among the priestsand people of Newark in the naming of

Bishop-Elect Joseph A. Costello as an

Auxiliary Rishop to Archbishop Boland.The priest-alumni of Darlington, the

archdiocesan seminary, have hailed the

first of their number to be raised to the

episcopate with brotherly affection and

respect.

THEY, WITH THEIR PEOPLE,have known him as a fellow priest work-

ing with them among the people of a

parish for 15 of his 21 years in the priest-hood. In him all have caught a glimpse

of the happiness of the priesthood epi-tomized by Cardinal Manning: "Happythe priest who loves his pastor’s lot andlives wholly in it, fulfilling day by daythe slight and despised acts of charity to

all who need his care, and laying up inheaven unconsciously the gold dust of a

humble life, looking only lor his eternalreward.”

May the greater weight of full pas-toral care not deprive you, Bishop Cos-

tello, of the quiet happiness that hasbeen yours. Rather may the blessing fromthe Pontifical with which you address himat whose hands you become a Rishop,"Ad multos annos!” return to you a hun-dredfold!

Efficiency in Secret

How Bishops Are ChosenThe efficient mechanics of

the elevation of a priest to the

rank of Bishop are an amaz-

ing and little-known feature ofthe government of the Churchthroughout the world.

Last week Pope John XXIIIappointed as Auxiliary Bish-

ops for Newark two priestswho had been carefully inves-

tigated as to theft- spiritual, in-tellectual and administrative

qualifications, their zeal, abil-ity to work with people, apti-tude the performance ofliturgical ceremonies’, even

their health and habits oforder.

BISHOPS ARE chosen froma list of candidates which havebeen compiled in the past.

Every twoyears, early in

I-ent, the Bishops of an eccle-siastical province—such as theProvince of Newark meetwith the Archbishop.

When the Archbishop an-

nounces the date of the meet-

ing each Bishop of the prov-

ince sends him a list of thopriests he wishes lo

recom-mend for the episcopacy. The

Archbishop then sends all the

Bishops a complete list of allrecommended candidates.

The list Is discussed at thomeeting, which Is held withoutthe knowledge of tho press or

the public. A vote is taken to

decide which names should hefiled with the Apostolic Dele-gate in Washington. A shortoutline of the qualifications ofeach candidate is sent withtho list.

WHEN A VACANCY occurs,tlie Delegate usually consultswith the Archbishop of the

province, and sometimes with

the neighboring Bishops. ThoDelegate then narrows downthe list, and the candidates re-

maining on it become the sub-

ject of an even more thoroughinvestigation. Usually the par-ed-down list consists of threecandidates for a single va-

cancy.Inquiries are then addressed

to priests closely associatedwith the candidates. Thesepriests are bound by the strict-est secrecy they are not

only forbidden to reveal whatthey have written, but alsomust keop secret the fact thatthey were questioned. The pen-alty for violation of the se-

crecy is excommunication—theseverest kind from which onlythe Pope can absolve.

The questions asked of thocandidate’s colleagues are de-signed to acquaint the Apos-tolic Delegate with his totalpersonality. They concern Ills

family background and its

general religious spirit, detailsof his early life and education,and his habits of prayer anddevotion.

HIS SCHOLASTIC accom-

plishments are investigatedCanon I-aw requires that a

Bishop hold a licentiate or

doctorate in theology, or at

least he well-versed in thisscience. Ills knowledge of for-eign languages is considered.Inquiries are made about Illsadministrative abilities and

experience to determine hisfitness to govern a diocese.

His colleagues are ques-tioned about his health and

personal appearance, his gen-eral disposition—has he humil-

ity and meekness, is he able

to work with others, is he a

wise manager?

The Inquiries cover his de-votion to the Holy See, his zealin defending and spreading the

Faith, his care in performingliturgical ceremonies.

TIIE RESULTANT dossier

on each candidate may run to

30 or 40 typewritten pages.These are sent to Rome bythe Apostolic Delegate, ar-

ranged in the order of hispreference in view of thoneeds of the particular dio-

cese.

As the Consistorial Congre-gation studies the reports, it

may make further investiga-tions. Finally the Congregationnotifies the Apostolic Delegateof its choice. At this point two

people are let in on the secret:

the chosen candidate is noti-fied and asked if he will ac-

cept the appointment, and the

Archbishop is notified at the

same time. Both arc bound tostrict secrecy.

Still the appointment is notofficial. The conferring of "thefullness of the priesthood’’rests only with the Pope. Onlyafter the Pontiff lias approvedthe choice and made the ap-pointment is the candidate

notified by the Apostolic Dele-

gate of the date upon whichthe appointment will be made.

It remains then for the Apos-tolic Bulls lo be prepared andHie plans for the consecrationto •be nude. Canon I.aw di-

rects that a Bishop-designatebe consecrated no later thanthree months after he has re-

ceived the Apostolic letters

(and if he has been appointedOrdinary of a diocese he musttake up residence there withinfour months.)

Msgr. Costello

From Parish

To ChanceryBy ANNE MAE BUCKLEYNEWARK-On a bleak No-

vember day a slim and lonelyfigure in black stood in a

cemetery, head bowed Inprayer. It was Msgr. JosephArthur Costello, 47, praying in

Holy Name Cemetery, JerseyUljt .at the graves o(Msgr.’John F. Ryan and Rev.Thomas Curry, the first twopastors he had assisted as a

new priest in St. Bridget’s par-ish, there. In his pocket was aUtter from the Apostolic'Dele-gation in Washington notifyinghim of his selection as Auxil-iary Bishop of Newark.

A few minutes earlier hahad knelt in the dimness of StBridget’s Church, where hahad spent the first 15 years

of his priesthood. There, 21

years ago, as a youth or-dained just a few weeks hehad anointed the dying Msgr.Ryan, a privilege he alwayiconsidered the reason the peo-ple of St. Bridget’s took himimmediately to their hearts.

There he had tasted thespecial joys of teaching chil-dren and visiting the sick, joyswhich were to make him sayoften during his ensuing ca-

reer—as vice chancellor of theNewark Archdiocese, defenderof the matrimonial bond, vicarfor religious of the archdio-cese, and finally as Bishop-designate—“At heart I am a

parish priest.”

THE LETTER announcinghis designation for the episco-pacy arrived on Nov. 10. Hiaselection, he says, is to him"an incomprehensible thing,”Because of the strict secrecy

Title 1st Used

At RequiemMONTCLAIR—It was at

the Requiem Mass ol thelate Msgr. Thomas H. Pow-ers, former rector of Im-maculate Conception Semi-

nary. where both had atud-ied for the priesthood, thatMsgr. John J. Doughertyand Msgr. Joseph A. Cos-tello were first publicly ad-dressed as Bishops.

The Mass was celebratedat 10:30 a.m. on Nov. 21,Just 2-1/2 hours after the

announcement in Wash-ington that the two hadbeen appointed AuxiliaryBishops to Archbishop Bo-laryl of Newark. Both at-tendee! the Requiem, andprotocol placed them in thehonored positions in the pro-cession, each with two mon-

signors as their chaplains.When Msgr. Thomas J.

Conroy mounted the pulpitin Immaculate ConceptionChurch to deliver the eu-

logy, his salutation, “Bish-

op Dougherty, Bishop Cos-tello ..." brought to

many of those present theirfirst knowledge of the newhonor that had so recentlycome to the two priests,priests.

(Continued on Page 2)

(Continued on Page 5)

(Continued on Page 3)

(Continued on Page 4)

part of the project examines“the way and conditions of

reconciliation, respecting allthat forms part of the reli-

gious historical and psycholog-ical heritage of these Oriental

Churches."

THE 27TH GENERAL con-

gregation was the third devot-

ed to discussing the project on

communications media. AVatican Radio broadcast said“the speeches of the day,without exception, expresseda favorable opinion on the

project in general, and some

gave it great praise, saying it

was good, useful, timely andrich in pastoral substance.”

The station said “marginaltalks’’ were made in favor ofbetter emphasis on certain as-

pects of the right of theChurch to concern itself withall the instruments of socialcommunications because ofthe influence which they have

on public opinion and on the

consciences of individualswhich they can "evilly dis-tort.”

It was pointed out duringthe discussion, Vatican Radio

reported, that "the pagan con-

cept of life, which is so wide-

spread in our times, has its

origins in great part in en-

tertainment, and hence the

great need for the clergy andthe Catholic laity to institute

schools for the Christian for-mation of directors, producersand actors.”

"IT WAS ALSO noted.” the

station said, “how Catholics

living in a pluralistic societymust choose from among the

programs and newspapers cir-

culating In their country thosewhich do not offend theirfaith.

“Cooperation between Cath-olics and tho faithful ofother Christian Churches has

already produced good resultsin those nations where thevarious religious denomina-tions Jive side by side.”

Another point emphasized,the station reported, “was the

importance of the communica-tions media in mission coun-

tries, where they are some-

times the only means bywhich the tenets of the Gospelcan be made known. It was

urged by some that the Vati-

can Radio, which is alreadyperforming such useful work,be made more powerful, and,If possible, that a Vaticantelevision transmitter also becreated.”

ALBERT GREGORY Cardlnal Meyer of Chicago was

among six Cardinals and 41Bishops named to the com-mission to draft anew decreeor schema on the sources ofRevelation.

So-called progressive groupswithin the council favored a

complete redrafting of theoriginal document, while con-servatives advocated little or

no change.Heading the new commis-

sion will be two Cardinals.One is Alfredo Cardinal Ot-

taviani, ' regarded as a con-

servative, who heads the Sa-cred Congregation of the HolyOffice.

The other is AugustinCardinal Bea, president of theVatican Secretariat for Pro-moting Christian Unity, whois regarded as a leader of theprogressives.

Other Cardinals named tothe commission, besides Car-dinal Meyer, were AchillaCardinal Lienart of Lille.France; Joseph CardinalFrings of Cologne, Germany;Ernest Cardinal Ruffini ofPalermo, Sicily; Joseph Car-dinal Lefebvre of Bourges,France; and Michael Cardi-nal Browne, Irish-born mem-

ber of -the Roman Curia whowas formerly Master Generalof fhi Dominican Order.

The other members of thecommission consist of 25members of the TheologicalCommission headed by Cardi-nal Ottaviani, which drewup the original draft, and 18members of Cardinal Bea’ssecretariat.

THE INSTRUCTION hand-cd down by the Pope indicat-ed that it will be the task ofthe new commission to re-

work the proposal on thesources of Revelation by"making it shorter and plac-ing greater emphasis on the

general principles of Catholicdoctrine - already treated byCouncil of Trent and the FirstVatican Council.”

Debate on the original pro-

posal had dragged on for five

days without any sign that itwould be possible to begin a

study of its various parts.The "debate” took the form

of declarations of Bishops to

the council rather than spon-

taneous verbal exchangessince council rules do not al-low impromptu remarks bycouncil Fathers.

Those objecting said thatthe proposal was too profes-sorial in tone, too rigid in itsdeclaration of truth, lengthyand repetitious. It was said(Hat its ambiguity of expres-sion might possibly create

confusion and misunderstand-

ing and that its severe tonecould be offensive, thus set-

ting back efforts to find a waytoward reunion with separatedChristians.

Those defending the propos-al replied that it had beenprepared by theologians of

recognized outstanding abilityand had been passed in its fi-nal form by the council’sCentral Preparatory Commis-sion, many of whose memberswere Cardinals. It was saidthat truth should offend no

one, Including the separatedChristians who are also seek-

ing truth.

THE COUNCIL will hold a

general congregation every

day except Sunday from Dec.

1 to Dec. 8 as it speeds towardthe close of its opening session.

Archbishop Perlcle Fellcl,Secrets ry Gcnersl of the coun-

cil, said that on Saturday,Dec. 8, the Feast of the Im-maculate Conception, the sol-emn closing ceremony of thefirst session will be held inSt. Peter's Basilica with PopeJohn presiding.

Council Newsmaker

Cardinal OttavianiAmericans following the Second Vatican

Council have read as much about Alfredo Car-dinal Ottaviani as they have about any council

Father, and ironically have learned remark-

ably little about him. The Ottaviani the worldhas come to know as leader of the council's

Theological Commission Is a

one-dimensional figure.Stories of the “tradition*

•list," the “arch-conserva*

tive,” and, as Time put it this

week, “undisputed leader of

conservative opinion at the

Second Vatican Council,”)have painted a picture dis-

tinguished chiefly by Its su-

perficiality.By contrast, laymen lnl

and around the Vatican got to know CardinalOttaviani mostly through the Oratorio San

Pietro, a playground and catechetical centermaintained By the Knights of Columbus nextdoor to St. Peter’s Basilica. Here Cardinal Ot-taviani spent a great deal of time before his

elevation to the Sacred College.< Even after he became a Cardinal, he couldoften be found at the oratory, coaching teen-

age boys ,in public speaking and apologeticsduring his free time.

His retiring manner masks a gigantic mindand a deep charity. During the war he was

always ready to lend a hand to anyone in need,and friends recall that his own quarters took

on the appearance of an infirmary he’d

.taken in so many homeless people that beds

were all over the apartment.To those friends, the nomination of Msgr.

Ottaviani to the College of Cardinals made lit*tie difference in their dealings with him. To

them, he was still Don Alfredo.

ALFREDO OTTAVIANI was born in Bom*In 1880, received his early education at a

Christian Brothers school, and spent much ofhis spare time around his father's bakery -* a

business still operated by th« family not farfrom St. Peter’s.

He received degrees in philosophy, canon

and civil law, and theology from Rome's Pontif-ical Seminary for Juridical Studies. Ordainedin 1916, he taught ecclesiastical law at the

seminary and held classes in philosophy at the

Urban University of the Sacred Congregationfor the Propagation of the Faith. Among his

published works is a two-volume compilation ofthe public law of the church.

..

IN 1928 HE BECAME rector of the Pontif-ical Bohemian College, and continues an in-terest in Czech refugee students there. Two

years later, he was named undersecretary of

the Sacred Congregation for Extraordinary Ec-

clesiastical Affairs. Following the Lateran Con-

cordat in 1929, establishing the sovereign stateof Vatican City, Msgr. Ottaviahi was named a

substitute secretary of state.In 1935 Msgr. Ottaviani became assessor of

the Sacred Congregation of the Holy Office, a

post he held for 20 years, later becoming its

pro-secretary and then secretary. In 1953, h«was made a Cardinal by Pope Pius XII. PopeJohn consecrated him a Bishop in ceremonieslast April.

CARDINAL OTTAVIANI, a close friend of

many American Church leaders, is a warm ad-mirer of America especially of its parishlife and its Catholic educational system. A guestof Archbishop Boland when he was here to re-ceive an honorary degree from Seton Hall Uni-

versity In 1959, Cardinal Ottaviani -then 68—Impressed onlookers with his energy and his

affability*Archbishop Boland, conferring the degree,

described the Cardinal as “one of the greatestscholars in the Church today” and referredto his position as “one of the most Importantpositions in the Church that of safeguardingthe faith as it has come down to us throughthe ages.”

On an earlier visit in 1937 he was aguest of the late Archbishop Walsh, with whomhe developed a deep and lasting friendship.

IN HIS WORK heading the TheologicalCommission in preparation for tho ecumenicalcouncil, Cardinal Ottaviani was responsible forthe project on Revelation. It drew out suchwide-ranging viewpoints that anew schemawill be prepared, and responsible observersare predicting that views other than those ofCardinal Ottaviani will prevail. A news-

magazine report on the situation this week tiedin the Cardinal’s stand with the motto on his

coat-of-arms; Semper Idem."Always the Same” to council reporters

might mein a rigid and unbending interpreta*lion of the truths of Faith. To his old friends,the Cardinal’s motto must evoke another as-

sociation; despite hi* lofty position, theirfriend still maintains an untiring devotion tohearing confessions, celebrating Mass, teach-ing catechism and counselling the young. Tothem, he is still Don Alfredo.

New SupplementTo Advocate

The Christian Voice, a

special magazine section ofThe Advocate, will be pub-lished for the first time

next week. The section willbe published periodically,with each issue devoted to

a phase of the liturgy or

Catholic life.

Rev. Edward J. Hayesand Rev. Paul J. Hayes,priests of the NewarkArchdiocese who hsve col-laborated on many a

booksand films, will prepare the

special material appearingin The Christian Voice.

The first issue will be a

popular presentation, In

articles, photos, drawingsand quizzes, of the mean-

ing or the Mass to Catholicpeople.

GREETINGS - Smiling serenely, Richard Cardinal Cushingof Boston exchanges a Roman greeting with ArchbishopRomolo Carboni, Apostolic Nuncio pf Peru, during acouncil recess In Rome. Cardinal Cushing is one of the

Peruvian missions' principal benefactors.

Council News Notes

Russians PleasedThe two Russian Orthodox

observers at the council have

praised the council’s work Inhn Interview given to a Soviet

news agency.They noted how well they

have been treated by the HolyFather, the council presidencyand Cardinal Bea’s secretariat“with all of them showingtime and again their affectionfor our Church and PatriarchAlexei (of Moscow) and their

respect and friendship for our

people and their struggle for

peace.”• • •

Two priests from St. Louisand two from Kansas City-St.Joseph have been named ex-

perts to assist in the council’swork. Those from St. Louis are

Rev. Nichael E. Perslch, C.M.,rector of Kenrick Seminary,and Rev. Joseph Baker, a

canon lawyer and Latinist.Those from Kansas City-St.

Joseph are Msgr William WBaum, vice chancellor, and

Msgr. Ernest J. Fiedler, dio-

cesan director of vocationsand of the Society for the

Propagation of the Faith. Ex-cept for Msgr. Fiedler, who is

recovering from pneumonia,all are now In Rome.

• • •

Augustin Cardinal Bea, S.J.,president of the Secretariatfor Promoting Christian Unity,and Dr. Claud D. Nelson,American Protestant leader,have exchanged books theyhave written on the scope andmeaning of the council. Theexchange took place when Dr.Nelson called on the Gcrinan-born prelate.

• • »

Non-Catholic observers sin-

cerely desire that the councilwill result in the renewal ofthe Catholic Church, accordingto one of the observers, Prof.Oscar Cullman of the Universi-ties of Paris and Basel (Switz-erland).

The noted Scriptural scholartold newsmen that non-Catho-lics arc convinced that if a re-

newal takes place “it willmake eo much easier the

dialogue between Catholic andnon-Catholic that will go onafter tho council.”

However, he said, “even ifthe projects for reforms are

passed, important differences

will persist between us.” He•aid Protestants tend to look

on the Catholic Faith aa hav-

ing "too much,” and thatCatholics tend to look on

Protestantism as having “toolittle.”

He said the great problemof reunion arlsea not from anyparticular dogma “but fromthe fact that the Roman con-

cept of unity ltaelf has a dif-ferent basis from ours.”

• • *

Fifteen Archbishops and

Bishops of the ByzantineUkrainian Rite issued a state-ment deploring the enforcedabsence of communist-im-

prisoned Metropolitan JosephSllpyi of Lwow from the coun-

cil and calling for hla libera-tion and the liberation of other

Bishops still under detention.Metropolitan Sllpyi, whose

diocese is an area of Polandannexed by Ruaaia, was ar-

rested In 1945. tortured and

sentenced to hard labor. His

exact whereabouts now are un-

known.• + •

The council Fathers, in a

message sent to Pope John on

Ilia 81st birthday, expressedthe wish that he will governthe Church for “many more

yeara and may ace it bearabundant fruits of unity andpeace.” The message was

adopted by acclamation at the

26th general siasion Nov. 24.

• • •

A Spanish official of thecouncil told newsmen at their

weekly Mass that councils

may be held more often in thefuture to make sure that theChurch keeps pace with theworld's progress.

Archbishop Caslmiro Morel!lo Gonzalez of Saragossa,Spain, one of five council un-

dersecretaries, noted that ad-

vances in mass communica-tions and the speed of travelhave Increased the spreadingof ideas. He said the Church

must work at “adapting her-self, placing the teachings ofthe Church in the torrent ofideas which come and go,which mingle and conflict."

“If the Church wishea to goforward at the same pace asthe world, we can prosumothat councils will be held more

often in the future,” he said.

"It will then be possible tostrengthen decisions whichhave proved effective and re-form those which have provedto be obstacles."

• • •

Auxiliary Bishop George J.Gottwald of St. Louia said onhla return from the councilthat the council givei Bishopsa "tremendous picture of theneeds of the laity.”

“Bishop* are pushing forvarious iaaues,” he said “be-cause they represent the needsof the laity in their own coun-try."

•• • •

A number of Bishops at thecouncil wore reported by Re-ligious New* Service to beworking on a petition callingon Pope John to set up a apo-dal accretariat to study prob-lems in underdeveloped coun-

tries. The major problem out-lined wn said to be soaringpopulations, especially Inareas of widespread hunger.

• • •

Archbishop John C. Hcenanof Liverpool, England, said inan article for the CatholicHerald that “it la thought tobe so likely as to be almostcertain that at the SecondVatican Council the authorityof the body of Bishops will beclearly stated.”

lie said also that “althoughno Uiihop can claim personalinfallibility, the whole body ofBishop* speaks unerringly on

matters of '»ith and morals.A Bishop may make mistakesin a sermon or a pastoral let-ter. Hut the unanimous au-

thority of the Bishops hasvalue of a different orderfrom that of a number of In-dividual Bishops."

Latin Bishop's UnitTo Meet in Rome

ROME (NC) - The nextregular session of the LatinAmerican Bishops’ Council(CELAM) will take place herethis week. It will bo the sec-ond time that CELAM has heldita annual mooting in Romosince It was founded in 1955to coordinate the activities ofthe various national epia-copates.

A Typical Council Session:

Drama,

Humor, SolemnityVATICAN CITY (NC) -

While the grave problems ofthe universal Church are beingexamined In the Second Vati-

can Council, there la a side-

play of human activity remi-niscent of congresses and par-liaments around the world.

The Mass, with which each

day’s work begins, la in a dif-ferent Rite almost every day—-a dally reminder that all isnot western and Latin in theCatholic Church.

After the Mass, the cere-

mony of enthroning the Gos-pels oh the center of the altaris repeated every day. Some

Blihop, each day chosen from

a different part of the world,carries the book the full lengthof the council hall accompan-ied by two candle bearers.

AT THIS POINT the council

secretary. general usuallymakes announcement* which

concern the whole assemblybut which are outside the ma-

terial on the agenda. He maynote, for example, some par-ticular feastday or announce

that some particular documentis about to be distributed.

Then he announces the coun-cil Fathers who have requestedpermission to apeak that day.The Cardinals, usually aboutblx of them, lead off thespeeches. Then the Archbish-

ops, Bishops and superiorsgeneral of religioui societies

follow, in no particular orderof rank or dignity.

Apparently, only the Cardi-nals are permitted to speakwithout making previous appli-cation to the general secretar-iat.

Hardly a day passes withoutsome council Father yieldinghis permission to apeak, gen-erally because he feela thattyls intended remarks have al-

ready been covered by a pre-vious speaker. He does, how-

ever, retain the right to filehis written text.

AROUND 11 EACH morningscenes develop in the'side•isles of St. Peter’s Basilicawhich except for the purplerobea and Colored marblecould be seen, say, in the cor-

ridors and cloakroom of thoU. S. Senate.

While loudspeakers keepthem in touch with the debatesIn progress in the council hall

the center nave of the ba-silica-clusters of Bishops en-

gage in conversation, form,dissolve, reform with new

members, and break up into

strolling pairs and threes.The council also has its

cloakroom and coffee lounge.The loudspeaker in the coffee

room might lend 20 or 80 Bish-

ops scurrying back to their

seati for a ballot that is aboutto take place.

ALTHOUGH THE councilFather! have been Instructedto refrain from expressingtheir feelings by “audience re-

action,” a spontaneous reac-

tion sometimes breaks out.

Only one time did the assem-

bly applaud, and then theywere called to order. At othertimes an audible murmur hasbeen heard when a par-

ticularly significant speakerhas approached the micro-

phone. ,

A dramatic moment can besensed sometimes in the as-

sembly. Then ail present willlean forward; all motion andsound will stop, and the eyeaand mindt of over 2,000 men

will be focused on the sound

of one man’s voice.The council presidency, di-

vided among 10 Cardinals,la an active one. A member

presides in turn over eachday’s general meeting.

There is absolute freedom of

speech, with limits only ontime (10 minutes) and matter(the subject under discussion).If either of these limits Is ex-

ceeded, the president rings *

bell and lays something like:“Habe excusatum, Pater, aed

tempus jam elapsum eat” (Ex-cuse me, Father, but time is

up) or “Non pertlnet ad rem”(That has nothing to do withthe subject).

A TOUCH OF humor some-times enters in, as happenedonce when the president re-

minded an orator that "Timais money" or when the presi-dent chided the speaker for

“preaching to preachers.”Sometimes the humor, in-

tended or not, is provided bythe speaker himself. One

speaker, carried away with hiadefense of Latin in the Mesa,pleaded; "At least leave usthe ’Kyrie’,’’ without reflect-ing that the "Kyrie” is one ofthe few non-Latin words in theMaas. Another entertained the

assembly with his discourse,complete witirgtsatures, on thaawkward moments encoun-tered in administering the Sac-rament of Baptism.

The general meeting nor-

mally comes to an end around12:15. Then, when the weatheria sunny, the front steps of St.Peter's burst Into color as thepurple and scarlet robed fig-ures flow into the square.When the weather is bad, asit generally ia in tha earlywinter days, there ia a jam atthe door aa the Biahops strug-gle into raincoats and attemptto open umbrellaa.

Sodality Meeting SetBOMBAY (NC) - The Third

World Congress of Sodalitiesof Our Lady will be held here

during the 1964 InternationalEucharistic Congress.

People in the NewsDr. Philip Scharper, editor-

in-chief of Shced and Ward,Catholic publishing firm, has

been elected president of theinterfaith Religious Education

Association.

Blshop-designale Clarence K.Ewell, named Auxiliary Bish-

op of Cleveland, will be con-

secrated Dec. 21.

Msgr. William J. McDonald

hai been reappointed rector

of tha Catholic Univarsity of

America for a five-year term

by Pope John.

Rev. Edward T. Hughes,superintendent of Philadelphiaarchdioccsan schools, receivedI.a Salle College * Centennial

Medal for “distinguiahed con-

tributions to Catholic educa-tion."

Thomas B. Kenedy of NewYork, editor of the OfficialCatholic Directory, has been

elected first vice president of

the Association of Statisticians

of American Religious Bodies.

Thomas Cardinal Tien,

8.V.D., exiled Archbishop of

Peking, is recovering in a

Rome hospital after an acute

attack of rheumatism.

Premier llayalo Ikada of

Japan was received in a pri-vate audience by Pope John.

Dr. Antonio tiasbarrlnl of

Bologna, 74, has been named

as Pope John's personal phy-sician, succeeding the lata Dr.

Filippo Rocchi.

Bishop Paul Robert of Gon-

alvfs, Haiti, exiled from hla

diocese, said in New York hewill go to Rome to take part

in the Vatican Council.

Archbishop Domenico Kn-rici, former Apoitolic Inter-nuncio to Japan and new

Apostolic Delegate to Aus-tralia, waa decorated by theJapan e.se Government withthe First Class Order of thaSacred Treasure.

2 THE ADVOCATE

(Continued from Page 1)

Vatican Council. . .

November 29, 1962

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Msgr. Dougherty on his ap-pointment, Very Rev. EmmetJ. Norton, S.J., rector of theJesuit community at St.Peter’s Prep, said "we like tobelieve that the four years you

spent at St. Peter’s made some

small contribution to the for-mation of the distinguishedscholar, the eloquent preach-er, the highly competent uni-

versity president who hasbeen chosen to receive the

fullness of the priesthood. We

are delighted."Very Rev. Mark Confroy,

0.5.8., headmaster of St.'Benedict’s Prep, said theschool rejoiced ‘‘with Bishop-elect Costello on this occasion.

An alumnus of the class of

1933, he is the second grad-uate of St. Benedict’s to be

elevated to the episcopal of-fice. Bishop Ahr of Trenton

was the first.”

AFTER HIGH SCHOOL,both began studies for the

priesthood. Msgr. Costellostudied at Seton Hall Univer-

sity and Immaculate Concep-tion Seminary and was or-dained at St. Patrick’s Cathe-dral.

Msgr. Dougherty also at-tended Seton ,Hall and Dar-

lington, but completed hisstudies at the North Ameri-

can College in Rome and

was ordained there.

Msgr. Costello has held sev-

eral archdiocesan posts in ad-dition to those mentioned. He

was appointed defender of

the bond in the archdiocesantribunal in 1953 and was nam-

ed a pro-synodal judge in

1960. On July 15, 1958, PopePius XII elevated him to therank of papal chamberlain.

MSGR. JAMES A. Hughes,vicar general, commenting on

Msgr. Costello’s elevation,said, ‘‘My association In the

chancery with Bishop-electCostello for the past six year?has given me the opportunityof knowing him more Inti-

mately. My admiration of hisbalanced, kindly judgment,devotion to his work, his un-

failing pleasant manner'andhis humble and easy approachto people has grown immeas-

urably so that with greif joywe can say, Archbishop 861-land and the people' of thearchdiocese have been blessed

by God with the appointmentof Bishop Costello.’*

“I am most happy, to leafnof the appointment of Bishop-elect Costello," said Msgr.James F. Looney, chancellor.‘‘lt has Indeed been a pleas-ure to work with him thesepast years In the ChanceryOffice, during which time Ihave come to appreciate notonly his quiet efficiency butalso his genial disposition and

deep humility. In congratulat-ing him on the great honorthat is his, I echo the sinceresentiments of all at the chan-cery, clergy and lay work-ers."

FOLLOWING HIS ordina-

tion, Msgr. Dougherty plung-ed into three more years ofbiblical studies towards hisdoctorate in Sacred Scripture.His summers were spent as

an assistant at parishes in

Bayonne and Garfield, and theother months in other parts ofthe world.

During his long tenure as a

professor at Darlington, Msgr.

Dougherty gained a reputa-tion as a preacher of great

power and depth. He also be-

came a radio and then a tele-

vision personality. He pro-duced and narrated the prize-

winning TV series "Rome

Eternal" a few years ago and

this summer completed work

on a series on Church coun-

cils.

MSGR. DOUGHERTY has

been a member of the edi-

torial board of The Advocatesince its foundation in 1951. He

was appointed to the presi-dency of Seton Hall in 1959,following the death of Msgr.John L. McNulty. The reac-

tion there to his elevation was

exemplified by statements

from the academic and ex-

ecutive vice presidents, Msgr.Thomas W. Cunningham and

Rev. Edward J. Fleming.“The elevation of Msgr.

Dougherty reflects honor up-

on Seton Hall and its familyof administrators, faculty and

student body," Msgr. Cun-

ningham said. "He representsthe cultured learning and ded-

icated spirituality proper to

the office of priest-educatorand brings these qualities to

his new office of AuxiliaryBishop."

“Nothing in the 106-year his-

tory of this venerable insti-

tution has caused such uni-versal rejoicing,” said Father

Fleming. "Faculty and stu-

dents alike arc grateful to

Pope John XXIII for elevat-

ing our distinguished presi-dent to the episcopacy . . .On the occasion of the an-

nouncement, the faculty andstudents offered prayers of

thanksgiving and asked God to

bless and protect him in yearsto come. We’re just absolutelydelighted."

Comment on AppointmentsFollowing are the state-

ments of Archbishop Boland,

Bishop Stanton, BishtFp Mc-

Nulty, Msgr. Dougherty ahd

Msgr. Costello on the eleva-

tion of Msgr. Dougherty and

Msgr. Costello to the hierar-

chy.I am very grateful to Al-

mighty God and the SovereignPontiff for the appointment of

two Auxiliary Bishops. It is a

great tribute to the accomplish-ments of Msgrs. Doughertyand Costello and new evidence

of the Holy Father’s paternalsolicitude for the archdiocese.

Archbishop Boland.

The elevation of Msgrs.-Dougherty and Costello gavejoy to mo and many Bishopsin Rome who admire their

sterling qualities. I wish them

happiness serving the arch-diocese as auxiliaries to our

beloved Archbishop BishopStanton.

I rejoice with ArchbishopBoland, Bishop Stanton, the

clergy, religious and the de-voted faithful of the Arch-diocese of Newark on the ele-vation of two distinguishedprelates to the episcopacy bythe Holy Father. Congratula-tions and prayerful greetingsto them. Bishop McNulty.

On this feast day of thePresentation of Our Blessed

Lady, when it was publicly an-

nounced that Our Holy Father,Pope John XXIII, had ap-pointed me Titular Bishop ofChoma and Auxiliary to His

Excellency Most Rev. ThomasA. Boland, Archbishop of New-

ark, I was privileged to offerMass in the Chapel of theCloistered Dominican Nuns inNewark.

Before the Mass, I madeknown to the Sisters and to

my mother, who was presentin the chapel, the news of myappointment. I asked them tojoin my Intentions in offeringthe Holy Sacrifice of the Massand to pray that Almighty Godwould make one, so unworthy,a fit instrument of servico for

Holy Mother Church in theArchdiocese of Newark.

Through the kindness of The

Advocate, I would now extendthis invitation to all membersof the archdiocese and mymany non-Catholic friends and

associates. I fervently beg the

prayers of the priests, religiousBrothers and Sisters and the

laity. I ask in a special wayfor the prayers of our children

and the sick.

Fortified with the prayersof the clergy, religious andfaithful and relying on the

guidance of the Holy Spirit andthe powerful intercession ofOur Blessed Mother, I anxious-

ly look forward to my con-

secration as a Bishop so thatI may assist Archbishop Bo-

land, the Shepherd of the Arch-diocese of Newark, in his pa-ternal solicitude for the spirit-ual needs of the one and one

half million souls who consti-tute his flock.

I am deeply grateful to Arch-

bishop Boland for his many

acts of kindness,- stretchingback to my years of training inthe Seminary of the Immacu-late Conception, Darlington,where His Excellency served

as our professor and counsel-lor. I pray that in some

measure I may be worthy ofhis confidence in me.

I am pleased to be associatedwith Bishop Stanton and Bish-op-elect Dougherty whose tal-ents and priestly zeal I have

long admired. I shall rely

greatly on their counsel and

example.Asa token of my loyalty and

devotion to Our Holy Father,Pope John XXIII, and in hum-

ble gratitude for his appoint-ment, I promise to strive each

day to live according to theadmonition addressed by St.Paul to Titus, a Bishop of the

early Church

"Show thyself in all thingsan example of good works, in

teaching, in integrity and dig-nity." (St. Paul’s Epistle toTitus, 2,7.) Bishop-electCostello.

My first reaction was hu-

mility at the great honor con-

ferred upon me. I feel verygrateful to the Holy Fatherfor this recognition and to

Archbishop Boland for his ex-

pression of confidence iq me. -The warmth of the people ofthe community who have sent

messages of congratulations isa very wonderful thing. Mostof all, I am grateful for thehonor conferred upon SetonHall University in having its

president raised to the fullnessof the priesthood. Bishop-elect Dougherty.

Duties, Rights Explained

Auxiliary BishopsAides to Ordinary

NEWARK The announce-ment that Msgr. John J.

Dougherty and Msgr. JosephA. Costello had been appointedas Auxiliary Bishops to Arch-

bishop Boland also revealedthat they had been named as

Titular Bishops of two Seeslocated in Asia Minor Cnir-*”key).

This brings up the questions:’(1) What is an Auxiliary Bish-op? (2) What is the signif-icance of the term Titular

Bishop? (3) Where are thosecities of Cotena and Chomawhich were once flourishingsites of Christianity, but whosefaith was buried under thehordes of Islam over a thous-and years ago?

ACCORDING TO the Catho-lic Encyclopedia, anAuxiliaryBishop is one deputed to a

diocesan Bishop who, capableof governing and admin-

istering his diocese, is unableto perform the pontifical func-tions or whose diocese is so

extensive that it requires thelabors ol more than one Bish-

op.

Ecclesiastical discipline,however, requires that no Bish-

op can be consecrated with-

out title to a certain and dis-tinct diocese which he governscither actually or potentially.Titulars as such have not the

power of jurisdiction overtheir titular Sees, this beingreserved to the Pope himselfand exercised through the Sa-

cred Congregation of Propa-ganda.

If, however, there were a

revival of the Faith in tha

area and sufficient number ofparishes and clergy arose torequire the presence of a Bish-

op in the view of the HolySee, the titular, would auto-

matically take this position.By right on consecration, a

titular auxiliary can performall the functions annexed tothe episcopal order by Divineand ecclesiastical law, but he

may not do so without per-mission of the Ordinary, nor

can he do so if the seat ie

vacant, even with permissionof the diocesan chapter.

BISHOP-ELECT Dougherty’stitular see of Cotena is locatedin Asia Minor and can be

identified with the modemtown of Godena or Gudene inthe area of Konla. It was thehome of the tribe of Katen-neis in the early Christian era.

Six Bishops are known therein the period from 381 to 879.

Choma, the titular See of

Bishop-elect Costello,, was a

suffragan See of Myra, whichis located in the Province of

Lycia in Asia Minor. It is in

an area probably visited bySt. Paul and Christianity mayhave been entrenched there as

early as the second century.

OBEDIENCE is one of theevangelical counsels.

Appointments Hailed . . .

(Continued from Page 1)

November 29, 1962 THE ADVOCATE 3

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In which the Church* shroudssuch metiers, Msgr. Costellocould discuss it with no oneexcept fais confessor under theseal of the Sacrament of Pen-ance. So he prayed in his oldand beloved parish church.And at the graves of thepriests he had served underAnd on Nov. 13, in Newark’soldest church, St. John’s, heread in the Mass for the Feastof St Didacus the prayer ofthe Collect:

“Almighty and' everlastingGod, by Your wonderful provi-dence You have chosen theweak tilings of this world ...we who are lowly in deed im-plore You to be made wor-

thyAfter that Mass Msgr. Cos-

tello was able to address to

the Apostolic Delegate in theU. S. his acceptance of the in-comprehensible honor forwhich he had been selected.

THOSE WHO HAVE watchedand worked with Msgr. Cos-tello in the Chancery Officewhere he has been since 1956do not find his new honor in-

comprehensible. Nor do themembers of the four religiouscommunities with mother-houses in the archdiocesewhere he has visited and ex-

amined every candidate forthe habit or vows since 1957.

They say that his has beenthe tireless, efficient, dedi-cated kind of service which isonly enhanced by the fact thatit is performed quietly, af-fably, and with constant as-

signation of the credit toothers. "Msgr. Hughes and

Msgr. Looney—they are behindall of this,’’ he insists.

To his archdiocesan duties

Msgr. Costello brought the

pastoral approach. "This is of-fice work,” he says, "butevery letter, every phone callconcerns souls.”

And another thing: "Sincecoming here and working withpriests,” he says, ”1 have

come to realize how muchwork the priests in the parishdo

~. How kind and patientthey are, what great trust inGod’s Providence they have.”

ON NOV. 20 Msgr. Costello

received another letter fromthe Apostolic Delegation noti-fying him that the announce-

ment of his elevation to therank of Bishop, along with thatof Msgr. John J. Doughertywho had taught him SacredScripture at the seminary,would be made the followingmorning at 8.

Only at that time would hebe able to share the news.

Carefully he went about ar-

ranging theperfect way of be-ginning his day.

First he telephoned the Do-minican Cloister in Newark toask if he might say Mass thereat 8 a.m. Then he telephonedh.'s mother, Mrs. Dennis Cos-tello of Newark, and asked ifshe would like to attend Massat the monastery this once.

Mass was just a little latebeginning. Msgr. Costellosettled his mother, arrangedthe Missal, watched the clockfor "the longest eight min-utes" of his life. At 8 o’clockhe went to his mother and theextern Sister (who tends to

matters outside the cloistergrille) with the letter and theexplanation: “It says that at 8

o'clock it will be announcedthat Msgr. Dougherty and I

are going to be Auxiliary Bish-ops to Archbishop Boland.”

SAID IRISH-BORN DeliaCostello, a widow for nineyears, "I never prayed thatArthur would be a Bishop—but1 went to town praying that hewould be a priest!"

The Bishop-Designate then

telephoned Msgr. James A.Hughes, who as vicar generalof the archdiocese whoseArchbishop is abroad at theSecond Vatican Council had al-ready been informed of the

announcement. Then Msgr.Costello called his sister, Mrs.Carl Fritzsche in Chelton,Conn., and secured her prom-ise-through copious tearsthat she would call her daugh-ter, his niece, in Edison, N.J.Then he turned to the cloister

grille and asked the nuns en-

closed there to assist at hisMass remembering his inten-tions.

"It was selfish of me,” herecalls with a boyish smile.

“Feeling the need of prayersao greatly, I went to the bapicsource. Not only was I offeringthe Mass, the greatest peti-tion, but I was gatheringaround me the choicest souls,the cloistered nuns, whose

prayers are considered the

strength of any diocese.”Afterwards he spoke with

Mother Mary Magdalen, whohad been elected prioress a

fewmonths ago, at which timeshe had protested her inade-

quacy to Msgr. Costello. “Nowthe tables were reversed,’’ he

said, “and she was saying allthe things 1 had said to her

at the time of her election ..

THE NEXT DAY he Inter-rupted Thanksgiving festivitieswith his family to drive to St.Matthew’s, Ridgefield, to visitaged and ill Msgr. John J.

Clark, and "ask his prayer,”

Msgr. Costello only knowsthe venerable and widely-lovedpastor throughbrief encountersin the Chancery Office, but he“always admired him.”

MSGR. COSTELLO can’t re-

member the beginning of hiscall to the priesthood. He re-

members admiring priests andthe priesthood. "But the

thought of myself becoming a

priest ...

I guess it was like

this thing ...” he said. In St.

Michael's School and St. Bene-dict’s Prep (where he was a

scrappy intramural basketball

player and shortstop) ArtyCostello must have figured the

priesthood, for him, would be

"incomprehensible.”A young curate at' St.

Michael's, though, had it

figured differently; appropri-ately, he is now the vocationdirector of the Paterson Dio-

cese, Msgr. Edward J. Scully.Father Scully once tried to or-

ganize a “Vianney Circle” atSt. Michael's for boys inter-

ested in the priesthood. Hecalled a meeting and was sure,

be said later, that at least

"one boy" would show up. But

no one did, not even that one

particular boy, Arty Costello,at whose first Mass in 1941 Fa-ther Scully gave the sermon.

Now that boy faces officialelevation to "the fullness of

the priesthood” looking for-

ward, he says, "to assisting

Archbishop Boland, to admin-

istering tho Sacraments ofConfirmation and Holy Or-

ders.” And probably attendingthe second session of the 21stecumenical council of theCatholic Church next year.

"TO BE NOMINATED a

Bishop at any time is such a

great thing,” he marveled this

week. "But at this time withthe council in progress in theChurch it takes on added sig-nificance ... Think of thenumber of priests and Bishopswho were bora and lived anddied and there never was a

council in their era ... ”

Msgr. Costello has a fine

sense of the effects of the

changing world and the needfor the Church to concentrateher teaching on the vulnerable

areas, an attitude not unlike

the one which prompted PopeJohn XXIII to call VaticanCouncil 11. That la why of all

parochial works Msgr. Costello

esteems the activity of the

Confraternity of Christian Doc-

trine. ,

“Confraternity work is not

something transitory; it Is

something constant,” he ob-

served. “Materialism, secular-

ism they make It necessaryto keep instructing the people,both children and adults, and

applying our instructions to

their needs in a constantlychanging world.”

WHEN BISHOP-ELECT Cos-

tello entered his office in the

Newark Chancery on Nov. 21

he found it decorated with gayred letters spelling, “Our Bish-

op,” along with the words,“Ad Multos Annos” (to manyyears) a Latin wish for long

life. Below the inscription the

priests and lay staff of the

Chancery Office had placed,next to his white porcelain ma-

donna, a bouquet of long-stemred roses.

To those who know the waysof the hew Bishop, it was not

surprising that later that daythe roses found their way

across the street into St.John’s Church, where theyadorned the Sacred Heart al-

tar, just between the statue ofSt. Joseph, hls quiet, humble

patron, and the main altar atwhich his parents, Dennis andDelia Costello; had stood more

than a half-century ago to ex-

change their nuptial vows.

PARISH PRIEST - For 15 years after his 1941 ordination, Msgr. Costello was an assist

ant atSt. Bridget's parish, Jersey City, and still considers Himself "a parish priest atheart. He specially loved visiting the sick, and working with children, as he was doingin photo above made in a classroom of St. Bridget's School. When'notified of his selec-

tion for the episcopacy, Msgr. Costello went to St. Bridget's Church to pray.

AS VICE CHANCELLOR - In his Chancery post, Msgr. Cos-tello assisted Archbishop Boland in countless liturgicalceremonies. Above, he holds the Archbishop's mitre dur-ing dedication rites of anew convent at St. John's, Gutten-berg, April 30, 1961.

BOYHOOD - Pictured at the

time of his graduation fromSt. Benedict's Prep In 1933,Joseph Arthur Costello was

a boy who admired thepriesthood but was shy of

daring to think he had a

vocation.

NIECE'S NUPTIALS - Msgr. Costello is shown officiatingat the marriage of his niece, Jean M. Fritzsche, to AnthonyA. DiVona In Good Counsel Church, Newark, In 1958. A

nephew, Carl, Is with the U. S. Army in Germany. He hasanother nephew, Joseph Fritzsche, 10, his namesake.

ROME SENDOFF - As he bid Archbishop Boland "bon voyage" aboard the ship thatwas to take him to Romo for tho Second Vatican Council, Msgr. Costello, extreme right,had no Inkling that he wouldbe a Bishop himself before the Archbishop returned fromthe council's first session. From left are Msgr. James A. Hughes, vicar general; Archbish-

op Boland, and Msgr. James A. Looney, chancellor.

4 TH* ADVOCATE

Msgr. Costello. . .

(Continued from Page 1)

Novembw 29, 1992

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One

him in little-boy fashion as he

smiled broadly into the re-

ceiver when one sister tele-

phoned him during an inter-view with The Advocate. “Mysisters are Irish and given to

expressing themselves in Irish

emotions,” he chuckled.

“They wept and laughed, and

wept and laughed.”.

MSGR. DOUGHERTY, fa-

mous as a biblical scholar, a

graduate of Rome’s Instituteof Biblical Studies, for 22

years professor of Sacred

Scriptufe at "Immaculate Con-

ception Seminary," and authorof a number of books on bib-lical subjects found in thedate of the announcement ofhis elevation to Bishop “a spe-

cial significance.”“Today is the Feast of the

Presentation of Our Lady,” he

observed, and drew the paral-lod to the fourth mystery of the

rosary with its meditation on

the Presentation of the ChildJesus in the Temple.

Msgr. Dougherty confided:“I have always had a specialdevotion to the Fourth

Mystery, the Presentation, be-

cause 4 associate it with my

own desire to be a priest. Thatdesire dates back as lopg as

I can remember...I asso-

ciate it with my own

Baptism.”

Explaining this personal de-

votion, he detailed the customof presentation according toOld Testament law. The first-born son in a Jewish family,he said, was “the property ofthe Lord and the Jewish ritual

required that the parents re-

deem him back from the Lord

by an offering to the Lord athis presentation in the tem-ple.” Msgr. Dougherty was thefirst-born of the five childrenof the late John and Christine

Dougherty of Jersey City.

DURING THE “wonderful

growing-up years” in St. Aloy-sius parish Msgr. Doughertyrecalls that his desire to bea priest grew on his admira-tion of the priests he knewthere, and served as an altar

boy. “There was something of

hero-worship in it,” he recalls.

As first-string tackle at St.Peter’s Prep and Seton Hall,where he captained the teamin his senior year, he was

something of a hero himself.After graduation he enteredthe diocesan seminary, and

was later sent to Rome to

complete his studies at theNorth American College.

“In Rome my interest in art

was rekindled,” he remem-

bers. An enthusiastic patron ofthe arts, Msgr. Dougherty hasmade Seton Hall a culturalcenter, presenting operas,maintaining a drama work-

shop, an experimental opera

chorus, a symphony orchestra,a museum, and most recentlyespousing the cause of theproposed National CulturalCenter in Washington by play-ing host to a closed circuitbenefit telecast and live showNov. 29.

HE IS a painter himself,principally of still life and por-traits, with his 12-year-oldniece Maureen Phelan as hisfavorite subject (“and realheart interest.”)

Over the fireplace in Msgr.Dougherty’s office hangs a

painting of Bishop JamesRoosevelt Baylcy, first Bishopof Newark and founder ofSeton Hall, where Bishop-ElectDougherty expects to remain

as* president, becoming thefirst Bishop to preside over

the university.There is also a bust of Pope

Pius XII, several fragileIloehm ceramics (Msgr.

Dougherty recently wrote the

preface to a book on Boehmwork) and his favorite piece,a small statue of St. John, hispatron, in boxwood, a materialwith biblical associations, and

so old that one arm is brokenoff.

AT HIS DESK, Msgr.Dougherty’s cigarette restedon an ash-tray on which was

inscribed “Athens” and behindhim a lamp glowed through a

shade made of old Sienesebook covers. The lampshadewas an acquisition during his

trip last summer which tookhim 20,000 miles, visiting thesites of former ecumenicalcouncils in Europe and theMiddle East.

He was helping prepare a

TV scries on council historyto be aired in the spring. Thisis the latest project in hiscareer in communicationswhich included years of regu-lar appearances on The Cath-olic Hour and production ofthe 1959 prizewinning TV sc-

ries, “Rome Eternal.”

At the moment, he said, heIs working on two new books.One of the "forthcomingvolumes is “An Old Testa-ment Reader” which he de-scribed as “an edition of theOld Testament designed for

reading with greater under-

standing" and suitable for col-lege students and other lay-

men. The second book in theworks is ananthology of Cath-olic literature through the cen-

turies.

His “Searching the Scrip-tures” written in 1959, wascalled by Rev. Harold C. Gar-diner, S J., of America maga-zine, one of the 10 best reli-gious books of the 19505.

THE OBVIOUS question to

ask such a man is “How do

you do so much?" His answer

seems to indicate that hehas built inside him some-

thing like the physical prin-ciple which dictates that a

body in motion must remain inmotion.

"I find recreation in doingdifferent things," ho explains."I administer during the day,and write evenings.” And hepaints on Saturdays and dur-

ing the summer if he canfind the time from helping toproduce TV documentaries. “Ithink you can work more ifyou work at different things,”he observed.

BUT THERE IS another rea-son for his productivity, be-trayed in answer to anotherquestion which sought to es-

tablish what has been hit fa-vorite work as a priest.

“I love all of it,” he said

warmly.

Still, ho admitted, there are

degrees, and without hesita-tion ho said ho has most en-

joyed giving retreats topriests. "Retreat work is themost satisfying priestly activi-ty.” he elaborated. "Preach-ing, hearing confessions,counselling , . .”

And his "rarest experience”he recalled, was the retreat hegave to the Trappist Monks inGethsemane Abbey In Ken-tucky. Among the retreatantswere the monk whose books

arc famous by his lay name,Thomas Merton, and anothergreat Trappist writer, FatherRaymond.

"The Trappists are mendedicated to the ascetic spir-itual life, but their humanqualities are so heartwarm-ing, Rishop-Elect Doughertysaid. “At the close of the re-

treat they presented" me witha series of gifts .

.. There

was bread from the monk whoi» the bread-maker, cheesefrom the cheese-maker, a ro-sary from tho rosary-maker,ceramics from those who didthose things, and a spiritualbouquet, written in Greek andHebrew, with 4 aketch of meas a frontispiece. .

As he received those whoWsome gifts from those silentholy men, the Bishop-Elect re-called, “It was very difficultto keep back one’s tears.”

ARTIST - Since 1946 Msgr. Dougherty has been a prominent figure in the communica-tions field, speaking, writing, advising for radio and TV shows, including the prize-winning religious documentary, "Rome Eternal." Above he faces TV camera during a

recent WPIX show entitled "Great Religious Leaders," discussing Church councils.

PRIEST - Msgr. Dougherty is shown celebrating Mass, thecentral act of a priest's life. The photo is taken from a

booklet accompanying a 1960 recording of the Mass byColumbia Records for which he wrote the commentary.

EDUCATOR - After 22 as professor of Sacred Scripture at Immaculate ConceptionSeminary, Darlington, Msgr. Dougherty in 1959 was appointed president of SetonHall University. Above he accepts seal of the university from Archbishop Boland as

Archbishop Egidio Vagnozzi, Apostolic Delegate in the U.S. watches.

ADMINISTRATOR - Early in his presidency of Seton HallMsgr. Dougherty embarked on two programs: onea $2.5million construction project for which he is shown break-ing ground last December, the other, to make the univer-

sity a cultural force in the community.

AUTHOR - Msgr. Dougherty presents Archbishop Bolandwith a copy of "The Catholic Bible in the St. Peter's Edi-tion," for which he was consultant. Published in 1958,the first copy went to the late Pope Pius XII. In 1959 hewrote "Searching the Scriptures," named by Americamagazine's Rev. Harold C. Gardiner one of the 10 best

religious books of the decade.

Msgr. Dougherty . . .

(Continued from Page 1)

November 29, 1962 THE ADVOCATE 5

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Birthday Observance HighlightsA Busy Week for Pope John

VATICAN CITY The ob-

servance of bis 81st birthdayhighlighted Pope John’s ac-

tivity-filled week—a week Inwhich he paid several visits,received a delegation of Bud-dhist monks, added eight can-

ons to those of the four majorRoman basilicas, and sent a

message of good will to PrimeMinister Jawaharlal Nehru ofIndia.

THE POPE acknowledgedhis birthday Nov. 25 at a Massat the Pontifical Urban Uni-

versity, praying to God:“Grace and favor You grantedme, and Your Providence haspreserved my spirit.”

Pope John expressed no con-

cern over his advancing yearsand said he is contented to dothe will of the Lord. “All daysare good to be born and all

days are good to die,” he said,“and there is no need to worrywhen life and mercy .are

drawn from this source.”

Gregorio Cardinal Agagian-lan, Prefect of the Sacred Con-

gregation for the Propagationof the Faith which runs the

university, greeted Pope John.In the university’s chapelwere Laurean Cardinal Ru-gambwa of Bukoba, Tangan-yika; Norman Cardinal Gilroyof Sydney, Australia; and Val-erian Cardinal Gracias ofBombay.

After offering Mass, thePope spoke briefly to the stu-dents and guests, saying he

was glad to be among the

young men who represent thefuture of the Church.

“WE ARE THE wealthyheirs of great lessons of thepast and we face a world

which needs the grace of theLord in the evangelical sense."the Pope said. “In our work,it is more important that weshould think of the future rath-

er than of the past."On his return to the Vatican,

the Pope received Stefan Car-dinal Wyszynski, Primate ofPoland, and the other PolishBishops attending the council.Later' in the day, the Popereceived the Austrian, Hungar-ian, English and Irish Bishopsattending the council.

At noon, more than 20,000gathered in St. Peter’s Squareto wish the Pope a happybirthday and to receive hisblessing.

THE POPE received 28Buddhist monks, on their wayhome to Japan after cere-monies in the U. S. markingBuddhism’s 70th anniversaryin that country. The Pontiff

spoke of his interest in Jap-anese history and particu-larly in the history of the earlyChristian missionary effortsthere.

The Pope added eight km-orary canons to the chaptersof the four major Roman ba-silicas.

The additional canons, whohave not yet been named, areto be chosen by the Pope andwill.have the right to taketheir place in the choir of thebasilica and wear the robes ofthe canons of each church.

The basilicas are St. Peter’s,St. Miry Major, St. John La-teran and St. Paul’s Outsidethe Walls.

THE PONTIFF disclosedduring an audience accordedto the Bishops from India that

he had sent the message toPrime Minister Nehru. The

Pope did not disclose the na-

ture of his message, but saidthat fie had received a veryrespectful reply from the In-dian Premier.

Itwas reported that the mes-

sage had been taken to India

by Cardinal Gracias, who leftthe council sessions to be withhis people during the crisisbrought on by the Chinese in-vasion.

Pope John said that he hadfirst met Nehru in Paris whenhe was Papal Nuncio there.The Pope said that he hadformed an excellent opinion ofthe Indian Premier and heremembers that Nehru encotir-aged him to continue his workfor peace.

EARLIER IN THE week

Pope John visited the Pontiff-,cal Spanish College where En-

rique Cardinal Pla y Denial,Primate of Spain, was ill withinfluenza.

He then went to the nearbyPontifical Roman Seminaryfor Juridical Studies which hehad attended as a young manand prayed before the imageof Our Lady of the Apostlesthere. Before returning to the

Vatican, he also stopped topray at the nearby Church ofSt. Apollinaris.

The Pope also paid a sur-

prise visit to the Church ofOur Lady of Guadalupe, thechurch for Mexicans in Rome.

Reports on New Look

At St. Elizabeth’sCONVENT The annual re-

port of Sister HildegardeMarie, president of St. Eliza-beth’s College, noted the strik-

ing physical changes on the

grounds of the college and the

general house of the Sistersof Charity of St. Elizabeth dur-

ing the 1961-82 school year.A special section of the re-

port is devoted to Henderson

Hall, the new academic andscience building opened in

September. There are several

pages of pictures of the build-

ing's interior and various

events connected with its ded-

ication, and an explanation ofthe symbolism embodied in itsartistic adornment.

AFFIXED TO the facade ofthe building is a wroughtiron and bronze trianglesymbolic of the TriuneGod. The .secondary symbolswithin the triangle are related

to the attributes of the ThreePersons of the Holy Trinityand represent also the sci-

ences to be taught in the build-

ing.Also pictured and explained

is the statue of Our LadyQueen of the Universe in the

foyer. It was especially de-signed and executed by Ed-mond Amateis. .The triangleon

the facade and the murals inHyland Lecture Hall were de-signed by the science and art

departments of the College ofSt. Elizabeth in cooperationwith the Rosti workshop ofBrewster, N. Y.

The report also containsstatistics on enrollment, ad-

missions, degrees conferred,faculty curricular develop-ment, scholarships, physicalplan and finances.

In her report or student fi-nancial aid, Slater HildegardeMarie states that it includedscholarships and grants-in-aid,campus employment and theNational Defense EducationAct student loan program.Scholarships and grants-in-aidamounted to $66,065. Studentsearned $12,938 in campus em-ployment. A total of $62,266was borrowed under terms ofthe Defense-Education Act.

Students also received atotal of $36,775 in financial aidfrom sources independent ofthe college.

Parents of Blind

To Hear TalkNEWARK — A seminar on

orientation and elementarymobility will be conducted bythe Mt. Carmel Guild SpecialEducation Department for theBlind for parents of bling chil-dren Dec. 2 at 3 p.m. at 99Central Ave.

Robert Wbitstock, assistantdirector of the Seeing Eye, win

speak on “Mobility for theBlind” and will show a movlo.A panel composed of Rev.Richard M. McGuinncss, di-rector of the apostolate forthe blind, and three Sisters ofSt. Joseph of Newark whoteach blind children, wiU dis-

cuss how to help them.

Two ChaplainsChange Address

NEW YORK - The MilitaryOrdinariate this week an-nounced changes of address fortwo North Jersey chaplains,one each from the Archdioceseof Newark and the Diocese ofPaterson.

Rev. Charles Brown of New-ark can now be reached at:Chaplain, Ist BG, 31st Infan-try, APO 7. San Francisco.Cal. Rev. Charles F. Powersof Paterson may be reachedat: Chaplain, Hqs. 2nd ARB,50th Inf., 4th Armd Div., APO66, New York, N. Y.

State Council OpensChristmas Campaign

UNION CITY - The NeWJersey State Council, Knightsof Columbus, has opened itsannual campaign to bringChrist back into Christmasthrough the medium of Christ-mas posters.

Ixiuis D. Carr of Jersey City,state chairman of Catholic acti-vities. has called on all grandknights to have the postersdisplayed prominently instores, offices and other pub-lic places. In addition, approx-imately 10,000 car bumperstickers have been distributed.

Pontiff Sees

Polish OfficialVATICAN CITY

John XXHI has received inprivate audience an official ofthe Polish communist govern-ment, it was learned here.

The Pope met with JerzyZswiejski, state councillor ofthe Polish republic, for 30

minutes on Nov. 20.

Vatican officials Would, notcomment -on the audience. Itwas not reported by VaticanRadio or L’Osservatore Ro-ano, Vatican City daily.

6 THE ADVOCATE November 29, 1962

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Catholic Spokesmen Stress

Belief in Religious LibertyWASHINGTON(NC) - Two

Catholic spokesmen, speakingat an interfaith meeting here,Stressed that U. S. Catholics

are firmly committed to theprinciple of religious liberty.The speakers were Msgr.John Tracy Ellis, professor ofChurch history at the Catholic

University of America, andRev. Edward Duff, S.J., ofWeston (Mass.) College andformerly of St. Louis (Mo.)University, author and speakeron social questions.

They spoke at sessions ofthe first national Institute on

religious freedom and publicaffairs sponsored by the Na-tional Conference of Christiansand Jews.

MSGR. ELLIS declared thatthe principle of Church-State

separation is an integral "partof Catholic thinking in this

country.”"In the world society as we

find it today, nothing is more

vital to the principle of reli-

gious freedom than that veryseparation,” he said.

Tracing the support of U. S.Catholics for religious freedom

and Church-State separationfrom colonial days to the pres-ent, Msgr. Ellis said:

"What the Catholic of 1962

would ask of his-fellow Ameri-cans ...is that they judge hisChurch by'its record in theU. S. and not in Spain or Co-lombia or any other countrywhere Catholics form a ma-

jority of the population,” hesaid.

He urged non-Catholicd to"keep their minds attuned tothe mounting sentiment in

Catholic circles all over theworld in favor of universal re-

ligious freedom.”

FATHER DUFF told a latersession that "the suggestionthat there is a cultural and

psychological irreconcilabilitybetween wholehearted belief inCatholicism as the trueChurchand

...an unstrained accept-ance of a society offering reli-

gious freedom to all musthave as its premise the expec-tation that an authoritarian re-

ligion cannot adjust itself to ademocratic political order.”

"That expectation has beennullified

...by the perform-ance of American Catholics,”he added.

Speaking on the school issue,Father Duff said many Catho-lics “see in the propaganda for

an official national schoolsystem as the chosen instru-

ment, the sacred vehicle, for

the transmission of democraticvalues, the shadow of ...

’State Shintoism.’ "

DR. FRANKLIN H. Littell,professor of church history atthe Chicago Theological Semi-

nary, challenged those “whoprefer to look backward to a

legendary Golden Age of reli-gion in America.”

“The most reactionary leg-end of all American folklore,”Littell said, is "that ’in thegood old days’ America was

founded as a Christian (i.e.Protestant) nation, and that inthose times the people were

good citizens, good churchmenand inhumanly industrious.”

The fact is, he declared, that

today “with the tremendous

manpower of Judaism, Cathol-icism and Protestantism in asituation primarily pluralisticand voluntaristic

... the Gold-

en Age of religion in'America

lies directly before us.”Dr. Bertram W. Korn, senior

Rabbi of the Reform Congre-gation Keneseth Israel of

Philadelphia, said “Jews havebeen accorded a closer approx-imation of religious freedom inthe U. S. than in any othercountry in the western world

at any time in history.”

WILBER G. KATZ, law pro-fessor at the University of Wis-consin and a constitutional lawexpert, challenged the theoryof “rigid” separation ofChurch and State. He said theAmerican constitutional tradi-tion “is not built on the as-

sumption that American reli-

gious pluralism is so chargedwith hostility that religious is-sues must be avoided by en-

forcing a rigid principle of

separation which would neces-

sarily limit the enjoyment ofreligious freedom.”

Katz said that in the area of

constitutionality and Church-State relations he prefers "aprinciple of neutrality to one of

separation.”

In Embassy Refuge

Cardinal MindszentyLeads Spartan Life

WUERZBURG, Germany(NC)—Jozsef Cardinal Minds-

xenty, Primate of Hungary,has learned to speak Englishin his refuge in the American

Legation in Budapest.Allgemeine Sonntagsseitung,

national Catholic weekly pub-lished here reports that the 70-

year-oid Cardinal has learned

English well enough to con-

verse with his special body-guard and with the Catholicmembers of the legation staffwho attend his Mass on Sun-

days.The Cardinal also reads

American newspapers as well

as the Hungarian press andL’Osservatore Romano, theVatican City daily.

THE CARDINAL came tothe legation with nothing but

the clothes he was wearing.The legation offered to getnecessities for him from the

U.S., but he insisted that hehad all he needed. He event-

ually accepted an extra cas-

sock and a pair of shoes.

His three-room apartment ison the third floor of the lega-tion building. Windows, with

bullet-proof glass, look out on

Budapest’s Liberty Square.The communist secret police

keep three black limousines,with their motors constantlyrunning, stationed outside the

building, the paper said.

INSIDE THE BUILDING,the Cardinal’s apartment is

protected by a double doorwith seven locks. A bodyguardis on duty outside this doorat all times, the paper report-at all times, the psper said.

The Cardinal’s apartment is

simple, it says. He has refusedthe legation's offers to givehim more comfort. The fur-

nishings are a simple cot andside table, a desk, three book-

racks, a wardrobe, two chairsand a washstand.

Twice a week, the Cardinal

fasts, taking only three slicesof black bread and a quart of

water, the paper says. Usually,his breakfast consists of teaand a few slices of bread. For

lunch, he generally has soupand some fruit, and his othermeals are just as simple.

DOCTORS ARE worriedabout his health because of aheart ailment contracted whilebe was in jail before the 1956

uprising and because heis con-

stantly losing weight, the pa-per states.

During the day, the Cardinalwrites his memoirs. Whenweather permits, he walks for

an hour or two in the lega-tion’s inner court. He never

goes to bed before midnight,the paper says.

Two New Fields

Open for BlindNEWARK - The Mt. Car-

mel Guild Center for theBlind has announced the es-

tablishment of classes in nurs-

ing and radio for blind people.The nursing class' will be

held on Monday evenings at8 p.m. and will be taught byJohn Bennett. The radio classwill be held Thursday eve-

nings at the same time andwill be taught by Keith Beebe.

Both classes will be held at

the guild center at 99 CentralAve. Registration may bemade by calling the center

(MI 2-1129).

Solemn Novena

At Mt. Carmel

JERSEY CITY - A SolemnNovena of Our Lady of theMiraculous Medal will beginDec. 2 at Mt. Carmel Church,it was announced by Msgr.Walter P. Artioli, pastor.

The mission will be preach-ed by Rev. Michael Flannery,C.M., with evening services at8 p.m. and the novena Massat 8:30 a.m. There will be atriduum for the children Dec.3-6 In preparation for FirstFriday.

Chemistry Professor

Gets Research Grant80UTH ORANGE — Dr.

Robert T. Conley, associate

professor of chemistry at SetonHall University, has beenawarded a $62,800 scientific re-

search grant by the NaUonalInstitutes of Health of the De-partment of Health, Educationand Welfare.

The three-year grant will en-able Dr. Conley to continue re-search dealing with the prepar-ation of organic compoundspotentially useful in the treat-ment of neurological diseases,an investigation he has con-

ducted for five years.

Seek to ModifyChurch TaxATLANTIC CITY (RNS)

Modification of the state law

exempting church propertyfrom taxation was advocatedhere by the New JerseyLeague of Municipalities.

It passed a resolution askingthe legislature to terminate

exemptions on parsonages andland outside the communitywhich the church serves.

Under the current law, par-sonages, no matter where lo-

cated, are exempted up to a

value of $25,000; accessorybuildings and up to five acresof land are also tax-free..

Delegates said this placed a

hardship on taxpayers of the

community absorbing the taxloss, pointing out that thechurch involved, being in an-other area, provides no localservice.

Papal Honor

Goes to DalyJERSEY CITY - Marcus

Daly of Lincroft, former di-rector of the Intergovern-mental Committee for Euro-

pean Migration, this week re-

ceived a letter notifying himthat he had been appointed a

Knight Commander of the Or-der of St. Gregory the Great.

Currently lecturing on inter-national organizations at St.Peter's College, Daly servedthree years in the governmentpost, traveling over half a mil-lion miles on behalf of Euro-pean refugees and migrants.

The Order of St. Gregorythe Great was founded in 1831by Pope Gregory XVI to re-

ward the civil and militarysubjects of the then PapalStates, but it is also conferred

on persons outside the papaldomain for outstanding char-acter and notable achieve-ments.

Father Rush

To Be PromotedJERSEY CITY—Rev. Peter

S. Rush, pastor of St. Joseph’s,has been nominated for pro-motion to brigadier general(retired) in the N.J. NationalGuard by Gov. Richard J.

Hughes.An army chaplain for 21

years, Father Rush retiredwith the rank of colonel, whichwould not be affected by this

promotion. The nomination

now awaits approval of theState Senate, which reconvenes

Dec. 3, and is expected to beacted on promptly.

On hearing of his nomina-

tion, Father Rush said, “Ihope and pray that, if it is

awarded, I will prove worthyof the trust placed in me.” Fa-ther Rush entered the Army in

July, 1940, and went Into serv-

ice with the National Guardtwo months later.

CLOTHING COLLECTION - Rev. Augustine Varricchio,pastor of Sacred Heart, Clifton, and Kenneth Norbe, mem-ber of the parish's Boy Scout troop, accept clothing do-nated by Mrs. Olga Glory to the annual Bishops' Relief

Thanksgiving collection.

Pope Authorizes

IndulgencesVATICAN CITY (NC)

Pope John XXIII has au-thorized Cardinals, Arch-

bishops and Bishops to im-

part partial indulgences toCatholics who receive their

blessing after PontificalMasses.

The decree issued by theSacred Apostolic Peniten-

tiary stated that those whoreceive the indulgence musthave at least a contriteheart.

The decree provided Car-dinals may impart indul-

gences of 15 years, Arch-

bishops 10 years and Bish-

ops seven years.

Slovakian Editor

To Be Honored

WASHINGTON- John Scir-

anka of Passpic, AmericanSlovak Journalist, will receivea plaque from the NationalCommittee for Liberation ofSlovakia on his 40th anniver-

sary as a newspaperman.A native of Pennsylvania,

Sclranka began work on a

Slovak publication there Dec.4, 1922.

Parsonages to Join

Ridgewood RatablesRIDGEWOOD

_ This Ber-gen County community lastweek received a report fromits tax collector which in-dicated that all of its churchesmay have to pay taxes ontheir parsonages (rectories).

The background of the de-cision is a complicated one,including a court decision, a

ruling by the state attorneygeneral and a revision of a

state law signed last August.It is involved with the generalupgrading of assessed valuesof all property in the statebnder the State SupremeCourt’s 10% valuation deci-sion of several years ago.

UNTIL THIS YEAR, parson-ages had an exemption of $5,-000 on assessed value, Whichwas sufficient to exempt themfrom taxes under the old

formulas. With most municip-alities now using a 40% valua-tion and with the SupremeCourt decision last June thatall exemptions shall be de-

ducted from true value of the

property, the parsonages now

become taxable in most areas.

In Ridgewood, there are 10

parsonages involved, one ofthem being at Our Lady ofMt. Carmel. Their combinedtrue valuation is $625,000 andtheir total tax bill for the yearwould be about $3,400. How-ever, Mt. Carmel may be

exempt from the tax under a

recent ruling that a rectoryattached to the church build-

ing itself is exempt.The Ridgewood Council of

Churches has announced thatit may file a protest againstthe tax.

November 29, 1962 THE ADVOCATE 7

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Ethics Without GodIt baffles us that our day sees so

many professional groups doctorslawyers, businessmen -franticSS en-

gaged in drafting fine-sounding codes ofethics for their members. In the past,society seemed to agree more easily onwhat Was right and what was wrong.

Chief Justice Earl Warren reflectedthe spirit of the times in his recent, com-ments on modern man’s need for spiritu-al guidance. “The education of both min-isters of religion and of lay-specialists,qualified to help the confused find him-self in the maze of ethical problems isone of the urgent needs of Western de-mocracy.”

HIS OBSERVATION that “ethicalsense was transmitted from generation togeneration in the family, in the school,in the great religious traditions and phil-osophies of the world” is highly signifi-cant. It implies that the traditional trans-mission system may be foundering some-

what.

Does character formation occupy a

major place in the curriculum of our

state-supported schools? Rather, vigorousefforts are being made to close the door toreligion in our public schools. God Him-self is being divorced from our everydaylife; Church-State separationists, in segre-gating the true God, have spawned a godof their own secularism. Thousands oflaws and a multiplicity of codes have been

drawn up all to explain the Ten Com-mandments —but what’s the motivation,for observing laws and codes if the Su-preme Lawgiver is relegated to the side-lines?

Mere desire for responsibility orstatus is not enough; fear of detectionoften fails as a force for good.

ETHICAL CONCEPTS have becomefuzzy in the home, in family life. Is animpressionable youngster soaking insound moral values when he hears hisfather boast of beating the income tax or

fixing a parking ticket, or his mothergloat over cheating the corner grocer outof a few cents? Ethical codes for adultscan derive strength ,and meaning onlyfrom solid foundations laid in the homeduring growing years.

Whatever you do is all right if youdisapprove of the law. It’s all right if itdoesn’t hurt anybody. It’s all right’if it’spart of accepted business practice. Theseare samples of modern ethical thinking;Mr. Warren comments on them: “Whenan individual citizen engages in such prac-tices, he does so not at his own peril, as

when he violates the law, but at peril to

the structure of civilization.”Without an agreed sense of ethics,

society would come to grief, because with-out ethics law itself could not exist.

But without God and religion, ethicsitself doesn’t make too much sense.

Emmanuel or Gigantic Sales?The weeks of Advent represent and

commemorate the years and centuriesthat preceded the Birth of Christ whenthe chosen people waited and prayed forthe coming of the Messiah. “O Come,0 Come Emmanuel” was the cry of thepatriarchs, the prophets-and the people.

TOW FAR HAVE W* frifttt awayfrom the real significance of Advent andthe meaning of Christmas? What is themost predominant note and prominenttheme in the preparation for Christmasin this, year of Our Lord 1902? <;

The big department stores are alllooking forward to. a gala season. Theyhave increased their inventories, eagerlyawaiting the influx of customers loadeddown with what it takes to make a pur-chase.

In the principal sheets of the largecitierthe arches have been set, the'dec-orations are already in place and whenthe magic word is given the lights willblare in all their “Christmas” glory ifthis has not already taken place. 1

This is the secular preparation forthe coining of Christinas. How much doesit have in Common with the preparationfor the coming of the Messiah? Could any-one recognize the spirit ofAdvent in allthis fanfare? Let us be honest. Many of

the most potent and influential merchantsknow little about the real meaning ofChristmas and care less. The story of the

angels, the shepherds, the Birth of the

1 Child are just so much idle supersti-tion and well-publicized fable. They mayadmit that Jesus Christ was a great man,

a prophet if you will like Moses, Eliasand Mohammed —but the Son of God??That is something they do not accept andin which they show little interest.

TO WHICH OF the two great forcesdo we pay greater homage and tribute?The spirit of commercialism that means

big sales and profits, or the spirit of Ad-vent that prepares men’s souls for theevent that was promised in Paradise andfulfilled in the humble Crib of Bethle-hem?

Nothing is more, lifeless and unin-

spiring than a discarded Christmas treethat is thrown out into the Street or gut-ter a few days after Christmas. When peo-ple stress only the material, the commer-cial and social influence of Advent andChristmas, their spirit,and heart will belimp„and lifeless likeU Christmas treewhen the holidays are over.

Christmas is a hoiydSy first~ a holi-

day thereafter. We all know how to makeour choice.

Commemorating SerraThe storm troopers of secularism

have successfully banned any religioussymbolism from the postage stamps is-sued for the season made significant onlyby the birth of Jesus Christ, the Son ofGod. We are left with the gaudy engrav-ing of a wreath not unlike those funereal

draped on European tombs.The first round has gone to the secular-ists!

TOERE IS A CHANCE to defeat themon another issue. The U. S. PostmasterGeneral has been asked to issue a Stampcommemorating the 250th anniversary ofthe birth of Fra Junipero Serra. Becausehe was a' priest and a Franciscan, thestorm trooper secularists will rise againto ban the issue. Unfortunately for theirdesigns, Father Serra was not only aPriest but he was an heroic well,an explorer, a colonizer, a frontiersmanin the days when this nation was beingformed;

At the same time that George Wash-ington was repelling the tyrant from our

eastern shores, Father Serra wag advanc-ing the settlements that shut Russia out

forever from our western coastline. Whilethe colonists on the Atlantic seaboardwere driving into the wilderness and de-

stroying the Indians, Father Serra was

pushing northward toward San Francis-co, gathering the Indians about him in

great mission compounds, teaching themto till the soil and instructing them in thelove of Christ.

THE STRING of great cities that face

westward across the Pacific are sprungfrom settlements built by Junipero Serrafrom San Diego in the south to San Fran-cisco in the north. San Juan Capistrano,San Luis Obispo, Los Angeles, Santa Bar-bara, Carmel . . .

this is the resoundinglitany intoned by the great Franciscan as

he travelled the California headlands.These incontrovertible facts have won

for this spiritual colonialist a place in theHall of Statues in the Capitol at Washing-ton. They should win for him as well a

special commemorative issue. You can as-

sure this by addressing letters of petitionto the Postmaster General in Washington.Another round should not be lost to the

.secularists. £

Highway SlaughterBetween Thanksgiving and New

Year’s our nation’s highways will be thescent of slaughter.

4

Road congestion,snow and ice, speed, reckless driving landdrunken driving all these contributeto a high fatality rate and an extremelyhigh personal injury rate. Seemingly, our

population has become hardened to thefact that this will take place and that it.will never happen to the reader. In NewJersey, we are presently exceeding the1961 fatality rate and it looks as thqughby the New Year our fatalities will haveIncreased by over 25%.

THERE IS ONE AREA of irresponsi-ble driving which needs to be especiallyemphasized during this holiday seasonand that is drunken driving. The statemotor vehicle commissioner has beeq en-

deavoring to impress upon -the people the

great risk involved in attempting to drive

while drinking. No one can deny that with

complete control of all of our faculties,driving today, at best, is a great risk.When we add to this risk by imbibing,nothing can come of the combination butslaughter and heartaches and even man-

slaughter.Recently, a Midwest judge, recogniz-

ing the slaughter and attempting to cor-

rect it, sentenced those who have beenreckless and wanton in their driving to

the emergency room of hospitals so theywould be able to see first hand the hor-ror of an accident.

Another great hazard today is theirresponsibility of young drivers. In manyrecent accidents those involved were intheir teens and in their quest of speedand showboating, they not only destroyedthemselves but brought others to the

grave with them.

GOV. RICHARD J. HUGHES, stateofficials, safety experts, and police of-

ficials are constantly warning the publicabout the hazards of everyday driving. It

is necessary that all drivers be attentiveto the plea that is being made for safe

driving.A car is no longer a luxury but a

necessity, and being such it demands that

we use this necessity with caution and

prudence, recognizing that it can be an

instrument of death. This is the season of

the year for caution, prudence and cour-

tesy.Remember that we are are morally

responsible for our driving.

First Business

Christ’s 40-Day Fast

A Prelude to ConflictBy FRANK J. SHEED

According to tradition, theplace of solitude to which OurLord was led by the Spirit laa hill to the north of Jericho.Whether here or not thoughwe know that He ipent 40days of complete fait.

Wc are reminded of Mosesand Elias. Moses had fasted40 days on Mt. Sinai before

bringing down the Ten Com-mandments for the second

time, (Exodus iv.2B), and Eliaihad fasted 40 days on the jour-ney to Mt. Horeb where God

spoke to him not in thegreat wind or in the earth-

quake or in the fire but in the

whisper of a gentle breeze (3Kings xix.B).

OUR LORD passed the dayiof His fast alone with God, un-

distracted by people. There

were wild beasts there, but

they were no danger to thetotal innocence of Christ.

What Our Lord’s converse

with His Father was we do not

know, and it would be foolishto try to guess. When at theage of 12 Our Lord was lost,we know nothing of those three(lays, save how they ended.So now we know nothing ofthe 40 days, save how theyended: the devif moved in.

Modern Christians tend to

see the devil as a sort of

comic-opera figure. They are

half ashamed of believing inhim at all. Even those whoknow something of his deadlyreality still think of him as a

kind of extra, prowling aboutthe fringes of the Redemption.

But in that great drama heis a principal. It was to botempted by him that Our Lordwas led into the desert. And itwas by the will of God thatthe three-year mission whichwas to end in our Redemptionopened with this conflict be-tween the Redeemer and the

enemy. To understand why, we

must see clearly who theenemy was.

MAN IS NOT the summit ofcreation, lie is made in God’simage, but so are the angels

—and they are higher in na-

ture than man.

But they too had to be testedbefore they reached the goalof the Beatific Vision. Theyhad to make the choice be-tween God and self. And vastnumbers of them, led by one,made the wrong choice. Theyfell. Hell was their portion.

The leader of the revolt isthe one who matters. He was

so constantly in Our Lord's

mind, that it would bo foolishfor us not to give him a littleof ours.

OUR LORI) describes him as

a murderer from the beginning,a liar knd tha father of lies(John viii.44). The two quali-ties in him Unis chosen formention appear in the names

given him. In the Apocalypsehe is called Apollyon. whichmeans murderer. The common-est name for him is devil,which meant slanderer, onewho Ilea about other people.

St. Paul is fond of the wordIn thin meaning. In the Epistlesto Timothy and Titus he warns

his hearers against "devilish-ness” of this sort.

Our Lord uses two other

names. He calls him Beelze-

bub, which means Lord ofFlies anyone who has livedin a hot country knows what

that means; the Jews often

changed the laat letter to makethe word meafl Lord of Excre-

ment. Most often Christ callshim Satan, the .enemy. '

We have still to ace why he

sought the conflict.

For VocationsMembers of the Aposto-

late for Vocations can guin

a plenary ihdulgence underthe ordinary conditions on:

Nov. 30, Feast of St. An-drew

Dee, 8, Feast of the Im-maculate Conception

Once a week, if reciteddaily, with piety, any pray-er for vocations approvedby the ecclesiastical author-

ity.A partial indulgence of

100 days may be gained foreach act of charity or pietyperformed for the Intentionof foatering vocati ns to the

prieithood.

Crisis Winner-

Was It Castro?

By LOUIS F. BUDENZ

Thi» small column, in con-trast to most of the U. S.press, was conspicuous in

pointing to the Lenin-Stalin“strategic retreat” in whichKhrushchev was engaging for

our “demoralization” early in

the Cuban crisis.

By mid-November, however,most of the daily press hadveered around and belated-

ly admitted the possibility of

great Khrushchcv-Castro gains.Thera were admissions that

the American nation had been

outwitted.

THE WORKER of Nov. 18

confirmed this:

"In Washington, the Penta-

gon and other war-mongeringelements in the Kennedy Ad-ministration are still playingaround with the Cuban crisis

as though it were only a week-end poker game, in which it

bluffs its way to taking thejackpot. But the chips withwhich Washington is playingare the lives of the entireAmerican people and the peo-ples of the rest of the world,"

The tremendous propagandawhich ia now to flood the worldto our detriment was forecastby the Red organ a few daysbefore, op Nov. J3:

"Who saved world peace?The leading statesman of thecapitalist world, Mr. Kennedy?No. It was the high-mindedhumanitarian deed of the com-

munist leader and statesmanof the socialist countries, Nik-ita Khrushchev.”

Why has this mess oc-

curred? The American nationhas been confronted withKhrushchev’s perfidy beforeand has succumbed to It. Whysuccumb again?

One major answer is that

given by Pope Pius XI 25

years ago that "the conspir-

acy of silence" on communismby most of the general pressof the world is responsible. Toput it bluntly, we are beingself-poisoned.

NOTHING BRINGS this tothe fore more dramaticallythan the appearance of AlgerHiss In a nation wide broad-cast over the American Broad-casting Company In mid-Nov-ember. A convicted perjurer-convicted because of testi-mony concerning the giving ofU. S. secret documents to theSoviet government was al-lowed to address the people.

What makes this moreominous is that the presidentof the company Is a formerfigura in official Washington.

Thus therp Is displayed againwhat cloudy judgment was

used when Khrushchev was In-

vited to this country and "the

spirit of Camp David" was up-permost. Nothing more thanthis act gave the Soviet leader

prestige in Latin America.Those who study communist

publications know that thiscreation of "a favorable at-

mosphere” to the communist

line is one of the conspiracy’schief objectives. If the Reds

themselves arc not able to

bring this about directly, then

they are to persuade non-com-

munists to perform the task.

This "atmosphere,” sym-bolized by the Hiss incident,

has proved most injurious. Let

us end it.

December Intentions

The Holy Father’s generalintention f6r December is:

That the Second Vatican

Council may be an outstand-

ing witness to the truth,unity and charity of the

Church.

The mission intention mg-

gc*ted for the Apostlcshipof Prayer by the Pope is:

That the Gospel of Christ

be spread more effectivelyamong the Moslem peoples.

The Question Box

Is Pope Infallible

On Canonizations?R'v. Leo Farley, S.T.D., and Rev. Robert Hunt, S.T.D., of

Immaculate Conception Seminary, Darlington, Ramsey, N. J*are editors of The Question Box. Questions may be addressedto them there for answers in this column

,or to Question Bom

Editor, The Advocate, 31 Clinton St., Ntwerh 2, N. J.

Q. When a saint is can-

onized, are we absolutely cer-tain that thia person is in factIn heaven? In other words, isthis an infallible pronounce-ment of the Pope?

A. By “canonization” we

mean the solemn and def-initive act by which the Popedecrees that a person is inheaven and should be giv-en the public veneration due tothe saints of God. Now, in an-

swering our question, we limitourselves to "canonizations”in this itrict sense of the termas we have defined It. Ob-viously not all the saints inChristian annals were "can-onized” in the same sense,since the processes of beatif-ication and canonization are offairly recent discipline, rough-

ly from the 17th century. The

procedures used before thattime are less easily analyzed,and present some problemswhich we cannot undertake to

discuss now.

WITH THIS limitation inmind, we answer that the actby which a Pope canonizes istruly infallible, so that therecan never be cause for doubtabout the heavenly status ofthe canonized saint. This istaught by theologians as an

absolutely certain conclusionflowing directly from a num-

ber of considerations. How-ever, the infallibility of a

papal canonization is itself nota defined dogma of our Faith.The theological reasons in-volved here can be summarilystated in three categories:

(1) The First Vatican Coun-cil defined that the RomanPontiff when acting as pastorand teacher of all Chriatiansin matters of faith or moralsif personally infallible. But thesolemn and definitive canon-ization of a saint is a matterof "morals" not of moralprinciple, of course, but moralinstruction and doctrine which

governs the relationship ofChriatians to their Creator.

For, a person who it can-onized as a saint ia placed be-fore the whole Church as a

concrete example or model ofthe Christian life in its high-est moral perfection. Also, thesaint is proposed as a legiti-mate heavenly intercessor be-fore the throne of God. We donot hesitate, therefore, to see

the act of canonization asLell-ing under the defined scope ofpapal infallibility.

(2) A decree of canonization

vitally concerns the wholeChurch, which is thereby be-ing committed to a papal de-cision to give public honor andveneration to this saint. H. infact, the decree were er-

roneous and the person were

really in hell, then surely the

"gates of hell” have prevailedagainst the Church. But our

1-ord promised his Church thedivine assistance against sucha tragedy. And the only waywe can sec for such a possi-bility to be definitely excludedis for the papal act of can-

onization to be infallible.

(3) The manner in whichthe Pope traditionally express-

es himself in acts of canoniza-tion is further support for theinfallibilityof such pronounce-ments. The standard formulaof canonization is couched interms indicating the plenitudeof authority, the definitive na-ture of the decree in regard to

the sanctity of the new saint,and the obligation of accept-ance as such on the part ofthe universal Church. The con-

junction of these characteris-tics shows clearly that thePope definitely intends his de-

cree ss infallible. We note thatthe Pope at least must knowthe extent of his own infal-

libility!One final note: infallibility

of canonizations embracesonly the bald fact that the

person in question is actuallyin heaven. All other state-ments contained in the full

decree (for example, historicalindications of the person’s life,circumstances and miracles)enjoy solely the historical veri-

ty that they possess Inde-

pendently of the act of can-

onization.

What about beatifications?

Do they enjoy the same in-

fallibility? We will return tothis question in a future issue.

Q. Recently a friend told me

that the image of a snaketwisted on a staff in our par-ish church is a symbol of our

Lord. Could you explain thia

symbolism? I thought thesnake was a symbol of Satan,the enemy of Christ.

A. The snake to which yourefer is classically termed the"brazen serpent” and la »ym-bolic of Our Lord a* Redeem-

er of mankind. Our Lord him-self refers to this symbolism:“And as Moses lifted up tha

serpent in the desert, even so

must the Son of Man be lifted

up, that those who believe in

Him may not perish, but mayhave life everlasting” (John 3,14).

THE SIGNIFICANCE of this

symbol is founded in an in-cident in the history of theChosen People as they mad*their way through the desert

to the Promised Land underthe leadership of Moses. TheJews, as they did from time

to time, complained once more

of the hardships of the jour-ney. Asa divine punishmentthey were attacked by veno-

mous serpents called "fiery”on account of the inflamma-

tion caused by their bites.

When the people finally ac-

knowledged their sin of faith-lessness in God, God com-

manded Moses to make a

bronze serpent. Moses did as

God commanded and placedthe "brazen serpent" on a polaor staff. By divine arrange-ent anyone of the Israelites

who had been bitten by the

fiery serpents could look uponthis image and thereby behealed. This story is of course

a vivid illustration of God's

power, for He alone could heal

a deadly bite by using means

that were in themselves ab-

solutely inadequate for the

purpose (Numbers 21, 4-9),

NOW, THE BRAZEN serpentraised by Moses as a divine

remedy for the poisonous bit*

of the serpent was e figureor type of salvation wroughtby Christ crucified. Christ Islifted up on the Cross so that

all who have succumbed tothe attack by Satan (himself

a serpent according to theimagery of the Book of

Genesis) in their journey

through life can look to himand be saved.

All men, by their human

generation in original sin as

well as by their personal de-

fections, are bitten by thesatanic serpent. All men there-fore must look to the Cross for

salvation. Thus, the chosen

people of old are themselves

the symbol of sinful mankind

to be saved through Christ,through whom alone God

grants salvation.

THe brazen serpent as sym-bol of Christ is but one of the

many so-called figures or

types of New Testament reali-

ty which can be found alreadyin the Old Testament. Th*

liturgy of the Church and sa-cred art in general have used

many of these types as clear

expression that the Old Testa-ment is not abrogated but ful-filled In the New. Such sym-

bolism, when understood,shows forth most beautifullythe unity and coherence ofGod's plan for our salvationas unfolded in the variousstages of sacred history.

Our Parish

"I finally got them all off to school this morning, but laterSister sent Jimmie home to get his left shoo."

8 the Advocate November 29, 1902

[ThoAtk^HßelOfficial Publication of the

Archdiocese of Newark and of

the Diocese of Paterson.

Most Rev. Thomas A.

Boland, S.T.D., Archbishop ofNewark.

PublDhcd weekly by Th# AdvocatePublishing Corporation! Mmt Rev.Thomas A. Boland. S.T.D., Pros*Idontj Rt. Rev. Macr. Jamas A.Hughes. PA. J.C.D.. V.0.. Vico

President. Rt. Rev. Msgr. James P.Looney. A M., Secretary; Rt. Rev.

Msgr. Caesar M. Rinaldi and RL

Rev. Msgr. Paul Knappek. PA..Trustees 31 Clinton M., Newark 2.N. J. MAiket 40700

Member of the Catholic Presa

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acrlber to N.C.W.C Nrws Serviceand Religious News Service.

Kdltorla! Hoard: Most Rev. MartinW Stanton. H.T.D., Ph D.. Rt RevMsgr William C. Helmhuchi Rt

Rev Msgr. John J Dougherty,8.T.L., 5.&.D., Very Rev. Msgr,(leoiae W Shea. S.T.D.i Vary Rev.

Msgr Thomas M. Itcardon. L.I.H,Rev. William J. Duffy. S.T.L.j Rev.Hugh J Kltulmmona. MRi Rev.James W. O’Neill; Rev WlUlsm N.field. M.U.i Rev. William Keller*A.M., S.T.L.i Rev. Francis J. Hougfc*ton. S.T L.

JaKTXDlr " ,<’ ri m R,V' *“"V

Pair i .on Itrprr.entiMv.i liar,film'll J. Iluillmrr

Managlo* KRltori Jo.teh R.Thomna

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Much Research

Still RequiredBy REV. ANDREW M. GREELEY

Any attempt to list the needsof the American church im-plies that there are thingswhich ought to be improved.

But often the solutions tocomplex problems are so ob-scure that we have only thevaguest idea of what ought tobe done. What is lacking is notgood will or dedication, but a

thorough study of a givenphenomenon and a detailed

planning program.

A CLASSIC example of thiskind of problem is the ques-tion of the efficient operationof the modern urban parish.The assumption that thereexists a theory which wouldproduce vigorous parishes ifonly pastors were wise enoughor brave enough to apply thetheory is Just not valid.

More Catholic Action, more

participated liturgy, more

communication between cler-gy and laity —but how arethese things to bo obtainedand what happens -after theyare?

We lack any but the mostsuperficial understanding ofthe goals, methods, and prob-lems of the urban American

parish.Until we have made much

greater progress the most de-dicated pastor is going to be

working under severe handi-caps.

ANOTHER AREA in whichmuch more study is needed isCatholic education. The Cath-olic school system is not de-ficient academically, but weknow next to nothing in the

way of systematized informa-tion.

We ought to have a cleareridea of what we are accom-

plishing with our schools as

we embark on several decadesof fantastic expansion. Nor dowe have much of an under-

standing of how some of the

religious effects of Catholicschooling can be produced inthose vast number of Catho-lics, who for one reason or an-

other, do not go to Catholicschools.

In this area of scientificstudy of Catholic education thecurrent project of the Car-

negie Corporation and the Uni-

versity of Notre Dame repre-sents a pioneering effort.

NOR DO WE KNOW whatthe Church’s goals ought to bein urban living. The U. S. is |rapidly becoming an urban

nation, as the giant metropoli-tan centers sprawl out. TheChurch is deeply involved insome of the more immediate

probles of urbanization suchas race and bousing, but sure-

ly our 2,000 years of religiousand humanistic tradition oughtto enable us to do more than

oppose, for example, high risehousing.

We ought to have a clearvision of what the city should

be, of what the good life, thehuman life, the Christian lifeshould look like in the

metropolis.What ought citizenship to

mean in the big city? Whatdocs the Church have to sayabout the cultural develop-ment of the city? This vast

area of social philosophy is al-most totally unexplored.

CLOSELY RELATED to ur-

banism is the need for anew

or a revitalized social action.The various social action

movements do not lack ded-icated people), but they do lack

a program with broad appeal.There is a desperate need forresearch which will clearly re-veal the implications of Chris-tian social teaching for Ameri-

can life.

From such research there

might also flow many advan-tages to. the various familymovements.

In a complicated societythere are no simple answersand complicated answers re-

quire study. To date we havetended to rely on simpleanswers.

Mass Calendar

A P*C ' * Sunday, lat Sunday ofAdvent, lit Class. Violet No Ot.Th "' *»• Cr. Pref. of Trinity.

i TM °o<fay. St. t'rancla

Confessor. 3rd Class. White.C °U. Ist Sun. of Advent! 3

C- **■>• Common Pref.

, * —’ Tuesday. St. PeterCnrysoUiius. Bishop. Confessor. Dor-tor. 3rd Class. White. Cl. 3nd Coll.I** *«»• °* Advent; 3 St. Barbara.

Cr. Common Pr«f.Dee. 3— Wednesday. Mats of pre-

*tpus Sunday. 3rd Class. Violet. No

cL

,i?,r £ r 2nd Col ‘ 81 Sabbasi 3C <P>. Common Pref.

«i2?cl .Thuradar. St. Nicholas.

CSnfr,mor - 3r<l Class. White.Pi'-. 21”1

.

1,1 Sun- °* Advent.Common Pref.

T- %Friday. St. Ambrose,

Doctor- 3rd Class.01. 2nd Coll. Ist Sun. of Ad-

-3 C <P). No Cr. Common Pref.r.? ~

.

Si!urd*y Immaculateplon .2? Virgin Mary,lat Class While. Cl 2nd CoU. Ist

virgin* AdY,nt;

Cr- I>r'< of Blessed

~ Sundjy. 2nd Sunday ofAdvent, lat Class. Violet. No Cl.

«r* 'l* Cr Pref of Trinity.

9L Olorta; Cr. Creed; C fromthe Votive Mass of Holy Ghost; NArchdiocese of Newark; P Dioceseof Paterson; Coll. Collect; Pref.Preface

Letters to the EditorW# turn* and address of the writer mutt be included In

a tetterintended for publtcetion, but they will be withheld if requested.

Family Column

Suggestion

Mrs. Joseph Slowinski,

Caldwell

Editor:

The other day a neighborvoiced a thought which hasoften crossed my mind: “Isn’tit too bad The Advocate neverhad a family column?’’

I pass the thought along toyou for I am sure my neigh-bor and I are not the onlyones who miss a peek into

someone else’s windows. Not

just out of curiosity, either.The sight of others with prob-lems is comforting and theirsolutions many times are help-ful; the vision of good exam-

ple of Catholic Faith well

lived and applied ia inspiring.Of course, you might'have

difficulty finding authors, butif the column were passedaround from year to year you

might find things easier.

While I am writing I musttell you how much our familyenjoys The Advocate: Dadlikes the news; I like the

complete coverage of encycli-cals and papal letters and

speeches; the older children

use the paper for some home-work assignment, and theyoung school children are

busy bees with your constantcontests.

Forty Hours

NewarkDtc. 2, 1*42

Plrrt Sunday •« Advants* cr*d Heart Cathedral. B 9 RidgeSt.. Newark

Anunptlon of Bleaaed Virgin. 344Pacific Ave.. Jeraey City

Our Lady of Mt. Carmel, 239 Her-rieon St.. Kutley

St Stanislaus Koatka, 1000 W. FifthSt., Plainfield

Dec. *, 1*42Second Sunday of Advant

St. Ann's. 103 l«th Ave., NewarkSt. Stephen a. 318 Morris Ave., New-ark

St Dominic's Academy. BloomfieldAve., Caldwells‘„ Hedwig's, 710 Clarkson Ave.,Elizabeth

cl vf,?'?: s,,c“nd st- Jaraey City

City” h 0 *"' 122 T* rry st" Jer,« y

St. Venantlus, 237 Central Ave..Orange

PatersonDec. 2, 1*42

c. /Lr*t Sunday of Advants‘- J °h"* Cathedral. Main andGrand Sts., Paterson

_

Dae. ♦, 1*42Second Sunday of Advant

Holy Rosary, 0 Wall St.. Paaaalc.

STRANGE BUT TRUE

Little-Known Facts For CatholicsBy M.J. MURRAY ctynn.im ncw.c, m*«»m*

Rosary RequestFrom England

Gerald Breen

69 Heriot St.

Liverpool 5, England

Editor:Some of your readers may

have broken rosaries which

are very useful to me in thework I carry on from here.

Beads are mended and sentto poor missions all over theworld.

My last parcel went toa leper colony In the Philip-pines ...

I have just receivedanother appeal from mission-

ers in the ex-communist stateof Kerala.

God Love You

World’s Riches

A Great DivideBy BISHOP FULTON J. SHEEN

The rich are becoming rich-

er, the poor are becomingpoorer.While one country has enough

money to spend $2.7 million on

an atomic submarine, anothercountry reports an increasedsale of candles indicatingthe low standards of living ofits people. Hunger is a greaterthreat to the peace of theworld than the atomic bomb.

The world seems to be divid-ed into two camps: those wholack everything and those whowant everything. Seventeen ofthe 21 of the poorest countries,with half of the world's popula-tion, have only 9% of theworld’s total income.

On the other hand are the19 richest countries, with 16%of the world’s population and

60% of the income I

PEOPLE WHO HAVE are

never satisfied with what theyhave they want! They wantnot money that will buy things,but money simply because ittakes the place of God. There

are many in the western worldwho want money more thanthe starving want bread.

NO MAN EVER loses his soulbecause he is rich, just as no

man ever saves his soul be-

cause he is poor.The great tragedy of becom-

ing rich is that man is apt tomake himself the center ofexistence; then wealth does

not mean larger liberality ingiving, but increased luxuryin personal expenditures. Thegreat value of wealth is that itenables one to create inter-

cessors for his soul who willPlead for him on the day ofjudgment.

We give you a chance to winsuch intercessors now $5,600is needed to build a chapel atIsiolo in Kenya. Help thischapel, and many others likeit throughout the missions, andyou will be building up yourown case in heaven.

GOD LOVE YOU to M.C. for

$1: “I promised God a dollarif we won our homecominggame. We won, so here is myoffering to His missions.’’ ToG.S.McC. for $10: “Here are

the contents of my missionbank for the poor.” To Mr. andMrs. H.F.K. for $7.56: "Wewould like to reinvest the en-closed dividend check in themost important business of all

the business of savingsouls.-’’

Cut out this column, pinyour sacrifice to it and addressit to Bishop Fulton J. Sheen,National Director, Society forthe Propagation of the Faith,366 Fifth Ave., New York, or

to your diocesan director:

Bishop Martin W. Stanton, 31

Mulberry St., Newark, oe

Msgrl William F. Louis, 24

DcGrassc St., Paterson.

Nothing Old-Fashioned

About Sense of ShameBy REV. JOHN L. THOMAS, S.J.

Assistant Professor of Sociology, St. Louis University

My husband and I are disturbed by the way some of the teenage girls in our

neighborhood dress. We don’t want our girls to be prudes, but aren’t there some

basic feminine decencies that girls almost instinctively ought to sense as fitting, justas there are some forms of conduct that mere common sense should warn them toavoid after puberty? We want our girls to acquire these good qualities associatedwith a rightful sense of shame.

You and your husband have

reason to be disturbed by theconduct you mention. It is

crudely and transparently sug-

gestive and unfortunately notconfined to teenagers, for we

find it frequently displayed on

college campuses.It will be helpful to start

with a definition of terms. Bya sense of shame, I mean the

ability or power to experiencethe painful emotion normallyassociated with a consciousnessof guilt, deficiency, or impro-priety.

ALTHOUGH WE usuaUy as-

sociate shame with moral fail-

ures and sex, it is much more

extensive, so that we must

carefully distinguish the feel-

ing or experience of shame

from its contents, that is, fromthe things that are considered

“shameful."The fundamental source of

shame is found in our aptitudeeither to fulfill our nature byusing our creative powers to

surpass our present selves, or

to descend, as it were, below

our true selves by using our

powers for purposes at var-

iance with the ends designed inthem by nature.

Thus as rational creatures

wc can build up ideal images

or ourselves and work to

realize or fulfill these images.Yet as finite creatures, con-

scious of our limitations and

tendencies to misuse our

powers, we are also capableof recognizing the gap that

may exist between our ideals

and our actual achievements.This is the origin of our sense

of shame,

THE SENSE of shame has

been closely associated with

sex, particularly in the West-

ern World. Experience showsthat sexual desire is not easilysubjected to the order of rightreason.

The nobility of sex as

a life-giving power requiresthat It be treated with specialreverence and privacy.

For some conclusions usefulfor education: first and fore-

most, since shame stems fromthe consciousness of failure toachieve a desired obligatoryideal, there can be no shamewhere there are no ideals. A“shameless" person is one

who acknowledges no values

or ideals worth achieving.If you wish your children to

develop a useful sense of

shame in the areas mentioned,you must emphasize the posi-tive aspects of sex, for onlyif they understand and esteem

as personal ideals the achieve-

ment of the positive values in-

herent in their sexual powerswill their sense of shame serve

to protect, warn and conceal.There can be no sense of

shame where there is no sense

of reverence. This goes far to

explain the patent educational

failure of the traditional ne-

gative treatment of sex.

THE SERIES OF adult

warnings, prohibitions, and

“don'ts,” focusing yquth's at-tention on a subtle, powerfuldrive which they cannot ignoreand with which they must per-sonally come to terms, furnish-

es no basis for either shame or

reverence.

Finally, since shame is a

social phenomenon, do not

ignore the effectiveness of goodfamily example. Your daugh-ters will later lack neither

sound judgment nor neededself-confidence if the models

they have early learned to es-

teem are balanced, sensitiveand attractive.

November 29, 1962 THE ADVOCATE 9

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Prexy Calls NSAAnti-Red Leader

CINCINNATI (NC)-The Na-tional Student Association Isin the forefront of the worldbattle against communism,according to Dennis Bhaul, a

Notre Dame graduate whoheads the organization.

Sbaul’a alma mater is oneof several Catholic institutionsconnected with the contro-

versial group. Others includeSfcton Hall, Catholic Univer-

sity, ManhattanvlUe Collegeof the Sacred Heart, SpringHill (Ala.), John Carroll

(Cleveland), Xavier Univer-

sity snd the University of

Dayton.

BHAUL, A Rhodes scholar,spoke at a leadership confer-

ence sponsored by the Xavier

University student council.

Xavier is a recent affiliate ofthe NBA, which has been un-der Are by extreme rightistgroups, Shaul reported.

Shaul attributed the opposi-tion by these groups to their

dislike of certain stands taken

by the organization.NSA favors federal aid to

education, he said, and was

an early supporter of inde-pendence for Algeria. The as-

sociation was critical of thaHouse Committee on Un-

American Activities and sug-gested that its work be car-

ried on by the Senate Judi-

ciary Committee.Other stands taken by the

NSA, which includes the stu-dent councils of more than400 colleges and universities,about one-third of them Cath-olic institutions, include:

Condemnation of racial dis-

crimination: opposition to theCastro regime in Cuba; insis-tence upon the autonomy ofWest Berlin, and condemna-

tion of the Hungarian govern-ment’s restrictions on studentthought and activity.

Processions in India

ERNAKULAM, India (NC)-The Three Syro-Maabar Riteand nine Latin Rite Catholic

parishes here held penitentialprocessions to ask God’s aid

against the invading armies of

communist China. .

FIRST FAMILY - Joseph Paul Blewitt became the 50th baby to be baptized in Immacu-late Heart of Mary parish, Wayne, this year on Nov. 18. He is also the 10th child inthe Blewitt family, making it the largest in the 500-family parish. His older sister,Mary Ann, 12, and his cousin, Frank Reilly, served as godparents. Also shown are hisparents, Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Blewitt (the father with Maureen, 1, in his arms), thepastor, Msgr. Edward J. Sscully, and the rest of the Blewitts; left to right, Michael, 3;Christine, 10; Laura, 4; Daniel, 5; Ellen, 6; Kevin, 8, and Virginal, 7.

Saint’s TargetProud of It

CHICAGO (NC) - Vet-

eran newsman Harry Reut-

llngcr, who died of cancer

last week, boasted for yearsthat he was ’’the only re-

porter in Chicago everchased by a saint swinginga mop."

Reutlinger frequently re-called how he went to Col-umbus Hospital here in 1913to interview a patient. Hesaid he met a Sister mop-ping a floor who told himthe patient was too ill.When Reutlinger persisted,the Sister lost her patience,took a swing at him withthe mop and chased him

away.That Sister was raised to

sainthood in 1946 the firstU. 8. citizen-saint, Mother

Francis Xavier Cabrtni.

Court Trial

For CollegeNEW YORK (NC) - State

Supreme Court Justice VincentA. Lupiano has ordered a

court trial on charges of anti-Catholic bias in the promotionpolicies of Queens College.

JusUce Lupiano held that

findings of the State Commis-sion for Human Rights (for-

merly the State Commission

•gainst Discrimination) indi-cate that the matter is a “ser-ious affair" deserving a court

trial.

CHARGES OF anti-Catholicbias at Queens College, a cityinstitution, were first raisedpublicly in 1938.

The request for a court trial

on the merits of the charges

was made before the SupremeCourt by two Catholic asso-

ciate professors Josef V.Lombardo of the art depart-ment and Joseph P. Mullalleyof the philosophy department—-who maintained that they were

denied promotions because ofanti-Catholic bias.

Justice Lupiano said a trialwas needed to settle the ques-tion of the "asserted pollutionof the academic atmosphereof Queens College."

"Careers and reputationsare at stake here," he said."If the infection exists, it willbe appropriately treated. If itdoes not exist, the cloud of

suspicion and doubt over the

integrity of the college admin-istration can be dispelled."

The case will be tried in theSupreme Court. No data hasyet been set.

Students Build Road

GHATKOPAR, India (NC)—Catholic college student! fromBombay have built a road anda small bridge in this village.

School Facilities

Top Building ItemNEW YORK-Of more than

$1.7 billion spent in Catholicconstruction this year, 38 centsof every dollar was spent oneducational facilities, 18 centson hospitals, 14 cents on

churches and the remaining30 cents scattered among allother institutional projects.

The figures were determinedin the annual survey of Cath-olic Building and Mainten-nance magazine, which report-ed total dollar volume of con-struction down slightly. Thenumber of Catholic highschools built, however, reach-ed an all-time high.

CATHOLIC elementaryschools were built in fewernumbers than last year butadditions to Catholic elemen-tary schools rose sharply.Church, rectory, convent andresidence institutions remain-

•df* roughly the same levelwhile hospital constructionfell off slightly,

Construction at the Catholicuniversities and colleges wasabove that of last year and in-dications are that next yearwill be even greater in add-ing new facilities,

Although institutional con-struction in most areas pro-ceeds at a more or less meas-ured pace, significant trendsare evident in the educational

construction figures. Catholic

elementary school construc-tion dropped from 288 newunits built last year to a totalof 200 built in 1962. At the

same time additions to ele-mentary schools rose to a totalof 530.

High school construction in1962 was exceptional. A totalincrease of 12% in studentcapacity (to be filled in three

years) was provided this yearand if forecasts are borne out,this growth will continue.

Paramus Parish Marks10 Years of Service

PARAMUS The 10th anni-versary of Our Lady of theVisitation pariah win cele-brated Nov. 25 with a SolemnMass of Thanksgiving offeredby Msgr. John E McHenry,pastor.

The parish was created in

1952 with M»gr McHenry asit* first pastor In its shortdecade. Visitation has seen theconstruction of a rectory, con-vent and school as well as therenovation of the former mis-sion church.

Its school, which now houses1,100 children in 27 classrooms,has also been the incubatorfor two regional high schools,Bergen Catholic and Immacu-late Heart of Mary Academy,which held their first classeshere while awaiting construc-tion of their own buildings.

Other activities during theweek-long celebration were a

fair for grammar schoolyoungsters, a dance for teen-agers and a buffet dance foradults.

Tertiarien Ask

For End to BiasCINCINNATI (NC)—Prayer

and action to ovorcomc racialprejudice and discriminationwere pledged by Franciscantertiaries at the sixth annual

Eastern Regional Third Orderconvention here.

Delegates called for supportof proposed fair housing legis-lation expected to be in-troduced in the coming OhioGeneral Assembly, and activeparticipation in local CatholicInterracial Councils.

Keynote speaker was SisterFrancesca of Oldenburg, Ind.,who called on her own experi-ences as a Negro to explainthe urgency of programs forinterracial justice.

She emphasized the spirit ofSt. Francis as the best ap-

proach to solving the problem.She said "it is up to us as

Catholics, to judge all men bytheir individual worth "

Ad-mitting that "a great deal ofheroic work has been done inthe past 10 years toward In-tegration," Sister Francescaadded that "we couldn't hasatisfied with our present pro-gress."

Family Life

N.T'**r,‘ !* cr” Maart Cathadral

l*ar*nt-l(chpol Child «*v JamaaMi-lltiah, Dr. Ann l.urta. 7 30 p m.

Sunhav, D»t slleraenfield, SI John -* Payrholoai.c*l Development ol Child Itev.Jeme. MeHuah. Dr. Ann l.urav7 30 pm

Hidselleut l-.ilt, St Franrtk ParentTeen Itev Jam,, Johnaon. Dr Haymond l.rvep H pin

Nutley. S| Mary-*, llutliand Wife,Itev John (ioldlna 730 pin

Union City. SI Anthony'. FamilySpirituality He* Dominie Marion!7.30 pm

Newark Karied Heart (VallaburaiParent lean i(«v llutiari {i. Ulbnay,Dr. Ann l.uraa. T s3O p m

Dae. al* ||. Patrick * J.r.eyi lit. » nsrii

Nor,h

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ParishionersTo Take Census

JERSEY CITY-Over 600 pa-riihioner* of St. Paul’s Churchthis week begsn to take a

door-to-door census under thedirection of Migr. Lao L. Ma-

honey, pastor.There are now 23,000 p«-

rishioners registered with St.Paul’s, but a great many newhomes and apartmenta havebeen built within Ita boun-daries. For the census, theparish has been divided into29 districts and it is expectedthat these will be covered ina week.

Chairman of tha canaus com-

mittee is Harold J. Ruvoldt,president of the United Parish

Societies of St. Paul's

Carmelites Told Youth

Is Idealistic as EverENGLEWOOD Rev. Quern

tin Duncan, O.Carm., eastern

vocation director for the Car-melite Fathers, wai amongthe delegates attending thefirst national meeting of Car-melite vocations directors

which was hold at Mt. CarmelHigh School, Chicago, on Nov.

23.In eight sessions, the dele-

gates studied the problemsconfronting vocation recruitingtoday.

Rev, Myles Colgan, O.

Carm., midwest vocation di-

rector and chairman of the

program, aaid "we are not so

much confronted with a short-

age of vocations in the UnitedStates as we are with the prob-lem of developing new tech-

nique! of recruitment."It is not fair," he contin-

ued, "to state limply that to-

day’s young people are tooconcerned with cars, steadydating and other material

things to dedicate themselvesto a - religious vocation. To-

day’s youth have aa muchidealism and dedication aa anyother generation; in fact, theymay have more.”

After pointing out the reluc-tance by aome to give up an-

tiquated methods of getting vo-

cations, Father Colgan said,"Some think we may have tolower our standards. Thla is•imply not true. Young peoplewant to be challenged. If we

don't present the challenge,and In the right way, we willbe faced with a serious short-

age of vocations."

FINLAND HAS only 2,200Catholics out of a population ofover 4 million.

10 rITI A D VOC A T £ November 29, 1992

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SIONATURE

Awaiting Christmas

A CRIB MADE SOFT for the coming Christ Child is Pomelo Carlin's goal. For the season

of Advent, Pam will place a wisp of straw in tho tiny doll-bod every time the does agood and helpful thing to prepare her heart for Christmas, the birthday of Christ. Pam,who is 6, says she'll "help Mommy," and dress her little sister, and be very good, sothat the crib Is high with straw by Christmas Eve. Pam is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.

Edward W. Carlin of Essex Fells, and a second grader at Mt. St. Dpmimic's Academy,Caldwell. The crib to be filled with straw is an old German custom which personalizes

the mystery of Advent for the child.

AN EMPTY STABLE waits on the hearth as the Bethlehem cave awaited the arrival ofMary and Joseph and the birth of Word of God on the first Christmas. Above, Pamtalks of Christmas to her little sister, Charity, 15 months old. With another sister, Jac-queline 20, Pam went into the woods nearby to gather greens and berries from whichthey fashioned an Advent wreath, adorned with four candles, three purple and one pink,one for each week of Advent, to be lighted each evening as the family prays theCollect of the previous Sunday's Moss. (Their eldest sister, Trudy 21, and brother Ed-ward 19, are away at school). Pam understands that a purple candle is lighted for thefirst, second and fourth weeks of Advent, and that the pink candle is for the joyous thirdweek begining with Gaudete (Rejoice) Sunday.

THE JOURNEY FO MARY and Joseph and their donkey, from Nazareth to Bethlehem, be-

gins in the Carlin dining room the first day of Advent, and will continue as Pam movesthe creche figures each evening a little nearer the empty stable in the living room. OnChristmas Eve the figures will be moved into the stanle, and in the morning the tinyimage of the Infant Jesus will be there. Advent customs like the empty stable and thetraveling statues of Mary and Joseph dramatize the fact that Advent is a time of expects-tation of the coming of Christ.

ADVENT WREATH AT MORVEN - Gov. Richard J. Hughes, holding hissix-month-old son, Thomas More, lights family Advent wreath in thedining room of the executive mansion, Morven, in Princeton, as he ex-

plains to five of the 10 youngsters in the family the significance of thewreath. It will be lighted to the accompaniment of prayer (the Collectof the Sunday Mass) each evening from Dec. 2, the First Sunday of Ad-

vent, until Christmas Eve. Mrs. Hughes is seated, center. The children,from left, are Patrick 11, Timothy 10, Brian 6, and Honey (Helen) 5.Away at school were Mary (at Sacred Heart Academy, Overbrook, Pa.)and John and Michael (at Delbarton, Morristown). The eldest Hughessons, Richard (in California) and Robert (in Clifton) are married and have

young their own.

Loneliness of Widowhood - and New HelpNEWARK—Widowhood can

be the loneliest thing in theworld.

Even- the widow or widowerwho is surrounded by childrenfaces the solitary reality, as

one woman put it, “of raisinga family without a better-half."

As the couple is halved, the

problems double. How is awidower to provide daytimecare for his children? How is

a widow to support her fam-ily? How will she make sureher sons are not harmed by

lack of masculine influence?How will he handle the spe-cial needs of his little girls?

AGGRAVATING the situa-tion is the fact that the wid-owed often have no one totalk with who really under-stands their situation; in fact,the structure of our society issuch that the widow or wid-

ower has no definite “status,”with the result that even their

opportunities for social con-

tacts are severely limited.After the funeral of a

spouse, one widower observes,"the loneliness sets in, and

even the friends who have of-fered their sympathy don’t un-derstand the adjustment you'llhave to make.

“Only those who have hadthe experience really under-stand.”

THIS IS THE KEYSTONE

upon which anew organiza-tion of the Family Life Apos-tolate of the Newark Archdio-

cese is being built. This Sat-urday, Dec. 1, over 80 widowsand widowers will attend 11:30Mass to be offered in SacredHeart Cathedral for the souls oftheir deceased partners. After

Mass, they’ll attend a lunch-eon at Thomm’s restaurant,and hear the first Cana con-

ference for the widowed in thearea. The conference will bogiven by Rev. Paul V. Collinof Sacred Heart, Bloomfield,associate director of the arch-diocesan Family Life Aposto-late.

Father Coilis is the organ-izer of tho new group, whichhas taken the temporary title,One-Parent Families, butwhich will welcome widowsand widowers who are child-less also. After the confer-ence, participants will organ-ize into area groups formonthly discussion and socialgatherings.

One preliminary session ofthe group was held last monthat which members of a simi-lar group, Post-Cana, fromWashington, DC., explainedtheir organization and itsachievements. Twenty - twoarea widows and widowers at-tended the session, which im-mediately bore the first fruitsof tho new group: "Theywere amazed to discover theywere not tho only ones withthese problems.” explained

James Kohlrenken of Kearny,father of four children and a

widower of seven months."Getting together to air outthese problems," be said, “is

a good step in the right di-rection."

“IT’S NOT INTENDED tobe a marriage bureau," saidFather Coilis (although the

Washington group admits this

can be called "a fringe bene-fit.”).

Acceptance of widowhood(which has always been anhonored state in the eyes ofthe Church) and mutual as-

sistance in coping with its

special problems will be thogoals, Father Coilis explained.

Conferences will draw uponthe 1957 address on widow-hood by Pope Plus XII, inwhich the late Pontiff spokewith touching understandingof the widow’s plight, but atthe same time outlined wid-owhood as a God-given voca-

tion.

"DEFINITELY it Is God’swill.” said Mrs. Walter P.Reilly of Orange, mother of11 and a widow for five

years. “God alone takes csro

of life; there is no questionthat it is God’s will that Icontinue and take care of thechildren.

“God's grace has been so

great in my particular case,"she said. “By the grace of

God things worked out day byday. But there ere some whocan't see things quite so clear-

ly just yet and need some-

one to help them ...”

MANY OF THE widows andwidowers in on the originalplanning are eager to helpothers in their circumstances.Those who have been wid-owed several yean can viewthe problems of the newlywidowed from the vantage

point of the mound of prob-lems they have already seensolved.

“I had to learn how to

shop, how to select clothea forthe children, how to getthrough the first holiday with-

out my wife ...’’ said SteveGarlic k of Waldwick, four

years a widower with threechildren. “If this organizationcan get people over these

humps, it will be a greathelp," he said.

“I’m all for it if it can helpanyone to make that adjust-ment," said Mrs. Charles F.Wear of Linden, a widow ofeight months with an adult

daughter. “The emotionalshock of my husband’s sud-den death was almost more

than I could bear. Prayer was

the only answer. I feel ifthere is anything at all I cando to help people find happl-ness after such a tragedy, Iwant to do it."

A World Mass

Like the FirstBy JOSEPH A. BREIG

I have a feeling that I am

getting the feel of the ecu-menical council from my studyof press office bulletins, brief-ings of newsmen and reportsof interviews with variouscouncil Fathers.

In what I am about to say,

however, I may be mistaken.After all, final decisions willdepend not only on the coun-cil’s deliberations, but alsoupon Pope John and the HolySpirit.

With that preamble, perhapsI may say that my guess isthat the council will prove to

be conservatively progressive.

FOR EXAMPLE, it winprobably give us our own

languages in part of the Mass,but not in as much of theMass as many of us wouldlike. Altogether, I think theoverall likelihood is forchanges in many areas, butnot great change.

My own preference would befor striking changes. I thinkthe people generally arc readyfor them. But in any case,once the process of change is

initiated, it Is almost certainto continue in future.If not now, then later, I be-

lieve that ideas like those ofBishop William Duschak, vicarapostolic of Calapnn In the

Philippines, will be largely putinto effect, and that verygreat good will come of them.

BISHOP DUSCHAK proposeda "world Mass" which wouldspeak plainly not only to Cath-olics of all tongues, but toothers.

Let us note that Bishop Du-schak is not against Latin; as

he said, he loves Latin; "it isand should remain the langu-age of the Church."

But the language of theChurch’s public worship, hofeels, is another matter. Anytongue other than that of thepeople "deprives them of theirright to participate In theMass."

HE MEANS, of course, par-ticipate fully.

He wants to see a "worldMass" based on the Last Sup-per, the first Mass.

The priest, he holds, shouldface the people as Christ did.He should speak audibly. Hoshould use the language of

those he is addressing, as

Christ did. And insofar as

possible, the Mass should bocomposed of Christ's own

words.

Bishop Duschak replied to

three stock objections thatLatin is a symbol of unity,that uso of native languages

might lead to "nationalisticoutlook” and schisms, andthat translation into the

tongues might distort Christian

teaching.

HIS REPLIES seem to me

to dispose of such arguments.He noted that tho Mass he

suggests would consist chieflyof Christ’s words taken from

Scripture —and we alreadyhave Scripture in every lan-

guage.If Scripture can be trans-

lated without distortion, whycan’t the Mass? BishopDuschak went on to ask this

pointed question;

"HOW DO YOU think peoplelearn their religion? In Latin?

They learn it In their mothertongue. Their faith is en-

shrined in the mother tongue.”As to Latin being a symbol

of unity, Bishop Duschakpointed to St. Paul’s Epistleto the Ephesians, whichspeaks of “One body and ono

Spirit . . . one Lord, one faith,one Baptism, ono God and Fa-ther of all . . .’’

St. Paul, he remarked, said

nothing about one language.(Bishop Duschak might haveadded that even as thingsstand now, there are about a

dozen tongues in which Massis offered, many of them lan-

guages of the people.)

SOMEONE MAY ASK whyI strongly desire changes. Thoanswer is simple: to me thegreatest shortcoming in Chris-tendom is neglect of the Massby the people.

Taking tho world as a whole,the masses are not at Mass—-not even on Sundays —and at

least half of those who are

present ore bored because

they have no real and active

participation.This, 1 think, is a situation

that cries for correction. 1 feelmuch more confident todaythan a few months ago thatthe correctipis aro coming.

Parish HeraldsChurch YearIn Advent Vigil

EAST ORANGE—An AdventVigil, climaxed by tho presen-tation in a darkened church oflighted candles, which partici-pants will then uso in makingAdvent wreaths for theirhomes, will be held Dec. 2 at8 p.m. in Holy Name Churchhere. The vigil, held annuallyat Holy Name, colebrates thebeginning of the Church yearand is a spiritual preparationfor Christmas.

A Bible devotion on thetheme, "Christ, the Light ofthe World,” will be con-

ducted by Rev. Francis J.Houghton, assistant chancel-lor of the Newark Archdio-cese. Special guests will be a

group of Lutheran people in-vited, said Rev. John R. Wal-dron, "in an effort to promotebetter understanding.” Couplesfrom Sacred Heart, Bloom-field, will also be guests .

Father Waldron is modera-tor of the parish Family LifeApostolate which sponsors theAdvent Vigil. After tho Churchservices the participants willgo to the school hall to con-

struct their Advent werathsand view a display of Adventand Christmas symbol* sug-gested for the homo.

11

m. m: .. :■ j

TkeAdvocateNovember 29, 1962

Orange Blossom Engagement rings setwith flawless diamonds in all sizes are

Exclusive with KROUPA JEWELERS.

Visit our new modern showroom to in*spect this unusual collection.

PA

Diamond Importer* . Silversmith*Raymond Commrece Building Suite* 203-210

11 Commerce St., Newark 2, N.J.

MA 3-3734 MA 3-0131

OPJN MON., WED. AND HI. EVENINOS Till 9 PM.

- GEORGE H. EITZOIRAID, Sp.«lal R.pr...ntatlv. -

ouJICWKLKIUf

sln<« 1937

Modern Christian Art

At Seton Hall MuseumSOUTH ORANGE - An ex-

hibit entitled "ContemporaryChriitian Art" opened thisweek at the Seton Hall Uni-

veraity Museum and will con-

tinue through Jan. 4.A number of local artists

will be featured, includingRev. Edward Jocham of St.

Matthew's, Ridgefield; Sister

Mary of the Compassion, O.P.of the Blue Chapel, Union

City; Sister Mary Suso, 0.P.,of Lacordaire, Upper Mont-

clair; and Sister Inez Maria

Ryan, S.S.N.D., a native ofSouth Orange, stationed inPuerto Rico.

Among the paintings, sketch-

es, lithographs, samples of

calligraphy, and sculpturesIn wood, metal, ceramics and

papier mache will be thework of Fernand Py, JosephBachlechner, the Hungarianexpatriate artists AndrewOize and Lajos Szalay, andothers.

Local painters whose works

are displayed include Frances

McQuillan, Upper Montclair;Ronald Gashke, Bloomfield,and Damien Horniatkewych,Newark.

A SELECTION of unusual

monstances, chalices and vest-

ments custom made from the

designs of Father Jocham are

being shown. On Dec. 10 at 8

p.m. in McLaughlin LibraryLecture Hall, Father Jocham

will lecture on “Modern Chal-

ices and Vestments." In an-

other special event a film,"Miserere," based on the

woodcuts of Georges Rouault

will be shown Dec. 10 in the

library at 1, 1:45 and 3:30

p.m.Purpose of the display, ac-

cording to Herbert C. baft,museum director, is to show"the tremendous moderniza-

tion and experimentation that

has taken place within therealm of liturgical art since

the lsst war."The museum is located in

McLaughlin Library on theSouth Orange campus of the

university. It is open 8:15a.m.-10 p.m. weekdays and 9a.m.-5 p.m. on Saturdays.

Recent FilmsBy WILLIAM H. MOORINGTwo for the Seesaw (Good;

adults) This realistic item for

sophisticated adults digs intothe details of fornication to

come up, finally, with a strongcase against divorce as a

means to remarriage.

Girls! Girts! Girts! (Fair;adults, adolescents) An inno-

cuous, artificial and franklyadolescent story about a fel-low who hankers after a fish-

ing boat of his own while mak-

ing time and money singing in

a nightclub.

KiO or Care (Weak; family)Watery farce which places a

private eye in a health-fad

rest borne where the medicalStaff seems more in need of

psychiatric treatment than the

patients.

War Lover (Fair; objection-able in part) Indecisive char-acterization and muddled mo-tivation reduce this story ofthe U. S. Air Force in wartimeBritain to a stereotypeddrama about flight missionsand off-duty sex adventures.

Films on TVFollowing la a Uat of film, on

TV Dec. I*7. There may by chansaaIn aoma due to cut. for TV uaa, but

generally the orlalnal Legion ofDecency ratlin a may bo aocaptad aa

correct.

FAMILY

Bloaaoma on PrtortUoa on

Broadway Parade

Boy Friend Rldera to Stara

Caraon City Rio GrandeFlat Top Rocky Mountain.

Flytas Micelle Bally. Irena

Gallant Hour* A Mary

Go-Getter Secret Mlaelon

Golden Hoove. Bwlaa MiiaHiawatha Tarzan Triumph.Home of Brave They WereIt Ain’t Hay Expendable

Night Work Thia la My Affair

One That Got Under Fire

Away

ADULTS, ADOLESCENTS

Abilena Town 1 Uve on Danier

Air Force IntrigueApe Man Lillian RuaaeU

Awakening Love A Learn

Bataan Love Letter*

Blood Alley Man Hunt

Blood on Sun Man Who

Bowery Champa Wouldn't Dia

CapC Black Jack Niiht PaoplaCharter PUot Pin Up GirlCheer, for Mlaa Secret Beyond

Blahop DoorCrazy tor Love Secret, of Nurae

Cry of City Shark Rlvar

Dr. Gillespie's Son of

Criminal Caae Frenkenateln

Dr. Kildare'a St. Benny,the DipVictory Stork Club

Ever Since Venua ThingFabuloua Senorita Tonight Wo BaldFort Worth CalaisGreat JohnL Who ta HopeHe lit ire Schuyler?

ADULTS

Web of Evident#

OBJECTIONABLE

Affair In Reno My Gun te Quick

Captura Panic in Straata

Carnival in Saxon CharmCoata Rica Small Back Room

Eve of St. Mark Star 1* Born

Kin* ofBurlesque 13 Rue Madeleine

Klondike Annie Torrid Zone

MOVIESfgdFor further Information MA 3-5700 or AO 3-0000

Morally Unobjectionablefor EveryoneAbortBoat of EnemiesBis BodCount of Hoots

CitatoPuna tbo Defiant

Damon A Prthlaa

Follow That

_

DroaatOar Purr-os

GlsolGirl of Golden

West

ia*ck^Otamfan#3f

KilterKill or CuroLady is Train*Lonerit D»yMarco Polo •

Mr. Hobba Take.Yfacatlon

Murder. Sbm BaldMysterious IslandNo Man Is IslandRiiur a Dial

RhythmRoso MarioSteel BayonetSweethearts

300 Spartans3 Stooges In

OrbitTrojan Horse

Wonderful Worldof Bros. Grimm

Youn* Guns of

TexasZots

Unobjectionablefor Adults,

AdolescentsBarabbaaatiir auditBird man of

AleatrasBrtdsoa at Toko RlCamillaConvlcta 4Xvrrybodr Go

llamaFlam* in Stroata

GeronlmoGlrli. Girls. GirlsHell Is for

Heroea

Hellions

Kid GslthadMule SwordMin In Cocked

Hit

Milk

Miracle Worker

Mutiny on BountyNlfht Creatures

Pirates of BloodRiver

Please Don'tEat D.tltlc*

Rear Window

Requiem forHeavywelsht

Stasecoach te

Dancers* Rock13 West Bt.

Twist All Nlsht3 Tickets to Parts

Valiant

War Hunt

Written on Wind

Morally Unobjectionable for AdultsAdventures of

Youns ManApartmentBadlaodorsBis Daat on

Madonna St.

Cat on Hot TinBoot

If Man Anawara

Imitation of Lifo

I Think a Fool

Lonrltncu ofLon* Distance

RunnorMinchurian

Candidate

Murder byContract

Panic Year ZeroPeriod of

AdJuatmentPileon That

Took Rome

SapphireSatan Never

Sleep*

Somethin* WUdSunday! and

Cybela

Taste of HoneyThunder of

Drums

3 for Seesaw

Viking!

West Side StoryWhatever

Happened to

Baby Jane?

Where Truth Lies

YoJlmbo

Morally Objectionable in Part for EveryoneChapman ReportDoctor la Loro

JMiuchWitch

Crpar

Hot Rod Gan*llouio of

NumboraIt Happened in

Athens7«aaica

Mary Had • LittleMonjotePeepin* Tom

Splendor in GrassStreetcar Named

Desire

Trapeze

3 Weeks In

Another TownVery Private

Affair

Separate ClassificationA separate claaalflratlon la siren to certain fllma which, while not

Morally eUeaaire In themselves. require come analytic and eaplanatlon atn protection to the uninformed asalnil wronf' Interpretation! and fates

StyloLon* Day's

Journay Into.Pressure PointSky Above &

Mud Below

CondemnedBaV Ar l-" 1- Boccaccio *7O Girl With

Golden EyesPhaedra

New PlaysReviewed by Joan T. Nourst

Cherry Orchard, The—Hand-

some off-Broadway revival ofChekhov’s wry comedy aboutRussia’s pre-revolution gentrywho debate brilliantly buthave no head for business.

Gilbert and Sullivan Brit-ain’s D’Oyly Carte troupe inbrief City Center visit featur-

ing splendid productions of oldfavorites.

Little Me Sid Ceasar com-

ically tops as ail the loves inthe life of a gaudy film queen.Lightly cynical and suggestivein spots, but generally amus-

ing adult fare.

SWEET MUSIC - Listening to playback of their new record,"These Things I Wish for You," (on Columbia) are two

of the 17 Religious of Jesus and Mary who record their

sweet choral music in the chapel of their convent in

Hayattsville, Md. The new album, successor to last year'sbeautiful "Jesus Bambino," includes songs from "The

Sound of Music" and other standards.

Book Review

An Artist’s SoulVIGIL IN THE SUN, by

Marina de Berg. Donbleday.138 pages. $3.50.If you have an artistic tem-

perament, perhaps this la the

meditation book for you. If

not, you might want to peekinto the heart of an outward-

ly bohemian young woman

who loves God very much.

The author is the same

young Frenchwoman who

started her titerary career

with “Heaven by the Hems,”her story of finding God after

years alone, of giving up a

bright dancing career and en-

tering a cloister only to find

this was not His will for her.

In “Vigil in the Sun," Ma-rina de Berg shares her 30-

day retreat at the Dominican

guest-house in France. In her

30 days she includos refer-

ences to the life she has led

since leaving the cloister.

SOME OF (IER passages

are so human, as this one

about a priest who passes herin a church: .. Are my

sleeves too short? Maybe my

ponytail hairdo has displeasedhim? Well, so long at he

doesn’t come near me! I’m

only too ready to lay down

my life for him if need be—-but he simply musn’t speak to

me; I couldn't stand it justnow.”

Other passages seem In-

spired: ”1 know that, fixingmy eyes upon His own divine

eyes, I shall see there the as-

surance of a never-endingfriendship. When I am trou-bled with doubt, when I groan.

when darkness crushes me, Ishall remember those eyes.”

This book is the opening of

a sensitive, creative heart

and mind. The form is oftenabstract—the author has writ-

ten as she thinks, the polishcoming only in the words, not

>n the structure.

It is s book of courage for’his young woman has daredto say: “I do believe, I will

try, I do love God above ev-

everything else.”

It Is a book not easily for-

gotten. June Dwyer.

Christmas Show

For ChildrenNEW YORK Three half-

hour Christmas programs for,by and about children will be

presented on Look Up andLive (ch. 2) at 10:30 a.m.

Sundays Dec. 2, 9 and 16.

The first program designedfor pre-school children willfeature puppeteer Lea Wal-

lace In a story based on the

one-act fantasy, "How theGreat Guest Came," whichtells of Jesus’ visit to an old

German shoemaker on Christ-

mas Eve.

On Dec. 9, Anita Zahn, chil-dren’s dance teacher, will pre-sent the Christmas story, per-

formed by her students in

tableau, drama, dance and

song. The Peloquin Choralewill provide the backgroundmusic.

The final program will pre-sent a scries of award-winning Christmas drawingsby children, with the Paulist

Choristers, a children's choir,singing carols from othercountries.

Television

SUNDAY, OIC. 1

7:49 a.m. (SI Christophers. "Pow-

•r ot Writer," Rosalind Rusaall.7:45 a.m. (7) Christopher!. “DoYour Pert." Deen Jegger.

7:95 e.m (0) Chrletophere.0:30 a.m. (4) falk About Ood.10:30 a.m. (3) Look Up and Lira.

Chrlstmaa Sorias for ChUdren.S p.m. (7) Directions *B3. Catholic

Perspective. James O’Gara.It p.m. (11) Insight, "Reason to

Live, Reason to Dte.">at O’Malley.

SATURDAY, OIC. I• a.m. (11) Christophers. "Ooe-

ernmeni Needs You," Robert Mur-phy.

RadioSUNDAY, DIC. 2

7 a.m. WPAT Chrtatopbara.7 a.m. WNXW Hour of Crucified.7:03 a.m. WOR Marian Theater.7:30 a.m.WHOM—Sacred Heart Hour.n::o a.m. WMCA—At# Maria Hour.a :iO a.m. WWRL—Are Maria Hour.

0:30 a.m. WVNJ Living Rosary.11:30 a m. WERA Hour of Cruet-

rifled. VooaUona.Noon WFHA (FM) Friendly Cor-

ner for Shut-lne, Mary ProducUona.Noon (WFUV-FtO Mass From

Blue Chapel.23:15 p.m. WFHA Our SpiritualMother.

12:43 p.m. (WFUV-FM) SacredHeart Program.

»S0 p.m. WNBC Catholio Hour."Christ and Christian." Rev. Rob-ert W. Gleason. BJ.

8:30 p.m. (WFUV-FM) Are Martaand P.m. WBNX—SL Jude Novena.• r m, (WFUV-FM) Hour of Cru-cified. Vocations.

7 p.m (WFUV-FM) Georgs towsUntvorrttr Forum. -

7 p.m. WWRL Hall Mary Hour.7:43 p.m. WBNX Novena.8 pm (WFUV-FM) Fordham Leo-

lure Series.

• P.m. (WFUV-FM) LiturgicalMusic Concert.

10 p.m. WABC Christian InAction.

MONDAY, OIC. S1:30 p.m. WIOU (FM) leeredHeart.

TUIIDAY, DIC. 43:30 p.m. WIOU (FM) - leeredHeart.

• p.m. (WFUV-FM) Sacred Heart7:30 p.m. WSOU (FM) - George-town University Forum.

7:43 p.m. WBNX Novena.

WIDNISDAY. DIC. S

2:30 p.m. WIOU (FM) - SacredHeart.

•pm. (WFUV-FM) - Sacred Heart7:43 p.m. WSOU UTM>—Christophers.

THURSDAY, DIC. 4

1:30 p.m. WSOU (FM) -• SacredHeart.

S p.m. WBOU (FM) FoUowtng ofChrist.

• pm. (WFUV-FM) Sacred Heart7:30 p.m. WSOU (FM) - Ave Maria

FRIDAY. DIC. 7

3:30 p.m. WIOU (FM) - SacredHeart.

• p.m. (WnJV-FM) - Sacred Heart7:30 p.m. WSOU (FlO Hour ofCrucified. Vocations.

S p.m. WBNX - Nonna.

SATURDAY, DIC. (• pjn. cwnry.no _ Sacrad Heart8:30 p.m. WOR Family Thtaler.

Weil, Back to

Mink Stoles

DAVAO, Philippines (NC)Tho men’s group of the

Maryknoll parish here de-cided to raise some moneywith a raffle, offering a

water buffalo as first prize.“To show off the valuable

work animal and to encour-

age people to buy chances,the men paraded the car-abao around the town,”Rev. Justin B. Kennedy,M. of West Shokan,N. said.

“But the notoriety was

apparently too much forfor beast of burden. Hedroped dead while beingexhibited in the village

plaza.”

12 THE ADVOCATE November 29, 1962

MIAMIBEACH

calcAwa\\sfew, o'' the Ocejn I

jt 163rd Street

“AMtnICA-M HOST/

FUNoannu. t^coißmnonr-MOTf'

Church & Mate Information

ANNOUNCING!THE ALL-NEW

SAINT ANDREW

MISSALS

V %NEW AS THEIR MODERN ART

Simple, tymbolle Illustrations »et the

styta for tho all-now Saint Andraw

Mlaaala—tha moat modarn available,

a lataat change! In rubrlca, adopted

by tha Church for uia attar

January 1,1961.

a Abundant notaa and commentaryexplain the liturgicalyear,

a Ordinary and Proper Prayera trans-

lated In contemporary English,

a Biographical notes on the Saints.

TRADITIONAL AS THE CHIRHOThis symbol which represents our Lord

appeared on early Christian tombs.

It has been chosen to symbolize tha

world famous missal of tha Monks of

Saint Andrew's Abbey—first to pro-

vide tha laity with tha complete altar

missal text. Saint Andraw Dally Mis-

sals have bean used by many Re-

ligious, Seminarians and Postulants,

and relied on over tha years by stu-

dents and educators.

MIKT ttOM THIS! UIIIONt IN A VMIITY Of lINDIN6S,ftICH.

Dally Missal (Large Edition)

Vespers and Compline. Most com-

plete missel available.

Dally Missal (Pocket Edition)

Compact version of the famous large

edition; handy size.

Sunday Missal

Simplified arrangement. Easy-to-use.

, Large, clear type.

Bible Missal (Dally)Avallable Dec. '62

Answers latest demands of Liturgical

Movement. Commended by Cardinal

Cushing.

Junior Dally Missal

For Grammar and High School Stu-

dents. Text In English. Dialogue Mass

In Latin.

I Qo To Mass (Child's Missal)For children 6-8. Full-color photoa.

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European News Roundup

Church Appeal Issue in FrancePARIS (NC) Revelation

of the fact that the Frenchhierarchy has asked for gov-ernment financial aid for thecountry’s five Catholic univer-sities became a campaign is-

sue in the national elections.Secularist and anti-clerical

forces seized on the issue inhopes of defeating. Gaullist

deputies who might favor suchaid.

What happened was that

someone "leaked" to the pressa confidential letter fromPremier George Pompidou toMsgr. Julien Gouet, secretarygeneral of the Conference ofCardinals and Archbishops ofFrance. The letter revealedthat Msgr. Gouet had visitedthe Premier several monthsago to ask for aid for theCatholic universities.

The Pompidou letter ex-

pressed the Premier’s agree-

ment with the legitimacy ofthe Church’a request and sug-gested an allocation of about$1 million for the Catholic uni-versities. But Pompidou added

that this could not be doneunder existing school law,which provides governmentsubsidies only for primary and

secondary private schools.While the release of the let-

ter was interpreted as an at-tempt to bolster the electionhopes of. candidates who op-pose France’s new approachto Catholic education, initialreturns indicated it had little

success. The first definitive re-

turns indicate that the new

Chamber of Deputies will ba

composed in general of depu-ties sympathetic to govern-ment aid to private schools.

’•

Cure ReportedPASSAU, Germany (NC)

A cure credited to the inter-cession of Therese Neumannhas been reported in the Pas-sau diocesan newspaper.

The newspaper said that Sis-ter Eleuthcria EUman of theLittle Sisters of the Poor inZweisel wrote to her parentsin Eichstaett of the apparentcure of the mother of one ofher assistant nurses.

According to Sister Elcuth-eria’s account, the woman was

suffering from a serious bloodailment and was at the pointof death. When she was told ofthe death (Sept. 18) of Therese

Neumann, she asked the Kon-nesreuth stigmatic’s interces-

sion.The sick woman improved al-

most immediately, the account

continued, and was soon able toresume her household chores.She later went to Munich Uni-

versity’s medical clinic for a

check-up. Physicians therefound her blood condition nor-

mal, and could not explain the

cure.

Abbey PilgrimageLONDON (NC) _ Hundreds

of Catholics went in pilgrimageNov. 24 to Westminster Abbey,London’s symbol of Britain'sbreak with Rome, to pray at

the shrine of St. Edward the

Confessor, medieval King ofEngland.

With the permission of the

Anglican authorities at what isnow the principal State churchof the country, they gathered

at the north door of the pre-Reformation Benedictine Ab-

bey and entered to pray at thetomb in which the great 11th

century saint's incorrupt bodywas laid in 1269. The richlyendowedshrine was looted, des-

ecrated and badly damagedduring the Reformation thoughthe actual tomb is still largely

intact within the Abbey.The pilgrimage was organ-

ized by the Guild of Our Ladyof Ransom, which works forthe conversion of England.

PRAYER SEMINAR - Chief figures at the Nov. 25 Apostleship of Prayer seminar forteachers of the Archdiocese of Newark at Seton Hall University are shown above. Leftto right are Rev. Thomas Diehl, S.J., national director of the Eucharistic Congress; Rev.Thomas J. O'Day, S.J., national director of the Apostleship of Prayer; Msgr. James X.Hughes, vicar general, and Rev. Anthony J. Connell, archdiocesan director of the Apos-

tleship of Prayer.

News From LatinAmerica

Outline Church’s Literacy Drive in ChileSANTIAGO, Chile (NC) _

The president of Chile’s Catho-lic Action has said that theChurch’s literacy campaign inthis country will be civic incharacter and nationwide in

scope.

Santiago Bruron will coordin-ate the campaign announced

recently by Raul Cardinal Sil-

va Henriqucz, 5.D.8., of San-

tiago. Chile has a populationof almost eight million. Its il-

literacy rate is 19.4%, one ofthe lowest in Latin America.

Helping to prepare for thecampaign are all the country’spolitical parties, the ChileanRed Cross, Rotary Club, LionsClub, Central Trade Union,Federation of Private Schoolsand Colleges, Parents’ Feder-ation and all the branches ofCatholic Action. Only the com-munists are abstaining.

Voting Duty Cited

SANTO DOMINGO, Domini-

can Republic (NC) Domini-

can Catholics have been re-

minded by their Bishops that

they have a grave duty to casttheir votes in the Dec. 20 elec-

tions, the first free ballotingin this land for decades.

The Bishops expressed fearof voter apathy because the

year of provisional govern'ment that followed the end ofthe Trujillo dictatorship has

seen much political confusionand fragmentation of parties.

This could open the way toCastroist-communlst victory,or to another dictatorship, theBishops warned, saying:"There are parties of extre-mist ideas, both of the rightand of the left, which would

deny the most elementary hu-man and Christian rights,should they win.”

Families Neglected?CARACAS, Venezuela (NC)

—Results of a national surveypresented to the VenezuelanChristian Family Movementshow that spirituality builtaround family practices is be-ing neglected by the parishes,

and that many families am

eager to change this situation.Points covered in the survey

were-the extent of participa-tion in parish worship by fam-

ily groups, parish assistanceto families, analysis of familyproblems in Sunday sermona,and the preparation of young

people for marriage.

November 29, 1962 THE ADVOCATE 13

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Holiday Sermon

Secularist Threats

Decried by BishopROUE (NC)—A purely secu-

larist concept of society issubtly attacking the Americantradition of social dependenceupon God, a Bishop warnedhere.

Such a concept is “alien toour American principles andtraditions'’ and “represents areal danger to which the peo-ple must be alerted,” said

Bishop Ernest 'J. Primeau of

Manchester, N.H.

BE SPOKE AT a Thanksgiv-ing Day Mass in the Church of

Santa Susahna, attended byAmericans living in Rome.Rev. James F. Cunningham,C.S.P., the pastor, read Presi-dent Kennedy’s ThanksgivingDay proclamation.' Bishop Primeau said the rea-

sons for our national gratitudeare “many, varied and sig-nal,” and that President Ken-

nedy enumerated a number ofthese in his Thanksgiving Dayproclamation.

But in a world of “peril and

change,” Bishop Primeau con-

tinued, “we Americans mustbe especially grateful todayfor a form of government

which, until now, has beenable to live up to its national

motto, *E Pluribus Unum,’ andwhich has been able to sup-

port in peace the coexistenceof groups who hold divergentand often incompatible viewswith regard to religious ques-tions.”

“Such a pluralism naturallymeans disagreement and attimes dissension,” he asserted,“but the American system hasbeen able to find agreementthrough the separation ofChurch and State.

“THIS SEPARATION doesnot mean the separation of theAmerican people from a reli-gious creed. Religious toler-

ance and the liberty of con-

science, as traditionallyunder-stood In the U. S., do not sig-nify indifference to religiousbeliefs—quite the contrary ...

“The idea of public ac-

knowledgment of social depen-dence upon God and obligationto Him, so traditional in our

history, is undergoing subtleattack by a purely secularistlc

concept of society,” BishopPrimeau stressed.

“This new theory would have

us believe that religion is onlya private matter—to be con-

fibed to the home and thechurch; that society as such,the state and the government,must be purely secular, thatthe statesman cannot act as a

believer; that he must be freefrom a judgment higher thanthe will of the people or the

party."“This concept is alien to our

American principles and tradi-tions,” the Bishop concluded.“It represents a real dangerto which the people must bealerted.”

TWICE OVER - The victory dinner of the St. Thomas the Apostle Byzantine CatholicChurch (Rahway) building fund was held Nov. 21 with reason for rejoicing. The goalof $60,000 was more than doubled with a final reported total of $133,075. Shown aboveare, seated, John Seibold, campaign director; Msgr. John Bilock, consultor for the

Byzantine Diocese of Pittsburgh; Rev. Emil J. Mihalik, pastor of St. Thomas, and Rev.John Onesko, pastor of St. Nicholas Church, Fords; standing, George Pansurick, An-

drew Galisin, John Cwiekalo and John Kowal.

Weekly Calendar

FRIDAY, NOV. 30

St. Peter's College, JerseyCity Robert Binswanger,Peace Corps training officer,will show new film, “ThePeace Corps,” narrated byDave Garroway.

Our Lady Star of the Sea,Bayonne Catholic FamilyBook Sale (through Dec. 3),9 a.m. - 9 p.m. in Egan roomof school.

Elisabeth Council, K. of C.Annual Ball, Elks Audito-

rium. Charles P. McGinkey,chairman.

Our Lady of Lourdes, Moun-tainside Parish productionof “The Boy Friend” (alsoDec. 1).

SATURDAY, DEC. 1Rev. James J. Kelly Coun-

cil, K. of C., Verona—Tenth

anniversary fall dance, EssexGreen Plaza Auditorium, 8:30p.m.

St. Therese’i, PatersonCard party, school auditori-

um, 8 p.m. Mrs. Daniel Mus-tic chairman.

Blessed Sacrament, Rose-

land Christmas bazaar,church auditorium, 1-9 p.m.

Post 539, C.W.V., Orange -

Square dance, St. John's

School, 8 p.m.

SUNDAY, DEC. 2

Gregory Club of New Jer-

sey, Upper Montclair Dayof recollection; Sacred Heart

Orphanage, Kearny, 2-5:30 p.m., conducted by Rev. An-

drew J. O’Reilly of New York

University.

Legion of Mary, KenilworthFourth annual auxiliary re-

union and tea, 3 p.m.

Third Order of Our Lady ofMt. Carmel, Bogota Meet-ing, SL Joseph’s Church, 3

p.m.

TUESDAY, DEC. 4

St. Peter’s Institute for In-dustrial Relations, JerseyCity Testimonial dinner forRev. William J. Smith, S.J.,director, Thomm’s Restau-

rant, Newark.

Star of the Sea Council, K.

of C., Bayonne Theater

party, “Beyond the Fringe.”

Journalism School

Planned at Laval

QUEBEC, Que—Laval Uni-

versity will open a school of

journalism in September, 1963,it was announced here thisweek.

The journalism school will bothe first at the Universitylevel to be opened in the cityof Quebec.

Priest's View:

Must Stress Right Role of SexWASHINGTON (RNS) -

Modern teenagers need to be

educated in the proper role

of sex rather than the tradl-

tiohal negative admonitions, a

leading priest-social workerdeclared here.

Rev. John Knott, director of

tlje Family Life Bureau,NCWC, stressed this to some

200 clerical and lay delegatesattending the ninth annual

National Conference on Catho-

lic Youth Work.

“IN DEALING with modern

adolescents,” Father Knott

stated, “we need to show them

the reality of their lives as

God created them.”

“They need to understand

that they are made to love'andto be loved,” he pointed out.

“They have a need and a rightto understand themselves andthe growth of feelings of lovewithin them.”

Father Knott pictured theteen-ager as a confused in-

dividual caught between thetraditional American puri-tanism and modern freedom.

“Overemphasis on the nega-tive aspects of the 6th and 9thCommandments solidifies the

impression tjiat there is some-

thing bad about sex,” he said.

The adolescent is likely to

develop a dual code of morali-

ty “in which he parrots backto parents and teachers thetraditional code of ethics butlives with his peers accord-

ing to an unwritten code ofsituational ethics which saysthat as long as you like eachother and don’t go all the way,everything is 0.K.,” FatherKnott said.

to correct this situa-

tion, the piiest suggested, is

“the Christian view that sex

is made by God and there-

fore is good and is sacred be-

cause it is concerned with

giving life and with complet-

ing it in another.”

Paulist Priest

To Give Mission

BLOOMFIELD - Rev. Ray-mond Lorentz, C.S.P., of the

Paulist Fathers Mission Band

will conduct a novena at Sac-

red Heart Church in honor of

the Immaculate Conception,Nov. 29-Dcc. 7.

Services will be held nightlyat 8 p.m.

14 THE ADVOCATE November 29, 1962

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Diocesan Tax Plea Is Upheld by CourtCARLISLE, Pa. (RNS) -

The Harrisburg Diocese hasbeen upheld in an appeal to

Cumberland County authori-ties tor real estate tax exemp-tions on properties used as, or

in conjunction with, parochialschools.

County Solicitor GeorgeStuart held that school-con-

nected realty is tax exempt,but this does not apply to par-sonages or rectories. The rul-

ing is in line with state Su-

preme Court decisions.

"IN THE CASE of schools,colleges, and universities, re-

gardless of denomination, allschool property is tax exemptand this has been held to in-clude buildings used for hous-

ing school personnel, presi-dents and teachers,” Stuartsaid.

Among the exemptions re-

quested by Bishop George L.Leech of Harrisburg were four

convents tof Sisters who teachin parochial schools; anew

high school; eight properties

on which houses had been

razed tor a school playgroundand two lots used tor play*ground purposes and as a foot-bnll field.

The Rev. William A. Spears,pastor of the MechanicsburgMt. Olivet Methodist churchhad entered the case to pro-test exemption of convents.

Smut Law UpheldHARTFORD, Conn. (NC) -

The state Supreme Court of

Errors has rejected a chal-

lenge to the Connecticut anti-

obscenity law, and upheld the

obscenity convictions of twonewsdealers.

Connecticut’s highest courtsustained the convictions of

two Meriden, Conn., men fined

$5O each two years ago inCommon Pleas Court on

charges of possessing obscenematerial.

They appealed to the highcourt on the grounds that thestate anti-obscenity law is un-

constitutional because it docs

not specify that the seller ofobscene matter must haveknowledge of its contents.

The Supreme Court opinionsaid the court has alreadyruled that the statute impliesthis knowledge requirementand this is now as much a partof the statute "as if it hadbeen so amended by the legi*lature.”

Capuchins ReturnNEW ORLEANS (NC)

The Capuchin Fathers, who es-

tablished the first school inNew Orleans in the early1700 sand played a major partin the development of theChurch in this area until the

1850s, have returned to the

city.Rev. Balthasar of Matallana,

O.F.M. Cap., and Rev. Leon-ard of Cegonal, O.F.M. Cap.,

.came here from Spain to serve

the Spanish-speaking.•

Prayer Case BriefsWASHINGTON (NC) The

Supreme Court has grantedpermission to the AmericanJewish Committee and the

Anti-Defamation League ofB'nli B’rith to file an amicicuriae (friends of the court)brief in connection with two

pending public school prayercases.

The two Jewish organize-tions have been outspoken op-ponents of religious practicesin public schools.

The court agreed Oct. Sto consider challenges to reli-

gious practices in the publicschools of Maryland and Penn-

sylvania.A court decision in these

cases is expected to clarify its

ruling of last June 25, whenit ruled against a prayer pre-scribed by the New York State

Board of Regents for recita-tion in New York publicschools.

Moms End Protest

FLORENCE, Ky. (NC)Mothers of Catholic school

pupils here have agreed to

pay the county for transport-ing their children to school,thus ending a daily protestmarch along busy U.S. high-way 42.

A major factor in the sign-ing was increasing winterweather and the possible dan-

ger to the children's healthif they continued to walk fromtheir homes outside Florence

to St. Paul's Catholic School

in town, according to a

spokesman for the parents ofthe children concerned.

Although Boone County car-

ried area parochial school pu-pils last year, this year it re-

fused unless parents paid forthe transportation.

Fears for ‘ Captives*

NEW YORK (RNS) Re-citation of prayers in publicschool would deprive "the cap-tive child” of his religiousfreedom, the president of the

United Synagogue of Americahas told the Senate JudiciaryCommittee.

George Maislen urged .the

committee to oppose legisla-tion which would “compel or

threaten to compel the chil-

dren of America to worship in

government agencies or under

the aegis of temporal authori-

ty.”The Senate Judiciary Com-

mittee, which has held one

public bearing on some 50

bills designed to permit therecitation of prayers in publicschools, was told by Maislenthat the United Synagogue sup-

ported the Supreme Court de-

cision outlawing the so-called

Regents prayer in New YorkState.

War Memorial

WORCESTER, Mass. (NC)A monument was dedicated

on the grounds of Immaculate

Conception Church here to the4,581 men of the U. S. 9thDivision killed during WorldWar 11.

The memorial was build byRev. Edward T. Connors, pas-tor, a chaplain with the 9thDivision during the war. Thedivision has held an annualreunion in Worcester since

1945.

Florham Park Parish

To Note 10thAnniversaryFLORHAM PARK-The 10th

anniversary of Holy Familyparish will be celebrated on

Dec. 8, Feast of the Immac-ulate Conception, with a Mass

at 8 a.m. and a dinner-dancein the evening.

Holy Family began as a

mission under Rev. John P.

O'Connell, an assistant at St.

Vincent’s, Madison, in 1951and was made a parish with

Father O’Connell as pastorthe following year. Masses

were first held for the 80-

family mission in the local

skating rink.Ground was broken in Oc-

tober, 1951, for the church on

a plot of ground donated bythe late W. Lloyd Smith, a

non-Catholic. The church was

dedicated on ThanksgivingDay, 1952, by Archbishop Bol-and, then Bishop of Paterson.

By spring of 1954, a paro-chial school was under con-

struction and a 19-room con-

vent was rising next to the

church. Both were completedfor the opening of school in

September, 1954, with an en-

rollment of 162 pupils, taughtby the Sisters of Christian

Charity.

Since then, eight classroomshave been added to the schooland a modem gymnastun-au-ditorium erected. There are

now 710 children in the school,including kindergarten. Theparish has grown to 730 fami-lies. '

Co-chairmen for the cele-bration are Mrs. -Marie Wei-

gand and Dr. Daniel Scotti,respective presidents of theRosary and Holy Name Soci-eties.

FRUITFUL REAPER - Precious Blood Brother Adrian Bargetakes stock of another potato crop on the 340-acre farm

at Brunnerdale Seminary, North Canton, Ohio. Brother

Adrian, who supervises a farm that saves the seminary$30,000 a year in food supplies, is aided by some 250

seminarians, many from the city.

Class for ParentsTEAN&CK A class for

expectant parents will beginJan. 7 at Holy Name Hospitaland last to Feb. 4. Candidates

may register on the first dayof class at 7:15 p.m. in MarianHall.

NCCM Award Deadline SetWASHINGTON (NC) - The

National Council of CatholicMen has announced that itsCatholic Action Award Con-test for outstanding activities

in the lay apostolate is now

open and will end Feb. 1, 1963.

Eligible are lay organiza-tions of Catholic men in theU. S„ its territories and unitsof all U. S. Armed Forces.There are two classes ofawards: for federations or or-

ganizations, such as dio-

cesan councils of Catholic men

and Holy Name Unions; andfor organizations themselves,such as individual societies andclubs.

Entries must be in the formof a narrative of not over 750words describing an apostolic

activity performed by a groupof laymen with the approvalof their Bishop.

The apostolic activity musthave taken place between 3an.

1, 1961, and Dec. 31, 1962.

Trophies for the winners andcertificates for the runners-upwill be awarded at the NCCM

convention in Atlantic CityApril 24-28, Entries will be ac-

cepted by NCCM Catholic Ac-tiqn Award Contest, 1312 Mas-sachusetts Ave., N.W., Wash-

ington 5, D. C.

November 29, 1962 THE ADVOCATE 15

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Here's a Do it Yourself ContestBy JUNE DWYER

Advent is on its way to sayChristmas is coming. It is alsoreminding Young AdvocateClub members that it is timefor anew contest that .will

brighten the holidays and

bring extra funds to the happywinners.

Addie, our Young Advocate

mascot, has dug deeply intoher contest bag to bring yousomething you will all enjoydoing—and something that will

lielp others too.

FOR THIS year’s Christ-

mas contest the Senior Young

Advocates—the boys and girlswho are in the fifth throughthe eighth grades—are invitedto send in Christmas cards oftheir own design. That meansyou will not use a kit and youwill not copy from someoneelse. This is to be your veryown gift.Asa special inducement

to our older members we are

going to do something withyour cards. Each year we seethe thousands of entries withthe hours of work and thebeautiful results. Each yearwe save the cards for as longas we can, but they have to

\go out to make room forother contests.

IN ORDER to share yourwork with others we are goingto take your cards to the or-

phanages and the old folkshomes in the area. That waysome who may not be gettingmany cards of their own willbe receiving your thought ofChrist and the blessings ofChristmas.

THE (JUNIOR Young Advo-

cates have a double incentivethis year too. We are askingthese boys and . girls, fromthe kindergarten right on upthrough the fourth grades, towrite us a Christmas prayer—-or if you would rather we

can call it a letter.We want you youngsters,

•many of whom are just learn-

ing how to write, to lift upyour minds and hearts to Godand to share your thoughtswith us. Write 4o the ChristChild and tell Him your wish-

es for the world, your familyor yourself. Speak to Him as

you would if He were reallycoming to you on Christmas—-for He is, you know.

THE DOUBLE incentive isthat we are going to use yourletters too. Yes, there will bethe usual cash prizes for thewinners, but all of the entrieswill be placed before the crib

right down here at The Advo-

cate office.

ADDIE has asked for extra

space in the mail departmentand has organized drivers totake the cards to the orphan-ages and homes for the aged.

Don’t .let her down—makethis the biggest Christmasmail ever.

GIVING IN THANKS - The Girl Scouts of St. Aloysius,Jersey' City, saved dues and gave up a Thanksgivingparty in order to fill baskets for the poor. Included ineach was a complete dinner. Watching the girls of troops,39, 69, 74 and 151 load

a bosket are Rev. Timothy F.

Hourihan, (left) scout chaplain, and Msgr. James A.Hughes, pastor and vicar general of tho archdiocese.

Have You

Read ...?

1. The big news in Young Ad-vocate Club circles thisweek is

(a) the Christmas con-

test

(b) housecleaning(c) the swimming season

B. Msgr. Furlong tells us in hiscolumn that vocations to the

religious life are lost by(a) too many tempta-

tions

(b) weak Catholics

(c) preferring a creatureto the Creator

3. The Second Vatican Council

began debate this week on

the

(a) means of transporta-tion to Rome

(b) reconciliation of theChurch and the sep-arated Eastern

Churches

(c) the liturgy4. Msgr. Joseph A. Costello

and Msgr. John J. Dougher-ty were appointed Bishopsby

(a) Pope John XXIII

(b) Archbishop Boland

(c) the Apostolic Dele-

gate.1. Pam makes a comfortable

; bed for the Christ Child by'• (a) sewing a tiny mat-

tress N

<b) doing good deeds

(c) visiting the stable

ANSWERS:I-<*),/>#**16;2-

(c),pngt19;3-<A),page1;<’{n),p*g»1;5-(b),png*15.;

Roselle Scouts

Become EaglesROSELLE Three Eagle

Scout awards were presentedat a court of honor sponsoredby troop 60 of St. Joseph’sChurch. The awards were giv-en to, John Brummer, Charles

Nutting and John Thomas.U is the first time in troop

history that three scouts re-

ceived the honor at the same

time. **' -

Annunciation

Names OfficersPARAMUS The eighth

graders who form the An-nunciation Civics Club haveelected John Gorman presi-dent. Other new officers are

Robert Plattcl, Ann White-

head, Mllcnda Repoli, GeraldCiccone and Michael Bushta.

Hudson Club

Interviews PressJERSEY CITY-The Young

Patriots Civics Club of St.Paul’s, Greenville, will hear a

report this week from a com-

mittee of 10 on the workingsof a newspaper and the print-ing industry. The committeetoured the Jersey Journal Nov.24 and interviewed persons ineach department.

CHRISTMAS SYMBOL - Addie has taken time out to showyou a symbol that can help during Advent: it is a crib,the symbol of Christ's sacrifices for us. Paste the crib on

cardboard, cut out and color. Then each day of Adventtry to do one good deed or make one sacrifice. Write yourdaily deed on a piece of paper and place it In the crib.

By Christmas you should have spiritual straw to keep theChrist Child warm. The dotted lines in figure 3 are to becut and figures 4 and 5 placed in the slots. Put glue on

the tabs in 1 and 2 to hold them to figure 3.

American Heroes Are

Good Literary FiguresCLARA BARTON, by Mary

Catherine Rose; ABRAHAM

LINCOLN, by Anne Colver;BENJAMIN FRANKLIN, byCharles P. Graves; THEO-DORE ROOSEVELT, byJames C. Beach. A DiscoveryBook series, Grosset & Dunlap.78-90 pages. $1 each.

Young Americans from 7 to

9 years of ago have been wellserved with this new series di-rected by Dr. Mary C. Austinof Harvard. Each book is

worthy of a place in yourhome.

The stories arc warm, well-

written and exciting. Theypaint a heritage for youthwhich is uplifting, and in keep-ing with the truest traditionsof Christian philosophy and

patriotic development.The illustrations by E. Har-

per Johnson, William Moyers,Gerald McCann and William

Hutchinson are excellent. Theyare dene in three colors and

are generously sprinkledthroughout the books.

CLARA BARTON is the

young woman responsible for

bringing the Red Cross toAmerica. She is also the

young woman who overcame

her shyness to teach and to

move onto the Civil War bat-

tlefields to help the wounded.

The author has wisely

pointed up the dramatic in

this account, while avoidingthe dull or melodramatic.

ABRAHAM Lincoln's story

is already known by even the

tiny tots but the approach tak-

en in this book is obviouslyaimed at the young and uses

Lincoln’s youth and that of hischildren to add anew dimen-sion to the oft-told tale.

An interesting transition inthis book is an account of

events immediately followingLincoln’s death.

BENJAMIN Franklin ap-

pears first as a boy. With

youth in mind, the author

uses Franklin's grandchildrenas the link when the statesman

grows old.

Notable is the use of quotesthe famous phrases that

Franklin coined to make his

points such as: ’’l hope we

never see ahother warI There

never was a good war or a

bad peace.”

THEODORE Roosevelt's

story seems to fit right in withPresident Kcnnody’s appealfor physical fitness amongyouth. The story plays up the

courage and patience of the

sickly boy who became thecolonel of the Rough Ridersand finally president.

The thread of history is

sometimes lost in the develop-ment of the character and in

the exposing of the moral—butthis is to the good since theyoungsters of today have thehistorical facts in large dosesin the classroom.

In clothing history with per-sonality the author, and theauthors of the other books in

the series, are banking young

readers in the treasury ofpa-

triotism. June Dwyer.

Deadline Near

For StudentsApplications for the arch-

diocesan examination which

determines admission to a

Catholic secondary highschool in September, 1963,must be submitted by Dec.

12. Forms are available

from grade school princi-ples or parish Confraternityof Christian Doctrine direc-

tors. The fee is (3.Applications are also

available from: Rev. RogerA. Reynolds, archdiocesaq-CCD director; Rev. Leon-ard J. Jordick, St. Peter’s,River Edge; Rev. Vincent

Bukowski, Sacred, Heart,Hudson Heights, and Rev.

George C. Lutz, St. Agnes,Clark.

Union Club

Acts BeforeRecognition

UNION - When The World

Challengers Civics Club of St.Michael’s received its official

charter from the Catholic Uni-

versity of America, Washing-ton, it was already analyzingcompleted programs.

Included was the evaluationof a mock campaign and elec-

tion held in the classroomwhich accurately predictedthe Union Township elections.

OTHER projects directed bySister M. Christine, 0.P.,teacher, include sending dele-

gates to Board of Education

meetings, interviewing town-

ship committee members,touring police and fire head-

quarters and conducting devbates.

16 THE ADVOCATE November SB, 1962

Christmas ContestBENIORS: (Boys and girls from the fifth grade

through the eighth grades) Make a Christmas card of yourown design. Do not use a kit

JUNIORS: (Boys and girls from the kindergartenthrough the fourth grades) Write a letter to the ChristChild ifc 150 words or less. The letter must be your own.

name GRADE

ADDRESS

TOWN ....TEACHER

SCHOOL ....TOWN

□ I am a member □ Iwould like to Join

(1) All entries must be accompanied by the above couponor a copy of it.

(2) Entries must be mailed by Friday, Dec. 21.(3) Prizes of $5, $3 and $2 will be awarded in each divi-

sion.

(4) Entries should be sent to June V. Dwyer, Young Ad-vocate Club Headquarters, 31 Clinton St, Newark 2, N. J

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ONE SISTERHOOD - Sister Dulce (left) of the MissionarySisters of the Immaculate Conception of the Mother ofGod paid her last visit In the U. S. to Immaculate Con-ception Convent, West Paterson, before returning to workIn the slums of Brazil. Known as the "Angel of the Slums,"Sister Dulce came to this country to raise funds for herwork In Bahia. Above she shows Sister Leo Joseph, aWest Paterson novice, the insignia of the Immaculate

Conception community in Brazil.

Ergo Induction Closes

November at CaldwellCALDWELL The closing

week of November featuresthree activities for the stu-dents of Caldwell College: in-

duction into the philosophyhonor society, the senior dsnceand three one-act plays.

Nov. 28, during assembly,new members will be nam<Hito Ergo, the college philosophyclub, by Rev. Psul C. Per-

rotta, 0.P., moderator. Bar-bara Brandes, president, willassist in the induction.

The program will featurepapers by Anne McCarter,"The Gift of Council." andCarol Keenan, "The Wisdomof Council.” Father Perrotta

will also speak on the theme.

THE SENIOR dance will beheld Nov. 30 at 8:30 in thereaidenca ball. Marge Bermanis chairman. She la assisted byDonna SadlocK, Marcia Dunn,Jeanne Farina and NancyReagan.

The final event, Nov. 28-29,will be the one-act plays re-

placing the annual threc-actproduction. The GenesUnGuild is presenting the playsunder the direction of SharonSchaible, Kathleen Dcbuske,Judith Henehan and gueat di-rector Dominick Consolati ofNewark.

North Jersey Date Book

THURSDAY, NOV. 28Bergen Paramus District Council of Catholic

Women—Meeting, St John’s, Hillsdale, 8:15;Msgr. Joseph A. Dooling, archdiocesan direc-tor of Mt. Carmel Guild, speaker.

Our Lady of Grace Rotary, Kairview-Spaghettisupper, 7 p m . church hall; Mrs. ConnieSalemme, Ciro Scarpulla, chairmen.

Unioo-Westfield District Council of Catholic

r,#m«

“ IMeeting, following 8 p.m. Benedic-S

»Unden; Mr* Frank Whit-

rock, ACCW discussion chairman, speaker.Mrs. Casimir Kowal, chairman.

81. Vincent de Paul, Marian Group, Bayonne -

Cako aale for school children; 1-5 p.m., audi-torium; Mrs. George McCuskcr, Mrs ThomasPaugh, chairmen.

FRIDAY, NOV. 30Catholic Teachers’ Sodality of North Jersey -

Card party-faahiona, 8 p.m., St. Peter’s Col-lege auditorium, Jersey City; Janet LaForge,Jean Leary, chairmen. Proceeds to Rev. R.Rush Rankin 8.J., memorial scholarship. ,

St. Colnmba’s Rotary, Newark Card party,• p.m., auditorium; Mrs. James Mayer, AnnKurdyla, chairmen.

Bergen-Rackenaack District Council of CatholicWomen Meeting, Sacred Heart, HudsonHeights, 8:30; Mrs. Raymond Caulfield, Mrs.Henry Soule, both of Sacred Heart Mothers’Guild, chairmen.

Bloomfield ColamMeUes_C.nl party-hat fashionshow, clubhouse; Mrs. Ann Conte, chsirmsn.

B ‘- RoM * »ossry, Hsnover- Christines

bazaar, auditorium, (Nov. 30-Dec. 1)- MrsConstance Smigelski, Mrs. Mary Troop, chair'men.

Coart Loyola, CBA - Card party, BpmKnights of Columbus Hall, South Orange; MrsTeresa English, Mary Sullivan, chairmen.

SATURDAY, DEC. 1Dob Bosco Mothers’ Guild, Ramsey Card

party-fashion show, 7:30, Immaculata Hall;Mrs. John Taachler, Mrs. William Jackson,chairmen.

Georgian Court College, Bergen-Passaic Alum-nae Luncheon-fashion show, 12:30, GeneBoyle’s, Clifton; Mrs. Joseph Ficon, Mrs.Philip Duffy, chairmen.

Caldwell College, Hudson Alumnae Mass, St.Aedan's, Jersey City, noon; breakfast, Peteand Domenick's, Jersey City. Rev. AlexanderSokollch, Seton Hall University, speaker; Mrs.Francis La Chapelle, Mrs. Paul F. Winters,chairmen. V

E. G. Alberque Columblettes Masqueradeparty, 9 p.m., Ridgefield Park clubhouse.

SUNDAY, DEC. 2

Mt. Carmel Guild, Essex County Meeting,' 2:30, Ml. Carmel Guild, Newark.Most Bacred Heart Columblettes Card party,

Wallington clubhouse; Mrs. Stephen Firtek’Mrs. Emil Tlusty, chairmen.

Our Lady Help of Christians Rosary, East Or-ange Tea, school hall, afternoon; proceedsfor school equipment.

Trinity Columblettes Major degree, 4 p.m.,clubhouse, Hackensack.

MONDAY, DEC. 3

Holy Trinity Rosary, Westfield Meeting, eve-

ning, high school all purpose room; Mrs. Eliz-abeth Drlnkwater will exhibit Madonnas andshow home decorations for Christmas.

Bt. Mary’s Hospital league, Orange Christ-

mas party, nurses educational building; choirand glee club of Holy Name Church, EastOrange, entertaining. Christmas stockings col-lected for Orange Toy Bureau; Feliclan Sisterato be honored.

Our Lady of the Lake Rosary, Verona Meet-

ing, 8:30, auditorium; Mr*. Stuart Keenan,

demonstrating making of centerpieces.SL Raphael’s Rosary, Livingston Meeting,

8:30, Knights of Columbus Hall, Livingston.Assumption Rosary, Morristown Meeting,

CYO room, following novena; elections andparty.

Sacred Heart Rosary, Vsilsburg, Newark

Meeting, school hall, 8:30.St. Mary’s Rosary, Rutherford Rosary at 8

p.m. followed by meeting; installation of offi-cers by Mrs. Harry Foley. Parly; Mrs. M. R.

Walczak, chairman.Christ the King Rosary. Hillside Meeting,

cafeteria, 8:30; school girls' choir entertaining.St. Joseph’s Altar and Scapular Confraternity,

Bogota Meeting, 8 30. cafeteria.

St. Thomas the Apostle Rosary, BloomfieldChristmas party, 8 p.m., auditorium, followingnovena; Mrs. John Donnelly, Mrs. ClarenceHaubner, chairmen. Gift* will be collected forSt. Vincent's Orphanage.

, TUESDAY, DEC. 4

Holy Cross Rosary, Harrison Meeting follow-ing novena; Christmas party in WisteriaRoom. Mrs. Emil Pomponi, chairman.

Bacred Heart Rosary, Jersey City Meeting,8:15, parish hall; party following.

New Rochelle College, North Jersey AlumnaeMeeting, home of Dorothy Seifert, HarringtonPark, 8:15; panel discussion on ecumenicalcouncil.

WEDNESDAY, DEC. 5

St. Ann’s Home for the Aged Senior Guild, Jer-sey City Card party, St. Paul’s Social Cen-ter, 8 p.m.; Elizabeth Kelly, chairman.

Court Rosemary, CDA Fiftieth anniversarycommittee meeting, clubroom, West NewYork; Mrs. Leo Thompson, chairman.

Holy Name Hospital, Central Auxiliary, TcaneckExecutive meeting, l p.m.; regular meet-

ing, 1:45, auditorium. Elections.Chestnut Hill College, Essex Alumnae Meet-

ing, home of Mrs. Anthony Ruvo, Bloomfield,8:15; gifts forneedy.

St. Cassian’s Women’s Auxiliary, Upper Mont-clair Meeting. 8:30, auditorium; play byschool children. Mrs. John Sullivan, chairman.

THURSDAY, DEC. 8

St. Mary’s Hospital League, Orange Christ-mas party, Rock Spring Coral. West Orange.

FRIDAY, DEC. 7

Household of Martha, Immaculate ConceptionMissiona Exhibit, home of Mrs. L. Sands,Newark (Dec, 7-10).

Holy TrinityRosary, Westfield Pre-Christmas

sale, Rescue Squad Building, Westfield (Dec.7-8); Mrs. Thomas Ure, chairman.

Sacred Heart Mothers’ Guild, Hudson Heights- Meeting, g p.m., parish hall; Mfg. ZmULarotonda, Mrs. Stephen Kulcsza, chairmen.

SATURDAY, DEC. 8

St. Mary’s Rosary, Rutherford Pro Christmassale, 9 a m.-4 p.m., high school; Mrs. M. R.Walczak, chairman.

Christ the King Rosary, Hillside Book fair,(Dec. 8-11), Xavier Hall; Mrs. Fred Perrotta,chairman.

SUNDAY, DEC. 9

Hudson County Ladles’ Auxiliary, CWV Mass,9:15, Our Lady of Libera uuditoriuin, West NewYork; breakfast, cafeteria. Msgr. Charles C.Dcmjanovich, state chaplain, celebrant; ClaireGordon, Nellie Morro, chairmen.

St. James Rosary, Newark Party, 2 p.m.;The Marian Players of Rutherford presentingtableaux of The Joyful Mysteries. Mrs. JamesEverett, chairman.

St. Francis Hospital league, Jersey CityDance, 4 p.m., Union Club, Hoboken; proceedsto hospital.

TUESDAY, DEC. II

Our Lady of Grace Mothers’ Guild, HobokenParty, 8 p.m., auditorium; Mr*. Anthony Ar-

menio, chairman.

Dominican 'Missionaries’ Found Indians Scarce in America’s 1880sCALDWELL Talking to missioneri can be

exciting. It can alto be a conversation filledwith laughter when It lnvolvea two senior Siitera

whose mission land waa America and who have

153 yeara of combined wisdom, experience andhumor to share.

Sister M. Antoninus, 0.P., is 93 years old.

Sister M. Aloysius, 0.P., is 85 years old. Eachof the Sisters came to the U. S. from Bavariato be Dominican missionaries and to "convertthe Indians.”

"The first thing I saw when I got off the

boat," laughed Sister Antoninus at the Domini-

can motherhouse here, “waa a Negro boy run-

ning across the street. I was sure that he was

an Indian... I actually didn’t see my first

Indian until the first world war in a booth at

Kresge’a department itore.”

SISTER Aloysius, who has made great con-

tributions to the growth of higher education inthis area, will tell you with a twinkle in her eyethat “I told Mother Joseph to open a college here

at Caldwell and she did. I waa her pet.” Shewill add that ahe and Mother Joseph (foundressof Caldwell College and former mother generalof the Caldwell Dominicans) earned theirdoctorates together at Fordham University.

Not to be outdone, Sister Antoninus will bequick to remind the listener that she had taughtMother M. Dolorita, 0.P., the present mother

general when she was in the sixth grade at St.

John's, Jersey City.

THE LIVES of the missionary Dominicansreveal the hiatory of the community. FourSisters from Ratlsbon, Germany, came to theU. S. In 1852 and made a settlement in Brook-

lyn. From here another house was formed inNew York City in 1888, which sent Sisters tobuild SL Dominic Academy, Jersey City, In 1878.

In 1881 the Jersey City convent became themotherhouse for the New Jersey Dominican!

and in 1893 land was purchased in Caldwellwhere the present motherhouse now stands.

SISTER ANTONINUS entered the Domini-

cans at Jersey City in 1884. “When I was a

postulant,” she recalled, “we had a little bousein Roseland which was in the country. I was

sent there with three Sisters and three girls . . .

I guess they thought I knew something aboutthe country since I had been raised on a farmnear Munich.

"The first thing they wanted me to do was

to milk the cow but I didn't know one end of itfrom the other . . . and when we bought the

Beach House Hotel in Caldwell,” ahe continued,“we cleaned it and helped to move in (that was

located on the aite of the present motherhouse,Mt. St. Dominic Academy and Caldwell College).One night they asked me to cook. I cooked thefish with the insides in and once used red pepperinstead of cinnamon on the apple dumplings.I never had to cook much after that.”

SISTER ALOYSIUS received her habit in

Jersey City and in 1893 went to Ohio where she

taught grade school for 30 years. After gettingher degree from Catholic University ahe wentto Mt. St. Dominic Grade School, Our Lady ofthe Elms Academy, Akron, and then back to

i the Caldwell campus for high school teaching.Always interested in communication and

culture. Sister Aloysius founded the Mt. St.Dominic school paper, The Argosy; wroteseveral plays for high school students, lectured,waa a principal, served on the Middle StatesAssociation evaluating board and headed thedivision of education for tbe Dominicans.

After serving as community prioress for

three years, Sister Aloysius earned her master’sand doctor's degrees in philosophy and educa-tion at Fordham. <

With this academic training ahe taught atthe extension colleges of Manhattan College,

Fordham University and Seton Hall University.After serving as prioress at Lacordalre, UpperMontclair, she came to Caldwell College where

she is still teaching philosophy.

SISTER Antoninus spent 16 years in Ohio

where, she says, ’’the students are more studious

and the parents are more interested in education

they make It their business.”Sister Antoninus' assignments took her to

Lawrence, Mass.; Jersey City,St. Venantius, Or-

ange; St. Francis, Newark, and Sacred Heart,

Rahway, where she served for 10 years before

retiring to the motherhouse.

Her "retirement,” however, consists of help-ing with the mall, distributing laundry, crochet-

ing and taking her turn as portress.

SISTER Aloysius' opinions are mainly on

educational and philosophic subjects: “Catholic

philosophy is the background of Catholic educa-

tion. There U not enough attention paid to phil-

osophy in secular education because of a stress

on materialistic progress." /

Her Mlsslonland: “It takes a great deal of

faith and courage to fight the forces of our

modern age, both political and social. We must

seek to Instill confidence in God's protection to

keep America on the great peak it is on now

and to enhance it with Its greatest spiritualgrowth."

Education: "We are headed in the right

educational direction but morally and spirituallythere ere great gaps. There are great evils to

be corrected especially for our youth such

things as not letting religion prevail, not allow-

ing prayer in our schools it is frightening.”

SISTER Antoninus spoke warmly of her six

candidates to the religious life and of her

views on teaching: "Boys are easier to teach.

When a boy is corrected he takea it, girlsbrood.”

Worries; "There is no use in worrying;worrying kills people."

English: “The Sisters talked English all

the time when I first came to America so. I had

to speak English too if I wanted them to listen

to me.”

Teaching: "I liked teaching because I felt

I was performing the will of God.’’

WE ASKED the American missionaries who

have liVed to see the fruits of their work, if

there was any advice they would like to giveto those starting out. One said: “Be good and

do what ia right.” The other said: "Look for

the best, get ready for the worst, and take what

God sends.”

It doesn’t matter which Dominican said

which. Tbough the path they followed passeddifferent jruta and gardens, they still share tha

secret of this season and of life: “Peace on

earth to men of good will."

MISSIONARIES - Sister M.

Aloysius, O.P. (left) andSister M. Antoninus, O.P.found a sense of humor

was a necessary tool in

their careers as mission-

aries from Germany to the

U. S. before the turn of the

century. Both are now at theDominican Motherhouse,

Caldwell.

Jersey PlaywrightWins 2 Awards

IMMACULATA. Pa. - The

one act play written by Deb-orah Jones of Pompton Plains

for the Immaculata Collegetournament won the top awardin the contest. Miss Jones, a

sophomore, was also namedthe best director.

CDA Head

Will SpeakInNewark

JERSEY CITY _ When

Court Lucina, CDA, celebratesits 50th anniversary at the

Military Park Hotel, Newark,Dec. 15, Margaret J. Buckley,national regent of the Catholic

Daughteri of America, will bethe speaker.

Miss Buckley, elected to thepost in 1960, will be mikingher first speaking appearancein North Jersey as bead of tbeCDA. She will come from herhome in Betbeada, Md.

November 29,1962 THE ADVOCATE 17

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HAPPY BIRTHDAY - Charles Stanek, drum major of the

Boystown drum and bugle corps, presents a bouquet to

Mrs. Elizabeth Ryan, president of the Boystown Guild, onthe occasion of the group's eighth anniversary celebrationlast week. Harold Bresley, color guard, looks on alongwith, left to right, Mrs. Francis Morningweg, Mrs. MaryKaras, Mrs. Lillian Ward, Mrs. Ryan, Mrs. Alice Brown,

all guild officers.

FORENSIC CHAMPS - Sister Mary Magdalen, principal of St. James High School andexecutive secretary of the Seton Forensic League, presents trophies to first-place winners

at the group's grand tournament. Left to right, are: Gary Reece, St. Mary's (Elizabeth);Virginia Daire, East Orange Catholic, and Mary Jane Reed and Kathleen Werbel, both

of Bayley-Ellard.

In Forensic Tourney

Two Bayley-Ellard Students WinJERSEY CITY—The efforts

of Bayley-Ellard High Schoolstudents highlighted the SetonForensic League’s 'grand tour-nament here at St. AloysiusHigh School last week. .

Two girls from the Madisonschool won first places and a

boy took a third in a compe-tition divided into four cate-

gories. A total of 24 highschools taught by Sisters ofCharity took part in the

•vent.

MARY JANE Reed was

first in poetry reading andKathleen Werbel won the ex-

temporaneous speaking por-tion of the program to giveBayley-Ellard its winningpair. Brian McFadden of thatschool was third in originaloratory.

Originaloratory was won byVirginia Daire of Essex Cath-olic. The remaining top honor

went to Gary Reece of St.

Mary’s (Elizabeth) in oratori-cal declamation.

Placing second In oratoricaldeclamation was Francis Ma-

carro of St. Michael’s (Union

City). Robert Jeffers of St.

Aloysius and John Stcrbaqk,St. James, tied for third. Run-

ner-up in original oratory was

Martha Rzasa, Holy Trinity.

SECOND AND third placesIn poetry reading went to Eve-

lyn Kcnez, St. Cecilia’s (Eng-lewood), and Elizabeth Egan,

St. Peter’s (New Brunswick).June Gecvcr of East OrangeCatholic took second in ex-

temporaneous speaking.The tournament was under

the direction of Sister MaryAlexandra, aupervisor of sec-

ondary schools for the Sistersof \.uarity, and Sister AnnoBernadette of St. Michael’s(Union City), league presi-dent.

Grammar Loop

Awards First

ChampionshipJERSEY CITY Rain de-

layed the North Jersey Catho-lic Elementary Track Confer-

ence’s first championship meet

a few weeks, but when it fi-

nally came off here Nov. 25

there were 675 enthusias-

tic youngsters battling for

prizes.Christ the King (Jersey

City) captured the boys’ title

with 32 points as against 13

apiece for the runners-up, St.

Nicholas (Jersey City) and

Our Lady of Victories (JerseyCity). Girls’ honors went to St.

Nicholas, which had 30 pointsto nip Our Lady of Sorrows(South Qrange), the runner-upwith 26 .points.

IN ONE OF the highlightsof the program, R. Glzzl and

A. Tobia gave St. FrancifXavier (Newark) first and sec-

ond places In a cross-country

run. Sacred Heart (Bloom-

field) showed the best tesm

performance In the event,

winning with 60 points against74 for St. Francis. St. Nicho-

las was third with 75.

Christ the King captured a

pair of firsts, in the 240- and

440-yard relays, but had to

count on Its strong finishes In

other races to offset double

wins by both Our Lady of Vic-

tories and St. Nicholas.

Double wins were popular in

the girls’ portion with five

teams sharing the 10 first

places. St. Nicholas, St. Pat-

rick’s (Jersey City) St. Anne’s

(Jersey City), Christ the Kingand St. Rosa of Lima (Newark)all had two first places.

Session SetJERSEY CITY - Members

of Um North Jersey Catholic

Elementary Track Conference

will meet Dec. 4 at 8 p.m. atSt. Paul of the Cross School

here. Plans for the indoor ses-

sion will be discussed.

Youth

Calendar

THURSDAY, NOV. 2#

Don Bosco (Ramsey) No-

vena to Immaculate Concep-tion starts

FRIDAY, NOV. 30

Mt. St. Dominic Academy(Caldwell) Harvest Hop,8:30 p.m.

St. Matthew's (Ridgefield)—Archdiocesan CYO March ofTalent finals, 8 p.m.

BATURDAY, DEC. 1

Essex Catholic (Newark)Northern New Jersey CatholicForensic League contest.“

TUESDAY, DEC. 4CYO Center (Jersey City)—

Archdlocqsan CYO hobby show,6-9 p.m.

THURSDAY, DEC. «

CYO Senior Yooth Council-

Meeting at Robert Treat Ho-

tel, Newark.

New QuartersROCKVILLE CENTRE.

N. Y. (NC) - The NationalCatholic High School Reading

Program has set up new na-

tional headquarters here. The

program, which previouslywas based in New York City,offers graded paperback booksin a reading list that is supple-mental to a student's classwork.

Vocation Notes

Why Chase

Shadows?

By MSGR. WILLIAM F. FURLONG

Every vocation to the priesthood or religious life that islost and most of them are —is the result of a young man

or young woman preferring a creature to the Creator.

It may be that a young lady decides on giving herselfto a young man in marriage rather than to Christ as herSpouse in religious life, or it may be that a young man decideson a career in the world rather than on a career with Christin saving souls. It may be any one of a thousand reasons,but they all come down to one— preferring a creature tothe Creator.

Is there an explanation? Yes, the young folks involved donot ‘‘think.” At least, they do not think things through to theirlogical conclusion. And, as a result, they have "a distorted

sense of spiritual values.” That was one of the four reasons

mentioned at the first International congress for fosteringpriestly vocations, as explaining why so few young men per-severe in following the call of Christ to follow Him.

• • •

PHOTOGRAPHERS ARE SATISFIED with reproducingwhat appears to the eye. Artists do more. They endeavor togo beyond the superficialities of the material world that sur-

rounds them. They penetrate the physical forms of things.They gaze piercingly through them in order to bring outtheir inner meaning and their shining spirituality.

That is what young people with vocations to the priesthoodand religious life should do when creatures loom up attrac-

tively, enticingly and alluringly to the point of obscuring theCreator.

v• • •

WHEN GOD DECIDED TO CREATE, He had to have a

model. And since absolutely nothing else existed He had to bethe model Himself. Therefore, all creatures are in some waymere Images of the Creator. Why then settle for an imagewhen one can have the Can you imagine someone

preferring a picture of an automobile to the automobile Itself?St Augustine, a doctor of the Church, claimed that "All crea-

tures are but shadows of the divine Reality. Why then chaseafter shadows?” he asked.

• • •

ON DEC. 8 THE CHURCH PLANS to canonize BlessedPeter Julian Eymard. An unusually fine bronze statue of thesaintly founder of the Blessed Sacrament Fathers may beseen in the Philadelphia Museum of Art. It was done in 1863and is considered one of the famous artist’s best works. The

masterpiece was done by a novice in the community of theBlessed Sacrament Fathers Brother Augustine.

He later left religious life and soared to the heights ofartistic fame. The world remembers him as the greatestFrench sculptor of the 18th century, Auguste Rodin. Especiallydoes the world remember him as the artist who did "TheThinker.”

• • •

I HAVE OFTEN WONDERED WHAT KIND of a "thinker"Rodin himself must have been. Because I cannot imagineanyone giving up religious life or a vocation to the priesthoodif he or she really thought the matter out.

• • •

Apostolate for VocationsNewark Archdiocese: Msgr. William F. Furlong, St.

Mary's, Elizabeth. N.J. Telephone: El 2-5154.

Paterson Diocese: Rev. John P. McHugh, DePaul HighSchool. Wayne, N.J. Telephone: OX 4-5750.

CYO Football

St. Paul's Sights Another TitleBAYONNE-St. Paul’s (Jer-

sey City) can clinch its second

Hudson County CYO Football

League championship in three

years this week with ■ pair ofvictories.

A 13-0 decision against St.

Aloysius (Jersey City), defend-

ing tltlist, last week extended

St. Paul’s current winningstreak to five games.

STAR OF the Sea (Ba-

yonne), newcomer to CYO

football and a team that scor-

ed a 26-0 win over St.Andrew’s (Bayonne) last week,will provide the opposition for

St. Paul’s Nov. 29 under the

lights at City Park Stadiumhere. St. Paul’s will meet Mt.Carmel (Bayonne) at the same

site Dec. 2.

Pat Spitaletta and Pete Pa-

hopian fashioned St. Paul’s win

over St. Aloysius and these

two boys are expected to show

the way in the final two

games which are a reschedu-

ling of earlier rainouts.

Frank Pagano sparked Star

of the Sea into the win col-

umn, scoring a pair of TDsand passing for another. Mt.

Carmel, St. Paul’s other oppo-nent, also was victorious

over the weekend, gaining a

6-0 verdict against All Saints

(Jersey City).

WHILE ST. Paul’s Is seek-

ing the Southern Division title;Boystown (Kearny) wilt be

eagerly watching from thesidelines. Boystown backed'in-to the Northern Division title

as it gained a pair of protestvictories.

Holy RosaJ-y (Jersey City)moved into the runner-up slotin the Northern Division whenit edged St. Paul of the Cross

(Jersey City), 7-6, on an 85-

yard run by Art Horan. TomD'Allessandro’s extra pointwas the difference.

Nick lannicculli of Our

Lady of Victories (JerseyCity) became the greatest

single-season scorer In CYOannals when he scored a touch-down in a 26-19 loss to SacredHeart (Jersey City), whichstill hss a faint chance of gain-

ing a tie for the Southern Di-vision.

Iannuccilli’s tally enabledhim to up his season total toJ01 points, breaking the stand-ard of 99 set last year by JoeBurzinski of Queen of Peace

(North Arlington). Pat Ander-

son was the standout for Sa-cred Heart, scoring three

touchdowns, two on passesfrom Jim O’Day.

The defending Northern Di-

vision champion, St. Michael’s

(Union City), recorded its firstwin of the season, a 6-0 win

against Mt. Carmel (JerseyCity).

Hudson CYO Sets PilgrimageJERSEY ClTY—Plans for the 12th annual Hudson County

CYO winter weekend and pilgrimage to the Shrine of Ste.Anne de Beaupre Feb. 21-25 were announced this week byMsgr. Henry J. Murphy, county CYO director.

During the past 11 years, 7,000 CYO members and friendshave visited the Canadian ahrine.

A SPECIAL train will depart from Grand CentralStation at7:30 p.m. Feb. 21 and return to New York at 7 a.m. Feb 25The group will stay at the Chateau Frontcnac in Quebec andspecial bus transportation will be provided to the Basilica ofSte. Anne de Beaupre.

Highlights for the weekend include ice skating, skiing to-boganing, sleigh riding, street dancing and a mardi grasparade Feb. 23.

Talent Finals

Listed Nov. 30RIDGEFIELD Finals in

the Newark ArcbdiocesanCYO’s annual March of Talentcontest are scheduled Nov. 30at 8 p.m. at St. Matthew’s.

Singers, instrumentalists and

others who survived countyeliminations held in Bergen.Essex, Hudson and Union will

compete. Each county will be

represented by four Juniorsand four seniors.

William Branigan will serve

as master of ceremonies andJohn L. Downey, CYO execu-

tive secretary, will direct thefinals.

EntertainmentAdded to Browsing

SOUTH ORANGE — Persons

attending a book fair at Mary-lawn of the Oranges Nov. 29-Dcc. 1 will be able to combine

browsing with entertainment.

Approximately 1,500 books will

be on display. Entertainment

programs are planned the firsttwo evenings and Saturday aft-ernoon.

A turkey will be givenaway on each of the first two

evenings. Ellen Farrell is in

charge of book arrangementsand Karen Luppy is in

charge of decorations.

18 THE ADVOCATE November 29, 1992

This**

You can’t beat a

Christinas Club

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Pirates, Peacocks Schedule

CageDebuts in Coming WeekSOUTH ORANGE—Two pre-

ined student! may write theprescription for Seton HallUniversity's best team in anumber of years, perhaps thebest since the Walter Dukes-Richle Regan club of 1952-53.

Nick Workman, the juniorwho ranked third in the nationwith a 33-point average lastyear, will be joined by RichieDec, a 6-5 sophomore whogained All-America honors at

Seton Hall High School andcontinued sharpening his tal-ents with the Pirate frosh last

season. Both are pre-med ma-

jors.

Werkman, Dec and a num-ber of other veterans andpromising newcomers willhave their first opportunity todisplay their abilities Dec. 5when Seton Hall inauguratesits season here with St. An-selm’s.

ST. PETER’S, which has a

much less optimistic outlook

at this stage,'will debut Dec.1 with Kings College at JerseyCity Armory. The Peacockswill entertain Toronto Dec. 5.

In 1961-62, the Pirates’ main

drawback was a lack of bigmen. Werkman, who IA 6-3, wasthe rebounding ace and ranked13th ih the nation in that de-partment. With Dec and 6-7

Harry Slaton In the startinglineup this yeat, the picturewill be much rosier for Ri-

gan, who is entering his thirdyear as head coach. The Pi-

rates were 15-R in each of the

.first two seasons.

While Dec and Slaton will be

newcomers to the Varsity, theremainder of the regulars arewell-seasoned. Golden “Sonny”Sunket, 6-1, and Randy Chave,6-2, will direct the attack frombackcour. Sunkctt la heclub’s defensive ace, usuallydrawing the opponent’s leadingacorer to guards Chave fea-tures an accurate outside shotand works smoothly with Sun-kett on passing. Both are jun-iors.

WERKMAN scored 793points and grabbed 413 re-bounds as a sophomore. Decled the freshmen with 21.8points per game. He pulleddown 190 rebounds, a depart-ment topped by Slaton with240. Slaton averaged 15.6

points.Behind the regulars are

Mike Murray and Dorn Klein,a pair of seniors who are

pressing Sunkett and Chavetor backcourt berths, and 6-5Joe Barlik and 6.9 Bob Ploci-nik, two sophs who are bat-

tling for front-court jobs.SL Anselm’s has four start-

ers returning from .a teamwhich posted a ,17-4 record last

wason and earned a spot inthe NCAA college divisiontournament. Dave Swann, who

averaged 16.3 points, is theclub’s top scorer. It will be theMcond game for St. Anselm’s,which will face Bates in itsdebut Dec. 8.

THREE REGULARS and

only one reserve are returningfrom the 1961-62 St. Peter's

club, which had a 12-10 rec-ord. Coach Don Kennedy willbe looking to sophomores and

a transfer student, junior Lou

Trivario, to fill out the startinglive.

Two of the veterans. BobMurray, a 6-6 senior, and cap-tain George McNally, a 60

junior, will be starting at

center and guard, respective-ly. Tom Lynch, a 6-5 junior,

may not be ready for full timeaction until later in the season.He is recovering from an in-jured knee. Bob Johnson, a 6-1

junior, is the remaining let-terman.

The leading candidates torthe other three starting posi-tions are Trivario, who it an

aggressive, driving type of

player; 6-5 George Kennedy,the son of the coach whoplayed with the 1960-61 fresh-

man team, and Tim Kchoe,who led the freshman with an

15-point average last year.Frank Heaney, a 6-0 sopho-

more from Archbishop Walsh

High School, is also expectedto tee action in the backcourt.

Tho Advocate's 1952

All-Catholicfootball teamwill bo announced horonext week, Doc. 6. This

newspaper's nominationfor bock and lineman oftho year will also bo re-

vealed.

Eye Relay Honors

Pirates Prepare for IndoorsSOUTH ORANGE They

brushed the early Novembersnows off the Seton Hall Uni-

versity outdoor board tracklast week so that the Piratescould begin preparations forwhat promises to be a reward-ing indoor season.

The success enjoyed byJohnny Gibson’s team duringthe just-concluded cross-coun-

try season they wound upas the number two team inthe east is likely to be re-peated in the twty-mile relayraces which will be contestedin Boston, New York and Phil-

adelphia this winter, SetonHall may even be ready tomake a firm bid towards re-

gaining the world indoorrecord for the event, now heldby Kansas University.

BUT IT would be unwise forPirates fans to expect toomuch of a team which will bemade up largely of sopho-mores and which faces thestrongest group of middle-dis-tance stars even gathered at

an eastern college, namely Vil-lanova. The Wildcats are quitesimply loaded with boys who

can run the 880 in and aroundthe 1:50-1:52 range.

Here’s an idea of what SetonHall is up against. Pat

Traynor, Villanova’s IC4Asteeplechase champion, is noteven being considered as a

member of Jim Elliott's first-string two-mile team this win-ter. Yet last July, pinch-hit-ting for an injured teammateIn the U.S.-Poland dual meet,Pat ran 800 meters (five yardsless than a half mile) in1:51.5.

The one bright spot aboutthe Villanova threat is that,in most meets, the Wildcats•ill not have their top fourboys running the relay. Tom-

my Sullivan, Nell Carroll andVic Zwolak will aU be com-

peting regularly in individual

cup races.

This will leave the relay run-mng to A1 Adams of JerseyCity, A1 Jackman, Jim Orr of

C Mountain Lakes and MartyPerko, with an occasional

helping hand from one of thetop three who may finish hisindividual chores early in the

evening.

AGAINST THIS slightlyweakened Villanova cup oftea, Seton Hall will have per-haps a better than even chanceand may, indeed, find Ford-

ham, Georgetown and HolyCross even stronger rivals.Not to mention Manhattan,which no doubt will piece to-gether a team capable of

breaking 7:40.The most likely candidates

for the Seton Hall foursomewill be Tom Tushingham,George Germann, Kevin Hen-

nessy and Ed Wyrsch, withJim Fischer, Bill Weikel andBailey Anderson the top re-

serves. The first four were thebulwarks of the cross-countryteam, along with distance manJoe Kroh.

Seton Hall should be evenbetter next year in both cross-

country and the two-mileevent. Wyrsch graduates, butBruce Andrews, wbo won theIC4A freshman harrier race,and Herb Germann, George’stwin, come up from the yearl-ing squad. These two shouldform the nucleus of a finefreshman two-mile team thisseason.

Peacocks Shoot

For VictoriesJERSEY CITY - A busy

Season, which is already off to

a fine start, is in store for theSt. Peter’s College rifle team.In all, the Peacocks are sched-uled to compete 33 times, most-ly in the Metropolitan Inter-collegiate Rifle League.

The local squad opened withvictories against NYU andManhattan in that league andwill return to action Nov. 30against Brooklyn College in a

league battle. In addition to 15league matches, the team will

meet four independent foes; itwin enter seven tournaments,and it will compete in seven

postal matches.

Ed Burns, Pete Marsh, Paul

Marsh and Tony Scerbo havebeen the early pacesetters forSt. Peter’s.

The remaining league sched-ule is as follows:

Nov. 30. Brooklyn CoUoso.Doc. T. Cooper l olon and NCEI

14. at Brooklyn Poly.Jan. 4. at C. W. Pool.Fob. 7. N. V. Commercial CpU*4*l

15. CCNY and Paco atMarch I. Rutacra and Columbia!

IS. St. John's) as. ftlayana and Ford-ham, SB. at Brooklyn Paly.

April S. at Klnaa Point.

Morris Catholic

Goes UndefeatedDENVILLE While varsity

teams were taking the head-lines, Morris Catholic's jay-vees quietly built themselvesan undefeated season in thefirst year for football at thelocal school.

A 24-14 triumph against Bay-ley-Ellard’s junior varsity last

week capped a 7-0-1 campaignfor Morris Catholic. Only a

deadlock with DePaul. 66,spoiled a bid for a perfect rec-ord. That, Incidentally, couldbe an omen of what is to come

in one of the big varsity gamesof the future since the twoteams will become Thanksgiv-ing Day rivals in 1963.

PAT LUCIANO coachedMorris Catholic to ita finecampaign, but winning Isn'tunfamiliar to him. In fact. Wis-ing is the thing with which hehas little experience. Hie di-rected the Morris Catholic bai-ketball jayveesto a 20-0 reentfdlast season, his first try ttascholastic coaching.

Jim Primavera haa tabbedhimaelf

as a back-to-watchnext season as illustrated hyhis two touchdown

ruofagainst Bayey-Ellard. {{*scored from 45 and 75 yards,two of msny long scoring playsengineered by the Queensmenthis season.

C'est La VieClose, but no cigar is the

cry of The Advocate's crys-tal ball after a harrowingfinish in the predicting busi-

ness for 1962. Aiming for the.800 level with 14 games re-

maining In the last twoweeks, we needed to call thewinner in every game tofinish with .801.

St. Benedict's and Setonllah managed a tie Nov. 25

for the only blemish in those14 games. So, the final fig.urea show 81 correct and23 wrong for ■ .796 standard.If lies had been disregard-ed, which they weren’t ofcourse, the record wouldhave been up near .850.'

Football Wrap-Up

Four Gain First Unbeaten YearNEWARK A summary of

the 1962 North Jersey Catho-lic schoolboy football season,which came to a belated endNov. 25, shows marked Im-provement over the previousyear.

Whlie a number of teamshad fine years In 1961, therewasn't an undefeated squadamong the 19 playing the

aport In 1962, four schools

produced unbeaten standards,the first in the history ofeach.

DePaul, which appears an

uncontested choice for theNJSIAA Parochial B crown,and St. Joseph’s had per-fect records, 8-0 each. DonBosco and Seton Hall earned

contending roles with St. Jo-

seph's for the Parochial Ahonors with 7-0-1 and 6-0-2, re-

spectively.

ANOTHER contrast is thenumber of teams playingabove and below .500 in thetwo years. Leas than half were

able to finish at or above thebreak-even level in 1961, hut

11 of the 19 made the gradethis year.

With St. Cecilia's, tba de-

fending champion, suspendedfor pre-season practice viola-

tions, Don Bosco moved to ita

first Tri-County Catholic Con-ference championship.

DePaul lived up to its pre-

season expectations with 40and the title in the Big SevenConference. The Spartana al-

so built the longest winningstreak among Catholic teams,14 games. They will be out tostretch that string next sea-

son.

Just below the four unbeat-

en teams were the area's twoBonedictine schools, St. Bene-dict's (6-1-1) and Deibarton(5-2). Queen of Peace alsoclimbed to its best record inseveral years with 6-3.

ST. JOSEPH’S took teamhonors both offensively anddefensively with 235 pointsscored and just 18 allowed.The Blue Jays’ offense was so

well rounded that they hadfour men among the top 14 in-dividual scorers. Quarterback

Jerry. Bcllotti, North Jersey'sNo. 5 point-maker, led the

way with 63.DePaul (207) and Don Bosco

(206) also showed potent scor-

ing punch as well as sturdydefense. The Spartans gaveup just 33 points and theDons allowed 40.

St. Joseph’s (4-3-1 in 1961)led a group of teams whichshowed big Improvement fromthe previous yeer. Some oftho others included: Deibar-

ton, 2-5 to 5-2; St. Benedict’s,3-4 to 6-1-1; Queen of Peace,3-6 to 6-3; Bayley-Ellard,2-6-1 to 5-3, and St Luke’s,2-6-1 to 5-3.

final rbcords

D*Paul

f*- Jowph'. a o o 115 la

2?." 7 0 1 306 40

sf*°" Nall • 0 a 173 48

Bj*l®* ll ' l * a 1 1 104 107Dalbartan 33 0 lot 339 U#*n ot <l3 0 l.lfl 1)3"•'•♦FEUard 33 0 IN 115

o’ !, 33 0 141 ee

J?; k yal»«F » 4 o ill ioi

?*• •’•Wr'a 4 4 1 111 lit

gW i l 8 IS 133

gvtr 8 2 5 ,?i >2BBarien Catholic a a 1 83 IN“•Nj* . lid USISI. Mary'* ISO 73 197Oratory

. 0 8 0 30 378

IMlvlOual icorlne

tlferjrSt- Bcnodlct'a !» 8- *eaSchrooUor, DoFaui 14 0 MDcVantla. Baytey-Ellard It 0 OfVaughn, Don Boaro 3 H as

ST.VSf*1* dtJeeeeh-e I II 13Quarto. Immaculate 10 0 no

HunC* Seton*' HallV "'“' 8 5 K

, 5 8 SiMuMhffi* DePaul 7 o «

: isS&'ST'freZV"** 4* 7°

3

s?ESSIB 5 §iDatflello. SL Piur-a 8 0 30

gorman, St. Potar'a 3 o 30

FwffiiS at uta’i a o 30—lnclude* onetwo-point coaivariion.

TBI-COUNTY CONFBRBNCBW L

Don Boaro3 0

B«rfon CuthoHePop* PluaVluoon of Poaco

Individual Icorlne

Vauchn. Don Bosco *3 * *22Potrocco, Q. P. 3 0 inShannon. nor*an Catholle 3 0 inBoryciewikla Pop* Plua 3 0 13te° w*' I>on Bo#c< > 3 O 12Mahoney. Don Boaco 3 0 12Tyburrxy, Pop* Plua 3 0 12Waller.

Pope Plua 3 0 12810 IIVIN

DePaul*

0Bayley-EUard 4 1O. L. Valley 4Immaculate 3SC. Luka’s 1St Mary'* i »Oratory 0 5

Individual Icarlna

DeVenzia. Baylay-RUard *9 o*l*anfrank. Valley I I SOQuarto. Immarulata ? 0 42

i ? s

INDIVIDUALLY, it waa

Ralph Lilore stealing the spot-light despite his 5-6, 165-poundframe. The St. Benedict’s jun-ior racked up 15 touchdownsand five extra points (one a

two-point conversion) for 96

points. Luke English of St.

Mary’s was the 1961 cham-

pion with 114 points.

Doug Schroedcr set a De-

Paul record with 84 pointsand finished second and BobDeVenzia of Bayley-Ellardtook third by one point with

66 to 65 for Mickey Vaughn ofDon Bosco.

In the leagues, DeVenxia

captured the Big Seven lau-rels with 54 to 50 for BillLanfrank of Our Lady of the

Valley. Vaughn tallied IS

points in his final game to

grab the Tri-County awardwith 22 points, four ahead ofMike Petrocco of Queen ofPeace and Bill Shannon of

Bergen Catholic.

BELLOTTI and Vaughnboth helped themselves to

higher ranks in the scoringrace with extra-point kicking.Bellotti shared the honors for

top point-maker in this de-

partment with Maurice Dul-les of Seton Hall. Each had15 PATs. Vaughn had 11.

A couple of others do not

appear on the list of topscorers, but they aided theirteams with their kicking. TonyRay of DePaul had 10 PATsand one field goal. Tom Scottof Bergen Catholic also toed

a field goal and added seven

conversions. Rich Bcnvcniitiof Bayley-Ellard finished with13 successful placements.

sports spot

Stunned Silenceby ed woodward

It seemed as if a full min-ute passed between the timethat tho official fired his , gunand the coaches, players andspectators realized that the

game hadended with St, Bene-dict’s and Seton Hall dead-

locked.The roar of approval (from

the victors) which usually ac-

companies the signal that timehas run out was missing fromSchools Stadium Nov. 25.

Everyone was either unaware

that it was oyer or unwillingto accept the fact that some-

body didn’t win.

GENERALLY, the fact thatfootball rules permit ties is

good. But, somehow, youcouldn't help but feel thereshould have been an exceptionin this case. You scanned the

field, secretly hoping to see

someone in authority step upand say: “Okay, let’s play an

extra period.”They talk about moral vic-

tories, but real victories tastemuch sweeter and the teamswent into the game so equallymatched that neither could be

fully satisfied with a moral

victory.In some way, though, this

may have been the most ap-propriate result. Each team

enjoyed a fine season andneither had an edge over theother. The Gray Bees mayhave been a little stronger onthe ground, but that was offset

by Seton Hall's passing.

ST. BENEDICT’S was muchcloser to victory than some

persona may realize, but quickthinking and stubborn defenseenabled the Pirates to set uptheir touchdown.

With 1:45 left in the firsthalf, St. Benedict’s took pos-session deep in its own terri-

tory. All the Gray Bees had todo was run out the clock. Se-ton Hall called a time out aftereach play, leaving St .Bene-dict's in need of a first downto kill the clock. The Piratesrefused to give up the 10 yardsand St. Benedict’s hadto punt.

When Seton Hall put the ballin play at the Gray Bees’ 44-

yard line, there waa 1:15 re-

maining. St. Benedict’s hadbeen able to use up just SOseconds in four' plays. Quar-terback John Morriion capi-talized on this, passing to DomZazzaro for a 44-yard touch-down.

ANOTHER EXAMPLE ofsmart coaching came In an-other battle of arch-rivals lastweek. Bergen Catholic waa

bidding for a big upset againstDon Boaco and almost pulledIt off.

With the score even, 6-6, andthe Crusaders driving for a

possible touchdown, Don Bos-co held, giving Bergen Catho-lic third down at the Dons’ 15-

yard line. Bergen Catholiccoach Ralph Pinto sent defen-sive back Mike Brits Into the

lineup with orders to hit theline just to the left of the cen-

ter.

Brltz didn’t make the firstdown, but he did his job. He

placed the ball squarely in themiddle of the field, setting upa field goal for Tony Scott.Scott kicked the ball from the

19-yard line, a 29-yard boot,and Crusader fans exploded as

if they had just finished an

unbeaten season.

But that effort revived Dob

Bosco and it went on to win

on the running and passing of

Mickey Vaughn, who scored13 points and passed to RickKennedy for six more.

■*‘V 9 *■ * ;/

DOTS.’N’ DASHES Anumber of North Jerseyadswill be among the Catholiccollege basketball players who

will be moving into action

soon, but the spotlight Will b#upon Bill Raferty, the formerSt. Cecilia’s (K) ace and statiscoring record-holder, aa hemakes his comeback try withLaSalle. Bill sat out moat ofthe 1961-62 season with an in-

jury, a slipped disc which waa

repaired by an operation earli-

er this year.

November 29,1942 THE ADVOCATE 19

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'In Other Hands'“When my studies in Rome

were over,” writes a mission-

ary in Vietnam, “I was sent

to the Major Seminary (of

Refugees). Now the seminaryis in other hands, so I am avicar in a country parish ofabout 3,500 refugees. Our par-ish is in the most miserablecondition; the church andschool in deplorable shape,r. "The faithful people will

never be able to have a more

worthy church to our Lordwithout your help and favor;they are very poor. So, if youwill, you can help us build a

new church and school. Tenthousand dollars are enoughfor that.”Mission Appeal

In ElizabethRev. John F. Davis will

make anappeal on behalf oftheSociety for the Propaga-tion of the Faith on Dec. 2

at St. Mary’s, Elizabeth,Msgr. William F. Furlong,pastor.

Bishop Stanton, society di-

rector, thanks Msgr. Fur-

long and other pastors ofthe archdiocese for makingthese appeals possible.

Society for the Propagationof the Faith

; Archdiocese of Newark:Most Rev. Martin W. Stanton, S.T.D.Rev. John F. Davis3X Mulberry St., Newark 2, N. J. Phone MArket 2-2803Hours: Daily, t a.m. to S p.m.j Saturday, 8 a.m. to 12.

Diocese of Paterson:Rt. Rev. Msgr. William F. Louis24 DeGrasse St, Paterson 1. N. J. Phone ARmory 4-0400Hours: Daily, | a.m. to s p.m.; Saturday, 0 a.m. to 12.

Donations to the Society for the Propagation of theFaith art incoma tax daductihla.

'Please Help Me

Build a Church'“This is my vineyard,"

writes Rev. P. Fellini, S.X.,from Mwonga in the Congo.“I began by calling my new

mission simply ‘Holy Mary’as a boy might call to hismother for help when lost.

"My parish is a sprawlingterritory with a governmentofficial in residence, a postoffice, a small hospital, anda prison.

“A year ago I came herefull of enthusiasm. About 3,000Catholics are my sole respon-sibility, along with 5,000 cate-chumens and some 55.000 peo-ple to whom I must preachthe Gospel.

“Ip the forest villages it isImpossible to have the exact

population.' People seem to

spring to life from all corners

as if coming up out of thesoil.

“There is great turmoil in

Mwonga due to recent politi-cal events, but this is myfield of work and my mind isset on building a church. On

Sundays I gather my peopleunder the palm trees, rain or

shine, for there is no shelterwherein to say Mass, give in-structions or hold meetings.

“Please help me to build a

church, for a mission parishwithout a church is like a

family without a home.”

Nuncio Back

From HaitiVATICAN CITY (NC) —

Archbishop Giovanni Ferro-

fino, Apostolic Nuncio to Haiti,has returned here to give a

personal account of the expul-sion of a Bishop and three

priests from that Caribbean

island nation.

IBs return, however, Is notinterpreted here as involvinga break in diplomatic relationsbetween Haiti and the HolySee.

It follows the ouster ofFrench-born Bishop Paul Rob-

ert of Les Gonaives and threeFrench priests by the Haitian

regime of President Francois

Duvalier.

(Reports from Haiti statethat a fourth priest has been

arrested and held for deporta-tion in the Duvalier govern-ment’s battle with the Church,which has resulted in the ex-

pulsion of three Bishops andnine priests since 1959).

Set HearingOn Hospital

JUNEAU, Alaska (NC) -The Alaska Supreme Courtwill hear oral arguments next

April or May in a challenge to

an arrangement under which

a hospital built with publicfunds is being leased to Cath-olic Sisters.

The case centers on a hos-

pital scheduled for completionApril 1 in Ketchikan. Votershave approved a plan for leas-

ing the hospital—built with

city, state and federal funds

—to the Sitters of St. Josephof Newark.

However, O.M. Lien, a Ket-chikan taxpayer, has soughtto block the leasing arrange-

ment. His challenge is beforethe state Supreme Court on

appeal from a First District

Superior Court ruling whichdismissed his suit.

Algerians Take

2nd Cathedral

CONSTANTINE, Algeria(NC) The government ofthis newly independent and

predominantly' Moslem nationhas taken over the Constan-tine cathedral, the secondcathedral it has taken duringNovember.

On Nov. 1 the Algerian gov-ernment took over the Cathe-dral of St. Philip in Algiers.

Algerian Minister of IslamicFoundations Tewfik El Madanl

came here to take possessionof the cathedral.

Canonization Due Dec, 9

Blessed Francis- 'Holy Father' to GenoeseVATICAN CITY (NC) -

One of the three personsto be canonized here Dec. 9by Pope John was a "HolyFather” whowas never a Popebut a Capuchin Brother.

To the people of Genoa,Blessed Francis Mary Croeseof Camporosso was known dur-

ing his life as “the Holy Fath-er.” Even today, almost 100

years after his death, manyGenoese know Brother Francis

Mary only by that title.

THE NEW St. Francis, likethe founder of the Franciscans,was never ordained. He hadlittle education and spent most

of his life begging on the

streets of Genoa. Yet he isacclaimed as a savior of thatItalian port city and devotionto him has been constant andardent.

The new saint was born in

1804 in the small Italian vil-

lage of Camporosso, and was

baptized John. His parents

were poor farmers.

At 18, John entered the mon-

astery of the Conventual Fran-ciscans at Sestri Poncntc on a

trial basis and took the nameof Brother Anthony. Twice he

unsuccessfully sought permis-sion to transfer to the Capu-chins. In 1825, he fled the Con-ventual monastery and walkedto the Capuchin monastery of

St. Francis at Voltrl where he

was accepted as a novice.

IN DECEMBER of the same

year he was transferred to the

monastery of St. Barnabas inGenoa and continued his no-

vitiate. He took the name ofBrother Francis and added the

name Mary. According to Cap-uchin custom he added the

name of his birthplace "Cam-

porosso.” At the age of 22 hetook his religious vows and a

few months later he was trans-ferred to the Capuchin mon-

astery of the Conception, alsoin Genoa, where he lived forthe rest of his life.

He first worked in the kit-chen and later the infirmary.

BECOMING A begging Broth-

er for. his community, he was

assigned a section of Genoa,and lived in a cellar.

Genoa was often the scene

of violence. There was much

anti-clericalism as well as hat-

red of the Pope.

The young Brother, however,was successful in carrying out

his task from the first, but

not always without incident.One day a group of young men

passed him and, after insultinghim, one of them picked up a

rock and threw it at him.

Blessed Francis was struck

on the head. He picked the

stone up and kissed it. His

action made the groupashamed and the youths asked

his pardon.

IN 1832 HE WAS assigned to

another section of the city.Gradually bis fame grew. Peo-

ple would ask his advice, beghim to pray for them or to

stop and talk over family and

even business decisions.His reputation for saintliness

was growing. There were manystories of his powers to read

hearts and to make accurate

predictions of things to come.

Numerous cures were attrib-

uted to him and he becameknown to all Genoa as “the

Holy Father.”

AMONG THE miracles at-

tributed to his intercession

even during his lifetime is one

called "the mystery of the let-

ter." This concerned a poorwidow whose only son was in

America and who sent his

mother a small amount of

money monthly to support her.

At one point his letters and re-

mittances ceased and tho wom-

an became convinced her son

had met with an accident.

She went to the monastery

intending to ask Blessed Fran-

cis to bless a letter addressed

to her son. When she confided

her fears to him, Blessed

Francis remained silent for a

few moments and then assured

well but that she would see

him soon.

He then told her to give himthe letter which she had

forgot to mention —and thathe would sec that it was de-livered before her son leftAmerica.

Within a few weeks her sonreturned to Genoa and told herthat he had been given a let-ter from her just before hesailed by a tall Franciscan.The son told his mother hehad departed the same dayshe had gone to see Francis.

A few days later BlessedFrancis came to collect almsand the boy cried, "It’s theBrother who brought your let-ter.”

MANY OF THE rumors ofmiracles attributed to BrotherFrancis were in connectionwith sailors, for he had a spe-cial affection for them. Theycarried news of his prodigiesto distant lands and his fame

spread across oceans.

He is hailed as a savior ofthe city because in the year ofhis death, 1866, Genoa was hit

by anoutbreak of cholera. Theher that her son was not onlv

Capuchin Brother offered his

life to God and prayed to Him

to lift the epidemic.On Sept. 17 he died, a vic-

tim of cholera, while thousands

of the town's citizens stood in

front of his monastery pray-ing that he be spared.

Blessed Francis practicedpenance with great austerity.He refused medical care even

after a disease he had con-

tracted caused open sores.Near the end of his life, his

superiors ordered him to ac-

cept treatment.

THE INITIAL process forhis beatification was opened in

1878 and was officially intro-

duced before the Sacred Con-

gregation of Rites in 1896. He

was beatified by Pope Pius XI

June 30, 1929.

The present Archbishop of

Genoa, Giuseppe Cardinal Siri,attributes his own cure to theintercession of Blessed Francis

on the day his beatification

took place.Cardinal Siri, then a newly

ordained priest, had attended

the beatification ceremonies inSt. Peter’s and then joined a

group of persons in a horse-drawn vehicle. Outside of

Rome the horse bolted and the

young Father Siri was thrown

out of the vehicle.

Doctors diagnosed his condi-

tion as serious, a possible skull

fracture. They said that if he

recovered he would likely be

mentaly deranged for the restof his life.

The then Archbishop ofGenoa hastened to his bedside,carrying with him a relic ofBlessed Francis which be

touched to the priest’s head.The following morning FatherSiri was in excellent condition

and after three days’ rest he

was up and on his way back

to Genoa.

Second of three articles

on the new saints

BLESSED FRANCIS

20 THE ADVOCATE November M, 1962

lWEDDING and FUNERAL DESIGNS!

f n«waf» TnUgraphtd Anywhara

WASHINGTON FLORISTIncorporalnd

Mltch.ll 2-o*2l

*345 HOAD STREET NEWARK, N.J..

Monument* mado of granite from the Rock of Age*

Quarry -EL Smith Quarry - Barr* Guild Monument*.

Sabre!1 GUILD J

* VISITORS WELCOME

I Our manufacturing plant <thowrgom at 12* tidg. R a

I Nortli Arlington, Uagon to

tlayt a wook.

Tfca BARM OUIID CortHknto af |QwoWty it a binding guarantee la

,*• purchaser and hit heir* tor- Iotror and for all timoi. No ttrongor

con bo written.

•'•'".JL!''"**

Guaionlood by^Housekeeping

ALBERT H. HOPPER, Inc.

MONUMINTS • mausoleums WY 1-2266-67RIDGE ROAD NO. ARIINOTON, NJ.

OppeiHo Holy Croti Comotory

Help Students to Become PriestsSl.OO WILL MAINTAIN A STUDENT FOR ONE DAY

WILL YOU HELP HIM ALONG?

In our Divine Word Seminaries in India, Philippinesand Japan, we have a number of students preparingfor thepriesthood. MANY ARE VERY POOR and needfinancial help to continue their studies.

—-—- TI AR OFF

D*ar Fottwn

Enclosed find $_ for sponsoring e studentto the priesthood for days. A

NAM* (Hnm plot)

—ION*. ITATI

r

m

IMAIL TO

HELP HIM TO REACH HIS GOAL

REV. FATHER RALPH, nat l. dir.

S.V.D. Catholic Univursitics

316 N. MICHIGAN CHICAGO 1

WEEK-END RETREATS

FOR THE LAITYSMND A WUKIND WITH OOD

For: MEN, WOMEN,HUSBAND and WIFE

lolal pJoft Abb*yMoom moko rturvatloni aorly

Writ* lor Information loi

DIRECTOR Of RITRtATf

St. fnl’t Abbey, NntN, NJ.

Memo For Christ mas ShoppersChrist

MAS IS A HOLVDAI, not Jut ■ holiday. If.on* (Irantie birthday party—and the birth-

day wa celebrate la Christ'.. .

.Christmas

entlally religions . . . Christmas la thaChrist-Maaa ...The glfte wa eichania

at Christmas—ought they not be help-ful to RellfionT .

. . Kelliious fifta

are best because they do wbat Christ__ dld - They reed the huntry in the

Wif ■ /wB jjJ Holy I,and (the I‘slrstinr refufees, for

Instance), clothe the naked (the Be-

douins In south Jordan). Instruct tha

ifnorant (In Catholic mission schools),provide Mass and the sacraments for

the poorest of Christ's poor (In paiaa

INDIA, IRAN, EGYPT. IRAQ) . . .

Could any fifta be moreselfleta, moreChrist-Uke?

. . . Think about this be-

fore you do your Christmas shopplnf. We can do allyour shop-

pin* foryou (by means of our CHRISTMAS GIFT CARDS). If

you but say the word.

. . The people who receive the GIFTCARDS you tell us to send, will know they’re beneflttlnf spir-itually all year lonf. They’ll know that somewhere, In their■am*. Christ’s work foes on. You’ll know, too. that—thanks toyou—human misery la not what It mlfht have been

. ..

What

more could on*ask at Christmas?

7hr Htfy Fathfr't Minim Aid

f" ti* Orxnula*nb

OUR Christ MAS GIFT CARDS

ARE ATTRACTIVE, ARTISTIC. INDIVIDUALIZED. Theymake It easy for you to shop ... Simply select a gift from thosewe’ve listed below—and send us, with your donation, the nameand address of the person in whose name you Intend the giftW* do all the rest W* send that person a GIFT CARDprompt-ly, explaining what you have done ... HERE ARE SOME GIITSTO SELECT FROM:

□ FEED A FAMILY FOR A MONTH. The Palestine Refugees(Arabs exiled by the Arab-Israell War of 1848) live In refuge*camps In LEBANON. JORDAN, SYRIA, and GAZA. They needfood, clothing, medicine, a place to sleep ...TO FEED A REF-UGEE FAMILY FOR A MONTH COSTS $lO ...Asa token ofour thanks, we’ll send you an Olive Wood Rosary from the HolyLand.

□ DON’T LET THE BEDOUINS FREEZE. Thousands of BE-DOUINS (tent-dwellers In the desert in SOUTH JORDAN)nearly froze to death last winter because they had no blanket..Wa can provide blanket, for them at $2 each . . . Mindful ofChriat, Who wa* cold In Bethlehem, will you give one blanket,ten, or more?□ HAVE MASSES OFFERED FOR THE LIVING AND DR-CEASED. Our missionary priesta will be pleased to offerpromptly the Masses you request The offering you make Istheir principal means of support . „. We’ll be pleased to sendGIFT CARDS, at your request□ DONATE AN ARTICLE FOR A MISSION CHAPEL. For

years to come these articles will serve God and souls, In (haname of the person you designate: VESTMENTS ($5O), a MON-STRANCE ($4O). CHALICE ($4O). CIBORIUM ($4O). TABER-NACLE ($25), CRUCIFIX ($25), STATIONS OF THE CROSS(s2f!. CENSER ($2O), SANCTUARY LAMP ($l5). ALTARLINENS ($l5), SANCTUARY BELL ($5).□ ENROLL YOUR FAMILY, YOUR FRIENDS. IN THIS MIS-SION AID SOCIETY. Tha spiritual benefits are Incalculable.Families are enrolled as annual ($5) or perpetual ($lOOl mem-

bers. Individuals—both living and deceased—may be enrolled,too. The offering for Individual membership Is $1 (annual) or

$2O (perpetual).

□ HELP US—IN THE NAME OF THE PERSON YOU DES-IGNATE. - TO BUILD A MISSION CHAPEL. CLINIC, ORSCHOOL. We can build a mission school, for Instance, for$2,500—what It costs In thin country for one classroom! Send us

your donation, large or small. We’ll earmark It for use whereIt's needed most—and tell you where It’s being used,

l^2ear£ist(nissionsjM«ANCIJ CARDINAL SNUMAN, President

Megr. Joseph T. Ryan, Notl W,so«d *■ eooMMoUosioae foi

eon^™,01 C N,A* ,A,T WII'ARI ASSOCIATION410 Lexington Avo. at 46th St. Now Yorit 17. N. Y.'

As LongAs YouLivekwsus*:.!GOOD incom il

70a teviit your nr>

liffi ii ««r J

K&ANNumr^Th aim Am In tha

*-■

IrotlMn tor

i idYiataiM.

[emorUl ind.

la aaarl

ftftlli

FtHI INFORMATION

SOCIETY OF

THE DIVINE WORDArndt? Drat GKAKD. FA

CHRISTMAS GRAVE PILLOWSMad* of froth cut *v*rgr*«ni, nlc*ly trimmed

On dliplay at our ihowroom

FLOWERS BY J

317 Ridge Rd., North AHington WY 8-6858

Call or write for placement on the resting placeof your loved one in Holy Cross Cemetery

InTime of Need

Consult Your Catholic Funeral Director

Whose carefuland understandingservice is in accord with

the traditions of Holy Mother Church

BERGEN COUNTY

TRINKA FUNERAL SERVICE

MAYWOOD • BOGOTA

LITTLE FERRY

HUbbard 7-3050VOLK FUNERAL HOMES

TEANECKi TE 6-0202

BOGOTA) HU 9-2202

JOHN J. FEENEY ft SONS232 FRANKLIN AVENUE

RIDGEWOOD, N. J.

Gilbert 4-7650GORMLEY FUNERAL HOME

335 UNION STREET

HACKENSACK, NJ.

HUbbard 7-1010

CLIFFORD H. PEINECKE

1321 TEANECK ROADWEST ENGLEWOOD, N. J.

FRANCIS X. FAHEY,

ManagerTE 7-2332

THOMAS J. DIFFIIY

41 AMES AVENUE

RUTHERFORD, N. J.

WEbtter 9-0098

HENNESSEY

FUNERAL HOME

232 KIPP AVENUE

HASBROUCK HEIGHTS, N, J.

ATlat 8-1362

KSfX COUNTY

FLOOD FUNERAL HOME

Andrew W. Flood, Mgr.112 So. Munn Ave.

Ea»t Orange, N. J.ORange 4-4445

MArket 2-2530

CODEY'S FUNERAL SERVICE69 HIGH STREET

ORANGE, N. J.

ORange 4-7554

HUELSENBECKMEMORIAL HOME

1108 So. Orange Ave.

Newark 6, N. J.Karl W. Huelienbeck

DirectorEStex 2-1600

CODEY'S FUNERAL SERVICE77 PARK STREET

MONTCLAIR, N. J.Pilgrim 4-0005

DECAFUA FUNERAL HOME

269 MT. PROSPECT AVE.

NEWARK, N. J.

HUmboldt 2-3333

OEOROE AHR ft SON700 NYE AVENUE

IRVINGTON, N. J.

EStex 3-1020

REZEM FUNERAL HOME

579 Grove Street

Irvington, N. J.

EStex 2-8700

STANTON FUNERAL HOME661 FRANKLIN AVENUE

NUTLEY, N. J.

NOrth 7-3131MURPHY MEMORIAL HOME

102 FLEMING AVENUE

NEWARK, N. J.

MArket 3-0514

JOHN F. MURPHY

480 SANFORD AVENUE

NEWARK, N. j.

ESsex 3-6053JOHN J. QUINNFUNERAL HOME

323-329 PARK AVENUE

ORANGE, N. J.

ORonge 2-4348

KIERNAN FUNERAL HOME

101 UNION AVENUE

BELLEVILLE, N. J.

PLymouth 9-3503FRANK McGEE

525 SUMMER AVENUE

NEWARK, N. J.

HUmboldt 2-2222

MURRAY

FUNERAL SERVICE

MICHAEL J. MURRAY.

Director

206 BELLEVILLE AVENUE

BLOOMFIELD; NJ.

PI 3-2527

MURPHY FUNERAL HOME

DIRECTORS

GRACE MURPHY

WILLIAM T. NEELY

301 ROSEVILLE AVENUE

NEWARK, N. J.

HUmboldt 3-2600

GORNY A GORNY

MORTUARY303 MAIN STREET

EAST ORANGE, N. J.

ORange 2-2414

l. V. MULLIN A SON

976 BROAD STREET

NEWARK, N. J.

MArket 3-0660

PETER J. QUINNFuneral Director

320 BELLEVILLE AVENUE

BLOOMFIELD, N. J.

Pilgrim 8-1260

GORNY A GORNY

MORTUARY

399 HOOVER AVE.

BLOOMFIELD, N. J.

Pilgrim 3-8400

HUDSON COUNTY

LAWRENCE G. QUINNFUNERAL HOME

298 ACADEMY ST.

(at Bergen Square)JERSEY CITY. N. J.

SW 8-8114

NECKER-SHARPIFUNERAL HOME

525 45th STREET

UNION CITY, N. J.UNIon 7-0820

' UNIon 7-0120

RIEMAN FUNERAL HOME

1914 NEW YORK AVENUE

UNION CITY, N. J.

UNIon 7-6767

LEBER FUNERAL HOME

20th ST. & HUDSON BLVD.

UNION CITY, N. J.

UNIon 3-1100

HOWARD J. BRENNAN

6414 BERGENLINE AVE.WEST NEW YORK, N. J.

UNIon 7-0373

WILLIAM SCHIEMM, INC.2200 HUDSON BLVD.

UNION CITY, N. J.

WILLIAM SCHIEMM,MANAGER

UNIon 7-1000

james a. McLaughlin

591 JERSEY AVENUE

JERSEY CITY, N. J.Oldfield 3-2266

WILLIAM SCHIEMM, INC539 BERGEN AVE.JERSEY CITY, N. J.

JOHN J. CARTY,MANAGER

HEnderson 4-0411

EARL F. BOSWORTH

311 WILLOW AVENUE

HOBOKEN, N. J.

OLdfield 9-1455

Oldfield 9-1456

BUNNEU FUNERAL HOME

41 Highland Ave.

Jersey City, N. J.

Charles A. Stevens,Manager

DElaware 3-6446

MORRIS COUNTY

BIRMINGHAM

FUNERAL HOME249 SOUTH MAIN STREET

WHARTON, N.J.FOxcroft 6-0520

SCANLAN

FUNERAL HOMES781 Newark Pompton Tplc

Pompton Plains, N. J.TE 5-4156SH 2-6433

PASSAIC COUNTY

GORMLEY FUNERAL HOME154 WASHINGTON PLACE

PASSAIC, N. J.

PRescott 9-3183

QUINLAN FUNERAL HOME27-29 HARDING AVENUE

CLIFTON, N. J.

PRescott 7-3002

HENNESSEY FUNERAL HOME171 WASHINGTON PLACE

PASSAIC, N. J.PRescott 7-0141

OORNY ft CORNYMORTUARY

519 MARSHALL STREETPATERSON, N. J.

MUlberry 4-5400

UNION COUNTY

MILLER-BANNWORTHFUNERAL HOME

1055 EAST JERSEY ST.

ELIZABETH, N. J.

Elisabeth 2-6664

OORNY ft OORNY

MORTUARY330 ELIZABETH AVENUE

ELIZABETH, N. J.Elisabeth 2-1415

For lilting In this Mction call The Advocate, MArket 4-0700

Pray for Them

Archbishop John J. Swint of Wheeling Dies at 82WHEELING, W. Vi. (NC)—

Pontifical Requiem Mass forArchbishop John J. Swint,Bishop of Wheeling, was of-fered in St. Joseph’s Cathedralhere.

Archbishop Swint died Nov.23 of an apparent heart at-tack. He would have been 83Dec. 15.

Bishop Joseph H. Hodges,new Bishop of Wheeling whohad served as Coadjutor Bish-op with the right ol successionto Archbishop Swint, flewback from Rome, where hewas attending the ecumenical

council, to be present at theRequiem Mass.

The Archbishop was thefirst native of West Virginiaraised to the episcopacy. Hewas a priest for more than 58

ears and a Bishop for morethan 40 years. He was the

fourth Bishop in the history ofthe 112-year-old Wheeling Dio-cese.

Born Dec. 15, 1879, at Pick-

ens, he studied at St. Charles

College, Ellicott City, Md.,and St. Mary’s Seminary,Baltimore, and was ordainedJune 23, 1904.

Following pastoral work in

Wheeling he founded the Dio-cesan Apostolic Mission Bandin 1908.

Pope Pius XI named him•Auxiliary Bishop of WheelingFeb. 22, 1922. He was named.Bishop of Wheeling Oct. 11,;1922, after the death of Bish-

op Patrick J. Donahue.• Pope Pius XII conferred on

.'him the personal title of Arch-

bishop on the occasion of the:50th anniversary of his ordi-

nation.

M. Angelica< LODI — Mother Mary An-

gelica Pilarska, C.S.S.F., 78,former provincial superior of!the Felician Sisters, died Nov.27 at Immaculate ConceptionInfirmary here. A Solemn Re-

quiem Mass will be offered atthe chapel at 9 a.m. Dec. 1.

\ Born in Mt. Carmel, Pa.,:Mother Angelica Joined thefelician Sisters in 1902. Herfirst post as a superior was

ht Sacred Heart, South Am-boy, 1912-15. She was superiorJn Webster, Mass., from 1915’.jo 1920.

In the latter year, she was

laamcd provincial school su-

pervisor and in 1926 became

•provincial superior, a post she

Occupied for 12 years. Then

•phe was named to bead a

province in Poland and went■to Warsaw in 1938, remainingtwo years before being drivenBut by the invading armies ofWorld War II.

>Mother Angelica became su-

perior at Sacred Heart, Irv-

ington, in 1940 and went to St.Francis, Mt. Arlington, in thesame role in 1947. She retiredin 1953 and lived since thenat the infirmary here.

Surviving are six sisters,Mrs. Joseph Mateja, Mrs.Cecilia Kramer, Mrs. EmilyDucenshine, Mrs. Agnes Sha-

manski, Mrs. Marie Klemasand Sister Mary Alma,C.S.S.F., of St. Mary’s Hos-pital, Orange; and fivebrothers, Louis, Anthony, Jo-

seph, Walter and Charles Pil-arskl, as well as a niece, Sis-ter Mary Imelda, C.S.S.F., ofHoly Cross, Trenton.

Sr. Elizabeth AgnesCONVENT — Sister Elisa-

beth Agnes Hayden, a memberof the Sisters of Charity of St.Elizabeth for 58 years, diedNov. 25 at St. Anne’s Villa aftera long illness. A RequiemMass was offered Nov. 28 atthe chapel here.

Born in Jersey City, SisterElizabeth Agnes entered thecongregation in 1904. Shetaught at St. Vincent’sAcademy and St. Aloyslus,Newark, as well as at severalother North Jersey schools.She was stationed at St. Paulof the Cross, Jersey City, from1938 until her transfer to St.Anne’s Villa in 1955.

Sister Elizabeth Agnes Issurvived by one sister, AnnaHayden of Jersey City. An-other sister, Sister Monalda ofthe Sisters of the Poor of St.Francis, pre-deceased her.

Sr. Mary CatherineLOS GATOS, Cal. - Sister

Mary Catherine of Siena,S.N.J.M., a former resident ofPaterson, died recently at theconvent of the Sisters of theHoly Names of Jesus andMary here.

Born Jemima Rose Ryle, thegranddaughter of a former

mayor of Paterson, SisterMary Catherine moved to Cali-fornia with her mother aftercompleting her schooling andentered the Sisters of the HolyNames following her mother'sdeath.

Sr. Grace VeronicaCONVENT

— Sister GraceVeronia Herlihy of the Sistersof Charity of St. Elizabethdied Nov. 24 at St. Ann* Villa

after a long illness. A Re-

quiem Mass was offered at the

chapel here Nov. 27.A native of Roxbury, Mass.,

Sister Grace Veronica Joinedthe Sisters of Charity in 1910.She taught elementary gradesat St. John's, Paterson, and£t. Mary’s, Salem, Mass.,where she was stationed from

1918 until her transfer to St.Anne Villa in 1961.

There are no immediate sur-

vivors. Sister Grace Veronica

was the sister of Sister MarieUrban Herlihy, also of the Sis-ters of Charity, who died in1955.

Sr. Marie Amanda

HARRISON — Sister MarieAmanda Lightbourne, a teach-

er at Holy Cross School here,died Nov. 25 of a brief ill-

ness. A Solemn Requiem Mass

was offered Nov. 27 at HolyCross Church.

Born in Waltham, Mass.,Sister Marie Amanda entered

the Sisters of Charity of St.Elizabeth in 1929. She hadserved at St. Patrick’s School,Elizabeth, before coming here

11 years ago.Survivors include a sister,

Mrs. Florence McManus of

Cambridge, Mass.

Sr. Margaret PatriceCONVENT—Sister Margaret

Patrice Purcell, a member ofthe Sisters of Charity of St.Elizabeth since 1904, died Nov.

21 at St. Anne Villa here. A

Requiem Mass was offeredNov. 23. '

Born in County Tipperary,Ireland, Sister Margaret Pa-trice was stationed in severalNorth Jersey convents, includ-

ing St. Vincent Academy, New-

ark, and Immaculate Concep-tion, Elizabeth. She was trans-ferred to St. Anne Villa in1954 due to illness.

There are no immediate sur-

vivors.

Sr. Gabriel MarieHOBOKEN — Sister Gabriel

Marie McCarthy, 74, a teacherat Our Lady of Grace School

here, died Nov. 21 at St.

Joseph's Hospital, Paterson,after a long illness. A RequiemMass was offered Nov. 24 atOur Lady of Grace Church.

A native of West Hoboken(Union City), Sister GabrielMarie entered the Sisters of

Charity of St. Elizabeth 50

years ago. She had beeit atOur Lady of Grace for three

years and, prior to that, was

at All Saints, Jersey City, for20 years.

Survivors include a brother,Rev. Dennis McCarthy, S.J., ofFordham University.

Sr. Mary EmilicnneSUMMIT v— Sister Mary

Emilienne Gauthier, O.P., one

of the Sister-foundresses of theMonastery of the Holy Rosaryhere died Nov. 21 at Overlook

Hospital. A Solemn RequiemMass was offered at the mon-

astery Nov. 26.Born in Pawtucket, R. I.,

Sister Emilienne was in the55th year of profession in thecloistered order at the time ofher death. She had entered theDominican Sisters of the Per-petual Rosary at the BlueChapel in Union City and came

here in 1919.

Sister Emilienne was thesister of the Mother-foundressof the Rosary Shrine here,Mother Mary Imelda, O.P.

I

Other Deaths...

Michael Kozmoski, 37, of

Clifton, brother of Rev. MyronKozmoski of Holy Ghost Uk-rainian Catholic Church,Chester, Pa., died Nov. 23 atBeth Israel Hospital, Passaic.

Msgr. Francis J. Garvey,65, dean of the clergy inCamden County and pastor ofHoly Saviour Church, West-

mont, died Nov. 18 at Camden.

Mrs. Helen Licbtenberg, 75,of Newark, mother of Sister

Dorothy Jose of Convent, diedNov. 20 at Bergen Pines Hos-

pital.

Patrick Shovlln of JerseyCity, 80, brother of Msgr. Jo-

seph A. Shovlln, pastor of St.

Anne’s, Jersey City, died Nov.2 at the Jersey City MedicalCenter.

Harry F. de Groot of Union,father of Sister Rosemarie,O.S.B., died Nov. 14.

Auxiliary Bishop FrandszekKorszynski of Wroclawek. Po-land, 69, author of “Bright

Rays from Dachau," an ac-

count of his period as a prison-er in the nazl concentrationcamp, died Nov. 3.

Niels Bohr, 77, International-

ly-known nuclear scientist andan original member of the re-vived Pontifical Academy of

Sciences, died Nov. 18 In

Copenhagen, Denmark.

Mrs. William B. Tooker of

Rutherford, 72, motherof VeryRev. Martin Joseph Tooker,C.P., rector of Immaculate

Conception Monastery, Ja-

alca, L.1., died Nov. 25 athome. '

Mrs. James Keating oil Jer-

sey City, 82, mother of SisterMario Celine, 0.P., of Rosen-

dale, N.Y., and grandmotherof Sister Thomas . Margaret,0.P., of Mt. St. Mary; New-

burgh, N.Y., died Nov. 23 atthe Jersey City Medical Cen-ter.

In yqur praytrs also re-

member these, your deceasedpriests :

/Vetvark...

'Rev. Alfred B. Oates, S.J.,

Dec. 2, 1937Rt. Rev. Msgr. William S. Con-

don, Dec. 2, 1956Very Rev. Peter Harrington,

S.M.A., Dec. 2, 1956Rev. Paul Lisa, Dec. 4, J950Rev. Henry J. Sheridan, Dec.

5, 1934Rev. Louis P. Remmele, Dec.

5, 1939 ’Rev. James Kearney, 0.P.,

Dec. 5, 1960Rev. Hugh J. Fricl, Dec. 6,

1925Rev. Justin W. Corcoran, Dec.

6, 1929Rev. Thomas F. Canty, Dec.

6, 1934Rev. Salvatore Midaglia, Dec.

6, 1942

Rt. Rev. Msgr. Charles W.

Tichler, Dec. 6, 1950

Paterson. . .

Rt. Rev. Msgr. Edward J. Bar-rett, Dec. 2, 1953

Rev. Cornelius Clifford, Dec.4, 1938

Rev. Philip P. Madden, Dec.5, 1948

PRECIOUS RELIC - Rev. Thomas J. Boyle, pastor of Our lady of Victories Church, Pater-son, and Sister Mary Venard, M.S.B.T., who directs the catechetical school at the St.Peter Clover mission, hold a cross containing a relic of St. Martin dePorres, which wassent back by Bishop McNulty from the ecumenical council. Officers of the St. Peter Cla-ver Society are, left to right, Nettle Carter, Tyrone Barnes, Ethel Williams, John Dela-

mar and Mrs. Leroy Williams.

Sacred Heart, Clifton,

To Note 65th AnniversaryCLIFTON The 65th anni-

versary of Sacred Heart par-ish, oldest Catholic church inClifton, will be celebrated Dec.

2 with a Solemn Mass of

Thanksgiving at 10 a.m. and a

dinner-dance at 6 p.m.Sacred Heart was founded in

1897 by Rev. Felix Sandri. Un-til that time, Italian Catholics

living in the Botany section ofClifton attended Mass at St.

Nicholas, Passaic.

Parishioners built the firstchurch themselves and itserved until 1918 when it wasmoved to make way for thenew brick church, completedthe following year, which still

serves the parish.

Only four pastors haveserved the parish. Father San-dri died in 1918 and was suc-ceeded by Rev. Joseph Ostino,who died in 1936. Rev. FelixL. Pcrlo, the third pastor, su-

pervised the building of SacredHeart School, which was dedi-cated in 1953. He died the fol-

lowing year and was succeeded

by the present pastor, Rev.Augustine Varricchio.

Father Varricchio has twice

refurbished the church duringthe past eight years. Anew

marble altar, altar railing and

pulpit were erected, new fix-tures installed and the entirechurch floor was covered withtile. Improvements were alsomade in the rectory.

A “TE DEUM” is a hymnof praise and thanksgivingsung on solemn occasions.

November 29, 1962 THE ADVOCATE 21

PRINTINGHARRY F. MURPHY

7» CUNTON ST., NEWARK 2Phone: MArfcot 3-2*31

FAMILY MONUMINTt

John f. a. McGovern

MEMORIALSf AUTHORIZED DEALER

vgy SfSTo0 —

WORTH ARLINOTOM, N. J.WYman LUn • DRlawara MM

Borgos & BorgosInsurance

v of all kinds

593 KEARNY AVENUE

KEARNY, N. J.OIOIOt J. 10*001

AIMRT H. ILAZI

WIUIAM A OIACCUM

WTm.n 14700

WHEN YOU WANT

FLOWERS CALL:

HANOVER FLORAL CO.Ctmatary tarvtca

*1 IWMili Avi., Hiiunr

TUcIWr 7-MM

HOME REPAIRSHOME OWNERS DEAL DIRECTLY WITH MORE RROTHERSON ANY JOE FROM CELLAR TO ROOF AND SAVE ONTHE SALESMEN'S COMMISSION.

I NO MONEY DOWN. UP TO 7 YEARS TO PAY

• ALTERATIONS

• ATTIC ROOMS

• EASEMENTS

• EATHROOMI

FOR FREE

, ESTIMATE CAU

• OARAOES • MASONRY• HEATINO • KITCHENS• IRON WORKS • SIDINO• DORMERS • PAINTINO

SO 3-0040

• PATIOS

• TILE WORK

• ROOFING

• STONE FRONTS

DAY. N/CHTOR SUNDAY

PIORI BROS., INC. IS VOSt AVI., SO. ORANGE

In The Kearny No. Arlington Area

TO SELL YOUR HOME FAST

Inakat on LkatlU U With

M a

an BoMovllla Pika. Arlington

WYmon 1-4822

Open Weekenda by Appointment

MICHAEL J. HARRISINC.

HIGH LEVEL

ROOFING EXPERTSSHEET METAL

CONSTRUCTIONPOR CHURCHES. SCHOOLS

AND INSTITUTIONSSPECIALISTS IN

* Residential Roofing* Leaders & Gutters* Siding

EL 3-1700MS NEW POINT ROAD

11IZAUTH, NJ.

ESTABLISHED 1913

BONDS

Insurance

Your NeighborhoodPharmacist

W

HE'S THE MAN YOUR

DOCTOR DEPENDS UPON

*£ suTwru:SJSwsTrw** h”

NEWARK•*■ * *»«ni Martarana, Propa.

_

LIU PHARMACYSaUbUdMd ov«r *0 run

_Roy Raalitarad Pharmadate

* r** DeUyaiy Opan Every Dayaja. to 11 yja.

*** »*». Proapart Avanua aar.

„„ ..Montclair AvanuaHU MtH Newark. N. J.

JERSEY CITY

.^VALENTI•* PHARMACY

• Waa* MPa Ava. afa, Palrviaar

PHONIi Di

WESTFIELD

MCBNTRAL PHARMACY

Mlcttaal J. carmalo. Raa. Phar.Praacrtpttona Carefully

Compoundad

«4 Contra*! BffkgßKa 1-UM

NUTIEY

.

RAY ORURS CO.ianaaa RMaMRep. Pkar.

ft n<|--•nerlptlona Promptly ruled

ADVOCATE CLASSIFIED MARKET PUCE IUIAUTtn --- =====^^==sS=========- ®

Rat**: 1 in»#rtion 40c per line 4 Inter-

tion* 38c p*r line. Minimum 3 line*.Deadline Monday 4 P.M.

Writ* to Th* Advocate

31 Clinton St., Newark, N.J.HELP WANTED FEMALE

vW* HAVE OPENINGS FOE

Female -stenotypist

SECRETARYMALE . SALES

ENGINEERSEXECUTIVE

"MANY OTHERS"

BURNSt EMPLOYMENT AGENCY*

Broad * Mirk* MA 1-7103

AIRUNB training ana Placement Hi**»■ »“* around hOUmu. Muat

H art. H. I, Orad a For talar*t*w aand addraaa and phono No. ta

Ml HI t Oranti, N, i, or call

«-u«a.

SITUATION WANTEDijnitO, aUtlattcal. Uiaau or aanaral.jknaaonabla lot. WUI pick up and do.

Calt altar 4 P.mT hHim,

BUSINESS DIRECTORY

AUTO FOR SALE

- onl>W®"**- Uko now. rauat aall roa

|abte. Phono HEmlock 4-JOOl attar

BRIDAL OOWNS

SAMPLE BRIDAL OOWNS

Tramoadoua dlaeoual valuaa on aampla•«puu. Mootlr traditional All ttaa tabItaa. rtnoat

manufacturari. Ona ot

■ kind. Include Blanchia. Henri Mull..Ota. From Nor. M la Dm. H Hour.•JO AM. to 0 PM.

•ample room only

OF

• THE BRIDE'S SHOPPE

• 'Malta? *l. Newark. N. f.

AUTO DEALERS - NEW CARS

BuicicAuthorised Dealer

•ALM WMIVICf PART* .

Pino Oaloction ot Hand Cara

BEIFUS BUICK INC.

UM Oprtaafield Avo., Irvlnaton, N J

ES 3 6600

BUICK

North Ettox Bulck Cos., Inc.

AuUaortaod Bulck Borvtoo

U Bloom field at 401 BleoaMlald Avo

Ft SBMO

la Montclair at It Lackawanna Plata* FI ptroo

BUICK

Mudaoa Count? Bulck Cos. Inc.

Trading an

* KENNEOY BUICK

Authortaad Doalar

mr W&N^i^aTY1 m.

AUTO DEALERS - NEW CARS

BROGAN CADIILAC-OIDSN,w Jereey'a Laron Cadlllao

Distributor

Aulhorieed CADILLAC . OLDS

SALES A SERVICEOpen Evenlnia to • P it. (except Wed >7M Paaaale A»e. Clifton. N. J

OK jjgoeCADILLAC

SALES A SERVICE

CENTRAL CADILLAC INC.Kino Selection ol Deed Cert

"° Ave.Newark

Phona MA 4-2255

CHEVROLET ISARGENT MOTORS INC.

Aulhortud

SALES A SERVICE

■» «Mli Ed. WY 1-SbOB. N. ArUniton

CHEVROLETTh« Only Authorised Dealer

WALLACE

&S n£&ELi,'M&since lII*

■ ■ . ... .°K USED CAMU. S No. 1. «| W Inane Art.

Linden

HUnHf 6-4900

CHEVROLETCORVAIR . CORVETTE

(CONNER CHEyROLET‘‘•'wwßrraj^

m Bloomfield A*e Caldwell

CA 6-6666

CHAPP CHEVROLET CORP.

S.laa A Sarvlc.CMEVROI.ET CHEVY IICORVAIR CORVETTE

»« Valloy St So. or . n,

SO 3-4000CHRYSLER . PLYNOUTH . VALIAN

TOWNE MOTORS INC.Direct Factory Daalar

*•*•» Farte Sarvlra

cara Body Shop

Phon* HUnlor 6-1400

ISJjL—gaoraa Avc., W. Linden. N._.CARDEN FORD

• FORD • FALCON• TIIUNOERBIRD

Authonaed Salea Sarvlra A Part*Complete aataction ol Finn

Guaranteed Uaad CaraHI H—HalSJIy Bloomflal

PETTE FORD

Authoruad Sal.. Sarvlca . Part.Falcon ■ Thunderblrd • Ford True!“Femeue for Penny Plnchln Daai

FTT Bloomflald Ava. Clifton. N.

at Allwood Circle

PRascott 9-7000

FORD

NAPPA FORD

New and uaad Falcon*. Ford* 1darbirda and Trucka.

w Newark A**., EllaabeU. N.

EL 4-8030

AUTO DEALERS - NEW CARS

FORD

FALCON . TIIUNOKRBIRDFORD TRUCKS

Guaranteed Lead Cara

‘ FOREST MOTORS INC.IT* Cantral Are. Oranaa. N. J

OR 3-2917

FORD

SHERIDAN FORD, Inc.

SAf.K.S SERVICE PARTSFORD CARS end TRUCKS

>6O BSLGROVE DR.. KEARNY

WY 1-5060

c»r Dept. 444 Kearny At*.

For Th* B«*t Deal In

OIDSMOBILEu* JOYCE OLDSMOBII.K

• Authorlred Sal** A S«rvlc*• Ou*rant**d Ua*d Car*

,

PI 4-7500

111 Ol*n Rids* At*. Montclair

PLYMOUTH - VALIANTSIMCA

REZZA MOTORS INC.

Authorlud Sal** S«r*lc* Part*Complete. Expert Body Work In our

own ShopSl4 Rlyer Drly* Garfield, N. J.

Phone OR 3-6600

PLYMOUTH - CHRYSLERVALIANT . IMPERIAL

MURPIIY BROS. MOTOR SALESSALKS Si SERVICE

100% OuaranlMd Ua*d Car*

ELlzobslh 5-5600aoa N. Broad St. EUubclh, N. J,

PLYMOUTH - VALIANTFULLER MOTOR CO.

Authorlud D*al*rPLYMOUTH A VALIANT

SALES 4 SERVICE

■BIOS Hud ion Bird.. Union CUy, N. J.

UNion 6-6300

PONTIACN*w Car Salaa • Sarvlc* . Paita

Guaranty Uaad CaraKlnaal Hody Work 4* Repair Service

TROPHY PONTIACCor 461 h St. Bayonn*. N J

HE 7-4900

PONTIAC - TEMPESTRAMBLER

MROZEK AUTO SALESAuthorlud Sal** and Sarvlc*

..

*> Vaar* of QualityCart Body Shop Repair*

Showroom SJO St a*or*» At*., IN J. HU 6-1616

S*rrtc* Dept. i 419 Roull* St.HU 41696

RAMBLER

S*« Jerry Slsnor*

ELM AUTO SALES

SALES . SERVICE PAHTTS

31 Kearny At*. Kearny. N. J,

WYmon 8-7311

AUTO DEALERS - NEW CARS

RAMBLER

"Service Uncacclled In >ll If. Pham*'

SCHIFTER RAMBLER INC.

FRANK SUTM, MarSain. Sarvlca, Part*. Towin*

Road Sandra • Body Work

NOrth 7-2233

B 9 Washington Ave. Nutley. N. J.

VOLKSWAGEN

Authorized Factory

SALKS • SERVICE - PARTS

Aircooled Automotive Corp."Eaaax County's Oldaat Dealer"

Val Jay SI. South Oranaa

Phones SO 3-4567

AUTO BODY g PAINTING

FERRARA'Sliy7? *^.AINTINa »n<l bodyworksVVhatl Alignment—Axis A Frame Work

* r#Sltr ■***>«• Paintingn Orange Rd . Montclair. PI 4 0544

AUTO SERVICE * REPAIRS

G. M. Transmission Service

Plymouth* Ford. Chevrolet. Buick. old#mobile. Cadillac, any make autei we

1 Iranamlaalon, guar#nl##2 J “•■w**l 1 P«ice quoted, noupat K-Z term*. I-day aervlce. 231 Hal

Hsjt.,N"M ST"* c,u “

INSURANCE AGENCIES

A. C. D'AMOREAGENCY

Complete Insurance ServiceFor Buatneee

•avlng* on all forma of—-

• Auto Insurance • Fire Insurance• Home Owners Package Policy

GE 8 6677SU Pataraon Ava„ E. Rutherford. N. J.

FUEL OIL - OIL BURNERS

JOHN DUFFY FUEL CO.

••Maklna A Marvins Frlanda

Since ISSI“

Oil Hurhara In.tailed A ServicedMalarad Dallaarlaa 84 Hour Sarvlca

Dial. Ml 2-2727198-IM Adarna St Newark. NJ

PETRO

"Sloe. 1803“

«0 ytara of l.eaderahlp In Oil Haallna

riNEMT duality rust on.Oil. BURNER SERVICE

Petroleum Ileal and puwtr CompanySTS Broad Ml. Nawark Ml SSI9O

FLOOR COVERINO

DUFFY'SServinS Catholic Famlllaa andInatitutlnng for Over 40 Ytara

U'CPala _ Unolaum VinylSubbar Til. Rua Claanlna

Repair, and AltarallonaNaa Raiall Stores

~ royi J *, "F CityClaanlna Plants 141 Logan Ava.

Phonei HE 5-6600

FLOOR WAXINO

A A 1 MAINTAINANC* A SUPPLYMom. and Cnmmeretil claanlna antvaalns. Church kneelere recovered «repaired. CM S TOSS FU s jota,

FLORIST

In Linden It'e

PLAZA FLORISTHarry 4 Mlily I)| Giovanni. Props.

Modern Floral Arrangements

For Every Occasion

FTP Member I>elivery Service

Phone HU 67677

or If no answer HU 6-2319

116 Wood Ave. N. Unden. N. J.

HARRY J7BURKE~~

r.RT. 1929

Flowers For All OcraaloneFrom our own greenhouses In UNION.For prompt Delivery Call: MU 6 0999.

Open 6 A M. to 9 P M. . Closed Sundays991 Pennsylvania Ave. Union

JONES THE FLORIST, INC.

Nutter'. Old.at riorlit Cat. 1800Call Ue Cor Your floral Need.

NOrlh 7-1022

HARDWARE - PAINTS*

THOMPSON'S..

HARDWARE STORE. Cook * Dunn • Pittsburgh Painla* RuaMt * Erwin . Slanlay tlardwaroProa Daily.rr Phona PI 4 0.150

Dnrn Friday Eva*.

Ml PARK ST UPPER MONTCLAIR

MOVING 4 STORAGE

ENGEL BROTHERS

INCORPORATEDPART LOADS or PULI. LOADS

Direct Van Sarvlra to All 50 SlalaaLOW RATES TREE ESTIMATES

Complete Modern Sinraao *

Phono: EL 4 7800

SOI JULIA ST. ELIZABETH. N. J.

CHARLES FEAR CO., INC.MOVINO AND STORAOK

BJ Yoara of Reliable Service

Local Si Lons DlalancoColl PI 4-1167

I*9 Qian Bulge Ave. ManUlalr

MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS -

NUNZIO MUSIC CENTERFr.nchl.ed Dealer for

BALDWIN PIANOS 4 ORGANSMualeal Inalrurllon on Accordionllano Organ -- Band Inairumanli

Paiaonal InatrucUon byCHARLES NUNZIO

401 Pranklln Ave., NuUoy. N.J. ««7 J4sf

NURSING HOMES“

r

CRANFORD: RItOOK LODGE

•NURSING HOME

M.n 4 Woman. PueCoperalive. conva.loc.nl, Inv.luu, aged IWs nuraa Inrh.rg. .1 .11 lime.. A pi. ...at peaceful home aurroumlad by au.rluuairounda.

GLADYS REILLY. R N.

410 ORCHARD ST. CHANPORD

MMIdf._B_M»JLAUREL MANOR A CERTIFIED

HOME for elderly man and womani

cloaa all.niton and carat r.tea raaaon

ablet ELmwood *4lOB. P. O Boa 150

Spring Valley New York.

In Nowork, N.J.

ABBEY NURSING HOMECOMPLCTR SERVICE

asod. conv.laacaal, chronically HI *

86 VAN NESS PLACE<Off Clinton Ave.)

Blgalow 3 0303

PHOTOORAPHS~

WAYNI CHILDREN'S-

PHOTOGRAPH

KIIB. Portrait* taken In your home byNETTIE CIIAPKo. OX 4 0393.

PLUMBING A HEATING

MICHAEL T. HAUDERMANN

1«1 WILLIAM ST . NEWARK 3. N. J.

. MARKET 3-7407

TELEVISION SERVICE

FERRARO'S

TELEVISION SERVICE

On» of “THE REST IN SERVICE"Sorvln* All of Cmi Count*

Hnnsat. Dspendabla. rast 34 Hr. Ssrviea

Phonei PLymouth 9-63003I« Graylock Parkway. Bsllayllla

TRAVEL AGENCIES

JOS. M. BYRNE CO.TRAVEL SERVICE

S«nrtn* th# Public Sine* IBM

Staamthlp A Air Raaarvatlona

T®ur* “vC’r'Oaat llonaymoon Trlpa«3» Broad 84.. Nawarit , MA 3-1740

UPHOLSTERERS

Kltr'ian chairs recovered In laatharatlaoattar and etronser than

naw. Guaran-

Jaad not to wilt M.30. In plaaUc *4 30.Parlor Sata reupholitered. For honaataa Imataa on all upholatary work call

OLdflald *-71 IS

ACE UPHOLSTERY SHOP•Mtk Newark A»a. at S Corners

Jaraey City, N. J.

HARRY J. STEVENS, INC.REALTORS

9° Yaara at Santa LocationSalaa • Appraisals • ManasamrntNawark a Irtinslon • The Oranaaa

Open Mon. A Wad. Evaa.

IT? t

un.Lr*L.A ’,J;' Nawark MA 3 3.18(

410 Main »L. Prana a OR 7-147'

RIAL ESTATE AOINTS

ALLENDALE

WHALE OF A HOUSE .• HEDKOOMS . 4RATH.***' l»ih off road

on Maly 3 acr<landscaMd plot- An Idas! home foi

a a completely renoand uunternlied. offering 11

•••clout rooms and Jalousied porchId.W-A. *rUhl llylnf room, librarjwith flttplace, jo family room, largidining room, modem kitchen with dtih

f ll4 ry on lit floor. At(ached I car garage with eonveniem• ntranca thru large laundry and util

lly room full basement and filtered•0 swimming pool. With the 0 bed

rooms and 4 modern batlia (hi* addi

Mn ""

whaU • house'* foi

S. T. VAN HOUTEN «. SONS

Realtors

Allendale, ,N. J. da 7 5050

kundays hy spp't

CHATHAM

To Suy or Sail *ln Chathamtown,hip, Madison and Flurhem Pari

sail

MIIIICENT M. UNDERWOODRealtor

Member Multlpls l.l,tlna NarylcaI*o Mam St , Chatham

ME 8-7300

GLEN RIOOi

NATHAN RUSSELL, INC.CatabUshtd kinre 1100 •

«KAL UTAT* INSURANCEU 7 Rldtawood Avo. Gian Rldda, N. J.

PI 3-5600 «%!?•

REAL ESTATE AGENTS

HILLSIDE :

Kostecka, Real Estata AgencyIn IfllUlde It's

KOSTECKA AGENCY

RrUdentlal Commercial

Phone WA 3-87002M I.one Ave Hillside, N. J

IRVINGTON

LARSEN & F?SH INC.

REALTORS• INSURANCE . APPRAISALS

Phones ES 3-11221J43 Springfield Ave., Irvington, N. J.

MONTCLAIR '

SALES RENTALS

MANAGEMENT

Complete Insurance Service

JOS. A. KELLEHER, JR.Reeltore

Phone Anytime

]3 S Fullerton Av.. Monteleir. N. J

MOUNTAIN LAKES

MULLINS - RASMUSSIN INC.

RL_4« Mt. Lelies*

DE 4-MOO

Sanders & Brackin, RealtorsOne Boulevard Mountain Lakea

DEERFIELD 4-ISIS

NORTH ARLINGTON

O'HARA AGENCYJOHN O'HARA. SK A.

REALTORSlnauranre Appralalnf

Property Manasement

WY 8-2916132 fudge lid.a N. Arlington

ROSELLE

GORCZYCA AGENCY• REALTORS a INSURERS

Investment Properties A M«t.

Murtaaiea

Phone: 241-2442Chestnut & Flfh Streets Roselle

SHORT HILLSRITA COLE'S SUBURBAN KSALTI

Servlna Short Hills. MlllburnSpringfield and Vicinity

HILLS ave.. short HILL!REALTORS DREXEL (OSS

RIDGEWOOD

GILSENAN & COMPANY"OUR REPUTATION IS VOUH

GUARANTEE or SATISFACTION"

l.O<X) Llatlnas of the FinestProperties In llaraan County

»l* E. Ridgewood Ave. Ql RISC

RIDGEWOOD * VICINITYWE CODDLE OUT OF TOWNERSOVER 500 MULTIPLE LISTINGS

HII'HENS REAL ESTATE Gi a *>oo

OPEN 7 DAYS AND EVENINOS37 West Hidgewnod Av#. KlUgewood

SUTHISFORD

FRED P. KURGANll’e Kurgan In Ho. Heigtn

Realtor

41 Park Avenue HutherfordWE 1-4200

UNION

In Union County * surrounding erasLei us halp you to select t home foryour comfort end happiness.Our experience la your proteetlen tobuy or sell, call on

JOHN P. McMAHONIMS Morris Ave., Union MU I }43t

REAL ESTATE AGENTS

WEST MILFORD

Tt« Round A Summ

at Plnecllffe LakeSales A Rentals

EDWARD A. CASEY,Realtor

WAYNE

*>HN WEISS CO., RealtorPotereon Hamburg Tpka, Wayne,

OX 4-3300

HASKELL

Morm you buy or Mil around NorthJ,r **r ,J; onl* ct JoMph Mondlllo. Brok-•r»- TEmple 3-3«J7, t*.a PR j-WTS.

U Union Valay Road PA Mt3l

SPARTA

LAKE MOHAWKMOO Down PHA for qualtflad buyar.V;. 'ha mlnuto Capa Cod Colonial,

3 3 lar«» Badroonu. Fullalso dining room. Ilvlnr room. Haaatono baaulator. flraplaco.„

. fOX HOLLOW FARMSNow la the tlmo to pick your futuraho™* With tha laavaa down, you

II" viaualUe your dream homo®n i. h* * cr* lot* In Suaaax County’afinaat year-round laka community InSparta adjoining Our Lady ot tha Lakechurch and School Cantor.

E. G. ANDERSON, REALTORSuaaax Cly. Mult. Llatln* Service

M. IS. opp. Sparta Theatre PA Mill

NORTH CALDWELL

O'BRIEN REALTY CO,

REAL ESTATE

REACTORS

THE CALDWELLSVERONA

INSURANCE

INSURORS

ESSEX FELLSCEDAR GBOVB

Phonos CApital 8-0555A»«-. North Caldwell

SADDLE BROOK

<>n« family houM. 4 rooms,torch, hoi water by lotconveniences. 113.900

Owner 94112a.

WESTFIELD

Walk to Parmhlsl School. S bedrooms,2V% baths, playroom, aarafe.low tastaaprice 300. AI) 2 6000.

APT- TOJRENT - NEWARKRomvllls 4 rooms and bath, upperIn three family home. Juai painted.All utiUtlea aupplted. IH6 a mo. 4th SU

Hu'nSfc AV* B*by »“*pUd*

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY

BARBER SHOPUpper Vallabur, Nawark. Good loca-

MArMtm°“*rn ~hon'

GOOD BUYS

SELL FAST IN

The Advocate

CLASSIFIED

MARKET

PLACE

KennedyBias Plan

PraisedNCWC Newt Service

Catholic reaction to Presi-dent Kennedy’s order barringdiscrimination in federallyaided housing mingled praisefor the order with cautionsthat it does not solve the prob-lem of segregated housing.

The consensus among Cath-olic specialists' in interracialjustice and community rela-tions was that the executiveorder is a valuable first steptoward ending housing segre-gation, but that much more re-mains to be done.

THEY ALSO stressed thatCatholics have a duty to workfor integrated housing, both byeducational programs under-lining the immorality of seg-regation and by practical ac-tion aimed at creating inte-grated neighborhoods.

These reactions followed thePresident’s announcement thathe bad signed the long-awaitedexecutive order barring dis-crimination in future housingbuilt or purchased with feder-al assistance.

The order covers bousingwith mortgages insured bythe FHA or guaranteed by the

VA, low-rent public housingsubsidized by the federal gov-ernment, housing in urban re-

newal projects subsidized byfederal money, and bousingbuilt with federal loans, in-

cluding homes for the aged,college dormitories and com-

munity facilities.

SOME FOES of segregatedbousing had urged that con-

ventional financing, too, becovered in the executive orderbecause the government in-

sures deposits of banks and

savings and loan associations.

Dennis Clark, executive sec-

retary of the New York Cath-olic Interracial Council saidthe order is “not as broad as

it might have been.”

He expressed regret (bat theorder does not affect the poß-cies of banks and savings andloan associations.

“But it’s a start," be added.“At last the federal govern-ment has done something sub-stantial to affect the discrim-ination patterns in the na-tion’s bousing market. .

. Thefederal government comes

very late to the game, and we

are glad it is finally in the

game doing, as the President

said, what isand morally right” .

Mathew Ahmann, executivedirector of the Nstional Catho-lic Conference for InterracialJustice, expressed the beliefthat the President's order“w® not substantially affectaegregation patterns in hous-ing for some time.”

He cited reports thst the or-

der will be enforced “muchtoo gently" and that it willapply only to new housingstarts.

CLARK SAID it fe "ex-

tremely important that the or-

der waa issued at this timebecause in the late l£6os wc

are going to face a serious

housing shortage" as themembers of the post-war“baby boom” generation be-gin to marry and seek their

own homes.

He said the order should be

particularly meaningful toCatholics because of their con-

cern for “individual rights,family life and the develop-ment of stable parishes.’’Catholics, he said, should “im-

mediately begin making plansto deal with the public re-

actions thst will accompany'the desegregation that this or-

der will bring about."

Catholic individuals andgroups “are going to have towork much harder to preparethe general public for housingdesegregation," he said. Hecalled for educational and pub-ic opinion campaigns on themorality of the race question,coupled with “a much more

specific campaign of guidanceby the Cstholie press andCatholic social action leaderswith respect to the whole ques-

tion of racial change in hous-

ing."

Grants OpenFor Linguists

SOUTH ORANGE Dr.

John B. Tsu, director of SctonHall University’s Institute of

Far Eastern Studies, has an-

nounced that applications are

now being accepted for the Na-

tional Defense Foreign Lan-

guage fellowship for the 1963-

64 academic year.Each grant for the study of

Chinese sod Japanese will cov-

er the cost of tuition and all

required fees plus a living ex-

pense ranging from >2,220 to

>2,270. Additional provisionswill be made by the govern-ment to provide a family al-

lowance for each dependent of

>720 a year.To qualify for a grant, the

Individual must be an Amer-ican citizen or a permanentresident of the country and

must have a bachelor’s degree.Application forms may be

obtained from the institute’soffice on the campus here and

must be filed before Jan. 25,196 X

22 THE ADVOCATE November 29, 1962iMovcmDer zu, iaezi

Use

Rickey'sRoto

Charge

UNION 4 SUCCASUNNA ONLYI

if w. inI Ft. Bottom Cablitals

DELUXECOPPERTONE

DUCTLESSHOOD

(77.93 Value)WithPurchat* of

GIANT 19 FT.

• in.

• 24"ml -.M,

«e«!l colon * UajlrtStr IqkH

• iMMtfkllwNNralnUM

UMON ANO MCCAMMNA ONLY

73

At low Ao S3 AWeeM

Eldon' ROAD RACETHRILLING GAMEof SKILL and TIMING!

MORE HEATLESS SPACE!

’Tesrlssi"GAS VENTED RECESSED

WALL HEATERu«

110.13

01,000■.T.U.•UAtiimW• CMplrtiailhhAf

£ 9507

AU TOYS ITEMS A SUCCASUNNA ONLYll»ctiont.

List

wExcitement galor.with this "go-carl”

J»ch»9 in mUaturelIncludes 2 pre-ai-sembled go>cartswith ilscWc motors,2 ass.mblsd "on-oH” switches withcontrol buttons, bat-tory box. fence, 16

P*,“* ol prs-astem-Wed track and rail

« HmSi.rn.lv IWrtU InMp»TwnnUi TANARUS« MsS ksU

•smsst---• LM f|M Mot BllMfl

MARX MYSTERY

SPACE SHIP

277 i.

„. 4 «

Interesting and Educationalforloyrof all ages!

NEW FIN TUBE

.BASEBOARD RADIATIONUnit complete with element, cover ond

assembllet. Available in 4 Ft. Lengths.

& a 4«-

k, h. Wmh. £ I, ,

isxzzZ'rZ

REMCOS'

#4804-1

#7ll

"Coylord" the FRIENDLY BASSET HOUNDIN STOCK AT

RICKEILOW PRICESSJr&rss.-ats■JO*wIX- API itdiv Mm Im•buliMiMAntMul Certo.

FOR YOUR LAUNDRY

FJBERGLAS

UTILA

TUB

• 24~x21-

• 20GallonCapacity

• Metal Stand• Chrome Fatpot

PANELING!RICK ELS REGENCY PREFINISHED

MAHOGANY PANELING3 COAT FINISH o LIGHT PMK SHADE

PROPANETORCH

•M purpoietwiii kmmmM wlwdir 4

M«imM Surge#

4x7 FULL 14" thick.

4xB fuu vr thick,.

PLYWOOD

TRAIN

BOARDS

4x6 W thick...

4xB Vi"thick...

5x9 W thick. . .r

■smsees16 ’Aluminum

EDEE DoorGrill.

riiCE 2.89 Volue

WithPurchase of

1" MUT EXTtWMR Nf-HURC

ALUMINUM DOOR

29**3 TRACK. Ttmi TILT

ALUMINUM

COMBINATION

WINDOW

■““ll**..^

WEATHERSTRIPPED

DOOR STOP- 2.59

48"x80”Bi-Fold

DOOR UNIT— 24.95

Stad Grade STIIBS

2x3 r..

10 u, 3.99

2x3 . 10-4.49

2x4r ...47cm.Pro-CutEconomy

m. . 10b. 3.79

PALACE 54' Formica Top

■SINK andICABINET

129.93 VALUE!

Sfe^«S3W,oOrd •40raem

4-Door lind.r.i.ii. r u-* Sjrom* Faucet. Strolne.

•-onar Underunk Cabinet e Whrt. Enamel FinbiT

Lid13.9*

canMits and( |gur

lEnB 17“U«».

#326/327

BLONDI "MATTEL'S” BRUNETTE

CHATTY BABY

hWr irmi m. knufcl tv..-.- nM,X. .m

• JSSmT**Wu »*pp#y.go«k» mnd rad

SPECIAL!

TABLE

FOLDS, ROLLSGet better bounce from the 3x9’weothw resident Swedish hardboordtop (3/16” thick). Finislwd ploying?Jud use th. semi-automatic mecha-nism to (old th. aluminum legs ... thenroll it

away easily on 4 ball castwsl

PLAYTABLE

TENNIS!

«Cdw

COLORWHEEL

499

SHOPAND

COMPARE!

FOREVERYONE

r—hl. A Sm» skf 1 4

MEDICINE CABINETwith SLIDING DOOR

Fluornnnt Light and Shod..

Roumted in lid* Coriwri

Lid

•JO 40>BB

•PEERLESS" GAS VtNTED

COMSOUHEATEIt

7B88 —'

EASY TO INSTALL

HEATING FINS

298BOX

For all .listingHot Water andSteam H«atingSystems. Giv.iup to 700%mor. heat I

7fOOT

POOl TABU

5988

• Full S*t ol 2-1/8” BallsI Control, Bod and

Ust $124.00

• 33,000 B.T.U.

• Fullt AutomaticHomywtll Controls

• Saam Woldod

Haat Chamber• ModemFinlih

e Fully Vented• Sou Our Complot# Heo'cr

Stock. All Sixeihorn

14,000 to63,000 B.T .U.

‘SKIL’/«" DRILL

wHh m '

freeOekix.UtilityCas.l

SO3K

FOUR CHOICE

•MIL DRILLW-°n

Attochm.nlSh

o**nIfer.

• 2-Woy L.v.l <Floor Lav.fers

eTriangfe. Bridge,Chalk, ScoreCounter and Instruction Booklet

• 2—4B*Cue Stick.• Convenient Side Dal Return

> FT. BCIUXEPOOL TAM. 88“

decker

UTILITYdrillCrcoloi

NiHlnr.r

SLIDING DOOJ

TWIN GARBAGECAN ENCLOSUREProvltfes sanitary outdoor or Indoor?

Storage lor two ewbago cans, up to 30’

gallons each. IRnasd Ad oovor allows(a wide open position lor deposit elj

Ti!L SAMD«

1 '‘Hr,* 110 r.M

8

u 100

ADWcir■ our Choice

1988

LONGER!u 100

****4 powri ORRJUNQ

l

Y

tow PIKE

SKIL 6" GRINDER

jSLviHSfSSmi—h

“* r-r «*"tnnSln.. 1, “?— * ilfvkwt *

•» fcelil.,

SKIL JIG SAW

• ||a „ rk... I,» m

••“I. 11lH.

■ r*l ■ lr.l„,

~~

SKIL 5” SAW

•* Wr -.I I

too! manufacture? 4U *» ,0,,m0*» p

etie

a

"WEN" AU SAUr**°fe

_ Versatile h. ,AWr"“ J JT* -.VyDuty -

•ow- Handles theCutting•otfobsl

- - Fast«»W tough.

Bing ol reheet

2 CAN SIZE

USE RICKEY'STO CHARGE.

|FREE 1.PARKING

~

S’-.S:

•rfsa,,

2988

1,070 CHARGE!

1962

RT. 10, SUCCASUNNA1/4 Mile Last of ledf,ewood Circle

Open Daily & Saturday 9-9

justice 4-RIBI

RT. 17, PARAMS•4 Miles North ot Houte 4

Open Daily 9-9. Friday & Saturday 9-10Gilbert 9-0700